Marlborough’s Trunk or Treat returns after two-year hiatus
marlborough | 15 L.L. Bean set to open in Hudson next month
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Vol. 48 | No. 43
hudson | 16
October 28, 2022
Class of 1952 reunites
marlborough at a glance wenzel | 12 Proudly 100% local content
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Marlborough Hudson E DI T I ON
Abutters head to court over Intel redevelopment
Beloved Hudson DPW worker suffers stroke
By Caroline Gordon and Laura Hayes
HUDSON - Last summer, Hunter Micciche could be found cleaning up downtown Hudson and mingling with the police officers on duty. Now, the once active and healthy 24-year-old Hudson resident is in a medically-induced coma. A few weeks ago, Micciche was spending time at his grandmother’s house when he suffered a stroke. “He kept texting me ‘help,’” said his mother Madeline Micciche. Madeline said he was taken to Marlborough Hospital before he was medflighted to Tufts Medical Center in Boston. According to his father Thomas, the stroke occured in his son’s brainstem, which is responsible for controlling the
HUDSON – The Intel redevelopment is heading to court. On Oct.19, a complaint was filed in Land Court by abutters – including the Villages at Quail Run, Westridge Condominiums, the Hudson’s Children’s Center and Ralph Stevens as the trustee of the Reed Hudson Revocable Trust – against the town and Intel Massachusetts. The complaint notes that the developer, Portman Industrial, hasn’t been named as a defendant because “it has failed to register as a foreign corporation doing business in Massachusetts.” Intel | 9
By Caroline Gordon Reporter
Hudson resident Hunter Micciche smiles for a photo.
Stroke | 6
Developer proposes 12-unit project on Lincoln Street By Laura Hayes Managing Editor MARLBOROUGH – A developer wants to bring a multifamily project to Lincoln Street. Located at 272 Lincoln Street, the developer is proposing a 12-unit, three-story building.
special pull-out section!
The application for a special permit was filed by 272 Lincoln LLC, which has an address of Newton. The application went before the City Council on Oct. 17. City Council voted to refer it to the Urban Affairs Committee for a public hearing on Nov. 21. Councilor Christian Dumais recused himself.
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