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LYNNFIELD<br />
WEEKLY NEWS<br />
Serving the community since 1957<br />
JANUARY <strong>18</strong>, 20<strong>18</strong> • VOL. 62, NO. 3<br />
16 PAGES • ONE DOLLAR<br />
Textile recycling<br />
brings money to PTOs<br />
By Adam Swift<br />
Editor<br />
The <strong>Lynnfield</strong> schools have<br />
recycled over 38,000 pounds<br />
of textiles as part of a program<br />
that’s brought in $2,175<br />
to the district’s parent teacher<br />
organizations.<br />
Since last April, Pembroke-based<br />
Bay State Textiles<br />
have worked with the schools to<br />
collect unwanted textile recyclables<br />
from boxes in front of each<br />
of the district’s four schools.<br />
“The focus of the program<br />
is to spread awareness to the<br />
problem of unwanted textiles,”<br />
said Kathryn Larsen, the<br />
Massachusetts recycling development<br />
coordinator for Bay<br />
PRSRT STD<br />
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POSTAL CUSTOMER<br />
LYNNFIELD, MA 01940<br />
WOBURN, MA<br />
State Textiles. “In Massachusetts<br />
alone, there is 520 million<br />
pounds of textiles, such as<br />
clothing, shoes, pocketbooks,<br />
linens, stuffed animals, or anything<br />
with a fabric base, that<br />
ends up in our waste stream.”<br />
Larsen said up to 95 percent<br />
of that material can be<br />
recycled or reused.<br />
“By working with the<br />
schools, we help to spread<br />
awareness of that,” she said.<br />
The boxes in front of the<br />
schools are emptied out weekly,<br />
and Bay State Textiles<br />
sends rebate checks to the<br />
school PTOs monthly.<br />
“Since April 14, the program<br />
has collected over 38,000<br />
pounds, generating over $1,900<br />
for the PTOs,” Larsen said.<br />
In addition to the monthly<br />
rebates, Larsen’s company<br />
sponsored a back-to-school<br />
drive where the schools<br />
earned an additional $275<br />
for collecting nearly <strong>18</strong>,000<br />
pounds of textiles between<br />
Sept. 1 and Dec. 30.<br />
Superintendent Jane<br />
Tremblay said the partnership<br />
with Bay State Textiles<br />
has been a success.<br />
“One of the reasons we decided<br />
to start this program<br />
was to bring in some revenue<br />
to really help support our parent<br />
speaker series,” said the<br />
superintendent.<br />
THE 2017 ESSEX MEDIA GROUP<br />
PERSONS OF THE YEAR<br />
Essex Media Group, which publishes the <strong>Lynnfield</strong> Weekly News and seven other titles,<br />
named its inaugural Persons of the Year for the 10 communities it covers. We asked one<br />
question in making our choices: Did the person or persons make a positive impact on their<br />
community? The selectees vary in age, gender, and occupation, but share a common theme:<br />
all have gone above and beyond to make their community a better place. In <strong>Lynnfield</strong> the<br />
choice couldn’t be limited to a single person.<br />
<strong>Lynnfield</strong> for Love<br />
ITEM PHOTO | SPENSER HASAK<br />
Spreading love, peace, and harmony<br />
By Adam Swift<br />
Editor<br />
In the aftermath of a divisive<br />
political season in 2016,<br />
a group of local residents<br />
came together to promote<br />
love and unity.<br />
Over the course of 2017,<br />
<strong>Lynnfield</strong> for Love helped organize<br />
and host a Racial Amity<br />
Day, created a Kindness<br />
Rocks garden at Market-<br />
Street, and held a multicultural<br />
fair with the <strong>Lynnfield</strong><br />
Cultural Council.<br />
“The group started in the<br />
aftermath of the election,”<br />
said <strong>Lynnfield</strong> for Love<br />
LYNNFIELD, Page 3<br />
Page 2: Letter to the editor<br />
Page 2: <strong>Lynnfield</strong> yoga teacher making a difference in Lynn schools<br />
Page 3: Selectmen split on planner<br />
Page 9: Boys hockey saves its best for last in Triton tie<br />
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2 WEEKLYNEWS.NET - 978-532-5880 JANUARY <strong>18</strong>, 20<strong>18</strong><br />
INDEX<br />
Classifieds ...........................................................................14-16<br />
Police Log ...................................................................................4<br />
Real Estate ..........................................................................14-16<br />
Religious Notes ..........................................................................8<br />
Seniors .......................................................................................6<br />
Sports ....................................................................................9-12<br />
Letter to the editor<br />
Quick action during flood<br />
Last Tuesday, Jan. 9, the<br />
water pipe in the basement<br />
of the Reedy Meadow GC at<br />
195 Summer St <strong>Lynnfield</strong><br />
burst from the extreme cold<br />
and there was 41/2 to 5 feet of<br />
water in the basement and I<br />
called the <strong>Lynnfield</strong> Fire Department<br />
and Center Water<br />
District. The South Station<br />
Fire responded under the<br />
leadership of Lt. Jim Alexander<br />
and his crew and they did<br />
a tremendous job pumping<br />
out our basement in quick<br />
fashion. Ken Burnham from<br />
the Water District and and<br />
his men also did a great job.<br />
I am extremely thankful to<br />
both <strong>Lynnfield</strong> Departments<br />
for there fast and professional<br />
service.<br />
Donnie Lyons PGA<br />
Professional-Director of<br />
Golf Town of <strong>Lynnfield</strong><br />
<strong>Lynnfield</strong> resident is the<br />
featured vocalist for Amazon<br />
Prime’s new hit TV series<br />
Local resident Noel Smith<br />
is the featured vocalist for<br />
Philip K. Dick’s “Electric<br />
Dreams” - Amazon Prime’s<br />
new hit TV series that premiered<br />
on January 12th.<br />
Noel’s haunting and unmistakable<br />
vocals can be heard<br />
throughout Episode 2 (AutoFac)<br />
and in the trailer for<br />
all shows in the series. The<br />
series itself touts an all-star<br />
cast with top Hollywood talent<br />
like Bryan Cranston and<br />
Steve Buscemi. Each episode<br />
tells a different story and<br />
that explores fantasy, humanity<br />
and a future no one<br />
could have imagined.<br />
Noel worked with composers<br />
Mark Isham who did<br />
the music for the ABC series<br />
“Once Upon a Time” and Brian<br />
Transeau who composed<br />
and developed the music for<br />
the blockbuster movies “The<br />
Fast and the Furious” and<br />
“Monster”.<br />
Lending her voice to big<br />
picture projects is nothing<br />
new for Noel. Recently,<br />
she recorded for the movie<br />
“Solace” starring Anthony<br />
Hopkins and Collin Farrell.<br />
In addition, Noel sings for<br />
the international a-cappella<br />
group Naturally 7 and her<br />
songs have been placed in<br />
high-budget video games.<br />
Noel maintains a private<br />
voice studio in <strong>Lynnfield</strong><br />
and is on the voice faculty at<br />
Walnut Hill School for Performing<br />
Arts. She directs an<br />
in-house recording choir, Vox<br />
Futura, for Futura Productions<br />
located in Roslindale,<br />
where they record for major<br />
films, video games and tv.<br />
Looking for past issues?<br />
Find them on weeklynews.net<br />
<strong>Lynnfield</strong> yoga teacher making<br />
a difference in Lynn schools<br />
By Gayla Cawley<br />
As part of their education,<br />
students in Lynn Public<br />
Schools are being taught to<br />
remain calm and deal with<br />
stress through the district’s<br />
yoga and wellness initiative<br />
with the help of a <strong>Lynnfield</strong><br />
yoga teacher.<br />
“This program is part of<br />
our work to facilitate the social<br />
and emotional wellbeing<br />
of our students,” said Superintendent<br />
Dr. Catherine<br />
Latham in an email. “I have<br />
received much positive feedback<br />
from teachers and students.”<br />
Michael Geary, assistant<br />
director of curriculum and<br />
instruction-health, said the<br />
Lynn Public Schools Yoga<br />
and Wellness Initiative is in<br />
its third year. He said physical<br />
education teachers have<br />
received professional development<br />
to incorporate yoga<br />
within classes — those teachers<br />
are subsequently able to<br />
teach students how to improve<br />
flexibility and muscle<br />
tone through yoga poses and<br />
exercises.<br />
“Yoga by definition is the<br />
union of body and mind, and<br />
another purpose of the Yoga<br />
and Wellness Initiative is to<br />
teach students how to remain<br />
calm in stressful situations,”<br />
Geary said in a statement.<br />
Geary said the initiative<br />
has expanded to include regular<br />
education teachers at<br />
Thurgood Marshall Middle<br />
School and Lynn Classical<br />
High School. Next year, the<br />
initiative will be expanding to<br />
other elementary regular education<br />
teachers and students.<br />
“The decision was based<br />
on research that shows<br />
mindfulness increases energy<br />
and improves mood while<br />
relieving stress and tension,”<br />
Geary said. “Teachers at<br />
these schools (Thurgood and<br />
Lynn Classical) have discovered<br />
different methods to include<br />
mindfulness into their<br />
everyday instruction.<br />
“These methods include<br />
controlled breathing and<br />
meditation techniques, which<br />
are designed to increase oxygen<br />
in the brain, calming the<br />
nervous system and releasing<br />
stress. Intentional breathing<br />
energizes the brain to allow<br />
students to learn for extended<br />
periods of time.”<br />
Providing teachers with<br />
that professional development<br />
has been Sharon Marrama,<br />
a certified yoga instructor<br />
and owner of Here<br />
Comes the Sun Yoga — Marrama<br />
also works with other<br />
school districts, including<br />
<strong>Lynnfield</strong>. She has been<br />
practicing yoga for six years<br />
and teaching for about five.<br />
Colleen Peterson, a PE/<br />
health teacher at Lynn Classical,<br />
said she started yoga<br />
in her curriculum last year<br />
PHOTO | OWEN O’ROURKE<br />
Sharon Marrama teaching a yoga class at Lynn Classical High School.<br />
after receiving extensive professional<br />
development from<br />
Marrama.<br />
These days, Peterson said<br />
students are dealing with<br />
so much between school and<br />
their personal lives, and<br />
therefore, have a lot of stress<br />
and anxiety.<br />
“It’s like a release,” Peterson<br />
said.<br />
But it’s not just PE/health<br />
teachers incorporating yoga<br />
and wellness into their classrooms,<br />
Peterson said. She’s<br />
seen a lot of other teachers<br />
doing a lot of the little things<br />
with their classes, including<br />
aspects of mindfulness and<br />
meditation.<br />
Marrama said the school<br />
administration has been completely<br />
behind the initiative,<br />
which makes it so successful<br />
in Lynn. She educates teachers<br />
about yoga and wellness,<br />
and those teachers can then<br />
bring those techniques into<br />
their classrooms.<br />
She said teachers don’t<br />
have to incorporate an entire<br />
yoga or meditation class —<br />
she teaches them about little<br />
pieces, such as yoga moves at<br />
desks, movement and brain<br />
breaks to use if things become<br />
unsettled in class.<br />
Horman Carcamo, 15, a<br />
freshman at Lynn Classical,<br />
said yoga has helped him to<br />
keep calm during stress. He<br />
said it feels good to do the exercise<br />
and poses.<br />
Victor Garcia, 15, a sophomore<br />
at Lynn Classical, said<br />
yoga in school has helped<br />
him calm down and focus. He<br />
said he runs track, and it also<br />
allows him muscle relief.<br />
Through the curriculum,<br />
Marrama said students learn<br />
how to breathe and calm<br />
themselves — by inhaling,<br />
she said the part of the brain<br />
that becomes energized is<br />
activated and by exhaling,<br />
the part of the brain that becomes<br />
relaxed is activated.<br />
So, she said by exhaling a little<br />
bit longer, a relaxed state<br />
of mind can be created.<br />
Marrama said she also<br />
works on teaching two things<br />
— “let it come, let it go, let it<br />
flow, which teaches students<br />
to let things come to them,<br />
accept it and let it go, and<br />
also that they are in charge<br />
of what happens to them.<br />
“The other thing that I<br />
think kids get out of this is<br />
yoga is a philosophy as well,”<br />
Marrama said. “I also teach<br />
in my yoga classes a component<br />
of whether it’s peace,<br />
love, kindness, honesty, understanding,<br />
compassion,<br />
gratitude. I’m teaching them<br />
to live yoga on and off the<br />
mat and that’s what I think<br />
this is doing.”<br />
Joshua Hernandez, 14, a<br />
freshman at Lynn Classical,<br />
also talked about how yoga<br />
relieves his stress and allows<br />
him to feel more calm.<br />
Freshman Bruce Leng,<br />
14, said he was dealing with<br />
personal problems before he<br />
started yoga.<br />
“After that, I felt a lot of<br />
weight lifted off my shoulders,”<br />
Leng said.<br />
Marrama said yoga can<br />
be settling for kids, a way for<br />
them to become more centered<br />
and focused, and to deal<br />
with anger and emotions.<br />
“I’m not going to say take<br />
a yoga class and you’re going<br />
to become a great student,”<br />
Marrama said. “I think (it)<br />
brings a mindset. I think<br />
when you practice yoga on<br />
a regular basis, it brings a<br />
different mindset. You learn<br />
how to control your feelings<br />
and your emotions. You learn<br />
to center yourself. You learn<br />
that you’re important.”
JANUARY <strong>18</strong>, 20<strong>18</strong> WEEKLYNEWS.NET - 978-532-5880 3<br />
THE 2017 ESSEX MEDIA GROUP<br />
PERSONS OF THE YEAR<br />
Spreading love, peace, and harmony<br />
LYNNFIELD<br />
From Page 1<br />
founder Jennifer Lupien,<br />
and the town’s Person of<br />
the Year. “I was looking for<br />
someone to speak up, and I<br />
posted that on a Facebook<br />
community group. We spoke<br />
about our experiences in<br />
<strong>Lynnfield</strong>, both positive as<br />
well as a little bit of the<br />
negative that you find in<br />
<strong>Lynnfield</strong> and everywhere<br />
else.”<br />
From that posting came<br />
a group of residents who<br />
held an informal meeting at<br />
Whole Foods. Rather than<br />
diving too deeply into the<br />
partisan political end of<br />
things, that meeting evolved<br />
into <strong>Lynnfield</strong> for Love.<br />
With a mission of spreading<br />
love, peace, and harmony,<br />
the group kicked off its<br />
first public event on the<br />
town common with a One<br />
Love celebration. Participants<br />
filled eggs with kind<br />
messages to “egg” the fire<br />
and police station. Other<br />
activities included writing<br />
letters of love to veterans,<br />
refugees, and children in<br />
hospitals and making kindness<br />
rocks for the kindness<br />
rock garden at Market-<br />
Street.<br />
“After that, we held a race<br />
amity day to celebrate all<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 />
types of friendship, we held<br />
a vigil after Charlottesville<br />
(the white supremacist/Neo<br />
Nazi rally in the Virginia<br />
town in August) at the town<br />
hall, and we held our multicultural<br />
event with the <strong>Lynnfield</strong><br />
Cultural Council, which<br />
was our big event,” said Lupien.<br />
There are no official membership<br />
numbers for <strong>Lynnfield</strong><br />
for Love. Lupien said<br />
there are about eight to a<br />
dozen members who play a<br />
key role in many events, with<br />
many dozens more who have<br />
volunteered or lent a hand in<br />
the past year.<br />
Those numbers don’t include<br />
the numerous town<br />
officials who have lent a<br />
hand to the group, and the<br />
residents who attended a<br />
<strong>Lynnfield</strong> for Love event in<br />
2017.<br />
“Selectman Chris Barrett<br />
has been very helpful<br />
when we’ve had questions,”<br />
said Lupien. “He’s provided<br />
us with a lot of insight and<br />
helped us when we had any<br />
roadblocks.”<br />
Barrett said he appreciates<br />
the message the group<br />
helps spread throughout the<br />
town.<br />
“In a world filled with<br />
many challenges, the town<br />
of <strong>Lynnfield</strong> can take great<br />
pride in this group, led by<br />
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dedicated adults and children,<br />
who are always ready<br />
and willing to go above and<br />
beyond to make sure we<br />
continue to move forward<br />
in a positive direction,” said<br />
the selectman. “This group<br />
is an example that even in<br />
small towns like <strong>Lynnfield</strong>,<br />
there is much we can do to<br />
help make the world a better<br />
place. We are grateful as<br />
a community that <strong>Lynnfield</strong><br />
for Love has laid a strong<br />
foundation for us to create<br />
new and enduring friendships<br />
among all of our residents.”<br />
This year, Lupien said one<br />
of the main goals for <strong>Lynnfield</strong><br />
for Love is earning<br />
non-profit status. She said<br />
she also expects there to be<br />
more events like the One<br />
Love event and the multicultural<br />
celebration with the<br />
cultural council.<br />
“We want to be inclusive<br />
for the whole community and<br />
we want to show love and acceptance<br />
for all people,” she<br />
said.<br />
We Have Your<br />
Number.<br />
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Selectmen split on planner<br />
By Adam Swift<br />
Editor<br />
Selectmen are split on funding<br />
a full-time town planner.<br />
In their proposed budget for the<br />
next fiscal year, planning board<br />
members are recommending the<br />
town fund a town planner to the<br />
tune of $65,000. Currently, a planning<br />
and land use assistant with<br />
a budgeted salary of just under<br />
$49,000, helps the board with<br />
planning and administrative work.<br />
“We think the town is at a<br />
point … where it is appropriate to<br />
have someone who is a true town<br />
planner both by experience and<br />
training,” said Brian Charville,<br />
the planning board chairman.<br />
A planner would be more proactive<br />
with development and also<br />
help with projects such as the current<br />
update of the town’s master<br />
plan, Charville said.<br />
Selectmen Chairman<br />
Christopher Barrett and selectman<br />
Richard Dalton said they would be<br />
inclined to support the position,<br />
while selectman Philip Crawford<br />
said he’s still on the fence.<br />
“I like that it would be more<br />
proactive than reactive,” said<br />
Barrett. “As we look at <strong>Lynnfield</strong><br />
in the years ahead, I think it is an<br />
important position.”<br />
Crawford said that the town is<br />
already substantially built out,<br />
and there might not be a great<br />
need for a full-time planner.<br />
“It doesn’t really lend itself to a<br />
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town the size of <strong>Lynnfield</strong>, where<br />
our development side is already<br />
there,” he said. “I don’t know if<br />
that is the best place to spend an<br />
additional $20,000 to $25,000. I<br />
think we can find someone to run<br />
the current position without going<br />
to a full-time planner.”<br />
The previous planning and land<br />
use assistant retired last year.<br />
Dalton, who was on the planning<br />
board for a dozen years, said<br />
the position is long overdue.<br />
“In traveling over the state and<br />
dealing with other municipalities,<br />
it is not uncommon for towns of<br />
this size to have a town planner,”<br />
he said.<br />
The recommended salary for a<br />
planner in <strong>Lynnfield</strong> was in part<br />
determined by a 2016 advertisement<br />
for a full-time planner in<br />
Georgetown, Charville said.<br />
Selectmen will make an official<br />
budget recommendation on<br />
all department budget requests<br />
closer to the annual town meeting<br />
in April.<br />
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4 WEEKLYNEWS.NET - 978-532-5880 JANUARY <strong>18</strong>, 20<strong>18</strong><br />
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Mailing Address: P.O. Box 5, Lynn, MA 01903<br />
News and Advertising Offices: 110 Munroe St., Lynn, MA 01901<br />
Office Hours: 8 a.m. to 5 p.m., Monday through Friday<br />
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Deadlines: News: Monday, noon; Display Ads: Monday, noon;<br />
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The <strong>Lynnfield</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>Lynnfield</strong><br />
Weekly News is delivered via US Mail to all homes and businesses in <strong>Lynnfield</strong>. It<br />
is also available in several locations throughout <strong>Lynnfield</strong>. The <strong>Lynnfield</strong> Weekly<br />
News will not be responsible for typographical or other errors in advertisements, but<br />
will reprint that part of an advertisement in which a typographical error occurs if<br />
notified immediately. Advertisers must notify the <strong>Lynnfield</strong> Weekly News of any<br />
errors in advertisements on the FIRST day of insertion. The publisher reserves the<br />
right to reject, omit or edit any copy offered for publication. POSTMASTER: Send<br />
address changes to <strong>Lynnfield</strong> Weekly News, P.O. Box 5, Lynn, MA 01903. © 2016<br />
Essex Media Group, Inc.<br />
Recreation department<br />
hosts open gym nights<br />
The <strong>Lynnfield</strong> Recreation<br />
Department is hosting<br />
non-competitive open gym<br />
nights at the Huckleberry<br />
Hill Elementary School.<br />
Parents can drop off their<br />
children to be supervised by<br />
recreation staff, or they can<br />
stay for no additional cost.<br />
The children will play games<br />
such as kickball, wiffle ball,<br />
and basketball with friends.<br />
Enrollment is limited to 20<br />
children with a minimum of<br />
10 participants for the program<br />
to run.<br />
The Wednesday session<br />
for preschool and elementary<br />
children is on Jan. 24, 31 and<br />
Feb. 7 and 14 from 6:30 - 7:30<br />
Child/senior bowling<br />
day at Kings<br />
The recreation department<br />
welcomes seniors and children<br />
for an afternoon of bowling fun<br />
on Wednesday, Jan. 31 at Kings<br />
at MarketStreet. Participants<br />
can come with their favorite senior<br />
or child or be teamed up to<br />
meet new friends.<br />
The event is $5 per person<br />
A TRADITION OF TRUST, CARING & PROFESSIONAL SERVICE TO THE COMMUNITY SINCE 1952<br />
▲ Service to all faiths<br />
▲ Complete Pre-Need Planning<br />
▲ Medicaid Approved Trust &<br />
Insurance Plans<br />
19 YALE AVE.,<br />
WAKEFIELD, MASS.<br />
▲ Spacious Modern Facilities<br />
▲ Ample Private Parking<br />
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Area Code 781<br />
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Conveniently Located off Exit 39 (North Ave.) Rt. 128<br />
Have a story to share?<br />
Need a question answered?<br />
contactus@essexmedia.group<br />
p.m. and costs $25.<br />
The Friday session for<br />
middle and high school children<br />
is Jan. 26 and Feb. 2, 9,<br />
and 16 fro, 6:30 - 7:30 p.m.<br />
and also costs $25.<br />
Registration is online at<br />
www.lynnfieldrec.com. Any<br />
questions, contact recreation<br />
director Julie Mallett<br />
at jmallet@town.lynnfield.<br />
ma.us or at (781) 334-9488.<br />
The recreation department<br />
is also running a bowling<br />
program at Kings on<br />
MarketStreet on Mondays.<br />
The program is $60 for eight<br />
weeks for boys and girls in<br />
grades 5 through 12.<br />
and includes bowling and<br />
shoes. Space is limited to the<br />
first 32 bowlers to sign up.<br />
Registration is available<br />
online at www.lynnfieldrec.<br />
com, or by contacting recreation<br />
director Julie Mallett<br />
at (781) 334-9488 or jmallett@town.lynnfield.ma.us.<br />
Tuesday, Jan. 9<br />
At 9:11 a.m., there was a<br />
motor vehicle accident on Salem<br />
Street.<br />
At 11:48 a.m., police assisted<br />
with water in the basement<br />
on Summer Street.<br />
At 12:15 p.m., there was<br />
a motor vehicle accident at<br />
Condon Circle.<br />
At 7:02 p.m., there was a<br />
motor vehicle accident with<br />
personal injury on Summer<br />
Street.<br />
Wednesday, Jan. 10<br />
At 7:20 a.m., there was a<br />
suspicious automobile on Edward<br />
Avenue.<br />
At 12:<strong>18</strong> p.m., there was a<br />
report of a suspicious person<br />
on Longbow Road.<br />
At 3:10 p.m., there was a<br />
motor vehicle accident with<br />
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Salmon Burger 4oz<br />
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• Thai Ginger Salmon Portions<br />
Clam Chowder, Pint<br />
• Fish Chowder, Pint<br />
• Soup du joir<br />
Bake Stuffed Lobster 1.5lb<br />
• Stuffed Clams - Home Style<br />
• Haddock Casserole<br />
• Seafood Casserole<br />
• Boiled Lobster<br />
property damage on North<br />
Broadway.<br />
Thursday, Jan. 11<br />
At 5:22 p.m., there was a<br />
report of a lost pocketbook on<br />
Market Street.<br />
At 8:56 p.m., there were<br />
motor vehicle violations on<br />
Main Street.<br />
Friday, Jan. 12<br />
At 6:41 a.m., there was a<br />
motor vehicle accident with<br />
property damage on <strong>Lynnfield</strong><br />
Street.<br />
At 10:56 a.m., there was a<br />
motor vehicle accident with<br />
property damage on South<br />
Broadway.<br />
At 1:43 p.m., there was a<br />
motor vehicle accident with<br />
personal injury on Walnut<br />
Street.<br />
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• Oysters<br />
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Live Lobsters<br />
call for market price<br />
At 7:08 p.m., there was a<br />
transformer fire on Juniper<br />
Road.<br />
Saturday, Jan. 13<br />
At 7:<strong>18</strong> p.m., police did<br />
a well-being check at Donovan’s<br />
Liquors on North<br />
Broadway.<br />
Sunday, Jan. 14<br />
At 5:53 p.m., there was a<br />
motor vehicle accident on<br />
Main Street.<br />
At 9:29 p.m., there was a<br />
motor vehicle accident on Salem<br />
Street.<br />
Monday, Jan. 15<br />
At 9:43 a.m., there was selective<br />
traffic enforcement on<br />
Main Street.<br />
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Super Bowl Feature<br />
Jan. 26-28 + Feb. 2-4<br />
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$14.99/lb<br />
Sides - $3.99 lb.<br />
Each day our team prepares a<br />
variety of compliments to<br />
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Pasta, rice, potatoes, coleslaw,<br />
vegetables. Call for todays sides.<br />
Condiments<br />
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JANUARY <strong>18</strong>, 20<strong>18</strong> WEEKLYNEWS.NET - 978-532-5880 5<br />
KIDS YOGA<br />
Why I do what I do<br />
Pet of the week<br />
Nine-year-old Butters came from a home<br />
that had over 90 cats and kittens. Butters<br />
is super friendly and affectionate. He enjoys<br />
giving head bumps and winding himself<br />
around legs while looking for attention.<br />
Butters enjoys playing with other cats, napping<br />
in sunlight and being petted all over,<br />
including his belly. He has been neutered<br />
and is up to date with vaccines. Butters is<br />
also diabetic. His diabetes is well managed<br />
and he does super well with receiving his<br />
insulin. If you are interested in meeting this<br />
boy and you may be thinking of adopting<br />
him, you can visit him at the Northeast Animal<br />
Shelter located in Salem. Visiting hours<br />
are Monday-Friday 10-8 and weekends 10-<br />
6. Butters is available for the Senior cat for<br />
Senior lap program. You can also view more<br />
information online @www.neas.org.<br />
Once upon a time there was<br />
a Sharon who felt “stuck.” She<br />
knew she wanted more but was<br />
unsure what that was…she tried<br />
many new things and although<br />
she was happy she felt attached<br />
to her old ways. Then one day<br />
her younger sister Maureen suggested<br />
yoga. She said sure why<br />
not and off they went on a yoga<br />
journey together. Her sister had<br />
been practicing for years so she<br />
showed her the best way to find<br />
out what type of yoga would<br />
work for her lifestyle and energy<br />
level…which was high.<br />
Together they visited many<br />
studios and took many classes<br />
and then they blogged about it<br />
in their blog site-Two Sisters’<br />
Journey. It’s still out there, although<br />
they haven’t posted in a<br />
few years.<br />
Once that journey was complete<br />
Sharon went off and practiced<br />
yoga in her own way, and<br />
it felt good. So when her sister<br />
asked her if she was interested<br />
in taking her teacher training<br />
program, Sharon replied “Sure,<br />
but I’ll never be a yoga teacher.”<br />
Silly right. So off she went to<br />
New Hampshire one weekend<br />
Find our<br />
Pets of the week<br />
and others at<br />
neas.org<br />
to begin her next step. The first<br />
day during lunch she heard a<br />
couple of the students talking<br />
about kid’s yoga. Her head spun<br />
around and said tell me more.<br />
They did and she signed up for<br />
more trainings and has never<br />
looked back.<br />
Sharon is no longer stuck…<br />
Sharon is exactly where she is<br />
supposed to be and is doing exactly<br />
what she is meant to do at<br />
this stage of her life. Nothing<br />
gives her more joy than seeing<br />
those smiling faces, except her<br />
grandson Connor and family.<br />
So, next time someone asks<br />
you to try something new maybe<br />
you should give it a shot…who<br />
knows where it will lead.<br />
Sharon Marrama, owner of<br />
Here Comes the Sun Yoga for<br />
Kids is a children’s yoga instructor<br />
at several local schools<br />
and studios. She also holds a<br />
certificate in Children’s & Teen<br />
Coaching and writes children’s<br />
books spreading sunshine along<br />
the way.<br />
CLEAN THAT MESS UP!<br />
DUMPSTER<br />
RENTALS<br />
10, 15,<br />
and 20 yard<br />
dumpsters<br />
Bridgewell celebrates 60 years<br />
Staff and members of the Rosewood II Day Program celebrate Bridgewell’s 60th anniversary in Danvers<br />
on Monday, Jan. 8. Bridgewell is a nonprofit in eastern Massachusetts providing social and human services<br />
that empower people with disabilities and other life challenges to live safe, self-directed and productive lives.<br />
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6 WEEKLYNEWS.NET - 978-532-5880 JANUARY <strong>18</strong>, 20<strong>18</strong><br />
Seniors<br />
LYNNFIELD SENIOR<br />
CENTER ACTIVITIES<br />
*****<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 />
Hobbies with Bob-<br />
Old Time Wrecks and<br />
Rescues: Join Bob in a<br />
discussion with videos of<br />
fireboats in action, old<br />
time car wrecks and the<br />
brave men and women<br />
who make the daring<br />
rescues. Wednesday, Jan.<br />
17 at 9:30 a.m. Free.<br />
Lunch and a Movie-<br />
Victoria and Abdul:<br />
Abdul Karim arrives from<br />
India to participate in<br />
Queen Victoria’s golden<br />
jubilee. The young clerk<br />
is surprised to find favor<br />
with the queen herself.<br />
As Victoria questions<br />
the constrictions of her<br />
long-held position, the<br />
two forge an unlikely<br />
and devoted alliance that<br />
her household and inner<br />
circle tries to destroy. As<br />
their friendship deepens,<br />
the queen begins to see a<br />
changing world through<br />
new eyes. Tuesday, Jan.<br />
16 and Wednesday, Jan.<br />
17 at 11:30 a.m. for $2/$3.<br />
Sign up.<br />
Arthritis Pain<br />
Relief Exercises: Carol<br />
Pallazolla, from Element<br />
Care, is a certified<br />
instructor with the<br />
Arthritis Foundation.<br />
Carol will demonstrate<br />
exercises that can be<br />
done sitting or standing<br />
to help relieve pain.<br />
Thursday, Jan. <strong>18</strong> at<br />
12:30 p.m. Free. Sign up<br />
Forensic Science<br />
Road Show: Venture<br />
into the world of CSI with<br />
this interactive program<br />
that introduces you to<br />
the fascinating subject<br />
of forensic science. Learn<br />
about the Massachusetts<br />
State Police Crime Lab,<br />
gunshot residue, crime<br />
lights and much more.<br />
Join Paul Zambella,<br />
Forensic Scientist, on<br />
Wednesday, Jan. 24 at<br />
12:30 p.m. Free. Please<br />
sign up.<br />
<strong>Lynnfield</strong> Police<br />
Dept. Presentation:<br />
Talk on Reverse 911<br />
Code Red for <strong>Lynnfield</strong><br />
residents allowing<br />
you to quickly receive<br />
messages in the event<br />
of an emergency, and<br />
the new ERIN Program<br />
Registration to help<br />
emergency responders<br />
while responding to<br />
service calls to homes<br />
with autistic family<br />
members. Monday, Jan.<br />
29 at 10 a.m. Sign up.<br />
Olive Oils and<br />
Balsamic Vinegars:<br />
Jerry Knox from The<br />
Branch Olive Oil Co. will<br />
lead us on a delicious<br />
tour of various olive oils<br />
and balsamic vinegars.<br />
Tuesday, Jan. 30 at 12:30<br />
p.m. Free. Please sign up.<br />
Tastings!<br />
*****<br />
Thursday, Jan. <strong>18</strong><br />
8 a.m. Hairdresser,<br />
Exercise Room. 8:30 a.m.<br />
Zumba Gold. 8:45 a.m.<br />
Drumming with Jill. 9<br />
a.m. Stitch and Chat,<br />
Manicurist. 9:15 a.m. Sit<br />
& Tone with Jill. 9:20<br />
a.m. Gentle Pilates. 9:30<br />
a.m. Geneology, Oriental<br />
Rug. 10 a.m. Yoga, Mah<br />
Jong Lessons. 10:30<br />
a.m. Lunch Bunch. 11<br />
a.m. Aerobic Dance with<br />
Alice. 11:30 a.m. Lunch:<br />
Beef Burrito. 12:30 p.m.<br />
Bridge, Arthritis Pain<br />
Relief Exercises.<br />
*****<br />
Friday, Jan. 19<br />
8 a.m. Exercise Room,<br />
Breakfast. 9 a.m. Blood<br />
Pressure and File of<br />
Life, Hairdresser, Acrylic<br />
Painting. 9:15 a.m. Bingo.<br />
9:30 a.m. Tai Chi - sign<br />
up.10 a.m. Art Guild<br />
Meeting. 10:30 a.m. Zumba.<br />
11:15 a.m. Lunch: Baked<br />
Fish.<br />
*****<br />
Monday, Jan. 22<br />
8 a.m. Exercise Room.<br />
8:30 a.m. Zumba with<br />
MONITORING BLOOD PRESSURE AT HOME<br />
If left undiagnosed or untreated, “hypertension” (high blood pressure)<br />
can lead to heart attack, heart failure, stroke, kidney disease or failure, vision loss,<br />
sexual dysfunction, angina (chest pain), and/or peripheral artery disease. With this<br />
in mind, the American Heart Association recommends that people diagnosed with<br />
high blood pressure purchase a blood pressure monitor for home use. To ensure<br />
that these monitors provide accurate readings, patients should take their<br />
monitors with them to their next doctor’s visit. A nurse or physician can inspect<br />
the device to see that the cuff is the correct size and that the patient is using the<br />
monitor correctly. The doctor can also compare the reading on the monitor with<br />
the one in the office.<br />
Once you’ve purchased your monitor, bring it to your next health care appointment.<br />
Have your doctor check to see that you are using it correctly and getting the<br />
same results as the equipment in the office. Plan to bring your monitor in once a<br />
year to make sure the readings are accurate. For more information, please call or<br />
visit VILLAGE PHARMACY in the Colonial Shopping Center (781-334-3133). For<br />
your convenience, we offer free prescription delivery five days a week and scheduled<br />
weekend deliveries upon request.<br />
HINT: A reading of 140/90 or above is generally considered to be indicative of<br />
Stage 1 hypertension.<br />
Colonial Shopping Center • 590 Main St. <strong>Lynnfield</strong>, MA 01940 • 781-334-3133<br />
Alice. 8:45 a.m. Aerobics<br />
Video. 9 a.m. Walmart<br />
Shopping, LaBlast Dance<br />
Fitness. 10 a.m. Creative<br />
Writing, Line Dance,<br />
Tap Dance, Sit and Tone<br />
with Darci. 11 a.m.<br />
Yoga. 11:30 a.m. Lunch:<br />
BBQ Chicken. 12 p.m.<br />
Mexican Train, Bowling,<br />
Oil Painting, Caregiver’s<br />
Support Group. 12:30<br />
p.m. Mah Jong, Computer<br />
- sign up.<br />
*****<br />
Tuesday, Jan. 23<br />
8 a.m. Hairdresser,<br />
Exercise Room. 8:45 a.m.<br />
Exercise Under the Belt.<br />
9 a.m. Blood Pressure,<br />
Qigong Meditation and<br />
Asian Exercise Class.<br />
9:15 a.m. Bingo. 9:30 a.m.<br />
Italian (intermediate)<br />
Qi Gong, Food Shopping.<br />
10 a.m. Low Vison<br />
Support, Tai Chi. 10:30<br />
a.m. Scrabble. 11:30 a.m.<br />
Lunch: Spaghetti. 12:30<br />
p.m. Computer Class -<br />
sign up, Bridge, Water<br />
Color Class, Reminisce.<br />
*****<br />
Wednesday, Jan. 24<br />
8 a.m. Exercise Room.<br />
8:30 a.m. Zumba. 9<br />
a.m. Artist’s Drop-in,<br />
Alterations with Anita,<br />
Hairdresser, Tripoley,<br />
Manicurist. 10 a.m. Chair<br />
Yoga, Embroidery, Hard<br />
of Hearing Support. 10:15<br />
a.m. Italian (beginner),<br />
11:30 a.m. Lunch:<br />
Cheeseburger. 12:15 p.m.<br />
Pokeno, Canasta. 12:30<br />
p.m. Bridge, Forensic<br />
Science Road Show. Trip:<br />
Home Sense.<br />
*****<br />
Thursday, Jan. 25<br />
8 a.m. Hairdresser,<br />
Exercise Room. 8:30 a.m.<br />
Zumba Gold. 8:45 a.m.<br />
Drumming with Jill. 9<br />
a.m. Stitch and Chat,<br />
Manicurist. 9:15 a.m. Sit<br />
& Tone with Jill. 9:20<br />
a.m. Gentle Pilates. 9:30<br />
a.m. Geneology, Oriental<br />
Rug. 10 a.m. Yoga, Mah<br />
Jong Lessons. 10:30<br />
a.m. Lunch Bunch. 11<br />
a.m. Aerobic Dance with<br />
Alice. 11:30 a.m. Lunch:<br />
Chicken Pot Pie. 12:30<br />
p.m. Bridge, Arthritis<br />
Pain Relief Exercises.<br />
*****<br />
Friday, Jan. 26<br />
8 a.m. Exercise Room,<br />
Breakfast. 9 a.m. Blood<br />
Pressure, Hairdresser,<br />
Acrylic Painting. 9:15 a.m.<br />
Bingo. 9:30 a.m. Tai Chi -<br />
sign up. 10 a.m. Art Guild<br />
Meeting. 10:30 a.m. Zumba.<br />
11:15 a.m. Lunch: Mac &<br />
Cheese.<br />
*****<br />
Monday, Jan. 29<br />
8 a.m. Exercise Room,<br />
Hairdresser. 8:30 a.m.<br />
Zumba with Alice. 8:45<br />
a.m. Aerobics Video. 9<br />
a.m. Walmart Shopping,<br />
LaBlast Dance Fitness.<br />
10 a.m. Creative Writing,<br />
Line Dance, Tap Dance,<br />
Sit and Tone with Darci,<br />
CODE RED with Police<br />
Department. 11 a.m.<br />
Yoga. 11:30 a.m. Lunch:<br />
Fish Sandwich. 12 p.m.<br />
Bowling, Oil Painting.<br />
12:30 p.m. Mah Jong,<br />
Computer - sign up,<br />
Mexican Train.<br />
*****<br />
Tuesday, Jan. 30<br />
8 a.m. Hairdresser,<br />
Exercise Room. 8:45 a.m.<br />
Exercise Under the Belt.<br />
9 a.m. Blood Pressure,<br />
Qigong Meditation and<br />
Asian Exercise Class.<br />
9:15 a.m. Bingo. 9:30 a.m.<br />
Italian (intermediate)<br />
Food Shopping. 10 a.m.<br />
Tai Chi. 10:30 a.m.<br />
Scrabble. 11:30 a.m.<br />
Lunch: Chicken. 12:30<br />
p.m. Computer Class -<br />
sign up, Bridge, Water<br />
Color Class, Olive Oils<br />
and Balsamic Vinegars.<br />
*****<br />
Wednesday, Jan. 31<br />
8 a.m. Exercise Room.<br />
8:30 a.m. Zumba. 9<br />
a.m. Artist’s Drop-in,<br />
Alterations with Anita,<br />
Hairdresser, Tripoley,<br />
Manicurist. 10 a.m. Chair<br />
Yoga, Embroidery. 10:15<br />
a.m. Italian (beginner),<br />
11:30 a.m. Lunch: Roast<br />
Pork. 12:15 p.m. Pokeno,<br />
Canasta. 12:30 p.m.<br />
Bridge.<br />
*****<br />
PETER A. TORIGIAN<br />
SENIOR CENTER<br />
*****<br />
Thursday, Jan. <strong>18</strong><br />
8:30 a.m. Quilting. 9:15<br />
a.m. Whist. 9:30 a.m.<br />
Big Band Dancing, Oil<br />
Painting (advanced),<br />
Walk-in Blood Pressure.<br />
10 a.m. Bridge. 1 p.m.<br />
Sing-a-Long.<br />
*****<br />
Friday, Jan. 19<br />
8 a.m. Oil Painting<br />
(beginner), TOPS Weigh-<br />
In. 9 a.m. Aerobics, TOPS<br />
Meeting. 9:30 a.m. Veterans<br />
legal Services. 10:30 a.m.<br />
Grief/Loss Group. 11:15<br />
a.m. Chair Yoga. 12 p.m.<br />
Open Art Studio. 12:30 p.m.<br />
Bingo. 2:30 p.m. Ping-Pong.<br />
*****<br />
Monday, Jan. 22<br />
8 a.m. Tips and Topics. 9<br />
a.m. Aerobics, Duplicate<br />
Bridge, Learn Mah<br />
Jongg. 10 a.m. Drill<br />
Team, Bridge. 11:15 a.m.<br />
Zumba. 12:30 p.m. Model<br />
Ship Building, Bingo. 2<br />
p.m. Caregiver’s Support<br />
Group.<br />
*****<br />
Tuesday, Jan. 23<br />
9 a.m. Peabody Kiosk, Huga-Bears.<br />
9:15 a.m. Whist.<br />
9:30 a.m. Exercise with<br />
Edye, Japanese Bunka,<br />
Veteran’s Group. 10:30 a.m.<br />
Line Dancing. 12 p.m. Mah<br />
Jongg. 12:30 a.m. Crocheting<br />
and Knitting, Best of Time<br />
Presentation. Start Making<br />
Tax Appointments.<br />
*****<br />
Wednesday, Jan. 24<br />
9 a.m. Sewing and Repair,<br />
Rug Hooking, Wood<br />
Carving, Aerobics. 10:15<br />
a.m. Zumba. 12:30 p.m.<br />
Model Ship Building. 1 p.m.<br />
Crazy Cards.<br />
*****<br />
Thursday, Jan. 25<br />
8:30 a.m. Quilting. 9:15<br />
a.m. Whist. 9:30 a.m.<br />
Big Band Dancing, Oil<br />
Painting (advanced),<br />
Walk-in Blood Pressure.<br />
10 a.m. Bridge, Hearing<br />
Screenings. 1 p.m. Sing-a-<br />
Long, ALS Support Group.<br />
*****<br />
Friday, Jan. 26<br />
8 a.m. Oil Painting<br />
(beginner), TOPS Weigh-<br />
In. 9 a.m. Aerobics, TOPS<br />
Meeting. 10:30 a.m. Grief/<br />
Loss Group. 11:15 a.m.<br />
Chair Yoga. 12 p.m. Open<br />
Art Studio. 12:30 p.m. Bingo.<br />
2:30 p.m. Ping-Pong.<br />
*****<br />
Monday, Jan. 29<br />
9 a.m. Aerobics, Duplicate<br />
Bridge, Learn Mah Jongg.<br />
10 a.m. Bridge. 11:15 a.m.<br />
Zumba. 12:30 p.m. Model<br />
Ship Building, Bingo.<br />
*****<br />
Tuesday, Jan. 30<br />
9 a.m. Peabody Kiosk, Huga-Bears.<br />
9:15 a.m. Whist.<br />
9:30 a.m. Exercise with<br />
Edye, Japanese Bunka.<br />
10:30 a.m. Line Dancing. 12<br />
p.m. Mah Jongg. 12:30 a.m.<br />
Crocheting and Knitting.<br />
*****<br />
Wednesday, Jan. 31<br />
9 a.m. Sewing and Repair,<br />
Rug Hooking, Wood Carving,<br />
Aerobics. 10:15 a.m. Zumba.<br />
12:15 p.m. Monthly Movie<br />
12:30 p.m. Model Ship<br />
Building.<br />
*****<br />
Thursday, Feb. 1<br />
8:30 a.m. Quilting. 9:15<br />
a.m. Whist. 9:30 a.m.<br />
Big Band Dancing, Oil<br />
Painting (advanced). 10<br />
a.m. Bridge. 1 p.m. Sing-a-<br />
Long.<br />
*****<br />
Friday, Feb. 2<br />
8 a.m. Oil Painting<br />
(beginner), TOPS Weigh-<br />
In. 9 a.m. Aerobics, TOPS<br />
Meeting. 10:30 a.m. Grief/<br />
Loss Group. 11:15 a.m.<br />
Chair Yoga. 12 p.m. Open<br />
Art Studio. 12:30 p.m. Bingo.<br />
2:30 p.m. Ping-Pong.<br />
*****<br />
Monday, Feb. 5<br />
9 a.m. Aerobics,<br />
Duplicate Bridge, Learn<br />
Mah Jongg. 10 a.m. Drill<br />
Team, Bridge. 11:15 a.m.<br />
Zumba. 12:30 p.m. Model<br />
Ship Building, Bingo. 1<br />
p.m. Food Commodity.<br />
*****<br />
Tuesday, Feb. 6<br />
9 a.m. Peabody Kiosk.<br />
9:15 a.m. Whist. 9:30<br />
a.m. Exercise with Edye,<br />
Japanese Bunka, Book<br />
Club. 10:30 a.m. Line<br />
Dancing. 11:30 a.m.<br />
Birthday Celebration. 12<br />
p.m. Mah Jongg. 12:30 a.m.<br />
Crocheting and Knitting,<br />
Party Set-up.
JANUARY <strong>18</strong>, 20<strong>18</strong> WEEKLYNEWS.NET - 978-532-5880 7<br />
Meals that warm your house and your heart<br />
Rosalie Harrington<br />
There are so many hearty<br />
and delicious meals to be<br />
made in winter. At my age, I<br />
am happy that I don’t have<br />
to ski anymore, but being out<br />
on the mountain in the cold<br />
is something I always dreaded<br />
- especially in January.<br />
Maybe it’s left over from my<br />
youth, when the oven was<br />
heating our apartment, further<br />
making the kitchen the<br />
center of warmth and love<br />
in our family. There was the<br />
aroma of baked beans cooking<br />
in an old crock, with the<br />
molasses, onion and bacon<br />
permeating the house for<br />
hours. On Saturday nights<br />
we had brown bread from a<br />
can, with hot dogs and the<br />
baked beans. There’s nothing<br />
an icy mountain can do<br />
to draw me away from all<br />
that warmth!<br />
My mother rarely baked<br />
because as a single parent<br />
who worked long days,<br />
she didn’t have the time.<br />
But my brother and I loved<br />
her banana cream pie. The<br />
cookbook that she gave me<br />
covered with old oil cloth<br />
was her only cook book and<br />
it will automatically open<br />
to that recipe. The stained<br />
pages bring it all that much<br />
closer.<br />
Our daughter Danielle<br />
and her boys have dinner<br />
with us at least once a<br />
week and every other week<br />
she talks about wishing she<br />
could stay home and make<br />
some of the meals that I like<br />
to serve and she enjoys eating.<br />
“I want you to teach me<br />
to make gnocchi like these,”<br />
she said last week about<br />
my ricotta and spinach gnocchi<br />
that are simmered in<br />
homemade broth - just until<br />
they rise to the top. In order<br />
to make them correctly, you<br />
have to let the dough rest in<br />
the fridge before you shape<br />
it into ovals. At serving time<br />
you can simmer the broth<br />
and complete the recipe, but<br />
like a lot of meals, there is<br />
prep time - which as a working<br />
mom I fear Danielle<br />
doesn’t have enough of. I will<br />
make her some gnocchi and<br />
put them in her fridge and<br />
she can finish them off. Better<br />
still, I will simmer them<br />
in broth and she can heat<br />
them in the oven with a little<br />
butter to be served with<br />
some chopped fresh sage and<br />
grated Parmesan. I taught<br />
myself many short cuts<br />
when I had my restaurant,<br />
out of necessity. There is just<br />
not enough time allowed<br />
between receiving an order<br />
and sending the dish out to<br />
the dining room for there to<br />
be too many steps.<br />
Home cooks can reduce<br />
the time they spend on each<br />
meal by adopting the attitude<br />
of the restaurant chef<br />
by preparing frequently<br />
used ingredients in advance.<br />
The most important question<br />
you can ask yourself is<br />
“What can I over-prepare for<br />
this meal that can be used to<br />
make the next several meals<br />
easier?”<br />
Don’t make salad dressing<br />
enough for just one<br />
meal. It can be reused on<br />
subsequent nights, and<br />
dressing can also do double<br />
service as a marinade for<br />
meat, fish or poultry. Here’s<br />
one you’ll love:<br />
Chop three cloves of fresh<br />
garlic finely and place in a<br />
medium size jar with a wide<br />
top. This will make it easier<br />
to add ingredients.<br />
Add a tsp each of Dijon<br />
mustard, salt and few grinds<br />
of pepper, three tbsp. of real<br />
maple syrup, cover and shake<br />
the jar well.<br />
Squeeze the juice from<br />
two lemons and pour into<br />
the jar or pour in about a<br />
third of your favorite vinegar,<br />
like wine or balsamic<br />
and pour in enough olive oil<br />
to fill the rest of the jar and<br />
shake well.<br />
We have a salad most<br />
nights and it makes prep<br />
so much easier to have the<br />
dressing pre-made.<br />
For a Caesar salad smash<br />
three anchovies into the<br />
dressing and a handful of<br />
grated Parmesan.<br />
Many people have complained<br />
that when they are<br />
alone it doesn’t pay to cook<br />
for one. I disagree. A whole<br />
chicken rubbed with some<br />
herbs and butter and roasted<br />
with carrots and potatoes<br />
makes a delicious meal. And,<br />
if you think about it, the<br />
oven does all the work. Enjoy<br />
the bird one evening and the<br />
rest of the meat will make<br />
a nice topping for a Caesar<br />
salad or a quick stir fry with<br />
other ingredients from your<br />
meal, such as rice and broccoli.<br />
By the third day you<br />
may tire of the chicken, but<br />
there’s always the freezer<br />
to make little baggies of cut<br />
up chicken ready to be part<br />
of a meal - or place the carcass<br />
covered with water in a<br />
small pot with a few carrots,<br />
a small onion and chopped<br />
celery and salt and bring<br />
to a boil and simmer for a<br />
few hours. You will be surprised<br />
by what a nice broth<br />
it makes. Strain and cook<br />
a few noodles in the broth<br />
and serve with a sprinkle of<br />
Pecorino Romano.<br />
I recently started roasting<br />
chicken in a way I can’t recall<br />
doing before. It’s a peasant<br />
style, rich in the wonderful<br />
flavors of roasted garlic and<br />
onions. The key to the dish is<br />
cooking the chicken on a rack<br />
made of carrots. The carrots<br />
lift the chicken off the bottom<br />
of the pan so that it can<br />
absorb the sizzling flavors<br />
steaming up from below.<br />
Rosalie with her daughter Danielle posing in front of the roasted chicken they prepared.<br />
Rosalie’s roasted chicken<br />
— Buy a whole chicken and cut it in half with poultry sheers or a knife.<br />
— Wipe it dry and set aside.<br />
—In a heavy pan saute several cloves of garlic and a medium onion sliced thin, until<br />
brown in three tbsp. olive oil. Remove from pan and add the halves of chicken.<br />
—Raise the heat to high and brown the chicken on both sides.<br />
—Add four peeled carrots cut up into several big pieces and five medium potatoes cut<br />
into fourths.<br />
— Place the veggies in the pan, under the breast, sprinkle with salt and some dried<br />
herbs from Provence (rosemary, sage, thyme) and add the garlic and onion.<br />
— Roast in a 325 oven for about forty five minutes or until the leg comes easily out of<br />
its joint. A larger bird will take about this time, a smaller one a little less time. When you<br />
place the chicken on a platter surrounded with veggies make sure you save the beautiful<br />
juices that are in the pan.<br />
— Loosen the particles stuck to the bottom and pour in a half cup each of chicken broth<br />
and white wine or Marsala.<br />
—Simmer for a few minutes and pour over the chicken at serving time.<br />
—The bird will be delicious and you will enjoy a new flavor to your roasted chicken.<br />
Rosalie’s roasted chicken.
8 WEEKLYNEWS.NET - 978-532-5880 JANUARY <strong>18</strong>, 20<strong>18</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 Peabody and<br />
Calvary in Danvers, now worshiping together<br />
as one at 46 Cherry St., Danvers,<br />
across from the Danvers Town Hall. Service<br />
of Holy Communion and Homily every<br />
Sunday at 8 a.m. and 10 a.m. Summers<br />
one service at 9 a.m. You’ll be welcome<br />
here. For more information call the church<br />
office at 978-774-1150.<br />
Calvary Baptist<br />
4 Coolidge Road, Peabody<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<br />
activities for young children provided<br />
during worship. During the school year,<br />
Kids Connection meets Tuesdays at 6:30<br />
p.m. and Youth Group meets Thursdays at<br />
7 p.m.<br />
Calvary Christian Church<br />
47 Grove St., <strong>Lynnfield</strong><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<br />
our Sunday worship services at 8:30<br />
a.m., 10:30 a.m., 12:30 p.m. and 6:30<br />
p.m. Children’s Ministry (ages 0-11) offered<br />
in all Sunday morning services.<br />
Hispanic Service: Sunday at 12:30 p.m.<br />
in the Prayer Chapel. Celebrate Recovery:<br />
Monday at 6:30 p.m. Young Adult<br />
Ministry: Wednesday at 7 p.m. ages <strong>18</strong>-<br />
30’s. Youth Ministry: Friday at 6:30<br />
p.m. ages 12-<strong>18</strong>. Weekly Prayer Meetings:<br />
Monday - Friday at 7 p.m. and<br />
Saturday at 6 p.m. Church office hours<br />
are Monday- Friday 8:30 a.m. to 4:30<br />
p.m. For more information contact our<br />
church office at 781-592-4722, office@<br />
lynnfield-ccc.org or visit our website<br />
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), <strong>Lynnfield</strong>,<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! Located at 5 Summer<br />
Street, Centre Church is an Open and Affirming<br />
Congregation of the United Church of<br />
Christ. Our worship services are held at 10:00<br />
a.m. each Sunday morning. We strive to provide<br />
inspiring, down-to-earth messages that<br />
are applicable to everyday life. We are committed<br />
to providing children a warm, safe, and<br />
inclusive environment with vibrant and engaging<br />
Children’s Programming (Godly Play,<br />
Whole People of God, and Brick-by-Brick)<br />
and trained and consistent staff, incorporating<br />
opportunities for stories, music, and service.<br />
Free nursery care is available for children up<br />
to age 4, with a new transition class beginning<br />
in January for 3- and 4-year olds. We also<br />
have a Young Families Group that offers fellowship<br />
opportunities for parents and children<br />
together. We have ample parking in a large lot<br />
behind the church and the facility is handicap<br />
accessible.. Please find us on Facebook at<br />
facebook.com/CentreChurchUCC or visit<br />
www.Centre-Church.org for updated information<br />
about our ministries and activities.<br />
Please feel free to contact the church office<br />
if you would like more information about any<br />
of these activities. (781-334-3050 or office@<br />
centre-church.org)<br />
Office Hours at the church are 9 am – 3 pm<br />
Monday – Friday.<br />
Tower Day School is located at Centre Congregational<br />
Church and Director, Leah<br />
O’Brien may be reached at towerdayschool@<br />
gmail.com or 781-334-5576.<br />
Carmelite Chapel<br />
Northshore Mall, Peabody<br />
978-531-6145<br />
Mass schedule: Monday-Friday, 8:30<br />
a.m., noon and 3 p.m.; Saturday, 8:30 a.m.<br />
and noon; Sunday Vigil, 4 and 5:30 p.m.<br />
Confessions: Monday-Friday, 11:30 a.m.-<br />
noon and 2:30-3 p.m., Saturday, 10:45-<br />
11:45 a.m. and 2:45-3:45 p.m. or by appointment.<br />
Chabad of Peabody<br />
682 Lowell St., Peabody<br />
978-977-9111, jewishpeabody.com<br />
Chabad of Peabody holds services weekly.<br />
Call or e-mail Rabbi Schusterman at<br />
rabbi@jewishpeabody.com. For event<br />
times and dates visit the website. Chabad<br />
runs a Hebrew School for children on<br />
Wednesday, and has an informal weekly<br />
drop-in class on Kabbalah and other holiday<br />
events. Hebrew School registration is<br />
now open. Call Raizel at the number above<br />
or email her at raizel@jewishpeabody.com.<br />
Community Covenant Church<br />
33 Lake St., West Peabody<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 11 a.m. Sunday School classes<br />
for all ages are held from 9:45-10:45 a.m.<br />
September 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<br />
Peabody<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<br />
morning services are at 9 a.m.<br />
Congregation Tifereth Israel<br />
8 Pierpont St., Peabody.<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., Peabody<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.<br />
Pastor hours: Mon., Tues. and Thurs., 1-5<br />
p.m. There is a nursery room. The church is<br />
handicap accessible.<br />
Additional information: info@ctipeabody.org<br />
or 978-531-8135.<br />
<strong>Lynnfield</strong> Community Church<br />
735 Salem St., <strong>Lynnfield</strong><br />
(781) 599-4421<br />
<strong>Lynnfield</strong>CommunityChurch.org.<br />
<strong>Lynnfield</strong> Community Church welcomes<br />
you to Sunday worship at 10-11 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., <strong>Lynnfield</strong><br />
781-334-4111 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<br />
in your faith. Served by Rev. Dr. Jeremy<br />
Pekari and Rev. David Brezina. mlcspirit.<br />
org.<br />
New Destiny Christian<br />
Spring Hill Suites, Peabody<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., Peabody<br />
978-535-6<strong>18</strong>6<br />
Sunday: Adult Sunday School begins at<br />
9 a.m., followed by refreshments and fellowship<br />
time. Worship Service begins at<br />
10:30 a.m. All are welcome. Monday:<br />
Men’s Group Study at 7 p.m., Thursday:<br />
Prayer Meeting, 7 p.m.<br />
Visit our website for more information or<br />
to leave a prayer request.<br />
NorthShoreBaptistChurch.org<br />
<strong>Lynnfield</strong> Catholic Collaborative<br />
112 Chestnut St., <strong>Lynnfield</strong><br />
Our Lady of the Assumption and St. Maria<br />
Goretti<br />
The <strong>Lynnfield</strong> Catholic Collaborative,<br />
comprised of Our Lady of the Assumption<br />
Church, Salem and Grove Streets, and Saint<br />
Maria Goretti Church, 112 Chestnut St.,<br />
<strong>Lynnfield</strong>, may be reached by calling 781-<br />
598-4313 or by email: jsano@ola-smg.org<br />
or by visiting the website: lynnfieldcatholic.<br />
org.<br />
The Pastoral Leadership Team: The Pastor<br />
is Rev. Paul E. Ritt, the Parochial Vicar<br />
is Rev. Anthony Luongo and the Deacons<br />
are 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 />
Go to: www.lynnfieldcatholic.org<br />
St. Maria Goretti (112 Chestnut Street,<br />
<strong>Lynnfield</strong>)<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., Peabody<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<br />
at 6 p.m. (Portuguese); Saturday at 9 a.m.<br />
(Portuguese) (and Vigil at 5 p.m. English);<br />
Sunday 9 a.m. (English); 11:30 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<br />
Sacrament, every Friday, 5-6 p.m. Religious<br />
Education Classes for Grades 1-6 at 8<br />
a.m. and Grades 7-10 at 10 a.m. on Sundays.<br />
St. Adelaide<br />
708 Lowell St., Peabody<br />
978-535-1985<br />
Team Ministry: Rev. Raymond Van De<br />
Moortell, and Rev. David C. Lewis.<br />
Weekend Mass Schedule: Saturday, 4<br />
p.m., Sunday, 8:30, 10 and 11:30 a.m.<br />
Holy Day Masses: 9 a.m. and 7 p.m.;<br />
Latin Mass: 1 p.m. Sunday. Confessions:<br />
Saturday, 3-3:30 p.m.; Baptisms: first<br />
Sunday of the month at 2:30 p.m.; Exposition<br />
of the Blessed Sacrament: first Friday<br />
of the month, 9:30 a.m.-noon and<br />
Wednesdays from 5:30-6:30 p.m.<br />
AA Meetings: Thursdays, 7 p.m. Religious<br />
Education classes (grades 1-10) are<br />
held in the church hall on Sunday and<br />
Thursday.<br />
St. Ann’s Parish<br />
136 Lynn St., Peabody<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-<br />
531-5791; Leanne Amirault, Preschool Dir.,<br />
978-532-3329 or 978-531-9521. Daily Mass:<br />
Saturday at 4 p.m. and Sunday at 8:30 and<br />
10:30 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., Peabody<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<br />
of the Sick. Please call 978-804-2250.<br />
St. John Lutheran<br />
Ellsworth Rd. at King St., Peabody<br />
978-531-1731, stjohnpeabody.org<br />
The Rev. Charles N. Stevenson, pastor.<br />
St. John is a member of the Evangelical<br />
Lutheran Church in America and Lutheran<br />
Congregations in Mission for Christ. Sunday<br />
worship at 9:30 a.m. with nursery care<br />
provided and coffee and fellowship following;<br />
Sunday School at 11 a.m.; Bible Study,<br />
Wednesday at 7:30 p.m. Holy Communion<br />
is celebrated the first and third Sunday of<br />
each month and on certain festivals.<br />
St. John the Baptist<br />
17 Chestnut St., Peabody<br />
978-531-0002 stjohnspeabody.com<br />
Pastor: Very Rev. John E. MacInnis,<br />
VF; Parochial Vicar: Rev. Mario Guarino,<br />
FDP 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);<br />
Sunday at 8, 10 and 11:30 a.m. (Spanish)<br />
and 5 p.m.<br />
St. John’s Thrift Shop, 19 Chestnut<br />
Street, Peabody (behind City Hall) will be<br />
closed for summer break starting July 2.<br />
The Shop 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., <strong>Lynnfield</strong><br />
(781) 334-4594,<br />
stpaulslynnfield.org.<br />
Rev. Robert Bacon, rector<br />
January Sundays, St. Paul’s Episcopal<br />
Church (127 Summer Street, <strong>Lynnfield</strong>)<br />
offers a said service with Eucharist at 8:30<br />
a.m. and Eucharist with music and choir<br />
at 10 a.m. Child care is offered for younger<br />
children and Godly Play classes for<br />
those K-7. Students in grades 8-12 (Youth<br />
Group) meets at 10 a.m. January 14 and 28<br />
(2nd and 4th Sundays) for discussion,<br />
learning, sharing, socializing, volunteering.<br />
On Mondays, at 6 p.m., St. Paul’s parishioners<br />
and friends gather for Centering Prayer.<br />
On Wednesdays, join us for Holy Eucharist<br />
at 9 a.m. followed by Bible study at 10 a.m..<br />
All are welcome to one or both gatherings.<br />
Open Choir Rehearsal begins at 7 p.m. on<br />
Thursday<br />
The Rev. Rob Bacon serves as rector. See<br />
our website for the Sunday gospel and sermon.<br />
For more information visit www.stpaulslynnfield.org;<br />
call the church office: 781-334-<br />
4594; like us on Facebook https://www.facebook.com/stpaulslynnfield/;<br />
or send an email<br />
to office@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<br />
generation we seek transformation of our lives<br />
and our community through Christ’s Gospel<br />
of love, compassion, and justice. To learn<br />
more please vistis www.ststephenslynn.org.<br />
St. Thomas the Apostle 3 Margin St.,<br />
Peabody, MA 01960<br />
978-531-0224, Office Hours: M-F 9 a.m.-<br />
12 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<br />
Trainor. Director of Music Ministry: Dr.<br />
Holly Zagaria. Website: www.<br />
stthomaspeabody.org. Winter Mass Schedule:<br />
Saturday 4 p.m. (English) ~ Sunday 10<br />
a.m .(English) 11:30 a.m. (Brazilian).<br />
Thrift Shop: Saturdays 9 a.m.-2 p.m.<br />
Join Us!<br />
St. Vasilios Greek Orthodox Church<br />
5 Paleologos St., Peabody<br />
978-531-0777, stvasilios.org<br />
Pastor: Rev. Christopher Foustoukos; Pastor<br />
Emeritus: Andrew Demotses; Pastoral<br />
Assistant: Deacon Robert Fadel; Worship<br />
schedule: Sunday - Matins at 8 a.m., Divine<br />
Liturgy at 9 a.m., Church School at 10:30<br />
a.m.-11:30 a.m.; Weekly feast days as announced:<br />
Matins at 8 a.m., Divine Liturgy at 9<br />
a.m.<br />
Second Congregational<br />
12 Maple St., Peabody<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<br />
from 9:15-10:15 a.m. For Bible study and<br />
Book Group schedules, call the office.<br />
South Congregational<br />
60 Prospect St., Peabody<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<br />
contemporary praise. Teen Youth Groups<br />
meet on Sunday evenings at the church.<br />
Several small groups for Bible Study meeting<br />
weekly – if interested in attending one,<br />
call church 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., Peabody<br />
978-210-7413<br />
sovG.us, info@sovG.us<br />
sovG is a family friendly church offering<br />
a 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<br />
in 7th-12th grades, our Youth Group meets<br />
Sunday evenings from 7-9 p.m. Email<br />
Youth Director Will Coley at will@sovG.<br />
us for information about Youth Group.<br />
Michael Williams, Lead Pastor. Visit:<br />
facebook.com/michaelwillyamz. Helping<br />
people connect with God, each other and<br />
the needs in our community.<br />
Temple Tiferet Shalom<br />
489 Lowell St., Peabody<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<br />
Communities. We offer a contemporary approach<br />
to Judaism while maintaining a respect<br />
for traditional Jewish values. We are a<br />
caring and inclusive community through<br />
learning and community activities. Besides<br />
Shabbat and Festival services, there is a Sisterhood<br />
and Temple Reads Book Club,<br />
Shabbat dinners, concerts and other programs.<br />
Consult the temple website and<br />
Facebook page for updated information.<br />
Temple Emmanuel’s mission is to be an<br />
inclusive and welcoming Jewish Reconstructionist<br />
Community devoted to learning,<br />
spirituality, and caring for each individual.<br />
At Temple Emmanuel we are building a vibrant<br />
future in honor of our past, utilizing<br />
ancient traditions to provide meaning and<br />
sustenance in our contemporary lives. There<br />
is a chairlift to the second floor social hall.<br />
Visitors are encouraged to come to services<br />
and events 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<br />
at 10 p.m. and a Jewish Meditation Circle is on<br />
the 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<br />
reserved by calling Phil 617-688-0870.<br />
Temple Ner Tamid<br />
368 Lowell St., Peabody<br />
978-532-1293, templenertamid.org,<br />
Email templenertamid@verizon.net.<br />
Rabbi Richard Perlman, Cantor Steve<br />
Abramowitz, Beth K. Hoffman, Synagogue<br />
Administrator. Service Schedule:<br />
Evening minyans held Sunday – Thursday<br />
at 7:30 p.m. Sunday morning Minyans<br />
at 9 a.m. Friday Evening Services at<br />
8 p.m. (unless a special service), Saturday<br />
morning service at 9:30 a.m. Active<br />
Temple including Religious School, Sisterhood,<br />
Men’s Club, Social Action and<br />
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<br />
the office for more information at 978-<br />
532-1293.<br />
The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day<br />
Saints<br />
400 Essex St., <strong>Lynnfield</strong><br />
lds.org - Sunday services and classes are<br />
from 9 a.m. to noon; 9-10:10 a.m. Sacrament<br />
Meeting; 10:20-11 a.m. Sunday School;<br />
11:10-noon, Primary and Youth Classes;<br />
Youth Night and Boy/Cub Scouts: Tuesdays<br />
at 7 p.m.; Bishop: Matthew Romano, 781-<br />
334-5586. Family History Center (open to<br />
the public) Wednesdays 10 a.m. to 9 p.m.;<br />
Thursday, 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. Please check before<br />
coming due to weather or for summer<br />
hours).<br />
Wakefield <strong>Lynnfield</strong> United Methodist<br />
Church<br />
273 Vernon St., Wakefield with Pastor:<br />
Glenn M. Mortimer<br />
Hello from the Wakefield- <strong>Lynnfield</strong><br />
United 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<br />
infants/ toddlers through high Schoolers.<br />
Following the service, we enjoy Fellowship<br />
at our Coffee & Conversation time.<br />
For more information about our church,<br />
please call the church office at (781) 245-<br />
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 Activities:<br />
Thursday, Jan 25 - 9:30-11:30 a.m. and<br />
4:40-5:15 p.m. Early Childhood Music Together<br />
Classes<br />
1:30 p.m. Choir Practice<br />
2:30 p.m. Kids Curtain Call<br />
Friday, Jan. 26<br />
9:30 a.m.-12:30 p.m. Early Childhood<br />
Music Together Classes<br />
3-4:30 p.m. Girl Scouts<br />
Saturday, Jan. 27<br />
9:30-12:30 p.m.- Early Childhood Music<br />
Together Classes<br />
Sunday, Jan. 28<br />
9:15 a.m.- Adult Choir Rehearsal<br />
10:30 a.m.- Sunday Worship, Sunday<br />
School & Nursery Care<br />
Monday, Jan. 29<br />
2:30 p.m. -Kids Curtain Call<br />
Tuesday, Jan. 30<br />
9:30 a.m.- Music Together Class<br />
West Church<br />
27 Johnson St., Peabody<br />
Associate Pastor: Rick McDonnell<br />
Office Phone: 978-535-4112<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<br />
number of program offerings, special events,<br />
small groups, and opportunities to serve that<br />
may well encourage you to feel at home in our<br />
fellowship.<br />
Every Sunday at West Church, people<br />
of all ages come together to worship the<br />
Lord, Jesus Christ, and to share in fellowship<br />
as a community. Each service<br />
includes singing praise, prayer, and<br />
preaching from God’s word. We invite<br />
you to come and join us for worship at<br />
10:30 a.m. Kingdom Kids, our Worship<br />
Service program for children nursery<br />
through 4th grade, is available during<br />
Worship service. Sunday School is<br />
available for children, youth and adults<br />
from 9–10 a.m. For more information<br />
about our programs throughout the<br />
week visit our 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.
JANUARY <strong>18</strong>, 20<strong>18</strong> WEEKLYNEWS.NET - 978-532-5880 9<br />
Sports<br />
Last-second goal lift Pioneers to a tie<br />
By Anne Marie Tobin<br />
PEABODY — The <strong>Lynnfield</strong> Pioneers<br />
boys hockey team saved its best for last<br />
Saturday at McVann-O’Keefe Rink - as in,<br />
literally, the last second in a wild and crazy<br />
ending.<br />
Trailing 2-1, and skating with a 6-on-3<br />
advantage after pulling goaltender Aidan<br />
Kelly, with about 11 seconds to go, senior<br />
captain Cooper Marengi won a faceoff<br />
in the left circle. George DeRoche took<br />
a shot and it was deflected to junior Will<br />
Garofoli, who threaded the needle from<br />
behind the net to senior captain Joey Mack<br />
camped on the right side of the crease.<br />
Mack fired a bullet into the back of the<br />
net, top shelf, to not only beat Triton goaltender<br />
Ben Fougere, but beat the clock by<br />
a mere second to salvage a 2-2 tie.<br />
A wild celebration ensued while the two<br />
officials briefly conferred, then confirmed,<br />
that the goal was good.<br />
“We’ll take that point any day,” said<br />
<strong>Lynnfield</strong> coach Jon Gardner. “I think<br />
they (the Vikings) definitely felt they left<br />
a lot out there, especially with Aidan Kelly<br />
coming up with some big and key saves for<br />
us, but I felt that we did, too, as we had<br />
a ton of chances that we couldn’t finish.<br />
Overall, other than the first period, I felt<br />
we had more than enough chances to win<br />
the game, but we’ll take the tie considering<br />
the circumstances.”<br />
Mack said he knew time was short.<br />
“I looked at the clock and there four seconds<br />
left,” he said. “Will Garofoli gets it in<br />
the corner and backhands it back to me near<br />
the faceoff circle and I didn’t even look I<br />
just knew I had to get a shot off. I think it<br />
might have deflected off their players.”<br />
The Pioneers got off to a slow start and<br />
played sluggishly throughout most of the<br />
first period, allowing Triton to dominate<br />
pace and possession. Kelly, however, was<br />
more than up to the task to keep Triton off<br />
the board With about five minutes to play,<br />
he made his biggest save, robbing Triton<br />
defenseman Tyler Godfrey who had fired a<br />
laser from the point into traffic.<br />
With under a minute to go in the period,<br />
Marengi went down in a heap on the<br />
boards. Triton’s Joe Conte was flagged for<br />
holding, giving the Pioneers a power play<br />
for the rest of the period and another 1:39<br />
at the start of the second, but could not<br />
break through.<br />
FILE PHOTO<br />
Will Garofoli had an assist on the game-tying goal Saturday in <strong>Lynnfield</strong>’s tie with Triton.<br />
The action picked up in the second period<br />
with both teams going back and forth.<br />
At even strength with under six minutes<br />
to play, Marengi won a faceoff and dished<br />
to a wide-open Jack Hammersley, a junior,<br />
but his shot was off the mark, Triton countered<br />
with a full ice rush by Godfrey, but<br />
he was again robbed by Kelly. <strong>Lynnfield</strong><br />
came right back up the ice. Hammersley<br />
slipped the puck back to junior assistant<br />
captain Jaret Simpson on the left point.<br />
He fired off a slapshot that got loose in the<br />
crease, but Marengi’s attempts to poke it<br />
home were denied by Fougere, who covered<br />
up the puck in heavy traffic.<br />
<strong>Lynnfield</strong> finally broke the ice with 3:43<br />
to go on a goal by DeRoche with assists<br />
going to senior captain Tyler Murphy and<br />
junior Mike Caruso to tie things up at 1-1.<br />
With under three minutes in the period,<br />
Triton amped up the attack and put the<br />
pressure on Kelly. Godfrey had two good<br />
chances snuffed out by Kelly, then Conte<br />
was denied by a heavily screened Kelly on<br />
a shot from the left point. After <strong>Lynnfield</strong><br />
cleared the puck out of the zone, Triton<br />
dumped it back in where Kelly covered<br />
up to force a faceoff from the left circle.<br />
Triton’s Connor Kohan won it, then walked<br />
in and found Kyle McKendry. His shot<br />
was saved, but the rebound popped out to<br />
Josh D’Arcy who slipped it past Kelly to<br />
give Triton a 1-0 lead at the 13:12 mark.<br />
The third period got chippy on both<br />
sides with both teams getting burned by<br />
penalties.<br />
<strong>Lynnfield</strong> could do no damage, however,<br />
on a power play about five and a half<br />
minutes into the period.<br />
With 5:09 to play, Marengi was sent to<br />
the box for cross-checking, where he was<br />
joined a little more than a minute later by<br />
Simpson (elbowing), giving the Vikings<br />
a 5-on-3 advantage for 48 seconds. They<br />
needed just 36 seconds to cash in to regain<br />
the lead. Senior assistant captain Nekoroski<br />
took one for the team, blocking a shot by<br />
Godfrey. The puck ended up on the stick<br />
of Brady Lyndholm, partially open in the<br />
slot on the right side. Lyndholm threaded<br />
the needle to Sam Rennick camped just<br />
outside the crease on the left, who redirected<br />
the puck home to put Triton back on<br />
top, 2-1. Time of the goal was 11:48.<br />
After that, things got interesting.<br />
With 2:51 to go, Conte was sent to the<br />
penalty box. With 1:12 to go, matching<br />
penalties were assessed to each team, and<br />
Gardner pulled Kelly to take advantage of<br />
a 6-on-4 man up edge.<br />
That edge turned into a 6-on-3 opportunity<br />
when Conte received double minors<br />
for cross-checking and slashing at 14:21,<br />
giving the Pioneers a 3-man edge for the<br />
remaining 39 seconds of the game.<br />
With Marengi, Mack, Garofoli,<br />
DeRoche, Murphy, and Robbie Brandano<br />
on the ice, the Pioneers survived an anxious<br />
few seconds when Triton’s Matt<br />
Duncan cleared the puck the length of the<br />
ice, missing the open net by a couple of<br />
feet.<br />
The Pioneers worked the puck back into<br />
the offensive zone with under 20 seconds<br />
to go. Garofoli spied Mack and put the<br />
puck right on his stick for the equalizer to<br />
stun the Vikings — and steal a point.<br />
“We left our game in the locker room<br />
and had zero intensity, and quite honestly,<br />
were beyond flat in that first period, they<br />
started listening to us in the last two periods,”<br />
said Gardner.<br />
“That was a bang-bang play and we did<br />
get the benefit of a couple of really undisciplined<br />
penalties on their part in the third<br />
period. It was a tough decision on pulling<br />
the goalie because you don’t want to give<br />
away your chance for a point and sometimes<br />
that many skaters can crowd things,<br />
but they didn’t pack it in like I thought they<br />
would, and that left both guys (Marengi<br />
and Mack) open.<br />
Gardner commended the play of junior<br />
Chris Flannery, Nekoroski and Garofoli.<br />
“They were really buzzing around especially<br />
in the last two periods, so that helped<br />
everyone pick up their games.”<br />
Wrestlers take two matches during quad meet<br />
By Anne Marie Tobin<br />
The <strong>Lynnfield</strong>/North Reading wrestling team picked up<br />
two wins in a quad meet Saturday at North Reading High<br />
to finish the week 2-2.<br />
The Black and Gold defeated Salem, <strong>18</strong>-12, then lost<br />
to defending Division 3 state champion Melrose, 46-30,<br />
in the middle match. LNR rallied to defeat Essex Tech<br />
54-24 in the final match. Sophomore Stuart Glover (120<br />
pounds), Josh Bedell (126 pounds), and senior captains<br />
Anthony Wilkinson (170 pounds) and Kevin Farrelly<br />
(195 pounds) were perfect on the day, winning all three<br />
of their matches.<br />
Against Salem, the Witches filled only five of the 14<br />
weight classes, three of which were won by the Black<br />
and Gold in matches that lasted a combined 2:35 on the<br />
mat. Glover picked up LNR’s first win with a pin in 1:43.<br />
Bedell took the next match in only 32 seconds, while senior<br />
captain Andrew DiPietro (152 pounds) capped the<br />
scoring for the Black and Gold with another quick win by<br />
pin, this one in only 21 seconds.<br />
Against Melrose, the Black and Gold got off to a great<br />
start and held a <strong>18</strong>-6 lead after the first four matches.<br />
Glover, once again, picked up LNR’s first win in a forfeit,<br />
while Bedell followed with a 35-second pin and Chris<br />
Metrano (126 pounds) also had a first period win by pin<br />
in 1:28.<br />
Wilkinson had the most impressive win, pinning returning<br />
sectional place finisher Cam Rosie in 1:23.<br />
Farrelly capped the match with a win by pin in 3:22.<br />
In the Essex Tech match, the Black and Gold won nine<br />
of 14 weight classes and led from start to finish. The<br />
match began at 120 pounds with Glover’s third win of the<br />
day (1:26). DiPietro picked up his second win with a win<br />
by pin in 1:59, while Wilkinson wrestled up a class at <strong>18</strong>2<br />
pounds and capped his perfect day with a win by pin in<br />
1:45. Farrelly won his second match with a win by pin in<br />
1:28. Sean McCullough (195 pounds) and Christian Real-<br />
Costa won their first matches of the day, both by pins, with<br />
McCullough winning his match in 1:45 and Real-Costa<br />
winning his match in 1:08. Bedell, Nik Marotta (160<br />
pounds) and Dan Ryan (170 pounds) won their matches<br />
in forfeits.<br />
LNR’s dual meet record improved to 5-11-1.<br />
“It’s been frustrating at times this season, but we are<br />
hanging in, supporting each other, and pushing each other<br />
to be the best we can be,” said LNR coach Craig Stone.<br />
“The attitude has been great, and there is plenty of enthusiasm,<br />
two important variables that transcend wins and<br />
loses.”<br />
Burlington 53, LNR 30<br />
On Jan. 10, the Black and Gold hit the road and struggled<br />
in the lower weight classes, which has been one of the<br />
team’s strengths this season. LNR won just two matches<br />
on the mats with DiPietro picking a win by pin in 2:39 and<br />
Wilkinson, back at 170 pounds, won in 1:57. McCullough<br />
(<strong>18</strong>2 pounds), Greg Camier (285 pounds) and Metrano<br />
(132 pounds) won their matches by forfeit.<br />
“We did not match up well in the lower weights,” said<br />
Stone. “Also, Burlington returned four starters while LNR<br />
had four first-year wrestlers.”<br />
LNR’s next match is tomorrow night against<br />
Northeastern Conference foe Peabody at home (6:30).
10 WEEKLYNEWS.NET - 978-532-5880 JANUARY <strong>18</strong>, 20<strong>18</strong><br />
Three reign supreme in Pioneers’ OT victory<br />
By Anne Marie Tobin<br />
LYNNFIELD — Oscar Robertson once<br />
said “if you are a basketball player, you’ve got<br />
to shoot.”<br />
Nobody had to tell that to anyone on either<br />
the <strong>Lynnfield</strong> or Triton boys basketball teams<br />
Monday during their game at <strong>Lynnfield</strong> High<br />
where the Pioneers won a 65-63 double-overtime<br />
thriller.<br />
The teams combined for 19 3-pointers<br />
in all, 12 by Triton and seven by <strong>Lynnfield</strong>.<br />
Triton’s Brandon Baletsa (<strong>18</strong> points) had five<br />
in the first half and six total, while teammate<br />
William Parsons (25 points) wasn’t too shabby<br />
with five of his own, four of them coming at<br />
crunch time from the fourth quarter on. Senior<br />
captains Zach Shone and Billy Arseneault<br />
knocked down two each for the Pioneers.<br />
In the end, however, it was a couple of<br />
pure hustle “Tommy point” worthy plays that<br />
turned the game in the Pioneers’ favor.<br />
With the game tied at 60-60 and three minutes<br />
left in the second OT, a sloppy possession<br />
nearly cost the Pioneers a possession, but senior<br />
Jason Ndansi (3 points) fought for a loose<br />
ball and forced up a shot to beat the shot clock.<br />
Fellow senior Matt Mortellite (13 points),<br />
battled three Triton players for the rebound<br />
but couldn’t convert a very contested layup<br />
attempt. It was deja vu for Mortellite as he<br />
hauled down another offensive rebound and<br />
got fouled on the layup, converting the second<br />
free throw to put the Pioneers ahead for good,<br />
61-60, with 2:52 to play.<br />
A minute later, after Triton missed the front<br />
end of a 1-and-1, Shone rimmed out a shot, but<br />
ROUNDUP<br />
By Anne Marie Tobin<br />
The <strong>Lynnfield</strong> girls basketball<br />
team came close to breaking through<br />
with its first win of the season, but<br />
let the lead slip away in the fourth<br />
quarter to fall to host Triton, 39-<br />
34, Monday night at Triton won<br />
the game at the free throw line,<br />
making 17-of-27, including 6-of 11<br />
in the fourth quarter alone, while the<br />
Pioneers had only 11 attempts the<br />
entire game and made just six.<br />
<strong>Lynnfield</strong> trailed 7-3 after one<br />
and 16-12 at halftime, then had a big<br />
third quarter, outscoring the Vikings<br />
<strong>18</strong>-9 to take a 30-27 lead into the<br />
final eight minutes, but that was as<br />
good as it got of the Pioneers.<br />
Sophomore Melissa Morelli<br />
Mortellite was johnny on the spot once again,<br />
grabbing the rebound and feeding Arseneault,<br />
who calmly drained a 3-pointer to stretch the<br />
Pioneers’ lead to 64-60 with under a minute<br />
to play. Undaunted, Parsons drained his fifth<br />
trey of the game to make it a one point game<br />
again, 64-63, with 42 seconds to go.<br />
<strong>Lynnfield</strong> turned the ball over on its next<br />
possession, giving the Vikings 20 seconds<br />
and a chance to run out the clock and win the<br />
game, but the Vikings heaved up an airball on<br />
a 3-pointer. Senior captain Dan Jameson (7<br />
points) and Ndansi battled to prevent Triton<br />
from saving the ball to give <strong>Lynnfield</strong> the ball<br />
with nine ticks left on the clock. Shone was<br />
intentionally fouled and converted the second<br />
free throw to make it 65-63 with 7.6 seconds<br />
left. Tight defense forced a Triton miss on a<br />
long three to seal the win for <strong>Lynnfield</strong>.<br />
<strong>Lynnfield</strong> coach Scott MacKenzie said it’s<br />
the little things that kids like Mortellite (13<br />
points) do that make a big difference.<br />
“I’m not surprised that it was Mort making<br />
those plays, it’s always Mort, he is scrappy<br />
and he is super competitive,” MacKenzie said.<br />
“He’s an athlete and always seems to come<br />
up with big clutch plays. A double overtime<br />
game, that was a real good high school game.<br />
I don’t think we shot the ball particularly well<br />
considering at the end of regulation we had<br />
only 52 points, but we’ll take it, man.”<br />
Triton shut down Arseneault, who was<br />
averaging nearly 29 points in his last three<br />
games, with a double team, holding him to<br />
just 12 points (nine of them in regulation).<br />
Shone stepped up in a big way with 24 points.<br />
He carried the offense in the third quarter with<br />
scored a team-high 10 points, while<br />
senior captain Lizzie Shaievitz<br />
scored eight points and fellow senior<br />
captain MacKenzie O’Neill had<br />
seven. Freshmen Grace Klonsky<br />
and Caroline Waisnor scored two<br />
points each.<br />
N. Reading 40, <strong>Lynnfield</strong> 27<br />
At <strong>Lynnfield</strong> Friday night, too<br />
many turnovers and poor shooting<br />
plagued the Pioneers. They trailed<br />
by just four, 11-7 after the first<br />
quarter, but back-to-back four point<br />
frames put the Pioneers in a 33-15<br />
hole after three.<br />
“Our turnovers were too high,<br />
more than 30, and our guards got<br />
frazzled by the pressure,” said<br />
<strong>Lynnfield</strong> coach Jim Perry. “We<br />
also had foul trouble early, but I<br />
thought my fours and fives played<br />
great, our rebounding continues to<br />
be great, but we need more offense.”<br />
Shaievitz scored a team-high<br />
eight points and hauled down eight<br />
boards, while Tori Morelli scored<br />
seven points and had seven rebounds.<br />
Melissa Morelli chipped in<br />
with six points and nine rebounds.<br />
O’Neill (4 points, six rebounds) and<br />
Klonsky (2 points, 2 steals, 2 blocks)<br />
also scored.<br />
BOYS BASKETBALL<br />
<strong>Lynnfield</strong> 65, N. Reading 60<br />
At North Reading Friday night,<br />
the Pioneers improved to 7-2 with a<br />
win over their archrival. <strong>Lynnfield</strong><br />
led by six, 38-32, at the half and<br />
51-40 after three. Billy Arseneault<br />
had another big night with 25 points<br />
while Zach Shone (16 points) and<br />
Matt Mortellite (12 points) also hit<br />
double figures. Dan Jameson (6<br />
points), Jason Ndansi (3 points) and<br />
PHOTO | KRISTINE MARENGI<br />
Matt Mortellite goes up for a layup during a<br />
game last week.<br />
nine of the Pioneers’ <strong>18</strong> points, helping to<br />
turn around a 1-point halftime deficit (28-27)<br />
into a 45-40 after three.<br />
“I thought it was a good game plan by<br />
them,” said MacKenzie. “They wanted to<br />
run two guys at Billy all night and we kept<br />
reminding the guys that we have four other<br />
dudes and a 4-on-3 with kids like Zach and<br />
the others who can make plays. Zach is one<br />
Jack Ford (3 points) also scored.<br />
<strong>Lynnfield</strong> 77, Amesbury 71<br />
At Amesbury Jan. 9, <strong>Lynnfield</strong><br />
(6-2) led throughout most of the first<br />
half, leading by six after the first<br />
quarter, 19-13, and by six at halftime,<br />
35-29. Amesbury exploded<br />
for 27 points in the third quarter<br />
to lead, 56-49, into the final eight<br />
minutes. But <strong>Lynnfield</strong> turned tables<br />
in the fourth quarter, outscoring<br />
the Indians 28-15. Arseneault (29<br />
points) and Shone (20 points) were a<br />
two-man show in the fourth quarter<br />
with 12 and 11 points to lead the<br />
Pioneers, who knocked down four<br />
timely treys (two by Shone, one<br />
each by Marengi and Arseneault) in<br />
the final eight minutes. Ndansi also<br />
hit double figures with 12 points,<br />
while Mortellite (8 points), Marengi<br />
(5 points) and Ford (3 points) also<br />
of those kids who is just a professional offensive<br />
player and he showed that tonight.”<br />
<strong>Lynnfield</strong> got off to a sluggish start and<br />
trailed 7-2 with a little more than two minutes<br />
to go in the first quarter. Freshman Jack<br />
Ford (3 points) knocked down a three from<br />
the corner to cut the deficit to 7-5 with 1:55 to<br />
play. Triton ran off five straight to close out<br />
the quarter with a 12-7 lead.<br />
Junior Jack Cleary (3 points) came in off the<br />
bench to start the second quarter and sparked<br />
an 8-0 Pioneer run. He drained a 3-pointer 10<br />
seconds in and, after a bucket by Mortellite,<br />
the Pioneers were tied, 12-12. On their next<br />
possession, Cleary grabbed an offensive rebound<br />
and fed Arseneault for a trey to give the<br />
Pioneers their first lead of the game, 15-12.<br />
Triton responded with a 16-7 run to lead 28-22<br />
with 1:02 left in the half, but <strong>Lynnfield</strong> closed<br />
out the half with a 5-0 run on a three by Jameson<br />
and bucket by Ndansi after he grabbed an offensive<br />
re board off the offensive glass to send the<br />
Pioneers into halftime trailing by just one, 28-27.<br />
<strong>Lynnfield</strong> outscored Triton <strong>18</strong>-12 in the<br />
third, but struggled in the fourth with only<br />
seven points, five of them by Shone, including<br />
a free throw to tie the game at 52 all with 3.3<br />
seconds left in regulation.<br />
Triton went on a 6-0 run to start the first<br />
overtime session, which <strong>Lynnfield</strong> matched<br />
to force a second OT. A Shone putback and<br />
Jameson backdoor layup, off a pretty feed<br />
from Arseneault, closed the deficit to 58-56.<br />
Then Jameson cooly knocked down two free<br />
throws with 1:04 left to force a second overtime<br />
session.<br />
Girls basketball comes close, but Triton prevails<br />
scored.<br />
BOYS HOCKEY<br />
Newburyport 3, <strong>Lynnfield</strong> 1<br />
At home Jan. 10, the Pioneers<br />
dropped their second game of the<br />
season despite outshooting the<br />
Clippers, 28-15. Newburyport led<br />
1-0 on a goal by Pat Leary at the<br />
2:58 mark after the first period, then<br />
doubled the lead to 2-0 on a goal by<br />
Owen Bradbury at the 3:01 mark of<br />
the second.<br />
The Pioneers cut the deficit to 2-1<br />
at the 6:22 mark of the third period<br />
on a power play goal by Murphy,<br />
assisted by Marengi and Mack.<br />
Newburyport sealed the win with<br />
an empty net goal by Bradbury with<br />
only 27 seconds to go.<br />
<strong>Lynnfield</strong> was 1-for-5 on power<br />
plays.<br />
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JANUARY <strong>18</strong>, 20<strong>18</strong> WEEKLYNEWS.NET - 978-532-5880 11<br />
A rewarding weekend split for Tanner girls<br />
By Anne Marie Tobin<br />
A new day, and a new organization, for youth football<br />
By Anne Marie Tobin<br />
LYNNFIELD — A new chapter in the <strong>Lynnfield</strong> youth<br />
football saga has begun.<br />
Last Thursday night at St. Maria Goretti church, the new<br />
<strong>Lynnfield</strong> Pioneer Youth Football and Cheer club (LPYFC)<br />
held an informational meeting to present its plans for the new<br />
program. More than 30 people, including several coaches<br />
along with selectmen Dick Dalton and Phil Crawford, attended<br />
the meeting.<br />
LPYSC president Steve Connolly opened the meeting by<br />
saying that he has received calls from many coaches, indicating<br />
their support and desire to be involved He also injected a little<br />
humor, noting that, unlike the Aug. 30 meeting of <strong>Lynnfield</strong><br />
Youth Football and Cheering (LYFC), no police detail was<br />
needed at the LPYFC meeting.<br />
“It has been a very difficult time this summer trying unsuccessfully<br />
to work with LYFC,” Connolly said. “After years of<br />
trying to get involved and after the way the Aug. 7 elections<br />
were voided and the way parents were not allowed to attend<br />
the Aug. 30 meeting and many other issues, it was apparent<br />
that LYFC had no intentio n of allowing parents to work with<br />
LYFC.<br />
“We realized then that parents would never have a voice in<br />
youth football in this town, so we went out on our own, quietly<br />
so as not to be a distraction to the existing program. We<br />
are committed to the notion that parents should be involved<br />
beyond just by watching their kids play, and the only way to<br />
make that happen was to form a new club.”<br />
The organization incorporated as a non-profit Oct. 19, 2017.<br />
The Articles of Organization list five directors: Connolly;<br />
Lauren George, treasurer; David Capachietti, vice-president;<br />
Kimberly Brown, clerk; and Rebecca Drzewiczewski, director.<br />
The organization intends to increase the number of directors<br />
by adding several new positions including director of cheer,<br />
director of football, director of player safety, director of equipment,<br />
director of communications, director of fundraising and<br />
PHOTO | ANNE MARIE TOBIN<br />
Carolyn Garofoli (15) protects goalie Abby Buckley during Friday’s<br />
game with the Raiders.<br />
PEABODY — All in all, it was a<br />
pretty good week for the Peabody/<br />
<strong>Lynnfield</strong> girls hockey team.<br />
Saturday, it cruised to a 5-0 win<br />
over Medford at McVann-O’Keefe<br />
Rink to get back to two games<br />
above .500 at 5-3-1.<br />
The night before, also at home,<br />
the Tanners took on one of the strongest<br />
teams in the state in Wellesley,<br />
ranked eighth in the state. The<br />
Raiders dominated the faceoff circle<br />
and cashed in with two power play<br />
goals to secure a 3-0 win.<br />
“After the Wellesley game, we<br />
really needed those two points<br />
against Medford,” said Peabody<br />
coach Michelle Roach. “Wellesley<br />
is a very good, talented team and aggressive<br />
team that runs three strong<br />
lines and they came to compete.”<br />
Peabody 5, Medford 0<br />
The game was tight through<br />
the first period with the Tanners<br />
clinging to a 1-0 lead on a goal<br />
by junior Kathryn DiGiulio, from<br />
freshman Dana Kampersal, at 5:19.<br />
Peabody began to pull away in<br />
the second period with two goals<br />
to make it 3-0 going into the final<br />
15 minutes. Senior captain Cassie<br />
Mirasolo (from freshman Jenn<br />
Flynn of <strong>Lynnfield</strong>) scored about<br />
four minutes in, then younger sister<br />
and linemate Sammie Mirasolo, a<br />
sophomore, scored an unassisted<br />
goal with 3:39 left in the period.<br />
DiGiulio notched her second<br />
goal of the game at the 8:06 mark to<br />
stretch the Tanners’ lead to 4-0.<br />
Sammie Mirasolo capped the<br />
scoring in a most unusual way with<br />
her second unassisted goal of the<br />
night, this one while the Tanners<br />
were playing short handed down<br />
two men, 3-on-5 with only 4.8 seconds<br />
left in regulation.<br />
Sophomore Jeny Collins earned<br />
the shutout in goal, her first of the<br />
season and the Tanners’ second in<br />
the last three games.<br />
“Jeny, Reilly Ganter, Kat<br />
DiGiulio, Paige Thibedeau and Jess<br />
Robert all played very well,” said<br />
Roach. “We knew Medford was<br />
going to be a good challenge.”<br />
Wellesley 3, Peabody 0<br />
There were many positives they<br />
took away from the game.<br />
“Even though we were outplayed<br />
at times, I did see some positives,”<br />
said Roach. “We were slow to start<br />
and we hesitated a little bit too much<br />
in the first period but picked it up in<br />
the second and third periods. The<br />
biggest positive for us is we went<br />
3-0 against a very high level team.<br />
“So we have seen a lot of progress,”<br />
she said. “The Peabody of<br />
three or four years ago wouldn’t be<br />
skating with a team like Wellesley.”<br />
Wellesley came out fast and<br />
tested Buckley right out of the gate<br />
when sophomore Emily Rourke<br />
fired a rocket, but Buckley was up<br />
to the task. Two minutes in, the<br />
Tanners’ penalty kill unit held the<br />
Raiders to a single shot to keep the<br />
game scoreless.<br />
Buckley came up with another<br />
big save with about five minutes to<br />
go in the period, going to her knees<br />
to deny senior forward Phoebe<br />
Lawrence.<br />
director of fields and facilities.<br />
The first annual meeting of the organization is scheduled for<br />
Thursday, Jan. 25 at St. Maria Goretti Church at 7 p.m..<br />
<strong>Lynnfield</strong> Pioneer YFC has pledged total transparency.<br />
Corporate bylaws, policies and procedures, conflict of interest<br />
policy, budget and frequently asked questions are all posted on<br />
its website, <strong>Lynnfield</strong>pioneersyfc.com.<br />
One of the FAQs states that the reason a new organization<br />
was founded was that “the previous organization historically<br />
failed to hold annual meetings for its members and then<br />
last August had two failed attempts at conducting an annual<br />
meeting to elect a board of directors.” It further states that “it<br />
became apparent that LYFC would not allow new membership<br />
within its board. <strong>Lynnfield</strong> Pioneer YFC was formed so that<br />
a clearly defined membership pool, including parents of participants,<br />
could have an opportunity to vote for its leadership,<br />
who could then work together to offer a youth sports program<br />
founded on the principles of fairness, communication, and<br />
teamwork.”<br />
“We met with CAYFL on Dec. 7 and attended a meeting<br />
last night as well,” said Connolly said the group has total support<br />
of the Cape Ann Youth Football League and has met with<br />
CAYFL twice<br />
“Nothing will change going forward and the league totally<br />
supports us,” Connolly said.<br />
Drzewiczewski added that she has received similar assurances<br />
from the CAYFL cheer board of directors.<br />
The participation fees for 20<strong>18</strong> will remain the same as they<br />
were in 2017 under LYFC, $300 per player for football and<br />
$200 per cheerleader. Connolly said that <strong>Lynnfield</strong> has the<br />
second highest registration fees in the CAYFL, but the new<br />
board hopes the fees for 2019 can be reduced once the program<br />
is underway and known costs are determined.<br />
Unlike LYFC, parents are included as members under the<br />
bylaws as are volunteers over the age of <strong>18</strong> and other interested<br />
persons if approved by two-thirds of the board.<br />
All members have voting privileges.<br />
With 1:22 left, Wellesley had its<br />
second power play opportunity and<br />
cashed in with 8.6 seconds left in the<br />
period when O’Neil beat Buckley<br />
with a hard wrist shot.<br />
“I don’t think we challenged them<br />
enough in that first period and we let<br />
them establish the pace of the game<br />
and we pretty much just sat back<br />
and let them dictate the tone,” said<br />
Roach.<br />
Wellesley scored another po w erplay<br />
goal at 8:52 of the second period<br />
to take a 2--0 lead. Sophomore<br />
Erin Fleming blasted a shot from<br />
just inside the blue line. Buckley<br />
made the initial stop, but the puck<br />
came loose and trickled over the<br />
goal line. Harrison picked up an assist<br />
on the play.<br />
“Our penalty kill and our 4-on-4<br />
has been good for us as we work<br />
really hard at it and were ready for<br />
them tonight, but we just had a few<br />
breakdowns in coverage and that’s<br />
when they capitalized, that’s all.”<br />
The game got a little chippy late<br />
in the period. With 2:09 left to play,<br />
both teams went down a man after<br />
matching minors. Peabody’s Jess<br />
Robert had a great chance with<br />
about 90 seconds left, but was denied<br />
by Wellesley goalie Liddy<br />
Schulz. Robert won the ensuing faceoff<br />
and got the puck to sophomore<br />
Sammi Mirasolo alone in front, but<br />
her shot was wide.<br />
The last minute, however, belonged<br />
to Wellesley. In traffic,<br />
Buckley snuffed out two scoring<br />
chances, covering up two loose<br />
pucks in the crease, the second with<br />
26 seconds left. The Raiders kept up<br />
the pressure and finally found pay<br />
dirt with just 17 seconds to go when,<br />
after winning another faceoff senior<br />
Olivia Vernon blasted a rising shot<br />
from the left point that beat Buckley,<br />
screened on the play, to make it a<br />
3-0 game.<br />
“We did challenge them in the<br />
second and third periods and we<br />
started getting opportunities and<br />
shots on net,” said Roach. “But we<br />
have to finish out periods and not<br />
give up goals right near the end of<br />
the period and we have to stay out<br />
of the penalty box.”<br />
Peabody had a great chance<br />
to narrow the deficit early in the<br />
third period when Wellesley took<br />
a hooking penalty, but the Raiders<br />
killed off the penalty.<br />
With 4:05 to play, Peabody went<br />
down a man with another penalty,<br />
but eight seconds later Wellesley<br />
got one too, so the teams played<br />
a man short for 1:53. Senior captain<br />
Mae Norton of <strong>Lynnfield</strong> was<br />
robbed on a slapper from the right<br />
point. O’Neil countered, beating<br />
a defender to break in alone on<br />
Buckley, but the goalie turned away<br />
the shot. Peabody had another good<br />
chance to get on the board about a<br />
minute later when freshman Reilly<br />
Ganter, also of <strong>Lynnfield</strong>, got off a<br />
shot from the right point into traffic,<br />
but the shot was deflected in front.<br />
Peabody spent the last 1:59 of<br />
the game on a power play and had<br />
chances by freshman Jenn Flynn<br />
and sophomore Carolyn Garofoli<br />
both of <strong>Lynnfield</strong>, Ganter, and<br />
Kathryn DiGuilio<br />
“The game was never out of reach<br />
but we did pick it up after that first<br />
period,” Roach said. “We could<br />
have played harder, but we did a lot<br />
of reacting, instead of challenging.<br />
When we did challenge, we were<br />
fine. We got solid play from Abby<br />
in goal with a couple of big saves.<br />
She plays a very level-headed game<br />
and made a couple of big plays on<br />
back door plays and breakaways.”<br />
Connolly outlined the nomination process; members interested<br />
in running for a seat on the board must inform LPYFC<br />
(preferably by email) by Jan. 20 of the desired position prior<br />
to the meeting. Nominations from the floor will be allowed.<br />
Connolly said once a new director of fundraising is in place,<br />
the new board will focus on fundraising, which should open<br />
up once the organization’s application for tax-exempt status is<br />
approved.<br />
“We have obtained a state solicitation certificate, so we<br />
are free to raise money today, the only thing is we cannot tell<br />
people that donations are tax deductible until we are tax-exempt,”<br />
said George. “I expect to have our determination ruling<br />
from the IRS within 90 days.”<br />
The largest start-up cost is expected to be uniforms and<br />
equipment as it is not clear whether or not LPYFC will have<br />
access to the same currently in the possession of LYFC.<br />
The organization has budgeted $35,500 for uniforms and<br />
$39,500 for equipment.<br />
“It would be great to have the uniforms and equipment that<br />
our registration fees over the years have paid for and we will<br />
engage in discussions with LYFC about that, but we don’t<br />
know what they (LYFC) plans to do,” said Connolly.<br />
Connolly said LPYFC has already had discussions about<br />
field use with FIelds Director Joe Maney and Richard Sjoberg,<br />
chairman of <strong>Lynnfield</strong> Recreation.<br />
George encouraged the attendees to make early registration<br />
a priority and that online registration should be available sometime<br />
in mid-February.<br />
Connolly concluded the meeting by assuring attendees that<br />
LPYFC is not interested in changing the program, but only the<br />
way the youth football program is governed.<br />
“Every other youth sports program in this town has regular<br />
and annual meetings and parents are allowed to be a part of<br />
the process,” he said. “It’s one thing to not get involved, but it<br />
is quite another to actively prevent people from participating.<br />
We are looking for parents to get involved and make this program<br />
successful.”
12 WEEKLYNEWS.NET - 978-532-5880 JANUARY <strong>18</strong>, 20<strong>18</strong><br />
HIGH SCHOOL SCHEDULE<br />
THURSDAY, JAN. <strong>18</strong><br />
No events scheduled<br />
FRIDAY, JAN. 19<br />
Boys basketball<br />
<strong>Lynnfield</strong> at Pentucket (6:30)<br />
Girls basketball<br />
Pentucket at <strong>Lynnfield</strong> (6)<br />
Wrestling<br />
Peabody at <strong>Lynnfield</strong> (6:30)<br />
SATURDAY, JAN. 20<br />
Wrestling<br />
<strong>Lynnfield</strong> at Canton quad (10)<br />
Boys hockey<br />
Masco at <strong>Lynnfield</strong> (12)<br />
Girls hockey<br />
Winthrop at Peabody/<br />
<strong>Lynnfield</strong> (4)<br />
Swimming<br />
<strong>Lynnfield</strong> at N. Reading (6:30)<br />
SUNDAY, JAN. 21<br />
Track<br />
D5 State Coaches Relays (10)<br />
MONDAY, JAN. 22<br />
Girls basketball<br />
Masco at <strong>Lynnfield</strong> (6)<br />
Girls hockey<br />
Peabody/<strong>Lynnfield</strong> at<br />
Oakmont (6)<br />
TUESDAY, JAN. 23<br />
Boys basketball<br />
Ipswich at <strong>Lynnfield</strong> (6:30)<br />
Girls basketball<br />
<strong>Lynnfield</strong> at Ipswich (6:30)<br />
WEDNESDAY, JAN. 24<br />
Wrestling<br />
Georgetown at <strong>Lynnfield</strong> (6:30)<br />
Track<br />
Essex Tech at <strong>Lynnfield</strong><br />
(7:15)<br />
Boys hockey<br />
Pentucket at <strong>Lynnfield</strong> (8:15)<br />
Girls hockey<br />
Masco at Peabody/<strong>Lynnfield</strong><br />
(5:15)<br />
CATERING<br />
TAKE-OUT<br />
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978-532-2791<br />
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Pets of the week<br />
and others at<br />
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Pioneer girls battle with Amesbury<br />
By Anne Marie Tobin<br />
<strong>Lynnfield</strong> gave defending<br />
Division 3 North champion<br />
Amesbury all it could handle, but<br />
the Indians scored the final three<br />
points of the game to stave off<br />
the upset-minded Pioneers, 48-<br />
45, Jan. 9 at <strong>Lynnfield</strong> High.<br />
While <strong>Lynnfield</strong> carried a<br />
37-36 lead into the final quarter,<br />
the Indians regained the lead,<br />
45-41, with a 9-4 run. <strong>Lynnfield</strong><br />
stormed back to tie the game at<br />
45 all on four straight points by<br />
sophomore Melissa Morelli, but<br />
Amesbury regained the lead for<br />
good with 55 seconds left to play<br />
on a free throw by the top scorer<br />
in the game, sophomore Allison<br />
Napoli (22 points).<br />
After freshman Mary Bullis<br />
added a hoop to make it a 3-point<br />
game with 32 seconds to play<br />
in regulation, the teams traded<br />
turnovers. Then, the Pioneers<br />
caught a huge break when 2017<br />
Cape Ann League co-Player of<br />
the Year Flannery O’Connor<br />
missed a pair of free throws that<br />
likely would have put the game<br />
out of reach with 11.2 seconds<br />
left, giving the Pioneers one<br />
last chance to force overtime.<br />
They got the open look they<br />
wanted, but senior captain Lizzy<br />
Shaievitz’s 3-pointer rimmed out<br />
at the buzzer.<br />
“I’ll be honest, we just thought<br />
we had to stop the rout tonight,<br />
that’s what we thought was<br />
coming,” said Perry. “I could<br />
not have been prouder of them<br />
tonight and that’s the best they<br />
have played by far against a<br />
quality opponent. We had two<br />
shots down the stretch to try to<br />
tie this game up. One shot was<br />
a little contested and Lizzie had<br />
a clean look on the last one. This<br />
game is definitely something we<br />
can build on.”<br />
The Pioneers came out of<br />
the gate sluggishly and trailed<br />
12-0 before Shaievitz finally<br />
broke the ice with a hoop with<br />
about a minute to go in the first<br />
quarter. Taking a pass from midcourt<br />
from freshman Caroline<br />
Waisnor, senior captain Emory<br />
Caswell cut the deficit to eight<br />
with a layup at the buzzer.<br />
<strong>Lynnfield</strong> outscored Amesbury<br />
12-9 in the second quarter,<br />
LPYFC first annual<br />
meeting Jan. 25<br />
The <strong>Lynnfield</strong> Pioneer Youth<br />
Football and Cheer group will<br />
be conducting its first Annual<br />
Meeting on Thursday, Jan. 25<br />
Gift<br />
Certificates<br />
Available<br />
PHOTO | ANN MARIE TOBIN<br />
Lizzie Shaievitz (in white) knocks the ball away from Sadie Kermelewicz<br />
during a game against Amersbury last week as Caroline Waisner<br />
(10) looks on.<br />
holding them scoreless for a<br />
3-minute stretch, to go into halftime<br />
trailing by just five, 21-16.<br />
The Pioneers poured it on in<br />
the third quarter, outscoring the<br />
Indians 21-15 to grab a one point<br />
lead at 37-36. Klonsky got things<br />
started with a floater, then a steal<br />
by Shaievitz and dish to O’Neill<br />
a couple of seconds later made it<br />
a one point game at 21-20. After<br />
a pair of buckets by Amesbury<br />
freshman Ciara Sullivan, sophomore<br />
Tori Morelli drained a<br />
floater to make it 25-22 with six<br />
minutes to go. Klonsky drained a<br />
3-pointer to tie the game at 25 all<br />
with 4:55 left in the quarter.<br />
Napoli went to work, polishing<br />
off an old-fashioned 3-point play,<br />
then making 2-of-2 from the free<br />
throw line to bump Amesbury<br />
lead to 30-25, but <strong>Lynnfield</strong><br />
closed out the half with a 12-6<br />
run, the final two on a pretty<br />
feed and finish from Waisnor<br />
at 7 p.m. in the basement of St.<br />
Maria Goretti’s church, 112<br />
Chestnut St., <strong>Lynnfield</strong> for the<br />
purpose of electing officers and<br />
directors. Any LPYFC member<br />
interested in running for a position<br />
must email the league at<br />
SPORTS BRIEFS<br />
to Melissa Morelli to regain the<br />
lead, 37-36, at the buzzer.<br />
The Indians opened the fourth<br />
quarter with a 6-0 run to lead 43-<br />
37, but the Pioneers answered<br />
with an 8-2 run to get back in the<br />
game at 45 all on hoops by Tori<br />
Morelli, a pair of free throws on<br />
a 1-and-1 by Melissa Morelli, a<br />
jumper by Morelli off an O’Neil<br />
pick and a pair of free throws by<br />
Shaievitz.<br />
Amesbury won the battle at<br />
the free throw line, making 16 of<br />
20 attempts, while the Pioneers<br />
made just eight of 19.<br />
<strong>Lynnfield</strong>, however, owned the<br />
boards at both ends of the court.<br />
Melissa Morelli dominated,<br />
hauling down 11 rebounds, eight<br />
of them off the offensive glass.<br />
She also scored a season-high 16<br />
points and also had three steals.<br />
“The thing that killed us tonight<br />
was our free throws and we<br />
missed some layups,” said Perry.<br />
admin@<strong>Lynnfield</strong>Pioneer YFC.<br />
com by Jan. 20 and indicate<br />
their intention to run and also<br />
identify the position he or she is<br />
seeking. Nominations from the<br />
floor will also be accepted. For<br />
more information about LPYFC<br />
and information about available<br />
positions, please visit the<br />
organization’s website, www.<br />
<strong>Lynnfield</strong>PioneerYFC.com.<br />
Softball registration<br />
has opened<br />
Registration for girls in grades<br />
2 through 8 who live or attend<br />
school in <strong>Lynnfield</strong> is open for<br />
the 20<strong>18</strong> <strong>Lynnfield</strong> Girls Softball<br />
spring season. To register, go<br />
to lynnfieldgirlssoftball.com to<br />
register.<br />
The league is also holding a<br />
“But even though we are saying<br />
what’s bad, it’s still so positive<br />
because we were in it, we were in<br />
the game, mainly because of our<br />
rebounding. We scored 45 points<br />
tonight because the guards finally<br />
bought in and ran our offense and<br />
because the Morellis and Emory<br />
just killed it off the boards. We<br />
got second looks tonight. I mean<br />
we took 66 shots tonight, that’s<br />
outstanding for us, and we are<br />
getting offense from Gracie and<br />
Caroline.<br />
“I was proud of them when<br />
they got the rebound that meant<br />
they held Amesbury to just one<br />
shot for the most part, one shot<br />
and done. We talked about flying<br />
down the floor and then if it’s not<br />
there, pull it up and run the offense.<br />
We weren’t jogging down<br />
the court, we were flying and that<br />
made a huge difference.”<br />
Klonsky (3 rebounds, 2 steals)<br />
and O’Neill finished with seven<br />
points each, while Shaievitz (6<br />
rebounds, 2 steals) had six points<br />
and Tori Morelli (6 rebounds, 2<br />
steals) had four. Waisnor finished<br />
with three points, three boards<br />
and three assists.<br />
Perry attributed the performance<br />
to hard work at practice<br />
and a little help from several<br />
former players.<br />
“We’ve had some great practices<br />
but the past several practices<br />
we turned it up in terms of the<br />
intensity and we have been doing<br />
a lot of running,” he said. “If<br />
they’re dogging it, then we run<br />
them, we run them, we run them.<br />
Then we say get back on the floor<br />
and play like you are supposed to.<br />
“We’ve had past captains come<br />
to our practices Abbie Weaver,<br />
Olivia Costello, Kelly Look, Jess<br />
Dwyer. We brought them in had<br />
them coming to our games and<br />
told them to talk to these girls and<br />
tell them what they saw. They<br />
have been paying attention and<br />
know our team. One of them<br />
was brutally honest, and said<br />
you are lazy, you are slow, it’s<br />
embarrassing to watch. It’s okay<br />
when we say it, but they really<br />
listen when these guys tell them<br />
and I think that was a big factor in<br />
jacking up the level of intensity.<br />
Hopefully this kind of energy can<br />
build into confidence.”<br />
series of clinics on Wednesdays<br />
from 4-5 p.m. at the Route One<br />
Sportsplex in Danvers. The<br />
clinics begin on Jan. 31 and run<br />
through March 7.<br />
Players can register on the website<br />
for the clinics as well. Those<br />
who register for the spring season<br />
and clinics at the same time will<br />
receive a discount.<br />
Spring practices begins in early<br />
April with games beginning in<br />
late April through mid-June.<br />
Teams play one home game and<br />
one away game each week.<br />
For additional information,<br />
visit the website, Facebook page<br />
or contact LGS by email, lynnfieldgirlssoftball@gmail.com<br />
or<br />
jguerra@jagg-group.com.
JANUARY <strong>18</strong>, 20<strong>18</strong> WEEKLYNEWS.NET - 978-532-5880 13<br />
Claire Kallelis appointed general manager<br />
at Hawthorne Hotel in Salem<br />
Owner Michael Harrington has<br />
announced the appointment of<br />
Claire Kallelis as the new General<br />
Manager of the Hawthorne Hotel.<br />
Mr. Harrington stated, “Claire is a<br />
highly motivated, dedicated individual<br />
with a strong work ethic.”<br />
Claire has a long work history<br />
with the hotel. From 1986<br />
to 1991, Claire worked in the<br />
Banquet Department as a server<br />
and later was promoted to the position<br />
of Banquet Captain. During<br />
the years 1991- 1994, she gained<br />
experience working for other<br />
properties in Boston and around<br />
New England.<br />
In 1994, Claire returned to take<br />
on the role of Banquet Manager<br />
and was quickly promoted to<br />
Director of Food and Beverage.<br />
In this leadership role, she was instrumental<br />
in the success and reputation<br />
of the Food and Beverage<br />
Department for close to 25 years.<br />
Claire strived to continue her<br />
growth in hospitality. In 2005,<br />
she was promoted to her most<br />
recent position of Assistant<br />
General Manager. She was a<br />
key contributor to the hotel’s<br />
recognized awards including the<br />
Best City Center Historic Hotel<br />
from Historic Hotels of America,<br />
and numerous Certificate of<br />
Excellence awards from Trip<br />
Advisor.<br />
Claire graduated from<br />
Salem State College in 1989<br />
where she earned a Bachelor<br />
of Science Degree in Business<br />
Administration and in 1993,<br />
earned her Master’s in Business<br />
Administration.<br />
“I am so proud to be leading<br />
such a historic property in the city<br />
where I grew up,” Claire said in<br />
a statement. “As Salem grows as<br />
Established manufacturing<br />
company looking for talented<br />
people to join our growing team!<br />
Harmonic Drive LLC is a renowned manufacturer of<br />
high-precision gears and actuators located in Peabody MA.<br />
Come join our team of experienced machinists, technicians and<br />
engineers in our world-class manufacturing headquarters.<br />
Open Positions:<br />
• CNC Lathe Machinists<br />
• Dimensional Calibration Technician<br />
• Manufacturing Engineer<br />
• Quality Assurance Technician<br />
• Electromechanical Assembler<br />
Outstanding Benefits Include:<br />
100% Company Paid Medical and Dental Premiums,<br />
401K Match, Profit Sharing Bonus, Paid Vacation,<br />
Sick Time and 13 Paid Holidays<br />
a vibrant community and thriving<br />
travel destination, we at the<br />
Hawthorne will continue to embrace<br />
our history of serving the<br />
community and its visitors.”<br />
We look forward to the continued<br />
contributions Claire will<br />
bring to the hotel to achieve the<br />
highest level of hospitality, consistency,<br />
quality, and service,<br />
often exceeding our guest’s<br />
expectations.<br />
For detailed job descriptions<br />
and to see all open positions:<br />
HarmonicDrive.net/careers<br />
Send your resume to:<br />
hr@harmonicdrive.net or apply<br />
in person M-F at: 247 <strong>Lynnfield</strong><br />
Street, Peabody, MA<br />
Have a story to share?<br />
Need a question answered?<br />
contactus@essexmedia.group
14 WEEKLYNEWS.NET - 978-532-5880 JANUARY <strong>18</strong>, 20<strong>18</strong><br />
LEGALS LEGALS CARPENTRY<br />
LANDSCAPING<br />
PEABODY CITY COUNCIL<br />
PEABODY CITY COUNCIL<br />
Notice is hereby given that the CITY COUNCIL OF THE CITY OF PEABODY will<br />
conduct a PUBLIC HEARING on THURSDAY EVENING, FEBRUARY 8, 20<strong>18</strong>, at<br />
7:30 P.M.., in Lower Level Conference Room, City Hall, 24 Lowell Street, Peabody,<br />
MA in accordance with the provisions of Chapter 40A, Section 5 of the<br />
Massachusetts General Laws TO CONSIDER AMENDING THE ZONING<br />
ORDINANCE OF THE CITY OF PEABODY as follows:<br />
BE IT ORDAINED by the City Council of the City of Peabody as follows:<br />
Notice is hereby given that the CITY COUNCIL OF THE CITY OF PEABODY will<br />
conduct a PUBLIC HEARING on THURSDAY EVENING, FEBRUARY 8, 20<strong>18</strong>, at<br />
7:30 P.M.., in Lower Level Conference Room, City Hall, 24 Lowell Street, Peabody,<br />
MA in accordance with the provisions of Chapter 40A, Section 5 of the<br />
Massachusetts General Laws TO CONSIDER AMENDING THE ZONING<br />
ORDINANCE OF THE CITY OF PEABODY as follows:<br />
BE IT ORDAINED by the City Council of the City of Peabody as follows:<br />
978-979-4071<br />
Removals, Pruning,<br />
Stump Grinding<br />
SECTION ONE: That the Zoning Ordinance of the City of Peabody entitled, City of<br />
Peabody Zoning Ordinance Adopted April 28, 2011 and amended through July <strong>18</strong>,<br />
2017 is hereby further amended as follows:<br />
By amending Section 6.11.2 A - "Applicability" A. General by Deleting the word<br />
"fifteen (15)" in the last sentence of Section A and replacing with the word "thirty<br />
(30)" resulting in the following paragraph:<br />
SECTION ONE: That the Zoning Ordinance of the City of Peabody entitled, City of<br />
Peabody Zoning Ordinance Adopted April 28, 2011 and amended through July <strong>18</strong>,<br />
2017 is hereby further amended as follows:<br />
By amending Section 4.2.5 "Uses" by adding the designation of SP in the I-L<br />
(Light Industrial) Zone in the column for retail facility of less than 50,000 square<br />
feet etc.<br />
CONSTRUCTION<br />
HOME<br />
IMPROVEMENT<br />
"A. General. The provisions of this Ordinance shall apply in zoning<br />
Districts R2, R3, R4, R5, BN, DDD, and BC to all residential<br />
developments that involve the creation of eight (8) or more<br />
housing units, whether rental or ownership, and shall apply<br />
to zoning districts R1, R1A and R1B that involve the creation of<br />
thirty (30) or more housing units."<br />
SECTION TWO: All ordinances or parts of ordinances inconsistent herewith are<br />
hereby repealed.<br />
SECTION THREE: This ordinance shall take effect as provided by law.<br />
To:<br />
Mitchell C. Cohen<br />
Lisa B. Cohen<br />
Every day<br />
Give us a call<br />
(SEAL)<br />
COMMONWEALTH OF MASSACHUSETTS<br />
LAND COURT<br />
DEPARTMENT OF THE TRIAL COURT<br />
<strong>18</strong>SM000035<br />
ORDER OF NOTICE<br />
and to all persons entitled to the benefit of the Servicemembers Civil Relief Act, 50<br />
U.S.C. c. 50 §3901 et seq.:<br />
Nationstar Mortgage LLC d/b/a Mr. Cooper<br />
PEABODY CITY COUNCIL<br />
COUNCILLOR EDWARD R. CHAREST<br />
CITY COUNCIL PRESIDENT<br />
Timothy E. Spanos<br />
City Clerk<br />
Weekly News: January 11, <strong>18</strong>, 20<strong>18</strong><br />
claiming to have an interest in a Mortgage covering real property in Peabody,<br />
numbered 5 Aborn Place, given by Mitchell C. Cohen and Lisa B. Cohen to<br />
Mortgage Electronic Registration Systems, Inc. acting solely as a nominee for<br />
Mortgage Financial, Inc., dated July 28, 2010, and recorded in Essex County<br />
(Southern District) Registry of Deeds in Book 29647, Page 538 (the "Mortgage"),<br />
as affected by a Loan Modification Agreement dated July 6, 2017 and recorded at<br />
said Registry of Deeds in Book 36034, Page 400, and now held by the Plaintiff by<br />
assignment, has/have filed with this court a complaint for determination of<br />
Defendant's/Defendants' Servicemembers status.<br />
If you now are, or recently have been, in the active military service of the United<br />
States of America, then you may be entitled to the benefits of the Servicemembers<br />
Civil Relief Act. If you object to a foreclosure of the above mentioned property on<br />
that basis, then you or your attorney must file a written appearance and answer in<br />
this court at Three Pemberton Square, Boston, MA 02108 on or before February<br />
19, 20<strong>18</strong> or you will be forever barred from claiming that you are entitled to the<br />
benefits of said Act.<br />
Witness, JUDITH C. CUTLER Chief Justice of said Court on January 8, 20<strong>18</strong>.<br />
Attest: Deborah J. Patterson<br />
Recorder<br />
16-026761<br />
Weekly News: January <strong>18</strong>, 20<strong>18</strong><br />
RENTALS<br />
DANVERS ~ MOBILE HOME<br />
Clean and furnished, 1 bdrm,<br />
convenient location, no pets.<br />
Call ~ 978-646-7634<br />
SERVICES<br />
FREE COMPUTER CHECKUP<br />
A $75 value!: A complete review of<br />
your computer system, Computer<br />
services, support and training is also<br />
available. Call Chris at All-Tech<br />
Networks today for immediate scheduling.<br />
978-535-4193<br />
PC GEEK FOR HIRE<br />
Home/Small office? PC running slow?<br />
Annoying pop-up's? Spyware and virus<br />
removal, software and hardware<br />
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hidden charges or gimmicks. call Glen<br />
978-531-1984.<br />
SECTION TWO: All ordinances or parts of ordinances inconsistent herewith are<br />
hereby repealed.<br />
SECTION THREE: This ordinance shall take effect as provided by law.<br />
CLEANING/<br />
MAINTENANCE<br />
The Leonard Co. is a cleaning<br />
contractor for condominium<br />
associations and new<br />
construction.<br />
The Leonard Co.<br />
Residential Window<br />
& Screen Cleaning<br />
Snow Blowing Services<br />
Snow Plowing<br />
Ice Melt Application<br />
(no salt or sand)<br />
Power Washing<br />
Comp. Clean-outs<br />
Light Demolition<br />
Call 617-512-7849<br />
for a FREE estimate<br />
or email: fondinib@aol.com<br />
If you need it clean,<br />
we’re on the scene...<br />
GENERAL<br />
HELP WANTED<br />
FINANCE COMMITTEE CLERK<br />
TOWN OF LYNNFIELD<br />
Duties include attending Finance<br />
Committee meetings in the evening<br />
from 7:00 p.m. to finish (typically 1-2<br />
hours, although sometimes longer),<br />
taking minutes of the meeting, working<br />
with chair on creating and posting<br />
agendas, distributing minutes and<br />
other materials to committee members,<br />
and scheduling meetings. Municipal<br />
finance knowledge preferred. Send<br />
email and resume to Bob Curtin,<br />
Interim Town Administrator, at rcurtin<br />
@town.lynnfield.ma.us. Hourly rate:<br />
$20.00.<br />
Applications are due by January 24,<br />
20<strong>18</strong>. AA/EOE.<br />
Have<br />
something<br />
to sell?<br />
We can<br />
help!<br />
PEABODY CITY COUNCIL<br />
COUNCILLOR EDWARD R. CHAREST<br />
CITY COUNCIL PRESIDENT<br />
Timothy E. Spanos<br />
City Clerk<br />
Weekly News: January 11, <strong>18</strong>, 20<strong>18</strong><br />
Find great<br />
deals in the<br />
classifieds!<br />
781-334-64<strong>18</strong> • Cell: 617-257-7511<br />
PAINTING<br />
DUN-RITE<br />
PAINTING AND PAPERHANGING<br />
John Bettencourt<br />
• Carpentry of all Types<br />
• Ceramic Tile<br />
978-532-1588<br />
Member of the Better Business Bureau<br />
MASONRY<br />
Paul DeNisco<br />
Mason Contractor<br />
Brick • Block • Stone<br />
Concrete • Tile<br />
978-532-4066<br />
Repairs - Big or Small<br />
REAL ESTATE<br />
FOR SALE<br />
Ellen Crawford<br />
Contact me for all your real estate needs.<br />
36 Salem St. <strong>Lynnfield</strong><br />
617-599-8090<br />
ellen.crawford@commonmoves.com<br />
750 DI1470085 432<br />
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• CARPENTRY • TILE<br />
• PAINTING<br />
978-314-4191<br />
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LAND<br />
LAND<br />
JANUARY <strong>18</strong>, 20<strong>18</strong> WEEKLYNEWS.NET - 978-532-5880 15<br />
This is where they take steps toward<br />
a life of unlimited future success.<br />
THIS IS HOME.<br />
LYNNFIELD $2,999,000<br />
LYNNFIELD $569,900<br />
NEW<br />
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LYNNFIELD $1,329,000<br />
LYNNFIELD $1,065,000<br />
SPRAWLING,11769+ SQUARE FOOT RESIDENCE showcases<br />
incredible spaces for grand entertaining and family gatherings.<br />
Louise Touchette<br />
DESIRABLE SOUTH FACING Light+Bright oversized multi-level<br />
home. The Fireplaced Living Room w/a beautiful picture window+Hardwood<br />
Floors opens to a separate Dining Room.<br />
Nikki Martin<br />
BRAND NEW TOTALLY RENOVATED expanded Cape on cul-desac<br />
that is waiting it’s first owner to use the all new white cabinet<br />
kitchen, black granite counter-tops with white quartzite island, all<br />
new black stainless steel Kitchen Aid appliances,<br />
Rossetti/Poti Team<br />
OPEN HOUSE SATURDAY 1-3P.M<br />
STUNNING GRAND TOWNHOME with 2 car attached garage,<br />
cathedral ceilings, hardwood throughout, wall of windows, gourmet<br />
KIT, FPcd LR, private patio and so much more!<br />
Louise Touchette<br />
PEABODY $2,100,000<br />
PEABODY $849,900<br />
BEVERLY $1,150,000<br />
BEVERLY $499,000<br />
APPROVED 13 LOT SUBDIVISION with approved ground level<br />
in law apartments. Seller has agreed to remove the rock. Culde-sac<br />
Kathy Bennett<br />
APPROVED 3 LOT SUBDIVISION<br />
Joyce Cucchiara<br />
ELEGANT 1ST FLOOR RESIDENCE at the most prestigious<br />
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Carol DiCiaccio<br />
FANTASTIC TOWNHOUSE CONDOMINIUM offering splendid<br />
front entrance with marble floor and antique stairway, 3 bedrooms,<br />
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Dan DelGrosso<br />
NEWTON $2,599,000<br />
DANVERS $589,000<br />
LYNN $314,900<br />
SAUGUS $529,900<br />
REDUCED<br />
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HAMMOND FAMILY RESIDENCE built by Thomas Hammond, Jr.<br />
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This unique antique home features 7 bedrooms, 7 fireplaces,<br />
Rossetti/Poti<br />
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Elaine Figliola<br />
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Evelyn Rockas<br />
OUTSTANDING CONTEMPORARY home in desirable indian valley<br />
location with a chic open floor plan for today’s discriminating<br />
home buyer! Lots of style in this home with large spacious rooms<br />
throughout<br />
Joyce Cucchiara<br />
REVERE $799,000<br />
NEW<br />
LISTING<br />
SALES ASSOCIATES OF<br />
THE MONTH<br />
DECEMBER<br />
2017<br />
HAMMOND FAMILY RESIDENCE built by Thomas Hammond, Jr.<br />
with Chestnut beams from Hammond owned Chestnut Hill trees,<br />
This unique antique home features 7 bedrooms, 7 fireplaces,<br />
Debra Molle<br />
READING $747,500<br />
Joyce Cucchiara<br />
Donna Fiandaca<br />
Angela Hirtle<br />
Kara Lawler<br />
MASSIVE HOME WITH IN-LAW POTENTIAL! Located on a Cul-<br />
De-Sac, this 5 bedroom home comes with an inground heated<br />
pool and lots of attractive features. The main level has 3 good<br />
sized bedrooms<br />
Angela Hirtle<br />
Nikki Martin<br />
Evelyn Rockas<br />
Louise Touchette<br />
Christopher Polak, VP/Managing Broker<br />
1085 Summer Street, <strong>Lynnfield</strong>, MA 01940<br />
781-334-5700 NewEnglandMoves.com
16 WEEKLYNEWS.NET - 978-532-5880 JANUARY <strong>18</strong>, 20<strong>18</strong>