Word: capuano
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...Harvard students know the city to Cambridge’s northeast as anything other than a place of cheap housing and people with funny Boston accents. FM puhsuaded—sorry, persuaded—born-and-bred Somervillian Michael A. Capuano ’03-’04 to show us the city’s hidden side. In this exclusive driving tour, we answer all your burning Somerville questions: Which video stores have gotten run out of business by the cops? Where do high school kids go to drink? And which Dunkin’ Donuts rooftops are occupied...
...close, Capuano (known to about everyone as Cappy) is short and powerful, and appears to be about 30 or 35 years old. His friendly greeting and firm handshake are that of a politician—unsurprising since his father is the former mayor of Somerville and currently serves as the representative of Somerville and Cambridge in the U.S. Congress. At 9:30 a.m. on Sunday, he’s energetic, dressed in a button-down collared shirt tucked into pressed khakis, and has already finished his work for the weekend in preparation for our Sunday trip to Somerville. He?...
Somerville is rife with Capuanos. On the way out of the high school Cappy points out Capt. Andrew Capuano Street, a roadway that bears the name of his grandfather, who served in both the Army and the Navy. Cappy says it was one of the first streets in Somerville to be named in someone’s honor. We soon drive by the house in which his father grew up. According to Cappy, all but two of the extended Capuano clan still live in the Commonwealth...
...Michael A. Capuano...
...year later he ran for Congress, but was defeated in the primaries by the eventual winner, Rep. Michael G. Capuano (D-Mass...