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Vol. 34, No. 44
-FREEwww.advocatenews.net
Published
Every Friday
GET OUT AND VOTE!:
Several contested races drawing
extra interest on Election Day Tuesday
Six-candidate Councillor-at-Large race expected to be close finish;
School Committee matchups in Ward 4 & Ward 7 expected to be tight
617-387-2200
Friday, October 31, 2025
HAPPY HALLOWEEN,
MALDEN!
By Steve Freker
E
lection Day 2025 is just four
days away and along with a
tightly contested, six-candidate
Councillor-at-Large race, there
are several ballot skirmishes expected
in the Ward races. Malden’s
Municipal General Election
is set for Tuesday, November
4, and Polling Places in all
eight Wards will be open from
7:00 a.m. until 8:00 p.m. Elections
are being held for 11 City
Councillors — one in each Ward
and three Councillors-at-Large
— and eight School CommitVOTE
| SEE PAGE 16
Malden voters will head to the polls in the 2025 Malden Municipal
Election on Tuesday, November 4. Polls are open from 7:00 a.m.
to 8:00 p.m. (Advocate Photo)
Ward City Council candidates:
Safe streets, redevelopment are
Malden’s most pressing issues
Asian Community Development Corporation
held Candidates Forum on Oct. 20
By Steve Freker
M
alden residents must be
able to traverse their community
safely — in whatever
mode they choose — as motorists,
bicyclists or pedestrians.
That was the consensus of every
one of the six Ward City Councillors
who took part in a Candidates
Forum hosted by the Asian
Community Development Corporation
(ACDC) in Malden City
Hall’s City Council Chamber on
October 20.
“The safety of our community is
CANDIDATES | SEE PAGE 10
It’s Halloween Tonight, October 31! Many of the schools in the
city celebrated early with their own gatherings, including at
the Salemwood K-8 School. Marking the spirit of Halloween
(above, from left) were Mayor Gary “Cash” Christenson, “Alex
the Minion” and Superintendent of Schools Dr. Timothy Sippel.
The Message from the Malden Public Schools: Be safe and smart
— as usual — out there tonight, Malden students, caregivers
and families! (Courtesy/City of Malden)
DAYLIGHT SAVINGS TIME ENDS SATURDAY NIGHT!
TURN YOUR CLOCK
BACK 1 HOUR!
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Page 2
THE MALDEN ADVOCATE–Friday, October 31, 2025
Mayor joins Malden Catholic for ribbon-cutting
of new $31M academic and athletic building
Special to The Advocate
M
ayor Gary Christenson
joined the Malden Catholic
community on October 22
to celebrate the grand opening
of the school’s new $31 million,
80,000-square-foot academic
and athletic facility at 50 Crystal
St. The new building, which was
constructed on the former Viking
Seafood processing plant
site, marks a major milestone for
the growing school, which has
seen rapid enrollment increases
in recent years. It supports MalGerry
D’Ambrosio
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Mayor Gary Christenson and Councillor At-Large Craig Spadafora are shown at the ribbon cutting at MC’s Donovan Field House with
former Malden Catholic Board of Trustees Chair Jim Donovan.
den Catholic’s distinctive co-divisional
model and the expansion
of its new 7th- and 8th-grade division.
The new addition to Malden
Catholic’s campus provides
expanded classroom space, advanced
STEM labs and modern
athletic facilities to meet the students’
and programs’ needs.
“Malden Catholic has grown
from approximately 500 students
in 2019 to a projected
1,100 students or more next
year, becoming a national model
for sustainable Catholic education
in an urban setting,” said
Malden Catholic President John
Thornburg. “We are grateful to
all of the partners who transMayor
Gary Christenson is
shown addressing the
attendees at the ribbon-cutting
at Malden Catholic High School.
formed this project from a concept
to a beautiful new space
that is enhancing our capabilities
to provide our students with
a high-quality academic and athletic
experience.”
Among those joining Mayor
Christenson at the ribbon-cutting
were former Malden Catholic
Board of Trustees Chair Jim
Donovan, who led the project’s
financing, and representatives
from Timberline Construction,
the company that built the facility.
Key
features of the new building:
•
The 35,000-square-foot Donovan
Fieldhouse with an indoor
turf field for year-round athletic
training
• The Passacantilli Gymnasium
with volleyball and basketball
courts
• The 3,000-square-foot Grant
Family Fitness Center, equipped
by Gronk Fitness
• Specialized classrooms for financial
literacy, entrepreneurship,
robotics and biomedical
engineering
• A dedicated 7th- and 8thgrade
wing with 18,000 square
feet of classroom, cafeteria and
office space for up to 200 students
and 22 new teachers and
staff
Like us on Facebook advocate
newspaper
Facebook.com/
Advocate.news.ma
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Page 3
Celebrating a Diamond Anniversary!
Special to The Advocate
M
ayor Gary Christenson
welcomed John and Rosalie
Russo and their family
to congratulate them on their
60th Wedding Anniversary.
Longtime Malden residents
John and Rosalie raised their
family in Malden and are extremely
proud of their three
children — Christine, David
and John — and their three
grandchildren: Ryan, Gavin
and Lennon. John and Rosalie
enjoyed their years in the
community; John spent many
years coaching Pop Warner
football, and Rosalie was president
of women’s softball for
four years. They were also well
known for their famous afternoon,
evening and late-night
joyous Christmas Eve celebrations
with friends and family.
Mayor Christenson surprised
them with a citation on behalf
of the City of Malden in recognition
of their milestone anniversary.
Pictured
from left to right: Rosalie’s sister Terry Squillacioti,
Christine Russo (John & Rosalie’s daughter), John Russo, Mayor
Gary Christenson, Rosalie Russo, comedian Dave Russo (John &
Rosalie’s son) and grandson Ryan Shields. (Courtesy photo)
On Tuesday, November 4th
Re-Elect
CRAIG
SPADAFORA
Councillor-at-Large
Because Experience Counts!
(Paid Political Adv.)
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THE MALDEN ADVOCATE–Friday, October 31, 2025
Sen. Lewis and Mass. Senate approve supplemental budget to support
healthcare, affordable housing, food assistance and more
Special to The Advocate
S
tate Senator Jason Lewis joined
his colleagues in the Massachusetts
Senate to approve legislation
that responsibly closes the books
on Fiscal Year 2025 (FY25) with a
$2.3 billion supplemental budget
that supports healthcare, affordable
housing, food assistance,
preparations to keep our roads
free from snow and ice this winter,
and more. This legislation also
advances several policy proposals
that would ensure integrity in government
operations, support the
Supplemental Nutrition Assistance
Program (SNAP) in Massachusetts,
protect student access to financial
aid and decouple childhood vaccine
schedules from unreliable federal
standards.
“While the federal government
unfortunately remains shut down
for business, the Massachusetts
legislature continues its commitment
to supporting programs and
services that residents rely on each
day,” said Senator Lewis. “This supplemental
budget supports critical
needs ranging from healthcare to
nutritional assistance and affordable
housing.”
Funding highlights of this legislation:
•
$2.04 billion for MassHealth
(with a net cost to the state of
$539 million [M] after federal reimbursements)
to cover rising healthIf
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• $75M to support affordable
rental housing through the Housing
Preservation and Stabilization
Trust Fund
• $60.7M for snow and ice removal
expenses this winter
• $18.5M to support public
health hospitals
• $18.3M to strengthen student
financial aid assistance at Massachusetts
public colleges and universities
•
$14M to aid people in treatment
for substance use and alcohol
addiction
• $12M to support the universal
school meals program for K-12
students
• $10M to fund technology enhancements
to SNAP in order to
improve the customer experience,
increase the accuracy of payments
and help avert harmful federal cuts
• $5M in direct support for reproductive
healthcare services
Policy highlights of this legislation:
•
Protecting federal workers and
military service members from losing
their housing due to an eviction
or foreclosure during a federal
government shutdown
• Establishing a Sheriff Fiscal
Oversight Council to strengthen
public trust by holding county
sheriff’s offices responsible for
spending and performance metrics
•
Decoupling the state definition
of “routine childhood immunizations”
from federal standards to
gain greater flexibility in determining
childhood vaccine schedules
• Punishing the impersonation
of a federal officer as a state crime
at a time when federal agents’ actions
are sowing controversy and
disruption in local communities
• Establishing a Public Higher
Education Student Support Fund
to ensure that stipends for books
and supplies remain available to
low-income students
• Granting access to former resident
records from more than 25
state-run institutions — many of
them now closed — for people
with intellectual or developmental
disabilities or mental health
conditions to help provide closure
for families while remaining mindful
of appropriate limits for privacy
and sensitive medical records
• Assisting the implementation
of the multistate Nurse Licensure
Compact by facilitating fingerprint-based
background checks
• Protecting the privacy of people
seeking name changes by removing
the automatic requirement
of a public legal notice for
name-change petitions, but allowing
the court to require public
notice in a particular case for
good cause
• Strengthening the Health Safety
Net by updating hospital assessments
and increasing funding
• Strengthening fishing violation
penalties by allowing the Massachusetts
Environmental Police to
charge by the pound — or charge
the total value of the catch up to
$10,000 — when imposing fines
for fishing violations
The Senate passed the legislation
on a bipartisan 39-0 roll call
vote on October 23, 2025. A similar
version having previously been
approved (141-14) by the House
on October 15, 2025, on October
27, a Conference Committee was
appointed to reconcile differences
in the two versions of the bill.
Then the bill will be sent to Governor
Maura Healey for her signature
and/or other action(s).
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Page 5
Malden receives Mass. PARC grant to help acquire
open space parcel at former hospital site
City will purchase 6.7 acres from Tufts Medicine; use plans include passive recreational activities, walking trails
By Steve Freker
he City of Malden got some
welcome news this week with
the announcement of a $425,000
state grant that will help fund the
acquisition of a land parcel from
Tufts Medicine that it intends on
using as park land. The Parkland
Acquisitions and Renovations for
Communities (PARC) grants — one
for $425,000 headed to Malden
— help cities and towns acquire,
create and renovate outdoor recreation
areas. The grants are provided
through the Mass. Office
of Energy and Environmental Affairs
(EEA).
Tufts Medicine joined with MelT
Tufts
Medicine, collaborating
with MelroseWakefield Hospital
and Acadia Healthc are ,
has constructed a 144-bed
behavioral and teaching hospital
at the former Malden Hospital.
It plans on opening ahead of
schedule before the end of
November. (Courtesy Photo/Tufts Medicine)
roseWakefield Hospital and Acadia
Healthcare to acquire the former
Malden Hospital site atop Hospital
Road in the city’s West End in 2023.
In a joint venture, construction is
near completion on a $65 million,
144-bed behavioral health hospital
there. The project has been
right on schedule throughout construction
and is slated to hold a ribbon-cutting
and Grand Opening
within the next four to six weeks,
according to Malden city officials.
Ward 3 Councillor Amanda Linehan
has been instrumental in the
process of identifying a developer
for the site through all of her
time in office. First elected in 2019,
she has worked with community
members — primarily the Friends
of Fellsmere Heights (FFH) — to
promote a use suitable to the wishes
of both neighborhood residents
and Malden city officials. A key focus
of Councillor Linehan and FFH
has been to preserve the green
space on and around that site, and
when it was revealed that the developers
were willing to sell some
of the adjacent land acreage to
the City of Malden, officials acted
quickly to finalize that agreement.
Malden Hospital, which was formerly
housed at the site, has since
been razed and replaced by the new
mental and behavioral health facility.
The former hospital buildings
had been sitting for nearly 25 years,
unoccupied and unused, since Malden
Hospital closed in 1999.
“It’s exciting news, it’s something
that has been long in the making
and it will be a valuable addition to
the Fellsmere neighborhood and
all of Malden’s residents,” Councillor
Linehan said of the land acquisition
at a recent Candidates Forum,
in announcing Malden’s receipt of
the grant for the first time.
In addition to the incoming
$425,000 PARC grant, a Community
Preservation Act allotment of
$750,000 is also already approved
and waiting to be used as well toward
acquiring the large green
space land parcel.
Mass. Governor Maura Healey
and Lieutenant Governor Kim
Driscoll this week announced over
$12 million in grants for projects in
40 communities across Massachusetts
that will help protect open
space, build parks and give more
people access to the outdoors. The
funding will support projects like
the one planned in Malden: creating
new walking trails and building
passive neighborhood parks.
Grants in other communities are
going toward protecting forests
and wetlands and preserving land
near rivers and lakes that provide
drinking water.
“Protecting open spaces is about
investing in the health, safety and
wellbeing of our communities,”
Gov. Healey stated in a news release
delivered Monday. “These
projects support local economies,
improve public health and make
our neighborhoods better places
to live. This funding helps ensure
that every resident has access to
the benefits of nature.”
These grants are part of a broader
effort to support local climate
resilience and land conservation.
Gov. Healey’s recently introduced
Mass Ready Act outlines new investments
to protect water and
nature while growing local economies
and preparing communities
for extreme weather.
“Local governments and conservation
commissions are essential
to protecting the land that matters
most to their communities,”
said Lieutenant Governor Driscoll.
“They know the land, they understand
the needs, and they’re trusted
by the people they serve. These
grants give them the resources to
turn local priorities into lasting protections.”
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THE MALDEN ADVOCATE–Friday, October 31, 2025
~ Malden Musings ~
The Life & Times of Jerry Nadler
By Peter Levine
F
rom time to time, I’ve been
known to scribble a few lines
about one of the more popular
Maldonians, my pal (and yours)
Harvey Nadler. But here’s a little-known
fun fact: Harvey had
a big brother named Jerry — every
bit as brilliant, maybe even
more so (though, to be honest,
not quite as good-looking — as
Harvey will unabashedly let you
know).
Jerry Nadler passed away this
past March at 83 years young,
and what a life he lived: from
humble Malden roots to a BU
degree and then a master’s from
Harvard. How about that for a kid
from our side of the tracks? Jerry
spoke Russian, German and Yiddish
like a champ, but the night I
had the pleasure of sitting with
him at a small side table at the
I.A.C.C., he spoke the universal
language of good conversation,
just like us regulars.
That night, Jerry didn’t need a
translator. He was warm, funny
and wonderfully down-to-earth.
We talked like old friends, two
Maldonians swapping stories.
Behind those calm eyes, though,
was a man who had seen and
done it all.
A U.S. Army vet during the Vietnam
era, Jerry went on to write
for the Record American and later
served as bureau chief for the
AP and UPI in Moscow, where he
brushed shoulders with some
guy named Mikhail Gorbachev.
Later, stationed in Tel Aviv during
Israel’s war in Lebanon, he cheated
death when his car was blown
up — literally —and somehow
he lived to tell the tale. After that,
it was stints in New York, D.C., Arkansas
and probably a few spots
only Jerry could point out on a
globe. Through it all, he stayed
the same: self-effacing, modest,
wise and deeply connected
to his Jewish heritage, which
seemed to anchor him wherever
life sent him.
Our conversation that evening
covered his adventures to
his reflections, touching on life,
luck and the strange way time
passes us by. I remember thinking
how modest he was, how little
he gave away about the extraordinary
chapters he’d lived.
You’d never guess, sitting across
from him, the depth of the stories
he carried.
When I think back on that
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night, I feel grateful — to Harvey,
for introducing me to his remarkable
big brother, and to Jerry, for
sharing a small piece of his incredible
journey with me. It was
one of those fleeting moments
that stays with you — a reminder
of how extraordinary some ordinary-seeming
lives truly are. May
his memory be a blessing.
It is said in “Malden Musings”...
• On Tuesday, October 14, at
7:05 p.m., the “traffic light from
hades” at Exchange & Main
(where Jack in the Box once met
Signor Pizza) was flashing red.
After a brief pause I sailed right
on through, which made me
very, very happy. The last time I
was that happy I was eating my
sister Barbara’s chicken cutlets!
Be prepared before the next power outage.
Hint, hint!
• Hot diggity dog! The promotional
flyer I received for Phat
Thaiger at 166 Eastern Ave.
shows a lounge area that I want
to spend a considerable amount
of time in all the while enjoying
exotic drinks whose names I
would have difficulty pronouncing!
If I ever left my recliner again,
that is. Modern, sleek, reeking of
hipness — Avenue C it ain’t! LOL.
• Happy, happy joy, joy!! Driving
up Route 1 on Monday, August
18, locked onto 90.3 WZBC
out of Boston College to the
show “Summertime Loving,
Loving in the Summer (Time)”
at about 5:30 along comes local
cult classic “Land of the Glass
Pinecones” by those crazy talented
cats in Human Sexual Response.
HSR were possibly Boston’s
best of the “new wave”
bands from the golden era of
Boston rock and garage and
should have/could have been
huge. Upon breakup HSR morphed
into the Zulus (amongst
others), and the only Malden
connection I got here is that Zulus
bassist Rich Cortese lived on
Adams Street for a short period,
and on one San Rock weekend
I picked his brain on all things
HSR/Zulus — a conversation I
will soon not forget.
• Michael Ardai, of Malden, formerly
of Manhattan, New York,
may his memory be a blessing.
• More names of skilled Malden
hockey roughnecks from yesteryear:
Ray Porter, Joey & Bobby
DiMeco, Larry Scibelli and Kevin
Halpern. The names keep rolling
in; I’ll have a more comprehensive
list soon with a little help
from an old Watts Street pally,
Jay O’Halloran.
• Speaking of rink rats of yesReceive
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teryear, I saw hockey phenom
Robby “Salem State Hall of Famer”
Buckley a couple weeks back
with his lovely wife Denise, and
I must say, Rob, with all due respect,
of course, Denise, you
have not aged a day! A beauty
from your Girl’s Catholic days
on Highland Ave. right up until
2025!
• I haven’t forgotten you, John
Bionelli, and your considerable
hockey skills — who, I believe,
still plays today at age 61! Holy
cow! “Who loves ya, baby?!” said
A black & white snapshot of
Jerry Nadler mastering the art
of golf
in my best Kojak voice.
• While on the subject of Malden
hockey legends, I hear tell
Presley Street’s Dennis “Two
Doors Down” Murphy is back in
town. Look up the word “legend”
in the dictionary (do they make
dictionary’s anymore?) and you
will see Murph’s picture! Details
to follow.
• Happy belated birthdays to
Johnny “The Pride of Pearl Street”
Molinari (10.22), Perry “Pearl’s
Pride & Joy” Verge (10.22), and
Lisa “The Love of Billy’s Life” Nolan
(10.21).
All the platters that matter!
Spinning on my Halloween turntable
during October 2025...
• “Dracula’s Theme” — The
Ghouls
• “Dracula Cha Cha” — Roberto
Valli Trio
• “The Headless Horseman” —
Kay Starr
• “Drac the Knife” — Gene Moss
& Fred Rice
• “The Monster Bop” — Bert
Convy
• “You Must Be A Witch” (Stereo
Version) — The Lollipop Shoppe
• “Satan’s Theme” — The Rondels
•
“Science Fiction/Double Feature”
— Richard O’Brien
• “Horror Staccato” — Frankie
Stein and His Ghouls
• “Haunted Guitar” — The
Three Suns
In the “Boys of Summer via Linden
on the Saugus Branch department,”
I give to you... Norman
Pashoian. Norm (M.H.S. 1975)
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׉	 7cassandra://gv92_8WhGVgAGvKBC_GSll8uf6vVZRw94ClEmL7DZNU3Y` imu|հ׉Ecould straight up shoot a basketball.
Pash, along with his younger
brother Mark, both played
baseball for Bob Rosano’s Stars
in the Malden Babe Ruth League,
but for Norm, fame and fortune
would be had on the basketball
courts of Malden not the baseball
diamonds.
From his home court at Linden
Park to Amerige, where he
would “snap a wire” and torch
the Cioffi brothers, Norm’s gritty
old school “in your face”–style
defense and that soft half jumper/half
set shot of his always
made him a tough cover as well
as one of the first picks during
our cherished b-ball days at the
old Y.M.C.A. Beloved by all, not
only was Norm a hoopster but
he was everybody’s bestie, and
before there was Karaoke there
was Norm and his signature tune
— “My Way” (the Frank Sinatra
version, of course) — sung loud
and proud up Waitt’s Mount on
those glorious Friday nights as
a senior; very fond high school
memories indeed.
Professionally, Norm went on
to rack up an impressive 17 years
with the Department of Defense
(specifically, the Defense Security
Service), where he held the
rather intimidating title of Deputy
Inspector General in Industrial
Security. Now, according to reliable
sources — and Norm’s résumé
doesn’t lie — he was part
of the professional staff at D.S.S.
Headquarters, juggling high-level
assignments in the International
Security, F.O.C.I., and Special
Access Programs Divisions.
He even spent five years as a
security inspector right here in
the greater Boston area, making
sure everything was tighter
than Fort Knox.
What does all that actually
mean? I haven’t the faintest clue
— but it sure sounds like top-secret,
big-league stuff.
As I mentioned earlier, Norm
THE MALDEN ADVOCATE–Friday, October 31, 2025
Subscribe to The Advocate: www.advocatenews.net
And let me tell you — the
Pashoian clan are all individualists.
Claire, the ultimate cheerleader
for her boys; Lisa, the family’s
beautiful and spirited sister;
and the youngest, Dave —
for the record, hands down the
best basketball player in the family
(can I get an amen from them
that know?). True story!
It was a very pleasant surprise
wasn’t the only Pashoian who
held legendary status around
these parts — his dad, the one
and only Norman E. Pashoian,
was an even bigger local celebrity
(hard to believe, I know). “Norman
the Doorman,” as he came
to be known, was pure class in
a crisp uniform — the Ritz-Carlton’s
welcoming smile for an incredible
66 years until his passing
in 2017 at age 85.
A proud 1946 Malden High
grad, Norman served a stint in
the U.S. Army before discovering
his true calling: greeting Boston’s
elite with that unmistakable
charm. Over the years, he
rubbed elbows (and likely traded
a few laughs) with the likes of
JFK, Jackie O, Frank Sinatra and
Yul Brynner — not a bad guest
list for a kid from Malden!
In 1950, fate came calling —
or rather, left a note on his car.
That’s how he met the love of his
life, Claire LeVangie. Four years of
dating later, they tied the knot
in May 1954 and built a beautiful
life together in Linden, raising
four wonderful kids and sharing
more than 50 years of marriage
before Claire’s passing in 2005.
to see Norm at our 50th high
school reunion this past September.
He looked marvelous and
made my imaginary 50th high
school reunion all-star hoop
team to boot. Bert Cioffi, Arthur
Boyle, Mark Burns, Dave Angelo,
Jackie Freker, Greg Phaneuf,
Danny “Cha Cha” Lynch and
Vance Ferratusco rounded out
the squad (Rose Tomasello, you
weren’t there or you would have
made the team also). Actually, all
looked marvelous. Thank you to
the “Pash” family for making Malden
a better place for almost a
century now.
As Peter Falk’s iconic TV character
Columbo would say, “Just
one more thing, sir” — YouTube
TV is much like a glorious time
machine and is good for what
ails ya to boot! You sit down
on your recliner, Ballantine Ale
at arm’s length, and suddenly
you’re back in a world of blackand-white
gangsters, Technicolor
cowboys, and larger-than-life
celluloid heroes. Being a hardcore
Maldonian — this is the real
thrill: If you look closely, you just
MUSINGS | SEE PAGE 19
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WARD 6 CITY COUNCIL
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THE MALDEN ADVOCATE–Friday, October 31, 2025
Malden’s Climate Action Plan: One Year Later
Special to The Advocate
L
ast fall, in an effort to make
Malden more resilient to climate
change, the City of Malden
published its first ever Climate
Action Plan (CAP). The CAP
provides a strategic roadmap for
reducing Malden’s greenhouse
gas emissions while building
the City’s ability to prepare for
climate change impacts. One
year later, Mayor Gary Christenson
is proud to report that the
plan’s implementation is fully
underway.
With the help of Councillor-at-Large
Carey McDonald,
Mayor Christenson established
a Commission on Climate Action
& Sustainability to drive CAP execution.
The mission of the commission
is to create and maintain
a safe, healthy, sustainable
and equitable community by addressing
the threat posed by the
changing climate to the Malden
community. Comprised of seven
members appointed by the
Mayor and approved by the City
Council, the Commission met for
the first time in May.
Councillor McDonald said,
“I’m thrilled we’ve built so much
momentum in Malden for clean
energy and climate action. This
comprehensive plan shows how
we can help protect our residents
from rising temperatures
and worsening storms, promote
clean energy, and do our part to
protect the planet.”
The group’s top priorities for
Year 1 include expanding clean
energy adoption in the City, mitigating
flood risks and fostering
community engagement
and education around climate
change. The group expects to
publish their first annual report
in June of 2026.
As the Commission gained
momentum this year, City staff
worked on various climate-forward
projects aligned with the
CAP. Here are just a few examples
of these projects:
• Public Facilities installed heat
pumps in their Oliver Street facility,
a project that contributed
to the City’s overall energy
reduction (Malden’s energy use
has been reduced by 30% since
the City began decarbonizing
in 2016).
• In 2024, via the Mass Save
program, Malden residents were
able to secure 852 home energy
assessments; 278 Malden homes
were weatherized; and 131 heat
pumps were installed.
• In the first year of the Malden
Community Electricity program,
participants purchased close to
10 million kilowatt-hours of voluntary
renewable energy, mitigating
over five million pounds
of carbon dioxide.
• The Office of Strategic Planning
& Community Development
(OSPCD) added three
new Bluebike stations around
Malden and started a comprehensive
planning process for
the Northern Strand Community
Trail.
• The City installed seven new
shaded bus shelters in areas
prone to dangerous heat levels
(“urban heat islands”) on
Lynn, Main, Salem and Florence
Streets.
• In partnership with Creative
Malden and the Coffee Shop
Artists, OSPCD hosted a monthlong
climate action–themed
art exhibit called “Our Warming
Planet: Visions of a Sustainable
Future.”
• Via the Wicked Cool Mystic
project, OSPCD has planned and
is implementing shade structures
and water bottle fillers at
known hot spots around town.
• Malden’s Tree Warden established
the Forestdale Arboretum,
planted Malden’s first pocket forest
on Goodwin Avenue, piloted
permeable pavement in Forestdale
Cemetery and planted over
600 new trees.
• The Malden River Works project
to build a new climate resilient
park on the Malden River
started construction in May.
• Malden held a successful
weekly farmers market during
the summer, even featuring an
Electric Vehicle Showcase at the
final market.
Reflecting on all of the progress
made to date, Mayor Christenson
noted, “I’m inspired by
all of the Malden residents who
have enthusiastically participated
in this work, whether it be
through the CAP steering committee,
the new climate commission,
or simply engagement in
public meetings. Together we’re
working to create a better future
for all Maldonians.”
To learn more about Malden’s
CAP and other green initiatives,
visit cityofmalden.org/GreenMalden.
Neighborhood
View Relaunches Citizen
Journalism Program in Malden
Community news initiative invites
residents to get involved
A
fter a brief hiatus, Neighborhood
View—Malden’s citizen
journalism project—will be
relaunching this November with
renewed energy and opportunities
for community participation.
The program invites local residents
to become contributors,
telling news stories that matter
to Malden.
A program of Urban Media
Arts (UMA) since 2014, Neighborhood
View was created to
empower local citizens to report
on local news stories and, in doing
so, create a more engaged
citizenry. The initiative is being
relaunched under the coordination
of former UMA staff member
Anne D’Urso-Rose, who is
now serving as an outside contractor
to UMA and volunteering
her time initially. She and UMA
will be exploring ways to sustain
the program into the future.
“Neighborhood View has always
been about amplifying local
voices and uncovering the
stories that connect us,” says
D’Urso-Rose. “We’re excited to
re-engage Malden residents
who care about their community
and want to learn how to tell
its stories.”
Neighborhood View is a member
of the Institute for Nonprofit
News, a national organization
that supports nonprofit local
news initiatives across the country.
Recognizing the gradual disappearance
of trusted local news
sources, the INN provides resources,
networking and opportunities
to vetted organizations
delivering quality local news.
“We welcome anyone who enJOURNALISM
| SEE PAGE 19
׉	 7cassandra://Xgu7wGdzr86Epaj9x9naSeeLYOpE6wEP__QfCPOW6Zc.` imu|հ׉ETHE MALDEN ADVOCATE–Friday, October 31, 2025
Page 9
~ Excellence in the Malden Public Schools ~
Malden High School announces Oct. 27
STAR Award Winners for school year
By Steve Freker
T
here are 19 Malden High
School students who are matriculating
in the school as usual
this week, but they are doing
so with a little more “STAR power”
these days. Malden High
School Principal Chris Mastrangelo
announced at the start of
this 2025-26 school year that a
new program would be in place
to “shout out” students who
demonstrate qualities that enhance
the school atmosphere
and the lives of themselves and
those around them.
“There are STARs among us
STAR, the student must be acknowledged
as showing these
qualities:
S: SUCCESSFUL— Define and
Strive Toward Your Personal Success
T:
THOUGHTFUL — Be Kind -
Your Words and Actions Make a
Difference
A: ATTITUDE — Find a Mind
Set to Set Yourself Up for Success
R: RESPECT — Respect Yourhere
at Malden High School and
we want to recognize them,”
Mastrangelo said this week, in
announcing the STAR Award
winners, as the First Quarter academic
marking period draws to
a close today.
First Quarter grades close today
and Report Cards will be
distributed on Wednesday, November
12.
To be selected as an MHS
self, Others, and the School - with
Your Words and Actions
STAR AWARD winners for
Week of October 27:
Mohamed Allam
Yasser Belatreche
Christopher Cardosa
Brendan Chang
Neveah Diaz Veno
Vanessa Edmunds
Yarrah-Lynn Etienne
Manicha Exilhomme
Bella Ferreira Fugueiredo
Mokhtar Goucem
Chrissy Guillaume
Kendrick Noelsaint
Wania Noor
Silvia Ochaita Gomez
Madison Rodriquez Cide
Rudghie Saef
Noah Staggs
Samaelle William
Quankun Xiang
Malden schools use Mass Cultural Council grants for popular art projects
Ukuleles at Linden STEAM Academy, murals at Beebe K-8 were all-inclusive with adaptive art materials
Special to The Advocate
M
alden Public Schools received
a generous grant
from the Mass Cultural Council
to support two different art projects
in the K-8 schools over the
course of the school year.
The first part of the grant supported
the purchase of 25 ukuleles
for use by students at Linden
STEAM Academy. Music teacher
Emily Wolf used the ukuleles in
her classroom, teaching Grade
3 and Grade 4 students how to
play the instrument. Playing the
ukulele also supports student’s
learning to read music, recognize
rhythms and feel comfortable
performing.
The second part of the grant
supported a mural project, inspired
by the art of Malden’s
own Frank Stella, completed by
art students at Beebe School.
The mural was completed by
Grade 7 and Grade 8 students
in Jess Howard’s art class in the
spring of 2025. The grant money
was used to purchase materials
for the mural, such as paint,
brushes and mural panels. The
grant money was also used to
purchase adaptive art materials,
allowing students with disabilities
to better participate in
art classes.
“We are thankful for the funding
provided by the Mass Cultural
Council that allowed us to
complete these projects,” said
Gerard Tannetta, Director of Social
Studies and Visual and Performing
Arts. “We are looking
forward to the ukuleles and
adaptive art supplies being used
GRANTS | SEE PAGE 19
ADAPTIVE ART WORKS: A
Mass Cultural Council grant
provided funds for art supplies
for students in Grades 7 and
8 at the Beebe K-8 School,
who worked to create a
mural inspired by famed
Malden artist Frank Stella.
Adaptive art supplies for use
by students physically and
intellectually challenged were
also purchased with the grant
funds. (Courtesy/Malden Public Schools)
PLAY THOSE UKULELES!Students in Grades 3 and 4 at Linden
STEAM learned how to play the ukulele with 25 instruments
purchased with a grant from the Mass Cultural Council. (Courtesy/
Malden Public Schools)
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THE MALDEN ADVOCATE–Friday, October 31, 2025
CANDIDATES | FROM PAGE 1
really at the crux of everything we
do,” Ward 5 Councillor Ari Taylor, a
first-term incumbent, asserted in
response to a question from the
moderator, echoing a sentiment
expressed by all of the candidates.
Councillor Taylor, who is running
for reelection unopposed,
was joined by five other Ward
Councillor candidates, including
incumbents Peg Crowe (Ward 1),
City Council President Amanda
Linehan (Ward 3), Ryan O’Malley
(Ward 4) and Stephen Winslow
(Ward 6). Also participating in the
forum was Ward 1 Councillor candidate
Brynn Garrity, who is challenging
the incumbent. Councillor
Winslow also has an opponent
in this year’s November 4 Final
Election, Jerry Leone, but was
the lone Ward 6 candidate on the
City Council Chamber dais on
Monday night.
The event was moderated by
Leverett Wing, President and CEO
of Commonwealth Seminar, a
Boston-based “training program
focused on teaching diverse leaders
how the legislative process really
works,” according to information
on its website, www.commonwealthseminar.org.
ACDC,
based in Boston’s Chinatown
neighborhood, “invests
in Asian American and low-income
communities by creating
and preserving affordable and
vibrant neighborhoods in Chinatown
and Greater Boston,” according
to information on its website,
www.asiancdc.org. ACDC is currently
involved in two major affordable
housing developments
in Malden: a 16-unit project at
213 Main St. and a larger, 335–
40-unit redevelopment at the former
Congregation Agudas Achim
property at 245 Bryant St.
In addition to the Ward Councillor
Forum, ACDC also hosted
a Councillor At Large Candidates
Forum Monday evening, which
immediately followed the first
and featured five participants: all
three incumbents and two challengers.
(See separate story.)
After going through a general
question list, which he described
as a “lightning round,” which featured
“Flash” cards with printed
“Yes” of “No” answers, the moderator
moved on to Malden-specific
questions. The first key question
posed by the moderator
was “What do you see as the
top pressing issues in your ward,
and what will you do to address
them?”
Ward 6 Councillor Winslow cited
“Safety and transportation access
and improvements in Maplewood
Square,” as his two main issues.
“We want the streets to be
safe for residents to be able to
walk down them with their kids,”
Councillor Winslow said. “We are
looking at more traffic calming
methods and considering implementing
projects like those on
Bainbridge Street [seven speed
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better bus stops,” which could
include roof shelters. “We are still
talking with the MBTA.”
The Ward 6 Councillor also said
he and his constituents were also
looking to exploring some initiatives
suggested in a recent Boston
University-fabricated vision
study, regarding present and future
improvement suggestions
for Maplewood Square. “We want
to look at more art [projects]
and murals,” the Ward 6 Councillor
said. “It is important we keep
working on improvements and
bringing events to Maplewood
Square like Maplewood Fest.”
Ward 5 Councillor Taylor got
right to it in her response: “There’s
Stephen Winslow
Ward 6 Councillor
one main point: Safety issues.”
“In some streets [in Ward 5]
there’s cars going off the road
and into homes. In one instance,
a family lost a beloved pet,” Councillor
Tayor recalled.
The Ward 5 Councillor said she
was pleased with progress that
has been made in her neighborhood.
“We have made some really
strong improvements in this area,”
Councillor Taylor said, citing new
traffic lines and signs on Webster
Street and speed bumps (seven of
them) on Bainbridge Street.
“There’s better signage on
Pierce Street, so people know
where they’re going. I’ve heard
from a lot of seniors who are
CANDIDATES | SEE PAGE 11
Ward 5 Councillor
Peg Crowe
Ward 1 Councillor
Amanda Linehan
Brynn Garrity
City Council President
Ward 3 Councillor
Ward 1 challenger
׉	 7cassandra://inqYOcQK7pydUoRX5AVd7ZYIxkrVxhofGuClSAK9i-k43` imu|հ׉E(THE MALDEN ADVOCATE–Friday, October 31, 2025
Page 11
scared of crossing.”
Also, the Councillor said she
had encountered in the confines
of Ward 5 “a lot of trash, a lot of
abandoned property; we have to
address all that.”
She said she believes there are
“some neighborhoods that haven’t
had civic engagement in
quite some time.”
Councillor Taylor also noted
there are “immigrant businesses
along Salem Street and we want
to include them and support the
owners. We want them to feel welcome,
and they can flourish and
call Malden home and their businesses
can do well.”
Ward 4 Councillor Ryan O’Malley,
who is seeking a sixth term
and is running unopposed, said,
“The challenges our community
faces don’t respect ward lines. We
have a lot of the same issues in all
of our wards.”
Councillor O’Malley said “livability”
is the key issue in Malden, and
it could be enhanced if economic
development includes goals
of “how can we bring businesses
to Malden that makes it possible
you can work near where you
live. “We have to continue to work
to provide affordable housing in
Malden so you can live where you
work,” Councillor O’Malley added,
noting that, with his Council colleagues,
they voted to adopt the
new, state-sanctioned Accessory
Dwelling Unit law allowing any
property to add a unit.
“It’s a process they can’t say ‘no’
to, and they will help you get to
a ‘yes,’“ Councillor O’Malley said.
Councillor O’Malley said, “Reducing
barriers to housing, such
as reducing parking requirements
and adding density bonuses, can
help Malden really flourish. There
are a lot of people who are getting
priced out.”
“How do you get to your work?
Multimodal transportation is
something I care a lot about, and
I really enjoy working with colleagues
on this issue,” the Ward
4 Councillor said, praising the
Bike to the Sea/Northern Strand
Trail in Malden and surrounding
communities — spearheaded by
Councillor Winslow.
“I have also been fighting to
bring a new shared-use path to
the city, Spot Pond Brook Greenway.
It has broad community
support, and what is also helpful
is feedback from those not so excited
about the project,” O’Malley
said.
Council President Linehan
WARD COUNCIL CANDIDATES: At the ACDC Malden Ward City
Councillor Candidates Forum on Monday night, from left:
Moderator Leverett Wing of Commonwealth Seminar and
candidates Ward 1 incumbent Peg Crowe, Ward 1 challenger Brynn
Garrity, Ward 5 incumbent Ari Taylor, Ward 4 incumbent Ryan
O’Malley, City Council President and Ward 3 incumbent Amanda
Linehan and Ward 6 incumbent Stephen Winslow. (Advocate Photo)
(Ward 3) noted that the “overarching
issues from [all] candidates
are safety getting around [the
city] and affordability.”
In her ward, Councillor Linehan
said, “there are pivotal development
issues,” citing the ongoing
former Malden Hospital
site project and the stalled Malden
District Courthouse plans. At
the former hospital site, a new regional
behavioral health facility
has been built “and should have
a ribbon-cutting in one to two
months.” The Ward 3 Councillor
said she is pleased that with the
support of Mayor Gary Christenson
the MBTA has agreed to retain
bus routes to that new behavioral
health center and the surrounding
neighborhood, as cutting
them had been proposed.
“They will also be employing a lot
of Malden residents,” she asserted.
Councillor Linehan also said
that on the very day of the forum
it was announced Malden has received
a new state-funded PARC
grant in the amount of $400,000
to improve and support open and
green space at the site, on land
the city has acquired there. PARC
grants can be used by municipalities
to acquire parkland, to build
a new park or to renovate an existing
park.
As for the courthouse site,
Councillor Linehan called its status
“stalled and frustrating,” then
echoed Councillor O’Malley’s remarks
on ward boundaries and
said that future project has implications
for all Malden residents.
“A dynamic arts and culture center
may not be an economic reality,”
she said, “but with the help of
our state legislature, perhaps we
could generate mixed-use [redevelopment]
at that site and potentially
spur the overall economic
development of that corridor
of the city.
Ward 1 Councillor challenger
Brynn Garrity said “enforcement
of egregious traffic violations”
in her ward as well as safety
in all forms of travel are key issues.
“There are no consequences
for traffic violations,” Garrity
said, noting that she is a personal
friend of the resident who lost
the dog, Toby, in the Ward 5 traffic
accident, noting the dog’s owner
was also seriously injured.
“Parking violations, speeding,
you name it. It’s a revenue stream
we are leaving on the table.”
Council candidate Garrity said
she has been a member of the
Malden Safe Streets group since
its inception and has been working
closely with other residents for
nearly two years on such projects
as the already established Safe
Routes to Schools. She also said
she and others would continue
to seek volunteers for “bike buses”
and “walking buses” for kids
going to school in the morning.
Garrity said she would also seek
zoning changes if elected, to enhance
and create both potential
economic development and
redevelopment on Main Street
and Commercial Street in Ward
1. “Commercial Street is kind of a
disaster. It’s ugly in a lot of parts.
Main Street, as you come from
Everett into Malden, is a big difference.
We are leaving a lot [of
what those areas could be] on
the table.”
Incumbent Ward 1 Councillor
Peg Crowe said the biggest issues
around her ward “are also
the next best opportunities.” She
referred specifically to the major
redevelopment project at the
Malden DPW site alongside the
Malden River, called “Malden Riverworks,”
as well as potential new
projects along Commercial Street.
“The Malden Riverworks is the
next best opportunity,” Councillor
Crowe said, “and Commercial
Street is the next and biggest untapped
resource [for redevelopment]
in our community.”
Councillor Crowe noted that
Ward 1, of all the eight wards in
the city, is most evenly divided between
commercial and residential
use. “I really feel Malden Riverworks
will be the key to developing
[more projects] along the
Malden River.”
“Ward 1 redevelopment is our
next best hope,” Councillor Crowe
said.
As for safe streets, Crowe noted
she was lobbied at the State
House to help make “Drive 25” a
public option in Malden, where
a citywide speed limit of 25 miles
per hour was implemented. She
also said she was also an early
backer of both the Safe Routes
to Schools program and the Malden
Safe Streets initiative. “I have
always championed public safety.
When we are on the road, we can
all slow down,” Councillor Crowe
said. “When you think outside the
box, and it works, then you just
put your ideas into practice.”
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THE MALDEN ADVOCATE–Friday, October 31, 2025
Get ready for high-energy, clean fun for the whole family!
J
oin dance sensation Jarell Rochelle,
who has appeared on
“So You Think You Can Dance,”
TEDx and PBS’s Blackademics, on
Tuesday, November 4, at 3 p.m.
He’ll be leading “Hip Hop XPression,”
a lively and inclusive dance
class where everyone can move,
groove and express themselves.
No experience needed — just
bring your energy, your love for
music and your best moves! Perfect
for all ages, this class blends
the upbeat rhythms of hip hop
with easy-to-follow choreography,
making it fun for children
of all ages and their family members.
Come ready to sweat, smile
and dance like nobody’s watching!
More
about Jarell Rochelle:
tic Xpression through hip-hop
– street dance, and multidisci“For
those who I have yet to
meet – my name is Jarell Howard
IV Rochelle, and I’m a movement
artist, speaking artist, educator,
and performer dedicated to the
transformative power of authenLike
us on Facebook advocate newspaper
Facebook.com/Advocate.news.ma
plinary art forms. Growing up
in the vibrant and diverse community
of Alief, Texas, I was immersed
in a rich cultural tapestry
that shaped my artistic journey
and fueled my passion for dance
and storytelling. […] At the core
of my work is my teaching pedagogy,
Xpress VIBE, where we provide
performances, workshops,
and educational programs that
emphasize the power of self-expression
through hip-hop culture
and street dance styles.
Our services are designed to address
the need for creative outlets
in communities, particularly
for young people of color and/
or any marginalized audiences
who often find their voices stifled
or overlooked. We aim to
create spaces where individuals
can explore and express their
emotions through dance, storytelling,
and other art forms. Currently,
I employ my teaching
pedagogy in my courses at Salem
State University as a newly
appointed associate professor of
dance in the Music & Dance Department
at Salem State tasked
with revitalizing and re-imagining
the Hip Hop Concentration
and what the focused major constitutes
– street dance is a HUGE
piece in the academic landscaping
puzzle.”
This program is funded by the
Friends of the Malden Public Library.
At
The Gallery@57:
‘Birds I View’
by Paige Wallis
M
A Complete Continuum of Care
alden artist Paige Wallis
brings to The Gallery@57
“Birds I View,” a beautiful collection
of original paintings inspired
by her own backyard
bird feeder. Using images captured
on a feeder camera, Paige
reimagines these fleeting moments
in paint — revealing the
color, character and charm of her
feathered visitors. Paige’s work
has been exhibited nationally,
collected internationally and featured
in The Artist’s Magazine,
American Art Collector and Fine
Art America.
A Malden resident, Paige’s
Because Your Family Deserves
Support at Every Stage.
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To Learn More or Schedule a Tour,
Contact Jill Hemeon at 857-337-8850
or jhemeon@legacylifecare.org
artistic roots run deep. Her
great-grandfather, Alfred Lowe,
trained at the Museum of Fine
Arts School in Boston and later
served as senior restorer at the
MFA. Originally from Huntsville,
Alabama, she studied at the Etobicoke
School of the Arts in Toronto
before earning her BFA
in Illustration from the Savannah
College of Art and Design
(SCAD), where she was honored
by both SCAD and the New York
Society of Illustrators.
The exhibition runs through
November 29. You can meet her
in person for free at the Artist Reception
on Friday, November 7,
Malden artist Paige Wallis (Courtesy
photo)
from 6:00-8:00 p.m. at The Gallery@57
(57 Pleasant St. in Malden).
Sponsored by Creative Malden,
a portion of the proceeds of
the sale of her original works and
prints will be donated to Communitas,
a local nonprofit organization
that provides services
to individuals with intellectual
and developmental disabilities.
׉	 7cassandra://xk_T7f-up7ODYcFYC_k6ig4vJCTHzQFJ4VamtODcZbA4` imu|հ׉E	\THE MALDEN ADVOCATE–Friday, October 31, 2025
Page 13
First Annual Bread of Life Halloween-themed
bowling fundraiser a great success
(Advocate photos by Tara Vocino)
he Young Professional Advisory
Board hosted the first
annual Bread of Life Halloween-themed
bowling fundraiser,
T
raising more than $3,500 for the
nonprofit, nondenominational,
faith-based food security organization
at Mixx 360 on Sunday
afternoon.
Bread of Life Development Director Patty Kelly,
dressed as a witch, with her husband, Frank
“The Three Stooges,” shown from left to right:
Steven Richard, John Nadolny and Anthony
Specialize. The lane is sponsored by Tax Shop
Financials.
Team “The Doucette’s,” shown from left to right: Front row: brother
Thomas Doucette, sister-in-law Nina Doucette, niece Kellie Doucette,
sister-in-law Judy Doucette and Bread of Life Development Director
Patty Kelly; back row: nephews Benjamin and Joshua Doucette,
husband Frank Kelly Sr. and son Frank Kelly Jr.
Team “Gutter Ghouls,” shown from left to right,
are Caroline McElligott, Janet McElligott, Obi
Ofokansi, Dante Carillo, Casey Addonizio, Frank
Kelly Jr. and Anthony McElligott.
Team “The Bowled and the Beautiful,” shown
from left to right: Patty Kelly, Despina Makredes,
Tammy DeSimone, Annamaria Georgopoulos
and Phylis Clark.
Team “Spare Time” based out of Malden
Overcoming Addiction, shown from
left to right: Patricia Armstrong, Carol
Ann Desiderio, Brian Slater and Karen
Andrews.
Team “Best Old Ladies,” shown from
left to right: Mary Beth Leon, Elizabeth
Lombardi, Cindy Robillard and Gail
Rufo.
Team “Le Bowlers,” shown from left
to right: Colby Doran, Thomas Pino,
Thomas Brodeur, William Pierce, William
Brandon and Paul Sampson.
Team “The Melrose Amateurs,” shown
from left to right: Craig Brandon,
Andrew Landry, Susan Landry, William
Brandon and Sara Brandon.
Bread of Life’s Young Professional Advisory Board hosted the event. Shown from left to right are
members Dante Carrillo, Anthony McElligott, Frank Kelly Jr., Daniel Urchuk, Julie Bourgea, Harrison
Bond, Jake Carey, Obi Ofokansi, Lisa Speziale and Tara Vocino during Sunday afternoon’s First Annual
Halloween-themed Bread of Life bowling fundraiser at Mixx 360.
Team “Creatures of the Night,” shown from left to right: Maryanne
Trevisan, Macy Dagitt, Fiona Germain, Daniel Urchuk, Paul
Germain and Renee Donnelly.
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THE MALDEN ADVOCATE–Friday, October 31, 2025
Malden High Girls Soccer & Girls Volleyball
Teams Tourney-Bound!
Golden Tornado Spikers hit (long!) road vs. Springfield; Blue &
Gold Booters await seeding call sometime today
By Steve Freker
W
hen they put the whole
kit and kaboodle of MIAA
State Tournament configurations
— the “true” State Tourney,
using the whole map —
they TOLD us there would be
days like this.
And road trips like the one
that Head Coach Dan Jurkowski
and his Malden High School
Golden Tornado Girls Volleyball
Team faced yesterday. How’s a
94.3-mille trip to play at Springfield
Central High School last
night grab you? That’s what
Malden was facing yesterday: a
four-hour-plus roundtrip in the
first round of the MIAA Division
1 Girls Volleyball State Tournament
preliminary game.
At least Coach Jurkowski, who
grew up in Western Mass. and
was a three-sport standout at
Belchertown High School, moving
on to graduate from UMass
Amherst, doesn’t need a GPS to
ramble 100-plus miles down the
Mass. Pike to find Springfield.
“It is what it is, when you’re
down in the second half of the
Power Rankings, you get what
you can get,” said Coach Jurkowski,
whose team won eight
of its last 10 games at an early
.500 start, finishing 14-6 overall.
The seedings are deceptive,
considering the seedings of
the two teams, with Springfield
Central (16-3) the 32nd seed (of
33 teams) and Malden (14-6) the
33rd and final seed.
The winner of last night’s
matchup for the Bob Uecker “upgrade”
“must be in the front row”
tomorrow, Saturday, November
1, on the road against undefeated
and #1 seed Chelmsford (200)
at 5:00 p.m. Chelmsford is the
only undefeated team in the
state’s Division 1 field.
“We are happy at how we finMalden
Varsity Girls Volleyball Head Coach Dan Jurkowski and the
Golden Tornado team were scheduled to open in the MIAA Division 1
State Girls Volleyball Tournament on the road at Springfield Central
last night at 6:00 (after Advocate press time). (Courtesy/Malden Athletics)
ished the regular season,” Coach
Jurkowski said. “We know what
we are up against, but we will
show up. We will be ready to
compete.”
Playing in a fifth straight State
Tournament, Girls Volleyball
happens to own the school’s longest-running
postseason qualifying
streak, tied with its Spring
Season Boys Volleyball brothers,
who also have competed after
the regular season in five consecutive
years. Boys Volleyball also is
coached by Jurkowski, who has
overseen a rapid rise in interest
and popularity in the sport of
volleyball — for girls and boys
— in Malden in the past seven
to eight years.
“We’ve been fortunate that a
lot of younger kids have been
getting involved in volleyball
through the many clinics and
offseason opportunities that
have become available through
our partnership with Malden
Recreation,” Coach Jurkowski
said. “It’s great to see.”
Malden was looking for continued
leadership from senior
captains Rashmi KC, Sania Chen
and Namaicka Jeune as the postseason
unfolded out West yesable
to turn it around this year
and challenge for a state tournament
berth, but we did a lot
better than that,” said Coach Caceda,
whose team awaits tomorrow’s
soccer seedings meeting
with the MIAA.
Malden may have not challenged
for the Greater Boston
League championship this season
— despite a dozen victories
— but it played competitive
soccer day in and day out,
despite an acute lack of overall
varsity experience. The Tornados
leaned heavily on senior
captains Brenda Darisse, Mercedes
Costa Aispuro and Maria
Couto Martins, who provided
leadership and some goal scoring
among them. The Malden junior
class was especially solid this
season, led by captain Amanda
Berliner, along with Meriam
Bouchtout, Nyla Pierre, Ava Lacasse
and Imane Agoumad.
The goaltending was an outThe
Malden Varsity Girls Soccer Team and Head Coach Rick Caceda
are ready to go and compete in the MIAA Division 2 State Girls Soccer
Tournament. Seedings are expected to be announced tomorrow
(Saturday), and the Golden Tornado team could play a game as early
as Monday in the preliminary round. (Courtesy/Malden Athletics)
terday. It is a veteran team this
year with eight seniors all told,
including Katelynn Vo, Danielle
Harrington, Gabby Lemus, Avani
Chhetri and Sorin Mamouzette.
Other Varsity players include juniors
Raquel Ferreira, Maliya Kazadi
and Ly Nguyen and sophomores
Xiaohui Li, Alexis Lee and
Hadassa Pierre-Rene.
***
Malden Girls Soccer
wanted to improve on
last season; Tornados
did that... and more
Malden Girls Soccer Head
Coach Rick Caceda went to his
first-ever New England Patriots
game this past Sunday. He has
something in common with that
Mike Vrabel-led juggernaut so
far this season. Like the Patriots,
who had a dismal season last
year and are experiencing a renaissance
this season at 6-2, Caceda’s
Malden team — which
slogged through a dreary 4-14
fall last year — has also “flipped
the script.” Heading into this
year’s MIAA Division 2 State Girls
Soccer Tournament, Malden carries
a 12-5-3 record into the postseason,
the Golden Tornado program’s
best finish in years.
“We expected we would be
and-out revelation. Not only did
goaltender Sofia Leon shine just
about every game, recording a
whopping EIGHT shutouts in 18
outings‚ she is only a freshman!
“We certainly did not expect to
get what we received from Sofia
in the goal this year,” Caceda
said. “She [Leon] did a fantastic
job and did her best to keep us
in a lot of games.”
Caceda said he is sure his team
will continue to bring a show of
confidence and hard work into
the postseason, which is expected
to begin Monday with a road
preliminary game.
The Malden Girls Soccer team,
in addition to the players already
mentioned in this report, includes
senior Thalyta Andrade,
junior Maya Pedraza-Alexander,
sophomores Wiam Saadouni
and Brianna Darisse and freshmen
Khadija Diagne and Gabriella
“Gabby” Sanchez Martinez.
׉	 7cassandra://wFYyxZcDCjEOaiKtl-igPhqIRut1M3ygjOWus2g_9kg6E` imu|հ׉ETHE MALDEN ADVOCATE–Friday, October 31, 2025
Page 15
Malden’s McGuffie unstoppable again:
225 yards, 4 TDs vs. Revere
Patriots outlast Tornados in 40-36 scoreboard assault for both teams
By Steve Freker
he ghost of John Madden
might have been walking
along the sidelines Friday night;
he was definitely spotted around
the Della Russo Stadium scoreboard.
With the way the Malden-Revere
football battle went
that evening, it was most definitely
more akin to a video game
than a high school game.
Just look at some of the numbers
that blew up off the field Friday,
particularly from Malden’s
#2, sophomore running back
Jayden McGuffie. For the night,
it was “All Jayden, All the Time” for
Malden. Every time he touched
the ball — and he touched it a
lot! — it seemed something remarkable
might happen. On Friday,
usually it did. McGuffie carried
the ball 29 times for 225
yards and scored four touchdowns
and three two-point conversion
runs. Remarkably, those
are signature numbers for most
high school running backs, and
they are huge for a single game,
but McGuffie has put up high
ones in his career.
Still, scoring 28 points in one
game is indeed a second-best.
Last year against Somerville, in a
42-36 loss, McGuffie scored ALL
of Malden’s points.
He nearly did that as well in
Friday night’s game, another
high-scoring loss for Malden,
40-36, at Revere. Malden went
to 2-5 overall with the result, 2-3
in the Greater Boston League.
Revere
0
6
22
14
T
For Revere, it was just the Patriots’
second win of the season (25,
2-3 GBL).
For the second game of the
last three, Malden scored 30
points or more and came away
empty, despite another remarkable
performance by McGuffie,
who earned Boston Herald
“Player of the Week” honors for
his big game.
McGuffie is in the midst of a
tremendous season, already
over 1,000 yards for the second
straight season (1,085 on
123 carries), 14 touchdowns,
10 two-point conversions and
104 points total — in just seven
games, with four remaining.
The 104 points is second in
all of Division 3. The season McGuffie
is having, Madden Football
might want to consider putting
Malden’s McGuffie on their
next cover!
But for all McGuffie’s heroics.
Malden’s defense just could not
stop Revere when it had to do it.
“When you have a player like
Jayden [McGuffie] putting up
numbers like that, we have to
play defense or it does not matter
how many points we score,”
FOOTBALL LINESCORE: REVERE 40, MALDEN 36
Malden
0
8
14 — 36
12 — 40
First quarter
Revere — Mario Ramirez 3-yard run (rush failed)
Second quarter
Malden — Jayden McGuffie 6-yard run (Jayden McGuffie run)
Revere — Mario Ramirez 80-yard run (rush failed)
Revere — Anthony Pelatere 24-yard run (Reda Atoui pass from
SCOREBOARD TELLS THE
STORY: The 40-36 final was an
offensive explosion on Friday
night in Revere with the Patriots
topping Malden. Defense was
not in the cards very often for
either team, on a night when
scoring was paramount. (Advocate
Photo)
Reda Atoui)
Malden — Jayden McGuffie 60-yard run (rush failed)
Malden — Jayden McGuffie 2-yard run (Jayden McGuffie run)
Third quarter
Revere — Anthony Pelatere 21-yard run (Jose Fuentes run)
Fourth quarter
Malden — Billy Gavin 52-yard run (rush failed)
Revere — Reda Atoui 4-yard run (rush failed)
Revere — Reda Atoui 25-yard run (rush failed)
Malden — Jayden McGuffie 3-yard run (Jayden McGuffie run)
Location:
Malden, MA
Job Description:
* Be able to acquire and maintain a certification for the
State Inspection License. Perform light duty mechanical
preventive duties, including Fleet preventive maintenance.
* State Inspection Services
* Miscellaneous shop duties
Requirements:
* Valid driver’s license with good driving history
* Possess or pass the required State Inspector License
Hours:
Tuesday through Friday, 8:30 AM to 5:30 PM
Saturday 8:00 AM to 3:00 PM
* Rate will be based on experience
Contact:
Ed Hyde or David Morovitz
Call: 781-322-9401
Email: ehyde@maldentrans.com
Website: www.maldentrans.com
said Malden High Head Coach
Witche Exilhomme. “They could
not stop us when we had the
ball, but we didn’t stop them either
and they scored one more
time than us in the fourth quarter.”
Every
time Revere scored a TD,
Malden raced right back to tie
it, until the fourth quarter when
Patriot quarterback Reda Aloui
busted out to score two TDs in
the span of 2 1/2 minutes to put
Revere out to a 40-30 lead with
less than 4 minutes to play.
Despite it being a night when
Revere seemed to run the ball
at will, it was actually a long
pass completion from Aloui to
Mario Ramirez that essentially
sealed Malden’s fate. On a third
and 12 play on Malden’s 45-yard
UNSTOPPABLE | SEE PAGE 17
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THE MALDEN ADVOCATE–Friday, October 31, 2025
VOTE | FROM PAGE 1
tee members, one in each Ward.
Turnout numbers will be difficult
to gauge, particularly with
the absence of a mayoral race.
The Councillor-at-Large race is
expected to generate interest
and more voters than the usual
18-22 percent expected in most
non-mayor’s race years.
There is no mayoral election in
the 2025 cycle, as longtime Mayor
Gary Christenson was reelected
to a record fourth consecutive
four-year team in 2023 and
still has two full years remaining
on his present term. Should
he choose to seek reelection
to an also unprecedented fifth
four-year term, that would be
his choice for the 2027 municipal
election.
There are six candidates for
Councillor-at-Large: three incumbents
and three challengers.
In the order of listing on
the ballot, incumbents Karen
Colón Hayes, Carey McDonald
and Craig Spadafora are all
seeking reelection. Challengers
are Mohammad Abu-Taha and
Solomon Davidoff, both political
newcomers, and Michelle
Luong, who is a former School
Committee member.
Colón Hayes and McDonald
are each seeking a third twoyear
term, Spadafora was first
elected in 2003 and is seeking his
12th consecutive term, as one
of the longest serving Councillors-at-Large
in Malden history.
There are contested City Councillor
races in Ward 1 and Ward
6 in this election. In Ward 1, incumbent
Peg Crowe is seeking
reelection to an eighth consecutive
term and is being challenged
by political newcomer
Brynn Garrity. In Ward 6, incumbent
City Councillor Stephen
Winslow seeks his third term for
reelection facing off in a rematch
from the 2023 election against
Jerry Leone, a former Ward 6
School Committee member.
All other City Councillor incumbents
are running unopposed
and will be reelected
Tuesday: Paul Condon (Ward 2),
the longest-serving Ward City
Councillor in Malden history,
City Council President Amanda
Linehan (Ward 3) and Councillors
Ryan O’Malley (Ward 4), Ari
Taylor (Ward 5), Chris Simonelli
(Ward 7) and Jadeane Sica
(Ward 8).
There are three contested
School Committee races: in Ward
1, Ward 4 and Ward 7. Incumbent
Ward 4 School Committee member
Dawn Macklin, in her second
term, won a preliminary election
challenge from two challengers.
She finished first in a close race
and will face off against Abeer
A. Annab of Mountain Avenue,
who finished second in the preliminary
election. Another incumbent
School Committee
member being challenged on
Tuesday is longtime rep Michael
Drummey, of Oxford Street in
Ward 1. He will face off against
political newcomer Kimberly M.
Gillette of 7 Tufts St. A third contested
School Committee race
is in Ward 7, where incumbent
Keith Bernard of Almont Street
is seeking reelection to a third
term. He is being challenged by
Nichole Dawn Mossalam of Essex
Street.
Peter T. Piazza, of 1 Manley TerLIMITED
POWERS OF APPOINTMENTS
n the context of an irrevocable
trust, a provision can be
included to provide for much
more flexibility insofar as ultimate
distribution of trust assets
is concerned.
A limited or special power
of appointment provision can
be incorporated into the document
to allow the Settlor (sometimes
referred to as Donor or
Grantor) of the trust to effectively
change which beneficiaries
will ultimately receive the
principal of the trust and can
also decide upon the timing of
those distributions.
It should be noted that MassHealth
hearing officers, Superior
Court judges and Appellate
Court judges are of the opinion
that reserving such a power
in an irrevocable trust does
not taint the trust and result in
I
the assets being “countable” for
MassHealth eligibility purposes.
The Trustee of an irrevocable
income only Trust may also
have the power to “appoint” the
trust principal to a class of individuals
consisting of the Settlors
children or other issue, such as
grandchildren or great grandchildren.
Appointing assets is
equivalent to distributing assets.
Therefore, the Trustee of
such a Trust could appoint any
portion of the trust principal to
a descendant of the Settlor of
the Trust.
For MassHealth purposes, if
at all possible, it would certainly
make sense for the Trustee to
not exercise such power of appointment
until five years have
elapsed since the assets were
first transferred to the irrevocable
trust. It should also be noted
that once the assets of the
trust are appointed to a son or
daughter, for example, that son
or daughter is legally free to do
whatever he or she wants to do
with those assets.
A limited power of appointment
provision in an irrevocable
Trust can also be exercised
via the Settlor’s Last Will and Testament
by including the necessary
provision in the Last Will
and Testament itself and then
submitting it to the probate
court and having it allowed
upon the Settlor’s death.
If the Settlor of the irrevocable
trust decides down the
road that he or she would rather
distribute assets of the Trust
to some or all of the grandchildren,
the limited power of appointment
provision will allow
for that flexibility. If the Settlor
had a falling out with a son or
daughter, the Settlor could effectively
disinherit that son or
daughter by appointing the
trust principal to the Settlor’s
other children via his or her
Last Will and Testament. Such
a provision provides a substantial
amount of control over the
ultimate distribution of the Settlor’s
estate.
The limited power of appointment
is “limited” because the
Settlor cannot appoint any of
the trust principal to the Settlor’s
estate, the Settlor’s creditors,
or the creditors of the Settlor’s
estate.
Joseph D. Cataldo is an estate planning/elder law attorney,
Certified Public Accountant, Certified Financial Planner, AICPA Personal
Financial Specialist and holds a master’s degree in taxation.
race, is running unopposed for
Ward 6 School Committee and
will be reelected to replace outgoing
three-term member Joseph
Gray, the only incumbent in
either body not seeking reelection.
Incumbent School Committee
Vice Chairperson Jennifer
Spadafora (Ward 3) and members
Robert McCarthy Jr. (Ward
2), Elizabeth J. Hortie (Ward 5),
Keith E. Bernard (Ward 7) and
Sharyn Rose-Zeiberg (Ward 8)
are all running unopposed and
will be reelected in Tuesday’s
election.
***
Where to vote in Malden
on Election Day
Following are the locations of
Malden polling places to vote
on Tuesday, November 4
WARD 1
Ward 1, Precinct 1 — Ferryway
School Cafeteria, 150 Cross St.
Ward 1, Precinct 2 — Ferryway
School Cafeteria, 150 Cross St.
Ward 1, Precinct 3 — Ferryway
School Cafeteria, 150 Cross St.
WARD 2
Ward 2, Precinct 1 — Community
Room, 189 Pearl St.
Ward 2, Precinct 2 — Irish
American, Main Hall (left), 177
West St.
Ward 2, Precinct 3 — Irish
American, Main Hall (right), 177
West St.
WARD 3
Ward 3, Precinct 1 — Beebe
School, K-4 Gym, 401 Pleasant St.
Ward 3, Precinct 1A — Beebe
School, K-4 Gym, 401 Pleasant St.
Ward 3, Precinct 2 — Beebe
School, Music Room, 401 Pleasant
St.
Ward 3, Precinct 3 — Beebe
School, Music Room, 401 Pleasant
St.
WARD 4
Ward 4, Precinct 1 — Early
Learning Center (ELC) Gym (left),
257 Mountain Ave.
Ward 4,Precinct 2 — Senior
Center, Auditorium, 17 Washington
St.
Ward 4, Precinct 3 — ELC Gym
(right), 257 Mountain Ave.
WARD 5
Ward 5, Precinct 1 — Salemwood
School Fieldhouse Cafeteria
(left), 529 Salem St.
Ward 5, Precinct 2 — Forestdale
School Cafeteria (left), 74
Sylvan St.
Ward 5, Precinct 3 — Forestdale
School Cafeteria (center),
74 Sylvan St.
Ward 5, Precinct 3A — Forestdale
School Cafeteria (right), 74
Sylvan St.
WARD 6
Ward 6, Precinct 1 — 630 Salem
St. Community Room, 630
Salem St.
Ward 6, Precinct 2 — Club 24,
Members Room, 787 Salem St.
Ward 6, Precinct 3 — Malden
Moose, Main Hall, 562 Broadway
WARD 7
Ward 7, Precinct 1 — Ferryway
School, Library Lobby, 150
Cross St.
Ward 7, Precinct 2 — DAV
Building, 85 Willow St.
Ward 7, Precinct 3 — Suffolk
Manor, Community Room, 312
Bryant St.
Ward 7, Precinct 3A — Suffolk
Manor, Community Room, 312
Bryant St.
WARD 8
Ward 8, Precinct 1 — Linden
School Cafeteria (left), 29
Wescott St.
Ward 8, Precinct 2 — Linden
School, Cafeteria (center), 29
Wescott St.
Ward 8, Precinct 3 — Linden
School, Cafeteria (right), 29
Wescott St.
Subscribe to the Advocate Online!
www.advocatenews.net
׉	 7cassandra://nMub5-6rQKA0V04FwDd6yk0uoE0c1RDmyoiElhNG7tg1` imu|հ׉E$THE MALDEN ADVOCATE–Friday, October 31, 2025
Page 17
As Halloween nears,
potential fire hazards lurk
This info is based on a press release from
the National Fire Protection Association®.
From decorations and candles to
flowing costumes, Halloween fun
can quickly turn frightening if fire
safety is overlooked. According to
the National Fire Protection Association®
(NFPA), between 2019
and 2023, an annual average of
832 home structure fires began
with decorations, resulting in three
deaths, 28 injuries and $17 million
in direct property damage. Forty-seven
percent of these fires occurred
because the decorations
were too close to a heat source;
approximately 33 percent started
with candles.
“Halloween is a festive holiday
for people of all ages, but it’s important
to recognize where potential
fire dangers lurk. By following a
few simple steps, families can help
keep the holiday fun and spooky,
while still staying safe,” said NFPA’s
Vice President of Outreach and Advocacy,
Lorraine Carli.
NFPA offers these tips and
guidelines for celebrating Halloween
with fire safety in mind:
Costumes: When choosing a
costume, stay away from long trailing
fabric; if your child is wearing
a mask, make sure the eye holes
are large enough so they can see
clearly.
Flashlights: Give children flashlights
to carry for lighting or glow
sticks as part of their costume.
Decorations: Dried flowers,
cornstalks and crepe paper catch
UNSTOPPABLE | FROM PAGE 15
line and the score 30-28, Revere,
and 8:11 left on the game clock,
Aloui threw a bomb to Ramirez,
who caught the ball at Malden’s
4-yard line. Aloui went in to score
on the next play to put Revere
ahead 34-28.
Malden was still within reach
at this point and drove the ball
back down the field to about
midfield and would have been
third down and 1 at the Revere
33-yard line. Then disaster struck
in the form of a penalty flag. Malden
has had issues with way too
many penalties this season — often
at inopportune moments —
and this was one of them. The
personal foul — unsportsmanfire
easily; keep all decorations
away from open flames and other
heat sources like light bulbs
and heaters. Remember to keep
exits clear of decorations so nothing
blocks escape routes.
Candles: Only use battery-operated
candles or glow sticks in jacko’-lanterns;
if you choose to use
real candles, be sure to place them
well away from anything that can
burn and far enough out of the
way of trick-or-treaters, doorsteps,
walkways and yards.
Smoke alarms: Make sure all
smoke alarms in the home are
working.
More Halloween safety info can
be found at nfpa.org. For frightfully
fun activities for kids and families,
download the free NFPA Halloween
Fire Safety Bundle featuring
Sparky the Fire Dog® at https://
sparkyschoolhouse.org/resource/
printable-halloween-bundle/
Founded in 1896, NFPA is a
global self-funded nonprofit organization
devoted to eliminating
death, injury, property and
economic loss due to fire, electrical
and related hazards. The association
delivers information and
knowledge through more than
300 consensus codes and standards,
research, training, education,
outreach and advocacy; and
by partnering with others who
share an interest in furthering the
NFPA mission.
like conduct after the whistle —
penalty pushed Malden all the
way back 15 yards to the Tornado
49-yard line. A run by McGuffie
went nowhere, and an interception
on a batted ball in the
Malden backfield followed as
the penalty led to the turnover.
Revere drove the ball down the
field on runs by Martinez and
Aloui, and Aloui stuck in his second
TD of the fourth quarter
with 4:21 left to play and a 40-28
score in favor of Revere.
Down two scores, Malden did
not throw in the towel, engineering
one last drive on some
more McGuffie runs and a 12yard
keeper by Billy Gavin. McGuffie
stuck in his fourth touchdown
and points 25 and 26 on
OBITUARIES
Betty A. (Sullivan)
Iannuzzi
Of Malden.
Passed away
October 18th.
She was born
on June 12,
1939 in Everett.
The daughter
of Frederick
and Olga (Herrstrom) Sullivan.
She was raised in Everett until
moving to Malden with her family
when she was 15 years old. Betty
graduated from Malden High
School in 1957. She was a longtime
resident of Malden and resided
on Charles Street for over
40 years before moving to the
Monsignor Neagle Senior Housing
complex in 2019.
Dear sister of Kenneth and
the late Dorothy Harding, Fred
Sullivan, Richard Sullivan, Shirley
Neagle, Marian Macleod,
and Frank Sullivan. Also pre-deceased
by her longtime companion
Lorraine Fantozzi.Betty
was the beloved aunt of numerous
nieces and nephews and as
such, being the youngest of her
many siblings, Betty was the default
babysitter for a number of
her siblings’ children. Aunt Betty
was loving and fun but you did
not test her. Betty enjoyed the
many family get-togethers and
holidays held throughout each
year and was sure to provide humorous
thoughts and commentary.
She especially loved the annual
sibling and in-law Christmas
parties that were rotated each
year by the various siblings and
the night on a 3-yard, then two
more points and 28 points for
the night.
The game was back-and-forth
all night, with Revere striking first
in the first quarter on a Ramirez
3-yard TD and led, 6-0, after one
period. Malden came right back
early in the second and took the
lead on a 8-yard TD by McGuffie
and the conversion, 8-6.
Then was a wild seesaw for the
rest of the period. Two TDs by Revere
— 80-yard run by Ramirez
and 24-yard run by Anthony Peletare
for a 21-yard TD run for a
20-8 lead — then, rapid fire, a sizzling,
60-yard TD run by McGuffie
and then, after senior Matthew
Candelario Da Costa recovered
a Revere fumble, a 59the
Christmas song and hymns
sing-a-longs.
Betty worked for various manufacturing/assembly
corporations
and in retirement worked
assisting and bus driving seniors
to and from appointments
and shopping. Betty was a loyal
friend and was noted by friends
and family for her quick wit and
sassiness. She was a lover of animals,
large convertibles, and the
beach, especially in Maine and
Revere Beach. She thoroughly enjoyed
spontaneously singing old
tunes. She will be greatly missed.
Phyllis A. (Landry)
D'Entremont
A lifelong resident
of Malden,
passed
away on Friday,
October 24th
after a brief illness.
Phyl -
lis was born
in Malden in
1943, the daughter of Ralph and
Frances Landry. She was raised
and educated in Malden, graduating
from Malden High School
with the Class of 1961. In 1964,
she married her sweetheart,
Charles D'Entremont, and the
two settled down together in
Malden. Phyllis had worked as
an accountant and bookkeeper
over the years for several different
companies, including Fleet
Bank, Bay State Ambulance, and
the Dexter House Nursing Home.
She was active in the communiyard
scoring drive capped by a
McGuffie 2-yard run and a 22-20
Malden lead at halftime.
***
EXTRA POINTS: Malden was
right back in action last night,
hosting non-leaguer Whittier
Tech at Macdonald Stadium.
It was Senior Night for Football
Players (16) and Cheerleaders
(9)... This was Malden’s
final scheduled home game,
though there might be one (or
two) more depending on the
schedule of the two non-playoff
games coming next week (Nov.
7-8) and the following week
(Nov. 14-15)... This year’s 138th
Malden-Medford Thanksgiving
Day game is on the road at Medford
at 10:00 a.m. on Thursday,
ty, participating in CYO at Sacred
Hearts, being a Den Mother and
committee member of the local
boy scouts. She was a founding
member for the Junior Variety's
show at the high school.
She kept herself busy with ceramics,
needlepoint, and knitting.
Phyllis touched many lives
and leaves behind many loving
family and friends.
She is the beloved wife of
Charles D'Entremont, devoted
mother of Craig (Jamie Faith)
D'Entremont of Ringe, NH, cherished
sister of Ralph Landry Jr.
of Melrose, and the late Joan
Landry-Nerden, and Margaret
(Peggy) Landry-Robinson, proud
grandmother of Cory, Jessica
and Cameron, and great grandmother
of Addy Faye, Charlie,
Eddie, and Marleigh, and loving
sister in law of Carol Memmolo
of Malden, Mary Campos of
CA, Diane LaFauci of NH, Denise
Lawrence of TX, Martina VerPault
of FL, Joe D'Entremont of MD,
John D'Entremont of, TX, Stephen
D'Entremont of Malden, Michael
D'Entremont of NH, Kevin D'Entremont
of Malden, and the late
Kay Perry, Sue Lombardi, and Bill
D'Entremont.
Visitation was held at the
Weir-MacCuish Golden Rule Funeral
Home, Malden, on Tuesday,
October 28th, with Funeral services
on Wed, October 29th. Interment
will take place at a later
date in Holy Cross Cemetery. Donations
can be made to the Dana
Fiber Cancer Institute (https://
www.dana-farber.org/how-youcan-help/ways-to-give).
November
27... Jayden McGuffie
has scored 10 touchdowns
in the past three games for Malden,
something no other Malden
player is believed to have
accomplished... Malden quarterback
Billy Gavin was the second-leading
rusher for the visiting
Tornados against Revere,
with 31 yards on six carries... For
some reason, Revere reported
to the Boston newspapers that
the team rushed for 420 yards
against Malden. No way. It must
have been a typographical error;
we hope it was not intentionally
reported that way. IF a team
rushed for 420 yards, it would
probably be a school and league
record for a single game. Maybe
300? Maybe.
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THE MALDEN ADVOCATE–Friday, October 31, 2025
Savvy Senior
by Jim Miller
How to Use Medicare’s Star Ratings
System During Open Enrollment
Dear Savvy Senior,
What does Medicare factor into
their star rating system? I need to
find a new Medicare plan during
the open enrollment period and
want to get it right this time.
Medicare Shopper
Dear Shopper,
If you’re shopping and comparing
Medicare Advantage
plans (the alternative to original
Medicare) or Part D prescription
drug plans during the open enrollment
(Oct. 15 – Dec. 7), you’ll
likely find a dizzying number
of options to choose from. The
Medicare star rating system is a
terrific tool to help you narrow
down your choices. Here’s what
you should know.
Understanding Star Ratings
The Medicare star ratings,
which you’ll find in the Medicare’s
online Plan Finder tool at
Medicare.gov/plan-compare,
offers a shorthand look at how
Medicare Advantage and Part D
plans measure up for quality and
member experience.
In this annual rating system,
five stars means excellent, four
means above average, three
means average, two means below
average, and one means
poor.
Medicare Advantage plans
(but not Part D plans) that get
at least a four-star rating get bonus
payments from Medicare,
which they can use to provide
extra benefits.
You should also know that
plans that get fewer than three
stars for three consecutive years,
can be terminated by Medicare,
so plans are incentivized to keep
their quality up. Such low-performing
plans show up on Plan
Finder with an upside-down red
triangle that has an exclamation
point inside.
People in these low-performing
plans can switch to ones rated
three stars or better during
Medicare’s Special Enrollment
Period for Disenrollment, which
is between Jan. 1 and Dec. 31.
How Ratings Are Comprised
Part D and Medicare Advantage
star ratings comprised up
to 40 or 30 quality and performance
measures, respectively.
Ratings for both types of plans
are based partly on member experience,
customer service, and
plan performance.
Part D ratings also assess prescription
drug safety and pricing,
while Medicare Advantage ratings
also look at whether members
are staying healthy and if
ones with chronic conditions get
the tests and treatments typically
recommended to them.
Be aware that five-star plans
are few and far between. The
Centers for Medicare & Medicaid
Services (CMS) has revised
the Medicare star rating methodology
in recent years, making
it extremely hard for a plan
to earn five stars.
In 2025, just 2 percent of people
with Medicare Advantage/
Part D plans and 5 percent in
stand-alone Part D plans have
five stars. Four-star plans are
much easier to find, as more than
70 percent of people with Medicare
Advantage are enrolled in
them.
Shopping Tips
Here are some tips to consider
when evaluating Medicare Advantage
and Part D star ratings
during open enrollment:
• Don’t choose or reject a
Medicare Advantage or Part D
plan only because of its star rating.
Costs and access to services
or health providers should be
your top priority when choosing
a plan. But a star rating could
be your deciding factor when
choosing between two plans
with similar out-of-pocket costs
and coverage.
• Don’t panic if a plan’s 2026
star rating is slightly lower than
its 2025 rating. The downgrade
could be due to a blip in the way
the ratings are computed from
year to year. It’s best to look at a
plan’s star-rating history over several
years.
• If you’re fine with the cost
and coverage of a plan but concerned
about its star rating, click
through the Medicare Plan Finder
for the star ratings subcategories.
You’ll be able to see how the
plan scored in the specific quality
and member satisfaction yardsticks
that matter to you.
If you have questions or need
help choosing a plan, contact
your State Health Insurance Assistance
Program (877-839-2675,
ShipHelp.org), which offers free
unbiased Medicare counseling in
person or over the phone.
Send your senior questions to: Savvy Senior, P.O. Box 5443, Norman, OK 73070, or visit SavvySenior.
org. Jim Miller is a contributor to the NBC Today show and author of “The Savvy Senior” book.
1. On Oct. 31, 1962, what film starring Joan Crawford and Bette
Davis debuted in the USA?
2. What sport has involved walking teams in age categories from
over-50s–70s and had a World Nations Cup in October?
3. How are Shakespeare’s “The Comedy of Errors” twins and those
in the Laurel & Hardy film “Our Relations” similar?
4. November is National Pomegranate Month; are pomegranates
in the Bible or Torah?
5. Where is Jerome — the USA’s largest ghost town and “Wickedest
Town in the West”?
6. What does the symbol of an 8 on its side mean?
7. On Nov. 1, 1938, what horse with a name including a food name
won a “race of the century” at Pimlico in Baltimore?
8. Halloween derived from Samhain, which was what kind of festival:
Celtic, French or German?
9. Why wasn’t there much Halloween celebrating during World
War II?
10. November 2 is Statehood Day in what two states named after
a Native American tribe?
11. What is Allhallowtide?
12. Reportedly, the term “trick-or-treat” originated in what century:
18th, 19th or 20th?
13. On Nov. 3, 1956, what 1939 film with a dog actress named Terry
first appeared on TV?
14. In the satire “Pumpkinification of the Divine Claudius,” who was
Claudius?
15. November 4 is Election Day; historically, what dessert was popular
on Election Day?
16. In what Shakespeare play about a dictator is “And graves have
yawn’d, and yielded up their dead... And ghosts did shriek and
squeal about the streets”?
17. On Nov. 5, 1940, FDR was elected to which of his four presidencies?
18.
The “shih” in the shih tzu dog breed is derived from a Chinese
word for what animal?
19. Where are the islets of Langerhans: Germany, “Gulliver’s Travels”
or the pancreas?
20. On Nov. 6, 1860, Abraham Lincoln won election with about
what percent of the popular vote: 40, 58 or 85?
ANSWERS
1. “What Ever Happened To Baby Jane?”
2. Walking football (soccer in the USA)
3. The plot involves two sets of twins being
confused for each other.
4. In both
5. The Black Hills in Arizona
6. Infinity
7. Seabiscuit (FDR stopped a cabinet
meeting to listen to the race on the radio.)
8.
Celtic
9. The USA was cut off from many sugar
suppliers, resulting in sugar rationing.
10. North and South Dakota
11. The evening of Oct. 3I–Nov. 2: All Saint’s
eve, All Saints’ Day (All Hallows’) and
All Soul’s Day.
12. 20th
13. “The Wizard of Oz” (The dog Toto was
played by Terry.)
14. A Roman emperor
15. Election cake; reportedly, it was a very
large cake like a fruitcake.
16. “Julius Caesar”
17. Third
18. Lion
19. Pancreas
20. 40 (There were three candidates opposing
him.)
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Page 19
MUSINGS | FROM PAGE 7
might spot someone from Malden’s
past sneaking into Hollywood
history.
For example, the gangster
masterpiece “Public Enemy” with
Jimmy Cagney. Who’s standing
tall in a blue uniform? None
other than Malden’s own Robert
Homans as Officer Pat Burke.
Fast-forward to the swinging
’60s and the cult favorite “Good
Times” with Sonny and Cher
— yep, that’s Malden’s Richard
“Sonny” Collier (who I’ve mentioned
in the past) hustling onscreen
as “The Peddler.”
Or how about the sweeping
frontier epic “Drums Along the
Mohawk”? Sure, it starred Henry
Fonda and Claudette Colbert,
but it was Malden’s very
own Edna May Oliver who stole
the show as the feisty Mrs. McKlennar.
Those
who are fans of the
weird and wacky, check out
“Zombies on Broadway,” where
horror icon Bela Lugosi shares
the screen with former Liggett’s
Drug Store employee turned
Hollywood character actor Wally
Brown — another Maldonian
whose name appears in
the credits more often than
not. Speaking of Wally Brown,
his role in “Death Valley Days”
Season 7, Episode 14 — “A Piano
Goes West” — was short but
very sweet!
One last note of Maldonia importance
goes out to the all but
forgotten Anne Nagel. CreditJOURNALISM
| FROM PAGE 8
joys writing, photography, or exploring
their community—no
journalism experience is initially
required,” says D’Urso-Rose. “Training
for new citizen journalists will
be offered after the first of the year,
but interested participants are encouraged
to get involved now.”
In addition to reporters, the
ed with hundreds of small roles
on the silver screen, one of her
only TV appearances happens
to be on 1957’s “Circus Boy” starring
a (pre-Monkees, of course)
12-year-old Mickey Dolenz as
Corky, Noah Beery, Jr. as Uncle
Joey the Clown, and one of Errol
Flynn’s besties Guinn “Big
Boy” Williams. In Anne’s final professional
appearance, she plays
Louisa Cody — wife of Buffalo
Bill Cody. Anne, “Malden Musings”
will always remember you
and salute your success!
Hollywood’s golden age had
a little more Malden magic than
most Maldonians ever realized.
Watch them light up the screen,
you’ll like them!
Postscript: The phone went
one ringy-dingy last week and
I immediately picked up. Who
was on the other end, you ask?
None other than old friend, the
living Malden legend himself,
M.H.S. Alumni Hall of Famer Michael
Goldman. Yeah, I know I
throw the word “legend” around
quite a bit, but if you know anything
about Michael Goldman,
you know of what I speak. Well,
anyway, M.G. shared some great
news for my ears, and I will bring
it to you soon. Please stay tuned
and happy trails till next week.
—Peter is a longtime Malden
resident and a regular
contributor to The Malden
Advocate. He can be reached
at PeteL39@aol.com for comments,
compliments or criticisms.
project
seeks volunteers to assist
with interviews, story ideas, photography,
and outreach.
For more information or to get
involved with the program, contact
Anne D’Urso-Rose, Neighborhood
View Coordinator at
info@neighborhoodview.org.
To view the publication and
subscribe (for free), visit www.
neighborhoodview.org.
For Advertising with Results,
call The Advocate Newspapers
at 617-387-2200 or Info@advocatenews.net
GRANTS | FROM PAGE 9
by students for years to come.”
***
FUN FACT: Do you know how
the ukulele first came into vogue
in the United States?
Everyone associates ukuleles
with Hawaiian music and rightly
so, since that is where they
became wildly popular in the
late 1880s when three immigrants
from Portugal arrived in
Hawaii — and brought the fourstringed
instruments with them.
Three of the immigrants, Manuel
Nunes, Augusto Dias and Jose do
Espirito Santo, were woodworkers
and cabinetmakers who began
crafting ukuleles in Honolulu
after their plantation work. The
instrument was created from
a hybrid of the machete and
the Portuguese rajão and was
adapted to be made with native
koa wood. The instrument was
called “ukulele,” which translates
to “jumping flea” in Hawaiian, referring
to the rapid movement of
the players’ fingers.
~ Legal Notice ~
MALDEN HOUSING AUTHORITY
Title – Technical Assistance to the Malden Housing Authority
Request For Proposals MHA# 080425
Type of Contract – Indefinite Quantity Contract
Award Stipulation – Multiple Awards; Each Task Order will be awarded either on a Firm
Fixed Price basis with a Cost Reimbursement allowed (without increase) with backup
documents/receipts.
Proposal Due Date– Wednesday, December 10, 2025 - 2:00 P.M.
Offerors are advised that the cutoff date for questions to be submitted is 10 business days
prior to the proposal due date of 11/26/25.
Proposal Objective – The Malden Housing Authority (MHA) seeks proposals from one or
more qualified professional consultants/ trainers with the capacity to provide either specific
or a wide range of services relating to improving the MHA’s Public Housing and Section 8
Program administration, inclusive and for the purpose of on-site training for its five member
Board of Commissioners, Administrative, Maintenance staff; Fee accounting and Financial
Advising Services; Federal, State, and non-profit Grant Writing Services; Risk Management
Services; Energy Conservation, Measurement and Verification Services; Modernization and
Procurement Consulting and Admin Services; Commodity Market Utility Analysis Consultants.
Proposals should include resumes; individual/firm experience; and hourly rate of delivery
of above listed services and any additional costs., all such services directed towards
expanding and increasing MHA’s programmatic and administrative proficiency, Section
8 voucher baseline count, and ownership/development real estate portfolio opportunities,
inclusive of for-profit, tax credit and mixed finance development, under an Indefinite
Quantity Contract (IQC) for a minimum term of one (1) year, extending up to a maximum
term of five (5) consecutive years, all awards to be made subject to funding and
in the MHA’s sole discretion. The primary objectives of this Statement of Work (SOW)
are to expand and improve the MHA’s assisted and unassisted housing program abilities,
opportunities and administration; assess and improve the MHA’s compliance with
applicable federal and state laws, rules, regulations and requirements; analyze institutional
staffing needs and competencies, and provide or recommend training designed to make
all MHA staff proficient in their job assignments, corrective action and/or any other type
or kind of improvement training MHA may require or desire. Bid Documents are available
by email request at efahey@ maldenhousing.org from 11/3/25 Monday through Thursday
from 9:00 am – 3:00 pm.
The Contractor(s) selected hereunder must execute all relevant federal and state bid documents
and contract forms and provide certification(s) of required insurance. Any award made
hereunder is subject to annual appropriation. The MHA reserves the right to cancel this bid
if it is in the MHA’s best interest to do so.MHA’s best interest to do so.
For additional copies of or further information relating to this RFP, please contact:
Ed Fahey, Mod, Procurement & Facilities Director
Malden Housing Authority
630 Salem Street
Malden, MA 02148
E-mail: efahey@ maldenhousing.org
October 31, 2025
It was embraced by the Hawaiian
royal family, with King David
Kalākaua being a major patron
who incorporated it into court
music and royal performances.
This association with royalty
and Hawaiian culture solidified
its place as a national symbol,
particularly at festive events like
luaus. The Panama-Pacific International
Exposition in San Francisco
in 1915 featured a popular
Hawaiian Pavilion, fueling a
ukulele craze that spread across
the country.
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Page 20
THE MALDEN ADVOCATE–Friday, October 31, 2025
Humane Removal Service
COMMONWEALTH
WILDLIFE CONTROL
ANIMAL & BIRD REMOVAL
INCLUDING RODENTS
CALL 617-285-0023
~ School Bus Drivers Wanted ~
7D Licensed School Bus Drivers
Malden Trans is looking for reliable drivers for
the new school year. We provide ongoing training
and support for licensing requirements. Applicant
preferably lives local (Malden, Everett, Revere).
Part-time positions available and based on AM &
PM school hours....15-30 hours per week. Good
driver history from Registry a MUST! If interested,
please call David @ 781-322-9401.
CDL SCHOOL BUS DRIVER WANTED
Compensation: $28/hour
Steps Stoops Rebuilt or Repaired
Chimney Rebuilt or Repaired
House Foundation Leaks Repaired
All Basement Repairs
Chimney Inspection
Roofing & Siding
Masonry Repairs
Window Installation & Repairs
Drywall & Carpentry
Waterproofing
Advocate
Call now!
617-387-2200
advertise on the web at
www.advocatenews.net
REAL ESTATE TRANSACTIONS
BUYER1
Goode, Jarred
Harrington, Andrea
Huang, Meitong
Joshi, Keya
Mcconnell, David
Ruggles, Mary A
Santha, Esrath
Tan, Jianwen
BUYER2
Boy, Keylla
SELLER1
Mcpherson, Robert
Materi, Carrie
Himel, Efran
Denehy, Robert J
Mcsheehy, Mark A
Carreiro, Andrew
Lgv LLC
Hunter Irt
Wise, Donald W
Dossantos, Yasmin C
Yu, Fangting
School bus transportation company seeking
active CDL drivers who live LOCALLY (Malden,
Everett, Chelsea and immediate surrounding
communities).
- Applicant MUST have BOTH S and P endorsements
as well as Massachusetts school bus certificate.
Good driver history from Registry a MUST!
-
Part-time hours, BUT GUARANTEED 20-35
HOURS PER WEEK depending on experience.
Contact David @ 781-322-9401.
The Kid Does
Clean Outs
From 1 item to 1,000
* Basements * Homes * Backyards
* Commercial Buildings
The cheapest prices around!
Call Eric: (857) 322-2854
Copyrighted material previously published in Banker & Tradesman/The Commercial
Record, a weekly trade newspaper. It is reprinted with permission from the publisher,
The Warren Group. For a searchable database of real estate transactions and property
information visit: www.thewarrengroup.com.
SELLER2
Denehy, Thomas E
ADDRESS
196-198 Malden St
256 Summer St
Donahue, Alison H
Wise, Gail M
Lemos, Renata
Yau, Sung H
12 Norwood St
546 Fellsway E
22 Pratt St
23-25 Richardson St
31 Wolcott St
CITY
Malden
Malden
81 Washington St #4 Malden
Malden
Malden
Malden
Malden
Malden
DATE
10.06.25
10.09.25
10.08.25
10.07.25
10.08.25
10.09.25
10.08.25
10.08.25
PRICE
902500
570000
390000
980000
905000
680000
1115000
820000
Classifieds
׉	 7cassandra://vif7Nc2kibN0mF-mmsDP_MD9VnK3ljec0E1y43DfoLY6` imu|հ ׉ETHE MALDEN ADVOCATE–Friday, October 31, 2025
Page 21
Discount Tree Service
781-269-0914
American Exterior and
Window Corporation
Contact us for all of your
home improvement projects
and necessities.
Call Jeff or Bob
Toll Free: 1-888-744-1756
617-699-1782 / www.americanexteriorma.com
Windows, Siding, Roofing, Carpentry & More!
All estimates, consultations or inspections completed
by MA licensed supervisors. *Over 50 years experience.
*Better Business Bureau Membership.
Insured and
Registered
Complete Financing Available.
No Money Down.
We follow Social Distancing Guidelines!
FIRE • SOOT • WATER
Homeowner’s Insurance Loss Specialists
FREE CONSULTATION
1-877-SAL-SOOT
Sal Barresi, Jr. - Your fi rst call
617-212-9050
Licensed
& Insured
Free
Estimates
Carpentry * Kitchen & Bath * Roofs * Painting
Decks * Siding * Carrijohomeimprovement.com
Call 781-710-8918 * Saugus, MA
General Contractor * Interior & Exterior
For Advertising with Results,
call The Advocate Newspapers
at 617-387-2200 or Info@advocatenews.net
J.F & Son Contracting
Snow Plowing
No Job too small! Free Estimates!
Commercial & Residential
781-656-2078
- Property management & maintenance
Shoveling & removal
Landscaping, Electrical, Plumbing, Painting, Roofing, Carpentry, Framing,
Decks, Fencing, Masonry, Demolition, Gut-outs, Junk Removal & Dispersal,
Clean Ups: Yards, Garages, Attics & Basements. Truck for Hire, Bobcat Services.
Advocate
Call now!
617-387-2200
advertise on the web at
www.advocatenews.net
Professional
TREE
REMOVAL
& Cleanups
24-HOUR SERVICE
AAA Service • Lockouts
Trespass Towing • Roadside Service
Junk Car Removal
617-387-6877
26 Garvey St., Everett
MDPU 28003 ICCMC 251976
Frank Berardino
MA License 31811
● 24-Hour Service
● Emergency Repairs
BERARDINO
Plumbing & Heating
Gas Fitting ● Drain Service
Residential & Commercial Service
617.699.9383
Senior Citizen Discount
Clean-Outs!
We take and dispose
from cellars, attics,
garages, yards, etc.
Call Robert at:
781-844-0472
Classifieds
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THE MALDEN ADVOCATE–Friday, October 31, 2025
׉	 7cassandra://QPA27P5H3MaDA8P-bMjwdPoljbdMxJuZ6g52vFoRPW09` imu|հ"׉ETHE MALDEN ADVOCATE–Friday, October 31, 2025
Page 23
Like us on Facebook advocate newspaper
Facebook.com/Advocate.news.ma
~ Legal Notice ~
CITY OF MALDEN
REQUEST FOR QUALIFICATIONS
The City of Malden’s Office of Strategic Planning and Community Development (OSPCD)
is seeking qualified contractors for its Lead Hazard Control/Healthy Homes Program,
Healthy Homes Production Program, and Community Development Block Grant (CDBG)
Housing Rehabilitation Program. These programs are funded by federal grants.
Full RFQ and application documents will be available by email request at sfranklin@
cityofmalden.org starting on Monday, November 3, 2025. Applications will be accepted on a
rolling basis for as long as funds are available for these or similar grants that the City receives.
Contractors who meet the minimum standards will be prequalified to submit quotes for
rehabilitation work.
Applications will be accepted in person, via email to sfranklin@cityofmalden.org, or via
mail at the Office of Strategic Planning and Community Development, 215 Pleasant
Street, Third Floor, Malden MA 02148.
CITY OF MALDEN
Office of Strategic Planning and Community Development
October 31, 2025
1 bedroom, 1 bath furnished room for rent.
$275. per week rent. Two week deposit
plus 1 week rent required.
Call: 617-435-9047 - NO TEXT
TRINITY REAL ESTATE
Providing Real Estate Services for 18+ Years
Servicing Saugus, Melrose, Wakefield, Malden, all North Shore communities, Boston and beyond.
Stay current on all industry updates
and trends with your most trusted
neighborhood real estate resource...
317 Lynn St, Malden
Single Family Home
List price: $789,900
8 rooms | 3 bedrooms
3 baths | 1,484 square feet
Lucia Ponte,REALTOR®: 781.883.8130
24 Parrott Street. Lynn, MA 01902
Two-Family Home
List price: $779,900
11 rooms | 6 bedrooms
2.5 bath | 2,565 square feet
Michael Foulds, REALTOR®: 617.461.1952
31 1 Street, Unit, Melrose, MA 02176
ST
Apartment Rental
Rental Price: $2,600
5 rooms | 2 bedrooms
1 baths | 900 square feet
Annemarie Torcivia,REALTOR® : 781.983.5266
For a free
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contact us
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321 MAIN STREET | SAUGUS, MA | VILLAGE PARK
TrinityHomesRE.com
781.231.9800
FURNISHED ROOM FOR RENT
EVERETT
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THE MALDEN ADVOCATE–Friday, October 31, 2025
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