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Lynnfield 10-18

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The #1 Selling<br />

Real Estate Office<br />

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

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

LYNNFIELD WEEKLY<br />

PEABODY<br />

NEW<br />

CALL FOR DETAILS<br />

Evelyn Rockas<br />

617-256-8500<br />

LYNNFIELD<br />

COMING SOON<br />

$1,899,000<br />

Louise<br />

Bova-Touchette<br />

617-605-0555<br />

MIDDLETON<br />

NEW<br />

$969,900<br />

Rossetti/Poti Team<br />

781-7<strong>18</strong>-4662<br />

PEABODY<br />

NEW<br />

CALL FOR DETAILS<br />

Joyce Cucchiara<br />

978-808-1597<br />

LYNNFIELD<br />

REDUCED<br />

$599,900<br />

Nikki<br />

Cappadona-Martin<br />

781-7<strong>10</strong>-1440<br />

OCTOBER <strong>18</strong>, 20<strong>18</strong> • VOL. 62, NO. 42<br />

IN THE NEWS<br />

Page 2:<br />

Veteran call<br />

firefighter<br />

named chief<br />

Page 6<br />

Breast cancer<br />

awareness<br />

section<br />

Page 9:<br />

Boys soccer back<br />

to winning ways<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 />

Therapy on four paws<br />

NEWS<br />

16 PAGES • ONE DOLLAR<br />

Close call<br />

to meet<br />

Town<br />

Meeting<br />

quorum<br />

By Thomas Grillo<br />

The biggest question at Town<br />

Meeting Monday night was<br />

whether enough voters showed<br />

up to meet the quorum.<br />

After a half hour wait for late<br />

comers amid a light rain, the<br />

minimum number of 175 was<br />

met at the Middle School with<br />

a few to spare.<br />

The most contentious issue<br />

of the dozen articles was a<br />

proposal to end Town Meeting<br />

at <strong>10</strong>:30 p.m. The Finance<br />

Committee and longtime resident<br />

Patricia Campbell opposed<br />

the measure.<br />

“Town Meeting is the people’s<br />

voice and it’s worth the time<br />

a few times a year,” she said.<br />

“Let’s not make this meeting a<br />

rubber stamp. We need time to<br />

finish Town Meeting … the experience<br />

in another community<br />

of limiting the time is they are<br />

having more meetings.”<br />

Another voter asked how<br />

much it cost taxpayers to run<br />

a Town Meeting. The answer<br />

from the town manager: $7,000.<br />

Proponents said one of the<br />

reasons to limit the time of<br />

the sessions stemmed from a<br />

PHOTO | MARIE LAGMAN<br />

survey of households. More<br />

Britney and Gianna Sylvester get hugs from Orla, whose name is Gaelic for “golden princess,”<br />

at Reading Day at the <strong>Lynnfield</strong> Public Library last week. The registered therapy<br />

than two-thirds of the 1,300 respondents<br />

favored a way to adjourn<br />

sooner.<br />

dog brought juice boxes and snacks for children to enjoy while she made sure they were<br />

comfortable and felt loved. She has been a therapy dog for six years and visits people in<br />

But Campbell pointed out<br />

hospitals, nursing homes, schools, and libraries. Orla was accompanied by Kate McGrath<br />

who read “A Boy Who Became Pope: The Story of Saint John Paul II” by Fabiola Garza. QUORUM, PAGE 3<br />

The #1 Selling<br />

Real Estate Office<br />

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

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

ANDOVER<br />

SOLD<br />

$2,988,000<br />

Nikki<br />

Cappadona-Martin<br />

781-7<strong>10</strong>-1440<br />

READING<br />

NEW<br />

$344,900<br />

Steve Macdonald<br />

508-982-5005<br />

SALEM<br />

NEW<br />

$459,000<br />

Dan DelGrosso<br />

978-578-5<strong>10</strong>8<br />

CHESTNUT HILL<br />

$2,199,000<br />

Reggie Lemelin<br />

978-979-6262<br />

MIDDLETON<br />

$1,299,999<br />

Karen Johnson<br />

781-367-8482


2<br />

INDEX<br />

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

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

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

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

Seniors ........................................................................................... 5<br />

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

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

Veteran call firefighter<br />

BY THOMAS GRILLO<br />

A “call” firefighter will be<br />

<strong>Lynnfield</strong>’s next chief.<br />

Glenn Davis, an executive<br />

for a healthcare company,<br />

began his fire career in the department<br />

as a part-timer nearly<br />

three decades ago, according<br />

to his resume. The 58-year-old<br />

<strong>Lynnfield</strong> resident came up<br />

through the ranks as lieutenant,<br />

captain, and deputy chief.<br />

He was the only candidate<br />

recommended to the Board of<br />

Selectmen for the job. Approval<br />

is expected at the board’s<br />

November meeting.<br />

“We are all convinced he is<br />

far and away the best candidate<br />

and capable of providing<br />

the leadership the department<br />

needs,” said Selectmen<br />

Chairman Richard Dalton. “His<br />

interview was head and shoulders<br />

above his competitors. He<br />

has a presence about him and<br />

named chief<br />

I’ve seen it in action. He’s a seasoned<br />

executive who fits what<br />

we’re looking for.”<br />

The department has nine<br />

full-time firefighters and 35 on<br />

call. The part time firefighters<br />

are only paid when they battle<br />

a blaze, which in <strong>Lynnfield</strong><br />

is rare. The vast majority of<br />

the calls, more than 2,000 by<br />

year’s end, are for medical<br />

emergencies.<br />

In addition to Davis, there<br />

were four other applicants,<br />

a mix of full time staff and<br />

on-call personnel. But Davis<br />

had the unanimous support<br />

from the five-member Fire<br />

Chief Screening Commision<br />

which included Dalton, Town<br />

Administrator Robert Dolan,<br />

retired <strong>Lynnfield</strong> firefighter<br />

and former Selectman Robert<br />

MacKendrick, Police Chief<br />

David Breen, and Thomas<br />

Kayola, who serves on town’s<br />

Capital Facilities Advisory<br />

Wilhelm E. Kozlauska, 89<br />

Wilhelm E. Kozlauska, 89, passed away<br />

with his family by his side on Oct. 9th.<br />

Born in Lynn on April 6, 1929, he was the<br />

son of the late Wallace and Ethel (Gelezauskas)<br />

Kazlawskas. Beloved husband of Dolores<br />

(Petrouskas) Kozlauska for 60 years. He<br />

leaves a son Dr. John W. Kozlauska and his<br />

wife, Heidi, of Lynnfi eld and a daughter Carol<br />

Hand, and her husband Michael of Bedford<br />

and his two precious granddaughters Lucy<br />

and Victoria Hand, several nieces and nephews a fi rst<br />

cousin and several other cousins.<br />

He was predeceased by his brother Fred Kozlowski,<br />

sister Gladys Luciano and sister in law Frances<br />

Russotto. A graduate of Lynn Classical Division of<br />

Obituary<br />

Committee.<br />

Last summer, the threemember<br />

Board of Selectmen<br />

voted unanimously not to<br />

renew Chief Mark Tetreault’s<br />

five-year contract, which ends<br />

in December. It’s unclear why<br />

his contract was not renewed.<br />

Dalton and Dolan said it’s the<br />

town’s policy not to comment<br />

on personnel matters.<br />

Tetreault, 54, a New<br />

Hampshire resident who has<br />

served as chief since 2014,<br />

said he has filed suit against<br />

the town, but did not provide a<br />

copy of the suit and said he did<br />

know at which court the complaint<br />

was filed. He said his<br />

attorney would call the Weekly<br />

News, but there was no call.<br />

Tetreault’s $115,000 contract<br />

provides three months severance<br />

pay in the event the chief<br />

is not reappointed.<br />

“I still have a job to do and<br />

will continue to do so,” he said.<br />

Technical Arts in 1947, he worked at General<br />

Electric Co. in Lynn, then enlisted in the<br />

U.S. Air Force and served his country during<br />

the Korean War as a radar mechanic and<br />

later as an instructor in Biloxi, MS.<br />

Kozlauska graduated from Northeastern<br />

University in 1960 with a degree in electrical<br />

engineering. For many years he worked<br />

for the U.S. Army in Huntsville, AL, Germany<br />

and in Massachusetts in the government<br />

offi ces at Raytheon on the Patriot missile system.<br />

Upon retirement he enjoyed traveling, polka dancing,<br />

working on his various Mercedes cars and tinkering<br />

in the garage. His was a member of Post 56<br />

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OCTOBER <strong>18</strong>, 20<strong>18</strong><br />

PHOTO | OWEN O’ROURKE<br />

Robert Curtin, left, and moderator Arthur Bourque are one<br />

person away from a quarum at <strong>Lynnfield</strong> Town Meeting.<br />

Close call to<br />

meet Town<br />

Meeting quorum<br />

QUORUM<br />

From page 1<br />

most of the residents who voted<br />

in the survey had not attended<br />

Town Meeting.<br />

The vote to limit Town<br />

Meeting failed with <strong>10</strong>9 against<br />

and 57 in favor.<br />

There was overwhelming<br />

support to approve $400,000<br />

to design, purchase, and construct<br />

a new septic system for<br />

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

the Meeting House, and the<br />

Historic Center.<br />

“This has been a serious issue<br />

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Before<br />

Kim Burtman<br />

Realtor, CBR<br />

for many years,” said Charles<br />

Richter, town engineer.<br />

Voters also gave the green<br />

light to spend $25,000 for identification<br />

cards for elementary<br />

and middle school students to<br />

increase security.<br />

The other changes approved<br />

by Town Meeting limits the<br />

proponent of a petition to <strong>10</strong><br />

minutes and opponents to three.<br />

Despite some opposition to<br />

limiting speech and one voter<br />

who said the proposal was “undemocratic,”<br />

the change was<br />

approved by a landslide.<br />

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

Home Sweet Home - At Last<br />

BY THOMAS GRILLO<br />

After months of uncertainty,<br />

the Winsor family moved into<br />

their new home on Crescent<br />

Avenue.<br />

The town’s building inspector<br />

issued an occupancy permit<br />

last week that allows Norman<br />

and Erin Winsor and their two<br />

daughters to live in the prefabricated<br />

home.<br />

“I slept like a baby on<br />

Wednesday night,” said<br />

Norman Winsor. My blood<br />

pressure is back to normal and<br />

we’re home.”<br />

But the dispute may not be<br />

over.<br />

The saga began earlier this<br />

year when Erin Winsor’s<br />

80-year-old mom moved into<br />

Brooksby Village, the Peabody<br />

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At the same time, they put<br />

their four-bedroom house across<br />

the street at 71 Crescent Ave.,<br />

where they raised a family, up<br />

for sale at $719,900.<br />

But Crescent Avenue residents<br />

Barbara J. Dunn and Peter<br />

A. Recka complained that the<br />

new home was larger than the<br />

approved plan.<br />

In response, Jack Roberto,<br />

the inspector, told the Winsors<br />

he will not issue an occupancy<br />

permit because the house was<br />

too close to a private way. Last<br />

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asked her attorney to take the<br />

matter to Land Court.<br />

“The Winsors approved plot<br />

plan stated the new house is to<br />

be the same size as the existing<br />

structure,” Dunn wrote in an<br />

email. “It is not. It is more than<br />

twice the size … Mr. Roberto<br />

held occupancy in April. What<br />

has changed? Nothing was corrected<br />

or modified.”<br />

One thing is certain, the battle<br />

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The Winsors say they have<br />

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WEEKLYNEWS.NET - 978-532-5880 OCTOBER <strong>18</strong>, 20<strong>18</strong><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: 1<strong>10</strong> Munroe St., Lynn, MA 01901<br />

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

www.weeklynews.net<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 />

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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 />

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Summons<br />

Franciel Mafei, 23, of 13<br />

Keys Drive, Apt. 8, Peabody, was<br />

issued a summons to appear<br />

in court for operating a motor<br />

vehicle without a license and<br />

failure to stop or yield following<br />

a traffic stop on Salem Street on<br />

Friday at 7 p.m. Officer reports<br />

car was impounded.<br />

Keily Hernandez, 19, of <strong>10</strong>5<br />

Summer St., Everett, was issued<br />

a summons to appear in court<br />

following a traffic stop at 782<br />

Salem St. and 505 Broadway<br />

and charged with the unlicensed<br />

operation of a motor vehicle on<br />

Sunday at 4:55 p.m.<br />

Philipe Terra Silva, 19, of 12<br />

Timothy Ave., Apt. 3, Everett,<br />

was issued a summons to appear<br />

in court for failing to signal,<br />

and the unlicensed operation of<br />

a motor vehicle on Sunday at<br />

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Police log<br />

School on Main Street.<br />

Accidents<br />

A car crash with property<br />

damage was reported<br />

on Saturday at <strong>10</strong>:<strong>18</strong> a.m. on<br />

Walnut Street. Officer reports<br />

crash not located. Saugus Police<br />

Department reports the crash<br />

may be at the entrance to Route<br />

95.<br />

On Saturday at 11:31 a.m. a<br />

car crash with property damage<br />

was reported at the rotary on<br />

Salem Street near Dunkin’<br />

Donuts. Officer reports there<br />

was no personal injury and paperwork<br />

was exchanged.<br />

A minor car crash was reported<br />

on Sunday at 12:43 p.m.<br />

at Condon Circle.<br />

A two-car crash with property<br />

damage was reported on<br />

Sunday at Condon Circle at 9:54<br />

p.m. Officer reports no injuries,<br />

and Phil’s Towing & Recovery<br />

Services on scene.<br />

Complaints<br />

Smoke in the basement of the<br />

Oloa Church on Salem Street at<br />

<strong>10</strong>:17 a.m. Friday. Call handled<br />

by the <strong>Lynnfield</strong> Fire Department.<br />

Officer requested at 12 Melch<br />

Road Friday at 9:37 p.m. because<br />

a garage door went up by itself.<br />

Officer reports everything is OK.<br />

Well-being check requested for<br />

a young woman on Salem Street<br />

Saturday at <strong>10</strong>:29 a.m. Caller said<br />

she is very distraught, possibly<br />

from the crash on Walnut Street.<br />

State Police en route to assist<br />

with paperwork exchange.<br />

Caller from 2 Center Village<br />

reported an 84-year-old woman<br />

fell on Saturday at 3:25 p.m. and<br />

needs assistance.<br />

Report of a suspicious man<br />

walking in the neighborhood<br />

near 36 Fairview Ave. on Sunday<br />

at 12:41 p.m. Officer reports<br />

area checked and could not locate<br />

anyone.<br />

Mother called from <strong>10</strong>0 King<br />

Rail Drive, Apt. <strong>10</strong>7 on Sunday at<br />

2:55 p.m. to report her daughter<br />

has threatened to harm herself.<br />

Officer reports patient taken to<br />

Union Hospital.<br />

On Sunday at 4:19 p.m. caller<br />

reports her motor vehicle was vandalized<br />

last week at 175 Lowell St.<br />

Caller reports a motor vehicle<br />

in the driveway at 40 Walnut St.<br />

on Wednesday at 12:31 p.m.<br />

Officer reports it was a neighbor’s<br />

car.<br />

False Alarms<br />

False alarms reported at 1<br />

Wildwood Drive at 2:39 p.m.<br />

Friday; at 14 Brook Drive on<br />

Saturday at 3:06 p.m.; at 2<br />

Elizabeth Way on Saturday at<br />

3:52 p.m.; at the Huckleberry<br />

Hill School at 5 Knoll Road on<br />

Sunday at 2:32 a.m.; at Kelly<br />

Jeep Chrysler Plymouth at 353<br />

North Broadway on Sunday at<br />

<strong>10</strong>:11 a.m.; at Lutheran Church<br />

at 708 Lowell St. on Sunday at<br />

5:57 p.m.; at 6 Barnsley Road<br />

on Monday at 4:09 a.m.; on<br />

Monday at 6:26 a.m. at 969<br />

Summer St.; False alarms were<br />

reported on Wednesday at 11:21<br />

a.m. at 45 Forest Hill Ave.; at 30<br />

Maywood Road on Wednesday<br />

at 6:48 p.m.; at the Apple Store<br />

at 1220 Market St. on Thursday<br />

at 3:28 a.m. and at 4:17 a.m.;<br />

on Thursday at 7:48 a.m. at 6<br />

Melody Lane; on Tuesday at<br />

1:23 p.m. at 44 Edward Ave.; at<br />

3 Post Office Square on Tuesday<br />

at 5:27 p.m.; at 5:58 p.m. at 89<br />

Crest Road; at PTC Therapeutics<br />

at 6 Kimball Lane, Apt. 320 on<br />

Tuesday at 8:27 p.m.<br />

Medical Aid<br />

Ambulance requested for an<br />

82-year-old woman not feeling<br />

well on Friday at 4:40 p.m. at<br />

1350 Market St. Officer reports<br />

patient taken to the hospital.<br />

Caller reported a child with a<br />

head injury at 6:02 p.m. Friday at<br />

On The Green at Market Street.<br />

Mother called from Market<br />

Street to report her 39-year-old<br />

son is having a mental crisis on<br />

Saturday at 12:13 p.m. Officer<br />

reports man was taken to<br />

Wakefield/Melrose Hospital.<br />

On Sunday at 9:46 p.m. caller<br />

reported a 67-year-old woman<br />

fell and injured her head at the<br />

Wakefield Elks at 63 Bay State<br />

Road.<br />

800.657.3272 EBSB.com<br />

$50 minimum deposit required to open any checking account. Other fees may apply, see schedule of fees for details. 20<br />

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“My brother’s stability is<br />

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Celebrating 15 Years


OCTOBER <strong>18</strong>, 20<strong>18</strong><br />

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

Seniors<br />

LYNNFIELD SENIOR<br />

CENTER ACTIVITIES<br />

Trips<br />

Oct 24 Parker’s Maple Barn<br />

— $5<br />

Oct 25-31 Iceland’s Magical<br />

Northern Lights (trip offered<br />

by Collette Travel) — $3,200<br />

double.<br />

Oct. 29 Sightseeing tour of<br />

Lexington and Concord by<br />

Mary Margaret of Yours Tours<br />

Boston.<br />

*****<br />

Thursday, October <strong>18</strong><br />

8 a.m. Hairdresser.. 8:30<br />

a.m. Exercise Room, Zumba<br />

Gold. 8:45 a.m. Drumming<br />

with Jill. 9 a.m. Manicurist,<br />

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

and tone with Jill. 9:20 a.m.<br />

Gentle Pilates <strong>10</strong> a.m. Yoga,<br />

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

bunch. 11 a.m. Aerobic dance<br />

with Alice. 11:30 a.m. Lunch:<br />

Grilled Cuban Sandwich.<br />

12:30 p.m. Bridge, Shoulder<br />

Pain/Ailments.<br />

*****<br />

Friday, October 19<br />

8 a.m. Breakfast, Exercise<br />

room. 9 a.m. Blood pressure,<br />

Broadway Jazz Dance class,<br />

Hairdresser, Acrylic Painting.<br />

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

Tai Chi. <strong>10</strong> a.m. Art Guild.<br />

<strong>10</strong>:30 a.m. Zumba. 11:15<br />

a.m. Lunch: Baked Fish.<br />

*****<br />

Monday, October 22<br />

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

Hairdresser, Zumba Gold<br />

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

Aerobics video. 9 a.m. Gentle<br />

Pilates, Wal-Mart Shopping<br />

<strong>10</strong> a.m. Line Dancing,<br />

Creative Writing, Creative<br />

Writing, Beginner Tap Dance,<br />

Sit and Tone with Darci.<br />

11a.m. Ageless Movement<br />

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

Ham. 12 p.m. Bowling, Oil<br />

painting, Caregivers Support<br />

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

Mexican Train, Computer<br />

(sign up).<br />

*****<br />

Tuesday, October 23<br />

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

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

Exercise Under the Belt. 9<br />

a.m. Blood Pressure, Walking<br />

Meditation. 9:15 a.m. Bingo.<br />

9:30 a.m. Grocery shopping,<br />

Intermediate Italian. <strong>10</strong> a.m.<br />

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

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

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

(sign-up), Bridge, Watercolor<br />

Class, Reminisce, Trip to VA<br />

Bingo.<br />

*****<br />

Wednesday, October 24<br />

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

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

Hairdresser. Artist drop-in,<br />

Alterations with Anita,<br />

Tripoley, Manicurist. 9:30<br />

a.m. Aerobics Video. <strong>10</strong> a.m.<br />

Chair Yoga, Embroidery,<br />

Social Psychology (week 3).<br />

<strong>10</strong>:15 a.m. Beginner Italian.<br />

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

Chops. 12:15 p.m. Pokeno,<br />

Canasta. 12:30 p.m. Bridge,<br />

Paint a Masterpiece. Trip:<br />

Parker’s Maple Barn.<br />

PETER A. TORIGIAN<br />

SENIOR CENTER<br />

Thursday, October <strong>18</strong><br />

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

Watch Battery Replacement.<br />

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

Advanced painting, Big<br />

Band dancing. <strong>10</strong> a.m.<br />

Bridge. 12:30 p.m. Bocce. 1<br />

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

Alzheimer’s Support Group.<br />

2 p.m. Show Rehearsal.<br />

*****<br />

Friday, October 19<br />

8 a.m. Labels, TOPS<br />

Weigh-in, Beginner Painting,<br />

9 a.m Aerobics, TOPS<br />

Meeting, Computer Help.<br />

<strong>10</strong>:45 a.m. Positive Aging<br />

Group. 11:15 a.m. Chair<br />

Yoga. 12 p.m. Open Art<br />

Studio, NARFE Mailing.<br />

9_15Mos CD_SA_LA_LPW.ai 1 <strong>10</strong>/<strong>10</strong>/20<strong>18</strong> 4:21:39 PM<br />

12:30 p.m. Bingo. 1 p.m.<br />

Scrabble.<br />

*****<br />

Monday, October 22<br />

8 a.m. Tips & Topics. 9 a.m.<br />

Aerobics, Duplicate Bridge.<br />

9:30 a.m. Tambourine Team.<br />

<strong>10</strong> a.m. Drill team, Bridge.<br />

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

p.m. Model ship building.<br />

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

*****<br />

Tuesday, October 23<br />

9 a.m. Hug-a-Bears.<br />

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

Exercise with Edye, Japanese<br />

Bunka, Veteran’s Group.<br />

<strong>10</strong>:30 Line Dancing 12<br />

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

Crocheting/Knitting. 12:30<br />

p.m. Movie. 4:30 p.m. Job<br />

Networking.<br />

*****<br />

Wednesday, October 24<br />

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

Hooking, Wood Carving,<br />

Sewing/Repair. <strong>10</strong>:15 a.m.<br />

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

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

Cards.<br />

MIDDLE-AGE HYPERTENSION LINKED TO DEMENTIA<br />

While previous guidelines identified high blood pressure as ≥ 140/90<br />

mm Hg, the latest American College of Cardiology (ACC) and American<br />

Heart Association (AHA) hypertension guidelines set the upper limit for<br />

blood pressure in adults at 130/80 mm Hg. Not only does the lowered<br />

limit help reduce the risk of cardiovascular disease and stroke, but new<br />

research suggests that it may also lower the risk of dementia. Beginning<br />

in 1985, according to a medical analysis of 8,639 people ages 33 to 55,<br />

those with a systolic blood pressure of 130 mm Hg or over as they<br />

reached the age of 50 had a 45% higher risk of dementia at age 75 than<br />

same-aged counterparts with a lower systolic blood pressure.<br />

Over the years, it has become increasingly clear that having high blood<br />

pressure for a sustained amount of time can impact the brain. Controlling<br />

hypertension also reduces your risk of heart attack, stroke, and heart<br />

failure. For more information, please call VILLAGE PHARMACY at<br />

781-334-3133, or see us in the Colonial Shopping Center. We feature<br />

ComputerRX for online refills and Parata Pas packaging system which<br />

allows us to customize the dispensing of your medications.<br />

HINT: According to the study mentioned above, no association was<br />

found between the risk of dementia and diastolic blood pressure (the<br />

blood pressure measured as the heart is at rest between beats).<br />

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


6<br />

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

BREAST CANCER AWARENESS MONTH<br />

Many breast cancer patients<br />

can skip chemo, study finds<br />

CHICAGO (AP) — Most<br />

women with the most common<br />

form of early-stage breast cancer<br />

can skip chemotherapy without<br />

hurting their chances of beating<br />

the disease, according to a new<br />

study that used genetic testing to<br />

gauge each patient’s risk.<br />

The survey is the largest ever<br />

done of breast cancer treatment,<br />

and the results are expected to<br />

spare up to 70,000 patients a<br />

year the ordeal and expense of<br />

these drugs.<br />

“The impact is tremendous,”<br />

said Dr. Joseph Sparano of<br />

Montefiore Medical Center in<br />

New York, the study leader.<br />

“Most women in this situation<br />

don’t need treatment beyond<br />

surgery and hormone therapy.”<br />

Moving away from chemo<br />

Cancer care has been evolving<br />

away from chemotherapy in<br />

favor of gene-targeting therapies,<br />

hormone blockers and<br />

immune system treatments.<br />

When chemo is used now, it’s<br />

sometimes for shorter periods<br />

or lower doses than previously.<br />

The largest study ever done<br />

of breast cancer treatment finds<br />

that most women with the most<br />

common form of the disease<br />

<br />

197 Washington St., Peabody<br />

978-532-0<strong>10</strong>2<br />

Mon.-Sat. 7 a.m.-7p.m. • Sun. 7 a.m.-2p.m.<br />

AP PHOTO BY KATHY YOUNG<br />

Adine Usher, 78, meets with breast cancer study leader Dr.<br />

Joseph Sparano at the Montefiore and Albert Einstein College<br />

of Medicine in New York.<br />

can skip chemotherapy without<br />

hurting their chances of beating<br />

the disease cancer.<br />

The breast cancer study focused<br />

on cases where chemo’s value increasingly<br />

is in doubt. The usual<br />

treatment is surgery followed<br />

by years of a hormone-blocking<br />

drug. But many women also are<br />

urged to have chemo to help kill<br />

any stray cancer cells. Doctors<br />

know that most don’t need it, but<br />

evidence is thin on who can forgo<br />

it, researchers found.<br />

The study gave <strong>10</strong>,273 patients<br />

a test called Oncotype DX, which<br />

uses a biopsy sample to measure<br />

the activity of genes involved in<br />

cell growth and response to hormone<br />

therapy, to estimate the risk<br />

that a cancer will recur.<br />

What the study found<br />

About 17 percent of women<br />

had high-risk scores and were<br />

advised to have chemo. The 16<br />

percent with low-risk scores now<br />

know they can skip chemo, based<br />

on earlier results from this study.<br />

The new results are on the 67<br />

percent of women at intermediate<br />

risk. All had surgery and hormone<br />

therapy, and half also got chemo.<br />

After nine years, 94 percent of<br />

both groups survived, and 84 percent<br />

were living without signs of<br />

cancer, so adding chemo made no<br />

difference, the survey said.<br />

Certain women 50 or younger<br />

did benefit from chemo; slightly<br />

fewer cases of cancer spreading<br />

far beyond the breast occurred<br />

among some of them given<br />

chemo, depending on their risk<br />

scores on the gene test.<br />

Will people trust the results?<br />

All women like those in the<br />

study should get gene testing<br />

to guide their care, said Dr.<br />

Richard Schilsky, chief medical<br />

officer of the oncology society.<br />

Testing solved a big problem<br />

of figuring out who needs<br />

chemo, according to Dr. Harold<br />

Burstein of the Dana-Farber<br />

Cancer Institute in Boston.<br />

Many women think “if I don’t<br />

get chemotherapy I’m going<br />

to die, and if I get chemo I’m<br />

going to be cured,” but the results<br />

show there’s a sliding<br />

scale of benefit and sometimes<br />

none, he said.<br />

TV chef Sandra Lee<br />

tells her breast cancer<br />

story in a new<br />

HBO documentary<br />

NEW YORK (AP) — TV<br />

chef Sandra Lee is sharing her<br />

personal experience with breast<br />

cancer in a new HBO documentary.<br />

Her goal, she said is to lead<br />

to early cancer detection with<br />

others.<br />

Three years ago, Lee was<br />

recovering at home after being<br />

discharged from the hospital<br />

following a double mastectomy.<br />

The 48-year-old “Semi-<br />

Homemade Cooking” star said<br />

she decided to talk about her illness<br />

to encourage other women<br />

to get screened for breast cancer.<br />

Lee was rushed to the hospital<br />

in 2015 to deal with a buildup<br />

of fluids and is expected to be<br />

monitored for a couple of days<br />

after receiving a breast cancer<br />

diagnosis.<br />

In the documentary Lee tells<br />

viewers “I was diagnosed with<br />

early stage breast cancer in 2015<br />

and when I was diagnosed I was<br />

on a tour launching a product<br />

line, so I had to spend my days<br />

doing the tour like everybody<br />

else does, work through a diagnosis<br />

and then in the afternoons<br />

and evenings do doctors<br />

appointments,” she said.” “I<br />

couldn’t find anything online<br />

that was gonna share with me<br />

what it meant to have breast<br />

cancer and what the treatments<br />

were gonna look like. What<br />

was all the information from all<br />

the doctors’ appointments, if I<br />

chose to get a double mastectomy,<br />

what did that really look<br />

like and what would that feel<br />

like and what would my day to<br />

day be? My mission is to bring<br />

early detection to the awareness<br />

of everyone first and foremost<br />

but secondly show what it looks<br />

like to go through the process of<br />

dealing with breast cancer.”<br />

Serena Williams<br />

goes topless for<br />

breast cancer awareness<br />

NEW YORK (AP) — Tennis<br />

great Serena Williams goes topless<br />

and sings “I Touch Myself”<br />

in a video to promote breast<br />

cancer awareness month.<br />

With her hands covering her<br />

breasts, Williams writes in the<br />

Instagram post that the video<br />

took her out of her “comfort<br />

zone.” But she said she wanted<br />

to do it because early detection<br />

saves so many lives.<br />

The video is part of the I<br />

Touch Myself Project, which<br />

is dedicated to Divinyls<br />

singer Chrissy Amphlett. The<br />

53-year-old Australian died<br />

after a long battle with breast<br />

cancer in 2013.<br />

Williams said Amphlett<br />

“gave us her hit song to remind<br />

women to put their health first.”<br />

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OCTOBER <strong>18</strong>, 20<strong>18</strong><br />

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

BREAST CANCER AWARENESS MONTH<br />

American Cancer Society<br />

unveils its new<br />

celebrity-designed<br />

holiday greeting cards<br />

ATLANTA — The American<br />

Cancer Society (ACS) has released<br />

its latest collection of<br />

holiday greetings cards.<br />

This year’s selection include<br />

special designs created by Tony<br />

Bennett, Bethenny Frankel,<br />

Sharon Osbourne, and Simone<br />

Smith. Proceeds benefit the ACS<br />

to fund its mission to support<br />

cancer patients everywhere.<br />

This year marks the 25th year of<br />

Tony Bennett designing cards for<br />

the charity. The cards, designed by<br />

the multiple Grammy and Emmy-<br />

Award winning musician, have<br />

raised more than $800,000.<br />

“I am honored to present<br />

‘Snowstorm in NYC’ as the holiday<br />

issue for this milestone year<br />

and I’m grateful to all who support<br />

the American Cancer Society<br />

and the fight to end cancer by<br />

purchasing ACS holiday cards,”<br />

said Bennett in a statement.<br />

Frankel, Osbourne, and Smith<br />

have all been affected by cancer<br />

and make their debut as holiday<br />

greeting card designers for the<br />

ACS this year. A portion of the<br />

proceeds from Osbourne’s card<br />

will benefit The Sharon Osbourne<br />

Colon Cancer Program.<br />

“To help fight cancer, I’ve<br />

designed my very own holiday<br />

card. It’s quite fabulous and<br />

proceeds benefit the American<br />

Catering<br />

available<br />

SU CHANG’S<br />

Authentic Chinese Cuisine<br />

Cancer Society,” said Osbourne.<br />

“This means you can wish everyone<br />

the happiest of holidays<br />

and show them that you give a<br />

(expletive) about ending cancer<br />

all at the same time.”<br />

Frankel said lots of people<br />

have been touched by cancer in<br />

some way.<br />

“I like to empower people to<br />

do what they can to make a difference,”she<br />

said in a statement. “This<br />

year, you can make every moment<br />

count by sending cards with a purpose<br />

from the American Cancer<br />

Society. I’m so excited to share the<br />

holiday card I designed, inspired<br />

by my sweet puppies Biggy and<br />

Smallz. All proceeds from the cards<br />

go to the American Cancer Society<br />

to help save lives from cancer.”<br />

Smith said she’s excited to<br />

use her A Sweet Touch of Hope<br />

lollipop pendant collection as<br />

inspiration for the holiday card<br />

she created for the nonprofit.<br />

“This year, send a greeting<br />

card that’s meaningful and<br />

makes a difference, as all proceeds<br />

benefit the ACS,” she said.<br />

Customers can also select from<br />

a variety of holiday greeting cards<br />

including Christmas, Hanukkah,<br />

New Year, Thanksgiving, religious<br />

and non-denominational<br />

seasonal cards, personal photo<br />

cards, and animated e-cards.<br />

Functions<br />

from 2-200<br />

Hope, Strength, Love<br />

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

www.SuChangsPeabody.com<br />

Breast cancer often overlooked<br />

BY MEREDITH NEWMAN<br />

ASSOCIATED PRESS<br />

MILLSBORO, Del. — When<br />

she was first diagnosed with<br />

breast cancer in 2012, Denise<br />

Valley went all out for October.<br />

She participated in every<br />

breast cancer walk and 5K.<br />

When she saw an item with a<br />

pink ribbon logo at the grocery<br />

store, she bought it.<br />

But then she learned her<br />

cancer metastasized to her<br />

lungs in 2013. For the first time,<br />

Valley saw October differently.<br />

She hasn’t gone to an event<br />

since.<br />

“I realized there’s no victory<br />

for me at the end,” she said. “I<br />

can ‘fight like a girl’ all I want<br />

... but I’ll never stop treatment.<br />

There’s no bell to ring.”<br />

October can be a month of<br />

empowerment, reflection and<br />

fundraising for those who<br />

have been affected by breast<br />

cancer. But for some women<br />

with stage IV breast cancer —<br />

in which the cancer has infiltrated<br />

other parts of their body<br />

— the “pink month” can’t end<br />

soon enough.<br />

To these women, metastatic<br />

breast cancer is often overlooked<br />

throughout October<br />

— particularly in terms of research<br />

funding. Unlike people<br />

who have an early stage of the<br />

disease, the end of their metastatic<br />

breast cancer journey is<br />

not neatly wrapped up in a pink<br />

ribbon, they say.<br />

Women with stage IV breast<br />

cancer will receive treatment<br />

for the rest of their life. And<br />

ultimately, the disease will kill<br />

them.<br />

It’s estimated that 40,000<br />

people die every year from metastatic<br />

breast cancer.<br />

In 2017, the National Cancer<br />

<strong>Lynnfield</strong> Healing Massage Therapy<br />

PHOTO | JASON MINTO /THE NEWS JOURNAL VIA ASSOCIATED PRESS<br />

Denise Valley is living with Stage IV breast cancer. When she<br />

was first diagnosed at stage II she was involved in fundraisers<br />

and walks, but her stage IV diagnosis made her see October in<br />

a different light.<br />

Institute published a study that<br />

found the number of metastatic<br />

breast cancer patients increased<br />

by 17 percent from 2000 to<br />

20<strong>10</strong>, the study said. It will<br />

likely increase by 31 percent<br />

from 20<strong>10</strong> to 2020. More services<br />

and research are needed<br />

for this growing population, the<br />

study said.<br />

The Metastatic Breast Cancer<br />

Alliance, an advocacy organization,<br />

found that only 7 percent<br />

of $15 billion invested in<br />

breast cancer research funding<br />

from 2000 to 2013 went toward<br />

work focused on stage IV breast<br />

cancer.<br />

But some advocates say while<br />

the disease gets more money<br />

than any other cancer, metastatic<br />

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cancer is often “written off.”<br />

Most of the funding goes to<br />

early detection, she said.<br />

Many women with stage IV<br />

often have to stop working<br />

to navigate the intricacies of<br />

clinical trials as they adjust<br />

to the idea that their time is<br />

likely limited. Those topics<br />

aren’t usually brought up, she<br />

said.<br />

The Delaware Breast Cancer<br />

Coalition didn’t have a support<br />

group for women with stage IV<br />

until this year. Lois Wilkinson,<br />

the coalition’s program manager,<br />

said most women with<br />

metastatic breast cancer don’t<br />

like being called “survivors,”<br />

they prefer the term “thriver,”<br />

she said.<br />

We want to hear<br />

from you!<br />

Send us a letter at<br />

editor@weeklynews.net.<br />

Letters should be<br />

no more than<br />

300 words.<br />

LiveSTRONG at the Y<br />

HALF MARATHON<br />

Two person relay option new this year.<br />

Saturday, November 17, 9:00 AM<br />

Lt. Ross Park, 36 Johnson St, Peabody, MA<br />

Register Online at:<br />

http://bit.ly/2M6dzPc<br />

Or use your phone<br />

to scan this QR Code<br />

Run to support cancer survivors in<br />

our community!<br />

Run to support LiveSTRONG at the<br />

YMCA, a program that helps adult<br />

cancer survivors reclaim their<br />

health and well-being following a<br />

cancer diagnosis.


8<br />

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

Religious Notes<br />

All Saints Episcopal Church of the North<br />

Shore<br />

allsaintseposcopalnorthshore.org<br />

All Saints Episcopal Church of the North<br />

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

in Danvers, now worshiping together as<br />

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

Danvers Town Hall. Service of Holy Communion<br />

and Homily every Sunday at 8 a.m. and <strong>10</strong><br />

a.m. Summers one service at 9 a.m. You’ll be<br />

welcome here. For more information call the<br />

church office at 978-774-1150.<br />

Calvary Baptist<br />

4 Coolidge Road, Peabody<br />

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

Andy Katzmire<br />

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

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

young children provided during worship.<br />

During the school year, Kids Connection meets<br />

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

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 like to<br />

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

services at 8:30 a.m., <strong>10</strong>:30 a.m., 12:30 p.m.<br />

and 6:30 p.m. Children’s Ministry (ages 0-11)<br />

offered in all Sunday morning services. Hispanic<br />

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

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

p.m. Young Adult Ministry: Wednesday at 7<br />

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

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

Monday - Friday at 7 p.m. and Saturday at 6<br />

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

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

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

or visit our website<br />

www.lynnfield-ccc.org.<br />

Centre Congregational Church<br />

An Open and Affirming Congregation of<br />

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 Wilson<br />

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

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

Church! Located at 5 Summer<br />

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

Congregation of the United Church of Christ.<br />

Our worship services are held at <strong>10</strong> a.m. each<br />

Sunday morning. We strive to provide inspiring,<br />

down-to-earth messages that are applicable<br />

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

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

with vibrant and engaging Children’s<br />

Programming (Godly Play, Whole People of<br />

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

staff, incorporating opportunities for<br />

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

available for children up to age 4, with a new<br />

transition class beginning in January for 3 and<br />

4-year olds. We also have a Young Families<br />

Group that offers fellowship opportunities for<br />

parents and children together. We have ample<br />

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

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

Facebook at facebook.com/CentreChurchUCC<br />

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

information about our ministries and activities.<br />

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

you would like more information about any of<br />

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 Congregational<br />

Church and Director, Leah O’Brien<br />

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 noon;<br />

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

Monday-Friday, 11:30 a.m.-noon and 2:30-3<br />

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

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 dates<br />

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

for children on Wednesday, and has an informal<br />

weekly drop-in class on Kabbalah and other<br />

holiday events. Hebrew School registration is<br />

now open. Call Raizel at the number above or<br />

email her at raizel@jewishpeabody.com.<br />

Community Covenant Church<br />

33 Lake St., West Peabody<br />

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

Community Covenant is a warm and inviting<br />

church in the Evangelical, Protestant tradition.<br />

All are welcome.<br />

The Reverend Joel Anderle, our Senior Pastor,<br />

officiates worship services every Sunday at<br />

11 a.m. Sunday School classes for all ages are<br />

held from 9:45-<strong>10</strong>:45 a.m. September through<br />

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 a<br />

kiddish. Weekly Sunday morning services begin<br />

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 978-531-<br />

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

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

Mon., Tues. and Thurs., 1-5 p.m. There is a<br />

nursery room. The church is handicap accessible.<br />

Additional information: info@ctipeabody.<br />

org 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 you<br />

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

service, join us for coffee and fellowship in<br />

Marshall Hall. Parking is behind the church and<br />

there are entrances in front and on the side of the<br />

building. Please visit soon.<br />

Messiah Lutheran<br />

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

781-334-4111 for Church; 781-334-6591 for<br />

Pre-school.<br />

A personal and traditional approach allows<br />

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

Word. Join us for worship on Sundays at <strong>10</strong>:30<br />

a.m. Mens’ Ministry, Christian Education, Financial<br />

Peace University, Community Service,<br />

and other opportunities to grow in your faith.<br />

Served by Rev. Dr. Jeremy Pekari and Rev. David<br />

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 at<br />

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 <strong>10</strong>:30 a.m. All<br />

are welcome. Monday: Men’s Group Study at 7<br />

p.m., Thursday: Prayer Meeting, 7 p.m.<br />

Visit our website for more information or to<br />

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, comprised<br />

of Our Lady of the Assumption Church,<br />

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

Goretti Church, 112 Chestnut St., <strong>Lynnfield</strong>,<br />

may be reached by calling 781-598-4313 or by<br />

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

website: lynnfieldcatholic.org.<br />

The Pastoral Leadership Team: The Pastor is<br />

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

Anthony Luongo and the Deacons are Thomas<br />

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

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 for<br />

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: <strong>10</strong> 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: Audrey<br />

Sullivan. Office hours: Monday to Friday,<br />

1-5 p.m. Mass schedule: Monday-Thursday, 9<br />

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

Saturday at 9 a.m. (Portuguese) (and<br />

Vigil at 5 p.m. English); Sunday 9 a.m. (English);<br />

11:30 a.m. (Portuguese); 6 p.m. (Portuguese).<br />

Confessions: Saturday, 4-4:45 p.m.;<br />

Baptisms, 2nd and 4th Sundays. Exposition of<br />

the Blessed Sacrament, every Friday, 5-6 p.m.<br />

Religious Education Classes for Grades 1-6 at 8<br />

a.m. and Grades 7-<strong>10</strong> at <strong>10</strong> 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, 8:30,<br />

<strong>10</strong> and 11:30 a.m. Holy Day Masses: 9 a.m. and<br />

7 p.m.; Latin Mass: 1 p.m. Sunday. Confessions:<br />

Saturday, 3-3:30 p.m.; Baptisms: first Sunday of<br />

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

Sacrament: first Friday of the month, 9:30<br />

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

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

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

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, Pastoral<br />

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

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

Religious Education Dir., 978-531-5791;<br />

Leanne Amirault, Preschool Dir., 978-532-3329<br />

or 978-531-9521. Daily Mass: Saturday at 4 p.m.<br />

and Sunday at 8:30 and <strong>10</strong>:30 a.m. Daily Mass:<br />

9 a.m.<br />

St. Clare of Assisi Catholic Community<br />

(non-Roman)<br />

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

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

Evangelical Lutheran Church<br />

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

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

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

Confirmation, Holy Communion, Confession,<br />

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

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

St. John Lutheran<br />

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

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

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

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

Church in America and Lutheran Congregations<br />

in Mission for Christ. Sunday worship at<br />

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

and fellowship following; Sunday School at 11<br />

a.m.; Bible Study, Wednesday at 7:30 p.m. Holy<br />

Communion is celebrated the first and third<br />

Sunday of each month and on certain festivals.<br />

St. John the Baptist<br />

17 Chestnut St., Peabody<br />

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

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

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

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

Martin; Mass: Monday-Saturday, 6:45 a.m. and<br />

4 p.m. (on Saturday); Sunday at 8, <strong>10</strong> and 11:30<br />

a.m. (Spanish) and 5 p.m.<br />

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

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

basement. St. John, the Baptist School is now<br />

accepting applications. Programs available for<br />

2, 3, 4 and 5-year-olds and grades 1-8. Extended<br />

day available for all students. Visit:<br />

stjohns-peabody.com or call 978-531-0444, ext.<br />

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 Rev. Rob Bacon serves as rector of the<br />

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

Street, <strong>Lynnfield</strong>. The Church was founded<br />

in April, 19<strong>18</strong>, <strong>10</strong>0 years ago. Today, its<br />

mission is to enable all to connect with God and<br />

one another through worship, prayer, service,<br />

and study.<br />

Students in grades 7-12 meet at <strong>10</strong>am the 2nd<br />

& 4th Sundays of the month for discussion,<br />

learning, sharing, socializing, volunteering.<br />

This Youth Group also participates in the local,<br />

ecumenical Giv2, which offers area teens opportunities<br />

to live their faith through serving.<br />

On Mondays, at 6pm, St. Paul’s parishioners<br />

and friends gather for Centering Prayer. Introduction<br />

to Centering Prayer is offered the first<br />

Monday of the month at 5:30.<br />

Holy Eucharist and Bible Study are offered<br />

Wednesday mornings, beginning at 9am.<br />

Listen to Sunday gospels and sermons and<br />

find more information about other events on our<br />

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

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

on 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 and generation<br />

we seek transformation of our lives and<br />

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

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

visit www.ststephenslynn.org.<br />

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

MA 01960<br />

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

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

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

Clemence. Pastoral Associate/Coordinator of<br />

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

Religious Education: Lisa Trainor. Director of<br />

Music Ministry: Dr. Holly Zagaria. Website:<br />

www.stthomaspeabody.org. Winter Mass<br />

Schedule: Saturday 4 p.m. (English) ~ Sunday<br />

<strong>10</strong> 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 Assistant:<br />

Deacon Robert Fadel; Worship schedule:<br />

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

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

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

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

Second Congregational<br />

12 Maple St., Peabody<br />

978-2<strong>10</strong>-4976, Rev. Alison Gerber<br />

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

The church is wheelchair accessible. Childcare<br />

is available during worship service for children<br />

through age five. Children’s Church during<br />

service, ages 6-12. Sunday School, ages two<br />

through adult from 9:15-<strong>10</strong>:15 a.m. For Bible<br />

study and Book Group schedules, call the office.<br />

South Congregational<br />

60 Prospect St., Peabody<br />

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

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

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

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

12th grade programs during the worship service.<br />

Our Sunday worship service blends both<br />

traditional hymns and contemporary praise.<br />

Teen Youth Groups meet on Sunday evenings at<br />

the church. Several small groups for Bible Study<br />

meeting weekly – if interested in attending one,<br />

call church office for info.<br />

Monthly Fellowship Dinner is the 2nd Sunday<br />

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

Prayer Meeting follows at 7 p.m. All are welcome.<br />

Sovereign Grace Community Church<br />

6 Bourbon St., Peabody<br />

978-2<strong>10</strong>-7413<br />

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

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

contemporary Sunday Morning Worship Service<br />

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

worship for kids through 5th grade. There is a<br />

full staffed nursery. For students in 7th-12th<br />

grades, our Youth Group meets Sunday evenings<br />

from 7-9 p.m. Email Youth Director Will<br />

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

Youth Group.<br />

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

Helping people<br />

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

our community.<br />

Temple Tiferet Shalom<br />

489 Lowell St., Peabody<br />

978-535-2<strong>10</strong>0, templetiferetshalom.org<br />

The Temple Shabbat Services are Fridays at<br />

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

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

Confirmation classes, Chai Club and youth<br />

groups. Social action and adult education programs<br />

are an integral component 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 to Judaism<br />

while maintaining a respect for traditional<br />

Jewish values. We are a caring and inclusive<br />

community through learning and community<br />

activities. Besides Shabbat and Festival services,<br />

there is a Sisterhood and Temple Reads<br />

Book Club, Shabbat dinners, concerts and other<br />

programs. Consult the temple website and Facebook<br />

page for updated information.<br />

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

and welcoming Jewish Reconstructionist<br />

Community devoted to learning, spirituality,<br />

and caring for each individual. At Temple Emmanuel<br />

we are building a vibrant future in honor<br />

of our past, utilizing ancient traditions to<br />

provide 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 them.<br />

Weekly Shabbat services will reconvene in<br />

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

mornings at 9:30am with Rabbi Greg<br />

Hersh on the first and third Saturdays of the<br />

month. Tot Shabbats are held on the second<br />

Saturday at 9:30am and an alternative Shabbat<br />

on the fourth Saturday morning at 9:30pm.<br />

Consult the website for a complete schedule of<br />

services, family events, and continuing education<br />

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

The Temple website also will list the special<br />

Rosh Hashanah and Yom Kippur Services as<br />

well as other special holiday celebrations. For<br />

information about seating on the High Holidays<br />

contact Phil at 617-688-0870 or info@WakefieldTemple.or<br />

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

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

Continuing Education programs.<br />

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

org) has the complete list of Rosh Hashanah and<br />

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

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 p.m.<br />

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

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

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

Active Temple including Religious School, Sisterhood,<br />

Men’s Club, Social Action and Adult<br />

Education. Pilates on Sunday mornings, <strong>10</strong>:30<br />

a.m., Zumba on Monday evenings, 6:15 p.m.,<br />

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

Temple welcomes Interfaith Families. Please<br />

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

532-1293.<br />

The Church of Jesus Christ of<br />

Latter-day Saints<br />

400 Essex St., <strong>Lynnfield</strong><br />

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

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

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

Primary and Youth Classes; Youth Night and<br />

Boy/Cub Scouts: Tuesdays at 7 p.m.; Bishop:<br />

Matthew Romano, 781-334-5586. Family<br />

History Center, Wednesdays <strong>10</strong> a.m. to 9 p.m.;<br />

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

coming due to 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 />

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

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

Knit, Pray & Crochet Ministry –<br />

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

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, scarves,<br />

prayer shawls and prayer squares for people in<br />

need. All faiths are welcome to join us.<br />

Following the service, we enjoy Fellowship at<br />

our Coffee & Conversation time.<br />

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

here through volunteer opportunities,<br />

social groups and committees like Ecumenical<br />

Youth Group, Choir, Book Club, Sunday<br />

School, Bible Study, United Methodist Women,<br />

Ministry Leadership Team, Card Care Club,<br />

Craft Fair Committee, just to name a few. We<br />

offer our building to many local groups like<br />

Happy Hearts Preschool, Cub Scouts, Girl<br />

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

Together-Preschool Music, Kids Curtain Call<br />

Drama for Middle Schoolers, Wakefield Toy<br />

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

Linus Blanket Drop-off spot!<br />

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

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

Elizabeth are trained musicians which they incorporate<br />

into special church services for all to<br />

enjoy! For more information about our church,<br />

please call the church office at (781) 245-1359 or<br />

email us at our new email WLUMC273@<br />

gmail.com. Visit us on Facebook www.facebook.com/methodistchurchwakefield.<br />

We look forward to welcoming you on Sunday!


OCTOBER <strong>18</strong>, 20<strong>18</strong><br />

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

Sports<br />

Luders, Bass pace Pioneer soccer<br />

By Harold Rivera<br />

LYNNFIELD — In a battle between<br />

two of the better squads in the Cape<br />

Ann League, the <strong>Lynnfield</strong> boys soccer<br />

team found itself being outplayed after<br />

one half of Monday’s game against<br />

Manchester-Essex. Once the Pioneers<br />

gained momentum and found their<br />

footing, they started playing like themselves<br />

again.<br />

Pioneers co-captains Jonathan Luders<br />

and Nathan Bass each scored a goal<br />

in the second half to push <strong>Lynnfield</strong><br />

past Manchester-Essex in a 2-0 win at<br />

Pioneer Stadium.<br />

“I felt that we came out with a little<br />

more energy (in the second half),”<br />

Pioneers coach Brent Munroe said. “We<br />

were a bit tentative in the first half. They<br />

passed the ball really well. I think that<br />

was difficult for us. We were on our back<br />

foot a little bit. In the second half we<br />

went out and pushed forward.”<br />

<strong>Lynnfield</strong> goalie Jack Campbell made<br />

five saves for the shutout win in net.<br />

Defensively, Munroe said his Pioneers<br />

were led by a positive effort from his<br />

backline which consists of Matthew<br />

Juliano, Michael Gentile, David Gentile<br />

and Luke Martinho.<br />

There wasn’t much to highlight during<br />

the first half, though the Pioneers did<br />

have their share of chances at putting in<br />

the game’s first goal. Luders, who made<br />

By Anne Marie Tobin<br />

LYNNFIELD — It was a<br />

banner week for the <strong>Lynnfield</strong><br />

boys and girls cross country<br />

teams.<br />

For the first time in as long<br />

as anyone can remember, the<br />

boys team ran its way to the top<br />

of the Cape Ann League standings,<br />

defeating both Ipswich and<br />

Georgetown in a tri-meet Oct.<br />

<strong>10</strong> at home. Both meets were extremely<br />

close with the Pioneers<br />

topping the Tigers, 27-28, and<br />

then completing the sweep with<br />

a 19-36 win over the Royals to<br />

improve to 5-3 and claim soled<br />

possession of first place in the<br />

league’s Baker Division.<br />

With the wins, the Pioneers<br />

are in prime position to make<br />

history and claim their first<br />

Cape Ann League title in program<br />

history.<br />

“I think we are in good<br />

shape, as long as we remain<br />

healthy,” said <strong>Lynnfield</strong> coach<br />

Joe DiBiase. “We have Masco,<br />

which will be tough and then<br />

North Reading left, but we have<br />

never won a CAL title. Back in<br />

1998-2000, we had very strong<br />

teams and I’d have to look up<br />

the records, but the league was<br />

not broken up into divisions, so<br />

we would always lose either to<br />

Masco, or Newburyport or both,<br />

PHOTO | ANNE MARIE TOBIN<br />

Jonathan Luders splits a pair of Hornet defenders Monday afternoon.<br />

plays all over the field from the opening<br />

whistle, sent a nifty pass to Thomas<br />

Hauser with 8:17 remaining in the half.<br />

Hauser’s shot just missed the outside<br />

corner and the game remained scoreless.<br />

Max Sieger sent a near-perfect pass<br />

across the field toward the Manchester-<br />

Essex goal but the ball didn’t find a<br />

<strong>Lynnfield</strong> foot and the Hornets dodged<br />

another bullet under the 2:00 mark. Both<br />

teams were scoreless at halftime.<br />

“I thought they outplayed us (in the<br />

first half),” Munroe said. “We were<br />

trying to pressure them high and they<br />

so this will be a first for us.”<br />

The girls team also had a good<br />

day, defeating Georgetown, 28-<br />

31, and losing a close one to<br />

Ipswich, 27-33, to improve to<br />

2-6.<br />

“It was a big accomplishment.<br />

Both teams ran well,<br />

the boys certainly were ready<br />

as they knew they had to win<br />

in order to claim first place in<br />

the CAL small division,” said<br />

DiBiase. “Coaches Joe Wallace,<br />

Dylan Rizzo and I are very<br />

proud of the team.”<br />

<strong>Lynnfield</strong>’s top finisher<br />

overall was sophomore John<br />

Astrofsky, who placed first<br />

(16:40). Senior captains Steve<br />

Dwyer placed fifth (17:19),<br />

David Blake finished sixth<br />

(17:26), and Joe Fabrizio placed<br />

ninth (17:47). Sophomore Mike<br />

Madden finished <strong>10</strong>th (17:59),<br />

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were passing the ball really well so it was<br />

hard for us to pressure them. The second<br />

half, we didn’t do much different. I think<br />

we just got them to turn the ball over in<br />

some areas where we could capitalize.”<br />

After Bass missed on a close header<br />

to start the second half, <strong>Lynnfield</strong> ended<br />

the scoreless drought on a Luders penalty<br />

kick with 35:52 to play.<br />

“Jonathan’s taken all our penalty<br />

kicks,” Munroe said. “He’s a great<br />

player. Not to say he can’t miss one, but<br />

he’s always happy to step up and take it.”<br />

The Pioneers bumped their lead to<br />

junior Sam Pifko finished <strong>18</strong>th<br />

(8:55) and sophomore Dylan<br />

Pool finished 19th (19:00).<br />

The Pioneers’ top finisher in<br />

the girls race was senior captain<br />

Annie Olsen, who placed 5th<br />

overall (21:11). Junior Elizabeth<br />

St. Andre finished sixth (21:35),<br />

while junior Cassidy Shone finished<br />

<strong>10</strong>th (22:44) and senior<br />

Keira Rothwell finished 11th<br />

(23:08). Other Pioneers placing<br />

in the top-<strong>10</strong> junior Sarah<br />

Deschenes (14th, 23:34), senior<br />

Lucy Madden (15th, 24:05) and<br />

freshman Julia Seelig (16th,<br />

24:09).<br />

“It is real exciting and we are<br />

very proud of their hard work,”<br />

DiBiase said. “The coaches<br />

have worked hard to find the<br />

balance of rest, hard work etc.<br />

The (new) track has enabled us<br />

to have some good speed workouts<br />

without killing their legs<br />

on the road. Every Friday we<br />

do a tempo workout on the turf,<br />

and every Saturday morning<br />

that we don’t have a meet, we<br />

have a hard track workout.”<br />

The Pioneers’ next meet,<br />

their final meet of the season,<br />

is against North Reading,<br />

Monday, Oct. 22 at Bradley<br />

Palmer State Park.<br />

“Every year the team is filled<br />

with great kids, but this group<br />

especially has had great karma,<br />

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2-0 a few minutes later, this time with<br />

Bass firing the shot into the back of the<br />

net. <strong>Lynnfield</strong> came close to stretching its<br />

lead to 3-0 when Thomas Buston picked<br />

up a pass from Jackson Cleary and sent a<br />

header that just missed with <strong>10</strong>:55 to play.<br />

<strong>Lynnfield</strong> kept the Hornets at bay for the remainder<br />

of the game to close its 2-0 win.<br />

“It was kind of two different styles.<br />

They were trying to hold it and move the<br />

ball around and we were trying to go for<br />

quick strikes,” Munroe said. “The quick<br />

strikes, we got the penalty kick that was<br />

a quick strike. The second goal didn’t<br />

come off any real passing, it was a free<br />

ball that we scored. In the second half we<br />

got a couple balls that worked for us.”<br />

The Pioneers (12-1-1) have a tough<br />

week in front of them with a visit to<br />

CAL powerhouse Masconomet Friday,<br />

Oct. 19 (3:45).<br />

“We’re definitely thinking about (state<br />

tournament) seeding,” Munroe said. “We<br />

have Pentucket and Masco. Masco’s undefeated<br />

in our league and hasn’t lost in<br />

our league in five years. Pentucket we<br />

beat earlier in the year but they’re really<br />

good. These are the three best teams in<br />

our league. We want to win for seeding<br />

but to be honest we’re also thinking<br />

about it as playing tournament-ready<br />

teams now. If we can hang with these<br />

team, we feel we’re in good shape for<br />

the tournament.”<br />

Banner week for cross country boys, girls<br />

a real positive spirit, a real<br />

good vibe. The captains have<br />

done a real nice job and everyone<br />

is working hard, but also<br />

are having fun. If you looked<br />

through our lineup,there are<br />

kids in National Honor Society,<br />

many Advanced Placement<br />

and honors kids, Math Team<br />

kids, school government kids<br />

and kids from every club in the<br />

school, band, school musical.<br />

They are really wonderful guys<br />

and girls.”<br />

54 Felton Street, Peabody, MA • 978.531.7456


<strong>10</strong><br />

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

Pioneers come up short vs. Ipswich<br />

By Anne Marie Tobin<br />

LYNNFIELD — The<br />

<strong>Lynnfield</strong> football team took it<br />

right down to the wire against<br />

the visiting Ipswich Tigers<br />

Friday night at Pioneer Stadium,<br />

but came up three yards short,<br />

falling to the Tigers 21-14, who<br />

survived a frantic last minute<br />

rally by the Pioneers that looked<br />

to be sending the game into<br />

overtime.<br />

The Tigers had a chance to<br />

put the game out of reach and<br />

had the ball on the Pioneers’<br />

14-yard line with a 2nd-and-6<br />

with a little more than two and a<br />

half minutes to go in the game.<br />

<strong>Lynnfield</strong>’s defense, however,<br />

forced a turnover on downs,<br />

giving the ball back to the<br />

Pioneers at their 14-yard line<br />

with 2:33 to go.<br />

With no timeouts left,<br />

<strong>Lynnfield</strong> quarterback Clayton<br />

Marengi marched his team all<br />

the way to the Tigers’ 3, only<br />

Thursday, Oct. <strong>18</strong><br />

Field hockey<br />

Pentucket at <strong>Lynnfield</strong>, 6<br />

Friday, Oct. 19<br />

Boys soccer<br />

<strong>Lynnfield</strong> at Masco, 3:45<br />

Volleyball<br />

<strong>Lynnfield</strong> at Ham-Wen, 5:30<br />

Girls soccer<br />

Masco at <strong>Lynnfield</strong>, 3:45<br />

Saturday, Oct. 20<br />

Football at Ham-Wenham, 1<br />

Sunday, Oct. 21<br />

No events scheduled<br />

Monday, Oct. 22<br />

Cross country<br />

<strong>Lynnfield</strong> at N. Reading, 3:30<br />

Field hockey<br />

<strong>Lynnfield</strong> at Masco, 3:45<br />

Volleyball<br />

A.C. at <strong>Lynnfield</strong> 5:30<br />

Tuesday, Oct. 23<br />

Boys soccer<br />

Complimentary<br />

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to be denied by the Tigers’ defense,<br />

which dropped running<br />

back Anthony Floramo, Jr. for a<br />

2-yard loss back to the 5, then<br />

picked off Marengi in the end<br />

zone with only 8.1 seconds to<br />

go in the game.<br />

The Pioneers converted on<br />

3rd down once and twice on<br />

4th downs on the drive on<br />

Marendi completions to Matt<br />

Fiori (20 yards on 3rd-and- <strong>10</strong><br />

at the Pioneer 36) and Jack Ford<br />

(16-yards on 4th-and-13 at the<br />

Pioneer 47, 9-yard catch at the<br />

Ipswich 21 on 4th-and-3).<br />

“When we got to 1st-and-goal<br />

at their 3, we sent in a 2-play<br />

combo that called for a run on the<br />

first play, then a pass on the next<br />

one,” said <strong>Lynnfield</strong> coach Pat<br />

Lamusta, “We had established<br />

the run and thought we could<br />

pound it in from there and then<br />

also have a second chance with<br />

a pass if we didn’t get it in, but<br />

in the end it just came down to<br />

<strong>Lynnfield</strong> at Newburyport, 6<br />

Girls soccer<br />

Newburyport at <strong>Lynnfield</strong>, 6<br />

Wednesday, Oct. 24<br />

Volleyball<br />

N. Andover at <strong>Lynnfield</strong>, 5:30<br />

Field hockey<br />

<strong>Lynnfield</strong> at Newburyport, 6<br />

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a couple of plays that we needed<br />

to make but didn’t. Overall our<br />

defense played well as a team<br />

defending their veer option, and<br />

offensively we showed a lot of<br />

resiliency and skills on the last<br />

2-minute drive.”<br />

Floramo had a monster day,<br />

picking up 135 rushing yards<br />

on 20 carries with two touchdowns,<br />

while Marengi was<br />

9-of-16 for 132 yards with two<br />

interceptions Ford caught five<br />

passes for 75 yards.<br />

After the defense forced<br />

a turnover on downs on the<br />

Tigers’ first drive, <strong>Lynnfield</strong><br />

drove 60 yards in six plays,<br />

capped by a great individual effort<br />

from Floramo, who scored<br />

from 11 yards out, dragging<br />

a gaggle of would-be tacklers<br />

into the end zone. Blake Peters<br />

tacked on the extra point to give<br />

<strong>Lynnfield</strong> an early 7-0 lead.<br />

Ipswich came back with<br />

two scores, the first on a 12-<br />

yard run by Cam Jones in the<br />

third quarter, and the second<br />

on a 4-yard scamper by Chase<br />

Huntley with a little under<br />

two minutes left in the half.<br />

Domenic Della Valte converted<br />

both extra points to make it a<br />

14-7 Tigers’ advantage with<br />

two minutes to go in the half.<br />

The Tigers got the ball back<br />

with 44 seconds after <strong>Lynnfield</strong><br />

failed to convert on fourth down<br />

at the Ipswich 29, but the Tigers<br />

drove all the way to the Pioneers<br />

5 with 5.7 second to go in the<br />

half, but their field goal attempt<br />

was blocked.<br />

<strong>Lynnfield</strong> tied the game at<br />

14 on its first drive of the third<br />

quarter on a 6-yard plunge by<br />

Floramoro (Peters PAT). A big<br />

play on the drive was a <strong>10</strong>-yard<br />

completion from Marengi to<br />

Ford to convert a 4th-and-9 at<br />

the Ipswich 23.<br />

Ipswich took the lead for<br />

good on the next drive with<br />

Cam James carrying it in from<br />

13 yards out on the first play of<br />

the fourth quarter.<br />

<strong>Lynnfield</strong>’s final drive was<br />

set up by a pair of timely defensive<br />

plays, the first by Leo<br />

PHOTO | KERRIANNE ALLAIN<br />

Anthony Floramo jumps over a would-be tackler during<br />

Friday’s game against Ipswich.<br />

PHOTO | ANNE MARIE TOBIN<br />

Kerrianne and Dennis Allain and son Hunter are all smiles as<br />

Hunter presents his mother with a bouquet at the Pioneers’<br />

football team Senior Night last Friday.<br />

Quinn, who forced Ipswich<br />

quarterback Ben Yanakakis<br />

out-of-bounds for a 2-yard loss<br />

on 3rd down at the Pioneer 13.<br />

Aidan McCormack then broke<br />

up a pass on the ensuing 4th day<br />

play to give the ball back to the<br />

Pioneers.<br />

The Pioneers’ final drive had<br />

more drama than the Perils of<br />

Pauline. They converted on<br />

3rd down once and twice on<br />

4th downs on Marendi completions<br />

to Matt Fiori (20 yards<br />

on 3rd-and-<strong>10</strong> at the Pioneer<br />

36) and Jack Ford (16-yards on<br />

4th-and-13 at the Pioneer 47,<br />

9-yards at the Ipswich 21 on<br />

4th-and-3).<br />

The Pioneers close out the<br />

regular season Saturday, Oct.<br />

20 at Hamilton-Wenham (1).<br />

After that, they wait to learn<br />

their fate in the Division 5<br />

North playoffs.<br />

“We are right on the bubble<br />

with Triton and Somerville,<br />

so now it’s all about getting<br />

a win at Hamilton-Wenham,”<br />

Lamusta said.<br />

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OCTOBER <strong>18</strong>, 20<strong>18</strong><br />

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

Defense drives the girls soccer bus<br />

By Daniel Kane<br />

and Anne Marie Tobin<br />

If it’s true that defense wins championships,<br />

the <strong>Lynnfield</strong> girls soccer team may<br />

be onto something.<br />

Monday at Manchester-Essex, the<br />

Pioneers fought their way to a 1-1 tie.<br />

Abby Lucich scored the only goal, assisted<br />

by Emma Montantile, in the 19th minute.<br />

Amberly McCarter made seven saves.<br />

On Friday, Oct. 12, the Pioneers<br />

posted their third shutout in their last<br />

four games (and fourth in the last six) to<br />

run their winning streak to four games,<br />

defeating Cape Ann League archrival<br />

North Reading on the road, 2-0.<br />

Montanile scored the game-winning<br />

goal in the 30th minute, with junior<br />

Anna Maria Ferrante notching the assist.<br />

Ten minutes into the second half, junior<br />

captain Tori Morelli added an insurance<br />

goal, also from Ferrante.<br />

“That game is always a battle for us,”<br />

<strong>Lynnfield</strong> coach Mark Vermont said of<br />

North Reading. “It’s North Reading, so<br />

for us it’s like Red Sox-Yankees. It (was)<br />

a home game so they (were) up for us<br />

and ready. It’s always a great battle,<br />

that’s how I see it.”<br />

With the win, the Pioneers improved<br />

to <strong>10</strong>-2-1 (9-2-1 CAL) to remain two<br />

games behind CAL Kinney Division<br />

leader Masconomet (12-0-1, 11-0-1<br />

CAL), who the Pioneers will take on in<br />

their next game Friday, Oct. 19 at home<br />

on the stadium field on Senior Night (6).<br />

<strong>Lynnfield</strong> 3, Triton 0<br />

The Pioneers punched their ticket to the<br />

Division 3 North tournament Tuesday at<br />

home with their third straight win.<br />

“It’s great,” Vermont said of clinching<br />

a spot in the tournament. “As a team you<br />

want to get that done as soon as possible.<br />

Now looking ahead we can continue to<br />

work and improve and also focus on getting<br />

a higher seed.”<br />

Molly Ozanian, Montanile and Ferrante<br />

each had one goal for the Pioneers. Ashley<br />

Mitchell and Emma Ricciardi each had<br />

one assist, both on perfectly placed passes<br />

in front of the net.<br />

“I thought we moved the ball well<br />

today,” Vermont said. “We were attacking<br />

and attacking well throughout the game.<br />

We had some great opportunities on some<br />

corner kicks and great passing.<br />

“Those are the things we work on a<br />

lot at practice so it’s good to see that it<br />

pays off,” Vermont added. “I thought the<br />

Field hockey has<br />

a split week<br />

PHOTO | ANNE MARIE TOBIN<br />

Liz Sykes is part of the strong back<br />

line that helped the Pioneers to a tie<br />

Monday and two wins last week.<br />

d zfense was strong, it’s always good to<br />

get a shutout. In the midfield we found<br />

the marks and moved the ball well so<br />

overall it was a great win for us.”<br />

The Pioneers went on the offensive<br />

early and found the back of the net after<br />

the first few minutes. On a <strong>Lynnfield</strong><br />

corner kick Mitchell placed the ball right<br />

in front of the Triton goal, Ozanian lept<br />

into the air and deflected the kick off her<br />

body to put <strong>Lynnfield</strong> ahead 1-0.<br />

<strong>Lynnfield</strong> added another goal with<br />

13:42 remaining in the first half. After<br />

controlling an inbound pass, Montanile<br />

turned and ripped a far, arching shot that<br />

slipped above the Triton goalkeeper to<br />

extend <strong>Lynnfield</strong>’s lead to 2-0.<br />

Meanwhile, several attempts at a scoring<br />

chance by the Vikings were quickly shut<br />

down by the Pioneer defense.<br />

McCarter also made several aggressive<br />

stops, one of which came when a<br />

Triton attacker slipped by the Pioneer<br />

defense with 24 minutes left to play.<br />

McCarter made a sliding stop to steal<br />

possession and shut down the Vikings’<br />

best scoring chance of the day.<br />

The rest of the second half was more<br />

of the same as <strong>Lynnfield</strong> moved the ball<br />

well and controlled a majority of the<br />

play before adding another late goal.<br />

With a few minutes left in the second<br />

half, Ricciardi carried the ball up the right<br />

sideline before sending a perfect pass across<br />

field that Ferrante finished with a header<br />

goal to extend the <strong>Lynnfield</strong> lead to 3-0.<br />

THE SCHOOL FOR BOYS<br />

By Anne Marie Tobin<br />

The <strong>Lynnfield</strong> field hockey<br />

team split two games last week.<br />

On Friday, Oct. 12, the<br />

Pioneers improved to 11-2<br />

with a solid 4-0 win over North<br />

Reading. Two days earlier on<br />

Oct. <strong>10</strong>, <strong>Lynnfield</strong> traveled to<br />

Triton and came up short, 3-2.<br />

Against North Reading, the<br />

Pioneers jumped out to a 4-0 lead<br />

in the first half, thanks to a big day<br />

from junior Lily Rothwell, who<br />

scored two goals and assisted<br />

on two others. Her effort gave<br />

<strong>Lynnfield</strong> coach Mamie Reardon<br />

the luxury of resting many of<br />

her starters and giving her bench<br />

some much-need minutes.<br />

“After the loss to Triton, this<br />

game was a nice bounce back<br />

win,” Reardon said. “We just<br />

didn’t have it against Triton and<br />

were totally flat and didn’t play<br />

our game at all,but we took care<br />

of it yesterday with a good day<br />

of practice. Today we came out<br />

with a lot of energy and got back<br />

to playing our game, so that was<br />

good. We took the ball wide,<br />

which is something we are always<br />

working on we had good<br />

sticks and stops and our finesse<br />

game was on point. I couldn’t<br />

be happier with their effort and<br />

I was happy I got all the seniors<br />

and juniors into the game.”<br />

Sophomore Maddie Murphy<br />

opened the scoring with a goal<br />

off a corner just two minutes<br />

into the game. Rothwell earned<br />

an assist on the play.<br />

Three minutes later at the 25:09<br />

mark, senior captain Ashley Barrett<br />

doubled the lead to 2-0, with<br />

Rothwell credited with an assist.<br />

With 3:46 left in the half,<br />

Rothwell cashed in on another<br />

corner with Ashley and Brianna<br />

Barrett, also a senior captain,<br />

earning assists.<br />

“There was just beautiful<br />

passing on that goal, so both<br />

Brianna and Ashley deserved<br />

assists,” said Reardon.<br />

Rothwell wrapped up the<br />

scoring with her second goal of<br />

the contest, this one with only<br />

seven ticks left on the clock.<br />

<strong>Lynnfield</strong> outshot the Hornets<br />

8-1 and held an 11-0 edge in corners.<br />

Senior Emily Dickey picked<br />

up the win in goal with one save.<br />

Triton 3, <strong>Lynnfield</strong> 2<br />

At Triton, the Pioneers<br />

dropped their second game of<br />

the season. They dominated<br />

possession and held a 9-5 edge<br />

in corners and 16-5 edge in<br />

shots, but still came up short.<br />

Sophomore Jenn Flynn<br />

staked the Pioneers to a 1-0 lead<br />

at the 20:25 mark of the first<br />

half. Ashley Barrett was credited<br />

with an assist.<br />

Triton bounced back with two<br />

goals over the final five minutes<br />

of the half to take a 2-1 lead into<br />

halftime.<br />

The Vikings picked up where<br />

they left off in the second half<br />

and bumped the lead to 3-1 at<br />

the 23:22 mark. Rothwell cut<br />

the deficit to 3-2 on a corner<br />

(from Ashley Barrett) with<br />

<strong>18</strong>:39 to go, but that was as<br />

close as the Pioneers would<br />

come the rest of the way.<br />

<strong>Lynnfield</strong>’s next game is<br />

Senior Night on Thursday, Oct.<br />

<strong>18</strong> against Pentucket on the stadium<br />

field. Game time is 6 p.m.<br />

MALDEN CATHOLIC<br />

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One Tradition of Excellence<br />

FALL OPEN<br />

HOUSES<br />

Thursday, October 25<br />

6:30 p.m.<br />

Saturday, November 3<br />

1:00 p.m.<br />

Visit maldencatholic.org/openhouse<br />

or call 781.475.5308<br />

THE SCHOOL FOR GIRLS


12<br />

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

DeRoche, LaCoste excel in golf open<br />

By Anne Marie Tobin<br />

<strong>Lynnfield</strong> high senior George DeRoche finished tied<br />

for ninth place at the Cape Ann League Golf Open<br />

Thursday, Oct. 11 at Far Corner Golf Course in West<br />

Boxford.<br />

DeRoche was named CAL Kinney Division Co-<br />

Player of the Year, sharing the honor with Masconomet’s<br />

Will Roberts. He also earned CAL First Team All-Star<br />

honors.<br />

Fellow Pioneer, junior Jack LaCoste, also played<br />

well but finished just outside the top-<strong>10</strong> in 12th place<br />

with 45 points, earning a selection nod to the CAL<br />

Second Team.<br />

“Both Jack and George played well today,” said<br />

first-year coach Mike Moresco. “I was also quite proud<br />

of all our kids as they finished second for the team<br />

Sportsmanship Award.”<br />

The individual title came down to a two-man battle<br />

between Triton’s Connor Small, who won with 68<br />

points, and Hamilton-Wenham’s Aidan Daly, who finished<br />

runner-up with 64 points. The difference ultimately<br />

came down to a 3-under performance by Small<br />

on the back nine, who eagled the par-4 <strong>10</strong>th and birdied<br />

two of the last four holes to cap a 3-under 33 and post a<br />

tournament-best 42 points on the inward nine.<br />

The Cape Ann League is one of the few leagues<br />

in Massachusetts that utilizes that format for scoring<br />

matches. Players earn a point for a double bogey, two<br />

points for a bogey, four points for a par, six points for a<br />

birdie and eight points for an eagle.<br />

DeRoche struggled on the front nine, making only<br />

three pars and tallying 21 points. But he rallied with 28<br />

points on the back, scoring points on every hole. After<br />

PHOTO | ANNE MARIE TOBIN<br />

George DeRoche, left, and Jack LaCoste finished<br />

ninth and 12th respectively at the Cape Ann League<br />

Golf Open at Far Corner C.G. last Thursday.<br />

four bogies and a par on the first five holes, he finished<br />

with four straight pars to punch his ticket to the all-star<br />

team.<br />

LaCoste also struggled on the outward nine, making<br />

just two pars and tallying only 17 points. But, like<br />

DeRoche, he scored 28 points on the back nine, parring<br />

six holes with a bogey and two doubles.<br />

“I got off to a rough start and had two triples on the<br />

5th and 6th holes, but other than a bogey here and there,<br />

I finished strong, so it was a pretty good round,” said<br />

LaCoste.<br />

SENIOR LIVING DIRECTORY<br />

“My round was pretty similar to Jack’s in that I<br />

played better on the back and finished strong with four<br />

straight pars,” DeRoche said. “I was happy to get a nice<br />

sand save on <strong>18</strong> when I blasted out to a couple of inches<br />

to save my par. It was nice way to finish and it felt really<br />

good to be named the co-Player of the Year for the<br />

League.”<br />

The Pioneers closed out the regular season Oct. 6 at<br />

the famed Myopia Hunt Club, where they took on the<br />

iron of the Cape Ann League, Baker Division champion<br />

Hamilton-Wenham, which came into the match undefeated<br />

at <strong>10</strong>-0.<br />

Regardless of how they fared against the Generals,<br />

the Pioneers will finish the season with their best record<br />

in at least the last six years.<br />

Next up for the Pioneers is a return trip back to Far<br />

Corner for the North Division 3 sectional tournament<br />

on Monday, Oct. 22 (9 a.m. shotgun start). The team<br />

will bring six players to the tournament with the lowest<br />

four scores counting. It will be the first time all season<br />

that the team will compete in an <strong>18</strong>-hole stroke play<br />

match.<br />

<strong>Lynnfield</strong> 153, Triton 149<br />

The Pioneers clinched sole possession of the CAL<br />

Kinney Division title the day before the CAL Open with<br />

a narrow 153-149 win over Triton at Sagamore Spring<br />

Golf Course. The title was the first for <strong>Lynnfield</strong> since<br />

2015 when the Pioneers finished in a three-way tie with<br />

Triton and North Reading.<br />

DeRoche led the way with 32 points.<br />

“Cole Giannasca’s 27 points and Bryan Mallett’s 26<br />

points really pushed us over the top,” said Moresco.<br />

With the win, <strong>Lynnfield</strong> improved to 9-1 overall in<br />

dual matches.<br />

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OCTOBER <strong>18</strong>, 20<strong>18</strong><br />

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

LEGAL NOTICE AND NOTICE OF A PUBLIC HEARING<br />

The Peabody Board of Health, acting under the authority of Section 31, Chapter<br />

111, of the General Laws of the Commonwealth of Massachusetts, at its public<br />

meeting of October 24, 20<strong>18</strong> at 2:30 P.M at Peabody City Hall lower level<br />

conference room), will vote on proposed amendments to its "Regulation of the<br />

Peabody Board of Health Restricting the Sale of Tobacco Products."<br />

SUMMARY OF PROPOSED REVISIONS<br />

· Establishes a maximum number of Tobacco Product Sales Permits and<br />

Adult-Only Retail Tobacco Stores in Peabody<br />

· Restricts the sale of flavored tobacco products to adult-only retail tobacco<br />

stores.<br />

· Prohibits the sale of flavored tobacco products by health care institutions.<br />

· Prohibits tobacco sales for new retail locations within 500 feet of a school.<br />

· Requires retailers selling nicotine in a liquid or gel form to comply with<br />

requirements for child-resistant packaging and plans for safe disposal.<br />

· Modifies the Violations section to clarify certain penalties.<br />

A complete copy of the proposed regulation is on file for public viewing at City Hall<br />

during normal business hours at the offices of the Health Department. In addition,<br />

the proposed regulation is posted on the City of Peabody website at<br />

www.peabody-ma.gov.<br />

Weekly News: October <strong>18</strong>, 20<strong>18</strong><br />

On behalf of the Peabody Board of Health<br />

Sharon Cameron<br />

Director of Health and Human Services<br />

City of Peabody<br />

978-538-5926<br />

VEHICLE REMOVED FROM SCENE<br />

( M.G.L. c. 255, Section 39A.)<br />

Notice is hereby given by: Mallia's Towing Inc, 161-163 Washington Street,<br />

Peabody, MA 01960, pursuant to the provisions of M.G.L. c. 255, Section 39A,<br />

that on October 19, 20<strong>18</strong> at: 1 p.m., 161-163 Washington Street, Peabody.<br />

Private Sale on the following Motor Vehicles will be sold to satisfy our<br />

garagekeeper's lien thereon for storage, towing charges, care and expenses of<br />

notices and sale.<br />

Vehicle Descriptions:<br />

09 Nissan Altima, Reg. No.: none, VIN 1N4AL21E89N528134, Vehicle Owner:<br />

Thomas Cunningham, 12 Magnolia Way, Apt 1216, Peabody MA 01960<br />

01 Chevy 1500, Reg. No.: 36ME82, VIN 2GCEK19T21131<strong>10</strong>82, Vehicle Owner:<br />

Gregg Harmer, 41 Range Ave, Lynn MA 01904<br />

93 Nissan PU, Reg. No.: 6VX539, VIN 1N6SD11S1PC416308, Vehicle Owner:<br />

Robert Anderson, 52 Wilson Terr, Peabody, MA 01960<br />

SIGNED: Mary Beth Mallia<br />

Weekly News: October 4, 11, <strong>18</strong>, 20<strong>18</strong><br />

ACROSS<br />

1 Very little<br />

5 Cutlass kin<br />

<strong>10</strong> Cartoon bear<br />

14 Sandwich cookie<br />

15 Swap<br />

16 Poet’s black<br />

17 Trucker’s haul<br />

<strong>18</strong> Ran a fever<br />

19 Main role<br />

20 Have guests<br />

22 In a devious manner<br />

23 “Skip to My --”<br />

24 Noon on a sundial<br />

25 Threw around<br />

29 Ear parts<br />

33 Jugs<br />

34 Cloudburst<br />

36 Spunk<br />

37 Sushi fish<br />

38 Derek & The Dominos hit<br />

tune<br />

39 Summer in Quebec<br />

40 Vacation jaunt<br />

42 Service ender<br />

43 Hidden supply<br />

45 Car dealers’ extras<br />

47 Pop<br />

49 Fiesta shout<br />

50 To date<br />

51 Large antelope<br />

54 Of small stature (hyph.)<br />

60 Limping along<br />

61 Ms. Bernhardt<br />

62 Nerve network<br />

63 Play charades<br />

64 Texas tourist site<br />

65 Sea eagle<br />

66 Bouquet<br />

67 Nubby fabric<br />

68 Grease cutter<br />

DOWN<br />

1 Decorated tinware<br />

2 Golf club item<br />

3 Orderly and clean condition<br />

4 Alpine vocalist<br />

5 Museum piece<br />

6 Moffo solo<br />

7 Exotic island<br />

8 Early garden?<br />

9 Valentine color<br />

<strong>10</strong> Shouting<br />

11 Toe the line<br />

12 Target<br />

13 -- 500<br />

21 Crop units<br />

22 Knight’s address<br />

24 Lucy Lawless role<br />

25 Take care of (2 wds.)<br />

26 Flake<br />

27 Ignited again<br />

28 Ounce fractions<br />

29 Drying ovens<br />

30 Put up<br />

31 Flexible<br />

32 Longhorn<br />

35 Yes, in Edinburgh<br />

38 Rustic road<br />

41 Frontier settler<br />

43 Prompts<br />

44 Gets dressed<br />

46 Having aged many years<br />

48 Boa<br />

51 Tar’s patron saint<br />

52 What the hen did<br />

53 Weaponry, briefly<br />

54 Sanskrit dialect<br />

55 Mideast power<br />

56 Entry form ID<br />

57 Not any<br />

58 Volcano in Sicily<br />

59 Like a bass<br />

61 Mr. Mineo<br />

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14<br />

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

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OCTOBER <strong>18</strong>, 20<strong>18</strong><br />

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

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Search 72385971 on cbhomes.com<br />

<strong>Lynnfield</strong> | 4/3 | $699,000<br />

35 Wildewood Drive<br />

Beautifully designed multi-level home.<br />

Enjoy two floors of sunny living space.<br />

Louise Touchette 617-605-0555<br />

Search 72397458 on cbhomes.com<br />

<strong>Lynnfield</strong> | 4/2 | $698,000<br />

2 Thwing Road<br />

Beautifully landscaped corner lot in desirable<br />

<strong>Lynnfield</strong> Center.<br />

Susan Vail 781-307-2996<br />

Search 72396976 on cbhomes.com<br />

CONGRATULATIONS<br />

To Our Agents<br />

Of The Month<br />

Joyce Cucchiara<br />

<strong>Lynnfield</strong> | 3/1.2 | $599,900<br />

32 Daventry Court<br />

Desirable King James Grant! Center<br />

Entrance Colonial situated off Cul-de-sac.<br />

Nikki Cappadona Martin 781-7<strong>10</strong>-1440<br />

Search 72396538 on cbhomes.com<br />

Peabody | 3/2 | $469,900<br />

New 2A Farm Avenue<br />

Awesome Garrison home with lots of nice<br />

living space for the family.<br />

Joyce Cucchiara 978-808-1597t<br />

Search t on cbhomes.com<br />

Louise Touchette<br />

Evelyn Rockas<br />

Peabody | 3/1 | Call for price<br />

New <strong>10</strong> Barrett Road<br />

Entertain this holiday season in the formal<br />

dining room with built in china cabinet.<br />

Joyce Cucchiara 978-808-1597<br />

Peabody | 2/1 | Call for price<br />

New 7B Felton Street<br />

1400+ square feet of one floor living<br />

featuring granite kitchen, enclosed porch,<br />

garage and more!<br />

Evelyn Rockas 617-256-8500<br />

Search 72409337 on cbhomes.com<br />

Nikki Martin<br />

Steve Macdonald<br />

Beverly | 3/3 | $1,150,000<br />

11 Thissell Street<br />

Elegant first floor residence at the most<br />

prestigious address in Pride’s Crossing.<br />

Carol DiCiaccio 781-820-3517<br />

Search 71989194 on cbhomes.com<br />

Middleton | 5/4.2 | $1,299,999<br />

1 Warren Drive<br />

Step into a dramatic sunny, open 2-story family<br />

room with cathedral ceilings, loft, and fireplace.<br />

Karen Johnson 781-367-8482<br />

Search 72317464 on cbhomes.com<br />

Swampscott | 4/2 | $599,900<br />

New 47 Worcester Ave<br />

Colonial Home on a lovely tree lined street.<br />

David Cloutier 603-892-<strong>18</strong>85<br />

Evelyn Rockas 617-256-8500<br />

Search 72409435 on cbhomes.com<br />

ColdwellBankerHomes.com<br />

Salem | 3/2.1 | $459,000<br />

New 5 Roslyn Street<br />

Townhome condo with classic period detailing.<br />

Sought after open concept living floor plan.<br />

Dan Del Grosso 978-578-5<strong>10</strong>8<br />

Search 72407644 on cbhomes.com<br />

Christopher Polak, VP/Managing Broker <strong>10</strong>85 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 />

Revere | 4/2 | $549,900<br />

New 36 Garfield Ave<br />

Be on vacation without going away! Steps<br />

from Revere Beach and T Station.<br />

Evelyn Rockas 617-256-8500<br />

Search 72408384 on cbhomes.com


16<br />

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

LYNNFIELD - $449,999<br />

LYNNFIELD - $479,900<br />

LYNNFIELD - $949,900<br />

JUST LISTED!<br />

NEW CONSTRUCTION!<br />

STUNNING NATURAL LANDSCAPE,<br />

BEAUTIFULLY MAINTAINED CAPE. Perfect<br />

for downsizing, first time buyers, or condo<br />

alternative. Bright, sunny kitchen; new Anderson<br />

windows to enjoy picturesque pond views in<br />

your private yard.<br />

EVENINGS: 774-487-2272<br />

EXCEPTIONAL RANCH IN PRISTINE<br />

CONDITION. Fireplace living room, newer<br />

granite kitchen 2 bedrooms, den, hardwood<br />

floors, cenral air, security, replacement windows,<br />

and 1 car attached garage. Nice yard , deck,<br />

storage shed and side driveway. Great Starter<br />

home or condo alternative.<br />

EVENINGS: 617-797-2222<br />

THIS NEW ENGLAND COLONIAL OFFERS an<br />

open floor plan with a gourmet kitchen/dining<br />

area, formal dining rm, foyer, half bath and a<br />

spacious family rm w/gas fireplace. Escape to the<br />

master suite, 3 additional bedrooms 2 baths and<br />

laundry rm. 2 car garage, hardwood floors,<br />

central air and more!<br />

EVENINGS: 978-317-4362<br />

WAKEFIELD - $469,900<br />

LYNNFIELD - $399,900<br />

LYNNFIELD - $549,900<br />

JUST LISTED!<br />

WALK TO LAKE QUANNAPOWITT. Home has<br />

hardwood floors and a remodeled full bath on the<br />

first floor with an eat-in kitchen and a living room<br />

with a wood burning fireplace. Walk-out family<br />

room with a half bath, laundry room and access<br />

to the greenhouse.<br />

EVENINGS: 617-791-2922<br />

NICE STARTER HOME OR CONDO<br />

ALTERNATIVE. This 5 rooms has generous<br />

living/dining room 2 bedrooms, kitchen and<br />

enclosed heated porch for more room. Great side<br />

yard and 1 car detached garage.<br />

EVENINGS: 617-797-2222<br />

LOVELY ENGLISH TUDOR. Features 3 bedrooms,<br />

1.5 baths, hardwood floors, updated cherry<br />

kitchen with granite, high ceilings, central air,<br />

newer gas heat, lower level playroom. Private lot.<br />

EVENINGS: 978-979-3243 OR 978-979-7993<br />

LYNNFIELD - $579,900<br />

LYNNFIELD - $549,900<br />

LYNNFIELD - $799,900<br />

DESIRABLE PILLINGS POND LOCATION.<br />

Three bedroom two full bath Multi Level with two<br />

car garage. Large private lot. New septic to be<br />

installed and town water hook up. Worth your<br />

renovations.<br />

WELL MAINTAINED 3 BEDROOM CAPE.<br />

Hardwood floors, eat-in-kitchen with Birch<br />

cabinets and granite countertops & sun room to<br />

deck. CA, security & more.<br />

EXCEPTIONAL PROPERTY!!! Beautiful Colonial<br />

on 2.8 acres. Stunning kitchen with granite and<br />

Corian counters and Birch cabinets. Master with<br />

jacuzzi tub and shower. Many updates, CA, new<br />

composite deck, Hardie board siding and more.<br />

EVENINGS: 781-405-8241<br />

EVENINGS: 617-791-2922 EVENINGS: 617-797-2222<br />

Donna Aloisi<br />

Bert Beaulieu<br />

Cheryl Bogart<br />

Helen Bolino<br />

Kim Burtman<br />

Bernie Starr - Broker/Owner • Richard Tisei - Broker/Owner<br />

Christine Carpenter<br />

Kerry Connelly<br />

Virginia Ciulla<br />

Julie Daigle<br />

Alex DeRosa<br />

Marshall D’Avanzo<br />

Eric Doherty<br />

Elena Drislane<br />

Sarah Haney<br />

Lori Kramich<br />

John Langer<br />

Kara Maciorowski<br />

Penny McKenzie-Venuto<br />

Maria N. Miara<br />

Catherine Owen<br />

Marilyn Phillips<br />

Marcia Poretsky<br />

Jaclyn Prizio<br />

Gale Rawding<br />

Maureen Rossi-DiMella<br />

Debra Roberts<br />

Ron Supino<br />

Patrice Slater<br />

Donna Snyder<br />

Northruprealtors.com • 26 Main Street, <strong>Lynnfield</strong> • (781) 334.3137 & (781) 246.2<strong>10</strong>0

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