׉?4ׁB!בCט ( (u׉׉	 7cassandra://1Jy50Q_ZJ0wm5N7PIa4XTWaHrnWn8QxwIe69_BtnWzU U>`)׉	 7cassandra://RFCbeexIZ9dmCrCTAH_aYqE82hYA5FVarp-UfMGAy6Q͚`J׉	 7cassandra://6CBuVQVx0nRY2afohp3JhPGAaeBRpsg9Sd5nVap8Em41`̰ ׉	 7cassandra://B5WTI-jtnfClCrq9T5a2V-TwDv00rZ_RSIh5cmMHhLE )Ͷ8͠c}?8K'נc}?8K' ̿9ׁHhttp://www.advocatenews.netׁׁЈ׈Ec}?8K'׉E	Maldden
alld
a
Vol. 31, No. 47
den
AADD
-FREEwww.advocatenews.net
Have
a Safe & Happy Thanksgiving!
CTE
CAT
AT
Published Every Friday
MHS Golden Tornadoes Football
Team Made Fenway History
HISTORY MAKERS: Malden High School football captains for the 2022 season included, from left,
senior defensive end Andrew Louis, junior wide receiver Gabriel Vargas Cardoso, senior linebacker/
fullback Kyle Paulding and sophomore linebacker James Hyppolite. (Advocate Photo/Henry Huang)
Greater Malden Behavioral
Health Inc. hosts 7th Annual
Pre-Thanksgiving Elder
Appreciation Breakfast
T
E
617-387-2200 Wednesday, November 23, 2022
Gov. Baker grants pardons
to two Amirault family members
convicted in infamous Fells
Acres child molestation case
Controversial case involved Malden day care
employees who were accused and jailed,
many experts on record as stating unjustly
Above is the West End house in Malden where the Fells Acre Day
Care business operated before accusations of child molestation
arose in the early-to-mid 1980s. (File Photo)
By Steve Freker
he infamous Fells Acres Day
Care case stirred emotions
and made major headlines locally
for much of the 1980s, 1990s
and beyond.
The case also became wellknown
nationally and even internationally,
due to the debate,
and doubt, over evidence-gathering
and interviewing techniques
used by investigators to
get information and testimony
Governor Charlie Baker
PARDONS | SEE PAGE 7
Junior Aid & Mass.
Outstanding Female Veteran
of the Year join forces
Special to Th e Advocate
Resident Walter Clark celebrated his birthday with Ward 6 Councillor Stephen Winslow, Mayor
Gary Christenson, Housing Authority Executive Director Stephen Finn, State Rep. Paul Donato,
and Housing Authority board member John Matheson.
n honor of Veterans Day, the
Junior Aid Association of Malden
joined forces with the 2022
Massachusetts Outstanding Female
Veteran of the Year, Malden
native Gina Rada, to donate
household items to Bedford
Green. Bedford Green is a
55+ Veterans Supportive Housing
complex with 69 furnished
apartment homes that off er permanent,
supportive housing for
homeless Veterans and those at
imminent risk of homelessness
in Bedford, Mass.
In September, Rada was the
I
guest speaker at Junior Aid Association
of Malden’s monthly
meeting. She discussed her career
as the current District DirecVETERAN
| SEE PAGE 3
$4.64
GALLON
We accept: MasterCard * Visa *
& Discover
Price Subject to Change
without notice
100 Gal. Min.
24 Hr. Service
781-286-2602
׉	 7cassandra://6CBuVQVx0nRY2afohp3JhPGAaeBRpsg9Sd5nVap8Em41`̰ c}?8K'߁c}?8K'ށ
PבCט   (u׉׉	 7cassandra://0V0DtYwgqWNidLlbG-Nc5HjBV43R79aTXEr29ri0_oA Zo`)׉	 7cassandra://Ko5_QwVkzMQn4WTlH3kvqc0nEDgcS9ocN79MsI-mD0E͔g`J׉	 7cassandra://-FxS78c3LzKtKej4WTmKrsUtgYov5pNxtPwOcqGeHVI.n`̰ ׉	 7cassandra://UX06cvfmHsiVtOLszSwqqZdQT8a0p_QZFKVOvl9xt3w  V͠c}?8K'ט ( (u׉׉	 7cassandra://4RCYTQivojVBwbk4ByFhyORNMJOSKimIksxBFbofiak `)׉	 7cassandra://Gkug_RC-3V2PiEf_g6nET4fWU4RgTYuBdzy1RlFYQGoͥ`J׉	 7cassandra://YmkxVRuFjORvpXuPWwOQGrdVZ4XAzcpcGvPw28KVUQs1`̰ ׉	 7cassandra://M5Kwro68zwVFJL__e9cLG7sOx03E5FPtFpOKVYirUL4 ܨ ͠c}?8K'נc}?8K'  9ׁHhttp://EddiesAutotech.comׁׁЈ׉EPage 2
THE MALDEN ADVOCATE–Wednesday, November 23, 2022
Assistant Speaker Clark announces
candidacy for Democratic Whip
“Effective leadership is not about individual ambition but our collective good. I will
use my voice at the leadership table to bring people and solutions together.”
O
n November 18, Assistant
Speaker of the U.S. House
of Representatives Katherine
Clark (5th District of Massachusetts)
announced her candidacy
for the position of Democratic
Whip. In a letter to colleagues,
she outlined her goals:
delivering results for the American
people, empowering Members,
and unifying the Democratic
Caucus.
Dear Colleague,
Americans have rejected Republican
extremism and affirmed
our commitment to
working people. By standing
with women, for democracy,
and for everyone’s economic security,
we have defi ed expectations
and secured a historically
close margin in the House.
Now, we must be tough, agile,
and united to stop the Republican
House Majority’s dangerous
agenda and take back
the House.
I am ready to guide this critical
work as our next Democratic
Whip, and I ask for your support.
Delivering Results: We must
be disciplined about our mission
and message to beat back
the GOP while advancing our
shared values. I will fight for
our agenda and your priorities
while running a strategic defense.
You can trust me to listen
to all corners of the Caucus,
be results-oriented, and be resolute
in my commitment to our
values.
Communication and innovation
are going to be critical to
our eff ectiveness. We must continue
to modernize and increase
effi ciency and responsiveness
to meet the needs of members
and our constituents.
Empowering Members: Our
collective strength comes from
you. Your wealth of talent and
experience are assets, and your
ability to voice the needs of your
constituents is our best compass
as we chart a path forward.
I will develop a strategy with
you focused on the needs of
your district. Members across
the Caucus must be involved
Katherine Clark
Congresswoman
in the decision-making process
and take a prominent role. I will
help us deliver results while promoting
and protecting you.
Uniting Together: Our success
will require a unifi ed front. We
are a team, and we must leverage
our strength to win.
Effective leadership is not
about individual ambition, but
our collective good. It is about
truly listening and understanding
what each member needs to
be successful. I will use my voice
at the leadership table to bring
people and solutions together.
Time and time again, House
Democrats have proven that
when we stand together, we
can overcome great obstacles
and secure wins for the American
people.
It is an incredible honor to
serve with you, and I look forward
to discussing my candidacy
and earning your support.
Warm Regards,
Katherine M. Clark
www.eight10barandgrille.com
We Have Reopened for
Dine-In and Outside Seating
every day beginning at 4 PM
WE'RE
OPEN!
8 Norwood Street, Everett
(617) 387-9810
STAY
SAFE!
׉	 7cassandra://-FxS78c3LzKtKej4WTmKrsUtgYov5pNxtPwOcqGeHVI.n`̰ c}?8K'׉ETHE MALDEN ADVOCATE–Wednesday, November 23, 2022
Page 3
VETERAN | FROM PAGE 1
tor for Lexington, Bedford and
Carlisle Veterans’ Services. In her
role, Rada serves as a dedicated
advocate and provides a wide
range of services to local area
veterans, from helping them
apply for service-connected
disabilities and fi nancial assistance
through the Chapter 115
program to connecting them
with various other available resources.
Before
her time as a Veteran
Services Offi cer and advocate,
Rada graduated from Malden
High School in 2002 and
then served Active Duty in the
United States Air Force for six
years. Rada achieved the rank
of Staff Sergeant before separating
honorably in 2008. She had
a decorated career as an Aerospace
Medical Service Technician,
receiving numerous commendations,
such as the John
L. Levitow Award, Army Commendation
Medal, Air Force
Good Conduct Medal and Global
War on Terrorism Service MedJunior
Aid members delivered donated household items on
Friday, November 18 to Bedford Green.
Pictured from left to right: Back row: Members Linda Corrente,
Mary Doucette, Paula Higgins, President Susan Higgins and
Massachusetts Outstanding Female Veteran of the Year Gina
Rada; front row: Bedford Green Senior Resident Services Manager
Jacquelyn Cope.
their service, their selfl essness,
and their courage. They are the
heart of this country and fought
for our freedoms,” said Junior
Aid Association of Malden President
Susan Higgins. “We hope
these donations are enjoyed
by the many Veterans that receive
support at Bedford Green.
We also thank our members for
their continued generosity and
support.”
Malden native and 2022
Massachusetts outstanding
Female Veteran of the Year
Gina Rada
Malden native and 2022
Massachusetts outstanding
Female Veteran of the Year Gina
Rada deployed to Afghanistan
in 2007.
AUTOTECH
DRIVE IT - PUSH IT - TOW IT!
Cold Hard Cash for Your Vehicle!
RIVE IT - PUSH IT - TOW IT
$$ CASH FOR YOUR CAR,
TRUCK OR SUV! $$
Get your vehicle Winter Ready!
We Offer A Complete Safety Check!
• Coolant Special with Oil Change
• Top Off All Fluids
Gt
hil Wit Rd
• Synthetic Blend Oil Change
2010 JEEP WRANGLER SAHARA 2015 CADILLAC ESCALADE ESV
Only
$79.95
Six Cylinder, Auto.,
4X4, Excellent Condition,
Most Power Options,
Clean Title,
Only 170K Miles!
TRADES WELCOME!
$12,500
Junior Aid members delivered donated household items on Friday, November 18 to Bedford Green.
Pictured from left to right: Members Linda Corrente, Cathy MacDonald, Paula Higgins, Eleanor
Kenney, Junior Aid Association of Malden President Susan Higgins, Massachusetts Outstanding
Female Veteran of the Year Gina Rada; front row: Bedford Green Senior Resident Services Manager
Jacquelyn Cope.
al. Gina was stationed at several
stateside locations, eventually
deploying for one year to Afghanistan,
where she served as
a member of a Provincial Reconstruction
Team & senior medic
on 55 Ground Assault Convoys.
The Department of Veterans’
Services presented Gina
Rada with the 2022 Deborah
Sampson Award. The Deborah
Sampson Award from the Department
of Veterans’ Services
Women Veterans’ Network recognizes
a Female Veteran who
has gone above and beyond to
serve Women Veterans throughout
the year and is named after
the Massachusetts-born Revolutionary
War heroine Deborah
Sampson.
“It was an honor for our organization
to team up with
Ms. Rada for this Service Project.
Malden should be proud
of all she has accomplished as
a Female Veteran. Our deepest
thanks go out to all Veterans for
Easy
Financing
Available!
(Most vehicles)
Premium Package,
Every Conceivable Option,
Excellent Condition,
One Owner. Clean Title,
Highway Miles!
TRADES WELCOME!
$24,500
(781) 321-8841 • (617) 571-9869
1236 EasternAve • Malden
EddiesAutotech.com
Vehicle!
We Pay Cash
For Your
׉	 7cassandra://YmkxVRuFjORvpXuPWwOQGrdVZ4XAzcpcGvPw28KVUQs1`̰ c}?8K'c}?8K'
PבCט   (u׉׉	 7cassandra://9VOKIWLR2hsWE6ttIAfgtFUHFaZTH5r-iTHEe1v2urk  `)׉	 7cassandra://ZfAQu1eWZpK2_BXNchDreEEX5QrYkddWTvpnc_E1Hng͏`J׉	 7cassandra://3Hxi3liway8hSbow5EvqBOu7te8fxRtrQfma6XEt1IM-`̰ ׉	 7cassandra://FP03GGU4fDRT08a6KPJyFlVnnnCQ1FBORzK1MJRnL8A  f͠c}?8K'ט ( (u׉׉	 7cassandra://AFg5Quw4ZGH85yWuT9z-0tojYrcN-uesVLWaYEwyEe8 a`)׉	 7cassandra://GYDTlzoCC0TiIzCEPxsYYD_glvDRxOs3WFhwGfE2Yk0͈`J׉	 7cassandra://I8vjVhn38vffXxTWZETxhCPwZDtzlrnEssUIOUYDAKk(`̰ ׉	 7cassandra://x5UdBsrbKWaT9VCHs6zLaRT9Bhoi1VEO_QUvvrIHP30 )@͠c}?8K'נc}?8K'
 )9ׁHhttp://www.roller-world.comׁׁЈנc}?8K'	 \e9ׁHhttp://WWW.MACKEYBROWNLAW.COMׁׁЈנc}?8K' 	19ׁHhttp://atwww.advocatenews.netׁׁЈנc}?8K' U9ׁHhttp://economy.InׁׁЈ׉E6Page 4
THE MALDEN ADVOCATE–Wednesday, November 23, 2022
Greater Malden Behavioral Health Inc. hosts 7th
Annual Pre-Thanksgiving Elder Appreciation Breakfast
By Tara Vocino
G
reater Malden Behavioral
Health Inc. hosted its 7th annual
pre-Thanksgiving elder appreciation
breakfast at the Housing
Authority Senior Building on
Tuesday.
Residents enjoyed a breakfast.
Resident Ruthann Ferinato was served food by Greater Malden
Behavioral Health Center Clinician Christine Farragher during
Tuesday’s 7th annual Elder Appreciation Breakfast at the Housing
Authority Senior Building.
10% Off
Senior
Discount!
SNOW BLOWER
SALES, SERVICE &
REPAIRS
Pickup/Delivery
Available
1039 BROADWAY, REVERE
WWW.BIKERSOUTFITTER.COM
Lawrence A. Simeone Jr.
Attorney-at-Law
~ Since 1989 ~
* Corporate Litigation
* Criminal/Civil
* MCAD
* Zoning/Land Court
* Wetlands Litigation
* Workmen’s Compensation
* Landlord/Tenant Litigation
* Real Estate Law
* Construction Litigation
* Tax Lein
* Personal Injury
* Bankruptcy
* Wrongful Death
* Zoning/Permitting Litigation
300 Broadway, Suite 1, Revere * 781-286-1560
lsimeonejr@simeonelaw.net
Far left: Resident Haywood Fennell and Greater Malden Behavioral Health Center CEO Todd Payton
joined in.
(Advocate photos by Tara Vocino)
Resident Heidi Mullen was
pictured with Mayor Gary
Christenson and Ward 6
Councillor Stephen Winslow.
Mystic Valley Elder Services CEO Lisa Grugone, Ward 6 Councillor
Stephen Winslow, Greater Malden Behavioral Health Center COO
Ishman Williams, Housing Authority Executive Director Steven
Finn, United States District Attorney Rachael Rollins, Mayor Gary
Christenson, Greater Malden Behavioral Health volunteer David
Eastmond and Senator Jason Lewis’ legislative aide Sarah Zeiberg.
MARCHETTI CORP.
59
4.25
4.55
5.57
By Container Only
5.15
DEF SALE!
$13.99/ 2.5 gals
DIESEL
TRUCK STOP
׉	 7cassandra://3Hxi3liway8hSbow5EvqBOu7te8fxRtrQfma6XEt1IM-`̰ c}?8K'׉E9THE MALDEN ADVOCATE–Wednesday, November 23, 2022
Page 5
Artist Focus:Sowing Opportunities
M
alden’s Fern and Ginny Remedi
Brown founded Sowing
Opportunities, Inc to help
establish agricultural sustainability
in a forgotten indigenous
village in Guatemala. Chajmaic,
Guatemala is the village where
their daughter Maya was born.
Sowing Opportunities is creating
a world where leaders are
developed in their own remote
communities, where people
have the means to get themselves
and their families out of
malnutrition, hunger, and poverty,
to establish an economy.In
January, the team is returning to
the remote village of Chajmaic,
Guatemala to work with village
leadership and 30 new families
to have greenhouses at their
homes to create hope and stability
on their own land.
Sowing Opportunities works
with A Thread of Hope – Guatemala
Fair Trade to bring you
beautiful Guatemalan handicrafts
to help raise funds to support
the work of Sowing Opportunities
and to support the artisan
makers in Guatemala.
The Fair-Trade principles create
opportunities for disadvantaged
producers, establish longterm
transparent and accountable
relationships, provide capacity
building, pay promptly
and fairly, support safe working
conditions, allow for gender
equity, freedom of association,
no discrimination, and ensure
children’s rights, cultivate environmental
stewardship, and respect
cultural identity.
The artisans make gorgeous
Advertise in
theADVOCATE
Call now! 617-387-2200
advertise on the web atwww.advocatenews.net
Mackey & Brown
Attorneys at Law
* PERSONAL INJURY * REAL ESTATE
* FAMILY LAW * GENERAL PRACTICE
* PERSONAL BANKRUPTCY * CIVIL LITIGATION
14 Norwood St., Everett, MA 02149
Phone: (617) 387-4900 Fax: (617) 381-1755
WWW.MACKEYBROWNLAW.COM
John Mackey, Esq. * Katherine M. Brown, Esq.
Patricia Ridge, Esq.
425r Broadway, Saugus
chenille bamboo ponchos, exquisite
durable cotton shirts,
colorful utilitarian cotton woven
wallets and leather belts, and
unique beaded ornaments that
can be used year-round as a decoration
can achieve these goals.
To learn more about Sowing
Opportunities and see the beautiful
handcrafted works, stop in
The Gallery@57 or see and support
them at the Malden Winter
Festival, Saturday, November 20.
What more could you want
in a gift for the December holidays?
Located
adjacent to Kohls Plaza Route 1 South
in Saugus at the intersection of Walnut St.
We are on MBTA Bus Route 429
781-231-1111
We are a Skating Rink with
Bowling Alleys, Arcade and
two TV’s where the ball
games are always on!
PUBLIC SKATING SCHEDULE
12-8 p.m.
Sunday
We Are Thankful For You.
Happy Thanksgiving! We wanted you to know that we are truly
grateful for our customers. We’ll be closed Thursday, November 24th
in observance of the holiday. You can access your accounts using our
ATMs and Online & Mobile Banking. Thank you!
Monday
Tuesday
$9.00
Price includes Roller Skates
Rollerblades/inline skates $3.00 additional cost
Private Parties
7:30-11 p.m.
$10.00
Price includes Roller Skates
Adult Night 18+ Only
Wednesday
Thursday
Friday Everyone must pay admission after 6 p.m.
Private Parties
Private Parties
4-11 p.m.
Saturday
12-11 p.m.
$9.00
$9.00
Everyone must pay admission after 6 p.m.
Sorry No Checks - ATM on site
Roller skate rentals included in all prices
Inline Skate Rentals $3.00 additional
BIRTHDAY & PRIVATE PARTIES AVAILABLE
www.roller-world.com
׉	 7cassandra://I8vjVhn38vffXxTWZETxhCPwZDtzlrnEssUIOUYDAKk(`̰ c}?8K'c}?8K'
PבCט   (u׉׉	 7cassandra://_hppXyRXKkmO26z6y_hs_zkYR6ZWfD59kPzy2n36iKw n`)׉	 7cassandra://d4k9bkDCOmvU_BqH6q5fA2TkUCjmKo7tHGnqMXzk1FM͛`J׉	 7cassandra://OrXdFpIpdvAzEIEJuLaeb2qdywUPJA7aGzCQLz1m7pM)`̰ ׉	 7cassandra://vyTEIq9h8LYFEEfuhUpLRW6pHsgLjiCUyrGSZH-RBxA i͠c}?8K'ט ( (u׉׉	 7cassandra://iXOC9IX-pMZdiMNs500kxYMeMrjr1knuVLDxfTazg-w `)׉	 7cassandra://0-GN7wI5j7UVADjMyAJGOHzWmvGGV8slcaHxg69FIDA͕C`J׉	 7cassandra://zsqkqtIsg4AsZbfSxkUCfISHTbmYd3hyHVo2BqxarZw+`̰ ׉	 7cassandra://50kROA3KS5vf4ThQnQfe7gsdA0Ye1RKQoRRffZjEbb0 =F͠c}?8K'נc}?8K' V9ׁHhttp://WWW.SABATINO-INS.COMׁׁЈנc}?8K' N9ׁHhttp://2004.ChׁׁЈ׉EPage 6
THE MALDEN ADVOCATE–Wednesday, November 23, 2022
~ Malden Musings ~
Remembering Richie Cremone
I
n the “my oh my how time fl ies
department,” it’s rapidly approaching
the one-year mark
when we lost a giant of a man,
one Richard Don “Richie” Cremone.
Richie was larger than
life. He really was. He took over
a room with an unmistakable
swagger that endeared him
to every single person he ever
met. I am sure of that. And, oh
how he loved his family. As he
aged, he became a lovable teddy
bear who would incessantly
speak of his beloved daughters,
grand-kids and his forever
youthful wife (despite being
married to Richie for 48 years),
Toni-Marie. Toni-Marie surprised
me recently. I ran into her at
Richie’s old stampin’ ground, the
Italian American Citizens Club,
when she walked through the
door with her daughter Lindsay.
I was momentarily at a loss for
words (fi rst time in a long time)
as she handed me a sealed envelope.
As much as my article
about Richie meant to her and
her family, Toni-Marie’s written
words meant so much more to
me: “the words and memories
you have shared have meant everything,
to have others understand
how much larger than life
he was is so important, so much
love and thank you.”
Written from the deep within,
time to revisit my love letter
to Richie:
Richie Cremone has left the
building. But I ain’t forgetting
him anytime soon. Yes, the living
legend that he was checked
out on us unexpectedly last year
and is, no doubt, probably part
of the Saint Peter’s heavenly
choir (he’s already prepared the
skiff yskaf for dinner!).
I say unexpectedly because
he was scheduled to depart
this mortal coil many times in
the past. But just like Big Papi’s
’04 Sox, he surprised us time
and time again by roaring back
and cheating the Grim Reaper
himself. Of course he did. That’s
Richie!
For all those out there shaking
their heads and wondering
who this so called “living legend”
was, let me take a moment
Law Offices of
Terrence W.
Kennedy
512 Broadway, Everett
• Criminal Defense
• Personal Injury
• Medical Malpractice
Tel: (617) 387-9809
Cell: (617) 308-8178
twkennedylaw@gmail.com
and explain. His longtime companion
Pete Robinson once described
him as the only man in
Malden who helped put at least
three well-known local restaurants
out of business. Honestly,
though, he is much more than
that despite what Pete would
good naturedly bust his beans
about. For the last 30 or so years,
he was that beefy guy behind
the grill at the Saint Rocco Feast
with the greatest, with the most
contagious, with the biggest
(expletive deleted) smile on his
face. Yes, that was Richie Cremone
– in his happy place, with
friends, grillin’ and chillin’ at the
Feast; maybe having a snort or
two; smiling whether he likes
you or not. That’s right, that was
Richie Cremone also.
I admit to writing this under
duress. I just adored that big
slug. His passing hit me like a
Hagler left-right. Floored me. I
wasn’t prepared. I can say, not
many of us were. I just thought
the world of him, not only because
he would generously gift
me with as much of his famous
homemade chicken soup as I
could possibly eat (as many mutual
jealous friends have speculated)
– no sir – I adored him because
there was nobody ever
created exactly like Richie Cremone.
I see people out there
right now shaking their heads
in the affi rmative!
A couple years back we did a
late Friday night Tiki-Island run,
Sonny, myself, Joe, Greg, Tommy
and Richie. The spareribs (on
the bone, well done) were fl ying
off the table. The mai tais were
flowing. And Richie Cremone
was holding court. What a night.
He regaled us with tales (some
tall, others taller) all locked away
in that massive brain of his until
our waiter came by the table
and told us to drink up and be
~ Home of the Week ~
SAUGUS.....5 room Cape offers 3
bedrooms, great open floor plan,
hardwood flooring, convenient
1st floor bedroom, sunroom,
gorgeous, level lot with storage
shed, located in Lynnhurst
neighborhood.
Offered at $515,000
335 Central Street,
Saugus, MA 01906
(781) 233-7300
View the interior
of this home
right on your
smartphone.
View all our listings at: CarpenitoRealEstate.com
Former New England Patriot and Boston College Eagle standout
Mike Ruth (left) handily beat the late Richie Cremone arm
wrestling while an amused Dave Angelo looked on at the Italian
American Citizens Club a few years back.
on our way; “closing time,” he
muttered as Richie snatched the
bill up. What a night. Richie had
that way with people. They just
loved him. They really did. I’m
rambling again but there are so
many places to go when you are
talking Richie Cremone.
Let’s go way back to Brandano’s
Restaurant on Pearl. That
is where I fi rst heard the name
Richie Cremone – when he fi rst
appeared on my radar. He was
the barrel-chested, surly chef
with unkempt hair in the kitchen
who created Brandano’s famous
roasted potatoes. His skiffyskaf
first made its appearance
at Brandano’s also, I believe. According
to Richie, he put Brandano’s
on the map. He told me
that; it had to be true! My brother
Joe, after a workout at the Y,
introduced me to Richie while
we were at the bar for lunch.
Richie looked right through me
as he placed another order of
steak tips on the grill. It was love
at fi rst sight for me.
When Brandano’s closed its
hallowed doors, Richie realized
a lifelong dream and opened his
own place, Cremone’s Restaurant
(again) on Pearl Street.
The name, not original, but the
food – forgetaboutit! Before we
go any further, I need to add
my two cents: that Richie’s lifelong
dream may have been to
open his own bar, but his greatest
achievement (in my humble
opinion) may have been marrying
up. His trophy wife, Toni-Marie,
is whom I speak of; his greatest
accomplishment (oh yeah,
and those great kids of his, Julie
Ann and Lindsay).
Cremone’s was bumping. It
was home to stealers, dealers
and sidewalk spielers; con men,
sly fl ies, fl at foots, reefer riders,
dopers, smokers and boiler stokers;
dead enders, stew bums,
tough guys, bar fl ies, rich men,
poor men and longshore men.
No kidding. Richie’s outsized
personality, the best chow in
town and some of the best bartenders
in the city (with more
than generous pours) making
it the go-to place in Malden for
many, many years. I remember
walking in one night with
Greg Lucey, Bert Choff and Greg
Phaneuf. Luce knew Richie better
than most at the time. He
(re)introduced me to him. Remember
the scene in “Annie
Hall” when Annie (Diane Keaton)
brings Alvie (Woody Allen)
to Grammy Hall’s table for dinner?
Remember the look Grammy
Hall gave Alvie, and how she
visualized him? Well, it wasn’t
as bad as that, but you get the
idea, right?
We had many laughs about
that years later when Richie actually
started liking me and acknowledging
that I existed. I remember
thinking, Richie likes
me! He really likes me! Lots of
laughs indeed. Richie loved to
laugh. And I loved laughing
along with him. I remember
the last time we sat at the Club
together having Ballantines.
“Big John” came up to him and
asked if he’d like a drink. He told
John, “Can’t you see I’m talking?!”
What a character that Richie! I
am rambling again.
Final thoughts: I not only
adored Richie, but I also loved
the guy (if you haven’t already
fi gured that out). And I miss him
a great deal. Always will. We always
will. That’s it for now. But
believe me, I ain’t done talking
about Richie.
As Peter Falk’s iconic TV character
“Columbo” would say “Just
one more thing, sir” – Lindsay
& Julie Ann, about their father:
“We hope if you take anything
from our dad’s life it is the importance
of making memories.
As a family. He is gone way too
soon but we will never run out of
memories. We thought it would
MUSINGS | SEE PAGE 6
׉	 7cassandra://OrXdFpIpdvAzEIEJuLaeb2qdywUPJA7aGzCQLz1m7pM)`̰ c}?8K'׉ETHE MALDEN ADVOCATE–Wednesday, November 23, 2022
Page 7
Mystic Valley Seniors Nominated
for U.S. Presidential Scholars Program
Special to Th e Advocate
C
aroline Crowley and Eric
Wang, both seniors at the
Mystic Valley Regional Charter
School, were recently selected
by Jeff rey Riley, Acting Commissioner
of the Massachusetts Department
Elementary and Secondary
Education, as nominees
for the U.S. Presidential Scholars
Program. Crowley and Wang are
the fourth and fi fth Mystic Valley
students to receive this prestigious
nomination.
The next step in the process is
that the students will be invited
by the United States Education
Department’s national review
team to complete a new application
to be considered for national
recognition.
The U.S. Presidential Scholars
Program was established in
1964, by executive order of President,
Lyndon Johnson to recogPARDONS
| FROM PAGE 1
from children as young 3 and 4
years old.
Nearly 40 years later, it was
back in the news as Governor
Charlie Baker announced he was
granting pardons to two members
of the same family who
were convicted of child molestation
charges and served jail time
in connection with the case, Gerald
Amirault and his sister, Cheryl
Amirault LeFave.
Gerald Amirault, 68, served 18
years of a 40-year sentence before
being paroled in 2004.Cheryl
Amirault LeFave, 65, spent
eight years in prison before her
conviction was overturned and
she was released in 1995.
Both worked in the family
business, running Fells Acre Day
Care, which was located in the
West End of Malden for many
years and was a popular choice
for local families in the 1970s
and 1980s until it was rocked by
lurid accusations of widespread
child molestation at the facility.
The business was owned
and operated by the late Violet
Amirault, who was also convicted
and served jail time in connection
with the case. She was paroled
and has since passed away.
The way investigators interviewed
the child witnesses led
to doubts about their testimony
and consequently the allegations
against the Amiraults.
Governor Baker was very specifi
c in his agreement with that
key aspect of the case in a statement
announcing the pardons.
"The investigations and prosecutions
of the Amiraults in
the 1980s took place without
the benefit of scientific studies
that have in the intervening
years led to widespread adoption
of investigative protocols
designed to protect objectivity
and reliability in the investigation
of child sex abuse cases,”
Baker stated.
“I am left with grave doubt regarding
the evidentiary strength
of these convictions," Governor
Baker added.
"(The Amiraults) are deeply
grateful to the Governor for
granting them executive clemency,"
said their attorney. James
Sultan. Attorney Sultan noted
that many letters from judges
and others in law enforcement
supporting the pardons.
"His decision will help to rectify
a grievous wrong which has
remained a serious blight on our
criminal justice system for nearly
four decades," Sultan said. Their
pardons now go to the Governor's
Council for review.
The prosecution was based
on testimony of nine children,
who said under questioning
that they had been molested at
the Fells Acres daycare center.
The Amiraults have consistently
proclaimed their innocence.
Gerald Amirault and Cheryl's
mother, Violet, was also convicted
in the 1987 trial. She died in
1997 as the case was being appealed,
and the charges against
her were dismissed posthumously
a year later.
"The Amiraults and their
whole family, they live with this
— this badge, this stigma of being
convicted child sex molesters
every day of their lives,” Attorney
Sultan said in an online
report.
“Gerald is still on parole now,
38 years after these charges
Rocco Longo, Owner
were brought, he still is wearing
an ankle bracelet,” Sultan added.
“He is still subject to extremely
stringent parole conditions. He
is still polygraphed every couple
of months. He can't travel.
He and his wife can't travel to
places that they've always wanted
to travel to. And he is on the
sex off ender registry for life because
of that unjust conviction.”
A pardon wouldn’t undo the
pain the family has endured
the last several decades, Sultan
said, "but it does something to at
least fi x things, and rectify them,
so that they no longer and their
family no longer have to bear
this awful and unjustifi able burden,”
he said.
OUR OFFICE HAS MOVED TO
519 BROADWAY, EVERETT
SABATINO INSURANCE
AGENCY
519 BROADWAY
EVERETT, MA 02149
PHONE: (617) 387-7466
FAX: (617) 381-9186
Visit us online at:
WWW.SABATINO-INS.COM
nize and honor some of our nation's
most distinguished graduating
high school seniors. The
Scholars represent excellence
in education and the promise
of greatness in young people.
Application is by invitation only;
therefore, students may not apply
individually to the Program,
nor may their schools nominate
them.
The selection of approximately
4,000 original program candidates
generally is made based
on SAT and ACT scores. Approximately
twenty females
and twenty males are selected
as candidates from each state.
A review committee of qualifi
ed individuals experienced in
secondary and post-secondary
education evaluates candidates
on their academic achievement,
personal characteristics, leadership
and service activities, and
an analysis of their essay. Approximately
800 candidates are
named semifinalists and forwarded
to the Commission for
further review.
In April, the Commission on
Presidential Scholars reviews
the applications of all semifinalists
based on the same criteria
used by the review committee.
The Commission selects up
to 161 U.S Presidential Scholars
each year. All scholars are honored
for their accomplishments
during the National Recognition
Program, held in June in Washington,
D.C.
׉	 7cassandra://zsqkqtIsg4AsZbfSxkUCfISHTbmYd3hyHVo2BqxarZw+`̰ c}?8K'c}?8K'
PבCט   (u׉׉	 7cassandra://sybS4MhuaxzVg3rl35KH9X-h4IZT73taDnKahLh3C4Y I>`)׉	 7cassandra://kfA-AKyBrTJwZwVRiaQWIIWum6pULi4FMJ2kSS4qEqgͰ`J׉	 7cassandra://zgTcqLSO3_yLgM26o_grgQX9XoQMjPEJibF8QtsRqo42%`̰ ׉	 7cassandra://MgqKEufXGsZlDSO2Zv0SuHUI-Q4oQRuJ2L8IDNrp8Og k͎͠c}?8K'ט ( (u׉׉	 7cassandra://_3cyNUJG7nyVt3qdcxLWUHFZ1Bm8p8y7TwNvrFOAx7k <`)׉	 7cassandra://8Yc7eefxSkMlcOTJWWiWIx6Pmsxld5gI6XWCas8t26w͙e`J׉	 7cassandra://6GB9noiyuJRRcP9ec2fPcKbVjSVnKrPkjxzK-H2EOXY0`̰ ׉	 7cassandra://jHyYj52lBHip2Eh-yB1nNJJhexK-FVNo1aMz5JI6nPg  fR͠c}?8K'׉EPage 8
THE MALDEN ADVOCATE–Wednesday, November 23, 2022
MHS Golden Tornadoes Football Team Made Fenway History
The 2022 Malden High School 2022 Football Team posted a 3-6 record (2-4 Greater Boston League) headed into the 135th Malden-Medford Thanksgiving Game – on
Tuesday night at Fenway Park in Boston. The 2022 Malden High Football Team included, front row, from left, Captains Zachariah Pan, Kyle Paulding, James Hyppolite,
Head Coach Witche Exilhomme, Captain Gabriel Vargas Cardoso, Captain Andrew Louis. Second row, from left, Felix Junior Da Costa, Joey Fils, Vidal Garner, Earl
Fevrier, Cliff ord Raphael, John Lloyd, Deuel Obdeus, Davian McGuffi e, Alex Avalos, Karl Lange, Jerrell Calixte, Robert Schulz. Third row, from left, Jason Tan, Dewayne
Saint, Jonathan Barrientos, Kiko Cornet, Matt Brito, Johnson Huynh, Isaac Pineda, Tony Gedeus, Wyatt Dessert, Cedric Mathely. Third row, from left, Olivier Jean Sain,
Darius Blaise, Zachary Johnson, Bryan Jean Simon, Chsrlens Barboux, Jay Fenezan. Fourth row, from left, Rodner Doricenty, Christopher Da Silva, Joseph Pinet, Marcus
Pierre, Devon Wallace, Ashton Calixte. Back row, Jenn Sturdevant, Coach Darrell Heon, Coach Alishaan Moughal, Coach Jean Sylvain, Coach Romario Berneche, Coach
Patrick Donoghue, Coach Richard Voltaire, Nicura Robinson, Janelle McAskill, Samantha Jeudy, Coach Kevin Isaza, Coach Andres Arredondo, Coach Wiston Jeune,
Coach Anthony Pappagallo, Coach Jhordy Mazo and Coach Joe Pappagallo.. (Advocate Photo/Henry Huang)
MUSINGS | FROM PAGE 6
be those momentous occasions
that we’d focus on, but it hasn’t
been that. We keep going back
to the comfort of having him
there. That consistent presence
in our lives. Knowing he was going
to call at least once a day to
just ‘check in.’ Now that he’s gone
there will forever be an absence
– our lives divided into before
and after. But his light was so
great that even now that he’s
gone, we can feel its warmth.”
Postscript 1: Great takeaway
from Lindsay’s eulogy to her
pops: “He loved to tease. He
loved to argue. The man drove
me crazy. I’m sure he drove
many of you crazy too. But he
had a heart of gold and a smile
that could illuminate the darkest
room. His life was a model of
family and friendship. A life truly
well-lived. Our mom tells a (funny?)
story of hearing their wedding
song – ‘Color My World’ –
while driving in the car with my
dad one day. She turned to him
and asked, ‘do you recognize this
song?’ to which he replied, ‘yeah,
they play it at the Squire all the
time.’ That was my dad. He cared
about everything and nothing,
all at once. The man knew how
to color a world though.”
Postscript 2: To Richie: “Some
trails are happy ones, others are
blue. It’s the way you ride the
trail that counts, here’s a happy
one for you. Happy trails to you,
until we meet again. Happy trails
to you, keep smiling until then.”
Love and miss ya, dude!
Monogram D4 Double siding
Cedar impression half rounds
Harvey Vinyl
64
Replacement Windows
Custom Aluminum Trim work
Windows
& Doors
Top quality
Vinyl Siding!
•Vinyl Siding •Carpentry Work •Decks
•Roofing •Free Estimates •Replacement Windows
•Fully Licensed •Fully Insured
׉	 7cassandra://zgTcqLSO3_yLgM26o_grgQX9XoQMjPEJibF8QtsRqo42%`̰ c}?8K'׉ETHE MALDEN ADVOCATE–Wednesday, November 23, 2022
Page 9
Faces of Recovery involved Malden High School students interviewing
and documenting people on their road to staying clean and sober
By Tara Vocino
Y
WCA Teen Advocates Sharing
Knowledge (TASK)
alongside Malden Overcoming
Addiction (MOA) hosted a Faces
of Recovery opening exhibit at
Wilcox Hall last Thursday night.
The TASK program was awarded
a grant from the Greater Boston
Council on Alcoholism. The focus
of the grant was to address
substance use disorder among
youths. The YWCA partnered
with MOA. Faces of Recovery
used a youth-led platform and
interview techniques to have
those who have strived to overcome
their substance use disorder
tell their stories. MOA provided
the interviewees for the
TASK girls to interview extensively
and document their stories
through text and photographs
about their road to recovery.
(Advocate
photos by Tara Vocino)
Mayor Gary Christenson
congratulated everyone on
becoming clean and sober.
Tristen O’Neil and The Bridge
Recovery Center Peer Support
Specialist Kerri Loftus
MOA Pr esident Paul
Hammersley and his wife, Lisa,
and daughter, Bella, were in
attendance.
Mayor Gary Christenson took a photo with teen advocates.
TASK students from Malden High School, pictured from left to
right: Kneeling: Kimora Ha-Trinh, Tracy Nganga and Mitji Joseph;
standing: Joy Lugo Morales, Mia Hernandez, Nevaeh Georges,
MHS alumna Sabrina Monteiro, Ana Esquivel and Taisha Balan.
City of Malden Addiction
Recovery Resource Specialist/
Malden Overcoming Addiction
President Paul Hammersley
welcomed guests.
Mayor Gary Christenson (center) took a photograph with event attendees.
YWCA Teen Coordinator Chris
Murphy with The Bridge
Recovery Center Peer Support
Specialist Kerri Loftus
Everett residents David and
Tina Oliveri shared their stories.
Pictured from left to right:
addiction survivors Recovery
Coach “PJ Bell,” Recovery Coach
Susan Jeselonis and Peer
Support Specialist Kerri Loftus.
׉	 7cassandra://6GB9noiyuJRRcP9ec2fPcKbVjSVnKrPkjxzK-H2EOXY0`̰ c}?8K'c}?8K'
PבCט   (u׉׉	 7cassandra://zh6PQW92x8H3QKTHo8UQx7BT8XHb-cr8vbWHhCyyEHw 	`)׉	 7cassandra://VPBacLQXILJQQ3Mc-kZtFiJHOAex6p8gqSaJq6dfqbQ͢`J׉	 7cassandra://ZcCNSl9bnLQ6U5sJS5W8jpgjY_HCw5kPFBPqdqBYVSU/F`̰ ׉	 7cassandra://Hz0je4THYgZ4ta2SLBUjG3g-lK2IEE7yJxMsAINDOpU 2q͠c}?8K'ט ( (u׉׉	 7cassandra://_VRQlc8PyvqNh7IwtOgTCs4W9lM3sUznPmRNlFahgCs `)׉	 7cassandra://BTWbbzpUMw-jpZx8ykQhZnuUXQyp-JXyU94TzksgVQ4͇`J׉	 7cassandra://TKr8l2wrB9OZkBmLpoAg0oGUXIzXxFfDXgGC4-W5MXI+`̰ ׉	 7cassandra://g5BA8Lh48ZTD6A2hLKTuTgOArtVJ2fQg5DFzBbsh8LM x͠c}?8K'׉EPage 10
THE MALDEN ADVOCATE–Wednesday, November 23, 2022
Here’s a capsule look at the Malden-Medford
Thanksgiving Game History, game-by-game
This year’s Thanksgiving game will be played at historic Fenway Park,
the first time EVER it has not been played in either Malden or Medford
A capsule summary of every game, 1 to 134, from 1889-2021
Gerry
D’Ambrosio
Attorney-at-Law
Is Your Estate in Order?
Do you have an update Will, Health
Care Proxy or Power of Attorney?
If Not, Please Call for a Free Consultation.
14 Proctor Avenue, Revere
(781) 284-5657
Dan
1972
T
his detailed, colorful history
was created and prepared
by former Malden Evening News
Sports Editor Paul Leahy from
1971 to 1991 and by former Malden
Evening News/Medford Daily
Mercury editor Steve Freker
from 1992 to the present. They’ve
played 134 times before in a series
that began in 1889 and is now
the LONGEST continuous high
school football rivalry in the United
States. Malden leads the series
68-56 – there have been 10
ties. Following is a capsule look of
each game that’s been played in
the time-honored series between
Malden and Medford:
1889: Medford won the first
A wise old owl says we must
be doing something right.
50 years of selling quality cigars
R.Y.O.
TOBACCO
---------TUBES
CIGAR
SMOKER’S
DELIGHT!
15
Handmade Cigars
- Long Leaf Filler -
Four Year
Old Tobacco
Wrapped including
a Cohiba
$43.95
* MANY MAJOR CIGAR BRANDS
* SPECIAL PERDOMO BOX SALE PLUS A FREE GIFT
CIGAR LIGHTER & CUTTER - RETAIL VALUE $100 - FREE!
* NEW SHIPMENT OF HUMIDORS
STARTING AT $99.95 COMPLETE!
A.B.C. CIGAR
170 REVERE ST., REVERE
(781) 289-4959
STORE HOURS: Monday - Saturday: 8:00 AM - 7:00 PM
Sunday & Holidays: 8:00 AM - 6:00 PM
We Sell
Cigars &
Accessories
Boxes
* Tins
Competitive
Prices!
OPEN
* Bundles
Singles
Thanksgiving Day
8AM-2PM
game, 34-0, in a game played on
Friday, October 15, 1889. Malden
players protested that Medford
used players from Tufts College
and MIT. A second game was
scheduled, and Medford won,
4-0, on the Saturday after Thanksgiving.
1890:
no score available; thereChris
2022
fore,
no verification if a game was
indeed played.
1891: Medford won, 22-0.
1892: Medford won, 34-0.
1893: Its first victory in the series
clinches the Suburban League title
for Malden, 18-0, according to
Malden records. Malden won a
second game that year by a score
of 12-10.
1894: Touchdowns by Tom Flanders
and Bill Nash gave Malden its
second straight Suburban League
crown, 10-0. Medford shared first
place with the Golden Tornadoes
going into the game.
1895: Medford succeeds Malden
as Suburban League champs,
16-11, at Tufts Oval. The two teams
were tied for first place entering
the game.
1896: Medford’s 18-0 victory
costs Malden the Suburban
League title.
1897: Malden holds twice inside
its own four-yard line and battles
to a scoreless tie at Tufts Oval in
the first game played on Thanksgiving
Day.
1898: Mike Howe scores twice
as Malden wins Suburban League
pennant, 20-12.
1899: Jack Williams’ three touchdowns
pace Medford to a 23-6
victory before the largest crowd
to date to watch the series, 1,500
people. From this game on, all the
games were played on Thanksgiving.
1900:
Malden’s Elmer Rice
scored the deciding touchdown in
a 11-5 victory that earns a Suburban
League championship before
a record crowd of 2,500 people.
1901: Malden storms back in
the second half and rallies to a
23-6 victory.
1902: Dennis Papkee scores the
deciding conversion after Paul
Volpe’s touchdown to give Medford
a 6-5 victory and the Suburban
League crown before another
record-breaking crowd of 5,000
people.
1903: Jack Mather’s two touchdown’s
pace Medford, 17-5, before
another record-breaking attendance
of 6,000 people.
1904: Jack Mather scores three
times and extends Medford’s
domination, 18-11.
1905: Malden installs ex-Dartmouth
and Everett end Matt Bullock
as coach specifically for the
Medford game and upsets the
Mustangs, 27-0, in the first game
at Bryant Street Park in Malden.
1906: Paul Pray’s conversion after
Midget Cotting’s touchdown
pulls Medford out, 6-5, with a record
crowd of 8,000 fans on hand.
1907: Charlie Miner scores three
touchdowns, and Malden captures
Suburban League title, 440,
with the highest score to date
in the series.
1908: Fights and threats of protests
mar Malden’s 6-0 victory.
Medford had a touchdown called
back and a 40-yard slugging penalty
against a Mustang, who was
ejected and had to be brought to
the sideline by a policeman. The
penalty sets up a winning, 15yard
TD catch by Malden’s Dennis
Letherman.
1909: Malden’s Arthur Miner
scores three touchdowns in a
23-3 victory.
1910: Six different players score
as Malden clinches State and Suburban
League titles with 13th
straight victory, 35-0. Malden
had its only undefeated, untied
(13-0-0) season and went on to
beat Providence (R.I.) Tech, 29-8,
in a postseason game at Bryant
Street Park.
1911: Medford wins Suburban
League title on two field goals by
14-year-old Art Donellan.
1912: Malden rolls behind the
passing of quarterback Herb
Kempton, 27-0, and wins State
and Suburban League crowns
with an undefeated record.
1913: Eric Christianson’s fourth
quarter touchdown helps Medford
upset Malden, 6-3.
1914: Medford captain Art Donellan
throws for one touchdown
and returns an intercepted pass
for another in a 21-0 shutout win.
1915: Bob Foley sprints for 80
yards with a blocked field goal and
boosts Medford to a 7-0 victory.
1916: Two offsides penalties
against Malden set up both Medford
scores as Mustangs rally for
SPORTS| SEE PAGE 13
׉	 7cassandra://ZcCNSl9bnLQ6U5sJS5W8jpgjY_HCw5kPFBPqdqBYVSU/F`̰ c}?8K'׉ETHE MALDEN ADVOCATE–Wednesday, November 23, 2022
Page 11
THanks
Here’s wishing you a Thanksgiving holiday complete
with all the trimmings - good food, food friends, and good times.
Gary Christenson
& The Citizens of Malden
Mayor
Steve Ultrino Paul J. Donato
State Representative
State Representative
Craig Spadafora
Councillor-At-Large
School Committee
Ward 2
Rob McCarthy
Councillor Ward 7
Chris Simonelli
(617) 389-8100
(617) 389-1000
BUSINESS ACCOUNTS WELCOME
Jason Lewis
State Senator
Councillor Ward 4
Ryan
R
O’Malley
EVERETT TAXI & MALDEN TRANS
LESTER, PEGGY & DAVID MOROVITZ
24 Hr. AIRPORT SERVICE
PACKAGE DELIVERY
nig
H
giv
appy
׉	 7cassandra://TKr8l2wrB9OZkBmLpoAg0oGUXIzXxFfDXgGC4-W5MXI+`̰ c}?8K'c}?8K'
PבCט   (u׉׉	 7cassandra://TiedKpDza8djbJzfMl86e0CG27aKGUI76aLwr2_vwk0 	W` )׉	 7cassandra://ixbV55Yq30GuTb_Q2ADkahc-DgLg2ldqxujkfHAtAic͋`J׉	 7cassandra://heIFHTJlqIja9pReRqH1aR23WEbsAHv3QtJYMzBmf5M&`̰ ׉	 7cassandra://fZVyGUEyG4KSiC_UDQ8QX7nXXvntboVXOSMiT9mdh9M 0
͠c}?8K'ט ( (u׉׉	 7cassandra://Ur6sRzVQBwXS5Wy5q4icldZ474ZEmU0kYAqlN6UYTag 	r`)׉	 7cassandra://ncbcqaIi_QDVYBQrxfWGwAY18cm0CAy-cI0d9K49TIk͕`J׉	 7cassandra://Hk2_7WXjUg4bdsNNsQ7oJMEDx_1Qzr-O6XHy8hPv04A'w`̰ ׉	 7cassandra://cVf3r7PGDGm0BJbaNcEY_W-NayIBPV1MYtQoupI9shA $͠c}?8K'נc}?8K'! "9ׁHhttp://Advocate.news.maׁׁЈנc}?8K'  $9ׁHhttp://Facebook.com/ׁׁЈנc}?8K' ̪9ׁHmailto:ktseng@cityofmalden.orgׁׁЈ׉EPage 12
THE MALDEN ADVOCATE–Wednesday, November 23, 2022
Residents oppose proposed marijuana dispensary
By Barbra Taromina
L
ast week's City Council meeting
opened with a public
comment segment that included
letters from three homeowners
on Wait Street who oppose
a proposal to site a marijuana
dispensary on Eastern Avenue.
All three homeowners complained
that their properties
were within the 75-meter residential
buff er zone. They believe
the dispensary, which includes
a growing operation,
will decrease the value of their
homes because no buyers will
be interested in a property with
a large dispensary as a neighbor.
They also raised concerns about
possible crime in the neighborhood.
Meanwhile
councillors Craig
Spadafora and Jadeane Sica
have been working to transfer
the special permit granting authority
for marijuana establishments
from the city council to
REASONABLE
COMPENSATION FOR S
CORP SHAREHOLDERS
T
he IRS is beginning to select
a certain amount of S
Corporations for examination
to make certain they are complying
with paying stockholders
who work for the corporation
a reasonable salary which
in turn translates into paying a
reasonable amount of payroll
taxes assessed on the salary.
The IRS will be looking at
three types of distributions to
S Corporation shareholders.
1. Those of appreciated assets
where the S Corporation fails
to report the gain on sale of
that asset in the fi rst place; 2.
When an S Corporation fails to
report a distribution to a shareholder
as a taxable dividend
when required to do so, and 3.
When a shareholder fails to report
a non-dividend distribution
as a taxable capital gain
when the distribution exceeds
his or her stock and loan basis
in the S Corporation.
With the IRS now receiving
an estimated $46billion in additional
funding towards its
enforcement efforts, S Corporations
need to maintain
very accurate books and records,
keep track of stockholder
basis and loan basis, and be
sure to report taxable transactions
properly. Calendar year
2022 returns fi led on or before
March 15, 2023 will still be susceptible
to an income tax audit
on or before March 15, 2026.
This will give the IRS virtually
three years to train their newley-hired
auditors just in time
to still be able to audit 2022
calendar year tax returns. Certainly,
2023 calendar year returns
and thereafter will be
even more likely to be audited.
S Corporation profi ts above
and beyond owners’ salary
that are distributed to the
stockholders are not subject
to payroll taxes. This is not the
case with partnerships. All of
a partnership’s ordinary net
income from a trade or business
is subject to self- employment
taxes. The IRS has created
a fact sheet that serves as
a guide for its agents to determine
whether or not an S Corporation’s
shareholder’s salary
is reasonable. The IRS wants to
collect payroll taxes on all wages
in order to fund the social
security system.
If a S Corporation shareholder
actively works in the business
and does not take any salary
at all, more likely than not,
the IRS will eventually catch up
with that S Corporation and
will look to reclassify most, if
not all, of the stockholder distributions
as salary and then
assess the S Corporation for
the requisite amount of payroll
taxes. Interest and penalties
would also be assessed.
The IRS FS (fact sheet) 200825
sets forth a guideline for
agents to use in order to determine
a reasonable salary
such as duties and responsibilities,
time and eff ort devoted
to the business, salaries
paid to non-stockholder employees
of the business, what
comparable businesses are
paying for the same level of
service, etc. With the Democrats
maintaining the Senate,
it does appear as thought the
IRS will indeed be funded with
an additional $86 billion, with
$46 billion earmarked towards
enforcement.
Joseph D. Cataldo is an estate planning/elder law attorney, Certifi ed
Public Accountant, Certifi ed Financial Planner, AICPA Personal
Financial Specialist and holds a master’s degree in taxation.
the planning board.
"That in the interest of promoting
a fair and transparent
marijuana licensing process, free
from political infl uence and the
potential for state ethics violations,
that the Code of the City of
Malden be amended to change
the Special Permit granting authority
for Marijuana Establishments
from the Malden City
Council to the Malden Planning
Board," read an order submitted
by the councillors.
Benevolent Botanicals has
proposed a dispensary at 926
Eastern Ave. The Cannabis Licensing
and Enforcement Commission
approved the company's
plan and praised it for rehabbing
an underutilized building.
But
the company's application
for a variance from the buffer
zone requirements was rejected
by the Board of Appeals.
The company issued a
lengthy statement in the wake
~ LEGAL NOTICE ~
NOTICE OF FUNDING AVAILABILITY (NOFA)
American Rescue Plan Act Funds Available for Vacant Property Acquisitions
NOFA RELEASED:
QUESTIONS DUE:
ADDENDUM RELEASED:
APPLICATIONS DUE:
APPLICATION OPENING:
NOVEMBER 9, 2022 AT 10:00 A.M.
DECEMBER 1, 2022 AT 10:00 A.M.
DECEMBER 1, 2022 AT 4:00 P.M.
DECEMBER 12, 2022 AT 10:00 A.M.
DECEMBER 12, 2022 AT 10:00 A.M.
DELIVER SEALED APPLICATIONS TO:
Malden Redevelopment Authority
215 Pleasant Street, Third Floor
Malden, MA 02148
The City of Malden has received $45.7 million in American Rescue Plan Act (ARPA) Local Fiscal
Recovery funds and has granted $2 million to the Malden Redevelopment Authority (MRA) to acquire,
rehabilitate, and sell vacant properties as affordable homes to income-eligible households. The MRA is
accepting applications from qualified applicants for the acquisition of vacant properties. Applicants must
be owners of vacant property located in the city of Malden. Applications are available upon request.
Applications are due on December 12, 2022 at 10:00 A.M. The City’s Office of Strategic Planning and
Community Development (OSPCD) will review applications for accuracy and completion. OSPCD staff
may request additional information after an application has been received.
Please submit any application requests or questions in writing to OSPCD Housing Program Coordinator
Kristina Tseng at ktseng@cityofmalden.org with “Vacant Properties Acquisition” in the subject line.
of that rejection. According to
Benevolent Botanicals, "The
Cannabis Licensing and Enforcement
Commission, including
the building commissioner,
voted to move us forward,
clearly with the understanding
that, if appropriate,
variances would be issued for
such small zoning issues. the
reason they believed this is
because the City Council told
them it was so. Councillors
Spadafora and Sica were especially
active in selling this
belief - that prohibitive buff er
zones were fi ne because the
city would just issue variances.
But clearly it isn't fi ne with residents
who are aff ected.
Like us on Facebook
advocate newspaper
Facebook.com/
Advocate.news.ma
׉	 7cassandra://heIFHTJlqIja9pReRqH1aR23WEbsAHv3QtJYMzBmf5M&`̰ c}?8K'׉E#THE MALDEN ADVOCATE–Wednesday, November 23, 2022
Page 13
SPORTS | FROM PAGE 10
13-13 tie, but lose the Suburban
League championship to Somerville
with the deadlock.
1917: Quarterback Charlie Donellan’s
third-quarter field goal
gives Medford an unbeaten record
(9-0-0) and Suburban League title,
3-0. Medford, which had allowed
only seven points all season heading
into the game, won the Suburban
League and Eastern Mass.
titles and defeated Manchester
(N.H.) in a postseason game at
Braves Field in Boston.
1918: Quarterback Chet Sanford
comes back from a three-week
layoff and directs Medford to a
second straight Suburban League
title with a touchdown pass and
field goal, 9-0. Boston Commerce
nipped Medford, 3-0, at Braves
Field for the Eastern Mass. title.
That lone field goal were the only
points Medford had allowed all
season.
1919: Medford holds twice on its
own goal line and battles Malden
to a 0-0 tie before a record-breaking
crowd of 8,500.
1920: Medford recovers from
Malden fumble with less than four
minutes in the game, and four
plays later Capt. Bob Blair scores
the winning touchdown in a 7-0
Mustang victory.
1921: Honey Lewin’s field goal
in the snow in the closing minutes
salvages Malden, 10-7, before a record-breaking
crowd of 10,000.
1922: Captain Bob Sandberg’s
third quarter touchdown overhauled
Medford for Malden and
allowed the Golden Tornadoes to
share the Suburban League crown
with Rindge Tech, 7-3. It was Malden’s
first piece of a league title in
10 seasons, since 1912.
1923: Captain Joe Murphy, a
tackle, rambles 62 yards for a first
quarter touchdown as Medford
wins Suburban League championship,
7-0, and drops Malden from
the unbeaten ranks.
1924: Crowd of 15,000, the largest
crowd to date by far, watches
quarterback “Sheep” Jackson direct
Malden to four second-half
touchdowns and a 27-6 win.
1925: First-half touchdowns by
Jack Mangan and Morris Spector
propel Malden to an unbeaten
season with a 13-0 win – in front
of another huge crowd of 15,000plus.
Malden tied for the Eastern
Mass. title.
1926: Three quick touchdowns
give Medford 20-0 first quarter
lead and Mustangs hold on for a
20-6 upset.
1927: John Baxter scores twice,
once on a 90-yard sprint, earning
Malden a 13-13 tie.
1928: Medford finishes the season
unbeaten with a 7-0-3 record
and gains a share of the Eastern
Mass. championship with Newell
Wilder leading the way to a 14-0
victory.
1929: With both teams coming
into the game undefeated, an alltime
series record crowd of 18,500
The 2019 Malden High team celebrated a 29-0 shutout win over Medford High, the Tornadoes’
fifth straight Thanksgiving Day victory, at Hormel Stadium in Medford. (Courtesy Photo/Malden High Athletics)
1937: Charlie Hanifan’s
fourth-quarter touchdown decides
it for Malden, 6-0.
1938: Medford turns to defense
and the punting of Bob Margarita
to battle Malden to another scoreless
tie, 0-0.
1939: Norm Brown returns an inless
tie, 0-0.
1945: Wet weather and soggy
grounds hold Medford to 36 yards
in total offense and Malden to just
14 yards in second straight scoreless
tie, 0-0.
1946: Capt. Warren McFague
and Jackie Feltch score as Medat
(8-0-0) and Malden at (7-0-1).
The Golden Tornadoes win gave
the Class A title to Weymouth.
1952: Five different players score
as Medford rolls, 27-0.
1953: Phil Gagliardi sprints 47
yards for the winning touchdown
with little more than three mininside
the fence and an estimated
2,000 to 3,000 outside saw Malden
Captain Sam Fishman lead the
Golden Tornadoes to an unbeaten
season (9-0-1) and a share of
the Eastern Mass. title by returning
a punt 55-yards for the only
score of the game as Medford (71-0)
fell, 6-0.
1930: Malden’s Warren Mulrey
scores a third-quarter touchdown
as the Golden Tornadoes upset
Medford, 7-2.
1931: Malden finishes with
an unbeaten (9-0-1) record and
claims a share of the Eastern Mass.
championship on touchdowns
by Sam Pashoian and Lloyd Tupper
in a 12-2 victory over Medford
(2-4-3).
1932: Lefty quarterback Joe Kelly
passes Malden to 20-0 victory.
1933: Joe Kelly clinches ninewin
season for Malden, 21-0, by
setting up two second-quarter
TDs with his passing, and running
for a third score in the game’s closing
minutes.
1934: Malden’s defense and the
punting of Medford’s Torby Macdonald
are the keys in a scoreless
tie, 0-0.
1935: The punting of Malden’s
“Chuckin” Charlie O’Rourke and
Medford Capt. Art Wareham dominate
in a battle of lines in a scoreless
tie, the second straight in the
series, that enables Malden to win
the Eastern Mass. Class A title.
1936: Dexter Shaffner scores
twice, but “Chuckin” Charlie O’Rourke
steals the show for Malden in
a 13-0 victory.
utes remaining in game to give
Medford a 6-0 victory.
1954: Malden gains only 49
yards on the ground, but quarterback
Billy Brown throws for
135 yards and two touchdowns
to pace Malden, 27-9, as Malden
shares the GBL title with Somerville.
1955:
A second-quarter safety
The Malden High School 1925 Golden Tornadoes football
team was undefeated and Suburban League and Eastern Mass.
Champions. (Courtesy Photo)
terception 90 yards in the second
quarter, and Patsy Darone kicks
the winning conversion as Malden
knocks Medford from the unbeaten
ranks, 7-6. Al Zarella’s touchdown
on a pass gave Medford its
first offensive point against Malden
in 10 years.
1940: Sal “Crazy Legs” Cannava
and Bud Mahoney score
fourth-quarter touchdowns to rally
Medford to a 14-6, come-frombehind
upset in the first Mustang
win over the Golden Tornadoes
in 11 years.
1941: Paul O’Brien returns an interception
65 yards to set up a second-quarter
touchdown in a 6-0
Medford victory.
1942: Hank Corrado’s two second-half
touchdowns pace Medford
to Eastern Mass. Class A
championship and unbeaten season,
13-0.
1943: Capt. John Giannelli and
Joe Corbisiero do all Medford’s
scoring in a 21-0 victory – four in
a row for the Mustangs.
1944: Underdog Medford stalls
at the Malden six-inch line as the
close of the first half and fights
the Golden Tornadoes to a scoreford
upsets Malden, 14-6. The
Mustangs are unbeaten in seven
straight Thanksgiving games.
1947: Dick Lawrence sprints 51
yards with a touchdown pass in
the fourth quarter and earns the
Class A Champion Mustangs a bid
to the ’Gator Bowl, 13-7.
1948: Dan Duggan scores twice
and leads ’Gator bowl–bound
Malden to undefeated season
and Class A title, 33-14, ending
an eight-year unbeaten streak by
Medford.
1949: Medford’s Joe Gnerre
scores a second-quarter touchdown
and the Mustangs hold Malden
at own two-yard line later in
frame for 6-0 victory.
1950: Steve O’Brien throws
touchdown pass to Buddy O’Shea
in second quarter after fake field
goal in 7-0 Malden victory.
1951: Hank Lindberg races 60
yards with an interception to set
up a seven-yard catch by Paul Hurton
with two minutes left in the
third quarter, breaking a scoreless
tie and starting Malden on a 19-0
victory. This was only the second
game in the series in which both
teams came in unbeaten, Medford
and a 20-yard interception return
late in the frame by Bob Del Isola,
son of Coach John Del Isola, lead
Medford to an upset, 8-7 victory.
1956: Dom Fermano scores
twice and Jason Mantia once to
lead Malden to a 20-6 win.
1957: Dom Fermano races
40 yards for a game wining,
fourth-quarter touchdown and
leads Malden to a come-from-behind
victory and GBL championship,
19-14.
1958: Sophomore Lou Lemmo
scores twice as Malden romps,
26-0.
1959: John Keats, Ken Puleo and
Mac Singleton score to give Malden
the GBL title, 20-0.
1960: Co-Capt. Vic Lemmo
scores three touchdowns as Malden
romps to second straight GBL
title, 50-6, in the highest scoring
game (so far) of the series.
1961: Senior Steve Desimone
scores four touchdowns and rushes
for a conversion to set a series
scoring record with 26 points
while pacing Malden, 34-2.
1962: Bill Gouvalaris scores two
touchdowns, including the tying
one, as Malden rallies from a 20-0
deficit and fights to a 20-20 tie.
Medford stops what would have
been the winning conversion with
2:30 left in the game.
1963: Bob Baker intercepts a
Mustang pass and returns it 88
yards for the Golden Tornadoes
touchdown, and George Scrimone
recovers a fumble in the end
zone for the winning two-point
conversion in a Malden 8-6, comeback
victory.
1964: Paul Finn and John Salmon
score two touchdowns each to
lead Malden, 24-0.
1965: Joe Fermano and Nick
Esposito score as Malden rallies,
14-6.
1966: Bill Croken and Ed Hichborn
lead Malden’s 25-13 upset
with two touchdowns each.
1967: Jim Reid scores twice as
GBL champs Medford earns share
of Class A championship with
Weymouth, 22-0.
1968: Ken Rideout equals series
record with four touchdowns
while leading Medford, 32-14.
1969: Co-Capt. Dave Moulton,
sidelined with 60 stitches in his
head after an automobile accident
the night before the game, comes
off the bench in the second half
and scores two touchdowns to
lead Malden to share the GBL title
with Quincy, 26-6.
1970: Mike Byrne passes for 207
yards and a 26-6 Malden win.
1971: Mustangs conclude best
SPORTS| SEE PAGE 14
׉	 7cassandra://Hk2_7WXjUg4bdsNNsQ7oJMEDx_1Qzr-O6XHy8hPv04A'w`̰ c}?8K'c}?8K'
PבCט   (u׉׉	 7cassandra://5xjn5cnu6_QHeUjekpIlMkH2ZZrSp3XH-70QdfjlF0g [` )׉	 7cassandra://zWeKoHu3aDXk6_qVpPT_GRepi58H1EzE5XCSdJdve14͙M`J׉	 7cassandra://lo2bzb4KpQwYhGa1QJvkGqkpqJ1iPs2N9IL2S7Ruqmg$`̰ ׉	 7cassandra://yoasDHoCpADb4D-9LC6jrso-0rAX27XaKWNckQ2yJuk͍͠c}?8K'"ט ( (u׉׉	 7cassandra://3g1OGvqiYGl70zD39V3ts9HhlPaHH0V3FjgKWuGLbsQ zz` )׉	 7cassandra://MWWXCh20MScvs0lcoBJkvXn_XFESuLUgx9GxBOBajJg͚`J׉	 7cassandra://BtYjhE3B5MT6STgLbKT3CjYfVgVhhyzvGYZ4nwflxXM$g`̰ ׉	 7cassandra://VbsU3TnibXzRCPUfkoqgsCMDOcSOEgtxXsov5OMpkmA͕<͠c}?8K'#׉E3Page 14
THE MALDEN ADVOCATE–Wednesday, November 23, 2022
SPORTS | FROM PAGE 13
season in five years as All-Scholastic
Kevin Cunniff runs 68 yards
on the final play of the game. Mike
Colonna’s one-yard run and Art
Ventresco’s 37-yard field goal added
the trimmings to the 16-0 win
that meant an 8-2 season.
1972: All-Scholastic tailback
Mike Colonna closed out his
schoolboy career by running for a
series record that still stands – five
touchdowns – as Medford walloped
the winless Tornadoes, 3819,
at Macdonald Stadium in the
highest total point-scoring game
in series history at the time. It was
the last Thanksgiving game for
coaching legend Bill Tighe of Malden,
who began coaching Lexington
the next season and coached
there until 2010, to conclude a 62year
coaching career.
1973: One of the most dramatic
second-half turnarounds in series
history gave Malden a 22-13
upset. Medford led at the half, 6-0,
and then the Mustangs’ John Flynn
returned the second-half kickoff
88 yards for a touchdown that
put Malden in a 12-0 hole. But the
steady ground game of the Tornadoes’
Tom Cuhna (101 yards) and
the passing accuracy of sophomore
quarterback John Stanasek
sparked the win, the first for new
Head Coach Paul Finn, who went
on to coach 25 more Thanksgiving
games.
1974: This was simply a rout
as Malden went on to share the
Greater Boston League title with
Peabody after blasting the Mustangs,
42-15, in a contest that
tied the record for total points in
the Malden-Medford game. Tornadoes
Co-Captain Jeff Sullivan
rushed for 130 yards and scored
two touchdowns; John Stanasek
passed for two TDs and four conversion
points; John Ruelle had a
touchdown and a two-point conversion;
Mark Burns, Paul Coleman
and junior Steve DeFilippis
scored TDs; Steve Carlan netted
a two-point conversion; and
Shawn Brickman kicked two PATs.
All-Scholastic Co-Captain Jack Freker
and defensive backs Steve Carpenter
and Charlie Russell led the
Malden defense.
1975: This is the infamous “Mud
Bowl” that switched from Hormel
to Pearl Street Stadium because
of field conditions. Malden turned
out to have better “mudders” while
winning its third game in a row
over the Mustangs. Don Roach ran
23 yards for a TD in the second period
and 10 yards for a score in the
third. He also caught a conversion
pass from John Stanasek as Malden
won, 14-8, to clinch a tie for
the GBL title with Everett.
1976: A 14-6 victory over Malden
“saves” Medford’s season at
Pearl Street Stadium. The Mustangs
went into the contest with
a winless, 0-9 record. Reserve
running back Mike Finigan, who
gained less than 100 yards all season,
leaped over the goal line from
one to give Medford a 6-0 lead.
Mike Meli scored what proved to
be the game-winning points on a
sweep for the two-point conversion.
In the fourth quarter, Medford
iced the game when quarterback
Kenny Curtis scored on a
8-yard sweep to make it 14-0. In
the final three minutes, Malden’s
Shawn Brickman completed 11
passes; the final one, a swing pass
in the last second of play to Vic
Souza, put Malden on the scoreboard.
1977:
The punting game was
the key to Medford’s 15-6 victory
at Tufts University’s Ellis Oval.
Quarterback Steve Powell’s fouryard
touchdown run gave Malden
the lead in the first quarter,
but Medford’s Tony Pasquale fell
on a fumble in the end zone when
a poor snap on a punt went over
Powell’s head and the Malden
kicker was hit by Ralph Tenaglia,
causing the fumble. A blocked
punt set up a 20-yard scoring run
by the Mustangs’ Mike Tortorella.
1978: Super Bowl–bound Medford
needed a 19-yard field goal
from Franz Eberth with 6:38 left
in the game to take a 9-7 victory
before 8,000 at sunny Pearl Street
Stadium. The Mustangs scored
first when Buddy MacLean passed
39 yards to Pat Holland on Medford’s
first possession, but it was
the Mustang defense that won
the game with a goal line stand at
the end of the half when Malden
couldn’t score on two tries from
the two-yard line.
1979: Medford exploded for 28
points in the first quarter on the
way to a record-setting (at the
time), 48-24 win over Malden in
which more points were scored
than in any other game in the ancient
series. Malden made it close
at the half with a 16-point outburst,
but the Mustangs put it
away with 20 points in the second
half. Craig Martorana led the scoring
with three touchdowns.
1980: Mike Todisco, a junior
wide receiver, caught three touchdown
passes from Mike Caraviello,
son of Medford coach Armond
Caraviello, as Medford defeated
Malden, 24-12, for the fifth year in
a row. For Malden, Dan Rao completed
10 out of 20 passes for 114
yards and Ed Fitzgerald had seven
receptions for 130 yards and a
touchdown.
1981: Trailing 10-0 at the
half, Medford battled back and
whipped Malden for the sixth
straight time, 29-18, on a beautiful
Thanksgiving morning at Tufts. Junior
quarterback Roger Martorana
rushed for two scores and passed
for one to lead the Medford comeback.
Malden quarterback Bobby
Trodden connected on an amazing
20 of 28 passes in the loss. It
was the final Thanksgiving Game
at the helm for Mustang coaching
legend Armond Caraviello.
1982: This turned into a oneman
game when Warren Olson,
whose father played for Malden
High, carried the ball 32 times,
gained 164 yards and scored two
touchdowns in Medford’s 19-0
romp. It was Medford’s seventh
straight win and made Mustang
coach “Bud” Kelley’s Thanksgiving
debut a memorable one, despite
the fact the game was played on
Malden turf.
1983: Ernie Breen fired two TD
passes to Steve Walsh, and Medford
bolted to a 25-0 halftime lead
and never looked back. Sophomore
Steve Monaco’s brilliant
passing (18-for-21, 177 yards) led
Malden’s second-half comeback
that produced a pair of scores for
the 25-14 final. This game was later
ruled a forfeit by Medford, the only
ever in series history, due to an ineligible
player. It shows as a Malden
win in the all-time series slate,
but it’s a known fact that Coach
Finn and the players never accepted
it as a win, living with the score
that was decided on the field.
1984: Paul DeMayo put on
one of the best one-player scoring
shows in history. He had second-half
touchdown runs of 56
yards, one yard and eight yards
and kicked the conversion point
after each score in Malden’s 21-6
victory. The running of DeMayo
(95 yards), Reggie Hayes (82) and
quarterback Steve Monaco (80)
was the key to the Malden win.
Richard Lavoie averted the shutout
for the Mustangs with a sixyard
run in the fourth quarter as
Malden stopped the Medford
win streak at eight games. Malden
captains Guy Prescott and Danny
Valeri along with Bob McVicar
keyed the defense for the Tornadoes.
1985:
The Medford ball-control
game helped the Mustangs
post a mild, 28-20 upset and grab
a share of the GBL title with Peabody.
Had Malden won, the Tornadoes
would have been co-GBL
champs. Played two days after
Thanksgiving because of a snowstorm,
the game was a showcase
for John Hunt. Medford’s tailback
carried the ball 27 times, gained
116 yards and scored two touchdowns,
including the game winner.
Marc Bartalini and Scott Pynn
scored the other touchdowns for
Medford. Tornadoes quarterback
Steve Monaco completed 12 of
23 passes for 154 yards but was
unable to throw a TD pass. Reggie
Hayes ran for two touchdowns
for Malden; Monaco, who remains
Malden High’s all-time career passer
with over 2,600 yards, ran in the
other score.
1986: Malden scored 20 points
in the first half and 13 in the fourth
quarter of a 33-12 victory. Junior
Carmine Cappuccio caught three
touchdown passes from Chuck
Borstel for a series record that still
stands. Junior Lawrence Hicks ran
for 136 yards and a TD, and junior
Brian Hatch scored a TD for the
Tornadoes. Bob Ferrante ran for
a Medford TD, and Drew Murphy
caught a 79-yard pass from Mustang
quarterback David Martorana
for the other Mustang score.
1987: Malden drove to an undefeated
(8-0) Greater Boston
League Championship, its first in
12 years, and its best record (9-1) in
over 25 years with a 28-0 victory in
the historic 100th game with Medford,
which was played at Hormel
Stadium before a huge crowd and
included national television coverage
by sports commentator Bob
Costas. A pregame pep talk to Malden
by former Tornadoes legend
Dave Moulton appeared on national
TV that day. Lawrence Hicks
ran for 118 yards and scored two
touchdowns. Bill Roderick passed
for 152 yards, including a 46-yard
toss to Carmine Cappuccio. Roderick
also scored a TD, and J.P. Kelley
had an interception for Malden.
Chris Forbes and Joe Mucci recovered
fumbles that set up Malden
TDs. Leading the defense were
All-Scholastic and NFL-bound Dan
Jones, Brian Hatch, Nick Freni and
Mike O’Brien.
1988: Malden clinched its second
consecutive GBL title with a
14-13 win. Ed Dicks scored on a
three-yard run in the first quarter
and Bob Carroll (blocked punt
and fumble recovery) caught a
four-yard TD pass from Sean Davis,
followed by Tim Ford’s two-point
conversion run in the fourth period,
which turned out to be the
game winning points. Co-captain
Mike Freker was a key defender
with Carroll on the day. Dave Morey
scored Medford’s first touchdown
on a three-yard run, and
Kevin Gillis kicked the PAT point
with sophomore Jimmy Martorana
returning a kickoff 75 yards
for Medford’s second touchdown.
1989: Defense dominated this
game from start to finish on both
sides of the scrimmage line. Medford
won the game, 12-8, snapping
a three-game Malden win
streak, and it was the Mustang
defense that scored both of its
TDs. Scott Tropeano stripped the
ball from a Malden runner and
reversed direction for a 20-yard
touchdown run in the second
quarter. In the fourth quarter, Jimmy
Martorana broke a 6-6 tie with
a spectacular, juggling interception
return that covered 70 yards.
George Mason caught a four-yard
pass from Kevin Geraghty for Malden’s
lone TD. The other two Malden
points came when Medford
quarterback Mike Moreno took a
deliberate safety.
1990: Eric Marsh and the Malden
defense dominated this game
for the Tornadoes, 16-2. A senior
tailback, Marsh carried the ball
25 times, gained 130 yards and
scored both the game’s touchdowns
on runs of 31 and four
yards. Malden defensive linemen
Steve Froio, Christian Fitzpatrick,
Dan “Bubba” Ford and Walter Fajardo,
plus three turnovers (two
fumble recoveries and an interception)
by Mike Giblin, kept the
Mustangs in check.
1991: Mike Moreno had pretty
much done it all in a three-year
standout career for Medford, but
he saved his best for last. Moreno
booted a 38-yard field goal with
3:38 left in the game to give the
Mustangs their 9-8 victory. It was
the first field goal for either team
in 12 years, since Franz Eberth’s
game winning 19-yarder in Medford’s
1978 win (9-7), and the longest
field goal in series history. After
a scoreless first half, Paul Morey
scored for Medford on a threeyard
run in the third quarter (but
the conversion try was no good)
for a 6-0 lead. Malden took the
lead early in the fourth quarter
when QB Rob Steber ran two yards
for a TD and Deterrance Guyton
ran in the two-point conversion
for an 8-6 lead that didn’t hold up.
1992: Rob Steber and A.J. Joy
scored the Malden touchdowns,
and Anthony Lopresti kicked both
conversion points that were the
difference in the Golden Tornadoes’
14-13 win at Macdonald Stadium
on Pearl Street. Dave Dussault
scored both Medford touchdowns,
and Rich Fleming kicked
the point-after. The game started
in a drizzle, which quickly became
a downpour. Despite the rain and
mud, there were no fumbles. Steber
scored on a three-yard run
in the first quarter, and Lopresti’s
PAT made it 7-0. Dussault caught
a 34-yard touchdown pass from
QB Chris Jones in the second period
to cut the Malden lead to 7-6.
Joy raced 54 yards for his TD later
in the second, and Lopresti’s
boot made it 14-6. Dussault returned
a punt 40 yards for a TD in
the fourth quarter, but the Malden
defense stopped the conversion
attempt to seal the win. After
Malden’s win, the ceremonial
“mud dive” was held and enjoyed
by all the Tornadoes.
1993: Malden came all the way
back and then some in one of the
best comebacks in the series-long
history, in a 46-18 win. Down 18-0,
Malden roared back with 46 unanswered
points. It was Malden’s biggest
margin of victory since 1974’s
win (42-15). Senior Kurt Gaudet
was the star of the day for Malden,
dominating the game with
three TDs and 160 yards rushing.
Teammate Billy Barrat scored two
TDs and rushed for 115 yards. Junior
split end Rich Griffin caught a
four-yard TD pass and two-point
conversion pass from junior QB
Ronnie Repoza. Medford scored
the first three TDs of the game,
all by Terrell Halls, who was unstoppable
in the first half, rushing
for an amazing 255 yards by halftime,
finishing with just under 300
for the game, still a series record.
Gaudet also had an interception
to spark the defense, and Richmond-bound
senior D.J. Cunningham,
shifted to nose tackle for the
game, led defensively for Malden.
It was the final Thanksgiving game
for Mustang head man “Bud” Kelley
after 12 years at the helm.
1994: In one of the biggest upsets
in the series overall, and bigSPORTS|
SEE PAGE 15
׉	 7cassandra://lo2bzb4KpQwYhGa1QJvkGqkpqJ1iPs2N9IL2S7Ruqmg$`̰ c}?8K'׉E4THE MALDEN ADVOCATE–Wednesday, November 23, 2022
Page 15
SPORTS | FROM PAGE 14
gest of the 1990s, heavy underdog
Medford, coming into the game at
1-8 overall under first-year Head
Coach Bill Buldini, a former Mustang
standout, shut down Malden’s
high-powered offense for
a 6-0 victory. Malden came into
the game with the most potent
passing attack in the GBL and
one of the best in Eastern Mass.,
averaging just under 25 points a
game behind the rifle arm of senior
quarterback Ronnie Repoza.
Medford’s defense had allowed
just over four touchdowns a game
coming into Thanksgiving. On a
bitterly cold morning in the low
teens in Malden, Medford froze
out Malden’s passing attack to
just 57 yards on the day, on 5-of13
numbers for Repoza, who still
finished with a then school single-season
passing mark of 1,447
yards in the air; Malden’s defense
was solid as well, led by Durkins
Anthony, as the only scoring of the
game came at the end of a 61-yard
scoring drive on Medford’s very
first possession of the day, a nineyard
TD pass from senior Mustang
QB Chris Jones to Mike Nestor. The
rest of the game was scoreless for
both sides. Paul Camuso led Medford
with 89 yards on nine carries.
Keith Bevans had two sacks to
spark the Medford defense.
1995: Playing his first varsity
game ever and his first game of
the season, surprise starter sophomore
tailback Jose Harris sparked
Medford to a 25-14 victory at Hormel
Stadium with two TDs and
141 yards. Medford went up 7-0
when Harris sprinted to a 75-yard
TD midway through the second
quarter followed by Steve Bosselman’s
PAT kick. Malden had a
golden opportunity when Mike
Ciaburri pounced on a Medford
fumble at its own five-yard line,
but the Mustangs wouldn’t let
Malden score on four cracks at the
goal line. Medford went up 13-0
when Harris busted free for his
second TD, an 18-yard run halfway
through the third quarter. Malden
did rally back on junior QB Ryan
Hale’s 11-of-22, 132 yards passing.
A 47-yard pass to senior J.J. O’Brien
set up a one-yard Hale TD in the
third. Jimmy Meagher (11 carries,
71 yards) then scored on a 12-yard
run for a 19-6 lead, and Paul Camuso’s
30-yard TD made it 25-6 with
under four minutes left. Malden’s
Joe DeMartino caught an 18-yard
TD pass from Hale, and O’Brien
caught the conversion for the final
scoring with less than minute
left, 25-14.
1996: This was a “Tale of Two
Halves” and a near season-saver
for Malden, which came into the
game at 1-9 for the year, a low
point in over 25 years for Malden
football. But Medford staved off
the comeback and held on for a
27-12 win, in another frigid morning
at Macdonald Stadium – just
10 degrees at kickoff. Medford
owned the first half of the game
with a 20-0 lead at the half. Soph
Dwayne D’Oyley caught an 18yard
TD pass from Rob Baldassari,
and Art Camuso’s kick made it
7-0. Junior Jose Harris, who scored
twice the year before, got back in
the spotlight with a 62-yard TD
run, Camuso’s PAT making it 14-0.
Malden’s offense sputtered, and
Mustang junior linebacker John
Murphy made it worse when he
blocked a Ryan Hale punt and
teammate Nick DeMaria fell on it
in the end zone for another Medford
TD and a 20-0 lead at the
half. Junior Frank Femino scored
on a 37-yard run to start the second
half, and Camuso’s third kick
made it 27-0. After that? Malden
owned the rest of the game. Hale
hit senior TE Randy DiCarlo with a
13-yard TD pass with 4:38 left in
the third. Junior John DeMartino
recovered a Mustang fumble on
Medford’s four-yard line, and Tornadoes
senior Adrian Pleasant ran
it in one play later to make it 2712.
Malden drove to the Medford
19 on its next possession, but the
drive stalled. Medford killed the
clock and Game #109 was history.
1997: Senior Medford tailback
Frank Femino had a holiday to remember
in leading the Mustangs
to a 34-8 victory at blustery Hormel.
Femino ran for 163 yards on
just 10 carries and challenged the
single-game series Thanksgiving
scoring mark with 22 points,
three TDs and two conversion
runs. On just the second play of
the game, Femino motored 62
yards for a score. After Mike Vecchia
blocked a Malden punt, Medford
was back in the end zone four
plays later when Eric Giordano
scored on a three-yard run. Femino’s
conversion run made it 14-0.
Malden’s best weapon, junior QB
Timmy Philbrook’s passing, was
hampered already by the strong
winds that day, and it got worse
when he was injured in the second
quarter and did not return –
held to 2-of-10, 20 yards passing.
Medford scored two more TDs on
runs by senior Bryce Hopkins and
Femino for a 27-0 halftime lead.
Femino’s 55-yard run to the Malden
4 early in the fourth set up
his own TD run a play later and a
33-0 lead. Malden senior fullback
Gregg DeVincentis scored to avert
the shutout on a four-yard run.
Matt Donoghue ran in the conversion
points at QB. Steve Ciampoli
led the Medford defense with
10 tackles and three assists. DeVincentis
led Malden with 12 tackles,
four assists and a fumble recovery.
1998: This was a shocker. Two
teams not known for their offensive
fireworks combined to set a
new combined single-game scoring
record for the series in Game
#111 at Macdonald Stadium. It
was also the final Thanksgiving
Day game for legendary Malden
Head Coach Paul Finn, after a 26year
career. Medford used a huge
game from quarterback Mike Fahey,
who ran for 164 yards on just
seven carries, and three TDs and
133 yards from senior tailback
Pat McCarthy, for a 47-32 win over
Malden, which eclipsed a series
record set in 1979 (a 48-24 Medford
win). Medford scored the first
three times it had the ball on a sixyard
keeper by Fahey, a nine-yard
TD reception by Steve Chausse
and a 45-yard run by Fahey. Malden
broke the shutout on a oneyard
keeper by senior QB Timmy
Philbrook in the second quarter,
but Fahey hit Brandon Hopkins
with a 28-yard TD pass with under
a minute to play in the half for
a 27-8 lead at the break. Malden
came right back with a 38-yard TD
catch by Craig Barton early in the
third, but it was the closest they
would get. The fourth quarter was
a wild one, with 36 points scored
combined, another series record.
McCarthy scored on a nine-yard
run, and Fahey’s 89-yard TD run, a
record for Medford on Thanksgiving
Day, made it 41-16, Mustangs.
Malden answered with a four-yard
TD run and conversion by Tommy
Kelley to make it 41-24, but Medford
added another TD on a sixyard
run by Terence Burrell. Malden
closed it out with a 35-yard
scoring pass from Philbrook to
Matt Donoghue. Philbrook finished
with a Malden Thanksgiving
Day record of 210 yards passing
(15-for-33, 2 TDs), surpassing
Mike Byrne’s numbers from the
1970 game (207 yards). Peter Kobzik
kicked five PATs for Medford,
another record. Junior Nick Cox,
Malden’s unofficial MVP on the
day, ran for 114 yards on just six
carries, a TD and a PAT, catching
five passes for 54 yards. Malden
senior Craig Barton had six catches
for 100 yards.
1999: In the last game of the
century, Medford made it six wins
in a row at soggy and cold Hormel
Stadium, with the weather making
for a smaller than usual crowd in
a 37-20 victory. Senior Wlad Louis
was the star for Medford, along
with senior captain Steve Chausse.
Louis ran for 127 yards and a
touchdown and Chausse had 70
tough yards on just 10 carries and
two TDs. Chausse also sparked a
Mustang “D” that held Malden to
just 63 yards on the ground and
five first downs. Malden senior
captain and QB Nick Cox was his
team’s best player on Thanksgiving
for the second straight season,
keeping his team in on both
sides of the ball. He led Malden
in rushing and in passing (3-for12,
101 yards). His favorite target
was senior Scott Haskell (2 rec., 97
yards), who had a 71-yard touchdown
catch which helped Malden
tie the game at 8-8 in the first
quarter. Brad Roche returned the
ensuing kickoff 75 yards for a Medford
touchdown. The two teams
traded TDs in the second period
– Chausse’s four-yard run for
Medford and Cox’s one-yard run –
as Medford led, 21-14, at the half.
Medford started the third quarter
with a 32-yard TD run by Brandon
Hopkins, but Cox returned
the ensuing kickoff 85 yards for a
TD to make it 28-20, Mustangs, as
Malden was right back in the ballgame.
A 32-yard field goal by Mike
Piontkowski, the first FG by either
team since 1991 (Mike Moreno
game winner), and a 25-yard TD
run by Chausse sealed the win.
This win tied the series for all-time
at 51-51-10 with the first winner
of the new millennium taking the
lead. This was the final game in the
series with Bill Buldini at the helm
for Medford, as he went a perfect
6-0 on the holiday. It was the first
Turkey Day leading the Malden
troops for first-year Head Coach
Rich Cullen. Cullen made the
crosstown switch as Head Coach
of Malden Catholic (his alma mater),
where he had been for the
previous 12 seasons.
2000: This was a memorable
“season saver” game for first-year
Medford Head Coach Al Pare, as
the Mustangs pulled the “Dominick
Hasek” to take a 14-13 win at
sunny, but brisk Macdonald Stadium.
Medford came in winless
at 0-8 and Malden was 1-9, with
the victor having at least a Turkey
Day win to savor. Medford also
took the lead in the series for the
first time since 1946, going ahead,
52-51-10. Junior two-way end Luis
Zamora and junior split end Angel
Ortiz were Medford’s stars. For
Malden, senior Ricky Bethelmie
went over the 1,000-yard rushing
mark for the year. Malden struck
first when freshman quarterback
Breno Giacomini (believed to be
the first freshman to start at quarterback
ever, for either side) hit
Nevy Marc with a 30-yard pass,
followed by a 20-yards TD run by
Bethelmie and a PAT kick by Carmelo
Bari. Medford QB Dave Foley
then hit Ryan Driscoll with a
seven-yard TD pass, and Zamora’s
PAT tied it at 7-7 at the half. A big
catch by Zamora and a 20-yard run
by freshman tailback Julien Mundele
fueled the drive. A trick, inside
kick by Medford opened the
second half as Ortiz leaped high
to snare Zamora’s “pooch” kick. A
40-yard run by Zamora and sixyard
TD burst by Terence “The
Bus” Burrell gave Medford a 13-7
lead. Zamora’s PAT made it 14-7
and that turned out to be the
game winning point. A lightning
response by Malden came with a
72-yard TD run by Bethlemie, but
the PAT kick to tie bounced off the
goalpost, and Malden trailed, 1413.
Dave Richard and Jack Dolabany
made key sacks for Medford
as the visiting Mustangs crowd, a
large one despite the team record,
roared with each one. On Malden’s
last chance drive, Ortiz sealed the
win with an acrobatic interception
at his own 25-yard line, following
his game saving play with
a “Mustang Dive” into the Medford
fans as the Mustangs won for the
seventh straight time on Thanksgiving.
2001:
In front of the largest
crowd in years at drizzly Hormel
Stadium, this one was thought to
be an evenly matched battle before
kickoff, but Medford exploded
in the first half for a 27-0 lead
en route to a 34-6 victory. Sophomore
tailback Julien Mundele
led the way with four TDs and
219 yards rushing, one TD short
of Mike Colonna’s series record
of five TDs set in the 1972 game.
Medford senior Angel Ortiz scored
the other first-half TD on a reception
from senior QB Peter Krasco,
who returned to action after missing
three games with injury. Krasco
went for 138 yards on 8-of-13
numbers. A PAT kick by Mike Piontkowski
and two-point conversion
by Dennis Giannino off a
pass from the kicker were Medford’s
other first-half points. Mundele
scored his fourth TD on a 31yard
third-quarter run. Malden
senior quarterback Mike Hudd
passed for 143 yards, including
a 43-yard TD strike to Tim Konick
to avert the shutout. Hudd set
the single-season Malden passing
mark (1,571 yards) in the loss,
which still stands. Medford tied
an all-time series record with its
eighth straight Thanksgiving win.
2002: A heavy snowstorm blanketed
Macdonald Stadium in
Malden with nearly a foot of the
white stuff, but the Malden players
and coaches shoveled it off
in time to hand Medford a 12-0
shutout loss and snap an eightgame
Malden loss streak. Malden
won for the first time since 1993
and also shut out Medford for the
first time since the fabled 100th
game in 1987 (28-0). On the “frozen
tundra,” Tornadoes junior Elisee
“Buddha” Pompilus rushed
for 149 yards on 23 carries and an
11-yard touchdown. Running behind
senior captain Jim Noble and
the Malden line, Pompilus’ running
set up a one-yard TD burst
by senior quarterback A.C. Callahan
with 8:53 left in the half. The
PAT kick was no good, and Malden
led, 6-0, which stood up at the
half. Medford drove to the Malden
20 next, but Malden’s Dan Laskey
pounced on a Mustang fumble. A
scoreless third period left it at 6-0
heading into the final quarter. A
34-yard run by Pompilus set up
his own three-yard TD with 6:53
to go in the game, and the conversion
pass was no good; Malden
led, 12-0. Malden’s J.D. Pappagallo
was credited with slowing
down Mustang star runner
Julien Mundele, who was held to
just one long fourth-quarter run.
2003: Malden won for the second
straight year, 7-0, at sunny
and brisk Hormel, the first time
Malden shut out Medford in two
consecutive games in 44 years
since 1958-1959 (26-0, 20-0) and
the first time Malden won two
years in a row since 1992-1993.
The win also retied the all-time series
at 53-53-10. The game’s lone
TD came on a jet sweep by Malden
junior Jamal Woods (7 carries,
56 yards). Senior co-captain
SPORTS| SEE PAGE 16
׉	 7cassandra://BtYjhE3B5MT6STgLbKT3CjYfVgVhhyzvGYZ4nwflxXM$g`̰ c}?8K'c}?8K'
PבCט   (u׉׉	 7cassandra://twUFPmLeqoe_BQ5MtC1BTALYlHDF5pLDdtT8-0mZTuY  ` )׉	 7cassandra://Mafs3VpdvuU_cC-xOMfOru9D2miHZ5IuGJXCE6YU4XU͙y`J׉	 7cassandra://fIM_Y6ufo9g8s9x1sIt1RwdFOmfrOwd_1PiJNlZllxg#`̰ ׉	 7cassandra://CuANKcP9AN1ZKgI1Gn4jkhjnGL1fOkid6bhrDPRVHKM͕͠c}?8K'&ט ( (u׉׉	 7cassandra://eqFgDASraPZFHnVQStSufxWenxpsYqXeQw9PsKctN1E 
_` )׉	 7cassandra://69n_kKiGwiv2Po4ZbVgXCb6orxfXKsY6WsVt7dLi9zI͌ `J׉	 7cassandra://DGzkqyFBbqZiQ6FM0MSwq23Tvg7WXaWowDaiKnce6_o"`̰ ׉	 7cassandra://-ACV28vcTQyk1ULw86ALJDSy--sV-kssLaT5fRYMhAQ͕c͠c}?8K''׉E4Page 16
THE MALDEN ADVOCATE–Wednesday, November 23, 2022
SPORTS | FROM PAGE 15
Devin McNelis drilled the PAT kick
in the first quarter, and that was it
for scoring for the day, as the defenses
took over. The anticipated
showdown between star backs Elisee
Pompilus for Malden and senior
four-year starter Julien Mundele
of Medford never materialized
as each was essentially held
in check, though Mundele did
lead all rushers with 77 yards on
20 carries. Penalties stalled Medford
all game; it never got inside
the Malden 20 in the second half.
For Malden, seniors McNelis, 6-7
NFL-bound end Breno Giacomini
(4 sacks), Rob Quigley and Sam
Nelson and junior Kevin Newhall
bottled up Medford’s attack. After
the game, Medford coach Al Pare
announced his retirement after
four years at the helm.
2004: One of the biggest offensive
lines in Malden High football
history simply dominated the
line of scrimmage as Malden won
its third straight, 28-6, on a partly
sunny, brisk morning at Macdonald
Stadium. Malden won its
third straight for the first time in
26 years (1986-1988) and spoiled
first-year Medford coach Mike
DeFelice’s Thanksgiving debut.
Seniors Kevin Newhall and Maurice
Rodriquez, junior Brendan
McNelis and sophomores James
Brito-White and Brian Melo dominated
up front, and Jamal Woods
carried 13 times for 117 yards
and two TDs to lead Malden. Junior
fullback Renaldo Bloodworth
ran for 60 yards, and junior slotback
Anthony Pappagallo had 49
yards and a TD. Medford scored
on the last play of the first half
when senior QB Kevin Krasco hit
junior end Kamal Mgaresh in the
back of the end zone for an eightyard
TD. Bloodworth and Woods
scored in the second half, and junior
Wiston Jeune hit 4-of-4 PATs.
Outsized, Medford played tough
all day, led by senior linebacker
Gerry Murphy’s 12 tackles and
two sacks. NU-bound Newhall led
Malden’s defense with 10 tackles.
Malden retook the all-time series
lead, 54-53-10.
2005: Malden High started
quietly but finished with a loud
thump in a 39-6 demolition in a
traditional “Mud Bowl” game at
Hormel. The fourth win in a row
for Malden was the first time in
40 years for a Golden Tornadoes
“Four-Peat.” The one-sided win
also capped the most successful
Malden season since 1988, the
first time it had won nine games
since 1987 as it finished 9-2. Star
of the day was junior Derek Freni,
with three touchdowns: one running,
one receiving and one punt
return. Classmate Jimmy Chery
capped a banner All-Scholastic
campaign with 13 carries for 122
yards. Freni, senior co-captains
Brendan McNelis and Anthony
Pappagallo along with seniors
Wiston Jeune and Sam Guillaume
led the defense, allowing Medford
only one completed pass all
game and less than 50 yards rushing.
Medford (3-8) scored its only
points on an 85-yard kickoff return
TD by senior Kamal Mgaresh
in the third quarter. It was coach
Rich Cullen’s last game at Malden
as he retired in the offseason.
2006: Medford came in winless,
shut out on the scoreboard
for six straight games at 0-10, and
the only history many gave the
Mustangs a chance at making
was they’d be the losingest team
in school history if they dropped
#11. There was positive history
to be made instead, as Mustang
Sean Foley booted a 26-yard field
goal on Medford’s first possession
in the first overtime game
ever played in the storied, 119year
history of Medford-Malden,
a stunning, 17-14 upset at rainy,
muddy and dark Macdonald Stadium
in Malden. Medford’s fans
rushed the field after the “season-saver”
win, the second time
in the decade (2000) they had entered
the game winless and won
it, and third time overall (1976).
Malden finished 3-7 and spoiled
coach John Lopresti’s Thanksgiving
debut. It also turned out to be
Medford coach Mike DeFelice’s final
game at the helm on Thanksgiving,
as he stepped down shortly
into the 2007 season, as Medford
broke a four-game win streak
by Malden. Steve Murphy was
the Mustangs’ workhorse in this
game – 138 yards and a TD on
23 carries – as Medford shocked
Malden by taking a 14-0 lead as
drenching rain soaked the field.
Malden did regroup and owned
the second half, scoring twice to
tie it: once on a short keeper by
sophomore QB Justin Richardson
and then on a 15-sweep around
left end with just 46 seconds to
play in the game by senior Jimmy
Chery. Chery caught the twopoint
conversion pass in traffic to
tie it. Both teams got four downs
from the 10-yard line in the historic,
first-ever OT period. Malden
was stopped at the three-yard line
on fourth down by a Steve Murphy
tackle in its try. Medford appeared
to win it on second down
on a Murphy eight-yard TD run on
its try, but it was called back due
to penalty. Two plays later, Foley’s
FG sealed the win.
2007: Game #120 at Hormel in
Medford featured the best weather
since the 2000 game – sunny
and “balmy” in the high 40s – and
also brought the closest finish
since that year as well, as it took
a PAT kick by sophomore Nick
Hoyt, the first of the season and
of his career, to make the difference
in a 7-6 Malden victory. This
was a “pick ‘em” game to start and
ended the same way. Medford
scored first on an 11-yard run by
senior star runner Steve Murphy,
but could not convert and led, 6-0.
Malden (4-7) came back and tied
the game on a three-yard run by
backfield “newcomer” junior captain
David Freni, and it was up to
Hoyt to deliver the end-over-end
kick that made it by about two feet
over the uprights for the lead at
the half. That was it for scoring as
the defenses took over. Both Freni
and sophomore Marcos Almeida
ate up lots of yards for Malden,
and Murphy did the same for Medford
(2-9), but no one could get
into the end zone. Medford’s last
and best bid ended on Malden’s
eight-yard line with 3:26 left to
play when Murphy was stopped
short of the stake by Malden seniors
Andrew Dinisco and Rodney
Borgella. Medford still didn’t
quit, held Malden and got the ball
back with under a minute to play,
but sophomore Mustang QB Mike
Sullivan’s last pass of the day was
intercepted by Richardson with 41
seconds left on the clock. Interim
Head Coach Jon Wilson, stepping
in for Head Coach Jim Atkins, was
at the helm for the Mustangs in his
first and only Thanksgiving game.
Coach Lopresti of Malden earned
his first Thanksgiving win.
2008: Nick Hoyt’s foot made the
difference in the 2007 game when
he kicked the extra point that won
the 121st meeting in 2007, 7-6. In
this one, Hoyt used both feet to
grind out 153 yards rushing and
a TD, the most rushing yards for a
running back for either team since
2001, in a 33-22 Malden win. The
win cemented a winning record
for Malden, as it put the Tornadoes
team at 5-6 overall. Malden was
awarded a forfeit win when one
of its non-league opponents was
later found to have used an illegal
player, so Malden finished 6-5.
Medford finished 0-11 and, unfortunately,
interim Head Coach
Mike Marchese’s Mustangs became
the first team to ever lose
11 games in Medford history.
Marchese was coaching in place
of Head Coach Jim Atkins, who
was on paid suspension for the
second straight Mustang football
season on Thanksgiving Day. Hoyt
ran in a TD, and junior David Console
and sophomore Frankie Dunn
also scored on the ground for the
largest first-half lead for Malden
in 20 years, 19-0. Soph Ronnie Pitterson
caught a TD pass from QB
Alex Krasco, and Medford trailed,
19-8, after three periods. Herbens
Antenor caught two fourth-quarter
TDs from Malden junior QB
Skakarus Semexant, and Malden
led 33-8. Krasco finished off with
pair of TD tosses: to senior Jan Lopez
for 31, and 23 yards to Jimmy
Richardson for a comeback try
that fell short. Giovanni Sanders
and Mike Sullivan each had twopoint
conversion scores for Medford.
It turned out to be the last
Thanksgiving game for both head
coaches, as Malden’s John Lopresti
retired in the offseason with a
2-1 Turkey Day record in his three
years at the helm. Marchese departed
when Medford hired a new
football head coach in the offseason,
Rico Dello Iacono, a former Everett
High assistant.
2009: Malden made it three in
a row with a hard-fought, 13-7
win over host Medford on a crisp,
sunny day at Hormel Stadium.
This one went down to the very
last play in one of the most exciting
finishes in many years. With
18 seconds to play and Medford
facing fourth-and-goal from the
Malden 4-yard line, QB Alex Krasco
fired a pass to Giovanni Sanders
in the corner of the end zone.
But Malden’s Frankie Dunn was
there to tip the pass away and seal
the win. Both teams came in with
different hopes. Malden, at 4-5,
sought to avoid having a losing
season. Medford, at 5-4, was looking
to complete its first winning
season since 1998. Malden scored
first on a 17-yard TD catch by Ramon
Viches from Malden QB Shak
Semexant. Nick Hoyt’s PAT made it
7-0. Medford tied it in the second
quarter on a nine-yard keeper for
a TD with freshman Isad Dzolota’s
PAT kick making it 7-7 at halftime.
Malden drove 45 yards after a
Mustang turnover for a go-ahead
score, four-yard run by Hoyt after
a series of short passes to Frankie
Dunn and David Console. Hoyt’s
PAT fluttered away, and it was 137,
Malden. Malden turned the ball
over in its own territory twice in
the final four minutes of the game
on fumbles after completed passes,
but Medford could not capitalize.
Malden first-year coach Joe
Pappagallo became the first Malden
coach in 36 years to win his
Thanksgiving debut since Malden
Hall of Fame coach Paul Finn’s boys
beat Medford in an upset in 1973.
2010: Malden Head Coach Joe
Pappagallo won his second game
in two tries at the helm in a 29-0
shutout victory over Medford in
Game #123 at Macdonald Stadium
in Malden, keeping pace with
the legendary Paul Finn in 1973
and 1974. But Pappagallo made
more serious history when his
senior captain, 6-1, 305 lb. lineman
Aaron Samano, scored the
game’s first touchdown on a fiveyard
“lumber” into the end zone
in the first. Little did anyone know
this would be the only score of
the first half as Malden led a spirited
Medford bunch, 7-0, at halftime.
In the second half, Malden
used its size advantage to play ball
control – senior quarterback Kevin
Valley threw a 29-yard touchdown
pass to Frankie Dunn and
then scored himself on a five-yard
touchdown run in the third quarter.
Senior Kenny Metellus scored
on an eight-yard run in the fourth
quarter. Medford could not get
much going offensively, though
it did get solid efforts out of a pair
of youngsters: a freshman starting
at quarterback, Gene Consalves,
and junior Nick Olivier out of the
backfield. Malden’s three best defensive
players in this shutout win
were juniors Austin Teal, “Witche”
Exilhomme and Jamie McInerney,
all of whom were named tri-captains
for the 2011 season.
2011: This one was all Malden
as the visitors may have scored
the fastest touchdown in the 124game
series history when junior
Ray Sainristil dove on a fumble in
the end zone after Medford’s first
snap from scrimmage. Thereafter,
it was never in doubt, as junior
quarterback Jake Martino threw
three first-half touchdown passes
on the way to a 36-0 Malden win –
two shutouts in a row and for the
first time in 50 years, five straight
Malden Thanksgiving victories (9
of 10 since 2002). It was the fourth
time in series history that Malden
won two years in a row by shutout,
the first since 2002-2003 (120,
7:0). Head Coach Joe Pappagallo’s
Malden team posted the
biggest Thanksgiving shutout win
in over 100 years, since a 1907 Blue
& Gold victory by a 44-0 count.
Malden used its size and speed
advantage to pile up points for a
28-0 halftime lead. After Sainristil’s
fumble recovery touchdown,
Malden made it 14-0 after the first
quarter on a five-yard touchdown
pass from Martino to senior captain
Witchevalence “Witche” Exilhomme
and a Martino keeper
for two. Malden stayed in air
raid mode in the second quarter
– Martino to senior Garvin Cius
for a 23-yard TD pass, with a Pat
DeCicco run for a 22-0 lead. Late
in the second quarter, Martino
hooked up again, hitting junior
Franklin Huynh for a 15-yard TD
pass. Malden played ball control in
the second half, feeding top back
O’Shane McCreath, who picked
up 87 yards on just 11 carries and
became the first Malden back to
top 1,000 yards rushing in a season
(1,012) since Ricky Bethelmie
ran for 1,130 in 2002. Martino
threw for 198 yards on the game,
1,550 for the year and 19 TDs. Malden’s
defense ruled for the shutout
win led by fellow co-captains Austin
Teal, Jamie McInerney and Exilhomme,
the best defensive player
in the GBL in 2011. Tyler Williams’
32-yard interception return for
the game’s final points five minutes
into the second half completed
the scoring. The Mustangs had
some solid play from Max Clancy,
Chris Bucknam and Reggie Fleurial.
Medford started a freshman at
quarterback in this one, for maybe
the first time in series history,
in Gene Conclaves. They were hurt
by the loss of top offensive weapon
and senior back Nick Olivier,
who was injured and out of action
for this one – gametime decision.
It ended up being the final Thanksgiving
game on the sidelines for
third-year Head Coach Rico Dello
Iacono, who stepped down after
Game Three in the 2012 Mustang
season. He went 0-3 for the
holiday classic.
2012: The largest crowd in years
turned out for this historic 125th
Game held at Macdonald Stadium
in Malden under a fabulous,
sunny sky with temperatures perfect
– around 40 degrees. Malden
won the game, by a 32-6 fiSPORTS|
SEE PAGE 17
׉	 7cassandra://fIM_Y6ufo9g8s9x1sIt1RwdFOmfrOwd_1PiJNlZllxg#`̰ c}?8K'׉E+THE MALDEN ADVOCATE–Wednesday, November 23, 2022
Page 17
SPORTS | FROM PAGE 16
nal, to capture its sixth straight,
behind the passing of senior QB
Jake Martino, who completed 12
of 23 passes for 123 yards on the
day. Junior Reggie Thelemaque
led Medford from the QB spot with
89 yards rushing. He scored Medford’s
only TD on an exciting, 54yard
run to open the third quarter.
Junior Malik McLaren finished
with 72 yards on 14 carries. Senior
Rodney Blaise scored two TDs for
Malden on a three-yard run in the
second quarter and on a five-yard
pass from Martino in the third. Junior
Ray Sainristil opened the scoring
with a first quarter, one-yard
TD plunge. Senior Captain Paul
Kiernan caught a two-point conversion
pass from Martino for an
8-0 Malden lead. Senior Patrick
Provitola, who also played great
at linebacker, caught a two-point
conversion pass. Sainristil scored
two TDs.
2013: For one of the few times in
the series’ ancient 126-game history,
Malden High scored as many
points defensively (eight) as offensively
in a holiday win, topping
host Medford, 16-0, at cold
and blustery Hormel Stadium. The
wind chill was even lower than
the Malden final score on this day.
Malden scored on its first possession
on a 21-yard run by Raymond
Sainristil. The extra-point conversion
try was no good, and it stayed
6-0 until Malden senior captain
Jensen Ayuk leveled Medford’s
Xavier Gibson on the very last play
of the first half, scooped the loose
ball and ran it in for a safety – Malden
8-0 at the half. Medford’s defense
also played tough, causing
three Malden fumbles on the day,
recoveries by Mustangs Matt Sullivan
and Gibson. Ayuk struck again
midway through the third quarter,
running back an interception
off Mustang QB Reg Thelemaque
for a 58-yard Pick 6 score. Malden
QB Loveng Francois ran in the twopoint
conversion for the 16-0 final.
2014: This was another classic
“throw out the records” upset
win that few saw coming, except
for those on the Medford sidelines,
of course. Under a full cover
of snow, over a foot on the artificial
surface of Malden’s Macdonald
Stadium before it was cleared
by gametime, second-year Medford
Head Coach Jason Nascimento
recorded his first Thanksgiving
Day coaching win in a 3612
win over host Malden. Medford
came into the game at 1-9 overall
and looking to break a long, seven-game
Thanksgiving Day win
streak for Malden, and they got
the job done. Medford QB Adrien
Pineda led the way offensively:
5-of-12 passing for 244 yards and
three TDs, two to Myles Olivier. Pineda
also scored a TD himself on
an 11-yard run in the fourth quarter
and threw a TD pass to Jose
Lopes. For Malden, junior Danley
Exilhomme scored both of Malden’s
touchdowns, but Medford
looked in command with an 1812
halftime lead. It was all Medford
in the second half, led by Pineda
and the two-man wrecking
crew defensive duo of Matt Sullivan
and Anthony DiRienzo, who
were dubbed “The Smash Brothers”
in reports on the game. Each
also had a key interception in the
second half. Sullivan and DiRienzo
each had double-digit tackles,
making life miserable for the Malden
offense.
2015: They showed up at Hormel
Stadium for Game #128 at Hormel
Stadium… and a Madden
Game broke out. Malden scored
early, often and then some in a
raucous, record-setting victory
that honked and hollered all the
way in a 59-36 Tornadoes victory,
the highest scoring game, two
teams combined –ever – in series
history. It was also the most
points Malden had ever scored on
Thanksgiving Day and the most
since a 50-6 win in 1960. Medford
scored 36 points for the second
straight year and the most points
in the 128-game history for the series
by a team that did not win the
game. Malden also set a record in
this game as the Tornadoes defense
scored a whopping (and record)
five times on the morning.
Malden led, 28-0, after the first
quarter, and 45-8 at halftime, but
Medford did not quit, led by Cory
Moore, who finished with three
TDs and 155 yards rushing. Medford
owned the second half, outscoring
the visitors, 28-14, but led
by the Exilhomme Brothers, DJ
and Danley, Malden held Medford
at bay long enough at the
end. Danley Exilhomme returned
two interceptions for TDs and ran
for two more; DJ scored three
TDs, seven TDs between them.
Malden clinched its first GBL title
since 1989 with the win. Eighthyear
Head Coach Joe Pappagallo
added to the momentous day by
announcing his resignation at
halftime.
2016: Despite scoring early and
playing a solid first quarter, Medford
ultimately fell to Malden, 4118.
The score was closer than it
seemed, as Medford scored before
Malden was able to take the lead
with a late score and PAT, ahead
7-6 at the end of the first quarter
on a 38-yard TD run by junior QB
Jared Martino. Malden pushed
the envelope all first half, trying to
convert fourth-down situations on
three occasions, only to be stuffed
by the Medford defense. Martino
threw two TD passes in the second
quarter to extend Malden’s lead to
21-6 at the half, capitalizing on a
failed fake punt attempt by Medford.
Martino’s second TD run of
the game, a 49-yard burst, gave
Malden lots of breathing room,
up 28-6. He added a third TD run
late in the third quarter, and senior
captain Josh Simon capped
the scoring late in the fourth quarter
for an 18-yard TD to ice. Martino
finished with 160 yards rushing
and over 100 yards passing to
lead the Tornadoes. Senior captain
Matt Geer led the Malden defense
at linebacker. It was first-year Head
Coach Bill Manchester’s first holiday
win in his Thanksgiving debut.
2017: Medford and Malden,
both entering the game with winless
seasons, slugged it out in an
exciting back-and-forth game that
marked the 130th time they had
met on Thanksgiving. Medford
capitalized on Malden errors, scoring
a touchdown on a fumble recovery
and scoring after successfully
foiling Malden’s attempt at a
two-point conversion. Malden ultimately
won the match, 27-22,
and the win was the Golden Tornadoes’
only one of the season, as
second-year Head Coach Bill Manchester’s
team finished 1-10 overall.
Junior Wesley Pierre stole the
show with over 15 rushing yards
and two TDs. Freshman QB Justin
Nortelus also scored a TD, the
first ninth-grader to score for Malden
on Thanksgiving ever, it is believed.
It was Coach Manchester’s
final game; he resigned his post
three weeks later after two years
at the helm and two Thanksgiving
wins.
2018: The temperature was the
big story before this game even
started, when a record cold wave
gripped the region, sending the
thermometer to a bone-chilling
15 degrees, with a gusty
wind making the wind chill factor
around 0 degrees. Medford
was the favored team, coming
in with a 3-7 record, and Malden
was winless, but the Golden Tornadoes
capitalized on five Medford
turnovers, including a lost
fumble with under a minute to
play on Malden’s 21-yard line and
the Tornadoes clinging to a 26-24
lead. Freshman linebacker Justin
Desimone recovered his second
fumble of the game after Malden
senior Sean Stout tackled backup
Medford QB Joel Disla and the ball
came free – recovered by Malden.
Medford starting QB Keith Barrasso
had left the game two plays earlier
after an injury. Barrasso had
been the game’s best player before
that, with a record 230 yards
rushing on 24 carries and three
touchdowns. Malden got touchdowns
from junior Jerry Mervil (2),
sophomore Matthew Bessey and
sophomore QB Justin Nortelus. At
the conclusion of the game, Medford’s
10-year Head Coach, Jason
Nascimento, announced he was
retiring from the post. First-year
Malden Head Coach Steve Freker,
the first former Tornadoes player
to coach the game in over a decade,
got a win in his Thanksgiving
debut.
2019: The seniors took center
stage in a game that Malden controlled
on both sides of the ball,
from beginning to end, in a 29-0
Tornadoes victory at gusty Hormel
Stadium in Medford. It was
Malden’s first shutout victory in
the ancient series since 2011 and
SPORTS| SEE PAGE 20
Malden vs. Medford
Through the Years
Here are ALL the Scores from the 134
Thanksgiving Day and other Series Games
1889: Medford 34-0
1889: Medford 4-0
1891: Medford 22-0
1892: Medford 34-0
1893a: Malden 18-0
1893b: Malden 12-10
1894: Malden 10-0
1895: Medford 6-14
1896: Medford 18-0
1897: Tie 0-0
1898: Malden 20-12
1899: Medford 23-6
1900: Malden 10-5
1901: Malden 23-6
1902: Medford 6-5
1903: Medford 17-5
1904: Medford 18-11
1905: Malden 27-5
1906: Medford 6-5
1907: Malden 44-0
1908: Malden 55- 0
1909: Malden 23-3
1910: Malden 35-0
1911: Medford 6-0
1912: Malden 20-7
1913: Medford 6-0
1914: Medford 21-0
1915: Medford 7-0
1916: Tie 13-13
1917: Medford 3-0
1918: Medford 9-0
1919: Tie 0-0
1920: Medford 7,-0
1921: Malden 10-7
1922: Malden 7-3
1923: Medford 6-0
1924: Malden 27-6
1925: Malden 13-0
1926: Medford 20-6
1927: Tie 13-13
1928: Medford 14-0
1929: Malden 6-0
1930: Malden 7-2
1931: Malden 12-2
1932: Malden 20-0
1933: Malden 21-0
1934: Tie 0-0
1935: Tie 0-0
1936: Malden 13-0
1937: Malden 6-0
1938: Tie 0-0
1939: Malden 7-6
1940: Medford 14-6
1941: Medford 6-0
1942: Medford 13-0
1943: Medford 21-0
1944: Tie 0-0
1945: Tie 0-0
1946: Medford 14-6
1947: Medford 13-7
1948: Malden 33-14
1949: Medford 6-0
1950: Malden 7-0
1951: Malden 19-0
1952: Medford 27-0
1953: Medford 6-0
1954: Malden 27-9
1955: Medford 8-0
1956: Malden 20-6
1957: Malden 19-14
1958: Malden 26-0
1959: Malden 20-0
1960: Malden 50-6
1961: Malden 34-12
1962: Tie 20-20
1963: Malden 12-6
1964: Malden 24-0
1965: Malden 14-6
1966: Malden 25-13
1967: Medford 22-0
1968: Medford 32-14
1969: Malden 26-6
1970: Malden 26-6
1971: Medford 16-0
1972: Medford 38-19
1973: Malden 22-12
1974: Malden 42-15
1975: Malden 14-8
1976: Medford 14-8
1977: Malden 15-6
1978: Medford 9-8
1979: Medford 48-24
1980: Medford 24-12
1981: Medford 29-18
1982: Medford 19-0
1983: Medford 25-14
1984: Malden 21-6
1985: Medford 28-20*
1986: Malden 33-12
1987: Malden 28-0
1988: Malden 14-13
1989: Medford 12-8
1990: Malden 16-2
1991: Medford 9-8
1992: Malden 14-13
1993: Malden 46-18
1994: Medford 6-0
1995: Medford 25-14
1996: Medford 27-12
1997: Medford 34-8
1998: Medford 47-32
1999: Medford 37-20
2000: Medford 14-13
2001: Medford 34-6
2002: Malden 12-0
2003: Malden 7-0
2004: Malden 28-6
2005: Malden 36-6
2006: Medford 17-14 (OT)
2007: Malden 7-6
2008: Malden 33-22
2009: Malden 13-7
2010: Malden 29-0
2011: Malden 36-0
2012: Malden 32-6
2013: Malden 16-0
2014: Medford 36-12
2015: Malden 59-36
2016: Malden 41-18
2017: Malden 27-22
2018: Malden 28-22
2019: Malden 29-0
2020: NO GAME- COVID-19
2021: Medford 24-21 **
2021: Malden 12-10
2022: ????
—With 134 games played, Malden leads the all-time series 68-56, There
have been 10 Ties.
*In 1985, Medford's 28-20 was overturned due to the use of an ineligible
player. Malden chose to not include that awarded win in its totals.
**Medford's 24-21 came on May 6, 2021 in the Fall 2 season, that followed
the cancellation of the 2020 season due to the pandemic. Malden's
Thanksgiving Day streak of wins since 2015 continued.
׉	 7cassandra://DGzkqyFBbqZiQ6FM0MSwq23Tvg7WXaWowDaiKnce6_o"`̰ c}?8K'c}?8K'
PבCט   (u׉׉	 7cassandra://2KIDCdPu08pkACVYsT2HUTUmfqTlcRafMZx_zQTkQp4 +`)׉	 7cassandra://mW-IDUtbLWv7mG0xtqvoeZuH6VqEfZMrG3Mh3U3qc4oͅ`J׉	 7cassandra://KKzBjmzirb8KvFNmiu3H9tESTy107DOTiMIXv08Yjew%J`̰ ׉	 7cassandra://Xy2KRM0rQDnLkkqHnwiaerYMoAGnHxqBu--v9cwQkqQ mZ͠c}?8K')ט ( (u׉׉	 7cassandra://EybsC1rHXVawCucDNo3AivjlMx-osDH6ro4bed-wrXc a`)׉	 7cassandra://wwRD1tv9MIrpvgzvYk1c6a_DLsZku4AXiPFJASUcb8o͂`J׉	 7cassandra://7OGqakESyRD61PbwY_50oCrRMib2MirjTx2st-eRh2o'`̰ ׉	 7cassandra://-r1fcY-TisSDqYT-1l03mbCESNO6nXhPcNT5c1cpkLc ̖͠c}?8K'*נc}?8K'. r!\9ׁH @https://permits.cityofmalden.org/EnerGov_PROD/SelfService#/home.ׁׁЈ׉EPage 18
THE MALDEN ADVOCATE–Wednesday, November 23, 2022
avy eniiooravvy S iorn or
avvyavy
vvy
io
iori
by Jim Miller
How Leg Pains Could
be an Early Sign
of Heart Attack or Stroke
Dear Savvy Senior,
I started a walking program a few months ago to help me lose
weight but I've been having problems with my legs and hips hurting
during my walk, although they feel better once I stop. I thought
it was just because I’m getting old, but my neighbor was telling me
about a leg vein disease she has called PAD and thinks I may have
something similar. What can you tell me about this?
Limping Linda
Dear Linda,
The health condition your neighbor is telling you about is known
as “peripheral arterial disease” (or PAD), which is an under the radar
disease that aff ects approximately 8 to 12 million Americans.
It happens when the arteries that carry blood to the legs and
feet become narrowed or clogged over the years with fatty deposits
or plaque, causing poor circulation.
But you also need to be aware that because PAD is a systemic
disease, people that have it are also much more likely to have
clogged arteries in other areas of the body like the heart, neck and
brain, which greatly increase the risks of heart attack or stroke.
Few Symptoms
Unfortunately, PAD goes undiagnosed and untreated way too
often because most people that have it experience few, if any
symptoms. The most common symptom, however, is similar to
what you’re experiencing: pain and cramping in the hip, thigh or
calf muscles, especially when walking or exercising but usually
disappears after resting for a few minutes.
Another reason PAD is under-diagnosed is because many people
assume that aches and pains go along with aging and simply
live with it instead of reporting it to their doctor.
Other possible symptoms to be aware of include leg numbness
or weakness, coldness or skin color changes in the lower legs and
feet, or ulcers or sores on the legs or feet that don’t heal.
Are You at Risk?
Like most other health conditions, the risk of developing PAD
increases with age. Those most vulnerable are people over the
age of 50 who smoke or used to smoke, have elevated cholesterol,
high blood pressure, diabetes, are overweight, or have a family
history of PAD, heart attack or stroke. African Americans are also
twice as likely to have PAD as Caucasians.
If you’re experiencing any symptoms or if you’re at increased risk
of PAD, you need to be tested by your doctor or a vascular specialist.
He or she will probably perform a quick and painless ankle-brachial
index test, which is done by measuring your blood
pressure in your ankle as well as your arm and compare the two
numbers. Your doctor may also do imaging tests such as ultrasound,
magnetic resonance angiography (MRA), and computed
tomographic (CT) angiography.
With early detection, many cases of PAD can be treated with lifestyle
modifi cations including an improved diet, increased physical
activity and smoking cessation.
If lifestyle changes aren’t enough, your doctor may also prescribe
medicine to prevent blood clots, lower blood pressure and
cholesterol, and control pain and other symptoms. And for severe
PAD, the treatment options are angioplasty (infl ating a tiny balloon
in the artery to restore blood fl ow then removed), the insertion
or a stent to reopen the artery, or a graft bypass to reroute
blood around the blockage.
To learn more about PAD, visit the National Heart, Lung and
Blood Institute at NHLBI.NIH.gov/health-topics/peripheral-artery-disease.
Send
your senior questions to: Savvy Senior, P.O. Box 5443, Norman,
OK 73070, or visit SavvySenior.org. Jim Miller is a contributor to
the NBC Today show and author of “The Savvy Senior” book.
A beautiful wife, mother,
grandmother, great-grandmother and
friend.
You will be forever loved and missed
by all who knew you.
I Love You, Peg
Lester & Family
OBITUARIES
James M. “Jimmy”
Dempsey
Of Malden. A
lifelong resident,
passed away suddenly
on Tuesday,
November 15th. Jim
was born in Malden
in 1951, the son of
William and Teresa
Dempsey. He was
raised in Malden, and graduated from
BC High School with the Class of 1969.
He then attended Salem State University
where he received his Bachelors
Degree in teaching. He went on to
become a teacher for the City of Malden.
He taught Automotive at the High
School for many years before moving
on to the Maplewood School where
he taught 6th Grade. He married Kim
(Gatie) of Weymouth in 1982 and they
lived and raised their family together
in Malden.
Jimmy was very handy, and could
fi x just about anything. He was a skilled
guitarist, and played with his band
Snakeshot in his younger years.
He
was passionate about boats and cars,
especially Corvettes and El Caminos.
He was a friend to everyone he met,
and would talk for hours if you let
him. His pride and joy was his family,
and he enjoyed spending time with
his children and grandchildren. Jimmy’s
proudest title came in 2021 as
“Papa Jim” to his two grandsons, John
and Evan.
He is survived by his wife, Kim
Dempsey, and children, William
Dempsey and wife Lisa of Peabody,
Anne Marie Lyons and husband Peter
of Winthrop, and Mary Beth Dempsey
of Lynnfield, his father, William T.J.
Dempsey of Malden, his brother Joseph
M. Dempsey of FL, his sisters,
Mary Ann Boari of Woburn and Jean M.
Perrigo of FL, his grandchildren, John
and Evan. He was a beloved “Best Pal”
to Anthony, Alyssa, and Philip Messina.
Jim was preceded in death by his
mother Teresa Dempsey, and his brother
William Dempsey.
Funeral services were held on Tuesday,
November 22, at the Weir-MacCuish
Golden Rule Funeral Home, Malden.
Malcolm J. "
Mac" Bennett
Of Malden. It is
with great sadness
that we announce
the passing of our
Dad, Malcolm John
“Mac” Bennett.
Mac was a resident
of Malden for 96
years. He passed
surrounded by his
family on November
11, at the longtime
family home
on High Street.
Mac was the loving husband of
Rita E. O’Neil, the love of his life for almost
60 years.
He was the son of Michael and Helen
Enwright. Mac was the loving father
to Ann Marie and Richard Tilley of
Malden, Kathleen and Robert O’Keefe
of Oakham, Barbara Bennett and Susan
Packard of Arlington, Colleen and
Anthony Chiccuarelli of Malden, Kevin
and Janine Bennett of North Reading,
and Christopher and Erin Bennett
of Wakefi eld. Survived by his brother,
Robert White of Waltham. He was
a cherished Grampy to Michael Tilley
and his wife Colleen, Brian Tilley and
his wife Nicole Santangelo, Kristen
(Tilley) D’Amico and her husband Michael,
Daniel O’Keefe and his wife Jessica,
Maura (O’Keefe) Eldridge and her
husband Christopher, Patrick O’Keefe
and his wife Crystal, Cailyn Chiccuarelli
and her fi ancé Dave Troiani, David
Chiccuarelli, Bailey Chiccuarelli, Caroline
Bennett, and John Bennett. Mac
was blessed with twelve great grandchildren
Madelyn, Brendan, Michael
Jr., Julianna, Charlotte ‘Mac’, Evan,
Ayla, Killian, Ronan, Reaghan, Finnegan,
and Mairead. His extended family
included the White families, the
O’Neil families, the LaCourt families,
the McGillicuddy families, Marie and
Nicky Iacoviello, and sister-in-law Patricia
Enwright.
Mac was predeceased by brothers
Michael “Buddy” Enwright, William
“Inky” Enwright, Daniel Enwright, sister
Claire Jones, sister-in-law Nita Enwright,
and members of the White
family. Also, brother-in-law John O’Neil
and his wife Lillian, and Francis “Buddy”
O’Neil and his wife Barbara. Mac
was a beloved uncle to many nieces
and nephews and friend of the late
Ann Brown.
Mac enlisted in the Coast Guard
during World War II and as a result was
unable to fi nish his education at Malden
High School. Later in life he was
was given an honorary Malden High
School diploma by Mayor Gary Christenson.
Mac was employed by the City
OBITUARIES | SEE PAGE 19
~ Five Year Anniversary ~
December 20, 1940 - November 25, 2017
׉	 7cassandra://KKzBjmzirb8KvFNmiu3H9tESTy107DOTiMIXv08Yjew%J`̰ c}?8K'׉E
THE MALDEN ADVOCATE–Wednesday, November 23, 2022
Page 19
OBITUARIES| FROM PAGE 18
of Malden for many years. He started at
the Cemetery Department, became a
Malden Police officer, and then became
a proud firefighter of the Malden
Fire Department, where he served
for over 36 years. Mac was a member
of many local organizations. He was
involved in the Malden Fire Department
Union, serving as both president
and vice-president, and served as local
Commander to the Malden VFW Post
639 for several terms.
Relatives and friends were invited
to celebrate Mac’s life at his funeral
from the Breslin Funeral Home, Mal–
LEGAL NOTICE –
den, on Thursday, November 17th with
a Funeral and a Mass of Christian Burial
celebrated at Immaculate Conception
Church, Malden on Friday.
In lieu of flowers, the family requested
honoring Mac with a donation
to the Malden Firefighter’s Benevolent
Fund, 1 Sprague Street, Malden
Ma 02148.
Your Hometown News Delivered!
EVERETT ADVOCATE
MALDEN ADVOCATE
REVERE ADVOCATE
SAUGUS ADVOCATE
One year subscription to
City of Malden, Massachusetts
MALDEN PLANNING BOARD PUBLIC HEARING
The Malden Planning Board will hold a public hearing in the Herbert L.
Jackson Council Chamber, Malden City Hall, 215 Pleasant Street, Malden,
MA at 7:00 P.M. on Wednesday, December 14, 2022 on the petition of
Anthony Centrella, Trustee of 62-64 Street Realty Trust (permit application
# RES 047277-2022) seeking a special permit under Title 12, Chapter 28,
Section 130 of the Code of the City of Malden, to allow ledge removal and
alteration of grade, to prepare the property to construct a single-family
dwelling, at the property known as and numbered Highland Avenue (no
number), Malden, MA, and also known by City Assessor’s Parcel ID #002 014
447. Petition and plans are available for public review in the Inspectional
Services Department, City Hall, 215 Pleasant Street, 3rd Floor, Malden, MA and
on the City website under permit application # RES 047277-2022
https://permits.cityofmalden.org/EnerGov_PROD/SelfService#/home.
Kenneth Antonucci
Clerk
November 23, 2022
December 2, 2022
The Advocate of your choice:
$150 per paper in-town per year or
$200 per paper out-of-town per year.
Name_________________________________________
Address_______________________________________
City_______________ State_______ Zip ____________
CC# _______________________________ Exp. _____
Sec. code____ Advocate (City):___________________
Clip & Mail Coupon with Credit Card, Check or Money Order to:
Advocate Newspapers Inc.
PO Box 490407, Everett, MA 02149
׉	 7cassandra://7OGqakESyRD61PbwY_50oCrRMib2MirjTx2st-eRh2o'`̰ c}?8K'c}?8K'
PבCט   (u׉׉	 7cassandra://InqVcthSkOCz197ZOkwoV5OXMPZe3HTaecLX1mkk1z8 `)׉	 7cassandra://wV_wfURBeiNY5Puj-MS3NX6HI5cdew1HQ5BkCsd8rzQ͐`J׉	 7cassandra://BIcbPff7I03QBeko-B089Cs-1D3-EuOSlQ3bHoL5ps4&`̰ ׉	 7cassandra://9yVtLdkgsuYsVST0itG5dd6QV2Lc8iwYEp8NApSEDAw ͠c}?8K'/ט ( (u׉׉	 7cassandra://GXjCumnKICBfQNKKx91iFF8Hgo7LU8rmQQCy4usAkKs 4K`)׉	 7cassandra://5IN4y_9dWYOAzwF95E9zaZOKHrvF3iRuO054L13x9Agͨ`J׉	 7cassandra://5It0r6tfW6wDjjq35FqyyeRDjLipB0zRfbwp2FLXigA4h`̰ ׉	 7cassandra://rkJdGlEuuOO5Npmy4EeC_oOqClNpS87BQbT9RVaWfzw կ_͠c}?8K'0נc}?8K'3 	C9ׁHhttp://www.advocatenews.netׁׁЈנc}?8K'2 9ׁHmailto:dina@angelosoil.comׁׁЈ׉E vPage 20
THE MALDEN ADVOCATE–Wednesday, November 23, 2022
SPORTS | FROM PAGE 17
1. November 25 is Black Friday; in the 1800s, what did Black
Friday mean?
2. In what city would you fi nd The AKC Museum of the Dog?
3. Whose backup band was called the Spiders from Mars?
4. On Nov. 26, 2021, the World Health Organization identifi ed
what variant?
5. According to the “Farmers’ Almanac,” what is the USA’s most
popular commercially sold potted plant?
6. On Nov. 27, 1924, what parade was fi rst held?
7. In the song “Tighten Up” by Archie Bell & the Drells, what
does “Tighten Up” refer to?
8. Who played a nun in the fi lm “The Bells of St. Mary’s”?
9. On Nov. 28, 1907, Louis B. Mayer (future movie producer)
opened his fi rst movie theater; where in Massachusetts was
it: Boston, Haverhill or Holyoke?
10. What are the only two perennial vegetables?
11. In 1904 the American Lung Association was founded to
fi ght what disease?
12. Why is the Northern Hemisphere colder than the Southern
Hemisphere?
13. On Nov. 29, 1832, what author was born who lived at places
including Fruitlands, Orchard House and Washington, D.C.?
14. What calendar (its name is also a person’s name) preceded
the Gregorian calendar?
15. What region is known as the “Roof of the World”?
16. On Nov. 30, 1998, what two energy-related companies
merged to create the largest company at the time?
17. How can a snail stick to a surface upside down?
18. According to Guinness World Records, in 2017 the world’s
longest noodle was cooked in China – 10,119 feet plus 1.92
inches; how long did it take to roll out: four, 11 or 17 hours?
19. What fall fruit has been declared by the FDA to have a
National Month in December?
20. On Dec. 1, 1918, Iceland became a sovereign state, but
remained part of what kingdom?
ANSWERS
AAA Service • Lockouts
Trespass Towing • Roadside Service
Junk Car Removal
617-387-6877
26 Garvey St., Everett
MDPU 28003 ICCMC 251976
fi nished off the Tornadoes’ season
with a pair of wins (2-9), its fi fth
straight over Medford. The Mustangs
finished winless. Malden
scored fi rst on an 11-yard touchdown
pass to senior co-captain
Jamari Youman (5 rec., 78 yards, 1
TD) from sophomore QB Shawn
Bartholomew, who was making
his fi rst Thanksgiving Day start.
Medford stuffed the two-point
conversion try, and Malden led,
6-0. The lead held up until late in
the second quarter, despite two
deep drives into Medford territory
by Malden, which ended on fourth
down inside the Mustang 10-yard.
With under three minutes left in
the half, sophomore placekicker
Ronald Juarez kicked the fi rst
Malden fi eld goal in a Thanksgiving
Day win since the 1950s when
he booted a 37-yarder through a
rain shower for a 9-0 Malden halftime
lead. The Tornadoes defense,
as it was all game, had been solid
in the fi rst half, led by sophomore
D-linemen Sammy Solorzano,
Davenche Sydney and senior
co-captains tackle Ray Duggan
and cornerback Ismael Sylus,
who made the loudest hit of
the Malden season to stop a Mustang
drive. Malden held Medford
to zero fi rst downs and less than
50 yards total off ense in the fi rst
half. Senior Jerry Mervil (102 yards
rushing, 48 yards receiving) scored
on the second play of the second
half, a 55-yard TD run, for a 15-0
lead. Youman picked off a Medford
pass and ran it for 55 yards
for a 21-0 lead; Juarez’s PAT was
good for 22-0. After some strong
running by sophomore Mackenley
Anasthal to get the ball to the
Medford 25, senior captain Peterson
Maxis closed out the scoring
with a 15-yard TD run – and
Juarez’s second PAT kick. It was the
debut on Thanksgiving for Medford
High fi rst-year Head Coach
John Curley. Malden Head Coach
Steve Freker was the fi rst former
Tornadoes player-turned-headcoach
to go 2-0 in on Thanksgiving
in his fi rst two games at the helm.
2020: no game, no season; cancelled
due to COVID-19 pandemic.
2021 (May 6, 2021, Fall 2): For the
fi rst time since 1897, almost 125
years, The Game was not planned
to be played on Thanksgiving Day,
because the once-in-100-years
COVID-19 pandemic cancelled the
2020 Fall Sports Season in Massachusetts.
This 132nd game was
not considered a “Thanksgiving
Game” due to it being played on
May 6, 2022, in the so-called “Fall
2 season,” but by playing the game
at all, Malden-Medford catapulted
past Boston English-Boston Latin,
which did not play in 2020 or Fall
2, to become THE longest continuous
high school football rivalry
in the United States. In a game
played at balmy Macdonald Stadium
(temperature in the low 60s),
Medford snapped a 14-game losing
streak overall, dating back to
the 2018 season, with a 24-21 win
over Malden. The game was close
throughout and even went down
to the last play, a 37-yard field
goal attempt by senior Tornadoes
placekicker Ronald Juarez, which
went just wide left as time ran out,
sending the Medford team rushing
the fi eld in a raucous celebration.
The top star of the game was
Medford senior quarterback Aidan
Barry, who totaled over 300 yards
of off ense individually, including
108 yards rushing and 2 TDs, to
go along with nearly 200 yards
passing and 2 TDs. Barry had one
of the best games ever for a Mustang
passer on Thanksgiving, connecting
on 19 of 25 passes for 203
yards. Alvin Legros (7 catches, 85
yards, 1 TD) was his favorite target.
Malden’s top off ensive performer
was senior Giovani Memeus (14
carries, 63 yards, 2 TDs). Malden
trailed, 24-21, after a 32-yard TD
pass from junior QB Shawn Bartholomew
to Nelson Monosiet
and then got a last chance when
the Tornadoes got a turnover on
downs at its own 34 with 2:36 to
play. But Malden’s drive stalled at
the Medford 27 after a costly holding
penalty, and the game ended
on the missed kick. It was Malden
Head Coach Steve Freker’s fi -
nal game on the sidelines, as the
reins were handed to assistant
coach Witche Exilhomme in the
off season.
2021: The game returned to
Thanksgiving Day in November
of 2021 and stayed in Malden as
the Tornadoes kept their dominance
intact with a 12-10 victory
over visiting Medford. It was Malden’s
sixth straight Thanksgiving
victory, dating back to 2016. Malden
got off to the best start possible
when sophomore Davian McGuffi
e took the opening kickoff “to
the house,” – 73 yards – for a Malden
touchdown. Ronald Juarez’s
PAT kick made it 7-0, Malden, before
most fans had even settled in
their seats. Medford’s off ense had
success moving the ball in the fi rst
half, but Malden’s defense stiff -
ened with two goal-line stands
to keep the 7-0 lead intact. Medford
did get on the scoreboard in
the second quarter – when penalties
backed Malden up near its
goal line and then freshman Malden
QB Aidan Brett was penalized
for intentional grounding in the
end zone – for a Medford safety
and a 7-2 lead. Medford was able
to stick in a touchdown with 11
seconds left in the half and added
a two-point conversion to go
into halftime leading, 10-7. Malden
came out strong in the second
half, converting an onside
kick off Juarez’s foot and eventually
driving down the fi eld and tying
the game when Juarez booted
a 21-yard fi eld goal. With the kick
Juarez became the only placekicker
in Malden High history to kick
field goals in two Thanksgiving
Day games (both Malden wins).
Senior Lyden Lewis was the unoffi
cial game MVP when he simply
dominated the rest of the
way. He sacked the Medford QB
on the next series in the end zone
for a Malden safety and a 12-10
lead. Lewis also caused a fumble
on another sack and recovered it
himself in another huge play. Malden
QB Jordan Rodriguez handing
the ball off to junior running
back Mak Blaise, which proved to
be the winning formula the rest of
the way as Malden ground down
the clock and sealed the victory.
It was a Thanksgiving win in his
debut for fi rst-year Malden Head
Coach Witche Exilhomme, a 2013
Malden High graduate.
1. Stock market crash
2. NYC
3. David Bowie
4. SARS-CoV-2 Omicron
5. Poinsettia
6. Macy’s Thanksgiving Day Parade in NYC
7. A new dance they started in Houston
8. Ingrid Bergman
9. Haverhill
10. Asparagus and rhubarb
11. Tuberculosis
12. It has less water, which retains heat well.
13. Louisa May Alcott
14. Julian
15. Tibet
16. Exxon and Mobil (ExxonMobil)
17. They secrete mucus that becomes sticky.
18. 17
19. Pear
20. Denmark
׉	 7cassandra://BIcbPff7I03QBeko-B089Cs-1D3-EuOSlQ3bHoL5ps4&`̰ c}?8K'׉ETHE MALDEN ADVOCATE–Wednesday, November 23, 2022
Page 21
~ HELP WANTED ~
Experienced Oil Truck Driver wanted.
Hazmat and CDL required.
Must present driver’s record history.
Please send resume to:
dina@angelosoil.com
or call 781-231-3500
WASTE REMOVAL &
BUILDING MAINTENANCE
• Landscaping, Lawn Care, Mulching
• Yard Waste & Rubbish Removal
• Interior & Exterior Demolition (Old
Decks, Fences, Pools, Sheds, etc.)
855-GO-4-GLAS
● 24-Hour Service
Frank Berardino
MA License 31811
● Emergency Repairs
BERARDINO
Plumbing & Heating
We follow Social Distancing Guidelines!
Gas Fitting ● Drain Service
Residential & Commercial Service
J.F & Son Contracting
Snow Plowing
No Job too small! Free Estimates!
Commercial & Residential
781-656-2078
- Property management & maintenance
Shoveling & removal
Landscaping, Electrical, Plumbing, Painting, Roofing, Carpentry, Framing,
Decks, Fencing, Masonry, Demolition, Gut-outs, Junk Removal & Dispersal,
Clean Ups: Yards, Garages, Attics & Basements. Truck for Hire, Bobcat Services.
617.699.9383
Senior Citizen Discount
• Appliance and Metal Pick-up
• Construction and Estate Cleanouts
• Pick-up Truck Load of Trash
starting at $169
• Carpentry
LICENSED & INSURED
Call for FREE ESTIMATES!
Office: (781) 233-2244
FIRE • SOOT • WATER
Homeowner’s Insurance Loss Specialists
FREE CONSULTATION
1-877-SAL-SOOT
Sal Barresi, Jr. - Your fi rst call
617-212-9050
SPADAFORA
AUTO PARTS
JUNK CARS
WANTED
SAME DAY PICK UP
781-324-1929
Quality Used Tires
Mounted & Installed
Used Auto Parts & Batteries
Family owned & operated since 1946
Advocate
Call now!
617-387-2200
advertise on the web at
www.advocatenews.net
$
$
$
$
Classifieds
׉	 7cassandra://5It0r6tfW6wDjjq35FqyyeRDjLipB0zRfbwp2FLXigA4h`̰ c}?8K'c}?8K'
PבCט   (u׉׉	 7cassandra://si7RqcfYhjsOyYeOMLH-9QdidAroq0yF-S54tIvDD2k }`)׉	 7cassandra://QbgNBzsK5xJtVqqCVlxa-3PaogJiBevI56sLENKmdEA͋`J׉	 7cassandra://snGAxPIEhyUfmLof8VyQSuTe4maXF_25ReQtlZLloqk+`̰ ׉	 7cassandra://60bDC6lBFtnoVTR4_LLyKkTaOo280g1QsViKL5h5ljQ .͐͠c}?8K'4ט ( (u׉׉	 7cassandra://3hbPj4t-It5Z2iJ_uaFFzZOpW90sdXGVhvGjGZ7bOyc Su`)׉	 7cassandra://4zh-pAZEhWsQNpbKBnic937W5REBDhRbiShHNkJiIsg̈́D`J׉	 7cassandra://ElR0QEvOvLMgqWFAL8s9VQFIZXEzV7Xx0-Ofh9N0yFE*`̰ ׉	 7cassandra://56YjfdVmEU1OBlNcOtH7p_cxMrt1fWd6IXO3CRV7pF4 p͠c}?8K'5נc}?8K'@ 9ׁHhttp://LITTLEFIELDRE.COMׁׁЈנc}?8K'? 9ׁHhttp://LITTLEFIELDRE.COMׁׁЈנc}?8K'> [9ׁHhttp://CarpenitoRealEstate.comׁׁЈ׉EPage 22
THE MALDEN ADVOCATE–Wednesday, November 23, 2022
SNOW
Residential
and
Commercial
Please Call:
339-987-7354
cell phone
CLASSIFIED
PLOWING ADVERTISING
Advocate
Call now! 617-387-2200
advertise on the web at
www.advocatenews.net
CM Masonry & Construction
Honesty. Quality. Trustworthy.
Comprehensive Chimney and Masonry Services
* General Masonry * Chimney Build & Repair
* Basements and Foundations
* Over 30 Years of Construction Experience * Fully Licensed and Insured
* Free Estimates and Great Rates
Call us at (781) 364-8591
REAL ESTATE TRANSACTIONS
BUYER1
VASQUEZ-RIVERA, ABEL
BUYER2
SELLER1
SELLER2
TRUE NORTH PROPERTIES LLC
We have sold all our inventory, are you looking to sell? Reach out
to us for a Free Pre-Listing Review, where we can discuss the best
options for your family.
We turn Real Estate into SOLD!
Call Sue now @781-558-1091 or email infowithmango@gmail.com
mangorealtyteam.com
38 Main St. Saugus
(781) 558-1091
20 Railroad Ave. Rockport
(978)-999-5408
Saugus
20 Railroad Ave. Rockport
(978)-999-5408
Thank you
Hello! My name is Rosa Palomba-Rescigno. As a licensed
real estate agent in Massachusetts since 2017, I have had
great success helping clients buy and sell homes in the
Saugus area, now expanding further in the Rockport, Gloucester area.
My experienced, committed team is Mango Realty Inc., located at
38 Main Street, Saugus and our 2nd location at 20 Railroad Ave,
Rockport. At Mango Realty Inc., we work together, helping each other
grow individually, but also by expanding our network as a team,
which is a part of my job that I love.
Welcome home. This two family with large units and an
additional living space in the lower level. 5 Baths total. Unit
1 is New which holds a 4 Room 2 bedroom fireplace, washer
and dryer. Unit 2 offers a 6 Room 3 Bedroom and 2 full
baths with a fireplace that leads to dining area with sliding
door overlooking deck where you could view miles of flat
land. Generous size rooms with ceiling fans and plenty of
storage space. 2 tier decks, heated pool. 2 car drive way
with space for 8-10 cars, cabana with a full bath and a
kitchen. Close to shopping malls, transportation, Airport,
and more .....$799,000
Un
lac
dro
dro
ro
lea
a
ener
sto
stor
with
kitc
with
kitc
th
w h s
or
h s
rage s
w th spac
k
h spac
sp
ce
ce
enero
ro
ac
ac
ous size
rage spac
ce fo
ce fo
ce fo
ce
ce.
2
ous
ce
ce. 2 tie
s s e
ce. 2 tie
2 tie
SAUGUS
As for my buyers, I make sure they are purchasing the right property
for the right price under the best terms. Working closely with my
clients often allows me to become long-term friends, and gives me
great satisfaction that I have helped and guided them through one of
the most exciting—and often stressful—times in their lives.
20 Pamela Ln U-20
Amesbury, MA 01913
Graduated magna cum laude in 2013 from Suffolk University, with a
major in sociology/criminal and civil law.
Spectacular sun-filled Colonial with exceptional flow and robust
space. Details matter and this lovely home is brimming with beautiful
woodwork, trim and much character. The open concept kitchen offers
stainless appliances and plenty of granite tops which flows to living
room and inviting fireplace which leads to double door going onto the
deck. Balancing things off on the second floor are 3 generous
bedrooms. The main bedroom has a large sitting room, main bath all
leading to a spacious roof top balcony. Large driveway, level yard, 1
car garage and more. ...$668,000
conce
conce
ce
ncing hin
ncing
g
edroom . T
ading to a
ad g t
edroo
oo
oms. T
g to a
g thin
The m
g thing of on the
hic
Th main
main
m n bed
ngs of
n b
bed
p
p
m n bed
epl e wh
on
on
e whi
on the
hic
on the
n the
e
e
hich le
e sec
e sec
le
e sec
Please feel free to contact me if you have any questions. We would
love to help you with your real estate needs. Together we will succeed!
781-820-0096 ~ soldwithrosa@gmail.com.
grani
ea
g
ea
granite to
eads t
nit
eads t
eads t
s t
ite to
to
to
to do
to
to do
to do
op w
oubl
ops w
oubl
oubl
ou
ept ki
which f
which f
flo
wh ch flows
flows
flows
s
kitc
s
itchen
b
ith b
ith b
s to
itchen
s to
en
n
ept kiitchen
flo
beau
n
beaut
ut
n offe
n offe
n offe
My team and I showcase homes on our website and utilize a team of
professional service providers to assist our clients' buying and selling
needs, including stagers, painters, designers, handymen and
inspectors. Communicative, thorough and detail-oriented-and will be
alongside you every step of the way.
ck wh
o
o
ck whe
oms w h
e y
he
oms w
oms w
ms w
w
with
h
leads to
yo
h c
here you c
with
you c
to
u c
u c
ads t din
yo co
o din
o d
co
ning
coul
ld
oom an
oom a
a
ni g a
g a
ld vi
ning area
d vi
rea w
area with
d 2
and 2
area with
with
h
lace, wa
2 full
ce, wa
2 f ll
wa
2 f ll
2 full
asher
as er
By listening to my clients’ needs and developing the trust needed to
help my clients, I have grown my business. I recognize the confidence
my clients put in me and strive to provide honest, professional
guidance to my buyers and sellers. I do this by offering a free
comparable market analysis to all my potential sellers and by getting
the highest and best price for their home.
Would you like a compliment of wonderful
neighborhood, space, and many amenities nearby?
This private setting townhouse offers so much. The
main level boasts an eat in kitchen, along with living
room and 3 generous bedrooms on the second floor.
the lower level or could also be categorized as the
ground level offers a large family room or bedroom
with a full bath. Did I mention washer and dryer in the
units, 1 deeded parking, 1 car garage., transportation,
nearby shops, and churches? Make this nestled home
a win ...$369,000
SAUGUS
for your business this year!
Happy Thanksgiving
Amesbury
Copyrighted material previously published in Banker & Tradesman/The Commercial
Record, a weekly trade newspaper. It is reprinted with permission from the publisher,
The Warren Group. For a searchable database of real estate transactions and property
information visit: www.thewarrengroup.com.
ADDRESS
CITY
DATE
87-89 HARVARD ST MALDEN
PRICE
11.02.22 530000
Turnkey awaits for new owner. Spectacular sun-filled 3 bedroom
ranch that boasts gleaming hardwood floors throughout,
including central air. The open concept kitchen offers stainless
appliances and plenty of granite counter tops, stainless
appliances, center island that flows into the dining area and open
concept of large living room. If you want a home within a
suburban feel that offers a deck, shed, level fenced yard,
driveway, dead end and more! This lovely property abutts Middle
School and Bike Trail....$579,000
bedroom
bedr
hroug
hroug
ep
ter islan
ter
er
ubu ba fe l th
of
riv wa
uburb
urb
vew
pt of
ba
ban fe
pt of
ban fe
riveway, d
f larg
f larg
rg
ee
eel th
eel th
ge liv
iv
ving r om. If
an
isla
vin
hat o
off
of
islan
ving r
th
g r om. If
m. If
grani
that f
gran
ge ving r om f
ha off
that f ws fl ws int
nt
th t f ws fl ws int
ni
nite c
nite c
flow
c
flow
count
co
nt
pt kit
te
ws into thws into
ter to
ter to
to
o th
ter tops,
kit
tche
op
op
ops,
ps,
en
ops, s
pt kitchen offe
te
en offe
en offe
stain
ops, stain
he
ug ou
fe s st
ghou
fe s st
ers st
ers st
ers st
ghout,
ers ta
ut,
ers ta
tainle
ainle
dr om
room
UNDER AGREEMENTR A
U D
U
N
N ER A
D
GR E E
E M
GR E EN
E M N
T
T
UNDE
UNDE
R
R
A REEME T
A REEME T
UNDER AGREEMENT
G
G
N
N
UNDER AGRE M N
E E T
UNDER AGREEMENT
׉	 7cassandra://snGAxPIEhyUfmLof8VyQSuTe4maXF_25ReQtlZLloqk+`̰ c}?8K'׉ETHE MALDEN ADVOCATE–Wednesday, November 23, 2022
Page 23
.............
#
1
Listing & Selling
Office in Saugus
“Experience and knowledge
Provide the Best Service”
Free Market Evaluations CRE
CarpenitoRealEstate.com
SAUGUS - 1st AD - 5 room Cape offers 3 bedrooms,
great open floor plan, hardwood flooring, convenient
1st floor bedroom, sunroom, gorgeous,
level lot with storage shed, located in Lynnhurst
neighborhood. Offered at $515,00.
From the Staff
at Carpenito
Real Estate,
Have a Safe
& Happy
Thanksgiving
SAUGUS - 1st AD - Desirable Brookdale Condo
offers this spacious 1 bedroom unit, beautiful,
updated kit w/quart counter, peninsula w/seating,
built-in desk, hardwood flooring, great open floor
plan, extra storage, located just outside of Saugus
Center. Offered at $275,000.
SAUGUS - 1st AD - 10 room colonial offers 5-6
bedrooms, 1 ½ baths, wood flooring, located
on Saugus River, home is in need total rehab.
Offered at $499,900.
WONDERING WHAT YOUR
HOME IS WORTH?
CALL US FOR A FREE
OPINION OF VALUE.
781-233-1401
38 MAIN STREET, SAUGUS
LET US SHOW YOU OUR
MARKETING PLAN TO
GET YOU TOP DOLLAR
FOR YOUR HOME!
LITTLEFIELDRE.COM
LITTLEFIELDRE.COM
View our website from
your mobile phone!
335 Central St., Saugus, MA
781-233-7300
LYNN - 1st AD - 4 room Ranch offers renovated
kitchen with granite counter & ct flooring, fireplace
lvrm, refinished hardwood flooring, finished lower
level with familyroom, breezeway, 1 car garage,
great location! Offered at $429,900.
׉	 7cassandra://ElR0QEvOvLMgqWFAL8s9VQFIZXEzV7Xx0-Ofh9N0yFE*`̰ c}?8K'c}?8K'
PבCט   (u׉׉	 7cassandra://whILAZvux6NOvtDMPgsYmzoAAxPvqX-Hjb_0LfkFyFg "`)׉	 7cassandra://tnSqaC7aPVZeyWIsmC12toWdjFs0OrCo3QPR8JKXNig͝`J׉	 7cassandra://3BTTA6-dneiGlC-sL1ReVpA0mJZgoEdz9NxVOipgvyk0.`̰ ׉	 7cassandra://64TYKHVg8pXObHgo8x-XIZuiDe4JTp_NJ4h5VbUw4HY O͠c}?8K'<נc}?8K'A [")9ׁHhttp://www.jrs-properties.comׁׁЈ׉EPage 24
THE MALDEN ADVOCATE–Wednesday, November 23, 2022
Follow Us On:
COMMERCIAL & RESIDENTIAL PROPERTY SALES & RENTALS
Sandy Juliano
Broker/President
The staff at JRS Properties
wishes everyone a Safe, Happy
and Healthy Thanksgiving!
WE KNOW EVERETT!! Call TODAY to sell or buy with the best!
FOR SALE
Condo
1 Riverview
Blvd, Methuen
Building 5,
Unit 204,
2 bed, 2.5 bath
$349,900.
Call Sandy at 617448-0854
for Details!
UNDER
AGREEMENT
BACK ON
THE MARKET!
NEW LISTING BY SANDY, 3 FAMILY, 234 WILSON
AVE., NAHANT $1,600,000. PLEASE CALL SANDY
FOR DETAILS @ 617-448-0854
New Listing
by Sandy
Single
family,
81 Florence
Street,
Everett
SINGLE FAMILY, 21 WALDEN TERRACE, SAUGUS. $849,900.
CALL SANDY FOR 617-448-0854
RENTED BY
RENTED
43 CHARLTON ST,
EVERETT
CALL NORMA
FOR DETAILS
617-590-9143
NORMA AS TENANT’S
AGENT
NEW PRICE: $649,900
NEW LISTING BY NORMA
UNDER
AGREEMENT
COMMERCIAL BUILDING
ON BROADWAY, EVERETT
PLEASE CALL NORMA
AT 617-590-9143 FOR
MORE INFORMATION
NEW LISTING BY
SANDY
Joe DiNuzzo
- Broker Associate
Norma Capuano Parziale
- Agent
433 Broadway, Suite B, Everett, MA 02149
www.jrs-properties.com
Open Daily From 10:00 A
00 PM
A.M. - 5:00 P.M.
Denise Matarazzo
- Agent
Follow Us On:
Rosemarie Ciampi
- Agent
Mark Sachetta
- Agent
617-294-1041
׉	 7cassandra://3BTTA6-dneiGlC-sL1ReVpA0mJZgoEdz9NxVOipgvyk0.`̰ c}?8K'׈Ec}?8K'c}?8K'
P,Malden Advocate  11/23/2022Malden Advocate  11/23/2022c}?frJM