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Lynnfield 7-26-18

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NEW<br />

LISTING!<br />

RENTAL<br />

LISTING!<br />

RENTAL<br />

LISTING!<br />

NEW<br />

LISTING!<br />

The #1 Selling<br />

Real Estate Office<br />

in <strong>Lynnfield</strong>*<br />

PEABODY<br />

SAUGUS<br />

$2,000+<br />

LYNNFIELD<br />

$6,000<br />

PEABODY<br />

$484,900<br />

OPEN HOUSE<br />

SAT AND SUN 12-1:30 P.M.<br />

LYNNFIELD<br />

$799,900<br />

*MLSPIN data 1/1/<strong>18</strong>-6/19/20<strong>18</strong><br />

Evelyn Rockas<br />

617-256-8500<br />

Louise<br />

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617-605-0555<br />

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781-710-1440<br />

LYNNFIELD WEEKLY<br />

JULY <strong>26</strong>, 20<strong>18</strong> • VOL. 62, NO. 30<br />

IN THE NEWS<br />

Page 2:<br />

Poster collector<br />

launches art<br />

attack on war<br />

Page 7:<br />

Sweet ideas<br />

for zucchini<br />

Page 9:<br />

New football<br />

staff gets feet wet<br />

at 7 v 7<br />

PRSRT STD<br />

ECRWSSEDDM<br />

U.S. POSTAGE<br />

PAID<br />

PERMIT #168<br />

WOBURN, MA<br />

POSTAL CUSTOMER<br />

LYNNFIELD, MA 01940<br />

SERVING THE COMMUNITY SINCE 1957<br />

“We are all one community”<br />

PHOTOS COURTESY FR. CORNELIUS MUKUBI OF THE SOCIETY OF AFRICAN MISSIONS<br />

Clean and conveniently-located water is no longer a dream for villagers in<br />

two Zambian communities who drilled new wells with financial help from<br />

<strong>Lynnfield</strong> Catholic Collaborative members. Story, page 3.<br />

NEWS<br />

16 PAGES • ONE DOLLAR<br />

Legislators<br />

drive police<br />

training bill<br />

By Thor Jourgensen<br />

Editor<br />

BOSTON – House Minority Leader<br />

Bradley H. Jones, Jr. (R-North Reading)<br />

and state Sen. Brendan Crighton (D-Lynn)<br />

joined forces to bolster police training.<br />

The lawmakers supported creation of a<br />

new $2 car rental surcharge, which will take<br />

effect in January. The proceeds from the tax<br />

will be used to pay for basic training for new<br />

police recruits, as well as mandatory in-service<br />

instruction and specialized training for<br />

veteran police officers in Massachusetts.<br />

Legislation outlining the dedicated surcharge<br />

is on Gov. Baker’s desk awaiting his<br />

signature.<br />

“This is a long overdue bill that will help<br />

support critical training programs for police<br />

officers in Massachusetts,” said Jones in a<br />

statement. “Creating a dedicated revenue<br />

stream to fund this training will also help to<br />

ease the financial burden on communities<br />

like <strong>Lynnfield</strong> that currently have to shoulder<br />

these costs.”<br />

The Legislature established a new<br />

Municipal Police Training Fund as part of<br />

the criminal justice reform bill, which was<br />

signed into law by the governor in April. The<br />

fund is already authorized to receive money<br />

from the state’s Marijuana Regulation Fund,<br />

including revenues generated from the licensing<br />

of marijuana establishments and the<br />

state tax on recreational marijuana sales.<br />

The car rental surcharge is expected to<br />

provide the Municipal Police Training Fund<br />

with an additional $8 million in revenues.<br />

Certain car rentals will be exempt from the<br />

surcharge, including rentals lasting less than<br />

12 hours and ride-sharing services offered<br />

through companies like Uber and Lyft.<br />

“Over the years we have heard loud and<br />

clear from police officers and departments<br />

that more resources are needed for police<br />

POLICE, PAGE 3<br />

NEW<br />

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The #1 Selling<br />

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in <strong>Lynnfield</strong>*<br />

AMESBURY<br />

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SAT AND SUN 12-1:30 P.M.<br />

LYNNFIELD<br />

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STONEHAM<br />

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PEABODY<br />

$329,900<br />

MIDDLETON<br />

$1,375,000<br />

*MLSPIN data 1/1/<strong>18</strong>-6/19/20<strong>18</strong><br />

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Karen Johnson<br />

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2<br />

Classifieds ...............................................................................13-16<br />

Obituary ......................................................................................... 5<br />

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

Real Estate ..............................................................................13-16<br />

Religious Notes .............................................................................. 8<br />

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

Sports .......................................................................................9-12<br />

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INDEX<br />

MarketStreet celebrates<br />

summer with movies<br />

and music for all ages<br />

The summer fun continues at<br />

MarketStreet with two outdoor<br />

programs: Music in The Square<br />

and Movies on The Green.<br />

MarketStreet <strong>Lynnfield</strong> welcomes<br />

guests big and small for<br />

two evenings of entertainment<br />

under the stars with Movies on<br />

The Green on Tuesday, August<br />

7 and Tuesday, August 14.<br />

Festivities begin with a dance<br />

party, fun swag from Lahey<br />

Health, and refreshments followed<br />

by a family-favorite<br />

film at dusk – Coco (8/7)<br />

and Despicable Me 3 (8/14).<br />

Admittance for both event series<br />

is free and takes place at<br />

MarketStreet <strong>Lynnfield</strong>.<br />

Movies begin at dusk. The<br />

Green is located near J.Crew<br />

and J.P. Licks. Pre-show entertainment<br />

begins at 6 p.m.<br />

Guests can reserve their<br />

space for Movies on The Green<br />

starting at 5 p.m. Blankets are<br />

encouraged as lawn chairs are<br />

not permitted.<br />

MarketStreet <strong>Lynnfield</strong> is the<br />

North Shore’s open-air shopping<br />

destination boasting more<br />

than 80 shops and restaurants,<br />

with more than two dozen<br />

which are locally-owned.<br />

Since its 2013 opening, it<br />

has offered the North Shore<br />

diverse shopping, dining and<br />

entertainment options and<br />

family-friendly events, seasonal<br />

festivities, and charitable<br />

fundraisers. Guests can<br />

find brands such as Amazon<br />

Books, Whole Foods Market,<br />

Kings Dining & Entertainment,<br />

Tommy Bahama, Davio’s<br />

Northern Italian Steakhouse,<br />

Apple, lululemon athletica,<br />

California Pizza Kitchen, Nike<br />

Running, FatFace UK, Hanna<br />

Andersson, Yard House, Legal<br />

C Bar, sweetgreen, Tumi, Pink<br />

Parkway, Wahlburgers, Paper<br />

Source and Vineyard Vines.<br />

6’ Shadow Box<br />

Lattice Arbur<br />

CASH ‘N’ CARRY AVAILABLE AT OUR LOCATION<br />

WEEKLYNEWS.NET - 978-532-5880 JULY <strong>26</strong>, 20<strong>18</strong><br />

Poster collector launches<br />

art attack on war<br />

Residents have a chance to<br />

see a unique poster exhibition<br />

at the <strong>Lynnfield</strong> Public Library<br />

in August.<br />

The theme of the exhibit is<br />

“End War” and features anti-war<br />

posters from several<br />

countries. The posters stem<br />

from a collection of more<br />

than 7,800 owned by Stephen<br />

Lewis, a long-time labor<br />

activist.<br />

“A trail of money that leads<br />

to war is the arm trade,” he<br />

said in a statement. “Some<br />

corporations make a big profit<br />

on everything from sidearms<br />

to ballistic missiles. The<br />

bigger the bang, the greater<br />

the profit.”<br />

He hopes the posters ask<br />

viewers questions, including:<br />

What is the effect of war?<br />

What is the price paid by<br />

non-combatants? What is the<br />

price tag of repairing infrastructures<br />

in countries devastated<br />

by war? What is the societal<br />

cost of spending money on<br />

war that could pay for healthcare,<br />

transportation, housing,<br />

job creation and other social<br />

benefits?<br />

Lewis describes posters as<br />

“people art” with the history of<br />

posters spanning mass communication,<br />

the labor movement<br />

and propaganda. “The art goes<br />

to the people rather than the<br />

people having to go to a museum,”<br />

he said.<br />

The library exhibit featuring<br />

Lewis’ collection will<br />

include placards next to the<br />

posters giving main identification,<br />

the country where<br />

the poster was produced, the<br />

organization it was produced<br />

for, translations to English<br />

(where necessary), the name<br />

of the artist (where known)<br />

and the date created (where<br />

known).<br />

Lewis has exhibited at a<br />

number of public libraries<br />

in Massachusetts, Boston<br />

City Hall, and two of the<br />

state Heritage parks. He<br />

has presented at the annual<br />

conference of the National<br />

Council on Public History,<br />

and on some cable television<br />

programs.<br />

He can be reached by email<br />

at lewisposters@gmail.com<br />

or at Facebook under labor/<br />

progressive political posters.<br />

The posters/photos were contributed<br />

by friends, collected<br />

at conferences, visits to some<br />

of the organizations, and from<br />

connections made through the<br />

internet.<br />

The poster project is supported,<br />

in part, by IBEW<br />

Local 103, Roofers Local 33,<br />

Bricklayers Local 3, Painters<br />

DC 35, Asbestos Workers<br />

Local 6, Postal Workers Local<br />

100, and Firemen and Oilers<br />

Local 3.


JULY <strong>26</strong>, 20<strong>18</strong><br />

“We are all one<br />

community”<br />

BY THOR JOURGENSEN<br />

EDITOR<br />

LYNNFIELD — Two<br />

Catholic churches showed their<br />

generosity can cross oceans and<br />

continents when they donated<br />

more than $13,000 to provide<br />

African communities with new<br />

wells.<br />

The first of two wells is<br />

providing clean and convenient<br />

water to residents in a<br />

community in Zambia where<br />

residents faced a water crisis.<br />

Existing wells were nearly<br />

non-functioning or unsafe<br />

and larger water sources<br />

were located miles from the<br />

community.<br />

“They were in desperate<br />

need of water,” said Marie<br />

Lagman, <strong>Lynnfield</strong> Catholic<br />

Collaborative’ director of<br />

media ministry, a faith community<br />

comprised of Our Lady of<br />

the Assumption and St. Maria<br />

Goretti.<br />

The lack of clean, accessible<br />

water has many consequences<br />

to individuals and to<br />

a community. In Africa, the<br />

job of collecting water from<br />

distant sources is primarily<br />

the burden of women and<br />

children.<br />

That responsibility eliminates<br />

the opportunity for the<br />

children to attend school and<br />

the women to earn an income,<br />

but it also makes them more<br />

vulnerable to rape and human<br />

trafficking.<br />

When drinking water in<br />

unavailable through wells, it<br />

must be carried and stored in<br />

uncovered containers near the<br />

home, the perfect breeding<br />

ground for mosquitoes that<br />

carry malaria.<br />

The well assistance initiative<br />

involving parishioners<br />

AMERICA’S FIRM FOR<br />

SMALL BUSINESS TAX NEEDS<br />

Peace of mind for Owners of<br />

Small Businesses<br />

Herb Harris, E.A., Owner<br />

386 Lowell Street, Peabody<br />

(978) 977-0411<br />

www.smallbizpros.com/h_harris<br />

in St. Maria Goretti and Our<br />

Lady of Assumption parishes<br />

and Our Lady of Assumption<br />

school sprung from a several<br />

year association with the<br />

Society of African Missions<br />

(SMA).<br />

SMA priests have visited the<br />

<strong>Lynnfield</strong> parishes in August<br />

for the last several years, participating<br />

in parish ministries<br />

and activities. Society member<br />

Rev. Don Phiri inspired parishioners<br />

in 2016 to help buy<br />

soccer uniforms, Bible story<br />

books and other items for the<br />

Zambian communities served<br />

by SMA.<br />

When Phiri and other SMA<br />

priests outlined the need<br />

for water improvements,<br />

Collaborative members were<br />

ready to lend a helping hand.<br />

Throughout this year’s<br />

Lenten season, the <strong>Lynnfield</strong><br />

Catholic Collaborative’s social<br />

justice group, Justice for Jesus,<br />

led the parishes to collect donations<br />

to fund the water wells.<br />

“Children had a special<br />

opportunity to donate,” said<br />

Lagman.<br />

The first well, located in St.<br />

Francis Kwama West, Zambia,<br />

is now up and pumping. The<br />

community’s 16,000 inhabitants<br />

have been barely surviving<br />

on the scarce supply<br />

provided by old, dried-up boreholes.<br />

Construction has begun<br />

on second well for St. Peters<br />

Kansuswa.<br />

“It shows that we are just all<br />

one community no matter if you<br />

live near or far away,” Lagman<br />

said.<br />

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WEEKLYNEWS.NET - 978-532-5880 3<br />

Legislators drive police training bill<br />

POLICE<br />

From page 1<br />

training,” said Crighton in<br />

a statement, who represents<br />

<strong>Lynnfield</strong> in the Legislature.<br />

“I’m pleased that through this<br />

dedicated revenue source, we<br />

can adequately fund the training<br />

that helps keep both our police<br />

and communities safe.”<br />

Baker has until July 28 to<br />

sign the bill into law.<br />

Peabody’s legislative delegation<br />

zeroed in on education<br />

as legislators pushed this<br />

month to wrap up discussions<br />

on state spending. State Reps.<br />

Ted Speliotis and Thomas<br />

Walsh secured $100,000 to help<br />

Peabody schools reduce kindergarten<br />

class sizes to allow<br />

increased one-on-one attention<br />

Lots of Gain.<br />

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for students.<br />

Speliotis said they also succeeded<br />

in pushing for spending<br />

statewide on advanced placement<br />

class (AP) tutoring.<br />

He said Peabody Veterans<br />

Memorial High School teachers<br />

helped pioneer AP tutoring with<br />

strong results.<br />

“Fewer than 100 students<br />

were taking AP classes 10 years<br />

ago and, this year, 24 percent of<br />

kids at Peabody High are taking<br />

AP,” Speliotis said.<br />

The Legislature approved<br />

an 11.5 percent increase in<br />

spending on AP tutoring.<br />

Speliotis said the Legislature<br />

also increased spending on<br />

YMCA after-school academic-based<br />

programs across the<br />

state.<br />

Walsh said legislators worked<br />

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to ensure that state spending on<br />

projects financed through bond<br />

spending include “wayfinding”<br />

at Centennial Park. He said<br />

the commercial area needs improved<br />

signage.<br />

“One of the difficulties is<br />

once you come off the highway,<br />

you know know whether to go<br />

left or right,” Walsh said.<br />

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4<br />

LYNNFIELD WEEKLY<br />

NEWS<br />

(USPS Permit #168)<br />

Telephone: 781-593-7700 • Fax: 781-581-3178<br />

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 />

www.weeklynews.net<br />

WEEKLYNEWS.NET - 978-532-5880 JULY <strong>26</strong>, 20<strong>18</strong><br />

Police log<br />

Editor: Thor Jourgensen tjourgensen@essexmediagroup.com<br />

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

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

Patricia Whalen pwhalen@essexmediagroup.com<br />

Michele Iannaco miannaco@essexmediagroup.com<br />

Ernie Carpenter ecarpenter@essexmediagroup.com<br />

Retail Price: $1.00<br />

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

Classified Ads: Monday, noon;<br />

No cancellations accepted after deadline.<br />

The <strong>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 in <strong>Lynnfield</strong>. It is also<br />

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

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

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

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

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

reject, omit or edit any copy offered for publication. POSTMASTER: Send address<br />

changes to <strong>Lynnfield</strong> Weekly News, P.O. Box 5, Lynn, MA 01903. © 2016 Essex<br />

Media Group, Inc.<br />

My Brother’s Table<br />

annual summer party<br />

August 9 at Spinelli’s<br />

Get ready for a fun night of<br />

fabulous food and great company<br />

with My Brother’s Table<br />

hosting their annual Summer<br />

Party on August 9 at Spinelli’s<br />

of <strong>Lynnfield</strong>.<br />

The fundraiser will be catered<br />

by some of the best<br />

restaurants on the North Shore<br />

including The Blue Ox, Tides<br />

Restaurant & Pub, John’s Roast<br />

Beef & Seafood, Old Tyme<br />

Italian Cuisine, Periwinkles,<br />

Becky’s Gourmet and Edible<br />

Arrangements of Lynn.<br />

Spinelli’s provides the table<br />

with a beautiful lakeside setting<br />

for this special event. The<br />

evening also includes musical<br />

entertainment, an instant wine<br />

cellar raffle as well as a silent<br />

auction including Red Sox and<br />

event tickets, private wine tastings,<br />

gift certificates, and more.<br />

Tickets to the Summer Party<br />

are $65 per person and are<br />

available for purchase online<br />

at www.mybrotherstable.org or<br />

by calling the Table at 781-595-<br />

3224. Limited tickets will be<br />

available at the door.<br />

The Summer Party is My<br />

Brother’s Table’s largest fundraiser.<br />

Because the Table does<br />

not receive any government<br />

support, they need to raise their<br />

entire budget through their own<br />

fundraising; the Summer Party<br />

is crucial to those efforts.<br />

This year the event will be<br />

sponsored by Eastern Bank<br />

Charitable Foundation, Salem<br />

Five Charitable Foundation,<br />

and Eaton Vance Management.<br />

My Brother’s Table is the<br />

largest soup kitchen on the<br />

North Shore and has been nourishing<br />

its neighbors since 1982.<br />

Hunger and poverty continue to<br />

persist in Lynn and across the<br />

country, especially in expensive<br />

housing markets, like the North<br />

Shore. Many guests of the Table<br />

struggle to afford rent and food<br />

and one third of the guests rely<br />

on the Table as their only source<br />

of daily nourishment.<br />

The Table serves hot meals<br />

365 days a year with genuine<br />

hospitality and love for all. In<br />

addition to serving meals on site,<br />

My Brother’s Table also delivers<br />

meals to homebound individuals,<br />

provides food packages<br />

to young families and families<br />

with disabled children, provides<br />

meals to at-risk seniors, to homeless<br />

people in the local recuperative<br />

care center, and they host a<br />

free weekly medical clinic.<br />

Looking for a house?<br />

Check the real estate secton!<br />

Summons<br />

Luis Munoz, 41, of 1198<br />

Essex St., Apt. 117, Lynn, was<br />

issued a summons on Thursday<br />

at 6:20 p.m. at Condon Circle for<br />

failure to stop/yield, and operating<br />

a motor vehicle with a suspended<br />

license.<br />

Complaints<br />

Officer requested on Thursday<br />

at 10:<strong>18</strong> a.m. at 34 Alexandra<br />

Road. Caller spoke with officer<br />

who took a report.<br />

Medical aid requested at 3<br />

Mirabeau Lane on Thursday at<br />

10:41 a.m. for a 76-year-old man<br />

who was suffering chest pains.<br />

Victim taken to the hospital.<br />

A cell phone caller from North<br />

Reading reported a motorist was<br />

erratically operating a motor vehicle<br />

on Thursday at 4:56 p.m.<br />

on Lowell Street. Officer checked<br />

the area, but was unable to locate<br />

the vehicle.<br />

A suspicious person was<br />

reported on Thursday at 9:15<br />

p.m. at 22 Pine St. Caller said<br />

someone is ringing the doorbell.<br />

Officer reports youths were<br />

playing “ring and run.”<br />

Malicious destruction of property<br />

was reported on Thursday<br />

at 11:13 p.m. at Starbucks at<br />

420 Market St.<br />

Wires down reported on<br />

Birchwood Road on Friday at<br />

8:45 a.m. Officer checked and<br />

cable company notified.<br />

A suspicious black SUV was<br />

reported parked in front of 69<br />

Bourque Road on Friday at 10:50<br />

a.m. for the past hour with a<br />

man inside. Officer checked and<br />

could not locate vehicle.<br />

On Friday at 11:10 a.m. a<br />

caller from 1386 Main St. reported<br />

his computer has been<br />

hacked. Officer reports no service<br />

needed.<br />

Report of suspicious persons<br />

at 55 Fairview Road on Friday<br />

at 3:24 p.m. Caller reported the<br />

family is away and two youths<br />

were in the backyard. Kids took<br />

off when confronted.<br />

Property check at Center<br />

Stores on Friday at 12:20 a.m.<br />

Back window was cracked open<br />

with a piece of plastic. Officer<br />

reports window is unable to be<br />

accessed; at <strong>Lynnfield</strong> Middle<br />

School on Friday at 12:22 a.m.<br />

Officer reports all appears to be<br />

in order; at Newhall Park on Oak<br />

Street on Friday at 12:22 a.m.;<br />

at Our Lady of Assumption on<br />

Friday at 12:31 a.m. Officer reports<br />

property appears to be in<br />

order; at the <strong>Lynnfield</strong> Senior<br />

Center at 525 Salem St. on<br />

Friday at 12:53 a.m. Officer reports<br />

property appears to be in<br />

order; at the intersection of 425<br />

Walnut St. and Market Street<br />

on Friday at 1:11 a.m. Officer<br />

reports property is quiet; at<br />

Glen Meadow Park on Trickett<br />

Road on Saturday at 12:41 a.m.<br />

Officer reports all appears to be<br />

in order.<br />

Well-being check requested at<br />

36 Pillings Pond Road on Friday<br />

at 4:02 p.m. Party agreed to go<br />

to the hospital with her husband.<br />

Officer requested on Friday at<br />

10:05 p.m. at 781 Summer St.<br />

for a report of a branch hanging<br />

from a tree. The Department of<br />

Public Works director was contacted<br />

and the branch will be cut<br />

in the morning.<br />

Report of loud music at 3<br />

Charing Cross on Friday at 11:38<br />

p.m. Call cancelled because reporting<br />

party said music and<br />

lights have been turned off.<br />

An erratic driver reported at<br />

Colby and Shea from 40 Salem<br />

St. on Saturday at 2:54 p.m.<br />

Officer unable to locate.<br />

Have a story to share?<br />

Need a question answered?<br />

contactus@essexmedia.group<br />

Fireworks reported on Saturday<br />

at Homestead Road at 9:<strong>18</strong> p.m.<br />

Officer reports unable to locate.<br />

Report of loud music at 1043<br />

Main St. on Sunday at 2:08 a.m.<br />

Officer spoke with homeowner,<br />

music volume was lowered.<br />

Burglar Alarms<br />

Burglar alarm reported at 16<br />

Westover Drive on Thursday at<br />

1:15 p.m. Officer checked, all secure;<br />

at 5 Lils Way on Thursday<br />

at 2:46 p.m. door was ajar, officer<br />

secured door; at Kelly Jeep<br />

Chrysler Plymouth at 353 North<br />

Broadway on Thursday at 10:44<br />

p.m. Officer reports all appears<br />

to be in order; at Wahlburgers<br />

at 930 Market St. on Thursday<br />

at 11:41 p.m. Officer reports the<br />

alarm was tripped accidentally<br />

by the cleaning crew; on Friday<br />

at 8:21 p.m. at Eastern Bank<br />

at 45 Salem St. Officer reports<br />

building was secure. Alarm company<br />

was contacted in search of<br />

contact information for the bank<br />

employee responsible for property<br />

walkthrough; at the Gap on<br />

Saturday at 8:27 a.m. Officer<br />

reports building was secure; at<br />

<strong>Lynnfield</strong> High School at 275<br />

Essex St. on Saturday at 2:27<br />

p.m. Door leading to the gymnasium<br />

was shut but unable to<br />

lock. Custodian was unable to<br />

be contacted; at Miscioscia at<br />

89 Crest Road on Saturday at 3<br />

p.m. Officer reports all appears<br />

to be in order. On Saturday at<br />

9:50 p.m. at the <strong>Lynnfield</strong> Middle<br />

School at 505 Main St. Officer<br />

reports all appears to be secure;<br />

at the Huckleberry Hill School at<br />

6 Knoll Road on Sunday at 10:47<br />

a.m. Officer reports all appears<br />

to be in order. On Sunday at 2:40<br />

p.m. at Boston Endodontics at 50<br />

Salem St., in Building A. Officer<br />

reports all appears to be secure.


JULY <strong>26</strong>, 20<strong>18</strong><br />

WEEKLYNEWS.NET - 978-532-5880 5<br />

Obituary<br />

Vincent J. Finocchio, 89<br />

COURTESY PHOTO<br />

Eastern Bank has donated $100,000 to support a robotic surgery program North Shore<br />

Medical Center. From left, Dr. David Roberts, Quincy Miller, president, Eastern Bank, Michael<br />

Davenport, Marc Rubin, surgery chair.<br />

Eastern Bank pledges $100k<br />

to North Shore Medical Center<br />

Eastern Bank has provided<br />

a $100,000 grant to the North<br />

Shore Medical Center (NSMC)<br />

to support a robotic surgery<br />

program.<br />

A surgical robot is used in<br />

prostate surgery and other surgical<br />

disciplines. During the<br />

operation, a surgeon guided by<br />

high-definition, 3-D views of<br />

the surgical site directs robotic<br />

arms to perform intricate procedures.<br />

The robot is a remote extension<br />

of the surgeon’s hands<br />

and its instrumentation enables<br />

better access, maneuverability<br />

and technical precision, NSMC<br />

said.<br />

“Creating a robotic surgery<br />

Love America Tour<br />

coming to the North Shore<br />

A group of 160 international<br />

volunteers is heading to the<br />

North Shore in August for a nationwide<br />

tour to spread a message<br />

of unity and peace.<br />

The 21-city tour will feature<br />

multicultural concerts and<br />

meditation workshops. “Out<br />

of love for America” was the<br />

young volunteers’ reply to the<br />

question of why they were<br />

coming all this way, renting<br />

vans and taking to the highways<br />

for a coast to coast encounter<br />

with Americans of all<br />

ages and backgrounds.<br />

Featured in the music and<br />

meditation programs will be<br />

Sahaja Yoga Meditation.<br />

The Love America Tour is<br />

sponsored by the nonprofit<br />

organization Sahaja Yoga<br />

International, which has been<br />

offering free community outreach<br />

programs in more than<br />

121 countries.<br />

In the U.S., Sahaja Yoga<br />

International has partnered with<br />

program on the North Shore<br />

will enable us to bring the latest<br />

surgical technology to our patients,”<br />

said Dr. Marc S. Rubin,<br />

chair of surgery at NSMC, in a<br />

statement.<br />

In 20<strong>18</strong>, the Davenport Fund<br />

donated a $1 million challenge<br />

grant to launch an additional<br />

$1 million fund drive to support<br />

the robotics program. The<br />

Eastern Bank gift, along with<br />

other leadership gifts and funds<br />

raised from the North Shore<br />

Cancer Walk, will bring NSMC<br />

closer to its $1 million goal.<br />

“Robotic surgery’s greatest<br />

advantages include smaller incisions,<br />

reduced pain and discomfort,<br />

and faster recovery for<br />

patients,” said Rubin. “We are<br />

excited to offer this new technology<br />

and improve the surgical<br />

recovery process.”<br />

Robert Rivers, CEO of<br />

Eastern Bank, said since the<br />

bank’s founding 200 years<br />

ago, supporting and advocating<br />

for the North Shore has been<br />

core to the lender’s vision and<br />

values.<br />

“North Shore Medical Center<br />

is a bedrock in the community<br />

and we couldn’t be prouder to<br />

have our philanthropic dollars<br />

support the latest innovations<br />

in patient care,” Rivers said in<br />

a statement.<br />

the United Nations, UNESCO,<br />

the National Institutes of<br />

Health, and Boys & Girls Clubs<br />

of America. Working with<br />

HealthCorps for the past 10<br />

years, thousands of U.S. high<br />

school students have learned<br />

how to meditate.<br />

In 20<strong>18</strong> at the annual<br />

HealthCorps Gala in New York<br />

City, Dr. Oz and the organization<br />

honored Sahaja Yoga<br />

Meditation for positively impacting<br />

the lives of millions of<br />

American youth.<br />

Corporations such as<br />

Microsoft, Amazon and<br />

Deloitte have also participated<br />

in meditation training<br />

programs for employees and<br />

managers.<br />

Jean-Philippe Courtois, president<br />

of Microsoft International,<br />

said he appreciated the benefits<br />

of Sahaja Yoga Meditation.<br />

“I have been impressed by<br />

the unsolicited feedback I received<br />

from Microsoft employees<br />

and managers who<br />

took part in the meditation<br />

training programs,” Courtois<br />

said in a statement. “They<br />

all speak of a significant improvement<br />

in their quality<br />

of life and well-being, expressing<br />

gratitude for the<br />

valuable experience that they<br />

were offered.”<br />

The three-week tour arrives<br />

in Greater Boston on August<br />

21. The tour will offer free<br />

programs to local businesses,<br />

school and public venues<br />

throughout that time span. If<br />

you are interested in having a<br />

class come to you please contact<br />

us through our website directly<br />

at www.love-america.us/<br />

or reach out to Michelle Simons<br />

at michelle.simons24@gmail.<br />

com.<br />

For more information about<br />

Sahaja Yoga and free ongoing<br />

classes all over the world go to<br />

onlinemeditation.org.<br />

PEABODY — Mr.<br />

Vincent J. “Vinny”<br />

Finocchio, age 89,<br />

of Peabody and<br />

formerly of Lynn<br />

and Everett, died<br />

on Wednesday, July<br />

<strong>18</strong>, 20<strong>18</strong>, at the<br />

Kaplan Family Hospice<br />

House, Danvers,<br />

surrounded<br />

by his loving family,<br />

following a lengthy<br />

illness. He was the<br />

husband of the late Patricia J.<br />

(McCarthy) Finocchio, who predeceased<br />

him in 2014.<br />

Born in Everett in 1928, Vinny<br />

was the son of the late Anthony<br />

and Helen (Balogna) Finocchio.<br />

He was raised and educated in<br />

Everett and graduated from Everett<br />

High School in 1946. Vinny<br />

was a United States Army veteran<br />

serving as a cook during the<br />

Korean confl ict and was honorably<br />

discharged as a corporal in<br />

February of 1957.<br />

During the late 1950s and<br />

early 1960s, he was the owner<br />

of the former Lynn House of<br />

Pizza on Market Street in Lynn.<br />

For more than 25 years, he<br />

worked as a meat cutter at Stop<br />

& Shop, until his retirement and<br />

was a member of the AFL-CIO.<br />

Vinny loved to cook and was<br />

famous for his homemade Italian<br />

sausages. He enjoyed taking<br />

care of his vegetable<br />

garden where he grew tomatoes<br />

and zucchini. He<br />

played golf on occasion<br />

and was an avid bowler,<br />

averaging a 122 in the<br />

candlepin bowling league he<br />

belonged to years ago. Vinny<br />

loved spending time with his<br />

Catering<br />

available<br />

SU CHANG’S<br />

Authentic Chinese Cuisine<br />

family, especially<br />

his grandchildren<br />

and was always<br />

in attendance for<br />

the many sporting<br />

events and school<br />

activities they had.<br />

Vinny is survived<br />

by his children, Patty<br />

Tansey and her<br />

husband Michael of<br />

Peabody, Mimi Corrigan<br />

and her husband<br />

Brian of Peabody and Tom<br />

Finocchio and his wife Kelly of<br />

Peabody; his beloved grandchildren,<br />

Katie, Molly, Michael, Brendan,<br />

Connor, Erin, Vincent and<br />

Mia; his brother, Anthony Finocchio<br />

of Jupiter, Fla.; his brotherin-law<br />

and sister-in-law, Joe and<br />

Patty McCarthy of Lynnfi eld; his<br />

close friend, Marie Anastos of<br />

Lynn; and his many nieces and<br />

nephews. He was the brother of<br />

the late Janet DeNorscia.<br />

Service information: A funeral<br />

service was held on Monday,<br />

July 23, 20<strong>18</strong> in the SOLIMINE<br />

Funeral Home, 4<strong>26</strong> Broadway<br />

(Route 129), Lynn, at 11:30<br />

a.m. Burial was in St. Mary’s<br />

Cemetery, Lynn. Visiting hours<br />

were on Sunday from 4-7 p.m.<br />

and again on Monday from<br />

10-11:30 a.m. Donations in<br />

Vinny’s memory may be made<br />

to Kaplan Family Hospice<br />

c/o Care Dimensions,<br />

78 Liberty St., Danvers,<br />

MA 01923. Directions<br />

and online guestbook at<br />

www.solimine.com.<br />

All Special Events<br />

Can Be Celebrated at Su Chang’s<br />

Live Music From 6:30-8:30 on Wednesdays<br />

Rehearsal Dinners • Anniversaries • Birthdays<br />

Functions<br />

from 2-200<br />

373 Lowell St., Peabody • Tel. 531-3366 • Fax 531-3060<br />

LUNCH M-F 11:30-3PM • Take Out Always Available Daily by Phone, Fax or our Website<br />

SUN-THURS 11:30-10 PM • FRI-SAT 11:30-11PM<br />

www.SuChangsPeabody.com<br />

Looking for past issues?<br />

Find them on weeklynews.net


6<br />

WEEKLYNEWS.NET - 978-532-5880 JULY <strong>26</strong>, 20<strong>18</strong><br />

Seniors<br />

LYNNFIELD SENIOR<br />

CENTER ACTIVITIES<br />

Trips<br />

July 31 Rhode Island<br />

Lighthouse Cruise, brunch at<br />

Country Club — $96.<br />

August 1 Boston’s Seaport<br />

District, newest and hippest<br />

neighborhood — $5.<br />

August 8 Kennebunkport<br />

Maine — $5.<br />

August 9 Lobsterbake Cruise<br />

on the Beauport Princess<br />

— $99.<br />

August 15 Private Tour of<br />

Beacon Hill, Nichols House,<br />

Swan boats and Charles St<br />

— $30.<br />

August 16 Russian and<br />

Medieval Europe in One Day!<br />

Russian Icon Museum, lunch,<br />

Worcester Art Museum — $96.<br />

August 21 Lobsterfest at the<br />

Newport Playhouse, play, cabaret<br />

and lobster! $109.<br />

August 22 Garden in the<br />

Woods, Framingham $20.<br />

August 24**** Cirque Eloize<br />

at Foxwood — $75****NEW<br />

DATE****.<br />

August 29 Rockport — $5.<br />

Sept 9-10 Friesian Horses,<br />

Orchards and Fun in Vermont<br />

$343.<br />

Sept 11 Kenny and Dolly<br />

Show at Danversport, luncheon<br />

and show — $69.<br />

Sept 12 Highfield Hall and<br />

Gardens, Falmouth. Lunch at<br />

Coonamessett Inn — $89.<br />

Sept 27 The Man of Many<br />

Voices, Joey Canzano at Whites<br />

of Westport — $79.<br />

Oct 7-11 Penn Dutch and<br />

Gettsburg tour — $1,051.00.<br />

Oct <strong>18</strong> Telephones, Lakes<br />

and Native Americans, tour NH<br />

Telephone Museum, cruise on<br />

Lake Sunapee and lunch, and<br />

Mr. Kearsarge Indian Museum<br />

— $99.<br />

Oct 25-31 Iceland’s Magical<br />

Northern Lights, trip offered<br />

by Collette Travel — $3,200<br />

double.<br />

Nov 6-8 Turning Stone<br />

Resort, NY $299.<br />

Nov <strong>26</strong>-27 Berkshire Holiday<br />

Trip — $327.<br />

Dec 4 Sicilian Tenors<br />

Christmastime at Danversport<br />

lunch and show — $69.<br />

Dec 13 Holiday Fun, Regis<br />

College, Gore Place and High<br />

Tea — $89.<br />

Events<br />

Thursday, July <strong>26</strong> at<br />

12:30 p.m.<br />

Free. Diabetes Academy:<br />

Marianne Chojnicki, RN, from<br />

Novonordisk, will discuss diabetes,<br />

treatments, how to eat<br />

healthy and stay active.<br />

Wednesday, August 1 at 10<br />

a.m.<br />

Welcome Coffee: Join us for<br />

a Welcome Coffee for anyone<br />

who is new to our center. This is<br />

a good opportunity to meet the<br />

staff and allow us to meet you.<br />

Coffee and cookies and tons of<br />

info!! Sign up.<br />

Thurs., Aug. 2 at 12:30 p.m.<br />

Veteran’s Coffee social: Join<br />

Tom Moran, Veteran’s Liaison<br />

from Compassionate Care<br />

Hospice, on the first Thurs. of<br />

each month for coffee & conversation.<br />

Tom can direct you to<br />

further help if necessary. Free.<br />

All Vets & spouses welcome.<br />

Sign up.<br />

Wednesday, August 8 and<br />

Thursday, August 9 at 11:30<br />

a.m. for $2.00/$3.00.<br />

Lunch and a movie—The<br />

Princess Bride: A fairy tale<br />

adventure about a beautiful<br />

young woman and her one true<br />

love. He must find her after a<br />

long separation and save her.<br />

They must battle the evils of<br />

the mythical kingdom of Florin<br />

to be reunited with each other.<br />

Sign up. Rated PG. Stars Mandy<br />

Patinkin, Andre the Giant, Billy<br />

Crystal and Robin Wright.<br />

Tuesday, August 14 at 9:30<br />

a.m.<br />

Big Band dance: Enjoy the<br />

music from yesteryear with R<br />

& R 2000, a 14 piece band. Put<br />

your dancing shoes on, or come<br />

and enjoy listening and reminiscing.<br />

There is a 50/50 raffle<br />

to be split with the band. Light<br />

refreshments will be served.<br />

Join us the second Tuesday of<br />

each month. Free.<br />

Monday, August 13th at 11:30<br />

for $2.00/$3.00.<br />

Lunch and a movie- Rick<br />

Steve’s England: We will start<br />

in England’s West Country<br />

with the quaint Cotswold villages,<br />

the cathedral town of<br />

Wells, and the prehistoric stone<br />

circles of Stonehenge. Then<br />

we will travel along the coast<br />

from Canterbury’s cathedral to<br />

Dover, hike atop the cliffs and<br />

visit the historic sailing ships in<br />

Portsmouth. We will explore pirate<br />

towns, fishing villages and<br />

a tin mine. We will finish by<br />

exploring the far southwest of<br />

England. Sign up.<br />

*****<br />

Thursday, July <strong>26</strong><br />

8 a.m. Hair Dresser 8<br />

a.m. Exercise Room 9 a.m.<br />

Manicurist 8:30 - 9:15 a.m.<br />

Zumba Gold 9:20-10:15<br />

a.m. Gentle Pilates 8:45<br />

a.m. Drumming w/Jill 9 a.m.<br />

Stitch and Chat 9:15 a.m. Sit<br />

& Tone w/Jill 10 a.m. Yoga<br />

10 a.m. Mah Jong 10:30 a.m.<br />

Lunch Bunch 11 a.m. aerobic<br />

dance w/alice 11:30 a.m.<br />

lunch: Pork Ribs 12:30 p.m.<br />

Bridge 12:30 p.m. Diabetes<br />

Academy.<br />

*****<br />

Friday, July 27<br />

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

a.m. Breakfast 9 - 10 a.m.<br />

Blood Pressure 9 a.m. - 12<br />

p.m. Hairdresser 9 a.m.<br />

Acrylic Painting 9:15 a.m.<br />

Bingo 9:30 a.m. Tai Chi—<br />

sign up 10:30 a.m. ZumBa<br />

11:15 a.m. lunch: macaroni<br />

and Cheese.<br />

*****<br />

Monday, July 30<br />

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

Video 8:30 a.m. ZumBa<br />

w/alice 9 a.m. Walmart<br />

shopping 10 a.m. Line<br />

Dancing/Creative Write 10<br />

a.m. Sit & Tone w/Darci<br />

10 a.m. TAP DANCE--<br />

cancel 11 a.m. AGELESS<br />

MOVEMENT 11:30<br />

a.m. Lunch: fish sandwich<br />

12:30 p.m. Mexican<br />

Train 12 p.m. Bowling<br />

12:30 p.m. Computer class<br />

(cancel) 12:30 p.m. Mah<br />

Jongg 12 p.m. Oil Painting<br />

Class.<br />

*****<br />

Tuesday, July 31<br />

8 a.m. Hairdresser 8<br />

a.m. - 3 p.m. Exercise Room<br />

8:45 a.m. Exer Under The<br />

Belt 9:30 a.m. Interm. Italian<br />

9:15 a.m. Bingo 9 a.m. Do In<br />

Stretching 9:30 a.m. Grocery<br />

Shopping 9 a.m. Blood<br />

Pressure 10 a.m. Tai Chi 10:30<br />

a.m. Scrabble 11:30 a.m.<br />

lunch: Chicken Quesadilla<br />

12:30 a.m. Computer Classsign<br />

up 12:30 p.m. Bridge<br />

12:30 p.m. Watercolor.<br />

PETER A. TORIGIAN<br />

SENIOR CENTER<br />

Thursday, July <strong>26</strong><br />

8:30 a.m. Quilting 9 a.m.<br />

Watch Battery Replacement<br />

9:15 a.m. Whist Manicurist<br />

9:30 Advanced Painting/<br />

Big Band Dancing 10 a.m.<br />

Hearing Screenings/Bridge<br />

12:30 p.m. Bocce/ Coping<br />

with Grief and Loss 1 p.m.<br />

Sing-a-Long 1:30 p.m. ALS<br />

Support Group.<br />

*****<br />

Friday, July 27<br />

8 a.m. Beginner Painting/<br />

TOPS Weigh-In 9 a.m.<br />

Aerobics/TOPS Meeting<br />

11:15 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, July 30<br />

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

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

Bridge 11 a.m. Tambourine<br />

Team 11:15 a.m. Zumba 12:30<br />

p.m. Model Ship Building/<br />

Bingo 2 p.m. Caregivers<br />

Support Group.<br />

*****<br />

Tuesday, July 31<br />

9:15 a.m. Whist 9:30 a.m.<br />

Exercise with Edye 10:30 a.m.<br />

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

Jongg 12:30 p.m. Crocheting/<br />

Knitting.<br />

*****<br />

Wednesday, August 1<br />

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

Rug Hooking/Wood Carving<br />

10:15 a.m. Zumba 12:30 p.m.<br />

Golden Agers Meet/Model Ship<br />

Building/ Sound the Alarm Red<br />

Cross Presentation.<br />

REDDENING RESPONSE<br />

The aptly-named condition known as “red man syndrome” is a<br />

response or hypersensitive reaction to taking the antibiotic “vancomycin,”<br />

which is prescribed to treat serious infections (including<br />

those of the bone, blood, and skin). This antibiotic is commonly used<br />

in intensive care units and often prescribed to patients who are<br />

allergic to penicillin or cephalosporins. Red man syndrome occurs in<br />

about 5 percent to 13 percent of patients who receive vancomycin.<br />

Initial symptoms typically consist of skin reddening of the face, neck,<br />

and upper torso, followed by itching, burning, fever, and chills. After<br />

about six days, skin thickens and begins to peel. Administering<br />

diphenhydramine to a patient before his or her first vancomycin<br />

infusion can prevent red man syndrome.<br />

In many cases, a reaction following vancomycin infusion is so mild<br />

that it may go unnoticed. People may also experience discomfort and<br />

burning and itching sensations. For more information, please call<br />

VILLAGE PHARMACY at 781-334-3133, or see us in the Colonial<br />

Shopping Center. Next to your personal doctor, your pharmacist is<br />

the most informed about the various medications available and their<br />

contraindications.<br />

P.S. While red man syndrome is not life-threatening, it can lead to<br />

cardiac arrest.<br />

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

“My brother’s stability is<br />

really important. Keeping<br />

him home is essential to our<br />

family. Adult Foster Care<br />

of the North Shore has<br />

been instrumental<br />

in facilitating all the<br />

resources we<br />

need for him<br />

to thrive in our<br />

family home.”<br />

~ Glavy, Caregiver to Brother<br />

978-281-<strong>26</strong>12<br />

AdultFosterCareNS.com<br />

Celebrating 15 Years<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 />

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JULY <strong>26</strong>, 20<strong>18</strong><br />

WEEKLYNEWS.NET - 978-532-5880 7<br />

Sweet ideas for zucchini<br />

By Rosalie Harrington<br />

After 20 years in the restaurant<br />

business and having raised<br />

my four kids into various stages<br />

of adulthood, I was ready for<br />

some variety to my life. With<br />

the support of my son, who had<br />

invited me to stay in his apartment<br />

in New York, and my husband,<br />

who would stay behind<br />

and keep the restaurant going,<br />

I spend a few months studying<br />

acting at the Lee Strasberg<br />

Theater and Film Institute in<br />

New York.<br />

I had recently completed<br />

shooting 52 shows for the<br />

fledgling Food Network, and<br />

really enjoyed it. The network,<br />

originally known as TVFN,<br />

was brand new, and I was<br />

thrilled when they asked me to<br />

be among their first hosts. My<br />

old boss from Channel 7, Raysa<br />

Bonow, who had directed the<br />

Look program I was on a few<br />

years earlier, was helping to get<br />

the Food Network launched,<br />

and it was great to have a national<br />

opportunity. All of this<br />

tickled an acting bug, and since<br />

my bachelor son said I could<br />

live with him for a few months<br />

in his West Village apartment,<br />

it was an opportunity to be<br />

grabbed.<br />

Even now, I’m glad I did.<br />

The next few months were so<br />

much fun. My best friend in<br />

school was Telly Savalas’ niece,<br />

Aphrodite, and we just clicked.<br />

I was much older than most<br />

of the students, and was often<br />

asked to play roles like aunt,<br />

mother, or older sister in some<br />

of the plays. My time with my<br />

son was wonderful and I did<br />

learn some techniques to help<br />

me relax in front of the camera.<br />

Having the chance to play at<br />

living in Manhattan was also<br />

wonderful - though I’d been<br />

to college, I had done so as a<br />

commuter, and a city kid, so my<br />

brief time at Strasberg gave me<br />

the feeling of being a ‘real’ college<br />

student.<br />

My son lived in an amazing<br />

restaurant neighborhood, and<br />

he delighted in introducing me<br />

to some of the best - almost as<br />

much as I enjoyed the experience.<br />

One of his favorites was<br />

Lupa, one of the first of Mario<br />

Batali’s efforts. It is a tiny trattoria<br />

in the Village. I made a plan<br />

to interview Mario for a radio<br />

piece for a show I was doing<br />

called “Delicious Encounters.”<br />

My husband Todd was in town<br />

for a few days, so the two of us<br />

went to Lupa at Mario’s invitation<br />

to interview him during<br />

the day, before the restaurant<br />

opened. Mario was caring for<br />

his 2-year-old, and couldn’t<br />

have been more charming. He<br />

took me into the kitchen with a<br />

“let’s cook something together”<br />

invitation. In a few minutes<br />

he rinsed a few cups of chickpeas<br />

in water, dried them with<br />

a paper towel and tossed them<br />

into a pan with olive oil and<br />

garlic for a quick saute. Next,<br />

he added a teaspoon of freshly<br />

chopped rosemary, then a cup<br />

of chicken broth. With each<br />

additional ingredient he would<br />

snap his wrist and send the ingredients<br />

airborne a few times<br />

before adding another. Next in<br />

was a few cups of fresh cooked<br />

pasta and a heaping handful of<br />

Pecorino.<br />

Mario plated the food in the<br />

dining room and served us some<br />

delicious wine, then joined us<br />

for lunch and a great conversation<br />

about food. It was one of<br />

the highlights of my New York<br />

experience. The recent accusations<br />

of inappropriate behavior<br />

against him are disappointing,<br />

of course, but I will always remember<br />

how cordial and gracious<br />

he was to us.<br />

I enjoy the dessert book,<br />

“Dolce Italiano,” written by<br />

Gina De Palma, who worked<br />

at Babbo, another of Mario’s<br />

restaurants and a favorite of<br />

ours. Her recipes are easy to<br />

follow, delicious and fresh<br />

tasting. I enjoy her olive oil/<br />

zucchini cake with lemon glaze<br />

(with only a few variations I’ve<br />

made over the years). It is delicious.<br />

All my gardening friends<br />

are already supplying me with<br />

zucchini from their gardens, so<br />

this is timely to deal with the<br />

overflow supply. I hope you<br />

enjoy this cake and some other<br />

favorite zucchini ideas.<br />

Looking for past issues?<br />

Find them on weeklynews.net<br />

Rosalie’s zucchini olive oil cake with lemon glaze.<br />

Zucchini ideas<br />

I prefer the narrow, long thin zucchini. Wash and dry them and cut into half-inch slices on<br />

the diagonal.<br />

— Heat a pancake grill and oil it with an olive oil spray.<br />

Sprinkle a few fresh thyme and or rosemary onto the grill and place the zucchini right on<br />

top of the herbs. Turn over after a few minutes, careful not to brown too much. Both sides<br />

should be nicely golden.<br />

Save for zucchini Parmesan, sandwiches with roasted peppers and soft cheese, or just a nice<br />

accompaniment as a side dish with meat or fish.<br />

— Minestrone is delicious with finely chopped vegetables, especially red pepper, celery, carrot,<br />

summer squash, zucchini.<br />

Puree a few tomatoes in the food processor after you saute the veggies in a little olive oil and<br />

garlic, then cover the veggies with the tomatoes and broth.<br />

Season with salt and pepper, a sprinkle of fresh thyme and add a few cups of green beans the<br />

last few minutes, for some crunch. Serve with a side of pesto and some grated cheese.<br />

— For a fresh summer salad that is so easy to make, grate a few zucchini in a bowl. In another<br />

bowl mix a half cup of olive oil with the juice of half a lemon, a tablespoon of maple syrup, a pinch<br />

of dijon mustard, salt and pepper and whisk well.<br />

Toss some of the dressing with grated zucchini.<br />

Any fresh herb like cilantro, flat leaf parsley, basil is nice chopped with this. Grate some Pecorino<br />

over the salad at serving time.<br />

— Zucchini flowers like the ones that I decorated the cake with are stuffed with ricotta and<br />

then dipped in a flour and beer tempura batter and deep fried. They are considered very special<br />

in Italy, and at my house. Enjoy the many opportunities that zucchini can provide along<br />

with the other great seasonal veggies.<br />

Zucchini Olive Oil Cake<br />

with Lemon Glaze<br />

— Preheat oven to 350 degrees.<br />

— Grease a 10-inch bundt pan well with Crisco and then sprinkle with flour, shaking off the excess.<br />

— Place 2 cups flour, 1 teaspoon baking powder and 1/2 teaspoon baking soda and 1 teaspoon<br />

salt in a bowl and whisk together with 1/2 teaspoon nutmeg, and 2 teaspoons cinnamon and<br />

ginger, set aside.<br />

— In a mixer bowl, beat 3 eggs with 1¾ cup sugar and 1 cup of olive oil for 3 minutes.<br />

— Beat in 1 teaspoon vanilla, scrape sides of bowl. Beat in dry ingredients on low speed all at once.<br />

— Add 1 cup of nut pieces and 1 teaspoon chopped candied ginger, stir to mix.<br />

— Pour into prepared pan and bake for 45 minutes until knife inserted comes out clean.<br />

— Prepare the glaze while the cake is baking.<br />

— In a small bowl, whisk 3/4 cup of fresh lemon juice with 1/3 cup granulated sugar and 1 cup<br />

of confectioners sugar.<br />

— Allow the cake to cool for 10 minutes, and then invert onto a wire rack. Brush with glaze when<br />

cake cools off. Decorate with a few zucchini flowers.


8<br />

WEEKLYNEWS.NET - 978-532-5880 JULY <strong>26</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, across<br />

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

Holy Communion and Homily every Sunday<br />

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

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

more information call the church office at<br />

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 activities<br />

for young children provided during<br />

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

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

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

Calvary Christian Church<br />

47 Grove St., <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 our<br />

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

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

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

morning services. Hispanic Service: Sunday<br />

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

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

Ministry: Wednesday at 7 p.m. ages <strong>18</strong>-30’s.<br />

Youth Ministry: Friday at 6:30 p.m. ages 12-<br />

<strong>18</strong>. Weekly Prayer Meetings: Monday - Friday<br />

at 7 p.m. and Saturday at 6 p.m. Church<br />

office hours are Monday- Friday 8:30 a.m. to<br />

4:30 p.m. For more information contact our<br />

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

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

Centre Congregational Church<br />

An Open and Affirming Congregation<br />

of the United Church of Christ<br />

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

Main), <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<br />

Congregational Church! Located at 5 Summer<br />

Street, Centre Church is an Open and<br />

Affirming Congregation of the United<br />

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

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

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

messages that are applicable to everyday<br />

life. We are committed to providing children<br />

a warm, safe, and inclusive environment<br />

with vibrant and engaging Children’s Programming<br />

(Godly Play, Whole People of<br />

God, and Brick-by-Brick) and trained and<br />

consistent staff, incorporating opportunities<br />

for stories, music, and service. Free nursery<br />

care is available for children up to age 4,<br />

with a new transition class beginning in<br />

January for 3 and 4-year olds. We also have<br />

a Young Families Group that offers fellowship<br />

opportunities for parents and children<br />

together. We have ample parking in a large<br />

lot behind the church and the facility is<br />

handicap accessible.. Please find us on Facebook<br />

at facebook.com/CentreChurchUCC<br />

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

information about our ministries and activities.<br />

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

if you would like more information about<br />

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

Office Hours at the church are 9 am – 3 pm<br />

Monday – Friday.<br />

Tower Day School is located at Centre<br />

Congregational Church and Director, Leah<br />

O’Brien may be reached at towerdayschool@gmail.com<br />

or 781-334-5576.<br />

Carmelite Chapel<br />

Northshore Mall, Peabody<br />

978-531-6145<br />

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

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

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

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

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

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 rabbi@<br />

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

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

School for children on Wednesday, and<br />

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

Kabbalah and other holiday events. Hebrew<br />

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

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

jewishpeabody.com.<br />

Community Covenant Church<br />

33 Lake St., West 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 for<br />

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

through June.<br />

For more information please contact the<br />

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

Congregation Sons of Israel<br />

Corner of Park and Spring Streets Peabody<br />

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

Also on Facebook<br />

First Friday of the month services begin at<br />

7:30 followed by an oneg. Weekly Saturday<br />

Sabbath services begin at 9 a.m. followed by<br />

a kiddish. Weekly Sunday morning services<br />

begin at 9 a.m. followed by a kiddish.<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. Pastor<br />

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

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 fellowship<br />

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

church and there are entrances in front and<br />

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

God’s Word. Join us for worship on Sundays<br />

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

Financial Peace University, Community<br />

Service, and other opportunities to<br />

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

Pekari and Rev. David Brezina. mlcspirit.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 9<br />

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

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

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

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

Meeting, 7 p.m.<br />

Visit our website for more information or<br />

to leave a prayer request.<br />

NorthShoreBaptistChurch.org<br />

<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 or<br />

by visiting the website: lynnfieldcatholic.<br />

org.<br />

The Pastoral Leadership Team: The Pastor<br />

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

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

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

Delahanty is Director of Parish Ministries.<br />

Office hours: Monday through Thursday 8<br />

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

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 at<br />

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

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

Sunday 9 a.m. (English); 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 Sacrament,<br />

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

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

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

St. Adelaide<br />

708 Lowell St., Peabody<br />

978-535-1985<br />

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

St. Ann’s Parish<br />

136 Lynn St., 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<br />

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

M. Ellen Fitzgerald, Religious Education<br />

Dir., 978-531-5791; Leanne Amirault, Preschool<br />

Dir., 978-532-3329 or 978-531-9521.<br />

Daily Mass: Saturday at 4 p.m. and Sunday<br />

at 8:30 and 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,<br />

Confession, Marriage, Holy Orders, and the<br />

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

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. St.<br />

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

Church in America and Lutheran Congregations<br />

in Mission for Christ. Sunday<br />

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

and coffee and fellowship following;<br />

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

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

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

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, VF;<br />

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

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

A. Martin; Mass: Monday-Saturday, 6:45<br />

a.m. and 4 p.m. (on Saturday); Sunday at 8,<br />

10 and 11:30 a.m. (Spanish) and 5 p.m.<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 />

Church Office: 781-334-4594<br />

781-334-4594<br />

The parish of St. Paul’s, 127 Summer<br />

Street, <strong>Lynnfield</strong>, was founded in April,<br />

19<strong>18</strong>, 100 years ago. Today, its mission is to<br />

enable all to connect with God and one another<br />

through worship, prayer, service, and<br />

study.<br />

For the Summer, St. Paul’s Episcopal<br />

Church offers 9am Sunday family services<br />

from June 24 to September 2.<br />

We continue Centering Prayer Mondays at<br />

6pm and Holy Eucharist and Bible Study<br />

Wednesdays starting at 9am.<br />

Listen to Sunday gospels and sermons and<br />

find more information about other Summer<br />

events on our website: www.<br />

stpaulslynnfield.org.<br />

The Rev. Rob Bacon serves as rector. Call<br />

the church office: 781-334-4594; like us on<br />

Facebook; or send an email 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<br />

and generation we seek transformation of<br />

our lives and our community through<br />

Christ’s Gospel of love, compassion, and<br />

justice. To learn more please visit 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.<br />

Coordinator 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 . in English, and 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<br />

9 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 from<br />

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

Group schedules, call the office.<br />

South Congregational<br />

60 Prospect St., 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 contemporary<br />

praise. Teen Youth Groups meet<br />

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

small groups for Bible Study meeting weekly<br />

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

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. All<br />

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 a<br />

contemporary Sunday Morning Worship<br />

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

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

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

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

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

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

information about Youth Group.<br />

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

facebook.com/michaelwillyamz. Helping<br />

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

needs in our community.<br />

Temple Tiferet Shalom<br />

489 Lowell St., 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 Communities.<br />

We offer a contemporary approach<br />

to Judaism while maintaining a respect for<br />

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

and inclusive community through learning<br />

and community activities. Besides Shabbat<br />

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

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

concerts and other programs. Consult<br />

the temple website and Facebook page for<br />

updated information.<br />

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

inclusive and welcoming Jewish Reconstructionist<br />

Community devoted to learning,<br />

spirituality, and caring for each individual.<br />

At Temple Emmanuel we are<br />

building a vibrant future in honor of our<br />

past, utilizing ancient traditions to provide<br />

meaning and sustenance in our contemporary<br />

lives. There is a chairlift to the second<br />

floor social hall. Visitors are encouraged to<br />

come to services and events that interest<br />

them.<br />

Weekly Shabbat services will reconvene<br />

in September on Friday nights at 7:30pm<br />

and Saturday mornings at 9:30am with<br />

Rabbi Greg Hersh on the first and third<br />

Saturdays of the month. Tot Shabbats are<br />

held on the second Saturday at 9:30am and<br />

an alternative Shabbat on the fourth Saturday<br />

morning at 9:30pm. Consult the website<br />

for a complete schedule of services,<br />

family events, and continuing education<br />

programs. www.WakefieldTemple.org.<br />

The Temple website also will list the<br />

special Rosh Hashanah and Yom Kippur<br />

Services as well as other special holiday<br />

celebrations. For information about seating<br />

on the High Holidays contact Phil at 617-<br />

688-0870 or info@WakefieldTemple.or<br />

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

schedule of services, family events,<br />

and 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, Email<br />

templenertamid@verizon.net.<br />

Rabbi Richard Perlman, Cantor Steve<br />

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

Administrator. Service Schedule: Evening<br />

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

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

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

special service), Saturday morning service<br />

at 9:30 a.m. Active Temple including Religious<br />

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

Action and Adult Education. Pilates on<br />

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

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

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

welcomes Interfaith Families. Please contact<br />

the office for more information at 978-532-<br />

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, Wednesdays<br />

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

4 p.m. Please check before coming due to<br />

weather or for summer 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> United<br />

Methodist Church!<br />

Sunday Worship Services:<br />

Summer: Sunday July 1 through Labor<br />

Weekend Sun. Sept. 2, 20<strong>18</strong> 10 a.m. Worship<br />

Service.<br />

School Year: September 8, 20<strong>18</strong> through<br />

June 30, 2019 -10:30 a.m.<br />

Knit, Pray & Crochet Ministry –<br />

Knit, Pray & Crochet meets at 10 a.m. on<br />

the 1st and 3rd Mondays of each month at the<br />

church to chat, learn to knit & crochet and to<br />

make items like blankets, hats, mittens,<br />

scarves, prayer shawls and prayer squares<br />

for people in need. All faiths are welcome to<br />

join us.<br />

Following the service, we enjoy Fellowship<br />

at our Coffee & Conversation time.<br />

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

community here through volunteer opportunities,<br />

social groups and committees like<br />

Ecumenical Youth Group, Choir, Book<br />

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

Methodist Women, Ministry Leadership<br />

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

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

to many local groups like Happy Hearts<br />

Preschool, Cub Scouts, Girl Scouts, Wakefield<br />

Arts & Crafts Society, Music Together-Preschool<br />

Music, Kids Curtain Call Drama<br />

for Middle Schoolers, Wakefield Toy<br />

Swap, just to name a few! We are also a<br />

Project Linus Blanket Drop-off spot!<br />

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

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

wife Elizabeth are trained musicians which<br />

they incorporate into special church services<br />

for all to enjoy! For more information<br />

about our church, please call the church office<br />

at (781) 245-1359 or email us at our new<br />

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

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

We look forward to welcoming you on<br />

Sunday!


JULY <strong>26</strong>, 20<strong>18</strong><br />

WEEKLYNEWS.NET - 978-532-5880 9<br />

Sports<br />

New football staff gets feet wet at 7v7<br />

By Anne Marie Tobin<br />

DANVERS — If you love high<br />

school football, then St. John’s Prep was<br />

the place to be Saturday for the annual<br />

Northeast 7v7 East Regional football<br />

championship.<br />

The tournament, formerly known<br />

as the Swampscott/<strong>Lynnfield</strong> 7 on 7<br />

Shootout attracted 40 teams, which not<br />

only battled each other, but battled one<br />

downpour after another.<br />

By the time the rain stopped late in<br />

the afternoon Buckingham, Browne<br />

and Nichols was the last team standing,<br />

having beaten Milton in the championship<br />

game.<br />

The three regional Northeast 7v7 tournaments<br />

are a football junkie’s dream<br />

with passing ruling the day. Forty teams<br />

competed in Saturday’s day-long competition,<br />

which features eight 40-yard<br />

long fields. All games are 24 minutes<br />

of running time. Games are played simultaneously<br />

with eight brackets of five<br />

teams each competing to be one of the<br />

two teams from each bracket to move on<br />

to the elimination round.<br />

Among the local teams were St. John’s<br />

Prep, <strong>Lynnfield</strong> High, Bishop Fenwick<br />

High, which had hosted the tournament<br />

the last five years, and Peabody, a firsttime<br />

participant.<br />

“We are changing our offense and are<br />

going to throw the ball more this year<br />

than we have in the last five years combined,<br />

so that’s why we decided to participate,”<br />

said Peabody head coach Mark<br />

Bettencourt. “That’s why we brought<br />

Gino Fedora over from <strong>Lynnfield</strong>. Who<br />

knows better than he does how to run<br />

that offense.”<br />

While Peabody failed to win a game,<br />

Fedora said the day was a success.<br />

“Absolutely we were pleased even<br />

though we came out a little flat,” said<br />

Fedora. “Especially considering the fact<br />

that it takes three years to implement<br />

a brand new spread and we only have<br />

three weeks to do it. We didn’t score a<br />

touchdown in our first two games and<br />

pulled them aside and challenged them<br />

to figure it out and they did, they scored<br />

three in each of the last two games, so<br />

that was a good showing.<br />

“Already I can feel the buzz as it has<br />

been a great summer. Now we need to<br />

find our identity and come together.”<br />

Four of five Tanner captains (Tyler<br />

Norman, Abe Kaba, Chriss Glass, Jake<br />

Souza) competed in the East Regional.<br />

“We usually run the ball, but we got a<br />

lot of good looks passing the ball today,”<br />

said Souza. “I think we went too deep<br />

early, but once we figured out we needed<br />

short passes we had success. The goal is<br />

to be 50-50 or 60-40 pass to run this year<br />

and we have some good new players<br />

and transfers, like quarterback Matt<br />

Jandrisevits, so we are learning a lot and<br />

working together as a real team.”<br />

Bishop Fenwick was the only local<br />

team to advance to the Sweet 16. The<br />

Crusaders held on to beat Andover in<br />

game four, 21-20, to finish pool play 2-2<br />

and won their spot in a tie-breaker. They<br />

defeated Pope John 22-12 in the round<br />

PHOTO | KERRIANNE ALLAIN<br />

Clayton Marengi runs into the end zone during the 7v7 exhibition last weekend at St. John’s Prep<br />

of 16 but were eliminated in the quarterfinals<br />

by eventual champion BB&N,<br />

22-15. Fenwick’s three captains (captain<br />

Tom MacDonald could not participate)<br />

said the future of Fenwick football is<br />

bright.<br />

“We had a bad year last year but this<br />

year’s team has grit and heart,” Derek<br />

DelVecchio said. “Today we didn’t take<br />

any crap from anyone and that’s why I<br />

love this group. This tournament is always<br />

awesome, a great team builder.”<br />

For captain Keegan O’Connor, a St.<br />

John’s Prep transfer, the tournament had<br />

a homecoming flavor.<br />

“I live in Andover so it was great to<br />

beat them and also it felt a little like home<br />

being back here at the Prep,” O’Connor<br />

said. “Today we got some great play<br />

from our young players so that was good<br />

to see. Players like Stefano Fabbiano,<br />

who is only a sophomore, showed some<br />

good stuff on both sides of the ball, so<br />

I believe we are improving every day.”<br />

Key to the Crusaders’ campaign to<br />

get back into the postseason playoffs is<br />

quarterback Cory Bright. Bright has battled<br />

injuries the past two seasons.<br />

“I think the only season I have had that<br />

I was injury free was freshman year, but<br />

I’m healthy and 100 percent, so I definitely<br />

like our chances and today will<br />

help us come together as a team and<br />

bring Fenwick football back to where it<br />

belongs,” Bright said.<br />

<strong>Lynnfield</strong> is in its first year under<br />

new coach Pat Lamusta, who succeeded<br />

10-year head man Neal Weidman<br />

after Weidman’s retirement. While the<br />

Pioneers finished pool play 1-3 and did<br />

not move on, Lamusta liked what he<br />

saw, especially against BB&N, which<br />

went on to win the whole thing.<br />

“I told the team I saw a lot of good<br />

stuff today and it was nice to see progress<br />

as the games went on,” Lamusta<br />

said. “By the fourth game, you could see<br />

PHOTO | KRISTINE MARENGI<br />

Hunter Allain stops an opposing player during the 7v7 competition at St.<br />

John’s Prep.<br />

the team was really gellin’ and the intensity<br />

level was right up there against some<br />

tough competition, like BB&N (won) by<br />

BB&N 21-20) in that last game. They<br />

have at least two kids going Division<br />

1 but we really held own. I can see so<br />

much improvement from the Endicott<br />

7v7 and they are much more cohesive as<br />

a group.”<br />

Senior Brett Cohee and junior Clayton<br />

Marengi alternated at quarterback. With<br />

<strong>Lynnfield</strong>’s all-time leader in touchdown<br />

passes, Matt Mortellite, off to St. Lawrence,<br />

the Pioneers’ quarterback position is up for<br />

grabs.<br />

“All I can say now is that there are are<br />

potential battles for positions all over the<br />

field,” Lamusta said. “It’s going to be<br />

very competitive.”<br />

Mortellite spent his summer as a volunteer<br />

assistant to Fedora in Peabody<br />

and was directing the Tanners’ offense<br />

Saturday.<br />

“They did some pretty good things<br />

and are starting to pick up the new offense,”<br />

Mortellite said. “We didn’t win<br />

any games, but little by little you can<br />

see improvement with every game, so<br />

I think Peabody should be ready to go<br />

from the very start of the season.”


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WEEKLYNEWS.NET - 978-532-5880 JULY <strong>26</strong>, 20<strong>18</strong><br />

Legionnaires’ season comes to an end<br />

By Anne Marie Tobin<br />

DANVERS — The No. 4<br />

Middleton-Peabody Senior<br />

American Legion baseball<br />

team’s summer season came<br />

to an end Monday night with<br />

a tough 1-0 loss in eight innings<br />

to top-seeded Andover in<br />

the semifinals of the District 8<br />

playoffs.<br />

“We lost on a seeing-eye<br />

ground ball between first base<br />

and second base with a runner<br />

at third base” said head coach<br />

John Kowlaski.<br />

The team had gotten off to<br />

a good start in the playoffs,<br />

defeating No. 5 Haverhill 3-1<br />

Saturday night at Essex Tech.<br />

Middleton-Peabody fell behind<br />

1-0 in the first inning, but<br />

rallied late, scratching out two<br />

runs in the bottom of the fifth<br />

then adding an insurance run<br />

in the sixth inning to take a 3-1<br />

lead. Middleton-Peabody had<br />

only six hits, but made the most<br />

of them in the late innings.<br />

“In close games, it all comes<br />

down to doing the small<br />

things you need to win,” said<br />

head coach John Kowalski.<br />

“Tonight we executed at the<br />

end. We got our bunts down,<br />

we moved runners over and we<br />

got a couple of very timely hits.<br />

Nick (Iannuzzi) gave up just<br />

that one run on a bleeder over<br />

the first baseman’s head, then<br />

Eddie (Campbell) came on and<br />

did a nice job.<br />

Peabody’s Campbell earned<br />

the win, but it wasn’t easy.<br />

Haverhill had runners at first<br />

and second with no outs in the<br />

top of the seventh, but Campbell<br />

buckled down to strike out Kyle<br />

O’Neill then got the next two<br />

outs on routine ground balls,<br />

the first to Endicott College<br />

commit Cooper Marengi of<br />

<strong>Lynnfield</strong> at first (unassisted)<br />

PHOTOS | ANNE MARIE TOBIN<br />

Mike Stellato, above, squares to bunt during Middleton-Peabody’s win over Haverhill. Cooper Marengi, below, makes a sliding<br />

catch on a ball in left field.<br />

and the second to shortstop<br />

Andrew Manni of Masconomet<br />

to seal the win.<br />

“He just throws strikes and<br />

that’s how he got out of that<br />

seventh inning when they had<br />

runners at first and second,”<br />

said Kowalski. “His breaking<br />

ball was in the strike zone. We<br />

had Will Garofoli (of <strong>Lynnfield</strong>)<br />

warming up, but Eddie is just a<br />

battler and we knew he could<br />

finish the game for us.<br />

“Their guy (Carpenter) was<br />

also throwing strikes with his<br />

breaking ball and he had us<br />

off balance for a while there,<br />

but the guys figured it out and<br />

came up with the hits when we<br />

needed them.”<br />

With the win, Middleton/<br />

Peabody advanced to the next<br />

round against top-seeded<br />

Andover Monday night at<br />

Andover High School.<br />

Haverhill’s Nick Skafos led<br />

off the game with a single, advanced<br />

to second on Andrew<br />

Williams’ sacrifice bunt and got<br />

to third on a fly ball to center<br />

field off the bat of O’Neill.<br />

Kyle Bellemoro roped a single<br />

down the third base line to bring<br />

Skafos home with the first run<br />

of the game.<br />

Haverhill starter Will Carpenter<br />

cruised through the first<br />

four innings, allowing only<br />

two singles, one in the first inning<br />

to Marengi and another in<br />

the second to Peabody’s Jake<br />

Irvine, who recently announced<br />

he<br />

Nick Iannuzzi started for<br />

Middleton-Peabody.<br />

He settled down and gave up<br />

and allowed only one single and<br />

just three baserunners over the<br />

next three innings.<br />

He walked the first two batters<br />

of the fifth inning, however,<br />

and was lifted in favor of<br />

Campbell who got out of the<br />

jam with three infield outs.<br />

Essex Tech’s Chris Masta<br />

started the fifth inning rally with<br />

an infield single. Peabody’s<br />

Evan Mullen sacrificed Masta<br />

to second, then Dean College<br />

commit Josh Cerretani of<br />

Peabody ripped an RBI single<br />

up the middle to bring Masta<br />

home to tie the game at 1-1.<br />

Cerretani stole second and kept<br />

going to third when the throw to<br />

second sailed into center field.<br />

Masco’s Pat Costigan delivered<br />

a clutch RBI single to bring<br />

Cerretani home with the eventual<br />

game-winning run.<br />

After Campbell escaped<br />

the top of the seventh unscathed,<br />

Masco’s Dave Hunter<br />

lined a long double to center.<br />

Up next was Northern Essex<br />

Community College transfer<br />

Mike Stellato of <strong>Lynnfield</strong>, who<br />

laid down a perfect bunt with<br />

Hunter advancing to third and<br />

Stellato safe at first with an infield<br />

hit.<br />

One pitch later, Hunter raced<br />

home on a wild pitch to make it<br />

a 3-1 ballgame.<br />

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JULY <strong>26</strong>, 20<strong>18</strong><br />

WEEKLYNEWS.NET - 978-532-5880 11<br />

Baseball all-stars come up short<br />

Lacrosse All-American<br />

COURTESY PHOTO<br />

The <strong>Lynnfield</strong> 12-year-old Little League Baseball All-Stars came up just short at the Bay State League<br />

Round 1 Trophy Weekend at Featherland Park, finishing runner-up after losing to Newburyport 11-3<br />

on July 15 in the championship game. Front, from left, are Nick Groussis, Ryan MacEachern, Brendan<br />

Manoogian, Ty Adamo; rear, Dan Dorman, Matt Papagikos, Anthony Grabau, Christian Rosa, Nick<br />

Lucich, Nate Lopez and Nick Hubbard.<br />

COURTESY PHOTO<br />

<strong>Lynnfield</strong>’s Craig Yannone, who will be a senior<br />

at St. John’s Prep, has been named to the<br />

Eastern Mass. Lacrosse Coaches Association<br />

All-American second team. A face-off specialist,<br />

he had a 73 percent winning record for<br />

the Eagles in the spring. Earlier this month<br />

Yannone participated in the Face-off Factory<br />

combine, finishing first in the Division 1 high<br />

school and college face-off competition.<br />

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12<br />

WEEKLYNEWS.NET - 978-532-5880 JULY <strong>26</strong>, 20<strong>18</strong><br />

Summer basketball in full swing<br />

The <strong>Lynnfield</strong> Recreation Department<br />

summer basketball program is going great<br />

guns. Top left, Jack Calichman goes up for a<br />

shot in the first half of a game last Thursday<br />

at the middle school. Top right, referee<br />

Bob Relihan supervises the action. Above<br />

left, Team GAGA coaches Alex Calichman<br />

(yellow shirt) and John Astrofsky wait for<br />

the action to start. Above right, Harris<br />

Hadzihasah, left, Lucas Adreani and Jack<br />

Calichman eye a rebound; at left, <strong>Lynnfield</strong><br />

Recreation Director Julie Mallett makes a<br />

point with L Town Ballers coaches Bryant<br />

Dana and Shannon Furey. Right, Johnny<br />

Pascucci tries to get around a defender.<br />

PHOTOS | ANNE MARIE TOBIN


JULY <strong>26</strong>, 20<strong>18</strong><br />

Contact the<br />

Editor,<br />

Tell us your<br />

stories,<br />

We Want To<br />

Hear From You!<br />

tgrillo<br />

@essexmediagroup.com<br />

Looking for a house?<br />

Check the real estate secton!<br />

RELOCATING?<br />

“Helpful tips”<br />

for a S-M-O-O-T-H<br />

trouble-free move!<br />

Designate a drawer for<br />

essentials such as<br />

sheets and towels for<br />

quick access the first<br />

night you move into<br />

your new home.<br />

Plan a garage/yard<br />

sale before you move.<br />

Fresh coffee, baking<br />

soda, or charcoal in a<br />

sock, placed inside<br />

your refrigerator will<br />

keep the inside smelling<br />

fresh and clean.<br />

WEEKLYNEWS.NET - 978-532-5880 13<br />

GENERAL<br />

HELP WANTED<br />

CARPENTER NEEDED<br />

* Previous experience in similar projects<br />

*Finish carpentry skills<br />

*Carpenters must have own tools and transportation<br />

*Carpenters must adhere to project reporting, timecard, and<br />

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*Ability to adapt to changing schedules<br />

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REAL ESTATE<br />

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FOR SALE<br />

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SERVICES<br />

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Annoying pop-ups? Spyware and virus<br />

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set up. Maintenance and system<br />

tune-up's to improve performance. No<br />

hidden charges or gimmicks. call Glen<br />

978-531-1984.<br />

NEW IN TOWN?<br />

LEGALS<br />

Legal Notice<br />

There will be a Tree Removal Hearing on Tuesday August 7, 20<strong>18</strong> at 9:00am at<br />

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

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

location(s).<br />

Address: 39 Coleman Street As per the petition of (Michael Liggiero)<br />

Peabody, MA 01960<br />

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

Weekly News: July <strong>26</strong>, August 2, 20<strong>18</strong><br />

PEABODY CITY COUNCIL<br />

CITY OF PEABODY<br />

AN ORDINANCE AMENDING SECTION <strong>18</strong>-21 ENTITLED<br />

"RATES OF COMPENSATION FOR FULL-TIME POSITIONS NOT<br />

SUBJECT TO COLLECTIVE BARGAINING"<br />

OF THE CODE OF THE CITY OF PEABODY<br />

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

AS FOLLOWS:<br />

SECTION ONE: That the ordinance establishing a Compensation and Classification<br />

Plan is hereby amended as follows:<br />

The Code of the City of Peabody adopted on January 23, 1969 and amended is<br />

hereby further amended by deleting from Section <strong>18</strong>-21 the ordinance<br />

establishing a Compensation and Classification Plan for the following:<br />

PEABODY CITY COUNCIL<br />

CITY OF PEABODY<br />

1.75% 2% 2%<br />

Effective Effective Effective<br />

Position July 1, 2015 July 1, 2016 July 1, 2017<br />

Director of Public Services 115,000 117,300 119,646<br />

Assistant Director of Public Services 82,328 83,974 85,654<br />

AND SUBSTITUTING THEREFORE, THE FOLLOWING:<br />

Effective<br />

Position July 1, 20<strong>18</strong><br />

Director of Public Services Up to 135,000<br />

Assistant Director of Public Services Up to 95,500<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 />

INTRODUCED JUNE 19, 20<strong>18</strong><br />

ORDERED PUBLISHED JUNE 19, 20<strong>18</strong><br />

PUBLISHED JUNE 28, 20<strong>18</strong><br />

ADOPTED JULY 12, 20<strong>18</strong><br />

PUBLICATION OF ADOPTION JULY <strong>26</strong>, 20<strong>18</strong><br />

Weekly News: July <strong>26</strong>, 20<strong>18</strong><br />

AN ORDINANCE AMENDING CHAPTER 19 ENTITLED MOTOR VEHICLES AND<br />

TRAFFIC OF THE CODE OF THE CITY OF PEABODY<br />

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

SECTION ONE: The Code of the City of Peabody adopted on January 9, 1986,<br />

and amended, is hereby further amended as follows:<br />

That Section 19-36 entitled "Driving Through Safety Zones<br />

Prohibited" of the Code of the City of Peabody,<br />

Massachusetts, is hereby amended by deleting the following language:<br />

Looking for<br />

past issues?<br />

Find them on<br />

weeklynews.net<br />

FIND AN AFFORDABLE PLACE TO LIVE.<br />

CHECK CLASSIFIED!<br />

Catch up with your<br />

favorite team in sports!<br />

It shall be unlawful for the driver of a vehicle, except on signal<br />

from a police officer to drive the same over or through a<br />

safety zone.<br />

AND INSERTING IN PLACE THEREOF THE FOLLOWING:<br />

a) It shall be unlawful for the driver of any vehicle, except on signal from a<br />

police officer, or in accordance with posted regulation (s), to drive same over or<br />

through a safety zone.<br />

b) A violation of subsection (a) shall be punishable by a fine in accordance with<br />

the following schedule:<br />

i. First offense in a calendar year $50.00<br />

ii. Second offense in a calendar year $100.00<br />

iii. Third and subsequent offense in a calendar year $150.00<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 />

INTRODUCED JUNE 14, 20<strong>18</strong><br />

ORDERED PUBLISHED JUNE 14, 20<strong>18</strong><br />

PUBLISHED JUNE 21, 20<strong>18</strong><br />

ADOPTED JULY 12, 20<strong>18</strong><br />

PUBLICATION OF ADOPTION JULY <strong>26</strong>, 20<strong>18</strong><br />

Weekly News: July <strong>26</strong>, 20<strong>18</strong>


14<br />

WEEKLYNEWS.NET - 978-532-5880 JULY <strong>26</strong>, 20<strong>18</strong><br />

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LYNNFIELD<br />

4663 BOSTON ST U:14<br />

$297,000<br />

B: Ermias Y Manahle<br />

S: Christine Disanto<br />

56 COMMERCIAL ST<br />

$620,000<br />

B: Sajin Shrestha & Satya<br />

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S: Olumide Olurinmade &<br />

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333-341 ESSEX ST<br />

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S: Mingh Sang Market LLC<br />

<strong>18</strong> ESTES ST<br />

$300,000<br />

B: Pedro A Lopez & Daniel<br />

Santos<br />

S: Christy C Bochicchio &<br />

Marilyn Liberge<br />

9 FAY ST<br />

$395,000<br />

B: Rosario E Lopez<br />

S: Saimir Zepaj<br />

87 FAYS AVE<br />

$379,900<br />

B: Samy Fedna & Rosenie<br />

Pollisaint<br />

S: Iris M Dumas & Jeffrey Dumas<br />

12 HERSCHEL ST<br />

$475,000<br />

B: F Guillen Electrical Svc<br />

S: East Coast Property Hldgs<br />

99-1/2 HIGH ROCK ST<br />

$620,000<br />

B: Franck Dorrilus & Mirla Zephyr<br />

S: Louis Yvon-Louis & Olita Louis<br />

REAL ESTATE<br />

FOR SALE<br />

Real Estate Transfers<br />

231 LINWOOD ST<br />

$350,000<br />

B: Sawannara Chann & Den<br />

Prom<br />

S: Marta L Interiano & Marcos<br />

Rodriguez<br />

37-39 LOVERS LEAP AVE<br />

$579,000<br />

B: Bryan R Castillo<br />

S: Lovers Leap LLC<br />

<strong>26</strong> MANSON ST<br />

$340,000<br />

B: Kacy Bassignani<br />

S: John Hanley & Loren Miller<br />

74 REGINA RD<br />

$725,000<br />

B: Adam T Chevalier & Kelly B<br />

Chevalier<br />

S: Thiago Miranda<br />

86 TIMSON ST<br />

$560,000<br />

B: Jose Hernandez & Clark S<br />

Hiltunen Tr<br />

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42 VALLEY AVE<br />

$545,000<br />

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S: Irving Development LLC<br />

20 HUSS CT U:104<br />

$121,000<br />

B: Ana Walshe<br />

S: Urban Renewal 8 LLC<br />

29 W BALTIMORE ST<br />

$255,000<br />

B: William Robin LLC<br />

S: Manfred G Greer-Jones<br />

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$375,000<br />

B: Eileen Dacey & Timothy Dacey<br />

S: Beverly Mcginn & Joseph R<br />

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70 ANDOVER ST<br />

$375,000<br />

B: Michael A Harris<br />

S: Pamela Gruntkosky & Joyce<br />

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B: Shanda K Coughlin & David L<br />

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S: Ddaigle Sally A Est & Cynthia<br />

A Webster<br />

68 BIRCH ST<br />

$360,000<br />

B: James J Cipollo & Zachary J<br />

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S: Dolores Vocino<br />

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$440,000<br />

B: Eric P Kerr & Kelly A Kerr<br />

S: Daniel J StCyr & Jean M StCyr<br />

5 FORENZA RD<br />

$495,000<br />

B: Dominic J Maccioli 3rd &<br />

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S: Eric B Goldberg<br />

53 FRANKLIN ST<br />

$485,600<br />

B: Emily J Cooper & Evan N<br />

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Find<br />

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SAVINGS<br />

in the classifieds


JULY <strong>26</strong>, 20<strong>18</strong><br />

WEEKLYNEWS.NET - 978-532-5880 15<br />

COLDWELL BANKER<br />

NEW<br />

LISTING!<br />

SALE<br />

PENDING!<br />

<strong>Lynnfield</strong> | $1,699,000<br />

Exquisite custom colonial with a contemporary<br />

flair in one of lynnfield’s finest<br />

neighborhoods!<br />

Debbie Caniff<br />

Search 72332488 on cbhomes.com<br />

NEW<br />

LISTING!<br />

<strong>Lynnfield</strong> | $1,299,000<br />

Stately and private setting for this beautiful<br />

Colonial, set back from the street, on highly<br />

desirable Lil’s Way, cul-de-sac.<br />

Debbie Caniff<br />

Search 72361992 on cbhomes.com<br />

<strong>Lynnfield</strong> | $799,900<br />

Very large Ranch style home boasting 2<br />

complete living levels. Grand entryway w/wide<br />

hallway & Rich Espresso Hardwood Floors.<br />

Nikki Martin<br />

Search 72366604 on cbhomes.com<br />

SALE<br />

PENDING!<br />

Peabody | $539,900<br />

Lovingly cared split entry home in desirable<br />

Pilgrim Heights neighborhood. Lots<br />

of space. Lower level has in-law potential<br />

Joyce Cucchiara<br />

Search 72352957 on cbhomes.com<br />

Peabody | $484,900<br />

Easy one level living in this 3-4 bedroom California<br />

Ranch located in the desirable Burke<br />

School neighborhood of West Peabody!<br />

Joyce Cucchiara<br />

Search 72365303 on cbhomes.com<br />

Peabody | $329,900<br />

You can’t beat this fantastic location and<br />

most of all this beautiful village style condominium<br />

complex with colonial taste.<br />

Joyce Cucchiara<br />

Search 72363468 on cbhomes.com<br />

Danvers | $759,000<br />

Young and Beautiful! Custom built and designed<br />

4 bedroom, 3 ½ Bath Colonial. First Floor Master<br />

Suite, Great Room with 10 ft. Ceilings.<br />

Elaine Figliola<br />

Search 72303178 on cbhomes.com<br />

Danvers | $399,000<br />

Well-built custom ranch offers ONE LEVEL<br />

LIVING with a spacious open floor plan.<br />

Sunken living room with fireplace.<br />

Steven MacDonald<br />

Search 72343849 on cbhomes.com<br />

Middleton | $1,375,000<br />

5 bedrooms, 6 bathrooms, 3 fireplaces and<br />

first floor guest suite. 2-story family room, entertaining<br />

kitchen, and elegant dining room.<br />

Karen Johnson<br />

Search 72317464 on cbhomes.com<br />

Newburyport | $659,900<br />

Wonderful 3 bedroom/2 bath Contemporary<br />

just steps to the best beach on Plum<br />

Island. Open floor plan. Light, and airy.<br />

Carol Dempsey<br />

Search 72303093 on cbhomes.com<br />

NEW<br />

LISTING!<br />

Newton: Chestnut Hill | $2,599,000<br />

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family residence built by lt. Thomas Hammond,<br />

Jr. with Chestnut beams.<br />

Rossetti/Poti Team<br />

Search 72253513 on cbhomes.com<br />

Reading | $519,000<br />

One acre Lot with lots of privacy, set on<br />

dead end street new hardwood on main<br />

level, new eat in kitchen.<br />

Steven MacDonald<br />

Search 72316035 on cbhomes.com<br />

NEW<br />

PRICE!<br />

Revere | $799,000<br />

Completely refurbished 5 Bedrooms and 3.5<br />

Bathrooms Colonial with Wrap-Around Porch &<br />

Gorgeous Hilltop Views of the Boston skyline.<br />

Debra Molle<br />

Search 72<strong>26</strong>9640 on cbhomes.com<br />

Revere | $429,900<br />

Attractive brick front ranch located on a dead<br />

end street in desirable west revere! This home<br />

is cozy, warm and inviting.<br />

Joyce Cucchiara<br />

Search 72364256 on cbhomes.com<br />

Saugus | $1,150,000<br />

Center entrance Colonial in executive neighborhood!<br />

6+ Bedrooms, 5 1/2 Baths, gorgeous<br />

Master en Suite, Finished lower level.<br />

Carol DiCiaccio<br />

Search 72285703 on cbhomes.com<br />

Stoneham | $538,900<br />

Great 3 bedroom home located on desirable<br />

cul-de-sac location! Spacious master<br />

bedroom with vaulted ceilings<br />

Steve MacDonald<br />

Search 72347058 on cbhomes.com<br />

NEW<br />

PRICE!<br />

Wenham | $998,000<br />

Cozy and warm expansive colonial. Grand<br />

marble floor front entrance with impressive<br />

iron railing staircase.<br />

Kathy Bennett<br />

Search 72290143 on cbhomes.com<br />

Amesbury | $569,900<br />

Spacious Townhouse at Bartlett’s Reach. with<br />

common Dock. 3 full baths, 2-3 bedrooms,<br />

new stainless steel appliances.<br />

Rossetti/Poti Team<br />

Search 72303461 on cbhomes.com<br />

ColdwellBankerHomes.com<br />

Amesbury | $114,900<br />

Move in condition! Truly turn-key ready for<br />

first time home buyers or investors! Pet<br />

friendly!<br />

Steve MacDonald<br />

Search 72361159 on cbhomes.com<br />

Christopher Polak, VP/Managing Broker 1085 Summer Street | <strong>Lynnfield</strong>, MA 01940 | 781.334.5700<br />

The property information herein is derived from various sources that may include, but not be limited to, county records and the Multiple Listing Service, and it may include approximations. Although the information<br />

is believed to be accurate, it is not warranted and you should not rely upon it without personal verification. Real estate agents affiliated with Coldwell Banker Residential Brokerage are independent contractor agents<br />

and are not employees of the Company. ©20<strong>18</strong> Coldwell Banker Residential Brokerage. All Rights Reserved. Coldwell Banker Residential Brokerage fully supports the principles of the Fair Housing Act and the Equal<br />

Opportunity Act. Owned by a subsidiary of NRT LLC. Coldwell Banker and the Coldwell Banker Logo are registered service marks owned by Coldwell Banker Real Estate LLC. 240300NE_12/17<br />

Middleton | $737,900<br />

Beautifully maintained town home offers<br />

option of either first or second floor master<br />

suite, gleaming hardwoods.<br />

Carol DiCiaccio<br />

Search 72342576 on cbhomes.com


16<br />

WEEKLYNEWS.NET - 978-532-5880 JULY <strong>26</strong>, 20<strong>18</strong><br />

The region’s<br />

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Christine Carpenter<br />

617-538-9396<br />

Elena Drislane<br />

978-979-3243<br />

Marilyn Philips<br />

781-367-1133<br />

Kerry Connelly<br />

978-273-0699<br />

Sarah Haney<br />

774-487-2272<br />

Marcia Porestsky<br />

781-771-8144<br />

Jaclyn Prizio<br />

781-844-5990<br />

Gale Rawding<br />

617-784-9995<br />

Debra Roberts<br />

781-956-0241<br />

Maureen Rossi-DiMella<br />

617-285-2057<br />

Patrice Slater<br />

781-858-1764<br />

Ron Supino<br />

978-590-1628<br />

Donna Snyder<br />

781-405-8241

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