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The #1 Selling<br />

Real Estate Office<br />

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

REDUCED!<br />

LYNNFIELD<br />

$1,999,000<br />

SALE PENDING<br />

IN JUST 5 DAYS!<br />

PEABODY<br />

$549,900<br />

NEW!<br />

PEABODY<br />

$499,900<br />

SOLD!<br />

LYNNFIELD<br />

$850,000<br />

MIDDLETON<br />

$969,900<br />

*MLS PIN 1/1/18 – <strong>11</strong>/2/2018<br />

LYNNFIELD WEEKLY<br />

Louise<br />

Bova-Touchette<br />

617-605-0555<br />

Evelyn Rockas<br />

617-256-8500<br />

Joyce Cucchiara<br />

978-808-1597<br />

Nikki<br />

Cappadona-Martin<br />

781-710-1440<br />

Rossetti/Poti Team<br />

781-718-4662<br />

NEWS<br />

NOVEMBER <strong>29</strong>, 2018 • VOL. 62, NO. 48 SERVING THE COMMUNITY SINCE 1957<br />

16 PAGES • ONE DOLLAR<br />

IN THE NEWS<br />

Page 2:<br />

Family bears<br />

its share of<br />

good cheer<br />

Housing is not<br />

on Bali Hai menu<br />

Page 2:<br />

Taxes rising, new<br />

fire chief hired<br />

Page 9:<br />

Luders wins MIAA<br />

Sportsmanship<br />

Essay contest<br />

PRSRT STD<br />

ECRWSSEDDM<br />

U.S. POSTAGE<br />

PAID<br />

PERMIT #168<br />

WOBURN, MA<br />

POSTAL CUSTOMER<br />

LYNNFIELD, MA 01940<br />

RENDERING COURTESY OF SOUSA DESIGN<br />

Left, an artist’s rendering of the two-story apartment building that would replace Bali Hai restaurant. Right, an a aerial view<br />

of the restaurant.<br />

By Thomas Grillo<br />

Patrons of the Bali Hai can breathe a<br />

sigh of relief.<br />

A proposal to replace the 277-seat<br />

Polynesian restaurant with two dozen luxury<br />

apartments was rejected by the Zoning<br />

Board of Appeals (ZBA) on Nov. 20.<br />

“We were disappointed that we did<br />

not receive the unanimous vote of the<br />

Summer<br />

Street School<br />

PTO is<br />

on the go<br />

ZBA,” said Ted Regnante, the attorney<br />

for <strong>Lynnfield</strong> twins Matthew and David<br />

Palumbo, who had hoped to redevelop the<br />

eating place on Moulton Road. “My clients<br />

are exploring their options, including<br />

whether to appeal the decision to the Land<br />

Court.”<br />

The project faced giant hurdles from the<br />

start. With the exception of one neighbor,<br />

Oak Street resident Mohammad Saeed,<br />

By Thor Jourgensen<br />

Editor<br />

The Summer Street School Parent<br />

Teacher Organization (PTO) stepped<br />

up its efforts to raise $30,000 this year<br />

with school-wide involvement last<br />

Wednesday in a “race for education.”<br />

Students bundled up, grabbed pompoms<br />

and circled the school several<br />

times while parents and teachers cheered<br />

who attended one of the public hearings<br />

last summer to support the apartments,<br />

neighbors were united in opposition.<br />

Many said they prefer the underused<br />

restaurant to more cars clogging what they<br />

called an already congested section of<br />

town. Others said they feared the influx of<br />

school children.<br />

BALI HAI, PAGE 3<br />

them on. A smiling Dr. Karen Dwyer,<br />

who came from the Acton-Boxborough<br />

schools this year to become Summer<br />

Street’s new principal, said the schoolwide<br />

event typifies the PTO’s dedication<br />

and enthusiasm for the school.<br />

“The community is so invested in the<br />

the children. They are over the top,”<br />

Dwyer said.<br />

PTO, PAGE 3<br />

The #1 Selling<br />

Real Estate Office<br />

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

PEABODY<br />

$2,499,000<br />

SOLD!<br />

LYNNFIELD<br />

$599,900<br />

REDUCED!<br />

PEABODY<br />

$454,900<br />

STONEHAM<br />

$499,900<br />

MIDDLETON<br />

$1,275,000<br />

*MLS PIN 1/1/18 – <strong>11</strong>/2/2018<br />

Reggie Lemelin<br />

978-979-6262<br />

Nikki<br />

Cappadona-Martin<br />

781-710-1440<br />

Dan Donovan<br />

617-304-9976<br />

Steve Macdonald<br />

508-982-5005<br />

Karen Johnson<br />

781-367-8482


2<br />

INDEX<br />

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

Taxes rising, new<br />

fire chief hired<br />

BY THOMAS GRILLO<br />

Homeowners will be facing a<br />

3 percent tax hike in 2019.<br />

Board of Selectmen set the<br />

tax rate Monday night.<br />

The average single family<br />

home will see its tax bill<br />

rise from $60 to $160.<br />

Condominium owners average<br />

bill will increase by $400.<br />

The residential tax rate is<br />

rising to $13.91 per thousand,<br />

up from $13.76 in 2018.<br />

Commercial property owners<br />

can expect to see a 5 percent<br />

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hike in their tax bills as the rate<br />

rose to $17.95 per thousand<br />

from $17.08.<br />

The panel also approved a<br />

three-year agreement to hire<br />

Glenn Davis as the town’s<br />

new fire chief. The job pays<br />

$135,000. In addtion, he will<br />

receive $2,500 once a year<br />

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WEEKLYNEWS.NET - 978-532-5880 NOVEMBER <strong>29</strong>, 2018<br />

Family bears its<br />

share of good cheer<br />

BY THOMAS GRILLO<br />

Don’t call her Mrs. Claus, but<br />

the title might fit.<br />

On Christmas Eve, Michelle<br />

Ayles and her two children will<br />

distribute hundreds of teddy<br />

bears to patients at Boston’s<br />

Children’s Hospital.<br />

“I wanted my kids to know<br />

Christmas is not about what<br />

you get under the tree,” she<br />

said. “It’s about what you give<br />

others.”<br />

The drive was launched five<br />

years ago after Ayles had a conversation<br />

when her neighbor’s<br />

nephew, Joey. The 6-year-old<br />

suffers from Morquio syndrome,<br />

a rare progressive disease<br />

that occurs in one of every<br />

200,000 births. Joey is one of<br />

two Massachusetts children<br />

with the ailment.<br />

“He loved to visit with my<br />

dog, and one year, around the<br />

holidays, I asked him what<br />

he had planned for Christmas<br />

Eve,” she recalled. “He said he<br />

has to go to Children’s Hospital<br />

for treatment, and that got<br />

me thinking. How many kids<br />

have to be in the hospital for<br />

Christmas and what can I do to<br />

help?”<br />

So the Teddy Bear Christmas<br />

was founded.<br />

Ayles and her family collected<br />

the stuffed treasures of<br />

all sizes, from a few inches to<br />

7 feet tall. The big ones are reserved<br />

for the hospital’s play<br />

rooms. That first year, they collected<br />

150 stuffed bears.<br />

“Everyone pitched in,” she<br />

said. “Friends and family<br />

spread the request by word of<br />

mouth and on Facebook,” she<br />

said. “My house was filled with<br />

teddies.”<br />

On that first Christmas Eve,<br />

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Michelle Ayles surrounded by some of the teddy bears she and her<br />

family will distribute to young hospital patients on Christmas Eve.<br />

Ayles, her 17-year-old daughter<br />

Megan, a senior at Peabody<br />

Veterans Memorial High<br />

School, her 13-year-old son<br />

Brady, a Higgins Middle School<br />

student, and Ayles’ mother<br />

brought them into Children’s<br />

Hospital.<br />

“It was life-changing for my<br />

kids,” Ayles said.<br />

That night in 2013, her<br />

mother met the Children’s CEO<br />

in the hospital’s lobby who told<br />

her they have 385 beds. That<br />

was enough to make the goal<br />

of 385 teddy bears in 2014, she<br />

said.<br />

“And we did it,” she said.<br />

“Last year, we distributed more<br />

than 1,000.”<br />

This year, as in previous<br />

years, the stuffed animals will<br />

be given to nurses who distribute<br />

them to children in their<br />

rooms. The Ayles family and<br />

friends will be greeters in the<br />

lobby.<br />

In addition, they plan to make<br />

a special donation to the ninth<br />

floor of Children’s Hospital in<br />

honor of Ella O’Donnell. The<br />

Peabody girl died last year from<br />

a brain tumor, one month before<br />

her <strong>11</strong>th birthday.<br />

Ayles refuses to take the<br />

credit for the program’s success.<br />

She said it’s a result of<br />

generous donations from families<br />

and businesses in Peabody,<br />

<strong>Lynnfield</strong> and all of the North<br />

Shore.<br />

The 47-year-old mother<br />

of two credits what she calls<br />

an army of people, including<br />

Northrup Associates, Coca<br />

Cola, the North Shore Dance<br />

Academy, ReMax on the River,<br />

the Peabody Public Schools,<br />

and more to make it a success.<br />

“Everyone rallies around<br />

this,” she said. “It’s the real<br />

spirit of Christmas.”<br />

If you want to contribute a<br />

stuffed animal, Teddy Bear Day<br />

will be held at the Northshore<br />

Mall on Sunday, Dec. 2 from <strong>11</strong><br />

a.m. to 7 p.m. There are drop<br />

off boxes at Peabody City Hall,<br />

Sidelines Sports Bar & Grill<br />

on Canal Street in Salem, and<br />

Salem Liquors on North Street<br />

in Salem.<br />

We want to hear<br />

from you!<br />

Send us a letter at<br />

editor@weeklynews.net.<br />

Letters should be no more<br />

than 300 words.<br />

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NOVEMBER <strong>29</strong>, 2018<br />

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

Summer Street<br />

School PTO is<br />

Housing not on the<br />

menu for Bali Hai<br />

PTO<br />

From page 1<br />

on the go<br />

PTO Co-president Kathryn<br />

Price said the PTO will meet<br />

its fundraising goal through<br />

donations solicited online and<br />

through the mail with student<br />

letters. She credited the greater<br />

<strong>Lynnfield</strong> community including<br />

local businesses with supporting<br />

the school and helping<br />

the PTO meet previous year<br />

fundraising goals.<br />

“Race for education,” with<br />

strong participation from<br />

teachers and parents, is the<br />

PTO’s biggest annual fundraising<br />

event.<br />

“We have a ton of support.<br />

There are lots of parents who<br />

volunteer,” Price said.<br />

Some of the $36,000 raised<br />

by the PTO last year helped buy<br />

30 Chromebooks and iPads for<br />

use in class learning activities.<br />

This year’s fundraising goals<br />

include installing a six-seat<br />

swing set in the play area on the<br />

school grounds. PTO-solicited<br />

donations will pay for the<br />

$<strong>11</strong>,000 swing set with Everett<br />

Bank paying for a seat on the<br />

swing set equipped with a child<br />

restraint.<br />

Dwyer and Price credited<br />

parent Ed Champy with doing<br />

the landscaping required to prepare<br />

for the set’s installation.<br />

“Ed Champy is a champ,”<br />

said Dwyer.<br />

Price said a $3,000 donation<br />

will go to the Summer Street<br />

School’s social/emotional<br />

learning committee to pay for<br />

an educator to come to the<br />

school and work with teachers<br />

on dealing with stress.<br />

Price, the parent of a Summer<br />

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Before<br />

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Street first and fourth grader,<br />

said social/emotional learning<br />

partly focuses on how to teach<br />

students enduring stress to concentrate<br />

on the task at hand and<br />

“stay in the moment.”<br />

The PTO also plans to donate<br />

$1,000 to pay instructor<br />

Christine Gehret to talk to<br />

teach “mindful movement,” a<br />

self control and focus exercise,<br />

every other week to Summer<br />

Street kindergarten students.<br />

Dwyer said mindfulness and<br />

social emotional wellbeing<br />

work with teachers and students<br />

is important because it focuses<br />

“on the whole child” and enhances<br />

learning.<br />

PTO Co-president Pamela<br />

MacDonald, mother of a<br />

Summer Street third grader, said<br />

the school’s teachers discuss<br />

and present to the PTO ideas for<br />

sharpening teaching skills.<br />

“They’re ideas are innovative<br />

and the PTO through the years<br />

has been a real support for the<br />

teachers,” she said.<br />

Money donated to date this<br />

year to the PTO paid for a “newcomer<br />

potluck,” a “pastapalooza”<br />

event and money is set aside for<br />

an end-of-the-year picnic.<br />

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Letters should be<br />

no more than<br />

300 words.<br />

BALI HAI<br />

From page 1<br />

Last summer, the Palumbos<br />

proposed a three-story building<br />

with 32 luxury apartments<br />

priced from $2,200 to $3,300.<br />

But that got a thumbs-down<br />

from neighbors and the Planning<br />

Board. The brothers came back<br />

in the fall with a smaller plan<br />

that reduced the number of units<br />

to 23 and lowered the height of<br />

the building to two stories.<br />

But those changes, and a<br />

traffic and school study from<br />

the developers that said there<br />

will be little impact on traffic<br />

and schools, failed to sway the<br />

neighborhood and the ZBA.<br />

Future Funds.<br />

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Regnante had argued town<br />

zoning allows for the development<br />

because it is simply another<br />

nonconforming use that<br />

will not be detrimental to the<br />

neighborhood. But the abutters<br />

disagreed.<br />

While two of three ZBA<br />

members supported the project,<br />

a special permit required a<br />

unanimous vote.<br />

It’s unclear what will happen<br />

next.<br />

The development team has<br />

an agreement to purchase the<br />

restaurant, a 1¼ acre parcel assessed<br />

at $1.5 million, for an<br />

undisclosed amount.<br />

The Palumbos said last<br />

summer that if the apartment<br />

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project was rejected, they<br />

would build a new restaurant on<br />

the site. They could also file a<br />

lawsuit.<br />

But Regnante said nothing<br />

has been decided.<br />

“Our 23-unit apartment<br />

building met all dimensional<br />

requirements, but the ZBA<br />

chairman did not agree,” he<br />

said.<br />

The Palumbos are not the<br />

only developers who have<br />

tried to redevelop the Bali Hai<br />

site. Two years ago, plans for<br />

a four-story, 68-unit apartment<br />

building to replace the<br />

48-year-old landmark by<br />

Monastiero Development were<br />

also rejected.<br />

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4<br />

WEEKLYNEWS.NET - 978-532-5880 NOVEMBER <strong>29</strong>, 2018<br />

LYNNFIELD WEEKLY<br />

NEWS<br />

(USPS Permit #168)<br />

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

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

News and Advertising Offices: <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<br />

Ernie Carpenter<br />

pwhalen@essexmediagroup.com<br />

ecarpenter@essexmediagroup.com<br />

David McBournie dmcbournie@itemlive.com<br />

Retail Price: $1.00<br />

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

Classified Ads: Monday, noon;<br />

No cancellations accepted after deadline.<br />

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

Media Group, Inc.<br />

<strong>Lynnfield</strong> student named<br />

to Mystic Valley honor roll<br />

The Mystic Valley Regional<br />

Charter School in Malden recently<br />

announced that Michael Stanley<br />

an eighth-grade student from<br />

<strong>Lynnfield</strong> was named to the High<br />

Honor Roll for the first quarter.<br />

Kim Burtman<br />

Realtor, CBR<br />

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

Cell: 617-240-0266<br />

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

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<strong>Lynnfield</strong>, MA 01940<br />

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High Honors are given to students<br />

with no grade lower than<br />

an A- for the quarter and Honor<br />

Roll recognition is given to students<br />

with no grade lower than<br />

a B-.<br />

All address information, particularly<br />

arrests, reflect police<br />

records. In the event of a perceived<br />

inaccuracy, it is the sole<br />

responsibility of the concerned<br />

party to contact the relevant police<br />

department and have the department<br />

issue a notice of correction<br />

to the <strong>Lynnfield</strong> Weekly<br />

News. Corrections or clarifications<br />

will not be made without<br />

express notice of change from<br />

the arresting police department.<br />

Arrest<br />

Lacora Jones, 24, of 150<br />

Rivers Edge Drive, Medford, was<br />

arrested on Monday at 1:40 p.m.<br />

at Gymboree at 405 Market St.<br />

and charged with shoplifting.<br />

Summons<br />

Josue Augustin, 33, of 66<br />

Medford St., Boston, was summoned<br />

on Tuesday at 3:57 p.m.<br />

following a motor vehicle crash<br />

with personal injury at 270<br />

Walnut St. and charged with the<br />

reckless operation of a motor vehicle<br />

and marked lanes violation.<br />

Allen Tran, 38, of 7A Lyman<br />

St., Lynn, Apt. 7, was summoned<br />

on Monday at 3:25<br />

and charged with larceny over<br />

$1,200 at Verizon Wireless at<br />

669 Market St.<br />

Accidents<br />

Minor motor vehicle crash reported<br />

on Market Street with no<br />

personal injuries on Wednesday<br />

at 7:<strong>29</strong> a.m.<br />

Hit and run crash reported<br />

on Wednesday at 9:57 p.m. at<br />

669 Market St. by the owner of<br />

a 2014 Honda Accord. Officer<br />

took report.<br />

Car crash with property<br />

damage reported on Thursday at<br />

<strong>11</strong>:45 p.m. at J.M. Electrical at<br />

471 North Broadway.<br />

Police log<br />

Complaints<br />

Officer requested at 300 Ross<br />

Drive for a dispute between the<br />

resident and a cab driver over<br />

fare on Wednesday at 5:23 p.m.<br />

Officer reports resident paid the<br />

fare and peace restored.<br />

Ashwood Road resident reports<br />

his neighbor is outside<br />

calling his dogs, but the animals<br />

are in the house barking on<br />

Wednesday at 10:56 p.m. Officer<br />

reports resident and dogs are in<br />

the home and none are barking<br />

outside. Man called police back<br />

on Thursday at 12:05 a.m. to report<br />

neighbor is outside yelling.<br />

Officer reports all is quiet.<br />

Report from 707 Walnut St.<br />

on Thursday at 10:20 p.m. about<br />

a resident who is pumping water<br />

from basement into the street.<br />

The Department of Public Works<br />

supervisor requested to assess<br />

situation and the area was salted<br />

and cones put out.<br />

Complaint from Ashwood<br />

Road resident on Tuesday at<br />

10:31 p.m. about a resident of<br />

13 Ashwood Road who is outside<br />

yelling for his dogs. Officer<br />

unable to locate anyone yelling<br />

out for dogs.<br />

Fire alarm reported on Tuesday<br />

at 6:10 p.m. at 621 Lowell St.<br />

Call referred to <strong>Lynnfield</strong> Fire<br />

Department.<br />

Caller found an American<br />

Express Platinum card at<br />

MarketStreet on Saturday at<br />

1:03 p.m. Item was turned in to<br />

mall security.<br />

Caller reports she ran out of<br />

gas on Route 1 South just outside<br />

the tunnel on Saturday at<br />

1:08 p.m. Officer reports Gaeta’s<br />

Towing assisted.<br />

Disabled auto reported on<br />

Saturday at 3:30 p.m. on Walnut<br />

Street at Sparhawk. Gaeta’s notified<br />

for tow.<br />

Officer requested on Saturday<br />

at 3:40 p.m. at 34 Wildwood<br />

Drive. Caller said they would<br />

like the officer to go through the<br />

house with her because several<br />

doors were open. Officer reports<br />

nothing found.<br />

Disabled auto reported at<br />

Main Street and the bottom of<br />

ramp at Route 128 at Exit 41 on<br />

Saturday at 5:03 p.m. and again<br />

at 5:26 p.m. Officer reports<br />

waiting for tow.<br />

Disabled auto reported at<br />

<strong>11</strong>00 Main St. at 228 Lowell<br />

St. on Saturday at <strong>11</strong>:<strong>11</strong> p.m.<br />

Officer spoke with operator who<br />

has AAA. Officer stood by while<br />

Gaeta’s Towing changed tire.<br />

Officer wanted on Friday at<br />

4:06 p.m. at <strong>Lynnfield</strong> Commons<br />

at 375 North Broadway, Apt.<br />

313.<br />

Caller reported a couple came<br />

to their door at 26 Glenwood<br />

Road on Saturday at 6:57 a.m.<br />

and argued with her husband.<br />

Officer reports there was a misunderstanding.<br />

Couple thought<br />

there was an estate sale at this<br />

address based on information<br />

from a pamphlet.<br />

False Alarms<br />

False burglar alarm at Personal<br />

Finance Management Plus at 40<br />

Salem St. on Wednesday at 5:48<br />

p.m. Officer reports side door to<br />

the building was unlocked. All is<br />

secure.<br />

Accidental burglar alarm on<br />

Thursday at 3:03 a.m. at 25<br />

Chatham Way. Officer reports all<br />

is secure.<br />

Accidental burglar alarm<br />

tripped at 7:58 a.m. on Monday<br />

at the front door of David’s Tea at<br />

<strong>11</strong>40 Market St.<br />

A confused elderly woman<br />

from 4 Wildewood Drive accidentally<br />

called 9<strong>11</strong> on Friday at<br />

9:18 a.m. Officer spoke with the<br />

woman’s children.<br />

Accidental burglar alarm on<br />

Friday at 6:14 p.m. at 172 Chestnut<br />

St. Officer reports all is OK.<br />

Construction company accidentally<br />

set off the burglar alarm<br />

on Saturday at 8:01 a.m. at 14<br />

Magnolia Drive.<br />

Accidental burglar alarm reported<br />

at 40 Chestnut St. Officer<br />

on Saturday at 1:32 p.m. reports<br />

homeowner arrived and contractors<br />

are working.<br />

False burglar alarm reported on<br />

Saturday at 5:42 p.m. at 5 Elizabeth<br />

Way. Officer reports all is OK.<br />

Accidental burglar alarm reported<br />

at 42 Stillman Road on<br />

Monday at 10:31 a.m. Officer<br />

reports house is secure.<br />

Medical Aid<br />

Husband requested an ambulance<br />

for his wife who was having<br />

trouble breathing at <strong>11</strong>1 Locksley<br />

Road on Friday at <strong>11</strong>:48 a.m.<br />

Patient taken to the hospital.<br />

Woman required medical aid<br />

for her 46-year-old diabetic boyfriend<br />

who had heart issues and<br />

was sweaty on Friday at 2:56<br />

p.m. at <strong>Lynnfield</strong> Commons,<br />

375 North Broadway, Apt. 404.<br />

Patient taken to the hospital.<br />

Request for an ambulance<br />

for a 42-year-old woman who<br />

fainted at 420 Salem St. on<br />

Friday at 5:38 p.m. Patient taken<br />

to the hospital.<br />

Medical aid requested from 19<br />

Yorkshire Drive on Friday at 7:46<br />

p.m. Patient taken to the hospital.<br />

Medical aid requested<br />

at Flagship Motors at 385<br />

Broadway on Saturday at 9:<strong>11</strong><br />

a.m. for an elderly man who<br />

slipped on the ice. Patient taken<br />

to Lahey Medical Center.<br />

Ambulance requested from<br />

Sunrise Assisted Living at 55<br />

Salem St. on Saturday at 9:34 a.m.<br />

for a 93-year-old man complaining<br />

of chest pain. Patient taken to the<br />

North Shore Medical Center.<br />

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

woman needed an assist lift on<br />

Saturday at <strong>11</strong>:25 a.m. Patient<br />

taken to Union Hospital.<br />

Ambulance requested by a<br />

man at 375 North Broadway, Apt.<br />

2-308, who said his 67-year-old<br />

wife is feeling dizzy on Saturday<br />

at 1:14 p.m. Patient taken to<br />

Union Hospital.<br />

Medical aid requested at<br />

Sunrise Assisted Living at 55<br />

Salem St., Apt. 308 on Saturday<br />

at 6:37 p.m. Patient taken to the<br />

hospital.<br />

Ambulance request on Sunday<br />

at 12:30 a.m. at 3<strong>11</strong> Ross Drive.<br />

Patient taken to the hospital.<br />

Caller requested an ambulance<br />

for an elderly woman having<br />

trouble breathing at Sunrise<br />

Assisted Living at 55 Salem St.<br />

at 3:23 a.m. on Sunday.<br />

Medical aid required for an elderly<br />

woman who fell on Sunday<br />

at 7:56 a.m. at Sunrise Assisted<br />

Living at 55 Salem St. Patient<br />

taken to the Melrose/Wakefield<br />

Hospital.<br />

Medical aid requested at <strong>29</strong>E<br />

Huckleberry Road on Monday at<br />

<strong>11</strong>:01 a.m. Patient taken to the<br />

North Shore Medical Center.<br />

Ambulance requested on<br />

Monday at 2:50 p.m. at 22<br />

Longbow Circle. Patient taken to<br />

Union Hospital.


NOVEMBER <strong>29</strong>, 2018<br />

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

LYNNFIELD SENIOR<br />

CENTER ACTIVITIES<br />

Trips<br />

Dec. 4 Sicilian Tenors<br />

Christmas Time at Danversport<br />

Lunch and Show — $69.<br />

.<br />

Activities<br />

Thursday, November <strong>29</strong><br />

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

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

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

with Jill. 9 a.m. Stitch and<br />

chat, manicurist. 9:15 a.m. Sit<br />

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

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

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

brunch. <strong>11</strong> a.m. Aerobic<br />

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

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

*****<br />

Friday, November 30<br />

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

breakfast. 9 a.m. Blood<br />

pressure, hairdresser,<br />

Broadway Jazz dance<br />

class, acrylic painting.<br />

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

Tai Chi (sign up). 10:30<br />

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

“When I first saw<br />

Grace, I knew I<br />

wanted to open<br />

my home to her.<br />

Now, we love to<br />

get our hair done<br />

and get manicures<br />

together. Grace<br />

has been a<br />

wonderful addition<br />

to our family.”<br />

Lunch - BLT sandwich.<br />

*****<br />

Monday, December 3<br />

8 a.m. Zumba gold, exercise<br />

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

video. 9 a.m. Hairdresser,<br />

gentle Pilates, Walmart shopping.<br />

10 a.m. Creative writing,<br />

line dance, topic of the day,<br />

tap dance, sit and tone with<br />

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

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

chicken. Noon Bowling, photo<br />

club, oil painting. 12:30 p.m.<br />

Mah Jongg, Mexican train,<br />

computer (sign up).<br />

*****<br />

Tuesday, December 4<br />

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

room. 8:30 a.m. Grocery shopping.<br />

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

the belt. 9 a.m. Blood pressure.<br />

9:15 a.m. Bingo, walking meditation.<br />

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

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

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

Lunch: Fish chowder. Noon<br />

Shopping, computer class -<br />

sign up, Bridge, watercolor<br />

class. 12:15 p.m. ElderAct<br />

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

~ Sharon, Caregiver to Grace<br />

978-281-2612<br />

AdultFosterCareNS.com<br />

Celebrating 15 Years<br />

Seniors<br />

watercolor class.<br />

*****<br />

Wednesday, December 5<br />

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

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

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

Christmas Tree store, Tripoley,<br />

alterations with Anita, manicurist.<br />

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

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

welcome coffee, embroidery.<br />

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

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

BBQ. 12:15 p.m. Pokeno/<br />

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

Craft class with Elaine.<br />

PETER A. TORIGIAN<br />

SENIOR CENTER<br />

Thursday, November <strong>29</strong><br />

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

Quilting. 9 a.m. Watch battery<br />

replacement, jewelry<br />

table in lobby until 2 p.m.<br />

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

Big band dancing, advanced<br />

painting. 10 a.m. Bridge.<br />

12:30 p.m. Loss of spouse<br />

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

*****<br />

Friday, November 30<br />

8 a.m. Beginner painting,<br />

TOPS weigh in. 9 a.m.<br />

Aerobics, TOPS meeting.<br />

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

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

Bingo.<br />

*****<br />

Monday, December 3<br />

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

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

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

Model ship building, Bingo.<br />

1 p.m. Food commodity. 2:30<br />

p.m. Friends board meeting.<br />

*****<br />

Tuesday, December 4<br />

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

Book club, exercise with<br />

Edye, Japanese Bunka. 10:30<br />

a.m. Line dancing. <strong>11</strong>:30<br />

a.m. Birthday celebration.<br />

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

Crocheting/knitting.<br />

*****<br />

Wednesday, December 5<br />

9 a.m. Aerobics, rug hooking,<br />

wood carving, sewing/repair.<br />

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

Model ship building, Golden<br />

agers meeting.<br />

Sea Witch<br />

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6<br />

WEEKLYNEWS.NET - 978-532-5880 NOVEMBER <strong>29</strong>, 2018<br />

DINING GUIDE DIRECTORY<br />

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Tuesday: Buy one baked or fried<br />

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TWO CONVENIENT LOCATIONS:<br />

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


NOVEMBER <strong>29</strong>, 2018<br />

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

Obituaries<br />

Lorraine M. Ingersoll, 100<br />

Christopher J. Malerich, 50<br />

Lorraine M Ingersoll, 100, wife of John<br />

W Ingersoll (deceased), lived at <strong>11</strong>9 Bartholomew<br />

St Peabody for 49 years until<br />

moving to The Kaplan Estates. She is survived<br />

by 4 children: Irene O’Brien, wife of<br />

Phil O’Brien, James Ingersoll, Gail Fialho,<br />

wife of George Fialho, Steven Ingersoll, husband<br />

of Mary Ingersoll, <strong>11</strong> grandchildren,<br />

27 great-grandchildren, 17 nieces and<br />

nephews, 49 great-nieces and nephews, 43<br />

great-great-nieces and nephews, and 8 great-greatgreat<br />

nieces and nephews. Her hobbies were music,<br />

dancing, playing the piano and long walks by the<br />

ocean. She was a published poet and writer and a<br />

passionate self-taught scientist, but most of all she<br />

UChoose18_SA_LA_LPW.ai 1 10/31/2018 10:03:22 AM<br />

Have a story to share?<br />

Need a question answered?<br />

contactus@essexmedia.group<br />

loved her family and country.<br />

Service information: Lorraine’s funeral<br />

was held at 10 a.m. on Wednesday Nov.<br />

28, 2018, at the SOLIMINE FUNERAL<br />

HOME, 426 Broadway (Rt. 1<strong>29</strong>) Lynn,<br />

MA. Visiting hours were on Tuesday from<br />

2-4 p.m. and 6-8 p.m. In lieu of flowers,<br />

please consider donating to your favorite<br />

charity in memory of Lorraine. Directions<br />

and guestbook at www.Solimine.com.<br />

SOMERVILLE — Christopher<br />

J. Malerich, of<br />

Somerville, the beloved<br />

husband of Matthew<br />

Barnes passed away<br />

on Friday, November 9,<br />

2018. He was 50.<br />

Born in Lynn he was<br />

the cherished son of of<br />

Arline T. (Hanson) and<br />

Jerome B. Malerich of Lynnfi eld.<br />

Dear brother of Jerome Malerich<br />

and his wife Betty of York, PA. Uncle<br />

of Daniel and Joshua Malerich.<br />

Chris attended Our Lady of<br />

Assumption Elementary School<br />

in Lynnfi eld and St. John’s Preparatory<br />

High School in Danvers,<br />

which laid the foundation for his<br />

lifelong Christian faith. He went<br />

on to earn his degree in Classics<br />

at Tufts University with a Phi Beta<br />

Kappa award. After deciding not<br />

to pursue a career in academia,<br />

he left his doctoral program at<br />

Princeton University to return<br />

home and started a career in<br />

banking. He managed to work for<br />

a number of companies over the<br />

course of his career without ever<br />

leaving his job, starting his journey<br />

at Bay Bank and ending it at<br />

Santander Bank.<br />

While he loved his work, his<br />

heart was at home with his husband,<br />

Matthew. They met online<br />

and managed to connect in a way<br />

that perfectly encapsulated their<br />

relationship. Matthew’s friends<br />

were delighted to welcome Chris<br />

into the fold and he wrapped<br />

himself so completely into their<br />

lives and their hearts that it was<br />

diffi cult to remember a time B.C.<br />

(before Chris), as that dark period<br />

came to be known.<br />

Chris was adored for his kindness,<br />

compassion, generosity of<br />

spirit, and the gusto with which<br />

he delighted in life. He loved<br />

learning, music, travel, good food<br />

& wine and the company of his<br />

friends. His love of sweets, especially<br />

whoopie pies and Nutella,<br />

was legendary.<br />

Chris and Matthew<br />

were together for seven<br />

years before their friends<br />

peer-pressured them<br />

into marrying in October<br />

2014. They married in a<br />

style just their own, the<br />

highlight of which was<br />

reciting their vows in the Theatre<br />

of Electricity at the Museum of<br />

Science, followed by stepping<br />

into the Faraday cage to be surrounded<br />

by lightning.<br />

In 2017, Chris was diagnosed<br />

with cancer. When he had to stop<br />

working as a result, he threw himself<br />

into learning how to cook,<br />

avidly watching PBS shows and<br />

studying the works of Cooks Illustrated<br />

and America’s Test Kitchen.<br />

He was soon routinely expanding<br />

Matthew’s waist line and volunteering<br />

with Community Cooks,<br />

preparing home-cooked meals<br />

for neighbors in need.<br />

Chris lived a big life in the ways<br />

that really mattered—a big heart,<br />

fi lled with love for his friends and<br />

family, unfailingly generous with<br />

his time—and he was loved in<br />

return for being exactly who he<br />

was. In the words of the Canadian<br />

poet, Céline Dion, “You’re here<br />

in my heart and my heart will go<br />

on and on”. Chris will remain in<br />

our hearts forever and he will be<br />

sorely missed.<br />

Service information: A funeral<br />

Mass was celebrated in St.<br />

Maria Goretti Church, on Friday,<br />

Nov. 16, followed by burial at<br />

Forest Hill Cemetery, <strong>Lynnfield</strong>.<br />

In lieu of flowers, donations<br />

in Christopher’s memory can<br />

be made to the Neuroendocrine<br />

Tumor Program, c/o Dr Jennifer<br />

Chan, Dana-Farber Cancer Institute,<br />

450 Brookline Avenue,<br />

Boston, MA 02215. For more<br />

information please visit www.<br />

dohertyfuneralservice.com<br />

DINING GUIDE DIRECTORY<br />

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We use 100%<br />

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Gluten free dishes<br />

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146 Humphrey St., Swampscott<br />

781-593-3308 • yansbistro.com<br />

Check out our entire family of publications.<br />

O1945<br />

O194O


8<br />

WEEKLYNEWS.NET - 978-532-5880 NOVEMBER <strong>29</strong>, 2018<br />

Calvary Christian Church<br />

47 Grove St., <strong>Lynnfield</strong><br />

781-592-4722 - www.lynnfield-ccc.org<br />

Senior Pastor Timothy Schmidt<br />

would like to invite you to join us for<br />

one of our Sunday worship services at<br />

8:30 a.m., 10:30 a.m., 12:30 p.m. and<br />

6:30 p.m. Children’s Ministry (ages<br />

0-<strong>11</strong>) offered in all Sunday morning<br />

services. Hispanic Service: Sunday at<br />

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

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

Young Adult Ministry: Wednesday at 7<br />

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

at 6:30 p.m. ages 12-18. Weekly<br />

Prayer Meetings: Monday - Friday at 7<br />

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

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

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

our church office at 781-592-4722,<br />

office@lynnfield-ccc.org or visit our<br />

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

Centre Congregational Church<br />

5 Summer St., <strong>Lynnfield</strong>,<br />

781-334-3050 or www.centre-church.org<br />

Pastor: Nancy Rottman<br />

Director of Faith Formation: Larainne<br />

Wilson<br />

An Open and Affirming Congregation<br />

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

you are and wherever you are on life’s<br />

journey, you are welcome. Our worship<br />

services are held at 10 a.m. each Sunday<br />

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

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

to everyday life. We are committed<br />

to providing children a warm, safe,<br />

and inclusive environment with vibrant<br />

and engaging Children’s Programming<br />

(Godly Play, Whole People of God, and<br />

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

staff, incorporating opportunities<br />

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

nursery care is available for children up<br />

to age 4, with a new transition class beginning<br />

in January for 3 and 4-year olds.<br />

We also have a Young Families Group<br />

that offers fellowship opportunities for<br />

parents and children together. We have<br />

ample parking in a large lot behind the<br />

church and the facility is handicap accessible.<br />

Please find us on Facebook at<br />

facebook.com/CentreChurchUCC or<br />

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

information about our ministries and<br />

activities.<br />

Please feel free to contact the church<br />

office if you would like more information<br />

about any of these activities. (781-<br />

334-3050 or office@centre-church.<br />

org)<br />

Office Hours at the church are 9 a.m.<br />

– 3 p.m. Monday – Friday.<br />

Tower Day School is located at Centre<br />

Congregational Church and Director,<br />

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

or 781-334-5576.<br />

<strong>Lynnfield</strong> Community Church<br />

735 Salem St., <strong>Lynnfield</strong><br />

(781) 599-4421<br />

<strong>Lynnfield</strong>CommunityChurch.org.<br />

<strong>Lynnfield</strong> Community Church welcomes<br />

you to Sunday worship at 10-<strong>11</strong><br />

a.m. Following our service, join us for<br />

coffee and fellowship in Marshall<br />

Hall. Parking is behind the church<br />

and there are entrances in front and<br />

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

visit soon.<br />

Prayer to the Blessed Virgin<br />

(never known to fail)<br />

O most beautiful flower of Mount Carmel, fruitful<br />

vine, splendor of Heaven, Blessed Mother of the Son<br />

of God, Immaculate Virgin, assist me in my<br />

necessity. O Star of the sea, help me and show me<br />

where you are my Mother. O Holy Mary, Mother of<br />

God, Queen of Heaven and Earth, I humbly beseech<br />

you from the bottom of my heart to succor me in my<br />

necessity (make request). There are none that can<br />

withstand your power. O Mary, conceived without<br />

sin, pray for us who have recourse to thee (three<br />

times). Holy Mary, I place this cause in your hands<br />

(three times). Say this prayer for 3 consecutive days<br />

and then you must publish and it will be granted to<br />

you. Thank you.<br />

P.F.<br />

Religious Notes<br />

Messiah Lutheran Church<br />

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

781-334-4<strong>11</strong>1 Church Office<br />

pastor@mlcspirit.org email<br />

The Sunday morning schedule begins<br />

at 9 am with an inter-generational Growing<br />

Together hour of Bible Study, prayer,<br />

fun and service. Sunday morning worship<br />

is held at 10:30 in a traditional yet<br />

family-friendly style.<br />

At 7:01 Wednesday is the min-week<br />

prayer service. All are welcome to join<br />

in prayer for families and friends,<br />

schools and communities, the nation and<br />

the world. Those who cannot make it in<br />

person may send their prayer requests to<br />

pastordaveb@mlcspirit.org<br />

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

Brezina serve Messiah Lutheran<br />

Church.<br />

<strong>Lynnfield</strong> Catholic Collaborative<br />

<strong>11</strong>2 Chestnut St., <strong>Lynnfield</strong><br />

Our Lady of the Assumption and St.<br />

Maria Goretti<br />

The <strong>Lynnfield</strong> Catholic Collaborative,<br />

comprised of Our Lady of the Assumption<br />

Church, Salem and Grove Streets,<br />

and Saint Maria Goretti Church, <strong>11</strong>2<br />

Chestnut St., <strong>Lynnfield</strong>, may be reached<br />

by calling 781-598-4313 or by email:<br />

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

website: lynnfieldcatholic.org.<br />

The Pastoral Leadership Team: The<br />

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

Vicar is Rev. Anthony Luongo and the<br />

Deacons are Thomas O’Shea and Ed<br />

Elibero. Donna Delahanty is Director of<br />

Parish Ministries.<br />

Office hours: Monday through Thursday<br />

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

p.m., closed for holidays.<br />

Go to: www.lynnfieldcatholic.org<br />

St. Maria Goretti (<strong>11</strong>2 Chestnut Street,<br />

<strong>Lynnfield</strong>)<br />

Saturday Vigil: 4 p.m.<br />

Sunday: 10 a.m.<br />

Tuesdays and Thursdays: 9 a.m.<br />

St. Paul’s Episcopal Church<br />

127 Summer St., <strong>Lynnfield</strong><br />

781-334-4594<br />

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

Paul’s Episcopal Church. Founded in<br />

1918, its mission is to connect with God<br />

and each other through worship, prayer,<br />

service, and study.<br />

We offer Sunday services at 8:30 a.m.<br />

and 10 a.m. Child care is available, as<br />

well as classes for K-6 students.<br />

Students in grades 7-12 meet at 10 a.m.<br />

the 2nd & 4th Sundays of the month for<br />

discussion, learning, sharing, socializing,<br />

volunteering. This Youth Group<br />

participates in the local, ecumenical<br />

Giv2, which gives teens opportunities to<br />

live their faith through service.<br />

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

and friends gather for Centering<br />

Prayer. Introduction to Centering<br />

Prayer is offered the first Monday of the<br />

month at 5:30 p.m. Holy Eucharist and<br />

Bible Study are offered Wednesday<br />

mornings, from 9 - <strong>11</strong> a.m. For more<br />

information go to: www.stpaulslynnfield.org.<br />

or email to office@stpaulslynnfield.org.<br />

Temple Emmanuel<br />

120 Chestnut St., Wakefield<br />

Temple Emmanuel of Wakefield is affiliated<br />

with the Jewish Reconstructionist<br />

Communities. We offer a contemporary<br />

approach to Judaism while maintaining a<br />

respect for traditional Jewish values. We<br />

are a caring and inclusive community<br />

through learning and community activities.<br />

Besides Shabbat and Festival services,<br />

there is a Sisterhood and Temple<br />

Reads Book Club, Shabbat dinners, concerts<br />

and other programs. Consult the<br />

temple website and Facebook page for<br />

updated information.<br />

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

an inclusive and welcoming Jewish Reconstructionist<br />

Community devoted to<br />

learning, spirituality, and caring for<br />

each individual. At Temple Emmanuel<br />

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

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

provide meaning and sustenance in our<br />

contemporary lives. There is a chairlift<br />

to the second floor social hall. Visitors<br />

are encouraged to come to services and<br />

events that interest them.<br />

Shabbat services, led by Rabbi Greg<br />

Hersh are held most Friday evenings at<br />

7:30 p.m. and Saturday mornings at 9:30<br />

a.m.<br />

Second Saturday morning is a Tot<br />

Shabbat at 10 p.m. and a Jewish Meditation<br />

Circle is on the third Friday evening<br />

at 7 p.m.<br />

Feb. 21 Jewish Mysticism with Rabbi<br />

Greg Hersh. Focus this month on Isaac<br />

Luria and Shabbetai Zevi.<br />

No charge, all interested are invited.<br />

Visit www.WakefieldTemple.org for<br />

complete schedule of services, family<br />

events, and Continuing Education programs.<br />

The Temple website (www.Wakefield-<br />

Temple.org) has the complete list of<br />

Rosh Hashanah and Yom Kippur services.<br />

Seats may be reserved by calling<br />

Phil 617-688-0870.<br />

The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day<br />

Saints<br />

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

Sunday services and classes are from 9<br />

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

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

<strong>11</strong>:10-noon, Primary and Youth Classes;<br />

Youth Night and Boy/Cub Scouts: Tuesdays<br />

at 7 p.m.; Bishop: Matthew Romano,<br />

781-334-5586. Family History Center,<br />

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

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

before coming due to weather or for<br />

summer hours.<br />

Wakefield-<strong>Lynnfield</strong> United Methodist<br />

Church<br />

273 Vernon St., Wakefield<br />

Pastor: Glenn M. Mortimer<br />

Sunday Worship Services:<br />

Summer: Sunday, July 1 through Labor<br />

Weekend Sun. Sept. 2, 2018 10 a.m.<br />

Worship Service.<br />

School Year: Sept. 8 through June 30,<br />

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

Knit, Pray & Crochet Ministry meets<br />

at 10 a.m. on the 1st and 3rd Mondays of<br />

each month at the church to chat, learn to<br />

knit & crochet and to make items like<br />

blankets, hats, mittens, scarves, prayer<br />

shawls and prayer squares for people in<br />

need.<br />

Following the service, we enjoy Fellowship<br />

at our Coffee & Conversation<br />

time.<br />

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

community through volunteer opportunities,<br />

social groups and committees like<br />

Ecumenical Youth Group, Choir, Book<br />

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

Methodist Women, Ministry Leadership<br />

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

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

our building to groups like Happy<br />

Hearts Preschool, Cub Scouts, Girl<br />

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

Music Together-Preschool Music,<br />

Kids Curtain Call Drama for Middle<br />

Schoolers, and Wakefield Toy Swap. We<br />

are also a Project Linus Blanket Dropoff<br />

spot. We have musicians “In the<br />

House” as our Pastor, Rev. Glenn Mortimer,<br />

and his wife, Elizabeth, are musicians,<br />

and incorporate music into special<br />

church services for all to enjoy. For more<br />

information about our church, please<br />

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

or email us at our new email<br />

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

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

We look forward to welcoming you on<br />

Sunday.<br />

Senior Center<br />

announces<br />

December events<br />

Everyone is invited to the<br />

Senior Center, 525 Salem St.,<br />

on Wednesday, Dec. 5, 10 a.m.<br />

for a welcome coffee for anyone<br />

who is new to our center.<br />

This is a good opportunity to<br />

meet the staff and learn about<br />

the many programs and services<br />

we offer. Coffee and cookies<br />

and tons of information will be<br />

on hand. Please call the center,<br />

781-598-1078, to sign up.<br />

On Thursday, Dec. 6 join<br />

Tom Moran, Veteran’s Liaison<br />

from Compassionate Care<br />

Hospice, at 12:30 p.m. for<br />

coffee and conversation. The<br />

event is free for all veterans<br />

and spouses. Call the Center to<br />

sign up.<br />

Also on Dec. 6 at 10 a.m., the<br />

monthly Parkinson’s Disease<br />

support group meets to discuss<br />

coping mechanisms for those<br />

Tree lighting<br />

on the Common<br />

<strong>Lynnfield</strong> residents are welcome<br />

to refreshments and to<br />

see the arrival of Santa on the<br />

Common on Saturday, Dec. 1<br />

starting at 3 p.m.<br />

At 4:15 p.m. the Girl Scouts<br />

take the stage in preparation for<br />

community sing-along.<br />

At 4:30 p.m. the Girl Scouts<br />

sing along with <strong>Lynnfield</strong><br />

High School Tri-M Band with<br />

the following songs: “Let<br />

It Snow, Let It Snow, Let It<br />

Snow”; “Rudolph the Red-<br />

Nosed Reindeer”; “I Have<br />

A Little Dreidel”; “Jingle<br />

Bells”; “Deck the Halls”;<br />

“Santa Claus is Coming to<br />

living with Parkinson’s. Group<br />

members support one another<br />

by sharing their stories and tips<br />

on how to cope with Parkinson’s<br />

on a daily basis.<br />

Guest speakers will join the<br />

group from time to time to discuss<br />

their areas of expertise in<br />

living with the disease. Kim<br />

Arouth, from Additional Care,<br />

will lead this monthly support<br />

group. The group will meet the<br />

first Thurs. of each month. The<br />

event is free. Call the Center to<br />

sign up.<br />

Carol Pallazolla, from<br />

Element Care, is a certified<br />

instructor with the Arthritis<br />

Foundation. Carol will demonstrate<br />

exercises that can be done<br />

sitting or standing to help relieve<br />

arthritis pain on Thursday,<br />

Dec. 13, at 12:30 p.m. Free —<br />

please call to sign up.<br />

Town”; and “O’ Chanukah, O’<br />

Chanukah.”<br />

At 4:45 p.m. there’s a holiday<br />

greeting and lighting of<br />

the Town Common trees by the<br />

Board of Selectmen, and a “We<br />

Wish You A Merry Christmas”<br />

sing-along.<br />

Trolley Tours for “Light<br />

up <strong>Lynnfield</strong>” leave from the<br />

Common at 4:30, 5, 5:30, and<br />

6 p.m.<br />

Be sure to visit the <strong>Lynnfield</strong><br />

Historical Society General Store<br />

inside the Meeting House and<br />

the Gingerbread House Contest<br />

in the Centre Congregational<br />

Church.<br />

A parking space for vets<br />

<strong>Lynnfield</strong> has designated a parking space at Town Hall<br />

for veterans as a way to thank them for their service.


NOVEMBER <strong>29</strong>, 2018<br />

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

Sports<br />

Luders signs letter to go to Seton Hall<br />

By Anne Marie Tobin<br />

LYNNFIELD — Add the name<br />

Jonathan Luders to an ever-growing list<br />

of <strong>Lynnfield</strong> High School athletes who<br />

will continue their playing careers at the<br />

Division 1 level.<br />

Luders made it official on Nov. 16<br />

when he signed an NCAA letter of intent<br />

to play baseball at Seton Hall University<br />

in front of a large contingent of family,<br />

friends and teammates.<br />

Luders made a verbal commitment as<br />

a sophomore after making an unofficial<br />

visit to the New Jersey school’s campus.<br />

“My first visit was the summer of my<br />

sophomore year when I was playing a<br />

summer tournament nearby with The<br />

Academy,”<br />

Luders said. “Coach (Rob) Sheppard<br />

saw me play and he contacted my coach ,<br />

and encouraged me to visit the campus. I<br />

visited that August and loved the campus,<br />

loved the coach, and loved the turf field,<br />

which is similar to ours. I got to meet<br />

some of the players and they were very<br />

cool. I just loved the culture down there.”<br />

Luders also considered Fairleigh<br />

Dickinson, b ut Seton Hall was a better fit,<br />

especially with academics .<br />

“I want to study something health related<br />

and maybe become a doctor or<br />

sports psychologist,” said Luders. “I just<br />

think Seton Hall offers me the best , not<br />

only when it comes to baseball, but in<br />

terms of my career plans.”<br />

Luders singled out <strong>Lynnfield</strong> coach<br />

John O’Brien for helping him navigate<br />

the search process .<br />

“I am blessed to play for such a great<br />

caring guy who helps all of his players<br />

when it comes to college selection,”<br />

Luders said.<br />

“He cares as a coach and as a person<br />

and when it comes to baseball , he brings<br />

PHOTO | ANNE MARIE TOBIN<br />

Jonathan Luders second from left, signed his letter of intent to play baseball at<br />

Seton Hall. Pioneer baseball coach, John O’Brien, is beside him, left. Sharing<br />

the moment are Luders’ father, Mark, sister, April and mother, Jill.<br />

out the best in every player and knows<br />

how to win . I 100 percent discussed the<br />

whole thing and he saw it through from<br />

start to finish .”<br />

“He turned into quite a leader, he leads<br />

by example , ” O’Brien said. H e doesn’t<br />

tell the kids what to do, he shows it by<br />

doing what he does .”<br />

“His going D1 means to a lot to me and<br />

to the <strong>Lynnfield</strong> program ,” O’Brien said.<br />

“ This is a kid who just loves the game and<br />

loves life. I’m happy he found his D1<br />

spot and will get a chance to play and get<br />

a good education. It’s a win for everyone,<br />

for all, for the team, for the program and<br />

for the school.<br />

“This is a kid who does anything you<br />

ask to the best of his ability and I couldn’t<br />

be prouder of him. This fall I chance to<br />

watch him play two soccer games and I<br />

never saw a kid who never stopped running.<br />

That’s just who he is, going full<br />

speed all the time. “<br />

For Luders, going full speed, no matter<br />

what the activity, is not an option , he said .<br />

“I play with every sport with passion,<br />

I just love the game of baseball and will<br />

do whatever it takes to win,” Luders said.<br />

“You have to have respect for anything<br />

you do, and I think I learned that from<br />

my mom and dad for bringing me and my<br />

sister April up the right way. There are<br />

many things you can’t control, but I can<br />

always control who I am as a person.”<br />

Luders is coming off a wildly successful<br />

season with the boys soccer team,<br />

which advanced to the North Division 3<br />

sectional final before being eliminated by<br />

eventual state champion Wayland.<br />

Luders was named the Cape Ann<br />

League Kinney Division Player of the<br />

Year and also received the team Player of<br />

the Year Award. He finished the season as<br />

the Pioneers’ leading scorer with 14 goals<br />

and 21 assists, factoring in exactly half<br />

of the 70 goals scored by <strong>Lynnfield</strong> this<br />

season.<br />

A high honor roll student member of<br />

the National Honor Society, Luders was<br />

recruited as a shortstop.<br />

“Their starting shortstop was a senior,<br />

but I will play anywhere I can to get<br />

playing time,” Luders said.<br />

For now, Luders said he is focused on<br />

getting ready preparing for the Pioneers’<br />

spring season.<br />

“I’ll be working out all winter to be in<br />

shape for baseball,” Luders he said. “We<br />

have an awesome team coming back, obviously<br />

we are losing some great seniors,<br />

but this is it for the new seniors, so we<br />

are all in. We had such a great run last<br />

year when nobody expected it from us,<br />

and there is no reason why we can’t do<br />

the same and even go one better and win<br />

a north title.”<br />

Still, O’Brien said Luders is far from<br />

perfect.<br />

“I had to pull him aside so many times<br />

when he became a starter in the outfield<br />

his sophomore year,” O’Brien said with<br />

a smile .<br />

“Every time I turned around he was off<br />

chasing foul balls in the woods . and I had<br />

to tell him that starters don’t chase foul<br />

balls.<br />

He couldn’t help it, he just goes full<br />

speed all the time and puts himself out<br />

there as an example. He is so motivational<br />

and, with him, it’s infectious. I mean,<br />

look at how many people are here today,<br />

for him. Nothing speaks to his character<br />

more than seeing what these kids think<br />

of him, how they respect him.”<br />

Jonathan proves to be a very good sport<br />

<strong>Lynnfield</strong> High senior Jonathan Luders is this<br />

year’s winner of the 18th Annual MIAA Student<br />

Sportsmanship Essay and Multimedia contest.<br />

Luders presented his essay Friday, Nov. 16 at<br />

the annual MIAA Sportsmanship Summit at Gillette<br />

Stadium.<br />

NBA champion, Walt Frazier said, “The star player<br />

must slay his ego and learn teamwork and communication<br />

skills before he can achieve the ultimate in<br />

sport.” These words sum up the definition of sportsmanship<br />

in my mind. To “slay his ego” means total<br />

respect for the game and the realization that no one<br />

player is ever greater than the game itself. This is the<br />

humbling thought that no matter how good I think I<br />

am, there is always someone better. I must work hard<br />

to improve myself and to be the best sportsman that I<br />

can be every day by keeping my ego in check.<br />

As a captain in both baseball and soccer, I understand<br />

that strong teamwork and communication skills<br />

are essential for “the ultimate in sport.” My job as<br />

captain is not only to be the best leader and sportsman<br />

I can be, it’s to motivate my teammates to believe<br />

in themselves and each other so that they can be the<br />

best players they can be. I try to model the words<br />

of legendary UCLA basketball coach, John Wooden,<br />

PHOTO | MIAA<br />

Marilyn Slattery, MIAA President/Malden High<br />

School house principal presents Jonathan Luders<br />

of <strong>Lynnfield</strong> High with a plaque for winning the<br />

Sportsmanship Essay Contest.<br />

“...when a game is over, and you see somebody that<br />

didn’t know the outcome, I hope they couldn’t tell<br />

by your actions whether you outscored an opponent<br />

or the opponent outscored you.” The only thing I can<br />

control is my actions before, during, and after the<br />

game. My goal is that my actions communicate to<br />

my teammates how the game should be played. In<br />

my eyes, that is sprinting on and off the field, diving<br />

for that ball that no one thought could be caught, and<br />

helping up an opposing player who has taken a fall. I<br />

noticed that sometimes when teams line up to shake<br />

hands, players say “good game” without the greatest<br />

intentions, for example, when the score was 7-0. To<br />

the losing team, it might not have been a “good game”<br />

and they probably don’t want to hear those words.<br />

Instead, I say “Respect” because that is something<br />

players can relate to if they played the game hard and<br />

in the right way. When I lead by these examples and<br />

give my best, my teammates do the same.<br />

True sportsmanship goes beyond the game. It carries<br />

over to the rest of my life and will transfer to<br />

my future endeavors, as I know I’ll be a man out in<br />

the world longer than I’ll be an athlete on the field.<br />

I believe sportsmanship in the real world is a matter<br />

of respecting everyone, being scrupulously honest,<br />

genuinely humble, and hard working because each of<br />

these qualities is a key to success in today’s world.<br />

Sportsmanship is when you do the very best you can,<br />

every day on the field, in the classroom, or at work<br />

because not only are you being the best version of<br />

yourself, you are bettering all those around you by<br />

raising the level of play and making the environment<br />

where you work or play that much better.


10<br />

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Winter sports schedule<br />

BOYS BASKETBALL<br />

Fri., Dec. 14, <strong>Lynnfield</strong> at Pentucket, 6:30 p.m.<br />

Tue., Dec. 18, <strong>Lynnfield</strong> at Rockport, 6:30 p.m.<br />

Fri., Dec. 21, Masconomet at <strong>Lynnfield</strong>, 6:30<br />

Sun., Dec. 23, Danvers at <strong>Lynnfield</strong>, 3 p.m.<br />

Thu., Dec. 27, <strong>Lynnfield</strong> at Melrose, 5 p.m.<br />

Wed., Jan. 2, <strong>Lynnfield</strong> at Ham-Wenham, 6:30 p.m.<br />

Fri., Jan. 4, Newburyport at <strong>Lynnfield</strong>, 6:30 p.m.<br />

Tue., Jan. 8, Amesbury at <strong>Lynnfield</strong> , 6:30 p.m.<br />

Fri., Jan. <strong>11</strong>, <strong>Lynnfield</strong> at North Reading, 6:30 p.m.<br />

Tue., Jan. 15, <strong>Lynnfield</strong> at Ipswich, 6:30 p.m.<br />

Fri., Jan. 18, Pentucket at <strong>Lynnfield</strong>, 6:30 p.m.<br />

Mon. Jan. 21, <strong>Lynnfield</strong> at Triton 1:30 p.m.<br />

Fri., Jan. 25, <strong>Lynnfield</strong> at Masconomet, 6:30 p.m.<br />

Sun., Jan. 27, Melrose at <strong>Lynnfield</strong>, 3 p.m.<br />

Tue., Jan. <strong>29</strong>, Man-Essex at <strong>Lynnfield</strong>, 6:30 p.m.<br />

Fri., Feb. 1, North Reading at <strong>Lynnfield</strong>, 6:30 p.m.<br />

Mon., Feb. 4, <strong>Lynnfield</strong> at Danvers, 7 p.m.<br />

Tue., Feb. 5, <strong>Lynnfield</strong> at Georgetown, 6:30 p.m.<br />

Fri., Feb. 8, Triton at <strong>Lynnfield</strong>, 6:30 p.m.<br />

Thu., Feb. 14, <strong>Lynnfield</strong> at Newburyport 7 p.m.<br />

GIRLS BASKETBALL<br />

Sat., Dec. 8, Notre Dame at <strong>Lynnfield</strong>, 1 p.m.<br />

Fri., Dec. 14, Pentucket at <strong>Lynnfield</strong>, 6:30 p.m.<br />

Fri., Dec. 21, <strong>Lynnfield</strong> at Masconomet, 6:30 p.m.<br />

Thu., Dec. 27, <strong>Lynnfield</strong> at Gloucester, 7 p.m.<br />

Wed., Jan. 2, Ham-Wenham at <strong>Lynnfield</strong> 6:30 p.m.<br />

Fri., Jan. 4, <strong>Lynnfield</strong> at Newburyport, 6:30 p.m.<br />

Tue., Jan. 8, <strong>Lynnfield</strong> at Amesbury, 6:30 p.m.<br />

Fri., Jan. <strong>11</strong>, North Reading at <strong>Lynnfield</strong>, 6:30 p.m.<br />

Tue., Jan. 15, Ipswich at <strong>Lynnfield</strong>, 6:30 p.m.<br />

Wed., Jan. 16, <strong>Lynnfield</strong> at Notre Dame, 5:30 p.m.<br />

Fri., Jan. 18, <strong>Lynnfield</strong> at Pentucket, 6:30 p.m.<br />

Mon. Jan. 21, Triton at <strong>Lynnfield</strong>, 6:30 p.m.<br />

Thu., Jan. 24, Winthrop at <strong>Lynnfield</strong>, 6:30 p.m.<br />

Fri., Jan. 25, Masconomet at <strong>Lynnfield</strong>, 6:30 p.m.<br />

Tue., Jan. <strong>29</strong>, <strong>Lynnfield</strong> at Man-Essex 6:30 p.m.<br />

Fri., Feb. 1, <strong>Lynnfield</strong> at North Reading, 7 p.m.<br />

Tue., Feb. 5, Georgetown at <strong>Lynnfield</strong>, 6:30 p.m.<br />

Fri., Feb. 8, <strong>Lynnfield</strong> at Triton, 6:30 p.m.<br />

Thu., Feb. 14, Newburyport at <strong>Lynnfield</strong>, 6:30 p.m.<br />

Tue., Feb. 19, <strong>Lynnfield</strong> at Winthrop, 4 p.m.<br />

BOYS HOCKEY<br />

Sat., Dec. 8, Gloucester at <strong>Lynnfield</strong>, 12 p.m.<br />

Wed., Dec. 12, <strong>Lynnfield</strong> at Masconomet, 8:05 p.m.<br />

Sat., Dec. 15, Pentucket at <strong>Lynnfield</strong>, 12 p.m.<br />

Sat., Dec. 22, <strong>Lynnfield</strong> at Ham-Wenham, 7 p.m.<br />

Wed., Dec. 26, <strong>Lynnfield</strong> at Castle Island tour., TBD<br />

Thu., Dec. 27, <strong>Lynnfield</strong> at Castle Island tour., TBD<br />

Sat., Dec. <strong>29</strong>, <strong>Lynnfield</strong> at Peabody, 12 p.m.<br />

Wed., Jan. 2, Masconomet at <strong>Lynnfield</strong>, 7:05 p.m.<br />

Sat., Jan. 5, Amesbury at <strong>Lynnfield</strong>, 12 p.m.<br />

Sat., Jan. 12, <strong>Lynnfield</strong> at Newburyport, 2 p.m.<br />

Tue., Jan. 15, <strong>Lynnfield</strong> at North Reading, 5:10 p.m.<br />

Sat., Jan. 19, <strong>Lynnfield</strong> at Triton, 12 p.m.<br />

Sat., Jan. 26, <strong>Lynnfield</strong> at Pentucket, 7 p.m.<br />

Wed., Jan. 30, <strong>Lynnfield</strong> at Amesbury, 8:05 p.m.<br />

Wed., Feb 6, Newburyport at <strong>Lynnfield</strong>, 8:15 p.m.<br />

Sat., Feb. 9, Triton at <strong>Lynnfield</strong>, 12 p.m.<br />

Wed., Feb. 13, North Reading at <strong>Lynnfield</strong>, 8:15 p.m.<br />

Sat., Feb. 16, <strong>Lynnfield</strong> at Westwood, 4:15 p.m.<br />

Wed., Feb. 20, <strong>Lynnfield</strong> at Gloucester, 7 p.m.<br />

Fri., Feb. 22, Medfield at <strong>Lynnfield</strong>, 12 p.m.<br />

GIRLS HOCKEY<br />

Sat., Dec. 8, Peabody at Marblehead, TBD<br />

Wed., Dec. 12, Peabody at St. Mary’s, 8 p.m.<br />

Sat., Dec. 15, Masconomet at Peabody 4 p.m.<br />

Mon., Dec. 17, Peabody at Oakmont, 6 p.m.<br />

Sat. Dec. 22, Ursuline at Peabody 4 p.m.<br />

Wed., Dec. 26, Peabody at Beverly, 4 p.m.<br />

Sat., Dec. <strong>29</strong>, Winthrop at Peabody, 4 p.m.<br />

Sat., Jan. 5, Medford at Peabody, 4 p.m.<br />

Wed., Jan. 9, Peabody at Medford, 7 p.m.<br />

Sun., Jan. 13, Peabody at Fenwick, 9 a.m.<br />

Wed., Jan. 16, Peabody at Waltham, 5 p.m.<br />

Sat., Jan. 19, Marblehead at Peabody, 4 p.m.<br />

Wed., Jan. 23, Peabody at Melrose, 6 p.m.<br />

Sat., Jan. 26, Oakmont at Peabody 12 p.m.<br />

Wed., Jan. 30, Waltham at Peabody 5:15 p.m.<br />

Wed, Feb. 6, Peabody at Winthrop, 6:10 p.m.<br />

Sat., Feb. 9, Peabody at Masconomet, 7:50 p.m.<br />

Wed., Feb. 13, Peabody at Medford, 5 p.m.<br />

Mon., Feb. 18, Peabody at Fenwick, 10 a.m.<br />

Wed., Feb. 20, Haverhill at Peabody, 2 p.m.<br />

INDOOR TRACK<br />

Sat., Dec. 8, <strong>Lynnfield</strong> at Man-Essex, 12 p.m.<br />

Tue., Dec. <strong>11</strong>, Amesbury at <strong>Lynnfield</strong>, 6:45 p.m.<br />

Tue., Dec. 18, Ipswich at <strong>Lynnfield</strong>, 6:45 p.m.<br />

Thu., Dec. 27, Ham-Wenham at <strong>Lynnfield</strong>, 9 a.m.<br />

Fri., Dec. 28, Essex Tech at <strong>Lynnfield</strong>, 6 p.m.<br />

Sat., Jan. 5, CAL Fresh/soph meet, TBD<br />

Wed., Jan. 9, <strong>Lynnfield</strong> at Masconomet, 7:15 p.m.<br />

Tue., Feb. 5, CAL Open at Reggie Lewis, 6 p.m.<br />

Sun., Feb. 17 Division 4 meet at Lewis, TBD<br />

Sat., Feb. 23 All-States championship, 10:30 a.m.<br />

SWIMMING/DIVING<br />

Sat., Dec. 8, Man-Essex at <strong>Lynnfield</strong>, 5 p.m.<br />

Fri., Dec. 14, <strong>Lynnfield</strong> at North Reading, 7:30 p.m.<br />

Wed., Jan. 2, <strong>Lynnfield</strong> at Ipswich, 7:30 p.m.<br />

Sat., Jan. 5, Ham-Wenham at <strong>Lynnfield</strong>, 5 p.m.<br />

Sun., Jan. 13, Masconomet at <strong>Lynnfield</strong>, 5 p.m.<br />

Wed., Jan. 16, <strong>Lynnfield</strong> at Triton, 6 p.m.<br />

Sat., Jan. 26, Austin Prep at <strong>Lynnfield</strong> 5 p.m.<br />

Sun., Feb. 3, CAL meet at Salem State, 8:30 a.m.<br />

Sat., Feb. 9, Girls North Sectional meet at MIT, TBD<br />

Sun., Feb. 10, Boys North Sectional meet at MIT, TBD<br />

Sat., Feb 16, Girls Division 1 state meet at BU, TBD<br />

Sun., Feb. 17, Boys Division 1 state meet at BU, TBD<br />

WRESTLING<br />

Sat., Dec. 8, <strong>Lynnfield</strong> at Wilmington tri-match, 10 a.m.<br />

Wed., Dec. 12, Pentucket at <strong>Lynnfield</strong> 6:30 p.m.<br />

Sat., Dec. 15, Wakefield Tournament, 9:30 a.m.<br />

Wed., Dec. 19, <strong>Lynnfield</strong> at Masconomet, 6:30 p.m.<br />

Sat., Dec. 22, Quad meet at Wakefield, 10 a.m .<br />

Thu., Dec. 27, Pentucket Tournament, 10 a.m.<br />

Sun., Dec. 30, Multiple opponents at Beverly, 9 a.m.<br />

Thu., Jan. 3, Triton at <strong>Lynnfield</strong>, 6:30 p.m.<br />

Sat., Jan. 5, Cohasset Tournament, 10 a.m.<br />

Wed., Jan. 9, <strong>Lynnfield</strong> at Holliston, 6:30 p.m.<br />

Sat., Jan. 12, Quad meet at N. Reading, 10 a.m.<br />

Fri., Jan. 18, Peabody at <strong>Lynnfield</strong>, 5 p.m.<br />

Sat., Jan. 19, Tri-meet at <strong>Lynnfield</strong>, 10 a.m.<br />

Wed., Jan. 23, <strong>Lynnfield</strong> at Georgetown, 6:30 p.m.<br />

Wed., Jan. 30, <strong>Lynnfield</strong> at Concord-Carlisle, 6:30 p.m.<br />

Sat., Feb. 2, Dual Meet Tournament at Haverhill, TBA<br />

Tue., Feb. 5, <strong>Lynnfield</strong> at Danvers, 5:30 p.m.<br />

Sat., Feb. 9, North Division 2 sectional tournament, TBD<br />

Fri., Feb. 15, Division 2 state tournament, TBD<br />

Sat. Feb. 16, Division 2 state tournament, TBD<br />

Sat., Feb. 23, All-States tournament, TBD<br />

Fri., March 1, New England championship, TBD<br />

Sat., March 2, New England championship, TBD<br />

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NOVEMBER <strong>29</strong>, 2018<br />

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

Frigid Thanksgiving results in a loss<br />

By Anne Marie Tobin<br />

LYNNFIELD — On one of the coldest<br />

Thanksgiving Days ever, the <strong>Lynnfield</strong><br />

Pioneers football team’s hopes to close<br />

out the season with a victory were gone<br />

with the wind at frigid Pioneer Stadium<br />

Thursday as visiting North Reading<br />

handed the Pioneers their worst loss of<br />

the season, 32-0.<br />

Truth be told, the only thing colder<br />

than the temperature and wind chill was<br />

the Pioneer offense, which made only<br />

two trips into North Reading territory the<br />

entire game and struggled all day to find<br />

any rhythm.<br />

“North Reading has a very, very sound<br />

defense and it was tough for us to get<br />

any kind of offensive drives going,” said<br />

first-year <strong>Lynnfield</strong> coach Pat Lamusta.<br />

“We needed a few big plays, but the<br />

bottom line it was tough for us throwing<br />

the ball, running the ball and catching<br />

the ball today. We kept telling the kids<br />

to block out the cold, but we just didn’t<br />

have it today. At the end of the day, you<br />

have to win the battle of the trenches and<br />

we just gave them too much room to run<br />

and with two solid running backs who<br />

run hard, we just had our hands full and<br />

couldn’t stop them.”<br />

The two backs referred to by Lamusta<br />

were senior captain Alex D’Ambrosio<br />

and junior Jack Keller who combined<br />

for nearly 200 yards of rushing yardage.<br />

D’Ambrosio was a one-man show in the<br />

first half, picking up <strong>11</strong>8 yards on 14 carries<br />

in the first half before finishing with<br />

a total of 139 yards on 23 carries. Keller<br />

was a two-way threat, picking up 57<br />

yards on seven carries and also caught<br />

two passes for 16 yards.<br />

Keller’s second catch was a gamechanger,<br />

coming with just 10 seconds<br />

left in the half on a hook-and-ladder to<br />

break the game wide open and send the<br />

Hornets into halftime with a 20-0 lead.<br />

Quarterback Matthew Solecki hit Keller<br />

PHOTO | KERRIANNE ALLAIN<br />

Captain Leo Quinn, right, holds off North Reading’s Jack Keller.<br />

near the right sideline about five yards<br />

from the line of scrimmage, then Keller<br />

tossed the ball to senior captain Michael<br />

Sheridan, who sprinted six yards into the<br />

end zone.<br />

“That hook-and-ladder was good execution,”<br />

Lamusta said. “You know when<br />

it comes to Thanksgiving Day games,<br />

there are always going to be trick plays<br />

tossed at you, and we had a couple up our<br />

own sleeves, too, but they just caught us<br />

on that trick play.”<br />

Going into a stiff breeze, the<br />

Pioneers dug a hole for themselves in<br />

the first quarter. A three-and-out on the<br />

opening drive of the game, resulted<br />

in Pioneer short punt that netted only<br />

three yards, handing the ball to North<br />

Reading at the Pioneer <strong>29</strong>. Solecki<br />

needed only four plays to find the end<br />

zone on a quarterback keeper from 12<br />

yards out (D’Ambrosio kick) to make<br />

it 7-0.<br />

After another Pioneer punt, North<br />

Reading drove 58 yards in four plays,<br />

capped by a 2-yard sprint by Solecki, to<br />

make it 13-0.<br />

After a scoreless third quarter,<br />

<strong>Lynnfield</strong> made its deepest trip into<br />

Hornet territory after a 30 yard strike<br />

from Clayton Marengi (4-of-12, 49<br />

yards) to Jack Ford (2 catches, 39 yards)<br />

set the Pioneers up with 1st down at the<br />

Hornet 22 only to turn the ball over on<br />

downs after Marengi’s pass intended for<br />

John Lee (6 carries, <strong>29</strong> yards) in the end<br />

zone was incomplete.<br />

Three plays later Solecki hit Michael<br />

Mikula from 74 yards out to bump the<br />

lead to 26-0 with about 10 minutes to go.<br />

Three minutes later, Keller capped the<br />

scoring with a 46-yard burst.<br />

“I have to give credit to the team for<br />

fighting hard to the end, especially the<br />

seniors who were awesome this year,”<br />

Lamusta said.<br />

“All we can ask is that the younger<br />

players learn from the seniors and remember<br />

this feeling going forward and<br />

use it as fuel next year.”<br />

The senior group has been through<br />

a lot and had their share of adversity<br />

this year, but we have to remember that<br />

while we didn’t win this game, we still<br />

had three good wins this year and we got<br />

better with every game.<br />

Lamusta earned high praise from senior<br />

captains Hunter Allain and Leo<br />

Quinn.<br />

“He’s a young coach, but really was<br />

more like a brother to us,” said Allain.<br />

“He was always energetic and never<br />

called us out after a loss. He just told us<br />

to show up the next day and showed a lot<br />

of pride. He’s a great role model.<br />

“It was tough losing every week at the<br />

beginning of the season, but all coach<br />

told us was just to keep doing our jobs,<br />

like Bill Belichick,” said Quinn. “He just<br />

told us to keep grinding and that success<br />

would come our way, and it did especially<br />

defensively.”<br />

Ted Flaherty has been all around the league<br />

By Anne Marie Tobin<br />

LYNNFIELD — If there is<br />

anyone who knows what it's<br />

like to be a Cape Ann League<br />

Thanksgiving Day football<br />

junkie, it's <strong>Lynnfield</strong> line coach<br />

Ted Flaherty.<br />

Yesterday, at the annual<br />

<strong>Lynnfield</strong>-North Reading<br />

Thanksgiving Day football<br />

game, Flaherty accomplished<br />

an unusual milestone when it<br />

comes to Thanksgiving Day<br />

rivalries.<br />

From Masconomet-North<br />

Andover to Amesbury-<br />

Newburyport to Georgetown-<br />

Manchester Essex to Ipswich-<br />

Hamilton Wenham to<br />

Triton-Pentucket, and, finally,<br />

<strong>Lynnfield</strong>-North Reading,<br />

Flaherty has seen it all.<br />

He may be the only coach to<br />

lay claim to having experienced<br />

the highs and lows of at least<br />

one of each and every one of the<br />

Cape Ann League Thanksgiving<br />

Day rivalry games.<br />

"I don't know for sure, but I<br />

am told that nobody has ever<br />

done that before," said Flaherty.<br />

"I've now been on the<br />

sidelines for at least one<br />

Thanksgiving rivalry game involving<br />

every league team,"<br />

Flaherty said. "The only rivalry<br />

game I had not coached was<br />

<strong>Lynnfield</strong>-North Reading, that<br />

is until today, so it completes<br />

the cycle. It was just last week<br />

when Pat (Lamusta) and I were<br />

talking Thanksgiving traditions<br />

starting with what Jim Pugh<br />

did at Masco, then some of the<br />

other teams I was a part of and<br />

I realized that <strong>Lynnfield</strong>-North<br />

Reading was the only rivalry I<br />

had not experienced."<br />

Since 1991, Flaherty has been<br />

the wild rover in the league,<br />

serving as an assistant coach<br />

or head coach of five different<br />

Cape Ann League football<br />

teams for all but two seasons.<br />

He started at Masconomet as<br />

an assistant in 1991.<br />

From there, Flaherty moved<br />

on in 1994 to Amesbury as an<br />

assistant from 1994-2001 and<br />

head coach from 1995- 2001,<br />

earning CAL Coach of the Year<br />

honors in 1998.<br />

Flaherty spent 2002 as an<br />

assistant at Georgetown, then<br />

defected to the Northeastern<br />

Conference at Beverly for two<br />

years as defensive coordinator.<br />

He returned to Ipswich in<br />

2005 as head coach through<br />

2012. He struck lightning in a<br />

bottle his second year, leading<br />

Ipswich to a Division 3A Super<br />

Bowl title in 2006.<br />

Flaherty's next stop was at<br />

Triton as a defensive coordinator<br />

under head coach and<br />

<strong>Lynnfield</strong> native and resident,<br />

Pat Sheehan, who currently is<br />

an assistant at Reading.<br />

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As far as his favorite<br />

Thanksgiving Day game<br />

memory goes, Flaherty says<br />

there are two.<br />

"As funny as it may sound,<br />

my junior year at Ipswich High<br />

we were playing Triton and we<br />

had a huge ice storm and the<br />

field was a skating rink," said<br />

Flaherty. "We couldn't wear<br />

our cleats and we were all sent<br />

up into the stands to borrow<br />

boots, so we played in snow<br />

boots.<br />

"But as a coach at Ipswich,<br />

the 2009 Thanksgiving game<br />

against Hamilton-Wenham is<br />

right up there," Flaherty said.<br />

"We won a Super Bowl in<br />

2006 and then lost 33 straight<br />

games. We ended up winning<br />

14-13, thanks to a late defensive<br />

stand on a two-point<br />

conversion and a recovery<br />

of an onside kick, then took<br />

three straight knees. Our kids<br />

had never taken a knee before.<br />

That moment when the<br />

game ended was the happiest<br />

moment, even better than the<br />

feeling we had after winning<br />

the Super Bowl."<br />

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WEEKLYNEWS.NET - 978-532-5880 NOVEMBER <strong>29</strong>, 2018<br />

The Barrett twins are off to Virginia<br />

By Anne Marie Tobin<br />

LYNNFIELD — The town of <strong>Lynnfield</strong> may be on<br />

the small side, but when it comes to NCAA college athletics,<br />

<strong>Lynnfield</strong> is right up there churning out big-time<br />

college student-athletes.<br />

The latest Pioneers to go the Division 1 route are the<br />

Barrett twins, Ashley and Brianna, who are taking their<br />

field hockey talents to the Atlantic-10 Conference where<br />

the duo will play at Virginia Commonwealth University<br />

(VCU). In front of family and friends, the twins signed<br />

their NCAA letters of intent Nov. 15 at the high school.<br />

The Barretts are following a long line of <strong>Lynnfield</strong><br />

residents who played Division 1 level field hockey.<br />

That group includes 1978 UNH graduate Marisa Didio,<br />

who played field hockey at UNH alongside Pioneers’<br />

coach, Mamie Reardon, and later coached UNH to an<br />

NCAA women’s national lacrosse championship in<br />

1985. Didio also coached the UNH field hockey team<br />

to the finals of the 1986 NCAA championship and also<br />

served as assistant coach of both the USA Olympic and<br />

national field hockey teams.<br />

Other Pioneers coached by Reardon who went on<br />

to play at the Division 1 level include: Pioneers’ assistant<br />

coach Kerry Doherty and Michelle Heaslip<br />

(Boston College); Bailey Fanikos (UNH/Virginia);<br />

Lilli Patterson and Sue Mucera (Northeastern); Linda<br />

Formosa and Betsy Vance (coached at Northwestern<br />

by Didio); Courtney Goodwin (UNH); Kathy<br />

Formosi (BU); Andrea Formosi, and Jennifer Carrey<br />

(Springfield).<br />

The Barretts hit the ground running as freshmen, with<br />

each securing a starting role in no time flat. Brianna<br />

started out as a forward and moved to center-mid last<br />

year, while Ashley is a forward.<br />

This year, both players were named to the Cape<br />

Ann League First Team All-Star team. Ashley led the<br />

Pioneers in scoring this year and finished the regular<br />

season with 19 goals and 12 assists, while Brianna finished<br />

with three goals and eight assists. Both players<br />

were also named to the CAL Second Team All-Star<br />

team last fall as juniors.<br />

Former <strong>Lynnfield</strong> High soccer<br />

standout Emily Scollard, a senior<br />

on the Stonehill College women’s<br />

soccer team, has been selected<br />

to play in Saturday’s NEWISA<br />

Senior Bowl game at Merrimack<br />

College in North Andover.<br />

Scollard, a 2015 <strong>Lynnfield</strong><br />

Haigh graduate, is one of two<br />

Skyhawks selected to represent<br />

Division II in the game, which<br />

features New England’s top senior<br />

players from Division 1, 2<br />

and 3. Kickoff is set for noon<br />

on Dec. 1.<br />

Scollard has been a key part<br />

of the Skyhawks’ defensive unit<br />

all four years of her collegiate<br />

career, helping to lead them to<br />

two Northeast-10 Conference<br />

tournaments and two NCAA<br />

Division 2 tournament bids,<br />

their only two in program history.<br />

She also was a integral<br />

component in the Skyhawks’<br />

2016 NE10 championship,<br />

their first since 1995.<br />

This season, the senior recorded<br />

one assist in a 2-1 victory<br />

over Southern Connecticut<br />

State University back in early<br />

October. As one of the key<br />

defenders for the Skyhawks,<br />

Scollard helped the team with<br />

eight shutouts this season, the<br />

most since 2016 when they<br />

tallied 10, which ranks tied for<br />

fifth all-time.<br />

PHOTO | ANNE MARIE TOBIN<br />

The Barrett family, from left, mother, Jill, Ashley,<br />

Brianna, father, Leo and brother, Patrick.<br />

The twins have been selected to play in the<br />

2018 Massachusetts State Field Hockey Coaches<br />

Association’s annual Best of 60 Senior All-Star game<br />

scheduled to be played on Sunday, Nov. 18 at Bentley<br />

University.<br />

The twins said their interest in VCU began when<br />

they attended a college showcase at the University<br />

of Massachusetts (Amherst) last June. They were<br />

also considering Holy Cross, Fairfield, Stonehill and<br />

Bentley, but after making multiple visits to VCU, settled<br />

on VCU.<br />

“The VCU coach, Stacey Bean, was the coach of Ashley’s<br />

team at the showcase, so we got to know her there and liked<br />

her a lot so that was a big factor,” said Brianna.<br />

“We just loved the area and especially loved the<br />

weather and the campus and everything about the<br />

program, so we knew that was the place for us,” said<br />

Ashley. It was only after we got our offer that we<br />

learned from Kerry that she had played for Bean when<br />

she was at BC. We had also played many club tournaments<br />

in the area as Virginia and Pennsylvania are big<br />

when it comes to field hockey.”<br />

The twins got a relatively late start in taking up the<br />

game and didn’t pick up their first sticks until seventh<br />

In her four years, Scollard<br />

has played in 77 games, starting<br />

73. A mainstay in the backfield,<br />

she led Stonehill to a total of<br />

26 shutouts over her career.<br />

She finished with six assists,<br />

including a career-high three<br />

helpers her sophomore year.<br />

Scollard has excelled off the<br />

field as well, having been named<br />

to the NE10 Commissioner’s<br />

Honor Roll and Athletic<br />

Director’s Honor Roll on multiple<br />

occasions. She also received<br />

the Division II ADA<br />

Academic Achievement Award<br />

her sophomore year and the St.<br />

Thomas Aquinas Medal, patron<br />

saint of students, for having the<br />

highest cumulative grade point<br />

average on the team.<br />

A 2015 graduate of <strong>Lynnfield</strong><br />

High School, Scollard was<br />

a four-year letter winner<br />

Alumni girls<br />

basketball game<br />

The <strong>Lynnfield</strong> girls basketball<br />

program will hold an<br />

Alumni Game on Tuesday,<br />

Dec. 18 at 6 p.m. in the <strong>Lynnfield</strong><br />

gymnasium in honor<br />

of former LHS coach, Jim<br />

Perry. The event feautures<br />

the 2018-2019 varsity team<br />

against former alums. There<br />

will be a raffle, food and tee<br />

shirt sales. All proceeds will<br />

grade after Jamie Johnson, the director of the middle<br />

school program, encouraged them to try out. They fell<br />

in love with the sport, and promptly quit ice hockey<br />

sophomore year to devote more time to their club team,<br />

the Northeast Club Elite team, currently the top-ranked<br />

team in New England.<br />

Both Barretts will serve as senior captains of the girls<br />

lacrosse team. Ashley said the strength of her game is<br />

her reverse hit.<br />

“I’m left-handed so I had to learn to play righthanded<br />

as they don’t have left-handed sticks,” she said.<br />

“It’s much easier for lefties to score from the left side as<br />

the ball can go either high or low so it’s a much harder<br />

shot for goalies to defend.”<br />

The strength of Brianna’s game is her poise and patience<br />

in the middle.<br />

“She is much calmer with the ball and has the ability to<br />

get everyone all settled down,” said Ashley. “Basically,<br />

she does all the work to set up the goals, while I am one<br />

of the girls who finishes what she started.”<br />

While they share much in common as twins, the duo<br />

plans to strike out on their own at VCU and will not<br />

room together. Ashley plans on majoring in health<br />

sciences then go into nursing, while Brianna plans to<br />

major in computer science and then look for a career in<br />

cyber-security.<br />

Both Barretts are excited to begin the next chapter of<br />

their lives at VCU, but will always carry fond memories<br />

of their four years at <strong>Lynnfield</strong> High, especially this<br />

year’s fall season, when the Pioneers put together one<br />

of their best seasons in recent history.<br />

The Barretts said they knew going into the season<br />

that the Pioneers had the right stuff to take the team to<br />

the next level.<br />

They were right as <strong>Lynnfield</strong> came within a whisker<br />

of being “the” team to knock Watertown out of the<br />

tournament and bring their nine-year run as state champions<br />

to a screeching halt. The Pioneers had the lead<br />

with 12 minutes to go, but a couple of unlucky bounces<br />

and calls went Watertown’s way to end their dream of<br />

becoming only the second team since 2008 to hand<br />

Watertown a loss.<br />

Scollard to play in girls soccer all-star game<br />

PHOTO | STONEHILL COLLEGE<br />

Emily Scollard has been a key<br />

defender for Stonehill.<br />

and two-year captain for the<br />

Pioneers. She earned Eastern<br />

Massachusetts All-Star and<br />

SPORTS BRIEFS<br />

be donated to the American<br />

Heart Association in Perry’s<br />

memory. There will be a<br />

small fee to players who wish<br />

to participate.<br />

For more information or to<br />

donate, please contact Kelly<br />

Look at lookkelly21@gmail.<br />

com.<br />

Wrestling team<br />

fundraiser Dec. 2<br />

The <strong>Lynnfield</strong>/North Reading<br />

wrestling team will be<br />

Cape Ann League All-League<br />

honors as a junior. As a senior,<br />

she was named the CAL<br />

Player of the year, as well and<br />

also received Boston Globe<br />

All-Scholastic and Boston<br />

Herald All-Scholastic honors.<br />

She was also named Eastern<br />

Massachusetts All-Star, earned<br />

All-State honors, and was the<br />

Pioneers’ team MVP.<br />

Stonehill finished third in<br />

NE10 Conference play this year<br />

with a 10-4 record, while concluding<br />

post season play with a<br />

13-7 overall record. This mark<br />

was the best since 2016 when<br />

the squad went 15-6-1. The 15<br />

wins was the third best in program<br />

history.<br />

This season the Skyhawks<br />

posted their longest win streak<br />

(7) since the 1999 season when<br />

the team won 13 in a row.<br />

having a mattress sale Sunday,<br />

Dec, 2 from 10 a.m. to 4<br />

p.m. in the high school cafeteria.<br />

All mattresses are<br />

brand new, name brand sets<br />

with full factory warranties.<br />

All sizes from twin to King/<br />

CA king are available. Layaway<br />

and delivery is available.<br />

Proceeds from the sale<br />

will go toward purchase of a<br />

new wrestling mat. For more<br />

information, email bnash@<br />

custonfundraisingsolutions.<br />

com.


NOVEMBER <strong>29</strong>, 2018<br />

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

LEGALS<br />

PEABODY CITY COUNCIL<br />

LEGAL AD<br />

NOTICE OF PUBLIC HEARING<br />

Notice is hereby given that the CITY COUNCIL of the CITY OF PEABODY will<br />

conduct a PUBLIC HEARING on THURSDAY EVENING, DECEMBER 13, 2018, at<br />

7:00 P.M.., in Frank L. Wiggin Auditorium, City Hall, 24 Lowell Street, Peabody, MA<br />

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 Peabody as follows:<br />

SECTION ONE: That the Zoning Map of the City of Peabody entitled, City of<br />

Peabody 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 CITY COUNCIL<br />

COUNCILLOR EDWARD R. CHAREST<br />

CITY COUNCIL PRESIDENT<br />

Timothy E. Spanos<br />

City Clerk<br />

Weekly News: November <strong>29</strong>, December 6, 2018<br />

City of Peabody<br />

PEABODY PLANNING BOARD<br />

City Hall · 24 Lowell Street · Peabody, Massachusetts 01960<br />

ACROSS<br />

1 Espresso with milk<br />

6 Eva or Zsa Zsa<br />

<strong>11</strong> Caress<br />

14 Parting word<br />

15 Luau greeting<br />

16 Retiree’s kitty<br />

17 Famed statuette<br />

18 Brick worker<br />

19 Switch positions<br />

20 Pie bakers<br />

22 Vinegar bottle<br />

24 Got nosy<br />

28 Hair-care product<br />

<strong>29</strong> Big wave<br />

30 Feel nostalgic<br />

32 Country addrs.<br />

33 Wet behind the ears<br />

35 Collars<br />

39 Jason’s vessel<br />

40 Use a crowbar<br />

41 D’Artagnan prop<br />

42 Sound of thunder<br />

43 Copper or iron<br />

45 Pan’s opposite<br />

46 Suits, so to speak<br />

48 Toughened<br />

50 Musical instrument<br />

53 Awkwardly<br />

54 “Hedda Gabler” author<br />

55 Senior<br />

57 Plea at sea<br />

58 One of 12<br />

60 Legally binding<br />

65 T, in Athens<br />

66 Tractor pioneer<br />

67 Give the slip<br />

68 Fr. holy woman<br />

69 Al of Indy fame<br />

70 Roomy vehicle<br />

DOWN<br />

1 Thai language<br />

2 Classified items<br />

3 Nervous twitch<br />

4 Oolong or pekoe<br />

5 Grand Tour site<br />

6 Played poker<br />

7 Astronaut — Shepard<br />

8 Office honcho<br />

9 Taunting cry<br />

10 Bitterness<br />

<strong>11</strong> Monklike<br />

12 Sea eagles<br />

13 Take a sip<br />

21 Exceedingly<br />

23 Near-winner (hyph.)<br />

24 Discard<br />

25 — Dame<br />

26 Greek alphabet ender<br />

27 No longer in use<br />

28 Periodical, briefly<br />

30 Round dwellings<br />

31 Gaelic pop star<br />

34 Oil cartel<br />

36 Not together<br />

37 Slant<br />

38 Dilapidated<br />

43 Sea, to Cousteau<br />

44 Row<br />

47 “Kubla Khan” setting<br />

49 Brain messengers<br />

50 Essential points<br />

51 Convoy chaser (hyph.)<br />

52 Gush forth<br />

53 Time waster<br />

55 Raw minerals<br />

56 Onetime Trevi Fountain coins<br />

59 Desk item<br />

61 Livy’s hello<br />

62 Highland youth<br />

63 Mountain overlooking Troy<br />

64 Place to winter<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, Peabody,<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 Peabody as follows:<br />

SECTION ONE: That the Zoning Map of the City of Peabody entitled, City of<br />

Peabody 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 />

PEABODY PLANNING BOARD<br />

THOMAS BETTENCOURT<br />

CHAIRMAN<br />

Weekly News: November 22, <strong>29</strong>, 2018<br />

This ordinance shall take effect as provided by law.<br />

NEW IN TOWN?<br />

FIND AN AFFORDABLE PLACE TO LIVE.<br />

CHECK CLASSIFIED!


14<br />

WEEKLYNEWS.NET - 978-532-5880 NOVEMBER <strong>29</strong>, 2018<br />

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

Designate a drawer for essentials such as<br />

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25 ABERDEEN AVE<br />

$349,900<br />

B: Tristan R Brown<br />

S: Stephen K Wilson Tr, Tr for<br />

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27 ABERDEEN AVE<br />

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1 BLUEBERRY WAY U:1<br />

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NOVEMBER <strong>29</strong>, 2018<br />

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

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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<br />

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

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16<br />

WEEKLYNEWS.NET - 978-532-5880 NOVEMBER <strong>29</strong>, 2018<br />

LYNNFIELD - $999,999<br />

LYNNFIELD - $549,900<br />

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Extremely well maintained 12 room Colonial on a<br />

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