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CAT
Vol. 25, No.21
-FREE- www.advocatenews.net
Published Every Friday
HONORING A FALLEN HERO
P
D ATC TE
E
781-233-4446
Friday, May 26, 2023
Unfi nished Business
A week after the defeat of the Cliftondale Square Overlay Zoning
District article, its creator has called on selectmen to address public
safety issues and to keep Cliftondale revitalization a top priority
By Mark E. Vogler
recinct 2 Town Meeting
Member Joseph Vecchione
this week called
on selectmen to exercise their
authority as traffic commissioners
to address safety concerns
in Cliftondale Square.
“Based on the comments
from several Board members
on Monday, traffi c, pedestrian
UNFINISHED | SEE PAGE 2
Old School Social Network
A PEN PAL PIZZA PARTY: Town Manager Scott C. Crabtree (seated
at left) was among the 90 adult pen pals who got to meet their
fourth grade pen pals from the Belmonte STEAM Academy last
Friday at the Saugus Senior Center. Seated next to Crabtree
are fourth-graders Jeremy Garcia and Andrey Barbosa – who
exchanged letters with the town manager. Standing behind,
pictured from left to right, are Interim School Superintendent
Michael Hashem, fourth-graders Sonny Santiago and Davi Astine
and Fourth Grade Teacher Tracey Ragucci. Please see inside for
more photos and story. (Saugus Advocate photo by Mark E. Vogler)
Retired U.S. Army Corporal Frank DeFronzo, a disabled veteran, joined by his service dog
Roxie, earlier this week visited the Riverside Cemetery grave of U.S. Army Staff Sergeant
Arthur F. DeFranzo – the Medal of Honor recipient who was killed in action on June 10,
1944, near Vaubadon, France. Please see inside for more photos and Memorial Day coverage.
(Saugus Advocate photo by Mark E. Vogler)
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THE SAUGUS ADVOCATE – FriDAy, MAy 26, 2023
A security expert shares his knowledge about the problem in a June 8 talk at the Saugus Public Library
Cyber Hackers and Attackers
(The following info is from a press release
issued by the Saugus Public Library
this week.)
T
he Saugus Public Library is offering
a special program on June
8 at 6:30 p.m. in the Community
Room: “Let’s Discuss Cyber: Hackers,
Attackers, and Thieves with Robert Siciliano.”
Robert
will be discussing various hack
attacks, how they occur and how to prevent
them. His intention is to shine a
light on different scenarios that affect
consumers, and what to do to make sure
they become a tougher target. This interactive
time together will use real-life
TOWN MEETING | FROM PAGE 1
safety, and traffic flow is the
next obstacle to tackle,” Vecchione
wrote in a four-page
examples to instruct attendees on how
to avoid the risks associated with hackers,
attackers and thieves.
Robert is a security expert and private
investigator with 30+ years of experience,
the #1 Best Selling Amazon.
com author of five books and the architect
of the CSI Protection certification,
which is a cyber social identity and personal
protection security awareness
training program.
Attendance is limited to 45 people. Visit
https://www.sauguspubliclibrary.org/
events to register.
This program is free, open to the public
and sponsored by the New Friends of
the Saugus Public Library.
letter to selectmen, referring
to last week’s Annual Town
Meeting deliberations.
“While I still hold that this
should have been done concurrently
with addressing
the critical piece that is zoning
and land use as our Master
Plan and 40 years worth of
studies clearly laid out, it’s up
to you as traffic commissioners
to proactively do something
about that,” he said.
Vecchione was the architect
of the article that would
have created a Cliftondale
Square Overlay Zoning District.
Town Meeting members
supported the article
by a 23-18 majority vote, but
the measure failed to get the
two-thirds supermajority required
for passage.
But in his letter dated May
17 – two days after the Town
Meeting vote – Vecchione
made recommendations on
what selectmen can do to
improve Cliftondale Square,
many of them safety-related.
Vecchione said selectmen
should
• Communicate with the
MBTA to replace the decrepit
and inaccessible bus enclosure
adjacent to Jackson
Street. He said the town
should petition the state legislative
delegation to obtain
a new enclosure that complies
with the Americans
with Disabilities Act.
• Press for the town manager,
in collaboration with
selectmen, the DPW and the
Saugus Police Department,
to develop a temporary pilot
program to study how removing
parking on one side
of the street helps with both
safety and traffic flow.
• Create a signage plan to
replace outdated or damaged
signage and install new
timed parking signage that is
missing on Lincoln Avenue.
• Stripe on-street parking
to define what is a spot and
what is not a spot.
• Repair damaged and
Honor. Respect. Gratitude.
We are truly grateful. Thank You.
We’ll be closed Monday, May 29th in observance of the holiday. You can access
your accounts using our ATMs and Online & Mobile Banking. Thank you!
temporary telephone poles,
clean up conduit and repair
sidewalks throughout the
area. People in wheelchairs
struggle to navigate some of
these sidewalks.
• Provide increased public
safety at targeted times.
• Petition state legislation
to acquire additional flashing
crossing beacons in Cliftondale.
There should be flashing
beacons at heavily used
intersections, including at
Banana Splitz and from Blue
Moon Smoke Shop, Vecchione
said.
• Use pre-existing traffic reports
and make them more
accessible to the public.
“There are a lot of good
points in here, and I think we
should take them seriously,”
Selectman Corinne Riley said
of Vecchione’s report. EspeRobert
Siciliano
will talk about cyber
social identity
and personal
protection in a
special program
nex t month.
(Courtesy photo to
The Saugus Advocate)
cially
the safety issues, she
stressed.
Board of Selectmen Vice
Chair Debra Panetta agreed
that the report contained
some good suggestions. The
town needs to repair sidewalks
and address the ADA
compliance issues.
Selectman Jeffrey Cicolini
said he leaned toward supporting
Vecchione’s article,
noting “It was several steps
in the right direction.”
Cicolini said he thought
that somebody should have
offered an amendment to
remove the controversial
height requirement out of
the zoning to make it more
palatable.
“Unfortunately, the people
who own a lot of the
storefronts aren’t investing.
“We’re sort of stuck in status
quo. I do hope this doesn’t
go away. I do hope someone
picks up the ball,” Cicolini
said.
Crabtree said he thought
the report contained some
good information.
Crabtree said there was no
guarantee that the article, if
adopted, would affect the
desired changes that would
spur revitalization. “Zoning
is an experiment,” Crabtree
said.
“To change the zoning in
Cliftondale, you’re not going
to know what happens,”
he said.
The town manager talked
about the uniqueness of the
town and its two centers of
town (Cliftondale and Saugus
Center) that are both vying
for commercial business
to stay relevant, in addition
to Route 1.
Board of Selectmen Chair
Anthony Cogliano called the
Cliftondale article’s failure to
win two-thirds majority support
from Town Meeting “a
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Page 3
Honoring a Fallen Hero
A revere Army veteran is a frequent visitor to the gravesite of Medal of Honor recipient
By Mark E. Vogler
R
etired U.S. Army Corporal
Frank DeFronzo
was born nearly two
decades after Saugus Medal
of Honor recipient U.S. Army
Staff Sergeant Arthur F. DeFranzo
was killed in action
in World War II. But DeFronzo,
whose name is spelled
slightly differently than the
hero he claims as his second
cousin, said he’s spent many
days at the Riverside Cemetery
making sure DeFranzo
has a good miniature American
flag at his gravesite.
“Twice a month or more I
come down here to pay my
respects to him and all of the
veterans,” DeFronzo said in
an interview this week.
“I’ve been coming here for
a long time. My father took
me down here when I was a
kid. He and Arthur were very
close. My father’s father and
Frank DeFronzo at Riverside Cemetery (Saugus Advocate
photo by Mark E. Vogler)
Arthur’s father were brothers,”
he said.
“I’m a DeFronzo, which is
different than DeFranzo. The
name got screwed up when
our families came over here,”
he said.
DeFronzo, 60, of Revere,
is a disabled veteran who
is accompanied by his service
dog, Roxie. He doesn’t
like to talk about his military
service, other than to say he
served with the U.S. Army’s
7th Cavalry Regiment.
His focus these days is makMEDAL
OF HONOR RECIPIENT
U.S. Army Staff Sgt. Arthur
F. DeFranzo (Courtesy
photo to The Saugus Advocate)
ing sure Staff Sergeant DeFranzo
has a flag. “I replace
the flag in the winter when
it gets tattered,” DeFronzo
said. “I always make sure he
has a flag. He needs to have
one 24-7.”
DeFranzo is one of more
than 3,500 Americans to
have received the Medal of
Honor – the highest military
decoration presented by the
United States government to
a member of its armed forces
since 1863 – and one of more
than 600 who received the
medal posthumously.
DeFranzo Medal of Honor
island is located near J. Pace
& Son and the S/Sgt. Arthur
F. DeFranzo V.F.W. Post 2346
building.
DeFranzo’s heroics and
sacrifice
U.S. Army Staff Sgt. Arthur
F. DeFranzo was the Saugus
World War II war hero who
received the Medal of Honor
posthumously for sacrificing
his life to save fellow soldiers.
The casket containing
his body laid in state at Saugus
Town Hall for three days,
and he received a military funeral
at Riverside Cemetery.
Staff Sergeant DeFranzo’s
official Medal of Honor citation
reads:
HERO | SEE PAGE 4
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THE SAUGUS ADVOCATE – FriDAy, MAy 26, 2023
Officer Harold L. Vitale Memorial Fund continues legacy, 38 years later
awarding scholarships to local high school students
O
n Saturday, June 17,
local high school students
from Saugus,
Revere and some surrounding
communities will be awarded
scholarships at a gathering including
their families at the Officer
Harold L. Vitale Memorial
Park on Ballard Street in Saugus
– near the 38th anniversary
date of the late officer’s ulGerry
D’Ambrosio
Attorney-at-Law
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14 Proctor Avenue, Revere
(781) 284-5657
timate sacrifice, (E.O.W. June
18, 1985). All of the 2023 recipients
will be announced in
just a few days; a partial list of
awards includes local resident
Sofia Caruso, who attends
Bishop Fenwick High School.
“We are excited to be able to
host our annual scholarships
awards ceremony … near the
anniversary date of his ultimate
sacrifice, June 18. The
event allows us an opportunity
to meet deserving students
and their families,” said Les Vitale,
brother of the late officer.
“For over 30 years we’ve hosted
the ceremony at the Memorial
Park named after Harold to
honor his life and reflect on his
years of service and sacrifice.”
Dick Vitale said, “The cost of
a secondary education is soaring
and continues to be a challenge
for students and their
families further compounded
by things like the Covid
outbreak, a struggling economy,
rising interest rates and a
shaky stock market. By providing
scholarships serves to cover
a small part of the students’
overall costs.” He went on to
say, “This day provides us a
great sense of pride and allows
us to spend time at the Park
named after Harold here in
Saugus where Harold worked
protecting the community
and where we experience the
continued support of Town officials,
members in public safeOur
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and enjoy the day with the
Saugus community.”
Bob Vitale, a retired Transit
Police Officer, went on to say,
“Hosting this event around Father’s
Day is great and is the
time of year when families typically
make time to celebrate
milestones like high school
graduations and the college
acceptance decisions.” He added,
“On top of that June 14th is
Flag Day and is Harold’s birthday,
so it’s a special day for us
though it’s hard to believe 38
years have passed and we’re
still hosting this event.”
Niece and nephew Victoria
Vitale-Bingham and her brother
Nicholas Vitale also spoke.
“Uncle Harold would have
turned 80 so it’s pretty cool
knowing we’ve been handing
out these scholarships during
our entire adult lives for over
30 years now. Even though we
grew up without having him
around us, this Reception and
our August charity golf outing
allowed us to get to know
him and be part of turning a
tragedy into a sense of pride
and lets us stop to recognize
the police officers like him for
their service to the community,”
said Victoria.
Nick Vitale added, “we’ve
gotten to meet some of his retired
co-workers over the years
and hear some great stories
about him, and we’ve even
gotten to know some of the
current members of the Department
that stop by every
year to pay their respects. They
have a tough job, so we’re
proud to show our support
and respect them for walking
the Thin Blue Line every day.”
Eileen Vitale, wife of the late
officer remarked, “June 18th
HERO | FROM PAGE 3
“For conspicuous gallantry
and intrepidity at the risk
of his life, above and beyond
the call of duty, on June 10,
1944, near Vaubadon, France.
As scouts were advancing
across an open field, the enemy
suddenly opened fire
with several machineguns
and hit 1 of the men. S/
Sgt. DeFranzo courageously
moved out in the open
to the aid of the wounded
scout and was himself
wounded but brought the
man to safety. Refusing aid,
S/Sgt. DeFranzo reentered
the open field and led the
advance upon the enemy.
There were always at least 2
machine guns bringing unrelenting
fire upon him, but
will always be a tough day for
me to get through, but I love
all that we do to remember
Harold. The Memorial Park Reception,
giving scholarships
and our annual golf tournament
are good days for me.
Our charity work allows us
to continue supporting victims’
advocacy programs of
some great organizations
that helped me get through
the difficult times like the
National and NE C.O.P.S. (National
Concerns of Police
Survivors and N.E. C.O.P.S.)
and the N.L.E.O.M.F. (National
Law Enforcement Officers
Memorial Fund). They are
amazing organizations who
helped us out back in 1985
and we stay involved and
give back to them with our
support to this day.”
The Officer Harold L. Vitale
Memorial Fund, Inc. is a
501(c)(3) organization and
was created in 1992 some
seven years after his death.
Officer Vitale was killed in the
line of duty in the early morning
hours of June 18, 1985,
while attempting to make an
arrest, when he was dragged
over 1,000 feet to his death.
Officer Vitale was 42 at the
time and married to his wife
Eileen, and they lived in Ipswich
with three children: Paul,
Michelle and Jaclyn. Officer Vitale’s
badge #17 was retired
upon his death. The Officer Vitale
Memorial Park was constructed
by the Town of Saugus
in 1992 in his honor.
The Memorial Fund Annual
Golf Tournament will be held
once again on the first Monday
in August (August 8) at Ipswich
Country Club – for the
28th time.
Medal of Honor monument
in Saugus (Saugus Advocate
photo by Mark E. Vogler)
S/Sgt. DeFranzo kept going
forward, firing into the enemy
and 1 by 1 the enemy
HERO | SEE PAGE 7
׉	 7cassandra://UttuFfXHyZBYRbD5ypXMhdvndeFyCXqqc-j_FQvhl2U/	`̰ dor+`Y׉EjTHE SAUGUS ADVOCATE – FriDAy, MAy 26, 2023
Page 5
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info@advocatenews.net
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Board of Selectmen Chair Anthony Cogliano (center), School Committee Member Dennis Gould
(kneeling) and WIN Waste Innovations Saugus Plant Manager Elliot Casey (to the right of Cogliano)
joined the Saugus High School Baseball Team before the fi nal game of the 2023 season
at World Series Park last Friday, May 19. (Courtesy Photo to The Saugus Advocate by Jack Walsh)
(Editor’s Note: World Series
Park issued the following
press release this week.)
W
IN Waste Innovations
Saugus
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Elliot Casey threw out the
ceremonial first pitch at
Saugus High Baseball’s final
game of the 2023 season
at World Series Park
last Friday (May 19).
WIN was being recognized
for their long-time
and ongoing contributions
to World Series Park and for
their support of baseball in
Saugus.
“We very much appreciate
WIN Waste Innovation’s
support over the past eighteen
years,” World Series
Park superintendent Bob
Davis said.
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XPage 6
THE SAUGUS ADVOCATE – FriDAy, MAy 26, 2023
A Pen pal Pizza Party
Fourth-graders and Saugus seniors get to meet over lunch after sharing letters since last fall
By Mark E. Vogler
T
he Saugus Senior Center
threw a special pizza
party for about 90
fourth-graders from the Belmonte
STEAM Academy last
Friday. But the pizza wasn’t the
main course. The young students
finally got to meet the
pen pals they’ve been sharing
letters with over the past several
months.
“Both groups have really
been looking forward to this
first-time meeting,” Fourth
Grade Teacher Brigitte Vaudo
said of the project she initiated
last fall with the 22 students
in her classroom. It spread to
other classrooms at the Belmonte.
“It’s
not just about the pizza.
It’s a learning experience
for the students and it’s something
that the seniors really
enjoyed, too,” she said.
“What you brought to our
students was pure joy,” Vaudo
later told the senior citizens.
The vast majority of the pen
pals who connected with the
students are senior citizens
who frequent the Saugus Senior
Center. And there were a
few middle-aged people involved,
too.
Town Manager Scott C.
Crabtree, whose son Brody
was among the Belmonte
fourth-graders participating,
exchanged several letters with
10-year-old Andrey Barbosa,
one of the fourth-graders. “We
got to talk about our family
history and where our ancestors
are from,” Crabtree said.
Andrey got to learn the important
role that his pen pal
plays in Saugus. “He makes
choices for the town,” he said
of Crabtree.
In an era when interpersonal
communications is dominated
by texts and emails, Crabtree
called it “a great exercise that
gets kids to think about what
they’re going to write.”
“It’s so different these days
in the way we communicate
with each other. Not a lot of
people take the time to write
letters. So, this was a great experience
for these kids,” he
said.
Vaudo planned and organized
“The Student and Senior
Pen Pal Project” – a special proPIZZA
PARTY | SEE PAGE 16
Student pen pal artist Amelia (left) with one of the drawings
she did of her pen pal Joanie Allbee, which now hangs on
Joanie’s refrigerator. (Saugus Advocate photo by Mark E. Vogler)
NO GENERATION GAP HERE: Left to right: 10-year-old Scott
Brennan and 99-year-old Annette Slocomb enjoyed a pizza
lunch together last Friday, meeting for the first time after being
pen pals for several months. (Saugus Advocate photo by
Mark E. Vogler)
Fourth-grader Samantha Williams (left) with her pen pal, Cheryl
Roberto, a longtime outreach worker at the Saugus Senior
Center (Saugus Advocate photo by Mark E. Vogler)
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~ The Old Sachem ~
Page 7
Nine Excellent Years
J
ames Nathaniel Brown
was born on Feb. 17, 1936,
in St. Simons, Georgia. His
father, Swinton Brown, was
a professional boxer, and his
mother, Theresa, was a homemaker.
Brown’s family moved
to Manhasset, New York, on
Long Island, living with his
grandmother and mother. Jim
was a standout at the local
high school, Manhasset Secondary
School, earning 13 letters
in his four years – football,
lacrosse, baseball, basketball
– and running track. He had a
record 38 points per game average
in basketball at Manhasset.
He died this week.
Jim entered Syracuse University
as a phenom in 1953.
In 1954, his sophomore year,
he was the second leading
rusher on the football team.
As a junior he rushed for 666
yards, 5.2 average yards per
carry and was selected as a
Second-team All American.
In 1956, as a senior, Brown set
the University record for the
highest season rushing average,
6.2, and the most touchdowns
in a single game, 6. As
a running back he rushed for
986 yards, which was third
best in the nation, and scored
14 touchdowns. Syracuse only
HERO | FROM PAGE 4
emplacements became silent.
While advancing he was
again wounded, but continued
on until he was within
100 yards of the enemy position
and even as he fell, he
kept fi ring his rifl e and waving
his men forward. When
his company came up behind
him, S/Sgt. DeFranzo, despite
his many severe wounds,
played eight games that season,
and Jim in the regular season
fi nale rushed for six touchdowns
and 197 yards, and also
kicked seven extra points for a
University record of 43 points
in a single game in a 61-7 rout
of Colgate. That year he was a
consensus fi rst team All-American
and fi nished fi fth in the
Heisman Trophy voting. The
Orangemen went to the Cotton
Bowl, where he rushed for
132 yards, scored three touchdowns
and kicked three extra
points. A blocked extra point
after the Syracuse touchdown
led to a 28-27 loss to Texas
Christian University.
He was a multi athlete at Syracuse;
he excelled in basketball,
track and lacrosse, in addition
to his football talents.
His sophomore season he had
a 15-points-per-game average
and was the second highest
scorer for the team. He lettered
in track and was fi fth in
the National Championship
decathlon. As a junior he averaged
11.3 PPG in basketball
and was a second-team
All American in lacrosse. As a
senior he was a fi rst-team All
American in lacrosse, scoring
43 goals in 10 games to rank
second in scoring nationally.
suddenly raised himself and
once more moved forward in
the lead of his men until he
was again hit by enemy fi re.
In a fi nal gesture of indomitable
courage, he threw several
grenades at the enemy machine
gun position and completely
destroyed the gun. In
this action, S/Sgt. DeFranzo
lost his life, but by bearing
the brunt of the enemy fi re
in leading the attack, he preEverett
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He was inducted into the Lacrosse
Hall of Fame. In the Carrier
Dome at Syracuse there is
an 800 square foot tapestry
showing Brown in both football
and lacrosse uniforms
and the words “Greatest Player
Ever.”
Jim Brown was selected as
the sixth overall selection in
the fi rst round by the Cleveland
Browns. As a rookie he
rushed for 237 yards against
the Los Angeles Rams, which
set a record unsurpassed for
14 seasons and a rookie record
that remained for 40 years. In
1958 he broke the single season
rushing record, dashing
off to 1,527 yards in a 12-game
season. This was another record
for Brown, and he was
selected not only as an ALLPro
but also the league Most
Valuable Player. To cap the season,
he set another record of
17 touchdowns.
When he retired from the
NFL after the 1965 season,
he left as the record holder of
single season rushing, 1,863
in 1963, and career rushing
of 12,312 yards, and 126 total
touchdowns. He had 15,549
total yards in the NFL. Jim led
the league in rushing a record
eight times. He was selectvented
a delay in the assault
which would have been of
considerable benefi t to the
foe, and he made possible
his company’s advance with
a minimum of casualties. The
extraordinary heroism and
magnifi cent devotion to duty
displayed by S/Sgt. DeFranzo
was a great inspiration to all
about him, and is in keeping
with the highest traditions of
the armed forces.
ed to the Pro Bowl each of his
nine seasons and scored three
touchdowns in his fi nal year.
With Brown leading the way,
Cleveland won the NFL Championship
in 1964, and was runner-up
in 1957 and 1965.
His next life force was acting
in fi lms. Before the 1964
season, he played a buffalo
soldier in the Western fi lm
“Rio Conchos.” He was next in
a fi lm shot in London in 1966,
MGM’s “Dirty Dozen,” where
he was cast as a convict sent
to France during World War
II to assassinate German offi
cers before the D-Day invasion.
He played a villain in a
1967 episode of “I Spy” and
was signed to a multi-fi lm contract
by MGM. He got his fi rst
leading role in the fi lm “The
Split” in 1969 and followed it
with “Riot,” a prison fi lm. Jim
appeared in 44 fi lms, including
the movie “100 Rifl es.”
In the 80s he mostly appeared
in television shows,
including “Knight Rider” and
“CHiPs.” He teamed up with
Vin Scully and George Allen
as a color analyst in CBS football
games. His autobiography,
“Out of Bounds,” was published
in 1989 by Zebra Books,
co-written by Steve Delsohn,
“The Old Sachem,” Bill Stewart
(Courtesy photo to The Saugus
Advocate by Joanie Allbee)
and Brown was the subject
of the book “Jim: The Author’s
Self-Centered Memoir of the
Great Jim Brown” by James
Toback.
The Sporting News selected
Jim Brown as the Greatest
Football Player of All Time in
2002, and he was also selected
for the same honor in 2014
by the New York Daily News,
which anyone who saw him
play will agree. I remember
seeing him play on television
in the 60s and was always astonished
by his capabilities.
(Editor’s Note: Bill Stewart,
who is better known to Saugus
Advocate readers as “The
Old Sachem,” writes a weekly
column about sports – and
sometimes he opines on current
or historical events or famous
people.)
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THE SAUGUS ADVOCATE – FriDAy, MAy 26, 2023
First Annual Saugus ‘Run to Home Base’
raises more than $13K for veterans
By Tara Vocino
L
ocal businesses,
bands and comedians
donated to the
Saugus VFW Post 2346
and Team Marshalls4Vets
fi rst annual Run to Home
Base fundraising event at
the Veterans of Foreign
Wars Post 2346 on Saturday
night. That included
Hardcover Restaurant,
Texas Roadhouse, Kowloon,
Nick’s Deli, Agawam
Diner, Spinelli’s, Market
Basket, Polcari’s and DeMaino’s
Restaurant. Bands
Just The Three Of Us and
Pistol Pete donated their
time alongside comedians
Johnny Pizzi and Lenny
Clarke. More than $13,000
was raised, including cash
donations. Home Base is
a national nonprofi t dedicated
to healing the invisible
wounds of war for veterans
of all eras, through
clinical care, wellness, education
and research, at
no cost to them.
“The night went well,”
Event Organizer/Post
Commander Jim Marshall
said. “Everyone had
a good time and lots of
laughs.”
Guests, pictured from left to right: Louise and Bill Davis,
Marge Hurley, Carol Frechette, Nancy Spadafora, Jim
Rooney, Gerry Davis and Kathleen Davis.
M emb ers
of Just The
Three Of Us,
pictured from
left to right:
Saugonian
Bucky Cole,
Jane Mitchell
and Jack
Hawes sang
oldies music.
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Revere resident Carl Mucci gave
the invocation.
Event organizers, pictured from left to right: VFW Senior Vice Commander Anthony LoPresti,
VFW Chaplain Carl Mucci, of Revere, Team Marshall for Vets Co-Leader Sue Lanich, Quartermaster
Jay Pinette (in back), VFW Commander Jim Marshall, President Bill Boomhower and Offi cer
of the Day Dan Roden.
Lenny Clark made a joke about
short people.
Event Organizer/Post Commander
Jim Marshall sold raffle
tickets to benefit veterans
during Saturday’s Run to Home
Base fundraising event at the
VFW Post 2346.
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Pistol Pete and The Smokin’ Guns, pictured from left to right – guitarist Leadfoot Sam Markson,
drummer Jody Breglier, bassist Mike Fee and vocalist/harmonica player Peter Chase –
performed R&B as well as Blues.
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Page 9
Pictured from left to right: Michael DeMarco, Jeff Snyder, Annabelle
Snyder and Rose LaVerde.
Pictured from left to right: Seated: Tina Carra, Anna Moscone, Jeannelle Tobin, Michael Carra
and Lenny Moscone; standing: Michael Papageorgiou, Lisa Tracia, Lenny Moscone Jr. and
Marie Moscone.
Pictured from left to right: Steve Muise, Dan Ryan, Karen Ryan
and Ray Gurgin.
Guests saluted during the National Anthem.
Veterans
Council Commander Steve and Lori Castinetti.
The town’s Memorial Day ceremony will be
celebrated on Saturday.
Comedian Johnny Pizzi entertained
the crowd.
Semper Fi, Marines!
Pictured
from left to right:
Home Base Veteran
and Family
Care Peer Recovery
Specialist Jake
McCaffrey, Chaplain
Carl Mucci and
Home Base Veteran
Outreach Coordinator
Derek
Goodwin.
J&
Veterans stood to be recognized.
(Advocate photos by Tara
Vocino)
The crowd erupts in laughter.
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THE SAUGUS ADVOCATE – FriDAy, MAy 26, 2023
Sachems finish strong by winning three of four
By Greg Phipps
I
n a season where it lost
several close, late-inning
affairs, the Saugus High
School baseball team may
have gotten past that lategame
hurdle by emerging victorious
in three of its final four
regular-season games. After
shutting out Northeast Metro
Tech last Monday, the Sachems
edged Winthrop, 5-4, in
a road contest last Wednesday
and pulled out a 6-5 extra-inning
battle at Gloucester on
Monday.
The win at Gloucester concluded
the 2023 season for the
Sachems, who finished 4-16
overall. That mark could easily
have been better had Saugus
been able to come out on
top in some tight games this
spring. Against Gloucester,
righty Cam Bernard pitched
six and a third innings and
fanned nine batters. Jordan
Rodriguez took over for him
with one out in the seventh
and ended up with the win
by going an inning and twothirds.
Cam Soroko, the team’s
leading hitter, had a big day
with four hits and a home run.
Saugus smacked 13 hits all
told, perhaps its best total offensive
output of the season.
The Sachems were defeated,
8-3, by Swampscott last Friday
in the team’s final home game
at World Series Park.
Last Wednesday at Winthrop,
Saugus came out of the
gate fast with four runs in the
top of the first inning. The host
Vikings responded with two
of their own in the bottom of
the frame and eventually tied
the game at four apiece. The
Sachems broke that deadlock
with a single tally in the top
of the sixth and made it stand
up. For Saugus, it was a reversal
of numerous 2023 storylines,
where the opponent
was the one to score the late
winning run.
Danny Zeitz doubled and
drove in two runs, while Nathan
Soroko and Shane Bourque
each knocked in runs.
Connor Bloom contributed a
single. Pitchers Bernard and
Cam Soroko combined to fan
nine batters.
Shane Bourque drove in one
of Saugus’s five runs in a 5-4
win at Winthrop last Wednesday.
Pitcher
Cam Bernard went sixplus
innings for Saugus in an
extra-inning, season-ending
victory over Gloucester on
Monday.
Sachems make postseason for 7th straight year
Q
By Greg Phipps
ualifying for the state
playoffs for the seventh
season in a row
was just one of the recent
achievements for the Saugus
High School softball
team. With a 14-7 win over
Salem last Saturday at the
Belmonte School Field, the
Sachems also clinched their
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second Northeastern Conference
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in three years. They were the
runner-up last year and have
gone 22-2 in the division
over the past three seasons.
A 16-4 mercy-rule victoWe
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ry over Swampscott last
Wednesday was Saugus’s
10th win of the spring and
earned the Sachems, who
sport a roster exclusively
of underclassmen players,
their postseason berth. “I’m
extremely proud of these
kids for what they have been
able to accomplish this season,
especially given the fact
that we are so young,” said
Head Coach Steve Almquist
after the Salem win. “Going
into the season there were a
lot of unknowns, and I don’t
think anybody saw this type
of season unfolding.”
The offense was at its best
against Salem as Lily Ventre
led the way with four
hits, two triples and two
RBIs. Devany Millerick added
three hits and two RBIs,
and Ava Rogers and Kaitlyn
Pugh combined for four hits
(two each). Rogers drove in
two and Maria Silva (hit and
two RBIs) and Sydney Deleidi
(RBI) chipped in as well.
Pitcher Taylor Deleidi
hurled a complete game
victory, and Alexa Morello,
Danica Schena and Isabella
Natalucci had standout
defensive games. Hannah
Duong was key on the
basepaths with several stolen
bases. The Sachems put
Ava Rogers was one of Saugus’s
major offensive contributors
as the Sachems qualified
for the playoffs for the seventh
season in a row.
the game away for good by
scoring nine times over the
final three innings.
Against Swampscott, the
bats were again in full gear
as the Sachems collected 20
hits total. Taylor Deleidi was
the winning pitcher. Pugh
socked four hits, including
two doubles and a triple plus
two RBIs. Millerick and Rogers
each contributed three
hits and two RBIs, and Ventre
and Morello both recorded
two hits and drove in two.
Sydney Deleidi finished with
three knocks. Duong drove
in a run with her first varsity
base hit, while Schena drilled
a triple and Abby Enwright
and Silva both reached base
safely. Saugus put the contest
away early by scoring six
times in the first inning.
A 10-2 loss at Masconomet
on Monday and a close 6-5
defeat against Somerville on
Sophomore Hannah Duong
drove in a run with her first
varsity hit in Saugus’s playoff-clinching
win over Swampscott
last Wednesday.
Tuesday left Saugus with an
11-8 overall record entering
this Thursday’s regular-season
finale at Pentucket.
Almquist said the performance
of this year’s squad
is “a credit to the hard work
that these kids have put in
along with the outstanding
job preparing these kids by
my assistant coaches Amanda
Naso [the junior varsity
head coach], Joe Cimetti,
Mike Shaw, Anthony Ascolese,
and Billy Enwright.”
In the Somerville contest,
Taylor Deleidi hurled a complete-game
effort with five
strikeouts. Millerick posted
three hits and drove in two
runs while Rogers brought
in a run with a triple. Sydney
Deleidi had two hits.
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Page 11
Saugus Gardens in the Spring
Here’s what’s blooming in town this week to make your walks more enjoyable
By Laura Eisener
R
achel Carson’s birthday
is tomorrow, May 27.
Most remembered for
her book “Silent Spring,” which
led to the banning of DDT and
more scrutiny of pesticides
and other chemicals’ effects
on the natural world, she was
a marine biologist who became
a great advocate of conserving
nature. At this peak
time of spring, we especially
appreciate some of her memorable
words: “Those who
dwell among the beauties and
mysteries of the earth are never
alone or weary of life.”
Birds are nesting in the trees
and sometimes in some other
surprising locations like hanging
flower baskets. It makes
sense to postpone pruning
if you have observed a bird
nesting in a tree or shrub
until the babies have flown.
Charles Zapolski in North Saugus
has a charming tenant at
his house this spring. He says,
“Ruby the Robin has chosen a
corner on the house to raise
her family.”
Forget-me-not (Myosotis
spp.) belongs to the Borage
family (Boraginaceae). There
are many stories about how it
got its name, which is similar
in many European languages.
German and Dutch names for
the plant translate to Forget
Me Not, and No-Me-Olvides
in Spanish means the same.
Whatever its origin, the common
name goes back centuries
in most European countries.
The Latin name, however,
means mouse ear, referring to
the size and shape of the leaf
of several species. The one we
are most familiar with is woodland
forget-me-not (Myosotis
sylvestris), which is a shortlived
but prolifically self-seeding,
sun-loving perennial.
Many groups have historically
used the flower as a symbol
to remember those who
have passed away, or who are
missing or suffering. It can also
mean loyalty and a “true blue”
attachment in a romantic relationship.
In World War I, it was
the flower most often used to
commemorate war veterans
and added to Memorial Day
bouquets. Poppies, especially
red ones, because of the poem
“In Flanders’ Fields” by Canadian
soldier John McCrae in
1915, also became a Memorial
Day symbol.
Chinese forget-me-not (Cynoglossum
amabile) has very
similar blossoms and is in the
same family. It blooms somewhat
later in the season. Siberian
bugloss (Brunnera macrophylla)
is another plant in
the borage family with similar
five-petalled blue flowers,
but very different foliage. The
leaves are heart shaped and
deep green, although the variety
‘Jack Frost’ has silvery
markings which add interest
to the leaves from spring
through fall. Siberian bugloss
blooms in spring and frequently
again in the fall, but
in summer the main attraction
is the foliage. These plants
are among the true blue flowering
perennials likely to be in
bloom on Memorial Day every
year.
Red, white and blue flowers
are in great demand, especially
between Memorial
Day and Independence Day.
This patriotic porch arrangement
of annuals will keep
blooming through summer.
The front step holds red and
purple million bells (Callibrachoa
hybrids), since dark purple
can often pass for deep
blue, a color in short supply
among flowers! The upper pot
contains lobelia (one of the
few annual flowers which is a
true blue), white petunias and
Forget-me-nots have sky blue flowers and are often associated with Memorial Day. (Courtesy
photo to The Saugus Advocate by Laura Eisener)
Patriotic annuals adorn these
front steps in Lynnhurst for
Memorial Day. (Courtesy photo
to The Saugus Advocate by Laura
Eisener)
Ruby the Robin is nesting in a corner of Charles Zapolski’s
house. (Courtesy Photo to The Saugus Advocate by Charles Zapolski)
red verbena as well as pinwheels
whirling in the wind.
Memorial Day marks the “unofficial
start of summer” and
the time of year when we can
reasonably expect to be frost
free until fall, so annuals can
be planted outside with confidence.
This
is one of the busiest
times of year for garden centers
and nurseries, with people
getting their gardens
and yards ready for summer
events, weddings and graduations
as well as planning barbecues
and anticipating good
weather for outdoor activities.
One morning this week, I went
by and saw that the front gardens
and walkway of Town
Hall were being transformed
with a delightful array of tropical
plants and annuals, just in
time for the Memorial Day activities
this weekend.
Editor’s Note: Laura Eisener is
‘Jack Frost’ Siberian bugloss is a reliable spring bloomer with
a sky blue flower and silvery marked foliage. (Courtesy photo
to The Saugus Advocate by Laura Eisener)
An array of new flowers and plants were installed around Town
Hall on Tuesday morning by the crew of The Landscapers, Inc.
(Courtesy photo to The Saugus Advocate by Laura Eisener)
a landscape design consultant
who helps homeowners with
landscape design, plant selection
and placement of trees
and shrubs, as well as perennials.
She is a member of the
Saugus Garden Club and offered
to write a series of articles
about “what’s blooming
in town” shortly after the outbreak
of the COVID-19 pandemic.
She was inspired after
seeing so many people taking
up walking.
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THE SAUGUS ADVOCATE – FriDAy, MAy 26, 2023
The Sounds of Saugus
By Mark E. Vogler
Good morning, Saugus!
Today (Friday, May 26) marks
the beginning of the long Memorial
Day weekend when Saugus
and communities throughout
the nation pause to reflect
on the brave sacrifices of Americans
who died while serving in
the U.S. Armed Forces.
At about 3 p.m. today, Veterans
Graves Registration Officer
Randy Briand and his army of
helpers will converge on Riverside
Cemetery to place miniature
American flags on each of
the veterans’ graves. The local
Boy and Girl Scouts are usually
the nucleus of the volunteers.
But Randy welcomes any help
he can get. And if you have
some free time this afternoon
and are in a patriotic mood,
come down to Riverside Cemetery
and help by flagging a few
of the veterans’ graves.
The town’s annual Memorial
Day Parade is the weekend’s
main event and is set for
tomorrow (Saturday, May 27).
Bands, marchers, vehicles and
other participants will gather
at the staging area at Anna
Parker Field at 124 Essex St. at
9 a.m. The parade will begin at
10 a.m., traveling the same parade
route as last year: down
Essex Street toward Cliftondale
Square, down Lincoln Avenue,
onto Central Street, to Winter
Street and into Riverside Cemetery
for the Memorial Day Ceremonies.
Retired
U.S. Navy Capt. Stephen
L. Castinetti, commander
of the Saugus Veterans Council,
said this year’s parade will
feature a media truck that will
display sites that honor Saugus
veterans and photos of
deceased military men and
women. A video prepared by
Saugus TV Studio Associate
John Prudent will be running
throughout the parade, and
residents will be able to view
it. Frank Manning, the outgoing
commander of Cpl Scott J.
Procopio Saugus American Legion
Post 210, has been chosen
as this year’s parade grand
marshal. A former U.S. Senator
and Ambassador to New
Zealand will be this year’s keynote
speaker. Castinetti said
this year’s parade will include
Junior ROTC color guard units
from Beverly, Peabody, Revere
and Salem. Guy Moley, the man
behind local charity car shows,
will arrange to have some classic
cars in the parade. Martin
Cox has offered to bring three
military vehicles with him. The
ceremony at Riverside Cemetery
is expected to take place
at about 11 or 11:15 a.m., according
to Castinetti.
On Monday evening from
5:30 p.m. to dusk, the Saugus
Veterans Council will be sponsoring
Motorcycle Monday at
Fuddruckers on Route 1 North.
People can visit the Fuddruckers
parking lot, check out the
motorcycles and enjoy a burger
while supporting the Saugus
Veterans Council. This will be a
regular Monday evening event
throughout the summer.
Saugus, be safe
Memorial Day Weekend is
traditionally one of the busiest
traveling periods of the year.
The heavy traffic – with people
rushing to family outings
and get-togethers with friends
– makes it a dangerous time to
be out on the highways. It’s a
period where traffic fatalities
are known to spike.
It’s also the time of the year
when fun outdoor activities
can turn tragic. Warmer weather
might make an outdoor lake
seem inviting to swimmers
who are oblivious to posted
warning signs and not familiar
with the hazardous conditions
that could prove fatal.
If you are traveling on the
highways this weekend, drive
safely. If you are participating in
outdoor events, play it safe and
don’t engage in risky behavior.
I plan to attend the Memorial
Day Parade and ceremony
in Saugus tomorrow. And
on Sunday, I plan to go down
to Swansea in Southeastern
Massachusetts to put flowers
on the veterans’ graves of family
members in my hometown
cemetery.
One of them is my late twin
brother, Lance, who was killed
in a motorcycle accident on
Memorial Day of 1978. Lance,
who served with the U.S. Air
Force in Cambodia, Laos, Thailand
and Vietnam during scary
times during the Vietnam War,
was an honor roll student going
into his junior year at the
then Southeastern Massachusetts
University – now UMass
Dartmouth – at the time of his
accident. And so it goes: On a
dark, foggy night, less than a
quarter of a mile from my folks’
house in Swansea, he hit a curb
with his motorcycle and went
flying off the vehicle. He died
quickly after snapping a vertebra,
according to the doctors.
My brother – the Air Force
veteran who came home safely
after dangerous duty in Southeast
Asia – was a Memorial
Day traffic fatality statistic. It’s
something you never forget.
Big week ahead for the
Class of 2023
Next week marks the final
days together for the students
of the Saugus High School
graduating Class of 2023. Besides
graduation rehearsals,
there will be special activities
throughout the week for the
seniors. The 152 Commencement
Exercises of Saugus High
School is set for Friday, June 2,
in Christie Serino Jr. Memorial
Stadium adjacent to the new
Saugus Middle-High School
Complex.
Holiday delay on trash/
recycling pickup
The Town of Saugus announced
that trash and recycling
collection will run on a
one-day delay for the Memorial
Day Holiday. Trash and recycling
will not be collected
on Monday, May 29, due to the
holiday. Collection will resume
on a one-day delay on Tuesday,
May 30. Residents are kindly
asked to leave trash and recycling
curbside by 7 a.m. the day
after their normally scheduled
collection day.
The Town of Saugus would
like to thank everyone for their
cooperation. Please contact
Solid Waste/Recycling Coordinator
Scott A. Brazis at 781-2314036
with any questions.
“Saugus Over Coffee”
The next “Saugus Over Coffee”
forum has been set for
Tuesday, June 20, at 6:30 p.m.,
when we will be featuring Precinct
6. We will be sending out
invitation soon – via email and
letters to the homes of each of
the five Town Meeting members
For
those unfamiliar with the
“Saugus Over Coffee” forums,
they are cosponsored by The
Saugus Advocate and the Saugus
Public Library. The primary
purpose is to give citizens
in each of the town’s 10 precincts
an opportunity to voice
their concerns about top issues
in their respective precincts. It
also gives them an opportunity
to meet their Town Meeting
representatives and chat over
a cup of coffee or tea. Town
Meeting members will benefit
by getting to know more about
concerns in their precincts.
Viewers of the forums videotaped
by Saugus TV will also
get to learn a little about the
history or interesting things
about the precinct being featured
each month.
One of my major hopes for
the forums is that it spurs an
interest for citizens to become
potential candidates for Town
Meeting in this fall’s town election.
The public should keep in
mind that there was a paucity
of candidates for Town Meeting
seats in the town elections
back in 2021. In five of the 10
precincts, only five candidates
ran for the five seats. That
means half of the 50-member
body was elected without
competition.
Stay tuned for more information
as “Saugus Over Coffee”
continues. Here is the remaining
schedule: Precinct 6
– June 20; Precinct 7 – July 10;
Precinct 8 – August 14; Precinct
9 – September 11; Precinct 10
– October 23.
Please check with The Saugus
Advocate or library for any
changes in dates. Residents
can check the programming
guide on the station’s website
(www.saugustv.org) for dates
and times. A video of the forum
will also be available for
viewing on the station’s vimeo
page within a day or two after
the event – www.vimeo.com/
saugustelevision.
A June run for Mission
Ready
Marine veteran Brandon
Montella, the U.S. Marine veteran
who completed a 100-mile
run last Veterans Day to honor
local veterans and to raise
money for his nonprofit cause,
announced he has scheduled
a 5K fund-raising run/walk
through Breakheart Reservation
this summer. The event –
set for 10 a.m. Saturday, June
10 – is to benefit his 501C3 Mission
Ready, which provides fitness
programs and events to
under-resourced youth and
veterans. Here’s a link to the
event with all the information
and sponsors on the site:
https://runsignup.com/Race/
MA/Saugus/MissionReady5K
Multiple “Shout Outs” this
week
Once again, we’ve received
several “shout outs” from our
readers:
Precinct 6 Town Meeting
Member Jeanie Bartolo: “Memorial
Day marks the 4th anniversary
of The Advocate’s
Sounds of Saugus ‘Shout Out’
column with a total of 327
Shout Outs, so I thought a
‘Shout Out’ for ‘Shout Outs’
to EVERYONE who nominated
someone special and a
great big thanks to Editor Mark
Vogler for printing them every
week. Let’s keep it going! Many
thanks, have a great Memorial
Day weekend!”
Gordon Shepard, for all Saugus
residents who volunteer
to help maintain, restore and
beautify the veterans graves
in Riverside Cemetery and Parish
Cemetery: “I want to give
‘shout outs,’ especially for the
DPW who went down to Parish
Cemetery last fall and cleaned
up some leaves and cut down
some trees I requested. And
some ‘shout outs’ for the DAR
for all that they do. The more
people that go down there and
see it [Parish Cemetery], the
better off we are in getting it
taken care of on a regular basis.”
Editor’s Choice: Gordon
Shepard. When it comes to
keeping the gravesites of
town veterans and cemetery
grounds in great shape, no living
Saugonian has done more
on a voluntary basis than Gordie
Shepard.
Shirley Bogdan: “I’d like to
give a ‘shout out’ to whoever
decorated Veterans Park with
American flags. It looks beautiful.
Thank you very much.”
Ruth Berg for her grandson:
“David Benjamin Levine just
graduated with the highest of
honors; Summa Cum Laude
and the Chancellor’s Medal
from U/Mass Lowell.”
Want to “Shout Out” a
fellow Saugonian?
This is an opportunity for our
paper’s readers to single out –
in a brief mention – remarkable
acts or achievements by
Saugus residents or an act of
kindness or a nice gesture.
Just send an email (mvoge@
comcast.net) with a mention
in the subject line of “An Extra
Shout Out.” No more than
a paragraph; anything longer
might lend itself to a story and/
or a photo.
Attention 2016-18 Saugus
High grads
The Saugus High School
graduate classes of 2016, 2017
and 2018 Cumulative Record
Folders will be destroyed on
July 15, 2023. Any graduates
from the dates above of Saugus
High School wishing to obtain
their records before they
are destroyed, please email
Kim Alba at kalba@saugus.k12.
ma.us. The pick-up dates and
times will be given to you via
email. If you would like them
mailed, please include an address
in your email.
Seeking Sachems Sports
Historical Data
If you are knowledgeable
about the Saugus High Sachems
Boys and Girls sports
teams prior to 1969, Saugus
Public Schools could use your
help. The School District is
looking for data on Saugus
THE SOUNDS | SEE PAGE 13
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Page 13
THE SOUNDS | FROM PAGE 12
High Sachems Boys and Girls
sports teams prior to 1969
that won a conference, regional
and/or State Championship.
“For example, we need data on
the 1966, ’67 or ’68 Saugus varsity
cross country team that
won the State Championship,”
Saugus School Committee
Member Dennis Gould wrote
in a press release.
“We need the team, the year
and what championship they
won. Pictures of the teams,
trophies or old banners would
be great also,” Gould said. “The
data will be used by the School
District to generate historical
banners to hang in the new
complex and to give to the Saugus
Sports Hall of Fame for permanent
record.”
If you happen to have access
or knowledge of such
data, please email it to Dennis
Gould, School Committee, jdgould1969@aol.com.
Dennis
can also be reached at 1-617257-4847.
Kowloon
launches outdoor
dining next week
The Kowloon Restaurant,
which is located at 948 Broadway
(Route 1 North) in Saugus,
opened its outdoor dining venue
on May 17 – serving a full
food and bar menu. The Kowloon
Restaurant is open every
day from noon till closing,
and the outdoor venue is open
Wednesday to Sunday from 5
p.m. to closing. This month’s
Outdoor Concert Lineup:
May 26: WildFire Band – free
admission, reserved seating is
$10 per person. Doors open
at 5 p.m.
May 27: Cover Story Entertainment
– free admission, reserved
seating is $10 per person.
Doors open at 5 p.m.
Next month’s lineup includes
the following:
June 4: Sunday Country
Night Live with Darren Bessette
and Samantha Rae Band – 6:00
p.m. – free admission, reserved
seating is $10 per person.
June 9: Live Music: World Premier
Band – 8:00 p.m. – free admission,
reserved seating is $10
per person.
June 10: Live Music: Dave
Macklin Band – 8:00 p.m. – free
admission, reserved seating is
$10 per person.
June 11: Sunday Country
Night Live with Whitney Doucet
& Moonshine Band – 6:00
p.m. – free admission, reserved
seating is $10 per person.
June 16: Live Music: Back to
the 80’s Band – 8:00 p.m. – free
admission, reserved seating is
$10 per person.
June 18: Sunday Country
Night Live with Cashwood –
6:00 p.m. – free admission, reserved
seating is $10 per person.
June
24: Live Music: WildFire
Band – 8:00 p.m. – free admission,
reserved seating is $10
per person.
June 25: Sunday Country
Night Live with Houston Bernard
Band – 6:00 p.m. – free admission,
reserved seating is $10
per person.
Bingo is back!
The Kowloon Restaurant announced
Bingo every Wednesday
from 7 to 9 p.m. in the
Hong Kong Lounge. Prizes will
be given away each week with
a grand prize set at the finale in
March. A full Chinese gourmet
spread is available during Bingo
– featuring pupu platters,
egg rolls, crab Rangoons, Saugus
Wings, General Gau’s chicken,
lobster sauce, fried scallops,
lo mein, moo shu pork, salt and
pepper calamari and sushi –
along with a full bar menu, including
the signature mai tais
and scorpion bowls.
Summer Track camps
gearing up
Chris Tarantino – a 1990 Saugus
High School graduate who
has a reputation for mentoring
young athletes in the sports of
track and field – is gearing up
for the start of another Saugus
Sachems summer track camp.
Tarantino said the summer program
targets kids in grades 1 to
8, in the age bracket of five to
14. The program is sponsored
by the town’s Youth & Recreation
Department.
Here are some of the details:
The camp will be scheduled
on running days behind the
Belmonte, from 6-8 p.m. Some
important dates for six to18
year olds:
June 19-22: Trial and final
registration week
June 26-30: First formal week
July 3-7: Second formal week
July 7: Pasta Dinner at Prince
Pizzeria at 6 p.m.
July 8: In-house meet at Belmonte
starting at 10 a.m.
July 10-13: Retrain week
July 15: Summer Showdown
– Cranston, R.I.
First-year runners will be
charged $250. The price will
be $200 for runners returning
from spring; $150 for returning
runners from spring
who have a uniform; $100 for
runners with three-plus years
in the program; and $50 for
those with three-plus years in
the program who have a uniform.
The cost includes: Camp
t-shirt, pasta dinner, entry in
Summer Showdown and uniform.
Please register for Summer
Track Camp by June 1 to
assure a uniform for Cranston.
For more details, you can
reach Coach Tarantino by calling
him at 781-854-6778 or
emailing him at christophertarantino24@gmail.com.
C.H.a.R.M.
Center is open
The Town of Saugus announced
that the community’s
compost C.H.a.R.M Center
will be open to residents
on Wednesdays and Saturdays
from 8 a.m. to 2 p.m. The site
is located behind the Department
of Public Works at 515
Main St.
Stickers are required to gain
seasonal access to the site.
Stickers may be purchased
for $25.00 at the Department
of Public Works (DPW) located
at the Compost Site when
THE SOUNDS | SEE PAGE 14
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THE SAUGUS ADVOCATE – FriDAy, MAy 26, 2023
At the Saugus Public Library
Urban Tree Care Presentation and Tree-inspired Printmaking Workshop on June 5
(Editor’s Note: The Saugus
Public Library issued the following
press release this week.)
P
lease join us for this two
part workshop on urban
tree care and printmaking,
inspired by trees, on
Monday, June 5, from 6 to 8
pm.
Landscape designer Laura
D. Eisener will talk about the
importance and care of urban
trees, followed by a printTHE
SOUNDS | FROM PAGE 13
making your visit to the Compost
Site. The Town accepts
checks only for payment of the
$25. No cash will be accepted.
Kindly bring a check when visiting.
Thank you! Compost site
stickers must be permanently
placed on the lower left corner
of residents’ automobile windshields.
Vehicles registered out
of state are not permitted.
Yard waste must be disposed
of in brown compost bags or
open containers. The Town will
accept grass clippings, leaves
and brush. As in years past, no
branches or limbs larger than
three inches in diameter are
permitted.
Residents may call Scott Brazis
at the Solid Waste and Recycling
Department at 781-2314036
with questions.
Saugus Democrats to elect
state delegates
On Tuesday, June 6, at 6:30
p.m., the Saugus Democrats
will convene in person at the
Saugus Public Library to elect
13 delegates and four alternates
to represent Saugus at
the 2023 State Democratic
Convention.
Registered and preregistered
Democrats in Saugus who are
16 years old by May 23, 2023,
may vote and be elected as delegates
or alternates during the
caucus. Youth (age 16 to 35),
people with disabilities, people
of color and members of
the LGBTQ+ community not
elected as delegates or alternates
are encouraged to apply
to be add-on delegates at
the caucus or by visiting massdems.org/massdems-convention.
The 2023 Convention will
be in person at the Tsongas
Arena in Lowell, Mass., on September
23.
Those interested in getting
involved with the Saugus Democratic
Committee should contact
Chairman Joe Malone at
making workshop led by local
artist Kelly Slater. Participants
will make one-of-a-kind prints
inspired by urban and oldgrowth
trees.
No experience required! This
is a free workshop, but registration
is required. See our
Events calendar at https://
www.sauguspubliclibrary.org/
events/
Laura D. Eisener is the landscape
designer at Northeast
Nursery and teaches in the
saugusdtc@gmail.com or 781233-1358.
Food
Pantry notes
The Saugus United Parish
Food Pantry is open today (Friday,
May 26) from 9:30-11 a.m.
Veterans bricks available
The Saugus War Monument
Committee, once again, is
sponsoring the Buy A Brick Program
to honor all those who
have served their country. If
you would like to purchase one
in the name of someone who is
presently serving or has served,
in the memory of a loved one,
or just for someone from your
family, school, etc., the general
pricing is $100 for a 4″ X 8″
brick (three lines) or $200 for
8″ X 8″ brick (five lines). Each
line is a maximum of 15 characters.
The improvement and upkeep
of the monument on the
corner of Winter and Central
Streets rely on the generosity
of donors through fundraising.
The brick application must
be in by Sept. 15 to ensure the
bricks will be ready for Veterans
Day. Please contact Corinne Riley
at 781-231-7995 for more
information and applications.
Final Legion breakfast
today
The Saugus American Legion
Post 210 will host its final
breakfast of the season today
(Friday, May 26), from 8–9 a.m.
The Legion requests a donation
of $8 from those who are
looking for a delicious meal at
Legion Hall. The 2023-24 season
will begin the Friday (Sept.
8) following Labor Day (Sept.
4). The Legion also welcomes
veterans who can’t afford the
meal to enjoy a free breakfast.
Bon appétit!
Saugus TV’s Summer Bash
Saugus TV welcomes Saugus
residents to a special celebration
– Saugus TV’s Summer
Bash – on Saturday, June 10,
Selectmen will honor town
employees
With the state Department
of Public Health ending
COVID-19-related safeguards
and requirements on May 11,
selectmen have decided they
want to honor town employees
who helped the town get
through three-plus years of the
global pandemic. They have
sent out invitations to their
June 13 meeting at 7 p.m. in
the second floor auditorium to
thank town employees personally
for their “selfless commitment
and dedication in putting
the health and welfare of our
community first.” In addition,
there will be a reception for all
town employees between 6
and 7 p.m. in the auditorium.
Saugus High Class BBQ on
Aug. 26
Saugus High alumni Mike
horticulture department at
North Shore Community College.
Her workshop, Urban
Tree Care, will include information
about the significance of
urban trees in improving life
for residents and those who
work in these environments,
how trees improve morale
and property values, enhance
safety and separation of vehicle
traffic and pedestrians,
decrease noise and glare, improve
air quality, reduce heatfrom
noon to 3 p.m. at 30 Main
St., Saugus. Free entry. Free
food. A photo booth and fun.
ing costs, improve views, and
provide other benefits. There
will be sufficient time for questions
and answers.
Kelly Slater, a local printmaker
who teaches stress-free improvisational
art workshops,
will lead participants in a trace
monotype workshop. Inspired
by urban and old-growth trees
of Massachusetts, participants
will make one-of-a-kind prints
without a press using the
simple but expressive trace
Allan (1979) and Pete Nicolo
(1980) are hosting this year’s
annual Saugus High Class BBQ,
which is set for 1 to 5 p.m. at
Saugus Everett Elks Grove on
Saturday, Aug. 26. There’s an
outdoor shelter. So, the event
will go on, rain or shine.
“Last year we had over 250
people attend (mostly Saugonians)
and we are expecting
maybe even a larger crowd,”
Nicolo said. “Saugus High Classmates
from multiple years,
along with some of our Saugus
Politicians, Coaches and Teachers
attended.”
All Saugus High Classes are
welcome. There will be a cash
bar during the day event. The
action will move to Elks Hall at
401 Main St., from 5 to 8 p.m.
“Most of us have kept in
touch with some of our classmates
/ friends throughout
the years,” Nicolo wrote in a recent
letter. “But what about the
classmates/friends that you
would love to see and have not
seen in decades? This is what
made our recent Saugus High
monotype technique. Participants
will have the opportunity
to use the solvent-free,
least toxic Akua Intaglio Inks
and one or two homemade
inks created with items such
as blue spirulina powder, turmeric,
rice paste, and honey.
Photos of urban and oldgrowth
trees will be provided
for inspiration, but people
are encouraged to bring pictures
or drawings of their favorite
trees.
Class BBQ this past September
2022 such a success. Take advantage
of this Opportunity
to possibly meet them there or
reach out to anyone you’d like
to see and reconnect!”
“Last year’s Saugus High Class
BBQ had some classmates traveling
from places as far away
as England, Hawaii, California,
Florida, North Carolina and
other parts of the US. Many
old friendships were rekindled,
while new friendships with old
Classmates were made,” Nicolo
said. “Some friends/classmates
had not seen each other in decades
(over 40 years), while so
many from surrounding classes
mingled together and had a
blast. It was quite a wonderful
experience for many.”
Nicolo said the event has already
generated great interest,
but asks that people who plan
to go RSVP by Aug. 5 or sooner
to help the organizers plan
the event better.
Make checks ($45 per perTHE
SOUNDS | SEE PAGE 15
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~ The SAVE Living Column ~
Page 15
Why should I recycle my food scraps and compost?
Composting adds nutrients,
moisture and carbon to the
soil and helps plants grow.
Compost reduces waste requiring
disposal and reduces
greenhouse gas emission.
Composting recycles nutrients
and organic matter for
plants. Composting saves
money in avoided disposal
costs and reduced purchases
of soil amendments. It’s empowering,
fascinating and fun
to make your own “Black Gold,”
and it can be made in as little
as 2 months.
You can buy ready-made
compost bins or make your
own out of wood pallets, cinder
blocks or wire fencing.
A compost bin should be at
least 3 feet wide x 3 feet long
x 3 feet deep. Make sure that
air can get in and around your
bin, including the bottom.
Most of the work is done
with the help of microorganisms
like bacteria, beetles,
earthworms and centipedes
that break down your scraps
and waste. You need a mix of
browns and greens. Browns
THE SOUNDS | FROM PAGE 14
son) payable to: Saugus High
Class BBQ, 13 Bourbon St., Unit
55, Peabody, MA 01960 or Venmo:
Pete Nicolo@Pete-Nicolo
Alumni with questions can
contact Peter Nicolo (1980) at
psnicolo2533@comcast.net
– 978-815-8234 or Mike Allan
(1979) at Allan7915@gmail.
com – (781) 953-2279.
What’s happening at the
Saugus Public Library
For schoolchildren looking
for interesting projects and
programs to participate in this
fall, there’s plenty to do at the
Saugus Public Library. There
are some very good programs
offered for grownups, too.
Clay Faces with Stamped
Words: Express yourself with
these fun clay pots made from
air-dry terra-cotta clay. Learn
how to hand build a coiled
clay vessel, then turn it into
an animal or human face. Play
with the facial expressions
and personalize your pot with
stamped words. Thursday, June
8, 5:30-7 p.m. in the Brooks
Room; ages 11-18. Please register
in advance; space is limited.
Call 781-231-4168 or register
online from the Events Calendar:
www.sauguspubliclibrary.org
Join
our Teen Advisory Board:
first Tuesday of each month at
6 p.m. in the Teen Room; fifth
include material such as fall
leaves, straw, salt marsh hay,
shredded paper and cardboard;
newspaper, paper towels,
paper plates, paper bags,
chipped brush, sawdust and
pine needles. Greens include
grass clippings, weeds not laden
with seeds, vegetable and
fruit wastes, eggshells, coffee
grounds and filters, tea bags
and manure from horse, cow,
rabbit, chicken, and goat.
Mix browns on the bottom
layer and alternate with
greens. Keep the pile damp
like a sponge and aerate. The
more you turn your pile, the
quicker it will break down.
For best results and to keep
out odor and pests, do not
add meat, bones, grease, oils,
peanut butter, dairy, diseased
plants, weeds gone to seed or
dog or cat waste.
A lot of this information can
be found on the MassDEP
website.
SAVE, the “Saugus Action
Volunteers for the Environment,”
is a nonprofit organization
with the goal to promote
grade and up. Meet with the
Teen Librarian once a month
to talk about what you’d like
for programs and materials at
the library. Your opinion matters!
No registration required.
Snacks provided! (sauguspubliclibrary.org
– 781-231-4168)
Just Sew! Saugonians are
welcome to join a monthly
sewing class for adults that is
held the third Monday of each
month from 6:30 to 7:30 p.m.
in the Community Room of the
Saugus Public Library. The class
covers basic topics like sewing
buttons, hemming clothing
and mending torn fabric
and will move on to more advanced
topics in the coming
weeks. This class is free. (See
sauguspubliclibrary.org)
Tree Talk: On Monday, June
5, from 6-8 p.m., the Saugus
Public Library will have a twopart
workshop on urban tree
care and printmaking, inspired
by trees. Landscape designer
Laura D. Eisener will talk about
the importance and care of urban
trees, followed by a printmaking
workshop led by local
artist Kelly Slater. Participants
will make one-of-a-kind prints
inspired by urban and oldgrowth
trees. No experience required!
This is a free workshop,
but registration is required.
Contact the Saugus Public Library
to register.
Cybersecurity: On Thursday,
June 8, at 6:30 p.m. in the
a better quality of life in Saugus
through environmental
action. Incorporated in 1973,
SAVE has had an eventful history
supporting the preservation
of the wildlife, water
bodies, open spaces and other
natural resources throughout
Saugus. Together, SAVE
members engage in events
and programs throughout
town, contributing to a caring
and engaged community.
Aiming to support the longterm
well-being of our dynamically
and diverse ecosystems,
SAVE also seeks to reduce/eliminate
pollution and
spread awareness about environmental
topics. Learn more
about SAVE at https://saugussave.wordpress.com
SAVE
will have a regular column
every few weeks; we will
do our best to answer questions
we are often asked. If you
have a question for us to answer,
please send your question
to Co-Presidents Ann
Devlin at adevlin@aisle10.
net or Stephanie Shalkoski at
stephaniems@gmail.com.
Community Room, the Saugus
Public Library will host
a talk titled “Let’s Discuss Cyber:
Hackers, Attackers, and
Thieves with Robert Siciliano:
Cyber, Social, Identity, and Personal
Protection.” Siciliano, a
longtime security expert and
private investigator, will talk
about various hack attacks,
how they occur and how to
prevent them. This program,
which is free and open to the
public, is sponsored by the
New Friends of the Saugus
Public Library. Attendance
is limited to 45 people. Visit
https://www.sauguspubliclibrary.org/events
to register.
First Baptist Church
presents “Can We Talk…”
First Baptist Church Pastor
Leroy Mahoney invites troubled
people to join others in
a special program called “Can
We Talk … Community conversations
on Trauma and
Healing” the first Thursday of
every month from 6 to 7 p.m.
at Rev. Isaac Mitchell Jr. Fellowship
Hall (105 Main St. in
Saugus). “Join us as we gather
in community to share our
stories, thoughts and feelings
about whatever you are going
through,” Rev. Mahoney states
in a written announcement.
“As always, it is a safe space
to come together in community,”
he says.
THE SOUNDS | SEE PAGE 18
- LEGAL NOTICE -
COMMONWEALTH OF MASSACHUSETTS
THE TRIAL COURT
PROBATE AND FAMILY COURT
Essex Probate and Family Court
36 Federal Street
Salem, MA 01970
(978) 744-1020
Docket No. ES23P1683EA
Estate of: JANE CLAIRE ALUKONIS
Also known as: JANE C. ALUKONIS
Date of Death: 12/16/2021
CITATION ON PETITION FOR
FORMAL ADJUDICATION
To all interested persons:
A Petition for Formal Probate of Will with Appointment of
Personal Representative has been filed by Lauren J. Alukonis
of Saugus, MA requesting that the Court enter a formal Decree
and Order and for such other relief as requested in the Petition.
The Petitioner requests that:
Lauren J. Alukonis of Saugus, MA be appointed as Personal
Representative(s) of said estate to serve Without Surety on the
bond in unsupervised administration
IMPORTANT NOTICE
You have the right to obtain a copy of the Petition from the
Petitioner or at the Court. You have a right to object to this
proceeding. To do so, you or your attorney must file a written
appearance and objection at this Court before: 10:00
a.m. on the return day of 06/29/2023.
This is NOT a hearing date, but a deadline by which you must
file a written appearance and objection if you object to this
proceeding. If you fail to file a timely written appearance and
objection followed by an affidavit of objections within thirty
(30) days of the return day, action may be taken without further
notice to you.
UNSUPERVISED ADMINISTRATION UNDER THE
MASSACHUSETTS UNIFORM PROBATE CODE (MUPC)
A Personal Representative appointed under the MUPC in
an unsupervised administration is not required to file an
inventory or annual accounts with the Court. Persons interested
in the estate are entitled to notice regarding the administration
directly from the Personal Representative and may petition
the Court in any matter relating to the estate, including the
distribution of assets and expenses of administration.
WITNESS, Hon. Frances M. Giordano, First Justice of this
Court.
Date: May 25, 2023
PAMELA A. CASEY O’BRIEN
REGISTER OF PROBATE
May 26, 2023
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THE SAUGUS ADVOCATE – FriDAy, MAy 26, 2023
PIZZA PARTY | FROM PAGE 6
gram that pairs up a student
with a senior. But she credited
Cheryl Roberto as the true catalyst
to getting the project underway.
Roberto, an outreach
worker at the Senior Center,
had wanted to bring back the
pen pal program once administered
at the center.
“I’ve always had a love for
seniors and I always get along
well with them,” said Roberto,
who has worked at the center
for 18 years.
“Everything is computers
these days. But I figured if
we could get seniors to start
writing letters again, it would
be fun for them,” she said. “I
looked forward to getting letters
from my pen pal, Samantha,
so I’m sure a lot of seniors
would look forward to getting
their letters. Once it got startAt
the end of the pizza party,
Vaudo thanked the adult pen
pals for enriching the lives of
the fourth-graders. The teacher
credited the pen pals with
spurring “an interest in reading,
writing and new ideas.”
“They were excellent role models
for my students,” she said.
Vaudo then walked to the
center of the dining room and
clapped her hands before givAnn
Swanson (center) with her pen pal, Isla, and Brody, who
is the pen pal of Michele Kelle, enjoyed last Friday’s pizza party
at the Saugus Senior Center where 90 fourth-graders got
to meet their pen pals, most of them senior citizens. Brody is
the son of Town Manager Scott C. Crabtree. (Saugus Advocate
photo by Mark E. Vogler)
ed, it was all good feedback –
all positive.”
Roberto said she enjoyed her
writing relationship with nineyear-old
Samantha Williams,
learning about her dogs and
~ Legal Notice ~
Public Notice
Notice is hereby given that the Saugus Board of Selectmen
will conduct a Public Hearing on the request of Punjab
Kesari, Inc, d/b/a Punjab Kesari, for a Common
Victualer’s license to be located at 1368 Broadway,
Saugus, MA 01906. Manager Manjit Singh.
The public hearing will be at the Saugus Town Hall
auditorium, second floor, 298 Central Street, Saugus,
MA 01906, on June 13, 2023 at 7:30 PM.
Anthony Cogliano, Chairman
Janice K. Jarosz, Temp Clerk
May 26, 2023
her trip to Aruba. “I enjoyed
learning about her and her outdoor
fish,” Samantha said.
There’s a huge age difference
between 99-year-old Annette
Slocomb and 10-yearold
Scott Brennan. But they
seemed to be enjoying each
other’s company and communicating
just fine – no generation
gap during the lunch they
shared.
“I learned what Annette’s
favorite color is – red. It’s the
same as my grandmother.
She’s red, too,” Scott said.
Slocomb learned that Scott
likes sports and is a good artist,
too. “I loved it,” Slocomb
said.
“Any time the Senior Center
is looking for a pen pal, I do it.
I enjoy it. And I enjoyed writing
to Scott and getting his letters,”
she said.
ing the final instructions to her
students. “The time has come
… please turn to your pen pal,
say thank you and goodbye.”
But Vaudo said she hopes
last Friday’s event turns into
an annual occasion.
Now in her third year in Saugus
Public Schools, Vaudo has
spent 24 years as an educator
– all of it as a fourth grade
teacher.
~ LEGAL NOTICE ~
Board of Selectmen
Public Hearing
Notice is hereby given that the Saugus Board of Selectmen
will conduct a Public Hearing on the request of Los Hornito,
LLC, d/b/a Los Hornito’s, 323 Main Street, Saugus, MA 0196,
for a Common Victualer’s License to operate at that address.
The Public Hearing will be held in the Saugus Town Hall
auditorium, second floor, 298 Central Street, Saugus,
MA 01906, on June 13, 2023 at 7: 35 PM.
Anthony Cogliano, Chairman
Janice K. Jarosz, Temp Clerk
May 26, 2023
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1. On May 26, 1927, Ford Motor
Company ended production
of what car that helped
“democratize the automobile”?
2. How are Ty Cobb, Walter
Johnson, Christy Mathewson,
Babe Ruth and Honus Wagner
similar?
3. What were the first baseball
bats made of?
4.On May 27, 1937, for the first
time, San Francisco’s Golden
Gate Bridge opened to the
public; how much did it cost to
walk the bridge: 25 cents, one
dollar or five dollars?
5. What word means the white of
an egg?
6. Which grows faster, fingernails
or toenails?
7. How many European countries
have a hereditary monarchy: five,
eight or 10?
8. May 28 is National Burger
Day; an American doctor with
what last name advocated
for hamburger meals for
digestion? (His last name is the
the
name of a hamburger dish.)
9. What famous European
church is undergoing restoration
and will reopen in 2024?
10. What does FDIC stand for?
11. On May 29, 1953, Edmund
Hillary and Tenzing Norgay
became the first to summit what
mountain that is the highest?
12. Most of the world’s true
cinnamon
comes
country?
13. Laurence Fishburne III was
the first black actor to play what
Shakespeare character on film?
14. On May 30, 1922, what
Washington, D.C., memorial
honoring a president and “the
virtues of tolerance, honesty,
from
what
Complete Financing
Available.
No Money Down.
and constancy in the human
spirit” was dedicated?
15. What fruit is traditional in
Black Forest cake?
16. Queen Victoria had what dogs
as pets that had previously been
considered shepherds’ dogs?
17. On May 31, 1859, what English
clock/bell with a nickname rang
out for the first time?
18. Seen through a telescope, the
hottest stars are what color: blue,
white or yellow?
19. What metal was discovered
in Nevada’s Comstock Lode?
20. On June 1, 1813, the Battle of
Boston Harbor took place during
what war?
ANSWERS
1. Model T
2. They were the first players in the
Baseball Hall of Fame.
3. They were homemade and were
often made of wagon tongue or scrap
wood.
4. 25 cents
5. Albumen
6. Fingernails
7. 10 (Belgium, Denmark, Liechtenstein,
Luxembourg, Monaco, the Netherlands,
Norway, Spain, Sweden and UK)
8. James H. Salisbury (Salisbury steak)
9. Notre-Dame Cathedral
10. Federal Deposit Insurance
Corporation
11. Everest
12. Sri Lanka
13. Othello
14. The Lincoln Memorial
15. Cherries
16. Collies
17. Big Ben
18. Blue
19. Silver
20. The War of 1812
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Page 17
Discount Tree Service
781-269-0914
Humane Removal Service
COMMONWEALTH
WILDLIFE CONTROL
ANIMAL & BIRD REMOVAL
INCLUDING RODENTS
CALL 617-285-0023
RON’S OIL
Call
For
PRICE
MELROSE, MA
02176
NEW
CUSTOMER’S
WELCOME
ACCEPTING VISA, MASTERCARD & DISCOVER
(781) 397-1930 OR (781) 662-8884
100 GALLON MINIMUM
Professional
TREE
REMOVAL
& Cleanups
24-HOUR SERVICE
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CLASSIFIEDS
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THE SAUGUS ADVOCATE – FriDAy, MAy 26, 2023
OBITUARIES
Karen Elaine Roman
Elaine A. (Runcie) Roman. An
employee of Blue Cross Blue
Shield her entire adult life,
she served in many capacities,
most notably as executive
administrative assistant
to multiple CEOs. In July 2021,
she retired after 40-plus years
of service.
With retirement, there was
O
f Saugus. Age 64, passed
away on May 11, 2023
at the Kaplan Family Hospice
House in Danvers, Massachusetts
with family by her side.
Born October 25, 1958
in Saugus, MA, she grew to
adulthood there and was a
lifelong resident. Karen was
the daughter of the late Richard
A. Roman and the late
THE SOUNDS | FROM PAGE 15
About The Saugus
Advocate
We welcome press releases,
news announcements,
freelance articles and courtesy
photos from the commore
time to pursue the
life she had always enjoyed:
lunch with friends, shopping,
dancing, gardening, sewing
and entertaining. Swimming
in her Saugus pool and from
the dock of her lake house in
Maine gave her joy, especially
when youngsters were present.
From a very young age,
she was driven to make life
more effi cient, more beautiful
and more fun for everyone
she knew.
Whatever anyone wanted
to do, Karen was ready to go!
She was a world traveler, exploring
Scandinavia, Ukraine,
all parts of Europe, Peru, Tanmunity.
Our deadline is noon
Wednesday. If you have a story
idea, an article or photo to
submit, please email me at
mvoge@comcast.net or leave
a message at 978-683-7773.
Let us become your hometown
newspaper. The Saugus Advozania,
the Greek Isles, Alaska
and most recently the ancestral
homeland in Ireland. She
was the traditional host and
instigator for holidays, celebrations,
and reunions, enlivening
each one with her energy
and creativity.
Besides social events, her
many passions over the decades
revolved around the
on-going restoration of her
vintage 1967 Camaro, updating
and enhancing her
homes, exploring the world,
making others happier and
more comfortable. Since
2016, she especially treasured
her get-aways at the
lake in Maine, enjoying the respite
of the outdoors as well
as the chaos of teaching little
ones to swim. Participating
in the lives of the nieces
and nephews of two generations
has long been a particular
pleasure.
Following the death of her
mother in 2010, Karen served
cate is available in the Saugus
Public Library, the Saugus Senior
Center, Saugus Town Hall,
local convenience stores and
restaurants throughout town.
Let’s hear it!
Got an idea, passing
COMMERCIAL & RESIDENTIAL PROPERTY SALES & RENTALS
Have a Safe & Happy
Memorial
Day
Weekend!
Sandy Juliano
Broker/President
EVERETT -
26-26A Victoria
Street. 2 family,
5 & 6 room,
$850,000.
Call Sandy at
617-448-0854
UNDER
AGREEMENT
LISTED BY NORMA!
Follow Us On:
~ Legal Notice ~
Public Notice
UNDER
AGREEMENT
EVERETT
5 Bedroom Single
Family. 129 Walnut St.,
Everett $629,900.
Call Norma for details
617-590-9143
List Your Home or Apartment With Us!
Open Daily From 10:00 A.M. - 5:00 P.M.
433 Broadway, Suite B, Everett, MA 02149
www.jrs-properties.com
Joe DiNuzzo
617-680-7610
Norma Capuano Parziale
617-590-9143
Rosemarie Ciampi
617-957-9222
Notice is hereby given that a Community Outreach Meeting
for a proposed Marijuana Establishment is scheduled for
Wednesday, June 21, 2023, at 5:30 PM at Saugus Television
Station, 30 Main Street, Saugus, MA 01906. The proposed
Adult Use Marijuana Retailer is anticipated to be located at
1393 Broadway, Saugus, MA. There will be an opportunity
for the public to ask questions.
May 26, 2023
~ Legal Notice ~
Public Notice
Denise Matarazzo
617-953-3023
617-294-1041
Notice is given by Northeastcann Inc., that a Community
Outreach Meeting is scheduled on Monday, June 19,
2023, at 6:00 p.m., at Saugus TV, located at 30 Main
Street Saugus, MA 01906, and to be broadcast live on
Saugus TV public access channel 8. Northeastcann Inc.,
will present an overview of the proposed Marijuana
Retailer Marijuana Establishment to be located at 1529
Broadway, Saugus, MA 01906. The public is invited to
attend and ask questions. The meeting will be recorded
and available at Saugus TV. Questions or comments
can be directed to Attorney Nicholas A. Gomes, by
email at nick@colemanandgomes.com or by telephone
at 5089019120.
May 26, 2023
some years as a hospice volunteer.
This put the knowledge
acquired from years of
care giving and working with
insurance providers into service
to her community.
Miss Roman is survived by
her partner of 40-plus years,
Fred Moore of Saugus, MA;
her brother Richard Roman
and his wife Carrie Taylor of
Chicago, IL; her sister Cheryl
Stewart and her partner
Nam Farino of Woburn, MA;
her sister Cindy Murray and
her husband Steven Murray
of Saugus, MA; numerous
cousins and many nieces and
nephews, their spouses and
children. She was devoted
to the entire Extended Family
and much loved by each
member.
The family extends the utmost
thanks to the medical
professionals of Massachusetts
General Hospital who
sustained Karen and her
loved ones with their knowlthought
or gripe you would
like to share with The Saugus
Advocate? I’m always interested
in your feedback. It’s been
six and a half years since I began
work at The Saugus Advocate.
I’m always interested
in hearing readers’ suggestions
for possible stories or
good candidates for “The Advocate
Asks” interview of the
week. Feel free to email me at
mvoge@comcast.net.
Do you have some interesting
views on an issue that you
want to express to the community?
Submit your idea. If
edge, caring and encouragement.
Particular recognition
is directed to doctors
Annekathryn Goodman, MD
and Richard Penson MD, both
of Mass General, and to Tejal
B. Patel, MD of North Shore
Physicians. Equal appreciation
goes to the excellent
nursing staffs at the MGH’s
Phillips House and Yawkey
Medical Infusion Center.
Karen stood out among all
their patients for her determination,
perseverance and
positive attitude. She was
clearly considered a role model
and a favorite. From the
very beginning of her medical
journey, she bonded with
them and they with her.
Relatives and friends were
invited to a visitation at
the Bisbee-Porcella Funeral
Home, Saugus on May 20th.
In lieu of fl owers, donations in
her memory may be made to
the Ovarian Cancer Research
Alliance @ ocrahope.org
I like it, we can meet for a 15to
20-minute interview over
a drink at a local coff ee shop.
And I’ll buy the coff ee or tea.
Or, if you prefer to continue
practicing social distancing
and be interviewed from
the safety of your home on
the phone or via email, I will
provide that option to you as
the nation recovers from the
Coronavirus crisis. If it’s a nice
day, my preferred site for a
coff ee and interview would
be the picnic area of the Saugus
Iron Works National Historic
Site.
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Page 19
REAL ESTATE TRANSACTIONS
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.
BUYER1
For a searchable database of real estate transactions and property information visit: www.thewarrengroup.com.
SELLER1
BUYER2
Comerford, John
Martin, Felicianna
Comerford, Kayla
Martin, Jeremy
Todisco Properties LLC
Tripp, Russell
THIS WEEK ON SAUGUS TV
Sunday, May 28 from 9–11 p.m. on Channel 8 –
“Sunday Night Stooges” (The Three Stooges).
Monday, May 29 all day on Channel 8 – “Movie
Monday” (classic movies).
Tuesday, May 30 at 6 p.m. on Channel 8 – Olde World
Community Remedies Community Meeting ***live***
Wednesday, May 31 at 6:30 p.m. on Channel 8 –
Bostica Community Meeting ***live***
Thursday, June 1 at 5 p.m. on Channel 8 – What’s
Cookin’? With Amanda.
Friday, June 2 at 6 p.m. on Channel 22 – SHS Class
of 2023 Graduation ***live***
Saturday, June 3 at 9 a.m. on Channel 9 – Planning
Board Meeting from June 1.
Saugus TV can be seen on Comcast Channels
8 (Public), 9 (Governmental) & 22 (Educational).
***programming may be subject to change without
notice*** For complete schedules, please visit www.
saugustv.org
For Advertising with Results,
call The Advocate Newspapers
at 781-233-4446 or
info@advocatenews.net
NEW
SAUGUS
JUST LISTED!
SAUGUS
FOR SALE SAUGUS
SELLER2
ADDRESS
22 Riverside Ct
23 Pinehurst Rd
CITY
Saugus
Saugus
DATE
05.05.23
05.04.23
PRICE
625500
635000
mangorealtyteam.com
38 Main St. Saugus
(781) 558-1091
20 Railroad Ave. Rockport
(978)-999-5408
14 Norwood St, Everett
(781)-558-1091
This charming tri-level is one of the most
desirable Saugus locations at Indian Rock.
The open concept kitchen offers Stainless
steel appliances and a center island that
adjoins a double sliding door that leads to the
screened in porch. Open and inviting, the first
floor can flow like a breeze into the dining
room which offers a cozy spot for family
meals that leads into the living room.
Stepping down into the family room welcomes
an inviting atmosphere fireplace where family
and friends can hang out for casual
entertaining. Move to the 3 large bedrooms
that offer beautiful gleaming hardwood floors
along with a spacious built in closet for the
main bedroom. A one car garage attached to
this lovely home and bonus rooms in the
basement with so much more space. A 6-7
car detached garage waits for the ideal buyer
that has loads of untapped potential above
the garage that is heated and came be a
home gym, teen suite, man-cave or enough
space for a large group to gather. Use your
imagination. The outdoor space has a
fabulous lot that has min. maintenance so
you can enjoy the enclosed sun porch. with
sprinkler systems, fenced in yard, driveway
for 8-10 cars and more. You'll be charmed!
$995,000. Call/text Peter at 781-820-5690
Say Yes to this address! This lovely move right in
home hosts a nice large eat in kitchen. This
welcoming floor plan open concept of living and
dining room offers nice hardwood floors where
you could enjoy casual or formal gathering. The
easy access for washer and dryer hook-up on first
floor along with a 1/2 bath is a great benefit. The
roof is updated in 2011. The upstairs 3 bedrooms
shares a full bath with all hardwood. The outdoor
space offers a low maintenance with handicap
railing, 2 driveways, shed and more. Close to
major routes, transp., Boston, and Airport. Don't
miss out. $599,000. Call/text Sue: 617-877-4553
JUST LISTED! 11 Spring Lane, Saugus
OH Sunday, May 28th 12:00 PM to 2:00 PM
Welcome to the Lynn fells area where this home
awaits your creative touch. This home is nestled
on a great street that offers a serene and idyllic
setting for your ideas and dreams. Easy access to
major highways making it a convenient commuter
location for those who would like to commute to
Boston or nearby towns. With new Saugus
schools, easy access to trails, restaurants, banks
etc. What more can you ask for? Don't miss out
on the opportunity to make Saugus your new
home…$649,000 Call/text Rosa at 781-820-0096
RENTAL-SAUGUS
Welcome to Saugus, where this cozy home awaits your
creative touch! Nestled on a peaceful dead-end street
where you can offer serene space for your ideas and
settings. Leave it as is or upgrade the kitchens and baths.
This level yard boasts a 1 car garage, fenced in yard and
parking for 4-6 cars. The location is excellent with easy
access to major routes, market street in Lynnfield,
Boston, Transportation and Logan Airport. Don't delay
and catch up on one our open houses this weekend or
book a private showing today! $419,000.
Call/Text Sue at 617-877-4553
Available immediately with broker fee being paid by
landlord! A touch of heaven best describes this
immaculate 4 room 2-bedroom private home attached
to a now closed commercial office. Excellent layout
with two generous bedrooms and large living room.
Spacious kitchen w/dishwasher, disposal, and ample
cabinet counter space. Window A/C included. Private
corner lot with three off street parking spaces.
Abundant closet & storage space. Landlord will be
adding a washer/ dryer hookup at or near the
commencement of lease and will maintain front yard.
Fenced in yard, reserved for tenant, tenant's
responsibility to maintain. One garage space available
but will be negotiated separately. Tenant responsible
for snow removal. No pet fee and only 500.00 security
deposit. Full Background and credit check required of
all applicants. $3,000.00
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THE SAUGUS ADVOCATE – FriDAy, MAy 26, 2023
.............
#
1
Listing & Selling
Office in Saugus
“Experience and knowledge
Provide the Best Service”
Free Market Evaluations CRE
CarpenitoRealEstate.com
SEE WHY MORE PEOPLE CHOOSE
CARPENITO REAL ESTATE
SAUGUS - Two Bedroom Condo. Fully appliance, eat-in kitchen
with granite counters and ceramic tile flooring NEW central air
and GAS heat, NEW windows, wood flooring, freshly painted, off
street parking, coin-op laundry in building…$329,900.
View our website from
your mobile phone!
335 Central St., Saugus, MA
781-233-7300
BOXFORD - 9 rm Colonial offers 3 bedrooms, 3 full, 2 half
baths, granite kitchen, fireplace, wood flooring, 1st floor
main bdrm w/private bath, finished lower level, bonus
room over 3 car garage, large lot…$950,000.
Carol Thibault
781-799-4519
LYNN - 6 NEWLY COMPLETED STORE FRONT FACADES offers
consisting of two condos. ALL occupied – great income, minimal
expenses make this a great investment, 1031 tax exchange, etc,
centrally located, close to public transportation…$2,799,900.
Annmarie Wilcox
781-608-1069
NORTH OF BOSTON - Well-established, immaculate Pilates Studio
offers top-of-the-line equipment, 950+sq ft of perfectly laid out
space, can be easily suited to your schedule to make this a perfect rf
investment! $20,000. MOTIVATED SELLER-MAKE AN OFFER!!
It was a pleasure to work with
AnnMarie and Carol. AnnMarie you
were always assuring that our needs
were foremost important. Always
caring and sensitive to an emotional
time. Thank you for your assistance
on that (crazy) Thursday before the
closing. In the end and during the
process all went smoothly. I would
certainly be happy to recommend
both of you. Take care and be well!
- E. Collins
EAST BOSTON -
1st AD, 3 Family
offers 5/6/6 rooms,
2/3/3 bedrooms,
wood flooring, eat-in
kitchens, laundry in
units, rear porches,
finished lower level,
replacement
windows,
gas/electric heat.
$1,075,000.
THINKING OF SELLING?
Carpenito Real Estate can
provide you with the
BEST price, T
BEST service and
BEST results! T
Call us today!
COMING SOON - 3+BED, 2 BATH
CAPE LOCATED ON A NICE SIDE
STREET IN A GREAT
NEIGHBORHOOD. UPDATED KITCHEN
AND ONE BATH. 1 CAR GARAGE.
FENCED YARD. PEABODY
LOOKING TO
BUY OR
SELL ?
CALL
CALL DEBBIE: 617-678-9710
Danielle
Ventre
978
FOR SALE - RARE FIND! BRAND NEW
HOME FEATURING 3 BEDS, 3
BATHS,QUALITY CONSTRUCTION
THROUGHOUT. FLEXIBLE FLOORPLAN.
OPEN CONCEPT, CATHEDRAL CEILINGS, SS
APPLIANCES, LARGE ISLAND, SLIDER TO
DECK. MAIN BED HAS 2 CUSTOM CLOSETS
AND EN SUITE. FINISHED WALK OUT LL
OPEN FOR FUTURE EXPANSION.
SAUGUS $859,900
CALL DEBBIE: 617-678-9710
UNDER
CONTRACT
FOR SALE- 3 BED, 1.5 BATH
RANCH. VINYL SIDING, GAS HEAT,
CENTRAL AC,GARAGE, HARDWOOD,
LARGE BASEMENT,
ALARM SYSTEM, NEWER ROOF.
SAUGUS $599,000
CALL KEITH 781-389-0791
UNDER
CONTRACT
FOR SALE -SAUGUS SPLIT-ENTRY,
2000 SQUARE FEET, 3
BEDROOM, 1.5 BATH, HARDWOOD
FLOORING, GARAGE
UNDER, FENCED IN PRIVATE
YARD.
SAUGUS $599,900
CALL RHONDA 781-706-0842
UNDER
CONTRACT
UNDER
CONTRACT
FOR SALE- 3 BED, 2 BATH
RANCH. UPDATED SYSTEMS,
2 FIREPLACES, GARAGE,
FENCED YARD, IN-GROUND
POOL, GREAT
NEIGHBORHOOD.
SAUGUS $565,000
CALL DEBBIE 617-678-9710
987-9535
MOBILE HOMES
WE ARE HIRING!
WE ARE LOOKING FOR
AGENTS IN OUR SAUGUS
OFFICE. OFFERING A SIGN
ON BONUS TO QUALIFIED
AGENTS!
FOR SALE- 3 ROOM, 1 BED, 1 BATH NICELY UPDATED HOME WITH NEW
PITCHED ROOF, ELECTRIC, HOT WATER AND MORE.
SAUGUS $119,900
FOR SALE-4 ROOMS, 2 BED, 1 BATH, NEW ROOF AND FURNACE.
DESIRABLE PARK. NEEDS SOME UPDATES. PEABODY $119,900
CALL ERIC 781-223-0289
UNDER
CONTRACT
FOR SALE - 3 BED, 1 BATH,
VINYL SIDING, HARDWOOD,
GAS HEAT, CENTRAL AC, GREAT
LOCATION,
SAUGUS $425,000
CALL KEITH 781-389-0791
MOBILE HOME
FOR SALE-BRAND NEW 14 X
52 UNITS. ONLY 2 LEFT!
STAINLESS APPLIANCES AND
FULL SIZE LAUNDRY. 2BED 1
BATH. FINANCING AVAILABLE
WITH 10% DOWN
DANVERS $199,900
Thinking of BUYING OR SELLING soon? CONFUSED about the current market?
WE ARE HERE TO HELP! GIVE US A CALL TODAY!
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