׉?4ׁB!בCט U Uru׉׉	 7cassandra://NLSN9NmrrtjwiVNrYNoJU2X3O0h9MQaWYaSLqtoC4nI e`'p׉	 7cassandra://QpfXrembOY_FV2vVo5G_j5hoMUCiwK6qHqWrJa4CFlAͽ`׉	 7cassandra://9MF4T7gP2HIeUBedtIhUV1xvg9vMnVHkFPbGQkazoEs:a` gdm)T2s׈Egdm)T2s׉EMalden City Engineer updates City
Council on progress of ongoing
lead pipe replacement in city
Engineer Yem Lip tells Councillors of positive progress in
ambitious 10-year, $35 million goal of replacing all lead lines
By Steve Freker
T
he turnaround has been
dramatic and the progress
toward what had once been
viewed as a potentially insurmountable
goal now appears to
have a realistic finish line.
In the course of Malden Mayor
Gary Christenson’s soon-tobe
record tenure as the city’s
chief operating officer, Malden
REPLACEMENT | SEE PAGE 9
Yem Lip
City Engineer
Paul Condon
Ward 2 Councillor
Santa Claus has a great visit
to Pine Banks Park!
L
ast weekend Santa Claus took time out of his busy schedule at the North Pole to visit his headquarters
at Pine Banks Park. Santa visited with children to hear what they want for Christmas, and he
posed for keepsake photos. Former Ward 5 Councillor Barbara Murphy and Santa’s helpers from Ward
5 served delicious hot chocolate and cookies. It was Santa’s 75th annual trip to see the children of Malden
and Melrose and make sure all are being nice!
Malden has gone from having the most lead pipes in the
Commonwealth of Massachusetts to being a regional leader in
lead pipe replacement in just seven years. Above, pictured from
left to right: Mayor Gary Christenson, City Engineer Yem Lip,
Democratic Whip Katherine Clark, EPA Regional Administrator
David W. Cash and Mass. Energy & Environmental Affairs
Secretary Rebecca Tepper inspect a lead pipe replacement
project in Malden. (Courtesy/City of Malden)
M
alden Mayor Gary Christenson
has made it a focal
point of his administration since
he first took office: transparency.
In partnering with the Malden
City Council on a number of issues,
there has been a decidedly
consistent method of both providing
information in an open
and transparent way and then
reaching an agreement on action
that can be taken to either
improve a situation, solve a problem
– or both.
In one major area of concern
From left: Santa, Mrs. Claus and elves: Pete Caso, Melrose Mayor Jennifer Grigoraitis, Barbara
Murphy, Santa Claus, Mayor Gary Christenson, Adam Weldai and Ward 1 Councillor Peg Crowe.
in our community, the Mayor,
joined by Councillor-at-Large
Craig Spadafora and his City
Council colleagues as well as
U.S. Rep. Katherine Clark (D-Fifth
District), has made tremendous
progress in the past several years
– replacing lead pipes in Malden.
In just seven years, since 2017,
when the state Department of
Environmental Protection (MassDEP)
declared that Malden must
adhere to established regulations
and address the problem
of lead pipe service, the city has
witnessed a major turnaround
and progress toward achieving
this goal. Spearheaded by the
diligence and efforts of Councillor
Spadafora, a new Removal
of Lead Pipes Ordinance was
weighed, debated and enrolled
by the City Council in 2017. In
it, the city established that private
homeowners and business
owners must replace lead water
lines going out from their
LEADER | SEE PAGE 16
EDITORIAL: Transparency and action
as Malden become a regional leader
in lead pipe replacement
Mayor Gary Christenson, Councillor-at-Large
Craig Spadafora, U.S. Rep.-House Minority
Whip Katherine Clark can all take a bow
׉	 7cassandra://9MF4T7gP2HIeUBedtIhUV1xvg9vMnVHkFPbGQkazoEs:a` gdm)T2sgdm)T2s
rבCט   Uru׉׉	 7cassandra://Ktxv0ZebIEyp75Di_NCgUSHyyeRz3K6RAQBJd9q0HuM u`'p׉	 7cassandra://FBZ8iZOynOr6px83n2MDNkPh4TMuesVLWCt1YwiKKpQͻ!`׉	 7cassandra://U7mDYB7rdcKwoCssH9CstxwnjNKxoB_XzOlMdReFwXk6` gdm)T2sט U Uru׉׉	 7cassandra://nsWDUw-Mo_ueTY1N1UaPemMW-fYwv65ADQcP_YpAcfU '`'p׉	 7cassandra://8Dut3dL62FxmQMOHihkXTW-VhKnXJiPhCvRL3mh7p7MͶ`׉	 7cassandra://NIqneX6uEbwhZMAdqK_JHHP9NHr5BHOsj_ZgXPkso4c6` gdm)T2sؔנgdm)T2s Á9ׁHmailto:Jason.Lewis@masenate.govׁׁЈנgdm)T2s߁ M9ׁHhttp://Lewis.comׁׁЈנgdm)T2sށ ̉9ׁHhttp://advocatenews.netׁׁЈנgdm)T2s݁ 9ׁHhttps://us06web.zoom.us/ׁׁЈ׉EPage 2
THE MALDEN ADVOCATE–Friday, December 20, 2024
The Advocate Newspapers
Close for Christmas Vacation!
T
he Advocate Newspapers, thanks to a middle-of-the-week Christmas
holiday, will not publish on Friday, Dec. 27 due to the holiday
week. Publisher Jim Mitchell has decided to reward his dedicated
staff with a week off. Our next edition will be published on Jan.
3, 2025 – to ring in the New Year! The Advocate Online will still post
news, photos and legal notices during that week as we our office
will be open Monday (9a-5p) and Tuesday (9a-3p, Christmas Eve),
and returning by appt. Thursday and Friday. The Advocate Newspapers
publisher and staff wish everyone a Merry Christmas, Happy
Hannukah and Happy Kwanzaa to all our readers. Please contact
us at: 617-387-2200 or email: info@advocatenews.net
Need a hall for your special event?
The Schiavo Club, located at
71 Tileston Street, Everett is
available for your Birthdays,
Anniversaries, Sweet 16 parties
and more?
For more info,
call (857) 249-7882
8 Norwood St.
Everett
(617) 387-9810
Open Tues. - Sat.
at 4:00 PM
Closed Sun. & Mon.
Announcing our Classic Specials
Dine In Only:
* FREE Salad with purchase of
Entree, Tuesdays & Wednesdays
* Cheese Pizza - Only $10
Catch ALL The
Live Sports
Action On Our
Large Screen
TV’s
Scan & Follow Us on Facebook!
A Victory Over Journalistic
Dishonesty
Everett Mayor DeMaria clears name and wins $1.1 million
settlement that puts Everett Leader Herald out of business
By Mark E. Vogler
T
he owner and publisher/editor
of the now-defunct Everett
Leader Herald paid the ultimate
price for knowingly publishing
a series of fake news stories
in an organized campaign to
discredit and publicly humiliate
Everett Mayor Carlo DeMaria. It
cost them $1.1 million in damages
and the life of the weekly
newspaper, which was first established
in 1885.
Those were the key components
of a settlement agreed to
by Leader Herald Owner Matthew
Philbin and Publisher/Editor
Joshua Resnek. That was an
expensive option, but one they
preferred over going to trial next
month in Middlesex Superior
Court to defend themselves in
the defamation lawsuit filed by
the mayor back in 2021.
“This is a rare amount [damages]
and a very high amount to be
awarded in a case like this,” Boston
Attorney Jeffrey Robbins, a
Partner at Saul Ewing LLP, told
The Everett Advocate in an interview
this week.
“I’m not aware of a politician
who has ever received an award
in a defamation case that comes
close to this. Nothing remotely
close,” Robbins said.
Robbins and Saul Ewing Attorneys
Joseph Lipchitz and Paige
Schroeder represented Mayor
DeMaria in his lawsuit against
the Leader Herald, its owner and
its publisher/editor.
Owner Philibin could not be
reached for comment. Publisher/Editor
Resnek did not return
a telephone call left on his answering
machine.
In his interview with The Everett
Advocate, Robbins called the
case “the most egregious example
of professional misconduct
and dishonesty by a newspaper”
that he can recall during his 42
years of practicing law.
www.810bargrille.com
“The American citizen has a
very low view of the media right
now,” Robbins said.
“And this is the kind of set of
During a press conference at the law offices of Saul Ewing LLP in
Boston on Monday, Mayor Carlo DeMaria, shown with his wife,
Stacy, delivered a statement regarding the awarded settlement
he will receive in the defamation case against the Everett Leader
Herald. (Advocate photo by Emily Harney)
Attorney Jeffery Robbins of Saul Ewing LLP shares his remarks
with the media regarding Mayor Carlo DeMaria’s settlement in
the defamation case against the Everett Leader Herald.
facts that feeds right into that,”
he said.
Mayor agrees to
drop lawsuit
Robbins and Mayor DeMaria
announced the settlement of
his lawsuit during a press conference
held Monday in the Boston
office of Saul Ewing LLP. Court
documents related to the settlement
remained confidential.
But Robbins met with reporters
to explain how that settlement
was reached.
“The size of the payment by
the defendants to Mayor DeMaria
and their shutting down of
the newspaper speaks volumes
about the egregiousness of the
defendants’ conduct, which the
paper’s publisher and editor has
already admitted constituted actionable
defamation,” Robbins
said in a statement to reporters
on Monday.
“Today marks the end of a very
unfortunate process, one which
should never have been necessary,
and never would have been
necessary but for the decision of
the owner of the Everett Leader
MUSINGS| SEE PAGE 11
׉	 7cassandra://U7mDYB7rdcKwoCssH9CstxwnjNKxoB_XzOlMdReFwXk6` gdm)T2s׉ETHE MALDEN ADVOCATE–Friday, December 20, 2024
Page 3
Ward 4 Councillor O’Malley
elected City Council President
Unanimous vote puts five-term Councillor into top spot for 2025
By Steve Freker
R
yan O’Malley will serve as
the Malden City Council
President in 2025, it was determined
at this week’s final Council
meeting of the calendar year.
O’Malley, who was reelected to
his fifth term in 2023, was ushered
into the Council’s top post
by a 9-0 vote at Tuesday night’s
meeting.
For the first time in several
such elections, the Ward 4
Councillor was the only candidate
nominated and voted
on by the members. After outgoing
Council President Stephen
Winslow (Ward 6) formally
opened nominations for Council
President for 2025, Ward 2
Councillor Paul Condon – the
most senior Councillor – nominated
O’Malley for Council President.
The nomination was seconded
by Ward 8 Councillor
Jadeane Sica.
The vote putting O’Malley
Ward 4 Councillor Ryan
O’Malley was unanimously
elected to serve as Malden
City Council President in 2025.
(Courtesy/City of Malden)
in the Council President’s post
was unanimous. Voting in favor
were Councillors Peg Crowe
(Ward 1), Condon, Amanda
Linehan (Ward 3), O’Malley,
Winslow, Sica, Karen Colón
Hayes (at large), Carey McDonald
(at large) and Craig SpadaSenator
Jason Lewis Announces
Virtual Office Hours for December
B
OSTON—State Senator Jason
Lewis will be holding Virtual
Office Hours on Tuesday, December
17, from 2 p.m. to 3 p.m.
Any constituent of Senator
Lewis is welcome to attend Office
Hours, with no appointment
necessary, to discuss any personal
issue or legislative feedback
with the Senator and his staff.
Virtual Office Hours are held
on Zoom. To join the meeting
please visit SenatorJasonLewis.
com, use the following link, or
enter the meeting information
on Zoom:
https://us06web.zoom.us/
j/83854164671?pwd=eWZWQWU0VkZjcE9XSXl5Rk1BRVd5Zz09
Meeting
ID: 838 5416 4671
Passcode: 234270
Each constituent meets privately
with the Senator during
the Zoom session.
Senator Lewis also holds regFor
Advertising with
Results,
call The Advocate
Newspapers
at 617-387-2200 or Info@
advocatenews.net
ular in-person Office Hours in
each community of the district
(Malden, Melrose, Reading,
Stoneham, Wakefield, and Winchester).
For
further information or any
questions, visit SenatorJasonLewis.com
or contact his State
House office at (617) 722-1206
or Jason.Lewis@masenate.gov.
fora (at large). Ward 5 Councillor
Ari Taylor and Ward 7 Councillor
Chris Simonelli were not
in attendance.
At the end of the meeting,
during the personal privilege
portion, Councillor O’Malley
thanked his colleagues. “I want
to say thank you to everyone for
your vote. It means a lot to me,”
O’Malley said.
Ward 8 Councillor Sica added,
“I honestly believe it is your
time to serve as Council President
this year. Councillor O’Malley
has grown a lot this year and
will make a fantastic Council
President.”
“I look forward to serving with
you next year,” Councillor Sica
added.
Councillor O’Malley was first
elected to the City Council in
2015, the youngest member
at the time and the youngest
member still. A Malden High
School graduate, O’Malley is
now a law student at Boston College
Law School.
He previously sought the
Council President post, but this
time around he secured strong
support with no opposition. His
first meeting to bang the gavel
will be on Tuesday, January
7, 2025.
RON’S OIL
Call
For
PRICE
MELROSE, MA
02176
NEW
CUSTOMER’S
WELCOME
ACCEPTING VISA, MASTERCARD & DISCOVER
(781) 397-1930 OR (781) 662-8884
100 GALLON MINIMUM
׉	 7cassandra://NIqneX6uEbwhZMAdqK_JHHP9NHr5BHOsj_ZgXPkso4c6` gdm)T2sgdm)T2s
rבCט   Uru׉׉	 7cassandra://ioekBUeLvBNF5h8a7p5K_kGo0WU7ieNSyd2lJVv1zWw `'p׉	 7cassandra://hKJwsNBGRu9fsZCBGbL8m6L5PTlvRnOW2r7Y4D9lXm0`׉	 7cassandra://-7WXEt1shBXIt3RxPjVoZPvSzRWJQSH0ukpgsFzO0b48` gdm)T2sט U Uru׉׉	 7cassandra://XNJi2_DmbUVlf8JX9UYCpE_8nZy2yH9z_DNAe51_vJs 9[`'p׉	 7cassandra://8HW6QpX6JCVxC6eG78acs267O99792_tNSM-Q2pegPcͪ`׉	 7cassandra://wVx5N_zSKYR7b6ko8UQOMwJTxVg5Cq_Hj4wl6rvVOwo5` gdm)T2sנgdm)T2s \9ׁHhttp://WWW.SABATINO-INS.COMׁׁЈנgdm)T2s 	mo9ׁHhttp://den.org/192/AddictionׁׁЈנgdm)T2s 	Y̻9ׁHhttps://www.ciׁׁЈ׉EPage 4
THE MALDEN ADVOCATE–Friday, December 20, 2024
Lawrence A. Simeone Jr.
Attorney-at-Law
~ Since 1989 ~
* Corporate Litigation
* Criminal/Civil
* MCAD
* Zoning/Land Court
* Wetlands Litigation
* Workmen’s Compensation
* Landlord/Tenant Litigation
* Real Estate Law
* Construction Litigation
* Tax Lien
* Personal Injury
* Bankruptcy
* Wrongful Death
* Zoning/Permitting Litigation
300 Broadway, Suite 1, Revere * 781-286-1560
lsimeonejr@simeonelaw.net
Sen. Lewis leads successful passage
of Educator Diversity Act
S
tate Senator Jason Lewis led
the successful effort in the
Massachusetts Legislature to pass
the Educator Diversity Act, legislation
that was signed into law by
Governor Maura Healey on November
20, 2024. The Educator
Diversity Act seeks to strengthen
the K-12 educator workforce
by hiring and retaining more diverse
educators – and improving
student outcomes.The Educator
Diversity Act was included
as part of a broader economic development
package that was enacted
by the House of RepresenHAPPY
HOLIDAYS!
Dan - 1972
Take Advantage of our Holiday Specials!
Chris 2024
We Sell Cigars & Accessories!
THE HOLIDAY SEASON IS HERE! MANY ITEMS ON SALE!!
Cohiba Special: Five Cohiba Blue Churchill
Cigars for Only $75. A Savings of $50!
Or, a Box of Cohiba Blue Churchill Cigars
Now Only $299. A Savings of $50!
* Travel Humidors * Desk Top Humidors * Many Types of Lighters * Ash Trays * Juuls * Vapes
* Glass Pipes * Rewards Program * CBD Infused Products * GIFTS UNDER $30 - GIFT CERTIFICATES
HOURS: OPEN SUN. - WED. 9 AM - 6 PM / THURS. - SAT. 9 AM - 7 PM
R.Y.O.
TOBACCO
&
TUBES
ON SALE!
Humidor Special!
Model A holds up to
25 cigars incl. ash tray,
humidifier, hygrometer,
cigar cutter and leather
pocket holder!
Special Price!
$99.95
WE MAKE
HOUSE
KEYS!
A.B.C. CIGAR
170 REVERE ST., REVERE
(781) 289-4959
their leadership on this critical issue
and our bill sponsors, House
Assistant Majority Leader Alice
Peisch, and Senator Jason Lewis
for their resilient leadership. Additionally,
Latinos for Education
and the Educator Diversity Act
Coalition are grateful to the Massachusetts
Black and Latino Legislative
Caucus for making this their
only education priority for the session
and to the over 90 House and
Senate co-sponsors of the bill.”
Key provisions of the Educator
Jason Lewis
State Senator
tatives and the Senate and was
then signed into law by Governor
Healey on November 20, 2024.
Massachusetts is a national
leader in public education, but
the state’s student population is
diversifying at a much faster rate
than its teachers and school administrators.
While students of
color make up over 45% of public
school enrollment, educators of
colors only account for about 10%
of the teacher workforce. “There is
strong evidence of the academic
and social-emotional benefits
for students from having diverse
teachers, especially for students
of color,” said Senator Lewis, who
is Senate Chair of the Legislature’s
Joint Committee on Education.
He continued, “I’m proud to
have filed and championed this
legislation and grateful to all the
students, teachers, parents, and
advocates who helped get the
Educator Diversity Act across the
finish line.”
“This is a monumental victory
for Massachusetts students, families,
and educators. Research consistently
shows that all students
benefit from a diverse educator
workforce, and this law ensures
we are building a system
where every child can see themselves
represented in the classroom,”
said Latinos for Education
CEO/Founder Amanda Fernandez.
“This bill is the first of its
kind in the nation and will serve
as a model for other states eager
to pass similar legislation. We
want to thank Speaker Mariano
and Senate President Spilka for
Diversity Act:
• Setting statewide educator diversity
goals and publishing an
annual report to ensure progress
in hiring and retaining diverse educators
•
Requiring the Department of
Elementary and Secondary Education
(DESE) to work with school
districts on plans to increase their
educator diversity
• Requiring each school district
to appoint a diversity officer or
team to advise the superintendent
and other district leaders
on efforts to recruit and retain diverse
educators
• Elevating the voices of diverse
educators, parents and students
by requiring all school districts to
establish a process for advising
the superintendent and school
committee on matters of diversity,
equity and inclusion
• Requiring diversity and implicit
bias training at least every five
years for all school and district
employees and school committee
members
• Requiring DESE to establish
a teacher apprenticeship pilot
program
• Requiring teacher preparation
programs to examine and
address barriers to equity in enrollment
and completion of their
programs
• Incentivizing diverse and highly
effective educators to work in
high-needs school districts
• Establishing a public information
campaign to spread awareness
of state scholarships and
loan forgiveness programs for
prospective educators
• Enabling DESE to create new
pathways for teacher licensure
and certification
׉	 7cassandra://-7WXEt1shBXIt3RxPjVoZPvSzRWJQSH0ukpgsFzO0b48` gdm)T2s׉ETHE MALDEN ADVOCATE–Friday, December 20, 2024
Page 5
Recovery Coach Academy Graduates 31
M
ayor Gary Christenson recently
thanked and congratulated
the 31 graduates
who completed the Connecticut
Community of Addiction
Recovery Academy (CCAR).
Malden Board of Health Addiction
Recovery Resource Specialist
Paul Hammersley obtained a
grant from RIZE Massachusetts,
which is dedicated to solving
the overdose crisis, to fund the
Academy.
A Recovery Coach is defined
as someone interested in promoting
recovery by removing
barriers and obstacles and
serving as a personal guide
and mentor for individuals
seeking or already in recovery
from drug and/or substance
abuse. Academy participants
Mayor Gary Christenson (center) with Recovery Coach graduates
took part in a 30-hour course
and received training on how
to assist before, during, after
or instead of treatment. Some
of the subjects taught included
motivational interviewing,
ethical boundaries and how to
create a wellness plan.
CCAR focuses on non-clinical
issues, such as housing, employment,
proceeding through
drug court and communicating
with probation officers. The
training is designed so that participants
come away with not
only the necessary skills but
are fully empowered and motivated
to help those in need.
For more information, please
visit https://www.cityofmalden.org/192/Addiction-Recovery-Resources.
SABATINO/MASTROCOLA
INSURANCE
AGENCY
519 BROADWAY
EVERETT, MA 02149
Auto * Home * Boat *
Renter * Condo * Life
* Multi-Policy Discounts * Commercial 10% Discounts
* Registry Service Also Available
Sabatino Insurance is proud to welcome
the loyal customers of
ALWAYS READY TO SERVE YOU: Our Staff are, Emma Davidson, Jeimy Sanchez,
Josephine Leone, Marie D’Amore, Rocco Longo, Z’andre Lopez, Anthony DiPierro,
Darius Goudreau, Laurette Murphy, Danielle Goudreau and Tina Davidson.
PHONE: (617) 387-7466
FAX: (617) 381-9186
Visit us online at: WWW.SABATINO-INS.COM
׉	 7cassandra://wVx5N_zSKYR7b6ko8UQOMwJTxVg5Cq_Hj4wl6rvVOwo5` gdm)T2sgdm)T2s
rבCט   Uru׉׉	 7cassandra://kIJDApnLR3FxDBqqLqarSBphlhKPeNhmKg8j9ddWG_k `'p׉	 7cassandra://WkDfqAgreYxssohZf_gwfEIUtyGl4Fe4QqsBA4LdDhoͷ`׉	 7cassandra://rAlQ6vSleGUPO96bhEHJ26MXKHCcUCip1d_58nS7wDY7` gdm)T2sט U Uru׉׉	 7cassandra://lecvJp3R4TiN4PO0uC_CBXgEFTCu0INTJmMS5T8nkyc `'p׉	 7cassandra://k88AAhw7xwlNYpIuawEPuUe5qyhPpPlx8dAss1Yt2rAS`׉	 7cassandra://TmkmuZectSLgCDD-8WNHni3ZNeR4nwPmPdsLUC5sWYI` gdm)T2sנgdm)T2s D̿9ׁHhttps://sites.google.com/ׁׁЈ׉EPage 6
THE MALDEN ADVOCATE–Friday, December 20, 2024
~ Malden Musings ~
The Holiday Postcard that's Christmas in Malden
By Peter Levine
A
h, the Christmas season in
Malden – it sounds like stepping
into a holiday postcard (one
that Frank Levine probably has
in his immense Malden postcard
collection), doesn’t it? Those
memories of Malden Square
during the ’60s through the ’80s
capture the magic of a classic
hometown Christmas. You can
almost feel the excitement in the
air as Maldonians bustled around
Mal’s, Kappy’s, Boston Leader,
Jack in the Box, Malden Jewelry,
Jordan Marsh and the old
newspaper stand on Main and
Pleasant – Albert Long hawking
Globe’s – filling the square with
Gerry
D’Ambrosio
Attorney-at-Law
Is Your Estate in Order?
Do you have an update Will, Health
Care Proxy or Power of Attorney?
If Not, Please Call for a Free Consultation.
14 Proctor Avenue, Revere
(781) 284-5657
life and laughter. It was a magical
place at the time where everyone
seemed to know each other, and
the shops, restaurants and cocktail
lounges felt like extensions of
your own living room.
Staying warm meant ducking
into the Charles Street Bowling
Alley, grabbing a slice at Signor
Pizza or Piece-o-Pizza or popping
into Brigham’s or Gold Coin
for some of their iconic comfort
food. Each of these places
was a little world of its own,
where familiar faces and local
legends, such as Ronny “Malden
Ron” Anderson – in his DPW
truck decked out for the holidays
– added their own warmth
and charm to the season. And,
Christmas in Edgeworth circa 1995: Father Puccini with some Edgeworth kids – Michelle Cagno,
Dorothy Levine, Lauren Barahona, Gina & Lee Ann (?) Scibelli, Toni Scibelli, Lauren Cirino, and
more – at the Saint Peter’s Christmas Fair. Special guest Santa, Joe Levine! (Helen Levine photo)
of course, there were the bars
where holiday cheer took on a life
of its own. Places like The Do Re
Lounge, Jack Haney’s, The Centre
Bar & Grille, the Auld New, and
the Horseshoe Lounge, where
friends could be found, laughter
flowed, and the holidays were
celebrated in true Malden style
(always responsibly, of course).
Christmas shopping was a
unique experience in itself, too.
Before the onslaught of “The
Mall” there was Jordan Marsh
and Woolworths, Bakers and No
Where’s End for those all-important
last-minute gifts; each store
held treasures waiting to be discovered,
with families bundling
up and huddling together to
take in the magic of the displays
and the warmth of the holiday
crowds.
And then there were those
snowy sojourns with friends to
the Square from all points in
Malden to catch a movie at the
Granada or the Strand, or to
shoot pool at Al’s Pool Room.
The glow of the streetlights surrounding
the downtown felt
like pure holiday magic, with
snow crunching underfoot and
scarves flapping in the wind
(yeah, it snowed in them days!).
Snowstorms didn’t stop the adventure
though; they only added
to it. Ice skating at Devir, Ferryway
or the Rez. Clearing snow
off the basketball court at Amerige
or Devir or Ferryway for an impromptu
winter game was just
one more way to make memoMUSINGS|
SEE PAGE 18
— Vinyl Siding — Carpentry Work — Decks
— Roofing — Free Estimates — Replacement Windows
— Fully Licensed — Fully Insured
׉	 7cassandra://rAlQ6vSleGUPO96bhEHJ26MXKHCcUCip1d_58nS7wDY7` gdm)T2s׉E8THE MALDEN ADVOCATE–Friday, December 20, 2024
Page 7
Grand Opening of Space Tax & Accounting
M
ayor Gary Christenson attended
the Grand Opening
Ceremony of Space Tax
& Accounting, which is located
at 67 Maplewood St., Unit
204. The new business provides
Bookkeeping Services,
Individual and Business Tax
Return Preparation, New Business
Formation and Small Business
Accounting Services. The
business was launched in October
of 2024 and the women-owned
business owners
are excited to become more
involved in the Malden community.
For
more information, including
hours of operation, please
visit https://sites.google.com/
view/spacetax/home or call 781288-9688.
Pictured
from left to right: Diogo Abreu, Space Tax & Accounting co-owner Dylebeth Correia, Mayor Gary Christenson, co-owner
Mariane Codogno and Willian Codogno.
׉	 7cassandra://TmkmuZectSLgCDD-8WNHni3ZNeR4nwPmPdsLUC5sWYI` gdm)T2sgdm)T2s
rבCט   Uru׉׉	 7cassandra://-ris3Hlv_4vfWRrx773Ar-EtBHrmLknRkr7w_F8vqfY Ӝ`'p׉	 7cassandra://rlmYM5pkJSuycZ9IULFem69ZkE4YWEUB8tJgW0hpIXM͚`׉	 7cassandra://EvtLp_ozMMuZxQLDPjfIlCzIR6uUwbKJJT3ZAQjrUWI+` gdn)T2sט U Uru׉׉	 7cassandra://cXfTbJs7j406aYwrRix9R3GME8L7Ccz-T-gs2Qml69c 	` 'p׉	 7cassandra://VowYj_MTju2bXJ26Q_0nkJwiY9yvgkAkmbqkOGdvgTAͽ`׉	 7cassandra://cXdXaHT-EhTODlfz0pjEzlPZc-dLSwlk91GxBg9yo3c1@` gdn)T2sנgdn)T2s G"9ׁH $mailto:jfitzpatrick@mcgovernauto.comׁׁЈנgdn)T2s 9ׁHhttp://www.roller-world.comׁׁЈ׉ENPage 8
THE MALDEN ADVOCATE–Friday, December 20, 2024
MHS Principal announces 542 students named
to High Honors & Honor Roll for First Quarter Marking Period
Advocate Staff Report
M
alden High School Principal
Chris Mastrangelo this
week announced that 542 students
have been named to either
the High Honors list or Honor
Roll as a result of academic
excellence in the First Quarter
Marking Period. Students
named to the High Honors list
have achieved all grades 90% or
higher (all As), and those named
to the Honor Roll have all grades
80% or higher (all As and Bs).
“We had a great quarter overall,
especially academically, seeing
all of these high achievers,”
the MHS principal said. “We are
looking to continue as we move
forward past the holiday season
and into the new year.”
HIGH HONORS
Class of 2025 – Seniors
BLOOM, ELIZABETH
BROWN, GLORIA
DA SILVA, THALIA
DAHBANI, FATIMAZAHRA
FLORES, MERARI
GASH, ISAIAH
HOANG, SIENNA
HUYNH, JOHNSON
JIANG, STANLEY
KEATING, MACK
LE, SOFI
LEBLANC, SOPHIE
LIN, SOPHIA
LY, HUONG
MARINKOVIC, IVANA
MELLES, LAMEK
MEMEUS, ELMEILLE
MORSE, MAXIMILIAN
NGUYEN, KENTON
NGUYEN, MILAN
OULDSAADA, ILYES
PAGULONG, JEFFERYI
QUACH, THANH DUY
RODRIGUEZ, GIZELLE
RUBERT, NASHALYN
SHAKYA, TSERING
SHEARER, PRESTON
SINGH, SATVIR
STEAD, ROBERT
TIERNEY, THOMAS
TONG, BEVERLY
TRAN, HAILEY
TROPNAS, KIMBERLY
VAGHELA, PIYA
VARGAS, MARIA EDUARDA
YICK, KATHLEEN
ZHANG, SARA
ZHU, ZIYOU
Class of 2026 – Juniors
ABDULGHANI, HALA
AL RUBAYE, DHULFIQAR
BOSWELL, DAGNY
BOSWELL, LINCOLN
CHEN, ETHAN
CHEN, JESSICA
CONTI, THOMAS
FAN, HENRY
GOLD, PHI
LEON, DESTINY
LIU, ALFRED
LUM, LUCAS
LYNCH, THOMAS
MEI, JOHNNY
MEMEUS, MAX
NGUYEN, THANG
NGUYEN, TRAN ANH QUAN
RETAMERO GRANJA, AMANDA
RUAN, EVAN
SAUNDERS, KIERAN
TALIC, ALDINO
TINOCO DA SILVA, YOHANNA
TRAN, JOHN
YE, KELLY
ZEB, SHANEEL
MARCHETTI CORP.
46 Years of Excellence!! 1978-2024
Regular Unleaded
$2.839
Mid Unleaded
$3.379
Super
$3.479
Diesel Fuel
$3.279
Gift
Available!
Hours: Monday thru Friday 6 AM to 7 PM / Saturdays 7 AM to 5 PM / Sundays 9 AM to 5 PM
HEATING OIL
ULS
$4.759
$2.99 9
DEF
Call for Current Price!
(125—gallon minimum)
DEF Available
by Pump!
24-Hour Burner Service
Open an account and
order online at:
Class of 2027
Sophomores
ANGOMAS, ANTHONY
AZHAR, ANNIYAH
BALAMURALI, NINITHA
BERLINER, AMELIA
BERLINER, CHARLOTTE
CARDOSO, CHRISTOPHER
CHEN, ABEL
CORREA, DENIEL
CRAWFORD, CAM’RON
DA SILVA, LUIZA FERNANDA
DANG, KYLE
DONAGHEY, ELINOR
FANG, LILIAN
FENG, RIXIN
FONTANILLA, CATHEN
GHILE, MOGOS
GLAUDE, ANGIE
GOUCEM, YASMINA
HERRERA, GRAYSON
HYPPOLITE, CHELMIE
IFEZUE, KOSISOCHUKWU
IHIRI, MAY
JANDAENG, PIAMRAK
LAM, ANGELA
LAROCHE, SCHEKINA
LEMBARRAA, SALMA
LIN, ABBY
LIN, CHERYL
LIN, ERIC
LIN, FIONA
LIN, JIAMING
LIN, KEN
MACIEL LIMA, ALEXIA
MELLES, NATAN
MERCIDIEU, JULIANNA
MEZA, ADELE
MILLER, SARAH
MORROW, RYLEIGH
MUNIR, ANUM
NGUYEN, LY
PIERRE RENE, BEYONCE
SHRESTHA, SUYOG
TAFRAOUI, AYA
TANG, ANDY
VARGAS, SOFIA
XHINDI, EMA
XIA, YINGYAN
YU, EMMA
ZHANG, HAO
Class of 2028 – Freshmen
ABOUJALALA, NUH
AGUILOS, ISAAC JAMES
AREVALO RODRIGUEZ, ANTHONY
BAKER, SARA
BANKS, SABRINA
BARROS SILVA, MARIA
BHATTARAI, SABRIMA
BIHI, AYA
BILODEAU, GIANNA
BUI, ANNA
CHEN, FELIX
CHEN, JIACHAO
CHEN, WILSON
CHRISTALIN, JEREMIAH
COGGSWELL, HANNAH
D’ANNA, NICHOLAS
DASILVA, MIRELLA
DE OLIVEIRA, JULIO CESAR
DEI SANTI, DAVI
DOOLEY, SERENA
ERRAMH, ADAM
GRZEGORZEWSKI, ANYA
GUERRERO, LORRAINE
HE, JIEYI
HEINING, LINNEA
HUANG, DYLAN
HUANG, ETHAN
HUSAIN, SYEDA
HYPPOLITE, DERLINE
KHATIWADA, SRIMAN
LE, MIKAYLA
LEI, JIMMY
LI, JAMES
LIN, SELINA
LIN, YUXIN
LIU, LUCAS
LYNCH, ALYSSA
MAC, J.B.
MALHOUNI, ISRAA
MESIDOR, AYANNA
MOUSTAFA, JANA
MOUSTAINE, ISRAE
NEICTH FORBES, RUBY
NGUON, EVA
NGUYEN, JAYDEN
NGUYEN, LAM
PAN, BRIAN
REN, RUIDA
REZENDE OLIVEIRA, HENRIQUE
SCOTT, JULIUS
SHRESTHA, ARUNA
SHRESTHA, AYUSHA
SIDHU, SATVINDER
SIMS, JULIAN
SINGH, TANVIR
SY, NGUYEN
TESFAYE, BEATEL
TRAN, SOPHIE
TSETEN, TENZIN
TSIGE, KIDUS
VALENCIA MONTOYA, SALMA
VIEIRA MACIEL, JORGE
YE, VICKY
ZENG, KIM
ZHANG, SOPHIA
ZHEN, ABIGALE
***
HONOR ROLL
Class of 2025 – Seniors
ABOUKHALIL, MANAL
ACOSTA AMAYA, YOSSELIN
AIMABLE, ESTANDELIE
AMISCAR, DULMIAH
ANTIN, SEAN
BAILEY, KAITLYN
BAUTISTA MATIAS, NELLY
BENFIELD, AMBER
BENHAFOUN, REDA
BIDARI, PRATYUSH
BORRERO, SAMIRA
BOUDRARI, MOHAMMED
BRETT, AIDAN
CALIXTE, ASHTON
CASSION, CHRISTIAN
CHEN, KEVIN
COELHO, YASMIN
CURRY, MADISON
DE SOUZA, LETICIA
DUENAS ORELLANA, KARLA
DUFRENE CAEZ, DIRLENE
DZUONG, HENRY
ELIE, EMMANUEL
FANG, BILL
FANG, JASLIE
FESEHAIE, ABIGAEL
FLORES, JOHN
FUENTE REYES, ARIANA
GRAY, KRISH
HUANG, KEVIN
JEFFERSON, GIANA
JOHNSON, KRISTYAUNA
JONATHAS, SABRIEL
JORDAN, MOLLY
JOSE, BRAYAN
KAUR, PARNEET
KIZIRIAN, NADALIA
LAROSE, JASMINE
LE, LINH
LEE, ABIGAIL
LI, JESSICA
LIANG, LANYU
LIN, KAREN
LIN, KEVIN
LONGO, CHRISTOPHER
LOUIGENE, THALIA
LU, ERICA
MACDONALD, CHRISTOPHER
MCWAYNE, ADDISON
MEGERSSA, YOHANES
MEI, EMILY
MUNIR, ASIM
MUSCADIN, MARQUIS
NGUYEN, DANIEL
STUDENTS | SEE PAGE 10
FLEET
Prices subject to
change
׉	 7cassandra://EvtLp_ozMMuZxQLDPjfIlCzIR6uUwbKJJT3ZAQjrUWI+` gdm)T2s׉EmTHE MALDEN ADVOCATE–Friday, December 20, 2024
Page 9
REPLACEMENT | FROM PAGE 1
has had its fair share of “firsts” in
both the region and the state.
Around 2016, it was revealed
the city was #1 in an unwanted
category: most lead water pipe
service lines in the Commonwealth
of Massachusetts. Some
47% of Malden’s water lines were
estimated by the Mass. Department
of Environmental Protection
(MassDEP) as containing
lead pipes.
At a recent Malden City Council
meeting, City Engineer Yem
Lip presented a detailed update
of the city’s progress toward an
established goal of replacing
and eliminating all lead pipes in
the community.
Dramatic turnaround in
lead pipe replacement
What Lip presented was information
that described a dramatic
turnaround in the past
seven years where Malden has
replaced hundreds of lead service
lines – just over 300 (301),
its biggest one-year total ever,
in 2024 alone – with the combination
of local, state and federal
resources and programs. Lip
appeared at the December 10
City Council meeting accompanied
by the Mayor’s Chief of
Staff, Maria Luise, to present an
update and answer questions
from the Council.
A scourge the city certainly
had not invited, but simply
a result of long-held past practice
– locally, regionally and
even nationally – was the use
of lead pipes to carry water
from the main reservoir to individual
homes and businesses.
According to the nonprofit
National Resources Defense
Council (NRDC), between 1900
and 1950, a majority of America’s
largest cities installed lead
water pipes. Some cities even
mandated them, often in response
to an industry campaign
to enact rules requiring
lead pipes. And because these
pipes can last 75 to 100 years or
more, the federal Environmental
Protection Agency (EPA) estimates
that some nine million
lead pipe lines still exist in communities
nationwide.
Health experts consider
lead pipes dangerous
Lead pipes are considered
dangerous by health experts because
lead is a toxic metal that
can leach into drinking water
when pipes corrode, potentially
causing serious health problems,
particularly for young children
and pregnant women, even
at low exposure levels, according
to the EPA. The EPA, along with
state agencies, such as MassDEP,
have mandated the elimination
of lead water pipes by local communities.
As
recently as 2015-2016,
close to 5,000 of Malden’s 12,000
water lines were believed to be
lead lines, but through some targeted
action by the City of Malden
and with the leadership of
the Malden City Council, there
has been a steady program of
lead pipe replacement, which
has knocked this down progressively.
A major move to address
this issue was the push by
the City Council, led by Councillor-at-Large
Craig Spadafora, to
enact a city ordinance mandating
the removal of lead pipes
by local homeowners and business
owners, which was accomplished
in 2017. Since then, Lip
recapped at the December 10
meeting, Malden has used some
$5 million in grants – shepherded
in 2022 ($3.6 million) and
again just this past May 2024
($1.4 million) by U.S. Rep. and
House Minority Whip Katherine
Clark (D-5th District) to this city
– to help fund the lead replacement
initiatives.
City Engineer Lip told the
Council at the December 10
meeting that the whole lead
pipe replacement process has
been “a collaborative effort between
our department, the Mayor’s
office, [City Controller] Chuck
Ranaghan and OSCPD [Office of
Strategic Community Planning
and Development]”. Lip relayed
that just this past October a report
was unveiled with a complete
inventory of all the water
service lines in Malden’s public
water system.
Water service lines
inventory completed
Water service lines are the
pipes that carry water from the
water lines in the street to Malden’s
homes, schools and other
buildings. The inventory lists
the type of material for each service
line – whether it’s copper,
galvanized steel, lead or plastic.
Lip said completing the inventory
was an important step in the
City’s effort to identify and replace
100% of the lead service
lines in the public water system.
It is part of an overall 10-year
plan – established in 2022 – to
replace all lead lines in Malden. It
was estimated this 10-year plan
would cost upward of $35 million
overall.
Ward 2 Councillor Paul Condon,
the longest-serving Councillor
in city history, said he was
pleased with the report and the
status of “one of the most important
projects we’ve undertaken
[in this community].”
“You’ve done a fine job,” Councillor
Condon said. “[The Engineering
Dept.] and Maria Luise
have been a driving force with
meetings and updates, providing
information on this project.”
“We’re pretty much on target,
and unless we lose steam, I think
we can do it by ’32,” Councillor
Condon added, in regard to the
replacement project.
“It started with Councillor
[Craig] Spadafora spearheading
the ordinance, which established
the initiative to help the
private side to replace their lead
lines, and we’ve got a lot of help
from the MWRA and our federal
legislators along the way,” Ward 1
Councillor Peg Crowe said.
Councillor-at-Large Karen
Colón Hayes said the MWRA zero-interest
loan program “is great
for the city.” “We have to make
sure the information is easily accessible
by everyone whom this
program could benefit [in] our
community,” Councillor Colón
Hayes said. “It’s a safety issue for
our residents.”
McDonald: building
awareness around
community
Councillor-at-Large Carey McDonald
said, “We’ve been successful
in building awareness
around the community; it’s helpful
to see the progress we’ve
made over time, and it’s significant
to see how much we’ve
spent, so we can share [that information]
with our constituents,”
in reference to the $25 million
in joint expenditures the city
intends to make overall on lead
pipe replacement.
“We’ve come a very long way;
it’s encouraging to see we have
gone above and beyond what
has been required of us,” Councillor-at-Large
Ryan O’Malley, a
longtime advocate of lead pipe
replacement ever since his first
election to the City Council in
2015.
425r Broadway, Saugus
Located adjacent to Kohls Plaza Route 1 South
in Saugus at the intersection of Walnut Street
We are on MBTA Bus Route 429
781-231-1111
We are a Skating Rink with
Bowling Alleys, Arcade and
two TV’s where the ball
games are always on!
PUBLIC SKATING SCHEDULE
12-7 p.m.
Sunday
Monday
Tuesday
$10.00
Price includes Roller Skates
Rollerblades/inline skates $3.00 additional cost
Private Parties
7:30-11 p.m.
Wednesday
Thursday
Friday
Saturday
$11.00
Price includes Roller Skates
18+ Adults Only After 7 PM - ID Required
Private Parties
Private Parties
4-8 p.m. $10.00 8:30-11 p.m. $11.
18+ Adults Only After 7 PM - ID Required
12-9 p.m.
$10.00
Everyone must pay admission after 6 p.m.
Sorry No Checks - ATM on site
Roller skate rentals included in all prices
Inline Skate Rentals $3.00 additional
BIRTHDAY & PRIVATE PARTIES AVAILABLE
www.roller-world.com
He’s Back...and Better Than Ever!
John A. Fitzpatrick
(Fitzy)
Sales & Lease Consultant
Direct: 617.410.1030
Main: 617.381.9000
Cell: 617.279.9962
jfitzpatrick@mcgovernauto.com
McGovern Automotive Group
100 Broadway, Rte. 99, Everett
׉	 7cassandra://cXdXaHT-EhTODlfz0pjEzlPZc-dLSwlk91GxBg9yo3c1@` gdm)T2sÁgdm)T2s
rבCט   Uru׉׉	 7cassandra://DPRZJHmLkKC4brAir6GXX26faA49GLfJ4E7GLqJFl2I `'p׉	 7cassandra://WD4adt7-JwlavgWQqIoJU1kaTn5rSXafHcuDLC4043A͋`׉	 7cassandra://Xkgbj49fgQMI5IOtGblxfjm0PEi18VChlxx3t1zJm58'2` gdn)T2sט U Uru׉׉	 7cassandra://b8KgrAlvo-weybaf9hKD3fbrEl-OQAdww90SJHA8I_I -`'p׉	 7cassandra://7uuiC6ETgmxrjGEkkQWfQngtC0zrGnIkQshxwttaCmoͪ`׉	 7cassandra://BbXW9dkRoWPa38pmHH9Edd7vdK5fghROMmqwFVZGFdY/-` gdn)T2sנgdn)T2s +9ׁHhttp://TONYSAUTOBODYLLC.COMׁׁЈנgdn)T2s 	Me9ׁHhttp://atwww.advocatenews.netׁׁЈ׉EPage 10
THE MALDEN ADVOCATE–Friday, December 20, 2024
STUDENTS | FROM PAGE 8
NGUYEN, JOHNATHAN
NGUYEN, JOSLYN
NGUYEN, LILY
NGUYEN, MINA
NGUYEN, NHI
PHAM, THUY DUONG
PIERRE, CHARLINE
RODRIGUES GOUVEA FILHO, HENRY
RODRIGUES TEIXEIRA, EVERLYN
SAN, JESLYN
SANCHEZ MARTINEZ, MARCELA
SANTOS, JENNIFER
SANTOS, NAYOMI
SILVA SOARES, KAUANY
SLAWSON, JENNIFER
SON, KATARINA
TORTORELLA BARBOSA, EMILEE
TRUONG, TINA
WEI, WESLEY
WILLIAMSON, JOSEPHINE
WONG, ETHAN
XIE, HELEN
YANG, JACKY
ZHOU, JINGYI
ZOU, ALFRED
Class of 2025 –Juniors
ABDULGHANI, SHAHD
AGBONOGIEVA, HANNAH
AHMED, NOHA
ALAM, FABIHA
ALARCON VASQUEZ, KATHERINE
ALAYANE, JOSEPH
ARANGO ALVAREZ, NICOL
BOLCONT MARIANO, SOPHIE
BOSWELL, KAIL
BOUAM, SALAH
CAO, THOMAS
CHAN, MATT JASON
CHAU, NATALIE
CHAU, VIVIAN
CHEN, ANNA
CHEN, SANIA
CHOISEUL, RUTH
CINE, BERENICE
DAVID, FRANTZCIA
DESSAINT, LEONARD
DRINKWATER, ALEX
ELWAFY, MARWA
ENAMORADO, MELINNA
EUGENE, BENIEL
FANFAN, MARVENS
FLORES, DANIEL
GAVIN, WILLIAM
GHANI, AHMED
GHANI, UMER
GHIMIRE, SANDESH
GONCALVES DOS SANTOS, BIANCA
GORDON, SYDNEY
GRANADO, CINDY
GRONDIN, ERIN
HALAISSI, YASSIR
HARRINGTON, DANIELLE
HERNANDEZ, ELIZABETH
HIENG, JOSEPH
HUANG, MENG YAO
HUYNH, SOPHIA
IDMBAREK TENORIO, OMAR
JAMKATEL, BHAIRABNATH
JOHNSON, LOGAN
KHATRI, ABHUSHAN
LE, HOANG NAM
LE, KHA HAN
LECONTE, ABIGAELLE
LEE, ADRIAN
LEMUS, GABRIELLA
LIN, IVAN
LITTLEJOHN, ERICA
LIU, ANDY
LIU, DENNIS
LOPES-TEIXEIRA, AALIYAH
MABOIS, MIRALDIE
MARTINS, MATHEUS
MCGOVERN, RICHARD
MEJIA SERNA, ASHLEY
METELUS, CHRISTIAN
MOCO LOURENCO, ANA
MOLINA YANES, ONEYDA
MONDARDO DE FREITAS, LAURA
MORRISON, JACOB
NACEUS, LEICA
NASH, MADISON
NGUYEN, ETHAN
NGUYEN, PHAN
NIE, HELEN
OLIVEIRA, BEATRIZ
ONYEJIAKA, LAURA
PARADA ARAUJO, DAVID
PAUDEL, SHUBHAM
PEGUERO, ALEXANDER
PEREZ, ELIEZER
PHAM, DUNG
PHU, JOHNNY
PINEDA PINEDA, JONATHAN
RENDON LAPOP, TAIRY
ROBINSON-MCCASKILL, CHRISTINA
SANGARE, ABDULRAMANE
SANTOS, CAROLINE
SEELEY, HAYLEE
SILVA, GUILHERME
SOUSA JUNIOR, LUIS
THAI, ASHLEY
TRAN, JOYCE
TSE, YAT LONG
VO, KATELYNN
WANG, IVAN
WARNER, JANIYAH
WONG, CECII
WONG, KENNETH
WU, IRENE
XIE, XITONG
YANG, ETHAN
YANG, OLIVIA
YAPHEL, KARMA
YOUMELL, FIONA
YOUSFI, YUNUS
ZENG, ASHLEE
Class of 2027 –
Sophomores
ABOUKHALIL, RAHMA
ABU RUBIEH, YOUSSEF
AGUILAR, ADRIAN
ALEXIS, GLORIA
ANDRADE VILLALTA, EDWIN
ARSAOUI, SAAD
BAE, KAILEY
BARRERO, DIEGO
BEARDSLEY, RYAN
BUI, AIDEN
CELICOURT, KEIRA
CHEN, JOSEPH
CHEN, SOPHIA
CHEN, TEMPEST
CHEN, VICKY
CHOEZOM, TENZIN
COSTA VALSECHI, ANTONIO
DARBOUSE, HARIELLE
DE FARIAS WEIHRAUCH, EMILLY
DE LOS SANTOS FELIZ, SCARLET
DE SIMONE OCEGUEDA, BAILEY
DESSAINT, MICAELLA
DIAZ VARGAS, JOAN
DOS SANTOS, NYLA
DOUKKALI, IYAD
DU, WEIQI
DUTAILLE, JASON
EL FATIHI, HASSAN
ELBANI, ELYASS
EVORAS, SOFIA
EXILHOMME, MANICHA
FANG, YONGBEI
FELIX GARCIA, SHEILYN
FRAGA DE OLIVEIRA, VITOR
FREEMAN-KAYIIRA, HASSAN
GALINDO GAVIRIA, JOSEP
HASSAN, ISTAHIL
HO, IAN IAN
HUANG, RYAN
IBRAHIM, AMMAR
JACQUET, JOSHUA
JANEY, DREAM
JERVOSO, MEGAN
JUAN, HSIN-CHIEH
KAZACHENKO, ANTHONY
LIMA DOS SANTOS SILVA, TOM
LOPES DA SILVA, EMANUEL
MACDONALD, JACK
MANTILLA, MARISA
MARENGHI, FRANCESCA
MATOS, ANGEL
MELO PEREIRA, MARIA
NGUYEN, ANN
NGUYEN, NHI
ORPHE, JASLYN
OU, ZHENLANG
PAGE, LEONARD
PAZ HOFFMANN, ARTHUR
PEDRAZA-ALEXANDER, MAYA
PEREZ CANTORAL, NELCY
PETION, KARLLENS
PHAM, THOMAS
PHUN, TUAN
PIERRE-LOUIS-PIERRE, LAURENE
PINHEIRO, CHACE
RANGEL, ANDRIANA
RODRIGUES, ABNER
ROMAN, RYAN
RUAN, EVELYN
RUAN, ROSALYN
SAEL, BEYONCE
SMITH, ATTICUS
UPADHAYAY, REVA
VENANCIO TORRES PEDRA, GUSTAVO
VO,
KRYSTALYN
WANG, YINJIE
WEST MAXWELL, ZIAYLA
YOHANNES, NAOMI
YOHANNES, WONGEL
ZENG, TERRANCE
ZOU, ANNA
ZUO, YAWEN
Class of 2028 –
Freshmen
ALAKOUM, AFIF
ALI, ABYAN
AREVALO, ISABELLA
AUGUSTE, SARA GABRIELLA
AZZELZOULI, ILIAS
BARBOSA GADEIA, MARIA
BELIZAIRE, MARDOCHE
BERTONCINI, LANDON
BINDAH, OLIVIA
BISETEGNE, LOZA
CAMBINDO, LUIS
CASTILLO, GABRIELA
CHEN, JANICE
CHERINET, JOSHUA
COIMBRA, CARLOS
DAVENPORT, MINERVA
DESGAZONS, CHELSEY
DO, AYDEN
DUPERVIL, JEREMIAH
DUVERGE, GYANIE
DYL, SABRINA
EDWARDSEN, ARIANA
ETIENNE, SARAH
FAGUNDES BRITO, MATHEUS
FARROW, KYLA
GHIAT, SERINE
GIULIANO, BLAKE
GOMES, GYOVANNA KRYSTTLY
GONZALEZ, JAIDEN
GOUCEM, MOKHTAR
GUILLAUME, CHRISTALEEN
HANKS, BRIDGET
HARTIN, MACKENZIE
JEAN CHARLES, PHALANGECIA MARIE
JEAN COUTE, PIERRE NISHA
JEUDY, JAYLEN
JOSEPH, HARRY
KARTHIK, PRAHLAD
KEOGH, LILLYANNA
KOVACEVIC-MARINKOVIC, MIRKA
LAM, NHI
LARAME, ROSE
LAYNE, DAVANTE
LAZARRE, MIKE ISRAEL
LECONTE, ARIELLE
LECONTE, LARIELLE
LEE, ALEXIS
LI, XIAOHUI
LICONA CRUZ, VALERIA
LIGON-CHAMBERS, NYLA
LIMA CONSOLI, VALENTINA
LIN, MARCUS
LY, MILAN
LYAFORI, LOAY
MACEDO DE JESUS, MICHELLE
MARTINEZ TEJADA, JOHANNA
MATZKIN, ALEKSANDRA
MCWAYNE, EMELIA
MEI, BENNY
MOUSSAOUI, YASMINE
NAMIR, ADAM
NGUYEN, NATHANIEL
NGUYEN, VANESSA
NIAZI, KHKOLA
NOELSAINT, KENDRICK
ORTIZ, HARMONIE
OTERO MILONOPOULOS, DEVIN
PALACIOS PINA, KRISAURY
PARKER, CONOR
PATH, CHANCE
PAUL, MARQUIS
PEREZ, LEVI
PHAM, TYLER
PHILOME, NEITSY
PIERRE-RENE, HADASSA
PINEDA, CHRISTOPHER
PIPER, EVON
QRANFAL, SHAKIB
QUEEN, HAZEL
REID, LILIAH
REUS, MARIA EDUARDA
RIOS, KAELYN
RIVERA, SOFIA
RODRIGUES BARBOSA, LUNNA
RODRIGUEZ CIDEOS, MADISON
SAINT JEAN, LAURIE
SAN, LEEANN
SANTOS RODRIGUES, RAYANE
SILWAL, PRAKRITI
SIMBUL, JAMILAH
SOUDERS, EVAN
SOUS, JADE
THAPA, DAVID
THAPA, JANBI
TRAN, ALINA
TROPNAS, SHAÏNA
TSE, KADIN
TURNER, KAYLA
VIEIRA ALVES BARBOSA, MIGUEL
WONG, ELLA
YU, WILLIAM
YUNG, DEREK
ZHONG, HUI ANNA
ZHU, IVAN
׉	 7cassandra://Xkgbj49fgQMI5IOtGblxfjm0PEi18VChlxx3t1zJm58'2` gdm)T2s׉ETHE MALDEN ADVOCATE–Friday, December 20, 2024
Page 11
MUSINGS | FROM PAGE 2
Herald and its publisher/editor
to embark on what, the evidence
on the public record showed,
was a purposeful, deliberate and
egregiously dishonest campaign
to use that paper and its storied
heritage to ruin one person’s reputation,”
Robbins said.
In return for the defendants’
payment and agreement to
close their newspaper, Mayor
DeMaria agreed not to go forward
with a trial of his defamation
case that was scheduled to
begin on Jan. 21 in Middlesex Superior
Court.
Mayor DeMaria noted that the
defendants tarnished the newspaper,
once a respected news
source under previous ownership,
with their egregious and
nefarious misconduct. “What
the evidence demonstrated is
that upon purchasing the Everett
Leader Herald in 2017, a paper
with a long and storied history
in our city, these defendants
embarked on a deliberate, purposeful,
relentless campaign
to publish accusations against
me that they knew were false,
that they knew were fabricated,
that they knew had no basis,
that they knew would damage
my reputation and inflict severe
damage not only on me but on
my family, and that they specifically
hoped and intended would
drive me out of office, or worse,”
Mayor DeMaria said.
“The size and scope of this
settlement, both in terms of the
amount that the defendants
have agreed to pay and, in their
agreement, to shut down their
newspaper, is a reflection of just
how egregious their conduct
was, and of the volume of their
admissions of their misconduct,
misconduct that gives journalism
and journalists a bad name,”
the mayor said.
“I’m unaware of any instance
in which a media outlet was purchased
for the purpose of destroying
someone’s reputation,
but that is precisely what happened
here,” he said.
DeMaria has been Everett’s
mayor since January of 2008.
Attorney lauds Everett
Advocate’s coverage
Attorney Robbins credited
the ongoing and comprehensive
coverage by The Everett Advocate
of DeMaria’s lawsuit for
“shedding public light on the situation.”
“The Advocate played a
courageous and crucial role in
exposing what had occurred.
And it was a crucial counterpart
to the Leader Herald,” Robbins
said in his interview.
The Leader Herald published
its final newspaper on Wednesday
(Dec. 18). As part of the
agreement, the newspaper had
to terminate all contracts with its
vendors and distributors. It also
had to take down its social media
page and run a notice in the
newspaper telling readers that it
had published its last edition, according
to Robbins.
Had the owner and publisher/
editor of the Leader Herald decided
to go to trial, a jury would
have decided what to award in
defamation damages, the attorney
said. “All a jury would have
decided to do in this case would
be to decide whether to award
damages and how much in damages,”
Robbins said.
“But a jury could not have ordered
a newspaper to close
down. That was one of the things
that made the settlement unusual,”
he said.
The Leader Herald published
about two dozen fabricated
news stories disparaging the
mayor over a period of 2019
through 2022, according to
court documents. The articles accused
DeMaria of soliciting and
accepting kickbacks, stealing
money and other acts of political
corruption – allegations that
Resnek later admitted were fabricated.
Robbins
noted that the newspaper’s
motive for attacking DeMaria
through fabricated stories
appeared to be motivated out of
Philbin’s belief “that mayor had
been unfavorable in his dealings
with his business interests,” Robbins
said.
Philibin owns an insurance
company, rooming houses and
several other properties. “There
was evidence on the reason [for
the fake articles attacking the
mayor],” Robbins said.
“That was what the mission
was. That’s what the goal was.
Texts and emails mentioned
that,” the attorney said.
“You don’t have one smoking
gun. You have an arsenal of
smoking guns. A whole ammunition
depot,” he said.
During the barrage of repeated
stories that publicly castigated
the mayor as a corrupt politician,
Robbins said, it was clear
that the mayor, his wife, his children
and elderly parents endured
great public humiliation.
“The mayor displayed a lot of
emotion over how the stories affected
him and his family,” Robbins
said.
“Here’s a story that tells how
this took a personal toll on him.
His father told him, ‘If what I’m
reading in the paper [the Leader
Herald] are true, you’re not my
son,’” the attorney said.
Classifieds
Advocate
Call now! 617-387-2200
advertise on the web atwww.advocatenews.net
If We Happen To
Meet By Accident ...
You’ll Be Glad You Found Us!
There is a difference between the rest and the BEST!
Celebrating 46 Years In Business!
TONY’S
AUTO BODY
Call or Visit
781-321-0032
34 Sharon Street
Malden, MA 02148
TONYSAUTOBODYLLC.COM
COME VISIT OUR
STATE OF THE ART BODY SHOP
• Computerized Paint Matching
(State of the Art Spray Booth)
• Computerized Frame Machines
• P.P.G. Refinishing System
• R134 + 1234yf A/C Machines
Fully Insured -RS2415
Insurance Company Approval
ALL OUR WORK IS GUARANTEED!
TONY
BARTOLO
Owner
46 Years
Let Us Handle Your
Next Insurance Claim.
Go With the BEST
It Doesn’t Get BETTER!
RENTAL
CARS
Available
׉	 7cassandra://BbXW9dkRoWPa38pmHH9Edd7vdK5fghROMmqwFVZGFdY/-` gdm)T2sŁgdm)T2sā
rבCט   Uru׉׉	 7cassandra://LErkI85ZfZWIkvopysAQ50ifWyWYgNftQbu8KHTkImE M`'p׉	 7cassandra://cVcXjlhO1qT4xBkO1Ts0MTDQFhzM9KAz6kWd8Yeuly8ͥe`׉	 7cassandra://BocVZBsPbCAM_PutRCZWnkGsf3OU4hgsbEwk7sbVoM02Z` gdn)T2sט U Uru׉׉	 7cassandra://QA4JIGcpTNe9x_ZdU-wU8YZ57nrtbW4KcmhFLawPz1g P`'p׉	 7cassandra://CNDmor76eG9XFn6pQmp4UFj54jzQEaPpOWVh5qqBx5k͞`׉	 7cassandra://RXyIsf2qgYzt5KQc2U5cjngWsLPet_iBQKeRPeNuG-s6` gdn)T2sנgdn)T2s 9ׁHhttp://Advocate.news.maׁׁЈנgdn)T2s O9ׁHhttp://Facebook.com/ׁׁЈ׉EPage 12
THE MALDEN ADVOCATE–Friday, December 20, 2024
‘SHAKESPEARE’S MACBETH, A ROCK OPERA’:
Malden native Greg Cherone releases songs
from new album
‘Let every man be master of his time... until 7 at night’
By Steve Freker
M
alden native Greg Cherone
has been listening to music
and creating his own for most of
his life. Quite naturally, when he
came across a well-known literary
offering while a student
in the Malden schools in the
1970s, the visceral, martial tone
of the piece summoned up striking
images. Then came the internal
audio.
“I remember being a
ninth-grader and we studied
Macbeth in my English class,”
Cherone recalled his first introduction
to a William Shakespeare
all-time classic. “This particular
play was required reading.
“The Elizabethan language
was archaic and very difficult for
me to understand at the time. I
wasn’t really sure what was going
on,” Cherone said.
Soon the aura shifted to aural.
Enter the bagpipes, drums
and thunder. Think “Macbeth,”
“plugged in.”
“I’m reading through a Shakespearian
play for the first time
and then it started,” Cherone
said. “I was hearing music in my
mind, particularly bagpipes, in
addition to the marching drums
and blaring trumpets and the
sounds of loud thunder, rainstorms,
and clanking steel sword
fights.”
Intrigued, but still not fully getting
the gist of one of the literary
masterpieces of all time, Cherone
went further. “It wasn’t until
I borrowed a spoken word album
from the Malden Library
that I was able to follow the plot.”
That was where it started. The
future Malden music maker was
hooked on Shakespeare. He was
determined to bring his own
take – a musical one at that – to
what is considered The Bard’s
greatest literary tragedy. Cherone’s
plan? Adapt “Macbeth” to
a rock opera format. Within this
past year, the Malden native’s
goal was achieved in the completion
of a unique album.
“‘Shakespeare’s Macbeth A
Rock Opera’ is a concept album,
listening experience that has
been a lifelong vision of mine,”
Cherone said. “My goal with
our rock opera adaptation is to
Greg Cherone has been
making music for over 40
years. (Courtesy/Apple Music)
“Shakespeare’s Macbeth, a Rock Opera,” by Malden’s
Greg Cherone, is set for a full album release in early 2025.
(Courtesy/Greg Cherone)
update and retell the story in a
modern way for a new generation.”
“For
what does it profit a man,
if he shall gain the whole world,
and lose his own soul?”
Above, one of the most wellknown
quotes from “Macbeth”
is relived in Cherone’s music. His
concept album – which is due for
full release in early 2025 – was inspired
by one of the most compelling
rock operas of all time,
the passion play depicted in
“Jesus Christ Superstar” (1973),
which dominated the 1970s and
beyond.
“Here is a compelling story of
a historical figure now expressed
in the dynamic soulfulness that is
rock opera. My mission is to present
the story so people of all ages
can easily understand. Composers
John Bettencourt and Robert
Clapp Jr. made this dream come
true. What your ears are about to
experience is truly remarkable
because it was conceived by the
greatest dramatist the English
language has ever known. Macbeth
isn’t just for freshman high
school students or dusty old
scholars - it’s a story that speaks
to each and every one of us.”—
Greg Cherone
***
According to RadioSparx, Massachusetts
Singer-Songwriter
Greg Cherone grew up with a
variety of musical influences inspired
by the ’70s Rock of Queen
and other icons.
He earned a Communications
Degree from Emerson College
and has performed for several
years in bands and acoustic duos
in the greater Boston area. Music
critics have written that “Greg
creates Rock and Pop songs with
soul and warmth and that his
melodies and lyrics showcase
unique and dramatic personalities
all their own.”
***
You can hear a four song excerpt
from “Shakespeare’s Macbeth,
a Rock Opera” at all the online
digital platforms.
Like us on Facebook
advocate newspaper
Facebook.com/ Advocate.news.ma
׉	 7cassandra://BocVZBsPbCAM_PutRCZWnkGsf3OU4hgsbEwk7sbVoM02Z` gdm)T2s׉ETHE MALDEN ADVOCATE–Friday, December 20, 2024
Page 13
W
State
Senator
Jason
Lewis
Spadafora
Councillor-At-Large
Craig
Council President
Stephen
Winslow
(617) 389-8100
(617) 389-1000
e wish you a Merry Christmas
State
Representative
Steven
Ultrino
Mayor
Gary
Christenson
& Malden City Government
State
Representative
Paul J.
Donato
Ward 2 School Committee
Rob
McCarthy
Ward 1 School Committee
Michael
Drummey
EVERETT TAXI & MALDEN TRANS
Lester, Peggy & David Morovitz
24 Hr. AIRPORT SERVICE
PACKAGE DELIVERY
׉	 7cassandra://RXyIsf2qgYzt5KQc2U5cjngWsLPet_iBQKeRPeNuG-s6` gdm)T2sǁgdm)T2sƁ
rבCט   Uru׉׉	 7cassandra://St88tZyteA2LEevzjfWQgo3IiBYoG0s692msaKipXjc 3`'p׉	 7cassandra://2VPysmIJN3IivUpDRuYzr_zuHN9shu1LWvDltQRtA3o4`׉	 7cassandra://BaldEFtntC7etsn8NGKboruruoWRYJSeAkdg0xJ6zSs7` gdn)T2sט U Uru׉׉	 7cassandra://w-czAnuqTKIRQT8dwwvGcGPewkmQeSw8mO73b9Hu2Oo )`'p׉	 7cassandra://4ECCwON1ElAVbce3TT1pJvuLE21_IDQ2ELgriQz22Yo`׉	 7cassandra://TCmqm6z3bPFtludbN6l55KbsOI3pIaRJObOvnEvmzyY8` gdn)T2t נgdn)T2t  .%9ׁHhttp://advocatenews.netׁׁЈ׉EPage 14
THE MALDEN ADVOCATE–Friday, December 20, 2024
~ Excellence in the Malden Public Schools ~
Malden High School names newest
‘Let’s Make it Happen’ students
By Steve Freker
s part of a schoolwide campaign
to promote and maintain
a positive and nurturing
school culture at Malden High
School, Principal Chris Mastrangelo
and his team have come up
with a number of ideas and initiatives
to further those goals. One
of the top initiatives was a new
A
theme for the 2024-2025 school
year: “Let’s Make it Happen.” As
part of the overall theme and
goal-setting, a related move was
the establishment of a recognition
on a regular basis of students at
MHS who are “Making it Happen.”
There is no exact definition
of this trait, Mastrangelo explained.
“It could be an act of
kindness toward a fellow student
or a staff member that is
noticed by someone. Or, maybe
the student worked extra hard
and well in the classroom that
week,” the MHS principal said. “It
could even be the student simply
being herself or himself and
just showing her or his great personality,
humor, and overall positive
vibes. We have so many of
those students!
“The ‘Making it Happen’ shoutouts
are announced on our student
announcements weekly,
in the morning before our first
class,” Mastrangelo noted. “We
have gotten fantastic feedback
and our students really want to
get on the list or see their classmates
get this recognition. ‘Let’s
Make it Happen’ has already
made a big impact on our goals
to maintain our positive and
thriving school culture.”
Following are the students
who were selected for “Making
it Happen” for the week of
December 9: Jean Victor, Hannah
Coggswell, Allvens Sael,
Neichka Guyllaume, Thomas
Pham, Madison Nash, Sebastian
Zapata, Juan Caballero,
Renato Serrao.
‘Pippin’ production delights audiences at Malden High School
Play Production class performs two shows and draws rave reviews
By Chouaib Saidi and Jacob
Fuentes
MHS Blue and Gold
A
fter two months full of memorization,
vocal training and
IN SONG: Addison McWayne as Catherine in “Pippin.” (Courtesy/
Malden Blue and Gold/Jacob Fuentes Photo)
acrobatic practice, Malden High
School’s Play-Pro cast, led by
Todd Cole and various staff
members, such as Technical Director
Ariana Messana and Band
Director Lauren Foley, was ready
to perform “Pippin”: a story full
of love, betrayal, and discovery
of self-identity. On Friday, November
22, students and their
families gathered in the Jenkins
Auditorium as they prepared to
witness the result of all the hard
work the Play-Pro cast has been
putting into this show for the
past two months.
The show started with “Magic
to Do”, the song in which the narrator
Leading Player (senior Natalie
Keating) introduces herself
and her circus ensemble. Keating
has performed in 21 shows to
date, with this being her last musical
performance with Malden
High School’s Play Production.
Throughout this number, the
LEAD ACTORS: Heitor Soares as Pippin and Natalie Keating as
Leading Player in the Play Production performance of “Pippin.”
(Courtesy/Malden Blue and Gold/Jacob Fuentes Photo)
circus sings to the audience and
claims they have “magic to do
just for you. We’ve got miracle
plays to play. We’ve got parts to
perform, hearts to warm, kings,
and things to take by storm as
we go along.” This number sets
the stage for how the story of
Pippin will be told. At the end of
the opening number, the Leading
Player is joined by her ensemble
as they pose and are surrounded
by roaring applause
from the audience.
This play goes over the complexities
of love, emotion and
identity in which the main character
Pippin undergoes adversity
to find his true identity. The play
starts with an introduction of Pippin
played by Heitor Soares and
then introduces his stepmother
Fastrada, who was played by Sophie
Leblanc. His protege brother,
Lewis, who is a talented, ideal
warrior, is played by Matt Jason
Chan. Pippin’s father, King Charlemagne,
is played by Liam Gallagher,
and Catherine is played
by Addison McWayne.
“I love performing more than
anything else in the world. I
don’t get stage fright anymore;
in fact, being on stage in front
of an audience makes me feel
really confident and comfortable,”
described Keating. “I love
being able to connect with an
audience.”
Other prominent characters,
such as Lewis, King Charlemagne
and Catherine, were impressively
played by cast members
who helped lead up the
play to give it the class and talent
it needed from beginning
to end.
Play Production President Addison
McWayne plays Catherine,
Pippin’s star-crossed lover,
in which she serenades him
with the tune “I Guess I’ll Miss
the Man” by Rachel Bay Jones.
“It went even better than I expected.
We have been working
on this show for a long time,”
McWayne said. “It only took a
few rehearsals to get the show
on its feet but it turned out even
better than I could’ve imagined.
Everything down to who loves
which stool on and off stage was
planned and executed perfectly.
“I am genuinely so proud of
every person on that stage and
behind it because we all worked
so hard for this and it shows,”
McWayne said.
Soares, who played the main
role of Pippin, shared similar
words about the show. While he
had positive thoughts about the
show itself, he said he also liked
how the audience impacted his
performance. “It’s always nice to
see the turnout especially when
it was an amazing turnout like
we got for both nights. It makes
me feel nervous when I see people
I know in the crowd,” he said.
Soares also noted that this was
his last musical with the Play Production
team: “It was the best
two nights of my life and still was
very upsetting at the same time.
It’s my very last musical and it hit
closing night.”
“It is going to be incredibly
hard to see them go. However, in
theatre, people don’t ever really
leave,” Play Production co-teacher
Ariana Messana said. “We had
so many alumni visit to come
see the show this weekend. So
even after students leave, they
still come back to support us and
their community.”
׉	 7cassandra://BaldEFtntC7etsn8NGKboruruoWRYJSeAkdg0xJ6zSs7` gdm)T2s׉EHTHE MALDEN ADVOCATE–Friday, December 20, 2024
Page 15
Malden High seniors are awarded
John and Abigail Adams Scholarship
for excellence in MCAS testing results
MHS hosts breakfast to honor over 50 recipients who are
eligible for free tuition at Mass. colleges & universities
By Steve Freker
T
his was an honor worth waiting
for and Malden High
School’s administration was there
to host the festivities for some of
its top students. Over 50 members
of the MHS Class of 2025
were the guests of honor at a
celebratory breakfast held at the
school to honor the recently announced
recipients of the 20242025
John and Abigail Adams
Scholarships.
“We are very proud of our newest
group of Adams Scholarship
awardees,” said Malden High
School eighth-year Principal Chris
Mastrangelo. “Through their academic
excellence, they have
earned this generous scholarship
which will assist them and their
families when they are trying to
pay college expenses should they
attend a state school.”
The Adams Scholarship is provided
by the Office of Student Financial
Assistance / Massachusetts
Department of Higher Education.
It provides a free, full tuition
scholarship award for up
to eight semesters at any and
all state colleges, universities or
community colleges. To qualify for
the Adams Scholarship students
must excel in the 10th grade Massachusetts
Comprehensive Assessment
System (MCAS):
—Score in the Advanced catePictured
from left to right: Matt Jason Chan, Liam Gallagher
and Addison McWayne form a base for Ash Cullity and Alison
Diez Jaramillo to balance on during “Entr’acte.” (Courtesy/Malden Blue
and Gold/Jacob Fuentes Photo)
gory on one of three high school
state assessment tests in English
Language Arts, Mathematics, or
STE (Biology, Chemistry, Introductory
Physics or Technology/
Engineering)
—Score in the Proficient or Advanced
category on the remaining
two high school state assessment
tests
—Have a combined MCAS
score on these assessments that
ranks in the top 25% in their
school district.
According to the Massachusetts
Office of Student Financial
Assistance (OSFA), The purpose
of the award is to reward and inspire
student achievement, help
attract more high-performing
students to Massachusetts public
higher education and provide
families of college-bound students
with financial assistance.
The OFSA website reports, “Recipients
of the John and Abigail
Adams Scholarship are eligible
for an award of a merit-based
credit toward tuition. Individual
student awards at State Universities
and Community Colleges
shall be no more than the resident
undergraduate tuition rate
at the participating institutions.
Individual student awards at the
University of Massachusetts shall
be valued at $1,714 [per semester]
at Amherst, $1,714 at Boston,
$1,417 at Dartmouth, and $1,454
at Lowell.”
For Advertising
with Results,
MHS ADAMS SCHOLARSHIP AWARDS: Malden High School Principal Chris Mastrangelo (at
right) and his administrative team hosted a celebration breakfast before school for the over 50
members of the MHS Senior Class of 2025 who were named recipients of the John and Abigail
Adams Scholarship. Sponsored by the Commonwealth of Massachusetts, the Adams Scholarship
is awarded for excellence in the MCAS testing program. The scholarship covers full tuition for
four years at any state college, university or community college. Many of the winners are shown
above with the principal at the breakfast. (Courtesy/Malden High School Photo)
call The Advocate
Newspapers
at 617-387-2200 or Info@
advocatenews.net
Sen. Lewis seeking
constituent input and
feedback
S
tate Senator Jason Lewis is
asking for feedback from residents
of his district to hear about
what policy issues and concerns
are most important to them.
Constituent feedback will help
Senator Lewis and his office to
set priorities and prepare for the
new legislative session that begins
in January 2025 and goes
through December 2026. If you
live in one of the communities
that Senator Lewis represents
– Malden, Melrose, Reading,
Stoneham, Wakefield and Winchester
– please visit https://bit.
ly/SenatorLewisSurvey or scan
the QR code provided to take the
five- to 10-minute survey before
Friday, January 31, 2025. All responses
will be kept anonymous.
The results of the survey will be
compiled and shared online and
at a virtual Town Hall meeting
with Senator Lewis on Tuesday,
February 18, 2025, from 7-8 p.m.
׉	 7cassandra://TCmqm6z3bPFtludbN6l55KbsOI3pIaRJObOvnEvmzyY8` gdm)T2sɁgdm)T2sȁ
rבCט   Uru׉׉	 7cassandra://RoJiP3Op3vh-PvmA4GS4wpuF_6dS543e8yD0Itt5CYw F`'p׉	 7cassandra://2wa11SrCltlK7TcWnSvon7QGsewuZ2ObQXn87G-tNTUͰ
`׉	 7cassandra://W3z5H7_gzeWVxvN3c7XoezdFICJ2Ex-d_06unMK1wkA2/` gdn)T2tט U Uru׉׉	 7cassandra://xMtU0aZcxbgHz1uACL8rwcVB-MXHrLDlAjm_y_-gKsk `'p׉	 7cassandra://VsbzlUCQYcRumH_hSZGYao3rsWa_l2P6EtpWfO8uX2Eͤ`׉	 7cassandra://QysOoMJnoLUsQXRApOEVzuTjACym6Amr3Oc4q9IITwQ5` gdn)T2tנgdn)T2t %9ׁHmailto:Info@advocatenews.netׁׁЈנgdn)T2t g9ׁH :http://public.dep.state.ma.us/SearchableSites2/Search.aspxׁׁЈ׉EPage 16
THE MALDEN ADVOCATE–Friday, December 20, 2024
MV Eagles Basketball Stifles Nashoba Tech in 70-39 Win
By Emily Brennan
S
ophomore Winsly Larrieux
and senior Dalton Kinnon
each scored 19 points to lead
Mystic Valley boys’ basketball to
a 70-39 conference victory over
Nashoba Tech on Friday night.
In addition to their 19 points,
Mitchel Damas contributed 11
points for the Eagles (1-0). Carl
Damas added 8 points, while
Liam Powers scored 5. Jake Heller-Bottari
and Noah Elbadaoui
each chipped in 3 points, and
Calvin Damas rounded out the
scoring with 2 points.
Mystic Valley set the tone early,
scoring the first six points of
the game in the opening 3:30.
The Eagles built on that momentum,
extending their lead
LEADER | FROM PAGE 1
homes to the street; likewise, the
city was obliged to replace lead
lines from the street to the lines
from the homes or businesses.
Along with the new ordinance
– the first of its kind in city history
– the city also established
by an additional 11 points.
Mystic Valley's defense limited
assistance programs featuring
both information and guidance
for homeowners on the “how to”
for replacing lead lines, as well as
financial resources, such as interest-free
loans to pay for lead line
replacements.
In 2022 it was estimated by
the city’s Engineering Depart~
Legal Notice ~
NOTICE OF INITIAL SITE INVESTIGATION AND
TIER II CLASSIFICATION
150 Charles Street
Malden, MA 02148
RTN 3-50953
A release of oil and/or hazardous materials has occurred at this location, which is a
disposal site as defined by M.G.L. c. 21E, § 2 and the Massachusetts Contingency Plan,
310 CMR 40.0000. To evaluate the release, a Phase I Initial Site Investigation was
performed pursuant to 310 CMR 40.0480. As a result of this investigation, the site has
been classified as Tier II pursuant to 310 CMR 40.0500. On or about November 30,
2024, 150-160 Charles Street LLC will file a Tier II Classification Submittal with the
Department of Environmental Protection (MassDEP). To obtain more information on this
disposal site, please contact John Clement, New England Environmental
Technologies Corporation, 145 South Main Street, Haverhill, MA 01835,
(978) 521-1111.
The Tier II Classification Submittal and the disposal site file can be reviewed at MassDEP
website using Release Tracking Number (RTN) 3-50953 at
http://public.dep.state.ma.us/SearchableSites2/Search.aspx or MassDEP,
Northeast Regional Office, 150 Presidential Way, Woburn, MA 01801, (978) 694-3200.
Additional public involvement opportunities are available under 310 CMR 40.1403(9) and
310 CMR 40.1404.
December 20, 2024
Nashoba Tech to just 7 points
in the first quarter. The Eagles
ment and City Engineer Yem Lip
that a 10-year plan to replace all
lead lines in Malden carried a
price tag of $35 million. At that
time, it was also estimated there
were about 2,500 known lead
water lines among the 12,000 in
the city. In a report delivered at
a recent Council meeting, it was
continued their strong play in
the second quarter, outscoring
stated that Malden has a legitimate
chance to attain that goal
by 2032. Within the past year
alone, Malden has replaced 301
lead lines – a new yearly high.
One of the key reasons Malden
has been able to attack
and address this pressing issue
is through the continued
assistance of U.S. Rep. Katherine
Clark at the federal level. In
2022, through the efforts of Rep.
Clark and U.S. Sen. Ed Markey
(D-Mass.), a Malden resident, the
city of Malden received a giant
boost toward lead pipe replacement
in the form of a $3.36 million
grant. Another $1.4 million
in federal funding courtesy of
the Infrastructure Law for Clean
Water was announced coming
to Malden in May of this year,
again through Rep. Clark’s efforts.
Additional funding and a
robust no-interest lending program
for local homeowners has
come through the Massachusetts
Water Resources Authority
(MWRA) to this city, supported
by our state legislative delNashoba
Tech to take a commanding
36-14 lead at halftime.
In
the third quarter, the Eagles
turned up the heat on defense,
leading to several fastbreak
points in transition. Mystic
Valley further extended their
lead, dominating the third stanza.
With a big lead in the fourth
quarter, some of the first-year
varsity players had the opportunity
to see playing time and
gain valuable experience. The
Eagles cruised to a 70-39 victory,
with sophomore Elbadaoui
sealing the win with a late
breakaway.
Next, the Eagles will travel to
Pioneer Everett to face the Panthers
on Friday, December 27,
at 1:30 PM.
egation of state Reps. Steve Ultrino
(D-Malden), Paul Donato
(D-Malden, Medford) and Kate
Lipper-Garabedian (D-Malden,
Melrose) and state Sen. Jason
Lewis (D-5th District).
Eight years ago, MassDEP
ruled that Malden had the most
lead water service lines in the
Commonwealth, about 47% of
all lines in the community. With
over 1,000 lines replaced since
that unwieldy number was revealed,
progress can most definitely
be acknowledged. As it
stands today, the lead line “most
in the state” label no longer applies
to Malden.
Though the “finish line” may
still be far off in the distance at
this time, 2032 is really not that
far away, as the sage of the City
Council, 32-year Ward 2 icon Paul
Condon pointed out.
Transparency, action and
progress – they have all played
a role in Malden addressing one
of its most pressing issues of the
new millennium. Let’s keep the
progress moving forward.
For Advertising with Results,
call The Advocate Newspapers
at 617-387-2200 or Info@advocatenews.net
׉	 7cassandra://W3z5H7_gzeWVxvN3c7XoezdFICJ2Ex-d_06unMK1wkA2/` gdm)T2s׉E	DTHE MALDEN ADVOCATE–Friday, December 20, 2024
Page 17
Malden High Girls Basketball off
to a solid start in the GBL
Wins over Chelsea and Lynn Classical to kick off season
By Steve Freker
M
alden High Girls Basketball
is off to a perfect start
in Greater Boston League (GBL)
play so far this season, and it’s a
breath of fresh air for a team that
has been working hard to get
this season going. Head Coach
Scott Marino’s squad blasted
Chelsea, 51-21, in its season and
home opener last week and then
doubled up with a 41-34 win on
the road at Lynn Classical Tuesday
night. The pair of wins left
Malden at a perfect 2-0 in GBL
competition heading into Thursday
night’s road game at Somerville
High (after Advocate press
time).
Malden did drop a tough one
on the road at North Quincy on
Aaliyah Ferreira lines up a
free throw for Malden against
Chelsea. (Advocate Photo/Henry Huang Photo)
Friday, Dec. 31, 69-38; the record
is now at 2-1 overall.
Against Chelsea, everyone
played well, led by senior Amanda
Fowke, who led all scorers
with 18 points and pulled
11 rebounds. Ina Tolete added
9 points against Chelsea and
sophomore Manicha Exilhomme
added 8 points. Fowke also
led Malden against Lynn Classical
with 10 points and 10 rebounds.
It
was a solid win for Malden,
coming against the deAmanda
Fowke was the
leading scorer for Malden
with 18 points in a win over
Chelsea. (Advocate Photo/Henry Huang
Photo)
Kimberly Tropnas goes in for a layup for Malden against
Chelsea. (Advocate Photo/Henry Huang Photo)
Sophia Rodriguez dribbles up
court for Malden.
fending GBL champ Lynn Classical.
“It was not easy, but not
many games in our league are
that way,” Coach Marino said,
“It’s competitive every night
and a lot of the teams are evenly
matched. We limited our mistakes
and overall played pretty
well on both ends of the court.”
Ina Tolete looks to the
rim between two Chelsea
defenders.
It’s been a good start all around
for Malden High girls basketball,
which saw a huge turnout for
preseason tryouts: some 86 girls
for the three levels of teams. “It’s
the most we’ve ever had for our
program,” the Malden coach
added. “It was great to see. We
have been working hard to draw
more interest with our youth
teams.”
Manicha Exilhomme stands
her ground and controls the
ball for Malden.
Janesa Perez-Sims goes up for
a shot against Chelsea.
׉	 7cassandra://QysOoMJnoLUsQXRApOEVzuTjACym6Amr3Oc4q9IITwQ5` gdm)T2sˁgdm)T2sʁ
rבCט   Uru׉׉	 7cassandra://tyZ8BCKCchFs02p0MeWUyZ0XceiOXi_fJx2M3VFkeS0 	]` 'p׉	 7cassandra://oYP9e-6zihjEoej2q4stJ7E3F5ucUCLYN7BGQMfBcck͹9`׉	 7cassandra://VbdobTmopR7ZVLpv9Woap33IIhFuCY-TufuB7osPAL4.B` gdn)T2t	ט U Uru׉׉	 7cassandra://zWbqLcO_ce459OdTFvyuU-CA6qDelyQVrtXZHbWNB2o AF` 'p׉	 7cassandra://6dTZHLVpF69S5T1fTWeARelrH5tKmwF5LgKBqn_q7_0`׉	 7cassandra://-FP9PpTgbqLYs2dm0_Cqglg5ZSH_c6LC4D4_aq6AZYQ5t` gdn)T2t
נgdn)T2t >r9ׁH #mailto:remixproductions14@gmail.comׁׁЈ׉E#wPage 18
THE MALDEN ADVOCATE–Friday, December 20, 2024
MUSINGS | FROM PAGE 6
ries that stayed with you forever.
And for those rare, sacred moments,
like Christmas Eve Midnight
Mass at the Immaculate
(1971) with bestie Jimmy Damiano,
the season’s magic was
truly complete. Those were the
days that made Christmas feel
like more than just a holiday –
they were the times that made
Malden feel like home. Priceless!!
Ten Christmas/Holiday songs
for 10 nights in December – all
guaranteed to get you in the Holiday
spirit. YouTube them. You’ll
like ’em! In no particular order
for 2024:
• Sal Baglio’s Stompers – “All I
Want for Christmas Is a Rock n
Roll Guitar”
• Louis Armstrong – “Christmas
Night in Harlem”
• Tom Waits – “Christmas Card
from a Hooker in Minneapolis”
• Merle Haggard – “Lonely
Night”
• Paul Robeson – “Silent Night”
• Harry Belafonte – “I Heard the
Savvy Senior
by Jim Miller
Be Wary of Winter Heart Attacks
Dear Savvy Senior,
I’ve heard that people with heart problems need
to be extra careful during the winter months because
heart attacks are much more common.
What can you tell me about this?
AFib Alan
Dear Alan,
Everyone knows winter is cold and flu season,
but many don’t know that it’s also the prime
season for heart attacks too, especially if you
already have a heart condition or have suffered
a previous heart attack. Here’s what you should
know, along with some tips to help you protect
yourself.
In the U.S., the risk of having a heart attack
during the winter months is twice as high as
it is during the summertime. Why? There are a
number of factors, and they’re not all linked to
cold weather. Even people who live in warm climates
have an increased risk. Here are the areas
you need to pay extra attention to this winter.
Cold temperatures: When a person gets cold,
the body responds by constricting the blood
vessels to help the body maintain heat. This
causes blood pressure to go up and makes the
heart work harder. Cold temperatures can also
increase levels of certain proteins that can thicken
the blood and increase the risk for blood clots.
So, stay warm this winter and when you do have
to go outside, make sure you bundle up in layers
with gloves and a hat, and place a scarf over
your mouth and nose to warm up the air before
you breathe it in.
Snow shoveling: Studies have shown that
heart attack rates jump dramatically in the first
few days after a major snowstorm, usually a result
of snow shoveling. Shoveling snow is a very
strenuous activity that raises blood pressure and
stresses the heart. Combine those factors with
cold temperatures and the risks for heart attack
surges. If your sidewalk or driveway needs
shoveling this winter, hire a kid from the neighborhood
to do it for you, or use a snow blower.
Or, if you must shovel, push rather than lift the
snow as much as possible, stay warm, and take
frequent breaks.
New Year’s resolutions: Every Jan. 1, millions
of people join gyms or start exercise programs
as part of their New Year’s resolution to get in
shape, and many overexert themselves too
soon. If you’re starting a new exercise program
this winter, take the time to talk to your doctor
about what types and how much exercise may
be appropriate for you.
Winter weight gain: People tend to eat and
drink more and gain more weight during the
holiday season and winter months, all of which
are hard on the heart and risky for someone
with heart disease. So, keep a watchful eye on
your diet this winter and avoid binging on fatty
foods and alcohol.
Shorter days: Less daylight in the winter
months can cause many people to develop
“seasonal affective disorder” or SAD, a wintertime
depression that can stress the heart. Studies
have also looked at heart attack patients
and found they usually have lower levels of vitamin
D (which comes from sunlight) than people
with healthy hearts. To boost your vitamin D
this winter, consider taking a supplement that
contains between 1,000 and 2,000 international
units (IU) per day.
Flu season: Studies show that people who
get flu shots have a lower heart attack risk. It’s
known that the inflammatory reaction set off by
a flu infection can increase blood clotting which
can lead to heart attacks in vulnerable people.
So, if you haven’t already done so this year, get
a flu shot and Covid-19 booster for protection.
And, if you’ve never been vaccinated for RSV or
pneumococcal pneumonia, you should consider
getting these vaccines too.
Send your senior questions to: Savvy Senior, P.O. Box 5443, Norman, OK 73070, or visit SavvySenior.
org. Jim Miller is a contributor to the NBC Today show and author of “The Savvy Senior” book.
Bells on Christmas Day”
• Johnny Crawford – “Greensleeves”
(The Rifleman TV Episode
168, “Old Tony,” April 8, 1963)
• The Louvin Brothers – “O
Come All Ye Faithful”
• John Lee Hooker – “Blues for
Christmas”
• Yogi Yorgesson – “I Yust Go
Nuts at Christmas”
• Frank Sinatra – “Have Yourself
a Merry Little Christmas”
Craig “Best Words” Spadafora
revisits the gold standard of
Christmas Eve remembrances:
“Some of my fondest Christmas
memories will always be
from my grandparents’ home
on Emerald Street, especially
those magical Christmas Eves.
As a kid with a big, bustling extended
family, I’d count down
the days to this beloved tradition.
The evening was pure magic – a
gathering of cousins, aunts, and
uncles all under one warm roof,
filled with love, joy, and that unmatched
anticipation of the season’s
most wondrous day.
“The night felt like a scene from
a holiday classic. Each child was
surprised with gifts from aunts
and uncles chosen at random,
and the house rang with laughter
and cheer, with a Christmas
tree that seemed endlessly
stocked with presents. Then
came the food – a feast that was
its own kind of holiday gift. Our
family whipped up every Italian
delight: baked, stuffed, boiled,
fried, cured. For weeks leading up
to Christmas, the house was perfumed
with the smell of Italian
cakes and cookies from our annual
baking marathon. The kitchen
became a bakery, producing
batch after batch of treats: taralli,
pizzelle, biscotti, struffoli, panettone,
cannoli, and so many
others.
“And then there was Christmas
Eve dinner – ‘The Seven Fishes.’ A
gourmet spread of baked, fried,
and sautéed seafood, a tribute
to tradition and family. As I got
older, leaving my grandparents’
house that night got harder, and
I began to realize that it was this
gathering that made the season
so magical.
“Looking back on it as an adult
feels like replaying a favorite
Christmas movie. My grandparents’
tree was perfect, my grandmother’s
smile genuine and radiant,
and the house had that unmistakable
Christmas scent that
still lingers in my memory. While
I can’t make any more holiday
memories with my grandparents,
I feel blessed to have had them as
examples. Now, the responsibility
of creating these precious holiday
memories for my three children
is in my hands. I’ll always
be grateful to Tony and Alice for
giving me a foundation of love
and joy, for teaching me what it
means to have a ‘Merry Christmas,’
and for helping shape the
person I am today.”
Hizzoner Gary “Mayor for Life”
Christenson, holiday memories –
he has a few: “My favorite Christmas
memories were of mom
taking me shopping in Malden
Square. After walking from our
apartment on Cross Street we
would first visit Jordan Marsh
where it seemed like we spent
hours between floors. We would
then head to Brigham’s where
I always made sure to have my
favorite, Peppermint Ice Cream.
After more shopping including
stops at the Army & Navy Store,
mom would always take me to
Granada Lanes. I loved bowling
growing up which I think was because
my grandfather was on an
episode of ‘Candlepins for Cash!’
I loved bowling so much that I
actually ended up working at
Granada Lanes for much of my
teen years and through college at
Suffolk. I later became known as
‘Bowling Alley Gary’ which stuck
with me off and on throughout
my life (on a personal note I prefer
Gary ‘The Beast Slayer’ Christenson
– LOL). When my mom
had enough of me in the downtown
my dad would take over
and I can still remember to this
day when he took me to see ‘Jaws’
at Granada. All I have to say is that
I went to bed with the lights on
that night! Malden Square during
Christmas had a big impact on
me growing up and that is one of
the reasons why I am focused on
doing what I can to help continue
its storied tradition in our city.”
As Peter Falk’s iconic TV character
Columbo would say, “Just
one more thing, sir” – a favorite
passage from Dr. Seuss my late
mother (Dorothy) loved so much
I’m bringing it back once again
this holiday season in her honor.
She adored Christmas, as anyone
who knew her can attest to, and
as long as I’m writing, I’ll keep her
memory alive.
My beloved mom was a remarkable
woman as many will
attest to, just ask anyone who
MUSINGS| SEE PAGE 19
׉	 7cassandra://VbdobTmopR7ZVLpv9Woap33IIhFuCY-TufuB7osPAL4.B` gdm)T2s׉ETHE MALDEN ADVOCATE–Friday, December 20, 2024
Page 19
MUSINGS | FROM PAGE 18
crossed her path! She had a
strength and warmth that drew
people to her, and she had an uncanny
way of making every single
person feel valued (especially
if they were a fellow smoker).
Our friends became her friends,
and she likely fed every one of
them at some point during our
lifetimes.
The tributes that poured in on
Facebook after she passed would
have meant the world to her. She
would have reveled in each kind
word and probably bragged a bit
about the photo of her shoveling
snow garnering nearly 300 likes.
It’s funny to think that even now,
she’s still making people smile.
Mom loved this Dr. Seuss passage.
It just about sums up the
spirit she brought to the season.
It’s from Dr. Seuss’s “How
the Grinch Stole Christmas”: “And
the Grinch, with his Grinch-feet
ice cold in the snow, stood puz~
Help Wanted ~
Event Coordinator. Plan & execute events incl. logistics,
sponsorships, budgets, & marketing. Secure partnerships
& deliver creative, high-quality experiences. Req. 4 yrs of
exp. in event planning or rel. field. Req. fluent Brazilian
Portuguese, written & spoken. $62,800.00/yr. Send resume
to: REMIX PRODUÇÕES INC, 173 Water St, Saugus, MA
01906 or email: remixproductions14@gmail.com
Lawn and Yard Care
SNOW PLOWING
*REASONABLE RATES
* PROMPT SERVICE
* PARKING LOTS
USA
781-521-9927
SPADAFORA
AUTO PARTS
JUNK CARS
WANTED
SAME DAY PICK UP
781-324-1929
Quality Used Tires
Mounted & Installed
Used Auto Parts & Batteries
Family owned & operated since 1946
DISINHERITING A CHILD
ing and/or spending time together
which might end up being a parent’s
worst nightmare.
Some things to consider when
you are contemplating disinheriting
a child are:
1. A child who might appear to be
A
s part of most estate plans,
parents will leave their estate
to all children in equal
shares. In some cases, parents
elect not to leave anything
to one or more of their
children. There may be a situation
where the parents believe
one child to be more financially
successful than others,
or not wanting to provide assets
to a special needs child so
as not to lose any governmental
benefits. In some cases, parents
may not want to leave assets
to an irresponsible, spendthrift
or drug-dependent child.
There are sometimes situations
where the parents want to disinherit
a child who is estranged
from the family, or to even use
the disinheritance as a way to
get even or to have the last
word so to speak.
One of the risks of disinheriting a
child is that it may be hurtful in the
child’s mind and will often affect the
child’s relationship with the other
siblings. There are, of course, countless
court cases wherein siblings are
suing each other over money and
disagreements about inheritances.
However, even if there is no subsequent
lawsuit, it is very possible that
the siblings will no longer be speakmore
successful financially may be
having trouble behind the scenes.
He or she may actually need the
inheritance now or in the future.
Financial situations can change
quickly. Divorce can wreak chaos
on a child’s finances. So too can illness.
Also keep in mind that if you
disinherit a child, you are also disinheriting
that’s child’s children (your
grandchildren).
2. You may have a spouse, child,
sibling, parent or other loved one
who is physically, mentally or developmentally
disabled, from birth,
illness, injury or even substance
abuse, who may be entitled to governmental
benefits now or in the
future. Most of these benefits are
available only to those with very
minimal assets and income. In these
situations, you do not have to disinherit
this person or persons. You
can easily establish a supplemental
needs trust that is carefully designed
to supplement and not
jeopardize the benefits provided
by local, state, federal or private
agencies.
3. You may also have a child that
is irresponsible with money or is under
the influence of drugs or alcohol.
You should consider that this
child may actually need financial
help now or in the future, and may
actually become a responsible and/
or sober adult. Instead of disinheriting
this child, you might think of
establishing a trust giving a certain
trustee discretion in providing or
withholding financial assistance.
You may also stipulate any requirements
you want your child to meet.
The manner in which you decide
to include your children in your estate
plan may say a good deal about
your values and faith. Not disinheriting
a child who may have caused
you grief and heartache may convey
a message of love and forgiveness.
Disinheriting a child, even for
what seems to be a good reason,
may convey a message of lack of
love, anger and resentment.
If you have previously disinherited
a child in your Will or Trust and
you have reconciled, you should
consider updating your estate planning
documents accordingly. If your
decision to disinherit is final, be sure
to discuss this with your estate planning
attorney. Lastly, consider telling
your child that you are disinheriting
him or her so it does not
come as a complete surprise. Explaining
your reasons will allow for
honest discussion and may help to
deter the child from blaming his or
her siblings later on, after you are no
longer alive. It might be better that
your child ends up not being happy
with you rather than not being
happy with his or her brothers and
sisters. After all, they will be the ones
around long after you are dead. I see
this all of the time. The great investor
Warren Buffet recently disclosed
he had his children review the terms
of his estate planning documents so
they would be able to provide input
while he is still alive.
Joseph D. Cataldo is an estate planning/elder law attorney,
Certified Public Accountant, Certified Financial Planner, AICPA Personal
Financial Specialist and holds a master’s degree in taxation.
zling and puzzling, how could it
be so? It came without ribbons. It
came without tags. It came without
packages, boxes, or bags.
And he puzzled and puzzled ’till
his puzzler was sore. Then the
Grinch thought of something he
hadn’t before. What if Christmas,
he thought, doesn’t come from a
store. What if Christmas, perhaps,
means a little bit more?”
That was her outlook. Christmas
wasn’t about the trimmings;
it was about family, friends and
the warmth of togetherness. Her
memory reminds us of every year
to focus on what truly matters.
Merry Christmas and Happy New
Year, Malden!
Postscript 1: Good Malden
hearts and the spirit of the season
abounded last Saturday at
the Italian American Citizen’s
Club in Edgeworth as the IACC
once again showed Malden
what this time of the year is truly
all about. Partnering with the
best of the best at the Malden
Police Department, Jackie Teal
and IACC President Billy Settemio
says to themselves, “Let’s throw
a fundraiser for the yoots of Malden,”
“let’s make sure them without
don’t go without this holiday
season.” The fundraiser was
a stone-cold success with thousands
raised for little ones that
may have gone without during
the holiday season. Thank you,
Jackie, Billy, MPD Chief Glenn
MUSINGS| SEE PAGE 21
Call
$
$
$
$
Driveways
from $35
׉	 7cassandra://-FP9PpTgbqLYs2dm0_Cqglg5ZSH_c6LC4D4_aq6AZYQ5t` gdm)T2śgdm)T2ś
rבCט   Uru׉׉	 7cassandra://F2nUvoSLYTVvt7YmytWmBiBaY9WKtOHosx-PfqvglJw `'p׉	 7cassandra://jLhBGDsqQXGInCRmPYRU5FqE0Rgm1RTLSiBY9-EtHPwͻ)`׉	 7cassandra://K-MaQbZTN5wVDUQyFFTQNH1new4oQgh4CSTxEzIYcNk:#` gdn)T2tט U Uru׉׉	 7cassandra://BQNiw-AW5Mg7-Hiey4CLt9JF7nFUGl5I_54VldnkCME `'p׉	 7cassandra://JHAe7rHRWFWJRHUM80d-fRuSAjGfj1xj1ZORehlMeL0ͽ/`׉	 7cassandra://Z-UCXSaxiGdVWv-Uf9XbyTbzyZSpBTcSmNWng1JU_BY5` gdn)T2tנgdn)T2t ̅u9ׁHmailto:teL39@aol.comׁׁЈ׉EPage 20
THE MALDEN ADVOCATE–Friday, December 20, 2024
KNIVES & SCISSORS
SHARPENED
Sharp Services Inc.
222 Central St., Saugus
(617) 590-3500
855-GO-4-GLAS
Like us on Facebook
advocate newspaper
Facebook.com/
Advocate.news.ma
Your Hometown News Delivered!
EVERETT ADVOCATE
MALDEN ADVOCATE
REVERE ADVOCATE
SAUGUS ADVOCATE
One year subscription to
The Advocate of your choice:
$175 per paper in-town per year or
$225 per paper out-of-town per year.
For Advertising with
Results,
call The Advocate
Newspapers
at 617-387-2200 or Info@
advocatenews.net
BUYER1
NUTHI, PENCHALA K
BUYER2
SELLER1
HOPKINS, PATRICK
Name_________________________________________
Address_______________________________________
City_______________ State_______ Zip ____________
CC# _______________________________ Exp. _____
Sec. code____ Advocate (City):___________________
Clip & Mail Coupon with Credit Card, Check or Money Order to:
Advocate Newspapers Inc.
PO Box 490407, Everett, MA 02149
REAL ESTATE TRANSACTIONS
SELLER2
HOPKINS, JESSICA
Advocate
Call now!
617-387-2200
advertise on the web at
www.advocatenews.net
Copyrighted material previously published in Banker & Tradesman/The Commercial
Record, a weekly trade newspaper. It is reprinted with permission from the publisher,
The Warren Group. For a searchable database of real estate transactions and property
information visit: www.thewarrengroup.com.
ADDRESS
100 KIMBALL ST
CITY
MALDEN
DATE
11.22.24
PRICE
785000
Classifieds
׉	 7cassandra://K-MaQbZTN5wVDUQyFFTQNH1new4oQgh4CSTxEzIYcNk:#` gdm)T2s׉ETHE MALDEN ADVOCATE–Friday, December 20, 2024
Page 21
MUSINGS | FROM PAGE 19
Cronin, the wonderful guys and
gals at the MPD, IACC members
and their paisons who showed
face to make this so damn successful.
You guys’ rock and are
wicked nice. This kind gesture
did not go unnoticed, by the way.
Straight through the Pearly Gates
for all the organizers, no ID necessary.
Insert great big holiday
smiley face.
Postscript 2: “What we have
once enjoyed we can never lose.
All that we love deeply becomes
a part of us.” The mold was broken
when he was created. Steff
Moro unabashedly commanded
the stage – from here to there
and all points in between. Going
out exactly as he wished. On his
own terms. Brother Chris as his
second mate, a man on a mission
to help his brother move
on to the next stage, just as he
wished. Sainthood awaits you,
Chris. Ain’t no secret, Steff was a
rambler, a gambler, a dealer and
a sidewalk spieler; a busker, husker
and dawn to dusker; a saint, a
sinner, a boozer and a winner. Everyone
you have ever met and all
the rest in between. He was Steve
Moro, and you will never meet
another like him. Your boyos will
miss you, big guy. Malden, I ask
that you please remember Steve
and his family as you gather with
friends and family this holiday
season. Didn’t know Steff Moro?
Too bad, he really, really was a hot
(expletive deleted).
Clean-Outs!
We take and dispose
from cellars, attics,
garages, yards, etc.
Call Robert at:
781-844-0472
—Peter is a longtime Malden
resident and a regular contributor
to The Malden Advocate
and he can be reached at PeteL39@aol.com
for comments,
compliments or criticisms.
The Kid Does
Clean Outs
From 1 item to 1,000
* Basements * Homes * Backyards
* Commercial Buildings
The cheapest prices around!
Call Eric: (857) 322-2854
1. On Dec. 20, 1790, the first American cotton mill went into operation
on what river in Massachusetts and Rhode Island?
2. Wha holiday’s name (created by an American activist) is in Swahili?
3.
How are Ask Jeeves, Lycos and WebCrawler similar?
4. On Dec. 21, 1913, the New York World newspaper published
the world’s first of what puzzle?
5. What writer who once lived in Vermont wrote in poems “East
is East, and West is West” and “The Law of the Jungle”?
6. How are USS and HMS similar?
7. On Dec. 22, 1989, what gate between East and West Germany
was opened?
8. Can you ski in Hawaii?
9. What is the French word for Christmas?
10. What kind of candy is gelt?
11. On Dec. 23, 1947, what winner of four Boston Marathons (now
a Mass. resident) was born?
12. Where did fondue originate: Belgium, France or Switzerland?
13. What is Merriam-Webster Dictionary’s World of the Year (meaning
being divided)?
14. On Dec. 24, 1912, one of the first USA public Christmas trees
was lit on Boston Common; for decades what province has gifted
Boston a Christmas tree?
15. What holiday plant is a parasite on other plants?
16. In what film would you find the Kingdom of Arendelle?
17. On Dec. 25, 1758, what comet was visible from earth – the first
comet sighting predicted beforehand?
18. Why was Mariah Carey – nicknamed Songbird Supreme – also
given the nickname “Queen of Christmas”?
19. How are cheque, draught and tyre similar”?
20. December 26 is Boxing Day in Great Britain and some other
countries; traditionally, what was it?
ANSWERS
1. Blackstone
2. Kwanzaa (Dec. 26–Jan. 1)
3. They are internet search engines
created in the 1990s.
4. Crossword
5. Rudyard Kipling
6. They are abbreviations for
ship titles (United States Ship
and His (Her) Majesty’s Ship,
respectively)
7. Berlin’s Brandenburg Gate
8. Yes (on Mauna Kea, an extinct
volcano on the Big Island)
9. Noel
10. Chocolate coins often given
at Hanukkah
11. Bill Rodgers
12. Switzerland
13. Polarization
14. Nova Scotia
15. Mistletoe
16. “Frozen”
17. Halley’s
18. Due to the popularity of her
hit “All I Want for Christmas is
You”
19. They are British spellings of
English words (check, draft
[the beverage] and tire).
20. A day when the poor, servants
and tradespeople received
gifts
׉	 7cassandra://Z-UCXSaxiGdVWv-Uf9XbyTbzyZSpBTcSmNWng1JU_BY5` gdm)T2sρgdm)T2s΁
rבCט   Uru׉׉	 7cassandra://dzLFledStCVvjBzZj0fUu7vI49zYyRNvMdOnIhzHpJw wM`'p׉	 7cassandra://gGXykKymSRdCp4xn4GL5ymegI-JS0jhoZ88NXeqvujUo`׉	 7cassandra://ShSLuweTrNwQIlwWqU4vs7iFdmlfiFUBfh20uia5IWQ>I` gdn)T2tט U Uru׉׉	 7cassandra://BpW-YOGjLGUMjTf15M3tXTGupx8FLY2mQKdZb0lcO4M `'p׉	 7cassandra://aBDKq10knNZN0uqmUgdtMVSeQ6G3vNphqj_BnKL5bYo͛`׉	 7cassandra://dCqOncIKCxiw4HrSoKNA7y4FDfY2wvlsXWY5-gX69Ik0` gdn)T2tנgdn)T2t  J9ׁHmailto:Info@advocatenews.netׁׁЈנgdn)T2t L=9ׁHhttp://www.advocatenews.netׁׁЈנgdn)T2t I`9ׁH !http://www.americanexteriorma.comׁׁЈנgdn)T2t 9ׁH !http://Carrijohomeimprovement.comׁׁЈ׉EPage 22
THE MALDEN ADVOCATE–Friday, December 20, 2024
Licensed
& Insured
Free
Estimates
Carpentry * Kitchen & Bath * Roofs * Painting
Decks * Siding * Carrijohomeimprovement.com
Call 781-710-8918 * Saugus, MA
General Contractor * Interior & Exterior
American Exterior and
Window Corporation
Contact us for all of your
home improvement projects
and necessities.
Call Jeff or Bob
Toll Free: 1-888-744-1756
617-699-1782 / www.americanexteriorma.com
Windows, Siding, Roofing, Carpentry & More!
All estimates, consultations or inspections completed
by MA licensed supervisors. *Over 50 years experience.
*Better Business Bureau Membership.
Insured and
Registered
Complete Financing Available.
No Money Down.
AAA Service • Lockouts
Trespass Towing • Roadside Service
Junk Car Removal
617-387-6877
26 Garvey St., Everett
MDPU 28003 ICCMC 251976
Frank Berardino
MA License 31811
● 24-Hour Service
● Emergency Repairs
BERARDINO
Plumbing & Heating
Gas Fitting ● Drain Service
Residential & Commercial Service
617.699.9383
Senior Citizen Discount
WASTE REMOVAL &
BUILDING MAINTENANCE
• Landscaping, Lawn Care, Mulching
• Yard Waste & Rubbish Removal
• Interior & Exterior Demolition (Old
Decks, Fences, Pools, Sheds, etc.)
• Appliance and Metal Pick-up
• Construction and Estate Cleanouts
• Pick-up Truck Load of Trash
starting at $169
• Carpentry
LICENSED & INSURED
Call for FREE ESTIMATES!
Office: (781) 233-2244
We follow Social Distancing Guidelines!
FIRE • SOOT • WATER
Homeowner’s Insurance Loss Specialists
FREE CONSULTATION
1-877-SAL-SOOT
Sal Barresi, Jr. - Your fi rst call
617-212-9050
J.F & Son Contracting
Snow Plowing
No Job too small! Free Estimates!
Commercial & Residential
781-656-2078
- Property management & maintenance
Shoveling & removal
Landscaping, Electrical, Plumbing, Painting, Roofing, Carpentry, Framing,
Decks, Fencing, Masonry, Demolition, Gut-outs, Junk Removal & Dispersal,
Clean Ups: Yards, Garages, Attics & Basements. Truck for Hire, Bobcat Services.
617-387-2200
advertise on the web at
www.advocatenews.net
For Advertising with Results, call The Advocate Newspapers
at 617-387-2200 or Info@advocatenews.net
Advocate
Call now!
Classifieds
׉	 7cassandra://ShSLuweTrNwQIlwWqU4vs7iFdmlfiFUBfh20uia5IWQ>I` gdm)T2s׉E 8THE MALDEN ADVOCATE–Friday, December 20, 2024
Page 23
׉	 7cassandra://dCqOncIKCxiw4HrSoKNA7y4FDfY2wvlsXWY5-gX69Ik0` gdm)T2sсgdm)T2sЁ
rבCט   Uru׉׉	 7cassandra://JkVai0IqCikkbxkWtPZx_YFfxq1xJkzzVWRaaonuCII ~:`'p׉	 7cassandra://8TUCuI6ZuT96JAU73WPuOrp9KiBd4xeMWmHeomEQuN8͉`׉	 7cassandra://6qQnRAk47kPb8bKx0oPltDZPmJGP-hDhBdVr0Pm5HIk.` gdn)T2t׉E 8Page 24
THE MALDEN ADVOCATE–Friday, December 20, 2024
׉	 7cassandra://6qQnRAk47kPb8bKx0oPltDZPmJGP-hDhBdVr0Pm5HIk.` gdm)T2s׈Egdm)T2sӁgdm)T2sҁ
r,Malden Advocate 12/20/2024Malden Advocate 12/20/2024gdmˁDV {