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The #1 Selling Real<br />

Estate Brokerage in<br />

<strong>Peabody</strong>*<br />

PEABODY<br />

$579,900<br />

PEABODY<br />

$329,900<br />

REDUCED<br />

LYNNFIELD<br />

$2,199,000<br />

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PEABODY<br />

$485,000<br />

SOLD!<br />

MIDDLETON<br />

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PEABODY WEEKLY<br />

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978-808-<strong>15</strong>97<br />

Evelyn Rockas<br />

617-256-8500<br />

Louise<br />

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Nikki<br />

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781-710-1440<br />

Rossetti/Poti Team<br />

781-718-4662<br />

NOVEMBER <strong>15</strong>, 2018 • VOL. 62, NO. 46<br />

NEWS<br />

SERVING THE COMMUNITY SINCE 1957<br />

16 PAGES • ONE DOLLAR<br />

IN THE NEWS<br />

Page 7<br />

Moulton helps<br />

House turn<br />

to blue<br />

Page 8<br />

North Shore Bank<br />

contributes to No<br />

Child Goes Hungry<br />

Page 12<br />

Fenwick girls cruise<br />

to Eastern Mass<br />

Division 6 title<br />

PRSRT STD<br />

ECRWSSEDDM<br />

U.S. Postage<br />

Paid<br />

Permit #66<br />

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

City expects to settle O’Shea suit<br />

PHOTO | OWEN O’ROURKE<br />

Three years of litigation is expected to end as the City Council approves a settlement<br />

to pay a developer. Story on Page 4.<br />

North Shore<br />

statesman<br />

Fred Berry<br />

dead at 68<br />

By Thomas Grillo<br />

Former state Sen. Frederick Berry<br />

(D-<strong>Peabody</strong>) has died at 68 after a<br />

brief illness, according to his family.<br />

“With great sadness, the family...<br />

shares the news of his passing,” the<br />

Berrys wrote on Facebook. “Fred<br />

died peacefully on Tuesday morning<br />

after a brief illness. The family appreciates<br />

all the support and well<br />

wishes they have received during<br />

this difficult time and asks for privacy<br />

as they make final arrangements<br />

to celebrate Fred’s life.”<br />

Berry, who launched his political<br />

career in 1979 on the <strong>Peabody</strong> City<br />

Council, represented the Second<br />

Essex district from 1983 and served<br />

for a decade as Senate Majority<br />

Leader until he retired in 2012.<br />

“Fred was a great guy, a wonderful<br />

person, who treated everyone fairly<br />

and has a remarkable story rising to<br />

Majority Leader in the senate where<br />

he was very influential,” said state<br />

Rep. Thomas Walsh (D-<strong>Peabody</strong>).<br />

“I got to know him in 1982 when<br />

he was running for senate and I was<br />

graduating from college. I volunteered<br />

on his campaign.”<br />

Walsh described Barry as a<br />

BERRY, PAGE 2<br />

Plans for marijuana facility still on track<br />

By Thomas Grillo<br />

Plans to replace Brothers Kouzina with<br />

a medical marijuana shop are on track despite<br />

a social media posting to the contrary<br />

by the popular Greek restaurant.<br />

Co-owner Penny Christopher posted<br />

a message on the diner’s Facebook page<br />

over the weekend telling patrons: “We are<br />

pleased to announce that Brothers Kouzina<br />

will remain open at its existing location.<br />

Thank you all for your continued support.”<br />

But executives from Phytotherapy Inc.,<br />

one of two firms to get the green light from<br />

the City Council to open pot clinics on<br />

Route 1, say the statement is wrong.<br />

“That posting took us by surprise,” said<br />

Pritesh Kumar, Phytotherapy’s CEO. “We<br />

MARIJUANA, PAGE 2<br />

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LYNNFIELD<br />

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2<br />

WEEKLYNEWS.NET - 978-532-5880 NOVEMBER <strong>15</strong>, 2018<br />

Kernwood<br />

Wine & Spirits<br />

12 Salem St.(Kernwood Plaza) • 781-246-8883<br />

Wishes You and Your Family a<br />

Safe and Happy Thanksgiving<br />

From Rob, Pat and Mike<br />

Proudly American<br />

Owned and Operated!<br />

Open Wednesday, November 21,<br />

10 a.m. to 9:30 p.m.<br />

All liquor stores closed Thanksgiving Day.<br />

North Shore statesman<br />

BERRY<br />

From page 1<br />

Fred Berry dead at 68<br />

progressive Democrat who<br />

championed legislation to assist<br />

children, and the disabled,<br />

and saved the Logan Express in<br />

<strong>Peabody</strong> from closing.<br />

“He was a leader on the<br />

largest stage in Massachusetts,”<br />

he said. “But he also paid attention<br />

to local issues.”<br />

Mayor Edward Bettencourt<br />

Jr. said he was Berry’s friend<br />

for many years.<br />

“Fred was a political mentor<br />

to me,” he said. “I’ve always<br />

been very close with him. He<br />

will be missed.”<br />

The mayor said Berry lived<br />

a remarkable life of public service...was<br />

a passionate advocate<br />

for his constituents, particularly<br />

those most vulnerable...and was<br />

a true champion for people with<br />

disabilities.<br />

“Fred’s legendary sense of<br />

humor could always be counted<br />

on to ease tensions and maintain<br />

perspectives,” Bettencourt<br />

said. “My thoughts and those of<br />

our entire community go out to<br />

Fred’s family during this difficult<br />

time.”<br />

Essex District Attorney<br />

Jonathan Blodgett said he met<br />

Berry during the City Council<br />

race in the 1970s.<br />

“Fred Berry was one of a<br />

kind,” Blodgett said in a statement.<br />

“He never let his disability<br />

define him. He was a<br />

champion for the disenfranchised,<br />

a dedicated and humble<br />

public servant, and one of the<br />

funniest guys I’ve ever known.”<br />

Berry’s council service and ascension<br />

to power on Beacon Hill<br />

were testaments to his desire to<br />

helping people, said friends.<br />

“He was concerned about<br />

people and peoples’ problems,”<br />

said former Lynn Mayor<br />

Thomas P. Costin Jr. “He was<br />

one individual who never<br />

had too little time to talk to<br />

someone. He was a true public<br />

servant, a very special person.”<br />

Berry earned a bachelor’s degree<br />

from Boston College and<br />

a master’s in education from<br />

Antioch College in 1974.<br />

A popular vote-getter who<br />

easily won reelection, Berry<br />

didn’t rest on his laurels of political<br />

accomplishments.<br />

He was a member of the<br />

Ancient Order of Hibernians,<br />

Friends of <strong>Peabody</strong>, Hogan<br />

Berry Regional Center, the<br />

North Shore Association for<br />

Retarded Citizens, North<br />

Shore Children’s Law Project<br />

and North Shore Community<br />

Mental Health Center.<br />

He hosted an annual golf<br />

tournament at the Ferncroft<br />

Country Club.<br />

Plans for marijuana facility still on track<br />

Dessert cakes and pastries<br />

PIES: Apple • Blueberry • Custard<br />

Coconut Custard • Pumpkin • Ricotta<br />

Lemon Merigue • Pecan • Mince • Banana Cream<br />

Chocolate Cream • Chocolate Mousse • Tropical Fruit<br />

Walk-ins welcome • Orders suggested by Nov. 19<br />

Fun, Games,<br />

Adventure<br />

and the first steps<br />

toward:<br />

CONFIDENCE<br />

SELF -ESTEEM<br />

AND DISCIPLINE<br />

FREE INTRODUCTORY<br />

COURSE<br />

FREE UNIFORM<br />

with enrollment<br />

Holiday Hours<br />

Open Wednesday, November 21<br />

7 a.m. - 7 p.m.<br />

Thursday, November 22<br />

7 a.m. - Noon<br />

- CLOSED FRIDAY -<br />

Pre-Schoolers<br />

Love<br />

Arts Martial<br />

MARIJUANA<br />

From page 1<br />

are not moving locations, we<br />

have been permitted by the city.<br />

I’m not sure why the restaurant<br />

owner would put such a thing<br />

on Facebook.”<br />

The restaurant is also owned<br />

Kim Burtman<br />

Realtor, CBR<br />

Office: 781-246-2100 Ext. 126<br />

Cell: 617-240-0266<br />

Email: kim.burtman@northruprealtors.com<br />

by Christopher’s nephew,<br />

Alexander Athanas, who was<br />

listed as Phytotherapy’s chief<br />

financial officer until he was<br />

replaced by Vincent Galano III<br />

last fall. Athanas purchased the<br />

1.4-acre restaurant site in 20<strong>15</strong><br />

for $2.5 million, according to<br />

26 Main Street<br />

Lynnfield, MA 01940<br />

We Specialize in<br />

AFTER SCHOOL<br />

MARTIAL ARTS<br />

WE TRANSPORT<br />

county records.<br />

He agreed to lease the<br />

4,860-square-foot space to<br />

Phytotherapy, a medical marijuana<br />

dispensary, for $120,000<br />

annually, according to the<br />

Massachusetts Department of<br />

Public Health records, while<br />

Brothers Kouzina would look<br />

for a new spot along Route 1.<br />

Under the plan, the restaurant<br />

was expected to close by year’s<br />

end and move to another location.<br />

Last summer, Kumar said<br />

the transformation of the restaurant<br />

to a marijuana shop would<br />

take about three months. Now,<br />

he expects to open next spring<br />

or summer.<br />

Kumar speculated the<br />

Facebook posting was an attempt<br />

to attract customers who<br />

may think the restaurant has<br />

closed.<br />

Athanas agreed.<br />

“It’s a way for the restaurant<br />

to let customers and residents<br />

know they’re still open,” he<br />

said. “Business has suffered<br />

a little since news stories appeared<br />

saying they are planning<br />

to close. Obviously, one of our<br />

main concerns is relocating<br />

the restaurant, but we haven’t<br />

found any spots to put it yet.”<br />

Christopher did not respond<br />

to a request for comment.<br />

INDEX<br />

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

Police Log ...............................3<br />

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

BRUCE MCCORRY’S<br />

MARTIAL ARTS Est. 1978<br />

Route 1 South, Newbury Street, <strong>Peabody</strong>,<br />

MA 01960<br />

978-535-7878<br />

Visit our website for more about us!<br />

www .brucemccorry.com<br />

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

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

Sports ............................... 9-12


NOVEMBER <strong>15</strong>, 2018<br />

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

Arrests<br />

Jeffrey Jon Bliss, 36, of 3<br />

Summit Ave., Somerville, was<br />

arrested and charged with uttering<br />

a false check, forgery of<br />

check, larceny by false pretense<br />

and on warrants at 3:21 p.m.<br />

Friday.<br />

Kenneth Falasca, 49, of 28<br />

Spring St., Medford, was arrested<br />

and charged with OUI<br />

liquor, following too close and<br />

possession of an open container<br />

of alcohol in a motor vehicle at<br />

7:33 p.m. Saturday.<br />

Jacob H. Quarles, 21, of 66<br />

Margin St., was arrested on warrants<br />

at 9:14 a.m. Saturday.<br />

Brett P. Budowicz, 59, of 42<br />

Hawkes St., Saugus, was arrested<br />

following a traffic stop at<br />

First Street and Lakeland Park<br />

Drive on Friday at <strong>11</strong>:53 a.m. and<br />

charged with attaching plates,<br />

operating an unregistered and<br />

uninsured motor vehicle and receiving<br />

stolen property.<br />

Summons<br />

Alicia Stuart, 23, of 6 Rose<br />

Lane, Gloucester, was summoned<br />

for assault and battery<br />

and assault and battery with<br />

a dangerous weapon at 12:05<br />

a.m. Saturday at Sylvan Street<br />

Grille on Sylvan Street.<br />

Rafael Azevedo, 27, of 106<br />

Wilbur St., Everett, was issued a<br />

summons following a motor vehicle<br />

stop on Thursday at 10:02<br />

p.m. at 66 County St. and 33<br />

Rose Circle for the unlicensed<br />

operation of a motor vehicle.<br />

Cesar Chavez, 29, of 42<br />

Laighton St., Apt. 1, Lynn,<br />

was issued a summons following<br />

a motor vehicle stop on<br />

Wednesday at 3:05 p.m. at 145<br />

Summit St. for the unlicensed<br />

operation of a motor vehicle.<br />

Jeffrey Matthew Colantuoni,<br />

31, of 14 Hunt St., was issued<br />

a summons following a motor<br />

vehicle crash into a home on<br />

Wednesday at 8 p.m. at 54 King<br />

St. He is charged with operating<br />

a motor vehicle under the influence<br />

of drugs and negligent operation.<br />

He was taken to Lahey<br />

Medical Center. All Star Towing<br />

towed the vehicle.<br />

Selina Gatwiri Joseph, 47, of<br />

8 Sanborn St., Apt. 2, was issued<br />

a summons following a parking<br />

complaint on Sanborn Street.<br />

She is charged with parking an<br />

unregistered motor vehicle on a<br />

public way.<br />

Accidents<br />

On Thursday at 4:44 p.m.,<br />

a report of a motor vehicle<br />

crash at 126 Lowell St. and 2<br />

Kosciusko St. Officer reports<br />

Atlantic Ambulance and All-Star<br />

Tow requested<br />

Caller reported a red Ford<br />

F-<strong>15</strong>0 operating erratically at<br />

12 Andover St. and 3 Andover<br />

Terrace on Thursday at 5:14 p.m.<br />

Caller said the vehicle struck<br />

a curb before rear-ending a<br />

Volvo just before Pulaski Street.<br />

Officer reports operator taken to<br />

the Lahey Medical Center. All-<br />

Before<br />

Get your car looking<br />

great this Fall!<br />

Police Log<br />

Star towed the vehicle.<br />

Animal Control<br />

Caller from 12 St. Lo Drive<br />

reported two dogs running in<br />

the area. They were described<br />

as medium, long-haired, blackand-white<br />

dogs that appear to<br />

have collars. Animal control<br />

officer reports they were gone<br />

upon arrival.<br />

Report of a dog that lives at 62<br />

Summit St. attacked a second<br />

dog at 74 Summit St. on Friday<br />

at 10:18 a.m. Officer reports<br />

neither dog was injured and no<br />

quarantine necessary.<br />

Caller left message for animal<br />

control officer about a dog<br />

from 3 Caruso Court was loose<br />

and charged at him on Friday at<br />

<strong>11</strong>:37 a.m.<br />

Caller from 5 Meade St. reported<br />

a dog excessively barking<br />

at 10 Meade St. on Wednesday<br />

at 4:45 p.m. Animal control officer<br />

sent a complaint notice<br />

to the owner, Michelle Melo<br />

Belmonte. The dog, a 5-year-old<br />

shih tzu named Pica, is licensed<br />

and vaccinated against rabies.<br />

Complaints<br />

Lowell Crossing Enterprises<br />

Group Home reports a resident<br />

acting up on Thursday at 6:47<br />

p.m. Party was yelling, being<br />

verbally abusive and derogatory<br />

towards staff. Officer spoke to<br />

the party, who was under control<br />

upon arrival. Party declined<br />

an ambulance.<br />

Report of suspicious men<br />

on Lenox Road on Thursday at<br />

<strong>11</strong>:45 p.m. Officer checked area<br />

and parties were gone.<br />

Light stuck on red on Friday<br />

at 8:35 a.m. at 101 Main St. and<br />

2 Washington St. <strong>Peabody</strong> Fire<br />

Department notified and it was<br />

fixed.<br />

Caller reported two people<br />

pushing a car down Lynn Street<br />

near Brown’s Pond on Friday<br />

at 8:51 a.m. Officer reports operator<br />

is out of gas. As the officer<br />

arrived so did AAA with the<br />

gasoline.<br />

Caller reports party out front<br />

of 13 Birch St. selling stolen<br />

computers on Wednesday at<br />

4:26 p.m. Officer reports call<br />

was unfounded.<br />

The <strong>Peabody</strong> Public Library<br />

at 82 Main St. reported juveniles<br />

being loud in the library on<br />

Wednesday at 5 p.m. Officer reports<br />

the kids were sent on their<br />

way.<br />

Anonymous caller reported<br />

traffic cones in the road at 81<br />

Fairview Ave. on Wednesday<br />

at 7:04 p.m. that are causing a<br />

traffic hazard. Officer reports<br />

cones belong to the resident at<br />

81 and he is bringing them in.<br />

People playing basketball on<br />

Pierpont Street on Thursday at<br />

1:44 a.m. Parties sent on their<br />

way.<br />

Deer struck by a motor vehicle<br />

on Thursday at 6:41 a.m.<br />

at 54 Russell St. Deer was euthanized<br />

by responding officer.<br />

The Department of Public Works<br />

was notified.<br />

A needle was found on the<br />

sidewalk on Thursday at 10:29<br />

a.m. at 57 Gardner St. Officer<br />

reports needle was removed.<br />

Overdose<br />

Report of an unconscious<br />

person in the food court restroom<br />

at the Northshore Mall. Officer<br />

reports CPR being performed,<br />

party came to and was taken to<br />

the Lahey Medical Center.<br />

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4<br />

PEABODY WEEKLY<br />

NEWS<br />

(USPS #66)<br />

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

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

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

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

www.weeklynews.net<br />

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

Reporter: Thomas Grillo tgrillo@itemlive.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 />

Ernie Carpenter ecarpenter@essexmediagroup.com<br />

David McBournie dmcbournie@itemlive.com<br />

Local Subscription Rate: $20 per year (52 issues) • Single Copy: $1.00<br />

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

Classified Ads: Monday, noon;<br />

No cancellations accepted after deadline.<br />

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

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

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

in several locations throughout <strong>Peabody</strong>. The <strong>Peabody</strong> Weekly News will not be<br />

responsible for typographical or other errors in advertisements, but will reprint that<br />

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

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

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

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

PEABODY WEEKL Y<br />

N E WS<br />

20<br />

WEEKLYNEWS.NET - 978-532-5880 NOVEMBER <strong>15</strong>, 2018<br />

City expects to settle O’Shea suit<br />

By Thomas Grillo<br />

The City Council is expected<br />

to ink a deal Thursday night<br />

that will end a three-year court<br />

battle over the O'Shea Mansion.<br />

Under the terms of the deal,<br />

developer Michael Corsetti will<br />

receive a cash settlement of<br />

$825,000, the <strong>Peabody</strong> Weekly<br />

News has learned.<br />

The legal wrangling began<br />

in 2016 when the city seized<br />

the 123-year-old landmark<br />

on Washington Street by eminent<br />

domain to prevent its<br />

demolition by Empire Design<br />

& Development, Corsetti's<br />

Gloucester-based company.<br />

Corsetti paid $350,000 for<br />

the property in 20<strong>15</strong>, according<br />

to the South Essex Registry of<br />

Deeds. He planned to take a<br />

wrecking ball to the mansion<br />

and build a mix of apartments<br />

and retail in keeping with the<br />

city’s vision for the downtown.<br />

A year later, he was paid<br />

$425,000 by the city to compensate<br />

him for the seizure.<br />

The city wants to preserve<br />

the mansion, the former site of<br />

PHOTO | OWEN O’ROURKE<br />

Under the terms of the deal, developer Michael Corsetti will<br />

receive a cash settlement of $825,000<br />

Bell Tavern, where Minutemen<br />

gathered before the Battle of<br />

Lexington and Concord. Mayor<br />

Edward A. Bettencourt Jr. hoped<br />

a developer would spare the<br />

mansion, and transform the aging<br />

home into offices or a restaurant.<br />

Corsetti filed suit in Essex<br />

Superior Court seeking $1.8 million<br />

in damages, alleging the city<br />

underpaid him, arguing the assessed<br />

value of the property was<br />

closer to $1 million. A second<br />

lawsuit, in U.S. District Court,<br />

alleged the city’s efforts to undermine<br />

Corsetti’s purchase of the<br />

mansion violated his civil rights.<br />

At the time, Bettencourt said<br />

he believed the city had a strong<br />

case. But earlier this year, a federal<br />

judge refused the city’s request<br />

to dismiss the case.<br />

Since then, Corsetti’s attorney,<br />

Peter E. Flynn of<br />

Saugus, has been negotiating<br />

with the city for a resolution.<br />

As a result, Corsetti gets a<br />

total of $1.25 million for the<br />

property, or more than three<br />

times what he paid.<br />

The City Council is expected<br />

to consider the settlement<br />

amount in executive session,<br />

out of public view. But any cash<br />

payment will be voted on in the<br />

council chambers.<br />

Bettencourt and Flynn declined<br />

comment.<br />

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NOVEMBER <strong>15</strong>, 2018<br />

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

Seniors<br />

LYNNFIELD SENIOR<br />

CENTER ACTIVITIES<br />

Trips<br />

Nov. 21 Road trip to Southern<br />

Maine — $5.<br />

Nov. 26-27 Berkshire<br />

Holiday Trip — $327.<br />

Nov. 28 Pre-Christmas trip<br />

to Eately in Boston — $5.<br />

Dec. 4 Sicilian Tenors<br />

Christmas Time at<br />

Danversport Lunch and<br />

Show — $69.<br />

Dec. 5 Boston’s European<br />

Market at Government<br />

Center — $5.<br />

Dec. 12 Cooking demonstration<br />

and tasting at Verrill<br />

Farms, Concord — $10.<br />

Dec. 13 Holiday Fun, Regis<br />

College, Gore Place and<br />

High Tea — $89.<br />

Dec. 19 Last Minute<br />

Shopping at Merrimack<br />

Outlets, tax-free N.H. — $5<br />

Jan. 9 After Christmas sale<br />

at Copley Plaza and the<br />

Prudential Center — $5<br />

Jan. 16 Museum of Fine<br />

Arts — $23<br />

Jan. 30 JFK Museum — $<strong>15</strong><br />

Feb. 6 Brine in Newburyport<br />

— $5<br />

Feb. 13. The Barnacle in<br />

Marblehead — $5<br />

Feb. 20. Park Lunch in<br />

Newburyport — $5<br />

Happenings<br />

Lunch and a Movie-While<br />

You Were Sleeping: Lonely<br />

transit worker Lucy Eleanor<br />

Moderatz pulls her longtime<br />

We want to hear<br />

from you!<br />

Send us a letter at<br />

editor@weeklynews.net.<br />

Letters should be no more<br />

than 300 words.<br />

crush, Peter, from the path<br />

of an oncoming train. At the<br />

hospital, doctors report that<br />

he’s in a coma, and a misplaced<br />

comment from Lucy<br />

causes Peter’s family to assume<br />

that she is his fiancée.<br />

When Lucy doesn’t correct<br />

them, they take her into their<br />

home and confidence.<br />

Monday, November 26th at<br />

<strong>11</strong>:30 for $2.00/$3.00. Sign<br />

up.<br />

Mickey Mouse’s 90th<br />

Birthday Lunch & Movie:<br />

We will be celebrating this<br />

special birthday with all<br />

things Mickey. Hot Diggitty<br />

Dog!!! Can’t wait to party<br />

with you!!!<br />

Tuesday, November 27th<br />

for $3.00. Sign up.<br />

Welcome Coffee: Join us<br />

for a Welcome Coffee for<br />

anyone who is new to our<br />

center. This is a good opportunity<br />

to meet the staff and<br />

learn about our many programs<br />

and services. Coffee<br />

and cookies and tons of info!<br />

Wednesday, Dec 5th at 10<br />

a.m. Sign up.<br />

Veteran’s Coffee Social:<br />

Join Tom Moran, Veteran’s<br />

Liaison from Compassionate<br />

Care Hospice, on the first<br />

Thurs. of each month for<br />

coffee & conversation. Tom<br />

can direct you to further help<br />

if necessary. Thursday,<br />

December. 6th at 12:30.<br />

Free. All Vets & spouses<br />

welcome. Sign up<br />

.<br />

Activities<br />

Thursday, November <strong>15</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:<strong>15</strong> a.m.<br />

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

“When I first saw<br />

Grace, I knew I<br />

wanted to open<br />

my home to her.<br />

Now, we love to<br />

get our hair done<br />

and get manicures<br />

together. Grace<br />

has been a<br />

wonderful addition<br />

to our family.”<br />

a.m. Gentle Pilates. 10 a.m.<br />

Christmas wreath craft class,<br />

yoga, Mah Jongg. 10:30 a.m.<br />

10:30 a.m. Lunch bunch.<br />

<strong>11</strong> a.m. Aerobic dance with<br />

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

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

*****<br />

Friday, November 16<br />

8 a.m. Breakfast. 8:13 a.m.<br />

Exercise room. 9 a.m. Blood<br />

pressure and file of life,<br />

Broadway jazz dance class,<br />

hairdresser, acrylic painting.<br />

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

Tai Chi. 10 a.m. Art guild<br />

meeting. 10:30 a.m. Zumba.<br />

<strong>11</strong>:<strong>15</strong> a.m. Lunch: Baked<br />

fish.<br />

*****<br />

Monday, November 19<br />

8 a.m. Zumba gold with<br />

Alice, exercise room/hairdresser.<br />

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

video. 9 a.m. Gentle Pilates,<br />

Walmart shopping. 10 a.m.<br />

Line dancing, creative<br />

writing, sit and tone with<br />

Darci, beginner tap dance.<br />

<strong>11</strong> a.m. Ageless movement.<br />

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

meat. Noon Bowling, oil<br />

painting, all around New<br />

England travel talk. 12:30<br />

p.m. Mah Jongg, computer<br />

(sign up), Mexican train.<br />

*****<br />

Tuesday, November 20<br />

8 a.m. Hairdresser, exercise<br />

room. 8:45 a.m. Exercise<br />

under the belt. 9 a.m. Walking<br />

meditation, blood pressure.<br />

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

Intermediate Italian, grocery<br />

shopping. 10 a.m. Tai<br />

Chi, low vision group. 10:30<br />

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

Lunch: tuna melt. 12:<strong>15</strong><br />

p.m. ElderAct meeting.<br />

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

~ Sharon, Caregiver to Grace<br />

978-281-2612<br />

AdultFosterCareNS.com<br />

Celebrating <strong>15</strong> Years<br />

sign up, bridge, watercolor,<br />

reminisce.<br />

*****<br />

Wednesday, November 21<br />

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

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

Hairdresser, artist drop-in,<br />

trip to L.L. Bean/Burlington,<br />

manicurist, Tripoley, alterations<br />

with Anita. 10 a.m.<br />

Chair yoga, embroidery, hard<br />

of hearing support. 10:<strong>15</strong><br />

a.m. Beginner Italian. <strong>11</strong>:30<br />

a.m. Lunch: Cobb salad.<br />

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

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

PETER A. TORIGIAN<br />

SENIOR CENTER<br />

Thursday, November <strong>15</strong><br />

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

a.m. Quilting. 9:<strong>15</strong> a.m.<br />

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

painting, big band dancing.<br />

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

Loss of spouse group. 1<br />

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

ALS support group. 5 p.m.<br />

Memory cafe.<br />

*****<br />

Friday, November 16<br />

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

painting, TOPS weigh in.<br />

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

help, TOPS meeting. 10:45<br />

a.m. Positive aging group.<br />

Northrup Realtors<br />

26 MAIN STREET<br />

LYNNFIELD, MA 01940<br />

PENNY MCKENZIE-VENUTO<br />

REALTOR®, CBR®, SRES®<br />

Direct: (781) 929-7237<br />

Office: (781) 246-2100 Ext. 20<br />

Fax: (781) 213-7983<br />

Email: pgmckenzie@aol.com<br />

Website: www.northruprealtors.com<br />

<strong>11</strong>:<strong>15</strong> a.m. Chair yoga. Noon<br />

National Association Retired<br />

Federal Employees mailing,<br />

open art studio. 12:30 p.m.<br />

Bingo. 1 p.m. Scrabble.<br />

*****<br />

Monday, November 19<br />

8 a.m. Tips and topics.<br />

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

bridge. 9:30 a.m. Podiatry,<br />

tambourine team. 10 a.m.<br />

Drill team, bridge. <strong>11</strong>:<strong>15</strong><br />

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

Model ship building, Bingo.<br />

*****<br />

Tuesday, November 20<br />

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

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

a.m. Exercise with Edye,<br />

Japanese Bunka. 10:30<br />

a.m. Line dancing. Noon<br />

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

Crocheting/knitting. 4:30<br />

p.m. Job networking.<br />

*****<br />

Wednesday, November 21<br />

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

repair, rug hooking, woodcarving.<br />

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

American Veterans<br />

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

12:30 p.m. Model shipbuilding,<br />

monthly movie.<br />

2 p.m. Homeless providers<br />

meeting.<br />

DIFFERENT, BUT THE SAME<br />

Patients may become confused when their prescription medication<br />

changes in size, shape, or color from one month’s supply to the next.<br />

Reasons for these changes vary. In some cases, drug shortages may lead<br />

the pharmacist to order a medication from a different supplier. Other<br />

times, the switch may be made on the basis of lower cost, in which case<br />

the savings would be passed on to the patient. Regardless of the reason,<br />

patients are urged to consult with the pharmacist about any differences in<br />

the appearance of the medications they are taking. Otherwise, uncertainty<br />

can give rise to nonadherence or overdosing, as patients either lose<br />

confidence or fail to recognize they have two of the same medication in<br />

different bottles.<br />

There are things you can do to help protect your family from potentially<br />

dangerous medication errors. Having all prescriptions filled at the same<br />

pharmacy or by the same chain, is an important step. For more information,<br />

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

Colonial Shopping Center. We feature ComputerRX for online refills and<br />

Parata Pas packaging system which allows us to customize the dispensing<br />

of your medications.<br />

HINT: To avoid confusion over medications that are the same, but look<br />

different, patients should be sure to finish up the pills they have before<br />

starting a new bottle.<br />

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


6<br />

WEEKLYNEWS.NET - 978-532-5880 NOVEMBER <strong>15</strong>, 2018<br />

DINING GUIDE DIRECTORY<br />

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Tuesday: Buy one baked or fried<br />

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125 Lynnfield St, Lynn, MA 01904<br />

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TWO CONVENIENT LOCATIONS:<br />

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421 Broadway, Saugus<br />

63 Foster Street, <strong>Peabody</strong>, MA 01960<br />

978-531-0500<br />

leosmetrobowl.com<br />

SonnyNotos.com<br />

49 Water St.<br />

Wakefield, MA 01880<br />

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Call ahead<br />

for take-out<br />

Monday - Saturday<br />

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Sunday<br />

Noon to 8 p.m.<br />

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

suchangspeabody.com<br />

T: 978-531-3366 • F: 978-531-3060 www.sylvanstreetgrille.com


NOVEMBER <strong>15</strong>, 2018<br />

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

Moulton helps House turn blue<br />

By Thomas Grillo<br />

North Shore voters can thank<br />

U.S. Rep. Seth Moulton for<br />

helping turn Congress blue.<br />

The Salem Democrat,<br />

who represents the 6th<br />

Congressional District on<br />

Capitol Hill which includes<br />

Lynnfield and <strong>Peabody</strong>, backed<br />

35 Democratic candidates for<br />

the House of Representatives<br />

from New York to Texas. Most<br />

of them won, helping give control<br />

of the House to Democrats.<br />

Moulton, who was reelected<br />

handily to his third term and insists<br />

he is not running for president<br />

in two years, batted .543<br />

picking up 19 wins against 16<br />

losses.<br />

For baseball comparison, Ted<br />

Williams, one of the greatest<br />

hitters of all times, concluded<br />

his career with the Boston Red<br />

Sox with a .406 batting average.<br />

No one has since has hit .400 or<br />

better.<br />

“The American people want<br />

a new generation of leadership<br />

in Washington within the<br />

Democratic party and that’s<br />

exactly what you see in these<br />

candidates,” Moulton told the<br />

Weekly News. “It’s a group of<br />

people who are not career politicians,<br />

who are unabashed<br />

about going against the establishment,<br />

and are very clear<br />

they will put the country first<br />

over politics. That’s the kind of<br />

campaigns they ran, the type of<br />

leaders they are, and those are<br />

the folks who won.”<br />

Democrats appear poised to<br />

pick up nearly 40 House seats<br />

in the 2018 midterm elections,<br />

the most since the Watergate<br />

era of the 1970s. Republicans<br />

will maintain control of the<br />

Senate, after Democratic losses<br />

in Indiana, Tennessee, Texas,<br />

and North Dakota — states<br />

President Donald Trump won<br />

by double digits in 2016.<br />

But Democrats who are excited<br />

about capturing the White<br />

House in 2020 based on race in<br />

the House, should know former<br />

presidents Bill Clinton and<br />

Barack Obama also lost majorities<br />

in the House during their<br />

first term, but managed to win<br />

reelection easily.<br />

On whether winning the<br />

House equals putting the president’s<br />

proposals on ice for<br />

two years, Moulton said the<br />

Democratically-controlled<br />

House has two missions.<br />

“Part of our role is to fulfill<br />

our responsibility to be a check<br />

on the executive branch, just as<br />

the founders intended,” he said.<br />

“But the other part of our job<br />

is to work with our Republican<br />

colleagues to get things done<br />

for the American people despite<br />

how divided the country is.<br />

And we need leadership in the<br />

House that’s willing and able to<br />

do that.”<br />

Moulton, who served four<br />

tours of duty in Iraq as a U.S.<br />

Marine and was an early opponent<br />

of House Minority<br />

Leader Nancy Pelosi, also put<br />

his money where his mouth is.<br />

Moulton’s Serve America PAC<br />

raised $2 million this year, and<br />

more than 60 percent went to<br />

candidates he endorsed.<br />

Among the Democratic winners<br />

in pivotal House races<br />

included Jahana Hayes of<br />

Connecticut, Antonio Delgado<br />

of New York, and Iowa<br />

Democratic congressional candidate<br />

Cindy Axne.<br />

On Pelosi, Moulton said<br />

while the former House Speaker<br />

has said she is 100 percent confident<br />

of becoming Speaker in<br />

January, he thinks otherwise.<br />

“There are a group of people<br />

in the Democratic Caucus who<br />

are public with the belief that a<br />

new Speaker should be elected,”<br />

he said. “But we are speaking<br />

for a vast majority of colleagues<br />

who hold that belief.”<br />

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8<br />

WEEKLYNEWS.NET - 978-532-5880 NOVEMBER <strong>15</strong>, 2018<br />

Religious Notes<br />

All Saints Episcopal Church of the North<br />

Shore<br />

46 Cherry St, Danvers, MA 01923<br />

allsaintseposcopalnorthshore.org<br />

All Saints Episcopal Church of the North<br />

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

in Danvers, now worship together in Danvers,<br />

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

of Holy Communion and Homily every<br />

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

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

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

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

Calvary Baptist Church<br />

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

Carmelite Chapel<br />

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

978-531-6145<br />

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

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

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

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

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

p.m. or by appointment.<br />

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

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

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

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

Call or email 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 <strong>Peabody</strong><br />

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

Community Covenant is a warm and inviting<br />

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

All are welcome.<br />

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

officiates worship services every Sunday at<br />

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

held from 9:45-10:45 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 <strong>Peabody</strong><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., <strong>Peabody</strong>.<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., <strong>Peabody</strong><br />

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

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

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

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

Mon., Tues. and Thurs., 1 p.m.-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 />

New Destiny Christian<br />

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

978-373-4340<br />

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

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

9:30 a.m.<br />

North Shore Baptist<br />

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

978-535-6186<br />

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

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

time. Worship Service begins at 10:30 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 />

Our Lady of Fatima<br />

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

<strong>11</strong>: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 7-10 at 10 a.m. on Sundays.<br />

St. Adelaide<br />

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

978-535-1985<br />

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

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

Mass Schedule: Saturday, 4 p.m., Sunday, 8:30,<br />

10 and <strong>11</strong>: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 1-10) are held in the<br />

church hall on Sunday and Thursday.<br />

St. Ann’s Parish<br />

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

978-531-1480<br />

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

Deacon 978-531-1480; M. Ellen Fitzgerald, 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 10:30 a.m. Daily Mass:<br />

9 a.m.<br />

St. Clare of Assisi Catholic Community<br />

(non-Roman)<br />

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

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

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

Evangelical Lutheran Church<br />

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

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

Confirmation, Holy Communion, Confession,<br />

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

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

St. John Lutheran<br />

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

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

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

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

Church in America and Lutheran Congregations<br />

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

ST. ADELAIDE’S CHRISTMAS FAIR<br />

ST. ADELAIDE’S CHURCH FAIR<br />

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

Friday, November 16, 6 – 9 p.m.<br />

Saturday, November 17, 10 a.m. – 5 p.m.<br />

• GREAT VARIETY OF FOOD<br />

FROM OUR KITCHEN<br />

(take-out available)<br />

• HOME BAKED GOODS<br />

• HOLIDAY GIFT BASKETS<br />

• GIFT EXTRAVAGANZA<br />

• BEAUTIFUL HOMEMADE<br />

CRAFTS<br />

• ICE CREAM SUNDAES<br />

• GAMES OF CHANCE, SPIN<br />

THE LUCKY WHEEL<br />

• FREE TURKEY GIVEN AWAY<br />

EVERY HOUR<br />

• CRADLE CORNER<br />

• WINE CELLAR<br />

• KIDS’ ACTIVITIES<br />

• BRING YOUR CAMERA<br />

OR PHONE FOR A<br />

PICTURE WITH SANTA<br />

• 50/50 POT OF GOLD<br />

RAFFLES EVERY HOUR<br />

• GRAND RAFFLE AND SUPER<br />

RAFFLE (CHANCE TO WIN<br />

CASH - UP TO $2,000 AND<br />

OTHER GREAT PRIZES)<br />

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

and fellowship following; Sunday School at <strong>11</strong><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., <strong>Peabody</strong><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, 10 and <strong>11</strong>: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. Thomas the Apostle<br />

3 Margin St., <strong>Peabody</strong>, MA 01960<br />

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

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

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

Clemence. Pastoral Associate/Coordinator<br />

of 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 />

10 a.m . in English, and <strong>11</strong>: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., <strong>Peabody</strong><br />

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

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

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

Deacon Robert Fadel; Worship schedule:<br />

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

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

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

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

Second Congregational<br />

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

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

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

The church is wheelchair accessible. 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:<strong>15</strong>-10:<strong>15</strong> a.m. For Bible<br />

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

South Congregational<br />

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

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

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

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

978-210-7413<br />

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

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

contemporary Sunday Morning Worship Service<br />

at 10 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., <strong>Peabody</strong><br />

978-535-2100, 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 Ner Tamid<br />

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

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

templenertamid@verizon.net.<br />

Rabbi Richard Perlman, Cantor Steve<br />

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

Administrator. Service Schedule: Evening<br />

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

North Shore Bank made a $2,500 donation to the No Child<br />

Goes Hungry in <strong>Peabody</strong> weekend backpack program. From<br />

left are, Dennis Feld of Evans Flowers and Greenhouse; Jarrod<br />

Hochman, <strong>Peabody</strong> School Committee member; Michele Feld<br />

of Evans Flowers and Greenhouse and Kevin M. Tierney Sr.,<br />

President and CEO of North Shore Bank.<br />

North Shore Bank<br />

contributes to No<br />

Child Goes Hungry<br />

North Shore Bank recently<br />

made a $2,500 donation to<br />

the No Child Goes Hungry<br />

weekend backpack program.<br />

The initiative, which was the<br />

idea of Dennis and Michele Feld<br />

of Evans Flowers and Greenhouse<br />

in 2017, provides students between<br />

first and eighth grade<br />

whose families qualify for free<br />

school breakfast and lunch, with<br />

backpacks containing enough<br />

food and snacks for the weekend.<br />

“Without the support of the<br />

entire community and their<br />

generous donations of backpacks,<br />

food, money, time and<br />

labor we would not be able to<br />

maintain this program and the<br />

city of <strong>Peabody</strong> would have at<br />

least 270 of its children hungry<br />

each weekend," said <strong>Peabody</strong><br />

School Committee member<br />

Jarrod Hochman in a statement.<br />

Kevin M. Tierney, president<br />

and CEO of North Shore Bank,<br />

St. Adelaide’s Christmas<br />

fair on Nov. 16 and 17<br />

St. Adelaide's Church, 708<br />

Lowell St., hosts its annual<br />

Christmas fair Friday, Nov. 16,<br />

6-9 p.m. and Saturday, Nov. 17,<br />

10 a.m.-5 p.m.<br />

The fair features a wide variety<br />

of food with takeout available<br />

and home-baked goods<br />

said No Child Goes Hungry's<br />

creation was an immediate inspiration<br />

for North Shore Bank<br />

to fulfill its role as a community<br />

bank helping local families.<br />

"Education and promoting<br />

the wellness of the children in<br />

our community have always<br />

been a priority for us," he said<br />

in a statement.<br />

North Shore Bank is a<br />

full-service community bank<br />

based in <strong>Peabody</strong>, and serves<br />

the personal and business<br />

banking needs of the North<br />

Shore, eastern Massachusetts<br />

and southern New Hampshire.<br />

Established in 1888, the bank<br />

operates out of twelve area<br />

offices located in Beverly,<br />

Danvers, Merrimac, Middleton,<br />

<strong>Peabody</strong>, Salem, Saugus and<br />

Newton, N.H.<br />

For more information on the<br />

program, contact Dennis Feld at<br />

978-531-4510.<br />

as well as holiday baskets, a<br />

gift extravaganza, homemade<br />

crafts, ice cream and games<br />

of chance, including Spin the<br />

Wheel.<br />

Santa will be on hand for<br />

the kids and available for<br />

photographs.<br />

PVMHS Athletic Hall of Fame<br />

Induction Banquet on Friday<br />

Tickets are still available for<br />

the 2018 <strong>Peabody</strong> High School<br />

Athletic Hall of Fame Induction<br />

Banquet that will be held at the<br />

Danversport Yacht Club on<br />

Friday, Nov. 23 at 6 p.m. Tickets<br />

are $60 per person and can be purchased<br />

at the PVMHS athletic director’s<br />

office or by calling (978)<br />

536-4752. The 18 inductees will<br />

be introduced prior to the kickoff<br />

at the Tanners' Thanksgiving Day<br />

game Thursday, Nov. 22 at home<br />

(10).


NOVEMBER <strong>15</strong>, 2018<br />

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

Sports<br />

PHOTOS | ANNE MARIE TOBIN<br />

Sophomore Mia Tsaparlis, left, dribbles around a Swampscott defender. At right, Grace Foley had perhaps Fenwick’s best chance of scoring against the Big Blue<br />

Sunday. Middle, the captains receiving the runner-up trophy are, from left, Marissa Orlando, Sam Tache, Sammi Gallant and Foley.<br />

Quick Big Blue burst dooms Fenwick girls<br />

By Anne Marie Tobin<br />

LYNN — A first half two-goal burst in a two-minute<br />

span was all No. 7 seeded Swampscott girls soccer team<br />

needed to win its first North Division 3 championship<br />

in program history, defeating No. 4 Bishop Fenwick,<br />

2-0, Sunday at Manning Field.<br />

The Crusaders, however, didn’t make it easy, as they<br />

threw everything they had at the Big Blue in the second<br />

half, but could not crack through Swampscott’s stout<br />

back line defense to seal the win for the Big Blue and<br />

punch their ticket to the state semifinals Wed., Nov. 14<br />

against South Division champion Norwell, which defeated<br />

Hanover, 3-2, Sunday at Milford.<br />

“I don’t know if Swampscott has ever won a north<br />

title, all I know is they haven’t since 2008 at least,” said<br />

Big Blue coach Norman James. “As a first-year coach,<br />

I had no idea what to expect. I just know that I am so<br />

happy for the players and this feels incredible.”<br />

Fenwick coach Steve Flaherty said while he was disappointed<br />

to lose the game, the Crusaders gave it their all.<br />

“Their effort was unbelievable from start to finish,<br />

especially in the second half, but we just couldn’t finish<br />

our opportunities,” Flaherty said. “The only thing I told<br />

them was to leave it all on the field, and they did just<br />

that. My four senior captains (Sammi Gallant, Marissa<br />

Orlando, Sam Tache and Grace Foley ) were tremendous<br />

today and have been all year. Marissa especially<br />

created so many chances for us despite being double<br />

and triple-teamed at times.<br />

Senior Grace Digrande netted the eventual game-winning<br />

goal at the <strong>11</strong>:06 mark, converting a free kick<br />

from the 25-yard line after her sister Sophia Digrande,<br />

a freshman, was fouled. Grace Digrande launched a<br />

seeing-eye shot into the top left corner of the net, just<br />

inches inside the post and inches under the crossbar.<br />

Fenwick freshman keeper Claudia Keith made a leaping<br />

attempt to save the ball, but (you guessed it) came up<br />

inches away.<br />

With a little more than nine minutes to play in the<br />

half, speedy Big Blue sophomore midfielder Mackenzie<br />

Kearney made a run down the left side of the field and<br />

earned a corner kick. Grace Digrande lofted a perfect<br />

corner into the box, where senior captain Haley<br />

Bernhardt picked the ball out of midair and buried it<br />

past Keith to double the Big Blue’s lead to 2-0 with<br />

8:51 left to play in the first half.<br />

The goal got the Crusaders’ attention as they amped<br />

up the offensive pressure, creating several scoring opportunities<br />

the rest of the half. Their best chances came<br />

with under two minutes to play off shots by senior captain<br />

Grace Foley, a midfielder and freshman midfielder<br />

Isabella DelVecchio, only to be denied by Swampscott’s<br />

senior keeper, Nicole Rosa.<br />

Fenwick carried its offensive momentum into the<br />

second half and pretty much controlled possession and<br />

pace of play for much of the half.<br />

Orlando, a forward, owned the right side of the field,<br />

creating several chances on runs despite being tightly<br />

marked, and at times, double-teamed. One of the<br />

Crusaders’ best chances to cut into the Big Blue’s lead<br />

came in the 55th minute on a free kick at the 35-yard<br />

line. Freshman McKenna Gilligan launched a floater<br />

into the box where a Swampscott defender, misdirected<br />

a header toward her own goal. Rosa scrambled through<br />

a scrum and collided with a Fenwick player but was<br />

able to cover up the loose ball.<br />

With 13 minutes to go in the game, Bernhardt nearly<br />

put the game out reach. Kearney sliced and diced her way<br />

through Fenwick’s midfield and found Bernhardt, wide<br />

open at the top right corner of the box, but her shot went<br />

wide.<br />

With under 10 minutes to go, Fenwick junior midfielder<br />

Isabella Fabbo, sophomore defender Elani<br />

Gikas and Gilligan all had quality chances, but Rosa<br />

denied them all.<br />

Fenwick best chance came with under three minutes<br />

to go when Gilligan launched a free kick on goal from<br />

the 30, only to come up empty.<br />

James credited the defense and his keeper for doing a<br />

great job keeping the Crusaders off the board.<br />

“Emerson (Laundry) played a tremendous game and<br />

Kayla (Kornitsky) and Molly (Frauenholz) played such<br />

a steady consistent game today,” James said. “And<br />

Aislinn (McCarran) is only a sophomore and wasn’t<br />

even on the team last year, so those four really played<br />

so well today.<br />

“Nicky (Rosa) took a real beating today and was really<br />

knocked around, bloody nose and all, but she was<br />

just incredible.”<br />

Fenwick finished the season 17-3-1.<br />

Flaherty said he is looking forward to next year.<br />

“We have five or six freshmen, like McKenna, who<br />

got quality minutes in this game and through the regular<br />

season, so while I hate to lose the six seniors,”<br />

Flaherty said.<br />

Crusaders get back at Austin Prep<br />

By Daniel Kane<br />

LYNN — The third time<br />

proved to be the charm for the<br />

Bishop Fenwick girls soccer<br />

team. After falling to Austin<br />

Prep twice during the regular<br />

season, the No. 4 Crusaders took<br />

down the No. 1 Cougars when it<br />

counted most with a 1-0 win in<br />

the Division 3 North semifinal<br />

Nov. 7 at Manning Field.<br />

The lone goal was scored in the<br />

second half on a shot by freshman<br />

Jordan Morris. Senior captain<br />

Marissa Orlando set up Morris’<br />

goal with a nice assist.<br />

“It was a great goal,” Fenwick<br />

coach Steve Flaherty said.<br />

“Jordan is a freshman and that<br />

was her first time scoring. I told<br />

her before the game, ‘You need to<br />

score tonight,’ and she just delivered.<br />

She has been working hard<br />

in practice, but they all have. It<br />

was a good team effort.<br />

“We all know Marissa can<br />

play,” Flaherty added. “She<br />

caused a lot of problems for their<br />

defense tonight, but there is no<br />

individual for us. It was a great<br />

team effort.”<br />

After a defensive battle in the<br />

first half Fenwick found an opportunity<br />

with three minutes before<br />

halftime. After a free kick from<br />

just outside the box was blocked<br />

by an Austin Prep defender, a rebound<br />

chance opened up for the<br />

Crusaders but they couldn’t capitalize<br />

as a shot sailed high over<br />

the net.<br />

The Crusaders were eventually<br />

able to capitalize on another<br />

chance later in the second half.<br />

Orlando carried the ball down the<br />

right side of the field and into the<br />

Austin Prep box. After making a<br />

defender miss she dished a perfect<br />

pass to Morris in front of the<br />

net, who ripped a shot into the<br />

back of the net to give Fenwick a<br />

1-0 lead with 16:16 to play.<br />

Austin Prep gave one last surge<br />

on offense in the final minutes of<br />

play but the Crusaders were able<br />

to hold on for the 1-0 victorysealing<br />

their bid into the sectional<br />

final.<br />

“Austin Prep is a good team<br />

and we both played hard tonight,”<br />

Flaherty said. “There’s not much<br />

you can do about a game like this.<br />

Whoever makes the first mistake,<br />

the other team is going to capitalize.<br />

It was a good game.”<br />

With the win, the Crusaders advanced<br />

to their second North sectional<br />

final in three years.


10<br />

Coach urges urgency<br />

on Thanksgiving<br />

By Harold Rivera<br />

By Anne Marie Tobin<br />

PEABODY — It was a battle<br />

for Tanner city bragging rights<br />

Friday night at rain-drenched<br />

Coley Lee Field as the hometown<br />

<strong>Peabody</strong> Tanners football<br />

team took on their Woburn<br />

counterparts in a non-playoff<br />

contest.<br />

The game was a back-andforth<br />

affair, but in the end,<br />

the <strong>Peabody</strong> Tanners came up<br />

short, 28-24.<br />

<strong>Peabody</strong> led 24-21 after a<br />

clutch 37-yard field goal by senior<br />

kicker Austin Leggett with<br />

9:31 left in the game.<br />

But Woburn took back the<br />

lead with a 70-yard, clockeating<br />

scoring drive that<br />

chewed more than six minutes<br />

off the clock, capped by on a<br />

3-yard touchdown pass from<br />

quarterback Ryan Qualey to<br />

tight end Anthony Morales and<br />

point after by Ayob Essquabin.<br />

With 3:17 to play, <strong>Peabody</strong><br />

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had good field position at its 35-<br />

yard line, but shot themselves in<br />

the foot when assessed a delay<br />

of game penalty, followed by<br />

2-yard loss on a botched run attempt,<br />

a sack and Alex DeNisco<br />

(3-of-<strong>11</strong>, 32 yards, INT) incompletion,<br />

turning the ball over<br />

on downs to Woburn with 1:32<br />

to play, effectively ending the<br />

game.<br />

“We were trying to go wide<br />

on that second down, but there<br />

was confusion, so that was a<br />

real killer, that delay of game<br />

penalty,” said <strong>Peabody</strong> coach<br />

Mark Bettencourt. “We had our<br />

opportunities, but couldn’t find<br />

that big play when we needed<br />

it. But we lost the game because<br />

we put no pressure on their<br />

quarterback. We couldn’t flush<br />

him out and that game him<br />

time to read our defense and<br />

find open receivers. Their offense<br />

had a lot of diversity and<br />

ran some things we had not seen<br />

before, so that also hurt us.”<br />

<strong>Peabody</strong> led 7-0 after the<br />

first quarter, thanks to a 79-<br />

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WEEKLYNEWS.NET - 978-532-5880 NOVEMBER <strong>15</strong>, 2018<br />

The goal for <strong>Peabody</strong> football coach<br />

Mark Bettencourt and his Tanners coming<br />

into their Thanksgiving game against<br />

Saugus is simple. <strong>Peabody</strong>, 4-6 this season,<br />

won’t accept a loss to close a tough, injury-riddled<br />

2018 campaign.<br />

“The seniors want to end the season on<br />

a win,” Bettencourt said. “Our goal of finishing<br />

the season over or at .500 was lost.<br />

Finishing at 5-6 is the best we can do and<br />

we have to make sure we do that. Finishing<br />

4-7 isn’t an option, that doesn’t speak for<br />

the work we’ve put in this year.”<br />

Saugus, however, will have other plans.<br />

Bettencourt has studied the Sachems on<br />

film and knows they aren’t an easy opponent<br />

to beat.<br />

“They’re tough kids,” Bettencourt said.<br />

“The story early in the season about what<br />

happened there and the way they’ve persevered<br />

with Coach Mike Mabee, he’s done<br />

a great job rallying these kids, motivating<br />

them and giving them something positive.<br />

When you inspire kids to overcome adversity<br />

you get good results. Watching the film,<br />

they had growing pains early in the year but<br />

they’re playing cleaner with every game.<br />

They’re coming here expecting to win.”<br />

<strong>Peabody</strong> plans to control the line of<br />

scrimmage and establish an effective running<br />

game in hopes of creating opportunities<br />

through the air. That makes it a big game for<br />

<strong>Peabody</strong>’s offensive line, led by Abe Kaba,<br />

Chris Glass and Mike Lock, and running<br />

backs Luis Guridys and Angel Paulino.<br />

“The biggest key is up front,” Bettencourt<br />

said. “We have to control the line of scrimmage.<br />

In the games we’ve won we’ve<br />

controlled the line of scrimmage. We’ve<br />

shown we can do it against teams a little<br />

bigger than us. We did it against Masco and<br />

Haverhill. If we can’t establish a running<br />

game, it affects our passing game.<br />

“If we can control the trenches, it allows<br />

us to do a lot more with ball control and that<br />

allows us to control the passing game.”<br />

Other key offensive contributors include<br />

quarterback Alex DeNisco and kicker<br />

Austin Leggett.<br />

Defensively, Bettencourt pointed to<br />

sticking to assignments as <strong>Peabody</strong>’s key.<br />

He also foresees a tall task ahead for cornerbacks<br />

Dylan Peluso and Carlos Hernandez,<br />

who’ll be relied on to prevent big plays in<br />

Saugus’ passing game. Linebackers Tyler<br />

Norman and Kyle Maglione also have<br />

played well.<br />

“Defensively, we have to read our keys<br />

and trust what the coaches are telling them<br />

to do,” Bettencourt said. “When we get<br />

away from reading our keys, we step into<br />

<strong>Peabody</strong> loses battle of Tanners<br />

yard fumble recovery and return<br />

by Luis Guridys, who had<br />

a monster game. After Woburn<br />

tied the game in the second<br />

quarter on a 12-yard touchdown<br />

pass, Qualey to Tyler Parrish<br />

(Essquabin PAT), Guridys answered<br />

right back three plays<br />

later, exploding for a 61-yard<br />

dash into the end zone to make<br />

it 14-7 with 3:41 left in the half.<br />

Woburn then drove 73 yards<br />

in nine plays, the final play a<br />

4-yard dash into the end zone<br />

by Stephen Kolodko with 32<br />

seconds left in the half to make<br />

it 14-13 at halftime.<br />

Woburn regained the lead,<br />

21-14, with 4:37 left in the third<br />

quarter on a 48-yard Qualey<br />

to Kolodko strike and Qualey<br />

to Ryan McLaughlin 2-point<br />

conversion.<br />

With 1:23 left in the quarter,<br />

Colby Therrien pulled the<br />

Tanners to within one, 21-20,<br />

with a 1-yard plunge.<br />

Guridys (4 carries, 96 yards,<br />

2 TDs) was the man of the hour<br />

again, recovering a pooch kick<br />

PHOTO | BOB CARBONE<br />

Luis Guridys has been a mainstay in the<br />

<strong>Peabody</strong> backfield.<br />

problems. The defense we run relies on<br />

<strong>11</strong> guys doing their jobs. What helps us<br />

is we’ve played some really good teams.<br />

Haverhill, Masco and Woburn were good<br />

teams. Beverly, Danvers, Marblehead,<br />

that’s going to help.<br />

“We have to step up and make sure we play<br />

our best game on Thanksgiving morning or<br />

the turkey might not taste so well.”<br />

Kickoff for Thanksgiving’s clash between<br />

<strong>Peabody</strong> and Saugus is scheduled for<br />

10 a.m. at Coley Lee Field.<br />

at the Woburn 39, the second<br />

successful pooch kick of the<br />

game executed by <strong>Peabody</strong>.<br />

The drive stalled at the 20, but<br />

Leggett (3-of-3 PATs) split<br />

the uprights to make it 24-21,<br />

<strong>Peabody</strong>.<br />

“Luis did everything in this<br />

game, he was just everywhere<br />

on both sides of the ball and<br />

on special teams,” Bettencourt<br />

said.<br />

“I couldn’t be happier for him<br />

as he is such a hard worker and<br />

a game like this is so special for<br />

him and our coaches, just a big<br />

day for a great kid.”<br />

Angel Paulino finished with<br />

82 rushing yards on 12 carries.<br />

The Tanners hope to wrap<br />

up the season in style with a<br />

Thanksgiving Day win over<br />

Saugus. Kickoff is set for 10<br />

a.m. Nov. 22 at Coley Lee Field.<br />

While <strong>Peabody</strong> leads the<br />

series, 44-33, and <strong>Peabody</strong><br />

has won the last four contests<br />

games, Bettencourt expects a<br />

tougher Saugus squad will give<br />

<strong>Peabody</strong> a real battle.<br />

“This is not the same Saugus<br />

team we have beaten these last<br />

four years,” said Bettencourt.<br />

“Saugus is the real deal this<br />

year, and considering all that<br />

program has gone through, they<br />

are having a great season. I expect<br />

we will need to play our<br />

best to come out on top. We<br />

need to finish the season strong<br />

as we have worked hard all<br />

year, so it’s important to come<br />

out with our best.”<br />

Prep<br />

onto<br />

Super<br />

Bowl<br />

By Steve Krause<br />

DANVERS — Brian St.<br />

Pierre has a chance to do something<br />

unique in St. John’s Prep<br />

football history: win a championship<br />

both as a player and a coach.<br />

St. Pierre accomplished the<br />

former in 1997 when his Eagles<br />

beat New Bedford in the Division<br />

1 Super Bowl. The Prep moved a<br />

step closer to the latter Saturday<br />

by defeating Central Catholic,<br />

21-0, in the Division 1 North final<br />

at Glatz Field.<br />

With the win, the Eagles move<br />

straight to the Division 1 Super<br />

Bowl on Dec. 1 against perennial<br />

Prep nemesis John DiBiaso and<br />

Catholic Memorial. The game is at<br />

Gillette Stadium in Foxborough at<br />

a time to be announced (Division 1<br />

has no teams in Central or Western<br />

Massachusetts).<br />

“This is a special place,” said<br />

St. Pierre. “It’s why I came back<br />

here to coach.”<br />

If there were ever a championship<br />

“trap” game, Saturday’s game<br />

against the Red Raiders would<br />

have been it. All eyes pointed to<br />

a rematch between The Prep and<br />

Everett for a Super Bowl berth<br />

after the Crimson Tide survived a<br />

Week 3 tussle with the Eagles (26-<br />

14). But Central put an end to those<br />

hopes by upsetting the Crimson<br />

Tide last week. So even though<br />

The Prep had beaten Central in<br />

Week 2, St. Pierre was wary.<br />

“Central Catholic is a very good<br />

team,” he said. “They went into<br />

Everett and won.”<br />

The game couldn’t have started<br />

better for the Eagles.<br />

“We hoped to win the toss,<br />

defer, take the wind, stop them,<br />

and then come down and score.<br />

We checked off all those boxes.”<br />

A defense that combined for six<br />

sacks Saturday got started early<br />

with a three-and-out, after which<br />

offense became the Matt Crowley<br />

show. The junior quarterback<br />

completed his first five passes and<br />

ended up at 10-for-13, 173 yards<br />

and a touchdown (he also set a<br />

single-season record for passing<br />

yards with 1,081).<br />

After running back Trent Tully<br />

(shouldering almost the whole<br />

load after Aise Pream went down<br />

with an injury) capped a long<br />

drive with a 3-yard plunge to<br />

make it 7-0, Crowley combined<br />

with Luke Brennan on a 49-yard<br />

thing of beauty in the second<br />

quarter. Crowley’s play fake lured<br />

Central’s defense toward the<br />

pocket, and he hit Brennan with a<br />

bullet about 10 years from the line.<br />

Brennan ran untouched to the end<br />

zone.<br />

Tully’s 8-yard run in the fourth<br />

quarter capped off the scoring.<br />

Now, the Eagles get ready to<br />

play at Fenway Park the night<br />

before Thanksgiving against<br />

Xaverian, and then at Gillette<br />

against Catholic Memorial.


NOVEMBER <strong>15</strong>, 2018<br />

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

Thanksgiving game for league title<br />

By Steve Krause<br />

After being the Thanksgiving<br />

football version of “A Man<br />

Without a Country” for more<br />

than a decade, seeing St. Mary’s<br />

from across the 50-yard line<br />

Thursday will do coach Dave<br />

Woods’ heart a lot of good.<br />

The fact that the game will be<br />

for a Catholic Central League<br />

championship makes it even<br />

better.<br />

“Anytime we play St. Mary’s<br />

in anything, it adds a little<br />

extra,” said Woods, on the eve<br />

of Thursday’s game (10) at<br />

Donaldson Field against the<br />

Spartans. “But with a league<br />

title on the line, it adds extra<br />

implications.”<br />

The fact that the value of<br />

winning a league title has been<br />

de-emphasized in terms of qualifying<br />

for the Super Bowl is of<br />

no consequence when it comes<br />

to playing the game.<br />

“It’s two good programs, and<br />

whoever wins is going to be<br />

(CCL) champion,” Woods said.<br />

FILE PHOTO<br />

Stefano Fabiano, left, caught two passes for 32 yards in the<br />

Crusaders’ victory over Ipswich.<br />

“It’s going to be fun.”<br />

Fenwick has run the table in<br />

the CCL up to now, but that’s<br />

a bit deceiving. Austin Prep<br />

dropped out of the CCL/Large<br />

and right now there are only<br />

five teams in the division. The<br />

Crusaders have beaten the three<br />

they’ve played — Williams,<br />

Spellman and Arlington<br />

Catholic — with only St.<br />

Mary’s left, while the Spartans<br />

only loss was to Williams. A St.<br />

Mary’s win would leave each<br />

team at 3-1 in the league, with<br />

the Spartans having the tiebreaker<br />

in head-to-head.<br />

In the world of the CCL, the<br />

lord giveth and taketh away for<br />

Fenwick. The Crusaders celebrated<br />

the return in Week 4 of<br />

quarterback Cory Bright, who,<br />

in the half-season since, has<br />

thrown for 1,100 yards and 16<br />

touchdowns.<br />

“That’s a season for most<br />

kids,” Woods said. “He’s been<br />

phenomenal.”<br />

Prior to Bright’s return, it was<br />

sophomore Chrys Wilson under<br />

center who kept the Crusaders<br />

on track, guiding them to a 2-1<br />

start.<br />

“He is also our starting linebacker<br />

and has played outstanding<br />

on defense,” said<br />

Fenwick coach Dave Woods.<br />

“He’s on all of our special teams<br />

and rarely comes off the field.”<br />

However, all-everything-else<br />

Keegan O’Connor broke his<br />

arm last Friday night against<br />

Ipswich, and that’ll be a tough<br />

loss for the Crusaders to absorb.<br />

“He wants to (play),” said<br />

Woods, “but I don’t know. It<br />

might be too soon to talk about<br />

doing that. It’s a tough break.<br />

He’s a senior.”<br />

Also playing their last games<br />

are Derek DelVecchio, George<br />

Fiskatoris, Ian Connor and<br />

Tommy McDonald. All six have<br />

been invaluable, Woods said.<br />

Underclassmen who have<br />

emerged as key contributors are<br />

David Cifuentes and Joe Rivers.<br />

“They’re our 1-2 punch at<br />

tailback,” said Woods. “David<br />

gets the ball more, but Joe<br />

scores about 20 percent of the<br />

time he touches the ball. We<br />

have to get him the ball more.”<br />

The Crusaders went into the<br />

Division 6 playoffs at 6-1 with<br />

the fourth seed, and defeated<br />

Greater Lowell in the quarterfinals<br />

before falling to No. 1<br />

Stoneham in the semis.<br />

“Stoneham is a great team,”<br />

said Woods. “I think they could<br />

play with anyone from Division<br />

3 on down. Maybe not a team<br />

like St. John’s Prep, but from 3<br />

down, they can play.”<br />

Fenwick tuned up for St.<br />

Mary’s with a win over Ipswich<br />

to enter Thanksgiving at 8-2. St.<br />

Mary’s, not counting its state<br />

semifinal game with Cohasset,<br />

is 7-3.<br />

Fenwick football rebounds against Ipswich<br />

By Anne Marie Tobin<br />

IPSWICH — A week after<br />

being bounced from the<br />

Division 6 North state tournament,<br />

the Bishop Fenwick football<br />

team roared back with a<br />

46-27 win over Ipswich Friday<br />

night at Jack Welch Field.<br />

Crusaders senior quarterback<br />

Cory Bright threw three<br />

touchdown passes, connecting<br />

with six different receivers,<br />

and also ran for another. Derek<br />

DelVecchio caught two touchdowns<br />

and Keegan O’Connor<br />

hauled in one.<br />

Despite missing five games<br />

to injury this season, Bright has<br />

thrown for 1,322 yards and 16<br />

touchdowns this season.<br />

David Cifuentes, Joe Rivers<br />

and Angel Martinez also scored<br />

touchdowns for Fenwick.<br />

Martinez’s 25-yard touchdown<br />

rush sealed the scoring for<br />

Fenwick.<br />

Cifuentes went 3-of-4 on<br />

PAT kicks and Rivers added a<br />

2-point conversion on a rush.<br />

While Fenwick (8-2) led from<br />

start to finish and was never in<br />

danger of losing, Fenwick coach<br />

Dave Woods was not happy<br />

with the Crusaders’ execution.<br />

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“It wasn’t our best effort,”<br />

Fenwick coach Dave Woods<br />

said.<br />

“We had a sloppy week of<br />

practice so we kind of played<br />

sloppy. We had enough to pull<br />

out the win so we’ll move on<br />

and get ready for Thanksgiving.<br />

Cory had a great game. He kept<br />

us above water with some of his<br />

plays.”<br />

Fenwick’s Bobby Farren set<br />

up the Crusaders first score<br />

when he recovered a fumble<br />

on a Tigers’ punt, giving the<br />

Crusaders a short field at the<br />

Tiger 21. One play later, Bright<br />

hit O’Connor with a 21-yard<br />

touchdown pass.<br />

The Crusaders made it<br />

12-0 a few minutes later on a<br />

4-yard TD reception, Bright to<br />

DelVecchio.<br />

Ipswich closed to 12-7 on an<br />

8-yard run by Cole Terry and extra<br />

point by Dominic Della Valle.<br />

Bright took matters into his<br />

own hands on the Crusaders’<br />

next possession, plunging into<br />

the end zone from the 1-yard<br />

line to send the Crusaders into<br />

halftime leading 18-7.<br />

Despite a driving rainstorm,<br />

the second half was an offensive<br />

explosion with both teams<br />

making one big play after<br />

another.<br />

After DelVecchio recovered a<br />

fumble on the Tigers’ first play<br />

from scrimmage in the second half,<br />

Cifuentes scored from the one (Joe<br />

Rivers rush) to make it 26-7.<br />

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countered with a 1-yard run of<br />

his own (Della Valle kick) to<br />

make it 26-14.<br />

DelVecchio (29-yard pass<br />

from Bright) and 43-yard run<br />

by Rivers, sandwiched around<br />

a 50-yard TD run by Terry<br />

made it 39-20. The Tigers<br />

Chase Huntley added a 43-<br />

yard rushing touchdown for<br />

Ipswich to make it 39-27 before<br />

Martinez sealed the deal with<br />

the final score of the game.<br />

The Crusaders will rest up and<br />

get back to practice in preparation<br />

for their Thanksgiving<br />

clash against Catholic Central<br />

League rival St. Mary’s.<br />

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PHOTO | BOB CARBONE<br />

Claudio Rocha was <strong>Peabody</strong>’s top performer.<br />

Fenwick girls steal<br />

cross country show<br />

By Anne Marie Tobin<br />

WRENTHAM — The Bis hop<br />

Fenwick girls cross country team<br />

stole the show at the Eastern Mass<br />

Cross Country Championships<br />

Saturday at the Wrentham<br />

Developmental Center, taking<br />

first place in the Division 6 meet<br />

with 58 points over runner-up<br />

Ipswich, which finished a distant<br />

second with 84 points.<br />

“The girls really controlled the<br />

meet as our depth is our strength<br />

and the girls know that,” said<br />

Fenwick coach Steve Czarnecki.<br />

“They ran really well controlled,<br />

and really ran a great team race.<br />

We were very poised and very athletic<br />

and challenged other teams<br />

to run with them and no one did<br />

or could.”<br />

Junior Ava Mahoney led the<br />

Crusaders with a third-place finish<br />

in 20:16.36, just 40 seconds behind<br />

winner Caitlin Kaprelian of<br />

West Bridgewater (20:16.36).<br />

Also factoring in the team<br />

scoring were senior Nicole Johns<br />

(13th, 21:52.59); senior Olivia<br />

Juneau (14th, 21:53.91); senior<br />

Joy Wambui (22nd, 22:12.94)<br />

and junior Grace Kubat (25th,<br />

22:17.45).<br />

Freshman Catherine Carter<br />

(36th, 22:50.75) and junior<br />

Corinne Ahern (43rd, 23:14.78)<br />

also ran strong races.<br />

Senior Aiden Hill was the top<br />

Crusader in the boys Division 6<br />

race. He finished fifth in 17:<strong>15</strong>.92<br />

and qualified for Sunday’s All-<br />

State Championships at Stanley<br />

Park in Westfield for a third<br />

straight year.<br />

The boys team finished 12th<br />

with 317 points, well behind<br />

Bellingham, which won with 49<br />

points.<br />

“The boys are young and have a<br />

good future and Aiden just ran an<br />

exceptional race,” Czarnecki said.<br />

Freshman Wyatt Burr (26th,<br />

18:18.<strong>11</strong>), junior Kevin Wythe<br />

(91st, 20:18.06), freshman<br />

Matthew Cirelli (105th, 20:46.44)<br />

and freshman Andre Santos<br />

(136th, 22:08.43) also contributed<br />

to the team scoring. Rounding<br />

out the top-seven were junior<br />

Nicholas Park (<strong>15</strong>1st, 22:50.90)<br />

and freshman Ethan Tran (<strong>15</strong>2nd,<br />

22:56.25).<br />

In the Division 1 meets, the<br />

<strong>Peabody</strong> High girls team finished<br />

eighth out of 21 teams with 242<br />

points, while the boys team finished<br />

<strong>15</strong>th out of 24 teams with<br />

372 points. Lexington swept both<br />

team titles, taking the girls race<br />

with 63 points and the boys race<br />

with 83 points. St. John’s Prep finished<br />

a distant runner-up with 136<br />

points.<br />

Senior Claudio Rocha was<br />

the Tanners’ top performer, finishing<br />

fourth in 16:02.74. Other<br />

Tanners scoring in the meet<br />

were senior Ryan Buchanan<br />

(75th, 17:41.42), senior Pablo<br />

Rodriguez (76th, 17:41.43), junior<br />

Matthew Davidson (103rd,<br />

18:07.30) and junior Jacob Farhat<br />

(<strong>11</strong>7th, 18:<strong>15</strong>.37). Juniors Noah<br />

Roar (120th, 18:17.63) and Cam<br />

Rich (124th, 18:20.17) also<br />

participated.<br />

Senior Alexandra Barrett led the<br />

girls team with a 30th place finish<br />

in 20:40.71, while senior Victoria<br />

Lombardi was close behind in<br />

33rd place in 20:41.84. Seniors<br />

Sarah Enes (52nd, 21:00.64),<br />

Shannon O’Connell (58th,<br />

21:12.68) and Lexi Bettencourt<br />

(74th, 21:39.07) rounded out the<br />

top-five Tanners who scored.<br />

Junior Emily McDonald (105th,<br />

22:20.01) and sophomore Cassia<br />

Picardy (<strong>11</strong>8th, 22:58.26) also ran.<br />

WEEKLYNEWS.NET - 978-532-5880 NOVEMBER <strong>15</strong>, 2018<br />

St. John’s soccer team<br />

falls in D1 North final<br />

By Harold Rivera<br />

LYNN — A bittersweet Saturday for St. John’s<br />

Prep athletics ended with a 2-1 loss for the No. 9<br />

Eagles soccer team at the hands of No. 3 Lincoln-<br />

Sudbury in the Division 1 North final at a windy<br />

Manning Field.<br />

The Warriors scored two goals in the first half<br />

and survived a late St. John’s threat in the second<br />

period, when senior forward Sam Smith scored on<br />

a penalty kick, to advance to the state semifinal.<br />

The Eagles end their season at <strong>15</strong>-3-4.<br />

“It was a great year,” St. John’s coach Dave<br />

Crowell said. “I don’t<br />

think anybody expected<br />

us to be here.<br />

We graduated eight<br />

of our starters from<br />

last year. We went to<br />

the EMass Final last<br />

year. This is really<br />

a whole new team,<br />

pretty much. I’m<br />

extremely proud of<br />

these guys and how<br />

far we came. If you<br />

asked me in August if<br />

we’d be here, I’d say<br />

‘no.’ If you asked me<br />

in mid-October, I’d<br />

say ‘we have a pretty<br />

good chance.’ We<br />

beat three really good<br />

teams to get here.”<br />

Eagles goalie<br />

Christian Buckley<br />

played a solid game in<br />

net, keeping Lincoln-<br />

Sudbury’s offense<br />

at bay in the second<br />

half St. John’s within<br />

striking distance.<br />

Buckley finished with<br />

five saves.<br />

“Christian was awesome,”<br />

Crowell said.<br />

COURTESY PHOTO<br />

Gabe Najim scored a goal in St. John’s Prep’s<br />

win over East Boston.<br />

“More so in the second half, I think, because the<br />

game became more open because we were trying<br />

to get forward. Christian’s been the backbone for<br />

us all season.”<br />

Things didn’t start well for the Eagles in this<br />

one. Starting forward/midfielder Ethan Ambrosh,<br />

a junior, suffered a broken ankle in the early minutes<br />

of the game.<br />

After 14 minutes of scoreless play in the first<br />

half, Lincoln-Sudbury’s Joseph Akisik broke<br />

the ice with the game’s first goal. With 12:30 remaining<br />

in the half, Joseph Mepham picked up<br />

a rebound and kicked it into the back of the net<br />

to give the Warriors a 2-0 advantage. Eagles junior<br />

midfielder/forward Kuol Majok sent a few<br />

shots in Warriors goalie Connor Lachman’s direction<br />

but the netminder made the stops. St. John’s<br />

trailed 2-0 at recess.<br />

“I’m not making any excuses but we lost Ethan<br />

in the first couple minutes, he broke his ankle,”<br />

Crowell said. “Lincoln-Sudbury’s a great team.<br />

They scored two good goals. We would’ve liked<br />

another five minutes. We changed our formation<br />

up, we tried to get more forward. We did what we<br />

could. Tonight wasn’t<br />

our night.<br />

“I think the wind<br />

had the effect tonight<br />

more than anything,”<br />

Crowell added. “All<br />

the goals that were<br />

scored were with the<br />

wind at our backs.”<br />

The Warriors came<br />

close to putting the<br />

icing on the cake when<br />

Akisik made his bid<br />

for his second goal of<br />

the night two minutes<br />

into the second period.<br />

Akisik’s shot hit<br />

the post and St. John’s<br />

dodged a bullet. Two<br />

minutes later, Buckley<br />

saved a Warriors free<br />

kick.<br />

After junior midfielder<br />

Zachary Davis<br />

nearly put the Eagles<br />

on the board with a<br />

nifty header, Smith did<br />

the trick with a penalty<br />

kick goal to make it a<br />

2-1 game.<br />

That was all the offense<br />

the Eagles had in<br />

store, however.<br />

St. John’s 2, East Boston 1<br />

At Manning Field Nov. 7, the Eagles just<br />

barely got the better of No. 4 East Boston, 2-1,<br />

in the Division 1 North semifinals. Ambrosh and<br />

Gabriel Najim were the goal scorers, both coming<br />

in the second half.<br />

“Our goal was to play at a pace that they (East<br />

Boston) weren’t used to and to tire them out,<br />

and I think for the most part that worked,” said<br />

Crowell. “We had to hang on a bit at the end, but<br />

we did a good job.”<br />

Catering<br />

available<br />

SU CHANG’S<br />

Authentic Chinese Cuisine<br />

We Wish Everyone A<br />

Very Happy Thanksgiving<br />

– Closed Thanksgiving Day –<br />

Functions<br />

from 2-200<br />

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

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

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

www.SuChangs<strong>Peabody</strong>.com


NOVEMBER <strong>15</strong>, 2018<br />

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

AUTO AUCTION<br />

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

<strong>Peabody</strong>, Ma 01960 that on November 16, 2018 at <strong>11</strong>a.m., a sale will be<br />

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

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

2010 Volkswagon Tiquan<br />

VIN: WVGBV7AX1AW5<strong>15</strong>162<br />

REG: unknown<br />

OWNER: Brian Melendez<br />

16 Linda Ave<br />

Methuen, MA 01844<br />

2007 Saturn Sky<br />

VIN: 1G8MB35B47Y103905<br />

REG: HIA621 MI<br />

OWNER: Christopher Stiffler<br />

333 Ricciuti Dr #904<br />

Quincy, MA 02169<br />

2003 Ford Expedition<br />

VIN: 1FMFU16W03LC<strong>11</strong>178<br />

REG: S69138 MA<br />

OWNER: Marconi Development Group<br />

<strong>15</strong>3 Andover St<br />

Danvers, MA 01923<br />

2005 Dodge Ram <strong>15</strong>00<br />

VIN: 1D7HU16N<strong>15</strong>5528430<br />

REG: S89736 MA<br />

OWNER: TW Cleaning<br />

12 Temple St #1A<br />

Newburyport, MA 01950<br />

Any question please call<br />

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

Weekly News: November 1, 8, <strong>15</strong>, 2018<br />

LEGAL NOTICE<br />

The <strong>Peabody</strong> Board of Health, acting under the authority of Section 31, Chapter<br />

<strong>11</strong>1, of the General Laws of the Commonwealth of Massachusetts, at its public<br />

meeting of October 24, 2018 voted to adopt amendments to its "Regulation of the<br />

<strong>Peabody</strong> Board of Health Restricting the Sale of Tobacco Products."<br />

SUMMARY OF REVISIONS<br />

ACROSS<br />

1 Messy person<br />

5 Fill a pipe<br />

9 Traffic no-no (hyph.)<br />

14 El —, Texas<br />

<strong>15</strong> Sandwich cookie<br />

16 “Walk Away —”<br />

17 1977 whale movie<br />

18 — von Bismarck<br />

19 Outdoes<br />

20 Eggs, to Ovid<br />

21 Ceremonies<br />

23 Remote<br />

25 “Watermark” chanteuse<br />

26 Passe<br />

27 Leg joint<br />

29 Quaker pronoun<br />

32 Kuwaiti leaders<br />

35 Soup du —<br />

36 Mexican mint<br />

37 Mini-pie<br />

38 Bird features<br />

39 Skipper’s place<br />

40 Pods for stews<br />

41 Ocean bird<br />

42 Extinct birds<br />

43 Born<br />

44 Writing fluids<br />

45 Take for a ride<br />

46 Encircle<br />

48 Early settler<br />

52 Sustenance<br />

56 “Shogun” apparel<br />

57 Cays<br />

58 Long ago<br />

59 Road map nos.<br />

60 Carpenter’s tool<br />

61 Adverse fate<br />

62 Winter wear<br />

63 Blisters<br />

64 Millay or Ferber<br />

65 Horde<br />

DOWN<br />

1 Takeoff<br />

2 Insect stage<br />

3 Sesame Street grouch<br />

4 Mae West accessory<br />

5 “Bummer!” (2 wds.)<br />

6 — -craftsy<br />

7 Distribute<br />

8 Less than fair<br />

9 Sophisticated<br />

10 Really small<br />

<strong>11</strong> All in one piece<br />

12 Nerve network<br />

13 Monster’s loch<br />

21 Mouse catchers<br />

22 Goes off course<br />

24 Ventricle neighbor<br />

27 Zen riddles<br />

28 Microwave, slangily<br />

30 Aloha State port<br />

31 Edible roots<br />

32 British school<br />

33 Whip up<br />

34 Uneven<br />

35 Quick pull<br />

36 Cheech’s partner<br />

38 Relaxes, as rules<br />

42 Nincompoop<br />

44 Van Gogh painting<br />

45 Movies<br />

47 Dunne or Castle<br />

48 Madonna role<br />

49 Generator part<br />

50 Skyscraper part (hyph.)<br />

51 Hazy<br />

52 Pinches off<br />

53 European capital<br />

54 Dr. Jekyll and Mr. —<br />

55 Overall feeling<br />

59 Color RV pioneer<br />

· Establishes a maximum number of Tobacco Product Sales Permits and<br />

Adult-Only Retail Tobacco Stores in <strong>Peabody</strong>.<br />

· Restricts the sale of flavored tobacco products to adult-only retail tobacco<br />

stores.<br />

· Prohibits the sale of 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 amended 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 amended regulation is posted on the City of <strong>Peabody</strong> website at<br />

www.peabody-ma.gov. The regulation takes effect January 1, 2019<br />

Weekly News: November <strong>15</strong>, 2018<br />

LYNNFIELD CENTER<br />

WATER DISTRICT<br />

BOARD OF WATER<br />

COMMISSIONERS<br />

PUBLIC HEARING<br />

TAX RATE CLASSIFICATION<br />

The Board of Water Commissioners<br />

of the Lynnfield Center Water<br />

District will be conducting a<br />

PUBLIC HEARING. The subject of<br />

the hearing concerns the allocation<br />

of the Center Water District Tax<br />

levy among the five property<br />

classes, as defined in Section 20A<br />

of Massachusetts General Law,<br />

Chapter 59, for the fiscal year<br />

2019, beginning July 1, 2018.<br />

District residents as well as<br />

interested persons are invited to<br />

attend the hearing to be held on<br />

MONDAY, NOVEMBER 26, 2018 at<br />

6:30 PM in the cafeteria at the<br />

Lynnfield Middle School, 505 Main<br />

Street, Lynnfield, MA. Oral and<br />

signed written testimony may be<br />

submitted at that time.<br />

Constance E. Leccese,<br />

Chairwoman<br />

Board of Water Commissioners<br />

83 Phillips Road<br />

Lynnfield, MA 01940<br />

+1.781.334.3901<br />

www.LCWD.US<br />

Weekly News: November <strong>15</strong>, 2018<br />

Have a story to share?<br />

Need a question answered?<br />

contactus@essexmedia.group<br />

On behalf of the <strong>Peabody</strong> Board of Health<br />

Sharon Cameron<br />

Director of Health and Human Services<br />

City of <strong>Peabody</strong><br />

978-538-5926<br />

Every day<br />

Give us a call


14<br />

WEEKLYNEWS.NET - 978-532-5880 NOVEMBER <strong>15</strong>, 2018<br />

www.gccarpentry.com<br />

General Carpentry<br />

Remodeling & Repairs<br />

Painting & Refinishing<br />

Handyman Services<br />

978 535-7525<br />

Small Jobs Welcomed<br />

FREE ESTIMATES<br />

978-471-8<strong>11</strong>2<br />

J.C.W. - Master Craftsman (Owner)<br />

Chimneys, patios,<br />

walkways, fireplaces,<br />

driveways, stairways,<br />

pointing, etc.<br />

20<br />

YRS<br />

Custom Built-Ins<br />

Cabinetry<br />

Shelving<br />

Storage<br />

Mass. Reg. # 165265<br />

QUALITY<br />

CONSTRUCTION<br />

Remodeling, Roofing, Siding,<br />

Windows, Decks, Kitchen and<br />

Bath Additions and Garages<br />

www.qualityconstruction.name<br />

alwaysqualitywork@gmail.com<br />

781-844-5176<br />

BALDASSARI PAINTING<br />

• Interior/Exterior Painting<br />

• Residential/Commercial<br />

• Wall Papering<br />

• Wall Paper Removal<br />

• Power Washing<br />

• Gutter Cleaning<br />

• Window Washing<br />

FREE<br />

Estimates<br />

Fred Jr. Baldassari<br />

978-688-0161 781-953-6890<br />

BALDASSARIPAINTING.COM<br />

Est. 1975<br />

Licensed<br />

& Insured<br />

BOB’S LANDSCAPING<br />

SERVICE<br />

• FALL CLEAN-UP<br />

• Curbside Pickup<br />

• Weekly maintenance<br />

• Tree and branch removal<br />

• Residential<br />

• Commerical<br />

• Industrial<br />

ALL PAVING INSTALLED BY<br />

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978-535-0507<br />

Free Estimates<br />

CUSTOM PAVING<br />

3rd Generation Paving Contractor<br />

• Emergency Winter Maintenance<br />

• Parking Lots • Patchwork<br />

• Private Roads • Sealcoating<br />

Serving the North Shore since 1981<br />

WEST<br />

PEABODY<br />

(978) 535-8980<br />

(800) 227-1652<br />

www.CustomAsphaltPaving.com<br />

Driveway plowing & walkway shoveling<br />

Call 781-731-5591<br />

Snow Removal<br />

By Thomas Kennedy<br />

Have something to sell?<br />

We can help!<br />

Real Estate Transfers<br />

The Leonard Co. is a cleaning<br />

contractor for condominium<br />

associations<br />

The Leonard Co.<br />

Residential Window<br />

& Screen Cleaning<br />

Snow Blowing Services<br />

Ice Melt Application<br />

(no salt or sand)<br />

Power Washing<br />

Comp. Clean-outs<br />

Light Demolition<br />

theleonardco.com<br />

Call 617-512-7849<br />

for a FREE estimate<br />

or email: fondinib@aol.com<br />

If you need it clean,<br />

we’re on the scene...<br />

service<br />

LYNNFIELD<br />

120 LOCKSLEY RD<br />

Jessica E Incerto<br />

S: Gregory Bruno &<br />

Jessica Bruno<br />

$402,000<br />

B: David J Mendonca &<br />

Juana D Merida<br />

$1,300,000<br />

S: Susan E Powers<br />

B: Albert Divirgilio &<br />

PEABODY<br />

Virginia Divirgilio<br />

S: Jennifer L Decker<br />

68 GARDNER ST<br />

68 ANDOVER ST $421,000<br />

$380,000<br />

B: Lorimer M Kaplan &<br />

B: Jorge A Pineda Corey D Williams<br />

4 ROURKE LN<br />

S: Pamela Gruntkosky S: Brigid A Mcniff Tr, Tr<br />

$835,000<br />

for Claire RT<br />

B: Richard Archambault<br />

228 BARTHOLOMEW ST<br />

& Susan E Archambault<br />

$650,000<br />

35 HARRIS ST<br />

S: Cheryl Iby & Eric Iby<br />

B: Ganal F Jacob & $400,000<br />

13 UNDERHILL RD<br />

$465,000<br />

B: Terri S Gill-Rosa Tr, Tr<br />

for RT Rosa RT<br />

Evon B Gerges<br />

S: Kevin Li & Qi Li<br />

9 DALE ST<br />

$420,000<br />

B: Thu N Le<br />

S: Jonathan D Sheldon<br />

& Meredith A Sheldon<br />

14 HOWARD AVE<br />

S: Marjorie L Potter B: Matthew Mccarthy & $400,000<br />

6 WING RD<br />

$680,000<br />

B: Anthony E Incerto &<br />

Richard J Sims Jr<br />

S: Richard J Sims Jr<br />

53 ENDICOTT ST<br />

B: Camila S Salazar &<br />

Luz A Salazar<br />

S: Nancy L Lynch Tr, Tr<br />

for Hodge FTt<br />

• CARPENTRY • TILE<br />

• PAINTING<br />

978-314-4191<br />

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Follow us<br />

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Paul DeNisco<br />

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Brick • Block • Stone<br />

Concrete • Tile<br />

978-532-4066<br />

Repairs - Big or Small<br />

RELOCATING?<br />

FREE COMPUTER CHECKUP<br />

A $75 value!: A complete review of<br />

your computer system, Computer<br />

services, support and training is also<br />

available. Call Chris at All-Tech<br />

Networks today for immediate scheduling.<br />

978-535-4193<br />

Find<br />

SERVICES<br />

MISC.<br />

SAVINGS<br />

in the classifieds<br />

Find great<br />

deals in the<br />

classifieds!<br />

“Helpful tips” for a S-M-O-O-T-H trouble-free move!<br />

Designate a drawer for essentials such as<br />

sheets and towels for quick access the<br />

first night you move into your new home.<br />

Plan a garage/yard sale before you move.<br />

Fresh coffee, baking soda, or charcoal in a<br />

sock, placed inside your refrigerator will<br />

keep the inside smelling fresh and clean.


NOVEMBER <strong>15</strong>, 2018<br />

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

COLDWELL BANKER<br />

Lynnfield | 5/4.1 | $2,199,000<br />

JUST LISTED 6 Ramsdell Way<br />

Stunning Colonial set back on lavish grounds<br />

in a desirable million-dollar neighborhood.<br />

Louise Touchette 617-605-0555<br />

Search 72422368 on cbhomes.com<br />

Lynnfield | 5/3.2 | $1,679,000<br />

576 Lowell Street<br />

Newly constructed energy efficient home offers<br />

exquisite craftsmanship with luxurious features.<br />

Louise Touchette 617-605-0555<br />

Search 72413979 on cbhomes.com<br />

Lynnfield | 5/4.1 | $1,500,000<br />

<strong>11</strong> North Hill Drive<br />

Car Enthusiasts take notice! 7-12 car garage<br />

with this Sprawling Contemporary in one of<br />

Lynnfield’ sought after neighborhoods.<br />

Debbie Caniff 617-771-2827<br />

Search 72332488 on cbhomes.com<br />

Lynnfield | 4/2.1 | $1,100,000<br />

5 Lil’s Way<br />

Entertainment size rooms, hardwood floors,<br />

open floor plan throughout. Great cul-de-sac!<br />

Debbie Caniff 617-771-2827<br />

Search 72361992 on cbhomes.com<br />

CONGRATULATIONS<br />

To Our Agents Of The Month<br />

Lynnfield | 4/3 | $739,900<br />

35 Bishop Lane<br />

Sprawling full basement ranch located in one<br />

of Lynnfields sought after neighborhoods.<br />

Dan Donovan 617-304-9976<br />

Search 72385971 on cbhomes.com<br />

Lynnfield | 4/2 | $674,900<br />

<strong>15</strong> Saunders Road<br />

Four bedrooms, 2 full baths, a flexible floor<br />

plan, and a private back yard.<br />

Debbie Caniff 617-771-2827<br />

Search 72414760 on cbhomes.com<br />

Joyce Cucchiara<br />

Louise Touchette<br />

Evelyn Rockas<br />

Lynnfield | 3/2 | $629,900<br />

JUST LISTED 623 Salem Street<br />

Another beautifully renovated home in<br />

Lynnfield! It doesn’t get any better than this.<br />

Joe Addario 781-820-3672<br />

Search 72422139 on cbhomes.com<br />

Nikki Martin<br />

Joe Addario<br />

Carol DiCiaccio<br />

<strong>Peabody</strong> | 4/2.1 | $599,900<br />

JUST LISTED 13 Tara Road<br />

Instantly appealing Colonial home with an<br />

inviting farmer’s porch in one of <strong>Peabody</strong>’s<br />

most sought-after neighborhoods.<br />

Joyce Cucchiara 978-808-<strong>15</strong>97<br />

Search 7242<strong>15</strong>55 on cbhomes.com<br />

<strong>Peabody</strong> | 3/1.1 | $529,900<br />

Pending <strong>15</strong> Catherine Drive<br />

Great living space in this split entry style<br />

home located in the desirable Burke School<br />

Neighborhood of West <strong>Peabody</strong>!<br />

Joyce Cucchiara 978-808-<strong>15</strong>97<br />

Search 72419163 on cbhomes.com<br />

Rossetti/Poti Team<br />

Stephen Velonis<br />

<strong>Peabody</strong> | 4/2 | $579,900<br />

167 Russell Street<br />

Beautiful renovated cape style home that<br />

offers that HGTV look for today’s buyer!<br />

Joyce Cucchiara 978-808-<strong>15</strong>97<br />

Search 724<strong>15</strong>914 on cbhomes.com<br />

<strong>Peabody</strong> | 3/2 | $459,900<br />

2-A Farm Ave<br />

Awesome Garrison home with lots of nice<br />

living space for the family.<br />

Joyce Cucchiara 978-808-<strong>15</strong>97<br />

Search 72409337 on cbhomes.com<br />

ColdwellBankerHomes.com<br />

<strong>Peabody</strong> | 3/1 | $429,900<br />

Pending 1 Bradford Road<br />

Don’t miss this full basement 7 room, 3 Bedroom<br />

Ranch that’s nestled on a 20,900 sq. ft. level lot.<br />

Joe Addario 781-820-3672<br />

Search 72414465 on cbhomes.com<br />

<strong>Peabody</strong> | 3/1 | $329,900<br />

7B Felton Street<br />

Come home for the Holidays to this sun-filled<br />

5 Room 3 Bedroom Garden Style Condo featuring<br />

open concept living, attached Garage,<br />

three season Sunroom, and private Deck.<br />

Evelyn Rockas 617-256-8500<br />

Search 72253165 on cbhomes.com<br />

Christopher Polak, VP/Managing Broker 1085 Summer Street | Lynnfield, 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. ©2018 Coldwell Banker Residential Brokerage. All Rights Reserved. Coldwell Banker Residential Brokerage fully supports the principles of the Fair Housing Act and the Equal<br />

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

Middleton | 2/2.1 | $549,900<br />

12 Meeting House Square<br />

Beautiful updated Cherry Kitchen w/Granite<br />

Countertops and S S Appliances, gleaming<br />

hardwoods in LR and Dining Room.<br />

Carol DiCiaccio 781-820-3517<br />

Search 72384001 on cbhomes.com


16<br />

WEEKLYNEWS.NET - 978-532-5880 NOVEMBER <strong>15</strong>, 2018<br />

GEORGETOWN - $389,900<br />

SAUGUS - $369,000<br />

LYNNFIELD - $469,900<br />

JUST LISTED!<br />

NEW PRICE!<br />

JUST MOVE IN! This 6 room remodeled Ranch<br />

home. Updates include: vinyl siding and trim,<br />

windows, doors, plumbing, electrical upgrade<br />

and central air, granite counters, new stainless<br />

steel appliances, gas stove, open to a family<br />

room addition and living room with stone<br />

fireplace.<br />

EVENINGS: 978-273-0699<br />

CLASSIC CAPE, gleaming hardwood floors<br />

throughout the first level large kitchen with<br />

breakfast bar. Master bedroom is the entire<br />

second floor which has potential to be a fourth<br />

bedroom or office.<br />

EVENINGS: 978-590-1628<br />

EXCEPTIONAL RANCH IN PRISTINE CONDITION.<br />

Fireplace living room, newer granite kitchen 2<br />

bedrooms, den, hardwood floors, cenral air, security,<br />

replacement windows, and 1 car attached garage.<br />

Nice yard, deck, storage shed and side driveway.<br />

Great Starter home or condo alternative.<br />

EVENINGS: 617-797-2222<br />

PEABODY - $4<strong>15</strong>,000<br />

LYNNFIELD - $449,999<br />

SALE PENDING!<br />

GREAT OPPORTUNITY! DUPLEX STYLE 2<br />

family in good condition. Each unit has living<br />

room, kitchen dining room area , 2 bedrooms and<br />

1 full bath Gas Heat. Plenty of street parking.<br />

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EVENINGS: 617-797-2222<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 />

LYNNFIELD - $549,900<br />

LYNNFIELD - $549,900<br />

SALEM - $399,900<br />

GREAT LOCATION FOR THIS 4 BEDROOM<br />

COLONIAL. Fireplaced living room, expansive<br />

kitchen with granite counters opens to family<br />

room. Spacious master with full bath, balcony<br />

and great closet space. New 4 bedroom septic!<br />

EVENINGS: 617-797-2222<br />

LOVELY ENGLISH TUDOR. Features 3<br />

bedrooms, 1.5 baths, hardwood floors, updated<br />

cherry kitchen with granite, high ceilings, central<br />

air, newer gas heat, lower level playroom.<br />

Private lot.<br />

EVENINGS: 978-979-3243 OR 978-979-7993<br />

ONLY A COUPLE BLOCKS AWAY FROM<br />

SALEM HARBOR! Walk to the Forest River Park.<br />

3 bedroom Colonial with large rooms. 2 driveways,<br />

one on each side of the house. Large eat-in kitchen<br />

with rear mudroom. Replacement windows. This<br />

one is ready for your finishing touches!<br />

EVENINGS: 617-791-2922<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 />

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, Lynnfield • (781) 334.3137 & (781) 246.2100

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