Banking your way!

Page 2
The Chelsea Record • Thursday, January 29, 2015
Phone: 617-884-2416 Fax: 781-485-1403
NEWS Briefs by Seth Daniel
TIME TO PAINT BOWLS
January is the time to come together inside to paint ceramic
bowls in preparation for the 4th Annual Chelsea Hunger Network’s ‘Empty Bowls’ fundraising event.
The annual event will take place on April 23 at 5 p.m. in the
Williams School. However, half of the fun is preparing for the
event ahead of time in painting the bowls.
Bowl painting sessions are currently in full swing. The
schedule is as follows:
*Jan. 31, 1:30 p.m. Cronin Ice Rink, 850 Parkway
*Feb. 4, 6 p.m. Salvation Army Chelsea
CHELSEA THRIVES ON FEB. 7
The Chelsea Thrives group announced this week that it will
be holding a community summit on Feb. 7. The Summit is a goal of the organization, which was instrumental in the All-America City delegation, will be held at the
Jordan Boys & Girls Club from 9 a.m. to 2 p.m.
Representatives from MGH, Chelsea Collaborative, Chelsea
Police Department, Chelsea Thrives staff, as well as neighborhood residents have been actively involved in planning the
Summit. The attendance goal for the Summit is 200 people. MEETINGS CANCELLED
Just about every public meeting for this week was cancelled
due to the blizzard, including the Chelsea City Council meeting.
Council President Leo Robinson said all pending business
that was on the Monday, Jan. 26, agenda will be pushed to next
Monday’s meeting, Feb. 2.
Meanwhile, other meetings that were cancelled included
the License Commission and the Planning Board, as well as a
School Committee meeting on Wednesday evening.
All meetings will be re-scheduled.
HARRY POTTER AT CPL
The Chelsea Public Library will be participating in the Harry
Potter Book Night event next month.
The Library has booked a program for Feb. 5 at 5 p.m. for
all Harry Potter fans to celebrate the worldwide event centered
around the popular book series.
STRENGTHENING FAMILIES PROGRAM
The Chelsea Public Schools is conducting is Strengthening
Families Program at the Mary C. Burke Elementary Complex,
300 Crescent Ave., every Tuesday evening from 5:30 - 7:30
p.m. through March 17. The program is for school parents and
students. Come share a meal and become a family that communicates. The program is in English and Spanish. Food and
Childcare are provided
For info: Kim Huffer at (617) 446-5107
FREE TAX PREPARATION AT TND
The Neighborhood Developers is offering free tax preparation at its headquarters in 4 Gerrish Ave. (above Family Dollar
by St. Rose). The program is for households with income under
$53,000/yr. Schedule an appointment for any time from January
27 until April 15. For an appointment, or if you would like to
volunteer, contact Blake at [email protected] or call 617 889
1375 x28
FREE TAX PREPARATION AT CAPIC
CAPIC's VITA Free Tax Preparation Program will be starting
on January
26. This program offers free tax help for qualified taxpay-
ers. CAPIC's
trained staff will assist with special credits, such as Earned
Income
Tax Credit, Child Tax Credit, and Credit for the Elderly or the
Disabled. CAPIC will offer three ways to file:
*By appointment
*FSA: Facilitated Self-Service with www.myfreetaxes.com
for
walk-in clients
*Virtual VITA - drop off your paperwork & pickup completed
return, up to three weeks later.
The Program will take place at CAPIC's Main Office, located
at 100
Everett Avenue, Unit 14, Chelsea, on Mondays and Tuesdays from 5pm-9pm
(doors close at 8:30 p.m.). No appointment necessary. Walkins are
welcome. For more information please contact Shelly Thimmer, VITA Program
Coordinator, at 617-884-6130, ext. 116.
YOUTH SUMMER JOB APPLICATIONS
Applications are now available for youth summer jobs with
the Chelsea Collaborative, with applications due by March 26.
The Chelsea Collaborative’s Summer Youth Employment
Program includes 20 hours per week for six to seven weeks in
the summer. Participants make $9 an hour.
Jobs include environmental work, banks, law offices, summer camps, day cares and office work.
Applications are available at the Collaborative’s headquarters, 318 Broadway.
For questions, call Sylvia at (617) 889-6080 x106.
Investigation active in fatal Revere shooting
Journal Staff Report
Police continue an active
investigation into the murder
of 18-year-old Andres Jaramillo last Friday morning in
his car, which was parked on
Garfield Avenue near the Garfield School.
A spokesman for the Suf-
folk County DA said there
have been no arrests made as
of Tuesday, but that leads are
being followed.
Revere Police responded
to an outdoor scene on Garfield Avenue shortly after 2
a.m. Friday morning to find
the victim, Jaramillo, inside
a vehicle suffering from fatal
injuries.
The Suffolk County State
Police Detective Unit, which
has jurisdiction over death
investigations in Revere, also
responded to the scene, as did
uniformed troopers and additional specialized State Police
units.
Revere Police Chief Joseph
Cafarelli and Suffolk District
Attorney Daniel F. Conley
continue to urge anyone with
information on the incident
to share it with investigators.
Tipsters may contact the Suffolk County State Police Detective Unit at 617-727-8817
or Revere Police detectives at
781-286-8340.
SENATOR
DiDOMENICO
ATTENDS
VETERANS
LUNCHEON
Banking your way!
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
Member FDIC | Member SIF |
Happy Valentines
Day Auntie Debbie.
Come watch Frozen
with me.
Love, sophie
(please be sure to include
name and newspaper preference in emails)
❏ Photo Enclosed ❏ No Photo Available
Please circle the paper you want your message printed in?
East Boston
Times-Free Press
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Everett Independent WINTHROP
TranScripT
MY VALENTINE WRITTEN IN 20 WORDS OR LESS
To: _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _
Happy Valentines
Day, Daddy.
Love your favorite
pats fans,
Ava and Sophia
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REVERE JOURNAL
Senator Sal DiDomenico recently joined Veterans Commissioners from throughout
the Commonwealth at the
Speaker’s Annual Luncheon
at the State House. He is
pictured here with new
Massachusetts Secretary of
Veterans Affairs Francisco
Urena and Chelsea Veterans
Agent Francisco Toro
_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _
_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _
_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _
_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _
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).
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The Chelsea Record • Thursday, January 29, 2015
Phone: 617-884-2416 Fax: 781-485-1403
FIRE DEPT. Log
The Chelsea Fire Department responded to 175 calls
for service during the week
of January 18 to January 25,
2015.
1 Hazardous Conditions
5 Assist the Occupant
2 Water Leaks
4 Stove/Oven Fires
3 Structure Fires
1 Motor Vehicle Fires
20 Motor Vehicle Accidents
1 MVA with Entrapment/
Rollover
17 Fire Alarm/Sprinkler
Activation
2 Carbon Monoxide Alarm
Activations
1 Odor of Gas Inside a
Structure
2 Mutual Aid Responses to
Revere
1 Mutual Aid Response to
Everett
2 Medical Alert/ Well Be-
ing Checks
1 Medical: Overdoses
7 Medical: Altered Mental
Status
18 Medical: Difficulty
Breathing
10 Medical: Injuries From
A Fall
17 Medical: Cardiac Disorder/ Chest Pains
6 Medical: Illness/Pain/Unable to Ambulate
8 Medical: Unresponsive
Person
4 Medical: Child Birth/Labor Pains
2 Medical: Bleeding/Laceration
2 Medical: Seizure
11 Medical: Trauma Injury
2 Medical: Ingested Poison/Alcohol Poisoning
3 Medical: Hypo/Hypertensive Person
3 Medical: Injury From an
Assault
POLICE Log
4 Medical: Diabetic Emergency
2 Medical: CVA/Stroke
1 Medical: Person Stabbed
1 Medical: Pedestrian
Struck by MV
1 Medical: Burn Injury
1 Medical: Cardiac Arrest/
CPR Initiated
2 Medical: Not Breathing/
Choking/CPR Initiated
1 Medical: Flu Symptoms/
EVD Protocol
1 Medical: Industrial Accident
2 Assist the Police Department
1 Hazmat: Level Zero Release (Less than 10 gallons)
2 Hazmat: Level 1 Release
(Over 10 gallons)
For news and fire department information, follow the
Chelsea Fire Department on
Twitter @ChelseaFD
January 13
Anthony Todisco, 26, 56
Mudge St., Lynn, was arrested for operating motor vehicle
with suspended/revoked license, distribute Class B drug,
possessing to distribute Class
B drug, conspiracy to violate
narcotic violations.
Dean Todisco, 26, 250
Congress Ave., Chelsea, was
arrested for possessing distribute Class B drug, conspiracy to violate drug law.
Jonathan Del Valle, 27, 163
Bloomingdale St., Chelsea,
was arrested for operation of
motor vehicle unlicensed.
Melissa Hardy, 36, 763
Broadway, Chelsea, was arrested for possessing Class
B drug, conspiracy to violate
drug law.
Joao Ribeiro, 37, 28 Devens St., Everett, was arrested
for operating motor vehicle
with suspended/revoked license, improper right turn,
one-way violation, warrant.
January 14
Hector Torres-Cruz, 18,
1234 Soldiers Field Rd.,
Brighton, was arrested for receiving stolen motor vehicle,
larceny of motor vehicle, operation of motor vehicle unlicensed, stop sign violation,
negligent operation of motor
vehicle, speeding, malicious
destruction of property, stop
sign violation, using motor
vehicle without authority.
Tito Linaresm 14 Lynn St.,
Chelsea, was arrested for operation of motor vehicle unlicensed.
Luis Solorzano, 19, 18
Daniel Pl., Lynn, was arrested
on a warrant.
Emerald Crowley, 18, 86
Holyoke St., Lynn, was arrested for being common nightwalker.
January 15
Emerald Crowley, 18, 86
Holyoke St., Lynn, was arrested for shoplifting.
Bradd Flowers, 31, 418
Border St., East Boston, was
arrested on a felony warrant.
Erick Vega, 22, 131 Heard
St., Chelsea, was arrested for
distributing Class D drug.
1/16
Stefany Soriano, 24, 15
Shurtleff St., Chelsea, was
arrested for operating motor
vehicle unlicensed, marked
lanes violation.
Thomas Fitzpatrick, 47,
39 Winlock Rd., Boston, MA
was arrested for disorderly
Luberto’s Bakery owner Danny Luberto and Suffolk County Sheriff Steven Tompkins at Luberto’s
Bakery Broadway, Revere on Monday to promote the friendly wager between Sheriff Tompkins and
King County (Seattle) Sheriff John Urquhart. If the Patriots happen to lose the Super Bowl, Tompkins
will have to ship one dozen Luberto’s lobster tail pastries to the King County Department.
Luberto's makes Seahawk bet a reality
By Seth Daniel
Sheriff Steven Tompkins and
Revere bakery owner Danny
Luberto are betting their tail that
the New England Patriots will
prevail in this weekend’s Super
Bowl – a lobster tail pastry,
that is.
Tompkins made an official appearance at Luberto’s
Bakery on Broadway Monday
to announce the friendly Super
Bowl wager between the local
Sheriff here in Suffolk County
and the other coast’s Sheriff,
John Urquhart of King County
(Seattle).
“This is a little cross country
collegiality and it’s fun and a
way to build goodwill between
Boston and Seattle, even though
we’re going to beat them in
the game,” said Tompkins.
“The King County Sheriff’s
Department is one of the finest
law enforcement agencies in the
country and the Seahawks are
a solid team, but the Lombardi
Cup is coming back to New
England.”
Urquhart had a similar confidence in his team, the Seattle
Seahawks.
“The
Suffolk
County
Sheriff’s Department and the
New England Patriots may
have a strong history, but the
Seahawks and the 12th Man
have destiny on their side,” he
said. “No fan of the Seahawks
will ever lose faith in our team’s
ability to win the big game.”
As part of the friendly wager,
Tompkins said that in the unlikely event that the Patriots lose the
Super Bowl, he will have to ship
one dozen gigantic Luberto’s
lobster tail pastries to the King
County, WA Department.
However, in the more than
likely event that the Patriots win
the Super Bowl, Tompkins will
gratefully accept one dozen 12th
Man Cupcakes from Cupcake
Royale in Seattle and a selection
of Fran’s Chocolates, also of
Seattle.
Tompkins
said
his
Department reached out to
Sheriff Urquhart to propose
the wager, which was warmly
accepted.
He said they wanted to choose
a Revere business that had been
affected by the July tornado.
Last July, Luberto’s found
itself in the path of a powerful
tornado that damaged a number of homes and businesses in
Revere and Chelsea.
Luberto said he was happy
that his business was chosen.
“What else can you ask for?”
he said.
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Income Limits 1 $47,450 5 $73,200 2 $54,200 6 $78,600 3 $61,000 7 $84,050 4 $67,750 8 $89,450 For Advertising
Rates, Call
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Page 3
Affordable Housing Restrictions Apply Units Sales Price 2 Bedrooms $147,000 3 Bedrooms $217,000 3 Bedrooms $217,000 4 Bedrooms $229,800 Black
January 19
Janna Casali, 35, 18 Tucker
St., Medford, was arrested for
shoplifting.
Robert Zucchari, 45, 161
Walnut St., Chelsea, was arrested for shoplifting.
Christopher Barry, 24, 21
Folly Mill Terr. Seabrook,
NH, was arrested for larceny
over $250, warrants.
Deshawn Wesley, 23, 63
Furnace St., Sharon, was arrested for assault and battery
with a dangerous weapon.
January 20
Robert Hinckley, 20, 21
Hooper St., Chelsea, was arrested for operating motor vehicle with suspended/revoked
license, failure to stop for police, speeding, fail to stop for
signal, reckless operation of
motor vehicle, carrying firearm without license, carrying
loaded firearm without license, possessing ammunition
without FID card, receivingp
stolen property over $250,
possessing to distribute Class
B drug, Possessing Class D
drug.
January 21
Abdirahman Hassan, 34,
235 Webster Ave., Chelsea,
was arrested for fail to signal,
operating motor vehicle unlicensed.
Jason Latimore, 31, 21
Shafter St., Boston, was arrested for operating motor ve-
hicle with suspended license,
violation of stop sign, failure
to wear seat belt, resisting arrest, threat to commit crime.
Angel Andrades, 44, 5
Webster Ct., Chelsea, was arrested on a warrant, operating
motor vehicle with suspended/
revoked license, distribution
of Class B drug, uninsured
motor vehicle.
January 22
Joseph Claudio, 22, 295
Spruce St., Chelsea, was arrested for assault with dangerous weapon, assault and battery with a dangerous weapon,
larceny over $250.
Donta Lewis, 21, 1486
Washington St., Boston, was
arrested on a warrant.
Louis-Jean Diemyre, 49,
824 Broadway, Chelsea, was
arrested on a warrant.
1/23
Jonathan Luna, 26, 58
Crescent Ave., Chelsea, was
arrested for felony warrant,
possessing ammunition without FID card, possessing to
distribute cocaine, possessing to distribute Class a drug,
drug vioation near scho9ol.
park, intimidation of witness/
juror, police, court official.
Michael Campagna, 24, 3
Seal Harbor, Winthrop, was
arrested on a warrant.
Carlos Escobar, 35, 304
Broadway, Chelsea, was arrested for violation of abuse
prevention order, warrant.
Kelley Hardy, 32, 37 Glendale St., Everett, was arrested
for multiple warrants.
Shaunta hearns, 28, 75 Putnam St., East Boston, was arrested for sexual conduct for
fee, furnishing false name,
warrant.
Jeffrey Soloman, 43, 534
Revere St., Revere, was arrested for operating motor vehicle with suspended/revoked
license, red light violation,
failure to wear seat belt.
January 24
Jorge Pineda, 33, 173 Winnisimmet St., Chelsea, was arrested for Operating under the
Influence of liquor.
Roger Romero, 34, 92
Grove St., Chelsea, was arrested on multiple warrants.
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For more information contact: Chelsea Restoration Corporation 154 Pearl St., Office #2 Chelsea, MA 02150 Phone: (617) 889-­‐2277 [email protected] conduct.
Rhiannon Riley, 36, 46
Gardner St., Chelsea, was arrested on a warrant.
Daniel Shepardson, 32, 14
School St., Chelsea, was arrested for felony warrant.
Bernabe Reyes-Rivas, 49,
72 Willow St., Chelsea, was
arrested for possessing open
alcoholic beverage in public,
furnishing false name.
January 17
Tracy Syverian, 35, 87 Cottage St., Chelsea, was arrested for assault and battery on
a family member, assault and
battery, malicious destruction
of property.
Domenic Crespo, 45, 17
Franklin St., Lynn, was arrested on felony warrants.
x 110
x 103
x 125
x 106
x 104
[email protected]
[email protected]
[email protected]
[email protected]
[email protected]
Page 4
Phone: 617-884-2416 Fax: 781-485-1403
Forum
Chelsea
R e c o r d
PRESIDENT: Stephen Quigley
EDITOR IN CHIEF: Cary Shuman
SNOW IN CHELSEA
THURSDAY, JANUARY 29, 2015
Money/
Continued from Page 1
Chelsea took a big hit from the snow storm this week, but
luckily citizens decided to make the best of it and work together
*$13.07 million to the CMF first deposits to the fund from
to clear the snow to the best of their ability – and have a little fun
*$40.2 million to the Gam- gaming license fees were
in the process.
around $17.5 million.
ing Local Aid Fund
PHOTOS BY KATY ROGERS
MGC officials said the
*$5.03 million to the Race
CMF will be allocating
Horse Development Fund
*$2.01 million to the Mass $100,000 planning grants
from the fund this year to
Tourism Fund
*$9.05 million to the Local communities that are host or
surrounding communities – or
Capital Projects Fund
Of course, other casino and even those that applied to be
slot parlor operators would host or surrounding commualso be contributing monies to nities and were denied.
That limited amount of
those funds as well.
“This CMT is only one of money comes due to the fact
the pots of money available,” that there is really nothing to
said Ron Hogan, a planning mitigate yet due to the fact that
analyst for the City of Mal- construction hasn’t started.
den. “There’s a transportation Therefore, for the initial year
mitigation fund and several of grants, the MGC decided to
others too that can be accessed award planning grants to comas well by communities. You munities to study the potential
Sosa, second from the left, decided to make removing snow
really, as a community, have factors they could face due to
a community effort by helping his neighbors throughout
to be out there quickly and be the construction and opening
the storm on Winthrop Road.
aware of all that’s available of a casino.
With so much money at
and getting at it if you want
to get the maximum bene- stake, one would think that
fit…It’s the old saying that most every community is
the squeaky wheel gets the chomping at the bit to get a
piece of the newfound revgrease.”
The money is over and enues. However, it isn’t the
above any other surrounding case as some communities
community agreements or have jumped out in front to
host community agreements get in the pipeline, others have
that are in effect, and it is sole- been slow to understand that
ly upon individual communi- the pots of money are available and others have been hesties to apply for the grants.
That first deadline for itant to participate in the prothe first pot of money – the cess due to ongoing litigation.
The City of Boston would
Community Mitigation Fund
(CMF) – comes on Monday, have likely qualified for the
Feb. 2, and will continue each $100,000 planning grant from
year per state law on the first the CMT, something that
business day of February. Al- could be put towards ongoing
ready, millions of dollars have traffic and community planbeen deposited into the var- ning efforts just underway in
ious state gaming tax funds, Charlestown.
However, the City would
though the CMF will be limited this year. Reportedly, the 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.”
end of Broadway where one
would have never thought a
hotel would land.
Foley said it probably
doesn’t make sense to the naked eye, but once one understands the business model and
the region’s needs that lie behind such decisions, it makes
far more sense.
“The Convention and Visitors Bureau cannot host some
of the largest conventions because we don’t have enough
rooms,” she said. “We can really compete as a convention
city if we build more hotel
rooms.”
That’s the model for so
many hotel companies like
Colwen and the Wyndham for
expansion.
Colwen will open its
Homewood Suites by Hilton
across from Chelsea High
School in November.
In Cambridge, near the
Somerville line, they are set to
open a Fairfield Inn & Suites
later this year.
The all new Marriott brand,
the AC Hotel, is currently under construction by Colwen at
Station’s Landing in Medford.
Meanwhile, Colwen is planning an Autograph by Marriott hotel for Somerville’s
Assembly Row in the near
future.
Another Colwen AC Hotel with 200 rooms has been
approved for the Ink Block
development area in Boston’s
South End where the Boston
Herald used to operate.
All of the hotels from Colwen are geared to a particular
market, though. That market
is the Millennial Generation
that, demographically speaking, shuns the ritzy confines of
a luxury hotel and embraces
smaller, less expensive hotels
with solid amenities and nice,
open lobby/social spaces.
“The Millennials want a
less expensive place to stay
with limited services and not
so much a luxury hotel,” she
said. “We think that we’ll see
a lot of change towards that.
They want their free Wi-Fi.
They want to be in a fun area
and they want to sit in lobbies
and socialize. That’s exactly
what we offer.”
Hotel/Continued from Page 1
Scotty Monte spent the snow day shoveling the driveway
for his family. Arianna Summa stood atop a snow mound much taller than
her. Minutes later, she swooped to the bottom at record
speeds.
Chelsea
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ing to Smith Travel Research,
Boston’s hotel occupancy
rates (which include Chelsea)
ranked 7th in the top 25 market areas in 2013. That was
behind prime places like New
York, Hawaii, Miami Beach,
San Francisco and Los Angeles. The occupancy rate for
2013 was around 73 percent.
This year, the 2015 projections for occupancy are way
up.
The Pinnacle Group predicts that Boston occupancy
rates will be at 80 percent this
year, which is up 7 percent
from 2013. Meanwhile, the
average room cost per night
is predicted to be $255.94.
Those numbers would be
some of the best occupancy
rates and room rates for just
about any market in the United States.
Meanwhile, the Boston
Convention Center in South
Boston’s Seaport District
is driving the growth in hotels tremendously and many
guests in Chelsea’s hotels
look to be those heading to the
Seaport District.
Foley said she believes that
a lot of hotel spillover from
the Seaport District does end
up in Chelsea, and that will
really be true once the Silver
Line is completed from the
Seaport to the Mystic Mall.
“That will be an absolute
game changer,” she said.
As it is now, Boston is 39th
on the list of having the most
International meetings in a
market – meetings that take
place at the Boston Convention Center or the Hynes Convention Center.
While 39th sounds like an
“iffy” proposition, that worldwide number is higher than
Washington, D.C. (43rd),
New York City (64th) and
Chicago (65th).
The number is also tempered by the fact that the Boston Convention and Visitors
Bureau cannot book some of
the largest conventions due to
the fact that the Greater Boston area doesn’t have enough
hotel rooms to handle such
things.
Therein lays the drive behind the expansion of hotels
in Chelsea – in places like
Marginal Street and the upper
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The Chelsea Record • Thursday, January 29, 2015
Phone: 617-884-2416 Fax: 781-485-1403
Page 5
Local hoop star Johnna Fisher says her college career is over
By Cary Shuman
Johnna Fisher, who was a
Northeastern Conference AllStar for the Winthrop High Vikings and went on to play for
Division 1 Central Connecticut State University, is hanging
up her sneakers.
The 6-foot-3-inch senior at
CCSU is the daughter of former college basketball star
John Fisher and the granddaughter of Chlesea resident
Lee Gallant.
Fisher said she is retiring
from the game she has played
competitively since middle
school. She is sitting out her
fourth and final collegiate
season due to knee problems,
having undergone five surgeries on her right knee in the past
three years.
Fisher, who will graduate in
May with a degree in Sociology
and a minor in Physical Education, played three full seasons
for the CCSU Blue Devils. Her
big-time basketball experience
included games at the University of Texas, the University of
Central Florida, the University
of Miami, and Boston College.
“Texas’s arena was huge,”
said Fisher. “All their facilities were amazing, especially
their football stadium. After
our game at UCF in Orlando, the team went to Disney
World.” During her college
career, Fisher played against
a few local players, including
former Winthrop High and Arlington Catholic standout Meredith Soper, who was a starting
player for Division 1 Bryant
University.
Fisher said playing Division 1 college basketball challenged her athletically and
academically because of the
many hours of practice and
conditioning that is expected
at that level.
“It was different that I expected,” said Fisher. “It was
tougher than I thought. With
the time commitment, you
really don’t have time to do
much. We practiced Mondays
and Wednesdays at 6 a.m. and
afternoon practices starting at
1:45 the other days. On a typical day for a home game, we
have a pre-game meal at 3 p.m.
and then we head to the gym
at 4 p.m. and we have to be on
the court at 6 p.m.”
At Winthrop High, Fish-
BRUINS Beat
er played basketball for three
different head coaches: Peter
Grimes, Dave Nagle, and Ignacio Oyola.
Grimes was a terrific mentor early in her career, naming
her an assistant manager in the
program while she was in elementary and middle school
and inviting her to compete on
occasion with the varsity.
“My father [John Fisher]
introduced me to Mr. Grimes
when I was young and he really took me under his wing,”
said Fisher. “He really helped
my basketball career a lot.”
The best game of her Winthrop career was a dominating performance in her senior
year against Gloucester when
she scored 30 points, grabbed
20 rebounds, and blocked 10
shots.
“We won by one point,”
said Fisher with a smile.
Fisher said she learned at a
young age that she was going
to be tall. “The doctor told me
right away – 6-3 or 6-4 and I
was like, OK. I was in the 99th
percentile for height and she
told me I was going to be tall
like my dad.”
John Fisher, Johnna’s father,
by Bob Morello
stands 6 feet, 6 inches, and developed in to an excellent college player following a growth
spurt after high school. John
was known for his soft shooting touch, passing skills, and
rebounding and was regarded
as a consummate team player.
Her mother, Michelle Favaloro, is 5-feet-8.
John would frequently take
his daughter to hone her skills
at local basketball courts.
“My father would take me
to shoot around all the time
and teach me stuff and I really wouldn’t believe him at that
point,” said Johnna. “Then
when I got older, I realized all
the things that my father taught
me about basketball were right
and he really was good at basketball.”
She made her debut in CYO
basketball and continued in
the sport at Winthrop Middle
School. In high school in addition to basketball, she also
played goalkeeper for the
soccer team for three seasons
under coach Tracey Martucci.
“I played goalie behind Rina
[Mallios] for two years,” said
Fisher.
As a Winthrop varsity
player, Fisher had the opportunity to play with some of
the victorious Team Toews.
Bergeron in his first ever NHL
All-Star invitation showed
why many still question as
to why he had not been selected in previous years. The
main benefactor of Bergeron’s
play was Islanders’ John Tavares who scored a goal in
each of the three periods, as
he was on the receiving end
of a Bergeron pass each time
to score the ‘hat trick,’ on his
way to tying an All-Star game
record with four goals in the
game.
The Bruins’ record at home
(15-7-4) shows strong signs
that they prefer home cooking, which should be a plus,
as four of their next six games
will be on Garden ice. Following tonight’s game, the B’s return to TD Garden to take on
the Los Angeles Kings (Saturday, 1/31 @ 7:00pm). The
Kings are also fighting for
a playoff position, currently
sitting in ninth place in the
Western conference, three
points out of a playoff spot.
The month of February begins with a trip to New York
(Wednesday, 2/4 @ 8:00pm),
to take on the Rangers who
hold down the sixth spot in the
Eastern Conference. The Islanders will take the ice at the
Garden on Saturday, 2/7 @
7:00pm, as the Bruins begin a
three-game homestand. Visiting the B’s on Monday, 2/8 @
7:30pm will be division-rival
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Montreal, ending their home
stay with a Tuesday, 2/10 @
7:00pm confrontation with
the Dallas Stars, another team
fighting for a playoff spot.
Former Bruin Tyler Seguin is
feeling ‘at home on the range’
playing for Dallas, his impressive stats include having appeared in all 47 Stars’ games
to date, scoring 28 goals/25
assists for a solid 53 points.
Consistency in their play
was the key word that Bruins CEO Charlie Jacobs used
when demanding better play
from the Bruins’ team – the
players showed signs of meeting his demands with a 6-1-3
record prior to the All-Star
break. Without a doubt the
return of two key components
– Zdeno Chara and David
Krejci, played a big part in
that streak. It now remains to
be seen whether the weeklong
layoff has benefited or hurt
Chara, as he continues to recuperate from a knee injury.
The Bruins will be able to
put another feather in their
helmet, as the National Hockey League recently announced
during All-Star weekend, that
the 2016 Bridgestone NHL
Winter Classic will feature the
Boston Bruins and Montreal
Canadiens at Gillette Stadium in Foxborough, MA, on
January 1, 2016. When these
long-time rivals meet, Boston will become the first NHL
team to host the Bridgestone
NHL Winter Classic for a
second time, after defeating
the Philadelphia Flyers 2-1 in
overtime at the 2010 Bridgestone NHL Winter Classic at
Fenway Park. It will mark the
first time the Canadiens will
play in the Bridgestone NHL
Winter Classic, and just the
second time a Canadian-based
NHL team will play in the
game, following Toronto’s appearance in 2014.
Bruins fans were saddened
to hear of the passing of Bob
Wilson, the radio voice of the
Boston Bruins for more than
two decades, retiring in 1995.
Wilson recently succumbed to
lung cancer at the age of 85,
and Bruins President Cam
Neely commented, “For a
generation of New England
hockey fans, Bob’s legendary
voice was synonymous with
the Bruins and he will always
be a part of our club’s history.
Our thoughts are with Nancy
and their children during this
difficult time.” Bob Wilson’s
voice will never be silenced; it
will play in the head of Bruins
fans for a long time!
Black
Johnna Fisher is the daughter
of former Chelsea resident
John Fisher and granddaughter of Chelsea resident Lee
Gallant.
ers,” said Fisher. “I’ve worked
with Jaida Hightower, Poli Tsiotos, and Nina Bartlette, who’s
a Division 1 prospect. This is
a really good Winthrop team.
But there are still things we can
improve on, though. ”
Fisher said following her
commencement in May, she
hopes to pursue a Master’s degree in Athletic Administration
at Endicott College in Beverly.
“Eventually I’d like to be
an athletic director,” said Fisher. “I hope to be able to assist
coach Oyola in the program
next season. I want to coach
and be an athletic administrator at a high school or college.”
CHS Roundup
Bruins prepare to pump up the volume
Tonight (Thursday) the
Bruins resume their push to
the playoffs following their
five-day All-Star break, hosted by the very competitive
New York Islanders. Currently the Islanders stand at the
top of the Metropolitan Division, ahead of the Pittsburgh
Penguins. More importantly,
they are tied with the Detroit
Red Wings for the top spot in
the Eastern Conference standings, with a game in hand. Six
games in two weeks sounds
like a pretty sparse schedule
for the B’s, but there is little
doubt that it will be an easy
one.
Along
with
tonight’s
matchup with the Islanders,
the teams will meet twice
during this two-week stretch.
The Islanders have benefited
from the play of former Bruins defenseman Johnny Boychuk who has played well,
earning 24 points (4-20) in
37 games. The B’s will also
face the New York Rangers,
Los Angeles Kings, and division-rival Montreal Canadiens. In a sense it gives Boston the opportunity to face a
series of tough games, as they
prepare to get their rhythm
back to playing ‘Bruins style’
hockey.
Boston fans will also have
the chance to salute Patrice
Bergeron tonight on his outstanding five-point NHL AllStar showing as a member of
the school’s all-time best athletes, including Courtney Finn
(All-American in basketball
at Bentley), her sister, Kristen
Finn (Bates College), Katerina
Mallios (Babson College), and
Nicole Giaquinto (All-American in track at UMass/Lowell).
Asked if she had ever
dunked the basketball during a
game or practice, she replied,
“I can touch the rim but I’ve
never dunked.”
Fisher received a four-year
college scholarship, selecting
CCSU over Division 1 and Division 2 schools that had corresponded with her. She said she
is sad that her playing days are
over.
“It was really hard at first
to give up the game,” said
Fisher, who is the coordinator
of CCSU’s intramural sports
leagues. “My parents were really supportive of my decision
and thinking about my future.
They have been supportive
through all of it, everything
that I’ve done.”
Fisher has spent part of her
winter break as a volunteer
coach on Ignacio Oyola’s staff
at Winthrop.
“I try to focus on the post
players because that’s where I
can relate and give some point-
Red Devil hoopmen
drop two contests.
The Chelsea High basketball team came out on the
short end of a pair of contests
this week, falling to Medford,
52-42, and then to Mystic Valley, 62-51. The twin defeats
drop the Red Devils below
the .500 mark to 5-6 as they
cross the midway point of the
season.
Chelsea fell behind early
by a wide margin to Medford,
trailing 22-10 after one period,
31-17 at the half, and 45-29
after three frames. However,
the Red Devils came alive in
the final quarter, engaging in
a furious comeback that saw
Chelsea draw within four 4642, with two minutes to play.
But that would be as close as
the Red Devils would get and
Medford held on to prevail by
a final score of 52-42.
CHS captain Eric Flores,
whose nine points in the final frame keyed the Chelsea
effort in the final quarter, finished with 13 points on the
night. Franklin Cruz hit for 12
points, followed by Angel Alvarez with six, Eric Fernandez
with five, Jahro Marshall with
four, and Guillermo Zelata
with two.
Chelsea next played Mystic Valley Friday evening.
The contest was a close affair
at the half, with MV holding
a 25-23 edge. However, the
Red Devils fell into a funk after the intermission, allowing
Mystic Valley to move out to
a 12 point lead from which
Chelsea never was able fully
to recover. Although the Red
Devils did get within four in
the final quarter, they ended
up on the short end of a 62-51
outcome.
Flores had a big game and
paced Chelsea with 27 points.
Cruz reached double figures
with 10, followed by Chris
Torres with four, Zelata with
three, and the duo of Marshall
and Albie Alicea with two
each.
"Our inconsistent play
has been disappointing and
has really hurt us," said CHS
head coach Jay Seigal. "When
we're able to put together four
solid periods in a game, we do
well, but that was not the case
in our two games this week."
Chelsea was scheduled to
play Greater Lawrence this
past Tuesday, and though the
game was moved up to Monday, it was postponed thanks
to Mother Nature. The Red
Devils were scheduled to
be back in action yesterday
(Wednesday) at Arlington
Catholic, but that contest too,
most likely was postponed.
Assuming the snow finally
comes to an end, Chelsea will
host Lynn Tech Friday at 5:30
and Arlington Catholic next
Wednesday at 7:00.
CHS track teams do
well vs. Medford
Although both the Chelsea
High boys and girls indoor
track teams fell to Medford
last Thursday, both teams
gave fine performances in
close meets.
The Lady Red Devils
came out on the short end of
a 52-33 decision. First place
finishers for Chelsea were
Mariama Kamara, who sprinted to victory in the 55 meter
dash in 7.7. seconds; Katherine Cabral, who captured the
300 dash in a state-qualifying
performance of 43.9; Wendy
Becerra, who took first in the
mile in a clocking of 6:45;
and Hassatu Dialo, who outdistanced the field in the twomile run in 15:32 in her first
time running that event.
Other point scorers for
Chelsea were Martine Simon
with a third in the 55 dash
in 8.1; Owliyo Muhammad
with a second in the 600 in
a tough race in 1:56.4; Awa
Bajinka with a third in the
600 in 2:05.7; Emely Burgos
with a second in the 1000 in
4:06; Eva Hernandez with
a third in the 1000 in 4:10;
Cynthia Guzman with a third
in the mile in 7:34; and Jasmine Castelleno with a toss of
26'- 8" in the shotput that was
good for second place.
The Lady Red Devils finished their inaugural indoor
season in the Greater Boston
League with a 2-3 record.
"We are only one or two
athletes away from being
one of the top teams in the
league," said CHS head coach
Mark Martineau. "Adding to
that promise is the fact that
we are graduating very few of
our athletes and none of our
top scorers. A lot of credit
needs to go to coach Rebecca Hayes who spends a lot of
team with each athlete working with them to achieve their
best every week. Without the
guidance of Hayes, this girls'
team would not have been
as successful as it has. This
team is looking good for years
to come."
On the boys' side, the Red
Devils performed well in a
meet that was close the whole
way, with Medford ultimately
prevailing by a slim 48-37 final tally.
First place finishers for
Chelsea were Cris Sanyet in
the 300 dash in a time of 39.0;
Jeffrey Estrada in the 600 dash
in 1:37.1; Sam Hernandez in
the 1000 in 3:13; Cris Lemus
in the mile in 5:42; and Luka
Braga with his first win of the
season in the shot-put with a
throw of 34'01'2".
"Luka has been getting
stronger and stronger each
week," noted Martineau.
Red Devils who placed
three points onto the Chelsea
side of the scoresheet with
second-place finishes were:
Marcone Correa in the 600 in
1:42; Brian Horn in the 1000
in 3:15; and Ronald Castro in
the mile in 5:46.
Third place efforts came
from Isaac Colcord in the 55
hurdles in 11.8; Josue Reyes
in the two-mile run in 13:27;
and Sanyet with a shot-put
toss of 31'-6.5".
"The meet was back and
forth the whole way," said
Martineau, "but we lacked the
depth to be able to pull it out in
the end. The boys had a tough
season overall, but several of
our athletes are among the
best in the GBL and should do
very well in the GBL championships. Looking to next year
we have several holes to fill
due to some key graduations,
but hopefully more athletes
will come out for the team in
its second season."
Next up for both the boys
and girls teams is the GBL
championship meet this Saturday at the Reggie Lewis
Center in Boston.
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Black
The Chelsea Record • Thursday, January 29, 2015
Page 6
Phone: 617-884-2416 Fax: 781-485-1403
MGC receives new exterior
of Wynn Everett design
positively, calling it ‘Iconic’
By Seth Daniel
Wynn Everett officials unveiled a first look at the new
design of its Lower Broadway casino last Thursday at
the Massachusetts Gaming
Commission (MGC) meeting,
showing an outside view of a
building that was much more
like the curvy, bronze Wynn
Encore resort in Las Vegas
than its previous straight up
and down tower for Everett.
While it was expected that
Steve Wynn would personally unveil his new conceptual
designs, which are reported
to be a collaboration between
Wynn, Roger Thomas (Wynn
executive VP of design) and
DeRuyter Butler (Wynn executive VP of architecture), that
did not take place.
Instead of complete floor
plans and renderings of the
entire project, Wynn Everett
officials chose to unveil only
the new exterior rendering –
which was much more like
a Wynn signature Las Vegas
design that the earlier tower
design that the MGC rejected
in September.
Bob DeSalvio of Wynn
Everett said the remaining designs are still under consideration, and will be unveiled in
the near future.
“The floor plans and other
elevations are in Las Vegas
where designers are reviewing the layouts,” said DeSalvio. “Final floor plans will
come at a later date. The design team is currently working on renderings for the interiors. They want to look at the
spaces in their proper context.
They might make a model to
do that so they can observe
how those spaces work.”
Other changes, though not
visual, were revealed.
Due to the new design being larger, DeSalvio said they
have gone from around 550
hotel rooms to approximately
629 rooms.
“The increase in rooms will
add jobs, some housekeeping
and some supervisors,” he
said. “For the most part, the
jobs increase will mostly be
in the housekeeping and supervisory areas.”
Also, the waterfront nightclub that would have sat at the
tip of the retail esplanade on
the banks of the Mystic River
has largely been scrapped in
favor of a function space and
meeting room area.
“The folks in Las Vegas
helped us think though the
way to approach the outdoor
space and green area and how
we want to use that,” he said.
“We have removed [the
nightclub] from the plan,” he
continued. “We felt having
the meeting areas in that spot
would have more use.”
Instead of the nightclub,
DeSalvio said they would
likely have a dual use for the
Andrea’s Restaurant proposed
for the resort. That restaurant
would be transformed into a
nightclub style entertainment
space after a certain hour, he
said.
Another revelation was
the fact that the project has
chopped off 300 parking
spaces from the garage, going
from 3,700 spaces to 3,400.
DeSalvio said that was directly due to comments they
received during the environmental review – comments
that urged them to call for
more promotion of mass transit and less reliance on parking for vehicles.
“Comments we got in the
FEIR asked us to take a look
at how to encourage more
mass transit,” DeSalvio said.
“We wanted to be very responsive to the comments we
received.”
Commissioners received
the peek into the new design
very well, making all positive
comments.
“It looks great,” said MGC
Chair Steve Crosby. “It’s a
major improvement over the
design from before. This is
going to be incredible visually for most people…Hopefully it will be more visible
than the windmill nearby…
It’s exciting and something to
be proud of.”
Said Commissioner Enrique Zuniga, “I think it’s really iconic.”
Commissioner
Jim
McHugh – who was instrumental in calling for a different design – said he liked
what he saw so far.
“I’m happy our request to
re-think the design has been
taken so seriously and has resulted in a different approach
to this,” he said.
The next milestone in the
Commissioners, including Gayle Cameron and Jim McHugh,
looked over the new renderings and made positive comments
last Thursday.
A look at the previous iteration of the Wynn Everett project
(above), a simple white tower, and the newest design (below) unveiled last Thursday at the MGC meeting, which is a more curvy,
bronze glass look reminiscent of the signature Wynn Encore
resort in Las Vegas.
Commissioners take in the newly unveiled plan on the screen last
Thursday.
Folks from Everett and members of Everett United gathered to support the new plans. (front, left to right) Lee Glennon, Lovanne
Zawodny and Marie Tozzi. (back, left to right) Councillor Mike Mangan, State Rep. Joe McGonagle, Regan Thistle, John Tocco of Wynn
Everett, Michael McLaughlin and Bobby Rowley.
process is expected to be the
release of the final environmental report, which will
focus exclusively on traffic
remediation. That process
has been underway since the
license was awarded in September and is expected by
Jan. 30.
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Running Weeks of
February 4th and February 1th
Call or email your Rep.
781-485-0558
Kathy Bright - [email protected]
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Page 7
The Chelsea Record • Thursday, January 29, 2015
Phone: 617-884-2416 Fax: 781-485-1403
EASTPOINTE HOLDS 3 KINGS CELEBRATION
The Eastpointe Rehabilitation on Central Avenue in Chelsea
hosted a 3 Kings Celebration on Jan. 4, which was organized
by Chelsea residents Carishmar and Loira Moore. The celebration was supported by St. Rose Church, Gladys Vega, BD’s
Discount, Compare Supermarkets, Allen’s Perfumers on Broadway, TND and several other volunteers.
Playing the role of the 3 Kings part of the day were (l-r) Mike Sandoval, State Rep. Dan Ryan and Councillor Calvin Brown.
They are pictured with a member of the Eastpointe staff.
Kathy Sugg, Officer Sammy Mojica and Henry Wilson with an
angel, Karla Delbrey.
King Juan Vega presents a
warm gift to one of the Eastpointe residents.
Playing a king, Henry Wilson
encourages one of the residents of Eastpointe.
Two of the kings, Mike Sandoval and State Rep. Dan Ryan, present
gifts to the residents.
Officer Kathy Sugg poses with resident.
Kings Mike Sandoval, Henry Wilson and Juan Vega give an encouraging gift to one of the
Eastpointe
PIONEER CHARTER
SCHOOL OF SCIENCE
Tuition Free Public Charter School
Best Public Schools in Boston
Boston Magazine, 2014
2013 State Wide District Rankings
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1st Place – Grade 10
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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
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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
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[email protected]
APPLY ONLINE at www.pioneercss.org
Call to register for open house
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Page 8
The Chelsea Record • Thursday, January 29, 2015
Phone: 617-884-2416 Fax: 781-485-1403
OBITUARIES
Gloria Mondou
Stanley Sinitski
Lifelong Chelsea resident
Famed musician, founder and leader of the
Modernistics Orchestra
Gloria C. (Brown) Mondau,
a lifelong resident of Chelsea,
died on January 24 at the Massachusetts General Hospital in
Boston. She was 65 years old.
The devoted wife of Gerry
F. Mondou, Sr. , she was the
beloved mother of Gerry F.
Mondou, Jr. of Chelsea; dear
sister of Harold Brown of
North Carolina, Nancy Cardone and Kathy Torres, both
of Chelsea, John Brown of
Lynn and the late Patricia Pizzaro and Michael Brown. She
is also lovingly survived by
many nieces and nephews.
Family and friends are
kindly invited to attend a Funeral from the Smith Funeral
Home, 125 Washington Avenue, Chelsea on Monday,
February 2 at 9 a.m. followed
by a Funeral Mass to be celebrated in St. Rose Church, 600
Broadway, Chelsea at 10 a.m.
Visiting Hours in the Smith
Funeral Home on Sunday will
be from 1 to p.m. Services will
conclude with interment at
Puritan Lawn Memorial Park.
Expressions of sympathy in
Gloria’s name may be made to
the American Cancer Society,
30 Speen St., Framingham,
MA 01701. To send a message
of condolence to Gloria’s family, please visit www.smithfuneralhomes.com
Irma Eloisa Pena ‘Tia’
Cardona
Voted “Mother of the Year” by members of the
Chelsea Senior Center
Irma Eloisa Pena ‘Tia’
Cardona passed away after a
brief illness on January 24 at
Eastpointe Nursing and Rehabilitation Center in Chelsea
where she was receiving palliative care. She was 79 years
old.
Born and raised in Honduras, she came to Chelsea over
40 years ago to make her home
and raise her family. She supported her family by working
as a housekeeper at the Chelsea Jewish Nursing Home for
more than 25 years, retiring
at age 62. She was a devoted
member of the St. Rose Parish
William R.
Carafa
& Son
Home for Funerals
389 Washington Ave.
Chelsea
617-884-4188
Amy Carafa
William R. Carafa Funeral Directors
Community and was an active participant at the Chelsea
Senior Center and was more
than once voted “Mother of
the Year” by center members.
Irma was preceded in death
by her sister Josefina de Murillo and her brother Sergio
Tejeda. She is survived by
her beloved daughter Lesvia
Esther Caceres and adored
granddaughter Irma Esther
Caceres. She was the cherished “Tia” to her nieces,
grandnieces, grandnephews
and countless extended family
members.
Her Funeral will be held
from the Frank A. Welsh &
Sons Funeral Home, 718
Broadway, Chelsea on Saturday January 31 at 9 a.m. followed by a Funeral Mass at St.
Rose Church, 600 Broadway,
Chelsea at 10 a.m. Services
will conclude with Interment
at St. Mary’s Cemetery in
Lynn. Relatives and friends
are most kindly invited to
attend. Visiting hours will
be held at the Welsh Funeral Home on Friday from 4 to
8 p.m.. For directions or to
send expressions of sympathy,
please visit www.WelshFuneralHome.com
In Loving Memory
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
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M.L. Torf (1867-1940)
Richard A. Pruneau
(617) 889-2900
(800)428-7161
www.torffuneralservice.com
Chester Joseph
Wozniak, Sr.
His smile and his spirit
will always be there.
God has him in
His keeping, he will
always be in the
hearts of many.
Love - Son, Chet, Jr.
Stanley B. Sinitski of Randolph, retired musician, drummer,
founder
and leader of
the Modernistics
Orchestra
for
over 63 years,
passed away on
Monday, January 26 at Winchester Hospital. He was 93
years old.
Stanley was a life member
of the Polish Falcons Nest 48
and Polish American Veterans
Post 13 of Chelsea, a member
of Pulaski Post American Legion, Knights of Columbus,
and the First Seniors of St.
Mary’s and St. Bernadette’s
in Randolph and St. Mary’s of
South Boston. He graduated
from St. Michael’s elementary school of Lynn and Rindge
Tech High School in Cambridge, class of1939.
He was a US Navy veteran of World War II, a Navy
AMM2/c serving in the North
Pacific and was awarded three
medals. He was a machinist,
mechanic and quality control
inspector employed through
the years by Boston Woven
Hose, Ace Electronics, TRG,
Control Data, and Alpha Industries.
Stanley’s greatest love
in life was Polka music. He
founded the Modernistics Orchestra in 1939. In the early
years the band could be heard
broadcasting live on the radio. For the next 63 years,
anywhere people gathered to
have a good time, weddings,
dances, picnics and parties,
the Modernistics were on the
bandstand playing that happy,
upbeat Polka music.
In the band’s TV debut
on PBS Channel 44, Stanley
was honored to be introduced
as “The Lawrence Welk of
Boston.” In 2013, he was
presented a lifetime achievement award for his years of
preforming and promoting
Polka music throughout New
England by the German Cultural Society in Pawtucket RI.
Born in South Boston on
March 28, 1921, the son of
Vincent and Alice (Post-
awska) Sinitski, formerly of
Lynn, Cambridge and Chelsea, he was the brother of the
late John Sinitski of Lynn and
was predeceased by his loving
wife of 50 years, Jean (Szklar)
and his dear friend, Bridget
(Robak) Bubencik.
He leaves behind his daughters: Christina El Maghraby of
Chelsea and Alice Rourke of
Wilmington; his son, Stanley
P. Sinitski and his wife, Gail
of Hampstead, NH; his grandchildren: Jennifer El Maghraby of Arlington , Jonathan El
Maghraby of Poultney, VT,
James Rourke and his wife,
Jessica of Columbia, SC,
Stephanie Barczak and her
husband, Dan of Londonderry NH, Kristen Vallieres and
her husband, Peter of Watertown, Eric Sinitski and his
wife, Jennifer of Salem, NH,
Emily Sinitski of Newton; two
great-grandchildren, Landon
and Sydney Barczak and nieces and nephews.
His Funeral will begin from
the Frank A. Welsh & Sons
Funeral Home, 718 Broadway,
Chelsea on Tuesday, February
3, at 8:30 a.m. followed by a
Funeral Mass at St. Stanislaus Church 163 Chestnut St.
Chelsea at 9:30 a.m. Services
will conclude with Interment
at Holy Cross Cemetery, Malden. Relatives and friends are
most kindly invited to attend.
Visiting hours will be held at
the Welsh Funeral Home on
Sunday, February 1 from 1 to
5 p.m.
Andres Daniel Jaramillo
Died Tragically
Andres Daniel Jaramillo
of Chelsea died tragically as
the result of gunshot wounds
received early Friday morning
January 23. He was 18 years
old.
Born in Boston, he grew up
in Chelsea and received his
early education at the Fessenden School in West Newton
and later went on to Chelsea
High School. He participated in basketball, football, lacrosse and soccer during his
school years. He was also involved at the Jordan Boys and
Girls Club in Chelsea where
he was recognized for his
compassion to others and his
leadership qualities.
To cherish his life and
mourn his passing, he leaves
his mother Isidra Quinones
and her fiancée, Eric Burgos
of Chelsea; his father, Andres
Felipe Jaramillo and his companion, Lina Sierra of Revere
and his four sisters: Andrea
and Sophie Jaramillo, Soliel
Allen and Laila Burgos. He is
also survived by many aunts,
uncles and cousins
. Funeral arrangements
were entrusted to the Frank
A. Welsh and Sons Funeral
Home, Chelsea.
Sophie Borum
Of Saugus, formerly of Chelsea
Sophie S. (Sikorski) Borum
of Saugus, formerly of Chelsea, passed away at home on
January 22 after a short illness. She was 90 years old.
Born and raised in Chelsea,
the beloved daughter of the
late Peter and Julia (Goryszewska) Sikorski, she married
Robert J. Borum and together they raised their family
in Chelsea. She worked for
a short time outside of her
home for Armour meatpacking company in Boston and
retired when the plant closed
its local operation. She was
a late member of the PPC in
Chelsea and the former PAV
Ladies Aux Post 13 Chelsea. During her life, Sophie
enjoyed traditional Polish
cooking, homemade sausage
making, golombki and baked
goods.
In addition to her parents,
Sophie was preceded in death
by her husband, Robert J. Borum, a granddaughter, Elisa
Borum, her siblings: the late
Stella Ciepiela, Helen Ksypka, Katie Lopezzo and John
Sikorski. She was the devoted mother of James Borum
and Christina Hawley, both
of Saugus; cherished grand-
mother of Christopher Borum,
Carla Borum, Kristin Hawley,
Robert Hawley and she is also
survived by many loving nieces and nephews.
Her Funeral will begin from
the Frank A. Welsh & Sons
Funeral Home, 718 Broadway, Chelsea on Friday, January 30 at 8:30 a.m. followed
by a Funeral Mass at St. Stanislaus Church, 163 Chestnut
St., Chelsea at 9:30 a.m. Services will conclude with interment at Woodlawn Cemetery,
Everett. Visiting hours will
be held at the Welsh Funeral
Home today, Thursday, from
4 to 8 p.m.- 8 P.M. For directions or to send expressions of
sympathy, please visit www.
WelshFuneralHome.com
Virginia Fitzgerald
Possessed a strong and independent nature
Virginia T. (Kruczek) Fitzgerald, a longtime Chelsea
resident, passed away after a
brief illness on January 23 at
the Chelsea Skilled Nursing
Center where she was receiving supportive and rehabilitation care.
Born and raised in Manchester, New Hampshire, she
was the beloved daughter of
the late Jacob and Cecelia
(Cebula) Kruczek. As a young
lady, she settled in Chelsea
together with her parents and
sister Ann Celeste. She married Chelsea Attorney John H.
FitzGerald and together they
raised their family of three
sons and one daughter. During
her lifetime, Virginia kept an
active social life as a member
of the St. Rose Ladies Sodality and recently at the Chelsea
Senior Citizens Center where
she enjoyed attending Yoga
classes, playing bocce, bowling and taking various senior
bus trips with the center.
She possessed a strong independent nature and would
chauffer friends and family to
various appointments, errands
and shopping excursions, one
could say she was a pre-“Uber
Driver.” Her favorite all time
car was an International Scout
SUV she called “Blue Bell.”
She was an avid reader and
believed in keeping active
both physically and mentally -- virtues which kept her
young in spite of any age.
In additions to her parents,
Virginia was preceded in
death by her husband, John
H. FitzGerald, Jr. a son, John
H. III, and her sister, Ann C.
Glebus. She is survived by
her beloved children and their
spouses; Mary Ann Folsom
and her husband, Frederick
of Belmont, NH, Robert FitzGerald and his wife, Susan of
Byfield, Michael FitzGerald
of Chelsea and Rosemarie
FitzGerald of Florida. She is
also survived by her cherished
grandchildren, Andrea, Michael Jr. and Kayla.
Funeral arrangements were
by the Frank A. Welsh and
Sons Funeral Home, Chelsea.
Interment was at Woodlawn
Cemetery, Everett. Should
friends desire, contributions
in her memory may be made
to the Maryknoll Missions,
PO Box 345, Maryknoll, NY
10545. For guestbook or to
send expressions of sympathy,
please visit:
www.WelshFuneralHome.
com
OBITUARIES
All obituaries
and death notices will be at a
cost of $50.00 per paper.
That includes photo.
Please send to
[email protected]
or call 781-485-0588
www.smithmemorial.com
Black
Phone: 617-884-2416 Fax: 781-485-1403
The Chelsea Record • Thursday, January 29, 2015
Page 9
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-
‘Crime and Punishment’ full of sound and fury
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 -
BUYER 1
ADemeter, David C
Youdelman, Rachel
Bowen, Jeffrey J
Ekantik Holdings LLC
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.
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 2
Farr, Haley J
SELLER 1
Lally, Michael J
Frontiero, Michael J
Herra, Christian
Williams 77 RT
SELLER 2
Fernandez, Ignacio
ADDRESS
CITY
50 Boatswains Way #206 Chelsea
60 Dudley St #118
Chelsea
16 Tremont St #1
Chelsea
77 Williams St
Chelsea
PRICE
$312,000
$258,500
$155,000
$450,000
NATIONALGUARD.com
WILL YOU BE THERE THE
MOMENT YOU’RE NEEDED?
Willyoubetherewhenalifeneedstobe
saved?Whenhomesarethreatenedbyanatural
disaster?Theansweris“yes”ifyou’reamember
oftheNationalGuard.
Learnmoreaboutbeingthereforyour
communityatwww.NATIONALGUARD.com
orcall1-800-GO-GUARD.
Brought to you as a Public Service.
Black
E
Page 10
The Chelsea Record • Thursday, January 29, 2015
Phone: 617-884-2416 Fax: 781-485-1403
• Revere • Everett • Winthrop • Lynn • East Boston • Chelsea • Charlestown
Independent Newspaper Group
Lynn
rEvErE
EvErEtt
ChELsEa
Winthrop
CharLEstoWn
East
Boston
CONDO
SHARE
• 123
APTS.
FOR RENT
Winthrop: One bedroom
2nd floor, porch, wall
to wall, ht & hot water
included, on bus line.
$875 per Month.
Call evenings 617846-5106.
ROOM FOR
RENT
RENTALS
COMMERCIAL
RENTAL:
• 123
APTS.
APARTMENT
FOR RENT
FOR RENT
CHELSEA: Available
now. Prattville area Nichols St. across from
park. Large 1BR,2nd
Floor. No Smoking,
No Pets. $1300.
781-645-2062 .
--------------------------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
More Than 100,000 Readers Each Week
7 Communities
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
617- 331-0517
Single Room for
one person, includes
utilities, cable, internet,
parking, near Busline,
$500 per month
. 781-975-2706
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
Classified
Call:
781-485-0588
Fax:
781-485-1403
• 137
----------------------------OFFICE/
OFFICE SPACE
COMM’L
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.
• 137
COMMERCIAL/
OFFICE/
WAREHOUSE
COMM’L
SPACE
RENTALS
TRANSPORTATION
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
-------DEADLINES: For
classified line ads,
deadlines are Monday
by 4 p.m. Call 781-4850588 or fax the ad to
781-485-1403
---NEED TO SELL Your
House? Call to reach
over 50,000 readers.
Call 781-485-0588 or
fax the ad to 781-4851403
----SELLING YOUR AUTO?
Call for our 4 week
special! Call 781-4850588 or fax the ad to
781-485-1403
Car Service
Sales • Rentals
Land • Commercial
RECRuItmENt
Professional • Medical
General • Services
• Auto Sales • Yard Sales
• Miscellaneous
• 272 GENERA L
HELP WANTED
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
LEGAL NOTICE
Career Fair
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.
Tuesday, February
January 3rd
7:00am – 5:00pm
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.
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
FACILITIES TECHNICIAN – Full time
The Chelsea Jewish Foundation is seeking competent, caring and kind individuals that take pride
in delivering excellence in serving others, especially our elderly population.
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.
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.
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
EVERETT: Commercial/
$ for
$
Industrial building
lease.
Office 2,500 SF.
Ride Right Transportation Inc.
Garage/Warehouse
3,000 SF. 4 Loading 24 HOUR/7 DAY TAXI Service
docks & 60,000 SF
Parking lot. Call (617)
884-0168
Must have experience,
3
REaL EstatE
TAXI DRIVERS
781-284-5300
WANTED
781-284-5300
with
current RMV driving record
and neat and clean
appearance.
………………
CHELSEA: Industrial/
TAXI
Office/Food Processing/
AM & PM shifts available.
Warehouse building
Full
& Part Time positions.
for lease
Inquire within
65,000 SF freezer /
Late Night & Early Morning Pick-ups • Hotel-Airport Services
cooler. Call (617)
884• Handicapped
• AllRate
Hospitals
Specializing
in Elder
31
Sachem
St,
Revere,
Special Rate forServices
Airline
Special
Employees
for• Special
Airline•Employees
Rates
for Satellite
ParkingServices
Lots MA
0168
SpecialLogan
RatesAirport
for Satellite
ParkingAccounts
Lots Welcome
• Flat Rates To/From
• Corporate
• Hotel-Airport Service (Early Morning & Late Night Services Available)
Discount
SeniorsAccounts Welcome $
• Flat Rates To/From10%Logan
AirportOff• For
Corporate
$
3
• 3Flat Rates To/From Logan
Airport• Expires
• Corporate
$15.00 Minimum
12/27/2011 Accounts Welcome
----------------------------DEADLINES: For
classified line ads,
deadlines are Monday
by 4 p.m. Call 781-4850588 or fax the ad to
781-485-1403
-----------------------------
FHAP AGENCIES &OTHER STATE/
     
LOCAL REFERRAL AGENCIES
3
All real estate advertising in this
newspaper is subject to the Federal
Fair Housing Act of 1968, which
makes it illegal to advertise any
preference, limitation or discrimination based on race, color, religion, sex, handicap, familial status
(number of children and or pregnancy), national origin, ancestry,
age, marital status, or any intention to make any such preference,
limitation or discrimination.
This newspaper will not knowingly
accept any advertising for real
estate that is in violation of the
law. Our readers are hereby
informed that all dwellings advertising in this newspaper are available on an equal opportunity
basis. To complain about discrimination call The Department of
Housing and Urban Development
“ HUD” toll-free at 1-800-6699777. For the N.E. area, call HUD
at 617-565-5308. The toll free
number for the hearing impaired
is 1-800-927-9275.
2005/
Freightliner/
Atlantic Lobster
LEGAL NOTICE
OF INTENT TO
SELL/TAKE
TITLE TO
ABANDONED
VEHICLE
Capstan Management of
1 Winnisimmet Street,
Chelsea, MA 02150.
Serves public notice that
we intent to sell/take to
one 2005 Freightliner,
white in color VIN#
1FVACWCS25HU08492,
that was left abandoned
on private property in
April 2012 at 1 Winnisimmet Street Chelsea, MA.
Last known registered
owner, Atlantic Lobster
Company LLC dba Global
Cargo Logistics, who has
been notified by certified mail. This serves as
FINAL NOTICE to Atlantic
Lobster Company LLC dba
Global Cargo Logistics,
as to the location of said
vehicle before sale/
title transfer to Capstan
Management.
12/23, 12/31, 1/8,
1/29
C
   
     
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   
  
    
  

   
   
  

   
    
  

     
    
  

   
    
  

For Advertising
Rates,
Call 617-884-2416
     
  
  

     
    
   

The Independent Newspaper Group fights against housing discrimination. 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
Fair Housing Center of Greater Boston at 617-399-0491.
CHELSEA PROFESSIONAL
SERVICE DIRECTORY
Cleaning
Construction
Appliance Repair Service
ac/refrigeration
Glenn Brown
Prompt and honest service
of all major appliances
781-990-3411 • gbappliancerepair.com
Brownstone Construction Clovers
“All Types of Masonry ”
Pointing • Licensed & Insured • Free Estimates
(617) 884-0168
James Real Estate Inc.
2 col. x 1 inch
$120.00
Landscaping Masonry
•Construction Clean-up
•Burnouts, Apartments + Basements
•Basement Cleaning
Yard • Commercial • Residential • Moving
617-296-6500
lawn Care
• Spring Clean Ups
• Trees and Branches
Removed
• Mulch & Hedges
• Mowing & Fertilizing
• Junk Removal
FRee eSTiMaTeS
Call Kevin
617-884-2143
Ray’s Landscaping
Mowing • Edging • Weeding
Bushes, Shrubs
Cleaning: Trash & Leaves
New Lawn, Patio, Concrete
Brick Work
Ray: 781-526-1181
Free Estimates
1 col. x
1 inch
$60.00
For 3 Months
($5 Per Week)
Paving
Painting
John J. Recca
Painting
AUGUSTA Stellar New
PLASTERING England
Interior/Exterior
KITCHENS
call 781-485-0588 x110
Black Cyan Magenta Yellow
LANDSCAPING
gino mastro
1 col. x cHristoPHer’s
lawn cutting
hedging,
weeding,
mulching
lanDscaPi
Residential
clean Yard • low-Priced
2 cinches
• Blueboard • Plastering
Yard clean-up • trim hed
Landscape & Masonry
.
Commercial
call chris
Free estimates
& Completing Ideas for over 30 Years
•Designing
Landscaping
617-835-4131
Jim 617-567-5927 Landscaping
$120.00
Interior/Exterior
781-284-85
Masonry
• Pressure
Washing
Mowing Service
• Brick or Block Steps
Free Estimates • Reliable
Commercial/Residential
• Spring &•Fall
Cleanups Lot • Brick or BlockFor
Walls
Parking
3 Clovers
• Mulching & edging
• Concrete or Brick Paver
Fully Insured
Sweeping
or Seed Lawns
Patios & Walkways
Care
1 col. x •• Sod
Months •lawn
Debris& Trimming
Removal• Brick Re-Pointing
Shrub• Planting
Spring Clean Ups
Quality Work
Professional Reliab
1 inch • irrigation •Systems
• trees and Branches
Clean-ups • Basement Repair
Woodlawnlandscaping@
($10
Per
Removed
residentiaL
• coMMerciaL
• Bob Cat
& Dump
617-389-laWn
Reasonable Rates
$60.00
• Mulch & Hedges
Truck Services
Week) • Mowing & Fertilizing AFFORDABLE LAND
Free Estimates
617-389-1490
For 3 Months 857-205-2873
• Junk Removal
Joe pierotti Jr. • Joe pierotti Sr.
FRee eStiMateS
617-466-0060 • 617
($5 Per
Week) • Senior
781-241-2454 M•T•W•F
[email protected]
9:30-5:00
Discount • Free Estimates • Licensed & Insured
Call Kevin
W
NE ROOM
N
OW PE
SH W O
NO
o
LiCenSed & inSu
Reliable Mowing Service, Mulching,
Fall Cleanups, Snowplowing, new La
Sat. 9:30-4:00 • Thur. 9:30-7:00
195 Squire Road • Revere
To advertise in our Service Directory please
Snow Removal
LANDSCAPING
MASONRY
John ToTTen ◆ AVICO ◆
Masonry MASON CONTRACTOR
specializing in stone, brick, block,
and concrete construction and repair
30 years experience
Licensed • senior Discount
(617) 561-9516
Your Ad
• Concrete
• Brick & Block
• Water Proofing
• All Types of Exterior
Restoration
FREE ESTIMATE
Insured & Licensed
781-581-0031
••SNOW
PLOWING&
COMMERCIAL
• COMMERCIAL
RESIDENTIAL&
RESIDENTIAL
FULLYINSURED
INSURED
•• FULLY
CLEAN-UPS
••Boston
CLEAN-UPS
BoBs
• CONSTRUCTION
CONSTRUCTION
Painting co.
617-884-2143 Spring & Fall Clean-up • M
Free Estimate
PAINTING
POWELL
Domenico
PAINTING &
Painting co. D
ECORATING
Painting 20 Years +
Small exterior
781-289-7700
781-289-7700
Prompt, Clean, neat.
complete interior
P.O.
P.O. Box
Box 606,
606,Revere,
Revere,MA
MA02151
02151 Tommy Domenico
Call anytime.
[email protected]
[email protected] 617-365-5451
Home 617-417-9585
COMMERCIAL & RESIDENTIAL • FULLY INSURED
Richard
RichardBruno
Bruno
CLEAN-UPS • CONSTRUCTION • SNOW REMOVAL
Vinny’s
Wallpapering
PAINTING
SPECIALISTS
(Marbleizing) FAUX
(Sponging) Wallpapering,
Floor Sanding
JOh
PA
In
Comm
SPECIAL WINTER RATES
FREE
ESTIMATES
Dan Powell
Re
A R O U N D
‘Motown the Musical’
Nostalgia reigns supreme (like
that famous 1960‘s, meteoric
female group of the same name),
when the national touring company production of new show,
“Motown the Musical” comes
to the Boston Opera House, (539
Washington St., Boston) Jan. 27
through Feb.15. Audiences will
be dancing in the streets, to the
show’s 40 rhythmic songs. This
musical is based on the life of
Motown founder, Berry Gordy.
Showtimes, Tuesday-Thursday,
at 7:30 p.m., Wednesday, Jan.
28, at 7 p.m.; Jan. 29,also 1 p.m.;
Fridays, at 8 p.m.; Saturdays,
2,8 p.m.; Sundays, 1,6:30 p.m.
No 6:30 p.m. performance
on Sunday, Feb. 2. Tickets
LEGAL NOTICE
NOTICE OF MORTGAGEE’S SALE OF REAL
ESTATE
By virtue and in
execution of the Power
of Sale contained in a
certain mortgage given
by George Mironchuk,
Trustee of the George
Mironchuk Trust to Wells
Fargo Bank, N.A., dated
December 28, 2009
and recorded with the
Suffolk County Registry
of Deeds at Book 45924,
Page 4 as affected by a
confirmatory mortgage
recorded with said Deeds
at Book 46387, Page
301, of which 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 10:00 a.m.
on February 6, 2015, on
the mortgaged premises
located at 187 WEBSTER
AVENUE, CHELSEA,
Suffolk County, Massachusetts, all and singular
the premises described in
said mortgage,
TO WIT:
Beginning at a point on
the Northeasterly side
of Webster Ave. at the
dividing line between
lot ten (10) and lot
eleven (11) as shown
on a plan of land in
Chelsea, Massachusetts,
showing Subdivision of
Lots on Webster Avenue
Housing Relocation
Project by John Marion,
City Engineer, dated
June 1, 1949, recorded
at Suffolk Registry of
Deeds, Book 6556, Page
472, thence running:
NORTHWESTERLY:
by Webster Avenue,
thirty-two and twenty
one-hundredths (32.20)
feet, thence turning and
running,
NORTHEASTERLY; by lot
nine (9) in part through
the center of a common
passageway ten (10)
feet wide, one hundred
(100) feet, thence
turning and running,
SOUTHEASTERLY: by
land of City of Chelsea,
thirty-two and twenty
one-hundredths (32.20)
feet, thence turning and
running,
SOUTHWESTERLY: by
lot eleven (11), one
hundred (100) feet, to
the point of beginning.
Being all and the same
premises conveyed in
Deed recorded in Book
18848, Page 97.
Subject to any conditions,
covenants, easements
and restrictions of record
insofar as the same are
in force and applicable.
For mortgagor’s(s’) title
see deed recorded with
Suffolk County Registry
of Deeds in Book 17404,
Page 178. Also see deed
recorded in Book 18848,
Page 97.
These premises will
be sold and conveyed
subject to and with
the benefit of all
rights, rights of way,
restrictions, easements,
covenants, liens or
claims in the nature of
liens, improvements,
public assessments, any
and all unpaid taxes,
tax titles, tax liens,
water and sewer liens
and any other municipal
start at $43. For more information and tickets, visit www.
BroadwayInBoston.com or the
Box Office, or call Ticketmaster
at 800-982-2787.
‘Father Comes Home
From the Wars’
American Repertory Theater
presents Suzan Lori-Parks’
“Father Comes Home From
the Wars, Parts 1,2, and 3,”
set during the Civil War,
through March 1 at the Loeb
Drama Center, 64 Brattle St.,
Harvard Square, Cambridge.
Performances:Jan.27-31, Feb.
1,3-8,10-14,17-21, 24,28, at
7:30 p.m.; matinees, Jan. 31, Feb.
1,4,7,8,14,15,18,21,22,25,28,
March 1, at 2 p.m.; Feb. 11, at
assessments or liens or
existing encumbrances
of record which are in
force and are applicable,
having priority over said
mortgage, whether or
not reference to such
restrictions, easements,
improvements, liens or
encumbrances is made in
the deed.
TERMS OF SALE:
A deposit of Five Thousand ($5,000.00 ) Dollars by certified or bank
check will be required to
be paid by the purchaser
at the time and place of
sale. The balance is to
be paid by certified or
bank check at Harmon
Law Offices, P.C.,
150 California Street,
Newton, Massachusetts
02458, or by mail
to P.O. Box 610389,
Newton Highlands, Massachusetts 02461-0389,
within thirty (30) days
from the date of sale.
Deed will be provided to
purchaser for recording
upon receipt in full of
the purchase price. The
description of the premises contained in said
mortgage shall control in
the event of an error in
this publication.
Other terms, if any, to be
announced at the sale.
WELLS FARGO BANK,
N.A.
Present holder of said
mortgage
By its Attorneys,
HARMON LAW OFFICES,
P.C.
150 California Street
Newton, MA 02458
(617) 558-0500
201203-1243 - YEL
1/15, 1/22, 1/29
C
LEGAL NOTICE
COMMONWEALTH
OF MASSACHUSETTS
THE TRIAL COURT
PROBATE AND
FAMILY COURT
Docket No.
SU15P0041EA
CITATION ON
PETITION FOR
FORMAL
ADJUDICATION
Suffolk Probate
and Family Court
24 New Chardon St.
Boston, MA 02114
(617)788-8300
Estate of:
Beverly Tarmy
Date of Death:
11/13/2014
To all interested persons:
A Petition has been
filed by: Beatrice M.
Liberman of Chelsea,
MA requesting that the
Court enter a formal
Decree and Order of
testacy and for such
other relief as requested
in the Petition. And also
requesting that: Beatrice
Liberman of Chelsea, MA
be appointed as Personal
Representative(s) of said
estate to serve Without
Surety on the bond.
You have the right to
obtain a copy of the Petition from the Petitioner
or at the Court. You
have a right to object
to this proceeding. To
do so, you or your
attorney must file a
written appearance and
objection at this Court
before: 10:00 a.m. on
02/12/2015
This is NOT a hearing
ate, but a deadline by
which you must file a
written appearance and
objection if you object
to this proceeding. If
you fail to file a timely
written appearance and
objection followed by an
Affidavit of Objections
within thirty (30) days
of the return date, action
may be taken without
further notice to you.
The estate is being
administered under
formal procedure by the
Personal Representative
under the Massachusetts
Uniform Probate Code
without supervision by
the Court. Inventory
and accounts are not
required to be filed
with the Court, but
recipients are entitled
to notice regarding the
administration from the
Personal Representative
and can petition the
Court in any matter
relating to the estate,
including distribution of
assets and expenses of
administration.
WITNESS, Hon. Joan P.
Armstrong, First Justice
of this Court.
Date: January 09, 2015
Felix D. Arroyo,
Register of Probate
1/29
C
LEGAL NOTICE
Page 11
The Chelsea Record • Thursday, January 29, 2015
Phone: 617-884-2416 Fax: 781-485-1403
COMMONWEALTH
OF MASSACHUSETTS
THE TRIAL COURT
PROBATE AND
FAMILY COURT
Docket No.
SU15P0065EA
Suffolk Probate
and Family Court
24 New Chardon St.
Boston, MA 02114
(617)788-8300
CITATION ON
PETITION FOR
FORMAL
ADJUDICATION
Estate of:
James J. Carroll,
Jr.
Date of Death:
11/25/2014
To all interested persons:
A Petition has been filed
by: James F. Carroll of
Hopedale, MA requesting
that the Court enter a
formal Decree and Order
of testacy and for such
other relief as requested
in the Petition. And also
requesting that: James F.
Carroll of Hopedale, MA
be appointed as Personal
Representative(s) of said
estate to serve Without
Surety on the bond.
You have the right to
obtain a copy of the Petition from the Petitioner
or at the Court. You
have a right to object
to this proceeding. To
do so, you or your
attorney must file a
written appearance and
objection at this Court
before: 10:00 a.m. on
02/12/2015.
This is NOT a hearing
date, but a deadline by
which you must file a
written appearance and
objection if you object
to this proceeding. If
you fail to file a timely
written appearance and
objection followed by an
Affidavit of Objections
within thirty (30) days
of the return date, action
may be taken without
further notice to you.
The estate is being
administered under
formal procedure by the
Personal Representative
under the Massachusetts
11 a.m. Tickets start at $25. Call
the Box Office at 617-547-8300
or visit americanrepertorytheater.
org.
‘Jimmy Titanic’
Carmel O’Reilly directs Tir Na
Theatre’s outstanding founder-actor, Colin Hamell, reprising
his role in Bernard McMullan’s
one-man play, “Jimmy Titanic,”
Wednesday, Feb. 4, at 7:30
p.m. at The Burren, 247 Elm
St., Somerville (burren,com; 617776-6896). The performance,
opening with the Coyne Family
trad set, is a benefit fundraiser
to support Boston-area’s young,
Irish musicians traveling to
Clare, Ireland, in an exchange
program with the Tulog Celli
Uniform Probate Code
without supervision by
the Court. Inventory
and accounts are not
required to be filed
with the Court, but
recipients are entitled
to notice regarding the
administration from the
Personal Representative
and can petition the
court in any matter
relating to the estate,
including distribution of
assets and expenses of
administration.
WITNESS, Hon. Joan P.
Armstrong, First Justice
of this Court.
Date: January 12, 2015
Felix D. Arroyo,
Register of Probate
1/29
C
LEGAL NOTICE
COMMONWEALTH
OF MASSACHUSETTS
THE TRIAL COURT
PROBATE AND
FAMILY COURT
Docket No.
SU14W2575
SUFFOLK Division
Summons By
Publication
Wendy Yaquelin
Padilla-Cruz,
Plaintiff
v.
Santos Edilberto
Ulloa-Mejia,
Defendant
To the named Defendant:
A Complaint has been
presented to this Court
by the Plaintiff, Wendy
Yaquelin Padilla-Cruz,
seeking a Complaint for
Support, Custody-Visitation pursuant to G.L.
c. 209C.
You are required to
serve upon attorney for
plaintiff whose address
is Law Office of Corral
& Marrero, 16 Cohasset
St., Roslindale, MA
02131, your answer
on or before March
19, 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 24th day of
December 2014.
Ann Marie Passanisi
Register of Probate Court
1/29
C
LEGAL NOTICE
COMMONWEALTH
OF MASSACHUSETTS
THE TRIAL COURT
PROBATE AND
FAMILY COURT
Docket No.
SU15P0064EA
INFORMAL
PROBATE
PUBLICATION
NOTICE
Suffolk Probate
and Family Court
24 New Chardon St.
Boston, MA 02114
(617)788-8300
Estate of:
James Charles
DeFelice
Also Known As:
James C. DeFelice
Date of Death:
09/20/2014
To all persons interested
in the above captioned
estate, by Petition of
Petitioner Rosemarie
DeFelice of Revere, MA.
The estate is being
administered under informal procedure by the
Personal Representative
under the Massachusetts
Uniform Probate Code
without supervision by
the Court. Inventory
and accounts are not
required to be filed with
the Court, but interested
parties are entitled to
notice regarding the
administration from the
Personal Representative
and can petition the
court in any matter
relating to the estate,
including distribution of
assets and expenses of
administration. Interested parties are entitled
to petition the Court to
institute formal proceedings and to obtain orders
terminating or restricting
the powers of Personal
Representatives appointed under informal
procedure. A copy of the
Petition and Will, if any,
can be obtained from the
Petitioner.
1/29
C
LEGAL NOTICE
NOTICE OF
PUBLICATION
STATE OF
WYOMING
COUNTY OF
ALBANY
IN THE
DISTRICT
COURT Second
JUDICIAL
DISTRICT
Civil Action
Case No. 33336
Plaintiff/
Petitioner:
Max Sylver Destin
vs.
Defendant/
Respondent:
Veronica Rios
NOTICE TO Veronica Rios,
DEFENDANT/RESPONDENT
DEFENDANT/RESPONDENT’S CURRENT
ADDRESS: last known address at 945 Broadway,
Chelsea, MA 02150
You are notified that a
Complaint for Divorce;
Civil Action No. 33336,
has been filed in the
Wyoming District Court
for the Second Judicial
District, whose address
is 525 Grand Avenue
Laramie, WY 82073,
seeking dissolution of
your marriage to Max
Sylver Destin; and a
Decree of Divorce; in
his favor.
Unless you file an
answer or response or
otherwise respond to the
Complaint or Petition
referenced above within
30 days following the
last date of publication of this notice, a
default judgment will be
taken against you and a
Decree of Divorce.
1/29, 2/5
C
LEGAL NOTICE
COMMONWEALTH
OF MASSACHUSETTS
THE TRIAL COURT
PROBATE AND
FAMILY COURT
Docket No.
SU15P0089EA
INFORMAL
PROBATE
Suffolk Division
Estate of:
John Peter
Black
T H E
C I T Y
Band. Admission,$25; with service fee, $26.87). Visit brownpapertickets.com.
‘Echoes’
Brown Box Theatre Project presents N. Richard Nash’s provocative one-act, two-hour drama,
“Echoes,” starring an all-Boston
cast appearing free of charge,
Jan. 30 through Feb. 8: Jan.
30-Feb.1, Feb. 5-8, at 7:30 p.m.,
at Atlantic Wharf’s lobby, in
Boston’s Waterfront District. For
reservations and more information, visit brownboxtheatre.org/
echoes. Zumix concerts
Zumix’s Firehouse Sessions kick
off with an evening of americana
Martin, III
Date of Death:
October 13, 2014
To all persons interested
in the above captioned
estate, by Petition of
Petitioner Tania L. Baez
of Chelsea, has been
informally appointed as
the Personal Representative of the estate to
serve without surety on
the bond.
The estate is being
administered under informal procedure by the
Personal Representative
under the Massachusetts
Uniform Probate Code
without supervision by
the Court. Inventory
and accounts are not
required to be filed with
the Court, but interested
parties are entitled to
notice regarding the
administration from the
Personal Representative
and can petition the
Court in any matter
relating to the estate,
including distribution of
assets and expenses of
administration. Interested parties are entitled
to petition the Court to
institute formal proceedings and to obtain orders
terminating or restricting
the powers of Personal
Representatives appointed under informal
procedure. A copy of the
Petition and Will, if any,
can be obtained from the
Petitioner.
1/29
C
LEGAL NOTICE
COMMONWEALTH
OF MASSACHUSETTS
THE TRIAL COURT
PROBATE AND
FAMILY COURT
Docket No.
SU10P1320PM
CITATION GIVING
NOTICE OF
CONSERVATOR’S
ACCOUNT
Suffolk Probate
and Family Court
24 New Chardon St.
Boston, MA 02114
In the matter of:
Elizabeth Kaplan
Of: Chelsea, MA
To the named
Respondent and all other
interested persons, you
are hereby notified
pursuant to Rule 72 of
the Supplemental Rules
of the Probate & Family
Court, that the First and
Second account(s)
of JEWISH FAMILY &
CHILDREN’S of Waltham,
MA as Conservator of
the property of said
Respondent has or have
been presented to the
Court for allowance.
You have the right to
object to the account(s).
If you wish to do so, you
or your attorney must
file a written appearance
and objection at this
court on or before 10:00
A.M. on the return date
of 02/12/2015. This
day is NOT a hearing
date but a deadline date
by which you have to
object to the account(s).
If you fail to file the
written appearance and
objection by the return
date, action may be taken in this matter without
further notice to you,
including the allowance
of the account(s).
Additionally, within
thirty days after said
return date (or within
and roots music, featuring Bill
Janovitz and the Needy Sons,
with the Tim Gearan Band, and
music from Zumix’s own young
performers, Jan. 31. Doors at
the 260 Sumner St., East Boston,
venue open at 6:30 p.m. for this
21+-year-old event. Tickets start
at $25. Visit www.firehouse.
rocks. Proceeds benefit Zumix’s
award-winning work with youth. Karen K and the
Jitterbugs
Karen K and the Jitterbugs’ family show brightens and lightens
up Club Passim, 47 Palmer St.,
Cambridge, Saturday, Jan.31, at
10:30 a.m. Tickets, $10; members, $8. Visit www.passim.org
or call 617-492-7679. such other time as the
Court upon motion
may order), you must
file a written affidavit
of objections stating
the specific facts and
grounds upon which each
objection is based and
a copy shall be served
upon the Conservator
pursuant to Rule 3 of
the Supplemental Rules
of the Probate & Family
Court.
You have the right to
send to the Conservator,
by registered or certified
mail, a written request
to receive a copy of the
Petition and account(s)
at no cost to you.
IMPORTANT NOTICE
The outcome of this
proceeding may limit or
completely take away
the above-named
person’s right to make
decisions about personal
affairs or financial
affairs or both. The
above-named person’s
right to make decisions
about personal affairs
or financial affairs or
both. The above-named
person has the right
to ask for a lawyer.
Anyone may make this
request on behalf of the
above-named person. IF
the above-named person
cannot afford a lawyer,
one may be appointed at
State expense.
WITNESS, Hon. Joan P.
Armstrong, First Justice
of this Court.
Date: January 09, 2015
Felix D. Arroyo,
Register of Probate
1/29
C
LEGAL NOTICE
COMMONWEALTH
OF MASSACHUSETTS
THE TRIAL COURT
PROBATE AND
FAMILY COURT
Docket No.
SU10P1320PM
Suffolk Probate
and Family Court
24 New Chardon St.
Boston, MA 02114
(617)788-8300
CITATION ON
PETITION FOR
ORDER OF
COMPLETE
SETTLEMENT OF
ESTATE
Estate of:
Elizabeth Kaplan
To all interested persons:
A Petition has been
filed by: Jewish Family
& Children of Waltham,
MA requesting that
an Order of Complete
Settlement of the
estate issue including to
approve an accounting
and other such relief as
may be requested in the
Petition. For the First
Amended and Second
and Final Account of the
Temporary Guardian and
Conservator.
You have the right to
obtain a copy of the Petition from the Petitioner
or at the Court. You
have a right to object
to this proceeding. To
do so, you or your
attorney must file a
written appearance and
objection at this Court
before 10:00 a.m. on
02/12/2015.
This is NOT a hearing
date, but a deadline by
which you must file a
written appearance and
objection if you object
to this proceeding. If
you fail to file a timely
written appearance and
objection followed by an
Affidavit of Objections
within thirty (30) days
of the return date, action
may be taken without
further notice to you.
WITNESS, Hon. Joan P.
Armstrong, First Justice
of this Court.
Date: January 09, 2015
Felix D. Arroyo, Register
of Probate
1/29
C
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 Nevin Mahmoud to
Mortgage Electronic
Registration Systems,
Inc. acting solely as a
nominee for CitiMortgage, Inc., dated May
16, 2006 and recorded
at Suffolk County Registry of Deeds in Book
39642, Page 314 of
which mortgage CitiMortgage, Inc. is the present
holder by assignment
from Mortgage Electronic
Registration Systems,
Inc. to CitiMortgage,
Inc. dated July 9, 2010
recorded at Suffolk
County Registry of Deeds
in Book 46666, Page
244, for breach of conditions of said mortgage
and for the purpose of
foreclosing the same,
the mortgaged premises
located at 223-225
Walnut Street, Chelsea,
MA 02150 will be sold
at a Public Auction at
2:00PM on February 20,
2015, at the mortgaged
premises, more
particularly described
below, all and singular
the premises described in
said mortgage, to wit:
Parcel 1:
_Being a parcel of
land with the buildings
thereon now numbered
223 Walnut Street,
Chelsea, according to
present numbering
of the buildings on
said street and more
particularly bounded and
described as a certain
parcel of land, according
to Shearer’s Plan dated
1846 and recorded at
the end of Book 616
in Suffolk Registry of
Deeds,
Northwesterly by Walnut
Street, twenty-five (25)
feet;_Southwesterly by
Lot 90 on said Walnut
Street, according to said
Plan, sixty (60) feet;
Southeasterly by land
now or late of Abbey
Fellows by a line parallel
with Walnut Street and
midway between Walnut
and Poplar Streets, twenty-five (25) feet;_Northeasterly by Northeasterly
half of Lot 92 Walnut
Street according to said
Plan, sixty (60) feet;_
Meaning and intending
to convey the building
numbered 223 Walnut
Street and the land
underneath and
appurtenant thereto,
being the Northwesterly
quarter of 92 Walnut
Street, according to
the Plan hereinbefore
mentioned._
Parcel 2:_
The land in Chelsea,
being a certain parcel of
‘Just So’
As part of its winter festival, the
Young Company at Stoneham
Theatre (395 Main St., Stoneham)
performs Stiles and Drewes’
delightful musical “Just So” stories, based on Rudyard Kipling’s
fables, Jan.31,Feb.1,7,8, at 4
p.m. There also is “Carrie,The
Musical,” Jan. 30,31,Feb.6,7, at
7:30 p.m.; Roald Dahl’s “Willy
Wonka,” Jan. 31, Feb.1,7,8, at 1
p.m.; and “Piggy Nation,” Feb.
7,8, at 11 a.m. Adults,$15; students, $10; early bird rate before
Jan.28,adults, $10. Call 781279-2200, or visit stonehamtheatre.org.
land with the buildings
thereon now numbered
225 Walnut Street,
Chelsea, according to
the present numbering
of the buildings on
said street, and more
particularly bounded and
described as follows;
Northerly by Walnut
Street, twenty-five
(25) feet;_Easterly by
Lot 94 on said Walnut
Street, sixty-two (62)
feet;_Southerly by land
now or late of Henry
Noyes, twenty-five (25)
feet;_Westerly by land
now or late of R.S. Frost,
sixty-two (62) feet;_
Being the Northeasterly
part of Lot 92 Walnut
Street, according to
Shearer’s Plan recorded
with Suffolk Deeds at the
end of Book 616._
Said premises are conveyed together with and
subject to the benefits
and conditions contained
in the agreement between Abraham Fleischer
and David Plotnick
dated November 17,
1910, and recorded with
Suffolk Deeds at Book
3498, Page 627._
For mortgagor’s title see
deed recorded with the
Suffolk County Registry
of Deeds in Book 18895,
Page 275.
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.
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.
CitiMortgage, Inc.
Korde & Associates,
P.C._321 Billerica Road_
Suite 210_Chelmsford,
MA 01824-4100
(978) 256-1500
1/22, 1/29, 2/5
C
LEGAL NOTICE
COMMONWEALTH
OF MASSACHUSETTS
THE TRIAL COURT
PROBATE AND
FAMILY COURT
Docket No.
SU15D0016DR
DIVORCE
SUMMONS BY
PUBLICATION
AND MAILING
Maria G.
Sepulveda
vs.
Carlos M.
Cardona
To the Defendant:
The Plaintiff has filed a
Complaint for Divorce
requesting that the
Court grant a divorce for
irretrievable breakdown
of the marriage pursuant
to G.L. c. 208 Sec 1B.
The Complaint is on file
at the Court.
An Automatic Restraining
Order has been entered
in this matter preventing
you from taking any
action which would negatively impact the current
financial status of either
party. SEE Supplemental
Probate Court Rule 411.
You are hereby summoned and required to
serve upon:
Maria G. Sepulveda, 593
Bennington St., Apt. 2,
East Boston, MA 021281010, your answer,
if any, on or before
03/26/2015. 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, if any, in
the office of the Register
of this Court.
WITNESS, Hon. Joan P.
Armstrong, First Justice
of this court.
Date: January 8, 2015
Felix D. Arroyo
Register of Probate
1/29
C
LEGAL NOTICE
COMMONWEALTH OF
MASSACHUSETTS
THE TRIAL COURT
PROBATE AND
FAMILY COURT
Docket No.
SU15C0005CA
NOTICE OF
PETITION FOR
CHANGE OF NAME
Suffolk Probate
and Family Court
24 New Chardon St.
Boston, MA 02114
(617)788-8300
In the matter of:
Mathew Brian
Troville
Of: Chelsea, MA
To all persons interested
in petition described:
A petition has been
presented by Mathew B.
Troville requesting that:
Mathew Brian Troville
be allowed to change his
name as follows:
Mathew Christopher
Resnik
IF YOU DESIRE TO
OBJECT THERETO, YOU
OR YOUR ATTORNEY
MUST FILE A WRITTEN
APPEARANCE IN SAID
COURT AT: BOSTON ON
OR BEFORE TEN O’CLOCK
IN THE MORNING (10:00
A.M.) ON:
02/05/2015
WITNESS, Hon. Joan P.
Armstrong, First Justice
of this Court.
Date: January 5, 2015
Ann Marie Passanisi
Register of Probate
1/29
C
The Chelsea Record • Thursday, January 29, 2015
Page 12
Phone: 617-884-2416 Fax: 781-485-1403
LETS GO PATS
LOOKING
We are going
to the
SUPERBOWL
FOR A
WIN
!!!!!
GO PATS!!!
HAVING A PARTY?
LET US TAKE YOU THERE
TAXI
O/O Ride Right Transportation Inc.
617-539-9999
617-539-9999
24 Hour TAXI Service
We have all you need for
your Superbowl party!
SUPERBOWL SPECIALS
Good January 30–February 1
Eastern Express
Car Wash
294 Eastern Avenue,Chelsea
617-884-4686
GREAT LAKES
AMERICAN CHEESE
$
3.99/lb
FAMILY PACK FRESH
CHICKEN WINGS
$
2.29/lb
PEPSI 2 LITER
10/ 10.00 plus deposit
ROUND PUMPERNICKEL
$
LAYS POTATO CHIPS
2/$5.00
FRIENDLY’S ICE CREAM
2/$6.00
BREAD
GREAT FOR DIPS
2.49
$
Now taking orders for
party platters
Hot • Cold • Cheese Trays
• Fruit Platters
35 REVERE ST., WINTHROP • (617) 846-6880
Black Cyan Magenta Yellow
WATCHING THE
SUPERBOWL
WITH US?
Free Appetizers at
halftime + $2.99
Budlight Draft Beer
FREE
Ocean-View
Function Room
For ANY Occasion.
Book your
Holiday Party
Now!
492 Revere Beach Blvd., Revere
www.antoniasatthebeach.com • 781-284-1272
Please see Antonia’s latest ad on www.RevereBeach.com