LYNN – After nearly a year of brainstorming ways to curb youth violence, Lynn-based attorney Jim Carrigan is spearheading a new speaker series at Marshall Middle School, which recently kicked off with a visit by Congressmen John Tierney.Carrigan said he hopes the program will give students the chance to choose a path leading them to success instead of falling into the cycle of crime and gang activity that is prominent in the area.The idea for the series was formulated after a city-wide summit was held last year to discuss an increase of crime in Lynn. The summit included members of the FBI, the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives (ATF), state and Lynn police gang units, District Attorney Jonathan W. Blodgett and people from the probation department. As part of the meeting, thermal maps were placed on the walls to show the different concentrations of crime throughout the city.?If you look at the crime in Lynn, you can see by looking at the thermal maps there is significant crime in the Marshall School area, so they suggested that we provide an alternative to crime and joining a gang,” Carrigan said.After meeting and brainstorming with members of the Lynn community as well as the middle school faculty, Carrigan met with Marshall Principal Richard Cowdell.?I talked to him about bringing some resources from the city to Marshall Middle School, both public and private, and he was all ears,” Carrigan said.Cowdell then implemented an advisory program in an effort to improve communication between the teaching faculty and their students. It was out of the advisory program that the speaker series was born, with the aim of bringing in members of the community who have found success in their professional lives to impart knowledge about their chosen profession.Students meet with their advisors before the speakers come in to discuss the issues that will be addressed, such as the best way to get into college, and they later write about the speaker and what they learned in their journals.?All of the teachers are involved and have around 14 advisees that they meet with three times a week. They meet for 27 minutes, first thing in the morning. They talk about listening skills, good eye contact, interviewing techniques, and how to accept criticism,” said Tina Beaulieu, the social worker at Marshall.The students got their first chance to implement their skills with Tierney?s Oct. 2 visit.?Congressman Tierney spoke about the importance of listening?to people who are trying to help?to parents and teachers,” said Cowdell.Mayor Edward J. Clancy Jr., North Shore Community College President Wayne Burton, Lynn School Superintendent Catherine Latham also addressed the students. State Rep. Robert Fennell, and School Committee members Maria Carrasco and John Ford were also in attendance.?The kids were really wonderful last week,” Carrigan said. “They were as attentive as they could possibly be and listened to every word. “The Superintendent of Schools, Dr. Latham, told the kids she was a graduate of Easton Junior High, which is now Marshall Middle School, and that really caught their attention. We try to make the kids believe that success is achievable for them. Some of these kids lead really tough lives.”Despite the challenges the students face, Cowdell said the students were gracious to their guests.?Our initial panel of speakers reported being very impressed by the attentiveness and maturity of the students,” said Cowdell.Carrigan said he is pleased with the program?s success.?It?s marvelous,” he said, adding his love for government inspired him to get involved with the program. “I?ve been bringing speakers into the schools over the years and it really inspires the kids and gets them thinking about things that are positive.”Carrigan has already enlisted a number of speakers for the remainder of the series, including Fennell, Bella English of the Boston Globe, Judge Albert Conlon of Lynn, Judge James Lemont of Lynn, and Magnolia Contreas, a