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<strong>Wilmington</strong><br />

51STYEARNQ.32 PHONE 978-658-2346<br />

1-93 Interchange<br />

Towns<br />

agree on<br />

overlay<br />

concept<br />

By STEPHEN PJORK<br />

TEWKSBURY - The proposi-<br />

tion of building an interchange,<br />

and the desire by many to do<br />

so, between Route 125 and<br />

Dascomb Road on Interstate 93<br />

has existed for a quarter centu-<br />

ry. According to many in atten-<br />

dance, more progress toward<br />

that end was made last<br />

Thursday morning in an hour-<br />

and-a-half session than had<br />

been made over the span of<br />

twenty-plus years.<br />

Members of the<br />

Junction/Route 93 Development<br />

Area Task Force - which<br />

includes representatives from<br />

Andover, Tewksbury, and<br />

<strong>Wilmington</strong> - met, for the first<br />

time as a task force, at<br />

Tewksbury Public <strong>Library</strong> to<br />

lay the groundwork toward a<br />

unified vision for the develop-<br />

ment of the area surrounding<br />

the proposed interchange.<br />

The so-called Junction/Route<br />

93 Development Area is consid-<br />

ered one of the largest concen-<br />

trations of employment and<br />

economic activity in northeast-<br />

ern Massachusetts.<br />

That general area has consis-<br />

tently been in the news for the<br />

last several years as the poten-<br />

SEE OVERLAY PAGE 14<br />

WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 9, 2006<br />

(Eror<br />

44 PAGES<br />

Butters Farmhouse Corporate Challenge<br />

Reading Co-operative Bank drops the'gauntlet<br />

By STEPHEN BJORK<br />

WILMINGTON - Reading Co-operative<br />

Bank kicked off a 13-week fundraising<br />

challenge to <strong>Wilmington</strong>'s business<br />

community on Wednesday, August 9th<br />

with a check in the amount of $3,500.<br />

Funds raised through the campaign will<br />

benefit the restoration of Butters<br />

Farmhouse, the 300-year old home on<br />

Chestnut Street that was recently<br />

spared from an appointment with the<br />

business end of a bulldozer.<br />

In order to save the historical struc-<br />

ture from being razed to make way for<br />

new development, residents voted over-<br />

whelmingly in the 2006 Annual Town<br />

Meeting to appropriate $470,000 for the<br />

purchase of the property. Just this<br />

month, <strong>Wilmington</strong>'s state legislators<br />

were successful in relieving local tax-<br />

payers of the full burden by appropriat-<br />

ing state funds to cover the purchase.<br />

Saving Butters Farmhouse from<br />

destruction was just the first step, how-<br />

ever. The structure is in dire need of<br />

restoration.<br />

Roughly two months ago, the<br />

<strong>Wilmington</strong> Historical Commission sent<br />

letters to local businesses containing an<br />

update on the status of the Butters<br />

Farmhouse and asking for donations.<br />

Some local businesses, such as Dunkin<br />

Donuts and Danversbank, were quick to<br />

step up to the plate with donations.<br />

In addition to donations, however, the<br />

Historical Commission also received a<br />

phone call. Julieann Thurlow,<br />

Executive Vice President of Reading<br />

Co-operative Bank, wanted to know how<br />

her company could become more<br />

involved.<br />

"In addition to contributing financial-<br />

ly, Julie Thurlow expressed that<br />

Reading Co-operative Bank would like<br />

to help by challenging other businesses<br />

to also give to the cause," explained<br />

Julie Fennell, Historical Commission<br />

member. "The Historical Commission<br />

vinced that Butters Farmhouse was an<br />

important project for the bank to sup-<br />

Commission," Thurlow said. "We decid-<br />

ed to offer, not just our financial sup-<br />

<strong>Wilmington</strong> Town Manager Michael Caira accepts a check in the amount of $3,500 from Julieann Thurlow, Executive Vice<br />

President of Reading Co-operative Bank. The money will go toward the restoration and preservation of the Butters<br />

Farmhouse. Reading Co-operative Bank has issued a corporate challenge to local businesses, with a goal of raising $75,000.<br />

(L-R): Julie Fennell; <strong>Wilmington</strong> Historical Commission, Carolyn Harris; Chairman of <strong>Wilmington</strong> Historical Commission,<br />

Julieann Thurlow, Michael Caira, Carolyn Chilcote; Branch Manager of the Middlesex Avenue Reading Co-operative Bank,<br />

and Meaghan Rogers; Marketing Assistant for Reading Co-operative Bank.<br />

Photo by Maureen Lamoureux<br />

was truly inspired by their dedication to<br />

give back to the community in which<br />

they serve."<br />

After reviewing the materials sent by<br />

the Historical Commission, according to<br />

Thurlow, Reading Co-operative was con-<br />

Seeing eye-to-eye<br />

'Yesterday and Today' accomplishes its goal of inter-generational understanding<br />

Bv JAYNE<br />

WILMINGTON Monday<br />

afternoon seniors and young-<br />

sters gathered for the final<br />

session of the Yesterday and<br />

Today program, part of<br />

<strong>Wilmington</strong>'s Children's Art<br />

grant from the Lahey Clinic<br />

Burlington through the<br />

Community Benefits<br />

Committee. Bringing together<br />

seniors and kids, this intergen-<br />

erational program explores<br />

the similarities and differ-<br />

ences of their childhoods.<br />

their just-printed books filled<br />

with pictures and interviews.<br />

Going around the room, par-<br />

ticipants discussed what they<br />

learned from each other and<br />

whether or not they would pre-<br />

fer spending childhood in the<br />

Dresent or the oast. Tvoicallv,<br />

Camaraderie abounded during the 'Yesterday and Today' program, as demonstrated by<br />

Alicia Speranza, Doris Stantial, Shreya Pai. Photo by www.chinappi.com<br />

Recreation and Enrichment<br />

Services (C.A.R.E.S.) pro-<br />

gram being held at the North<br />

intermediate School during<br />

the summer. Seniors from the<br />

Buzzell Senior Center came to<br />

the school to meet with<br />

C.A.R.E.S. campers once a<br />

week for three weeks for the<br />

purpose of sharing their life<br />

experiences of growing up<br />

during their era.<br />

Yesterday and Today was<br />

developed and funded by a<br />

To reach us<br />

Call: 978-658-2346<br />

During their time together,<br />

the C.A.R.E.S. campers, from<br />

third grade and up, discussed,<br />

researched<br />

and fostered<br />

understand-<br />

ing about<br />

the seniors'<br />

upbringing<br />

and experi-<br />

ences while<br />

comparing<br />

and con-<br />

trasting the<br />

ways in<br />

which they<br />

relate to the<br />

campers'<br />

own<br />

lifestyles. At<br />

Monday's<br />

final meet-<br />

ing a cele-<br />

b r a t o r y<br />

atmosphere<br />

the answers broke down along<br />

generational lines with a few<br />

exceptions. Most youngsters<br />

Peggy Quinn and Autumn Dargon share a smile during the final<br />

session of 'Yesterday and Today'. www.chinappi.com<br />

prevailed as prefer the technology availcampers<br />

and seniors reviewed able today, with computers,<br />

iPods, PlayStations and other<br />

electronics topping the most<br />

cited reasons for wanting to<br />

live in the current age. Most of<br />

the seniors expressed a yearn-<br />

ing for the more simple times<br />

of their youth, but all were<br />

impressed with the outgoing<br />

personalities, intelligence, and<br />

accomplishments of the<br />

campers they got to know over<br />

the course of the program.<br />

Phyllis Gorham remarked<br />

that when she was growing up,<br />

"life was a lot simpler, happi-<br />

er. You could walk outside<br />

without being afraid." Noting<br />

the advances in medicine how-<br />

ever she stated that, "I have<br />

the best of both worlds."<br />

Peggy Quinn, a retired busi-<br />

ness owner, enjoyed her expe-<br />

rience with the campers<br />

tremendously.<br />

"I signed up because I want-<br />

ed to meet today's kids,"<br />

Quinn said. "I found it great,<br />

especially the girls I had; they<br />

were so diversified."<br />

Autumn Dargon, a 9-year old<br />

entering 4th grade, and 11 year<br />

old 6th grader Savannah<br />

Hubbard interviewed Mrs.<br />

Quinn and learned some valu-<br />

able lessons of their own. Both<br />

girls cited their interest in<br />

interviewing the seniors as<br />

motivation for joining the<br />

Yesterday and Today program.<br />

"She told us that there's<br />

nothing you can't do if you put<br />

your mind to it.<br />

I think its<br />

true,"<br />

Savannah said,<br />

"If you put<br />

your heart into<br />

it, you can do<br />

it."<br />

Mary<br />

DiGirolamo,<br />

97, took a<br />

moment out of<br />

the festivities<br />

to sing the<br />

song "My Best<br />

Tb You" and<br />

dedicated it "to<br />

sions seniors<br />

port.<br />

"As the request did not include a spe-<br />

cific amount, Carolyn Chilcote, our<br />

(North <strong>Wilmington</strong>) Branch Manager<br />

set up a meeting for us to discuss the<br />

project with the Historical<br />

the kids."<br />

Afterwards<br />

she discussed<br />

the impres-<br />

have about<br />

SEE YESTERDAY PAGE 13<br />

port, but our personnel and marketing<br />

resources, hence the corporate-<br />

Challenge to the businesses and busi<br />

ness people in <strong>Wilmington</strong>."<br />

SEE BUTTERS FARM PAGE 13<br />

A look back at <strong>Wilmington</strong> of yesteryear.<br />

When the<br />

Democrats<br />

cooked-out<br />

Bv LARZ F. NEILSON<br />

WILMINGTON - Large cook-<br />

outs are an August tradition. In<br />

<strong>Wilmington</strong>, a long-standing<br />

yearly event was put on by the<br />

Democratic Town Committee.<br />

In election years, the cookout<br />

would be timed to take place<br />

just prior to the state pri-<br />

maries.<br />

In 1958, the <strong>Wilmington</strong> and<br />

Woburn Democratic commit-<br />

<strong>Wilmington</strong> Police Dept. today,<br />

one being Chief Michael<br />

Begonis.<br />

The cookout quickly became<br />

"the" political event of the sum-<br />

mer. Of course, there were<br />

always candidates on hand,<br />

many elected officials, and<br />

hundreds of townspeople. Gov.<br />

Endicott I'eabody attended in<br />

1963, and Ted Kennedy was<br />

there another year.<br />

Madeline Higginbotham and Charlie Dolan, at the end of<br />

the table, sing a duet over chicken wings.<br />

File photo<br />

tees put on a joint event at<br />

Town Park, with 2,000 people<br />

said to be present. They went<br />

through 2,000 pounds of lobster,<br />

two tons of hot dogs and 500-<br />

dozen ears of corn.<br />

A large sign read, "Drive<br />

carefully - the life you save<br />

may be a Democrat!"<br />

Two years later the<br />

<strong>Wilmington</strong> Democrats moved<br />

the cookout to Rene and<br />

Marjorie Larivee's house on<br />

Concord Street, right next to<br />

Route 93. Rene Larivee was a<br />

selectman and served as the<br />

town's Civil Defense director.<br />

Two of his grandsons are on the<br />

Locals on hand would include<br />

Ed Curtis, Ted Cantrell. Tony<br />

Visconti, Walter 4nd Mary<br />

Harrington. Alice Chisholm,<br />

Ernie Crispo. Jimmy<br />

McLaughlin. Harold McKelvey.<br />

Elizabeth Kelley, Maggie and<br />

John Imbimbo, and Francis<br />

Haggerty.<br />

In 1958, the Republicans also<br />

threw a monster cookout, but<br />

the GOP effort waned in the<br />

60s. The spirit of 'the<br />

Democratic cookout was such<br />

that Wavie Drew would attend.<br />

She was a longtime selectman<br />

and chairman of the<br />

SEE DEMOCRATS PAGE 14


Danversbank participates in School<br />

Supply Drive to benefit homeless<br />

WILMINGTON - Danversbank<br />

is pleased to be participating in<br />

the Massachusetts Coalition for<br />

the Homeless "Back to School<br />

Supply Drive" for the second<br />

year in a row. This effort is one<br />

of several the bank commits to<br />

as a result of its rewarding and<br />

long-standing relationship with<br />

the Coalition.<br />

"This will benefit children in<br />

<strong>Wilmington</strong> and throughout the<br />

state," said Holly Nahabedian,<br />

Branch Manager of<br />

Danversbank in <strong>Wilmington</strong>.<br />

"In addition to assisting those<br />

who are homeless, the drive<br />

also benefits people who have<br />

just recently been placed in<br />

housing." ^<br />

All Branch locations are<br />

accepting donations of back-<br />

packs, notebooks, pencils or<br />

pens, rulers, calculators, and<br />

binders.<br />

"Last year the response from<br />

our "customers, and employees<br />

was overwhelming," expressed<br />

Danversbank 1st Vice<br />

President Kevin Noyes. "Their<br />

generosity enabled us to donate<br />

hundreds of needed school sup-<br />

ply items to the Coalition, and<br />

Advertisement<br />

It's Your Money<br />

by Joyce Brisbois<br />

LEFT A JOB? RETIRED?<br />

WHERE'S YOUR 401(K)?<br />

Whether you've been in a job a<br />

few years or a few decades, the<br />

money in your 401(k) ought not be<br />

wasted. It's been tax-protected up<br />

to now. Don't lose the advantage.<br />

What are the options? You could<br />

leave the money where it is. Make<br />

certain that the same investment<br />

options are still open to you. If the<br />

account is below $5,000, the<br />

employer can insist you take the<br />

funds. You could roll over the<br />

funds into an IRA. This offers the<br />

widest investment and beneficiary<br />

choices and might save on fees if<br />

you consolidate the funds into one<br />

IRA account. Third choice is to<br />

roll over the money into your new<br />

employer's 401(k) if you like the<br />

investment choices. One advan-<br />

tage in a 401 (k) is the right .to bor-<br />

row your funds if you need emer-<br />

gency money.<br />

The fourth option, and the worst,<br />

is to take the money and run. The<br />

immediate cost is tax on the payout<br />

plus an early-withdrawal penalty.<br />

Greater yet: the tax-deferred<br />

growth of the money later.<br />

Need good advice on big-money<br />

questions? Talk to the tax and<br />

finance people at:<br />

Joyce K. Brisbois, C.P.A.<br />

P.O. Box 176<br />

Heritage Commons<br />

11 Middlesex Ave., Ste 1&2<br />

<strong>Wilmington</strong>, MA 01887<br />

978-658-5034 - office<br />

978-658-5717-FAX<br />

jkbrisbois@aol.com - Email<br />

this year our goal is to exceed<br />

that achievement."<br />

The collection is underway<br />

until Tuesday August 15, 2006,<br />

and items can be dropped off at<br />

any Branch location during<br />

Lobby hours of business.<br />

"Last year, the <strong>Wilmington</strong><br />

branch was one of the biggest<br />

contributors," Nahabedian<br />

said. "We are off to a good<br />

start and hope that our<br />

<strong>Wilmington</strong> branch will go on<br />

to exceed last year's numbers."<br />

The Massachusetts Coalition<br />

for the Homeless (MCH) works<br />

to address the broad economic<br />

and social issues that lead to<br />

homelessness. Established by<br />

an association of grassroots<br />

organizations in 1981, MCH is<br />

the country's oldest statewide<br />

homeless advocacy organiza-<br />

tion. Their policy and efforts<br />

include the annual involvement<br />

of over 700 volunteers, over 800<br />

faith communities, 1300 service<br />

providers and regional advoca-<br />

cy groups, and hundreds of<br />

families and individuals who<br />

TOWN CRIER - WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 9, 2006<br />

have experienced homeless-<br />

ness. For more information<br />

about MCH visit their website<br />

at http://www.hahomeless.org.<br />

About Danversbank<br />

Danversbank was founded in<br />

1850 and is a one-billion dollar<br />

financial institution operating<br />

out of twelve locations in<br />

Andover, Beverly, Chelsea,<br />

Danvers (2), Middleton,<br />

Peabody, Reading, Revere,<br />

Salem, <strong>Wilmington</strong> and<br />

Woburn; and one Commercial<br />

Banking Office in Boston.<br />

The Bank has been recognized<br />

by the FDIC as "Outstanding"<br />

for its community reinvest-<br />

ment activities, named one of<br />

Massachusetts' "Best Places<br />

to Work" by the Boston<br />

Business Journal in 2005 &<br />

2006, and runner-up for the<br />

Better Business Bureau's<br />

local 2006 Torch Award for<br />

Excellence. For more infor-<br />

mation, visit the bank's web-<br />

site at www.danversbank.com,<br />

or call the Customer Support<br />

Center at 800-771-8200.<br />

Danversbank Branch Manager, Holly Nahabedian, organizes<br />

some of the donations' thus far received for the Back to School<br />

Supplies Drive to benefit homeless children in Massachusetts.<br />

The drive ends on August 15th, so people are encouraged to<br />

hurry on down to contribute.<br />

Photo by Maureen Lamoureux<br />

Tewksbury Art show<br />

Entrants invited<br />

Calling all artists!<br />

Participate in the Tewksbury<br />

Community of Artists' Annual<br />

Art Festival to be held on<br />

September 29 & 30, 2006 at the<br />

John Wynn Middle School,<br />

Brisbois Capital Management L.L.C.<br />

Registered Investment Advisor<br />

www.BrisboisCapital.com<br />

> Advisory<br />

> Education Planning<br />

> Insurance Planning<br />

i Estate Planning and Guidance<br />

i Portfolio Construction and Review<br />

Todd P. Bnsbois<br />

Founder and President<br />

• Financial Planning<br />

1 Retirement Planning<br />

1 Asset Management<br />

1 Asset Allocation<br />

1 Banking and Mortgage Services<br />

Call for a free consultation<br />

11 Middlesex Ave, Suite 2<br />

<strong>Wilmington</strong>, MA 01887<br />

Ciffice 978-229-7616<br />

info@brisboiseapital.com<br />

See our competitive golf course<br />

Ask about our elegant function rooms<br />

Enjoy FINE DINING at our restaurant<br />

or on trie patio<br />

overlooking the golf course!<br />

[TEVvl^MJKii<br />

COUNTRY CLUB<br />

->—> ———<br />

FUNCTIONS • PUBLIC GOLF COURSE • TEW-MAC TAVERN<br />

1880 Main Street, Tewksbury, MA 01876<br />

Available for functions 20 - 300 people<br />

Tewksbury<br />

Judged show with ribbons and<br />

private reception for artists and<br />

their guests on Friday night<br />

3 pieces per person at $5 per<br />

piece for Non-members (adults<br />

only).<br />

To review the guidelines and<br />

download an application,<br />

please visit<br />

www.tewksbury.info/tca/ and<br />

click on 'Events* and scroll<br />

down to the Annual Art<br />

Festival.<br />

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■» •». -^ *. •> -. •<br />

TOWN CRIER -WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 9, 2006<br />

No Forms • No Cards • No Hassles • Lucci's Hakes Savings Simple! SUNDAY-SATURDAY • Aug. 6-12<br />

Come Join Us In Celebrating Serving<br />

The Community For SO Years With<br />

Great Quality, Price and Service<br />

S mmm<br />

RED SOX PLAYER OF THE GAME ITEM<br />

1. Register to Win 2 Red Sox Tickets<br />

2. $50 Luccis Gift Certificate<br />

3. Trip to Spring Training in 2007<br />

FRUITY CHEERI0S<br />

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SAVE $3.00 LB.<br />

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From:<br />

The<br />

Editors<br />

Desk<br />

by Stephen P. Bjork<br />

An ill-conceived plan<br />

The Tewksbury activist group known as U-25 is back in the<br />

headlines. Regrettably, the group is demonstrating a dangerous<br />

pattern - issuing proposals before researching all facets of the<br />

plan.<br />

The group first came onto the scene early in 2006 with plans to<br />

re-allocate the Town's budget for the purpose of increasing the<br />

public schools budget by $1 million. With that additional $1 mil-<br />

lion, the group argued, the school system could hire enough<br />

teachers to reduce classroom sizes below 25 students (hence the<br />

name: U-25). When asked by the Town Crier in February 2006,<br />

however, the group's primary spokesman, Jamie Cutelis, admit-<br />

ted that the group had not endeavored to perform an analysis of<br />

the budget. They simply felt confidant that the money was "in<br />

there somewhere" and that, if properly motivated, could be<br />

located and redistributed by the financial agents of the town.<br />

U-25 was eventually convinced to revise its plan and offer it as<br />

a Proposition 2 1/2 override question.<br />

That override question failed at the ballot.<br />

Recently, U-25 issued its latest plan - the group will sponsor<br />

three articles to the Special Town Meeting in October.<br />

One of those articles will call for a shift of $200,000 from the<br />

Tewksbury Public <strong>Library</strong> budget over to the town's stabilization<br />

iund. The Town Crier is uncomfortable with such an action.<br />

For starters, $200,000 appears to be an arbitrary figure with,<br />

once again, no analysis behind it and no plausible plan for deal-<br />

ing with the cuts. The group has offered some suggestions for<br />

cost cutting measures (opening an hour later each day, closing<br />

on Sundays, eliminating the assistant director role, etc.), but the<br />

suggestions do not produce savings anywhere near the $200,000<br />

mark, but would result in the loss of the library's accreditation.<br />

Perhaps more importantly, the mere proposition of unceremo-<br />

niously gutting the budget of a public library, put forth by a<br />

group purporting to be in favor of education, leaves a bad taste<br />

in one's mouth - and it certainly sends the wrong message to the<br />

youth of the community. Especially when more than 900 of<br />

Tewksbury's youngsters are currently participating in<br />

Tewksbury Public <strong>Library</strong> sponsored programs during the sum-<br />

mer months.<br />

I'm not exactly sure when public libraries gained the prover-<br />

bial "red-headed step-child" status within society, but the idea<br />

held by some that libraries have become obsolete as a result of<br />

the Internet couldn't be further from the truth. Statistically<br />

speaking, library visits throughout the country have more than<br />

doubled since the Internet became a household word. The visits<br />

to Tewksbury's library reflect, and exceed, those statistics.<br />

According to <strong>Library</strong> Director Elisabeth Desmairas, "On each<br />

Monday in July, more than 3,000 items slid across the library's<br />

circulation desk. Breaking those transactions down to any<br />

hourly average, the library's clerks have processed one book<br />

every twenty seconds. In fact, approximately 25,000 books and<br />

other items have been checked out in the month of July, a rate<br />

that would have been unheard of a decade ago."<br />

Public libraries exist in the United States, thankfully, as a way<br />

to even the playing field between the privileged and the non-priv-<br />

ileged- just as public education does. Despite the notion held by<br />

many residing in the comfort of the suburbs, not everyone in<br />

Massachusetts owns a computer. Particularly when one consid-<br />

ers that a number of Tewksbury motels, through state assis-<br />

tance, play host to homeless families, the crucial need for cost-<br />

free access to books, computers, and the Internet, cannot be<br />

understated. Indeed, the free and unhindered access to infor-<br />

mation is just one of the things that sets United States citizens<br />

apart from those living in third world countries.<br />

Yes, the public school system is in dire straits - if all other sta-<br />

tistics and evidence is set aside, the recent accreditation warn-<br />

ing issued to Tewksbury <strong>Memorial</strong> High School by the New<br />

England Association of Schools and Colleges will attest to that<br />

fact.<br />

But, decimating the library budget is not the answer.<br />

The Town Crier applauds any group of citizens that becomes<br />

involved in the community with the goal of improving it.<br />

However, the only thing more dangerous than pushing forward<br />

without a plan is pushing forward with a plan that is ill-con-<br />

ceived.<br />

Letters to<br />

the editor<br />

Thanks to the legislators<br />

Dear Editor,<br />

The <strong>Wilmington</strong> Historical<br />

Commission wishes to thank<br />

our legislators for their suc-<br />

cess in acquiring, through<br />

override, $450,000 for the<br />

Butters Farmhouse.<br />

We wish to extend a special<br />

thank you to Rep. James<br />

Miceli for his tireless efforts to<br />

steer this fiscal request<br />

through the House, through<br />

the Conference Committee,<br />

and through an override of the"<br />

Governor's line item veto.<br />

__JVe wish to thank Rep.<br />

Charles Murphy for his contin-<br />

ued support of our acquiring<br />

and preserving the Butters<br />

Farmhouse.<br />

We wish to thank State<br />

Senator Bruce Tarr for his<br />

senatorial support of the<br />

acquisition and preservation<br />

of the Butters Farmhouse and<br />

his efforts in supporting the<br />

over ride and steering it<br />

through the Senate.<br />

The Historical Commission<br />

appreciates the many efforts<br />

of our legislators in fulfilling<br />

the goal of the Commission to<br />

preserve <strong>Wilmington</strong>'s rich<br />

heritage. Due to their support,<br />

the Butters Farmhouse will be<br />

preserved for generations to<br />

come.<br />

Sincerely,<br />

Carolyn Harris<br />

Bill Campbell<br />

Gerry Duggan<br />

Bonny Smith<br />

Kathleen Reynolds<br />

Julie Fennel!<br />

Like every sum-<br />

I mer, driving<br />

'around town I've<br />

noticed a startling increase in building<br />

projects. One project, not yet in the build<br />

stage, will gain more visibility over the<br />

next few weeks and months as the devel-<br />

oper, The Hanover Company, appears<br />

before various boards in town working on<br />

due diligence.<br />

The Lodge at Ames Pond is coming to<br />

Tewksbury, and planning to bring 364<br />

rental units in a three phase building<br />

process. Of those 364 units, plans desig-<br />

nate 25% of the units as affordable with<br />

49% of the units as 1 bedroom, 40% as 2<br />

bedrooms and 11% as 3 bedrooms.<br />

The project, still in relative early stages<br />

of approval, scares the heck out of lots of<br />

residents, particularly parents worried<br />

about the already overburdened school<br />

system. I had to take a closer look at<br />

Tewksbury's 40B situation to sort out<br />

whether or not this enormous rental hous-<br />

ing project makes sense.<br />

Surprisingly, it does.<br />

I'm no fan of Chapter 40B, which effec-<br />

tively hogties communities trying to man-<br />

age growth, when the community possess-<br />

es a housing base less than ten percent of<br />

which is categorized as "affordable."<br />

With 498 units of affordable housing in<br />

Tewksbury, the town stands at about 4.9%.<br />

Surrounding towns fare better than we do<br />

with BuTerica at 6.1%, Chelmsford at<br />

5.8%, Dracut at 5.5%, and <strong>Wilmington</strong><br />

near 9%. Andover has already met its<br />

10% commitment.<br />

And yet, residents surely know that the<br />

Town has a "higher percentage of condo-<br />

miniums and apartments than can be<br />

found in most towns nearby," as the<br />

Tewksbury Affordable Housing Plan cites<br />

in the Comprehensive Needs Assessment<br />

portion.<br />

QUumt&fllrtcr<br />

WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 9, 2006<br />

Fortnight in Review by Jayne W. Miller<br />

So, why the contradiction? Poor plan-<br />

ning seems like the easy, and obvious,<br />

answer. The town has allowed many<br />

smaller sized developments offering few<br />

affordable housing units compared to the<br />

number of units being built. Over the next<br />

1-2 years, according to the Affordable<br />

Housing Plan, the town will see eight pro-<br />

jects built ranging in size from one to 60<br />

units including the first phase of the<br />

Lodge at Ames Hill (again, these are pro-<br />

jections). These eight projects will build<br />

222 units but only give the town 76 units<br />

designated affordable contributing to the<br />

10% required by 40B.<br />

The town needs 77 units in order to have<br />

the right to refuse dubious developments<br />

for one year, a provision available to<br />

towns not yet at the 10% requirement.<br />

When a Zoning Board of Appeals rejects a<br />

developer's project the developer may<br />

appeal that decision to the State Housing<br />

Appeals Committee (HAC). Of the 415<br />

appeals that board heard from 1970 -2002 ,<br />

45% of the cases were withdrawn, dis-<br />

missed or settled, 24% of the cases were<br />

negotiated between the town and the<br />

developer and 31% were decided by the<br />

HAC. Of that 31%, 84% ruled in favor of<br />

the developer and only 16% for the town.<br />

Clearly, towns are at a disadvantage with<br />

developers under the 40B law.<br />

But, back to those eight near term pro-<br />

jects. Almost all of them are ownership,<br />

or condominium, developments requiring<br />

up to 25% of affordable housing units as<br />

part of the development. When building<br />

small 16 unit projects that means only<br />

four count toward Tewksbury's 10%.<br />

The problem is that the projects, and<br />

affordable units, are coming piecemeal.<br />

And it gets worse.<br />

"As Tewksbury continues to approve<br />

market rate homes in conventional subdi-<br />

visions and cluster developments, the<br />

Letters to the editor<br />

town accrues an unmet liability for 40B<br />

units," states the Affordable Housing Plan<br />

mentioned earlier. Current estimates indi-<br />

cate that the town needs an additional 690<br />

affordable units. According to a Northern<br />

Middlesex Council of Governments study<br />

Tewksbury would have to create a whop-<br />

ping 2761 additional homes to obtain 690<br />

units under the 25% allotment.<br />

However, all rental units count toward<br />

the elusive 10% of total housing stock.<br />

Thus, a large development like that<br />

planned for Ames Hill, offers 364 units, a<br />

big dent in that 690 unit goal, and perhaps<br />

presents less stress for our schools.<br />

Renter occupied housing in Tewksbury<br />

averages 2.08 people per household versus<br />

the owner occupied households which<br />

average 2.9 people. Ames' projections on<br />

the saturation level of children that would<br />

move into the Lodge seem grossly under-<br />

estimated with only 49 children in the<br />

entire 364 complex. The developer con-<br />

tends that fifty percent of those children<br />

will be high school aged and the other 50<br />

percent will be elementary and middle<br />

school aged.<br />

That said, the project currently plans for<br />

a three phase managed building process<br />

over three years, with the first year only<br />

opening 34 units. Thus, the pain of a sud-<br />

den influx of students will take a little<br />

longer to feel, and perhaps give the town<br />

more time to repair school budgets and<br />

hire teachers.<br />

Keep an eye out for 40B developments as<br />

you drive around town. Accepting a devel-<br />

opment like the Lodge at Ames Hill, ignor-<br />

ing for the moment the legitimate cries of<br />

"Not In My Backyard" allows Tewksbury<br />

to claim a chunk of that 10% and returns<br />

some autonomy to town going forward in<br />

the near term.<br />

library a luxury In support of the library<br />

Dear Editor:<br />

These facts are well known to<br />

almost all Tewksbury resi-<br />

dents and are undisputed:<br />

• Tewksbury's Public Schools<br />

rank a shameful 198th of 207 in<br />

the state in per pupil spending.<br />

• Our schools rank a disas-<br />

trous 206 of 207 in the state in<br />

student to teacher ratio.<br />

• Class sizes are approaching<br />

or at a terrifying 30 in the<br />

Elementary/Middle Schools<br />

and 40 in the High School.<br />

• The High School is on<br />

WARNING and will LOSE ITS<br />

ACCREDITATION if the class<br />

size, lack of program, and lack<br />

of elective issues are not<br />

addressed.<br />

Almost everyone agrees the<br />

Tewksbury Public Schools<br />

need to hire a significant num-<br />

ber of new teachers to address<br />

the above issues. As always<br />

the issue is money.<br />

U25 has proposed a<br />

Homeowners Tax Cut By-Law<br />

to save each and every<br />

Tewksbury homeowner hun-<br />

dreds of dollars each year; a<br />

pension investment study<br />

committee to see if we can<br />

invest our pension dollars and<br />

get a higher rate of return arid<br />

save us substantial tax dollars<br />

each year, and a cut to the<br />

<strong>Library</strong> budget.<br />

Why the <strong>Library</strong>? Simply<br />

because the <strong>Library</strong> is a<br />

Luxury item. It is not an<br />

essential necessary service.<br />

Police, fire, DPW,<br />

water/sewer, schools are<br />

essential musthave services.<br />

People's lives depend on<br />

police/fire. A child's future<br />

and our economic future<br />

depend on our school system.<br />

This seems harsh to some, but<br />

the reality is, nobody depends<br />

on the library. Because<br />

Tewksbury does not have<br />

unlimited tax dollars we have<br />

to prioritize. We have few<br />

other choices.<br />

Everyone loves the library,<br />

but in this day and age it's an<br />

extra. Nobody is harmed if the<br />

library budget is cut.<br />

Thousands of children suffer<br />

every day when, they are<br />

forced into overcrowded class- •<br />

rooms of 30 to 40 kids. Cutting<br />

the library budget is an incon-<br />

venience- Cutting teachers so<br />

class size is 30 to 40 is a<br />

tragedy. An unaccredited<br />

library is sad. An unaccredit-<br />

ed High School is a criminal<br />

act. U25 thinks the issue is<br />

simple and clear. We hope the<br />

town's people do too.<br />

Very Truly Yours,<br />

U25 - Jamie Cutelis<br />

Tewksbury<br />

Thanks First Baptist<br />

Dear Editor,<br />

The <strong>Wilmington</strong> Historical<br />

Commission wishes to thank<br />

Bob Figucia and the members<br />

of the First Baptist Church for<br />

their efforts to Preserve the<br />

Butters Farmhouse. Through<br />

their Fourth of July Dunk<br />

Tank, $470 was raised to be<br />

donated to the Preserve the<br />

Butters Farmhouse fund.<br />

Their efforts to help us in our<br />

COMNGIN<br />

OCTOBER...<br />

All your quetions answered...<br />

goal to raise funds to preserve<br />

<strong>Wilmington</strong>'s heritage is<br />

greatly appreciated.<br />

Sincerely,<br />

Carolyn Harris<br />

Bill Campbell<br />

Gerry Duggan<br />

Bonny Smith<br />

Kathleen Reynolds<br />

Julie Fennell<br />

...in one place<br />

Don't miss it! Town Crier<br />

Dear Editor,<br />

It appears that the School<br />

Department is once again<br />

over reaching their bound-<br />

aries. Why is the Tewksbury<br />

<strong>Library</strong> responsible for U25<br />

problems? Attacking the<br />

libraries budget is not the<br />

answer. It makes little sense<br />

to fix one problem by creating<br />

another.<br />

The Tewksbury Public<br />

<strong>Library</strong> apparently satisfied<br />

the majority at Town Meeting.<br />

The majority authorized a<br />

sound <strong>Library</strong> budget, not an<br />

extension of the School<br />

Department budget.<br />

Our library is properly man-<br />

aged and should not be target-<br />

ed by other departments with-<br />

out cause. Which Department<br />

will be next?<br />

In the past twenty-five years<br />

the libraries across the Nation<br />

have served the people well<br />

providing the necessary tools<br />

to move our country forward.<br />

The Tewksbury <strong>Library</strong><br />

appears to address all of its<br />

problems in a timely responsi-<br />

ble fashion, not allowing prob-<br />

lems to fester.<br />

The School Department has<br />

complained about class sizes<br />

for the past twenty-five years<br />

and longer. Complaining to<br />

the taxpayers is not enough,<br />

action is required. The people<br />

understand that the problems<br />

are not the number of stu-<br />

dents in a class it is the lack<br />

of discipline expected of them.<br />

The opportunity is now to do<br />

something about class sizes<br />

and or restructuring. Money<br />

is an excuse and seldom the<br />

answer; however, too much<br />

money can be the source of<br />

the problems leading to waste-<br />

ful spending and lack of direc-<br />

tion.<br />

Taxpayers can no longer<br />

afford sacred cows it is that<br />

simple. Sharpen your own<br />

pencils and do the right thing.<br />

The School Department must<br />

lead; following has yielded lit-<br />

tle in return for way too much.<br />

The taxpayers sooner or later<br />

must say enough.<br />

Return to the basics. It is<br />

time to address the wasteful<br />

spending by the Department<br />

of Education.<br />

Don Ordway<br />

Tewksbury<br />

®0xmt$yirier<br />

Cetokaburp - <strong>Wilmington</strong><br />

<strong>Wilmington</strong> office located at:<br />

226 Lowell Street, <strong>Wilmington</strong>, MA 01887-2947<br />

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HTRT A iftAf ffc Co? tt Wif K&P<br />

Are you ready for the<br />

inevitable? Do you wish you<br />

could live forever? Do you<br />

think your life has made a pos-<br />

itive difference to your fellow<br />

man? Do you fear death and<br />

ihe unknown? Do you want to<br />

know how much time you have<br />

left?<br />

These questions come to the<br />

surface as you get older and<br />

;ire faced with an illness that<br />

could be fatal. There are many<br />

perceptions when contemplat-<br />

ing the end of life. When a life<br />

has been beautiful and fulfill-<br />

ing we wish it would never end.<br />

The ecstasy of love, the close-<br />

ness of family and friends, and<br />

the pleasure of our senses are<br />

never forgotten. It is difficult<br />

to believe all these will end<br />

with death. The greater the joy<br />

of life the greater fear of<br />

death. Many finrftrelief in<br />

believing they willgb on to a<br />

better life. It is no longer the<br />

end but the beginning. Many<br />

religions believe in this con-<br />

eept, and it can be a blessing<br />

in dealing with death.<br />

If you have lived a full and<br />

complete life you are indeed<br />

fortunate. When I say a com-<br />

plete life I mean you are,ready<br />

and wish to pass on. My old<br />

friend of 92 years explains<br />

what "complete" means. "Tony<br />

I've lived a full life. I've seen<br />

and done it all. I'm very tired<br />

and I feel ready to pass.on. I<br />

want to sleep for eternity." It<br />

would be great if we all could<br />

experience'such an ending<br />

The unfairness of some<br />

deaths can be devastating; the<br />

death of a child, a parent who<br />

k<br />

TOWN CRIER - WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 9, 2006<br />

Wj&fL #3F—<br />

Birth<br />

announcement<br />

Gerald Kulevich and Jessica<br />

(Kittredge) Kulevich of<br />

<strong>Wilmington</strong> are pleased to<br />

announce the birth of their<br />

daughter Gabrielle Marie,<br />

born on July 24, 2006 at Salem<br />

Hospital.<br />

Grandparents include<br />

Alexander and Barbara<br />

Kulevich of Marblehead,<br />

Kathleen Kittredge of<br />

<strong>Wilmington</strong> and William<br />

Kittredge of Revere. Gabrielle<br />

is the great-granddaughter of<br />

Emily Kittredge of Wenham.<br />

She was welcomed home by<br />

her brothers, Michael and<br />

Matthew.<br />

The Family Therapist<br />

by Anthony Ferrara<br />

Preparing for Death<br />

must leave his dependent chil-<br />

dren, and those who never had<br />

the opportunity to fulfill their<br />

hopes and dreams. Belief in a<br />

cure can keep those struggling<br />

with serious illness involved in<br />

living. Some are fortunate to<br />

achieve some of these dreams.<br />

This is a time of medical<br />

break-throughs, making many<br />

cures possible. No definite<br />

time to die can or should be<br />

given. Everyone needs some<br />

hope to hold on to. I feel a<br />

patient should be told they<br />

could live six months or sue<br />

years. Only God knows. I know<br />

one friend who was told he had<br />

six months to live fifteen years<br />

ago. However, perseverance<br />

and stamina are necessary to<br />

make this possible. The belief<br />

that you will die very soon can<br />

speed up your death. Worry,<br />

depression, and fear can<br />

become a feeling of dying<br />

every day rather than that one<br />

time.<br />

From the first day of birth,<br />

some individuals have only<br />

known pain and suffering.<br />

Distorted bodies and chronic<br />

diseases indeed put a strain on<br />

life.<br />

Many of these strong souls<br />

make this a challenge that<br />

they overcome. These special<br />

people in many cases achieve<br />

more than the complete<br />

healthy people. The will to sur-<br />

vive and achieve can be the<br />

strongest healer.<br />

On the other side, there are<br />

individuals who pray to die<br />

because they can no longer<br />

stand the pain and suffering.<br />

Through prayer, family sup-<br />

License and registration,please<br />

If this is what you saw in your side-view mirror, it would greatly<br />

improve the experience of being pulled over by a police officer.<br />

<strong>Wilmington</strong> Patrolman Dan D'Eon served up some lobster and<br />

steak tips during the 4th Annual <strong>Wilmington</strong> Police Union<br />

Scholarship Clambake last Wednesday evening.<br />

Photo by Maureen Lamoureux<br />

port and the hope of recovery<br />

they go on. The suffering can<br />

become so extreme that loved<br />

ones also pray for their death.<br />

In such cases death can be<br />

merciful. •<br />

For some the fear of death is<br />

overwhelming. They realize<br />

death cannot be ignored or put<br />

on hold and it is inevitable.<br />

Realizing that only the living<br />

• can anticipate the honor of<br />

death can lessen some of this<br />

pain. Just to think about<br />

death, you must be alive.<br />

What a shame when good<br />

health is not recognized and<br />

appreciated. We are told<br />

through the years that if you<br />

have your health you have<br />

everything. We should truly<br />

believe this statement before<br />

we begin to lose our health. We<br />

then would know how well life<br />

was treating us.<br />

If you have unfinished priori-<br />

ties, finish them while you<br />

have your health and strength.<br />

Did you say all the things you<br />

always wanted to say? Do you<br />

feel you haven't contributed<br />

enough to your fellow man? Do<br />

so; it's not too late. Death<br />

could be the end or the begin-<br />

ning, depending on your belief.<br />

What you leave behind will<br />

surely go on for years. Family<br />

and friends can insure the<br />

mention of your name. We are<br />

all equal in death. Money,<br />

power, and politics can't buy<br />

our freedom.<br />

Don't wait to prepare for<br />

death. Make all the arrange-<br />

ments while you are physically<br />

and mentally capable. When<br />

this is accomplished, push<br />

thoughts of death aside and go<br />

on living. Facing the inevitable<br />

before its time can put you in<br />

charge at your death.<br />

We are then prepared to fol-<br />

low those we loved in the past.<br />

Questions? Comments!<br />

e-mail:<br />

Tony@yourtowncrier.com<br />

<strong>Wilmington</strong><br />

residents<br />

graduate<br />

UMass<br />

Amherst<br />

Approximately 4,000 students<br />

in 85 majors received under-<br />

graduate degrees from the<br />

University of Massachusetts<br />

Amherst this spring.<br />

Commencement ceremonies<br />

were held May 28, 2006, at the<br />

Warren P. McGuirk Alumni<br />

Stadium.<br />

Students from <strong>Wilmington</strong><br />

who graduated:<br />

Michael Ryan Aubert<br />

Amanda M. Barrasso<br />

Stephen M. Ciulla<br />

Jonathan R. Eaton<br />

Dennis Paul Morse, Jr.<br />

Ann Bao Nguyen<br />

Megan L. Pickett<br />

Kristen Elizabeth Sauv<br />

Michelle N. Vo<br />

Ryan Horgan discusses the similarities and differences of grow-<br />

ing up in today's society, as opposed to growing up when Glen<br />

Diggs (pictured in the background) did. It was all part of the<br />

Yesterday and Today program held at <strong>Wilmington</strong>'s North<br />

Intermediate School.<br />

Photo by www.chinappi.com<br />

Two Gents<br />

I know it is easy to drive ten minutes up 93 for a tax<br />

free weekend, every weekend, but please patronize our<br />

,y Massachusetts businesses this weekend!<br />

Tewksbury<br />

U-25 wants to take $200k from the library? The<br />

library has $200k?<br />

Tewksbury<br />

Bravo and sincere thanks to the Board of Appeals for<br />

not granting a Variance or Permit for that 110 foot<br />

monstrosity of a cell tower to be built at 188 Main St<br />

<strong>Wilmington</strong>. And thank you to the neighbors who<br />

appeared at the meeting to voice their concerns. It's<br />

gratifying to see some common sense prevail.<br />

<strong>Wilmington</strong><br />

I think it's great that the school dept. is cutting down<br />

on buses. Kids walking to school will lose weight,<br />

become smaller and fit better in those little desks.<br />

Tewksbury<br />

Want your opinion heard?<br />

' Send your Two Cents to:<br />

twocents@yourtowncrier.com.<br />

All submissions chosen for publication will be done so<br />

anonymously.<br />

Alexis Wade graduated from<br />

Berklee College of Music<br />

BOSTON - Alexis Wade of<br />

<strong>Wilmington</strong> participated in<br />

Berklee College of Music's 2006<br />

Commencement held recently<br />

in Boston at Northeastern<br />

University's Matthews Arena.<br />

Alexis, a 2003 graduate of<br />

<strong>Wilmington</strong> High School recent-<br />

ly earned her degree in Music<br />

Business/Management. She is<br />

the manager of the nationally<br />

known bluegrass/jazz ensemble,<br />

The Wayfaring Strangers and a<br />

new rock band named Tobacco<br />

Mosaic. Her principal instru-<br />

ment is the violin. Honorary<br />

Doctor of Music Degrees and<br />

diplomas were presented by<br />

Berklee President Roger Brown<br />

to soul music legend and<br />

Grammy-winning superstar<br />

Aretha Franklin, Grammy-win-<br />

ning singer/songwriter Melissa<br />

Etheridge '80, internationally<br />

celebrated saxophonist and<br />

Berklee educator Andy<br />

McGhee, and Grammy-winning<br />

producer and engineer Elliot<br />

Schemer. In front of more than<br />

4,000 guests, Etheridge deliv-<br />

ered the commencement<br />

address.<br />

More than 800 seniors partici-<br />

pated in the commencement<br />

ceremony at which bachelor of<br />

music degrees and professional<br />

diplomas were awarded.<br />

Female graduates numbered<br />

247, representing 31 percent of<br />

RMLD peaks again,<br />

urges conservation<br />

READING Reading<br />

Municipal Light Department<br />

(RMLD) reports this week's<br />

sweltering heat set a new record<br />

for peak electricity usage of<br />

172,493 kilowatts on Wednesday,<br />

August 2, at 4 p.m. when the<br />

temperature was 97 degrees,<br />

breaking the previous record of<br />

168,702 kilowatts set on July 21.<br />

"With temperatures hovering<br />

at 100 degrees, we kept extra<br />

crews on and had very few prob-<br />

lems," said RMLD's<br />

Engineering and Operations<br />

Manager Pete Dion. "RMLD<br />

consistently maintains its<br />

equipment and trims trees near<br />

its lines in order to be prepared<br />

for weather like this," Dion<br />

added. "We fared very well dur-<br />

ing the heat wave."<br />

Dion says if customers have<br />

recently added central air con-<br />

ditioning or installed multiple<br />

window air conditioning units,<br />

"Call us and let us know you've<br />

added equipment so RMLD can<br />

check the transformer servicing<br />

your home. This is a proactive<br />

measure which helps keep out-<br />

the total class. Internationa<br />

students from 42 different coun<br />

tries - the largest portions fron<br />

South Korea and Japan - madt<br />

up 29 percent of the class<br />

Domestic students were from 4,*<br />

U.S. states - the greatest num<br />

ber from Massachusetts, New<br />

York, and California. The tof<br />

three majors were Professio'na<br />

Music, Miisi<<br />

Business/Management, am<br />

Music Production ' £<br />

Engineering. Guitar, voice, anc<br />

piano were the three most com<br />

mon means of musical expres<br />

sion among students of flu<br />

graduating class.<br />

In her remarks, Etheridge tok<br />

the students they had reinvigo<br />

rated her hope in the musk<br />

industry, and asked them to Staj<br />

faithful to their inspiration<br />

"Always be in your truth," sh<<br />

said, "whether you are singing<br />

whether you are wrapping youi<br />

arms around your instrument<br />

and playing it, whether you are<br />

listening to it and mixing it, or<br />

if you are trying to find out the<br />

best way to bring music to the<br />

world. You were given this gift,<br />

you were chosen. Be in your<br />

truth, be in your light, be in<br />

your love. Go out there and> be<br />

the musician that you are Be<br />

the keeper of the dream, of<br />

music."<br />

ages to a minimum." i<br />

RMLD encourages customers<br />

to conserve during hot weather<br />

by making sure:<br />

• air conditioners are installed<br />

on a wall receiving the least<br />

direct sunlight (usually a north-<br />

ern wall),<br />

• air conditioning is set at 78<br />

degrees,<br />

• filters are cleaned or<br />

replaced regularly,<br />

• blinds or shades are pulled<br />

down during the hottest part of<br />

the day,<br />

• windows are down to help<br />

insulate homes by keeping the<br />

air inside colder for longer,<br />

• window air conditipners and<br />

central air registers are not<br />

blocked by drapes or furniture<br />

• when cooking, use<br />

microwaves instead of ovens,<br />

• hold off washing and drying<br />

clothes until later in the<br />

evening.<br />

Information about ways to<br />

save energy can be obtained by<br />

calling RMLD at 781-944-1340 or<br />

781- 942-6598 or visiting<br />

www.rmld.com.<br />

!<br />

l


Tewksbury lions attend<br />

Lions Clubs International<br />

Convention in Boston<br />

LIONS ON PARADE: District 33N participated in the International convention held in Boston<br />

on June 30 - July 5th. The Tewksbury Lions Club is a member of District 33N as will be the<br />

<strong>Wilmington</strong> Club when it is formed this fall.<br />

Any man or woman interested in joining either <strong>Wilmington</strong> or Tewksbury Lions Club is invit-<br />

ed to call Dennis Toscano at 978-667-6727 or e-mail: dnnsdmnns@yahoo.com<br />

(Mike Billias photo)<br />

' Aubrey L. 'Monty" Gibson of<br />

Lowell, President of the<br />

Tewksbury Lions Club, recently<br />

attended the 89th Lions Clubs<br />

International Convention, in<br />

Boston, serving as sergeant-at-<br />

arms, along with other mem-<br />

bers of the Tewksbury Club.<br />

Gibson was one of 13,000 Lions<br />

who participated in the meeting<br />

in Boston, which drew repre-<br />

sentatives from 100 countries<br />

and geographic areas around<br />

the world.<br />

According to Gibson, in late<br />

June or early July of each year<br />

15,000-20,000 Lions club mem-<br />

bers and their families from<br />

more than 100 countries gather<br />

for the Lions Clubs<br />

International Convention. For<br />

five days, Lions conduct associ-<br />

ation business, share fellowship'<br />

and enjoy the sights of an inter-<br />

national city. The Lions.Clubs<br />

International Convention is one<br />

, of the largest annual conven-<br />

, tions of its kind in the world. .<br />

Normally the Lions Clubs<br />

International Board of<br />

Directors selects convention<br />

sites from around the world five<br />

years in advance, after an<br />

extensive bidding process.<br />

Following the devastation of<br />

Hurricanes Katrina and Rita, it<br />

was determined that the Lions<br />

Clubs International Convention<br />

would have to be moved from<br />

New Orleans to another city.<br />

Boston was one of a number<br />

of cities that quickly offered to<br />

host the convention. Tourist<br />

authorities presented options<br />

for accommodating the conven-<br />

tion and the large number of<br />

attendees and explained why<br />

their cities are attractive desti-<br />

nations. Members of local Lions<br />

clubs also demonstrated their<br />

. commitment by forming a<br />

Lions Host Committee.<br />

• , Deciding factors in the choice<br />

of Boston included appropriate<br />

meeting space, available hous-<br />

ing in proximity to the conven-<br />

tion center, median double<br />

room hotel rates and estimated<br />

shuttle costs, as well as the<br />

many attractions Boston offers<br />

for conventioneers from around<br />

the world.<br />

This was the first time that<br />

the Lions Clubs International<br />

Convention held in Boston and<br />

the first time it will be held in<br />

the northeastern part of the<br />

United States since 1936.<br />

Cooperation is vital between<br />

Lions Clubs International<br />

Headquarters staff and the<br />

local Lions Host Committee in<br />

order to make sure that the<br />

convention runs smoothly.<br />

Lions in Boston quickly formed<br />

a Host Committee and in only<br />

eight months volunteers have<br />

devoted hundreds of hours to<br />

preparing for the convention.<br />

The group is responsible for<br />

' hospitality including staffing<br />

welcome centers, arranging<br />

welcoming banners, securing<br />

local marching bands for the<br />

parade and serving as<br />

sergeants-at-arms for major<br />

events.<br />

Among the highlights of the<br />

convention was a spectacular<br />

Parade of Nations featuring<br />

9,000 Lions from 100 countries,<br />

many in native dress, who<br />

marched along with floats and<br />

25 marching bands ^ --<br />

In addition, the 2006 Lions<br />

Humanitarian Award was pre-<br />

sented to Shri Dipchand Savraj<br />

Gardi of Mumbai, India. At age<br />

91, Gardi is doing the work he<br />

likes best: giving away his<br />

wealth to those in need.<br />

Gardi was presented with thus<br />

prestigious award on Tuesday,<br />

July 4. The 2006 Lions<br />

Humanitarian Award, the high-<br />

est honor of the association,<br />

includes a $200,000 grant for<br />

continuing humanitarian activi-<br />

ties from Lions Clubs<br />

International Foundation.<br />

I*revious Lions Humanitarian<br />

Award recipients include for-<br />

mer President Jimmy Carter<br />

an'd Mother Teresa.<br />

At the age of 49, Gardi, who<br />

was educated in India and<br />

I^ondon. retired from his law<br />

career to dedicate his life to<br />

aiding others. Gardi began his<br />

philanthropic work by setting<br />

up schools in small villages, in<br />

particular schools for girls. I It-<br />

continues to dedicate his life to<br />

philanthropic work on a full-<br />

time basis.<br />

The Dipchand Gardi<br />

Charitable Trust provides<br />

approximately $80,000 per year<br />

in funding for a variety of pro-<br />

jects, including schools, hospi-<br />

tals, religious institutions,<br />

elderly homes and community<br />

health programs.<br />

The Trust generally distrib-<br />

utes $1,120 as seed money for<br />

projects, asking that the organi-<br />

zation or* group raise four times<br />

this amount for the completion<br />

of work. Once that amount is<br />

raised, additional funds are<br />

provided by the Trust if needed.<br />

The feasibility of each project<br />

is first reviewed by Gardi, and<br />

then a host of other experts and<br />

specialists review the project.<br />

For projects involving con-<br />

struction, surveyors and engi-<br />

neers also advise on the project<br />

and act as supervisors.<br />

"I particularly wanted girls to<br />

be educated because one edu-<br />

cated mother in each family<br />

could make a world of differ-<br />

ence to the future of society as<br />

a whole." he said. He built his<br />

first school at his birthplace<br />

when he was 31.<br />

He has been awarded the<br />

Gujarat Garima Award, Rajiv<br />

Gandhi Award and Girnar<br />

Award, in addition to other<br />

prestigious .awards, for his<br />

humanitarian work. However,<br />

he prefers to stay out of the<br />

TOWN CRIER - WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 9, 2006<br />

limelight. "I want no reward, no<br />

award," he says. "Not a single<br />

school or anything else con-<br />

structed with my help is named<br />

after me. I want to be forgotten,<br />

not remembered. I want to be<br />

like the foundation stone pro-<br />

viding a firm and strong base<br />

for others to build their beauti-<br />

ful dreams on," he said.<br />

"What I have today was some-<br />

one else's yesterday and will<br />

belong to someone else tomor-<br />

row," Gardi said. He plans to<br />

continue his humanitarian<br />

work throughout India, working<br />

for the betterment of society<br />

and helping others fulfill their<br />

dreams.<br />

Convention delegates attend-<br />

ed workshops, learned about<br />

important issues facing com-<br />

munities around the world,<br />

elected international officers,<br />

voted on constitutional amend-<br />

ments and helped set the future<br />

direction for Lions Clubs<br />

International. Attendees also<br />

met with members from around<br />

the world for a week of fellow-<br />

ship.<br />

"I am very proud of the<br />

Tewksbury club for being part<br />

of this terrific occasion. It was<br />

exciting for me to meet so many<br />

people from countries all over<br />

the world. We shared stories<br />

and experiences with people<br />

from other countries and found<br />

ways to overcome the language<br />

barriers. I am also looking for-<br />

ward to future conventioas so I<br />

can reconnect with my new<br />

international friends," said<br />

Gibson.<br />

The Tewksbury Lions Club<br />

has 55 members and meets on<br />

the second and fourth<br />

Wednesday of the month at 7:00<br />

p.m. at the U.S.Bunting &<br />

Cricket Club, 449 Boylston<br />

Street, Lowell, (near the end of<br />

Whipple Road). Lions clubs are<br />

a group of men and women who<br />

identify needs within the com-<br />

munity and work together to<br />

fulfill those needs. For more<br />

information or to get "involved<br />

with the Tewksbury Lions Club,<br />

please contact Membership<br />

Chairperson Dennis Toscano at<br />

978-667-6727 or email at dnns-<br />

dmnnsyahoo.com<br />

Lions Clubs International is<br />

the world's largest service club<br />

organization with nearly 1.4<br />

million members in approxi-<br />

mately 46,000 clubs in 196 coun-<br />

tries and geographical areas<br />

around the world. Since 1917,<br />

Lions clubs have aided the<br />

blind and visually impaired and<br />

made a strong commitment to<br />

community service and serving<br />

youth throughout the world.<br />

Lions tackle tough problems<br />

like blindness, drug abuse pre-<br />

vention and diabetes aware-<br />

ness. For more information<br />

about Lions Clubs<br />

International, visit the Web site<br />

at www.Uonsclubs.org.<br />

Golf Tourney to benefit Tewksbury<br />

Senior Center expansion project<br />

TEWKSBURY - The Friends<br />

, of the Elderly will host its 9th<br />

Annual Mary Ann Wareham<br />

Golf Connection Tournament-<br />

Connecting Generations! The<br />

outing will be held at the Indian<br />

, Ridge Country Club in Andover<br />

, on Monday, September 11, 2006.<br />

All proceeds benefit the<br />

Tewksbury Senior Center<br />

Expaasion Project.<br />

Registration forms are avail-<br />

able at the Tewksbury Senior<br />

Center, 460 East Street or by<br />

calling Linda Brabant at 978-<br />

6404482 (days) or 978-851-4243<br />

(evenings). Tournament fee is<br />

$125 per golfer and includes<br />

Continental Breakfast, cart &<br />

green fees, sit-down lunch,<br />

prizes and the „Wareham Cup<br />

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winning teams to display<br />

throughout the year!<br />

Sponsorships very much appre-<br />

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Tee/Green/Special Event $125;<br />

Raffle prize donations gladly<br />

accepted. .<br />

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Tuesday, August 22nd.<br />

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OBITUARIES<br />

Warner Allen<br />

Formerly of <strong>Wilmington</strong><br />

dREFIELD, PA - Warner<br />

Allen died Tuesday, August 8,<br />

2()06 apparently of a heart<br />

attack. He was hiking in the<br />

Pennsylvania mountains with<br />

his dog Heidi. He talked to<br />

his wife around 11 a.m. and<br />

said he would call her when<br />

he reached his car in 15-30<br />

minutes. He never called.<br />

Heidi (the dog) was with him<br />

when he was found.<br />

Warner graduated from<br />

WHS in 1960, and still has<br />

Bertha Mae Drew<br />

Family in <strong>Wilmington</strong><br />

RANDOLPH CENTER, VT -<br />

88, of Randolph Center, died<br />

Saturday afternoon, August 5,<br />

2006 at Rowan Court in Barre.<br />

She was born August 16,1917<br />

in Chelsea, MA; the daughter<br />

of the late Harry R. & Eva<br />

(Veno) Hitchcock. Mrs. Drew<br />

for many years spent sum-<br />

mers in Maine and winters in<br />

florida before moving to^<br />

Randolph Center in 2005. She<br />

enjoyed travel, reading, and<br />

television.<br />

She is survived by her son,<br />

Alan Lauchlan Drew of<br />

Randolph Center; her sister,<br />

Eileen Thebeau of<br />

<strong>Wilmington</strong>, MA; many<br />

nieces and nephews. She was<br />

(Jeorge K. Mullens<br />

Salesman for Merchant Tire Company<br />

WILMINGTON - Mr. George<br />

k. "Kenny" Mullens, 76, of<br />

<strong>Wilmington</strong>, died August 2,<br />

; 2006, at the<br />

Lahey Clinic in<br />

Burlington, fol-<br />

~ lowing a brief<br />

illness. Mr. Mullens was born<br />

May 2, 1930, in Stamford, CT,<br />

he was the son of the late<br />

William and Lottie (Ike)<br />

Mullens. He grew up in<br />

Connecticut, where he was<br />

educated, he joined the<br />

lAiited States Navy during the<br />

Korean War and served his<br />

Ceuntry from 1948 until 1952.<br />

Prior to retirement Kenny<br />

ftws a salesman for Merchant<br />

Tire Company for many<br />

Jrears. Kenny met and mar-<br />

tied his wife of 52 years,<br />

Grace V. (Querci) Mullens,<br />

I hey moved to <strong>Wilmington</strong> in<br />

the early 1960's where they<br />

raised their four children.<br />

In his spare time Kenny<br />

enjoyed watching the Red Sox<br />

and the Patriots, he loved to<br />

cook, he enjoyed his children<br />

and grandchildren tremen-<br />

dously, he was always doing<br />

things for them, they were the<br />

light of his life.<br />

j-i Kenny also had a passion for<br />

gardening, he was avid veg-<br />

etable gardener, but his flow-<br />

ers were his talent, he had<br />

hpautiful flower gardens at<br />

Itfs home and they were fea-<br />

tured in the Town Crier about<br />

ijpee weeks ago.<br />

COMING IN OCTOBER...<br />

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friends in the <strong>Wilmington</strong><br />

area. He retired from Air<br />

Products Corporation about 2<br />

years ago.<br />

Cards can be sent to his wife<br />

June and adult children, Kim<br />

and Travis, at 4729 Cortland<br />

Drive, Orefield, PA 18069<br />

He is also survived by his<br />

sister Nancy (Allen) Stocker<br />

of Denver, CO<br />

The funeral is not yet<br />

scheduled.<br />

predeceased by her brothers,<br />

Harold Hitchcock and<br />

Raymond Hitchcock, and her<br />

sisters, Thelma Yarter and<br />

Joan Balcom.<br />

A memorial service will be<br />

held in <strong>Wilmington</strong>,<br />

Massachusetts at a later date.<br />

There will be no calling<br />

hours. Contributions in her<br />

memory may be made to the<br />

American Diabetes<br />

Association, 77 Hegeman<br />

Avenue, Colchester, VT 05446<br />

or to St. Jude's Children's<br />

Research Hospital, 332 N.<br />

Lauderdale, Memphis, TN<br />

38105. Arrangements are by<br />

the Day Funeral Home in<br />

Randolph.<br />

Kenny was the beloved hus-<br />

band of Grace V. (Querci)<br />

Mullens of <strong>Wilmington</strong>, devot-<br />

ed father of Joseph K.<br />

Mujlens & his wife Mary A. of<br />

<strong>Wilmington</strong>, Donna M. Breen<br />

& her husband William M. of<br />

Norwell, Paula A. Surette &<br />

her husband Richard A. of<br />

<strong>Wilmington</strong>, and the late<br />

Barbara J. Mullens-Stephen,<br />

loving grandfather of William<br />

M., Jr., Matthew P., &<br />

Timothy D. Breen, Jacqueline<br />

G. & Michael J. Mullens, and<br />

Eric R. & Justine M. Surrette.<br />

Visiting hours were held for<br />

Mr. Mullens at the Nichols<br />

Funeral Home, Inc., on<br />

Friday, August 4. Funeral<br />

services were private.<br />

<strong>Memorial</strong> donations in Mr.<br />

Mullens name may be made<br />

to the Make A Wish<br />

Foundation, One Bulfinch<br />

Place, 2nd Floor, Boston, MA<br />

02114.<br />

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Serving All Areas<br />

$10 OFF PUMPING with this ad<br />

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TOWN CRIER - WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 9, 2006<br />

Theresa A. Paiva<br />

Active in Tewksbury's Senior Community; 75<br />

TEWKSBURY - Theresa A.<br />

•'Terry" Paiva, age 75, an<br />

active member of<br />

Tewksbury's Senior commu-<br />

nity, died unexpectedly on<br />

Saturday, August 5, 2006, at<br />

her home.<br />

She was born in Cambridge,<br />

on June 7, 1931, a daughter of<br />

the late Anthony and Theresa<br />

(Rotunda) Taurisano, but had<br />

lived in Tewksbury for the<br />

past four decades.<br />

She worked an assembly for<br />

several computer and elec-<br />

tronic manufacturing compa-<br />

nies including Inforex Co.<br />

She was a communicant of<br />

St. William's Church, an<br />

active member of the<br />

Tewksbury Senior communi-<br />

ty, and was recalled by<br />

Lillian M. Remillong<br />

Family in Tewksbury; 91<br />

TEWKSBURY - Lillian M.<br />

(Kuzela) Remillong, age 91, a<br />

resident of Billerica<br />

Commons for the last five<br />

years, died Saturday, August<br />

5, 2006, at Saints <strong>Memorial</strong><br />

Medical Center in Lowell,<br />

after a brief illness. She was<br />

the wife of the late William J.<br />

Remillong Sr, who died in<br />

1989.<br />

She was born in Elizabeth,<br />

NJ, the daughter of the late<br />

Joseph and Rose (Jankowski)<br />

Kuzela, and lived the greater<br />

part of her life in Bound<br />

Brook, NJ. She lived in<br />

Hannibal, Missouri, before<br />

moving to Billerica five years<br />

ago.<br />

Mrs. Remillong enjoyed gar-<br />

dening and bird watching,<br />

and was described by her son<br />

as having devoted her life to<br />

her family.<br />

She is survived by a son and<br />

daughter-in-law, William J.<br />

Remillong Jr., and his wife<br />

Mary (Gilbert) of Tewksbury;<br />

two grandchildren, Elizabeth<br />

Remillong, M.D. and her hus-<br />

band Arthur Hochthurn of<br />

Salt Lake City, UT, and<br />

Gilbert Remillong and his<br />

fiance, Ehrin Barker, both of<br />

Maiden; and a sister-in-law,<br />

Elizabeth Kuzela of<br />

Plainfield, NJ.<br />

She was also sister of the<br />

I<br />

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friends as having devoted her<br />

life to her special son, Jimmy.<br />

She is survived by one son,<br />

James Paiva of Lowell; one<br />

sister, Nancy Gardner of<br />

Center Barnstead, NH; and<br />

numerous nieces , nephews,<br />

dear friends and neighbors.<br />

She was also the sister of the<br />

late Joseph, Rocco, Michael,<br />

and Anthony Taurisano, Rose<br />

Russo, and Jennie Martino.<br />

Her funeral will be held<br />

Friday, Aug. 11, at 9:30 a.m.<br />

from the Tewksbury Funeral<br />

Home, corner of Dewey and<br />

Main Sts. (Rte 38) Tewksbury<br />

Center, phone (800 or 978) 851-<br />

2950. Her Funeral Mass will<br />

be celebrated Friday at 10:30<br />

a.m. in St. William's Church,<br />

1351 Main St. (Rte 38)<br />

Tewksbury, followed by burial<br />

in Tewksbury Cemetery.<br />

Visiting hours Thursday<br />

from 4 to 7 p.m. in the funer-<br />

al home. Kindly omit flowers.<br />

<strong>Memorial</strong>s to the Tewksbury<br />

Senior Drop-In Center,<br />

Building Fund, 175 Chandler<br />

St., Tewksbury, A 01876 will be<br />

appreciated, www.tewksbury-<br />

funeralhome.com<br />

<br />

late Edward and Joseph<br />

Kuzela.<br />

Relatives and friends were<br />

received Monday, Aug. 7,<br />

from 4 to 7 p.m. in the<br />

Tewksbury Funeral Home,<br />

corner of Dewey and Main<br />

Sts. (Rte 38) Tewksbury cen-<br />

ter, phone (800 or 978) 851-<br />

2950, followed by her Funeral<br />

Service, Monday evening at<br />

7:00 p.m. in the funeral home.<br />

Following cremation, burial<br />

will be in Whiting <strong>Memorial</strong><br />

Park, Whiting, NJ. In lieu of<br />

flowers, memorials to the<br />

Lowell Assoc. for the Blind<br />

and Visually Impaired, 174<br />

Central St., Lowell, MA 01852,<br />

will be appreciated,<br />

www. tewksbury funeral-<br />

home.com<br />

< http: //www. tewksburyf u-<br />

neralhome.com ><br />

Kenneth J. Yandle Jr.<br />

Demolition Local 1421, formerly of Tewksbury; 44<br />

LOWELL - Kenneth Joseph<br />

"Yanka" Yandle Jr., age 44, a<br />

member of the Demolition<br />

Union Local 1421, died Sunday<br />

evening, August 6, 2006, at his<br />

home, surrounded by his fam-<br />

ily, after a long illness. He<br />

was the husband of Susan M.<br />

(Spencer) Yandle, with whom<br />

he would have celebrated a<br />

25th wedding anniversary on<br />

September 4th.<br />

He was born in Everett, on<br />

October 12, 1961, a son of the<br />

late Kenneth J. and Jean M.<br />

(Richardson) Yandle. He was<br />

raised in Tewksbury, where he<br />

had lived the greater part of<br />

his life. As a resident of<br />

Tewksbury, he attended<br />

Tewksbury schools and was a<br />

communicant of St. William's<br />

Church.<br />

He was employed as a Chief<br />

Field Superintendent by<br />

Deprezio and Garofano Co. in<br />

Chelsea, and was a proud<br />

member of the Demolition<br />

Union Local 1421.<br />

He was remembered by his<br />

family as being an outdoors<br />

man, who especially loved<br />

fishing and hunting.<br />

Besides his wife, he is sur-<br />

vived by two children, Jamie<br />

Marie Yandle and Kenneth<br />

Joseph Yandle HI both of<br />

Lowell; a brother and sister-<br />

in-law, Joseph R. Yandle and<br />

his wife Suibhan of Rutland,<br />

VT; two sisters and brothers-<br />

in-law, Linda L. Nickerson<br />

and her husband Dana of<br />

Tewksbury, Jean Marie<br />

Conway and her husband Rick<br />

of Lowell; his mother-in-law;<br />

Mary (Scherban) Spencer of<br />

Tewksbury; his lifelong<br />

friend, David Evans of NH; 1<br />

and many nieces, nephews, 1<br />

cousins, and brothers-in-law 1<br />

and sisters-in-laws.<br />

His funeral will be held<br />

Thursday, Aug. 10, at 9:30 a.m.<br />

from the Tewksbury Funeral<br />

Home, corner of Dewey and<br />

Main Sts. (Rte 38) Tewksbury<br />

Center,-phone (800 or 978) 851-<br />

2950. His Funeral Mass will<br />

be celebrated Thursday at<br />

10:30 a.m. in St. William's<br />

Church, 1351 Main St. (Rte 38)<br />

Tewksbury, followed by burial<br />

in Tewksbury Cemetery.<br />

Visiting hours Wednesday<br />

from 4 to 7 p.m. in the funeral<br />

home. www. tewksburyfuner-<br />

alhome.com<br />

'<br />

Lorraine F. Young<br />

Family in Tewksbury, formerly of <strong>Wilmington</strong>; 81<br />

DRACUT - Lorraine F.<br />

(Ryan) Young, age 81, a<br />

retiree of St. John's Hospital<br />

in Lowell, died Sunday morn-<br />

ing, August 6, 2006, at the<br />

Willow Manor in Lowell, after<br />

a long period of declining<br />

health.<br />

She was born in East Boston,<br />

December 5, 1924, a daughter<br />

of the late Charles and<br />

Frances (Maze) Ryan, and<br />

was raised in East Boston.<br />

She lived in <strong>Wilmington</strong> and<br />

East Boston the greater part<br />

of her life, and moved to<br />

Dracut in 1979.<br />

She was employed at Saint<br />

John's Hospital, now Saints<br />

<strong>Memorial</strong> Medical Center, cen-<br />

tral supply department until<br />

her retirement.<br />

In her retirement, she<br />

enjoyed Bingo, and was fond of<br />

her role as a foster-grandpar-<br />

ent at the Brookside<br />

Elementary School in Dracut.<br />

She is survived by four<br />

daughters and sons-in-law,<br />

Barbara Valentine and her<br />

husband Richard of GA, Joan<br />

Carrico and her husband<br />

Kenneth of OH; Mary Williams<br />

and her husband Robert<br />

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"Butch" of NC, and Patricia<br />

Regan and her husband David<br />

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brother, Charles W. Ryan of<br />

Billerica; ten grandchildren;<br />

and nine great grandchildren.<br />

She was also sister of the late<br />

Paul R. Ryan, and Robert<br />

Ryan.<br />

Relatives and friends will be<br />

received Wednesday morning,<br />

August 9, from 9:00 am until<br />

11:00 am in the Tewksbury<br />

funeral Home, corner of<br />

Dewey and Main Sts. (Rte 38)<br />

Tewksbury Center, phone (800<br />

or 978) 851-2950. Her Funeral<br />

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morning at 11:00 a.m., followed<br />

by burial in Tewksbury<br />

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the Saints <strong>Memorial</strong> Medical<br />

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Joseph Orefice graduates New<br />

England School for Financial Studies<br />

BOSTON - The Massachusetts<br />

Bankers Association (MBA)<br />

today announced the list of<br />

graduates of The New England<br />

School for Financial Studies.<br />

Joseph P. Orefice of MassBank<br />

in Tewksbury is one of fifty-five<br />

students from banks and other<br />

financial services-related firms<br />

that have completed graduation<br />

requirements at the school,<br />

which is recognized by the<br />

American Council on<br />

Education for both undergradu-<br />

ate and graduate credits.<br />

The Massachusetts Bankers<br />

Association established the<br />

School for Financial Studies in<br />

1960 to provide opportunities for<br />

professional growth to those<br />

already in the industry. Over*<br />

the years it has grown to meet<br />

the needs of the industry and<br />

today focuses heavily on finan-<br />

cial management, technology,<br />

lending, marketing, and other<br />

strategic industry issues. Just<br />

last year it combined opera-<br />

tions with the former New<br />

England School of Banking and<br />

is sponsored with Maine<br />

Association of Community<br />

Banks, Maine Bankers<br />

Association, Massachusetts<br />

Bankers Association, New<br />

Hampshire Bankers<br />

Association, Rhode Island<br />

Bankers Association and<br />

Vermont Bankers Association.<br />

"Continuing education is very<br />

important in the banking indus-<br />

try," said Kathleen E. Jones,<br />

senior vice president Education<br />

and Management Development<br />

at the MBA. "Since so many<br />

people in our industry work<br />

their way up through the ranks,<br />

this is a great opportunity to<br />

learn and advance through<br />

their organizations."<br />

Local students named to<br />

Salem State College Dean's list<br />

Salem, Mass. - The following<br />

students were named to the<br />

dean's list at Salem State<br />

College for the spring 2006 aca-<br />

demic semester.<br />

<strong>Wilmington</strong><br />

Kara Bruce<br />

Susan Carroccino<br />

William Coffill<br />

Julie Cronin r<br />

Diane Dellascio<br />

Eric Hiltz<br />

Trenton Hoyt<br />

Ellen Largenton<br />

Shannon Loring<br />

Amanda Mauriello<br />

<strong>Wilmington</strong> students<br />

participate in 2006<br />

Design Camp<br />

LOWELL-While some kids<br />

might be complaining<br />

already about summer bore-<br />

dom, <strong>Wilmington</strong> students<br />

are living and breathing<br />

robotics, crime scene analy-<br />

sis, electromagnets and flight<br />

school at UMass Lowell's<br />

DesignCamp. This year's par-<br />

ticipants are Natalie Cecere,<br />

Victoria Folch-Pi, Colleen<br />

Frackleton, Eric Frasco antf<br />

Ryan O'Rourke.<br />

DesignCamp offers science<br />

and engineering workshops to<br />

students in grades 5-11,<br />

immersing them in hands-on<br />

experimentation and inven-<br />

tion. The week long sessions<br />

run from July 10 through<br />

August 4. Select sessions are<br />

i.<br />

!<br />

Jonathan Maynard<br />

Kristen O'Brien<br />

Lauren Olson<br />

Stephanie Pettigrew<br />

Marjorie Taylor<br />

Judith Thomas<br />

Kelly Torpey<br />

Ann Warford<br />

Students must attain a grade<br />

point average of at least 3.0 to<br />

be placed on the dean's list.<br />

For information on Salem<br />

State College or the Salem<br />

State College Dean's List visit<br />

www.salemstate.edu.<br />

also available for girls only.<br />

Back again by popular<br />

demand is Design Camp's<br />

Crime Science class in which<br />

students learn to solve crimes<br />

"CSI-style" - analyzing finger-<br />

prints, blood and hair with<br />

microscopes and chemicals.<br />

New to the program are a<br />

number of exciting sessions<br />

including one in which stu-<br />

dents use electricity and<br />

magnetism to build moving<br />

electronic animals. Another<br />

session, TechCreation, lets<br />

students create and program<br />

computer controlled gadgets<br />

such as automated Kool-Aid<br />

makers and candy dis-<br />

pensers.<br />

*^-~<br />

TOWN CRIER - WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 9, 2006 9 »"<br />

1<br />

Four local students graduate<br />

Lexington Christian Academy<br />

Janae Detwiler<br />

Janae Detwiler graduated<br />

from Lexington Christian<br />

Academy with the Class of<br />

2006. Janae, daughter of the<br />

Reverand Dr. and Mrs. Gregg<br />

Detwiler of <strong>Wilmington</strong>, was<br />

inducted into the National<br />

Honor Society in her Junior<br />

year and received the<br />

Academic Excellence Award<br />

from Headmaster Dr. J. Barry<br />

Koops.<br />

\She was a board member of<br />

the Helping Our World Service<br />

Club, and was a member of<br />

the Varsity Field Hockey<br />

team. Janae also served as<br />

the Senior Class Prefect for<br />

the LCA Peer Issues Group<br />

and served as a High School<br />

Buddy to middle school stu-<br />

dents.<br />

Janae gained hands-on<br />

knowledge in the field of<br />

speech therapy during her<br />

Senior Internship with<br />

Massachusetts General<br />

Hospital. She will attend<br />

Marymount Manhattan<br />

College in New York City this<br />

fall.<br />

Stephanie Own<br />

Stephanie Oum graduated<br />

from Lexington Christian<br />

Academy with the Class of<br />

2006< Stephanie, daughter of<br />

Mr. and Mrs. Sang Eng Oum<br />

of <strong>Wilmington</strong>, was inducted<br />

into the National Honor<br />

Society in her Junior year and<br />

was recognized for her schol-<br />

arly achievements with the<br />

Presidential Academic<br />

Excellence Award.<br />

An active member of the<br />

LCA Buddy Program,<br />

Stephanie also served on the<br />

Board of the Helping Our<br />

World Service Club. In both<br />

2005 and 2006 Stephanie<br />

earned the LCA Spanish<br />

Department's Excellence<br />

Award. Stephanie also com-<br />

peted in both Junior and<br />

Varsity Lacrosse and Field<br />

Hockey, managing the team in<br />

her Sophomore and Junior<br />

years.<br />

Stephanie gained hands-on<br />

experience during her Senior<br />

Internship with Children's<br />

Hospital and will attend<br />

Boston University in the fall.<br />

Kenneth Aruda<br />

Kenneth Aruda graduated<br />

from Lexington Christian<br />

Academy with the Class of<br />

2006. Kenneth, son of Mr.<br />

Wayne and Dr. Mary Aruda of<br />

<strong>Wilmington</strong>, was inducted into<br />

the National Honor Society<br />

and recognized for his schol-<br />

arly achievements with the<br />

Presidential,, Academic<br />

Excellence Award.<br />

Kenneth played both Clarinet<br />

and Saxophone in LCA's<br />

Concert and Jazz Bands. He<br />

was also a member of the<br />

Varsity Soccer team.<br />

Kenneth completed his<br />

Senior Internship with Foley &<br />

Lardner, gaining hands-on<br />

knowledge in the field of law.<br />

He will attend Boston College<br />

in the fall.<br />

Jeremy Schuh<br />

Jeremy Schuh graduated<br />

from Lexington Christian<br />

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10 TOWN CRIER - WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 9, 2006<br />

Monday,<br />

July 31<br />

11:10 a.m.<br />

A vehicle<br />

parked in the World Gym parking<br />

lot at 1830 Main Street was keyed<br />

maliciously.<br />

12:13 p.m. Police were asked to<br />

investigate a male party that was<br />

going door-to-door, in the vicinity<br />

of Chandler Street and Foster<br />

Road, Asking for money to help<br />

with a broken down vehicle. As a<br />

result of the call. Robert Ayles,<br />

24, of Tewksbury, was arrested in<br />

the vicinity of 548 Chandler<br />

Street on the basis of a warrant<br />

12:51 p.m. Police received a<br />

report that a blonde-headed male<br />

was observed removing a license<br />

plate from a vehicle in the park-<br />

ing lot of Marshall's at 10 Main<br />

and then left the scene in a sec-<br />

ond vehicle.<br />

7:00 p.m. A residential mailbox<br />

on Kennedy Road was stolen.<br />

Tuesday, August 1<br />

4:15 a.m. Police removed an<br />

unruly visitor from the lobby of<br />

Providence Towers at 11 Old<br />

Boston Road.<br />

12:53 p.m. Malicious damage to<br />

property was reported by a resi-<br />

dent of Baystate Road.<br />

1:11 p.m. A motor vehicle-relat-<br />

ed accident occurred in the vicin-<br />

ity of 940 Andover Street.<br />

4:27 p.m. A motor vehicle-relat-<br />

ed accident occurred at the inter-<br />

section of Andover Street and<br />

River Road.<br />

10:35 p.m. Police received a<br />

report of a male party walking<br />

along Whipple Road and "flash-<br />

ing" passing motorists. Police<br />

were unable to locate the sus-<br />

pect.<br />

Cynthia Roche, 49, of Wakefield,<br />

was arrested in the vicinity of 918<br />

Main Street on the basis of a war-<br />

rant.<br />

Michael Maciejczk, 29, of<br />

Tucson, Arizona, was arrested in<br />

the vicinity of 10 Main Street and<br />

was charged with the theft of<br />

motor vehicle parts or acces-<br />

sories and being in possession of<br />

a burglarious instrument.<br />

Wednesday, August 2<br />

12:00 midnight A residential<br />

mailbox on Danielle Drive was<br />

damaged maliciously.<br />

12:35 a.m. A residential mail-<br />

box on Manor Hill Road was<br />

damaged maliciously.<br />

5.44 a.m. A residence on<br />

Baystate Avenue was burglar-<br />

ized.<br />

9:01 a.m. A residential mailbox<br />

Tewksbury Police Log<br />

on River Road was damaged<br />

maliciously sometime overnight.<br />

9:21 a.m. A motor vehicle was<br />

stolen from a residence on South<br />

Street.<br />

9:45 a.m. A residential mailbox<br />

on Minuteman Way was damaged<br />

maliciously sometime overnight.<br />

9:19 p.m. Police responded to a<br />

report of a domestic disturbance<br />

at a guest room of the Caswell<br />

Motel at 450 Main Street. As a<br />

result of the call, David Goveia,<br />

25, of Lowell, was arrested at the<br />

scene and was charged with vio-<br />

lating an abuse protection order.<br />

9:20 p.m. A motor vehicle-relat-<br />

ed accident occurred in the vicin-<br />

ity of 1475 Main Street.<br />

Daniel Acevedo, 42, of<br />

Lawrence, was arrested in the<br />

vicinity of 85 Main Street and<br />

was charged with larceny of<br />

property valued at more than<br />

$250.<br />

Thursday, August 3<br />

9:40 a.m. A motor vehicle-relat-<br />

ed accident occurred in the vicin-<br />

ity of 616 Main Street.<br />

11:09 a.m. A motor vehicle-<br />

related accident occurred in the<br />

vicinity of 1220 Main Street.<br />

7:49 p.m. Police responded to a<br />

report of three women in the<br />

vicinity of 875 East Street<br />

attempting to throw a rug over a<br />

goose in an attempt to capture it.<br />

Police discovered that one of the<br />

women was a veterinarian and<br />

was attempting to treat the<br />

goose, which may have been shot<br />

by a BB gun.<br />

Friday, August 4<br />

1:15 a.m. An officer attempted<br />

to stop a vehicle on Main Street<br />

and was drawn into a pursuit.<br />

Suspects fled the vehicle on foot<br />

in the vicinity of 61 Bishop<br />

Street.<br />

5:00 a.m. A vehicle parked at a<br />

residence on Boisvert Road was<br />

burglarized overnight.<br />

7:33 a.m. A vehicle parked, at a<br />

r Tomahawk Drive<br />

was burglarized overnight.<br />

8:26 a,m. A vehicle parked at a<br />

residence on John Street was<br />

burglarized overnight.<br />

8:33 a.m. A vehicle parked at a<br />

residence on Boisvert Road was<br />

burglarized overnight.<br />

8:47 a.m. A vehicle parked at a<br />

r Tomahawk Drive<br />

was burglarized overnight.<br />

12:43 p.m. A motor vehicle-<br />

related accident occurred in the<br />

vicinity of 1900 Main Street.<br />

1:20 p.m. A vehicle parked at a<br />

residence on Euclid Road was<br />

®Qwn$k(£vm<br />

burglarized overnight.<br />

1:22 p.m. Malicious damage to<br />

property was reported by a busi-<br />

ness on Main Street.<br />

1:24 p.m. A vehicle parked at a<br />

residence on John Street was<br />

burglarized overnight.<br />

2:14 p.m. A residential mailbox<br />

on Chapman Road was damaged<br />

maliciously.<br />

2:30 p.m. Police responded to<br />

multiple reports of approximate-<br />

ly 10 girls fighting in the vicinity<br />

of 1764 Main Street.<br />

3:24 p.m. A vehicle parked at a<br />

residence on Tomahawk Drive<br />

was burglarized overnight.<br />

4:53 p.m. A vehicle parked at a<br />

residence on John Street was<br />

burglarized overnight.<br />

4:59 p.m. A, motor vehicle-relat-<br />

ed accident occurred in the vicin-<br />

ity of 10 Main Street.<br />

7:02 p.m. A motor vehicle-relat-<br />

ed accident occurred in the vicin-<br />

ity of 2 Main Street.<br />

7:23 p.m. A motor vehicle-relat-<br />

ed accident occurred in the vicin-<br />

ity of 85 Main Street.<br />

8:27 p.m. An assault and bat-<br />

tery occurred at the Motel Six,<br />

located at 95 Main Street.<br />

Saturday, August 5<br />

6:40 a.m. A motor vehicle-relat-<br />

ed accident occurred in the vicin-<br />

ity of 288 Livingston Street.<br />

9:12 a.m. A motor vehicle-relat-<br />

ed accident occurred in the vicin-<br />

ity of 1795 Andover Street.<br />

, Jacqueline Thyne, 42, of<br />

Tewksbury, was arrested in the<br />

vicinity of 4106 Archstone Avenue<br />

and was charged with domestic<br />

assault and battery.<br />

James Perry, 17, of Tewksbury,<br />

was arrested in the vicinity of 21<br />

Secor Way on the basis of a war-<br />

rant.<br />

Sunday, August 6<br />

1:43 p.m. A motor vehicle-relat-<br />

ed accident occurred in the vicin-<br />

ity of 919 Whipple Road.<br />

8:28 p.m. A residential mailbox<br />

on Whittemore Street was dam-<br />

aged maliciously.<br />

8:29 p.m. Malicious damage to<br />

property was reported by a resi-<br />

dent of Greenmeadow Drive<br />

9:10 p.m. A motor vehicle was<br />

stolen from a residence on<br />

Kenneth Lane.<br />

A 16-year old Littleton,<br />

Colorado youth was arrested in<br />

the vicinity of the Extended Stay<br />

America at 1910 Andover Street<br />

and was charged with breaking<br />

and entering during nighttime<br />

hours for the purpose of commit-<br />

ting a felony.<br />

Monday,<br />

1 July 31<br />

4:12 p.m.<br />

A motor<br />

vehicle-related accident<br />

occurred in the vicinity of 197<br />

Middlesex Avenue.<br />

9:01 p.m. Police responded to<br />

a report of a domestic distur-<br />

bance occurring inside the<br />

Market Basket at 240 Main<br />

Street.<br />

Tuesday, August 1<br />

12:19 a.m. A residential mail-<br />

box on Woburn Street was dam-<br />

aged maliciously.<br />

8:54 a.m. Yard ornaments<br />

were stolen from a residence on<br />

King Street at some point<br />

overnight.<br />

9:57 a.m. A motor vehicle-<br />

related accident occurred at<br />

the juncture of Lowell Street<br />

and Interstate 93 »<br />

12:03 p.m. A motor vehicle-<br />

related accident occurred in<br />

the vicinity of 226 Lowell Street.<br />

2:02 p.m. Police responded to<br />

a report of a domestic distur-<br />

bance at a residence on<br />

Suncrest Avenue.<br />

5:19 p.m. Police assisted in<br />

resolving a dispute between a<br />

resident of Marcia Road and a<br />

landscaping company.<br />

Wednesday, August 2<br />

10:32 a.m. A residential mail-<br />

box on Salem Street was dam-<br />

aged maliciously.<br />

6:05 p.m. A motor vehicle-<br />

related accident occurred in<br />

the vicinity of 1 Butters Row.<br />

10:24 p.m. Police responded to<br />

a report of a domestic distur-<br />

bance at a residence on Verdun<br />

Road.<br />

Thursday, August 3<br />

7:28 a.m. A motor vehicle-<br />

related accident occurred in<br />

the vicinity of 298 Shawsheen<br />

Avenue.<br />

8:49 a.m. An unlocked vehicle<br />

parked at a residence on<br />

Houghton Road was burglar-<br />

ized sometime overnight.<br />

11:12 a.m. A motor vehicle-<br />

related accident occurred in<br />

the vicinity of 579 Main Street.<br />

1:19 p.m. Two youths were<br />

observed by a neighbor going<br />

into a camper on the property<br />

of a resident of Moore Street.<br />

As a result of the call, one<br />

youth was arrested and<br />

charged with illegally possess-<br />

<strong>Wilmington</strong> Police Log<br />

ing a Class D substance.<br />

5:00 p.m. A motor vehicle-<br />

related accident occurred in<br />

the vicinity of 98 Nichols Street.<br />

8:18 p.m. Several youths were<br />

involved in a fight occurring<br />

behind the Boutwell Street<br />

School.<br />

9:22 p.m. Police responded to<br />

a report of an assault and bat-<br />

tery that occurred in the vicini-<br />

ty of 211 Lowell Street. As a<br />

result of the call, Patrick<br />

Keogan, 34, of <strong>Wilmington</strong>, was<br />

issued a summons for assault<br />

and battery with a dangerous<br />

weapon (shod foot) and<br />

unarmed robbery. Mr. Keogan<br />

turned himself in for arrest on<br />

Friday, August 4<br />

Jonathon Ryan, 18, of,<br />

<strong>Wilmington</strong>, was arrested in<br />

the vicinity of 321 Main Street<br />

and was charged with disturb-<br />

ing the peace, resisting arrest,<br />

disorderly conduct, and illegal-<br />

ly possessing a Class D sub-<br />

stance with the intent to dis-<br />

tribute.<br />

Kevin McLaughlin, 54, of 30<br />

Parlmont Park in North<br />

Billerica, was arrested in the<br />

vicinity of 474 Main Street and<br />

was charged with operating a<br />

motor vehicle while under the<br />

influence of alcohol.<br />

Friday, August 4<br />

9:34 a.m. A motor vehicle-<br />

related accident occurred in<br />

the vicinity of 1 Earls Row.<br />

9:59 a.m. Property was stolen<br />

from a construction site on<br />

Grant Street.<br />

10:22 a.m. A motor vehicle-<br />

related accident occurred in<br />

the vicinity of 310 Lowell Street.<br />

Daniel Walter, 21, of<br />

<strong>Wilmington</strong>, was arrested in<br />

the vicinity of 18 School Street<br />

and was charged with assault<br />

with a dangerous weapon, and<br />

assault and battery.<br />

Jennifer Perez, 29, of<br />

Lawrence, was issued a sum-<br />

mons for permitting a motor<br />

vehicle to be operated without<br />

insurance.<br />

Anthony Giglio, 27, of<br />

Tewksbury, was arrested in the<br />

vicinity of 408 Main Street and<br />

was charged with operating a<br />

motor vehicle after the revoca-<br />

tion of his driver's license,<br />

operating a motor vehicle after<br />

the revocation of his registrar<br />

SOLD OUT???) Q O<br />

Can't Find Red Sox vs. Yankees Tickets?<br />

Well, neither COUld we. But for the next five weeks the Town Crier<br />

will be giving away 4 tickets a week to the August 31st Lowell Spinners'<br />

game against the Staten Island Yankees to the fans/family who best epit-<br />

omize what it takes to be a proud member of Red Sox Nation.<br />

MIR VflllR 1 - Get your friends/family together<br />

2 - lake a picture showing your support for the Best Team in MLB<br />

tion, and illegally possessing! a<br />

Class D substance.<br />

Andrew Venjre, Jr., 25,, of<br />

Tewksbury, was stopped j by<br />

police in the vicinity of «27<br />

Main Street and was issueaa<br />

summons for operating a motor<br />

vehicle with a suspended dri<br />

ver's license.<br />

Saturday, August 5<br />

12:00-noon A motor vehicle<br />

related accident occurred in<br />

the parking lot of the 99<br />

Restaurant at 144 Lowell Street<br />

As a result, Richard<br />

Cummings, 19, of <strong>Wilmington</strong>,<br />

was issued a summons for leav-<br />

ing the scene of an accident<br />

involving property damage.<br />

3:03 p.m. A motor vehicle<br />

related accident occurred in<br />

the vicinity of 581 Main Street,<br />

ft 17 p.m. Police assisted in<br />

resolving a dispute between<br />

landlord and tenant of a prop<br />

erty on I^ake Street.<br />

Sunday. August 6<br />

1:32 p.m. A motor vehicle<br />

related accident occurred in<br />

the Vicinity of 1 Nichols Street.<br />

9:32 p.m. A female youth was<br />

shot in the leg by a pellet gun<br />

from a passing motor vehicle in<br />

the vicinity of Brattle Streel<br />

and Glen Road.<br />

Daniel Farrell, 18, of<br />

<strong>Wilmington</strong>, was stopped by<br />

police in the vicinity of Ifif.<br />

Main Street and was issued a<br />

summons for illegally possess<br />

ing a Class D substance.<br />

John Waterman, 40, ol<br />

<strong>Wilmington</strong>, was stopped by<br />

police in the vicinity of 159<br />

Church Street and was issued a<br />

summons for operating a motor<br />

vehicle after the revocation ol<br />

his driver's license and failing<br />

to have an inspection of his<br />

motor vehicle.<br />

Michael Davis, 21, of<br />

Burlington, was stopped by<br />

police in the vicinity ol 1 River<br />

Street and was issued a sum-<br />

mons for operating a motor<br />

vehicle with a suspended dri-<br />

ver's license and having an<br />

expired inspection sticker.<br />

Kyle Carroll, 20, of Lowell,<br />

was arrested in the vicinity of 1<br />

Faneuil Drive and was charged<br />

with illegally possessing. :a<br />

Class D substance.<br />

3 - Bring the picture to our pew offices at 226 Lowell Street in <strong>Wilmington</strong><br />

4 - watch the paper the following week to see if you're the winner!!!<br />

Entiles CM Un be e-mailed to Offlce@yoartowncrter.com with Red Son Fan" as the subject line.<br />

Please remember to include your name and phone number as well.<br />

A new winning photo will be published each week starting July 26th so good luck to all who enter.<br />

CHANCE<br />

TO SEE<br />

VS.<br />

Future Red Sox take on Future Yankees<br />

Thursday, August 31st, 2006 Keith Foulke Bobblehead Night LeLacheur Park<br />

t<br />

-


Children's Programs<br />

Kidstock! Presents "You're a<br />

Good Man, Charlie Brown"<br />

The "Peanuts" gang from the<br />

popular comic strip will be on<br />

stage on Thursday, August 17th at<br />

2 p.m., as Kidstock! of<br />

Winchester presents "You're a<br />

Good Man, Charlie Brown" for<br />

an audience ages four and older.<br />

-Songs and sketches in this live<br />

children's mini-musical will fea-<br />

ture Lucy, Schroeder, Linus and,<br />

of course, Charlie Brown. Free<br />

tickets for the event may be<br />

reserved by visiting or calling the<br />

Children's Room at (978) 694-2098<br />

beginning Thursday, August 10th.<br />

Sponsored by the Friends of the<br />

<strong>Library</strong>.<br />

Three Apples Storytellers<br />

Storytellers Lorraine Hartin-<br />

Gelardi and Jim LaChapelle will<br />

be appearing at the library on<br />

Wednesday, August 23rd at 2 p.m.<br />

All ages are welcome to this sam-<br />

pling of the Three Apples<br />

Storytelling Festival, a weekend<br />

celebration of the art of story-<br />

telling, to be held September 30th<br />

through October 1st in Bedford,<br />

MA. Visit www.threeapples.org<br />

for more information about the<br />

weekend and the organization<br />

that is sponsoring the event at<br />

the library. Tickets for the event<br />

are free and may be reserved by<br />

visiting or calling the Children's<br />

Room at (978) 694-2098 beginning<br />

Thursday, August 10th.<br />

Being Silly! Story/Craft<br />

Silly stories and a hand puppet<br />

craft will invite much Acting Up!<br />

in this program for five year-olds<br />

and older on Tuesday, August<br />

22nd at 10 a.m. Visit or call the<br />

Children's Room at (978) 694-2098<br />

beginning Thursday, August 10th<br />

to register.<br />

Children!* Movie Nights<br />

i —. -. --. - -. -. -■. "-■*- «e «•' < ■« *<br />

s<br />

TOWN CRIER - WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 9, 2006 11<br />

ji <strong>Wilmington</strong> <strong>Library</strong> Notes<br />

by Christina Stewart<br />

You're a Good Man, Charlie Brown<br />

This powerful African tale<br />

directed by Carroll Ballard (The<br />

Black Stallion and Fly Away<br />

Home), to be screened on<br />

Tuesday, August 15th at 6:30 p.m.,<br />

tells of an unbreakable bond of<br />

friendship between a cheetah<br />

named Duma and a courageous<br />

young boy named Xan<br />

(Alexander Michaletos). Keep<br />

cool with this Antarctic adven-<br />

ture story set for viewing on<br />

Monday, August 21st at 6:30 p.m.<br />

Sled dogs left alone to fight for<br />

survival, attempt to make their<br />

way home as their trainer, played<br />

by Paul Walker, tries to arrange a<br />

rescue. Bring something comfort-<br />

able to sit on, if desired. Free<br />

popcorn and lemonade will be<br />

served. Both films are rated PG.<br />

Ronalds Summer<br />

Reading Fun Show<br />

Ronald McDonald is a summer<br />

reader! Come see Ronald, live<br />

and in person, in his Summer Baby Times<br />

Reading Fun show on Friday,<br />

August 11th at 10 a.m. Tickets<br />

are free and may be reserved by<br />

visiting or calling the Children's<br />

Room at (978) 694-2098.<br />

Sponsored by McDonald's of<br />

<strong>Wilmington</strong>.<br />

Book Discussion<br />

Dragon Rider by Cornelia<br />

Funke was selected by children<br />

ages nine and older for their dis-<br />

cussion to be held on Wednesday,<br />

August 16th at 3:30 p.m. The book<br />

features Firedrake, a silver drag-<br />

on, who is joined by a brownie<br />

and an orphan boy in a quest to<br />

find the legendary valley known<br />

as the Rim of Heaven, encounter-<br />

ing friendly and unfriendly crea-<br />

tures along the way, and strug-<br />

gling to evade the relentless pur-<br />

suit of an old enemy. Copies of<br />

the book may be reserved by vis-<br />

iting or calling the Children's<br />

Room at (978) 694-2098. A door<br />

prize, provided by the Friends of<br />

the <strong>Library</strong>, will be awarded.<br />

Certificates<br />

Certificates will, be available at<br />

the Children's Room circulation<br />

desk beginning Monday, August<br />

14th for those who participated in<br />

the summer reading program,<br />

Acting Up!<br />

Preschool Story Times<br />

Registration begins Monday,<br />

August 21st for preschool story<br />

times. Introduce your young<br />

child to books, flannel board sto-<br />

ries, songs, circle games and fin-<br />

ger plays offered by Children's<br />

Librarian, Susan MacDonald<br />

Assistant Children's Librarian<br />

Barbara Michaud. Registration<br />

for the following programs may<br />

be made by visiting the<br />

Children's Room or by calling<br />

(978) 694-2098.<br />

A program most appropriate for<br />

the early walker with caregiver,<br />

to be held on Thursdays,<br />

September 21, October 5 and 19 at<br />

9:15-9:40 a.m.<br />

Time for Twos<br />

Caregivers and two year-olds<br />

attend on Thursdays, September<br />

14, 28 and October 12 at 9:15-9:45<br />

a.m.<br />

Story Times for Three<br />

Year-Olds<br />

Children who are three by<br />

September 14th attend for six<br />

weeks, on either Thursdays<br />

(September 14, 21, 28, October 5,<br />

12, and 19) 10:30-11 am or Fridays<br />

(September 15, 22, 29, October 6,<br />

13 and 20) 9:30-10 am.<br />

Story Times for Four<br />

and Five Year-Olds<br />

Ed Withycombe of Tewksbury stopped by the East Street Farm Stand for some fresh corn on<br />

Tuesday. The farmstand is leased by Brox Farm of Dracut. They sell fresh vegetables and pies<br />

from their crops grown in Tewksbury and Dracut. Photo by Maureen Lamoureux<br />

Saturday, August 12th & Sunday, August 13th<br />

3rd Annual<br />

SALES TAX<br />

HOLIDAY WEEKEND<br />

COOPER, JEWELERS<br />

FINE JEWELRY & DIAMONDS '<br />

0<br />

All 14K Jewelry<br />

Pay M> Sales TAX<br />

No Payments For 90 Days<br />

COOPER IEWELERS<br />

- WoburnMall<br />

781-933-1511<br />

www.CoOpeijewelers.coni w<br />

y<br />

Four year-olds and five year-<br />

olds (not yet attending kinder<br />

garten) attend for six. weeks on<br />

either Tuesdays (September 12,<br />

19, 26, October 3, 10 and 17) 10-<br />

10:30 am or Fridays (September<br />

15, 22, 29, October 6, 13, 20) 10:30-<br />

11 am. Registration for the next<br />

story time session will begin<br />

Monday, October 23.<br />

Teen Program<br />

All-You-Can-Rcad Buffet<br />

(For Teens)<br />

Monday August 14,11:30 a.m. to<br />

7 p.m. Sign up for our food-filled<br />

reading marathon and enjoy a<br />

full buffet of snacks, sodas, and<br />

sandwiches all day long, plus a<br />

pizza party for every marathon<br />

reader! Bring a pillow, a beanbag<br />

chair, or something else comfy to<br />

sit on. Call (978) 694-2098 to regls<br />

ter. Sponsored by the Friends of<br />

the <strong>Library</strong>.<br />

Teen Dungeons and<br />

Dragons<br />

Tuesday August 22, 2:30-4:30 p<br />

m. Beginners through advanced<br />

players, ages 12 and older, are<br />

welcome.<br />

Teen Movie Night<br />

Tuesday, August 22, 6:15 p.m.<br />

Johnny Depp, Orlando Bloom,<br />

and Keira Knightly star in this<br />

action-adventure movie about a<br />

search for cursed pirate ship<br />

Henna Tattoos<br />

Wednesday, August 23rd, 6 p.m.<br />

to 8 p.m. Get a Mehndi style tem-<br />

porary tattoo to show off. Please<br />

register by calling (978) 694-2098.<br />

Teen Book Discussion<br />

Friday, August 25, 12 p.m. Join<br />

us to discuss Scott Westerfeld's<br />

So Yesterday. Please bring a<br />

lunch; dessert and drinks will be<br />

provided. Door prizes provided by<br />

the Friends of the <strong>Library</strong>.<br />

Foreign/Independent<br />

Films<br />

Thursday August 10 at 6:30 p.m<br />

O.T: our town. Against all odds,<br />

the first theatrical production in<br />

over 20 years at Dominguez High<br />

School in Compton, CA, is going'<br />

to be Thornton Wilder's<br />

American classic "Our Town".<br />

The kids are about to experience<br />

more than a culture clash, as<br />

they embark on a rich journey<br />

and discover the educational and<br />

social value of theater.<br />

Thursday, August 24 at 6:30 p.m.<br />

Hawaii, Oslo. View the story of a<br />

handful of desperate people<br />

whose paths cross on the hottest<br />

day of the year in Oslo. Frode<br />

and Milla have their first child,<br />

but learn he will not live long<br />

without an expensive operation<br />

they cannot afford.<br />

\<br />

'" \<br />

Tewksbury<br />

<strong>Library</strong> Notes<br />

by Elisabeth DesMarais<br />

Free Downloadable Audio<br />

Books from Merrimack Valley<br />

<strong>Library</strong> Consortium<br />

It's 2 a.m., you can't sleep and<br />

you're looking for a good audio<br />

book to get you through the<br />

night. Now you can check out<br />

and download audio books in<br />

the comfort of your own home<br />

at any time from MVLC's<br />

Digital Downloads site at<br />

http://mvlc.lib.overdrive.com.<br />

Listen to James Patterson's lat-<br />

est thriller, learn a foreign lan-<br />

guage, and reminisce with an<br />

old time radio program or "Get<br />

Real" with Dr. Phil. There is<br />

sure to be something to interest<br />

everyone in your family.<br />

Locally, both Tewksbury and<br />

<strong>Wilmington</strong> are participating in<br />

this new service, which is host-<br />

ed by the Merrimack Valley<br />

<strong>Library</strong> Consortium. "We hope<br />

to bring busy commuters back<br />

to the library," says Tewksbury<br />

Public <strong>Library</strong>'s Director,<br />

Elisabeth Desmarais. "Once<br />

they have a library card they<br />

will be able to check out, down-<br />

load and return these books<br />

without stepping foot in the<br />

building. We hope to offer<br />

more virtual library services of<br />

this type in the future."<br />

In addition to commuters and<br />

insomniacs, books from stu-<br />

dents' summer reading lists<br />

will soon be available.<br />

Homebound patrons will be<br />

able to access the collection.<br />

Busy parents who no longer<br />

have time to read can take in a<br />

book while driving to soccer<br />

practice or cooking dinner<br />

Grandparents may enjoy listen<br />

ing to the Jack Benny program<br />

or Dragnet. The consortium<br />

will add approximately 50 now<br />

books each month.<br />

The MVLC libraries in the fol<br />

lowing cities and towns will<br />

offer this service. You must<br />

have a valid card issued by one<br />

of these libraries to participate<br />

Amesbury. Andover, Billerica,<br />

Boxford, Burlington, Carlisle.<br />

Chelmsford, Dracut. Dunstable.<br />

Essex, Georgetown, Groveland.<br />

Hamilton-Wenham. Haverhill.<br />

Ipswich, Littleton. Lowell.<br />

Manchester, Merrimac.<br />

Methuen, Middleton, Newbury.<br />

Newburyport, North Andover,<br />

North Reading, Rockport.<br />

Salisbury, Tewksbury.<br />

Topsfield, Tyngsborough, West<br />

Newbury, Westfo<br />

<strong>Wilmington</strong>.<br />

MVLC has contracted with<br />

Overdrive, Inc., a leading<br />

provider. of enterprise digital<br />

right management and digital<br />

media solutions to provide this<br />

service. Audio books can be<br />

downloaded and listened to on<br />

your PC via the Overdrive<br />

Media Console. Most can be<br />

transferred to an MP3 player or<br />

burned to a CD. The books are<br />

currently not iPod compatible.<br />

New corporations in Tewksbury<br />

BKPO Corp., 34 Villa Roma Dr..<br />

Tewksbury. Sonal Goel, 184 Parimont<br />

Pk., No. Billerica, president and<br />

treasurer; Sonial" Chawla, 34 Villa<br />

Roma Dr., Tewksbury, secretary. To<br />

provide software and hardware tech-<br />

nology services, etc.<br />

Folsetter Electric, Inc., 30 Parker<br />

Ave., Tewksbury. Robert Folster,<br />

same, president, treasurer and sec-<br />

retary. Electrical contracting and<br />

installation work including alarm<br />

systems.<br />

Lather & Lace. Inc.. 14:s Marshall<br />

St., Tewksbury. Peter Carlino, same<br />

president; Richard P. Palermo<br />

same, treasurer; Nicole M. Carlino.<br />

same, secretary. Hair salon<br />

Ventura Pool & Patio. Inc., 668<br />

Main St., #313. <strong>Wilmington</strong> Richard<br />

P. Ventura. 8 Jacobs Landing<br />

Danvers. president; Lawrence T<br />

Dyment, 52R Butters How<br />

<strong>Wilmington</strong>, treasurer and secretary<br />

Pool and patio installation, sales anil<br />

service.<br />

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Tap, Jazz, Hiphop Ages 3-Aduh<br />

Registration: August 23 rd 1 pm - 5 pm<br />

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775 Boston Road Billerica, MA<br />

or call: 978-658-6588<br />

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Visit the Stoneham Savings Bank Branch near you and in just a few minutes,<br />

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Hurry in.. .this special CD is good only through August 2006.<br />

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Large and small parcels for residential and<br />

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TOWN CRIER - WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 9, 2006<br />

'Yesterday and Today 9 accomplishes its goal<br />

Of inter-generational understanding<br />

FROM PAGE 1<br />

today's kids versus reality, and<br />

how the program helped her<br />

understand the next generation.<br />

•"We only see the bad. We don't<br />

recognize the good," said<br />

DiGirolamo, "I enjoyed (the<br />

Program) to no end. They are<br />

so well behaved, I'm sure their<br />

parents must be proud of them.<br />

They are really* acting like<br />

grown ups," she said of her<br />

partners Tatyana and Justin,<br />

and of the campers in general.<br />

Tatyana plans to keep in touch<br />

and hopes to do it again next<br />

year. Additionally, Tatyana, like<br />

many of the student partici-<br />

pants, began asking her grand-<br />

mother the same kinds of ques-<br />

tions she learned to ask here.<br />

Through the relaxed discus-<br />

sions of the program the chil-<br />

dren learned how to open a dia-<br />

logue into the values and expe-<br />

riences of past generations.<br />

All in all the participants and<br />

leaders, including Director of<br />

Elderly Services Terri<br />

Marciello, agreed that the pro-<br />

gram was successful. Ice<br />

Cream Sundaes and book sign-<br />

ings not withstanding, insight<br />

and understanding were served<br />

up well this year.<br />

Gino Martignetti of <strong>Wilmington</strong> dug right into a plate of steamers during the Police Union's<br />

Scholarship Clambake on Wednesday evening.<br />

Photo by Maureen Lamoureux<br />

:~:*-the <strong>Wilmington</strong> Police Union held its 4th Annual Scholarship Clambake last Wednesday night.<br />

Front Row Kneeling: Officer Dan Cadigan, Officer Brian Gillis, union Treasurer Sergeant Brian<br />

Pupa, Union Steward Officer Paul Chalifour, Officer Chip Bruce.<br />

•Center Row: Officer Chris Ahem, Union President Officer Ronald "Butch" Alpers, Rep James<br />

Miceli, Scholarship Recipient Jennifer Maio, Scholarship Recipient Sarah Terlaga, Officer Matt<br />

Stavro, Senator Bruce Tarr, IUPA Rep Brian McMahon, Officer Anthony Fiore, Officer<br />

£>Daniel D'Eon ^<br />

"Back Row IUPA Rep Andy Ray, Officer Brian Herman, Officer Louis Martignetti, Officer John<br />

Delorey, Union Vice President Lieutenant Joe Desmond<br />

"I had a dream I was a<br />

beautiful<br />

dancer."<br />

Make her<br />

dreams<br />

come<br />

true at<br />

Debt r s Dance Studio<br />

continues to be a leader in the industry.<br />

We take extreme pride in teaching our students<br />

with the most professional and quality<br />

training available. Our staff is talented,<br />

energetic and highly motivated.<br />

Students credits include:<br />

• Cunentlv performing on Broadway<br />

' mi ompany ot Fame<br />

• New England Palnols Cheerleaders<br />

• Performed with Chrislma Aguilera<br />

• Pefto'ni^.i ,n Boston Celtics Game<br />

• Appeared in National mi gazme advertisement lor Nike<br />

cial guest peilonners on <strong>Wilmington</strong> Cable Television<br />

TAP-JAZ2-BAU£T-lyKlC<br />

HIP HOP/RANK<br />

Preschool thru Adult<br />

Beginner thru Professional<br />

r> . Our Teen Hip Hop classes are a Blast<br />

Debt f Two large aircondi,,oned s,udios<br />

s Dunce Studio<br />

(978) 658-5948<br />

442 Main St.-<strong>Wilmington</strong><br />

■ r.j I,.,.I,<br />

Classes begin<br />

Monday, Sept. 11<br />

Matt and Faith Anne Stavro served steamers to the guests during the <strong>Wilmington</strong> Police<br />

Union's 4th Annual Scholarship Clambake last Wednesday. Bryan McMahon, President of the;<br />

New England Police Benevolent Association helped himself to a cup of hot broth.<br />

Photo by Maureen Lamoureux*<br />

Butters Farmhouse<br />

Corporate Challenge<br />

Reading Co-operative Bank drops the gauntlet<br />

FROM PAGE 1<br />

The Corporate Challenge is a<br />

13-week campaign with a goal<br />

of raising $75,000. Businesses<br />

may participate within four lev-<br />

els of sponsorship. Sponsorship<br />

levels include "Gold" for dona-<br />

tions of $2,500 and above,<br />

"Silver" for donations of $1,000<br />

and above, "Bronze" for dona-<br />

tions of $500 and above, and<br />

"Contributing" for donations of<br />

$100 and above.<br />

One hundred percent of the<br />

proceeds will go directly to the<br />

restoration and preservation of<br />

the Butters Farmhouse.<br />

Next week, Reading Co-opera-<br />

tive Bank will issue a mailing to<br />

more than 330 businesses ask-<br />

ing for their participation in the<br />

challenge.<br />

"To make our goal, we would<br />

need 30 companies to partici-<br />

pate at the Gold level sponsor-<br />

ship," said Fennel.<br />

According to Historical<br />

Commission Chairman Carolyn<br />

Harris, the restoration work<br />

and upgrades will be performed<br />

only by professionals with expe-<br />

rience working on historical<br />

structures.<br />

"We're really excited about<br />

this," Harris said. "This a<br />

major cost and it has always<br />

been our intention to do this for<br />

as little cost to the taxpayer as<br />

possible. Reading Co-operative<br />

has always given back to the<br />

community."<br />

Reading Co-operative Bank<br />

was a major sponsor in<br />

<strong>Wilmington</strong>'s 275th<br />

Anniversary Celebrations and<br />

wdl again act as the Corporate<br />

Sponsor for <strong>Wilmington</strong>'s 2nd<br />

Annual Half-Marathon.<br />

"Reading Co-operative Bank<br />

is a mutual bank; therefore we<br />

do not have stockholders,"<br />

Thurlow said. "The key stake-<br />

holders of this bank are its cus-<br />

tomers and its employees.<br />

Therefore, it is our responsibili-<br />

ty to be community minded.<br />

Reading Co-operative Bank has<br />

been involved in its community<br />

since 1886, so 1 guess we have<br />

something in common with<br />

Butters Farm; longevity.<br />

Residents wishing to offer<br />

donations are welcomed and<br />

may be made out to "Town ol<br />

<strong>Wilmington</strong>" and referencing<br />

"Butters Farmhouse Challenge"<br />

and may be sent to:<br />

<strong>Wilmington</strong> Town Hall<br />

c/o Treasurer's Office<br />

121 Glen Road<br />

<strong>Wilmington</strong>, MA 01887<br />

Attn: Butters Farmhouse<br />

Challenge<br />

"This historic landmark is<br />

truly a gem, a piece of history<br />

for everyone to enjoy," Fennel<br />

said. "Beyond donations, il<br />

anyone is interested in getting<br />

involved, they can contact Julie<br />

Fennell, <strong>Wilmington</strong> Historical<br />

Commission Member at<br />

Julie@YALCCoaching.com."<br />

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14W<br />

1-93 Interchange<br />

Overlay plan for Mills Mall<br />

FROM PAGE 1<br />

tial site for a 750,000 square foot<br />

shopping mall to be built by the<br />

Mills Corporation.<br />

One of the challenges in devel-<br />

oping the area is that it con-<br />

sists of acreage that straddles<br />

the town-lines of <strong>Wilmington</strong>,<br />

Tewksbury, and Andover.<br />

Members of the Task Force<br />

jumped at the suggestion made<br />

by Carole Hamilton,<br />

<strong>Wilmington</strong> Director - of<br />

Planning & Conservation, to<br />

establish a cooperative overlay<br />

district for the entire area,<br />

regardless of municipal bound-<br />

aries.<br />

"That would mean that a<br />

developer that came in with a<br />

project that straddles two town-<br />

lines would have one set of<br />

rules to guide them, as opposed<br />

to having to follow several dif-<br />

ferent set of rules and attend-<br />

ing an endless stream of meet-<br />

ings in the different towns,"<br />

Hamilton said.<br />

Chris Huntress, Chairman of<br />

Andover's Interchange Task<br />

Force lauded the proposal of<br />

such an overlay district and<br />

took it a step further.<br />

"That is an excellent idea,"<br />

Huntress said, "I had hoped<br />

that the three communities<br />

might get together and develop<br />

a master plan for the area."<br />

The development of a master<br />

plan, according to Huntress,<br />

would propose land uses and<br />

therefore remove any doubt as<br />

to what the communities would<br />

ideally like to see from poten-<br />

tial developers.<br />

The entire Task Force agreed<br />

to have each municipality's<br />

planners - Carole Hamilton<br />

from <strong>Wilmington</strong>, Steve<br />

Sadwick, Director of<br />

Mills Corporation<br />

still in the picture<br />

By JAYNE W. MILLER<br />

TEWKSBURY - The fate of a<br />

750,000 square foot Mills Mall to<br />

be located in Tewksbury is now<br />

in the hands of the federal gov-<br />

ernment.<br />

Mills first needed to garner<br />

support for the project from the<br />

community of Tewksbury. That<br />

support was solidified during a<br />

May 2004 Special Town Meeting<br />

In which the town voted over-<br />

whelmingly in favor of the pro-<br />

ject.<br />

Early in 2006 Mills<br />

Corporation garnered national<br />

headlines as it struggled with<br />

inaccurate accounting records<br />

going back as far as 2000. The<br />

company announced the cutting<br />

of a number of its executives,<br />

the abandonment of most of its<br />

scheduled projects, and even<br />

defaulting in some of its debts.<br />

Mills representatives have,<br />

however, consistently espoused<br />

its commitment to the<br />

J<br />

Tewksbury project. That com-<br />

mitment remains, according to<br />

David Wahr, regional consul-<br />

tant to Mills Corporation, and a<br />

resident of Andover.<br />

Regardless of Mills' solvency,<br />

the entire project hinges on the<br />

approval of a new 1-93 inter-<br />

change located between Route<br />

125 and Dascomb Road.<br />

Without that new interchange,<br />

the parcel remains landlocked<br />

and not viable for such develop-<br />

ment. Furthermore,<br />

Tewksbury's 2004 Special Town<br />

Meeting vote is contingent on<br />

the building of a new inter-<br />

change.<br />

The Interchange Justification<br />

Report, which makes the case<br />

for a new interchange and was<br />

produced by the Merrimack<br />

Valley Planning Commission,<br />

went to the Secretary of the<br />

Executive Office of<br />

Transportation (EOT) on July<br />

26. The EOT then, acting as a<br />

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TOWN CRIER - WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 9, 2006<br />

Community Development in<br />

Tewksbury, and Paul<br />

Materazzo, Director of<br />

Planning in Andover - get<br />

together to begin the process of<br />

putting together an overlay dis-<br />

trict that would address the<br />

concerns and desires of each<br />

community.<br />

The Development Task Force<br />

will meet next on October 12 in<br />

Andover at a location to be<br />

determined.<br />

The Development Task Force<br />

was conceived and established<br />

by the Merrimack Valley<br />

Economic Development<br />

Council (MVEDC), a private<br />

non-profit organization estab-<br />

lished to promote the economic<br />

growth in the Merrimack<br />

Valley area.<br />

Thursday's meeting was facil-<br />

itated by MVEDC President<br />

Robert Halpin<br />

conduit more than a reviewing<br />

party, submits the report to the<br />

Federal Highway Authority as<br />

the highways receive the bulk<br />

of funding from the federal<br />

level.<br />

"Hopefully within 60-90 days<br />

the report will be submitted to<br />

the Federal Highway<br />

Administration," commented<br />

Wahr.<br />

Most of the review will happen<br />

at the Federal level, with the<br />

blessing of the EOT needed just<br />

to move the project to the next<br />

level.<br />

When asked to comment on<br />

Mills recent financial instabili-<br />

ties Wahr stated that he "knows<br />

nothing about Mills finances.<br />

My direction is to move forward<br />

with the project."<br />

Calls to Mills at the new cor-<br />

porate headquarters in Chevy<br />

Chase, Maryland were not<br />

returned.<br />

The <strong>Wilmington</strong> Board of Selectmen could have held a meeting at the Democratic cook-<br />

out at Fred Cain's in 1965. From left, Lloyd Bender, Sen. Jimmy Long, Sen. Pres.<br />

Maurice Donahue, Fred Cain, Paul Niles, Wavie Drew, Rene Larivee, and Rep. George<br />

Catalounis of Woburn.<br />

A look back at <strong>Wilmington</strong> of yesteryear...<br />

Democrats cooked-out<br />

FROM PAGE 1<br />

Republican Town Committee.<br />

In other words, the Democrats<br />

were hosting the cookout for<br />

townspeople.<br />

In 1964, Fred F Cain was<br />

elected state representative,<br />

and the following year, the<br />

cookout moved to the yard at<br />

his car dealership (currently<br />

the site of Cornerstone<br />

Mitsubishi at 580 Main Street).<br />

There was plenty of space for<br />

tables - all they had to do was<br />

move the cars. And if rain was<br />

threatening, there was a large<br />

fiberglass canopy.<br />

Fred Cain would buy hun-<br />

dreds of tickets and hand them<br />

out. It was part of his political<br />

style.<br />

John Kerry attended the cook-<br />

out at Cain's in 1972, and was<br />

snubbed by Mrs. Drew. She was<br />

a Gold Star Mother, having lost<br />

a son in World War II, and she<br />

WCTV program schedule<br />

Sunday. August 13. 2JM<br />

Channel 9<br />

7:30 AM Stoneham<br />

<strong>Memorial</strong> Seventh Day<br />

Adventist Church<br />

9:00 AM Sharing Our Faith<br />

10:00 AM St. Thomas of<br />

Villanova<br />

11:00 AM <strong>Wilmington</strong> First<br />

Baptist Church<br />

12:00 PM Family of God<br />

1:00 PM United Methodist<br />

Church<br />

3:00 PM Congregational<br />

Church Service<br />

5:00 PM Sharing Our Faith<br />

6:00 PM United Methodist<br />

Church<br />

8:00 PM St. Thomas of<br />

Villanova<br />

9:00 PM Family of God<br />

10:00 PM Congregational<br />

Church Service<br />

12:00 AM <strong>Wilmington</strong> First<br />

Baptist Church<br />

Channel 10<br />

12:00 AM Community<br />

Bulletin Board<br />

7:00 AM Classic Arts<br />

Showcase<br />

12:00 PM Community<br />

Bulletin Board<br />

7:00 PM Classic Arts<br />

Showcase<br />

Channel 22<br />

10:00 AM Board of Selectmen<br />

1S66 Main street,<br />

Tewksbury. A4A €1876<br />

www.tammysdanceccnnecUcii.ccii)<br />

*78-8J8-€209<br />

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fesfe<br />

t^<br />

Meeting - 7/17/06<br />

7:00 PM Board of Selectmen<br />

Meeting - 7/17/06<br />

Monday. August 14. 2006<br />

Channel 9<br />

8:00 AM Congregational<br />

Church Service<br />

10:00 AM <strong>Wilmington</strong> First<br />

Baptist Church<br />

11:00 AM Family of God<br />

12:00 PM St. Thomas of<br />

Villanova<br />

1:00 PM Sharing Our Faith<br />

1:30 PM Public Power:<br />

Neighbors Helping Neighbors<br />

2:00 PM Derby Street<br />

Variety Show<br />

2:30 PM 1948-56 Cub Scouts<br />

3:00 PM Moneysense - Social<br />

Security<br />

3:30 PM Pictures & Music<br />

From The Common<br />

5:00 PM "Senior Sing-Along"<br />

6:00 PM Where's <strong>Wilmington</strong><br />

6:30 PM The Word: Alive and<br />

Well<br />

7:00 PM "Family Day in<br />

<strong>Wilmington</strong>"<br />

9:00 PM Cable Bible Study<br />

10:00 PM Dave Roberts<br />

Radio<br />

Channel 10<br />

7:00 AM Annenberg<br />

Educational Network<br />

6:00 PM WHS 2006 Senior<br />

Promenade<br />

7:00 PM Education News<br />

Parents Can Use<br />

8:00 PM WHS/WMS2006 ^<br />

Jazz Concert<br />

10:00 PM Classic Arts<br />

Showcase<br />

Channel 22<br />

8:00 AM Board of Selectmen<br />

Meeting - 7/17/06<br />

12:00 PM White House<br />

Chronicle<br />

12:30 PM A Conversation<br />

With Congressman Tierney<br />

2:00 PM Cable Advisory Task<br />

Force Meeting - 7/24/06<br />

4:30 PM Elder Services<br />

Meeting - 7/20/06<br />

7:00 PM Board of Selectmen<br />

Meeting - LIVE- 8/14/06<br />

Tuesday. August 15. 2006<br />

Channel 9<br />

8:00 AM Education News<br />

Parents Can Use<br />

9:00 AM The Word: Alive and<br />

Well<br />

10:00 AM Heritage Park<br />

Baptist Church<br />

11:00 AM "Poppycock & Real<br />

Ideas"<br />

12:00 PM St. Thomas of<br />

Villanova<br />

1:00 PM United Methodist<br />

Church<br />

2:30 PM "Fun On The<br />

did not like Kerry's anti-war<br />

activities.<br />

Even in the sweltering sum-<br />

mer heat, candidates and offi-<br />

cials felt they had to wear suits,<br />

but everyone else was dressed<br />

very casually. Joe Kennedy<br />

showed up in a suit during his<br />

first run for Congress on a hot<br />

August afternoon. He made the<br />

rounds of the tables, greeting<br />

people with sweat pouring off<br />

his forehead.<br />

There would always be a raf-<br />

fle for a "basket of cheer,"<br />

meaning an assortment of<br />

liquor In 1965, the gentleman<br />

who was selling tickets was also<br />

the winner. As soon as the win-<br />

ning ticket was announced, he<br />

put the prize in his trunk and<br />

took it home.<br />

In later years, the raffle was<br />

for a trip to Bermuda. One year,<br />

Realtor Mike Nash was running<br />

the raffle. Being supportive of<br />

Fourth"<br />

3:15 PM<br />

Award<br />

5:00 PM<br />

6:00 PM<br />

7:00 PM<br />

2006 "Good Guy"<br />

Where's <strong>Wilmington</strong><br />

Cable Bible Study<br />

Pictures & Music<br />

From The Common<br />

8:00 PM Sports Forum<br />

9:30 PM Maranatha Mission<br />

Stories<br />

10:00 PM Alan Smithee's<br />

Bag O' Movies<br />

11:00 PM Sound The Trumpet<br />

12:00 AM Jim Pillsbury Live<br />

Channel 10<br />

7:00 AM Annenberg<br />

Educational Network<br />

6:00 PM WHS 2006 Senior<br />

Promenade<br />

7:00 PM NASA Connect<br />

7:30 PM College Roundtable<br />

8:00 PM WHS 2006 Senior<br />

Awards Night<br />

11:00 PM Classic Arts<br />

Showcase<br />

Channel 22<br />

12:00 PM School Committee-<br />

7/12/06<br />

3:00 PM RMLD Board<br />

Meeting - 6/21/06<br />

6:00 PM Army News Watch<br />

7:00 PM RMLD Board<br />

Meeting - 6/21/06<br />

Wednesday. August 16. vm<br />

Channel 9<br />

8:00 AM NASA Connect<br />

9:00 AM Alan Smithee's Bag<br />

O' Movies<br />

9:30 AM<br />

10:30 AM<br />

Trumpet<br />

12:00 PM<br />

Stories<br />

"Senior Sing-Along"<br />

Sound The<br />

Maranatha Mission<br />

1:00 PM Creating A Healthy<br />

Environment<br />

2:00 PM The Word: Alive and<br />

Well<br />

2:30 PM Public Power:<br />

Neighbors Helping Neighbors<br />

3:00 PM "Family Day in<br />

<strong>Wilmington</strong>"<br />

5:00 PM Moneysense - Social<br />

Security<br />

5:30 PM<br />

6:30 PM<br />

7:00 PM<br />

Award<br />

9:00 PM<br />

10:00 PM<br />

Radio<br />

11:00 PM The Road To<br />

Recovery<br />

Channel 10<br />

7:00 AM Annenberg<br />

Educational Network<br />

1948-56 Cub Scouts<br />

WMSJ Backstage<br />

2006 "Good Guy"<br />

"Senior Sing-Along"<br />

Dave Roberts<br />

5:00 PM WHS/WMS2006<br />

Jazz Concert<br />

7:00 PM NASA Sci Files: The<br />

Case of the Deafening Sound<br />

8:00 PM WHS 2006<br />

Graduation<br />

his son's efforts, his father<br />

bought ten tickets. And he won<br />

the trip.<br />

That caused no small amount<br />

of consternation in the office of<br />

a competing Realtor, who went<br />

on and on about how that draw-<br />

ing was a fix.<br />

The next year, she ran the raf-<br />

fle and made pronouncements<br />

about how this year, it was<br />

going to be an honest drawing.<br />

At the cookout, she asked a<br />

young selectman to draw the<br />

ticket. You'd have a hard time<br />

finding anyone with a cleaner<br />

reputation. She held the bucket<br />

way up high and the young man<br />

reached into the bucket and<br />

pulled a ticket. The winner was<br />

Mike Nash.<br />

The Town Crier ran a story<br />

about the drawing. The woman<br />

was so mad she cancelled her<br />

ad in the paper, and didn't put it<br />

back for more than a year.<br />

10:00 PM Classic Arts<br />

Showcase<br />

Channel 22<br />

10:00 AM White House<br />

Chronicle<br />

10:30 AM A Conversation<br />

With Congressman Tierney<br />

12:00 PM <strong>Wilmington</strong><br />

Housing Authority Meeting<br />

3:00 PM RMLD Board<br />

Meeting - 6/21/06<br />

7:00 PM School Committee<br />

7/12/06<br />

Thursday. August 17. 2006<br />

Channel 9<br />

8:00 AM NASA Sci Files: The<br />

Case of the Deafening Sound<br />

9:00 AM Creating A Healthy<br />

Environment<br />

10:00 AM The Road To<br />

Recovery<br />

11:00 AM "Fun On The<br />

Fourth"<br />

12:00 PM Moneysense-<br />

Social Security<br />

1:00 PM WMSJ Backstage<br />

1:30 PM The Word: Alive and<br />

Well<br />

2:00 PM Derby Street<br />

Variety Show<br />

3:00 PM St. Thomas of<br />

Villanova<br />

4:00 PM<br />

5:00 PM<br />

Church<br />

6:00 PM<br />

Board<br />

7:00 PM<br />

7:30 PM<br />

Cable Bible Study<br />

United Methodist<br />

Community Bulletin<br />

Where's <strong>Wilmington</strong><br />

Physician Focus:<br />

Skin Cancer<br />

8:00 PM Sports Forum<br />

9:00 PM "Poppycock & Real<br />

Ideas"<br />

10:00 PM Congregational<br />

Church Service<br />

12:00 AM Jim Pillsbury Live<br />

Channel 10<br />

7:00 AM Annenberg<br />

Educational Network<br />

5:30 PM WHS 2006<br />

Graduation<br />

7:00 PM NASA's Destination<br />

Tomorrow<br />

7:30 PM Words That Cook<br />

8:00 PM WHS 2006 Senior<br />

Awards Night<br />

11:00 PM Classic Arts<br />

Showcase<br />

Channel 22<br />

12:00 PM Board of Selectmen<br />

Meeting - 8/14/06<br />

2:30 PM Cable Advisory Task<br />

Force Meeting - 7/24/06<br />

5:00 PM <strong>Wilmington</strong> Housing<br />

Authority Meeting<br />

6:30 PM <strong>Wilmington</strong> Elder<br />

Services Meeting<br />

7:00 PM School Committee -<br />

7/12/06


i<<br />

E-MAIL: JAMIE©YOURTOWNCRIER.COM<br />

. -. • •<br />

Defeat North Reading in best of three series<br />

<strong>Wilmington</strong> takes<br />

Northeast Baseball<br />

championship<br />

Bv DAN IGO<br />

Sports Correspondent<br />

The <strong>Wilmington</strong> Wildcats<br />

capped off an amazing sum-<br />

mer season by winning the<br />

Northeast League champi-<br />

onship Friday, defeating<br />

North Reading 10-3.<br />

<strong>Wilmington</strong>'s amazing victo-<br />

ry was anchored by pitcher<br />

Andrew Valente, who pitched<br />

brilliantly. He went five and<br />

1/3 innings, giving up two<br />

runs on three hits, while walk-<br />

ing four and striking out four.<br />

The final game progressed a<br />

lot differently than the first<br />

two of the series. The first<br />

game was won by North<br />

Reading 14-9, with<br />

<strong>Wilmington</strong> taking the next<br />

game 10-8. Valente was able<br />

to silence the North Reading<br />

bats by mixing up his pitches<br />

and throwing a consistent<br />

curveball.<br />

"I was just using the break-<br />

ing ball really well," he said.<br />

"I was hoping to make the bat-<br />

ters look silly."<br />

<strong>Wilmington</strong>'s bats were hot<br />

the whole series, and Friday's<br />

game was no different.<br />

Charlie Waitt continued his<br />

prowess at the plate, going 2-<br />

for-4 with two RBIs and a run.<br />

Kyle Lunt had a hit to go<br />

along with two RBIs. Carlton<br />

Lentini and David Rak each<br />

had a pair of hits, with Rak<br />

contributing two runs and an<br />

RBI.<br />

The story of the game, how-<br />

ever, was Valente. The way<br />

North Reading had been hit-<br />

ting the first two games, it<br />

Southpaw mixes it up<br />

would be easy to assume that<br />

they could put up eight or nine<br />

runs again in a heartbeat.<br />

Valente came in prepared for<br />

the game, hoping that North<br />

Reading would be stifled.<br />

U I was looking over the stats<br />

from the previous two<br />

games," he said. "I just fig-<br />

ured they couldn't hit the<br />

breaking ball."<br />

Coach Don Foley said that<br />

he thought this was the first<br />

Northeast League title for the<br />

Wildcats in their history. He<br />

said that hitting was the key<br />

for his team to bring the title<br />

to <strong>Wilmington</strong>.<br />

"Once we started we just<br />

killed the ball and we've been<br />

hitting it a ton ever since," he<br />

said after the game.<br />

The championship series did<br />

not start off on a good foot for<br />

the Wildcats. The first game<br />

was held Tuesday in North<br />

Reading, with <strong>Wilmington</strong> los-<br />

ing 14-9. North Reading<br />

scored 11 runs in the first<br />

three innings, responding to a<br />

3-0 lead <strong>Wilmington</strong> took early<br />

in the game.<br />

Lentini had three hits, all<br />

doubles, and scored three<br />

times in the game. Legro<br />

went 2-for-3 and had 3 RBIs.<br />

Another bright spot was<br />

Valente, who showed a pre-<br />

view of what he had in store<br />

for Friday. He pitched a solid<br />

3 2/3 innings, only giving up<br />

two runs on four hits.<br />

<strong>Wilmington</strong> responded in a<br />

big way on Thursday at home.<br />

They overcame an eight-run<br />

deficit and propelled them-<br />

WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 9, 2006<br />

selves to a 10-8 win, evening<br />

up the series at one game<br />

apiece. Lentini was on the<br />

mound, and while he let up six<br />

earned runs, he kept the<br />

Wildcats in the game through-<br />

out.<br />

Ernie Mello had a huge day<br />

in his leadof f spot at the plate,<br />

going 2-for-4 with two runs<br />

scored. Legro, who hit the<br />

ball consistently solid all year,<br />

went 2-for-3 with two runs and<br />

an RBI. Rak was perfect at<br />

the plate, going 3-for-3 with<br />

two runs and an RBI.<br />

Brendan Sheehan had three<br />

runs, while Lunt had two<br />

RBIs. Shane Foley also<br />

added a hit and an RBI.<br />

The <strong>Wilmington</strong> team of<br />

June and the <strong>Wilmington</strong><br />

team of August are the same<br />

on paper, but the results were<br />

extremely different on the<br />

field. Valente said that it took<br />

some time at the beginning of<br />

the year for the varsity and<br />

JV players on the team to gel,<br />

but once they did, they started<br />

to get on the same page and<br />

started to win ball games.<br />

Valente also believes that<br />

come when varsity baseball<br />

begins in March, <strong>Wilmington</strong><br />

will have a load of confidence<br />

because of their title.<br />

"Now we'll be walking<br />

around thinking we can take<br />

down anybody," he said. "We<br />

won't be having second<br />

thoughts or anything like that.<br />

After winning this we know<br />

we can win anything."<br />

Valente tosses<br />

gem in title game<br />

By DAN IGO<br />

Sports Correspondent<br />

An old baseball adage says<br />

defense wins championships.<br />

<strong>Wilmington</strong>'s Andrew Valente<br />

proved Friday that pitching<br />

can also do the same.<br />

Valente was flawless on the<br />

mound in the third and deci-<br />

sive game against North<br />

Reading, pitching five and 1/3<br />

innings, giving up two runs on<br />

three hits, while walking four<br />

and striking out four. He led<br />

the Wildcats to a 10-3 victory,<br />

good enough for the Northeast<br />

League title.<br />

What's most impressive<br />

about Valente's start is who<br />

the opponent he faced. North<br />

Reading had been on an<br />

absolute tear offensively in<br />

the series, scoring 14 and 8<br />

runs in the first two games<br />

respectively. Their bats were<br />

considerably cooler in the<br />

third game, mainly because<br />

Valente was able to keep them<br />

off-balance.<br />

Valente isn't a flamethrower,<br />

so he doesn't overpower hit-<br />

ters with his fastball. He<br />

mixes up his pitches well, and<br />

has a very effective breaking<br />

ball. He used this breaking<br />

ball to his advantage the<br />

entire game, fooling many<br />

North Reading hitters.<br />

<strong>Wilmington</strong> struggled might-<br />

ily in the first half of the year,<br />

often because their starters<br />

couldn't get out of the first<br />

inning. Valente was one of<br />

the exceptions. Coach Don<br />

Foley knew at the beginning of<br />

the year how important<br />

Valente was to the staff.<br />

"In the first game (of the<br />

-year) the starting pitcher did-<br />

n't get out of the first inning,<br />

and Valente pitched five<br />

innings of relief," Foley said.<br />

"He came back three days<br />

later and pitched five innings<br />

of relief again. He's thrown<br />

the ball the best out of anyone<br />

so far."<br />

The Wildcats have been<br />

underdogs all year, and the<br />

championship series was no<br />

different. They lost the first<br />

game 14-9, and were down in<br />

the second game 8-3 before<br />

coming back to win 10-8. The<br />

Wildcats of the beginning of<br />

the year might have packed it<br />

in. But the current Wildcats<br />

team, Valente said, was a<br />

stark contrast from the earlier<br />

version.<br />

"We just pulled together," he<br />

said. "At the beginning of the<br />

year it was just varsity and JV<br />

mixed together. But we really<br />

pulled together and got on the<br />

same side and the same page.<br />

We really meshed together.<br />

We've been playing good base-<br />

ball. When you play ,good<br />

baseball you can take down<br />

anybody."<br />

The unexpected run to the<br />

championship by <strong>Wilmington</strong><br />

will no doubt be a confident<br />

boost for the team when high<br />

school action begins. Most of<br />

the core players, including<br />

Valente, will be on the dia-<br />

mond in the spring. North<br />

Reading is also in the Cape-<br />

Ann League, where they no<br />

doubt will remember their two<br />

tough losses. Valente knows<br />

his team "won't forget their<br />

championship run.<br />

"Now we'll be walking<br />

around thinking we can take<br />

down anybody," he said. "We<br />

won't be having second<br />

thoughts or anything like that.<br />

After winning this we know we<br />

can win anything. Kids won't<br />

be taking us lightly anymore."<br />

The <strong>Wilmington</strong> High School<br />

lefthander is entering his<br />

junior year. He pitched exclu-<br />

sively on the varsity team in<br />

the spring, taking his spot as<br />

the number three man in the<br />

rotation. He said he hopes to<br />

move up in the rotation next<br />

year.<br />

Valente is a member of the<br />

winter track team at<br />

<strong>Wilmington</strong> High as well, run-<br />

ning distance. His main con-<br />

centration is the two-mile.<br />

Valente isn't taking a season<br />

off from baseball. After a two<br />

week break, he is going to suit<br />

up for <strong>Wilmington</strong> Fall Ball,<br />

along with many of his cham-<br />

pionship teammates.<br />

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ML *'<br />

Sisters Kerry Quinn, left, and Chris Stone, right, have been the volunteer directors of the<br />

Tewksbury Summer Track program for the past three years. Every Thursday night at TMHS,<br />

the track meets are held for kids ages two and up.<br />

(Maureen Lamoureux photo I<br />

t<br />

1<br />

Third year onboard<br />

Sisters on the right<br />

track with the kids<br />

By ANDREA MACMULLIN<br />

Amidst the many organized<br />

sports for children in<br />

Tewksbury lies a gem. For six<br />

weeks during the summer<br />

months children as young as<br />

two all the way up to eleven<br />

and twelve year olds flock to<br />

the track at Tewksbury<br />

<strong>Memorial</strong> High School for a<br />

few hours of running races,<br />

seeing old friends and making<br />

new, and most of all, having<br />

fun.<br />

The beauty of "Summer<br />

Track" as it is simply called, is<br />

there is no registration<br />

months in advance, no uni-<br />

forms, no tryouts, and no fee.<br />

Just show up on Thursday at<br />

six, and runners compete in<br />

events from the 50-yard dash,<br />

to relays, even the rnile. And<br />

no one goes home empty hand-<br />

ed. From first place runners to<br />

participants, everyone gets a<br />

ribbon.<br />

This Thursday night fun is<br />

nothing new.<br />

"We used to do it when we<br />

were kids," said volunteer and<br />

person with the bullhorn every<br />

Thursday night, Chris Stone.<br />

In her third year of running<br />

Summer Track, Stone said a<br />

few years back she and her<br />

sister Kerry Quinn came down<br />

one night with their own chil-<br />

dren to do what they had done<br />

Stuart to play<br />

inHNIB<br />

tournament<br />

Hockey Night in Boston's 15<br />

annual Girls Summfer<br />

Showcase will be held at the I-<br />

Center in Salem, fNew<br />

Hampshire beguining/August<br />

13th and ending o/i August<br />

18th.<br />

Tewksbury resident Kerri<br />

Stuart, a goalie, wfll be plavji<br />

for Team MtforjHeast.<br />

Northeast's games will be held<br />

on August 13th at 10:45 a.m.<br />

and 6:30 p.m.; August 14th at<br />

12:15; August 15th at 9:00 a.m.;<br />

August 16th at 12:15, with play-<br />

offs following the -next two<br />

as kids, but no one was there.<br />

From there the wheels start-<br />

ed to turn, and before they<br />

knew it, Stone and Quinn had<br />

volunteered themselves to<br />

bring back the traditional<br />

Summer Track, once run by<br />

the retired TMHS Track and<br />

Cross Country Coach, Bob<br />

MacDougall. Stone said<br />

MacDougall spent several<br />

hours instructing the two on<br />

how to run the weekly meets.<br />

But Stone and Quinn didn't<br />

walk into this blindly. The<br />

pair both ran track in high<br />

school, and both regularly<br />

complete in runs throughout<br />

the area.<br />

"I ran my whole life, and so<br />

did Kerry," said Stone. "I love<br />

it, I can't imagine life without<br />

exercise."<br />

And that love of running and<br />

fitness is what is brought to<br />

the track every Thursday, with<br />

parents and more cheering<br />

from the sidelines as runners<br />

of all abilities approach the<br />

finish line.<br />

"It's too fun a thing to let the<br />

kids miss it," said Quinn, giv-<br />

ing reason to why she commit-<br />

ted to running it with her sis-<br />

ter.<br />

Committed, and not to let the<br />

kids down, Quinn even drove<br />

home from vacation one<br />

Thursday this season. While<br />

Chris organizes the kids on the<br />

Baseball<br />

18 & Under<br />

15 & Under<br />

13 Year Old<br />

12 & Under<br />

12 & Udder<br />

9 &>rnder<br />

:Under<br />

field, Kerry organizes the<br />

paperwork with the sign-ups<br />

and ribbons.<br />

Aside from Stone and Quinn<br />

making Summer Track possi-<br />

ble, students from TMHS who<br />

run track also help to make<br />

the night run smoothly.<br />

"The high school kids is what<br />

makes it," said Stone<br />

From handing out ribbons at<br />

the finish line, to running<br />

alongside the runners for<br />

encouragement, the high<br />

school students are iastrumen-<br />

tal to the success of the night.<br />

"They're crucial," said Stone.<br />

"They're awesome."<br />

Despite the hot and humid<br />

weather this summer, the run-<br />

ners aren't staying home<br />

Recently, Summer Track had<br />

one of its largest turnout of<br />

runners, approximately 80<br />

kids came out to compete.<br />

"They all look forward to it."<br />

said Stone. The greatest sight<br />

for both Stone and Kerry is<br />

seeing the kids and how excit-<br />

ed they are as they cross the<br />

finish line. "Just look at the<br />

pictures and you don't have to<br />

say anymore"<br />

Summer Track will continue<br />

on Thursdays through August<br />

17th for ages two and up.<br />

For complete track results<br />

from this past week, please<br />

turn to page SP03.<br />

I/V/VI/Vfi*<br />

laat Street rear, Tewksbury, MA 01876<br />

978-851-1230<br />

Game Day<br />

Sundays<br />

Sundays<br />

Saturdays<br />

) Saturdays<br />

Sundays<br />

Saturdays<br />

Sundays<br />

Softball Game Day<br />

18 & Under Sundays<br />

14 & Under Saturdays<br />

10 & Under Saturdays<br />

2007 Dear<br />

Now Available!!!<br />

Individual Registration.<br />

Players may register as individuals & be placed on a team sponsored by<br />

Extra Innings and coached by one ot our staff members<br />

Team Registration<br />

Teams may also enter the Extra Innings Fall Baseball & Softball Leagues.<br />

Teams must provide their own coaches, players, uniforms<br />

& team equipment<br />

For more information or to register online visit<br />

www.extrainnings-tewksbury.com, or call 978-851-1220<br />

Registration closes August 29th<br />

» ~<br />


.,<br />

-?<br />

SP2 TOWN CRIER - WEDNESDAY. AUGUST 9, 2006<br />

w m ~ i<br />

Last week the annual Street Hockey camp was held at the Wynn<br />

; ' School in Tewksbury. Abov


*' ;<br />

V~<br />

Tewksbury<br />

Summer<br />

Track results<br />

4x100 relay<br />

2-4 years<br />

1st Place<br />

McKenzie Clark<br />

Bobby Clark<br />

Angelina Impemba<br />

Matthew Meakle<br />

2nd place<br />

Ryan Quinn<br />

Sean Stackpole<br />

Sean Cunningham<br />

Cole Stone<br />

Girls 8-10<br />

1st place<br />

Kaleigh Gammon<br />

Bridget Blair<br />

CaitlynLeary<br />

Courtney Latta J<br />

Boys 8-12<br />

1st place<br />

Kyle Paquefte<br />

Chris Paquette<br />

BenLafortune<br />

2nd place<br />

David Dempsey<br />

Patick Dempsey<br />

Colin Quinn<br />

Sammy Taynor<br />

3rd place<br />

Bobby Clark<br />

Chris Groves<br />

Tyler Robinson<br />

13-14<br />

1st place<br />

Eric Pquette<br />

Cody Laf ortune<br />

50 M Boys 2-3<br />

Sean Stackpole<br />

Sean Cunningham<br />

Jack Kennealy<br />

4-6<br />

Alex Papageorgiou<br />

Matt Crowley<br />

Bobby Clark<br />

6-8<br />

Connor Blair<br />

Colin Quinn<br />

Tyler Robinson<br />

9-11<br />

Sammy Traynor<br />

Benn Laf ortune<br />

Chris Groves<br />

2nd heat<br />

Cody Laf ortune<br />

Richard Silk<br />

Girls 2-4<br />

Ryan Quinn<br />

McKenzie Clark<br />

Riley Clark<br />

6-8<br />

Courtney Latta<br />

Lily Robinson<br />

9-11<br />

Bridget Blair<br />

CaitlynLeary<br />

Kaleigh Cammon<br />

200M Boys 2-3<br />

Sean Cunningham<br />

Sean Stackpole<br />

Danny Lightfoot<br />

4-6<br />

Alex Papageorgiou<br />

Bobby Clark<br />

Stephen Long<br />

6-8<br />

Connor Blair<br />

Colin Quinn<br />

Tyler Robinson<br />

9-11<br />

Sammy Traynor<br />

David Dempsey<br />

Benn Laf ortune<br />

12-14<br />

Eric Paquette<br />

Andrew Lafortune——<br />

Cody Lafortune<br />

Girls 4-5<br />

McKenzie Clark<br />

Ryan Quinn<br />

Caitlin Conneely<br />

9-11<br />

Bridget Blair<br />

Caitlyn Leary<br />

800 M 5 years<br />

Matt Crowley<br />

Lily Robinson<br />

8-11<br />

Connor Blair<br />

David Dempsey<br />

Cody Laf ortune<br />

Mile Girls 9-11<br />

Bridget Blair<br />

CaitlynLeary<br />

Boys 8-10<br />

Kyle Paquette<br />

Colin Quinn<br />

Tyler Robinson<br />

11-14<br />

Eric Paquette<br />

Andrew Lafortune<br />

Richard Silk<br />

400M<br />

ages 4-14 All ran together.<br />

Bobby Clark<br />

McKenzie Clark<br />

Matt Crowley<br />

Connor Blair<br />

David Dempsey<br />

Jack Kinneely<br />

Benn Lafortune<br />

Cody Laf ortune<br />

Stephen Long<br />

Alex Papageorgiou<br />

Lily Robinson<br />

Tyler Robinson<br />

Richard Silk<br />

Colin Quinn<br />

Bridget Blair<br />

CaitlynLeary •<br />

TOWN CRIER - WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 9, 2006<br />

Congratulations to the '96 AAA Mill City Monsters - The Hockey Academy's 2006 Summerfest<br />

Champions at Waterville Valley. Monster Players residing in Tewksbury include: Dom<br />

Montecalvo, Robert Cutone, Jack Cash, David Sheehan, Dylan Lemieux, Jeffrey Donahue and<br />

Connor Sodergren. The tournament was held August 4-6 at Waterville Valley.<br />

(courtesy photo)<br />

Twisters win Nor'Easter Classic in N.H<br />

After recently placing second in two local tournaments, the Merrimack Valley Twisters softball<br />

team placed first in the Nor'Easter Classic, Laconia N.H this past weekend. Winning six games<br />

in a row (three of which were shutouts), including the Championship game 7 - 0 against the Boston<br />

Bat Busters of Reading, MA.<br />

The Twisters went six games (43 innings - one game going to an international tie breaker) with<br />

strong pitching and near flawless fielding. The Twisters outscored their opponents 34-9. It was<br />

a great team effort.<br />

The Twisters' players are all from this area - five from Tewksbury, three from Billerica and then<br />

one each from Andover, Bedford, North Reading and Rowley. Tewksbury players include Kelsey<br />

McLaughlin, Melissa Popp, Sara Elwell, Danielle DePierro and Nikki Fernandez.<br />

Falmouth Road Race<br />

to raise money for<br />

Stroke research<br />

Fifty-four dedicated runners<br />

are hoping to raise $54,000 for<br />

stroke research and education<br />

by running the 7.2-mile<br />

Falmouth Road Race August 13.<br />

Led by Heidi Bruschi, wife of<br />

New England Patriots<br />

Linebacker Tedy Bruschi, the<br />

runners have joined Tedy's<br />

Team to make strides against<br />

the leading cause of disability<br />

in the United States - and the<br />

nation's number-one killer.<br />

Tedy's Team is an offshoot of<br />

Train to End Stroke, an<br />

American Stroke Association<br />

program that trains individuals<br />

to complete their first<br />

marathon while raising vital<br />

finds for stroke research and<br />

education.<br />

The race will be held on<br />

Sunday, August 3, 10 am. at the<br />

Woods Hole Community Center<br />

' Falmouth, MA<br />

The Town Crier<br />

-AND-<br />

NATIONAL AMI SIMKNTS<br />

showcase<br />

(INI \l A S<br />

WOBURN<br />

MOVIE TRIVIA<br />

WINNERS<br />

LAST WEEK'S QUESTION<br />

John Goodman starred as a New York Yankee<br />

in which film?<br />

□ A: 61 &B: The Babe<br />

□ C: Safe at Home<br />

And the winners are...<br />

(The envelope please...)<br />

Joseph Aiesi, 41 Geigcr Dr., Tewksbury<br />

Joyce O'Dea, 84 Glen Road, <strong>Wilmington</strong><br />

Gary Clark, 16 Tomahawk Dr., Tewksbury<br />

(courtesy phofo)<br />

SP3<br />

<strong>Wilmington</strong>'s Jimmy Fund j<br />

team ends successful season<br />

After an exciting summer of<br />

biifiebalLjhe season for the<br />

<strong>Wilmington</strong> Wildcats of the 11<br />

and 12 year old division of the<br />

Jimmy Fund League came to an<br />

end Sunday night at Rotary Park.<br />

Before a packed house of family<br />

and friends cheering them on the<br />

Wildcats fell to North Reading 7-<br />

6 in the first round of the play-<br />

offs.<br />

With <strong>Wilmington</strong> ace John<br />

Keough on the mound for the<br />

'Cats, North Reading broke the<br />

ice with an unearned run in the<br />

top of the first. The Wildcats<br />

bounced right back in the bottom<br />

of the inning. Connor Burke got<br />

things started reaching first on<br />

an error by the North Reading<br />

shortstop. Walks to Kyle Skinner<br />

and Ryan Cocca loaded the bases<br />

for Keough who worked a 3-2<br />

pitch for a walk to knock in<br />

Burke with the tying run.<br />

A sacrifice fly by Phil Lentini<br />

plated Skinner with the second<br />

run of the inning and a two out<br />

single to right field by David<br />

Caira scored Cocca for the third<br />

run. The Cats would pick up the<br />

fourth run of the inning when<br />

they pulled off a double steal<br />

between Keough on third and<br />

Caira on first. Keough scored the<br />

fourth run and Caira with some<br />

heads up base running ended up<br />

on third. That's the way the<br />

inning would end, with the<br />

Wildcats doing some early dam-<br />

age and taking a 4-1 lead.<br />

The bats fell silent for both<br />

teams in the second and third<br />

innings, as the score remained 4-<br />

1 after three innings. North<br />

Reading did threaten to score in<br />

the third. With the bases loaded<br />

and no outs Keough got the next<br />

batter to strike out, then thanks<br />

to a huge unassisted double play<br />

by Wildcat's first baseman David<br />

Caira, the Cats kept their lead.<br />

The "North Reading team man-<br />

aged to score another run in the<br />

top of the fourth on a single, a<br />

fielder's choice and a wild pitch<br />

cutting the lead to 4-2. The<br />

Wildcats answered with two<br />

more runs in the bottom of the<br />

inning to go up 6-2. Matt Curran<br />

started the inning with a base hit<br />

to left field. One out later a walk<br />

to Skinner put runners at first<br />

and second.<br />

The base-running duo then<br />

pulled off a double steal moving<br />

both men up into scoring posi-<br />

tion. Ryan Cocca came through<br />

with a smash to second base that<br />

the second baseman knocked<br />

down and threw to first for the<br />

out. Curran scored on the play<br />

with Cocca credited for the rbi.<br />

With two outs Wayne Knoops<br />

came up with a clutch hit to cen-<br />

ter scoring Skinner with what<br />

would be the final run for the sea-<br />

son for the Cats and to open up a<br />

6-2 lead.<br />

A four run fifth inning and a<br />

single run in the sixth was all<br />

North Reading needed to<br />

advance to the second round,of<br />

the playoffs. The Wildcats


SP4<br />

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978-658-2494<br />

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• 100% Cedar Wood<br />

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All Types oi Plastering<br />

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New & Repair Work<br />

Blueboard & Plaster<br />

Free Estimates<br />

Fully Insired<br />

- Phone -<br />

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C & S Electric<br />

Licensed and Insured<br />

MA-A20016 NH-M11405<br />

978-804-7658<br />

Septic Systems<br />

Sewer Connections<br />

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Stephen Wright<br />

959 Main Street<br />

<strong>Wilmington</strong>, MA 01887<br />

Screened Loam<br />

$20/yard Delivered<br />

MASONRY<br />

Robert R.<br />

Construction<br />

• STAIRS<br />

•CHIMNEY WORK<br />

• SUMP PUMPS<br />

• CONCRETE WORK<br />

• BULKHEADS<br />

FULLY LICENSED<br />

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Scheduled lawn maintenance trim-<br />

mings • mulching • gutter cleaning &<br />

installations • walkways • patios •<br />

retaining walls • brick walkways<br />

FREE ESTIMATES FULLY INSURED<br />

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978-657-6013<br />

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NO WASTE WOOD OR<br />

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Red Hemlock $40 yd.<br />

Dork Bark $40 yd.<br />

CERTIFIED<br />

Playground Mulch $40 yd.<br />

LOAM (sSToAM )<br />

LOAM SCREENED 1/4" $31 yd.<br />

LOAM UNSCREENED $20 yd.<br />

STONE 3/4" CRUSHED S39 yd.<br />

ORGANIC COMPOST $33 yd.<br />

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Contractor;: Inquire at Farm for Discount<br />

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RUSSELL FARMS<br />

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< OMSIIMM IION<br />


Weekdays: Monday—Friday,<br />

8:30 a.m. - 4:30 p.m.,<br />

Recreation Office, Town Hall,<br />

Room 8.<br />

Mail: Recreation<br />

Department, 121 Glen Road,<br />

<strong>Wilmington</strong>, MA 01887<br />

Night Drop: Place payment,<br />

class information and your<br />

phone number in sealed enve-<br />

lope and drop in metal slot in<br />

the wall at the left of the front<br />

door to Town Hall.<br />

We encourage residents of<br />

varying abilities, disabilities<br />

to participate in our pro-<br />

grams, trips, etc.<br />

If you require an accommo-<br />

dation, call the Recreation<br />

Office at (978) 658-4270 or<br />

call TTY (978) 694—1417.<br />

CONCERTS ON THE COM-<br />

MON<br />

Wednesday evenings 6:30 - 8<br />

p.m. FINAL CONCERT<br />

August 9 - A Tribute to Elvis<br />

- **Rescheduled** Can't get<br />

enough Jailhouse Rock,<br />

Hound Dog, Love Me Tender?<br />

Mike Slater will croon Elvis'<br />

oldies on the Common - rated<br />

one of the best tribute artists<br />

in New England!<br />

TOWN BEACH<br />

(Silver Lake)<br />

Now thru Sunday, August 13.<br />

The public beach at Silver<br />

Lake provides our finest<br />

recreation resource. Qualified<br />

lifeguards supervise the facili-<br />

ty from 11 a.m. - 7 p.m.<br />

Monday through Saturday,<br />

and 12 noon to 7 p.m. on<br />

Sundays. <strong>Wilmington</strong> resi-<br />

dents may use the beach at no<br />

charge. Proof of residency is<br />

required. All non-residents<br />

can either pay a daily fee at<br />

the beach or purchase season<br />

passes at the Recreation<br />

Office. Children under 14 must<br />

be accompanied by an adult.<br />

No flotation devices or dogs<br />

are allowed on the beach.<br />

CANOE RENTALS - $10<br />

weekday/$15 weekend - Canoe<br />

rentals are available during<br />

beach operation hours.<br />

WILDCAT CAPS FOR SALE<br />

-$8<br />

(Recreation Office)<br />

Check out this navy cloth<br />

TOWN CRIER - WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 9, 2006<br />

SP5<br />

on Recreation Department's Summer Flyer '•:<br />

cap with the wildcat paw<br />

embroidered on the front.<br />

One size fits most with a slide<br />

on the back for your perfect<br />

fit. A great "birthday/end of<br />

school/good report card" gift<br />

for your favorite "cat"!<br />

CHILDREN'S PROGRAMS<br />

REC. BASKETBALL<br />

LEAGUE (WRBL)<br />

Grades 3 - 10, $60, Saturdays,<br />

December 2, 2006 - February<br />

10, 2007, (10 Weeks) No games<br />

on 12/30.<br />

This will mark the 44th year<br />

for <strong>Wilmington</strong> Recreation<br />

Basketball! There are 10<br />

Saturday games and one<br />

weeknight practice each<br />

week. Registration period is<br />

Tuesday, August 15 - Friday,<br />

October 20.<br />

TENNIS FOR TWO - TOT<br />

AND YOU<br />

(Kathleen Reynolds - Boutwell<br />

Courts)<br />

Age 4 accompanied by an<br />

adult, $30, Fridays, September<br />

8 - October 13, (6 Weeks), 9 -<br />

9:45 a.m.<br />

This new class teaches our<br />

potential pros the basics of<br />

tennis. Love all!<br />

"LITTLE DRAGONS"<br />

KARATE CLASS<br />

(Academy of Traditional<br />

Karate)<br />

Ages 3-4, $25, Thursdays,<br />

August 3 - 24, (4 Weeks), 4 -<br />

4:45 p.m. This new class<br />

includes basic Karate moves,<br />

Japanese culture and life<br />

skills such as concentration,<br />

respect and confidence. T-<br />

shirt and belt included.<br />

KINDER SOCCER<br />

(West Intermediate School<br />

Gym)<br />

Ages 4 - Kindergarten, $35,<br />

Saturdays, September 23 -<br />

November 4, (6 Wks.), 9:30 -<br />

10:15, 10:15 - 11 or 11 - 11:45<br />

a.m. (No class October 7).<br />

Just like the big kids, now you<br />

can play soccer indoors while<br />

learning about the game.<br />

KINDER KARATE<br />

(Brett Gonsalves - West<br />

Intermediate Cafeteria)<br />

Ages 4 - Grade 1, $30,<br />

Saturdays, September 23 -<br />

November 4, (6 Wks.), 9:30 -<br />

10:20 a.m. (No class October<br />

7)<br />

An introduction to the art.<br />

Warm-ups, basic moves and<br />

body strikes will be featured.<br />

Continuing students are wel-<br />

come!<br />

PARTY TIME!<br />

(Christine Downey Town<br />

Hall)<br />

Ages 4-7, $18 each party.<br />

Includes games, stories,<br />

music, make-up, a craft pro-<br />

ject, refreshments and a sou-<br />

venir photo!<br />

Beach Bash - Wednesday,<br />

August 9, 4:30 - 6 p.m. Wear a<br />

swimsuit or summer attire,<br />

and enjoy a summer beach<br />

party!<br />

Sock Hop Friday,<br />

September 22, 4:30 - 6 p.m.<br />

Have fun in the poodle skirt<br />

and leather jacket era!<br />

Costumes will be provided.<br />

STEVE NUGENT FITNESS<br />

PROGRAMS<br />

(Burlington, MA)<br />

Enroll in Fitness Center pro-<br />

grams at reduced rates! Call<br />

for information about dis-<br />

counted membership.<br />

"LITTLE NINJAS"<br />

KARATE, Ages 5 - 9, $50,<br />

Monday - Friday, August 14 -<br />

18, 9:45 - 10:30 a.m.<br />

This summer, try a one-week<br />

introduction to the martial<br />

arts. Uniform included.<br />

SKYHAWKS YOUTH SPORT<br />

CLINICS<br />

(Woburn St. School)<br />

$95, Monday - Friday, 9 a.m.<br />

-12 noon. In inclement weath-<br />

er, we will move into the gym.<br />

Mighty Hawks - Ages 6-8,<br />

August 7-11. Clinics in base-<br />

ball, basketball and soccer<br />

each day!<br />

Skateboarding - Ages 11 -15,<br />

August 7-11. (Shawsheen<br />

School). Boarders will teach<br />

safety and new techniques.<br />

TENNIS LESSONS<br />

(Christopher Ng and Amanda<br />

Miles - Boutwell Courts)<br />

Monday - Friday, August 7 -<br />

11.<br />

$20, Ages 5 - 7 , 12 - 1 p.m.<br />

This class covers basic fore-<br />

hand, backhand, volley, serve<br />

and general information about<br />

tennis.<br />

FALL TENNIS LESSONS<br />

(Kathleen Reynolds<br />

Boutwell Courts)<br />

Ages 8 - 12, $25, Saturdays,<br />

September 9 - October 14, (6<br />

Weeks), 9 -10 a.m.<br />

Learn to serve, volley, play<br />

the net and speak "tennis".<br />

Beginners or experienced<br />

players welcome.<br />

ADULT PROGRAMS<br />

BALLROOM AND LATIN<br />

DANCE LESSONS<br />

(Christine Glaeser - Town<br />

Hall)<br />

Ages 16 & up, $25, Fridays,<br />

September 15 - October 27, (6<br />

Weeks), 7 - 8 p.m., No class<br />

10/6.<br />

Have you enjoyed the danc-<br />

ing on television lately? Try<br />

this abbreviated class, which<br />

includes the swing, fox trot,<br />

and waltz.<br />

AEROBICS<br />

(Patti Fitzgerald - Woburn St.<br />

Gym)<br />

$50, Mondays & Wednesdays.<br />

September 25 - November 20,<br />

(8 Wks.), 7-8p.m. (No class<br />

October 9).<br />

This is a low impact course<br />

consisting of aerobics, muscle<br />

strengthening and condition-<br />

ing. No fitness class experi-<br />

ence necessary.<br />

35+ BASKETBALL<br />

(Bill Campbell Middle<br />

School Gym)<br />

$50, Tuesdays, September 19<br />

- November 14, (8 Wks.), 6:30,<br />

7:30 or 8:30 p.m. games.<br />

Registration is first-come,<br />

first-served. A new season<br />

play basketball in the fall!<br />

This league offers structured<br />

team play with refereed<br />

games for fun and fitness. No<br />

games 10/31.<br />

STEVE NUGENT FITNESS<br />

PROGRAMS<br />

(Burlington, MA)<br />

CARDIO-KICK BOXING,<br />

Ages 16 & up, $70,<br />

Wednesdays, July 5<br />

September 27, (13 Wks.), 7 -<br />

7:45 p.m.<br />

A fitness center program at<br />

a reduced rate! This class<br />

emphasizes the techniques of<br />

professional kick boxers.<br />

GOLF LESSONS<br />

(Barrie Bruce - Billerica<br />

Country Club)<br />

$140, 5 Weeks. Learn the<br />

basics of golfing - woods,<br />

irons, chipping and putting -<br />

from excellent (and very<br />

patient!) instructors. Choose<br />

from: Sundays, July 23 -<br />

August 20, 11:30 a.m. - 1 p.m.<br />

Mondays, July 24 - August<br />

21, 6 -7:30 p.m.<br />

Tuesdays, July 25 - August<br />

22, 6 - 7:30 p.m.<br />

DISCOUNT TICKET SALES<br />

IMAX Movie Tickets<br />

Jordan's Furniture, Reading<br />

and Natick, $9 each,<br />

redeemable at the box office<br />

for any show.<br />

Discount Movie Tickets -<br />

Showcase Cinema Tickets are<br />

$7 ea. AMC/Loew's Theatre<br />

tickets are $6 each. Maximum<br />

purchase per person, per day,<br />

is 10 tickets (any combina-<br />

tion).<br />

Water Country Tickets - Cost<br />

is $23 per ticket for over 4 feet<br />

tall. Regular price at the gate<br />

is $32 each. No expiration<br />

date!<br />

Six Flags New England<br />

Tickets - $32 (save $18 per<br />

ticket!). Good for anyone 36"<br />

and over; under 36" is free.<br />

Big E - Friday, September 15<br />

- Sunday, October 1, 2006, $10<br />

Adult (13 & up), $8 Child<br />

(Ages 6-12), $15 Ride Ticket.<br />

Call for ticket availability<br />

date.<br />

Canobie Lake Park - Stop in<br />

after June 19 to pick up dis-<br />

count coupons good for $4 off<br />

Monday - Friday all-day pass-<br />

es.<br />

THEATRE TICKETS<br />

•"Refunds are based on the<br />

ability to find a replacement<br />

to purchase your ticket***<br />

Hairspray North Shore<br />

Music Theatre, Friday.<br />

November 17, 8 p.m. show, $36.<br />

See this fun and fabulous<br />

musical about Tracy<br />

Turnblad, a big girl with big<br />

hair who enters a dance cort-;<br />

test sponsored by a Baltimore<br />

TV Dance Show in 1962.<br />

Wicked - Opera House,<br />

Sunday, October 7, 2007! 7:30<br />

p.m. show, $85 per ticket. This<br />

show chronicles the events in<br />

the lives of the Wicked Witch<br />

of the West, and Glinda the<br />

Good Witch. A return engage-<br />

ment after this spring's sell-<br />

outs!<br />

A Christmas Carol - North<br />

Shore Music Theatre, Sunday,<br />

December 10,2 p.m. show, $37.<br />

We've got tickets for this holi-<br />

day classic a great family<br />

event!<br />

THEATRE TRIPS<br />

Note: These trips include<br />

bus transportation.<br />

Buses will leave from the<br />

Fourth of July Building 1<br />

hours prior to show time.<br />

•••Refunds are based on the<br />

ability to find a replacement<br />

to purchase your ticket and<br />

bus seat.***<br />

Christmas Spectacular star-<br />

ring the Radio City Rockettes<br />

- Wang Theatre, Wednesday,<br />

December 13 or Thursday.<br />

December 14, 8 p.m.<br />

Performance. $72. They "re<br />

back and we*ve got tickets<br />

for two nights - pick the best<br />

for you!<br />

Wicked Opera House.<br />

Thursday, October 4, 2007! 7:30<br />

p.m. show, $93. This popular<br />

show sold out its recent run in<br />

Boston and is selling now for<br />

2007! This is the story of how<br />

the Wicked Witch got to be so<br />

wicked - it really wasn't her<br />

fault at all!<br />

TRIPS<br />

Buses leave promptly from<br />

the Fourth of July Building<br />

parking lot unless otherwise<br />

noted.<br />

***Trip refunds are based on<br />

travel company restrictions<br />

and/or the ability to find a<br />

replacement for your reserva-<br />

tion<br />

(except when purchasing<br />

trip insurance, if avail-<br />

able ).**•<br />

Please note - no alcoholic<br />

beverages are allowed on<br />

buses or motorcoaches.


SP6 TOWN CRIER - WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 9, 2006<br />

LEGAL NOTICE<br />

Commonwealth of<br />

Massachusetts<br />

The Trial Court Probate and<br />

Family Court Department<br />

MIDDLESEX Division<br />

Docket No. 06P2981EP1<br />

In the Estate of<br />

IRENE B. TAYLOR<br />

Late of WILMINGTON<br />

In the County of MIDDLESEX<br />

Date of Death April 18, 2006<br />

NOTICE OF PETITION FOR<br />

PROBATE OF WILL<br />

To all persons interested in the<br />

above captioned estate, a petition<br />

has been presented praying that<br />

a document purporting to be the<br />

last will of said decedent be<br />

proved and allowed, and that<br />

CHRISTOPHER A. TAYLOR of<br />

WILMINGTON in the County of<br />

MIDDLESEX be appointed<br />

executor, named in the will to<br />

serve without surety.<br />

IF YOU DESIRE TO OBJECT<br />

THERETO, YOU OR YOUR<br />

ATTORNEY MUST FILE A<br />

WRITTEN APPEARANCE IN<br />

SATO COURT AT CAMBRIDGE<br />

ON OR BEFORE TEN O'CLOCK<br />

IN THE FORENOON (10:00 AM)<br />

ON SEPTEMBER 12, 2006.<br />

In addition, you must file a writ-<br />

ten affidavit of objections to the<br />

petition, stating specific facts<br />

and grounds upon which the<br />

objection is based, within thirty<br />

(30) days after the return day (or<br />

such other time as the court, on<br />

motion with notice to the peti-<br />

tioner, may allow) In accordance<br />

with Probate Rule 16.<br />

WITNESS, HON. ROBERT W.<br />

LANGLOIS. ESQUIRE, First<br />

Justice of said Court at CAM-<br />

BRIDGE this day, August 1, 2006.<br />

5329 John Buonomo<br />

08.09.06 Register of Probate<br />

<strong>Wilmington</strong> Recreation Department offers:<br />

Fabulous Fall<br />

Getaway<br />

Get a jumpstart on this year's<br />

foliage season and join us for<br />

this" two-night getaway,<br />

.^September 15 -17, at the North<br />

Conway Grand Hotel in the<br />

beautiful Mount Washington<br />

Valley. Travel by motorcoach<br />

up to this lovely upscale resort<br />

hotel with comfortable rooms<br />

and amenities including both<br />

indoor and outdoor pools, fit-<br />

ness center, Jacuzzi, and tennis<br />

courts. A welcome reception<br />

Friday evening will kick-off<br />

your weekend. Your stay<br />

includes two buffet breakfasts<br />

at your leisure and one "dinner<br />

off the menu" including salad,<br />

entree, dessert and non-alco-<br />

holic beverages in the<br />

Mountainside Restaurant.<br />

Relax and enjoy the resort in<br />

this picturesque setting in the<br />

White Mountains. If you want<br />

more to do, you can begin your<br />

holiday shopping at the onsite<br />

Settler's Green Outlet Village.<br />

Right outside your door you will<br />

find over sixty tax-free shop-<br />

ping outlets including The Gap,<br />

Reebok and Harry & David to<br />

name a few.<br />

Regroup and relax each<br />

evening in the Mountainside<br />

Tavern for some tavern fare in<br />

front of a big screen TV. The<br />

cost for this weekend in New<br />

LEGAL NOTICE<br />

Hampshire is $245 per person<br />

double occupancy and only $190<br />

per person for a quad! Call your<br />

friends, clear your calendar<br />

and join us!<br />

Contact <strong>Wilmington</strong><br />

Recreation at (978) 658 - 4270<br />

for more information, or stop<br />

by Town Hall, Room 8 to regis-<br />

ter.<br />

LEGAL NOTICE<br />

TOWN OF WILMINGTON<br />

STREET ACCEPTANCE BY<br />

BETTERMENT PETITION<br />

2007 ANNUAL<br />

TOWN MEETING<br />

The Board of Selectmen of the<br />

Town of <strong>Wilmington</strong> gives notice<br />

that all informal petitions for<br />

warrant articles for Acceptance<br />

of Streets by Betterment Plan, so<br />

called, in the Town of <strong>Wilmington</strong><br />

for the 2007 Annual Town Meeting<br />

must be filed with the office of<br />

the Town Clerk, Town Hall,<br />

<strong>Wilmington</strong>, no later than 4:30<br />

p.m. on September 1, 2006.<br />

5318 Raymond N. Lepore<br />

Chairman<br />

08.09.06 Board of Selectmen<br />

08.16.06 08.23.06<br />

TOWN OF TEWKSBURY<br />

LEGAL NOTICE<br />

.<br />

LEGAL NOTICE TOWN OF WILMINGTON<br />

TOWN OF TEWKSBURY<br />

PLANNING BOARD<br />

PUBLIC HEARING<br />

SPECIAL PERMIT<br />

Notice is hereby given that the<br />

Tewksbury Planning Board will<br />

hold a public hearing on August<br />

28, 2006 at 7:15 P.M. in the<br />

Tewksbury Town Hall<br />

Auditorium, 1009 Main Street,<br />

Tewksbury, MA 01876 on an appli-<br />

cation filed by Fiber Tower for a<br />

Special Permit to install two dish<br />

antennas onto the existing tower.<br />

Said property is located at Wynn<br />

Middle School, 90 Victor Drive,<br />

Assessor's Map 73, Lot 19, zoned<br />

Municipal.<br />

The application may be exam-<br />

ined in the Community<br />

Development Department,- 999<br />

Whipple Road, Tewksbury, MA<br />

(978-6404370 x248), Monday thru<br />

Friday 8:00 am - 4:00 pm.<br />

5321 Stephen J. Sadwick<br />

08.09.06 08.16.06 . Director<br />

LEGAL NOTICE<br />

THE COMMONWEALTH OF<br />

MASSACHUSETTS<br />

LAND COURT<br />

DEPARTMENT OF THE<br />

TRIAL COURT<br />

Case No. 06 MISC 325945<br />

. To: Amy J. Farrell and to all<br />

persons entitled to the benefit of<br />

the Servicemembers Civil Relief<br />

Act.<br />

GMAC Mortgage Corporation<br />

claiming to be the holder of a<br />

Mortgage covering real property<br />

in <strong>Wilmington</strong>, numbered 106<br />

Glen Road given by Amy J.<br />

Merrill, fka Amy J. Farrell to<br />

Mortgage Electronic Registration<br />

Systems, Inc., dated January 13.<br />

2003, and recorded with the<br />

Middlesex County (Northern<br />

District) Registry of Deeds at<br />

Book 14406, Page 198 and now<br />

held by the plaintiff by assign-<br />

ment has filed with said court a<br />

complaint for authority to fore-<br />

close said mortgage in the man-<br />

ner following: by entry and pos-<br />

session and exercise of power of<br />

sale.<br />

If you are entitled to the bene-<br />

fits of the Servicemembers Civil<br />

Relief Act as amended-and you<br />

object to such foreclosure you or<br />

your attorney should file a writ-<br />

ten appearance and answer in<br />

said court at Boflpn on or before<br />

the 11th day of*September, 2006,<br />

or you may be forever barred<br />

from claiming that such foreclo-<br />

sure is invalid under said act.<br />

Witness, KARYN F. SCHEIER,<br />

Chief Justice of said Court this<br />

27th day of July, 2006.<br />

5327 DEBORAH J. PATTERSON<br />

08.09.06 RECORDER<br />

PLANNING BOARD<br />

PUBLIC HEARING<br />

SPECIAL PERMIT<br />

Notice is hereby given that the<br />

Tewksbury Planning Board will<br />

hold a public hearing on August<br />

28, 2006 at 7:30 P.M. in the<br />

Tewksbury Town Hall<br />

Auditorium, 1009 Main Street,<br />

Tewksbury, MA 01876 on an appli-<br />

cation filed by Fiber Tower for a<br />

Special Permit to install two dish<br />

antennas onto the existing tower.<br />

Said property is located at 120<br />

Lumber Lane, Assessor's Map<br />

103, Lot 102, zoned Heavy<br />

Industrial.<br />

The application may be exam-<br />

ined in the Community<br />

Development Department, 999<br />

Whipple Road, Tewksbury, MA<br />

(97^6404370 x248), Monday thru<br />

Friday 8:00 am - 4:00 pm.<br />

5320 Steven J. Sadwick<br />

08.09.06 08.16.06 Director<br />

LEGAL NOTICE<br />

TOWN OF WILMINGTON<br />

CONSERVATION<br />

COMMISSION<br />

PUBLIC HEARING<br />

Notice is hereby given that a<br />

Public Hearing will be held in<br />

Town Hall, Room 9, 121 Glen<br />

Road, <strong>Wilmington</strong>, MA 01887, on<br />

Wednesday, August 16, 2006, at<br />

7:50 p.m. in compliance with the<br />

provisions of M.G.L. Chap. 13i,<br />

Section 40, and 310 C.M.R. 10.00<br />

on an Notice of intent, filed by<br />

Cranberry Lake Realty Trust, P.<br />

0. Box 603, <strong>Wilmington</strong>, MA 01887,<br />

and James M. and Priscilla A.<br />

Kelly, 12 Scaltrito Drive,<br />

<strong>Wilmington</strong>, MA 01887, owners;<br />

Cranberry Lake Realty Trust,<br />

P. 0. Box 603, <strong>Wilmington</strong>, MA<br />

01887, applicant. The applicant is<br />

proposing the construction of<br />

approximately 625 linear feet<br />

water main to connect existing<br />

water mains, including the tem-<br />

porary disturbance of Bordering<br />

Vegetated Wetlands. This work is<br />

within the 100-foot Buffer Zone of<br />

Bordering Vegetated Wetlands as<br />

designated by the MA Wetlands<br />

Protection Act, M.G.L. Chapter<br />

131, Sect. 40 and 310 CMR 10.00.<br />

This property is located on<br />

Assessor's Map 70 Parcels 101B,<br />

101D,' 105F, between Marjorie<br />

Road and Scaltrito Drive,<br />

<strong>Wilmington</strong>, MA, 01887. A copy of<br />

the plan is on file in the Planning<br />

& Conservation Department,<br />

Room 6, <strong>Wilmington</strong> Town Hall,<br />

and may be inspected between<br />

the hours of 8:30 a.m. and 4:30<br />

p.m. Monday through Friday.<br />

5326 Judy Waterhouse<br />

08.09.06 Chair<br />

Conservation Commission<br />

REQUEST FOR PROPOSALS<br />

The Town of <strong>Wilmington</strong> will be<br />

accepting proposals to conduct a<br />

group trip for a 7 Night Eastern<br />

Caribbean Cruise. Sealed propos-<br />

als, marked "Eastern Caribbean<br />

Cruise" on the outside, will be<br />

received at the Office of the Town<br />

Manager, Town Hall, 121 Glen<br />

Road, <strong>Wilmington</strong>, MA 01887 until<br />

11:30 a.m. on Monday, August 21,<br />

2006, when and where they will be<br />

publicly opened and read.<br />

Specifications maybe obtained<br />

at the Town Hall in the<br />

Recreation Office between the<br />

hours of 8:30 A.M. and 4:30 P.M.,<br />

Monday through Friday.<br />

The Town of <strong>Wilmington</strong><br />

reserves the right to reject the<br />

proposal or any part thereof<br />

deemed not to be in the best<br />

interest of the Town of<br />

<strong>Wilmington</strong>.<br />

For further information contact<br />

the <strong>Wilmington</strong> Recreation<br />

Department at 978-6584270.<br />

5330 08.09.06<br />

LEGAL NOTICE<br />

TOWN OF WILMINGTON<br />

CONSERVATION<br />

COMMISSION<br />

PUBLIC HEARING<br />

Notice is hereby given that a<br />

Public Hearing will be held in<br />

Town Hall, Room 9, 121 Glen<br />

Road, <strong>Wilmington</strong>, MA 01887, on<br />

Wednesday, August 16, 2006, at<br />

7:40 p.m. in compliance with the<br />

provisions of M.G.L. Chap. 131,<br />

Section 40, and 310 C.M.R. 10.00<br />

on an Notice of Intent, filed by Ed<br />

Wencis, Keyspan Energy<br />

Delivery, 52 2nd Avenue, 3rd floor,<br />

Waltham, MA 02451, applicant;<br />

Town of <strong>Wilmington</strong>, 121 Glen<br />

-Road, <strong>Wilmington</strong>, MA 01887,<br />

owner. This project involves the<br />

installation of approximately<br />

1,624-foot, 8-inch-diameter plastic<br />

natural gas pipeline to connect<br />

two existing 8-inch diameter plas-<br />

tic pipelines along Concord<br />

Street. This work is within the<br />

100-foot Buffer Zone of Bordering<br />

Vegetated Wetlands and<br />

Riverfront Area as designated by<br />

the MA Wetlands Protection Act,<br />

M.G.L. Chapter 131, Sect. 40 and<br />

310 CMR 10.00, This property is<br />

located on Assessor's Maps 62 &<br />

78, Concord Street, <strong>Wilmington</strong><br />

MA 01887. A copy of the plan is on<br />

file at the Planning k<br />

Conservation Department, Room<br />

6, <strong>Wilmington</strong> Town Hall, and<br />

may be inspected between the<br />

hours of 8:30 am. and 4:30 p.m.<br />

Monday through Friday:<br />

5325 Judy Waterhouse<br />

08.09.06 _ Chair<br />

Conservation Commission<br />

LEGAL NOTICE<br />

TOWN OF WILMINGTON<br />

Board of Appeals<br />

A public hearing will be held at<br />

the Town Hall, 121 Glen Road on<br />

August 21,2006 at 7:00 p.m. on the<br />

following applications:<br />

Case 42-06 Susan Sampson<br />

Map 29 Parcel 16A<br />

To acquire variance from<br />

Standard Dimensional<br />

Regulations (Table II) for an<br />

inground pool to be 5 feet from<br />

the rear and 5 feet from the side<br />

lot lines when 20 feet is required<br />

for property located on 2 Patches<br />

Pond Lane.<br />

Case 43-06 Compete Home<br />

Improvement Map 58 Parcel 8A<br />

To acquire variance from<br />

Standard Dimensional<br />

Regulations (Table n) for an<br />

addition and farmer's porch to be<br />

22 feet from the front yard lot<br />

line on Ash Street for property<br />

located on 9 Elm Street.<br />

8.02 06,8.09.06 5317<br />

LEGAL NOTICE<br />

Commonwealth of<br />

Massachusetts<br />

The Trial Court Probate and<br />

Family Court Department<br />

MIDDLESEX Division<br />

Docket No. 06P2062GI1<br />

In the Matter Of SHARON<br />

SULLIVAN Of TEWKSBURY<br />

In the County of MIDDLESEX<br />

NOTICE OF PETITION FOR<br />

APPOINTMENT OF<br />

GUARDIAN OF MENTALLY<br />

ILL PERSON<br />

To SHARON SULLIVAN of<br />

TEWKSBURY in the County of<br />

MIDDLESEX, and her heirs<br />

apparent or presumptive, a peti-<br />

tion has been filed in the above<br />

captioned matter alleging that<br />

said SHARON SULLIVAN of<br />

TEWKSBURY in the County of<br />

MIDDLESEX is a mentally ill<br />

person and praying that KEVIN<br />

SULLIVAN of N ANDOVER in<br />

the County of ESSEX or some<br />

other suitable person be appoint-<br />

ed guardian, to serve with surety<br />

of the person - and property -<br />

with the authority to administer<br />

antipsychotic medications in<br />

accordance with the treatment<br />

plan.<br />

IF YOU DESIRE TO OBJECT<br />

THERETO, YOU OR YOUR<br />

ATTORNEY MUST FILE A<br />

WRITTEN APPEARANCE IN<br />

SAID COURT AT CAMBRIDGE<br />

ON OR BEFORE TEN O'CLOCK<br />

IN THE FORENOON (10:00 AM)<br />

ON SEPTEMBER 7, 2006.<br />

WITNESS, HON. ROBERT W.<br />

LANGLOIS, ESQUIRE, First<br />

Justice of said Court at CAM-<br />

BRIDGE this day. July 26, 2006.<br />

5319 John R. Buonomo<br />

08.09.06 Register of Probate<br />

LEGAL NOTICE<br />

TOWN OF WILMINGTON<br />

CONSERVATION<br />

COMMISSION<br />

PUBLIC HEARING<br />

Notice is hereby given that a<br />

Public Hearing will be held in<br />

Town Hall, Room 9, 121 Glen<br />

Road, <strong>Wilmington</strong>, MA 01887, on<br />

Wednesday, August 16, 2006, at<br />

7:20 p.m. in compliance with the<br />

provisions of M.G.L. Chap. 131,<br />

Section 40, and 310 C.M.R. 10.00<br />

on an Notice of Intent, filed by<br />

Daryn Gladstone, 165 Industrial<br />

Park Drive, Dover, NH, 03820,<br />

applicant; Enuido & Milagros<br />

Escobar, 201 Salem Street,<br />

<strong>Wilmington</strong>, MA 01887 owners.<br />

The applicants are proposing to<br />

construct a 12'x 14' three season<br />

sunroorn on a 12'x 14' deck. This<br />

work is within the 100-foot Buffer<br />

Zone of Bordering Vegetated<br />

Wetlands and the Riverfront Area<br />

of Lubbers Brook as designated<br />

by the MA Wetlands Protection<br />

Act, M.G.L. Chapter 131, Sect. 40<br />

and 310 CMR 10.00. This property<br />

is located on Assessor's Map 81<br />

Parcel 4, 201 Salem Street,<br />

<strong>Wilmington</strong>, MA, 01887. A copy of<br />

the plan is on file at the Planning<br />

k Conservation Department,<br />

Room 6, <strong>Wilmington</strong> Town Hall,<br />

and may be inspected between<br />

the hours of 8:30 a.m. and 4:30<br />

p.m. Monday through Friday.<br />

5324 Judy Waterhouse<br />

08.09.06 Chair<br />

Conservation Commission<br />

i<br />

—~-^^^^^^^^**mmmmmmmmm<br />

LEGAL NOTICE<br />

MORTGAGEE'S SALE OF<br />

REAL ESTATE<br />

By virtue and in execution of<br />

the power of sale contained in a<br />

certain mortgage given by Peter<br />

C. DeGennaro, Trustee of<br />

Kansas-Russell Realty Trust, to<br />

Saugusbank, a co-operative<br />

bank, dated February 23, 2005,<br />

and recorded with the Middlesex<br />

North District Registry at Book<br />

18433, Page 107, of which the<br />

undersigned is the present hold-<br />

er, and for breach of the condi-<br />

tion of said mortgage and for the<br />

purposes of foreclosing the same,<br />

Saugusbank, present holder of<br />

said mortgage, will sell at<br />

PUBLIC AUCTION at<br />

11:00 a.m., on August 28,2006, at<br />

Lots 958-986 Kansas Road, a/k/a<br />

11 Kansas Rd., <strong>Wilmington</strong> MA<br />

all and the singular, the premises<br />

described in said mortgage, to<br />

wit:<br />

Certain parcels of land in<br />

<strong>Wilmington</strong>, MA, being those lots<br />

bounded by Russell Street, Rhode<br />

Island Road, Second Street and<br />

Connecticut Road, and being fur-<br />

ther described as Lots 958 to and<br />

including 986 and shown on Plan<br />

Book 24, Plan 24, recorded at<br />

Middlesex North District<br />

Registry of Deeds.<br />

Together with all rights, privi-<br />

leges and easements connected<br />

herewith, and subject to restric-<br />

tions, easements and rights of<br />

way of record; and said premises<br />

are hereby conveyed subject to<br />

any building and zoning law<br />

requirements which may be in<br />

force and applicable.<br />

Premises to be sold and con-<br />

veyed subject to and with the<br />

benefit of all rights, rights of<br />

way, restrictions, easements,<br />

covenants, liens or claims in the<br />

LEGAL NOTICE<br />

TOWN OF WILMINGTON<br />

CONSERVATION<br />

COMMISSION<br />

PUBLIC HEARING<br />

Notice is hereby given that a<br />

Public Hearing will be held in<br />

Town Hall, Room 9, 121 Glen<br />

Road, <strong>Wilmington</strong>, MA 01887, on<br />

Wednesday, August 16, 2006, at<br />

7:10 p.m. in compliance with the<br />

provisions of M.G.L Chap. 131,<br />

Section 40, and 310 C.M.R 10.00 on<br />

an Notice of Intent, filed by<br />

Wanda Cameron, 4 Argonne<br />

Road, <strong>Wilmington</strong>, MA 01887,<br />

owner & applicant. The applicant<br />

is proposing to construct a 11/2<br />

story addition within the 100-foot<br />

Buffer Zone of Bordering<br />

Vegetated Wetlands as designated<br />

by the MA Wetlands Protection<br />

Act, M.G.L Chapter 131, Sect. 40<br />

and 310 CMR 10.00. This property<br />

is located on Assessor's Map 57<br />

Parcel 56A, 4 Argonne Road,<br />

<strong>Wilmington</strong>, MA, 01887. A copy of<br />

the plan is on file at the Planning<br />

& Conservation Department,<br />

Room 6, <strong>Wilmington</strong> Town Hall,<br />

and may be inspected between<br />

the hours of 8:30 a.m and 4:30<br />

p.m. Monday through Friday.<br />

5323 Judy Waterhouse<br />

.06 Chair<br />

Conservation Commission<br />

LEGAL NOTICE<br />

MORTGAGEE'S SALE OF<br />

REAL ESTATE<br />

17 Sullivan Parkway Tewksbury<br />

By virtue and in execution of<br />

the Power of Sale contained in a<br />

certain mortgage .given by<br />

Barbara R. Hauser and Barbara<br />

Hart to Emigrant Mortgage<br />

Company, Inc., dated November<br />

7, 2003, and recorded with<br />

Middlesex County (Northern<br />

District) Registry of Deeds at<br />

Book 16664, Page 130, of which<br />

mortgage the undersigned is the<br />

present holder, for breach of the<br />

conditions of said mortgage, and<br />

for the purpose of foreclosing the<br />

same, will be sold at Public<br />

Auction on the mortgaged<br />

premises hereinafter described,<br />

namely:<br />

17 Sullivan Parkway<br />

Tewksbury<br />

Middlesex County,<br />

Massachusetts on September 14,<br />

2006 at 12:00 P.M., all and singu-<br />

lar premises described in said<br />

mortgage as follows:<br />

The land with the buildings<br />

thereon situated in Tewksbury,<br />

Middlesex County,<br />

Massachusetts, being shown as<br />

Lot 24, Sullivan Parkway, on a<br />

Plan entitled, "Plan of Sullivan<br />

Parkway, Sullivan Village<br />

Section VI Tewksbury, owned by<br />

John D. Sullivan," dated June 10,<br />

nature of liens, improvements,<br />

public assessments, any and all<br />

unpaid taxes, tax titles, tax liens,<br />

water and sewer liens and any<br />

other municipal assessments or<br />

liens or existing encumbrances<br />

of record which are in force and<br />

are applicable, having priority<br />

over said mortgage whether or<br />

not reference to such restric-<br />

tions, easements, improvements,<br />

liens or encumbrances is made in<br />

the deed. .<br />

Terms of sale: A deposit of five<br />

thousand dollars ($5,000.00) by<br />

certified or bank-check will be<br />

required to be paid by the pur-<br />

chaser at the time and place of<br />

sale. The balance is to be paid by<br />

certified or bank check at the law<br />

offices of Oakley, O'Sullivan &<br />

Eaton, PC, 89 Main Street,<br />

Andover, MA 01810-3839, within<br />

thirty (30) days from the date, of<br />

sale. Deed will be provided to<br />

purchaser for recording upon<br />

receipt in full of the purchase<br />

price In the event of an error in<br />

this publication, the description<br />

of the premises contained in said<br />

mortgage shall control.<br />

Other terms, if any, to be<br />

announced at the sale.<br />

The undersigned Mortgage<br />

Holder reserves the right to<br />

reject any and all bids made at<br />

the foreclosure sale, to amend or<br />

change the terms of the sale by<br />

announcement made prior to or<br />

at the foreclsoure sale and to<br />

continue the foreclosure sale to<br />

such subsequent date as the<br />

Mortagee may deem advisable<br />

SAUGUSBANK, a co-operative<br />

bank, present Holder of said<br />

Mortgage By its Attorneys,<br />

Oakley, O'Sullivan & Eaton,<br />

P.C.<br />

5312 Gregory N. Eaton<br />

8.02.06.8.09.06.8.16.06 Esquire<br />

LEGAL NOTICE<br />

TOWN OF WILMINGTON<br />

CONSERVATION<br />

COMMISSION<br />

PUBLIC MEETING<br />

Notice is hereby given that a<br />

Public Meeting will be held in<br />

Town Hall, Room 9, 121 Glen<br />

Road, <strong>Wilmington</strong>, MA 01887, on<br />

Wednesday, August 16,2006 at 7:00<br />

p.m., in compliance with provi-<br />

sions of M.G.L. Chap. 131, Section<br />

40, and 310 C.M.R. 10.00 on a<br />

Request for a Determination of<br />

Applicability, filed by Gary Miele,<br />

14 Ox Bow Drive, <strong>Wilmington</strong>,<br />

MA 01887, owner & applicant. The<br />

applicant is proposing to con-<br />

struct a 10' x 20' addition with a<br />

24' x 24' garage within the 100-foot<br />

buffer zone of bordering vegetat-<br />

ed wetlands as designated by the<br />

MA Wetlands Protection Act,<br />

M.G.L. Chapter 131, Sec. 40 and<br />

310 CMR 10:00. This property is<br />

shown on Assessor's Map 47<br />

Parcel 29,14 Ox Bow Drive,<br />

<strong>Wilmington</strong>, MA, 01887. A copy of<br />

the plan is on file at the Planning<br />

& Conservation Department,<br />

Room 6, <strong>Wilmington</strong> Town Hall,<br />

and may be inspected between<br />

the hours of 8:30 a.m. and 4:30<br />

p.m., Monday through Friday.<br />

5322 Judy Waterhouse<br />

08.09.06 Chair<br />

Conservation Commission<br />

1954, S.L.Tureo, surveyor, record-<br />

ed with Middlesex North District<br />

Deeds in Book of Plans 84 and<br />

87A, and bounded and described<br />

as follows:<br />

NORTHEASTERLY by Sullivan<br />

Parkway, 124.90 feet;<br />

SOUTHEASTERLY by Lot 2 and<br />

part of Lot 22,164 feet;<br />

SOUTHWESTERLY by Lot 25,<br />

100 feet; and<br />

NORTHWESTERLY by part of<br />

Lot 26, 89.09 feet.<br />

Said premises will be sold sub-<br />

ject to any and all unpaid taxes,<br />

assessments, betterments and<br />

municipal liens, if any there be<br />

TERMS: Five Thousand and<br />

00/100 ($5,000.00) Dollars in cash<br />

or certified check at the time and<br />

place of the sale, balance to be<br />

paid at the office of Adelson Loria ,<br />

k Weisman PC. Attorney for<br />

Emigrant Mortgage Company,<br />

Inc. at INTERNATIONAL<br />

PLACE, BOSTON, MASSACHU-<br />

SETTS 02110, within thirty days of<br />

the sale. Other terms, if any, to be<br />

announced at the sale<br />

Emigrant Mortgage Company.<br />

Inc.<br />

Present holder of said mortgage<br />

By its Attorney Adelson Loria &<br />

Weisman P.C. ONE INTERNA-<br />

TIONAL PLACE BOSTON, MA<br />

02110<br />

5328 AUCTIONEER:<br />

Traverse Real Estate, Inc.,<br />

Mass. Lie. No. 10<br />

08.09.06 08.16.06 08.21.06<br />

- ■


TOWN CRIER - WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 9, 2006<br />

• „- Paige Tbnra and Melanie Flaherty had time to catch a few rays on the beach at Silver Lake<br />

before enjoying the lunch sponsored by the <strong>Wilmington</strong> Police Association.<br />

Photo by Maureen Lamoureux<br />

n •-"-•,<br />

„.. .Volleyball purists might have called a foul, but it was, after all, just a friendly game at Silver<br />

Lake when Kevin Flaherty let loose and put the fear in his opponents with a vicious spike.<br />

Photo by Maureen lamoureux<br />

9 '■ I<br />

1 H •;<br />

•<br />

Amanda Hough, Nicole Tetreault and Daniel Tetreault practiced their sand castle building skills'<br />

for the Annual Sand Castle Contest during the Police Association sponsored Beach Day.<br />

Photo by Maureen Ivimoureux"<br />

<strong>Wilmington</strong><br />

Police<br />

Patrolman's<br />

Association<br />

Annual<br />

Beach<br />

Day<br />

CHIEF COOK - <strong>Wilmington</strong><br />

Police Chief, Michael Begonis,<br />

was the "officer in charge" of<br />

hot dogs for <strong>Wilmington</strong><br />

Recreational Campers on Silver<br />

Lake on Thursday.<br />

The <strong>Wilmington</strong> Police<br />

Association has put on a great<br />

feed for the kids for many years.<br />

AIJ, FOR FREE!<br />

Photo by Maureen Lamoureux<br />

The future of the building industry<br />

Michael Sullivan, David Caira, and Tim Masiello teamed up to make a sand castle a! Silver<br />

Lake Beach last Thrusday. Photo by Maureen Lamoureux<br />

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MIOOLESEX EAST appaarlng In Dally Tlmaa - Chronicle (Heading. Wobum. Winchaelar. Burlington, Wakaflald).<br />

Lynnflald Villager, No. Reading Tranacripl. <strong>Wilmington</strong> & Tawkabury Town Crktr, Stonaham Independent<br />

"Spinmrtainment" draws the crowds to<br />

players develop with the Lowell Spinneri<br />

By DOUG WOOD-BOYLE<br />

Sellout crowds have been attending every Lowell<br />

Spinners' game at Edward A. LeLacheur Park since<br />

August 1999 as much to participate in the<br />

"Spinnertainment" as to watch a special brand of base-<br />

ball that develops future major leaguers and rehabili-<br />

tates injured veteran players for the Boston Red Sox.<br />

Media Relations and Promotions Director Jon Goode<br />

said, "Promotions are a big part of what we do, but not<br />

just any promotion; family oriented promotions. When we<br />

sit around thinking about what our fans would like, it is<br />

pretty simple really, our fans are families."<br />

General Manager Tim Bawmann confirmed that pro-<br />

motions and special events are top on his list. To this end,<br />

the staff takes an annual two day retreat between seasons<br />

to hash out the promotions for the following year.<br />

Goode noted that promotions are so much a part of his<br />

life that he sometimes has a problem remembering who<br />

the opposing team will be on a given date, but never what<br />

the promotion is that night. In fact, in their advertising,<br />

the Short-Season Single A team will list the promotion<br />

over instead of the name of the opposing team in the New<br />

York-Pennsylvania League, of which the Spinners are<br />

members.<br />

This week will feature a Notebook giveaway night on<br />

Thursday and on Friday it will be Revenge of the Nerds<br />

Night with appearances by Myron Noodleman look-a-<br />

likes. On Thursday, August 17, Red Sox star closing pitch-<br />

er Jonathan Papelbon (Lowell Spinners 2003) is expected<br />

to be on hand to throw out the first pitch, sign autographs<br />

and help give away a bobble-head doll in his likeness.<br />

Other activities for that night will include: Rachel the<br />

Caricaturist, Dolly's Dance World Pre-Game<br />

Performance, and radio station WROR 105.7 FM Street<br />

Team.<br />

According to Bawmann, it will be a real family affair.<br />

Middlesex East<br />

A weety regional section reaching 10 communities<br />

LYNNFIELD • NORTH READING • RIADINC. • WAKLNELD<br />

• WINCHESTER ' • BURI.INCION • WIIMINGTON<br />

JOSHUA PAPELBON, BROTHER<br />

OF BOSTON RED SOX ALL<br />

STAR closer Jonathan Papelbon is<br />

shown above right. Both brothers<br />

have now worn the Lowell Spinners<br />

uniform.<br />

The Spinners mascot, Canaligator<br />

waves to the crowds as Sumo<br />

Wrestlers battle it out on the field.<br />

Jonathan's brother Joshua is one of two closers with the Spinners (with four saves on the season) and<br />

the team will be flying the brothers' parents up from their home in Florida.<br />

However, anyone hoping to attend better get their tickets early. More than likely the game wills<br />

another sellout.<br />

As of this past Monday, the<br />

Spinners hit the mark for 256<br />

sellout games. According to<br />

Bawmann, the ticket sales are<br />

made up of about one-third sea-<br />

son ticket holders, one-third<br />

group and special party sales<br />

and one-third single ticket<br />

sales.<br />

"Our sellouts started before<br />

(the Red Sox) did," Bawmann<br />

said. "August of 1999 was the<br />

last time we did not sell out."<br />

He attributes the team's<br />

success to several factors, not<br />

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"A family of four could<br />

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'<br />

PAGE S-2-WEDNESDAY/THURSDAY, AUGUST 9,10, 2006<br />

tews<br />

6y J^aitl J'eehj<br />

"TALLADEGA NIGHTS" HAS SURPRISE ENDING<br />

IN THIS PHOTO PROVIDED BY COLUMBIA PICTURES, NASCAR driver Ricky Bobby,<br />

played by Will Ferrell, holds a trophy in a scene from "Talladega Nights: The Ballad of<br />

Ricky Bobby."<br />

(AP Photo/HO,Suzanne Hanover)<br />

"TALLADEGA NIGHTS:<br />

THE BALLAD OF<br />

RICKY BOBBY"<br />

GRADE: *♦*<br />

Cars collide and jokes fly<br />

in the NASCAR farce<br />

"Talladega Nights: The<br />

Ballad of Ricky Bobby."<br />

Will Ferrell plays the title<br />

character, a dim-witted racer<br />

who loops tracks with super-<br />

human skill. The actor's cos-<br />

mic improv is balanced out<br />

;with serious racing action.<br />

;f he sports scenes feature<br />

Jaijto wrecks worthy of a<br />

: Michael Bay blockbuster.<br />

! Ferrell reteams with<br />

! director Adam McKay<br />

! ("Anchorman: The Legend of<br />

iRon Burgundy") for another<br />

Ifcfeshy comedy. While the sto-<br />

ryline is formulaic, the<br />

' fcS-iter-performer is at his<br />

best, opposite talented co-<br />

stars like John C. Reilly,<br />

Sacha Baron Cohen, Michael<br />

/Clarke.Duncan and Amy<br />

|j Adams. *<br />

•; It's a fun, irreverent day<br />

;; at the races. The film zips<br />

about speed,<br />

badass speed."<br />

Hot, nasty,<br />

Ricky (Ferrell) is the son<br />

of a semi-professional<br />

racer/amateur tattoo artist.<br />

His pro-driving dream is<br />

rooted in a need to win his<br />

father's love He has humble<br />

pit-crew beginnings, workjng<br />

with his childhood friend Cal<br />

(Reilly) on a losing car spon-<br />

sored by Laughing Clown<br />

malt liquor.<br />

Promoted from mechanic<br />

to driver, Ricky fearlessly<br />

clocks top speeds to become<br />

an overnight sensation. His<br />

entourage includes a cross-<br />

dressing crew chief<br />

(Duncan) and a personal<br />

assistant (Amy Adams) with<br />

a secret crush on him. He<br />

marries a groupie (Leslie<br />

Bibb) and has two obnoxious<br />

sons named Walker (Houston<br />

Tumlin) and Texas Ranger<br />

(Grayson Russell).<br />

His career hits the skids<br />

alter he crashes in a race<br />

against Jean Girard (Sacha<br />

Baron Cohen), a gay French<br />

;; through an array of pop cul- driver. The shock of the acci-<br />

;; ture reference points and dent leaves Ricky believing<br />

:: mocks the commercialism of he's paralyzed, but doctors<br />

.: njotorsports. (Halliburton is assure everyone that the con-<br />

;: courted as a car sponsor.) dition is psychosomatic. Cal<br />

:! The tale opens with an wonders if that means his<br />

|i alleged quote from Eleanor friend can start fires with his<br />

i Roosevelt, "America is-all thoughts.<br />

.«<br />

V<br />

When Ricky finally gets<br />

behind the wheel again, he<br />

can barely manage 26 mph.<br />

He loses his wife and his job,<br />

and is forced to move back in<br />

with his mother (Jane<br />

Lynch). Working as a pizza<br />

deliveryman, he brings a pie<br />

to a mysterious customer<br />

who turns out to be his long-<br />

lost father, Reese (Gary<br />

Cole). His dad helps him get<br />

his competitive edge back so<br />

he can challenge Jean<br />

Girard in a big event at the<br />

Talladega Superspeedway.<br />

Plot-wise, the ballad is<br />

pretty basic, although the<br />

finale is a surprise.<br />

"MIAMI VICE"<br />

GRADE: ***<br />

What the movie "Miami<br />

Vice" may lack in substance,<br />

it more than makes up for in<br />

pure adrenaline.<br />

The TV series its based on<br />

was an hour-long fashion-<br />

filled music video that hap-<br />

pened to feature detectives.<br />

Now 15 years later, the film<br />

has no fashion to speak of<br />

and no music of note - except<br />

a heavy-metal recording of<br />

"In the Air Tonight" over the<br />

end credits<br />

The film's grim tone,<br />

grainy look and jagged plot-<br />

ting may be the opposite of<br />

the original series, but it<br />

hangs its hat on a much<br />

more realistic look at the<br />

drug culture in Miami.<br />

The film is made in the<br />

image of characters who are<br />

never honest about who they<br />

are and who do not allow<br />

themselves to be made vul-<br />

nerable, living in a world<br />

where not killing someone is<br />

considered an act of tender-<br />

ness. Colin Farrell and Jamie<br />

Foxx are Miami undercover<br />

vice cops who infiltrate a<br />

Colombian drug ring to fer-<br />

ret out a federal informant.<br />

The movie resembles<br />

"Heat," another crime drama<br />

by writer-director Michael<br />

Mann, who produced the TV<br />

series.<br />

But Mann isn't going for<br />

an Oscar here, he's simply<br />

trying to tell a gritty cops<br />

and robbers story. Its appar-<br />

ent that this was the true<br />

vision he once had for the<br />

show, before the network<br />

executives got their hands on<br />

it. Had the show been debut-<br />

ing in 2006 rather than the<br />

1980s* it probably would have<br />

landed on a network like<br />

HBO, where the typical FCC<br />

constraints don't exist.<br />

There are fast cars and<br />

faster boats. And there is as<br />

much steam as there is vio-<br />

lence.<br />

"CLERKS II"<br />

GRADE: ***<br />

The type of jokes you'd be<br />

embarrassed to tell anyone<br />

except your closest friends<br />

and, even then, only when<br />

you're out of earshot of<br />

everyone else, are shouted<br />

from the rafters in "Clerks<br />

II."<br />

Helen Keller, movie star<br />

fantasies, many things that<br />

happen behind closed doors -<br />

these are the topics in the<br />

"Clerks II" script. Juvenile?<br />

Yes. Silly? Yes. But guess<br />

what - it's also often hilari-<br />

ous.<br />

"Clerks II" returns<br />

writer/director Kevin Smith<br />

to Randal and Dante, the<br />

shiftless characters he creat-<br />

ed in the original "Clerks"<br />

more than a decade ago.<br />

They have graduated from<br />

working in a crummy conve-<br />

nience store to working in a<br />

crummy fast-food restaurant.<br />

But in all other ways their<br />

development remains arrest-<br />

ed.<br />

Movies to S-8<br />

mmm mmm<br />

MIDDIESFX EAST oppeonng in Doily Timoi - Chronicle (Reading. Woburn. Winchoil.-.. Burlington. WakelieldJ<br />

lynnheld ViNogor. No Rootling Iranicnpl. <strong>Wilmington</strong> & Towlubuiy Town Oiei, Slonehani Independent<br />

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Bear Rock celebrates<br />

first anniversary<br />

READING - The Bear<br />

Rock Cafe will be marking<br />

its one-year anniversary in<br />

the Town of Reading this<br />

month and to celebrate, the<br />

Bear Rock Cafe is launch-<br />

ing a Guest Appreciation<br />

Month as a way to thank its<br />

loyal guests.<br />

Guests can expect week-<br />

ly prizes, including a<br />

catered lunch for an office<br />

and free coffee will be<br />

served to restaurant guests<br />

each Monday and Tuesday<br />

morning from 7:00 a.m. to<br />

11:00 a.m. throughout'the<br />

month of August.<br />

The Bear Rock Cafe,<br />

located on Walkers Brook<br />

Drive in Reading, has con-<br />

sistently ranked at the top<br />

of the chain in overall sales<br />

and customer satisfaction<br />

surveys.<br />

Franchise ownership group<br />

Union Street Ventures LLC<br />

attributes a very successful<br />

first year to Bear Rock<br />

Cafe's community involve-<br />

ment and ability to consis-<br />

tently deliver an outstand-<br />

ing overall guest experi-<br />

ence.<br />

"We feel that our cus-<br />

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beyond the walls of the<br />

restaurant and into the<br />

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He added, "We've had<br />

the pleasure of participat-<br />

ing in a number of special<br />

events, working with local<br />

organizations and raising<br />

money to worthy causes<br />

whenever possible through<br />

our Fundraising Program."<br />

Through Bear Rock's<br />

unique Fundraising Pro-<br />

gram, organizations such<br />

" as the Reading High School<br />

Girls Lacrosse Team, Read-<br />

ing Tot-Lot and the Susan<br />

G. Komen Breast Cancer<br />

Foundation have been able<br />

to partner with the Bear<br />

Rock Cafe to earn much<br />

needed dollars for these<br />

groups by sending diners to<br />

the cafe on specific dates,<br />

with a portion of those<br />

sales being donated back to<br />

the group.<br />

The Bear Rock Cafe has<br />

taken part in a total of six<br />

fundraisers in the past four<br />

months.<br />

The local franchisees are<br />

about to begin construction<br />

on their second location at<br />

Horn Pond Plaza in Woburn<br />

and have signed a commit-<br />

Bear Rock to S-4<br />

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MIDDII Six IASI cippoo.mg in Daily Iimci ■ Thron.. le |Rood


i<br />

PAGE S-4-WEDNESDAY/THURSDAY, AUGUST 9, 10, 2006<br />

BY THE BOOK AND ON THE WEB<br />

Pioneer Pride<br />

celebrated<br />

(Lynn field)<br />

The 20 student Pioneer<br />

Pride recipients this year<br />

each received a Pioneer<br />

Pride tec shirt and a $25.00<br />

gift certificate to Barnes &<br />

Noble.<br />

Congratulations to the fol-<br />

lowing winners: Samantha<br />

Ma/.zarella, Pat Lamusta,<br />

Kim Lane, Marc Iudiciani,<br />

Kelly Cox, Chris Dario, Meg<br />

Sweezey, Saki Armenis, Kara<br />

Ackerman, Eric Sachetta,<br />

Rachel Wint, Michael<br />

Kennedy, Deanna LeBlanc,<br />

John Caruso, Krista Grava,<br />

Batyr Tagyshev, Devon<br />

Ritchie, Kyle Lawless, Talene<br />

C'Brien, Joey Puleo, Sofya<br />

Bronshvayg, Mason<br />

Hickman, Danielle Grava,<br />

Corey Dolbeare, Julie<br />

Keener, and Brett Bolivar<br />

Books reviews from<br />

the Ryan School<br />

(Tewksbury)<br />

Title: Mattimeo, Author:<br />

Brian Jacques, Genre:<br />

Fiction - Fantasy.<br />

Book Review by: David H.<br />

"The book Mattimeo is the<br />

fourth book in the Redwall<br />

series, so to really be able to<br />

enjoy it; you should read the<br />

first three books. Mattimeo<br />

starts out with a cruel fox<br />

that hates Redwall Abbey<br />

and all who live in it. His<br />

plan is to kidnap all of the<br />

children of Redwall Abbey.<br />

Somehow he succeeds, but to<br />

know exactly how, you have<br />

to read the book for yourself.<br />

The parents of the children<br />

of Redwall chase the fox,<br />

who is known as Slagar,<br />

across the country, meeting<br />

many obstacles along the<br />

way. While all of the warriors<br />

are gone, Redwall is attacked<br />

by a pack of crows led by one<br />

very vicious one, Lord<br />

Ironbeak.<br />

"Brian Jacques wrote this<br />

book to thrill his readers.<br />

There is a great mix of<br />

action adventure and some<br />

comedy. Jacques wanted to<br />

tell the readers that anything<br />

could be accomplished<br />

depending on how hard you<br />

try and how much you<br />

believe.<br />

"I like the book because<br />

everything, besides the part<br />

that it was based on animals,<br />

seemed so real. It could have<br />

taken place long ago during<br />

the time of knights and cas-<br />

tles, but the friendships could<br />

be from today. It also had my<br />

favorite combination of<br />

action, adventure, and<br />

humor. It was a truly enjoy-<br />

able story."<br />

Title: The Doll People;<br />

Authors: Ann M. Martin and<br />

Laura Godwin, Genre:fiction<br />

- fantasy, mystery.<br />

Book Review by: Carolyn<br />

C.<br />

"The Doll People is about<br />

a family of dolls. They are<br />

bored all the time because<br />

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they can't get caught talking<br />

by their owner Kate. They<br />

had an Auntie Sarah, but a<br />

long time ago she left the<br />

house and never came back.<br />

They missed her very much.<br />

Then one day they went<br />

searching for Sarah. While<br />

they were searching for<br />

Sarah they met another doll<br />

family named the Funcrafts.<br />

They became close friends.<br />

"Ann M. Martin and Laura<br />

Godwin wanted to tell us to<br />

know that you should never<br />

give up. I think this because<br />

when they couldn't find<br />

Auntie Sarah they didn't give<br />

up. They just kept searching<br />

until they found her. Everyf<br />

they thought it was impossi-<br />

ble to find her, they kept on<br />

looking.<br />

"I liked it because it was<br />

always interesting. It always<br />

kept me guessing. I liked<br />

when the Funcrafts and the<br />

Dolls went all over the house<br />

searching for poor Auntie<br />

Sarah. They had so many<br />

good adventures that they<br />

went on. I wish that I could<br />

go on them too. I loved the<br />

adventures."<br />

Parker Middle<br />

School Improvement<br />

Goals (Reading)<br />

The Parker School<br />

Council, under the direction<br />

of the following parents and<br />

faculty members is guided by<br />

the goals below, according to<br />

the Parker website.<br />

Parents: Stacy Bertocchi<br />

(Grade 6), Sheila Smith<br />

(Grade 7), Kathleen<br />

Gallagher (Grade 7), Brian<br />

Snell (Grade 8), and<br />

Jacqueline Steele (Grade 8.)<br />

Faculty: Kathy Daly, Ellen<br />

Howland, and Amy Ropple<br />

Notes to S-8<br />

Bear Rock<br />

From S-2<br />

ment with Bear Rock Fran-<br />

chise Systems, Inc. to open<br />

a total of ten Bear Rock<br />

Cafes in this particular<br />

area.<br />

The Woburn Bear Rock<br />

Cafe is slated to open in the<br />

fall of 2006.<br />

New menu items such as<br />

SPORTS SHORTS<br />

'MIDDLESEX EAST<br />

SPORTS WEEKLY TRIVIA<br />

In what year were the Coke<br />

bottles added over the Green<br />

Monster at Fenway Park?<br />

Answer appears elsewhere<br />

in this column.<br />

•The following is a list of<br />

athletes from Woburn who<br />

participated in the Bay State<br />

Games<br />

BLACK. ARIELLE<br />

WOBURN 15 F BATON<br />

TWIRLING 9<br />

BLACK. DANIELLE<br />

WOBURN 15 F BATON<br />

TWIRLING 9<br />

BODDAPATI. ARL'N<br />

Pizzetas made on the<br />

restaurant's hand tossed<br />

gourmet flatbread and<br />

open-faced sandwiches are<br />

being added to expand the<br />

Bear Rock Cafe's appeal for<br />

lunch, dinner and after-<br />

noons and evenings within<br />

the fast-casual restaurant<br />

segment.<br />

The original Bear Rock<br />

Cafe opened in October of<br />

1997 in Raleigh, North Car-<br />

olina and has now evolved<br />

into a unique neighborhood<br />

gathering place with loca-<br />

tions in 13 states.<br />

The emerging quick-<br />

casual restaurant is charac-<br />

terized by a distinctive<br />

menu of hand-crafted sand-<br />

wiches, hot and savory<br />

soups, garden fresh salads,<br />

loaded baked potatoes,<br />

oven-fresh breads and an<br />

award-winning children's<br />

menu.<br />

Bear Rock Cafe is also<br />

well-known for catering<br />

trays and boxed lunches for<br />

office or home.<br />

A thriving network of<br />

franchise owners and dedi-<br />

cated staff drive the growth<br />

of the Bear Rock Cafe.<br />

Founded in 1997, the<br />

Bear Rock Cafe has built a<br />

loyal following of cus-<br />

tomers, including in the<br />

Reading area.<br />

For more information on<br />

Bear Rock Cafe, franchis-<br />

ing, to join the online guest<br />

club or to access nutrition-<br />

al information, log onto<br />

www.bearrockcafe.com<br />

LANDSCAPING<br />

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BADMINTON<br />

COUGHLIN. JASON<br />

WOBURN 15 M JUNIORS<br />

BASKETBALL<br />

DAVIS. DON WOBURN<br />

46 M TRACK & FIELD<br />

FRALICK. JOHN<br />

WOBURN _2JL jyi<br />

WRESTLING<br />

INGERSOLL. KYLE<br />

WOBURN 19 M TRACK &<br />

FIELD 14<br />

LEONARD. ALISON<br />

The Cassell Club Intercity<br />

Baseball Team.<br />

•Need some help on this<br />

week's trivia question? The<br />

answer is one of the follow-<br />

ing years: 1997, 1996, 1994 or<br />

1992.<br />

■THE READING<br />

SOFTBALL 12U TEAM, the<br />

"Riptides," traveled to<br />

Danvers this past weekend<br />

for their ASA Summer<br />

Invitational and came home<br />

WOBURN 14 F BATON champions. Saturday was<br />

TWIRLING 8<br />

day of battles against strong<br />

LUONGO. NAPINE pitching. The results were<br />

WOBURN 15 F BATON<br />

TWIRLING 9<br />

some hard-fought wins, over<br />

MOVSESSIAN. AMANDA Beverly antTuanvers sand-<br />

WOBURN 15 F ICE wiched around a loss to the<br />

HOCKEY 9<br />

eventual top seed: Westford.<br />

PRUDDEN. TYLER The wins did get the Riptide<br />

WOBURN 24 M ARCHERY into a second seed and the<br />

SOUSA. RACHEL important first round bye on<br />

WOBURN 16 F ICE Sunday.<br />

HOCKEY 11<br />

Play on Sunday heated up<br />

and so did the Riptide bats.<br />

•The following is a list of The hitting catapulted the<br />

athletes from Wakefield who team to a decisive win<br />

participated in the Bay State against Danvers, and set-up<br />

Games<br />

a rematch with Westford. In<br />

BERRY. JUSTIN<br />

a game that featured several<br />

WAKEFIELD 22 M TRACK<br />

momentum shifts, the<br />

& FIELD<br />

Riptides used their early<br />

KENNY. PATRICK<br />

edge to provide a comfort<br />

WAKEFIELD 24 M TRACK<br />

zone and answered with the .<br />

& FIELD<br />

necessary defensive plays.<br />

With timely hitting coupled<br />

LEMOINE. TODD<br />

with heady base running,<br />

WAKEFIELD 30 M TRACK<br />

they came out on top by a 9-4<br />

& FIELD<br />

score.<br />

PETITm LISA WAKE-<br />

FIELD 16 F ICE HOCKF.V<br />

The Reading Riptide compete<br />

in the MiddleEssex 12A<br />

IL<br />

League and carry a very<br />

QUIRK. REBECCA<br />

respectable 6-2 record into<br />

WAKEFIELD J2_<br />

play this week.<br />

SWIMMING<br />

SMITH,<br />

PAN<br />

WAKEFIELD .15 M<br />

•ANSWER TO THIS<br />

FENCING 9<br />

WEEK'S TRIVIA QUES-<br />

SMITH. DAVE<br />

TION: The Coke bottles were<br />

WAKEFIELD 15_ M<br />

added in 1997..<br />

FENCING 9<br />

•PATRICK DRISCOU.<br />

OF STONEHAM was recent-<br />

ly named Assistant Athletic<br />

Director for Maiden Catholic<br />

High School, Division One<br />

Catholic Conference<br />

League. He is also a member<br />

of the MC baseball and hock-<br />

ey coaching staffs. Driscoll is<br />

an Austin Prep graduate and<br />

was the captain and MVP of<br />

the Assumption College<br />

Greyhounds 2001 team. He is<br />

currently a player-coach for<br />

•DO YOU KNOW SOME-<br />

THING WE DON'T? If you<br />

have information about a<br />

local athlete that you would<br />

like to see appear in this col-<br />

umn, please email it to read-<br />

ingchronicle@comcast.net, h<br />

or mail it to: Paul Feely, ■.-,<br />

Middlesex East Sports. P.O.<br />

Box 240, Reading, Ma., 01867,<br />

or call Paul at 781-944-2200<br />

between 7 am and 3:30 pm,<br />

Monday through Friday, or<br />

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MIODItSbX EAS1 uppeonng ,„ Ou,ly ,«», - Chronicle IReod.na Wobom. Winch.sK,,. ^f^^f' 1<br />

lvnnl,,IH V.lloJ. No Rood.ng Tianscnp,. <strong>Wilmington</strong> * lewl^r, Tc~n C..... Stoneham Indopenden.<br />

SUBURBAN ADVENTURE<br />

CLUB ACTIVITIES<br />

Suburban Adventure Club for<br />

ages late 30s to 60s offers 15+<br />

professionally run events per*<br />

month. Come meet new friends<br />

in a fun, casual atmosphere.<br />

Upcoming activities include:<br />

outdoor volleyball, Tuesdays,<br />

I-ake Quannapowitt, Wakefield,<br />

6 p.m. $5; Day Canoe on Nashua<br />

River, Groton, Sat. 8/19 9:30<br />

a.m. $44; Atomic bowling, Pro<br />

Lanes, N. Reading 7:15 p.m. $25;<br />

Mini Golf and Ice Cream,<br />

Kimballs Westford, Sun 8/20<br />

1:30 p.m. $20; Golf scramble,<br />

Billerica Country Club, Mon.<br />

8/21 5:30 p.m. $30; Labor Day<br />

Weekend in Falmouth on the<br />

Cape, Fri-Mon 9/1-4 $224<br />

includes 4 meals and more, and<br />

much more.<br />

Contact Meg at Suburban<br />

Adventure Club for newsletter/<br />

reservations 978-663-9495 or<br />

www.SuburbanAdventureClub.c<br />

om.<br />

PEABODY MUSEUM<br />

FALL SCHEDULE<br />

The Peabody Museum of<br />

Ethnology and Archaeology at<br />

Harvard University has<br />

announced its fall schedule.<br />

Kicking off a season of excep-<br />

tional exhibits, lectures, and<br />

special events is the Harvard<br />

Museum's Community Day,<br />

Sunday September 17,<br />

All six Harvard Museums<br />

will open to the public for free,<br />

from 1 to 5 p.m. Look for special<br />

events, offers, and programs at<br />

each of the museums.<br />

October brings the now<br />

annual Mesoamerican Weekend<br />

conference October 13 -15. Join<br />

in for an exploration of the<br />

lamed Maya Hieroglyphic<br />

Stairway at Copan, one of the<br />

world's largest archaeological<br />

jigsaw puzzles.<br />

The Peabody's annual cele-<br />

bration of Dia deo los Muertos<br />

(Day of the Dead) in collabora-<br />

tion with the Consulate General<br />

of Mexico in Boston takes place<br />

on November 2 with music, tra-<br />

ditional refreshments and guest<br />

artists from Mexico.<br />

Opening this fall is an exhi-<br />

or a<br />

bition of Michael Rockefeller's<br />

photographs of the Dani of New<br />

Guinea, taken shortly before his<br />

death in 1961. Michael Rocke-<br />

feller: New Guinea Photo-<br />

graphs, 1961 opens November<br />

15.<br />

EVERETT HIGH<br />

'71 REUNION<br />

The Everett High School<br />

Class of 1971 will hold its 35th<br />

Class Reunion on November 15,<br />

Saturday, at the Holiday Inn,<br />

Boston Logan Airport Hotel,<br />

McClellan Highway, Boston.<br />

Come for the 35th Class<br />

Reunioh\ It was a time of bell-<br />

bottom jeans, long hair, short<br />

skirts, fishnet nylons, protests<br />

and lots of fun.<br />

If interested in seeing some<br />

familiar faces and want to rem-<br />

inisce about the good old days<br />

when life was simple and care-<br />

free, contact any of the commit-<br />

tee members for more informa-<br />

tion.<br />

The reunion committee is :<br />

Joanne Alboano 617-389-3271,<br />

Carl Amici 617-304-198^, Charlie<br />

and Camille Peluso 781-938-1402<br />

and Stephanie DePlatzi 617-389-<br />

4865.<br />

2006 TANGLEWOOD<br />

JAZZ FESTIVAL<br />

The Boston Symphony<br />

Orchestra will present its annu-<br />

al Labor Day Weekend<br />

Tanglewood Jazz Festival<br />

September 1 - 3 at the orches-<br />

tra's summer home in the<br />

Berkshire Mountains in Lenox.<br />

Jazz greats highlighting this<br />

year's festival include Dr. John,<br />

Wynton Marsalis, Elvis<br />

Costello, Dave Brubeck, Ann<br />

Hampton Callaway, Irma<br />

Thomas, the Dizzy Gillespie All-<br />

Star Big Band, the Bit Three<br />

Palladium Orchestra, the<br />

Spanish Harlem Orchestra and<br />

Marian McPartland.<br />

In its second year, the popu-<br />

lar Jazz Cafe is an informal<br />

venue for new artist who per-<br />

form before each concert.<br />

Rising stars appearing this<br />

year include the John Stetch<br />

Trio, Rachael Price, the Arren<br />

Wolf Quartet, Taylor Eigsti and<br />

Julian Lage and Sy;ncopation.<br />

RENT-A-TENT<br />

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Many sizes available<br />

CALL 781-933-3268<br />

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Real Wood<br />

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Saturday & Sunday<br />

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No sales tax! Save<br />

5% on everything!<br />

Entertainment Centers<br />

to Bedrooms,<br />

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k" "Subject to MA tax holiday restrictions Details in store Previous sales excluded<br />

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call 781-944-2200<br />

Mom Finishing<br />

Available<br />

or Do-it Yourself-<br />

with our easy<br />

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READING MA<br />

39 Lincoln St.<br />

across from the Train Depot<br />

hood and beverages will be<br />

available in both the Hawthorne<br />

Tent and the Party Tent and<br />

admission is free to the Jazz<br />

Cafe shows.<br />

The 2006 Tanglewood Jazz<br />

Cafe Schedule is as follows:<br />

Friday, Sept. I, 6:30 p.m. John<br />

Stetch Trio; Saturday, Sept 2 at<br />

1 p.m. Taylor Eigsti and Julian<br />

Lage; Saturday, Sept 2 at 6 p.m.<br />

Syncopation; Sunday;<br />

September 3 noon Arren Wolf<br />

Quartet; Sunday, Sept. 3, 6 p.m.<br />

Rachaei Price.<br />

For additional information<br />

"call 413-637-5286.<br />

DAVID JOHNSON fiTII<br />

GOLF TOURNAMENT<br />

The 6th annual David K.<br />

Johnson Golf Tournament will<br />

be held on Monday, August 28th<br />

at the Georgetown Country<br />

Club.<br />

The event generates funds to<br />

assist families affected by<br />

Alzheimer's Disease and other<br />

forms of dimentia. Proceeds<br />

benefit organizations such as<br />

Peter Sanborn I'lace in<br />

Reading.<br />

Registration is at 9:30 pm<br />

with a shotgun start at 10:30<br />

am. A reception tollows golf at<br />

3:00 pm followed by dinner at<br />

5:00 pm.<br />

The cost of golf lunch and<br />

dinner is $175. You can call<br />

Peter Sanborn Place to receive<br />

additional information at 781-<br />

944-1972.<br />

KIDSTOCK IN WAKEFIELD<br />

AUGUST 4 AND 18<br />

Performers with Kidstock<br />

will be performing at the Beebe<br />

<strong>Library</strong> in Wakefield on Friday<br />

August 18. All performances,<br />

which will begin at 10:30 a.m.,<br />

will be held inside Beebe<br />

library's Lecture Hall.<br />

Due to the limited space<br />

combined with the popularity of<br />

these shows, carriages will not<br />

be permitted inside the Lecture<br />

Hall during these two different<br />

productions, which are<br />

designed for children ages three<br />

and older.<br />

FALL ADULT-ONLY<br />

DUDE RANCHES<br />

Guest ranches are ever pop-<br />

ular as family vacation destina-<br />

tions, but members of the Dude<br />

Ranchers' Association recoe-<br />

nize that adults also value time<br />

to themselves.<br />

As a result, more and more<br />

guest ranches are offering spe-<br />

cial adult-only programs, says<br />

Colleen Hodson, executive<br />

director of the Dude Ranchers'<br />

Association in Cody, Wyoming.<br />

"At least forty percent of our<br />

member ranches set aside the<br />

time for adults," Hodson says.<br />

"It's definitely a growing trend<br />

in ranch vacations."<br />

Some ranches set aside a<br />

month, others a week and most<br />

all are held in the spring or fall.<br />

"Fall is an ideal time to visit,"<br />

Hodson says. "Not only to take<br />

in the season's colors, but<br />

because the summer crowds are<br />

gone."<br />

/<br />

For a complete listing of<br />

ranches that offer adult-only<br />

programs or to request a free<br />

catalog, call 866-399-2339, e-mail<br />

info@dude ranch.org or visit<br />

www.dude ranch.org.<br />

NORTHEAST PAC PLANS<br />

EXCITING FUNDRAISER<br />

The Northeast Parent<br />

Advisory Council is making<br />

plans for an exciting 2007 schol-<br />

arship fundraiser. Each year,<br />

several students are presented<br />

financial awards as a result of<br />

the fundraising efforts of the<br />

PAC. This year, alone, over<br />

$11,000 was given to graduating<br />

seniors.<br />

Next year's event will con-<br />

sist of a "taster's delight" food<br />

court and creative arts festival<br />

for the whole family. The fol-<br />

lowing vendors will include:<br />

crafters, food/restaurant estab-<br />

lishments, sports collectors.<br />

Accomplished performers<br />

will be on hand to entertain<br />

patrons. They will include local<br />

talents along with surprise<br />

guests.<br />

Vendors and performers who<br />

would like further information<br />

call 781-246-0810, x 1643 or email<br />

gmezikofsky^northeast.tec.ma<br />

.as,<br />

50% OFF ON<br />

DOWN EASTER<br />

The North Suburban<br />

Chamber of Commerce<br />

Summer Getaway to Main will<br />

travel on Amtrak s Downeaster<br />

to Portland, Old Orchard<br />

Beach, Saco or Wells and enjoy<br />

everything Main from historic<br />

lighthouses to the beautiful<br />

Casco Bay.<br />

Receive 50% off companion<br />

fare with purchase of one regu-<br />

lar full fare ticket when travel-<br />

ing on the Downeaster.<br />

Valid on trains 681 and 686<br />

between any city pair Monday<br />

through Thursday only. This<br />

offer is valid for sale and travel<br />

through August 29. Use promo-<br />

tion code v540. Other restric-<br />

tions. Call 1-800-usa-rail or visit<br />

www.amtrackdowneaster.com.<br />

VOLUNTEER WITH<br />

HOMELESS CHILDREN<br />

Horizons for Homeless<br />

Children is seeking fun-loving,<br />

dependable people to play and<br />

develop relationships with chil-<br />

dren living in family homeless<br />

shelters in northeastern<br />

Massachusetts.<br />

A commitment of one 2-hour<br />

shift per week is required for at<br />

least 6 months. The next train-<br />

ing will be held on Tuesday,<br />

August 1 and Wednesday,<br />

August 2 from 6 to 9 p.m.<br />

For more information about<br />

WEDNESDAY/THURSDAY. AUGUST 9, 10, 2006-PAGE S-5<br />

the program, or to register for a<br />

training visit www.horizons-<br />

Iorhomelesschildren.org or call<br />

978-557-2182.<br />

LIFE LONGEVITY<br />

AND GENES<br />

Boston University Medical<br />

Center researchers are con-<br />

ducting a study on the roles<br />

that genes and other family-<br />

related factors might play in<br />

exceptional longevity among<br />

family members.<br />

Researchers are seeking<br />

families with at least two living<br />

members aged 90 or older and<br />

their living children who reside<br />

in Massachusetts and neighbor-<br />

ing parts of New Hampshire,<br />

Maine, Connectieut and Rhode<br />

Island.<br />

Trained clinical staff mem-<br />

bers will meet with study par-<br />

ticipants in their homes to ask<br />

questions about their family<br />

and health history and to con-<br />

duct some physical assess-<br />

ments. Study participants will<br />

also be asked for a small blood<br />

sample to obtain genetic infor-<br />

mation<br />

Interested parties should<br />

call BUMC's Long Life Family<br />

Study recruitment office toll<br />

free at 1-888-333-6327. or visit<br />

www.bumc.bu.edu/centenarian.<br />

PHILLIPS ACADEMY<br />

SUMMER INTERVIEWS<br />

Phillips Academy is conduct-<br />

ing interviews now through<br />

September 4 for local students<br />

planning to apply for admission<br />

to the 2007-08 school year. Each<br />

application to Phillips Academy<br />

is required to have a personal<br />

interview as part of the admis-<br />

sion process.<br />

In response to an unprece-<br />

dented demand last year for fall<br />

interviews, the Office of<br />

Admission is encouraging local<br />

families to take advantage of<br />

their proximity to Phillips<br />

Academy and come to campus<br />

during the summer for an inter-<br />

view.<br />

Interviews and student-guid-<br />

ed tours are being offered from<br />

9 a.m. to 2 p.m. Monday and<br />

Friday, and from 9 - 11 a.m.<br />

Tuesday, Wednesday and<br />

Thursday. These visits provide<br />

time to learn about the school<br />

and to speak with admission<br />

counselors and student tour<br />

guides.<br />

All summer tour guides are<br />

current day students who are<br />

eager to share their pers|x.'c-<br />

tives and experiences. The<br />

Office of Admission will host<br />

two open houses (one late fall,<br />

the other in mid-January 2007)<br />

so local families can visit while<br />

school is in session.<br />

To schedule an intervicKv and<br />

tour, please call the Phillips<br />

Academy Office of Admission at<br />

978-749-4053.<br />

PEABODY MUSEUM<br />

UPCOMING EXHIBITIONS<br />

New and upcoming exhibi-<br />

tions at the-Peabody Essex<br />

Museum include "Of Gods and<br />

Mortals, Traditional Art from<br />

India" ongoing<br />

In India, art plays an inte-<br />

gral role in the structure of<br />

daily life. Paintings, sculpture,<br />

textiles and other art forms are<br />

used in religious practices and<br />

to express prestige and social<br />

position.<br />

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l..|L.p II ■ ■ —w« mmm ■""^^■"^•■■■•^" mmmmmmmmmm<br />

1<br />

PAGE S-6 WEDNESDAY/THURSDAY AUGUST 9, 10 2006<br />

Spinnertainment<br />

From S-1<br />

make your own Sno Cone and<br />

"much, much more!"<br />

There is also the concourse<br />

at the top of the stands, with<br />

food concessions, and on any<br />

given night, balloon artists,<br />

stilt walkers, karaoke, an ani-<br />

mal naturalist, face painter,<br />

caricaturist and other activi-<br />

ties. When entering the park,<br />

there is a custom built model<br />

of the most famous<br />

Volkswagen of all, "Herbie the<br />

Love Bug," and during the<br />

game activities such as t-shirt<br />

tosses and soft baseball tosses,<br />

take place.<br />

*' Of course there is the ever<br />

growing popularity of the<br />

team's three mascots. The<br />

Spinners became proud par-<br />

ents of Canaligator on January<br />

19, 1996. He was born in the<br />

Canals of Lowell and got his<br />

name from the nearly 6-miles<br />

of canals in the city.<br />

According to legend, after just<br />

a few days in the canals,<br />

Canaligator crawled up the<br />

banks and over to LeLacheur<br />

Park where he has been ever<br />

since. During the off-season,<br />

Canaligator can be seen<br />

throughout the Merrimack<br />

Valley. He frequently visits<br />

schools, hospitals, day care<br />

centers and more.<br />

Hearing of the friendly con-<br />

fines of LeLacheur Park our<br />

second mascot, Allie-GATOR,<br />

joined the family on July 8,<br />

1999. She had heard of the<br />

great fun at Spinners games<br />

and decided to come up from<br />

the canals of lawell herself.<br />

She and her sidekick<br />

Canaligator, thrive in enter-<br />

taining fans young and old all<br />

season long. In the off-season<br />

she mysteriously disappears.<br />

We think she has a winter<br />

home in Florida. Rest assured<br />

come opening night she will be<br />

back in town and ready to per-<br />

form.<br />

The pair (in real life Dracut<br />

residents Arty Notini (a senior<br />

level high school student) and<br />

Mareena Sullivan (a student at<br />

Fitchburg State College) were<br />

married in an off season cere-<br />

mony this year and on opening<br />

day brought forth their child<br />

Millie Gator (played by three<br />

Lowell residents) named for<br />

the former mills around Lowell.<br />

Bawmann noted that mixed<br />

in with all of this, something is<br />

given away at every game.<br />

These good be items such as the<br />

aforementioned Papelbon bob-<br />

ble-head doll, or an item such<br />

as the finely detailed wood<br />

modeT of Lowell's <strong>Memorial</strong><br />

Stadium, the first home of the<br />

Spinners when they came her<br />

from Utica, New York in 19%.<br />

The bobble-heads are a pop-<br />

ular give-away. In fact a Jack<br />

Kerouac bobble-head, celebrat-<br />

ing the famous author who was<br />

from Lowell, was so popular a<br />

copy was sent to the Baseball<br />

Hall of Fame in Cooperstown,<br />

New York and is the first pro-<br />

motional item to be on perma-<br />

nent display in that institution.<br />

Bawmann said, "We devel-<br />

oped the Papelbon bobble-head<br />

last year, not knowing he would<br />

be a rookie success. We lucked<br />

out."<br />

In 2001, the team was award-<br />

ed the Larry McPhail Award for<br />

Best Promotions in Minor<br />

League Baseball. Bawmann has<br />

a goal of being this year, to be<br />

the first team to win the award<br />

a second time.<br />

He is looking at the success<br />

of such activities as "Birth<br />

Night" when any pregnant<br />

women were invited to come to<br />

the game. The first one to give<br />

With our thanks to our Military and Coast Guard families, a 50% Reduction<br />

in all fees for patients with a parent deployed in a combat zone.<br />

Wow! Sara thanks for your cooperation. Your braces<br />

were on for only 12 months'. Thanks for your help.<br />

Call Susan, office manager, at 781-944-6761<br />

for a complimentary orthodontic consultation.<br />

Find us at: www.gtoucesterorthodontics.com<br />

J.H.AhlinDDS<br />

ASSOCIATES IN FAMILY DENTISTRY<br />

198 ASH STREET, READING, MA 01867<br />

You'll<br />

SAVI<br />

up tog<br />

Ourregi<br />

LOW<br />

Jesse says "Thanks,<br />

Dr. Ahlin, for straightening<br />

and bleaching my teeth.<br />

They look great and help<br />

me feel terrific about myself!"<br />

birth closest to the date of the<br />

game was awarded a year's<br />

worth of baby supplies.<br />

There is also the continued<br />

success of the Yankee<br />

Elimination. Bawmann said<br />

the promotion started three<br />

years ago when it was decided<br />

to attempt to get any Little<br />

League team in the area using<br />

the name Yankees to change it<br />

to Spinners. Those that agreed<br />

were given free uniforms and<br />

this year the old uniforms and<br />

equipment was collected dur-<br />

ing an off-season promotion<br />

and sent to needy teams in the<br />

New York area.<br />

Bawmann noted that when<br />

the promotion first started,<br />

three Little League teams par-<br />

ticipated, Since ESPN and<br />

CNN picked up the story, the<br />

number of teams participating<br />

has grown to 34.<br />

Another facet to the team's<br />

financial success, according to<br />

Bawmann, is its Major League<br />

affiliate, which, of course is the<br />

Boston Red Sox.<br />

"We are fortunate that they<br />

are so close we can get the<br />

rehab players," Bawmann said.<br />

This year alone relief pitch-<br />

er Keith Fouke and left fielder<br />

Willie Moe Pena have had<br />

rehabilitation stints with the<br />

Spinners. In the past players<br />

MIDDLESEX EAST appearing In Dally Time* - Chronicle (Reading. Woburn, Wlncheelet. Burlington, Wakelleld). J<br />

Lynnlleld Villager, No. Reading Transcript, <strong>Wilmington</strong> « Tewkabury Town Crier. Stoneham Independent<br />

such as Ramon Martinez made<br />

the short trip to Lowell as did<br />

Brett Saberhagen, and Rich "El<br />

Guape" Garces.<br />

Aside from Papelbon, Kevin<br />

Youklis, Shea Hillenbrand, St<br />

Louis Cardinal David Eckstein<br />

and Abe Alvarez have all start-<br />

ed as Spinner's. Hillenbrand<br />

(1996) was the first former<br />

Spinner to be a Major League<br />

All-Star (2002); Eckstein was<br />

the first Spinner to make the<br />

World Series when his then<br />

team, the Los Angeles Angels<br />

won it all; Youkilis was the sec-<br />

ond player to take home a<br />

World Series ring; and Alvarez<br />

played a spot game with the<br />

Sox earning him a ring.<br />

Bawmann lauded the team's<br />

owners, Drew and Joann Weber,<br />

for making it all possible. The<br />

Red Sox fund the players'<br />

salaries and benefits, but it is<br />

up to the Spinners to provide<br />

the venue and provide the day-<br />

today operations.<br />

"The Red Sox have given us<br />

competitive teams," Bawmann<br />

said, "which has allowed us to<br />

provide an affordable enter-<br />

tainment venue."<br />

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(<br />

ers range in age from high<br />

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olds. According to the rules,<br />

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allowed to have more than 3<br />

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The players' age is determined<br />

by the June 5th deadline. No<br />

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players on their active list that<br />

have 4 or more years of prior<br />

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July 1st of each year, all cluljs<br />

must have at least 10 pitchers"<br />

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tory on their website<br />

(www.lowellspinners.conl)<br />

"The Spinners have enjoyed 10<br />

successful seasons in I-owell,<br />

as a Class A Affiliate of the<br />

Boston Red Sox. The present<br />

owners, Drew and Joarin<br />

Weber, have owned the team<br />

since 1997.<br />

"The first year of Spinners<br />

baseball at Alumni field in 1996<br />

drew 95,986 fans. Attendance<br />

increased to 106,862 during the<br />

Webers' first year with the<br />

team in 1997.<br />

"In 1998, the Spinners<br />

moved into the brand Tieyv<br />

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which seats 4,767 and has a<br />

standing room capacity of<br />

5,000. Attendance rose to<br />

174,020 fans with 24 sell-outs.<br />

"In 1999, the Spinners sold<br />

out 34 of 38 games, drawing a 1<br />

team record 180.077 fans. The<br />

Spinners filled Ielxichcur Park<br />

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the Spinners second among the<br />

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MIDDLESEX tASI appearing in Daily Times - Chronicle (Reading Woburn, Wmchesfer. Burlington, Wukefield)<br />

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attached garage. Beautifully updat-<br />

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ceramic tile. Finished lower level<br />

features fireplace, wet bar and floor<br />

with granite. Summer paradise in<br />

outstanding yard with in-ground<br />

pool and cabana. $629,900<br />

New Listing! Chapman Park<br />

Garrison Colonial! 8 rooms, 4 bed-<br />

rooms, 2 baths and 1 car attached<br />

garage. This home offers new C/A,<br />

hardwood and spacious newer sec-<br />

ond floor addition (2004). Other<br />

updates include newer boiler and<br />

new roof. Enjoy the outdoors in love-<br />

ly yard with beautiful pond views.<br />

$444,900<br />

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UJj<br />

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-<br />

I<br />

Real Estate Transfers<br />

-BURLINGTON-<br />

Mcdian Price: $400,000<br />

21 ALCINE LANE was sold to Sharla Mcauliffe and Ahsan<br />

Sethi by Michael Ferrick Jr. and Nancy Ferrick for $430,000.<br />

22 CHANDLER ROAD was sold to Kerry and William Ross by<br />

Patrick Connolly for $740,000.<br />

5 MYRNA STREET was sold to Elizabeth Gergely-Retey and<br />

Jeff Cozzaglio by Carl and Valerie Humphreys for $465,000.<br />

14 WINMERE AVENUE was sold to Alana and Christopher<br />

Carroll by Michelle and Sean Kane for $370,000.<br />

-LYNNFIELD-<br />

Median Price: $510,000<br />

600 CHESTNUT STREET was sold to Steven and Maria Piazza<br />

by Chestnut Street Dev. LLC for $1,200,000.<br />

162 ESSEX STREET was sold to James Wallace by Deborah<br />

and John McGonnell for $535,000.<br />

4 LAUREL ROAD was sold to Kevin and Vasilia Kelly by Debo-<br />

rah Bryant for $470,000.<br />

176 LOCKSLEY ROAD was sold to Deborah Bryant-Supino and<br />

Mark Supino by Judith Melchionda and Randolph Cotter for<br />

$825,500.<br />

977 MAIN STREET was sold to Maria Rodriguez by Peggy<br />

Pratt-Calle for $600,000.<br />

91 OAK RIDGE TERRACE was sold to Fillings Pond LLC by<br />

Aragorn Dev. LLC for $1,440,000.<br />

PONDVIEW LANE MULTI was sold to Fillings Pond LLC by<br />

Aragorn Dev. LLC for $1,440,000.<br />

17 TOWNSEND ROAD was sold to Steven and Lisa Connolly by<br />

Maria Zuccoli for $790,000.<br />

-NORTH READING-<br />

Median Price: $390,500<br />

3 ADRIAN DRIVE was sold to Joanne Lehner and Jonathan<br />

Belinowiz by Carolyn and Martin Tucker for $903,000.<br />

1 BERRIDGE WAY was sold to Lynne Upton by Christine and<br />

Dennis Cataldo for $920,000.<br />

12B CHESTER ROAD was sold to Susan Sault by Gregory and<br />

Marie Gagne for $334,900.<br />

71 CHESTNUT STREET was sold to Julie and Robert Carpen-<br />

ter by Jeffrey and Patricia Neals for $735,000.<br />

122. ELM STREET was sold to Linda Hassapis by Smith Sons<br />

o^fi<br />

Transfers to S-9<br />

Young Colonial featuring 9 rms, 4<br />

bedrms, 2.5 baths, fireplaced living<br />

rm & more. Situated on a large cor-<br />

ner lot w/a heated inground pool.<br />

Well located brick office building.<br />

Separate utilities. Public parking<br />

lot to rear.<br />

35 Maven Street, Reading<br />

www . carlsonre. com<br />

WEDNESDAY/THURSDAY. AUGUST 9,10, 2006-PAGE S-7<br />

Do you<br />

grill out \<br />

safely?<br />

Barbecueing or grilling<br />

outdoors this summer tops<br />

the list of fun ways for fami-<br />

lies to eat dinner together,<br />

according to a survey from<br />

the Propane Education and<br />

Research Council.<br />

And almost two-thirds of<br />

Americans say that a barbe-<br />

cue or cookout is their<br />

favorite way to entertain - or<br />

be entertained - during the<br />

summer months.<br />

But only one in three<br />

adults say they know enough<br />

about basic grilling safety<br />

tips. To help the 74.million<br />

"barbecue households" in the<br />

United States enjoy a safe<br />

and healthy summer season,<br />

the propane industry teamed<br />

up with best-selling author<br />

and griling expert Steven<br />

Raichlen to release its top-ten<br />

tips on grilling safely with<br />

propane gas.<br />

• When the cylinder is<br />

refilled, have the supplier<br />

check for dents, damage, rust<br />

or leaks.<br />

• After filling or exchang-<br />

ing, take the cylinder home<br />

immediately. Keep the vehi-<br />

cle ventilated and the cylin-<br />

der valve closed and capped.<br />

• Always use or store cylin-<br />

ders outdoors in an upright<br />

(vertical) position. Do not<br />

use, store or transport cylirr-<br />

Grill to S-8<br />

CENTURY 21 GR ASSOCIATES<br />

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Great location, 9 rm, 4 bedrm, 2.5<br />

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<strong>Wilmington</strong>! This 3 bdrm Ranch » .1 detached garage is big-<br />

ger than it looks. Cabinet packed oak kitchen w/skylights<br />

leads out to large deck, nice sized yard A storage shed,<br />

newer tilt-in insulated windows. Easy access Rte 93. shops A<br />

train. All this A low taxes<br />

READING $399,000 - I inl.111- include newer kitchen, bath.<br />

Elumbing. heating system, hoi water healer and windows. Great<br />

■1 and private yard. Bring your tosmctk ideas!!!<br />

STONEHAM $499,900 - New listing! A true move-in prop-<br />

erty! Many updates within Z years, hdwd firs, marble<br />

entry, kit has some updates, painted Cabinets, tile fir A a<br />

new range. 1 new baths w/top of the line fixtures, new oil<br />

tired heat sys, lower level family rm remiHleled. exterior<br />

p.iim. enclosed sun rm w/heat zone. !>on'l miss this one'<br />

WOBt RN *' 33,000 - Spacious (1 year young 1 bdrm. mas<br />

(er bdrm w full hath. 3* baths A a I car garage ( olinii.il'<br />

Open airy kitchen, cathedral ceiling, family rm w gas fire<br />

Elace open to large deck for summer enjoyment. 1st fir<br />

lundry rm. hdwd firs, C/A. Walk up to finished 3rd fir.<br />

add 139i MJ ft. finished area in basement w full bath A<br />

rec space home theater.<br />

For GMAC Mortgage Services Ask for Mike Quinn<br />

READING $319,900 - Colonial tucked away in a private setting<br />

yet close to highway, schools A shops. Perfect starter or<br />

condo alternative. Relax on the 3-season porch or Trex deck<br />

by the pool or the gas fireplace » marble surround in the liv-<br />

ing rm. Natural woodwork A hdwd firs, eat in kitchen, over<br />

sized 2 car garage A a fenced yard for your pets.<br />

STONEHAM $439,900 - /.« AH Quality remodeled open con-<br />

cept for casual living, lower level leads to in-law au pair, has<br />

new kitchen. 31 fl open rm 1 JTI be divided for specific living .<br />

areas. Everything else is done roof, plumbing, electric, hydro<br />

heating system. In .ground guniie pool, landscaping is done,<br />

move in A enjoy your summer!<br />

STONEHAM sS4$.000 - Charming H rm Victorian w many<br />

updates. Interesting details w high ceilings, recessed<br />

lighting A retinished hdwd firs. Enjoy the comforts of a<br />

new home w a new furnace, new windows A central air. ■<br />

Enjoy all Ibis on the dead end street on the Mclrosc,'<br />

stoneham line.<br />

READING $379,900 - lovely Ranch In Birch Meadow,<br />

school district! This one-owner home boasts 3 bedrooms. ■<br />

all hardwood floors, fireplaced living room, built in china<br />

cabinet A lilt-In windows. Refrigerator, washer, dryer,<br />

included. Needs some updating but great opportunity to<br />

own in Reading.


h.<br />

■ ■ ■ "■* mm^^mm mmmmm^Kmmmmmmmmmmmmmm<br />

PAGE S-8-WEDNESDAY/THURSDAY. AUGUST 9, 10, 2006<br />

Movies<br />

from S-2<br />

"Smith has also matured.<br />

In "Clerks II," he shows he<br />

has figured out how to use<br />

the camera to tell stories.<br />

And he has created a charac-<br />

ter, a restaurant manager<br />

played by Rosario Dawson,<br />

who fits into the comic book<br />

shop-obsessive world of<br />

Randal and Dante but who<br />

also seems like she hasn't<br />

spent her entire life in her<br />

parents' basement, hunched<br />

over a television with the col-<br />

lector's edition of "Lord of<br />

the Rings" playing on a per-<br />

manent loop.<br />

Dawson broadens the<br />

appeal of the profane "Clerks<br />

II" beyond its obvious fan<br />

base because she makes the<br />

bestiality jokes seem oddly<br />

sweet. She is smart, funny<br />

and all but irresistible here.<br />

In fact, there's a flirty scene<br />

with her dancing to the<br />

Jacksons' "ABC" on a<br />

rooftop that I suspect pos-<br />

sesses the magical power to<br />

make anyone whd watches it<br />

fall in love with her.<br />

"LITTLE MAN"<br />

GRADE: **<br />

The idea of a baby beating<br />

up a grown-up is funny, and<br />

from this idea comes "Little<br />

Man," a comedy entirely<br />

centered on a shrunken ver-<br />

sion of Marlon Wayans' head<br />

He, from the neck up, plays a<br />

2-foot-6 con named Calvin<br />

Sims, who masquerades as<br />

an abandoned baby in order<br />

to infiltrate the home of a<br />

yuppie couple (Shawn<br />

Wayans, Kerry Washington)<br />

to steal back an enormous<br />

diamond.<br />

Technically it's an impres<br />

she feat: Wavans' head - in a<br />

ruffly baby bonnet - is super-<br />

imposed onto the body of a<br />

child actor. Dressed in footed<br />

pajamas and pastel sweaters,<br />

he's still a tough guy (his<br />

would-be parents are puzzled<br />

as to why their baby has tat-<br />

toos), and it's occasionally a<br />

decent sight gag to see this<br />

tiny figure mix it up with the<br />

various bad guys chasing the<br />

diamond.<br />

But "Little Man" quickly<br />

sags like a loaded diaper.<br />

The Wayans brothers (the<br />

movie was directed by<br />

Keenen Ivory Wayans, and<br />

written by Keenen, Marlon<br />

and Shawni fill the empty<br />

spaces with breast-feeding<br />

jokes, diaper jokes, pointless<br />

car chases. Buried under all<br />

this is a rather sweet story<br />

about families, but it's hard<br />

to see it amongst all the<br />

tastelessness.<br />

"Little Man" has little wit;<br />

it's good for a few giggles but<br />

will be quickly forgotten.<br />

"PIRATES OF THE<br />

CARIBBEAN: DEAD<br />

MAN'S CHEST"<br />

GRADE: ****<br />

"Pirates of the Caribbean:<br />

Dead Man's Chest," is the<br />

swashbuckling sequel to<br />

2003's "Pirates of the<br />

Caribbean: The Curse of the<br />

Black Pearl," with a third<br />

film will set sail next year.<br />

Director Gore Verbinski<br />

has spun seaworthy tale on<br />

this voyage Summer movie<br />

audiences, "Dead Man's<br />

Grtuv* NORTHSHORE/CITIWIDE<br />

STONEHAM $389,900<br />

Churning Coloniil! 3 bedrooms.<br />

2 lull baths beautiful spacious<br />

kitchen, enclosed front porch &<br />

many updates. Colonial Park area<br />

of town<br />

781-942-2199<br />

BURLINGTON $599,900<br />

New Construction 4 bedroom<br />

Colonial 1 . Hardwood in dining<br />

room, kitchen, foyer & stairs, for-<br />

mal dining room, gas tireplaced<br />

family room C/A. 2 car garage,<br />

deck & more<br />

781-249-7412<br />

MKEFIELD $235,000<br />

immaculate top floor unit, parquet<br />

floors & Berber carpet, deck off<br />

living room, fee includes: heal &<br />

not water Close to trams, stores &<br />

Lake.<br />

617-512-4552<br />

348 MAIN ST.,<br />

READING, MASS.<br />

21 Albion St.,<br />

WAKEFIELD, MA<br />

621 Main St.,<br />

WOBURN. MA<br />

271 Main St.,<br />

STONEHAM<br />

Reading<br />

(78D-942-2199<br />

www.c21northshore.com<br />

READIHG $619,900<br />

Wontterlul family neighborhood!<br />

Beautifully updated Cape. 3 bed-<br />

rooms. 3.5 baths, finished base-<br />

ment and hardwood floors.<br />

7B1-942-2199<br />

TEWKSBURY $379,900<br />

Garrison/Colonial/Slib! Built in<br />

1983 with over 70,000 in renova-<br />

tions past 5 years. 1 acre lot with<br />

over 1700 sq ft. of living space<br />

1-978-774-2770<br />

NO. READING $429,900<br />

A Great Place to Enjoy Lite'! 2<br />

bedrooms. 2.5 baths. 2 car garage,<br />

end unit townhouse. beautiful golf<br />

course views!<br />

781-942-2199<br />

READING $379,900<br />

Fantastic Starter House!<br />

Great neighborhood, plenty ol<br />

room to expand, hardwood<br />

floors throughout. This great<br />

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781-942-2199<br />

BURLINGTON $469,900<br />

Oversiied 5 bedroom Cape!!<br />

Desuabie Fox Hill area, sunroom<br />

and attached garage. 2 bedroom<br />

m-law potential, large level lot<br />

781-272-1515<br />

NO. READING $395,000<br />

New Price! Open House 8/13,<br />

1-3 pm, 4 Jenkins Way<br />

6* room Ranch, finished lower<br />

level, almost acre yard with<br />

pool, family room with wet bar.<br />

Estate Corp.<br />

781-944-7820<br />

781-246-1546<br />

781-935-1110<br />

781 -438-4676<br />

978-744-2600<br />

Burlington<br />

(7811-272-1515<br />

Formerly Northwest Tabaldi<br />

www. c21 citiwide. com<br />

READING $369,900<br />

4 bedroom. 1.5 bath, close to<br />

tram. Barrows School detached<br />

garage, nice lot.<br />

781-942-2199<br />

BILLERICA $464,900<br />

Two 3-bedroom units with hard-<br />

wood, duplex style home, firished<br />

basement, large deck, largo yard<br />

potential condo conversion<br />

781-272-1515<br />

READING $259,900<br />

Reai nice unit with open concept,<br />

kitchen opens to living rm, granite<br />

countertops. stainless steel appli-<br />

ances, original hardwood doors,<br />

nice fenced in yard.<br />

— Lunches & More! —<br />

Reading Station Coffee Depot<br />

32 Lincoln St., Reading<br />

Now Open 6 am to 4 pm<br />

781-942-2199<br />

1st Act til new price! Ready for occupant v<br />

with new paint and carpel this 4 mom, I<br />

bedroom Condominium has an updated<br />

hath, low condo Ice and deeded parkin);<br />

Central A/C. Walk to center and restaurants<br />

Grill From S-7<br />

ders near high temperatures<br />

(this includes storing spare<br />

cylinders near the grill.)<br />

• Never leave the grill<br />

unattended. Always follow the<br />

grill manufacturer's instruc-<br />

tions on lighting the grill and<br />

make sure the grill top is<br />

open when attempting to<br />

light the grill.<br />

• Before connecting or<br />

lighting a propane gas grill,<br />

use a leak-detection solution<br />

to check connections for<br />

tightness. Do not use matches<br />

or lighters to check for leaks.<br />

• If you suspect a gas leak<br />

and are able to safely turn off<br />

the gas supply valve, do so<br />

immediately and call the fire<br />

department.<br />

• Do not allow children to<br />

tamper or play with the cylin-<br />

der or grill.<br />

Chest" is truly worthy of<br />

your doubloons and galleons<br />

and pieces of eight.<br />

It's that tawdry buccaneer<br />

Johnny Depp who'll have you<br />

pounding your peg leg on the<br />

theater floor in salute.<br />

Swaying around in a constant<br />

state of controlled bewilder-<br />

ment, three sheets into the<br />

wind, his turn as Sparrow is<br />

the prize of the seven seas,<br />

equal if not superior to the<br />

performance that won him<br />

an<br />

Oscar nomination in the<br />

first tilm. Depp is the center<br />

of the mayhem, and its the<br />

other aspects of the specta-<br />

cle that circle him like<br />

sharks.<br />

-■-" -■-," a- —•■■V '■■■-■ ■ "I"*""* ""•'"■ «"•"•., «>. «•""• ••-■•<br />

lynnUld Vilkitjcr. No Rouclioa franKr.pt. <strong>Wilmington</strong> & Tewklbury Town Crief, Slonenom Independent<br />

Maureen Giuliano<br />

Broker/Owner<br />

GRI, CBR<br />

(617) 281-4615<br />

• Do not smoke while han-<br />

dling a propane cylinder.<br />

• Never pour an accelerant<br />

such as lighter fluid or gaso-<br />

line on the grill,<br />

• When not in use, grill<br />

burner controls should be<br />

turned off and the cylinder<br />

valve should be closed.<br />

Interest in grilling is sky-<br />

rocketing, according to<br />

Raichlen, author of The<br />

Barbecue Bible and the just-<br />

released Raichlin on Ribs.<br />

"Given the large numbers<br />

of grillers in this country, it is<br />

imperative that safe grilling<br />

tips are made available and<br />

more importantly, followed.<br />

For more information,<br />

visit www.usepropane.com<br />

Notes<br />

From S-4<br />

Principal: Linda Darisse<br />

Goal One: The school<br />

council will provide leader-<br />

ship and support as the<br />

Parker community transi-<br />

tions to new leadership.<br />

Rationale: Parker will have a<br />

new principal .... This will<br />

require adjustments on the<br />

part of everyone - staff, stu-<br />

dents, parents and the new<br />

principal. The school council<br />

will work collaboratively<br />

with staff and parents to<br />

facilitate the transfer in lead-<br />

ership.<br />

Goal Two: To enhance<br />

home-school communication.<br />

Rationale: Effective commu-<br />

nication between home and<br />

school is essential to serving<br />

a child's educational, social,<br />

and emotional needs.<br />

Goal Three: To continue<br />

providing the students with<br />

CLASSIFIED<br />

N. Reading, MA $699,900 N. Reading, MA $539,000<br />

Tewksbury, MA $429,900 Andover, MA $199,900<br />

the necessary skills and<br />

strategies to master the<br />

material they will be learn-<br />

ing and to demonstrate that'<br />

mastery on tests, specifically<br />

the MCAS and other stan-<br />

dardized measures.<br />

Rationale: Parker Middle<br />

School continues to achieve<br />

superior results on the MCAS<br />

and standardized tests. This<br />

goal should continue to be a<br />

school-wide effort and should<br />

be embraced by as many<br />

areas as possible.<br />

Goal Four: To examine the<br />

practices that help define the<br />

climate and culture of the<br />

Parker Middle School. Areas<br />

to be examined include secu-<br />

rity procedures, community<br />

service, dress code, progress<br />

reports, and the teacher/par-<br />

ent partnership. Rationale:<br />

The school practices that are<br />

already in place must be con-<br />

stantly reassessed so that<br />

they align with the goals of<br />

the school. The areas to be<br />

examined go a long way in<br />

shaping the academic as well<br />

as the social experience of<br />

middle school students. This<br />

examination of our practices'<br />

will ensure the continued<br />

quality experience of Parker<br />

students.<br />

// you'd like to read<br />

about your favorite school,<br />

student or teacher in<br />

"School Notes," please send<br />

school newsletters and<br />

other relevant information<br />

to Phyllis Nissen, "School<br />

Notes," Middlesex East<br />

Supplement, Box 240,<br />

Reading, MA 01867 or to<br />

schooltowns@comcast.net.<br />

We welcome student writ:<br />

ing.<br />

V.<br />

J<br />

U4 Park Street, North Reading, MA 01864<br />

Reading, MA $399,900<br />

What's your<br />

home worth?<br />

For a FREE<br />

Market Analysis<br />

Give us a Call!<br />

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Are you looking for a Buyers Agent? Give us a call! (978) 664-0075<br />

Spacious end unit Ibwnhouse. newly<br />

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woods Move in condition. Complex has<br />

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1<br />

Opportunity ttiJjve on Arlington Itoad in<br />

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Deeded parking. Condo fee includes<br />

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t WAKEFIELD $544,900 WOBURN $459,900 WAKEFIELD $499,500 READING $479,900 READING $349,900 NO. READING $379,900 s<br />

Wonderful rare Creek Revival architec<br />

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Move in for Ihe School Year' 3 bedroom.<br />

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S READING $399,900 WAKEFIELD $439,900 READING $439,900 WAKEFIELD $599,900 READING $609,900 WAKEFIELD $599,900 |<br />

Great location for this well maintained<br />

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MIDDItStX EAST o^jeuuMg in Do.ly rimes Chronicle (Reading. VVobutn Winchester. Burlington, Wakolieldl<br />

lynnhcld Village. No Reodinq fioflscript. Wilm.iuilon 8. Towksbu-y town O or Stonohom InHorsonilent<br />

Transfers from S-7<br />

Plumbing and Heating for $(187,500.<br />

40 MAIN STREET U:H was sold to Mark Harrison and Ste-<br />

fanie Hallway-by Lisa Broderick and Lisa Robilaille for $200,000.<br />

38 NORTH STREET was sold to Tower Homes Inc. by Maple<br />

Kt. and Mark Hall for'$345,000.<br />

-READING-<br />

Median Price: $422,0(10<br />

22 GREKN MEADOW DRIVE was sold to Kevin and Susan<br />

Briggs by Jonson Woods Realty Corp. for $6:«,858.<br />

21!t GROVE STREET was sold to John Fowler and Mary Vasta<br />

by Lisa and Norman Garceau for $405,000.<br />

27 HAROLD AVENUE was sold to James Lynch by James and<br />

Kathleen Lynch for $225,(XH).<br />

x:t LOCUST STREET was sold lo Elizabeth and Michael Wolski<br />

by Gilbert Adams for $340,000.<br />

243 MAIN STREET L':I)11 was sold to Philip Luongo by John<br />

Dolan for $184,000.<br />

7 ORANGE STREET was sold to Charles Drane and Elena<br />

GourlbtDrane by Janette and Robert Nason for $462,000.<br />

31 PARKMAN ROAD was sold to Jason and Mary Shanahan by<br />

Bernadette^Quirk for $478,900.<br />

261 SALEM STREET U:7 was sold to Fedela Bardetti by Ange-<br />

lo Liani and Susan Foster for $350,000.<br />

146 SUMMER AVENUE was sold lo Catherine and Michael<br />

Gray by Jon Asgeirsson for $650,000.<br />

46 TIMBERNECK DRIVE was sold to Alyson and Christopher<br />

Ritondo by Catherine and Michael Gray for $480,000.<br />

5 WASHINGTON STREET U:B7 was sold to Brenda Anthony<br />

by Zhihong Gao for $195,000.<br />

89 WASHINGTON STREET was sold to Robert Fedak and<br />

Stephanie Dyck by Adrian Harte for $400,000.<br />

157 WEST STREET was sold to Gregory and Robin Regazzini<br />

by Robert Gardner for $390,000.<br />

-STONEHAM-<br />

IMediah Price: $402,500<br />

131 FRANKLIN STREET U:502 was sold to Jeffrey Twyon by<br />

Andrea Marlow for $255,000.<br />

137 FRANKLIN STREET U:504 was sold to Anna and Leslie<br />

Pike by Mary Ann Poff for $254,000.<br />

15 MARBLE STREET was sold to Daphne and Michael<br />

Wentzell by Amanda and Marguerite Wentzell for $406,000.<br />

160 ORRIS STREET was sold to John Garipay by Edward and<br />

Janet Marie Urquhart lor $449,900.<br />

-TKWKSBURY-<br />

Median Price: $359,950<br />

1202 EMERALD COURT U: 1202 was sold to Cheryl and<br />

Richard Sardellitti by Stonewood LI£ for $347,400.<br />

50 LOWE STREET was sold to Stewart Solomon by Jades Rt.<br />

and Howard Allgaier Jr. Tr. for $597,500.<br />

1501 MAIN STREET U:21 was sold to Ronald Wybert by Paul<br />

Lamorc Jr. and Theresa Lamore for $277500.<br />

1501 MAIN STREET U:25 was sold to Keith Crowley by TJ Rt<br />

and Timothy Duggan Tr. lor $55,000.<br />

89 QUAIL RUN U:89 was sold to Laura Corsetto and Michael<br />

Newcomb by Keith Guernsey and Susan Decrescenzo for $265,000.<br />

-WAKEFIELD-<br />

Median Price: $409,950<br />

266 ALBION STREET I': 18 was sold to Michael Vivaldi by<br />

Charles and Peter Surette for $227,500.<br />

11 COLUMBIA ROAD 1:5 was sold to John Murray by 11<br />

Columbia Road Rt. and Matthew Piccone Tr. for $148,000.<br />

18 JACKSON "LANE was sold to Jeannette SantororParenl and<br />

Michael Parent by Camille Kilroy and Camille G


i<br />

■ I ■ m<br />

PAGE S.1Q.WEDNESDAY/THURSDAY. AUGUST 9. 10, 2006<br />

SUMMIT REAL ESTATE<br />

605 MAIN STREET, WOBURN<br />

BEADMG - DESMBLE SUMMIT TOWERS<br />

fj NEW LISTING!! - 2 bdrm, 2 balK unit<br />

w/slider lo l^e priv balcony, eal-in kit,<br />

l.R/din area perfect for entertaining.<br />

Pool, washers & drvers on site & extra<br />

storage. $269,900<br />

PRICED TO SELLII Spacious I bdrm<br />

unit is priced below the most recent<br />

sale prices at Summit Towers. Slider<br />

leads to priv patio area. Eat-In kit,<br />

new wall to wall. $189,900<br />

NEWCONIK) LISTING! - It's not too<br />

late to enjoy the pool or lounge on the<br />

private balcony this summer! This<br />

upper level unit at Summit Towers<br />

— also has a pretty view! This spacious I<br />

nenroom unit is in move-in condition & has a generous sized kitchen & good<br />

closet space. The building has elevators, washers & dryers. Convenient highway<br />

acci ' ss - ; $214,900<br />

Whether you arc BUYING, SEIJ.ING or RENTING, with over 20<br />

years experience, I can help vou achieve Your real estate goals.<br />

Call now!! Kathy Define, (.III. CBR<br />

781-942-4717 781-872-4079 A<br />

. summitrealestate@verizon.net<br />

BUILDABLE LOT<br />

All permits in hand for 3<br />

bedroom, 2 car garage.<br />

No builder tie in<br />

Being offered at<br />

$219,900<br />

- FOR SALE BY OWNER -<br />

CALL 978-423-9191<br />

Transfers<br />

from S-9<br />

28 SHERIDAN ROAD was sold to Kevin and Tia Digiovanm by<br />

Bradford Orsburn for $325,000.<br />

785 WOBURN STREET was sold to Eleccomm Rt. and Stephen<br />

Martin Tr. by Kevin and Robert Palmer for $1,700,000.<br />

•WINCHESTER-<br />

Median Price: $712,500<br />

120 FOREST STREET was sold to Jennifer and Wade Spencer<br />

by Rachel Nokes for $670,000.<br />

284 HIGHLAND AVENUE was sold to Anna and David Hood<br />

by John and Justin Barrett for $580,000,<br />

2 HILLSIDE AVENUE was sold to Jean Edmands and Ruth<br />

Weeks by Elizabeth Edmands for $126,630.<br />

39 MCCALL ROAD was sold to Roy and Wendy Procops by<br />

Angela and Karl Boone for $1,035,000.<br />

PROSPECT STREET was sold to Elisabeth and Richard.<br />

Sweeney by Carol Moriarty for $500,000.<br />

Ill SALEM STREET was sold to Kelly and Luke Albrecht by<br />

Charles and Heather Harris for $540,000.<br />

51 THORNBERRV ROAD was sold to Winning Farm LLC by<br />

Town of Winchester for $1,500,000.<br />

11 WEDGE POND ROAD was sold to Edward Adelson and<br />

Ruth Rosenholtz by J. Anthony Jenkens and Joy Jenkens for<br />

$840,000.<br />

-WOBURN-<br />

Median Price: $365,000<br />

121 CAMBRIDGE ROAD U.D was sold to Amy and John Gard-<br />

ner by Independence Realty LLC for $249,900.<br />

2 ilAILEY WAV was sold to Robyn McLaren by Chervl and<br />

Richard Sardellitti for $575,000.<br />

25 HOLTON STREET was sold to Carlos Napuri and Michelle<br />

Greene by Mary and Robert Adams for $363,500.<br />

« INNITOU ROAD was sold to Amanda Clement-Embree and<br />

Kevin Embree by Daniel Rogan Jr. and Man' Nohelty for $400,000.<br />

6 MUNROE AVENUE was sold to Irrevocable Special Nee T.<br />

and James Boyea by Peter and Thomas Doherty for $405,000.<br />

50 ROBINSON ROAD was sold to David Powers by Kalherine<br />

Skaletsky for $335,000.<br />

295 SALEM STREET VM was sold to Techlogix Inc by Salem<br />

Place LLC for $457,000.<br />

1 SAMOSKT ROAD was sold to Judith Fleming by Claire Walsh<br />

for $359,000<br />

6 WILLOW STREET U:2 was sold to Amanda McIIugh and<br />

Eugene Wolcott by Barbara and Richard Hayes for $310,000.<br />

PRIVATE<br />

m<br />

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21 Bow Street "The Damon Tavern"<br />

North Reading MA 01864 973-664-0707 781-334-0005<br />

ta<br />

6 North Main St, Middleton, MA 978-646-8969 978-532-2406<br />

2 Lowell St, Unit 6A, <strong>Wilmington</strong>, MA 978-658-5657 781-221-0044<br />

NORTH READING NOHTH READING NORTH READING NORTH READING<br />

Ist Offer! Nt v. quality 2xfi construction. 4 ,V«i- Campbeltlon Estates! Sew Construction!<br />

bedroom, 2 112 bulls Colonial on a large Gorgeous new development is selling<br />

lot. (irunile counterfoils, ss appliances, quickly. Kxciting designs, a myriad of<br />

ceramic tile floors, hardwood on I st floor, amenities. Don't hesitate, call today!<br />

$509,900 FromS900s<br />

Spacious Split Fntry in prized Hillview<br />

Country Club location. Open floor plan,<br />

first floor family room, formal dining<br />

room, hardwood floors on a private acre.<br />

$549,000<br />

Garrison Colonial on heauti ful wooded<br />

1/2 acre lot near Chestnul Vi lage in new<br />

llalchvlder School district, 7 rooms. :i<br />

bedrooms, 1-1/2 baths with arge familv<br />

room above 2 car garage. $479,900<br />

NORTH READING STONEHAM NORTH READING READING<br />

*£xcepUon&l 6,000+ sq ft home in<br />

Maclntyre. Victorian reproduction. Knjoy<br />

jiool. park Kr award winning new<br />

•Balchefder School. Make an offer!<br />

$1,099,000<br />

Premiere location! Completely remodeled 1<br />

bedroom Cnndo in mini condition.<br />

$209,900<br />

1st Offer! 1 rm, 4 bdrm Colonial in sought<br />

after cul-de-sac loc. Kitchen boasts new ss<br />

appliances & granite counters, gorgeous<br />

sunrm w/hot tub, master suite w/14' ceil-<br />

ings on a 1,28 private lot. $885,000<br />

Great starter home/enndo alternative.<br />

Convenient location & a few minutes<br />

walk to Lake Quannapowill. Large deck<br />

w/hot tub & level backyard w/shed.<br />

$2.99,500<br />

STONEHAM READING WILMINGTON NO. READING<br />

4 room Condo in one of Stoneham's most<br />

sought after complex. This front facing<br />

penthouse unil on 5th level has recently<br />

hcen updated.<br />

$259,900<br />

1st Offer! Charming Westside 6 room, 3<br />

bedroom Ranch with fireplaced living<br />

room, new eat-in kitchen. Great location.<br />

Walk to town or Irain. Mini condition!<br />

$419,900<br />

l-'ully updated, just move in 10 room, 4<br />

bedroom, 2-1/2 bath home in North<br />

<strong>Wilmington</strong> with manicured level lot.<br />

$589,900<br />

Move right into this extensively renovated 8<br />

room, 4 bedroom home with an open door<br />

plan for entertaining & new farmer's porch<br />

& fenced yard on dead end street.<br />

$574,900<br />

NORTH READING WAKEFIELD TEWKSBURV WOBURN<br />

nn M<br />

MO MM<br />

Ucltome lo (treat I.oll Kstales! Superb new<br />

H Inl neighborhood surrounded by conser-<br />

vation land & equestrian paths, dr.mil<br />

quality w'world class amenities by<br />

Hahitech. From $849,000<br />

1st Offer! Newly updated 4 room, 1 bed-<br />

room, I li.it h unil al desirable Brook Bend<br />

Complex. Greal open layout, lots of clos-<br />

ets, great location. Walk'to town & trains.<br />

$214,900<br />

Lovely, maintained 7 room, 3 bedroom<br />

Colonial on corner lot. Large open kitchen<br />

with dining area. Lower level family room<br />

& separate office. Convenient to Rt, 93.<br />

$364,900<br />

ht Offer!8 room, .1 bedroom. 2 bath Ranch<br />

with many amenities on professionally<br />

landscaped lot with fish pond, storage shed<br />

& lawn sprinkler. $399,900<br />

WILMINGTON WILMINGTON WILMINGTON NO. READING<br />

Bright 3 bedroom home located in the<br />

shawsheen Commons. No IIOA fees and<br />

nun vnurown land. Close lo His I2H&93.<br />

$319,900<br />

1st Offer! Immaculate oversized 3* bed-<br />

room. 3 full bath Split on I» acre lot.<br />

lint shed level lot, Walking distance to<br />

train & stores.<br />

$499,900<br />

Introducing<br />

"The Commons" atElmwood Village<br />

MODEL NOW OPEN<br />

28 Luxurious Townhouses selling quickly!<br />

60% Sold Out!<br />

RESERVE YOURS TODAY!<br />

I HOUSB Monday thru Friday 12:00 - 3 p.m.<br />

SOUTH HI \lll\f Luxurious Townhomes for all age*. 28 maintenance free<br />

units within walking distance to quaint North Reading Center,<br />

llncompromised quality, deluxe feature* Include stainless steel appliances,<br />

granite kitchens, hardwood floors, marble baths and more.<br />

fhnse I $509,900 a> $539,900 ^^^^<br />

1st Offer! hour bedroom Cape on dead end<br />

with large country kitchen, skylights skylight & a<br />

lovely family room. $359,900<br />

Kxtraordinary home of substantial pro-<br />

Eortions & design in coveted Ridgeway<br />

states. 5 bedrooms, 3 car garage, two 1st<br />

floor family rooms. Outstanding! $969,000<br />

PHASE 1 - OVER 70% SOLD OUT!<br />

55+ Active Adult Community<br />

Carefree Living in a most Convenient Location<br />

ROWLEY - Pingree Farms is an<br />

Active adult community consisting<br />

of 23 luxury park-like setting of 28<br />

acres of natural beauty & adjacent to<br />

the 10004 acres of slate & town for-<br />

est. Masterfully designed w/open<br />

floor plans, Pingree Farms offers 2<br />

unit styles of exceptional craftsman-<br />

ship at an exceptional value within<br />

either duplex or triplex buildings.<br />

Pre-construction pricing on selected<br />

units from $474,900<br />

Open House Saturdays I 3 pm, Sundays I-4 pm, Weekdays 12-2 pm<br />

Other times available by appointment.<br />

Rte 95N to exit 54A, Rte. I33E,<br />

MiuuubtX tASI appearing in Oa,l, limes - Chronicle (Reading. Woburn. Winchester, Burlington, Walelieldl,<br />

tynnlield Villager No Reoding transcript, <strong>Wilmington</strong> A lewksbury Town Crier, Stonoham Independent<br />

Dottye Vaccaro named<br />

Broker of the Month<br />

RE/MAX Top Achiev-<br />

ers, Inc. of Reading congratu-<br />

lates Dottye Vaccaro as Broker<br />

of the Month for her excellence<br />

in Listings and Sales. Dottye's<br />

award is the result of her com-<br />

mitment to real estate and to<br />

her high level of service to her<br />

customers and clients.<br />

Dottye's outstanding sales<br />

skills have made her a consis-<br />

tent award winner throughout<br />

her career, having recently<br />

received the highly prestigious<br />

Platinum Club Award for her<br />

accomplishments in sales and<br />

listings for 2005. She is a mem-<br />

ber of the National Association<br />

of Realtors, the Massachusetts<br />

Association of Realtors, the<br />

Eastern Middlesex Association<br />

of Realtors, the Bay State Mul-<br />

tiple Listing Service, President<br />

for the Women's Council of<br />

Realtors (WCR) for 2002 as well<br />

as the current 2006 WCR Presi-<br />

dent.<br />

Dottye holds the GRI<br />

(Graduate Realtor Institute)<br />

designation for continuing edu-<br />

cation in all aspects of real<br />

estate. Also the CRS (Certified<br />

Residential Specialist) designa-<br />

tion for completing the<br />

required courses offered by<br />

Residential Sales Council and<br />

demonstrating specific exper-<br />

tise in applied residential real<br />

estate marketing. Less than<br />

three percent of all Realtors<br />

hold this designation. She also<br />

received her SRES designation,<br />

(Senior Real Estate Specialist)<br />

and her CBR, (Certified Buyer<br />

Rep). These credits allow Dot-<br />

tye the expertise to assist<br />

seniors and all other Buyers<br />

with all their real estate needs.<br />

RE/MAX Top Achiev-<br />

ers. Inc. attributes Dottve's<br />

success to their high standards<br />

of professionalism, integrity<br />

and knowledge of the real<br />

estate market and current;<br />

trends. A frequent recipient of;<br />

sales awards. Dottye is deeply<br />

committed to servicing all her<br />

customers and clients.<br />

When it comes to sell-<br />

ing or buying real estate, you<br />

have Dottye's personal commit-<br />

ment in making your experi-<br />

ence a rewarding and satisfy-<br />

ing one. As an experienced<br />

Realtor, she has the education,<br />

and expertise to guide you<br />

through every step of selling or<br />

buying a home with the least<br />

amount of stress. For<br />

all of your real estate needs<br />

Dottye may be reached at<br />

RE/MAX Top Achievers, Inc. at<br />

100 Main Street, Reading or by<br />

phone at 781-944-6060 x 229.<br />

Please Recycle<br />

This ,\cKspapcr<br />

W<br />

<strong>Wilmington</strong>'s first Community<br />

for people 55 years young!<br />

YENTILE<br />

PLACE<br />

ftjl W Sales Trailer open<br />

^■fl^Sat., & Sun. 1 lam - 4pm<br />

Cross Simt, <strong>Wilmington</strong> (corner of Rt 38 and Rt 129) j<br />

Pre-Construction prices and Special Incentives being offered!<br />

Exclusively marketed by 0WH<br />

Sue Macdonald Wf<br />

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996


MIDDU SI X EAST uppoor.ng in Daily Iimoi - Chronicle (Reoding. Wobum. Wmchosle., Burlington, Wakelield),<br />

lyniilmld Vilkigci. No Reading Iranxnpl. <strong>Wilmington</strong> & lewksbuiy lown Cnor. Slonrhom Independent<br />

Calendar<br />

From S-5<br />

The Pcabody Ks'sex Museum<br />

has recently tripled its gallery<br />

space for Indian art in order to<br />

reveal the rich diversity of the<br />

country's artistic tradition.<br />

Featuring works from the<br />

1800s to the present, this new<br />

installation includes the deli-<br />

cate embroideries, fine por-<br />

traits and devotional images<br />

prized by maharjas, merchants,<br />

farmers and laborers.<br />

The Peabody Essex Museum<br />

is lcoated in Salem. For more<br />

information calll 978-745-9500.<br />

PUPPET SHOWPLACE<br />

TOT SCHEDULE<br />

The Puppet Showplace<br />

Theatre in Brookline Village<br />

offers during the summer per-<br />

formances for audiences week-<br />

days, on Wednesday and<br />

Thursday at 10:30 a.m. and 1<br />

p.m. Located opposite the<br />

Brookline Village T station it is<br />

barrier free. Accessible to all<br />

children and adults.<br />

Admission is $9.50 per per-'<br />

son ($7.50 for members).<br />

Prepaid reservations are rec-<br />

ommended by calling 617-731-<br />

6400.<br />

The July schedule is as fol-<br />

lows:<br />

The Case of the Missing<br />

Woodpile July 19 and 20 for ages<br />

3 - 8; Snow White and Other<br />

Tales July 26 and 27 for ages 3 -<br />

8 *-.<br />

LYMAN ESTATE<br />

GUIDED TOURS<br />

Historic New England is<br />

pleased to announce that the<br />

Lyman Estate Greenhouses in<br />

Waltham now offer guided tours<br />

on the first Wednesday of each<br />

month.<br />

Visitors to the greenhouse<br />

can enjoy a tour with one of<br />

Historic New England's plant<br />

Radbourne sturdy outside, modern inside<br />

By Associated Designs<br />

Engagingly traditional on the<br />

exterior, the Radbourne offers a<br />

I'omfortable array of popular con-<br />

temporary amenities inside Gath-<br />

ering places fill most ol the<br />

ground floor, along with utilities.<br />

a half bath and spacious owners'<br />

suite. Two more bedrooms are<br />

upstairs, plus a bathroom and<br />

deep bonus room.<br />

the raised masonry keystone<br />

and lintel combine with stone<br />

veneer, multipaned windows, plus<br />

a wooden post and handrail to<br />

give it a comfortably solid, tradi<br />

tional look. A gabled garage with<br />

an arched window adds a dash ol<br />

contemporary flavor.<br />

Passing through the covered<br />

porch, you step into an entry with<br />

a den on the left, and a hallw a> to .<br />

the right. That hallway provides<br />

direct access to a powder room,<br />

coat closet and a utility room com-<br />

plete with a deep sink Because the<br />

utility room links to the two-car<br />

garage, it also doubles as a mud-<br />

room, and provides a convenient pet<br />

sleeping area as well<br />

Gathering spaces open out at the<br />

far end of the entry, just past the<br />

' stairs The great room Hows unim-<br />

peded into a nook, expanded and<br />

brightened by a side window bay<br />

and sliding glass doors at the rear<br />

Roth areas have vaulted ceilings<br />

Tall windows in the great room<br />

Hank a gas fireplace where colorful<br />

Savings Bonds purchased<br />

prior to December 1965<br />

slop earning interest 40<br />

years from the issue date.<br />

• Savings Bonds and Notes<br />

purchased after November<br />

1965 stop earning interest<br />

30 years from the issue date.<br />

information on older bonds.<br />

1-800 4US BONO<br />

flames and radiant warmth create<br />

a comforting focal point on dark<br />

days and nights.<br />

Cupboards and counters wrap<br />

around the C-shaped kitchen<br />

f Vaulted<br />

Nook<br />

, 12'4" x 11<br />

1<br />

I- Kitchen<br />

13' x 13'4"<br />

L J=M Entry ^W<br />

n r- ,J -<br />

lEJT"<br />

Open to<br />

Great Room<br />

Below<br />

'9 2006 Associated<br />

Designs. Inc.<br />

Radbourne<br />

PLAN 30-562<br />

First Floor 1530 sq.ft.<br />

Second Floor 486 sq.ft.<br />

Living Area 2016 sq.ft.<br />

Bonus Room 287 sq.ft.<br />

Gorage<br />

521 sq.ft.<br />

Dimensions 50' x 52'<br />

2000 SERIES<br />

on three sides, plus<br />

there's even more<br />

Ga rage<br />

22'4 x 22'8work<br />

and storage<br />

space in the central<br />

work island. The<br />

www.AiSKialedDeiigns.com<br />

step-in pantry Alls an entire corner. lion and artist's conception, send<br />

A vaulted owners' suite fills the $25 io Associated Designs. 1100<br />

Radbourne's entire right side. Its Jacobs Dr.. Eugene. OR 97402.<br />

long plant shell rims the upper edge Please specify the Radbourne M)of<br />

the wall between the sleeping 562 and include a return address<br />

area and the private bathroom. when ordering. A catalog featuring<br />

Amenities include a dual vanity, over 550 home plans is available lor<br />

step in shower, and walk-in closet $15. For more information, call<br />

For a review plan, including (8(10)634-0123 or visit our website<br />

scaled llooi plans elevations, sec- at www AssociatcdDesisms com<br />

EXPERT SERVICE<br />

Computer or network In<br />

your home or office Only<br />

$30 per hour Why pay<br />

more for the same serv-<br />

ice' 781-438-3450<br />

VIRUS INFECTED?<br />

Email won't work''<br />

Hardware issue''<br />

Call SmarlAlex!<br />

J . Microsoft Cert<br />

User friendly<br />

On-site service<br />

781 258 6779<br />

DELLARUSSO<br />

CONCRETE FLOORING<br />

All types ol concrete Pa-<br />

tios, walkways, stamped<br />

concrete slabs FREE<br />

EST. Michael 781665<br />

1855 Cell 781 706-9746<br />

Fences, Wad &<br />

Masonry 0150<br />

experts to learn about the his-<br />

toric plant materials, discover<br />

the history of the building, and<br />

hear about the Lyman family<br />

history, the Lyman greenhouse<br />

includes some of the oldest<br />

greenhouses still in active use<br />

in the country.<br />

The 11)04 grapery contains<br />

grapes grown from cuttings<br />

taken in the 1880s from the<br />

royal greenhouses at Hampton<br />

mers, kayakers and walkers of<br />

all ages and abilities who would<br />

like to join MBCC in eradicating<br />

the breast cancer epidemic.<br />

Each participant will raise a<br />

minimum of $150 in contribu-<br />

tions to benefit MBCC and may<br />

chose to participate in one, two<br />

or all three of the events. Visit<br />

www.mbcc.org/swim to register<br />

or call 1-800-649-MBCC.<br />

GOLF" TOURNAMENT ON<br />

SEPTEMBER 2:t<br />

The Heading-North Reading<br />

Chamber of Commerce Golf<br />

Tournament will be held on<br />

September 25 at the Meadow<br />

Brook Golf Club, 292 Grove St.<br />

The fee is $175 per person/limit-<br />

ed to 64 golfers and includes 18<br />

holes with cart, barbeque<br />

lunch, buffet dinner & prizes.<br />

There will be a Scramble<br />

Format. 11:30 am registration,<br />

1:00 pm shotgun start. All<br />

golfers are welcome, single<br />

players will be assigned to a<br />

foursome. Premier Co Sponsors<br />

are Reading Cooperative Bank<br />

and Spurr & Spurr, LLP. For<br />

more information contact Carol<br />

Hughes 781-944-8824<br />

WEDNESDAY/THURSDAY, AUGUST 9,10, 2006-PAGE S-11<br />

NORTH READING<br />

Large 15 room Home! 3600 sq. ft. includes 4 room in law apart<br />

merit, kitchen, bedroom, full bath, living room and green house. Close to<br />

Hood School and state forest. Living room, dining room, hardwood,<br />

updated large kitchen with breakfast room, 4 bedrooms, walkout fami-<br />

ly room plus sun room. 3 full baths. 3 car heated garage, fireplace plus<br />

Z wood stoves. Excellent condition. Private one acre lot. $634,900<br />

Call owner 508-423-3409<br />

CIANO<br />

DEVELOPMENT, LLC<br />

GARAGE & COMMERCIAL SPACE<br />

FOR LEASE, WITH OPTION<br />

AVAILABLE IMMEDIATELY<br />

Office: 781-942-7451<br />

_B^14^\/tair^treet^Jead^^<br />

(978) 664-2100 QfcnlUriC, (781)944-2100<br />

SPINDLER & O'NEIL<br />

Visif us at www.C2l.spindlerandoneil.com<br />

Serving Reading, North Reading and the Surrounding Communities Since 1985.<br />

NORTH READING Unparalleled 5 betlrms. den,::."><br />

bath, iiiln H M11 in); area & lux bath < 2 car alt garage<br />

in BRAND NEW 3274 sf co on gorgacre.<br />

Exc value 9 $729,900<br />

NORTH READING Plan your summer fun on large<br />

deck with hotlub & above ground pool. Young 9 rm<br />

Colonial on I At in prime Ridgeway Estates. S7I9.HIIII<br />

Each office Independently Owned & Ope rated.<br />

' 10 CiriES AND TOWNS EVERY WEEK <<br />

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Top quality brands with<br />

over 30 species ol wood<br />

Unfinished 4 .prefmished<br />

Installation available as<br />

well as sanding 4 relm<br />

ishmg<br />

Call 1 781-856-3109<br />

P T© 14© /■'<br />

RETIRED HANDYMAN<br />

Best Prices - Small |obs<br />

Carpentry, tile, etc I do it<br />

all 1 Senior discounts Call<br />

Paul 978-657-8891 Cell<br />

978833'-2999<br />

2) EA<br />

-SERVICES Cleaning 0070 Cleaning 0070 Electrician 0120<br />

ABRACADABRA DIANE'S CLEANING<br />

Accounting<br />

WINDOW CLEANING SERVICE - Free Esl<br />

& Taxes 0010 M/mdows so clean it's like Quality service. Res &<br />

magic' Reasonable pn- Com. We'll make coming<br />

BOOKKEEPER ces. Call 781-939-2342. home a pleasure Bond-<br />

Do you . need a part time —— ed 4 Insured 617-387or<br />

iemporary Bookkeep C & J Office Cleaning 2490<br />

er? Hire the best Call Bil<br />

We do more than whail is<br />

781-272-2587<br />

expected of a typical Final Touch Cleaning<br />

cleaning service. Call Reas rates, references,<br />

978-767-1971<br />

quality work, dependable<br />

Candioflicecleaning @<br />

Carpentry 0050<br />

and honest Insured Call<br />

verizon netwww.lreewebs<br />

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com/carrol 1Q<br />

Doucette Const. Co.<br />

•Metal Studs<br />

CLAUDETH<br />

'Drywall. Tapmg<br />

'Accoustical ceilings<br />

It you need someone<br />

4 Doors<br />

clean your house. I have them<br />

617-909-8784<br />

Kenney Construction<br />

Carpentry<br />

Frame to Finish<br />

Licensed 4 Insured<br />

25 years experience<br />

Call 78J -942 0427<br />

1<br />

FABBRI MASONRY<br />

Stairs walls, walkways,<br />

patios concrete work All<br />

American Eagle Electric<br />

types ol Masonry FREE<br />

Master Electician Resid<br />

ESTIMATES 978 988<br />

4 Comm. Additions, serv-<br />

0807. 781-640-4038<br />

ice" upgrades, bathrooms<br />

K C FENCE<br />

kitchens. Call 781-932<br />

1045 Lic#A12002<br />

COMPANY<br />

Free estimates! Quality<br />

HOLT ELECTRICAL CO.<br />

work<br />

Residential 4 Commer<br />

cial. Serving all your electrical<br />

needs Small |Obs<br />

welcomed! Lief A14967<br />

Call 781-938-8341<br />

Tom Darragh, Quality<br />

_ Home Team Cleaning<br />

Electrical Contractor Lie<br />

Services. Etc We don't<br />

BA13979 and.Insured No<br />

to cut corners, we clean<br />

Holiday cleaning<br />

|ob too small Quality<br />

great references and do a available Call Bill or San<br />

work, reasonable rates<br />

Call 781-799-0017<br />

marvelous |Ob Free Esti-dra 781 -272-2587<br />

males 781-933-0445<br />

JIM'S Window Washing fences, Wall &<br />

Cleaning By Simone Service Gutters cleaned<br />

Responsible & guaran Residential Free ests Masonry ' 0150<br />

teed I work hard to keep Call 781 933-2419<br />

your' home clean Free<br />

A & P Masonry & More<br />

est (c) 617-930-1164 (h) WINDOW WASHING Stonewall specialist No<br />

781-935-5729<br />

Residential/Commercial job too small Summer<br />

Call Phil<br />

specials! Call Alex 617<br />

CRYSTAL CLEAR<br />

781 944-3001 470-1155<br />

R.A. SAMPSON<br />

CLEANING _______<br />

Construction Spec in re- Commercial Residential -■ .■■ -<br />

A-1 MASONRY<br />

modeling, kitchens, Guaranteed linest quality UM tare 0080 New 4 restoration Spec<br />

baths, decks, additions &.' service Carpet cleaning. _______<br />

in brick, block, stone,<br />

siding Lied 4 insured llpor care Call for free<br />

Call Rick 781-760-7386<br />

estimates 781-279 4814<br />

LITTLE FOLKS<br />

stairs, walks, chimneys<br />

DAY SCHOOL<br />

Free ests Call Glen 781<br />

600 W Cummmgs Park<br />

935-3511.617 930-1778<br />

at Rtos 128 4 93 Full 4<br />

part tiqrio Summer camp,<br />

A-A MASONRY<br />

Have your older<br />

nursery, pre-school'4 kin-<br />

Flagstone. Stone walls,<br />

dergarten programs Col-<br />

Brick stairs, cement work.<br />

lege degree stall<br />

Walkways 4 Patios All<br />

U.S. Savings<br />

"001684 781 935-9697<br />

types of masonry work<br />

fJAEYC Accredited Cert<br />

Free est Call Salvatore<br />

781-942-0911 Reading<br />

Bonds stopped<br />

Computers<br />

earning interest? & Electronics 0090<br />

1 TREE TRIMMING 4<br />

Floor, Rug & Tile Home & Commercial<br />

Paint, Paper<br />

TREE REMOVAL<br />

0160<br />

Decorating 0190 JRs Tree Work & Plaster 0260<br />

Fall Clean Up Service .<br />

MURALS Children's artist<br />

781 729-8325<br />

MacOonald<br />

RON WILSON & SONS<br />

ottering c.istom murals<br />

Plastering<br />

HARDWOOD FLOORS<br />

www mic!~iae!|amestoomy<br />

Ceilings walls repairs<br />

Winchester Land-<br />

Install-Sand-Fmish<br />

50MEGS oo-i 10% dis-<br />

patches Clean & e"<br />

scape & Irrigation Inc<br />

Hardwood and Laminate<br />

count 603 432-6183<br />

cient Free estimate"<br />

Design 4 installation ol<br />

Call 781 942-7486<br />

603-635-2250<br />

landscape 4 irrigation<br />

20 yrs exp Fully 978-4233633<br />

systems 781-729 3637<br />

insured Call 978-604<br />

Instruction 0200<br />

Manny 4 Son Painting<br />

4570 or 978 658-2930<br />

Inior-or'ExtenO'<br />

PIANO LESSONS<br />

Wallpaper Ren<br />

Home<br />

Firb! lesson Free Musical 0250 Free Est Low Mains<br />

Floor, Rug & Tile Improvement 0180 Exp w children 4 adults<br />

Over 3.' Yrs Experience<br />

Classical . Jazz or Key PIANO LESSONS<br />

78' 932-8299<br />

0160<br />

ARNIE'S SMALL HOME<br />

boards; '81 729 4347 First Lesson Free<br />

Repairs 4 Improvement<br />

Exp w children 4 adults PAINTING 4 PAPER<br />

617-387-0447 Carpentry, painting, ma-<br />

SURETTE TILE Special-<br />

Landscaping &<br />

Classical / Jazz or Key Hanging Ceiling Wails S<br />

sonry, tiles, disappearing<br />

M; /81 729-4347 Woodwo'k Pnmtod Wan<br />

izing m tile repair 4 num- attic stairways repaired Gardening 0220<br />

paper Stripped and Hum.'<br />

ber one in tile installa- Call 978-658-2110 • tit<br />

Call Ai Toland at 78"<br />

tions Insured All areas<br />

CT LANDSCAPE Point, Paper<br />

272 6261<br />

Call Joe<br />

HAS YOUR BUILDING Beautily your property & Plaster 0260<br />

SHIFTED' Structural re Summc and Fall yard<br />

PAPERHANGER<br />

A1 CERAMIC TILE pairs ol barns, houses cleanups Other land<br />

Paint'iuj and ' papuw<br />

Cheap Price-Rich Look<br />

REPAIRS and garages Call Wood scape so •vices<br />

No |Ob loo small For free<br />

Exp Interior Exterior<br />

Regroutmg ford Bros, Inc lor sod placement Stone<br />

est call John Flynn at '<br />

Pamto' 4. Carpenter Rel<br />

New installations straightening. leveling grave! designs<br />

I roc<br />

78' 662-4841<br />

request Call Ralaei<br />

Kitchen 4 baths foundation and wood ests .'8- r.48 9151<br />

781-629-0229<br />

Call 781 438-2401<br />

STEPHEN MEUSE<br />

frame repairs 1-800<br />

All-Wood Floor Sanding<br />

OLD-BARN www 1 800<br />

'AINT PAPFRH/'I<br />

CUT N EDGE<br />

Dave's Painting<br />

NG Interior only 25 yrs<br />

Co 20 yrs exp. sanding<br />

OLD-BARNCOM<br />

LANDSi' APING Wot>,,-n Specializing in interior,<br />

>xp Reas rales Can<br />

4 refniishing Carpet re<br />

MA 78' 935 3910 Spring residential painting and<br />

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KENS HANDYMAN<br />

781-62! H.-U (Wake<br />

cleanup weekly<br />

paperhanging 20 years<br />

Stall 781367 0108 781<br />

Services Small carpeniddi<br />

weekly mowing de exp Quality work at reas<br />

try painting, odd jobs, re-<br />

5883323<br />

thatching bark mu •<br />

Call 781 729-4657<br />

pairs., etc Free est Call<br />

VON S PAINTING<br />

stalled bushes<br />

CERAMIC TILE<br />

1-508-254-5096<br />

• 4 CARPENTRY<br />

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Complete bathroom re-<br />

Tyvo Teachers looking lor<br />

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modeling Tile flaors 4<br />

JOES LANDSCAPE summer work Yrs ol<br />

Specializing in interior<br />

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MAINTENANCE exp. Free estimates Ca<br />

painting, repairing odds 4<br />

prices All work guar Lar-<br />

Fall Cleanup plowing, '81 933 7788 0 Sbing, Heating<br />

ends 4 more 617-967<br />

ry 978 375 1900 tit<br />

lawn care yd mamt bed<br />

B1 395 069?<br />

0633 MA Reg »148629<br />

work, pruning I xp<br />

Conditioning<br />

Free consultations<br />

HARDWOOD FLOORS<br />

reas 781-354 7008 Jon J4 S PLASTERING<br />

Sheehans Hardwood<br />

A types ol plastering<br />

Mr. Maintenance<br />

Floors installed sanded<br />

JOHNSON sand smooth, stucco<br />

General construction 4<br />

Baldi Plumbing/Heating<br />

relmished tree est. fully<br />

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renovation services Ad-<br />

We call hack<br />

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Tree 4 Shrub pruning work Bluerbrd 4 plaster<br />

ditions, kit 4 baths, tile<br />

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HARDWOOD more Call 781-933-7543<br />

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1<br />

No |oh too small 1<br />

Fully lie 4 and insured<br />

Lie « 12636<br />

Call Enc at 978-658 4240<br />

—r<br />

EAGLE FENCE<br />

New Installations<br />

Wood. Chain link. Vinyl<br />

FREE ESTIMATES<br />

Call 781-933-7872<br />

Plowing Available<br />

J DUFFEY FLOOR Sem'«»tandynl«i<br />

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u T. ti—V" „,„,„„ Can! lind anyone to do<br />

ence Call Jack DuHev own nan(, y n ' Call Sam<br />

HP 933 7445 NeSl "" 781 - 245 " 3909<br />

i<br />

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De thatching. Lawn [Ren<br />

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781 944 3039<br />

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Exp Lie. ins tree est<br />

781 729-3414<br />

JOHN THE PAINTER<br />

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Power wash Light car<br />

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M V Plastering &<br />

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Best Prices'<br />

Old ceilings 4 walls<br />

new again'<br />

Free estimates<br />

Call 978-686-5012<br />

Roofing 0300<br />

Accurate Renovations<br />

ROOFS^ windows doors,<br />

decks, masonary paint-<br />

ing One call does it Mil<br />

No |ob too bm or sma"<br />

Call 978 943-2567<br />

SERVICES<br />

TO S-12


wrvmm<br />

PAGE S-12-WEDNESDAYrmURSDAY. AUGUST 9, 10, 2006<br />

MlDUltbtX tAbl appearing in Daily limoi - Chconiclo (Reading. Wobuin. WnchoiWr, Builmglon, Waledelcil.<br />

LynnlieU Villagoi, No Reading Tr6nscnpl. <strong>Wilmington</strong> & Tewksbury Town Cnof, Stonohain Independent<br />

1*;Wobum • Winchester • Burlington • Stoneham • Reading • North Reading • <strong>Wilmington</strong>»Tewksbury • Lynnfield • Wakefield * r^ *■-"«■ a t»«U|ch<br />

C!,lUlll *8#rt*rV<br />

TEWKSBURY MlDDLESEXJiAST<br />

: SERVICES<br />

FROMS-11<br />

' Roofing 0300<br />

ROOF REPAID<br />

Water damage Snow<br />

fiemovai Immediate re-<br />

sponse Gutters replaced<br />

f cleaned Insured ' Rels<br />

pall /81 632-6069<br />

Schools 0310<br />

ATTEND COLLEGE ON-<br />

LINE. Irom Home 'Medi-<br />

cal 'Business, "Paralegal.<br />

• Computers. •Criminal<br />

ausl.ee Job Placement<br />

Assistance Computer<br />

provided Financial aid il<br />

quality 866-858-2121<br />

Jvww onlmelidewatertech<br />

com<br />

TRAIN FOR A HIGH<br />

JinOWTH MEDICAL CA<br />

flEER In less lime THE<br />

SALTER SCHOOL will<br />

Jrain you 1 Medical Assis<br />

Jam. Health Claims Spe-<br />

■CtaliSt, or Massage<br />

Therapist CAMPUSES<br />

WORCESTER. MAL-<br />

•DEN CAMBRIDGE<br />

•TEWKSBURY, FALL<br />

*R',VER Day evening<br />

•classes now lormmg 1<br />

•800-299-1074. www<br />

Jsalter edu<br />

10 Communities<br />

HEADING<br />

Rubbish & Junk<br />

Removal 0360<br />

■DOUG'S REMOVAL -<br />

Cicanout ol attics garay<br />

es. yaras cellars, etc<br />

Reliable service. Iree<br />

ests We haul anything<br />

781-438-351R<br />

A & ACLEANOUTS<br />

Cieauouts ol garages,<br />

yards cellars etc Fast,<br />

reliable service Low<br />

rates 1-781 438 1264<br />

A DISPOSAL<br />

Just call - ill lake it all<br />

Clean ouls trash remov-<br />

al attics, cellars demoli-<br />

tion. Insured Please call<br />

781-454-8470<br />

A+ REMOVAL ~<br />

Any household, yard, or<br />

construction debris. Cel<br />

lars. garages. allies<br />

cleaned Oumpsters<br />

available 978-664-6250<br />

ACE REMOVAL<br />

Clean-ups cheap Why<br />

pay lor labor? Rent sm<br />

dumpster to clean out<br />

home/business. We pro-<br />

vide labor 781-279-2323<br />

RUBBISH REMOVAL<br />

Res & Comm. We clean<br />

out & haul away, base-<br />

ments, yards, allies, etc.<br />

Comm site clean ups<br />

Quick reponse. C 617-<br />

543-3823 Wakelield MA<br />

SOLUTION T01 I PUZZLE<br />

5 1 7<br />

9 6 3<br />

4 8 2<br />

1 5 6<br />

2 3 8<br />

7 4 9<br />

3 7 4<br />

6 9 5<br />

8 2 1<br />

9 8 3<br />

2 4 5<br />

16 7<br />

8 9 2<br />

7>5.4<br />

CLASSIFIED<br />

u INDEX<br />

* 0000 - Services<br />

0010 Accounting & Taxes<br />

0020 Appliance Repair<br />

0030 Architectural Design<br />

■ ..& Drafting<br />

0040 Business<br />

0050 Carpentry<br />

0060 Catenng<br />

0070 Cleaning J<br />

0080 Child Care<br />

0090 Computer Software<br />

4 Hardware<br />

0100 Counseling<br />

0.110 Drapenes<br />

0120 Electnaan<br />

0136 Entertainment<br />

0t40 Equipment Renial 4<br />

Repair<br />

0150 Fences. Wall 4 Masonry<br />

OfBO Floor 4 Rug 4 Tile<br />

017" Health 4 Elder Care<br />

0180 Home Improvements<br />

0190 Home 4 Commercial<br />

' Decorating<br />

1)200 instruction<br />

tflO insulation<br />

0220 Landscaping 4 Gardening<br />

0230 Legal<br />

024C Miscellaneous<br />

0il5C Musical<br />

0260 Pa 01 Paper 4 Plaster<br />

0370 Paying 4 Seal Coating<br />

OzBfi 3 :urong 4 Heating<br />

0290 Professional<br />

0300 P.<br />

0310 Schools<br />

0320 Secunty<br />

0330 Sewing 4 Alterations<br />

0?40 Snowpiowmg<br />

33J0_ Spcns 4 Fitness<br />

ttushi<br />

Junk Removal<br />

. rg 4 Moving<br />

13$ *.' ' :<br />

0380 UpnoBtenng 4 Refmisfi rg<br />

jioo Wedding<br />

'000-Miscellaneous<br />

•:"erai<br />

3sl4Found<br />

les Snare-Car<br />

Pools<br />

I : '55.<br />

2000 - For Sale<br />

-:.uues 4 Collectibles<br />

2026 Bcals Motors 4 Supplies<br />

2G.3C Business Furniture<br />

_W Bus-essErjuipmeni<br />

-mg 4 Fabrics<br />

2060' Cc-rs 4 Stamps<br />

2070 Farm Supplies<br />

Equ prnenl & Livestock<br />

ml<br />

- HoosenoW Goods<br />

2C9d Holiday Items<br />

2100 industrial Equipne"'<br />

2'10 Miscellaneous<br />

':2' Money Savers<br />

2WQ Pets 4 Supplies<br />

2'40 Sporting Goods<br />

\<br />

6 4 2<br />

8 17<br />

5 3 9<br />

4 7 3<br />

19 6-<br />

3 1 ! 6 2 *5 8<br />

6 2 1 9 8 5<br />

43 8 7 2 1<br />

5 7 9 3 6 4<br />

2160 Swimming Pools S-Sup,,<br />

2160 Wanted To Buy<br />

2170 Wood, Coal 4 Oil<br />

3000 - Yard Sales<br />

3010 Auctions, Flea Markeis<br />

4 Fairs<br />

3020 Burlington<br />

3030 Lynnfield<br />

3040 Maiden ,<br />

3050 Medlord<br />

3060 Melrose<br />

3070 North Reading<br />

• 3080 Reading<br />

3090 Stoneham ••<br />

3100 Tewskoury<br />

3110 Wakefield<br />

3120 <strong>Wilmington</strong><br />

3130 Winchester<br />

3140 Woburn<br />

3150 Area Sales<br />

4000-Real Estate<br />

4010 Real Estate Sen/ices<br />

4020 Commercial Property<br />

4030 Condominiums' '<br />

Townhouses<br />

4040 Houses For Saie<br />

4050 Income Property<br />

4060 Land<br />

4070 Vacation Property<br />

4080 Real Estate Wanted<br />

5000 - Rentals<br />

5010 Apartments 4 Condos<br />

5020 Commercial<br />

5030 Houses<br />

5040 Miscellaneous<br />

5050 Rental Services<br />

5060 Rentals to Share<br />

5070 Rooms<br />

5080 Seasonal<br />

5090 Slorage 4 Garages<br />

5100 Wanted to Rent<br />

6000 - Transportation<br />

6010 Auto 4 Truck<br />

Parts 4 Repairs<br />

6020 Auto Rental, Lease<br />

4 Financing<br />

6030 Used Car Services<br />

6040 Auto-X-Change<br />

6050 Autos Wanted<br />

6060 Motorcycles<br />

6070 Recreational Vehicles<br />

6080 Trucks 4 Vans<br />

7000 - Business / Finance<br />

7010 Business Opportunity<br />

7020 Business Wanted<br />

7030 Income 4 Investment<br />

7040 Mortgage 4 Loans<br />

8000 - Employment<br />

8010 Child Care Wanted<br />

8020 Employment Services<br />

4 Publications<br />

8030 Employment Wanted<br />

8O40 General l%* Wanted .<br />

9010 Prayers<br />

9000 - Special<br />

9020 Announcements<br />

9030 Legais<br />

Wedding 0400<br />

WEDDING<br />

INVITATIONS<br />

The Daily Times Chroni-<br />

cle will provide lor all your<br />

wedding needs You are<br />

welcome to take our wed-<br />

ding album home over-<br />

night or use our online in-<br />

vitation catalog at<br />

www \ u.'u'v-iationpiaceconv<br />

. Daily I rnesChronicle<br />

MISCELLANEOUS<br />

Lost & Found 1020<br />

LOST - Grey and while<br />

cat in vicinity ol Bodlord<br />

Road. Woburn Please<br />

call 781-935-4637<br />

LOST Rascal - lge dully<br />

grey & white cat Very<br />

timid Missing since 8/3<br />

Vic ol Phillips & Middle<br />

St nr Kennedy. RE-<br />

WARD 781-933-1981<br />

Free 1040<br />

FREE Antique Reed<br />

Pump Organ Foot pedal<br />

has broken spring Call<br />

9/8-664-4022<br />

FOR SALE<br />

Antiques 8.<br />

Collectibles 2010<br />

ART ANTIQUES WANT-<br />

ED! Paul Royka. national-<br />

ly known expert, author,<br />

TV appraiser accepting<br />

line art antiques consign-<br />

ments 978-582-8207, .<br />

www ROYKAS.com<br />

Boat's, Motors<br />

& Supplies<br />

1989 BAYL1NER 16', 50<br />

HP motor Good condi-<br />

tion New starter, all. &<br />

carb $1,900 781-760-<br />

0361.<br />

2004 HONDA Aqua. Trax<br />

S12 Jet Ski, 3 sealer, low<br />

hrs . like new cond, w/<br />

frailer $6,500/bo SOS-<br />

SI 4-9967/781-944-0744<br />

21' Century 4000, 230hp<br />

I'O. lake use only, mint<br />

cond. new tandem trlr<br />

All covers, Cutty cab.<br />

$7500BRO 781-245-'<br />

3603.617-201-0981.<br />

VilNNKOTA Elec Motor<br />

28 lb. thrust w/deep cycle<br />

marine battery, both in<br />

exc cond $100 781-<br />

346-1133<br />

WALKER Bay 8 light<br />

weight dinghy w/elec<br />

trolling motor, deep cycle<br />

bait. Iish finder, life vests<br />

$600 781-272-0109<br />

Business<br />

Equipment 2040<br />

MULTIPLE Storage Trail-<br />

ers lor sale Best offer.<br />

45 & 48 ft. long. Trans-'<br />

portalion to drop site in-<br />

cluded in sale price All<br />

trailers water tight If inter-<br />

ested call 781-939-0925<br />

ext. 22 Paul O'Shea,<br />

Tighe Trucking<br />

Furniture 8,<br />

Household Goods<br />

2080<br />

2 glass end tables w/<br />

match lamps $50; natu-<br />

ral desk w/ chair $50,<br />

porch set cushion couch,<br />

chair, end & collee tbl<br />

SI25 781-438-1704<br />

20 ejris bke w'helmet<br />

S50BO 781-246-1522<br />

5 PC Cherry wood On<br />

bdm ',ei under 5 yrs.<br />

old 2 bureaus 1 w/mirror<br />

2 nt tbles. $2.000.'BO<br />

781-281 2004 Must sell<br />

by 8/24 06<br />

ANTIQUE vanity w/mirror<br />

1930s. $35 Freezer $15<br />

Kemore sewing machine<br />

$50 Movie scrn. $5.<br />

Metal sta'.d lor power<br />

saw $15 781 944-2071<br />

Beaulilul DAY BED<br />

White w/brass w/never<br />

used mattress $150<br />

Two 52"x18"x30" tall 6<br />

drawer wicker Iront<br />

DRESSERS $50 ea 978-<br />

657 7315<br />

BEAUTIFUL twri iulon<br />

chair with ottoman Mis-<br />

sion style Folds out to<br />

iwm bed Paid $800 ask-<br />

ing $300 Please call<br />

781-365-4321<br />

BRAND new Armoire<br />

hlk lacq $350 Solid pine<br />

kit set w/4 chrs. $25f3<br />

Brand new Sharpe carou-<br />

sel coveel / micro oven<br />

$325 781-438 4458<br />

CARRIER 20.000 BTU<br />

AC $200 lor home or<br />

business. 200 amps<br />

781-935-1516 after 5pm<br />

CRIB $125 Carriage<br />

$40 Pack and Play $45<br />

Rug $125 18 cf refrig<br />

$200 781-933-4296 i<br />

UP TO 140.000 READERS EACH WEEK<br />

Furniture &<br />

Household Goods<br />

2080<br />

Industrial<br />

Equipment 2100<br />

set $4,500 Couch, chair, en(a| rugs paintings, jew-<br />

olloman1.850 Recliher e|p, s1er||ng. 1 pc loen-<br />

$500 781-944-3298 ,jre conients.. No obliga- New<br />

OAK Hulch $400<br />

781-272-8169<br />

Reading 3080<br />

STONEHAM<br />

nduslrial bays for<br />

lion to sell ~Wayne White rent 41R Elm St., Stone-<br />

Call jr 781-933-1258 . ham, MA 02180. 1500 sf<br />

$1,595/mo with office<br />

space. 617-448-3930.<br />

ONE green couch $100. Hand Tools Wanted<br />

oak kitchen table w/chrs Patternmaker, carpenter, =<br />

& bench $100, brown iron sheet melaL machinist u „... t.. c_|e 4A4Q<br />

bed queen size, mattress Plains: chisels, 'calipers. MOUSeS for 5016 WW<br />

MELROSE - Sunny 1BR,<br />

great location, walk to T.<br />

Lg. LR & BR. EIK/FB No<br />

pets. Photos & more:<br />

srtrusl.com or Call 781-<br />

438-1301. $800 + utils.<br />

Credit/cri, check req'd.<br />

OaUg CEimcHCXt;riiniclf<br />

s Tcwk*bui7<br />

* $ Dailu aiinrB (thrnntilc<br />

.—.. r<br />

""" , * Town Crier \<br />

■llH Dailpgimtatfliriiiiiclt frr<br />

1" .« v «wi*f/:// "i—^<br />

tTNNFIELDl llllKfiT<br />

WAKEFIELD Ige 2 br +<br />

1st tlr. 2 baths,, din rm.,<br />

hdwd Hrs., exc resid.<br />

loc. Walk to lake, square<br />

& public iransp. Good lor<br />

rmmtes $1,295 mo. ♦<br />

utils. 781-246-2818 or<br />

781-775-3006<br />

WAKEFIELD West Side,<br />

charming 3 room on 1st<br />

fir. $950 * utils, 4 room<br />

on 2nd fir $1100 + utils<br />

Exc. location. Walk to<br />

lake, train, 128/93 Avail-<br />

able 9/1. Sec. dep req'd<br />

978-750-3692.<br />

Level:<br />

u<br />

as<br />

GIANT YARD SALE<br />

WOODWORKING ma- Saturdays, July & Aug at<br />

chines, Delta 15" ind. pla- ABC Flea Marl Oil Walkner.<br />

X5 shaper tble + bits ers Brook Dr.. Reading,<br />

Carrier A'C low prolile 6 1/8 jointer $2950_ lor Exit 39 olf 95 / 128.<br />

dsgn BTU6050-S200 all More! 781-249-8453 Starts 8 am. Up Ip 40<br />

brand new co store |ule<br />

spaces avail See or call<br />

rug new 8x10 ntrl $100 u:cr.||nnpftll, OllfJ Gordon "603-918-6470"or<br />

Retuned Singer sew-91 miscellaneous * " " lus, snow UD<br />

$100 978-664 4202<br />

BOSTITCH 6 gallon Air<br />

mi i FfiF rinrm reiria" Compressor & Brad Nail- MOVING/Multi Fam Sal.<br />

$50sm desk 7l 00 sm er $160. Aluminum stag- & Sun 8/12 & 13, 8-2.<br />

co2chW50 rocking chr mg plank ,6' long $125. Condor Rd. olf Pearl St.<br />

$65. pulls, blankets & 781-938-0414 Antiques, china, coNec i-.<br />

THESAMUCMGf PUZZLES By Michael Mepham<br />

1 8<br />

1<br />

3<br />

Complete the grid so each<br />

row, column and 3-by3 box<br />

(in bold harden) contain<br />

evety digit, I to 9 For<br />

stialegies on how to solve<br />

Sudolcu, visit<br />

throws $10. 20- bike $25. „ADDCTC bles Franklin Mint dolls.<br />

baby toys $5. army play- CARPETS kids toys boys clths.. sz.<br />

set $12, cardboard blocks I have access to sev. 5-7. dr. table, etc<br />

1<br />

$15, race set $6. 2 mini '.000 yds_ plush carpet \<br />

hockey sets $25, twin doll fan carpel your LR & hall Stoneham 3090 2<br />

stroller $10. scooter $8, lor $495 Price incls.<br />

girls legos $10, LT desk pad/inst based on 30 sq M0V(NG ..|n House-<br />

& chr $5. LT coup car yds Berbers/comm car- Sg|e Everythlng Mus,<br />

$8. FP doll house $10, pets avail. 781 862-0909 Go, SaturdaJ 8/12 9am.<br />

FP Loving Family people 2pm. 75 Washington St<br />

& lurn. etc $30 Call 781- COIN-OP Air Hockey Ta- Rain or Shine"!<br />

933-6691<br />

ble w/overhead scote<br />

working coin mechs 8ft x<br />

411 $650 Call 781-937- Wokefield 3110<br />

7<br />

9<br />

7<br />

www.iudoku.org.uk<br />

6 Sudoiu<br />

8 answer<br />

elsewhere<br />

on this page<br />

CUSTOM made drapery 1654 days<br />

Teal on lop. mauve trim<br />

MULTI Family indoor<br />

1-108" lor picture wm- FOOSBALL TABLE yard sale Sat. 8/12, J3-1<br />

dow" 1 -slider"90" $100 Specialty store quality pm Americal Civic Cenhrm<br />

781-935-1516 Hardly used $225/BO ter, Main St. Lots ol great<br />

Call 978-658-4047. items on sale! Sponsored<br />

8/5/06<br />

© 2006 Michael Mepham. Distributed by<br />

Tribune Media Services. All rights reserved. J<br />

Dinrm set $125 TV Ible<br />

by Bravo All Stars Cheer<br />

$20. stove $100 781-<br />

Get Caught Up In Dra- & Dance Training Center<br />

933-6691.<br />

ma!! Read the brand new __^^^_^_„^_^_<br />

exciting novel by Latila<br />

Dryer $50. Relng. $300 Sanchez For more mfor- <strong>Wilmington</strong> 3120<br />

Quilt $15 Ninja Turtle malion visit www.out- _<br />

toys. $20 End tbl . $25 skirtspress com/caughtup GARAGE Sale Sunday<br />

781-933-6691.<br />

0^811617-938-2323 8/13 g.3i 25 Seneea<br />

GREEN Craftsman Gar- Lane <strong>Wilmington</strong> House-<br />

ELECTRIC goll bag cart,<br />

den Riding Lawn Mower, wares, Furniture, DeCcr,<br />

w/attachments. Hardly<br />

used Cost new $900, will<br />

Yr 1997. 22 Horse Powsell<br />

$400 781-438-1491.<br />

FOR SALE - Ice making<br />

relrigeralor $700 Regular<br />

refrigerator $200 Gas<br />

Stove $300 Call 781-<br />

435-1315 M-F. 12 noon -<br />

9 pm<br />

E,c<br />

er,6 speed, 50 in Mower ■■-...,.,-. c,, c Ca,,ir<br />

Deck Mint Condition. MOVING SALE- Satur-<br />

$1500 00. Craftsman ?** 8/12 & Sunday 8/13,<br />

Mulcher. Yr 2003. Mint J 0 "**"* 31 " * nd ° v , e , r<br />

Condition $1500.00 Call *«»•»• <br />

Call 978-423-4446. 21 X 4 FT POOL plus<br />

LARGE Trampoline Net d f k , 7 V rs , old ' "® w .£f<br />

Good condition. $60.00.*/motor, •Jjrow„ vac.<br />

Call 781-729-7021 0n '<br />

All real estate<br />

advertising in<br />

this newspa- ist per is subfect<br />

to the FeOeral<br />

"""""I" Fair * Housing<br />

Ad ol 1968. which makes il<br />

illegal lo advertise any preference.<br />

Iim'ilation or discrimination<br />

based on race, color, religion,<br />

sex, handicap, familial<br />

stalus (number ol children<br />

and or pregnancy), national<br />

origin, ancestry, age. manlal<br />

stalus. or any intention lo<br />

make any such prelerence.<br />

hmilalioo or discnmination<br />

This newspaper will not<br />

knowingly accept any advertising<br />

tor real estate that is in<br />

violalion bf the law Our readers<br />

are hereby inlomied that<br />

all dwellings advertising in<br />

this newspaper are available<br />

on an equal opportunity basis.<br />

To complain about discrimination<br />

call The Department<br />

ot Housing and Urban<br />

Development ■ HUD' toll-tree<br />

at 1-800-669-9777 For the<br />

N.E. area, call HUD at 617-<br />

9 ** W000, selljor 565-5308 The loll Iree num-<br />

$1000/BO 978-851-7929 ber lor the heanng impaired<br />

MOVING • 42x72" kitch- — is 1-800-927-9275<br />

en glass table, 6 chrs, 2 SWIMMING<br />

stools, $399. Din rm. pe- POOLS/SPA's.Home- = —<br />

can 44x65' table. 6 chrs. owners wanted! Kayak Commercial<br />

w/2 16" Ivs.. ' hutch Pools/Spa's is seeking „ .<br />

62x81'H $500. 781-942- demo homesiles lo dis- rropeny 4020<br />

1230 P la y new maintenance _—<br />

free Kayak Pool and BUILDING SALE! "MAN-<br />

MOVING' 54" round bev- S P a ' s Save thousands ol UFACTURER DIRECT<br />

elled edae alass tble *« wiln 'bis unique op- Since 1980!" Extensive<br />

wcherr^ wood 9 bale & 4 PortunMy. Call now! 1- range of sizes/models.<br />

Sft? 'SKSSS 800427 " 02 SqV°Ends 10 °op,]o 6 .<br />

Apartments &<br />

Condos 5010<br />

WOBURN • 1BR in apt<br />

Reading - Immac. 1 BR Domplex. Avail. 9/15 Off<br />

apis, brick complex, nr. Vlain SI. Convenient locatrain.<br />

Fresh paint, w/w, :ion. Plenty ol pkg $850<br />

bale, laund. & pkg No ► utils 781-932-3699<br />

pels. No fees $895 -<br />

$950. Ht / hw Ardean As- WOBURN - 2 1/2BR Du-<br />

SOC. 781-944-4700<br />

plex. Close lo T. 1st &<br />

sec. * utilities N/P.<br />

READING 1st fir. in 6 unit $1395/month. Available<br />

bldg on Main St. Hid 2 8/15 781-933-4921<br />

bdrm., hdwd firs., ac, dw,<br />

disp., micro, eat in kit.,<br />

WOBURN - Lge modern<br />

laund in bldg 1 car<br />

1br in 12 unit bldg , $800.<br />

space. $1050. Avail 9/1<br />

a/c, EIK, D&D. w/w car-<br />

617-523-2100.<br />

pel., walk to Ctr Avail<br />

now Also 2 bdrm. w/balcony<br />

$950$ 1025 Avail<br />

READING<br />

9/"& 10/1 1 bdrm all incl<br />

Prestigious elevator build<br />

ing overlooking town<br />

6 unit bldg. $800 Avail<br />

11/1.617-523-2100<br />

green Studios, 1 & 2<br />

bdrms. Rent incl. ht & hw<br />

Short' walk lo T, shops & WOBURN nice nghbhd. I<br />

restaurant's Conv to 93 bdrm. apt Oil st.prkg lor<br />

& 128<br />

1 car. $750 hi & hw incl<br />

General Washington 1st & last 781-254-0802<br />

Apartments<br />

625 Main St. WOBURN - Spacious 1<br />

978 369-7282 bedroom condo at Conti-<br />

20 ACRES- $12,900 NYS<br />

nental Cl., eat-in-kitchen,<br />

Adirondacks: Owner fi- STONEHAM - 5 rm, 2BR tile, parking, conv loc,<br />

nancing For more infor-. on quiet st Near 93/128. $975 plus utilities. Ill<br />

malion, call Christmas &| Sep. driveway, 1st llr in 2 Properties 781-248-4550<br />

Associates. 800-229i- .(am- NS hshld $1,200<br />

7843 or visit www land Call 781-438-8186. . Woburn 2 br, 5 Ige rms<br />

andcamps com<br />

w/d hkup, otf st. prkg<br />

STONEHAM , front/back porch, hdwd<br />

LOOKING TO OWN 2 br apt. Very clean firs. Nr Horn Pond $1095<br />

LAND? Invest in rural Close to schs.square & noulils. 781-438-9034<br />

acreage throughout 93 $1050+ utils 781-<br />

America: coastal, moun-<br />

888-0705/781-883-8607 WOBURN 3 RM. APT.<br />

tain, waterfront proper-<br />

Bright, sunny, olf '6t<br />

STONEHAM<br />

ties, 20 to 200 acres Foi<br />

prkg, $695 mo. no utils,<br />

FREE Special Land Re-<br />

MAIN ST. no pels. Days 781-246ports:<br />

www.landbuyers<br />

NO FEE 1 Bedroom 1230/eves. 781-334-5101<br />

guide.com/new<br />

apis $850-$900' Close lo<br />

Rles.128, 95 & 93 Heat WOBURN 5rm, 2br, 2 car<br />

& HW included Modern,<br />

Land / Property Wanted<br />

pkg, patio, nr Horn Pond,<br />

hardwood floors, tile bath, w/d hkup, hdwd Hrs, no<br />

Raw or permitted land, parking and more. Call pels $1,200+ utils. PI<br />

Distressed properties<br />

781 438-3456.<br />

call 781-933-2611 B4 8<br />

Best price. No delay! bostonproperty123 com<br />

Trilon Construction<br />

WOBURN AND VICINITY<br />

978-988-2343<br />

WAKEFIELD 1 bdrm 2nd 1 Bed ht & hw incl $775<br />

RUN" DOWN HOMES tlr. Avail 8/15 AC, prkg., 1 Bed sm. w/util. $650"<br />

WANTED - Tewksbury or no pels, n/smkg. apt 2 Room stu heated $775<br />

<strong>Wilmington</strong> for remodel or Short walk to lake $800 2 bed w/util incl $1000<br />

demo. Cash paid. John<br />

mo. Call 617-966-5774. 2 Bed, Medlord $975<br />

3 Bed Heated $1600<br />

Carroll, Builder. 978-851-<br />

4851.<br />

WAKEFIELD attractive 1 RE 781-944-8533 or 781br<br />

near ctr. & transp Oil 589-8100.<br />

st. prkg No pels. $795 +<br />

utils Call 781-245-5513 WOBURN Country Club<br />

RENTALS<br />

Apis. Cambrdge Rd. 2<br />

WAKEFIELD iarge sh7 bdrm $1200 mo. Ample<br />

Apartments &<br />

dio, near cntr/lake, oil st prkg, laundry, d&d, ac,<br />

prkg No pets, NS hshld on MBTA bus line Ht &<br />

Condos 5010 $725 + utils Avail 8/1 hw incl. 978-372-1661.<br />

n-<br />

^5ine;47 S2.300/BO ^^ ^ ^ ^^g^.-g;<br />

781-944-0590.<br />

ANDOVER 1 BR near<br />

Woburn young 1/2 duplex<br />

town/train, off si prkg.,<br />

hse. 3 firs, 3 brs, 1 1/2<br />

MOVING AH Ethan ANen ANTIQUES TO f^l ^^ *** coin op, $800/up mo NP,<br />

baths, over 1200 si Frpl.<br />

in exc cond All Re- COLLECTABLES<br />

or utils. Sec. req. Call<br />

laundry deck $1495<br />

duceb! Complete Dinrm Antiques, (urn., glass, on-<br />

978-771-8246.<br />

Avail. 9/1.781-726-0304<br />

_J<br />

WOBURN. North 5 rm<br />

apt.. 2nd fir. $950 mo<br />

No pels, no heal & elec<br />

Avail 9/1 781-935-0851.<br />

leave message<br />

Commercial 5020<br />

& box spring incl $400, anvils , vises,- shdplots. ~_<br />

8x10 wool rug $150 Call 888-405-2007.<br />

DUXBURY'- Unique Nan-<br />

781-662-0312 < tucket Colonial 3BR, 4<br />

baths, in-law suite. Near<br />

ROCK Maple Dm rm Wood, Coal<br />

bay/shops Best schools<br />

w/4 chairs, hulch $350 » Qj| 2170 & beach Best buy at<br />

B/O Excellent shape!<br />

$699,900. 781-910-0675<br />

Oak collee. 2 end Ibis ' PAUL'S FIREWOOD 7—<br />

B/O Cell .727-631-2124. seasoned Oak » Maple STONEHAM - Home, for<br />

Tut anlH A delivered Call sale 7 r00m Ca P e Cod MELROSE Ige mod I<br />

br, near T, 3rd fir. hv.<br />

firs., ac. stove, refrig.. ca<br />

ble, bsmnt w/d, own slor<br />

age bin, 1 car covereo<br />

prkg NP. Avail now<br />

$980 + utils 781-334-<br />

4156<br />

NEW Duplex for rent -<br />

2BR $1,500/monlh, no<br />

'<br />

Table tennis tble. Good ^Dnce ^5^3794 o 3BR/2 baths. Cul de sac utils. North Reading<br />

—A cond oc $25 -70.-•»*.*>*« 781-273-3346<br />

R.H' LOC By Owner Available Sept 978-373-<br />

978-851-4330<br />

$485,000. 781-568-9554 1045.<br />

TWO Elhan Allen twin<br />

appl. only<br />

hdbds . sngl. sz dresser,<br />

2 night tbles, mirror, sm YARD SALES \ WOBURN brand new 3<br />

cab Almost new Asking<br />

bdrm., 3 ba col. Cherry<br />

$285 781-938-0414<br />

kit. cabs, granite tops,<br />

Auctions, Flea<br />

hdwd . ceramic tile, emer-<br />

UMBRELLA stroller, $10<br />

MarketS 81 Fairs3010 gency gen 2 car.att. gar<br />

TV & stand, $90 Yard<br />

^ on dead end si. Low<br />

lurn. $10 Toys, $5 &<br />

ABC FLEA MART $600's. 7 Allred Terrace<br />

$10 781 933-6691<br />

Reading,, olf Walkers 781-424-8039. t<br />

Wardrobe sm Maple & Brook Or Exit 39 otf I-95 __^_^_^_^___<br />

Birch 40 1/2"W, 19"D. 48 (Rte. 128). Indoors 8 out. —<br />

3/4"H 6 drwrs./lelt side AIR CONDITIONED in- Land<br />

4060<br />

Removable shelves & side FREE ADMISSION<br />

hanger on n w/dr Asking Space' avail. See or call N. WOODSTOCK, NH.<br />

$125/BO 781-325-5129 Gordon 603-918-6470 Prime house lot in 12 lot<br />

^^^-^-^^^^^^^— sub-division Town water<br />

9° od WHITE Couch, gooo u , .LD J7~ MTil 1l\ll\ * sewerage 1/2 acre<br />

cond $100/BO Flowered NOTtll Heading JU/V " Walk to down town<br />

$110>00. 781-438-4863<br />

NORTH READING Moving<br />

Sale - Fum. BR set Wanted In <strong>Wilmington</strong><br />

wAung hdbd 4 trame. oak Land I Home for Remodel<br />

corner hutch, nder mow- Call Craig Newhouse<br />

_^___^^^^^^ er. snow blower, much Cell* 978-857-0002"<br />

WOOD carved fireplace m Andover/Wilm. Line<br />

18,000 sq ft. industrial<br />

garage spaces Will sub<br />

divide Large yard. 4 5<br />

WAKEFIELD- 7 room apt acres, near Rte. 93 Call<br />

Newly renov, w/w carpet, T J. Really Trusl Jamie<br />

neai public transp. Small 508-962-3710 or Tom<br />

pel okay Available 8/1 781-771-2892<br />

$1,500 781-224-9638<br />

WAKEFIELD: Commer-<br />

WILMINGTON Base cial bldg. Entire 2nd fir<br />

ment apt. 1BR Oil si 1,400 si ol ollice space<br />

pkg, w/d hkup $775/mo "for lease Next lo Dunkin<br />

incl utils & cable 978 Donuts, melds hi S hw.<br />

NO. READING - Ground 618-6115. Avail immed<br />

Pvt pkg rear ol bldg<br />

level, quiel living 3 Ige.<br />

$1,800 / mo Completly<br />

rooms & garage W/D WILMINGTON 3BR bsml<br />

renov 781-245-6709.<br />

hkup Htd, a/c. Refs & apt. Avail 9/1/06. Quiei<br />

sec $900 978-664-6110. nghbrhd. NS hshld, NP<br />

1st+ sec dep $1500/mo<br />

WILMINGTON<br />

NORTH Reading Line, 2 utils incl. 978-804-4954<br />

HERITAGE COMMONS<br />

2 units available. 10A.<br />

room studio in modern<br />

bldg. Pool, tennis, htd. WILMINGTON<br />

2nd dr.. 620 si 9<br />

pkg section 8 ok. 781- Modern newly renov<br />

$529 58 per mo ♦ utils.<br />

245-7504<br />

1BR Lower level, w/w<br />

ISA, 1st llr, 600 Sf «<br />

carpel, . fireplace, NS<br />

$637 50 per mo + utils<br />

READING - 1 br apt Oil household, no pels, pri-<br />

Northeastern Rental Mgl<br />

st. pkg., close to public vate entrance, utils. incl<br />

1-978-658-7511.<br />

Iransp, no pets Ret's. $900/mo Avail now 1s<br />

WILMINGTON<br />

req Avail. 9/1 $895-$920 & last re" 178-658-5716<br />

R. W- Stuart Building<br />

ht & hw ind. mo For into.<br />

Retail / Office Space 2<br />

781-933-1829<br />

WINCHESTER ■ 1BR] units available<br />

new k & b. hdwd, w/d #101 860 si 9 $1,200<br />

Laura Ashley couch,<br />

READING - 3-4 rm con- hkup N/S hshld, NP. per mo. ♦ utils<br />

good cond S757BO Kit<br />

do. Patio, pool, new. w/w, $1150 ♦ utils. 1 st/last/ #103 624 si 9 $884. per<br />

ible w/benches. $30<br />

NP. $1000 inc. ht/hw/ca sec 4 Jee Summit RE mo ♦ utils<br />

Charbroil Grill. $50 Call<br />

1 st/last/sec 4 tee Sum- 781-942-47f7.<br />

Call 978-658-7511.<br />

781-953 3347<br />

mit RE 781-942-4717.<br />

www nedevcorp com<br />

WINCHESTER Lge stu-<br />

°'e Call 781-245-4543. • 1/2 Acre Lot tor Sale "<br />

mantel leak Never used 978 397-3813 for a look - STONEHAM - 2BR. 2<br />

dio. lull bath, kitchenette<br />

bath at Monterosa $700 9/1 In 12 unit bldg RENTALS<br />

Unfinished Must be _ «-.-«!«■<br />

seen S650/BO 71"w x SAT 8/12, 9 am - Noon Vocation<br />

$1,350/month ♦ utilities /l/W, all incl Live in Su-<br />

30"d x 55"h Call 781- 8 Oakland Road Multi Available 9/1 781-944- . jer 1 car prkg Call Gary TOS-13<br />

Property 4070<br />

438 9333<br />

family yard sale<br />

5597 or 617-413-3344 781-721-4830<br />

--<br />

d


1 " I<br />

MIDDU SI X [ ASI oppcinng in Daily Times Chionicle (Rooding, Woburn. WmelicHe.. Burlington. WnkelicUI.<br />

llwW Village,. No Rootling Transcript, <strong>Wilmington</strong> & tcwkibury lr ..n C.ier, Sioneham Independent<br />

Ei<br />

/IflC Supp/y, (he nation's largest wholesale distnbutot of<br />

i:\tenor building products, is looking (o put together a<br />

summer team and currently seeks:<br />

WAREHOUSE/MATERIAL<br />

HANDLERS<br />

Will load and unload trucks for delivery per customer<br />

orders This involves handling building products both<br />

manually'and with mechanical and hydraulic<br />

equipment Forklift experience helpful. Must be at least<br />

18 years old.<br />

Please send resume or stop by to complete an<br />

application ABC Supply Company,<br />

110 Commerce Way, Woburn, MA 01801. •<br />

tqual Opportunity Employtr/Drug-Frce Workpla* alace<br />

*sg<br />

www.abc-supply.com<br />

WILMINGTON PUBLIC SCHOOLS<br />

WILMINGTON, MA 01887<br />

VACANCIES<br />

Mini-Van Drivers<br />

Security Monitor<br />

(High School)<br />

Elementary School Nurse<br />

(1 Year Leave of Absence)<br />

Send letter of interest in<br />

Direcioi of Administration & Finance<br />

<strong>Wilmington</strong> Public Schools<br />

1(>I Church Street<br />

<strong>Wilmington</strong>, MA 01887<br />

Work with a company<br />

that values individual<br />

growth and learning.<br />

Join'our full-service<br />

restaurant team and<br />

enjoy the kind of<br />

good life that keeps<br />

getting better<br />

Hosts<br />

Servers<br />

Full and Pan Time,<br />

All Shifts<br />

Apply In person or<br />

online at www.unos.com<br />

■<br />

Unq Chicago Grill,<br />

1150 Middlesex Tpke.<br />

Burlington, MA<br />

Uno Chicago Grill,<br />

300 Mishawam Rd.<br />

Woburn, MA<br />

We ore an equct<br />

Opportunity employer<br />

Our employees<br />

woke us ft I<br />

RENTALS<br />

FROM S-12<br />

<strong>Wilmington</strong> -12 Bay St.<br />

Avail immed 735 s.l. @<br />

$9 7.5 per s.l total ol<br />

■$597.18 per mo Ulils not<br />

rncld Northeastern Rent-<br />

al Mgl. 1-978-658-7511<br />

Houses 5030<br />

NEW 3BR House lor renl<br />

Central air in North Read-<br />

ing Available Sepl<br />

$2.000/month No utils or<br />

renl with option -Call lor<br />

more mlo 978-373-1045<br />

WOBURN 3 bdrm<br />

bouse S1.500 no utils<br />

Prkg lor 2. yard 781-<br />

938-1735 or 781-420-<br />

6029<br />

Rentals to Share<br />

5060<br />

M&F seek 3rd lor 9/1<br />

Duplex-yard. w/d. prkg &<br />

more $450 + 1/3 utils<br />

Dep & rels No pels N/S<br />

apt 781-718-3783<br />

Rooms<br />

Please call<br />

978-694-6000<br />

for more information<br />

h/iKil (;/y«»T»u//i Kmphtyer tM<br />

5070<br />

BURLINGTON beautilully<br />

maml home, quiet resid<br />

st Unlurn rm All utils<br />

N/smkg home No pels<br />

$125/wk 617-755-6022<br />

Reading. No. Reading<br />

Stoneham Clean rm lor<br />

rent shared bath & kit;<br />

$110-$135/week includes<br />

"util Sec dep & rels<br />

req'd 978-668 2656<br />

. » —<br />

WILMINGTON<br />

Large clean room<br />

Shared kitchen & balh<br />

$125 - $135 / week<br />

Hel's & sec dep req<br />

978 658-2656<br />

CNC<br />

Lathe<br />

Operator<br />

Must be able to<br />

program G-Code,<br />

set-up and<br />

run to light<br />

tolerances.<br />

WILMINGTON<br />

Call<br />

978-<br />

657-4137<br />

World of Learning<br />

Children's Center<br />

Hiring the end of<br />

August<br />

TEACHERS<br />

(EEC Certified)<br />

& ASSISTANTS<br />

, 5 Days<br />

•' Hours Negotiable<br />

Contact Mary Beth<br />

Burke. Director<br />

781-273-0160<br />

Wanted to<br />

Rent 5100<br />

APT . single, mature N/S<br />

Female looking for 1st<br />

door apt fri owner/occu-<br />

pied house Call 978-<br />

474-8653<br />

AUTOMOTIVE<br />

—^^^—■<br />

Auto & Truck Parts<br />

& Repairs 6010<br />

4 DUNLOP TIRES w/rims<br />

lor a Toyota 4-runner.<br />

225-75R 15 $150/each<br />

tire w/rim or B/O Only 50<br />

miles use Call 781-696-<br />

5862<br />

Auto-X-thange 6040^<br />

.2004 DODGE Neon. Sid.,<br />

like new. It grey. 26K.<br />

36mpg hwy. ac Financ-<br />

ing avail Pnv seller.<br />

$7500 978-664-2705<br />

1999 ACURA RL. 3.5,<br />

(ully loaded, 86K miles<br />

$9,500 or besl ofler 978-<br />

835-2955<br />

2004 HUMMER II. Brnl<br />

orange, custom interior<br />

paint, loaded 14'<br />

Nav/DVD Screen. 39K<br />

miles $37,900 781-942<br />

1230<br />

2003 HONDA Accord LX<br />

ex cond . blue ext., aulo<br />

4 dr., ac, cd.. 21K miles<br />

$14,995 978664-0316.<br />

cell 978-394-5841<br />

2003 MAZDA 6 Steel<br />

Grey, Auto Mint cond<br />

41K. 4dr, pwr moon<br />

Bose $14,900 781-443-<br />

3220. 781 438 6731<br />

2002 CADILLAC Seville<br />

SLS North . Star, 60K<br />

new tires, clean FLA car<br />

$13,500 or B/O .978-887<br />

5205<br />

=== —2001 CHRYSLER LHS<br />

Storage & Silver, low miles, luxury<br />

~ ' CflQft model w/sunroof: etc<br />

OarageS WiV Buying van $9200 781<br />

944-0412<br />

STORAGE SPACE<br />

30 x 30 Garage with 2 2001 FORD Explorer XLT<br />

overhead doors 10 II 4x4 V6, navy blue, pow<br />

ceilings,, lights, electricer options Exc condition<br />

and water Call lor de- 46K miles S10.000/BO<br />

tails 978 664 4812 781-938-0086<br />

10<br />

WEDNESDAY/THURSDAY, AUGUST 9,10, 2006-PAGE S-13<br />

, 1- »■'•'■•-.• It MMM ■<br />

Burlington, Wobum, Winchester, Reading, Wakefield, No. Reading, <strong>Wilmington</strong>, Tewksbury, Lynnfield, Stoneham<br />

OPT< KEAD<br />

GENERAL HELP GENERAL HELP GENERAL HELP<br />

Billing Clerk<br />

A <strong>Wilmington</strong>-based HVAC wholesaler is look-<br />

ing to fill a full-time billing clerk position imme-<br />

diately. The applicant will be responsible for<br />

day-to-day processing of customer billing as<br />

well as cash sales to walk-in customers. The<br />

applicant will also do some on-line billing for<br />

utility accounts. Applicants should be accurate,<br />

detail-oriented, have computer skills including<br />

a knowledge ol Excel software and able to<br />

work in a fast paced environment. Experience<br />

with a SHIMS based bitliny system would be a<br />

plus.<br />

This lull-time position includes health & dental<br />

insurance, paid vacation, and a401K plan<br />

Interested candidates should<br />

email their resume to<br />

Jim Burke at<br />

jburke@sgtorrice.com. BUS<br />

Full and Part Time<br />

Drivers<br />

Needed • Must have CDL<br />

Call:<br />

978-664-0110<br />

CASHIER<br />

WANTED<br />

Mother's Hours<br />

Mon.-Fri. 9-2<br />

Apply in person<br />

WAYS2DE<br />

BAZAAR<br />

107 Main Street "<br />

Reading, MA<br />

781-944-1348<br />

PART TIME<br />

DENTAL<br />

ASSISTANT<br />

If interested,<br />

email resume to »<br />

appt®<br />

madentalc3re.com<br />

or fax<br />

781-944-4276<br />

2001" MERCURY Sable<br />

LS.66K mi, well maint , 6<br />

£D ch'ngr. j, Ithr. abs,<br />

aded, all power $7100<br />

781-334-6069<br />

1999 FORD Explorer<br />

.XLT. 106k mi , aulo , a/c.<br />

power windows &.locks. 4<br />

whl dr., cc. ed player<br />

S5.400 or b/o Call 978-<br />

337-1891.<br />

1999 FORD Wmdstar.<br />

Maroon, 7 pass pw, pi.<br />

cruise, 84K mi . good<br />

cond Runs great $3995<br />

781-726-0304<br />

1999 MERCURY Sable<br />

Sec 3 0 eng All power<br />

ac. 128K, looks & runs<br />

exc , $2,900/BO 978<br />

766-6920<br />

1998 CADILLAC DeVille<br />

4 dr sedan, excellent<br />

cond 77K miles Florida<br />

car, all power $6 000<br />

Call 978-851-2560.<br />

1997 SEBRIG Converti-<br />

ble Mint cond Loaded<br />

fow mi $4.900/BO cell<br />

617-513-1801 ask lor<br />

Cheryl<br />

1996 CHEVY Impala SS<br />

Dk Cherry, ' gray Ithr<br />

bkls., .1 owner, V8. CD<br />

console, vy gd cond $11<br />

900/BO 781-245-8597<br />

1996 FORD Mustang<br />

Convertible. 6 cyl. leal<br />

grn w/ while rool Gar<br />

winters Aulo. ac, alarm<br />

amfm. CD w/ boom box<br />

in trunk $6,500 Linda<br />

781-248-8549<br />

11996 FORD TAURUS GL<br />

Auto. 3 0 eng. 150K<br />

Good condition. 4 door<br />

$700 Call 978-664 0415<br />

I996 TOYOTA Camry<br />

High miles, cloth interior<br />

CD player, Iront wheel dr<br />

Ask $3 500 Contact Phil<br />

781-944-2580<br />

1994 BUICK Park Ave<br />

Runs well, but needs re<br />

pairs No dents 175K mi<br />

S850/BO, Bill 781-933-<br />

1144. billwag3834 0ven<br />

son nel<br />

,994 F-350 7 3L DIESEL<br />

Jump True* 10' body, 8'<br />

: isher Conventional<br />

Plow 6 new tires Excel-<br />

lent condition 98 235 mi<br />

$7,000 781 932 9537 •<br />

Dependable<br />

Gas<br />

Attendant<br />

For high volume<br />

station.<br />

1 p.m. - 9 p.m.<br />

and weekend<br />

shifts available<br />

Call Jim<br />

781-<br />

883-2128<br />

Auto-X-Change 6040<br />

1967 CHRYSLER Cus-<br />

tom Newport. HdTop, or-<br />

ig interior, 62K orig mi<br />

$5000 Bronze/blk vinyl<br />

rool 781-272-8392<br />

Autos Wanted 6050<br />

FREE CAR STRUCK<br />

REMOVAL Any size any<br />

condition Please call<br />

-978-531-5330<br />

JUNK CARS<br />

REMOVED FOR A FEE<br />

Wing's Used Auto Parts,<br />

Tewk Used eng. & trans,<br />

sold & insl Used tires<br />

S15& up 978 851-8100<br />

Motorcycles 6060<br />

2003 HONDA XR 50R<br />

Dirt Bike Excellent condi-<br />

tion $900 781-933-1171<br />

2003 ROAD King Classic<br />

100th Anniversary, 2-<br />

lone. sterling silver & viv-<br />

id blk.. 2,050 mi. Serious<br />

inquiries only $16,500<br />

978-835-2955<br />

2001 SUZUKI DR ?00<br />

Mint cond Under 600<br />

mi . On/oil road bike<br />

$1550 978-618-8647<br />

2000 KAWASKI VULCAN<br />

800 Mint condition<br />

ONLY 580 MILES<br />

$3,800/BO. Call Don al<br />

781721-6680<br />

Recreational<br />

Vehicles 6070<br />

27 FT Award Classic<br />

Travel trailer. $9,500 or<br />

BO Call 978-658-9619, 7<br />

Hamlin Lane, <strong>Wilmington</strong><br />

2005 SEA DOO 215HP<br />

RXT-Low hrs. Exc cond<br />

w/dbl trailer & accesso-<br />

ries $10.000/BO For<br />

more mlo call Rick 978-<br />

658-2597, 978-423-1809<br />

1997 HOLIDAY .Rambler<br />

- Musi see 25 ft travel<br />

trarlr, lully sell contained,<br />

alumrf Irame, fiberglass<br />

ext, fully loaded Hvy du-<br />

ty hitch, sway bar Queen<br />

size bd sips 4 511.000<br />

or BO 978 658-2061<br />

Recreational<br />

Vehicles 6070<br />

1996 STARCRAFT Gal:<br />

axy Tent Trailer Sleeps<br />

8. screen house canopy<br />

attachment. $2,500 978<br />

664-4179.<br />

?995 COACHMEN Cata-<br />

lina Travel Trailer 31'<br />

Great cond. $5500 or<br />

BO Call to view. 978-<br />

203-9117 '<br />

Medical<br />

Transcriptionist<br />

Part Time<br />

Transcribe office notes, consultations,<br />

correspondence.<br />

Available immediately.<br />

Flexible hours.<br />

Fax resume to:<br />

781-662-4878<br />

Pro-Care, Inc.<br />

Plumbing & Heating<br />

Division<br />

is looking to hire:<br />

Licensed Plumbers<br />

For residential & commercial<br />

• Min. 5 yrs. exp.<br />

• Valid driver's license.<br />

Health, life, dental insurance & 401K<br />

Call: Andrew 617-628-3952<br />

e-mail: Andrew@pro-careinc.com<br />

License #10570<br />

Personal<br />

Lines CSR<br />

A&K Fowler Insurance<br />

LLC in North Reading is<br />

looking lor a Full Time<br />

Personal Lines Service<br />

Representative.<br />

Cahdidate should have<br />

3 years experience.<br />

Must be detail and serv-<br />

ice oriented Some<br />

Commercial Lines<br />

experience helpful We<br />

offer an excellent salary<br />

with full benefits and a<br />

retirement plan<br />

Please lax resume to<br />

Alan Fowler at<br />

978-664-2209<br />

or email<br />

alan@ „<br />

aklowlerlns.com<br />

HEAVY<br />

EQUIPMENT<br />

OPERATOR<br />

TRAINING FOR<br />

EMPLOYMENT<br />

Bulldoieis, Backhoes,<br />

Loaders, Dump Trucks,<br />

Graders, Scrapers,<br />

Excavators ;<br />

• National Certllicalion t<br />

• Financial Assistance<br />

• Job Placemen! Assistance<br />

866-215-4540<br />

Associated Training Services<br />

www equipment-school com<br />

===== Employment Services<br />

Trucks & Vans 6080 & Publications 8020<br />

1999 FORD Explorer XLT<br />

86.000 miles. Full power.<br />

Like new condition inside<br />

and out $7,000. 781-<br />

933-5119.<br />

T999 PLYMOUTH Voy-<br />

ager 69K mi., Expresso<br />

Pkg 33 Itr., ac cd, 10<br />

way spkrs., tinted gls 7<br />

pass. Int. very clean<br />

S4900/BO 339-223-3125<br />

(<strong>Wilmington</strong>)<br />

1997 NISSAN Quest XE<br />

Mini van, 7 passenger<br />

Auto, ac, 50K mi., 1 own-<br />

er, mint cond. $3,800<br />

978-397-3321<br />

1990 SILVERADO heavy<br />

duty. Chevy Truck, 4x4<br />

w/8 ft bed 150K $2500<br />

Cap avail. 781-272-8392.<br />

BUSINESS &<br />

FINANCE<br />

Business<br />

Opportunity 7010<br />

ALL CASH CANDY<br />

ROUTE Do you ean,<br />

$800 in a day? Your own<br />

local candy route. In-<br />

cludes 30 Machines and<br />

Candy All lor $9,995 1-<br />

800-921-3949<br />

Mortgage<br />

& Loans<br />

THE Times Chronicle ac-<br />

cepts no responsibility lor<br />

ads requiring lees lor<br />

services or publications.<br />

If you have any questions<br />

please call the Classified<br />

Department al 781 933-<br />

3700<br />

General Help<br />

Wanted 8040<br />

Ambulatory lemale in<br />

Reading needs 2 PCA's<br />

to share daytime cover-<br />

age Mon-Sat. Car & ref's<br />

req Call 781-942-0684<br />

CDL CLASS A Team and'<br />

Solo Drivers Minimum<br />

ONE year experience<br />

OTR Good work history<br />

and MVR Call lor details<br />

Call 888-736-4879<br />

www.van-pak.com<br />

EARN UP TO $55000<br />

WEEKLY Working<br />

through the Government<br />

PT, No experience need-<br />

ed Call Today!!! 1-800-<br />

488-2921 Ask lor Depart-<br />

ment T-4<br />

EARN UP TO $55000<br />

WEEKLY Working<br />

through the Government<br />

PT, No experience need-<br />

ed. Call Today 1 !! 1-800-<br />

488-2921 Ask lor Depart-<br />

ment T-4<br />

^^^ CHARTWELLS the lead-<br />

. . R er in K-12 school lood<br />

UP TO $50/HOUR service has |he ,0nowing<br />

Deliver papers for law- ^||Qn aya|| s , 2006<br />

yers Full lime or^parNj^f Food Semce Posl.<br />

ime Must have cit. No<br />

risk Process Server 617-<br />

365-2646 (24 hrs.)<br />

lion $8.30 / hr 7 30 am -<br />

1 pm For the Winchester<br />

Public Schools Contact<br />

Bill Janson, Food Service<br />

Dir 781-721-7033 EOE<br />

7040 #1 TRUCK DRIVING<br />

SCHOOL $50 000<br />

$$CASH$$ Immediate $75,000 1st/yr earnings<br />

Cash lor Structured Set- I rai , nin 9 „ '?' , Wer £f r<br />

dements. Annuities, Law Swift, CR England Stu-<br />

Suit, Mortgage Notes & dent financing! Tuition<br />

Cash Flows J.G Went- Reimbursement! 100 .<br />

worth #1 1 -(800)794 b Placement Ass,s<br />

7o1f, lance 1-800-883 0171<br />

EXTA-62<br />

REVERSE MORTGAG<br />

ES! SENIOR HOME-<br />

OWNERS' No payments<br />

until you permanently<br />

leave your Residence<br />

Government insured, no<br />

qualifying. Call Frank<br />

Cosla 1 -800-974-4846<br />

x229 Continental Fund-<br />

ing, Sloughlon, MA www<br />

cfc-reversemortgage com<br />

EMPLOYMENT<br />

Child Core<br />

Wanted 8010<br />

A Surrogate Mother<br />

Wanted Established Sur<br />

rogacy Program seeks<br />

loving women, 21-45 to<br />

carry couples biological<br />

babies, prior birth experi-<br />

ence required, non-smok-<br />

ers, generous compensa-<br />

tion. 1-888-363-9457<br />

www.reproductiveiawyer<br />

com<br />

AVON! Career or pocket<br />

money, you decide 1 Up to<br />

50% commission prolit<br />

Low start up Email ISR<br />

Lisa® LWilber@aol com<br />

or call toll Iree 1 -800-258-<br />

1815<br />

Driver - QTR. Flatbed<br />

and Reeler Recent Aver<br />

age $1294 $1<br />

P/T CHILD CARE 523/week No Experi-<br />

Trucks & Vans 6080 Great lor nannies, gran ence' On the Road<br />

nies, college students & Training Available 800<br />

2006 CHEVY Silverado, retirees Needed for 3 771-6318 www prime<br />

1991 HONDA ACCORD Z71 pack. 1800K, silver school age children 12, 9 inc com<br />

EX. ac. sunrf. well maint bnch color, pwr pack, & 8 Before & after school<br />

w/tune New timing bell snow plow prep pack, ofl hrs M-F 630-8:30am & Earn up lo $500 weekly<br />

Runs exc $2 599/' Leo. road pkg Many extras 2:30-4 30pm Responsi- assembling our angel<br />

978-658-5°<br />

req cab. 8' bed $26,000 ble & committed. NS pins in the comfort ol<br />

11987 CHEVY S-1'0 1% Bla/ei<br />

Call 781-290-9414 home Ref's req'd Late your own home No expe-<br />

Aug start Please call rience required Call 1-<br />

w/1975 Chevy Impala<br />

eng Re built trans has , 2002 FORD F150 Super<br />

978-821-0175. ' 413-303-0474 or visit<br />

www angelpin net<br />

overheating problerns Cab - short bed. 4 dr.,<br />

$650 781-932-0052 XLT auto, PS. PW, PART TIME NANNY POLICE OFFICERS<br />

cruise, tow pack, cap Sept start date 2 child Earn up lo $20,000, bo-<br />

1969 CHEVY Impala. V8. wrroll out bed, 102K hwy (age 8 & 11) M/T/Th/F nus Tram to protect your<br />

auto, 4dr. 35K mi eng mi. very clean Kelley BB 2 30-5 30 Wed 12:30 fellow Soldiers and be a<br />

Trans frame ml Good at $10,300 Must sell 5 30 avail Car/ref. req'd leader in the Army Na<br />

shape Needs body work $9000 Bob 781-248- 781-944-6587 or 781 tionai Guard. 1-888-GO<br />

$1600BO 617 817-2036 4595 937-1734<br />

GUARD com/police<br />

Service Professionals<br />

- We Will train -<br />

. One of New England's most successful service companies since<br />

1945, Modern Pest Services seeks conscientious, quality-minded person<br />

to deliver proven pest management solutions to our commercial and res-<br />

idential clients. Experience in our industry is not required Our Training<br />

Specialists will focus personal attention on you, helping vou become an<br />

expert in pest management.<br />

Following your training you will receive your own territory with your<br />

own clients. You will be responsible for helping your clients protect their<br />

health and property. They will count on you for expert service and advice.<br />

You will be working independently, from your company vehicle, leaving<br />

from and returning to Woburn each day. You will needa lo be organized<br />

and attentive to detail. If you want to be responsible for providing a val-<br />

ued, exceptional service, you should be talking with us 1<br />

So, if you seek a rewarding, life-long career, with a successful, pro-<br />

fessional company where your opinion matters, contact us today!<br />

Modern is an EOE. Women are encouraged to apply<br />

|ob Requirements:<br />

You will be traveling on your own from home to home and from busi-<br />

ness to business so a valid driver's license and a clean driving record is<br />

required. As you will be dealing directly with clients, strong communica-<br />

tion skills are also needed.<br />

Salary:<br />

$35,000 - 40,000 per year.<br />

Education Requirements:<br />

A high school diploma is required. However, previous pest control<br />

experience is not necessary, we prefer to train.<br />

Benefits:<br />

Competitive Wages<br />

Bonus Opportunity<br />

Paid Holidays<br />

Vacation Package<br />

Medical Insurance<br />

Dental Insurance<br />

Modern<br />

PESTISERVICES<br />

CDL<br />

Driver<br />

Paving<br />

Company in<br />

Stoneham, NA<br />

781- I<br />

438-7766<br />

Drivers/O/OPS: HOME<br />

WEEKENDS & MAKE<br />

GREAT WEEKLY PAY!!<br />

Plus Blue Cross Blue<br />

Shield, Paid Vacation &<br />

Lease Purchase Pro-<br />

gram. (Super Regional &<br />

Dedicated Runs Also<br />

Available) CDL_A, 1yr.<br />

exp. Or 6mths. w/major<br />

carrier 877-806-5929<br />

www arnold4|obs com<br />

TRAIN AT HOME Be-<br />

come a PARALEGAL Na-<br />

tionally Certified MEDI-<br />

CAL OFFICE ASST. Na-<br />

tionally Certified PHAR-<br />

MACY TECHNICIAN Call<br />

1 -800-625-7053<br />

WANT HOME MOST<br />

WEEKENDS WITH<br />

MORE PAY? Heartland's<br />

GREEN MILE$ program!<br />

$54/mile company dnv-<br />

ers and $1.26 for opera-<br />

tors! 12 months OTR re-<br />

quired HEARTLAND EX-<br />

PRESS 1-800-441-4953<br />

www heartlandexore" 15<br />

com<br />

ARE YOU A MACHINE<br />

OPERATOR?<br />

If so, call Adecco today<br />

and schedule an inter-<br />

view Full time positions<br />

available for immediate<br />

openings. Applicants<br />

must have previous expe-<br />

rience 781-935-1004<br />

AUTOMOTIVE Techm-<br />

cian for new car dealer<br />

Only the best need apply<br />

$50K» 866-206-3323<br />

x2563<br />

CALL CENTER<br />

SUPERVISOR<br />

Our multi million dollar in-<br />

ternational company is<br />

rapidly expanding and in<br />

need of a dynamic super-<br />

visor to help build our<br />

Stoneham outbound call<br />

center Great pay and bo-<br />

nus No T-Stop nearby<br />

Call Jamie 508-320-9595<br />

CONTROLLER<br />

BURLINGTON: Fast<br />

paced home bldr/devel-<br />

oper seeks acctg prof<br />

Respons include cash<br />

mgmt, financial report-<br />

ing. CPA interface, pay-<br />

roll, human resources ad-<br />

min & office mgmt Mm<br />

3 years solid accounting<br />

exp , construction or real<br />

estate preferred Able to<br />

work indep . with accura-<br />

cy and meet deadlines<br />

Requires high level ol<br />

computer proficiency<br />

Forward detailed resume<br />

w salary requirements to<br />

FAX 781 -270-9406 or<br />

Email IdouglasflLCI<br />

Build com<br />

COUNTER help wanted<br />

for hardware & lumber<br />

departments Part time,<br />

flexible hours<br />

Reading Lumber<br />

978-664-5757<br />

" 401 (k) Retirement Plan<br />

" Personal Time<br />

* Company Vehicle<br />

* Free Uniforms<br />

' Paid Training<br />

" Advancement Opportunities<br />

128B New Boston Street<br />

Woburn, MA 01801<br />

781-938-7378 or 800-221-2267<br />

781-933-9080 Fax<br />

e-mail: roberttiufrson@modernpesl.com<br />

Canterbury<br />

Children's Center<br />

5 Bryant Street, Wakefield, MA<br />

781-245-9636<br />

Teacher's Aide<br />

8:30-11:00 Mon. through Fri.<br />

Great working environment.<br />

No summers, vacation weeks<br />

or snow days required.<br />

Start school with your child this September<br />

Call for details.<br />

General Help<br />

Wanted<br />

LIBRARY PAGE wanted<br />

Duties: reshelve books &<br />

AV items, maintain cor-<br />

rect shelf order of materi-<br />

als. Qualifications: basic<br />

understanding of Dewey<br />

Decimal System and con-<br />

cept of alphabetical or-<br />

der. Reliable and de-<br />

pendable Must be able<br />

to move loaded book<br />

carts and reach shelves<br />

with or without ladders<br />

10 hrs. wk. $3 65 $10 55<br />

per hr No benefits Send<br />

application to Rebecca<br />

Deaver, Asst.<br />

Woburn Public<br />

PO Box 298,<br />

MA 01801<br />

General Help<br />

8040 Wanted<br />

Director,<br />

<strong>Library</strong>,<br />

Woburn.<br />

LIC. ELECTRICIANS<br />

& EXP. APPRENTICES<br />

Local electrical contractor<br />

seeks Full Time help<br />

Competitive pay and ben-<br />

efits. Call 781-229-2944<br />

or fax 781-229-7744<br />

LIMOUSINE SERVICE<br />

Seeking dependable peo<br />

pie w/knowledge of the<br />

Boston area FT/PT pos<br />

avail Will train Earn up<br />

tO$13/hr 781-938-0014<br />

P/T Before/After School<br />

Teachers $10-$15/hr<br />

Morns 7-8 30am, After-<br />

noons 2 30-6pm Lv<br />

msg 781-937-8240 x312,<br />

781-933-7895 •"College<br />

students May Apply'"<br />

MAINTENANCE<br />

Person with knowledge ol<br />

cleaning needed lor office<br />

building in Woburn area<br />

40 hour week $l2/hour<br />

to start Must have valid<br />

license & good communi-<br />

cation skills Call Mark at<br />

781-646-4100<br />

NETWORK CABLING<br />

SERVICES, INC.<br />

Has Entry level positions<br />

available for Voice & Da-<br />

ta Cable Technicians<br />

Call 888-627-1927 Fax<br />

resume to 781-939-7292<br />

Two Constitution Way.<br />

Woburn, MA 01801<br />

OPERATORS NEEDED:<br />

6am-10am or 7am-3pm<br />

3-4 days per week Must<br />

be able to type 40 wpm<br />

No other experience<br />

needed Please call 978-<br />

229-8786 <strong>Wilmington</strong> ol-<br />

fice<br />

OWN A COMPUTER'<br />

Put it to work Part<br />

time/Full time Co to<br />

www homebizforall com<br />

or call 888-208-8088<br />

PEOPLE w/good commu-<br />

nicalion skills wanted for<br />

mall kiosk A good job<br />

for retiree or physically<br />

disabled, but all are wel-<br />

come Positions availa-<br />

ble in Burlington. Nash-<br />

ua, and Saugus Calf<br />

Russell at 781-983-1939<br />

8040<br />

MEDICAL/<br />

CHIROPRACTIC<br />

Assistant needed part<br />

time, 3' days approx<br />

8am-2:30pm Must have<br />

a caring, cheerful person-<br />

ality and enioy working<br />

with people Biology<br />

medical or chiropractic<br />

experience a plus Fax<br />

resume/cover letter to<br />

781-224-0147<br />

3EADING position avail<br />

lor Sept in School Age<br />

Child Care program<br />

Must be 21 & willing to<br />

get 7D-van license Exp<br />

pref If ml or for more in-<br />

fo call REAP at 781-944-<br />

0044 or send resume to<br />

REAP, PO box 372<br />

Reading MA 01867<br />

RECEP/ADMIN position<br />

full-time w/benelits Must<br />

be reliable and have<br />

good communicalion<br />

skills Starting al $11/hr.<br />

but negotiable depending<br />

on experience www Bak<br />

Chiropractic com Fax re-<br />

sume/cover letter to 781 -<br />

224-0147<br />

SALES Manager lor new<br />

car dealer Motivator, ed<br />

ucator & sales creator<br />

with honesty integrity,<br />

creativity $85K plus<br />

866-206-3323 x2563<br />

SEEKING Fore person &<br />

Crew Members lor maml<br />

& landscape construction<br />

Exp Prel Driver license<br />

FT I PT Top pay & bene<br />

fits 978-664 9977<br />

SMALL School hiring pre-<br />

school. mlani toddler<br />

teacher and aide 20-30<br />

hrs wk Flex hrs Exc<br />

benefits Exp pref Call<br />

978-658-9741 s<br />

WAITSTAFF<br />

Full and Part Time<br />

Apply at<br />

Spuds Restaurant<br />

Montvale Ave . Woburn<br />

WAREHOUSE<br />

WORKERS WANTED!<br />

Company in Woburn is<br />

seeking part time Ware<br />

house Associates for im-<br />

mediate openings Candi-<br />

dates must have previous<br />

warehouse experience<br />

Call Adecco today to<br />

schedule and interview<br />

781-935-1004<br />

WOBURN Public<br />

Schools F/T Computer<br />

Repair/Support Techni-<br />

cian WinXP/Win20007<br />

MacOSX Exp in school<br />

setting pref Send re-<br />

sumes to Barbara Henry,<br />

55 Locust St. Woburn,<br />

MA 01801<br />

s s


.-■<br />

PAGE S-14-WEDNESDAY/THURSDAY, AUGUST 9, 10, 2006<br />

1 I I ' mmmmmmmmmm<br />

MIDDLESEX EAST appearing ,n Daily limes - Chronicle (Reading, Wobu.n. Winchmrer. Burlington. Wakefield),<br />

lynnfield Villager, No Reading Transcnpl. <strong>Wilmington</strong> & Tewkibury Town Crier, Stonehom Independent<br />

:<br />

• 10 CITIES AND TOWNS EVERY WEEK<br />

It's about<br />

Quality of life<br />

for our Residents<br />

and Staff.<br />

■<br />

Burlington, Woburn, Winchester, Reading, Wakefield, No. Reading, <strong>Wilmington</strong>, Tewksbury, Lynnfield, Stoneham<br />

UP TO M EADELR<br />

//<br />

MEDICAL MEDICAL GENERAL HELP GENERAL HELP<br />

Glen Ridge is a Medicare and Joint Commission<br />

Certified. 164-beif Skilled Nursing facility<br />

Come join our team of caring professionals<br />

Nursing<br />

Secretary/Scheduler<br />

Full-time, Mon.-Fri., 8am-4:30pm<br />

164-bed skilled nursing facility is seeking<br />

an energetic, organized, detail oriented<br />

individual with excellent computer and<br />

interpersonal skills to join our team.<br />

Duties include staffing for the nursing<br />

department, payroll, phones and various<br />

human resource clerical functions.<br />

P'ease fax resume to Wendy Douglass,<br />

HS Dept..or stop by to fill out an<br />

application. Qualified candidates will be<br />

contacted for interviews.<br />

An equal opportunity employer.<br />

D\NIELS HOUSE<br />

(Nursing ffi> H o m e )<br />

CURRENTLY HAS<br />

POSITIONS<br />

AVAILABLE<br />

liAYLOK NURSE<br />

Small, family-owned Nursing Home is<br />

seeking a Baylor Nurse to work<br />

7:00 P.M. - 7:00 A.M., Sat and Sun.<br />

Work 24 hours get paid for 32 hours.<br />

Meals provided.<br />

R\ MUSK MANAGER<br />

FT Experienced RN Nurse Mgr.<br />

needed for small 33 bed (not skilled)<br />

LTC facility.<br />

IWi;


The Agnes Strec1\er Dance<br />

is Returning to STOWEHAM<br />

• Creative Movement • Musical Theatre<br />

• Pallet • Hip-Hop<br />

• Tap •• Hip-HoplTap<br />

• Jazz • Cheerdance<br />

• Ballet • Yoga<br />

• Pre-Pointe • Kindermusik<br />

• Pointe • Master Classes<br />

• Lyrical • Birthday Parties<br />

• Qymnastics • Summer Dance Program I<br />

New students:<br />

Pay first payment at time<br />

of registration and receive<br />

half off registration fee.<br />

The First 25 Students<br />

Reeeive A FREE ASDS<br />

Baseball Hat!<br />

Est. ]%S 1<br />

www.AgnesStreckerDanceStudio.com<br />

377 Main St., Stoneham, MA 02180<br />

781-438-5576<br />

172 Beach St., Revere, MA 02151<br />

781-284-9787<br />

908 Salem St., Qroveland, MA 01834<br />

978-469-0060<br />

-I<br />

The Agnes Strecker<br />

Dance Studio is<br />

celebrating forty two<br />

successful years<br />

of dance education.<br />

Come visit us or<br />

call our Studio.<br />

STONEHAM<br />

REQISTRATION<br />

• Returning Students<br />

Monday, Augurt 21, 2006<br />

4:00-8:00 pm<br />

• New Students<br />

Tuesday, August 22, 2006<br />

4:00-8:00 pm<br />

August 9, 10 2006;<br />

ENROLL NOW<br />

FOR A NEW YEAR OF DANCE!<br />

PROFESSIONAL INSTRUCTION IN:<br />

• Ballet • Jazz • Lyrical<br />

• Pointe • Modern • Hip Hop<br />

• Tap • Pre-Ballet • Pilates<br />

Classes for ages 2.5 yrs. to Adult<br />

Classes Begin Sept. 11, 2006!<br />

REGISTRATION & PLACEMENT:<br />

Aug. 31,2006 4-6: k>m Sept. 6,2006 4-6:30pm<br />

NUTCRACKER AUDITIONS:<br />

Sunday, September 24, 2006<br />

,\ f rl/i Reading<br />

S C II O () L (> F<br />

BALLET<br />

Lisa C. Pulver, Director<br />

»•.<br />

~ }i*i*\<br />

Celebrating lOYears of Quality Dance Training!<br />

52 Main St., North Reading, MA 01864 www.schoolofballet.com<br />

CALL 978-664-6433 NOW!<br />

»«.■.- ■ V,—' \-<br />

I<br />

I


' ■". ■' ■' ■I ■■ iiaii m^m^^^^^^ma^^mmmmm m^mmmm<br />

-?^ G _ E .? S ;?: WEDNESD AY/THURSDAY, AUGUST 9,10, 2006 L/nnlield Villugei No Reading ItanKripl. <strong>Wilmington</strong> & lowksbury lown Crier, Slonohum Iralopcnclonl<br />

Brain teasers mth toothpicks and more...<br />

By ANDREA MACMULLI.N<br />

TKWKSBURY - Summer<br />

school may never be the same.<br />

What the Tewksbury <strong>Memorial</strong><br />

High School students who<br />

recently attended summer<br />

school learned went way<br />

beyond the textbook. Raytheon<br />

employees in Tewksbury volun-<br />

teered to spend their time by<br />

sharing some hands-on applica-<br />

tions with Tewksbury students.<br />

"I loved it," said Raytheon<br />

employee Amanda McNamar<br />

who volunteered to help out in<br />

a math class. McNamar<br />

majored in math in college,<br />

and is now an engineer with<br />

Raytheon, making her a per<br />

feet fit in the subject area.<br />

McNamar came up with the<br />

idea to use Origami, and<br />

applied it to geometry.<br />

McNamar said the students<br />

worked on three different pro-<br />

jects and were able to recog-<br />

nize the many geometric<br />

shapes in their designs.<br />

"It was very rewarding, and<br />

a great opportunity to give<br />

back to the community," McNa-<br />

mar said.<br />

Dominic Mancini, also a<br />

Raytheon engineer, did some<br />

"brain teasers" with toothpicks<br />

in the geometry class that he<br />

participated in.<br />

"It helps the students to<br />

think outside of the box,"<br />

Mancini said.<br />

Jodv Brvant, a member of<br />

the Japan Operations at<br />

Raytheon, is also a part of the<br />

Mentoring Initiative introduced<br />

this past spring. It allows stu-<br />

dents the opportunity for inter-<br />

action with a professional who<br />

can guide them in future<br />

career paths From the Men-<br />

toring Initiative came the idea<br />

for Raytheon to take part in the<br />

summer school program<br />

Cynthia Basteri, Tewks-<br />

bury s Director of Extended<br />

Student and Community Edu-<br />

cational Services approached<br />

Bryant with the idea of<br />

Raytheon employees working<br />

on the summer school pro-<br />

gram. And from there, another<br />

connection between Tewksbury<br />

students and Raytheon was<br />

born.<br />

"We had ninety people from<br />

Raytheon." said Bryant of<br />

those who volunteered their<br />

time for the program. And it<br />

proved to be rewarding for both<br />

sides.<br />

"A lot of them are interested<br />

in continuing." he said.<br />

Bryant says, that because of<br />

its success, Raytheon would<br />

support future endeavors,<br />

including a similar program set<br />

to begin in October.<br />

"It was a lot of fun." said<br />

Frank Toney of Raytheon. Fun<br />

because he was able to work<br />

one on one, or with a small<br />

group of two to three students,<br />

and really assist young people<br />

in understanding a concept. "It<br />

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was rewarding to see students<br />

learn, knowing that I helped,"<br />

Toney said.<br />

Students asked Toney how<br />

geometry and algebra helped<br />

him in his day-to-day life at<br />

work. Toney explained to the<br />

students that he takes the same<br />

approach to the challenges he<br />

sees at work as one does when<br />

trying to solve a math problem.<br />

By breaking it down - doing it<br />

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a less complicated endeavor.<br />

"It's a more systematic<br />

approach to solving a prob-<br />

lem," he said "It's a lot easier<br />

that way"<br />

Bryant says that plans are<br />

already being formed for next<br />

year's program, with both he<br />

and Basteri committed to com-<br />

ing up with new ideas to make<br />

the experience even better.<br />

"Everyone is benefiting<br />

from this," Bryant said.<br />

Four new principals<br />

in Woburn schools<br />

By PAT BLAIS<br />

WOBURN - The city of<br />

Woburn will have four new<br />

principals in their nine ele-<br />

mentary schools including<br />

the Clapp School in the<br />

South End. the Goodyear<br />

School in East Woburn, the<br />

Hurld School on Bedford<br />

Road and the Shamrock<br />

School on Eastern Avenue<br />

Clapp School -<br />

At the Clapp School,<br />

Principal Becky Hedin will<br />

take charge of the George<br />

I. Clapp Elementary School<br />

from two-year principal An-<br />

thony Colanino, who moves<br />

on to a similar position in<br />

the Gloucester school sys-<br />

tem.<br />

Hedin, a native of Fram-<br />

ingham, comes to Woburn<br />

from a 2nd grade teaching<br />

position in the Sudbury<br />

Public Schools.<br />

A graduate of Wheelock<br />

College, she received her<br />

Masters degree from Leslie<br />

University and further stud-<br />

ies at Boston University.<br />

She had been working with<br />

current Principal Colanino.<br />

Goodyear School<br />

Reading resident Chris-<br />

tine Kelley was selected as<br />

new principal by a seven-<br />

person search committee<br />

after Principal Jane Mur-<br />

phy recently announced her<br />

plans to vacate the post<br />

Kelley's resume boasts<br />

over 25-years of teaching<br />

experience, has most re-<br />

cently served as a second<br />

grade teacher at Winches-<br />

ter's Vinson-Owen School.<br />

Employer' within the<br />

neighboring town's elemen-<br />

tary school for the past 15-<br />

years, the Reading resident<br />

has also taught in the third<br />

and sixth grades in Wil-<br />

mington's Shawsheen Ele-<br />

mentary School and North<br />

Intermediate School.<br />

At the outset of her edu-<br />

cational career, Kelley was<br />

employed as the director of<br />

a Catholic sponsored Eng-<br />

lish immersion program in<br />

Boston.<br />

Hurld School<br />

The School Committee<br />

welcomed recently the dis-<br />

trict's new Hurld School<br />

principals during its most<br />

recent meeting at the Joyce<br />

Middle School.<br />

Eileen Mills, a veteran<br />

teacher at the Wyman Ele-<br />

mentary School in Woburn<br />

for nearly 20-years, ss the<br />

new leader of the Hurld<br />

Elementary School.<br />

The Cleveland Avenue<br />

resident will replace retir-<br />

ing Principal Barry Dono-<br />

van.<br />

Shamrock School<br />

At the Shamrock School,<br />

the search committee chose<br />

Salem resident Wayne<br />

Clark, who taught in the<br />

Beverly Public School sys-<br />

tem for the past 13-years.<br />

Clark will fill the va-<br />

cancy created by the retire-<br />

ment of former Shamrock<br />

School Principal Karen<br />

Lindberg.<br />

Clark vowed to be a<br />

hands-on leader who will be<br />

regularly seen working<br />

with staff members and stu-<br />

dents outside of the corner<br />

office.<br />

Social Studies<br />

important<br />

With so much emphasis on<br />

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Social studies helps students<br />

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MIUDIFS1 X (AM cippcanny m Daily rimes Chronicle (Baading Wobu'n Winchester, Burlington, Walteficldl<br />

lyiirilicM Villtuffi r Jo Reading Irnnscript WJfnifHjtop & fi-wksbiiry Town « 101 SloncrKK'l InrlciwrHlonl<br />

6% increase<br />

$290 Vser Fee'for<br />

Winchester athletes<br />

By LINDSEY CAKDARKLLI<br />

WINCHESTER The<br />

School Committee has<br />

voted on user fees for the<br />

2006-2007 school year at its<br />

recent meeting that is ex-<br />

pected to raise fees about<br />

6%, according to School<br />

Committee Chairman Rob-<br />

ert O'Connor.<br />

"We are fee-dependent<br />

here," said O'Cortnor. "We<br />

don't know of any other<br />

source of funding."<br />

The athletics fee was<br />

voted to be $290 per student<br />

with a $950 family cap. In<br />

2005-2006, the fee was $275<br />

per student with an $1,100<br />

cap.<br />

"We're trying not to put<br />

the fee on the families who<br />

have the maximum, and<br />

spread it over the general<br />

population." said O'Connor.<br />

The transportation fee is<br />

increased by 10 percent,<br />

from $475-$835 per student<br />

in 2005-2006 to $525-$920.<br />

.Both instrumental music<br />

and pre-school tuition fees<br />

will stay the same, at $350<br />

and $3,000 per student re-<br />

spectively.<br />

The price of a Type A<br />

lunch was voted to increase<br />

by 25 cents, from $2.50 in<br />

2005-2006 to $2.75.<br />

The fees were approved<br />

on a 4-1 vote, with Samue<br />

Kounaves giving the onl><br />

descending vote.<br />

"I think it's inherent or.<br />

the state to support these<br />

programs," said Kounaves.<br />

"We're just sitting back qui-<br />

etly, and other communities<br />

are suffering too."<br />

The biggest debate was<br />

over transcript fees, which<br />

was $3.00 per transcript af-<br />

ter the first four in 2005-<br />

2006.<br />

A raise in the price was<br />

proposed, to $3.00 for the<br />

first transcript and $5.00 for<br />

each subsequent transcript.<br />

But guidance counselors<br />

are "very reluctant" to<br />

change the price of a tran-<br />

script, said Superintendent<br />

James Marini.<br />

"The counselors feel that<br />

students need to apply to<br />

various colleges, since the<br />

increasing enrollment<br />

we're seeing is being seen<br />

at colleges too," Marini.<br />

In the end, the Commit-<br />

tee decided not to raise the<br />

transcript fee, at least for<br />

the time being.<br />

"Right now the problem<br />

is working with guidance,<br />

who is essentially pleading<br />

with us not to touch the<br />

fees," said Marini.<br />

Stoneham names Patriquin<br />

new assistant superintendent<br />

By NANCY DOXAIU K<br />

STONEHAM : The School<br />

Committee went face-to-face<br />

with the two finalists vying for<br />

the Assistant Superintendency<br />

in Stoneham during a late June<br />

School Committee meeting,<br />

and came with away with a<br />

clear winner in Anne H.<br />

Patriquin. the Georgetown<br />

. School System Director of Cur-<br />

riculum and Instruction who<br />

was also a longtime teacher in<br />

, the Wakefield school system.<br />

Both candidates came high-<br />

ly regarded by members of<br />

Stoneham's search committee<br />

as well by their references.<br />

"We've gotten very positive<br />

references. I'm confident we<br />

have very accurate and very<br />

thorough input," School Super-<br />

intendent Dr. Joseph Connelly<br />

told the committee before intro-<br />

ducing the candidates.<br />

"I'm really pleased to bring<br />

before you tonight two finalists<br />

I feel have very strong creden-<br />

tials."<br />

Billerica <strong>Memorial</strong> High<br />

School Principal Dr. Richard<br />

Safier and Georgetown School<br />

System Director of Curriculum<br />

and Instruction Anne H.<br />

Patriquin sustained a third<br />

round of interviews last week,<br />

with each displaying a breadth<br />

of knowledge of curriculum<br />

development and government<br />

mandated programs, as well as<br />

a high degree of competence in<br />

technology, budget manage-<br />

ment, and organizational, ver-<br />

bal, and writing skills.<br />

But in the end, it was<br />

Patriquin, who got the nod<br />

Irom both Casey and the School<br />

Committee for her greater<br />

involvement in K-12 curricu<br />

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Student lunches up 25t in Burlington<br />

By JOHN WHITE<br />

BURLINGTON - Stu-<br />

dents will face increased<br />

school lunch prices when<br />

they,go back to school.<br />

Recently, the School<br />

Committee voted 4-1 to<br />

raise the prices to all stu-<br />

dents by 25 cents.<br />

/ The vote follows the<br />

news th'at for the first time<br />

in many years, the food<br />

service program made<br />

money in the past fiscal<br />

year.<br />

However, Food Service<br />

Director Cynthia Kazan-<br />

jian, citing increased costs,<br />

said the increase is needed<br />

to maintain the positive<br />

cash flow.<br />

Prices for students at<br />

the elementary and middle<br />

school level will go from $2<br />

to $2.25 and at Burlington<br />

High School the price will<br />

rise from $2.25 to $2.50. The<br />

cost for adult lunches will<br />

go from $3 to $3.50.<br />

Director of Operations<br />

and Finance Craig Robin-<br />

son noted the profit for fis-<br />

cal 2006 ($6,060) and lauded<br />

Kazanjian and the staff.<br />

"They run a great pro-<br />

gram," he told the commit-<br />

tee. He reported participa-<br />

tion has increased at all<br />

schools. Robinson said that<br />

if the proposed increase<br />

was approved, the pro-<br />

jected profit for next year<br />

is about $8,000.<br />

Kazanjian said the in-<br />

crease is needed due to the<br />

increased cost of food,<br />

equipment costs, and wage<br />

increases for staff.<br />

"We now need to take a<br />

very'aggressive stand for<br />

next year," she stated.<br />

Kazanjian added that<br />

there will be changes in the<br />

selections.<br />

Freedman takes part in<br />

principal shadowing<br />

WAKEFIELD Wakefield<br />

High School Principal Elinor<br />

Freedmaivhas been named as<br />

one of a dozen Massachusetts<br />

principals who will be taking<br />

part in the 2006-2007 Chinese-<br />

U.S. Principal Shawdowing<br />

Project.<br />

This program, which will<br />

extend throughout the upcom-<br />

ing 2006-2007 school year, is<br />

sponsored by the China<br />

Exchange Initiative (CEP<br />

and the China Education<br />

Association for International<br />

Exchange (CEAIE).<br />

"I wish we could hire them<br />

both," Connelly said before rec-<br />

ommending that the School<br />

Committee appoint Patriquin.<br />

The committee, liking what<br />

they heard from both candi-<br />

dates and from Patriquin in<br />

particular; voted 4-0 in favor of<br />

the appointment.<br />

Patriquin taught at Wake-<br />

field High SchooPToF 25 yeaTs-<br />

before moving her career to<br />

Georgetown.<br />

"I think Stoneham is a good<br />

fit. I've spent most of my<br />

career in Wakefield. I see them<br />

as similar communities. I feel<br />

professionally it's a good fit for<br />

me," she told the committee.<br />

"I think I'm also ready to<br />

become an assistant superin-<br />

tendent of schools because it's<br />

the job I do. If Georgetown was<br />

bigger, that would be my title."<br />

Patriquin also displayed sen-<br />

sitivity in the realm of profes-<br />

sional development, particular-<br />

ly how it can sometimes affects<br />

veteran teachers, and keeping<br />

those programs meaningful.<br />

"You need to know about<br />

adult learners," she said of her<br />

approach to that area of<br />

responsibility that she will take<br />

on as well in Stoneham.<br />

She also spoke with pride<br />

with regard to her visibility<br />

within the schools.<br />

"I schedule a half day every<br />

week that is sacred. By being<br />

in the building, I get involved<br />

in the classrooms," she said,<br />

adding that she considers it<br />

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The program receives<br />

financial support from the<br />

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mutual intercultural under-<br />

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tunities for professional devel-<br />

opment by setting up partner-<br />

ships between administrators<br />

from Massachusetts and<br />

peers in China.<br />

The project, now in its<br />

third year, will continue in<br />

November 2006 with a visit by<br />

twelve Chinese administrators<br />

In April 2007, a total of<br />

twelve U.S. administrators<br />

will visit their Chinese coun-<br />

terparts at schools in China.<br />

During the week of October<br />

28 through November 4. a<br />

schedule of shadowing events,<br />

including classroom visits,<br />

and meetings with various<br />

school and community groups<br />

will be developed for the visit-<br />

ing administrator's stay in<br />

.Wakefield.<br />

A host family is currently<br />

being sought for the visiting<br />

Chinese administrator who<br />

will shadow Freedman,<br />

Any family who is interest<br />

ed in hosting should contact<br />

Freedman at Wakefield High<br />

School, 781-246 6440, or via e-<br />

mail at freedmaiwwakefield<br />

.kl2.ma.us.<br />

For more information on<br />

this intercultural initiative.<br />

visit the program website.<br />

www.TheChinaExchangelniti<br />

ative.org<br />

For the latest news out of<br />

the Wakefield Public School<br />

Department, visit"www.wake<br />

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"We're changing the<br />

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Commenting on the sur-<br />

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you have accomplished the<br />

impossible."<br />

Vanella noted that food<br />

service was once subsidized<br />

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He asked if participation<br />

would drop if prices in-<br />

creased.<br />

"It will fall off to start,<br />

then it will come back up,"<br />

responded Robinson.<br />

Kazanjian cautioned that<br />

without the increase, the<br />

deficits would return.<br />

"It's as simple as that,"<br />

she said.<br />

Committee member Mi-<br />

chael DeSimone asked if<br />

the increase could be 15 or<br />

20 cents.<br />

Kazanjian said that if<br />

the increase is 25 cents,<br />

there will not be a need for<br />

another increase for some<br />

time.<br />

Committee Chairwoman<br />

Christine Monaco^tast the<br />

dissenting vote.<br />

"I have a problem with<br />

increasing the elementary<br />

and middle school from $2<br />

to $2.25," she stated.<br />

Monaco said she also<br />

wanted public input and<br />

suggested deferring a vote<br />

until the next meeting.<br />

"I came in planning to<br />

vote no on this," she said.<br />

adding she would stick to<br />

that position if there was<br />

significant opposition from<br />

the public.<br />

The issue of participa-<br />

tion levels was raised<br />

again.<br />

Kazanjian stated it has<br />

increased from 33 percent<br />

to 52 percent.<br />

Addressing the effect of<br />

price increase, she said<br />

there is generally a 1 per-<br />

cent loss for every 10 per-<br />

cent the price goes up.<br />

Committee member Ste-<br />

phen Nelson noted the work<br />

of Kazanjian and said he<br />

would go along with her<br />

recommendation.<br />

"I think this committee<br />

ought to support her." he<br />

said. "I don't think it's an<br />

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However, Nelson said he<br />

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from the public.<br />

In response to a ques-<br />

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important for the prices to<br />

be set as soon as possible<br />

because of reporting re-<br />

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government.<br />

Vanella said he would<br />

back the proposal, stating<br />

there has not been an in-<br />

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the increase amounts to<br />

around eight cents per<br />

year.<br />

After the increase was<br />

voted. Monaco commented,<br />

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people a chance to express<br />

their opinion on that."<br />

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'AGE SS-4-WEDNESDAY/THURSnAY AllrtllSTQ m onnfi<br />

THE NEWLY RENOVATED and expanded $18.5M<br />

Batchelder School in North Reading will welcome<br />

elementary students in September. A portion of the new<br />

building appears in the foreground. A section of the<br />

renovated 1917 building is in the upper right corner.<br />

(Transcript photo by Maureen Doherty)<br />

In Lynnfield<br />

Middle school hires new<br />

assistant principal<br />

William G. Furbush will join part of the Maine Army National<br />

the Lynnfield Middle School as Guard, from November 2003<br />

the assistant principal for the through March 2005. As a<br />

2006-2007 school year. sergeant at the Tactical<br />

Furbush last position was Operations Center in Mosul, he<br />

world languages department head was decorated by the Army two<br />

and German teacher at York times for outstanding job<br />

Middle School in York, Maine, performance and motivation,<br />

where he has worked since fall most rccenjly with the Army<br />

2000. He became the department Commendation Medal in<br />

head in September 2002. He also December 2004.<br />

served as the summer school site Prior to his work at York<br />

coordinator for the school this Middle School, Furbush was a<br />

past year, and was an Fulbright teaching assistant for<br />

administrative intern working grades 9 through 12 at the<br />

along with the principal and Austrian Ministry of Education<br />

assistant principal. in Althofen. Austria. From 1997<br />

While at York Middle School, to 1998, he created activities and<br />

Furbush was deployed to Iraq as lessons to teach English as a<br />

^^ s^^M<br />

second language, and provided<br />

tutorial services for the<br />

community.<br />

Furbush also worked as a<br />

supervisor coordinator and tutor<br />

for the Onward Tutor Program in<br />

Orono, Maine, and worked as a<br />

mutual fund accountant for the<br />

Forum Financial Group in<br />

Portland.<br />

The new assistant principal<br />

also has experience in the athletic<br />

realm. At various times, he<br />

served as the York Middle School<br />

baseball coach, assistant track<br />

coach, and coordinator of the<br />

after-school ski club.<br />

Getting accepted<br />

Grades still at top for colleges<br />

. Perhaps unfairly, more pres-<br />

sure than ever before is on<br />

today's high school students.<br />

The number of high schoolers<br />

who want to continue on to col-<br />

lege is ever-increasing. Since<br />

the competition is stiff,<br />

prospective collegians must<br />

demonstrate experience in a<br />

wide range of activities in addi-<br />

tion to academics in the hopes<br />

of standing out from the rest.<br />

While no two admissions<br />

boards are the same, students<br />

hoping to make a name for<br />

themselves among the sea of<br />

applicants can bank on a hand-<br />

ful of resume builders to ensure<br />

they pass the admission board<br />

litmus tests.<br />

• Grades. High schoolers<br />

can have a resume that boasts<br />

such things as class president,<br />

homecoming king or queen,<br />

tutoring underprivileged kids,<br />

etc, But if the grades aren't<br />

there, the admission likely<br />

won't be, either. Which isn't to<br />

say straight-A's are a necessity.<br />

But good grades remain the<br />

foundation and the foremost<br />

thing admission boards exam-<br />

ine throughout the decision<br />

process.<br />

The "Princeton Review"<br />

points out that schools look at<br />

grades all the way through a<br />

;<br />

schoolastic career, meaning the<br />

typical "senioritis" that settles<br />

in for high school seniors<br />

should be cautioned against to<br />

avoid damaging" a GPA stu-<br />

dents worked three and a half<br />

years to achieve.<br />

• Classes. In addition to con-<br />

sidering how well you did in<br />

school, admissions boards will<br />

look at what classes were<br />

taken. For instance, a B aver-<br />

age in honors-level courses will<br />

likely look better than an A<br />

average in standard-level class-<br />

es. Advanced-placement classes<br />

are especially appealing as<br />

they are college-level courses<br />

and will provide perhaps the<br />

most genuine glimpse as to<br />

how well you can perform aca-<br />

demically in college. Students<br />

who don't qualify for honors or<br />

AP classes, however, should not<br />

feel certain schools are off-lim-<br />

its. Just make sure the classes<br />

you take are legitimate ones<br />

(i.e., courses in mathematics,<br />

English, foreign language) and<br />

that you do well in each.<br />

• Standardized Test Scores.<br />

While some schools have<br />

reduced the emphasis placed<br />

on ACT or SAT scores over the<br />

years, the fact of the matter<br />

remains thev are still very<br />

important to most higher learn-<br />

ing institutions. Good grades<br />

might get you admission, but<br />

good grades coupled with high<br />

test scores will get you in and<br />

likely get you scholarship or<br />

grant money, a big bonus<br />

thanks to rising tuition and<br />

room and board costs. Taking<br />

tests such as the ACT and SAT<br />

seriously is imperative and<br />

often worth whatever the cost<br />

may be to prepare. Few schools<br />

look beyond test scores as a<br />

chief admission consideration,<br />

and fewer yet don't look at the<br />

scores at all. A strong perfor-<br />

mance from students without<br />

the grades will also raise an<br />

eyebrow on a few admissions<br />

boards.<br />

• Activities. Much debate<br />

has been made over just how<br />

big a role activities play in get-<br />

ting kids into college*. The<br />

National Association for Col-<br />

lege Admissions Counseling's<br />

(NACAC) State of College<br />

Admission report for 2005<br />

showed that perhaps extracur-<br />

riculars are overrated among<br />

applicants (and maybe even<br />

underrated by colleges). Slight-<br />

ly more than 50 percent of the<br />

661 schools that responded to<br />

the survey said extracurricu-<br />

ujijitiujjjii mi,<br />

Miuuirltx tAbl appealing in Daily limos - Chronicle (Reading, Wobuin, Winchos'er. Builinglon. Wakolicld)<br />

Lynnfield Villager, No Reading [ronicripl, <strong>Wilmington</strong> & Tewkibury Town Crier, Slonehom Independenl<br />

In North Reading<br />

Batchelder school to he ready<br />

for students in September<br />

By Maryanne Soucy<br />

and Bob Turosz<br />

North Reading Transcript<br />

The public with get a chance<br />

to check out the new and<br />

improved L.D. Batchelder<br />

Elementary School in North<br />

Reading before it officially<br />

opens to students on the first<br />

day of school, Wednesday,<br />

September 6.<br />

An open house will be held<br />

at the school at the end of<br />

August, according to School<br />

Committee member Jerry<br />

Venezia, though an official<br />

time and date was not set as of<br />

press time.<br />

Project cost $18.5M<br />

The Batchelder School is the<br />

town's oldest school and it had<br />

been deteriorating over the<br />

years. Its original 1917<br />

section was renovated to<br />

current standards while its<br />

exterior appearance was<br />

preserved -- including a<br />

controversial replacement of its<br />

slate roof — to maintain the<br />

building's historic integrity.<br />

lar have little or no impor-<br />

tance whatsoever when deter-<br />

mining admission Despite<br />

that, high school kids would be<br />

wise to look at that glass as<br />

half full, meaning that almost<br />

50 percent do value extracurric-<br />

ulars such as a job or sports<br />

experience.<br />

Where such activities are<br />

most valuable may not be in<br />

getting a student into college,<br />

but preparing him to do well<br />

once he gets there. Balancing a<br />

job. school and a social life is<br />

something many college stu-<br />

dents might struggle with.<br />

Those who have been down<br />

that road already in high<br />

school will have a leg up on<br />

their future classmates.<br />

• -Recommendations. Again,<br />

similar to extracurriculars, a<br />

good recommendation holds<br />

limited weight among many<br />

schools, greatly paling in com-<br />

parison to the importance<br />

placed on grades and test<br />

scores. Still, a glowing recom-<br />

mendation can turn a border-<br />

line candidate into a lock, and<br />

a potential scholarship winner<br />

into someone who no longer<br />

needs to,worry about paying<br />

for college. Choosing who will<br />

write a recommendation is<br />

important as well, as the stu-<br />

dent will want a teacher who<br />

knows about him in and out of<br />

the classroom and who can<br />

offer better insight into who he<br />

is as a person as well as a stu-<br />

dent.<br />

• Class Rank. This can be<br />

completely irrelevant depend-<br />

ing on the school. Students who<br />

ranked #1 of a a graduating<br />

class of 12 won't look as good<br />

as those who finished atop a<br />

class of 450. Also, if fellow<br />

classmates did poorly, being a f<br />

the top of a class that barely<br />

graduated won't be too impres-<br />

sive, either. Some schools don't<br />

even release or compile class<br />

rank, so it might be entirely<br />

moot. Still, class rank is some-<br />

The Batchelder is located<br />

within the town's Historic<br />

District which sets standards<br />

for historically accurate exterior<br />

finishes.<br />

The 1950s wing, which<br />

included the cafeteria, was razed<br />

to make way for the expansion,<br />

as were the modular classrooms<br />

that had been used for several<br />

years to house the school's<br />

fifth-grade classes due to an<br />

ever-growing elementary<br />

population.<br />

The total price tag of the<br />

two-year construction project<br />

was $18.5 million.<br />

Students bused to<br />

Stoneham for 2 years<br />

For the past two academic<br />

years, the students in grades<br />

K-5 were bused to Stoneham<br />

where they attended classes at<br />

the old Central School. The old<br />

Central School was selected to<br />

be leased by North Reading<br />

because its size enabled the<br />

entire Batchelder community to<br />

be kept together during their<br />

two-year sojourn.<br />

Summer vacation began two<br />

days early for Batchelder<br />

students this year to enable<br />

faculty and staff members time<br />

to pack up their classrooms for<br />

the move back to North<br />

Reading. Furnishings and<br />

classroom materials were<br />

moved into the school,<br />

beginning July 24.<br />

About 60 percent of the<br />

furniture used by students and<br />

staffls being recycled back into<br />

the building, therefore, a<br />

replacement schedule will be<br />

necessary to maintain high-<br />

quality materials, according to<br />

the Batchelder School<br />

Improvement Plan for 2006-<br />

07. This plan was recently<br />

accepted by the School<br />

Committee.<br />

"It's been a long haul and a<br />

nice two years in Stoneham,"<br />

Batchelder School Principal<br />

Sean Killeen told the School<br />

Committee. "The old Central<br />

School served us well. I think<br />

we made the right choice (in<br />

selecting the Central School),<br />

but everyone is excited about<br />

coming back to North<br />

Reading."<br />

"It's been a long haul<br />

and a nice two years in<br />

Stoneham. The old<br />

Central School served<br />

us well. I think we<br />

made the right<br />

choice...hul everyone is<br />

excited about coming<br />

back to North<br />

Reading."<br />

-Sean Killeen,<br />

Batchelder Principal<br />

Venezia commended Killeen<br />

as well as the Batchelder staff<br />

and faculty for making the<br />

two-year relocation work.<br />

"When we put this plan<br />

together the last couple of<br />

^cars, it was fraught with peril.<br />

You guys made it work. You<br />

could have been negative about<br />

it and you weren't. You and all<br />

the parents were extraordinary."<br />

Additionally, the School<br />

Committee offered its thanks<br />

to the families of students at<br />

the town's other schools for<br />

making the best of the<br />

circumstances during the<br />

construction. Many families<br />

had to contend with changes in<br />

starting and closing times at<br />

the town's other schools in<br />

order to make the busing<br />

schedule work due to the longer<br />

commute to Stoneham.<br />

Schedule changes<br />

Superintendent of Schools<br />

Dr. David Troughton pointed<br />

out that with the re-opening of<br />

the Batchelder, ail of the<br />

schools will revert to their pre-<br />

construction schedules.<br />

The Batchelder will be the<br />

"late" elementary school in<br />

2006-07 while the Hood and<br />

Little Schools will be the<br />

"early" schools. In the past, the<br />

Batchelder and the Little shared<br />

the same schedule while the<br />

Hood was on the opposite<br />

schedule. However, the<br />

Batchelder school population<br />

will grow in size in September<br />

to the point where it cannot<br />

share bus routes with other<br />

schools, the superintendent<br />

explained.<br />

Rainy spring interrupted<br />

construction<br />

In spite of construction<br />

delays caused by the<br />

extraordinarily heavy rains in<br />

May and June, the school will<br />

be ready to accept students in<br />

time for the first day of school<br />

as planned.<br />

The original completion dale<br />

was July 1. But the torrential<br />

rains flooded the transformers,<br />

and came through those<br />

transformers into the building<br />

which forced some work on the<br />

site to be halted, Venezia<br />

explained to the School<br />

Committee.<br />

Venezia added that the<br />

situation was adequately<br />

addressed and the replacement<br />

parts were ordered, but the<br />

delays it caused made it<br />

impossible to have the<br />

building completed by July I.<br />

A new "substantial completion<br />

date" was set for August 1.<br />

Among the goals in the<br />

coming school year contained<br />

in the School Improvement<br />

Plan are promoting and<br />

fostering a sense of awareness<br />

and appreciation for the new<br />

Batchelder School by the<br />

community. The open house<br />

will be the first step in<br />

meeting that goal.<br />

As the cover of the school<br />

improvement plan states: "New<br />

location, same results =<br />

Excellence." The new address<br />

of the Batchelder School is 175<br />

Park St., North Reading.<br />

Students vote favorite<br />

school lunch<br />

School lunches have come a<br />

£? "ESS. ?!° ,lon g wa y since the m y ster y<br />

vm'


MIDDIf SFX FAST appealing in Diiily [ime> Chioniclc (Reading, Wobum, Winchester, Burlington, Wokolinldl.<br />

Lynnfield ViBogei No Reading Ironicnpl, <strong>Wilmington</strong> A Inwksbury Town Cr.cr, Sionoham Independent WEDNESDAY/THURSDAY, AUGUST 9,10,2006-PAGE SS-5<br />

School Calenders<br />

Austin Preparatory<br />

School Calendar<br />

August 21)<br />

New Parents Information<br />

Session<br />

- Student hospitality event<br />

for grade 9 from 6:00 p.m. to<br />

7:30 p.m.<br />

August 30<br />

New Parents Information<br />

Session<br />

- Student hospitality event for<br />

grades 6, 7, 8, and 9 from 6:00<br />

p.m. to 7:30 p.m.<br />

September 5<br />

Teacher Inservice Day<br />

(No School) *<br />

September 6<br />

Registration for Grades 6 to 9<br />

(8:00 a.m. to 11:30 a.m.)<br />

Registration/Orientation for<br />

Grades 10 to 12 (12:15 p.m. to<br />

2:30 p.m.)<br />

September 7<br />

First Day of School for All<br />

Students<br />

September 15<br />

Schoolwide Liturgy<br />

September 21<br />

' Back-to-School Night<br />

(Grades 6-8)<br />

- Event for all parents of stu-<br />

dents in grades 6 to 8 from<br />

7:00 p.m. to 8:30 p.m.<br />

September 27<br />

Back-to School Night<br />

(Grades 9-12)<br />

- Event for all parents of stu-<br />

dents in grades 9 to 12 from<br />

7:00 p.m. to 8:30 p.m.<br />

October 4<br />

Student Evaluations Due<br />

-Submission deadline is 8:00<br />

a.m.<br />

October 9<br />

Columbus Day Observed (No<br />

School)<br />

October 18<br />

Testing Day for Students in<br />

Grades 6 to 11 (Dismissal at<br />

11:30 a.m.)<br />

- College Visitation Day<br />

for Seniors<br />

- Staff Development from<br />

12:00 noon to 4:00 p.m.<br />

November 5<br />

Fall Open House<br />

- Event to be held from 1:00<br />

p.m. to 3:30 p.m.<br />

November (i<br />

Second Quarter Begins<br />

November 15<br />

Evening Open House<br />

- Event to be held from 7:00<br />

p.m. to 9:00 p.m.<br />

November 18<br />

Entrance Exams<br />

-Exams to be held from 8:30<br />

a.m. to 11:00 a.m.<br />

November 20<br />

Parent Conferences for All<br />

Grades<br />

- Conferences to be held from<br />

2:30 p.m. to 4:30 p.m. and<br />

from 6:00 p.m. to 8:00 p.m.<br />

November 21<br />

Thanksgiving Recess Begins<br />

at End of School Day<br />

November 27<br />

Students Return from<br />

Thanksgiving Recess<br />

December 6<br />

Student Evaluations Due<br />

ftiflt* Tke Toj,<br />

DaKcelCeiciet<br />

- Deadline for submission is<br />

8:00 a.m.<br />

December 9<br />

Entrance Exam Make-Up<br />

Session<br />

- Exams to be held from 8:30<br />

a.m. to 11:00 a.m.<br />

December 20<br />

Winter Recess Begins at End<br />

of School Day<br />

January 2<br />

Teacher Inservice Day<br />

(No School)<br />

January 3<br />

Students Return from<br />

Winter Recess<br />

January 15<br />

Martin Luther King Day<br />

Observed (No School)<br />

January 16 to 18<br />

- Semester Exams for<br />

Grades 9 to 12<br />

- Half Day of Classes for<br />

Grades 6 to 8<br />

- Noon Dismissal for All<br />

Students<br />

January 19<br />

Headmaster's Holiday<br />

(No School)<br />

January 22<br />

Third Quarter/Second<br />

Semester Begins<br />

February 8<br />

Academic Conferences<br />

i Invitation Only)<br />

February 14<br />

Student Evaluations Due<br />

- Deadline for submission is<br />

8:00 a.m.<br />

February 16<br />

February Recess Begins at<br />

End of School Day<br />

February 26<br />

Students Return from Febru-<br />

ary Recess<br />

March 26<br />

Fourth Quarter Begins<br />

April 5<br />

Holy Thursday Observed (No<br />

School)<br />

April 6<br />

Good Friday Observed (No<br />

School)<br />

Calender to SS-6<br />

Stoneham<br />

from SS-3<br />

crucial to be visible at parent<br />

meetings and student activities.<br />

"I think it's real important<br />

that you are there for the kids.<br />

That's the business we're<br />

in., and the kids appreciate<br />

very much. It's a way that you<br />

let them know you're there for<br />

them."<br />

When asked by School Com-<br />

mittee Chairman Kristin Russo<br />

about future career aspirations,<br />

Patriquin said that her goal is<br />

to become an assistant superin-<br />

tendent of schools.<br />

"I see this as my strength<br />

working in concert with a<br />

superintendent."<br />

Pending contract negotia<br />

tion. Patriquin is expected to<br />

replace Josepn i.asey as assis-<br />

tant Superintendent of Stone-<br />

ham schools, a posjUon he has<br />

held for five years/as he moves<br />

his career to Melrose to<br />

become that school system's<br />

superintendent<br />

In <strong>Wilmington</strong><br />

'Dad's Group 9 springs into action<br />

By PHYLLIS NISSFW<br />

WILMINGTON - Sledding<br />

party without snow? No prob-<br />

lem.<br />

Picnic area without tables'.'<br />

Not any more.<br />

The North Intermediate<br />

Dads' Group is turning 'boys<br />

will be boys' into a really good<br />

thing, and school wish-lists into<br />

'bench'mark opportunities.<br />

"The Dads' Group goal is to<br />

have fun with the kids at the<br />

North Intermediate School,"<br />

said Chris Coakley, the contact<br />

person for <strong>Wilmington</strong>'s not-so-<br />

old-boy network.<br />

"We also try to make a little<br />

money that can be used by the<br />

school to make things a little<br />

better for kids, teachers, par-<br />

ents, and the town," Coakley<br />

said. "My guess on how it got<br />

started is that it's related to the<br />

fact that most dads would love<br />

to be more involved, but it's<br />

Lunch<br />

from SS-4<br />

al organization of more than<br />

55,000 members who provide<br />

high-quality, low-cost meals to<br />

students and are dedicated to<br />

feeding children safe and nutri-<br />

tious meals.<br />

With an estimated 17. per-<br />

cent of children and adoles-<br />

cents ages 2 to 19 overweight,<br />

nutrition education and proac-<br />

tive awareness programs are<br />

vital. The 'Vote' campaign will<br />

help inform parents and stu-<br />

dents on the importance of bal-<br />

anced, nutritious meals and<br />

show how healthy lunch options<br />

have evolved. Federal Dietary<br />

Guidelines for Americans set<br />

standards for essential protein,<br />

vitamins and minerals and<br />

limit calories from fat for<br />

meals within the federally<br />

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In recent years, school<br />

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difficult to help out during<br />

school hours."<br />

In this case, his story is her<br />

story, too. Five years ago,<br />

when Michele Nortonen<br />

became North Intexmediate<br />

principal, she invited parents<br />

to an open house to meet her,<br />

spoke about her vision for the<br />

school and what she'd like to<br />

implement, based on past suc-<br />

cesses in other school districts<br />

where she'd been a principal.<br />

"I talked about the correla-<br />

tion between student success<br />

and parent involvement and<br />

suggested a vehicle - called<br />

The Dads' Group' - for dads to<br />

get more physically involved,"<br />

Nortonen said. "I had a sign-up<br />

sheet available and by the end<br />

of the meeting, about half*a<br />

dozen names appeared on it."<br />

She called each person,<br />

invited him to a meeting, and<br />

suggested he bring a friend.<br />

"And the rest," she said, "is his-<br />

tory."<br />

At her other schools, the<br />

gyms had been open, so after<br />

each monthly meeting, the<br />

guys got together to shoot<br />

hoops.<br />

"That was a real hook," said<br />

Nortonen. "Unfortunately, our<br />

court is already rented out, but<br />

that hasn't stopped our dads<br />

from participating in a very<br />

active way. Membership in the<br />

group is fluid, mainly because<br />

the kids are here only two<br />

years. The dads understand<br />

that like any organization, they<br />

don't have to attend every<br />

meeting. E-mails are shared,<br />

and information gets out one<br />

way or the other. In fact, one of<br />

the dads, whose only daughter<br />

is now at (the Middle School),<br />

still has a connection with us!<br />

It's a great way for dads to net-<br />

work with one another while<br />

making a positive contribution<br />

to their child's education and<br />

school."<br />

Contribute they have, paving<br />

their way with popcorn, pizza,<br />

chips, and a dash of improv.<br />

Take last winter's premiere<br />

event.<br />

"You'd think that picking a<br />

February date in New England<br />

would pretty much guarantee<br />

snow, but you never know about<br />

New England weather," said<br />

Coakley, of the sledding party<br />

scheduled during last Febru-<br />

ary's school vacation.<br />

Did they suffer a meltdown 9<br />

Yes, and no.<br />

"Some kids played football,<br />

soccer, and basketball outside."<br />

said Coakley of the delightful<br />

way-too-early spring weather<br />

that day. They toughed it out,<br />

though.<br />

"We got maybe 50 people by<br />

the end," he said. "We were<br />

looking at losing money, but<br />

our rough count at the end<br />

resulted in a couple of-dollars<br />

for the school. The best part<br />

was that the kids were full of<br />

hot dogs, burgers, chips, and<br />

soda "<br />

And the men, as always: hot<br />

stuff. 'Cafeteria in this case<br />

referred to the cafeteria, but<br />

did not include the kitchen:<br />

Coakley and the big guys<br />

grilling, 'dogs' boiling in a<br />

turkey fryer,<br />

"To use the kitchen would<br />

have involved an extra fee."<br />

said Nortonen. "so we had a<br />

cook-out, but an eat-in."<br />

Thank goodness, again, for<br />

that school cafeteria, and these<br />

'reel' men.<br />

"We were going to show the<br />

new 'Charlie and the Chocolate<br />

Factory,' said Coakley, "but we<br />

put 'Cats and Dogs' in first to<br />

get the projector up and run-<br />

ning. By the time we got every-<br />

thing hooked up and working,<br />

the three kids that had showed<br />

up for the movie didn't want to<br />

stop it. We watched all of 'Cats<br />

and Dogs,' then half of 'Charlie<br />

and the Chocolate Factory.'<br />

"A couple of people went<br />

home even happier with some<br />

nice raffle winnings - ski tick-<br />

ets, <strong>Wilmington</strong> towels, candy<br />

basket. T-shirt. DVD...."<br />

When it comes to work-life<br />

balance, these men take a back<br />

seat to no one.<br />

All work and no play? Not<br />

for these working dads whose<br />

homeaway-from-home<br />

improvements include purchas-<br />

ing benches for the school gym,<br />

buying and building three large<br />

wooden picnic tables for teach-<br />

ers and students, and chipping<br />

in on a 'double curving' slide<br />

upgrade that the students real-<br />

ly wanted on the new play-<br />

ground.<br />

Past events include a trip<br />

with "lots of excited and scared<br />

kids" to'the Livingston Haunted<br />

House in Tewksbury; UMass<br />

Lowell-BC hockey at the<br />

Tsongas Arena, attended by 160<br />

of <strong>Wilmington</strong>'s finest; Man<br />

chester, Nil Wolves Arena fool-<br />

ball, Lock Monsters hockey,<br />

and a movie night at school.'<br />

"We showed the movie<br />

Robots' to around 2(X) parents<br />

and kids'' said Coaklev.<br />

"A free movie and free pop-<br />

corn kept everyone happy. We<br />

asked the kids to bring some<br />

food for the local food bank,<br />

and we collected over 100 items.<br />

Nine winners at the raffle<br />

after the movie each took home<br />

a set of four tickets to any-<br />

UMass Lowell sports 2005-2006<br />

games - hockey at Tsongas<br />

arena, men's and women's bas-<br />

ketball at Costello gym."<br />

Meetings, they say, are a lot<br />

of fun.<br />

"We hold seven or eight one-<br />

hour meetings during a given -<br />

year," said Coakley "Currently,<br />

we meet at 8 p.m on the sec-<br />

ond Thursday of the month at<br />

the North Intermediate School<br />

<strong>Library</strong> to make our plans.<br />

Meetings are very casual and<br />

often fun. Typically, we come<br />

up with a 'to do' list for an<br />

upcoming event, and we each-<br />

volunteer to do something. We<br />

also discuss how we might<br />

spend any funds that we have<br />

at the end ol the year from our<br />

raffles.<br />

"Our best accomplishment,"<br />

said Coakley. "is our success in<br />

happy kids. In addition, we<br />

dads feel great about our work.<br />

Who wouldn't be proud of<br />

memorable times with our kids,<br />

going to games with family and<br />

friends, spending time at<br />

school when the kids aren't<br />

working'.'"<br />

The group is, they'd be the<br />

first to point out, politically<br />

correct and all-inclasive.<br />

But just admit it, guys,<br />

where would you be without a<br />

woman's touch?<br />

"Michele Nortonen," said<br />

Coakley, "is the honorary dad."<br />

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PAGE SS-6-WEDNESDAYATHURSDAY, AUGUST 9,10,2006<br />

Calender from ss-5<br />

April 13<br />

April Recess Begins at End<br />

of School Day<br />

April 23<br />

Students Return from April<br />

Recess<br />

April 25<br />

Senior Evaluations Due<br />

- Deadline for submission is<br />

8:00 a.m.<br />

April 27<br />

Student Evaluations Due for<br />

Grades 6 to 11<br />

- Deadline for submission<br />

is 8:00 a.m.<br />

May 7-18<br />

Advanced Placement Exams<br />

May 21-23<br />

Senior Final Exams<br />

May 28<br />

<strong>Memorial</strong> Day Observed (No<br />

School)<br />

May 29-31<br />

Semester Exams for<br />

Grades 9 to 11<br />

- Noon dismissal from exams.<br />

May 29-31<br />

Year-End Activities for<br />

Grades 6 to 8.<br />

June 1<br />

Bacalaureate Mass<br />

- Event begins at 4:00 p.m.<br />

June 2<br />

Commencement Ceremony<br />

- Event begins at 2:00 p.m.<br />

June 5<br />

Faculty Meeting<br />

June 10<br />

Final Grades Due<br />

- Deadline for submission<br />

is 10:00 a.m.<br />

June 18<br />

Last Day of School if No<br />

Snow Days Used<br />

June 25<br />

Last Day of School if All<br />

Snow Davs Used<br />

Burlington School<br />

Calendar<br />

August 28-29<br />

Teacher Inservice Days<br />

(No School<br />

August 30<br />

First Day of School<br />

September 4<br />

Labor Day Observed<br />

(No School)<br />

October 2<br />

Yom Kippur Observed<br />

(No School)<br />

October 9<br />

Columbus Day Observed<br />

(No School)<br />

October, 16<br />

Early Release Day lor<br />

Elementary Students<br />

-Parent-teacher conferences<br />

and professional develop-<br />

ment after classes end.<br />

October 18<br />

Eariy Release Day for<br />

Elementary Students<br />

-Parent-teacher conferences<br />

and professional develop-<br />

ment after classes end.<br />

October 24<br />

Early Release Day for<br />

Elementary Students<br />

-Parent-teacher conferences<br />

and professional develop-<br />

ment after classes end.<br />

October 26<br />

Early Release Day for<br />

Elementary Students<br />

-Parent-teacher conferences<br />

and professional develop-<br />

ment after classes end.<br />

November 10<br />

Teacher Inservice Day<br />

("No School)<br />

November 22<br />

Thanksgiving Recess Begins<br />

at End of School Day<br />

-Early Release Day for All<br />

Students<br />

November 27<br />

Students Return from<br />

Thanksgiving Recess<br />

December 5-8<br />

Early Release Day for Mid-<br />

dle School Students<br />

- Parent-teacher conferences<br />

after classes end.<br />

December 22<br />

Winter Recess Begins at End<br />

of School Day<br />

- Early Release Day for<br />

All Students'<br />

January 2<br />

Students Return from<br />

Winter Recess<br />

January 15<br />

Martin Luther King Day<br />

Observed < No School)<br />

February 16<br />

February Recess Begins at<br />

End of Schol Day<br />

February 26<br />

Students Return from<br />

February Recess<br />

April (i<br />

Good Friday Observed<br />

(No School)<br />

April 13<br />

April Recess Begins at End<br />

of School Day<br />

April 23<br />

Students Return from April<br />

Recess<br />

May 28<br />

<strong>Memorial</strong> Day Observed<br />

(No School).<br />

June 1<br />

Lynnfield High School<br />

Graduation at 6:00 p.m.<br />

June 20<br />

Tentative Last Day of School<br />

Lynnfield School<br />

Calendar<br />

August 28-29<br />

Teacher Inservice Days<br />

(No School<br />

August 30<br />

First Day of School<br />

September I<br />

Labor Day Observed<br />

(No School)<br />

October 2<br />

Yom Kippur Observed<br />

(No School)<br />

October 9<br />

Columbus Day Observed<br />

(No School)<br />

October 16<br />

Early Release Day for<br />

Elementary Students<br />

-Parent-teacher conferences<br />

and professional develop-<br />

ment after classes end.<br />

October 18<br />

Early Release Day for<br />

Elementary Students<br />

-Parent-teacher conferences<br />

and professional develop-<br />

ment after classes end.<br />

October 24<br />

Early Release Day for<br />

Elementary Students<br />

-Parent-teacher conferences<br />

and professional develop-<br />

ment after classes end.<br />

October 26<br />

Early Release Day for<br />

Elementary Students<br />

-Parent-teacher conferences<br />

and professional develop-<br />

ment after classes end.<br />

November 10<br />

Teacher Inservice Day<br />

(No School)<br />

November 22<br />

Thanksgiving Recess Begins<br />

at End of School Day<br />

-Early Release Day for All<br />

Students<br />

November 27<br />

Students Return from<br />

Thanksgiving Recess<br />

December 5-8<br />

Early Release Day for Mid-<br />

dle School Students<br />

- Parent-teacher conferences<br />

after classes end.<br />

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December 22<br />

Winter Recess Begins at End<br />

of School Day<br />

, - Early Release Day for<br />

All Students<br />

January 2<br />

Students Return from<br />

Winter Recess<br />

January 15<br />

Martin Luther King Day<br />

Observed i No School'<br />

February Hi<br />

February Recess Begins at<br />

End of School Day<br />

February 26<br />

Students Return from<br />

February Recess<br />

April 6<br />

Good Friday Observed<br />

(No School)<br />

April 13<br />

April Recess Begins at End<br />

of School Day<br />

April 2!1<br />

Students Return from April<br />

Recess<br />

May 28<br />

<strong>Memorial</strong> Day Observed<br />

(No School)<br />

June 1<br />

Lynnfield High School<br />

Graduation at 6:00 p.m.<br />

June 20<br />

Tentative Last Day of School<br />

North Reading<br />

School Calendar<br />

September 5<br />

Stall' Orientation Day<br />

(No School'<br />

September (i<br />

First Day of School<br />

September 11<br />

Little School Parents'<br />

Orientation Night<br />

September 20<br />

Batchelder School Parents'<br />

Orientation Night<br />

September 21<br />

Hood School Parents'<br />

Orientation Night<br />

September 2(1<br />

High School Back-to-School<br />

Night<br />

September 27<br />

Middle School Back-to-School<br />

Night<br />

October 1<br />

Early Release Day for All<br />

Students<br />

October 9<br />

Columbus Day Observed<br />

(No School)<br />

November 1<br />

Early Release Day for All<br />

Students<br />

November 10<br />

Veteran's Day Observed (No<br />

School)<br />

November 14-17<br />

Early Release Day for Mid-<br />

dle School Students -<br />

- Parent-teacher evening con-<br />

ferences to be held Novem-<br />

ber 14 and 16.<br />

- Parent-teacher afternoon<br />

conferences to be held<br />

November 15 and 17<br />

November 20<br />

High School Evening Parent-<br />

Teacher Conferences<br />

November 22<br />

Thanksgiving Recess Begins<br />

- Early Release Day for all<br />

students.<br />

November 27<br />

Students Return from<br />

Thanksgiving Recess<br />

November 20<br />

Early Release Day for All<br />

Students<br />

December 0 - 8<br />

Early Release Day for Ele<br />

mentary Students<br />

- Evening parent-teacher<br />

conferences to be held<br />

December 6.<br />

- Afternoon parent-teacher<br />

conferences to be held<br />

December 7. 8.<br />

December 22<br />

Winter Recess Begins at End<br />

of School Day<br />

January 2<br />

Students Return from Winter<br />

Recess<br />

January 15<br />

Martin Luther King Day<br />

Observed (No School)<br />

January 16-19<br />

High School Mid-Year Exams<br />

January 17-19<br />

Early Release Days for High<br />

School Students<br />

January 29<br />

Kindergarten Changeover<br />

February 7<br />

Early Release Day for All<br />

Students<br />

February 13<br />

Kindergarten Registration at<br />

Batchelder School<br />

-Registration for 2007-2008<br />

school year.<br />

February 14<br />

Kindergarten Registration at<br />

Hood School<br />

-Registration for 2007-2008<br />

school year. .<br />

February 15<br />

Kindergarten Registration at<br />

Little School<br />

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Registration lor 2007-2008<br />

school year.<br />

February 16<br />

February Recess Begins at<br />

End of School Day<br />

February 26<br />

Students Return from<br />

February Recess<br />

February 27<br />

Snow Date for Batchelder<br />

School Kindergarten Regis-<br />

tration<br />

March 1, 2<br />

Snow Date for Hood and<br />

Little School Kindergarten<br />

Registration<br />

March 7<br />

Early Release Day for All<br />

Students<br />

March 8<br />

High School Evening<br />

Conferences<br />

March 12<br />

Public Budget Hearing<br />

March 21-23<br />

Early Release Days for Ele<br />

mentar) Students<br />

- Evening parent-teacher<br />

conferences on March 21<br />

- Afternoon parent-teacher<br />

conferences on March 22, 23<br />

April 4<br />

Early Release Day for All<br />

Students<br />

April 13<br />

April Recess Begins at End<br />

of School Day<br />

April 23<br />

Students Return from<br />

April Recess<br />

May 2<br />

Early Release Day for<br />

All Students<br />

May 28<br />

<strong>Memorial</strong> Day Observed<br />

(No School)<br />

June 6<br />

Early Release Day for All<br />

Students<br />

June 8<br />

High School Graduation<br />

June 25<br />

Last Day of School for<br />

All Students<br />

Our Lady of<br />

Nazareth Academy<br />

Calendar<br />

September 6<br />

First Day of School for<br />

Sophomores, Juniors and<br />

Seniors<br />

- Classes to be held from 8;00<br />

a.m. to 11:00 a.m.<br />

September 7<br />

First Day of School for<br />

Freshmen<br />

- Grade 9 classes to be held<br />

from 8:00 a.m. tp 11:30 a.m.<br />

September 8<br />

Opening Liturgy for<br />

Grades 9 to 12<br />

September 11<br />

Classes Begin for<br />

All Students<br />

September 28<br />

Parent-Teacher Meeting<br />

- Event begins at 7:00 p.m.<br />

October 4<br />

High School Information Fair<br />

- Event to be held from 6:30<br />

p.m. to 8:30 p.m.<br />

October 14<br />

Admissions Open House<br />

- Event to be held from 9:00<br />

a.m. to 12:00 noon.<br />

October 18<br />

Testing Day for<br />

Grades 9,10,11<br />

October 18<br />

College Visting Day for<br />

Seniors<br />

November 9<br />

Admissions Open House<br />

- Event to be held from 7:00<br />

p.m. to 9:00 p.m.<br />

November 22<br />

Thanksgiving Recess Begins<br />

at 12:00 noon<br />

November 27<br />

Students Return from<br />

Thanksgiving Recess<br />

December 22<br />

Winter Recess Begins at End<br />

of School Day<br />

January 3<br />

Students Return from Winter<br />

Recess<br />

January 28 - February 2<br />

Catholic Schools Week<br />

February 16<br />

February Recess Begins at<br />

End of School Day<br />

February 26<br />

Students Return from Febru-<br />

aiy Recess<br />

April 5<br />

Holy Thursday Observed (No<br />

School)<br />

April 6<br />

Good Friday Observed<br />

(No School)<br />

April 9<br />

Easter Monday Observed<br />

(No School)<br />

April 13<br />

April Recess Begins at End<br />

of School Day<br />

• April 23<br />

Students Return from April<br />

Recess<br />

May 12-W<br />

Spring Musical<br />

May 18<br />

Prom<br />

May 23<br />

Senior Banquet<br />

May 24<br />

Senior Graduation<br />

June 11, 12, 13<br />

Final Exams<br />

June 14<br />

Exams Make-Up Day<br />

Reading School<br />

Calendar for<br />

Kindergarten to<br />

Grade 8<br />

August-30<br />

Teacher Inservice Day<br />

(No School for Students)<br />

August 31<br />

Teacher Inservice Day<br />

(No School for Students)<br />

September 5<br />

First Day of School<br />

for Students<br />

- Half-day for full-day kinder-<br />

garten students and grade<br />

one students.<br />

- Full-day for all other<br />

students.<br />

September 27<br />

Early Release for Grades Six<br />

to Eight<br />

October 2<br />

Yom Kippur Observed<br />

(No School)<br />

October 9<br />

Columbus Day Observed<br />

(No School)<br />

October 25<br />

Early Release for Grades<br />

Six to Eight<br />

November 7<br />

Teacher Inservice Day,<br />

- No School for students in<br />

grades six to eight.<br />

- Parent-teacher conferences<br />

to be held for kindergarten to<br />

grade five.<br />

November 10<br />

Veterans Day Observed<br />

(No School)<br />

November 22<br />

Thanksgiving Recess Begins<br />

- Early Release Day for stu-<br />

dents grades six to eight.<br />

November 27<br />

Students Return from<br />

Thanksgiving Recess<br />

December 13<br />

Early Release for Grades<br />

Six to Eight<br />

December 22<br />

Winter Recess Begins at End<br />

of School Day<br />

January 2<br />

Students Return from<br />

Winter Recess<br />

January 15<br />

Martin Luther King Jr. Day<br />

Observed (No School)<br />

January 16<br />

Kindergarten Changeover<br />

January 22<br />

Start of Second Semester<br />

January 31<br />

Early Release Day for<br />

Grades Six to Eight<br />

February 16<br />

February Recess Begins at<br />

End of School Day<br />

February 26<br />

Students Return from<br />

February Recess<br />

February 28<br />

Early Release for Grades<br />

Six to Eight<br />

March 14<br />

Early Release for Grades<br />

Six to Eight<br />

April 3<br />

Teacher Inservice Day for<br />

Kindergarten to Grade Eight<br />

(No School)<br />

April 6<br />

Good Friday Observed<br />

(No School)<br />

April 13<br />

April Recess Begins at End<br />

of School Day<br />

April 23<br />

Students Return from<br />

April Recess<br />

April 25<br />

Early Release Day for<br />

Grades Six to Eight<br />

May 28<br />

<strong>Memorial</strong> Day Observed<br />

(No School)<br />

May 30<br />

Early Release Day for<br />

Grades Six to Eight<br />

June 26<br />

Last Day of School (if,all<br />

four snow days are used)<br />

- Early Release Day for All<br />

Students<br />

Reading School<br />

Calendar for :<br />

Grades 9 to 12 r<br />

August 28<br />

Teacher Inservice Day (No<br />

School for Students) -»<br />

August 29<br />

First Day of School for Stu-<br />

dents : -<br />

Calender to SS-7 '<br />

>;


MIDDUilX LAS! uppon.my in Daily limes Chronicle (Rooding, Woburn. Winchester, Burlington. Wokelieldl,<br />

lynnlielo Villcioci No Reading IrOMCripl, <strong>Wilmington</strong> & Tewlcsbury Town ,ner, Sloneham Independenl<br />

Calender from ss-6<br />

September 1<br />

Early Release Day<br />

September 4 .<br />

Labor Day Observed (No<br />

School)<br />

October 2<br />

Yom Kippur Observed<br />

(No School)<br />

October 9<br />

Columbus Day Observed<br />

(No School)<br />

November 7<br />

Teacher Inservice Day<br />

(No School)<br />

November 10<br />

Veterans Day Observed<br />

(No School)<br />

November 22<br />

Thanksgiving Recess Begins<br />

* Early Release Day<br />

November 27<br />

Students Return from<br />

Thanksgiving Recess<br />

November 29<br />

Early Release Day<br />

December 19<br />

Early Release Day<br />

- Winter Recess Begins<br />

January 2<br />

Teacher Inservice Day (No<br />

School)<br />

January 3<br />

Students Return from Winter<br />

Recess<br />

January 15<br />

Martin Luther King Jr. Day<br />

l v Observed (No School)<br />

January 22<br />

Start of Second Semester<br />

January 31<br />

/Early Release Day for<br />

Grades Six to Eight<br />

February Hi.<br />

February Recess Begins at<br />

. End of School Day<br />

February 26<br />

Students Return from<br />

February Recess<br />

February 28<br />

Early Release Day<br />

March II<br />

Early Release Day<br />

April 3<br />

Teacher Inservice Day<br />

(No School)<br />

April 6<br />

Good Friday Observed<br />

I No School i<br />

April 13<br />

April Recess Begins at End<br />

of School Day-<br />

April 23<br />

Students Return from<br />

April Recess<br />

May 2<br />

Early Release Day<br />

May 28<br />

<strong>Memorial</strong> Day Observed<br />

(No School)<br />

June 2G<br />

Last Day of School (if all<br />

four snow days are used)<br />

- Early Release Day for All<br />

Students<br />

Stoncham School<br />

Calendar<br />

September 5<br />

Teacher Inservice Day<br />

(No School)<br />

September 6<br />

Teacher Inservice Day<br />

(No School)<br />

September 7<br />

First Day of School<br />

October 9<br />

Columbus Day Observed<br />

(No School)<br />

November 10<br />

Veteran's Day Observed<br />

(No School)<br />

November 22<br />

Thanksgiving Recess Begins<br />

at 12:00 noon<br />

November 27<br />

Students Return from<br />

Thanksgiving Recess<br />

December 22<br />

Winter Recess Begins at End<br />

of School Day<br />

January 2<br />

Students Return from Winter<br />

Recess<br />

January 15<br />

Martin Luther King Day<br />

Observed (No School)<br />

February 16<br />

February Recess Begins at<br />

End of School Day<br />

February 26<br />

Students Return from<br />

February Recess"<br />

April 6<br />

Good Friday Observed<br />

(No School)<br />

April 13<br />

April Recess Begins at End<br />

of School Day<br />

April 23<br />

Students Return from<br />

April Recess<br />

May 28<br />

<strong>Memorial</strong> Day Observed<br />

(No School)<br />

June 8<br />

Stoneham High School<br />

Graduation<br />

June 18<br />

Last Day of School if No<br />

Snow Days Used<br />

June 25<br />

Last Day of School if All<br />

Snow Days Used<br />

Tewksbury School<br />

Calendar<br />

August 28-2!)<br />

Teacher Inservice Days<br />

(No School)<br />

August 30<br />

First Day of School for All<br />

Students<br />

August 30-31<br />

Kindergarten Orientation<br />

September I<br />

No School<br />

September 1<br />

Labor Day Observed<br />

(No School><br />

September 5<br />

Kindergarten in Full Session<br />

October 9<br />

Columbus Day Observed<br />

(No School)<br />

November 22<br />

Thanksgiving Recess Begins<br />

at End of School Day<br />

November 27<br />

Students Return from<br />

Thanksgiving Recess<br />

December 22<br />

Winter Recess Begins at End<br />

of School Day<br />

January 2<br />

Students Return from Winter<br />

Recess<br />

January 15<br />

Martin Luther King Day<br />

Observed (No School)<br />

January 16<br />

Teacher Inservice Day<br />

(No School)<br />

February 16<br />

February Recess Begins at<br />

End of School Day<br />

February 26<br />

Students Return from<br />

February Recess<br />

April 5<br />

Teacher Inservice Day<br />

(No School)<br />

April 6<br />

Good Friday Observed<br />

(No School)<br />

April 13<br />

April Recess Begins at End<br />

of School Day<br />

April 23.<br />

Students Return from<br />

April Recess<br />

May 28<br />

<strong>Memorial</strong> Day Observed<br />

(No School)<br />

June 20<br />

Last Day of School for All<br />

Students<br />

FALL REGISTRATION NOW GOING ON<br />

HOURS 9-5 DAILY<br />

Our excellent program provide! quality instruction in all Olympic<br />

Cymnaitic eventi, from Mother and Child ClaSMI (1 to 3 yean), JR.<br />

Gymnast ages 3 to 5 and girls ages 6 to 18. Boys gain strength<br />

and co ordination in gymnastics power tumbling. Many other<br />

exciting programs. Call 781 944-2277 for brochure or come in.<br />

Reading ~f<br />

gymnastics /fcademy. /<br />

172VVoburnStrrct.Rr-!(''nj Mass 018R7<br />

(781)944-2277 www.readinggymnasl.cs.com e-iiail gymnast* rcadinggymnaslics com<br />

Wakefield School<br />

Calendar<br />

September 5<br />

Teacher Inservice Day<br />

(No School)<br />

September 6<br />

First Day of School<br />

October 6<br />

Teacher Inservice Day<br />

(No School)<br />

October 9<br />

Columbus Day Observed<br />

(No3chool)<br />

November 1<br />

Early Release Day for All<br />

Students<br />

- Parent-teacher conferences<br />

for kindergarten to grade<br />

eight.<br />

November 9<br />

, Early Release Day for<br />

Galvin Middle School<br />

and Wakefield High School<br />

Students<br />

November 10<br />

Veteran's Day Observed<br />

(No School)<br />

November 22<br />

Thanksgiving Recess Begins<br />

at End of School Day<br />

-Early Release Day for All<br />

Students<br />

November 27<br />

Students Return from<br />

Thanksgiving Recess<br />

December 22<br />

Winter Recess Begins at End<br />

of School Day<br />

January 2<br />

Students Return from<br />

Winter Recess<br />

January 15<br />

Martin Luther King Day<br />

Observed (No School)<br />

January 22<br />

Kindergarten Changeover<br />

February 9<br />

Early Release Day<br />

- Staff Development for<br />

kindergarten to grade four<br />

staff.<br />

- Parent-teacher conferences<br />

for grades five to eight.<br />

February 16<br />

February Recess Begins at<br />

End of School Day<br />

February 26<br />

Students Return from<br />

February Recess<br />

March 16<br />

Teacher Inservice Day<br />

(No Schooli<br />

March 28<br />

Early Release Day for All<br />

Students<br />

- Staff Development for<br />

Galvin Middle School and<br />

Wakefield High School staff.<br />

- Parent-teacher conferences<br />

for kindergarten to grade<br />

four.<br />

April 5<br />

Early Release Day for<br />

Elementary Students<br />

- Parent-teacher conferences<br />

for kindergarten to<br />

grade four.<br />

April 6<br />

Good Friday Observed<br />

(No School)<br />

April 13<br />

April Recess Begins at End<br />

of School Day<br />

April 23<br />

Students Return from<br />

April Recess<br />

May 28<br />

<strong>Memorial</strong> Day. Observed<br />

(No School)<br />

June 20<br />

Last Day of School (if no<br />

snow days used)<br />

<strong>Wilmington</strong> School<br />

Calendar<br />

August 28<br />

Teacher Inservice Day<br />

August 29<br />

First Day of School<br />

for Students<br />

September I<br />

No School<br />

September 1<br />

I,abor Day Observed<br />

(Schools Closed)<br />

September 27<br />

Early Release Day for All<br />

Students<br />

October 9<br />

Columbus Day Observed<br />

(No School)<br />

October 25<br />

Early Release Day for All<br />

Students<br />

November 10<br />

Veteran's Day Observed<br />

(No School)<br />

November 22<br />

Thanksgiving Recess Begins<br />

at End of School Day<br />

Early release day for ele-<br />

mentary students<br />

Parent-teacher conferences<br />

scheduled for this date<br />

November 27<br />

Students Return from<br />

Thanksgiving Recess<br />

December 5<br />

Early Release Day for<br />

Middle School Students<br />

Parent-teacher conferences<br />

scheduled at Middle School.<br />

December 6<br />

Early Release Day for<br />

Elementary Students<br />

Parent-teacher conferences<br />

scheduled at elementary<br />

schools.<br />

December 22<br />

Winter Recess Begins at End<br />

of School Day<br />

January 2**<br />

Students Return from<br />

Winter Recess<br />

January 15<br />

Martin Luther King Day<br />

Observed (No School ><br />

January 21<br />

Early Release Day for All<br />

Students<br />

February H;<br />

February Recess Begins at<br />

End of School Day ■<br />

February 26<br />

Students Return from<br />

February Recess<br />

March 7<br />

Early Release Day for All<br />

Students<br />

March 27<br />

Early Release Day'for<br />

Middle School Students<br />

-Parent-teacher conferences<br />

scheduled at Middle School.<br />

March 28 .<br />

Early Release Day for<br />

Elementary Students<br />

-Parent-teacher conferences<br />

scheduled at elementary<br />

schools.<br />

April 6<br />

Good Friday Observed<br />

(No School)<br />

April 13<br />

April Recess Begins at End<br />

of School Day<br />

April 23<br />

Students Return from April<br />

Recess<br />

May 9<br />

Early Release Day for All<br />

Students<br />

May 28<br />

<strong>Memorial</strong> Day Observed<br />

(No School 1<br />

The Dancing school<br />

^B Ballet • Jazz • Pomte • Hip-Hop • Tap • Tumble-Funk<br />

*, . ^ Young Children's Classes* Bop Hip-Hop ♦ Musical Theatre<br />

i^>„. ►_ Competition Groups Available<br />

NOW<br />

REGISTERING<br />

FOR THE FALL!<br />

ALL CLASSES AVAILABLE!<br />

AGES 2 - PROFESSIONAL<br />

August 16, 9 AM-Noon<br />

August 31,4 PM-7PM<br />

September 8, 1 PM-3 PM<br />

Learn more about our<br />

programs and register<br />

your child for a class<br />

on our website:<br />

thedancingschool.com<br />

or Call 978-664-2767<br />

THE DANCING SCHOOL<br />

276 Park Street. North Reading. MA<br />

(At the comer ot Park Street and Route 621<br />

WEDNESDAY/THURSDAY, AUGUST 9,10,2006-PAGE SS-7<br />

June 19<br />

Last Day of School<br />

Winchester School<br />

Calendar<br />

September 6<br />

First Day of School<br />

September 6-8<br />

Early Release Day for<br />

Grades One to Six<br />

October 9<br />

Columbus Day Observed<br />

(No School)<br />

October 25-27<br />

Early Release Day for<br />

Kindergarten to Grade Eight<br />

November 10<br />

Veteran's Day Observed<br />

(No School)<br />

November 22<br />

Thanksgiving Recess Begins<br />

at End of School Day<br />

- Early Release Day for All<br />

Students<br />

November 27<br />

Students Return from<br />

Thanksgiving Recess<br />

December 14<br />

Early Release Day for All<br />

Students<br />

December 22<br />

Winter Recess Begins at End<br />

of School Day<br />

January 2<br />

Students Return from<br />

" Winter Recess<br />

January 15<br />

Martin Luther King Day<br />

Observed < No School)<br />

January 24<br />

Early Release Day for All<br />

Students<br />

February 16<br />

February Recess Begins at<br />

End of School Day<br />

February 26<br />

Students Return from<br />

February Recess<br />

March 6<br />

Early Release Day for All<br />

Students<br />

March 14-16<br />

Early Release Day for<br />

Kindergarten to Grade Eight<br />

April 6<br />

Good Friday Observed<br />

(No School)<br />

April 13<br />

April Recess Begins at End<br />

of School Day<br />

April 23<br />

Students Return from April<br />

Recess<br />

May 7<br />

Early Release Day for<br />

All Students<br />

May 28<br />

<strong>Memorial</strong> Day Observed<br />

(No School)<br />

June 3<br />

Winchester High School<br />

Graudation<br />

June 18-19<br />

Early Release Day for<br />

Elementary Students<br />

June 19<br />

Last Day of School<br />

Woburn School<br />

Calendar<br />

September ."i<br />

Teacher Inservice Day<br />

(No School)<br />

September 7<br />

First Day of School<br />

October !><br />

Columbus Day Observed<br />

(No School ><br />

November 22<br />

Thanksgiving Recess Begins<br />

at End of School J)a\<br />

-Early Release Day lor All<br />

Students<br />

November .'7<br />

Students Return from<br />

Thanksgiving Recess<br />

December si<br />

Winter Recess Begins al End<br />

ol School Day<br />

- Early Release Day for All<br />

Stiidei.ls<br />

January 2<br />

Students Return from<br />

Winter Recess<br />

January 15<br />

Martin Luther King Day<br />

Observed ' No School i<br />

February IG<br />

February Recess Begins at<br />

End of School Daj<br />

February -<br />

Students Return from<br />

February Recess<br />

April 6<br />

Good Friday Observed<br />

(No School <<br />

April 13<br />

April Recess Begins at End<br />

of School Day<br />

April 23<br />

Students Return from April<br />

Recess<br />

May 2K<br />

<strong>Memorial</strong> Day Observed<br />

(No School i<br />

June 22<br />

. Last Day Of School<br />

What makes a great elementary school education?<br />

Jsisfes^<br />

• Small classes<br />

• Talented, dedicated u.ulu i-<br />

•" Music. An. Drama. Spanish<br />

• Friendly community aiiiKisplnii<br />

^ Challenging academics with a u<<br />

Odyssey Day School<br />

An AISNK and NAEYt. accredited independent «'/""/<br />

lr Toddlers through tirade «<br />

11 Paul Ave., Wakefield • 781-245-6050 info@odysseydayschool.org<br />

Director/Owner<br />

Tracv DellaKusso<br />

REGISTRATION<br />

DATES:<br />

AUG. 15 THRU 17<br />

•4-8 I'M<br />

Am.. 22 THRU 24<br />

• 4-8 I'M<br />

Oil 111 PIIONl INYTIMI<br />

781-438-3166<br />

www. Ielsdanceinr.com<br />

CLASSES RESUME<br />

Sl.l'l I MHI R 11 III<br />

Financial aid available to qualifying families.<br />

Mew your.<br />

child's class on<br />

closed circuit 7V<br />

CLASSES on<br />

*T\p<br />

• |\//<br />

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• BUI.Fl/Pt)<br />

* MODI-UN<br />

• A( ROBAIK S<br />

• HIP HOP<br />

• AIM i! Ci vssi-.s<br />

• Sl'K lAl I'lvl S( MOOI<br />

("l us! SSI \RI INd<br />

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Visit booths & watebms perform<br />

Sloneham Town Day (SaLTSeptember l(>ll>)<br />

Melrose Victorian Fair (Sun.. September l~lh)<br />

Member Sloneham < hamher of ( onmiem<br />

Thank you for voting us #1 in 2006<br />

1


»M<br />

Middlesex East • SPECIAL SECTION<br />

APPEARING IN 10 LOCAL PUBLICATIONS: Daily Times Chronicle<br />

and Wakefield, The Lynnfield Villager, North Reading Transcript, <strong>Wilmington</strong> Town Crier, Tewkshury Town<br />

Crier, and the Stoneham Independent<br />

•2006 0 towns<br />

Back to Sch Ml<br />

established 1984<br />

Coming down and going up<br />

August 9, 10 2006<br />

Coming down in the near future is the old Woburn High School (at<br />

left above) on Montvale Avenue in Woburn. Presently a new school is<br />

being readied at the rear of this one and destruction of this facility is<br />

scheduled for this week. Above right, work is presently underway at<br />

the Reading <strong>Memorial</strong> High School on Birch Meadow Drive in<br />

Reading. Shown is the new entrance to the existing field house and<br />

the new corridor connecting the school to the field house, allowing<br />

students to enter the field house without having to go outside.<br />

(Staff photos)<br />

A YELLOW<br />

MINI BUS at the<br />

Barrows School<br />

in Reading boards<br />

local youth<br />

for some<br />

summer<br />

fun.<br />

USATsJ \J/QODS<br />

DANCENTERS<br />

where students receive outstanding training<br />

while building great friendships!<br />

Now registering for August Camps and Fall Programs<br />

* Classes conveniently offered days, evenings and weekends to meet the needs of<br />

today's busy family schedules.<br />

* Diverse faculty of professionals to provide your child with exceptional training in a fun,<br />

nurturing atmosphere.<br />

* Recreational classes ages 2.5 - adult, and competition teams.<br />

* Currently openings on 11 different teams from ages 5 through young adult.<br />

* Courteous, organized administration always ready to assist you.<br />

* Fall classes offered in Stoneham, Reading and now North Readinsl<br />

* Camps held at North Reading location (formerly the Studio for Dance)<br />

* Camp Openings still available for the following weeks:<br />

8/7-8/11 ages 7-11<br />

8/14-8/18 ages 11 & up - intermediate level<br />

8/21-8/25 ages 13 & up - advanced level ~<br />

LET OUR QUEST FACULTY HELP YOU JUMPSTART YOUR FALL TRAININQ<br />

Call 781-942-3700 for free brochure and detailsl<br />

View our fall schedules online at www.susanwoodsdance.com<br />

, \\<br />

I<br />

I ,<br />

Cell Phones: Friends or Foe<br />

to School Administrators?<br />

Cell phones today allow<br />

users to do a lot more than just<br />

make and take phone calls.<br />

Students can use their cell<br />

phones to take and send digital<br />

photos, text messages, and<br />

even short digital video clips.<br />

All of these uses have the<br />

potential to be a disturbance<br />

in school classrooms. As a<br />

result, some schools have insti-<br />

tuted a ban on cell phones, or<br />

at least a mandatory "shut-ofF<br />

of phones during classroom<br />

hours. Since some schoois feel<br />

that cell phones are beneficial<br />

in emergency situatons, but do<br />

not want them to be a distrac-<br />

tion during lessons, the shut-off<br />

is a compromise for all<br />

involved.<br />

To place your ad in Call<br />

today...<br />

Don't wait!<br />

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•No Video Games, Arcades or Tokens<br />

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TRY SOMETHING DIFFERENT<br />

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Now in their 38th year in Woburn<br />

Sign up now<br />

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We Train Champions<br />

All Ages & Abilities<br />

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