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CAT
D
Vol. 26, No.9
-FREE- www.advocatenews.net
CAT
Published Every Friday
WHAT IT COSTS TO RUN SAUGUS
T
TE
781-233-4446
Friday, March 1, 2024
The budget season is
offi cially underway
Town Manager Crabtree briefs selectmen on his
preliminary spending plan for the 2025 Fiscal year
By Mark E. Vogler
own Manager Scott
C. Crabtree has recommended
$33.1 million
for the School Department for
the 2025 Fiscal Year that begins
July 1 – an increase of $1.5 million
over the Fiscal Year 2024
budget approved last spring by
the Annual Town Meeting. But
that’s still $1.2 million less than
the proposed Saugus Public
Schools budget recommended
by Superintendent Michael
Hashem and approved by the
School Committee.
“I’m sure I’m going to get tons
of criticism for what I gave the
schools,” Crabtree told selectmen
Tuesday (Feb. 27) night
during his annual budget briefing
in the fi rst fl oor conference
room at Saugus Town Hall.
The preliminary spending
plan unveiled by the town manager
includes municipal general
fund operating budgets totaling
$78.3 million to go with
proposed school spending,
which adds up to an estimated
$111.4 million in total general
fund operating budgets.
“We try to be conservative…
Town Manager Scott C. Crabtree confers with Selectman Anthony Cogliano before Tuesday
(Feb. 27) night’s briefi ng on the Fiscal Year 2025 operating budget recommended by
the town manager. Selectmen voted to recommend the spending plan, which now goes
through a series of hearings by the Finance Committee. Please see inside for this week’s
“The Advocate Asks” – selectmen’s take on the town manager’s budget. (Saugus Advocate
Photo by Mark E. Vogler)
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roof and heating system in 2020.
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not try to overspend. We spend
within our means. That’s something
the schools need to do,”
Crabtree told selectmen.
The total estimated Expenditure
Budget is nearly $118 million
for the General Fund and
$15 million for the Water and
Sewer Enterprise Funds, for a
total Fiscal Year 2025 estimated
expenditure amount of nearly
$133 million.
Selectmen voted unanimously
to recommend the town
manager’s operating budget,
forwarding it to the Finance
Committee, which will begin
hearings on each department
budget before making its recommendations
to the Annual
Town Meeting, which is set to
convene on May 6.
Crabtree’s $1.5 million hike in
the School Department budget
is triple the increase he recommended
for school spending
last year. He also noted in
his four-page budget message
to selectmen that the increase
was actually understated. “The
increase does not include the
indirect costs paid by the Town
on behalf of the School Department
and included as part
of the total Net School Spending
(NSS) calculation required
by the Massachusetts Department
of Elementary and Secondary
Education (DESE),” the
town manager said in his budget
message.
Crabtree identified several
challenges in preparing the estimates
of expenditures in his
recommended FY 2025 budget:
• Health Insurance – the rates
have not been fi nalized by the
provider. The town can expect
that the rate will be set within
the next few months. Crabtree
said his offi ce has made a conservative
estimate based on the
current enrollment of employees.
That estimate will have to
be revisited later in the budget
BUDGET SEASON|
SEE PAGE 2
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THE SAUGUS ADVOCATE – FriDAy, MArCH 1, 2024
Election 2024
Final day of in-Person Early Voting ends at 12:30 p.m.; Presidential Primary Election set for Tuesday
By Mark E. Vogler
T
he Saugus Public Library
will complete
a week of In-Person
Early Voting today (Friday,
March 1) from 8:15 a.m. to
12:30 p.m. in the Community
Room for the Presidential
Primary Election. Registered
voters who want
to cast their ballots for
the Democratic, Libertarian
and Republican Parties
in the traditional way can
go to the polls next Tuesday
(March 5) from 7 a.m.
to 8 p.m. In addition to listing
the presidential candidates,
the election ballot
will also allow voters in
each of the three parties
to pick a state committeeman,
a state committeewoman
and town committee
members.
There were 21,781 total
registered voters in Saugus
as of this week, according
to Town Clerk Ellen Joyce
Schena. They include 4,989
Democrats, 2,071 Republicans
and 59 Libertarians.
The vast number of voters
(14,456) are classified as unenrolled.
Where
To Vote
Precinct – Polling Locations
1
Saugus Middle High
School Complex – 1 Pearce
Memorial Drive
2 Veterans Early Learning
Center – 39 Hurd Avenue
3 Saugus Senior Center –
466 Central Street
4 Belmonte STEAM Academy
– 25 Dow Street
5 Saugus Senior Center –
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Chris 2024
LAST CHANCE: A week of In-Person Early Voting at the Saugus
Public Library was scheduled to end at 12:30 p.m. today (Friday,
March 1). (Saugus Advocate photo by Mark E. Vogler)
466 Central Street
6 Veterans Early Learning
Center – 39 Hurd Avenue
7 Knights of Columbus –
57 Appleton Street
8 Belmonte STEAM AcadBUDGET
SEASON| |
FROM PAGE 1
cycle, he said.
• Trash hauling and incineration
rates continue to increase.
In addition, the cost of disposal
of recyclable materials
continues to increase and has
been impacted with increased
tonnage and contamination
charges.
• Pension Contributions – the
$5.6 million is a decrease from
the amount appropriated in the
2024 Fiscal Year.
• Regional School Assessments
– vocational education,
including Northeast Regional
Vocational Technical School
and Essex North Shore Tech,
is budgeted for $3.3 million
based on estimates provided
by DESE on the town’s minimum
required contribution.
The Fiscal Year 2025 estimated
assessments reflect a 13.7 percent
increase.
“Northeast Metropolitan Regional
Vocational School has
begun construction on a MSBA
approved construction project
in the amount of $324,922,541,”
Crabtree said in his budget
message.
“Based on the most recent
debt information provided
by Northeast Regional, our
share of the existing debt service
for the Fiscal Year 20-25
is $488,201. This amount has
been included in the Vocational
Educational Assessment budget,”
Crabtree said.
“In addition to the debt seremy
– 25 Dow Street
9 Saugus Middle/High
School 1 Pearce Memorial
Drive
10 Italian American Club –
1 Beachview Avenue
vice for the construction of the
facility impacting the amount
appropriated for vocational education
is the operational budget
for a new school. A new facility
with new systems and
services could also impact our
annual assessment for the education
operational budget,”
he said.
• Other insurance – the various
property, liability and workers
compensation insurance
premium estimates have been
budgeted based on an increase
of about 12 percent over actual
fiscal year 2024 premiums
recommended by the provider.
The premiums will not be finalized
until later in the spring.
• Capital improvements –
there are significant capital
needs that the town will need
to plan and identify funding
sources for. These include but
are not limited to local capital
facility needs, infrastructures,
such as roadways, public
safety equipment, such as fire
apparatus and other equipment
that is nearing end of
life and requiring expensive
repairs, as well as funding the
Northeast Regional Vocational
School capital assessment
for the MSBA School Construction
Project.
Crabtree told selectmen the
town was fortunate that it has
not yet had “anything significant”
in the way of snowfall
this winter. “If we were having
a legitimate winter, we’d
be having $3 million for snow
and ice,” Crabtree said.
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Page 3
~ The Advocate Asks ~
Saugus selectmen offer their
individual impressions of the town
manager’s proposed Fiscal Year 2025
operating budget
425r Broadway, Saugus
Located adjacent to Kohls Plaza Route 1 South
in Saugus at the intersection of Walnut Street
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
12-7 p.m.
Sunday
Monday
Tuesday
$9.00
Price includes Roller Skates
Rollerblades/inline skates $3.00 additional cost
Private Parties
7:30-11 p.m.
BRIEFING THE BOARD: Town Manager Scott C. Crabtree unveiled his proposed Fiscal Year 2025
operating budget to selectmen during Tuesday (Feb. 27) night’s meeting in the first floor conference
room at Saugus Town Hall. (Saugus Advocate photo by Mark E. Vogler)
Editor’s Note: For this week’s
column, we put this question
to each member of the Board
of Selectmen: What’s your take
on the town manager’s proposed
budget? What do you
like? What are your chief concerns,
if any? Here’s what they
had to say:
Board of Selectmen Chair
Debra Panetta
I appreciate all the hard
work that went into preparing
the FY 2025 operating budget.
This preliminary budget
will now be given to the Finance
Committee, where they
must receive the budget by
March 1 per our Charter. Our
Finance Committee will have
multiple, public meetings to
review each budget in detail.
We do see some additional
funds being recommended
in certain line items, like repairs
& maintenance of playgrounds,
and repairs & maintenance
of street paving,
which is needed.
Board of Selectmen Vice
Chair Jeffrey Cicolini
As stated, it is still very early
in the process with so many
unknowns. Local aid, local receipts,
permits, fees are all
best guesses this early. I sincerely
appreciate the Manager
and his team’s conservative
approach to budgeting
as it protects us from overextending
ourselves and having
unforeseen cuts if revenue
estimates are too high. I
was pleased to see many positions
have been filled this year
and we are adding to our DPW
crew and other departments.
Also, allocating an additional
$1.5mm to the schools in addition
to the related increases
in pension and health insurance
for school employees
and retirees (schedule 19)
essentially equates to allocating
an additional $2.5mm to
$3mm in total to the school
department. It appears all
department requests were
granted and in some cases
the manager’s budget is higher
than the department recommended.
I am sure things
will get pinned down as we
get further in the budget cycle
but from what I see now I
am very optimistic.
Selectman Corinne Riley
The Town Manager has always
had a good plan for
town finances. I’m very happy
that there are only a couple
of open positions that
need to be filled, and I would
like to see the manager fill the
positions in the Planning and
Economic Development department.
I am also glad to
see that his proposed budget
includes a significant increase
to the School Department,
and I’m sure the school
administration for the district
will work hard to increase the
level of education for our students.
My
concern is at the state
ASKS | SEE PAGE 4
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Friday
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THE SAUGUS ADVOCATE – FriDAy, MArCH 1, 2024
~ The Old Sachem ~
A new electric system
By Bill Stewart
S
lowly but strategically,
we turn to electricity
to advance the environment
while dismissing
or at least reducing oil usage
and its contamination.
We have rooftop solar panels,
auto electric provision
stations, electric automobiles
and now we have wind
farms to generate electricity.
Vineyard Wind and the
Natural Resources Defense
Council, the National Wildlife
Federation and the Conservation
Law Foundation
entered into an agreement
with Vineyard Wind to create
electricity for Massachusetts’
South Shore from its
wind turbines located offshore.
In addition to creating
electricity, they are committed
to preserving the protection
of marine habitats, such
as for fish, whales, turtles and
Gerry
D’Ambrosio
Attorney-at-Law
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(781) 284-5657
bird species. They have committed
to a relationship with
the offshore fishing industry
of Massachusetts. In 2010,
they worked with representatives
of the fishing industry
to ensure that industry fishermen
would have a strong
voice in relation to the projected
installation.
The wind farm will be located
15 miles off the coast of
Massachusetts and will create
clean, renewable and affordable
electricity for over
400,000 homes and businesses
within the Commonwealth
while reducing carbon
emissions by over 1.6
million tons per year. The turbines
will be located 15 miles
south of Martha’s Vineyard
and Nantucket; the location
was determined by a multiyear,
intergovernmental task
force, in a process that considered
scientific data along
with public input. This area is
located in an area that consists
of powerful and reliable
wind speeds, an ideal area for
wind turbines.
Vineyard Wind 1 will consist
of 62 wind turbines located
one nautical mile apart
on east-west and northsouth
positions. The turbines
are General Electric Haliade-X
turbines, each having
the capability of generating
13 megawatts of electricity.
The electricity generated
will be collected by an
off-shore substation prior
to being transmitted to the
shore station. It will generate
800 megawatts of electricity,
with a capability of providing
to 400,000 sites, the equivalent
of removing 325,000 vehicles
from Massachusetts
roads. Two submarine cables
will be installed along a
carefully studied route from
the substation to a point on
Covell’s Beach in Barnstable.
ASKS | FROM PAGE 3
level. Earmarks obtained by
State Representatives have already
been reduced due to financial
issues at the state level,
but I am hopeful that local
aid will not be decreased.
I look forward to having
an update meeting with
the town manager soon, to
hear his plan addressing the
agreed-upon goals of the
board and the town manager,
especially discussing
the plans for parks and playgrounds,
and a mass notification
system to push timely
Geological surveys determined
the route to avoid sensitive
habitats of sea and land
animals. The cables are to be
buried six feet underground
beneath public roadways in
Barnstable and will follow
under roadways to Hyannis,
adjacent to an existing Eversource
substation.
Currently, the project is
generating electricity for
about 30,000 sites. When
completed it will generate
806 megawatts and will cost
about $4 million for customers
of three major electric
utilities. The project is
a joint venture of Avangrid
and Copenhagen Infrastructure
Partners, who are also
creating another project as a
smaller wind farm, the South
Fork project developed by
Orsted and Eversource to
provide electricity to Long
Island in New York. At least
nine of the Vineyard 1 turbines
have been installed,
and work is continuing to
eventually fulfill the dream
of providing clean electricity
and reducing gas emissions.
updates out to residents. The
Golden Hills playground has
been in need of replacement
for a very long time, and improved
communication to residents
are both top priorities
for the Board and the Manager.
I also am looking forward
to that meeting to address
the plan for our vacant school
buildings.
Selectman Michael Serino
I thought that the Town
Manager’s proposed budget
to the Board of Selectmen
was a fairly standard presentation.
There were no surprises
“The Old Sachem,” Bill Stewart.
(Courtesy photo to The Saugus
Advocate by Joanie Allbee)
The future is now for changing
our world to a more hospitable
measure of energy.
(Editor’s Note: Bill Stewart,
who is better known to Saugus
Advocate readers as “The
Old Sachem,” writes a weekly
column about sports – and
sometimes he opines on current
or historical events or famous
people.)
to me. As always the challenges
are in the area of the Town’s
fixed costs such as, health insurance,
pension contribution
and our regional school
assessment costs. The most
significant challenge we face
will be how to pay for the construction
of the new Northeast
Regional Vocational School.
Saugus’s share is estimated
around 3 million dollars a year.
This does not include the cost
to send more students to the
expanded 400 student facility.
However, the Town’s revenue
stream consisting of
property and excise tax revenue,
new growth and local receipts
seem to remain steady
and strong. Although, our
State aid revenue increased by
about 4 million since last year.
I am concerned about the financial
condition of the State.
Over the past several months,
reports have surfaced that the
State is lacking in revenue receipts
and the costs to house
and feed the migrant population
has put a financial strain
on the State. I am concerned
this might have an impact on
local aid receipts to cities and
towns. Unfortunately, local aid
numbers are usually not finalized
until late summer.
In conclusion, the budget
that the Selectmen approved
is a preliminary budget. As the
budget process moves forward,
the budget will continue
to be adjusted as necessary
so that we have a balanced
budget. Your Town Meeting
Members will have the final
approval of the budget.
׉	 7cassandra://-V_j5UqOX1p9Ej94M_BEF-XAuK_XiPLWaD6YExtqVKc, `̰ e)Ն	0a׉ElTHE SAUGUS ADVOCATE – FriDAy, MArCH 1, 2024
Page 5
Welcome to Cliftondale
Meet Miss Marleah Elizabeth Graves
By Janice K. Jarosz
(Editor’s Note: This is the second
in a series of articles about the upcoming
“Open House” event set
for the first weekend in May at
the old Cliftondale School, which
is now known as The MEG, at 5448
Essex St. in Saugus.)
A
s if trying to save the
Cliftondale School from
the wrecking ball was
not enough of a feat, I also
learned along the way that the
school was named after a favorite
teacher who I had never
heard of – coming from the
Oaklandvale area, the “other
side of town.”
Once I began going through
old newspaper clippings and
town reports, I learned that
Miss Graves was a true “legend
in her own time,” and I realized
the best way to honor her was
to meet those who knew her
fi rsthand.
The following interviews and
CLIFTONDALE |
SEE PAGE 10
Marleah Elizabeth Graves in her classroom at the old Cliftondale
School (Courtesy photo to The Saugus Advocate)
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THE SAUGUS ADVOCATE – FriDAy, MArCH 1, 2024
Local DAR members deliver donations to USO Logan
SORTING THROUGH THE DONATIONS: Local DAR members Wendy Renda, Gail Cassarino and
Jaclyn Cassarino Smith recently assembled much-needed supplies for delivery to USO New
England at Logan Airport. (Courtesy photo to The Saugus Advocate)
(Editor’s Note: The Parson
Roby Chapter of the Daughters
of the American Revolution
[DAR] issued the following
press release.)
M
embers of the Parson
Roby Chapter
of the Daughters
of the American Revolution
(DAR) Gail Cassarino, Wendy
Renda, and Jaclyn Cassarino
Smith along with members
of the Judge Samuel Holten
Society Children of the
American Revolution (C.A.R.),
Ella and Sydney deliver donations
to the USO at Logan Airport.
In a heartwarming display
of patriotism and generosity,
the DAR have stepped
forward to support America’s
service members by donating
much-needed supplies to the
USO. This act of kindness underscored
the DAR’s unwavering
commitment to honoring
and supporting those
who serve in defense of freedom
and democracy.
As part of the DAR’s ongoing
eff orts to serve the community
and uphold the values
of patriotism and service,
Need a hall for your special event?
The Schiavo Club, located at
71 Tileston Street, Everett is
available for your Birthdays,
Anniversaries, Sweet 16 parties
and more?
For more info,
call (857) 249-7882
JOHN MACKEY & ASSOCIATES
~ Attorneys at Law ~
* PERSONAL INJURY
* REAL ESTATE
* FAMILY LAW
* PERSONAL BANKRUPTCY
* LANDLORD/TENANT DISPUTES
14 Norwood Street
Everett, MA 02149
Phone: (617) 387-4900 Fax: (617) 381-1755
WWW.JMACKEYLAW.COM
Project Patriot State Chairmen,
Gail & Wendy rallied its
members to gather essential
supplies. The generous
donation from the DAR includes
a variety of essential
items, such as personal care
products, snacks, entertainment
items, comfort items,
coloring books, and crayons,
all aimed at providing support
and comfort to service members
and their families during
deployments, training exercises
and other missions. These
supplies will help bolster the
USO’s eff orts to create a home
away from home wherever
they may be stationed.
The partnership between
the DAR and the USO exemplifi
es the power of collaboration
and community support
in making a positive imKIDS
HELPING OUT: Sydney, 6, and Ella, 4, of the Judge Samuel
Holten Society of the Children of the American Revolution
(C.A.R.) recently participated in the delivery of donations to
USO New England at Logan Airport. (Courtesy photo to The Saugus
Advocate)
pact on the lives of our military
personnel. Through their
combined eff orts, these organizations
are ensuring that
service members know they
are valued, respected, and
appreciated for the sacrifi ces
and dedications to their
country. Together we can all
make a meaningful difference
in the lives of those who
sacrifi ce so much in serving
our nation.
For over 80 years, the United
Service Organizations
(USO) has been a vital force
in strengthening America’s
military service members by
keeping them connected to
family, home, and country
throughout their service to
the nation.
The DAR is a non-profit,
non-political volunteer women’s
service organization dedicated
to promoting historic
preservation, education, and
patriotism. For more information
on what we do or in joining
the Parson Roby Chapter
DAR, please email parsonroby.saugusdar@gmail.com
The
Meadow at Peabody ladies 18-hole
golf league is ready to start in April
I
t is hard to think about
golf with the cold temperatures,
but we are
hopeful for a spring warm-up
to start the season on Tuesday,
April 23, 2024. Founded
in 2001, the Peabody Meadow
Ladies’ Association today
consists of close to 45 members
and plays 18 holes every
Tuesday morning from April
through October. The mission
of the Peabody Meadow
18-hole league is to enjoy the
game of golf, meet and play
with women golfers who appreciate
the camaraderie and
recreation inherent in weekly
play, and to continually increase
the understanding of
the rules of golf within a supportive
and stimulating natural
environment.
The Meadow at Peabody is
an 18-hole regulation public
golf course run by the City of
Peabody. The course is situated
on 259 yards of rolling
terrain and various elevation
changes. It off ers big greens
and a challenge for all golfers
and provides an outstanding
venue to achieve
this mission.The Meadow at
Peabody is run by Head Golf
Professional Peter Cronan
and has a fully stocked pro
shop. The golf course is located
at 80 Granite St. in Peabody,
Mass.
The league is committed
to the advancement of
the game and competition,
but most importantly to
its members, enjoying the
course and one another. We
welcome all levels of play,
with the maximum handicap
at 36, making it a well-blended
league. We have diff erent
formats/events each week –
giving the ladies a chance to
mix things up and play with
each other. There are no requirements
to joining other
than wanting to experience
the great game of golf
with a great group of women.
You can join midseason,
so it’s never too late to make
this summer your best ever.
If you are interested in
learning more or signing up
for the league, please feel
free to call Joanne St. Pierre
at 781-856-7363 or email joannestpierre29@comcast.
net.
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Page 7
The Theatre Company of Saugus presents two
weekends of “Puff s” next month
T
he Theatre Company of
Saugus (TCS) will present
“Puffs – Seven Increasingly
Eventful Years at a
Certain School of Magic and
Magic,” during two weekends
in April 2024.
For seven years a certain
boy wizard went to a certain
wizard school and conquered
evil. This, however, is not his
story. This is the story of the
Puff s... who just happened to
be there, too. A tale for anyone
who has never been destined
to save the world. Third
or Nothing!
The New York Times proclaims
“Puffs” “a fast-paced
romp through the seven increasingly
eventful years….
For Potterphiliacs who grew
up alongside Potter and are
eager to revisit that world,
Puff s exudes a jovial winking
fondness for all things Harry!”
Performances are April 1920-21
and 26-27-28, 2024, on
Friday and Saturday evenings
at 8:00 p.m., and with Sunday
matinees at 2:00 p.m. The loed
the Saugus production of
the musical “Zombie Prom,”
which was presented in fall
2022 and was nominated for
several DASH awards, including
Best Musical. Kaycee also
appeared in TCS’ spring 2023
production of “Comedy of Errors.”
The stage manager for
“Puff s” is Delys Russell.
Cast members come to SauMr.
Voldy and his Death Buddies are shown in rehearsal for
“Puff s” at Theatre Company of Saugus. (Courtesy photo to The
Saugus Advocate)
cation is the TCS home at the
American Legion Post 210, 44
Taylor St., Saugus, Mass. The
upstairs performance space
is not wheelchair accessible,
but it features a bar with soft
and alcoholic drinks available
at very reasonable prices.
Tickets are now on sale. Tickets
paid at the door will be $25
for adults, or $23 for seniors,
youths or veterans. Tickets
purchased in advance online
will be $22 for adults and $20
for seniors, youth and veterans.
For complete info, see the
Tickets page on the TCS website:
tcsaugus.org/tickets
“Puffs” is directed for TCS
by Kaycee Wilson. She directgus
from a variety of towns in
the area, and some of them
play multiple roles. Residents
of Medford are Shawyoun
Shaidani, who plays Wayne
Hopkins, Caroline DeBrota as
Leanne, and Arielle Mercier
as Magic #2. Malden residents
include Brady Neiss-Moe as
Zach Smith, Second Headmaster,
and others; Kathy Bedard
as Xavia Jones and others;
and Stephen Nedell as all
the Teachers. Winthrop residents
are Lauren Thompson as
Ginny, Helga, Bippy and others;
and Mandi Totin as Susie
Bones. Residents of Boston are
Benedict Dawn-Cross as Cedric
and Mr. Voldy; and Heidi
Fisher as Sally Perks. Those
from Quincy are Bec Lowe as
Ernie Mac; and Samson WillPUFFS
| SEE PAGE 15
RON’S OIL
Call
For
PRICE
MELROSE, MA
02176
NEW
CUSTOMER’S
WELCOME
ACCEPTING VISA, MASTERCARD & DISCOVER
(781) 397-1930 OR (781) 662-8884
100 GALLON MINIMUM
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THE SAUGUS ADVOCATE – FriDAy, MArCH 1, 2024
THEY EVEN SAID IT ON SPORTS CENTER! Michael Jordan’s
decision to try pro baseball had a direct effect on the career of
Malden’s Carmine Cappuccio
imagine: Michael Jordan basically stole Cappuccio’s spot on the Double-A Birmingham Barons in 1994
(Following is Part 2 of twopart
series telling the story
of how a decision by the
greatest player in NBA history,
Michael Jordan, had a direct
effect on the professional
baseball fate of Malden High
School’s greatest athlete, Carmine
Cappuccio.)
By Steve Freker
I
t was February 7, 1994,
and big news in Chicago
that day was how the Bulls
had heated up in a hurry, winning
21 of 24 games, jumping
to fourth place in the NBA’s
Eastern Conference standings.
The Atlanta Hawks, led by
Dominique Wilkins and former
Boston College star John Bagley
and the Patrick Ewing-fueled
New York Knicks were 1-2
in the East at the time. Much
was being made of the Bulls’
hot streak as the three-time
defending NBA champs were
apparently getting on just
fine without the services of
the legendary Michael Jordan,
who had shocked the world
three months and a day earlier,
when he announced his
retirement.
Before that day was out,
however, it would be the
man who many call the
greatest player in NBA history
that would make the
earth move once again. In
a press release out of another
Chicago professional
sports team’s office, it was
announced that Jordan had
signed a minor league contract
with the MLB Chicago
White Sox. At the time, both
the Bulls and the White Sox
were owned by sports conglomerate
builder Jerry Reinsdorff.
Check that Richter
Scale, folks, here was another
seismic announcement
with the most recognizable
athlete in the world, front
and center.
Though not unheard of,
after all, Bo “Knows Everything”
Jackson was on the
White Sox roster at the
time and Deion “Primetime”
Sanders was playing for the
two Atlanta franchises, football
Falcons and baseball
Braves, at the time.
But this was different. This
was Michael Jordan. Plus, he
wasn’t talking about playing
two sports, just the one:
baseball.
“BAG IT!” SPORTS ILLUSTRATED
COVER: A Sports Illustrated
cover bashed NBA great
Michael Jordan for deciding
to give professional baseball
a try.
Think LeBron James retiring
and going to the NFL
Think LeBron James retiring
from the NBA and then
announcing he would be
strapping on a football helmet
and playing D-End for
the NFL’s Los Angeles Rams.
Or Mike Trout putting away
his bat and glove and telling
the world he would next
be seen skating in the NHL
for the Anaheim Mighty
Ducks. Even though these
statements today would be
mind-boggling and seem
outlandish, to say the least,
multiply all that times 1000!!
It was Michael Jordan saying
and doing this!
Of course, a common reaction
to all this was “This isn’t
real... it’s all just a hoax, wait
and see.” Everyone waited,
and then it was not a hoax.
Then they saw Jordan suited
up at White Sox spring training
in Sarasota, Fla., a couple
of weeks later.
He dressed in the same
locker room with Bo Jackson
and the rest of the major
leaguers and even played in
a game against the Cleveland
Indians against a hot
Cleveland prospect who
simply pounded the ball to
gaps with authority, when
he wasn’t hitting it over the
fence. That guy, also an outfielder,
did not even get the
big league spring training
media attention or instant
recognition that Jordan got
that spring. The Indian prospect?
Manny Ramirez, who
would go on to hit 555 homers
and help bring the Red
Sox two World Series titles
in the following decade.
Up-and-coming ChiSox
prospect from Malden:
Carmine Cappuccio
There were also a trio of
more fine, up-and-coming
young outfielders on the
other side of the White Sox
Sarasota spring training
complex toiling away, who
also were not illuminated
in the spotlight that shone
brightly on Michael Jordan
that spring. The threesome
included two future major
leaguers and a Malden,
Mass., native who had done
what most every professional
athlete does on their way
up the ladder: rip it up and
be one of the best at every
level of play.
Malden’s Carmine Cappuccio
had just come off
his best professional baseball
season to date, joining
his fellow outfield prospects
Mike Cameron and Jimmy
Hurst in leading the South
Bend (Indiana) White Sox to
a Midwest League championship.
Cappuccio hit .305,
his highest average in his
pro career, with four homers
and 52 RBIs in 101 games in
’93 for South Bend. He was
among the team leaders in
extra base hits (26 doubles,
6 triples) and led all everyday
players in OPS (.813).
Cappuccio was a key man
in a strong outfield contingent
that included the likes
of Cameron and Hurst, who
hit 20 home runs that season.
The 1994 season looked
like it could be a big one as
to moving up the Chicago
TRIPLE-A NASHVILLE
SOUNDS: Malden’s Carmine
Cappuccio played in 1995,
1996 and 1997 at the Triple-A
professional baseball level
for the Nashville (Tennessee)
Sounds.
GOLDEYES STATS CARD: Here is a look at Carmine Cappuccio’s
professional baseball stats through the years, on the back of
his Winnipeg Goldeyes card.
White Sox baseball ladder,
for all three prospects. Who
knows? maybe one, two
or perhaps all of the three
might get a shot at a roster
spot at the Double-A level,
which that year was the Birmingham
(Alabama) Barons.
Cappuccio was in his third
year of professional baseball,
Cameron and Hurst in
their fourth.
All three had legitimate
consideration at a Double-A
roster spot. Those in
the know tell of the value
of that Double-A year. “It’s
a blink away from the big
leagues, for most organizations.
Double-A ball is where
teams fine-tune and ready
their players for the majors,”
a seasoned Atlanta Braves
scout named John Stewart
told me a year after that
1994 season when he was
scouting another Malden
High-bred future pro, Kevin
McGlinchy.
McGlinchy later became
Malden’s second pro of the
1990s when he was picked
in the fifth round by the
Braves in the 1995 MLB
draft.
You know something else?
That Braves scout, John
Stewart, knew the whole
story about Cappuccio and
Jordan. Everyone in MLB
did, it seemed. Because everyone
knows how rare it is
to make it to the “bigs.” He
commiserated with us Malden
folks, agreeing that Carmine
got the short end of
that Chicago stick.
Double-A: A blink away
from the big leagues
A blink away. So that Double-A
spot is pretty valuable
real estate when it comes to
a professional baseball career,
especially if you had
just turned 24 years old a
week before Jordan’s big
news announcement, as
Cappuccio had done on
February 1, 1994.
Still another shoe dropped
about a week and a half before
spring training broke in
March 1994 when it was announced
that the most famous
minor league baseball
player in the world, Michael
Jordan, would be starting
his professional baseball career
with the Birmingham
Barons, at the Double-A level.
And – you guessed it –
he’d be playing outfield.
You heard that correctly.
Here was a man who had
last played baseball 13 years
previously, at Laney High in
Wilmington, N.C. Two games
into his senior year baseball
season at Laney, he was dismissed
from the team because
he had missed time
on the baseball diamond
due to playing in a basketball
tournament. Despite his
basically nonexistent baseball
resume, the 31-year-old
Jordan was getting a coveted
and highly valued outfielder
roster spot in one of
the top Double-A professional
baseball leagues in
the nation.
As for the aforementioned
trio of Cappuccio, Cameron
and Hurst? No Double-A
for them. Not even a sniff in
1994, not with the Michael
Jordan Show headed to BirCARMINE
CAPPUCCIO | SEE PAGE 9
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Page 9
Youth Hockey
East Coast Junior Patriots compete for state championship in weekend playoffs
By Meghann Breton
B
ack again for more,
the East Coast Junior
Patriots youth hockey
team will be competing
in the Mass. Hockey State
Championships this weekend.
After a successful regular
season that landed them
in 1st place overall, the kids
are ready to take it all and
come out on top. The team
is comprised of 17 talented
kids from Saugus, Revere,
Malden, Everett, Melrose
and Winthrop. This year
the State Championships
will take place at the New
England Sports Center in
Marlborough, Mass. The first
game will be held tonight
(Friday, March 1) at 6:40
p.m., and it will be against
the Junior Maples from Triton/Amesbury.
Games will
continue all weekend leadCARMINE
CAPPUCCIO |
FROM PAGE 8
mingham and the Barons.
The promising trio of upand-comers
was assigned
to the Prince William Cannons
in Woodbridge, Virginia,
an Advanced (Long
Season) Single-A White Sox
franchise.
I was there in the second
row on Opening Day to see
Carmine go 1-for-4 with an
RBI double in the left-center
gap in his debut with
Prince William. Just like he
had at every stop along the
way – Malden High, Rollins
College, South Bend – and
now in northern Virginia, he
looked like a stud hitter.
Being assigned to the Single-A
was not a step down
so much as it was a “stay in
place” assignment. Could
Cappuccio, Cameron or
Hurst have used that possible
promotion to Double-A
Birmingham as a stepping
stone to the bigger and better
futures? Of course they
could have used it.
Cameron actually did get
a big league call-up the next
season. He was playing for
Birmingham in 1995, along
with Cappuccio and Hurst,
but he got sent back down
after an unproductive, 22game
stint. Maybe if Cameron
had played with Birmingham
that extra year, the added
experience would have
helped him to stick in the
SINGLE-A PRINCE WILLIAM
CANNONS: In 1994, Malden’s
Carmine Cappuccio played for
the Advanced Single-A Prince
William (Virginia) Cannons. It
was thought in spring training
he might have made the
jump to Double-A Birmingham.
“bigs”?
Same
for Hurst. His value
was high enough after the
1994 season in Birmingham
that he was a decent piece
in a trade to the Detroit Tigers
in the 1995 offseason.
He bounced back and forth
for a couple of seasons between
the majors and the
minors, never gaining a
niche at the highest. Would
that ’94 season at Double-A
have made a difference?
Sure it would.
They even said it on ESPN’s
Sports Center!
As for Cappuccio? You
know it would have made
a difference. They even said
IN THE TOURNAMENT: Connor Lacey, 14, of Saugus, in recent
action for the East Coast Junior Patriots, who compete tonight
for the Mass. Hockey State Championship. (Courtesy Photo of
Meghann Breton)
ing up to the Championship
game which will be held on
Sunday (March 3).
The East Coast Junior Patriots
hockey team is a part
of the Valley Hockey League
and consists of the following
12-, 14-, and 15-year-old
kids, all coached by Jimmy
Caruso, of Saugus: Joe Hurley,
of Malden; Justin Souders,
of Malden; and Jamie
Branzell, of Revere; Demetri
Breton, 14, of Saugus;
Artie O’Leary, 14, of Saugus;
Andre Rosales, 14, of
it on ESPN’s Sports Center!
That very night of the
news about Jordan, on
Sports Center, I recall, vividly,
anchorman Dan Patrick
stating, “It’s great that
Michael Jordan wants to try
and play professional baseball.
But who is the player
that’s going to be held back
an extra year in the minors
because of this?
“Maybe it’s Carmine Cappuccio
from Malden, Mass.,
who led the South Bend
White Sox in hitting last
year? Or one of the other
outfielders from that team
like Jimmy Hurst or Mike
Cameron?” Patrick said on
national television. “Who
knows? What we do know is
that one of these White Sox
prospects is going to miss
experience at a higher level
because of Michael Jordan.”
So there. Dan Patrick said
so!
I remember sitting on my
couch on Jacob Street that
night, thinking the same
exact thing: “Yeah, Michael
Jordan is a great basketball
player and all that, but
what’s up with him playing
baseball? He’s 31 years old
and there’s no way he intends
on making this a longterm
thing.
“He’s playing outfield?
That’s what Carmine plays.
I hope this really does not
hurt his chances,” I thought.
Then, lo and behold, MJ
goes to Double-A Birmingham
and the other three
MAKING THE MOVE: Andre Rosales, 14, of Saugus, heads down
the rink in recent action for the East Coast Junior Patriots; he
will be competing for the Massachusetts Hockey State Championship
this weekend. (Courtesy Photo of Meghann Breton)
Saugus; James Caruso,14,
of Saugus; Conor Lacey, 14,
of Saugus; Louis Migliore,
14, of Saugus; Evan Manuel,
12, of Saugus; JoJo Visconti,
12, of Revere; Justin
Hurley, 14, of Malden; Anthony
Ford, 14, of Malden;
outfielders are off to Virginia
with the Cannons.
What followed in the 1994
season appears to be further
validation of some suspect
decision-making in the
White Sox organization.
Only success for Birmingham
was at ticket booth
The only success Birmingham
had that 1994 season
was in the ticket booth. They
set an attendance record for
the franchise that was never
broken as the traveling
carnival atmosphere Jordan
brought to the team filled
K.J. Moura, 12, of Malden; J.J.
Perryman, 14, of Everett; Ramond
Blauvelt, 14, of Everett;
Sebastian Caceda, 14, of
Revere; Evan Souders, 14, of
Malden; Ayush Doshi, 14, of
Melrose; and Adam Mouhib,
15, of Winthrop.
the stands all year.
Truth be told, Jordan was
far from great and shy of
good. But it would be a lie
to say he was awful. He hit
.203 for the season, starting
nearly every night for
manager Terry Francona
(that guy again! future Red
Sox icon). He did drive in 51
runs in 127 games and hit
three home runs. He walked
51 times, nearly leading the
team in that department,
CARMINE CAPPUCCIO
| SEE PAGE 15
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THE SAUGUS ADVOCATE – FriDAy, MArCH 1, 2024
Beyond the podium: Sam LoRusso’s journey to
wrestling excellence
By Dom Nicastro
O
n paper, Saugus High
School senior Sam LoRusso
is not a wrestling
state champion. But he
kinda is.
Consider this: LoRusso
wrestles for the Saugus-Peabody
cooperative team. They
compete in Division 1. Had
Saugus had a team of its
own, it’s likely competing in
Division 3. And LoRusso beat
the Division 3 state champion
in the 157-pound class –
Adrian Guzman of Ashland
– in the All-State wrestling
tournament. See the logic?
LoRusso is pretty much a
state champion.
What he actually is for
the record books is a podium-placer
among the best of
the best in competition in his
weight class. LoRusso – unbeaten
in dual meets the last
two seasons – advanced further
in the state meets with
fourth places in the last two
weeks: at Division 1 States
and then at All-States, which
features all wrestlers across
Massachusetts from all divisions.
In
the dynamic and oftentimes
grueling world of high
school wrestling, certain individuals
stand out not just
for their accomplishments
on the mat but also for their
journey to success. LoRusso
is one such individual, whose
name has become synonymous
with resilience, progression
and excellence in
the Massachusetts wrestling
community. He’s beaten
wrestlers that beat him
earlier on the biggest stage,
has come from behind in
big matches and even powered
through a swollen eye
during States.
CLIFTONDALE |
SEE PAGE 11
statements were made by fellow
teachers, school officials,
PTO parents and students who
truly knew and loved her.
National Teacher of the Year
Marleah made a lasting impression
on the hearts of all
those who came to know her,
including the vast number of
elementary students who came
Saugus’ Sam LoRusso tosses an opponent to the mat.
He’ll compete at “New Englands”
this weekend in Providence,
R.I. He’s gotten recognition
as one of the best
wrestlers in his weight class
by The Schwartz Report; LoRusso
was ranked 15th in
New England after Division
1 States by that report.
As he prepares to make
his mark at “New Englands,”
his story offers a compelling
look into the making
of a high school wrestling
standout. LoRusso’s wrestling
narrative is a chronicle
of continuous improvement
and strategic preparation.
Beginning his wrestling career
at a young age in Saugus,
LoRusso has developed
a wrestling style that is as tenacious
as it is tactical. With
a fourth-place finish at both
the Division 1 States and
All-States in the 157-pound
class, his journey is marked
by a steady climb through
the ranks, punctuated by intense
offseason training.
“I really turned it on in the
offseason,” LoRusso said. “I
turned it on in my sophomore
offseason to go to junior
year and I did really well.
I was a little bit undersized
to her classroom, in her over 45
years of teaching.
Being acclaimed as the Elementary
School National Teacher
of the Year in 1970 made
no inroads on the unassuming
ways, which were the hallmark
of this gracious woman.
I was witness to this trait when
as a Language Arts Coordinator
I visited her late in her career to
display to her the new program
which we were adopting system
wide in Saugus.
last year for my weight. But
this last offseason, I grew a
lot, and I got up to 175 in
the offseason and was lifting
really heavy. I was going to
wrestling five days a week.”
This offseason grind paid
dividends, allowing LoRusso
to hone his technique and
build the physicality needed
to dominate his weight class.
But it was not just the physical
training that propelled
him forward; mental preparation
played a crucial role
as well. LoRusso’s approach
embodies a holistic view of
athlete development, where
mental fortitude is as critical
as physical prowess.
His coaches – integral to
his growth – have offered
more than just technical
guidance. They’ve instilled
a mindset that has allowed
LoRusso to excel under pressure.
“All my coaches are
great... they helped me turn
it up mentally,” LoRusso said,
underlining the psychological
edge he’s cultivated.
The cooperative wrestling
program between Saugus
and Peabody High Schools
has also been instrumental
in his development, creatThere
was hesitation in her
eyes, a moment of reflection, as
she sought words to address me
– that – “with two years to go before
retirement could I make an
exception and let her continue
the program she was comfortable
with and successful with,”
a request, short of being a plea,
offered with no claim of privilege
or seeking favor, coming
across as “John, would it make
sense if...?”
It made sense – a lasting
Saugus wrestler Sam LoRusso and strength coach Mike Penta
ing an environment that nurtures
talent through collaboration
and shared resources.
It’s a symbiotic relationship
that has seen individual
prowess translate into
collective success, with the
team boasting a remarkable
record that neared 20 team
wins.
LoRusso’s ascent is also a
narrative of community and
family. His brother, Max, a junior,
shares his wrestling ambitions,
echoing the competitive
environment that permeates
their home. “Everything
I did, he did it with me,”
LoRusso said of his brother’s
training regimen, highlighting
the shared journey that
has seen them both become
forces to be reckoned with
on the mat.
Away from the physical
battles of wrestling, LoRusso
excels academically, boasting
a GPA that reflects his
diligence. His success in the
classroom mirrored by his
achievements on the mat
paints the picture of a student-athlete
who has mastered
the balance required
to excel in both arenas. He
wants to get into a union afmemory
of two teachers who
respected one another and
loved their trades.—John Burns,
October 2006
A fellow teacher writes
It was quite often the case
that each classroom held approximately
40-46 students
during my tenure in the 1930’s
and 40’s. I was the first-grade
teacher and Marleah Graves was
not only my colleague, but my
best friend as well. We taught
ter high school and possibly
work with family on elevator
maintenance and other
trades.
As LoRusso sets his sights
on “New Englands,” he does
so not only with the skill
and determination honed
through years of rigorous
training but also with the
knowledge that his journey
has been shaped by the
support and guidance of his
coaches, the unwavering
spirit of his family and the camaraderie
of his teammates.
And this helps: He’s just simply
good on the mat.
“I would say [my style]
hasn’t changed much,” LoRusso
said. “I just got better
at it. I have a very – I
would say – I have a very
strong style. I go out there
with heavy hands. I just try
to wear guys down. I’ve got
better conditioning than
them. I’m not going to stop.
Just wrestle through all the
positions and just go hard
for six minutes. I mean, my
coach tells me that a lot of
times, even if the kid is better
than me, I beat them because,
he said, I just bully
kids.”
on the first floor with our classrooms
next to one another and
Marleah was the second-grade
teacher. If we were assigned a
class of less than 40 students, we
were both in heaven that year!
As a first-grade teacher, I remember
my children as disciplined,
well-behaved, and respectful,
not only of me, but
of their parents and fellow stuCLIFTONDALE
| FROM
PAGE 5
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Page 11
Saugus ends postseason drought with
convincing victory over North High
By Dom Nicastro
T
hey won Northeastern
Conference titles,
had 16-win seasons
and several all-stars. However,
nagging the Saugus
High School girls basketball
program during its recent
string of success had been the
goose egg in the postseason.
Not anymore. The Sachems
broke the postseason hex.
And convincingly. Saugus
beat North High of Worcester,
58-12, in the preliminary
round of the Division 3 state
girls basketball tournament
at Saugus High School on
Tuesday night, Feb. 27. Saugus
(14-7), the No. 25 seed in
the 40-team, single-elimination
tourney, moves on to face
No. 8 Dover-Sherborn (13-7)
on Thursday night, Feb. 29, at
Dover-Sherborn High School.
“It’s great,” said Saugus sophomore
Peyton DiBiasio, who
led all scorers with 14 points,
including nine in the second
quarter in which the Sachems
outscored North, 23-6, and
went into the break leading,
30-8. “You know, we’ve been
struggling for the last two
years. We’ve never been able
to get that win. But it’s always
been a high compete level.And
I think we upped our game this
year, and we prepared ourselves
for moments like this.”
Ice-cold in the first quarter
(1-for-13 from the field), Saugus
in the next quarter was
simply red-hot like the color
in its uniform. The Sachems
shot 9-for-17 in the second
quarter, including 5-for-8 from
3-point land. Ella Castle was
CLIFTONDALE |
SEE PAGE 11
dents as well. For the most part,
students behaved and listened
to the teacher but if there was a
problem with a student, which
was rare, the parents would side
with the teacher and exact their
own discipline at home.
During my years in college, we
were taught that the eyes of a
child were not developed fully
enough to learn how to read until
they reached the age of seven.
We did not know about autism
at that time, and I do not
recall anyone getting sick over
peanut butter. Few children had
Saugus’ Ashleigh Moore tossed up a 3 as Madi Femino (4) positions
for rebound.
the Downtown Queen with
2 in the quarter and 8 of her
overall 11 points. DiBiasio,
Taylor Deleidi (10 points) and
Ashleigh Moore (3 points, 7 rebounds)
also had 3-pointers
as Saugus had a game-turning
16-0 run over the first and
second quarters.
The Sachems’ defense in the
opening 16 minutes forced 27
turnovers from last-seeded
North High (44 in the game).
The Polar Bears had 5 field
goals in the entire game, including
only 1 in the second
half – Susy Daniels’ bucket
that made it 52-12 with 3:52
left in the game. North went
3-for-11 in the first half and
1-for-20 in the second half under
ferocious pressure in the
halfcourt by the Sachems.
Saugus coach Joe Lowe, in
his first year as head coach after
serving as an assistant last
year, said he was concerned
about North point guard Jakayla
Edmonds after watching
her on film. She didn’t score
asthma and very few of my students
required any kind of medication.
As
teachers, we did not assign
homework to our students until
the fourth grade. We believed
that youngsters needed fresh air
and exercise as much as they
needed lessons in the Three R’s.
In my teaching career, children
were able to attend neighborhood
schools where children
knew their classmates
and neighbors. Most children
today do not have that advantage.
It must be simply awful to
put a young child on a bus and
send him or her off to a school
in another section of town. It is
against Saugus in her 0-for6
night. “She’s a great player. I
watched her on film, and she’s
tough,” Lowe said. “I thought
Madison Botta and Madi Femino
just kind of shut her down.
Because the games that I saw
them playing, when she gets
going, their team gets going
with open threes. And for us
to shut her down was kind of
what our gameplan was, and
I thought they did a good job.”
Saugus allowed only 1 field
goal in the first quarter (Daniels’
bucket that made it 6-2).
But Saugus only had 1 itself:
DiBiasio’s 3-pointer that broke
a 0-for-8 start to the game that
made it 5-0 nearly 5 minutes
into the contest.
“All nerves,” Lowe said when
asked about the slow start.
“They had a good crowd. Parents
were there. It was loud
in here. I lost my voice a little
bit. It was cracking. I think
for us to miss six layups in the
first quarter, I think that was
all nerves. But I’m happy they
no wonder why children are so
stressed out in today’s society.
I have been very fortunate to
have lived a long life and to be
able to see how well so many of
my students turned out. Some
of the ones I never expected to
make it into the world became
the most successful ones of all
– one just never knows the real
potential of a young student!
Another advantage to living
a long life has been the opportunity
to meet many of my former
students in our adult years.
It is such a joy to talk to them
about their elementary school
days and the wonderful times
we shared together at CliftonSaugus
coach Joe Lowe is all smiles during a timeout.
Saugus’ leading scorer Peyton DiBiasio
got it out then.”
It was Easy Road from there,
as Saugus heated up on each
end of the floor. And in the
post-game, it led to an allsmiles
Ana Silva, a Saugus
senior who’s played for four
years now and was longing
for that first postseason win.
“It feels amazing,” Silva said.
“My senior year is coming to
an end. So to get a tournadale
School.—Miss Constance
Putnam, October 2006
A letter from a former student
To
the Members of the MEG
Foundation:
Marleah Graves was a great
help to me and the rest of my
class in the second grade. Our
class had a difficult first grade
because it was the year that Miss
Putnam retired, and we had no
fewer than a dozen different
teachers so that we made very
little progress and had next to
no continuity.
So, it was up to Miss Graves to
teach us both the first and secment
win is something I’m going
to remember.”
Saugus girls basketball scoring
against North High
Peyton DiBiasio, 5-2-14; Ella
Castle, 4-0-11; Madi Femino,
0-2-2; Devany Millerick,
0-3-3; Ashleen Escobar, 2-4-8;
Ashleigh Moore, 1-0-3; Taylor
Deleidi, 4-1-10; Jessica Bremberg,
2-0-4; Sydney Deleidi,
1-1-3.
ond grade material when we
arrived in her classroom. She
did an excellent job and really
bailed out our sinking boat. We
were and still are very much indebted
to her.
She was very dedicated and
took a keen interest in our
well-being – showing special
slide shows and other activities
to enhance our interest and enthusiasm.
It
is very fitting that the Cliftondale
School is being preserved
and dedicated in her
memory as she taught so faithfully
and well for many, many
years.—Charlie Gibbons, October
2011
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THE SAUGUS ADVOCATE – FriDAy, MArCH 1, 2024
Saugus Gardens in the Winter
Here’s what’s blooming in town this week to make your walks more enjoyable
By Laura Eisener
W
hile most of us are
just dreaming of gardens
at this time of
year, today is the first day of meteorological
spring! Kelly Slater
has been harvesting spring
greens for quite a while now
and can pick her salad ingredients
without going outdoors, although
she has also built a tiny
greenhouse outside, which is
producing tasty treats like perennial
and annual arugulas
and the colorful red veined sorrel.
Indoors there are several varieties
of lettuce growing in pots
on a sunny windowsill, as well
as kale, basil, parsley, stevia and
beet greens.
Wild arugula, also known as
perennial wall rocket or perennial
roquette (Diplotaxis tenuifolia),
is a spicier flavored leafy
green that grows back for several
years in the garden. Its leaves
are narrower, and it tastes more
strongly of mustard. If it is left
to bloom, the flowers are bright
yellow unlike the whitish color
of the annual rocket.
Red veined sorrel (Rumex sanguineus)
has long narrow leaves
with red petioles and veins. The
leaves have a lemony flavor. Also
known as bloody dock or bloodwort
because of the color, it actually
looks a lot more appealing
than these nicknames sound. It
is a member of the buckwheat
family (Polygonaceae) and unrelated
to the genus wood sorrel
(Oxalis spp.), a member of the
wood sorrel family (Oxalidaceae),
some varieties of which are
sold as ornamental shamrocks at
this time of year. The two plants
look nothing alike, but both do
contain some oxalates, which
may cause problems if eaten excessively.
Both are tasty and edible
in moderate amounts. When
young, the leaves of red veined
sorrel can be added to salads,
and if the leaves grow larger
“April Snow, Breakheart” is a painting by Kelly Slater showing oak buds opening despite a late spring snow in Breakheart
Reservation. (Photo courtesy of Kelly Slater)
they can be sauteed much like
spinach and beet greens.
Kelly’s greenhouse is made of
flexible stems of forsythia, which
grow on her land; they can be
formed into half-hoop shapes,
with each end buried in the
ground inside a wooden edged
raised garden bed. To help keep
light and keep heat in, plastic
sheeting is placed over the four
hoops, and further heat is absorbed
by water filled plastic
milk jugs inside the house. This
has been overall a mild winter,
but the greenhouse has enabled
cool weather greens to begin
growing and mature much faster
than they would if just planted
outdoors in bare ground.
Nature provides inspiration
for many of her paintings, such
as the one pictured above of
oak branches budding out despite
snow in early spring. This
painting, titled “April Snow,
Breakheart” depicts some trees
growing in Saugus’ own state
park, Breakheart Reservation.
Mary Lou Graham’s snowdrops
in her Forest Street garden
are a little farther along
than mine and are certainly living
up to their reputation as
being February bloomers. Last
week I mentioned a few of this
flower’s nicknames, such as fair
maids of February and Candlemas
bells, but I have also been
reminded of some others. The
French word for snowdrops is
perce-neige, which means snow
piercer, as often the blossoms
do come up through the snow.
In some parts of England, the
drooping posture of the blossoms
has produced the nickname
of dingle-dangles. The
19th-century English poet Christina
Rossetti in her poem “February”
wrote of these flowers, “I’ve
brought some snowdrops; only
just a few, But quite enough to
prove the world awake...”
Some other signs of spring are
blossoms opening on the maples.
The squirrels in my neighborhood
seem very fond of the
blossoms of silver maple (Acer
saccharinum) and red maple
(Acer rubrum), which are in full
bloom now, even venturing out
on branches that bounce with
their weight to nibble on the
flowers. They snap off some of
the smallest branches in order to
hold them while they nibble off
the blossoms, then drop them
on the ground when they are
through. These trees produce
plenty of blossoms for both
squirrels and for the wind to
pollinate, so there will be plenty
of new trees sprouting later
in the spring.
Editor’s Note: Laura Eisener is a
landscape design consultant who
helps homeowners with landscape
design, plant selection and
placement of trees and shrubs, as
well as perennials. She is a member
of the Saugus Garden Club
and offered to write a series of articles
about “what’s blooming in
town” shortly after the outbreak
of the COVID-19 pandemic. She
was inspired after seeing so many
people taking up walking.
Kelly Slater’s little greenhouse, which uses forsythia twigs
as a frame, has harvestable crops already! (Photo courtesy
of Laura Eisener)
This squirrel has been harvesting silver maple blossoms
outside my window for several days recently. (Photo courtesy
of Laura Eisener)
Snowdrops are blooming in
the garden of Mary Lou Graham.
(Photo courtesy of Laura
Eisener)
A variety of spring lettuces can be picked from Kelly Slater’s
windowsill garden. (Photo courtesy of Laura Eisener)
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Page 13
The Sounds of Saugus
By Mark E. Vogler
Good morning, Saugus!
It was about this time eight
years ago that I had just begun
my second journalistic
tour of duty covering Saugus
– this time as editor of
The Saugus Advocate. I had
last reported on the people
and events of the town for a
five and a half year–stint with
North Shore Sunday that ended
in the spring of 1992. In between
the two Saugus stops,
I had spent three years as editor
of The Nantucket Beacon
followed by 18 years at The Eagle-Tribune
in North Andover.
I still remember my first
night back in Saugus, sitting
in the cramped, but cozy first
floor conference room at Saugus
Town Hall. Town Manager
Scott C. Crabtree presided
over his annual briefing of
Saugus selectmen on what
was then his proposed budget
for the 2017 Fiscal Year.
I was just a guest that night,
and didn’t have to file a story
on the proposed budget. But I
would hit the ground running
the following week, covering
Super Tuesday. I hung around
outside the Precinct 9 polling
location at the Oaklandvale Elementary
School.
I remember interviewing
a bunch of Saugus residents
who voted for Bernie Sanders
that day. The U.S. Senator
from Vermont won a close
race for Democratic votes in
Saugus over Hillary Clinton.
Meanwhile, Donald Trump
trounced his nearest Republican
challenger, John Kasich.
What I remember most
about those hours outside the
Precinct 9 polls was getting to
talk to two first-time voters
and how thrilled they were to
be exercising their democratic
rights. And they were more
than proud to discuss their
choice of Sanders during interviews
with The Saugus Advocate
after they voted.
I plan to spend a couple of
hours on Tuesday covering
what would be my third presidential
primary. Hopefully, I
will find the same passion and
young idealism that I found
eight years ago in first-time
voters Hannahy Lydon, then
18; and Nick Dicredico, who
was 21.
But that may be a challenge,
given how jaded and down
people are on politics. And
this is the first time I can recall
in many a Presidential Election
Year where the primary really
doesn’t mean anything for
voters in either party.
Stay tuned.
No retirement plans yet
It’s about this time every
year that I make a decision on
whether to go another year
as a newspaperman. It was
professionally fulfilling for
me to make it to a half century
of reporting. At age 71,
I know I don’t have too many
years left in a dying profession
that’s been rewarding to me.
It all depends on good health.
Journalism is something that
I still enjoy and take pride in
– knowing that a consistently
good newspaper is an asset
to any community.
After eight years covering
the town for The Saugus Advocate
– plus the five and a
half years in a previous newspaper
stint – I have invested
more than 13 years of my professional
life in Saugus. Driving
up and down Route One
has always been the least desirable
part of the job. But it
has been a fun, interesting
and challenging job that I’ve
always taken pride in doing.
But, as they say, all good
things come to an end at
some point in life. If I had the
energy and commitment to
go another decade, I would.
But I wouldn’t want to convert
to an online journalist. I’m
a print guy. I have to feel and
see the real paper.
Two sad “Shout Outs”
Precinct 6 Town Meeting
Member Jeanie Bartolo contributed
this week’s “Shout
Outs.” “I have two sad ‘Shout
Outs,’” Jeanie wrote in a recent
email.
“The first is for Carol Davis,
wife of Bob Davis, who passed
away last week. All of us who
go to World Series Park knew
Carol. She was just the sweetest
person, I never saw her
without a smile on her face
and a kind word for everyone.
I will miss her. Rest in Peace,”
Jeanie wrote.
“The second sad ‘Shout Out’
is for Ruth Swanson who also
passed away last week. I first
met her when we were on the
Cultural Arts Council together.
Her love for the Arts was such
that she was a founding member
of the M.E.G. Cultural Arts
Center in Cliftondale Square.
She was smart, funny and witty
and I will miss her too. Rest
in Peace.”
Want to “Shout Out” a fellow
Saugonian?
This is an opportunity for
our paper’s readers to single
out – in a brief mention –
remarkable acts or achievements
by Saugus residents or
an act of kindness or a nice
THE MEG BUILDING, which was originally known as the Bond Building, but known mostly as
the Cliftondale School during most of its century of existence, is one of the most famous historical
landmarks in Precinct 2. It houses the MEG Foundation – named after Marleah Elizabeth
Graves – a legendary Saugus educator. Plans are in the works for an “Open House” event
at The MEG on May 4-5. (Saugus Advocate file photo)
gesture. Just send an email
(mvoge@comcast.net) with a
mention in the subject line of
“An Extra Shout Out.” No more
than a paragraph; anything
longer might lend itself to a
story and/or a photo.
Food Pantry notes
The Saugus United Parish
Food Pantry is open today
(Friday, March 1) from 9:3011
a.m.
Legion Breakfast today
There’s a good breakfast
deal for Saugus veterans and
other folks who enjoy a hearty
breakfast on Friday mornings.
The American Legion Post 210
at 44 Taylor St. in Saugus offers
Friday morning breakfasts
for the 2023-24 season. Doors
open at 7:30 a.m., with breakfast
served from 8-9:00 a.m.
for an $8 donation. Veterans
who cannot afford the donation
may be served free.
Countdown Till Town
Meeting
The 2024 Annual Town
Meeting convenes on Monday,
May 6 – that’s still more
than two months away. Having
collaborated with the Saugus
Public Library and SaugusTV
while moderating 10
months of “Saugus Over Coffee,”
in which we featured the
town’s 10 precincts last year,
I feel invested in the Town
Meeting process.
As a special service to our
readers and the registered
voters of Saugus, we will reach
out to the Town Meeting
members in each precinct, focusing
on one precinct each
week, in the weeks leading up
to the start of Town Meeting.
We plan to ask Town Meeting
members about their expectations
for the upcoming
Town Meeting. This week,
we received responses from
three of the five Town Meeting
Members in Precinct 1.
Next week, we will reach out
to Town Meeting Members in
Precinct 2.
By the time Town Meeting
convenes, all 50 members will
have had a chance to respond
to these four questions:
1) What do you consider
the top priority for the town
as you prepare for the opening
of the 2024 Town Meeting
session?
2) What do you consider
the top priority for residents
in your precinct as you prepare
for the opening of the
2024 Town Meeting session?
3) Are you working independently
or in collaboration
with other members on articles
to be introduced for this
year’s Town Meeting? Could
you please elaborate? Summarize
your article and what
you hope to accomplish.
4) Please feel free to share
any other views about the upcoming
Town Meeting.
Town Meeting forums at
the library
In recent weeks, Precinct 10
Town Meeting Member Peter
Manoogian has been providing
a wonderful opportunity
for Saugus citizens who want
to learn the basics about Town
Meeting – the legislative body
of Saugus town government.
Manoogian has presided over
several Town Meeting forums
held at the Saugus Public Library.
Manoogian is a veteran
of about four decades in local
town government at various
levels, including many years
as a Town Meeting member.
Manoogian will be leading
two more sessions this year
that are tailored for newly
elected Town Meeting members
or veterans who want
to refresh themselves about
Robert’s Rules of Order or how
to put forward an article for
consideration. The sessions
for March 25 and April 22 will
be held in the Community
Room at the library from 6:30
p.m. to 7:30 p.m.
Learn about Appleton’s
Revolution on March 13
The first Saugus Historical
Society meeting of the spring
will be at 7 p.m. on Wednesday,
March 13 at 30 Main St. in
Saugus. Paul E. Kenworthy will
talk about “the first American
Revolution,” which began in
Saugus when Samuel Appleton
spoke from a high rock adjacent
to what is now Appleton
Street on September 19,
1687, denouncing Governor
Edmund Andros. In 1686, Edmund
Andros was appointed
governor of the Dominion of
New England by Great Britain.
He instituted many laws and
policies that were not popular
in New England.
One of the most significant
protests during Andros’ threeyear
administration occurred
here in Saugus. A year after
Andros’s appointment, ApTHE
SOUNDS | SEE PAGE 14
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THE SAUGUS ADVOCATE – FriDAy, MArCH 1, 2024
Two Saugus men charged in million-dollar insurance fraud case
A
Middlesex County
Grand Jury has indicted
six people –
including two Saugus men
– in connection with an insurance
fraud scheme that
bilked insurance carriers
out of more than a million
dollars. Fabio Rodrigo Jordao
Correa, 31, has been
charged with one count of
conspiracy to commit larceny
over $1,200, six counts
of larceny over $1,200, one
count of common and notorious
thief, 11 counts of
false or fraudulent insurance
claims and one count
of identity fraud. Tabajara
Alves Ribeiro, 23, has been
charged with one count of
conspiracy to commit larceny
over $1,200. This week
Middlesex County District
Attorney Marian Ryan, Everett
Chief of Police Steven
Mazzie and Chief of Investigations
of the MassachuSOUNDS
| FROM PAGE 13
pleton spoke from the top of
the rock outcrop against Great
Britain’s demands from the
colonies. The Appleton’s Pulpit
historical marker at that
spot is familiar to many residents
and was recently restored
by the local Parson
Roby Chapter of the DAR. This
program will give the background
of that incident, including
political changes in
England and in the colonies
that profoundly changed the
relationship between them.
Paul is a National Park Ranger
at the Saugus Iron Works
National Historic Site and
vice-president of Saugus Historical
Society.
The program is free to the
general public. There will be
a brief meeting at 7 p.m. to
allow Saugus Historical Society
members the opportunity
to vote on the slate of officers
for this year, followed by a presentation
of a booklet of photographs
of the work of Carmine
Moschella, created by
his daughter Carla Moschella,
for the historical society archives.
Many Saugus residents
will remember Mr. Moschella’s
work at the high school
and the many projects he
contributed to the town. He
passed on many of his skills
to the high school students
and adults who took woodworking
and furniture restoration
classes from him. The
“Appleton’s Revolution” talk
will follow immediately. As
usual, light refreshments will
be served.
setts Insurance Fraud Bureau
Katherine Mulligan announced
the indictment of
six individuals in connection
with allegedly filing
false and fraudulent insurance
claims through their
business, Riviera Auto Body,
which is located in Everett.
“During a two-year investigation
by the District Attorney’s
Office, the Everett Police
and the Massachusetts
Insurance Fraud Bureau,
authorities learned that an
auto-body shop, FT Auto
or Riviera Auto in Everett,
was allegedly at the center
of a wide-ranging scheme
to defraud multiple insurance
carriers,” according to
a press release issued by Ryan’s
office.
“This scheme operated for
multiple years and was allegedly
masterminded by
defendants Jhon Lopera
and Fabio Correa. The deCompost/Recycling
DropOff
Site winter hours
The Town of Saugus Compost/Recycling
Drop-Off Site
is closed for the winter. But
it will reopen for recycling
on the third Saturday of this
month weather permitting.
Please note: The site will be
open March 16 during the
period from 8 a.m. to 2 p.m.
Please contact Scott Brazis,
Director of Solid Waste/Recycling,
with any questions at
781-231-4036.
Welcome to Cliftondale
The Meg Foundation Board
of Directors is inviting former
students, family members,
friends, or anyone interested
in attending an “Open House”
event at The MEG Building,
formerly known as the Cliftondale
School, from May
4–5, 2024.
Many of our visitors to the
school – located at 54-58 Essex
St. – have shared with us
incredibly special memories
of their childhood while attending
the first, second, third
and fourth grades. Oftentimes
they bring their grandchildren
as well to take a tour of the
building and view firsthand
what an elementary school
looked like those many years
ago.
The purpose of this event is
to highlight Cliftondale, the
school, the people and the
businesses that have made
this part of Saugus special.
Presently board members are
in the process of gathering
historical items, class pictures,
schoolbooks and handwritfendants
allegedly orchestrated
the submission of
scores of insurance claims
for customers of the shop
which defrauded the insurance
carriers of in excess of
$1 million in payments,” the
statement continued.
“The claims were false in
a variety of ways: they often
included descriptions of
automobile collisions which
had never occurred, or collisions
in which the damage
to the vehicles were inflated,
or damage to the vehicle
was done at the shop
itself and was not the result
of a collision. The claims
also listed persons as drivers
of vehicles involved in the
collisions who were simply
aliases of the defendants or
stolen identities appropriated
by the defendants for use
in the fraudulent scheme. As
part of the scheme, defendant
Lopera allegedly cultiten
letters of young students.
If you have any class pictures
or school memorabilia that
the committee could borrow
to display, or if you have any
questions, please contact Paula
Walsh at 781-520-2122.
Kindergarten Enrollment
2024-2025
Open enrollment for kindergarten
will begin on Monday,
April 22, and continue
through Friday, April 26. Kindergarten
is free and full day
(8:30 a.m.-2:30 p.m.). Families
can pick up a kindergarten
registration packet at
the main office of the Veterans
Early Learning Center between
the hours of 9:30 a.m.
and 1:30 p.m. Completed registration
packets will be due
on Wednesday, May 22, and
Thursday, May 23, during the
following hours: 9:30 a.m.1:30
p.m. (All registration documents
must be included
on the packet return dates.)
Staff will be available to collect
your documentation at
the main entrance. Once all
documentation is confirmed
we will schedule an appointment
for a mandatory kindergarten
screening. Kindergarten
screenings will be held
on June 3 & 4 and will last 20
minutes.
*While there is no official
deadline for kindergarten
registration, we ask that you
register your student by May
24, to help us effectively plan
staffing and programming for
next year.”
SAVE 2024 Environmental
Scholarship Available
vated a relationship with defendant
Greene, who was a
clerk at the RMV branch in
Revere and performed RMV
queries and transactions
at Lopera’s request and received
electronic payments
and gift cards from Lopera
as compensation for her services
to him.”
Also indicted: Jose Manuel
Gordon, 49, of Roxbury,
has been charged with one
count of conspiracy to commit
larceny over $1,200 and
one count of receiving stolen
property. Wanda Greene,
56, of Revere, has been
charged with receiving a
bribe as a public employee,
receiving unlawful gratuities
as a public employee,
and receiving improper
compensation as a public
employee. Four of the
defendants have been arraigned
in Middlesex Superior
Court.
Saugus Action Volunteers
for the Environment (SAVE)
is very pleased to announce
that it is offering a $1,000 Environmental
Scholarship to a
Saugus resident who is or will
be attending a two- or fouryear
college or other educational
institution and pursuing
a degree in an area that
would positively impact the
environment. A qualifying
applicant may be a 2024 high
school graduating senior or a
current college undergraduate
student continuing their
education.
Applicants can download
the SAVE 2024 Environmental
Scholarship Application
Form found at www.saugusSAVE.org.
Please note: Section
C of the application should
be identified with your initials
only and should provide
a brief summary of any of
your activities relating to the
environment, as well as describe
how you feel your career
choice will positively impact
the environment.
Please email your application
– no later than midnight
on April 19, 2024 – to: SAVE
Co-President Ann Devlin at
adevlin@aisle10.net
What’s new at the Saugus
Public Library?
There’s always something
interesting going on. Here’s an
activity worth checking out:
Join us at the Saugus Public
Library on March 11 from
6-7:30 p.m. for an adult painting
class with the Pop Up Art
School. Each participant will
create a painting on canvas
of a starry night sky. The preTwo
other individuals
were indicted by the grand
jury and are fugitives. They
are Jhon Alexander Lopera
Munera, 40, of Revere,
charged with one count of
conspiracy to commit larceny
over $1,200, six counts
of larceny over $1,200, one
count of common and notorious
thief, 15 counts of
false or fraudulent insurance
claims, one count of
bribery of a public employee,
one count of giving unlawful
gratuities to a public
employee and one count of
promising or offering improper
compensation to a
public employee. Edwin Alexander
Lopera Munera,
33, of Pawtucket, R.I., was
charged with one count of
conspiracy to commit larceny
over $1,200. Both of
those individuals are believed
to be in Colombia.
senters will provide instructions
on proper brush techniques,
how to stabilize the
hand to allow for better fine
motor control and how to
create texture using different
paint colors and brushstrokes,
plus how to mix paint to create
shadows and highlights.
By the end of the class, participants
will not only have created
a painting, but will have
learned techniques for continuing
on their own.
No experience is necessary.
This is a free class with all materials
provided, but space is
limited. Please register on our
events calendar (https://www.
sauguspubliclibrary.org/) or
call 781-231-4168, ext. 3107.
Pop up Art School has been
teaching for nine years and
has taught over 1,750 art
programs in public libraries,
plus afterschool enrichment
in public and private schools.
Their artists/teachers have
taught in private and public
schools on the South Shore
of Boston.
loon!
Bingo is back at the KowJoin
the Kowloon Restaurant
for Wednesday Night Bingo.
The event takes place every
Wednesday from 7 to 9
p.m. and will continue to April
3. Entry is free. Games, prizes
and music highlight the
event. For more information,
call the Kowloon Restaurant at
781-233-0077 or visit online at
www.kowloonrestaurant.com
March 8 Night Dance Jam
THE SOUNDS | SEE PAGE 16
׉	 7cassandra://ZH4ukqfgZObGgdHeEvwoR7edVVGFSGXnv3lhuki5dus%[`̰ e)Ն	0a׉E(THE SAUGUS ADVOCATE – FriDAy, MArCH 1, 2024
Page 15
CARMINE CAPPUCCIO |
FROM PAGE 9
when the “Moneyball” era
was not even a thought. He
did lead the team in strikeouts
and was a below average
fielder, but stole 30 bases,
too.
Sports Illustrated bashed
him with a cover story
screaming “Bag it, Michael!”.
But even that writer later
retracted part of his vitriol.
For someone whose
resume only went up to a
smattering of varsity baseball
games in his junior year
of high school and then a
13-year layoff, it was actually
pretty commendable MJ
could even get up against
90-mph-plus fastballs.
Of course, after he fashioned
a remarkable, to say
the least, 27-game hitting
streak in the early part of
the season, the entire rest
of the opposing pitchers
in the Southern League
went all “Not on My Watch”
and threw the NBA’s greatest
player nothing but the
first number of his Bulls’ jersey.
Yup. Nothing but deuces.
Ever.
That’s probably why he
walked so many times thereafter.
Can’t hit what you
can’t see. They threw him so
many curveballs, he probably
got lucky, too, as not
many hooks are in the strike
zone.
To add insult to injury, the
three home runs MJ hit that
season led the outfielders
who were on the Birmingham
Barons roster that season.
PopGun City!
Did the White Sox purposely
have a subpar outfield
contingent in Birmingham
so as not to draw attention
to their shortsightedness
with Jordan’s addition?
If every outfielder stinks, no
one will notice how rough
MJ looks. Who knows? What
we do know is that no outfielder
that year from Birmingham
ever made it to the
big leagues.
What about those guys
stuck in Single-A?
We wonder what those
three guys stuck in Single-A
would have done that extra
PUFFS | FROM PAGE 7
cox playing Harry, Fat Friar
and others. Everett residents
are Kaleigh Ryan playing Megan
Jones, and Mark Damon
as J. Finch Fletchley. Somerville
residents include Joseph
Grebla, who plays Clumsy
Longbottom, Uncle Dave
and others; and Meghan Patyear
in Birmingham? How
would Malden’s Cappuccio
have done?
Plenty of people said they
thought they saw major
league potential in Jordan,
more than that say he wasted
his time. After that 1994
season, he never put on a
glove or took a swing again.
His dalliance peaked before
it even evolved.
In March of the following
year, after long eschewing a
return to the White Sox, Jordan
flipped the switch and
returned to the Bulls, leading
them to 24 of 27 wins
in the home stretch of the
NBA season, on their way to
the 1994-95 World Championship.
Two more titles followed
as a second “ThreePeat”
emerged before Jordan
retired again, in 1997,
only to return for a brief stint
with the Washington Wizards.
He’s now just your average
billionaire NBA owner
with the Charlotte Hornets
in his home state of North
Carolina.
That 1994 season for Prince
William was a solid one for all
three budding White Sox
prospects. Cappuccio led
the team in hitting at .292
and established a career
high in home runs (12) and
RBIs (60). Teammates Hurst
(25 HRs) and Cameron (18
HRs) also showed off some
power.
The Cannons’ year was also
the first time Cappuccio was
on the same team with Pete
Rose Jr. Son of “The Hit King”
Pete Rose Sr., he became
best “baseball friends” with
Cappuccio and the two of
them ended up being on the
same team, in different levels
and leagues, for many of
the following years the two
of them played.
I met Pete Jr. during the
opening game for the Cannons,
which I attended in
’94, and several years later
joined him as a member
of Cappuccio’s wedding
party when he married his
wife Shannon in St. Joseph’s
Church on Salem Street in
Malden in 1997. Pete Jr. “The
Hit Prince”! What a great guy
and a great friend!
All three outfielders did
finally make it to Birmingrick,
who is Magic #1. Thomas
Marsh, who is playing Oliver
Rivers, is from Newton. David
Lee Vincent, from Newburyport,
is the Narrator. Billy Jenkins,
from Stoneham, is Blondo
Malfoy and others. Tricia
Smith plays Hannah and is
from Revere.
The show has some adult
language and situations that
ham and Double-A the next
season, in 1995. Cappuccio
shined in Double-A and in
midseason, got promoted
to Triple-A Nashville, making
local history as the first
Malden High product to ever
make it to that high a level
– one step from the big
leagues! He hit .278 with four
homers in 65 games for Birmingham
and .272 with five
homers in the same amount
of games at Nashville.
Cameron got a call-up to
the “bigs” and played 22
games in the majors in 1995.
Hurst got traded to Detroit
after the 1994 season.
Cappuccio first-ever Malden
HS player at Triple-A
In 1996, Cappuccio played
a full season at Triple-A Nashville
and had one of his best
pro seasons of all with 10
homers, 61 RBIs and a consistent
.273 average. In 1997,
Cappuccio ran into something
he had avoided in his
entire professional career
until then: the injury bug. He
missed about half the season
with back issues, and
they accelerated, even with
therapy, so that he played
just 55 games. He tried to
come back and get ready
for the 1998 season, but the
clock had run out. He was
released by the White Sox
at the age of 27 and did not
go to spring training in 1998.
Married and with a new
baby at time, a daughter, Tia,
Cappuccio opted to take the
season off in 1998 and heal
up, hoping to come back in
1999. With no MLB offers,
Cappuccio decided to go the
Independent League route
and signed with a fledgling
team, the New Jersey Jackals.
One
of his teammates was
Pete Rose Jr. so there was
some familiarity. Cappuccio
went on a hitting tear
the first week of that season
that did not end until
he was named Independent
League “Player of the
Year” by Baseball America
magazine. He was the Independent
League’s version
of the Triple Crown winner
that year, leading the league
in batting average (.349),
homers (17) and RBIs (75) in
just 80 games. Was there a
might not be suitable for
younger kids. “Puffs” is a stage
play written by Matt Cox as a
transformative and transfigured
work under the magic
that is U.S. Fair Use laws.
“Puffs” is not authorized,
sanctioned, licensed or endorsed
by J.K Rowling, Warner
Bros. or any person or
company associated with
“Comeback City” story here
in the offing?
I saw him play quite a few
games in person that year,
splitting time visiting either
him or Kevin McGlinchy either
in Atlanta or on the
road, with McGlinchy – now
with the MLB Atlanta Braves
in his fourth year in professional
baseball. What a thrill
it was to be able to go see
two guys I coached at Malden
High – the city’s greatest
hitter and player, Capuccio,
and its greatest and
most successful pitcher, McGlinchy,
play pro ball in real
time at the same time in
1999.
Cappuccio’s stellar season
with the Jackals earned him
an invite to MLB spring training
in 2000 with the Philadelphia
Phillies, and he was
assigned to Double-A Reading
(Pennsylvania).
At 30 and stuck behind
some younger Phillies prospects,
his playing time was
staggered and his hitting
numbers suffered. He was
released by Reading about
halfway through the season
and with few options,
signed a contract with Yucatan
in the Mexican League to
finish their season. That detour
lasted 14 games and 62
at bats before he returned
home to Florida to contemplate
his future. Now with
two children, his son C.J.
now “on the roster,” the Cappuccios
decided to give it
another shot, this time headed
out of the country once
again, this time to Winnipeg,
Ontario, Canada, to play for
the Winnipeg Goldeyes, in
the 2001 season, once again
in the Independent League.
Cappuccio’s final pro season
in Canada in 2001
In Winnipeg, Cappuccio
quickly became a bit of a folk
hero. As he did in New Jersey,
he went ballistic at the
plate and set franchise and
league records, including a
45-game hitting streak that
still stands. He played in all
90 games, hit 9 homers and
drove in 80 runs while hitting
.359.
His season there was so legendary,
and so earth-shattering
that the Goldeyes had
a “Carmine Cappuccio Night”
the Harry Potter books, films
or play.
“Puffs” was originally produced
Off Broadway by Tilted
Windmills Theatricals (John
Arthur Pinckard / David Carpenter).
“Puffs” was developed
in part during a residency
with the University of
Florida School of Theatre +
Dance, Jerry Dickey, School
five years later... and gave
out Carmine Bobbleheads
that same night! Epic!
It was a season to remember,
and even though he was
the highest-paid Independent
League player in the
United States and Canada,
he was 31 and not looking
at a major league contract in
his future. With two kids, the
nomadic life of a professional
hitter looking to catch on
and someday play in the big
leagues was not so appealing.
Cappuccio decided to
call it a career after 9 professional
seasons, 663 games,
2,634 at bats, 50 home runs
and 336 runs batted in. For
his entire pro career, he hit
a prolific .291, a sensational
statistic.
These days he is a successful
sales executive making
his home in Fort Lauderdale,
Fla. For many years previously,
he lived in Greensboro,
N.C., ironically, just a
county or two away from Michael
Jordan’s present home.
His two children were both
accomplished high school
athletes and both graduated
from college in Florida,
as their parents did.
Thirty years and “The Last
Dance” later, lots of people,
including Terry Francona
(whose opinion I respect,
but not in this instance),
glamorously spoke of how
Jordan “could have definitely
been a major leaguer,
if he stuck with it...” I do
not buy into that school of
thought.
Could Carmine Cappuccio
have been a major leaguer,
perhaps with that extra season
of Double-A seasoning?
Perhaps. Yeah, maybe, but
we will never know. But it is
always nice to think of what
may have been, isn’t it?
What cannot be taken
away is that Carmine Cappuccio
is the greatest and
most successful player of
all time from the great city
of Malden. He also played
more professional baseball
than anyone who ever
picked up a bat or a glove
in Malden history.
Thanks for your service
and your achievements, my
friend. You made us proud,
Carmine, you really did.
Director; originally produced
Off-Off Broadway by Stephen
Stout and Colin Waitt. “Puffs”
(Two Act Edition) is presented
by arrangement with Concord
Theatricals on behalf of
Samuel French, Inc.
For more information and
to purchase tickets, see the
Theatre Company of Saugus
website at TCSaugus.org.
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THE SAUGUS ADVOCATE – FriDAy, MArCH 1, 2024
Sy Senior
a
Dear Savvy Senior,
Do you have any suggestions
on divvying up my personal
possessions to my kids after
I’m gone without causing hard
feelings or confl ict? I have a lot
of jewelry, art, family heirlooms
and antique furniture, and four
grown kids that don’t always
see eye-to-eye on things.
Confl icted Parent
Dear Confl icted,
Divvying up personal possessions
among adult children
or other loved ones can often
be a tricky task. Deciding
who should get what without
showing favoritism, hurting
someone’s feelings or causing
a feud can be diffi cult, even for
close-knit families who enter
the process with the best of
intentions. Here are a few tips
to consider that can help you
divide your stuff with minimal
confl ict.
Sweating the Small Stuff
For starters, you need to
be aware that it’s usually the
small, simple items of little
monetary value that aren’t
mentioned in your will that
cause the most confl icts. This
is because the value we attach
to the small personal possessions
is usually sentimental or
emotional, and because the
simple items are the things
that most families fail to talk
about.
Family battles can also escalate
over whether things are
being divided fairly by monetary
value. So, for items of
higher value like your jewelry,
antiques and art, consider
getting an appraisal to assure
fair distribution. To locate
an appraiser in your area, try
ISA-appraisers.org, Appraisers.org
or AppraisersAssociation.org.
Dividing
Fairly
The best solution for passing
along your personal
possessions is for you to go
through your house with your
kids or other heirs either separately
or all at once to fi nd
out which items they would
like to inherit and why. They
may have some emotional attachment
to something you’re
not aware of. If more than one
child wants the same thing,
you’ll have to make the ultimate
decision.
Then you need to sit down
and make a list of who gets
Senin r
ior
or
by Jim Miller
How to Divide Your Personal Possessions
Without Dividing the Family
what on paper, signed, dated
and referenced in your will.
You can revise it anytime you
want. You may also want to
consider writing an additional
letter or create an audio or
video recording that further
explains your intentions.
You can also specify a strategy
for divvying up the rest of
your property. Here are some
popular methods that are fair
and reasonable:
Take turns choosing: Use
a round-robin process where
your kids take turns choosing
the items they would like
to have. If who goes fi rst becomes
an issue, they can always
fl ip a coin or draw straws.
Also, to help simplify things,
break down the dividing process
room-by-room, versus
tackling the entire house. To
keep track of who gets what,
either make a list or use adhesive
dots with a color assigned
to each person to tag the item.
Have a family auction:
Give each person involved the
same amount of play money
or use virtual points or poker
chips to bid on the items
they want.
Use online resources: For
families who want help or live
far apart, there are web-based
resources like FairSplit.com
that can assist with the dividing
process.
For more tips, see “Who
Gets Grandma’s Yellow Pie
Plate?” at YellowPiePlate.umn.
edu. This is a resource created
by the University of Minnesota
Extension Service that offers
a free video and detailed
workbook for $12.50 that
gives pointers to help families
discuss property distribution
issues and lists important
factors to keep in mind that
can help you avoid or manage
confl ict.
It’s also very important that
you discuss your plans in advance
with your kids so they
can know ahead what to expect.
Or you may even want
to start distributing some of
your items now, while you are
still alive.
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.
Saugus driver involved in fatal New
Hampshire crash that killed his passenger
A
38-year-old Saugus man
was the driver of a car involved
in a rollover crash
on I-95 in Portsmouth, N.H., that
left his 65-year-old woman passenger
dead on Wednesday.
New Hampshire State Police
had not released the identities
of the Saugus man, or his passenger
from Buena Park, Calif.,
who was ejected from the car
and pronounced dead at the
scene.
Evidence at the scene showed
that a 2019 Genesis G70 had
been traveling northbound toward
Portsmouth when the
driver lost control and left the
paved portion of the interstate,
according to state police. The
car continued into the grassy
center median before turning
and hitting a large light pole.
The woman passenger was
thrown from the car. Troopers
assigned to the Troop A barracks
responded to the scene,
which was just south of exit 3B,
and found a car on its roof in the
high-speed breakdown lane of
the southbound lanes of travel.
The driver was taken to Portsmouth
Regional Hospital with
serious but non-life-threatening
injuries. Two southbound
lanes of I-95 were closed for
about three hours while emergency
responders investigated
the crash.
Saugonians named to Saint Anselm
College Dean’s List for Fall 2023 Semester
S
aint Anselm College
has released the Dean’s
List of high academic
achievers for the fi rst semester
of the 2023-2024 school
year. To be eligible for this
honor, a student must have
achieved a grade point average
of 3.4 or better in the semester
with at least 12 credits
of study that award a letter
grade. This semester there
were a total of 562 students
from 24 states and four countries.
Dean Mark W. Cronin announced
that the following local
students have been named
to the Dean’s List for the fall
2023 semester: Sofi a Del Sonno,
Psychology, 2024; and
Maggie Warner, Nursing, 2027.
About Saint Anselm College:
Founded in 1889, the four-year
liberal arts college provides a
21st-century education in the
Catholic, Benedictine tradition.
Located in southern New
Hampshire near Boston and
the seacoast, Saint Anselm is
well known for its strong liberal
arts curriculum, the New
Hampshire Institute of Politics,
a highly successful nursing
program, a legacy of community
service and a commitment
to the arts.
Come watch Polymnia Choral Society tell the
story of Anne Frank’s diary, life and legacy
F
or over 70 years, Polymnia
Choral Society has been
delivering great performances
to acknowledge and
honor the important times in
our lives. On Saturday, March
9, 2024, at 7:30 p.m., Polymnia
will be performing “Annelies”
by James Whitbourn. It’s a powerful
and dramatic work in 14
movements that details the
life of Anne Frank during the
time she was in hiding during
World War II. Also included in
the piece are excerpts from
her diary.
SOUNDS | FROM PAGE 14
at the Kowloon
The Kowloon Restaurant is
set to host Friday Night Dance
Jam where Motown meets
Freestyle, starring the Classic
Supremes, The Cover Girls, P2,
Come experience Polymnia
Choral Society’s performance
of songs inspired by Anne
Frank’s writings, life and legacy.
In addition, educational
materials regarding the Holocaust,
Anne Frank’s life and
her diary’s infl uence will be
available for the audience to
learn more about these topics.
Due to the seriousness of
this concert’s subject matter,
it would be appropriate for
adults and children aged 12
and up to attend.
This concert will be held
Lance Bernard Bryant and Jovian
Ford. DJ Ricky will spin
club classics. The event is slated
for March 8.
VIP Tickets are $75 per person
for reserved seating, buffet
and photos with the artists.
Doors open for VIP tickat
the Melrose Performing
Arts Center at Melrose Veterans
Memorial Middle School
(350 Lynn Fells Pkwy., Melrose,
Mass.). Doors open at 7:00 p.m.
Tickets are $25 for adults, $20
for seniors and $15 for students.
To
purchase tickets for this
concert, visit https://polymnia.
org/about-our-upcoming-season/
or Miter Biter (479 Main St.,
Melrose) or call 617-633-5006.
For more information about
Polymnia: www.polymnia.
org/about
ets from 6-8 p.m. General admission
tickets are $65 per
person for reserved seating
only. Doors open for general
admission tickets at 8 p.m.
Showtime is 9 p.m. Tickets
THE SOUNDS | SEE PAGE 17
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Page 17
OBITUARIES
Mrs. Carolyn
(Gove) Davis
dren, Peter Davis and his
wife Mari of New York City,
Glen Davis and his wife Laurie
of Saugus and Rachel
Shipulski and her husband
David of Pelham, NH; four
grandchildren, Kevin Davis,
Stephanie Bluestein, Nichole
Sousa and David Shipulski;
seven great grandchildren,
Isabella, Jacob,
Lilyana, Caleb, Emilia, Nico,
and Connor; her brother,
George Gove and sister,
Debby Perl. She was predeceased
by her sister Jean
Taatjes.
Relatives and friends
were invited to attend
visiting hours in the BisO
f
Saugus. Age 80,
died on Thursday,
February 22nd after
a long illness. She was
the loving and devoted
wife of Robert Davis for 60
years. Born in Lynn, Mrs.
Davis was the daughter of
the late George and Ruth
Gove. Carolyn retired from
Boston Sand and Gravel in
2005 and enjoyed her retirement
years spending
quality time with her husband
Bob and doing some
travelling. She valued her
time with her family. She
previously worked at Sears
in Saugus. In addition to her
love for her family, Carolyn
was very passionate about
her church, The First Congregational
Church, where
she was the longtime organist
and choir director
as well as serving in several
other capacities. She was
most proud of the many
Christmas concerts that she
did for several years.
In addition to her husband,
Mrs. Davis is survived
by her three chilSOUNDS
| FROM PAGE 16
are available by order online
at Kowloonrestaurant.com
or the Kowloon front desk or
charge-by-phone: 781-2330077.
For more information,
call the Kowloon Restaurant at
781-233-0077 or visit online at
www.kowloonrestaurant.com
A Pro Wrestling Legend
visits Saugus
The Kowloon Restaurant is
set to host Mark Henry for a
night of Standup and stories
of his life as a World Wrestling
Entertainment (WWE) Hall of
Famer and All Elite Wrestling
(AEW) and Pro Wrestling Legend.
The event is scheduled
for March 12. VIP Tickets are
$85.00 per person for Priority
Seating and Post Show Meet
bee-Porcella Funeral Home,
549 Lincoln Ave., Saugus
on Monday, February 26.
A funeral service was held
in the First Congregational
Church, 300 Central St., Saugus
on Tuesday. Interment
in Pine Grove Cemetery in
Lynn. For condolences visit
www.BisbeePorcella.com.
In lieu of flowers, donations
in Carolyn’s memory may
be made to the First Congregational
Church Memorial
Gifts, 300 Central St.,
Saugus, MA 01906
Robert A. Pelusi
O
f Saugus. Died on
Monday, February
19th at the age of
77. Born in Winthrop, Robert
was the son of the late
Frank and Mary (Bagnera)
Pelusi. He was a former Red
Cap for Amtrak.
Robert is survived by his
brother, Stephen Pelusi
and his wife Donna of Boxford
and two sisters, Marsha
Scire and her husband
Mario and Barbara Beal all
and Greet. The VIP tickets include
one autograph and one
selfie with your own device.
General admission is $35.00
per person and includes the
show only. The doors open at
6 p.m. and showtime is 7 p.m.
Tickets are available by order
online at Kowloonrestaurant.com
or the Kowloon front
desk or charge-by-phone:
781-233-0077.
Mark Jerrold Henry is an
American former powerlifter,
Olympic weightlifter, strongman
and professional wrestler
currently signed to AEW
as a commentator/analyst,
coach and talent scout. He is
best known for his 25-year career
in WWE.
Maple sugarin’ time!
Come to Breakheart Reservation
on Saturday, March
of Saugus. He is also survived
by many nieces and
nephews. Robert was predeceased
by his brother,
Francis Pelusi.
Relatives and friends were
invited to attend visiting
hours in the Bisbee-Porcella
Funeral Home, Saugus
on Monday, February 26.
In lieu of flowers, donations
in Robert’s memory may be
made to the American Diabetes
Association at diabetes.org.
Ruth
A. (Stead)
Swanson
Danvers at the age of 92.
She was the wife of the late
Anthony A. Eovine. Born
in Peabody and a lifelong
resident of Saugus, Mrs.
Swanson was the daughter
of the late Harry and
Catherine (Roche) Stead.
Ruth was a former executive
assistant for the Reinforced
Earth Company
of Woburn. She was also a
founding member of the
MEG Foundation in Saugus
and was a poll worker
for the town.
Mrs. Swanson is survived
by two sons, Daniel Swanson
and his wife Gail of
Saugus and Garrett Swanson
and his wife Joy of FL;
three daughters, Joyce
Keller and her husband Allen
of NH, Janet Macomber
and her husband Tony of
NH and Ann Marie Swanson
and her partner Jen
of Sudbury; 16 grandchildren;
eight great grandchildren;
two brothers,
James Stead and Richard
Stead both of Saugus; and
two sisters, Audrey McCullough
of Lynnfield and
Gail Cotter of Ashland. She
was predeceased by her
two sons, Mark and Richard
Swanson; one daughter,
Patricia Swanson; and
three sisters, Kathryn Hollett,
Florence McNair, and
Joan Bromberger.
Relatives and friends were
invited to attend visiting
hours in the Bisbee-Porcella
Funeral Home, Saugus
on Wednesday, February
28. Funeral services, at
the request of the family,
are private. In lieu of flowers,
donations in Ruth’s
memory may be made to
Care Dimensions at caredimensions.org.
-
LEGAL NOTICE -
COMMONWEALTH OF MASSACHUSETTS
THE TRIAL COURT
PROBATE AND FAMILY COURT
Essex Probate and Family Court
36 Federal Street
Salem, MA 01970
(978) 744-1020
Docket No. ES24P0493EA
Estate of: VIRGINIA W. GRAY
Date of Death: 11/06/2023
CITATION ON PETITION FOR
FORMAL ADJUDICATION
O
f Saugus. Died on
Tuesday, February
20th at the Kaplan
Family Hospice House in
9, from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. for
this fun annual event. Experience
the process of maple
sugarin’ from tapping a tree
to sampling real maple syrup.
The hands-on tour includes
the history of maple
sugaring from Native Americans
to today, tree identification
& tapping, wood splitting,
the evaporator and a tasting
station.
For more information or
questions, please call 781233-0834
or stop by the Visitor
Center at Breakheart Reservation
(177 Forest St., Saugus).
Winter is calling at
Breakheart
If you love hiking, nature
and the great outdoors,
there’s a lot going on this winTHE
SOUNDS | SEE PAGE 18
To all interested persons:
A Petition for S/A - Formal Probate of Will with Appointment
of Personal Representative has been filed by Lucinda Murgia
of Saugus, MA requesting that the Court enter a formal Decree
and Order and for such other relief as requested in the Petition.
The Petitioner requests that:
Lucinda Murgia of Saugus, MA be appointed as Personal
Representative(s) of said estate to serve Without Surety on the
bond in unsupervised administration.
IMPORTANT NOTICE
You have the right to obtain a copy of the Petition from
the Petitioner or at the Court. You have a right to object
to this proceeding. To do so, you or your attorney must file
a written appearance and objection at this Court before:
10:00 a.m. on the return day of 04/03/2024.
This is NOT a hearing date, but a deadline by which you
must file a written appearance and objection if you object to
this proceeding. If you fail to file a timely written appearance
and objection followed by an affidavit of objections within
thirty (30) days of the return day, action may be taken without
further notice to you.
UNSUPERVISED ADMINISTRATION UNDER THE
MASSACHUSETTS UNIFORM PROBATE CODE (MUPC)
A Personal Representative appointed under the MUPC in
an unsupervised administration is not required to file an
inventory or annual accounts with the Court. Persons interested
in the estate are entitled to notice regarding the administration
directly from the Personal Representative and may petition
the Court in any matter relating to the estate, including the
distribution of assets and expenses of administration.
WITNESS, Hon. Frances M. Giordano, First Justice of this
Court.
Date: February 23, 2024
PAMELA A. CASEY O’BRIEN
REGISTER OF PROBATE
March 01, 2024
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THE SAUGUS ADVOCATE – FriDAy, MArCH 1, 2024
SOUNDS | FROM PAGE 17
We follow Social Distancing Guidelines!
Frank Berardino
MA License 31811
• 24 - Hour Service
• Emergency Repairs
BERARDINO
Plumbing & Heating
Residential & Commercial Service
Gas Fitting • Drain Service
617.699.9383
Senior Citizen Discount
ter at Breakheart Reservation
– courtesy of the state Department
of Conservation & Recreation
(DCR). All programs
are free and open to the public.
An adult must accompany
children.
Reasonable accommodations
available upon request.
Parking fees may apply depending
on the program’s
location. For more information,
please email Jessica
Narog-Hutton, Visitor Services
Supervisor, at jessica.
narog-hutton@mass.gov
Here are a few programs
that DNR has in the works:
· On Sundays through
March, why not do something
easy, like a Sunday
morning hike from 10 a.m. to
noon? Check in at the Visitor
Center (177 Forest St., Saugus).
Join the Park Interpreter
for a weekly guided hike.
Each trip will highlight natural
and historic features that
make Breakheart unique.
Hikes will be moderately
American Exterior and
Window Corporation
Contact us for all of your
home improvement projects
and necessities.
Call Jeff or Bob
Toll Free: 1-888-744-1756
617-699-1782 / www.americanexteriorma.com
Windows, Siding, Roofing, Carpentry & More!
All estimates, consultations or inspections completed
by MA licensed supervisors. *Over 50 years experience.
*Better Business Bureau Membership.
Insured and
Registered
Complete Financing Available.
No Money Down.
LANDSCAPERS NEEDED
Established company in Everett looking
for an experienced crew leader and
experienced crew workers for mowing,
trimming and construction work.
Full-Time work with paid vacation
and holidays.
Starting Pay: $25-$35 per hour
Call (617) 389-1490
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Clean-Outs!
We take and dispose
from cellars, attics,
garages, yards, etc.
Call Robert at:
781-844-0472
paced and range from two
to three miles over sometimes
uneven and rocky terrain.
This activity is best suited
for ages eight years and
up. The hike will be canceled
in the event of heavy rain.
· On Thursdays through
March, the Camp Nihan Educational
Center (121 Walnut
St., Saugus) will offer the
Wild Breakheart Series from
9 to 10 a.m. Join Breakheart
staff for this rotating nature
series that will explore different
aspects of Breakheart
in the wintertime. In March
be a part of the Breakheart
Birding Club. Discover what
birds are starting to come
back for the spring and what
birds stay from the winter.
· On Fridays through
March, check out Kidleidoscope
from 10:30 to 11:30
a.m. at the Visitor Center
(177 Forest St., Saugus).
Come join a park interpreter
for a story time and nature
walk. Complete a small
craft and explore the woods!
Walks are gently paced and
approximately one mile,
though not accessible for
strollers. This activity is appropriate
for families with
THE SOUNDS | SEE PAGE 19
For Advertising
with RESULTS,
call The
Advocate
Newspapers
at 781-2334446
or info@
ad v oc a t ene w s .net
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Page 19
1.The name of the 1969
Woody Allen fi lm “Play It
Again, Sam” was inspired
by a line in what movie?
2.On March 1, 2007, the
Swiss Army accidently
invaded across an unmarked
border into what
country that also borders
Austria?
3.What Irishman wrote,
in “The Picture of Dorian
Gray” (1890), “There is
only one thing in the
world worse than being
talked about, and that is
not being talked about”?
SOUNDS | FROM PAGE 18
children who are three to
fi ve years old. Meet at the
Visitor Center.
· On Saturdays through
March, “Step into the Past”
from 10 a.m.to noon at the
Visitor Center (177 Forest St.,
Saugus). Join the park interpreter
to discover the park
4.Who was the lone survivor
of the wreck of the
Pequod?
5.On March 2, 1789, what
state founded by a Quaker
revoked its ban on theatre
performances?
6.How many inches wide
is a regulation basketball
hoop: 18, 20 or 22?
7.What does a paleographer
study?
8.Bibendum (or Bib) is
the mascot of the Michelin
tire company and what
else?
9.March 3 is a national day
history. Hikes are about two
and a half miles and of moderate
diffi culty along rocky
trails with several stops. Best
for adults and older children
with a keen interest in history.
Meet outside the Visitor
Center. This activity will be
canceled in the event of rain.
· First and third Saturdays:
Stories in Stone: Breakheart
to celebrate what lean bacon
that is usually round?
10.About how many gallons
of maple sap are used
to make a gallon of syrup?
11.On March 4, 1922, at
the Berlin Zoological Garden,
what fi lm – the fi rst
about vampires – premiered?
12.What
alleged 1892
murderess inspired a
punk musical?
13.Why did a bloodless
“war” between the Netherlands
and the Isles of Scilly
last for 335 years (16511986)?
14.Women
fi rst participated
in Olympic swimming
in what year: 1897, 1912
or 1922?
15.On March 5, 1868, the
has been shaped not only by
nature but by the many people
who have called it home.
· Second and fourth Saturdays:
Glacial Giants: Countless
clues to a glacial past
dot the landscape. If one
knows where to look, this
hidden geologic history can
be revealed.
impeachment trial of what
president began?
16.What 1800’s Boston-born
poet/minister/
abolitionist stated, “Our
life is March weather, savage
and serene in one
hour”?
17.What is the fastest fl y:
dragonfly, horsefly or
mosquito?
18.On March 6, 1997, who
began the fi rst offi cial royal
website?
19.It was proposed that
what should have the scientifi
c name of Nessiteras
rhombopteryx?
20.On March 7, 1946, due
to nuclear testing, citizens
were evacuated from
what atoll?
About The Saugus Advocate
We
welcome press releases,
news announcements,
freelance articles and courtesy
photos from the community.
Our deadline is noon
Wednesday. If you have a
story idea, an article or photo
to submit, please email
me at mvoge@comcast.net
Partnering for Success in Today’s
Real Estate Landscape
Charming 3-Family
Property in the Heart of
Rockport!
In today's rapidly evolving real estate market, partnering with
a trusted agent is not just beneficial—it's essential. Mango
Realty is here to guide you through the complexities of
buying or selling property in the digital age, ensuring a
seamless and successful experience every step of the way.
Navigating Market Votality
The real estate landscape is dynamic, with market conditions
shifting swiftly in response to various factors. Now, more
than ever, having a knowledgeable real estate agent by your
side is crucial. At Mango Realty, our agents stay abreast of
market trends, helping you make informed decisions in
volatile times.
Access to Exclusive Listings
Welcome to 8 Hale Street, Rockport MA, a delightful 3-family
property nestled in the picturesque town of Rockport. Offering a
unique blend of historic charm and modern convenience, this
property presents an exceptional opportunity for investors, multigenerational
families, or those looking for a primary residence
with rental income potential.
Offered at:
$1,295,000
Includes two patios and a stunning deck with ocean views.
One unit offers breathtaking ocean vistas, while another
enjoys charming peak-a-boo glimpses of the sea.
This meticulously cared-for property at 8 Hale Street, offering a
turnkey experience with recent updates and separate utilities for
each unit, ensuring ease of management. This charming 3-family
home boasts ample off-street parking, a valuable commodity in
Rockport, alongside an inviting private backyard perfect for
summer barbecues or serene retreats. Gardening enthusiasts will
delight in the space to cultivate their own oasis, all while being just
moments away from the natural beauty of Rockport's beaches,
parks, and hiking trails. Don't miss the opportunity to own this
well-appointed property in the heart of Rockport!
Contact Information: For inquiries and to schedule a viewing,
please call Jeanine Moulden at 617 312-2491 or email
gowithjeanine@gmail.com
In a competitive market, access is everything. Partnering with
Mango Realty grants you access to a wide range of exclusive
listings that may not be readily available to the public. From
off-market gems to pre-construction opportunities, we open
doors to properties that align with your unique preferences
and goals.
Expert Negotiation in a Digital Age
With the rise of online platforms, the art of negotiation has
taken on new dimensions. Our skilled agents are adept at
leveraging digital tools while maintaining the personal touch
that leads to successful deals. Whether buying or selling, we
negotiate on your behalf to achieve the best possible
outcomes.
Mitigating Risk & Maximizing Returns
Real estate transactions involve inherent risks, from legal
complexities to financial considerations. Mango Realty acts
as your advocate, guiding you through potential pitfalls and
ensuring that your investments are sound. Our goal? To
maximize your returns while minimizing stress.
Why Partner with Mango Realty Today?
In a time when information overload is the norm, Mango Realty offers clarity,
expertise, and peace of mind. Our agents are not just salespeople; they are
trusted advisors dedicated to your success. Partner with us to navigate the
complexities of today's real estate landscape and embark on a journey towards
your property dreams.
Contact Information: For inquiries and to schedule a
viewing, please call Sue Palomba at 781-558-1091 or email
soldwithsue@gmail.com and infowithmango@gmail.com.
Situated in a sought-after enclave of Saugus, this home offers the
perfect blend of tranquility and convenience. With easy access to
major highways and proximity to top-rated schools, shopping, and
dining, it embodies the essence of modern suburban living.
Boasting impeccable craftsmanship and attention to detail, this
property exudes elegance at every turn. From the grand foyer to the
gourmet kitchen, no expense was spared in creating a space that is
as functional as it is luxurious.
Step into the backyard retreat, where lush landscaping surrounds a
private oasis. Perfect for entertaining or unwinding after a long day,
the outdoor space offers a tranquil escape from the hustle and
bustle of everyday life.
Client Satisfaction at its Finest:
The sale of 1 Hammersmith Dr marks not just a transaction, but the
culmination of a journey. Mango Realty is honored to have
represented both the seller and the buyer in this remarkable sale.
Our team's dedication to client satisfaction, market expertise, and
strategic marketing efforts have once again delivered exceptional
results.
What’s Next?
As we celebrate this milestone sale, Mango Realty remains committed to
helping clients achieve their real estate goals. Whether you're in search of
your dream home, looking to sell for top dollar, or exploring investment
opportunities, our team is here to guide you every step of the way.
Contact Information: For inquiries and to schedule a viewing,
please call Sue Palomba at 781-558-1091 or email
soldwithsue@gmail.com and infowithmango@gmail.com.
ANSWERS
or leave a message at 978683-7773.
Let us become
your hometown newspaper.
The Saugus Advocate is
available in the Saugus Public
Library, the Saugus Senior
Center, Saugus Town Hall,
local convenience stores
and restaurants throughout
town.
Celebrating Success - Another
Milestone Sale at Mango Realty
Mango Realty, Inc. is proud to announce the successful sale of the
exquisite property at 1 Hammersmith Dr, Saugus MA 01906. This
stunning residence, nestled in the picturesque neighborhood of Saugus,
has found its perfect match with a discerning buyer seeking luxury,
comfort, and style.
1.“Casablanca”
2.Liechtenstein
3.Oscar Wilde
4.Ishmael
5.Pennsylvania
6.18
7.Ancient manuscripts
8.The “Michelin Guide” to restaurants
and hotels
9.Canadian
10.40
11.“Nosferatu”
12.Lizzie Borden (“Lizzie”)
13.It soon ended without a peace treaty;
later a peace treaty was instigated by a
historian writing to the Dutch Embassy.
14.1912
15.Andrew Johnson
16.Ralph Waldo Emerson
17.Horsefl y
18.Queen Elizabeth II
19.The Loch Ness monster
20.Bikini Atoll
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THE SAUGUS ADVOCATE – FriDAy, MArCH 1, 2024
Carpenito Real Estate is now
SAUGUS $1,475,000
Incredible colonial with a gorgeous
fireplace in an impressive 2-story
great room. No detail was missed!
SAUGUS $925,000
Custom colonial in the Woodlands
with fireplace, finished lower level,
central air, and 2-car garage.
New Year, New Home!
Aja Arsenault
Your Forever Agent®
(781) 941-0185
Aja is ready and equipped to be
Your Forever Agent® and help you
find the home of your dreams.
SAUGUS $679,900
Cape Cod style Colonial with 4 beds, 2
full baths, 1st-floor family room, and a
2-car garage, in a convenient location.
COMMONMOVES.COM
335 CENTRAL STREET, SAUGUS, MA | (781) 233-7300
SAUGUS $329,900
New 2 bedroom condo with a granite
kitchen, central air, gas heat, new
windows, and off-street parking.
©2024 BHH Affiliates, LLC. An independently owned and operated franchisee of BHH Affiliates, LLC. Berkshire Hathaway HomeServices and
the Berkshire Hathaway HomeServices symbol are registered service marks of Columbia Insurance Company, a Berkshire Hathaway affiliate.
Equal Housing Opportunity.
SAUGUS $725,000
Rare two-family with 2/3 bedrooms,
hardwood floors, and a charming
patio in a quiet side street location.
BEVERLY $689,900
Renovated colonial with new kitchen,
hardwood floors, and heating system.
Features a 2-car garage and large lot.
FOR SALE
FOR SALE- 2 BEDROOM, 2 FULL BATH HOME
WHICH WAS COMPLETELY RENOVATED IN
2007. THIS HOME FEATURES BAMBOO
FLOORING THROUGHOUT WITH EXCEPTION OF
TILE IN THE BATHS, SPACIOUS ROOMS, FIRST
FLOOR LAUNDRY, LOTS, OF SKYLIGHTS FOR
PLENTY OF NATURAL LIGHT AND MUCH MUCH
MORE. ALL SYSTEMS HAVE BEEN UPGRADED.
LOCATED UP OFF STREET FOR ULTIMATE
PRIVACY AND LARGE HALF ACRE LOT OF
LAND. BIG DECK OFF KITCHEN FOR
ENTERTAINING OR JUST ENJOYING THE
OUTDOORS. MALDEN $639,900
CALL DEBBIE 617-678-9710
FOR SALE
FOR SALE -.NOTHING TO DO BUT MOVE IN!!! 3 BED CAPE
WITH NEWER OPEN CONCEPT KITCHEN/DINING ROOM
THAT INCLUDES STAINLESS APPLIANCES, GRANITE
COUNTERS, BREAKFAST BAR, CERAMIC TILE FLOOR WITH
MATCHING BACKSPLASH. 1ST FLOOR ALSO HAS SEPARATE
LIVING ROOM, DINING ROOM AND BEDROOM. RED OAK
FLOORING, CROWN MOLDING, SUN ROOM W/SKYLIGHT
LEADS TO GREAT SIZE DECK OVERLOOKING A NICE SIZED,
FLAT LOT. LOWER LEVEL HAS FAMILY ROOM WITH BERBER
CARPET AND AN ADDITIONAL SPACE FOR STORAGE AND A
WORKSHOP. GAS HEATING SYSTEM. THE BACKYARD
INCLUDES A STORAGE SHED AND IS FENCED-IN FOR ALL
THE PETS! SAUGUS $570,000
CALL KEITH 781-389-0791
COMING SOON
COMING SOON -GORGEOUS QUALITY NEW CONSTRUCTION
WITH 3800 SQFT OF LIVING! THIS HOME FEATURES 9' CEILINGS
ON BOTH FLOORS, CUSTOM KITCHEN CABINETS, THERMADOR
APPLIANCES, REFRIGERATOR BUILT INTO THE CABINETS,
COMMERCIAL STOVE/OVEN, BUILT IN HOOD, 10' ISLAND, QUARTZ
COUNTERS AND BACKSPLASH, COFFEE STATION, AND
BREAKFAST NOOK OVERLOOKING THE PATIO AND BACKYARD.
THERE IS ALSO AN ELECTRIC FIREPLACE IN FAMILY ROOM WITH
COFFERED CEILING, WIDE PLANK OAK 6" HW FLOORS. 2ND
FLOOR LAUNDRY WITH CUSTOM CABINETS, 3 BEDROOMS WITH
CUSTOM CLOSETS. LARGE PRIMARY SUITE W/ CUSTOM WALK-IN
CLOSET. SHOWER HAS 3 SHOWER HEADS AND 2 BODY SPRAYS
FOR SPA- LIKE EXPERIENCE. AMAZING ENTERTAINMENT AREA
WITH A FULL BATHROOM AND A CUSTOM WET BAR IN FULL
BASEMENT .LYNNFIELD
CALL KEITH 781-389-0791 FOR MORE DETAILS
RENTALS
• 2 BEDROOM SINGLE FAMILY HOME WITH OPEN CONCEPT, LARGE BEDROOMS WITH BALCONIES AND ONE
BATHROOM. FIRST FLOOR LAUNDRY, QUAINT AREA. SAUGUS $2,800 PLUS UTILITIES CALL RHONDA 781-706-0842
• 1 BEDROOM APARTMENT EAT-IN KITCHEN WITH PLENTY OF CABINETS. FRESHLY PAINTED AND NEW CARPETS.
LAUNDRY HOOK-UPS IN UNIT FOR AN ELECTRIC DRYER. 2 CAR OFF STREET PARKING. NO PETS AND NO.
SMOKING. FIREPLACE IN BEDROOM IS DECORATIVE ONLY. GOOD CREDIT AND REFERENCES. 3 MONTHS RENT
REQUIRED TO MOVE IN. AVAILABLE 3/1-SAUGUS $1,800 CALL RHONDA 781-706-0842
• SECOND FLOOR THREE-BEDROOM APARTMENT OFFERS A LARGE EAT IN KITCHEN WITH UPDATE CABINETS,
GRANITE, GAS COOKING AND HARDWOOD FLOORING. NICE SIZE LIVING ROOM AND MAIN BEDROOM PLUS TWO
ADDITIONAL BEDROOMS ALL WITH HARDWOOD FLOORING. THERE IS COIN-OP LAUNDRY AVAILABLE IN THE
BASEMENT AS WELL. PARKING FOR TWO CARS OFF STREET. GAS HEAT AND PEABODY ELECTRIC. THREE
MONTHS' RENT REQUIRED TO MOVE IN. PEABODY $3,000 CALL RHONDA 781-706-0842
• TWO BEDROOM, 2 BATH MODERN CONDO WITH LAUNDRY IN UNIT. 2ND FLOOR UNIT WITH HARDWOOD
FLOORING, CENTRAL AIR, EXTRA STORAGE, AND OFF STREET PARKING. SPACIOUS BEDROOMS. AVAILABLE
IMMEDIATELY. REVERE $2,800 UTILITIES NOT INCLUDED. CALL LAUREN 781-835-6989
FOR SALE
FOR SALE -RARE OPPORTUNITY TO OWN THIS 2
FAMILY HOME LOCATED ON A DEAD END STREET IN
SAUGUS CENTER. FIRST FLOOR OFFERS 1 BEDROOM,
EAT-IN KITCHEN, LIVING ROOM, OFFICE,
DINING ROOM (COULD BE A SECOND BEDROOM)
FULL BATH AND IN-UNIT LAUNDRY. THE SECOND UNIT
FEATURES EAT-IN KITCHEN, NICE SIZED LIVING ROOM
AND TWO BEDROOMS. NEWER GAS HEATING SYSTEMS.
SEPARATE UTILITIES, PAVED DRIVEWAY, PLENTY
OF OFF STREET PARKING. LARGE BASEMENT
WITH PLENTY OF STORAGE. THIS PROPERTY IS
PERFECT FOR ANYBODY LOOKING TO OWNER
OCCUPY OR RENT. SAUGUS $749,000
CALL KEITH 781-389-0791
COMING SOON
MOBILE HOMES
• SPACIOUS 2 BEDROOM IN NEED OF TLC. GREAT FOR HANDYMAN. HEAT AND A/C NOT
WORKING. LARGE ADDITION.2 CAR PARKING. DANVERS $79,900
LOOKING TO
BUY OR SELL?
COMING SOON-BRAND NEW
CONSTRUCTION COLONIAL LOCATED ON A
NICE SIDE STREET NOT FAR FROM
ELEMENTARY SCHOOLS AND THE CENTER
OF TOWN. 4 BEDS, 3.5 BATH WITH
HARDWOOD THROUH-OUT. OPEN
CONCEPT BEAUTIFUL KITCHEN AND BATHS.
EXQUISITE DETAIL AND QUALITY BUILD.
GARAGE UNDER.
SAUGUS
CALL KEITH 781-389-0791
JUSTIN KLOACK
978-815-2610
CALL HIM
FOR ALL YOUR
REAL ESTATE NEEDS
• YOUNG ONE BEDROOM IN GOOD CONDITION IN A DESIRABLE PARK WITH 2 PARKING SPOTS.
SOLD AS IS. SUBJECT TO PROBATE DANVERS $99,900
• SPACIOUS 2 BEDROOM IN EXCELLENT CONDITION WITH NICE YARD. LOW PARK RENT.
PEABODY $179,900
• PRE-CONSTRUCTION. WELCOME TO SHADY OAKS BRAND NEW MANUFACTURED HOME
COMMUNITY. AFFORDABLE YET UPSCALE LIVING , EACH HOME HAS AMPLE SQUARE FOOTAGE
WITH 2 BEDROOMS AND 2 BATHS. ONE WILL HAVE 3 BEDROOMS AND ONE BATH. OPEN CONCEPT
PERFECT FOR ENTERTAINING. HIGH QUALITY FINISHES FROM TOP TIER APPLIANCES TO
ELEGANT FINISHES.. A SERENE WOODED SETTING WHILE BEING CONVENIENT TO SCHOOLS,
SHOPPING, DINING AND MAJOR TRANSPORTATION ROUTES. THIS IS AN EXCEPTIONAL
OPPORTUNITY TO OWN A PIECE OF THIS THRIVING COMMUNITY AT AN UNBELIEVABLE PRICE.
LOW PARK RENT OF 450 A MONTH. INCLUDES TAXES, WATER AND SEWER, RUBBISH REMOVAL
AND SNOW PLOWING. ACT NOW BEFORE PRICE INCREASE. EXPECTED OCCUPANCY DATE
APRIL 2024 DANVERS $249,900
CALL ERIC 781-223-0289
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