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NOVEMBER <strong>22</strong>, 2018 • VOL. 62, NO. 47<br />

NEWS<br />

SERVING THE COMMUNITY SINCE 1957<br />

16 PAGES • ONE DOLLAR<br />

IN THE NEWS<br />

INSIDE<br />

Our annual<br />

Thanksgiving<br />

football section<br />

Crystal (clear) Lake<br />

Page 9<br />

Stricter tobacco<br />

rules coming<br />

Pages 10-<strong>11</strong><br />

PHOTOS: <strong>Peabody</strong><br />

Historical Society<br />

Craft Fair<br />

PRSRT STD<br />

ECRWSSEDDM<br />

U.S. Postage<br />

Paid<br />

Permit #66<br />

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

PHOTO | SPENSER HASAK<br />

Mayor Edward A. Bettencourt Jr. speaks to a crowd during the reopening of Crystal Lake. Story on Page 3.<br />

From <strong>Peabody</strong><br />

to Hollywood<br />

to Oscar buzz<br />

By Thomas Grillo<br />

Brian Hayes Currie may not<br />

be a big celebrity, but that could<br />

change now that “Green Book”<br />

is in movie theaters nationwide<br />

this week.<br />

The 57-year-old Lynn native,<br />

who moved to <strong>Peabody</strong> as an<br />

adolescent, is co-author of the<br />

film that is getting lots of Oscar<br />

buzz.<br />

Based on a true story critics<br />

have called a mix of “Driving<br />

Miss Daisy,” “The Odd<br />

Couple,” and “Planes, Trains<br />

and Automobiles,” it’s the tale<br />

of Dr. Don Shirley, a classically-trained<br />

African-American pianist<br />

played by Mahershala Ali.<br />

He tours the South in the 1960s<br />

with chauffeur-bodyguard,<br />

Frank Anthony Vallelonga, an<br />

Italian New York City bouncer,<br />

OSCAR, PAGE 2<br />

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WEEKLYNEWS.NET - 978-532-5880 NOVEMBER <strong>22</strong>, 2018<br />

From <strong>Peabody</strong> to<br />

Hollywood to Oscar buzz<br />

OSCAR<br />

From page 1<br />

portrayed by Viggo Mortensen.<br />

Given the turbulent racial<br />

times, the eight-week road trip<br />

concert tour of the Jim Crow<br />

south is filled with danger.<br />

The chance to co-write the<br />

story was an accident, Currie<br />

said.<br />

“One of the guys I met years<br />

ago when I worked in nightclubs<br />

was Nick Vallelonga, my buddy,<br />

a co-writer of the film and whose<br />

father this is about,” said Currie,<br />

a St. John’s Prep (Danvers) graduate.<br />

“Nick kept this story close<br />

to the vest because he wanted<br />

to make it himself. When he finally<br />

told me, I offered to write<br />

and produce it with him, and he<br />

agreed.”<br />

Currie pitched the idea to director<br />

Peter Farrelly, best known<br />

for “Dumb & Dumber” and<br />

“Something About Mary,” with<br />

brother, Bobby Farrelly.<br />

Peter Farrelly liked the idea<br />

and a film was born.<br />

Up to now, Currie has had a<br />

few small roles in movies, including<br />

“Armageddon” and<br />

“Con Air.” He was a screaming<br />

fan in “Fever Pitch,” the Farrelly<br />

brothers’ romantic comedy starring<br />

Drew Barrymore and Jimmy<br />

Fallon filmed at Fenway Park.<br />

But it’s a new world now.<br />

So far, the film has captured<br />

more than a dozen film festival<br />

awards. The latest is the People’s<br />

Choice Award at the Toronto<br />

International Film Festival.<br />

“It’s amazing how things<br />

can change,” he said. “All of a<br />

sudden agents are chasing me<br />

down. After a friend wrote “Con<br />

Air” and tasted success, he told<br />

me that if your apartment catches<br />

fire, make sure you get all your<br />

old scripts before they burn.<br />

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Daily 9 a.m. - 8 p.m.<br />

Weather permitting<br />

Free hot chocolate and candy canes<br />

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AFTER SCHOOL<br />

MARTIAL ARTS<br />

WE TRANSPORT<br />

Suddenly, there’s a new interest.”<br />

While the story alone is compelling,<br />

Currie said the casting<br />

of Mortensen and Ali was brilliant<br />

and could have made all the<br />

difference.<br />

“Peter Farrelly came up with<br />

genius idea of Viggo Mortensen<br />

and Ali,” he said. “As a writer,<br />

when you have actors that can<br />

make it look that easy, it makes<br />

we, as writers, look smart.”<br />

The film title is taken from<br />

“The Negro Motorist Green-<br />

Book,” a travel guide published<br />

from 1936 to 1966 to advise<br />

black travelers on where to stay<br />

and what to avoid in the South.<br />

Amid the tension and hostility<br />

of the times, the film also offers<br />

glimpses of humor.<br />

There’s a scene where Tony<br />

teaches Don about fried chicken<br />

and can’t believe the African-<br />

American man never had it<br />

before.<br />

Mortensen, who gained<br />

40 pounds for the film, and<br />

had standout performances in<br />

“Captain Fantastic” and “A<br />

History of Violence,” ate 13<br />

chicken breasts in one scene,<br />

Currie said.<br />

There are laughs too when<br />

the musician helps his driver<br />

write letters to his wife, Dolores,<br />

played by Linda Cardellini.<br />

Currie said he doesn’t object to<br />

the comparison of “Green Book”<br />

to other road trip and buddy films.<br />

“’Driving Miss Daisy’ won an<br />

Academy Award and that doesn’t<br />

hurt, and the ‘Odd Couple’ is an<br />

all-time great,” he said.<br />

USA Today says Mortensen<br />

and Ali are spot-on with their<br />

character quirks, from Tony’s<br />

thick “Sopranos”- ready accent<br />

and street smarts to Doc’s upper-crust<br />

demeanor that belies his<br />

insecurities. They grow closer,<br />

the reviewer wrote, as Doc helps<br />

his driver write love letters, and<br />

Tony witnesses up close how<br />

southerners treat black men.<br />

Rolling Stone magazine loved<br />

it too.<br />

“In a time when our nation<br />

is more divided than ever, the<br />

movie offers the possibility of<br />

redemption,” the magazine reads.<br />

“Thanks to the dream team of<br />

Mortensen and Ali, audiences<br />

will be cheering. And they’ll be<br />

right.”<br />

INDEX<br />

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

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

Obituaries ................................7<br />

Religious Notes .......................9<br />

Seniors ....................................5


NOVEMBER <strong>22</strong>, 2018<br />

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

Crystal (clear) Lake<br />

By Thomas Grillo<br />

Despite freezing temperatures<br />

and the threat of snow,<br />

more than 200 residents huddled<br />

in winter coats, scarves,<br />

and gloves at the reopening of<br />

Crystal Lake last week.<br />

In the 1970s, a grass-roots effort<br />

to save the eight-acre lake<br />

from becoming a swamp was<br />

launched. With a $3.5 million<br />

investment of city, state, and<br />

grant funds, work was completed<br />

to make it a vibrant recreation<br />

area again.<br />

"This is a historic moment<br />

for the city," said Mayor<br />

Edward A. Bettencourt Jr.<br />

who spoke at the lake's edge<br />

without a coat. "It's a day you<br />

and I have looked forward to<br />

for many years. This is a proud<br />

day for all of us to see this<br />

project become a reality."<br />

When temperatures rise next<br />

spring, people from across the<br />

city can enjoy the park complete<br />

with paddle boats, picnic<br />

tables and benches, a new footpath<br />

on the lake's south side,<br />

and a fountain in the lake.<br />

"I'm so excited because all<br />

those memories that took place<br />

years ago on this spot will be<br />

recreated for a new generation,"<br />

the mayor said.<br />

In 2016, the City Council approved<br />

a $2 million loan to help<br />

pay for the dredging. Earlier this<br />

year, the City Council approved<br />

$750,000 for the final phase of<br />

the Crystal Lake project. A portion<br />

of the money will be used<br />

for routine maintenance.<br />

Bettencourt said something<br />

of this magnitude can't be done<br />

alone. He said it was the result<br />

of many people working long<br />

hours, often for no pay, to make<br />

it happen.<br />

He singled out the city's State<br />

House delegation including<br />

former state Rep. Joyce Spiliotis<br />

to secure the initial $800,000 to<br />

jumpstart the project.<br />

"She went to bat for us along<br />

with state Rep. Ted Speliotis<br />

and Sen. Fred Berry to get<br />

us that seed money to get us<br />

going," he said.<br />

The mayor also praised<br />

the city's Parks Recreation<br />

& Forestry, Community<br />

Development, the City Council,<br />

the <strong>Peabody</strong> Municipal Light<br />

Plant, and the Department<br />

of Public Works, for lending<br />

a hand. He said state Rep.<br />

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

and state Senator Joan Lovely<br />

(D-Salem) also played major<br />

roles in lobbying for money to<br />

fund the improvements.<br />

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Former Ward 6 City<br />

Councilor Barry Sinowitz, who<br />

was involved in the early effort<br />

to save the lake, said the<br />

opening day turnout was like a<br />

reunion.<br />

"There are so many friends<br />

here who worked on this<br />

project, it's gratifying," he<br />

said. "This project began more<br />

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it languished again, and then<br />

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More than 50,000 cubic yards,<br />

or 4,200 truckloads of sediment<br />

were dredged from the<br />

lake. The result has been to<br />

increase its depth from three<br />

to eight feet and to restore the<br />

water to its natural flow and<br />

clarity. With dredging complete,<br />

Phase 2 added docks for<br />

fishing, boats, a gazebo, and<br />

new landscaping.<br />

"Before the dredging was<br />

complete, you could have<br />

walked across the pond and<br />

just be up to your knees,"<br />

Bettencourt said. "That's all<br />

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4<br />

WEEKLYNEWS.NET - 978-532-5880 NOVEMBER <strong>22</strong>, 2018<br />

PEABODY WEEKLY<br />

NEWS<br />

Police Log<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 />

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Arrests<br />

Kervens D. Blaise, 24, of 8<br />

Berry St., was arrested on a warrant<br />

at 1:24 p.m. Saturday.<br />

Eric Boga, 28, of 6 Pine Road,<br />

Apt. 2, Beverly, was arrested<br />

and charged with operation of a<br />

motor vehicle with a suspended<br />

license at 3:<strong>11</strong> p.m. Friday.<br />

Derek E. Locke, 29, of <strong>11</strong>5<br />

Lowell St., Apt. 2, was arrested<br />

and charged with nighttime<br />

building breaking and entering<br />

for a felony at 2:31 a.m. Sunday.<br />

Juan Luis Perez-Lopez, 35,<br />

of 198 Williams Ave., Apt. 1,<br />

Lynn, was arrested on Friday at<br />

1:17 p.m. following a traffic stop<br />

at Sears Automotive at 210S<br />

Andover St. and charged with<br />

the unlicensed operation of a<br />

motor vehicle. The vehicle was<br />

towed by Arrington Towing.<br />

Gramoz Stefo, 31, of 29<br />

Walsh Ave., Apt. 1, was arrested<br />

and charged with operating after<br />

a revoked license and on a warrant<br />

at 5:49 p.m. Friday.<br />

Christina Ann Pimenta, 26,<br />

of 16 Fulton St., was arrested<br />

following a motor vehicle traffic<br />

stop on Thursday at 12:17<br />

a.m. at 48 Andover St. and 2<br />

Buttonwood Lane and charged<br />

with three counts of drug<br />

possession.<br />

Wilmar Lopez-Perez, 19,<br />

of 21 Highland Ave., Apt. 1,<br />

Lynn, was arrested following<br />

a motor vehicle traffic stop on<br />

Buttonwood Lane on Thursday<br />

at <strong>11</strong>:17 a.m. and charged with<br />

the unlicensed operation of a<br />

motor vehicle, marked lanes violation,<br />

and no inspection sticker.<br />

Nicole Armstrong, 26, homeless,<br />

was arrested at Sports<br />

Collectibles at 14 <strong>Peabody</strong><br />

Square for disorderly conduct<br />

and resisting arrest on Thursday<br />

at 2:<strong>11</strong> p.m.<br />

Summons<br />

Jose Burgos-Hernandez, 47,<br />

of 92 Cottage St., Chelsea, was<br />

issued a summons on Thursday<br />

3:20 p.m. following a traffic<br />

stop on Dearborn Road and<br />

charged with operating a motor<br />

vehicle with a suspended license.<br />

Vehicle towed by Gaeta’s<br />

Towing.<br />

Mitat Cela, 56, of 16 Gardner<br />

St., Salem will be summoned for<br />

operating a motor vehicle with a<br />

suspended license, and failure to<br />

yield, following a motor vehicle<br />

crash at Kappy’s Liquor at 175<br />

Andover St. on Friday at 10:41<br />

a.m. Motor vehicle was towed<br />

by Arrington Towing.<br />

Accidents<br />

Crossing Guard reports a<br />

tractor trailer is parked at 48<br />

Lynnfield St. 2 Cashman Road<br />

and is causing a hazard on Friday<br />

at 8:29 a.m. The officer issued a<br />

parking ticket to Massachusetts<br />

licence plate no. S49<strong>22</strong>0 for obstructing<br />

the street.<br />

Caller reports her motor vehicle<br />

was struck while parked<br />

in the Macy’s parking lot on<br />

Andover Street and the driver<br />

took off on Friday at 2:43 p.m.<br />

Officer will document the<br />

damage.<br />

A report of a motor vehicle<br />

crash with personal injury at<br />

1:13 a.m. Saturday at Amergent<br />

at 9 Centennial Drive. One drive<br />

was taken to Beverly Hospital<br />

after a two-car crash.<br />

A report of a two-car motor<br />

vehicle crash on Lowell Street<br />

on Wednesday at 5:37 p.m.<br />

Officer reported there were no<br />

injuries and will document.<br />

A motor vehicle crash was<br />

reported on Jubilee Drive on<br />

Thursday at 7:06 a.m. Officer reports<br />

gone upon on arrival.<br />

Minor one-car motor vehicle<br />

crash reported on Thursday at<br />

Dunkin’ Donuts at 8:32 a.m.<br />

Officer reports no injuries or<br />

tow.<br />

Massachusetts State Police<br />

reported a motor vehicle crash<br />

on Thursday at 8:36 a.m. on<br />

Routes 1 and 128 North.<br />

Animal Control<br />

Report of an injured squirrel<br />

at <strong>22</strong> Longview Way on<br />

Wednesday at 5:49 p.m. Officer<br />

reports animal was moved to the<br />

end of the street.<br />

Unknown caller reported a<br />

small white dog running loose<br />

near Tremont Street on Thursday<br />

at 2:50 p.m. Gone upon arrival.<br />

Complaints<br />

A report of a neighborhood<br />

dispute at 4:57 p.m. Friday at 29<br />

Walsh Ave. A landlord reported<br />

an argument over a missing<br />

Christmas tree in the basement<br />

from a tenant.<br />

A caller reported suspicious<br />

activity after seeing a person<br />

going through cars at 1:59 a.m.<br />

Saturday at Tannery Apartments<br />

at 50 Warren St.<br />

A caller reported suspicious<br />

activity at 9:29 a.m. Saturday<br />

as he believed someone tried to<br />

gain access to his home while he<br />

was away on vacation. The caller<br />

noticed a mark on his door, but<br />

police reported no access was<br />

gained and nothing was missing.<br />

A report of a disturbance at<br />

8:39 p.m. Saturday at NFI — MA<br />

Group Home at 136 Washington<br />

St. A caller reported a resident<br />

was out of control and had a<br />

butter knife in his or her possession.<br />

The person was taken<br />

to Salem Hospital; at 1:45 a.m.<br />

Sunday at 149 Washington St. A<br />

caller reported drunken karaoke<br />

singing from the apartment.<br />

A report of a suspicious motor<br />

vehicle at 3:<strong>22</strong> a.m. Sunday at 7<br />

Proctor St. A caller reported a<br />

car running and smoking. Police<br />

reported the vehicle was on fire,<br />

which was extinguished.<br />

North Shore Medical Center<br />

Emergency Room requested a<br />

well-being check for a woman<br />

from Endicott Street who walked<br />

out of the ER with an IV in her<br />

arm on Wednesday at 4:36 p.m.<br />

Officer spoke with woman who<br />

is with her son. She did not have<br />

an IV in her arm and all is OK.<br />

Lahey Behavioral Services<br />

dialed 9<strong>11</strong> to say a party at 91<br />

Central St. sent an email to the<br />

department indicating suicidal<br />

thoughts on Wednesday at 4:40<br />

p.m. Prior to the end of the call<br />

to police caller said she received<br />

a call from Emergency Services<br />

who said they are in touch with<br />

the woman and have a plan.<br />

Officer performed a well-being<br />

check and all is OK.<br />

Resident from <strong>11</strong> Charlotte<br />

St. asked for an officer to speak<br />

to a woman banging at her<br />

door and refusing to leave on<br />

Wednesday at 6:07 p.m. Officer<br />

reports woman is lost and will<br />

be transported.<br />

Caller reported someone in<br />

a Malibu is driving erratically<br />

on Wednesday at 6:30 p.m. at<br />

2 Walnut and 3 Central streets.<br />

Officer reports gone upon arrival.<br />

An unwanted woman was reported<br />

on Wednesday at 6:46<br />

p.m. at Homewood Suites at<br />

57 Newbury St. Officer reports<br />

woman was in the process of<br />

leaving when they arrived.<br />

Mother requested a wellbeing<br />

check on Wednesday at<br />

7:14 p.m. for her daughter at<br />

the Plaza Hotel at 125 Newbury<br />

St. who has tested positive for<br />

fentanyl and is pregnant. Officer<br />

reports daughter was checked<br />

by EMS and refused treatment.<br />

Black Ford Fusion with a<br />

flat tire reported at Bunghole<br />

Liquors at 79 Lowell St. on<br />

Wednesday at 7:38 p.m.<br />

Possible water break reported<br />

at 2 Walsh Ave. and 48 Driscoll<br />

St. on Wednesday at 8:37 p.m.<br />

Officer checked the area, does<br />

not appear to be a water main<br />

break.<br />

Suspicious black Jeep<br />

Grand Cherokee reported at<br />

17 Catherine Drive and 2 Flynn<br />

Road driving up and down the<br />

street. Officer spoke to operator<br />

who is a private investigator and<br />

advised him to register at the<br />

<strong>Peabody</strong> Police Department the<br />

next time he is in town.<br />

Illegal dumping reported at<br />

1200 Salem St. on Thursday at<br />

2:04 p.m.<br />

Medical Aid<br />

Request for an ambulance<br />

on Thursday at 5:10 p.m. from<br />

15 Central St., Apt. 302 where<br />

a woman may have fallen and<br />

broken her elbow. Atlantic<br />

Ambulance responded to the<br />

call.<br />

Vandalism<br />

A report of vandalism at<br />

8:30 a.m. Sunday at Chabad of<br />

<strong>Peabody</strong> at 682 Lowell St. The<br />

rabbi reported damage to the<br />

temple.<br />

Report of a break-in to a<br />

landscape trailer at Marotta<br />

Landscaping at 25 Sheffield<br />

Drive and two leaf blowers were<br />

stolen on Thursday at 7:36 a.m.<br />

Officer will document.


NOVEMBER <strong>22</strong>, 2018<br />

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

LYNNFIELD SENIOR<br />

CENTER ACTIVITIES<br />

Trips<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 />

.<br />

Activities<br />

Thursday, November <strong>22</strong><br />

Center closed for<br />

Thanksgiving<br />

*****<br />

Friday, November 23<br />

Center closed<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. Walmart<br />

shopping, gentle Pilates.<br />

10 a.m. Line dancing, creative<br />

writing, sit and tone<br />

with Darci, tap dance. <strong>11</strong><br />

a.m. Ageless movement.<br />

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

salad with shrimp, lunch<br />

and movie: While You Were<br />

Sleeping. Noon Bowling, oil<br />

painting class, caregiver’s<br />

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

Jongg, Mexican train.<br />

*****<br />

Tuesday, November 27<br />

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

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

Exercise under the belt. 9<br />

a.m. Walking meditation.<br />

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

Grocery shopping, intermediate<br />

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

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

a.m. Mickey Mouse birthday<br />

lunch and movie. 12:30 p.m.<br />

Computer class sign up,<br />

bridge, watercolor.<br />

*****<br />

Wednesday, November 28<br />

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

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

a.m. Artist drop-in, trip to<br />

One Dollar Zone, alterations<br />

Seniors<br />

with Anita, Tripoley, manicurist.<br />

9:30 a.m. Aerobic’s<br />

video. 10 a.m. Chair yoga,<br />

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

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

Lunch: Meatloaf. 12:15 p.m.<br />

Pokeno, Canasta, bridge.<br />

PETER A. TORIGIAN<br />

SENIOR CENTER<br />

Thursday, November <strong>22</strong><br />

Center closed for<br />

Thanksgiving<br />

*****<br />

Friday, November 23<br />

Center closed<br />

*****<br />

Monday, November 26<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>:15<br />

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

Model ship building, Bingo.<br />

2 p.m. Caregivers support<br />

group. 3 p.m. Board of directors<br />

meeting. 6:30 p.m.<br />

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

*****<br />

Tuesday, November 27<br />

9 a.m. Hug-a-bears. 9:15<br />

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

Veterans group, exercise<br />

with Edye, Japanese Bunka.<br />

10:30 a.m. Line dancing.<br />

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

Crocheting/knitting.<br />

*****<br />

Wednesday, November 28<br />

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

repair, rug hooking, wood<br />

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

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

building. 1 p.m. Crazy cards.<br />

Prime Rib<br />

Served with Baked Potato, Veggies, and Salad<br />

All Day Monday & Tuesday for only<br />

$<br />

19.95<br />

MEDS THAT INTERFERE WITH CALCIUM ABSORPTION<br />

Anyone looking to get sufficient dietary or supplemental calcium to<br />

stave off bone loss should know that there are several medications that<br />

can interfere with the body’s ability to absorb calcium. Common culprits<br />

include medications used to treat heartburn and “gastroesophageal reflux<br />

disorder” (GERD), such as omeprazole (Prilosec), lansoprazole (Prevacid),<br />

and esomeprazole (Nexium). These medications decrease the production<br />

of stomach acid, which leads to decreased calcium absorption. Hence,<br />

they are recommended for short-term use. Other heartburn medications<br />

that lower stomach acid production include ranitidine (Zantac), famotidine<br />

(Pepcid), and cimetidine (Tagamet). In addition, it should be noted that<br />

long-term use of oral corticosteroids, such as prednisolone and hydrocortisone,<br />

can block calcium production.<br />

If you have certain medical conditions, you may not have a choice but<br />

to take one of these medications. If you do, it is especially important to<br />

take steps to protect your bones. To learn more, please call or visit<br />

VILLAGE PHARMACY in the Colonial Shopping Center (781-334-3133).<br />

We feature ComputerRX for online refills and Parata Pas packaging<br />

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

HINT: Medications used to treat high blood pressure and heart failure called<br />

“loop diuretics,” which include furosemide (Lasix), bumetanide (Bumex), and<br />

torsemide (Dermadex), can also have an impact on calcium absorption.<br />

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

Letter To<br />

The Editor<br />

We love to hear from you.<br />

Write to the Editor,<br />

tgrillo@essexmediagroup.com<br />

Weekly ask<br />

the expert<br />

Question: What is the difference between a<br />

pre-approval and a pre-qualification?<br />

This week’s expert is Tom Patch, MLO# 142695<br />

Answer: There is a huge difference between preapproval<br />

and pre-qualification. A true pre-approval<br />

or pre-qualification requires some work on behalf<br />

of your lender. If they ask you how much you want<br />

to be approved for and then send you a letter<br />

without reviewing your documentation the letter is<br />

worthless and merely providing you with a<br />

guide to what you might qualify for.<br />

A pre-qualification is an establishment of a<br />

borrower’s qualification for a mortgage loan<br />

amount for a specific range, based on some<br />

varying level of examination of the<br />

borrower’s assets, debts and income and it is<br />

done by the Loan Officer. In many cases when a<br />

realtor knows that you have a true “pre-qual”<br />

from a reputable mortgage lender this puts you<br />

in a stronger position to get your offer accepted.<br />

A pre-approval by contrast is an in-depth examination of<br />

a borrower’s assets and income documentation. This<br />

involves a full examination by an underwriter; the<br />

individual approving your loan. Think of this as<br />

a commitment to lend. Not only does this give<br />

you power to make an offer, but it can<br />

eliminate surprises in your transaction. To be<br />

fair, it is more time consuming because it<br />

involves supplying your information directly to<br />

the lender. However, a pre-approval will make you<br />

more competitive and gets most of your<br />

mortgage work done up front.<br />

Whether you need a "pre-qual" or pre-approval<br />

depends on your personal situation, but it is best to<br />

meet with a licensed loan officer before starting<br />

the process to make that determination.<br />

MEP is a mortgage banking firm providing mortgages<br />

to homeowners throughout New England and other<br />

parts of the United States. This is a recurring column<br />

that will appear every other week as a service to the<br />

local community. MEP is locally owned and operated<br />

with corporate headquarters in Lynnfield.<br />

If you have specific questions about this topic or any<br />

other mortgage questions, please contact us.<br />

Tom: tpatch@ meploans.com or 781-309-1807<br />

Mortgage Equity Partners


6<br />

WEEKLYNEWS.NET - 978-532-5880 NOVEMBER <strong>22</strong>, 2018<br />

DINING GUIDE DIRECTORY<br />

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Tuesday: Buy one baked or fried<br />

haddock, get second ½ price<br />

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

www.dock125.com | (781) 595-9563<br />

197 Washington St., <strong>Peabody</strong><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 />

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SonnyNotos.com<br />

49 Water St.<br />

Wakefield, MA 01880<br />

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Monday - Saturday<br />

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Sunday<br />

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


NOVEMBER <strong>22</strong>, 2018<br />

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

Edward W. Rhodes, Jr., 91<br />

PEABODY — Edward<br />

W. Rhodes, Jr., 91<br />

years of <strong>Peabody</strong>, died<br />

on Tuesday November<br />

13, 2018 in the Kaplan<br />

Family Estates in<br />

<strong>Peabody</strong> after a long<br />

illness. He was the husband<br />

of the late Ruth M.<br />

(Clothier) Rhodes. He<br />

was born in Lynn, the son of the<br />

late Edward W. Rhodes, Sr. and<br />

Martha (Sheldon) Rhodes, He<br />

was raised in Lynn and was a<br />

graduate of Lynn Classical High<br />

School. He was also a graduate<br />

of New England Institute in Boston<br />

where he received his Funeral<br />

Directing Education. He has<br />

lived in Lynn, <strong>Peabody</strong>, Marshfi<br />

eld and Port Orange, Florida.<br />

He recently returned to <strong>Peabody</strong>.<br />

Mr. Rhodes was a WWII Navy<br />

Veteran and served in the American,<br />

Asiatic and Pacifi c Theatres<br />

of Operation. He served as an<br />

Electrician’s Mate. Mr. Rhodes<br />

was an Honorary Member of the<br />

Boston North Cancer Association<br />

Board of Directors and Past<br />

President. He was a member of<br />

the Lynn Rotary, a member of the<br />

National Funeral Directors Association<br />

and Past President of the<br />

Massachusetts Funeral Directors<br />

Association.<br />

Mr. Rhodes was the former<br />

owner of the Rhodes Funeral<br />

Home on Western Avenue<br />

and Ocean Street locations.<br />

Although Ed worked<br />

with his father for many<br />

years, Ed took over the<br />

family business upon the<br />

death of his father Edward W.<br />

Rhodes, Sr. Ed served the people<br />

of greater Lynn for many years at<br />

A TRADITION OF TRUST, CARING & PROFESSIONAL SERVICE TO THE COMMUNITY SINCE 1952<br />

Service to all faiths<br />

Complete Pre-Need Planning<br />

Medicaid Approved Trust &<br />

Insurance Plans<br />

19 YALE AVE.,<br />

WAKEFIELD, MASS.<br />

both the Western Avenue<br />

and Ocean Street<br />

locations. He represented<br />

progressive thinking<br />

and traditional values in<br />

funeral service. In 1984<br />

he sold the business to<br />

David J. Solimine.<br />

He is survived by his<br />

son, Edward W. Rhodes<br />

III and his wife Gineen L. (Rae)<br />

Rhodes and his daughter, Sheryl<br />

A. (Rhodes) Murphy-Keen and<br />

her husband Edward “Ted” Keen<br />

of Plymouth, his grandchildren,<br />

Patrick R. Murphy of Florida, Cassandra<br />

M. Waterhouse and her<br />

husband Nicholas of Chicopee,<br />

Kendra L. Rhodes of <strong>Peabody</strong>, Rachel<br />

Keen of Bridgewater, 3 great<br />

grandchildren and 1 great, great<br />

grandchild. He also leaves a sister,<br />

Marilyn Wells of Florida.<br />

Service information: A memorial<br />

service will be held on<br />

Saturday December 8, 2018<br />

in the SOLIMINE FUNERAL<br />

HOME, 67 Ocean Street (Rte.<br />

1A) Lynn at <strong>11</strong> a.m. Relatives<br />

and friends are respectfully<br />

invited. Visitation will be from<br />

10 to <strong>11</strong> a.m. prior to his service.<br />

Donations may be made<br />

to the Carmelite Preschool, 5<br />

Wheatland Street, <strong>Peabody</strong>,<br />

MA 01960 or the Boston<br />

North Cancer Association,<br />

P.O. Box 3153, <strong>Peabody</strong>,<br />

MA 01960, www.bostonnorthcancer.org.<br />

Directions<br />

and guestbook at<br />

www.solimine.com<br />

Conveniently Located off Exit 39 (North Ave.) Rt. 128<br />

Spacious Modern Facilities<br />

Ample Private Parking<br />

Handicapped Accessible<br />

Area Code 781<br />

245-3550 • 334-9966<br />

NASHUA, N.H. — Regis I. (Tudal) Hersey,<br />

75, of Nashua, N.H., and formerly of <strong>Peabody</strong>,<br />

died early Thursday morning, Nov. 15,<br />

2018 at Bridges by EPOCH in Nashua, N.H.,<br />

with her family by her side. She was the wife<br />

of the late Kenneth E. Hersey Sr., who died<br />

in 2006.<br />

She was born in Melrose on Jan. 9,<br />

1943, to the late Yves and Adelaide<br />

(O’Brian) Tudal and was raised and educated<br />

in Saugus. She resided in <strong>Peabody</strong> for<br />

many years while employed at the Essex County<br />

Bank as a teller. Regis loved watching sports,<br />

including hockey and NASCAR, in addition to<br />

learning especially about space. She attended<br />

North Shore Community College, receiving<br />

an associate’s degree in Computer Science. In<br />

1983, she and her family moved to Wilmington,<br />

N.C. In North Carolina, she was employed at<br />

First Citizens Bank and later as an accounting<br />

assistant at The Bridge Tender Restaurant before<br />

It’s Our<br />

Storewide<br />

Three Convenient Locations...<br />

Regis I. Hersey, 75<br />

1943 - 2018<br />

One Day Only<br />

Friday, Nov. 23rd!<br />

her retirement. She returned north to<br />

Nashua, N.H., in 2009.<br />

She is survived by a daughter, Dawn<br />

Hersey of Nashua, N.H.; son and daughter-in-law,<br />

Kenneth E. and Kathy Hersey<br />

Jr. of Clarksville, Md.; and two grandsons,<br />

Kenneth C. Hersey and Teddy<br />

Hersey, both of Maryland.<br />

Service information: A visitation will<br />

be held on Sunday, Nov. 18, 2018 from 3 until<br />

6 p.m. at the CONWAY, CAHILL-BRODEUR<br />

Funeral Home at the 82 Lynn St., <strong>Peabody</strong> facility.<br />

Her funeral will be held on Monday at<br />

9:30 a.m. from the funeral home followed by<br />

a funeral Mass in St. Adelaide’s Church, 708<br />

Lowell St., West <strong>Peabody</strong> at 10:30 a.m. Burial<br />

will be in Puritan Lawn Memorial Park <strong>Peabody</strong>.<br />

Expressions of sympathy may be made to the<br />

Alzheimer’s Association, 480 Pleasant St., Watertown,<br />

MA 02472 in her memory.<br />

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8<br />

WEEKLYNEWS.NET - 978-532-5880 NOVEMBER <strong>22</strong>, 2018


PEABODY WEEKLY<br />

NEWS<br />

THANKSGIVING FOOTBALL 2018<br />

Saugus at <strong>Peabody</strong> (10)


T2<br />

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

THANKSGIVING FOOTBALL<br />

This year was all about change<br />

By Anne Marie Tobin<br />

2018 was all about change for<br />

the Tanners football team. With<br />

a new spread offense, there was<br />

plenty of room for optimism<br />

heading into the new season.<br />

But the year turned out be upand-down.<br />

<strong>Peabody</strong> managed<br />

to secure a spot in the North<br />

Division 2 playoffs, only to lose<br />

a clunker to Reading to fall back<br />

into the non-playoff rotation.<br />

Malden Catholic transfer<br />

quarterback Matt Jandrisevits<br />

led the offense to a 36-7 win<br />

over Somerville in the Tanners'<br />

opening game of the season<br />

at home in week one. Angel<br />

Paulino and Luis Guridys ran<br />

for two touchdowns each, while<br />

Jandrisevits also scored. Kyle<br />

Maglione converted two 2-point<br />

conversions and Austin Leggett<br />

tacked on two extra points.<br />

In week two, the Tanners<br />

traveled to Danvers to take on<br />

the Falcons. Dropped passes,<br />

costly penalties and a defense<br />

that couldn't keep up with the<br />

faster, quicker Falcons added<br />

up to an ugly night of football.<br />

By the time the dust settled, the<br />

Falcons walked away with a<br />

30-3 win. The bright light for<br />

the Tanners was Leggett, who<br />

split the uprights from 40 yards<br />

out late in the first half to put<br />

<strong>Peabody</strong>'s only points on the<br />

board.<br />

<strong>Peabody</strong>'s offensive woes continued<br />

at Marblehead in week<br />

three. Brandon Caniff broke up<br />

a couple of Marblehead pass<br />

plays in the end zone to keep it a<br />

seven-point game at the half, but<br />

the Tanners did themselves in<br />

the second half with a boatload<br />

of penalties wiping out several<br />

long gains on runs by Paulino<br />

and Guridys and some costly defensive<br />

penalties and it all added<br />

up to a 28-7 Magicians' win. The<br />

Tanners’ only touchdown came<br />

late in the game when Alex<br />

DeNisco hit Dylan Peluso with<br />

a 43-yard strike.<br />

Week four went right down<br />

to the wire before Revere survived<br />

a wild final couple of<br />

minutes to hold on for a 27-25<br />

win. <strong>Peabody</strong> dug a huge 20-6<br />

hole for itself in the first half,<br />

thanks to a slew of costly penalties<br />

along with three ill-timed<br />

fumbles.<br />

"Mistakes killed us and<br />

we just couldn't make plays<br />

when we had opportunities,"<br />

said <strong>Peabody</strong> coach Mark<br />

Bettencourt. "Things are not<br />

falling our way."<br />

But the Tanners battled back<br />

and closed to within 27-19<br />

after a fumble recovery by<br />

Abe Kaba and a 3-yard run by<br />

Paulino made it 27-25 with<br />

18 ticks on the clock. Joshua<br />

Tanzer recovered a Leggett onside<br />

kick at the Revere 43. But<br />

a bobbled snap on what might<br />

have a game-winning 52-yard<br />

field goal by Leggett sealed the<br />

Tanners' fate.<br />

The Tanners' three-game skid<br />

came to a halt in week five with<br />

a 21-6 win at Masconomet,<br />

thanks to a great defensive<br />

effort.<br />

"This was a game that we<br />

knew we needed after not getting<br />

it done last week against<br />

Revere," <strong>Peabody</strong> coach Mark<br />

Bettencourt said. "This was<br />

basically an all or nothing<br />

situation."<br />

Tanzer led <strong>Peabody</strong> with two<br />

sacks and a forced fumble.<br />

Colby Therrien added two<br />

rushing touchdowns, while<br />

Jandrisevits also scored.<br />

The Tanners made it two in a<br />

row with a 42-14 rout over visiting<br />

Malden in week six as the<br />

Tanners execution in all three<br />

phases of the game was nearly<br />

flawless. Paulino, Sousa, Therrien<br />

and Guridys scored rushing<br />

touchdowns, while Peluso and<br />

Caniff hauled in TD receptions<br />

from Jandrisevits. Defensively,<br />

Maglione (interception), and<br />

Colten Cole (fumble recovery)<br />

shined, while Leggett was a perfect<br />

6-of-6 in extra points.<br />

The Tanners were never able<br />

to get their offense on track in<br />

PHOTO | BOB CARBONE<br />

Luis Guridys breaks open a run against Somerville.<br />

week seven, losing at Beverly,<br />

28-7. There was good news<br />

after the game when the Tanners<br />

learned their 3-4 record was<br />

good enough to clinch a spot in<br />

the North Division 2 playoffs.<br />

"They beat us up up-front,"<br />

Bettencourt said. "They outplayed<br />

us in every facet of the<br />

game. We didn't show up at any<br />

phase of the game. They just<br />

outmanned us."<br />

Therrien scored <strong>Peabody</strong>'s<br />

only touchdown late in the<br />

game on a 3-yard scamper.<br />

In week eight, the Tanners<br />

got off to a disastrous start in<br />

the quarterfinals of the North<br />

Division 2 playoffs at Reading.<br />

They battled to the end, but<br />

never recovered, falling to the<br />

Rockets, 35-21.<br />

The Rockets scored on their<br />

first three possessions to lead<br />

21-0 after the first quarter and<br />

still led 28-0 late in the first half<br />

before Therrien broke the ice<br />

with a 5-yard run. Maglione ran<br />

a punt back 31 yards for a TD,<br />

while Declan Russell caught a<br />

10-yard TD pass from DeNisco.<br />

Tyler Norman was a bright spot<br />

on defense filling if the injured<br />

Sousa at linebacker.<br />

In week nine, the Tanners took<br />

on a familiar foe in Haverhill<br />

and played with a heavy heart.<br />

The team honored beloved<br />

English teacher Lawrie Bertram,<br />

who died suddenly, with a moment<br />

of silence prior to the game<br />

and also wore back tape across<br />

the bulls logo on their uniforms.<br />

A defensive battle, the game<br />

turned in the fourth quarter<br />

when Joe Mastromatteo forced<br />

a fumble, recovered by Chris<br />

Glass, to set up a 6-yard TD run<br />

by Paulino (2 TDs). DeNisco,<br />

in his first varsity start, threw a<br />

TD pass to Jared Ridley. Dylan<br />

Peluso sealed the win with an interception<br />

as time wound down.<br />

In week 10, it was a battle<br />

for Tanner city bragging rights<br />

Friday at rain-drenched Coley<br />

Lee Field as the <strong>Peabody</strong><br />

took on their Woburn Tanner<br />

counterparts.<br />

The game was back-andforth,<br />

but in the end, the<br />

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

short, 28-24. Guridys had a<br />

monster game with two TDs,<br />

the first on a 79-yard fumble<br />

recovery and the second on a<br />

61-yard run, and also recovered<br />

a key onside kick to keep<br />

<strong>Peabody</strong>'s hopes alive in the<br />

fourth quarter. Therrien (2-yard<br />

run) and Leggett (37-yard FG)<br />

also scored.<br />

Inside this special section<br />

you will see game-by-game accounts<br />

from the regular season.<br />

Find out who is going into<br />

the Hall of Fame on page 5,<br />

while game scores of every<br />

Thanksgiving Day classic since<br />

1944 can be found on page 16<br />

and Saugus and <strong>Peabody</strong> results<br />

from 2018 can be found on page<br />

17.<br />

Bishop Fenwick takes center<br />

stage on pages 20-21, while St.<br />

John’s Prep is featured on pages<br />

<strong>22</strong>-23.<br />

Finally, the <strong>Peabody</strong> Weekly<br />

News would to applaud the<br />

efforts of photographers Bob<br />

Carbone and Al Perez, who<br />

shared all of the beautiful<br />

photos featured in this special<br />

section. Both Bob and Al have<br />

been there through the oppressive<br />

heat of the early season<br />

right through that driving rainstorm<br />

the night the “other’<br />

Tanners came to Tanner City.<br />

They have been there every<br />

step of the way to capture the<br />

Tanners’ season in pictures and<br />

we are very grateful for your<br />

generous support.<br />

Wishing You a<br />

Happy Thanksgiving!<br />

Good Luck Tanners & Pioneers<br />

Maria Salzillo, Realtor | 508.527.6910 | mrsreagent@gmail.com


THANKSGIVING FOOTBALL<br />

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

T3<br />

ROSTER<br />

No. Player Grade<br />

1 Austin Leggett 12<br />

2 Colby Therrien <strong>11</strong><br />

3 Kyle Maglione 10<br />

4 Cam Cuzzi 10<br />

5 Brandon Caniff <strong>11</strong><br />

6 Joe Mastromatteo 12<br />

7 Colton Cole 12<br />

8 Jordan Ilori <strong>11</strong><br />

9 Dylan Peluso 12<br />

10 Matt Jandrisevits 12<br />

<strong>11</strong> Jared Ridley 12<br />

12 Jack Woods 12<br />

13 Joel Kashila <strong>11</strong><br />

15 Krisli Miraka <strong>11</strong><br />

16 Dante Olow 10<br />

17 Brandon Pzenny 10<br />

18 Alex DeNisco 10<br />

19 James Alimonti 10<br />

20 Anthony Bettencourt 10<br />

21 Luis Guridys 12<br />

<strong>22</strong> Declan Russell 10<br />

24 Carlos Hernandez 12<br />

No. Player Grade<br />

25 Jack Flaherty <strong>11</strong><br />

26 Jack O’Hara 10<br />

27 Joseph Swanton 10<br />

28 Dom Annese 10<br />

29 Matthew Bower <strong>11</strong><br />

32 Joseph Casey <strong>11</strong><br />

33 James Guiry <strong>11</strong><br />

34 Tyler Norman 12<br />

37 Nick Vecchio 10<br />

38 Jake Sousa 12<br />

39 Jared Smith 12<br />

41 Angel Paulino <strong>11</strong><br />

42 Joshua Tanzer 12<br />

50 Steven Nova <strong>11</strong><br />

51 Brandon Glass 10<br />

52 Abe Kaba 12<br />

53 Chris Glass 12<br />

54 Phillip Makoci <strong>11</strong><br />

57 Michael Leonard 10<br />

59 Eddie Collado 12<br />

61 Jennaro Herbert <strong>11</strong><br />

63 Matt Goggin 10<br />

No. Player Grade<br />

64 Aiden Kelleher 12<br />

66 Jaden Nigro 10<br />

69 Dylan Rea 10<br />

72 Sean Bell <strong>11</strong><br />

72 Alexander Franklin 10<br />

72/75 Calvin Scribner <strong>11</strong><br />

73 Dylan Davis 10<br />

74 Mark DeLuca <strong>11</strong><br />

76 Kevin Pence 10<br />

77 Michael Lock 12<br />

78 Sean Bell <strong>11</strong><br />

79 Ari Rozopoulos <strong>11</strong><br />

80 Zen Garcia 10<br />

81 Shay Palmer 10<br />

82 Ramon Franco <strong>11</strong><br />

84 Owen Carr 12<br />

87 Jeremiah Dessalines <strong>11</strong><br />

96 Jerrell Greaves 12<br />

99 Evan Bun <strong>11</strong><br />

Head coach:<br />

Mark Bettencourt<br />

Wishing you all a Happy Thanksgiving!<br />

Good luck teams!<br />

from your friends at<br />

800-657-3272 · EBSB.com Member FDIC Member DIF<br />

·)c:;>--N orthrup Associates--


T4<br />

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

WEEK 1<br />

THANKSGIVING FOOTBALL<br />

Senior Carlos Hernandez, left, finishes off a run and senior Jared Ridley outruns Somerville defenders.<br />

PHOTOS | BOB CARBONE<br />

Tanners put on a very good spread<br />

By Josh Kummins<br />

PEABODY — For head coach<br />

Mark Bettencourt and the <strong>Peabody</strong><br />

Tanners, this offseason<br />

was all about implementing a<br />

new spread offense.<br />

It took a series to get the ball<br />

rolling, but senior quarterback<br />

Matt Jandrisevits led the offense<br />

as <strong>Peabody</strong> cruised to a 36-7 win<br />

over Somerville Friday night at<br />

Coley Lee Field.<br />

“The big question tonight was,<br />

‘How were our kids going to<br />

show what they were forced to<br />

learn in a short period of time,<br />

both offensively and defensively?”<br />

Bettencourt said. “It was<br />

about how much we can retain<br />

and how much we can execute<br />

when the shooting starts and the<br />

crowd is here.”<br />

Jandrisevits opened the scoring<br />

with a rushing touchdown<br />

before junior Angel Paulino and<br />

senior Luis Guridys each scampered<br />

into the end zone twice<br />

apiece, helping the Tanners<br />

break a streak of three consecutive<br />

season-opening losses.<br />

Paulino set the tone for <strong>Peabody</strong>’s<br />

ground game on the first<br />

series, gaining back-to-back first<br />

downs on the first two plays<br />

from scrimmage. Jandrisevits<br />

had his first pass intercepted on<br />

the next play, but the Tanners<br />

returned the favor with a quick<br />

defensive stand.<br />

Jandrisevits responded quickly<br />

on <strong>Peabody</strong>’s second series.<br />

After Paulino moved the chains<br />

with an <strong>11</strong>-yard run, the quarterback<br />

opted to keep the ball<br />

on four of the next six plays. He<br />

dashed into the end zone from<br />

13 yards out for the game’s first<br />

points before sophomore Kyle<br />

Maglione successfully brought<br />

in the 2-point conversion, making<br />

the score 8-0 with 4:43 to<br />

play in the opening quarter.<br />

“(Jandrisevits) has a whole<br />

new corps of receivers that he<br />

has to develop a relationship<br />

with, so he’s basically still learning<br />

this offense; he’s run the<br />

spread before, but not this type<br />

of spread,” Bettencourt said. “I<br />

thought he ran the ball extremely<br />

well today and showed that he’s<br />

a weapon for us with his arm and<br />

legs.”<br />

Louis Jacques Montina and<br />

the Highlanders gained a pair of<br />

first downs when they took over,<br />

but the drive stalled at midfield<br />

and gave <strong>Peabody</strong> the ball back.<br />

Jandrisevits completed a pair of<br />

passes to junior Brandon Caniff<br />

during the ensuing possession,<br />

but Paulino took the handoff for<br />

the third time in five plays and<br />

found the end zone. Maglione’s<br />

second conversion doubled the<br />

lead to 16-0.<br />

Caniff recovered a fumble on<br />

the first play of the visitors’ next<br />

series before <strong>Peabody</strong> rattled off<br />

a 10-play drive that ended with<br />

Paulino scoring on a 13-yard run<br />

with 3:08 left before halftime.<br />

That was more than enough<br />

offense for the Tanners, but<br />

they carried all the momentum<br />

into the break after stopping the<br />

Highlanders a yard shy of the<br />

end zone after they ran a dozen-play<br />

drive that started from<br />

their own 35-yard line.<br />

“We’re looking for anything to<br />

motivate these kids that they’re<br />

doing things right,” Bettencourt<br />

said. “It was perfect timing for<br />

what we needed at this time.<br />

Everyone’s learning. We made<br />

mistakes, but they’re mistakes<br />

that can be corrected. The more<br />

we can keep preparing it, the<br />

better we’re going to get.”<br />

Jandrisevits busted off two<br />

double-digit-yard runs on <strong>Peabody</strong>’s<br />

first drive of the second<br />

half. Guridys reached the end<br />

zone for the first time in the<br />

game with five minutes to play<br />

in the third quarter as he dove<br />

down the sideline from 39 yards<br />

out. His two-yard run with 4:17<br />

to play in the game made the<br />

score 36-0, but Somerville broke<br />

the shutout in the final 70 seconds<br />

as Fred Castin dove in from<br />

two yards out and Larsen Pierre<br />

hit an extra point.<br />

Old Towne Market<br />

Olde Town Market<br />

“Your Neighborhood Grocers”<br />

8 Post Office Square<br />

Lynnfield MA 01940<br />

781 477 0725<br />

Warmest wishes for a happy and healthy Thanksgiving. Good Luck Teams!<br />

DRS. ZICHERMAN, LAGO & ASSOCIATES<br />

PEDIATRIC DENTISTRY, ADULT DENTISTRY<br />

& ORTHODONTICS SINCE 1975<br />

www.mzldental.com<br />

One Roosevelt Ave <strong>Peabody</strong> MA ● 978-535-2500


THANKSGIVING FOOTBALL<br />

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

T5<br />

<strong>Peabody</strong> HOF to induct 18 members<br />

PEABODY — The <strong>Peabody</strong><br />

High School Athletic Hall of<br />

Fame has unveiled the list of<br />

this year’s Hall of Fame inductees.<br />

Spanning many eras<br />

and representing a wide range<br />

of sports, the group of 18 honorees<br />

not only contributed to<br />

the success of <strong>Peabody</strong> High<br />

School athletics, but many of<br />

them continue to give back to<br />

the community.<br />

The Fall of Fame is a<br />

Tanner tradition that is held in<br />

even-numbered years, when<br />

the Tanners are hosts of the<br />

annual Thanksgiving Day<br />

clash against Saugus.<br />

The inductees and their<br />

families will be introduced on<br />

Thursday, Nov. <strong>22</strong> before the<br />

kickoff of the Thanksgiving<br />

Day game at Coley Lee Field.<br />

On Friday, Nov. 23, the honorees<br />

will be formally inducted<br />

into the Hall during a gala<br />

banquet at the Danversport<br />

Yacht Club.<br />

2007 basketball team<br />

captains Kyle Multner and<br />

Eddie Leonard are among<br />

the inductees this year. Both<br />

were multi-sport athletes at<br />

<strong>Peabody</strong> High. Leonard excelled<br />

in basketball and was<br />

a 1,000 point scorer. Multner<br />

also played basketball and<br />

finished his career with 960<br />

points, but his real passion<br />

was baseball. As a senior, he<br />

led the Tanners to a Greater<br />

Boston League championship,<br />

posting a 6-1 pitching record<br />

with 0.79 ERA.<br />

Three inductees went on to<br />

successful careers as <strong>Peabody</strong><br />

firefighters or policemen.<br />

Gary Hayward (1977) captained<br />

the soccer and baseball<br />

teams his senior years. Scott<br />

Wlasuk (1979) was a threesport<br />

athlete who made significant<br />

contributions to the<br />

football, lacrosse and track<br />

teams. He went on to excel<br />

in football and lacrosse at<br />

Wesleyan University and<br />

later served a short stint as<br />

coach of the Tanners football<br />

team. As a senior, Patrick<br />

Conrad (1980) helped lead<br />

the Tanners to a 9-1 record in<br />

football and also batted .515<br />

in baseball.<br />

Former hockey team MVPs<br />

Mark Leonard (1984), who<br />

is active in <strong>Peabody</strong>’s youth<br />

hockey programs, and Gary<br />

Ruddock (1974) are also<br />

being inducted. Ruddock was<br />

a key defenseman on the 1976<br />

team that advanced to the state<br />

semi-finals at Boston Garden,<br />

while Leonard was a two-time<br />

leading scorer for the Tanners<br />

who went on to excel at the<br />

University of Connecticut<br />

and the European Hockey<br />

Federation before he became<br />

the head coach of the Tanners<br />

in 1995.<br />

Track standout Charlie<br />

Spurr (1970) is also among<br />

the new inductees. He was<br />

team MVP as a senior and still<br />

holds the record for the 120-<br />

yard outdoor (15.1) and 45-<br />

yard indoor high hurdles (5.9).<br />

2005 graduates Lauren<br />

(Orlando) LaTorella and<br />

Heather Popp were two-sport<br />

standouts at <strong>Peabody</strong> High.<br />

LaTorella captained the volleyball<br />

and basketball teams<br />

and led the Tanners to GBL<br />

championships in both sports<br />

as a senior. She went on to become<br />

a three-year basketball<br />

starter at Brandeis University.<br />

Popp served as captain of the<br />

soccer and lacrosse teams.<br />

She was MVP in lacrosse and<br />

set the record for single game<br />

goals (10).<br />

Gary Palmieri Jr. (2002)<br />

will join his brother Anthony<br />

in the Hall of Fame. He was<br />

a three-sport standout in football,<br />

hockey and baseball, captain<br />

of the football and baseball<br />

teams, leading the league<br />

in sacks his senior year.<br />

Josh Rachman (1994) and<br />

Sean Hayes (1992) were<br />

outstanding football and lacrosse<br />

players. Rachman was<br />

an all-star in both sports and<br />

garnered the Unsung Hero<br />

Award for the 1993 football<br />

Superbowl champions. Hayes<br />

was a two-sport captain. He<br />

set boys lacrosse program records<br />

for season saves (291)<br />

and single game saves (41).<br />

Three more outstanding<br />

three-sport female athletes -<br />

Tracey (McKeen) Palazzola<br />

(1997), Jocelyn (Costa)<br />

Sullivan (2004) and Michelle<br />

Renee Grifoni (2008) will also<br />

be inducted. McKeen served<br />

as senior captain of the basketball<br />

and soccer teams, earning<br />

team MVP awards in both<br />

sports. She currently is an assistant<br />

coach of the <strong>Peabody</strong><br />

girls basketball team under<br />

her father, Stan McKeen, who<br />

also coaches the <strong>Peabody</strong> boys<br />

soccer team. Sullivan served<br />

as senior captain of the field<br />

hockey, lacrosse and swim<br />

teams. She was named MVP of<br />

both field hockey and lacrosse<br />

teams and is currently an assistant<br />

principal at the South<br />

Memorial School. Grifoni<br />

served as captain of the volleyball,<br />

basketball and softball<br />

teams. She received the Frank<br />

Wiggin Award in basketball,<br />

was the MVP in softball and<br />

was named <strong>Peabody</strong> High<br />

Female Athlete of the Year in<br />

2008.<br />

Rounding out the 2018<br />

class and being inducted<br />

posthumously are William<br />

Connolly (1950) and Paul<br />

Tenberg (1974). Connolly<br />

played baseball, hockey and<br />

football and went on to play<br />

football at the University<br />

of Massachusetts, Amherst.<br />

Tenberg was an outstanding<br />

football player who earned the<br />

Billy Dexter Award as a senior,<br />

then continued his football<br />

career at the University<br />

of New Hampshire.<br />

Happy Thanksgiving<br />

Best of luck to the Lynnfield Pioneers<br />

and <strong>Peabody</strong> Tanners<br />

APY*<br />

771 Salem Street<br />

Lynnfield, MA<br />

617-387-<strong>11</strong>10<br />

www.everettbank.com<br />

Member FDIC<br />

Member SIF


T6<br />

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

THANKSGIVING FOOTBALL<br />

WEEK 2<br />

Tough trip to Danvers for Tanners<br />

By Anne Marie Tobin<br />

DANVERS — It was one<br />

step forward, two steps back<br />

for the <strong>Peabody</strong> football team,<br />

which was manhandled by<br />

Danvers, 30-3, Friday night at<br />

Dr. Deering Stadium.<br />

Dropped passes, costly penalties<br />

and a defense that couldn’t<br />

keep up with the faster, quicker<br />

Falcons added up to an ugly<br />

night of football.<br />

“We had our opportunities,<br />

but we simply didn’t play<br />

well,” <strong>Peabody</strong> coach Mark<br />

Bettencourt said. “We took way<br />

too many penalties, we lined<br />

up incorrectly way too many<br />

times, we didn’t read defensive<br />

keys, and we didn’t do a good<br />

job blocking. We knew exactly<br />

what Danvers was going to do.<br />

Our footwork was slow, but in<br />

the end penalties just strangled<br />

us. Every time we had some momentum,<br />

a flag was thrown and<br />

that killed us.”<br />

<strong>Peabody</strong> had no answers for<br />

Falcons’ senior quarterback<br />

Brendan Treacy and senior<br />

running back Matt McCarthy.<br />

Treacy threw for 230 yards, and<br />

completed touchdown passes<br />

of 47 and 54 yards, while<br />

McCarthy ran for 175 yards<br />

and 3 touchdowns. The Falcons<br />

racked up 345 yards of net offense,<br />

while <strong>Peabody</strong> mustered<br />

only 147.<br />

“We absolutely knew that<br />

McCarthy was their big threat,<br />

but we allowed him to control<br />

the game,” Bettencourt said.<br />

“The kids need to pay more<br />

attention to what we are doing<br />

and focus on fundamentals.<br />

They need to know their responsibilities<br />

and do their jobs.”<br />

Danvers served notice on<br />

<strong>Peabody</strong>’s first possession,<br />

forcing a three-and-out. After a<br />

<strong>Peabody</strong> quarterback Matt Jandrisevits takes off on a quarterback keeper during last Friday night’s game.<br />

37-yard punt by Declan Russell,<br />

the Falcons methodically drove<br />

to the Tanners’ 9-yard line before<br />

the drive stalled. Max<br />

Leete converted a 26-yard field<br />

goal to give the Falcons an early<br />

3-0 lead.<br />

After the Tanners turned the<br />

ball over on downs at their 49,<br />

Danvers needed only three<br />

minutes to make it 10-0, with<br />

McCarthy doing the honors<br />

from 9 yards out (Leete PAT).<br />

The Tanners let a golden opportunity<br />

slip on the next drive<br />

when, from the Tanners’ <strong>22</strong>,<br />

quarterback Matt Jandrisevits<br />

had Russell open at the Falcons’<br />

40, but Russell couldn’t hold<br />

on.<br />

Another penalty on the<br />

Tanners on Danvers’ next drive<br />

set up the next Falcons touchdown<br />

-- a 45-yard strike from<br />

Treacy to McCarthy (Leete<br />

PAT) to make it 17-0.<br />

The Tanners finally broke the<br />

ice when Austin Leggett nailed<br />

a 40-yard field goal to end the<br />

half.<br />

“The one good thing is<br />

knowing that we have Austin<br />

as a field goal option in situations<br />

like that when we needed<br />

to put points on the board,” said<br />

Bettencourt.<br />

It went from bad to worse in<br />

the second half for <strong>Peabody</strong>,<br />

which put up only 46 yards of<br />

offense, all of them (and 36<br />

on one rush by Angel Paulino)<br />

coming on the game’s final<br />

drive.<br />

Danvers added two more second-half<br />

scores on a Treacy to<br />

Ezra Lombardi 54-yard strike<br />

and a McCarthy 2-yard run.<br />

Paulino finished with 57<br />

yards on eight carries, while<br />

Jandrisevits (6-of 14, 70 yards)<br />

finished with 45 yards on 10<br />

carries. Jared Ridley led the<br />

receivers with 25 yards on four<br />

catches. Guridys chipped in<br />

with two receptions good for 38<br />

yards.<br />

It’s back to the drawing board<br />

PHOTO | BOB CARBONE<br />

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

“I don’t know if we’re<br />

moving too fast and losing kids,<br />

but if you ask the coaches, they<br />

and I would agree that we are<br />

not,” said Bettencourt. “Tonight<br />

it came down to the shot gaps<br />

and we didn’t pick them up.<br />

Our footwork was slow and<br />

that led to penetration, which<br />

led to us not being very smooth<br />

on offense and unable to find<br />

any rhythm. And we have to<br />

understand that swarm doesn’t<br />

mean hit after the whistle. We<br />

dropped some passes and that’s<br />

the scary thing about the spread<br />

as you have to throw it, but you<br />

also have to catch it.”<br />

637 Lowell Street (Hannaford Plaza), West <strong>Peabody</strong><br />

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Thanksgiving<br />

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Realtor®<br />

26 Main St. Lynnfield MA<br />

978-590-1628


THANKSGIVING FOOTBALL<br />

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

T7<br />

WEEK 3<br />

Tanner quarterback Matt Jandrisevits hands off to running back Angel Paulino during Friday night’s game.<br />

Mistakes cost Tanners in football loss<br />

By Scot Cooper<br />

MARBLEHEAD — For<br />

the second straight week,<br />

Marblehead coach Jim Rudloff<br />

was less than pleased with how<br />

his team played. The Magicians<br />

didn’t get a first down until<br />

late in the first half, but they<br />

pounced on some Tanner mistakes<br />

to win the game 28-7<br />

Friday night at Piper Field.<br />

“<strong>Peabody</strong> played a great<br />

game, I know they had a tough<br />

week, but we should’ve been<br />

a lot better than we were,”<br />

Rudloff said. “I honestly can’t<br />

express how disappointed I<br />

am, but I should have seen it<br />

coming, we had a terrible week<br />

of practice. We might have had<br />

a good 10 minutes here or there,<br />

but we certainly came out flat<br />

tonight.”<br />

The Magicians were fortunate<br />

that <strong>Peabody</strong>’s struggles<br />

on offense continued for the<br />

second straight game. After putting<br />

up just three points in a loss<br />

against Danvers, the Tanners finally<br />

broke through for a touchdown<br />

when Alex DeNisco hit<br />

Dylan Peluso with a 43-yard<br />

strike with 2:27 left to play.<br />

Austin Leggett’s kick made it<br />

28-7. Denisco took over for<br />

starter Matthew Jandrisevits,<br />

who took a heavy hit on a sack<br />

by Tamelle Platt.<br />

Marblehead (3-0) opened the<br />

scoring after <strong>Peabody</strong> (1-2) lost<br />

the ball trying to punt, the ball<br />

ending up on the Tanners’ seven.<br />

Tim Cronin scored two plays<br />

later, and Mason Poisson’s first<br />

of four PAT’s made it 7-0.<br />

The Magicians tried to add<br />

to their lead, but <strong>Peabody</strong>’s<br />

Brendan Caniffe swatted away<br />

a couple of Chris Gally passes<br />

in the end zone, ending the first<br />

half with the Tanners down<br />

seven.<br />

Penalties hurt <strong>Peabody</strong> in the<br />

second half, wiping out several<br />

long gains on runs by Angel<br />

Paulino and Luis Guidrys. When<br />

the Tanners were flagged on offense,<br />

it wiped out big gains,<br />

and when they were penalized<br />

on defense, it gave Marblehead<br />

excellent field position.<br />

The Magicians took advantage<br />

of the Tanners’ largesse,<br />

with Gally rushing in from<br />

the nine with 6:57 left in the<br />

third quarter, making it a 14-0<br />

game.<br />

The Magicians got the ball<br />

on a short punt, and three snaps<br />

later Gally ran to the goal line<br />

where he fumbled the ball into<br />

the end zone and Devin Romain<br />

pounced on it, upping the score<br />

to 21-0.<br />

With 5:46 left, Cronin scored<br />

his second of the game from a<br />

yard out to seal the scoring for<br />

Marblehead.<br />

<strong>Peabody</strong> coach Mark<br />

PHOTO | BOB CARBONE<br />

Bettencourt said his team is a<br />

work in progress and it’ll keep<br />

working to get better.<br />

“Are we happy that we’re<br />

1-2? No, we’re not, but Danvers<br />

and Marblehead are two of the<br />

best teams on our schedule, so<br />

we’ll keep working and it will<br />

come,” Bettencourt said. “We<br />

need to get some momentum,<br />

get some first downs, and get<br />

some confidence. It’s the big<br />

picture, it’s a big puzzle, and<br />

the things are still being put<br />

into place, now we get ready<br />

for our next four games, trying<br />

to get better on offense and<br />

defense.”<br />

Wishes everyone a<br />

HappY<br />

THANKSGIVING<br />

Edible Arrangements<br />

Go <strong>Peabody</strong>!<br />

<strong>Peabody</strong>, MA | 7 Bourbon Street | 978-536-7010 • Lynn,MA | 919 Lynnfield Street (Goodwin Circle) | 781-593-1888 • Beverly, MA | 45 Enon Street | 978-927-3120<br />

Wishing all a healthy and happy Thanksgiving!<br />

Good Luck to the Lynnfield Pioneers and <strong>Peabody</strong> Tanners<br />

Experience the J Barrett Difference<br />

Kate Fabrizio | 978.314.0196 | www.katefabrizio.com


T8<br />

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

THANKSGIVING FOOTBALL<br />

WEEK 4<br />

Tanner football rally falls short<br />

By Anne Marie Tobin<br />

PEABODY — If nothing else,<br />

Friday night’s Northeastern<br />

Conference clash at Coley Lee<br />

Field between <strong>Peabody</strong> (1-3)<br />

and Revere (2-2) had something<br />

for everybody. The game<br />

went right down to the wire before<br />

the Patriots survived a wild<br />

final couple of minutes to hold<br />

on for a 27-25 win.<br />

The Tanners handed the first<br />

half to Revere on a silver platter<br />

thanks to several ill-timed and<br />

costly penalties along with<br />

three fumbles, which helped a<br />

severely undermanned Revere<br />

team build a 20-6 lead at halftime<br />

and 27-13 lead going into<br />

the final quarter.<br />

“Mistakes killed us and we<br />

just couldn’t make plays when<br />

we had opportunities and<br />

we had plenty of chances,”<br />

said <strong>Peabody</strong> coach Mark<br />

Bettencourt. “We had a great<br />

week of practice and the kids<br />

busted their butts all week, but<br />

things are just falling our way.”<br />

But <strong>Peabody</strong> battled back and<br />

made a game of it, cutting the<br />

deficit to just eight points, 27-19<br />

with a little under 10 minutes to<br />

play after a 3-yard touchdown<br />

run by Angel Paulino (14-78<br />

yards, 3 rushing TDs), set up<br />

by a 57-yard screen pass from<br />

quarterback Matt Jandrisevits<br />

(18 carries, 142 yards) to Colby<br />

Therrien (2 catches, 65 yards)<br />

that gave the Tanners 1st-andgoal<br />

from the 3.<br />

From that point on, it was<br />

Revere’s game to win, but the<br />

Patriots nearly didn’t close the<br />

deal.<br />

After the Tanners had driven<br />

to the Patriots’ <strong>22</strong>-yard line, the<br />

drive stalled and Revere got<br />

the ball back on downs. Darius<br />

McNeil (20 carries, 99 yards)<br />

picked up 19 yards on a couple<br />

of rushes to move the ball out<br />

to the Patriots’ <strong>22</strong> with about<br />

1:45 to go, but two plays later<br />

PHOTO | BOB CARBONE<br />

<strong>Peabody</strong>’s Declan Russell makes an over-the-shoulder catch after slipping past David Guillama<br />

of Revere.<br />

quarterback Jonathan Murphy<br />

fumbled the ball with <strong>Peabody</strong><br />

Abe Kaba recovering at the<br />

Revere 35-yard line with 1:18<br />

to go. Five plays later, Angel<br />

Paulino (14 carries, 78 yards)<br />

punched it in from the 3-yard<br />

line to make it 27-25 with 21<br />

seconds left.<br />

But in perhaps the biggest<br />

defensive stand of the night, the<br />

Patriots denied Jandrisevits on<br />

the 2-point conversion attempt<br />

up the middle to seemingly seal<br />

the victory.<br />

Not so fast, said <strong>Peabody</strong>,<br />

thanks to a perfectly executed<br />

onside kick by Austin Leggett.<br />

By the time the last player<br />

was peeled off the pile, Joshua<br />

Tanzer emerged with the ball,<br />

giving <strong>Peabody</strong> another lastgasp<br />

chance to pull out a victory<br />

with the ball on the Revere 43<br />

with just 18 ticks left on the<br />

game clock.<br />

Another Jandrivesitz to<br />

Russell connection and a couple<br />

of incompletions advanced the<br />

ball to the Patriots’ 35, bringing<br />

on the Tanners’ field goal unit to<br />

attempt a 52-yarder with seven<br />

seconds left, but the snap was<br />

bobbled.<br />

At 1-3, the Tanners’ backs<br />

are up against it in terms of<br />

playoffs.<br />

“We’ve had some teams at<br />

1-3 that made it and some teams<br />

that didn’t, but we need to depend<br />

on other people now,” said<br />

Bettencourt. “I was proud of the<br />

kids for their resiliency tonight,<br />

but we had so many defensive<br />

mistakes that really hurt us.<br />

That big sack we got but then<br />

had a big face mask penalty, but<br />

we kept fighting to the end.”<br />

The sack and penalty referred<br />

to by Bettencourt came on the<br />

Patriots opening drive. Kaba<br />

and Tyler Norman dropped<br />

Murphy for an <strong>11</strong>-yard loss,<br />

setting up what could have been<br />

3rd-and-21 from the Patriots’<br />

42, but a face mask penalty on<br />

the tackle nullified the play,<br />

thereby costing the Tanners<br />

26 net yards and giving the<br />

Patriots great field position at<br />

the <strong>Peabody</strong> 42. Eight plays<br />

later, McNeil ran it in from the<br />

6 and Rayan Riazi tacked on the<br />

extra point to give the Patriots a<br />

7-0 lead.<br />

<strong>Peabody</strong> fumbled the ball<br />

deep in its own territory on its<br />

first possession, opening the<br />

door for another Patriots score,<br />

this one by Murphy (3TDs).<br />

<strong>Peabody</strong> got on the board in<br />

the second quarter, going 81<br />

yards in 17 plays, capped by a<br />

1-yard plunge by Therrien.<br />

The Tanners gambled with<br />

an onside kick, recovered by<br />

Colten Cole, but Revere was<br />

awarded possession after the<br />

officials ruled that Cole had<br />

stepped out of bounds prior to<br />

the recovery.<br />

“They said he was six inches<br />

out of bounds on that pooch<br />

kick,” said Bettencourt. “That<br />

was a huge momentum swing<br />

in their favor. Things were just<br />

not falling our way.”<br />

The Tanners advanced all the<br />

way to the Patriots’s 41 on their<br />

next possession where they<br />

faced 3rd-and-2. Luis Guridys<br />

bullied his way past the first<br />

down marker, only to fumble.<br />

Revere needed only four plays<br />

to cash in and bump its lead to<br />

20-6 with less than a minute left<br />

in the half.<br />

<strong>Peabody</strong> marched all the way<br />

inside the Revere 1 and had 3rdand-goal<br />

with three seconds to<br />

go, the big plays being a 30-yard<br />

kickoff return by Kye Maglione<br />

and a 48-yard Jandrisevits to<br />

Declan Russell (2 catches, 56<br />

yards) bomb. The Tanners came<br />

up empty as they fumbled the<br />

snap as time expired.<br />

Jandrisevits and Alex<br />

DeNisco split time under center.<br />

Jandrisevits completed 7-of-13<br />

passes for 136 yards, while<br />

DeNisco completed 3-of-10<br />

passes for 27 yards.<br />

“We have Masco next and I<br />

don’t know what to expect as<br />

Masco will have an extra week<br />

to prepare, so that’s a slight<br />

advantage to them in that they<br />

will save on injuries, and they<br />

are probably here tonight, but<br />

we need to focus on just making<br />

plays,” Bettencourt said.<br />

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The Home Team<br />

Wishing everyone a Safe & Happy Thanksgiving<br />

Good luck Pioneers and Tanners


THANKSGIVING FOOTBALL<br />

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

T9<br />

WEEK 5<br />

Tanner football gets much-needed win<br />

Joshua Tanzer (42) had two sacks and recovered a fumble to help the Tanners defeat Masconomet.<br />

FILE PHOTO<br />

By Daniel Kane<br />

BOXFORD — The <strong>Peabody</strong><br />

football team grinded out a<br />

much-needed 21-6 win thanks<br />

to a great defensive effort at<br />

Masconomet Friday night.<br />

“This was a game that we<br />

knew we needed after not getting<br />

it done last week against<br />

Revere,” <strong>Peabody</strong> coach Mark<br />

Bettencourt said. “This was basically<br />

all or nothing. We’re not<br />

going to get into the playoffs at<br />

3-4, we know that, we learned<br />

that last year and this is a situation<br />

where we have to win out<br />

and this was the first big hurdle<br />

we had to get over.”<br />

The Tanners’ defense kept<br />

the Chieftains offense at bay<br />

for a majority of the night.<br />

Linebacker Joshua Tanzer led<br />

<strong>Peabody</strong> with two sacks and a<br />

forced fumble.<br />

“He made some big plays for<br />

us,” Bettencourt said of Tanzer.<br />

“He found himself in positions<br />

to make plays and he was able<br />

to make plays in space. If he<br />

misses some of those plays<br />

it might be a different game.<br />

I thought our whole defense<br />

played well, especially Josh.<br />

“We were able to execute the<br />

game plan by having the patience<br />

and the confidence that<br />

the guy next to them was going<br />

to do his job,” Bettencourt<br />

added. “That played a huge part<br />

in today’s game.”<br />

Running back Colby Therrien<br />

added two touchdowns on the<br />

ground for <strong>Peabody</strong> while quarterback<br />

Matthew Jandrisevits<br />

also had a rushing touchdown.<br />

“The team loves it when<br />

(Therrien) comes in because<br />

they know what we’re doing,”<br />

Bettencourt said. “We’re powering<br />

the ball and I think our<br />

offensive line steps up a bit<br />

when he comes in the game in<br />

that package. Today it worked<br />

and we’re grateful to be where<br />

we are.”<br />

A stop on 4th-and-inches by<br />

the Tanners defense provided<br />

the spark and field position the<br />

<strong>Peabody</strong> offense needed to get a<br />

scoring drive started late in the<br />

first quarter. <strong>Peabody</strong> drove 39<br />

yards, adding a touchdown on a<br />

1-yard run by Jandrisevits to go<br />

ahead 7-0.<br />

The score remained 7-0 all<br />

the way up until the second half.<br />

Masco quarterback Marshall<br />

Lastes dropped back to pass<br />

but Tanzer forced a fumble<br />

that <strong>Peabody</strong> recovered at the<br />

Chieftains’ 7.<br />

<strong>Peabody</strong> capitalized on the<br />

turnover on a 3-yard touchdown<br />

run by Therrien to go ahead<br />

14-0.<br />

The Chieftains were able to<br />

put together their only scoring<br />

drive of the night on their next<br />

drive. Jay Theriault (<strong>11</strong>7 yards<br />

and one touchdown) totaled 56<br />

yards on the drive, capping it<br />

off with a two-yard touchdown<br />

to cut the <strong>Peabody</strong> lead to 14-6.<br />

On the ensuing kickoff, an attempted<br />

squib kick turned into<br />

a huge play for the Tanners.<br />

Brandon Caniff scooped up<br />

the bouncing kick at <strong>Peabody</strong>’s<br />

40 and returned it 55 yards before<br />

being brought down at the<br />

Chieftains’ 5.<br />

“Those are things you can’t<br />

practice,” Bettencourt said of<br />

the play. “That kind of stuff<br />

seemed lately to be happening<br />

against us. Now maybe we’ve<br />

turned a corner and we can start<br />

getting some of those breaks.”<br />

<strong>Peabody</strong> added a touchdown<br />

two plays later on a 5-yard run<br />

by Therrien and held onto the<br />

lead for the rest of the game for<br />

the 21-6 win.<br />

“We want to get better<br />

every week,” Bettencourt said.<br />

“Every week you see our offense<br />

and defense getting a<br />

little bit better. The kids are<br />

buying in more and more everyday.<br />

We’re having great<br />

weeks of practice because<br />

they’re starting to believe in<br />

the system. Hopefully that<br />

keeps rolling into next week.”<br />

Good Luck!<br />

Wishing all<br />

a Happy<br />

Thanksgiving.<br />

Robin Murphy<br />

978-979-5098<br />

robinmurphy@verizon.net<br />

Happy<br />

Holiday<br />

Season!<br />

Serving<br />

<strong>Peabody</strong> &<br />

for over 30 years!<br />

Anita Horowitz<br />

978-535-89<strong>22</strong><br />

www.northshorehomeinfo.com<br />

ADVANTAGE Real Estate<br />

Good Luck!<br />

Best wishes<br />

for a happy,<br />

Healthy Holiday<br />

Season.<br />

Ronna Tuttle<br />

978-821-0638<br />

ronnatuttle@comcast.net<br />

Regina Paratore<br />

781-608-8040<br />

www.reginaparatore.com<br />

Be<br />

“Thankful” this<br />

Holiday Season<br />

“Working Above<br />

& Beyond”<br />

Good Luck<br />

Teams!<br />

Happy<br />

Thanksgiving.<br />

Bob Trodden<br />

617-958-4083<br />

bobtrodden@comcast.net<br />

Bernie Horowitz<br />

508-527-31<strong>22</strong><br />

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Happy<br />

Holiday<br />

Season!<br />

Serving<br />

<strong>Peabody</strong> & Lynnfield<br />

for over 30 years!<br />

Jeri Moffie<br />

978-590-3628<br />

jeri.moffie@gmail.com<br />

Good Luck.<br />

Wishing<br />

everyone a<br />

Happy Holiday<br />

Season.<br />

Much Gratitude this<br />

holiday season<br />

From Your<br />

Local Realtor<br />

“Allow Me To<br />

Earn Your Business”<br />

Mitchell Rosenwald<br />

617-974-1230<br />

www.rosenwaldrealestate.com


T10<br />

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

Media Day<br />

THANKSGIVING FOOTBALL<br />

The <strong>Peabody</strong> Tanners football and cheer team pose for a photo on Media Day.<br />

PHOTOS | BOB CARBONE<br />

From left, Carlos Hernandez, Eddie Collado, Tyler Norman, Abe Kaba, Jake Sousa and Luis Guridys ham it up<br />

on Media Day.<br />

<strong>Peabody</strong> cheerleaders work on a throw.<br />

Go Tanners<br />

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THANKSGIVING FOOTBALL<br />

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

T<strong>11</strong><br />

WEEK 6<br />

Angel Paulino finds a big hole to pick up some yardage, assisted by Jack Woods (left) and Michael Lock (right).<br />

By Scot Cooper<br />

PEABODY — The <strong>Peabody</strong><br />

football team executed a<br />

near-perfect game plan across<br />

all three phases during Friday<br />

night’s game against visiting<br />

Malden. The Tanners kept<br />

Malden’s offense off the field,<br />

forced turnovers on defense and<br />

made the most of the opportunities<br />

they were given. The result<br />

was a 42-12 <strong>Peabody</strong> victory at<br />

Corey Lee Field the Tanners’<br />

third win of the season.<br />

<strong>Peabody</strong> coach Mark<br />

Bettencourt said he was pleased<br />

to see his Tanners put forth<br />

a solid outing after mistakes<br />

cost them in losses earlier this<br />

season.<br />

“We gelled, I mean offensively,<br />

a lot of mistakes that<br />

we’ve been making lately we<br />

corrected today, and I think you<br />

Tanner defense smothers Malden<br />

saw the results on the field,”<br />

Bettencourt said. “If the kids<br />

do what the coaches teach them<br />

to do, things obviously look a<br />

lot better for us, and we looked<br />

pretty good tonight.”<br />

The Tanners scored on their<br />

second possession, after fumbling<br />

the first time they had the<br />

ball, on a sack and recovery<br />

by Malden’s Amilcar Ferreira.<br />

Angel Paulino took it in from<br />

the 1-yard line with 3:48 left in<br />

the first quarter. Austin Leggett<br />

tacked on the extra point, who<br />

was a perfect 6-of-6 in point<br />

after kicks, to put <strong>Peabody</strong><br />

ahead to stay.<br />

The Tanners were back in<br />

business four seconds later, as<br />

Malden fumbled the kickoff,<br />

and Colten Cole recovered.<br />

Jake Sousa capped the short<br />

drive with a 2-yard touchdown<br />

run and Malden found itself in<br />

an early 14-0 hole.<br />

Kyle Maglione (1 catch,<br />

32 yards) swiped a Justin<br />

Nortelus pass on the next series,<br />

and <strong>Peabody</strong> scored three<br />

plays later, when Matthew<br />

Jandrisevits (2-of-3, 42 yards,<br />

TD) found Dylan Peluso in the<br />

right corner for the touchdown<br />

pass from <strong>22</strong> yards out.<br />

<strong>Peabody</strong> went into the locker<br />

room up 28-0, after Alex<br />

DeNisco (3-of-4, 46 yards, TD)<br />

hit Brandon Caniff with an <strong>11</strong>-<br />

yard touchdown pass. Malden<br />

was struggling on offense in<br />

the first half, and <strong>Peabody</strong> was<br />

more than willing to take advantage<br />

on Senior Night.<br />

After the break, Tanners running<br />

back Colby Therrien ran<br />

one in from six yards out, and<br />

Luis Guridys busted loose for a<br />

45-yard scoring run in the third<br />

to close things out for <strong>Peabody</strong>.<br />

Malden got on the board<br />

late in the third, on a touchdown<br />

run by Nortelus, and the<br />

Malden quarterback hooked up<br />

with Raushad Moore from 21<br />

yards out for the final score of<br />

the game. Moore’s catch was<br />

a highlight-reel play, going up<br />

for a high throw, getting his<br />

arm under the ball and pulling it<br />

away from a Tanners’ defensive<br />

back.<br />

Ten Tanners had a least one<br />

rushing attempt, including<br />

Paulino (10 carries, 72 yards),<br />

Jandrisevits (5 carries, 59<br />

yards), Guridys (1 carry, 45<br />

yards), Cam Cuzzi (6 carries,<br />

26 yards), DeNisco (2 carries,<br />

16 yards), Therrien (2 carries,<br />

12 yards), Sousa (2 carries, 3<br />

yards), Colten Cole (1 carry, 6<br />

yards), Dante Olowu (1 carry,<br />

2 yards) and Jack Flaherty (3<br />

carries).<br />

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PHOTO | AL PEREZ<br />

“Those kids impressed<br />

me, I know they’re young,<br />

they’re rebuilding, but they<br />

fought hard the entire game,<br />

I give them a lot of credit,”<br />

Bettencourt said. “Our goal<br />

is to get better every week,<br />

hopefully this gives us a push<br />

for Beverly next week. That’s<br />

been the goal from week one,<br />

get better every week.”<br />

Despite the loss, Malden<br />

coach Steve Freker said he was<br />

proud of his team’s effort.<br />

“We’ve only got four-five<br />

guys with varsity experience,<br />

we started two freshmen and<br />

three sophomores on the offensive<br />

line, and that’s unheard<br />

of in the NEC,” Freker<br />

said. “We told them to keep<br />

fighting in the second half and<br />

score a few touchdowns and<br />

they did that.”<br />

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and Tanners


T12<br />

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

THANKSGIVING FOOTBALL<br />

WEEK 7<br />

Tanner football flat in loss to Beverly<br />

By Daniel Kane<br />

BEVERLY — The <strong>Peabody</strong><br />

football team couldn’t get<br />

anything to work offensively<br />

against a strong Beverly defense,<br />

falling 28-7 to the<br />

Panthers at Hurd Stadium<br />

Saturday afternoon.<br />

“They beat us up upfront,”<br />

<strong>Peabody</strong> coach Mark<br />

Bettencourt said. “We couldn’t<br />

hit open holes. They stopped us<br />

from running downhill and they<br />

outplayed us in every facet of<br />

the game. We didn’t show up at<br />

any phase of the game.<br />

“Everything they did, we<br />

practiced for four days and<br />

we weren’t lining up right,”<br />

Bettencourt added. “I don’t<br />

know how that happens but<br />

we’ll have to watch the film<br />

and find out where the confusion<br />

was. They just outmanned<br />

us. They played a better football<br />

game then we did. I give<br />

Beverly all the credit in the<br />

world they needed to win this<br />

game and they went out and<br />

played inspired.”<br />

Despite the loss, <strong>Peabody</strong> (3-<br />

4), qualified for the Division 2<br />

North state tournament as the<br />

No. 6 seed. The Tanners will<br />

visit No. 3 Reading (6-1) Friday<br />

night at 7.<br />

Panthers coach Andrew<br />

Morency was happy to see his<br />

team’s hard work throughout<br />

the season pay off Saturday. The<br />

Panthers (4-3) clinched a state<br />

tournament bid in Division 3<br />

North with the victory. Beverly<br />

visits No. 4 Winchester Friday<br />

night (7).<br />

“It’s a huge win to make this<br />

our third in a row and get a win<br />

at home against a hot <strong>Peabody</strong><br />

team,” Morency said. “Going<br />

forward in the playoffs, I think<br />

you need a good defense and<br />

ours had been something else<br />

the last few weeks.<br />

Colby Therrien scored <strong>Peabody</strong>’s only touchdown Saturday during the Tanners’ loss to Beverly Saturday.<br />

“We’re just excited,”<br />

Morency added. “This is a hard<br />

working group. They have decided<br />

to take it day by day and<br />

you’ve seen the results so I’m<br />

very proud of this team and the<br />

way they’ve turned it around<br />

this year.”<br />

Duncan Moreland had a huge<br />

game for the Panthers at both<br />

defensive back and wide receiver.<br />

Moreland broke up several<br />

<strong>Peabody</strong> passes and hauled<br />

in four catches for 102 yards<br />

and one touchdown.<br />

“You see the return of a few<br />

guys having a huge impact<br />

for us,” Morency said. “Marje<br />

Mulumba, Duncan back there at<br />

defensive back. Our back seven<br />

has been playing better. I know<br />

we have a strong defensive line<br />

but to have those guys come up<br />

and make plays is a huge thing.”<br />

The game started with several<br />

back-and-forth stops by both<br />

defenses including an interception<br />

by <strong>Peabody</strong>’s Jake Sousa<br />

at his own goal line. However,<br />

Sousa was hurt on the play and<br />

unable to return for the Tanners.<br />

“Losing Jake on that interception<br />

where he pulled his<br />

hamstring, that’s a devastating<br />

loss,” Bettencourt said. “But<br />

I’m not going to use that as an<br />

excuse, the middle linebacker<br />

position was not the issue that<br />

we had.”<br />

The <strong>Peabody</strong> offense started<br />

the game with five straight<br />

three-and-out drives and was<br />

unable to capitalize on two<br />

Beverly turnovers in the first<br />

half.<br />

With four minutes remaining<br />

in the first half, Beverly hit its<br />

first big play of the day when<br />

quarterback Ryan Barror (5-<br />

for-<strong>11</strong> for 125 yards, one passing<br />

touchdown and one rushing<br />

touchdown) found Moreland<br />

open down the left sideline for a<br />

68-yard touchdown pass to put<br />

the Panthers ahead 6-0.<br />

Beverly struck again a few<br />

minutes later when Barror<br />

capped off a drive with a 4-yard<br />

touchdown run to extend<br />

Beverly’s lead to 14-0.<br />

The Panthers started the<br />

second half with a blocked<br />

punt by defensive tackle Bobby<br />

Adams and from there the<br />

game belonged to the hard running<br />

of Clayton McAlpine (13<br />

carries for 102 yards and two<br />

touchdowns).<br />

McAlpine added a 1-yard<br />

touchdown and broke off a 66-<br />

yard touchdown run on the next<br />

drive to put Beverly ahead 28-0<br />

in the third quarter.<br />

<strong>Peabody</strong> was able to capitalize<br />

on a Beverly fumble with<br />

PHOTO | BOB CARBONE<br />

a three-yard touchdown run by<br />

Colby Therrien (<strong>11</strong> carries, 52<br />

yards), but the Tanners’ next<br />

drive ended on an interception<br />

to seal the Beverly win at 28-7.<br />

Matt Jandrisevits (2-of-7, 25<br />

yards) and Alex DeNisco (1-<br />

of-4, 5 yards) split time under<br />

center for the Tanners. Dylan<br />

Peluso led the receivers with<br />

one catch for 23 yards.<br />

Should the Tanners defeat<br />

the Rockets Friday night, they<br />

would take on the winner of<br />

Friday’s game between No. 2<br />

seed Lincoln-Sudbury (6-1) and<br />

No. 7 seed Masconomet.<br />

The other side of the bracket<br />

features No. 1 North Andover<br />

(7-0) against No. 8 Westford<br />

Academy (3-4) and No. 4<br />

Woburn (3-4) against No. 5<br />

Waltham. Both of those games<br />

are scheduled for Friday night<br />

at 7.<br />

266 Broadway,<br />

Saugus MA 01906<br />

(781) 233-2587<br />

We are open<br />

7 days a week!<br />

Happy Thanksgiving<br />

to all Players and CoacheS<br />

PEABODY CITY COUNCIL<br />

2018<br />

Best Wishes For A Safe<br />

& Happy Thanksgiving<br />

Good Luck <strong>Peabody</strong> Tanners<br />

and Lynnfield Pioneers<br />

Safe and


THANKSGIVING FOOTBALL<br />

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

T13<br />

WEEK 8<br />

Tanners can’t keep up with Reading<br />

By Anne Marie Tobin<br />

READING — The No. 6<br />

<strong>Peabody</strong> football team got off<br />

to a disastrous start Friday night<br />

against No. 3 Reading in the quarterfinals<br />

of the North Division<br />

playoffs at John Hollingsworth<br />

Field. The Tanners battled to the<br />

bitter end, but never recovered,<br />

falling to the Middlesex League<br />

Liberty League champion<br />

Rockets, 35-21.<br />

The Rockets got off to a dream<br />

start, scoring on their first three<br />

possessions to build a quick 21-0<br />

lead after one quarter of play,<br />

while <strong>Peabody</strong> went three-and-out<br />

on its first three drives to set the<br />

tone for the evening.<br />

Reading needed only eight seconds<br />

to take a lead just two minutes<br />

into the first quarter on a trick<br />

pass play, from running back Jake<br />

D’Agostino to Pat Conroy (the<br />

first of his 3 TDs) , to take a 7-0<br />

lead.<br />

It went from bad to worse for<br />

<strong>Peabody</strong> on the ensuing kickoff.<br />

Intended to be a squib kick, the<br />

ball bounced off a <strong>Peabody</strong> player<br />

and was recovered by Reading’s<br />

Josh Williamson at the Reading<br />

44. Seven plays later, Conroy ran<br />

it in from the 6-yard line to double<br />

the Rockets’ lead to 14-0.<br />

After forcing another threeand-out,<br />

Reading needed only<br />

eight plays to drive 48 yards for its<br />

third score of the quarter, this one<br />

on an 18-yard touchdown pass<br />

from quarterback Matt Sannella<br />

(105 passing yards, 70 rushing<br />

yards) to Domenic Masucci, and<br />

the rout was on.<br />

“You cannot have that kind<br />

of a start, falling behind 21-0, in<br />

a playoff game,” said <strong>Peabody</strong><br />

coach Mark Bettencourt. “We dug<br />

ourselves too big a hole right off<br />

the bat, going three-and-out on<br />

our first three possessions, and<br />

had that squib kick bounce off<br />

our player so we were doomed<br />

PHOTO | BOB CARBONE<br />

<strong>Peabody</strong> running back Luis Guridys stiff arms Reading’s Jake D’Agostino (8) during Friday<br />

night’s 35-21 loss to the Rockets.<br />

from the beginning. They could<br />

play relaxed with that kind of lead<br />

and that’s not what you want in<br />

a playoff game. You want to put<br />

yourself in a position where the<br />

pressure is on both teams, and we<br />

did not do that.”<br />

Trailing 28-0 with less than<br />

four minutes to go in the first<br />

half, <strong>Peabody</strong> finally found some<br />

offensive rhythm and got on the<br />

board with only seven seconds left<br />

in the half. The Tanners drove 66<br />

yards in 13 plays, the final play<br />

being a 5-yard rush into the end<br />

zone by Colby Therrien (4 carries,<br />

19 yards). Austin Leggett tacked<br />

on the extra point to make it 28-7<br />

at the half.<br />

The Rockets started the third<br />

quarter with their foot on the<br />

gas and, still in hurry-up mode,<br />

needed less than a minute to bump<br />

the lead to 35-7 on a 9-yard rush<br />

by Conway.<br />

<strong>Peabody</strong> gamely fought back in<br />

the fourth quarter. With 4:29 left,<br />

sophomore Kyle Maglione made<br />

it 35-14 with a 31-yard punt return.<br />

Then, after the defense forced<br />

just the second Rockets’ punt<br />

of the game, quarterback Alex<br />

DeNisco (3-of-7, 27 yards, TD),<br />

in for starter Matt Jandrisevits<br />

(2-of-5, 25 yards, 7 carries for 23<br />

yards) who suffered a knee injury<br />

in the third quarter, found Declan<br />

Russell over the middle from 10<br />

yards out to make it 35-21 with<br />

under a minute to go.<br />

“I don’t know whether Matt got<br />

hit straight on or from the side,<br />

but he’s a tough kid and hopefully<br />

will be back next week,” said<br />

Bettencourt.<br />

Angel Paulino was a bright spot<br />

for the Tanners, picking up 69<br />

rushing yards on 18 carries, while<br />

Luis Guridys picked up 16 yards<br />

on three carries.<br />

Tyler Norman did a nice job<br />

filling in for the injured Jake<br />

Sousa at linebacker. The Tanners<br />

were also missing defensive back<br />

Dylan Peluso.<br />

“Anytime you have the heart of<br />

your defense on the sidelines, that<br />

hurts,” Bettencourt said. “Tyler<br />

did a very good job considering he<br />

has been playing a totally different<br />

position all years and had only two<br />

days to learn how to play middle<br />

linebacker. He showed great leadership<br />

by volunteering to switch.”<br />

Reading came into the game on<br />

a five-game winning streak, and<br />

had scored 28 or more points in<br />

five of its seven games, and 30 or<br />

more points in four games.<br />

Bettencourt said he knew going<br />

into the game that the Tanners had<br />

their work cut out for themselves.<br />

“We knew they were a very<br />

good team capable of putting a<br />

lot of points on the board, so we<br />

knew that our best shot at winning<br />

the game would be to keep our<br />

offense on the field and their offense<br />

off,” Bettencourt said. “That<br />

didn’t happen. All due respect to<br />

Danvers and Beverly, Reading is<br />

probably the best team we have<br />

faced this year.<br />

“We knew we were behind the<br />

8-ball coming in to the tournament<br />

and we had no one to blame but<br />

ourselves. We needed to compose<br />

ourselves to handle adversity, now<br />

we have to rally and finish the<br />

season as strong as we can.”<br />

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Gene and Staff offer their warmest<br />

thoughts and wishes for a Safe & Happy Thanksgiving<br />

Gene’s Barber Shop<br />

535 Lowell Street, <strong>Peabody</strong><br />

978.535.9872


T14<br />

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

THANKSGIVING FOOTBALL<br />

WEEK 9<br />

Bittersweet win for Tanners<br />

By Anne Marie Tobin<br />

PEABODY — The <strong>Peabody</strong><br />

football team got back on track<br />

Friday night with a 20-10 win<br />

over visiting Haverhill (4-5) at<br />

Coley Lee Field.<br />

The game turned on a turnover<br />

midway through the fourth<br />

quarter. Clinging to a 13-10<br />

lead, <strong>Peabody</strong> senior defensive<br />

back Joe Mastromatteo forced<br />

a Haverhill fumble recovered<br />

by senior captain Chris Glass<br />

(2 sacks) at midfield. Having<br />

been denied by the Hillie’s defense<br />

in the red zone (their third<br />

red-zone stop in the game) on<br />

their previous possession, that<br />

was all the Tanners needed to<br />

seize the momentum. <strong>Peabody</strong><br />

drove all the way to the Hillies<br />

6-yard line, where the Tanners<br />

had 1st-and-goal with about<br />

two and a half minutes to play.<br />

Angel Paulino (103 yards, 2<br />

TDs) punched it in with 2:03<br />

left in the game to give <strong>Peabody</strong><br />

a little breathing room. Kyle<br />

Maglione (5 carries, 23 yards)<br />

came up huge on the drive with<br />

two 3rd-down conversions.<br />

Dylan Peluso sealed the win<br />

with his second interception of<br />

the game with about a minute<br />

to play.<br />

“We decided to go back to our<br />

old school power type offense<br />

instead of the spread on that<br />

final drive to see is we could<br />

pound the ball,” said <strong>Peabody</strong><br />

coach Mark Bettencourt. “Our<br />

line held their blocks and Angel<br />

found the holes. We missed<br />

some golden opportunities,<br />

but I was very happy the way<br />

the kids stepped up. This was<br />

one of the best games we have<br />

played, especially on defense.”<br />

With starting quarterback<br />

Matt Jandrisevits sidelined<br />

with an injury, Alex DeNisco<br />

got his first varsity start and the<br />

sophomore did not disappoint,<br />

completing eight of 13 pass<br />

Dylan Peluso (9) picked off two passes in <strong>Peabody</strong>’s win over Haverhill.<br />

attempts for 67 yards with one<br />

touchdown.<br />

“To go up against a very good<br />

MVC team in your first start<br />

has to be scary, but the fact that<br />

Alex and Matt have swapped<br />

off all year made it comfortable<br />

for Alex to step in. That experience<br />

helped him.”<br />

The win was bittersweet for<br />

the Tanners, who observed<br />

a moment of silence prior to<br />

the game in memory of beloved<br />

English teacher Lawrie<br />

Bertram, who died suddenly<br />

last Friday.<br />

“She was more than just a<br />

teacher, she was the one who<br />

stayed every day until 5 to help<br />

the kids who don’t have a strong<br />

family support system,” said<br />

Bettencourt. “She was a special<br />

person. The kids were split<br />

50-50 on whether or not to play,<br />

so I told them that Ms. Bertram<br />

would want them to play. We<br />

wore black tape over our bulls<br />

to honor her. Honestly I had my<br />

doubts about being able to win<br />

the game, but she was with us.”<br />

<strong>Peabody</strong> took a 6-0 lead on<br />

a 2-yard run by Paulino in the<br />

first quarter.<br />

Haverhill took its first (and<br />

only) lead of the game on a<br />

1-yard plunge by Hillies quarterback<br />

Brady Skafas. But<br />

Haverhill paid a dear price as<br />

Skafas was injured and did not<br />

return.<br />

DeNisco hit Jared Ridley<br />

form 18 yards out (Austin<br />

Leggett kick) to regain the lead<br />

for <strong>Peabody</strong>, 13-7, in the second<br />

quarter. A key play on the drive<br />

was a 14-yard DeNisco to<br />

Declan Russell strike to convert<br />

on third down and keep the<br />

chains moving. Sergio Martinez<br />

nailed 20-yard field goal make<br />

it 13-10 at halftime.<br />

<strong>Peabody</strong> was in prime position<br />

to add to its lead when<br />

Peluso returned the second half<br />

kickoff 78 yards to the Hillies’<br />

6. But the drive was killed when<br />

Haverhill picked off DeNisco in<br />

the end zone.<br />

The pick set the defensive<br />

tone for the rest of the game<br />

with neither team able to get<br />

much going.<br />

“The defenses just fed off<br />

each other,” said Bettencourt.<br />

“We’d get a stop, they’d get a<br />

stop, then we’d get a stop.”<br />

In the fourth quarter, <strong>Peabody</strong><br />

came up empty again in the red<br />

PHOTO | AL PEREZ<br />

zone after driving to the Hillies’<br />

20.<br />

It wasn’t until <strong>Peabody</strong>’s<br />

final drive, sparked by Glass’s<br />

fumble recovery, that either<br />

team would find the end zone.<br />

“Haverhill was starting to<br />

gain momentum and had picked<br />

up a couple of first downs, but<br />

Joe just put his shoulder pad on<br />

the ball and it popped right to<br />

Chris,” said Bettencourt.<br />

Dylan Peluso came up clutch on<br />

the defensive side of the ball with<br />

two interceptions, the second one<br />

coming with under two minutes to<br />

go on the Hillies final drive.<br />

Glass finished with two<br />

sacks, while Aiden Kelleher,<br />

senior captain Abe Kaba and<br />

Luis Guridys had key tackles<br />

for losses.<br />

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Have a Safe and<br />

Mayor of <strong>Peabody</strong>Happy Thanksgiving<br />

Go... Tanners Pioneers Crusaders Eagles<br />

CITY OF PEABODY • EDWARD A. BETTENCOURT, JR., MAYOR<br />

edward.bettencourt@peabody-ma.gov


THANKSGIVING FOOTBALL<br />

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

WEEK 10<br />

T15<br />

City loses battle of Tanners<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 counterparts<br />

in a non-playoff 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 drive that<br />

chewed more than six minutes<br />

off the clock, capped<br />

by a 3-yard touchdown<br />

pass from quarterback Ryan<br />

Qualey to tight end Anthony<br />

Morales and point after by<br />

Ayob Essquabin.<br />

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

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. A 2-yard loss<br />

on a botched run attempt, a sack<br />

and Alex DeNisco (3-of-<strong>11</strong>,<br />

32 yards, INT) incompletion,<br />

turning the ball over on downs<br />

to Woburn with 1:32 to play, effectively<br />

ending the 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 gave him time<br />

to read our defense and find<br />

open receivers. Their offense<br />

had a lot of diversity and ran<br />

some things we had not seen before,<br />

so that also hurt us.”<br />

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

first quarter, thanks to a 79-<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 />

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. <strong>22</strong> at Coley Lee Field.<br />

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

series, 44-29, 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 />

PHOTO | BOB CARBONE<br />

Angel Paulino puts his head down looking for extra yards.<br />

PHOTO | BOB CARBONE<br />

Luis Guridys (21) has been a mainstay in the <strong>Peabody</strong> backfield.<br />

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Participating Provider For Most Major Insurances<br />

Call today to make the appointment you<br />

have been putting off until tomorrow!<br />

GO TEAMS!


T16<br />

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

THANKSGIVING FOOTBALL<br />

<strong>Peabody</strong>’s Jake Sousa, behind a block from Brandon Glass (51), finds a hole up the middle in the 2017 game.<br />

<strong>Peabody</strong> - Saugus Rivalry History<br />

FILE PHOTO<br />

Year Winner Score Year Winner Score Year Winner Score Year Winner Score Year Winner Score<br />

1944 <strong>Peabody</strong> 19-7<br />

1945 <strong>Peabody</strong> 6-0<br />

1946 Saugus 7-0<br />

1947 <strong>Peabody</strong> 13-0<br />

1948 Saugus 27-13<br />

1949 Saugus 26-6<br />

1950 Saugus 47-14<br />

1951 Saugus 15-0<br />

1952 <strong>Peabody</strong> 12-7<br />

1953 Saugus 33-6<br />

1954 Saugus 20-12<br />

1955 <strong>Peabody</strong> 14-6<br />

1956 Saugus 32-7<br />

1957 Saugus 34-13<br />

1958 Saugus 38-14<br />

1959 Saugus 14-6<br />

1960 Saugus <strong>22</strong>-6<br />

1961 <strong>Peabody</strong> 20-0<br />

1962 <strong>Peabody</strong> 12-6<br />

1963 <strong>Peabody</strong> 26-14<br />

1964 Saugus 26-13<br />

1965 Saugus 35-12<br />

1966 Saugus 48-0<br />

1967 <strong>Peabody</strong> 26-8<br />

1968 Saugus 26-14<br />

1969 <strong>Peabody</strong> 30-6<br />

1970 <strong>Peabody</strong> 42-0<br />

1971 <strong>Peabody</strong> 16-0<br />

1972 <strong>Peabody</strong> 36-16<br />

1973 Saugus 12-0<br />

1974 <strong>Peabody</strong> 21-20<br />

1975 Saugus 6-0<br />

1976 <strong>Peabody</strong> 62-6<br />

1977 Saugus 12-10<br />

1978 Saugus 30-14<br />

1979 <strong>Peabody</strong> 35-14<br />

1980 Saugus 40-6<br />

1981 <strong>Peabody</strong> 28-12<br />

1982 <strong>Peabody</strong> 14-0<br />

1983 <strong>Peabody</strong> 42-6<br />

1984 Saugus 17-14<br />

1985 <strong>Peabody</strong> 8-6<br />

1986 <strong>Peabody</strong> 33-12<br />

1987 Saugus 21-20<br />

1988 Saugus <strong>22</strong>-14<br />

1989 <strong>Peabody</strong> 14-13<br />

1990 <strong>Peabody</strong> 39-8<br />

1991 <strong>Peabody</strong> 21-14<br />

1992 <strong>Peabody</strong> 28-6<br />

1993 <strong>Peabody</strong> 28-0<br />

1994 <strong>Peabody</strong> 40-8<br />

1995 <strong>Peabody</strong> 34-14<br />

1996 <strong>Peabody</strong> 39-28<br />

1997 <strong>Peabody</strong> 35-31<br />

1998 <strong>Peabody</strong> 39-32<br />

1999 <strong>Peabody</strong> 36-0<br />

2000 <strong>Peabody</strong> <strong>22</strong>-6<br />

2001 <strong>Peabody</strong> 41-16<br />

2002 <strong>Peabody</strong> 20-8<br />

2003 <strong>Peabody</strong> 35-8<br />

2004 <strong>Peabody</strong> 34-12<br />

2005 <strong>Peabody</strong> 28-0<br />

2006 Saugus 13-0<br />

2009 Saugus 14-6<br />

2010 <strong>Peabody</strong> 34-13<br />

20<strong>11</strong> <strong>Peabody</strong> 19-7<br />

2012 Saugus 43-0<br />

2013 Saugus 25-14<br />

2014 <strong>Peabody</strong> 33-0<br />

2015 <strong>Peabody</strong> 52-0<br />

2016 <strong>Peabody</strong> 35-6<br />

2017 <strong>Peabody</strong> 33-7<br />

<strong>Peabody</strong> 44<br />

Saugus 29<br />

No ties<br />

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781-334-9877 781-334-9877<br />

GO TEAMS!<br />

HAPPY THANKSGIVING


THANKSGIVING FOOTBALL<br />

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

T17<br />

PHOTO | BOB CARBONE<br />

<strong>Peabody</strong> cheer and football captains, from left, Megan Ayles, Tyler Norman, Michael Lock, Chris Glass, Abe Kaba, Jake Sousa, Makayla Iannalfo.<br />

2018 PEABODY TANNERS<br />

SCHEDULE/RESULTS<br />

Date Opponent Score<br />

9/7 Somerville 36-7 W<br />

9/14 at Danvers 30-3 L<br />

9/21 at Marblehead 28-7 L<br />

9/28 Revere 27-25 L<br />

10/16 at Masco 21-6 W<br />

10/13 at Malden 42-12 W<br />

10/20 at Beverly 28-7 L<br />

Division 2 North Playoffs<br />

10/26 at Reading 35-21 L<br />

Non-playoffs<br />

<strong>11</strong>/2 Haverhill 20-10 W<br />

<strong>11</strong>/9 Woburn 28-24 L<br />

Thanksgiving Day<br />

<strong>11</strong>/<strong>22</strong> Saugus 10 a.m.<br />

2018 SAUGUS SACHEMS<br />

SCHEDULE/RESULTS<br />

Date Opponent Score<br />

9/7 at Amesbury 30-12 L<br />

9/14 at NE Metro 26-18 L<br />

9/<strong>22</strong> Salem 14-0 W<br />

9/29 at Lynn English 42-35 L<br />

10/5 at Gloucester 61-15 L<br />

10/13 Winthrop 20-14 W<br />

10/19 Swampscott 42-0 L<br />

Division 4 North Playoffs<br />

10/26 at Weston 27-6 W<br />

<strong>11</strong>/3 at Amesbury 20-0 L<br />

Non-playoffs<br />

<strong>11</strong>/9 Pentucket 21-7 W<br />

Thanksgiving Day<br />

<strong>11</strong>/<strong>22</strong> at <strong>Peabody</strong> 10 a.m.<br />

Good Luck Lynnfield Pioneers • Good Luck <strong>Peabody</strong> Tanners<br />

CENTURY HOUSE<br />

Route <strong>11</strong>4 •<strong>Peabody</strong><br />

978-531-1410<br />

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EPICUREAN SHOPPE<br />

Route <strong>11</strong>4 •<strong>Peabody</strong><br />

978-531-1638<br />

Family Owner & Operated of 50 Years<br />

www.VillRx.com<br />

GOOD LUCK TEAMS!<br />

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


T18<br />

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

<strong>Peabody</strong>/Saugus celebration dinner<br />

THANKSGIVING FOOTBALL<br />

PHOTOS | OWEN O’ROURKE<br />

Evan Bun received the Tanners’ Heisman Trophy Award.<br />

<strong>Peabody</strong> football players Colten Cole, left, Matt Jandrisevits, and Jared Ridley at the<br />

<strong>Peabody</strong>/Saugus Thanksgiving game dinner.<br />

Jack Woods and Josh Tanzer were all smiles at the dinner.<br />

From left, Abe Kaba, Chris Glass, and Anthony Furnari chat before the start of the dinner.<br />

Beverly<br />

978-927-0032<br />

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This year,<br />

may you build memories<br />

that last a lifetime.<br />

Happy Moynihan Thanksgiving<br />

Lumber<br />

MOYNIHAN LUMBER<br />

www.moynihanlumber.com


THANKSGIVING FOOTBALL<br />

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

T19<br />

Media Day and <strong>Peabody</strong>-Fenwick scrimmage<br />

Angel Paulino bursts through a big hole on his way to a 50-yard touchdown run.<br />

PHOTOS | BOB CARBONE<br />

<strong>Peabody</strong> cheerleaders practice a throw prior to<br />

the start of the <strong>Peabody</strong>-Fenwick scrimmage on<br />

Media Day.<br />

Left, Fenwick sophomore David Cifuentes is off and running.<br />

BEST RATES AROUND<br />

FOR YOUNG DRIVERS!<br />

550 Summer St. Lynnfield<br />

@Pillings Pond<br />

1012 Eastern Ave. Malden<br />

@the corner of Rt 60 & 99<br />

374 Main St. Wakefield<br />

781-3<strong>22</strong>-2800<br />

www.supinoinsurance.com<br />

CONGRATULATIONS<br />

PEABODY TANNERS<br />

FOOTBALL<br />

Plan Now for Your Special Occasion<br />

Ask about our Special Occasion Packages at Great Savings!<br />

Packages Include Cake, Pastry and Food<br />

• Four Foot Colossal Subs (Hot or Cold) • Calzones<br />

• Deli Platters • Finger Sandwiches • Appetizers<br />

• Antipasto Salads • Delicious Hot Foods • Italian &<br />

American Mini Pastries • Holiday Pies and Cakes<br />

• Walk-Ins Welcome • Orders Suggested<br />

197 Washington Street • <strong>Peabody</strong> • 978-532-0102<br />

Go Tanners


T20<br />

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

2018 Bishop Fenwick Football<br />

THANKSGIVING FOOTBALL<br />

Crusaders Roster<br />

Player No. Grade Pos.<br />

Jason Romans 2 FR. QB/DB<br />

Cory Bright * 5 SR. QB<br />

Jake Miano 7 JR. WR/DB<br />

David Cifuentes 8 JR. RB/DE<br />

Steven Woods 9 FR. QB/LB<br />

Keegan O'Connor * 10 SR. WR/DB<br />

George Fiskatoris <strong>11</strong> SR. WR/DB<br />

Derek DelVecchio * 12 SR. WR/DB<br />

Chrys Wilson 14 SO. QB/LB<br />

Stefano Fabiano 20 SO. WR/DB<br />

Domenic Calder 21 FR. RB/DE<br />

Carl Thomas <strong>22</strong> JR. WR/DB<br />

Rob Favuzza 23 JR. WR/DB<br />

Tucker Destino 28 SO. RB/DE<br />

Jake Connolly 30 SO. WR/DB<br />

Jack Berinato 31 FR. WR/DB<br />

Player No. Grade Pos.<br />

Joe Rivers 32 JR. RB/LB<br />

Christian Loescher 33 SO. K<br />

Angel Martinez 34 SO. RB/<br />

DBPatrick Jacobs 40 SO. TE/DL<br />

Bobby Farren 41 SO. WR/DB<br />

Sonny Gosselin 43 JR. TE/DL<br />

Jimmy Espinal 50 SO. OL/LB<br />

Andrew Wilson 52 SO. OL/LB<br />

Ian Connor 54 SR. OL/LB<br />

Tom MacDonald * 55 SR. OL/DL<br />

Thomas Hazard 56 JR. OL/DL<br />

Franklin Quintin 60 SO. OL/DL<br />

Mike Lee 62 SO. OL/DL<br />

Jonathan Balan 63 SR. OL/DL<br />

Dan McGrath 65 JR. OL/DL<br />

Matt Juneau 70 SO. OL/DL<br />

Wishing everyone a very Happy Thanksgiving!<br />

Good Luck Tanners, Crusaders and Pioneers<br />

Treadwell’s<br />

Player No. Grade Pos.<br />

Andrew Wallace 71 JR. OL/DL<br />

Nick Caputo 72 FR. OL/DL<br />

Tim Lee 74 JR. OL/DL<br />

Nick Valentin 75 FR. OL/DL<br />

Colby Browne 80 SO. WR/DB<br />

Dan Richard 81 SO. WR/DE<br />

Kobe Estes 82 JR. WR/DB<br />

Ethan Gonzalez 83 JR. TE/DE<br />

Jordan Maurice 84 SO. WR/DB<br />

Quintin Bullard 21 FR. WR/DB<br />

Patrick Fitzgerald 13 FR. WR/DB<br />

Patrick Burns 34 FR. WR/DB<br />

Captains<br />

*Cory Bright, Derek Delvecchio, Tom MacDonald &<br />

Keegan O'Connor<br />

ROCCO A. IOCCO, D.M.D.<br />

LET’S GO TEAMS!<br />

40 Salem St. • Lynnfield • 781-245-7986 • www.ioccodental.com


THANKSGIVING FOOTBALL<br />

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

T21<br />

PHOTO | BISHOP FENWICK<br />

Front row, from left are coach Tayler DiPesa, Analiese Jezowski, Colby Tassinari,<br />

captain Kylie Coleman, captain Kerry McNally, captain Alison Rothrock, Sara<br />

Artigas Viscasillas, Capri Martinez, Isabella Sforza. Back row are Isabella Scolaro,<br />

Caitlin Estella, Maria Jimenez, Julia Barnes, Hailey Lewis, Cassyn Scarpaci,<br />

Colby Paolo, Olivia Ciafardoni, Meghan Costello and coach Lisa Speziale.<br />

PHOTO | BISHOP FENWICK<br />

Fenwick’s head coach Dave Woods, center, stands with the 2018 senior captains<br />

from left, Keegan O’Connor, Cory Bright, Woods, Derek DelVecchio, and<br />

Tommy MacDonald.<br />

2018 Bishop Fenwick Crusaders Schedule/Results<br />

Date Opponent Score<br />

9/8 Hamilton-Wenham 28-0 W<br />

9/14 at Dedham 29-20 L<br />

9/21 Pentucket 33-7 W<br />

9/28 Arlington Catholic 42-14 W<br />

10/5 at Williams 28-0 W<br />

10/12 at Malden Catholic 13-7 W<br />

10/19 Cardinal Spellman 56-6 W<br />

North Division 6 Playoffs<br />

10/26 Greater Lowell 55-0 W<br />

<strong>11</strong>/1 at Stoneham 48-20 L<br />

2018 Bishop Fenwick Crusaders Schedule/Results<br />

Non-playoffs<br />

<strong>11</strong>/9 at Ipswich 46-27 W<br />

Thanksgiving Day<br />

<strong>11</strong>/<strong>22</strong> St. Mary’s 10 a.m.<br />

Where opportunity and achievement meet


T<strong>22</strong><br />

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

THANKSGIVING FOOTBALL<br />

2018 St. John’s Prep Football<br />

Eagles Roster<br />

No. Player Grade<br />

1 Dan Delaus Junior<br />

2 Aise Pream Senior<br />

4 Harry Trout Senior<br />

5 Wes Rockett Senior<br />

6 Luke Brennan Senior<br />

7 Cooper McNinch Senior<br />

8 Pat Nistl Junior<br />

9 Will Potdevin Senior<br />

10 Matthew Crowley Junior<br />

<strong>11</strong> Sean Majeski Senior<br />

12 Ben Grunes Senior<br />

13 Max Freedman Senior<br />

14 Sean Walsh Senior<br />

15 Jonathan Bunnell Soph.<br />

16 Garrett Dunn Soph.<br />

17 Gus McGee Soph.<br />

18 Alex Vlachos Senior<br />

19 Antaei Rosa Senior<br />

20 Max Duchemin Junior<br />

21 Antonio Zarur Junior<br />

<strong>22</strong> Max LaPlante Soph.<br />

No. Player Grade<br />

23 Jordan Young Soph.<br />

24 Trent Tully Senior<br />

25 John Wilmont Junior<br />

26 Thomas Martinuk Soph.<br />

27 Jonathan Zion Soph.<br />

28 Matthew Stewart Junior<br />

29 Henry Brunelle Soph.<br />

30 Jim Schneiders Junior<br />

31 Tripp Clark Junior<br />

32 Nick Baldini Junior<br />

33 James Hanley Senior<br />

35 Colton Tangney Senior<br />

36 Franco DelGaizo Soph.<br />

37 Emil Pinales-Santana Soph.<br />

38 Jayzel Pina Soph.<br />

39 Dylan Wodarski Fresh<br />

40 Matt Mitchell Fresh<br />

42 James Guy Jr. Junior<br />

43 Grady McGowan Soph.<br />

44 Patrick Keefe Senior<br />

45 Jarrett Young Junior<br />

No. Player Grade<br />

46 Cole Collins Junior<br />

49 Donny Paglia Soph.<br />

50 John Murphy Senior<br />

51 Jonathan Jenkins Senior<br />

52 Peter Wiehe Soph.<br />

53/47 John Fallon Junior<br />

54 David Przybycien Senior<br />

55 Collin Taylor Soph.<br />

56 Lincoln Proops Soph.<br />

57 John McDonald Junior<br />

58 Jack McDermott Senior<br />

59 Kiernan Patch Junior<br />

60 Will Moulton Senior<br />

61 Nick Barrett Soph.<br />

62 Mason Davis Junior<br />

64 James Taylor Senior<br />

66 Thomas Corwin Soph.<br />

67 Nathan Marconi Junior<br />

68 Chris West Soph.<br />

71 Steven Lafferty Soph.<br />

72 Cooper Smith Junior<br />

No. Player Grade<br />

73 Kevin Dewing Senior<br />

74 Sean Cicerone Soph.<br />

78 Ian Smith Senior<br />

79 Dylan Roberts Fresh.<br />

80 Charlie Wilmont Fresh.<br />

81 Sean Bellamy Junior<br />

82 Nick Masterson Junior<br />

83 Sam Scherkenbach Soph.<br />

84 Jackson Delaney Fresh<br />

85 Anthony Fagan Junior<br />

86 Matt Loughlin Fresh<br />

87 Michael Fionda Junior<br />

88 Alex Lane Senior<br />

89 Griffin Ruffner Soph.<br />

90 Harrison Greenslade Soph.<br />

94 Charlie Giunta Senior<br />

96 Jack Lockhart Soph.<br />

Head coach<br />

Brian St. Pierre<br />

100 Newbury St. (Rt. 1)<br />

Danvers<br />

978-304-1762<br />

danvers@yellowjacketsgym.com<br />

Yellow Jackets is owned and managed<br />

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Girls and Boys Gymnastics Classes<br />

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THANKSGIVING FOOTBALL<br />

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

T23<br />

PHOTOS | ST. JOHN’S PREP<br />

Lynnfield resident Anthony Fagan lines up at tight end in the Eagles’ Homecoming game.<br />

Wes Rockett is all smiles after a touchdown.<br />

Quarterback Matt Crowley drops back looking for a receiver.<br />

2018 St. John’s<br />

Prep Eagles<br />

Schedule/Results<br />

Date Opponent Score<br />

9/7 Haverhill 43-14 W<br />

9/14 Central Catholic 31-12 W<br />

9/<strong>22</strong> at Everett 26-14 L<br />

9/28 Westford Academy 42-0 W<br />

10/6 at Catholic Memorial 35-17 W<br />

10/13 BC High 40-19 W<br />

10/19 at Bridge-Raynham 30-7 W<br />

Division 1 North playoffs<br />

10/26 Haverhill 41-0 W<br />

<strong>11</strong>/2 Acton-Boxborough 55-28 W<br />

<strong>11</strong>/9 Central Catholic 21-0 W<br />

Thanksgiving Eve<br />

<strong>11</strong>/21 at Xaverian (Fenway) 7 p.m.<br />

The 2018 St. John’s Prep football captains, from left, are Aise Pream, Kevin Dewing, James<br />

Taylor, Wes Rockett and Colton Tangney.<br />

HAPPY<br />

THANKSGIVING<br />

Good luck <strong>Peabody</strong> Tanners, St John's Prep Eagles<br />

Lynnfield Pioneers, and Bishop Fenwick Crusaders!<br />

139 Lynnfield Street, <strong>Peabody</strong>, MA 01960 • 978-531-53<strong>11</strong> • www.stonewoodtavernpeabody.com


T24<br />

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

THANKSGIVING FOOTBALL<br />

COLDWELL BANKER<br />

Go Tanners!<br />

From a <strong>Peabody</strong><br />

High Alumnus ’70.<br />

Cheerleader for<br />

Class A Champs ‘69<br />

Joyce Cucchiara<br />

(978) 808-1597<br />

Joyce.Cucchiara@NEMoves.com<br />

Happy<br />

Thanksgiving!<br />

From a PHS Grad and<br />

Lynnfield Resident!<br />

Louise Bova-Touchette<br />

(617) 605-0555<br />

Louise.Touchette@NEMoves.com<br />

Go Tanners<br />

and Pioneers!<br />

Evelyn Limberakis Rockas<br />

(617) 256-8500<br />

Evelyn.Rockas@NEMoves.com<br />

Go Pioneers!<br />

From a Lynnfield High<br />

Alumnus ‘84<br />

Get That<br />

Touchdown!<br />

Happy Thanksgiving<br />

Best Wishes<br />

and Happy<br />

Thanksgiving!<br />

Nikki Cappadona Martin<br />

(781) 710-1440<br />

Nikki.Martin@NEMoves.com<br />

Elaine Figliola<br />

(781) 910-6454<br />

Elaine.Figliola@NEMoves.com<br />

Deb Molle<br />

Debra.Molle@NEMoves.com<br />

Have a Healthy<br />

Happy Holiday<br />

Season<br />

Carol DiCiaccio<br />

(781) 820-3517<br />

Carol.DiCiaccio@NEMoves.com<br />

Wishing you a<br />

Happy and Healthy<br />

Holiday Season<br />

Jill Jorgenson<br />

(781) 632-9879<br />

Jill.Jorgenson@NEMoves.com<br />

Enjoy the warmth<br />

and love of your<br />

family during this<br />

holiday season<br />

Denise Moynihan<br />

(784) 782-1200<br />

Denise.Moynihan@NEMoves.com<br />

Have a happy,<br />

healthy, and<br />

peaceful<br />

thanksgiving<br />

Dan Del Grosso<br />

(978) 578-5108<br />

Dan.Delgrosso@NEMoves.com<br />

Wishing everyone<br />

a happy and safe<br />

holiday season.<br />

GO PATRIOTS!<br />

Dan Donovan<br />

(617) 304-9976<br />

Daniel.Donovan@NEMoves.com<br />

Have a winning<br />

holiday season!<br />

Steve Macdonald<br />

(508) 982-5005<br />

Steve.Macdonald@NEMoves.com<br />

Frank Rossetti<br />

(781) 718-4662<br />

Frank.Rossetti@NEMoves.com<br />

Martha Poti<br />

(781) 717-4660<br />

Martha.Poti@NEMoves.com<br />

GO PIONEERS!<br />

Wishing you all a<br />

happy and healthy<br />

Thanksgiving<br />

HAPPY<br />

THANKSGIVING<br />

Lynnfield and<br />

<strong>Peabody</strong>!<br />

Have Fun Everyone!<br />

Debbie Caniff<br />

(617) 771-2827<br />

Deborah.Caniff@NEMoves.com<br />

Good Luck<br />

Lynnfield<br />

Pioneers<br />

Karen Johnson<br />

(781) 367-8482<br />

Karen.Johnson@NEMoves.com<br />

ColdwellBankerHomes.com<br />

Coldwell Banker Residential Brokerage<br />

Lynnfield, MA<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 />

Happy<br />

Thanksgiving!<br />

David Cloutier<br />

(603) 892-1885<br />

David.Cloutier@NEMoves.com


NOVEMBER <strong>22</strong>, 2018<br />

All Saints Episcopal Church of the<br />

North 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<br />

Calvary in Danvers, now worship together<br />

in Danvers, across from the Danvers Town<br />

Hall. Service of Holy Communion and<br />

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

Call or email Rabbi Schusterman at rabbi@<br />

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

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

School for children on Wednesday, and<br />

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

Kabbalah and other holiday events. Hebrew<br />

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

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

jewishpeabody.com.<br />

Community Covenant Church<br />

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

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

Community Covenant is a warm and inviting<br />

church in the Evangelical, Protestant<br />

tradition. All are welcome.<br />

The Reverend Joel Anderle, our Senior<br />

Pastor, officiates worship services every<br />

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

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

through June.<br />

For more information please contact the<br />

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

Congregation Sons of Israel<br />

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

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

Also on Facebook<br />

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

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

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

a kiddish. Weekly Sunday morning services<br />

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

Congregation Tifereth Israel<br />

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

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

contact president Elliot Hershoff at<br />

978-531-7309.<br />

First United Methodist<br />

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

handicap accessible.<br />

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

or 978-531-8135.<br />

New Destiny Christian<br />

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

978-373-4340<br />

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

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

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

North Shore Baptist<br />

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

978-535-6186<br />

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

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

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

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

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

Meeting, 7 p.m.<br />

Visit our website for more information or<br />

to leave a prayer request.<br />

NorthShoreBaptistChurch.org<br />

Our Lady of Fatima<br />

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

Religious Notes<br />

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

St. Adelaide<br />

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

978-535-1985<br />

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

St. Ann’s Parish<br />

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

978-531-1480<br />

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

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

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

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

Ellen Fitzgerald, Religious Education Dir.,<br />

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

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

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

and 10:30 a.m. Daily Mass: 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,<br />

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

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

<strong>22</strong>50.<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<br />

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

and coffee and fellowship following;<br />

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

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

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

month and on certain festivals.<br />

St John the Baptist<br />

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

(978) 531-0002 http://stjohnspeabody.<br />

org<br />

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

Parochial<br />

Vicars: Rev. Kevin Leaver, and Rev. Rev.<br />

Paul G.M. McManus;<br />

Deacons: Leo A. Martin, and Chuck Hall;<br />

Winter Mass Schedule: Monday-Saturday,<br />

6:45 a.m. and Saturday at 4 p.m, Sunday<br />

at 8, 10 and <strong>11</strong>:30 am. in Spanish, and 5 p.m.<br />

Other Seasons’ Schedule for Saturday 4<br />

p.m. Mass and<br />

Sunday 8 a.m. Mass. see: http://stjohnspeabodynews.org/Shared<br />

Mass Schedule/<br />

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

month from 9:30 a.m.<br />

to 12:30 p.m. in the Pastoral Center basement.<br />

Thrift Shop Thursday 9 a.m. - Noon<br />

Fridays & Saturdays 9 a.m. -1 p.m.<br />

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

applications.<br />

Programs available for 2, 3, 4 and 5-yearolds<br />

and grades 1-8.<br />

Extended day available for all Students.<br />

Visit: http://www.stjohns-peabody.com/<br />

Tel. No. (978) 531-0444, ext. 340<br />

St. Thomas the Apostle<br />

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

We love to hear from you.<br />

Have a story? Let us know! Contact the Editor,<br />

Write to the Editor,<br />

tgrillo@essexmediagroup.com<br />

tgrillo@essexmediagroup.com<br />

Have a story to share?<br />

Need a question answered?<br />

contactus@essexmedia.group<br />

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

978-531-0<strong>22</strong>4, Office Hours: M-F 9<br />

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

Very Rev. John MacInnis, VF. Parochial<br />

Vicar: Rev. Steven Clemence. Pastoral Associate/Coordinator<br />

of Youth Ministry:<br />

Dawn Alves. Coordinator of Religious Education:<br />

Lisa Trainor. Director of Music<br />

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

stthomaspeabody.org. Winter Mass Schedule:<br />

Saturday 4 p.m. (English) ~ Sunday 10<br />

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<br />

Assistant: Deacon Robert Fadel; Worship<br />

schedule: Sunday - Matins at 8 a.m., Divine<br />

Liturgy at 9 a.m., Church School at 10:30 -<br />

<strong>11</strong>:30 a.m.; Weekly feast days as announced:<br />

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

Second Congregational<br />

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

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

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

The church is wheelchair accessible.<br />

Childcare is available during worship service<br />

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

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

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

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

Group schedules, call the office.<br />

South Congregational<br />

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

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

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

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

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

through 12th grade programs during the<br />

worship service. Our Sunday worship service<br />

blends both traditional hymns and contemporary<br />

praise. Teen Youth Groups meet<br />

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

small groups for Bible Study meeting weekly<br />

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

church office for info.<br />

Monthly Fellowship Dinner is the 2nd<br />

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

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

are welcome.<br />

Sovereign Grace Community Church<br />

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

978-210-7413<br />

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

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

contemporary Sunday Morning Worship<br />

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

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

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

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

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

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

information about Youth Group.<br />

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

facebook.com/michaelwillyamz. Helping<br />

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

needs in our community.<br />

Temple Tiferet Shalom<br />

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

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

The Temple Shabbat Services are Fridays<br />

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

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

Confirmation classes, Chai Club<br />

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

education programs are an integral component<br />

of the temple.<br />

Temple Ner Tamid<br />

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

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

Email templenertamid@verizon.net.<br />

Rabbi Richard Perlman, Cantor Steve<br />

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

Administrator. Service Schedule: Evening<br />

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

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

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

special service), Saturday morning service<br />

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

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

Action and Adult Education. Pilates on<br />

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

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

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

welcomes Interfaith Families. Please contact<br />

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

1293.<br />

Stricter tobacco<br />

rules coming<br />

By Thomas Grillo<br />

<strong>Peabody</strong> is the latest community<br />

to further restrict tobacco<br />

sales.<br />

"Everyone is becoming increasingly<br />

concerned about vaping<br />

among young people and<br />

the sale of flavored tobacco<br />

products which seem to be designed<br />

to appeal to youngsters,<br />

like bubble gum and coconut<br />

flavors," said Sharon Cameron,<br />

director of the city's Health<br />

Department. "We are trying to<br />

minimize chances young people<br />

will access them."<br />

Under new rules approved by<br />

the Board of Health that take<br />

effect in January, the number<br />

of tobacco sales permits will be<br />

capped at 64. Today, there are<br />

61 permit holders in <strong>Peabody</strong>.<br />

Within that ceiling, there are<br />

four adult-only tobacco retailers,<br />

such as smoke shops,<br />

and that number will be limited<br />

to five.<br />

In addition, the new rules<br />

would limit the sale of flavored<br />

tobacco products, a favorite of<br />

teens, to adult-only retail tobacco<br />

stores; prohibit the sale of<br />

tobacco products by hospitals,<br />

clinics, and schools; tobacco<br />

sales for new retail locations<br />

would be outlawed within 500<br />

feet of a school.<br />

Violators face fines from<br />

$100 to as much as $300 depending<br />

on the number of<br />

violations.<br />

Many of the Bay State's cities<br />

and towns are enacting similar<br />

regulations. Lynn passed new<br />

rules last summer, and Revere<br />

has among stricts laws on the<br />

North Shore.<br />

Doctors say the evidence is<br />

clear tobacco kills. The Surgeon<br />

General found conclusive evidence<br />

that tobacco smoking<br />

causes cancer, and respiratory<br />

and cardiac diseases.<br />

The U.S. Department of<br />

Health and Human Services<br />

has concluded that nicotine<br />

is as addictive as cocaine or<br />

heroin. The Surgeon General<br />

found nicotine exposure during<br />

adolescence, a critical time for<br />

brain development, may have<br />

lasting adverse consequences<br />

for brain development.<br />

In its ruling against Phillip<br />

Morris, RJ Reynolds and other<br />

major cigarette manufacturers,<br />

a Federal District Court found<br />

tobacco manufacturers spent<br />

billions annually on marketing<br />

to encourage young people to<br />

purchase cigarette products in<br />

order to provide replacement<br />

smokers the companies need<br />

to survive. These companies,<br />

the court said, were likely to<br />

continue targeting underage<br />

smokers.<br />

Here’s some information<br />

about vaping and the health<br />

risks it creates:<br />

Vaping is inhaling and exhaling<br />

the aerosol, often referred<br />

to as vapor, which is<br />

produced by an e-cigarette or<br />

similar device. The term is used<br />

because e-cigarettes do not produce<br />

tobacco smoke, but rather<br />

an aerosol, that consists of fine<br />

particles. Many of these particles<br />

contain varying amounts<br />

of toxic chemicals, which have<br />

been linked to cancer, as well as<br />

respiratory and heart disease.<br />

Vaping has grown in popularity<br />

with the rise of e-cigarettes,<br />

which were introduced<br />

in 2007. Vaping devices include<br />

vape pens and advanced personal<br />

vaporizers, also known<br />

as ‘MODS.’ E-cigarettes, which<br />

look like smoke cigarettes, and<br />

vape pens, which resemble<br />

large fountain pens, are simpler<br />

in design and less expensive<br />

than devices that have been customized<br />

by the user.<br />

Typically, a vaping device<br />

consists of a mouthpiece, a<br />

battery, a cartridge for containing<br />

the e-liquid or e-juice,<br />

and a heating component for<br />

the device that is battery-powered.<br />

When the device is used,<br />

the battery warms the heating<br />

component, which turns the<br />

contents of the e-liquid into an<br />

aerosol that is inhaled into the<br />

lungs and then exhaled.<br />

The e-liquid in vaporizer<br />

products usually contains a propylene<br />

glycol or vegetable glycerin-based<br />

liquid with nicotine,<br />

flavoring and other chemicals<br />

and metals, but not tobacco.<br />

Some people use these devices<br />

to vape THC, the chemical<br />

responsible for most of marijuana's<br />

mind-altering effects,<br />

or even synthetic drugs like<br />

flakka, instead of nicotine.<br />

The newest and most popular<br />

vaping product is the JUUL,<br />

which is a small, sleek device<br />

that resembles a flash drive. Its<br />

subtle design makes it easy to<br />

hide, which helps explain why<br />

it has become so popular among<br />

students. It now accounts for<br />

72 percent of the market share<br />

of vaping products in the U.S.<br />

It comes in several flavors like<br />

crème brûlée, mango and fruit<br />

medley. Every JUUL product<br />

contains a high dose of nicotine,<br />

with one flavor cartridge<br />

containing about the same<br />

amount of nicotine as a pack of<br />

cigarettes<br />

Evidence indicates vaping<br />

products may be dangerous.<br />

Despite early optimism when<br />

these products first came on the<br />

market in the late 2000’s, health<br />

advocates now recommend<br />

caution in using them in light<br />

of growing evidence suggesting<br />

that their risks, especially to<br />

young people, outweigh their<br />

benefits.<br />

Source: CenterOnAddiction.<br />

org


10<br />

WEEKLYNEWS.NET - 978-532-5880 NOVEMBER <strong>22</strong>, 2018<br />

Tis’ the season to be crafty<br />

Amenities embellished the ground floor of the Smith Barn.<br />

Bonnie Anderson and her business Practical Pieces were present at the fair.<br />

PHOTOS | OWEN O’ROURKE<br />

Crowds gathered to look at the wares presented on the floor of<br />

the Smith Barn during the <strong>Peabody</strong> Historical Society crafts<br />

fair on Saturday.<br />

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A small sampling of the crafts that were for sale at the fair.<br />

CATERING<br />

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• Sandwiches<br />

• Salads<br />

• Daily Specials<br />

Looking for past issues?<br />

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NOVEMBER <strong>22</strong>, 2018<br />

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

Sarah Ciman was taking care of the Like Father<br />

Like Daughters counter.<br />

Aidan Walsh of Boy Scout Troop <strong>11</strong>9 was selling<br />

wreaths.<br />

Sophia Gallo, left, and Lydia Tierney set up their<br />

table in the Smith Barn.<br />

Ana Walsh, left, and Carlos Andrade prepare the wreaths that Boy Scout Troop <strong>11</strong>9 sold at the fair.<br />

Kristen Glionna of Norwich Circle Signs was showing off her<br />

hand-painted signs.<br />

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12<br />

BOSTON — Thanksgiving<br />

is a wonderful family holiday,<br />

but the day can be ruined<br />

with a cooking or candle<br />

fire, a burn injury, or a carbon<br />

monoxide incident from longterm<br />

use of the oven, warned<br />

State Fire Marshal Peter J.<br />

Ostroskey.<br />

There are more home fires<br />

on Thanksgiving than any other<br />

single day in Massachusetts,<br />

twice as many as New Year’s<br />

Eve which ranks second.<br />

“The good news is that there<br />

are some simple steps you can<br />

take to keep your family safe.<br />

To start with, every home<br />

should have working smoke<br />

and carbon monoxide (CO)<br />

alarms,” Ostroskey said in a<br />

statement.<br />

Here are some tips to have a<br />

tragedy-free holiday:<br />

Cooking -<br />

Check to make sure your<br />

oven is empty before turning it<br />

on.<br />

Wear short or tight-fitting<br />

sleeves when cooking.<br />

Catering<br />

available<br />

SU CHANG’S<br />

Turn pot handles inward over<br />

the stove.<br />

Remember to “stand by<br />

your pan" and stay in the<br />

kitchen when boiling, frying or<br />

broiling.<br />

Use a timer when baking or<br />

roasting and never leave the<br />

house with the oven running.<br />

The best way to respond to a<br />

stovetop fire is to “put a lid on<br />

it” and turn off the heat.<br />

The best way to respond to<br />

an oven or broiler fire is to keep<br />

the doors closed and turn off the<br />

heat.<br />

If the fire is not quickly<br />

snuffed out, leave the house and<br />

call 9-1-1 from outside.<br />

“Last Thanksgiving, firefighters<br />

across the Commonwealth were<br />

busy responding to cooking fires,”<br />

said Ostroskey.<br />

Examples of 2017<br />

Thanksgiving fires include<br />

Milford Fire Department's<br />

response to a gas oven fire.<br />

Residents in the home were<br />

alerted to the fire by fire and<br />

smoke alarms.<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<br />

WEEKLYNEWS.NET - 978-532-5880 NOVEMBER <strong>22</strong>, 2018<br />

Resident celebrates 15 years in recovery<br />

By Steve Krause<br />

In was a lifetime ago when<br />

Joel Levine was part of a<br />

<strong>Peabody</strong> Veterans Memorial<br />

High School's baseball team<br />

that came close to winning a<br />

state championship.<br />

The year was 2003 when<br />

the Tanners routinely used Jeff<br />

Allison and Mark Shorey to blind<br />

the opposition with high heat.<br />

But Levine, among others<br />

on that team, got tangled up<br />

in drug problems that derailed<br />

college and pro careers, and in<br />

some cases cost athlete's their<br />

lives.<br />

Levine was the featured<br />

speaker last week at the Saugus<br />

and <strong>Peabody</strong> Lions Clubs’<br />

pre-Thanksgiving game dinner<br />

at the Holy Ghost Hall near<br />

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

The physical education<br />

teacher and baseball coach in<br />

Authentic Chinese Cuisine<br />

Everett, has been in recovery<br />

for nearly 15 years. In addition<br />

teaching, and raising a family,<br />

he speaks to students, such as<br />

the seniors from both teams<br />

who were in attendance in<br />

hopes they can avoid what happened<br />

to him.<br />

“I grew up with values instilled<br />

by my parents,” he said.<br />

“But along around the seventh<br />

or eighth grade, I started to veer<br />

off a little bit and rebel.”<br />

It started, he said, by smoking<br />

weed, and graduated to other<br />

drugs such as oxycontin. He<br />

ended up a heroin addict, to the<br />

point of injecting the drug and<br />

sharing needles, things he’d<br />

vowed never to do.<br />

“I’d wake up in the morning,<br />

angry that I hadn’t died the<br />

night before,” he recalled.<br />

But in 2004, Levine said he<br />

saw the light.<br />

“I got the right kind of treatment,<br />

and I’ve been sober<br />

since,” he said.<br />

While his life improved,<br />

others did not fare so well.<br />

Some died of overdoses, one as<br />

was he preparing to get married.<br />

“Can you imagine, the parents<br />

of those two brothers,<br />

losing two of their children a<br />

year apart?” he said.<br />

Later in the evening, <strong>Peabody</strong><br />

coach Mark Bettencourt alluded<br />

to Levine’s talk.<br />

“I experienced some of that,<br />

because at the time I was a<br />

<strong>Peabody</strong> policeman,” he said.<br />

“I have so much respect for<br />

Joel because he got help and<br />

straightened himself out.”<br />

Bettencourt also praised his<br />

Saugus counterpart Michael<br />

Mabee, and the Saugus seniors<br />

for making something out of what<br />

could have been a bad season.<br />

Thanksgiving is the number<br />

one day for home fires<br />

Tewksbury firefighters responded<br />

to a cooking fire in<br />

the driveway of a single-family<br />

home. A deep fryer and a 20 lb.<br />

propane tank were on fire about<br />

10 feet from the garage. No one<br />

was injured by this fire. There<br />

was heat damage to the paint on<br />

the garage and damages were<br />

estimated to be $500.<br />

Just as a Haverhill family was<br />

getting ready to sit down to their<br />

holiday meal around 4:30 p.m.<br />

last Thanksgiving, they called<br />

the Haverhill Fire Department<br />

for a cooking fire in their single-family<br />

home. Even though<br />

the smoke alarms did not<br />

work, no one was injured. The<br />

building did not have sprinklers<br />

and damages were estimated to<br />

be $2,000.<br />

Gas ovens - crack a window<br />

for fresh air when using the gas<br />

oven for an extended period of<br />

time.<br />

Candles -<br />

Use candles inside a 1-foot<br />

circle of safety free of anything<br />

that can burn.<br />

Think twice about lighting<br />

the candles on that lovely centerpiece<br />

if it means you can’t<br />

follow the 1-foot circle of safety<br />

rule.<br />

Use extra care with candles<br />

when children and pets are<br />

around.<br />

Consider using flameless,<br />

battery-operated candles<br />

instead.<br />

Blow out candles when<br />

leaving the room; don’t leave<br />

candles burning unattended.<br />

Use non-combustibles<br />

holders or saucers.<br />

Keep all matches and lighters<br />

out of reach of children.<br />

For more information contact<br />

your local fire department or<br />

the Department of Fire Services<br />

Thanksgiving web page.<br />

The Sachems’ coach,<br />

Anthony Nalen, was suspended<br />

and then fired before<br />

the season started. Mabee took<br />

over and the Sachems went into<br />

Thanksgiving with a 4-6 record,<br />

the same as <strong>Peabody</strong>’s.<br />

“Whatever happens on<br />

Thanksgiving Day, you<br />

guys have all my respect,”<br />

Bettencourt said. “You won<br />

four games in the middle of<br />

that situation. I’m sure during<br />

a lot of those weeks you had<br />

no idea what was going to<br />

happen the next day.”<br />

Bettencourt recalled some<br />

of the rivalry’s more memorable<br />

games, including one at<br />

Stackpole Field that started out<br />

on a sheet of ice and ended up<br />

two inches deep in mud.<br />

“We won the game when<br />

we stopped Marc Fauci on a<br />

conversion attempt,” he said.<br />

Lynnfield's Emma Mancini<br />

and <strong>Peabody</strong>'s Emily<br />

Diezemann of the Endicott<br />

women's volleyball team have<br />

been selected to play in the New<br />

England Women's Volleyball<br />

Association (NEWVA) Senior<br />

Classic on Sunday, Dec. 2.<br />

The game will be hosted by<br />

Eastern Nazarene College in<br />

Quincy and will be comprised<br />

of the top 30 seniors in the<br />

region.<br />

Over their four-year careers,<br />

the two seniors helped Endicott<br />

to back-to-back Commonwealth<br />

Coast Conference (CCC) championships<br />

in 2016 and 2017,<br />

ending their careers in the semifinals<br />

in 2018.<br />

Diezemann and Mancini led<br />

the Gulls to an overall record<br />

of 86-43, and a record of 30-4<br />

against CCC foes. Their senior<br />

campaign saw the Gulls defeat<br />

four regionally-ranked foes in<br />

Springfield, Tufts, Amherst and<br />

Wesleyan, the latter of which<br />

advanced to the NCAA DIII<br />

Quarterfinals to end the season.<br />

"It is exciting to see both<br />

Emily and Emma recognized<br />

on this level and invited to compete<br />

with the other top seniors<br />

in the region," said Head Coach<br />

Tim Byram, in a statement.<br />

He said what they and the<br />

team accomplished during this<br />

four-year span speaks volumes<br />

to what they both brought to the<br />

program.<br />

"All of those things were<br />

needed to get to where we are<br />

today," he said.<br />

The two crushed workouts<br />

and showed up daily ready to<br />

work hard, he said, while also<br />

encouraging and pushing others<br />

to do the same. They both regularly<br />

looked for ways to help<br />

and were always the first to grab<br />

a net pole or a broom or whatever<br />

was needed and not pass it<br />

“I guess our fat guys were just<br />

a little tougher than their fat<br />

guys.”<br />

Mabee, a 1996 graduate, said<br />

he never beat <strong>Peabody</strong> during<br />

his time in Saugus.<br />

“Hopefully, that changes this<br />

year,” he said.<br />

He also talked about the joy<br />

of playing next to kids he grew<br />

up with, something the seniors<br />

will never experience again,<br />

even if they play in college.<br />

“It’s a lot different,” he said.<br />

“So all you guys, play this game<br />

for your teammates.”<br />

Each team presented an endof-year<br />

award. Saugus’ Heisman<br />

Trophy went to co-captain Jake<br />

Morgante. <strong>Peabody</strong>’s award,<br />

given, as Bettencourt said, to<br />

the person who shows up to<br />

practice every day without any<br />

assurances that he’ll play on<br />

Friday night, went to Evan Bun.<br />

Diezemann picked to play<br />

in NEWVA Senior Classic<br />

along to an underclassmen, he<br />

added.<br />

"Individually, it was always<br />

easy to talk to Emily and she<br />

always was looking for ways to<br />

help," Byram said. "She could<br />

walk the line of listening to<br />

something and then guiding a<br />

teammate to what's best for the<br />

team and the individual. She<br />

learned to take control in practices<br />

and call timeouts or address<br />

people to help get everyone on<br />

the same page and moving the<br />

right direction. Her presence at<br />

the net was something to contend<br />

with too and I can picture<br />

she and Tori closing out the 2016<br />

CCC final with a fitting block."<br />

For her part, Mancini had<br />

presence in the weight and<br />

locker room and on the court,<br />

he said.<br />

"I don't fully understand how<br />

someone can be so powerful<br />

and dynamic and then awkward<br />

enough to trip over a line or a<br />

teammate dancing and have us<br />

wondering if she was hurt every<br />

other day," he said. "Her presence<br />

on the pin reached new<br />

levels during her junior and<br />

senior year and watching her<br />

set and reset kill records was<br />

impressive."<br />

Not willing to settle for just<br />

being a hitter, she worked hard<br />

to improve her passing and defense<br />

to become a six-rotation<br />

outside for her senior campaign,<br />

he added.<br />

"I think these two sum up and<br />

model what it means to be a terrific<br />

student-athlete, teammate<br />

and friend," Byram said. "The<br />

team and program are eternally<br />

grateful for all they've done and<br />

glad they have the opportunity<br />

to represent the Gulls one<br />

more time at the senior classic.<br />

Congrats ladies and thanks for<br />

making it Another Great Day To<br />

Be A Gull."


NOVEMBER <strong>22</strong>, 2018<br />

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

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

PEABODY PLANNING BOARD<br />

City Hall · 24 Lowell Street · <strong>Peabody</strong>, Massachusetts 01960<br />

Notice is hereby given that the PLANNING BOARD of the CITY OF PEABODY will<br />

conduct a PUBLIC HEARING on THURSDAY EVENING, DECEMBER 6, 2018, at<br />

7:00 P.M.., in Lower Level Conference Room, City Hall, 24 Lowell Street, <strong>Peabody</strong>,<br />

MA in accordance with the provisions of Chapter 40A, Section 5 of the<br />

Massachusetts General Laws TO CONSIDER AMENDING THE ZONING MAP OF<br />

THE CITY OF PEABODY as follows:<br />

BE IT ORDAINED by the City Council of the City of <strong>Peabody</strong> as follows:<br />

SECTION ONE: That the Zoning Map of the City of <strong>Peabody</strong> entitled, City of<br />

<strong>Peabody</strong> Zoning Map Adopted April 28, 20<strong>11</strong>, as amended, and approved by the<br />

Planning Board on October 6, 2016 is hereby further amended as follows:<br />

TO REZONE PARCELS 136 AND 137 AS SHOWN ON ASSESSORS MAP 86<br />

NUMBERED AS 26 HOWLEY STREET FROM GENERAL BUSINESS DISTRICT (GBD)<br />

TO BUSINESS CENTRAL (BC).<br />

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

hereby repealed.<br />

SECTION THREE:<br />

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

PEABODY PLANNING BOARD<br />

THOMAS BETTENCOURT<br />

CHAIRMAN<br />

Weekly News: November <strong>22</strong>, 29, 2018<br />

PEABODY CITY COUNCIL<br />

LEGAL AD<br />

NOTICE OF PUBLIC HEARING<br />

Every day<br />

ACROSS<br />

1 Romance<br />

5 Fed a line<br />

9 Scout destination<br />

13 Imitated<br />

14 Sarge’s pooch<br />

15 Playing card<br />

16 Good, for Pedro<br />

17 Nullify<br />

18 Dress style (hyph.)<br />

19 Rile up<br />

21 MPs’ wear<br />

23 Guitarist — Paul<br />

24 Wheel buy (2 wds.)<br />

26 Weep loudly<br />

27 Publicity<br />

29 Looked good on<br />

34 Justified<br />

38 Recover<br />

39 A big fan of<br />

40 November stone<br />

42 Turn white<br />

43 Office worker<br />

45 Competitions<br />

47 Mortar go-with<br />

49 Six-Day War site<br />

50 Popular shift<br />

52 Tool man — Allen<br />

53 Fussy dresser<br />

56 Store sticker (2 wds.)<br />

61 Kind of trail<br />

63 Highland lakes<br />

64 Hourly pay<br />

66 Estate recipient<br />

67 WWII craft (hyph.)<br />

68 Timetable info<br />

69 Mr. Stravinsky<br />

70 Polite bloke<br />

71 Cotillion honorees<br />

72 Big name in electronics<br />

DOWN<br />

1 Brand name<br />

2 Express one’s views<br />

3 Turns sharply<br />

4 — St. Vincent Millay<br />

5 Pact<br />

6 Pass near Pikes Peak<br />

7 Sundance Kid’s wife<br />

8 Cabinet parts<br />

9 Pepsi or RC<br />

10 a<br />

<strong>11</strong> Repair<br />

12 Co. honcho<br />

15 Yak<br />

20 Festivity<br />

<strong>22</strong> Swarm around<br />

25 Performer on stage<br />

27 Leading edge<br />

28 Flat-topped caps<br />

30 — pants<br />

31 Asian mountains<br />

32 French miss (abbr.)<br />

33 Potato buds<br />

34 Trace of smoke<br />

35 Part of A.M.<br />

36 Tpks.<br />

37 Boat crane<br />

41 Wackiness<br />

44 Most grizzled<br />

46 The Dalai —<br />

48 Have a snack<br />

51 Went temporarily off course<br />

53 Tierra del —<br />

54 Easy-to-find constellation<br />

55 Mason of whodunits<br />

56 Stopper<br />

57 Night attire<br />

58 Click-on item<br />

59 Make small talk<br />

60 Box office<br />

62 The one here<br />

65 Schmooze<br />

Notice is hereby given that the City<br />

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

conduct a public hearing on THURS-<br />

DAY EVENING, DECEMBER 6, 2018<br />

at 7:00 P.M., in the Frank L. Wiggin<br />

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

<strong>Peabody</strong>, MA in accordance with<br />

Chapter 797 of the Acts of 1979, as<br />

amended, of the Massachusetts<br />

General Laws in order TO ADOPT THE<br />

PERCENTAGES OF THE LOCAL TAX<br />

LEVY TO BE BORNE BY EACH CLASS<br />

OF REAL AND PERSONAL PROPERTY<br />

FOR FISCAL YEAR 2019.<br />

PEABODY CITY COUNCIL<br />

COUNCILLOR EDWARD R. CHAREST<br />

CITY COUNCIL PRESIDENT<br />

Timothy E. Spanos<br />

City Clerk<br />

Weekly News: November <strong>22</strong>, 2018<br />

www.gccarpentry.com<br />

General Carpentry<br />

Remodeling & Repairs<br />

Painting & Refinishing<br />

Handyman Services<br />

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Small Jobs Welcomed<br />

FREE ESTIMATES<br />

QUALITY<br />

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Windows, Decks, Kitchen and<br />

Bath Additions and Garages<br />

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great for finding the skilled<br />

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781-593-7700, ext.2


14<br />

WEEKLYNEWS.NET - 978-532-5880 NOVEMBER <strong>22</strong>, 2018<br />

781.580.9357<br />

marjorie.youngren@raveis.com<br />

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Happy Thanksgiving<br />

Our Lynnfield team gives thanks to our clients and community.<br />

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The Leonard Co. is a cleaning<br />

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Northrup Associates Proudly Supports...<br />

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We are Collecting New, Unwrapped Stuffed Animals to Benefit Pediatric<br />

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www.NorthrupRealtors.com


NOVEMBER <strong>22</strong>, 2018<br />

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

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16<br />

WEEKLYNEWS.NET - 978-532-5880 NOVEMBER <strong>22</strong>, 2018<br />

GEORGETOWN - $389,900<br />

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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-<strong>22</strong><strong>22</strong><br />

MIDDLETON - $429,000<br />

BEVERLY - $649,900<br />

OPEN FLOOR PLAN, GOURMET KITCHEN,<br />

first floor master Bedroom with walk in closet<br />

and full bath. Dining room, living room with<br />

fireplace and slider to deck. Second floor offers<br />

two additional bedrooms, a full bath, loft and<br />

laundry. Oak floors, central air, one car garage<br />

and full basement.<br />

EVENINGS: 781-771-8144<br />

GREAT INVESTOR OPPORTUNITY for this 3<br />

family + an additional unit in the front, street<br />

level, currently used as a hair salon with a single<br />

station. Newer roof. Convenient to Rt 128.<br />

Within walking distance to train station.<br />

EVENINGS: 617-791-29<strong>22</strong><br />

LYNNFIELD - $549,900<br />

LYNNFIELD - $549,900<br />

SALEM - $369,900<br />

NEW PRICE!<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-<strong>22</strong><strong>22</strong><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: 617-791-29<strong>22</strong><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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