- Revere Journal

Transcription

- Revere Journal
Black Cyan Magenta Yellow
FAMILY FRIGHT NIGHT
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REVERE JOURNAL
YOUR HOMETOWN NEWSPAPER SINCE 1881
HAUNTED HIGH SCHOOL
VOLUME 18, No. 77
WEDNESDAY
October 26, 2016
INDEX
Editorial
Police News
Sports
Classifieds
Wynn donated
$39K to keep slots
out of Revere hotel
4
11
13
21-23
By Seth Daniel
DEATHS
Antonette Martorano Chiampa
John Consolo
Kenneth Houghton
Rocco Ursino
Jane Wiseman
Obituaries Page 8
INDEPENDENT
NEWSPAPER GROUP
PHOTO BY ADRIENNE MAGUIRE
NEWS
BRIEFS
BURYING GROUND
CLEAN UP
The Beautify Revere series
concludes for 2016 with a
cleanup at the Rumney Marsh
Burying Ground on Saturday,
October 29 from 10 a.m. -12
p.m. All are welcome; supplies will be provided.
With any questions, Contact Elle Baker at ebaker@
revere.org, or 781-286-8188.
SUDI TO OPEN
THURSDAY
The City of Revere will
host a community event to
launch its Substance Use
Disorder Initiatives (SUDI)
Office, located at 437 Revere
Street., on Thursday, October
27, at 1:00 p.m. .
Please feel free to contact
Julia Newhall with any questions @ 339-440-7950.
See NEWS BRIEFS, Page 8
Members of the Class of 2018 haunted the hallways of Revere High School last Thursday night
for an annual fundraiser. Pictured above are the students who ran the Purge room with Principal
Lourenco Garcia. See more photos on page 12.
Revere schools to close for Good Friday
By Seth Daniel
The Revere Public Schools
will be taking Good Friday,
April 14, off after all – just
don’t say it’s for Good Friday.
After a contentious School
Committee meeting on Tuesday, Oct. 18, Revere Supt.
Dianne Kelly announced via
letter late last week that the
school district would, in fact
be taking April 14 off – but
instead of being for a religious
holiday – the day off is seen as
a professional day instituted
for public safety reasons.
“The added complication
here is there were about 150
teachers throughout the district that were going to be
taking the day off,” said Kelly
this week. “In some schools it
was more than half the staff
that would be gone. That
wouldn’t have been safe at all
in the schools for students…
Our point in closing school
is not because it’s Good Friday, but because it’s not safe
POP WARNER CHAMPIONS
to open school. On the Jewish
Holy Days and Muslim Holy
Days the numbers of colleagues calling out was not as
significant.”
School Committeeman Michael Ferrante said the matter
took on a life of its own. After
eliminating all religious holidays (Christian, Muslim and
Jewish) from the school calendar, including Good Friday for
the first time, there wasn’t initially a great deal of pushback.
That changed radically in September when teachers and the
Revere Teacher’s Association
(RTA) began to fight to get the
day back.
It culminated on Oct. 18
when the matter was addressed before a crowd of
teachers and staff members
before the School Committee.
“If you don’t have the teachers to run the schools, what
can you do?” asked Ferrante.
“With the other religions, we
might have 30 or so teachers
that were going to be absent.
With this, we were going to
have about 130 teachers out.
This took on a life of its own.
People were livid.”
He said it was the best deal
the schools could get given the
circumstances.
“We were going to be really shorthanded,” he said.
“We would have to shut the
schools down because public
safety of the kids was going to
be a big problem. We tried to
entice them by continuing to
have June 14 as the last day of
school – an act of good faith
on our part.”
Erik Fearing of the RTA
said they were satisfied with
the decision.
“This has settled the issue
rather nicely,” he said.
A survey of staff and teach-
The Wynn Boston Harbor
casino said this week that it
had gotten involved in the
Revere Special Election last
Tuesday, Oct. 18, that had
major implications for a developer that is pushing the
statewide Question 1 ballot
initiative in November.
Wynn also said it would be
involved in the statewide fight
in November as well, putting
an undetermined amount of
resources into the fight against
the question that would potentially allow an additional slot
parlor.
Currently, a developer living in Revere – but with major ties to Thailand – has an
option on a trailer park next to
Suffolk Downs and wishes to
develop that into a hotel and
slot parlor. Question 1 asks
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The City of Revere early voting can be done in person at the
American Legion Building, 249 Broadway,
Monday through Thursday
8:15 a.m. – 5:00 p.m.
Friday
8:15 a.m. – 12:15 p.m.
FRONT ENTRANCE
Also, on
Saturday, October 29, from 9:00 a.m. – 2:00 p.m.
at the Election Department in Revere City Hall,
281 Broadway.
The Pleasant Street entrance to Revere City Hall
(handicap accessible).
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Also, registered voters have the option to request an early
voting ballot through the mail. Simply fill out an application
and mail it to Revere City Hall, Election Department, P.O. Box
246 Revere, MA 02151. You can find the application on the
Secretary of the Commonwealth’s website:
http://www.sec.state.ma.us/ele.
PHOTO BY JOE PREZIOSO
Residents of Oak Island and City leaders gathered on Saturday, Oct. 22, to help finish constructing the new playground at
Dashwood Park. Once the work was done, it was time to have
fun, and here Linda DeMaio decided to take the slide down to
ground level, getting a little surprise on the fast moving slide.
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La votación temprana puede ser en persona o
por correo. En la ciudad de Revere, la votación temprana
puede ser hecha en persona en el edificio The American
Legion Building, 249 Broadway, Front Entrance, durante
las siguientes fechas y horas: lunes a jueves desde las 8:15
a.m.- 5:00 p.m. y viernes desde las 8:15 a.m. – 12:15 p.m.
Para conveniencia pública, la ciudad de Revere también ha
decidido ofrecer un horario de fin de semana el sábado, 29
de octubre de 2016 desde las 9:00 a.m. – 2:00 p.m. en Revere
City Hall, 281 Broadway Revere, MA 02151. La entrada por
la calle Pleasant Street de Revere City Hall es accesible para
los discapacitados.
También, los electores registrados tienen la opción de
solicitar una papeleta de votación temprana por correo.
Simplemente llene una aplicación y envíela a Revere City
Hall, Election Department, P.O. Box 246, Revere, MA 02151.
Usted puede encontrar esta aplicación en la página web de la
Secretaría del Commonwealth:
http://www.sec.state.ma.us/ele.
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GOOD FRIDAY Page 2
Oct. 24 - Nov. 4
PHOTO BY JOE PREZIOSO
for voters to determine whether that developer can ask the
Massachusetts Gaming Commission (MGC) for a second
slots license. The one slots
license approved under the
expanded gaming act of 2011
was awarded to Plainville and
is now operational.
The vote in Revere on
Tuesday, Oct. 18, asked Revere voters to approve the
designation of the trailer park
as an official gaming site. Revere voters rejected the plan
by a 2-to-1 margin.
“We assessed the situation
and were thinking about getting involved for a while,”
said Wynn Boston Harbor
President Bob DeSalvio.
“What really turned things
around for us was the crowd
A KID AT HEART
VOTE EARLY IN REVERE
Domenic Boudreau (11) and Santiago Quiceno (88) congratulate
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THE REVERE JOURNAL
FORMAN HONORED
Wynn //CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1
of people who came out to
support ‘No on 1’ around the
City and the state. Mayor Brian Arrigo came out against
it, most of the Revere City
Council came out against it,
Governor Baker and Speaker
DeLeo came out against it and
the people of Revere that we
spoke to were dead-set against
it. There were so many mysteries around the Revere proposal that we felt we needed
to help get the facts out. When
this came up in the past, people knew what they were voting for. You knew you were
voting for Wynn or MGM or
the Suffolk Downs plans. You
knew the proposals. This is
full of secrets and questions
that have gone unanswered.
We felt the need to help get
the truth out.”
According to campaign finance reports filed this week,
Wynn formed a committee
named Revere Can Do Better.
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Wynn Resorts of Las Vegas
contributed $39,000 to that
Committee.
Wynn spent $23,000 with
Kimball Political Consulting
of Springfield for databases,
Voter ID, and live and automated get out the vote calls.
Other expenditures included $3,803 to The Saint Consulting Group of Hingham,
$7,500 to Saint Digital of
Hingham for digital media,
and $3,521 to Cambridge Offset Printing.
All expenditures were made
between Oct. 12 and Oct. 20.
DeSalvio said there were no
secrets to the funding activities
in the Revere Special Election
and that Wynn has said previously it opposes Question 1.
He said the recent effort and
future efforts against the statewide question would be open
and up front, contrary to what
he said is going on with the
Thailand developer supporting Question 1.
“We are absolutely supporting the ‘No on Question One’
effort statewide and want to be
very open and upfront about
where our money is coming
from,” DeSalvio said. “It’s
coming from Wynn. That’s
more than we can say about
the investors from Thailand
who are very secretive about
who is funding their $10 million campaign. We think that
speaks volumes about where
their interests really are.
Whatever our contribution,
we won’t divulge the amount
until after the election because
it would give the opposition
an edge. They’d very much
like to know how much we are
spending.”
The ‘Yes on 1’ campaign
said last Friday that the Horse
Racing Jobs and Education
Committee in Revere has filed
a request with the Office of
Campaign and Public Finance
(OCPF) to investigate four
Committees that participated
in the Oct. 18 Special Election. One of those committees
was the Wynn ‘Revere Can
Do Better’ committee.
“The Horse Racing Jobs
and Education Committee
has filed a request to investigate the (four) committees for
possible violations of Massachusetts code,” read a release.
“The Committee is also concerned that public funds may
have been expended by the
(Revere) Mayor and/or members of his administration in
an effort to further mislead the
citizens of Revere regarding
the 400-room hotel and limited electronic gaming complex
that has been proposed in Revere.”
The release read that the
robo-call paid for by Wynn
featured Revere Mayor Brian
Arrigo asking voters to defeat
the plan and called ‘Yes on 1’
a “fly-by-night” proposal. Arrigo said when he made the
robo-call, according to the release, he didn’t know who was
funding it.
To that end, the Committee has made a request for all
communications, electronic or
otherwise, within the Office of
the Mayor of Revere, or to or
from the Office of the Mayor
of Revere, regarding the Special Election held on Oct. 18
and other such search items.
DeSalvio said Wynn Boston Harbor is against the statewide question because he believes it won’t be good for the
fledgling gaming industry that
is just now taking shape in the
state.
“It makes no sense to grant
an additional slot license when
the two major licensed casinos
aren’t even open yet,” he said.
“Let’s wait and see how the
two licensed casinos do before
adding more. The legislation
was very thoughtfully written
to protect against oversaturating the market. We need to
respect the law and assess the
market before considering any
type of expansion.” He added that approving
Question 1 could open up
communities to slot parlors,
even when they have rejected
gaming in the past – provided
they have the facility next to a
horse track.
“It doesn’t matter how a
community voted for gaming
in the past,” he said. “A yes
vote would allow anyone to
do this anywhere in the state.”
Good Friday //CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1
ers at each Revere school
showed that schools like the
Garfield Elementary would
have 60 percent of its staff
gone. Others, like the Lincoln
and Whelan Schools would
have more than 30 percent
of the staff out. Most other
schools had far fewer teachers
requesting Good Friday off,
such as Revere High School,
which only had 3 percent.
The deal will be that the
schools are closed on April
14, which is Good Friday. The
last day of school, however,
has not been moved and will
remain at June 14.
Kelly said that’s because
the Revere schools already go
beyond the required 180-day
state mandate. Revere students go to school this year
184 days, and so Kelly said
they would absorb the new
day off within the extra four-
Black
day margin.
It will, however, require
renewed contract negotiations with the RTA, and Kelly said that will take place
next month. The topic will be
around amending the ‘Temporary Leaves of Absence’ provision within the contracts – a
provision that encompasses
religious holidays, personal
days and things like jury duty.
In September, for the Muslim Eid holidays, Kelly said
that more than 500 students
were called in absent by their
parents for religious reasons.
Those students were not penalized and given excused absences and a chance to make
up any missed homework or
classwork.
Since as far back as anyone
can remember, Good Friday
has been a day off for Revere
schools. A few years back, to
accommodate all major religions represented in the increasingly diverse district, the
schools adopted a policy of
taking all religious holidays
listed on the state calendar.
That proved problematic in
2015 when a number of Muslim and Jewish holidays hit in
September all at once – and
when combined with Labor
Day, it meant students were
out of school for significant
periods of time just prior to
standardized testing dates.
“No matter what you do,
you’re not going to make everyone happy on this issue,”
said Kelly. “In the end, it’s
our job to figure out this issue
and what’s best for the kids. It
might be we have school on
every Holy Day as we did in
recent years prior to this. It is
really important everyone is
treated fairly.”
Recently, Stanley Forman ( third from left) a former Shirley
Ave. resident and Channel 5 Videographer, was inducted into
the Massachusetts Broadcasters Hall of Fame. Several Revere
and former Revere residents joined the festivities at the Boston
Quincy Marriott Hotel. Shown above from left are Nancy Goldstein, Councillor Ira Novoselsky, Stanley Forman, Retired Revere
Fire Chief Dan Doherty, Juanita Haas and Councillor Bob Haas.
Gas leak impacts neighborhoods
Gas service is back to normal after a leak affected an
area of the city Monday.
Following the puncturing
of a gas line due to a construction accident in the Copeland
Circle on Squire Rd., National
Grid crews had to shut the line
down before they could begin
repairing it. Affected customers in Revere were at Overlook Ridge, and in the Point of
Pines/Riverside area. National
Grid had to open its emergency operations center at the
Point of Pines Yacht Club
National Grid crews shut
off gas to more than 400 of
the 612 impacted gas meters
in the Point of Pines/Riverside
area. All 23 impacted meters
at Overlook Ridge were shut
off. The rest of the City was
not impacted.
“People were worried they
might not have heat,” said
Ward 5 Councillor John Powers.
Repair work was concluded
early Tuesday morning. The
on ramp to the Lynnway was
re-opened for traffic at 4 a.m.
while National Grid began relighting pilots and restoring
service at 3 a.m. By 8 a.m.
National Grid was making
regular sweeps going door to
door to make sure everyone
was back on line.
During the gas shut off the
Point of Pines Fire Station
was open for emergencies.
For anyone still having a
problem the National Grid
customer service number is
1-800-732-3400. Volare’s gets the nod from commission
By Sue Ellen Woodcock
With no complaints from
police in the past three months
and enhanced employee training and increased security,
the Revere Licensing Commission has given the okay
to Volare Restaurant to keep
doing what the establishment
has been doing to control its
patrons and not over serve.
The commission met last
Wednesday and gave Volare
a thumbs up but warned the
owners that they will still be
on a probationary period. In
the past year there has been
a couple of incidents at the
Broadway restaurant and bar.
Revere Police Lt. Sean Randall said there have been no
unusual incidents since September and a detail officer
has been in use on Fridays
and Saturdays. The manager,
Cecilia Maya, said they now
have three security guards. No
one is allowed in after 12:30
a.m. A patron who leaves is
not allowed back in. There
is now a dress code and emSee COMMISSION, Page 3
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Hill Elementary School
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Please call (617) 423-6633 or email
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Black Cyan Magenta Yellow
Wednesday, October 26, 2016
THE REVERE JOURNAL
Page 3
A NEW PLAYGROUND AT DASHWOOD PARK
Photos by Joe Prezioso
Community leaders and
local volunteers gathered on
Saturday morning, Oct. 22,
to help finish constructing the
new playground in Oak Island.
Volunteers worked through
the rain and mud to assemble
the new park, some taking a
moment or two to enjoy some
of the new swings and slides.
Paul Lieu used a screw gun to fasten bolts onto the rock climbing park piece.
Volunteers at the Oak Island playground on Saturday morning. Commission // CONTINUED FROM PAGE 2
ployees have received TIPPS
training.
“The combination (of everything) has helped us,” she
said.
In other business:
• A common victualler’s license was issued to a new coffee shop called Brewin Cafe,
There was also a hearing for
Brothers Auto Body, 19 Naples Road, for a state police
report of using a Class 2 used
car license to purchase cars at
auction and the sale of salvage
cars. Both were tabled until
more information was gathered by the state police.
311 Broadway. It will be open
from 6 a.m. to 8 p.m. with
seating for 15.
• The commission held a
hearing on Circle Auto Gallery, 400 Beach St., regarding
the violations of license conditions, including exceeding
the number of cars for sale.
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CLOTHES ENCOUNTERS
As Featured on Channel 5’s “CHRONICLE”
Michael Vercellin pours cement mix into a wheelbarrow
as construction got underway.
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Wednesday
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Saturday Night October 29
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You are invited to be part of an important event
on Saturday, November 5
This is Assisted Living
Again this year for Veterans Day, we will be taking a luxury bus (courtesy of Local
Motion of Boston) to help place flags on the graves of the brave men and women
buried in Massachusetts National Cemetery in Bourne. Seating is limited so call us
soon to reserve your seat.
781-284-3376
Live life to the fullest!
Join us for a private lunch and tour of our residences
COHEN FLORENCE LEVINE ESTATES
201 Captains Row, Chelsea
www.chelseajewish.org
PAUL BUONFIGLIO & SONS - BRUNO FUNERAL HOME
128 Revere Street, Revere, MA 02151
781-284-3376 www.buonfiglio.com
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HARRIETT & RALPH KAPLAN ESTATES
240 Lynnfield Street, Peabody
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To schedule complimentary lunch, contact:
Kristen Donnelly 617-887-0826 • [email protected] • Chelsea
Andrea Hillel 978-854-1812 • [email protected] • Peabody
Traditional Assisted Living and Specialized Memory Support
Page 4
THE REVERE JOURNAL
Wednesday, October 26, 2016
Forum
Revere
J o u r n a l
PRESIDENT: Stephen Quigley - [email protected]
MARKETING DIRECTOR: Deb DiGregorio - [email protected]
HAVE A SAFE AND HAPPY
HALLOWEEN
Halloween will be observed this Monday, and that means that
scores of children and others will be roaming our streets during
the early-evening hours as they go about their ritual of trick-ortreating in our neighborhoods.
It is up to each one of us to be extra-observant if we are operating a motor vehicle during this time period in order to ensure
that a tragic situation does not occur.
Safety is the watchword for everyone both behind the wheel
of a car on Halloween night and for those who are on the streets
as well. Common-sense must prevail when traversing our thoroughfares on foot, especially if we have young children in tow
who are over-eager to get to their next stop in the pursuit of
candy.
In addition, parents of teenagers must be strict in laying down
the rules about trick-or-treating or late-night revelry, especially
given that Halloween falls on a school night.
Halloween does not permit parents to abdicate their responsibilities to ensure that their teens understand they must be home
at a reasonable hour and that they are not to engage in mischief.
We wish all of our readers a safe and happy Halloween.
LETTER TO THE EDITOR
ON VOKE SCHOOL
ENROLLMENT
Dear Editor:
Regarding Ron Jannino's
statement that Revere currently has more students at
Northeast than ever before;
that amount means nothing
unless these 210+ students
are receiving the best possible
education from the most qualified instructors in the best
and safest possible learning
environment. I am concerned
with a number of important
issues at the school that have
been allowed to become more
commonplace over time. Revere as a community should
be alarmed by them.
For starters, all students deserve better than to learn from
unlicensed/unqualified teachers. Giving a job to someone
who has never taught before
is no way to provide learners
with the best possible education. We need highly qualified
instructors to prepare the next
generation of the vocational
work force. Teaching jobs are
often only posted inside the
school, and never in places
where the best candidates will
find them. The School Committee appears to do nothing
at all to question these hirings
or to demand administration
strive for the highest qualified.
The taxpayers deserve
transparency. School Committee meetings are not televised or recorded, the budget
is not readily available, nor
are the meeting minutes. Most
of what goes on at the school
is not reported in the local papers. We need to know more.
Please see LETTER Page 10
Revere
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Guest Op-Eds
Question 2: Simple, Plausible, and Wrong
By Jacob Oliveira and
Mary Bourque
The solution proposed by
Question 2 is, to use H.L.
Mencken’s phrase, simple,
plausible, and wrong because
it ignores other badly needed changes in charter policy
and leaves students in district
schools victims in its wake.
What is wrong, is the funding formula. Recent editorials
and political advertisements
have argued both ways on
whether charter schools take
or generate money for the public schools. Losing a child or
two over several classrooms
throughout a district does not
mean that a district can cut its
budget to accommodate the
reduction. The sending district receives a reimbursement
to manage the revenue reduction that is spread out over
five years. Truth be told, it
has been four years since this
offset has been fully funded.
This basic misunderstanding
of district budgeting is at the
core of much of the confusion.
What is plausible, are the
recommendations made by the
Foundation Budget Review
Commission. A bipartisan
commission of educators, leg-
islators and business members
studied the adequacy of school
funding last year. The findings
indicated that the state is underfunding K-12 education by
$1 billion in the foundation
budget. This budgeting challenge, creates even more difficulties for districts. Advanced
coursework, athletics, transportation, enrichment and
more have been on the chopping block in district after district over the past number of
years. Too many districts are
struggling to provide the support services children need in
mental and emotional health.
Last year’s Foundation Budget Reform Commission laid
out the picture clearly. Real
financial reform, not only of
charter reimbursements but of
education funding as a whole,
is but one of many needed before there should be any discussion of lifting the cap on
charter schools.
What is simple, is to create an accountability system
on the local level. The difference in the children attending
district and charter schools
must end. A requirement that
charter schools reflect the
demographics of sending districts exists in current law, but
it has no teeth. For a charter
to draw from districts with a
high rate of second language
learners and have none itself,
or for a charter to speak of an
open lottery but never draw a
high need special education
students demonstrates the
problem. This is compounded by the state’s accountability system, which implicitly
pits districts against district,
school against school, so long
as performance is valued over
the growth students’ gain from
their district. Enrollment and
retention measures must have
teeth, and the accountability
system must measure what
school systems add to their
students, not simply measure
where their students come
from.
Finally, the separation of
chartering and funding is the
source of much of what ails
this system. The Board of Education grants charters; the
state does or does not fund
reimbursement; local districts
pay the price. This separation must end. As the Suffolk
Superior Court found in its
dismissal this week of Doe v.
Peyser:
This decision - how to allocate public education choic-
es amongst the multitude of
possible types - is best left to
those elected to make those
choices to be carried out by
those educated and experienced to do so.
Those “elected and experienced” include not only the
legislators who have made
funding decisions regarding
state aid; it also includes local
school committee members.
Local school committees are
charged with transparently
allocating local funds in education. Before any increase of
the charter cap can be considered, charter schools must be
made locally accountable to
their democratically accountable school committees and
the citizens in communities
from which they take their
students.
Only when true reform
takes place can we be certain
that all schools are fulfilling
their role: educating all students to be effective citizens
in a democracy.
Jacob Oliveira is from Ludlow
and is President, MA Association of School Committees, and
Mary Bourque is Superintendent
of Schools in Chelsea is President,
MA Association of Superintendents
OP/ED
Why I am Yes on 2
By Marty Walz
If all you know about Question 2, the ballot question that
would lift the cap on public charter schools, is what
you’ve seen on TV – chances are good you’re confused
about how to vote.
As the author of the current
charter school law when I was
a state Representative and
House Chair of the Education
Committee, I’m voting yes
and ask you to do the same.
Here are the facts. Voting
yes on Question 2 would allow
more public charter schools to
open in the nine cities where
new charters can’t open today
because of an arbitrary cap
imposed by state law. Boston
is one of those nine cities. The
ballot question has no impact
on the 342 cities and towns
not near the cap. But, for these
nine cities, it would mean that
more children would have
more access to a world-class
public education.
A vocal minority of charter
school opponents are doing
their best to convince voters that charters drain money from public schools. This
is nothing more than a scare
tactic. What the TV ads don’t
say: charter schools are public
schools, and, as with all public
schools, the taxpayer funds allocated for a child’s education
follow the child to whatever
Black
public school is educating him
or her.
Moreover, a recent report
by the nonpartisan Boston
Municipal Research Bureau
confirmed that charter schools
are not causing Boston Public
Schools’ budget pressures. In
fact, the BPS budget increased
25% in the past six years. With
an annual budget over $1 billion, BPS spends more per pupil than any of the 100 largest
school districts in America.
Teachers unions have provided 99% of the funds for the
campaign against Question 2.
Rather than doing what’s best
for kids, they are motivated by
self-interested adult-focused
policies that protect a status
quo that is failing to serve too
many children. Public charter
schools prove what’s possible
academically with low income and minority children.
A recent Brookings Institution report underscores this
point. It said “charter schools
in the urban areas of Massachusetts have large, positive
effects on educational outcomes. The effects are particularly large for disadvantaged
students, English learners,
special education students,
and children who enter charters with low test scores.”
Public charter schools in
Massachusetts are held accountable for students’ academic achievement in ways
traditional district schools are
not. If a charter school does a
poor job educating students,
the state shuts it down – as it
should. In contrast, the state
can’t force local school committees to close chronically underperforming district
schools that are robbing kids
of a quality education – a
particularly acute problem in
cities. Too often the schools
carry on, generation after generation, providing a poor quality education.
No wonder tens of thousands of Massachusetts students are on waiting lists for
high-performing public charter schools, including 12,000
in Boston alone. Parents desperately want better schools
for their children, yet the existing cap on charter schools is
blocking the establishment of
more great schools.
We hear how Massachusetts has the best schools in the
nation. True enough, yet this
bragging masks a problem:
the large, persistent achievement gaps our state has failed
to close for children of color
and those from low-income
backgrounds. Massachusetts
has the third largest achievement gap based on family income in the nation, and it is
growing larger. In contrast,
public charter schools narrow
these stubborn gaps, especially for urban low income and
minority children.
Created by liberal Democrats in the state legislature
in 1993 to give parents better
educational choices, charter
schools are now a source of
controversy within the Democratic Party as two key constituencies are on opposites
sides. While teachers unions
oppose charters, minority
voters overwhelmingly support their expansion. Barack
Obama, Hillary Clinton, Deval Patrick, Speaker of the
House Robert DeLeo, two
other House Education Committee Chairs, Patricia Haddad and Alice Peisch, and many
other Democrats support children’s access to high quality
charter schools.
I’ve devoted much of my
career to improving district
schools. Ideally, Boston Public Schools would rank as every family’s first choice. Until that day, we should honor
families and their desires for
better options for their children. Question 2 maximizes
opportunity for students and
advances equity, which fulfills
our moral obligation to meet
their educational needs.
Marty Walz, a Democrat,
served as State Representative for the 8th Suffolk District
from 2005-2013.
Wednesday, October 26, 2016
THE REVERE JOURNAL
Open letter to East Boston Savings Bank Customers and Communities:
The end of 2016 marks the 168 year milestone for East Boston Savings Bank. When we opened our
doors in 1848 our mission was much the same as it is today, to deliver valued banking services to satisfy
lifetime needs by building long term relationships based on trust, safety and friendly service.
Through the years, having seen it all from economic depressions to banking crises to the real estate
bubble, EBSB remains a pillar of strength due to the honesty, integrity and banking values of our board of
directors, senior management team and our employees. It is with great resolve that EBSB embraces its
responsibility to be a trustworthy resource for banking services and a good neighbor in communities
throughout greater Boston.
East Boston Savings Bank will always have your best interests at heart. We are committed to all of our
customers, big and small, individuals and businesses in providing you with the quality product, excellent
service and sound advice. We also believe that it is our responsibility to foster economic growth in our
communities when possible. We will continue to research new branch opportunities stimulating economic
growth by providing local jobs and banking services to help businesses and individuals thrive.
Our values lie beyond banking interests. Being a good neighbor and giving back to the community is
important to us. Each year the bank makes contributions and/or donates a variety of items supporting
community and civic groups and our employees volunteer their time for meaningful causes. In addition,
since its inception in 1998, the East Boston Savings Bank Charitable Foundation has distributed over
$5 million in grants to well-deserving not-for-profit organizations serving our market area.
As president, chairman and chief executive officer of East Boston Savings Bank it is my responsibility to
see that the bank continues to be a trusted provider of personal and commercial banking services, provide
exceptional customer experiences, solid banking performances, workforce development and community
leadership. We will never take for granted our customers’ trust or shirk our civic obligations.
I very much appreciate the continued confidence and support you have shown. Our future looks brighter
every day and we are truly thankful to you for being an integral part of our success. If you have any
questions or concerns regarding EBSB or our mission, please do not hesitate to contact me directly at
[email protected] or 978-977-2211.
Sincerely
Richard J. Gavegnano
President, Chairman and Chief Executive Officer
800.657.3272 • ebsb.com
Allston • Belmont • Boston • Brookline • Cambridge • Danvers • Dorchester • East Boston
Everett • Jamaica Plain • Lynn • Medford • Melrose • Peabody • Revere • Saugus
Somerville • South Boston • Wakefield • West Roxbury • Winthrop
Black Cyan Magenta Yellow
Page 5
Black Cyan Magenta Yellow
Page 6
THE REVERE JOURNAL
Wednesday, October 26, 2016
REVERE STUNNED!!
Mayor Brian Arrigo
and his appointed aid Omar,
have sold out to
Wynn Resorts to protect
Everett’s casino interests
and block gaming in Revere.
Paid for by the Horse Racing Jobs and Education Committee
Black Cyan Magenta Yellow
Black Cyan Magenta Yellow
Wednesday, October 26, 2016
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Page 8
THE REVERE JOURNAL
OBITUARIES
Jane Wiseman
Former president and vice president of
Temple B'nai Israel in Beachmont; past RHS
valedictorian; active in community theater
Jane D. (Porter) Wiseman
of Stoneham, formerly of Revere, former wife of the late
Ronald Wiseman, died October 12 at home surrounded
by her family after a long and
courageous battle against cancer. She was 80 years old.
Born in Boston, the daughter of the late John and Fanny
(Silverman) Porter, Jane was
raised and educated in Revere
and graduated as Valedictorian of her class at Revere High
School. She continued her
studies by taking many continuing education courses at
Northeastern University and
UMass Boston throughout her
adult life and even well into
the days of her recent illness. She worked as a legal secretary for 40 years with a local
law firm. She was active in
community theatre for many
years, receiving the award of
Best Actress at a local competition, and she served both as
President and Vice President
of Temple B’Nai Israel of
Beachmont for many years.
She is survived by her dear
companion, Ralph Epstein of
Revere; her daughters: Andrea Byrne and her late husband, Kenneth of Stoneham
and Hayley Arone and her
husband, Joseph of Boxford;
grandchildren: Jared and his
wife, Katie, Damon, Sarena
and Caden Byrne and Jonathan and Rachel Arone. She
was predeceased by her brother, Alan Porter. Special friend
to her loyal Maltese, Lilly.
Funeral services were held
at Temple B’Nai Israel of Revere. Interment was in B’Nai
Israel of Beachmont Cemetery
in Everett. Contributions in
her memory may be made to
Temple B’Nai Israel, 1 Wave
Ave. Revere, MA 02151. For
guest book, please visit: www.
torffuneralservice.com.
John Consolo
Licensed Clinical Social Worker of Rutland,
formerly of Revere
John P. Consolo of Rutland, formerly of Revere,
died unexpectedly on October
19. He was 51 years old. John worked at Wachusett Counseling Associates
in Leominster as a licensed
clinical social worker for 25
years. He graduated from Revere High School, Fitchburg
State University and attained
his Masters of Social Work at
Boston College.
John enjoyed hockey and
served as an assistant coach
at Fitchburg High School for
five years and coached for
Twin City Youth Hockey. He
also played in various men’s
hockey leagues. Johns greatest enjoyment came from
spending time with his family. John was born on August 2,
1965 in Winthrop, a son of the
late Gaetano and Carol (Oreto) Consolo and has resided
in Rutland for many years.
He is survived by his wife of
four years, Sabrina Pettigrew
4th Year Anniversary
Rita M._ Dente
of Rutland, his son Jack T.
Consolo of Leominster, two
step children, Nicholas Pettigrew and Daniel Pettigrew,
both of Rutland, one brother,
Philip Consolo of Revere, a
nephew, Philip Consolo Jr. of
Revere and his former wife,
Jayne DiGeronimo Consolo
of Leominster.
A Funeral Mass with be
celebrated from the Brandon
Funeral Home, 305 Wanoosnoc Road, Fitchburg in St.
Anna’s Church, 199 Lancaster St., Leominster at 11 a.m.
on Friday, October 28. Burial
will be in St. Leo’s Cemetery,
Leominster. Calling hours
will be held from 5 to 8 p.m.
Thursday, October 27 at the
funeral home.
Oct. 26 2012 Oct. 26, 2016
Birthday Remembrance
Margaret M. Peg
Nickerson
May you always walk in sunshine
and God’s love around you flow,
for the happiness you gave us, no
one will ever know. It broke our
hearts to lose you, but you did not
go alone, a part of us went with
you, the day God called
you home.
A million times we’ve needed you.
A million times we’ve cried. If
love could only have saved you.
You never would have died.
The Lord be with you And May
You Rest in Peace.
Amen
Your Husband Christie, Children
October 25
To the Most Beautiful
Mother
and Grandmother
We Love & Miss You
Your Family
& Grandchildren
TORF FUNERAL
SERVICE
Pre-need planning with our
price protection guarantee.
Arrangements made at our
facility or in the comfort of
your own home
4 generations of the Torf Tradition:
Deborah Torf Golden Amy Torf Golden
Hyman J. Torf (1903-2000)
M.L. Torf (1867-1940)
Richard A. Pruneau
(617) 889-2900
(800)428-7161
www.torffuneralservice.com
Danny S. Smith
773 Broadway
Revere, MA 02151
Phone (781) 284-7756
www.vertuccioandsmith.com
Wednesday, October 26, 2016
REVERE SENIOR CENTER
Antonette Martorano Chiampa
Mass Port Authority retiree known for her
courage, zest for life, love of family, and as a
champion for animals
Antonette ‘Netta’ Martorano Chiampa, formerly of Revere, passed away peacefully
surrounded by family and
friends on October 16 at Spartanburg Regional Hospital
in South Carolina where she
recently relocated. She was 75
years old.
Retired from Mass Port Authority as a ground transportation supervisor at Logan Airport for 29 years. Antonette
(Netta) Chiampa was known
for her courage, her zest for
life, the love of family and as
a champion for animals.
Netta was born in Boston’s
North End, the daughter of the
late Gaetano and Lucia (Avellino) Martorano.
She is survived by her
daughter, Flora Squillante, her
son Anthony Squillante and
his family of South Carolina
Monthly Podiatry Clinic
Dr. David Kaplan Foot Doctor will be available at the Rossetti Cowan Senior Center on Wednesday November 2, 2016
Only Routine Foot Care including cutting of toenails and
trimming of Calluses will be offered. Referrals to other Specialists will be made if necessary for more complicated proband her son, Albert Squillante lems. Services will be a discounted fee of $20.00 per visit.
of Revere. Netta also leaves
three grandchildren and the
Hearing Program
late Bella Squillante, nieces
Free Frequency Test and case history Analysis, as well as
and nephews and great nieces cleaning are available with Mary Marino at the Rossetti/Cowand nephews. She was the sis- an Senior Center, 25 Winthrop Ave for Elderly Residents the
ter of the late Frank Martora- next hearing date will be October 27, 2016 from 10:00 A.M.
no of Revere, Lucille Perry of to 12:00 P.M appointments are suggested but walk-ins will be
California and Joseph Marto- serviced if time allows
rano of California.
She will be sorely missed
Blood Pressure Individual Conference
by all who had the pleasure to
November 3 and November 17
meet her.
Kenneth Houton
Exercise Rider, Suffolk Downs Race Track
Kenneth Houghton of Everett, formerly of Revere,
passed away unexpectedly on
Saturday, October 15. He was
57 years old.
An exercise rider at Suffolk
Downs Race Trakc, he was
the cherished son of Kenneth
Houghton of Rhode Island
and the late Mary (Heslin)
Houghton; loving father of
James Houghton of Everett
and brother of Carol Pariseau
and Kimberly Lafond.
Funeral arrangements were
Rossetti Cowan Senior Center
25 Winthrop Avenue
Chair Massage
Therapeutic Massage can relax tense Muscles due to overwork or stress. It can also improve the blood supply to tissues,
improve energy and alertness and relieve stress and anxiety.
Barbara MacDonald Certified and Licensed Massage Therapist
will be at Rossetti Cowan Senior Center on November 7, 2016.
She will be offering 15 minute chair massage from 10:00 to
Noon. The cost is $10.00 per session and although walk-ins
will be serviced, it is advisable to call for Reservation at 781286-8156. Call the center for additional information.
Group Name: Sharing Grief Experience
Meeting : November 28, 2016
Time: 1:00 to 3:00 p.m.
We would like to offer Revere residents a chance to meet as
a group and discuss the loss of loved ones effects on those left
to grieve. This would be a gathering where one could come
and discuss or just listen to various people who may want to
share how they are feeling. This will be a group of people
listening or offering
ZUMBA TONING CLASSES
Zumba classes held at the Revere Senior Center
Wednesday evenings at 6:15 P.M. to 7:15 P.M.
Only $5.00 per class. All levels of fitness are Welcome
Use main entrance. Doors open at 6:00 P.M. locked at 6:15
by Vazza’s “Beechwood” Funeral Home, Revere. Committal private. For guest book:
www.vazzafunerals.com.
Rocco Ursino
Of Revere
Rocco Ursino of Revere
died peacefully on October
14.
The loving son of Nicola
and and late Mirella (Ferrraro)
Ursino, he was the dear brother of Laura DeCologero and
her husband, Paul of Revere
and Danielle Ursino Munro
of Wakefield; cherished uncle
of Isabella, Dante, Caden and
Gwen and is also survived by
his adored canines Mico, Mia,
Chico and Rico.
Family and friends will
Movies every Wednesday between 12:30 and 1:00
Wednesday October 27……The Family Fang
Lunch schedule for October 27- November 2
Thursday October 27 …..Cheese Pizza, Pasta Fagiola, Three
Ben Salad, Sliced Pears, Milk, Coffee Or Tea
Friday October 28….Vegetable LaSagna, Broccoli Florets,
Whole Wheat Bread, Applesauce, Milk, Coffee Or Tea
Monday October 31….Macaroni and Cheese, Carrots,
Whole Wheat Bread, Mandarin Oranges, Milk, Coffee Or Tea
Tuesday November 1….Chicken W/Gravy, Mashed Potatoes, Cranberry Sauce, Carrots, Lemon Pudding, Milk, Coffee
Or Tea
Wednesday November 2 ….Stuffed Green Peppers, Stewed
Tomatoes, Whole Wheat Bread, Pineapple Chunks, Milk,
Coffee, Or Tea
honor Rocco’s life by gathering at the Immaculate Conception Church, Beach Street,
Revere on Saturday, October
29 from 9:30 to 10:30 a.m.
for a period of memorial visitation followed by a memorial funeral mass in celebration
S.H.I.N.E
of Rocco’s life at 10:30 a.m.
Medicare Open Enrollment/Turning 65 Seminar Presented
Arrangements are with the By Bari Olevsky S.H.I.N.E counselor at the Rossetti-Cowan
personal care of Ruggiero Senior Center onWednesday, November 2 Time: 6:30 P.M.
Family Memorial Home 617
569 0990. For more informaCONTINUED FROM PAGE 1
tion, visit: www.ruggieromh.
com.
tions for pot holes to be filled
COUNCILLORS
back in April and they’re still
SEEKS ANSWERS
not done.”
FOR DELAYS
“We’re understaffed and
There’s nothing like a little we can privatize,” Goodwin
Gold Star mother and devout Christian
frustration to help get some- said.
Lorraine Terry of Revere
thing done.
“People don’t want to hear
died on October 15.
Several city councillors are about it anymore,” said GuiA devout Christian who
frustrated that they submit- nasso. “We just keep hitting a
loved gardening, she was the
ted motions and then have it wall.”
cherished mother of Dane Terpassed only to see the work
Goodwin said this issue
ry of Revere and the late Gail
not get done. Many of the has gone on for years with
Broderick and John Terry who
motions that seem to have requests for thousands and
was killed in Vietnam; loving
gone into thin air involve the thousands of signs and potgrandmother of David Terry
Department of Public Works. holes.
and Leah, Patrick, and MeIt’s not a problem that just
“You’ve got one guy to do
gan Broderick; dear sister of
surfaced recently but the signs for the city,” Goodwin
the late Erma Possehl, Marie
councillors want to see some said, adding that the situation
and Patty Antoniak. Laber, her twin brother, Anisn’t good for moral. “We
Funeral arrangements were action.
thony LaBella, Peter LaBella
During Monday night’s have 17 guys in the Departby the Paul Buonfiglio &
Sons-Bruno Funeral Home, council meeting DPW Head ment of Public Works,”
Don Goodwin said lack of
Novoselsky said “the mayPrayer To The Holy Spirit Revere. For guest book, please manpower is what’s at the
or
needs to hire extra help.”
visit www.Buonfiglio.com.
O Holy Spirit, thou who are all knowroot
of
the
problem.
For
exing, who brightens every path that I
ample, if there is an order for SIP OF WINTHROP,
may reach my ideal, thou who giveth
me the divine gift of forgiving and
signs, there is only one person
forgetting wrongs done unto me and
making signs — if he’s not NOVEMEBR 4
who in every instant of my life art
Guests are invited to enworking on the highway dewith me. I’d like in this short dialogue
to affirm my gratitude for all your
partment or water and sewer joy sampling dozens of wines
from around the world as well
blessings and reaffirm once again
or parks.
that I never want to part from thee
Ward 2 Councillor Ira No- as specialty craft beers at the
though the illusion of material things
voselsky, Ward 1 Councillor 9th annual, “A Sip of Winabound. My desire is to be with
thee and all loved ones in perpetual
Joanne McKenna, and Ward throp.”. Experience an evegrace. Thank you for your mercy on
3 Councillor Arthur Guinasso ning of the Red, The White
me and mine (Person should pray 3
have submitted motions for and The Brew. There will also
consecutive days without revealing
signage. A couple of McKen- be delicious hors d’oeuvres,
petition. Within three days grace will
be attained, regardless of how difna’s requests are over a year chocolate & wine pairing,
ficult the petition may be.) Publish this
raffles, music and merry minold.
prayer once grace is obtained.
“It makes us look like gling. “A Sip of Winthrop”
C.G.
we’re not doing our jobs,” takes place Friday, November 4, from 7:00 – 9:00 pm
she said.
Novoselsky said there is an at Cottage Park Yacht Club,
enterprise fund large enough 76 Orlando Ave., Winthrop. to hire seven more people. Tickets are $35.00 and inGoodwin said the enterprise clude a commemorative wine
fund can only be used for wa- glass. Tickets are on sale now
ter and sewer work.
at
The Winthrop Chamber
“There are hundreds of
of
Commerce office locatnew signs that need to be put
ed
at
207 Hagman Road, by
up,” said Novoselsky.
calling
the Chamber at 617“We
need
to
beef
up
the
Louis R. Vazza ~ Funeral Director
help,” said Ward 5 Councillor 846-9898 and online at the
www.vazzafunerals.com
John Powers. “I’ve put in mo- Chamber website, www.winthropchamber.com.
Briefs //
Lorraine Terry
To place a
Memoriam in
the Journal,
please call
781-485-0588
Vazza
"Beechwood"
Funeral Home
262 Beach St., Revere • 781-284-1127
Black
Black
Wednesday, October 26, 2016
THE REVERE JOURNAL
Page 9
HALLOWEEN AT THE ROSSETTI-COWAN SENIOR CENTER
The Rossetti-Cowan Senior Center Halloween Luncheon on
Thursday, October 20th was a very enjoyable event with a Costumes-Optional opportunity. Speaker of the House, Rep. Bob
DeLeo and two of his staff, Sofia Forgione and Joan Moscillo, brought Halloween sheet cakes while singer John Costanzo
swooned the seniors with his classy and electric style.
Andy Boticelli with singer Johnny Costanzo and Mary Amato.
Speaker Bob DeLeo, a fervent
supporter of the senior center,
greets the seniors.
Camille Ciambelli and Sue Colella dress for the festivities.
Carol Capolla and Dominica
Virtorioso look lovely and
frightful.
Seniors enjoying the show.
Rachel Centrella and Stephen
Fielding or Dale and Roy?
Senior staff Marisa Curiale, Camille Ciambelli, Stephen Fielding, and
Mary Ann Moore greet seniors.
Is Still Possible After Changes In The Law
Call Today For Free Consultation
ATTORNEY STEPHEN F. MURRAY
One Orr Square, Revere, MA 02151 ◆ 781-289-3417
I help people file for relief under the Bankruptcy Code
Gloria Mattera and Gilda Ausiello are happy as witches on a
broom.
Singer Johnny Costanzo
swoons the seniors.
Roseann Colannino with Auntie Margaret Walls.
Rachel Centrella corrals singer
Johnny Costanzo.
Sofia Forgione, Stephen Fielding, Speaker Bob DeLeo, Camille Ciambelli, and Morris D.
Morris.
Councillor Steve Morabito, Northeast Vocational School Rep.Ron Jannino, Councillor Joanne McKenna, School Committteewoman Susan Gravallese with seniors.
BANKRUPTCY
Vin and Judy Cammarata with Speaker Bob DeLeo , Lee Meoli and Fr. Jim Barry.
Speaker Bob DeLeo with Marilyn Carroll.
Speaker Bob DeLeo with former teacher of 41 years Phyllis
Tanen.
DID YOU KNOW?
RECYCLED NEWSPAPERS
CAN BE MADE INTO
CEREAL BOXES, EGG CARTONS, PENCIL
BARRELS, GROCERY BAGS, TISSUE PAPER
AND MANY OTHER PRODUCTS,
INCLUDING NEW NEWSPAPERS!
Black
Speaker Bob Deleo with Andy Botticelli and Mary Amato.
Page 10
THE REVERE JOURNAL
Wednesday, October 26, 2016
M CELATA REAL ESTATE OPENS NEW LOCATION
Photos by Katy Rogers
M Celata Real Estate
opened its new location at
268 Broadway, directly across
from Revere City Hall on
Saturday, Oct. 22. Maureen
Celata has been in the real estate business since 1994 and
opened her own real estate
company in 2006. She looks
forward to continuing to grow
and serve clients from their
new location. The opening
was celebrated with a ribbon
cutting in the company of
Mayor Brian Arrigo.
Maureen Celata was accompanied by Mayor Brian Arrigo for the
grand re-opening. M Celata Real Estate celebrated its new location with a ribbon cutting on Saturday, Oct. 22. Owner
Maureen Celata was joined by her real estate agents and Mayor Brian Arrigo to cut the ribbon
outside of the new business location.
Johnny Green, Owner Maureen Celata, Kathy Schiavo, Lisa Migliozzi and Diane Law celebrated the
grand re-opening of M Celata Real Estate on Saturday afternoon, Oct. 22.
Real estate agents of M Celata Real Estate look forward to continuing to provide their services to
Revere and surrounding communities.
Pictured right,
Real estate
agents Johnny
Green and Carlos Villa were
ready to get
back to work
after ribbon
cutting.
Pictured right, Sylvia Caceda, Danielle Lozzi, and Sonja Moskal are looking forward to serving the
community at the new M Celata Real Estate location on Broadway Revere.
Letter //CONTINUED FROM PAGE 4
The public from the 12 cities/towns that go to Northeast
deserve better than an exponential rise in costs. Woburn’s
total cost, for example, went
from $750,000 to almost $1.8
million in just four years. Hidden within these rising costs
is a Superintendent's salary
that went from $168,000 to
$179,000 in just two years-an $11,000 raise! There are
a number of alarming equipment purchases around the
school that were completely unnecessary--a powder
coating unit that is not in the
MA Vocational Frameworks
was purchased for close to
$100,000, and $500,000 was
dumped into a STEM program
that has been short-sighted
from day one in my opinion.
SALESIAN BOYS & GIRLS CLUB
Meanwhile, the school is falling apart, the athletic fields are
badly outdated, and the leaky
swimming pool has been
closed for years. Last year,
Revere sent Northeast $1.3
million dollars. How much
more will be sent for the new
school Northeast's administration is trying to get?
The parents deserve better than to not even be told
that there is allegedly mold
all over the school - in bathrooms, in locker rooms, under floor tiles, and throughout
the HVAC system. Having
worked there for five years,
I witnessed it myself. The
school's administration made
a plea to the Massachusetts
Building Authority because
they are trying to get a new
building, but have said nothing at all to the parents. Never
mind that they run a daycare
inside the school, exposing
kids under the age of five to
moldy air. This is highly disturbing, to say the least.
Since I announced my
candidacy for the Northeast
School Committee, parents
and teachers who have encountered problems at the
school and have no one else
to turn to have been contacting me. They deserve someone to listen to them. Of the
12 school committee races,
10 are running unopposed--a
lack of turnover on the School
Committee will certainly do
nothing to curb the general
state of apathy. I have the utmost respect for Ron Janni-
Give the Gift of
Hometown News
A year’s subscription to
The Revere Journal,
The Chelsea Record or
The Winthrop Sun-Transcript.
$26 in town or $50 for out of town.
Name_______________________________________
Address_________________________________________
________________________________________
City__________________ State ____ ZIP___________
Clip this and mail in or stop by the office 8:30AM - 5PM
no's qualifications, as both a
man and `as a lifelong Vocational advocate; however, he
has been in this seat for 32
years and has been unwilling
to address the major problems
listed above that have gone on
regularly on his watch.
Revere needs a liaison between the school and the city,
one whose actions keep the
interests of both parties in
mind. We need a representative who will work tirelessly
to promote the school and enlighten the community about
the many opportunities there
are in vocational education for
students. It is not simply about
how many students are enrolled at Northeast; we must
do better for them, and continue to strive for improvements
across the board.
Lou Spagnola,
Candidate for Northeast
Vocational School
Committee (Revere)
10th ANNUAL PASTA DINNER
FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 18, 2016
6:00 p.m. to 8:00 p.m.
150 Byron Street, East Boston, MA
Food Provided by
Jeveli’s Restaurant,
Sammy Carlo’s Delicatessen
& Muffin Town
Join our Salesian Community for a
Special Family Night!
Many Raffles Prizes!! - Great Gift Baskets!!
Tickets $10.00 each
All proceeds to benefit programs for our kids.
For More Information Please Call 617-567-0863
www.salesianclub.com
facebook.com/salesianclub
We care for
the caregivers.
PLEASE USE WORDSWORTH ST. ENTRANCE
AMPLE PARKING IN SALESIAN PARKING AREAON WORDSWORTH ST.
You’ve made a commitment to providing
your loved one with the care they need
and deserve.
We stand alongside you with a promise
that you’ll never be alone on your journey
of providing the dignity and comfort of
home. With experienced care teams that
help solve day-to-day challenges while
anticipating what’s ahead, we support
caregivers like you and help improve the
lives of those in need of care.
The Independent Newspapers
385 Broadway, Suite 105
Revere, MA 02151
Learn more and find out if you’re eligible.
For more information call us at 781-485-0588
866-797-2337 | caregiverhomes.com
Black
Wednesday, October 26, 2016
THE REVERE JOURNAL
Page 11
POLICE NEWS
HALLOWEEN SAFETY
TIPS
The Revere Police Community Policing office has
been making the rounds to
the various schools over the
past week to remind children
of important safety tips when
Trick or Treating on Halloween.
Officer Gerard Salvati
said they have visited many
schools and remind children
and parents of the following:
•Younger children should
always be with an adult.
•Use a flashlight, glow
sticks, or reflective tape.
•Don’t go to dark,unlit
houses.
•Don’t go inside a stranger’s house alone.
•Cross and crosswalks and
make contact with the eyes of
drivers.
•Don’t eat any candy unless
an adult checks it first.
•Costumes and shoes
should fit to avoid falls.
•Avoid homemade treats.
POLICE RECOVER
FIREARM IN
WARRANT
Revere Police recovered
a firearm from an Overlook
Ridge man who was wanted
by police in Medford for a
domestic assault involving a
handgun.
On Friday, around 2 p.m.,
Revere Police executed an arrest warrant on a man at Overlook Ridge for the Medford
Police. The man had allegedly
threatened his girlfriend with
a firearm.
Once in the home to arrest
the man, they found a firearm
on the floor of an empty closet
in plain sight. After securing
a warrant, police were able to
recover the firearm and drugs.
Michael Siciliano, 19,
of 21 Overlook Ridge Terr.
#514, was charged with one
warrant, possession of ammo
without a permit, possession
of a firearm without a permit,
possession of a large capacity
firearm, defacing the serial
number on a firearm, and possession of a Class B drug.
ACCIDENT MONDAY
ON WINTHROP
PARKWAY
State Police from the Revere Barracks responded
Monday night to a single-vehicle crash on Route 145 that
resulted in serious injuries to
a teenage passenger and mi-
nor injuries to the driver and
another passenger, also teenagers. Two other passengers
in the 1998 GMC Envoy sport
utility vehicle refused medical
treatment. State Police have
issued a summons to the driver for charges of negligent operation and speeding.
Trooper and Revere Police,
along with Revere firefighters and EMS, responded to
the crash, which occurred on
Route 145 westbound near
the intersection with Hillside
Avenue, at 7:45 p.m. First responders found one passenger,
a 17-year-old boy from Everett, suffering from serious
injuries. Medical aid was provided on-scene and the victim
was then transported to Massachusetts General Hospital,
where he was listed in stable
condition later last night.
Two other occupants of the
vehicle – the driver, a 17-yearold Saugus boy and another
passenger, also a 17-yearold boy from Everett – were
transported to MGH with minor injuries.
The last two passengers,
both also 17-year-old boys
from Everett, refused medical
attention.
Troopers’ investigation indicates that the Envoy was
ARREST Report
MONDAY,
OCTOBER 17
Wayne Richard, 59, of Saugus, was arrested on charges
of operation of a motor vehicle while under the influence
of liquor (2nd offense) and
negligent operation of a motor vehicle.
Miguel A. Santana, 54, of
18 Intervale St., was arrested
on an outstanding warrant.
Nicholas Joseph Servideo,
31, of Everett, was issued a
summons for a charge of operating a motor vehicle with a
suspended license.
Thanh H. Thang, 41, of
Boston, was arrested on a
charge of shoplifting (3rd offense).
Pasquale Andrettola, 60, of
32 Centennial Ave., was issued a summons for a charge
of bribing a public official.
TUESDAY,
OCTOBER 18
Zachary P. Titus, 21, of
Wakefield, was issued a summons for a charge of shoplifting.
WEDNESDAY,
OCTOBER 19
Jasmine M. White, 26, of
Jamaica Plain, was issued a
summons for a charge of operating a motor vehicle with
a suspended license (subsequent offense).
Margerie Serrano, 34, of
179 Campbell Ave., was issued a summons for charges
of larceny of property over
$250 and intimidation of a
witness.
Patricia M. Costa, 54, of
1535 North Shore Rd., was
issued a summons for malicious destruction of property
over $250.
THURSDAY,
OCTOBER 20
Valeria Alves, 24, of Framingham, was arrested on a
charge of shoplifting.
Colin Thomas Faller, 19, of
Melrose, was arrested on an
outstanding warrant.
FRIDAY,
OCTOBER 21
Michael Siciliano, 19, of
21 Overlook Ridge Terrace,
was arrested on an outstanding warrant and on charges of
possession of a firearm without an FID card, possession of
ammunition without an FID
card, possession of a large
capacity firearm, defacing a
firearm serial number, and il-
legal possession of a Class B
controlled narcotic substance
with intent to distribute.
SATURDAY,
OCTOBER 22
Yurany Calle-Campos, 26,
of 370 Ocean Ave., was arrested on a charge of assault
& battery.
SUNDAY, OCTOBER 27
Jessica M. Filipowich, 37,
of Malden, was arrested on a
charge of operating a motor
vehicle while under the influence of liquor.
Sandra Maldonado, 25, of
44 Highland St., was arrested on a charge of interfering
with a police officer in the
performance of his duty.
Jose Granados, 44, of 44
Highland St., was arrested on
charges of assault & battery
and interfering with a police
officer in the performance of
his duty.
Get your Flu Shot
Vacúnese contra la influenza (gripe)
We are pleased to announce that flu
vaccines are now available to everyone.
You do not need to be an EBNHC patient in order to receive a
vaccine. If you would like to be vaccinated, please call MondayFriday to make an appointment:
• Adult Medicine
617-568-4401 (over age 15)
• Family Medicine
617-568-4800 (adults and children)
• Pediatrics
617-568-4477 (children under 15)
Protect yourself
and your family.
Get vaccinated!
¡Proteja su salud
y la de sufamilia.
Vacúnese!
Nos complace informarle que las vacunas
contra la influenza estacional están disponibles
para todo el mundo.
Usted no necesita ser paciente del EBNHC para vacunarse. Si desea
vacunarse, favor de llamar de lunes-viernes para hacer una cita:
traveling westbound on Route
145 at a high rate of speed.
According to the preliminary
crash reconstruction, the high
rate of speed caused the driver
to lose control as he attempted to change from the middle
lane to the left lane. The vehicle rolled over and struck a cement wall and a fence before
coming to rest on its roof on
the roadway.
The driver will be summons
to Chelsea District Court to
face charges of negligent operation of a motor vehicle and
speeding. The westbound side
of Route 145 at the crash location was closed until 10:16
p.m.
car.
On Monday, Oct. 17, at
5:24 p.m., officers were conducting a motor vehicle stop
on Shirley Avenue. While
doing so, one officer was approached by a man who asked
the officer if he could supply
him with the owner’s information on a parked vehicle. He
also tried to offer the officer
money to do so. The officer
informed the man he does not
accept bribes or give info out.
Pasquale Andreottola, 60,
of 32 Centennial Ave., was
summonsed for bribing a public employee.
ALERT OFFICER
GRABS SUSPECT
On Wednesday, Oct. 19,
Revere Police responded to
area of Central Fire on Broadway for a female causing a
disturbance.
The woman was intoxicated and allegedly she walked
by the fire station screaming
and yelling.
Officer Leo McCaskell is
being credited with a great
arrest of a man who was accused of sexually assaulting a
woman on an MBTA bus on
Saturday, Oct. 22.
The officer observed a male
party at the bus stop near 7/11
who fit the description of one
male party wanted for a sexual assault on an MBTA bus
earlier. The Revere officer
was notified just a short time
earlier from an MBTA police
officer about the incident.
The Revere officer placed
the man under arrest and the
MBTA responded to the station to take custody of the
man. No further information
was available.
CAN’T BRIBE THE
COPS
One man was summonsed
for trying to bribe a police
officer on Shirley Avenue to
give him information on the
owner of a particular parked
• Departamento de Medicina Familiar
617-568-4800 (adultos y niños)
• Departamento de Pediatría
617-568-4477 (niños menores de 15 años)
Because your good health matters. 617-569-5800 • www.ebnhc.org •
Black
FOUND WOMAN’S
BODY
Revere Police and the State
Police are actively investigating a case where a dead woman was found in the woods
behind the Stop & Shop on
Furlong Drive – right behind
the Police Station.
On Thursday, Oct. 20,
around 2 p.m., officers responded to the area for a deceased female. No foul play
was noted at the scene, but
officials are investigating.
WEEKLY CRIME REPORT
Journal Staff Reports
House Breaks: (3)
VFW; Aurelia Sylvia
Drive; and Ocean Avenue.
Commercial Breaks: (0)
Motor Vehicle *Thefts/
Breaks: (3)
Lee Burbank Highway –
Sunoco; *Overlook Ridge
Drive; Salem Street – West
Revere Health Center
Motor Vehicle Accidents:
(32)
Copeland Circle; Mahoney
Circle; McCoba Street; Parkway (cruiser); American Le-
gion Highway; Beach Street;
Larkin Street; Squire Road;
VFW; Furlong Drive; Broadway; Lynnway; Lynnway;
Freeman Street; Reservoir
Avenue; Broadway; Harris
Street; Park Avenue; Oliver
Terrace; American Legion
Highway; Beach Street;
Squire Road; Whitin Avenue;
North Shore Rd/Dehon; Oak
Island/North Shore Rd; Malden Street; Beach Street; Parkway/Furlong; Lee Burbank
Hwy; Lee Burbank Hwy; Furlong Drive; and Beach Street.
House Parties/Loud Stereo
Complaints (after 9 p.m.): 10
Three banks robbed in under one week
By Seth Daniel
Three banks were hit in
one week in Revere – all of
them Citizens Bank branches
– and police are investigating
any connections between the
three.
The most recent, and most
shocking robbery, happened at
the Citizens Bank on Broadway around 11:40 a.m. when
a man dressed in all black,
wearing a sinister skeleton
mask and brandishing a handgun went into the bank and
stole an undisclosed amount
of cash.
The suspect wore a black
hat with Peace signs on it and
brandished a weapon, taking
off on a green bicycle up Central Avenue – where a red dye
pack exploded and caused a
lot of attention to be focused
on the fleeing man.
The robber eluded police,
but a good deal of the money
was found in the Municipal
Parking Lot on Central Avenue – about one block from
the bank.
Tellers at the bank were
shaken by the incident and the
bank branch closed up for the
rest of the day on Monday.
Meanwhile, six Revere
Public Schools went on lock-
The Revere Police are looking
for an identification of this
man, who brandished a gun
and robbed the Broadway
Citizens Bank branch Monday morning while wearing
a skeleton mask. He fled on a
bicycle and eluded police.
down for about 15 minutes
after the armed man fled from
the bank.
Supt. Dianne Kelly said
Revere High School, Rumney
Marsh Academy, the Hill
School, Lincoln School,
Whelan School and the Susan
B. Anthony School were on
external lockdown for about
15 minutes out of an abundance of caution.
“We did develop some
leads on the case today (Tuesday), so it’s a pretty active
investigation,” said Lt. John
Goodwin.
Meanwhile, on Thursday,
Oct. 20, around 6 p.m., police responded to the Citizens
Bank on Furlong Drive in the
Stop & Shop for an armed
robbery of the branch.
Workers described the man
as a white male, about 5’4”
and wearing a baseball hat. He
had tape over his nose. He fled
with an undisclosed amount
of cash.
The day before, on Wednesday, Oct. 19, police believe
the same man committed an
armed robbery of the Citizens
Bank on Squire Road in the
Stop & Shop there.
The man entered the bank
around 3:30 p.m. on Oct. 19
and brandished a firearm.
The man was wearing a longsleeved white shirt and sweatpants, along with a blue baseball hat and the tape on his
nose.
He demanded cash, was
armed and fled the scene on
foot.
“That was the same suspect in both of those Stop &
Shop cases,” said Goodwin.
“We have some good video
evidence on the two at Stop &
Shop incidents so we’re following that.”
Around the City
Gods and Mortals
Yehuda Poliker
Moonbox Productions and
Grand Harmonie present “Gods
and Mortals,” featuring internationally celebrated leader-violinist
Cynthia Roberts, Sunday, Nov. 6,
3-4:30 p.m., United Parish, 210
Harvard St., Brookline.Tickets,
$15-$30. Visit Eventbrite.
The multi-instrumentalist-composer performs Saturday, Oct.
29, 8 p.m. at Berklee Performance
Center, 136 Mass. Ave., Boston.
[email protected]. YU R [STAR]
• Departamento de Medicina para Adultos
617-568-4401 (más de 15 años)
BUSTED OUT FIRE
STATION WINDOW
In the midst of her tirade,
she punched a window out on
the garage doors of the Central Fire Station.
She was transported to
Whidden Hospital for injuries
to her hand and she will be
summonsed to court.
Patricia Costa, 54, of 1535
North Shore Rd., was charged
with malicious destruction of
property over $250.
Oberon presents Finkle’s mini
series, through Nov. 6, 2
Arrow St., Cambridge. Visit
Cluboberon.com.
Shakespeare Romantic Comedies
Brown/Trinity
Rep
MFA
Programs present Shakespeare’s
romantic comedy, “The Winter’s
Tale,” November 3-6: November
3-5, 7:30 p..; matinees,
November 5,6, 2 p.m., Citizens
Bank Theater, Pell Chafee
Performance Center, 87 Empire
St., Downtown Providence, RI.
$12; seniors, $8; students, $6.
Visit trinityrep.com.
Mala
ArtsEmerson announces the
world premiere of playwright-actress Melinda Lopez’s “Mala,”a
reflection of love,loss and family,
in which she appears, Oct. 27-Nov.
20, Jackie Liebergott Black Box
Theatre, Emerson/Paramount
Center, Boston, 559 Washington
St., Boston. $60.Thursdays, 7:30
p.m.; Fridays,8p.m.; Saturdays,
2,8 p.m.; Sundays, 2 p.m.;
Saturday, Oct. 29, 8 p.m. only.
Visit www.artsemerson.org or call
617-824-8400.
K2
Commonwealth Shakespeare
Company Theatre in the Rough
presents a staged reading of
“K2,” Saturday, Oct. 29, 7 p.m.,
Babson Arts, Sorenson Center
for the Arts, Wellesley. $20; VIP
reception tickets, $60.
Gorefest XIV
ImprovBoston presents more
camp, more pain, in their
Gorefest XIV: The Campain,
its annual blood-soaked original Halloween musical show,
October 27 through November
6. Thursdays, 8 p.m.; Fridays,
Saturdays, 7:30,9:30 p.m.;
Sundays, also Monday, Oct.
31, 7:30 p.m. 40 Prospect St.,
Cambridge. Casual, washable attire.Ponchos provided.
Recommended for ages 16+.
$25; students at the door, $20.
improvboston.com/gorefest. Nerissa and Katryna
Nields
The melodic, harmonious sisters perform Nov. 5, 3 p.m.,
($10/$12), Club Passim’s family show, and will perform an
adult show at 7 p.m. 47 Palmer
St., Cambridge. passim.org, 617492-7679.
Black Cyan Magenta Yellow
Page 12
THE REVERE JOURNAL
Wednesday, October 26, 2016
REVERE HIGH SCHOOL'S 6TH ANNUAL HAUNTED HALLWAYS
Photos by Kane DiMasso-Scott
The 2016 Revere High
School Haunted Hallways
took place on Thursday, October 20, 2016. Proceeds from
the event will benefit the Class
of 2018. The juniors of Revere
High School, given creative
control over the event, went
all out with this years Haunted Hallways; with the second
floor lights shut off, partici-
pants had to weave their way
through themed classrooms
filled with creatures, clowns,
and the living dead, jumping
out at them from behind and
under walls. The participants
went through in groups of seven or less, to ensure the event
went smoothly. Once it began,
screams could be heard all the
way from the opposite side
of the building, continuously
throughout the night.
The first room along the Haunted Hallways was the Purge room.
These ladies gave the participants quite the fright with the
lights turned off.
Kimberly Mendez, Stephanie Vu, and Ehridhi Islam worked the
front door, sending groups of participants up to the Haunted
Hallways.
Nicole Travis, Claudia Cervantes, and Natalie Maldonado worked
the night volunteering at Haunted Hallways, making sure
groups stayed together and the event ran smoothly.
Students in charge of the Butcher's Room.
Sebastian Varon getting into
character in the Butcher's
Room right before the event
begins.
Mustfa Bensalah, in the Asylum Room.
With the school lights dimmed, and strobe and color lights added throughout the second floor, this hallway turned into a very
treacherous walk for some participants.
Scary decorations lined the
Haunted Hallways, being
attached to the ceilings, walls,
floors, and windows.
Twin clowns Haley Tedescho and Nadia Lerari in the Long Hallway.
Once the event started, there
was not a quiet moment
throughout the second floor
of Revere High.
The Asylum room was filled with screams throughout the night
as kids stuck close to their parents and friends alike.
Please Join us
in supporting
Revere High Basketball
Participants advanced in
groups through the Haunted
Hallways, making sure to keep
close and safe in case things
got too scary.
Mustafa Bensalah played quite the convincing role as he
crawled across the floor, bloody and battered, with a knife and
teddy bear.
Saturday, November 19th
Beachmont VFW
7PM - 11PM
Food & Dance
Live Auction & Raffles
$25.00 Donation
PHOTO BY ADRIENNE MAGUIRE
Tickets can be purchased at
paypal.me/rhsboysbasketball
or
Checks can be mailed to
RHS Basketball Parents
Club/ Co. Pat Hayes
170 Sargeant St, Revere,
MA 02151
All the Revere High students who made Haunted Hallways the success that it was gathered for a
group photo.
Hannah Fitzpatrick scared all the partipants out of their whits with her "GET OUT" screams.
Black Cyan Magenta Yellow
Black Cyan Magenta Yellow
Wednesday, October 26, 2016
THE REVERE JOURNAL
Page 13
Sports
RHS CROSS COUNTRY SENIOR NIGHT
RHS SPORTS Roundup
Photos by Joe Prezioso
RHS football team
defeats Salem, 28-23;
playoff opener Friday
The Revere High football
team rolled to its third straight
victory and a berth in the Division 1A North state playoffs
with a 28-23 victory over Salem before a wet but delighted hometown crowd Friday
evening under the lights at
sparkling Harry Della Russo
Stadium.
Coach Lou Cicatelli's crew
is the sixth seed in the D-1A
North and will trek to Chelmsford, the third seed, for a contest Friday evening at 7:00.
The win over Salem was
not as close as the final fivepoint margin might indicate,
although the visiting Witches did their best to pull some
tricks in the final quarter to
narrow what had been a seemingly-comfortable 28-7 Revere lead.
The Patriot offense dominated the contest from the outset, piling up more than 350
yards of total offense on the
evening. Revere drove deep
into Salem territory on its first
possession, but a fumble was
scooped up by a Salem defender who scooted 70 yards
for a touchdown.
However, despite that inauspicious beginning, the Patriots shook off the momentary
adversity, taking the ensuing
kickoff and marching to paydirt. Senior captain Anthony
DeStefano scored the first of
his four touchdowns on the
night, going in from six yards
out. Senior captain Victor
Rivera provided most of the
big yardage on the drive with
a pair of scampers of 30 and
40 yards, as he got untracked
early in a contest in which he
would run roughshod over the
Salem defense for 180 yards.
After the Patriot defense
held firm on Salem's next possession, quarterback Eddie
Sullivan went back to work
and launched an 80 yard foray for a touchdown. DeStefano went over from two yards
out and Badr Haou kicked the
second of his four extra points
to make it 14-7. A key play in
the drive was a pass from Sullivan to senior captain John
DeSimone.
Revere's last offensive possession of the half was another long drive that culminated
with DeStefano going in for a
TD from short yardage with
0:02 left in the half. A 30 yard
pass connection from Sullivan
to Haou was the key play in
the Revere drive that left matters standing at 21-7 at the intermission.
"We played extremely well
on both sides of the ball in the
first half," said Cicatelli. "It
was awesome two-way football. Our defense was rock
solid, with senior linemen Gianni Hill and Gabe Martinez
dominating the line of scrimmage. Victor Rivera came up
The Revere High School
cross country team honored its
seniors with posters and group
photos before their meet last
Wednesday, Oct. 19, at Belle
Isle Marsh course.
Seniors Monica Posada, Lani Stevens and Megan Erwin with
Coach Katie Sinnott.
Senior Monica Posada is full of emotion and memories when she
glances upon the poster created by her fellow teammates for
her about her time on the team.
Coach Michael Flynn with Sebastian Mejia, Zack Gentile and
Brendan Christopher.
Please see ROUNDUP Page 14
Produce
Crisp & Juicy McIntosh Apples 3lb Bag.........................2/$5.00
"Your Independent Grocer, Where Old Friends Mee t And Ne w One s Are Made"
SALE DAYS THURSDAY, OCTOBER 27 THROUGH NOVEMBER 2ND 2016
Grocery
Great grocery specials
Prince Pasta (ex. Lasagna & Jumbo Shells) .......................10/$10.00
Hunts Pasta Sauce 24oz. ................................10/$10.00
Rice-a-Roni .......................................................10/$10.00
Best Yet Cranberry Sauce ...............................10/$10.00
Chobani Yogurt ................................................10/$10.00
Best Yet Apple Juice 64oz. .................................................4/$5.00
Wishbone Salad Dressings 8oz. .......................... 4/$5.00
Cap'n Crunch Cereal.............................................2/$5.00
Best Yet Canned Vegetables................................2/$1.00
Penn Dutch Egg Noodles .....................................2/$3.00
Pillsbury Toaster Strudel ...................................... 3/$5.00
Ellios Pizza ............................................................ 2/$6.00
TGIF Appetizers.....................................................2/$5.00
Nestle Cookies ..................................................... 2/$6.00
Dragone Ricotta 15oz.......................................... 2/$4.00
Bakery
Ecce Panes Semolina Bread.......................................$2.99
Buttermilk Biscuits 4pk .............................................. $1.89
Butterscotch Pecan Cookies 10pk .............................$2.99
Fresh Jumbo Green Peppers .............................. $1.29/lb
Fresh Mild Red Salad Onions .................................89¢/lb
Fresh & Sweet Blackberries.................................2/$5.00
Fresh Mangoes ..................................................... 4/$5.00
Weekend Specials
Friday, October 28th through Sunday, October 30th
BAKERY
Rocky Road Brownies 4pk............................................ $3.49
4" Pies- Blueberry- Apple-Pecan-Cherry........................89¢
DELI
Best Yet Roast beef ..................................................... $5.99/lb
Russer Wunderbar German Bologna .................... $2.29/lb
Our Own Store Made Antipasto .............................. $5.99/lb
PRODUCE
Fresh Bananas ...........................................................39¢/lb
Cluster on the Vine Tomatoes..............................................$1.79/lb
California Sweet Green Seedless Grapes......................$1.89/lb
MEAT
Family Pack Country Style Pork Ribs.................. $1.39/lb
Family Pack Grade A Drumsticks ........................ 69¢/lb
Family Pack Sirloin Steak Tips ......................$6.99/lb
GROCERY
Pepsi Cola 2 Liter .................10/$10.00 limit 10/cust + deposit
Tropicana Orange Juice 89oz. ................................. $4.99
Best Yet Ice Cream .............................................. 2/$4.00
NEW THIS YEAR–CREATE YOUR CUSTOM DINNER FROM THE ITEMS BELOW:
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FROM THE ITEMS BELOW:
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FROM THE ITEMS BELOW:
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ORDER
PRICE WEIGHT
OR EXTENDED
NAME
NEW THIS YEAR–CREATE
YOUR
CUSTOM
DINNER
FROM
THE
ITEMS
BELOW:
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ORDER
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PRICE
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OR AMOUNT
EXTENDED
NAME
PER LB.9 PM
QUANTITY
WILL BE OPEN
UNTIL
NEW THISWE
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YOUR
CUSTOM
DINNER
FROM
THE ITEMS BELOW:
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PER LB. WEIGHT
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WHOLE TURKEY - @TURKEY
16-20 LB
$39.99
PHONE
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ON WEDNESDAY,
NOV.
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PRICE
DOZEN
DINNER
ROLLS
dozen
APPLE
PIE
TURKEY
GRAVY
1.99/LB
LESS
DEPOSIT/PYT.
PUMPKIN
PIESAUCE
$N/C
3.99 dozen
DATE
TO
BE PICKED $UP:
HOMEMADE
STUFFING
3.99/LB
CRANBERRY
1.99
APPLE
PIE
$N/C
LESS
DEPOSIT/PYT.
$
PUMPKIN
PIE
11/2lbs
DINNER
PRICE
DOZEN
DINNER
ROLLS
dozen
dozen
MASHED
POTATOES
3.50/3.99
APPROX.
TIME:
TURKEY
GRAVY
1.99/LB
LESS
DEPOSIT/PYT.
PUMPKIN
PIE ROLLS
$N/C
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APPLE
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DUE
$
TOTAL
PRICE:
$dozen
SWEET
POTATOES
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DOZEN
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DUE
$
TOTAL
PRICE:
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$
TOTAL
PRICE:
$
TURKEY PIE
GRAVY
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DUE
$$
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BRING
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ORDERS MUST BE RECEIVED
BY required
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NOV.
23, 2013
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BY
92013.
PMUPSAT.
NOV.
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WILL
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UNTIL
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ON
WEDNESDAY
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Deli
Butterball Honey Smoked Turkey Breast................ $5.99/lb
Carando Genoa Salami .............................................. $5.99/lb
Krakus Imported Polish Ham .................................... $5.99/lb
Hans Kissle Cheese Tortellini Salad........................... $5.99/lb
Great Lakes Swiss Cheese.......................................... $3.99/lb
Meat
Family Pack Specials
Grade A Chicken Leg Quarters .....................69¢/lb
Boneless Top Sirloin Steaks ...................... $3.99/lb
Center Cut Boneless Pork Chops ............. $1.99/lb
Spoon Roast Beef .................................... $3.99/lb
Center Cut Pork Roast or Blade Pork Roast$1.99/lb
Perdue Roasting Chickens......................... $1.29/lb
Best Yet Bacon ......................................... 2/$6.00
Bar S Hot Dogs 1lb pkg ....................................89¢
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Page 14
THE REVERE JOURNAL
Wednesday, October 26, 2016
REVERE D-SQUAD POP WARNER HEADING TO THE PLAYOFFS
Photos by Joe Prezioso
Revere D-Squad Pop Warner defeated the Roxbury Eagles 34-12 on Sunday morning. The team clinched the
division (Greater Boston D2)
title with their victory against
the Eagles and has already secured a spot in the state championship.
“We don’t want to get ahead
of ourselves; we are going to
take it game by game,” said
coach Patrick Keefe. “We’re
gonna try to win a few and
hopefully we will have some
luck on our side and make a
historic run for the city of Revere.”
From here, the Patriots
move on to the state playoffs,
and then the regional championships. If they win those,
they move on to Florida for
the Pop Warner equivalent of
the Super Bowl.
Revere Patriots players run to the bench after winning the coin toss against the Roxbury Eagles.
Doug Goodwin recovered a
Roxbury Eagles fumbled ball
and ran from his end zone to
the Eagles to score a touchdown.
Dante Hector (23) dives with the ball to gain a first down.
Domenic Boudreu (11) makes a run with the ball, a first of many.
David Ramirez is tackled on a run.
Sam Catano (79) jumps to try to block a Eagles pass.
Roundup //CONTINUED FROM PAGE 13
from his cornerback spot
and made some nice tackles
that dropped their ball carriers
for losses."
The Patriots continued to
maintain their dominance after the intermission. Revere
extended their lead immediately after the break to a seemingly-commanding 28-7 advantage with a 70-yard march
that absorbed almost the entire third period. DeStefano,
who ended up with 105 yards
on the night from his fullback
slot, got the call once again,
this time going in from eight
yards out.
However, the Salem offense
finally got its act together and
found the end zone to slice
the Revere lead to 28-13 at
the start of the fourth quarter.
A Patriot fumble that was recovered by the Witches at the
Revere 30 then made things
interesting. The Witches took
advantage of the turnover to
turn the game into a suddenly-uncomfortable 28-21 affair
with about two minutes to go.
The Patriots then did themselves no favors by drawing
a pair of yellow flags on successive plays on their ensuing
possession, pushing themselves back to inside their own
10 yard line. Cicatelli at that
point opted to take a safety to
give his kicker a clean shot at
a free kick. The strategy paid
off well, with Salem unable to
mount a meaningful offensive
threat in the final minute.
"Salem made a game of it
and we got a little bit sloppy at
the end, but all in all the team
did a great job," said Cicatelli.
"We have been improving ev-
ery week and have been working hard in practice, and it's
paid off. I'm so proud of the
way the team has played these
past few weeks. The boys
could have thrown in the towel when we started out at 0-4,
but they never gave up and
now we're in the playoffs."
If the Patriots prevail at
Chelmsford, they will face the
winner of the #2 Reading vs.
#7 Malden Catholic matchup.
Lincoln-Sudbury is the top
seed in the D-1A North, with
Westford Academy at No. 4,
Peabody at No. 5, and Cambridge at No. 8.
RHS girls cross
country team
defeats Salem
The Revere High girls cross
country team ran to its second
straight victory with a 21-34
win over Salem last Tuesday.
Almost all of coach Katie Sinnott's Lady Patriots
pushed themselves to earn
personal record (PR) times
on their home course at Belle
Isle, as well as PR race paces,
en route to the triumph.
"Despite having an injury
to a scoring runner, the team
pulled together and won," said
Sinnott.
Among the Lady Patriots
who posted PR times were:
Monica Posada (senior),
Hawa Barry (junior), Hannah
Fitzpatrick (junior), Somaya
Laroussi (sophomore), Olivia Novoselsky (sophomore),
Manal Dembri (freshman),
Salome Gezehagn (freshman),
and Gabrielle O'Brien (freshman).
Fifty Wonderful Years
Emerito Arias
"Though she is not a scoring runner, Manal Dembri
had a break-out race, running
strong throughout the course
and taking almost three minutes off her overall time from
last week," noted Sinnott.
"Junior Hannah Fitzpatrick is
a true talent who is seconds
away from the Revere course
record. Monica Posada continues her streak of personal
improvement over the season."
Sinnott and her crew will
compete in the Northeastern
Conference Meet this Saturday at Bradley Palmer State
Park in Topsfield.
RHS GOLF CAPTAINS
TO COMPETE IN THE NEC OPEN
RHS Varsity Golf Team Captains Chris Anderson and Cam O’Neil
were chosen as the 2017 NEC All-Stars. Congratulations!
They will compete in the NEC Open Wednesday, October 26th at
Gannon Golf Club in Lynn.
Manal Dembri - 18th overall, 37:55
Fine showing by RHS
boys cross country
Although the Revere High
boys cross country team
dropped its final dual meet of
the season to Salem, 19-38,
last week, 11 of the 13 Patriots who competed achieved
personal records (PR) on their
2.85 mile course at Belle Isle.
The first Revere runner
across the line with a fourth
place finish was Zack Gentile,
who set a PR of 17:30. Sebastian Mejia took fifth place
with a PR of 17:31, followed
by Arthur LaCerda in eighth
position with a PR of 18:06,
Jonathan Nushi in 11th with a
PR of 19:22, and Kevin Nguyen in 12th in 19:23.
Other Patriots who competed were Bryan Gutierrez with
a PR, by more than a minute,
of 19:22; Brandon Nguyen,
Ryan Sarmanian, with a PR
by more than two minutes, in
21:52; Fabio Tran with a PR,
by 1:14, of 21:58; James Carpanelli with a PR, by 1:52, of
22:00; David Phan in 23:00;
Ahmed Nahtar with a PR,
by more than one minute, of
23:58; Brendan Christopher
in 24:30; and Wellan Sok in
26:55.
Although the Patriots will
not be competing in this
week's NEC All-League Meet
because members of the team
have commitments with the
Junior ROTC, coach Mike
Flynn and his crew will compete in the state meets in the
weeks thereafter.
Volleyball team wins
to reach state tourney
The Revere High volleyball
team punched its ticket for a
Journey to the Tourney with
a 3-0 shutout victory over
Northeast Regional Vocational School Monday.
Last Tuesday, the Lady Patriots defeated Malden in three
sets, 25-22, 25-20, and 25-14.
Seniors Hailey Poole and Samantha Myrtil turned in impressive serving performances
in the triumph.
Coach Brenna Suslak and
her crew, who now stand at
10-6 on the season, were set to
host Lynn Classical yesterday
(Tuesday); entertain Lynn English tomorrow; (Thursday),
and then wrap up their regular
season at home against Peabody Monday.
THINK OF IT AS AN
OWNER’S MANUAL
FOR YOUR MONEY.
The free Consumer Action
Handbook. It’s in print and
online at ConsumerAction.gov.
Order your free copy online
at ConsumerAction.gov or
write to Handbook, Pueblo,
CO 81009.
Mercury Recovery Program
Mercury is an element that can be harmful to human health and the
environment if not disposed of properly.
Mercury is found in products such as:
Thermostats
“Feliz Cumpleaños Papito”
Your Family Loves You
Individual Results
Hannah Fitzpatrick - 1st
overall, 19:29
Monica Posada - 2nd overall, 20:46
Leila Cesic - 3rd overall,
21:22
Olivia Novoselsky - 7th
overall, 24:52
Lani Stevens - 8th overall,
25:02
Gabrielle O'Brien - 12th
overall, 26:42
Somaya Laroussi - 15th
overall, 29:09
Salome Gezehagn - 16th
overall, 29:09
Hawa Barry - 17th overall,
34:41
Thermometers
Button-Cell
Batteries
Mercury
Switches
Fluorescent
Lamps
Please contact your local Board of Health or Dept. of Public Works
for information where to safely dispose of these items.
Sponsored by
Wheelabrator Saugus
Black
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Wednesday, October 26, 2016
THE REVERE JOURNAL
Black Cyan Magenta Yellow
Page 15
Supporting
Our Youth
Working for
Our Youth
Working for a
strong, healthy
community
Jessica A.
Speaker of
the House
BOB DeLEO
For all of your General & Cosmetic Dental needs
123 Revere Street, Revere • 781-284-6826
www.dfdentalcare.com
Proud of Our
Community
Mayor
Brian Arrigo
Giannino
& Family
City Council President
Joseph Boncore
State Senator
REVERE MUNICIPAL EMPLOYEES
FEDERAL CREDIT UNION
SAVINGS ACCOUNTS
Savings & Club Accounts • Share Drafts (checking Accounts)
ATM / Debit Cards • Allpoint Network - 55,000 free ATMS
Online Banking • Bill Pay
Mobile Banking from your smartphone
POP Money - Person to Person money transfer
LOANS
Home Equity • Auto Loans • Personal • Bill Consolidation
Share Secured • Personal Loans for Education
281 BROADWAY, CITY HALL
REVERE, MA 02151
(781) 286-8116
REVERE HIGH SCHOOL
101 SCHOOL ST.
(781) 333-2071
Do you have an idea that could make
Revere a healthier place to work, live,
and play?
www.reveremunicipalefcu.org
Enrolled RPS Students Grade 1-12
& their families are eligible to join
Revere on the Move and the Alcohol, Tobacco,
and Other Drugs Task Force of Revere CARES
want to help you make your idea a reality!
Proud to call
this city home
John Powers
City Councillor Ward 5
EDUCATING
OUR YOUTH
Funds Available:
TAXI
• Up to $8,000 for ideas to reduce youth
substance use, improve youth mental health,
or increase positive youth engagement
• Up to $7,500 for permanent community
changes that make it easier to eat healthy and
be active for all
• Up to $3,000 for programs that make it
easier to eat healthy and be active for all
24-Hour
Taxi Service
617-539-9999
617-846-9999
TLC Pediatrics
DBA Revere-Winthrop Pediatrics
Janet Chua, M.D.
Yelizavueta Vaynshteyn, M.D.
Leonard F. Firer, M.D.
Robert Fusunyan, M.D.
Joan Granitsas, CPNP-PC
Does my idea fit with the grant? What if I have never done a grant
before?
Anyone can call or email the staff listed on the applications for any question about mini
grants! We want to make your idea as successful as possible.
Specializing in
Infants - Children - Adolescents
280 Beach Street,
Revere, MA 02151
781-289-5057
Who can apply?
Community organizations, neighborhood groups, city departments, schools, businesses
and any others who want to take on a project to help make Revere a healthier
community.
24 Hour TAXI Service
24 Hour TAXI Service
617-539-9999Proud
• 617-846-9999
of
Our City
SUPPORTING
OUR YOUTH
CAROL
TYE
SCHOOL
COMMITTEE
Where can I find an application?
General application will be available at www.reverecares.org on November 1 st !
When are applications due?
Sunday, January 14, 2017
Susan
Gravellese
School
Committee
Example
Fund:
ExampleProjects
ProjectsWe
We Can
Can Fund:
ATOD: Any Above the Influence Campaign activity, peer-to-peer mental health
ATOD:
Any management
Above the Influence
Campaign
activity, peer-to-peer
mental health
support,
stress
trainings
for students,
positive alternative
activities
support, stress management trainings for students, positive alternative activities
for store fronts and public spaces
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Permanent Community Change: New urban trails, community gardens, bicycle racks
for store
fronts and
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Permanent
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Change: New urban trails, community gardens, bicycle racks
Programs: Safe walking or biking trainings, healthy cooking or shopping classes
Like us on Facebook or visit our coalition website for the latest information on
Like us on Facebook or visit the
ourmini
coalition
grants. website for the latest information on
• 100 Gal. Minimum • 24 Hour Service
REVERE
KARATE
ACADEMY
144 Broadway, Revere
781-289-9535
www.reverekarate.com
Programs: Safe walking or biking trainings, healthy cooking or shopping classes
CALL FOR DAILY LOW PRICE
SCHOOL
COMMITTEEMAN
• *NEW* for 2016, up to $5,000 dollars for
youth lead applications!
24 Hour TAXI Service
24 Hour TAXI Service
617-539-9999 • 617-846-9999
Don't Be
afraid to
ask for
help...
MICHAEL
FERRANTE
the mini grants.
Facebook.com/RevereCARESCoalition
Facebook.com/RevereCARESCoalition
Facebook.com/revereonthemove or
Facebook.com/revereonthemove
or
www.reverecares.org
www.reverecares.org
Blooming Daisy™
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To order, please call or visit:
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Northgate Shopping Center
Revere, MA 02151
Save $2
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SAY NO TO DRUGS
Michael “Mickey” Casoli
Black
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Page 16
THE REVERE JOURNAL
Wednesday, October 26, 2016
REVERE THROUGH THE YEARS
10 years ago
October 25, 2006
Mayor Thomas Ambrosino
answered questions and heard
suggestions from City Council members at a meeting held
to discuss the selection of a
developer by the mayor for
the $500 million proposed development on Ocean Ave.
The city's 911 emergency
call system is slated for an upgrade to E-911 in the coming
weeks.
The City Council voted
against a request for a the
construction of a billboard at
Brown Circle above a small
building abutting Broadway
at Pitcairn St. Citizens in the
area strongly opposed the proposal, which would have been
the 82nd billboard in the city.
Lee's Trailer Park on the
Parkway has been purchased
by local developer William
Settipane for $3 million.
The proposal for a 13-story, 38-unit condo building on
Revere Beach Blvd. on the
site of the Shipwreck Lounge
and Breakers Rooming House
came before the City Council
this week.
Although MCAS scores
released this week show an
overall steady improvement
in the city's schools, there are
some of areas of concern for
fifth grade students.
20 years ago
October 23, 1996
A weekend nor'easter
brought rain that lasted for 40
hours, leaving several neighborhoods underwater, driving
many from their homes, and
causing hundreds of thousands of dollars worth of damage to homes and businesses.
Ward 6 City Councillor Denise Salemi said residents in
her section of the city "are in
devastation."
Mayor Robert Haas has
asked the City Council for
$100,000 for legal fees for
court action to stop the proposed asphalt batching plant
for Rowe's Quarry on Salem
St.
Police arrested 12 gang
members on drug-dealing
charges in the area of Shirley
and Walden Aves.
30 years ago
October 29, 1986
The City Council has voted
unanimously to borrow $3.7
million for various projects,
of which $2.5 million will be
used for remodeling the police station on Pleasant St. and
$500,000 for equipment purchases by the DPW.
Mayor George V. Colella has added his support to
the Mass. Municipal Association's so-called Mayors
D-Day in the War on Drugs,
with Nov. 18 set as the date
for community leaders to assemble in the schools to warn
students of the evils of drugs
and alcohol.
A police investigation reportedly has revealed that a
former public official is the
prime suspect in the automobile window-smashing spree
of last January that was aimed
at current office-holders.
However, the police have yet
to reveal the identity of the
suspect.
The city has declared Lenny Orlandella Day to mark the
25 years that Orlandella has
worked at Kelly's Roast Beef
on Revere Beach. Orlandella
was feted at a surprise party
attended by more than 100
friends at the Porthole Pub
in Lynn. Kelly's recently was
recognized by the Guinness
World Book of Records for
serving more Coca-Cola than
any other establishment in the
country.
40 years ago
October 20, 1976
The City Council took the
Police Dept. to task for a number of problems in the city, including roving gangs of boys
ages 8-13; drugs being sold
at school playgrounds; and a
juvenile who set a bridge on
fire.
The following day, Police
Chief George Corbett lashed
out at his critics in an interview with the Revere Journal. "I'm sick and tired of my
men taking the brunt of criticism for problems in the city.
For example, with regards to
nightclubs in the city, since
1974 we have made 38 arrests
for various violations of the
liquor laws, but the License
Commission has yet to hand
out even one suspension," he
said.
Despite the protests of
Mayor William Reinstein,
local residents, and the City
Council, the License Commission voted 2-1 to allow
local establishments to remain
open until 2 a.m. pursuant to
the new state law. Commissioners Richard Hayes and
Berg Barooshian voted in favor and Joseph DelGreco opposed the measure.
Second grade students who
presently are attending classes
in the controversial portable
classrooms at the McKinley
School will be able to attend
classes at the Immaculate
Conception School starting
next week. Parents of the students have complained of the
stench of mildew in the temporary classrooms.
The state legislature has
approved a bill that will allow
the city to implement a resident parking sticker program.
Joseph Rossetti is the new
President of the local Lions
Club.
50 years ago
October 27, 1966
The lowest bid for a the
Pictured above, a group of children hold their easter eggs that they found at the Easter Egg Hunt
at the old Harry Della Russo Stadium in the 1970's.
new Lincoln School has come
in at $1,445,000, which is
more than $800,000 below the
lowest bid received by the city
in the initial round of bidding,
but which was balked at by the
City Council. Project architect
Harold Turiello designed new
plans for the school that resulted in the lower bids.
The School Committee
voted this week to choose the
so-called central site at the pit
area for the location of a new
Revere High School.
Americo Albano has been
elected the President of the local Kiwanis Club for a second
term.
The Revere PTA has won
an award from the state PTA
organization for the local
PTA's Operation Blockhouse
program that seeks to protect
children from child molesters
by establishing safe houses
throughout the city. The safe
houses are the homes of concerned residents identified by
black and yellow Blockhouse
Parent signs on their properties. The Blockhouse program
came about as a result of a
series of child molestings and
assaults in recent years. There
have been no reported cases
of child molestation since the
program went into effect.
60 years ago
October 25, 1956
The local Red Feather
Drive will be held Thursday
evening, with volunteers set
to visit every Revere home.
Louis B. Fox is the drive's local chairman.
The School Committee
has voted for $200 pay raises
across the board for all teachers. The new starting salary
for a Revere teacher will be
$3150.
City officials and police
will be out in force on Halloween to ensure a safe and
sane celebration of the holiday.
George V. McCullough, a
beloved teacher of English at
Revere High for the past 10
years, died of a heart attack
while driving his car Saturday
in Billerica. He was 52.
The School Committee has
asked City Manager Edward
P. O'Toole for an update on the
progress for a new elementary
school for the Ward 4 area and
for a new high school.
Drunk drivers were found
to be responsible for an estimated 7500 deaths in auto
accidents across the country
in 1955.
70 years ago
October 24, 1946
The Revere Teachers Club
demanded payraises of $500
across-the-board at this week's
School Committee meeting.
The teachers cited pay scales
in nearby school systems that
show that Revere's teachers
are among the lowest-paid in
the area.
The largest Halloween party ever to be held in the city's
history for Revere children is
set for Paul Revere Stadium
next Wednesday evening with
lighting to be borrowed from
Wonderland Park.
RHS SPORTS Through the Years
Happy & Healthy
HALLOWEEN
BLOCK PARTY!
Friday, October 28, 2016
2:00 to 7:00 pm
East Boston Neighborhood Health Center
10 Gove Street, East Boston
Join us for free games, prizes, face
painting, photo booth, airbrushed
tattoos, and much more:
Health information
Healthy snacks and candy alternatives
10 years ago
October 25, 2006
The RHS boys cross country team defeated Winthrop,
18-48, to claim the championship of the South Division
of the Northeastern Conference. Mario Herrera was the
first Patriot across the line in
a time of 14:37, followed by
teammate John Cacaviello
in 14:40. Steven Armstrong,
Maurizio Turco, and Bryan
Coniglio completed the scoring for the Patriots.
Asley Barrios scored three
goals to lead the RHS boys
soccer team to a 4-3 win over
Saugus.
The RHS football team
dropped a 24-8 decision to
Beverly Friday evening at a
rain-soaked Harry Della Russo Stadium. RHS quarterback
Steve Ennamorati scored the
lone Patriot TD on a 27 yard
run. Matt Gasparini rushed for
79 yards on 19 carries.
Freshman Colby Hough
was the top Lady Patriot runner, taking first place in this
past week's meet with Winthrop for the RHS girls cross
country team.
Coach Jen Wells's RHS
field hockey team earned ties
with Swampscott and Beverly
this past week. Jenna Matera
and Stephanie Bruno scored
the goals in the 2-2 deadlock
with Swampscott. Bruno
scored the RHS tally in a 1-1
duel with Beverly.
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Black
30 years ago
October 29, 1986
The RHS football team remained winless with a 24-7
loss to Everett. RHS quarterback Joe Galvin scored the
lone Patriot TD on a nine yard
run.
The RHS field hockey team
set a school record for wins
for the program with a 3-1
triumph over Arlington, the
Lady Patriots' third victory of
the season. Sophomore Jennifer Wells scored her sixth and
seventh goals of the season
to set a new school record.
Kristen Stiles accounted for
her 222nd steal of the season,
almost doubling her previous
RHS record of 116 steals from
last year. Diane DiGiovanni
scored Revere's third goal in
the victory.
$10ton’s old
Costume contests with prizes for everyone!
For more information, visit www.ebnhc.org
20 years ago
October 23, 1996
A tri-meet for the RHS cross
country team with Somerville
and perennial GBL power
Cambridge featured a battle
between the league's two top
runners, the Patriots' Sam Ros
and Cambridge's Rhett Taylor.
Revere defeated Somerville,
but fell to Cambridge, with
Taylor narrowly edging Ros.
The RHS golf teram prepared for the upcoming state
tourney with a 39.5-32.5 win
over Everett. Patriot Kevin
Gilberti shot the best round of
the day, a 35, to defeat his Everett opponent 5-4.
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The RHS boys soccer team
shut out Everett, 3-0, to improve
to 6-10. Patriot keeper Gary
Fusco recorded his first varsity
shutout. Joe Santinello scored
two goals and Jaron Frieden
added another for the Patriots.
Kim Kelley scored one goal
and assisted on two others to
lead the RHS girls soccer team
to a 4-1 win over Melrose. The
contest marked the first home
contest for the girls' program,
which is playing as a club sport
this year in its inaugural season
as a program. More than 200
RHS fans were on hand for the
contest. Other goal-scorers for
Revere were Toni Marotta, Raela Ripaldi, and Dottie Page.
40 years ago
October 20, 1976
The RHS football team fell
out of contention for a possible Super Bowl bid with a
20-7 loss to Malden Saturday
afternoon. Revere held a 7-0
lead midway through the third
period with a TD pass from
Mike Lentz to David MacDonald accounting for the Patriot score.
50 years ago
October 27, 1966
Ron Ferullo tossed a 26
yard pass to Mike Mucci for
a touchdown to give the RHS
football team a 6-6 tie with
Malden.
60 years ago
October 25, 1956
The Immaculate Conception High football team
defeated St. Patrick's of Watertown, 7-0, Sunday. Kevin
Hegarty scored the lone TD of
the game on a three yard run.
70 years ago
October 24, 1946
Revere and Saugus battled
to a 6-6 tie in a game played
at the Manning Bowl in Lynn
Monday evening with an estimated 10,000 fans in attendance.
The Immaculate Conception High football team
dropped its first game of the
season, 7-0, to St. Clement's
of Somerville Sunday.
Black
Wednesday, October 26, 2016
THE REVERE JOURNAL
Page 17
Getting Out
SSU’s The Master and Margarita, or The Devil Comes to Moscow astounds
By Sheila Barth
[email protected]
Listen. Watch. Don’t stop.
Be prepared, Look everywhere.
Once you enter Salem State
University’s (SSU) Callan Studio Theatre to see Mikhail Bulgakov’s surrealistic satire “The
Master and Margarita,” you’ve
entered the Twilight Zone.
The Theatre and Speech Communication Department has produced a daring, dynamic, powerful production here that invades
theatergoers’ minds and provokes
serious discussion about the play
and, incidentally, our current national and global political crises.
Like most Russian literary
works, “The Master and Margarita” is complex, with several
characters, an amalgam of metaphysical, biblical and contemporary beings that fuse together, in
a Moscow public park, an apart-
ment, a Satanic ball, mental institution, ancient Jerusalem, 2,000
years ago, and maybe, just maybe, in the minds of the persecuted.
The show also comes with
a warning: “The production
contains gunshots, loud noises, intense imagery, sexual
content, simulated violence,
nudity, and is therefore unsuitable for young children.”
Under the deft supervision-direction of Peter Sampieri, who’s
an associate professor at the university, also a stage/film director,
playwright, musician and puppeteer, this remarkably talented
student cast overwhelms theatergoers seated within elbow’s
reach, on three sides of the stage.
The two-hour, one-act play
brings non-stop excitement and
terror, aided by Michael Harvey’s lighting and Devin McGovern’s battery of eerie sounds.
Multimedia effects announce the
name and location of each of the
four days, broken into 22 scenes,
as a time warp hurls us and the
cast between Moscow in 1929
and the era of the Master’s novel,
33 A.D., the tumultuous time of
Jesus’ betrayal, crucifixion, deliverance, and Judas’ murder. We
also enter the Underworld, when
Satan stages a bachanal masquerade ball, in a Moscow apartment.
Silhouetted cartoon images on
the walls enhance the actors’ trips
underwater, in the air, and beyond,while a couple’s harmonious music softens the atmosphere.
In the opening scene, mental
patients in an asylum scratch,
squirm, scream, stride, slump,
shiver, and shrink from attendants who are checking, sedating, and suppressing them.
In Patriarch’s Ponds Park, Moscow, two literary friends engage
in an animated discussion, about
atheism, when a slick-looking,
smooth-talking stranger appears
in their midst. He says he’s
Woland, a universal professor
of black magic, and predicts
one of the two men, Berlioz
(nicely portrayed by SSU junior Bobby Brennan), will slip
on saffron oil, and be beheaded by a passing train. The other
fellow, 23-year-old poet Ivan
Homeless (talented SSU sophomore Stephen Zubricki IV),
will end up in an insane asylum.
That’s when the madness, mayhem, black magic, and metaphysical begin to unfurl, in
super speedy, scary scenes.
Three asylum women in strait
jackets doff their garb, revealing Satanic, black costumes underneath. Puppeteers Ian Gillis,
Becky Jo Roland, and Shannon
Keelan manipulate mangy-looking, vodka-swilling black cat
Behemoth, while Matt Lundergan as Satan’s servant, Koroviev,
stomps around on stilts, fulfilling the Devil’s tasks. Lundegan
also captures attention as Pi-
Revolt, She Said. Revolt Again.
By Sheila Barth
[email protected]
There may not be a gender divide, but I felt a generational divide at Company One
Theatre’s production of oneact, award-winning play, “Revolt, She Said. Revolt Again”.
Through a series of swift-moving
vignettes, playwright Alice Birch
introduces some new language
to us older folks, and peppers her
play with lots of not-new, salty
language, involving sexual and
sexist overtones. The play explores contemporary women’s
quest for more freedom, more
rights, and the opportunity to
be all that Everywoman wants
to be, without societal, familial,
patriarchal, or racial suppression. Birch poses the question,
what happens when we rebel?
Good question. The quest has
been going on throughout history.
As women in other societies and
religions struggle for the right to
drive a car, choose their own fashion, marry whom they wish, or
not marry - rights that American
women freely enjoy - inequity
among the sexes and in the workplace still exists, even here. So
does the dominant male attitude.
The public is ripe for Birch’s
play, especially in today’s American political climate, with Hillary Clinton running for president, opposed by Donald Trump,
the ultimate male super egotist.
And, folks, it isn’t pretty.
Neither is Birch’s play. In astute Company One Associate
Artistic Director-Director Summer L. Williams’ comments,
she says she enjoys the fact
that Birch gives little stage direction, leaving it to the actors’
and director’s self-expression
to drive home Birch’s points.
When asked in a pre-show,
printed interview what Williams
thinks audiences coming to see
the play may expect, she replied,
“I think the expectation might
be this is a play about some
badass women who are doing
some badass things in the name
of feminism or women’s rights.
What one might not expect is the
darkness that surrounds all that.
“I think Alice [Birch] is offering
an entry point into a conversation about what it means to be a
woman, and the particular ways
society feels women should behave, but that idea can’t actually
be explored without including
the nastiness behind all of it.” Take heed, Donald Trump.
From your own account, you’re
opposing a nasty woman.
While young women theatergoers applauded and hooted at
times during the play, some of
us grand dames sat, watched
and listened, wondering at
times whether we were viewing a sensationalized,bold,brazen delivery of simplistic facts.
The talented ensemble of Christa Brown, Ally Dawson, Becca
A. Lewis and Jeff Marcus are
blatantly outrageous at times,
hyperbolic, over-the-top, aided
by Lynn Wilcott’s special effects, including videos and projected titles on the stage walls.
There are common threads,
too, such as bluebell flowers,
potatoes and watermelons.
In the first scene, Revolutionize
the Language, a guy wants desperately to propose to a woman
and get her in bed, while she plays
the semantics game and takes an
aggressive role in the bedroom.
Next is Revolutionize the World
(Do Not Marry),where a woman
negates her boyfriend’s proposal; followed by Revolutionize
the Work (Engage With It),in
which a woman wants to take
off Mondays to have the freedom of more sleep, while her
employers cajole her with tempting offers to change her mind.
More explosive is Revolutionize the Body (Make it Sexually
Available Constantly), where
a woman exposes herself on
a grocery aisle in a store, rationalizing her twisted solution to ward off future attacks. Revolutionize The World (Don’t
Reproduce) is enacted with a bizarre conversation among three
generations, followed by Revolutionize the Work (Don’t Do
It); Revolutionize the Language
(That Word Doesn’t Exist Here);
Revolutionize the World (Don’t
Associate With Men); Revolutionize the Body (Stop Eating)/
The Language; (Stop Speaking)
Crossword Puzzle
ACROSS
1Dutchcheese
5Usecredit
10GuitaristHendrix
14Machete
15Broadcaster
16PartofUSMA
17Drinkchoice
19__bene
20Multi-speakersystem
21Water-poweredengines
23Compasspt.
25Bunnymoms
26Atlanticvacationspot
30One-timeconnection
31Unitofwork
34Fragrance
35Knock
37Twangy
39SpikeJonesclassic
43Squeeze
44“Are__Lonesome
Tonight?”
45Launchforces
46USNAgrad
47Exclamationsofsurprise
50Destroyers
52Vegasmachine
53MeriwetherorGrant
54Dashboardgauge
58Relaxed
63“DamnYankees”vamp
64Drinkchoice
66Coastalbird
67ShaquilleoftheNBA
68Bombtype
69SeaofAsia
70Convulsivebreaths
71Bigcheese
DOWN
1Flowsback
2Sap
3Africanplant
4Wasteland
5Yokohamafarewell
619th-centuryWimbledon
winner
7PartofQ.E.D.
8“CantoGeneral”poet
9Plantfungus
10SingerJoplin
11God’simage
12Spouse
13LupinoandTarbell
18Consider
22Formofbingo
24ActorMorales
26Italianbowlinggame
27Decorate
28Deceive
29Large,commodious
boats
31CosmeticianLauder
32Morecrude
33Luster
36Doubleover
38Jason’sship
40Woodenpeg
41Spirit
42Burialservices
48Grandstander
49Breastbones
51Forestdenizen
52Little
54GymnastKorbut
55Gloomy
56__podrida
57Delibreads
59Wildshot
60Yugoslavianleader
61Slaughterofbaseball
62Turnsdownthelights
65Chart
Black
and (Start to Shut it Down), revealing a violent tale of abuse.
The play ends In Galvanise, a
rapid, rat-a-tat treatise on choice,
which you must see to experience.
Each scene is vibrant and intensifies, sometime violently,
other times, noisily chaotic.
Unfortunately, I was unmotivated, not ready to join Sunday’s
Barrington, RI women’s march
BOX OFFICE
Adapted, one-act, two-hour version, written by Jean-Claude
van Itallie, based on Mikhail Bulgakov’s surrealistic satire of
Stalinist oppression. Includes puppetry and live music October
27-29, 7:30 p.m.; October 29, midnight, Salem State University’s
Callan Studio Theatre, 352 Lafayette St., Salem. Tickets, $15, students, seniors, $10. For mature audiences. Includes nudity. Visit
salemstatetickets.com.
late’s righthand servant, Arthanius, infusing comedic touches. SSU junior student Nikos Koutsogiannis is astounding in his
evil, yet smooth, portrayals of
evildoers Woland and Pontius
Pilate. Besides acting, Koutsogiannis sings, does cartwheels
and more, commanding every scene in which he appears.
Satan actually isn’t intent on
merely committing evil. He
wants to ensure that both goodness and evil always exist.
Portraying Woland’s saintly foil,
The Master (also Yeshua the
Nazarene), SSU senior Dylan
LeSage glows with innocence
and goodness. The Master is
enamored with wealthy beauty
Margarita (SSU junior Courtney
Plati), his muse, inspiration, and
love of his life, who embraces Satan to save her lover and his work.
When Mikhail Bulgakov wrote
this anti-Stalin satire, completing
it in 1940, it was banned and not
performed until the 1960s, long
after his death at 40 years old.
See the play. Don’t miss it. But
be prepared to be shocked.
BOX OFFICE
One-act, 75-minute play by Alice Birch, making its New England
premiere with Company One Theatre through Nov. 19, Boston
Center for the Arts, Plaza Theatre, 539 Washington St., Boston.
Tickets, $25-$38, students, $15;pay-what-you-want, Oct. 30 at 2
p.m. bostontheatrescene.com.
against a local man who, in his
local newspaper, took a satiric swipe against women wearing yoga pants in public. (The
story exploded on national TV
news, prompting the parade).
I’ll leave that to my young, rebellious sisterhood`.
A Gentlemen’s Guide to Love and
Murder - a killer of a musical
By Sheila Barth
[email protected]
Who’d ever think that murder
is hilariously funny, or that we’d
be rooting for an ambitious but
hapless serial murderer?
Obviously, Robert L. Freedman and Steven Lutvak, who are
enjoying awards, accolades, and
reaping benefits, winning four
Tony Awards in 2014 for their
farcical musical, “A Gentlemen’s
Guide to Love and Murder”.
Based on Roy Horniman’s novel, this killer of a farcical songand-dance show also won The
Drama League, Drama Desk and
Outer Critics Circle awards and a
fistful of notable nominations in
2014 and 2015. Theatergoers clogged Tremont Street, at the Shubert Theatre,
last Tuesday night, to buy tickets
for the national touring company
production that featured some of
the original Broadway cast.
You’d be hard-pressed to
find a happier gathering than the
packed house. The show ran in
Boston Oct. 18-23.
Besides the show’s sterling
cast, Alexander Dodge’s multimedia set-within-a-set, with its
movable stage; Aaron Rhyne’s
extravagant background video projections; Linda Cho’s
eye-poppingly lavish costumes;
and the orchestra’s melodiously
full and rich sounds, (under the
magical wand of Music Director
Lawrence Goldberg), are visually and audibly stunning.
Philip S. Rosenberg’s lighting
and Dan Moses Schreier’s bombastic sound effects punctuate
the non-stop fun. The story’s plot, based on a
poor relative who unlocks the
mystery of his dear, departed
mother’s privileged family, thus
changing the course of his life, is
plausible, too.
How?
Main character Monty Navarro (excellent Kevin Massey, who
also performed in the Broadway
show) reveals all in flashbacks,
while sitting at a desk, writing in
his journal, waiting to be executed, he thinks. It’s time for him to
confess his guilt on paper, and reveal how he eliminated the family line, one by one,on purpose
or by accident, to gain the lordly
title of Earl.
When Monty’s widowed, domestic working mother dies, and
her dear, old friend Miss Shingle
(Jennifer Smith) comes calling,
she reveals Monty’s mother was
an heiress to a wealthy, privileged family in London. They
unlock a box of letters Monty’s
mother had written to her family,
who disinherited her when she
married Monty’s father.
“You’re a D’Ysquith,” Miss
Shingle sings to the hapless
young man. Thing is, there are
eight in his line of succession to
his title.
Making matters worse, Monty is hopelessly infatuated with
narcissistic, but beautiful Sibella.
She loves him, she sings, doesn’t
know what she’d do without
him, but she’s bent on marrying
a dull, boring, wealthy suitor.
“Poor Monty,” she sings, unaware he’s more resourceful than
she could ever imagine.
The show’s oft-sung refrain,
“Foolish to Think,” clinches Monty’s ineptitude - but we
know better. One by one, Monty ingeniously eliminates his eccentric,
mostly unlikable relatives, all
hilariously portrayed by John
Rapson.
Rapson’s super-slick, caricaturish changes include snotty
Asquith D’Ysquith Jr., who’s
consorting with a middle-aged,
showy showgirl; Asquith’s elderly, dignified, and caring father; and Lord Adalbert, a rich
man who looks down on lowly
people, in song, “I Don’t Understand the Poor.” Rapson is
weirdly exuberant as the Rev.
Lord Ezekiel D’Ysquith, who
remembers Monty’s mother,
but hinders Monty’s succession;
beekeeping Henry D’Ysquith;
philanthropic do-gooder Lady
Hyacinth D’Ysquith;and pompous Major Lord Bartholomew
D’Ysquith, who hates his wife.
Monty finds Henry’s sister Phoebe to be charming. She’s lovely,
kind, attentive, and no threat to
Monty’s lineage.
There’s a delightful romantic
triangle musical number, with
Monty between his two beloved
women and the doors separating
them, in “I’ve Decided to Marry
You”.
Besides Rapson, Massey is
charmingly lowkey, ideally cast,
as Monty. Kristen Beth Williams
is pink, plush and beautiful as Sibella; and Kristen Hahn is properly ladylike and lovely as Monty’s cousin and fiancee’, Phoebe.
Under choreographer Peggy
Hickey, the ensemble doesn’t
miss a beat. The story ends with a delightful twist, where underdog Monty
wins out, getting away with murder and the family fortune.
But you never know if there’s
another, undiscovered, longlost
relative, waiting.....
If you missed this marvelously silly production, you have
a reprieve. Check the show’s
touring schedule. During its
cross-country trek, it’s expected
to return sometime to Hartford,
Conn. and Providence, RI.
Real Estate Transfers
BUYER 1
SELLER 1
ADDRESS
Quintero-Restrepo, J
348 Broadway RT A&M Foreign Motors LLC
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M&R Unired RT 348 Broadway
Donnarumma, John A 756 Broadway
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Donnarumma, John A 8 Revere St
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Page 18
THE REVERE JOURNAL
Wednesday, October 26, 2016
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Black Cyan Magenta Yellow
Wednesday, October 26, 2016
THE REVERE JOURNAL
Page 19
SPEAKER BOB DELEO HOSTS 25TH ANNUAL COMEDY NIGHT
On Friday, October 21 at the Winthrop Yacht Club, Speaker of the House Bob Deleo held his annual Comedy Night. A
packed room with family, friends, and elected officials were entertained by local comedian Johnny Pizzi.
Speaker of the House Bob DeLeo (center) welcomes his colleagues in government, Senator Joseph
Boncore, State Representative Adrian Madaro, School Committee member Tino Capabianco and
Candidate for Register of Deeds Stephen Murphy.
Richie Scannelli joined his friend Speaker Bob DeLeo last Friday
night.
All smiles, Comic Headliner
Johnny Pizzi with Speaker DeLeo and Patti DePamphilis.
Speaker Bob DeLeo and Vicki Mucci welcome State Rep. Roselee
Vincent (second from left) and husband, Richard.
Last Wednesday afternoon students at the
Garfield School cut the ribbon to their new
playground with Mayor Arrigo and other of-
ficials. Students also received Presidential
Active Lifestyle Awards for taking the PALA
challenge with their physical education class
and showing they are physically fit.
A students gets a high five and applause from
school officials.
OLD FRIENDS,
NEW TRADITION
Mayor Brian Arrigo gives a
high five to Nora Janjar.
Students at the Garfield School hold out their
certificates of physical achievement.
A group of students sitting on the field at the Garfield School listening to the speakers.
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Students cut the ribbon to the new playground with Mayor
Brian Arrigo and other officials.
State Fire Marshal Peter J.
Ostroskey offers fire safety
tips for celebrating Halloween
including using battery-operated tea lights in pumpkins
instead of candles. More children are injured by cars than
fire on Halloween, so it’s important for children to learn
and practice pedestrian safety
and for drivers to use extra
caution.
Reminder: Be Careful with
Halloween Costumes, Decorations and Trick-or-Treating
Use a small flashlight or
battery-operated tea light in
pumpkins instead of a candle.
Make sure your home is
well-lit inside and out and that
there is a clear path to your
door.
Keep decorations like cornstalks away from heat sources
and lit candles.
Be sure all parts of costumes are labeled flame retardant.
Costumes should not have
trailing materials or tails long
enough to cause falls.
If a child is wearing a mask
instead of make-up, make sure
the eye holes are large enough
to see through clearly.
Speaker of the House Bob
Deleo welcomes his guests.
GARFIELD STUDENTS GET A NEW PLAYGROUND
Photos by Sue Ellen Woodcock
Winthrop Housing Chairman Frank Ferrara and Anne Ferrara
were in attendance at the Winthrop Yacht Club Friday evening
with Speaker DeLeo and Vicki Mucci (far right).
Safety tips for
Halloween
Black
Page 20
THE REVERE JOURNAL
A R O U N D
The Scottsboro Boys
SpeakEasy Stage Company
presents John Kander and Fred
Ebb’s musical, through Nov.
26, Boston Center for the Arts,
527 Tremont St., Boston. Visit
Speakeasystage.com.
When January Feels
Like Summer
Underground Railway Theater
presents Cori Thomas’ twoact, 2-hour+ romantic comedy, “When January Feels Like
Summer,” directed by Benny
Sato Ambush, through Nov. 13,
450 Mass. Ave., Central Square,
Cambridge. Tickets start at $20,
also students with university ID;
senior citizens, $5 off; under
age 18, $15; group discounts.
Call 617-576-9278, or visit
CentralSquareTheater.org.
Puppet Showplace
Theater
Crabgrass Puppet Theatre performs “The Lion and the Mouse,”
Nov. 3,4, 10:30 a.m., Nov. 5,6, at
1,3 p.m., Recommended for ages
4+. $12. Reservations strongly recommended. 32Station
St., Brookline. Call 617-7316400, Ext. 101, or visit Puppet
Showplace.
Wit
Hub
Theatre
Company
Company of Boston presents
Pulitzer Prize-winning author
Margaret Edson’s play, “Wit,”
Nov. 4-19, First Church Boston,
66 Marlborough St., Boston.
Performances, Thursday, 7:30
p.m.; Friday, Saturday, 8 p.m.;
Sunday, 5 p.m. all tickets, paywhat-you-can. hubtheatreboston.org.
Train Like Pacquiao
TITLE Boxing Club will host
perosnal training sessions, “Train
Like Pacquiao,” Oct. 31-Nov.
5, at the 338 Newbury St. and
North Station, 226 Causeway
St., Boston clubs. Fee $60 for 30
minutes. More information, visit
TITLENewbury.com, for sessions, email TITLENewburySt@
gmail.com or call 617-426-9464.
Phantom Gourmet
and Kowloon for Kids
The two have combined to feature
an Asian buffet, entertainment
by WildFire and Vinyl Groove
Bands, and a special performance
from Saugus’ IMPROV and
THE SACHIMES, raffles and an
auction, October 27, 6-12 p.m.
Call 781-233-0077.
How Soft the Lining
T H E
ning musical about doomed
young lovers takes center stage
at Bill Hanney’s North Shore
Music Theatre Nov. 1-20:
Tuesday-Thursday, 7:30 p.m.;
Friday,Saturday, 8 p.m.; matinees, Wednesday, Saturday,
Sunday, 2 p.m. Kids 18-under, 50
percent discount on all evening
performances. Students. 50 percent off, Friday Nov. 18, 8 p.m.
62 Dunham Road, Beverly. Call
978-232-7200, or visit www.
nsmt.org. Bad Habit Productions presents the world premiere
of Boston-area playwright
Kirsten Greenidge, November
5-20, Boston Center for the
Arts, Calderwood Pavilion,
527 Tremont St., Boston. Performances,
Wednesday, Michael Feinstein
Thursday, 7:30 p.m.; Friday, Come to The Cabot, see and meet
Saturday, 8 p.m., Sunday, 2 p.m. extraordinary performer Michael
previews, November 5, at 8 p.m, Feinstein, Saturday, Oct. 29,
November 6, 7p.m. Advance 286 Cabot St., Beverly. There’s a
tickets, $21; day of show, $28. Privateer Rum Reception, 7 p.m.,
in the theater’s Cabot Street Bar,
617-933-8600.
appearances by Feinstein and
Boston international
Joyce Kulhawik, Amanda Carr
and special guests, with concert
Kids Film Festival
Key films at the 54-film fes- at 8 p.m., featuring Feinstein’s
tival at the Capitol Theatre “The American Songbook,” and
in Arlington and Somerville the Amanda Carr Trio. Theatre are “Annabelle Hooper
and the Ghosts of Nantucket,
documentary “Life, Animated,”
other sorts, documentaries, and
international student-made films,
open to the public. There also
are workshops to teach kids the
basics of media and filmmaking.
Visit bikff.org.
None Shall Escape
Wednesday, October 26, 2016
C I T Y
stage.com.
Jazz Composers
Alliance Orchestra
The 20-piece orchestra performs
new music for a jazz orchestra by
resident composers David Harris,
Darrell Katz, Mimi Rabson and
Bob Pilkington, and guest composer Mark Harvey, Tuesday,
November 1, 8 p.m., the Lilypad,
1353 Cambridge St., Inman
Square, Cambridge. Donations,
$10; students, seniors, $8. Jazzcomposersalliance.org.
Woodsybug Art
Exhibition
Boston artist Nicole Beauchaine
echibits her collection of handcarafted customized art guitars
in November, at Sister Sorel,
645 Tremont St., Boston’s South
End. Launch event is Monday,
November 7, 6-8 p.m., with cash
bar and complimentary hors
d’oeuvres. Art is for sale. Free.
Master and Margarita Anatoly Dverin
The play, also known as “The
Devil Comes to Moscow,”
Mikhail Bulgakov’s surrealistic
satire of Stalinist oppression,
is performed in an adapted,
90-minute version that includes
puppetry magic, live music and a
masquerade ball, October 27-29,
7:30 p.m.; October 29, midnight, at Salem State University’s
Callan Studio Theatre, 352
Lafayette St., Salem. Tickets,
$15, students, seniors, $10.Visit
salemstatetickets.com.
The National Center for Jewish
Film features the free screening
of film, “None Shall Escape,”
Nov. 1, 7 p.m., Wsserman cinematheque at Brandeis University,
followed by a Q&A with profesCirque of the Dead
sors Thomas Doherty and Daniel
Breen. More information, visit The Boston Circus Guild presents its annual extravaganza of
jewishfilm.org. circus spectacle and gruesome
acts, through October 29, Club
Basra-Boston
Oberon, 2 Arrow St., Cambridge.
Connections
$30-$50. Visit Cluboberon.com.
A free performance and exhibit featuring an Iraq-US collab- Warrior Class
oration in theater, poetry, art
The Lyric Stage Company of
and music will be held Friday,
Boston presents Kenneth Lin’s
November 4, 8 p.m., at Arts
incisive new play, ideal for
in the Armory, 191 Highland
this political season, through
Ave., Somerville. The exhibit is
November 13, with an all-star
on display through October 30
Boston cast, 140 Clarendon St.,
at Midway Studios, 15 Channel
Boston: Wednesdays,Thursdays,
Center St., Boston. Space is
7:30 p.m.; Fridays, 8p.m.;
limited for the performance.
Saturdays, 3,8 p.m.; Sundays,
Information, call 617-750-8900,
3 p.m., also October 26 and
or email [email protected].
November 9, at 2 p.m. Tickets
start at $25. Seniors, $10 disWest Side Story
count; student rush, $10; group
This
beloved
award-win- rates. Free related events. lyric-
From Russia With Art Gallery
features as its holiday exhibit
the Ukrainian-American impressionist and artworks from
15 artists and jewelry designers from Russia, Ukraine, and
America, through December 24,
281 Concord Ave., Cambridge.
Artist’s opening reception for
Dverin, hosted by Olesya and
Jerry Koenig, is October 26,
5-8 p.m., featuring live Russian
and Ukrainian music and refreshments, Gallery hours TuesdaySunday, 10:30 a.m. a,m,-7 p.m.,
excluding November 8 and 24.
Fromrussiawithart.org. Shakespeare in Song
Celebrate the 400th anniversary of the Bard’s death, Friday,
November 4, 7:30 p.m., Follen
Community
Church,
755
Mass. Ave., Lexington, and
Sunday, November 6, 3 p.m.,
Pickman Concert Hall, Longy
School of Music, 27 Garden St.,
Cambridge, with Broadway hit
songs and more. $25; students,
seniors, $20. 617-254-1125.
Tapas
Photo by Karen Irwin Photography
Luminarium Dance Company presents its 2016 feature production November 11 and 12 at the Boston University Dance
Theater.
featuring Bridge Reppers and
guest artists, Multicultural Arts
Center, Cambridge. connect@
bridgerep.org. The Diamonds
Reagle Music Theatre of Greater
Boston presents the one-and-only
legendary vocal pop band, the
Diamonds, Sunday. November
6, 2 p.m., 617 Lexington St.,
Waltham. Reaglemusictheatre.
com, 781-891-5600.
Bodega Signs and
Wonder
New England Foundation for
the Arts’ Creative City Program
announces Bodega Signs and
Wonder, celebrating a multimedia, public visual art installation
by Jamaica Plain artist Denise
Delgado, in Jamaica Plain’s
Egelston Square Peace Garden,
Washington and School streets,
as part of Egelston Square Main
Streets’ “Noche de Cuentos,”
(night of stories), Thursday, Oct.
27, 5-8 p.m. The event, free and
open to the public, features food,
art, spoken word and interview
film clips.
Constructed Video
Opening reception for Boston
Cyberarts Gallery’s new exhibit, “Constructed Video,” featuring work by Georgie Friedman,
Robin Mandel and Andrew
Neumann, is Friday, Nov. 11,
Bridge Repertory Theater presents “Tapas,” “The Marvelous
Party,” a formal cocktail party
and evening of music,mixing,
mingling, inspired by Noel
Coward, Friday, November 4,
6-8 p.m. The exhibit will be
displayed Nov. 12-Dec. 18,141
Green St., Jamaica Plain. free,
open to the public. Visit bostoncyberarts.org, call 617-5248495, or email [email protected].
Studios at Sorel
Short films by Woodsybug are
featured at this free art show,
curated by Faith Verrill and
Controlled Kaso, Monday, Nov.
7, 6 p.m.-1 a.m., 645 Tremont
St., Boston. The launch event,
with cash bar and complimentary
hors d’oeuvres, is 6-9 p.m. The
show will be exhibited for a
month. More information, email
[email protected].
Mass Media Expo
Programs, screenings, exhibitions and interactive events await
visitors at Mass Media Expo,
Saturday, Nov. 5, WGBH Boston.
Visit massmediaexpo.com.
Every 28 Hours
Company One Theatre, in partnership with Claudia Alick of
the Oregon Shakespeare festival and Dominic D’Andrea of
the One-Minute Play Festival,
presents the 80-minute, no-intermission festival Nov. 5, 2 p.m.,
Museum of Fine Arts, Boston.
Post-show programming also.
#Every28Hours.
Nino’s Ristorante Italiano
Take Out • Dine In • Full Bar
781-629-3494 • 7B Everett Street, Revere, MA
Open Monday - Thursday 11am - 10pm • Friday & Saturday 12pm - 11pm
City Paws
Capturing Stray & Escaped Dogs
By Penny Cherubino
For the third time in 6
months, I’ve been part of a
group that has managed to
capture a loose dog on the
Commonwealth Avenue Mall.
In two cases, no one was with
the dog. In the third, the dog
had broken free from a prong
collar.
Off Leash and Alone
Despite the number of dogs
I see off leash on the Mall, I
still look around to see if I can
determine if there is a scofflaw with the dog or if the dog
is an escapee.
In the case of a pretty Bichon Frise, a group effort
caught her and a water bottle strap became a temporary
leash. A call to the phone
number on her tag revealed
that her person did not know
she was missing. He surmised
she must have slipped out
when a guest left the house.
Last week’s stray was a
small, mixed breed. A gentleman called the dog to him and
gained control of the collar.
The pooch had a license but
no owner ID, so a call was
placed to Animal Control. I
managed to get a length of cable from a passing landscaper
and quickly attached a makeshift leash to the dog’s collar.
The man said he would wait
with the dog. I went on my
way and alerted dog walkers
of the dog’s location in case
they saw someone searching
for a lost animal. When I saw
the man again, he reported
that the family came to claim
the pup.
Poorly-Secured,
Aggressive Dog
In the third instance, a
neighbor was trying to catch
a rather aggressive, large,
mixed breed. This dog had
broken free from a prong collar. I took my neighbor’s dog
so he would have two hands
to work with and so his dog
would be safe from the growling, snapping escapee.
With no hope of getting
the pinch collar back on the
vast number of off leash dogs
I see each day, I now carry an
inexpensive slip leash with the
pick up bags that are always in
my pocket.
Leash or confine your dog
when people are coming and
going from your home. Especially if a door leading to outdoors is available.
Don’t use pinch collars. A
British coalition headed by the
Royal Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals has
called for an end to the sale
and use of both shock collars
and pinch or prong collars.
I’ve lost count of the number
of times I’ve seen someone
trying to get one of the latter
back on a dog after the dog
has broken free.
Finally, keep your dog on a
short, strong leash with a secure collar or harness. If you
have a dog with aggression
or fear issues, add a second
safety connection. My fearful
Poppy has her leash connected
to both a collar and a harness.
Do you have a question or
topic for City Paws. Send an
email to Penny@BostonZest.
com with your request.
LOWEST PRICE GUARANTEED
Training can also prevent an escape. Three-month-old Howie
sits perfectly on command. Notice the gentle foot holding his
leash in place, helping him obey.
dog, we turned the leash into
a noose and tried to lasso the
animal. We offered treats to
tempt the dog, but nothing
was working. I had an appointment and had to leave
before animal control arrived.
Later I learned a young man
had joined the fray and was
able to hold the dog by its ruff
long enough to get the leash
around its neck.
Preparation and
Prevention!
None of us is a perfect
guardian and we’ve all had
scary near-escape moments.
But there are things you can
do to help prevent these situations and to be prepared when
you encounter one. With the
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316 Main St., Charlestown • 617-242-0300
781-284-7800 • 705 North Shore Rd., Revere, MA 02151 24/7/365
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Wednesday, October 26, 2016
THE REVERE JOURNAL
Page 21
• Revere • Everett • Winthrop • Lynn • East Boston • Chelsea • Charlestown
Independent Newspaper Group
Lynn
Call:
781-485-0588
Fax:
781-485-1403
rEvErE
EvErEtt
ChELsEa
Winthrop
CharLEstoWn
East
Boston
7 Communities
Classified
REaL EstatE
Sales • Rentals
Land • Commercial
RECRuItmENt
Professional • Medical
General • Services
More Than 100,000 Readers Each Week
• Auto Sales • Yard Sales
• Miscellaneous
• 100 REAL ESTATE
U
r
nde
ent
eem
Agr
781-289-7500
RENTALS
We have several apartments in Lynn,
Winthrop, East Boston, Revere,
Everett, and Malden
ranging from
$1,000.00 to $3,000.00
Jennifer
Mora
Danielle
Ramos
MaryJane
Archibald
Dario Quiroz
• 123
APTS.
FOR RENT
Katherin
Schiavo
Sonja
Moskal
Abington Five room
single familu
m
e
e
featuring 3
Agr
bedrooms.
der
n
U
Beautiful flat
usable yard
with above
ground pool and deck. Off street parking for 2.
Asking 210K
ent
Diane Law
Mahinder Kaur
John
McLaughlin
Gerald
Abbey
Cyndi Mandell
Leigh
Stimolo
across from City Hall.
Unfinished 4 bedroom
colonial. Most of the
work has benn done but
needs your talent to complete. When completed
this will be a beauty.
Home has 7 total rooms,
4 bedrooms, and 2.5
baths. Offered at 369k
Boston - Multi level row
house featuring 7 rooms, 3
bedrooms, 2.5 baths, close
to Forest Hill T. Station,
private outoor spaced with
fenced in yard and 2 off
street parking space.
Asking 550K
Braintree - New listing
located
ent at Jonathan’s Landing
in Braintree. Sunny and
bright 4 room condo with
er A
d
one
bedroom.
Contemporary
Un
unit featuring eat in kitchen,
with lots of cabinets and
counter space. Open concept,
living room leads to a private balcony. Asking 339k
em
gre
Revere 41 Cummings Ave.
Beautifully maintained
em
gre
single family home
rA
e
d
featuring 8 rooms,
Un
4 bedrooms. Eat in
kitchen / ceramic
tile flooring, hardwood thru out. Good sized rooms.
Asking 349Kk
ent
John Green
Kevin
Labbe
Owner/Broker
Revere - Commercial
building featuring running
business for years. Heavily
traveled street for high
visibility. Building sits on
about 40k square feet of
land for possible expansion. Car sales license and auto repair. Asking 829K
Lynn - Commercial building
featuring 5 rental units for sale.
Net income is 67k. This building is fully rented and well
maintained. Off street parking
for 3k Asking 629k
Winthrop - 5
Room condo
featuring Cosmopolitan style
interiors. New
kitchen and
appliances, new
bath featuring marble. Two generous size bedrooms.
Almost 1000sq. ft. Asking 235K
268A Broadway
Maureen Celata
“ It ’
s All
ice”
About The Serv
Revere - Building and business being sold in very high
traffic area. This mixed use
building houses residential
uni with 4 bedrooms and
the restaurant. State of the
art equipment, cameras, and
furniture. Asking $925K
New listing! Fabulous center
entrance colonial featuring 8
rooms, 4 bedrooms, and 2.5
baths. Tiled entrance leads to
the den, kitchen, dining area, and formal living room all
with hard wood flooring. 4 Bedrooms on second level
with master bath and additional bath. Two car garage
on cul-de-sac. Asking 624K
D
L
SO
D
L
SO
www.MCelataRealEstate.Com
Next licensing class to being on
November 5th. Seats are limited.
Call Maureen @ 781-289-7500
Paul Clamens
Melissa Diaz
Carlos
Villa
Senad Resic
Tatiana
der
Un
Kimberly
Paula
Stephen
Jalbert
ent
eem
Agr
Vivian
Rosado
Danielle
Lozzi
• 272 GEN’L HELP WANTED
DRIVERS - Class A & B
CAR STORAGE GARAGE
Drivers: Local Driving
Apartments Available
WANTED
near Weymouth.
Property Management
Hazmat & Tanker
617-846-9200
Endorsements.
www.therentconnection.com
Experience driving
manual transmissions.
Very little overnight
• 137
HOUSE
travel! 1-855-677OFFICE/
FOR RENT
5016
for 1998 Corvette
COMM’L
10/26
RENTALS
convertible
-------------------------REVERE - Nov.1-ASAP,
electricity needed for
CNAs
COMMERCIAL RENTAL
2-3 BR House, lg. yard,
trickle charger.
Per Diem Certified
REVERE: Off Broadway.
kitch. w/DW&disp.,1
Nursing Assistants
Professional office
1/2BA, bsmt., pkg.,
Call Sue 781-858-0332
Openings! We are
space.
On
public
no pets, no smoking.
currently hiring for
transportation. Call for
Revere Housing Authority
$2000 no utilities. 1st,
Day/Evening/Night
details.
978-590-8810
Display Job
ad Posting
last, dip and REFs req’s.
at the Department of
CAR STORAGE NEEDED
shifts.
Applicants
----------------------------Assistant
Tenant
Selector
Planning & Commucall/text 617-371-5795
for
1998
corvette
Size: 2 (2.13) col x 2.5
HOUSEHOLD must have a valid
nity Development at
11/2
convertible, electricity
The incumbent receives and reviews all
Massachusetts CNA
Revere City Hall Monday
SERVICES
needed
for
trickle
applications including Federal, State,
certificate. through Thursday 8:15
HOUSEHOLD SERVICES
charger.
TOWNHOUSE
Hyman Towers, and Emergency; maintains
AM to 5:00 PM http://
Please call Amalia at
KJ Painting and
the State and Federal ledgers. Responsible
Call Sue 781-858-0332
FOR RENT
www.revere.org/
857-243-6204 or Newspaper
email
The Independent
Group
Cleaning. Commercial/
for inputting
data in the HAB System for
departments/conserRe-certifications both Annual and Interim,
[email protected]
residential
cleaning
WINTHROP TOWNHOUSE
Papers Included:
Pub
Dateupdating and mainDue ----------------------------- vation-commission/
sending
out
leases,
to set up an interview.
and painting,
- Large 2 Bedroom
taining all
Waiting Lists, filing systemMon
for all 10/24
meetingagendas.
The
Revere
Journal
Wed/10/26
10/29
stripping
and
buffing,
applicants, tenants move-outs, withdrawn,
plus office townhouse,
Andrew B. DeSantis,
East Boston
Sun
Wed/10/26
--------------------------pressure washing.
vacates, and deceased. Mon 10/24
Close to transportation,
Chairman
LEGAL
NOTICE
DRIVERS NEEDED
617-593-6057.
Everett Independent
Wed/10/26
Mon 10/24
On street parking. No
Revere Conservation
PUBLIC
Salary:
$37,000.00
$39,900.00
$12/hr & $.54/
KJPaintingandcleaning
Chelsea Record
Wed/10/26
Mon 10/24 NOTICE
Pets. Available now.
Commission
mile.M-F 9:30 AM –
@hotmail.com.
Please
submit
Resume
and
Letter
of
10/26
Constantino, Broker
Notice
is
hereby
given
Lynn Journal
Wed/10/26
Mon 10/24
12:30 PM
10/26
Interest to
R
617-567-1811
in
accordance
with
the
WinthropDelivery
Sun-Transcript
Mon 10/24
JamesThurs/10/27
L. Milinazzo, Executive Director
drivers Meals
provisions
of
Section
40
11/2
Housing Authority 70 Cooledge
Charlestown
Patriot Bridge RevereThurs/10/27
Mon 10/24
on Wheels
Chapter 131 of the MasStreet Revere, MA 02151
Need reliable car
LEGAL NOTICE
sachusetts General Laws
• 123
PUBLIC
Apply: www.mves.org
This
position
will
remain
open
until
filled.
(Wetlands
Protection
Act)
APARTMENTS FOR RENT
APTS.
NOTICE
Or call Mystic Valley
that the City of Revere
Total
The RHA375.00
is an Equal Opportunity Employer/
FOR RENT
Conservation Commission Notice is hereby given
Elder Services
Affirmative Action Employer
in accordance with the
will hold a Public
781-324-7705 x598
provisions of Section
Hearing,
November
2,
10/27
REVERE -Northgate Area
40 Chapter 131 of the
2016 at 7:00 PM in the
Available Dec. 1. Lg
Massachusetts General
•
242
City
Council
Chamber
TO PLACE YOUR
2BR, Fully applianced
----------------------------------------------------------Laws (Wetlands Protecof Revere City Hall,
AUTOS
AD 781-485-0588 CAR FOR
SALE
tion Act) that the City
Kit w/DW, WD Hookup,
DEADLINES:
For
classiNEED
TO
SELL
Your
281
Broadway,
Revere,
FOR SALE
of Revere Conservation
2 car driveway, No
fied line ads, deadlines
House? Call to reach
MA 02151 upon the
2012 Nissan Altima
Commission will hold
pets. $1350 no util. First
are Monday by 4 p.m.
over 50,000 readers.
application (Notice of
Excellent condition, low Call 781-485-0588 or
a Public Hearing,
Intent) of the Cavallo
mo., sec. and refs req’d
Call 781-485-0588 or
31,000
miles
Wednesday, November
Corporation to construct
781-289-6196
fax the ad to 781-485fax the ad to 781-48522, 2016 at 7:00 PM in
$11,000
Must
see.
a
single
family
house
at
11/16
1403
1403
the City Council Chamber
857-277-2187
0
Belcher
St.,
Assessors
-----------------------------of Revere City Hall, 281
Map 2, Block 72 Lots
Broadway, Revere, MA
131 and parts of Lots
02151 upon the appli132
and
133.
The Independent Newspaper Group fights against housing discrimination. If you believe you have been
A copy of the Applicant’s cation (Notice of Intent)
discriminated against in your effort to buy a home or to rent an apartment, we urge you to call the
of Danai Griffin to install
“Notice of Intent” applia 11x20 foot in-ground
Fair Housing Center of Greater Boston at 617-399-0491.
cation will be available
pool at 7-9 Fowler Ave.
CAR STORAGE
NEEDED
Black
Brockton - Large 8
rooms, 3 bedrooms
and 2 full baths.
Farmers porch and
good size lot for
entertaining. Off
street parking for 4.
Asking 170K
Nayara Gomes
Karen
Lawley
Diana Aponte
Jeanette
Adeboi
Revere, MA 02151. A
copy of the Applicant’s
“Notice of Intent” application will be available
at the Department of
Planning & Community Development at
Revere City Hall Monday
through Thursday 8:15
AM to 5:00 PM.
http://www.revere.
org/departments/conservation-commission/
meetingagendas.
Andrew B. DeSantis,
Chairman
Revere Conservation
Commission
10/26
R
LEGAL NOTICE
COMMONWEALTH
OF MASSACHUSETTS
THE TRIAL COURT
PROBATE AND FAMILY
COURT DEPARTMENT
SUFFOLK Division
DIVORCE SUMMONS
BY PUBLICATION
AND MAILING
Suffolk Probate and
Family Court
24 New Chardon Street
Boston, Ma 02114
(617)788-8300
Docket No.
SU16D1879DR
Flor Aguilar
vs.
Franklin Aguilar
To the Defendant:
The Plaintiff has filed a
Complaint for Divorce
requesting that the
Court grant a divorce for
irretrievable breakdown
of the marriage.
The Complaint is on file
at the Court.
An Automatic Restraining
Order has been entered
in this matter preventing
you from taking any
action which would negatively impact the current
financial status of either
party. SEE Supplemental
Probate Court Rule 411.
You are required to
serve upon: Flor Aguilar
829 Revere Beach #2,
Revere, MA 02151 your
Peabody Nice historic
Victorian Commercial
building in downtown
Peabody. Zoned for
retailer, wholesaler,
office space, or condo
conversion. Just off Peabody Square with easy access
to the highway. Asking $419k
Revere - Two family
home centrally located
to public transportation and the beach.
r
e
d
This home could use
Un
your touches to bring
it back to its original beauty. Decent size rooms.
Could be used as a 2 bedroom or a 3 bedroom
instead of dining room. 1 car garage with two
additional parking spots. Asking $399K
ent
eem
Agr
D
L
O
S
Matthew
Powers
Melrose - Beautifuly maintained 7
rooms 3 bedroom
single gamily. This
property is located
close to the country
club. Corner lot for
plents of parking.
SOLD 569K
Gary Ferragamo
Vice-President
Silvia Caceda
answer, if any, on or
before 12/08/2016.
If you fail to do so, the
court will proceed to the
hearing and adjudication
of this action. You are
required to file a copy of
your answer, if any, in
the office of the Register
of this Court.
Witness, Hon. Joan P
Armstrong, First Justice
of this Court.
Date: September 22,
2016
Felix D. Arroyo,
Register of Probate
10/26
R
LEGAL NOTICE
COMMONWEALTH
OF MASSACHUSETTS
THE TRIAL COURT
PROBATE AND
FAMILY COURT
Suffolk Division
24 New Chardon St.
Boston, MA 02114
(617)788-8300
CITATION ON
PETITION FOR
FORMAL
ADJUDICATION
Docket No.
SU16P2257EA
Estate of:
Lillian I Amato
Date of Death:
07/07/2007
To all interested persons:
A Petition for Formal
Probate of Will with
Appointment of Personal
Representative has
been filed by Mary E.
Pinkham of Revere,
MA requesting that the
Court enter a formal
Decree and Order and
for such other relief as
requested in the Petition.
The Petitioner requests
that: Mary E. Pinkham of
Revere, MA be appointed
as Personal Representative(s) of said estate to
serve Without Surety on
the bond in an unsupervised administration.
IMPORTANT NOTICE
You have the right to
Dina
Clinton
Danielle
Gahagan
Yves Bosquet
obtain a copy of the Petition from the Petitioner
or at the Court. You have
a right to object to this
proceeding. To do so,
you or your attorney
must file a written appearance and objection
at this Court before:
10:00 a.m. on the return
day of 11/24/2016.
This is NOT a hearing
date, but a deadline by
which you must file a
written appearance and
objection if you object
to this proceeding. If
you fail to file a timely
written appearance and
objection followed by an
affidavit of objections
within thirty (30) days
of the return day, action
may be taken without
further notice to you.
UNSUPERVISED
ADMINISTRATION UNDER
THE MASSACHUSETTS
UNIFORM PROBATE
CODE (MUPC)
A Personal Representative appointed under the
MUPC in an unsupervised
administration is not
required to file an inventory or annual accounts
with the Court. Persons
interested in the estate
are entitled to notice
regarding the administration directly from the
Personal Representative
and may petition the
Court in any matter
relating to the estate,
including the distribution
of assets and expenses
of administration.
WITNESS, Hon. Joan P.
Armstrong, First Justice
of this Court.
Date: October 12, 2016
Felix D. Arroyo,
Register of Probate
10/26
R
TO PLACE YOUR
AD 781-485-0588
der
Un
ent
eem
Agr
HUGE N
CTIO
REDU
Page 22 THE REVERE JOURNAL
Wednesday, October 26, 2016
REVERE PROFESSIONAL
SERVICE DIRECTORY
Boat Storage
Boat Storage
$28 per foot @ 1 Belle Isle Terrace, Winthrop.
Full Marine Service, hauling winterizing and shrink
wrapping. Get Winter repairs at special rates.
Call 617-846-2800
Cleaning Services
“The Cleaning Experts”
Your Cleaning Experts Since 1985
Housecleaner
looking for private
homes to clean.
$20 hr. will clean
as if it were my
own home.
Lisa Watkins
617-301-2166
Call for a
Free Estimate
781-289-5563
[email protected]
25%OFF
978-652-8383
[email protected]
www.firstclasscleaningpro.com
Since 1978
CARPET AND UPHOLSTERY
CLEANING
617-567-2926
Removes Dirt • Cleans • Deodorizes
KITCHENS
Complete Office Cleaning
Handyman
Carpentry and
Painting
To advertise in our
Service Directory
Please call
781-485-0588
lawn cutting
Handyman
hedging, weeding, mulching
•
Handyman
clean Yard • low-Priced
Services
Landscape & Masonry c .
call chris
Designing & Completing Ideas for over 30 Years
Available...
• Windows
617-835-4131
Landscaping
Masonry
No Service
job • Brick or Block Steps • Painting
• Reliable Mowing
• Spring & Fall Cleanups
• Brick or Block Walls
Clovers
too
Small! • Concrete or Brick Paver • Decks
• Mulching
& edging
M•T•W•F 9:30-5:00
Sat. 9:30-4:00
• Thur. 9:30-7:00
or email
KBright@
195 Squire Road • Revere
residentiaL • coMMerciaL
781-844-1133
617-389-1490
Joe pierotti Jr. • Joe pierotti Sr.
Your Ad
Here
FREE ESTIMATE
LICENSED & INSURED
GENERATIONS OF EXPERIENCE
BRICK • BLOCK • STONE • CONCRETE
ALL TYPES OF MASONRY
FREE ESTIMATES 617-821-3793
617-884-2143 Spring & Fall Clean-up • Mulch • Lawns
••SNOW
PLOWING&
COMMERCIAL
• COMMERCIAL
RESIDENTIAL&
RESIDENTIAL
FULLYINSURED
INSURED
•• FULLY
CLEAN-UPS
••Boston
CLEAN-UPS
BoBs
CONSTRUCTION
• CONSTRUCTION
Painting co.
Painting 20 Years +
Prompt, Clean, neat.
Small exterior
complete interior
Spring Clean Ups
CLEAN-UPS • CONSTRUCTION • SNOW REMOVAL
SPECIAL WINTER RATES
Vinny’s
Starting Now
FREE
Trimming,
Wallpapering Mowing,ESTIMATES
Mulch,
Edging,
Movers CENTURY & Painting
Dan Powell
Planting,
Pruning
781-289-4786
DRIVEWAY 781-289-7896 617-381-7500
[email protected]
781-581-0031
Complete Yard & Lawn Care
• Spring & Fall Clean-Up • Lawn Treatment
617-466-0060 • 617-331-4243
Landscaping
Ronnie Z.
Top Notch Services
• HOT TOP
DRIVEWAYS
• SEAL COATING
Landscaping • Plowing
Trash Removal • Demolition
Free Estimates Call: 781-760-6734
Trim & Mulch
& Wallpapering.
781-535-2773 or Interior
781-286-4114
& Exterior.
Interior/Exterior
Commercial/Residential
Fully Insured
Quality Work
Affordable Prices.
Landscaping
Call Cesar
Revere Gardens
781-718-9971
781-241-2454
Giovanni Di Chiara
Reasonable Rates
Free Estimates
Spring Cleaning
Mulch, Flowers, Repairs
781-629-4309
Mike’s Painting Co.
[email protected]
Interior - Exterior
Insured • Senior citizens discounts
Weekly/Bi-Weekly
Your
Ad contracts available
Leave Your
Moving To (781)
Us324-1555 Here
RESIDENTIAL &
COMMERCIAL
617-568-1800
Whether It Be One Piece
or More!
William Mack Painting
geneRaL contRactoRS
Reasonable Rates
Spring & Fall Clean-up
Lawn Care
Trim & Mulch
• Brick Steps • Brick Patios & Walkways
781-535-2772
• Concrete Patios & Walkways • Brick or Block Walls
Elements Group, Inc.
• Brick Re-Pointing
Commercial & Residential
617-389-1490
L.
P.
QUALITY
IS OUR GOAL.
Fence
CONTRACTING
MoreLLi Masonry
& tiLe
Building & Remodeling
Z Best
Enterprises
All Types of Masonry Repair, Ceramic Tile,
Concrete Pours, Chimneys, Stairs, Walls,
Snow Removal, Shoveling/Plowing Available.
Fully Insured • No Job Too Small
Dennis Morelli
Kitchen ✧ Bathroom
Additions ✧ Porches
Expert Installation
Replacement windows
781-632-8812
and Repair
Garages ✧ Decks
MOVERS
• Stockade • Cedar Board
Siding - All Types
• Chain Link Fences
• Vinyl Fences
LUIGI:
30 years experience
Leave
Your
(617)
846-0142
FREE ESTIMATES
FREETo
ESTIMATES
Moving
Us
Call the rest,
…One
LICENSED
…
Whether It Be
Piece or More!
then call Z Best
INSURED
10% OFF FOR SENIOR
CITIZENS,
BOB CAPOCCIA
617-799-7660 VETERANS & DISABLED
Call Ronnie
781-284-1491
Ronnie Z.
781-321-2499
For A Free Estimate
JUNK REMOVAL
RMF
RUBBISH REMOVAL
Free Estimates • Affordable • Scrap Metal
TWO GUYS WITH
A MOVING TRUCK
Call Ronnie
Luciano Fanciosa
781-853-9400
LICENSED
Expert Design
Lawn Maintenance
Yard Clean-ups ~ Sod Lawns
Snow Plowing ~ Sand & Salt
No-cost Estimates
Interior, Exterior
20 Years Experience,
References
LANDSCAPE & MASONRY CO.
Free Estimates • Reasonable Rates
Fully Insured
617-320-4179 • 617-846-5805
781-321-2499
For A Free Estimate
Landscape Maintenance
Hardscapes • Irrigation • Masonry
Landscape Lighting
Fully Insured
Free Estimates
Reasonable Rates
•
•
•
•
781-289-0698
Ask Frank about Pressure Washing!
Designing & Completing Ideas for over 30 Years
Painting/Carpentry
P&G PAINTING
LANDSCAPING
MASONRY
Interior/Exterior
PAVING
3 family ~ Approx. $5,200
Light Carpentry
SO & SO • ReliablePaint
Mowing Service
• Brick or Block
Steps
SAS
NS
20 yrs exp.
Emilio 781-289-0534
.
R INSURED
• SpringLicense
& Fall#27484
Cleanups
•
Brick
or
Block
Walls
781-289-5207
• 40 yrs. exp. Free Estm.
(781) 289-1542
Family Operated
Since 1963
• Mulching & Edging
ASPHALT PAVING - CONSTRUCTION
• Sod or Seed Lawns
Curb Cuts
Concrete Foundations Concrete
Landscaping & Construction
•CoatShrub Planting
& Trimming
Landscaping
Retaining
Walls
Seal
Joseph pepe
Designing/Hardscape
• Maintenance& Office Moving
•
Residential
Water
Lines
Stone
Delivery
Sewer
Lines
heating,
air
conditioning
•
Irrigation
Systems
Free Estimates • Sod/Seed • Comm/Res.
& refrigeration
G
G
G
G
G
G
G
G
G
G
G
G
• Concrete339-927-2666
or Brick Paver
Patios
& Walkways
PLUMBING
• Brick Re-Pointing
• Basement Repair
SANTOS RIVAS
Boilers • Burners
617-569-5687
BatHroom & KitcHen installation
617-846-2789
• Senior
Discount
Heating
[email protected]
master license #15231 • Fully insured
Licensed & Insured
10% Senior Discount
WWW.MOVERSINACTION.COM
Baseboards •Water Heaters
QUALITY WORKMANSHIP
24 Hour Emergency Service
(617) 846-8668
617-567-1978 • 617-846-1978
License #12742
Paving
Serving East Boston & Winthrop
PROFESSIONAL PAVING
mpressive
Showroom SaleS & Service
Any Service Over $100 with coupon
331 BroaDway,
revere, ma 02151
Now Accepting M/C, Visa, AmEx
Take pride in your home
PLUMBING,
Give us a call • Free Estimates
HEATING &
GASFITTINGS
& CONTRACTORS
DrivewaysPAVING
• Walls • Commercial
Landscaping
Water Heaters
Call Tracey - Office # 978-502-1378
installed
781-284-9555
Nick
D’Agostino
licenSed + inSured. maSter lic no 12945.
617-594-4130
www.moversinactions.net
www.moversinaction.net
PLASTERING
AUGUSTA
CashPLASTERING
for
Junk Cars
M.J.
Interior/Exterior
Rubbish
Disposal DOHERTY
• Blueboard • Plastering
Junk
Removal PLASTERING
Jim
617-567-5927
Free Moving
Estimates Jobs Plastering
Small
of all types.
Call: 857-261-5255
Free Estimates
AdDonald DeSimone
contact me onYour
Facebook:
Here (781) 324-9135
Call For PricingDriveways
• Resurfacing
& Remodeling
857-258-2959
Complete roofing
• Bobcat Services
specialist
POOLS
781-284-6558
781-706-0371
Commercial Pool
RMF RUBBISH
REMOVAL
Free Estimates • Affordable
Scrap Metal - Free Pick Up
Clean-ups/Clean-outs
No job too big or too small
Call Santos Rivas
(LIC# CS-107294)
617-569-5687
www.moversinaction.net
ROBINSONS REMOVAL SERVICE
DUMPSTER REMOVAL
15 & 20 yard Container Rentals
Rubbish Removals & House Clean-Outs
781-389-1045
617-270-3178
Satisfaction
Above & In-ground Pools - Guaranteed!
Replacement Liners
Filters - Accessories - Installation - Repairs
Openings - Closings - Gunite Pool Repairs
Pool Installation
Compare the quality!
“Your Full Service Company”
Est. 1974
Lic. #105059
781-284-0104
Commercial
Pool
781-632-5750
Above & In-ground Pools
• Siding
• Additions
ExpErt Replacement
rEpair! Liners• Carpentry
REPAIR SERVICE
RUBBISH ROMOVAL
Masonry
Same owner for
38 years.
Shingles,
Rubber Roof,
Chimney Repairs,
Gutters,
Roof Repairs
Roof RepairsCell:
Mid-Size Roofs & Ext. Repairs
Supervisor’s License #100694
Home Contractor’s #126861
Fully Insured
Winthrop, MA
Free Estimates
617-539-4487
Roofing • Gutters
WE STOP
ROOF LEAKS
ASPHALT PAVING - CONSTRUCTION
Curb Cuts G Landscaping G Water Lines G Excavation
Concrete Foundations G Retaining Walls G Stone Delivery
Bobcat Service G Concrete G Seal CoatG Sewer Lines G Free Fill
BOB 781-284-6311 Family Operated
617-A-S-P-H-A-L-T Since 1963
G
G
G
THE DECK
DOCTOR
Call Elvis
781-420-6943
Is your deck in good condition or
needs a few boards repaired,
or need a new deck?
FREE honest estimates.
Call for all your carpentry needs.
Ray’s Landscaping
Mowing • Edging • Weeding
Bushes, Shrubs
Cleaning: Trash & Leaves
New Lawn, Patio, Concrete
Brick Work
Ray: 781-526-1181
Free Estimates
781-629-5225
Fall
Clean Ups
FIRST 100 CALLERS
SAVE AN ADDITIONAL $100!
O’NEIL’S HOME
TRIM IMPROVEMENT
ONLY
EXTERIOR
ED DiLORENZO
PLUMBING
9-5pm
Small Jobs Only
• FREE Estimates
• Painting & Staining
• Commercial & Residential
• Interior & Exterior
• Fully Insured
• No Deposit Required
• We don't collect a dime unless
you’re completely satisfied
• Up to 5 Year Written Labor &
Material Warranty
Best Rates
License # 24536
CALL NOW FOR FREE ESTIMATE
Reasonable Rates
Free Estimates
617.909.2807
www.imagepaintingco.com
781-241-2454
Distributed by Valassis, Inc. as part of RedPlum® • TO ADVERTISE WITH
facebook
Google+
PAINTING
BOSTON BOBS
PAINTING CO.
ROOF LEAKING?
PAINT SPECIAL
Includes: FREE Power washing, scraping,
sanding, caulking & priming. Does not include
paint. Price effective on most homes.
$
Does not inlcude paint.
Price effective on most homes
EXTERIOR
PAINT SPECIAL
$
3499
Gutter Cleaning
Power Washing
CALL 888-379-9856
twitter
Leaky Roof
Corolla
roofing
Shingles Missing
Vinny’s
Computers, printers, laptops, fax, typewriters.
•-Decks
Filters
Accessories
Installation
Repairs
Wallpapering
too big
trotman rEpair SErvicE, inc.
• Repairs
(617) 888-8058
Union Lic. Member
Openings
- Closings - Gunite Pool
Senior & Vets&
20% Discount
617-387-6146
Free Est. • Fully Ins.
VictorRepairs
Grillo
Painting
Call Everett
Licensed Free Estimates Insured
617-201-1468
781-858-6104
Family
owned
&
operated
• 28 years in business
1
col.
x
Compare the quality!
ROOFING
781-289-7896
JULES
deL’s & sons
MURPHY
RAZOR
EDGE
“YourAd
Full Service
Company”
Roofing
Builder
leaky roof
inch
Your
ROOFING
ANDAre
Repair
ROOFING Roofing &1
Leaks
Our First Priority
ROOFING
Remodeling
Roofing/Sheet
Metal
CARPENTRY
CO. Renovations
shingles missing
Est. 1974Maintenance
$60.00
Shingles/Rubber/Slate
or Too Big
Free St.,
Estimates
- Reg. #133317 - Over 20 years experience
67 Lubec
East Boston
617-846-3923
Here NoFreeJobUnionTooEst.Lic.Small•Member
Custom metal fabrications
Cell 617) 212-5612 • Office/Fax (617) 567-2808
complete roofing Service
Fully Ins.
617-293-6305
Roofing
REFRIGERATION781-632-5750
Free Estimates
Call 781-715-3948
781-289-8503
Call Roof Repairs Co.
617-846-0900
Does not inlcude paint.
Price effective on most homes
CALENDAR
REFRIGERATION
Gutters - Flashing - Decks - Affordable, Competitive Rates
115 Butler Street
Revere 781-284-8790
Paul Machado
617-650-2246 •Fax: 617-294-2286
[email protected]
COMMERCIAL SERVICE
ICE CUBE MACHINES, WALK-INS,
REACHIN SALES, SERVICE, RENTALS
USA ROOFING & SIDING
“We get the job done the first time on time”
ROOF
MAINTENANCE
Free estimates
All Types of Roofing
Chimney & Gutter Work
FREE ESTIMATES
Dave 781-760-4350
Plumbing
1 col. x
1 inch
$5/wk
781-284-9555
A+ RECORD
Commercial & Residential
Shingles & Rubber
WINDOWS
“We Get The Job Done The First Time On Time”
• Shingle and Rubber Roofs
• All Types of Siding • Gutters
• Window Replacement • Decks
• Flashing • And More...
Paul Machado
Phone: 617-650-2246
Fax: 617-294-4640
[email protected]
Lic # 067095 • Reg. #120081
SANTINO’S ROOFING
617-548-3801 • Office 781-771-7052
Always the Best Value
BEAT Roofing & Siding
THE
by V.S.R.
HEAT
Free Estimates • Fully Insured
D & S GeneRal Leak Stoppers • Snow & Ice Removal from Roofs
ContRaCtinG CoRp. New Roofing & Repairs •Rubber Roofing Shingle Roofing
office: 617-884-0909
20% Off
Cell: 617-771-5165
New Roofs
24
Hrs.
18379
IHW 5/03/15 •
Licensed & Insured
Leaky roof/Shingles missing
Call Roof Repairs Co.
617-846-3923/617-846-0900
Leaks are our First priority
“
SPRING
+
SUMMER
SPECIALS
10-Year labor Free Estimates - Reg. #133317 - 20 years experience
Our goal is to provide our customers with
and 25 yr
the highest quality material and
professional installations in the business.”
Shingles
–J.B.
Warranty.
We are insurance
Claim
Custom Porches & Decks
Specialists.
Windows Gutters Commercial
508-801-8573
Flat & Rubber Roofs
Licensed & Insured General Contractor
Free Estimates
licenSed + inSured. maSter lic no 12945.
24 Hour emergency service
D & S GeneRal
ContRaCtinG CoRp.
office: 617-884-0909
Cell: 617-771-5165
& more
617-387-4552
Window Washing
USA Roofing
& Remodeling
Si Parlo Italiano
& more
Commercial & Residential
Shingles & Rubber
Rubber & Modified.
Seamless Gutter
Shingles
42 yrs exp, Free est
Windows
✧ Plastering
✧ Painting &
Wallpapering
✧ Odd Jobs
✧ No Job Too Small
Does not include paint.
Price effective on most homes.
2100
OTHER SERVICES
Roofing/Siding
Exterior & Interior
mpressive
617-389-1490
R. SASSO & SONS
Ray’s Landscaping
**Free Estimates**
**Emergency Service Repairs**
• New Rubber Roof Systems
• Shingles & Slate • Chimneys
Small & Large Jobs
• Windows & Skylights
• Gutters • Carpentry • Siding
Call or Text Elvis Superior Workmanship at prices
Commercial - Residential
that won’t go through the roof.
Fully LicensedPainting
& Insured 20 Years +
781-420-6943
Excellent References
We speak
English
Call today
Prompt, Clean, neat.
•Emergency Leak
24/7
617-315-3050
& Repair
Portuguese
A.S.R. Roofing Contractors
Call anytime. • Ice & Snow Removal
Serving all of New England
• Asphalt Shingles
Home
617-833-5896
Senior & Veterans
Discount 15%
off
• Rubber Roof Systems
• Flat Roof of all kinds
East Boston, MA
Global
• Gutters - Downspouts - Drains
Call 617-561-1333
Roofing
• Chimney - Dormers - Skylights
Ask for Bob Corolla
No job too small or
• Brick Steps
SNOW REMOVAL
REMODELING
TILE
MASTER
D. DELL’ANNO
Morano
• Brick Patio
&
Walkways
PLUMBER
RICHIE’S PLOWING
FRANK’S SNOW PLOW SERVICE
REMODELING
All Your Remodeling Needs
Tile
Lic. #10914
Commercial and Residential•Plowing/Salting
Licensed & FullyPatios
Insured
• Concrete
&
For Speedy ServiceSMALL
Call JOBS $75/hrParking lots, driveways, walkways
781-760-6710
Winthrop, MA
Plumbing
& Heating
Free estimates
Free Estimates Call:
617-846-2608
781-771-1820Not Fixed, Not Charged
Walkways
reasonable
Prices
Business: 781-233-2657 • Cell: 781-760-6734
617-448-0293
Showroom
SaleS
&
Service
Ed DiLorenzo
• Brick or Block Walls
781-853-9108
331 BroaDway,
revere, ma 02151
• Brick Re-Pointing
www.JandSlandscape-masonry.com
for free estimate
Cmage
John J. Recca
Image
Painting
Co.PAINT SPECIAL
P
ainting
Co.
PAINT
SPECIAL
Plumbing
✧ Free Estimates
Painting Christopher’s
$TRIM ONLY $
781-284-4693
1999
3499
✧ Replacement
& Elec. Drain Cleaning
Interior/Exterior
Call for free estimate
Affordable Rate
781-284-3615
POOL TABLE REPAIR
Daren Commercial/Residential
Abe: 617-820-7931 24 Hour emergency service
DiBartolomeo
Lic. #10914
Licensed plumber #31550
Professional
Clean-ups/Clean-outs No
job too&big
or too small Bay State Paving POOL TABLE
Relocation
Storage
&
Landscaping
Fully
Insured
Call SantosSantos
Rivas
ROOFING/SIDING
FELT RECOVERING
Rivas
Painter
Design
• New Driveways
Any Size • Sealcoating
Quality Work
Revere Roofing Jack Hubner
Seal Coating
617-569-5687
617-389-1490
Your
Ad
617-650-1596
Painting
Plumbing & Heating
24 Hr. Emergency Service
SPECIAL $25 OFF
• Fall Clean Ups
• Trees and Branches
Removed
• Mulch & Hedges
• Mowing & Fertilizing
• Junk Removal
• Painting
• Free Estimates • Licensed & Insured
Ceiling Specialist
Licensed & Insured
Repair • Carpentry
Remodeling
Kitchen & Bath
Windows/Doors
Deck • Painting
Insulation
Call Sang
New Lawn, Patio, Concrete
InterIor/
exterIor
Brick Work
Free estImates
Meticulous Work Ray: 781-526-1181
We paInt asbestos
Free Estimates
shIngles &
alumInum sIdIng
Call arI @
SMALL SERVICES
617-710-8881 • 617-561-1215
[email protected]
• Yard Cleaning
“no Jobs too
Services
big or too small”
617-389-1490
Sales • Service • Installation
Service Contracts • Budget Plans
Ceilings painted starting as
low as $65.00 each
Includes stock and labor
Call for free estimate
781-289-3314
Mowing • Edging • Weeding
Excavation
Bobcat Service
Free Fill
•781-284-4747
RelocationEst.&1986Storage
residential & commercial
BOB 781-284-6311
Rtechnician
ESIDENTIAL • COMMERCIAL
licensed
• Full
617-A-S-P-H-A-L-T
OIL Packing & Service
lic. #019734
781-308-3809
• Free Estimates
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Wednesday, October 26, 2016
LEGAL NOTICE
COMMONWEALTH
OF MASSACHUSETTS
LAND COURT
DEPARTMENT OF
THE TRIAL COURT
16 SM 009482
ORDER OF
NOTICE
TO: Lhousseine
Astol
Fatima Azoggagh
And to all persons
entitled to the benefit
of the Servicemembers
Civil Relief Act, 50 U.S.C.
App. Section 3901 et
seq.: MTGLQ Investors,
L.P. claiming to have an
interest in a Mortgage
covering real property in
Revere, numbered 1658
North Shore Road, given
by Lhousseine Astol
and Fatima Azoggagh
to Bank of America,
N.A., dated July 31,
2008, and recorded
in the Suffolk County
Registry of Deeds in
Book 43869, Page
312, and now held by
Plaintiff by assignment,
has/have filed with
this court a complaint
for determination of
Defendant’s/Defendants’
Servicemembers status.
If you now are, or
recently have been,
in the active military
service of the United
States of America, then
you may be entitled
to the benefits of the
Servicemembers Civil
Relief Act. If you object
to a foreclosure of
the above-mentioned
property on that basis,
then you or your
attorney must file a
written appearance and
answer in this court
at Three Pemberton
Square, Boston, MA
02108 on or before
November 21, 2016
or you will be forever
barred from claiming
that you are entitled to
the benefits of said Act.
Witness, JUDITH C.
CUTLER, Chief Justice of
this Court on October 5,
2016.
Attest:
Deborah J. Patterson
Recorder
10/26/16
R
LEGAL NOTICE
COMMONWEALTH OF
MASSACHUSETTS
LAND COURT
DEPARTMENT OF
THE TRIAL COURT
Case No.: 16 SM
009584
ORDER OF NOTICE
TO: Justin Colwell
and to all persons
entitled to the benefit
of the Servicemembers
Civil Relief Act, 50
U.S.C. Section 3901 et
seq.: Quicken Loans
Inc. claiming to have an
interest in a Mortgage
covering real property
in Revere, numbered
73 High Street, given
by Justin Colwell to
Mortgage Electronic
Registration Systems,
Inc., as Nominee for
Quicken Loans Inc.,
dated August 1, 2013,
and recorded in Suffolk
County Registry of Deeds
in Book 51895, Page
181, and now held by
Plaintiff by assignment,
has/have filed with
this court a complaint
for determination of
Defendant’s/Defendants’
Servicemembers status.
If you now are, or
recently have been,
in the active military
service of the United
States of America, then
you may be entitled
to the benefits of the
Servicemembers Civil
Relief Act. If you object
to a foreclosure of
the above-mentioned
property on that basis,
then you or your
attorney must file a
written appearance and
answer in this court
at Three Pemberton
Square, Boston, MA
02108 on or before Nov.
21, 2016 or you will
be forever barred from
claiming that you are
entitled to the benefits
of said Act. Witness,
JUDITH C. CUTLER, Chief
Justice of this Court on
Oct. 07, 2016 Attest:
Deborah J. Patterson
Recorder A-4596048
10/26/2016
R
LEGAL NOTICE
NOTICE OF
MORTGAGEE’S SALE OF
REAL ESTATE
By virtue and in
execution of the Power
of Sale contained in a
certain mortgage given
by Donald R. Connolly
to Mortgage Electronic
Registration Systems,
Inc., dated December
12, 2012 and recorded
with the Suffolk County
Registry of Deeds at
Book 50694, Page
182, of which mortgage
the undersigned is
the present holder
by assignment from
Mortgage Electronic
Registration Systems,
Inc. to United Shore
Financial Services, LLC
d/b/a United Wholesale
Mortgage dated October
27, 2015 and recorded
with said registry on
December 9, 2015 at
Book 55433 Page
153, for breach of
the conditions of said
mortgage and for the
purpose of foreclosing,
the same will be sold at
Public Auction at 3:00
p.m. on November 9,
2016, on the mortgaged
premises located at
193 Pomona Street,
Revere, Suffolk County,
Massachusetts, all and
singular the premises
described in said
mortgage,
TO WIT:
The land with the
buildings thereon in
Revere, Suffold County,
Massachusetts, being
shown as Lot A on plan
entitled ‘’Subdivision
of Land in Revere,
Mass.,’’ dated May 19,
1966, Thomas W. Dakin,
Surveyors recorded
in Suffolk Registry of
Deeds, Book 8047, Page
148. Said Lot A is further
bounded and described
as follows:
NORTHWESTERLY by
Pomona Street, as shown
on said Plan, 40 feet;
SOUTHWESTERLY by
Lots 34,35 and 36, as
shown on Plan entitled
‘Forest Park, Plan of
Land in Revere, Mass.’’,
recorded in said Deeds,
Book 3429, Page 129,
90 feet;
SOUTHEASTERLY by Lot
82, as shown on said
Plan of Forest Park, 40
feet; and
NORTHEASTERLY by Lot
B, as shwon on first
mentioned plan, 90 feet.
Said Lot A contains 3600
square feet according to
the first mentioned plan.
Said Lot A being the
southerly part of Lots
79,80 and 81, as
shown on said plan of
Forest Park. For title
reference see deed of
Paul F. Facella Builder,
Inc. dated September
28, 1966 as recorded
with the Suffolk County
Registry of Deeds at
Book 8701, Page 362.
Meaning and intending
to convey and hereby
conveying the same
premises conveyed to
me/us by deed dated
06/09/1995 and
recorded with Suffolk
Registry of Deeds in
Book 19811, Page 170.
For mortgagor’s(s’) title
see deed recorded with
Suffolk County Registry
of Deeds in Book 19811,
Page 170.
These premises will
be sold and conveyed
subject to and with
the benefit of all
rights, rights of way,
restrictions, easements,
covenants, liens or
claims in the nature of
liens, improvements,
public assessments, any
and all unpaid taxes,
tax titles, tax liens,
water and sewer liens
and any other municipal
assessments or liens or
existing encumbrances
of record which are in
THE REVERE JOURNAL
force and are applicable,
having priority over said
mortgage, whether or
not reference to such
restrictions, easements,
improvements, liens or
encumbrances is made in
the deed.
TERMS OF SALE:
A deposit of Five
Thousand ($5,000.00
) Dollars by certified
or bank check will be
required to be paid by
the purchaser at the time
and place of sale. The
balance is to be paid by
certified or bank check
at Harmon Law Offices,
P.C., 150 California
Street, Newton,
Massachusetts 02458,
or by mail to P.O.
Box 610389, Newton
Highlands, Massachusetts
02461-0389, within
thirty (30) days from
the date of sale. Deed
will be provided to
purchaser for recording
upon receipt in full of
the purchase price.
The description of the
premises contained in
said mortgage shall
control in the event of an
error in this publication.
Other terms, if any, to be
announced at the sale.
UNITED SHORE
FINANCIAL SERVICES,
LLC D/B/A UNITED
WHOLESALE MORTGAGE
Present holder of said
mortgage
By its Attorneys,
HARMON LAW OFFICES,
P.C.
150 California Street
Newton, MA 02458
(617) 558-0500
201509-0639 - TEA
10/12, 10/19, 10/26
R
LEGAL NOTICE
MORTGAGEE’S NOTICE
OF SALE OF REAL ESTATE
By virtue and in
execution of the Power
of Sale contained in a
certain Mortgage given
by Joseph Corso a/k/a
Joseph Corso, Jr. and
Michele R. Corso to
World Savings Bank,
FSB, dated June 27,
2005 and recorded
with the Suffolk County
Registry of Deeds at
Book 37520, Page 256
; of which Mortgage
the undersigned is
the present holder for
breach of the conditions
of said Mortgage and
for the purpose of
foreclosing same will be
sold at Public Auction at
1:00 PM on November
9, 2016 at 101-103
Steeple Street, Revere,
MA, all and singular the
premises described in
said Mortgage, to wit:
The land with the
buildings thereon
situated in revere,
Suffolk county,
Massachusetts, the
premises currently
numbered 101-103
steeples street and being
shown as lots 516 and
517 on a plan entitled
“plan of greenlawn no.
1, property of squire
real estate trust, revere,
mass., may 5, 1916,
Whitman & Howard,
C.E.’s” , recorded with
Suffolk deeds at the
end of book 4077,
together bounded and
described as follows:
northwesterly: by
steeples street, as shown
on said plan, 45 feet;
northeasterly: by lot
515 on said plan, 100
feet; southeasterly: by
lots 457 and 456 on
said plan, 45 feet; and
southwesterly: lot 518
on said plan, 100 feet.
Being the same property
conveyed to Joseph
Corso, Jr. And Michele
R. Corso by deed from
Joseph f. Corso and
Michele r. Corso recorded
02/11/2003 in deed
book 30552 page 192,
in the registry of deeds
plan for Suffolk county,
Massachusetts.
The premises are to
be sold subject to and
with the benefit of all
easements, restrictions,
building and zoning
laws, liens, attorney’s
fees and costs pursuant
to M.G.L.Ch.183A,
unpaid taxes, tax titles,
water bills, municipal
liens and assessments,
rights of tenants and
parties in possession.
TERMS OF SALE:
A deposit of FIVE
THOUSAND DOLLARS
AND 00 CENTS
($5,000.00) in the form
of a certified check,
bank treasurer’s check
or money order will be
required to be delivered
at or before the time
the bid is offered. The
successful bidder will
be required to execute
a Foreclosure Sale
Agreement immediately
after the close of the
bidding. The balance of
the purchase price shall
be paid within thirty
(30) days from the sale
date in the form of a
certified check, bank
treasurer’s check or
other check satisfactory
to Mortgagee’s attorney.
The Mortgagee reserves
the right to bid at the
sale, to reject any and
all bids, to continue
the sale and to amend
the terms of the sale
by written or oral
announcement made
before or during the
foreclosure sale. If the
sale is set aside for any
reason, the Purchaser
at the sale shall be
entitled only to a return
of the deposit paid. The
purchaser shall have
no further recourse
against the Mortgagor,
the Mortgagee or the
Mortgagee’s attorney.
The description of the
premises contained in
said mortgage shall
control in the event of an
error in this publication.
TIME WILL BE OF THE
ESSENCE.
Other terms if any, to be
announced at the sale.
Wells Fargo Bank, N.A.
successor by merger to
Wachovia Bank, N.A.,
successor by merger
Wachovia Mortgage FSB,
f/k/a World Savings
Bank, FSB
Present Holder of said
Mortgage,
By Its Attorneys,
ORLANS MORAN PLLC
PO Box 540540
Waltham, MA 02454
Phone: (781) 790-7800
14-016098
10/19/16, 10/26/16,
11/2/16
R
LEGAL NOTICE
COMMONWEALTH OF
MASSACHUSETTS
(SEAL)
LAND COURT
DEPARTMENT OF THE
TRIAL COURT
16 SM 009616
ORDER OF NOTICE
TO:
Lawrence J. De Stefano;
Doris De Stefano
and to all persons
entitled to the benefit of
the Servicemembers Civil
Relief Act:, 50 U.S.C.
c.50 § 3901 et seq.:
HSBC Bank USA,
National Association,
as Trustee for Fremont
Home Loan Trust 2006D, Mortgage-Backed
Certificates, Series
2006-D
claiming to have an
interest in a Mortgage
covering real property
in Revere, numbered 83
Bates Street, given by
Lawrence J. De Stefano
and Doris De Stefano
to Mortgage Electronic
Registration Systems,
Inc. as nominee for,
Fremont Investment
& Loan, its successors
and assigns, dated
September 18, 2006,
and recorded with
the Suffolk County
Registry of Deeds in
Book 40449, Page
152, and now held by
plaintiff by assignment
has/have filed with
this court a complaint
for determination of
Defendant’s/Defendants’
Servicemembers status.
If you now are, or
recently have been,
in the active military
service of the United
States of America, then
you may be entitled
to the benefits of the
Servicemembers Civil
Relief Act. If you object
to a foreclosure of
the above-mentioned
property on that basis,
then you or your
attorney must file a
written appearance and
answer in this court
at Three Pemberton
Square, Boston, MA
02108 on or before
November 28, 2016
or you will be forever
barred from claiming
that you are entitled to
the benefits of said Act.
Witness, JUDITH C.
CUTLER Chief Justice of
this Court on October
12, 2016
Attest:
Deborah J. Patterson
Recorder
(OM 15-001091)
10/26
R
LEGAL NOTICE
MORTGAGEE’S NOTICE
OF SALE OF REAL ESTATE
By virtue and in
execution of the Power
of Sale contained in a
certain Mortgage given
by Joseph C. Jones, Jr. to
New Century Mortgage
Corporation, dated
September 13, 2005
and recorded with the
Suffolk County Registry
of Deeds at Book 38080,
Page 152 subsequently
assigned to Wilmington
Trust Company as
successor to JPMorgan
Chase Bank, National
Association, as Trustee
for C-BASS Mortgage
Loan Asset-Backed
Certificates, Series 2006CB3 by New Century
Mortgage Corporation
by assignment recorded
in said Registry of Deeds
at Book 45991, Page
67 and subsequently
assigned to Wilmington
Trust Company as
successor to The
Bank of New York as
successor to JPMorgan
Chase Bank, National
Association as Trustee
for C-BASS Mortgage
Loan Asset-Backed
Certificates, Series 2006CB3 by New Century
Mortgage Corporation
by assignment recorded
in said Registry of Deeds
at Book 55755, Page
184; of which Mortgage
the undersigned is
the present holder for
breach of the conditions
of said Mortgage and
for the purpose of
foreclosing same will be
sold at Public Auction at
11:00 AM on November
16, 2016 at 14 Morris
Street, Revere, MA,
all and singular the
premises described in
said Mortgage, to wit:
The land with the
buildings thereon
situated in Revere,
Suffolk County,
Massachusetts, and being
shown as Lots 1 and 2
on a Plan of Building
Lots in Revere, belonging
to Mary L. Mahoney,
A.F. Sargent, surveyor,
dated October 1914
and recorded in Suffolk
Registry of Deeds in
Book 3843, Page 419,
and being bounded and
described as follows:
NORTHEASTERLY: by
Morris Street, one
hundred forty-swven
and 35/100 (147.35)
feet; SOUTHWESTERLY:
by Linehurst Road, one
hundred eighty and
16/100 (180.16) feet;
and; NORTHERLY: by Lot
3 as shown on said Plan,
one hundred ten and
57/100 (110.57) feet.
Subject to and with the
benefit of easements,
restrictions, reservations
or taking of record, if
any insofar as the same
may now be in force and
applicable. Meaning and
intending to mortgage
the same property from
IAG Federal Credit Union
to Robert C. Coppola,
dated February 14,
1994 and recorded
at the Suffolk County
Registry of Deeds in
Book 18953, Page 247.
Being the same premises
Black
conveyed to the herein
named mortgagor (s)
by deed recorded with
Suffolk County Registry
of Deeds in Book 23538,
Page 324.
The premises are to
be sold subject to and
with the benefit of all
easements, restrictions,
building and zoning
laws, liens, attorney’s
fees and costs pursuant
to M.G.L.Ch.183A,
unpaid taxes, tax titles,
water bills, municipal
liens and assessments,
rights of tenants and
parties in possession.
TERMS OF SALE:
A deposit of FIVE
THOUSAND DOLLARS
AND 00 CENTS
($5,000.00) in the form
of a certified check,
bank treasurer’s check
or money order will be
required to be delivered
at or before the time
the bid is offered. The
successful bidder will
be required to execute
a Foreclosure Sale
Agreement immediately
after the close of the
bidding. The balance of
the purchase price shall
be paid within thirty
(30) days from the sale
date in the form of a
certified check, bank
treasurer’s check or
other check satisfactory
to Mortgagee’s attorney.
The Mortgagee reserves
the right to bid at the
sale, to reject any and
all bids, to continue
the sale and to amend
the terms of the sale
by written or oral
announcement made
before or during the
foreclosure sale. If the
sale is set aside for any
reason, the Purchaser
at the sale shall be
entitled only to a return
of the deposit paid. The
purchaser shall have
no further recourse
against the Mortgagor,
the Mortgagee or the
Mortgagee’s attorney.
The description of the
premises contained in
said mortgage shall
control in the event of an
error in this publication.
TIME WILL BE OF THE
ESSENCE.
Other terms if any, to be
announced at the sale.
Wilmington Trust
Company as successor to
The Bank of New York as
successor to JPMorgan
Chase Bank, National
Association as Trustee
for C-BASS Mortgage
Loan Asset-Backed
Certificates, Series
2006-CB3
Present Holder of said
Mortgage,
By Its Attorneys,
ORLANS MORAN PLLC
PO Box 540540
Waltham, MA 02454
Phone: (781) 790-7800
15-008444
10/26, 11/2, 11/9
R
LEGAL NOTICE
LEGAL Notice of Public
sale
Notice is hereby given
by Mario’s Towing of
22 Naples Rd., Revere,
Ma. Pursuant to the
provisions of G.L.c. 255,
Section 39A, that will sell
the following abandoned
vehicles and on or after
November 9, 2016, by
private sale to satisfy
their garage keeper’s
lien for towing, and
notice of sale.
1. 2006 BMW VIN#
WBAVD33576KV61700
Signed,
Owner Mario’s Towing
10/26, 11/2, 11/9
R
LEGAL NOTICE
COMMONWEALTH
OF MASSACHUSETTS
THE TRIAL COURT
PROBATE AND FAMILY
COURT DEPARTMENT
SUFFOLK Division
DIVORCE SUMMONS
BY PUBLICATION
AND MAILING
Suffolk Probate and
Family Court
24 New Chardon Street
Boston, Ma 02114
(617)788-8300
Docket No.
SU16D1957DR
Victoria Messina
vs.
Abdelkrim Fadel
To the Defendant:
The Plaintiff has filed a
Complaint for Divorce
requesting that the
Court grant a divorce for
irretrievable breakdown
of the marriage.
The Complaint is on file
at the Court.
An Automatic Restraining
Order has been entered
in this matter preventing
you from taking any
action which would
negatively impact the
current financial status
of either party. SEE
Supplemental Probate
Court Rule 411.
You are required to
serve upon: Victoria
Messina 560 Beach
Street, Revere, MA
02151 your answer,
if any, on or before
12/22/2016. If you fail
to do so, the court will
proceed to the hearing
and adjudication of this
action. You are required
to file a copy of your
answer, if any, in the
office of the Register of
this Court.
Witness, Hon. Joan P
Armstrong, First Justice
of this Court.
Date: October 5, 2016
Felix D. Arroyo,
Register of Probate
10/26
R
LEGAL NOTICE
NOTICE OF
MORTGAGEE’S SALE OF
REAL ESTATE
By virtue and in
execution of the Power
of Sale contained in a
certain mortgage given
by Donald Pasco and
Yvonne M. Goulart to
Mortgage Electronc
Registration Systems,
Inc., as nominee for
GN Mortgage, LLC,
dated April 16, 2004
and registered with
the Suffolk County
Registry District of
the Land Court as
Document No. 679348
as noted on Certificate
of Title No. 115067,
of which mortgage
the undersigned is
the present holder
by assignment from
Mortgage Electronic
Registration Systems,
Inc., as nominee for
GN Mortgage, LLC to
Wells Fargo Bank, N.A.
dated December 30,
2011 and registered
with said registry on
January 6, 2012 at
Document No. 798759,
Certificate of Title No.
115067, for breach of
the conditions of said
mortgage and for the
purpose of foreclosing,
the same will be sold at
Public Auction at 10:00
a.m. on November 9,
2016, on the mortgaged
premises located at 32
Page 23
Barrett Street a/k/a
28-32 Barrett Street,
Revere, Suffolk County,
Massachusetts, all and
singular the premises
described in said
mortgage,
TO WIT:
That certain parcel
of land with the
buildings thereon
situate in Revere, in
the County of Suffolk
and Commonwealth of
Massachusetts, bounded
and described as follows:
SOUTHEASTERLY by the
northwesterly line of
Barrett Street, fifty-five
(55) feet;
SOUTHWESTERLY by
lot 1 as shown on plan
hereinafter mentioned,
one hundred (100) feet;
NORTHWESTERLY by land
of Joseph A. Grivello
et al, fifty-five (55)
feet; and
NORTHEASTERLY by land
now or formerly of John
B. Lander et al, one
hundred (100) feet.
All of said boundaries
are determined by the
Court to be located as
shown on plan drawn by
Calichman & Gallagher,
Engineers, dated
January 12, 1955, as
modified and approved
by the Court, filed with
the Land Registration
Office as Plan No.
25669-A, a copy of a
portion of which is filed
with Certificate of Title
No. 60561, and shown
thereon as Lot Two (2).
For mortgagor’s(s’) title
see deed registered with
Suffolk County Registry
District of the Land
Court as Document No.
591089, as noted on
Certificate of Title No.
115067.
These premises will
be sold and conveyed
subject to and with
the benefit of all
rights, rights of way,
restrictions, easements,
covenants, liens or
claims in the nature of
liens, improvements,
public assessments, any
and all unpaid taxes,
tax titles, tax liens,
water and sewer liens
and any other municipal
assessments or liens or
existing encumbrances
of record which are in
force and are applicable,
having priority over said
mortgage, whether or
not reference to such
restrictions, easements,
improvements, liens or
encumbrances is made in
the deed.
TERMS OF SALE:
A deposit of Five
Thousand ($5,000.00)
Dollars by certified
or bank check will be
required to be paid by
the purchaser at the time
and place of sale. The
balance is to be paid by
certified or bank check
at Harmon Law Offices,
P.C., 150 California
Street, Newton,
Massachusetts 02458,
or by mail to P.O.
Box 610389, Newton
Highlands, Massachusetts
02461-0389, within
thirty (30) days from
the date of sale. Deed
will be provided to
purchaser for recording
upon receipt in full of
the purchase price.
The description of the
premises contained in
said mortgage shall
control in the event of an
error in this publication.
Other terms, if any, to be
announced at the sale.
WELLS FARGO BANK,
N.A.
Present holder of said
mortgage
By its Attorneys,
HARMON LAW OFFICES,
P.C.
150 California Street
Newton, MA 02458
(617) 558-0500
201501-0775 - YEL
10/12, 10/19, 10/26
R
LEGAL NOTICE
(SEAL)
COMMONWEALTH OF
MASSACHUSETTS
LAND COURT
DEPARTMENT OF THE
TRIAL COURT
15 SM 007451
ORDER OF NOTICE
TO:
Mukesh Ramnarine
and to all persons
entitled to the benefit
of the Servicemembers
Civil Relief Act, 50 U.S.C.
App. § 501 et. Seq.:
Ocwen Loan Servicing,
LLC claiming to have an
interest in a Mortgage
covering real property in
Revere, numbered 693
Winthrop Avenue, given
by Mukesh Ramnarine
to Mortgage Electronic
Registration Systems,
Inc. acting solely as
a nominee for Lowell
Cooperative Bank,
dated September 27,
2011, and recorded
in Suffolk County
Registry of Deeds in
Book 48442, Page 230,
and now held by the
Plaintiff by assignment,
has/have filed with
this court a complaint
for determination
of Defendant’s/
Defendants’
Servicemembers status.
If you now are, or
recently have been,
in the active military
service of the United
States of America, then
you may be entitled
to the benefits of the
Servicemembers Civil
Relief Act. If you object
to a foreclosure of
the above-mentioned
property on that basis,
then you or your
attorney must file a
written appearance and
answer in this court
at Three Pemberton
Square, Boston, MA
02108 on or before
November 28, 2016
or you will be forever
barred from claiming
that you are entitled to
the benefits of said Act.
Witness, JUDITH C.
CUTLER Chief Justice of
said Court on October
17, 2016.
Attest:
Deborah J.
Patterson
Recorder
15-021199 /
Ramnarine, Mukesh
10/26
R
LEGAL NOTICE
COMMONWEALTH OF
MASSACHUSETTS
(SEAL)
LAND COURT
DEPARTMENT OF THE
TRIAL COURT
16 SM 005375
ORDER OF NOTICE
TO:
Maureen Sparaco
and to all persons
entitled to the benefit of
the Servicemembers Civil
Relief Act:, 50 U.S.C.
c.50 § 3901 et seq.:
Wells Fargo Bank,
National Association as
Trustee for Option One
Mortgage Loan Trust
2007-2, Asset-Backed
Certificates, Series
2007-2,
claiming to have an
interest in a Mortgage
covering real property
in Revere, numbered
48 Lancaster Avenue,
given by Maureen
Sparaco to Option One
Mortgage Corporation, a
California Corporation,
dated November 22,
2006, and recorded
with the Suffolk County
Registry of Deeds in
Book 40869, Page
45, and now held by
plaintiff by assignment
has/have filed with
this court a complaint
for determination of
Defendant’s/Defendants’
Servicemembers status.
If you now are, or
recently have been,
in the active military
service of the United
States of America, then
you may be entitled
to the benefits of the
Servicemembers Civil
Relief Act. If you object
to a foreclosure of
the above-mentioned
property on that basis,
then you or your
attorney must file a
written appearance and
answer in this court
at Three Pemberton
Square, Boston, MA
02108 on or before
November 28, 2016
or you will be forever
barred from claiming
that you are entitled to
the benefits of said Act.
Witness, JUDITH C.
CUTLER Chief Justice of
this Court on October
11, 2016
Attest:
Deborah J. Patterson
Recorder
(OM 16-005215)
10/26
R
FHAP AGENCIES &OTHER STATE/
LOCAL REFERRAL AGENCIES
     
All real estate advertising in this
newspaper is subject to the Federal
Fair Housing Act of 1968, which
makes it illegal to advertise any
preference, limitation or discrimination based on race, color, religion, sex, handicap, familial status
(number of children and or pregnancy), national origin, ancestry,
age, marital status, or any intention to make any such preference,
limitation or discrimination.
This newspaper will not knowingly
accept any advertising for real
estate that is in violation of the
law. Our readers are hereby
informed that all dwellings advertising in this newspaper are available on an equal opportunity
basis. To complain about discrimination call The Department of
Housing and Urban Development
“ HUD” toll-free at 1-800-6699777. For the N.E. area, call HUD
at 617-565-5308. The toll free
number for the hearing impaired
is 1-800-927-9275.
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THE REVERE JOURNAL
Wednesday, October 26, 2016
Family fright night
Sunday, October 30
SBA Field (107 Newhall st)
4:00PM to 7:00PM
Costume Parade 3:30PM
Walking from Griswold Park (formerly St. Mary’s)
Haunted Corn Maze • Costume Parade • Pony Rides • Music
Trick-or-Treat Lane • Amusement Rides • Cookie Decorating
Face Painting • Pizza • and more!
/RevereRecreation - Michael Hinojosa - www.revererec.org - 781-286-8190
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