Price - Revere Journal
Transcription
Price - Revere Journal
Page 2 THE REVERE JOURNAL Wednesday January 28, 2015 NEWS BRIEFS CITY HALL, OTHERS CLOSED WEDS. City Hall, along with all other Municipal Buildings including the Senior Center, Parks and Recreation, and Public Library, will be closed today, Weds., Jan. 28, and will reopen on Thursday, Jan. 29 at 8 a.m. The Mayor’s Office said this will allow crews to continue with the clean-up effort and help ensure the safety of employees and residents. RIVERSIDE FLOODED Council President John Powers reported Tuesday that the Riverside on Mills Avenue topped off and flooded during the Tuesday morning high tide, and he said he expected it would flood Tuesday evening as well. On Tuesday afternoon, as he surveyed the Pines Beach, he said large waves were hitting the Beach several hours prior to the evening high tide. Weather reports early on Tuesday reported 30 foot waves offshore. GOV. BAKER RELEASES STREET/ SIDEWALK FUNDS The Baker Administration announced last week that it would release several millions of dollars meant for community to cities and towns. In Revere, some $470,000 came to the City that had been expected months ago. Mayor Dan Rizzo applauded the early move by Gov. Charlie Baker. “The Governor released the additional $100 Million in Chapter 90 that was budgeted for, but not released by the former Governor,” he said. “We received an additional $470,000 as our share. That will help us do several more streets and sidewalks and I believe, demonstrates a commitment Governor Baker has in investigating in our local cities and towns.” ment to leadership based on his work ethic, the widespread respect he has from the members, and his ability to lead others,” said Senate President Stanley Rosenberg (D-Amherst). Senator Petruccelli has also been appointed Vice Chairman of the Senate Committee on Bills in Third Reading, Revere homeowner thwarts would be thieves in the act By Seth Daniel SEN. PETRUCCELLI PROMOTED TO MAJORITY WHIP State Sen. Anthony Petruccelli was promoted to Majority Whip in the Massachusetts State Senate last week. The Majority Whip helps craft the Senate agenda and contributes to the building of the Senate Calendar, which controls when bills will come up for debate. The structure of the Senate has been changed to reflect Senate President Rosenberg’s priority of shared leadership and engagement. “I am grateful to Senate President Rosenberg for the opportunity to serve in this leadership capacity and look forward to offering new perspective to the roll,” said Senator Anthony Petruccelli (D-East Boston). “Senator Petruccelli continues to advance in his Senate career with his appoint- During their annual meeting in January, the Revere Housing Authority (RHA) Commissioners elected officers for the 20152016 year. George Anzuoni (pictured) was voted in as Chairman. Chairman Anzuoni has worked to develop funding for scattered site renovations. He has also earned certifications in public housing management, low-income housing tax credits, and along with other members of the board created and/or updated RHA’s Disaster & Emergency Plan, Snow Removal Procedures, Fraud, Waste and Abuse Policy, and the Smoke-Free Workplace for all RHA properties. Other elected Commissioners include the Vice-Chairman, Anthony “Tony” Perrone. Irving “Hank” Greenberg was voted in to serve as Treasurer. The State Representative is Robert Furlong and the Tenant Representative is Henry Mancini. RHA’s mission is to provide low-income housing for low to moderate income families, providing them with safe and affordable housing. ie al EAS TB OS VER E ESENTS T TS PR E S E R E ST AIN M AL RG N TO h an n u 19t te of e a st tas LOCAL ETHNIC & AMERICAN FOOD - CASH BAR - ENTERTAINMENT THURSDAY, JANUARY 29, 2015 HILTON BOSTON LOGAN AIRPORT 6:00PM - 9:00PM $35.00 PER PERSON TICKETS ONLINE AT: tasteofeastie2015.eventbrite.com TICKETS AVAILABLE AT: 146 Maverick Street & 154 Maverick Street You617-561-1044 or call: ComplimentaryTube Validated Parking Courtesy of Hilton Boston Logan and Massport You Tube You Tube #tasteofeastie Zarah Magazine has been invited by Boston Mayor Martin J. Walsh to attend an Ethnic Media Round Table at City Hall on January 27. The purpose of this meeting is to discuss the work of the Office of New Bostonians. Mayor Walsh feels that it is critical to keep the various ethnic groups informed and also get input from these groups. Zarah Magazine featured Mayor Walsh in its August edition after being invited and attending a Ramadan Iftar at City Hall sponsored by Mayor Walsh which we were honored to attend. Mr. Moukhabir spoke to the Mayor about Zarah Magazine and its objective to be “The Voice of the Arab American Community” and other ideas and suggestions he thought would be helpful to the Mayor. Among the topics to be discussed at the Ethnic Media Roundtable are the Citywide Immigrant Integration and Empowerment Initiative and also the priorities for the Mayor’s Office of New Bostonians. Zarah Magazine is produced in Revere and East Boston and its publisher, Rachid Moukhabir, participates in a RevereTV-produced television show with Revere resident Bill Jackson frequently. : m Hours Store ursday 5pm-9ppm Th 10am-2 Friday y 9am-5pm a Saturd : 10am-5pm y ne Sunda It’s go ne… AVE it’s go S When OCK UP & ! Y Z ST A R LIKE C Take advantage of dealer new year car sales—plus, save even more with City of Boston Credit Union’s Auto Financing options on New, Used and Refinanced Vehicles, including terms up to 84 months! which approves drafting and constitutionality of all legislation before final Senate passage. In addition, Senator Petruccelli is also a member of the Senate Committee on Ways and Means. In a newly created position, Senator Petruccelli will also serve as Chairman of the Senate Democratic Caucus. NEW DELIVERIES Now serving the community! 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A.P.R.s are subject to change without notice. 617-389-6333 NEXT TO TOTAL PERFORMANCE SPORTS OFF RTE. 16 Black Two alleged car, house and shed thieves ran into one armed homeowner who wasn’t going to take it any longer – but only after the thieving duo had burglarized numerous homes and had stolen the car of a Revere City Councillor. Around 4 a.m. on Friday morning, police received multiple calls from the area of Tuckerman Street for shots being fired. Those shots came from a Tuckerman Street homeowner who had confronted two masked thieves trying to break into his shed. The homeowner, who owns a popular fence company, had become frustrated with numerous breaks into his shed – where he keeps his business tools and equipment – over the last few months. Just before Christmas, he came to the Journal to place an item that appeared in the paper calling for his tools to be returned and issuing a reward. He said at that time he wouldn’t be afraid to take matters into his own hands if he came face to face with any more thieves. He held true to that Friday morning. Police learned after prolonged interviews with the man that he had installed a home security video system for the shed not long after the original break. Just before 4 a.m., the system detected intruders at the shed and the homeowner observed two masked men around the shed. Arming himself with a legally licensed firearm, he confronted the thieves and ordered them to comply with his commands. One of them did, but the other did not – allegedly charging the homeowner with a knife. The homeowner fired two rounds, and thought that he had hit one of the men when that man fled with a limp. It turns out, however, that neither shot hit the men and the limp came from an injury incurred earlier in the night. Police flooded the area and soon found both men nearby sitting in a stolen vehicle. They were arrested without incident and the limping man was taken to the hospital. Before that happened, however, police found numerous items – including car keys – in their pockets and in the car. Several residents from the immediate area came forward to police as the investigation continued to report that their homes or vehicles had been burglarized. Police said there had been a rash of burglaries in the area, and at the moment they believe most or all of them came at the hands of the two young men that were arrested. Further investigation revealed that City Councillor Jessica Giannino had her car stolen that night as well. The car was found a few streets over from her home. However, the car keys were found in the possession of the two young men when they were arrested. Police said the case is still open and active and they expect several more charges to come after an investigation. Daniel Barker, 24, of 110 Malden St., and Christopher Rivera, 23, of Chelsea, were both charged with breaking and entering in the nighttime for a felony and carrying a dangerous weapon. Rivera was apprehended last August after he was caught allegedly looting and burglarizing homes on lower Broadway that had been damaged by the F-2 tornado. Dog Walking and Sitting Services 6 Years Experience Cats Too! 617-513-0638 www.gentleleaders.com ENORMOUS WAREHOUSE SALE Everything Must Go! 4 DAYS ONLY with 1,000s of new items at huge savings! www.atozeventsales.com Our Sales are getting Bigger & Better! New Truckload of Domestics • Comforters • Sheets • Blankets • Quilts • Duvets • Window Treatments & More CATEGORIES: Comforters, Quilts, Bedspreads, Sheet Sets, Apparel, Accessories, Shoes, Electronics, Modular Furniture, Draperies, Household Products, Dishware, Glassware and Much, Much More!! 1000s of items! EXCITING NEW ASSORTMENTS New Merchandise Daily! FROM THE NORTH: Rt. 93 S. to exit 31. 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PARKING: Available on street or at end of Garden St. take right onto Second St. lot on right, look for Owens Commerce Center Sign. www.atozeventsales.com Save up to 60% TO 90% off original retails Wednesday January 28, 2015 THE REVERE JOURNAL Page 3 Unknown millions: Little known but lucrative ‘pots of money’ from MGC taxes to begin grant round By Seth Daniel To date, casino money for local communities has centered on the lucrative host community agreements and surrounding community agreements, but a whole new pot of money is set to become available for the first time on Monday, Feb. 2, when grant applications for the state Community Mitigation Fund (CMF) are due. It is the inaugural deadline for what is expected to be a very lucrative annual grant process open to many communities in the area and consisting of several multi-million dollar pots of money. The new pot of money – one of several pots of money that will be fully available once the Wynn Everett casino and other casinos are up and running – comes via fees paid to the Massachusetts Gaming Commission (MGC) through licensing fees and taxes. Per the state’s Expanded Gaming Law, large chunks of those fees are set aside for Community Mitigation, the state Cultural Council, the state Tourism Fund, Gaming Local Aid Fund, Capital Projects Fund, an Education Fund, a Transportation Infrastructure and Development Fund, and, of course, the Race Horse Development Fund – among four others. Wynn Everett officials in- dicated that there would be millions of dollars going into the various funds listed above in their first full year of operation – money that is meant to go to communities to help fund projects and mitigate impacts through the use of state taxes and fees paid by casino operators. During the first year of operation, Wynn will provide $201 million to the 12 separate funds, it said, including: *$4.02 million to the Mass Cultural Council *$30.15 million to the Transportation Infrastructure and Development Fund *$28.14 million to the Education Fund *$13.07 million to the CMF *$40.2 million to the Gaming Local Aid Fund *$5.03 million to the Race Horse Development Fund *$2.01 million to the Mass Tourism Fund *$9.05 million to the Local Capital Projects Fund Of course, other casino and slot parlor operators would also be contributing monies to those funds as well. “This CMT is only one of the pots of money available,” said Ron Hogan, a planning analyst for the City of Malden. “There’s a transportation mitigation fund and several others too that can be accessed as well by communities. You really, as a community, have to be out there quickly and be aware of all that’s available and getting at it if you want to get the maximum benefit…It’s the old saying that the squeaky wheel gets the grease.” The money is over and above any other surrounding community agreements or host community agreements that are in effect, and it is solely upon individual communities to apply for the grants. That first deadline for the first pot of money – the Community Mitigation Fund (CMF) – comes on Monday, Feb. 2, and will continue each year per state law on the first business day of February. Already, millions of dollars have been deposited into the various state gaming tax funds, though the CMF will be limited this year. Reportedly, the first deposits to the fund from gaming license fees were around $17.5 million. MGC officials said the CMF will be allocating $100,000 planning grants from the fund this year to communities that are host or surrounding communities – or even those that applied to be host or surrounding communities and were denied. That limited amount of money comes due to the fact that there is really nothing to mitigate yet due to the fact that construction hasn’t started. Therefore, for the initial year of grants, the MGC decided to award planning grants to communities to study the potential factors they could face due to the construction and opening of a casino. With so much money at stake, one would think that most every community is chomping at the bit to get a piece of the newfound revenues. However, it isn’t the case as some communities have jumped out in front to get in the pipeline, others have been slow to understand that the pots of money are available and others have been hesitant to participate in the process due to ongoing litigation. The City of Boston would have likely qualified for the $100,000 planning grant from the CMT, something that could be put towards ongoing traffic and community planning efforts just underway in Charlestown. However, the City would not confirm whether or not it had applied or would apply for the CMT due to the ongoing lawsuit filed just recently. “The City of Boston is now engaged in litigation and therefore cannot comment on specifics related to the lawsuit,” read a statement from Boston Mayor Martin Walsh. “Mayor Walsh is taking this action to protect the City and the neighborhood of Charlestown.” Meanwhile, in another community with a lawsuit against the MGC – Revere – it has applied for the CMT and hopes to use the potential $100,000 grant for traffic planning. The Revere Mayor’s Office said they have been working with their planning consultant, Paul Rupp, to apply for the inaugural round of state gaming tax grants. Revere is the only community surrounding Wynn Everett that would have no surrounding community agreement monies available to it. The community never engaged with Wynn Everett to negotiate such an agreement due to legal restrictions in its host community agreement with Mohegan Sun. “We did put an application in a week ago,” said Mayoral Assistant Miles Lang-Kennedy. “We’re looking to potentially use it for planning efforts for Rt. 16 and Rt. 1. It’s all very new this year, but as they go forward, we expect there will be more guidelines.” Chelsea City Solicitor Cheryl Fisher Watson said her City has been on the forefront of looking to get involved with the numerous funds available from the MGC, including the CMT. Getting in the pipeline is very important to the City, she said, and they have appointed Planner John DePriest to be a representative on the CMT Committee. “This year it’s a little different because there is no construction or casino to mitigate,” Watson said. “We are definitely on board with this. We’re putting in for the maximum grant this year. We have a lot of traffic concerns to mitigate. We want to get ahead of the gaming addiction and education issues. We’re also interested in looking at jobs and, of course, public safety is very important in this too… We’ve already looked preliminarily at some intersections. We’ve done our homework. We’re ahead of the curve on this I think.” Hogan, of Malden, has also been appointed to the CMT Committee by his community. “We already have our application in and already have had conversations with the Commission about what activities would be ok for use of the mitigation fund,” he said. “Communities are going to have to be on top of this in years to come so they can figure out how to use it effectively. This year it’s kind of a no-brainer. It’s money that’s just on the table.” reported any action by the adult that would support criminal charges. The adult met voluntarily with investigators and submitted to an interview with detectives. The interview likewise did not yield any evidence to support charges.” The release went on to say that the investigators spoke with the parent of the boy to explain what they found, and the release indicated that she expressed relief. “She supported those findings, expressed relief, and did not wish to proceed with any criminal case against the adult. As a result, the investigation has been closed without charges,” read the release. In light of the results of the investigation, and the release of the circumstances that triggered the entire action, parents and parishioners said they felt they deserved at least a meeting. “I want the Archdiocese to reconsider the way they handled this whole mess and if this happens again, before they jump into any extreme actions like getting rid of someone, that they first conduct a thorough investigation,” Duval said. “I feel like it was escalated to the point that it got by the way they went about handling it…The school is also certainly going to suffer some financial consequences, and we believe a lot of that will be because of this firestorm the Archdiocese created.” In further statements to the Boston Globe over the weekend, Donilon said the Archdiocese holds to the belief that the behavior, though not found criminal, was inappropriate. “Even if not later found to be criminal, the failure to recognize that unacceptable situation coupled with the failure to report the matter as it had been communicated to supervisors led to the resignation of those who were in positions to ensure the protection of children,” he said. “The decision to follow the law regarding mandated reporting does not rest upon whether the individual’s actions were criminal.” Turco and Duval said they believe all necessary steps were taken by Father Szal, Principal Kelly and the sec- ond grade teacher – who taught Duval’s daughter. They believe that mandated reporting was followed and that no one tried to hide anything – and especially – that concerns raised by the parent were communicated. The fact that the situation unfolded over Christmas break from Dec. 19 to Jan. 5 also contributed to the seemingly long duration between communications with the parent, Turco said. Duval said he feels particularly bad for his daughter’s former teacher – who was only in her first year of teaching. “My daughter’s teacher is the last one who should have gotten fired,” he said. “She repeated it to the higher up, the principal, and so she did everything right…There was a story going around that she was crying when she was cleaning out her room. She told everyone that she wasn’t crying because she lost her job, but because she wasn’t allowed to say good-bye to the kids. That woman would have taken a bullet for my kids and you don’t find that all the time. For her to lose her job over this is tragic.” Turco said he felt particularly bad for Father Szal, who spent several years at IC rejuvenating the Parish and the School. “All these years of priesthood and caring for parishioners and now you Google his name and you’ll read that he put children in danger,” said Turco. “He’s just been cut down by this…You don’t do this kind of thing for an incident that the Archdiocese blew out of proportion. I’d like to know whether priests are allowed to use the bathroom at Fenway Park. If they go in the bathroom there and there are children present, is that a reportable event? Do they have to tell the Archdiocese that they were in the bathroom with children present while at a Red Sox game? That’s how ridiculous this situation became.” IC Community/ CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1 the Archdiocese has not returned an e-mail sent from the Journal about the petition. However, that communication came on the eve of Monday and Tuesday’s blizzard conditions. The Archdiocese did release a statement on Thursday, however. “We are relieved that no child was harmed,” said Terrence C. Donilon, a spokesman for the Archdiocese. “However, as we have previously stated, the conduct of the worker in using the child’s bathroom at Immaculate Conception School, Revere, with students present, was highly inappropriate and improper.” Officially, the petition does not call for the reinstatement of the priest, principal and teacher, but Turco said there is strong sentiment in the school and Parish community for the return of those three folks. The petition does call for discussion about the future of IC Parish and School; the financial challenges that will lie ahead for the school as a result of the negative publicity; and the handling of the present situation. That situation exploded into the public square on Tuesday evening, Jan. 13, following a vague letter that was sent home to parents. Turco and Duval said the entire school community was thrown for a loop when they received the letter on Monday night in the children’s backpacks. The letter, both said, talked about the fact that an adult staff member had been put on leave and that something had happened. It said that these kinds of things are difficult to talk to children about and it gave a number to call for help in counseling children on these situations. Both said there was no further information given out, and the principal was not allowed to comment. Many parents turned to police, who did not immediately know or have any information about the incident. Parents were in an uproar, Turco said, and children were reporting to parents that new signs had been posted in the bathroom saying only children were allowed to use it. It was all a recipe for thinking the worst had happened. “We were in tears trying to figure out what kind of terrible thing had happened at our kids’ school,” said Turco. “Other parents were calling us; no one knew what was happening.” Soon, Turco and Duval said, as parent meetings began to take place with the Archdiocese, many realized that the incident was unfounded and many believed the Archdiocese had created a frenzy – one that many in the media had fed into while trying to get at the truth of the matter. The end result, according to Revere Police and the Suffolk County DA, was that a 64-year-old custodian had used the bathroom and a young boy had reported that to his mother. “The investigation revealed that a 64-year-old male assigned to the school's custodial staff used the boy's restroom, which was across the hall from his office, on several occasions in December and early January,” read a statement from the DA late last week. “One boy reported to a parent that he had observed the adult using the urinal during this time. No child reported that the adult engaged in physical contact with them. No child reported that the adult used sexual language around them. No child n’s ol Bosatno RestaudRest The right checking mix to help you switch! I Ital~ Established 1924 ~ ant Restaurant SENIOR DISCOUNT! 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SIMPLY FREE CHECKING Arrow Plastics® Server Set Sign up now and receive your choice of a FREE Gift! Frigidaire Container Set Celebrate Customer Appreciation Day on January 30th in all branches! 800-657-3272 EBSB.com Minimum opening deposit for all accounts is only $50. Bank rules and regulations apply. Gift is awarded when account is opened. Gift selection may change without notice. We reserve the right to substitute a gift of similar value. If the value of the gift exceeds $10, the bank is required to report the gift value on form 1099-INT or 1099-MISC. The recipient is responsible for all applicable taxes. Ask us for details. Join us on Facebook at www.facebook.com/EastBostonSavingsBank Member FDIC / Member DIF 0.00 25 Page 4 THE REVERE JOURNAL Wednesday January 28, 2015 RHS TRACK FALLS SHORT TO PEABODY 9.00 0 2.00 00 8.75 8.00 7.00 Coach Sam Ros with the 2014-2015 Boys Indoor Track Team. Coach Antonio LaBruna with the 2014-2015 Girls Indoor Track Team. 9.00 00 00 00 0 Left to Right - Boys Captains: John Simonini, Salah Barhoum, Mirza Liskovica, and Bounlaing Chea (missing from the picture due to illness is Pedro Pimenta). Pictured far right is manager Amanda Ke. Left to Right – (Revere boys) Dom Giangregorio and Daniel Murphy - Boys 50 yard dash. Jerome Berry - Boys 300 meters. 8.00 00 25 1.50 Jasmina Zelkanovic - Girls High Hurdles. Lionel Forbes - Boys High Hurdles. Left to Right – (Revere girls) Angelina Nguyen, Leangcheng Chrea, and Jessica Cambraia - Girls 50 yard dash. Romessa Ali Moussa - Girls High Jump. Nelson Cevallos - Boys High Jump. 00 5.00 75 0.00 A Taste of Antique Favorites Left to Right – (Revere girls) Nadia Lerari, Yesenia Arango, and Fiona Kerthi - Girls 600 meters. Prix Fixe Dinner Menu MENU AVAILABLE Sunday THROUGH Thursday Only. From January 25th until February 5th ENTREES PLEASE SELECT ONE FROM THE FOLLOWING SALADS/APPETIZERS PLEASE SELECT ONE FROM THE FOLLOWING James Petrozzelli - Boys Shot Put. John Simonini - Boys mile. HOUSE SALAD Field greens, cherry tomatoes, red onions, cucumber in a creamy balsamic dressing. CAESAR SALAD Romaine hearts, caesar dressing and homemade crostini and parmigiano cheese. MUSSELS Sautéed with your choice of garlic, olive oil and wine or marinara sauce EGGPLANT ROLLATINE Stuffed with cheese and basil served with marinara sauce. Left to Right - Coach Antonio LaBruna, Captains Jessica Cambraia, Rim Lerari, Fiona Kerthi, Danielle Fortuna, and Yesenia Arango. CHEESE PLATTER Black Cyan Magenta Yellow CHICKEN OR EGGPLANT PARMIGIANA CHICKEN FRANCESE Breaded,baked with marinara sauce, Egg battered served with artichoke hearts, basil and mozzarella cheese served with a tomatoes in a lemon wine sauce. choice of pasta BOLOGNESE Our delicious meat sauce, tossed with RICOTTA GNOCCHI choice of pasta. with your choice of, wild mushroom and ANTIQUE TABLE HADDOCK Alfredo sauce or baked with marinara, Panko crusted and pan seared haddock mozzarella cheese and basil. served over risotto in a lemon caper, butter and white wine sauce. DESSERT/COFFEE PLEASE SELECT ONE FROM THE FOLLOWING Canolli Bread Pudding Coffee THE ABOVE LISTED MENU IS $26.95 PER PERSON BEVERAGES, TAX AND GRATUITY ARE NOT INCLUDED No substitutions permtted. Regular Menu also available Antique favorites available at both location 2 Essex St, Lynn MA 01902 19 Crest Avenue, Winthrop MA www.antiquetableonline.com 781-477-9778 617-207-9054 Wednesday January 28, 2015 THE REVERE JOURNAL Page 5 JUNO HITS REVERE FOR THE BLIZZARD OF 2015 Summer Street had a difficult time Tuesday morning. Winthrop Parkway looking very nasty during blizzard of 2015. Erica Anderson helping her aunt Andrea Anderson shovel out. No one around: Endicott Avenue is deserted by people and passing cars. Happy the snowman enjoying the weather on A big job for Joe Catalano with a tiny shovel; af- Tuesday morning in Beachmont. ter waking up this morning to his shovels stolen off his porch last night “If we advertise it, we’ll have it when you get here. It’s easy. It’s honest and it’s guaranteed.” Brian Kelly What Blizzard? Several sparrows take to the roof of a Beachmont home looking for a meal between the snowflakes. A storm means prime feeding time for sea birds. 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Ends 2/02/2015. 1-781-598-1234 Seagulls fly amongst the waves amidst the storm. Tranquility, weathering out the Blizzard from inside a Revere home wasn’t such a bad idea on Tuesday Route1North, Lynnfield NISSAN ® Black Cyan Magenta Yellow nissanoflynnfield.com Page 6 THE REVERE JOURNAL Forum Revere J o u r n a l PRESIDENT: Stephen Quigley - [email protected] MARKETING DIRECTOR: Deb DiGregorio - [email protected] LETTER TO THE EDITOR No more cuts Dear Governor Baker, We are writing to urge you not to impose further 9c cuts to elderly home care. On October 19, 2014, Governor Deval Patrick made a total of $2.37 million in 9c cuts to Elder Affairs line items, including $1.52 million to home care services. Protective services, congregate housing and meals programs were also cut. In October of 2008, Governor Patrick chose to make a total of $15.511 million in 9c cuts to the Executive Office of Elder Affairs (ELD) line items (9110 accounts). The accounts lost 5.3% in overall funding. The impact of these cuts are still felt today in the ELD accounts, seven budget years later. Among the programs hardest hit were the home care purchased services item, and home care case management, which lost $6.77 million. The home care line items never recovered from the 9C cuts of FY 2009. Funding in FY 2015 is roughly where it stood—or lower--than eight budgets ago in FY 2007: Previous 9c cuts have not only affected the 28,200 elders in this program, it has resulted in lower CHIA rates for this program, since Chapter 257 rates are based largely on restrained historic levels of funding. It has also pushed up caseloads to over 100 per worker at some agencies, and depressed salary levels. At the same time, the home care accounts have had a significant positive financial impact on the state’s bottom line by reducing spending in nurs- ing facility appropriations. Home and community based services have dramatically changed nursing facility use by MassHealth: Between FY 2000 and FY 2014, the number of nursing home patient days paid for by MassHealth fell by 4,500,000 days (-34.4%). In FY 15, the median cost of a MassHealth SNF patient day is $189.64. The costs avoided from 4.5 million fewer patient days is $853.38 million. This “home care dividend” is a smart investment, which provides the state with an immediate ROI: when we keep an elder out of a MassHealth nursing facility bed today, that same day we provide them with care in the community for less than half the cost. Home care spending also attracts more federal FFP bonuses from CMS. For all the above reasons, we ask you not to impose further 9c cuts to the home care accounts. Our elderly clients have already paid a significant price for 9c cuts over the past seven years. Al Norman Mass Home Care Michael E. Festa AARP Massachusetts David Stevens Mass Councils on Aging Carolyn Villers Mass Senior Action Council Chet Jakubiak Mass Association Of Older Americans Lisa Gurgone Home Care Aide Council S ubscription I nformation The Revere Journal is published every Wednesday by the Independent Newspaper Group. Periodical postage rates paid at Boston, MA. Newsstand price is 50 cents. Subscriptions are $26 per year in Revere, and $50 per year outside the city. Known office of publication: 385 Broadway, Revere, MA 02151. Postal publication number is USPS NO. 710120. Postmaster, send address corrections to the Independent Newspaper Group, Attn: Circulation, 385 Broadway, Revere, MA 02151.The Revere Journal assumes no financial responsibility for typographical errors in advertisements, but will reprint that part of the advertisement in which the error occurs. Advertisers will please notify the management immediately of any errors that may occur. Revere Journal 385 Broadway , Revere, MA 02151 781-485-0588 • Fax: 781-485-1403 D irectory Advertising and Marketing Marketing Director Deb DiGregorio - [email protected] Assistant Marketing Directors Colm Bohill - [email protected] Maureen DiBella - [email protected] Senior Sales Associates Peter Sacco - [email protected] Kathleen Bright-Procopio - [email protected] Legal Advertising Ellen Bertino - [email protected] Ad Design Carol Alagero (classified) Editorial Senior Reporter Seth Daniel - [email protected] Regular Contributors Cary Shuman - [email protected] Copy Editing, Layout Scott Yates - [email protected] Kane DiMasso-Scott Maria Zahir Business Accounts Executive Judy Russi - [email protected] Printer Concord Monitor (N.H.) Wednesday, January 28, 2015 REVERE THROUGH THEYEARS 10 years ago January 26, 2005 The Blizzard of 2005 delivered 30 inches of snow, temperatures near 10 degrees, and high winds to Revere over the weekend. Mayor Tom Ambrosino asked residents to be patient and allow time for city workers to clear snow from the streets and find some place to put it. Homes were shaken, dogs became ill, and one elderly woman nearly had a heart attack last Friday when members of the State Police bomb squad detonated on Revere Beach some highly dangerous chemicals that reportedly were found at Pope John XXIII High School in Everett by an environmental company that was cleaning up the school’s science labs. The court case brought initially by the city against the adult video store Moon-Lite Reader that began in 1995 still is ongoing on the issue of legal fees, with the city appealing a lower court decision that awarded Moon-Lite more than $1 million. A three-alarm fire destroyed a home on Washington St. at 3 a.m. Wednesday morning. The blaze started in a faulty heating system in the basement and caused more than $300,000 in damage. Are We There Yet?, Coach Carter, and Hotel Rwanda are playing at the Revere Showcase Cinemas. 20 years ago January 25, 1995 Carol Tye, a 34 year veteran of the Revere School Dept., has been named Asst. Superintendent, the first woman to hold that post. Joseph Nuzzo 35, of Everett, and Edward Flaherty, 29, of South Boston, former Northwest Airlines employees, have been indicted for credit card fraud. Both men had been mentioned by another former Northwest employee, Susan Taraskiewicz, in her secret diary for allegedly harassing her. Taraskiewicz was found brutally murdered in Revere in 1992. Revere police officers Sgt. Mike Cutillo, Wayne Anderson, and Sal Falzarano made a forced entry into an apartment at 14 Nahant Ave. where they found crack cocaine and made arrests, the third series of arrests and drug raids in as many weeks in the city. Revere dermatologist Dr. Richard Finkel, 54, has been indicted on 60 counts of mail fraud for allegedly filing false Black claims and bilking insurers of more than $29,000. Firefighters knocked down two, single-alarm fires this week at 110 Ocean Ave. and 76 Vane St. 30 years ago January 23, 1985 The School Committee voted unanimously not to proceed with a proposal for a Magnet Academy for grades 7 and 8 at the high school. A capacity crowd of parents was on hand for the vote. However, both those parents who support the idea and School Committee members said they will continue to study the proposal. Peter McCauley, the city’s Sealer of Weight and Measures, who also acts as the city’s unofficial historian, reports that the flying horses from the famed Hippodrome on Revere Beach will be individually auctioned off next month in New York City. McCauley said that Circus World of Florida, which purchased the ride from William Hurley in 1973, never reassembled it. It is expected that each horse will bring $8000-$10,000 at auction. The Hippodrome was built on Revere Beach at the turn of the century The State DPW told city officials this week that it is considering a redesign of Route 1 through the city. Avenging Angel and The Falcon and the Snowman are playing at the Revere Showcase Cinemas. 40 years ago January 22, 1975 The Revere Fire Department has purchased a Jaws of Life tool for the extraction of motorists from automobile accidents. City Councillor Michael Edward has proposed that the John F. Kennedy Memorial Library be built on the site of the proposed Wonderland Shopping Center. The City Council unanimously endorsed Edward’s idea. The Kennedy family’s plan to build the library in Harvard Square has run into opposition from Cambridge citizens’ groups. Richard Powers, 26, a member of the Revere Journal staff, has been cited for excellence in sports journalism by the New England Press Association for his profile last year on Mark Pennington, a 22 year old local man, who set a new world record for eating a pound of grapes in 55 seconds. George C. Scott stars in Bank Shot at the Parkway Plaza Theatre. A city backhoe has been digging in a vacant lot on Ocean Ave. in search of the bodies of two teenagers who reportedly were buried there last July by a 62 year old man who has confessed to their murders. The man said he met the pair, a 13 year old girl and a 15 year old boy, on Revere Beach and then lured them to the cellar of one of the abandoned buildings that formerly were on the lot. The excavation is under the direction of Capt. George Hurley and Detective Michael Casoli. 50 years ago January 28, 165 The Education Committee of the Revere Interfaith Council has joined with the School Committee in urging the City Council to take immediate action on the proposal to build a new Revere High School. The City Council has voted to create a new agency, to be known as the Community Action Program of Revere Inc. (CAPRI), composed of 10 citizens of varied backgrounds, who will administer local funding from the federal government pursuant to Pres. Lyndon Johnson’s anti-poverty bill. Audrey Taub, a top-ranking member of the Revere High senior class, has confirmed that she is the first student to be admitted to the new branch of the University of Massachusetts at Boston, which will open this fall. Larry Nelson was installed this week as the new President of the local Kiwanis Club in exercises held at the Surf Supper Club on Ocean Ave. Congressman Torbert Macdonald was the guest speaker at the sixth annual installation of officers of the Colonial Acres Civic Group. He told the audience that their efforts to make Revere a better place to live soon will succeed. 60 years ago January 27, 1955 The Mothers March in the fight against infantile paralysis will take place tonight from 7-8 p.m. Residents are asked to keep their porch lights on. City Manager Edward P. O’Toole has presented to the City Council a total city budget of $4,680,015 for 1955, the earliest that the budget has been ready in city history. O’Toole’s budget, which is $38,487 greater than last year’s, is $600,000 less than what city department heads requested and provides no pay raises for any city employees, including school teachers, even though the teachers negotiated a pay raise with the School Committee. The teacher say they will bring the matter to court. The City Council has voiced its approval for the continuation of rent control and has urged the legislature to allow cities and towns to have the option of continuing with it. A capacity crowd of nearly 1000 persons was on hand at the Beachview Ballroom to hear a talk by Roy M. Cohn, former Chief Counsel of the U.S. Senate committee headed by Senator Joseph McCarthy of Wisconsin. The event was sponsored by he American Legion Post 61. Cohn urged his audiences to remain ever alert for subversive influences wherever they may be operating. Dean Martin and Jerry Lewis star in Three Ring Circus at the Revere Theatre. 70 years ago January 25, 1945 The recent American naval victory at Leyte proved tragic for a local family who received word this week that Gerald Swerling, 18, was killed in action. Swerling was aboard a destroyer that was battered by the Japanese. Word also was received this week from the War Dept. that Pvt. Peter Stamulis of 40 Washington Ave. was killed in action in France on November 8. He was the father of a two year old daughter, Janet. The Plan E Club heard a guest speaker, a city councillor from Cambridge, speak of the benefits of the City Manager form of government and said that taxes usually are reduced once a mayor no longer is in charge of a city. The largest convention ever to be hosted by the city will take place this weekend when some 500 delegates of the War Parents of America Inc. from 35 cities and towns across the state will meet here. Daniel Dillon, chairman of the Revere Committee of the Suffolk County Infantile Paralysis campaign, urges all Revere residents to give generously to the group’s fundraising efforts this weekend. The largest call-up of men by Draft Board 128 in more than a year left Ft. Banks in Winthrop this morning for their pre-induction physicals. It is expected that draft calls will be heavy in the months ahead Wednesday, January 28, 2015 THE REVERE JOURNAL Page 7 POLICE NEWS THREATS TO SCHOOL Revere Police are seeking a complaint against a 13-yearold student of the Susan B. Anthony Middle School after he made threats against the school. Authorities were vague about the threats, but indicated the young man had made a threat to the school facility, which triggered an investigation last Thursday. He has been suspended from the school until getting evaluated. Charges will be filed this week, it is expected. ATTACKS PREGNANT GIRLFRIEND One Chelsea man was arrested Sunday after allegedly assaulting his pregnant girlfriend. Police were called to an address on Lee Burbank Hwy. on Sunday around 12:20 p.m. for a fight between a man and a woman. After an inquiry, police arrested the man after it was learned that he hit the pregnant woman in the stomach and the face. Raul Alberto Rivera, 22, of Chelsea, was charged with assault and battery with serious bodily injury on a pregnant person. JAM AT JOE’S Two cars full of young people got involved in a road rage incident that resulted in a brawl at Joe’s Market on Squire Road last Saturday evening. Around 6 p.m., police were called to the gas station for a major fight. Some in the melee had threatened to use a gun; others had threatened to use a knife. No weapons were found, though. Depending on which group of kids police talked to, the situation started when one group cut off another group on Squire Road. A red Mustang with five young people inside of it was said to have cut off another vehicle with two young people in it. The driver of the other vehicle told police that after the Mustang cut him off, he beeped at it. Shortly after, he felt that the car was following him. So, he circled the block and stopped at Joe’s, where both cars quickly emptied out and fisticuffs ensued. The driver of the Mustang said he slid on some ice and accidentally got in front of the other car, and the driver of the other car became irate and pulled him over at Joe’s. In any event, both ended up in a vicious fight. None were known to each other, and none were cooperative with police. WEEKLY CRIME REPORT Many of the youths were from Revere, but no one was arrested. Charges may be filed in the near future, police said. KNOCKED OUT AT AMBROSE One 13-year-old Revere youth reported to police on Sunday around 4 p.m. that he had been knocked out by another youth during a fight at Ambrose Park. The youth told police that a boy he only knows by first name began texting him on Sunday about a fight. They set a time to meet at Ambrose Park, and a fight ensued. During the scuffle, the victim said the other boy hit him in the head with a toy BB gun – knocking him unconscious. When he awoke on the ground, he had bruises to his eye area. The incident is under investigation. Tompkins expresses support for reforming sentencing laws Suffolk County Sheriff Steven W. Tompkins expressed his support for an effort led by Senator Sonia Chang-Diaz and Representative Mary Keefe to reform sentencing laws and expand job training programs through an omnibus bill. The bill, “An Act to Increase Neighborhood Safety and Opportunity,” would restore a judge’s ability to exercise discretion over sentencing for drug offenses. Under current Massachusetts law, judges are forced to sentence non-violent offenders convicted of some drug charges to mandatory minimum sen- tences regardless of whether the time meted out is far more than the crime deserves. “I thank Sen. Chang-Diaz and Rep. Keefe for having the courage to take a stand on these important issues,” said Sheriff Tompkins. “The truth is, we put far too many people in jail who should be remanded to diversionary, substance abuse or mental health programs. Restoring judicial discretion to drug sentencing would allow judges to determine the best punishment on a case-by-case basis.” A 2013 study conducted by MassINC found that Massachusetts’ mandatory minimum laws have not been cost-effective. Governor Charlie Baker has also voiced support for repealing mandatory minimums for non-violent drug offenders. “Sheriff Tompkins adds an important voice to this debate and I’m glad we have his support,” said Sen. Chang-Diaz. The bill offered by Sen. Chang-Diaz and Rep. Keefe would also eliminate a current law that strips offenders convicted of non-violent drug offenses of their right to operate a motor vehicle for up to 5 years after their sentences are completed. “My department places an Love Is In The Air intense focus on programs designed to help offenders improve their station in life and successfully re-enter the community,” Sheriff Tompkins added. “We need to hold people accountable when they break the law, but the harder we make it for them to come back into the community, the more likely they are to go back to their old ways and re-offend.” House: 9 Washburn Avenue; Washburn Avenue; Milano Avenue; Kimball Avenue; Tuckerman Avenue; Eaton Street; Francis Street; Walnut Avenue and Newbury Street. Commercial: 0 Motor Vehicle Theft: 6 Marshview Terrace; Hyde Street; Derby Road; *Sigourney Street; Milano Avenue; and Haddon Street. 34 Motor Vehicle Accidents: Brown Circle (2); Copeland Circle; Constitution Avenue; Furlong Drive; Squire Road; Graves Road/ Pitcairn Street; Dolphin Avenue; Squire Road; Tapley/ Broadway; Graves/Squire; Squire Road; Squire/Sigourney; Roosevelt Street; Broadway; Lee Burbank Hwy; Orr Square; Rumney Road; Foster Street; Bennington Street; Everard Street; Cushman/ Adams; Squire Road; Wolcott Road; Winthrop Avenue; Bellingham Avenue; Washington Avenue; Crescent Avenue; Lee Burbank Hwy; Squire Road; Squire Road; Central/ Broadway; Boulevard; and Alden Avenue. ARREST REPORT MONDAY, JAN. 19 No Arrests Reported TUESDAY, JAN. 20 No Arrests Reported WEDS., JAN. 21 Daniel Harold Megquier, 59, of 35 Broadsound Ave., was charged with one warrant. THURSDAY, JAN. 22 Viana Zedir, 26, of 24 Wolcott Rd., was charged with assault and battery and one warrant. FRIDAY, JAN. 23 Daniel Barker, 24, of Everett, was charged with breaking and entering in the nighttime for a felony and carrying a dangerous weapon. Juvenile, a 13-year-old youth was arrested on one warrant. Anthony Murray, 42, of 58 Cambridge St., was arrested on four warrants. SATURDAY, JAN. 24 No Arrests Reported SUNDAY, JAN. 25 Robert Simons, 59, of 194 Shirley Ave., was charged with domestic assault and battery. Raul Alberto Rivera, 22, of Chelsea, was charged with assault and battery with serious bodily injury on a pregnant person/DRO. LET EVERYONE KNOW WHO YOUR VALENTINE IS WITH A PHOTO OR A MESSAGE... All Valentines will be published in the February 10–11 & 12th issue of the East Boston Times Free Press, Revere Journal, Everett Independent, Chelsea Record, Winthrop Sun Transcript, Lynn Journal, Charlestown & North End Regional Review DEADLINE: Mail or drop off by Thurs., Feb. 5th Valentine’s Day Ad Special 2 columns x 4 inches in Color $100.00 Per Paper at the Independent Offices located at 385 Broadway, Suite 105, Revere, MA 02151 or Email to [email protected] (please be sure to include name and newspaper preference in emails) Revere Journal • Lynn Journal Chelsea Record • Everett Independent East Boston Times Winthrop Sun-Transcript Charlestown Patriot Bridge North End Regional Review Running Weeks of February 4th and February 1th Call or email your Rep. 781-485-0558 Kathy Bright - [email protected] Deb DiGregorio - [email protected] Maureen DiBella - [email protected] Peter Sacco - [email protected] Sioux Gerow - [email protected] Colm Bohill - [email protected] Black Happy Valentines Day Auntie Debbie. Come watch Frozen with me. Love, sophie ❏ Photo Enclosed ❏ No Photo Available Please circle the paper you want your message printed in? REVERE JOURNAL East Boston Times-Free Press Chelsea record Everett Independent WINTHROP Sun TranScripT MY VALENTINE WRITTEN IN 20 WORDS OR LESS To: _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ Happy Valentines Day, Daddy. Love your favorite pats fans, Ava and Sophia _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ From: _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ Name: _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ Phone #: _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ Independent Newspaper Group will not be responsible for any lost or unpublished photos. Photos may be picked up at the journal office after the Valentine messages are published (up to 30 days). Page 8 THE REVERE JOURNAL Wednesday, January 28, 2015 OBITUARIES George James Pickard Maria Cantino Lyndall DeFronzo Of Revere Registered Nurse and U.S. Army Captain Revere School Food Service Manager George James Pickard of Revere died on Thursday, January 22. He was the beloved husband of Maida B. (Sacks) Pickard; devoted father of Jon Michael Pickard; loving son of the late Harry and Sally (Bell) Pickard. A Memorial Service will be announced at a later date. Contribution's in George's memory may be made to a charity of one's choice. Arrangements under the care of Torf Funeral Service. Please visit www.torffuneralservice.com for online guestbook. Franklin Delano Meade Marine and Navy Veteran of Three Wars Franklin Delano “Frank” Meade passed away at his Revere home with his family at his side on Tuesday, January 20 following a long illness. He was 81 years old. Frank was born in Freeburn, KY and the family later settled in Williamson, WV. Frank was educated there and at the young age of 17, he enlisted in the United States Marine Corps. He was eager to leave his home town and serve his country after the Second World War. Frank loved the military, and when he finished with his service as a Marine, he later joined the United States Navy. He rose to the rank of “Chief Gunner’s Mate.” His time in the Navy brought him to ports all around the world. In 1966, he married Barbara P. Bruce. The couple had two children and lived in many different states and countries. Frank enjoyed his career in the Navy which spanned 26 years and he provided 30 years of service to his country. After retiring from the Navy, Frank and his family settled in Virginia and he became a Supervisor of the Department of Transportation of Virginia. In later years, Frank and his wife moved to Revere, back to where his wife was from and where they enjoyed their home overlooking the beautiful ocean. He was a veteran of World War II, Korea and Vietnam, a past member of the American Legion Post #61 Revere, USS Yellowstone and St. Pius Men’s Club of Virginia. He was the devoted husband of Barbara P. (Bruce) Meade of Revere with whom he shared 48 years of marriage; the loving father of Marilynn Eleanor Medina of Norfolk, VA and Franklin M. Meade of Norton, MA; the cherished grandfather of Eleanor Graciella Medina of Revere and Marilynn Meade Medina of San Antonio, TX; the beloved brother of the late Faye Meade, Mary Margaret Aliff, James Roy Meade and Arthur Meade. He is also lovingly survived by his niece, Sherry Hatfield and he was the uncle of the late Barbara Aliff, both of West Virginia, the cherished brother in law of Ret. State Police Sgt. James R. Bruce of Winthrop and his late wife, Carole P., Eleanor “Sissy” Bruce – Kelley and her husband, Robert N. Kelley of Revere and New Hampshire and Marilyn A. “Mal” Symmes of Winthrop. Interment was private. Family and friends are invited to attend a Memorial Funeral Mass on Saturday, January 31 at 10:30 a.m. in Immaculate Conception Church (Corner of Beach St. & Winthrop Ave.) Revere. In lieu of flowers, remembrances may be made to: DAV of Mass. 24 Beacon St., State House, Suite 546 Boston, MA 02133. For more information, visitwww.vertuccioandsmith. com Marilyn Flynn Member of Winthrop Elks Marilyn J. (Ginsburg) Flynn of Winthrop passed away suddenly on January 14. She was 70 years old. Raised in Revere, she graduated from Revere High in 1962, married her high school sweetheart, David Flynn (who passed away in December of 2013) and then moved to Winthrop. They were married 51 years. Her passions included BINGO, bowling, gardening, cooking, boating and Jamaica. She was very patriotic and was a a member of the Elks Lodge 1078 of Winthrop. Marilyn was an extraordinary wife, mother, sister, aunt, Danny S. Smith 773 Broadway Revere, MA 02151 Phone (781) 284-7756 www.vertuccioandsmith.com cousin, and friend. She was also a mother, mentor and friend to many of her daughters’ friends. She is lovingly survived by her daughters TerriEllen Wood of Texas, Laurie Lee Pangburn of Florida, Wendi Towers of Woburn, Bonnie Flynn and her companion, David Carver of Revere; her sons-in-law: Mark E. Wood of Vermont and Michael Towers of Woburn; grandchildren Becky and Zack Wood of Vermont; grandson Daniel Zizza of Salem; her sister and brother Phyllis Ginsburg and her brother, Robert P. Ginsburg, both of Ohio and her faithful dog, Annie. A Celebration of Life will be held at the Winthrop Elks 1078 on May 30 from 12 noon to 4 p.m Vazza . "Beechwood" Funeral Home 262 Beach St., Revere • 781-284-1127 Louis R. Vazza ~ Funeral Director www.vazzafunerals.com Maria J. (Lopez) Cantino, formerly of Revere and Puerto Rico, died on January 20 at the E.N. Rogers Memorial Veterans Hospital of Bedford following a long illness. Born in Santurce, Puerto Rico on November 28, 1924, she was raised and educated in Puerto Rico and later attended Nursing School there to become a Registered Nurse. She entered the United States Army in April of 1949 and served during the Korean Conflict until June of 1953 rising to the rank of Captain. During her time in the service, she met and fell in love with a handsome soldier, Armando S. Cantino, and the couple wed in February of 1954. She and her husband returned to her native home of Santurce, Puerto Rico, where they spent the majority of their lives until coming to Revere in 2008. The couple celebrated their 60th wedding anniversary this past February. Mrs. Cantino is survived by her beloved husband of 60 years, Armando Salvatore Cantino. She was the devoted sister in law of Anthony P. Cantino of Revere and the late: Carmela J. Caputo and Philip Cantino; the dear aunt of Angela J. Tabb and her husband, Robert, Joseph A. Caputo, Jr. and his wife ,MaryLou, Camille M. Punch and her husband, William A. and Joanne T. Caputo-Carfagna and her husband, Alfred. She was the cherished grand-aunt of Denise Tarro, Jeffrey Tarro and his wife, Michele, Devon Punch and her husband, Matthew Smith and Anthony J. Caputo. She is also lovingly survived by three great-grandnieces, Chelsey, Gianna and Ciara. Funeral arrangements were by the Vertuccio & Smith Home for Funerals, Revere. Entombment was in the Woodlawn Community Mausoleum (Versailles Building), Everett. In lieu of flowers, remembrances may be made to the Patients' Activities Fund at E.N. Rogers Memorial Veterans Hospital, 200 Springs Rd., Bedford, MA 01730. For More information, visit www. vertuccioandsmith.com GARY M. OUELLETTE Bro, Superbowl Sunday marks the day, nine years ago you went away. Remembering the happy times and feelings of good cheer, Cherishing our memories of the days when you were here. There is a special place within our hearts that is with us everyday A place where all our memories of you are tucked away. You will always live on in the hearts and minds Of the Loving Family you letf behind. Unseen, Unheard but always near still loved and missed year after year. Your Loving Family & ME TA G.O. Patriots Always Remembering You E. Azzari, Michael E. Azzari, all of Saugus and Samantha L. and Hannah K. Azzari and the cherished son of the late Edward Azzari and Irene (Favret) Azzari. He is also lovingly survived by an aunt, many cousins, nieces and nephews. Family and friends are invited to attend the funeral from the Vertuccio & Smith Home for Funerals, 773 Broadway (Route 107) Revere today, Wednesday, January 28 at 9:30 a.m followed by a Funeral Mass in the Immaculate Conception Church (corner of Beach St. and Winthrop Ave.) at 10:30 a.m. Interment will be in Woodlawn Cemetery, Everett. In lieu of flowers, remembrances may be made to: Alzheimer’s Association, MA / NH Chapter, 480 Pleasant St., Watertown, MA 02475 Hail, Sacred Heart of Jesus, living and strengthening source of eternal life, infinite treasury of the divinity, burning furnace of divine love! You are my refuge and my sanctuary. My loving Savior, consume my heart in that burning fire with which Your own is inflamed. Pour into my soul those graces which flow from Your love. Let my heart be so united with Yours that our wills may be one, and my will in all things conformed with Yours. May Your Will be the guide and rule of my desires and of my actions. Amen. S.M.B. Prayer to St. Anthony O Holy St. Anthony, gentlest of Saints, your love for God and Charity for His creatures, made you worthy, when on earth, to possess miraculous powers. Miracles waited on your words which you were ever ready to speak for those in trouble or anxiety. Encouraged by this thought, I implore of you to obtain for me (request). The answer to my prayer may require a miracle, even so you are the Saint of Miracles O gentle and loving St. Anthony, whose heart was ever full of human sympathy. Whisper my petition into the ears of the Sweet infant Jesus, who loved to be folded in your arms, and the gratitude of my heart will be ever yours. Amen. Black Cyan Magenta Yellow Gloria Popp Of New Hampshire, formerly of East Boston Gloria M. (LaRosa) Popp of Allenstown, NH, formerly of East Boston, died at Catholic Medical Center on January 20. She was 86 years old. Gloria was a long time employee of Kimball Jewelers of Boston and a member of the Third Order of St Francis. Born and raised in East Boston, the daughter of the late Anthony and Grace (Coco) LaRosa, she was the beloved wife of the late Walter E.; devoted mother of Dennis Popp and his wife, Kim Weisensee of Peabody, Richard Popp and his wife, Donna Johnson of Melrose, Kevin Popp of New Hampshire, Jeanmarie Popp and her husband, Paul Cerullo of Revere; dear sister of the late Rosemarie Socci and Carmella Varone and is also survived by eight loving grandchildren and 10 great grandchildren. Funeral services were by the Paul Buonfiglio & Sons-Bruno Funeral Home, Revere. For guest book, please visit www. Buonfiglio.com Bridge Builder; Program Director and Grand Knight of Knights of Columbus Retired State Trooper In Loving Memory Feb 5, 2006 - Feb 5, 2015 , all of Revere; loving grandmother of Sean King, Patrick King, Michael DeFronzo and Amanda DeFronzo and dear sister of Hilma Black of Texas. Funeral arrangements were by the Paul Buonfiglio & Sons-Bruno Funeral Home, Revere. In lieu of flowers donations may be made to Care Dimensions 75 Sylvan St, Suite B 102 Danvers, MA 01923 For guest book please visit www.Buonfiglio.com Joseph Barravecchio Edward Azzari Edward E. Azzari, a long time Revere resident, formerly of Everett, died on Thursday, January 22 at the Lighthouse Nursing Care Center of Revere following a long illness. He was 81 years old. Ed was born and raised in Everett and graduated from Everett High School, Class of 1951 after which he enlisted in the U.S. Army during the Korean Conflict. During his time in the Army, he served as an M.P. (Military Policeman). After serving his country, he worked for the U.S. Postal Service for a brief time, until he was sworn into the Massachusetts Registry Police. He remained on the force for many years and was promoted to “Special Investigator” before retiring as a Massachusetts State Trooper. In 1963, he married Louise F. Federici and the couple settled in Revere where they raised their two boys. He was the loving and devoted husband of Louise F. (Federici) Azzari with whom he shared 44 years of marriage and the cherished father of Edward V. Azzari and his wife, Atty. Michelle A. Azzari of Saugus and Revere Police Lt. John M. Azzari and his wife, Kristin M. Azzari. He was the adored grandfather of Nicholas A. Azzari and Julia Lyndall E. (Swinson) DeFronzo of Revere, formerly of N. Carolina, died on January 23 at the Anne Mark Nursing Home. She was 81 years old. Lyndall worked for many years as a food service manager for Revere Public schools. She was the daughter of the late Decatur and Bertha (Guthrie) Swinson; beloved wife of the late Frank. DeFronzo; devoted mother of Paula King and her husband, John and Francesco DeFronzo S.M.B. Joseph Vito 'Uncle Vito' Barravecchio, a Moon Township resident in Pennsylvania for the past 30 years, formerly from Warren, Ohio for 16 years and originally from Revere passed away on Tuesday, January 20 at Heritage Valley Sewickley. Joseph was a member of St. Joseph Church. For over 50 years, a member of the Knights of Columbus, 3rd Degree both locally and in Warren, OH where he had been a Program Director and Grand Knight. Joseph’s work was building bridges. From 1976 to 1984, he worked at Valley Consolidated Industries in Warren, OH. In April 1984 until 1995, he was employed by Colonial Iron Works in Oakdale and Canonsburg. From 1997 until 2009, he was employed by Bridges and Towers, Inc. in New Castle. His notable accomplishments were building the George Washington via Duct, Riverside in NY and the PNC Field Triple A Baseball Stadium of the Scranton/Wilkes Barre Railriders. He was born in East Boston on April 6, 1942 to the late Vito and Marie Josephine (Tedesco) Barravecchio. He was the beloved husband for 49 ½ years to Glenda (Howell) Barravecchio; loving father of Anthony Joseph Barravecchio (Caryn) and Michael Vito Barravecchio (Stephanie); cherished grandfather of five; brother of Joan Marie Barravecchio. Funeral arrangements were by Copeland’s Moon Township Funeral Home, 981 Brodhead Road where prayers were recited followed by Mass at St. Joseph Church with Father Richard Jones officiating. Entombment followed in Resurrection Cemetery. The family welcomes flowers or donations in his name to the American Heart Association. John Tobin Worked at State Street Bank and Omni Parker John, B. Tobin Agr. Sc. (N.U.I.), M.Sc. (Dubl.), M.B.A. (N.U.I) of Revere, formerly of Ballylooby, Tipperary, Ireland died on January 25. John worked for many years at State Street Bank as a Portfolio Accountant, and later in security at the Omni Parker House in Boston. He enjoyed socializing and playing golf at Kelley Greens in Nahant. Born in Ballylooby, Tipperary, Ireland, the son of the late Thomas and Elizabeth (English), he was the beloved husband of Donna Lombardo; devoted father of Rory, Eilis, Michael and John. He is survived by his brother, Richard and was pre-deceased by seven others. He is also survived by eight loving grandchildren and by many nieces, nephews and in-laws. His Funeral will be held from the Paul Buonfiglio & ST. JUDE NOVENA May the Sacred Heart of Jesus be adored, glorified, loved and preserved throughout the world now and forever. Sacred Heart of Jesus pray for us. St. Jude, worker of miracles, pray for us. St. Jude, helper of the hopeless, pray for us. Say this prayer 9 times a day. By the 8th day your prayer will be answered. It has never been known to fail. Publication must be promised. My prayers have been answered. S.M.B. Sons-Bruno Funeral Home, 128 Revere St., Revere on Thursday, January 29 at 9 a.m. followed by a Funeral Mass in St. Anthony’s Church at 10 a.m. Relatives and friends are kindly invited. Interment will be in Woodlawn Cemetery. For guest book please visit www.Buonfiglio.com 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 ST. THERESE, THE LITTLE FLOWER, PLEASE PICK ME A ROSE FROM THE HEAVENLY GARDEN AND SEND IT TO ME WITH A MESSAGE OF LOVE ASK GOD TO GRANT ME THE FAVOR I THEE IMPLORE AND TELL HIM I WILL LOVE HIM EACH DAY MORE AND MORE. (The above prayer, plus 5 Our Fathers, 5 Hail Marys, 5 Glory Bes, must be said on 5 successive days, before 11 a.m. On the 5th day, the 5th set of prayers having been completed, offer one more set - 5 Our Fathers, 5 Hail Marys, 5 Glory Bes.) S.M.B. Wednesday, January 28, 2015 THE REVERE JOURNAL Page 9 Enjoy a game-day party and keep your resolutions on track FAMILY FEATURES T wo of the most popular New Year’s resolutions are losing weight and eating healthier. But by the time the big game rolls around, many people are ready for a break — or looking for an excuse to cheat. But kickoff does not have to be a signal to punt your healthy-eating habits. Registered dietitian Jodie Shield knows it can be a struggle to celebrate and stay healthy. She’s put together some win-win tips and recipes — healthy and delicious — that are sure to keep fans cheering for more: Know your game plan. If you’re the home team (i.e. the party host), you get to call the plays. Serve entrees that are lean and festive, such as Touchdown Turkey Chili. Or prepare a thin whole wheat crust pizza using reduced-fat mozzarella cheese, tomato sauce and lots of sliced veggies. Offer a starting line-up of healthier appetizers. Whip some traditional game day favorites into shape. Instead of nachos, serve baked chips with salsa. Pass on the salt and butter and sprinkle a dash of Parmesan cheese over popcorn. Forget the fried chicken wings and serve baked chicken tenders seasoned with Hidden Valley Salad Dressing & Seasoning Mix. Think fresh. Skip the super subs and set up a sandwich bar with lean deli meats such as turkey breast and ham, low-fat cheese slices and prepped veggies — like sliced tomato and shredded lettuce — and low-fat toppings. Pass on super big portions. No matter what foods are served, remember you don’t have to eat the whole thing. Grab a small plate and load half of it up with fresh veggies and baked chips. Get in on the action. During halftime, grab your guests and head outdoors for a quick game of touch football. You can always record the commercials so you don’t miss out. 7 Layer Fiesta Ranch Dip Prep Time: 10 minutes Makes: 10 (1/4 cup) servings 1 16-ounce can fat-free refried beans 1/2 cup guacamole 1 package Hidden Valley Fiesta Ranch Dips Mix 1 cup fat-free sour cream or plain nonfat yogurt 1 cup shredded reduced-fat cheddar cheese 6 green onions, chopped 1 medium tomato, chopped 1/4 cup sliced black olives (optional) 1. Spread each of the ingredients in the order listed over a 9-inch serving platter or pie dish. 2. Chill for an hour and serve. Hold That Line Hummus Dip “No need to pass on fabulous dips to maintain your diet,” said Shield. “Thanks to the protein and fiber in chickpeas, hummus is light, yet heart-healthy enough to satisfy hungry sports fans. Try this easy recipe for happy game day guests.” Touchdown Turkey Chili Prep Time: 15 minutes Cook Time: High heat cooks for 4 hours; Low heat cooks for 8 hours Makes: 8 (1 cup) servings 1 tablespoon olive oil 1 medium onion, chopped 1 medium green bell pepper, chopped 2 pounds lean ground turkey breast 2 cans (14.5 ounces each) Mexican-style diced tomatoes 1 can (6 ounces) reduced sodium tomato paste 1 can (15 ounces) black beans, rinsed and drained 1 cup low sodium tomato juice 1 package Hidden Valley Fiesta Ranch Dips Mix 1. Heat olive oil in a large nonstick pan over mediumhigh heat. 2. Add onions and bell pepper and sauté until crisptender, about 5 minutes. 3. Remove and place in slow cooker. 4. Add ground turkey breast to the same pan and cook until crumbled and browned, about 8 to 10 minutes. 5. Add the turkey to the slow cooker along with all of the remaining ingredients. 6. Cover the slow cooker and cook for 4 hours on high heat or 8 hours on low heat. Play Good Defense and Substitute The best way to tackle those creamy, high-calorie dips is to make smart substitutions. Here are a few options to help you get started: Instead of: Use: Guacamole Salsa Pesto Chopped tomatoes and basil Sour cream Plain fat-free yogurt Cheese Reduced-fat cheese Cream Fat-free evaporated milk Black Prep Time: 10 minutes Makes: 8 (1/4 cup) servings 2 cans (15 1/2 ounces each) chickpeas, rinsed and drained 4 garlic cloves 1/3 cup lemon juice 1 package Hidden Valley Salad Dressing & Seasoning Mix 4 tablespoons cold water 1/2 cup tahini (sesame seed paste) Dash of paprika for garnish 1. In a food processor, puree the chickpeas, garlic, lemon juice, salad dressing and seasoning mix and water until very smooth, about 3 minutes. 2. Add tahini paste and process an additional 2 minutes. 3. Spread hummus into a shallow serving bowl. 4. Sprinkle top with paprika. For more recipes and tips, visit www.hiddenvalley.com. Cheesy Ranch Popcorn Prep Time: 5 minutes Cook Time: 3 1/2 minutes Makes: 6 (2 cup) servings 1 bag (3 ounces) reduced-fat, low sodium butter-flavored microwave popcorn 1/4 pack (0.25 ounces) Hidden Valley Salad Dressing & Seasoning Mix 3 sprays from olive oil mister 3 tablespoons grated Parmesan cheese 1. Pop popcorn according to package directions. Immediately open the bag and pour the popcorn into a large serving bowl. 2. Spray the popcorn with three sprays from the olive oil mister, toss with salad dressing and seasoning mix and then toss with the Parmesan cheese. Serve immediately. Black Cyan Magenta Yellow Page 10 THE REVERE JOURNAL Wednesday, January 28, 2015 NEW OFFICERS ELECTED IN THE JACK SATTER HOUSE The Jack Satter House held its installation of officers and board members on Jan. 22nd. There was a short program and dinner where Council President John Powers and State Rep. RoseLee Vincent commended the people of the Jack Satter House and its officers. Priscilla Nickerson was also on hand to represent Mayor Dan Rizzo. PHOTOS BY JOE PREZIOSO The new officers is as follows: President: Frank Sabbio 1st vice president: Georgette Hayes 2nd vice president: Roxanne Aiello Treasurer: Terry Arthur Recording Secretary: Eleanor Fine Financial Secretary: Rosemary Hudson. State Rep. RoseLee Vincent presented outgoing president Les Uliss a certificate of appreciation from the House of Representatives. Steve Post, director of the Jack Satter House, (right) installs Frank Sabbio as the incoming president. City Council President, John Powers presented outgoing Jack Satter House president Les Uliss a certificate of appreciation from the Revere City council. New president Frank Sabbio thanked everyone who supported him as well as the outgoing officers. He also quoted Mary Tyler Moore is his inaugural speech, "Never let your ego get in the way of someone else's idea." Fran Ferrante, Rose Napolitano, Rose Mirasolo and (standing) Pattie Manzo. PIONEER CHARTER SCHOOL OF SCIENCE Tuition Free Public Charter School Best Public Schools in Boston Boston Magazine, 2014 2013 State Wide District Rankings 1st Place – Grade 10 English 1st Place – Grade 10 Science & Technology/enginering 2nd Place – Grade 8 Mathematics - Student Growth Janice Gilman, Barbara Levine and Kiki Alexander. OPEN HOUSE For prospective parents Tues & Thurs at 10am & 3:30pm Accepting applications for grades 7-9 ǀ Open to ALL Massachusetts Residents Rigorous academic program Math and Science focus College prep curriculum Extended learning time Low student to teacher ratio Free tutoring oppurtunities PCSS I - Everett Phone: (617) 389-7277 Fax: (617) 389-7278 PCSS II - Saugus Phone: (781) 666-3907 Fax: (781) 666-3910 Free & reduced lunch program Extracurricular activities & athletics Special Education, English Language Learners, Gifted & Talented services [email protected] APPLY ONLINE at www.pioneercss.org Call to register for open house 14_ars_ad_winthrop_12.31:Layout 1 12/31/14 10:57 AM Page 1 THE ARBORS® a t W i n t h r o p Georgette Hayes and Roxanne Aiello are installed as 1st and 2nd vice presidents. Shirley Sowsy and Bea King during the Pledge of Allegiance. Independent Living Assisted Living • Memory Care Independent and Assisted Living Residential Community The Arbors at Winthrop provides the highest quality assisted living programs, services and facilities. Winthrop’s Premiere Rental Retirement Community! All residents enjoy daily activities, housekeeping and linen service, three meals a day in the dining room, 24-hour staffing and the security of knowing that personal care assistance is available. Call today for a personal tour (617) 207-3009. The Arbors at Winthrop • 46 Lincoln Street • Winthrop, MA 02152 • (617) 207-3009 • arborsassistedliving.com PLEASE RECYCLE THIS PAPER Black Cyan Magenta Yellow State representative, RoseLee Vincent, "Its like coming to a family reunion every time I come here." Black Cyan Magenta Yellow Wednesday, January 28, 2015 THE REVERE JOURNAL Page 11 Sports RHS SPORTS Roundup Lady Patriots win three, now 10-1 The Revere High girls basketball team crunched three more opponents this past week, raising their record to a sterling 10-1 and in the process qualifying for the post-season state tournament. The Lady Patriots opened their week last Monday with a 53-39 triumph over former Greater Boston League rival Medford. The Lady Mustangs, who are in first place in the GBL, came out on fire from the outset, utilizing a pressure defense that rattled Revere in the opening period. However, by the end of the first half, the Lady Patriots had turned the momentum in their favor and then took control of the contest after the intermission. "Medford started fast, but we showed a lot of fight and character in responding to their challenge and then picked up our intensity in the second half, especially on defense," said RHS head coach Diana DeCristoforo. "When we play full-court, man-toman defense and force turnovers, it gets our guards running and creates opportunities for us on offense." Senior captain Tiphani Harris led the Lady Pats with 18 points. Maritza Scott with 13 points and Adanna Hector with 11 also reached double figures, followed by Meaghan Gotham with six points, Valentina Pepic with two, Pamela Gonzalez with two, and Natasha Iacoviello with a free throw. The Lady Patriots were back in action the following night, trekking to Danvers. Once again a slow start bedeviled the Revere squad, which found itself in a 14-0 hole after the opening four minutes. "It was our second game in two nights and our legs were a little tired," said DeCristoforo. "Danvers is quick and has some good shooters and we allowed them to take control of the game. But after they gave us their best shot, we responded with guts and toughness." Indeed, after a Lady Patriot timeout, the Revere girls soon asserted total command of the situation. A little arithmetic shows that with a final score of 51-34 showing on the scoreboard at the end of the game, the Lady Patriots outscored their Lady Falcon rivals by the wide margin of 51-20 over the remaining three and a half periods. Adanna Hector topped the Revere scoresheet with 10 points of the nine Lady Patriots who contributed to the Revere offensive production. Pepic and Gonzalez hit for eight points apiece, Harris stuck for seven, Scott added six, Gotham and Tatianna Iacoviello chipped in four each, and Ally Hinojosa and Natasha Iacviello both scored two points. Friday evening's match with Swampscott saw the Lady Patriots reverse the opening trend of the previous two contests as they took the initiative from the outset. Revere sprinted to a 9-0 lead to start the game and never looked back en route to a 48-26 runaway victory. Once again, the Lady Patriots received balanced scoring throughout their lineup, led by Scott with 12 points and Harris with 11. Pepic added six, followed by Gonzalez with five, Natasha Iacoviello and Hinojosa with four each, and Gotham with two. "My goal as a coach is to have every member of the team contribute, whether it be scoring, rebounding, passing, or defensively, and we have been doing that," said DeCristoforo. "Every girl knows that she is an important part of the team and every girl knows that she is expected to play a role in our success." With their 10th win, the Lady Patriots now have attained the first goal that DeCristoforo had set for them, qualifying for the post-season state tournament. Next up is an NEC North Division title and after that, a deep run in the state tourney. "Our goal is not just to be a good team, but to be a great team," said the coach. When asked the inevitable question of comparing this squad to her now-legendary 20-0 Lady Patriot contingent of a few years ago, DeCristoforo said, "Obviously there are differences, as there always are with every team each year. But the one common denominator between that team and this one is that they compete as hard in our practices as they do in the games." The Lady Patriots were scheduled to play Winthrop yesterday (Tuesday), but the blizzard had other plans for DeCristoforo and her crew. They will host a good Peabody team Friday and then travel to Lynn Classical Monday. PHOTOS BY JENN CIMINO On Friday, Jan. 23, RHS Girls Basketball Alumni came together to support the 2014-2015 RHS Girls Basketball Team vs. Swampscott. The Patriots won 48-26. In the photo above are members of the RHS Alumni squad : Maureen DiBella (‘80), Corrie O’Neil (‘96), Jacqui Noel (‘13), Adriana Borriello (13), Adrienne Maguire (‘76), Samantha Harris (‘12), Melissa Moore-Randall (‘89), Danielle Smith (‘13), Cheryl McGrath (‘82), Kelli Hyland (‘95), Karen Jouve (‘95), Gianna Bua (‘13), Katie Aborn (‘97), Patrice Misiano Fogg (‘89), Diana Odoardi (‘88), Jill Blasi LeClare (‘88), Gena Restiano (‘13), Erin DeNofrio, Caitlyn Caramello (‘13), Kim Penney and Diana DeCristoforo (‘99) and the RHS Girls Basketball Team. In the photo to the right are three of Revere High 1,000 Point Scorers- Gena Restiano, Patrice Misiano Fogg and Karen Jouve. RMS SPORTS Basketball Middle School Girls fall to tough Swampscott squad The Revere Middle School girl's basketball team ran into a buzz saw last Tuesday when Swampscott invaded SBA gymnasium. The Big Blue, who had NEVER beaten the Lady Patriots showed up with a juggernaut unit, including 6' 2" 8th Grader Faye Parker (23 points and numerous blocks) and put a lickin' on the young Revere team. Our girls went don 16-1 after 1 period and though they outscored their opponent 34-33 the rest of the way just couldn't make up the deficit and ended up on the short end of a 49-35 score. Emily DiGiulio (12) and Erika Cheever (13) led the way for their team scoring 25 points between them. Olivia Novoselsky had 4, and Alana Nelson, Chloe Giordano, and Catherine Woodbury all chipped in with 2. Revere now stands at 3-2 and plays at Sa- Junior Lady Patriot teams off to fine start The Revere junior varsity, freshman, and middle school teams have been emulating their varsity Lady Patriot counterparts, as all three are off to fine starts at the midpoint of the season. The Revere High JV squad, under the direction of coach Kristin Ciappina, presently sports an 8-3 record. The junior Lady Pats have been playing well defensively, working together to secure over 35 rebounds a game. Offensively, they are working as a whole with everyone contributing points to the scoresheet. "Captains Elizabeth Lake and Tia Fichera are a strong and aggressive defensive unit, working together to pressure our opponents as both girls are leading the team in steals and assists," said Ciappina. lem on Friday. Boys Middle School Hoopsters Bury Swampscott The Boys Middle School basketballers won their 4th straight contest by dispatching a weak Swampscott group 51-18. The Jr. Pats raced out to a 27-4 1st quarter advantage and never looked back as Coach Erik Maloy cleared the bench early and cruised to the victory. Sebastian Vanegas led Generations of Experience Firmly Cemented in Revere Follow Us on Facebook and Twitter (ClaremontIns) BANKRUPTCY 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 Claremont Insurance Established 1937 319 Broadway, Revere • 781-289-6700 Produce Please see ROUNDUP, Page 12 "Your Independent Grocer, Where Old Friends Meet And New Ones Are Made" SALE DAYS THURSDAY, JANUARY 29TH THROUGH WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 4TH, 2015 Grocery Weekend Specials Great grocery specials Prince Pasta Asst. 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Erick Mariona dropped 4, Harvey Lemus struck for 3, and Yussuf Ali-Buda finished with 2. Mike Hayes, Adam Harper, Eric Bua and Dillon Day all saw action for the victors. The Boys are now 4-1 and head to Salem to take on the Witches this Friday . 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We have the right to limit quantities. Page 12 THE REVERE JOURNAL Roundup// CONTINUED FROM PAGE 11 Samantha Woodman and Victoria Puopolo are a tough duo in the post, communicating well together in ripping down rebounds and feeding each other the ball to score. "Gianna Berkowitz, Karen Malpica, and Teanna Cruz-Prince complement the team’s defense. Hanadi Kobilic and Wafaa Meliani contribute in grabbing rebounds," added the coach. Injured teammate Vanessa Puopolo has been on hand to cheer on her teammates. Freshman coach Elizabeth Leonard's freshman squad has achieved a sterling 9-1 mark at the halfway point, with their only loss coming to Peabody by a slim threepoint margin. "The intensity and dedication of these young ladies have proven to be the keys to our success," said Leonard. "With only eight members on the team, each one has contributed to our strong season thus far." Victoria Correia, Alena Giuliano, Toni Scearbo, and Jasmina Mujic each are averaging eight points per game. The defense is held down by Emily Wykes and Correia, who are averaging six steals per game. The Middle School team, which is comprised of seven sixth graders, two seventh graders, and six eighth graders, stands at 4-2 on the season with wins over Marblehead, Salem, and Saugus and losses to Gloucester and Swampscott. "The girls work really hard in practice and have already seen great improvements in their individual skills and team play," said coach Erin Parker. Damiano Cevallos win for RHS boys track team Richie Damiano and Nelson Cevallos won their respective events for the Revere High boys indoor track team in the Patriots' meet with Peabody last week. Damiano captured the 1000 dash with a time of 2:51.9, while Cevallos took the high jump with a leap of 5'-8". Bounlaing Chea grabbed second place for Revere in the 600 in a clocking of 1:34.5. Edi Mujan and Anthony Berry tied for second (and thus split the second and third place points for Revere) in the 300 dash in 40.5. Lionel Forbes added a point to the Revere total with a third in the 50 hurdles in 7.2 and Danny Murphy took a third in the 50 yard dash in 5.9. Revere also won the 4 x 400 relay in a time of 3:59.2, handily defeating their Peabody counterparts by 14.5 seconds, to finish with 24 points compared to Peabody's 62. The Revere squad now will compete in the Northeastern Conference All-League Meet Friday at the Reggie Lewis Center. RHS hockey team still in the doldrums The Revere High hockey team came out on the short end of both of its contests this past week, dropping a 2-1 decision to Somerville last Wednesday and then falling by a 6-0 margin at Gloucester Saturday. "We're playing hard and giving it a good effort, but the bottom-line is that we're younger and smaller than the teams we're going up against," said RHS head coach Joe Ciccarello. "We're having trouble scoring -- we have only 18 goals in 14 games -- and you can't win many games with that kind of offense." The Patriots grabbed a 1-0 lead in the opening frame in their encounter with former Greater Boston League rival Somerville on a goal by Joe Ristaino, assisted by Rich Polignone, but Somerville knotted matters before the period ended. Somerville then lit the lamp in the middle period for what would prove to be the eventual game-winner. "We had our chances to tie Somerville, but we couldn't finish our opportunities," said Ciccarello. In Saturday's encounter at Gloucester, defensive lapses allowed the Fishermen to have three break-ins on the RHS net. "Gloucester FEBRUARY IS NATIONAL DENTAL HEALTH MONTH Reports show that American students miss over 51 million hours of school every year because of oral health problems, and students who have experienced recent oral health pain are 4 times more likely to have lower grades and GPAs. Join Independent Newspapers in celebrating National Dental Health month. Your 2 col. x 2 inch directory ad for the month of February Single paper for only $150.00 for all 4 weeks. Choose any paper or run in all is one of the fastest-skating teams we've played, but that's no excuse for allowing the breakaways that we did," said Ciccarello. "This is a great group of kids," added the coach. "They work hard and have excellent character, but we need to get bigger and more experienced if we're going to compete against the caliber of teams on our schedule." The Pats suffered a setback in the Somerville contest when Polignone, their senior captain, left the ice with a concussion and will be out indefinitely. Ciccarello and his crew will host Swampscott tonight (Wednesday) at 6:30 and will entertain Peabody next Wednesday at 5:30. RHS girls track competes vs. Peabody The Revere High girls indoor track team ran into one of the top teams in the Northeastern Conference Saturday and came out on the short end of a 72-14 decision to Peabody. Among the highlights for the Lady Patriots was a second-place finish by Danielle Fortuna in the 1000 meter dash in a personal record (PR) time of 3:47. Suellen Guerreiro ran her season-best time of 14:10 in the two mile run to take second place in that event. Sophomore Monica Posada ran a PR for the third straight meet in the mile with a clocking of 6:28. "Monica is one of the hardest workers on the team and she approaches every race with a positive mindset and a numerical goal in mind," said RHS head coach Antonio LaBruna. "It has been a great season for her to this point and she is still getting better." Angelisa Nguyen ran a strong 49.8 in the 300 meter dash, the first time that Angelisa has run in that event this season, to capture third place. Jasmine Zelkanovic also earned a point for the Revere scorebook with a third place finish in the 50 hurdles in 9.3. The Revere 4 x 400 relay quartet, comprised of Monica Posada, Danielle Fortuna, Nadia Lerari, and Yesenia Arango, handily defeated their Peabody counterparts. The Revere foursome came across in a time of 5:08.8, almost 20 seconds faster than the 5:28.2 clocking for Peabody. The Lady Patriots' will compete in the Northeastern Conference All-League Meet Friday at the Reggie Lewis Center. Chea hits for 27 points,but Patriots fall to Big Blue Revere High boys basketball captain Tommy Chea poured n 27 points, but the Patriots came out on the short end of a 68-59 decision to Swampscott Friday evening. The contest was a nip-andtuck affair throughout a fastpaced first half, which ended with the teams deadlocked at 34-34, as both squads put on an offensive show. The Revere side was led by Chea, who hit for 20 of his points in the opening two periods. "Tommy was absolutely outstanding for us tonight, as he has been all season long," said RHS heard coach Adam Rizzo. "Watching him in the first half was just a show of what he is capable of on a nightly basis. I'm not sure there is a player in the league that does more for his team than he does. We are asking our point guard to cover the opposing team's big men. He also is our best rebounder, scorer, passer, defender, decision-maker, and probably shot-blocker. "There isn't an area of the game that Tommy doesn't contribute to," continued Rizzo. "The coaching staff and I knew coming into the season that he would be a very good player, but right now I would have to say he is one of the league's best." However, as has happened in many of their games this season, the third quarter continued to be the Patriots' Achilles heel. Bad decisions on the offensive end and the inability to make defensive stops allowed Swampscott to move out to an eight-point advantage at the third buzzer, a lead that Revere never was able to dent the rest of the way. Janard Jones, who sank a trio of three-pointers, joined Chea in the double-figures club with 11 points. Last Tuesday night the Patriots took on Danvers, one of the true powerhouse boys' basketball programs in the state that is ranked fifth in Massachusetts by ESPN High School Sports, and fell by a score of 94-49. "We knew it was going to be an uphill battle," said Rizzo. "Our plan was to slow the game down and work to get the best shots possible. This worked for half of the first quarter as we held onto a slight lead, but then the Falcons turned it on and started clicking on all cylinders. They got hot from three, they pounded it inside to their 6'8" and 6'5" big men, and there wasn't much we could do about it. "I've been coaching in the NEC in some capacity for the past seven years and have had the privilege to watch some very talented basketball teams," added Rizzo. "What I saw on Tuesday night was the best team that the NEC has ever had in Danvers. They're going to be a contender for the state title this year, and with their combination of size and skill, they can beat anybody in the state." The Patriots had been scheduled to play Winthrop last night (Tuesday), but that contest was snowed-out. Rizzo and his crew will trek to Peabody Friday night and will host Lynn Classical next Tuesday. Wednesday, January 28, 2015 RHS Girls JV Basketball beats Swampscott 49-32 on Friday Jan. 23. PHOTOS BY JENN CIMINO Elizabeth Lake takes the ball down the court. Samantha Woodman drives left past a Swampscott defender. Tia Fichera pushes the ball up the court. Teanna Cruz-Prince goes for a long two-point basket. RON’S OIL Call For Low Price 781-397-1930 781-662-8884 * 24 Hour Services * *Actual Ad Size* 3.998” x 2” Contact your rep | 781-485-0588 Kathy Maureen Sioux Peter Colm x x x x x 110 103 125 106 104 [email protected] [email protected] [email protected] [email protected] [email protected] The Revere Journal | Winthrop Sun Transcript | The Chelsea Record Everett Independent | The Lynn Journal | East Boston Times Free Press Charlestown Patriot Bridge | Regional Review The Winthrop Arms Hotel/Restaurant Tuesday – All Day The Winthrop Arms Hotel CHICKEN POT PIE Chic Pie served on the 2 T’s in the week Dine in(617)846-4000 $8.95 plus tax with 1 side 130 Grovers Winthrop, Take Out Ave.,$6.95 pluxMA tax02152 No sides 130 Grovers Avenue, Winthrop | 617-846-4000 "Where Winthrop Meets To Eat" Black Cyan Magenta Yellow Gianna Berkowitz puts up a shot behind the three-point line. Wednesday, January 28, 2015 THE REVERE JOURNAL Page 13 REVERE HIGH SCHOOL FOOTBALL TEAM AWARDS BANQUET The Revere High School Football team held its annual Awards Banquet at the Mottolo Post on Sunday night. Individual and team were presented to players. Head coach Lou Ciccatelli thanked the parents club for its outstanding effort in organizing the banquet. Academic Award winners; 1st row: Daniel Murphy, Giuseppe Cincinnato, Ronny Marcelino, Alejandro Portillo, Adan Valle, Damond Khat, Florens Shoshe, John DeSimone, 2nd row: Dhimiter Shosho, Leandro Montoya, Corey Khat, Vinnie LoBuono, Steven Noel, Anthony Berry, Andre Amato, Joe Vitale; 3rd row: Oscar Rudecindo, Brandon Britto, Kaleb Silva, Jordi Palma. Head coach Lou Cicatelli and Fabiano Award winner, Jeremy Berry. Maria Valentine Britto, Joanne Murphy, Gabrielle Desimone, Tracy Sullivan from the Parents Club. Coach Jose Escobar, Kaleb Silva, Coach Vinnie Gregorio. Sophomores: 1st Row: Eddy Sullivan, Andy Em, Leandro Montoya; 2nd Row: Coach Mark Adreani, coach Bobby Crowe, Coach Jose Escobar, Coach Dan Decristoforo, Danny Muller, Gianni Hill, Sam Carter, Anthony Destefano, Jose Torres, John Desimone, Gabe Felix-Martinez, Head coach Lou Cicatelli. Juniors; Danny Murphy, James Furlong, Vin Lubono, Florens Shosho, Dhimite Shosho, Jake Noftle, 2nd Row: Coach Mark Adreani, coach Jose Escobar, coach Dan Decristoforo, Brandon Britto, Jordy Palma, Giuseppe Cincinnato, Steve Noel, Jonathan Gomez, Andre Amato, Pho Tran, coach Bobby Crowe, coach Vinnie Gregorio, Head coach Lou Cicatelli Seniors; 1st Row: Anthony Berry, Damon Khat, Alejandro Portillo, Jose Ceja; Coach Mark Adreani, coach Bobby Crowe, coach Dan Decristoforo, Adin Valle, Kaleb Silva, Josh Cartnazo, Gio Merino, coach Jose Escobar, coach Lou Cicatelli, coach Vinnie Gregorio. 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 The Independent Newspapers 385 Broadway, Suite 105 Revere, MA 02151 For more information call us at 781-485-0588 Black Page 14 THE REVERE JOURNAL Wednesday, January 28, 2015 BIG TIME CLEARANCE SALE! Pennyworth’s Men’s Apex Bionic Climate Block Jacket Men’s Venture Rain Jacket $69.99 Women’s Denali Jacket $69.99 $133.99 Reg. $99.00 Sizes: S-XXL Reg. $99.00 Sizes: S-XXL Reg. $179.00 Sizes: S-XXL Assorted Discontinued Colors Assorted Discontinued Colors Assorted Discontinued Colors Assorted Discontinued Colors Women’s Osito Fleece Jacket $69.99 Reg. $160.00 Sizes: S-XXL Reg. $149.00 Sizes: S-XXL Assorted Discontinued Colors Women’s Aconcagua Vest Goose Down $119.99 $99.99 Reg. $99.00 Sizes: S-XXL Assorted Discontinued Colors Ladies Aconcagua Goose Down Jacket Ladies Apex Bionic Softshell Windproof $69.99 Reg. $99.00 Sizes: S-XXL Assorted Discontinued Colors Assorted Discontinued Colors Ladies Venture Rain Jacket $69.99 Reg. $99.00 Sizes: S-XXL Reg. $170.00 Sizes: S-XXL Assorted Discontinued Colors Girl’s OSO Hoody Fleece Jacket $69.99 $109.99 Reg. $199.00 Sizes: S-XXL Assorted Discontinued Colors Girl’s Denali Fleece Jacket Men’s Apex Bionic Hoody $139.99 Reg. $149.00 Sizes: S-XXL Assorted Discontinued Colors On Sale! 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On Monday February 9, 2015 Barbara MacDonald Certified and Licensed massage Therapist will be offering 10 to 15 minute chair massage at the Rossetti-Cowan Senior Center from 10:00 AM to noon, the cost is $ 5.00 per session and although walk-in will be serviced, it is advisable to call for a Reservation at 781286-8156 Monthly Podiatry Clinic Dr.David Kaplan Foot Doctor February 4, 2015 from 9:00 -1:00PM 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 problems. Services will be a discounted fee of $20.00 per visit. HMO plans, Medicaid and Medicare will not be Free Hearing Program Free, Frequency Test and Case history Analysis, as well as cleaning are available at the Rossetti/Cowan Senior Center, 25 Winthrop Ave. for Elderly Residents The next hearing date will be February 26, 2015 from 9:00 a.m. to 12:00 a.m. Appointments are suggested but walk-ins will be serviced if time allows Blood Pressure Individual Conference Thursday February 5th and February 19th 11:00 AM to 12:00 PM Join us for Zumba Toning Class. Great Workout and lots of fun ! Zumba classes are back at the Senior Center Wednesday evenings at 6:15 P.M. to 7:15 P.M. Please use front door. All levels of fitness and all ages are welcome. Cost is $5.00 per class. Weekly Movies on Wednesdays are as follows Movies start at 12:30 with Light refreshments served. Wednesday January 28…..Night at the Museum Author Len Sandler will be signing copies of his book titled See You On The High Ground (The Jared C. Monti Story) at the Rossetti-Cowan Senior Center on February 26 at 10:00 AM Lunch Menu for week of January 29 through February 4 Thursday January 29…. Rotini & Meatballs W/Tomato Sauce, French Roll, Sliced Pears and Cookies, Milk, Coffee or Tea Friday January 30….. Fish & Cheese On A Roll W/Tartar Sauce, French Fries, Cream Of Broccoli Soup, Apricot halves, Milk, Coffee, Or Tea Monday February 2…. Stuffed Green Peppers, Cream Of Chicken Soup, Whole Wheat Bread, Fruit Cocktail, Milk, Coffee or Tea Tuesday February 3…..Hot Dog On A Roll W/Mustard & Relish, Baked Brown Beans, Loretta’s Potato Salad Apple Sauce, Milk, Coffee or Tea Wednesday February 4 …. Fish & Cheese On A Roll, French Fries, Soup Du Juor, Vanilla Pudding, Milk, Coffe or Tea The Seniors That Care Program The seniors That Care Program is a program in which seniors have been participating in knitting blankets for elders and babies at various hospitals, nursing homes and homeless shelters. We are currently looking for any new participants who would like to join us on a Thursday morning at the Rossetti-Cowan Senior Center at 10:00 a.m. Even if you are unable to knit you may be able to learn how to and have a fun of socialization. For more information on the Seniors that Care program or to donate any yarn please call Lois Diamond at 781-286-8156 or drop by any Thursday morning 25 Winthrop Ave. UPCOMING FOXWOODS CASINO TRIP Tuesday February 24, 2015 $25.00 per person Includes bus ticket, free buffet or $10 voucher for selected restaurants at Foxwoods and $10.00 slot play. Bingo and refreshments and Movie offered on bus. Bus departs from the Rossetti-Cowan Senior Center, 25 Winthrop Ave. Revere, MA. @ 8:00 AM Sharp!! Please reserve and make payments before February 17, 2015. Please call Senior Center for Reservations at 781-286-8156 We would like to offer Revere residents a chance to meet as a group and discuss the loss of loved ones affects 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 compassion at a time when it’s needed most. For more information or if you plan to attend please contact Lois Diamond at 781-286-8156 Group Name : Sharing Grief Experiences Meeting Date: Monday January 26, 2015 Place : The Rossetti-Cowan Senior Center 25 Winthrop Ave, Revere, Ma 02151 Time: 1:00 to 3:00 P.M. PATRIOT SENIOR ACTIVITIES The First meeting for 2015 is Tuesday March 10, 2015 March 10 - Irish Cabaret Show at Venus DeMilo with Corn Beef & Cabbage Dinner or Baked Scrod $85.00 per person APRIL 14-16 - Penn Dutch Trip featuring the live performance of the play Moses Includes 2 Nights Lodging, 4 Meals, Tickets to "MOSES" Touring & time to shop at the Farmers' Market $399.00 per person April 21 - Live in Concert Neil Sedaka at Mohegan Sun Premium Seats $99.00 per person General Admission $89.00 per person Payment must be received with reservations Please call Lorraine 781-289-3039 Reserve early.. Page 15 Mendez joins East Boston Savings Bank as Assistant Vice President Enjoying breakfast at the Rossetti-Cowan Senior Center: Agnes Ferrioli and Theresa Ricupero smile after sipping some super coffee and a muffin served by our favorite kitchen volunteer Rosalie DeRosa and kitchen worker Angela Toscano. Each day seniors hop on the shuttle and come to the senior center to socialize, have breakfast and activities, followed by lunch, bingo, and other programs. Photos-Stephen W. Fielding CHA earns the Gold Seal Award Cambridge Health Alliance (CHA), a vital and innovative community health system that serves Cambridge, Somerville, and Boston’s metro-north communities, has earned The Joint Commission’s Gold Seal of Approval® for Hospital Accreditation by demonstrating continuous compliance with its performance standards. The Gold Seal of Approval® is a symbol of quality that reflects an organization’s commitment to providing safe and effective patient care. CHA underwent a rigorous, unannounced on-site survey in last fall. During the review, a team of Joint Commission expert surveyors evaluated compliance with hospital standards related to several areas, including emergency management, environment of care, infection prevention and control, leadership, and medication management. Surveyors also conducted 61 site observations and interviewed more than 200 employees. The Joint Commission has accredited hospitals for more than 60 years. More than 4,000 general, children’s, long-term acute, psychiatric, rehabilitation and specialty hospitals currently maintain accreditation from The Joint Commission, awarded for a three-year period. In addition, approximately 360 critical access hospitals maintain accreditation through a separate program. “Joint Commission accreditation provides hospitals with the processes needed to improve in a variety of areas from the enhancement of staff education to the improvement of daily business operations,” said Mark G. Pelletier, RN, MS, chief operating officer, Division of Accreditation and Certification Operations, The Joint Commission. “In addition, our accreditation helps hospitals enhance their risk management and risk reduction strategies. We commend CHA for its efforts to become a quality improvement organization.” “CHA is pleased to receive accreditation from The Joint Commission, the premier health care quality improvement and accrediting body in the nation,” said Paul Allen, MD, MPH, CHA’s chief quality officer. “The surveyors praised our level of integration and alignment throughout CHA and applauded our staff’s teamwork, passion, and excellence. The recognition truly validates our commitment to deliver safe and high-quality care to our patients every day.” The Joint Commission’s hospital standards are developed in consultation with health care experts and providers, measurement experts, and patients. The standards are informed by scientific literature and expert consensus to help hospitals measure, assess and improve performance. Founded in 1951, The Joint Commission seeks to continuously improve health care for the public, in collaboration with other stakeholders, by evaluating health care organizations and inspiring them to excel in providing safe and effective care of the highest quality and value. The Joint Commission accredits and certifies more than 20,500 health care organizations and programs in the United States, including hospitals and health care organizations that provide ambulatory and office-based surgery, behavioral health, home care, laboratory, and nursing home services. An independent, not-for-profit organization, The Joint Commission is the nation’s oldest and largest standards-setting and accrediting body in health care. Learn more at www. jointcommission.org. Cambridge Health Alliance is a vital and innovative community health system that provides essential services to Cambridge, Somerville, and Boston’s metro-north communities. It includes three hospital campuses, a network of primary care and specialty practices, and the Cambridge Public Health Dept. CHA is a Harvard Medical School teaching affiliate and is also affiliated with Harvard School of Public Health, Harvard School of Dental Medicine, and Tufts University School of Medicine. For more information, visit www.challiance. org. PARKWAY OPTICAL and EYECARE Established 1957 Janis M. Cotter, O.D. COMPREHENSIVE EYE EXAMS Testing for glaucoma, cataracts, and diabetic eye disease. Contact Lens Consultations and Fittings Philip Cotter, R.D.O. COMPLETE OPTICAL SERVICES Dianna Iandolo O.D. Eyewear for the Family • Eyeglasses repaired Senior Discounts, Medicare, HMO’s, and many other insurances accepted. Hours: Mon. - Fri. 9:00am - 6:00pm • Closed Wed. & Sun.• Sat. 9:00am-3:00pm 80 Broadway • Revere, MA 781-289-7929 Black Cyan Magenta Yellow East Boston Savings Bank President and CEO Richard Gavegnano has announced that Adnai Mendez has been appointed as the new Assistant Vice President of EBSB’s Central Square, East Boston office. As Assistant Vice President, Adnai will focus on growing and managing the branch’s deposits as well as overseeing its daily operations while providing guidance, encouragement and recognition to his staff so that they can in turn provide exceptional service to customers. Prior to joining EBSB, Adnai was a branch manager at Citizens Bank. Adnai, a native of Cuba, is currently enrolled at Northeastern University studying for his Bachelors in Leadership. Founded in 1848, East Boston Savings Bank operates 27 full-service branches in the Adnai Mendez greater Boston metropolitan area and offers a variety of deposit and loan products to individuals and businesses located in its primary market, which consists of Essex, Middlesex and Suffolk counties. Tips offered for safe snow shoveling A 2011 study published in the Clinical Research in Cardiology revealed that shoveling snow actually does increase the risk of a having a heart attack. The study looked at 500 people and found that 7 percent started experiencing symptoms of heart problems while shoveling snow. The cardiologists conducting the Canadian study felt that while 7 percent is significant, there could be as many as double that number given the fact that the patients may not have connected their heart problems with snow shoveling. “While heart attacks may be the most serious consequence of shoveling snow, there are other even more common health risks including dehydration, back injuries, pulled muscles, broken bones and frostbite. But the good news is there are ways to safely shovel snow,” said Martin B. Tirado, CAE, Executive Director, Snow & Ice Management Association. The Snow & Ice Management Association (SIMA), the national nonprofit organization representing the snow removal industry, is suggesting these tips for safe snow shoveling: TIP #1: Stay on top of the snow. No we aren’t suggesting that you make snow angels but when there’s a heavy snow, the best advice is to stay ahead of the storm. SIMA recommends that to prevent snow and ice from adhering to the sidewalk or street, clear the snow every few inches instead of waiting for the snow to stop falling before you head outdoors. TIP #2: Wear breathable layers. Layering is typical cold winter weather advice. We suggest wearing layers of loose clothing so you can peal a layer off if you get hot. Avoid wearing heavy wools, manmade materials or other materials that don’t allow perspiration to evaporate. Better choices are cotton and silk. TIP #3: Watch your feet. No you aren’t on Dancing with the Stars, but nonetheless, you need to pay attention to what’s on your feet when heading outdoors to shovel snow. SIMA suggests wearing quality outdoor winter wear such as waterproof boots with good traction. Good traction is critical to ensuring that you don’t slip and fall. TIP #4: Take a few minutes to stretch. Shoveling snow is a workout so you need to stretch to warm up your muscles particularly because you are shoveling snow in the cold weather. Stretching before you start shoveling will help prevent injury and fatigue. TIP #5: Push don’t lift. Sounds like something a high school wrestling coach may say but if you push the snow to the side rather than trying to lift the snow to remove it, you exert less energy thereby placing less stress on your body. TIP #6: Drink up! Water that is. SIMA recommends taking frequent breaks and staying hydrated. You should drink water as if you were enduring a tough workout at the gym or running five miles. TIP #7: Don’t play in traffic. Sometimes people get so focused on the task at hand they don’t pay attention to their surroundings. When shoveling snow near streets, pay attention to the traffic since vehicles may not have good traction in the snow and ice. TIP #8: Call and text. We’re not suggesting that you make calls and text while shoveling snow, but it is important to have your cell phone on you so you can make a call in event of an emergency. FEBRUARY IS NATIONAL PET DENTAL HEALTH MONTH PETS NEED DENTAL CARE TOO!! Did you know that February is National Pet Dental Health month? According to experts, oral disease is the #1 health problems diagnosed in dogs and cats. • Tooth loss or mobility • Subdued behavior • Abnormal drooling • Dropping food out of the mouth • Swallowing Food Whole • Bad Breath • Yellow-brown crust on teeth • Bleeding gums • Going to food bowl but not eating Join Independent Newspapers in celebrating National Pet Dental Health month. Your 2 col. x 2 inch directory ad for the month of February Single paper for only $150.00 for all 4 weeks. Choose any paper or run in all *Actual Ad Size* 3.998” x 2” Contact your rep | 781-485-0588 Kathy Maureen Sioux Peter Colm x x x x x 110 103 125 106 104 [email protected] [email protected] [email protected] [email protected] [email protected] Page 16 THE REVERE JOURNAL Wednesday, January 28, 2015 Getting Out ‘Muckrakers’ By Sheila Barth [email protected] More than ever, the question of privacy, revealing classified information, and the people’s right to know has taken on iconic proportions during this era of terrorism, corruption, and scandal. Are whistle blowers, hackers, and people who reveal dirty, little (and big) secrets heroes or treasonous enemies, treacherous to our country’s security? Where do we draw the line? In Zayd Dohrn’s one-act, two-people play, currently performed at New Repertory’s Black Box Theater, the playwright pits an ambitious “almost 26-year-old” American activist female who believes in full disclosure against an “almost 40-yearold” British political journalist-hacker, who’s on a global lecture circuit. He’s scheduled to speak in Berlin, Paris, and other high-profile cities, but he’s staying one step ahead of authorities seeking to capture Esme Allen and Lewis D. Wheeler. him. Dohrn wrote the play in 2010, when Bradley-now-Chelsea Manning, a 22-year-old Army sergeant and intelligence analyst, leaked classified information from the US State and Defense departments. The play premiered at Barrington Stage in 2013, coincidentally when 29-year-old NSA contractor Edward Snowden leaked classified information to journalists, who, in turn, published some of it throughout the world. Dohrn’s play has some holes, but accomplished actors Esme Allen as Mira and Lewis D. Wheeler as Stephen are so entertaining, we don’t quibble over details, such as his paranoia about getting captured, yet he lectures in public, gets tipsy, and loosens up with this pretty young activist stranger. Besides making these two characters likable and believable, Direc- BOX OFFICE tor Bridget Kathleen O’Leary keeps their discourse and action tightly timed, ratcheting up the intrigue. Allen and Wheeler as Stephen expertly play a challenging, ping-pong-style, cat-and-mouse game as two strangers thrown together after he lectures in her group. There wasn’t enough money to pay for putting Stephen up in a hotel, so Mira, who claims to be a Smith College graduate, originally from Ann Arbor, Mich., takes him in for the night at her studio flat. She works for the Durga Project, an activist group that wants full transparency - to keep everything out in the open. She bolsters his ego, telling him he’s admired around the world for printing classified information - a rock star. “You’ve opened the floodgates with one leak,” she gushes. Noting his paranoia, she adds, no one would try to kill him. But he knows he’s constantly being followed, he retorts. Stephen pat searches Mira. He One-act, 80-minute play by Zayd Dohrn, appearing through Feb. 1, with New Repertory Theatre, at the Arsenal Center for the Arts Black Box Theatre, 321 Arsenal St., Watertown. Performances: Jan.30, at 8 p.m.; Jan. 29, at 2,7:30 p.m.; Jan. 31, at 3,8 p.m.; Feb. 1, at 2 p.m. only.Talkbacks Jan. 29, Feb. 1, after the 2 p.m. matinee. Tickets, $36; senior, student, group discounts. Call the Box Office at 617-923-8487 or visit newrep.org. makes her leave the bathroom door open when she goes pee. He searches her apartment for “bugs”. Throughout the evening, Mira challenges the public’s right to full disclosure - complete transparency, she says - while Stephen, is highly protective of his fragile military source. Stephen’s willing to disclose anything about his personal life, but nothing else, he insists. But Mira is coy, cagey, flirtatious, able to get him to reveal more than he intended. Drinking more, he lets down his guard as the couple’s flirtation escalates into a nude romp in her bed, nicely nuanced by Christopher Brusberg’s lighting. His phone rings continu- ously with important messages. He takes one call, which upsets him greatly, reducing him to tears. And she comforts him. Thing is, which one is actually totally transparent and truthful? Is Mira who she says she is? Does she fully understand Stephen’s situation and the consequences involved if she exposes him further? Dohrn keeps theatergoers questioning with his surprising plot turns and ending. “Muckrakers” should top your list of things-to-see, especially during today’s worldwide terrorist attacks, political grandstanding, and the media’s eagerness to expose whatever it can, rightfully or not. ‘Crime and Punishment’ full of sound and fur y By Sheila Barth [email protected] It’s no small feat to stage Fyodor Dostoyevsky’s convoluted, classic novel of crime and retribution. The novel was originally published in 12 monthly installments in a Russian literary journal, The Russian Messenger, in 1866, and later in a single volume, after the author’s return from a 10-year exile in Siberia. The story is rife with symbolism, many primary, secondary, and tertiary characters, and a timeless plot that resonates even louder in today’s society. Marilyn Campbell and Curt Columbus’ 2007, oneact, award-winning theater adaptation of Dostoyevsky’s “conversation on the nature of evil,” takes a contemporary tact, probing into the Crossword Puzzle Across 1 They’re dirty pool 11 WNBA positions 15 Muse of sacred music 16 Brest milk 17 Does a bit of informal polling 18 Paquin of “True Blood” 19 Note 20 Puzzle (out) 21 Model born Lesley Hornby 23 Equinox mo. 24 Accepted 25 “GoodFellas” Oscar winner 28 Reckon, in the boonies 30 OR abbr. 32 One who’s done stretches? 33 Texas Rangers CEO 35 Leap on blades 36 Story writer/poet Grace who studied with Auden 37 Classic Leontyne Price role 38 Honey Ryder and Xenia Onatopp, e.g. 40 Out of line 41 Inseparable 42 Some rectangular bars 43 Feinting spells? 44 Ore.’s highest point 46 Broker’s advice 47 Any regular on “The View” 48 Numbers for closers 50 Cone head? 53 __ Bacon: “East of Eden” character 54 Got at 57 Structure on piles 58 “When pigs fly!” 55 Bergen’s home: Abbr. 59 More than asked 24 Phrase of emphasis 56 Org. working on bridges 60 Safari sights 25 R&B singer Bryson 26 Dow 30 company Down 27 When, in Act Two of “Macbeth,” 1 They’re no. experts the Porter knocks at the gate 2 It may wind up around the house 28 Caught 3 Paul’s “The Prize” co-star 29 Taquer’a meat 4 Bard’s interjections 31 Irritates, with “at” 5 Introduce by degrees 34 Far from mellifluous 6 Stack sweetener 36 At the helm of 7 GP gps. 39 Nursery sounds 8 Weight 40 Like much business? 9 Can across the pond 45 Put away 10 “I’m afraid the news is not good ...” 46 Wedding announcement 11 One may be filed 47 Stupefyin’ Jones creator 12 It merged with Zanzibar in 1964 48 First-year Spanish verb 13 Gangbuster’s target 49 Mexican waterways 14 Inn time 50 Persian for “place of” 22 Singer of complex songs 51 One needing social work? 23 Baste 52 Confucius’s “Book of __” conscience and subconscious of the classic masterpiece’s handsome, 23-year-old former law student, Rodion Raskolnikov. Bitter, impoverished, and beaten down, Raskolnikov’s desperation drives him to commit murder. Then, he rationalizes his heinous act is justified, because it enables him to commit kindly acts. As his guilt weighs more heavily on his conscience, he seeks redemption. In this deliberately scaleddown version, the playwrights call for three actors to portray several characters. Directed by Catherine Bertrand, Salem Theatre Company’s production on opening night is a praiseworthy attempt, full of sound and fury, but the characters are thinly drawn. On the small, stark stage, Jonathan Moriarty’s lighting spotlights each character during key scenes, and appropriately darkens during bleak moments. As theatergoers, a lone man sits silently, deep in troubled thought. With Alexander Castillo portraying main character Raskolnikov, we explore his reasons for committing double murder, traveling through his subconscious and conscience-wrestling. At times, Castillo is compelling, especially when he’s engaging in cat-and-mouse, “modern-day crime-solving” encounters with seemingly sympathetic detective, Porfiry Petrovitch, (Robert Cope). As Raskolnikov devolves further into guilt-ridden hysteria, Castillo rants, rages, cries, battling his inner demons, then asks us onlookers whether we agree with his philosophy - BOX OFFICE specific people, like Napoleon Bonaparte and him, have the right to kill others to benefit the downtrodden and society. As Porfiry, Cope is affable, believably interested in Raskolnikov’s legal theories (he read a paper the young man wrote in college). While solving his case, Porfiry seems earnestly trying to befriend Raskolnikov and save him from a tougher prison sentence. He calls Raskolnikov the “new face of crime,” while Raskolnikov counters with Porfiry’s new police tactics won’t work on him. Then, too, Porfiry throws Raskolnikov a curve. The killer has confessed, he says,but he knows Raskolnikov is the real murderer who has committed the perfect crime. Porfiry gambles on whether Raskolnikov’s conscience will allow an innocent person to be convicted. Cope also portrays unemployed drunkard, Marmeladov, whose Bible-reading daughter, Sonia, is forced into prostitution to support her family while he “drinks away her earnings”. Cope is cleverly cloying as Porfiry, but he’s bland as Marmeladov. Through quick costume, posture and voice changes, Jade Mears morphs from Raskolnikov’s elderly, bentover, skinflint, pawnbroker-moneylender-slum landlady, to Sonia.Donning a black hat and assuming a kindly demeanor, Mears transforms into Lizaveta, the landlady’s sister and Sonya’s friend, whom Raskolnikov also murders, because she witnessed his stabbing her sister to death. Donning a shawl, Mears changes One-act, 90-minute, three-person adaptation of Fyodor Dostoyevsky’s novel, by Marilyn Campbell and Curt Columbus, appearing with Salem Theatre Company through Feb.14: Thursdays-Saturdays, at 7:30 p.m.; Sundays at 3 p.m. at 90 Lafayette St., Salem. Tickets, $10-$30; Feb. 5, LGBT night; discount tickets, postshow meet and greet. Visit salemtheatre.ticketleap.com/ crime-punishment/. again, as Raskolnikov’s loving, pathetic mother, who borrows money and gives him everything she has, before dying, heartbroken. As their devotion to each other increases, emotional scenes require more intensity, more chemistry between the couple. Raskolnikov gave Sonia the money his mother gave him, so she can pay for a proper funeral for her father and support her family. Raskolnikov also squirreled away some of his stolen booty under a rock, and begs Sonia to run away with him. When he confesses to her, Sonia convinces him to confess, repent. She promises not to abandon him. Important subplots and key characters of Raskolnikov’s best friend, his sister Dounia, her former employer who is fixated on her, and her vapid, wealthy fiance,’ are ignored. Then again, it’s nearly impossible to winnow this 19th century masterpiece into 90 minutes. Also, I attended “Crime and Punishment” on opening night, so by now, those first-night jitters and minor stage snafus are probably solved. Real Estate Transfers BUYER 1 BUYER 2 Escolero, Victoria Guzman, Edwin J JP Morgan Chase Bank NA Stasio, Matthew C Dass, Jasmine Pabla, Piara Bilimoria, Parushasp Bilimoria, Sarosh H Santos, Charlotte Don Q Real Estate Dev Wiltrout, Mary E Nunes, Alberto Toste, Salvatore Toste, Bernadette SELLER 1 Bruzzese, Anthony J Huttova, Iveta Rizzo, Lee Deutsche Bk Natl T Co Tr Ciampa, Joseph Crosby, Robert H Russell, Edward Toste, Salvatore Damato, Shawn SELLER 2 ADDRESS CITY Bruzzese, Marion L 44 Barrett St Revere JP Morgan Chase Bank NA 105 Franklin Ave #97 Revere 81 High St Revere 142 Lincoln St Revere 239-241 Proctor Ave Revere 350 Revere Beach Blvd #13Q Revere Russell, David E 25 Standish Rd Revere Toste, Bernadette 161 Vane St Revere Damato, Michele 160 Walnut St Revere PRICE $417,000 $177,800 $285,000 $240,000 $640,000 $445,000 $130,000 $400,000 $489,000 ADRENALINE RUSH! You’ll also get career training and money for college. If you’re ready for the excitement, join the Army National Guard today. 1-800-GO-GUARD • www.1-800-GO-GUARD.com Black Cyan Magenta Yellow Black Wednesday, January 28, 2015 THE REVERE JOURNAL Page 17 • Revere • Everett • Winthrop • Lynn • East Boston • Chelsea • Charlestown Independent Newspaper Group Lynn EvErEtt ChELsEa Winthrop CharLEstoWn East Boston NEW TING LIS MALDEN Suffolk Ave. 5 rooms, 2 bedrooms, 1st floor unit. Completely renovated with hard woods and granite counters. 1 off St. parking. Asking $1,500.00 CHELSEA Webster St. Chelsea, 2nd floor unit featuring 5 bedrooms, kit, living and dining room. Beautifully renovated. Asking $1,400.00 EVERETT Hancock St. New Kitchen with wood cabinets, stainless steel appliances and granite counters. Large apartment. Asking 1,600.00 Chatham St. 2nd floor huge unit featuring 4 rooms, 2 bedrooms, new stove. Hardwood flooring, full bath. Asking $1,400.00 Asking $425k Licoln St. 2 level unit featuring 1 bedroom with heat and hot water. Refrigerator included. Off street parking. Asking $1,000.00 Katherin Schiavo Diane Law John McLaughlin Un and bike paths. Asking $114k. Paul Teixiera Laura Abbene WINTHROP OCEANFRONT 1 & 2 Bedroom. Modern, spacious apartments for rent. Heat, parking, pool, cabana, exercise room, fabulous view, balcony. 8 minutes to Logan. Near “T” No pets. From $1,500 M-F 9-3 FORT HEATH APARTMENTS 617-846-7300 • 123 APT. FOR RENT Apartments Available Office Space 617-846-9200 www.therentconnection.com REVERE OFFICES FOR RENT High visibility office for rent, includes use of conference room and all utilities. $375/mo. and up 781-286-1484 Winthrop 1 + 2 Bedrom Apts: Brick Complex w/ Elevator located near Park & Transportation. $1125 - $1300 inc FREE HEAT! Full Kitchen, Full Bath, Sliders to Balcony, A/C, Security, Parking, Storage, POOL. Res Mgr & 24/7 Maintenance. Ref & Credit Req. 617-846-4115. Dogs NO ROOM FOR RENT Single Room for one person, includes utilities, cable, internet, parking, near Busline, $500 per month . 781975-2706 lbajana99@ hotmail.com -----------------East Boston : Furnished Room, New Bed & TV, available in 2 Bedroom Apt with deck. Share with 55 year old male roommate $650.00 per month.( includes utilities & cable) - 2 weeks Security required - Great Deal. 617-584-7771 --------------------------• 123$ APT.3 APARTMENT FOR RENT FOR RENT CONDO SHARE WINTHROP: Share a condo on Seal Harbor, 2 Bedroom , 2 Bath ( 1 bedroom & Bathroom for you ) + parking space $900.00 per month Utilities & cable included 24 hr Concierge Call 617331-0517 ent em gre A der Bowler St. 3rd floor unit with 4 rooms, 1 bedroom, office/den. Refrigerator included off street parking for 1. Asking $1,100.00 Baltimore St. 2 level unit, 3 rooms, 1 bedroom, heat and hot, water included. Cats only for pets. Off street parking for 4. Asking $1,200.00 “ It Great investment opportunity to own two incomes and run your own business. Property has one working office and sale set up and a residential unit for sale in a highly visible location. Asking $449k. LYNN Saugus–3 Room Condo centrally located in Saugus. Professionally maintained with high occupancy rate. Inground pool walking John Green Paul Clamens Un Senad Resic Johnathan Clamens Kimberly Paula Revere–New listing. Large single family home centrally featuring 3 bedrooms, 2 full baths, Kitchen, living, and dining rooms. 2 fireplaces and great room. Asking $325K Revere–Totally remod- ree g er A d Un spacious condo features new kitchen, Heat, hot water Insurance included in condo fee. Asking $350K Revere-Ocean Front Ludmillla Lopes James Harrington NEED TO VISIT A LOVED ONE IN PRISON ? Family Connections: Offers Round Trips to Correctional Facilities, Call to schedule your visit 24 hours in advance. Call 617-500- 0717 or 617-749-7693. Linda @familyconnections.co www.familyconnections. co • 272 GENERA L HELP WANTED Car Service 3 $ CHELSEA: Available now. Prattville area - Nichols24 HOUR/7 DAY TAXI Service St. across from park. Large 1BR,2nd Floor. Must have experience, with No Smoking, No Pets. current RMV driving record $1300. 781-645-2062 . TAXI DRIVERS 781-284-5300 781-284-5300 WANTED and neat and clean appearance. Diana Aponte D L SO Bihn P Matthew Powers Dario Quiroz Un Meticulously maintained 2 family home in West Revere. 5 rooms for new owner, 4 rooms for tenant. Two car garage, built in pool. SOLD 475K Matthew Vasquez FACILITIES TECHNICIAN – Full time Requirements and Qualifications: Building maintenance including minor electrical, mechanical, plumbing, construction, modification, and repair. Basic computer skills, abilitiy to work independently, and year of experience in property maintenance including: HVAC, Electrical, Painting, Carpentry, and Plumbing with a demonstrated competency in at least two of these areas. Must pass CORI, possess a valid Mass Drivers License and have own vehicle, and have a clean driving record. Responsibilities: Assists with other Facility Department responsibilities as required, including, but not limited to, painting, and some cleaning, such as toilet overflows and snow removal. Performs maintenance duties including, but not limited to, minor electrical and plumbing repair, light carpentry, general building maintenance as assigned by supervisor. Schedule may include nights or weekends as required To apply, please submit cover letter and resume to: Shore Educational Collaborative | Human Resources Department 100 Revere Beach Parkway | Chelsea, MA 02150 Fax: 617-887-2960 | E-mail: [email protected] EOE To Place Your Ad Call 781-485-0588 it’s all about community. Exciting things are happening at the nationally recognized East Boston Neighborhood Health Center. As one of the largest community health centers in the country, we provide a comprehensive system of services including primary and specialty care, a 24-hour Emergency Department, community-based outreach and health education programs, and a widely acclaimed Elder Service Plan (PACE). We now have over 800 dedicated employees and 170 providers to support our mission to provide quality health care that is both affordable and accessible. TransporTaTion associaTes Full-time positions available to provide trans$500 Sign-on portation services to the Elder Service Plan (ESP) Bonus! participants. Candidate must have the ability to move and assist participants - some heavy lifting required; have good communication skills, the ability to work independently and to make common sense decisions. Requires HS Diploma/GED, MA driver’s license, excellent driving record and van driving experience. At least one year of geriatric experience. Must successfully pass a Department of Transportation approved medical examination prior to hire date. HealTH aides Up to $300 Full time, part time, and per-diem positions available to provide care to our elderly participants in Sign-on Bonus! our ESP program. Home Health Aide Certification required as well as HS Diploma/GED. Reading and writing skills as well as excellent clinical and interpersonal skills also required. At least one year of home health aide experience preferred. We provide a full array of benefits for you and your family and are conveniently located near the Maverick Blue Line T station. Please send your resume to: Human Resources 10 Gove Street, East Boston, MA 02128 AM & PM shifts available. To Place Your Email: [email protected]; Fax: 617-568-4489 Full & Part Time positions. EOE/M/F/D/V Ad Call Inquire within Visit our website to discover opportunities and enjoy anexceptional career at 781-485-0588Late Night & Early Morning Pick-ups • Hotel-Airport Services • Handicapped Services • All Hospitals • Specializing in Elder Services 31 Sachem Revere, Special Rate for Airline Special Employees Rate for• Special Airline Employees Rates St, for Satellite Parking Lots MA www.ebnhc.org Special Rates for Satellite Parking Lots • Flat Rates To/From Logan Airport • Corporate Accounts Welcome • Hotel-Airport Service (Early Morning & Late Night Services Available) Discount SeniorsAccounts Welcome $ • Flat Rates To/From10%Logan AirportOff• For Corporate $ • 3Flat Rates To/From Logan Airport• Expires • Corporate Welcome3 fights against housing discrimination. $15.00 Minimum 12/27/2011 Accounts Independent Newspaper Group Large Well Maintained home with many new nt me upgrades. New roof 2014. e gre A der 3 bedrooms, 2.5 baths, living room with fireplace Asking $324K Revere Ocean front living. 1 bedroom, 9th floor unit with a den/office which offers direct ocean views. 24 hour concierge on duty. SOLD 275K D L SO Joanne Luti Mahinder Kaur Dominic DiCato Gerald Abbey Leigh Stimolo WANTED DELIVERY DRIVER to deliver flowers, must have own car. please call Mr.Flower 781-286-3833 Elder Services Agency seeks a responsible, caring individual to deliver meals to homebound elders in Revere and Chelsea. Hours are Monday – Friday from 9:30am to 12:30 pm. Rate of pay is $9.00 per hour plus .50 per mile. Must have own transportation. Please call MaryJane at (617) 884-2500 Chelsea Revere Winthrop Elder Services, 100 Everett Avenue, Unit 10, Chelsea, MA EOE/AA Career Fair Tuesday, February January 3rd 7:00am – 5:00pm Chelsea Jewish Foundation 165 Captains Row, Chelsea, MA Accepting applications for all positions and locations, but currently hiring for: RN’s LPN’s CNA’s Home Health Aides Dietary Staff The Chelsea Jewish Foundation is seeking competent, caring and kind individuals that take pride in delivering excellence in serving others, especially our elderly population. Complete the application for employment online to expedite your interview! Visit www.chelseajewish.org and click on “Careers”. Please dress for a professional environment and bring copies of your résumé. Allow yourself 60-90 minutes for this experience. Parking available on surrounding streets. STERLINGWEAR OF BOSTON 175 McClellan Highway • East Boston, MA. 02128 Telephone: 866-889-8688 • Fax: 617-567-6472 Part Time Retail Sales Associates- East Boston, MA Sterlingwear of Boston is looking for enthusiastic associates to join our talented staff selling Made in America products. Weekend availability is required! Must have a positive attitude and enjoy working with the public. Comparable sales experience preferred. Must be at least 18. For more information about Sterlingwear of Boston, Inc. please go to www.sterlingwear.com. Apply in person at our East Boston store or email your resume to [email protected]. Sterlingwear Employees share a commitment to quality and a commitment to a safe, dignified and respectful work environment for all. Sterlingwear is an Equal Opportunity Employer. All qualified applicants will receive consideration for employment without regard to race, religion, color, national origin, sex, age, status as a protected veteran, among other things, or status as a qualified individual with disability. The If you believe you have been discriminated against in your effort to buy a home or to rent an apartment, we urge you to call the m Independent Newspaper Groupat 617-399-0491. Fair Housing Center of Greater Boston 3x=3.27 Black Kevin Labbe MEALS ON WHEELS DRIVER • 272 GENERA L HELP WANTED East Boston Neighborhood Health Center Vice-President East Boston Mix Use Property Featuring 2 rental units. 1 unit features 2 beds and an office, the other has 2 beds. A working Pizzeria for the third unit inclusive of the business all on a busy corner lot in East Boston. Asking $830k nt eled condo on upper floor me in desirable building. This TRANSPORTATION TRANSPORTATION : Ride Right Transportation Inc. TAXI NEW TING LIS em gre A der EVERETT: Commercial/ Industrial building for lease. Office 2,500 SF. Garage/Warehouse 3,000 SF. 4 Loading docks & 60,000 SF Parking lot. Call (617) 884-0168 ………… CHELSEA: Industrial/ Office/Food Processing/ Warehouse building for lease 65,000 SF freezer / cooler. Call (617) 8840168 --------------------- REVERE: Off Broadway. Professional office space. On public transportation. Call for details. 978-590-8810 ----------------REVERE: Broadway offices/business, street level, 750 sq ft. $1200 unheated, includes parking. 781-2861250. ent Gary Ferragamo corner of Broadway and Winthrop Ave. very rare legal three family. Owners unite featuring 3 level with 4 thousand square feet of living space. 5 bedrooms, 2 full baths, hardwood floors, off-street parking and garage. 2-3 room rentals. Asking $749k REVERE : North Revere – One Bedroom, off street parking, all utilities included, Smoking : NO Pets : NO . Available Feb 1 $1100 per Mo. Call 781-324-1183 ----------------Winthrop: One bedroom 2nd floor, porch, wall to wall, ht & hot water included, on bus line. $875 per Month. Call evenings 617-846-5106. COMM’L • Auto Sales • Yard Sales • Miscellaneous 353 Broadway Owner/Broker ’s Al ce” l About The Servi 474 Revere Beach Blvrd #405- Maintanence free beachfront living awaits you in this pride-of ownership condo featuring 4 rooms, 2 beds, and 2 full baths. Newer paint, hardwood floors, replacement windows and appliances. 1 deeded parking sport under. Asking $319k COMM’L/ WAREHOUSE SPACE COMMERCIAL RENTAL: RENTALS Professional • Medical General • Services 781-289-7500 Maureen Celata Revere– New Listing! Nicely maintained 2 bedroom, 2 bath, 2 deeded garage parking. This unit features spacious rooms, balcony, heat, and hot water included in condo fee. Asking $181k • 123 APT. FOR RENT • 137 ----------------------------OFFICE/ OFFICE SPACE RECRuItmENt www.MCelataRealEstate.Com Revere– 2 family home featuring 5 rooms on first floor and 8 rooms on 2nd level. House is in move in condition, two separate gas systems. Off street parking and fenced in yard. Asking $1,400.00 Converse St. 4 rooms, 2 bedrooms inclusive of hot water. Boston views near Orange Line. Refrigerator included. Sales • Rentals Land • Commercial More Than 100,000 Readers Each Week 7 Communities New Pre-Licensing Class to begin on February 7, 2015 for two weekends. Classroom size is limited. Call Maureen for Details and Reservations 781-289-7500 MaryJane Archibald Classified Call: 781-485-0588 Fax: 781-485-1403 rEvErE REaL EstatE Page 18 THE REVERE JOURNAL LEGAL NOTICE COMMONWEALTH OF MASSACHUSETTS THE TRIAL COURT PROBATE AND FAMILY COURT Docket No. SU14W2108 SUFFOLK Division Summons By Publication Paul K. McCann, Plaintiff v. Paul L. Hawkins and Karen McCann Defendant(s) To the above named Defendant(s): A Complaint has been presented to this Court by the Plaintiff, Paul K. McCann, seeking a Complaint to Establish Paternity. You are required to serve upon Paul K. McCann, plaintiff, whose address is 129 Gladstone St., Boston, MA 02128, your answer on or before February 26, 2015. If you fail to do so, the court will proceed to the hearing and adjudication of this action. You are also required to file a copy of your answer in the office of the Register of this Court at Boston. Witness, Joan P. Armstrong, Esquire, First Justice of said Court at Boston, this 12th day of December 2014. Ann Marie Passanisi Register of Probate Court 1/28 R LEGAL NOTICE MORTGAGEE’S SALE OF REAL ESTATE By virtue of and in execution of the Power of Sale contained in a certain mortgage given by Areli Nascimento Jr. and Evagner A. Nascimento to Option One Mortgage Corporation, dated March 24, 2005 and recorded at Suffolk County Registry of Deeds in Book 36721, Page 282 of which mortgage Deutsche Bank National Trust Company, as Trustee for Citigroup Mortgage Loan Trust, Series 2005-OPT3, Asset Backed Pass-Through Certificates, Series 2005-OPT3 is the present holder by assignment from Sand Canyon Corporation f/k/a Option One Mortgage Corporation to Deutsche Bank National Trust Company, as Trustee for Citigroup Mortgage Loan Trust, Series 2005-OPT3, Asset Backed Pass-Through Certificates, Series 2005OPT3 dated November 16, 2010 recorded at Suffolk County Registry of Deeds in Book 47298, Page 221, for breach of conditions of said mortgage and for the purpose of foreclosing the same, the mortgaged premises located at 28 South Irving Street, Revere, MA 02151 will be sold at a Public Auction at 10:00AM on February 4, 2015, at the mortgaged premises, more particularly described below, all and singular the premises described in said mortgage, to wit: The land in Revere, being shown as Lots 423A and 422A on a Subdivision Plan of Land of Lots 422, 423, 430 and 431, in Revere, by David Calichman, Registered Land Surveyor, dated June 30, 1956, and recorded in Suffolk Registry of Deeds Book 7169, Page 560, bounded and described as follows:__EASTERLY by South Terms of the Sale: Cash, cashier’s or certified check in the sum of $5,000.00 as a deposit must be shown at the time and place of the sale in order to qualify as a bidder (the mortgage holder and its designee(s) are exempt from this requirement); high bidder to sign written Memorandum of Sale upon acceptance of bid; balance of purchase price payable in cash or by certified check in thirty (30) days from the date of the sale at the offices of mortgagee’s attorney, Korde & Associates, P.C., 321 Billerica Road, Suite 210, Chelmsford, MA 01824-4100 or such other time as may be designated by mortgagee. The description for the premises contained in said mortgage shall control in the event of a typographical error in this publication. Other terms to be announced at the sale. Deutsche Bank National Trust Company, as Trustee for Citigroup Mortgage Loan Trust, Series 2005-OPT3, Asset Backed Pass-Through Irving Street, eighty (80) feet, as shown on said plan;__NORTHERLY by Lot 421, one hundred fifteen (115) feet, as shown on said plan;__SOUTHERLY by Lot 430A, eighty (80) feet, as shown on said plan;__WESTERLY by Lots 429 and 424, one hundred fifteen (115) feet, as shown on said plan.__Containing approximately 9,200 square feet of land, more or less, and all as shown on said plan. For mortgagors’ title see deed recorded with the Suffolk County Registry of Deeds in Book 36721, Page 281. The premises will be sold subject to any and all unpaid taxes and other municipal assessments and liens, and subject to prior liens or other enforceable encumbrances of record entitled to precedence over this mortgage, and subject to and with the benefit of all easements, restrictions, reservations and conditions of record and subject to all tenancies and/or rights of parties in possession. Certificates, Series 2005-OPT3 Korde & Associates, P.C._321 Billerica Road_ Suite 210_Chelmsford, MA 01824-4100 (978) 256-1500 Nascimento, Areli, 14017433, 1/14, 1/21, 1/28 R LEGAL NOTICE (SEAL) THE COMMONWEALTH OF MASSACHUSETTS LAND COURT DEPARTMENT OF THE TRIAL COURT 2015 MISC.15SM000108 ORDER OF NOTICE To: Margaret M. O’Leary and to all persons entitled to the benefit of the Servicemembers Civil Relief Act, 50 U.S.C. App. § 501 et seq.: Wells Fargo Bank, N.A. claiming to have an interest in a Mortgage covering real property in Revere, numbered 10 Ocean Avenue, Unit 208, Surfside Condominium, given by Margaret M. O’Leary to Wells Fargo Bank, NA, dated April 21, 2009, and recorded with the Suffolk County Wednesday, January 28, 2015 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 2 col. x 2 inches $240.00 For 3 Months ($20 Per Week) Carpet Upholstery Cleaning TRITTO Spartan Cleaning ServiCe CONTRACTING Buidling, Remodeling, Kitchens, Baths, Decks, Additions, Roofing, Siding, Home Repairs Since 1978 COMMERCIAL RESIDENTIAL CARPET AND UPHOLSTERY CLEANING Satisfaction Guaranteed Call 617-567-2926 Removes Dirt • Cleans • Deodorizes To advertise in our Service Directory please call 781-485-0588 Painting 20 Years + Prompt, Clean, neat. Call anytime. Home 617-417-9585 Plastering AUGUSTA PLASTERING Interior/Exterior • Blueboard • Plastering Jim 617-567-5927 Free Estimates Please Recycle This Paper John J. Recca Painting Interior/Exterior Commercial/Residential Fully Insured Quality Work Reasonable Rates Free Estimates Brownstone Construction “All Types of Masonry ” Pointing • Licensed & Insured • Free Estimates (617) 884-0168 JUNK Landscaping REMOVAL Fast Removals Ray’s Landscaping • Dumpster Rentals • Demolition • Scrap Metal & Junk Car Removal Call AL COY 617-539-0489 Call Donny 857-261-5255 Masonry & Chimney Pointing, Carpentry & Odd Jobs 1 col. x 1 inch $60.00 We Clean & Repair Gutters 781-241-2454 ($20 Per Week) SNOW & ICE MANAGEMENT COMMERCIAL PLOWING SALTING & SNOW REMOVAL 857-205-2873 Mowing • Edging • Weeding Bushes, Shrubs Cleaning: Trash & Leaves New Lawn, Patio, Concrete Brick Work Ray: 781-526-1181 Free Estimates Governors Garden Landscaping Free Estimates 617-872-4831 Handyman Hanton Home Repairs • Handyman • Windows • Painting • Decks 1 col. x 1 inch $60.00 For 3 Months ADVENT HANDYMAN SERVICES Paint • Tile Carpentry & More Pics & Refs available Insured Bill: 781-964-6851 1 col. x 1 inch $60.00 For 3 Months 617-372-3308 ($5 Per Week) Movers 1 col. x 2 inches $120.00 For 3 Months ($10 Per Week) Ronnie Z. KITCHENS 781-284-9555 licenSed + inSured. maSter lic no 12945. Daren DiBartolomeo MASTER PLUMBER 9am-5pm •Lic. #10914 Specializing in SMALL JOBS & Elec. Drain Cleaning Ed DiLorenzo 781-284-3615 Not Fixed Not Charged LANDSCAPING cHristoPHer’s lawn cutting ($10 Per Week) W NE ROOM N OW PE SHOW O N Whether It Be One Piece or More! hedging, weeding, mulching clean Yard • low-Priced Landscape & Masonry co. call chris Designing & Completing Ideas for over 30 Years 10% OFF FOR SENIOR CITIZENS, Landscaping Masonry VETERANS & DISABLED • Reliable Mowing Service • Brick or Block Steps Call Ronnie • • • • • 781-321-2499 For A Free Estimate Sat. 9:30-4:00 • Thur. 9:30-7:00 331 BroaDway, revere, ma 02151 2 col. x 1 inch $120.00 For 3 Months Leave Your Moving To Us Roofing/Siding M•T•W• F 9:30-5:00 Showroom SaleS & Service ($5 Per Week) 781-289-5563 e-mail [email protected] Get Everything Clean For 2013 … LICENSED … INSURED Plumbing & Heating 1 col. x 1 inch $60.00 For 3 Months 781-289-5563 Call today for a free estimate e-mail [email protected] (617) 846-0142 FREE ESTIMATES mpressive 24 Hour emergency service Rental/Sale Ready Cleaning Rental/Sale Ready Cleaning Carpet Steam Cleaning Steam CleaningCleaning PressureCarpet Cleaning • Window Pressure Cleaning Cleaning Janitorial Service••Window Maid Service Janitorial Service Maid Service Bonded and•Insured Uniformed workers Bonded and Insured Call today for a free estimate Uniformed workers Clovers lawn Care • Brick or Block Walls • Concrete or Brick Paver Patios & Walkways • Brick Re-Pointing • Basement Repair This Paper • Spring Clean Ups • trees and Branches Removed • Mulch & Hedges • Mowing & Fertilizing • Junk Removal residentiaL • coMMerciaL 617-389-1490 Joe pierotti Jr. • Joe pierotti Sr. Snow Plowing • Senior Discount • Free Estimates • Licensed & Insured LANDSCAPING 195 Squire Road • Revere Residential & Commercial Masonry specializing in stone, brick, block, • Rubber Roofing and concrete construction and repair • Metal • Repairs 30 years experience Licensed • senior Discount • Shingle Roofing (617) 561-9516 • Ice Removal • Asphalt Repairs • All Types of Repairs • Licensed & Insured • Free Estimates 617-835-4131 Please Recycle Spring & Fall Cleanups Mulching & edging Sod or Seed Lawns Shrub Planting & Trimming irrigation Systems SONNY’S MASONRY New Roofs ROOFING John ToTTen 10-Year ◆ AVICO ◆ labor BRICK • BLOCK • STONE • CONCRETE ALL TYPES OF MASONRY •• SNOW PLOWING COMMERCIAL & • COMMERCIAL RESIDENTIAL& RESIDENTIAL • FULLY INSURED • FULLY INSURED CLEAN-UPS ••Boston CLEAN-UPS BoBs CONSTRUCTION •• CONSTRUCTION Painting co. 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SSO & SON S Family Operated Since 1963 Painting Paint 3 family Emilio 7 License #27484 ASPHALT PAVING - CONSTRUCTION Landscaping & Construction Designing/Hardscape • Maintenance Free Estimates • Sod/Seed • Comm/Res. 781-284-4747 Est. 1986 OIL 10% OFF FOR SENIOR CITIZENS, VETERANS & DISABLED Boilers • Burners Baseboards •Water Heaters 24 Hour Emergency Service 781-321-2499 PAVING (781) 289-1542 COMPANY Call Ronnie Woodlawnland Your Ad Here 30 years experience Interior/Exterior Special Winter Rates Free Estimates • Reasonable Rates Fully Insured 617-320-4179 • 617-846-5805 Expert Design Lawn Maintenance Yard Clean-ups ~ Sod Lawns Snow Plowing ~ Sand & Salt Leave Your Moving To Us Whether It Be One Piece or More! RESIDENTIAL & COMMERCIAL (781) 324-1555 Directory please call 781-485-0588 GILLx110 OIL Ronnie Z. MOVERS Professiona William Mack Painting Please Recycle This Paper Reasonable Rates All Types of Roofing Spring & Fall Clean-up Lawn Care Work D & S GeneRal Trim & Mulch ContRaCtinG CoRp. • Brick Steps • Brick Patios &FREE Walkways ESTIMATES 781-535-2772 office: 617-884-0909 • Brick or Block Walls • Concrete Patios & Walkways Dave 781-760-4350 Elements Group, Inc. Cell: 617-771-5165 geneRaL contRactoRS Chimney & Gutter LiCenS Reliable Mowing Ser Fall Cleanups, Snowp Fre Call anytime. D&B Landscape MAINTENANCE & more Commercial & Residential Shingles & Rubber F 781 617-466-00 617-884-2143 Spring & Fall Cle Insured & Licensed FREE ESTIMATES 617-821-3793 ROOF Roofing Yard clean-up FRee eStiMateS Call Kevin and 25 yr P.O. P.O. Box Box 606, 606,Revere, Revere,MA MA02151 02151 Tommy Domenico Shingles [email protected] [email protected] 617-365-5451 Home 617-417-9585 Richard RichardBruno Bruno Warranty. FREE ESTIMATE Vinny’s Your AdWe are insurance Wallpapering 781-581-0031 Claim CENTURY & Painting AL’S SNOWPLOWING Here DRIVEWAY 781-289-7896 781-248-5915 Specialists. Residential ~ Commerical QUALITY MASONRY • HOT TOP Top Notch Services 617-548-3801LICENSED508-801-8573 DRIVEWAYS & INSURED Landscaping • Plowing • 617-429-0606 781-289-5825 GENERATIONS OF EXPERIENCE • SEAL COATING [email protected] • Concrete • Brick & Block • Water Proofing • All Types of Exterior Restoration gino ma lanD POWELL Domenico PAINTING & Painting co. D ECORATIN Painting 20 Years + Small exterior 781-289-7700 781-289-7700 complete interior Prompt, Clean, neat. MASON CONTRACTOR QUALITY IS OUR GOAL. 1 col. x 2 inches $120.00 For 3 Months ($10 Per Week) 978-652-8383 www.firstclasscleaningpro.com Housecleaner looking for private homes to clean. $20 hr. will clean as if it were my own home. Lisa Watkins 617-583-0161 “The Cleaning Cleaning Experts” “The Experts” 617-389-1490 Snow Removal STELLAR NEW ENGLAND Nick D’Agostino 2 col. x 2 inches $240.00 For 3 Months Alimony • Family Wills & Trusts Landlord/Tenant LUIGI: Plumbing Fully Insured Free Estimates 617-329-9557 Kitchen ✧ Bathroom Additions ✧ Porches Replacement windows Garages ✧ Decks Siding - All Types Expert Installation and Repair • Stockade • Cedar Board • Chain Link Fences • Vinyl Fences 30 years experience FREE ESTIMATES Call the rest, then call Z Best BOB CAPOCCIA 617-799-7660 781-284-1491 Curb Cuts G Landscaping G Water Lines G Excavation G Concrete Foundations G Retaining Walls G Stone Delivery G Bobcat Service G Concrete G Seal CoatG Sewer Lines G Free Fill BOB 781-284-6311 Family Operated Since 1963 617-A-S-P-H-A-L-T G Cell: 617-270-3178 Heavy Duty Cleaning • Junk Removal • Post Construction Carpet & Tile Installation • Painting 25%OFF www.CallisLegal.com Building & Remodeling Z Best Enterprises ASPHALT PAVING - CONSTRUCTION Professional Painter FIRST CLASS CLEANING & HANDYMAN’S PRO Law Office of Matthew Callis L. P. for free estimate R. SASSO & SONS Painting Boston BoBs Painting Co. Cleaning Services Attorney CONTRACTING Fence HOME REPAIR? PUBLIC NOTICE Notice is herby given Ceiling Specialist 617-650-1596 LICENSED & INSURED FREE ESTIMATES Home Repair LEGAL NOTICE Ceilings painted starting as low as $65.00 each Includes stock and labor Call for free estimate 781-289-3314 Licensed & Insured Repair • Carpentry Remodeling Kitchen & Bath Windows/Doors Deck • Painting Insulation Call Sang Mark Tritto (617) 401-6539 in accordance with the provisions of Section 40 Chapter 131 of the Massachusetts General Laws (Wetlands Protection Act) that the City of Revere Conservation Commission will hold a Public Hearing, Wednesday, February 4, 2015 at 4:15 PM in the City Council Chamber of Revere City Hall, 281 Broadway, Revere, MA 02151 upon the application (Notice of Intent) of the Massachusetts Department of Transportation (MassDOT) to construct a stormwater treatment system as part of MassDOT’s Impaired Waters Retrofit Initiative. 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 Andrew B. DeSantis, Chairman Revere Conservation Commission 1/28 R Arthur Anderson S.T. Home Improvement & General Contracting Construction Do Business With The Owner & Save! 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 February 23, 2015 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 January 7, 2015 Attest: Deborah J. Patterson Recorder 1/28 R COMMONWEALTH OF MASSACHUSETTS (SEAL) LAND COURT DEPARTMENT OF THE TRIAL COURT 000048 ORDER OF NOTICE TO: Paul Ollivierra, Rhonda Shine 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 33 Pitcairn Street Unit #1, 33-35 Pitcairn Street Condominium given by Paul M. Ollivierra and Rhonda Shine to Mortgage Electronic Registration Systems, Inc. as nominee for, Mortgage Partners, Inc., its successors and assigns, dated December 9, 2005,and recorded with the Suffolk County Registry of Deeds in Book 38672, Page 269, and now held by plaintiff by assignment, has/have filed with Contractors Complete Office Cleaning ConstruCtion CONSTRUCTION By BY Anderson ANDERSON Roofing, Siding,Windows, Windows, Carpentry Roofing, Siding, Carpentry Free Estimates Estimates• Licensed • Licensed & Insured & Insured Over2530Years YearsininBusiness Business Over Bob Anderson Anderson781-289-9032 781-289-9032 LEGAL NOTICE Registry of Deeds at Book 44842, Page 131, 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 UnitedStates of America, then you may be entitled to the benefits of the Servicemembers Civil ReliefAct. 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 February 23, 2015 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 January 9, 2015 Attest: Deborah J. Patterson Recorder 201210-0684-YEL 1/28 R Sales • Service • Installation Service Contracts • Budget Plans 617-567-1978 • 617-846-1978 Curb Cuts Landscaping G Water Lines G Excavation Concrete Foundations Retaining Walls G Stone Delivery G Bobcat Service Concrete Seal Coat G Sewer Lines G Free Fill G G G G G G BOB 781-284-6311 617-A-S-P-H-A-L-T PLUMBING CROMBIE Plumbing & Heating Licensed & Insured 10% Senior Discount QUALITY WORKMANSHIP (617) 846-8668 License #12742 Joseph pe heating, air condit & refrigeratio residential & comm licensed technic lic. #019734 781-308-3 Beattie PlumBing & Heat Hot Water Heaters & Boilers PlumBing Fixture rePair BatHroom & KitcHen installation 617-846-2789 [email protected] master license #15231 • Fully insured mpressive Plumbing & Heatin Wednesday, January 28, 2015 THE REVERE JOURNAL A R O U N D MLK Celebration ‘Pinocchio’ Berklee College of Music kicks off its 2015 Martin Luther King Jr. Celebration on Frday, Jan. 23, at 7 p.m. with a keynote presentation featuring Chuck D, from hip-hop group, Public Enemy, and Angella Dozier Henry, mother of DJ Henry and founder of the DJ Dream Fund, at the DAvid Friend Recital Hall, 921 Boylston St., Boston. There’s also a panel discussion covering topics such as police brutality, environmental justice, gender equality, and LBGTQIA civil rights. The event is free of charge and open to the public. It kivkd off events running through Jan. 30, and includes musical performances. For a full schedule,visit Berklee. edu/news. That wooden little fellow comes alive again, in Wheelock Family Theatre’s world premiere of Steven Bogart and Wendy Lement’s “Pinocchio,” based on the the book, “The Adventures of Pinocchio,” by Carlo Colladi, appearing Jan. 30-Feb. 22, at the 180 The Riverway, Boston theater. Showtimes, Fridays at 7:30 p.m., Saturday, Sunday at 3 p.m. Starring Boston’s favorites Steven Barkhimer and Sirena Abalian, the show is recommended for adults, teens and children over 7 years old. Tickets, $35,$30,$25,420; Pajama Party Fridays, $15. Call the Box Office at 617879-2300, visit tickets@ wheelock.edu, or www. WheelockFamilyTheatre.org. ‘Red Alert!’ ImprovBoston presents “Red Alert,” a space comedy of galactic proportions. Audiences interact with and follow Cmdr.Daniel Booker and the crew of the USS Starship Caliburn, through their discoveries of aliens, new worlds, and dangers, while navigating outer space, Fridays at 10 p.m. through Jan. 30. The theater is located at 40 Prospect St., Cambridge. Tickets, $18; students, $14. Visit improvboston. com. ‘The Second Girl’ Huntington Playwright Fellow Ronan Noone’s play, “The Second Girl,” an immigrant American drama, is directed by renowned Campbell Scott, through Feb. 21, at the Boston Center for the Arts Calderwood Pavilion, 527 Tremont St., South End, Boston. Performances: Fridays at 8 p.m.; Saturdays, 2,8 p.m.; Sunday, Jan. 25,Feb.1, at 2,7 p.m. Feb. 8,15, at 2 p.m. only; Tuesdays, 7:30 p.m.; Wednesday, Jan. 21,Feb. 11, at 7:30 p.m.; ;Jan. 28, at 7 p.m.; Feb. 4,18, at 2 and 7:30 p.m. Check for related events. Tickets start at $25. Seniors, $5 off; subscribers, BU community, $10 off; patroons 35 and younger with valid IDs, $25; students and military with valid IDs, $15. Visit huntingtontheatre.org, the BU box offices at BCA or 264 Huntington Ave., or call 617266-0800. Winter Rock and Roll Weekend ArtsEmerson: The World on Stage features Tigerman Woah and Faces on Film, Jan. 23. and Quilt and Julia Easterlin, Jan. 24, in “Winter Rock and Roll Weekend,” at the Jackie Liebergott Black Box Theatre, Emerson Paramount Theatre, 559 Washington St., Boston. Doors open both nights at 9. Advance tickets, $10; at the door, $12. Visit www.artsemerson.org or call 617-84-8400. LEGAL NOTICE LEGAL NOTICE By virtue and in execution of the Power of Sale contained in a certain Mortgage given by Mark Scearbo to Wells Fargo Bank, N.A., dated July 14, 2008 and recorded with the Suffolk County Registry of Deeds at Book 43813, Page 319, of which the Mortgage the undersigned is the present holder, for breach of the conditions of said Mortgage and for the purpose of foreclosing the same will be sold at Public Auction at 01:00 PM on February 18, 2015 at 1081 Broadway, Revere, MA, all and singular the premises described in said Mortgage, to wit: The land in Revere, Suffolk County, Massachusetts, on Broadway with the buildings thereon, bounded and described as follows: SOUTHERLY on Broadway, fifty-four (54.00) feet; SOUTHEASTERLY by Lot “A” on the hereinafter mentioned Plan, one hundred and thirty-eight (138.00) feet; NORTHERLY by Lot 36 as shown on said Plan, seventy-nine and 05/100 (79.05) feet; and WESTERLY and SOUTHWESTERLY by two courses by Lot C on ‘Bride*Widow*Hag’ ‘Red Alert!’ ImprovBoston presents “Red Alert,” a space comedy of galactic proportions. Audiences interact with and follow Cmdr.Daniel Booker and the crew of the USS Starship Caliburn, through their discoveries of aliens, new worlds, and dangers, while navigating outer space, Fridays at 10 p.m. through Jan. 30. The theater is located at 40 Prospect St., Cambridge. Tickets, $18; students, $14. Visit improvboston.com. ArtsEmerson:the World on Stage presents Daniel Beaty’s “Breath and Imagination,” starring Elijah Rock as classical vocalist Roland Hayes, Jan. 27-Feb. 8, at the Emerson/Paramount Center Main Stage. 559 Washington St., Boston. Performances: Jan. 27,29, Feb. 3, at 7:30 p.m.; Jan. 28, Feb. 4, at 7 p.m.; Jan.30,31, Feb. 6,7, at 8 p.m.Feb. 1, 8, at 2 p.m.;Feb. 5, at 11 a.m. and 7:30 p.m.; Tickets, $25-$79; group, senior, student discounts. Call 617-824-8400 or visit www. artsemerson.org. ‘Three Acts, Two Dancers, One Radio Host’ Ira Glass, host of “The American Life,” choreographer Monica Bill Barnes and Company and Anna Bass perform an unprecedented, unusual show, “Three Acts, Two Dancers, One Radio Host,” on Saturday, Jan. 24, at 8 p.m. and Sunday, Jan. 25, at 3 p.m., at Citi Shubert Theatre, 270 Tremont St., Boston. Tickets start at $25. Call 866-348-9738, visit the Box Office or citicenter.org. starting at the Institut, at 7 p.m.; Brandeis University, Jan. 27, at p.m.; Boston College,Jan. 28, at 6:30 p.m.; Boston University, Jan. 28, at :30 p.m., and Jan. 29, at 7 p.m.; and Suffolk University, Feb. 1, at 7 p.m. For tickets and more information, visit bit. ly/freudcase. Kaleidoscope Berklee College of Music’s Songwriting Department hosts its first-ever battle of the bands, Kaldeidoscope: An Open Genre Battle of the Bands, Tuesday, Jan. 27, at 8 p.m. in the Berklee Performance Center, 136 Mass. Ave., Boston. Tickets, $12. Visit www.berklee.edu/BPC or call 617-747-2261. Emerson String Quartet The acclaimed Emerson String Quartet performs music by Purcell, Beethoven, and Lowell Liebermann, Thursday, Jan. 22, at 8 p.m. at the New England Conservatory’s Jordan Hall, 30 Gainsborough St., Boston. Tickets, $35-up. Call 617-4826661, visit www.celebrityseries. org or the Box Office. The Bad Plus ‘Bedlam’s Saint Joan’ The Bad Plus performs the Boston premiere of Ornette Coleman’s 1972 landmark album, “Science Fiction,” Saturday, Jan. 24, at 8 p.m. at the Berklee Performance Center, 136 Mass. Ave., Boston. Tickets:$28-$42. Call World Music/CRASHarts at 617-8764275 or visit www.WorldMusic. org. Underground Railway Theater presents George Bernard Shaw’s three-hour play, “Bedlam’s Saint Joan,” with two intermissions, featuring four actors - Edmund Lewis, Andrus Nichols, Tom O’Keefe and director Eric Tucker, portraying 24 roles, Jan. 15 through Feb. 8, at Central Square Theatre, 450 Mass. Ave., Cambridge. Performances: Wednesday, Thursday, at 7:30 p.m.; Friday, 8 p.m.; Saturday, 3,8 p.m.; Sunday, 2 p.m. Tickets start at $15; student rush, day of show, subject to availability, $15, with valid ID. Visit CentralSquaretheater.org, call 866-811-4111, or the Box Office at 617-576-9278. ‘A Case Named Freud’ The Goethe-Institut Boston presents the American premiere of Savyon Liebrecht’s third play in her Freud trilogy, “A Case Named Freud,” featuring an all-Boston star line-up, in commemoration of the Holocaust’s 70th anniversary, Jan. 25-Feb. 1, 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. Present Holder of said Mortgage, By Its Attorneys, ORLANS MORAN PLLC P.O. Box 540540 Waltham, MA 02454 Phone: 781-790-7800 1/28, 2/4, 2/11 R C I T Y exhibition is free and open to the public. The exhibition is a tribute to MassArt alumnus-professor Albert Munsell, inventor of the Munsell Color System. Opening reception is Wednesday, Jan. 28, 6-8 p.m. Galleries are open Monday-Saturday, 12-6 p.m., Wednesdays, 12-8 p.m. Visit www.massart.edu/galleries, e-mail [email protected] or call 617-879-7337. ‘Breath and Imagination’ said Plan, totaling one hundred eighty-seven (187.00) feet. Said parcel contains 10,795 square feet of land more or less and is shown as “Lot B” on a plan entitled Subdivision of Land in Revere, dated March 21, 1981, by David Calichman, Registered Surveyor, and recorded with the Suffolk County Registry of Deeds in Book 9732, Page 147. Said parcel is known as No. 1081 Broadway, Revere, MA. For title see Deed recorded immediately hereto. The premises are to be sold subject to and with the benefit of all easements, restrictions, building and zoning laws, 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 or bank treasurer’s check 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 T H E Page 19 LEGAL NOTICE CITY OF REVERE DEPARTMENT OF PUBLIC WORKS INVITATION FOR BIDS STREET SWEEPING SERVICES MUN-2015-1003 Sealed bids to furnish all labor and materials for STREET SWEEPING SERVICES for the City of Revere, Department of Public Works, will be received at the Office of the Purchasing Agent, City Hall, Revere, Massachusetts prior to 10:00 AM on Thursday, February 12, 2015, immediately after which the bids will be opened and read publicly. Specifications and contract documents will be available January 29, 2015, after 1:00 PM, at the Office of the Purchasing Agent, City Hall, Revere, Massachusetts. Mailing of specifications requires advance payment in the form of a bank check or money order, in the amount of $5.00. Revere City Hall office hours are Monday thru Thursday, 8:15 AM to 5:00 PM and Friday, 8:15 AM to 12:15 Noon. Each bid submitted to the City of Revere must be accompanied by a bid deposit in the form of a bid bond, money order, cashier’s check, certified check, or treasurer’s check, issued by a responsible bank or trust company, in the amount of six thousand dollars ($6,000.00). Checks must be made payable to the City of Revere. The City of Revere as the awarding authority, may accept any bid or portion of a bid, waive any informality in a bid, order more or less of any item, investigate the ability of the vendors to honor a bid, select a vendor who does not submit the lowest bid and award all contracts as shall be considered in the best interest of the City of Revere. It is the policy of the City of Revere to take positive steps to maximize the utilization of minority business enterprises in all activities administered by this agency. No bidder may withdraw his/her bid within forty-five (45) days after the actual date of the opening thereof. This invitation for bid is in accordance with M.G.L. Chapter 30B. Marie E. Zelandi Purchasing Agent 1/28 R Cantata singers The Cantata Singers perform Sergei Rachmaninoff’s “AllNight Vigil,” in celebration of the work’s centennial, Saturday, Jan. 24, at 8 p.m. in St. Paul Church, CAmbridge, and Saturday, Jan. 31, at 8 p.m. in Wellesley College’s Houghton Chapel, in collaboration with the college’s concert series. Preconcert talks begin at 7 p.m., featuring Anna Winestein, executive director of the Ballets Russes Cultural Partnership, and there are post-concert receptions for all ticketholders. For more information, visit www.cantatasingers. org. Bread and Puppet Theater American Repertory Theater/ Moscow Art Theater School Institute for Advanced Theater Training presents Kim Rosenstock’s comedy, “Bride*Widow*Hag,” Jan.2224, at the Ex, inside the Loeb Drama Center, Brattle St., Harvard Square, Cambridge. Performances: Jan. 22,23, at 7:30 p.m.; Jan. 24, at 2,7:30 p.m. Tickets, $20; members, subscribers, $15.Call 617-547-8300 or visit americanrepertorytheater. org/events/show/bridewidowhag. Poetry Spend an evening of poetry with Suffolk Unversity and The Poets’ Theatre, in “The Word Exchange: the Music of Language in Translation,” Thursday, Jan.22, at 7:30 p.m.,featuring works from Vietnam, Italy, France, ancient Greece and Rome, performed by world class poets and actors,at the Modern Theatre at Suffolk University, 525 Washington St., Boston. Tickets, $20; students, $10. For more information on the Word Exchange, visit www.poetstheatre.org. ‘Middletown’ Vermont-based award-winning Bread and Puppet Theater returns to Cyclorama on Tremont Street in Boston’s South End, with two-act, 1-1/2-hour, “Captain Boycott,” recommended for ages 12-up, Wednesday-Sunday, 7 p.m. (tickets, $18; students, seniors, $13; kids 11-under- not recommended for this age group, $11); one-act, one-hour,“The Nothing is not Ready Circus,” Jan. 24,at 3 p.m., Jan. 25, at 3 and 7 p.m. ($18/$13, kids 11-under,$10; 2-under, free of charge) and artistic director Peter Schumann’s visual art installation, Jan. 24-Feb. 1, free and open to all. Advance tickets, visit www.breadandpuppet.org or call 866-811-4111. Angela Hewitt and Anne Sofie von Otter Internationally renowned Swedish mezzo-soprano Anne Sofie von Otter and globally renowned British-Canadian pianist Angela Hewitt perform on Friday, Jan. 23, at 8 p.m. in the New England Conservatory’s Jordan Hall, 30 Gainsborough St., Boston. Tickets, $35-up. Call 617-482-6661, or visit www. celebrityseries.org. ‘Drawn In’ Dance Currents, Inc. presents “Drawn In,” featuring several notable choreographers and guest artists from DanceVisions, Jan. 31, at 7:30 p.m. at Green Street Studios, 185 Green St., Cambridge. Tickets at the door, $20; students, seniors and Boson Dance Alliance members, $17. Call 617-965-1569, e-mail kathyhassinger@gmail,com or visit www.dancecurrentsinc. com. Trinity Repertory Theatre kicks off the new year with Will Eno’s award-winning play, “Middletown,” starring Chelsea beloved native-Trinity Rep resident actor Fred Sullivan Jr., Jan.22 through Feb. 22, at Dowling Theatre, 201 Washington St., Providence, RI. Check for discounted preview tickets, Jan. 22-24, pay-whatyou-can, Jan. 23. Performances, Thursday-Sunday, Tuesday, at 7:30 p.m.; Wednesday, Saturday, also Feb. 8, 2 and 7:30 p.m.; Feb. 1, Feb. 11, at 2 p.m. only; Feb. 4,Feb. 21, at 7:30 p.m. only; For tickets/more information, visit www.trinityrep.com or call 401351-4242. ‘The Diary of Anne Frank’ Marblehead Little Theatre presents Frances Goodrich and Albert Hackett’s multi-award winning dramatization of “the Diary of Anne Frank,” Jan. 30,31,Feb. 5,6, at 7:30 p.m.; Feb. 7, at 7 p.m.; Feb. 1, at 2 and 7:30 p.m.; and Feb. 8, at 2 p.m. at its 12 School St. venue in downtown Marblehead. Tickets, $25; students on Sunday matinees only, $15. Visit www.mltlive.org. 6365. Cape Ann Symphony The Cape Ann Symphony will hold a benefit concert featuring Boston Symphony Orchestra stars violinist Lucia Lin and cellist Owen Young, Friday, Jan. 23, at 8 p.m. at the magnificent Shalin Liu Performance Center, 37 Main St., Rockport.The duo will perform music by Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart Zoltan Kodaly, and Handel-Halvorsen’s exciting “Passacaglia, with its fireworks finale.Seats, $35. a post-concert reception with Lin, Young, and conductor Yoichi Udagawa, featuring music with vocalist Brittany Betts and guitarist Nate Weaver, with refreshments, will be in the center’s upstairs function hall. ($15). Visit www. rockportmusic.org or call 978281-0543. New Works Festival The Firehouse Center for the Arts’ New Works Festival, showcasing New England directors, actors and playwrights is held Jan.23, for full-length works, Jan. 24,31, for shorts, Jan. 30, for one act plays, all at 8 p.m. in the Market Square, Newburyport venue. Tickets, $15; four-day festival pass, $40. Call 978-462-7336 or visit www.firehouse,org. ‘Crime and Punishment’ Salem Theatre Company presents Marilyn Campbell and Curt Columbus’ new, award-winning adaptation of Dostoyevsky’s “conversation on the nature of evil,” probing into the mind of the classic masterpiece, “Crime and Punishment’s,” murderer, Jan. 22 through Feb.14: ThursdaysSaturdays, at 7:30 p.m.; Sundays at 3 p.m. at the 90 Lafayette St., Salem theater. Tickets, $10-$30; Friday, Jan. 23, pay-what-youthink;Jan. 24, opening weekend post-show meet and greet; Jan. 25, college night - $5 tickets for college students with valid IDs; Feb. 5, LGBT night; discount tickets, post-show meet and greet. Visit salemtheatre.ticketleap.com/crime-punishment/. Ella and Frank Siobhan Magnus and John Stevens perform a live concert tribute to Frank Sinatra and Ella Fitzgerald, Saturday, Jan. 24, at 7:30 p.m. at the Larcom Theatre, 13 Wallis St., downtown Beverly. Tickets, $35-$55; discounts for seniors and groups of 10 or more. Visit www.larcomtheatre. com or call 617-531-1257. Food for Thought films Fruitlands Museum (102 Prospect Hill Road, Harvard) presents its Food for Thought film series, Wednesdays, Jan. 21,Feb.18,and March 18, from 7 to 8:30 p.m. The documentaOtis Murphy ry films explore themes of enviSaxophonist extraordinaire Otis ronmental stewardship, comMurphy performs in concert munity building, and the quest Monday, Jan.26, at 7:30 p.m. for human expression. featuring at Salem State University Recital hometown Harvard’s Chef Paul, Hall, 71 Loring Ave., Salem. preparing soups for attendees Tickets, $15; students, seniors, during discussions of the film. $10; Salem State students with Cost, free, homemade soup, $5 valid IDs, free of charge. Murphy per bowl. For more informaalso teaches a master class that tion, visit www.fruitlands.org morning at 11. Visit salemstaor call 978-456-3924, Ext. 292. tetickets.com or call 978-542- Laszlo Gardony Berklee College of Music professor Laszlo Gardony performs with his quartet on Thursday, Jan. 22, at the Regattabar, Charles Hotel, One Bennett St., Harvard Square, Cambridge. Tickets, $18; students, $15. For more information, call the Regattabar or visit www. regattabar.com. NEC concert The New England Conservatory presents a faculty spotlight concert, free of charge, Monday, Jan. 26, at 8 p.m. in Jordan Hall, 30 Gainsborough St., Boston. ‘Color Fields’ At Mass. College of Art and Design’s Bakalar & Paine Galleries, (621 Huntington Ave., Boston) Best of Boston Lisa Tung curates new exhibition “Color Fields,” a celebration of color featuring 13 internationally known artists, Jan. 26 through March 7. The Black Cyan Magenta Yellow ‘The Second Girl’ Huntington Playwright Fellow Ronan Noone’s play, “The Second Girl,” an immigrant American drama, is directed by renowned Campbell Scott, through Feb. 21, at the Boston Center for the Arts Calderwood Pavilion, 527 Tremont St., South End, Boston. Performances: Fridays at 8 p.m.; Saturdays, 2,8 p.m.; Sunday, Jan. 25,Feb.1, at 2,7 p.m. Feb. 8,15, at 2 p.m. only; Tuesdays, 7:30 p.m.; Wednesday, Jan. 21,Feb. 11, at 7:30 p.m.; ;Jan. 28, at 7 p.m.; Feb. 4,18, at 2 and 7:30 p.m. Check for related events. Tickets start at $25. Seniors, $5 off; subscribers, BU community, $10 off; patroons 35 and younger with valid IDs, $25; students and military with valid IDs, $15. Visit huntingtontheatre.org, the BU box offices at BCA or 264 Huntington Ave., or call 617-266-0800. Page 20 THE REVERE JOURNAL LETS GO PATS We are going to the SUPERBOWL Wednesday, January 28, 2015 WATCHING THE SUPERBOWL WITH US? 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