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Have a Safe & Happy Thanksgiving!
ADVOCATE
Vol. 28, No. 48
-FREEMalden’s
16th
www.advocatenews.net
Published Every Friday
Annual Parade of Holiday
Traditions & Christmas Tree Lighting
617-387-2200 Wednesday, November 27, 2019
Malden prepares to take
on Medford for 132nd year
By Justin McAllister
M
alden High School and
Medford will battle for
the 132nd time on Thanksgiving
morning in the second-longest
continuous high school football
rivalry in the nation.
This year's game will be
played at Medford High's Hormel
Stadium on Locust Street
in Medford with the traditional
10 o'clock start Thursday morning,
November 28.
Malden leads the series, 6655
(with 10 ties) and is looking to
make it five wins in a row for the
Blue and Gold and back-to-back
wins on the season on Thursday.
Malden topped Tech Boston in
its last game for its first win of
the season, while Medford (010)
is seeking its first win under
first-year head coach John
Curley.
Malden won last year's 131st
game at Macdonald Stadium in
Malden by a 28-25 final score.
Medford is led by junior quarSanta
greets Malden residents during last year’s Parade of Holiday Traditions.
(Photo Courtesy of Paul Hammersley)
terback Aiden Barry, who leads
the team is scoring (seven
touchdowns) leading riusher
Dash Exateur, Donovan Charles
is the third captain at 6-5, 275
and holds down the line as a
two-way tackle.
Malden is led by co-captain
seniors Jerry Mervil, Jamari Youman,
Peterson Maxis and Ishmael
Sylus.
Youman is ranked fourth in
the state in Division 1 touchdown
receptions (10) and seventh
is scoring (84 points). Youman
also has two defensive
touchdowns, one on an interception
return and a punt return
for a touchdown.
Other seniors playing in their
final game for the Tornadoes are
linemen Ray Duggan and Sebastien
Blanc, and defensive back
Kahli Hardmond.
"The seniors are really looking
forward to the Thanksgiving
game as it will be the last time
they will get to suit up with their
classmates and teammates," second-year
Malden head coach
Steve Freker said. "We hope
that the Malden fans come out
strong to support our team."
Tickets for the game are $5.00
in advance on sale at Malden
High School Athletic Office, 77
Salem St., Malden. All tickets are
$7.00 on the day of the game at
Hormel Stadium.
Debate on Malden Hospital triggers Open Meeting Law complaints
By Barbara Taormina
O
ver the past 16 months, the
Massachusetts Attorney
General’s Office of Open Government
received and reviewed
five complaints on meetings,
discussions and records related
to the Malden Hospital site and
determined there have been
four violations of the state’s
Open Meeting Law.
Four of the complaints involved
Malden officials and the
Malden Hospital Site Development
Committee. The fifth
complaint centered on communication
and deliberation
among members of Medford’s
Ad Hoc Subcommittee for Malden
Hospital.
All five complaints were filed
by Ward 3 resident Brian DeLacey,
who has long been involved
in local political and community
issues. DeLacey currently reports
local news on the Malden
News Network on Facebook,
and he recently launched Malden
After Dark, a public forum
on topics of interest to Malden,
which is also on Facebook.
Open Meeting Law guarantees
the public’s access to most
municipal meetings, minutes
and records in order to ensure
transparency in local government.
DeLacey feels his string
of complaints and the responses
from the Attorney General
demonstrate how the law supports
the public’s right to access
and information and protects
communities from decisions
and policies made behind
closed doors without the public
knowledge or input.
“Some of the issues are fundamental
to the nature of our
Democracy,” he said. “In various
ways these determinations
address key elements of Open
Meeting Law.”
The first of the five complaints
focused on the minutes from
two meetings of the Malden
Hospital Site Committee held
in January and March of 2018. In
July, DeLacey filed a complaint
with the committee about the
minutes, which he said were incomplete
and inadequate. The
committee revised the minutes,
added missing information
and released the corrected
records on Sept. 12. Still, five
days later DeLacey filed a complaint
with the Attorney General’s
office about the original version
of the minutes.
Nearly one year later, in a letter
dated Sept. 9, 2019, Assistant
Attorney General Sarah Chase
informed the city that the Malden
Hospital Site Redevelopment
Committee had violated
the Open Meeting Law by failing
to include the time and place of
the meetings and a summary of
the discussions that took place
in the original minutes. However,
because the committee had
already revised the minutes,
Chase said the AG’s office considered
the complaint resolved.
In December 2018, DeLacey
filed a second complaint with
the attorney general regarding
an email Ward 3 Councillor
John Matheson, chairperson of
the Malden Hospital Site Development
Committee, sent to City
Solicitor Kathryn Fallon, Assistant
Solicitor John McNaught
and eight follow councillors. In
the email, Matheson thanked
McNaught for his work on the
first Open Meeting Law complaint
and suggested DeLacey
had filed it “with the “intention
of harassment.”
Matheson recommended that
councillors “comply strictly to
the requirements of the Open
Meeting Law, without any additional
courtesies such as uploading
committee meeting
minutes online which can then
be used to generate additional
[open meeting law] complaints.
It is unfortunate that it has come
to this but necessary.”
The Attorney General’s Office
determined that Matheson violated
Open Meeting Law by deliberating
with a quorum of the
City Council outside of a public
meeting. Although Matheson
did not intend for his email to
generate any deliberation, according
to the AG’s office simply
sending an opinion to a quorum
of the City Council is considered
deliberation.
The complaint about the Hospital
Committee’s inadequate
minutes was not an issue under
consideration by the City
Council, but the AG’s office explained
deliberation covered
any public business under the
City Council’s jurisdiction. The
AG’s office added that Matheson’s
advice on how to avoid future
Open Meeting Law complaints
was also clearly public
business under the City Council’s
jurisdiction.
DeLacey’s next complaint,
filed in February of this year, involved
a meeting notice for the
Malden Hospital Site Development
Committee. The only item
on the agenda was continued
discussions on citizen engagement
for the development of
the hospital site. According to
DEBATE | SEE PAGE 4
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THE MALDEN ADVOCATE–Wednesday, November 27, 2019
In the month of Thanksgiving,
Portal To Hope sends special
thanks to our program supporters
and volunteers!
For more information about Portal
To Hope, or to get involved in the
cause to end domestic violence,
please call: (781) 338-7678
or visit:
www.portaltohope.org
Linden Tree’s Winter Potpourri Concert featuring
the World of Folk and Acoustic Music
T
he Linden Tree Coffeehouse
continues its 35th year of
acoustic music concerts on Dec.
14 at 7:30 p.m. Join us for Winter
Potpourri, 2019 an evening
of discovering new talent! Eight
local singer/songwriters will play
two songs each, and one or more
of those folks will be chosen to
perform during next year’s season.
Audience input will play a
big part in the decision-making
process, so please come help us
make this choice while enjoying
new music and new faces.
What is folk music these days?
It can be traditional or contemporary
with roots in bluegrass,
country, jazz, gospel and blues.
Our contestants will provide a
range of music in the genre we
call folk. Performing in this year’s
potpourri are Bill Anderson, Mark
Bishop Evans, John Ferullo, Kathleen
Healy, Roberta Lamb, Rick
Drost, Toast & Jam, and Wild Maple.
Samples of their music can
be found on their web and facebook
pages.
The evening will again be hosted
by Wakefield singer/songwriter
Kirsten Manville, who will perform
a few favorite songs from
her album, Some People Sing, and
introduce a few new ones. Manville
creates songs that feel like
they might have come straight
from journal entries: deceptively
simple lyrics that paint pictures,
tell stories, and evoke a
range of emotions. Manville is
a refreshing, straightforward
folk-rock-country-singer-songwriter
with stage presence audiences
love.
Entertainment will include
a 25-minute set by one of last
year’s winners, Peter Lehndorff.
He writes folk and jazz songs
about everyday life. Lehndorff is
now mixing his humorous observations
with the serious; the romantic
with the eccentric. There
are stories about cars, what he
eats, and the places he has lived.
His car-related songs have been
on NPR’s Car Talk radio show.
Besides winning last year’s Linden
Tree Coffeehouse’s Winter
Potpourri, Lehndorff has been
a finalist in the Boston Acoustic
Underground competition. The
Springfield Union wrote about his
performance, “intelligent lyrical
vignettes of everyday life and the
comical trappings of suburbia,
delivered with an acute sense of
comedic timing.”
Bill Anderson is a former resident
of Wakefield. Anderson has
been playing music all his life, in
bands and orchestras around
the world. Trained as a classical
oboist at the New England Conservatory
as well as Boston University,
10 years ago, to achieve
his ambition of performing the
songs he’d always written, as a
singer/songwriter, he attended
song-writing conferences
around the United States and
workshopped with artists from
John Gorka to Livingston Taylor
to Kathy Mattea, constantly striving
to put the truth and heart of
the subject in his lyrics. His style is
often described as telling a story,
giving the listener a clear, mental
picture of events and emotions
common to us all.
Julie Charland is one-half of
the duo Toast and Jam. She is
playing solo this evening, and
writes and performs origiCONCERT
| SEE PAGE 10
Temple Emmanuel of Wakefield to host Shabbat Potluck
J
oin members of Temple
Emmanuel of Wakefield for
a Special Community Shabbat
Potluck on Friday, December 6
at 6:30 p.m. Following dinner,
members of the musical group
Bashert will perform, filling the
evening with joy, meaning and
spirit. New Temple members
will also be recognized.
Bashert is led by Rabbi Howard
Mandell and features a
group of seven talented singers
and musicians who are members
of Congregation Beth Israel
of the Merrimack Valley in
Lawrence, Mass. They draw on a
variety of sources for their musical
Friday night services.
Potluck main dishes and sides
should be vegetarian, dairy or
fish. Challah, desserts and beverages
will be provided by the
Temple. Please let Susan S.
know if you are coming and
what dish you would be bringing
– Sbreger94@gmail.com or
919-605-0523 – by December 4.
There is no charge for attending;
all are welcomed.
Temple Emmanuel of Wakefield
is a member of the Jewish
Reconstructionist Communities.
Members come from
many towns on the North
Shore. Rabbi Greg Hersh is
the spiritual leader. There is a
chairlift to the social hall. Temple
Emmanuel is located at
120 Chestnut St. in Wakefield;
www.WakefieldTemple.org;
781-245-1886.
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Page 3
Marijuana cultivation, manufacturing
and retail business proposed for Eastern Ave.
By Barbara Taormina
T
he Cannabis Licensing and
Enforcement Commission
(CLEC) voted to move Craft Cultivation
Group forward in the city’s
retail marijuana licensing process.
Robert Heffernan and his family
hope to transform their building
at 1130 Eastern Ave., which
many may know as the JRM recycling
plant, into a marijuana cultivation,
manufacturing and retail
operation. The next step for
the Heffernans will be a community
outreach meeting to present
their plan to the neighborhood.
The Heffernans first presented
their proposal to the commission
in August and it didn’t go well.
Members of the commission felt
their plan had a lot of loose ends
and missing details. Some commission
members were willing to
consider the cultivation aspect of
their proposal but opposed the
retail piece of the business. But
Craft Cultivation was one of three
marijuana licensing applicants
who were invited back to present
revised business plans, and
the second time around the Heffernans
won the unanimous support
of the commission.
It’s always helpful when the
chief of police makes the motion
to approve a marijuana business
proposal, and during the latest
round of discussions, Police Chief
Kevin Molis was the first member
of the commission to voice support
for Craft Cultivation. “Their
presentation hit all the areas that
needed to be hit,” said Molis, addJoin
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ing that the group acknowledged
the deficiencies of their first presentation
to the commission.
“They have knowledge of the
industry, knowledge of the product,
knowledge of the sources,”
said Molis. “I felt confident they
were in this for the right reasons.”
The Heffernans are planning
a complete renovation
of their 12,500-square-foot
building to accommodate an
11,000-square-foot cultivation
area, a 1,900-square-foot manufacturing
space where they
will produce their own branded
cannabis products and a
1,200-square-foot retail area.
Jamie Crumb, who has six years
of experience running a mariEASTERN
AVE. | SEE PAGE 22
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THE MALDEN ADVOCATE–Wednesday, November 27, 2019
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DeLacey, the notice violated
Open Meeting Law because it
did not specifically state which
topics the committee planned
to discuss. At that meeting, the
Friends of Fellsmere Heights
provided an update on their
work with Boston Architectural
College to create a community-based
redevelopment proposal
for the hospital site and
funding possibilities for such a
project.
The AG’s office agreed that the
Like us on Facebook advocate newspaper
Facebook.com/Advocate.news.ma
Malden Hospital Site Development
Committee violated Open
Meeting Law with an insufficiently
specific meeting notice
that neglected to mention a presentation
by the Friends of Fellsmere
Heights and failed to provide
a reasonable member of
the public an understanding of
what the meeting would cover.
In March, DeLacey filed a
fourth complaint – against Medford’s
Ad Hoc Subcommittee for
Malden Hospital alleging that,
like Matheson, the three members
of the committee violated
Open Meeting Law by deliberating
outside of a public meeting.
The members of the Medford
subcommittee participated in
an email chain that reviewed
questions for a public survey developed
by the Friends of Fellsmere
Heights to gage public
opinion on the hospital project.
Because all three members, or a
quorum, took part in the discussion,
the AG’s office determined
that they deliberated on public
business within their jurisdiction
outside of a public meeting.
In his fifth and final Open
Meeting Law complaint, DeLacey
accused the Malden City
Council of improperly withholding
the minutes of an executive
session held on Dec. 8,
2015. During that meeting, the
City Council discussed the purchase
of 110 Pleasant St. for a
temporary city hall, the leasing
of additional space for city offices
and the appraisal of the
Malden Hospital site. DeLacey,
who has closely followed the
Malden Hospital story and has
developed his own alternative
proposal for the site, wanted information
about the appraisal.
Although public bodies are required
to hold open and public
meetings, closed-door discussions
or executive sessions
are allowed in 10 different situations,
including discussions
to “consider the purchase, exchange,
lease or value of real
property if the chair declares an
open meeting will have a detrimental
effect on the negotiating
position of the public body.”
Because the hospital site hasn’t
been sold, releasing appraisal information
could affect the city’s
negotiating position in any possible
plan to purchase the property.
The AG determined the City
Council’s decision to continue to
withhold the minutes with the
appraisal was not a violation of
Open Meeting Law.
“Malden: Today, tomorrow and yesterday...”
two Malden heavyweights photo-op
By Peter F. Levine
“J
ust the facts ma’am…”
Ghosts of Malden’s Past:
• Did you know that in 1969
Malden High School righthander
Paul Murphy might have
pitched the greatest game in
Malden High history – an 18-inning
no-hitter versus Quincy?
• Did you know that 1975 Malden
High School graduate Nancy
Spector was a national billiards
champion?
• Did you know that Herbert
Jackson was Malden’s first African-American
public official?
He also went on to become the
first African-American state rep
and the first person of color to
be elected the president of the
“Common Council.” His father
was born into bondage. The old
City Hall Council Chamber was
named after this legendary man.
He lived on Salem Street at the
mouth of Pierce. The next time
you drive by, check out the awesome
switch box dedicated to
him in front of his old house.
• Did you know that in 1967 our
not so progressive city of Malden
and the Malden Police Department
banned the counterculture
(or “hippie”) newspaper
called The Avatar?
• Did you know that parts of
the Cher/Wynona Ryder movie
“Mermaids” were shot in a warehouse
on Green Street?
• Did you know that in the late
1950’s the Malden National Little
League – I believe – was the
first little league in Malden? They
played their home games at Converse
Field, the field originally
built for the employees of Converse
Rubber. It was directly off
Former owner of the Highland Café Dave Angelo and former professional
heavyweight boxer from Malden High School Class of
1973 Ronny Drinkwater. (Courtesy Photo)
Highland Avenue, and Converse
Rubber was in the background a
couple of hundred yards away in
the vicinity of where John Brewer’s,
Dollar Tree, Donut Villa, etc.,
etc. are now located.
• Did you know that during the
infamous Sacco and Vanzetti trial
anarchists threatened to blow up
the “Gas Tanks” on the corner of
Pearl and Charles Street, possibly
because Massachusetts Governor
(and Malden guy) Alvan Fuller
showed no mercy when the
death penalty was carried out?
Okay, let’s go over the list once
more: the top 200 best basketball
players I have played against
in Malden during my playing
days. We’ll go 50 at a time in no
particular order. Remember, this
list is not a 1-200 best to not the
best. Just random names, the
next 50 names:
Eric Dannenburg, Jimmy Coleman,
Gary Twyman, Jack, Steve
and Gary Freker, Scott Hanley,
Neal Jones, Joe Victor, Mike McCauley,
David Matthews, Brad
Snow, Mitch Cohen, David and
Arthur Boyle, Mike Keegan, Jonathan
and Keith Brickman, Barry
Almond, Johnny Novak, Richie
Giannattasio, Dana Brown, Gary
Lee, Bobby “Jonesy” Jones, Eddie
Thomson, Mike Vona, Richie
“Ace” Howard, Tommy “Kell” Kelly,
Johnny “Prez” Presiosa, Warren
Wolcott, Chris Bennett, Mike
DeBenedictis, George Antonakos,
Scotty “Scooter” Byrnes, Jimmy
“Mr. JRM” Geider, Chris and
Mike Cirino, Jimmy Kelly, Kevin
“K Mac” McKenna, Teddy and
Brian Grifkin, Dave and Mike Morelli,
Greg and Chris Errico, Steve
Prendable, Dave and Joe Bouley,
Mark “Choppa” Chopelas and
Ronny McCarthy.
“The history of Malden, Massachusetts,
1633-1785” is an interesting
look into Malden’s earliest
days. I continue to read it online.
Malden was infested with
rattlesnakes back in the beginning.
Here is another fascinating
glimpse into Malden’s distant
past: “The Indians manner
of holding the reptiles (rattlesnakes),
as described in the
text, was practiced by one of
their descendants. John Elisha,
MALDEN: TODAY | SEE PAGE 12
׉	 7cassandra://MsH_yYiz6X5Kg7Grsqda-cfV55KEVZxq44x3UPOIZ64,?`̰ ]܆pz׉ETHE MALDEN ADVOCATE–Wednesday, November 27, 2019
Page 5
Massachusetts Legislature passes “Distracted Driving” legislation
B
OSTON – As one of the
lead sponsors of the legislation,
Representative Paul J.
Donato (D-Medford, Malden)
is excited to announce that the
Massachusetts State Legislature
has passed the Distracted
Driving bill. “I have worked on
this bill for some time and feel
this is a real public safety issue
that has been addressed,” said
Representative Donato. “Unfortunately,
distracted driving has
caused too many unnecessary
accidents and even deaths. I am
grateful for the support of my
colleagues in the House and in
the Senate.”
“We’re proud to have worked
with our colleagues in the Senate
to make Massachusetts
roads safer and save lives by
moving this policy forward,” said
House Speaker Robert A. DeLeo
(D-Winthrop). “I want to thank
Chair Straus for his leadership
on this issue and Leader Wagner,
Chair Michlewitz and my
colleagues in the House who
worked so diligently to advance
this legislation.”
“There are too many heartbreaking
stories of those who
lost loved ones to distracted
driving, and so I’m proud the
Legislature has taken action to
prevent future tragedies,” said
Senate President Karen E. Spilka
(D-Ashland). “This bill strikes a
balance between increased enforcement
and increased transparency,
requiring more demographic
data to be released to
the public than ever before so
that we can ensure this law is
being enforced equitably across
the Commonwealth. I’d like to
thank Senator Boncore, Senator
Brownsberger and all the
conferees for their hard work to
bring this final bill to fruition.”
Bill H.4203, An Act requiring
the hands-free use of mobile
telephones while driving, defines
hands-free mode as one
that engages in voice communication
with and receiving audio
without touching, holding
or otherwise manually manipulating
a mobile electronic device.
Law enforcement officials
will issue warnings to drivers for
first offenses of the new law until
March 31, 2020.
Additionally, this legislation
improves transparency in public
safety by granting expanded
access to traffic stop data. It has
been 15 years since the last public
report on traffic stop data; under
this bill the state will be required
to publish and analyze
the data annually. Expanding
access to this information improves
transparency and public
safety outcomes.
The bill will also:
• Allow for drivers to use mapping
or navigation devices if
they are affixed to the windshield,
dashboard or central
console or integrated into the
vehicle and only involve a tap
or a swipe
• Exempt use of electronics
in the case of an emergency
and for first responders if they
are using the devices as part of
their duties
• Penalize drivers with $100
fine for the first offence, $250
fine and safety course for the
second offence and $500 fine
and surcharge for third and subsequent
offences
• Expand data collection of
identifying characteristics, including
age, race and gender
and location when police issue
a uniform citation
• Hold law enforcement agencies
accountable – if data sugFirst
Baptist Church of Malden to
host 76th Annual Festival of Carols
C
gests those jurisdictions might
be engaging in racial profiling
– by requiring them to collect
data on all traffic stops for a oneyear
period and provide implicit
bias training
• Require the Executive Office
of Public Safety and Security
(EOPSS) to publish data online
annually
• Mandate EOPSS to contract
with a research institution to
conduct an annual analysis of
the data collected
• Direct the EOPSS Secretary
to hold three public hearings
across the Commonwealth annually
to present the findings
505 Broadway
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of the annual report and analysis
and field public testimony
• Create a public awareness
campaign informing and educating
drivers on the dangers
of using technological devices
while driving.
On November 20, H.4203 was
laid before the governor.
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ontinuing a tradition which began in 1943, on Sunday, December
8, at 5 p.m., the First Baptist Church of Malden (corner of
Main and Salem Streets) will host the 76th Annual Festival of Carols.
Singers interested in participating are asked to come at 3 p.m. for rehearsal.
This is an ecumenical event which has a long-standing tradition
in the greater Malden community. Singers from many Protestant
and Roman Catholic churches will participate. There will also be
musical presentations by Casa de Fe y Alabanza (a Spanish-speaking
church) and First Nepali Baptist Church (a Nepalese-speaking
church). The choral director for the program is Richard Freeman and
the organist will be Rosalind Mohnsen.
There is no admission charge. A free will offering will be received.
Contact the First Baptist Church at fbcmalden@verizon.net or call
781 324-2745 for additional information.
Beebe School announces
10th
Annual Food Drive
T
he 10th Annual Beebe Food Drive will begin on Saturday, November
30 at Malden’s Holiday Parade, and it will conclude on
Thursday, December 19. Please come out to the parade and support
the 10th Annual Beebe Food Drive. Beebe students will be
following their float collecting donations of nonperishable items.
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THE MALDEN ADVOCATE–Wednesday, November 27, 2019
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~ Letter to the Editor ~
Lack of change has consequences
Dear Editor:
In reference to What’s the
Matter with Malden by Neil Kinnon,
published last week Nov.
22, 2019, the lack of voter turnout
is a symptom of the more
serious disenfranchisement of
our residents. While our city
touts its openness and welcoming
spirit towards all and
our demographics are wonderfully
diverse, Malden’s political
landscape along with the Police
Department, Fire Department
and School Department
has shamefully remained the
same as it was when I graduated
from Malden High School in
1966 with a few token persons
of color scattered about. Just
look at the pictures in The Advocate
each week of the leadership
and city servants in these
various departments.
As a retired Boston teacher, I
experienced the benefits to our
students when teachers and
administrators reflect the cultures
and appearance of those
we served.
While the majority of our citizens
are no longer Irish, Italian
with a few Jewish and Blacks living
in Suffolk Square, the choices
on the ballot remain stagnant.
Although, as residents we
keep hearing about the end to
blue bags, possible city wide
residential parking and a return
to beautifully paved residential
streets and matching sidewalks,
there were no decisions
entrusted to us in the form of
ballot questions. When did our
democracy disappear here too
in Malden, the friendly city?
On my street, Regent Road,
after three months of construction,
only half the street
is paved and the sidewalks
were fixed hit or miss (mostly
missed). When will our street
signs be replaced by the larger
blue ones of my neighbors? It’s
been more than five years. Yet,
the Everett streets bordering
mine are beautiful with all new
sidewalks, fully paved roads,
city wide residential parking
and large trash and recycling
bins. Everett is really putting us
to shame.
Yes, while the downtown is
getting gentrified, the voters
in the residential areas are less
than enthusiastic as our neighborhoods
deteriorate.
Will any of the choices in this
past election correct these systemic
problems?
Sincerely,
Gloria Hirsh Clark
Malden Catholic grants a wish
amron, 16, is an energetic
teenager who enjoys
going out to eat and spending
time with his family. He finds
comfort during their time together
which helps him cope
with the challenges attributed
to a life-threatening neuromuscular
disorder. Dreams of
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thrilling rollercoaster rides, sunny
skies and new adventures at
Walt Disney World Resort kept
him upbeat during his challenging
treatments.
Malden Catholic worked tirelessly
over a full year to make
Camron’s wish a reality. In November
2019, Malden Catholic’s
Make-A-Wish Club and
Make-A-Wish Massachusetts
and Rhode Island were proud
to present a check to Camron
for $10,270 that sent Camron
and his family to Walt Disney
World Resort, where he enjoyed
riding the monorail, eating ice
cream whenever he wanted
and watching the Magic Kingdom
fireworks. Malden Catholic’s
Headmaster, John Thornburg,
Principals Cenca and Bro.
Thomas Puccio, Chief of Staff
Sean Hurley and Athletic Director
Bill Raycraft, along with
the club student leaders, teachers
and parents, presented the
check to Make-A-Wish Massachusetts
and Rhode Island representatives
Hillary Muntz and
Joanne Spillane.
For more than a year, Malden
Catholic students, parents and
alumni and the greater community
came together and raised
money by selling decorated
GRANTS | SEE PAGE 22
MALDEN FIRST CHURCH of the NAZARENE
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Prices subject to
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FLEET
׉	 7cassandra://ibf8xe8MMwrcxtuN1mTrnZcnycGrMQJNCRsbMzJ7Vxk.`̰ ]܆pz׉ETHE MALDEN ADVOCATE–Wednesday, November 27, 2019
Page 7
Donato, Lewis and Ultrino vote to enact Student Opportunity Act
State Senator Jason Lewis
and State Representatives
Paul Donato and Steven Ultrino
recently joined both chambers
of the Massachusetts Legislature
as they unanimously voted
to enact the Student Opportunity
Act. This legislation, which
provides an unprecedented $1.5
billion new investment in Massachusetts
K-12 public education
system, ensures that all public
schools have adequate resources
to provide high-quality education
to students across the state,
regardless of zip code or income
level. Assuming inflation, over the
seven-year implementation timeline
the bill will provide an estimated
$2.2 billion in support of public
schools.
The Student Opportunity Act
provides significant support to
school districts that serve English
Learners (EL) and high concentrations
of low-income students. At
the same time, all school districts
across the Commonwealth will
benefit from updates to the existing
funding formula, along with
increased state investment in vital
education aid programs, such as
special education transportation,
school construction and renovation
and the 21st Century Education
Trust Fund.
“Access to a high-quality public
education is a fundamental
right for every child, and that’s
why the Student Opportunity Act
will make an unprecedented $1.5
billion investment in our public
schools, ensuring that school districts
across the Commonwealth
have adequate and equitable resources
to provide all students,
especially those facing adversity,
with a high-quality public education,”
said Lewis, who is the Senate
Chair of the Joint Committee
on Education and a lead architect
of the legislation. “I am confident
that the Student Opportunity Act
will effectively address opportunity
and achievement gaps and
make a meaningful difference
to generations of Massachusetts
students.”
“From my previous experience
as a school committee member,
I know how important the increased
funding as well as other
aspects of this bill will be in providing
our schools with important
resources to ensure that all
children receive an excellent education,”
said Donato.
“I am excited to see Massachusetts
working to fix the disparities
in funding among school districts,”
said Ultrino. “This investment in
education will help to remove barriers
to educational opportunities
and close achievement gaps in
our lower income communities.”
The Student Opportunity Act
fully implements the recommendations
of the 2015 Foundation
Budget Review Commission
(FBRC) in order to support the “educational
programs and services
necessary to achieve the Commonwealth’s
educational goals”
as stated in the Commission’s mission.
The bill provides an estimated
$1.4 billion in new Chapter 70
aid over and above inflation when
fully implemented over the next
seven years. The bill modernizes
the K-12 education funding and
policy landscape in four areas:
• Estimates school districts’ employee
and retiree health care
costs using up-to-date health insurance
trend data collected by
the state’s Group Insurance Commission
(GIC)
• Increases special education enrollment
and cost assumptions to
more accurately reflect district enrollment
•
Increases EL funding and differentiates
funding by grade level
to reflect the greater resources
required to educate older EL
students
• Addresses the needs of districts
educating high concentrations
of low-income students
by providing additional funding
based on the share of low-income
students in each district; districts
educating the largest percentage
of low-income students will
receive an additional increment
equal to 100 percent of the base
foundation; in addition, the definition
of low-income is returned
to 185 percent of the Federal Poverty
Level, as opposed to the 133
percent level used in recent years.
In addition to implementing
the FBRC’s recommended formula
changes, the Student Opportunity
Act provides an additional
$100 million in state financial support
in several categories to help
public schools and communities
deliver a high-quality education
to every student. Those fiscal supports
include:
• Increasing foundation rates
for guidance and psychological
services in recognition of the
growing need for expanded social-emotional
support and mental
health services
• Committing to fully funding
charter school tuition reimbursement,
which provides transitional
aid to help districts when students
leave to attend charter schools,
Sen. Lewis announces
drop-in office hours
S
tate Senator Jason Lewis will hold special drop-in office
hours at his State House office on Tuesday, December 3
from noon to 1 p.m. in Room 511B of the State House (24 Beacon
St. in Boston). This is a great opportunity for constituents
who work in downtown Boston or are unable to attend the senator’s
regularly scheduled office hours. Lunch will be provided.
All residents are encouraged to drop in to speak with the senator
and raise any concerns that they would like.
Those who are unable to attend should contact his office at
(617) 722-1206 to arrange a meeting.
405 Pearl St., Malden, MA 02148
It’s time to get back to the things you love.
At Agility Orthopedics our
commitment to keep you
moving is more than just
three words, it’s a promise
to help you experience life
in the ways that matter
most to you.
Appointments for the following
services are now available at
our Malden location:
• Joint Replacement
• Sports Medicine
• Hand Surgery
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• Regenerative Medicine:
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within a three-year timetable
• Expanding the special education
circuit breaker program,
which reimburses districts for
extraordinary special education
costs, to include transportation
as well as instructional cost, to
be implemented over the next
four years
• Raising the annual cap on
Massachusetts School Building
Authority (MSBA) spending for
construction and renovation by
$200 million (from $600 million
to $800 million), enabling more
school-building projects across
the state to be accepted into the
MSBA funding pipeline, which reimburses
towns and cities for a
portion of school-building costs.
• In addition to new funding and
other supports, the Student Opportunity
Act establishes the 21st
Century Education Trust Fund to
provide districts and schools access
to flexible funding to pursue
creative approaches to student
learning and district improvement.
“The
Student Opportunity Act
is a true game-changer for low-income
students and their communities,
and we’re delighted to see
it approach the finish line. We applaud
Senate President Spilka,
Speaker DeLeo, Senator Lewis,
Representative Peisch, and the
other members of the conference
committee for their leadership
in developing this bill. And we
thank the entire Education Committee
for delivering the major
new school funding our students
need, when some were pressuring
them to think small,” said AFT
Massachusetts President Beth
Kontos. “The Student OpportuniVOTE
| SEE PAGE 14
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נ]܆{z 8̼9ׁHmailto:pinkhamgene@gmail.comׁׁЈנ]܆{z ;9ׁH  http://www.bostonnorthdental.comׁׁЈנ]܆{z $|O9ׁHhttp://Center.comׁׁЈנ]܆{z gh9ׁHhttp://www.JMׁׁЈ׉EPage 8
THE MALDEN ADVOCATE–Wednesday, November 27, 2019
Malden Reads “Holiday Pop-up Bookstore & More”
M
alden Reads invites you to
join their 10th anniversary
year celebration and fundraising
event at their one-day “Holiday
Pop-up Bookstore & More”
in the lobby of the new J Malden
Center apartment community at
190 Pleasant St. in Malden. The
event will take place on Saturday,
December 7 from 11 a.m.–7 p.m.
Learn for the first time about
Malden’s “One City, One Book”
program or celebrate your memories
of Malden Reads throughout
the years. Find out about our
2020 book selection and some
of the major upcoming events.
Learn what it’s like to volunteer
with Malden Reads! The Holiday
Pop-Up Bookstore & More event is
a special opportunity to celebrate
all 10 years of Malden Reads’ book
selections for adults and children.
This will be the first opportunity
to purchase the 2020 selection,
“Fahrenheit 451” by Ray Bradbury,
and the 2020 companion books
for younger readers. In addition,
all the book selections throughout
the years will be on sale as
well as the companion books.
Plans for the day include:
• Books by local authors for sale
as well as author talks throughout
the day
• Creative gift wrapping (available
for purchase)
• Arts and crafts for children
and adults (with a small charge
for materials)
• Discussion area with “Conversation
Starter” cards related to
general themes of Malden Reads
books.
• A traveling mural project to
share the titles of books that
have influenced you throughout
your life
• A “photo booth” to take your
picture with the 2020 book and
other props
Light refreshments will be
served. Guests are encouraged
to take part in a gift raffle that day
or donate to the program in person
or online.
This is also one of the first
public opportunities to visit the
new J Malden Center community,
which provides luxury apartments
and new retail on the
ground floor opening soon, and
will be the new home of Malden
City Hall. You will be able to take
a tour of the resident amenity areas
during the event. For more
information on J Malden Center,
please view www.JMaldenCenter.com.
A
schedule for the day will be
posted online at maldenreads.
org. Hope to see you at the Holiday
Pop-up Bookstore & More!
Malden Reads is a communiEastern
bank Bldg. Rt-1
605 Broadway, #301 Saugus, MA 01906
781-233-6844 www.bostonnorthdental.com
ty reading program that asks the
question “What if all of Malden
read the same book?” It is organized
by a dynamic group of volunteers
in collaboration with MATV,
Malden’s Media Center, and the
Malden Public Library. The 2020
program is an “NEA Big Read”
(funded in part by the National
Endowment for the Arts), and the
book selection is “Fahrenheit 451”
by Ray Bradbury.
Dr. Priti Amlani
Dr. Bruce Goldman Dr. Bhavisha Patel
Don't be alone on Thanksgiving Day –
free community turkey dinner
T
Full mouth Rehabilitation
Before
After
his roasted turkey dinner
with all the fixings and desserts
is open to anyone who
would like to enjoy a wonderful
holiday meal in good company.
The dinner is free of charge and
no reservation is needed. The
event will be held on Thanksgiving
Day, Nov. 28, from 12-2 p.m.
at Malden High School (corner
of Salem & Ferry Streets) in the
back cafeteria.
“As busy as this day is – putting
out up to 1,000 meal – I
wouldn’t miss it for anything,”
said Bread of Life (BOL) Executive
Director Gabriella Snyder
Stelmack. “I’m surrounded by
hundreds of people, young and
old, who volunteer to serve and
deliver meals, or just sit down
and share a meal with someone
who would otherwise be alone
and lonely on the holiday. This
is what it’s all about: neighbor
helping neighbor.”
The dinner is sponsored by
BOL, Anthony’s of Malden, Forestdale
Community Church in
Malden, Hoff’s Bakery in Malden,
Knights of Columbus IC
Council #13966, Malden High
School, Mayor Gary Christenson,
Tim Rufo & Friends, and staff at
Malden’s Salemwood School.
Donations of roasted turkeys
(preferably deboned) are
much-needed and would be appreciated.
They may be brought
to the Malden High School cafeteria,
rear entrance off of Ferry
Street, on Wednesday, November
27 from 4–7 p.m.
The deadline for signing up for
Thanksgiving volunteer opportunities
is Friday, Nov. 22. People
may do so by calling the BOL office
at 781-397-0404.
Meals will also be delivered
from Malden High School on
Thanksgiving morning to senior
citizens in local cities and
towns who are unable to attend.
If interested in delivering meals,
please email Gene Pinkham at
pinkhamgene@gmail.com.
Community member Karin Nystrom (left) with Deputy Fire Chief
Bill Sullivan posing with the 2020 Malden Reads book selection,
“Fahrenheit 451” by Ray Bradbury. The book is a classic dystopian
and futuristic novel where firefighters burn books instead of
putting out fires.
׉	 7cassandra://PFC92wlM8IyKgdo-RmbjiI2aotu3Lzns-XTvt0LONys-8`̰ ]܆pz׉ETHE MALDEN ADVOCATE–Wednesday, November 27, 2019
Page 9
Here’s wishing you a Thanksgiving holiday complete
with all the trimmings - good food, food friends, and good times.
Mayor
Gary Christenson
& The Citizens of Malden
Steve Ultrino Paul J. Donato
State Representative
State Representative
Councillor Ward 4
Ryan
O’Malley
Barbara
Murphy
Councillor Ward 5
School Committee
Ward 2
Rob McCarthy
Councillor-At-Large
Stephen Winslow
Jason Lewis
State Senator
Craig Spadafora
Councillor-At-Large
John Matheson
Councillor Ward 3
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THE MALDEN ADVOCATE–Wednesday, November 27, 2019
City Council seeks member for Human Rights and Fair Housing Commission
T
he Malden City Council
is reaching out to Malden
residents in an effort to
fill the “resident member” position
on the Human Rights
and Fair Housing Commission
(the “Commission”). Members
of the Commission work
to ensure that all residents –
regardless of race, color, religious
creed, national origin,
sex, age, ancestry, sexual preference,
familial status, marital
status, veteran status, or
physical, mental or emotional
capacity or disability – are afforded
equal opportunity in or
access to credit eligibility, employment,
housing, education,
recreation, public accommodations,
public services and
licensing, and shall minimize
unlawful discrimination by
encouraging mutual understanding
among all residents.
The Commission is comprised
of seven individuals
with varied backgrounds who
have knowledge of existing resources,
an understanding of
how regional systems function,
and who have experience
with fair housing and discrimination
issues. Three members
are appointed by the Mayor
and four are appointed by
Sen. Lewis accepting internship applications
S
tate Senator Jason Lewis
is looking for civic-minded
individuals interested in
a spring-semester internship
in his State House office.
Lewis proudly represents
the people of the Fifth Middlesex
District of Massachusetts,
which includes the cities
and towns of Malden,
Melrose, Reading, Stoneham,
Wakefield and parts of Winchester.
He currently serves
as the Senate Chair of the
Joint Committee on Education,
and he has been a leader
in shaping public policy on
a range of issues important
to his district, region and the
state, including education,
healthcare, and economic
opportunity for all.
Interns wi l l have the
unique opportunity to experience
policymaking, politics
and government from
the inside. Although unpaid,
interns will obtain meaningful
experience by witnessing
and participating in the dayto-day
functioning of a State
Senate office.
Interns will report mainly
to Constituent Affairs Director
Elizabeth Tran, and
they will be responsible for
assisting with a variety of
tasks, ranging from constituent
correspondence to legislative
research to database
management to communications
and social media
projects. In addition, interns
will have the opportunity to
attend events, hearings and
meetings in the State House.
Interns in his office will gain
the satisfaction of serving
the Commonwealth and will
be able to add valuable experience
to their resume.
Applicants must have excellent
written and verbal
communication skills, a high
level of attention to detail,
and good overall professionalism.
Candidates must also
be comfortable with Microsoft
Office, Google applications,
and major social meA.B.C.
CIGAR
170 REVERE ST., REVERE
Gift
Cards
OPEN: Mon.-Sat. 8 AM - 8 PM
Sun. - Holidays: 8 AM - 6 PM
(781) 289-4959
Rewards
Program
the City Council and include
a representative of the Malden
Housing Authority, a Malden-based
representative of
the National Association of Realtors,
a representative of the
Chamber of Commerce, a representative
of a Malden-based
disability advocacy organization,
a representative of a
Malden-based organization
providing services to elders,
and two resident members,
one appointed by the Mayor
and one by the City Council.
Resident members may serve
for one year from date of appointment.
Residents
interested in applying
should contact Patricia
Bucciero at pbucciero@cityofmalden.org
by December 6,
2019. Candidate is subject to a
successful CORI report.
dia platforms. Preference will
be given to college students
and young adults. Applications
from residents of the
Fifth Middlesex District are
strongly encouraged. Winter/spring
internships generally
coincide with the academic
calendars of area colleges
and universities. Hours
are negotiable, ranging from
10-14 hours per week.
Individuals with a particular
interest in communications,
public relations, graphic
design, video production
or social media should indicate
so in their application.
Candidates should send a resume,
brief letter of interest,
and writing sample to Elizabeth.Tran@masenate.gov
by
Sunday, January 5, 2020. References
should be available
upon request. Applications
will be reviewed on a rolling
basis, so interested parties
are encouraged to apply
promptly. For questions,
please call (617) 722-1206.
CONCERT | FROM PAGE 2
Chris
Dan
Steve
Pleased to Serve You and Answer All Your Questions!
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AND THANK ALL OUR CUSTOMERS PAST & PRESENT!
OUR
48th
YEAR
nal bluegrass, modern folk,
Americana, swing and more.
Toast and Jam’s first CD (all
original), “Ten Slices,” was
released in 2009. Their second
full-length CD, “Heaven
Knows,” was released in 2015,
and now a third album is in
the works.
Rick Drost writes and sings
songs with depth and heart,
songs that repay repeated listening
and convey a long love
of classical music, natural wonders
and poetry. His songs treat
life from varied angles: jilted lovers,
swans in the Public Garden,
leftover lobsters and meditations
on meditation. Longtime inspiration
came from Joni Mitchell and
Leonard Cohen; recent influences
include Vance Gilbert and David
Wilcox, who covers Drost’s
song “Turning the World” in live
performances. Drost’s latest CD,
“Turning the World,” continues to
get airplay from Europe across
America to New Zealand. Originally
from Western New York,
Annual Christmas Ecumenical
Memorial Service to be held at
Everett’s Woodlawn Cemetery
F
rancis J. LaRovere, III, Esq.,
President of the Board of
Trustees of Woodlawn Cemetery
is pleased to announce that
Woodlawn will hold its 19th Annual
Christmas Ecumenical Memorial
Service at its Chapel on
Thursday, December 5, 2019
at 7:00 p.m. A musical prelude
performed by the Figgy Pudding
Carolers shall precede the
Service at 6:30 p.m. This Acapella
Quartet of Dickensian Carolers
will entertain Woodlawn’s
guests with spiritual and celebratory
Holiday classics.
The theme of the Service is
to provide support and solace
for those coping with the loss
of a loved one during the Holiday
Season. It is a unique ecumenical
commemoration that
will be co-celebrated by Fr. Vincent
Gianni and The Rev. Edgar
Gutierrez-Duarte. The two
theologians with highlight the
Service with their readings and
reflections of spiritual biblical
Drost travels from Cambridge to
sing at coffeehouses, house concerts,
small festivals and Folk Alliance
Events around the country.
Mark Bishop Evans grew up in
southern California, where his
major musical influences outside
of church were Gordon Lightfoot,
Bob Dylan, Peter, Paul and
Mary, Paul Simon, the Beach Boys
and pretty much any folk, folk
rock or beach music. Listening
and playing the folk and protest
music of the 60s inspired him to
begin writing his own songs. Evans
has a way with words and
melodies, bringing them together
in pleasant and poignant combinations
that make you want to
tap your feet and sing along. His
music is an intriguing blend of
folk, folk rock and ballads, lyrically
rich in emotional content and
melodically comfortable like a
favorite jacket, like a close friend
you want to sing along with.
Mark relocated north of Boston,
Mass., in the early 90s and today
considers himself a “Noreasta.”
John Ferullo is a songwriter
and open mike host from Maspassages,
which are designed
to supply comfort to all those
in attendance.
The Service concludes with
the commemorative Memorial
Christmas Tree Lighting of
Woodlawn’s specimen spruce
tree located adjacent to the
entry driveway at Woodlawn,
which occurs simultaneously
with the final rendition of lyrics
from the carolers. The tree shall
remain lit throughout the Holiday
Season. Upon the conclusion
of the Service, Woodlawn
will host a light collation of Pastries
and Coffee for all attendees
back inside Patton Hall located
within the Chapel. The public
is cordially invited, and Woodlawn’s
Gates will be open at 6:00
p.m. Seating is limited, and it
may not be held for late arrivals.
A such, it is recommended that
you arrive early. For more information
contact Paul M. Maniff,
Director of Sales at Woodlawn
at 617-387-0800.
sachusetts with stories about
regular people. He performs his
own songs and other folk songs
all around New England. His music
has been described as “about
important things with his stories
about seemingly small things.”
Kathleen Healy is a hard-working
musician and songwriter living
on Cape Cod. She draws from
her experience of living and raising
a family near the beach for
many of her songs. Some say
saltwater runs through her veins.
Healy writes from the heart, and
her honest lyrics and often poignant
subject matter lend themselves
to the unique quality of
her voice. She admits to being a
live music junkie but is currently
not seeking treatment for her
addiction.
Equally at home singing
and playing in a quiet cafe or
in front of a crowd, Roberta
Lamb rocks to the beat of a
variety of musical styles, from
blues to rock and Americana.
She picked her first guitar as
CONCERT | SEE PAGE 22
׉	 7cassandra://wc84cIToU1ohTjLn92L4c2XY5TCWeulgBc8gFIx7ls8(~`̰ ]܆pz׉E#THE MALDEN ADVOCATE–Wednesday, November 27, 2019
Page 11
Medford vs Malden Thanksgiving
EDITOR’S NOTE: This record was
A capsule summary of every game, 1 to 130, from 1889-2018
1919: Medford holds twice on its
prepared by former Malden Evening
News Sports Editor Paul Leahy
through 1991 and by former Malden
Evening News/Medford Daily Mercury
Editor Steve Freker from 1992 to
2014 and then 2017 to the present.
T
hey’ve played 130 times before
in a series that began in
1889. This year’s game is the 132nd
.
Malden leads the series, 66-56-10.
Following is a capsule look of each
game that’s been played in the
time-honored series between Malden
and Medford:
1889: Medford won the first
game, 34-0, in a game played on Friday,
October 15, 1889. Malden players
protested that Medford used
players from Tufts College and MIT.
A second game was scheduled, and
Medford won, 4-0, on the Saturday
after Thanksgiving.
1890: No score available; therefore,
no verification that a game was
indeed played.
1891: Medford won, 22-0.
1892: Medford won, 34-0.
1893: Its first victory in the series
clinches the Suburban League title
for Malden, 18-0, according to Malden
records.
1894: Touchdowns by Tom Flanders
and Bill Nash gave Malden its
second-straight Suburban League
crown, 10-0. Medford shared first
place with the Golden Tornadoes
going into the game.
1895: Medford succeeds Malden
as Suburban League champs,
16-11, at Tufts Oval. The two teams
were tied for first place entering
the game.
1896: Medford’s 18-0 victory costs
Malden the Suburban League title.
1897: Malden holds twice inside
its own four-yard line and battles
to a scoreless tie at Tufts Oval in
the first game played on Thanksgiving
Day.
1898: Mike Howe scores twice
as Malden wins Suburban League
pennant, 20-12.
1899: Jack Williams’s three touchdowns
pace Medford to a 23-6 victory
before the largest crowd to
date to watch the series: 1,500
people. From this game on, all the
games were played on Thanksgiving.
1900:
Malden’s Elmer Rice scored
the deciding touchdown in a 11-5
victory that earns a Suburban
League championship before a record
crowd date of 2,500 people.
1901: Malden stormed back in
the second half and rallied to a
23-6 victory.
1902: Dennis Papkee scores the
deciding conversion after Paul
Volpe’s touchdown to give Medford
a 6-5 victory and the Suburban
League crown before another
record-breaking crowd of 5,000
people.
1903: Jack Mather’s two touchdown’s
pace Medford, 17-5, before
another record-breaking attendance
of 6,000 people.
1904: Jack Mather scores three
times and extends Medford’s domination,
18-11.
1905: Malden installs ex-Dartmouth
and Everett end Matt Bullock
as coach specifically for the
Medford game and upsets the Mustangs,
27-0, in the first game at Bryant
Street Park in Malden.
1906: Paul Pray’s conversion after
Midget Cotting’s touchdown
pulls Medford out, 6-5, with a record
crowd of 8,000 fans on hand.
1907: Charlie Miner scores three
touchdowns, and Malden captures
Suburban League title, 44-0,
with the highest score to date in
the series.
1908: Fights and threats of protests
mar Malden’s 6-0 victory. Medford
had a touchdown called back
and a 40-yard slugging penalty
against a Mustang, who was ejected
and had to be brought to the sideline
by a policeman. The penalty
sets up a winning, 15-yard TD catch
by Malden’s Dennis Letherman.
1909: Malden’s Arthur Miner
scores three touchdowns in a 23-3
victory.
1910: Six different players score
as Malden clinches State and Suburban
League titles with 13th straight
victory, 35-0. Malden has its only
undefeated, untied (13-0-0) season
and went on to beat Providence
(R.I.) Tech, 29-8, in a post-season
game at Bryant Street Park.
1911: Medford wins Suburban
League title on two field goals by
14-year-old Art Donnellan.
1912: Malden rolls behind the
passing of quarterback Herb Kempton,
27-0, and wins State and Suburban
League crowns with an undefeated
record.
1913: Eric Christianson’s fourth
quarter touchdown helps Medford
upset Malden, 6-3.
1914: Medford captain Art Donnellan
throws for one touchdown
and returns an intercepted pass for
another in a 21-0 shutout win.
1915: Bob Foley sprints for 80
yards with a blocked field goal and
boosts Medford to a 7-0 victory.
1916: Two offside penalties
against Malden set up both Medford
scores as the Mustangs rally
for a 13-13 tie, but lose Suburban
League championship to Somerville
with the deadlock.
1917: Quarterback Charlie Donellan’s
third-quarter field goal
gives Medford an unbeaten record
(9-0-0) and Suburban League title,
3-0. Medford, which had allowed
only seven points all season heading
into the game, won the Suburban
League and Eastern Mass. titles
and defeated Manchester (N.H.) in
a post-season game at Braves Field
in Boston.
1918: Quarterback Chet Sanford
comes back from a three-week layoff
and directed Medford to a second
straight Suburban League title
with a touchdown pass and field
goal, 9-0. Boston Commerce nipped
Medford, 3-0, at Braves Field for the
Eastern Mass. title. That lone field
goal was the only points Medford
had allowed all season.
Sisterhood Congregation Agudas
Achim-Ezrath Israel’s Chanukah Celebration
E
vent details: Chanukah
Celebration with performance
by Drumatix, an innovative,
entertaining rhythm
and dance group created by
Israeli native Noa Barankin.
Breakfast including latkes will
be served. Menorah Lighting,
Raffles, Chanukah Gift
Shop, Fun for all Ages! Location:
Sisterhood Congregation
Agudas Achim-Ezrath Israel,
245 Bryant St. in Malden,
Mass.; Sunday, December 15
at 10:00 a.m.
Adults, $15.00; ages five-13,
$5.00; under age five, free. Paid
reservations by Dec. 11. Send
reservation and check made
out to Sisterhood, Cong AA-EI
and mail to Laraine Alpert, 15
Davis Ct., Saugus, MA 01906.
For more info, email teilifeline@aol.com.
Public
invited to 2020 Inaugural Celebration
T
he City of Malden is
pleased to announce that
the 2020 Inaugural Ceremonies
will take place on Monday,
January 6 at 6 p.m. at Malden
High School’s Jenkins Auditorium
(77 Salem St.). Members
of the public are invited to witness
Mayor Gary Christenson
and City Council and School
Committee members as they
are sworn into office. There
will also be an opportunity to
recognize outgoing members
who have served the community.
The Malden High School
Choral Arts Society, the Malden
High School Band and Wah
Lum Kung Fu & Tai Chi Academy
will be among the performers
at the event.
own goal line and battles Malden to
a 0-0 tie before a new record-breaking
crowd of 8,500.
1920: Medford recovers from Malden
fumble with less than four minutes
in the game, and four plays later
Capt. Bob Blair scores the winning
touchdown in a 7-0 Mustang
victory.
1921: Honey Lewin’s field goal
in the snow in the closing minutes
salvages Malden, 10-7, before new
record-breaking crowd of 10,000.
1922: Captain Bob Sandberg’s
third-quarter touchdown overhauls
Medford for Malden and allowed
the Golden Tornadoes to
share the Suburban League crown
with Rindge Tech, 7-3. It was Malden’s
first piece of a league title in
10 seasons, since 1912.
1923: Captain Joe Murphy, a tackle,
rambles 62 yards for a first-quarter
touchdown as Medford wins the
Suburban League championship,
7-0, and drops Malden from the unbeaten
ranks.
1924: Crowd of 15,000, the largest
crowd to date by far, watches
quarterback “Sheep” Jackson direct
Malden to four second-half touchdowns
and a 27-6 win.
1925: First-half touchdowns by
Jack Mangan and Morris Spector
propel Malden to an unbeaten
season with a 13-0 win, in front
of another huge crowd of 15,000plus.
Malden tied for the Eastern
Mass. title.
1926: Three quick touchdowns
give Medford a 20-0 first-quarter
lead, and the Mustangs hold on for
a 20-6 upset.
1927: John Baxter scores twice,
once on a 90-yard sprint, earning
Malden a 13-13 tie.
1928: Medford finishes the season
unbeaten with a 7-0-3 record
and gains a share of the Eastern
Mass. championship with Newell
Wilder leading the way to a 14-0
victory.
1929: With both teams coming
into the game undefeated, an alltime
series record crowd of 18,500
inside the fence and an estimated
2,000 to 3,000 outside saw Malden
Captain Sam Fishman lead the
Golden Tornadoes to an unbeaten
season (9-0-1) and a share of the
Eastern Mass. title by returning a
punt 55 yards for the only score of
the game as Medford (7-1-0) fell by
a 6-0 score.
1930: Malden’s Warren Mulrey
scores a third-quarter touchdown
as the Golden Tornadoes upset
Medford, 7-2.
2000: This was a memorable “season
saver” game for first-year Medford
head coach Al Pare, as the Mustangs
pulled the “Dominick Hasek”
to take a 14-13 win at sunny, but
brisk Macdonald Stadium. Medford
came in winless at 0-8, and Malden
was 1-9, with the victor having
at least a Turkey Day win to savor.
Medford also took the lead in the
series for the first time since 1946,
going ahead, 52-51-10, with their
SPORTS | SEE PAGE 15
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Page 12
THE MALDEN ADVOCATE–Wednesday, November 27, 2019
Malden to take on Medford in coun
Jerry Mervil, Ishmael Sylus, Matthew Bessey, Jamari Youman, Peterson Maxis, JJ Costa, Michael Mathes, Wootchy Pierre-Rene, Moise Fanfan, Khali Hardmond, Shawn Barthol
Joseph, Peyton Carron, Lyden Louis, Philip Duong, Eliezer Santiago, Eliezer Beato, Jeremiah Dessources, Sebastien Blanc, Davenche Sydney, Samuel Solorzano, Justin Desim
Colin Kyaw and Muneer Odally. (File Photos)
MALDEN: TODAY | FROM PAGE 4
a “colored man” of mixed blood,
who claimed descent from the
Natick Indians, resided among
the hills in the north-eastern
part of Malden about the year
1820. He used to catch rattlesnakes,
which then abounded
in the crevices of the ledges and
among the angular stones which
the frost had detached from the
cliffs and strewn at the bases of
the hills. He carried the captives
home in his hands, holding them
fast just below their heads, their
tails being wreathed about his
arms. When their fangs became
hooked in a piece of stout woolen
cloth, which he held for them
to bite at, he would pull them
out by a sudden jerk and render
them harmless. If they did not
bite at the cloth, he would open
their mouths with a stick, as he
pressed them to the ground,
while an assistant would entangle
their fangs in the cloth, and
so extract them. Sometimes he
held them down with a forked
stick and removed the fangs
with pincers. The ‘creepies’ thus
treated he exhibited in Boston
and elsewhere, on public occasions,
as tamed snakes, which
he could handle and carry in his
bosom with impunity, to the astonishment
of spectators. Besides
the ‘taming’ of snakes, he
and his family did quite a business
in the preparation of rattlesnake
oil, which was sold about
the country as a specific for rheumatic
complaints and diseases of
the joints. Fifty cents for a small
bottle was considered cheap
by the purchaser, and amply repaid
the seller. Mrs. William Hogan,
who will be remembered
by many old inhabitants, was an
itinerant saleswoman in that line,
and added to her stock skunk’s
fat, and roots and herbs, which
she procured as ordered.”
One more time with feeling:
“Just once more...”
• I’d like to see Mr. Brendan
Duffy walking through the basketball
court at the old Y, dripping
sweat, after a hard-fought
handball game upstairs against
“Johnny No Gloves,” ready for a
Ballantine Ale.
• I’d like to see former heavyweight
pugilist Ronny “Bevy”
Drinkwater go another round or
two. (Who remembers his bout
with Muhammad Ali!?)
• I’d like to walk that long front
corridor at the Granada Theater,
sit in one of those old ratty seats
and take in a midnight movie
(“The Song Remains the Same”?)
• I’d like to see Medford guy Joe
Pet’s “Incredible Two Man Band”
at the Centre Bar & Grille on a
Saturday night with all my good
time friends. (I ran into him at the
Topsfield Fair last month and he
looks great!)
Senior Captains Jerry Mervil and Ishmael Sylus
• I’d like to spend a Sunday
night at the Broadway East
when Richie Willis and his boys
in North Shore Acappella were
the hottest ticket in town. (Richie
had/has some serious stage
presence, don’t he?!)
• I’d like to walk into Jack
Haneys Bar & Grille on Main
Street, sit down at one of those
vintage bar stools and order a
35-cent draft.
• I’d like to walk into Joe & Nemo’s
with my dear friends Bobby
Hench, Barry Hitchcock and
Chuckie Frangules and order a
steamed hot dog or two.
• I’d like to sit at the counter
at Bernie Miller’s place, O’Neil’s
Drug Store, on Charles Street,
order a lime rickey and hang out
with the Silvas, Hitchcocks, Feminos
and all the rest of the old
neighborhood gang.
• I’d like to spend a Sunday
night at the Blue Star Bar & Grille
watching Preacher Jack implode
on the piano. (Rest in peace to
his guitarist “Sweet” Ray Burnette).
•
I’d like to see Dave Angelo behind
the stick at the old Highland
Café.
• I’d like to see beloved educator/literary
muse/raconteur
John O’Brien walking through
the Square, trench coat & soft
hat, salt & pepper beard – making
his way to his next class.
“Just once more – for the sake
of old times and old-timers!”
Thank you to James Calagero,
who I totally lifted this idea
from (and the last line) while I
was thumbing through a back
issue of “Boston’s North End”
from 2002.
“This is the end, beautiful
friend, this is the end, my only
friend, the end...” as the late great
Eddie Larson used to say, “No
man is a failure who has friends.”
Hope all you out there had a
great Thanksgiving!
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Page 13
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THE MALDEN ADVOCATE–Wednesday, November 27, 2019
VOTE | FROM PAGE 7
ty Act will deliver increased state
funding to every district, but the
greatest increases, rightfully, will
go to low-income districts whose
students have the greatest needs.
That means that students of all
backgrounds will finally be able
to enjoy the benefits – everything
from smaller classes and additional
counselors, to up-to-date classroom
supplies and more art, music,
and enrichment – that their
peers in wealthier districts take
for granted.”
In order to track and reproduce
successful school and district-level
programs and policies, the legislation
calls on school districts to
develop and make publicly available
plans for closing opportunity
gaps. These plans will include specific
goals and metrics to track success.
The bill includes language to
ensure that plans consider input
from school committees and other
stakeholders. In addition, the
Secretary of Education will collect
and publish data on student
preparedness in each district for
post-graduate success in college
and the workforce.
“MBAE applauds Representative
Peisch, Senator Lewis and House
and Senate leadership for coming
together to produce a compromise
bill that takes direct aim
at the urgent challenge of racial
and socio-economic achievement
gaps,” said Massachusetts Business
Alliance for Education Executive
Director Ed Lambert. “This legislation
prioritizes increased funding
for students and communities that
need it the most, includes essential
guardrails to ensure the money
is thoughtfully and strategically
deployed, and increases state and
district focus on preparing students
for college and workforce
opportunities.”
Furthermore, the Student Opportunity
Act establishes a Data
Advisory Commission to help improve
the use of data at the state,
district and school levels to inform
strategies that strengthen teaching,
learning and resource allocation.
The bill increases the scope
of data collected and moves towards
establishing targets for college
and career success.
VOTE | SEE PAGE 17
׉	 7cassandra://BTCt31EKkGt8IZquamO1EU-4qW7HGBA-pvIs_A-ljKQ-`̰ ]܆pz׉E@THE MALDEN ADVOCATE–Wednesday, November 27, 2019
Page 15
SPORTS | FROM PAGE 11
only win. Junior two-way end Luis
Zamora and junior split end Angel
Ortiz were Medford’s stars. For Malden,
senior Ricky Bethelmie went
over the 1,000-yard rushing mark
for the year. Malden struck first
when freshman quarterback Breno
Giacomini (believed to be the first
freshman to start at quarterback
ever, for either side) hit Nevy Marc
with a 30-yard pass, followed by a
20-yard TD run by Bethelmie and
a PAT kick by Carmelo Bari. Medford
QB Dave Foley then hit Ryan
Driscoll with a seven-yard TD pass,
and Zamora’s PAT tied it at 7-7 at the
half. A big catch by Zamora and a
20-yard run by freshman tailback
Julien Mundele fueled the drive. A
trick inside kick by Medford opened
the second half as Ortiz leaped high
to snare Zamora’s “pooch” kick. A 40yard
run by Zamora and six-yard TD
burst by Terence “The Bus” Burrell
gave Medford a 13-7 lead. Zamora’s
PAT made it 14-7 and turned out
to be the game-winning point. A
lightning response by Malden came
with a 72-yard TD run by Bethlemie,
but the PAT kick to tie bounced off
the goalpost, and Malden trailed,
14-13. Dave Richard and Jack Dolabany
made key sacks for Medford
as the visiting Mustang crowd, a
large one despite the team record,
roared with each one. On Malden’s
last chance drive, Ortiz sealed the
win with an acrobatic interception
at his own 25-yard line, following
his game-saving play with a “Mustang
Dive” into the Medford fans as
the Mustangs won for the seventh
straight time on Thanksgiving.
2001: In front of the largest crowd
in years at drizzly Hormel Stadium,
this one was thought to be an
evenly-matched battle before kickoff,
but Medford exploded in the
first half for a 27-0 lead en route
to a 34-6 victory. Sophomore tailback
Julien Mundele led the way
with four TDs and 219 yards rushing,
one TD short of Mike Colonna’s
series record of five TDs set in the
1972 game. Medford senior Angel
Ortiz scored the other first-half TD,
on a reception from senior QB Peter
Krasco, who returned to action
after missing three games with injury.
Krasco went for 138 yards on
8-of-13 numbers. A PAT kick by
Mike Piontkowski and two-point
conversion by Dennis Giannino off
a pass from the kicker were Medford’s
other first-half points. Mundele
scored his fourth TD on a 31yard
third-quarter run. Malden senior
quarterback Mike Hudd passed
for 143 yards, including a 43-yard
TD strike to Tim Konick, to avert the
shutout. Hudd set a single-season
Malden passing mark (1,571 yards)
in the loss. Medford tied an all-time
series record with its eighth-straight
Thanksgiving win.
2002: A heavy snowstorm blanketed
Macdonald Stadium in Malden
with nearly a foot of the white
stuff, but the Malden players and
coaches shoveled it off in time to
hand Medford a 12-0 shutout loss
and snap an eight-game Malden
loss streak. Malden won for the
first time since 1993 and also shut
out Medford for the first time since
the fabled 100th game in 1987 (280).
On the “frozen tundra” Golden
Tornadoes junior Elisee “Buddha”
Pompilus rushed for 149 yards on
23 carries and an 11-yard touchdown.
Running behind senior captain
Jim Noble and the Malden line,
Pompilus’s running set up a oneyard
TD burst by senior quarterback
A.C. Callahan with 8:53 left in
the half. The PAT kick was no good,
and Malden led, 6-0, which stood up
at half. Medford drove to the Malden
20 next, but Malden’s Dan Laskey
pounced on a Mustang fumble.
A scoreless third period left it at 6-0
heading into the final quarter. A 34yard
run by Pompilus set up his own
three-yard TD with 6:53 to go in the
game, and the conversion pass was
no good; Malden led, 12-0. Malden’s
J.D. Pappagallo was credited with
slowing down Mustang star runner
Julien Mundel,e who was held
to just one long fourth-quarter run.
2003: Malden won for the second-straight
year, 7-0, at sunny and
brisk Hormel, the first time Malden
shut out Medford in two consecutive
games in 44 years since 19581959
(26-0, 20-0) and the first time
Malden won two years in a row
since 1992-1993. The win also retied
the all-time series at 53-5310.
The game’s lone TD came on a
jet sweep by Malden junior Jamal
Woods (7 carries, 56 yards). Senior
co-captain Devin McNelis drilled
the PAT kick in the first quarter, and
that was it for scoring for the day,
as the defenses took over. The anticipated
showdown between star
backs Elisee Pompilis for Malden
and senior four-year starter Julien
Mundele of Medford never materialized
as each was essentially
held in check, though Mundele
did lead all rushers with 77 yards
on 20 carries. Penalties stalled Medford
all game, which never got inside
the Malden 20 in the second
half. For Malden, seniors McNelis,
6-7 NFL-bound end Breno Giacomini
(4 sacks), Rob Quigley, Sam Nelson
and junior Kevin Newhall bottled
up Medford’s attack. After the
game, Medford coach Al Pare announced
his retirement after four
years at the helm.
2004: One of the biggest offensive
lines in Malden High football
history simply dominated the line
of scrimmage as Malden won its
third straight, 28-6, on a partly sunny,
brisk morning at Macdonald Stadium.
Malden won its third-straight
for the first time in 26 years (19861988)
and spoiled first-year Medford
coach Mike DeFelice’s Thanksgiving
debut. Seniors Kevin Newhall
and Maurice Rodriquez, junior
Brendan McNelis and sophomores
James Brito-White and Brian
Melo dominated up front, and Jamal
Woods carried 13 times for 117
yards and two TDs to lead Malden.
Junior fullback Renaldo Bloodworth
ran for 60 yards, and junior slotback
Anthony Pappagallo had 49 yards
and a TD. Medford scored on the
last play of the first half when senior
QB Kevin Krasco hit junior end Kamal
Mgaresh in the back of the end
zone for an eight-yard TD. Bloodworth
and Woods scored in the second
half, and junior Wiston Jeuen
hit 4-of-4 PATs. Outsized, Medford
played tough all day, led by senior
linebacker Gerry Murphy’s 12 tackles
and two sacks. NU-bound Newhall
led Malden’s defense with 10
tackles. Malden retook the all-time
series lead, 54-53-10, in the victory.
2005: Malden High started quietly
but finished with a loud thump
in a 39-6 demolition in a traditional
“Mud Bowl” game at Hormel. The
fourth win in a row for Malden was
the first time in 40 years for a Golden
Tornadoes “Four-Peat.” The one-sided
win also capped the most successful
Malden season since 1988,
the first time it had won nine games
since 1987 as it finished 9-2. Star of
the day was junior Derek Freni, with
three touchdowns: one running,
one receiving and one punt return
TD. Classmate Jimmy Chery capped
a banner All-Scholastic campaign
with 13 carries for 122 yards. Freni,
senior co-captains Brendan McNelis
and Anthony Pappagallo along
with seniors Wiston Jeune, and Sam
Guillaume led the defense, allowing
Medford only one completed
pass all game and less than 50 yards
rushing. Medford (3-8) scored its
only points on an 85-yard kickoff return
TD by senior Kamal Mgaresh in
the third quarter. It was coach Rich
Cullen’s last game at Malden as he
retired in the offseason.
2006: Medford came in winless,
shut out on the scoreboard for six
straight games at 0-10 and the only
history many gave the Mustangs a
chance at making was they’d be the
“losingest” team in school history if
they dropped #11. There was positive
history to be made instead, as
Mustang Sean Foley booted a 26yard
field goal on Medford’s first
possession in the first overtime
game ever played in the storied,
119-year history of Medford-Malden,
a stunning, 17-14 upset at
rainy, muddy and dark Macdonald
Stadium in Malden. Medford’s
fans rushed the field after the “season-saver”
win, the second time in
the decade (2000) they had entered
the game winless and won it, and
third time overall (1976). Malden
finished 3-7 in coach John Lopresti’s
Thanksgiving debut. It also turned
out to be Medford coach Mike
DeFelice’s final game at the helm,
as Medford broke a four-game win
streak by Malden. Steve Murphy
was the Mustang workhorse in this
game, 138 yards and a TD on 23 carries,
as Medford shocked Malden
by taking a 14-0 lead as drenching
rain soaked the field. Malden did
regroup and owned the second
half, scoring twice to tie it, once on
a short keeper by sophomore QB
Justin Richardson and then on a
15-sweep around left end with just
46 seconds to play in the game by
senior All-Scholastic Jimmy Chery.
Chery caught the two-point conversion
pass in traffic to tie it. Both
teams got four downs from the 10yard
line in the historic, first-ever OT
period. Malden was stopped at the
three-yard line on fourth down by a
Steve Murphy tackle in its try. Medford
appeared to win it on second
down on a Murphy eight-yard TD
run on its try, but it was called back
due to a penalty. Two plays later, Foley’s
FG sealed the win.
2007: Game #120 at Hormel in
Medford featured the best weather
since the 2000 game, sunny and
“balmy” in the high 40s, and also
brought the closest finish since that
year as well, as it took a PAT kick
by sophomore Nick Hoyt, the first
of the season and of his career, to
make the difference in a 7-6 Malden
victory. This was a “pick ’em”
game to start and ended the same
way. Medford scored first on an 11yard
run by senior star runner Steve
Murphy, but could not convert and
led, 6-0. Malden (4-7) came back
and tied the game on a three-yard
run by backfield “newcomer” junior
captain David Freni, and it was up
to Hoyt to deliver the end-over-end
kick that made it by about two feet
over the upright for the lead at the
half. That was it for scoring as the
defenses took over. Both Freni and
sophomore Marcos Almeida ate up
lots of yards for Malden, and Murphy
did the same for Medford (29),
but no one could get into the
end zone. Medford’s last and best
bid ended on Malden’s eight-yard
line with 3:26 left to play when Murphy
was stopped short of the stake
by Malden seniors Andrew Dinisco
and Rodney Borgella. Medford still
didn’t quit, held Malden and got
the ball back with under a minute
to play, but sophomore Mustang
QB Mike Sullivan’s last pass of the
day was intercepted by Richardson
with 41 seconds left on the clock. Interim
head coach Jon Wilson was
at the helm for the Mustangs in his
first and only Thanksgiving game.
Coach Lopresti of Malden earned
his first Thanksgiving win.
2008: Nick Hoyt’s foot made the
difference in the 2007 game when
he kicked the extra point that won
the 121st meeting in 2007, 7-6. In
this one, Hoyt used both feet to
grind out 153 yards rushing and a
TD, the most rushing yards for a running
back for either team since 2001
in a 33-22 Malden win. The win cemented
a winning record for Malden,
as it put the Golden Tornadoes
team at 5-6 overall. Malden was
awarded a forfeit win when one of
its non-league opponents was later
found to have used an illegal player,
so Malden finished 6-5. Medford
finished 0-11 and, unfortunately, interim
head coach Mike Marchese’s
Mustangs became the first team
to ever lose 11 games in Medford
history. Marchese was coaching
in place of head coach Jim Atkins,
who was on paid suspension for the
second-straight Mustang football
season on Thanksgiving Day. Hoyt
ran in a TD; junior David Console
and sophomore Frankie Dunn also
scored on the ground for the largest
first-half lead for Malden in 20 years,
19-0. Soph Ronnie Pitterson caught
a TD pass from QB Alex Krasco, and
Medford trailed, 19-8, after three periods.
Herbens Antenor caught two
fourth-quarter TDs from Malden junior
QB Skakarus Semexant, and
Malden led, 33-8. Krasco finished off
with pair of TD tosses to senior Jan
Lopez for 31 and 23 yards to Jimmy
Richardson for a comeback try
that fell short. Giovanni Sanders and
Mike Sullivan each had two-point
conversion scores for Medford. It
turned out to be the last Thanksgiving
game for both head coaches, as
Malden’s John Lopresti retired in the
offseason with a 2-1 Turkey Day record
in his three years at the helm.
Marchese departed when Medford
hired a new football coach in the
offseason, Rico Dello Iacono, a former
Everett High assistant.
2009: Malden made it three in a
row with a hard-fought, 13-7 win
over host Medford on a crisp, sunny
day at Hormel Stadium. This one
turned out to be an “Instant Classic”
as it went down to the very last play
in one of the most exciting finishes
in many years. With 18 seconds
to play and Medford facing fourthand-goal
from the Malden 4-yard
line, QB Alex Krasco fired a pass to
Giovanni Sanders in the corner of
the end zone. But Malden’s Frankie
Dunn was there to tip the pass
away and seal the win. Both teams
came in with different hopes. Malden,
at 4-5, sought to avoid having
a losing season. Medford, at 5-4, was
looking to complete its first winning
season since 1998. Malden scored
first on a 17-yard TD catch by Ramon
Viches from Malden QB Shak
Semexant. Nick Hoyt’s PAT made it
7-0. Medford tied it in the second
quarter on a nine-yard keeper for
a TD, with freshman Isad Dzolota’s
PAT kick making it 7-7 at halftime.
Malden drove 45 yards after a Mustang
turnover for a go-ahead score,
four-yard run by Hoyt after series of
short passes to Frankie Dunn and
David Console. Hoyt’s PAT fluttered
away, and it was 13-7, Malden. Malden
turned the ball over in its own
territory twice in the final four minutes
of the game on fumbles after
completed passes, but Medford
could not capitalize. Malden firstyear
coach, Joe Pappagallo, became
the first Malden coach in 36 years to
win his Thanksgiving debut since
Malden Hall of Fame coach Paul
Finn’s boys beat Medford in an upset
in 1973.
2010: Malden head coach Joe
Pappagallo won his second game in
two tries at the helm in a 29-0 shutout
victory over Medford in Game
#123 at Macdonald Stadium in Malden,
keeping pace with the legendary
Paul Finn in 1973 and 1974. But
Pappagallo made more series history
when his senior captain, 6-1, 305
lb. lineman Aaron Samano scored
the game’s first touchdown on a
five-yard “lumber” into the end zone
in the first. Little did anyone know
this would be the only score of the
first half as Malden led a spirited
Medford bunch, 7-0, at halftime. In
the second half, Malden used its size
advantage to play ball-control as senior
quarterback Kevin Valley threw
a 29-yard touchdown pass to Frankie
Dunn and then scored himself on
a five-yard touchdown run in the
third quarter. Senior Kenny Metellus
scored on an eight-yard run in the
fourth quarter. Medford could not
get much going offensively, though
it did get solid efforts out of a pair
of youngsters: a freshman starting
at quarterback, Gene Consalves,
and junior Nick Olivier out of the
backfield. Malden’s three best defensive
players in this shutout win
were juniors Austin Teal, Withchie
Exilhomme and Jamie McInerney,
all of whom were named tri-captains
for the 2011 season.
2011: This one was all Malden as
the visitors might have scored the
fastest touchdown in the 124-game
series history when junior Ray Sainristil
dove on a fumble in the end
zone after Medford’s first snap from
scrimmage. It was never in doubt
thereafter as junior quarterback
Jake Martino threw three first-half
touchdown passes on the way to
a 36-0 Malden win, two shutouts
in a row and for the first time in 50
years, five straight Malden Thanksgiving
victories (9-of-10 since 2002).
It was the fourth time in series history
that Malden won two years
in a row by shutout, the first since
2002-2003 (12-0, 7:0). Head coach
Joe Pappagallo’s Malden team posted
the biggest Thanksgiving shutout
win in over 100 years, since a
1907 Blue and Gold victory by a
44-0 count. Malden used its size and
speed advantage to pile up points
for a 28-0 halftime lead. After Sainristil’s
fumble recovery touchdown,
Malden made it 14-0 after the first
quarter on a five-yard touchdown
pass from Martino to senior captain
Witchevalence “Witchie” Exilhomme
and a Martino keeper for
two. Malden stayed in air raid mode
in the second quarter – Martino to
senior Garvin Cius for a 23-yard TD
pass, with a Pat DeCicco run for a
22-0 lead. Late in the second quarter,
Martino hooked up again, hitting
junior Franklin Huynh for a 15yard
TD pass. Malden played ball
control in the second half, feeding
top back O’Shane McCreath, who
picked up 87 yards on just 11 carries
and became the first Malden
SPORTS | SEE PAGE 17
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THE MALDEN ADVOCATE–Wednesday, November 27, 2019
~ Legal Notice ~
COMMONWEALTH OF MASSACHUSETTS
SALE OF REAL ESTATE
UNDER M.G.L. c. 183A:6
By virtue of a Judgment and Order of the Malden District Court (Civil Action No. 1850 CV 622), in favor of the Trustees of the Malden Mills
Condominium Association Trust against The Estate of Tariqul Hague a/k/a Tarik Haque, et al, establishing a lien pursuant to M.G.L. c. 183A:6
on the real estate known as Unit 108 of the Malden Mills Condominium with a street address of 10 Linwood Street, Unit 108, Malden, Middlesex
County, Massachusetts for the purposes of satisfying such lien, the real estate is scheduled for Public Auction commencing at 11:00 a.m. on
December 11, 2019 at 10 Linwood Street, Unit 108, Malden, Massachusetts. The premises to be sold are more particularly described as follows:
DESCRIPTION:
Unit Designation: Unit 108
Unit Post Office Address: 10 Linwood Street, Malden, MA 02148
Percentage Interest: .0143
Area: 524+ sq. feet
The Unit described above in the Malden Mills Condominium was created by a Master Deed dated May 5, 1987 and recorded in the Middlesex South
District Registry of Deeds in Book 18141, Page 58, in accordance with the provisions of M.G.L. Ch. 183A.
The Unit contains the area listed above and is laid out as shown as shown on a plan recorded herewith, which is a copy of a portion of the plans
recorded herewith, which is a copy of a portion of the plans filed with the Master Deed and to which is affixed a verified statement in the form
provided for in M.G.L. Ch. 183A, Section 9.
The Unit is conveyed together with the above-listed Percentage Interest (a) in the common areas and facilities of the Condominium, as described in
the said Master Deed, and (b) membership in the Malden Mills Condominium Association, subject to a Declaration of Trust, By-Laws and Rules
and Regulations recorded with said Registry of Deeds in Book 18141, Page 79.
The Unit is conveyed together with the exclusive easement to use parking space No. 74 as shown on the site plan recorded with said Master Deed
so long as Grantee(s) hereunder owns said Unit, and in accord with all applicable By-Laws, Rules and Regulations, and the exclusive easement to
use storage space No. 30 as shown on basement floor plan recorded with said Master Deed so long as Grantee(s) hereunder owns said Unit, and in
accord with all applicable By-Laws, Rules and Regulations.
The Unit is to be used only for residential purpose and for no other purpose, except as may be expressly permitted by the Directors in accordance
with the provisions of the said Malden Mills Condominium Association Trust. The Unit is further subject to all amendments of the Master Deed and
By-Laws. The Grantee(s) acquires the Unit with the benefit of and subject to the provisions of M.G.L. Ch. 183A, relating to condominiums, as that
statute is written as of the date hereof, the said Master Deed and Malden Mills Condominium Association Trust referred to above and any By-Laws
and Rules and Regulations from time to time adopted thereunder, and all matters of record stated or referred to in the said Master Deed as if each
were fully set forth herein; and subject to real estate taxes attributable to the Unit which are not yet due and payable.
For title, see Deed to Tariqul Hague dated August 3, 1988 and recorded with the Middlesex County (Southern District) Registry of Deeds in Book
19244, Page 292.
In the event of a typographical error or omission contained in this publication, the description of the premises contained in said Unit Deed shall
control.
TERMS OF SALE:
1.
2.
3.
A non-refundable deposit payable in cash, certified or bank check in the amount of $5,000.00 for the unit shall be payable at the Auction.
The balance of the purchase price is to be paid within thirty (30) days of the auction.
An Auctioneer’s Release Deed will be issued to the purchaser, upon payment of the balance of the purchase price, within thirty (30) days
of the auction. The Deed shall convey the premises subject to, and with the benefit of, all restrictions, easements, improvements, outstanding tax
titles, municipal or other public taxes, assessments, liens, or claims in the nature of liens, and existing encumbrances of record senior to the lien
hereby being satisfied, whether or not reference to such restrictions, easements, improvements, outstanding tax titles, municipal or other public
taxes, assessments, liens or claims in the nature of liens or encumbrances is made in the deed.
4.
if any.
5.
6.
7.
8.
9.
10.
Additionally, and not by way of limitation, the sale shall be subject to and with the benefit of any and all tenants, tenancies, and occupants,
No representation is or shall be made as to any amount of taxes due and outstanding.
The successful bidder shall pay the future condominium common charges commencing with the date of the auction.
No representation is or shall be made as to any other mortgages, liens, or encumbrances of record.
No representation is or shall be made as to the condition of the Premises or the Condominium. The Premises shall be sold “as is.”
Other items, if any, shall be announced at the sale.
The sale is subject to and in accordance with the Judgment and Order, a copy of which may be obtained from the seller’s counsel, Attorney
Pamela M. Jonah, Marcus, Errico, Emmer & Brooks, P.C., 45 Braintree Hill Park, Suite 107, Braintree, MA 02184, (781) 843-5000.
MALDEN MILLS CONDOMINIUM ASSOCIATION TRUST,
By its Board of Trustees
November 15, 22 & 29, 2019
׉	 7cassandra://39vjcqnTEP4bsGCrjWkMJAypE-eKjfnkc_lds2Xbi98`̰ ]܆pz׉E-THE MALDEN ADVOCATE–Wednesday, November 27, 2019
Page 17
SPORTS | FROM PAGE 15
back to top 1,000 yards rushing in
a season (1,0121) since Ricky Bethlemie
ran for 1,130 in 2002. Martino
threw for 198 yards on the frame,
1,550 for the year and 19 TDs. Malden’s
defense ruled for the shutout
win led by fellow co-captains Austin
Teal, Jamie McInerney and Exilhomme,
the best defensive player
in the GBL in 2011. Tyler Williams’s
32-yard interception return for the
game’s final points five minutes into
the second half completed the scoring.
The Mustangs had some solid
play from Max Clancy, Chris Bucknam
and Reggie Fleurial. Medford
started a freshman at quarterback
in this one for maybe the first time
in series history in Gene Gonclaves.
They were hurt by the loss of top offensive
weapon senior back Nick Olivier,
who was injured and out of action
for this one. It ended up being
the final Thanksgiving game on the
sidelines for third-year head coach
Rico Dello Iacono, who stepped
down after Game Three in the 2012
Mustang season. He went 0-3 for
the holiday classic.
2012: The largest crowd in years
turned out for the historic 125th
Game held at Macdonald Stadium
in Malden under a fabulous, sunny
sky with temperatures perfect
– around 40 degrees. Malden won
the game, by a 32-6 final, to capture
its sixth straight, behind the
passing of senior QB Jake Martino,
who completed 12-of-23 passes for
123 yards on the day. Junior Reggie
Thelemaque led Medford from the
QB spot with 89 yards rushing. He
scored Medford’s only TD on an exciting,
54-yard run to open the third
VOTE | FROM PAGE 14
“We applaud the hard work
of Education Committee Chairs
Rep. Alice Peisch and Sen. Jason
Lewis, and thank all of our
elected leaders for their willingness
to listen to superintendents,
who oversee schools across the
Commonwealth,” said Massachusetts
Association of School Superintendents
Executive Director
Tom Scott. “Having been a partner
in these conversations since
the formation of the Foundation
quarter. Junior Malik McLaren finished
with 72 yards on 14 carries.
Senior Rodney Blaise scored two
TDs for Malden on a three-yard
run in the second quarter and on a
five-yard pass from Martino in the
third. Junior Ray Sainristil opened
the scoring with a first quarter, oneyard
TD plunge. Senior Captain Paul
Kiernan caught a two-point conversion
pass from Martino for an 8-0
Malden lead. Senior Patrick Provitola,
who also played great at linebacker,
caught a two-point conversion
pass. Sainristil scored two TDs.
2013: For one of the few times in
the series’ ancient 126-game history,
Malden High scored as many
points defensively (eight) as offensively
in a holiday win, topping host
Medford, 16-0, at cold and blustery
Hormel Stadium. The wind chill was
even lower than the Malden final
score on this day. Malden scored
on its first possession on a 21-yard
run by Raymond Sainristil. The extra-point
conversion try was no
good, and it stayed 6-0 until Malden
senior captain Jensen Ayuk leveled
Medford’s Xavier Gibson on the very
last play of the first half, scooped the
loose ball and ran it in for a safety,
Malden 8-0, at the half. Medford’s
defense also played tough, causing
three Malden fumbles on the day,
recoveries by Mustang Matt Sullivan
and Gibson. Ayuk struck again
midway through the third quarter,
running back an interception
off Mustang QB Reg Thelemaque
for a 58-yard Pick 6 score. Malden
QB Loveng Francois ran in the two
point conversion for the 16-0 final.
2014: This was another classic
“throw out the records” upset win
that few saw coming, except for
Budget Review Commission, we
recognize that providing the resources
to keep Massachusetts
competitive and to re-establish
equity across all zip codes is not
an easy task. Expanding opportunities
for all children is at the
heart of district leadership, and
we believe that the Student Opportunity
Act makes the necessary
reforms to ensure that our
schools and our students get the
resources they need to succeed.”
To support ongoing efforts to
address education-funding chal~
LEGAL NOTICE ~
MALDEN BOARD OF APPEAL
PUBLIC HEARING
The Malden Board of Appeal will hold a public
hearing at the John and Christina Markey Malden Senior
Community Center, 7 Washington Street, Malden, MA at
6:30 P.M.
on Wednesday, December
18,
2019 on
Petition 19-016 by Andrew William Tchate for a variance of
Section 800.4.1.3 Chapter 12, of the Revised Ordinances of
1991 as Amended of the City of Malden, Adminstrationto
hear and decide appeals of decisions or orders made
by the Insepctor of Buildings or other administrative official,
Namely, the use or occupancy, at the property known
as and numbered 58 Malden Street, Malden, MA and
also known by City Assessor’s Parcel ID # 038-208-812.
Petition & plans available for public review in Office of
Assessor, 110 Pleasant St., 3rd floor. Malden MA or online
at www.cityofmalden.org or https://permits.cityofmalden.
org/EnerGov_Prod/SelfService.
By: James O’Brien
Chairman
November 27 & December 6, 2019
those on the Medford sidelines, of
course. Under a full cover of snow,
over a foot on the artificial surface
of Malden’s Macdonald Stadium before
it was cleared by game time,
Medford head coach Jason Nascimento
recorded his first Thanksgiving
Day coaching win in a 3612
win over host Malden. Medford
came into the game at 1-9 overall
and looking to break a long, seven-game
Thanksgiving Day win
streak for Malden, and they got the
job done. Medford QB Adrien Pineda
led the way offensively, 5-of-12
passing for 244 yards and three TDs,
two to Myles Olivier. Pineda also
scored a TD himself on an 11-yard
run in the fourth quarter and threw
a TD pass to Jose Lopes. For Malden,
junior Danley Exilhomme scored
both of Malden’s touchdowns, but
Medford looked in command with
an 18-12 halftime lead. It was all
Medford in the second half, led by
Pineda and the two-man wrecking
crew defensive duo of Matt Sullivan
and Anthony DiRienzo, who
were dubbed “The Smash Brothers”
in reports on the game. Each
also had a key interception in the
second half. Sullivan and DiRienzo
each had double-digit tackles,
making life miserable for the Malden
offense.
2015: They showed up at Hormel
Stadium for Game #128 at Hormel
Stadium… and a Malden Game
broke out. Malden scored early, often
and then some in a raucous, record-setting
victory – they honked
and hollered all the way in a 59-36
Golden Tornadoes victory, the highest
scoring game, two teams combined
– ever – in series history. It
was also the most points Malden
lenges, the legislation also includes
the following provisions:
• Establishes a Rural Schools
Commission to investigate the
unique challenges facing rural
and regional school districts with
low and declining enrollment and
make recommendations for furhad
ever scored on Thanksgiving
Day and the most since a 50-6 win
in 1960. Medford scored 36 points
for the second straight year (and the
most points in the 128-game history
for the series by a team that did
not win the game. Malden also set
a record in this game as the Golden
Tornadoes defense scored a whopping
(and record) five times on the
morning. Malden led 28-0 after the
first quarter, and 45-8 at halftime,
but Medford did not quit – led by
Cory Moore – who finished with
three TDs and 155 yards rushing.
Medford owned the second half,
outscoring the visitors, 28-14, but
led by the Exilhomme Brothers, DJ
and Danley, Malden held Medford
at bay long enough at the end. Danley
Ex returned two interceptions
for TDs and ran for two more. DJ
scored three TDs – seven TDs between
them. Malden clinched its
first GBL title since 1989 with the
win. Eighth-year head coach Joe
Pappagallo added to the momentous
day by announcing his resignation
at halftime.
2016: Despite scoring early and
playing a solid first quarter, Medford
ultimately fell to Malden, 41-18.
2017: Medford and Malden,
both entering the game with losing
seasons, slugged it out in an
exciting back-and-forth game
that marked the 130th time they
had met on Thanksgiving. Medford
capitalized on Malden errors,
scoring a touchdown on a
fumble recovery and scoring after
successfully foiling Malden’s
attempt at a two-point conversion.
Malden ultimately won the
match, 27-22, and the win was
the Golden Tornadoes’ only one
ther updates to help impacted districts
and communities
• Directs the Department of Revenue
and Department of Elementary
and Secondary Education to
analyze the method of determining
required local contributions
in the Chapter 70 school fund~
LEGAL NOTICE ~
PERMITS, INSPECTIONS & PLANNING SERVICES
110 Pleasant Street, 2nd
City of Malden, Massachusetts
Floor
Malden, Massachusetts 02148
(781) 397-7000 ext. 2030
MALDEN PLANNING BOARD
PUBLIC HEARING
The Malden Planning Board will hold a public hearing in the Auditorium on the First
Floor of the JOHN & CHRISTINA MARKEY MALDEN SENIOR COMMUNITY
CENTER, 7 Washington Street, Malden, MA at 7:00 PM on Wednesday,
December 11, 2019 on the petition of Lawrence French, on behalf of property owner,
L. French Realty Trust, for a special permit under Section 700.1.3.1 of Chapter 12,
Revised Ordinances of 1991, as Amended, of the City of Malden, seeking to structurally
change, extend and change use of a preexisting nonconforming property in the
Residence A zoning district, namely, to construct two dormers on the third floor of
the existing building and to change use from a single-family dwelling and rooming
house to a three-family dwelling, at the property known as and numbered
98 Laurel Street Malden, MA, and also known by City Assessor’s Parcel ID
#133 684 406. Petition and plans are available for public review in the Permits,
Inspections & Planning Office, Malden City Hall, 110 Pleasant Street, 2nd Floor,
Malden, MA and on the City website under Permit Application # CMID-029792-2019 at
https://permits.cityofmalden.org/EnerGov_PROD/SelfService#/home.
By: Kenneth Antonucci, Clerk
Malden Planning Board
November 22 & 27, 2019
of the season; second-year head
coach Bill Manchester’s team finished
1-10 overall. Junior Wesley
Pierre stole the show with over 15
rushing yards and two TDs. Freshman
Justin Nortelus also scored a
TD, the first ninth-grader to score
for Malden on Thanksgiving ever, it
is believed. Coach Manchester resigned
his post three weeks later.
2018: The temperature was the
big story before this game even
started, when a record cold wave
gripped the region, sending the
thermometer to a bone-chilling 15
degrees with a gusty wind making
the wind chill factor around 0 degrees.
Medford was the favored
team coming in, with a 3-7 record,
and Malden was winless, but the
Golden Tornados capitalized on
five Medford turnovers, including
a lost fumble with under a minute
to play on Malden’s 21-yard line and
the Golden Tornadoes clinging to
a 26-24 lead. Freshman linebacker
Justin Desimone recovered his second
fumble of the game after Malden
senior Sean Stout tackled backup
Medford QB Joel Disla and the
ball came free, recovered by Malden.
Medford starting QB Keith Barrasso
had left the game two plays
earlier after an injury. Barrasso had
been the game's best player before
that, with a record 230 yards rushing
on 24 carries and three touchdowns.
Malden got touchdowns
from junior Jerry Mervil (2) and
sophomore Matthew Bessey. At
the conclusion of the game, Medford’s
10-year head coach Jason Nascimento
announced he was retiring
from the post. First-year Malden
head coach Steve Freker got a win
in his Thanksgiving debut.
ing–formula for the purpose of
improving equity, predictability
and accuracy
• Requires MSBA to undertake
a review of the current program,
now in its fifteenth year, to ensure
that capital reimbursements meet
district needs
׉	 7cassandra://sM_g2wO6EiOgOIyJRw4La9tCGVuZy4s0niC5pB4q88U"`̰ ]܆pz݁]܆pz܁
PבCט   (u׉׉	 7cassandra://kxxndpohTvOg80IikHouZ4Z6wYNgmFmLZba3FUyjkvc `)׉	 7cassandra://oUZAr4oVM5BtFH5K4wQbAACrh5VYEMYT5dyOfemDjgQ}`J׉	 7cassandra://RcprJasWprPrtQ8lgKTvGc3p2w2qrKY2aaVgHYiiQf8$`̰ ׉	 7cassandra://6q3DzDLUsoczGVs1NKRuJ4lBERU7pXz6EiJ9xixNVck 8̠͠]܆z#ט ( (u׉׉	 7cassandra://riVJYUIQMLjGGHcp9FTli3kCQeiXS3wBDLKCYJ2gmFY 	* ` )׉	 7cassandra://dY5ROhIac8SMU33-8umXzBTcTxUFjPslsWtu3AHtxdY͎|`J׉	 7cassandra://uu08uor9EqQy6qwGEccUHKXMMbPM7JzFCllNn_yDHkM'@`̰ ׉	 7cassandra://lG6aENHNl6G9ZkgE8UFWKG8BkUjei2kZqbyoaka867k K̌͠]܆z$נ]܆z1 LR̒9ׁHhttp://lovetotherescue.orgׁׁЈנ]܆z0 q"9ׁH @https://permits.cityofmalden.org/EnerGov_PROD/SelfService#/home.ׁׁЈנ]܆z/ tb9ׁH 1http://cityofmalden.org/EnerGov_Prod/SelfService.ׁׁЈנ]܆z. ̰9ׁHhttp://www.cityofmalden.orgׁׁЈ׉EPage 18
THE MALDEN ADVOCATE–Wednesday, November 27, 2019
~ LEGAL NOTICE ~
MALDEN BOARD OF APPEAL
PUBLIC HEARING
The Malden Board of Appeal will hold a public hearing at
the John and Christina Markey Malden Senior
Community Center, 7 Washington Street, Malden, MA at
6:30 P.M. on Wednesday, December 18, 2019 on
Petition 19-017 by Syed S. Shabbir for a variance of
Section 800.4.1.3 Chapter 12, of the Revised Ordinances of
1991 as Amended of the City of Malden, Administrationto
hear and decide appeals of decisions or orders made by
the Inspector of Buildings or other administrative official.
Namely, the use or occupancy, at the property known as
and numbered 27 Home Street, Malden, MA and also
known by City Assessor’s Parcel ID # 144-677-704.
Petition & plans available for public review in Office of
Assessor, 110 Pleasant St., 3rd floor. Malden MA or online
at www.cityofmalden.org or https://permits.cityofmalden.
org/EnerGov_Prod/SelfService.
By: James O’Brien
Chairman
November 27 & December 6, 2019
~ LEGAL NOTICE ~
~ LEGAL NOTICE ~
MALDEN BOARD OF APPEAL
PUBLIC HEARING
The Malden Board of Appeal will hold a public
hearing at the John and Christina Markey Malden Senior
Community Center, 7 Washington Street, Malden, MA at
6:30 P.M.
on Wednesday, December
18,
2019 on
Petition 19-018 by Timothy Brash for a variance of
Section 500.1.2.3 Chapter 12, of the Revised Ordinances
of 1991 as Amended of the City of Malden. Namely, the
Offstreet parking regulations for dwelling three and four
family – minimum number of parking spaces (1) one per
bedroom, as per plans CMID-031529-2019 at the property
known as and numbered 11-15 Acorn Ct, Malden, MA and
also known by City Assessor’s Parcel ID # 064-309-930.
Petition & plans available for public review in Office of
Assessor, 110 Pleasant St., 3rd floor. Malden MA or online
at www.cityofmalden.org or https://permits.cityofmalden.
org/EnerGov_Prod/SelfService.
By: James O’Brien
Chairman
November 27 & December 6, 2019
~ LEGAL NOTICE ~
MALDEN BOARD OF APPEAL
PUBLIC HEARING
The Malden Board of Appeal will hold a public
hearing at the John and Christina Markey Malden Senior
Community Center, 7 Washington Street, Malden at
6:30 P.M. on Wednesday, December 18, 2019 on
Petition 19-015 by Jordan Shapiro on behalf of Carine
Cetoute, formerly Carine Vendryef for a variance of
Section 800.4.1.3
Chapter
12, of
the Revised
Ordinances of 1991 as Amended of the City of Malden,
Administration- to hear and decide appeals of decisions
or orders made by the Inspector of Buildings or other
administrative official, Namely, the use or
occupancy, at the property known as and
numbered 65 Lowell St., Malden, MA and also
known by City Assessor’s Parcel ID #080-363-323.
Petition & plans available for public review in Office of
Assessor, 110 Pleasant St., 3rd floor. Malden MA or
online at www.cityofmalden.org or https://permits.
ci t yo fma lden.o r g/EnerG ov_P r o d/S e lfS er v ice .
By: James O’Brien
Chairman
November 22 & 27, 2019
November 22 & 27, 2019
~ LEGAL NOTICE ~
PERMITS, INSPECTIONS & PLANNING SERVICES
110 Pleasant Street, 2nd
City of Malden, Massachusetts
Floor
Malden, Massachusetts 02148
(781) 397-7000 ext. 2044
MALDEN PLANNING BOARD
PUBLIC HEARING
The Malden Planning Board will hold a public hearing in the Auditorium on the First
Floor of the JOHN & CHRISTINA MARKEY MALDEN SENIOR COMMUNITY
CENTER, 7 Washington Street, Malden, MA at 7:00 PM on Wednesday,
December 11, 2019 on the petition of 100 Maplewood Street LLC for a special permit
under Section 700.13 of Chapter 12, Revised Ordinances of 1991, as Amended, of the
City of Malden, to remove ledge and alter the grade to prepare the property to
construct a new single-story commercial building with basement, at the property
known as and numbered 100 Maplewood Street, Malden, MA and also known by City
Assessor’s Parcel ID # 127 433 302. Petition and plans are available for public review
in the Permits, Inspections & Planning Office, 2nd Floor, 110 Pleasant Street,
Malden, MA and under Permit # CMID-031818-2019 at
https://permits.cityofmalden.org/EnerGov_PROD/SelfService#/home.
By: Kenneth Antonucci
Clerk
PERMITS, INSPECTIONS & PLANNING SERVICES
110 Pleasant Street, 2nd
City of Malden, Massachusetts
Floor
Malden, Massachusetts 02148
(781) 397-7000 ext. 2044
MALDEN PLANNING BOARD
PUBLIC HEARING
The Malden Planning Board will hold a public hearing in the Auditorium on the First Floor
of the JOHN & CHRISTINA MARKEY MALDEN SENIOR COMMUNITY CENTER,
7 Washington Street, Malden, MA at 7:00 PM on Wednesday, December 11, 2019 on the
petition of Bay State Commons LLC to amend the special permit granted in Case #19-04
under Section 300.3.2.13, Chapter 12, Revised Ordinances of 1991, as Amended, of the City
of Malden, that allows Dwelling, Co-Housing use of property in the Residential Office
zoning district, namely, to construct a dwelling containing three stories and thirty (30)
dwelling units, at the property known as and numbered 368 Pleasant Street, Malden, MA
and also known by City of Malden Assessor’s Parcel ID # 030 134 416. Petition and plans
are available for public review in the Permits, Inspections & Planning Office, 2nd Floor, 110
Pleasant Street, Malden, MA and under Permit # CMID-030122-2019 at
https://permits.cityofmalden.org/EnerGov_PROD/SelfService#/home.
By: Kenneth Antonucci
Clerk
November 22 & 27, 2019
Happy Thanksgiving from
our family to yours
335 Central Street,
Saugus, MA 01906
(781) 233-7300
View the interior
of this home
right on your
smartphone.
View all our listings at: CarpenitoRealEstate.com
׉	 7cassandra://RcprJasWprPrtQ8lgKTvGc3p2w2qrKY2aaVgHYiiQf8$`̰ ]܆pz׉ETHE MALDEN ADVOCATE–Wednesday, November 27, 2019
Obituaries
Page 19
Thomas
F. Hines
P
assed away
peacefully
on November
23, 2019, at
home surrounded
by his loving
family. He was
90 years old.
Thomas was a longtime resident
of Malden and a United States
Army Veteran during the Korean
Conflict. He worked as a locksmith
at Harvard University in
Cambridge for 35 years and was
a longtime coach for Malden Little
League Baseball. Thomas was
known as everybody’s Papa.
Thomas was the beloved husband
of the late Anna T. (Fitzgerald)
Hines. He was the son of
the late John and Mary (Gavin)
Hines. Thomas was the loving
father of Thomas F. Hines Jr. and
his wife Susan of North Attleboro,
Maureen Hines Simopoulos
of Malden, Kevin Hines of
Hudson, NH and his dear friend
Darleen Koetsch, and Kathleen
M. Hines of Malden. He was the
dear brother of Margaret O’Connor,
Francis Hines, Daniel Hines
and his wife Lynda, Nancy Manning
and her husband William,
and the late Edward, Mary, John,
James, and Joseph Hines. Thomas
was the cherished grandfa~
LEGAL NOTICE ~
MALDEN BOARD OF APPEAL
PUBLIC HEARING
The Malden Board of Appeal will hold a public hearing
at the John and Christina Markey Malden Senior
Community Center, 7 Washington Street, Malden, MA
at 6:30 P.M. on Wednesday, December 18, 2019 on
Petition 19-014 by Ed Spinney of Sign Art, Inc. on
behalf of WS Development for a variance of Section
3.35.9.3.2.1 Chapter 3, of the Revised Ordinances of
1991 as Amended of the City of Malden, Sign Design
Control Ordinances. Namely, Dimensional Controls for
sign size, as per plans SGER-031199-2019 at the
property known as 38 Broadway, Malden, MA and also
known by City Assessor’s Parcel ID #125-481-103.
Petition & plans available for public review in Office of
Assessor, 110 Pleasant St., 3rd floor. Malden MA or
online at www.cityofmalden.org or https://permits.
cityofmalden.org/EnerGov_Prod/SelfService.
By: James O’Brien
Chairman
November 27 & December 6, 2019
~ LEGAL NOTICE ~
PERMITS, INSPECTIONS & PLANNING SERVICES
110 Pleasant Street, 2nd
City of Malden, Massachusetts
Floor
Malden, Massachusetts 02148
(781) 397-7000 ext. 2030
MALDEN PLANNING BOARD
PUBLIC HEARING
The Malden Planning Board will hold a public hearing in the Auditorium on the First
Floor of the JOHN & CHRISTINA MARKEY MALDEN SENIOR COMMUNITY
CENTER, 7 Washington Street, Malden, MA at 7:00 PM on Wednesday,
December 11, 2019 on the petition of Lawrence French, on behalf of property owner,
L. French Realty Trust, for a special permit under Section 700.1.3.1 of Chapter 12,
Revised Ordinances of 1991, as Amended, of the City of Malden, seeking to structurally
change, extend and change use of a preexisting nonconforming property in the
Residence A zoning district, namely, to construct two dormers on the third floor of
the existing building and to change use from a single-family dwelling and rooming
house to a three-family dwelling, at the property known as and numbered
98 Laurel Street Malden, MA, and also known by City Assessor’s Parcel ID
#133 684 406. Petition and plans are available for public review in the Permits,
Inspections & Planning Office, Malden City Hall, 110 Pleasant Street, 2nd Floor,
Malden, MA and on the City website under Permit Application # CMID-029792-2019 at
https://permits.cityofmalden.org/EnerGov_PROD/SelfService#/home.
By: Kenneth Antonucci, Clerk
Malden Planning Board
November 22 & 27, 2019
ther of James M. and Brian P. Donahue,
Shaun T. and Erin E. Hines,
and Kristina M. and Julie A. Simopoulos.
He is also survived
by many nieces and nephews.
In lieu of flowers donations in
Tom’s memory may be made to
Shriner’s Hospital, 51 Blossom
St., Boston, MA 02114 or https://
lovetotherescue.org.
George W.
Mason, Sr.
A
lifelong
resident of
Malden, passed
away on Friday,
November
15, after a brief illness. George
was born in Chelsea in 1947, the
son of Robert and Ruth (Olson)
Paradise. He was raised in Malden,
and after completing his
education, he began working in
the asphalt paving trade. Over
the years he had worked at Commonwealth
Paving and AAA
Paving. He was a beloved man,
active in the community and a
member of many clubs and organizations,
including being a
longtime Mason, a Past President
of the Eagles, and a Past Exalted
Ruler of the Lodge of Elks.
He is survived by his wife, Linda
J. Mason, his mother Ruth
Paradise of Malden, his children,
Craig Mason and wife Tammy,
Robert Mason and wife Patricia
of Stoneham, George W. Mason
Jr. and wife Julie of Malden, Edward
Mason of NH. Maureen
Mason and husband Kevin of
Malden, Christina Zeletsky and
husband Dennis of NH, Dawna
Glaude of Haverhill, Todd Mason
of Malden, Danielle Casoli
and husband Michael of Saugus,
Deirdra Crocker and husband
Jonathan of Malden, and
Diamond Martins of Salsbury,
his sisters, Donna Murtagh of
Malden and Rose Stanley of NH,
as well as many many grandchilOBITUARIES
| SEE PAGE 20
Snow Shovelers Wanted
(Everett, Revere, Chelsea)
Earn extra money! Need to be in good health to
shovel snow, spread salt, and run a snow blower.
Pays $20 per hour, based on experience.
Call Anthony at (617) 212-2003
Bingo is Back every Tuesday night
Congregation Agudas Achim-Ezrath Israel
245 Bryant St. off Rt. 60, Malden
781-322-7205
Doors open at 4:00 PM Games start at 6:30 PM
Free Coffee Cash Snack Bar
Pull Tab Tickets available Come Back Prizes
~ LEGAL NOTICE ~
COMMONWEALTH OF MASSACHUSETTS
THE TRIAL COURT
PROBATE AND FAMILY COURT
Middlesex Probate and Family Court
208 Cambridge Street,
Cambridge, MA 02141
(617) 768-5800
Docket No. MI19P5519EA
Estate of: Thomas Farina
Date of Death: 09/16/2019
CITATION ON PETITION FOR
FORMAL ADJUDICATION
To all interested persons: A petition for Formal Adjudication
of Intestacy and Appointment of Personal Representative has
been filed by Maureen E. Lane of Malden, MA requesting that
the Court enter a formal Decree and Order and for such other
relief as requested in the Petition. The Petitioner requests that:
Maureen E. Lane of Malden, MA be appointed as Personal
Representative(s) of said estate to serve Without Surety on the
bond in an unsupervised administration.
IMPORTANT NOTICE
You have the right to obtain a copy of the Petition from
the Petitioner or at the Court. You have a right to object to
this proceeding. To do so, you or your attorney must file a
written appearance and objection at this Court before:
10:00 a.m. on the return day of 12/20/2019.
This is NOT a hearing date, but a deadline by which you
must file a written appearance and objection if you object to
this proceeding. If you fail to file a timely written appearance
and objection followed by an affidavit of objections within
thirty (30) days of the return day, action may be taken without
further notice to you.
UNSUPERVISED ADMINISTRATION UNDER THE
MASSACHUSETTS UNIFORM PROBATE CODE (MUPC)
A Personal Representative appointed under the MUPC in
an unsupervised administration is not required to file an
inventory or annual accounts with the Court. Persons interested
in the estate are entitled to notice regarding the administration
directly from the Personal Representative and may petition
the Court in any matter relating to the estate, including the
distribution of assets and expenses of administration.
WITNESS, Hon. Maureen H. Monks, First Justice of this
Court.
Date: November 22, 2019
TARA E. DeCRISTOFARO
REGISTER OF PROBATE
November 27, 2019
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THE MALDEN ADVOCATE–Wednesday, November 27, 2019
OBITUARIES | FROM PAGE 18
dren, nieces, and nephews.
George was preceded in death
by his father, Robert J. Paradise,
his son, Derek Mason and his sister,
Florence Jones.
Louis T. Maglione
O
f Malden
passed
away suddenly
on Tuesday evening
November
19, 2019, he was 67. Louis was
born in Revere, the son of the
late Rocco A. & Rita C. (Puopolo)
Maglione. Louis was raised
in Malden and was a graduate
of Don Bosco High School in
East Boston & Lowell College in
Lowell.
After high school, Louis joined
the U.S. Air Force, serving during
the Vietnam Era. After serving his
country, Louise was discharged
as a 2d Lieutenant U.S. Air Force.
He later took employment with
the Veterans Administration in
the Jamaica Plan section of Boston,
as a file clerk. He had just
retired within the last few years.
In his younger days he was an
altar boy, along with his brother
Anthony at the Sacred Heart Parish
in Malden. While at Dom Bosco
High School Louis excelled
on the track team. In his spare
time he was an avid Boston Red
Sox fan. He was an active member
of the Malden YMCA and
was a member of the Revere
Italian Americans Club. He also
enjoyed researching Wall Street
stocks and investment companies
along with his brother to further
his knowledge. Both Louis
& his brother Anthony could be
seen walking around the city doing
errands, talking to friends or
Louis walking home after a day’s
work at VA in Boston.
Louis is survived by his brother
Anthony, his cousin George Maglione
and Matthew Guallongo.
He was predeceased by his
parents the late Rocco A. Maglione
& Rita C. (Puopolo) Maglione.
Mary
A. (DiNanno)
Papa
O
f Malden, November 22.
Beloved wife of the late
Samuel J. "Sam" Papa. Loving
mother of Marybeth Baumgardner
of Marshfield, Steven Papa
of Framingham and Nancy Stefanowicz
and her husband Jay
of Allentown, NJ. Loving grandmother
of Samantha, Gregory,
Alex, Andrew, Erik and Matthew
and great-grandmother of Ava
and Aubree. Dear sister of Ted DiNanno
of Lynnfield, Doris Dowling
of Malden and the late Barbara
Ciccarello. She is also survived
by several nieces and nephews.
Mary has been a lifelong resident
of Malden. She worked for the
DiNanno and Son Property Management
Company for many
years, retiring at the age of 83.
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SNOW HELP WANTED
Established company in
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~ LEGAL NOTICE ~
COMMONWEALTH OF MASSACHUSETTS
THE TRIAL COURT
PROBATE AND FAMILY COURT
Docket No. MI19P5009GD
Middlesex Probate and Family Court
208 Cambridge Street, Cambridge, MA 02141
In the interests of: Kaylee A. Goodrich
Of Everett, MA
Minor
NOTICE AND ORDER:
PETITION FOR APPOINTMENT OF
GUARDIAN OF A MINOR
NOTICE TO ALL INTERESTED PARTIES
1. Hearing Date/Time: A hearing on a Petition for
Appointment of Guardian of a Minor filed on 10/03/2019 by
Diana M. Fruciano of Revere, MA
Shauna L. Frissora of Everett, MA will be held
12/11/2019 08:30 A.M. Guardianship of Minor Hearing
located at Cambridge, MA.
2. Response to Petition: You may respond by filing a written
response to the Petition or by appearing in person at the hearing.
If you choose to file a written response, you need to:
File the original with the Court; and
Mail a copy to all interested parties at least five (5)
business days before the hearing.
3. Counsel for the Minor: The minor (or an adult on behalf
of the minor) has the right to request that counsel be appointed
for the minor.
4. Counsel for Parents: If you are a parent of the minor child
who is the subject of this proceeding you have a right to be
represented by an attorney. If you want an attorney and cannot
afford to pay for one and if you give proof that you are indigent,
an attorney will be assigned to you. Your request for an attorney
should be made immediately by filling out the Application of
Appointment of Counsel form. Submit the application form in
person or by mail at the court location where your case is going
to be heard.
5. Presence of the Minor at Hearing: A minor over age 14
has the right to be present at any hearing, unless the Court finds
that it is not in the minor’s best interests.
THIS IS A LEGAL NOTICE: An important court proceeding
that may affect your rights has been scheduled. If you do not
understand this notice or other court papers, please contact an
attorney for legal advice.
Date: October 3, 2019
TARA E. DeCRISTOFARO
Register of Probate
November 27, 2019
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Page 21
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CONCERT | FROM PAGE 10
a child in Texas and took to
singing folk songs, Spanish
traditional tunes, and ballads.
Lamb honed her vocal
craft as a classical musician,
exploring concert singing
and opera in college and
later in Vienna, Austria. Back
home in the United States,
she took time to raise a family
in Massachusetts, and she
eventually found her way
back to her first love: American
music. Once her children
were launched, she picked
up the guitar and started
playing and singing covers
while practicing and listening
to whatever music came
her way. Strongly influenced
by the vibrant local music
community, she started writing
originals and rebranded
herself as a singer-songwriter.
She just recorded her first
album of originals, Not Your
Mama’s Blues, and performs
across New England at a variety
of venues from cafes, coffeehouses
and restaurants to
small concert stages, porch
fests and farmers’ markets,
singing and playing her heart
out. Kenny Selcer will accompany
Roberta.
Wild Maple is Gary Dolinsky on
guitar and vocals, Trish DeCaprio
on violin and vocals and Steve
Straight on acoustic bass and vocals.
The group’s original songs
are influenced by a variety of
music genres: Americana/roots,
blues, bluegrass, classic country,
folk, Celtic, popular music of the
past 60 years and classical. Music
critics have praised Wild Maple’s
“appealing and polished
sound” with both male and female
lead vocals and “sensational
vocal harmonies.” Recent performances
include Club Passim
in Cambridge, the Guilford Performing
Arts Festival in Guilford,
Conn., and the Crane Estate in
Ipswich, Mass. Wild Maple’s lively
shows include a healthy dose
of relaxed fun, humor and audience
engagement.
The show begins early at 7:30
p.m.; doors open at 7:00. Homemade
baked goods and beverages
are available. Tickets at the
door are specially priced – just a
$5 minimum donation for this
show to introduce the World
of Folk and Acoustic Music to
area residents. Clean and gently
used condition coats, hats and
gloves will be collected for Mission
of Deeds Winter Coat Drive
for men, women and children
in need.
The Linden Tree Coffeehouse
is located in the social hall of
Wakefield’s Unitarian Universalist
Church (326 Main St., Wakefield,
MA 01880). Information
and reservations: 781-246-2836.
THE MALDEN ADVOCATE–Wednesday, November 27, 2019
EASTERN AVE. | FROM PAGE 3
juana cultivation and extraction
business in Maine, would be Craft
Cultivation’s chief operating officer.
“He seemed sincere and passionate
about the industry,” said
Molis.
Like other members of the
commission, Molis was impressed
with Crumb’s emphasis on the
quality of the product Craft Cultivation
intends to produce. “Their
goal is to make a product where
the quality has some appeal because
the process is pure, and
more organically or environmentally
friendly,” said Molis, adding
that he liked the idea of products
made in Malden.
Commission members also
liked Craft Cultivation’s threepronged
proposal that would allow
them to supply other local retail
marijuana shops.
Molis also felt the business
would enhance a blighted section
of the city and would not
cause any problems for residents
who live nearby. “The location is
ideal but they have some parking
issues to figure out,” said Building
Commissioner Nelson Miller, who
is also a member of the Cannabis
Commission.
The building has 13 existing
parking spots and the business
needs at least 21 spaces. The Heffernans
plan to lease additional
space for parking on an adjacent
lot.
CLEC Member Jenelle DeVits
pushed to move the proposal for
The Frosty Nug forward in the licensing
process. The proposed
location for the Frosty Nug shop
is 639 Broadway, in a building
now occupied by a pizza shop.
But the commission has already
approved MassMedicum’s proposal
for a retail shop across the
street at 616 Broadway, and that
company is now heading into a
special permit hearing with the
City Council.
MassMedicum faced some
vocal opposition during the required
community outreach
meeting held at Linden STEAM
Academy last month. Angry residents,
who felt they were not
given adequate notification of
MassMedicum’s plan, opposed
siting a retail marijuana business
in a densely populated neighborhood
across the street from a daycare
center. DeVits suggested that
the commission could approve
GRANTS | FROM PAGE 6
stars and placing them on walls
across the school to inspire and
motivate students – along with
a host of creative fundraising
activities. “This served as a reminder
that with a community
working together, we could
provide renewed hope and
the Frosty Nug proposal and then
leave it to the neighbors and the
City Council to decide between
that business and MassMedicum.
But Ron Hogan, who chairs
the Cannabis Commission, felt it
would be unfair to throw another
proposal for a retail marijuana
business at the neighbors. Hogan
also suggested it would be
unfair to applicants who are investing
time and money to pursue
local retail licenses. “There’s
no scenario that the City Council
would approve that has two of
these across the street from one
another,” he said.
Still, Hogan said that the multistep
licensing process is fluid
and proposals that have been approved
by the commission may
hit roadblocks further on with
the City Council, the mayor and
the state. And that could open
up opportunities for other applicants
who are still hoping for the
chance to launch a retail marijuana
business in Malden.
uplifting joy when it is needed
most,” said Malden Catholic
Girls Division Principal Lisa
Cenca, program lead.
Malden Catholic’s Make-AWish
Club also recently announced
its fundraising plans
to fulfill another wish through
a second donation of $10,000
at the end of 2020.
OPEN HOUSE - REVERE
EVERETT - 5/5 2 bdrm ea.unit. Spacious eat in
kitchens, hdwd/fls partial new roof, driveway, and
more. Steps from Orange line......................$699,000.
53 Jackson St. Saugus
(781) 813-3325
10 OCEAN AVE., REVERE - SAT., NOV. 30, 12-1:30 PM
Ocean Front Loft unit with balcony fireplace & deeded
pkng. Unit is amazing with floor to ceiling windows.
Why Pay Rent - Own For Less!..............................$399,900
Darlene Minincleri & Sue Palomba
ADMIRAL’S HILL- Gorgeous 2 bed,
2 bath Balcony laundry, pkng. for 2, pool
gorgeous views. Fee incl. Ht./Hw...$409,900
REVERE BEACH -
Gorgeous
panoramic Ocean
Views from every
rm. 1 bed 1 bath 9th
Fl. condo. Why pay
rent?...........$319,000
~ APARTMENTS FOR RENT ~
Revere, Wakefield , Winthrop, East Boston from
$1600 - $2900 / Some incl. all utilties. Call for details!
Call for a FREE Market Analysis
John
Marino
Lea
Doherty
Pat
Rescigno
Rosa
Rescigno
Xavier
Ortiz
Sharon
D’Allesandro
Kevin
O’Toole
Maureen
Gaeta
Kevin Alvorado
(Office Assistant)
LYNN - Great 2 Bedroom,
1 Bath, 1 Parking space.
Move-in Ready. Great
neighborhood, close to
public transportation &
amenities.........$309,000.
EVERETT - Zoned as a 3 fam. but used as 2,
great location, open floor plan, Near Wellington
Station, Encore Casino & Shopping.......$699,000
~ Meet our Agents ~
UNDER
AGREEMENT
UNDER
AGREEMENT
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Page 23
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#
1
Listing & Selling
Office in Saugus
“Experience and knowledge
Provide the Best Service”
Free Market Evaluations
CarpenitoRealEstate.com
View our website from
your mobile phone!
335 Central St., Saugus, MA
781-233-7300
SAUGUS Warm and Cozy 7 rm Cape offers
granite kit, granite peninsula w/seating, lvrm
w/cath ceil & skylight, desirable 1st flr familyrm
w/skylights & atrium door to deck, IG heated
pool, level lot w/irrigation system, Lynnhurst
neighborhood......................................$459,900.
SAUGUS 1st AD AFFORDABLE two bedroom
condo, great open concept, spacious living
room with slider to balcony, hardwood flooring,
coin-op laundry in building, Cliftondale
Sq........................................................$239,900.
CHELSEA ALL BRICK CE Colonial offers 10
rooms, 5 bedrooms, 2 full baths, updated kit
w/silestone & stainless, 3 season porch, gas
fireplace, roof deck, slate roof, 2 c heated garage,
lg lot ONE-OF-A-KIND!...............$899,900.
SAUGUS 1st AD 8-room, 4-bedroom Garrison
Colonial offers 1 ½ baths, eat-in, granite
kitchen, fireplace living room, dining
room, great 1st floor family room w/sliders to
screen deck, hardwood flooring, newer heat
& roof, cent. air, 1 car garage, level lot, located
in Iron Works neighborhood on cul-desac.......................................................$599,900.
WONDERING
WHAT YOUR HOME IS WORTH?
CALL FOR YOUR FREE MARKET ANALYSIS!
SAUGUS Custom, 5-yr-old Col offers 9 rooms,
4 bedrooms, 3 ½ baths, two master suites,
two story family rm w/gas fireplace, wood
flooring, gourmet kitchen, dining rm, incredible
details throughout, cent. air (2 units), 1st
floor laundry room, breezeway, 3 car garage,
level yard with sprinkler system & patio w/awning,
located in desirable Stonecliffe Heights.
Great home in Great location!............$899,900.
SAUGUS One of the last buildable lots left
in Saugus!
Land runs from Hanson Road to Hamilton
Street creating a unique opportunity to build
new construction home!..................$169,000.
LITTLEFIELD REAL ESTATE
SAUGUS ~ Rehabbed colonial. New windows, siding, new kitchen with quartz
counters, stainless appliances, new cabinets. New hardwood flooring throughout
house. New heat. Central AC. New maintenance free deck. .........$570,000
SAUGUS ~ Desirable 2 family. Each unit has
2 beds, updated kitchens and baths, vinyl
siding, in-unit laundry, rear decks .......$499,000
SAUGUS ~ Rehabbed colonial, 4-5 bedroom, 2 full baths, gas heat,
central AC, new siding, new roof, hardwood flooring, fresh paint, new
kitchen with SS appliances quartz counters ...............$559,900
38 Main Street, Saugus MA
WWW.LITTLEFIELDRE.COM
781-233-1401
SAUGUS ~ Raised ranch, 3 bed, 3 bath, gas heat, central AC,
garage under, great location, master bedroom with master bath and walk
in closet, finished lower level for the extended family ......... $579,900
Call
Rhonda
Combe
For all your
SAUGUS ~ 4 bed, 3 bath colonial. Spacious kitchen, SS
appliances, Oversized one car garage, irrigation, gas heat
enclosed porch, centralVac, finished lower level ... $569,900
real estate needs!!
781-706-0842
SAUGUS ~ 3 bed, 1.5 bath colonial. Open
concept 1st floor, 2 car garage, newer gas heat,
roof and HW heater, prof landscaping....$439,900
REVERE ~ 2 family located in the Beachmont
area, 3 beds, one bath in top unit, 2 beds, one
bath lower unit .....................................$639,000
LAND
FOR SALE
WILMINGTON ~ Colonial featuring 4 beds and
2 full baths, great dead end location, central AC,
hardwood flooring, finished lower level ..$534,900
SAUGUS ~ 3 bed ranch, open concept, stainless
appliances, private dead end street, newer gas heat,
hardwood flooring, 10k lot, garage ..............$435,000
LYNN ~ New construction. 3400 sq feet, 4 bed, 2.5 bath,
gas heat, central AC, hardwood flooring, walking closet,
great cul de sac location, garage under ........... $879,999
SAUGUS
Call Rhonda Combe
at 781-706-0842 for details!!
SOLD
SOLD
UNDER
CONTRACT
SOLD
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THE MALDEN ADVOCATE–Wednesday, November 27, 2019
Follow Us On:
COMMERCIAL & RESIDENTIAL PROPERTY SALES & RENTALS
Sandy Juliano
Broker/President
WE KNOW EVERETT!! Call TODAY to sell or buy with the best!
NEW LISTING BY SANDY!
SINGLE-FAMILY
NEW LISTING BY NORMA AND JOE!
SINGLE-FAMILY
67 DARTMOUTH ST., EVERETT
NEW PRICE! $484,000
141 CHELSEA ST., EVERETT
$699,900
LISTED BY SANDY!
UNDER AGREEMENT!
CONDO
180 GREEN ST., UNIT 217 MELROSE
$319,900
LISTED BY SANDY!
UNDER AGREEMENT!
9 KENMORE DR., DANVERS
$1,150,000
SOLD BY MARIA!
SINGLE-FAMILY
39 BROADWAY UNIT #303, MALDEN
NEW PRICE! $399,900
LISTED BY NORMA!
55 MENLO AVE., LYNN
$339,900
SOLD BY JOE!
137 CHELSEA ST., EVERETT
NEW RENTAL!
SOLD BY SANDY!
44 RAYMOND ST., EVERETT
$629,900
SOLD BY NORMA!
120 ESTES ST., EVERETT
NEW PRICE! - $559,900
2 BED, EVERETT APARTMENT
$1,850/MO
CALL JOE FOR DETAILS
617-680-7610
Joe DiNuzzo
- Broker Associate
Norma Capuano Parziale
- Agent
Open Daily From 10:00 A.M. - 5:00 P.M.
433 Broadway, Suite B, Everett, MA 02149
www.jrs-properties.com
Denise Matarazz
- Agent
Maria Scrima
- Agent
Follow Us On:
617.544.6274
Rosemarie Ciampi
- Agent
Kathy Hang Ha
-Agent
Mark Sachetta
- Agent
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