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PEABODY<br />

WEEKLY NEWS<br />

Serving the community since 1957<br />

NOVEMBER <strong>23</strong>, 2017 • VOL. 61, NO. 47<br />

16 PAGES • ONE DOLLAR<br />

Recreational<br />

marijuana ban<br />

hits roadblock<br />

‘Tis the season for fairs<br />

By Adam Swift<br />

Editor<br />

PRSRT STD<br />

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<strong>Peabody</strong>, MA<br />

No sitting city councilor<br />

has voiced support for allowing<br />

the retail sale of marijuana<br />

in <strong>Peabody</strong>, but there is<br />

some disagreement on how<br />

the council handles a potential<br />

ban on recreational pot<br />

sales.<br />

Thursday night, a zoning<br />

amendment proposed<br />

by Mayor Edward A. Bettencourt<br />

Jr. prohibiting any<br />

retail sales or cultivation of<br />

marijuana within city limits<br />

failed by the slimmest of margins.<br />

Earlier this year, the<br />

council approved a temporary<br />

moratorium on retail marijuana<br />

sales that runs through<br />

the end of 2018.<br />

The three councilors who<br />

voted against zoning amendment<br />

— Ward 5 Councilor<br />

and President Joel Saslaw,<br />

Ward 6 Councilor Barry Sinewitz,<br />

and Ward 1 Councilor<br />

Jon Turco — pointed to that<br />

moratorium as a mechanism<br />

allowing the city further time<br />

to study the issue. Councilor-at-Large<br />

Anne Manning-Martin<br />

was out of the<br />

state Thursday night, meaning<br />

the council came one vote<br />

short of the eight needed to<br />

reach the two-thirds majority<br />

necessary to pass a zoning<br />

amendment.<br />

“I’ve looked at this at<br />

length, and I agree with the<br />

mayor on most of his arguments<br />

against it,” said Turco.<br />

“The question is, do we have<br />

all the information? There is<br />

a moratorium until Dec. 21,<br />

2018, so we have 13 months<br />

to look at this.”<br />

Turco suggested the retail<br />

marijuana sales ban go back<br />

before the council’s legal affairs<br />

committee.<br />

MARIJUANA, Page 3<br />

PHOTOS | SPENSER HASAK<br />

People flocked to the Fair for all Seasons at St. Adelaide Church in <strong>Peabody</strong>. Paul Derrivan, left, of <strong>Peabody</strong>,<br />

former chairman of the Fair for all Season, was all dressed up for this year’s fair. Candace Daigle,<br />

of Saugus, sells a handmade doll at the Basket Market stand.<br />

INSIDE : Our annual Thanksgiving football section<br />

Page 2: Murtagh the choice for <strong>Peabody</strong> superintendent<br />

Page 3: Two arrested in connection with Century House stabbing<br />

Page 7: Hearing from my mother on Thanksgiving<br />

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2 WEEKLYNEWS.NET - 978-532-5880 NOVEMBER <strong>23</strong>, 2017<br />

INDEX<br />

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Police Log ....................................................................................4<br />

Real Estate ...........................................................................14-16<br />

Religious Notes......................................................................... <strong>11</strong><br />

Seniors....................................................................................... 6<br />

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By Adam Swift<br />

Editor<br />

A familiar face in the <strong>Peabody</strong><br />

schools is the choice as<br />

the district’s next superintendent.<br />

Last week, the School Committee<br />

unanimously voted to<br />

enter into negotiations with<br />

assistant superintendent<br />

Cara Murtagh for the top job<br />

in the schools.<br />

The vote comes just one day<br />

after the committee wrapped<br />

up interviews with five finalists<br />

for the position. While the<br />

committee struck quickly on<br />

appointing a new superintendent,<br />

it was a move committee<br />

member Jarrod Hochman<br />

said he’s been contemplating<br />

at least since the committee’s<br />

failed attempt last winter to<br />

hire a replacement for interim<br />

superintendent Herb Levine.<br />

“I was intrigued by some<br />

of the candidates, intrigued<br />

by some of their credentials<br />

on paper, disappointed by<br />

some of the interviews, and<br />

excited by some of the interviews,”<br />

said Hochman. “But<br />

everything led me back to<br />

my thought going into the<br />

interviews that our assistant<br />

superintendent, who I have<br />

worked closely with during<br />

her five years as an assistant<br />

and for three years before<br />

that as a principal, would be<br />

a highly qualified and capable<br />

leader for our school district.”<br />

Hochman was not alone in<br />

highlighting the hard work<br />

they say Murtagh has put<br />

into the district and love and<br />

compassion she has for the<br />

city’s students and parents.<br />

Committee member<br />

John Olimpio said he was<br />

impressed with the way<br />

Murtagh handled the questioning<br />

by the board at her<br />

interview Monday.<br />

“She handled the questions<br />

without skipping a beat and<br />

showed confidence and acknowledged<br />

areas of concern,”<br />

Bruce McCorry’s<br />

978-535-7878<br />

www.brucemccorry.com<br />

said Olimpio. “She knows<br />

what works and what needs<br />

change in the district.”<br />

Given her years of experience<br />

in the district and<br />

that she is already working<br />

alongside Levine, committee<br />

member Joseph Amico said<br />

Murtagh will have the best<br />

opportunity of any of the candidates<br />

to hit the ground running.<br />

“I was highly impressed<br />

with the résumés of all the<br />

candidates, they blew me<br />

away,” said committee member<br />

Brandi Carpenter. “But<br />

that said, Cara does have a<br />

little something extra.”<br />

The other four finalists interviewed<br />

over the past week<br />

were Wilmington assistant<br />

superintendent and former<br />

Beverly High School Principal<br />

Sean Gallagher, Weymouth<br />

Assistant Superintendent<br />

We Specialize in<br />

AFTER SCHOOL<br />

MARTIAL ARTS<br />

We have a few available spaces left<br />

Murtagh the choice for<br />

<strong>Peabody</strong> superintendent<br />

WE TRANSPORT<br />

COURTESY PHOTO<br />

Cara Murtagh was unanimously voted by School Committee for <strong>Peabody</strong><br />

Superintendent.<br />

Susan Kustka, Medford High<br />

School Headmaster John<br />

Perella, and Alexandra Montes-McNeil,<br />

an instructional<br />

superintendent on the superintendent<br />

leadership team for<br />

the Boston public schools.<br />

During the failed superintendent<br />

search during the<br />

2016-17 school year, the process<br />

was bogged down by a<br />

late start, some bad weather,<br />

and several finalists accepting<br />

positions in other districts<br />

before <strong>Peabody</strong> could make a<br />

final decision.<br />

This year, the district<br />

jumped out in front of the field<br />

and there was little hesitation<br />

to make a quick decision.<br />

“I’ll be honest, I came here<br />

tonight anticipating asking<br />

for a second round of interviews,<br />

and Ms. Murtagh<br />

would have been on that list<br />

with one other candidate,”<br />

said committee member Beverley<br />

Ann Griffin Dunne.<br />

“I think everyone here is in<br />

agreement that (Murtagh)<br />

has been an amazing person<br />

to work with and I believe she<br />

will be an outstanding superintendent.”<br />

Murtagh, who typically<br />

sits next to Levine at School<br />

Committee meetings, stepped<br />

away as the board discussed<br />

the superintendent appointment.<br />

While she did not make<br />

any official statement following<br />

a brief recess, she did receive<br />

a standing ovation from<br />

the committee members and<br />

school officials present for the<br />

meeting.<br />

The superintendent position<br />

was listed with a salary<br />

range of $175,000-$190,000.<br />

Looking for<br />

past issues?<br />

Find them on<br />

weeklynews.net


NOVEMBER <strong>23</strong>, 2017 WEEKLYNEWS.NET - 978-532-5880 3<br />

Recreational marijuana<br />

ban hits roadblock<br />

MARIJUANA<br />

From page 1<br />

Bettencourt said that while<br />

he has come around to the<br />

need for medical marijuana in<br />

recent years, he is staunchly<br />

against allowing recreational<br />

marijuana sales in the city.<br />

“I strongly believe that this<br />

is important for our future,”<br />

said the mayor. “This is about<br />

the direction and the type of<br />

city we want to be.”<br />

The city council has the<br />

authority to ban recreational<br />

sales because voters in the<br />

city did not support last year’s<br />

referendum on legalization.<br />

During the public participation<br />

portion of the public<br />

hearing, several people<br />

spoke out against the recreational<br />

marijuana sales ban,<br />

citing the potential loss of<br />

tax revenue to the city and<br />

that neighboring communities<br />

such as Salem, which<br />

are moving forward with<br />

retail sales, would benefit<br />

from <strong>Peabody</strong>’s reticence.<br />

However, none of those who<br />

spoke up against the ban<br />

were from <strong>Peabody</strong>, which<br />

was pointed out by several<br />

councilors who voted for the<br />

zoning amendment.<br />

Mike Crawford, a legalization<br />

proponent from Marblehead,<br />

said the issue was no<br />

longer about legalization, but<br />

about taxes.<br />

“If you want to ban recreational<br />

marijuana, you should<br />

have the citizens of <strong>Peabody</strong><br />

revote,” said Crawford. “It’s<br />

going to happen in Salem,<br />

and what’s going to happen<br />

in <strong>Peabody</strong> is that it’s going to<br />

lose millions of dollars (from<br />

sales tax).”<br />

But Councilor-at-Large<br />

David Gravel urged the council<br />

to act immediately on the<br />

ban.<br />

“The silence is deafening<br />

from opponents who are <strong>Peabody</strong><br />

residents,” said Gravel.<br />

“We had speakers from Amesbury,<br />

Marblehead, and Duxbury.<br />

Where are the <strong>Peabody</strong><br />

residents who oppose this?<br />

They are not here.”<br />

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After<br />

Councilor-at-Large Tom<br />

Walsh noted that the issue<br />

has already been discussed<br />

and unanimously supported<br />

to forward to the Planning<br />

Board in the legal affairs committee<br />

in September.<br />

“I’m not sure what has<br />

changed in the past couple<br />

of months,” he said. “We’re<br />

here tonight to make a decision<br />

and some people feel this<br />

should go back to committee,”<br />

said Walsh. “We’ve already<br />

discussed this.”<br />

Saslaw noted that the<br />

shape of the marijuana laws<br />

has changed since it was<br />

passed last November. He<br />

also said that no notices had<br />

gone out about the zoning<br />

amendment.<br />

“If you asked 100 people<br />

out on Main Street if there<br />

was a vote to ban recreational<br />

marijuana, they would not<br />

know that,” said Saslaw. “My<br />

issue is that we should vet<br />

this properly here and that a<br />

dialogue should take place.”<br />

The council president said<br />

he supports putting a recreational<br />

marijuana sales ban<br />

back before the city’s voters.<br />

“To say that we said no a<br />

year ago, I think that is the<br />

lazy way out,” said Saslaw.<br />

“We have a moratorium, and<br />

I’m happy we did that, but we<br />

don’t have to slam the door<br />

shut today … I have a hard<br />

time taking this out of the<br />

hands of the voters because<br />

the climate has changed.”<br />

Sinewitz said he opposes<br />

legalized marijuana sales,<br />

but voted against the zoning<br />

amendment because he believes<br />

there is time to take a<br />

closer look at the issue after<br />

the city makes a final decision<br />

on medical marijuana<br />

sales.<br />

Earlier this month, the<br />

council approved letters of<br />

non-opposition for three companies<br />

looking to establish<br />

medical marijuana dispensaries<br />

along Route 1. It is expected<br />

that the council will<br />

eventually approve one special<br />

permit for a dispensary<br />

along Route 1.<br />

Although Thursday night’s<br />

zoning amendment vote<br />

failed, it come before the council<br />

again as soon as January,<br />

when a new council is seated.<br />

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Two men have been arrested<br />

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stabbing of a 52-year-old man<br />

at the Century House on Sunday<br />

afternoon.<br />

<strong>Peabody</strong> Police responded<br />

to a fight in the kitchen area<br />

of the restaurant, located at<br />

<strong>23</strong>5 Andover St., and found a<br />

man with a stab wound to his<br />

abdominal area.<br />

Police rendered emergency<br />

aid and the victim was taken<br />

to Massachusetts General<br />

Hospital, and is reported to be<br />

in stable condition, <strong>Peabody</strong><br />

police said.<br />

Rogerio Silva Thomaz Dos<br />

Reis, 18, of 2 Tremont St.,<br />

was arrested shortly before<br />

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and assault with a dangerous<br />

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Rogerio Teixeira, 54, of 2<br />

Tremont St., was charged<br />

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Police said everyone involved<br />

are employees of the<br />

restaurant. An investigation<br />

is ongoing into the relationships<br />

of the people involved<br />

and the circumstances surrounding<br />

the incident. Police<br />

said there is no danger to the<br />

public.<br />

The two suspects will be<br />

arraigned in <strong>Peabody</strong> District<br />

Court on Monday.<br />

Assisting in the investigation<br />

were Capt. Scott Wlasuk,<br />

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David Bettencourt, Daniel<br />

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4 WEEKLYNEWS.NET - 978-532-5880 NOVEMBER <strong>23</strong>, 2017<br />

PEABODY<br />

WEEKLY NEWS<br />

Serving the community since 1957<br />

(USPS #66)<br />

Telephone: (978) 532-5880 • Fax: (978) 532-4250<br />

Mailing Address: P.O. Box 5, Lynn, MA 01903<br />

News and Advertising Offices: <strong>11</strong>0 Munroe St., Lynn, MA 01901<br />

Office Hours: 8 a.m. to 5 p.m., Monday through Friday<br />

www.weeklynews.net<br />

Editor: Adam Swift aswift@essexmediagroup.com<br />

Sports Editor: Anne Marie Tobin atobin@essexmediagroup.com<br />

Advertising Reps: Ralph Mitchell rmitchell@essexmediagroup.com<br />

Kerry Smith ksmith@essexmediagroup.com<br />

Patricia Whalen pwhalen@essexmediagroup.com<br />

Subscription Rate: $35 per year (52 issues) • Single Copy: $1.00<br />

Deadlines: News: Monday, noon; Display Ads: Monday, noon;<br />

Classified Ads: Monday, noon;<br />

No cancellations accepted after deadline.<br />

The <strong>Peabody</strong> Weekly News is published 52 times per year on Thursday by Essex<br />

Media Group, Inc. No issue is printed during the week of Christmas. The <strong>Peabody</strong><br />

Weekly News is delivered via US Mail to homes and businesses in <strong>Peabody</strong>. It is<br />

also available in several locations throughout <strong>Peabody</strong>. The <strong>Peabody</strong> Weekly News<br />

will not be responsible for typographical or other errors in advertisements, but will<br />

reprint that part of an advertisement in which a typographical error occurs if notified<br />

immediately. Advertisers must notify the <strong>Peabody</strong> Weekly News of any errors in advertisements<br />

on the FIRST day of insertion. The publisher reserves the right to reject,<br />

omit or edit any copy offered for publication.<br />

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Monday, Nov. 13<br />

At 4:40 p.m., there was<br />

a motor vehicle accident on<br />

Bartholomew Street.<br />

At 5:26 p.m., there was a<br />

report of a past larceny on<br />

Upham Street.<br />

At 6:03 p.m., there was a<br />

report of a suspicious man<br />

looking into the windows of<br />

a preschool on Paleologos<br />

Street. The man was dropping<br />

off his kids.<br />

At 7:52 p.m., there was<br />

a motor vehicle accident on<br />

Newbury Street.<br />

At 9:50 p.m., there was a<br />

breaking and entering to as<br />

motor vehicle reported on<br />

Main Street.<br />

Tuesday, Nov. 14<br />

At 2:12 a.m., there was<br />

a motor vehicle accident on<br />

Farm Avenue.<br />

At 8:42 a.m., there was a<br />

tree blocking a sidewalk on<br />

Jills Way.<br />

At <strong>11</strong>:22 a.m., police arrested<br />

Tomaseo Joseph Graziose,<br />

31, of 261 Newbury St. in <strong>Peabody</strong><br />

on a warrant.<br />

At <strong>11</strong>:49 p.m., there was<br />

a breaking and entering to<br />

a motor vehicle on Foster<br />

Street.<br />

At <strong>11</strong>:54 a.m., police arrested<br />

James R. Dryer, <strong>23</strong>, of<br />

14 Main St. in Salisbury for<br />

possession of a class A drug<br />

and on a warrant.<br />

At 12:56 p.m., there was a<br />

report of a woman causing a<br />

disturbance on Lake Street.<br />

At 3:24 p.m., there was<br />

Police log<br />

a report of a fight between<br />

families visiting relatives at<br />

a nursing home on Johnson<br />

Street.<br />

At 4:45 p.m., a motor vehicle<br />

struck a pole at the CVS<br />

on Lynnfield Street.<br />

At 5:21 p.m., there was<br />

a motor vehicle accident on<br />

Clement Avenue.<br />

At 6:02 p.m., there was<br />

a motor vehicle accident on<br />

Main Street.<br />

At 6:09 p.m., there was<br />

a motor vehicle accident on<br />

Lynnfield Street.<br />

Wednesday, Nov. 15<br />

At <strong>11</strong>:08 a.m., there was a<br />

report of vandalism to a motor<br />

vehicle on Newbury Street.<br />

At <strong>11</strong>:09 a.m., there was<br />

a motor vehicle accident on<br />

Centennial Drive.<br />

At 12:16 p.m., police arrested<br />

Michael C. Belanger, 40, of<br />

<strong>11</strong>7 Tremont St. in <strong>Peabody</strong><br />

on a warrant.<br />

At 2:51 p.m., there was<br />

a motor vehicle accident on<br />

Colfax Street at Washington<br />

Street.<br />

At 4:20 p.m., a manager<br />

from Stop & Shop on Howley<br />

Street reported that a woman<br />

wearing an electric blue puffy<br />

coat and a pink hat had stolen<br />

groceries.<br />

At 4:39 p.m., there was<br />

a motor vehicle accident on<br />

Howley Street.<br />

At 5:12 p.m., there was a<br />

motor vehicle accident with<br />

injuries on Summit Street at<br />

Lynnfield Street.<br />

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Thursday, Nov. 16<br />

At 12:47 a.m., police arrested<br />

David S. Delauri, 25, homeless<br />

of <strong>Peabody</strong> for violating<br />

an abuse prevention order<br />

and disorderly conduct, subsequent<br />

offense. Police also arrested<br />

Olivia Ayott, <strong>23</strong>, of 154<br />

Newbury St., #9 in <strong>Peabody</strong><br />

for disorderly conduct and<br />

Jacqueline Desmond, <strong>23</strong>, of<br />

333 Nahant Road in Nahant<br />

for leaving the scene of an accident<br />

with property damage.<br />

At 4:<strong>11</strong> p.m., a UPS package<br />

was reported stolen on<br />

Washington Street.<br />

At 4:36 p.m., a woman on<br />

May Street said she believed<br />

her neighbors were invading<br />

her privacy by pointing security<br />

cameras towards her<br />

property.<br />

At 9:19 p.m., there was a<br />

motor vehicle accident near<br />

exit 44 on Route 128 South.<br />

Friday, Nov. 17<br />

At 1:45 a.m., there was a<br />

motor vehicle into a pole on<br />

Lowell Street.<br />

At 8:57 a.m., there was a<br />

motor vehicle accident on Andover<br />

Street.<br />

At 12:40 p.m., there was<br />

a motor vehicle accident on<br />

Washington Street.<br />

At 2:18 p.m., there was<br />

a motor vehicle accident on<br />

Washington Street at Clement<br />

Avenue.<br />

At 5:53 p.m., there was<br />

a motor vehicle accident on<br />

Newbury Street.<br />

At 6:28 p.m., there was a<br />

hit and run accident on Lowell<br />

Street.<br />

Saturday, Nov. 18<br />

At 10:15 a.m., a caller reported<br />

that nails were being<br />

left under the tires of his motor<br />

vehicle on Main Street.<br />

At 12:30 p.m., there was a<br />

report of a past breaking and<br />

entering on Tracey Street.<br />

At 5:28 p.m., there was a<br />

complaint about an employee<br />

stealing items from the Stop<br />

& Shop on Howley Street.<br />

At 8:25 p.m., police arrested<br />

Jonathan G. Rivera, 21, of<br />

266 Newbury St., 15A in <strong>Peabody</strong><br />

for operating under the<br />

influence of liquor, negligent<br />

operation of a motor vehicle,<br />

and a marked lanes violation.<br />

Sunday, Nov. 19<br />

At 12:01 a.m., there was a<br />

motor vehicle accident in <strong>Peabody</strong><br />

Square.<br />

At 12:03 a.m., there was a<br />

report of a past breaking and<br />

entering on Country Club<br />

road.<br />

At <strong>11</strong>:21 a.m., there was a<br />

report of an injured deer in<br />

the woods on Reynolds Road.<br />

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6 WEEKLYNEWS.NET - 978-532-5880 NOVEMBER <strong>23</strong>, 2017<br />

Seniors<br />

LYNNFIELD SENIOR<br />

CENTER ACTIVITIES<br />

Blood Pressure:<br />

Every Tuesday from<br />

9 - 10:30 a.m. we have<br />

a nurse who will take<br />

your blood pressure and<br />

answer any questions<br />

you may have regarding<br />

your blood pressure<br />

Diabetes Academy:<br />

Marianne Chojnicki, RN,<br />

CDE, from Novonordisk<br />

will be here to discuss<br />

diabetes, treatments, how<br />

to eat healthy and stay<br />

active. Thursday, Nov. 30<br />

at 12:30 p.m. Free.<br />

Hot Cocoa Mug Cookie<br />

Craft: Join Elaine as we<br />

make these adorable<br />

treats. Sure to bring a<br />

smile on a cold winters<br />

day. Wednesday, Dec. 6<br />

at 12:30 p.m. $1 payable<br />

at sign-up. Sample in<br />

Elaine’s office.<br />

Parkinson’s discussion:<br />

Join Kim Arouth,<br />

BSN, from Additional<br />

Care, in a discussion on<br />

Parkinson’s Disease. She<br />

will discuss what it is<br />

and the tell tale signs of<br />

this disease.<br />

There will be a discussion<br />

on where to access<br />

resources for both the<br />

individual diagnosed<br />

with Parkinson as well as<br />

the caregiver. Thursday,<br />

Dec. 7 at 12:30 p.m. Free.<br />

Sign up.<br />

Christmas Breakfast:<br />

Join us for breakfast<br />

on Friday, Dec. 8 at<br />

9 a.m. There will be<br />

Christmas music and<br />

the Lynnfield Senior<br />

Center Tap Dancers<br />

will perform a holiday<br />

selection. Breakfast will<br />

feature eggs, bacon and<br />

more. Tickets are $3 for<br />

everyone and go on sale<br />

Friday, Oct. 27.<br />

Tea Light Snowman<br />

Ornament: Light up your<br />

tree with these adorable<br />

Mr. & Mrs. Snowman.<br />

Monday, Dec. <strong>11</strong> at 12:30<br />

p.m. $1 payable at sign<br />

up. Sample in Elaine’s<br />

office<br />

Lunch and a Movie-<br />

White Christmas:<br />

White Christmas is the<br />

story of a successful<br />

song-and-dance team<br />

who become romantically<br />

SINUSITIS IN CHILDREN<br />

Before parents treat their children with cold medication, they should make<br />

sure that their runny noses, headaches, and fatigue are symptoms of nothing<br />

more than a cold. These complaints may also be associated with the chronic<br />

problem of “sinusitis,” which is as common in children as it is in adults. In fact,<br />

children can be particularly susceptible to sinus problems because their<br />

sinuses are not fully formed until they reach age 12. Their sinuses are also<br />

narrower than those of adults. Sinusitis is characterized by inflammation of<br />

the nasal passages, which can be caused by problems ranging from colds to<br />

allergies. The inflammation narrows the nasal passages so that mucus cannot<br />

drain properly, causing discomfort and possible infection.<br />

Pediatric sinusitis can be difficult to diagnose because symptoms of<br />

sinusitis can be caused by other problems, such as viral illness and allergy.<br />

You can reduce the risk of sinus infections for your child by reducing<br />

exposure to known environmental allergies and pollutants such as tobacco<br />

smoke, reducing the time spent at day care, and treating stomach acid reflux<br />

disease. Please call 781-334-3133 for more information, or visit VILLAGE<br />

PHARMACY in the Colonial Shopping Center .<br />

HINT: Possible telltale signs of sinusitis include a “cold” lasting 10-14 days,<br />

frequent runny nose with a yellow discharge, pain near the cheeks or eye<br />

areas, and difficulty staying awake.<br />

Colonial Shopping Center • 590 Main St. Lynnfield, MA 01940 • 781-334-3133<br />

involved with a sister<br />

act and team up to save<br />

the failing Vermont<br />

inn of their former<br />

commanding general.<br />

Stars: Bing Crosby,<br />

Danny Kaye, Rosemary<br />

Clooney and Vera- Ellen.<br />

Music by Irving Berlin:<br />

Features the Oscar<br />

nominated songs “Count<br />

Your Blessings Instead<br />

of Sheep” and of course,<br />

Bing singing “White<br />

Christmas.” Lunch will<br />

be roasted turkey and<br />

stuffing. Thursday, Dec.<br />

14 at <strong>11</strong>:30 a.m. for $2/$3.<br />

Sign up.<br />

Lunch and Rick<br />

Steves’ European<br />

Christmas: Join Rick as<br />

he provides a portrait of<br />

how Europeans celebrate<br />

the holiday from England<br />

to Norway, Burgundy to<br />

Bavaria, and Rome to the<br />

top of the Swiss Alps. The<br />

2004 Midnight Mass at<br />

St. Peters Basilica (Pope<br />

John Paul II) is featured<br />

with highlights of<br />

Christmas traditions<br />

up in the loft with the<br />

finest choirs, and into the<br />

kitchen with grandma<br />

and her best-kept holiday<br />

secrets. Lunch will be<br />

baked ham with raisin<br />

sauce and au gratin<br />

potatoes. Monday, Dec. 18<br />

at 12:30 p.m. Sign up by<br />

noon the day before. $2<br />

for Lynnfield residents<br />

and $3 for all others.<br />

*****<br />

Thursday, Nov. <strong>23</strong><br />

HAPPY<br />

THANKSGIVING!<br />

CENTER IS CLOSED<br />

*****<br />

Friday, Nov. 24<br />

CENTER IS CLOSED<br />

*****<br />

Monday, Nov. 27<br />

8 a.m. Exercise Room.<br />

8:30 a.m. Zumba with<br />

Alice. 8:45 a.m. Aerobics<br />

Video. 9 a.m. Walmart<br />

Shopping. 10 a.m.<br />

Creative Writing, Line<br />

Dance, Tap Dance, Sit<br />

and Tone with Darci. <strong>11</strong><br />

a.m. Yoga. <strong>11</strong>:30 a.m.<br />

Lunch: Lemon Chicken.<br />

12 p.m. Mexican Train,<br />

Bowling, Oil Painting,<br />

Caregiver’s Support.<br />

12:30 p.m. Mah Jong,<br />

Computer - sign up,<br />

Mexican Train. 12:30<br />

p.m. Computer Class.<br />

*****<br />

Tuesday, Nov. 28<br />

8 a.m. Hairdresser,<br />

Exercise Room. 8:45<br />

a.m. Exercise Under<br />

the Belt. 9 a.m. Blood<br />

Pressure, Qigong. 9:15<br />

a.m. Bingo. 9:30 a.m.<br />

Italian (intermediate),<br />

Food Shopping, Big Band<br />

Dance. 10 a.m. Tai Chi.<br />

10:30 a.m. Scrabble.<br />

<strong>11</strong>:30 a.m. Lunch:<br />

Pot Roast. 12:30 p.m.<br />

Computer Class - sign<br />

up, Bridge, Water Color<br />

Class, Reminisce.<br />

*****<br />

Be on the lookout for our holiday edition of<br />

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To advertise, call 781-593-7700 x1355<br />

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Wednesday, Nov. 29<br />

8 a.m. Hairdresser,<br />

Exercise Room. 8:30 a.m.<br />

Zumba. 9 a.m. Artist’s<br />

Drop-in, Alterations<br />

with Anita, Shopping<br />

with Claire at Macy’s,<br />

Tripoley, Manicurist.<br />

9:30 a.m. Hobbies with<br />

Bob. 10 a.m. Chair Yoga,<br />

Embroidery. 10:15 a.m.<br />

Italian (beginner), <strong>11</strong>:30<br />

a.m. Lunch: Chicken<br />

Salad Plate. 12:15 p.m.<br />

Pokeno, Canasta. 12:30<br />

p.m. Bridge, Matter of<br />

Balance. Trip: Shopping<br />

at PRU & Copley.<br />

*****<br />

PETER A. TORIGIAN<br />

SENIOR CENTER<br />

*****<br />

Thursday, Nov. <strong>23</strong><br />

HAPPY<br />

THANKSGIVING!<br />

CENTER IS CLOSED<br />

*****<br />

Friday, Nov. 24<br />

CENTER IS CLOSED<br />

*****<br />

Monday, Nov. 27<br />

9 a.m. Aerobics, Duplicate<br />

Bridge. 10 a.m. Drill<br />

Team, Bridge. <strong>11</strong>:15 a.m.<br />

Zumba. 12:30 p.m. Model<br />

Ship Building, Bingo,<br />

Show Rehearsal. Food:<br />

Cheese Lasagna.<br />

*****<br />

Tuesday, Nov. 28<br />

9 a.m. <strong>Peabody</strong> Kiosk,<br />

Book Club. 9:15 a.m.<br />

Whist. 9:30 a.m. Exercise<br />

with Edye, Japanese<br />

Bunka. 10:30 a.m.<br />

Line Dancing. 12 p.m.<br />

Mah Jongg. 12:30 a.m.<br />

Crocheting and Knitting.<br />

Food: Haddock. 4 p.m.<br />

Driver’s Meeting.<br />

*****<br />

Wednesday, Nov. 29<br />

9 a.m. Aerobics, Sewing<br />

and Repair, Rug Hooking,<br />

Wood Carving. 10 a.m. Flu<br />

Clinic. 10:15 a.m. Zumba.<br />

12:15 Monthly Movie.<br />

12:30 p.m. Model Ship<br />

Building. 1 p.m. Crazy<br />

Cards. Food: Chicken<br />

Broccoli Fettuccini.<br />

*****<br />

We want to hear<br />

from you!<br />

Send us a letter at<br />

editor@weeklynews.net.<br />

Letters should be no more<br />

than 300 words.<br />

254 Canal St., Salem, MA | 99 Commerce Way, Woburn, MA<br />

<strong>11</strong>8 Needham St., Newton, MA<br />

1-800-56-GARDNER or 978-744-1810 • www.gardnermattress.com<br />

May not be combined with any other offer. Some restrictions may apply. See store for details


NOVEMBER <strong>23</strong>, 2017 WEEKLYNEWS.NET - 978-532-5880 7<br />

Hearing from my mother on Thanksgiving<br />

By Rosalie Harrington<br />

Everywhere I go lately,<br />

people are asking me about<br />

birds. Do I cook the stuffing<br />

inside the bird or outside?<br />

Do I buy farm raised or Butterball<br />

(the one my mother<br />

swore by)? Do I know any<br />

tricks to keep people from<br />

talking politics and ending<br />

up mad? People see me and<br />

all of their holiday hosting<br />

anxiety comes pouring out.<br />

My mother had a knack<br />

for making everything taste<br />

good, just like her mother.<br />

The Butterball turkey, sold<br />

frozen, needed three days to<br />

defrost. My mother would<br />

have scoffed at the idea of<br />

brining the bird overnight<br />

in the garage in a barrel of<br />

saline solution to tenderize,<br />

“who has a garage, we barely<br />

have a car!” And she wouldn’t<br />

have gone for putting it in a<br />

paper bag either. I can hear<br />

her doing a rant about all the<br />

newfangled approaches now.<br />

Like a lot of Italians, she felt<br />

our people had already discovered<br />

the best way to do<br />

everything with food, so any<br />

new approaches were automatically<br />

a mistake. Whether<br />

fashion or food, like Sinatra<br />

sang, she wanted to do it<br />

“My Way.”<br />

My mother always stuffed<br />

the bird with the most delicious<br />

stuffing (recipe follows).<br />

She made a big deal<br />

of massaging the bird with<br />

soft butter and salt after it<br />

was stuffed. Then it would be<br />

basted with the drippings every<br />

half hour and the gravy<br />

was so good you could drink<br />

it. One criticism I would offer<br />

today — I never got the courage<br />

to tell her when she was<br />

still around — she should<br />

have made a roux instead of<br />

putting some flour and broth<br />

in a jar and shaking it up. A<br />

roux with equal parts butter<br />

and flour cooked first before<br />

the drippings is the “correct”<br />

way to make gravy, according<br />

to this Italian. “Who says,<br />

you don’t know everything?”<br />

she is saying in my head. She<br />

Rosalie’s delicious stuffing recipe came from her mother.<br />

had a way of making me feel<br />

that my input wasn’t exactly<br />

valid. And even that is a trait<br />

I miss.<br />

I will not be having my<br />

whole family over for turkey<br />

dinner. For many years, we<br />

would invite a large group<br />

of lonesome people at Rosalie’s<br />

on Thanksgiving and<br />

before that I would have my<br />

brother, my sister-in-law,<br />

and all their family with the<br />

grandparents — all of them.<br />

It was a ton of work. Days<br />

of shining the silver serving<br />

pieces, cleaning the chandelier<br />

over the dining room table,<br />

trips to the North End to<br />

buy dried figs, nuts prosciutto,<br />

ricotta pie, artichokes,<br />

pomegranates. I even had a<br />

seating plan with precious<br />

little place holders for everyone<br />

which my kids helped<br />

to customize with their art.<br />

My beautiful compote needed<br />

pounds of several varieties<br />

of grapes to be beautiful<br />

as a centerpiece and I had<br />

two Victorian silver grape<br />

scissors that also needed to<br />

be polished. Was I crazy?<br />

Thanksgiving is no longer<br />

allowed to demand so much<br />

of my energy.<br />

Todd and I had a big house<br />

in Gloucester for a few years<br />

and we entertained dozens<br />

of his relatives and many<br />

friends and we had a blast.<br />

Having a great space filled<br />

with lots of people is a beautiful<br />

thing. I love my little<br />

cottage now, but this time<br />

of year we get the urge to<br />

be able to handle a larger<br />

crowd. Wouldn’t it be fun to<br />

have a bigger house? Good<br />

friends have invited us to<br />

a Thanksgiving eve dinner<br />

with 40 other people at their<br />

gigantic home. “Who ever<br />

heard of such a thing? You<br />

have strange friends.” You<br />

guessed correctly if you knew<br />

it was my mother’s voice in<br />

my head.<br />

Norman Rockwell used to<br />

capture the feeling of American<br />

Thanksgiving with his<br />

magazine covers. They didn’t<br />

show lonesomeness or broken<br />

families — there was<br />

no suffering, just sanitized<br />

suburban American life on<br />

display. Several years ago,<br />

I decided that I wanted to<br />

spend Thanksgiving morning<br />

giving away turkey dinners.<br />

With a food pantry’s help, my<br />

daughter Sue and I delivered<br />

about 60 dinners to various<br />

people who were “in need.”<br />

We were not making very<br />

good time because Sue needed<br />

to chat with each person<br />

and wipe away many tears<br />

at every turn. “But mom they<br />

were all alone. But mom they<br />

wanted me to stay for coffee.<br />

But they seemed so poor.” We<br />

started at 9 in the morning<br />

and by 2 in the afternoon we<br />

were mentally drained, physically<br />

exhausted, and our<br />

hearts were broken. On the<br />

way home, with Sue looking<br />

like Rudolph with a red nose<br />

and still tearing, said “That<br />

was wonderful, I’m so happy<br />

we did that.” Me too.<br />

Rockwell never painted<br />

a Thanksgiving like the one<br />

we celebrated last year —<br />

at least, not that I’ve seen.<br />

We were offered the use of<br />

a loft by a friend who lives<br />

in Brooklyn. The day before<br />

the holiday we hopped onto<br />

an Acela train with our two<br />

grandsons and their mom<br />

and steamed into Manhattan.<br />

The boys made friends<br />

with the conductor, who was<br />

wonderful — spreading his<br />

warmth and joy to everyone,<br />

and taking the boys for a tour<br />

of some parts of the train you<br />

don’t normally see, like the<br />

platform on the back of the<br />

caboose.<br />

On a stop in Connecticut a<br />

woman came on board loaded<br />

down with packages and<br />

two tupperware pie carriers<br />

that go back to another era.<br />

“Someone’s going to get some<br />

nice dessert for the holiday,” I<br />

said as she sat down next to<br />

us. “Pecan pies,” she said. We<br />

had wonderful conversation<br />

all the way to the city while<br />

the boys were entertained<br />

by the conductor and their<br />

mother had a much-needed<br />

nap and Todd was off somewhere<br />

on his computer. My<br />

newest best friend and I said<br />

our goodbyes in the city and<br />

she wished me a Happy Holiday,<br />

Happy Life and handed<br />

me one of the tupperware<br />

carriers with a pie. It was the<br />

sweetest encounter ever.<br />

We took an Uber into<br />

Brooklyn, dropped our bags<br />

at the loft and took a walk<br />

so the boys could absorb the<br />

funk of the only half-gentrified<br />

section we were in.<br />

They loved the graffiti in the<br />

neighborhood and the funky<br />

vibrancy of the street life. We<br />

found a butcher where we<br />

bought a four pound turkey<br />

breast which we roasted with<br />

veggies before we went to the<br />

Macy’s Thanksgiving Day parade<br />

the next day.<br />

It will surely go down as<br />

one of the best times. “Only<br />

you would go to Brooklyn<br />

for Thanksgiving.” I can still<br />

hear my mother’s voice in my<br />

head.<br />

Stuffing Recipe<br />

(Serves 10)<br />

— Chop 1 large onion and cook until lightly browned<br />

— Add 1 pound of Italian sausage meat removed from casing<br />

— Add 1 cup of chopped celery, including the leaves, or fennel.<br />

— Place 1 stick of melted butter in a bowl and add:<br />

• 5 chopped sage leaves<br />

• A sprig of rosemary and a few sprigs of thyme leaves chopped<br />

• 5 cups of homemade croutons or Pepperidge Farm cornbread stuffing,<br />

more or less depending on whether you like a dry or moist stuffing.<br />

• 2 apples chopped<br />

• ½ cup each of currants or raisins and chopped apricots and walnuts<br />

• 6 tbsp. flat leaf parsley, chopped<br />

• Salt and pepper to taste.<br />

— Beat two eggs and combine with a cup of chicken broth in a large<br />

bowl.<br />

— Combine everything into the bowl with the eggs and toss gently. Add more<br />

chicken broth as needed to make a ball that sticks together when gathered in<br />

your hands.<br />

— Turn about 75 percent of the stuffing into a greased pan and place in the<br />

oven with the turkey about an hour before the turkey is done. Stuff the remainder<br />

of the mixture into the turkey.<br />

— Bake uncovered until it is golden brown.<br />

— Cut into squares and serve.<br />

Gravy<br />

— Sauté neck and the giblet in tbsp of hot oil and brown all over.<br />

— Add a chopped onion and cover both with water and simmer for an hour<br />

with a bay leaf. Use this as stock for gravy<br />

— After the bird has been removed to a serving platter, remove several tbsp.<br />

of fat from the pan and discard.<br />

— Reserving au jus and drippings and a little of the fat.<br />

— Directly into turkey pan place at least a half cup of flour (8 tbsp) You should<br />

have at least 1/2 cup of liquid in the pan. Cook over low heat for several minutes,<br />

until browned.<br />

— Add three cups of chicken broth and one cup cider and scrape the bottom of<br />

the pan with a wooden spoon.<br />

— Add cooked giblets, season with salt and pepper, stirring until thickened.<br />

— Add a half cup of heavy cream (optional) for silky gravy and simmer for a<br />

few minutes.<br />

— Add soaked and chopped porcini for a woody taste – a cup or so of other<br />

mushrooms is also nice.<br />

Helpful hint for preparing turkey<br />

Massage the bird with softened butter or olive oil. Sprinkle with a combination<br />

of fresh thyme and rosemary leaves chopped. A few slices of pancetta or bacon<br />

is nice, too. Pour 1 cup of Marsala wine, cider, and Grand Marnier over the bird<br />

AFTER it is lightly browned. Baste every half hour with the drip-pings in the pan.


8 WEEKLYNEWS.NET - 978-532-5880 NOVEMBER <strong>23</strong>, 2017<br />

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NOVEMBER <strong>23</strong>, 2017 WEEKLYNEWS.NET - 978-532-5880 9


10 WEEKLYNEWS.NET - 978-532-5880 NOVEMBER <strong>23</strong>, 2017<br />

Over the past few years there has been<br />

a significant increase of interest for yoga<br />

programs for children. The availability of<br />

classes for all ages is on a steady incline<br />

and we are seeing parents reaching out for<br />

children as young as 3-4 years of age up to<br />

18 and older.<br />

There are various reasons for wanting a<br />

child to experience this heightened awareness<br />

of happiness and positivity. Yes, the<br />

benefits are astounding, but another is the<br />

joy that it can bring into our lives.<br />

The current research has led many to<br />

realize that yoga is a lesson that can be<br />

taught and it has an important meaning.<br />

My teachings focus not only the poses, but<br />

on this philosophy of being mindful by using<br />

the simple message that peace, love<br />

and kindness matter.<br />

At the end of yoga class we may create<br />

something as simple as a Kindness Rock<br />

Garden or a Mindful Jar. On another day it<br />

could be as complicated as creating a choices<br />

wheel that is meant to help them to work<br />

out difficult decisions in a positive manner,<br />

therefore avoiding unwarranted conflicts.<br />

KIDS YOGA<br />

I Want Yoga Too!<br />

Coupled with the poses that create balance,<br />

flexibility, improved motor skills and<br />

improved sleep these activities send that<br />

message home with them. Helping them to<br />

live yoga on and off the mat with a more<br />

balanced mind and body connection.<br />

In closing, I would just like to add that<br />

this information is fact based. There are<br />

many articles I could site but one that sent<br />

a significant message to me is a 2014 article<br />

in Frontiers of Psychiatry Journal- it<br />

states that the outcome of their research<br />

shows a few of the many potential benefits<br />

that children can experience include: an<br />

improvement in concentration and memory,<br />

new respect for peers and others, improved<br />

self-regulation, increased self-confidence,<br />

a feeling of overall well-being,<br />

enriched emotional balance and a positive<br />

outlook on physical fitness.<br />

So yes! I am Miss Sharon and I am Here<br />

Comes the Sun Yoga. And Yes! I want to<br />

spread sunshine wherever I go with this<br />

positive message: I Am Peaceful! I Am Loving!<br />

I Am Kind!<br />

Let’s all live yoga on and off the mat!<br />

SENIOR LIVING DIRECTORY<br />

The North Shore’s longest running resource guide.<br />

To advertise here, contact 781-593-7700, ext. 1355<br />

or email advertising@itemlive.com<br />

Pet of the week<br />

Nine-year-old Remy is a sweetheart. If you<br />

are looking for an easy going Boston Terrier<br />

Mix that enjoys leisurely walks, belly<br />

rubs (for which she makes the most adorable<br />

grunting sounds) and tennis balls, then this<br />

one is the one for you. She is a local surrender<br />

and has been spayed and is Up to Date with<br />

vaccines. Remy does have some special needs,<br />

such as diabetes and hip dysplasia, but she<br />

sure does not let these things slow her down.<br />

She is super friendly, loving and affectionate<br />

and is just as happy going outside for walks<br />

as she is staying inside while being petted. She<br />

really is a great gal is has quickly become a<br />

staff and volunteer favorite at the Northeast<br />

Animal Shelter. Remy is available for the Senior<br />

for Senior program.<br />

If you are interested in meeting Remy, visiting<br />

hours at her “Inn Between” are Monday - Friday<br />

10-8 and weekends 10-6. You can also view<br />

more Information online @ www.neas.org.<br />

156 Broad St.<br />

leoinc.org<br />

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Let LEO keep you warm this winter.<br />

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Our in-home care providers are extremely understanding,<br />

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• Complete analysis of your insurance needs<br />

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• Business insurance for all industries<br />

• Life, disability and long term care insurance<br />

• Significant account discounts for home<br />

and auto insurance<br />

www.TarpeyInsurance.com<br />

The Retirement Financial Center<br />

Thomas T. Riquier, CFP®, CLU<br />

Financial questions? No fee for first meeting.<br />

10 Liberty Street<br />

Danvers, MA 019<strong>23</strong><br />

978-777-5000<br />

RetirementCtr.com<br />

Securities and Advisory Services Offered through United Planners Financial<br />

Services. Member: FINRA, SIPC. The Retirement Financial Center and<br />

United Planners are independent companies.


NOVEMBER <strong>23</strong>, 2017 WEEKLYNEWS.NET - 978-532-5880 <strong>11</strong><br />

Religious Notes<br />

All Saints Episcopal Church of the<br />

North Shore<br />

allsaintseposcopalnorthshore.org<br />

All Saints Episcopal Church of the North<br />

Shore, formerly St. Paul’s in <strong>Peabody</strong> and<br />

Calvary in Danvers, now worshiping together<br />

as one at 46 Cherry St., Danvers, across<br />

from the Danvers Town Hall. Service of<br />

Holy Communion and Homily every Sunday<br />

at 8 a.m. and 10 a.m. Summers one service at<br />

9 a.m. You’ll be welcome here. For more<br />

information call the church office at 978-<br />

774-<strong>11</strong>50.<br />

Calvary Baptist<br />

4 Coolidge Road, <strong>Peabody</strong><br />

978-531-0914, Pastor Caleb Ingersoll and<br />

Pastor Andy Katzmire<br />

Sunday worship at 10 a.m. followed by<br />

coffee and fellowship. Nursery care and activities<br />

for young children provided during<br />

worship. During the school year, Kids Connection<br />

meets Tuesdays at 6:30 p.m. and<br />

Youth Group meets Thursdays at 7 p.m.<br />

Calvary Christian Church<br />

47 Grove St., Lynnfield<br />

781-592-4722 - www.lynnfield-ccc.org<br />

Senior Pastor Timothy Schmidt would<br />

like to invite you to join us for one of our<br />

Sunday worship services at 8:30 a.m., 10:30<br />

a.m., 12:30 p.m. and 6:30 p.m. Children’s<br />

Ministry (ages 0-<strong>11</strong>) offered in all Sunday<br />

morning services. Hispanic Service: Sunday<br />

at 12:30 p.m. in the Prayer Chapel.<br />

Celebrate Recovery: Monday at 6:30 p.m.<br />

Young Adult Ministry: Wednesday at 7<br />

p.m. ages 18-30’s. Youth Ministry: Friday at<br />

6:30 p.m. ages 12-18. Weekly Prayer Meetings:<br />

Monday - Friday at 7 p.m. and Saturday<br />

at 6 p.m. Church office hours are Monday-<br />

Friday 8:30 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. For more<br />

information contact our church office at<br />

781-592-4722, office@lynnfield-ccc.org or<br />

visit our website www.lynnfield-ccc.org.<br />

Centre Congregational Church<br />

An Open and Affirming Congregation<br />

of the United Church of Christ<br />

5 Summer St. (corner of Summer and<br />

Main), Lynnfield,<br />

781-334-3050 or www.centre-church.org<br />

Pastor: Nancy Rottman<br />

Director of Faith Formation: Larainne<br />

Wilson<br />

Whoever you are and wherever you are on<br />

life’s journey, you are welcome at Centre Congregational<br />

Church! Centre Church is an Open<br />

and Affirming Congregation of the United<br />

Church of Christ. Our worship services are<br />

held at 10 a.m. each Sunday morning. We strive<br />

to provide inspiring, down-to-earth messages<br />

that are applicable to everyday life. We are<br />

committed to providing children a warm, safe,<br />

and inclusive environment. We offer vibrant<br />

and engaging Children’s Programming (Godly<br />

Play, Whole People of God, and Brick-by-<br />

Brick) and incorporate opportunities for stories,<br />

music, and service. Free nursery care with<br />

consistent, trained staff, is available for children<br />

up to age 4. We also have a Youth Group<br />

for Grades 5-12 and participate in an ecumenical<br />

group (Giv²) that provides teens an opportunity<br />

to live out their faith through service.<br />

We are connected with several non-profits including<br />

Haven From Hunger, Empty Bowls,<br />

City Mission, and Mission of Deeds. Visit with<br />

old friends and make new ones while enjoying<br />

refreshments after the service. We have ample<br />

parking in a large lot behind the church and the<br />

facility is handicap accessible. Please find us on<br />

Facebook at facebook.com/CentreChurchUCC<br />

or visit www.Centre-Church.org for updated<br />

information about our ministries and activities.<br />

Please feel free to contact the church office<br />

if you would like more information about<br />

any of these activities. (781-334-3050 or office@centre-church.org)<br />

Office Hours at the church are 9 a.m. – 3<br />

p.m. Monday – Friday.<br />

Tower Day School may be reached at towerdayschool@gmail.com<br />

or 781-334-5576<br />

Carmelite Chapel<br />

Northshore Mall, <strong>Peabody</strong><br />

978-531-6145<br />

Mass schedule: Monday-Friday, 8:30 a.m.,<br />

noon and 3 p.m.; Saturday, 8:30 a.m. and<br />

noon; Sunday Vigil, 4 and 5:30 p.m. Confessions:<br />

Monday-Friday, <strong>11</strong>:30 a.m.-noon and<br />

2:30-3 p.m., Saturday, 10:45-<strong>11</strong>:45 a.m. and<br />

2:45-3:45 p.m. or by appointment.<br />

Chabad of <strong>Peabody</strong><br />

682 Lowell St., <strong>Peabody</strong><br />

978-977-9<strong>11</strong>1, jewishpeabody.com<br />

Chabad of <strong>Peabody</strong> holds services weekly.<br />

Call or e-mail Rabbi Schusterman at rabbi@<br />

jewishpeabody.com. For event times and<br />

dates visit the website. Chabad runs a Hebrew<br />

School for children on Wednesday, and<br />

has an informal weekly drop-in class on<br />

Kabbalah and other holiday events. Hebrew<br />

School registration is now open. Call Raizel<br />

at the number above or email her at raizel@<br />

jewishpeabody.com.<br />

Community Covenant Church<br />

33 Lake St., West <strong>Peabody</strong><br />

978-535-5321, Rev. Joel Anderle communitycovenantlive.org.<br />

Community Covenant is a warm and inviting<br />

church in the Evangelical, Protestant<br />

tradition. All are welcome.<br />

The Reverend Joel Anderle, our Senior<br />

Pastor, officiates worship services every<br />

Sunday at <strong>11</strong> a.m. Sunday School classes for<br />

all ages are held from 9:45-10:45 a.m. September<br />

through June.<br />

For more information please contact the<br />

church office. Our Church is handicap accessible.<br />

Congregation Sons of Israel<br />

Corner of Park and Spring Streets <strong>Peabody</strong><br />

978-532-1624, peabodyshul.org<br />

Also on Facebook<br />

Friday Sabbath services are the first Friday<br />

of each month at 7:30 p.m. Sunday morning<br />

services are at 9 a.m.<br />

Congregation Tifereth Israel<br />

8 Pierpont St., <strong>Peabody</strong>.<br />

Services once a month. For further information<br />

contact president Elliot Hershoff at<br />

978-531-7309.<br />

First United Methodist<br />

24 Washington St., <strong>Peabody</strong><br />

978-531-0095, Pastor Seok-Cheol Shin<br />

Bible-centered praise and worship service,<br />

Sunday at 10:30 a.m. with Holy Communion<br />

every Sunday. All are welcome. Pastor<br />

hours: Mon., Tues. and Thurs., 1-5 p.m.<br />

There is a nursery room. The church is handicap<br />

accessible.<br />

Additional information: info@ctipeabody.org<br />

or 978-531-8135.<br />

Lynnfield Community Church<br />

735 Salem St., Lynnfield<br />

(781) 599-4421<br />

LynnfieldCommunityChurch.org.<br />

Lynnfield Community Church welcomes<br />

you to Sunday worship at 10-<strong>11</strong> a.m. Following<br />

our service, join us for coffee and<br />

fellowship in Marshall Hall. Parking is behind<br />

the church and there are entrances in<br />

front and on the side of the building. Please<br />

visit soon.<br />

Messiah Lutheran<br />

708 Lowell St., Lynnfield<br />

781-334-4<strong>11</strong>1 for Church; 781-334-6591<br />

for Pre-school.<br />

A personal and traditional approach allows<br />

Messiah to care for people and share God’s<br />

Word. Join us for worship on Sundays at<br />

10:30 a.m. Mens’ Ministry, Christian Education,<br />

Financial Peace University, Community<br />

Service, and other opportunities to grow in<br />

your faith. Served by Rev. Dr. Jeremy Pekari<br />

and Rev. David Brezina. mlcspirit.org.<br />

New Destiny Christian<br />

Spring Hill Suites, <strong>Peabody</strong><br />

978-373-4340<br />

Pastors are David and Mary Jane Wing. A<br />

full Gospel/Prophetic church. Sunday service<br />

at 9:30 a.m.<br />

North Shore Baptist<br />

706 Lowell St., <strong>Peabody</strong><br />

978-535-6186<br />

Sunday: Adult Sunday School begins at 9<br />

a.m., followed by refreshments and fellowship<br />

time. Worship Service begins at 10:30<br />

a.m. All are welcome. Monday: Men’s<br />

Group Study at 7 p.m., Thursday: Prayer<br />

Meeting, 7 p.m.<br />

Visit our website for more information or<br />

to leave a prayer request.<br />

NorthShoreBaptistChurch.org<br />

Lynnfield Catholic Collaborative<br />

Our Lady of the Assumption and St. Maria<br />

Goretti<br />

The Lynnfield Catholic Collaborative, comprised<br />

of Our Lady of the Assumption<br />

Church, Salem and Grove Streets, and Saint<br />

Maria Goretti Church, <strong>11</strong>2 Chestnut St., Lynnfield,<br />

may be reached by calling 781-598-<br />

4313 or by email: jsano@ola-smg.org or by<br />

visiting the website: lynnfieldcatholic.org.<br />

The Pastoral Leadership Team: The Pastor<br />

is Rev. Paul E. Ritt, the Parochial Vicar is<br />

Rev. Anthony Luongo and the Deacons are<br />

Thomas O’Shea and Ed Elibero. Donna<br />

Delahanty is Director of Parish Ministries.<br />

Office hours: Monday through Thursday<br />

8 a.m. - 4 p.m., Friday 8 a.m. - 12 p.m.,<br />

closed for holidays.<br />

Please note that from July 2-September 3,<br />

the 5 p.m. Mass at St. Maria Goretti in Lynnfield<br />

will be suspended. For the summer<br />

months, the Masses will be as follows:<br />

Our Lady of the Assumption (758 Salem<br />

Street, Lynnfield)<br />

Saturday Vigil: 4 p.m.<br />

Sunday: 7 a.m., 9 a.m., <strong>11</strong> a.m.<br />

Mondays, Wednesdays and Fridays: 9<br />

a.m.<br />

St. Maria Goretti (<strong>11</strong>2 Chestnut Street,<br />

Lynnfield)<br />

Saturday Vigil: 4 p.m.<br />

Sunday: 10 a.m.<br />

Tuesdays and Thursdays: 9 a.m.<br />

Our Lady of Fatima<br />

50 Walsh Ave., <strong>Peabody</strong><br />

978-532-0272, Fr. Christopher Gomes<br />

Choir Dir.: Noreen Galopim; Organist:<br />

Audrey Sullivan. Office hours: Monday to<br />

Friday, 1-5 p.m. Mass schedule: Monday-Thursday,<br />

9 a.m. (Portuguese); Friday at<br />

6 p.m. (Portuguese); Saturday at 9 a.m.<br />

(Portuguese) (and Vigil at 5 p.m. English);<br />

Sunday 9 a.m. (English); <strong>11</strong>:30 a.m. (Portuguese);<br />

6 p.m. (Portuguese). Confessions:<br />

Saturday, 4-4:45 p.m.; Baptisms, 2nd and<br />

4th Sundays. Exposition of the Blessed Sacrament,<br />

every Friday, 5-6 p.m. Religious<br />

Education Classes for Grades 1-6 at 8 a.m.<br />

and Grades 7-10 at 10 a.m. on Sundays.<br />

St. Adelaide<br />

708 Lowell St., <strong>Peabody</strong><br />

978-535-1985<br />

Team Ministry: Rev. Raymond Van De<br />

Moortell, and Rev. David C. Lewis. Weekend<br />

Mass Schedule: Saturday, 4 p.m., Sunday,<br />

8:30, 10 and <strong>11</strong>:30 a.m. Holy Day<br />

Masses: 9 a.m. and 7 p.m.; Latin Mass: 1<br />

p.m. Sunday. Confessions: Saturday, 3-3:30<br />

p.m.; Baptisms: first Sunday of the month at<br />

2:30 p.m.; Exposition of the Blessed Sacrament:<br />

first Friday of the month, 9:30 a.m.-<br />

noon and Wednesdays from 5:30-6:30 p.m.<br />

AA Meetings: Thursdays, 7 p.m. Religious<br />

Education classes (grades 1-10) are held in<br />

the church hall on Sunday and Thursday.<br />

St. Ann’s Parish<br />

136 Lynn St., <strong>Peabody</strong><br />

978-531-1480<br />

Rev. Charles Stanley; Richard W. Cordeau,<br />

Deacon 978-531-1480; M. Ellen Fitzgerald,<br />

Pastoral Associate 978-531-9625. Office of<br />

Religious Education: 140 Lynn St., M. Ellen<br />

Fitzgerald, Religious Education Dir., 978-531-<br />

5791; Leanne Amirault, Preschool Dir., 978-<br />

532-3329 or 978-531-9521. Daily Mass: Saturday<br />

at 4 p.m. and Sunday at 8:30 and 10:30<br />

a.m. Daily Mass: 9 a.m.<br />

St. Clare of Assisi Catholic Community<br />

(non-Roman)<br />

Rev. Mike Otero-Otero, O.S.F.<br />

Located at and with courtesy by St. John<br />

Evangelical Lutheran Church<br />

32 Ellsworth Road at King St., <strong>Peabody</strong><br />

Saturday Vigil Mass at 3 p.m.<br />

We offer valid seven sacraments - Baptism,<br />

Confirmation, Holy Communion, Confession,<br />

Marriage, Holy Orders, and the Anointing of<br />

the Sick. Please call 978-804-2250.<br />

St. John Lutheran<br />

Ellsworth Rd. at King St., <strong>Peabody</strong><br />

978-531-1731, stjohnpeabody.org<br />

The Rev. Charles N. Stevenson, pastor. St.<br />

John is a member of the Evangelical Lutheran<br />

Church in America and Lutheran Congregations<br />

in Mission for Christ. Sunday worship<br />

at 9:30 a.m. with nursery care provided<br />

and coffee and fellowship following; Sunday<br />

School at <strong>11</strong> a.m.; Bible Study, Wednesday<br />

at 7:30 p.m. Holy Communion is celebrated<br />

the first and third Sunday of each month and<br />

on certain festivals.<br />

St. John the Baptist<br />

17 Chestnut St., <strong>Peabody</strong><br />

978-531-0002 stjohnspeabody.com<br />

Pastor: Very Rev. John E. MacInnis, VF;<br />

Parochial Vicar: Rev. Mario Guarino, FDP<br />

and Rev. Paul G.M. McManus; Deacon:<br />

Leo A. Martin; Mass: Monday-Saturday,<br />

6:45 a.m. and 4 p.m. (on Saturday); Sunday<br />

at 8, 10 and <strong>11</strong>:30 a.m. (Spanish) and 5 p.m.<br />

St. John’s Thrift Shop, 19 Chestnut Street,<br />

<strong>Peabody</strong> (behind City Hall) will be closed<br />

for summer break starting July 2. The Shop<br />

will reopen on July 21.<br />

Food Pantry on the last Sunday of the<br />

month from 9:30 a.m. - 1 p.m. in the Pastoral<br />

Center basement. St. John, the Baptist<br />

School is now accepting applications. Programs<br />

available for 2, 3, 4 and 5-year-olds<br />

and grades 1-8. Extended day available for<br />

all students. Visit: stjohns-peabody.com or<br />

call 978-531-0444, ext. 340.<br />

St. Paul’s Episcopal<br />

127 Summer St., Lynnfield<br />

(781) 334-4594,<br />

stpaulslynnfield.org.<br />

Rev. Robert Bacon, rector<br />

St. Paul’s Episcopal Church worships at 8:30<br />

a.m. and 10 a.m. on Sundays. The 8:30 a.m.<br />

Holy Eucharist (Rite I) is a said service. The 10<br />

a.m. Holy Eucharist service (Rite II) includes<br />

music with hymns and choir and is followed by<br />

coffee hour fellowship. Sunday School begins<br />

at 10 a.m. for children (Pre-K through Grade<br />

5). Childcare is available for younger children.<br />

St. Paul’s also offers a Wednesday Holy Eucharist<br />

at 9 a.m., followed immediately by Bible/<br />

Book Study. All are welcome. The church is<br />

handicap accessible. For more information,<br />

visit our website, call the church office, like our<br />

Facebook page https://www.facebook.com/stpaulslynnfield/,<br />

or email office@<br />

stpaulslynnfield.org.<br />

St. Stephen’s Episcopal Church<br />

781-599-4220<br />

About St. Stephen’s Episcopal Church: St.<br />

Stephen’s is an open and affirming Christian<br />

church worshiping in the Angelican tradition.<br />

Crossing lines of color, class, culture and generation<br />

we seek transformation of our lives and<br />

our community through Christ’s Gospel of<br />

love, compassion, and justice. To learn more<br />

please vistis www.ststephenslynn.org.<br />

St. Thomas the Apostle 3 Margin St.,<br />

<strong>Peabody</strong>, MA 01960<br />

978-531-0224, Office Hours: M-F 9 a.m.-12<br />

p.m. Fax: 978-531-6517. Pastor: Very Rev.<br />

John MacInnis, VF. Parochial Vicar: Rev.<br />

Steven Clemence. Pastoral Associate/Coordinator<br />

of Youth Ministry: Dawn Alves. Coordinator<br />

of Religious Education: Lisa Trainor.<br />

Director of Music Ministry: Dr. Holly Zagaria.<br />

Website: www.stthomaspeabody.org.<br />

Winter Mass Schedule: Saturday 4 p.m. (English)<br />

~ Sunday 10 a.m .(English) <strong>11</strong>:30 a.m.<br />

(Brazilian).<br />

Thrift Shop: Saturdays 9 a.m.-2 p.m.<br />

Join Us!St. Vasilios Greek Orthodox<br />

Church<br />

5 Paleologos St., <strong>Peabody</strong><br />

978-531-0777, stvasilios.org<br />

Pastor: Rev. Christopher Foustoukos; Pastor<br />

Emeritus: Andrew Demotses; Pastoral Assistant:<br />

Deacon Robert Fadel; Worship schedule:<br />

Sunday - Matins at 8 a.m., Divine Liturgy at 9<br />

a.m., Church School at 10:30 a.m.-<strong>11</strong>:30 a.m.;<br />

Weekly feast days as announced: Matins at 8<br />

a.m., Divine Liturgy at 9 a.m.<br />

Second Congregational<br />

12 Maple St., <strong>Peabody</strong><br />

978-210-4976, Rev. Alison Gerber<br />

Worship services at 10:30 a.m. each Sunday.<br />

The church is wheelchair accessible.<br />

Childcare is available during worship service<br />

for children through age five. Children’s<br />

Church during service, ages 6-12.<br />

Sunday School, ages two through adult from<br />

9:15-10:15 a.m. For Bible study and Book<br />

Group schedules, call the office.<br />

South Congregational<br />

60 Prospect St., <strong>Peabody</strong><br />

978-531-1964, southchurch.net<br />

Sr. Pastor: Grant Hoofnagle. Sunday service<br />

is at 10 a.m. Communion service is the<br />

first Sunday of each month. Children pre-K<br />

through 12th grade programs during the<br />

worship service. Our Sunday worship service<br />

blends both traditional hymns and contemporary<br />

praise. Teen Youth Groups meet<br />

on Sunday evenings at the church. Several<br />

small groups for Bible Study meeting weekly<br />

– if interested in attending one, call church<br />

office for info.<br />

Monthly Fellowship Dinner is the 2nd<br />

Sunday of each month at 6 p.m. in fellowship<br />

hall - Prayer Meeting follows at 7 p.m.<br />

All are welcome.<br />

Sovereign Grace Community Church<br />

6 Bourbon St., <strong>Peabody</strong><br />

978-210-7413<br />

sovG.us, info@sovG.us<br />

sovG is a family friendly church offering a<br />

contemporary Sunday Morning Worship<br />

Service at 10 a.m. Sunday School is offered<br />

during worship for kids through 5th grade.<br />

There is a full staffed nursery. For students in<br />

7th-12th grades, our Youth Group meets<br />

Sunday evenings from 7-9 p.m. Email Youth<br />

Director Will Coley at will@sovG.us for information<br />

about Youth Group.<br />

Michael Williams, Lead Pastor. Visit:<br />

facebook.com/michaelwillyamz. Helping<br />

people connect with God, each other and the<br />

needs in our community.<br />

Temple Tiferet Shalom<br />

489 Lowell St., <strong>Peabody</strong><br />

978-535-2100, templetiferetshalom.org<br />

The Temple Shabbat Services are Fridays<br />

at 7:30 p.m. The Temple offers Preschool,<br />

Religious School, Bar and Bat Mitzvah instruction,<br />

Confirmation classes, Chai Club<br />

and youth groups. Social action and adult<br />

education programs are an integral component<br />

of the temple.<br />

Temple Emmanuel<br />

120 Chestnut St., Wakefield<br />

Temple Emmanuel of Wakefield is affiliated<br />

with the Jewish Reconstructionist Communities.<br />

We offer a contemporary approach<br />

to Judaism while maintaining a respect for<br />

traditional Jewish values. We are a caring<br />

and inclusive community through learning<br />

and community activities. Besides Shabbat<br />

and Festival services, there is a Sisterhood<br />

and Temple Reads Book Club, Shabbat dinners,<br />

concerts and other programs. Consult<br />

the temple website and Facebook page for<br />

updated information.<br />

Temple Emmanuel’s mission is to be an inclusive<br />

and welcoming Jewish Reconstructionist<br />

Community devoted to learning, spirituality,<br />

and caring for each individual. At<br />

Temple Emmanuel we are building a vibrant<br />

future in honor of our past, utilizing ancient<br />

traditions to provide meaning and sustenance<br />

in our contemporary lives. There is a chairlift<br />

to the second floor social hall. Visitors are<br />

encouraged to come to services and events<br />

that interest them.<br />

Shabbat services, led by Rabbi Greg Hersh<br />

are held most Friday evenings at 7:30 p.m. and<br />

Saturday mornings at 9:30 a.m.<br />

Second Saturday morning is a Tot Shabbat at<br />

10 p.m. and a Jewish Meditation Circle is on the<br />

third Friday evening at 7.<br />

Visit www.WakefieldTemple.org for complete<br />

schedule of services, family events, and<br />

Continuing Education programs.<br />

The Temple website (www.WakefieldTemple.org)<br />

has the complete list of Rosh Hashanah<br />

and Yom Kippur services. Seats may be reserved<br />

by calling Phil 617-688-0870.<br />

Temple Ner Tamid<br />

368 Lowell St., <strong>Peabody</strong><br />

978-532-1293, templenertamid.org, Email<br />

templenertamid@verizon.net.<br />

Rabbi Richard Perlman, Cantor Steve<br />

Abramowitz, Beth K. Hoffman, Synagogue<br />

Administrator. Service Schedule: Evening<br />

minyans held Sunday – Thursday at 7:30 p.m.<br />

Sunday morning Minyans at 9 a.m. Friday<br />

Evening Services at 8 p.m. (unless a special<br />

service), Saturday morning service at 9:30<br />

a.m. Active Temple including Religious<br />

School, Sisterhood, Men’s Club, Social Action<br />

and Adult Education. Pilates on Sunday<br />

mornings, 10:30 a.m., Zumba on Monday<br />

evenings, 6:15 p.m., Israeli Dance Group<br />

Tuesday evenings at 8 p.m. Temple welcomes<br />

Interfaith Families. Please contact the office<br />

for more information at 978-532-1293.<br />

The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day<br />

Saints<br />

400 Essex St., Lynnfield<br />

lds.org - Sunday services and classes are<br />

from 9 a.m. to noon; 9-10:10 a.m. Sacrament<br />

Meeting; 10:20-<strong>11</strong> a.m. Sunday School; <strong>11</strong>:10-<br />

noon, Primary and Youth Classes; Youth<br />

Night and Boy/Cub Scouts: Tuesdays at 7<br />

p.m.; Bishop: Matthew Romano, 781-334-<br />

5586. Family History Center (open to the<br />

public) Wednesdays 10 a.m. to 9 p.m.; Thursday,<br />

10 a.m. to 4 p.m. Please check before<br />

coming due to weather or for summer hours).<br />

Wakefield Lynnfield United Methodist<br />

Church<br />

273 Vernon St., Wakefield with Pastor:<br />

Glenn M. Mortimer<br />

Hello from the Wakefield- Lynnfield United<br />

Methodist Church!<br />

Here is a little bit about our welcoming<br />

Methodist Church Community. Each Sunday,<br />

Worship Service starts at 10:30 a.m .<br />

during which we offer Sunday School for infants/<br />

toddlers through high Schoolers.<br />

Following the service, we enjoy Fellowship<br />

at our Coffee & Conversation time.<br />

There are also many ways to serve the<br />

community here through volunteer opportunities,<br />

social groups and committees like<br />

Ecumenical Youth Group, Choir, Book<br />

Club, Sunday School, Bible Study, United<br />

Methodist Women, Ministry Leadership<br />

Team, Card Care Club, Craft Fair Committee,<br />

just to name a few. We offer our building<br />

to many local groups like Cub Scouts,<br />

Girl Scouts, Wakefield Arts & Crafts Society,<br />

Music Together- Preschool Music, Kids<br />

Curtain Call Drama for Middle Schoolers<br />

and Wakefield Reparatory Theater! We<br />

even have musicians “In the House” as our<br />

Pastor, Rev. Glenn Mortimer, and his wife<br />

Elizabeth are trained musicians which they<br />

incorporate into special church services for<br />

all to enjoy! For more information about our<br />

church, please call the church office at (781)<br />

245-1359 or email us at our new email<br />

WLUMC273@gmail.com. Visit us on<br />

Facebook www.facebook.com/methodistchurchwakefield<br />

We look forward to welcoming you on<br />

Sunday!<br />

This Weeks Activity:<br />

Thursday, Nov. <strong>23</strong> -<br />

Have a Blessed Thanksgiving Day!<br />

Sunday, Nov. 26 - 9:15 a.m. Adult Choir<br />

Rehearsal<br />

10:30 a.m. - Sunday Worship, Sunday<br />

School & Nursery Care<br />

Monday, Nov. 27 - 2:30 p.m. Kids Curtain<br />

Call<br />

Tuesday, Nov. 28 - 9:30 a.m. Early Childhood<br />

Music Together Class<br />

Wednesday, Nov. 29 - 7 p.m. Advent Bible<br />

Study<br />

7 p.m. Dr. Jazz Big Band Rehearsal<br />

The month of November, for our<br />

“Warming Tree” we are collecting New<br />

Hats, Mittens, Gloves, Scarfs and New Unwrapped<br />

Toys to help support the Wakefield<br />

Holiday Shop for families in need during<br />

the Holiday Season.<br />

All items Due Dec. 1st.<br />

West Church<br />

27 Johnson St., <strong>Peabody</strong><br />

Associate Pastor: Rick McDonnell<br />

Office Phone: 978-535-4<strong>11</strong>2<br />

Office Email: office@westchurchpeabody.org<br />

Website: www.westchurchpeabody.org<br />

No matter where you are on your spiritual<br />

journey, you are welcome at West Church! We<br />

love the Lord Jesus and we care deeply about<br />

meeting the needs of those God sends to us. At<br />

West Church you will share in a worship service<br />

centered on the majesty and holiness of<br />

God rather than on ourselves. We have a number<br />

of program offerings, special events, small<br />

groups, and opportunities to serve that may<br />

well encourage you to feel at home in our fellowship.<br />

Every Sunday at West Church, people of<br />

all ages come together to worship the Lord,<br />

Jesus Christ, and to share in fellowship as a<br />

community. Each service includes singing<br />

praise, prayer, and preaching from God’s<br />

word. We invite you to come and join us for<br />

worship at 10:30 a.m. Kingdom Kids, our<br />

Worship Service program for children nursery<br />

through 4th grade, is available during<br />

Worship service. Sunday School is available<br />

for children, youth and adults from<br />

9–10 a.m. For more information about our<br />

programs throughout the week visit our<br />

website: www.westchurchpeabody.org.<br />

Summer Sundays at West Church<br />

Church Prayer Time at 8:30 a.m.<br />

Worship Service and Kingdom Kids at<br />

9:30 a.m.<br />

Punch Fellowship Following the Service


12 WEEKLYNEWS.NET - 978-532-5880 NOVEMBER <strong>23</strong>, 2017<br />

LEGALS<br />

LEGALS<br />

LEGALS<br />

LEGALS<br />

THE STATE OF NEW HAMPSHIRE<br />

JUDICIAL BRANCH<br />

SUPERIOR COURT<br />

Strafford Superior Court<br />

259 County Farm Road, Suite 301<br />

Dover, NH 03820<br />

CITATION FOR PUBLICATION<br />

Superior Court Rule 4(d)<br />

Case Name: Katherine S.A. Moore, et al v Jessie M. (Porter) Higgins, Heirs,<br />

Successors and Assigns and All Unknown Third Parties Who May Claim an<br />

Interest<br />

Case Number: 219-2017-CV-00336<br />

The above entitled action is now pending in this Court. The original pleading is on<br />

file and may be examined by interested parties. The Court has issues an Order for<br />

Service by Publication on defendant(s) Jessie M. (Porter) Higgins, Hiers,<br />

Successors and Assigns and All unknown third Parties Who may claim an Interest.<br />

The Court ORDERS:<br />

Katherine S.A. Moore; Norman Moore shall give notice to Jessie M. (Porter)<br />

Higgins, Hiers, Successors and Assigns and All Unknown Third Parties Who May<br />

Claim an Interest of this action by publishing a verified copy of this Citation for<br />

Publication once a week for three successive weeks in the <strong>Peabody</strong> Lynnfield<br />

Weekly News and Foster's Daily Democrat, newspapers of general circulation. The<br />

last publication shall be on or before December <strong>11</strong>, 2017.<br />

Also, ON OR BEFORE 30 days after the last publication<br />

Jessie M. (Porter) Higgins, Heirs, Successors and Assigns and All Unknown Third<br />

Parties Who May Claim an Interest shall file an Appearance and Answer or other<br />

responsive pleading with this Court. A copy of the Appearance and Answer or other<br />

responsive party listed below and any other party who has filed an appearance in<br />

this matter.<br />

January 01, 2018<br />

Katherine S.A. Moore; Norman Moore shall file the Return of Service with this<br />

Court. Failure to do so may result in this action being dismissed without further<br />

notice.<br />

Notice to Jessie M. (Porter) Higgins, Heirs, Successors and Assigns and All<br />

Unknown Third Parties Who May Claim an Interest: If you do not comply with<br />

these requirements, you will be considered in default and the Court may issue<br />

orders that affect you without your input.<br />

Send copies to:<br />

J Kirk Trombley, ESQ Trombley Kfoury PA<br />

47 Old Concord Turnpike<br />

PO Box 860<br />

Barrington, NH 03825<br />

Weekly News: November <strong>23</strong>, 30, December 7, 2107<br />

BY ORDER OF THE COURT<br />

Kimberly T Myers<br />

Clerk of Court<br />

PEABODY CITY COUNCIL<br />

LEGAL AD<br />

NOTICE OF PUBLIC HEARING<br />

Notice is hereby given that the City<br />

Council of the City of <strong>Peabody</strong> will<br />

conduct a public hearing on THURS-<br />

DAY EVENING, DECEMBER 14, 2017,<br />

at 7:30 P.M., in the Frank L. Wiggin<br />

Auditorium, City Hall, 24 Lowell Street,<br />

<strong>Peabody</strong>, MA on the application from<br />

TOP'S CHURRASCARIA, INC.D/B/A<br />

OLIVEIRA'S STEAK HOUSE, 72-74<br />

Walnut Street, <strong>Peabody</strong>, MA requesting<br />

TO AMEND AN ENTERTAINMENT<br />

LICENSE TO ALLOW FOR ADDITIONAL<br />

LIVE ENTERTAINMENT, SPECIFICAL-<br />

LY, LIVE MUSIC LIMITED TO A<br />

MAXIMUM OF 3 PERFORMERS<br />

MONDAY THROUGH SUNDAY 8:00<br />

P.M. TO 12:45 P.M. at said 72-74<br />

WALNUT STREET, <strong>Peabody</strong>, MA.<br />

.<br />

PEABODY CITY COUNCIL<br />

COUNCILLOR JOEL D. SASLAW<br />

CITY COUNCIL PRESIDENT<br />

Timothy E. Spanos<br />

City Clerk<br />

Weekly News: November <strong>23</strong>, 2017<br />

PEABODY CITY COUNCIL<br />

LEGAL AD<br />

NOTICE OF PUBLIC HEARING<br />

Notice is hereby given that the City<br />

Council of the City of <strong>Peabody</strong>, acting<br />

as the Special Permit Granting<br />

Authority, will conduct a public hearing<br />

on THURSDAY EVENING, DECEMBER<br />

14, 2017, at 7:30 P.M., in the Frank<br />

L. Wiggin Auditorium, City Hall, 24<br />

Lowell Street, <strong>Peabody</strong>, MA on the<br />

application from PATRICK COBURN,<br />

SR., Trustee of Mount Pleasant Realty<br />

Trust, 3 Mt. Pleasant Drive, <strong>Peabody</strong>,<br />

MA FOR A SPECIAL PERMIT FOR<br />

RENOVATION AND ADDITIONS TO<br />

PRE-EXISTING NON-CONFORMING<br />

COMMERCIAL STRUCTURE WHICH<br />

INCLUDES THE ADDITION OF A<br />

SECOND STORY OVER CERTAIN<br />

PORTIONS OF THE PREMISES at said<br />

3 MT. PLEASANT DRIVE, <strong>Peabody</strong>, MA<br />

as filed in accordance with Sections<br />

1.5, 6.1, and 15.7 of the <strong>Peabody</strong><br />

Zoning Ordinance.<br />

PEABODY CITY COUNCIL<br />

COUNCILLOR JOEL D. SASLAW<br />

CITY COUNCIL PRESIDENT<br />

Timothy E. Spanos<br />

City Clerk<br />

Weekly News: November <strong>23</strong>, 30, 2017<br />

Have something to sell?<br />

We can help!<br />

Legal Notice<br />

There will be a Tree Removal Hearing on November 27, 2017 @ 9:00am at the<br />

Recreation, Parks & Forestry Department office located at 50 Farm Avenue,<br />

<strong>Peabody</strong>, MA, for the removal of a Public Shade Tree(s) at the following<br />

location(s).<br />

Address: 9 Manor Drive As per the petition of (Bobbie Moscato)<br />

<strong>Peabody</strong>, MA 01960<br />

Per Order of Brian Grant, Tree Warden<br />

Weekly News: November 16, <strong>23</strong>, 2017<br />

AUTO AUCTION<br />

Notice is hereby given by Four Star Service Inc. 134 Newbury St. Rear Unit R.U.B.<br />

<strong>Peabody</strong>, Ma 01960 that on November 24, 2017 at <strong>11</strong>a.m., a sale will be<br />

conducted for the following vehicles to satisfy the garage lien, thereon for the<br />

storage, towing charges, care and expenses of notice & sale of said vehicle:<br />

2006 Volkswagon Jetta VIN: 3VWPG71K06M683503<br />

Reg: 2EB324 MA<br />

Owner: Rosa Corban<br />

49 Robbins St #2<br />

Lowell, Ma 01854<br />

1996 Toyota Avalon VIN: 4T1BF12B8TY<strong>11</strong>7961<br />

Reg: Unknown<br />

Owner: John Pennisser<br />

88 Union St<br />

South Weymouth, Ma 02190<br />

2005 Cadillac CTS VIN: 1G6DP567550<strong>11</strong>4830<br />

Reg: 8HR560 Ma<br />

Owner: Michael Vilarino<br />

35 Park Ave<br />

Revere Ma 02151<br />

2006 Nissan Maxima VIN: 1N4BA41E36C8659<strong>23</strong><br />

Reg: 2CM741 Ma<br />

Owner: Sonia E. Marrero<br />

2 Smidt Ave. Apt 3<br />

<strong>Peabody</strong>, Ma 01960<br />

Any question please call<br />

Four Star Service Inc, 978-535-9847<br />

Weekly News, November 9, 16, <strong>23</strong>, 2017<br />

Need a question answered?<br />

contactus@essexmedia.group


13 WEEKLYNEWS.NET - 978-532-5880 NOVEMBER <strong>23</strong>, 2017<br />

LEGALS<br />

LEGALS<br />

LEGALS<br />

CONSTRUCTION<br />

An Ordinance Amending Chapter 16 Licenses<br />

Of the Code of the City of <strong>Peabody</strong><br />

BE IT ORDAINED BY THE CITY COUNCIL OF THE CITY OF PEABODY AS FOLLOWS:<br />

SECTION ONE: That the Code of the City of <strong>Peabody</strong> adopted on January 9, 1986, and amended, is hereby further amended:<br />

By amending Article I "In General" and adding a new Section 16-5 entitled Civil Fingerprinting as follows:<br />

§ 16-5.1 Purpose and legislative authorization.<br />

§ 16-5.2 Applicability; notification of applicant.<br />

§ 16-5.3 Processing; communication of results.<br />

§ 16-5.4 Reliance on results.<br />

§ 16-5.5 Compliance with law, regulation and City policy.<br />

§ 16- 5.6 Fees.<br />

§ 16-5.1 Purpose and legislative authorization.<br />

A.<br />

In order to protect the health, safety and welfare of the inhabitants of the City of <strong>Peabody</strong>, and as authorized by MGL c. 6, §<br />

172B1/2, this chapter shall require:<br />

(1)<br />

Applicants for certain City licenses permitting the conduct of specific occupational activities within the City as enumerated in<br />

§16-5.2, below, to submit to fingerprinting by the <strong>Peabody</strong> Police Department;<br />

(2)<br />

The Police Department to conduct criminal record background checks based on such fingerprints; and<br />

(3)<br />

The City to consider the results of such background checks in determining whether or not to grant a license.<br />

B.<br />

The City authorizes the Massachusetts State Police, the Massachusetts Department of Criminal Justice Information Systems<br />

(the "DCJIS") and the Federal Bureau of Investigation (the "FBI") as may be applicable to conduct on behalf of the City and its<br />

Police Department fingerprint-based state and national criminal record background checks, including of FBI records,<br />

consistent with this chapter. The City authorizes the Police Department to receive and utilize records of the State Police, the<br />

DCJIS and the FBI in connection with such background checks, consistent with this chapter.<br />

§ 16-5.2 Applicability; notification of applicant.<br />

A.<br />

Any applicant for a license to engage in any of the following occupational activities organized by category in this Code all<br />

within the City shall submit a full set of fingerprints taken by the <strong>Peabody</strong> Police Department within 10 days of the date of the<br />

application for a license for the purpose of conducting a state and national criminal record background check to determine the<br />

suitability of the applicant for the license:<br />

(1)<br />

Solicitors and peddlers under Chapter 26.<br />

(2)<br />

Amusements under Chapter 5<br />

(3)<br />

Fortuneteller under Chapter 16-20.75<br />

(4)<br />

Entertainment license applicant under Chapter 16-20.5<br />

(5)<br />

Dealers in junk, secondhand articles and antiques under Chapter 24<br />

(6)<br />

Secondhand motor vehicle dealer under Chapter 16-29<br />

(7)<br />

Vehicles for hire under Chapter 30<br />

(8)<br />

Ice cream truck vendor under Chapter 16-28<br />

B.<br />

At the time of fingerprinting, the Police Department shall notify each individual who is fingerprinted that his or her fingerprints<br />

will be used to check such individual's FBI and state criminal history records.<br />

§16-5.3 Processing; communication of results.<br />

A.<br />

The Police Department shall transmit fingerprints it has obtained pursuant to § 16-5.2 of this chapter to the Identification<br />

Section of the Massachusetts State Police, the DCJIS and/or the FBI as may be necessary for the purpose of conducting<br />

fingerprint-based state and national criminal records background checks of license applicants specified in the said section.<br />

B.<br />

The Police Department shall provide the applicant with a copy of the results of his or her fingerprint-based criminal record<br />

background check and supply the applicant the opportunity to complete, or challenge the accuracy of, the information<br />

contained in it, including in the FBI identification record. The Police Department shall also supply applicants with information<br />

regarding the procedures for obtaining a change, correction or updating of a criminal record, including a copy of 28 CFR Part<br />

16.34 pertaining to FBI identification records. In no event shall the Police Department render a suitability evaluation pursuant<br />

to the subsection below until it has taken the steps detailed in this subsection and otherwise complied with any other<br />

procedures required by any City policy applicable to licensing-related criminal record background checks.<br />

C.<br />

The Police Department shall communicate the results of fingerprint-based criminal record background checks to the applicable<br />

licensing authority within the City. The Police Department shall in addition render to the licensing authority its evaluation of the<br />

applicant's suitability for the proposed occupational activity based upon the results of the criminal records background check<br />

and any other relevant information known to it. In rendering its evaluation, the Police Department shall consider all applicable<br />

laws, regulations and City policies bearing on an applicant's suitability. The Police Department shall indicate whether the<br />

applicant has been convicted of, or is under pending indictment for, a crime that bears upon his or her suitability, or any<br />

felony or misdemeanor that involved force or the threat of force, controlled substances or a sex-related offense.<br />

§ 16-5.4 Reliance on results.<br />

Licensing authorities of the City shall utilize the results of fingerprint-based criminal record background checks for the sole<br />

purpose of determining the suitability of the subjects of the checks in connection with the license applications specified in §<br />

16-5.2, above. A City licensing authority may deny an application for a license on the basis of the results of a<br />

fingerprint-based criminal record background check if it determines that the results of the check render the subject unsuitable<br />

for the proposed occupational activity. The licensing authority shall consider all applicable laws, regulations and City policies<br />

bearing on an applicant's suitability in making this determination. The licensing authority shall not deny a license based on<br />

information in a criminal record unless the applicant has been afforded a reasonable time to correct or complete the record or<br />

has declined to do so.<br />

§ 16-5.5 Compliance with law, regulation and City policy.<br />

Implementation of this chapter and the conducting of fingerprint-based criminal record background checks by the City shall be<br />

in accordance with all applicable laws, regulations and City policies. The Chief of Police is authorized to promulgate<br />

regulations for the implementation of this chapter. The City shall not disseminate criminal record information received from the<br />

FBI to unauthorized persons or entities.<br />

§ 16-5.6 Fees<br />

The fee charged by the Police Department for the purpose of conducting fingerprint-based criminal record background checks<br />

shall be $100. A portion of the fee, as specified in MGL c. 6, § 172B1/2, shall be deposited into the Firearms Fingerprint<br />

Identity Verification Trust Fund, and the remainder of the fee may be retained by the City for costs associated with the<br />

administration of the fingerprinting system.<br />

SECTION TWO: All ordinances or parts of ordinances inconsistent herewith are hereby repealed.<br />

SECTION THREE: This ordinance shall take effect as provided by law.<br />

INTRODUCED JULY 18, 2017<br />

ORDERED PUBLISHED NOVEMBER 9, 2017<br />

PUBLISHED NOVEMBER <strong>23</strong>, 2017<br />

Weekly News: November <strong>23</strong>, 2017<br />

Have a story to share?<br />

Need a question answered?<br />

contactus@essexmedia.group<br />

PEABODY CITY COUNCIL<br />

LEGAL AD<br />

NOTICE OF PUBLIC HEARING<br />

Notice is hereby given that the City<br />

Council of the City of <strong>Peabody</strong>, acting<br />

as the Special Permit Granting<br />

Authority, will conduct a public hearing<br />

on THURSDAY EVENING, DECEMBER<br />

14, 2017, at 7:30 P.M., in the Frank<br />

L. Wiggin Auditorium, City Hall, 24<br />

Lowell Street, <strong>Peabody</strong>, MA on the<br />

application from LAMAR CENTRAL<br />

OUTDOOR, 360 Warren Avenue, East<br />

Providence, R.I. FOR A SPECIAL<br />

PERMIT AMENDINGSPECIAL PERMIT<br />

2014-2 SEEKING TO REMOVE THE<br />

DIGITAL FACES AND REPLACE AND<br />

OPERATE WITH STATIC FACES at 1R<br />

NEWBURY STREET, <strong>Peabody</strong>, MA as<br />

filed in accordance with Sections 6.1,<br />

<strong>11</strong>.6, 15.2, and 15.7 of the <strong>Peabody</strong><br />

Zoning Ordinance.<br />

PEABODY CITY COUNCIL<br />

COUNCILLOR JOEL D. SASLAW<br />

CITY COUNCIL PRESIDENT<br />

Timothy E. Spanos<br />

City Clerk<br />

Weekly News: November <strong>23</strong>, 30, 2017<br />

AUTOMOTIVE<br />

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NOTICES<br />

NOTICE<br />

If you received this publication as<br />

part of a promotional program<br />

and wish to no longer receive it,<br />

please call 781-593-7700, ext.<br />

1<strong>23</strong>9, or email: circulation<br />

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PEABODY CITY COUNCIL<br />

LEGAL AD<br />

NOTICE OF PUBLIC HEARING<br />

Notice is hereby given that the City<br />

Council of the City of <strong>Peabody</strong>, acting<br />

as the Special Permit Granting<br />

Authority, will conduct a public hearing<br />

on THURSDAY EVENING, DECEMBER<br />

14, 2017, at 7:30 P.M., in the Frank<br />

L. Wiggin Auditorium, City Hall, 24<br />

Lowell Street,<br />

<strong>Peabody</strong>, MA on the application from<br />

BARDON TRIMOUNT, INC. C/O<br />

AGGREGATE INDUSTRIES NER, INC.,<br />

1715 Broadway, Saugus, MA FOR A<br />

SPECIAL PERMIT TO CONSTRUCT A<br />

NEW ELECTRIC CONTROL HOUSE TO<br />

HOUSE THE ELECTRICAL INFRASTRU-<br />

TURE FOR THE EXISTING ASPHALT<br />

PLANT at 55 RUSSELL STREET,<br />

<strong>Peabody</strong>, MA as filed in accordance<br />

with Sections 1.5, 6.1, and 15.7 of the<br />

<strong>Peabody</strong> Zoning Ordinance.<br />

PEABODY CITY COUNCIL<br />

COUNCILLOR JOEL D. SASLAW<br />

CITY COUNCIL PRESIDENT<br />

Timothy E. Spanos<br />

City Clerk<br />

Weekly News: November <strong>23</strong>, 30, 2017<br />

CARPENTRY<br />

CLEANING/<br />

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14 WEEKLYNEWS.NET - 978-532-5880 NOVEMBER <strong>23</strong>, 2017<br />

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NOVEMBER <strong>23</strong>, 2017 WEEKLYNEWS.NET - 978-532-5880 15<br />

One of the real joys of the Holiday Season is<br />

the opportunity to say Thank You.<br />

SOLD<br />

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74 Highland Ave.<br />

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Must see, Call Frank Rossetti


16 WEEKLYNEWS.NET - 978-532-5880 NOVEMBER <strong>23</strong>, 2017<br />

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LYNNFIELD - $1,349,000<br />

GIVING<br />

THANKS...<br />

Soon we’ll be gathering<br />

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Ron Supino<br />

Patrice Slater<br />

Donna S nyder<br />

Debra Roberts


PEABODY<br />

WEEKLY NEWS<br />

Serving the community since 1957<br />

THANKSGIVING FOOTBALL 2017<br />

<strong>Peabody</strong> vs. Saugus at Stackpole Field (10)


T2 WEEKLYNEWS.NET - 978-532-5880 THANKSGIVING FOOTBALL<br />

It’s been an up-and-down season<br />

By Anne Marie Tobin<br />

It was an up and down season for the Tanners this year.<br />

They dug a huge hole for themselves with losses in their<br />

first three games, but caught fire over the next six weeks,<br />

winning five of those six games to finally top the .500 mark<br />

at 5-4. <strong>Peabody</strong> couldn’t stand prosperity and dropped a<br />

disappointing 26-20 loss to Lynn Classical at Manning<br />

Field in the final game prior to its annual Thanksgiving<br />

Day clash with Saugus.<br />

After a 5-6 finish last year, <strong>Peabody</strong> football coach<br />

Mark Bettencourt made it clear that his team would mean<br />

business in 2017. But on Sept. 9 at Somerville’s Dilboy<br />

Stadium on opening day, it was the Highlanders that were<br />

all business in a 24-7 win over the Tanners.<br />

After Somerville fumbled on the first play of the game,<br />

senior captain Eric DeMayo scored <strong>Peabody</strong>’s first touchdown<br />

of the season on a 3-yard run in the first quarter.<br />

After that, however, it was all Somerville, who put 24 unanswered<br />

points on the board.<br />

“There are no excuses there, their athletes beat our athletes,”<br />

said Bettencourt.<br />

In week two, <strong>Peabody</strong> returned to Coley Lee Field and<br />

dropped its home opener to Danvers, 7-0 on Sept. 16.<br />

<strong>Peabody</strong>’s defense was outstanding, limiting the Falcons<br />

to just six possessions, whose offense never ran a red zone<br />

play.<br />

For over 41 minutes, neither team scored, but all that<br />

changed in a heartbeat when the Falcons’ Matt McCarthy<br />

raced 50 yards into the end zone for the game winning<br />

score with under three minutes to play.<br />

“It’s just heart wrenching when your defense gives you<br />

an effort like that,” said Bettencourt.<br />

In week three, the only good news that came out of a<br />

21-7 loss to visiting Marblehead was the Tanners finally<br />

scored a touchdown after going nearly 130 straight minutes<br />

without one.<br />

Tanner nation breathed a sigh of relief in week 4 as the<br />

Tanners finally got untracked with a 21-0 romp on the<br />

road over Revere.<br />

The turning point came on the opening kickoff, a Revere<br />

fumble recovered by Nolan Murphy.<br />

“That was just a huge turnover to start the game,” said<br />

Bettencourt. “It gave us a lot of momentum.”<br />

Michael Lock set up <strong>Peabody</strong>’s third score with a<br />

blocked punt.<br />

Unfortunately for <strong>Peabody</strong>, an attempt to go arial led<br />

to four interceptions and a 35-7 to Masconomet the next<br />

week, putting the team’s playoff hopes on life support.<br />

<strong>Peabody</strong> got off to a quick start, scoring on the very first<br />

drive of the game on a 30-yard strike from Jonell Espinal<br />

to Elijah White. After that, the Chieftains ran roughshod,<br />

scoring 35 unanswered points to send <strong>Peabody</strong> packing.<br />

The Tanners went back to the drawing board and finally<br />

found their rhythm, winning their next four games, in<br />

dominant fashion, outscoring opponents, 124-32.<br />

<strong>Peabody</strong> beat Malden, 40-0, on the road in week six.<br />

DeMayo led the ground attack, rushing for 124 yards on<br />

just 14 carries and also added a defensive touchdown with<br />

an interception.<br />

The Tanners held onto the ball for more than 28 of 44<br />

PHOTO | BOB CARBONE<br />

From left, Cam Powers, Joe Mastromatteo, Noah Freedman, Nolan Murphy and Eric DeMayo take the field during a<br />

game this past fall.<br />

total minutes, controlling the pace of the game.<br />

“That’s what we’ve always been trying to do, but we’ve<br />

had trouble at times with it this year,” Bettencourt said.<br />

While <strong>Peabody</strong> made it two straight the next week with<br />

a 20-9 win over Beverly, the bad news was the Tanners<br />

were eliminated from the North Division 2 playoffs.<br />

“I wish it had come together like this for us earlier in<br />

the season,” Bettencourt said. “We’ve won two games in<br />

a row now and we feel really good about where we are as<br />

a unit.”<br />

Behind another impressive defensive performance and<br />

some big plays from underclassmen, <strong>Peabody</strong> clobbered<br />

Westford, 30-0, at home in week eight.<br />

Sophomore Colby Therrien threw a touchdown pass to<br />

Dylan Peluso, the first varsity touchdown for each.<br />

In week nine, <strong>Peabody</strong> defeated Haverhill, 34-<strong>23</strong>, on the<br />

road.<br />

Paulino, had a career-high 178 rushing yards to lead the<br />

ground game, which amassed 283 rushing yards in total.<br />

For the first time this year, he Tanners pulled above .500<br />

at 5-4.<br />

In week 10, the Tanners gave one away, losing 26-20 to<br />

Classical in overtime. <strong>Peabody</strong> had the lead and the ball<br />

on Classical’s 32-yard line with 2:13 to play, but a fumble<br />

opened the door for the Rams to tie things up at the end of<br />

regulation, then win it in OT.<br />

“Mistakes were made,” said Bettencourt. “They capitalized<br />

on our mistake in the fourth quarter and that took the<br />

wind out of our sails.”<br />

Inside this special section, you will see game-by-game<br />

accounts as well as features and photographs that make it<br />

a must-read.<br />

Find out what makes DeMayo tick on page 5, while<br />

<strong>Peabody</strong>’s cheerleaders take center stage on page 17.<br />

2017 records and results for <strong>Peabody</strong> can also be found<br />

on page 17, while complete game scores from every<br />

Thanksgiving Day game since 1944 can be found on page 16.<br />

Finally, read about two other local teams hoping to<br />

end their seasons on a high note with Thanksgiving wins.<br />

Fenwick is featured on pages 20-21 while the Prep is featured<br />

on pages 22-<strong>23</strong>.<br />

Finally, the <strong>Peabody</strong> Weekly News would like to applaud<br />

the efforts and passion of photographer Bob<br />

Carbone, who has shared so many of his beautiful photos<br />

with us all year long, including the cover photos, to help<br />

our coverage of the <strong>Peabody</strong> Tanners. Bob has been there<br />

through the heat of late August through the bitter cold (remember<br />

the Classical game at Manning Field!), through<br />

rain and shine. Be it a win or a loss, Bob, daughter Diana<br />

and son Patrick, have been there every step of the way to<br />

capture the Tanners’ season in pictures, and we are so very<br />

grateful for your generous support.<br />

Wishing You a<br />

Happy Thanksgiving!<br />

Good Luck Tanners & Pioneers<br />

Maria Salzillo, Realtor | 508.527.6910 | mrsreagent@gmail.com


THANKSGIVING FOOTBALL WEEKLYNEWS.NET - 978-532-5880 T3<br />

2017 <strong>Peabody</strong> High School football team and coaching staff.<br />

PHOTO | BOB CARBONE<br />

2017 <strong>Peabody</strong> Veterans Memorial High School roster<br />

No. Name Pos. Grade<br />

1 Austin Leggett K JR<br />

2 Elijah White WR/DB SR<br />

3 Jonell Espinal QB/DB SR<br />

4 Cole Cuzzi WR/DB SR<br />

5 Nolan Murphy WR/DB SR Capt.<br />

6 Joe Mastromatteo TE/DB JR<br />

7 Colton Cole RB/DB JR<br />

8 Sam Mastromatteo TE/DB SR<br />

9 Dylan Peluso WR/DB SO<br />

10 Markus Barker WR/DB SR<br />

<strong>11</strong> Colby Therrien QB SO<br />

12 Jack Woods WR/DB JR<br />

13 Kyle Medeiros WR/DB SO<br />

15 Krisli Miraka QB SO<br />

17 Kemani Jackson TE/DB JR<br />

21 Luis Guirdys RB/DL JR<br />

22 Declan Russell RB/DB SO<br />

<strong>23</strong> Joseph Casey OL/LB SO<br />

24 Carlos Hernandez WR/DB JR<br />

25 Jack Flaherty RB/DB SO<br />

27 Joseph Rodriguez WR/DB SO<br />

29 Joel Kashila TE/DB SO<br />

30 Salvatore Aia RB/LB SR<br />

33 Noah Freedman RB/DB SR Capt.<br />

34 Tyler Norman RB/LB JR<br />

38 Jake Sousa RB/LB JR<br />

39 Jared Smith WR/DB JR<br />

40 Sean Pacheco WR/DB SR<br />

41 Angel Paulino RB/DB SO<br />

44 Eric DeMayo RB/LB SR Capt.<br />

45 Matthew Raposa OL/LB SR<br />

48 Patrick Russo TE/DL JR<br />

49 Jordan Ilori WR/DB SO<br />

50 Dante Porrazzo RB/LB JR<br />

51 Brandon Glass OL/DL FR<br />

52 Abe Kaba OL/DL JR<br />

53 Chris Glass OL/LB JR<br />

54 Phillip Makoci OL/LB SO<br />

55 Jefferson Guerra OL/DL JR<br />

57 Jon Salmeron OL/DL SR<br />

58 Eddie Collado OL/DL JR<br />

59 Dariel Canela OL/DL SR Capt.<br />

63 Cam Powers TE/DL SR Capt.<br />

67 Connor Fielding OL/DL SR<br />

69 James Guiry OL/LB SO<br />

73 Aiden Kelleher OL/DL JR<br />

74 Mark DeLuca OL/DL JR<br />

75 Calvin Scribner OL/DL SO<br />

77 Michael Lock OL/DL JR<br />

78 Sean Bell OL/DL SO<br />

79 Ari Rozopoulos OL/DL SO<br />

80 Pat Rigol WR/DB JR<br />

82 Ramon Franco TE/DL SO<br />

84 Owen Carr TE/DB JR<br />

87 Kyle MacDonald TE/DL JR<br />

88 Jeremiah DesSalines TE/LB SO<br />

89 Denzel Jean-Noel TE/DL JR<br />

96 Jerrell Greaves OL/DL JR<br />

97 Evan Bunn OL/DL SO<br />

99 Jeremy Mam OL/DL JR<br />

HEAD COACH<br />

Mark Bettencourt<br />

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T4 WEEKLYNEWS.NET - 978-532-5880 THANKSGIVING FOOTBALL<br />

WEEK 1<br />

<strong>Peabody</strong> football stumbles in Somerville<br />

PHOTO | BOB CARBONE<br />

From left, Abe Kaba (52), quarterback Colby Therrien (<strong>11</strong>) and Jake Sousa (38) break from the line of scrimmage during <strong>Peabody</strong>’s opening night loss to Somerville<br />

By Harold Rivera<br />

SOMERVILLE — After a<br />

5-6 finish last season, <strong>Peabody</strong><br />

football coach Mark Bettencourt<br />

made it clear that his team would<br />

mean business in 2017. Sept. 8 at<br />

Somerville’s Dilboy Stadium, it<br />

was the Highlanders that were all<br />

business in a 24-7 win over the<br />

Tanners.<br />

After Somerville fumbled on<br />

the first play of the game, Tanners<br />

running back Eric DeMayo scored<br />

<strong>Peabody</strong>’s first touchdown of the<br />

season on a three-yard run. Austin<br />

Legget’s PAT kick was good and<br />

<strong>Peabody</strong> led 7-0 with 6:55 to play<br />

in the first quarter.<br />

“That’s exactly what we were<br />

looking for,” Bettencourt said.<br />

“That’s what we were hoping<br />

would motivate us and put points<br />

on the board. From that point on,<br />

we had trouble finding holes. The<br />

holes were moving because they<br />

were shooting gaps and we didn’t<br />

do a very good job adjusting.”<br />

Somerville 24<br />

<strong>Peabody</strong> 7<br />

From there, it was all Somerville.<br />

The Highlanders knotted things up<br />

on a one-yard touchdown run by<br />

Fred Castin with 6:50 left in the<br />

second quarter. Emerson Klemz<br />

added the PAT kick. A pair of<br />

<strong>Peabody</strong> fumbles resulted in field<br />

goals of 16 and 32 yards made by<br />

Klemz in the final minute of the<br />

half. At recess, Somerville led 13-7.<br />

“That took the momentum away<br />

from us,” Bettencourt said. “We<br />

talked about that at halftime, how<br />

we had to get the momentum back<br />

with a good drive.”<br />

DeMayo opened the second<br />

half with a 38-yard carry to lead<br />

<strong>Peabody</strong> into Somerville territory,<br />

but the senior fumbled two plays<br />

later to end the drive. Both teams<br />

were kept off the board in the third<br />

quarter.<br />

With 6:50 left in the fourth,<br />

Klemz booted a 27-yard field goal<br />

through the uprights to extend<br />

Somerville’s lead to 16-7. The key<br />

play of the drive was a 65-yard<br />

pass from Highlanders quarterback<br />

Elijah Jeffreys to receiver Lucas<br />

Saint-Jean. Three minutes later,<br />

Jeffreys found Saint-Jean again on<br />

a <strong>23</strong>-yard touchdown pass to ice the<br />

win.<br />

“Somerville looked very good,”<br />

Bettencourt said. “I was very impressed<br />

with them. We didn’t have<br />

much film on them, so we kind of<br />

went off what they did last year. It<br />

was similar to what they did last<br />

year. There are no excuses there,<br />

their athletes beat our athletes.”<br />

Moving forward, the Tanners<br />

will hope to improve on their physicality<br />

in hopes of earning their first<br />

win of the season. <strong>Peabody</strong>’s young<br />

and inexperienced up front but<br />

Bettencourt’s confident the team<br />

will make the necessary improvements<br />

soon.<br />

“I think Somerville manhandled<br />

us up front,” Bettencourt said. “We<br />

have some young kids in there. They<br />

have to get better and they will. I<br />

think some of our kids had the ‘deer<br />

in the headlights’ look. They’ll get<br />

better as the year progresses.”<br />

<strong>Peabody</strong> now shifts its focus to<br />

preparing for next Friday night’s<br />

home game against Danvers.<br />

“Danvers is physical,”<br />

Bettencourt said. “We’ll find the<br />

right combination. We have a lot<br />

of film we can watch and we’ll find<br />

out who can play varsity football<br />

and who needs some more time.<br />

We’ll have that figured out, hopefully,<br />

by next week.”<br />

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Good Luck <strong>Peabody</strong> Tanners & Lynnfield Pioneers!


THANKSGIVING FOOTBALL WEEKLYNEWS.NET - 978-532-5880 T5<br />

<strong>Peabody</strong>’s DeMayo puts his team first<br />

By Harold Rivera<br />

PEABODY — When the<br />

<strong>Peabody</strong> football team started<br />

the season 1-4 after its first five<br />

games, it seemed as though there<br />

wasn't much light at the end of the<br />

tunnel for the Tanners. But behind<br />

a motivated group of players who<br />

have both redemption and winning<br />

on their minds, the Tanners<br />

have salvaged their season. That<br />

group is led by senior running<br />

back/linebacker Eric DeMayo.<br />

DeMayo, in his second season<br />

captaining the Tanners, has made it<br />

a priority to keep his teammates motivated<br />

through the closing weeks of<br />

the season. After <strong>Peabody</strong> stumbled<br />

to its 1-4 start, the Tanners have won<br />

four of their last five games to even<br />

their record at 5-5.<br />

"I've definitely seen improvement,"<br />

DeMayo, who also plays<br />

baseball and runs indoor track at<br />

<strong>Peabody</strong>, said. "We started a bit<br />

slow going 0-3 to start the season.<br />

I've seen a totally different team<br />

since then. Our players are<br />

learning what to do and they're<br />

improving. We've definitely<br />

learned from our mistakes."<br />

Aside from staying motivated<br />

and upbeat, adjustments to the<br />

offensive and defensive schemes<br />

have also been key to <strong>Peabody</strong>'s<br />

turnaround.<br />

"Our defense didn't struggle<br />

too much at the beginning of the<br />

year," DeMayo said. "We made<br />

adjustments in our secondary and<br />

that has gone a long way. Teams<br />

haven't been able to run the ball<br />

on us. Offensively, we made<br />

some changes to our schemes.<br />

We've switched to the ground and<br />

pound offense that works for us<br />

and that's been working for us the<br />

second half of the year."<br />

Coming into the season,<br />

DeMayo and his teammates had<br />

high hopes for the 2017 cam-<br />

Eric DeMayo is in his second year as a captain of the <strong>Peabody</strong> football team.<br />

paign. <strong>Peabody</strong>'s goal was to<br />

emerge as a contender in the<br />

Northeastern Conference and<br />

lead itself into a playoff run.<br />

Although the Tanners fell short<br />

of those goals, they never threw<br />

the towel on the season.<br />

"I'm proud that this team didn't<br />

fold over and give up after not<br />

making the state tournament,"<br />

DeMayo said. "We lost our fourth<br />

game against Masconomet and we<br />

made it a point after that not to lose<br />

another game. Up until that loss<br />

to Lynn Classical we stuck to that<br />

and even in that game we put up a<br />

great fight. After starting 1-4 we've<br />

fought and it's been impressive."<br />

On the individual side, DeMayo<br />

was hoping to follow up on his big<br />

junior season with a strong senior<br />

PHOTO | BOB CARBONE<br />

campaign. DeMayo has emerged<br />

as a reliable weapon on both sides<br />

of the ball, hurting opponents as a<br />

bruising ball carrier and a toughas-nails<br />

tackler.<br />

He played the role of unsung<br />

hero his first two seasons as a<br />

throwback fullback, blocking for<br />

<strong>Peabody</strong>'s all-time leading rusher,<br />

Doug Santos, who had two monster<br />

years behind DeMayo.<br />

DeMayo's priority has always<br />

been to help the Tanners win games.<br />

"I wanted to dominate this<br />

year," DeMayo said. "I didn't<br />

have too many individual goals<br />

this year. I cared more so about<br />

how our team was going to do<br />

this season. I put the team's goals<br />

ahead of my individual goals."<br />

He also wanted establish himself<br />

as a reliable leader for his<br />

teammates. As one of <strong>Peabody</strong>'s<br />

five team captains, DeMayo has<br />

given a full effort into serving<br />

as a role model for the younger<br />

players on the Tanners' roster.<br />

"This is my second year being a<br />

captain. I noticed that it meant a lot<br />

last year as a junior," DeMayo said.<br />

"I definitely see a lot of the younger<br />

guys looking up to me and copying<br />

what I do. This year, I've seen some<br />

of the coaches relying on me to be<br />

a leader and help the younger guys.<br />

Those guys look up to me and I<br />

have to lead by my actions."<br />

Tanners coach Mark<br />

Bettencourt has also seen<br />

DeMayo emerge as a natural<br />

leader for his teammates. While<br />

most players focus on preparing<br />

themselves, Bettencourt has seen<br />

DeMayo devote himself to preparing<br />

his teammates.<br />

"He was captain as a junior<br />

and senior and that speaks volumes<br />

as the type of person and<br />

leader that he is," Bettencourt,<br />

who also coaches DeMayo in<br />

baseball, said. "Not many players<br />

contribute to the team for all four<br />

years. He didn't just prepare himself,<br />

he was all about preparing<br />

his team and that's what separates<br />

Eric. He's not just a good player<br />

but a good student.<br />

"You don't get many kids like<br />

this," Bettencourt added. "I've<br />

been very blessed in my five years<br />

coaching here to have kids with<br />

this much talent. These are the<br />

type of kids that you remember 30<br />

years from now, not just for what<br />

type of player they were but what<br />

type of person they were."<br />

With one game left on the<br />

season, <strong>Peabody</strong> has one goal<br />

left: finish the year with a win<br />

against Thanksgiving Day rival<br />

Saugus. DeMayo, who hopes<br />

to play Division 1 college, has<br />

been a part of <strong>Peabody</strong> victories<br />

over Saugus in all three of his<br />

years taking part in the rivalry.<br />

Needless to say, he'd like to continue<br />

that success.<br />

"There's a huge history with the<br />

rivalry," DeMayo said. "It goes<br />

back pretty far. Pretty much all<br />

of my coaches have taken part<br />

in that rivalry. It hasn't been too<br />

competitive since I've been here<br />

but you can't count Saugus out.<br />

They're having a good year and<br />

they're going to be competitive.<br />

It's going to be a good fight."<br />

"One more game left,"<br />

Bettencourt added. "We're hoping<br />

Eric can finish his high school career<br />

with a win. He's been a true<br />

Tanner and I'm sure he'll do everything<br />

in his power to get that<br />

win."<br />

Happy Thanksgiving<br />

Best of luck to the Lynnfield Pioneers<br />

and <strong>Peabody</strong> Tanners<br />

APY*<br />

Drop in and see our new branch at:<br />

771 Salem Street<br />

Lynnfield, MA<br />

781-776-4444<br />

Member FDIC<br />

Member SIF


T6 WEEKLYNEWS.NET - 978-532-5880 THANKSGIVING FOOTBALL<br />

WEEK 2<br />

Tanner offense cannot get untracked<br />

By Anne Marie Tobin<br />

PEABODY — The <strong>Peabody</strong><br />

Tanners football team dug a huge<br />

hole for itself Sept. 15 in its home<br />

opener at Coley Lee Field, dropping<br />

to 0-2 after losing a defensive battle<br />

to the visiting Danvers Falcons, 7-0.<br />

For over 41 minutes, the game<br />

was a scoreless stalemate, but<br />

all that changed in a heartbeat<br />

when Falcons’ running back Matt<br />

McCarthy took a handoff from<br />

quarterback Justin Mullaney and<br />

raced 50 yards into the end zone<br />

for the game winning score (Zach<br />

Dillon kick) with just 2:36 remaining<br />

in the game.<br />

Danvers 7<br />

<strong>Peabody</strong> 0<br />

<strong>Peabody</strong> gamely gave it their all<br />

on a final drive that started on its<br />

own 29 after a 21-yard kickoff return<br />

by Nolan Murphy and ended<br />

at the Falcons 40 when sophomore<br />

Jonell Espinal’s pass on<br />

fourth-and-15 was intercepted by<br />

Colby Holland.<br />

Danvers had just six possessions<br />

and its offense never ran a red zone<br />

play. Prior to McCarthy’s touchdown<br />

run, the Falcons’ deepest<br />

trip into Tanner territory came with<br />

seconds left in the first half when<br />

Colby Holland took a Mullaney<br />

pass 18 yards to the 25 on a fourthand-forever<br />

from the Tanners’ 43 as<br />

time expired. Those two plays (the<br />

Holland catch and McCarthy touchdown<br />

run) accounted for 68 of the<br />

125 yards total yards gained by the<br />

Falcons in the game.<br />

Not being able to find a way to<br />

come out on top in close ones has<br />

<strong>Peabody</strong> coach Mark Bettencourt<br />

scratching his head in search of<br />

answers.<br />

“Our defense played more than<br />

well enough to win this game,” said<br />

Bettencourt. “We still have some<br />

guys who are not playing 100 percent<br />

in terms of being physically<br />

able, but we have to find a way to<br />

score points. Maybe we should<br />

<strong>Peabody</strong> fans try to get their Tanners going during the Danvers game.<br />

have kicked a field goal on our first<br />

drive when we got down to the 10.<br />

Our kicker (Austin Leggett) had<br />

never kicked a field goal before and<br />

had only two extra points under his<br />

belt and we did some things well on<br />

that drive, so we decided to go for<br />

the first down, we just didn’t get it.<br />

“It’s just heart wrenching when<br />

your defense gives you an effort<br />

like that.”<br />

<strong>Peabody</strong> got off to a fast start,<br />

driving on its second possession<br />

from its own 40-yard line all the<br />

way down to the Falcons’ 10-yard<br />

line. Facing fourth-and-2, quarterback<br />

Colby Therrien’s pass intended<br />

for Noah Freedman was<br />

incomplete, turning the ball over on<br />

downs.<br />

Both teams had dismal numbers<br />

in the first half with Danvers netting<br />

just 36 yards and <strong>Peabody</strong> not much<br />

better with 50.<br />

<strong>Peabody</strong>’s defense picked up<br />

where it left off, opening the second<br />

half by stuffing the Falcons at their<br />

own 35 with a fourth-and-22.<br />

Starting from their own 33, the<br />

Tanners drove into Danvers territory<br />

for the second time after a<br />

2-yard gain by Jake Sousa, but the<br />

gain was negated by a personal foul<br />

penalty on the Tanners, sending<br />

them back 15 yards to their own 34,<br />

but another big penalty and <strong>11</strong>-yard<br />

loss on a quarterback sack snuffed<br />

out the drive.<br />

Once again, the defense stood<br />

tall. After punting, <strong>Peabody</strong> got the<br />

ball right back on an interception by<br />

Marcus Barker, giving the Tanners<br />

great field position at their own<br />

41 but the possession ended with<br />

a punt after the drive stalled at the<br />

Falcons’ 49.<br />

Danvers needed just two plays<br />

before McCarthy broke free from<br />

the 50 and scored the eventual game<br />

winning touchdown.<br />

Taking over at its own 29,<br />

<strong>Peabody</strong>’s Cole Cuzzi hauled down<br />

a pass for Espinal to set up second-and<br />

7 at the 32, but an offsides<br />

call cost the Tanners five yards.<br />

Back-to-back completions from<br />

Espinal to Cuzzi, the latter good for<br />

17 yards gave <strong>Peabody</strong> a first down<br />

at the Tanner 49.<br />

It was then that <strong>Peabody</strong> finally<br />

caught its first break of the game<br />

when Danvers was flagged for excessive<br />

celebration and taunting<br />

PHOTO | PATRICK CARBONE<br />

after an incomplete pass to Elijah<br />

White, moving <strong>Peabody</strong> to the<br />

Danvers 35 with 48 seconds on<br />

the clock. That was a close as the<br />

Tanners would come, however.<br />

Senior captain Eric DeMayo led<br />

the ground attack with 51 yards on<br />

13 carries, while Luis Guirdys had<br />

18 yards on seven carries and Jake<br />

Sousa picked up 16 yards on three<br />

carries.<br />

Espinal, in just one drive, was<br />

3-for-7 for <strong>23</strong> yards, while Therrien<br />

completed four of five attempts for<br />

13 yards.<br />

“All we can go is up,” said<br />

Bettencourt.<br />

It won’t be easy, however, as the<br />

Tanners’ next opponent is NEC<br />

rival Marblehead next Saturday<br />

night at 7.<br />

Northrup Associates “The Home Team”<br />

GO TANNERS!<br />

Happy Thanksgiving to you and your family<br />

Debra Cuozzo Roberts,<br />

Realtor ® 781-956-0241<br />

Go Tanners<br />

978-531-2984 <strong>Peabody</strong> MA<br />

GO<br />

CRUSADERS


THANKSGIVING FOOTBALL WEEKLYNEWS.NET - 978-532-5880 T7<br />

WEEK 3<br />

<strong>Peabody</strong>’s football frustrations continue<br />

By Anne Marie Tobin<br />

PEABODY — The <strong>Peabody</strong> High football<br />

team’s offensive woes continue to grow, but<br />

there may be a glimmer of hope.<br />

In a rare Saturday night game at Coley Lee<br />

Field, the Tanners fell behind early to visiting<br />

Marblehead, which ran the coat tails of receiver<br />

Derek Marino, a true one-man band if<br />

ever there was one, on their way to a 21-7 loss.<br />

The good news for the Tanners was they<br />

finally scored a touchdown after going nearly<br />

130 straight minutes without one. More<br />

good news was the fact that Tanners had the<br />

Magicians’ number in the second half, shutting<br />

them out, and also showed signs of finally<br />

to be able to generate sustained drives<br />

of their own.<br />

Marblehead 21<br />

<strong>Peabody</strong> 7<br />

The bad news was Marino was unstoppable,<br />

making seven catches for 159 yards in<br />

the first half alone, accounting for well over<br />

half of the Magicians’ 255 total yards on the<br />

evening. Just four plays into the game, he<br />

hauled in a 64-yard bomb from quarterback<br />

Dewey Millett. Two possessions later, he<br />

made it 14-0 with a 17-yard reception, again<br />

from Millett.<br />

“We knew he was a matchup problem<br />

and Marblehead did a good job putting him<br />

in spots where we had to have different guys<br />

covering him,” said <strong>Peabody</strong> coach Mark<br />

Bettencourt. “He had a great game, and give<br />

their QB (Millett) credit because he threw it<br />

where only their kid could catch it.”<br />

But after that, a funny thing happened<br />

- <strong>Peabody</strong>’s trademark defense kicked in<br />

and was virtually impenetrable the rest of<br />

the game, holding Marblehead to negative<br />

yardage on three of its next four possessions<br />

to go into halftime trailing 21-0. The only<br />

possession to generate any yardage came<br />

PHOTO | BOB CARBONE<br />

Elijah White tries to shake free from Marblehead’s Nick Karns.<br />

after a special teams miscue when a snap<br />

on a <strong>Peabody</strong> sailed over punter’s Declan<br />

Russell’s head deep in <strong>Peabody</strong> territory. He<br />

was brought down at the Tanner 9-yard line,<br />

where Devin Romain punched it into the end<br />

zone to make it a 21-0 ball game.<br />

Offensively, however, the Tanners could<br />

not move the ball in the first half with only 41<br />

yards of offense to the Magicians’ 187. Their<br />

longest play from scrimmage was a 13-yard<br />

completion from lefty quarterback Colby<br />

Therrien to Elijah White, Of seven possessions,<br />

four ended with 3-and-out punts, one<br />

ended on downs after a 31-yard 8-play drive<br />

stalled and another ended on an interception.<br />

Therrien and Jonell Espinal alternated possessions<br />

for <strong>Peabody</strong> at quarterback.<br />

“Going with two quarterbacks gives us the<br />

ability to have Colby roll naturally to his left<br />

and either run or throw and do the same with<br />

Jonell going to his right, that was the thought<br />

process,” said Bettencourt. “But tonight, neither<br />

one of the them had any time to do anything<br />

but run for their lives.”<br />

<strong>Peabody</strong> went old-school, groundand-pound<br />

in the second half, a look that<br />

Bettencourt said might be seen more often in<br />

future games.<br />

“We have to find something that can work<br />

offensively and we have to find a way to<br />

score” said Bettencourt. “Marblehead’s defensive<br />

line won the surge and moved the line<br />

of scrimmage backwards. That can’t happen<br />

if we’re going to be successful. The second<br />

half was a different story for the offensive<br />

line.”<br />

<strong>Peabody</strong> took the opening kickoff of the<br />

second half and drove 44 yards (all but 7 on<br />

the ground) to the Magicians’ 25-yard line.<br />

The drive, which took nearly nine minutes<br />

off the clock, featured two fourth-and-short<br />

conversions, but stalled at the Magicians’ 27<br />

by inches.<br />

Taking a page out of the Tanners’ playbook,<br />

Marblehead went to the ground and got<br />

down to the <strong>Peabody</strong> 9-yard line where a sack<br />

for an 8-yard loss by Eric DeMayo and Sean<br />

Bell forced the Magicians back to the 17-yard<br />

line, where they missed a field goal attempt<br />

with 7:36 left.<br />

<strong>Peabody</strong> found pay dirt on the final drive<br />

of the game. The Tanners converted a big<br />

fourth-and-9 at the Marblehead 38 on a 30-<br />

yard pitch pass by DeMayo (12 carries, 31<br />

yards) to Elijah White (3 catches for 45 yards,<br />

7 carries for 19 yards). Therrien punched it<br />

home from the 1-yard line on a quarterback<br />

sneak to get <strong>Peabody</strong> on the board for the first<br />

time since opening day.<br />

“Get ready to see more of what you saw<br />

in the second half. We have to find something<br />

that works for us and what you saw in<br />

the second half, the possession game, just<br />

pounding the ball on the ground, ball control<br />

and keeping the other team’s offense off the<br />

field worked for us,” said Bettencourt.<br />

Bettencourt also gave a shout out to his<br />

defensive unit, saying, “Dariel Canela had an<br />

incredible game as well as linebacker Chris<br />

Glass (interception) who had a tremendous<br />

game.”<br />

Marblehead coach Jim Rudloff said, “I<br />

thought <strong>Peabody</strong> played hard tonight. The<br />

way they came out and ran the ball like like<br />

they did, and of course, stop us defensively<br />

shows a lot of heart. You can see those guys<br />

play with a lot of drive and I wish we could<br />

have some of that.”<br />

<strong>Peabody</strong> has a short week to recover with<br />

a game at Revere (0-3) Thursday night at 7.<br />

Run, tackle, win, feast.<br />

Good luck to all the North Shore<br />

High School Teams<br />

978-462-3106 • institutionforsavings.com<br />

Member FDIC<br />

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T8 WEEKLYNEWS.NET - 978-532-5880 THANKSGIVING FOOTBALL<br />

WEEK 4<br />

Tanners break into win column...finally<br />

By Anne Marie Tobin<br />

REVERE -- You could feel a collective<br />

sigh of relief from Tanner<br />

nation...finally.<br />

After three dismal weeks of<br />

anemic offense, the Tanners finally<br />

got untracked last night, defeating<br />

Revere 21-0 at Harry Della Russo<br />

Stadium Sept. 28 to break the ice<br />

with their first win of the season.<br />

<strong>Peabody</strong> had touchdown runs<br />

from Eric DeMayo (6 yards),<br />

Elijah White (9 yards) and Noah<br />

Freedman (6 yards) along with<br />

three extra-points from kicker<br />

Austin Leggett in its first multiple<br />

score game of the season.<br />

As crazy as it seems, the turning<br />

point may have come on the first<br />

play of the game, a Revere fumble<br />

recovered by Nolan Murphy, on the<br />

opening kickoff that gave <strong>Peabody</strong><br />

a short field field at the Patriots’ 24-<br />

yard line. <strong>Peabody</strong> needed just five<br />

plays to cash in on a 6-yard touchdown<br />

run by DeMayo. DeMayo<br />

looked to be stopped at the line of<br />

scrimmage as he swept to the outside,<br />

but stiff-armed his way into<br />

the end zone to give the Tanners<br />

a 7-0 lead after Leggett nailed the<br />

extra point.<br />

<strong>Peabody</strong> 21<br />

Revere 0<br />

“That was just a huge turnover to<br />

start the game,” said Bettencourt.<br />

“That was enormous, it gave us a<br />

lot of momentum and we finally<br />

blocked up front. Tonight we had<br />

some push, we hit the holes, we still<br />

need more consistency, but overall,<br />

getting the ball and scoring off that<br />

first turnover was huge for us.”<br />

While it was a promising start,<br />

the rest of the half for both teams,<br />

was an exercise in offensive futility<br />

as neither team was able to move<br />

the ball for the most part. <strong>Peabody</strong><br />

managed only 80 yards in its four<br />

possessions, two of which ended in<br />

punts and a third on a missed field<br />

goal. Revere was even worse, with<br />

only 52 yards from scrimmage in<br />

Carlos Hernandez attempting to break up a pass intended for Revere’s Badre Haou.<br />

its four possessions, two of which<br />

ended in punts (both of them less<br />

than 20 yards with no returns), one<br />

in a turnover on downs and its final<br />

drive came to end as time expired at<br />

the end of the half.<br />

With a 7-0 lead and the ball to<br />

start the third quarter, <strong>Peabody</strong><br />

started on its own 31 after a 10-<br />

yard return by Cole Cuzzi, but was<br />

backed up 10 yards on holding penalty.<br />

DeMayo (13 carries, 90 yards)<br />

got that back and more on the first<br />

play of the drive, taking a handoff<br />

from quarterback Jonel Espinal and<br />

breaking loose 59 yards all the way<br />

to the Revere 29-yard line. He was<br />

nearly down at the line of scrimmage,<br />

but put on the jets and was<br />

in the clear only to be caught from<br />

behind by Revere junior Jonathan<br />

Murphy (4 carries, 18 yards and<br />

2 catches, 10 yards) with a touchdown-saving<br />

tackle. <strong>Peabody</strong><br />

picked up two more first downs on<br />

the next two plays on a 5-yard run<br />

by Freedman and <strong>11</strong> yard pickup<br />

by junior Jake Sousa (2 carries, 21<br />

yards), then White (3 carries, 18<br />

yards) darted off tackle, untouched,<br />

into the end zone from nine yards<br />

out to make it 14-0, Tanners.<br />

“At halftime we said that first drive<br />

was the most important these kids<br />

have faced,” said Bettencourt. “We<br />

needed to punch one in and we did.<br />

Noah Freedman, DeMayo and Jake<br />

Sousa all ran hard and the offensive<br />

line had their best game tonight.<br />

Revere picked up only five first<br />

downs and made only two trips into<br />

Tanner territory the entire game, the<br />

deepest drive getting down to the<br />

<strong>Peabody</strong> 25-yard line on its next<br />

possession after the White touchdown,<br />

only to be backed up to the<br />

40 on a penalty and turn the ball<br />

over to <strong>Peabody</strong> on a Cam Powers<br />

interception.<br />

<strong>Peabody</strong>’s final score was set up<br />

by Michael Lock, who blocked a<br />

Patriot punt, and Dariel Canela, who<br />

recovered the ball at the Revere 25-<br />

yard line. The big play on the drive<br />

was a fourth-and-2 conversion at<br />

the Revere 22 by Freedman (6 carries,<br />

24 yards), who shed two tacklers<br />

on a gritty 12-yard pickup to the<br />

Revere 16, then ran it in from the 6<br />

to make it 21-0 after Leggett’s point<br />

after, his third of the game.<br />

White put an exclamation point<br />

on the Tanners’ effort, picking<br />

off Boudreau’s last pass of the<br />

game late in the fourth, following<br />

which Therrien took a knee as time<br />

expired.<br />

Revere’s freshman quarterback<br />

Calvin Boudreau had some success<br />

throwing the ball, but two interceptions<br />

proves costly. Boudreau finished<br />

8-for-13 for 95 yards. His favorite<br />

receiver was junior Badr Haou,<br />

who had a big night for the Patriots<br />

with four catches good for 73 yards.<br />

PHOTO | DIANA CARBONE<br />

For the second straight week,<br />

<strong>Peabody</strong> platooned Espinal (4-<br />

for-7, 48 yards) and Colby Therrien<br />

(0-1) at quarterback.<br />

“We mixed Colby and Jonel,<br />

sometimes changing on the same series.<br />

Our 2-headed quarterback situation<br />

is working, and we’ll ride the<br />

guy who is throwing the ball better.”<br />

<strong>Peabody</strong> also marked another<br />

milestone last night as the Tanners<br />

attempted their first field goal in<br />

five years under Bettencourt.<br />

“We have never, ever attempted<br />

a field goal in the five years that<br />

I have been here, and I wasn’t<br />

happy that it was blocked,” said<br />

Bettencourt. “I think if Austin got<br />

another shot at it, he would have<br />

made it, no question.”<br />

<strong>Peabody</strong>’s (1-3) next game is<br />

against Masconomet Friday night at 7.<br />

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THANKSGIVING FOOTBALL WEEKLYNEWS.NET - 978-532-5880 T9<br />

WEEK 5<br />

Masconomet manhandles Tanners<br />

By Mike Alongi<br />

PEABODY — Sometimes, to win a big<br />

football game a team needs to switch things<br />

up. Unfortunately for the ground-and-pound<br />

<strong>Peabody</strong> Tanners, an attempt to become a<br />

passing team led to four interceptions and a<br />

35-7 loss to the Masconomet Chieftains at<br />

Coley Lee Field Oct. 6.<br />

Unfortunately for the Tanners, Masco had<br />

other ideas and took matters into its own<br />

hands early on, jumping out to a 21-7 lead<br />

after the first quarter and coasted from there.<br />

<strong>Peabody</strong> coach Mark Bettencourt said the<br />

plan to change things up came from some<br />

things they saw on film during the week of<br />

preparation, and it just didn’t work out.<br />

Masco 35<br />

<strong>Peabody</strong> 7<br />

“When you’re a team that likes to run and<br />

you see that the best way to try to win is to<br />

throw, you’re doing something you don’t<br />

normally do and it’s tough,” Bettencourt said.<br />

“We practiced it as much as we could. We’re<br />

a ground-and-pound team, but we saw their<br />

size would be an issue so we tried to go over<br />

and around it. But when we did, they made<br />

some big plays.”<br />

The Tanners actually got off to a quick start,<br />

scoring on the very first drive of the game.<br />

After getting the ball at his own 39-yard line,<br />

senior quarterback Jonel Espinal (<strong>11</strong>-for-20,<br />

152 yards, TD, 3 INT) led the drive through<br />

the air, completing 3-of-5 passes for 47 yards.<br />

He capped off the drive with a beautiful 30-<br />

yard touchdown pass to senior receiver Elijah<br />

White to give <strong>Peabody</strong> the early lead.<br />

“I really liked the way Jonell threw the ball<br />

with confidence tonight,” Bettencourt said.<br />

“He was really driving the ball in there, but<br />

we needed some breaks and we didn’t get<br />

them. A ball off Eljiah’s shoulder pads turns<br />

into a pick, another pass just misses Elijah’s<br />

fingers, things like that. It’s a tough way to<br />

lose, but that’s football.”<br />

Masco responded right away with its powerful<br />

ground attack. Peter Kitsakos and Jay<br />

Theriault combined for 77 yards on the drive,<br />

although Kitsakos had 53 of those yards on<br />

a big touchdown run to tie the game. The<br />

Chieftains then got their first interception<br />

on the ensuing <strong>Peabody</strong> drive and scored in<br />

quick fashion on a four-yard touchdown run<br />

Austin Legget (right) kicks off with Tyler Norman looking on.<br />

from Dan Monagle. The same thing happened<br />

on the next drive, with Masconomet grabbing<br />

an interception once again. This time, it only<br />

took one play for the Chieftains to score, as<br />

Kitsakos took a ball around the right side 69<br />

yards.<br />

The bad luck kept snowballing for<br />

<strong>Peabody</strong>, as they went three-and-out on the<br />

next drive and gave the ball right back. On<br />

Masconomet’s first play, quarterback Matt<br />

Brockelman hit Monagle for a 55-yard touchdown<br />

pass to make it 28-7.<br />

The second half only saw one touchdown<br />

scored when Monagle scored a four-yard<br />

touchdown at the end of a massive 19-play,<br />

77-yard drive by Masconomet that took <strong>11</strong>:48<br />

off the clock between the third and fourth<br />

quarter.<br />

Eric DeMayo led the Tanners ground attack<br />

with 43 yards on eight carries. Five<br />

Tanners had receptions in the game, led by<br />

Cole Cuzzi who had four catches for 58 yards<br />

and Dylan Peluso, who had three catches<br />

good for 34 yards. Jack Woods (3 catches,<br />

24 yards) and Sam Mastromatteo (1 catch, 8<br />

yards) also contributed.<br />

Now at 1-4 on the season, <strong>Peabody</strong> needs<br />

to win its final two games in order to even<br />

have a chance at qualifying for the Division<br />

2 North playoffs. The Tanners have qualified<br />

for the playoffs in each of the last three years<br />

after missing out in Bettencourt’s first year<br />

PHOTO | BOB CARBONE<br />

after taking over as head coach in 2013.<br />

Unless No. 8 Woburn crashes and burns,<br />

there’s little chance for <strong>Peabody</strong> to move up.<br />

The No. 9 Tanners have a 5.80 rating, 3½<br />

points behind the other Tanners.<br />

North Andover and Masconomet are<br />

duking it out for second and third, with<br />

Lincoln-Sudbury right now the top seed.<br />

“The unfortunate thing is that with this loss,<br />

we took our destiny out of our own hands,”<br />

Bettencourt said. “Now we’ve got to rely on<br />

other people to lose and stuff like that, and<br />

you never want to be in that position. But<br />

we’ll regroup and try to come back strong in<br />

these final two weeks and see what happens<br />

from there.”<br />

Bob Trodden<br />

617-958-4083<br />

bobtrodden@comcast.net<br />

Good Luck!<br />

Wishing all<br />

a Happy<br />

Thanksgiving!<br />

Robin Murphy<br />

978-979-5098<br />

robinmurphy@verizon.net<br />

Good Luck<br />

Teams!<br />

Happy<br />

Thanksgiving<br />

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Bernie & Anita Horowitz<br />

978-535-8922<br />

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Much gratitude this<br />

holiday season<br />

From Your<br />

Local Realtor<br />

Mitchell Rosenwald<br />

617-974-1<strong>23</strong>0<br />

rosenwaldrealestate.com<br />

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Happy<br />

Holiday<br />

Season!<br />

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978-821-0638<br />

ronnatuttle@comcast.net<br />

Good Luck!<br />

Best wishes<br />

for a Happy,<br />

Healthy<br />

Holiday Season<br />

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978-535-3122<br />

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781-608-8040<br />

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Be<br />

“Thankful” this<br />

Holiday Season<br />

Good Luck<br />

Teams. Wishing<br />

everyone a<br />

Happy Holiday<br />

Season<br />

Jim Moretti<br />

978-601-0372<br />

jim@northshorehomeinfo.com


T10 WEEKLYNEWS.NET - 978-532-5880 THANKSGIVING FOOTBALL<br />

<strong>Peabody</strong>’s offensive line is ready to rumble.<br />

PHOTOS | BOB CARBONE<br />

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THANKSGIVING FOOTBALL WEEKLYNEWS.NET - 978-532-5880 T<strong>11</strong><br />

WEEK 6<br />

Tanners bounce back with dominant ground game<br />

By Mike Alongi<br />

and Anne Marie Tobin<br />

MALDEN — The <strong>Peabody</strong> football team<br />

got back to its ground-and-pound ways this<br />

week, as the Tanners pounded their way to a<br />

40-0 win over the Malden Golden Tornadoes<br />

at MacDonald Stadium Oct. 13.<br />

The senior running back duo of Eric<br />

DeMayo and Noah Freedman led the way on<br />

the ground for <strong>Peabody</strong>. DeMayo rushed 14<br />

times for 124 yards and a touchdown, while<br />

Freedman rushed <strong>11</strong> times for 48 yards with<br />

two touchdowns. DeMayo also added a defensive<br />

touchdown with an interception return<br />

for a touchdown in the second half.<br />

<strong>Peabody</strong> 40<br />

Malden 0<br />

One of the biggest advantages <strong>Peabody</strong><br />

held in the game was the time of possession<br />

battle. The Tanners held onto the ball for more<br />

than 28 of the 44 total minutes in the game,<br />

completely controlling the pace of the game.<br />

“That’s what we’ve always been trying to<br />

do, but we’ve had trouble at times with it this<br />

year,” Bettencourt said. “But the guys did a<br />

great job tonight of staying within the game<br />

plan.”<br />

The Tanners got things going early on,<br />

scoring on their very first drive. After<br />

Freedman pounded out four rushes for <strong>23</strong><br />

yards to start the drive, DeMayo took a<br />

handoff around the right side and ran 40 yards<br />

for a touchdown.<br />

After forcing a three-and-out on the ensuing<br />

Malden drive, <strong>Peabody</strong> got the ball<br />

back and went on a 14-play, 70-yard drive<br />

that took over <strong>11</strong> minutes off the clock between<br />

the first and second quarters. The drive<br />

was capped off with a four-yard touchdown<br />

run from Freedman.<br />

The Tanners got the ball back one more<br />

time before the half ended, with 40 seconds<br />

to make something happen. Luckily for them,<br />

Malden muffed the snap on a punt and set<br />

<strong>Peabody</strong> up on the Malden five-yard line. It<br />

took three plays for Freedman to punch in his<br />

second touchdown of the game from three<br />

yards out.<br />

With the game well in hand, <strong>Peabody</strong> spent<br />

much of the second half killing off the clock.<br />

They did continue to score though, starting<br />

with DeMayo’s pick six with about two minutes<br />

remaining in the third quarter.<br />

The defensive performance as a whole<br />

was huge for <strong>Peabody</strong>, with the Tanners<br />

notching six sacks as a team and forcing three<br />

turnovers.<br />

“The guys played well out there on defense,”<br />

Bettencourt said. “(Malden) made<br />

some mistakes, and we were able to capitalize<br />

on those mistakes. That’s the name of<br />

the game in high school football.”<br />

Running backs Luis Guridys and Declan<br />

Russell each added a rushing touchdown late<br />

PHOTO | BOB CARBONE<br />

Eric DeMayo scored two touchdowns, one<br />

on the ground and another on an interception.<br />

in the second half to stretch out the lead and<br />

seal the win.<br />

Next up for <strong>Peabody</strong> (2-4) is Northeastern<br />

Conference foe Beverly, who Bettencourt<br />

says the Tanners always treat as a rival.<br />

“When <strong>Peabody</strong> and Beverly match up,<br />

you can throw the records out,” he said. “This<br />

has always been more of a rivalry game, like<br />

what we have with Danvers. So we’ll work<br />

hard this week and I’m sure the guys will be<br />

ready to go.”<br />

<strong>Peabody</strong> and Beverly will kick off at 7 p.m.<br />

Friday night at Coley Lee Field. The game is<br />

a big one as it is the final game of the regular<br />

season and <strong>Peabody</strong> desperately needs a win<br />

to keeps its playoff hopes alive.<br />

Going into the Malden game, Bettencourt<br />

said the team was pretty much out of the<br />

playoffs unless the Tanners find a way to win<br />

their last two games and get a little help from<br />

teams like Reading, Woburn, Waltham and<br />

Chelmsford.<br />

“Those are good teams and it’s doubtful at<br />

least in my opinion that we are going to get<br />

as much help from them as we need, maybe<br />

Chelmsford, which has its hands full, but it<br />

comes down to it’s still a long shot for us even<br />

if we win both of our final games.<br />

“All year long we have looked at film and<br />

every game is the same in that we know what<br />

we need to do, it’s just a matter of figuring it<br />

out and executing,” added Bettencourt.<br />

With one game to go, Lincoln-Sudbury is<br />

the only undefeated team in Division 2 and<br />

leads the 12-team pack with a power ranking<br />

of 17.83. The final four spots are up for<br />

grabs with Chelmsford in fifth place (10.8),<br />

Woburn in sixth (10.67), Waltham in seventh<br />

(10.5), Reading in eighth (9.87) and <strong>Peabody</strong><br />

(4-2) in ninth place (7.33) all duking it out<br />

to become one of the eight qualifiers for the<br />

playoffs.<br />

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T12 WEEKLYNEWS.NET - 978-532-5880 THANKSGIVING FOOTBALL<br />

WEEK 7<br />

Tanners topple Beverly on Senior Night<br />

By Mike Alongi<br />

PEABODY — Behind another<br />

solid defensive performance, the<br />

<strong>Peabody</strong> football team defeated<br />

Beverly, 20-9, on senior night at<br />

Coley Lee Field Oct. 20.<br />

The Tanners needed a few new<br />

faces to step up in this game, as<br />

senior captain Eric DeMayo went<br />

down with an injury on the first<br />

series of the game. The burden<br />

fell on fellow senior captain Noah<br />

Freedman (46 rush yards, TD) and<br />

sophomore Angel Paulino (76 rush<br />

yards, TD) on the offensive end,<br />

while junior Chris Glass and sophomores<br />

Joe Casey and James Guiry<br />

picked up the slack on defense.<br />

“Our offense certainly took a<br />

blow when we lost Eric early,<br />

but guys like Noah and Angel<br />

stepped up and helped lessen that<br />

blow,” said <strong>Peabody</strong> coach Mark<br />

Bettencourt. “On defense, guys like<br />

Joe and James had their numbers<br />

called and stepped up when they<br />

needed to.”<br />

With the win, the Tanners crept<br />

closer to the .500 level, but it wasn’t<br />

enough to punch the Tanners’ ticket<br />

to the North Division 2 playoffs.<br />

Instead, the Tanners will take on<br />

Westford Academy for a second<br />

straight year. Last year, <strong>Peabody</strong><br />

was the No. 5 seed and defeated<br />

No. 4 seed Westford on the road in<br />

the quarterfinals of the Division 1A<br />

playoffs, 35-19.<br />

“All I can say is I’m glad we<br />

don’t have to go to their place again,<br />

and it will be great to host a home<br />

game,” said Bettencourt. “This<br />

game is just one game on the way<br />

to finishing the season above the<br />

.500 mark, and while it’s not like an<br />

advancement game, it still means<br />

something to us and we will give<br />

it our best effort. It’s disappointing<br />

not to be a playoff team, but we still<br />

have a lot of football left to play this<br />

season.”<br />

The Beverly game was a defensive<br />

battle to start the game, with<br />

both teams exchanging three-andouts<br />

in the first quarter. The Tanners<br />

finally got something going as the<br />

quarter wound to a close, with senior<br />

Nolan Murphy returning a<br />

punt 45 yards all the way down to<br />

PHOTO | BOB CARBONE<br />

<strong>Peabody</strong>’s Sam Mastromatteo is off and running with Beverly’s Ryan Barror, left, and Mike Anderson in<br />

pursuit.<br />

the six yard-line with eight seconds<br />

left. On the first play of the second<br />

quarter, Freedman punched in a<br />

4-yard touchdown to give <strong>Peabody</strong><br />

a 7-0 lead.<br />

The Tanners then forced a threeand-out<br />

and got the ball back at their<br />

own 25-yard line. <strong>Peabody</strong> then<br />

kicked off a 10-play, 75-yard drive<br />

that was highlighted by a 40-yard<br />

pass from senior quarterback Jonell<br />

Espinal to senior tight end Sam<br />

Mastromatteo and culminated in a<br />

10-yard touchdown run by Paulino.<br />

Espinal got the start under center<br />

and played most of the game, a<br />

marked departure from the platoon<br />

system that Bettencourt has<br />

employed this season, alternating<br />

Espinal with sophomore Colby<br />

Therrien.<br />

“That was by design tonight,”<br />

said Bettencourt. “It was senior<br />

night and Jonel was a game captain<br />

so we talked about it before the<br />

game that as such, we were going<br />

with the senior, Jonel. He played<br />

great and deserved it.”<br />

Beverly was able to capture a<br />

little momentum before the half by<br />

blocking the extra point attempt,<br />

and Clark Marchand returned<br />

the loose ball 90 yards to give the<br />

Panthers two points.<br />

In the second half, <strong>Peabody</strong> was<br />

able to extend the lead to 20-2 after<br />

Espinal scored on a one-yard quarterback<br />

sneak with 3:30 left in the<br />

third quarter. The Tanners defense<br />

then continued to shut down the<br />

Panthers, forcing two more threeand-outs<br />

in the third quarter.<br />

<strong>Peabody</strong> 21<br />

Beverly 7<br />

“They certainly gave us some<br />

issues tonight, they have a great<br />

unit,” Beverly coach Andrew<br />

Morency said of the <strong>Peabody</strong> defense.<br />

“They’ve been running that<br />

4-4 scheme for years and they really<br />

know how to do it, and they got us<br />

several time with some blitzes inside<br />

and things like that. They did<br />

a really good job of keeping us off<br />

balance.”<br />

“I wish it had come together like<br />

this for us earlier in the season,”<br />

Bettencourt said of his team’s defensive<br />

performance. “We’ve won<br />

two games in a row now and we<br />

feel really good about where we are<br />

as a unit. Tonight helped prove that<br />

even more by seeing what we could<br />

do even when we lost a big contributor<br />

like Eric at middle linebacker.”<br />

Beverly finally broke through in<br />

the final seconds of the third quarter.<br />

With 19 seconds remaining, quarterback<br />

Nick Berry hit Ryan Barror<br />

for a 51-yard touchdown pass to<br />

put the score at 20-9, but that was<br />

as close as the Panthers would get.<br />

<strong>Peabody</strong> forced two more threeand-outs<br />

and went on two long<br />

drives to run out the clock.<br />

Now at 3-4, the Tanners’ mindset<br />

it to finish the season on a high note.<br />

“We knew that even if we didn’t<br />

get in (to the playoffs) then our<br />

goal is to keep riding this winning<br />

streak,” said Bettencourt. “We have<br />

an opportunity to potentially close<br />

out this season on a six-game winning<br />

streak, and we’d like to do that<br />

if possible.”<br />

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THANKSGIVING FOOTBALL WEEKLYNEWS.NET - 978-532-5880 T13<br />

WEEK 8<br />

Tanners trample Westford for fourth straight<br />

By Mike Alongi<br />

PEABODY — Behind yet another<br />

impressive defensive performance<br />

and some big plays from<br />

the underclassmen, the <strong>Peabody</strong><br />

Tanners took down the Westford<br />

Academy Grey Ghosts, 30-0, at<br />

Coley Lee Field Oct. 27. The win<br />

is the third in a row for <strong>Peabody</strong>,<br />

putting its season record at an even<br />

4-4 and is also the second in two<br />

years against the Grey Ghosts, who<br />

were upset by the Tanners, 35-19,<br />

in the first round of the 2016 North<br />

Division 1A playoffs.<br />

<strong>Peabody</strong> 30<br />

Westford 0<br />

The underclassmen were able<br />

to show that the future is looking<br />

pretty bright for the Tanners, as<br />

sophomore quarterback Colby<br />

Therrien threw a touchdown pass to<br />

sophomore receiver Dylan Peluso,<br />

the first career varsity touchdown<br />

for both of them. Meanwhile, sophomore<br />

running back Angel Paulino<br />

dazzled with 159 rushing yards and<br />

two touchdowns and had his first<br />

100-yard game as a varsity player.<br />

Paulino’s touchdowns were on<br />

rushes of 30 and 25 yards, while<br />

his longest run of the day was a<br />

52-yarder.<br />

“We have three words for Angel<br />

when he’s out there: hit the hole,”<br />

said Bettencourt. “Just hit the hole<br />

and let your natural talent take over<br />

once you get to the second level,<br />

and you can see what he can do<br />

once he’s in space.”<br />

The duo of senior running backs<br />

Noah Freedman and Eric DeMayo<br />

also rushed for one touchdown<br />

each, while junior kicker Austin<br />

Leggett drilled a 25-yard field goal<br />

to round out the scoring for the<br />

Tanners.<br />

Things got off to a hot start for<br />

<strong>Peabody</strong>. After Joe Mastromatteo<br />

snagged an interception on the<br />

opening drive of the game, the<br />

Tanners got the ball at midfield and<br />

moved down the field, largely on<br />

Jonell Espinal getting protection from Jake Sousa as he looks for a receiver.<br />

the back of Freedman. Then, stuck<br />

on fourth-and-goal from the oneyard<br />

line, DeMayo punched it in to<br />

give <strong>Peabody</strong> the lead.<br />

The next <strong>Peabody</strong> drive was a<br />

long one, going 70 yards in nine<br />

plays and taking up just over four<br />

and a half minutes of game time.<br />

Although it stalled out at the 10-<br />

yard line, Leggett was able to give<br />

the Tanners points by hitting a 25-<br />

yard field goal.<br />

<strong>Peabody</strong> went on to force a threeand-out<br />

on the ensuing drive, then<br />

sacked the Westford punter for a<br />

10-yard loss to set up field position<br />

in the red zone. Despite a sack and<br />

a penalty pushing the Tanners back<br />

to the 30-yard line, Paulino resolved<br />

the situation with a 30-yard touchdown<br />

run to put <strong>Peabody</strong> up 17-0<br />

at the half.<br />

PHOTO | BOB CARBONE<br />

While the Tanners did open up<br />

the second half with a fumble, they<br />

still controlled the flow of the game.<br />

<strong>Peabody</strong> held the Grey Ghosts<br />

scoreless on the next drive, then<br />

got the ball back and moved down<br />

the field in a 12-play, 85-yard drive<br />

that took up 7:16 and culminated<br />

in a 25-yard touchdown run from<br />

Paulino.<br />

The final score of the game was<br />

the six-yard touchdown connection<br />

between Therrien and Peluso,<br />

which came with just under five<br />

minutes remaining in the game.<br />

While they aren’t taking part<br />

in the playoffs, there is still plenty<br />

that <strong>Peabody</strong> has to play for. The<br />

Tanners have a chance to win six in<br />

a row if they win out, which would<br />

send the seniors out on a high note<br />

and give confidence to next year’s<br />

returning players.<br />

“Once we found out that we<br />

weren’t going to have a chance<br />

to compete for a Super Bowl, we<br />

knew we had to go for the next<br />

best thing and that’s winning out,”<br />

Bettencourt said. “The seniors<br />

would love to go out like that and<br />

leave something for the younger<br />

players. So our guys are focused<br />

on taking it game by game and focusing<br />

on execution and intensity.<br />

The rest will play itself out from<br />

there.”<br />

The Tanners will take the next<br />

step in their quest to win out on<br />

Friday night when they travel to<br />

Haverhill to take on the Hillies at 7.<br />

Last year, the Tanners also<br />

played Haverhill after both teams<br />

were eliminated from their respective<br />

playoff divisions (Haverhill in<br />

Division 1, <strong>Peabody</strong> in Division<br />

1A)<br />

Against the heavily-favored<br />

and No. 6-ranked Hillies, the upset-minded,<br />

and undermanned,<br />

Tanners gave as good as they got,<br />

but came up just short, losing, 20-8,<br />

at Coley Lee Field on a cold and<br />

blustery night.<br />

Nonetheless, Bettencourt was<br />

proud of the Tanners’ effort.<br />

“We were down so many players,<br />

and it was just a tough week, but we<br />

stayed right them, it’s just some<br />

penalties really hurt us in the first<br />

half. It just seemed that every time<br />

we got an opportunity, we gave it<br />

away, we didn’t take advantage.<br />

When asked why the Tanners are<br />

taking on another Division 1 team<br />

in this year’s playoffs, Bettencourt,<br />

who has been a regular attendee<br />

at the re-seeding meetings held<br />

Sundays at St. John’ Prep, said,<br />

“because we are the only Division<br />

2 team who will play up a division.”<br />

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GO TEAMS!<br />

Stay Safe. Keep Healthy. Live Well.<br />

GOOD LUCK TANNERS<br />

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thoughts and wishes for a Safe & Happy Thanksgiving<br />

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535 Lowell Street, <strong>Peabody</strong><br />

978.535.9872


T14 WEEKLYNEWS.NET - 978-532-5880 THANKSGIVING FOOTBALL<br />

By Anne Marie Tobin<br />

Finally. After an 0-3 start, the<br />

<strong>Peabody</strong> Tanners football team has<br />

finally inched above the .500 mark<br />

for the 2017 season.<br />

The Tanners topped the mark<br />

Nov. 3 at Trinity Stadium, defeating<br />

Division 1 rival Haverhill 34-<strong>23</strong><br />

behind a superior effort from running<br />

back Angel Paulino, who ran<br />

for 178 yards and two touchdowns<br />

on 26 carries to lead the <strong>Peabody</strong><br />

ground game, which amassed 283<br />

rushing yards in total. Couple that<br />

with a punishing run defense that<br />

held the Hillies to a negative 15<br />

total yards, and it all added up to the<br />

Tanners’ fourth straight win, and<br />

fifth in their last six games.<br />

<strong>Peabody</strong> coach Mark Bettencourt<br />

said it was a mixed bag.<br />

“At times we showed signs of<br />

being a young team with too many<br />

mistakes and penalties, but other<br />

times we really executed well and<br />

played like a experienced team,”<br />

he said. “But we didn’t fold early<br />

when they scored on the opening<br />

kickoff, and it didn’t cause us to<br />

lose our focus, so overall, it was a<br />

good win.”<br />

WEEK 9<br />

Tanner football is finally above .500<br />

<strong>Peabody</strong> 34<br />

Haverhill <strong>23</strong><br />

With so many scoring plays for<br />

both teams, it’s tough to say the<br />

game came down to a single play,<br />

but this one might have. With a<br />

28-<strong>23</strong> lead late in the fourth quarter,<br />

<strong>Peabody</strong> faced a fourth-and-2 at the<br />

Hillies’ 25. <strong>Peabody</strong> coach Mark<br />

Bettencourt called a timeout with<br />

3:12 to go to set up a play. Paulino<br />

got the nod and did not disappoint,<br />

picking up 5 yards to the Haverhill<br />

20 to keep the drive going, and<br />

the ball out of the Hillies’ hands.<br />

<strong>Peabody</strong> senior quarterback Jonell<br />

Espinal needed just two plays to<br />

find senior captain Noah Freedman<br />

in the end zone with a perfect 18-<br />

yard strike to put the game out of<br />

reach.<br />

The game had a wild start. On<br />

The star of the game was Angel Paulino, with a career high 178 rushing yards and two TDs.<br />

the opening kickoff, Haverhill’s<br />

Devon Cunningham staked the<br />

Hillies to a 6-0 lead with a 90-yard<br />

kickoff return. Nolan Murphy<br />

nearly matched that effort, returning<br />

the ensuing kickoff 70 yards<br />

to set up <strong>Peabody</strong>’s first score two<br />

plays later, an 8-yard run by Paulino<br />

(Austin Leggett kick), then added<br />

a score in the second quarter on a<br />

2-yard rush by Noah Freedman and<br />

Leggett kick to take a 14-6 lead into<br />

halftime. Paulino stretched the lead<br />

to 21-6 in the third quarter with a<br />

5-yard scamper (Leggett kick), capping<br />

off a 68-yard drive.<br />

The Hillies fought back and<br />

closed to within five at 21-16 at the<br />

end of three on a 52-yard touchdown<br />

pass from Brady Skafas to<br />

Cunningham (Sergio Martinez<br />

kick) and 30-yard field goal by<br />

Martinez. But <strong>Peabody</strong> stormed<br />

back, sandwiching touchdown<br />

receptions from Dylan Peluso (2<br />

catches, 26 yards) of 13-yards (from<br />

Colby Therrien) and Freedman (12<br />

carries, 55 yards) of 18-yards (from<br />

Jonell Espinal) around a Haverhill<br />

score to secure the victory.<br />

Therrien and Espinal didn’t throw<br />

much, but when they did, they were<br />

effective. Espinal was 3-for-4 for<br />

32 yards and one touchdown, while<br />

Therrien was 2-for-6 for 14 yards<br />

and one score and also picked up 45<br />

yards rushing on three carries.<br />

“Our two quarterbacks played<br />

very well but our run defense was<br />

phenomenal from the defensive<br />

linemen to the linebackers to the<br />

strong safeties,” said Bettencourt.<br />

“Dariel Canela, Cam Powers,<br />

Ramon Franco (2 sacks), they’ve<br />

been doing it all year lunch pail<br />

style, and Abe Kaba, Michael Lock<br />

as well. Linebackers Eric DeMayo<br />

and Chris Glass were strong and<br />

strong safeties Sam Mastromatteo<br />

and Marcus Barker also had excellent<br />

games.”<br />

Next up for <strong>Peabody</strong> is old<br />

Northeastern Conference foe Lynn<br />

Classical (7-2) on Friday at 4 p.m.<br />

at Manning Field in Lynn.<br />

“If you had to pick a game to<br />

play, this would be the one to pick,”<br />

PHOTO | BOB CARBONE<br />

said Bettencourt. “We had actually<br />

asked for this game last week as a<br />

home game and didn’t get it. “This<br />

is a bit of a rivalry game with a motivational<br />

factor, so now after playing<br />

many teams with losing records, it<br />

will be great to go up against a team<br />

that is 7-2.<br />

“We had a little trouble on our<br />

passing defense against Haverhill<br />

and got confused on some patterns<br />

and left some guys open,” said<br />

Bettencourt. “ We missed some<br />

tackles in space so that concerns<br />

me greatly for the Classical game<br />

as they like to put people in space.”<br />

Good Luck Lynnfield Pioneers • Good Luck <strong>Peabody</strong> Tanners<br />

CENTURY HOUSE<br />

Route <strong>11</strong>4 •<strong>Peabody</strong><br />

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www.centuryhousepeabody.com<br />

EPICUREAN SHOPPE<br />

Route <strong>11</strong>4 •<strong>Peabody</strong><br />

978-531-1638<br />

PEABODY CITY COUNCIL<br />

2017<br />

Best Wishes For A Safe<br />

& Happy Thanksgiving<br />

Good Luck <strong>Peabody</strong> Tanners<br />

and Lynnfield Pioneers<br />

Safe and


THANKSGIVING FOOTBALL WEEKLYNEWS.NET - 978-532-5880 T15<br />

By Harold Rivera<br />

and Anne Marie Tobin<br />

LYNN — File this one as the one<br />

they gave away.<br />

On Nov. 10 at frigid Manning<br />

Field, Lynn Classical simply stole<br />

one from the <strong>Peabody</strong> Tanners<br />

football team, 26-20. <strong>Peabody</strong> controlled<br />

its own destiny and seemed<br />

to have the win in the bag with the<br />

ball on Classical’s 32-yard line and<br />

a six point lead at 20-14 with 2:13<br />

to play. But Classical had other<br />

ideas and, after a Tanner fumble,<br />

rattled off 12 straight points to send<br />

<strong>Peabody</strong> packing.<br />

The first came after the Rams<br />

recovered the fumble, and turned it<br />

into a 68-yard touchdown toss from<br />

Rams quarterback Keith Ridley to<br />

Nashaun Butler to knot things up<br />

at 20-20 at the end of regulation.<br />

The Rams added insult to injury,<br />

scoring the game winning touchdown<br />

in overtime after <strong>Peabody</strong>’s<br />

drive stalled.<br />

WEEK 10<br />

The one that got away<br />

Classical 26<br />

<strong>Peabody</strong> 20<br />

Noah Freedman grinding out a run thanks to a block from Ramon Franco (82).<br />

PHOTO | KATIE MORRISON<br />

“We fought hard,” said <strong>Peabody</strong><br />

coach Mark Bettencourt. “Mistakes<br />

were made and it came down to who<br />

could make big plays. They capitalized<br />

on our mistake in the fourth<br />

quarter and that took the wind out<br />

of our sails. We were eyeballing a<br />

six-game win streak, but everything<br />

just flattened out at the end.<br />

“We had first-and-10 at their <strong>23</strong><br />

and knew that all we had to do was<br />

run the ball a couple of times, let<br />

them call their last two timeouts and<br />

run the clock all the way down on<br />

the next play. Even if we didn’t get<br />

a first down, they (Classical) would<br />

still have to go 80 yards with very<br />

little time, so I liked where we were.”<br />

It went from bad to worse in<br />

overtime for the Tanners, who were<br />

unable to find the end zone on the<br />

first drive, following which, Tucker<br />

carried the Rams to victory with his<br />

second game-winning score of the<br />

season.<br />

GO<br />

TEAMS!<br />

GOOD LUCK!<br />

“We missed two open guys, so we<br />

had our chances,” said Bettencourt.<br />

After a scoreless first quarter,<br />

both teams began to find their<br />

rhythm in the second period. The<br />

Tanners marched to Classical’s oneyard<br />

line on their first possession of<br />

the quarter but saw the promising<br />

drive end in a fumble. Two plays<br />

later, <strong>Peabody</strong> redeemed itself with<br />

a safety to take a 2-0 lead.<br />

The Tanners upped their lead to<br />

8-0 on a 63-yard touchdown pass<br />

from senior quarterback Jonell<br />

Espinal to Elijah White with 2:22<br />

left in the period (kick failed).<br />

Needing a big play before the end<br />

of the half, Ridley fired a 30-yard<br />

touchdown strike to Butler to inch<br />

Classical back in at 8-6 after a failed<br />

two-point conversion.<br />

Malcolm Best plowed his way<br />

into the end zone on a 5-yard carry<br />

midway through the third quarter to<br />

give Classical its first lead at 12-8,<br />

and Best also rushed in the conversion.<br />

The Rams’ lead was short<br />

lived, as <strong>Peabody</strong>’s Espinal-to-<br />

White connection struck again for a<br />

78-yard touchdown to tie the game<br />

at 14-14 (kick failed).<br />

“Elijah’s a real good athlete,”<br />

Bettencourt said. “It’s tough to<br />

cover him one-on-one. He’s very<br />

quick and once he beats you it’s<br />

tough to catch him. We try to look<br />

for that matchup.”<br />

DeMayo’s 69-yard interception<br />

return swung the momentum back<br />

<strong>Peabody</strong>’s way early in the fourth<br />

quarter, but that was as good as it<br />

got for the Tanners, who dropped<br />

back down to .500.<br />

For <strong>Peabody</strong> (5-5), Espinal completed<br />

7-of-19 pass attempts for 195<br />

yards and two touchdowns, both<br />

caught by White. Angel Paulino<br />

had 19 carries for 62 yards and Eric<br />

DeMayo, who caused problems for<br />

the Rams on defense all afternoon.<br />

Unfortunately, DeMayo wasn’t<br />

able to play as much a role on the<br />

offensive side of the ball.<br />

“Eric’s injury doesn’t allow us<br />

to use him the way we want to and<br />

not having him is a huge factor,”<br />

Bettencourt said. “We like to run<br />

the ball 20-25 times with him on<br />

offense, but we only used him offensively<br />

on third-and-short and<br />

fourth-and-short plays. Our record<br />

might be a lot better if we could, not<br />

that one player makes a team. He’s<br />

a special talent.”<br />

Ridley pieced together a strong<br />

showing despite the brutal winds,<br />

completing 16-of-29 pass attempts<br />

for 255 yards and two touchdowns.<br />

Ridley’s go-to target of the afternoon<br />

was Nashaun Butler, who<br />

caught seven passes for a 169 yards<br />

and two touchdowns.<br />

Both teams now move on to<br />

their final games of the season on<br />

Thanksgiving Day with <strong>Peabody</strong><br />

taking on a much-improved Saugus<br />

squad on the road and Classical<br />

taking on Lynn English at Manning.<br />

Reedy Meadow Golf Course<br />

at Lynnfield Centre<br />

King Rail Golf Course<br />

“We gave the kids five days off<br />

and told them to go home, relax and<br />

be a regular kid until Thursday,”<br />

said Bettencourt. “We need to get<br />

healthy, that’s our number one<br />

need right now with s many kids<br />

so dinged up after a long and trying<br />

season, and we know that this<br />

Saugus team is not the pushover<br />

they have been in the last few years,<br />

so there will be no blowout this year.<br />

Saugus didn’t play a weak schedule<br />

like some people have said, they are<br />

a pretty good team at 4-6 so I am expecting<br />

a tough, hard battle, but our<br />

kids are nothing but resilient.<br />

“We know that Saugus ran some<br />

spreads early in the year and that<br />

they also went to the double wing<br />

toward the end, so it’s going to be<br />

tough as we have to prepare and<br />

practice for both. We have our<br />

hands full.”<br />

1 King Rail Drive, Lynnfield<br />

2<br />

0<br />

17<br />

Happy Thanksgiving To All! - Thank You<br />

Have<br />

for a Great<br />

a Safe<br />

Season!<br />

and<br />

Go... Tanners Pioneers Crusaders Happy Thanksgiving Eagles<br />

CITY OF PEABODY • EDWARD A. BETTENCOURT, JR., MAYOR<br />

edward.bettencourt@peabody-ma.gov


T16 WEEKLYNEWS.NET - 978-532-5880 THANKSGIVING FOOTBALL<br />

These <strong>Peabody</strong> seniors hope to go through four Thanksgiving games without a loss.<br />

PHOTO | DIANA CARBONE<br />

<strong>Peabody</strong>-Saugus rivalry through the years<br />

YEAR...................... WINNER......................SCORE<br />

1944....................... <strong>Peabody</strong>......................19-7<br />

1945....................... <strong>Peabody</strong>......................6-0<br />

1946....................... Saugus........................7-0<br />

1947....................... <strong>Peabody</strong>......................13-0<br />

1948....................... Saugus........................27-13<br />

1949....................... Saugus........................26-6<br />

1950....................... Saugus........................47-14<br />

1951....................... Saugus........................15-0<br />

1952....................... <strong>Peabody</strong>......................12-7<br />

1953....................... Saugus........................33-6<br />

1954....................... Saugus........................20-12<br />

1955....................... <strong>Peabody</strong>......................14-6<br />

1956....................... Saugus........................32-7<br />

1957....................... Saugus........................34-13<br />

1958....................... Saugus........................38-14<br />

1959....................... Saugus........................14-6<br />

1960....................... Saugus........................22-6<br />

1961....................... <strong>Peabody</strong>......................20-0<br />

1962....................... <strong>Peabody</strong> .....................12-6<br />

1963....................... <strong>Peabody</strong>......................26-14<br />

1964....................... Saugus........................26-13<br />

1965....................... Saugus........................35-12<br />

1966....................... Saugus........................48-0<br />

1967....................... <strong>Peabody</strong>......................26-8<br />

1968....................... Saugus........................26-14<br />

1969....................... <strong>Peabody</strong>......................30-6<br />

1970....................... <strong>Peabody</strong>......................42-0<br />

1971....................... <strong>Peabody</strong>......................16-0<br />

1972....................... <strong>Peabody</strong>......................36-16<br />

1973....................... Saugus........................12-0<br />

1974....................... <strong>Peabody</strong>......................21-20<br />

1975....................... Saugus........................6-0<br />

1976....................... <strong>Peabody</strong>......................62-6<br />

1977....................... Saugus........................12-10<br />

1978....................... Saugus........................30-14<br />

1979....................... <strong>Peabody</strong>......................35-14<br />

1980....................... Saugus........................40-6<br />

1981....................... <strong>Peabody</strong>......................28-12<br />

1982....................... <strong>Peabody</strong>......................14-0<br />

1983....................... <strong>Peabody</strong>......................42-6<br />

1984....................... Saugus........................17-14<br />

1985....................... <strong>Peabody</strong>......................8-6<br />

1986....................... <strong>Peabody</strong>......................33-12<br />

1987....................... Saugus........................21-20<br />

1988....................... Saugus........................22-14<br />

1989....................... <strong>Peabody</strong>......................14-13<br />

1990....................... <strong>Peabody</strong>......................39-8<br />

1991....................... <strong>Peabody</strong>......................21-14<br />

1992....................... <strong>Peabody</strong>......................28-6<br />

1993....................... <strong>Peabody</strong>......................28-0<br />

1994....................... <strong>Peabody</strong>......................40-8<br />

1995....................... <strong>Peabody</strong>......................34-14<br />

1996....................... <strong>Peabody</strong>......................39-28<br />

1997....................... <strong>Peabody</strong>......................35-31<br />

1998....................... <strong>Peabody</strong>......................39-32<br />

1999....................... <strong>Peabody</strong>......................36-0<br />

2000....................... <strong>Peabody</strong>......................22-6<br />

2001....................... <strong>Peabody</strong>......................41-16<br />

2002....................... <strong>Peabody</strong>......................20-8<br />

2003....................... <strong>Peabody</strong>......................35-8<br />

2004....................... <strong>Peabody</strong>......................34-12<br />

2005....................... <strong>Peabody</strong>......................28-0<br />

2006....................... Saugus........................13-0<br />

2009....................... Saugus........................14-6<br />

2010....................... <strong>Peabody</strong>......................34-13<br />

20<strong>11</strong>........................ <strong>Peabody</strong>......................19-7<br />

2012....................... Saugus........................43-0<br />

2013....................... Saugus........................25-14<br />

2014....................... <strong>Peabody</strong>......................33-0<br />

2015....................... <strong>Peabody</strong>......................52-0<br />

2016....................... <strong>Peabody</strong>......................35-6<br />

<strong>Peabody</strong> 43<br />

Saugus 29<br />

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THANKSGIVING FOOTBALL WEEKLYNEWS.NET - 978-532-5880 T17<br />

2017 <strong>Peabody</strong> schedule/results<br />

9/8...........................at Somerville..................................24-7<br />

9/15.........................Danvers..........................................7-0<br />

9/<strong>23</strong>.........................Marblehead....................................21-7<br />

9/28.........................at Revere........................................21-0<br />

10/6.........................Masco.............................................35-7<br />

10/13.......................at Malden.......................................40-0<br />

10/20.......................Beverly...........................................20-9<br />

10/27.......................Westford ........................................30-0<br />

<strong>11</strong>/3..........................at Haverhill.....................................34-<strong>23</strong><br />

<strong>11</strong>/10........................at Classical.....................................26-20<br />

Thanksgiving Day<br />

<strong>11</strong>/<strong>23</strong>........................at Saugus.......................................10 a.m.<br />

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PHOTOS | BOB CARBONE<br />

Above, the entire cheerleading squad for the <strong>Peabody</strong> High football team hopes to cheer their<br />

Tanners on to a Thanksgiving Day victory. Seniors on the squad include, from left, Michaela<br />

Farese, captain Katie DuPont, Kalista Kyslowsky and Vittoria Periera. Missing from the photo<br />

is captain Kaycie Groom.<br />

2017 Saugus schedule/results<br />

9/8.......................at St. Mary’s.....................................54-21<br />

9/16.....................North Quincy...................................37-20<br />

9/22.....................at Salem..........................................22-19<br />

9/30.....................Lynn English....................................46-22<br />

10/7.....................Gloucester.......................................26-25<br />

10/13...................Winthrop..........................................40-13<br />

10/21...................at Swampscott.................................40-19<br />

10/28...................at Pentucket....................................35-21<br />

<strong>11</strong>/3......................Amesbury........................................22-6<br />

<strong>11</strong>/10....................at Greater Lowell.............................42-12<br />

Thanksgiving Day<br />

<strong>11</strong>/<strong>23</strong>....................<strong>Peabody</strong>..........................................10 a.m.<br />

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the Lynnfield Pioneers!<br />

ROCCO A. IOCCO, D.M.D.<br />

LETS GO TEAMS!<br />

40 Salem St. • Lynnfield • 781-245-7986 • www.ioccodental.com


T18 WEEKLYNEWS.NET - 978-532-5880 THANKSGIVING FOOTBALL<br />

Honoring a pre-Thanksgiving tradition<br />

PHOTOS | KATIE MORRISON<br />

The Saugus and <strong>Peabody</strong> Lions Club dinner at Prince Restaurant in Saugus is an annual pre-Thanksgiving<br />

tradition for the seniors and coaches from each team. Above, the <strong>Peabody</strong> seniors, along with coach Mark<br />

Bettencourt and his son, Mark Jr., get together after the dinner. Below, Bettencourt is joined by his Tanners<br />

award winner, Matt Raposa, second from right, as well as Saugus coach Anthony Nalen and Sachems<br />

award winner Ricky Martinez. Bottom left, Mark Bettencourt Jr. enjoys some dessert. Left, former New<br />

England Patriot Pete Brock gave an inspiring speech as the guest speaker at the event.<br />

Wishing all a healthy and happy Thanksgiving!<br />

Good Luck to the Lynnfield Pioneers and <strong>Peabody</strong> Tanners<br />

Experience the J Barrett Difference<br />

Kate Fabrizio | 978.314.0196 | www.katefabrizio.com


THANKSGIVING FOOTBALL WEEKLYNEWS.NET - 978-532-5880 T19<br />

Fenwick Hall of Fame calls Tarr’s name<br />

By Anne Marie Tobin<br />

Toughness and heart. When it<br />

comes to Fenwick football, nobody<br />

exemplified those qualities<br />

on and off the playing field more<br />

than running back Bobby Tarr.<br />

Tarr, who played three years<br />

of varsity football as well as<br />

boys lacrosse at Fenwick, is one<br />

of seven former student-athletes<br />

along with the 2004 state champion<br />

baseball team, who will<br />

receive the ultimate Crusader<br />

honor - induction into the Bishop<br />

Fenwick Athletics Hall of Fame<br />

on Nov. 24 at Montvale Plaza in<br />

Stoneham.<br />

“Honestly, I haven’t had high<br />

school football on my mind much<br />

of late as it’s been 10 years, but<br />

I was surprised when I got the<br />

call,” said Tarr, now a financial<br />

analyst for a property management<br />

company in Cambridge.<br />

“It’s a great honor to be sure as<br />

there have been so many great<br />

athletes in Fenwick history, so I<br />

am so grateful to Coach Woods<br />

for nominating me and I am<br />

cannot wait for the actual banquet<br />

and ceremony in November.”<br />

Tarr, a member of the Class of<br />

2008, re-wrote the record book<br />

at Fenwick, rushing for a record<br />

5,601 yards, 69 touchdowns and<br />

426 points during a career that<br />

spanned from 2005-2007.<br />

He finished his career as the<br />

third all-time leading rusher<br />

and eighth leading scorer in<br />

Massachusetts history. He was<br />

the first football player in state<br />

history to rush for more than<br />

2,500 yards in back-to-back seasons,<br />

having accomplished the<br />

feat his junior and senior years. In<br />

2007 as a senior, he led the state<br />

in scoring with 192 points. He<br />

finished his career as the North<br />

Shore’s all-time leading rusher,<br />

surpassing Ipswich’s Bernie<br />

Adell (1974-1977), who held the<br />

record for 30 years. Tarr broke<br />

Adell’s 30-year old record in<br />

style, with a 4-touchdown, <strong>23</strong>0-<br />

yard performance in Fenwick’s<br />

32-22 win over St. Mary’s.<br />

Tarr is the only football player<br />

in Fenwick to have his number<br />

retired; his No. 3 jersey was officially<br />

retired during Alumni<br />

Weekend in 2013.<br />

The list of honors, awards and<br />

Bobby Tarr pushing off a defender during his Crusader glory days.<br />

records Tarr received is lengthy,<br />

but it pales in comparison to the<br />

legacy of compassion and character<br />

he left behind at Fenwick.<br />

It was Thanksgiving Day at<br />

Austin Prep when the Tar, then a<br />

junior, and Cougar senior Nathan<br />

Sherr were tied for the state lead<br />

in scoring. Late in the game, the<br />

Crusaders were up by a touchdown<br />

and were knocking on<br />

the door at the Cougars’ 5-yard<br />

line. Tarr had already scored<br />

two touchdowns on his way to<br />

a single game school record 380<br />

rushing yards.<br />

“If we score, the game is basically<br />

over and Bobby wins the<br />

state scoring title so I called a<br />

power off tackle for Bobby and he<br />

came out of the huddle to me on<br />

the sideline,” said Fenwick coach<br />

Dave Woods. “I asked him what<br />

was wrong and he said “Coach<br />

can we get Stoico a touchdown.”<br />

Mike Stoico was our senior fullback<br />

who blocked for Bobby. I<br />

felt so humbled and embarrassed<br />

that I needed a junior in high<br />

school to tell me to get a senior<br />

(who had given us everything we<br />

ever asked of him) a touchdown<br />

in his last game ever.”<br />

Woods gave the ball to Stoico<br />

and he got stuffed on the line of<br />

scrimmage.<br />

“The entire team (and probably<br />

every one of our fans) just turned<br />

and looked at me, thought I was<br />

crazy. We ran it again and Stoico<br />

scored. Bobby celebrated that TD<br />

more than he ever celebrated any<br />

of his own.”<br />

Sherr scored a late touchdown<br />

and added the 2-point conversion<br />

to win the scoring title by two<br />

PHOTO | BISHOP FENWICK<br />

over Tarr.<br />

“Bobby could have not have<br />

cared less about the scoring title,<br />

he cared more about Mike and his<br />

teammates than he ever did about<br />

any of his own stats. He was one<br />

of the most unselfish kids we<br />

have ever had,” said Woods.<br />

For his part, Tarr downplayed<br />

his part, saying “all those years<br />

there were five guys and a fullback<br />

blocking for me. Mike was<br />

a great guy and teammate and I<br />

was not blind to the fact that I<br />

would be nothing without him<br />

and the offensive line. I wanted<br />

him to have a chance, he more<br />

than deserved it.”<br />

A 2-time Catholic Central<br />

Conference Most Valuable<br />

Player, Lynn Item, Salem News<br />

and Boston Globe Player of the<br />

Year, Tarr moved on to Bentley,<br />

where, after a redshirt freshman<br />

year, he was the Falcons’ leading<br />

rusher (in a pass-crazed offensive<br />

scheme) his last three seasons in<br />

spite of the fact that dogged by<br />

injuries and illness.<br />

For much of his Fenwick career,<br />

Tarr also played hurt with a<br />

hip injury, yet played through the<br />

pain and never complained. He<br />

had surgery during his senior year<br />

and missed the spring lacrosse<br />

season to be ready for the fall<br />

football season.<br />

Unfortunately, it didn’t work<br />

out that way. Shortly after arriving<br />

at Bentley, Tarr was sent<br />

home with what was thought to<br />

be a bad cold. He woke up that<br />

night with severe chest pain, and<br />

his mother took him to Anna<br />

Jaques Hospital in Newburyport.<br />

He was whisked by ambulance to<br />

Massachusetts General Hospital<br />

after doctors thought he was<br />

having a heart attack. The diagnosis<br />

was myocarditis, an inflammation<br />

of the heart muscle,<br />

bringing an end to his freshman<br />

season.<br />

He returned to the team in 2010<br />

and led the Falcons with 590<br />

rushing yards and three touchdowns<br />

on 95 carries.<br />

The following season was his<br />

best. He rushed for 860 yards and<br />

five touchdowns and also caught<br />

<strong>11</strong> passes for another 72 yards.<br />

During his final season in 2012<br />

Tarr led the Falcons to an 8-2 record,<br />

rushing for a team-best 482<br />

yards on 104 carries with five<br />

touchdowns along with another<br />

120 yards on five receptions and<br />

one touchdown.<br />

And he did it all while battling<br />

through a concussion and<br />

mononucleosis.<br />

“I was pretty lucky in spite of<br />

all that and the heart problem,”<br />

said Tarr. “They caught the heart<br />

infection early, and it was just a<br />

matter of time and rest, and I was<br />

back working out by December.”<br />

Tarr left Bentley as the fifth<br />

leading rusher in program history.<br />

His accomplishments and dedication<br />

were recognized in 2012 with<br />

the Jerry Nason Award for Senior<br />

Achievement, an award reserved<br />

for a member of the senior class<br />

who persevered through extreme<br />

adversity.<br />

Beverly<br />

978-927-0032<br />

North Reading<br />

978-664-3310<br />

Plaistow, NH<br />

603-382-1535<br />

This year,<br />

may you build memories<br />

that last a lifetime.<br />

Happy Thanksgiving<br />

MOYNIHAN LUMBER<br />

www.moynihanlumber.com


T20 WEEKLYNEWS.NET - 978-532-5880 THANKSGIVING FOOTBALL<br />

2017 Bishop Fenwick Football<br />

Injuries were a key factor in the Bishop Fenwick’s football team’s season.<br />

Crusaders roster<br />

PHOTO | BISHOP FENWICK<br />

2 Nate Minaya WR/DB Junior<br />

5 Cory Bright (C) QB/LB Junior<br />

7 Dylan Mullen WR/DB Senior<br />

8 Jonathan Balan RB/DB Junior<br />

10 Keegan O’Connor WR/DB Junior<br />

<strong>11</strong> George Fiskatoris WR/DB Junior<br />

12 Derek DelVecchio QB/DB Junior<br />

14 Dan McGrath TE/LB Soph.<br />

20 Stefano Fabiano WR/DB Fresh.<br />

21 Teddy Wilson WR/DB Soph.<br />

22 Carl Thomas WR/DB Soph.<br />

<strong>23</strong> Rob Favuzza WR/DB Soph.<br />

28 Jake Miano QB/LB Soph.<br />

30 David Cifuentes RB/LB Soph.<br />

31 Domenic Paoloa WR/DB Junior<br />

32 Mateo Cifuentes WR/DB Senior<br />

33 Luis Naranjo RB/LB Senior<br />

34 Angel Martinez RB/DB Fresh.<br />

40 Brandon Kenney RB/LB Senior<br />

41 Tucker Destino QB/DE Fresh.<br />

42 Chrys Wilson QB/LB Fresh.<br />

43 Andrew Wilson RB/LB Fresh.<br />

50 Matthew DiBiase WR/DE Senior<br />

51 Harrison Mandragouras OL/DL Junior<br />

52 Luke Deschenes OL/DB Senior<br />

53 Sonny Gosselin OL/DL Soph.<br />

54 Ian Connor OL/LB Junior<br />

55 Tom MacDonald OL/DL Junior<br />

56 Thomas Hazard OL/DL Soph.<br />

61 Eddie Krouse OL/DL Junior<br />

63 Carter George OL/DL Junior<br />

64 Colin Cargill OL/DL Senior<br />

70 Matt Juneau OL/DL Fresh.<br />

71 Andrew Wallace OL/DL Soph.<br />

73 C.J. MacAskill OL/DL Senior<br />

74 Tim Lee OL/DL Soph.<br />

75 Jaycob Reynoso (C) OL/DL Senior<br />

76 Sebastian Balan OL/DL Senior<br />

80 Matt Bower RB/LB Soph.<br />

81 Dan Richard TE/DE Fresh.<br />

82 Chris Fisher TE/DE Senior<br />

83 Ethan Gonzales TE/DE Soph.<br />

84 Michael Sellards (C) TE/LB Senior<br />

HEAD COACH<br />

Dave Woods<br />

Where opportunity and achievement meet.


THANKSGIVING FOOTBALL WEEKLYNEWS.NET - 978-532-5880 T21<br />

Bishop Fenwick cheerleaders and captains<br />

PHOTOS | BISHOP FENWICK<br />

Above, the 2017 Bishop Fenwick cheerleading squad. At left are captains Devin Rich, Mikayla Draicevic, Samantha<br />

Cambria. Below, from left, co-captain Cory Bright, coach Dave Woods, and co-captains Jaycob Reynoso and Michael<br />

Sellards.<br />

Date Opponent Score<br />

9/9 at Hamilton-Wenham 21-0 L<br />

9/15 Dedham 20-14 L<br />

9/<strong>23</strong> at Pentucket 20-14 W<br />

9/28 at Arlington Catholic 28-14 L<br />

10/6 Archbishop Williams 41-20 L<br />

10/13 Austin Prep 35-8 W<br />

10/21 at Cardinal Spellman 30-20 L<br />

10/28 Northeast Voke 42-12 W<br />

<strong>11</strong>/3 Essex Tech 26-19 W<br />

<strong>11</strong>/10 Triton 26-0 L<br />

Thanksgiving Eve<br />

<strong>11</strong>/24 at St. Mary’s 7 p.m.<br />

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Happy Thanksgiving<br />

and good luck to the teams!


T22 WEEKLYNEWS.NET - 978-532-5880 THANKSGIVING FOOTBALL<br />

2017 St. John’s Prep Football<br />

The 2017 St. John’s Prep football team sits against the backdrop of Xavier Hall on the Eagles’ Danvers campus.<br />

Eagles Roster<br />

PHOTO | ST. JOHN’S PREP<br />

1 Pedro Sousa Senior<br />

2 Aise Pream Junior<br />

4 Mike Yarin Senior<br />

5 Wes Rockett Junior<br />

6 Max Baker Senior<br />

7 Matthew Scolaro Senior<br />

8 Luke George Senior<br />

9 Will Potdevin Junior<br />

10 Matthew Crowley Soph.<br />

<strong>11</strong> Cole Rinklin Soph.<br />

12 Vincent Dalai Senior<br />

13 Aidan McKernan Soph.<br />

14 Sean Walsh Junior<br />

15 Dan Taylor Senior<br />

16 Robert Markus Soph.<br />

17 Alex Viachos Junior<br />

18 Luke Brennan Junior<br />

19 Antaei Rosa Junior<br />

20 Matthew Duchemin Soph.<br />

21 Russell Rinklin Junior<br />

22 Rich Hart Senior<br />

<strong>23</strong> Richie Williams Soph.<br />

24 Trent Tully Junior<br />

25 John Wilmont Soph.<br />

26 Patrick Niati Soph.<br />

27 Eddie Hardiman Junior<br />

28 Nick Vecchi Senior<br />

29 Brandon Caniff Soph.<br />

30 Robert Schneiders Soph.<br />

31 Robert Clark Soph.<br />

32 Nick Baldini Soph.<br />

33 James Hanley Junior<br />

34 John Merrigan Senior<br />

35 Chris Femino Senior<br />

36 Trevaughn Wright-Reynolds Senior<br />

37 Evan Ypilantis Soph.<br />

38 Brendan Kane Soph.<br />

39 Noah Thomas Fresh.<br />

40 Conor McCarthy Senior<br />

41 Charles Ahern Senior<br />

42 Ethan Chenard Soph.<br />

43 Jayzel Pina Fresh.<br />

44 Patrick Keefe Junior<br />

45 Sean Letarte Junior<br />

46 Cole Collins Soph.<br />

47 John Fallon Soph.<br />

48 Sean Bellamy Soph.<br />

49 Jonathan Neal Junior<br />

50 Jack Murphy Junior<br />

51 Liam Fabbri Soph.<br />

52 Ben Grunes Junior<br />

53 Cooper Smith Soph.<br />

54 David Przybycien Junior<br />

55 Colten Tangney Junior<br />

56 Josh Polese Senior<br />

57 Jack McDonald Soph.<br />

58 Jack McDermott Junior<br />

59 Kiernan Patch Soph.<br />

60 William Moulton Junior<br />

61 Theo Hutt Soph.<br />

62 Cullen Zampell Senior<br />

63 Griffin Fogarty Soph.<br />

64 James Taylor Junior<br />

65 Evan Doheny Soph.<br />

66 Connor Finch Soph.<br />

67 Nathan Marconi Soph.<br />

68 Mason Davis Soph.<br />

69 Scott Raess Soph.<br />

70 Nathan Beucler Junior<br />

71 Darryl Matvichuk Junior<br />

72 Will Cherry Senior<br />

73 Kevin Dewing Junior<br />

74 Aidan Wilkinson Soph.<br />

75 Thomas Keane Soph.<br />

76 Cameron Keezer Senior<br />

77 Daniel Hornby Soph.<br />

78 Zak Zinter Soph.<br />

79 David Gaudin Senior<br />

80 Nicholas Masterson Soph.<br />

81 William Nardone Junior<br />

82 John Batholomew Soph.<br />

83 Ryan Meleedy Junior<br />

83 Antonio Zarur Soph.<br />

84 Patrick Sweetnam Senior<br />

85 Anthony Fagan Soph.<br />

86 John Walsh Junior<br />

87 Michael Slattery Senior<br />

88 Alex Lane Junior<br />

89 Daniel Delaus Soph.<br />

90 Harrison Greenslade Soph.<br />

91 Jonathan Jenkins Junior<br />

92 Michael Fonda Soph.<br />

93 Alex Rizza Senior<br />

94 Charles Giunta Junior<br />

95 Michael McShane Senior<br />

96 Ian Smith Junior<br />

97 Brandon Robinson Junior<br />

98 Chadem Barnes-Felix Senior<br />

99 Liam Farrell Soph.<br />

99 Andrew Kennefick Soph.<br />

HEAD COACH<br />

Brian St. Pierre<br />

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Fall Classes start Sept. 6th


THANKSGIVING FOOTBALL WEEKLYNEWS.NET - 978-532-5880 T<strong>23</strong><br />

Scenes from a historic autumn at The Prep<br />

PHOTOS | ST. JOHN’S PREP<br />

The new field at the St. John’s<br />

Prep athletici complex was<br />

named for former coach Fred<br />

Glatz at a ceremony in September.<br />

At left, Mike Yarin (4) and<br />

Michael Slatter escort Glatz<br />

onto the field at the beginning<br />

of the ceremony, with the new<br />

health and wellness center in the<br />

background. At right, St. John’s<br />

players emerge from the tunnel<br />

that leads to the field for the<br />

first game, which was Sept. <strong>23</strong>,<br />

against Everett.<br />

Coach Brian St. Pierre confers with sophomore quarterback Matt Crowley.<br />

The sophomore took over for an injured Mike Yarin in the third game of the<br />

season and kept the job for the rest of the fall.<br />

Mike Yarin, who began the season as the quarterback, was moved to receiver midway through the<br />

season. Above, he runs for some after-catch yardage against Malden Catholic on homecoming night.<br />

Date Opponent Score<br />

9/9 at Haverhill 27-0 W<br />

9/15 at Central Catholic 21-0 L<br />

9/<strong>23</strong> Everett 42-28 L<br />

9/30 Malden Catholic 35-0 W<br />

10/6 at Catholic Memorial 35-17 W<br />

10/13 at BC HIgh 20-13 L<br />

10/20 Bridge-Raynham 20-14 L<br />

<strong>11</strong>/3 at Lowell 28-21 W<br />

<strong>11</strong>/10 Andover 55-6 W<br />

Division 1 North playoffs<br />

10/27 at Everett (QF) 49-14 L<br />

Thanksgiving Day<br />

<strong>11</strong>/<strong>23</strong> Xaverian 10:15 a.m.<br />

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T24 WEEKLYNEWS.NET - 978-532-5880 THANKSGIVING FOOTBALL<br />

Go Tanners!<br />

From a <strong>Peabody</strong> High<br />

Alumnus ’70.<br />

Cheerleader for Class A<br />

Champs ‘69<br />

Joyce Cucchiara<br />

Cell: 978-808-1597<br />

Email: Joyce.Cucchiara@NEMoves.com<br />

Happy<br />

Thanksgiving!<br />

From a PHS Grad<br />

and Lynnfield Resident!<br />

Louise Bova-Touchette<br />

Cell: 617-605-0555<br />

Email: Louise.Touchette@nemoves.com<br />

Best Wishes for<br />

a Happy<br />

Thanksgiving!<br />

Evelyn Rockas<br />

Cell: 617-256-8500<br />

Email: evelyn.rockas@nemoves.com<br />

Go Pioneers!<br />

From a Lynnfield High<br />

Alumnus ‘84.<br />

Cheerleader for ’84 Champs<br />

Nikki Cappadona Martin<br />

Cell: 781-710-1440<br />

nikki.martin@nemoves.com<br />

Get That<br />

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Happy Thanksgiving<br />

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Happy Thanksgiving!<br />

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Have a Healthy<br />

Happy Holiday<br />

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Have a happy, healthy,<br />

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Holiday Season<br />

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Go Tanners!<br />

Wishing you all a healthy<br />

Thanksgiving Holiday<br />

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Direct: 617-650-3349<br />

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Enjoy the warmth<br />

and love of your family<br />

during this holiday season<br />

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Wishing everyone a happy<br />

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GO PATRIOTS!<br />

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Christopher Polak, VP/Managing Broker<br />

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