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Vol. 33, No. 9
den
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Local News & Sports Online in 6 Languages! Subscribe Here!
AADD
T
he Malden City Council voted
to spend over $2 million
in Community Preservation
funds – set aside through Malden
residents’ municipal taxes
– to either initiate or complete
five new community projects
citywide. All of the projects were
accompanied by a letter of support
from Mayor Gary Christenson.
These projects are:
— A $983,000 for the Malden
River Works Project
The Malden River Works Project
will construct a publicly
open space along the Malden
River while improving climate
resiliency along the Malden
DPW Yards. All Community
Preservation Act Funds will be
expended on the open space
improvement only. The overall
scope of the nearly $7 million
project includes rehabilitation of
the DPW Facility on Commercial
Street, with none of this work attached
to Community Preservation
funding.
— $783,000 for Malden Hospital
Open Space Acquisition
This funding will cover all
of the cost of acquiring open
CTE
CAT
AT
www.advocatenews.net
Published Every Friday
Malden City Council approves
funding for several long-awaited
community improvement projects
Councillors approve over $2.1 million in expenditures from
Community Preservation funds for fi ve new projects citywide
By Steve Freker
— $175,000 for improvements
to Fitzgerald Park, adjacent
to the CBD Parking Garage
on Exchange Street
Some of an overall $225,000
City Council President
Stephen Winslow presided
over one of the most
momentous evenings in
recent memory with fi ve new
community improvement
pr o je c ts
a pp r o v e d .
(Courtesy City of Malden)
space at the Malden Hospital
site, which has been set aside by
the overall plan of Tufts Health
Medicine in rehabbing the major
former Malden Hospital site
at 100 Hospital Rd. This expenditure
will allow the city to acquire
6.7 acres of open space next to
what will be a new behavioral
health center operated by Tufts.
The city intends to use it as passive
recreational space (in initial
discussions).
project in the downtown on Exchange
Street has been completed;
$40,000 from Community
Preservation funds has already
been expended. It is a
continuation of the project –
creating an enhanced play area
in the downtown.
— $67,360 to Linden Rink
Project at Wescott Street, Linden
Park
The total project includes construction
of an outdoor recreational
hockey rink for outdoor
“street hockey” with an asphalt
and acrylic surface. An earlier
proposal for an enclosed ice
hockey rink requesting funds
was not approved for funding.
This total project cost is approximately
$481,000 and will be
completed with use of $150,000
in Ward 8 mitigation funds and
$200,000 in Community Development
Block Grant funding.
— $151,650 for Design Planning
for Oak Grove Community
FUNDING | SEE PAGE 7
617-387-2200
By Tara Vocino
M
any patrons have attended
Moose events, but not
many know the backstory of the
Loyal Order of Moose, the fraternal
and service organization
founded in 1888 and headquartered
in Mooseheart, Illinois,
with a membership of over one
million members. The Moose organization
is known for its dedication
to children and seniors
with their support of two facilities:
the Mooseheart Child City
E
Friday, March 1, 2024
Celebrating its 65th anniversary,
Malden Moose Lodge continues
its work of caring
Malden Moose Lodge No. 1910 administration, shown from left
to right: Administrator Henry Dorazio, President Ed “Porky”
Strong and Senior Regent Kathy Regent last Friday afternoon
at the Malden Moose Lodge 1910, which is located at 562
Broadway in Malden.
& School, a 1,000-acre campus
located 40 miles west of Chicago,
which supports children and
teens in need, and Moosehaven,
a 70-acre retirement community
near Jacksonville, Florida, for
elderly residents who have at
least 15 years of service to the
Moose organization. According
to Moose International, the organization
contributes between
$75 to $100 million worth of
community service (counting
CELEBRATING | SEE PAGE 9
Seven Malden High students receive total of over
$2 million in full scholarships to college
MHS seniors set school record for number of recipients of Posse and Questbridge
Scholarships; All receiving full, 4-year academic grants
By Steve Freker
I
f you see a contingent of
Malden High School seniors
from the Class of 2024 walking
around with big smiles on their
faces that just will not go away,
there is a great reason.
These seven students have
just been informed they have
been selected to receive full,
4-year academic scholarships
to some of the most prestigious
colleges and universities in the
nation.
In all, the full scholarships
add up to over $2 million in full
grants, covering all costs: tuition,
fees, room and board.
What about the colleges
and universities they are headed?Tufts
University, Centre College
(Kentucky), Union College
(N.Y.), Rutgers University (N.J.)
SCHOLARSHIPS | SEE PAGE 17
Fnu Dolkar Tsering
Bryn Mawr
Cahterine Alaynre
Centre C1
Damien Josephat
Centre College
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THE MALDEN ADVOCATE–Friday, March 1, 2024
Job Program geared
towards people 50 and
older continues at the
Malden Public Library
T
he Malden Public Library
continues to offer an online
job support program for
people 50 years old and older.
The 50+ Job Seekers Program
is a free service, and people 50
years or older are welcome to
join any or all of the sessions,
which are held on Zoom. Anyone
interested who doesn’t
have a computer or isn’t familiar
with Zoom is welcome to
come to the library and borrow
a Chromebook during the
sessions. Library staff will make
sure anyone interested in participating
can do so.
The morning sessions are
from 9:30-11:30 a.m. and meet
on the fi rst and third Wednesdays.
Here are the session dates
and topics:
March 6 – Resumes (Part #1)
March 20 – Resumes (Part #2)
April 3 – Cover Letters & Using
AI in the Job Search
April 17 – Networking
May 1 – Interview Strategies
May 15 – Interview Practice
June 5 – Thinking Outside
the Box
June 12 – Marketing Plan
The Library is excited to continue
off ering this program and
encourages anyone interested
to attend. Call the Malden Public
Library with questions at 781324-0218;
ask for Marita.
T
Early Voting Begins
Feb. 24 for March 5th
Presidential Primary
Special to Th e Advocate
hose who wish to vote early
may do so from Saturday,
February 24 through Thursday,
February 29 in Room 220 at Malden
City Hall (215 Pleasant St.).
Hours for in-person early voting
are as follows:
Saturday, February 24 from
10:00 a.m. to 1:00 p.m.
Sunday, February 25 from
10:00 a.m. to 1:00 p.m.
Monday, February 26 from
8:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m.
Tuesday, February 27 from
8:00 a.m. to 7:00 p.m.
Wednesday, February 28 from
8:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m.
Thursday, February 29 from
8:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m.
Anyone who misses this voting
window will have to vote at
their regular polling location on
Election Day. The City of Malden
would like to remind voters that
some ward/precinct lines and
polling locations have changed
since the federal redistricting
and they may confi rm their voting
location by using the Secretary
of State’s Where Do I Vote
feature at https://www.sec.
state.ma.us/WhereDoIVoteMA/
WhereDoIVote
Those wishing to vote by mail
must have their application submitted
to the City Clerk’s Offi ce
by 5:00 p.m. on Thursday, February
29. This deadline will assure a
proper amount of mailing time
to get the ballot to the voter.
Applications for Vote by Mail or
Absentee Ballots may be downloaded
at https://www.sec.state.
ma.us/ele/eleabsentee/absidx.
htm. All Vote by Mail / Absentee
Ballots must be returned to
City Hall by 8:00 p.m. on Tuesday,
March 5. Vote by Mail /
Absentee Ballots are not to be
dropped off at polling places on
Election Day. Twenty-four hour
a day ballot drop off is available
by using the offi cial City of Malden
drop boxes located outside
at City Hall (215 Pleasant St.) and
the Malden Police Station (800
Eastern Ave.). Voters may follow
the status of their Vote by
Mail ballots by using the Secretary
of State’s Track My Ballot
feature at https://www.sec.state.
ma.us/WhereDoIVoteMA/TrackMyBallot
The
last day to register to vote
for the Presidential Primary is
February 24 at 5:00 p.m. Voter
registration is available online
24 hours a day, seven days
a week at https://www.sec.state.
ma.us/ovr/
50+ Job seekers
For Advertising with Results,
call The Advocate Newspapers
at 617-387-2200 or
Info@advocatenews.net
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
Poll Workers Help wanted
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Page 3
~ Malden Musings ~
MHS Alumni Hall
of Fame Banquet
By Peter Levine
F
ellow Maldonians, it is that
time of the year again! The
Malden High School Alumni
Association’s 6th Alumni Hall of
Fame Banquet will take place Friday,
May 3, at (the iconic) Anthony’s
of Malden on Canal Street.
Nomination forms are available
at the main offi ce at Malden
High School or at: http://
maldenhighalumni.com/. Don’t
be left out, get your choice in
asap; nomination papers are
due back by February 24 and
can be mailed to: MHSAA, Inc.,
PO Box 47, Malden, MA 02148.
If you have any questions, contact:
Anthony Dickinson at anthonyndickinson@gmail.com.
This
year it is an honor and my
extreme (pun intended) pleasure
(actually, mine, my sister
Barbara and Gary Cherone’s) to
nominate bassist Philip Bynoe
for consideration for induction
into the Alumni Hall of Fame.
Philip, being one of the most
successful, most well-known,
most talented musicians ever
to graduate MHS, is still performing
and creating music in
2024. At MHS the 1979 graduate
was involved in the orchestra/band
and studied music theory
all the while playing in a ton
of groups before college. After
Malden High (pre-stardom),
Phil attended Berklee, where
he studied with Berklee giant
Wit Brown, practicing relentlessly
and changing bands several
times in the ensuing years.
Destiny stepped in. Nuno Bettencourt
and Gary Cherone
from the band Extreme introduced
Philip to Mike Mangini
(Extreme/Dream Theater
drummer). Soon, he and Mangini
were playing together in the
“Rick Berlin Band.” They entered
and won a local rhythm section
competition, and it was Mangini
who later got Philip an audition
with Steve Vai. The rest, as
they say, is history. Philip went
on to work regularly with superstar
guitarist Vai (and Joe Satriani),
touring with him/them
since 2012, a role he previously
held from 1996 to 2000. He has
also played on four of Vai’s studio
albums. Amazing stuff for a
Malden guy!
Speaking of Amerige Park’s
Gary Cherone, here’s a well-deserved
nod to GC for remaining
true to his down-to-earth Malden
roots – never getting lost
in the insanity of the profession
he chose. This is what Gary
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MHS 1979 graduate Philip Bynoe
had to say about Phil’s Hall of
Fame nomination: “Phillip, my
classmate and dear friend was
the first in the flesh musician
I looked up to in high school,
long before my dreams of being
in a band materialized, Phil was
already a pro playing in nightclubs
around town. I was in awe
of his talent then and still am! He
has gone on to tour the world
over with many elite artists and
Phil has played second fi ddle to
none! He cannot help but shine
on any stage! And may I add a
personal note: throughout his
whole amazing career Phil has
remained a true gentleman. I am
honored to call him my friend
and a very worthy candidate
for the hall.”
Check out some of these famous
Maldonians now ensconced
in the Alumni Hall of
Fame:
• Gary Cherone – Extreme
frontman, pretty decent hoop
player, and Amerige Park’s most
famous son (besides Cliff Cioffi ,
of course – insert smiley face).
• Bobby Sager – billionaire
philanthropist, Park Street’s
most famous son, and the only
person I know who has a working
ATM machine in their living
room.
• John Volpe – MHS Class of
1926, United States Ambassador
to Italy, second United
States Secretary of Transportation,
61st and 63rd Governor of
Massachusetts and in his spare
time Administrator of the Federal
Highway Administration.
Amazing career.
• Kevin Cullen – renowned
journalist and author – his time
at The Boston Globe is legendary.
Also, not a bad little athlete
when we were growing up.
MUSINGS| SEE PAGE 18
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THE MALDEN ADVOCATE–Friday, March 1, 2024
Malden Antique Show Is Back March 9
F
ebruary 28, 2024 MALDEN,
MA – The Malden Historical
Society will bring its annual Antique
Show and Sale back to Anthony’s
of Malden on March 9,
2024 from 10 am to 3 pm. Now
in its 36th year, this event provides
a great opportunity to get
out of the house during the winter
doldrums, explore the wares
of more than 25 dealers, and
take home an interesting piece
of our tangible past.
Gerry
D’Ambrosio
Attorney-at-Law
Is Your Estate in Order?
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L
The one-day Malden Antique
Show and Sale has attracted
dealers from throughout New
England who offer a range of
items for sale, including art, gold
and silver jewelry, glass, china,
silver, pottery, linens, lighting,
toys, books, post cards, small
furniture, ephemera, and much
more. Anthony’s provides convenient
access for dealers and
shoppers alike.
Admission to the show is $6
($5 with an ad, card, or copy of
this article, print or electronic)
and benefits the Malden Historical
Society. Anthony's will have
lunch and beverages available
for purchase, so everyone can
make a day of it. Anthony’s is located
at 105 Canal Street in Malden,
has ample free parking, is
a two-block walk from the Malden
Center MBTA Station (Orange
Line), and is wheelchair
accessible, with all dealers on
one floor.
The Malden Historical Society
is a local volunteer-run nonprofit
organization founded in 1886
and dedicated to collecting, preCelebrating
Our 52nd Year
Chris 2024
serving, and disseminating the
history of Malden and beyond.
This year, we are proud to join
the rest of Malden in celebrating
the 375th anniversary of the
City’s founding. To learn more
about the Malden Historical Society,
visit www.maldenhistoricalsociety.org
or email info@
maldenhistoricalsociety.org.
Maldonian has hands
blessed before first
clinical rotation
ocal students who are studying
nursing at Saint Anselm
College in Manchester, N.H.,
gathered in the Abbey Church
for a blessing before they began
their first clinical placements.
The Blessing of the
Hands Ceremony held on February
2 is a beloved tradition
for the college’s future nurses
– connecting the Benedictine
values at the center of their college
experience to their future
work. A total of 114 future nurses
representing seven states received
the Blessing of Hands,
marking a new chapter in their
nursing education by taking
the classroom, lab and simulation
learning to the clinical
environment. Malden student
Hannah Gately was included
in the honor. To be eligible
for this honor, a student must
be in good academic standing
and have completed three semesters
of a liberal arts nursing
curriculum.
The nursing students were
joined by faculty, family and
friends, listening to prayer and
reflection. Father Francis McCarty,
O.S.B., presided over the
blessing.
About Saint Anselm College:
Founded in 1889, this is a nationally
ranked four-year liberal
arts college providing a 21st
century education in the Catholic,
Benedictine tradition. Located
in southern New Hampshire,
Saint Anselm is well known for
its strong liberal arts curriculum,
the New Hampshire Institute
of Politics, commitment to
inclusiveness, a highly successful
nursing program and a legacy
of community service.
Like us on Facebook advocate newspaper
Facebook.com/Advocate.news.ma
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Page 5
Tickets going fast for Malden Baseball LEGACY
Hall of Fame banquet set for March 7
Bob Rotondi is Legacy Selection; Other inductees Shawn Brickman, Joe Caraco
Sr., Kenny Mazonson, Deano Summers, Sal Turilli, Pearl & Perry Verge Sr.
Advocate Staff Report
T
ickets are going fast for the
Inaugural Malden Baseball
LEGACY Hall of Fame banquet
set for Thursday, March 7.
The much-anticipated event
is set for the Malden Moose Hall,
562 Broadway. Doors open at
6:00 p.m. for the social reception,
with photo opportunities
at 6:45 p.m. followed by dinner
at 7:00 p.m. An induction ceremony
will follow the dinner.
Some of the most well-known
and appreciated contributors to
the sport of Baseball in the city
of Malden will soon get their
due honors.
All those who want to share in
honoring these inaugural honorees
are welcome and invited
to attend the First Annual Malden
Baseball LEGACY Hall of
Fame dinner and induction ceremony.
The
Malden Baseball LEGACY
Hall of Fame's mission is simple:
“To honor those who lives and
worthy."
This year's inductees to be
honored on March 7 are the following:
—
Bob Rotondi, LEGACY Inductee
—
Shawn Brickman, former
longtime Malden High Head
Varsity Baseball Coach, Northeastern
University Division 1
Baseball record-holder, Malden
High School, Malden Babe
Ruth and Malden Little League
standout
—Joe Caraco Sr., former longtime
Malden Babe Ruth Manager
and BRL Board Member and
Offi cer
BANQUET | SEE PAGE 6
Hall of Fame LOGO
meaningful contributions have
directly and positively impacted
Baseball in the city of Malden
through the years.”.
In the letter to the inductees
from the MBL Hall of Fame, it explains:
"Baseball has been an integral
part of the history of the
city of Malden and indeed, it is
a part of the very fabric of this
community. The institutions
that have been formed, then
grown and thrived surrounding
the sport of Baseball in our city
have helped thousands of individuals
and families in the city
of Malden create so many wonderful
and lasting relationships,
friendships and memories."
Certainly, your contributions
through the years to Baseball in
the city of Malden deserve special
recognition and acknowledgement
among those whose
contributions have been exemplary
and particularly noteNeed
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
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Visit us online at: WWW.SABATINO-INS.COM
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THE MALDEN ADVOCATE–Friday, March 1, 2024
Malden artist’s latest drawings on exhibit
SJ Art Consulting presents “Notes on the World Around Us”
S
J Art Consulting was pleased
to announce Notes on the
World Around Us, a two-person
exhibition featuring original
drawings by Ingrid Ludt and
Sand T Kalloch, at their gallery in
downtown Haverhill, Mass. The
two series of drawings by Ingrid
Ludt and Sand T Kalloch tell
stories related to physical places
and objects, real and in the
mind’s eye.
Sand T’s abstract series utilizes
wax pastels, graphite, conte and
ink to ruminate on the concept
of “A Mile Long.” Beginning with
more concrete concepts, such as
length, speed and time, Sand T’s
fi nal drawings lead the viewer to
more abstract notions of survival,
endurance and our very existence.
The work invites viewers
to dive into their own experiences,
seeing both recognizable
and newer concepts emerge.
Ludt’s ink and pencil drawings
capture the essence of physical
forms by focusing on their outer
edges. Through the use of
BANQUET | FROM PAGE 5
—Kenny Mazonson, present
50-year-plus Malden Little
League and Malden Youth
simplifi ed gestures, she uncovers
the intrinsic energy and distinct
character of objects like
stones and shells. Her attention
to rhythm and line is inspired by
a background in dance.
The public is invited to attend
an opening reception on Thursday,
March 14, 2024, from 5-8
p.m. Both artists will be in attendance,
and refreshments will
be served. The exhibition will be
on view from March 14 through
April 14 at 43 Washington St. in
Haverhill.
Sand T Kalloch is a contemporary
artist known for her reductive
abstract work. She maintains
a studio in Malden. Her artistic
output comes in the form of
mixed-media paintings, low relief,
and works on paper. A simplifying
approach to art-making
is the driving force behind her
mixed-media works. The primary
intention is to utilize six basic
elements of visual language: dot,
line, surface, color, form and light.
Sand T holds a Master of Fine
Baseball Manager, League Offi
cer and Board Member; Former
Malden Babe Ruth coach
and former Malden Senior Babe
Ruth Manager
Lawrence A. Simeone Jr.
Attorney-at-Law
~ Since 1989 ~
* Corporate Litigation
* Criminal/Civil
* MCAD
* Zoning/Land Court
* Wetlands Litigation
* Workmen’s Compensation
* Landlord/Tenant Litigation
* Real Estate Law
* Construction Litigation
* Tax Lein
* Personal Injury
* Bankruptcy
* Wrongful Death
* Zoning/Permitting Litigation
300 Broadway, Suite 1, Revere * 781-286-1560
lsimeonejr@simeonelaw.net
Sand T Kalloch, A Mile Long #1699, #1704 and #1829, a set of
three, wax pastel
Sand T Kalloch, A Mile Long
#1699,wax pastel
Arts from the School of the Museum
of Fine Arts at Tufts University.
She has been the recipient
of numerous awards and
grants for her work in the visual
arts, as well as for her volunteer
works in art advocacy and community
building. Her exhibition
history is extensive, with representation
in numerous solo and
group exhibitions in Australia,
Canada, France, Malaysia, Singapore,
Taiwan and the United
— Deano Summers, present
Malden Babe Field Director
(nearly 20 years), present
Malden Babe Ruth Manager
(Flames, nearly 30 years), former
Malden Senior Babe Ruth
Manager (Marlins), former Malden
High School Assistant Baseball
Coach)
—Sal Turilli (posthumously),
former longtime Malden Babe
Ruth (Stars) and Malden Little
League (Tornadoes) manager,
coached many, many future
high school stars in Malden
—Pearl and Perry Verge Sr.,
one of the early "First Lady of
Malden Babe Ruth" contributors
and her husband, who was a former
longtime Malden Babe Ruth
Manager and League Officer.
Pearl Verge also a former Malden
Babe Ruth Offi cer and Fundrais~
Home of the Week ~
Step into this charming expanded Cape
Colonial, boasting a beautiful stained glass
window, cherry cabinets, and a breakfast bar in
the kitchen. The first floor features a spacious
family room, formal dining room, living room
with a gas fireplace, and a full bath. Upstairs,
find four bedrooms, a bonus room, and a
luxurious bath with double sinks and a Jacuzzi
tub. Outside, an oversized trek deck awaits for
entertaining, with ample parking including a
two-car garage. Recent updates include a new
roof and heating system in 2020.
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States. Represented by art dealers
in the United States, Canada,
Malaysia and Singapore, her
work has been shown nationally
and internationally in dozens of
art fairs. Sand T’s artwork resides
in public and private art collections
worldwide.
About SJ Art Consulting, LLC:
The company was established in
2013 by owner Sarah LoVasco to
fi ll a need for residential design,
curatorial and installation work.
LoVasco began selling original
artwork directly to clients
in their homes, further exposing
the need for nontraditional
ing Assistant to league Treasurer
The Legacy Inductee for 2024
is the individual whose contribution
to the sport of baseball
in Malden has been both very
impactful and long-lasting.
The baseball legacy of Bob
Rotondi extends back to the
1950s, when he began his
coaching career as manager
of the Little League Rifl es. He
then continued in the managerial
ranks with the Malden
Babe Ruth League for 13-15 year
olds in 1960 and continued to
the present day, where he still
serves as manager of the Malden
BRL Knights.
"It should be a great night for
everyone and we are expecting
a great turnout," said Malden
Baseball LEGACY Hall of
Fame representative and one
modes of promoting and selling
artwork. The Gallery at SJ Art
Consulting in downtown Haverhill,
Mass., is a reliable source for
original work created by regional,
emerging to mid-career artists.
Today, LoVasco operates an
arts-based business where clients
can expect top-notch customer
service and highly skilled
installation teams, and artists
can rely upon a proven reputation
of trust and integrity when
exhibiting and selling their artwork.
To learn more about SJ
Art Consulting, visit sjartconsulting.com.
of
the founders Bob McVicar,
who has long been active in
Malden Baseball on many levels,
particularly in fundraising
for Malden Babe Ruth, Malden
High School Baseball and Malden
Youth Baseball.
*****
Tickets for the First Annual
Malden Baseball LEGACY are
$35.00 per person and $280.00
for a table of eight. All tickets
must be purchased in advance,
with none sold at the door.Payment
may be made through
credit card, Venmo or Cash App.
Arrangements can be made for
check payment through reservations
as well.
Please email: steve.freker@
gmail.com to reserve tickets
and/or to request information
and any other questions.
Like us on Facebook
advocate newspaper
Facebook.com/
Advocate.news.ma
׉	 7cassandra://za8FuhtO2vLxrCzOsWoHshPKc8x3ULVQ5-woCzkY_Ro*`̰ eՆ	0Z8׉ETHE MALDEN ADVOCATE–Friday, March 1, 2024
Page 7
FUNDING | FROM PAGE 1
Center rehabilitation
The goal is to historically restore
and preserve the Oak
Grove Community Center at the
intersection of Winter and Washington
Streets while at the same
time modernizing the building
to make it completely handicapped
accessible in line with
federal regulations.
City Council President Stephen
Winslow led a wide-ranging
discussion of some details
of parts of the various projects
and thanked and praised all of
the hundreds of people whose
contributions and input led to
the initiation and progress of
all of these projects. Councillor
Winslow noted that this was
one of the key evenings in the
community in terms of advancing
such a slate of commendable
and worthwhile community
improvement projects in
Malden.
Approving the expenditures
in the separate votes were
Jadeane Sica (Ward 8), Chris
Simonelli (Ward 7), Carey Macdonald
(at-Large), Ari Taylor
(Ward 5), Amanda Linehan
(Ward 3), Peg Crowe (Ward 1),
Craig Spadafora (at-Large), Karen
Colón Hayes (at-Large), Paul
Condon (Ward 1), Ryan O’Malley
(Ward 4) and Stephen Winslow
(Ward 6).
RON’S OIL
Call
For
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MELROSE, MA
02176
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ACCEPTING VISA, MASTERCARD & DISCOVER
(781) 397-1930 OR (781) 662-8884
100 GALLON MINIMUM
MALDEN CITY COUNCIL: The members of the Malden City Council approved the expenditure of
over $2.1 million in local taxpayer-generated funds to aid in either the initiation or completion
of fi ve major community improvement projects across the city with the expenditure of
Community Preservation Act funds. The City Council, pictured from left to right: Front row:
Jadeane Sica (Ward 8), Chris Simonelli (Ward 7), Carey McDonald (at-Large), Ari Taylor (Ward
5) and Amanda Linehan (Ward 3); back row: Peg Crowe (Ward 1), Craig Spadafora (at-Large),
Karen Colón Hayes (at-Large), Paul Condon (Ward 1), Ryan O’Malley (Ward 4) and Stephen
Winslow (Ward 6). (Courtesy City of Malden)
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THE MALDEN ADVOCATE–Friday, March 1, 2024
MIDDLESEX DA: Everett Auto Body shop at center
of wide-ranging $1 million-plus auto insurance scam
Everett, Revere and Saugus residents charged with others in
connection with three-year investigation of case
D
istrict Attorney Marian Ryan,
Everett Chief of Police Steven
Mazzie and Chief of Investigations
of the Massachusetts
Insurance Fraud Bureau Katherine
Mulligan have 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 on Bow Street in Everett.
Four of the defendants have
been arraigned in Middlesex Superior
Court.
—Fabio Rodrigo Jordao Correa,
31, of Saugus, 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.
—Jose Manuel Gordon, 49,
of Roxbury, has been charged
Two other individuals were indicted
by the grand jury and are
fugitives:
—Jhon Alexander Lopera
DA RYAN Logo
with one count of conspiracy
to commit larceny over $1,200
and one count of receiving stolen
property.
—Tabajara Alves Ribeiro, 23, of
Saugus, has been charged with
one count of conspiracy to commit
larceny over $1,200.
—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.
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.,
charged with one count of conspiracy
to commit larceny over
$1,200.
Both of those individuals are
believed to have fled to Colombia.
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. This scheme operated
for multiple years and was allegedly
masterminded by defendants
Jhon Lopera and Fabio
Correa. The defendants allegedly
orchestrated the submission
of scores of insurance claims
for customers of the shop that
defrauded the insurance carriers
of in excess of $1 million in
payments.
The claims were false in a variety
of ways: They often included
descriptions of automobile collisions
that 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 cultivated
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.
****
A scheduling hearing was set
for Monday, at which time a trial
date and other events in the
case were to be set. The Assistant
District Attorney assigned
to this case is Graham Van Epps.
Malden Reads Community Dinner on March 20
J
oin Malden Reads on
Wednesday, March 20 at 6:30
p.m. for a community dinner –
one of the events for this year’s
featured book, “Being Heumann:
An Unrepentant Memoir
of a Disability Rights Activist,” by
Judith Heumann. Dinner will be
at 110 Grill at 200 Exchange St.,
starting at 6:30. Parking is available
at the Jackson Street Garage,
and 110 Grill will provide
free validated parking there.
The evening will begin with
social time and a buffet of appetizers.
Afterwards attendees will
sit down, and guests will be able
to order from a limited selection
of main dishes. All dishes can be
prepared gluten-free, and vegetarian
options will be available.
The restaurant is fully accessible;
questions about accessibility
can be directed to 110 Grill.
The cost of the evening is $28,
including appetizers, a main dish,
tax and tip. Drinks and dessert
may be purchased individually.
Reservations must be made and
paid for no later than March 18
by directly contacting 110 Grill
at 781-605-2172. Please tell them
you are with the Malden Reads
dinner on March 20. You can provide
your credit card number by
phone or prepay with cash by
visiting the restaurant in person.
When you arrive for the event,
you will be given a gift card to
use to pay for your dinner.
All are welcome! “We hope
you have read the book but it
is not required to attend. Being
Heumann highlights the history
of the disability rights moveThe
Malden Reads community enjoyed dinner at an Ethiopian
Restaurant. (Courtesy photo)
ment in this country, and is available
in book, e-book, and other
formats at the Malden Public
Library and for purchase at The
Gallery@57 on Pleasant Street.”
Through informal conversation,
there will be an opportunity to
discuss themes from the book,
including disability awareness,
hidden disabilities, the benefits
of the Americans with Disabilities
Act (ADA) to non-disabled
people, civil rights and human
rights and the power of one person
working in collaboration
with a team to create change.
For more information about
Malden Reads and to see what
other events are coming up, see
MaldenReads.org.
For Advertising with Results,
call The Advocate Newspapers
at 617-387-2200 or Info@advocatenews.net
׉	 7cassandra://M650hfErNynGCVuyTimjdcy_Rjj2DSYLaY_39ecrRBY,`̰ eՆ	0Z:׉E!THE MALDEN ADVOCATE–Friday, March 1, 2024
Page 9
CELEBRATING | FROM PAGE 1
monetary donations, volunteer
hours worked and miles driven)
annually.
In an interview at the Malden
Moose Lodge No. 1910 at
562 Broadway, Rte. 99, in Malden
last Friday afternoon, Malden
Moose President Ed “Porky”
Strong said the Lodge is one of
many throughout the United
States and Canada that support
the two facilities.
“If something happens to
anyone under age 18 with a parental
hardship, they are able
to live there,” 54-year member
Strong said, regarding Mooseheart.
“They usually get a college
scholarship, or they will join
the service – they give them a
high school education and a
chance to join the ROTC or enter
a trade.”
“That’s the reason that I’m involved
in the Moose organization,”
Strong said. “I don’t have
any children of my own, but
those are my kids.”
For 33-year Lodge Administrator
Henry Dorazio, of Malden,
he became invested following
in his father’s footsteps,
also named Henry, who was the
original administrator in 1959.
“It’s satisfying to me,” Dorazio
Malden Moose Administrator Henry Dorazio by the founding
fathers memorial, which includes his father – also named
Henry.
said. “Circling back to the children’s
home, they live in family-like
settings situated on farmland
and attend public school.
“Similar to an assisted living
facility, they have a dining
room, hospital, activity center
and a lounge,” said Strong about
Moosehaven. “It is paid for by
seniors’ social security checks.”
Keeping it local, the Malden
Moose Lodge has 522 members
with active memberships –
and over 100 of them are women.
Dues are $60 yearly, with the
exception of this year’s special
discount: $40 annually off ered
during the club’s anniversary.
The discount is in honor of the
Malden Moose’s 65th anniversary,
which will be highlighted
with a visit from Moose International
Chairman John Sipes
on Thursday, March 14 at 6 p.m.
Malden Mayor Gary Christenson,
Police Chief Glenn Cronin
and Assistant Fire Chief Lennie
Dunn are slated to be in attendance.
Besides
providing for children
in Illinois and seniors in Florida,
the Moose gives back localMembership,
shown from left to right: Bartender/Past
President Bobby Freni, Administrator Henry Dorazio, Senior
Regent Kathy Hannan and members Patty Graffam, Steve
Graff am, Karen Dellemonico, Mike Thompson and Paul Webber
in front of the bar. (Advocate photos by Tara Vocino)
ly. According to Senior Regent
Kathy Hannan, they initiated a
Toys for Malden drive, amounting
to approximately 700 toys
this year, which are dropped off
at the police station.
“I’m a Moose member, because
giving back to children
and the elderly is amazing,” Hannan
said.
Dorazio added that the
Moose runs a peer pressure
prevention program in elementary
schools and churches
for approximately 40 children.
The Moose also raises $2,500
for the Breast Cancer Association
at a Halloween dance. In
addition, the Moose has a sock
drive for veterans and collects
backpacks for Housing Families
in Malden. Each local lodge collectively
donates $500, according
to Dorazio.
As far as activities, Hannan
said the Lodge has shuffleboard,
bocce, a pool table and
darts – open from 1 to 10 p.m.
weekdays and later on weekends.
To become a member,
fill out an application at the
lounge.
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THE MALDEN ADVOCATE–Friday, March 1, 2024
Malden Recreation teams up with
Malden High for Girls Softball Clinic
Malden Recreation and Malden High Girls Softball teamed up to provide a free, successful, instructional Softball Clinic for several weeks on Saturday mornings
at the Salemwood K-8 School Fieldhouse. Drills and individual instruction were provided to about 40 girls. The clinic was free of charge to all who attended
and was led by Coach BiBi and Malden High softball Head Coach Rebecca Krigman, other MHS coaches and some MHS players. Malden Rec Coordinator Joe
Levine and Assistant Laura Perez said that the clinic was “very well-received and all the girls who attended got some quality instruction and had a great time.”
Rec Coordinator Levine thanked the Malden High Athletic Program and softball coaches for their collaboration in this event. (Courtesy Photo/Malden Recreation)
Maldonians 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 20232024
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
students have been named to
the Dean’s List for the fall 2023
semester: Jane Harrington,
Communication, 2024; and Mia
Polston, English, 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.
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׉	 7cassandra://3YCTdJ1K0i9I-Nml16IskLeQWCKNICOTthE1viEfAkw-`̰ eՆ	0Z<׉E)THE MALDEN ADVOCATE–Friday, March 1, 2024
Page 11
Mystic Valley girls swimming places 6th
at MIAA Division 2 State Championship Meet
By Emily Brennan
T
he MIAA Division 2 girls
state swimming championships
took place on Saturday,
February 17 at the Massachusetts
Institute of Technology in
Cambridge. The Eagles collected
their best result in program
history, finishing in sixth place
overall.
Sydney Cao, Crystal Tang, Isabelle
Pennachio and Lana Santos
Albuquerque opened the
meet with a celebration on the
podium in the 200-medley relay.
The foursome dropped a
full second from their previous
best and touched the wall in
1:57.34 to earn a seventh-place
finish and a school record. A few
minutes later, sophomore Isabella
Cirame touched the wall
in tenth place in the 200 yard
Individual Medley with a swim
of 2:18.07. Cirame’s time was
not only a lifetime best, but the
program’s second fastest ever in
the event.
Later in the day in the 100
freestyle, Cirame and Cao both
broke their lifetime best records.
Cirame would finish in ninth
place with a time of 55.61 while
Cao achieved a 15th place finish
in 56.69. With that time Cirame
is closing in on the Mystic
Valley record.
After a short break Mystic Valley’s
200-yard freestyle relay
Shown from left to right are Isabelle Pennachio, Nicole Kelso,
Khloe Co, Lucia Antonucci, Lana Santos Albuquerque, Brooke
Burke, Sydney Cao, Britney Nayiga, Crystal Tang and Isabella
Cirame.
was arguably the most exciting
event of the day, with the team
of Cao, Albuquerque, Cirame
and Nayiga going neck and neck
with four teams for the relay title.
With a swim of 1:41.80, Mystic
Valley finished in fourth place
– three tenths of second behind
State Champion Wayland
– which finished at 1:41.50. Mystic
Valley finished almost two full
seconds ahead of the previous
record in an amazing photo finish
with Wayland, Duxbury and
Weston High Schools.
Mystic Valley added valuable
points in the 100 breaststroke,
led by sophomore Lucia
Antonucci in 10th place
(1:10.71). Britney Nayiga was
not far behind, touching the
wall in 1:10.77 to drop just over
two seconds from her fastest
Shown from left to right are Isabelle Pennachio, Lana Santos
Albuquerque, Sydney Cao and Crystal Tang.
Shown from left to right are
Britney Nayiga, Lana Santos
Albuquerque, Sydney Cao
and Isabella Cirame.
Britney Nayiga
this year, finishing in 11th place.
The 400-freestyle relay team
of Cirame, Albuquerque, Antonucci
and Nayiga secured another
podium appearance with
a sixth-place finish in 3:51.25.
Most notably, Cirame swam to
a 55.56 in her 100-freestyle leg,
earning her yet another lifetime
best.
“I am so proud of this young
group of girls to achieve what
they did this weekend,” Head
~ Malden Neighborhood Basketball League ~
Week 9 – ‘Then there was 1’
2024 Malden Neighborhood Basketball League
Team
Bullets - c 11
Sixers - c
9
Lakers - c 7
Celtics
Pistons
Kings
4
3
2
W L
1
3
4
9
10
9
Games behind Streak
W - 9
W - 4
L - 3
L - 3
L - 1
L - 1
0
2
3.5
7.5
8.5
8.5
c - Clinched playoff spot
Tuesday, Feb. 20 at Ferryway
Game 1 – Pistons 53, Kings 47
The Pistons took advantage of a 26-14, 2nd half offensive
barrage or they could’ve lost this one. It was N. Sullivan
that led them with the game-high of 22, followed
by the “weekly improving” R. Wallace with 15. But on the
other side, Z. Pierre had a nice game himself, ending
with 18 – A. Brathwaite chipped in 11 in this close defeat.
Game 2 – Bullets 58, Celtics 43
The Emerald played the Bullets tough again, but in
the end the boys in blue pulled away behind another
strong game from “MVP candidate” L. Guertin (21) – and
also in the conversation, his teammate C. Mijar had 18
and yet another dagger 3 in the 4th from G. Biscan. Celts
C. Mathely (18) & J. Sweeney (15) each played a great
game but needed just a lil more help to finish the game.
Saturday, Feb. 24 at Ferryway
Game 1 – Kings 43, Pistons 40
The Kings finally got a much-needed victory after
hard, rough weeks. The Kings Z. Pierre had a solid game
with 15; A. Brathwaite, who was the catalyst in the 1st
to get them going, added 13 by game’s end. The Pistons
J. Bly led with 16 and R. Wallace had 11 in this unexpected
loss. As they could only muster up a total of
2 points in the final frame, that basically made up the
overall difference.
Game 2 – Sixers 39, Lakers 23
The Crimson surprisingly didn’t shoot 1 free throw the
whole game and still won? The Lakers did shoot F.T.’s but
only hit 20% of them, and they never were able to score
double digits in any of the 4 quarters. This low scoring
affair only boasted 2 double-digit scorers: The Pistons’
C. Joseph with 10 and the Lakers “MVP Candidate” S.
Warton with 13. Both teams struggled and it showed
throughout the game.
Sunday, Feb. 25 at Ferryway
Game 1 – Sixers 42, Celtics 37
The Sixers beat the defending champs and jumped
into 2 places with the victory as well as clinched a
playoff spot for the madness. And thanks to this
Celtics loss, the Lakers also clinched a playoff spot.
C. Joseph carried his team in every quarter and had
a Monster Game, dropping 26. The Celts’ J. Sweeney
(14) and C. Malave (10) had the big points for their
team, which struggled all over the place. As a team
they scored just 3 points in the 4th quarter and went
2-15 from the line. Ya’ can’t defend the title shooting
like that.
Game 2 - Bullets 50, Kings 40
The final game showcased an energized Kings team
that played well throughout and even outscored the
Bullets in the final frame. But as usual the will & fight of
L. Guertin would not be denied – he scored 23 in the
game. G. Biscan hit another Big 4th quarter 3 pointer
to seal the Win. We can’t say enough on the improvement
of A. Brathwaite, who started from the bottom;
now he’s here as the team’s leading scorer with 19. The
Kings missed 15 free throws, compared to the Bullets’
3 misses.
This Week’s Games
Sat., March 2
Sixers Bullets
Kings Lakers
Sun., March 3
Kings Celtics
Pistons Lakers
Coach Andrew DiGiacomo said.
“What is even more exciting is
that we do not graduate a single
swimmer from this states
team. It was a great end to a
great season.”
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׉EIPage 12
THE MALDEN 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 two-part 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.
Think
LeBron James
retiring and going
to the NFL
dan 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
“B A G IT!” SPORT S
ILLUSTRATED COVER: A Sports
Illustrated cover bashed NBA
great Michael Jordan for
deciding to give professional
baseball a try.
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 Jorfine,
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
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 conGOLDEYES
STATS CARD: Here is a look at Carmine Cappuccio’s
professional baseball stats through the years, on the back of
his Winnipeg Goldeyes card.
sideration 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-yearold
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 head׉	 7cassandra://bj0Rt1N6NpLHpNoNEr4900Eg68J0LguHa0KMgS5ZXpg*`̰ eՆ	0Z>׉E+ed to Birmingham 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,
22-game stint. Maybe if Cameron
had played with Birmingham
that extra year, the added
experience would have helped
him to stick in the “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 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
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.
runs. He walked 51 times, nearly
leading the team in that department,
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.
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 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 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
THE MALDEN ADVOCATE–Friday, March 1, 2024
Of course, after he fashioned a
remarkable, to say the least, 27game
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 year 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 “Three-Peat” 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 bePage
13
ing 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 wedcome
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
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.
ding 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 Birmingham 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 firstever
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
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 “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
BASEBALL | SEE PAGE 21
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THE MALDEN ADVOCATE–Friday, March 1, 2024
MVRCS boys swimming places 10th
at MIAA D2 State Championship
By Emily Brennan
T
he Mystic Valley Regional
Charter School boys swim
team recently concluded their
season at the MIAA Division 2
State Championships. The Eagles
faced great competition
around the state and finished
10th overall with 100 points.
Leading off the meet, the
team of Dylan Phan, Thomas
Sodeyama-Cardoso, Kevin Sodeyama-Cardoso
and Lucas Freitas
dropped almost a full second
off their 200-medley relay best
time to earn an 11th place finish
at 1:45.0. Sophomore Jaden Anthony
followed in the 200 Freestyle
scoring while placing 15th
at 1:50.48. Anthony also swam
the 100 freestyle later in the day
but finished out of the scoring
with a time of 50.6.
In the next event, the 200 Individual
Medley, in which the
swimmer swims two lengths
of butterfly, backstroke, breaststroke
and freestyle, Mystic Valley
senior captain Jason Yan finished
10th in a personal best
time at 2:04.05, just ahead of
teammates and sophomores
Shown from left to right:
Christian Antonucci, Jason
Yan, Jaden Anthony and Lucas
Freitas.
Shown from left to right: Lucas Freitas, Christian Antonucci,
Jason Yan, Kevin Sodeyama-Cardoso, Jaden Anthony and
Thomas Sodeyama-Cardoso.
Kevin Sodeyama-Cardoso and
Christian Antonucci finishing
11th and 12th, respectively in
2:04.44 and 2:05.62. It is rare to
have three swimmers score in
any event.
Thomas and Kevin Sodeyama-Cardoso
took home 9th and
13th place, respectively, scoring
valuable points in the 500-yard
freestyle. Thomas finished just
shy of a podium appearance
Beacon Hill
Roll Call
By Bob Katzen
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THE
HOUSE AND SENATE: There
were no roll calls in the House or Senate
last week.
Beacon Hill Roll Call’s research
shows that so far there are at least
eleven bills that have been approved
unanimously by the Senate in 2023
but are languishing in the House Ways
and Means Committee as of February
23, 2024. With no opposition in the
Senate, observers question why the
bills have not yet been considered
and approved by the House.
Under House rules, any individual
representative can move to discharge
any and all if these bills from the
Ways and Means Committee. There
is a 7-day waiting period prior to the
House considering the motion to discharge.
The discharge motion must receive
a majority vote of the members
present. If the measure is discharged
from the committee, the committee
has four days within which to report
out the measure for placement on the
House’s agenda for action.
A bill may also be discharged from
the Ways and Means Committee by
any representative by filing a petition
signed by a majority of the House. The
bill would then be discharged seven
days later and go onto the House
agenda for the next session.
A state representative who spoke
on the condition of anonymity told
Beacon Hill Roll Call that some bills
are sometimes held up in committee
because someone in a high position
of power either inside or outside the
Statehouse is opposed to it. “Rank and
file members have little control over
with a time of 5:02.13. Kevin
dropped almost 5 seconds from
his lifetime best to finish 13th in
5:07.61.
With an 11th place time of
2:04.44, Kevin Sodeyama-Cardoso
slashed seconds off his
200 IM for another personal
best. Sodeyama-Cardoso was
followed by Christian Antonucci,
who finished 12th in 2:05.62.
The Eagles’ strongest swim of
the bill if a powerful person wants the
measure buried,” said the legislator.
An ex-state representative who
wished to remain anonymous said,
"Although under House rules, every
representative has the power to attempt
to discharge a bill, hardly any
attempt is made to do this out of fear
of alienating the powerful speaker,
his leadership team and committee
chairs."
Beacon Hill Roll Call’s archives show
that motions to discharge a bill from
a committee and bring it to the full
House for debate and a vote were a
common practice back in the 1970s
and 1980s.
Beacon Hill Roll Call contacted the
House Speaker’s office and and asked
why the bills are still in committee. We
received this e-mail response:
“Each of those bills are currently
being reviewed by the House, with a
continued focus on fiscal responsibility,”
said Max Ratner, a spokesman for
House Speaker Ron Mariano (D-Quincy).
He also cited three important bills
that were approved by the House in
November 2023, December 2023 and
January 2024 and are in the Senate
Ways and Means Committee awaiting
action. Beacon Hill Roll Call will report
on those bills in a future report.
Here are five of the important bills
that were approved unanimously by
the event came from senior
captain Jason Yan, who added
a 10th place finish to the Eagles’
score card with a time of 2:04.05.
Mystic Valley’s 200 freestyle relay
team of Anthony, Yan, Lucas
Freitas and Antonucci turned in
a solid 8th place performance
and a podium appearance and
medal in a time of 1:33.57. As
all four are underclassmen, it
points to an excellent future.
After the podium appearance,
sophomore Antonucci was back
in the water for another fantasthe
Senate and are currently in the
House Ways and Means Committee:
GENDER X (S 2429)
On July 27, 2023, the Senate 39-0,
approved and sent to the House a bill
that would allow Bay Staters to choose
the gender-neutral designation “X” in
lieu of “male” or “female” on their birth
certificates and marriage certificates.
Another provision in the bill codifies
into law a current practice that allows
individuals to select “X” as their
gender designation on their driver’s
license, learner’s permit, identification
card and liquor purchase identification
card.
In addition, current state law requires
medical documentation in order
to change a gender designation
on a birth certificate. The bill does
away with that requirement.
Similar proposals were approved
by the Senate during the 2018, 2020
and 2022 sessions but died from inaction
in the House.
“People know what gender they
are,” said sponsor Sen. Jo Comerford
(D-Northampton). “This bill affirms the
ability of people to choose a non-binary
gender option on state documents
and forms, which would align
the commonwealth with many other
states that have adopted this designation
…Together, with our partners in
the House, we will continue to move
tic swim and did not disappoint,
dropping nearly two seconds
from his previous best time and
finishing 10th in the 100 breaststroke
at 1:01.8. Antonucci’s time
makes him the 3rd fastest in the
event in Eagles history.
In the final event of the day,
Antonucci teamed up with Yan,
Anthony and Kevin Sodeyama-Cardoso
to produce a sixthplace
finish, the teams highest
of the day, in the 400-free relay
with a time of 3:24.7.
With the 2023-24 season in
the rearview mirror, fifth-year
Head Coach Andrew DiGiacomo
has high hopes for the 2024-25
season and looks to the future
of the program with great excitement
and anticipation. “After
coming in 3rd last year, and
the number of seniors we lost to
graduation, we came into this
meet with expectations to set
the stage for a young group of
swimmers over the next couple
of years,” said coach DiGiacomo.
“Overall, it was a very good meet
and as a team we will use this as
a learning experience to continue
to aim for a state championship
in the coming years.”
our commonwealth to embrace this
basic human right.”
“Giving people the opportunity
to be who they are is a human right
and one that we are proud to extend
to every member of the commonwealth,
regardless of how they identify,”
said Senate President Karen Spilka
(D-Ashland) who first introduced the
bill in 2017. “Allowing a nonbinary option
for state licenses and birth certificates
is fundamental to building a society
that welcomes, protects and respects
all individuals … I am as hopeful
as ever that Massachusetts will be
able to enshrine this change into our
state laws this session and continue
welcoming everyone into our commonwealth
with open arms.”
Although no senators voted
against the bill, there was opposition
from some outside groups.
Catholic Action League Executive
Director C.J. Doyle called the bill a “malign,
non-rational proposal” that will
“require the state to affirm and give legal
sanction to the ideologically driven
delusion that gender is a subjective
social construct, which can be altered
arbitrarily and capriciously, rather
than what it is, which is an objective
and immutable biological reality."
"It will make government a party
BHRC| SEE PAGE 16
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Page 15
Fast start, strong finish lead King Philip past
Malden HS girls basketball
Tornado girls comeback not enough, knocked out in
MIAA State Tournament first round
By Steve Freker
T
he King Philip Regional High
Warriors girls basketball team
started out red hot and never
stopped off the rest of the way
in a 62-38 state tourney win over
Malden High on Tuesday night. in
Wrentham. Tuesday’s game was
in the MIAA Division 1 State Girls
Basketball Tournament’s preliminary
round. The loss ended Malden’s
season with a 13-8 overall record.
It was the second time Malden
had qualified for the postseason
in two years – the first time a
Golden Tornados team had accomplished
this feat in decades.
The #27-seeded Warriors held
#38-seeded Malden scoreless until
50 seconds were left in the first period,
starting the game on a 13-0
run over the opening seven minutes,
including a trio of three-point
shots. KP ended up with 7 3-pointers
for the first half after burying 4
in the first quarter alone on its way
to a 20-2 first quarter lead.
“We got in a hole early and it
was hard to fight back from that,
especially when our shots were
not falling,” said Malden High seventh-year
Head Coach Scott Marino.
“We played better defense
in the second quarter and stayed
even with them, but still were behind
at halftime.”
Malden did regroup somewhat
in the second quarter, using some
better defense and rebounding in
the defensive end. The visiting Torvarious
scoring deficits it faced.
The Tornados did stay aggressive
as well, driving to the basket
and fighting for offensive rebounds
most of the night. Malden
found itself at the free throw
line frequently, but was not able to
capitalize, shooting barely 50 percent
from the line. The Tornados
also could not match KP’s 3-point
range, hitting only 1 3-pointer (Tolete)
for the night and missing a
bunch.
Angie Colon readies for a free
throw against King Philip in
the State Tournament game.
nados kept it even and trailed, 267,
at halftime.
“I challenged [our team] at halftime
to make it a game and I think
our players tried that,” said Coach
Marino. “King Philip scored quicker
and better than us, that was the
difference.”
Both teams heated up defensively
in the third quarter, with
King Philip going back to the
“three” (finishing with 9 for the
game) and Malden getting some
scoring from Tori Gammon and
Ina Tolete.
King Philip’s big start in the first
quarter was exactly the game
plan, according to Warrior Head
Coach Jeff Miszkiewicz.“ [The hot
start was] very important, the last
couple of games we’ve got [behind]
early, so my pregame speech
MALDEN VARSITY GIRLS BASKETBALL: In front: Tori Gammon,
Kimberly Trompas and Manichia Exilhomme; in back: Ina
Tolete, Sophia Rodriguez, Angie Colon, Olivia Rodriguez,
Jamila Said, Amanda Ebenezer, Mandy Cook and Jazzy
Antoine. (Advocate Photos)
“I am glad our players were able
to earn the experience of playing
in the state tournament – a lot of
them two years in a row,” Coach
Marino said. “That is something
no one can ever take away from
them.
“We appreciate all the support
we received from the players’ families
and our other fans all season,”
Coach Marino said. “We also are
grateful for the cheerleaders, the
Malden High School administrators,
staff and fans who traveled
down to this game to support our
team. They have backed us all year
and in this game as well.”
Coach Marino also noted the efHALFTIME
TALK: Malden Head Coach Scott Marino and
assistant coach Larry Kelleher talk with the team at halftime
at the King Philip state tourney game.
was for our defense to create our
offense,” Miszkiewicz said in an online
report. “We certainly did that
in the first quarter.”
Malden certainly did not quit
throughout the game, despite the
forts of senior captains Tori Gammon
and Angie Colon all season
as well as his other two seniors,
Jamila Said and Julisa Ramirez.
“We wish our seniors the best of
luck in the future and at the same
time, we are excited about the future
with three starters and 11 varsity
players returning,” Coach Marino
said.
DeLeire leads Lady Eagles basketball
team past Chelsea in season finale
By Emily Brennan
M
Bailey DeLeire scored a game-high 13 points against Chelsea.
ystic Valley girls’ basketball
earned a 48-25 win in the final
game of the regular season
at the Eastern Avenue Gymnasium
on Monday, February 19.
The night started with a ceremony
to honor all the seniors: Aya
Abbassi, Breana Nansamba, Inssaf
Machouk, Thaila Jean-Baptiste
and Sophie Lebrun.
Bailey DeLeire scored a gamehigh
13 points, while Breana
Nansamba notched 10 points
and 7 rebounds as the Eagles
picked up their 14th win. Sylvie
LaFeber finished with 10
points and 2 rebounds. Aya Abbassi
contributed 6 points, 7 rebounds
and 5 steals.
The Eagles were outscored
by Chelsea in the first minute
of play, but they were
shortly plagued by turnovers
and poor rebounding and
managed to outscore them
11-8 in the opening frame.
That three-point Eagles advantage
turned into a Chelsea
seven-point deficit after
two frames thanks to Sylvie
LaFeber with 7 points and
Nansamba with a 3-pointer.
Through the third frame,
the Eagles paced Chelsea and
came away with a very comfortable,
20-point lead. Abby
Ssewankambo and Anna Luiza-Batista
opened the fourth
quarter with back-to-back
buckets to give Mystic Valley
the lead and victory at 48-25.
The Eagles compiled a record
of 14-6 throughout the regular
season to earn a spot in the Division
4 MIAA tournament. They
are the #34 seed.
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BHRC | FROM PAGE 14
to this delusion,” continued Doyle. “It
will confuse and falsify public records
and compel government employees
to participate in this falsification. It
will result in discrimination in public
employment against those who hold
a traditional understanding of reality
and will make the investigation of offenders
more difficult for law enforcement.
Section 4 of the bill will essentially
empower government bureaucrats
who administer programs for
youth to proselytize the minors in
their care for so-called gender transitioning."
(A
“Yes” vote is for the bill.)
Sen. Jason Lewis
Yes
MAKE OBTAINING ID CARDS EASIER
FOR HOMELESS PERSONS(S
2251)
On July 27, 2023, the Senate 38-0,
approved and sent to the House legislation
that would make it easier for
homeless youth and adults to secure
free state ID cards.
Supporters said that currently a
person experiencing homelessness
faces prohibitive fees and documentation
requirements when trying to
obtain an ID card. They noted that
this legislation removes those barriers
by eliminating fees and only requiring
that applicants present documentation
showing that they are
currently receiving services provided
by the state, a homeless service
provider or another service provider.
They argued that ID cards are necessary
for applying for jobs, enrolling in
school, interacting with law enforcement,
accessing government buildings,
opening financial accounts and
many other basic services that many
take for granted.
“When we listen to our homeless
youth about the challenges they face,
there is a common denominator and
that is access to identification,” said
Sen. Robyn Kennedy (D-Worcester),
the Senate sponsor of the bill. “Having
proper identification is the foundation
to accessing food, shelter and
employment opportunities, while also
breaking the cycle of poverty.”
“Fees and documentation are not
just barriers to identification,” saidSenate
President Karen Spilka (D-Ashland).
“By extension, they are barriers
to getting a job, accessing healthcare
and applying for services—the
most basic of necessities. These barriers
harm the most vulnerable people
in our commonwealth and eliminating
them is a compassionate step
that makes the path to stability a little
bit easier.”
(A “Yes” vote is for the bill.)
Sen. Jason Lewis
Yes
MENSTRUAL PRODUCTS (S 2491)
On October 26, 2023, the Senate
38-0, approved and sent to the House
a bill that would require all prisons,
homeless shelters and K-12 schools
to maintain free menstrual products,
including sanitary napkins, tampons
and underwear liners in private and
public restrooms and to make them
available in a “convenient manner that
does not stigmatize any persons seeking
the products.”
Supporters said that according to
THE MALDEN ADVOCATE–Friday, March 1, 2024
Under the bill, pharmacists could
the Massachusetts Menstrual Equity
Coalition, approximately one in seven
children in Massachusetts is living in
poverty and struggles to pay for menstrual
products. They argued that research
shows that the inability to access
menstrual products affects students’
class attendance.
They also noted that women facing
homelessness or who are incarcerated
face high barriers to access, with
Massachusetts shelters reporting that
menstrual products are among the
least donated items. They argued that
restricted access in shelters and correctional
facilities means that products
can be used as bargaining chips
and tools of control for people in vulnerable
circumstances.
“I learned about this issue from
young people in Medford High
School, Somerville High School and
Cambridge Rindge and Latin who
took leadership at the local level
to make menstrual hygiene products
available in their own communities,”
said sponsor Sen. Pat Jehlen
(D-Somerville). “This is a true grassroots
movement starting with girls
talking about their experiences of
missing valuable class time or feeling
embarrassed to access products
during the school day. These conversations
have already started to change
the culture and have motivated us to
expand this across the state.”
“Period products are not luxuries,
but necessities required for people’s
basic needs, health and hygiene,”
said Sen. Julian Cyr (D-Truro), Senate
Chair of the Committee on Public
Health. “Today’s passage of the … bill
affirms that women and all menstruating
people deserve access to menstrual
products. An inaccessibility of
period products speaks to the longstanding
and persistent misogyny in
our society, a bias that intersects with
inequalities in housing, education, socioeconomics
and beyond. By ensuring
better access to these products,
we support further access to essential
health needs regardless of our situation
in life.”
During floor debate, Cyr sarcastically
commented, “I think it's pretty obvious
that if most men could menstruate,
these products would be as ubiquitous
and free as toilet paper.”
(A “Yes” vote is for the bill.)
Sen. Jason Lewis
Yes
HIV PREVENTION DRUGS (S 2480)
On October 26, 2023 the Senate 380,
approved and sent to the House a
bill that would allow pharmacists to
prescribe, dispense and administer
a short-term supply (60-days once in
a two-year period) of HIV prevention
drugs, known as pre-exposure prophylaxis
(PrEP), to a patient without
a prescription.
The bill requires pharmacists to
provide counseling to the patient regarding
the use of PrEP, to inform the
patient’s primary care doctor that the
pharmacist has prescribed the drug
and to connect patients without a primary
care provider with a health care
provider for ongoing care and to obtain
a prescription for PrEP.
only prescribe PrEP to patients who
have tested negative for HIV within
the past seven days, do not have HIV
symptoms and are not taking medications
that are not safe to use with PrEP.
Supporters say that PrEP is a
life-saving medication that is nearly
100 percent effective in stopping the
transmission of HIV. They note that under
current law, individuals who take
PrEP must make an appointment and
go through their doctor, a barrier that
can stand in the way for people who
need the medication on short notice,
cannot make an appointment or cannot
access medical care.
“PrEP is a game changer in HIV
prevention. Yet, while this life-saving
medication reduces the risk of transmission
by 99 percent, it remains inaccessible
for too many,” said sponsor
Public Health Care chair Sen. Julian
Cyr. “Allowing pharmacists to prescribe
and dispense PrEP on a shortterm
basis, similar to what’s already
allowed for contraceptives, would
significantly increase the accessibility
of this essential HIV prevention
tool. With greater access to PrEP we
can narrow the gap in PrEP utilization
among LGBTQ+ people of color. I am
someone who uses PrEP and most of
my gay, bisexual and queer friends
rely on it too. With this legislation, we
are once again putting people at the
center of our public health policy. I’m
thrilled it has passed the Senate.”
“When someone is ready to begin
PrEP, it is crucial that they are able to
[do so] as soon as possible,” said Carrie
Richgels, Manager of Policy and
Advocacy at Fenway Health. “At Fenway
Health, we regularly work to overcome
barriers that patients face due
to trauma, stigma and discrimination.
We know from experience that
to overcome these obstacles we must
meet people where they are and build
trust. Trust is essential to getting people
on PrEP, and a local pharmacy can
provide a lower threshold of access
and can be a trusted access point for
those who may face discrimination in
traditional healthcare settings.”
(A “Yes” vote is for the bill.)
Sen. Jason Lewis
Yes
PHARMACEUTICAL ACCESS,
COSTS AND TRANSPARENCY (S
2520)
On November 15, 2023, the Senate
39-0, approved and sent to the House
a bill that supporters say would make
major changes and reforms to the
state’s pharmaceutical system by “lowering
the cost of drugs at the pharmacy
counter and improving oversight of
the pharmaceutical industry.”
“The Senate has made pharmaceutical
cost containment and oversight a
priority for a long time, and I’m proud
that we’ve had the opportunity to
pass this bill in three consecutive sessions,
improving it as we learn more
and more about the industry,” said
Sen. Cindy Friedman (D-Arlington),
Senate chair of the Committee on
Health Care Financing. “While we are
supportive of the work of the pharmaceutical
industry, we also know that
far too many Massachusetts residents
are struggling to access lifesaving, essential
medication due to outrageous
and skyrocketing costs. [This legislation]
will provide necessary transparency
and oversight measures, so that
consumers can trust that this system
is putting patients and their health
before profits.”
“I am pleased the Senate has
passed this crucial prescription drug
legislation,” said Sen. Mike Rodrigues
(D-Westport), Chair of the Senate
Committee on Ways and Means.
“Healthcare is all about accessibility
and affordability, and this reform-minded
consumer focused bill
will allow increased access to prescription
drugs while also considerably
driving down the cost of everyday
medications.”
(A “Yes” vote is for the bill.)
Sen. Jason Lewis
Yes
ALSO UP ON BEACON HILL
INCREASE FINES FOR VIOLATING
HANDICAPPED PARKING (H 3261) –
The House gave initial approval to a
proposal that would allow cities and
towns to increase the current $300
maximum fine for parking illegally in
a parking space reserved for handicapped
persons. That $300 fine is set
by the state and goes into the municipalities’
General Fund. The measure
would allow cities and towns to impose
an additional $450 fine - making
the total fine $750. The additional
$450 would be placed into a specialized
local account to be used for
Americans with Disabilities Act (ADA)
upgrades in the city or town where
the violation occurred. The original
$300 fine would still go into the community’s
General Fund.
“In my district and across the state,
cities and towns through commissions
on disabilities have plans to
make their communities more accessible,”
said sponsor Rep. Bruce Ayers
(D-Quincy). “However, oftentimes a
lack of funding prevents them from
enacting their plans. This bill allows
them to place some of the financial
burden on the backs of those who
violate the laws that exist to protect
the rights of people with disabilities,
and to provide for greater opportunities
of access.”
CHANGE ARCHAIC LANGUAGE
REFERRING TO PERSONS WITH DISABILITIES
(H 4396) – The House gave
initial approval to a bill that would
modernize written state laws to reflect
the evolution of terminology relating
to persons with disabilities.
Changes include replacing “handicapped
persons” with “persons with
disabilities,” replacing “the mentally
retarded” with “persons with an intellectual
disability,” replacing “retarded
children” with “children with an intellectual
disability” and replacing “disabled
American veterans” with “American
veterans with disabilities.”
Supporters said the primary objective
of the bill is to identify and eliminate
outdated, archaic language from
the General Laws of Massachusetts
and replace it with more respectful,
person-first language. They noted that
once the archaic language was found,
they contacted the relevant state
agency or office to confirm that the
bill would have no unforeseen consequences,
such as impacting funding
or access to services.
"Modernizing state statutes to
reflect the evolution of terminology
relating to persons with disabilities
is an essential step the commonwealth
can take to reflect the respect
that we should have for all residents,”
said sponsor Rep. Mike Finn (D-West
Springfield). “Getting the bill to this
point is a result of collaboration between
many executive offices, stakeholders
and legislative committees.
My hope is that the latest version of
the bill will pass legislative scrutiny
and reach the finish line this session.
Working on this bill in particular has
been an honor because it represents
my own personal beliefs about how
every individual in this commonwealth
deserves to be treated with
dignity."
NOAH FERNANDES MITOCHONDRIAL
AWARENESS DAY (H 4140) –
The House gave initial approval to a
bill designating the Friday of the third
full week of September as Noah Fernandes
Mitochondrial Disease Awareness
Day, in recognition of the Team
Noah Foundation, whose goal is to
alleviate the financial and emotional
stress by providing transportation
and home improvements to families
with children who are affected by Mitochondrial
Disease and other developmental
disabilities.
“Noah Fernandes was the son of
a friend, Victor Fernandes, who is a
business leader in New Bedford and
very involved in our community,” said
sponsor Rep. Tony Cabral (D-New Bedford).
“Noah was diagnosed with Melas,
one of the most severe forms of
Mitochondrial disease when he was
five years old. For the next 10 years,
Noah’s muscular and mental condition
deteriorated as juvenile dementia
overtook his body and left him unable
to move or speak until he passed
away at age 15.”
Cabral continued, “Within their
grief, Victor and Noah’s mom, Christine
Fernandes, launched the Team
Noah Foundation – a non-profit which
helps the families of severely disabled
children with conversion projects to
make their homes more handicap-accessible
and to help provide specialized
vans, bicycles and other transportation
needs. The Team Noah Foundation
also was the driving force behind
the Noah’s Place Playground in
New Bedford which is the largest and
most inclusive playground in New
England. Given the great work that
the Team Noah Foundation does, in
the memory of Noah Fernandes, it
seemed only fitting to acknowledge
this and bring awareness of this disease
to the state level.”
MARIJUANA AND FIRST RESPONDERS
(S 48) – The Committee
on Cannabis Policy has given a favorable
report and recommended
passage of a measure that would require
the Cannabis Control Commission
and the Executive Office of Public
Safety and Security to study and report
to the Legislature on the barriers
that first responders face about their
BHRC| SEE PAGE 18
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Page 17
MBTA Police seek two suspects who robbed victim
at gunpoint at Malden Center T Station
Public’s help is sought by authorities to identify
photos of persons of interest in case
By Steve Freker
T
wo brazen armed robbery
suspects stuck up their
victim at gunpoint and then
hopped on an Orange Line
car and took off toward downtown
Boston on Sunday, Feb.
19. The victim was not reported
to have been injured in the
robbery, which took place at
4:45 p.m. in broad daylight.
SCHOLARSHIPS | FROM PAGE 1
and Bryn Mawr College (Pa.).
The students are all Malden
High seniors and include: Catherine
Alayne (Centre College),
Fnu Dolkar Tsering (Bryn Mawr
College), Nathan Dean (Rutgers),
Thomas Ghile (Union College),
Damien Josephat (Centre
College), Zhiqiang "Phillip" Li
(Tufts) and Zeng Yu (Tufts).
Alayne, Dolkar Tsering, Dean,
Ghile and Josephat were
awarded their full scholarships
through the Posse Scholarship
program.
Five selectees from Malden
High equals the school mark
for full scholarships from the
Posse program, the most in five
years, according to MHS administrators.
Li
and Yu were recipients of
the Questbridge Match Scholarships
program, another national
program where Malden High
students have received scholarships
in the past.
"We were amazed and so
proud and excited when we
were informed of these scholarship
awards," said Malden
High School seventh-year Principal
Chris Mastrangelo. "What
a tremendous honor for these
students and a huge impact
on their families, for saving the
full cost of their college educations.”
"On
top of all of this, these
are some of the best places of
higher learning in the nation,"
Mastrangelo added, "and it is
all a result of the education they
have received at Malden High
School and the support of their
families."
Mastrangelo gave special
thanks to Malden Public Schools
Director of Guidance Erin Craven
and the Malden High Guidance
Department for shepherding
the seven students and
the many other MHS seniors
who also applied, through the
lengthy process.
Yu Zeng
Tufts University
"I am so happy and my family
is just thrilled about this," Josephat,
one of the Posse Scholarship
recipients who was also
a member of the Malden High
football team, said. "It was a long
and tough process applying for
this scholarship, but of course it
was all worth it. This is really going
to help me and my family
so much. It is incredible, really,
hard to express in words what
this means."
To be eligible for national Posse
Scholarship program, a high
school senior must:
—Be nominated by their high
school or a community-based
organization
—Be in the first term of their
senior year in high school
—Demonstrate leadership
Ahiqiang 'Phillip' Li
Tufts University
within their high school, community
or family
—Demonstrate academic potential
—Apply
on time; depending
on the Posse city or program,
nominations are accepted in the
spring and summer before senior
year begins (contact your
local Posse office for specific
deadlines)
—The Posse Scholarship is
neither a minority nor a needbased
scholarship. It is open to
students of all backgrounds.
Posse seeks students who are:
—Leaders in their high
schools and communities
—Committed to their education
and those who demonstrate
academic potential
Interested in teamwork and
Police said the suspects
were described as being Black
males in their mid-to-late
teens and dressed in all black
– sweatpants and puffy winter
jackets over black hoodies.
The two persons of interest
in the case also wore black
“shiesty” ski masks. One of the
persons of interest wore sunglasses.
MBTA Police did obtain
clear photos of each of the
two persons of interest from
inside the Orange Line train
and is asking the public’s assistance
with any information
that could lead to the identification
and apprehension of
the suspects.
Please call the MBTA’s Criminal
Investigation Unit at 617222-1050
with any information;
callers may remain anonymous.
MBTA
Police are seeking to identify these two persons of interest
from a photo taken in an MBTA Orange Line train in connection
with an armed robbery at gunpoint at the Malden Center T
Station on Sunday, February 19 at 4:45 p.m. (Courtesy/ MBTA Police)
Posse Scholarship and
Questbridge Match Scholarship
Programs help Malden students
and those nationwide: Here's what
you need to know
To be eligible for national PosNathan
Dean
Rutgers University
Thomas Ghile
Union College
se Scholarship program, a high
school senior must:
—Be nominated by their
high school or a community-based
organization
—Be in the first term of their
senior year in high school
—Demonstrate leadership
within their high school, community
or family
—Demonstrate academic
potential
—Apply on time; depending
on the Posse city or program,
nominations are accepted in
the spring and summer before
senior year begins (contact
your local Posse office for
specific deadlines)
—The Posse Scholarship is
neither a minority nor a needbased
scholarship. It is open to
students of all backgrounds.
Posse seeks students who
are:
—Leaders in their high
schools and communities
—Committed to their education
and those who demonstrate
academic potential
Interested in teamwork and
diversity
—Positive, motivated, talented,
ambitious young people
****
The Questbridge Match
Scholarship Program is another
national program.Match Scholdiversity
—Positive,
motivated, talented,
ambitious young people
The Questbridge Match
Scholarship Program is another
national program.
"I know and hope all of their
teachers, guidance counselors
and administrators who have
guided these students through
their four years at MHS can share
in the pride and honor associated
with these scholarships,"
Mastrangelo said.
arship Recipients are granted
admission to one of QuestBridge's
college partners with a
full four-year scholarship worth
over $200,000 each. Our college
partners use a combination
of their own funds as well
as state and federal aid to fund
the scholarship. Please view
each college partner's Financial
Aid section for further details
and see a glossary of financial
aid terms.
The Match Scholarship is offered
as part of a generous financial
aid package provided
by the QuestBridge college
partner that covers the cost of
attendance, including:
—Tuition and fees
—Housing and food
—Books and supplies
—Travel expenses
All Match Scholarship packages:
Have
NO parental contribution
Have
NO student loans
May contain a student contribution
in the form of workstudy,
summer work, or student
savings.
For more information on the
Posse Scholarship Foundation
or Questbridge Match Program,
go to: www.possefoundation.
org or www.questbridge.org.
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THE MALDEN ADVOCATE–Friday, March 1, 2024
MUSINGS | FROM PAGE 3
• Richie “Ace” Howard – former
mayor of Malden overseeing
the beginning of our renaissance
in Malden and Malden
Square, which we are all benefitting
from today. On a personal
note, one of Malden’s best athletes
and stand-up guys!
• Marc Phaneuf – think about
this: We got a Malden boy
(straight outta Greystone Road)
who has worked with Iggy Pop,
Tony Bennett, Lady Gaga, Roger
Daltrey and Lou Rawls. Think
about that! And his dad Paul was
the most beloved Superintendent
of the past 75 years.
• Heather (Kahn) Braver – Arthur’s
little girl is an award-winning
broadcast journalist who
anchored the number one rated
newscast at WCVB-TV in Boston
for nearly 10 years – also serving
as the station’s chief medical
reporter. On a personal note,
thank goodness Heather has her
mom’s good looks. (I kid, Arthur!)
• Also, my former boss at Cataldo
Ambulance, Diana Cataldo;
my Miller High Life drinking
buddy back in the day at Anthony’s,
Albert Spadafora; political
kingmaker and landsman
Michael Goldman; the most
well-known hippie to ever call
Malden home, Norman Greenbaum;
the Malden MVP of the
past 50 years (?), Ron Cox; LenBHRC
| FROM PAGE 16
legal right to use cannabis.
“As we move away from cannabis
prohibition, we should ensure we do
not hold on to pre-existing, bias-driven
bans,” said sponsor Sen. Julian Cyr
(D-Truro). “I filed [the bill] to investigate
the existing barriers to first responders’
legal right to use cannabis
… The bill would also explore the
effectiveness of cannabis in treating
anxiety, depression, stress, PTSD and
other traumas.”
DECLARE RACISM AS A PUBLIC
HEALTH CRISIS (S 1412) – The Children,
Families and Persons with Disabilities
Committee gave a favorable
report and recommended passage
of legislation that would declare racism
as a public health crisis and direct
the Office of Health Equity to develop
policies to dismantle systemic
racism impacting health and establish
programs focused on the prevention
and treatment of chronic diseases
disproportionately impacting communities
of color.
FREE DIAPERS (H 149) – Another
proposal given a favorable report
by the Children, Families and Persons
with Disabilities Committee would
create a pilot program to provide free
diapers to low-income families at food
pantries.
“Access to new, clean diapers is necessary
to preserve our babies’ health,”
says sponsor Sen. Joan Lovely (D-Salem).
“No parent should have to resort
to reusing soiled diapers due to
an inability to pay or have to underny’s
wonderful wife, Joanne (Assetta)
Iovino; former MPD Chief,
Saint Peter’s congregant and
YMCA regular, Eddie Trabucco;
amongst others.
• So, hurry, get your nomination
papers in (by Feb 24) for
the next worthy candidate: Mike
Boyle? David or John Surette
or their band, Boy’s Life? Charlie
Farren? Paul “Quadzilla” DeMayo?
Mayer or Aaron Mintz?
Paul Gilligan? Al Barriss? Dom
Fermano? Dave Russo? Norman
Pashoian, Sr.? Dan Ford?
• On a personal Philip Bynoe
note, I’ve known Philip for a very
long time – a sweetheart of a
man from that first time I met
him in 1981 to this very day. I
know I speak in hyperbole at
times (at times!?), but Malden,
please believe me when I tell
you this time, Philip is a monster
at his chosen profession.
Just ask four of the most prolific
gunslingers in the music business:
Steve Vai, Joe Satriani, John
Petrucci or Nuno Bettencourt.
He would not be holding down
the bottom for these guys all
these years if he were not.
It is said in “Malden Musings”...
• Had a great “phoner” recently
with Maldonian Bobby
Stead. We spent 15 or so minutes
traveling back in time to
when life was a lot less complex.
We tossed around the names
of Kevin Hannon and Karl Ryan,
go further economic hardships to acquire
diapers. This legislation puts the
well-being of our infants and families
where it should be, at the forefront.”
AMERICAN SIGN LANGUAGE (S
2589) – The Education Committee
gave a favorable report to and recommended
passage of a measure
that would require that American Sign
Language (ASL) be taught in all Bay
State public elementary and secondary
schools to increase interactions
between hearing persons and deaf
and hard-of-hearing persons, as well
as children with autism. Current law
allows but does not require schools
to teach ASL.
"I sponsored the legislation to promote
greater equity and inclusion in
our public school systems,” said Sen.
Jake Oilveira (D-Ludlow). “In recent
years, it has become apparent that instruction
in American Sign Language
provides children with autism with
increased opportunities for education
and development. It is visually
based, unaided and provides a mode
of quick communication. American
Sign Language is a language our students
should get the opportunity to
learn in our public school system, and
it supports inclusion and involvement
for all students.”
QUOTABLE QUOTES
"Nearly 70 percent of those deaths
took place where we should feel safest
– at home. Tragically, more than half
of those deaths took place in homes
without working smoke alarms. And
about two-thirds of last year’s fatal fire
Sean Gilligan, John “Fieldsy”
Fields, Greg & Jeff Carroll, as
well as Jimmy “Moe” Molinari to
name but a few – the “Connah
Gang” (Highland & Whitman),
where some of the nicest boys
and girls Malden ever produced
got into mischief. Thanks for the
memories, Bobby.
• Caught Paulie “G” Gilligan’s
act at his home away from home
(Prince Pizzeria) last week. In
case you were wondering, Paulie
is as funny as he was the first
time you saw him. Never, ever
a dull moment with Paulie G!
More on this amazing comedian
(and proud Maldonian) in
the future.
• Ain’t DPW Director Bobby
Knox doing a great job over
there on Commercial Street.
And his early morning inspirational
Facebook posts are becoming
stuff of legend in Malden.
Thank you, Bobby!
As Peter Falk’s iconic TV character
Columbo would say, “Just one
more thing, sir” – once again, we
salute the most awesome decision
made by the current occupants
at 215 Pleasant St. since
they agreed to tear down “The
Beast That Ate Pleasant Street”
(thank you, Mayor Christenson!)
and reinvent Malden Square in
the process. In the 1980’s Malden
acquired $17.4 million from
the Urban Development Action
Grants program for office convictims
were adults aged 65 or older."
---State Fire Marshal Jon Davine
on the 45 Massachusetts residents
who died in fires last year.
“When a company repeatedly violates
our wage and benefits laws,
the workers and their families suffer,
and sadly some of these violations
took place during the height
of the COVID-19 pandemic.My office
will continue to hold accountable
those who violate our worker protection
laws.”
---Attorney General Andrea
Campbell announcing $2.4 million
in citations against Concierge Services,
Inc., a Plymouth-based corporation
that provides concierges
staffing services to high-end, luxury
properties in Greater Boston.
The violations include failure to
pay minimum wage and overtime,
failure to make timely payment of
wages, improper deductions from
wages, record keeping violations
and failure to comply with numerous
provisions of Massachusetts'
earned sick time law.
“As the largest fair housing lawsuit
by defendant size in Massachusetts
history, this lawsuit sends a clear
message to every landlord and broker
in the state: if you are a real estate
company that discriminates against
families and children with housing
vouchers, the question of whether
you will be caught is not a matter of
if, but when.”
--- Aaron Carr, Founder and Executive
Director of Housing Rights
Initiative on the group’s lawsuit
“Our communities deserve water
infrastructure that fully serves their
needs, protects residents from harm
and preserves our natural resources.
This funding will make a real difference
in addressing combined sewer
overflows that affect water quality
and our environment and removing
contaminants like PFAS from our
drinking water.”
---Commissioner Bonnie Heiple
of the Massachusetts Department
of Environmental Protection, announcing
the $151 million federal
grant for Massachusetts drinking
water and clean water infrastructure
upgrades.
HOW LONG WAS LAST WEEK’S
SESSION?
Beacon Hill Roll Call tracks the
length of time that the House and
Senate were in session each week.
Many legislators say that legislative
sessions are only one aspect of the
Legislature’s job and that a lot of important
work is done outside of the
House and Senate chambers. They
note that their jobs also involve committee
work, research, constituent
work and other matters that are important
to their districts. Critics say
that the Legislature does not meet
regularly or long enough to debate
and vote in public view on the thoustruction,
beautification projects,
and infrastructure improvements,
used $60 million in private
sector money for the construction
of commercial housing and
$2.8 million in state transportation
bonds. With this infusion of
cash, we still could not dig ourselves
out of our decline. We still
were a city that young couples
and businesses avoided – despite
throwing all kinds of money
at the problem and having great,
forward thinking leadership
teams led by Jim Conway, Tom
Fallon, Eddie Lucey, Richie Howard
and now Gary Christenson.
Until we tore that Beast down!
Continuing in the spirit of forward
thinking or thinking outside
the box three years past,
Malden made a change to when
we begin our winter parking
restrictions. In prior years, winter
parking restrictions began
November 1, regardless of the
weather. The winter parking restrictions
placed a great burden
on those who rely upon
the street to park. Malden’s prior
policy often left residents restricted
to one side of the street
for months on end when snow
wasn’t even on the ground.
Common sense prevailed. Parking
Director (and much more)
Ronny “Hoganater” Hogan decided
to begin restrictions with
the arrival of what he called
the “first big winter event” – a
against 20 Boston-area landlords
and real estate brokers for alleged
discrimination against low-income
tenants.
snowstorm significant enough
to warrant the ban. For three
straight years it has been a
godsend for residents who rely
on street parking, particularly
last year because winter (once
again) never really materialized.
Thank you to Mr. Hogan and all
our elected officials who have
finally started to think creatively.
As Malden continues its remarkable
comeback, after decades
of stagnation, it is good
to know that our mayor and his
staff are up to the task of guiding
Maldonians to the next step
in our evolution.
Postscript 1: Donnie from China
Garden has passed away. I do
not exclude Donnie’s last name
(Quon) out of disrespect. I exclude
it out of great respect for
a most remarkable human being.
I will follow up on this iconic
Edgeworth figure soon. May
his memory be a blessing.
Postscript 2: Speaking of
Richie Howard, my sincerest
condolences to you and your
family on the loss of your wife
Lisa. May her memory be a
blessing, my friend.
—Peter is a longtime Malden
resident and a regular
contributor to the Malden
Advocate and can be
reached at PeteL39@aol.com
for comments, compliments
or criticisms.
sands of pieces of legislation that have
been filed. They note that the infrequency
and brief length of sessions
are misguided and lead to irresponsible
late-night sessions and a mad
rush to act on dozens of bills in the
days immediately preceding the end
of an annual session.
During the week of February 1923,
the House met for a total of 56
minutes and the Senate met for a total
of 30 minutes.
Mon. Feb. 19
No House session
No Senate session
Tues.Feb. 20
House11:02 a.m. to 11:38 a.m.
Senate 11:29 a.m. to 11:43 a.m.
Wed. Feb. 21
No House session
No Senate session
Thurs. Feb. 22
House11:01 a.m. to11:21 a.m.
Senate 11:15 a.m. to11:31 a.m.
Fri. Feb. 23
No House session
No Senate session
Bob Katzen welcomes feedback
at bob@beaconhillrollcall.com
Bob founded Beacon Hill Roll
Call in 1975 and was inducted into
the New England Newspaper and
Press Association (NENPA) Hall of
Fame in 2019.
׉	 7cassandra://cVmQl1sy_Xw0TaIQ-AkLvw_qo_HdPpA7YbG_qViU6Tk$X`̰ eՆ	0ZE׉ETHE MALDEN ADVOCATE–Friday, March 1, 2024
Page 19
OBITUARIES
Chris Constantine
Mirageas
Passed away peacefully on
February 22, 2024. Chris was
born in Malden,
MA to his loving
parents, the
late Constantine
and Demetra
(Makrys) Mirageas.
He was adored beyond
measure by his late grandparents
Christos & Koula Mirageas
and Nicholas and Angeliki
Makrys.
Chris leaves behind his son,
Chris Jr., of Eliot, ME. He is also
survived by: his sister Ann Mirageas
of Bedford, NH; sister Kathy
Perrone and her husband Jerry
of Melrose, MA; loving uncle to
Angelica Murphy and her husband
Colin of Malden, MA Jerry
Perrone of Manchester, NH
and Phillip Perrone of Charlestown,
MA. In addition, he will
be missed by many dear, lifelong
friends.
A graduate of Northeast Metropolitan
Regional Vocational
High School in Wakefi eld, MA,
where he obtained his degree in
welding. This education, along
with his natural aptitude for
auto mechanics and auto body
served him well. “The Greek” operated
C&C Collision, a successful
business, for over 40 years
until his retirement in 2020.
He was a hardworking, simple
t-shirt and blue jeans guy.
From a very young age he
showed his love and fascination
with cars. You would often fi nd
him under the hood of many a
car including his beautifully restored,
red 1962 Chevy Impala.
Ann and Kathy would like to
thank those who called, visited,
checked in or showed random
acts of kindness. Special love
goes out to Basil, Joe, Paul, Casey,
and his cousins, Nick & John.
We are forever grateful.
Services were held at the A.J.
Spadafora Funeral Home, Malden
on Tuesday, February 27th
Burial was private. A celebration
of life will be held at a later date.
Donations may be made in
Chris' memory to the Northeast
Regional Vocational High
School 100 Hemlock Road,
Wakefi eld, MA 01880
John T. "Jack" Garrity
Of North Reading, formerly of
Malden and Sarasota, Florida.
Passed away surrounded by his
REAL ESTATE TRANSACTIONS
BUYER1
THALI, AMOGH
BUYER2
SELLER1
DEJESUS, MARCIO
SELLER2
family on February
23rd, at the
age of 104.
He was an
amazing man
who will be profoundly
missed
by his family. Beloved
husband
of the late Lillian
(Mahoney) Garrity. Predeceased
by his sisters, Harriet Turco and
Helena Dunlap. Devoted father
of Lillie Fournier and her husband,
Robert, of Sarasota, Florida;
June Fagan and her husband,
Joseph, of Wilmington;
and Lorri McBride and her husband,
David, of Andover. Loving
“Papa” to Joseph Fagan III and
his wife, Anna; Caroline Wilcox
and her husband, Bryan; Elizabeth
Kramer and her husband,
Benjamin; and Laura Zawalich
and her husband, Daniel. Proud
great grandfather of Theodore,
Charles, Violet, Kathleen, Madeline,
and Louise.
Retired Chief of the Malden
Fire Department. Graduate of
Malden High School Class of
1938. Enlisted and served with
United States Army Air Forces'
14th Flying Tigers as a radio-operator
and gunner during WWII,
fl ying more than fi fty combat
missions.
Relatives and friends are invited
to pay respects at the Nichols
Funeral Home, 187 Middlesex
Avenue, Wilmington on Friday,
March 1, 2024, from 4 PM to
8 PM. A Mass of Christian Burial
shall be celebrated at the Immaculate
Conception Church,
600 Pleasant Street, Malden,
on Saturday, March 2, 2024, at
10 AM. Please go directly to the
church. Services will conclude
with burial and military honors
at Forestdale Cemetery, Malden.
In lieu of fl owers, donations
may be made in Jack’s name
to the Relief Association of the
Malden Fire Department, One
Sprague Street, Malden, MA
02148.
Leah Knickle
Of Malden.
Born in Melrose
and a longtime
Malden resident,
Leah, at 44 years
of age, passed
away unexpectedly at the CHA
Whidden Memorial Hospital in
Everett early morning on February
17th. Devoted mother of
OBITUARIES | SEE PAGE 20
CAPITAL GAINS TAX EXCLUSION
AND IRREVOCABLE TRUSTS
½ of the capital improvements
attributed to wife, or $15,000.
Selling expenses of $25,000.
In this example, the cost basis
P
eople often question if they
transfer their principal residence
into an irrevocable trust,
will they still be entitled to the
capital gains tax exclusion upon
a subsequent sale, pursuant to Internal
Revenue Code Section 121.
The answer is yes.
A married couple fi ling a joint
income tax return has the right to
exclude up to $500,000 of capital
gain on the sale of their principal
residence. The limit is $250,000
for a single taxpayer. The capital
gain is simply the diff erence between
the selling price and the
cost basis of the home. The cost
basis of the home is determined
by adding the original purchase
price, plus capital improvements
over theyears as well as expenses
associated with selling the home
such as a broker’s commission,
tax stamps, legal fees, fi xing up
expenses and any other expenses
associated with the sale.
In some cases, you also have
the benefi t of using the date of
death value as part of the cost basis
if one of the spouses were to
die. For example, if husband and
wife purchased a home 25 years
ago for $250,000 and the husband
died 10 years ago when the
home’s value was $350,000, upon
a subsequent sale of the home by
the wife, the cost basis is computed
as follows (also assume capital
improvements prior to husband’s
death were $30,000 and selling
expense were $25,000):
½ of the $250,000 purchase
price is allocated to wife, or
$125,000. She only owned 50%
of the home.
½ of the fair market value of
home at the time of husband’s
death is $175,000 ($350,000 x
½, since the husband only had a
50% interest in the home at the
time of his death).
would be $340,000 ($125,000 +
$175,000 + $15,000 + $25,000). If
the home were sold for $575,000,
the capital gain would be
$235,000. The entire gain would
be non-taxable. Since the husband
passed away, one half of the
fair market value of the home at
thetime of his death enters into
the calculation of the wife’s cost
basis. This is referred to as the
“step-up in cost basis”.
For the $500,000 capital gains
tax exclusion to apply, the married
couple must have lived in
the home for 2 out of the previous
5 years prior to the actual sale.
Since the irrevocable income-only
trust is designed to
qualify under the “grantor-type”
trust rules, the law treats the Settlors/Donors/Grantors
of the trust
as the owners for tax purposes.
What makes the trust a grantor-type
trust for capital gains tax
purposes is the reserved right in
the Settlors to direct where the
trust principal and/or income
of the trust can go during the
Settlors’ lifetime. In accordance
with Internal Revenue Code Section
674(a), this retained power
is what makes the trust a grantor-type
trust for capital gains tax
purposes, thereby preserving the
capital gains tax exclusion. This
is referred to as a lifetime special
power of appointment.
Most often, a lifetime special
power of appointment and a testamentary
special power of appointment
provision is included
in an irrevocable Trust. The testamentary
special power of appointment
is designed to allow
the Settlor the ability to change
the ultimate benefi ciary of the
Trust by exercising that power of
appointment via the Settlor’s Last
Will and Testament being submitted
to a probate court upon
death. A power of appointment
is essentially a power to redirect
where the Trust principal will go.
This also results in an incomplete
gift for gift tax purposes.
Joseph D. Cataldo is an estate planning/elder law attorney,
Certifi ed Public Accountant, Certifi ed Financial
Planner, AICPA Personal Financial Specialist and
holds a master’s degree in taxation.
Copyrighted material previously published in Banker & Tradesman/The Commercial
Record, a weekly trade newspaper. It is reprinted with permission from the publisher,
The Warren Group. For a searchable database of real estate transactions and property
information visit: www.thewarrengroup.com.
ADDRESS
13 PRESTON ST
CITY
MALDEN
DATE
01.22.24
PRICE
755000\
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avvya yavvy eniiooravvy S iorn or
v y
io
iori
by Jim Miller
How to Divide Your Personal
Possessions Without
Dividing the Family
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 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 off ers 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.
Like us on Facebook advocate newspaper
Facebook.com/Advocate.news.ma
~ Legal Notice ~
NOTICE OF ACTIVITY AND USE LIMITATION
906-910 EASTERN AVENUE, MALDEN, MA 02148
RELEASE TRACKING NUMBER 3-18088
A release of oil and/or hazardous materials has occurred at this location, which is a disposal site
as defined by M.G.L. c. 21E, § 2 and the Massachusetts Contingency Plan, 310 CMR 40.0000.
On February 23, 2024, Crazy Good Kitchen Express LLC recorded with the Middlesex South
Registry of Deeds a NOTICE OF ACTIVITY AND USE LIMITATION on the disposal site,
pursuant to 310 CMR 40.1070 through 40.1080.
The NOTICE OF ACTIVITY AND USE LIMITATION limits the following site activities and
uses on the above property:
(i) Use for residential, hotel, day care, school (for children under 18 years of age), public park,
and/or community center (for children under 18 years of age) unless such use is conducted in
accordance with the controls as identified below; and
(ii) Excavation, drilling, or otherwise disturbing the soil unless controls are established as
identified below.
The following controls are necessary and shall be undertaken and/or maintained at the Property
to avoid the above limitations:
(i) The subsurface soils beneath building foundations, building slabs on-grade, bituminous or
concrete pavement and existing topsoil/loam surficial soil layers on the entirety of the
parcel(s) of land of the entire Property, (hereinafter the “Protective Cover”) are presumed to
contain pollutants or contaminants requiring restricted exposure. The Protective Cover shall
be maintained to continue its effectiveness in preventing exposure to the subsurface soils. In
the event the Protective Cover is modified, altered, replaced or removed, a surface cover of
equal protective function shall be reinstalled to prevent changes in exposure. If, in the opinion
of a Licensed Site Professional, restricted access is not required, the Protective Cover does not
need to be maintained; and
(ii) Construction or site improvements, including utility-related activities, involving the
excavation, disturbance, or movement of subsurface strata must be carried out in accordance
with performance standards for Release Abatement Measures (RAMs) set forth by the
Massachusetts Contingency Plan (MCP) at 310 CMR 40.0440, the performance standards
for Utility Related Abatement Measures (URAMs) set forth by the MCP under 310 CMR
40.0460, the Soil Management procedures pursuant to 310 CMR 40.0030, and/or all
applicable worker health and safety practices pursuant to 310 CMR 40.0018. Landscaping
and groundskeeping activities, including but not limited to planting trees and shrubs,
maintenance and resurfacing of parking lots, sidewalks and driveways, cutting and raking
grassy areas are not subject to these requirements.
Any person interested in obtaining additional information about the NOTICE OF ACTIVITY
AND USE LIMITATION may contact Jose Desouza of Crazy Good Kitchen Express LLC,
53 Summit Street, Malden, MA 02148; (617) 785-1151.
The NOTICE OF ACTIVITY AND USE LIMITATION and the disposal site file can be can
be viewed at MassDEP website using Release Tracking Number (RTN) 3-18088 at
https://eeaonline.eea.state.ma.us/portal#!/search/wastesite/results?RTN=3-0018088 or
at MassDEP, Northeast Regional Office, 150 Presidential Way, Woburn, Massachusetts 01801;
Main Phone: 978-694-3200.
March 01, 2024
THE MALDEN ADVOCATE–Friday, March 1, 2024
OBITUARIES | FROM PAGE 19
Maxx and Myles Smith, Beloved
daughter of Stanley and Dorothy
(Flowers) Knickle of Malden.
Sister of the late Andrew
E. Knickle. Lovingly survived by
many aunts, uncles and cousins.
Longtime companion of the late
Kenan Smith. She is also leaves
behind many close friends including
Karen Schiavo, Colleen
Baker as well as members of
the Maplewood Baptist Church
Youth Group.
A graduate of Malden
schools and the Northeast
Vocational High School. She
spent many years a private livein
nanny for many families. A
loving mother, she would do
anything for her sons she also
loved cooking shows as well
as time spent in North Conway,
NH.
Family and friends were invited
to attend Visiting Hours in
the Carroll Funeral Home, Malden
on Sunday, February 25.
Committal Services were. In lieu
of fl owers, the family suggests
memorial donations be made
to her children and sent to Stanley
Knickle, 13 Marshall Avenue,
Malden, MA 02148.
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Page 21
BASEBALL | FROM PAGE 13
“Carmine Cappuccio Night” 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
For Advertising with
Results,
call The Advocate
Newspapers
at 617-387-2200 or Info@
advocatenews.net
Clean-Outs!
We take and dispose
from cellars, attics,
garages, yards, etc.
Call Robert at:
781-844-0472
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.
~ Legal Notice ~
Notice of Organization
Notice is hereby given that on January 30th 2024. PPG
Production LLC. Arts of Org. filed with the Secretary of
State of Massachusetts, Office is located at this address
668 Salem St, Malden, MA 02148, Middlesex County
to conduct business as a theatrical booking agent as
required in the Commonwealth under Ch.140 of the
general code.
March 1, 2024
- Legal Notice -
COMMONWEALTH OF MASSACHUSETTS
THE TRIAL COURT
PROBATE AND FAMILY COURT
Middlesex Probate and Family Court
10-U Commerce Way
Woburn, MA 01801
Docket No. MI24D0135DR
DIVORCE SUMMONS BY
PUBLICATION AND MAILING
ENGREED M REMY
vs.
JEAN T REMY
To the Defendant:
The Plaintiff has filed a Complaint for Divorce requesting that
the Court grant a divorce for Irretrievable Breakdown of the
Marriage 1B.
The Complaint is on file at the Court.
An Automatic Restraining Order has been entered in this matter
preventing you from taking any action which would negatively
impact the current financial status of either party.
SEE Supplemental Probate Court Rule 411.
You are hereby summoned and required to serve upon:
Engreed M Remy, 217 Highland Ave. #2, Malden, MA 02148
your answer, if any, on or before 04/02/2024. If you fail to do
so the court will proceed to the hearing and adjudication of this
action. You are also required to file a copy of your answer, if
any, in the office of the Register of this Court.
WITNESS, Hon. Terri L. Klug Cafazzo, First Justice of this
Court.
Date: February 21, 2024
TARA E. DeCRISTOFARO
REGISTER OF PROBATE
March 01, 2024
1. The name of the 1969 Woody Allen film “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”?
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 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
film – the first 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 (1651-1986)?
14. Women first participated in Olympic swimming in what
year: 1897, 1912 or 1922?
15. On March 5, 1868, the 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 fly: dragonfly, horsefly or mosquito?
18.
On March 6, 1997, who began the first official royal website?
19.
It was proposed that what should have the scientific
name of Nessiteras rhombopteryx?
20. On March 7, 1946, due to nuclear testing, citizens were
evacuated from what atoll?
ANSWERS
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. Horsefly
18. Queen Elizabeth II
19. The Loch Ness monster
20. Bikini Atoll
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THE MALDEN ADVOCATE–Friday, March 1, 2024
American Exterior and
Window Corporation
Contact us for all of your
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Call Jeff or Bob
Toll Free: 1-888-744-1756
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Page 23
For Advertising with Results,
call The Advocate Newspapers
at 617-387-2200 or Info@advocatenews.net
INSPECTIONAL SERVICES
215 Pleasant Street, Room 330
Malden, Massachusetts 02148
(781) 397-7000 ext. 2044
City of Malden
Massachusetts
MALDEN PLANNING BOARD
PUBLIC HEARING
The Malden Planning Board will hold a public hearing in the Herbert L. Jackson
Council Chamber, Malden City Hall, 215 Pleasant Street, Malden, MA at 7:00 P.M.
on Wednesday, March 13, 2024 on the petition of Craig Murphy on behalf of
Murphy Avakian Realty LLC in Permit Application # CMID 062352-2023, seeking
a special permit under Title 12.28.010(E) of the Code of the City of Malden, to
structurally change and extend preexisting nonconforming property in
the Industrial 1 zoning district, namely, to construct an addition to the first and
second floors of the existing building, at the property known as and numbered,
1236 Eastern Avenue, Malden and by City Assessor’s Parcel ID#154 500 011.
Petition and plans are available for public review in City Hall, Inspectional Services
Department, Room 330, 215 Pleasant Street, Malden, MA and on the City website
under Permit Application #CMID 062352-2023 at https://maldenma-energovweb.
tylerhost.net/apps/SelfService#/home
By:
Diane M. Chuha
Clerk
February 23, March 01, 2024
Your Hometown News Delivered!
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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.
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.
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THE MALDEN 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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