Then came the logo submissions. Ideas, prototypes, sketches and even full-blown designs for the prospective mascots were presented. In all, the schools received 85 potential logos, and the mascot selection committee then whittled the list down to the three finalists.
Want news like this sent straight to your inbox? Head over to PatriotLedger.com to sign up for alerts and make sure you never miss a thing. You pick the news you want, we deliver. In our collective search, it became clear that we sought a mascot that embodied the traits we, as a school and community, unwaveringly uphold, Paquette said. We are loyal, proud, decisive, strong, protective, skilled and resilient.
Paquette said the new scot needs to embody the traits and characteristics that the school and the community endeavor to uphold. We are loyal, proud, connected, decisive, strong, compassionate, protective, skilled, brave, resilient, and impressive, to name a few, he said. These mascot choices embody these traits and characteristics.
The final mascot must also be able to appeal, and support, all the students in the Hanover school system, from kindergarteners to high school seniors. Our mascot must possess a clear and identifiable beauty, one that’s easily communicated and displayed, he said. There’s beauty in the grace of a Hawk, for example, beauty in the strength of a Husky, and beauty in the loyalty of being United.
Community Content
Randolph native Scott Tingle has been chosen as a member of NASA’s Artemis Team and may be part of the next mission to the Moon.
Tingle, a Blue Hills Regional Technical School graduate, spent six months aboard the International Space Station in 2018 and now will be part of a group of 18 prospective astronauts who could journey to the Moon by 2024.
“Scott has always been an inspiration for all of our students,” Blue Hills Superintendent Jill Rossetti said. “He is kind, hardworking and overall an excellent role model for students at Blue Hills. We are excited for this new project and will be following his story closely over the next four years.”
20 December 2020, 10:39 pm EST By
Blue Hills Regional Technical School graduate Scott Tingle has been recently selected as a member of NASA Artemis Team and may possibly land to the moon in 2024, according to NBC Boston.
Superintendent Jill Rossetti said that Tingle has always inspired all of our students, describing the astronaut as a hardworking, kind, and a great role model for Blue Hills students. We are excited for this new project and will be following his story closely over the next four years, Rosetti said in a press statement.
Who is NASA astronaut Scott Tingle?
Tingle studied in Blue Hills where he graduated in 1983. In 1988, the Randolph, MA native earned a Bachelor of Science in Mechanical Engineering from Southeastern Massachusetts University and his Master of Science degree in mechanical engineering from Purdue University in West Lafayette, Indiana.
Updated on December 21, 2020 at 12:32 am
After six months aboard the International Space Station, a Randolph native has been named as one of the 18 astronauts with a chance to go to the moon.
Scott Tingle, a graduate of Blue Hills Regional Technical School, has been selected as a member of NASA’s Artemis Team, according to a news release from Jill Rossetti, the school s superintendent.
The team will work toward putting one man and one woman on the moon in 2024 for further exploration. They would then use data from that mission to prepare a future mission to Mars, the release stated.