×‰?4×B!›×‘C‘×˜š Í( Í(Í€u×‰œ”×‰	Ú 7cassandra://xhGrYjCTh8h4QVQXcUXe0aDZbne7_Gq0JxcfdG6jwVQÎ ¢ôÍ`ÍœÍ)×‰	Ú 7cassandra://W5heRtqNuMBCKpMdRIYyqFXauNSii94_5nSgPISsDd0ÍÍ`ÍJÍà×‰	Ú 7cassandra://8rntyXD78X3OoCyJNnqzpEa7UxdE4bz6SVgkW73X7DcÍ1_Í`Ì°Í ×‰	Ú 7cassandra://iOpRxH3no49YFAJZLGUJiYkc1hUKj5-QuokhRqv9NZIÎ ‚~ÍVðÍ ÍÅÍñ×d
Ri&©èMí81Ô‘× ×d
Ri&©èMí81× Í€Í?Ì˜9×H­http://www.ad××Ðˆ×ˆE×d
Ri&©èMí81¾×‰EÚMSpring Clocks Forward 1 Hour Saturday Night!
Vol. 32, No.10
-FREEwww.advocatenew
.net
Free
Every Friday
~ ELECTION 2023 ~
Councillors emerge early as
candidates for vacant mayorâ€™s seat
By Barbara Taormina
T
wo city councillors this week
announced their decision to
run for mayor in the wake of Mayor
Brian Arrigoâ€™s announcement
that he will not seek reelection.
City Council President Patrick
Keefe and Councillor-AtLarge
Gerry Visconti will be on
the ballot this fall although neither
candidate has yet pulled papers
which are not available until
May 1.
Keefe, who is serving his second
term as Ward 4 councillor
and is treasurer for the Revere
Democratic City Committee, said
Revere is the center of his familyâ€™s
life and he is all in.
â€œThe cityâ€™s accomplishments
over the last few years have been
transformative and Iâ€™m proud to
support and advocate for our
continued progress. With all of
our current successes weâ€™ve had,
it is important to remember that
the work must carry on. It is the
only constant,â€ wrote Keefe in a
statement he released this week.
â€œThe next leader of our city
GERRY VISCONTI
Councillor-at-Large
should use our last eight years
as our foundation and continue
moving the city forward. I know
that my calling has come and
have the experience, leadership
and unmatched work ethic to get
the job done,â€ he said.
At-Large Councillor Gerry Visconti
has also tossed his hat into
the ring. Visconti said it has been
humbling that so many people
have encouraged him to run.
PATRICK KEEFE, JR.
Ward 4 Councillor
Visconti is serving his fi rst term
as councillor-at-large. Before being
elected to the city council
he served on the Revere School
Committee. He is a small business
owner and serves as president
of Middlesex Mortgage Financial,
Inc.
â€œWith a transition coming
this fall, I believe now is the time
VACANT | SEE Page 6
Basketball Pats Tourney
Hopes Fade
Revereâ€™s Supt. of Schools Dr. Dianne Kelly expresses her surprise
as city family, friends, and city and school offi cials turned
out in the City Council chambers to honor her for being recently
awarded MA Schools Supt. of the Year. See photos on
page 10. (Advocate photo by Tara Vocino)
~ POLITICAL ANNOUNCEMENT ~
Retired Revere Police Sargeant
and Lifelong Ward 6 Resident
Chris Giannino will seek election
to the Revere City Council
6 seat on the Revere City Council.
â€œOur community needs a City
Councilor thatâ€™s a leader that understands
the needs of the residents
of Ward 6. I understand
the need of being accessible to
my neighbors. I am a candidate
COUNCIL | SEE Page 9
$3.48
CHRIS GIANNINO
Candidate for Ward 6 Council
We accept: MasterCard * Visa *
& Discover
Special to Th e Advocate
DRIVING HARD: Pats Co-Captain Sal DeAngelis drives the ball up court during last weekâ€™s MIAA
Tourney action. See story on page 11. (Advocate photo by Emily Harney)
R
etired Revere Police Sargeant
and lifelong Ward 6 resident
Chris Giannino announced this
week his bid to run for the Ward
Price Subject to Change
without notice
100 Gal. Min.
24 Hr. Service
781-286-2602
GALLON
781-286-8500
Friday, March 10, 2023
A Happy Surprise
for Supt. Kelly
×‰	Ú 7cassandra://8rntyXD78X3OoCyJNnqzpEa7UxdE4bz6SVgkW73X7DcÍ1_Í`Ì°Í ×d
Ri&©èMí81¿×d
Ri&©èMí81¾Í
PÍ€×‘C’×˜š   Í(Í€u×‰œ”×‰	Ú 7cassandra://kMKihNTWDB5h8pwxoPVT0M6URspFaeyacK3vHSSu0FYÎ @¡Í`ÍœÍ)×‰	Ú 7cassandra://aZE-8EuFv2KkDfH_ey8H3E3Td1seQJPMSeUw02YW-WsÍ¤ÔÍ`ÍJÍà×‰	Ú 7cassandra://0KyXT5IY9mEtWCyLMTsbhfejYlTEQH3xFqX3HTnegvcÍ0Í`Ì°Í ×‰	Ú 7cassandra://95BuTStKG8S6WzNk-FFAMA3dp9AbBN-uVMa5wVBsgxMÎ ›wÍ(,Í ÍÅÍñ×d
Rj&©èMí81Ø×˜š Í( Í(Í€u×‰œ”×‰	Ú 7cassandra://ct_vHejD9amJQ7igrDTRlMCDf4qX5g_71sqzGNChj6kÎ wåÍ`ÍœÍ)×‰	Ú 7cassandra://WXX6sRInHAArrrjWqHOoyh6BNJkTKpALAXETpb6BzDQÍ¨þÍ`ÍJÍà×‰	Ú 7cassandra://QzVwur9E6gKqlb2HIpi7-QWH9dQ8A9d8-7X5Vxa74ycÍ3IÍ`Ì°Í ×‰	Ú 7cassandra://YKvZ-JhHhIYh73U4cID3IlJvhX7_uhYzpCaAjsw_nj8Î æÍdÍ ÍÅÍñ×d
Rj&©èMí81Ù”× ×d
Rj&©èMí81å ÍŸÍ£Í 9×HÚ "http://www.eight10barandgrille.com××Ðˆ× ×d
Rj&©èMí81ä ÍlÍÌ¢9×H·http://Advocate.news.ma××Ðˆ× ×d
Rj&©èMí81ã Í|ÍúÌ‚9×H´http://Facebook.com/××Ðˆ× ×d
Rj&©èMí81â ÍÐÍ Í 9×HÚ  mailto:lsimeonejr@simeonelaw.net××Ðˆ×‰EÚßPage 2
THE REVERE ADVOCATE â€“ FRIDAY, MARCH 10, 2023
ANGELOâ€™S
FULL SERVICE
1978-2023 Celebrating 45 Years in Business!
191 7
Regular Unleaded
$2.999
MidUnleaded
$3.949
Super
$3.979
Diesel Fuel
$4.199
KERO
By Container
Only
Heating Oil
at the Pump
DEF
$4.759
HEATING OIL
24-Hour Burner Service
Call for Current Price!
(125â€”gallon minimum)
DEF Available
by Pump!
Open an account and
order online at:
www.angelosoil.com
(781) 231-3500 (781) 231-3003
367 LINCOLN Aî€·î€¦ î´ î€´Aî€¶î€¨î€¶î€´
Sun. 9AM-5PM
î€°îµºîµ¼î¶„îµ¾î¶’ î¹Ÿ î€¥î¶‹î¶ˆî¶î¶‡
Attorneys at Law
î€ î€³î€¨î€µî€¶î€²î€±î€¤î€¯ î€¬î€±î€­î€¸î€µî€¼ î€ î€µî€¨î€¤î€¯ î€¨î€¶î€·î€¤î€·î€¨
î€ î€©î€¤î€°î€¬î€¯î€¼ î€¯î€¤î€º î€ î€ªî€¨î€±î€¨î€µî€¤î€¯ î€³î€µî€¤î€¦î€·î€¬î€¦î€¨
î€ î€³î€¨î€µî€¶î€²î€±î€¤î€¯ î€¥î€¤î€±î€®î€µî€¸î€³î€·î€¦î€¼ î€ î€¦î€¬î€¹î€¬î€¯ î€¯î€¬î€·î€¬î€ªî€¤î€·î€¬î€²î€±
14 Norwood St., Everett, MA 02149
Phone: (617) 387-4900 Fax: (617) 381-1755
î€ºî€ºî€ºî€‘î€°î€¤î€¦î€®î€¨î€¼î€¥î€µî€²î€ºî€±î€¯î€¤î€ºî€‘î€¦î€²î€°
John Mackey, Esq. * Katherine M. Brown, Esq.
Patricia Ridge, Esq.
St. Anthonyâ€™s Church
Flea Market & Bazaar
Saturday, March 11, 2023
from 8:00 AM - 2:00 PM
Featuring Crafts, Nick-Nacks
& So Much More!
~ Admission Only .50 Cents ~
For info, call Linda: (781) 910-8615
î€¤îî î“î•î’î†îˆîˆî‡î– î…îˆî‘îˆî‚¿î— î€¶î—î€‘ î€¤î‘î—î‹î’î‘îœî‚¶î– î€¦î‹î˜î•î†î‹
Make a Splash at the 2023
JetBlue Shamrock Splash to
support community events on
area public beaches
G
et Cold for a Cause on Sunday,
March 12 with Save the
Harbor/Save the Bay at the 12th
annual JetBlue Shamrock Splash!
Join 250 splashers to raise money
for free, fun summer events
in your community by plunging
into the cold, clean waters of Boston
Harbor at Constitution Beach
in East Boston. After a plunge in
the cold harbor, participants will
warm up with plenty of hot clam
chowder and Harpoon beverages.
Splashers are encouraged to
wear a costume of their choosing
for the event. The top six fundraisers
and participants with
the best costumes will win free
round trip JetBlue tickets to anywhere
JetBlue fl ies.
Money raised at the Shamrock
Splash will support Save the Harbor/Save
the Bayâ€™s Better Beaches
Program in partnership with
the Department of Conservation
& Recreation. The Better Beaches
grant allows local organizations
to host fun beach events free
to the public in Nahant, Lynn,
Revere, Winthrop, East Boston,
South Boston, Dorchester, Quincy
and Hull.
â€œLast year, Save the Harbor
awarded $17,500 in Better
Beaches grants to Revere organizations
such as Revere Parks and
Recreation, NamaStay Sober and
Revere Beach Partnership,â€ said
Save the Harbor/Save the Bay
Executive Director Chris Mancini.
â€œThis money was used to put
on events like International Sand
Sculpting, Chalk the Boulevard,
yoga classes on the beach, festivals,
and Haus of Threes Progress
Make A Splash
on the beach.â€
This year, with your help, Save
the Harbor will be able to award
$300,000 in Better Beaches
grants to local organizations.
â€œThe Better Beaches program
invested more than ever in our
community and beaches last
year to focus on improving access
for people of color, people
with disabilities and non-English
speakers,â€ said State Representative
Jessica Giannino. â€œIâ€™m incredibly
proud of the Commonwealthâ€™s
increased commitment
in 2023 so even more people can
experience these amazing coastal
resources.â€
Make a team, raise money, and
brave the cold harbor! To register
for the 2023 JetBlue Shamrock
Splash, visit www.shamrocksplash.com
Got
a great idea for a free
beach event or program? Let
Save the Harbor/Save the Bay
know and apply for a Better
Beaches grant at https://www.
savetheharbor.org/better-beaches.
You can also vote for your favorite
event idea at https://www.
savetheharbor.org/participatory.
Save the Harborâ€™s success
would not be possible without
its program partners and
event sponsors, including Arctic
Chill, FMC Ice Sports, Bay State
Cruise Company, Blue Cross Blue
Shield of Massachusetts, Blue Sky
Collaborative, Boston & Maine
Webcams, The Boston Foundation,
BostonHarbor.com, Boston
Properties, Coast Cannabis, The
Coca-Cola Foundation, Comcast,
Cronin Group, Constellation
Generation, Comcast Foundation,
the Daily Catch, Department
of Conservation & Recreation,
Eastern Salt Company, Inc.,
Executive Offi ce of Energy and
Environmental Aff airs, Harpoon,
IR+M Charitable Fund, JetBlue,
John Hancock Financial Services,
Massachusetts Convention
Center Authority, Massport, P&G
Gillette, Mix 104.1, National Grid
and The Richard Saltonstall Charitable
Foundation.
In addition, Save the Harbor
recognizes the Metropolitan
Beaches Commission (MBC) CoChairs
â€“Senator Brendan Crighton
of Lynn and Representative
Adrian Madaro of East Boston â€“
and the legislative and community
members of MBC as well as
Massachusetts Senate President
Karen Spilka and House Speaker
Ron Mariano for their support for
our beaches and our communities.
Save the Harbor also thanks
the Baker-Polito Administration,
the Massachusetts Legislature,
Save the Harborâ€™s partners at the
Department of Conservation &
Recreation, the Boston Centers
for Youth & Families, the YMCA
of Greater Boston and the hundreds
of people who take part
in the Shamrock Splash for their
support.
Prices subject to
change
Ask about
our Heating Oil
Conditioner!
FLEET
×‰	Ú 7cassandra://0KyXT5IY9mEtWCyLMTsbhfejYlTEQH3xFqX3HTnegvcÍ0Í`Ì°Í ×d
Ri&©èMí81À×‰EÚ×THE REVERE ADVOCATE â€“ FRIDAY, MARCH 10, 2023
Page 3
Rep. Giannino announces she
will not run for Mayor
I
n a statement released to the
press on Tuesday, State RepJESSICA
GIANNINO
State Representative
RevereTV Spotlight
M
ayor Brian Arrigo announced
last week that
he would not be running for reelection,
ending his years of service
as mayor later this year. Last
week he spoke of the cityâ€™s triumphs
and goals throughout
his time as mayor in the annual
State of the City Address at
the auditorium of the Susan B.
Anthony and Whelan Schools.
This yearâ€™s address was rather
short compared to in years past.
RevereTV streamed the mayorâ€™s
speech, as has been done every
year, on social media and RTV
GOV. You can watch it again at
your convenience on RevereTVâ€™s
YouTube page.
Last week was a popular week
in local government meetings.
There has been large public attendance
at Ways and Means
Subcommittee and City Council
meetings over the past few
months as councillors heard
public comment and expert
opinion and debated about
moving forward on plans to
build Revere a new high school.
The building plans and process
discussion has been taking
place at meetings over the
past few years and ramped up
as they tried to meet certain
deadlines this month. The plans
were voted favorably out of subcommittee
last week, and the
resentative Jessica Giannino
announced she would not seek
election for Mayor. The recently
appointed House Vice Chair
of the Joint Committee on Children,
Families and Persons with
Disabilities stated, â€œI am humbled
by the calls and messages
of support encouraging me to
run for mayor. I love my job as
State Representative, and believe
I can serve the people of
Revere best in the House. I am
thankful to Speaker Mariano
for appointing me to a leadership
position and I am eager to
get to work on legislation to improve
the quality of life for the
residents of my district and the
Commonwealth.â€
offi cial vote of the City Council
to approve or disapprove was
held right after. You can watch
the Revere City Council vote on
this matter as well as other agenda
items as the meetings replay
on RTV GOV and remain posted
on YouTube.
You might be familiar with
RevereTVâ€™s public service announcement
postings called â€œIn
the Loop.â€ These are announcements
based on city fl yers posted
the week of recording and
include information about initiatives,
events and programs
around Revere. The latest recording
of â€œIn the Loopâ€ is a message
about road construction
happening in Beachmont.
This week you will see a similar
announcement series called
â€œFocus on Health Minute.â€ These
short minute-long videos are
like the â€œIn the Loopâ€ PSAs, but
they are actually a spin off from
the Board of Healthâ€™s monthly
program called â€œFocus on
Health.â€ Instead of the half-hour
long interview style show, these
recordings will be focused on
a public health issue and summarized
and explained in a brief
minute. The â€œFocus on Health
Minuteâ€ will also be posted to
RevereTVâ€™s YouTube page and
will be played in between programming
on RTV.
Lawrence A. Simeone Jr.
Attorney-at-Law
~ Since 1989 ~
* Corporate Litigation
* Criminal/Civil
* MCAD
* Zoning/Land Court
* Wetlands Litigation
* Workmenâ€™s Compensation
* Landlord/Tenant Litigation
* Real Estate Law
* Construction Litigation
* Tax Lein
* Personal Injury
* Bankruptcy
* Wrongful Death
* Zoning/Permitting Litigation
300 Broadway, Suite 1, Revere * 781-286-1560
lsimeonejr@simeonelaw.net
Like us on Facebook
advocate newspaper
Facebook.com/
Advocate.news.ma
www.eight10barandgrille.com
OPEN DAILY FOR DINNER AT 4 PM.
CATCH THE CELTICS, BRUINS &
NCAA SPORTS ON OUR
6 LARGE SCREEN TV'S!
m
WE'RE
OPEN!
8 Norwood Street, Everett
(617) 387-9810
Our 50th Anniversary
Dan - 1972 We Sell Cigars & Accessories! Chris 2023
* 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
R.Y.O.
TOBACCO
&
TUBES
ON SALE!
NEW STORE
HOURS:
Mon. - Sat.:
9AM - 6PM
Sunday &
Holidays:
9AM - 5PM
--------HUMIDORS
ON
SALE!
STARTING
AT $99.
COMPLETE!
--------MARCH
MADNESS IS HERE!!
Where Premium
Quality and Friendly Prices Meet!
Singles * Tins * Bundles * Boxes
A.B.C. CIGAR
170 REVERE ST., REVERE
(781) 289-4959
×‰	Ú 7cassandra://QzVwur9E6gKqlb2HIpi7-QWH9dQ8A9d8-7X5Vxa74ycÍ3IÍ`Ì°Í ×d
Ri&©èMí81Á×d
Ri&©èMí81ÀÍ
PÍ€×‘C’×˜š   Í(Í€u×‰œ”×‰	Ú 7cassandra://xQBQnQNR2teSUN_J3wMrRY4YAvyYrCKZ4f9xq1XaAycÎ øÒÍ`ÍœÍ)×‰	Ú 7cassandra://7pTMgnWMPnSTHxIPio9M5zit4QfS5yvf30A_xW0dUP0ÍŽöÍ`ÍJÍà×‰	Ú 7cassandra://Qkuq393uos7-je20CQBgBX56TK3erU9KfC4AojlYrRYÍ-Í`Ì°Í ×‰	Ú 7cassandra://GMzw_lJmUGsJjlCIwnF7kkVX9tLVcjLnyjq6ME0Hky8Î ŸŒÍ*2Í ÍÅÍñ×d
Rj&©èMí81æ×˜š Í( Í(Í€u×‰œ”×‰	Ú 7cassandra://TxcbJAMR9kHWBL6qpmnk3WhM93yxMOZ6VfhwHp1vJxsÎ eNÍ`ÍœÍ)×‰	Ú 7cassandra://a9AFpG4lIIlt23BbEzSCm0pM-7_PWMEyfz0IOqO75tcÍŽ„Í`ÍJÍà×‰	Ú 7cassandra://otDkC6zCyrDyiASOVvGbK7vWhZ2KUKzzlPJ28eIajvMÍ*ØÍ`Ì°Í ×‰	Ú 7cassandra://SoRlY5xsymADTbvjjB7S2oQ7gwFyOXBvAcsE-PxUa2sÎ +ÍHVÍ ÍÅÍñ×d
Rk&©èMí81ç×‰EÚÊPage 4
THE REVERE ADVOCATE â€“ FRIDAY, MARCH 10, 2023
Cambridge Health Allianceâ€™s Revere Mobile Market
Celebrates Its Fifth Anniversary
REVERE, Mass.â€” On Saturday,
March 4, the Cambridge Health
Alliance Revere Mobile Market
celebrated its fifth anniversary.
Since 2018, the community
health system has held a monthly
produce market at the CHA
Revere Care Center (454 Broadway)
to distribute fresh produce
for free to CHA patients and local
residents.
Volunteers braved freezing
rain, then snow as they assembled
food into bags supplied by
Tufts Health Plan, a Point32Health
company. More than 400 households
received eight different
types of fruit and vegetables and
three non-perishable items supplied
by the Greater Boston Food
Bank (GBFB).
After the market, volunteers
and local offi cials honored the
many people who have made
the market happen. Revere
Mayor Brian Arrigo kicked off
the celebration by speaking to
the valued partnership with
Cambridge Health Alliance staff , local offi cials, community partners, and volunteers celebrated
the fi fth anniversary of the CHA Revere Mobile Market on March 4, 2023. Pictured (from left): Carol
Tienken, Greater Boston Food Bank chief fi nancial offi cer, Carl Paratore from Point32Health, Cheryl
Schondeck, Greater Boston Food Bank chief operating offi cer, Jean Granick, Community Health
Improvement Department program manager at Cambridge Health Alliance, Doug Kress, chief community
offi cer at Cambridge Health Alliance, David Roll, MD, medical director of the CHA Revere
Care Center, and Revere Mayor Brian Arrigo.
CHA, which he recognized for
making a diff erence in the community.
Carol Tienken, GBFB
chief fi nancial offi cer, and Cheryl
Schondeck, GBFB chief operating
officer, discussed the
importance of food distribution
programs like the Mobile
Market. Carl Paratore from
Point32Health, a longtime market
volunteer, thanked all of the
volunteers (more than 140 in total)
who have played a crucial
role in this fi ve-year eff ort to address
food insecurity.
â€œIn 2016, CHA began an institutional
eff ort to screen patients
4.50
9 Month CD
Savings make
dreams possible.
NO MATTER WHAT YOU ARE SAVING FOR,
THIS RATE IS HARD TO IGNORE.
Hereâ€™s your chance to run the numbers in your favor. Everett
Bankâ€™s 9 Month CD with an amazing 4.50% APY* gets you closer
îƒ·îƒ² îƒ·îƒ«îƒ²îƒ¶îƒ¨ î„¢îƒ±îƒ¤îƒ±îƒ¦îƒ¬îƒ¤îƒ¯ îƒªîƒ²îƒ¤îƒ¯îƒ¶ îƒ°îƒ¸îƒ¦îƒ« îƒ©îƒ¤îƒ¶îƒ·îƒ¨îƒµî€„ îƒŽîƒ¤îƒ¶îƒ¬îƒ¯îƒ¼ îƒ¦îƒ¤îƒ¯îƒ¦îƒ¸îƒ¯îƒ¤îƒ·îƒ¨ îƒ¥îƒ¨îƒ·îƒ·îƒ¨îƒµ
earnings with Everett Bankâ€™s 9 Month CD. Go to everettbank.
com to easily open your account on-line in just minutes.
Open your account
on-line in minutes!
A volunteer assembles a bag of free fresh produce and non-perishable
food items at the CHA Revere Mobile Market on March
4, 2023. Cambridge Health Alliance is an academic community
health system committed to providing high-quality care in Cambridge,
Somerville and Bostonâ€™s metro-north communities. CHA
has expertise in primary care, specialty care and mental health/
substance use services, as well as caring for diverse and complex
populations. It includes two hospital campuses; a network
of primary care and specialty practices and the Cambridge Public
Health Dept. CHA patients have seamless access to advanced
care through the systemâ€™s affi liation with Beth Israel Lahey Health.
RONâ€™S OIL
Call
For
PRICE
*Annual Percentage Yield (APY) is accurate as of the date posted and is subject to change without notice. APY assumes that interest
îƒµîƒ¨îƒ°îƒ¤îƒ¬îƒ±îƒ¶ îƒ²îƒ± îƒ§îƒ¨îƒ³îƒ²îƒ¶îƒ¬îƒ· îƒ¸îƒ±îƒ·îƒ¬îƒ¯ îƒ°îƒ¤îƒ·îƒ¸îƒµîƒ¬îƒ·îƒ¼î€„ îƒŠ îƒºîƒ¬îƒ·îƒ«îƒ§îƒµîƒ¤îƒºîƒ¤îƒ¯ îƒºîƒ¬îƒ¯îƒ¯ îƒµîƒ¨îƒ§îƒ¸îƒ¦îƒ¨ îƒ¨îƒ¤îƒµîƒ±îƒ¬îƒ±îƒªîƒ¶î€„ îƒŠ îƒ³îƒ¨îƒ±îƒ¤îƒ¯îƒ·îƒ¼ îƒ°îƒ¤îƒ¼ îƒ¥îƒ¨ îƒ¬îƒ°îƒ³îƒ²îƒ¶îƒ¨îƒ§ îƒ©îƒ²îƒµ îƒ¨îƒ¤îƒµîƒ¯îƒ¼ îƒºîƒ¬îƒ·îƒ«îƒ§îƒµîƒ¤îƒºîƒ¤îƒ¯î€„ îƒ˜î„Ÿîƒ¨îƒµ îƒ°îƒ¤îƒ¼ îƒ¥îƒ¨
îƒºîƒ¬îƒ·îƒ«îƒ§îƒµîƒ¤îƒºîƒ± îƒ¤îƒ· îƒ¤îƒ±îƒ¼ îƒ·îƒ¬îƒ°îƒ¨î€„ îƒ–îƒ¬îƒ±îƒ¬îƒ°îƒ¸îƒ° îƒ²îƒ© î¸î€£î€žî€ž îƒ¬îƒ¶ îƒµîƒ¨îƒ´îƒ¸îƒ¬îƒµîƒ¨îƒ§ îƒ·îƒ² îƒ²îƒ³îƒ¨îƒ± îƒ¤ îƒŒîƒ¨îƒµîƒ·îƒ¬î„¢îƒ¦îƒ¤îƒ·îƒ¨ îƒ²îƒ© îƒîƒ¨îƒ³îƒ²îƒ¶îƒ¬îƒ· îƒ¤îƒ±îƒ§ îƒ¨îƒ¤îƒµîƒ± îƒ·îƒ«îƒ¨ îƒ¤îƒ§îƒ¹îƒ¨îƒµîƒ·îƒ¬îƒ¶îƒ¨îƒ§ îƒŠîƒ™îƒ¢î€„
MELROSE, MA
02176
NEW
CUSTOMERâ€™S
WELCOME
ACCEPTING VISA, MASTERCARD & DISCOVER
(781) 397-1930 OR (781) 662-8884
100 GALLON MINIMUM
%APY*
for health-related social needs,
such as food and housing,â€ said
David Roll, MD, medical director
at the CHA Revere Care Center.
â€œMore than half of the patients
at our center screened positive
for food insecurity, and we began
exploring partnerships to
address this signifi cant need in
our community.â€ In response,
CHA partnered with GBFB, Tufts
Health Plan/Point32Health,
Good Measures, and the City
of Revere to launch the market.
Since its inception, the monthly
Revere Mobile Market has distributed
nearly 490,000 pounds
of fresh produce to more than
14,700 local residents, half of
whom are CHA patients. It also
has featured multiple food demonstrations
and information
about community resources
such as SNAP, WIC, and other local
support in addition to nutrition
education.
×‰	Ú 7cassandra://Qkuq393uos7-je20CQBgBX56TK3erU9KfC4AojlYrRYÍ-Í`Ì°Í ×d
Ri&©èMí81Â×‰EÚTHE REVERE ADVOCATE â€“ FRIDAY, MARCH 10, 2023
Page 5
Debate continues
over new High School following City Councilâ€™s vote
By Barbara Taormina
A
crowd of students, RHS graduates,
educators, school staff ,
parents, city offi cials and taxpayers
fi lled the City Council Chambers
this week to plead with city
councillors to build a new high
school. Some asked councillors
to return to the plan to build the
school at Wonderland, which the
council voted down last week.
Others insisted it would be less
expensive to build at Wonderland
rather than the existing site
as several councillors have proposed.
They all shared concerns
about Revere High School losing
its accreditation and the impact
that would have on students applying
to colleges. There were
warnings about students leaving
for private schools, teachers
looking for jobs in other communities
and property values plummeting
because of the state of
education in Revere.
Councillors, who have always
supported building a new high
school, shared the same concerns
expressed by the community.
But what triggered them
was the suggestion that the decision
to vote against submitting
the schematic design to the Massachusetts
School Building Authority
(MSBA) for approval was
political.
Revere Teachers Association
Co-President Michelle Ervin,
who stressed she was speaking
as an educator not as a union
rep, asked councillors to put the
politics aside. â€œThis has become
a political issue. Youâ€™ve made it
political,â€ Erwin told councillors.
Youâ€™ve already voted on a place.
Put the politics aside and think
about the education of the children
in your city.â€
Councillors, one by one, reiterated
their commitment to building
a new school, and they insisted
that voting against the schematic
designs at Wonderland
was not a political decision.
Ward 1 Councillor Joanne
McKenna said she agonized
over her no vote for a month.
â€œIt wasnâ€™t political for me; there
was no financial conclusion,â€
said McKenna, adding that every
week the cost of the project
changed by millions of dollars.
Councillor-at-Large Dan Rizzo
said the budget for the project
has been a moving target, saying
that the job of the City Council
is to provide fi scal oversight.
â€œThereâ€™s a lot of fear mongering
going on trying to scare people
that they have a City Council that
doesnâ€™t care about education
and a school will never be built.
We need to get rid of the public
discourse weâ€™ve seen over the
past week,â€™ said Rizzo.
Ward 3 Councillor Anthony Cogliandro
said he had witnessed
threats to Councillor McKenna.
â€œThat behavior needs to absolutely
100 percent stop,â€ he said.
â€œWe didnâ€™t deserve the attacks
on our character, the attacks on
our families,â€ said Councillor-atLarge
Gerry Visconti. â€œIt seems
as if some things have not been
put out there. We all want a high
school. Itâ€™s a false narrative to say
the Revere City Council does not
want a high school.â€
Visconti, like other councillors,
said the issue is fi nances and the
unknown cost of the Wonderland
site. But Mayor Brian Arrigo
and senior project manager Brian
Dakin said building on the existing
site would be more expensive.
According to Dakin, it would
cost $65 million more to build on
the current site.
City Council President Patrick
Keefe said city offi cials have
deliberated on the site for the
school for about two years. â€œWe
found that the least imperfect
site was Wonderland. Over that
time, costs have escalated,â€ said
Keefe, adding that the choice of
Wonderland showed vision.
Keefe also said the council had
heard from CFO Richard Viscay
about strategies to pay for the
project without a 2 1/2 override.
Gerry
Dâ€™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
â€œWe are n ot going to have an
override. We can aff ord it. Yes, we
have to make sacrifi ces, but yes,
we will make them for the city of
Revere,â€ said Keefe. â€œI will do anything
it takes to bring Wonderland
back on board.â€
The council will make a clear
decision about the site and
the path forward for the high
school at their next meeting in
two weeks.
×‰	Ú 7cassandra://otDkC6zCyrDyiASOVvGbK7vWhZ2KUKzzlPJ28eIajvMÍ*ØÍ`Ì°Í ×d
Ri&©èMí81Ã×d
Ri&©èMí81ÂÍ
PÍ€×‘C’×˜š   Í(Í€u×‰œ”×‰	Ú 7cassandra://eke6AMUdZP2SNdb6hJA6aeyNEpQIZk3P5IYUn00PasIÎ í‡Í`ÍœÍ)×‰	Ú 7cassandra://3waKKupfWU_0ozCGVlPabN1nCrB1U1F-gp9vGesQg-wÍ™ÞÍ`ÍJÍà×‰	Ú 7cassandra://rmZ57m-5jrFzhk9IKUKPmL2DqTlc4AXd5A8cWXZN3tAÍ+ÆÍ`Ì°Í ×‰	Ú 7cassandra://w09ujVngiTtlckzqhsd2ux_ltTmoyNNld3FPSj4LFbMÎ <Í„Í ÍÅÍñ×d
Rk&©èMí81ê×˜š Í( Í(Í€u×‰œ”×‰	Ú 7cassandra://xYlANP-AbwUDlgqcqHdcNFCqCX4LlwhjKn2J_V99L8sÎ 
äÍ` ÍœÍ)×‰	Ú 7cassandra://BxJSZO9Q76xtvc1tlZLN8ALct9TujRlDLq95V2284NoÍ¤åÍ`ÍJÍà×‰	Ú 7cassandra://Ghg677SEvpIxqrkIjHU4zVlVHIF4LjOiPTQhzRYr0KcÍ+¹Í`Ì°Í ×‰	Ú 7cassandra://UQU5UgYfBKCARSavy-dGop-zBvIXtSRN7j9Yqx8EhYsÎ /oÍVDÍ ÍÅÍñ×d
Rl&©èMí81ë‘× ×d
Rl&©èMí81ñ Í¾ÍÌÕ9×H¹http://EddiesAutotech.com××Ðˆ×‰EÚLPage 6
THE REVERE ADVOCATE â€“ FRIDAY, MARCH 10, 2023
RHS JROTC Team to Compete in
National Academic Bowl
Championship in Washington, DC
425r Broadway, Saugus
Located adjacent to Kohls Plaza Route 1 South
in Saugus at the intersection of Walnut St.
We are on MBTA Bus Route 429
781-231-1111
We are a Skating Rink with
Bowling Alleys, Arcade and
two TVâ€™s where the ball
games are always on!
PUBLIC SKATING SCHEDULE
12-8 p.m.
Sunday
Monday
Tuesday
$9.00
Price includes Roller Skates
Rollerblades/inline skates $3.00 additional cost
Private Parties
7:30-11 p.m.
$10.00
Price includes Roller Skates
Adult Night 18+ Only
Wednesday
Thursday
Friday Everyone must pay admission after 6 p.m.
Private Parties
Private Parties
4-11 p.m.
Saturday
12-11 p.m.
$9.00
$9.00
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
For Advertising with Results,
call The Advocate Newspapers
at 781-286-8500 or Info@advocatenews.net
REVERE, MA â€“ Through all the
obstacles students have faced
over the last three years, Army
JROTC cadets have risen to the
challenge through their participation
in the 2022-2023 JROTC
Leadership & Academic Bowl
(JLAB). The cadets from Revere
High School have proven their
ability to overcome and succeed
despite those obstacles.
After advancing through two
intense phases of online competition,
Revere High Schoolâ€™s
JROTC Academic Team composed
of Cadets Karla Leal, Paris
Peguero Pena, Brianna Restrepo
and Annabelle SandyRoche
will compete in a Championship
event in Washington,
DC. The 2023 U.S. Army JROTC
Academic Bowl Championship
will be held on the campus
of The Catholic University of
America, June 23-27, 2023. This
event is sponsored by the U.S.
Army Cadet Command and is
conducted by College Options
Foundation.
Revere High Schoolâ€™s JROTC
team earned top scores out of
the 1,844 Army JROTC academic
teams that competed from
around the world. The team is
one of only thirty-two Army
JROTC Academic Bowl teams in
the nation to advance to the fi -
nal competition, which includes
an all-expense paid trip to the
Championship event in Washington,
DC.
During the two fast-paced
preliminary rounds, cadets were
tested on their knowledge of
core curriculum such as math,
science, and language arts as
well as current events, citizenship,
leadership skills, and financial
literacy. Financial literacy
videos are sponsored by
the USAA Educational Foundation
and provided to all cadets.
Questions from the videos were
included in Levels I and II of the
VACANT | FROM Page 1
for new vision and leadership. As
a result, I am announcing my candidacy
for mayor,â€ Visconti said
in a written statement released
this week.
Visconti said he regretted that
the vitriol and tone of national
politics has made its way to the
local level.
â€œIf given the opportunity, I will
be a mayor for each and every Revere
resident, whether it be a lifelong
resident or a new resident
that chose this city to call home.
Visconti said he looks forward
to talking with residents and
sharing his vision.
â€œI want to be the candidate
to get us past political divisions,
working together for a better
Revere.
online competition.
The JROTC Leadership & Academic
Bowl is a nationally recognized
competition created exclusively
for JROTC students. By
participating, cadets learn the
values of citizenship, academic
competition, and college opportunity.
The competition creates
tremendous opportunities
for JROTC cadets by allowing
them to demonstrate leadership
and academic abilities.
College Options Foundation is
a non-profi t organization dedicated
to enriching the academic
development of high school
students and assisting them in
their preparation for higher education.
Using academic competitions,
college exam study
guides, college admissions tutorials,
and personalized counseling,
College Options Foundation
has assisted the nationâ€™s JROTC
cadets worldwide for nearly two
decades.
Keefe and Visconti often work
collaboratively on the council,
but they diff er on what will no
doubt be the headlining issue in
upcoming campaigns: the new
high school.
Keefe has passionately declared
he would do what it
takes to get the plan to build
the new high school at wonderland
back on track despite
the councilâ€™s decision to vote
the plan down.
While Visconti also fully supports
a new high school, he has
insisted that the city make fi nancially
responsible choices about
the project.
It has been speculated that
Councillor-at-Large Steve Morabito
has also expressed his intentions
to toss his hat into the mayoral
race as well.
×‰	Ú 7cassandra://rmZ57m-5jrFzhk9IKUKPmL2DqTlc4AXd5A8cWXZN3tAÍ+ÆÍ`Ì°Í ×d
Ri&©èMí81Ä×‰EÚ#¡THE REVERE ADVOCATE â€“ FRIDAY, MARCH 10, 2023
Page 7
Carlo DeMaria, Jr. vs. Everett Leader Herald, Sergio Cornelio,
Joshua Resnek, Matthew Philbin and Andrew Philbin, Sr.
New Year â€“ Same Problems; Leader-Herald Newspaper Owner Faces Further Questions
By James Mitchell
When asked about the news(Editorâ€™s
Note: This article was
published in the Everett Advocate
on Feb. 17, 2021)
E
verett Leader Herald owner
Matthew Philbin awaits another
day of deposition after his
recent deposition with attorneys
for Mayor Carlo DeMaria on January
18, 2023, at the Boston law
offi ces of Saul Ewing Arnstein &
Lehr LLP was cut short.
Philbin, along with his Attorney,
Kevin Polansky, answered
questions posed by Atty. Jeff rey
Robbins, the mayorâ€™s lead attorney
in the lawsuit which began
back in 2022. In 2022, the court
ruled that the lawsuit can be expanded
back to 2017 following
evidence presented by DeMariaâ€™s
attorneys of defamatory articles
published about DeMaria dating
back years.
Philbinâ€™s testimony shed light
on the newspaperâ€™s dire fi nances
when he admitted to needing
to fund the newspaper out of
pocket as the free weekly newspaper
could not draw advertising
revenue to even come close
to paying the paperâ€™s expenses.
Philbin, in his sworn testimony,
stated that he hoped that his corrupt
publisher/reporter Joshua
Resnek would liven up the newspaperâ€™s
content in order to draw
potential advertisers.
Since purchasing the newspaper
in 2017, Philbin stated,
he hired Resnek to handle
the fi nances for the company,
Dorchester Publications LLC,
(Everett Leader Herald), as well
as write the content. He then
claimed that he never kept track
of the fi nances of the company
â€“ stating that he paid no attention
to the newspaperâ€™s fi nances
from 2019 through 2021, stating
that Resnek was in charge
of that.
â€œMy question is, youâ€™ve paid no
attention to the income, the revenue
thatâ€™s come into Dorchester
Publications in 2019, 2020, 2021?
Thatâ€™s your testimony?â€ asked the
attorney.
â€œYou have to be more specifi c,â€
replied Philbin.
â€œI canâ€™t be,â€ stated Robbins.
Asked if he knew the defi nitions
of â€œmoneyâ€ and â€œrevenueâ€,
Philbin admitted that he did, providing
his defi nition.
When he was asked once
again if he kept track of the
revenue that was coming into
Dorchester Publications in 2019,
Philbin testifi ed that he â€œlooked
at itâ€ â€“ just like he admitted to doing
in 2020, 2021 and 2022. Philbin
responded in kind to tracking
the expenses and net income
from 2019 through 2022 as well.
paper hemorrhaging money
since almost the entire time heâ€™s
owned it, Philbin admitted that
the newspaper lost approximately
$50,000-$75,000 per or
even more.
His best estimate for 2019
and 2022, according to Philbin:
It might have lost closer to
$100,000.
â€œSo, by my rough calculation,
it has lost about somewhere between
4 and $500,000 between
2018 and the end of 2022; correct?â€
asked Robbins.
â€œYeah, in around there,â€ replied
Philbin.
Philbin admitted that he personally
had to cover the loss of
approximately half a million dollars
out of his own pocket since
2018 in order to keep the newspaper
running.
â€œSo you knew that it was losing
money every month, correct?â€
asked Robbins.
â€œYes,â€ replied Philbin.
â€œAnd every month, in fact, you
had to provide the funds to pay
the expenses out of your own
personal pocket, correct?â€
â€œYes,â€ replied Philbin.
Philbin, when asked if he knew
the gross revenues and expenses
for the newspaper from 2018
to 2021, stated that he didnâ€™t remember.
When
asked for an approximate
percentage of the newspaperâ€™s
expenses he paid in 2018,
Philbin stated he didnâ€™t know
but did admit, once again, that
the expenses were paid for with
his own personal funds. Philbin
claimed that Resnek kept track
of the expenses and revenue for
the newspaper company, from
which he would receive reports.
He also stated, that the bookkeeper
kept track through QuickBooks.
Philbin then testifi ed that
his former employee, Elena Vega
would keep track of the thousands
of dollars he would use to
help fund the newspaper, reporting
to him directly.
Atty. Robbins asked Philbin
if he was aware of any cash being
used to fund the newspaper.
Philbin stated that there
could have been cash, along
with checks â€œthat would come in
through the front door.â€
Philbin again was asked if he
was aware that Resnek was soliciting
cash for the newspaper or
that there was any plan to generate
cash infusions, which he
would deny, but then he admitted
to receiving an email about
how Resnek was going to raise
money and increase advertising
and cut costs.
Resnek provided Philbin a plan
to obtain thousands of dollars to
cover the printing and delivery
of the newspapers leading up
to the 2021 election. Resnek said
that he had three persons, Mr. A,
Mr. B and Mr. C, who would bank
roll the newspaper at $5,000
apiece. In an email to a friend,
Resnek said that he would meet
a man in a Mercedes-Benz at a
Main Street restaurant and pickup
thousands of dollars in cash
from someone who supported
the mayorâ€™s challenger, Fred
Capone.
According to Philbin, as advertising
revenue continually declined,
especially during the Covid
pandemic, he applied for and
received for two Paycheck Protection
Program (PPP) loans in
2020 and 2021, totaling approximately
$20,000, which was forgiven
by the government. Philbin
stated that he used the money
to meet the newspaperâ€™s expenses.
â€œAnd
I assume that when you
told the government that you
needed taxpayersâ€™ money to
help keep the newspaper afl oat,
you were telling the truth; right?â€
asked Robbins.
â€œYes,â€ replied Philbin, who admitted
to signing the application
for the two PPP loans.
Atty. Robbins asked if the loan
was used to pay the rent at the
Church Street offi ce; Philbin stated
that he couldnâ€™t recall and
that it could have been for publishing
the newspaper. Philbin,
along with his brother, Andrew
Philbin, Jr., are the owners of the
Church Street building where
the newspaper offi ce is located,
along with apartments, under
the name Philbin Realty Group.
Philbin said he couldnâ€™t recall
the cost and number of copies
that were printed each week
as he left that up to Resnek, although
he agreed that if the
number of copies went up that
the costs would go up and he
would have to fi nd the money
to pay for the increase.
â€œAnd you were having trouble
funding the printing and the delivery
of newspapers at a static
level in 2020 and 2021. Fair to
say?â€ asked the attorney.
â€œI guess thatâ€™s fair to say,â€ he
said.
Philbin would then cut back
on staffi ng, from his VP of Operations,
Elena Vega, who stated
that the Leader Herald was not a
real newspaper, to his executive
secretary. Philbin would continue
to pay his wife her $90K salary
despite her not being present
at the offi ce, according to one of
his former staff members.
The newspaperâ€™s former photographer
and graphic designer,
James Mahoney, testifi ed in
his deposition that Philbin was in
complete control over the newspaperâ€™s
content, editing and fi -
nal edits. According to Mahoney,
once Philbin approved the fi nal
draft, it was sent to the printers.
â€œDid Mr. Resnek ever suggest
to you that Mr. Philbinâ€™s approval
of the newspaper was not necessary?â€
asked Atty. Robbins.
â€œNever to my recollection. I
have fairly distinct memories of
that time frame of Mr. Resnek always
saying, hang on, you know,
Mr. Philbin needs to see it,â€ said
Mahoney.
Mahoney was shown complaint
exhibits where Philbin denies
any involvement â€œin the reviewing,
editing or approving
the alleged defamatory statementsâ€
in the newspaperâ€™s publication.
â€œIt appears not to be a
true statement,â€ stated Mahoney.
On numerous occasions during
his testimony, Mahoney
stated that Philbin was always
involved in the matters of the
newspaperâ€™s production, from
the editing and proofi ng of the
articles to the fi nal drafts of the
complete edition before it went
to press.
Philbin is expected to appear
again for his next deposition in
the near future.
Everett, MA
617-202-8259
* We work with most Fuel Assistance programs
â€œWeâ€™re accepting new customers, no experience necessaryâ€
â€œAceptamos Nuevos clientes no se necesita experiencia.â€
~ Hablamos EspaÃ±ola ~
50 Gallon
Minimum
(Surcharge Applys)
Major Credit Cards
Accepted
Scan our
QR Code
AUTOTECH
$$ CASH FOR YOUR CAR,
TRUCK OR SUV! $$
DRIVE IT - PUSH IT - TOW IT!
Cold Hard Cash for Your Vehicle!
GET YOUR VEHICLE SPRING READY!
Our Spring Service includes:
â€¢ Complete Safety Check
â€¢ AC Check â€¢ Engine Light Check
â€¢ Suspension Check with Oil Change Special
Only $79.95
2012 SMART CAR CABRIOLET
Convertible, Excellent Condition,
Deluxe Package,
Heated Seats,
Most Power Options,
Clean Title, Only 81K Miles!
TRADES WELCOME!
$9,900
Easy
Financing
Available!
(Most vehicles. Restrictions apply)
2013 KIA SOUL
Loaded with Power Options,
Sun Roof, Heated Seats,
Remote Starter,
Clean Title,
Only 86K Miles!
TRADES WELCOME!
$8,995
(781) 321-8841 â€¢ (617) 571-9869
1236 EasternAve â€¢ Malden
EddiesAutotech.com
Vehicle!
We Pay Cash
For Your
×‰	Ú 7cassandra://Ghg677SEvpIxqrkIjHU4zVlVHIF4LjOiPTQhzRYr0KcÍ+¹Í`Ì°Í ×d
Ri&©èMí81Å×d
Ri&©èMí81ÄÍ
PÍ€×‘C’×˜š   Í(Í€u×‰œ”×‰	Ú 7cassandra://8gurq7Ky4YfTYzjgumfCfbOEkKgB3A74--9orI6OfCgÎ 1ÆÍ`ÍœÍ)×‰	Ú 7cassandra://ox0391kqXbCoyWJK97OJG_vukDjgvdVPR4tILqi_Wv8ÍŽÍÍ`ÍJÍà×‰	Ú 7cassandra://435M_iQgUACsAvuU-rCy0HU01rEOwfq_3bO-2j6RG8wÍ)VÍ`Ì°Í ×‰	Ú 7cassandra://QVX2ouUSv20j_5hiFGGuP2g1BUlvLkeasreijUsmIFwÎ ÅÞ.Í ÍÅÍñ×d
Rl&©èMí81ð×˜š Í( Í(Í€u×‰œ”×‰	Ú 7cassandra://7URGbqg_wye4O3kWlBtxgpUaROeUaKawuFFwLqzyb18Î Ã¿Í`ÍœÍ)×‰	Ú 7cassandra://7jrV2U0M-h6LTXOegZd-d-Q2TEEH58-0Xsq2w-2vPIcÍ’FÍ`ÍJÍà×‰	Ú 7cassandra://DvQbdP4hHOpnL7n2QijAUB8hjEzFQPQFrN-9DBzPdAMÍ+nÍ`Ì°Í ×‰	Ú 7cassandra://wX6eVuPM-028X2iEddO3n_sSMiDHddBTaVQS1jTt4GQÎ ÛåDÍ ÍÅÍñ×d
Rl&©èMí81ò‘× ×d
Rl&©èMí81õ ÍMÍÌŸ9×H¾mailto:chris.redfern@fells.org××Ðˆ×‰EÚâPage 8
THE REVERE ADVOCATE â€“ FRIDAY, MARCH 10, 2023
~ LETTER TO THE EDITOR ~
Northeast Metropolitan Technical School Districtâ€™s Bait
and Switch Cannot Stand
Dear Editor,
Friends of the Middlesex Fells
Reservation is dedicated to the
conservation, appreciation, and
sustainable enjoyment of the
Fells. We have long been interested
in preservation of open
public land.
We are deeply concerned
about:
â€¢ the Northeast Metropolitan
Technical School Districtâ€™s
(NEMTâ€™s) plans for a new facility
to be sited on a forested hilltop
site rather than a more accessible
site on existing playing
fi elds,
â€¢ the lack of transparency in
the site selection process, and
â€¢ the lack of information provided
to residents when they
voted regarding the Building
Committeeâ€™s final siting decision
and lack of a separate ballot
question on this signifi cant
decision.
In the site plans approved
by the Building Subcommittee
but revealed only after the 2022
Special Election, instead of using
an existing road as access to
â€œthe siteâ€ abutting it, an entirely
new entrance and one-half
mile access road would be constructed
next to wetlands, then
carved through rock ledge, to
a perched site scoured of trees
and other living things, then
blasted extensively to remove
the hilltop covering many acres,
creating a new â€œfootprintâ€ 60feet
above student parking and
other student access to the new
building.
For the January 2022 Special
Election, information posted
on the NEMTâ€™s own website
as well as reporting in The
Boston Globe did not disclose
that the Building Committee
no longer intended to use the
specifi c building site as recommended
by the design consultant.
Instead, the term â€œsiteâ€ then
began to be employed to mean
â€œsomewhere generally on the
entire 60-acre site,â€ even though
NEMTâ€™s public-facing plans still
showed the site as the playing
fi eld. Similarly, the materials circulated
in support of the ballot
item lacked suffi cient detail for
the public to know that the Forest
was targeted.
A signifi cant number of our
members are residents and
voters in the communities ultimately
providing funding for
site preparation and building
construction, including cost
overruns and other contingent
expenses to maintain a completed
project and comply with
state and federal code, such as
accessibility accommodations
under Americans With Disabilities
Act (ADA) and their continuing
upkeep in all weather conditions
from Hemlock Road to
the new â€œsite.â€
The issue presented on the
ballot was a matter of the financing,
whether to accept
funds from the Massachusetts
School Building Authority and
support the balance from the
school systems served by NEMT.
The need for the â€œNew Vokeâ€
was supported by the longstanding
pre-feasibility recommendation.
Since the only documentation
about the plan for
the school was the pre-feasibility
recommendation of using
the playing fi elds, voters that
were paying attention would
reasonably believe that was
the intent.
For the NEMT to then publicize
their more fi nancially and
environmentally costly plan
only after the vote can only be
described as a bait and switch
maneuver.
We stand with the Sierra
Club-Massachusetts in its recent
letter to the Massachusetts
School Building Authority detailing
the environmental value
of this hilltop forest. The NEMT
must also consider the quantifi
able environmental services
provided by a mature upland
forest and the other benefi ts to
human habitation it confers. It
provides shade that cools ambient
air temperatures for the
surrounding areas, serves as a
windbreak to extreme winds,
presents structures and features
that aid stormwater retention,
erosion control, and groundwater
recharge during extreme
weather events, and provides a
ready means for exchange and
sequestration of atmospheric
carbon, all in addition to the
preserving relative tranquility
and enjoyment of place by
neighbors and the community
at-large.
On behalf of our members,
we join with the many voices
opposing the current site plan.
A well designed, suitably sited,
and solidly constructed â€œNew
Vokeâ€ should be built on the fi rst
site proposed, with traffi c access
via the existing improved right
of way, Hemlock Road.
Chris Redfern (he/him)
Executive Director
Friends of the Middlesex
Fells Reservation
chris.redfern@fells.org
×‰	Ú 7cassandra://435M_iQgUACsAvuU-rCy0HU01rEOwfq_3bO-2j6RG8wÍ)VÍ`Ì°Í ×d
Ri&©èMí81Æ×‰EÚ/THE REVERE ADVOCATE â€“ FRIDAY, MARCH 10, 2023
Page 9
RHS JROTC Dill Team Challenge
Division were Overall Unarmed Division
Champions at the 2nd Brigade Drill
Championship in Medford, N.J.
T
he Revere High School (RHS)
Army Junior Reserve Offi cers'
Training Corps (JROTC) Patriot
Battalion Drill and Color Guard
teams competed in three Drill
Competitions in the Commonwealth
of Massachusetts Army
League (COMAL) Drill League.
COMAL consists of the 11 Massachusetts
Army JROTC Programs
throughout the state
(Brockton, CASH, East Boston,
English, Commerce, Lawrence,
Methuen, New Bedford, Revere,
South Boston and Wareham).
Drill and Ceremonies is one of
the key ingredients of the Army
JROTC Program. Drill is conducted
in accordance with current
Army Training Circular 3-21.5,
Drill and Ceremonies, dated May
3, 2021, which is the Army standard
for executing the Manual
of Arms. This category also includes
Exhibition drill in accordance
with brigade-published
standards.
The RHS JROTC Drill Team is
subdivided into the Armed Division
and the Unarmed Division.
Within each division, cadets
compete in Color Guard, Regulation,
Inspection, Dual Exhibition,
Platoon Exhibition and New Cadet
Squad. In the Armed Division,
Revere placed first overall
in Color Guard and Regulation
and second overall in Inspection.
In the Unarmed Division,
Revere placed fi rst in Regulation
and Inspection and third
in Color Guard. The RHS Army
JROTC Drill Team was awarded
the Governorâ€™s cup and as the
first-place team overall in the
COMAL league received a bid to
compete in the 2nd
Brigade Drill
Competition at Lenape High
School in Medford, NJ. This is the
Drill Teamâ€™s fi fth COMAL League
Championship, marking their
Quintuple Championship (Previous
years: SY2015-2016, SY20162017,
SY2017-2018, SY20182019
and SY2022-2023).
The RHS Army JROTC Drill
Commander, Cadet Ryan Willett,
led this team to victory. The
unarmed drill team is coached
by SFC (R) James Burke, and the
armed drill team is coached by
CSM (R) Robert Callender. The
dedication and commitment of
all cadets led to their tremendous
accomplishments.
On Friday, March 3, 2023, 54
RHS JROTC Drill Team cadets departed
for the 2nd
Brigade Drill
Competition at Lenape High
School in Medford, N.J. Ten cadets
participated in the 2nd
Brigade
Army Academic Bowl, and
44 cadets participated in the
Drill Competition. The RHS Army
JROTC Drill Team in the Challenge
Division were the Overall
Unarmed Division Champions in
the 2nd
Brigade Drill Championship
in Medford, N.J. In the Unarmed
Division, Revere placed
first in Unarmed Exhibition,
commanded by Cadet Anna
Sa. They placed second in Unarmed
Inspection, commanded
by Cadet Paris Peguero-Pena,
and Color Guard, commanded
by Cadet Gavin Rua. Individual
awards during knock-out were
presented in the Unarmed Division
to Cadets Harrison Rua,
Katelyn Giovanniello and Aya
Belgseisse. In the Armed Division,
individual awards were presented
to Cadets Roberto Garcia
and Yaron Ramirez.
Great job, Patriot Battalion!
COUNCIL | FROM Page 1
with integrity, honesty and experience.
I dedicated my life to
serving and protecting the citizens
of Revere and I am ready
to step up to represent them
in this capacity. The Revere City
council needs a voice of reason.
I am prepared to have diffi cult
conversations and help solve
issues that will make the City of
Revere a better place for all of us
to work, live and raise a family.â€
Chris Giannino is a lifelong
Ward 6 resident. He is a product
of the Revere Public School
system and went on to attend
Salem State College where he
obtained a Bachelor of Science
in Business Administration in
1989. Chris is a retired 33-year
veteran of the Revere Police Department.
He spent his career in
the Traffi c Division where he coordinated
events and logistics
for the City of Revere, managed
the motorcycle unit, and studied
accident reconstruction.
Chrisâ€™ service to his community
gave him the experience to
work collaboratively with others,
mediate diffi cult conversations,
and solve problems. He
has made an impact on the lives
of so many in the community by
always being ready to off er advice
or listen.
×‰	Ú 7cassandra://DvQbdP4hHOpnL7n2QijAUB8hjEzFQPQFrN-9DBzPdAMÍ+nÍ`Ì°Í ×d
Ri&©èMí81Ç×d
Ri&©èMí81ÆÍ
PÍ€×‘C’×˜š   Í(Í€u×‰œ”×‰	Ú 7cassandra://IXZAbpzw-9F5pbtA9JR0_Rq1eFMIkMUfeMyokMVNfAEÎ 	ÍÍ`ÍœÍ)×‰	Ú 7cassandra://Mr35xkwBcp3Nz_a_VlSUaU5KG6TIapX5r5nLmKF0CagÍ—ÛÍ`ÍJÍà×‰	Ú 7cassandra://rMStoTe5oj2mOgsEsa7u1wq6pjHCecey0_KP-Iyy09AÍ0Í`Ì°Í ×‰	Ú 7cassandra://aFOrHg1_WbRkI-d7GKnV6CI5nus3HwXo7FoMmqBkTH4Î Z‘Ì¢Í ÍÅÍñ×d
Rl&©èMí81ö×˜š Í( Í(Í€u×‰œ”×‰	Ú 7cassandra://nAZw_uHsPQuWqK2kKsSiCo598kb8XkTPWiq0E8ir2rUÎ ²~Í`ÍœÍ)×‰	Ú 7cassandra://zomt7_cmjAD2Ne50YlMPTo1cVpE2ET4E4O-tVXKHLhMÍpÍ`ÍJÍà×‰	Ú 7cassandra://Spuh7yGT3jy2xYmAiILNyb12EreP5cKxRfspAP0xs1gÍ+qÍ`Ì°Í ×‰	Ú 7cassandra://_GCmlJ6B6HqWgFODnZk_6jzvTs7SzUAIePwdLAgCt1oÎ paÍäÍ ÍÅÍñ×d
Rl&©èMí81÷‘× ×d
Rm&©èMí81ú Í‰ÍbÍC9×HÚ $http://Facebook.com/Advocate.news.ma××Ðˆ×‰EÚ-Page 10
THE REVERE ADVOCATE â€“ FRIDAY, MARCH 10, 2023
Mayor Brian Arrigo, RPS Honor Mass. Superintendent
of the Year recipient Dr. Dianne Kelly with Surprise Party
By Tara Vocino
T
he city surprised Revere Schools Supt. Dr. Dianne Kelly â€“ in recognition of her accomplishment as
the recipient of the Massachusetts Superintendent of the Year Award this February at the National
Superintendents Conference in San Antonio â€“ in the Revere City Council Chambers on Tuesday. She
was joined by Mayor Brian Arrigo, School Committee members, City Council members, colleagues
and students in the celebration.
â€œI am thankful for this celebration and overwhelmed by the outpouring of support,â€ Kelly said. â€œI
originally thought I was talking to councillors about the high school building project, and it took me
a few minutes to realize it was a surprise.â€
Kelly said she is humbled to receive the statewide award.
The Superintendent of Schools and her family, pictured from left
to right: brother-in-law Duane Keegan, nephew Danny Keegan,
mother Noreen Kelly, Dr. Dianne Kelly and brothers Sean Kelly
and Greg Kelly.
Gianni Hill, who served on the School
Committee as a student representative,
with Dr. Dianne Kelly.
Former math student and district humanities director
Dr. Christina Porter said she drew her inspiration from
Superintendent of Schools Dr. Dianne Kelly.
The Superintendent of Schools and her family, shown from
left to right: brother Sean, mother Noreen Kelly, Dr. Dianne
Kelly and brother Greg Kelly.
Superintendent of Schools Dr. Dianne
Kelly said she was surprised to
see so many people, and especially
her family, in the City Council Chambers
on Tuesday off ering her congratulations
on earning Superintendent
of the Year state-wide.
Members of the Revere High School JROTC sang â€œFight songâ€ by
Rachel Platten to Superintendent of Schools Dr. Dianne Kelly. Pictured
from left to right: Wendy Carvajal, Kenya Kiptanui, Sophia
Perno, Santiago Gil, Mirna Maldonado, Walid Harda, Jose Aparicio,
Dr. Kelly, MAJ (R) Deborah A. Bowker and Tiff any Esteves.
School Committee members and offi cials, pictured from left to right: Assistant Superintendents Dr.
Richard Gallucci and Dr. Danielle Mokaba, Aisha Milbury-Ellis, Carol Tye, Superintendent of Schools
Dr. Dianne Kelly, Vice Chair Stacey Bronsdon-Rizzo, Susan Gravellese, Assistant Superintendent Dr.
LourenÃ§o Garcia and Chair/Mayor Brian Arrigo.
Pictured from left to right: Paul Revere Innovation School third
graders Evangeline Ellis, Alexis Vazquez, Brian Dominguez, Tiff any
Trinh, Angelina Tran and Rayan Mohammed are pictured with
Principal Moe Coyle and Superintendent of Schools Dr. Dianne
Kelly after they presented â€œOur fi ngers donâ€™t fade from the lives
that we touchâ€ artwork.
Susan B. Anthony School students presented Superintendent of Schools Dr.
Dianne Kelly with fl owers and a video presentation congratulating her. Pictured
from left to right: Franklin Blanco Morales (grade 8), Aya Behhite (grade 7),
Dr. Kelly, Vitoria DeAlmeida Ferreira (grade 8) and Layla Portillo (grade 6).
Shown from left to right: Travel and Tourism Director Charles Giuff
rida, Councillor-at-Large/Veterans Service Offi ce Director Marc
Silvestri, School Committee Member/former Superintendent of
Schools Carol Tye and Superintendent of Schools Dr. Dianne Kelly.
(Advocate photos by Tara Vocino)
×‰	Ú 7cassandra://rMStoTe5oj2mOgsEsa7u1wq6pjHCecey0_KP-Iyy09AÍ0Í`Ì°Í ×d
Ri&©èMí81È×‰EÚ‘THE REVERE ADVOCATE â€“ FRIDAY, MARCH 10, 2023
Page 11
Singling out the stars
after another competitive
hoop season
Everett, Malden, Revere boys basketball
players make their mark in the GBL
By Joe McConnell
A
s the high school state tournament
boys basketball
brackets shrink to a precious
few teams, who are now getting
ready for their Elite 8 games, or
the Round of 8, as the Massachusetts
Interscholastic Athletic Association
(MIAA) calls them, respective
leagues have been announcing
their all-star teams, as
well as individual awards to their
most outstanding individual
players and coaches. The Greater
Boston League (GBL) is no exception.
Crimson
Tide trio earns star
status
Senior guards Steven Cordero,
Kevin Ruiz and David DeSouza
completed their scholastic hoop
careers on this always prestigious
squad. Coach Stanley Chamblain
could always count on Cordero
to consistently be one of the
teamâ€™s leading scorers, while Ruiz
and DeSouza also did their part to
spark the off ense at crucial times
during the season. As a team, they
were 9-5 in the GBL, and 10-10
overall to qualify for the Division
1 state tournament, where they
lost to Attleboro in a preliminary
round game, 67-55.
Patriots fi nish season strong
with two all-stars in the lead
Revere coach Dave Learyâ€™s team
also ended up 10-10 overall after
a late regular-season surge. They
carried that momentum over
to the Division 2 state tournament,
where they upset Plymouth
South, the 27th
seed, 55-50, before
bowing out to Nashoba Regional,
the sixth seed, in a Round of 32
game, 71-40.
Off the court, the Basketball
Patriots were honored with two
league all-stars: senior forward
Domenic Boudreau and senior
guard Alejandro Hincapie.
Golden Tornadoes complete
winning season with two allstars
Malden
veteran boys basketball
BASKETBALL | SEE Page 19
Season ends for Revere
boys in Round of 32
By Greg Phipps
F
inishing with a.500 overall
record may not seem like
much of an accomplishment.
But considering where the Revere
High School boysâ€™ basketball
team stood about a month
ago, the 2022-23 season will be
looked upon as a resurgent one
for the Patriots.
With six games to go in the
season, Revere was 5-9 and any
chance for a playoff berth appeared
unlikely and remote at
best. But the Patriots regrouped
to win fi ve of their last six regular-season
games. As a result,
they fi nished with 10 wins,
enough to earn them a low seed
(the 38th spot) in the Div. 2 state
tournament.
Revere added to the late-season
momentum by scoring a
come-from-behind 55-50 preliminary-round
victory on the
road over No. 27 Plymouth
South early last week. The resurgence
came to a halt last
Thursday night when the Patriots
ran up against a powerful
sixth-seeded Nashoba Regional
squad in the Round of 32 and
were defeated by a 71-40 score.
Senior co-captain Domenic
Boudreau continued his
fi ne play by providing another
double-double performance.
He poured in 21 points (more
than half the teamâ€™s total for
the game) and grabbed 10 rebounds,
as well as blocking two
shots.
Afterwards, Head Coach David
Leary said he was â€œvery
proudâ€ of his team and added
that the Patriots showed no
quit all season despite having
to cope with midseason injuries
to key players. He also thanked
the parents, families and fans for
their support during the year.
The Nashoba loss left Revere
with an 11-11 overall mark for
the season. Revere will lose
several key seniors, including
Boudreau and fellow captain
Alejandro Hincapie, Sal
DeAngelis, Vinny Vu and Vincent
Nichols. Both Boudreau and Hincapie
were also named to this
yearâ€™s Greater Boston League
all-star team.
Looking forward to next year,
junior Luke Ellis and sophomore
Ethan Day are two of the players
Revere will be counting on
in 2023-24.
Point of Pines fire station back on
track with $6.4M loan order
By Barbara Taormina
C
ity CFO Richard Viscay was
at the City Council meeting
this week with a loan order for
$6.4 for the Point of Pines fi re
station.
â€œThis is the fi nal amount we
will need to begin construction
of the new Point of Pines fi re station,â€
Viscay told the council. â€œIt
includes everything, the entire
project as bid out by the project
manager.â€
Back in the summer of 2019,
a feasibility study was completed,
and a $9.2 million bond was
issued. A year later the existing
fi re station was demolished. But
along the way the Massachusetts
Environmental Protection
Agency stepped in with an appeal
and notifi cation that the
agency was assuming jurisdiction
over project due to fl ooding
concerns. But last summer,
after a site visit with local offi -
cials, DEP withdrew their appeal
and left the conditions of the Revere
Conservation Commission
in place. Winter Street architects
updated the plan to refl ect the
resiliency of the building regarding
any fl ooding concerns.
Now, the plan and the $6.4
million loan order will head to a
public hearing.
Council approves special
permit to raze Shirley Ave.
building
City councillors approved a
special permit for Shirley Avenue,
LLC to raze the existing
non-conforming building at
163 Shirley Ave. and replace it
with a new four-story mixed-use
non-conforming building.
Attorney Lawrence Simeone
presented an update on the project
to the council. Simeone said
a lot of time and planning had
gone into the project. â€œI think
weâ€™ve got it right. We listened to
issued raised by the neighbors.â€
Ward 2 City Councillor Ira Novoselsky,
who lives in and represents
the neighborhood, helped
develop a list of 26 conditions
that refl ected concerns of abutters
and neighbors concerned
about privacy and space.
Simeone explained that the
plan had been scaled back
from a five-story building to
four stories. The ground fl oor
with have two commercial
units and the remaining fl oors
will be residential with 14 studio
units and 10 one-bedroom
apartments. There were conditions
about the removal of
large trees, the placement of
windows and fencing around
the new building.
â€œIt was great to see comprotinues
the transformation of
Shirley Ave.â€
Fellow city councillors were
pleased to hear that the developer
had worked so closely
with neighbors and the ward
councillor.
â€œThank you for listening to the
neighborhood and doing the
right thing,â€ said Ward 1 Councillor
Joanne McKenna.
Other councillors said they
would vote in favor of the special
permit because it had Novoselskyâ€™s
support.
â€œArchitect David Barsky has
designed most of the new buildings
on Shirley Ave. Itâ€™s completely
revitalized the area,â€ said
Novoselsky.
~ HELP WANTED ~
FULL TIME DRIVER WANTED
MONDAY â€“ FRIDAY; 8:00 AM â€“ 4:00 PM
SCRUBBING BOARD
104 HANCOCK ST
EVERETT * 617-387-4838
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?
Call Dennis at
(857) 249-7882 for details.
mise with this project,â€ said
Novoselsky. â€œIt was great work
on both ends to reach common
ground. This project conLike
us on Facebook
advocate newspaper
Facebook.com/Advocate.news.ma
×‰	Ú 7cassandra://Spuh7yGT3jy2xYmAiILNyb12EreP5cKxRfspAP0xs1gÍ+qÍ`Ì°Í ×d
Ri&©èMí81É×d
Ri&©èMí81ÈÍ
PÍ€×‘C’×˜š   Í(Í€u×‰œ”×‰	Ú 7cassandra://H2yfETwQt953Fl6N57wghXV8lQO5uzlF48CfT3OsCbkÎ ìÎÍ`ÍœÍ)×‰	Ú 7cassandra://prAaa4dhAlYfevQs_xsGJ5-Tbf4wB82zzfR1p8QCW1IÍšËÍ`ÍJÍà×‰	Ú 7cassandra://VGsQHHujGBt9yyf9PtRYVZeAROYqN7kSwacNVL1WTqMÍ0‚Í`Ì°Í ×‰	Ú 7cassandra://Qe1OKXh9zKy-34IIupI-VpFrIZ0G9dNzeGbd6IjK8lEÎ *÷ÍfÍ ÍÅÍñ×d
Rm&©èMí81ù×˜š Í( Í(Í€u×‰œ”×‰	Ú 7cassandra://imve9okhtGX9GZQyzErlFhGCYC-Oz0LUlC5_LEe8pIYÎ S›Í`ÍœÍ)×‰	Ú 7cassandra://N39GsxFrn9eZeZoUR-PKdllayCuYQm0QOO4rKCiV8sEÍ‰fÍ`ÍJÍà×‰	Ú 7cassandra://FrSRWOT3H5ZUcdJN52bpL-4zh8iuzzuUUK9RGDRu8MoÍ)ÛÍ`Ì°Í ×‰	Ú 7cassandra://d77RApIUE8MIBI0VJyhFRCdrtNWy_HTm8LAAwAnSg3sÎ VÍ ÍÅÍñ×d
Rm&©èMí81û•× ×d
Rm&©èMí82 ÍTÍÌç9×HÚ *mailto:MASSDOT.CivilRights@dot.state.ma.us××Ðˆ× ×d
Rm&©èMí82  Í	ÍNÌç9×HÚ *mailto:MASSDOT.CivilRights@dot.state.ma.us××Ðˆ× ×d
Rm&©èMí81ÿ Í[ÍûÌ«9×HÚ  mailto:sumner100@dot.state.ma.us××Ðˆ× ×d
Rm&©èMí81þ ÍÍ8ÍK9×H¸http://virtualmeeting.li××Ðˆ× ×d
Rm&©èMí81ý ÍÍðÍK9×H¸http://virtualmeeting.li××Ðˆ×‰EÚôPage 12
THE REVERE ADVOCATE â€“ FRIDAY, MARCH 10, 2023
RHS Varsity Boysâ€™ Football Patriots celebrate season;
Shosho named Player Of The Year, Fabiano Award recipient
By Tara Vocino
T
he Revere High School Boysâ€™ Varsity Football Patriots celebrated
their season last Wednesday at Prince Pizzeria. Jason
Shosho received the Player Of The Year Award and the
Fabiano Award; Domenic Boudreau received the Outstanding
Off ensive Player Award; Max Doucette received the Outstanding
Defensive Player Award; Sami Elasri received the
Unsung Hero Award; and Maykin Funez Gonzalez, Adam
Aguaouz, Davi Barreto and Christopher Cassidy received
the Coachesâ€™ Award.
Davi Barreto received the Coachesâ€™ Award from Varsity
Coach Louis Cicatelli.
Christopher Cassidy received the Coachesâ€™ Award
from Assistant Coach Jared Gordinas.
Jason Shosho received the Player
Of The Year Award from Varsity
Head Coach Louis Cicatelli.
Adam Aguaouz received the Coachesâ€™ Award from
Vin Gregorio.
Maykin Funez Gonzalez received the Coachesâ€™
Award from Receiving Coach Daniel Murphy.
Pictured from left to right: Freshmen Coach Jared Gordinas, Assistant Coach Oscar
Lopez, freshmen Bryan Fuentes, Adalberto Martinez, Marcelo Fermin-Cuartas,
Christopher Wells and Jackson Martel and Assistant Coach Brandon Brito. The
freshmen received gym bags. (Advocate photos by Tara Vocino)
Juniors, pictured from left to right: Sachin Neaupane, Brayan Lemus, Zakaria Benkirane,
Rafael Teixeira, Abbas Atoui, Diego Madrigal, Chase Smith, Nicholas Aguirre,
Carlos Rizo, Patrick Keefe, Guillermo Hernandez, Ahmed Bellemsieh, Hakim
Malki, Javan Close Jr., Anthony Pham and Walter Rodriguez received jackets, alongside
Coaches Louis Cicatelli, Jose Escobar and Vin Gregorio.
Seniors, pictured from left to right: in the front row: Adam Aguaouz, Christopher
Cassidy, Juelz Acevedo, Domenic Boudreau and Davi Barreto; second row: William
Rosales Granadino, Josue Mayorga, Jason Shosho, Michael Toto, Max Doucette, Salem
Berrechid, Sammi Mghizou and Maykin Funez Gonzalez. They received pullovers.
Pictured
from left to right: Head Coach Louis Cicatelli, Assistant Coach Brandon
Brito, sophomores Isaiah DeCrosta, Darian Martinez and Nico Aguirre and Assistant
Coaches Danny Murphy and Oscar Lopez. The sophomores received hoodies.
×‰	Ú 7cassandra://VGsQHHujGBt9yyf9PtRYVZeAROYqN7kSwacNVL1WTqMÍ0‚Í`Ì°Í ×d
Ri&©èMí81Ê×‰EÚtTHE REVERE ADVOCATE â€“ FRIDAY, MARCH 10, 2023
Page 13
During last Wednesdayâ€™s Revere High School varsity
football banquet at Prince Pizzeria, RHS Football
Head Coach Louis Cicatelli thanked players, parents
and coaches for a great season.
Max Doucette received the Outstanding Defensive
Player Of The Year Award from Varsity Head Coach
Louis Cicatelli.
~ Legal Notice ~
Dom Boudreau received the Outstanding Off ensive
Player Of The Year Award from Head Coach Louis Cicatelli.
~
Legal Notice ~
The Massachusetts Department of Transportation
invites you to attend
Virtual Public Information Meetings
for the
Sumner Tunnel Restoration Project
Tuesday, March 14
virtualmeeting.link/Sumner-Mar-14
6:00 p.m.
Wednesday, March 15
virtualmeeting.link/Sumner-Mar-15
6:00 p.m.
Jason Shosho received the Fabiano Award from Varsity Football
Head Coach Louis Cicatelli for his leadership skills on and
off the fi eld.
The Massachusetts Department of Transportation is hosting two virtual public information meetings to discuss
changes to Phase 2 of the Sumner Tunnel Restoration Project. The previous version of Phase 2 included a
four-month full closure of the tunnel beginning in May of 2023. Phase 2 will now consist of two separate two-month
full closures during the summers of 2023 and 2024.
All residents, abutters, local business owners, and interested commuters are invited to attend. Both meetings will
provide the same information. Holding two meetings is an effort by MassDOT to accommodate everyoneâ€™s
schedules as best possible. Spanish and Arabic interpretation will be available at both meetings.
Prior to the meetings, if you have specific questions or concerns for the project team, please email us at:
sumner100@dot.state.ma.us.
Note: This meeting is accessible to people with disabilities. MassDOT provides reasonable accommodations and/or
language assistance free of charge upon request (e.g interpreters in American Sign Language and languages other
than English, live captioning, videos, assistive listening devices and alternate material formats), as appropriate. For
accommodation or language assistance, please contact MassDOTâ€™s Chief Diversity & Civil Rights Officer by phone at
(857) 368-8580, Relay Service at 7-1-1, fax (857) 368-0602 or by email to MASSDOT.CivilRights@dot.state.ma.us.
Requests should be made as soon as possible prior to the meeting, and for more difficult to arrange services
including sign-language, CART or language translation or interpretation, requests should be made at least ten
business days before the meeting.
Title VI Notice of Nondiscrimination: MassDOT complies with Title VI of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 and related
federal and state statutes and regulations. It is the policy of MassDOT to ensure that no person or group of persons
shall on the grounds of Title VI protected categories, including race, color, national origin, or under additional
federal and state protected categories including sex, age, disability, sexual orientation, gender identity or
expression, religion, creed, ancestry, veteran's status , or background, be excluded from participation in, be denied
the benefits of, or be otherwise subjected to discrimination under any program or activity administered by MassDOT.
To request additional information about this commitment, or to file a complaint under Title VI or a related
nondiscrimination provision, please contact MassDOT's Title VI Specialist by phone at (857) 368-8580, Relay Service
at 7-1-1, fax (857) 368-0602 or by e-mail at MASSDOT.CivilRights@dot.state.ma.us.
ï»¥ï»£ ïº±ïº©ïºŽïº³ï»Ÿïº ï»¥ïºï»­ï»§ï»Œï»Ÿïº ï»²ïº‹ïºŽïº»ïº§ïº„ïº‘ ï»ïºŽïº»ïº—ï»»ïº ï»°ïºŸïº­ï»³ï»“ ØŒ ï»¯ïº­ïº§ïºƒ ïº”ï»ï» ïº‘ ïº”ïº‘ï»­ï» ï»ï»£ ïº•ïºŽï»£ï»­ï» ï»Œï»£ï»Ÿïº ïº•ï»§ïºŽï»› ïºïº«ïº‡ MassDOT 3 8580 ï»°ï» ï»‹ ï»‘ïº—ïºŽï»¬ï»Ÿïº ïº­ïº‘ï»‹
(857).
68
Caso esta informaÃ§Ã£o seja necessÃ¡ria em outro idioma, favor contar o Especialista em TÃ­tulo VI do
MassDOT pelo fone 857-368-8580.
Si necesita informaciÃ³n en otro lenguaje, favor contactar al especialista de MassDOT del TÃ­tulo VI al
857-368-8580.
ï‹´ï¿½ï¿½ï¿½î±‘ï¿½î¶¼ï­ï¿½ï¿½ï¿½ï¿½ï¿½ï¿½î†ï¿½ï¿½ï¿½ï¿½ï¿½ï¿½ï¿½ï¿½ï¿½ï¿½ï¿½ï¿½MassDOTï¿½î “ï¿½ï¿½ï¿½î‹¤ï¿½ï¿½ï¿½ï¿½ï¿½ï¿½ï¿½î†ï¿½ï¿½
857-368-8580î ‹
Sami Elasri received the Unsung Hero Award from Off ensive Coordinator
Jose Escobar.
ï‹´ï¿½ï¿½ï¿½î±‘ï¿½î¶¼ï­ï¿½ï¿½î®¢ï¿½î²™ïœ¥ï¿½ï¿½ï¿½ï¿½ï¿½ï¿½ï¿½ïˆ°ï•žî®ºï¿½ï¿½ï¿½MassDOTï¿½î “ï¿½ï¿½ï¿½î ”ï¿½î¶·ï¿½ï‘™ï¿½î¯‡ï€¨ï¿½ï¿½ï¿½
857-368-8580î ‹
×‰	Ú 7cassandra://FrSRWOT3H5ZUcdJN52bpL-4zh8iuzzuUUK9RGDRu8MoÍ)ÛÍ`Ì°Í ×d
Ri&©èMí81Ë×d
Ri&©èMí81ÊÍ
PÍ€×‘C’×˜š   Í(Í€u×‰œ”×‰	Ú 7cassandra://0yTBXNzuYYfhVHqayyoTAXxsX-nXhIyLsn58UBHv9R4Î 
¨Í`ÍœÍ)×‰	Ú 7cassandra://urnx2eFzzIkBWWJlYmCxT3vsWd9nnwvZroh8AeZtanYÍ•ãÍ`ÍJÍà×‰	Ú 7cassandra://MW6-25BzYND7do4ElCFG7XYRWSsk4tNRepNSr_cMF7YÍ&)Í`Ì°Í ×‰	Ú 7cassandra://gwEurrg_9HofSkBlFdQsiBKoXH4fv-BI2iMnuPBMuAkÎ HòÍ7²Í ÍÅÍñ×d
Rm&©èMí82×˜š Í( Í(Í€u×‰œ”×‰	Ú 7cassandra://-xUKTjZNml4caCDhwhuLsTKpzF3Vgx8Je4EEApvBhHMÎ 	MOÍ`ÍœÍ)×‰	Ú 7cassandra://ih_KIXWBzEd4YhUiqIqqveu26hVkC9vxZoNGZ5L826cÍöÍ`ÍJÍà×‰	Ú 7cassandra://tRWtBOA7qIdDK0alDkQ5jJNiej2COkcawBA9rdR_ZOUÍ(*Í`Ì°Í ×‰	Ú 7cassandra://qMxGelctTULEFGVcRiwqFQl_wxtrnpz-mguJkxz8JJAÎ €"tÍ ÍÅÍñ×d
Rm&©èMí82“× ×d
Rn&©èMí82 ÍMÍ	Ìû9×HÚ  mailto:HR@combinedproperties.com××Ðˆ× ×d
Rn&©èMí82
 ÍLÍ]9×H²mailto:roc@aol.com××Ðˆ× ×d
Rn&©èMí82	 ÍXÍÂZ9×H³http://diabetes.org××Ðˆ×‰EÚ.Page 14
THE REVERE ADVOCATE â€“ FRIDAY, MARCH 10, 2023
tions in their schools but are not receiving
any additional educational
aid from the state.
Sponsor Sen. John Velis (D-WestBy
Bob Katzen
Donating Your Body to Science
Dear Savvy Senior,
I am interested in possibly donating my body to science
when I pass away. What can you tell me about this, and
what would I need to do to set it up?
Getting Old
Dear Getting,
If youâ€™re looking to help advance
medical research, and in
the process, eliminate your funeral
and burial costs, donating
your body to science is a great
option to consider. Hereâ€™s what
you should know.
Body Donations
Each year, itâ€™s estimated that
approximately 20,000 people
donate their whole body, after
death, to medical facilities
throughout the country to be
used in medical research projects,
anatomy lessons and surgical
practice.
After using your body, these
facilities will then provide free
cremation and will either bury
or scatter your ashes in a local
cemetery or return them to your
family, usually within a year.
And, just in case youâ€™re wondering,
your family cannot not
be paid for the use of your body.
Federal and state laws prohibit it.
Here are a few other things
you need to know and check
into, to help you determine
whether whole-body donation
is right for you:
â€¢ Donation denial: Most body
donation programs will not accept
bodies that are extremely
obese, or those that have infectious
diseases like hepatitis, tuberculosis,
H.I.V. or MRSA. Bodies
that suff ered extensive trauma
wonâ€™t be accepted either.
â€¢ Organ donation: Most medical
school programs require
that you donate your whole
body in its entirety. So, if you
want to be an organ donor (with
the exception of your eyes), you
probably wonâ€™t qualify to be a
whole-body donor too.
â€¢ Religious considerations:
Most major religions permit individuals
to donate both their
full body and organs, and many
even encourage it. If you are unsure,
you should consult with
your pastor or spiritual adviser.
â€¢ Special requests: Most programs
will not allow you to donate
your body for a specifi c purpose.
You give them the body
and they decide how to use it.
â€¢ Memorial options: Most
programs require almost immediate
transport of the body
after death, so thereâ€™s no funeral.
If your family wants a memorial
service, they can have one
without the body. Or, some programs
off er memorial services at
their facility at a later date without
the remains.
â€¢ Body transporting: Most
programs will cover transporting
your body to their facility
within a certain distance. However,
some may charge a fee.
How to Proceed
If you think you want to donate
your body, itâ€™s best to
make arrangements in advance
with a body donation program
in your area. Most programs
are off ered through university-affiliated
medical schools.
To fi nd one near you, the University
of Florida maintains a
list of U.S. programs and their
contact information at Anatbd.
acb.med.ufl .edu/usprograms. If
you donâ€™t have Internet access,
you can get help by calling the
whole-body donation referral
service during business hours
at 800-727-0700.
In addition to the medical
schools, there are also private
organizations like Science Care
(ScienceCare.com) and Anatomy
Gifts Registry (AnatomyGifts.
org) that accept whole body donations
too. Some of these organizations
will even allow organ
donation because they deal in
body parts as well as whole cadavers.
Once
you locate a program
in your area, call and ask them
to mail you an information/registration
packet that will explain
exactly how their program
works.
To sign up, youâ€™ll need to fi ll
out a couple of forms and return
them. But you can always
change your mind by contacting
the program and removing
your name from their registration
list. Some programs may ask
that you make your withdrawal
in writing.
After youâ€™ve made arrangements,
youâ€™ll need to tell your
family members so they will
know what to do and who to call
after your death. Itâ€™s also a good
idea to tell your doctors, so they
know your fi nal wishes 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 â€œThe Savvy Seniorâ€ book.
If you have any questions about this weekâ€™s report, e-mail us at
bob@beaconhillrollcall.com or call us at (617) 720-1562
GET A FREE SUBSCRIPTION TO
MASSTERLIST â€“ Join more than
25,000 people, from movers and
shakers to political junkies and interested
citizens, who start their
weekday morning with MASSterListâ€”the
popular newsletter that
chronicles news and informed
analysis about whatâ€™s going on up
on Beacon Hill, in Massachusetts
politics, policy, media and influence.
The stories are drawn from
major news organizations as well
as specialized publications selected
by MASSterlistâ€™s new editor,
Erin Tiernan, with help from Matt
Murphy. Both are pros and have
a wealth of experience. And they
also introduce each article in their
own clever way.
MASSterlist will be e-mailed to
you FREE every Monday through
Friday morning and will give you
a leg up on whatâ€™s happening in
the blood sport of Bay State politics.
For more information and to
get your free subscription, go to:
https://lp.constantcontactpages.
com/su/aPTLucK
THE HOUSE AND SENATE: Beacon
Hill Roll Call records local representativesâ€™
votes on a roll call from
the week of February 27-March 3.
There were no roll calls in the Senate
last week.
$353 MILLION SUPPLEMENTAL
BUDGET (H 57)
House 153-0, approved and
sent to the Senate a $353 million
fi scal 2023 supplemental budget.
Provisions include $86 million for
the emergency shelter system to
help off set medical costs for migrant
families going to emergency
rooms for shelter and assistance;
$130 million to keep expanded nutrition
assistance in place for a few
more months; $65 million for the
universal school meals program;
and provisions to keep some pandemic-era
programs, set to expire,
in place including allowing restaurants
to sell beer, wine and cocktails
for take-out and expanding
outdoor dining from April 1, 2023
to April 1, 2024. Another provision
extends the authority, set to expire
in a few weeks, for public bodies,
agencies and commissions to
hold their meetings remotely until
March 31, 2025.
â€œThe package â€¦ covers a number
of diff erent areas that all require
our immediate attention,â€
said House Ways and Means Committee
chair Rep. Aaron Michlewitz
(D-Boston). â€œThis modest proposal
addresses some of the pressing
needs the commonwealth is facing
currently. As we begin this legislative
session, we are on a quick
time frame for some of these programs
and this spending bill is one
that we need to move fairly quickly
to ensure our people receive the
services they need.â€
â€œThe migrant crisis our commonwealth
has been facing with these
last couple of months has put our
will to the test,â€ continued Michlewitz.
â€œWhile Washington continues
to struggle with fi nding a reasonable
compromise on a broken immigration
system, it is the state and
our municipalities that have been
forced to pick up the pieces.â€
(A â€œYesâ€ vote is for the budget.)
Rep. Jessica Giannino Yes
Rep. Jeff Turco
Yes
ALSO UP ON BEACON HILL â€“ A
look at some bills fi led for consideration
in the new 2023-2024 Legislature:
BABY
BONDS (SD 711) â€“ Would
create a Baby Bonds program in
Massachusetts to provide funds
at birth to certain low-income
residents which can be accessed
when the account holder turns 18
to support asset-building activities
such as post-secondary education,
homebuying or investing
in a business.
â€œI am proud to have fi led [this bill]
to start building an eff ective and
transformational baby bonds program
in the commonwealth that
will build wealth from the bottom
up, and the middle out, to put hardworking
residents on a trajectory for
wealth-creation from day one,â€ said
sponsor Sen. Paul Feeney (D-Foxborough).
â€œBy automatically investing
from day one of a childâ€™s life, we
are providing a jump-start to individuals
otherwise at a disadvantage
by beginning to narrow the racial
wealth gap and giving our poorest
residents a fi ghting shot at the middle
class and the American Dream.â€
CHOREOGRAPHER LAUREATE (SD
2382) â€“ Would create a new state
position of Choreographer Laureate
to encourage participation in
the arts, elevate the dance legacy
and current dance in Bay State communities
and choreograph performances
for important state events
and ceremonies.
â€œIn my decades as a dancer and
choreographer, Iâ€™ve witnessed the
power of dance and movement to
bring people together, and to embrace
the joy and diversity of humanity,â€
said sponsor said Sen. Becca
Rausch (D-Needham). â€œI fi led this
bill to help spread that joy and appreciation
throughout the commonwealth
and uplift the importance
of the arts and cultural exchange
in our communities.â€
IMMIGRANTS IN SCHOOLS (SD
2412) â€“ Would require the Department
of Education to establish an
assistance program for cities and
towns that are experiencing sudden
infl uxes of immigrant populafi
eld) said that he fi led the measure
to start an important conversation
on how we can assist municipalities
that are seeing a sudden infl ux of
population in their school districts.
â€œI am pleased that Gov. Healey has
also recognized this issue and set
aside funding in her supplemental
budget to help schools take care of
these students. This is a working bill
and I look forward to continuing to
collaborate with my colleagues to
ensure our municipalities have the
resources they need.â€
ACTIVE SHOOTER (SD 157) â€“
Would require the state to adopt
the National Fire Protection Associationâ€™s
standard guidelines for active
shooter or hostile events. The
bill also establishes an Executive
Council comprised of representatives
of fi re fi ghters, EMS and law
enforcement agencies to develop
best practices for all elements of
active-shooter response situations.
â€œIn recent years, our country has
been presented with greater risks
and threats when it comes to active
shooter situations,â€ said sponsor
Sen. Patrick Oâ€™Connor (R-Weymouth).
â€œWe are fortunate that
here in Massachusetts, we have
been proactive and collaborative
about protecting the safety of all
residents. This legislation seeks to
ensure that we remain ahead of
the curve and keep our residents
safe well into the future.â€
MAKE ELECTION DAY A LEGAL
HOLIDAY (SD 353) â€“ Would make
Election Day, every two years, a
statewide holiday and provide people
who cannot take the holiday off
because they are Election Day workers
or perform other essential work,
with two hours paid voting leave.
â€œThe ability to vote is the foundation
of our democracy,â€ said sponsor
Sen. Becca Rausch (D-Needham).
â€œFor economically vulnerable communities,
the question of voting
oftentimes comes down to missing
hours at work, holding onto a
job or earning pay they rely on to
put food on the table. My bill to establish
Election Day as a holiday
gives voters the greatest fl exibility
to cast their ballot and make their
voices heard.â€
QUOTABLE QUOTES â€“ Gov. Maura
Healey released a proposed $55.5
billion fiscal 2024 state budget.
Hereâ€™s what they are saying about it.
â€œOur â€¦ budget is what Massachusetts
needs to meet this moment
and build a strong economy,
livable communities and a sustainable
future. Combined with our tax
relief proposal, we will set Massachusetts
up for success by lowering
costs, growing our competitiveness
and delivering on the promise of
our people. Additionally, we are taking
aggressive action to address our
housing crisis by creating the Executive
Offi ce of Housing and Livable
Communities led by a housing secretary
who will coordinate across
BEACON | SEE Page 16
×‰	Ú 7cassandra://MW6-25BzYND7do4ElCFG7XYRWSsk4tNRepNSr_cMF7YÍ&)Í`Ì°Í ×d
Ri&©èMí81Ì×‰EÚ+qTHE REVERE ADVOCATE â€“ FRIDAY, MARCH 10, 2023
Page 15
~ LETTER TO THE EDITOR ~
Revere High School Class of 1973 50th Class Reunion
W
e are holding our 50th class
reunion of R.H.S. â€™73 on Saturday,
September 16th, 2023 at
the Sheraton Four Points Hotel
in Wakefi eld.
Henry P. Tufo
We would appreciate any
help from the Revere Advocate
Community, friends and family
to spread the word to classmates.
OBITUARIES
O
f
Revere. A lifelong Revere
resident, passed away unexpectedly
on March 8, 2023. Beloved
son of the late Anthony
and Mary (Corsini) Tufo. Devoted
father of Susan Plante of NV, Steven
Tufo and his wife Gabrielle of
Ohio, Daniel Tufo of NV, Patricia
Guilmette, and the late John Tufo.
Also survived by 7 loving grandchildren,
8 great- grandchildren
and his dear friends Mark Casella
(Former Revere City Councillor)
and the late Marguerite Handy.
Henry Worked for United Airlines,
and Tand D Trucking for
many years. Henry was well
known throughout the City. He
Served on the City of Revere Planning
Board for 14 years including
1 term as the Vice Chairman.
Visiting hours will be held in the
Paul Buonfi glio & Sons-Bruno Funeral
Home 128 Revere St, Revere
on Friday, March 10th from 4-7
pm. Followed by a Prayer Service
at 7:00 pm. Relatives and friends
are kindly invited. In Lieu of fl owers
donations may be made to the
charity of oneâ€™s choice.
Raymond L.Taylor
Irene Barbanti-Taylor. Loving father
of Ann Taylor of Windham
NH, Gregory Taylor and his wife
Theresa of Windham NH, Barbara
Taylor of Andover NH, Jeff rey Taylor
of Meredith NH, and the late
Lenny Taylor. Cherished grandfather
of Gregory, Anna, Jessica,
and Colette. Dear brother-inlaw
of Doris Carbone and her late
husband Richard of Woburn, Judith
Rita of Medford, Elaine Figliola
and her late husband John of
Lynnfi eld, and the late John Barbanti.
Also survived by many loving
nieces and nephews.
Raymond proudly served his
country in the United States
Army. He graduated with a PHD
from CalTech and retired as a
physicist from Avco Research Laboratory
in Everett. Upon retirement
he started and owned CVD
Consulting in Everett. He will truly
be missed by all who knew him. A
Memorial Visitation will be held at
the Paul Buonfi glio & Sons-Bruno
Funeral Home 128 Revere St, Revere
on Monday, March 13, 2023
from 10:00am to 11:30am followed
by a 12:00pm Mass at St.
Anthonyâ€™s Church in Revere. Relatives
and friends are kindly invited.
Private Interment. In lieu of
fl owers donations can be made
to Dana Farber Cancer Institute,
450 Brookline Avenue, Boston,
MA 02215 or at www.dana-farber.
org or to the American Diabetes
Association, P.O. Box 7023 Merrifi
eld, VA 22116-7023 or at www.
diabetes.org.
Gale Mary (Neikirk)
Malatesta
raised in East Boston and educated
there, until moving to Revere
with her family in the early
1960â€™s. She was an alumna of Revere
High School, Class of 1965.
It was at Revere High school
where she would meet her future
husband, Paul Malatesta.
After graduating, Gale went to
work as a legal secretary in Boston.
She was awaiting her future
husbandâ€™s return from his military
duty. The couple were married
on November 9, 1969. They
remained in Revere and began
their family together.
Gale was a proud homemaker
and housewife. She cared for
her family with an abundance of
love and joy showered throughout
her home. When her children
were older, Gale went to
train and became certifi ed as
a Pharmaceutical Technician &
worked at CVS at Northgate. She
enjoyed her job very much and
seeing people, as well as helping
them. However, she left her
job, to a much better job, being
a grandmother. Gale was
over the moon to have been
her grandchildrenâ€™s day care
& helped raise them. Nothing
meant more to her. Gale loved
being at the beach and talking
quiet walks along the sand soaking
in the sun. She enjoyed visiting
the historical North Shore
towns and the history surrounding
them. Gale was a â€œDisney Fanaticâ€
along with the rest of her
family. More than anything else,
she treasured her family, and
loved them unconditionally.
She is the beloved wife to Paul
O
O
f Revere. Passed
away on March
5, 2023 at the age of
92. Born in Providence RI, on July
3, 1930 to the late Prentice C. Taylor
and Yvonne S. (Belliveau). Beloved
husband of 28 years to
f Revere. Died on Sunday,
February 26, 2023. With the
loving presence of her family
at her residence, following a
most courageous battle with
pancreatic cancer, she was 74
years old. Gale was born in Boston
on March 18, 1948, to her
late parents, Ret. Boston Firefi
ghter Ross W. â€œRedâ€ Neikirk &
Teresa (Fiore) Neikirk. She was
Malatesta for 53 years of Revere.
the loving mother of Lynn
M. Romboli & husband Scott, &
Laura A. Connolly & husband
Thomas. The cherished grandmother
of Ryan R. Connolly,
Hannah L. Connolly, & Christopher
M. Romboli. She is the dear
sister of Karen Russo & husband
Philip of Salem, NH. At the familyâ€™s
request, PLEASE OMIT fl owers,
donations in Galeâ€™s memory
may be made to The MGH Fund
Mass General Development Offi
ce 125 Nashua Street, Suite 540
Boston, MA 02114-1101
Family & friends were respectfully
invited to visiting hours on
Monday, March 6th in the Vertuccio
Smith & Vazza Beechwood
Home for Funerals Revere.
A funeral was conducted from
the funeral home on Tuesday,
followed by a funeral mass at the
Blessed Mother of the Morning
Star, Revere. Interment followed
in Holy Cross Cemetery, Malden.
Please reach out to Paul L.
Greene-RHS Reunion Committee
at 508-488-0305 or (cell) 978758-7779
or by email at rgreenroc@aol.com
Public
Hearing Notice
City of Revere, MA
Proposed Loan Order
Point of Pines Fire Station Bonds
Notice is hereby given that the Revere City Council will
conduct a public hearing on Monday evening, March
27, 2023 at 6:00 p.m. in the City Councillor Joseph A.
DelGrosso City Council Chamber, Revere City Hall, 281
Broadway, Revere, MA 02151 relative to the following
proposed loan order:
That, in addition to amounts previously appropriated
therefor, $6,400,000 is appropriated to pay costs of the
demolition and construction of the Alden Mills Point of
Pines Fire Station, including the payment of all costs incidental
and related thereto; and that to meet this supplemental
appropriation, the Treasurer, with the approval
of the Mayor, is authorized to borrow said amount under
and pursuant to Chapter 44, Section 7(1) of the General
Laws, or pursuant to any other enabling authority, and to
issue bonds or notes of the City therefor.
î€·î‹î„î— î—î‹îˆ î€·î•îˆî„î–î˜î•îˆî• îŒî– î„î˜î—î‹î’î•îŒîîˆî‡ î—î’ î‚¿îîˆ î„î‘ î„î“î“îîŒî†î„î—îŒî’î‘
îšîŒî—î‹ î—î‹îˆ î„î“î“î•î’î“î•îŒî„î—îˆ î’ï‚ˆî†îŒî„îî– î’î‰ î€·î‹îˆ î€¦î’îîî’î‘îšîˆî„îî—î‹ î’î‰
Massachusetts (the â€œCommonwealthâ€â€™) to qualify under
Chapter 44A of the General Laws any and all bonds of
the City authorized to be borrowed pursuant to this loan
order, and to provide such information and execute such
î‡î’î†î˜îîˆî‘î—î– î„î– î–î˜î†î‹ î’ï‚ˆî†îŒî„îî– î’î‰ î—î‹îˆ î€¦î’îîî’î‘îšîˆî„îî—î‹ îî„îœ
require in connection therewith.
A copy of the aforementioned proposed loan order is on
î‚¿îîˆ î„î‘î‡ î„î™î„îŒîî„î…îîˆ î‰î’î• î“î˜î…îîŒî† îŒî‘î–î“îˆî†î—îŒî’î‘ îŒî‘ î—î‹îˆ î€²ï‚ˆî†îˆ î’î‰
the City Clerk, Revere City Hall, Revere, Massachusetts
02151, Monday through Thursday from 8:15 A.M. to 5:00
P.M. and Friday 8:15 A.M. to 12:15 P.M.
Attest:
Ashley E. Melnik
City Clerk
March 10, 2023
~ Help Wanted ~
~ Help Wanted ~
Combined Properties, Inc. is a full-service investment
î„î‘î‡ î•îˆî„î îˆî–î—î„î—îˆ î‡îˆî™îˆîî’î“îîˆî‘î— î‚¿î•î î–î“îˆî†îŒî„îîŒîîŒî‘îŠ îŒî‘ î†î’îîîˆî•î†îŒî„î
and multi-family residential properties.
î€ºîˆ î„î•îˆ îî’î’îŽîŒî‘îŠ î—î’ î‚¿îî î—î‹îˆ î‰î’îîî’îšîŒî‘îŠ î“î’î–îŒî—îŒî’î‘î–î€
Parking Lot Attendant/Monitor
î€·î‹îˆ î“î„î•îŽîŒî‘îŠ îî’î— î„î—î—îˆî‘î‡î„î‘î— îšîŒîî î…îˆ î•îˆî–î“î’î‘î–îŒî…îîˆ î‰î’î• îˆî‘î‰î’î•î†îŒî‘îŠ
î—î‹îˆ î˜î‘î„î˜î—î‹î’î•îŒîîˆî‡ î˜î–îˆ î’î‰ î„î–î–îŒîŠî‘îˆî‡ î“î•î’î“îˆî•î—îŒîˆî– îŒî‘ î€°î„îî‡îˆî‘
î„î‘î‡ îˆî‘î–î˜î•îŒî‘îŠ î†îîˆî„î‘îîŒî‘îˆî–î– î„î‘î‡ î’î•î‡îˆî• î‰î’î• î‡îˆî–îŒî•îˆî‡ î†î˜î•î… î„î“î“îˆî„îî€‘
î€¶î†î‹îˆî‡î˜îîˆ îŒî– î€·î˜îˆî–î‡î„îœ î€ î€¶î„î—î˜î•î‡î„îœ î€‹î“î•îˆî‰îˆî•î•îˆî‡î€Œ î’î• î€°î’î‘î‡î„îœ î‚±
î€©î•îŒî‡î„îœ î’î• î€”î€“î€î€“î€“ î„î€‘îî€‘ î€ î€•î€î€“î€“ î“î€‘îî€‘
Commercial â€“ Residential Painter â€“ Light Maintenance
î€ºîˆ î„î•îˆ î–îˆîˆîŽîŒî‘îŠ î„î‘ îˆî›î“îˆî•îŒîˆî‘î†îˆî‡ î€³î„îŒî‘î—îˆî• î‰î’î• î’î˜î• î„î“î„î•î—îîˆî‘î—
î†î’îîî˜î‘îŒî—îŒîˆî– îŒî‘ î€°î„îî‡îˆî‘ î„î‘î‡ î‘îˆî„î•î…îœ î†î’îîîˆî•î†îŒî„î î“î•î’î“îˆî•î—îŒîˆî–î€‘
î€·î‹îŒî– îŒî– î„ î‰î˜îîî€î—îŒîîˆ î“î’î–îŒî—îŒî’î‘ îšîŒî—î‹ î…îˆî‘îˆî‚¿î—î– î€‹î€°î’î‘î‡î„îœî€î€©î•îŒî‡î„îœ
î€›î€î€–î€“î€î€˜î€î€“î€“ î“î€‘îî€‘î€Œî€‘
Please submit resume or work history to
HR@combinedproperties.com or call 781-388-0338.
Combined Properties provides equal employment opportunities
to all employees and applicants for employment
î„î‘î‡ î“î•î’î‹îŒî…îŒî—î– î‡îŒî–î†î•îŒîîŒî‘î„î—îŒî’î‘ î„î‘î‡ î‹î„î•î„î–î–îîˆî‘î— î’î‰ î„î‘îœ î—îœî“îˆ
îšîŒî—î‹î’î˜î— î•îˆîŠî„î•î‡ î—î’ î•î„î†îˆî€ î†î’îî’î•î€ î•îˆîîŒîŠîŒî’î‘î€ î†î•îˆîˆî‡î€ î–îˆî›î€ î“î•îˆîŠî‘î„î‘î†îœ
î’î• î“î•îˆîŠî‘î„î‘î†îœî€î•îˆîî„î—îˆî‡ î†î’î‘î‡îŒî—îŒî’î‘î€ î–îˆî›î˜î„î î’î•îŒîˆî‘î—î„î—îŒî’î‘î€
îŠîˆî‘î‡îˆî• îŒî‡îˆî‘î—îŒî—îœ î’î• îˆî›î“î•îˆî–î–îŒî’î‘î€ îŠîˆî‘îˆî—îŒî† îŒî‘î‰î’î•îî„î—îŒî’î‘î€ î‘î„î—îŒî’î‘î„î
î’î•îŒîŠîŒî‘î€ î„î‘î†îˆî–î—î•îœî€ î„îŠîˆî€ î‡îŒî–î„î…îŒîîŒî—îœî€ îî„î•îŒî—î„î î–î—î„î—î˜î–î€ î™îˆî—îˆî•î„î‘
î–î—î„î—î˜î–î€ î€±î„î—îŒî’î‘î„î î€ªî˜î„î•î‡ î’î• î•îˆî–îˆî•î™îˆ î˜î‘îŒî— î’î…îîŒîŠî„î—îŒî’î‘î–î€ î’î•
î„î‘îœ î’î—î‹îˆî• î“î•î’î—îˆî†î—îˆî‡ î–î—î„î—î˜î– î“î•î’î‹îŒî…îŒî—îˆî‡ î…îœ î„î“î“îîŒî†î„î…îîˆ îî„îšî€‘
î€·î‹îŒî– î“î’îîŒî†îœ î„î“î“îîŒîˆî– î—î’ î„îî î—îˆî•îî– î„î‘î‡ î†î’î‘î‡îŒî—îŒî’î‘î– î’î‰ îˆîî“îî’îœîîˆî‘î—î€
îŒî‘î†îî˜î‡îŒî‘îŠ î•îˆî†î•î˜îŒî—îŒî‘îŠî€ î‹îŒî•îŒî‘îŠî€ î“îî„î†îˆîîˆî‘î—î€ î“î•î’îî’î—îŒî’î‘î€
î—îˆî•îîŒî‘î„î—îŒî’î‘î€ îî„îœî’ï‚‡î€ î•îˆî†î„îîî€ î—î•î„î‘î–î‰îˆî•î€ îîˆî„î™îˆî– î’î‰ î„î…î–îˆî‘î†îˆî€
î†î’îî“îˆî‘î–î„î—îŒî’î‘ î„î‘î‡ î—î•î„îŒî‘îŒî‘îŠî€‘
×‰	Ú 7cassandra://tRWtBOA7qIdDK0alDkQ5jJNiej2COkcawBA9rdR_ZOUÍ(*Í`Ì°Í ×d
Ri&©èMí81Í×d
Ri&©èMí81ÌÍ
PÍ€×‘C’×˜š   Í(Í€u×‰œ”×‰	Ú 7cassandra://FrtooUKCsUpbVJ6VIwOopavrfTCJUtdpmBFY92BDjpcÎ 	‡6Í` ÍœÍ)×‰	Ú 7cassandra://p5COitozk9A-CkGS-vf7TfL0fkuXibjuD80HGIJvBIcÍ”­Í`ÍJÍà×‰	Ú 7cassandra://o6ngAP1IZB1TdMMiA347HwXd7v_Ry86BwvVUMACMCp0Í'jÍ`Ì°Í ×‰	Ú 7cassandra://rtLa18jE6cgMiH2-m8VA0iW8GPy5MDWDuDBfldpXUOcÎ dÍØÍ ÍÅÍñ×d
Rn&©èMí82×˜š Í( Í(Í€u×‰œ”×‰	Ú 7cassandra://Qtb94SpGxyc6RmLqWgCvGwSKl1pO5X8X8lIHlHvuAgMÎ ÄYÍ`ÍœÍ)×‰	Ú 7cassandra://IFkp64YKgcDyYdpRVMs54gazmp2hk3zHMYwkOJc2Y3IÍ©‘Í`ÍJÍà×‰	Ú 7cassandra://twHgIJZwoIasXjbH4ip_6jB57iVItzMUpHrQcBLNt6AÍ4nÍ`Ì°Í ×‰	Ú 7cassandra://JgQ34WTAu91A8XakgxfZYN9TxFUKwNJTr0BsJUdn1WcÎ Ø
Í,Í ÍÅÍñ×d
Ro&©èMí82‘× ×d
Ro&©èMí82 ÍmÍÌÑ9×H»http://www.advocatenews.net××Ðˆ×‰EÚ:€Page 16
Your Hometown News Delivered!
EVERETT ADVOCATE
MALDEN ADVOCATE
REVERE ADVOCATE
SAUGUS ADVOCATE
One year subscription to
The Advocate of your choice:
$150 per paper in-town per year or
$200 per paper out-of-town per year.
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
- LEGAL NOTICE -
î€¦î€²î€°î€°î€²î€±î€ºî€¨î€¤î€¯î€·î€« î€²î€© î€°î€¤î€¶î€¶î€¤î€¦î€«î€¸î€¶î€¨î€·î€·î€¶
î€·î€«î€¨ î€·î€µî€¬î€¤î€¯ î€¦î€²î€¸î€µî€·
î€³î€µî€²î€¥î€¤î€·î€¨ î€¤î€±î€§ î€©î€¤î€°î€¬î€¯î€¼ î€¦î€²î€¸î€µî€·
î€¶î˜îµµî’îîŽ î€³î•î’î…î„î—îˆ î„î‘î‡ î€©î„îîŒîîœ î€¦î’î˜î•î—
î€•î€— î€±îˆîš î€¦î‹î„î•î‡î’î‘ î€¶î—î•îˆîˆî—
î€¥î’î–î—î’î‘î€ î€°î€¤ î€“î€•î€”î€”î€—
î€‹î€™î€”î€šî€Œ î€šî€›î€›î€î€›î€–î€“î€“
î€§î’î†îŽîˆî— î€±î’î€‘ î€¶î€¸î€•î€–î€³î€“î€—î€™î€›î€¨î€¤
î€¨î–î—î„î—îˆ î’î‰î€ î€°î€¤î€µî€¼ î€¯î€‘ î€°î€¤î€µî€·î€¬î€±
Dî„î—îˆ î’î‰ î€§îˆî„î—î‹î€ î€”î€•î€’î€•î€•î€’î€•î€“î€•î€•
î€¦î€¬î€·î€¤î€·î€¬î€²î€± î€²î€± î€³î€¨î€·î€¬î€·î€¬î€²î€± î€©î€²î€µ
î€©î€²î€µî€°î€¤î€¯ î€¤î€§î€­î€¸î€§î€¬î€¦î€¤î€·î€¬î€²î€±
To all interested persons:
î€¤ î€³îˆî—îŒî—îŒî’î‘ î‰î’î• î€©î’î•îî„î î€³î•î’î…î„î—îˆ î’î‰ î€ºîŒîî îšîŒî—î‹ î€¤î“î“î’îŒî‘î—îîˆî‘î— î’î‰
î€³îˆî•î–î’î‘î„î î€µîˆî“î•îˆî–îˆî‘î—î„î—îŒî™îˆ î‹î„î– î…îˆîˆî‘ î‚¿îîˆî‡ î…îœ î€¹îŒî™îŒî„î‘ î€­î€‘ î€¯îˆî‰îˆî…î™î•îˆ
of î€«î„îî“î—î’î‘ î€©î„îîî– î€±î€« requesting that the Court enter a formal
Decree and Order and for such other relief as requested in the
Petition. The Petitioner requests that: î€¹îŒî™îŒî„î‘ î€­î€‘ î€¯îˆî‰îˆî…î™î•îˆ of
î€«î„îî“î—î’î‘ î€©î„îîî–î€ î€±î€« be appointed as Personal Representative(s)
of said estate to serve î€ºîŒî—î‹î’î˜î— î€¶î˜î•îˆî—îœ on the bond in
î˜î‘î–î˜î“îˆî•î™îŒî–îˆî‡ î„î‡îîŒî‘îŒî–î—î•î„î—îŒî’î‘
î€¬î€°î€³î€²î€µî€·î€¤î€±î€· î€±î€²î€·î€¬î€¦î€¨
î€¼î’î˜ î‹î„î™îˆ î—î‹îˆ î•îŒîŠî‹î— î—î’ î’î…î—î„îŒî‘ î„ î†î’î“îœ î’î‰ î—î‹îˆ î€³îˆî—îŒî—îŒî’î‘ î‰î•î’î î—î‹îˆ
î€³îˆî—îŒî—îŒî’î‘îˆî• î’î• î„î— î—î‹îˆ î€¦î’î˜î•î—î€‘ î€¼î’î˜ î‹î„î™îˆ î„ î•îŒîŠî‹î— î—î’ î’î…îîˆî†î— î—î’
î—î‹îŒî– î“î•î’î†îˆîˆî‡îŒî‘îŠî€‘ î€·î’ î‡î’ î–î’î€ îœî’î˜ î’î• îœî’î˜î• î„î—î—î’î•î‘îˆîœ îî˜î–î— î‚¿îîˆ î„
îšî•îŒî—î—îˆî‘ î„î“î“îˆî„î•î„î‘î†îˆ î„î‘î‡ î’î…îîˆî†î—îŒî’î‘ î„î— î—î‹îŒî– î€¦î’î˜î•î— î…îˆî‰î’î•îˆî€
î€”î€“î€î€“î€“ î„î€‘îî€‘ î’î‘ î—î‹îˆ î•îˆî—î˜î•î‘ î‡î„îœ î’î‰ î€“î€—î€’î€”î€—î€’î€•î€“î€•î€–î€‘
î€·î‹îŒî– îŒî– î€±î€²î€· î„ î‹îˆî„î•îŒî‘îŠ î‡î„î—îˆî€ î…î˜î— î„ î‡îˆî„î‡îîŒî‘îˆ î…îœ îšî‹îŒî†î‹ îœî’î˜ îî˜î–î—
î‚¿îîˆ î„ îšî•îŒî—î—îˆî‘ î„î“î“îˆî„î•î„î‘î†îˆ î„î‘î‡ î’î…îîˆî†î—îŒî’î‘ îŒî‰ îœî’î˜ î’î…îîˆî†î— î—î’
î—î‹îŒî– î“î•î’î†îˆîˆî‡îŒî‘îŠî€‘ î€¬î‰ îœî’î˜ î‰î„îŒî î—î’ î‚¿îîˆ î„ î—îŒîîˆîîœ îšî•îŒî—î—îˆî‘ î„î“î“îˆî„î•î„î‘î†îˆ
î„î‘î‡ î’î…îîˆî†î—îŒî’î‘ î‰î’îîî’îšîˆî‡ î…îœ î„î‘ î„îµ¶î‡î„î™îŒî— î’î‰ î’î…îîˆî†î—îŒî’î‘î–
îšîŒî—î‹îŒî‘ î—î‹îŒî•î—îœ î€‹î€–î€“î€Œ î‡î„îœî– î’î‰ î—î‹îˆ î•îˆî—î˜î•î‘ î‡î„îœî€ î„î†î—îŒî’î‘ îî„îœ î…îˆ î—î„îŽîˆî‘
îšîŒî—î‹î’î˜î— î‰î˜î•î—î‹îˆî• î‘î’î—îŒî†îˆ î—î’ îœî’î˜î€‘
î€¸î€±î€¶î€¸î€³î€¨î€µî€¹î€¬î€¶î€¨î€§ î€¤î€§î€°î€¬î€±î€¬î€¶î€·î€µî€¤î€·î€¬î€²î€± î€¸î€±î€§î€¨î€µ î€·î€«î€¨
î€°î€¤î€¶î€¶î€¤î€¦î€«î€¸î€¶î€¨î€·î€·î€¶ î€¸î€±î€¬î€©î€²î€µî€° î€³î€µî€²î€¥î€¤î€·î€¨ î€¦î€²î€§î€¨ î€‹î€°î€¸î€³î€¦î€Œ
î€¤ î€³îˆî•î–î’î‘î„î î€µîˆî“î•îˆî–îˆî‘î—î„î—îŒî™îˆ î„î“î“î’îŒî‘î—îˆî‡ î˜î‘î‡îˆî• î—î‹îˆ î€°î€¸î€³î€¦ îŒî‘
î„î‘ î˜î‘î–î˜î“îˆî•î™îŒî–îˆî‡ î„î‡îîŒî‘îŒî–î—î•î„î—îŒî’î‘ îŒî– î‘î’î— î•îˆî”î˜îŒî•îˆî‡ î—î’ î‚¿îîˆ î„î‘
îŒî‘î™îˆî‘î—î’î•îœ î’î• î„î‘î‘î˜î„î î„î†î†î’î˜î‘î—î– îšîŒî—î‹ î—î‹îˆ î€¦î’î˜î•î—î€‘ î€³îˆî•î–î’î‘î– îŒî‘î—îˆî•îˆî–î—îˆî‡
îŒî‘ î—î‹îˆ îˆî–î—î„î—îˆ î„î•îˆ îˆî‘î—îŒî—îîˆî‡ î—î’ î‘î’î—îŒî†îˆ î•îˆîŠî„î•î‡îŒî‘îŠ î—î‹îˆ î„î‡îîŒî‘îŒî–î—î•î„î—îŒî’î‘
î‡îŒî•îˆî†î—îîœ î‰î•î’î î—î‹îˆ î€³îˆî•î–î’î‘î„î î€µîˆî“î•îˆî–îˆî‘î—î„î—îŒî™îˆ î„î‘î‡ îî„îœ î“îˆî—îŒî—îŒî’î‘
î—î‹îˆ î€¦î’î˜î•î— îŒî‘ î„î‘îœ îî„î—î—îˆî• î•îˆîî„î—îŒî‘îŠ î—î’ î—î‹îˆ îˆî–î—î„î—îˆî€ îŒî‘î†îî˜î‡îŒî‘îŠ î—î‹îˆ
î‡îŒî–î—î•îŒî…î˜î—îŒî’î‘ î’î‰ î„î–î–îˆî—î– î„î‘î‡ îˆî›î“îˆî‘î–îˆî– î’î‰ î„î‡îîŒî‘îŒî–î—î•î„î—îŒî’î‘î€‘
î€ºî€¬î€·î€±î€¨î€¶î€¶î€ î€«î’î‘î€‘ î€¥î•îŒî„î‘ î€­î€‘ î€§î˜î‘î‘î€ î€©îŒî•î–î— î€­î˜î–î—îŒî†îˆ î’î‰ î—î‹îŒî– î€¦î’î˜î•î—î€‘
î€§î„î—îˆî€ î€°î„î•î†î‹ î€“î€–î€ î€•î€“î€•î€–
î€©î€¨î€¯î€¬î€» î€§î€‘ î€¤î€µî€µî€²î€¼î€²
î€µî€¨î€ªî€¬î€¶î€·î€¨î€µ î€²î€© î€³î€µî€²î€¥î€¤î€·î€¨
î€°î„î•î†î‹ î€”î€“î€ î€•î€“î€•î€–
THE REVERE ADVOCATE â€“ FRIDAY, MARCH 10, 2023
BEACON | FROM Page 14
state government and with cities
and towns to move us forward on
our housing goals.â€
---Gov. Maura Healey.
â€œHang onto your wallets. Gov.
Maura Healeyâ€™s budget will cost
you. A $55.5 billion dollar proposed
budget, which is 14 percent higher
than [ex-Gov. Charlie Bakerâ€™s] budget
proposed last year. If Question 1
didnâ€™t scare away the taxpayers, a 14
percent increase to state spending
certainly will. This budget doesnâ€™t
include broad based tax cuts and
tax eliminations that Massachusetts
desperately needs to compete
with states like New Hampshire and
Florida. Instead, it explodes state
spending, which seems to be rife
with abuse by adding generously
to payroll expenses, new bureaucracies
and giveaways.â€
---Paul Craney, a spokesman for
the Massachusetts Fiscal Alliance.
â€œWe thank the Healey-Driscoll administration
for a â€¦ budget that
makes signifi cant and important investments
in Jewish communal priorities.
Todayâ€™s budget provides $1.5
million in vital funding for nonprofit
security grants, $1.5 million in the
Genocide Education Trust Fund and
builds towards greater economic
security.â€
---From a press release from the
Jewish Community Relations Council
of Greater Boston.
â€œWhile the governorâ€™s budget
proposes several meaningful new
initiatives, it doesnâ€™t come close to
making the investments necessary
to address our workforce challenges,
tackle our broken childcare system,
end the housing aff ordability
crisis or fi x the MBTA and build
a 21st century statewide transportation
system. Instead, a massive
permanent tax cut for the wealthy
would most likely lead to catastrophic
budget cuts the next time
we hit a recession.â€
---Andrew Farnitano, spokesman
for Raise Up MA Coalition that
spearheaded the successful November
2022 ballot question requiring
taxpayers who earn more than
- LEGAL NOTICE -
î€¦î€²î€°î€°î€²î€±î€ºî€¨î€¤î€¯î€·î€« î€²î€© î€°î€¤î€¶î€¶î€¤î€¦î€«î€¸î€¶î€¨î€·î€·î€¶
î€·î€«î€¨ î€·î€µî€¬î€¤î€¯ î€¦î€²î€¸î€µî€·
î€³î€µî€²î€¥î€¤î€·î€¨ î€¤î€±î€§ î€©î€¤î€°î€¬î€¯î€¼ î€¦î€²î€¸î€µî€·
î€¶î˜îµµî’îîŽ î€³î•î’î…î„î—îˆ î„î‘î‡ î€©î„îîŒîîœ î€¦î’î˜î•î—
î€•î€— î€±îˆîš î€¦î‹î„î•î‡î’î‘ î€¶î—î•îˆîˆî—
î€¥î’î–î—î’î‘î€ î€°î€¤ î€“î€•î€”î€”î€—
î€‹î€™î€”î€šî€Œ î€šî€›î€›î€î€›î€–î€“î€“
î€§î’î†îŽîˆî— î€±î’î€‘ î€¶î€¸î€•î€–î€³î€“î€“î€”î€”î€¨î€¤
î€¨î–î—î„î—îˆ î’î‰î€ î€µî€²î€±î€¤î€¯î€§ î€³î€¬î€µî€¨î€·î€·î€¬
î€¤îî–î’ îŽî‘î’îšî‘ î„î–î€ î€µî€²î€±î€±î€¬î€¨ î€³î€¬î€µî€¨î€·î€·î€¬
Dî„î—îˆ î’î‰ î€§îˆî„î—î‹î€ î€”î€“î€’î€•î€šî€’î€•î€“î€•î€•
î€¦î€¬î€·î€¤î€·î€¬î€²î€± î€²î€± î€³î€¨î€·î€¬î€·î€¬î€²î€± î€©î€²î€µ
î€©î€²î€µî€°î€¤î€¯ î€¤î€§î€­î€¸î€§î€¬î€¦î€¤î€·î€¬î€²î€±
To all interested persons:
î€¤ î€³îˆî—îŒî—îŒî’î‘ î‰î’î• î€¶î€’î€¤ î€ î€©î’î•îî„î î€³î•î’î…î„î—îˆ î’î‰ î€ºîŒîî îšîŒî—î‹ î€¤î“î“î’îŒî‘î—îîˆî‘î—
î’î‰ î€³îˆî•î–î’î‘î„î î€µîˆî“î•îˆî–îˆî‘î—î„î—îŒî™îˆ î‹î„î– î…îˆîˆî‘ î‚¿îîˆî‡ î…îœ î€­î’î‹î‘ î€©î€‘ î€³îŒî•îˆî—î—îŒ of
î€±îˆîšî…î˜î•îœî“î’î•î—î€ î€°î€¤ requesting that the Court enter a formal Decree
and Order and for such other relief as requested in the Petition. The
Petitioner requests that: î€­î’î‹î‘ î€©î€‘ î€³îŒî•îˆî—î—îŒ of î€±îˆîšî…î˜î•îœî“î’î•î—î€ î€°î€¤
be appointed as Personal Representative(s) of said estate to serve
î€ºîŒî—î‹î’î˜î— î€¶î˜î•îˆî—îœ on the bond in
î˜î‘î–î˜î“îˆî•î™îŒî–îˆî‡ î„î‡îîŒî‘îŒî–î—î•î„î—îŒî’î‘î€‘
î€¬î€°î€³î€²î€µî€·î€¤î€±î€· î€±î€²î€·î€¬î€¦î€¨
î€¼î’î˜ î‹î„î™îˆ î—î‹îˆ î•îŒîŠî‹î— î—î’ î’î…î—î„îŒî‘ î„ î†î’î“îœ î’î‰ î—î‹îˆ î€³îˆî—îŒî—îŒî’î‘ î‰î•î’î î—î‹îˆ
î€³îˆî—îŒî—îŒî’î‘îˆî• î’î• î„î— î—î‹îˆ î€¦î’î˜î•î—î€‘ î€¼î’î˜ î‹î„î™îˆ î„ î•îŒîŠî‹î— î—î’ î’î…îîˆî†î— î—î’
î—î‹îŒî– î“î•î’î†îˆîˆî‡îŒî‘îŠî€‘ î€·î’ î‡î’ î–î’î€ îœî’î˜ î’î• îœî’î˜î• î„î—î—î’î•î‘îˆîœ îî˜î–î— î‚¿îîˆ î„
îšî•îŒî—î—îˆî‘ î„î“î“îˆî„î•î„î‘î†îˆ î„î‘î‡ î’î…îîˆî†î—îŒî’î‘ î„î— î—î‹îŒî– î€¦î’î˜î•î— î…îˆî‰î’î•îˆî€
î€”î€“î€î€“î€“ î„î€‘îî€‘ î’î‘ î—î‹îˆ î•îˆî—î˜î•î‘ î‡î„îœ î’î‰ î€“î€—î€’î€”î€šî€’î€•î€“î€•î€–î€‘
î€·î‹îŒî– îŒî– î€±î€²î€· î„ î‹îˆî„î•îŒî‘îŠ î‡î„î—îˆî€ î…î˜î— î„ î‡îˆî„î‡îîŒî‘îˆ î…îœ îšî‹îŒî†î‹ îœî’î˜ îî˜î–î—
î‚¿îîˆ î„ îšî•îŒî—î—îˆî‘ î„î“î“îˆî„î•î„î‘î†îˆ î„î‘î‡ î’î…îîˆî†î—îŒî’î‘ îŒî‰ îœî’î˜ î’î…îîˆî†î— î—î’
î—î‹îŒî– î“î•î’î†îˆîˆî‡îŒî‘îŠî€‘ î€¬î‰ îœî’î˜ î‰î„îŒî î—î’ î‚¿îîˆ î„ î—îŒîîˆîîœ îšî•îŒî—î—îˆî‘ î„î“î“îˆî„î•î„î‘î†îˆ
î„î‘î‡ î’î…îîˆî†î—îŒî’î‘ î‰î’îîî’îšîˆî‡ î…îœ î„î‘ î„îµ¶î‡î„î™îŒî— î’î‰ î’î…îîˆî†î—îŒî’î‘î–
îšîŒî—î‹îŒî‘ î—î‹îŒî•î—îœ î€‹î€–î€“î€Œ î‡î„îœî– î’î‰ î—î‹îˆ î•îˆî—î˜î•î‘ î‡î„îœî€ î„î†î—îŒî’î‘ îî„îœ î…îˆ î—î„îŽîˆî‘
îšîŒî—î‹î’î˜î— î‰î˜î•î—î‹îˆî• î‘î’î—îŒî†îˆ î—î’ îœî’î˜î€‘
î€¸î€±î€¶î€¸î€³î€¨î€µî€¹î€¬î€¶î€¨î€§ î€¤î€§î€°î€¬î€±î€¬î€¶î€·î€µî€¤î€·î€¬î€²î€± î€¸î€±î€§î€¨î€µ î€·î€«î€¨
î€°î€¤î€¶î€¶î€¤î€¦î€«î€¸î€¶î€¨î€·î€·î€¶ î€¸î€±î€¬î€©î€²î€µî€° î€³î€µî€²î€¥î€¤î€·î€¨ î€¦î€²î€§î€¨ î€‹î€°î€¸î€³î€¦î€Œ
î€¤ î€³îˆî•î–î’î‘î„î î€µîˆî“î•îˆî–îˆî‘î—î„î—îŒî™îˆ î„î“î“î’îŒî‘î—îˆî‡ î˜î‘î‡îˆî• î—î‹îˆ î€°î€¸î€³î€¦ îŒî‘
î„î‘ î˜î‘î–î˜î“îˆî•î™îŒî–îˆî‡ î„î‡îîŒî‘îŒî–î—î•î„î—îŒî’î‘ îŒî– î‘î’î— î•îˆî”î˜îŒî•îˆî‡ î—î’ î‚¿îîˆ î„î‘
îŒî‘î™îˆî‘î—î’î•îœ î’î• î„î‘î‘î˜î„î î„î†î†î’î˜î‘î—î– îšîŒî—î‹ î—î‹îˆ î€¦î’î˜î•î—î€‘ î€³îˆî•î–î’î‘î– îŒî‘î—îˆî•îˆî–î—îˆî‡
îŒî‘ î—î‹îˆ îˆî–î—î„î—îˆ î„î•îˆ îˆî‘î—îŒî—îîˆî‡ î—î’ î‘î’î—îŒî†îˆ î•îˆîŠî„î•î‡îŒî‘îŠ î—î‹îˆ î„î‡îîŒî‘îŒî–î—î•î„î—îŒî’î‘
î‡îŒî•îˆî†î—îîœ î‰î•î’î î—î‹îˆ î€³îˆî•î–î’î‘î„î î€µîˆî“î•îˆî–îˆî‘î—î„î—îŒî™îˆ î„î‘î‡ îî„îœ î“îˆî—îŒî—îŒî’î‘
î—î‹îˆ î€¦î’î˜î•î— îŒî‘ î„î‘îœ îî„î—î—îˆî• î•îˆîî„î—îŒî‘îŠ î—î’ î—î‹îˆ îˆî–î—î„î—îˆî€ îŒî‘î†îî˜î‡îŒî‘îŠ î—î‹îˆ
î‡îŒî–î—î•îŒî…î˜î—îŒî’î‘ î’î‰ î„î–î–îˆî—î– î„î‘î‡ îˆî›î“îˆî‘î–îˆî– î’î‰ î„î‡îîŒî‘îŒî–î—î•î„î—îŒî’î‘î€‘
î€ºî€¬î€·î€±î€¨î€¶î€¶î€ î€«î’î‘î€‘ î€¥î•îŒî„î‘ î€­î€‘ î€§î˜î‘î‘î€ î€©îŒî•î–î— î€­î˜î–î—îŒî†îˆ î’î‰ î—î‹îŒî– î€¦î’î˜î•î—î€‘
î€§î„î—îˆî€ î€°î„î•î†î‹ î€“î€™î€ î€•î€“î€•î€–
î€©î€¨î€¯î€¬î€» î€§î€‘ î€¤î€µî€µî€²î€¼î€²
î€µî€¨î€ªî€¬î€¶î€·î€¨î€µ î€²î€© î€³î€µî€²î€¥î€¤î€·î€¨
î€°î„î•î†î‹ î€”î€“î€ î€•î€“î€•î€–
$1 million annually to pay an additional
4 percent income tax, in addition
to the current fl at 5 percent
one, on their earnings of more than
$1 million annually.
â€œGov. Healeyâ€™s â€¦ budget proposal
includes several positive elements
that begin to address the
new competitive challenges Massachusetts
employers are facing, but
rehabilitating Massachusettsâ€™ declining
business climate will require
far more signifi cant steps.â€
--- Chris Anderson, President of
the Massachusetts High Technology
Council.
â€œThe fi ling of Gov. Healeyâ€™s fi rst
budget proposal comes at a critical
time for the commonwealth. With
pandemic-era federal support ending
for many programs, it is imperative
that we set clear priorities to
ensure that state spending is maintained
at sustainable levels. I look
forward to reading through the
governorâ€™s budget in more detail
and following the upcoming Ways
and Means budget hearings to get
a better understanding of what her
proposal entails.â€
---GOP House Minority Leader
Rep. Brad Jones (R-North Reading).
HOW LONG WAS LAST WEEKâ€™S
SESSION? Beacon Hill Roll Call tracks
the length of time that the House
and Senate were in session each
week. Many legislators say that legislative
sessions are only one aspect
of the Legislatureâ€™s job and that a
lot of important work is done outside
of the House and Senate chambers.
They note that their jobs also
involve committee work, research,
constituent work and other matters
that are important to their districts.
Critics say that the Legislature does
not meet regularly or long enough
to debate and vote in public view
on the thousands of pieces of legislation
that have been fi led. They
note that the infrequency and brief
length of sessions are misguided
and lead to irresponsible late-night
sessions and a mad rush to act on
dozens of bills in the days immediately
preceding the end of an annual
session.
During the week of February
27-March 3, the House met for a total
of fi ve hours and four minutes
while the Senate met for a total of
four minutes.
Mon. Feb. 27 House 11:03 a.m. to
11:13 a.m.
Senate 11:36 a.m. to 11:37 a.m.
Tues. Feb. 28 No House session
No Senate session
Wed. March 1 House 11:01 a.m.
to 3:51 p.m.
No Senate session
Thurs. March 2 House 11:01 a.m.
to 11:05 a.m.
Senate 11:04 a.m. to 11:07 a.m.
Fri. March 3 No House session
No Senate session
Bob Katzen welcomes feedback
at bob@beaconhillrollcall.
com Bob founded Beacon Hill
Roll Call in 1975 and was inducted
into the New England Newspaper
and Press Association
(NENPA) Hall of Fame in 2019
×‰	Ú 7cassandra://o6ngAP1IZB1TdMMiA347HwXd7v_Ry86BwvVUMACMCp0Í'jÍ`Ì°Í ×d
Ri&©èMí81Î×‰EÚÅTHE REVERE ADVOCATE â€“ FRIDAY, MARCH 10, 2023
Page 17
î€¦îîˆî„î‘î€î€²î˜î—î–î€„
î€ºîˆ î—î„îŽîˆ î„î‘î‡ î‡îŒî–î“î’î–îˆ
î‰î•î’î î†îˆîîî„î•î–î€ î„î—î—îŒî†î–î€
îŠî„î•î„îŠîˆî–î€ îœî„î•î‡î–î€ îˆî—î†î€‘
î€ºîˆ î„îî–î’ î‡î’ î‡îˆîî’îîŒî—îŒî’î‘î€‘
î€¥îˆî–î— î€³î•îŒî†îˆî– î€¦î„îîî€
î€šî€›î€”î€î€˜î€œî€–î€î€˜î€–î€“î€›
î€šî€›î€”î€î€–î€•î€”î€î€•î€—î€œî€œ
WASTE REMOVAL &
BUILDING MAINTENANCE
â€¢ Landscaping, Lawn Care, Mulching
â€¢ Yard Waste & Rubbish Removal
â€¢ Interior & Exterior Demolition (Old
Decks, Fences, Pools, Sheds, etc.)
â€¢ Appliance and Metal Pick-up
â€¢ Construction and Estate Cleanouts
â€¢ Pick-up Truck Load of Trash
starting at $169
â€¢ Carpentry
LICENSED & INSURED
Call for FREE ESTIMATES!
î€²î‰¤î†îˆî€ î€‹î€šî€›î€”î€Œ î€•î€–î€–î€î€•î€•î€—î€—
~ Help Wanted ~
VENDING MACHINE MOVER
$500.00 Signing Bonus for All New Hires
Driver with clean driving record for the greater Boston
area to move and service vending equipment. Must
have valid driverâ€™s license. Any Electronics experience is
helpful but not necessary. Our company was established
îŒî‘ î€”î€œî€™î€”î€‘ î€ºîˆ î’ï‚‡îˆî• î†î’îî“îˆî—îŒî—îŒî™îˆ îšî„îŠîˆî–î€ î–î„îî„î•îœ î†î’îîîˆî‘î–î•î„î—îˆ
îšîŒî—î‹ îî’î… îˆî›î“îˆî•îŒîˆî‘î†îˆî€‘ î€¤ î€—î€“î€”îŽ î„î‘î‡ î“î•î’î‚¿î—î€î–î‹î„î•îŒî‘îŠ î“îî„î‘î€
î‹îˆî„îî—î‹ î€‰ î‡îˆî‘î—î„î î…îˆî‘îˆî‚¿î—î–î€ î“î„îŒî‡ î‹î’îîŒî‡î„îœî– î„î‘î‡ î“î„îŒî‡ î™î„î†î—îŒî’î‘î–
î„î‘î‡ îî„î‘îœ î’î—î‹îˆî• î…îˆî‘îˆî‚¿î—î–î€‘ î€©î˜îî î—îŒîîˆî€ î“îî˜î– î€²î€· î„î™î„îŒîî„î…îîˆî€‘
Random drug testing and background checks are
î“îˆî•î‰î’î•îîˆî‡î€‘ î€°î˜î–î— î…îˆ î„î…îîˆ î—î’ î–î“îˆî„îŽ î€¨î‘îŠîîŒî–î‹ îƒ€î˜îˆî‘î—îîœî€‘ î€¤î“î“îîœ
îŒî‘ î“îˆî•î–î’î‘ î€°î’î‘î‡î„îœ î—î‹î•î˜ î€©î•îŒî‡î„îœî€ î€œî„î î—î’ î€—î“î î€£ î€›î€– î€¥î•î’î„î‡îšî„îœî€
î€°î„îî‡îˆî‘î€ î€°î€¤ î‚± î€²î• î–îˆî‘î‡ îœî’î˜î• î•îˆî–î˜îîˆ î—î’
îî–î‹îˆîˆî‹î„î‘î€£î„î†î—îŒî’î‘îî„î†îŽî–î’î‘î˜î–î„î€‘î†î’î. No phone calls please.
î€­î€‘î€© î€‰ î€¶î’î‘ î€¦î’î‘î—î•î„î†î—îŒî‘îŠ
î€¶î‘î’îš î€³îî’îšîŒî‘îŠ
î€±î’ î€­î’î… î—î’î’ î–îî„îîî€„ î€©î•îˆîˆ î€¨î–î—îŒîî„î—îˆî–î€„
î€¦î’îîîˆî•î†îŒî„î î€‰ î€µîˆî–îŒî‡îˆî‘î—îŒî„î
î€šî€›î€”î€î€™î€˜î€™î€î€•î€“î€šî€›
î€ î€³î•î’î“îˆî•î—îœ îî„î‘î„îŠîˆîîˆî‘î— î€‰ îî„îŒî‘î—îˆî‘î„î‘î†îˆ
î€¶î‹î’î™îˆîîŒî‘îŠ î€‰ î•îˆîî’î™î„î
î€¯î„î‘î‡î–î†î„î“îŒî‘îŠî€ î€¨îîˆî†î—î•îŒî†î„îî€ î€³îî˜îî…îŒî‘îŠî€ î€³î„îŒî‘î—îŒî‘îŠî€ î€µî’î’îƒ€î‘îŠî€ î€¦î„î•î“îˆî‘î—î•îœî€ î€©î•î„îîŒî‘îŠî€
î€§îˆî†îŽî–î€ î€©îˆî‘î†îŒî‘îŠî€ î€°î„î–î’î‘î•îœî€ î€§îˆîî’îîŒî—îŒî’î‘î€ î€ªî˜î—î€î’î˜î—î–î€ î€­î˜î‘îŽ î€µîˆîî’î™î„î î€‰ î€§îŒî–î“îˆî•î–î„îî€
î€¦îîˆî„î‘ î€¸î“î–î€ î€¼î„î•î‡î–î€ î€ªî„î•î„îŠîˆî–î€ î€¤î—î—îŒî†î– î€‰ î€¥î„î–îˆîîˆî‘î—î–î€‘ î€·î•î˜î†îŽ î‰î’î• î€«îŒî•îˆî€ î€¥î’î…î†î„î— î€¶îˆî•î™îŒî†îˆî–î€‘
RONâ€™S OIL
Call
For
PRICE
21 FIRST STREET
MELROSE, MA 02176
NEW
CUSTOMERâ€™S
WELCOME
ACCEPTING VISA, MASTERCARD & DISCOVER
(781) 397-1930 OR (781) 662-8884
100 GALLON MINIMUM
AAA Service â€¢ Lockouts
Trespass Towing â€¢ Roadside Service
Junk Car Removal
617-387-6877
26 Garvey St., Everett
MDPU 28003 ICCMC 251976
We follow Social Distancing Guidelines!
î€¶î€³î€¤î€§î€¤î€©î€²î€µî€¤
î€¤î€¸î€·î€² î€³î€¤î€µî€·î€¶
î€­î€¸î€±î€® î€¦î€¤î€µî€¶
î€ºî€¤î€±î€·î€¨î€§
ADVOCATE
Call now!
781-286-8500
advertise on the web at
www.advocatenews.net
î€¶î€¤î€°î€¨ î€§î€¤î€¼ î€³î€¬î€¦î€® î€¸î€³
î€šî€›î€”î€î€–î€•î€—î€î€”î€œî€•î€œ
î€´î˜î„îîŒî—îœ î€¸î–îˆî‡ î€·îŒî•îˆî–
î€°î’î˜î‘î—îˆî‡ î€‰ î€¬î‘î–î—î„îîîˆî‡
î€¸î–îˆî‡ î€¤î˜î—î’ î€³î„î•î—î– î€‰ î€¥î„î—î—îˆî•îŒîˆî–
î€©î„îîŒîîœ î’îšî‘îˆî‡ î€‰ î’î“îˆî•î„î—îˆî‡ î–îŒî‘î†îˆ î€”î€œî€—î€™
î€©î•î„î‘îŽ î€¥îˆî•î„î•î‡îŒî‘î’
î€°î€¤ î€¯îŒî†îˆî‘î–îˆ î€–î€”î€›î€”î€”
î‚‡ î€•î€— î€ î€«î’î˜î• î€¶îˆî•î™îŒî†îˆ
î‚‡ î€¨îîˆî•îŠîˆî‘î†îœ î€µîˆî“î„îŒî•î–
î€¥î€¨î€µî€¤î€µî€§î€¬î€±î€²
î€³îî˜îî…îŒî‘îŠ î€‰ î€«îˆî„î—îŒî‘îŠ
î€µîˆî–îŒî‡îˆî‘î—îŒî„î î€‰ î€¦î’îîîˆî•î†îŒî„î î€¶îˆî•î™îŒî†îˆ
î€ªî„î– î€©îŒî—î—îŒî‘îŠ î‚‡ î€§î•î„îŒî‘ î€¶îˆî•î™îŒî†îˆ
î€™î€”î€šî€‘î€™î€œî€œî€‘î€œî€–î€›î€–
î€¶îˆî‘îŒî’î• î€¦îŒî—îŒîîˆî‘ î€§îŒî–î†î’î˜î‘î—
Classifieds
î€‡
î€‡
î€‡
î€‡
×‰	Ú 7cassandra://twHgIJZwoIasXjbH4ip_6jB57iVItzMUpHrQcBLNt6AÍ4nÍ`Ì°Í ×d
Ri&©èMí81Ï×d
Ri&©èMí81ÎÍ
PÍ€×‘C’×˜š   Í(Í€u×‰œ”×‰	Ú 7cassandra://hRKieJqvXb92g-VCgmAzE0e-nT20nAYrY_di6U0xRaEÎ GêÍ`ÍœÍ)×‰	Ú 7cassandra://fQXBlCEdt01-6grM_YSzR-0zrUcvROehhNbhrvQpKosÍ™ÔÍ`ÍJÍà×‰	Ú 7cassandra://RBv4-_RYDySSj9PAJOxXQ6OcLwOOsu_F2g2K0vA83QwÍ-CÍ`Ì°Í ×‰	Ú 7cassandra://dCzLwvDuu9NV8V7pJ3SVKocqYdaLnes9LfWPePrRNPEÎ ÍbÐÍ ÍÅÍñ×d
Rp&©èMí82×˜š Í( Í(Í€u×‰œ”×‰	Ú 7cassandra://UdaaDU10buyZjK_Z1XJaivU8epSbhOWZ_20VUy-kuxwÎ ¸Í`ÍœÍ)×‰	Ú 7cassandra://fHuidi039WGnZwyqt-J4XjZlJ3MVKLPNzo6Tjr4IKuQÍñÍ`ÍJÍà×‰	Ú 7cassandra://PjVtX_Gpw0UGjJQbe6HhlfV7KWwlQBBgpvCY6Yq4cAIÍ*ÁÍ`Ì°Í ×‰	Ú 7cassandra://AXg3qYFr8MnuHc_gvLYnzQ208NZAUt5Twf9Cm3Ec6rMÎ ìÚÎ g\Í ÍÅÍñ×d
Rt&©èMí82”× ×d
Rt&©èMí82 ÍqÍ*Ì«9×H¼mailto:ListwithLea@yahoo.com××Ðˆ× ×d
Rt&©èMí82 ÍuÍqÌ÷9×Hºhttp://mangorealtyteam.com××Ðˆ× ×d
Rt&©èMí82 ÍÅÍ¤ÍÖ9×HÚ $http://Facebook.com/Advocate.news.ma××Ðˆ× ×d
Rt&©èMí82 Í	5Ì¨ÌÍ9×H½http://www.thewarrengroup.com××Ðˆ×‰EÚ•Page 18
THE REVERE ADVOCATE â€“ FRIDAY, MARCH 10, 2023
~ Home of the Week ~
1. March 10 is Mario Day; why
was that date chosen?
2. What was Dr. Seussâ€™s fi rst childrenâ€™s
book?
3. What record label did Berry
Gordy found?
4. On March 11, 1990, what USSR
republic was the fi rst to declare
independence?
5. What is the smallest dog breed
and named after the largest state
in Mexico?
6. What animal has the longest
lifespan: giant tortoise, Greenland
shark or immortal jellyfi sh?
7. What U.S. president would not
use the telephone while in offi ce
and once said, â€œYou canâ€™t know
too much, but you can say too
muchâ€?
8. On March 12, 1901, Andrew
Carnegie off ered New York $5.2
million to build 65 of what type
of building?
9. In 1964 what red-haired English
singer-songwriter/actor appeared
on BBC as founder of â€œThe
Society for The Prevention of Cruelty
to Long-Haired Menâ€?
10. On March 13, 2020, Jeff Reitz
of California won a Guinness
World Record for most consecuAnswers
UNDER
AGREEMENT!
tive visits (2,995) to what amusement
park?
11. How are lemons, oranges and
tomatoes similar
12. In Gainesville â€“ nicknamed
â€œPoultry Capital of the Worldâ€ â€“
in what state is it only legal to eat
fried chicken with your fi ngers?
13. On March 14, 1885, in London,
what Gilbert & Sullivan comic
opera set in Japan was first
publicly performed?
14. Where is the tallest windmill
in the world: China, Holland
or USA?
15. When in the month are the
â€œidesâ€?
16. On March 15, 1820, what state
that was originally part of another
state was formed?
17. How are coff ee cherry and
coff ee bean diff erent?
18. What is the opposite of a stalagmite?
19.
What does â€œknee high by the
Fourth of Julyâ€ mean?
20. On March 16, 1995, what U.S.
state became the last to formally
ratify the 13th Amendment
to the Constitution (abolishing
slavery)?
SAUGUS....Nice Colonial offers spacious
kitchen with maple cabinets, granite counters,
î’î‰îƒ€î†îˆ î„î•îˆî„î€ îîŒî™îŒî‘îŠ î•î’î’î îšîŒî—î‹ îšî’î’î‡ îƒî’î’î•îŒî‘îŠ î„î‘î‡
î‰î˜îî î…î„î—î‹ î’î‘ îƒ€î•î–î— îƒî’î’î•î€ î—îšî’ î–î“î„î†îŒî’î˜î– î…îˆî‡î•î’î’îî–
î„î‘î‡ î‰î˜îî î…î„î—î‹ î’î‘ î–îˆî†î’î‘î‡ îîˆî™îˆîî€ îî˜î‡î•î’î’îî€ îŠî•îˆî„î—
î–îŒî‡îˆ î‡îˆî†îŽî€ î‰î„î‘î—î„î–î—îŒî† îšî•î„î“î€î„î•î’î˜î‘î‡î€ îˆî‘î†îî’î–îˆî‡
î“î’î•î†î‹î€ î–î—î’î•î„îŠîˆ î–î‹îˆî‡ îšîŒî—î‹ îˆîîˆî†î—î•îŒî†îŒî—îœî€ î˜î“î‡î„î—îˆî‡
î‹îˆî„î—îŒî‘îŠ î–îœî–î—îˆîî€ î‡î•îŒî™îˆîšî„îœ î„î‘î‡ îŽîŒî—î†î‹îˆî‘ î€‹î€”î€“
îœîˆî„î•î– î’îî‡î€Œî€ îî’î™îˆîîœ îœî„î•î‡î€ î–î“îîŒî— î•î„îŒî î‰îˆî‘î†îŒî‘îŠî€ î€— î†î„î•
î‡î•îŒî™îˆîšî„îœî€ î†îî’î–îˆ î—î’ î€¶î„î˜îŠî˜î– î€¦îˆî‘î—îˆî•î€‘
î€²î‰£îˆî•îˆî‡ î„î— î€‡î€—î€™î€œî€î€œî€“î€“
î€–î€–î€˜ î€¦îˆî‘î—î•î„î î€¶î—î•îˆîˆî—î€
î€¶î„î˜îŠî˜î–î€ î€°î€¤ î€“î€”î€œî€“î€™
î€‹î€šî€›î€”î€Œ î€•î€–î€–î€î€šî€–î€“î€“
View the interior
of this home
right on your
smartphone.
î€¹îŒîˆîš î„îî î’î˜î• îîŒî–î—îŒî‘îŠî– î„î—î€ î€¦î„î•î“îˆî‘îŒî—î’î€µîˆî„îî€¨î–î—î„î—îˆî€‘î†î’î
COMMERCIAL & RESIDENTIAL PROPERTY SALES & RENTALS
Daylight savings time begins!
Spring forward!
Change your
clocks, check your
smoke detectors!
Sandy Juliano
Broker/President
Follow Us On:
New Listing by
Sandy Single
family,
81 Florence St.,
Everett
$649,900
New Listing by
Norma
Everett 2 family,
$729,900.
Call Norma for
details!
617-590-9143
Everett Rental - 3 bedrooms - $2950/month
Call Sandy for details at: 617-448-0854
Open Daily From 10:00 A.M. - 5:00 P.M.
433 Broadway, Suite B, Everett, MA 02149
www.jrs-properties.com
Denise Matarazzo
617-953-3023
617-294-1041
Norma Capuano Parziale
617-590-9143
Rosemarie Ciampi
617-957-9222
Joe DiNuzzo
617-680-7610
1. Because when
it is written as
Mar10 it looks
like his name.
2. â€œAnd to Think
That I Saw It on
Mulberry Streetâ€
3. Motown
4. Lithuania
5. Chihuahua
6. Immortal jellyfi
sh (It can reverse
its life cycle.)
7.
Calvin
Coolidge
8. Libraries
9. David Bowie
10. Disneyland
11. They are berries.
12.
Georgia
13. â€œThe Mikadoâ€
14. Holland (the
De Noord)
15. The middle
16. Maine (originally
part of
Massachusetts)
17. The former
is the fruit that
contains two
seeds, or beans.
18. A stalactite
19. It is an expression
used to
describe a good
corn crop.
20. Mississippi
×‰	Ú 7cassandra://RBv4-_RYDySSj9PAJOxXQ6OcLwOOsu_F2g2K0vA83QwÍ-CÍ`Ì°Í ×d
Ri&©èMí81Ð×‰EÚ˜THE REVERE ADVOCATE â€“ FRIDAY, MARCH 10, 2023
Page 19
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
BUYER1
Thomas, Joslin
BASKETBALL | FROM Page 11
coach Don Nally had a good year
in the GBL, and it also helped that
he had two senior all-stars leading
the way. They are center Jonald
Joseph and guard Justin Bell. The
Golden Tornadoes through the efforts
of these two players ended
up with a 12-8 regular-season record.
They then lost a close game
to host Lowell, the 20th seed, in
the Division 1 preliminary round
game.
GBL all-star roundup
Hereâ€™s the 2022-23 GBL girls allstar
roster: senior guard Tyrese
Melo Garcia, senior center Joshua
St. Jean, senior forward Nelson
Obarisiagbon and sophoREAL
ESTATE TRANSACTIONS
SELLER1
BUYER2
Amc Properî†Ÿ es LLC
more guard Warren Keel of Lynn
English; senior guard Sam Orcutt,
sophomore guard Justin
Marino and senior guard Anthony
Teixeira-Kugler of Medford;
freshman guard Marvin Avery, Jr.
and junior guard Almina Gerado
of Lynn Classical; senior guard
Franco DiFusco and senior forward
Jared Antonelli of Somerville;
and junior guard Brauli
Quezada Timeo of Chelsea.
Lynn English won the league title,
and they also had the league
MVP. The aforementioned Keel is
already turning heads as a sophomore
star. Lynn Englishâ€™s Alvin
Abrue was the GBL Coach of the
Year. Lynn Classical secured the
sportsmanship award.
Evans Painting
No Hassle. No Fuss. Call Amy and Russ
Interior/Exterior
Amy Evans
Tel: 781-820-8189
Like us on Facebook advocate newspaper
Facebook.com/Advocate.news.ma
TheMangoMinute
mangorealtyteam.com
38 Main St. Saugus
(781) 558-1091
20 Railroad Ave. Rockport
(978)-999-5408
14 Norwood St, Everett
(781)-558-1091
Just Listed - Saugus
This nicely located,
spacious townhome
offers 2-3 bedrooms, 1.5
baths and attached
garage. Main level
features large picture
windows with plenty of
natural light, eat in
kitchen, half bath, and
exterior access. The
next level features two
nice sized bedrooms with large closets and
a full bath. Third level features heated loft
area with skylights and additional storage.
Could be used as 3rd bedroom, office, or fun
bonus room. In unit aundry, brand new
heating and cooling system, brand new
water heater. This 8 unit complex with
ample parking is Located just outside of
Saugus Center. Close proximity to the
Northern Strand Trail and Breakheart
Reservation, shopping, restaurants,
highways and bus routes. Offered at
$399,000
Listing agent Lea Doherty 617-594-9164
ListwithLea@yahoo.com
Mango Realty is excited to introduce buyers to new
luxury townhouses located in a beautiful North
Shore Community just minutes away from major
highways. Boasting 2100 square feet or more, each
unit features six large rooms, 3.5 bathrooms, granite
countertops, stainless steel appliances, generous
walk-in closets, 3 zone gas heat with central air, 200
amp service with recessed lighting throughout, deck
and third floor balcony, one gar garage and plenty
of parking. Two units will have elevators. Get in
early to help pick your colors and personalize your
townhouse and be ready for occupancy by the end
of May. Prices starting at $799,900. Schedule an
appointment now by calling 781-820-5690
Everett
Are your smoke and carbon monoxide detectors
compliant with current regulations? There can
be no question that smoke and carbon
monoxide detectors can save lives. You will not
be able to transfer your deed, even if the house
is to be remodeled or even demolished by the
new owner, unless the smoke/carbon detectors
are complaint with state and local regulations at
the time the deed is transferred. Regulations
vary from community to community but in
general there must be a combination
smoke/carbon detector on each floor. Some
communities require just a smoke detector only
within 10' of a bedroom, while others require
one in each bedroom. It is always best to consult
your local fire inspector to determine what the
requirements are for your community.We at
MANGOalways assist our clients in this
important aspect of a transaction, but it is wise
to make sure you are up to code regardless of
whether you are selling your home or not.
Townhouse Rental
Peabody
3 bedroom in Peabody $3600.00, washer & dryer
hookup and plenty of parking
Call Christine at 603-670-3353
Location! Would you like to own in Everett? This 4
family offers an inviting foyer on the first floor
apartment along with 3 bedrooms. Patio out
back, fenced in yard, driveway and more.
Convenient location to bus line, orange line,
shopping, restaurants and minutes from Encore
and Boston. Everett is booming! Are you ready to
buy?
Hurry will not last! $1,300,000
Rentals Available
Saugus, 6 rooms, 3 bedroom $2900.00, washer & dryer
hookup and plenty of parking.
Call Christine at 603-670-3353
Looking for Store front commercial property in Everett?
Call Sue now at 617-877-4553
Everett, 6 room 3 bedroom with washer & dryer hookup
$2500.00 Call Sue now at 617-877-4553
SELLER2
ADDRESS
30 Rand St
DATE PRICE
02.16.23 599900
Revere
UnderUnder
agreementagreement
×‰	Ú 7cassandra://PjVtX_Gpw0UGjJQbe6HhlfV7KWwlQBBgpvCY6Yq4cAIÍ*ÁÍ`Ì°Í ×d
Ri&©èMí81Ñ×d
Ri&©èMí81ÐÍ
PÍ€×‘C‘×˜š   Í(Í€u×‰œ”×‰	Ú 7cassandra://EXQEsYefAqCKjfMtaaAhQ43Hf1YGlRmhZNqY607UJnwÎ ZRÍ`ÍœÍ)×‰	Ú 7cassandra://WKA5SUxU-oBIgxD9UUb_53EII-hnYr736LKpsgXfbXoÍ™«Í`ÍJÍà×‰	Ú 7cassandra://7if08ZOizB7i-Dy2mehzsxup3_CrFoHHxFkb1hRIetgÍ/kÍ`Ì°Í ×‰	Ú 7cassandra://5rIBKnoahK6U5b7-U788aXPFGpRfasiyDhWUh3bGLSYÎ ßÍ¦´Í ÍÅÍñ×d
Ru&©èMí82×‰EÚ´Page 20
THE REVERE ADVOCATE â€“ FRIDAY, MARCH 10, 2023
î€­îŠî”î‚ î€´îŽî‚îîî˜îîî…
î€¯î€°î€³î€µî€© î€°î€§ î€£î€°î€´î€µî€°î€¯ î€Ž î€¸î†îî î†î”î•î‚îƒîîŠî”î‰î†î…î€ îŠîŽîŽî‚î„î–îî‚î•î†
î€±îŠîî‚î•î†î” î€´î•î–î…îŠî îîƒ²î†î“î” î•îî‘î€Žîî‡î€Žî•î‰î†î€ŽîîŠîî† î†î’î–îŠî‘îŽî†îî• î€šî€–î€‘î€Œî”î’
î‡î• îî‡ î‘î†î“î‡î†î„î•îîš îî‚îŠî… îî–î• î”î‘î‚î„î†î€ î„î‚î îƒî† î†î‚î”îŠîîš î”î–îŠî•î†î… î•î
îšîî–î“ î”î„î‰î†î…î–îî† î•î îŽî‚îŒî† î•î‰îŠî” î‚ î‘î†î“î‡î†î„î•
îŠîî—î†î”î•îŽî†îî•î€‚î€î€î€î€î€î€î€î€î€î€î€î€î€î€î€î€î€î€î€î€î€î€î€î€î€î€î€î€î€î€î€î€î€î€î€î€î€î€î€î€î€î€î€î€î€î€î€î€î€î€î€î€…î€–î€‘î€î€‘î€‘î€‘î€
î€´î€¢î€¶î€¨î€¶î€´ î€Ž î€– î“îîîŽ î€¤îîîîîŠî‚î îîƒ²î†î“î” î€“ î”î‘î‚î„îŠîî–î” îƒî†î…î“îîîŽî”î€ î€“
î‡î–îî îƒî‚î•î‰î”î€ î†î‚î•î€ŽîŠî îŒîŠî•î„î‰î†î î˜îŠî•î‰ îˆî“î‚îîŠî•î† î„îî–îî•î†î“î”î€ îîƒ³î„î†î€
î˜î“î‚î‘î€Žî‚î“îî–îî…î€ î†îî„îîî”î†î… î‘îî“î„î‰î€ î”î•îî“î‚îˆî† î”î‰î†î…î€ î–î‘î…î‚î•î†î…
î‰î†î‚î•î€ îîŠî„î† îšî‚î“î…î€ î„îîî”î† î•î î€´î‚î–îˆî–î” î€¤î†îî•î†î“î€î€î€î€î€î€î€î€ î€…î€•î€—î€šî€î€šî€‘î€‘î€
î€³î€¦î€·î€¦î€³î€¦î€î€´î€¢î€¶î€¨î€¶î€´ îîŠîî† î€Ž î€ªî€®î€±î€³î€¦î€´î€´î€ªî€·î€¦ î€˜ î“îîîŽ î€´î‘îîŠî• î€¦îî•î“îš
î€³î‚îî„î‰î€ îƒî†î‚î–î•îŠî‡î–î îˆî“î‚îîŠî•î† îŒîŠî•î€ îˆî“î†î‚î• îî‘î†î îƒ¸îîî“ î‘îî‚îî€
î„î–î”î•îîŽ î˜îîî…î˜îî“îŒî€ î€“ î‡î–îî îƒî‚î•î‰î”î€ îƒ¶îîŠî”î‰î†î… îîî˜î†î“ îî†î—î†îî€
î…î†î„îŒî€ î”î†î„î–î“îŠî•îš î”îšî”î•î†îŽî€ î„î†îî•î“î‚î î‚îŠî“î€ îŽî‚îîšî€ îŽî‚îîš î–î‘î…î‚î•î†î”î€
îî†î—î†î îîî• î˜î€î”î•îî“î‚îˆî† î”î‰î†î…î€ î€ºîî–î€ˆîî î‡î‚îî îŠî îîî—î†î€‚î€î€î€î€î€…î€–î€šî€šî€î€šî€‘î€‘î€
î€­îŠî”î‚ î‰î‚î” î•î‰î“îŠî—î†î… îŠî î•î‰î† î“î†î‚î î†î”î•î‚î•î† î‘î“îî‡î†î”î”îŠîî
î”îŠîî„î† î‰î†î“ îŠîî„î†î‘î•îŠîîî€ î€¦î‚î„î‰ îšî†î‚î“ î‰î†î“ î„îîŠî†îî• îƒî‚î”î†
îŠîî„î“î†î‚î”î†î” î‚îî… î”î‰î† îƒî†î„îîŽî†î” îŽîî“î† î‚îî… îŽîî“î†
î‘î“îî…î–î„î•îŠî—î†î€
î€¤î‚îî î€­îŠî”î‚ î‚î• î€—î€’î€˜î€Žî€“î€•î€‘î€Žî€“î€•î€•î€™
î‚îî… îƒ¶îî… îî–î• î˜î‰îš îƒî–îšî†î“î” î‚îî… î”î†îîî†î“î” î“î†îîš îî î€­îŠî”î‚ î•î îˆî†î•
î•î‰î†îŽ î•î‰î† î“î†î”î–îî•î” î•î‰î†îš î…î†î”î†î“î—î†î€‚
î€¦î€·î€¦î€³î€¦î€µî€µ î€Ž î€¥î†î”îŠî“î‚îƒîî† î€³î‚îî„î‰ îîƒ²î†î“îŠîîˆ î€–î€Œ î“îîîŽî”î€ î€“
îƒî†î…î“îîîŽî”î€ î€“ î‡î–îî îƒî‚î•î‰î”î€ î†î‚î•î€ŽîŠî îŒîŠî•î„î‰î†î îî‘î†î î•î î…îŠîîŠîîˆ
î“îîîŽ î˜îŠî•î‰ î”îîŠî…î†î“ î•î îƒî‚îî„îîîšî€ î‰î‚î“î…î˜îîî…î€ î„î†îî•î“î‚î î‚îŠî“î€
î”î†îŽîŠî€Žîƒ¶îîŠî”î‰î†î… îîî˜î†î“ îî†î—î†îî€ î€¸îîî…îî‚î˜î îî†îŠîˆî‰îƒîî“î‰îîî…
î€î€î€î€î€î€î€î€î€î€î€î€î€î€î€î€î€î€î€î€î€î€î€î€î€î€î€î€î€î€î€î€î€î€î€î€î€î€î€î€î€î€î€î€î€î€î€î€î€î€î€î€î€î€î€î€î€î€î€î€î€î€ î€…î€•î€–î€šî€î€šî€‘î€‘î€
FOR SALE
NEW CONSTRUCTION
FIVE NEW HOMES FROM
HAMMERTIME CONSTRUCTION.
GET IN SOON AND PICK YOUR LOT
AND YOUR HOME. SAUGUS
STARTING AT $895,000 CALL
ANTHONY FOR DETAILS
857-246-1305
LOOKING TO
BUY OR SELL
CALL
ANTHONY
COGLIANO
FOR RENT
FOR RENT - SINGLE FAMILY HOME
OFFERING LIVING, DINING, & SUN
ROOM, AND AN EAT-IN KITCHEN. 2
BEDROOMS AND AN OFFICE ON 2ND
FLOOR ALONG WITH FULL BATH.
WALK-UP ATTIC & BASEMENT FOR
STORAGE. LAUNDRY IN BASEMENT.
PLENTY OF PARKING. GOOD CREDIT &
REFERENCES. 3 MONTHS RENT TO
MOVE IN SAUGUS $3,500
RHONDA 781-706-0842
FOR SALE
FOR SALE-SPACIOUS, 2 BED, 2
BATH, DOUBLE SIDED FIREPLACE,
HISTORIC BROWNSTONE CONDO
IN WATERFRONT DISTRICT OF
CHELSEA WITH AMAZING CITY
AND WATER VIEWS!
CHELSEA $599,999
CALL DANIELLE 978-987-9535
FOR SALE
FOR SALE -DESIRABLE WARD 1
LOCATION! 13 ROOM CENTER ENTRANCE
COLONIAL, 5 BEDS, 3.5
BATHS. FRESHLY PAINTED EXTERIOR.
NEW ROOF. LARGE FENCED
YARD LYNN $899,999
CALL JUSTIN 978-815-2610
SOLD
CALL HIM FOR
ALL YOUR
REAL ESTATE
NEED
857-246-1305
WE ARE HIRING!
WE ARE LOOKING FOR
FULL - TIME AGENTS IN
OUR SAUGUS OFFICE.
OFFERING A SIGN ON
BONUS TO QUALIFIED
AGENTS! CALL KEITH
781-389-0791
FOR RENT
FOR RENT - 3 ROOM, 1 BED, 1
BATH, 2ND FLOOR UNIT, COIN
LAUNDRY IN BMNT, NO
SMOKING. STORAGE. 2 OFF
STREET PARKING
SAUGUS $2,000
CALL RHONDA 781-706-0842
MOBILE HOMES
FOR SALE- 3 ROOM, 1 BED, 1 BATH NICELY UPDATED HOME WITH NEW
PITCHED ROOF, ELECTRIC, HOT WATER AND MORE.
SAUGUS $119,900
FOR SALE-4 ROOMS, 2 BED, 1 BATH, NEW ROOF AND FURNACE.
DESIRABLE PARK. NEEDS SOME UPDATES. PEABODY $119,900
CALL ERIC 781-223-0289
FOR SALE
MOBILE HOME
FOR SALE-BRAND NEW 14 X
52 UNITS. ONLY 2 LEFT!
STAINLESS APPLIANCES AND
FULL SIZE LAUNDRY. 2BED 1
BATH. FINANCING AVAILABLE
WITH 10% DOWN
DANVERS $199,900
CALL ERIC 781-223-0289
UNDER
CONTRACT
SOLD
THINKING OF BUYING OR SELLING SOON? CONFUSED ABOUT THE CURRENT MARKET AND WHAT IS
GOING ON WITH INTEREST RATES AND INVENTORY? WE ARE HERE TO HELP! GIVE US A CALL TODAY!
×‰	Ú 7cassandra://7if08ZOizB7i-Dy2mehzsxup3_CrFoHHxFkb1hRIetgÍ/kÍ`Ì°Í ×d
Ri&©èMí81Ò×ˆE×d
Ri&©èMí81Ó×d
Ri&©èMí81ÒÍ
PÍ€,»Revere Advocate  03/10/2023»Revere Advocate  03/10/2023×d
RUàfrJÂý