MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 11, 2017 Police chase from Malden ends on a Peabody roof By Roberto Scalese But the day’s events stemmed in the process. Police attempted to ITEM STAFF from an incident Friday night, stop the suspect, but had to end when residents reported to Mal- the chase due to safety reasons, PEABODY — Police say a man den Police that someone was dam- Gatcomb said. led of cers on a long chase Satur- aging their cars, according to Mal- After searching for Ochendu the day before bailing out of his car in a strip club parking lot and trying den Police Capt. Marc Gatcomb. previous night to no avail, Malden to hide on top of a trailer home’s Gatcomb said Ochendu had al- Police learned that the suspect roof. legedly smashed out several car was back at his house on Satur- Saturday’s bizarre chain of windows in a residential area. Wit- day and went to his home again events started at 9:30 a.m., when nesses were able to get the suspect’s around 9:30 a.m. The department Malden Police of cers tried to ar- plate number, which led police to had activated their Special Oper- show up at his house Friday night. ations Unit (SOU), Gatcomb said. rest Obieze Ochendu, 34, in his PHOTO | MASSACHUSETTS STATE POLICE Rockland Avenue home, according After an altercation with police, Ochendu reportedly escaped in to a Massachusetts State Police Ochendu took off in his Chevy Im- Police talk to a suspect hiding on a trailer home roof af- statement. pala and nearly struck two of cers CHASE, A6 ter the man reportedly led them on a multi-city chase. Lynn, Medford, and Peabody going to the polls Tuesday

By Thomas Grillo pected in the lead up to the Novem- four councilor-at-large seats in- ITEM STAFF ber election for mayor, City Council cluding incumbents Buzzy Barton, and School Committee. Hong Net, and Brian LaPierre. The Lynn, Medford, and Peabody vot- Rowe said she expects just 17 challengers are Brian Field, Jaime ers head to the polls Tuesday to percent or 8,900 of the city’s 52,418 Figueroa, Richard Ford, John Ladd, whittle down municipal race elds. registered voters to go to the polls, and Taso Nikolakopoulos. Coun- In Lynn, the race getting the most similar to the 2013 primary. cilor-at-Large Daniel Cahill is not attention, said City Clerk Janet The four candidates going head- seeking reelection, clearing the way Rowe, is the four-way battle to re- to-head include Gina O’Toole, a for at least one new at-large coun- place Ward 2 City Councilor Wil- 51-year-old teacher aide, Richard cilor. liam Trahant, who served for nine Starbard, 53, owner of Rick’s Auto In a quirk of election law, because terms. Collision in Revere, Peter Grocki, a there’s a primary ght in Ward 2, “That’s the big one to watch,” said 50-year-old maintenance worker at the names of all candidates in ev- Rowe. the Salem Housing Authority, and ery race will appear on the ballot Polls open at 7 a.m. and close at salesman Christopher Magrane, even if there are only two people 8 p.m. 51. A low Lynn voter turnout is ex- Eight candidates are seeking POLLS, A7 Lynn Tech Town of Saugus teacher is at celebrates 37th our service By Gayla Cawley Founder’s Day ITEM STAFF LYNN — U.S. Rep. Seth Moul- By Dan Kane Two-year- ton (D-Mass) honored Jason Mc- Cuish, a Lynn teacher, for his FOR THE ITEM old Dominic commitment to service and ability Calioro, of to inspire that trait in others, by SAUGUS — For Phil Rando and Saugus, wan- Glen Davis, the city’s Founder’s Day selecting him as the second annu- ders around celebration on Saturday presented al Peter J. Gomes Service Award the Founder’s another opportunity to give back to winner on Sunday. Day celebra- the community they love. McCuish, who teaches at Lynn tion with his “As much as it is a celebration it’s Vocational Technical Institute, also a huge day for local programs parents on was presented with the award to fundraise,” said Davis. Saturday. from a competitive eld of eight “It’s great,” added Rando. “To help nalists, which is given to an in- them out and bring the community ITEM PHOTO | dividual in the sixth congressio- together is the biggest thing.” SPENSER HASAK nal district who best epitomizes And bring the community to- the qualities of integrity, compas- sion and commitment to service gether Founder’s Day did, still go- that were the foundations of the ing strong in its 37th year and at- late Rev. Professor Peter Gomes’ tracting hundreds of people, some ITEM PHOTO | OWEN O’ROURKE teachings. visiting the tents of more than 80 “I’m overwhelmed and  attered,” vendors, others enjoying the dance U.S. Rep. Seth Moulton presents Jason McCuish, a teacher at Lynn Vocational Technical Institute, the second annual Peter FOUNDER’S DAY, A7 J. Gomes Service Award during a ceremony at Lynn City Hall. MCCUISH, A7

Swampscott INSIDE In Malden Fire department scores with City prepares for hosts its rst family Route 1 work closures. A2 fun fair. A3 • a brand new In Saugus Polling locations for Class of 1967 visit former city election. A3 high school before build- Blocksidge ing is torn down. A2 In LOOK! It’s all about Gabe By Steve Krause In Lynn at LynnArts. A8 ITEM SPORTS EDITOR Council candidate Gina O’Toole shares In Sports SWAMPSCOTT — Seven her plans. A3 St. Mary’s wins both boys years of planning, pleading, and girls City Soccer and perseverance came to fru- • Championships. B1 ition Saturday as the ribbon (blue, naturally) was cut to In Opinion, beginning Tuesday open the newly redone Block- sidge Field — home to as much athletic history as any venue on the North Shore. “Sometimes,” said Gov. Charlie Baker, on hand for opening cere- monies, “you have to lose to win.” Baker wasn’t just making a remark about his own jour- ney to the corner of ce, which included a 2010 loss to Gov. Deval Patrick, but the arduous Starting tomorrow, columns by four Item staffers will trek that resulted in Satur- ITEM PHOTO | KATIE MORRISON be published, on a rotating basis, on our Opinion page. day’s celebration. Beth Bresnahan, Bill Brotherton, Gayla Cawley, and Swampscott resident Governor Charlie Baker and his wife, Lau- Steve Krause (left to right, above) will provide commen- ren, joined a host of Swampscott athletes from youth and high taries on various topics every Tuesday and Thursday. BLOCKSIDGE, A7 school sports for the Saturday ribbon-cutting at Blocksidge Field. Expect the unexpected.

OBITUARIES ...... A2 POLICE/FIRE ...... A6 COMICS/DIVERSIONS ...... B4-5 HIGH 79° VOL. 139, ISSUE 234 LYNN ...... A3 LOOK! ...... A8 CLASSIFIED ...... B6-7 LOW 59° OPINION ...... A4 SPORTS ...... B1-3 HEALTH ...... B8 PAGE A8 ONE DOLLAR A2 THE DAILY ITEM MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 11, 2017 OBITUARIES Preparing for Route 1 work closures William E. Julien, 72 STAFF REPORT Transportation. Crews will be doing deck Route 60, and proceed to From Friday, Sept. 22 repairs on the bridge that Copeland Circle where ve- MALDEN — Overnight LYNN — William and her husband through Sunday, Oct. 29, carries Route 1 over the hicles can rejoin Route 1. E. Julien, age 72, of Scott of Lynn, five drivers who use Route 1 closures and detour routes Northern Strand Trail. on the Malden/Revere/ • Drivers on Route 1 Lynn, died on Thurs- grandchildren; Am- will guide drivers through The detour routes are as north will exit at Route 60, Saugus line should be the area during the follow- follows: day, Sept. 7, 2017, ber Comeau, Ryan Squire Road, at Copeland at the Kaplan Family Cox, Joshua Cox, aware the road will be ing times: • Drivers on Route 1 Circle and go west, turn Hospice House with Riley Clements, and closed in both directions • Route 1 southbound: south will exit at Lynn his family at his side. William Clements, a between Lynn Street and 11 p.m., Friday, through 7 Street, and then turn left right onto Wesley Street, He was the husband sister Kathy Matson Squire Road for more than a.m., Saturday. onto Salem Street, right right onto Lynn Street, of Gloria (Schultz) and her husband a month during overnight, • Route 1 north and onto Lynn Street, left onto and left onto Salem Street Julien, with whom he Paul, of New Hamp- according to the Massa- south: 11 p.m., Saturday, Wesley Street, left onto where vehicles can rejoin shared 50 years of marriage. shire and several nieces and chusetts Department of through 8 a.m., Sunday. Beach Street/Squire Road, Route 1. A lifelong resident of Lynn, nephews. Bill’s entire family he was the son of the late wishes to express their sin- Joseph and Lucille (Amero) cere gratitude to Bill’s son- Class of 1967 visits former high school Julien. He had worked as an in-law Scott for the care, inspector at the GE Riverworks comfort, and compassion Plant in Lynn for 52 years un- he showed to Bill these past before building is torn down in Saugus til his retirement on April 1, four months. 2017. Service information: At Bill was a member of Post his request services under 507, Lynn and an avid Patriots the direction of the SOLI- fan. He enjoyed sitting down to MINE Funeral Homes 426 an ice-cold beer and spending Broadway (Route129), Lynn time with his cat Nigel. are private. In lieu of flow- In addition to his wife, he ers please make donations is survived by three daugh- in his name to the Kaplan ters; Christine Cox of New Family Hospice House, 78 Hampshire, Lee Ann Comeau Liberty St., Danvers, MA and her husband Ronald of 01923. Guestbook at www. Lynn, and Kelly Clements solimine.com.

William J. Anderson, 50

SAUGUS — William ert O’Hagan of Sau- J. Anderson, “Billy”, gus, his niece Cassie age 50, of Saugus, O’Hagan of Tenn. He passed away Sept. was also surround- 4, 2017, due to a ed by a sister and lengthy illness. He her husband Tammy attended Learning (O’Hagan) and Wal- Prep School for spe- ter Palomino and his cial needs Vocations niece Gianna Palo- Training in Newton, mino, all of Revere, where he graduated in 1987. whom he cherished deeply, He was a longtime member and his nephew Patrick (PJAY) and avid camper at Hidden Fleury of Saugus. He was able Valley Campground in Derry, to spend his last days enjoy- N.H., where he leaves be- ing his time with his sister and ITEM PHOTO | GAYLA CAWLEY hind many close friends who her family comfortably and Members of Saugus High School Class of 1967 take the opportunity to see the inside of their for- cared for him deeply. It was peacefully before he entered mer high school for the last time before the building is torn down. here that he volunteered his the Kaplan House in Danvers. time to raise money for a lo- He also leaves behind many By Gayla Cawley School. current school. Doherty she moved from Saugus in cal food bank in the area with Aunts, Uncles and Cousins. ITEM STAFF Saugus High School has been in the building 1977. Early in the walk- the help of his best friend His family would like to extend Principal Michael Hash- numerous times since get- through, she said every- Rich; this summer, they raised their thanks to Bridegwell, and SAUGUS — There was em said the current school ting her diploma — as a thing appeared to be just a mixture of nostalgia and $1,000.00. This made Bill especially Mary Joyce, for the will eventually be torn teacher and administrator like it was when she was excitement as the Class very grateful. He was also an care and compassion to Bill down, and the space will — but she said that wasn’t a student. She said the of 1967 walked through avid Demolition Derby car over the years. become a state-of-the-art the case for some of the building looks old, and their former high school driver. Bill was able to com- Service information: His athletic field. The new alumni, who were walk- on Sunday. It was poten- felt some sadness that it pete in his final race on July memorial service will be school will be next to the ing through their old high tially their last chance to would be torn down. 7 at Brockton Fare, and with held on Saturday, Sept. 16, existing building. The school for the first time Chaffee, 68, said the re- the love of the promoters, the from 2–4 p.m. in the GO- see inside their former stomping grounds before principal said there’s ex- since graduating. union gave her a chance Mann Family, they set up a ODRICH Funeral Home, 128 citement in town for the Doherty said she expect- to see her friends — “you special car dedicated to find St., Lynn. In lieu the building is torn down. new school — “everyone is ed her former classmates never forget your friends. a cure for cancer. Billy won his of flowers, the family is ac- In June, voters approved two questions for a $186 nostalgic for the old build- to be so excited that the Suddenly you’re right heat that day, and received cepting donations so they ing, but it’s time.” building hadn’t really a trophy. This was a special may continue to raise money million school project back there (and) it’s just during a special election “I think people are excit- changed in 50 years. as if no time has passed.” and happy day in Bill’s life. for the local food bank and ed about the new school,” Fred Conti lives in He is survived by his longtime to start a memorial gar- — the first requested $160 Audrey Rossetti Brienza said Diane Doherty, 68, Maine and made the trip companion, Kim McDaniels of den at his favorite place on million for a proposed said her kids also went to a member of the Class of down to Saugus for the Saugus for over 20 years. He earth, his campground. All grade 6-12 combination school in Saugus. She said reunion. He said he came also leaves behind his mother, monies collected will be di- middle and high school, 1967. “The majority (of us) the high school is very run Patricia (O’Hagan) Anderson vided to both causes. Please and the second sought felt this was so overdue.” for the reunion event the down and needs to be re- of Saugus, his late father Wil- see GO FUND ME.COM for support for a $25 million The walkthrough was night before, but definite- placed. liam Anderson, a brother Rob- Bill Anderson. district-wide master plan part of the Class of 1967’s ly had an interest to come “There’s a lot of nos- that would restructure the 50th high school reunion back and see the high talgia, but it needs to be district to include an up- celebrations, with an school for the last time. He done,” Brienza said. “We event held the night be- said getting a new school MASSACHUSETTS BRIEF per elementary school for have to move forward into grades 3-5 at the existing fore at Four Points Sher- is good. the future.” Belmonte Middle School aton. “It’s an old building,” High schoolers among national average of 21, a and a lower elementary Doherty said she felt Conti said. “It’s served its Gayla Cawley can be nation’s best on ACT test slight increase from last school for Pre-K through mostly excited about the purpose.” reached at gcawley@item- year’s 20.8. grade 2 at the Veterans new school and nostalgia Sandra Chaffee, a Na- live.com. Follow her on BOSTON (AP) — Mas- Fifty-six percent of Memorial Elementary about walking through the ples, Fla., resident, said Twitter @GaylaCawley. sachusetts high schoolers Massachusetts gradu- in the graduating class of ates also met all four 2017 are among the top in ACT college readiness Freezer preserves New England’s the nation when it comes benchmarks, up from 53 to test scores. percent last year and The state’s 2017 public above the national aver- most important seed, plant catalog and private high school age of 27 percent. graduates who chose to Republican Gov. Charlie By Bob Salsberg what might be New En- serve from calamity a rich in search of plants like Je- take the ACT exam had Baker said he’s proud ASSOCIATED PRESS gland’s most important diversity of life. In this case sup’s milk-vetch, a species an average composite to see Massachusetts seed catalog. it’s not animals marching so rare it grows in just three score of 25.4 out of a pos- students scoring high. FRAMINGHAM — An Inside the freezer in two by two but vegetation tiny clusters along the Con- sible 36. He thanked teachers and ordinary-looking freezer Framingham are tightly threatened by any number necticut River. That’s not only up from school administrators for in a sturdy cinderblock sealed packages contain- of things, including natural Once gathered, seeds are last year’s score of 24.8, helping prepare students shed at a suburban Bos- ing an estimated 6 mil- disasters, climate change, first brought to a facility but well ahead of the for college or careers. ton botanical garden holds lion seeds from hundreds unchecked development or in western Massachusetts of plant species, bearing simply being trampled afoot and dried to 20 to 30 per- Advertisement obscure or hard-to-pro- by unsuspecting hikers. cent of relative humidity, 27 Quick & Easy Fix Ups to Sell nounce names like poten- The society’s 2015 survey said Brumback, explain- Your Home Fast and for Top Dollar tilla robbinsiana. They are of more than 3,500 known ing that the drying pro- rare varieties of plant life plant species determined cess assures that liquid NORTH SHORE - Because your home may well be reduce stress, be in control of your situation, and make native to the region — in that 22 percent were rare, your largest asset, selling it is probably one of the most the most profi t possible. inside cells won’t expand some cases found nowhere in decline, endangered or and crack when exposed important decisions you will make in your life. And In this report you’ll discover how to avoid fi nan- else in the world — and once you have made that decision, you’ll want to sell cial disappointment or worse, a fi nancial disaster when perhaps already extinct. to low temperatures. are in grave danger of your home for the highest price in the shortest time selling your home. Using a common-sense approach, “Plants have always The seeds are then vanishing from the land- possible without compromising your sanity. Before you get the straight facts about what can make or break been second-class citizens brought to Framingham, you place your home on the market, here’s a way to the sale of your home. scape. when it comes to conser- sealed in foil envelopes help you to be as prepared as possible. You owe it to yourself to learn how these impor- The “seed ark,” as it’s play- vation,” said Bill Brum- and frozen at -4 degrees To assist home sellers, a new industry report has just tant tips will give you the competitive edge to get your fully dubbed by the New En- back, the organization’s been released call “27 Valuable Tips That You Should home sold fast and for the most amount of money. Fahrenheit, keeping them gland Wild Flower Society, conservation director who know to Get Your Home Sold Fast and for Top Dol- Order your free report today. To hear a brief re- viable for decades or even is not unlike Noah’s biblical for three decades has su- lar,” It tackles the important issues you need to know corded message about how to order your FREE centuries, depending on to make your home competitive in today’s tough, ag- copy of this report, call Toll Free 1-888-539-5603 vessel in its quest to pre- pervised the collection the individual species. gressive marketplace. and enter ID#1023. Call anytime, 24 hours a day, and storage of rare seeds Through these 27 tips, you will discover how to pro- 7 days a week. in New England. “Animals tect and capitalize on your most important investment, IN MEMORIAM are much more, shall we LORRAINE REID say, charismatic. Plants 781-593-7700 OCTOBER 10, 2017 Publishing Daily, except Sundays ON HER BIRTHDAY don’t get the same protec- USPS-142-820 ISSN-8750-8249 Remembering my mom, tions under the federal en- Periodicals postage paid at Lynn, MA FUNERAL HOME & CREMATION SERVICE my best friend. dangered species act.” and additional offices. 798 Western Ave., Lynn, MA 01905 | 781-593-5520 Lovingly remembered and sadly missed. Teams of staffers and vol- Copyright ©2017 The Daily Item Love you Mom. unteers scour some of the Subscriptions Donna and John Prepaid by mail to all parts of the United States Richard C. Nadworny Richard C. Nadworny Jr. Daniel P. Hanlon Jr. region’s most remote areas $20.00 for 4 weeks $65.00 for 13 weeks Family owned $130.00 for 26 weeks since 1958 CEMETERY LETTERING $260.00 for 1 year IN ALL LYNN CEMETERIES Send payment to and POSTMASTER, send address changes to: Private parking area BRUCERLANE.COM The Daily Item Handicap accessible LOW PRICES • IMMEDIATE SERVICE 110 Munroe St. P.O. Box 5 nadwornyfuneralhome.com 978-758-7186 Lynn, MA 01903 MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 11, 2017 A3 LYNN Council candidate Gina O’Toole shares her plans By Thomas Grillo Police Department Capt. sponse which can only be She vowed to form a City ITEM STAFF Mark O’Toole, have lived sufficiently addressed by a Council and School Com- in Fay Estate since the full-time councilor.” mittee Task Force with the LYNN — If Gina O’Toole ’90s, her family’s go O’Toole said one of her authority to audit, ana- becomes the next city way back. priorities is to streamline lyze, and make recommen- councilor to represent “My great-grandparents, permitting for people who dations to meet the city’s Ward 2, she plans to be on the Tammaro family, set- want to open businesses. educational and financial the job 24/7. tled in Lynn’s Brickyard “Several business own- obligations. “I know I can be the voice neighborhood more than ers have told me that the Noting that fire stations to best represent the resi- 100 years ago after im- process of establishing a have been closed in the dents of Ward 2,” she said. migrating from Italy,” she business in Lynn is com- neighborhood for years, “As a Lynn School Depart- said. “My husband’s fami- plicated and frustrating she supports replacing ment employee, if elected, ly, the O’Learys, have been compared to other commu- many of the aging sta- I will be required to forfeit in Lynn since the 1840s.” nities,” she said. this position, which I’ll do, tions. She did not offer a Her children attended To solve the delays, she way to pay for it. and serve full time.” proposed assigning one the Aborn and Shoemaker O’Toole said she supports The North Shore Commu- Elementary schools and person from a city agen- a public-private partner- nity College graduate is in a Pickering Middle School. cy to guide the applicant ship to connect the city by crowded race to replace Wil- The campaign has tak- through what can be a Wi-Fi, but did not say how liam Trahant, who served en her door-to-door where complicated process. on the Council for nine she learned residents have On school spending, much it would cost and terms. The other contenders concerns ranging from O’Toole said other city how it would be paid for. include Richard Starbard, gang problems, absentee agencies are taking a finan- “I have an unwavering 53, owner of Rick’s Auto landlords, noise and traf- cial hit because of the need commitment to the best Collision in Revere, Pe- fic complaints, overgrown to boost school funding. interests of residents of ter Grocki, the 50-year-old trees and broken street “As a result, staffing and Ward 2 and to the citizens maintenance worker at the lights, she said. services of the Lynn Po- and businesses of Lynn,” Salem Housing Authority, “Some of these may lice and Fire Departments she said. and salesman Christopher seem trivial, but they are and Department of Pub- Magrane, 51. real to our residents,” she lic Works and other city Thomas Grillo can be O’Toole said while she said. “They deserve an im- agencies have been dras- reached at tgrillo@item- ITEM PHOTO | OWEN O’ROURKE and her husband, Lynn mediate and thorough re- tically reduced,” she said. live.com. Ward 2 city councilor candidate Gina O’Toole. Fire department hosts its first family fun fair By Dan Kane mary motivation for fire- FOR THE ITEM fighters and event volun- teers Andrew Luque, who LYNN — When Lynn manned the grill cooking firefighter Dan Dulong up hot dogs and hamburg- wanted to organize an ers, and Mark Adrien, who event to get the Lynn helped in the nearby Wyo- Fire Department more in- ma Softball Field conces- volved in the community, sion stand serving the grill Marianne the first thing he thought food and refreshments. Thibault and of was a day of races at the “We get all the support her daughter Lynn Woods Reservation. we could ask for so it’s McKenna Dulong, who also helps great to give it back here,” Duqette, organize races at the park Adrien said. both of Lynn, on Wednesday nights, knew The event also featured finish their the popularity of these a kids race, bouncy hous- kinds of races, and with race during es, and inflatable obstacle the help of Local 739 Union Lynn Fire courses located on the out- President Mike O’Connor Family Day at field of the softball field. the first Lynn Fire Family Kids were also busy get- Lynn Woods Day and Fun Run became on Saturday. ting their faces painted a reality on Saturday. and receiving red balloons. “Today went so well,” Also on the scene was ITEM PHOTOS | Dulong said. “It’s great for 3rd Alarm Wood Fire Piz- SPENSER HASAK the community and fire za, which cooks its pizzas department to be involved out of the back of a con- in an event to raise money verted fire engine. Among and have fun.” some of the guests grab- O’Connor could be found bing some pizza were Lyn- at the finish line of the day’s ner Chris Nardone and longest race, which featured his son Jack, who partici- a 4.5 mile course passing pated in the kids race. by Steel and Stone Towers, “Today was a good time. making sure each finisher What a great turnout for got a high five along with the first year,” Nardone cheers of encouragement. said. “Going forward more “Lynn Fire is one big and more people should family,” O’Connor said. come to this event.” “It’s great for all of the The idea of making this guys from the different an annual tradition for the engines and ladders and fire department and the their families, along with community is something members from the com- Dulong likes the sound of. munity to come together “We may mess around for such a fun day. with the date a bit,” he “The community is al- said. “But I really look for- ways supporting us, so we ward to doing something want to support them.” like this again and seeing Taso Nikolakopoulos rounds the final bend and Justyn Lopez, 13, of Lynn, heads down the final Showing support for the how big it can grow in the heads for the finish line. straight to take third place in the kids’ race. community was also a pri- future.” POLLING LOCATIONS Ward 1 Ward 4 Precinct 4 LHA Community Hall Precinct 1 Precincts 1 and 2 10 Church St. Shoemaker School KIPP Academy 26 Regina Rd. 90 High Rock St. Ward 6 Precinct 2 Precincts 3 and 4 All precincts 3rd Alarm Pondview Lodge The Lynn Museum Lynn Voc. Tech Fieldhouse Wood Fired 112 Kernwood Drive 590 Washington St. 80 Neptune Boulevard Pizza was on hand. Precincts 3 and 4 Ward 5 Ward 7 Whipping up Sisson School 56 Conomo Ave. Precincts 1, 2 and 3 All precincts the pizzas Lynn Voc. Tech Annex were, from Breed Junior High School 90 Commercial St. 90 O’Callaghan Way left, Todd Ward 2 Condon All precincts and Kevin St. Pius Lower Church Hall and Halley Doherty. 215 Maple St. Ward 3 All precincts Marshall Middle School 100 Brookline St. MASONRY & CONSTRUCTION Julio Mendez FAMILY OWNED AND OPERATED

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E M. G D  President and Publisher Edward L. Cahill Andrew Jackson, father of a B A. B Chief Executive O cer John M. Gilberg E C  J. Edward M. Director of Advertising nationalism that plagues US today T  J  Gordon R. Hall 110 Munroe St. News Editor Monica Connell Healey P.O. Box 5 W J. K One Southern monu- hated the British and J. Patrick Norton and statesman, he vehe- Lynn, MA 01903 Vice President, Finance ment that has not come their “savage” friends as mently opposed local re- J N. W  Michael H. Shanahan Chief Operating O cer Chairman under fire of late stands in much as anyone. Maybe sistance to debt collection Customer Service P ’ front of the North Caroli- more. “Your government and scaled back national Monday - Friday, 8 a.m. - 5 p.m. Horace N. Hastings, 1877-1904 na Capitol. It is a bronze has at last yielded to the plans for infrastructure, Charles H. Hastings and Wilmot R. Hastings, 1904-1922 Connecting Charles H. Hastings, 1922-1940 equestrian of Gen. Andrew impulse of the nation,” he education and domestic All Departments: Ernest W. Lawson, 1940-1960 Jackson, the president told his volunteers at the markets. Partly as a re- 781-593-7700 Charles H. Gamage and Peter Gamage, 1960-1982 from 1829 to 1837, with start of the war. “The hour sult, Jackson-era frontiers Peter Gamage, 1982-1991 Ext. 2 Peter H. Gamage, 1991-1996 a plaque that reads: “He of national vengeance is were not strongholds for Brian C. ¡ayer, 1996-1999 Revitalized American De- at hand.” In 1814 his men self-sufficient farming but Classifi ed Advertising Bernard W. Frazier Jr., 1999-2005 Peter H. Gamage, 2005-2014 mocracy.” slaughtered Creek rebels; rather for slave-grown cot- classi [email protected] That’s the usual view in 1815 he saved New Or- ton, whose frenzied export John S. Moran, Executive Editor, 1975-1990 Subscriptions of the man. Somehow, we leans from British inva- to Britain made the Unit- [email protected] just know that Old Hick- sion; in 1818 he attacked ed States more dependent ory made America a more runaway slaves and Sem- Circulation on the old mother country, [email protected] egalitarian place than inole towns in Florida. not less so. And when the what the stuffy, bewigged Each time he displayed a bust came as he left office Ext. 3 Founders had designed in reckless, almost suicidal in 1837, neither he nor Newsroom 1787. courage. the Democratic Party he [email protected] I don’t think the North When Jackson spoke of had created showed much [email protected] Carolina statue should be the “nation,” he meant ev- EDITORIAL mercy for those holding Ext. 4 removed. But I do think ery white family who felt the bag. the plaque should be as he did, not every per- Sports Put simply, Jacksonian [email protected] changed. For Jackson was son living in the United nationalism mostly came the founder not of Ameri- States. The Jacksonian out of race war and epic Ext. 5 can democracy, but rather nation was not just all- Remembering violence. It had little to Retail and Online of a certain kind of Amer- white, but anti-black and do with the peaceful de- Advertising ican nationalism, one that anti-native. No wonder velopment of society, nor [email protected] still clouds our democratic that his main priority as with the kinds of economic a bad day horizons. president was the deporta- fairness that most Ameri- ADVERTISING Let’s be clear, though: tion of some 70,000 native cans wanted, if given the Ernie Carpenter Jr. Jackson earned the love peoples out of their South- Director of Advertising The monuments can be found in most North Shore choice. that most white Ameri- eastern homelands, and Who, then, founded and Business Development, ext. 1355 communities, including Lynn, and the memories — cans felt for him by the [email protected] that the only big change American democracy, if never far from the minds of people who lived through 1820s. That’s because in voting rights during his not Jackson? The answer, Michele Iannaco the day — surface on Sept. 11. he saved them from a two terms was the “loss of I think, is no one. Democ- Advertising Sales Rep, ext. 1315 There’s the memorial sign on Lynnfield Street, the long, harrowing struggle those rights by free black racy is a struggle rather [email protected] plaque in front of the Revere-Malden fire station, an- against the British. Al- men. As for white men, than an achievement, a Jim McFadyen other plaque in Saugus, and a monument at Goldfish though the empire official- they already had the fran- process rather than an in- Advertising Sales Rep, ext. 1217 Pond. The tributes and salutes to Americans and people ly recognized the United chise; Jackson didn’t give stitution. It happens when [email protected] from around the world who were killed by terrorists on States in 1783, it want- it to them. people agree to be less cru- Ralph Mitchell Sept. 11, 2001 dot the nation and occupy sacred ground ed and expected the new Old Hickory’s fans also in New York City, Washington D.C., and Pennsylvania. el to each other, to accept Advertising Sales Rep, ext. 1313 country to fail. The British argue that he empowered [email protected] But monuments, like memories, have a way of fad- excluded American pro- ordinary folk by opening their common needs along ing if the appreciation and respect for them is not duce from many markets, new lands and confront- with their diverse back- Patricia Whalen renewed and new generations are not educated by dumped low-price goods grounds. It is more compli- Advertising Sales Rep, ext. 1310 ing the Bank of the United [email protected] people who lived the events that became history. in Eastern seaports, and States. He certainly be- cated, difficult and fragile than any statue can con- The 9/11 attacks have not been consigned to history organized a counter-rev- lieved in their “sovereign” BUSINESS OFFICE books and news clips. They live in the memories of olutionary state in what right to avenge them- vey. It is the shared chal- people who endured changed lives, changed families is now Ontario. Above all, selves against their ene- lenge of all Americans. Beth Bresnahan and a changed nation on that bright blue Tuesday. Chief Executive Of cer, ext. 1253 they had a loose alliance mies and to seek fortunes J.M. Opal is an associ- [email protected] Many of them, including Saugus, Marblehead, Lynn, with the Indian nations around the world. For that Peabody, Swampscott and Lynnfield residents, will and enslaved blacks who very reason, though, Jack- ate professor of history at Susan J. Conti pause today and think of loved ones and friends they kept white families up McGill University in Controller, ext. 1288 son didn’t think the peo- [email protected] lost. Others will recall the surreal and stunning im- at night, fearing for their ple could regulate private Montreal and author of ages broadcast on television that morning. lives. During the War of interests for the common “Avenging the People: An- Ted Grant Publisher, ext. 1234 But a whole generation of young people will view 1812, these “internal en- good. Indeed, his version drew Jackson, the Rule of 9/11 in the roughly the same way they view other [email protected] emies” sometimes sided of a republic didn’t have Law, and the American events that preceded their birth or that occurred with the empire in a final much of a public at all, ex- Marian Kinney Nation” (Oxford Univer- when they were too young to comprehend historical effort to crush the republic. cept in wartime. ext. 1212 events and their ramifications. A veteran of extreme A hard-line judge and sity Press). Readers may [email protected] These 20-somethings and teenagers need more violence in the Carolinas free-wheeling business- send him email at jason. Will Kraft than history books or social media summaries to and Tennessee, Jackson man as well as a soldier [email protected]. Vice President / Finance, ext. 1296 grasp a complete understanding of the attacks. They [email protected] need the opportunity to hear directly from the people Jennifer Perez who lost loved ones in the attacks and who tried to ext. 1205 save lives, and who rushed to Ground Zero in their [email protected] wake. There are thousands of people who can provide Carolina Trujillo firsthand accounts of how the nation responded to Community Relations Director, ext. 1226 the attacks and how 9/11 changed the country. [email protected] Americans too young to remember the attacks are going to be passed the torch of history by the genera- Jim Wilson Chief Operating Of cer, ext. 1200 tion that lived through 9/11. They must be thorough- [email protected] ly prepared to carry the truth about 9/11 forward to future generations. CIRCULATION The key to that preparation is spending time lis- Lisa Mahmoud tening to the firsthand accounts of 9/11 survivors Manager, ext. 1239 and people who endured that day. History is never [email protected] absolute and the push to tear down Confederate CLASSIFIED monuments is proof that perspectives on history are never anchored in concrete. Abbe Young Smith Manager, ext. 1276 It is a giant puzzle and pieces are almost always [email protected] missing. The search for those pieces begins when people NEWSROOM take time to listen to stories told by people who wit- Bill Brotherton nessed world-changing events like 9/11. Every Amer- Features Editor ext. 1338 ican should shoulder the responsibility of finding and [email protected] speaking with someone who experienced that day. It is up to the first responders, the witnesses, the sur- Gayla Cawley Reporter, ext. 1236 vivors and people who lost loved ones to offer their [email protected] memories and their accounts of that day to ensure that Americans born after the attacks or too young to Cheryl Charles remember them learn what happened on 9/11. Night Editor, ext. 1278 [email protected] If there is truth to be found in history, it can only be discovered by talking to the people who were there. Tori Faieta Copy Editor ILLUSTRATION | ADAM ZYGLIS [email protected] Thomas Grillo AKRON BEACON JOURNAL Reporter, ext. 1264 [email protected] Spenser Hasak Photographer, ext. 1332 Trump misses his DACA opportunity [email protected] Thor Jourgensen President Donald Trump missed He then urged Congress to act in stepped his authority, though the speak English fluently. They are News Editor, ext. 1267 his opportunity. Polls show a the meantime to accommodate law and precedent leave room for part of the culture, having arrived [email protected] large majority of Americans sup- the roughly 800,000 young people such discretion. Yet, at the same here at a median age 6 through, Steve Krause port protecting from deportation who know this country as home. time, the president hardly has again, no choice of their own. Why Sports Editor, ext. 1229 young immigrants brought il- The House and Senate should committed to changing the con- not protect them from deportation [email protected] legally to this country by their act. They have tried for 15 years gressional dynamic through pro- and allow them to work given all Katie Morrison parents. A troubled Trump White — to no avail, falling short by a posed legislation or a passionate the country has invested? Sports Reporter House would have been helped by handful of votes, too many Demo- call to action. [email protected] the president bridging differenc- crats and Republicans balking at The president did suggest, er- These young immigrants placed es and acting with the “heart” he support for the DREAM Act. roneously, that DACA triggered their trust in the government, Owen O’Rourke Photographer, ext. 1224 earlier deemed necessary. Barack Obama watched Con- a surge of young immigrants. providing data about themselves [email protected] Unfortunately, this president gress fail and listened to key Actually, such an increase traces to participate in the program. of many colliding views also de- Democratic constituencies. He to legislation protecting victims Now that information makes Roberto Scalese scribed the Deferred Action for then created the program, view- of human trafficking signed by Digital Content Director, ext. 1211 them more vulnerable to depor- [email protected] Childhood Arrivals program as ing it as temporary. It does not George W. Bush. The president tation, as indicated in a memo “amnesty.” Thus, he appeared include a path to citizenship. El- and Jeff Sessions, the attorney Anne Marie Tobin from the Department of Home- caught between positions as he igibility is limited to those com- general, also alluded to the far- Sports Reporter, ext. 1307 announced this week his inten- ing before age 16, living here for fetched notion that these young land Security. All of that should [email protected] tions for DACA going forward. at least five years, now in school immigrants are displacing Ameri- be enough to spur Congress to act. Bridget Turcotte The president sought to have it or with a diploma, and having no cans at work. The odds are that it won’t argue Reporter, ext. 1269 both ways. He declared that the criminal record. President Trump They are Americans in every for the president sticking with the [email protected] program would end in six months. argues that his predecessor over- way but formally on paper. They temporary answer. Ryan York Copy Editor, ext. 1220 TO SUBMIT YOUR LETTERS, PLEASE MAIL TO THE DAILY ITEM, P.O. 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Call Lisa at 781-593-7700 ext. 1239 A6 THE DAILY ITEM MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 11, 2017 POLICE/FIRE

All address information, particu- Breaking and Entering A report of cars egged at 8:55 Assaults larly arrests, reflect police records. In a.m. Saturday on Washington the event of a perceived inaccuracy, A report of a breaking and Street. A caller reported her car A report of an assault and entering at 9:36 p.m. Friday at battery at 2:40 p.m. Sunday it is the sole responsibility of the con- and the car behind hers were 6 Newhall St.; at 5:05 a.m. Sat- egged overnight. She didn’t on Lowell Street. An assault cerned party to contact the relevant urday at 5 Parrott St.; at 9:13 want to see an officer and was and battery with a knife was police department and have the a.m. Saturday at 32 Arbor St.; going to wash the egg off of her reported — the only description department issue a notice of correc- at 5:01 p.m. Saturday at 32 Ar- car; at 9:48 a.m. Saturday on was of a young, white man with tion to the Daily Item. Corrections or bor St.; at 8:28 p.m. Saturday Hawkes Street. A caller report- dark hair. clarifications will not be made without at 3 Ferris Road; at 12:40 a.m. ed his car was egged and saw express notice of change from the ar- Sunday at 16 Cedar St. others in the area that were Breaking and Entering A report of a motor vehicle resting police department. also egged. He had already breaking and entering at 8:52 cleaned it off his car and didn’t A report of a motor vehicle a.m. Saturday at 50 Johnson want to see an officer, but add- breaking and entering at 8:24 LYNN St.; at 1:04 p.m. Saturday at ed that he thought someone a.m. Sunday at 74 County St. A 50 Johnson St. was driving around egging cars. caller reported a past break-in Arrests A caller reported she was to several motor vehicles in the Complaints thrown out of Wags n’ Whis- driveway; at 9:40 a.m. Satur- Jessica DeLeon, 36, of 178 day at 73 County St. A caller re- PHOTO | ASSOCIATED PRESS Ferry St., Everett, was arrested kers at 11:28 a.m. Saturday A report of a disturbance at ported his property was stolen on warrant charges of larceny on Pleasant Street. She stated Police officers take Orion Krause, covered in a 12:14 p.m. Friday at 33 Wa- from his unlocked vehicle and from building and Class B drug that her dog was soaking wet white sheet, to a police vehicle in Groton. verly St.; at 4:17 p.m. Friday unlocked garage. possession at 8:49 p.m. Friday. at 14 Nichols Ave.; at 10:04 and she went in because she heard her dog crying out. Police Joshua Dixon, 27, of 4 Clark p.m. Friday at 16 Clifton St.; at Complaints Ave., Salem, was arrested and 11:37 p.m. Friday at 328 Es- reported an employee asked Suspect in 4 slayings charged with armed robbery, sex St.; at 1:10 a.m. Saturday the caller to leave because A report of a disturbance at resisting arrest, assault and at 60 Granite St.; at 3:41 a.m. the dog was misbehaving and 7:55 p.m. Friday at 6 Pierpont to appear in court battery on a police officer and Saturday at 22 Jefferson St.; at there were no charges for the St. A woman reported she got unlawful possession of ammo 6:48 a.m. Saturday at 1147 services. punched in the face by her without a firearm identification A caller reported a Jeep drove By Crystal Hill unarmed and seemed vul- Western Ave.; at 11:03 a.m. neighbor; at 8:38 p.m. Friday ASSOCIATED PRESS nerable. card at 11:45 a.m. Saturday. Saturday at 52 Newhall St.; at down the street speeding at at Mobile Estates at 286 New- Gelber Lopez-Chali, 23, of 1:33 p.m. Saturday on Pilgrim “He looked like a nice 12:52 p.m. Saturday at 4 Holy- bury St. A caller reported her BOSTON — A 22-year- kid who needed help, he 2 Breed Terrace, was arrested Road. The caller yelled at the oke St.; at 1:36 p.m. Saturday neighbor smashed the window old recent Oberlin College was skinny (and) tall. I and charged with operation of operator who reportedly flipped at 7-Eleven at 3 Lynnfield St.; of her vehicle. Kevin Anthony graduate and jazz drum- thought he was the vic- a motor vehicle with a revoked him off and swore at him while at 2:53 p.m. Saturday at 810 Bovell, 39, of 286 Newbury St., mer from Maine will face tim of the prank, or in an license as a habitual traffic of- he was outside with his kids. Lynnway; at 4:16 p.m. Satur- Apt. 98, was summoned for murder charges Monday accident, or had a mental fender, speeding and passing A group of kids came in to re- day at 25 Great Woods Road; malicious destruction of prop- in the slayings of four health problem. He wasn’t violation at 8:09 p.m. Friday. port a small bag with possible at 5:28 p.m. Saturday at 360 erty; at 3:46 p.m. Saturday at adults found at a Massa- bleeding profusely or any- Michael Sparks, of 39 Stew- marijuana inside of it at 4:09 Washington St.; at 8:45 p.m. East End Veterans Memorial chusetts home. thing,” Alcocer said. art St., Everett, was arrested on p.m. Saturday on Wyman Road. Saturday at 203 Den Quarry Park at 45 Walnut St. A caller Orion Krause, of Rock- Alcocer, who had never a warrant charge of assault and Road; at 9:40 p.m. Saturday The kids stated that it was at reported he was sitting in the port, Maine is scheduled seen Krause until that battery with a dangerous weap- at Oxford and Willow streets; the entrance of the park by a park and that an unknown man for arraignment in Ayer night, had thought the al- on at 11:51 p.m. Saturday. at 9:57 p.m. Saturday at 16 tree near the baseball fields. started yelling at him; at 3:50 District Court in connec- leged confession was “just Rockmere Gardens; at 9:58 Police were unable to find any tion with the deaths of p.m. Sunday on Caller Street. crazy talk.” It wasn’t until Accidents p.m. Saturday at 10 Central marijuana. an elderly man and wom- A report of suspicious activi- Krause was later taken Ave.; at 11:11 p.m. Saturday an and two middle-aged A report of a motor vehicle away in an ambulance at 161 Chestnut St.; at 11:17 ty at 3:51 a.m. Saturday at 28 women in Groton, a town accident at 2:02 p.m. Friday Theft that a detective confirmed p.m. Saturday at 460 Eastern Martinack Ave. Three men were about 43 miles northwest on Commercial Street; at 2:23 to Alcocer that the killings Ave.; at 12:53 a.m. Sunday A report of stolen jewelry at reportedly loading a motor ve- of Boston, the Middlesex p.m. Friday at 145 Lynnfield St.; had taken place, Alcocer at 12 Cedar St.; at 4:47 a.m. 10:59 a.m. Friday on Bartlett hicle onto a trailer. Police re- district attorney’s office at 2:54 p.m. Friday at Bay View said. Sunday at Boston and Myrtle Street. A caller reported that all ported the men had purchased said Sunday. Avenue and Hawthorne Street; It’s unclear whether streets; at 8:23 a.m. Sunday of her good jewelry was stolen, the vehicle; at 1:28 p.m. Satur- Town police found the at 2:56 p.m. Friday at Central Krause has an attorney. at 33 Munroe St.; at 9:34 a.m. including diamonds and wed- day at TD Bank at 637 Lowell man and two of the wom- Avenue and Sutton Street; at Relatives of Krause in Sunday at 312 Union St. ding bands. St. The bank manager reported en dead inside the house 2:56 p.m. Friday at Central Rockport, Maine, did not a man in the parking lot ate a and the other woman’s Avenue and Sutton Street; at respond to a request for banana and then tucked in his body outside on Friday 2:56 Friday on Liberty Street; Overdose PEABODY comment Sunday. shirt night. The victims have at 3:05 p.m. Friday at 312 Oberlin College & Con- A report of an overdose at A report of a neighborhood yet to be identified. Union St.; at 3:06 p.m. Friday Arrests servatory, a liberal arts 1:17 a.m. Saturday on Mall dispute at 3:23 p.m. Saturday Middlesex District At- at Domino’s Pizza at 341 Union college in Ohio with a pres- Street; at 11:28 p.m. Saturday Vanessa Caruso, 24, of 6 at 17 Ayer St. A caller reported torney Marian Ryan said St.; at 5:18 p.m. Friday at Son- tigious music program, has on Kingsley Terrace; at 4:28 Sanborn St., Apt. 2, was ar- her neighbor threw a Starbucks the victims appeared to ny’s Car Wash at 700 Lynnway; identified Krause as a 2017 a.m. Sunday on Hanover Street. rested and charged with two cup at her vehicle. have died of blunt force graduate of the school’s at 8:41 p.m. Friday at 395 Es- counts of Class B drug posses- sex St.; at 8:48 p.m. Friday at trauma. She called the sit- conservatory. Theft sion, unlicensed operation of a Overdose uation “a tragic incident “The nature of this 369 Chestnut St.; at 3:17 a.m. motor vehicle and on a warrant A report of a larceny at 12:21 of family violence” but it’s crime is horrific, and the Saturday at 5 Oakwood Ave.; at 3:25 p.m. Friday. A report of an overdose at p.m. Friday at Union Travel ‘N unclear how Krause is re- grief of family and friends at 5:48 a.m. Saturday at 22 Michael F. Castiello, 30, of 4:41 p.m. Friday on Norfolk Valley Ave.; at 8:37 a.m. Sat- Tours at 177 Union St.; at 2:41 lated to the victims. immeasurable. And yet 34 Keys Drive, Apt. 11, was Avenue. A woman was taken to urday at 853 Western Ave.; at p.m. Friday at 154 Pleasant St.; Neighbor Wagner Alcocer, Orion is one of our own,” arrested and charged with op- Salem Hospital; at 7:47 a.m. 9:13 a.m. Saturday on Federal at 10:45 a.m. Saturday at 42W 52, unwittingly became a said Oberlin president eration of a motor vehicle with Saturday at 5321 Crane Brook Street; at 11:24 a.m. Saturday Baltimore St.; at 6:05 p.m. Sat- witness when the suspect Carmen Ambar and the a suspended license at 10:48 Way. A man was taken to Lahey showed up at his back conservatory’s dean, An- at 51 Essex St.; at 3:17 p.m. urday at Walmart at 780 Lyn- Hospital; at 1:20 p.m. Saturday Saturday at 500 Western Ave.; nway; at 6:44 p.m. Saturday at a.m. Saturday. door, naked and muddy, drea Kalyn, in an email to Jon Paul Guitard, 48, of 116 on Wagner Street. A man was that evening and calmly the school community. at 4:09 p.m. Saturday at South 242 Boston St.; at 7:52 p.m. taken to Salem Hospital. and Summer streets; at 6:31 Saturday at 69 North Common Lafayette St., Apt. 110, Salem, told Alcocer he “just mur- Krause’s Facebook page was arrested and charged with dered four people,” accord- says he studied jazz at the p.m. Saturday at Commercial St.; at 12:57 a.m. Sunday at Theft and South Common streets; 50 Newhall St.; at 7:41 a.m. larceny at 12:25 p.m. Sunday. ing to Alcocer. school. The school’s web- Michael Patrick McDade, Alcocer told The As- site shows that Krause at 9:27 p.m. Saturday at Fed- Sunday at 583 Chestnut St.; A report of a larceny at 12:25 28, of 90 Aborn St., Apt. 1R, sociated Press that the put on a senior recital in eral Street and Western Ave- at 10:48 a.m. Sunday at 43 p.m. Sunday at 2 Littles Lane nue; at 11:35 p.m. Saturday State St. was arrested and charged with suspect’s eyes were “very April. larceny at 12:25 p.m. Sunday. and 63 Main St. Police reported red” and he had cuts on A community vigil for at Joyce and Union streets; at A report of a robbery at 1:04 two were in custody for purse 12:39 a.m. Sunday on Lowell a.m. Saturday at Family Dollar his body and blood above the four victims was held Accidents snatching. Jon Paul Guitard, 48, his eye and knee but was Sunday in Groton. Street; at 12:47 a.m. Sunday at 50 Central Ave. of Salem, and Michael Patrick at Chatham Street and Western A report of a motor vehicle hit McDade, 28, of Peabody, were Avenue; at 6:12 a.m. Saturday Vandalism and run accident at 5:52 p.m. arrested for larceny. MASSACHUSETTS BRIEFS at 29 Ford St.; at 7:46 a.m. A report of vandalism at 8:41 Friday at 50 Margin St. and 93 Sunday at Boston Street and Gardner St. Andrea Paige Mul- Man, 22, charged in death of Suspect in custody after Broadway. p.m. Saturday at 72 Mall St.; SWAMPSCOTT lin, 27, of 12 Quarry Lane, Apt. A report of a motor vehicle hit at 9:39 p.m. Saturday at 229 girl fatally struck by car shooting at festival on 3205, Malden, was summoned and run accident at 5:31 p.m. Kings Hill Drive. Accidents for leaving the scene of proper- METHUEN (AP) — Po- MIT campus Friday at 7 Alice Ave.; at 7:01 A report of a motor vehicle lice say they’ve arrested ty damage; at 3:49 p.m. Satur- CAMBRIDGE (AP) p.m. Saturday at 55 Rock Ave. MARBLEHEAD accident with personal injury a man and charged him A report of a motor vehicle day at 9 Munroe St. — Police at the Mas- A report of a motor vehicle at 9:02 a.m. Friday at Essex in the hit-and-run death accident with personal injury Complaints Street and Vantage Terrace. of an 11-year-old girl in sachusetts Institute of at 9:40 p.m. Friday at 16 Com- accident at 7:14 p.m. Friday at A report of a motor vehicle Methuen. Technology say a shooting mercial St.; at 8:42 p.m. Satur- A report of suspicious ac- 93 Central St. and 1 Osborne accident at 2:36 p.m. Friday at Police Chief Joseph has been reported as a day at 515 Chatham St. tivity at 5:43 p.m. Friday on Terrace; at 2:34 p.m. Saturday at 63 Central St. and 2 Tremont Mobil Gas Station at 525 Para- Solomon says 22-year-old parade passed through Chestnut Street. A caller re- the school’s campus. ported some kids got into a St.; at 5:47 p.m. Saturday at dise Road; at 4:24 p.m. Friday Steven Toro, of Lawrence, Assaults MIT police say the Bartlett and Steadman piece of Su Chang’s at 373 Lowell St.; at Whole Foods Market at 313 was arrested Saturday A report of an assault and equipment, were able to start it at 12:41 p.m. Sunday at 465 Paradise Road; at 9:35 a.m. evening and charged with shooting was reported battery with a dangerous and were swinging the bucket Lowell St. and 2 Norwich Road. Saturday at Humphrey Street motor vehicle homicide just before 5 p.m. Sunday weapon at 9:09 p.m. Friday on around; at 9:49 p.m. Friday on A report of a motor vehicle and Orchard Circle; at 10:31 and other offenses in con- at 200 Tech Square. A Maple Street; at 3:38 p.m. Sat- Sandie Lane. A caller reported accident with personal injury at p.m. Saturday at Cherry Street nection with Jadee Soto’s suspect is in the custody urday on Curwin Circle. someone knocked on the door 7:27 p.m. Friday at Analogic at and Hillside Avenue; at 12:28 death Thursday night. of Cambridge police and a A report of an assault at 3:33 and when the caller opened the 8 Centennial Drive. Two people a.m. Sunday at Mobil Gas Sta- Investigators say Jadee firearm has been recov- p.m. Saturday on Western Avenue. door, the person ran off. were taken to the hospital. tion at 525 Paradise Road. was struck as she and her ered. father stepped into the Cambridge police say street. the shooting took place at The vehicle then drove the Cambridge Carnival. Police chase from Malden ends on a Peabody roof toward Lawrence. The event has been shut The girl was thrown down. CHASE While on the highway, K9 partner Kojak located and assault and battery into the air and hit by According to the Carni- another vehicle traveling two State Police K-9 unit the suspect on the roof of on a police officer. He is val’s website, the event From A1 in the opposite direction. vehicles joined the pur- a house,” State Police said. is a “colorful and festival expected to be arraigned She died at the hospital. his car again on Satur- suit, which wound through Officers at the scene were in Malden District Court celebration rooted in day, which was spotted a Toro is being held Lynnfield and Peabody. able to talk Ochendu into on Monday, Gatcomb said. African traditions.” It short time later. Officers At that point, the suspect coming down off the roof. at the Methuen Police Police said no one was Department pending celebrates diversity and started to pursue him and drove into the Golden Ba- He was arrested and taken community. the chase was on, with the nana strip club’s parking to Melrose-Wakefield Hos- hurt in the incident, and arraignment Monday in no property was reported Lawrence District Court. Two people suffered suspect heading up Route lot and bailed out of his pital, State Police said. injuries not considered 1 in Saugus, State Police damaged. It wasn’t immediately car, according to police. Ochendu was charged life-threatening and were said. With officers chasing on by Malden Police with two known if he’s represented taken to a hospital. During the chase, Ochen- foot, he reportedly ran counts of malicious de- Staff Reporter Gayla by a lawyer. MIT police say they du ran stop signs and red into a nearby trailer home struction of property, two Cawley contributed to this Solomon says informa- lights and smashed into community. counts of failure to stop for report. Roberto Scalese can tion provided by the pub- don’t believe there is an an unmarked police cruis- “MSP K9 Trooper police, assault and battery be reached at rscalese@ lic resulted in the arrest. ongoing threat. er, Gatcomb said. Leigha Genduso and her with a dangerous weapon itemlive.com. Catch up with your Lynn Drug Task Force favorite team CALL 24 HOURS A DAY in Item Sports! Hotline or text the word tiplynn and your tip to “tip411” (847411)

All reports of neighborhood activity will be investigated. 781-477-4444 Callers may remain anonymous. Spanish menu available MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 11, 2017 THE DAILY ITEM A7 Lynn, Medford, Peabody going to the polls Swampscott scores POLLS From A1 with a brand new running. By Tuesday night, the Blocksidge Field city will have an idea who is leading in the race for BLOCKSIDGE that’s as far as the project mayor between Mayor Ju- From A1 has gotten. dith Flanagan Kennedy “The person said that or Sen. Thomas McGee Baker served on one of he didn’t want to hear (D-Lynn). The fight that the committees that was that any athlete had to has been called a battle formed along the way, and leave school early so he or royale has, so far, been un- that board’s recommenda- she could get a game in,” eventful. tions were turned down by Spellios said. “Because of In the race for political the 2012 Town Meeting. that, there will be lights donations, McGee is the “But that wasn’t the end in the spring.” clear winner. At the end of of it,” said Scott Faulkner Spellios also said that August, his campaign had of the All-Blue Founda- another donor has ear- $103,165 compared to just tion, which helped oversee marked money for a play- $13,552 for Kennedy, ac- ITEM PHOTO | SPENSER HASAK the final construction of ground on the far end of cording to the Massachu- the project. “A study com- the park. setts Office of Campaign Lynn Election Coordinator Mary Jules puts the cover on a device that mittee was formed, and Saturday, the stands and Political Finance. holds completed ballots once they’ve passed through Accu-Vote ma- we did the research, and were full and there were Kennedy said she was chines. presented a new plan in people lined up along the outspent in the last two May 2013.” fence to see the dedication seeking re-election this The eight challengers driquez, Michael Ruggiero races and still managed to One of the big sticking ceremony and to just take year include Donna Cop- and Paul Ruseau. win. are Natalie Breen, Robert points to getting the turf- it all in. Sample ballot and poll- There are council races pola, John Ford, Lorraine Cappucci, Andrew Castag- field built was the infill. “This is an inspiration,” ing places are available in Ward 1 pitting incum- Gately, and Jared Nichol- netti, Ann Marie Cugno, On most fields, including said Roger Volk, who does on the city’s website: www. bent Wayne Lozzi against son. Cheryl Rodriguez, George Manning in Lynn, that public address at Big Blue medfordma.org. William O’Shea III, and in The handful of challeng- Sacco, Remo Scarfo, and infill consists of cut-up football games. “This all In Peabody, polls are Ward 3 City Council Pres- ers include: Cherish Casey, Curtis Tuden. Cugno is rubber, which was seen happened because of the ident Darren Cyr is facing Brian Castellanos, Eliza- a member of the School open from 7 a.m. to 8 p.m. as a health hazard by the in Ward 6 for the City love the people here have George Meimeteas, and beth Rosario Gervacio, Na- Committee. town’s Board of Health. for their time. It’s been a Council primary. On Blocksidge, coconut City Councilor Dianna tasha Megie-Maddrey, Jes- Two candidates for May- long time coming.” Mark O’Neill, Mike Geom- husks are used for the in- Chakoutis is being chal- sica Murphy, and Michael or, incumbent Stephanie The turf has been ruled elos, and Margaret Tier- fill. lenged for a second time Satterwhite. M. Burke and challenger for football, soccer, field by Marven Hyppolite, the Medford’s municipal David McKillop, will ap- ney are looking to replace “I think solving that is- outgoing Ward 6 Councilor hockey, and lacrosse. It 24-year-old caseworker for preliminary election will pear on the ballot with sue was a turning point in Barry Sinewitz. The top two has a new, state-of-the-art U.S. Rep. Seth Moulton whittle the list of 15 City that race decided in No- getting this project off the vote-getters will move on to press box that rises on top (D-Mass.). Council candidates to a to- vember. ground,” said recreation the November general elec- of aluminum bleachers. There will be at least tal of 14 that will appear For Medford School director Danielle Strauss. tion. There are no plans at the two new members of the on the Nov. 7 final ballot. Committee, five of the in- Faulkner agrees. “That went a long way moment to put stands on School Committee where All seven incumbent cumbents are seeking Thomas Grillo can be toward getting the proj- the visitors’ side of the the mayor serves as chair. City Councilors are seek- re-election, including Erin reached at tgrillo@item- ect approved at the 2015 field, said Public Works Patricia Capano, the vice ing re-election, including DeBenedetto, Kathy Kreatz, live.com. Adam Swift and Town Meeting,” he said. director Gino Cresta, chairwoman, and Maria Rick Caraviello, Fred Del- Mea Mustone, Robert E. Steve Freker contributed But getting approval because the planners Carrasco, a Dominican Re- lo Russo, Jr., John Falco, Skerry Jr., and Paulette Van to this report. Adam Swift was contingent upon other thought they might in- public native who joined Adam Knight, Breanna der Kloot. Challengers in can be reached at aswift@ factors, the biggest being terfere with the baseball the seven-member panel Lungo-Koehn, Michael the 10-candidate field in- itemlive.com and Steve a condition that $300,000 field at Phillips Park. And in 2007, are not running. Marks, and George Scar- clude Kathleen Cullinane, Freker at sfreker@itemlive. of the $2 million price tag ultimately, Cresta hopes The other members pelli. com. Angela Moore, Alexis Ro- had to be raised privately. there is a new concession “This type of public-pri- stand on the far end of the vate partnership is kind stadium. Saugus celebrates 37th Founder’s Day of underappreciated,” said Baker noted that both of Selectman Peter Spellios, his boys played Big Blue football, yet the first game FOUNDER’S DAY century,” Nickolas said. the Saugus High School from inside the makeshift who was the liaison be- tween the town and the on the new field would “I’m grateful for all she Band, showcasing some of jail that would be donated From A1 All-Blue Committee. be girls soccer (won by has done.” their tunes played at foot- to the band. Swampscott, 2-0). routines on the stage, with “This took some time,” Cakounes, who has coor- ball games. One of the selectmen to Blocksidge Field is kids playing in the fun ar- said Spellios. “Good things dinated the event for sev- “It’s fun for us to be able finally get bailed out after named for John Enos ea’s inflatable attractions, often do, and they take eral years now, described to perform at such a great encouraging passersby to Blocksidge, who was 28 enjoying face painting, a lot of work. This was a how the day started as a event like this,” said Band give to the cause was Jeff when he died in World and the dunk tank. celebration of Saugus but Director Justin Jones. He major investment in the Cicolini. community, and it’s now a War I, just a month prior The celebration, which also evolved into such an also said how great it is to “It’s just a great cause,” point of pride.” to the signing of the armi- shuts down Central Street important day. get a little live practice be- he said. “Once I was asked Spellios added that stice that ended the con- for pedestrians, is coor- “This event started as a fore the football season gets planning and fund rais- flict in 1918. dinated, in part, with the celebration of Saugus and going. to volunteer here I didn’t ing is still being done for “I wonder how he would Saugus Youth and Recre- now, along with that, has be- The band’s Saugus hesitate to join the in- some necessary additions feel about this,” said Bak- ation Department, led by come the biggest fundraiser Band-it’s Jail fundraiser, mates, it’s great fun.” to the field. One donor last er. “Isn’t it great we have director Greg Nickolas, for youth and sports,” she run by parents and mem- Debra Panetta, chairwom- week pledged money so given this field a facelift and program coordinator said. “It’s a great day to be a bers of the band, featured an of the Board of Select- that lights can be erected that person who fought Crystal Cakounes. Saugonian.” some of the members of men, said “Founder’s Day is by the spring. The foot- and died for his country “Crystal has tak- One of the several musi- Saugus’ Board of Select- a day of celebrating every- ing has been poured, but could appreciate?” en Founder’s Day and cal performances Saugo- men being “arrested” and thing Saugus. It’s a great brought it into the 21st nians were treated to was having to raise bail money Saugus family tradition.” Lynn Tech teacher McCuish is at our service

MCCUISH Park and a cleanup at pastor for St. Paul Luther- ton to honor him today From A1 Lynn Commons. an Church; Brenda Mattos was really, really cool and “I think the thing that of Beverly, a volunteer who inspiring.” McCuish said. “I just feel particularly distinguished works with the homeless; Moulton said the award blessed and fortunate to Jason was his commitment Mary Margaret Moore, of was created to honor his have even been considered, to inspiring others, to not Salem, former director of own mentor and inspira- and so to receive the award just serve himself, but to in- the Independent Living tion to serve, Rev. Gomes, — it’s a testament, I think, spire others to serve, and we Center of the North Shore a Christian minister who to my students, and the saw it in the example of Rep. and Cape Ann; Rick Palardy, served for almost 40 years staff and other faculty and Brendan Crighton (D-Lynn) formerly of Georgetown, at Memorial Church of teachers who give so much who showed up here as a firefighter and community Harvard University, a on our service days togeth- state representative to the volunteer; and Rob Werner, space built to honor the er, our SkillsUSA program award, not knowing that of Salisbury, founder of the Harvard public servants and how hard the kids work Jason would be the winner, Leeward Foundation. who died in World War I. with me. So, this award re- but simply because he was David Barrios, 16, a ju- Moulton said Gomes ally doesn’t belong to me. It so important to his own de- nior at Lynn Tech, spoke had one of those popular belongs to the entire Lynn cision to serve the country.” at the award ceremony courses on campus and Vocational Technical Insti- Moulton said McCui- about McCuish, who he students would often turn tute.” sh, who is also a director said has been his teacher, to him when they were The award was present- for My Brother’s Table in football coach, advisor and having a tough time. He ed at Lynn City Hall the Lynn, personifies what mentor. told Gomes that he had day before the 16th anni- it means to be in public “Mr. McCuish is one of decided to join the U.S. versary of Sept. 11, 2001, service — he serves as an the most fascinating, car- Marine Corps, something which for Americans, will advisor for the local Skill- ing, and dedicated people I he said his mentor was give them pause as they sUSA chapter and his stu- have ever met,” Barrios said. concerned about, but who remember the deadliest dents have been honored “He always says that he had expressed relief that terrorist attack in the by the national SkillsUSA doesn’t change lives, rather there wasn’t a war going country’s history. organization with numer- he changes his by working on at the time. The conver- But Sept. 11 has also ous awards. Under his with others. One of the many sation happened about six served a dual purpose since watch, he said McCuish’s things that makes him a months before 9/11. Congress declared it a Na- “I’m not someone who ITEM PHOTO | KATIE MORRISON tional Day of Service in 2009. students have raised thou- worthy candidate for the rec- sands of dollars with ser- ognition is he walks the walk wanted to be a politician, Evan Giles tossed a football around after the Moulton said the award is but I was inspired to serve,” dedication. given out purposefully on vice-led projects, and vol- every single day … Because unteered countless hours of his guidance and support, Moulton said. “And first of or near the anniversary “to all, I was inspired to serve coincide with this day in at My Brother’s Table, the Lynn Vocational Technical Greater Boston Food Bank Institute has a culture of giv- by Peter J. Gomes, who is American history that has really the man responsible, Selling a house? and the Lynn Shelter As- ing back.” gratefully been reborn from more than any other, for my sociation. Crighton said McCuish Buying a house? a day of tragedy as a day of decision to join the Marines, McCuish said SkillsU- was his football captain service.” and I wouldn’t be a member SA is a program that runs when they were at Lynn Find out what properties Following the awards of Congress today, if not for for students of vocational Classical High School — ceremony, Moulton, Mc- that decision to serve the recently sold in your area. schools where they learn he was a freshman and Cuish and more than 50 country first in the Marines. valuable skills about their McCuish was a senior. other volunteers partici- I think that service brings trades, but the program “I had known him before Check out pated in the planned ser- Americans together and at a not only has students en- because he had played vice portion of the event, time when the country is so the Real Estate page hance their vocational Pop Warner and was al- taking part in activities divided and there’s so much in Saturday’s paper. that included serving a careers and futures, but ways just a leader, even at tension in our communities, meal at My Brother’s Ta- gives back a lot to the com- that young age, and real- service is a way to not only ble, home renovation with munity through service. ly inspired me,” Crighton give back, but to bring peo- Lynn Housing and Neigh- Other finalists included said. “He was the type of ple together. We need that borhood Development, Jocelyn Cook, of Marble- guy who would knock you now more than ever.” fall cleanup at Girls Inc. head, founder of SPUR; down on the field and pick of Lynn, urban gardening Sandra Suarez, of Lynn, op- you right back up, and was Gayla Cawley can be with the Lynn Beautifi- erations manager at Com- a really great teacher to reached at gcawley@item- cation Project, farming pass Working Capital; Rev. me, even in high school … live.com. Follow her on at The Food Project Lynn Anne Deneen, of Gloucester, For Congressman Moul- Twitter @GaylaCawley. A8 MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 11, 2017 LOOK! PEOPLE, PLACES, AND THINGS The flock rocks the block Lady Gaga says she’s taking a ‘rest’ from music after tour

TORONTO (AP) — Lady Gaga says that she’s planning to take a “rest” from music and “slow down for a moment for some healing.” The pop star was at in Toronto on Friday for a pair of con- certs and to premiere a Netflix documentary about herself, “Gaga: Five Foot Two.” The film, playing at the Toronto Interna- tional Film Festival, chronicles PHOTO | ASSOCIATED PRESS her life, February’s Super Bowl performance and her struggle Son of ex-Fox News with chronic pain. host Eric Bolling dies Gaga teared up speaking to reporters about her health BOULDER, Colo. (AP) — The issues. “It’s hard,” she said, “but son of former Fox News host it’s liberating too.” Eric Bolling has died, just “When this tour is over I will hours after Fox announced that take a little downtime from Bolling was leaving the network. myself, and then I’ll get back to Bolling said in a tweet on doing what I love,” she said. “I’m Saturday that he and his wife, never not making music. I’m nev- Adrienne, were devastated er not creating. I just am excited by the loss of their son, Eric to spend some time reflecting on Chase Bolling. A sophomore that past ten years and getting at the University of Colorado excited about what I want to in Boulder, Eric Chase Bolling create next.” died Friday night. ITEM PHOTO | SPENSER HASAK Eric Bolling said the cause of his son’s death is under investi- The Bethel A.M.E. Church in Lynn hosted their annual neighborhood party on Saturday. gation but that authorities told Some people in attendance were, from left, Verdrey Madzimoyo, Vivian Gaines, Mary him there was “no sign of self Joyner, Matt Plourde, Rev. Bernadette Hickman-Maynard, Edna Smith, Al Boyd, Susan harm at this point” and that an Smith, Richie, all of Lynn, Angela Chase of Revere, Jim Boutin, and Joanne Dupree, autopsy was planned next week. both of Lynn. It’s all about Gabe at LynnArts

PHOTO | ASSOCIATED PRESS Artist Gabe Smith, left, speaks to SEND US YOUR STUFF Charles Kartsonis of WE WANT TO HEAR FROM YOU! TO CONTRIBUTE TO LOOK!, Lynn about PLEASE EMAIL [email protected] OR MAIL YOUR his piece, SUBMISSION TO THE ITEM, P.O. BOX 5, LYNN, MA 01903. “Pop Culture,” which is on display in his solo exhibition at LynnArts.

ITEM PHOTOS | SPENSER HASAK

Gabe talks PHOTO | ASSOCIATED PRESS about his DJing ‘It’ floats away with record-breaking setup at the opening $117.2 million weekend of his exhibition. LOS ANGELES (AP) — ‘It’ is a hit. The Stephen King adaptation from New Line and Warner Bros. shattered records over the weekend earning $117.2 million from 4,103 locations according to studio estimates on Sunday. Not only is “It” now the largest ever opening for a horror movie and the largest September opening of all time, the film more than doubled the earnings of the previous record holders. Before this weekend “Para- normal Activity 3” had the biggest horror opening with $52.6 million from 2011, and the highest September de- but was “Hotel Transylvania 2’s” $48.5 million in 2015. “We blew past everyone’s most optimistic and aggres- sive projections and I think there might be room for us to grow this weekend even still,” said Jeff Goldstein, Warner Bros. president of domestic distribution. Goldstein said he was conservative with Sunday projections due to the confounding factors of the film’s R-rating, the popularity of late night showings, the beginning of football season and Hurricane Irma. Regardless of whether there is an uptick when final numbers are reported Monday, “It’s” success is still astounding, especially considering that the project from director Andy Muschietti cost only $35 million “603,” a piece by Gabe. Another one of Gabe’s works. to produce. WEATHER LOTTERY

SUN, MOON, TIDES National weather TODAY’S FORECAST MARINE FORECAST MASS. EVENING: MASS. MID-DAY: Thursday...... 8960 Thursday...... 9371 Forecast for Monday, September 11, 2017 Wednesday...... 0906 Wednesday...... 6816 Sunrise today 6:19 a.m. Bands separate high temperature zones for the day. Mainly sunny. High 79F. NW winds around 5 kt. Waves Winds NW at 5 to 10 mph. 1 foot or less. Tuesday...... 2964 Tuesday...... 5631 Sunset today 7:00 p.m. Tonight: Clear skies with a Tonight: NW winds around 5 Yesterday’s payoff: Yesterday’s payoff: Sunrise tomorrow 6:20 a.m. few passing clouds. Low 59F. kt. Waves 1 foot or less. Winds NW at 5 to 10 mph. EXACT ORDER EXACT ORDER High tide today 3:41 p.m. H All 4...... $5,806 All 4...... $4,966 Low tide today 10:04 p.m. First or last 3...... $813 First or last 3...... $695 Any 2...... $70 Any 2...... $60 High tide tomorrow 4:35 p.m. H Any 1...... $7 Any 1...... $6 IRMA 1 ANY ORDER ANY ORDER All 4...... $242 All 4...... $207

Fronts First 3...... $135 First 3...... $116

Cold Warm Stationary Last 3...... $135 Last 3...... $116 Pressure H L SEPT. 13 SEPT. 20 High Low Showers Rain T-storms Flurries Snow Ice TODAY TUESDAY WEDNESDAY Mass Cash: 10-18-24-27-28 <-10 -0s0s 10s 20s 30s 40s 50s 60s 70s 80s 90s 100s 110+ Sunny | High 79, Low 59 P’Cloudy | High 85, Low 61 P’Cloudy | High 81, Low 64 Sat. Megabucks 2-4-15-32-36-48 NATIONAL SUMMARY: Irma will bring heavy, flooding rain to parts of the Sat. Powerball: 6-20-29-57-59 (22) Southeast today as central and South Florida will have gradually improving weather. Afternoon thunderstorms will develop over the central and south- ern Rockies, as well as the Sierra Nevada of California. Much of the rest of the nation will have dry and quiet weather.

©2017 AccuWeather, Inc. SPORTS B MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 11, 2017 English completes Lynn football sweep

By Mike Alongi yards on six catches and two touch- from the first series of the game, FOR THE ITEM downs. forcing a three-and-out and stopping “We did some good things for sure, two plays behind the line of scrim- LYNN —The English football team and we took care of the football for mage. When English took over after kicked off the 2017 season on the the most part which is the most im- the punt, Matt Severance orches- right foot on Saturday afternoon, portant thing,” said English coach trated an eight-play drive down the taking down defending Division 2 Chris Carroll. “We’ve still got some field that culminated in an eight- North champion Beverly, 26-20, at things to work on, but overall I was yard touchdown pass to Brown to Manning Field. pleased with what we got done to- make it 6-0. The Bulldogs showed off their Beverly started to move the ball speed on both offense and defense day.” Another impact player on offense on the ensuing drive, moving into throughout the game, and became English territory behind some the fifth, and final, Lynn team to for English was freshman receiver Mathies Fowler, who had 69 yards strong running from Panthers se- win on the gridiron this weekend. nior Ameer Alshrafi. However, when on six catches in his first career KIPP started the parade Thursday, quarterback Nick Berry rolled out game. and St. Mary’s, Classical and Tech of the pocket on a first-and-10 from continued it Friday. “He’s a tough kid, he comes from a the English 25, Severance flew into Junior quarterback Matt Sever- great athletic family, and he’s been the backfield from his spot in the ance ran the show for the Bulldogs, working his tail off all summer to secondary and made a huge tackle, completing 15-of-26 passes for 183 be here,” Carroll said. “He feels that stripping the ball for English senior yards and two touchdowns with he’s good enough to be on varsity as Tyshawn Anderson to recover. one interception while also rushing a freshman and he wants to show The turnover kicked off English’s ITEM FILE PHOTO for 46 yards and two touchdowns. it. For me, if kids can play they can longest drive of the game, as they Senior running back Ski Gaston play, freshman to senior. He’s bought moved 72 yards in 14 plays capped English quarterback Matt Severance pulls rushed for 109 yards, while junior in and he works hard.” away from Beverly’s Bobby Adams during Sat- wide receiver Prince Brown had 101 The English defense set the tone ENGLISH, B2 urday’s game. St. Mary’s boys, girls rule the Lynn soccer roost

By Steve Krause ITEM SPORTS EDITOR LYNN — St. Mary’s is the city cham- pion in both boys and girls soccer, by virtue of Saturday night’s twin killings of Lynn Classical (2-1 in the girls cham- pionship game; 1-0 in the boys’ contest). However, the closeness of those scores is a bit deceptive. Both goalkeepers for the Rams kept their teams in their re- spective games. Junior Carly Mendonca played a marvelous game for the girls in keeping the Spartans within striking distance. “She was tremendous,” said first-year coach Mark Ierardi. “She was really, re- ally good.” But after Classical’s Isabel Mc- Gaughey scored in the third minute on a direct kick that almost blooped its way into the St. Mary’s net, the Rams ITEM PHOTO | KATIE MORRISON were stopped cold. A lot of that had to Haley Bernhardt had the honor of scoring the do with tournament MVP Mia Nikola- rst-ever goal on the new Blocksidge Field kopoulos, who patrolled the middle like playing surface Saturday. a sentry, keeping Classical from making any progress at all upfield. “It’s good to have her back,” said St. Mary’s coach Jim Foley, referring to the An all-around good fact that Nikolakopoulos missed last season with an ACL injury. “She’s not 100 percent there yet, but you can see day for the Big Blue her improving. She’ll be much further along later in the season. By Steve Krause from Mackenzie Kearney, “But she controlled the middle of the ITEM SPORTS EDITOR scored the second one in field,” he said. “Having her back for this the 54th minute. season is like getting a new player.” SWAMPSCOTT — It “The win wasn’t easy,” It took a while for St. Mary’s to get was a great day to be Blue. said coach Alvi Ibanez. going, but once the Spartans did, they Big Blue. “Monument was a solid kept the pressure on Mendonca, who Saturday, seven years opponent.” kept batting shots away. The Spartans after the idea was first Early in the game, Mon- got the game-tying goal from Susannah floated to the town, ument created three good Cornell midway through the first half Swampscott opened its opportunities, but keeper on a shot from Mendonca’s left. And newly-redone Blocksidge Nikki Rosa made point Gabby Diaz Martinez ended up with Field, with brand new blank saves each time. the game-winner. turf, and suitable for play- Also ready to play, “I thought we played well,” said Ie- ing four sports (football, Ibanez said, were ninth rardi. “That’s probably one of the better soccer, field hockey and graders Sarah and Allison teams we’re going to play, and if we can lacrosse). Tribendis. get an effort like that out of the girls in Then, once the opening “Their assignment was every game, we should be fine.” festivities were over, the to create energy through “We always look forward to this tour- Big Blue girls soccer team the midfield line as the nament,” said Foley, whose team de- christened the field with opponent had been domi- fended its championship from last sea- a 2-0 victory over Monu- nating that area,” Ibanez son. “And this was a good win for us. ment. said. “Their magnificent Mark’s a good coach and he’s going to Haley Bernhardt had work ethic turned the do a great job.” the honors of scoring the game around and put us In the consolation game, English de- ITEM PHOTOS | KATIE MORRISON first-ever goal on the new in a position to win.” feated Tech, 6-0, with Tommi Hill get- field, in the 32nd min- Also Saturday, the Big ting the shutout. Alex Zayas scored Top, from left, Classical’s Julia Jordan, St. Mary’s Susan- ute, with an assist from Blue football team went twice, as did Ravyn Rapley, Sydney nah Cornell and Sydney Spiess of the Rams vie for an in- Grace DiGrande. Allison coming kick. Above, St. Mary’s Joe Thongsythavong keeps Tribendis, with the helper BIG BLUE, B2 ST. MARY’S B2 the ball away from Classical’s Brian Morales. Peabody’s Nelson Fenwick doesn’t get many breaks hits a milestone in loss to Hamilton-Wenham PEABODY — Peabody’s Emily Nel- son scored her 100th and 101st career By Anne Marie Tobin ejected after incurring consecutive un- point in Saturday’s 2-2 girls soccer tie FOR THE ITEM sportsmanlike conduct penalties late in with Cardinal Spellman. the second quarter. After the Cardinals took a 2-0 lead 28 HAMILTON — Some days, you just “No doubt, not having Jaycob hurts us, minutes into the game, Nelson struck can’t catch a break. Such was the case and we knew that Cory was really just a with six minutes remaining in the first Saturday afternoon for the Bishop Fen- week away from being 100 percent, but half to make the score 2-1. She added wick football team, which dropped its he wanted to go, so we gave him a shot,” her second goal midway through the season opener to host Hamilton-Wen- said Woods. “But it’s a long season, and second half to lift the Tanners into the ham, 21-0 at Stadium Field. everyone knows it was better for him in tie. The Crusaders went into the game un- the long haul if we want him to be at his Sophomore Shelby Doucette played dermanned without the services of 6-1, best. We are a young and inexperienced well in goal for the Tanners, making 11 290 senior captain Jaycob Reynoso. Ju- team to begin, and you just cannot re- saves, including one diving stop late in nior quarterback Cory Bright, also a cap- place game time experience, especially the game to save the tie. tain, lasted just two series before being against a good team like Hamilton-Wen- Also playing well were freshmen Aja ITEM PHOTO | KATIE MORRISON lifted by head coach Dave Woods. Bright ham. Alimonte, Bridgette O’Connell, Jordyn is still shaking off an injury suffered in Fenwick got off to a great start with Peabody’s Emily Nelson scored two Collins, Amber Kiricoples and Haley the Crusaders’ first preseason scrim- a sustained 6½-minute drive after re- goals for her 100th and 101st career Baker. mage in late August against Peabody. ceiving the opening kickoff, marching 43 points, but more importantly, lifted Sophomore Colleen Crotty played As if that wasn’t enough of a challenge, yards in 10 plays into Generals’ territory strong at sweeper in her first varsity Peabody to a 2-2 tie over Spellman the Crusaders lost the services of yet game. Saturday. another starter when Dylan Mullen was FENWICK, B2 B2 SPORTS THE DAILY ITEM MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 11, 2017 Rays monitor hurricane news while beating Sox

BOSTON (AP) — Tam- could have going into this lead into the fifth, when pa Bay Rays manager storm for our area and for Ramos and Evan Longo- Kevin Cash went to check our friends and families.” ria hit RBI singles. Bos- his phone for Hurricane “It definitely consumes a ton has scored two runs or Irma news as soon as he lot of your time and your fewer 18 times in 30 starts reached his office after the emotion,” he said. “I think while Porcello was in the final out. we’ve done as good of a job game. Wilson Ramos stood at as we could have done.” He gave up five hits in his locker and wanted to Cobb (11-9) allowed one five innings. show reporters a video on run and four hits — all “In the fifth inning, ob- his iPhone of heavy winds singles — and three walks viously, there were some swaying palm trees that a in five innings. Ramos and things I’d like to correct, friend watching his house Lucas Duda each hit a solo but overall it wasn’t bad,” had sent. homer for the Rays. Porcello said. The Rays had a lot on “It’s hard to not think Ramos homered in the their minds as they beat about the situation,” Ra- sixth off Brandon Work- the Boston Red Sox 4-1 mos said. “We have houses man, a drive that just Sunday to avoid a three- over there — all our fami- game sweep. lies are from Florida, too.” cleared the center field “I think in the training Alex Colome pitched a wall, and Duda went deep room the whole day we perfect ninth to complete in the seventh against just had the weather on, a five-hitter and earn his Robby Scott. the radar,” pitcher Alex major-league leading 43rd Tampa Bay stopped Bos- Cobb said. save in 48 chances. ton’s four-game winning “You’re not thinking Reigning AL Cy Young streak, and the Red Sox about it while you’re play- Award winner Rick Por- lead over the second-place ing, obviously, but I think cello was dealt his major Yankees in the AL East every other minute of the league-leading 17th loss, was cut to 3½ games. PHOTO | ASSOCIATED PRESS day we’ve been trying to the victim of poor run sup- Christian Vazquez hit a be forecasters in seeing port once again. run-scoring single in the Boston’s Christian Vazquez, right, slides out at home plate as Tampa what best possibilities we Porcello (9-17) took a 1-0 first for Boston. Bay Rays’ Wilson Ramos, left, reaches to tag him in the second inning . St. Mary’s boys, girls win city soccer title

ST. MARY’S keeper Daniel Cotres. “Winning this tourna- “Yes,” said Steadman. From B1 “It was kind of a tough ment is always one of our “Once he switched to Kev- call for that time in the top goals,” said St. Mary’s in, that gave him a little Denham, Lauren Moore- game,” said Classical coach Mike D’Agostino. less room to move around. house and Katelyn Bowden. coach Dominick Stead- “We came out and played He did a good job.” Coach Ed McNeil said man. really well for the first five In the consolation game, Tora Ueland and Grace Similar to the girls game, or six minutes, and then Lynn Tech defeated En- Gately also played well. St. Mary’s got the better of didn’t really show up for a glish, 7-1, with Geo Ramirez The boys game came the action, but Cotres was while,” D’Agostino said. scoring four goals, with down to a direct kick with equal to the task. Connor Mackey was the Ashby Murphy, Omer Po- just over four minutes left “He very definitely kept MVP for the boys game for joy and Edison Alas get- in the game, as the result us in the game,” said his defense against Clas- ting one apiece. of a handball call on the Steadman. sical’s Kevin Molina-Ore- Teo Feliciano led the Rams. Nolan Perez of the The win was sweet for lana. team on defense. Spartans converted the the Spartans, who were “He really shut No. 9 “We played up to our po- kick, booting it just out upset in last year’s tour- (Molina-Orelana) down,” tential,” said coach Jeremy of the reach of Classical nament final by English. said D’Agostino. McKeen. Fenwick football team luckless in defeat FENWICK yard catch down to the put the game out of reach “We definitely need to From B1 Fenwick 22-yard line. at 21-0 after Lanciani work on our blocks and as- Fenwick was flagged for tacked on the extra point. signments, and we did that at the 42 only to turn the unsportsmanlike conduct, Fenwick freshman Angel successfully in spurts, but ITEM PHOTO | KATIE MORRISON ball over on downs. Run- moving the ball to the 12. Martinez gave the Cru- we had some good things English coach Chris Carroll gets ready to call a ning back Louis Naranjo It went from bad to worse saders something to cheer happen in that Angel ran play during Saturday’s game. carried the brunt of the in a hurry when the Gen- about when he returned great off tackle and did load, rushing for 38 yards erals received another the ensuing kickoff 36 great, and also Louis early English hangs on to defeat on five attempts. freebie prior to the snap of yards to the 50-yard line, on did well. The Generals needed the next play when Mul- giving the Crusaders a Derek also came in and only three minutes to put len was ejected, moving short field. Fenwick drove played a smart game and up the first score of the Beverly in its opening game the ball to the 6-yard line. to the Generals’ 23-yard showed good control for game, driving 60 yards in Senior Andrew Riccio took line, the big plays being a the most part. Unfortu- six plays, the final play ENGLISH nior Clayton McAlpine the handoff from junior 10-yard pickup by Naran- nately for us, though it being a highlight reel 29- punched in a 10-yard quarterback Billy Whelan jo, a 10-yard pickup on a was hit or miss, and that’s From B1 yard touchdown reception touchdown run with just and waltzed untouched rollout by junior quarter- what you get with a team off by a one-yard touch- by senior Jake Lanciani, over five minutes left in into the endzone. Lanciani back Derek DelVecchio that is as inexperienced as down run by Severance. who added the point after the game to make it 26-20, split the uprights on the and an 8-yard run by Mar- we are.” The Bulldogs then forced to stake the Generals to a point after to make it 14-0 tinez, who stutter-stepped English needed to stop the Fenwick outgained Ham- a three-and-out to get the 7-0 lead with a little more Generals with just 1:20 his way past three tacklers bleeding. ilton-Wenham, 174-106, ball back and moved down than a minute to go in the left in the half. all the way down to the They did just that, as the on the ground, while the the field quickly thanks to first quarter. Fenwick gambled with 23. That was as close as Bulldogs came up with a Generals enjoyed a huge a 43-yard touchdown pass After Hamilton-Wenham an onside kick to open the Crusaders would get, 10-play drive that includ- edge in the air. Whelan from Severance to Brown, ed two huge third-down forced a 3-and-out, the the third quarter, but the however, as the Generals’ completed 7-of 12 passes making it 20-0. conversions to keep the Crusaders’ defense re- ball went out of bounds, defense stuffed David Ci- for 157 yards, compared to Beverly finally did get clock running and ice the turned the favor and got with Hamilton-Wenham fuentes on the next two Fenwick, which complet- some momentum mov- win. the ball back on downs at declining the penalty and plays to get the ball back ing in its direction on the “I’m not going to sugar- their own 33. Once again, taking over on its own 47. on downs at their own 19. ed just 1-of-5 attempts for ensuing drive, all on one coat it, we hung on for that Fenwick had no trouble The Generals converted The bright spots for eight yards, with senior play. On first-and-10 from victory at the end,” Carroll driving down field, but the two third down plays and Fenwick were 3-fold; first, captain Michael Sellards their own 26 yard-line, said. “I was very pleased drive stalled at the Gener- drove to the Crusaders’ the play of varsity rook- hauling down the only re- Berry fired a pass over with what we did for two- als’ 40, forcing the Crusad- 2-yard line. Once again, ies Naranjo (10 carries, ception. the middle to senior Clark and-a-half quarters, but in ers to punt the ball away the Crusaders couldn’t 60 yards) and the fresh- Next up for Fenwick is Marchand, who took it 74 the end we had to hold on with less than three min- catch a break when the man Martinez (7 carries, another non-league clash yards to the house to get for a win. But we do talk utes to go in the half. Generals converted a bro- 45 yards), and second, the Friday night against the Panthers on the board. about finishing games Starting at its own 18, ken play. Whelan fumbled play of DelVecchio (7 car- Dedham, while Hamil- The ensuing drive saw above all, and the guys Hamilton-Wenham drove the snap and scrambled ries, 36 yards), who was ton-Wenham travels to Beverly force an English were able to do that on the to the 36 in three plays, left, then dove past the left pressed into service under North Reading for a Cape punt for the first time in final drive.” then Lanciani turned the pylon into the endzone to, center after Bright was Ann League contest, also the game, but the Pan- Next up for English will game around with a 42- for all practical purposes, taken out of the game. Friday night. thers couldn’t convert an- be Somerville, one of the other score before the half. newest members of the English got right back NEC who came up with a It was a great day for Swampscott Big Blue to business to open the big conference win of its second half, working a 10- own in Week 1 (24-7 win BIG BLUE run made it 8-0. Bascon’s Auturo Vasquez from 30 ers. It was a great effort.” play, 80-yard drive that over Peabody). 10-yard fumble recovery yards out, with Thomas The Big Blue gridders ate up a bunch of time and “We don’t know very From B1 made it 16-0, with Dylan Frisoli getting both PATs, will get their chance to ended with another Sever- much about them other up to Greater Lawrence January receiving the con- and it was 37-0 after three. play on the new field Sat- ance touchdown run, mak- than their big win this and dominated the Reg- version pass from Frary. Frary hooked up with urday (noon) against Tri- ing it 26-7. From there, week,” Carroll said of gies to the tune of a 44-0 though, English’s offense Frary’s pass to Jonathan Cote from nine yards out ton, and the festivities Somerville. “I’m sure it thrashing. seemed to stall. Beverly will be a long week of film Oriakhi in the second in the fourth quarter, Quarterback Colin Fra- won’t be the only thing forced three-and-outs on study and practice to get quarter put Swampscott with Frisoli getting the ry tossed five touchdown up 23-0 by the half. point-after. that motivates them. the Bulldogs’ next two ready, then we’ll see what “They knocked us out of possessions, then scored happens on the field.” passes to lead the way. It was more of the same “We’re much further the playoffs last year,” he on a 12-yard touchdown English and Somerville Lucas Cote hauled in the for the Big Blue in the along than we were at this pass from Berry to Alshra- will kick off on Friday first one, from 10 yards third quarter, with Frary time last year,” said coach said. “We love to play them, fi to get right back in the night at 7 p.m. at Dilboy out, early in the first quar- hitting Dominic Codispoti Bobby Serino, “both with and we’re looking forward game at 26-13. When ju- Field in Somerville. ter and Isaiah Bascon’s with a 35-yarder, and then the coaching and the play- to it after last year.” After two rough years, Nadal back on top at Open

NEW YORK (AP) — Ra- el than it needed to be by be back.” their return to the heights of age 31, he is once again the At No. 32, Anderson was fael Nadal entered the 2017 the end of an unusually The No. 1-ranked Nadal their sport. Nadal of old. the lowest-ranked U.S. Grand Slam season on a easy path through the field, collected his 16th Grand Nadal has dealt with knee “I mean, I’ve always said Open men’s finalist since 2½-year drought without so Nadal overwhelmed Kev- Slam trophy overall and and wrist problems, both he’s one of the, obvious- the ATP computer rankings much as one appearance in a in Anderson 6-3, 6-3, 6-4 at his news conference, he likely a result of his physical ly, greatest players of our began in 1973. The 31-year- major final, let alone a title. on Sunday to win his third wore a white T-shirt listing brand of play, over his career, sport, obviously feeling very old South African never had He ends it having reassert- championship at Flushing the date and site of each but 2015 and 2016 were his confident,” Anderson said. been past the quarterfinals ed himself, capped by a U.S. Meadows. one. Among men, only Roger first seasons without reach- “He seems to have turned at any major tournament in Open final that shaped up “Of course, after a couple Federer has more, with 19. ing at least one Grand Slam around a lot of those inju- 33 previous appearances, so as quite a mismatch — and of years without competing Each of those two longtime final since 2004, when he ries he’s experienced the when he won his semifinal turned out to be exactly that. at this very high, high level,” rivals won two of the four was still a teenager. last couple of years. I guess on Friday, he climbed into His game at a higher lev- Nadal said, “very happy to majors this season, marking Seems safe to say that, at time will tell on that.” the stands to celebrate. MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 11, 2017 THE DAILY ITEM SPORTS B3

HIGH SCHOOL SCHEDULE Gannon Mixed Chapman results MONDAY Marblehead at Tewskbury (5:30) Boys Soccer Stoneham at Beverly (5:30) Classical at English (7:30) TUESDAY Danvers at Beverly (4) Boys Soccer Malden at Salem (4) Essex Tech at Lynn Tech (4) Malden Cath. at St. Mary’s (3:45) Mystic Valley at Shawsheen (4) Marblehead at Swampscott (4) St. John’s (D) at St. John’s (S) (4) Peabody at Medford (4) Revere at Somerville (6) Field Hockey Saugus at Gloucester (5) Everett at Swampscott (4) Winthrop at Everett (4) Malden at Marblehead (4) Cross Country Peabody at Gloucester (7) Classical at Peabody (4) Girls Soccer Danvers at Winthrop (4) Pioneer at KIPP (7:15) English at Beverly (4) Shawsheen at Mystic Valley (4:15) Malden at Marlbehead (4) Tech at PMA (4) Medford at Somerville (4) Golf Revere at Everett (4) Beverly at Peabody (4) Field Hockey Fenwick at Wakefield (3) Beverly at Revere (6) Malden Cath. at Cath. Mem. (3) Girls Soccer Revere at Malden (3:15) English at Gloucester (7) Winthrop at St. Mary’s (3) Marblehead at Danvers (4) Xaverian at St. John’s (3:15) Peabody at Medford (4) Volleyball Revere at Winthrop (4) Arl. Cath. at St. Mary’s (5) Salme at Malden (4) Classical at Danvers (5:15) Saugus at Classical (3:45) English at Salem (5:15) Golf Everett at Winthrop (5:30) Classical at English (4) Malden at Methuen (5) Malden at Saugus (3:15) Marblehead at Medford (5:30) Revere at Winthrop (4) Matignon at Fenwick (5:30) St. John’s at Malden Cath. (3:15) Mystic Valley at Fellowship (5:30) Williams at St. Mary’s (3) Peabody at Swampscott (5:15) Volleyball Revere at Saugus (5:30) Malden at Lowell (5) Tech at Notre Dame (5:30)

SPORTS BRIEFS Lynn English Hall use their skills in a game situation. PHOTO | TARA JOHNSON of Fame induction It consists of 10 clinics to The Gannon Golf Course Mixed Chapman Tournament wrapped up last weekend, and be held on Mondays and The Lynn English High when it was over, Joyce Agganis and Bob Cross, above, were the winners with a 2-day Thursdays from 7 to 8:30 School Hall of Fame induc- score of 126. Last Sunday’s downpours did not deter the duo from getting the victory. In tion will be Tuesday, Oct. p.m. for Grades 4-12. The second, in a match of cards, were Ann Dawson/Steve Hayward at 130, with Tara and Ben 17, at the Porthole Restau- dates are Oct. 16, 19, 23, Friedman in third, with the same score. Jay and Jane Fiste were fourth (135), Mark and rant 98 Lynnway. 26, 30 and Nov. 2, 6, 9, 13 Linda Courtemanche fifth (136), and Mary Hunt/Butch Demoree sixth (137). Cocktail hour is from 5 to and 16. 6 p.m., with the dinner at They will be held at St. 6. Tickerts cost $60. There Marys High School, 35 is a choice between prime Tremont St., Lynn, 01902. HIGH SCHOOL FOOTBALL rib and chicken cordon Sessions cost $200 and bleu. participants should bring FRIDAY kick) First quarter Gr. Law. 0 0 0 0 — 0 their own ball. ContacHel- CLASSICAL 39, MEDFORD 0 SM — Johnson 63 run (George Free- LT — Steffan Gravely 34-yard S — Cote 10 pass from Frary (Bas- Tickets are available at: man rush) en Ridley 781-775-0778 at Manning Field run (kick failed) con rush) (781) 477-7366, through Medford 0 0 0 0 — 0 SM — Mark Niboh 7 run (rush failed) LT — Keoni Gaskin 12-yard S — Bascon 10 Fumble recovery principal Tom Strangie and ridleytopflightbasket- Classical 19 6 7 7 — 39 S — Marvens Jean 15 run (Marti- run (kick failed) (January pass from Frary) the Hall of Fame commit- [email protected] for de- C — Nashaun Butler 24 pass from nez-Moretta kick). LT — Steffan Gravely 63-yard Oriakhi 7 pass from Frary (Frisoli LYNNFIELD 32, NEWBURYPORT 0 pass from David Barrios (Brandon tee. tails. Keith Ridley (kick failed) S — Codispoti 35 pass from Frary C — Chase Buono 52 pass from Rid- At Lynnfield HS Toui pass from David Barrios) (Frisoli kick) Inductees are Daniel Ca- ley (Adam Washington kick) Newburyport 0 0 0 0 — 0 LT — Keoni Gaskin 28-yard S — Vasquez 30 pass from Frary hill, Clark Crowley, Gary C —Marcus Tucker 8 run (rush Lynnfield 6 19 0 7 — 32 fumble return (kick failed) (Frisoli kick) Prep wins its L — Anthony Murphy 2 run (conver- failed( LT — Steffan Gravely 7-yard S — Cote 9 pass from frary (Frisoli Dancewicz, William Frost, sion failed) C — Washington 33 pass from Ridley run (kick failed) kick) Kevin Harrington, Ste- football opener L — Matt Mortellite 23 pass to (pass failed) SOMERVILLE 24, PEABODY 7 HAMILTON-WENHAM 21, Jason Ndansi (Cooper Marengi kick) phen Hendrickson, James C — Malcolm Best 5 run (Washing- at Dilboy Field BISHOP FENWICK 0 St. John’s Prep got its L — Mortellite 49 pass to Nick Kin- McDonald, Richard Mc- ton kick) Peabody 7 0 0 0 — 7 at Ham-Wenham 2017 football season off to non (kick blocked) C — Ridley 12 run (Washington kick). S’ville 0 13 0 11 — 24 Ham-Wen 7 7 7 0 — 21 Guinness, Tim Ring, Philip L — Murphy 2 run (conversion failed) a rousing start Saturday, ST. MARY’S 54, SAUGUS 21 P — Eric DeMayo 3-yard run Fenwick 0 0 0 0 — 0 Torto and Lisa Armstrong L — Tyer Murphy 39 run (Marengi defeating Haverhill, 27-0, at Manning Field (Austin Leggett kick) HW — Billy Whelan 29 pass to Jake kick Trahant. Saugus 0 14 0 7 — 21 S — Fred Castin 1-yard run (Emerson Lanciani (Lanciani kick) in a road game. MARBLEHEAD 16, TRITON 9 Ads for the ad book are: St. ary’s 14 24 0 6 — 54 Klemz kick) HW — Andrew Riccio 6 run (Lanciani Senior quarterback Mike at Triton High School S — Emerson Klemz 30-yard field full page (5½-8½): $80; SM — James Brumfield 33 run (Cal- M’head 0 8 0 8 — 16 kick) Yarin passed for two touch- goal vin Johnson rush) Triton 3 0 6 0 — 9 HW — Whelan 2 run (Lanciani kick) half-page ($45) and a quar- S — Emerson Klemz 26-yard field downs and ran for a third SM — Johnson 75 interception T—Joe DelMonico 26-yard field goal ST. JOHN’S 27, HAVERHILL 0 ter page ($25). goal return (Johnson pass to Brumfield) M—Mason Poisson 25-yard pass At Haverhill in the victory. S Emerson Klemz 28-yard SM — Brumfield 40 pass from John- from Dan Doherty (kick failed) SJP 8 6 7 6 — 27 The Eagles are in action field goal son (Johnson pass to Brumfield) M—Safety Haverhill 0 0 0 0 — 0 Ridley Basketball S — Lucas St. Jean 24-yard Friday night at Central SM — Marlon Scott 3 run (Johnson T—Tommy Lapham 7-yard run (rush SJ — Cole Rinklin 1-yard pass from pass from Elijah Jeffreys (Jiovanny Catholic. pass to Patrick Henry) failed) Mike Yarin (Aise Pream run) Skills Clinic Pierre run) S — James Moise 11 run (Javier M — Derek Marino 27-yard pass SJ — Mike Yarin 1-yard run (kick Classical assistant coach Lynn Cable Sports Martinez-Moretta kick) from Dan Doherty (Derek Testa run) SATURDAY failed) SM — Scott 60 pass from Johnson SJ — Michael Slattery 10-yard pass Helen Ridley will run the LYNN TECH 34, CHELSEA 0 SWAMPSCOTT 43, football roundtable (Scott rush) at Chelsea Stadium GR. LAWRENCE 0 from Mike Yarin (Liam Fabbri kick) Ridley Basketball Skills S — Christian Correia 4 pass from Lynn Tech 20 14 0 0 — 34 at Gr. Lawrence SJ — Trent Tully 2-yard run (kick Clinic, a high intensity Tonight at 6 p.m., Lynn Michael Mabee (Martinez-Moretta Chelsea 0 0 0 0 — 0 S’scott 16 7 14 7 — 43 failed) session for boys and girls Cable Sports TV 15 (Com- to get them in shape and cast) and TV 13 (Verizon) to help develop basketball will be broadcasting a live skills. round table discussion of Oklahoma up to No. 2 in AP poll Drills are designed to North Shore football, break- help any player at any ing down the players, games Oklahoma moved up to sixth following a victory polls ranked in the top 10, to a four-win season last level with ball-handing, and teams. No. 2 in The Associated against Stanford. Penn which dates back to the year, but quarterback Josh shooting (off the dribble, The panel will include Press college football poll State is No. 5. Nov. 9, 2014. Rosen and the offense John Hoffman, Steve off screens and off the behind Alabama after the The Crimson Tide re- OUT seem to be blossoming un- pass), creating your own Krause, Paul Halloran Sooners scored the most ceived 59 first-place votes. Notre Dame’s stay in the der new offensive coordi- shot and finishing at the Frank DeFelice, Ken Per- impressive victory of week Oklahoma has two and Top 25 lasted one week. nator Jedd Fisch. rim. rone and Al Giardi. Listen- two. Clemson one. The Fighting Irish lost CONFERENCE CALL The clinic will also mix ers can call in and mention Three of the top six POLL POINTS 20-19 at home to Georgia, in playing games so that their favorite moments and teams from last week de- DOWN which moved up two spots SEC — 6 players can learn how to players at 781-596-1905. feated other ranked teams The Buckeyes have their to No. 13. The Irish were ACC — 5 on Saturday, creating an lowest ranking November the only team to fall out of Pac-12 — 5 TV/RADIO early shake-up near the of the 2014 season. Ohio the rankings. Big 12 — 4 top of the AP Top 25. The State hopes this season IN Big Ten — 4 Baseball Sooners jumped three takes a similar path. UCLA followed up its American — 1 7 p.m...... NY Yankees vs. Tampa Bay...... MLB Network spots after winning 31- In 2014, the Buckeyes remarkable comeback vic- RANKED VS. RANKED 10 p.m...... Colorado at Arizona...... MLB Network 16 at Ohio State. The last lost at home to Virginia tory in week one against No. 3 Clemson at No. 14 Pro football time the Sooners were this Tech and fell from No. 8 Texas A&M with a more Louisville. Lamar Jackson close to being No. 1 was 7:10 p.m...... New Orleans at Minnesota...... ESPN to No. 22 in the rankings. routine blowout of Hawaii and the Cardinals nearly 2011. The Buckeyes did not lose and landed at No. 25 in 10:20 p.m.... LA Chargers at Denver...... ESPN beat the eventual national The Buckeyes slipped again and won the nation- the latest rankings. The Soccer champions in Death Val- 3 p.m...... Prem. Lg: Huddsfield at West Ham United... NBCSN from No. 2 to eighth. al championship in Urban Bruins moved into the Clemson held its spot at Meyer’s third season as rankings for the first time ley last season. Can the No. 3 after beating Auburn coach in Columbus. since starting 2016 at No. Tigers’ ferocious defen- MAJOR LEAGUES and Southern California The Buckeyes did ex- 16. sive front slow down the moved up two places to tend their streak of 41 The Bruins stumbled Heisman Trophy winner? American League National League East Division East Division W L Pct GB W L Pct GB Boston 81 62 .566 — x-Washington 88 55 .615 — NFL TODAY IN SPORTS New York 77 65 .542 3½ Miami 68 75 .476 20 Baltimore 71 71 .500 9½ Atlanta 64 78 .451 23½ AMERICAN CONFERENCE NATIONAL CONFERENCE Sept. 11 left-center field for a single in the Tampa Bay 71 73 .493 10½ New York 63 80 .441 25 East East 1886 — The Mayflower defends the first inning. Toronto 66 77 .462 15 Philadelphia 54 89 .378 34 W L T Pct PF PA W L T Pct PF PA America’s Cup by beating Britain’s 1988 — Mats Wilander wins the lon- Central Division Central Division Buffalo 1 0 0 1.000 21 12 Philadelphia 1 0 0 1.000 30 17 Galatea in two straight heats. gest men’s final in U.S. Open history, W L Pct GB W L Pct GB Miami 0 0 0 .000 0 0 Dallas 0 0 0 .000 0 0 Cleveland 86 56 .606 — Chicago 77 66 .538 — NE 0 1 0 .000 27 42 N.Y. Giants 0 0 0 .000 0 0 1926 — The United States captures edging Ivan Lendl, 6-4, 4-6, 6-3, 5-7, Minnesota 74 69 .517 12½ St. Louis 75 68 .524 2 N.Y. Jets 0 1 0 .000 12 21 Washington 0 1 0 .000 17 30 the Davis Cup for the seventh 6-4. Kansas City 71 71 .500 15 Milwaukee 75 68 .524 2 South South straight year as it beats France 4-1. 1994 — Andre Agassi wins the U.S. Detroit 60 82 .423 26 Pittsburgh 67 77 .465 10½ W L T Pct PF PA W L T Pct PF PA 1935 — Helen Hull Jacobs wins the Open with a three-set victory over Chicago 56 86 .394 30 Cincinnati 62 82 .431 15½ Jacksonville 1 0 0 1.000 29 7 Carolina 1 0 0 1.000 23 3 U.S. Lawn Tennis Association cham- Michael Stich and becomes the first West Division West Division Tennessee 0 1 0 .000 16 26 Atlanta 1 0 0 1.000 23 17 W L Pct GB pionships for the fourth straight year. unseeded player to beat five seeded W L Pct GB Houston 0 1 0 .000 7 29 N Orleans 0 0 0 .000 0 0 Houston 86 57 .601 — 1937 — Don Budge beats Gottfried players in a Grand Slam and the first Los Angeles 92 51 .643 — Indianapolis 0 1 0 .000 9 46 T Bay 0 0 0 .000 0 0 Los Angeles 73 70 .510 13 von Cramm in five sets to win his unseeded champion since Fred Arizona 83 60 .580 9 North North Texas 71 71 .500 14½ W L T Pct PF PA W L T Pct PF PA first U.S. Open men’s singles title. Stolle in 1966. Colorado 78 65 .545 14 Seattle 71 72 .497 15 Baltimore 1 0 0 1.000 20 0 Detroit 1 0 0 1.000 35 23 1976 — In the third race at Latonia, 1999 — Serena Williams captures San Diego 65 79 .451 27½ Oakland 63 80 .441 23 Pittsburgh 1 0 0 1.000 21 18 Green Bay 0 0 0 .000 0 0 San Francisco 56 89 .386 37 jockey John Oldham and his wife, the U.S. Open women’s singles title Sunday’s Games Cleveland 0 1 0 .000 18 21 Minnesota 0 0 0 .000 0 0 Suzanne Picou, became the first hus- by defeating top-seeded Martina Toronto 8, Detroit 2 x-clinched division Cincinnati 0 1 0 .000 0 20 Chicago 0 1 0 .000 17 23 band and wife riding team to com- Hingis, 6-3, 7-6. Tampa Bay 4, Boston 1 Sunday’s Games West West Chicago White Sox 8, San Francisco 1 Cincinnati 10, N.Y. Mets 5 W L T Pct PF PA W L T Pct PF PA pete in a parimutuel race. Oldham 2001 — Sports come to a standstill Kansas City 11, Minnesota 3 Atlanta 10, Miami 8, 11 innings Oakland 1 0 0 1.000 26 16 L.A. Rams 1 0 0 1.000 46 9 finished second aboard Harvey’s in the wake of terrorist attacks in N.Y. Yankees 16, Texas 7 Washington 3, Philadelphia 2 Kansas City 1 0 0 1.000 42 27 Seattle 0 0 0 .000 0 0 Hope and Picou rode My Girl Carla to New York and Washington, with major Oakland 10, Houston 2 Chicago White Sox 8, San Francisco 1 Denver 0 0 0 .000 0 0 Arizona 0 1 0 .000 23 35 an 11th-place finish. league baseball postponing a full L.A. Angels 5, Seattle 3 St. Louis 7, Pittsburgh 0 Chargers 0 0 0 .000 0 0 San Fran 0 1 0 .000 3 23 Baltimore at Cleveland, 8:05 p.m. Milwaukee 3, Chicago Cubs 1 1977 — In the last U.S. Open match schedule of regular-season games Monday’s Games Arizona 3, San Diego 2 Thursday’s Games Thursday, Sep. 14 played at the West Side Tennis Club for the first time since D-Day in Baltimore (Jimenez 5-9) at Toronto (Estra- Colorado 8, L.A. Dodgers 1 Kansas City 42, New England 27 Houston at Cincinnati, 8:25 p.m. in Forest Hills, N.Y., Guillermo Vilas 1944. da 7-8), 7:07 p.m. Monday’s Games Sunday’s Games Sunday, Sep. 17 beats Jimmy Connors, 2-6, 6-3, 7-6, 2005 — Roger Federer defends his Detroit (Boyd 5-9) at Cleveland (Carrasco Pittsburgh (Brault 0-0) at Milwaukee Atlanta 23, Chicago 17 Philadelphia at Kansas City, 1 p.m. 6-0, for the men’s singles title U.S. Open singles title by beating 14-6), 7:10 p.m. Buffalo 21, N.Y. Jets 12 Arizona at Indianapolis, 1 p.m. (Woodruff 1-1), 7:40 p.m. 1982 — Chris Evert wins her sixth 35-year-old Andre Agassi, 6-3, 2-6, N.Y. Yankees (Sabathia 11-5) vs. Tampa Colorado (Gray 7-4) at Arizona (Greinke Baltimore 20, Cincinnati 0 Minnesota at Pittsburgh, 1 p.m. Bay (Odorizzi 8-7) at Citi Field, 7:10 p.m. U.S. Open singles title, defeating 7-6 (1), 6-1. 16-6), 9:40 p.m. Pittsburgh 21, Cleveland 18 Cleveland at Baltimore, 1 p.m. Seattle (Miranda 8-6) at Texas (Hamels L.A. Dodgers (Maeda 12-6) at San Francis- Oakland 26, Tennessee 16 New England at New Orleans, 1 p.m. Hana Mandlikova, 6-3, 6-1. 2010 — James Madison, a top team 9-3), 8:05 p.m. Jacksonville 29, Houston 7 Chicago at Tampa Bay, 1 p.m. co (Stratton 2-3), 10:15 p.m. 1983 — Jimmy Connors wins his in the Football Championship Subdi- Chicago White Sox (Lopez 0-3) at Kansas Philadelphia 30, Washington 17 Buffalo at Carolina, 1 p.m. Tuesday’s Games second consecutive and fifth overall vision, beats No. 13 Virginia Tech City (Hammel 8-10), 8:15 p.m. Detroit 35, Arizona 23 Tennessee at Jacksonville, 1 p.m. Tuesday’s Games Atlanta at Washington, 7:05 p.m. L.A. Rams 46, Indianapolis 9 N.Y. Jets at Oakland, 4:05 p.m. singles title at the US Open, beating 21-16. The last time Virginia Tech Chicago WS at Kansas City, 1:15 p.m. Miami at Philadelphia, 7:05 p.m. Carolina 23, San Francisco 3 Miami at L.A. Chargers, 4:05 p.m. Ivan Lendl, 6-3, 6-7, 7-5, 6-0. lost to a I-AA team was 1985, when Baltimore at Toronto, 7:07 p.m. Pittsburgh at Milwaukee, 7:40 p.m. Seattle vs Green Bay, 4:25 p.m. San Francisco at Seattle, 4:25 p.m. 1985 — Pete Rose of the Cincinnati Richmond beat the Hokies 24-14 at N.Y. Mets at Chicago Cubs, 8:05 p.m. Detroit at Cleveland, 7:10 p.m. N.Y. Giants at Dallas, 8:30 p.m. Washington at L.A. Rams, 4:25 p.m. Reds becomes the all-time hit leader Lane Stadium. Yankees vs. T Bay at Citi Field, 7:10 p.m. San Diego at Minnesota, 8:10 p.m. Open: Tampa Bay, Miami Dallas at Denver, 4:25 p.m. Oakland at Boston, 7:10 p.m. Cincinnati at St. Louis, 8:15 p.m. Monday’s Games Green Bay at Atlanta, 8:30 p.m. with his 4,192nd hit, breaking Ty 2010 — The Penn State women’s Seattle at Texas, 8:05 p.m. Colorado at Arizona, 9:40 p.m. New Orleans at Minnesota, 7:10 p.m. Monday, Sep. 18 Cobb’s record. Rose lines a 2-1 pitch volleyball team has its record winning San Diego at Minnesota, 8:10 p.m. L.A. Dodgers at San Francisco, 10:15 p.m. L.A. Chargers at Denver, 10:20 p.m. Detroit at N.Y. Giants, 8:30 p.m. off San Diego pitcher Eric Show to streak end at 109 matches. B4 THE DAILY ITEM MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 11, 2017 COMICS

OFF THE MARK / MARK PARISI MODERATELY CONFUSED / JEFF STAHLER DILBERT / SCOTT ADAMS

LIO / MATT TATULLI

GARFIELD / JIM DAVIS ROSE IS ROSE / PAT BRADY

ARLO AND JANIS / JIMMY JOHNSON SOUP TO NUTZ / RICK STROMOSKI

FRANK AND ERNEST / BOB THAVES BIG NATE / LINCOLN PEIRCE

THE GRIZZWELLS / BILL SCHORR THE BORN LOSER / ART AND CHIP SANSOM

OVERBOARD / CHIP DUNHAM THATABABY / PAUL TRAP

ALLEY OOP / GRAUE AND BENDER MONTY / MEDDICK

REALITY CHECK / DAVE WHAMOND HERMAN / JIM UNGER ZIGGY / TOM WILSON MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 11, 2017 THE DAILY ITEM B5 DIVERSIONS

HOROSCOPE

VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22) CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20) TAURUS (April 20-May 20) CANCER (June 21-July 22) Learn as you go. Be open to You have options, but you must Emotional matters concerning Listen, ask questions and veri- Choose your words wisely to Collaborate with people who suggestions and willing to try question what you are doing youngsters or elders will be up- fy the information you receive. avoid being stuck taking care have similar goals but think new things. Branch out and and why to find the answers setting. Remain calm and you Getting upset with someone of someone else’s responsibili- differently. What you can ac- use your skills to reach new will have a better chance to fix will not help matters. Protect ties. If you complain or criticize, complish will help you present you are looking for. A change personal information and your you will be left to do everything positive ideas that will benefit heights. Effort will bring bene- will do you good. whatever has gone wrong. fits. reputation. Say little and pay on your own. your cause. attention to detail. SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec. 21) AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 19) GEMINI (May 21-June 20) LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 23) Dig in and get ahead. What Weigh the pros and cons of any ARIES (March 21-April 19) Emotions will swell throughout Professionalism and practicali- Personal improvements are situation you face concerning you put behind you will ease Stay focused on your respon- the day. Don’t let frustration ty will be necessary. Don’t over- featured. Look inward and do home, family or an important stress, leaving you room to sibilities and get things done. mount and lead to an argu- spend on products or items things that will help you op- relationship. Taking time to take part in more enjoyable Your hard work will be noticed, ment with someone you deal that promise the impossible. erate at your optimum. Don’t gather information and digest and gratitude will be offered. with daily. Calm down and fo- Be happy with the way you are wait for someone to give you a activities or spend time with a what’s happened will help you Don’t let a personal issue halt cus on personal growth, not on and focus more on personal shove. Take the initiative. loved one. avoid an argument. your productivity. trying to change others. growth and peace of mind.

DEAR ABBY BRIDGE

Herpes infection keeps lonely woman on the dating sidelines Careful with those spade spots, Eugene DEAR ABBY: I am a can’t get through a store The second track of Pink played a spade to the ace, 65-year-old woman, at- Dear Abby is written by Abigail Van without someone asking Floyd’s album “Ummagum- with gratifying results — 11 tractive and lonely. I am Buren, also known as Jeanne Phillips, me question after ques- ma” is titled “Careful with That tricks and an excellent score. Axe, Eugene.” In today’s deal, uncomfortable using dat- and was founded by her mother, tion. They just look for Twice, South did not ruff some declarers in a duplicate high at trick three, permitting ing sites because I have Pauline Phillips. Contact Dear Abby at that opening and start were not careful with their genital herpes. I was in- DearAbby.com or P.O. Box 69440, Los throwing questions at me! spade spots, but I doubt any East to win the trick. Then, fected by my first husband Angeles, CA 90069. I believe in being polite, so were called Eugene. based on the point-count, surely the declarers should more than 40 years ago. I have reached the point of First, though, let’s look at have dropped the spade king, If I were to meet some- just nodding my head or the bidding. What should als in the United States live full, happy lives. I South do after West’s one- but they did not. one on one of those sites, between the ages of 14 and hope you will check it out. responding with a yes or heart opening is followed by At three tables, West when would be the right 49 has genital herpes (HSV-2). no most of the time. It’s two passes? strangely led a diamond. The time to reveal my prob- Because you are hesitant DEAR ABBY: I recently really off-putting. A lot of It looks normal to balance declarers won on the board lem? After we have gotten these people need to back off. with one spade, but it is pos- and carelessly ran the spade about when to reveal your moved to a new area of my sible to bid two spades. In to know each other? Or 10. West took that trick and status, please visit the state. I like the environ- NEEDS BOUNDARIES this position, that would be should I be up front about played three rounds of hearts, ASHA website (ashasexu- ment, the cost of living, IN THE SOUTH an intermediate jump over- it and say something when East overruffing the dummy alhealth.org). You will find etc., but there’s one prob- call showing a decent six-card we first meet? I am, natu- DEAR NEEDS BOUND- or longer suit and some 14- for down one. it informative. It includes lem I don’t know how to rally, afraid of condemna- ARIES: Many people ask 16 high-card points. Agreed, a section on relationships, address. The people here here, the club king is of un- tion and/or contempt. questions as a way to start suggestions about when to share far too much infor- certain value, and the heart a conversation because UNSURE IN NEW tell someone, how to talk to mation with strangers in honors are probably not worth they are interested in you much. It is close. YORK a partner, reactions to ex- everyday conversation. I or are lonely. Because you After South bid one spade, pect, etc. think there should be DEAR UNSURE: Her- consider their questions North cue-bid two hearts to pes is an infection, not a Another website that has some boundaries and lim- invasive and you need show spade support and at been mentioned in my col- its on what is said in public. least game-invitational val- scarlet letter. Many people boundaries, you will have ues. South then jumped to umn before is H-Date.com. While I was waiting to carry the virus, and a sur- to set them. A way to do four spades. prising number of them It offers a free dating ser- ask a salesclerk a ques- that would be to tell the At four tables in a dupli- are not aware they have it vice through which thou- tion, the person ahead of questioner that the query cate, West started with three and can infect others. In sands of men and women me in line described her is a personal one, and you rounds of hearts. The declar- meet. Many nice, eligible entire medical history in ers carefully ruffed with dum- fact, according to the Amer- prefer not to share that my’s spade 10. Then, when ican Sexual Health Associ- people — people just like detail. She went on and on kind of information with East did not overruff, they ation, one in six individu- you — have herpes and and on. There are times I strangers.

EVENING TV LISTINGS SUNDAY’S TV SEPTEMBER 10, 2017 EVENING TV LISTINGS MONDAY’S TV SEPTEMBER 11, 2017 CROSSWORD 7:00 7:30 8:00 8:30 9:00 9:30 10:00 10:30 11:00 11:30 12:00 12:30 1:00 7:00 7:30 8:00 8:30 9:00 9:30 10:00 10:30 11:00 11:30 12:00 12:30 1:00 BROADCAST STATIONS BROADCAST STATIONS WGBH Steves’ Vietnam Secrets of West- Endeavour on Masterpiece Vicious India: Nature’s Ed Sullivan’s Rock and Roll WGBH Greater Steves’ Antiques Roadshow Antiques Roadshow POV (N) Charlie Rose (N) Greater Tavis Midsomer ^ PBS Europe War minster “Harvest” (N) Wonderland Classics ^ PBS Boston Europe “Seattle” “Seattle” Boston Smiley Mur. WBZ 60 Minutes Stephen Big Brother (N) NCIS: Los Angeles Hawaii Five-0 WBZ Sports Final (N) Joel Interna- WBZ Wheel of Jeopardy! Big Bang Kevin Mom Life in Scorpion “Maroon 8” WBZ Late Show-Colbert Late Late Show With $ CBS K. Bannon. (N) “Sirens” News Osteen tional $ CBS Fortune (N) Theory Can Wait Pieces News James Corden WCVB America’s Funniest Celebrity Family The 2018 Miss America Competition News- SportsCen- Soledad Person of Interest WCVB News- Chronicle Bachelor in Paradise The couples must To Tell the Truth (N) News- Jimmy Kimmel Live Nightline Celebrity % ABC Home Videos Feud Women vie for the crown. (N) Center 5 ter 5 O’Brien “Root Cause” % ABC Center 5 make a decision. (N) Center 5 (N) Page (N) WBTS Football Night in America (N) NFL Football New York Giants at Dallas Cowboys. The Giants News American Ninja Ac. Hol- WBTS Boston Ac. Hol- American Ninja Warrior National finals Midnight, Texas (N) Boston Tonight Show-J. Late Night With * NBC and Cowboys collide. (N) at 11 Warrior lywood * NBC News lywood continue in Las Vegas. (N) News Fallon Seth Meyers (N) WFXT NFL The OT The Orville “Old Simpsons Family Boston 25 News at Boston Boston TMZ (N) Ent. WFXT Ent. TMZ (N) So You Think You Can Dance “Top 6 Boston 25 News at Boston TMZ Ent. Simpsons Boston 9 FOX Football (N) Wounds” (N) Guy 10PM (N) News 25 Tonight 9 FOX Tonight Perform” The top six dancers compete. 10PM (N) News Tonight News WUNI La fuerza de creer La Rosa de Guadalupe “Edición Especial” Aquí y Ahora (N) María de Noticiero República Deportiva Juego WUNI La Rosa de Guada- Enamorándome de Mi marido tiene Hoy voy a cambiar Noticias Noticiero Contacto Deportivo Quiero ; UNI Todos Univision (N) Estrellas ; UNI lupe (N) Ramón familia Nueva Uni (N) Amarte WSBK Castle An air marshal WBZ News (N) Blue Bloods An Blue Bloods “Forgive Big Bang Big Bang 2 Broke 2 Broke Two and WSBK Big Bang Big Bang WBZ News (N) Law & Order: Spe- Law & Order: Spe- Seinfeld Seinfeld How I Met How I Met King of F MNT is murdered. officer is outed. and Forget” Theory Theory Girls Girls Half Men F MNT Theory Theory cial Victims Unit cial Victims Unit Queens WGBX (6:00) “Meet Me in Antiques Roadshow American Masters Photographer Dorothea Infinity Hall Live Secrets of West- Endeav- WGBX The Great British Midsomer Murders Hinterland Mathias is Vera “The Ghost Position” Vera PBS NewsHour (N) Steves’ Antiques L PBS St. Louis” (1944) “Rapid City” Lange. “Dave Mason” minster our L PBS Baking Show “Days of Misrule” investigated. is reunited with Stuart. Europe WBIN Becker Wings Newhart Evening My Two Family Wild Side Great Newhart Family Wings Becker Three’s WBIN Happen- 227 Family Family Harry (N) American Cleveland King of Family Wings Becker Three’s R MNT Shade Dads Ties Escapes Ties Company R MNT ing Guy Guy Dad the Hill Ties Company WLVI Scandal “It’s Good to The The Modern Modern 7 News at 10PM on Rookie Blue “Messy Anger Anger Paid WLVI Gold- Gold- Supergirl A kidnap- Hooten & the Lady 7 News at 10PM on Pawn Pawn Anger Anger Judge X CW Be Kink” Middle Middle Family Family CW56 (N) Houses” Manage. Manage. Program X CW bergs bergs per abducts Alex. “The Caribbean” CW56 (N) Stars Stars Manage. Manage. Ross TELE ›››‡ Frozen (2013, Niños) Voices of Gran Oportunidad Don Francisco te Titulares Videos ›‡ Cats & Dogs: The Revenge TELE Caso Cerrado: Jenni Rivera: Mari- Sin senos sí hay El señor de los Al Rojo Titulares Sin senos sí hay El Señor ¨ TELE Kristen Bell, Idina Menzel. (N) invita (N) y Más Asom. of Kitty Galore (2010) ¨ TELE Edición Estelar (N) posa de Barrio (N) paraíso (N) cielos (N) Vivo y más paraíso de los WABU Law & Order: Crimi- Law & Order: Crimi- Law & Order: Crimi- Law & Order: Crimi- Law & Order: Crimi- Law & Order: Crimi- Psych WABU Criminal Minds J.J. Criminal Minds Criminal Minds Criminal Minds Criminal Minds Criminal Minds Psych ¥ ION nal Intent “Frame” nal Intent nal Intent nal Intent nal Intent nal Intent ¥ ION is abducted. “Gabby” “Persuasion” “Rabid” CABLE STATIONS CABLE STATIONS Storage Storage Storage Wars: Best of Barry “Barry’s Biggest Bets” Auction antics featuring Barry Storage Wars: Best of Barry Intervention “Leslie” Intervention “Allison” Intervention “Austin” Intervention “Alex” Leah Interven- Intervention “Allison” Interven- A&E Wars Wars Weiss. (N) “Barry’s Biggest Bets” A&E (N) (N) Remini tion tion (6:35) The Walking The Walking Dead Fear the Walking Dead Daniel assists Lola Talking Dead (N) Fear the Walking Dead Daniel (5:55) ›› “Happy Preacher An old foe Preacher “The End Talking Preacher Preacher Jesse questions the Preacher “The End AMC Dead (N) giving out water. (N) assists Lola giving out water. AMC Gilmore” (1996) resurfaces. of the Road” (N) “Finale” (N) path ahead. of the Road” Shahs of Sunset Shahs of Sunset (N) Below Deck “The 1 Shahs of Sunset Watch Shahs of Sunset Housewives/OC Housewives/OC Housewives/OC Housewives/OC The Real House- Watch Housewives/OC The Real House- BRAVO “You Got Sherv’d” Percenters” What BRAVO wives of Dallas (N) What wives of Dallas (6:30) The Baseball Sports Sunday (N) The Baseball Show Sports Sunday The Baseball Show Sports (6:30) Early Edition Best of Felger & Boston Sports Tonight (N) Monday Monday Best of CSNE Show (N) Sunday CSNE (N) Mazz Radio Patriot Patriot Boston Alaska: The Last Alaska: The Last Alaska: The Last Alaska: The Last Alaska: The Last Alaska: The Last Last Diesel Brothers Diesel Brothers: Diesel Brothers Gear Dogs “A Dog Diesel Brothers Gear Dogs “A Dog Diesel DISC Frontier Frontier Frontier Frontier Frontier Frontier Frontier DISC Trucked Out (N) “Clash of the Titan” Flees” (N) “Clash of the Titan” Flees” Brothers (6:15) “The Princess Transyl- Tangled: Raven’s K.C. Un- Raven’s Bizaard- K.C. Un- Bizaard- Stuck/ Bunk’d Bunk’d K.C. Un- K.C. Un- Raven’s Stuck/ Bizaard- Bizaard- Liv and K.C. Un- Bizaard- Raven’s Stuck/ Bunk’d Bunk’d DISN and the Frog” vania The Se Home dercover Home vark dercover vark Middle DISN dercover dercover Home Middle vark vark Maddie dercover vark Home Middle SportsCenter (N) MLB Baseball Baltimore Orioles at Cleveland Indians. Progressive SportsCenter (N) SportsCenter With SportsCen- (6:55) NFL Football New Orleans Saints at Minnesota Vikings. NFL Football Los Angeles Chargers at Denver Broncos. The Broncos face ESPN Field. (N) Scott Van Pelt (N) ter ESPN The Vikings play host to the Saints. (N) the new-look Chargers. (N) Baseball: Sunday SportsCen- 2017 U.S. Open Tennis Men’s Final. From the USTA Billie Jean 30 for 30 ESPN FC (N) MLB (6:55) Fútbol Americano de la NFL New Orleans Saints en Min- Fútbol Americano de la NFL Los Angeles Chargers en Denver Broncos. ESPN2 Night Countdown ter King National Tennis Center in Flushing, N.Y. (N) Shorts Baseball ESPN2 nesota Vikings. Desde el U.S. Bank Stadium, Minneapolis. Desde el Sports Authority Field. (N) (6:00) ››‡ “Fast Five” (2011, Action) Vin ››‡ Fast Five (2011, Action) Vin Diesel, Paul Walker. Dom ›‡ The Waterboy (1998) Adam (6:10) ›‡ “The Waterboy” ›› Just Go With It (2011) Adam Sandler, Jennifer The 700 Club ›‡ Big Daddy (1999) Adam FREE Diesel, Paul Walker. Toretto and company ramp up the action in Brazil. Sandler, Kathy Bates. FREE (1998, Comedy) Adam Sandler. Aniston. A man’s careless lie spins out of control. Sandler, Joey Lauren Adams. ›››‡ The Avengers (2012) Robert Downey Jr. Superheroes join The Strain “The Trai- The Strain “The Snowfall “The Rubicon” Franklin (5:00) ›››‡ “The ›› The Other Woman (2014, Romance-Comedy) ›› The Other Woman (2014, Romance-Comedy) Think FX forces to save the world from an unexpected enemy. tor” (N) Traitor” solidifies his future. FX Avengers” Cameron Diaz, Leslie Mann, Kate Upton. Cameron Diaz, Leslie Mann, Kate Upton. Like Too (6:45) ›››‡ “Hidden Figures” (2016, The Deuce “Pilot” Vincent plots Ballers Insecure Last Week Tonight The Deuce “Pilot” Last VICE ›››› The Dark Knight (2008, Action) Christian Bale, The Deuce “Pilot” Vincent plots Hard Knocks: Train- Insecure HBO Historical Drama) Taraji P. Henson. ‘PG’ to improve his situation. (N) (N) With John Oliver HBO Week News Heath Ledger, Aaron Eckhart. ‘PG-13’ to improve his situation. ing Camp (6:00) Road to 9/11 Agents discover a terrorist cell. (N) Road to 9/11 Operations target (6:00) Road to 9/11 102 Minutes That Changed America A chronicle of what took Hotel Ground Zero 102 Minutes That Changed HIST Osama bin Laden. HIST place on 9/11. America (6:00) “Killer Mom” Locked In (2017, Suspense) Josie Davis, Deadly Ex (2016, Suspense) Natasha Locked In (2017, Suspense) (5:00) ›› “Step- ››› Pretty Woman (1990) Richard Gere, Julia Roberts. A corpo- Project Runway ››› Pretty Woman (1990) LIFE (2017) Karen Cliche. Kaleigh Rivera, James Fuertes. Henstridge, Marguerite Moreau. Josie Davis, Kaleigh Rivera. LIFE mom” (1998) rate raider hires a hooker to act as a business escort. Richard Gere, Julia Roberts. Catfish: The TV Teen Wolf “Were- Teen ›› Four Brothers (2005) Mark Wahlberg. Siblings ›› Get Rich or Die Tryin’ Teen Mom 2 “On the Teen Mom 2 “Playing Teen Mom 2 (N) Siesta Key Kelsey Super Super Catfish: The TV Catfish: MTV Show “Jose & Jay” wolves of London” Wolf (N) seek revenge for their adoptive mother’s murder. (2005, Crime Drama) MTV Hunt” Family Picnic” weaves a web. (N) Sweet Sweet Show The TV Charlie Bruins Ring of Honor (N) Dining Red Sox Sports Sports Sports Dirty MLB Baseball Tampa Bay Rays English Premier League Soccer Manches- Liverpool Match Sports Bruins Sports Sports Paid PiYo Copper NESN Moore Academy Playbook Today Today Today Water TV at Boston Red Sox. NESN ter City FC vs Liverpool FC. Extra (N) Today Academy Today Today Program Workout! Pan! Henry Henry Henry Game Full Full Full Full Friends Friends Friends Friends Fresh Henry I Am Frankie “I Am Thunder- Full Full Full Full Friends Friends Friends Friends Fresh NICK Danger Danger Danger Shakers House House House House Prince NICK Danger ... in Danger” (N) mans House House House House Prince Dice Episodes Ray Donovan “Sold” Ray Donovan (N) Episodes Dice (N) Ray Donovan Episodes Dice Ray (6:15) ››‡ “Bad Episodes Dice Shameless “Happily Ray Donovan Naked Ray Donovan An Eye for Beauty SHOW (N) Donovan SHOW Moms” (2016) ‘R’ Ever After” SNCTM (2014, Drama) ‘NR’ (6:28) Outlander Outlander “The Outlander “The Survi- Outlander “The Survi- Survi- ›› Bad Girls (1994, “Chi- Survi- Outlander “The ›› Made of Honor (2008) Survi- Outlander “The ›‡ John Tucker Must Die STARZ Battle Joined” (N) Battle Joined” vor’s Battle Joined” vor’s vor’s Western) ‘R’ STARZ cago” vor’s Battle Joined” Patrick Dempsey. ‘PG-13’ vor’s Battle Joined” (2006) Jesse Metcalfe. ‘PG-13’ (6:00) “Race to ››‡ Tomorrowland (2015) George Clooney, Hugh Laurie. A ››‡ Race to Witch Mountain (2009) ›‡ (5:00) ››‡ “Tomor- ›› Need for Speed (2014) Aaron Paul, Dominic Cooper. A street- ›› Lake Placid (1999, Horror) Bill Pullman, Jeepers SYFY Witch Mountain” scientist and a young woman explore a mysterious city. Dwayne Johnson, AnnaSophia Robb. Legion SYFY rowland” (2015) car racer wants revenge on a treacherous rival. Bridget Fonda, Oliver Platt. Creepers Seinfeld Seinfeld ››‡ Now You See Me (2013) Jesse Eisenberg. ›‡ The Bounty Hunter (2010) Jennifer ››‡ Hulk (2003, Family Family Family Family Family Family American People of Conan (N) People of Conan TBS Agents track a team of illusionists who are thieves. Aniston, Gerard Butler. Fantasy) Eric Bana. TBS Guy Guy Guy Guy Guy Guy Dad (N) Earth Earth (6:30) ››‡ “Shooter” (2007, Suspense) The Last Ship “Al- The Last Ship “Al- ››‡ Shooter (2007, Suspense) Mark Wahlberg, (6:00) ›› “The Paci- ››› Cinderella (2015) Cate Blanchett. A young ››› Into the Woods (2014) Meryl Streep. A childless Law & TNT Mark Wahlberg, Michael Peña. legiance” (N) legiance” Michael Peña, Danny Glover. TNT fier” (2005) woman tries not to lose hope in the face of cruelty. couple seek to end a witch’s curse. Order Law & Order: Spe- Law & Order: Spe- Law & Order: Spe- Law & Order: Spe- Modern Modern Modern Modern Chuck NCIS “Corporal WWE Monday Night RAW Braun Strowman and Brock Lesnar. Modern Modern Modern Modern CSI: Cri. USA cial Victims Unit cial Victims Unit cial Victims Unit cial Victims Unit Family Family Family Family USA Punishment” (N) Family Family Family Family Scene Love & Hip Hop: Love & Hip Hop: Love & Hip Hop: Black Ink Crew: ›› Space Jam (1996, Children’s) Michael Purple Love & Hip Hop: Love & Hip Hop: Baller Wives (N) Baller Wives (N) Love & Hip Hop: Baller Wives Baller VH1 Hollywood Hollywood Hollywood Chicago Jordan, Wayne Knight. Rain VH1 Hollywood Hollywood (N) Hollywood Wives B6 THE DAILY ITEM MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 11, 2017 CLASSIFIED

GENERAL REAL ESTATE NOTICES HELP WANTED WANTED Does your company PAY CALLS Real Estate salesperson wanted Outstanding opportunity! Positive attitude, good people skills need employees? more important than experience. Part or full time. Pay Call Numbers (900, 976 and 550) Call John or Mike Connor Advertiser telephone numbers with 781-581-5940 900, 976 and 550 prefixes MUST disclose the price of the telephone Connor Real Estate call. When a number is published within the advertisement the per JOB INFORMATION minute and/or flat charge must be SERVICES RENTALS included. If you dial a pay per call number from an advertisement appear- NOTICE ing in the classified section and it For more information and assistance APARTMENTS DOES NOT disclose this information, regarding the reliability of business please notify the Item classified opportunities, work-at-home opportuni- REAL ESTATE department immediately. Response to DANVERS ~ MOBILE HOME ties, employment services and financ- Clean and furnished, 1 bdrm, WANTED any pay per call numbers will be ing, the Daily Item urges its readers to charged to your telephone bill and convenient location, no pets. contact the Better Business Bureau Call ~ 978-646-7634 anyone under 18 years of age must Inc., 290 Donald Lynch Blvd., Suite have parent's consent. 102, Marlborough, MA 07152-4705 or Lynn ~ Studio, 1, 2, 3 bdrms. Clean, I BUY HOMES Please call immediately for further call 508-652-4800 modern apartments. On bus line, details or information. parking, laundry. From $950, No fees. CLASSIFIED NOTICE Call ~ 781-477-6457 (781)593-7700 Don't pay to find work before you get CASH! Placing a help wanted ad is great for the job. Legitimate job placement firms OFFICE SPACE MISC. that work to fill specific positions finding the skilled workers you need. cannot charge an upfront fee. For free information about avoiding employ- LYNN ~ 5000 sq. feet offices/commer- FOR SALE: ment service scams, write the Federal cial space with plenty of parking on the You pick the date to move. Lynnway. Secure bldg. with plenty of Leave what you want. Privacy Hedges -FALL BLOWOUT SALE Trade Commission at Washington, 6 ft Arborvitae (Evergreen) Reg $149 D.C., 20580 or call the National Fraud parking!!! Lease for $15.00 per sq. Pay no commission if we buy your house. Now $75 Beautiful, Nursery Grown. Information Center, foot. Call 781-632-4086 Call David Hughes at Century 21 Hughes. FREE Installation/FREE delivery, Limi- 1-800-876-7060 All real estate advertising in this 781-599-1776 ted Supply! ORDER NOW: newspaper is subject to the Federal GENERAL Fair Housing Act of 1968, the Massachu- 518-536-1367 www.lowcosttreefarm setts Anti Discrimination Act and the Boston and .com HELP WANTED Cambridge Fair Housing Ordinances, which makes it illegal to advertise any preference, limitation, or Find great DISH Network Satellite Television HELP WANTED discrimination based on race, color, religion, sex, Service. Now Over 190 channels for handicap, familial status, national origin, ancestry, Laborers and carpenters wanted. Local age, children, marital status, sexual orientation, bargains in ONLY $49.99/mo! FREE Installation, General Contracting company, based veteran's status, or source of income or any FREE Streaming, FREE HD. Add intention to make any such preference, limitation out of Northern Mass is looking for or discrimination. Internet for $14.95/mo! experienced laborers and general This newspaper will not knowingly accept any 1-800-506-3363 advertising for real estate which is in violation of carpenters with 3-4 years experience. the law. Our readers are hereby informed that all Sell your stuff in If interested please submit resume or dwellings in this newspaper are available on an standard email to Al Sager. equal opportunity basis. To complain of discrimination, please call HUD toll-free at [email protected]. 1-800-669-9777. For the N.E. area, call HUD at 617-595-5308. The toll-free number for the HELP WANTED-SALES hearing-impaired is 1-800-927-9275. EARN $500 A DAY (SALES) Final Expense Insurance • Exclusive Leads • Local Training/Support • Every day is Payday • Agent Health/Dental Benefits 781-593-7700, ext.2 • Incentive Trips CALL 860-357-6904 www.fhginsurance.com

call 781-593-7700 ext. 2 to start your classifi eds classifieds daily subscription.

LEGALS LEGALS LEGALS

CITY OF LYNN CITY OF LYNN MORTGAGEE'S NOTICE OF SALE OF REAL ESTATE

The City of Lynn will receive bids for the following: Notice is given that the Planning Board will hold a public hearing in Room 402, By virtue and in execution of the Power of Sale contained in a certain Mortgage Lynn City Hall on Tuesday, September 26, 2017 at 6:30PM and 8:00PM in given by Ralph DeFazio Jr. to MetLife Home Loans, a Division of MetLife Bank, REPAIRS TO AND REPLACEMENT PARTS Council Chambers on the following Ordinance: N.A., dated May 8, 2009 and recorded with the Essex County (Southern District) FOR TRAFFIC LIGHT CONTROLLERS IN THE YEAR TWO THOUSAND SEVENTEEN AN ORDINANCE AMENDING THE Registry of Deeds at Book 28578, Page 2 subsequently assigned to Nationstar FOR THE CITY OF LYNN ZONE ORDINANCE OF THE CITY OF LYNN Mortgage LLC by MetLife Home Loans, a Division of MetLife Bank, N.A. by INSPECTIONAL SERVICES DEPARTMENT Be it Ordained by the City Council and by the authority of the same as follows, to assignment recorded in said Essex County (Southern District) Registry of Deeds at wit:- Book 32299, Page 421; of which Mortgage the undersigned is the present holder Specifications may be obtained at the OFFICE OF THE PURCHASING AGENT, SECTION 1:00 for breach of the conditions of said Mortgage and for the purpose of foreclosing Room 205, City Hall, Lynn, Massachusetts. The Zone Map of the City of Lynn, as the same constitutes and is part of the Zone same will be sold at Public Auction at 12:00 PM on September 18, 2017 at 1 Ordinance of the City of Lynn, together with said Zone Ordinance, as heretofore Clough Street, Lynn, MA, all and singular the premises described in said Mortgage, Bids must be sealed and marked accordingly and submitted to the OFFICE OF THE amended, is further amended as follows: to wit: PURCHASING AGENT, ROOM 205, CITY HALL, LYNN, MASSACHUSETTS By removing the following land from a R1 and establishing the same as land in a prior to 11:00 A.M., MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 25, 2017 and will be publicly R4, all of the land lying between and bounded by Essex Street, Porter Street, Land in said Lynn, with the buildings thereon, numbered One Clough Street, being opened and read aloud and forth-with in Room 205, City Hall, Lynn, Jackson Street and Ingalls Street. shown as Lot No. 58 on a plan of Goodridge Estate recorded with Essex South Massachusetts. SECTION 2:00 District Registry of Deeds at Book 857, Page 300, bounded and described as Section 4.1.6 is hereby amended as it applies to the R4 District follows: Mixed follows: NORHTEASTERLY: by Goldwaite Street, one hundred (100) feet; Certifications regarding Public Contract Debarment under MGL, Chapter 29, Use Street Level -- P SOUTHEASTERLY: by Clough Street, forty (40) feet; SOUTHWESTERLY: by Lot No. Section 29F, Certificate of Non-Collusion, MGL, Chapter 40, Section 4B1/2, or SECTION 3:00 59 on said plan, one hundred (100) feet; NORTHWESTERLY: by Lot No. 57 on said Chapter 30, as applicable and the Attestation Statement Payment of Taxes, MGL, Section 5.1.6 is hereby amended by adding the following sentence after the words plan, forty (40) feet; Being the same premises conveyed to us by deed dated Chapter 62C, Section 49A, must be signed and submitted with an original "right of way." December 26, 1993, and recorded in said Registry at Book 12346, Page 87. signature or the bid will be rejected. Allowed nonresidential uses are permitted below the ground floor in the R4 District provided the structure has more than fifty residential units. The premises are to be sold subject to and with the benefit of all easements, This is bid under MGL Chapter 30B. SECTION 4:00 restrictions, building and zoning laws, liens, attorney's fees and costs pursuant to Section 8.3.6. is hereby amended as follows: 8.3.6. Except in the R4, District, the M.G.L.Ch.183A, unpaid taxes, tax titles, water bills, municipal liens and Charles E. White level of the first floor of an apartment or tenement house APARTMENT HOUSE/ assessments, rights of tenants and parties in possession. Purchasing Agent shall not be more than four feet above the mean level of the street FIRST FLOOR Item: September 11, 2017 LEVEL or way on which the building abuts or is to be numbered and no space TERMS OF SALE: below such first floor shall be used for human occupancy. A deposit of FIVE THOUSAND DOLLARS AND 00 CENTS ($5,000.00) in the form of LEGAL NOTICE SECTION 5:00 a certified check, bank treasurer's check or money order will be required to be Lynn Conservation Commission Section 9.3 is hereby amended by adding the following paragraph: Multifamily delivered at or before the time the bid is offered. The successful bidder will be with more than 50 units in the R4, 1 per dwelling unit required to execute a Foreclosure Sale Agreement immediately after the close of In accordance with the provisions of M.G.L. Chapter 39, Section 23B, and Chapter PER ORDER: Janet L. Rowe, City Clerk the bidding. The balance of the purchase price shall be paid within thirty (30) days 131, Section 40, (the Wetlands Protection Act and the local By-Laws), the Lynn Item: September 11, 2017 from the sale date in the form of a certified check, bank treasurer's check or other Conservation Commission will hold a public meeting on Tuesday, September 19, check satisfactory to Mortgagee's attorney. The Mortgagee reserves the right to bid 2017, at 6:30 p.m., Room 102A, Lynn City Hall, on the Notice of Intent of 42 LEGAL NOTICE at the sale, to reject any and all bids, to continue the sale and to amend the terms River Street, LLC, 75 Williams Street, Chelsea, MA for the installation of a Lynn Conservation Commission of the sale by written or oral announcement made before or during the foreclosure proposed landscape wall and site grading around the existing six unit multi-family sale. If the sale is set aside for any reason, the Purchaser at the sale shall be dwelling located on the property. The property is located within the limits of the In accordance with the provisions of M.G.L. Chapter 39, Section 23B, and Chapter entitled only to a return of the deposit paid. The purchaser shall have no further 100-year flood plain and is classified as Land Subject to Coastal Storm Flowage at 131, Section 40, (the Wetlands Protection Act and the local By-Laws), the Lynn recourse against the Mortgagor, the Mortgagee or the Mortgagee's attorney. The 42 River Street, Lynn, MA. Conservation Commission will hold a public meeting on Tuesday, September 19, description of the premises contained in said mortgage shall control in the event of 2017, at 6:30 p.m., Room 102A, Lynn City Hall, on the Notice of Intent of Edward an error in this publication. TIME WILL BE OF THE ESSENCE. Mary Lester Giordano, applicant, C.L. Hauthaway & Sons Corporation, 638 Summer Street, Chairwoman Lynn, MA, for the removal of a portion of the existing one story building and Other terms if any, to be announced at the sale. Item: September 11, 2017 replace with new two--story addition within same footprint at 650 Summer Street, Lynn, MA. Nationstar Mortgage, LLC CITY OF LYNN Mary Lester Present Holder of said Mortgage, By Its Attorneys, Notice is given that the Committee on Ordinances will hold a public hearing in Chairwoman Item: September 11, 2017 ORLANS PC Room 402, Lynn City Hall on Tuesday, September 26, 2017 at 6:15PM on the PO Box 540540 following Ordinance: Waltham, MA 02454 IN THE YEAR TWO THOUSAND SEVENTEEN AN ORDINANCE AMENDING THE (SEAL) Phone: (781) 790-7800 ORDINANCE RELATIVE TO FEES FOR APPLICATIONS FOR THE APPOINTMENT OF COMMONWEALTH OF MASSACHUSETTS 14-016596 CONSTABLES AND OTHER SERVERS OF CIVIL PROCESS IN THE OF LYNN LAND COURT Item: August 28, September 4, 11, 2017 Be it Ordained by the City Council of the City of Lynn and by the authority of the DEPARTMENT OF THE TRIAL COURT same as follows, to wit:- 17SM004535 SECTION 1:00 ORDER OF NOTICE The Mayor, with the approval of the Lynn City Council shall appoint Constables LEGAL NOTICE for the term of one year. Notwithstanding anything to the contrary, all such To: Lynn Conservation Commission Constables with the power to serve civil process shall be residents of the City upon Stephen Kinnon appointment and shall remain residents of the City during their tenure in office. In accordance with the provisions of M.G.L. Chapter 39, Section 23B, and Chapter The residency required in this Ordinance shall not take effect for those Constables and to all persons entitled to the benefit of the Servicemembers Civil Relief Act, 50 131, Section 40, (the Wetlands Protection Act and the local By-Laws), the Lynn who hold appointments at the time of passage of the Ordinance. U.S.C.c. 50 §3901 et seq.: Conservation Commission will hold a public meeting on Tuesday, September 19, 2017, at 6:30 p.m., Room 102A, Lynn City Hall, on the Notice of Intent of Gerry SECTION 2:00 A fee of One Hundred Dollars ($100.00) Dollars shall be charged Wells Fargo Bank, National Association as Trustee for Option One Mortgage Loan Raffaele, applicant, Raffaelle Construction Corporation, P.O. Box 436, for the applications for the appointment of Constables and other Servers of Civil Trust 2006-1, Asset-Backed Certificates, Series 2006-1 Swampscott, MA, for the construction of a new commercial building with 14 units, Process in the City of Lynn. drive-under garage, and associated utilities and parking areas within Land Subject claiming to have an interest in a Mortgage covering real property in Lynnfield, to Coastal Storm Flowage and Riverfront Area at 20 Heath's Court in Lynn, MA SECTION 3:00 Pursuant to M.G.L. c. 41, s. 95A, constables appointed under numbered 767 Walnut Street, given by Stephen Kinnon to Option One Mortgage sections 91, 91A, and 91B or otherwise elected to serve as constables in the City Corporation, dated October 17, 2005, and recorded in Essex County (Southern Mary Lester shall periodically pay the City in which the constable is appointed or elected 25 District) Registry of Deeds in Book 24977, Page 216, and now held by the Plaintiff Chairwoman per cent of all fees the constable collects for the service of civil process under the by assignment, has/have filed with this court a complaint for determination of Item: September 11, 2017 fee structure established in section 8 of chapter 262 of the Massachusetts Defendant's/Defendants' Servicemembers status. General Laws. This payment shall be made in installments to be deposited with the city treasurer not later than January 15, April 15, July 15 and October 15 of each If you now are, or recently have been, in the active military service of the United year, but a constable having less than $500 to deposit at that time shall hold the States of America, then you may be entitled to the benefits of the Servicemembers share for deposit until the sooner of October 15 or the time when the amount due Civil Relief Act. If you object to a foreclosure of the above mentioned property on Need to find to the city under this section equals or exceeds $500. A treasurer receiving funds that basis, then you or your attorney must file a written appearance and answer in under this section shall deposit them into the general fund of the city or town, and this court at Three Pemberton Square, Boston, MA 02108 on or before October they shall be expended, subject to appropriation by a majority vote of the city 16, 2017 or you will be forever barred from claiming that you are entitled to the an article? council in a City for any purpose which the City considers necessary. benefits of said Act. Witness, JUDITH C. CUTLER Chief Justice of said Court on August 30, 2017. SECTION 4:00 All Ordinances or parts of ordinances inconsistent herewith are Attest: Deborah J. Patterson hereby repealed. Recorder 11-005245 Subscribe to SECTION 5:00 This ordinance shall take effect thirty-one (31) days after its final Item: September 11, 2017 approval as adopted and advertised. Per Order: Janet L. Rowe, City Clerk e-edition on Item: September 11, 2017 MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 11, 2017 THE DAILY ITEM CLASSIFIED B7

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North Koreans celebrate with familiar routines

PYONGYANG, North The North has a history of Korea (AP) — North Kore- marking significant dates ans on Saturday celebrat- with show of military ca- ed another public holiday pability, but its recent tests with familiar routines, have been seen as driven laying flowers and bowing mainly by technological in front of statues and por- needs amid an accelerating traits of past leaders while effort to expand its nuclear the outside world kept a weapons arsenal. close watch amid specula- “Because we firmly sup- tions that another missile port our respected supreme test is near. leader comrade Kim Jong South Korea’s govern- Un, our country will become ment earlier said North Ko- stronger as a self-reliant, rea could potentially mark nuclear power, and we will the 69th founding anniver- have a great future,” said sary with its third test of a PHOTO | ASSOCIATED PRESS developmental interconti- Pak Kum Hyang, a Pyong- nental ballistic missile. North Korean soldiers salute at Munsu Hill in yang citizen who came up But no weapons test was Pyongyang, North Korea to mark the 69th anni- the city’s Mansu Hill to vis- detected from North Ko- versary of the country’s founding. it the bronze statues of the rea as of Saturday after- late leaders. noon, as people in capital This year’s anniversary North flight-tested its de- “This anniversary of the Pyongyang went through came just after North Ko- velopmental Hwasong-14 founding of our country is customary practices of rea conducted its sixth and ICBMs twice in July and significant and comes just showing loyalty to late most powerful nuclear test analysis of flight data sug- after we’ve had a success- leaders Kim Il Sung and to date last weekend, which gested that the missiles ful H-bomb test,” said Choe Kim Jong Il, the father of it claimed as a detonation could reach deep into the Sol Ju, another Pyongyang third-generation leader of a thermonuclear weap- U.S. mainland when per- citizen who planned to lat- Kim Jong Un. on built for its ICBMs. The fected. er go on a family picnic.

Dutch engineer aims high with latest green roof design PHOTO | ASSOCIATED PRESS Olivia Neely, a topless cyclist wearing body By Mike Corder paint, before the start of the annual Philly ASSOCIATED PRESS Naked Bike Ride in Philadelphia. AMSTERDAM — Stand- ing between raised beds of plants on top of a former Bikers in the buff naval hospital, Joris Voet- en can look across to the Joris garden, cafe and terrace Voeten ride in Philadelphia that decorate the slop- inspects By Dino Hazell Olivia Neely, who was ing roof of Amsterdam’s the rooftop ASSOCIATED PRESS topless, was riding for the NEMO science museum. garden Such productivity is part first time, inspired by the he helped PHILADELPHIA — of the urban engineer’s vi- recent end of a romantic develop in And they’re off — the bi- relationship. sion for cities worldwide, cyclists and their clothes. Amsterdam. “I just broke up with my places where he sees the Thousands of nude cy- boyfriend and wanted to largely neglected flat tops of PHOTO | clists set off on a trek have a sense of freedom,” buildings doing more than ASSOCIATED PRESS around Philadelphia on keeping out weather and Saturday for the annual she said. “I did it for me, housing satellite dishes. garden to make it more traditional roofing sheets erlands, said the cooling Philly Naked Bike Ride. not for anyone else.” Voeten, of Dutch compa- economically beneficial,” do. They also reduce heat effect is well known, but About 3,000 riders in The ride is to protest de- ny Urban Roofscapes, says Voeten told The Associ- by evaporating water. the new roof in Amster- various stages of undress pendence on fossil fuels, a rooftop garden system ated Press ahead of the Voeten said readings dam is an improvement on pedaled a 10-mile (16-ki- advocate for the safety of he unveiled Friday on the official presentation. “But taken on a very hot day existing designs because of lometer) course taking cyclists and promote posi- former hospital roof stores most of all, we finally get showed a temperature the way it stores water and in sights including Inde- tive body image. more rainwater than ex- to exploit the last unused difference of up to 40 de- can feed it back to plants. pendence Hall and the Friends Lindsay Meehan isting green roofs and square meterage in the ur- grees Celsius (72 degrees Sensors in the shallow Philadelphia Museum of and Michelle Astringer rode requires less power by re- ban environment.” Fahrenheit) between his layer of soil on top of the Art, where Sylvester Stal- together and helped each lying on a capillary irriga- Roofs that are adapt- hospital garden above the water storage elements lone sprinted up the steps other get painted. Meehan tion system that uses insu- ed so plants can grow on banks of a busy waterway monitor qualities such as while training as Rocky. is a first-timer at the PNBR lation material instead of them produce a cooling compared with a roof cov- temperature and moisture Participants in the ride while Astringer is a regular. pumps to water plants. effect on buildings and ered in black bitumen. content. If the soil gets too can go as bare as they Meehan said she decid- “You can relax here, the air immediately above Robbert Snep, a green dry, extra water can be dare. Some were in their ed to take part because you can have meetings them in two ways. The roof expert from Wagen- added. If there is too much birthday suits while oth- eating disorder recovery here. You could operate a plants reflect heat instead ingen University and Re- water, it can be released ers sported underwear or and body positivity are “a restaurant on your rooftop of absorbing it the way search in the central Neth- into the drains. body paint and glitter. big part of my life.” B8 THE DAILY ITEM MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 11, 2017 HEALTH Aqua cycling: An entertaining, soothing underwater workout By Lisa Boone LOS ANGELES TIMES LAWNDALE, Calif. — I love spinning, but it doesn’t always love me back. So when I decided to try aqua cyling, an underwa- FILE PHOTO | TRIBUNE NEWS SERVICE ter spin class at the Mo- Making meals from leftovers keeps edible food tion Plus Aquatic & Ther- out of the trash. apy Center in Lawndale, it was more about giving my knees a break than get- ting my heart rate up. Get creative The workout, originally designed as a therapy class for patients, is described as “a fine line between fitness with leftovers and rehab” by instructor Criselda Esguerra, who is By Barbara Quinn say nutrition experts. And also a physical therapy aid THE MONTEREY when food is squandered, at the center. COUNTY HERALD so is the land, water and energy used to produce it. “It is low impact so any- My recent influx of guests one can do it,” says Es- We can do better, says left me with a refrigerator registered dietitian Al- guerra. “And while it is a FILE PHOTOS | TRIBUNE NEWS SERVICE stuffed with leftovers. I’m ice Henneman from the cycling class, I don’t focus not complaining; I actual- on spinning alone but up- Aqua cycling class participants do crunches in the pool by locking their University of Nebraska feet under the handle bars of their bikes in Lawndale, Calif. ly don’t mind eating the Extension Service. Here per body, back and core same thing over and over work as well as breathing are some practical sugges- One woman next to me, easy and easy things diffi- and over. and stretching.” with insomniacs,” Esguer- tions to keep edible food cult. Crunches, for exam- But when I realized the Class takes place in 4 ra says. Another reason devoted to HIT classes, out of the trash and into ple, done with your feet gargantuan bag of fresh feet of water on about eight why aqua cycling is grow- said the class had im- service for our health and tucked underneath the spinach my sister-in-law bikes that are attached to ing in popularity? Simple: proved her flexibility, en- our environment: bike’s handle bars, are a brought from a discount the bottom of the therapy It’s fun. This is a humble abling her to do squats for • Shop in your refrig- breeze while simple leg warehouse was going to pool with suction cups. physical therapy office, the first time in years. erator before going to the movements are reduced to become yuck before I could Pedaling against the wa- not a boutique gym. The The class feels like a re- store. Plan at least one slow motion. make one more spinach ter inside the heated pool class was a mix of women storative version of spin- “use it up” meal each week. The support of the water salad or smoothie, I decid- left me feeling relaxed and of various ages and sizes ning rather than SoulCy- • Puree leftover vegeta- feels amazing and helps ed to get creative. sleepy; not exhausted or and abilities. Some were cle underwater. It doesn’t bles and add to pasta sauce. with flexibility, especially Thumbing through “Rec- sore. That might explain recovering from injury; feel like you’re working (Great way to add veggies when it comes to stretching. ipes to CHOMP On” pub- why Esguerra’s most pop- others were taking the out, but you are. to kids diets, by the way.) “It’s great for strength- lished by the Auxiliary at ular classes are in the eve- class to balance out other The buoyancy of the wa- • Mix chopped fresh ening and toning because Community Hospital of ning. “The class is popular high-intensity workouts. ter makes difficult things herbs in a little olive oil you are doing cardio but the Monterey Peninsula, and freeze in individual strengthening your mus- I found a recipe for spin- ice cube trays to pull out cles at the same time,” ach soufflé (page 51). Key at your convenience. says Esguerra. “A lot of ingredient: 2 packages fro- • Squeeze the juice from clients have seen major zen chopped spinach. So aging lemons and limes results in the thigh area.” into the steamer went my and freeze into ice cubes Class takes place to music giant bag of fresh spinach to flavor water and other in a 4-feet-deep pool that is … a perfect substitute. beverages. heated to 86 degrees. Garlic clove. Check. While • Tell yourself, “I’m being Esguerra, who teaches I was at it, I chopped up creative!” when — rather 15 to 20 classes per week, the last of a leftover onion than buy more food — you jumps in and out of the and threw it into the mix. substitute ingredients in a pool, and on and off the In place of 3 beaten eggs recipe with food you have bike. The workout is 45 in the recipe, I used up the on hand. Use 1/8 teaspoon minutes and includes band remaining contents of a garlic powder in place of a work, traditional stand up carton of liquid eggs sit- garlic clove for example. Or spinning in third position, ting in my fridge. Olive oil. peel, seed and chop a me- crunches and stretching. It Yep. And score! My cheese dium tomato as a flavorful took me a while to get my drawer had just enough substitute for each table- pedal stroke down in the leftover Parmesan cheese spoon of tomato paste called water, but once I got the to top off the recipe. for in a recipe. Check out hang of it I could feel my- We Americans waste The Cook’s Thesaurus at self working my muscles about 90 billion pounds www.foodsubs.com for other Participants do floating leg exercises during an underwater spin class. without any joint pain. of edible food every year, reasonable substitutions. The secret to chronic happiness as you age By Bruce Horovitz KAISER HEALTH NEWS By all rights, Fletcher People Hall should not be happy. walk past At 76, the retired trade the bars association manager has on Front endured three heart at- Street, tacks and eight heart At 76, in Nome, bypass operations. He’s Fletcher Hall Alaska. had four stents and a bal- has a variety loon inserted in his heart. of medical He has diabetes, glau- conditions FILE PHOTO | coma, osteoarthritis in that dictate ASSOCIATED PRESS both knees and diabetic what he neuropathy in both legs. cannot do in He can’t drive. He can’t life, yet he’s Alaska Gold Rush town struggles travel much. He can’t see focused on very well. And his heart what he can with its hard-drinking legacy condition severely limits do. his ability to exercise. On By Rachel D’Oro this summer. that we have. But I think a good day, he can walk ASSOCIATED PRESS City Manager Tom Mo- the methods to accomplish about 10 yards before FILE PHOTO | TRIBUNE NEWS SERVICE ran was directed by the that are multifaceted,” he needing to rest. ANCHORAGE, Alaska — council to introduce the said. The old Gold Rush town of Yet the Brooklandville, new reality — and move Chronic pain, in fact, measure, and even he Nome’s boozing history Md., resident insists he’s forward,” said Dr. Susan more frequently leads Nome on Alaska’s western says it’s an attempt “to do was born with the town a genuinely happy guy Lehmann, director of the to depression than does coast is trying again to ad- something.” after gold was discovered — in part, because he ap- geriatric psychiatry day anxiety, said Dr. Kathleen dress hard drinking that’s Locals say such a law in 1898, bringing scores preciates what he can do. program at Johns Hop- Franco, associate dean at deeply entrenched there would unfairly target res- of hard-drinking fortune “There’s no question that kins University School of the Cleveland Clinic Le- — this time with a pro- idents who are struggling seekers. The gunslinger as age impinges on your Medicine. “Aim to have the rner College of Medicine. posed law prohibiting in- with alcoholism while fail- Wyatt Earp ran the most life, you do have ‘black dog’ best life you can at where That depression then toxication in public places ing to address root causes. ornate of 50 saloons lining days,” said Hall. “I fight ag- you are right now.” leads to additional pain like the city’s main street, Critics also say the likely Front Street in the Gold ing every day. But I never, Living with chronic dis- and suffering, she said. where people can be seen targets would include a Rush heyday. ever give up. You have to ease often complicates life. “So you have an emotional stumbling along or passed few dozen constant street Nearly 120 years later, work at keeping happy.” The majority of adults 65 and physical component.” out near tourist shops. drinkers who can’t afford there are 13 establish- Hall focuses on the things and over have multiple That’s why Hall clings The measure would for to pay fines, even though ments that sell alcohol that bring him joy: writing chronic conditions that dearly to his greatest pas- the first time outlaw in- the final version of the along the hardscrabble and listening to music and contribute to frailty and sion: writing. When he re- toxication in public rights measure doesn’t propose downtown business dis- audiobooks. By juggling disability, according to a tired at 65, his original plan of way, such as Nome’s any penalties. An incorrect trict. There are also three those pastimes throughout 2013-14 report from the was to travel with his wife, Front Street and its sea fine schedule in the origi- liquor stores along that the day — every day — he Centers for Disease Con- Tracey. His physical limita- wall. It targets those with nal draft was removed. four-block stretch. ultimately feels a sense of trol and Prevention. The tions curbed those goals, so a blood-alcohol content of The measure could be Public intoxication prob- contentment. “Every one of percentage of chronic con- he circled back to what has at least 0.08 percent — amended to include a fine lems always spike over a those things requires that ditions among people 65 brought him the most hap- the same threshold for if it passes, Moran said. weeklong period in March, I use my mind — which is and over has increased piness. He stays engaged in driving while intoxicated. City Council member when the city is the finish a good thing.” over time, too. The percent- daily news by writing for But it is getting a tepid Mark Johnson opposes point for the Iditarod Trail Geriatric experts agree age of people reporting hy- two blogs — including one response from some city the proposal that’s set to Sled Dog Race, and in Oc- that Hall has pretty much pertension, asthma, cancer at-large column in which council members and citi- be addressed Monday. tober, when nearly every figured out the right for- and diabetes was higher in he espouses what he calls zens while stirring debate “I think everybody has Alaska resident receives mula. “You have to be 2013 — 14 percent than in his “compassionate conser- on how to stem a problem good intentions for trying a check from the state’s oil willing to accept your 1997-98, reports the CDC. vative” values. that has seemed to worsen to assist with a problem wealth fund.