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Williams Alum Kirshe Leads U.S. Rugby to Olympic Semi-Finals

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Williams College alum Kristi Kirshe and the U.S. women's rugby sevens team are one win away from securing a medal at the 2024 Olympic Games in Paris, France.
 
On Monday afternoon (EDT), the Eagles came from behind to beat Great Britain, 17-7, in the Olympic quarter-finals.
 
And Kirshe was key in the win.
 
Great Britain, which eliminated the Americans at the Tokyo Olympics in 2021, took a 7-0 lead early and led, 7-5, at half-time.
 
But Kirshe scored a try off the second-half restart to give the Eagles a 10-7 lead, and the conversion made it 12-7.
 
Then, Kirshe assited on Sammy Sullivan's try to stretch the lead to 10 points.
 
NBC commentator Rupert Cox called it, "the performance of [Kirshe's] life in an Olympic quarter-final."
 
Cox noted that Kirshe, who graduated from Williams in 2017, took up rugby after graduation while working in Boston. The Franklin, Mass., native was an all-America selection in women's soccer while at Williams. 
 
Team USA, which started its Monday with a loss to host France in the conclusion of pool play, advances to Tuesday's 9:30 a.m. (EDT) Olympic semi-final against New Zealond, a 55-5 winner over China in the quarters on Monday.
 
The Bronze medal and Gold medal matches are scheduled for 1 p.m. and 1:45, respectively, on Tuesday.
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Williamstown Expects Spike in Property Taxes in FY26

By Stephen DravisiBerkshires Staff
WILLIAMSTOWN, Mass. — No details were revealed about the town's fiscal year 2026 spending plan at Monday's joint meeting of the Select Board and Finance Committee.
 
But it was apparent that FY26 budget will require a significant increase in the property tax levy in the year that begins July 1.
 
"This is not going to be a year when we're likely to keep the tax increase at 1 percent," Fin Comm member Melissa Cragg said near the end of the hour-long session.
 
That 1 percent referred to the FY25 increase in the levy — the total amount to be raised through property taxes in a calendar year. Last winter, the Fin Comm, after talking with the Select Board, tried to keep the levy level from FY24. It fell a little short of that goal, but largely the 1 percent rise was seen as a win by officials concerned about an ever increasing tax burden on homeowners.
 
On Monday night, officials discussed significant headwinds facing the town as it crafts a spending plan that will go before the annual town meeting on Thursday, May 22.
 
The biggest drag: spiraling health care costs for town and school employees.
 
"I know some communities already are dealing with a 25 percent-plus threshold from their plans," Town Manager Robert Menicocci told the joint meeting. "Our retiree health care in the fall came in the 20-percent range. After a lot of back and forth, it seems plans may be coming in in the 10- to 15-percent range after some tough conversations about what's covered and what's affordable in health plans.
 
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