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The #1 Selling<br />

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LYNNFIELD<br />

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LYNNFIELD WEEKLY<br />

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NEWS<br />

JAN. <strong>31</strong>, 2019 • VOL. 63, NO. 5<br />

SERVING THE COMMUNITY SINCE 1957<br />

16 PAGES • ONE DOLLAR<br />

IN THE NEWS<br />

Page 8:<br />

Rep. Jones’ views<br />

on Gov. Baker’s<br />

state budget<br />

message<br />

Page 8:<br />

The race is on<br />

for town election<br />

Page 10:<br />

DeRoche hits<br />

century mark<br />

PRSRT STD<br />

ECRWSSEDDM<br />

U.S. POSTAGE<br />

PAID<br />

PERMIT #168<br />

WOBURN, MA<br />

PHOTO | OWEN O’ROURKE<br />

Auctioneer Paul Zekos is about to close the bidding on the Perley Burrill gas station to the high<br />

bidder, David Capachietti, right.<br />

New<br />

life for<br />

an old<br />

landmark<br />

By Thomas Grillo<br />

LYNNFIELD — Going,<br />

going, gone.<br />

It took just nine minutes<br />

and $360,000 to seal the<br />

fate of the abandoned Perley<br />

Burrill gas station. The 2.6-<br />

acre site’s next life will be as<br />

two single-family homes.<br />

When the bidding started<br />

at Tuesday’s auction, it didn’t<br />

look like a promising day for<br />

the town of <strong>Lynnfield</strong>, which<br />

spent $200,000 to clean up<br />

the parcel just off Route 1.<br />

“What’s your pleasure<br />

on 914 Salem St.,” asked<br />

Paul Zekos, founder of<br />

Zekos Group Auctioneers in<br />

Shrewsbury. “<strong>Lynnfield</strong> is a<br />

dynamite place and this is a<br />

convenient location.”<br />

While Zekos tried to get the<br />

bidding started at $300,000,<br />

then $250,000, and seconds<br />

later to $200,000, but there<br />

PERLEY, PAGE 3<br />

POSTAL CUSTOMER<br />

LYNNFIELD, MA 01940<br />

Crisis level rising for water district<br />

By Thomas Grillo<br />

Citing its violation of the state’s open<br />

meeting law, the embattled <strong>Lynnfield</strong><br />

Center Water District’s Board of<br />

Commissioners rolled back its controversial<br />

rate hike.<br />

The vote to repeal the increase comes<br />

three days after Chairwoman Constance<br />

Leccese submitted her resignation effective<br />

at the end of March. Her term was<br />

scheduled to end in 2021.<br />

At Monday night’s meeting at the<br />

<strong>Lynnfield</strong> Middle School, the commissioner’s<br />

attorney Chris Casey said a review<br />

of the meeting’s minutes confirmed<br />

a vote to increase the rates was taken twice<br />

last year. But nowhere in the minutes do<br />

they list the specific three-tiered rates, and<br />

without that the vote was improper, he<br />

said.<br />

Originally, Leccese said Casey had reviewed<br />

the minutes of previous meetings<br />

and determined the higher rate, its retroactive<br />

increase, and the tiered system, were<br />

legal.<br />

“The opinion is what we did was perfectly,<br />

perfectly legal and legitimate,”<br />

Leccese said at the time.<br />

In her resignation letter last week to<br />

Commissioner Richard Lamusta, she said<br />

the demands placed on the commission has<br />

escalated dramatically over the past year.<br />

LCWD, PAGE 2<br />

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2<br />

WEEKLYNEWS.NET - 978-532-5880 JANUARY <strong>31</strong>, 2019<br />

INDEX<br />

Classifieds ...............................................................................12-16<br />

Crisis level rising<br />

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

for water district<br />

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

Religious Notes .............................................................................. 6<br />

Seniors ....................................................................................... 6, 8<br />

Sports .....................................................................................10-11<br />

Local students<br />

named to fall 2018<br />

dean’s list at<br />

Stonehill College<br />

Peabody and <strong>Lynnfield</strong> students<br />

are among those listed on<br />

the fall 2018 Stonehill College<br />

dean’s list.<br />

To qualify for the dean’s<br />

list, students must have a semester<br />

grade point average of<br />

3.50 or better and must have<br />

completed successfully all<br />

courses for which they were<br />

registered.<br />

Local students include:<br />

Caroline Colbert of<br />

Peabody, Class of 2019; Curtis<br />

Craffey of <strong>Lynnfield</strong>, Class of<br />

2019; Riley Dowd of Peabody,<br />

Class of 2019; Elizabeth<br />

Huston of Middleton, Class<br />

of 2019; Jessica Infiorati of<br />

<strong>Lynnfield</strong>, Class of 2019;<br />

Tanner Moquin of Peabody,<br />

Class of 2019; Emily Scollard<br />

of <strong>Lynnfield</strong>, Class of 2019;<br />

Connor Wolff of Peabody,<br />

Class of 2019; Madison<br />

Hughes of Middleton, Class<br />

of 2020; Wendy Lucas of<br />

Wakefield, Class of 2020;<br />

30 Year Fixed Mario GLPW.ai 1 1/7/2019 12:37:55 PM<br />

Leigh O’Brien of Wakefield,<br />

Class of 2020; Sarah Stueve<br />

of Peabody, Class of 2020;<br />

Sophia Anderle of Peabody,<br />

Class of 2021; Emily Attaya<br />

of Wakefield, Class of 2021;<br />

Alexis Christie of Wakefield,<br />

Class of 2021; Eric Flaherty<br />

of Peabody, Class of 2021;<br />

Molly Leach of Wakefield,<br />

Class of 2021; Patrick<br />

Passatempo of <strong>Lynnfield</strong>,<br />

Class of 2021; Victoria<br />

Famiglietti of Middleton,<br />

Class of 2022; Jack Fritz<br />

of Peabody, Class of 2022;<br />

Juliana Passatempo of<br />

<strong>Lynnfield</strong>, Class of 2022 and<br />

Kirsten Tennihan of Peabody,<br />

Class of 2022.<br />

Stonehill is a Catholic college<br />

located near Boston on a<br />

384-acre campus in Easton. The<br />

college engages over 2,500 students<br />

in more than 80 rigorous<br />

academic programs in the liberal<br />

arts, sciences and pre-professional<br />

fields.<br />

LCWD<br />

From page 1<br />

“This is a complex organization,”<br />

she wrote. “I feel the district<br />

would be better served by<br />

a commissioner with more time<br />

to devote to the organization’s<br />

mission.”<br />

With former Commissioner<br />

Kenneth Burnham’s retirement<br />

this month, there will soon be<br />

at least two new members on<br />

the three-person panel and a<br />

new superintendent. Burnham<br />

had also served as water<br />

superintendent.<br />

Lamusta’s term ends<br />

in March and it’s unclear<br />

whether he will seek reelection.<br />

Following the meeting,<br />

Lamusta said he had not made<br />

up his mind whether to run.<br />

LHS librarian receives lifetime<br />

achievement award<br />

Staff Report<br />

Janice Alpert, librarian at<br />

<strong>Lynnfield</strong> High School, received<br />

the Peggy Hallisey<br />

Lifetime Achievement Award.<br />

The Massachusetts School<br />

Library Association, who issued<br />

the prize, said she has<br />

demonstrated a commitment to<br />

students, learning, and the advancement<br />

of school libraries.<br />

The association said Alpert<br />

transformed the school’s library<br />

program. At the start of her career,<br />

she automated the library<br />

catalog, renovated the library<br />

space and program, created a<br />

website, outfitted the library<br />

with iPads and chromebooks,<br />

and operates a student help desk<br />

Commissioners are elected by<br />

ratepayers.<br />

In an interview with <strong>Lynnfield</strong><br />

Weekly News, Leccese said the<br />

decision to resign was very<br />

difficult.<br />

“This is an organization in<br />

transition, and they need a new<br />

board and a new superintendent,”<br />

she said. ”My decision to<br />

resign was in the best interest of<br />

the district and I hope this will<br />

move things forward.”<br />

Leccesse’s resignation comes<br />

as ratepayers and the Board<br />

of Selectmen are at odds.<br />

Selectmen are seeking changes<br />

in the panel’s governance.<br />

Last summer, the LCWD<br />

faced criticism from dozens of<br />

residents who attended a public<br />

hearing to complain about<br />

brown water. In December,<br />

program.<br />

The association said Alpert<br />

partnered with the <strong>Lynnfield</strong><br />

Senior Center where high<br />

schoolers taught elders about<br />

robots, and 3D printing. But<br />

after taking a survey of seniors,<br />

she discovered what the senior<br />

citizens really wanted were<br />

LYNNFIELD<br />

WEEKLY<br />

NEWS<br />

the panel was denounced by<br />

ratepayers over a controversial<br />

retroactive water rate increase<br />

that took its 2,600 users by<br />

surprise.<br />

Earlier this month, the Board<br />

of Selectmen filed a public records<br />

request seeking documents<br />

from the water commission<br />

about the rate hike.<br />

Town Administrator Robert<br />

Dolan said Selectmen were<br />

concerned about whether the<br />

commissioners made formal<br />

votes to implement the new<br />

policies from the rate increase,<br />

charging for water by use, and<br />

retroactive billing.<br />

The selectmen submitted legislation<br />

to state Rep. Bradley<br />

Jones Jr. (R-North Reading) on<br />

Beacon Hill that would amend<br />

governance of the LCWD.<br />

classes about how to use cell<br />

phones, tablets, and topics such<br />

as online banking and shopping.<br />

Alpert will receive the award<br />

on Sunday, March <strong>31</strong> during<br />

the association’s banquet at<br />

the Sheraton Framingham<br />

Hotel & Conference Center in<br />

Framingham.<br />

We reach EVERY<br />

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Looking for past issues?<br />

Find them on weeklynews.net


JANUARY <strong>31</strong>, 2019<br />

New life for an<br />

old landmark<br />

PERLEY<br />

From page 1<br />

were no takers among the dozen<br />

registered buyers.<br />

When he lowered the starting<br />

bid to $100,000 just after noon<br />

in Town Hall, hands went up.<br />

“Doesn’t matter where we<br />

start, it only matters where we<br />

finish,” Zekos told the crowd.<br />

“I’ve got to meet someone for<br />

lunch.”<br />

As the auction continued,<br />

two bidders faced off against<br />

each other; an investor on a cell<br />

phone, and two local builders<br />

who partnered to do the deal.<br />

In the end, David Capachietti,<br />

of Mass Pipeline Services Inc.<br />

and Marco Tammaro of MJR<br />

Custom Homes in <strong>Lynnfield</strong>,<br />

topped the bidding.<br />

“We are excited to buy a historic<br />

piece of <strong>Lynnfield</strong> and<br />

bring it back to its pride and<br />

glory,” Tammaro said following<br />

the sale. “Hopefully the neighbors<br />

are excited too and the<br />

ones we spoke to are.”<br />

Zekos said he felt good about<br />

the results. His firm will be paid<br />

a 3 percent commission of the<br />

sale price, or $10,800.<br />

“I’m super pleased,” he said.<br />

“It’s always great when there’s<br />

a capacity crowd and we can<br />

deliver for the town.”<br />

The auction for the storied<br />

gas station cured a headache for<br />

town officials, who spent the<br />

last five years fighting with the<br />

former owner, Joseph Pedoto,<br />

trustee of Little Joe Realty Trust.<br />

Perley Burrill, who historians<br />

say immigrated from Nova<br />

Scotia with just pennies in his<br />

pocket, built the gas station in<br />

1932, when gas was 15 cents<br />

a gallon. Residents said it was<br />

not unusual to see attendants<br />

fueling as many as eight cars<br />

while a line waited to get in or<br />

out of the place.<br />

Legend has it that when the<br />

Northeast blackout occurred in<br />

1965, the station was the only<br />

place in the region with electricity,<br />

thanks to its generator.<br />

That’s when the tagline “Just<br />

off the Pike where the light<br />

shines bright,” was born.<br />

Looking for a house?<br />

Check the real estate secton!<br />

For years, the Burrill family<br />

boasted it was America’s oldest<br />

filling station, according to<br />

RoadsideArchitecture.com.<br />

Perhaps, the website says, the<br />

owners meant it was the oldest<br />

station still in operation.<br />

The distinction of America’s<br />

oldest gasoline station might<br />

go to Reighard’s in Altoona,<br />

Pennsylvania, which says they<br />

have been in operation since<br />

1909, the website says.<br />

Perley and Phillips Burrill<br />

sold the property in 2005 to<br />

Pedoto for $1 million, where<br />

he operated the gas station and<br />

Viking Oil Co.<br />

That’s when the troubles<br />

began, say residents.<br />

One year later, state Attorney<br />

General Thomas Reilly sued<br />

Pedoto after the heating oil distributor<br />

abruptly stopped delivering<br />

oil to customers. Viking<br />

Oil ceased operations that year.<br />

Later, town officials alleged<br />

Pedoto leased the property<br />

to landscapers and a used car<br />

dealer, all illegal uses.<br />

In 2014, an Essex Superior<br />

Court judge ordered Pedoto to<br />

remove five underground tanks<br />

from the property or face jail<br />

time. All the while, the property,<br />

and the building on it, continued<br />

to deteriorate.<br />

Two years later, Pedoto owed<br />

$232,073 in back taxes and<br />

property was seized for nonpayment,<br />

clearing the way for<br />

development.<br />

Last year, the Planning Board<br />

approved a two-lot subdivision<br />

for the station that operated from<br />

1932 before it closed in 2013.<br />

Pedoto said he has moved on<br />

and declined to talk about it.<br />

“I have nothing to do with<br />

that property anymore,” he said.<br />

“That’s long gone.”<br />

Robert Dolan, <strong>Lynnfield</strong>’s<br />

town administrator who<br />

watched the auction unfold,<br />

said he’s glad the property is<br />

back on the tax rolls.<br />

“We’re thrilled that the companies<br />

who made the investment<br />

in the site are committed<br />

to turning what had been a<br />

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WEEKLYNEWS.NET - 978-532-5880 JANUARY <strong>31</strong>, 2019<br />

Police Log<br />

Summons<br />

Gardenya Paulo, 22, of 534<br />

Salem St., Apt. 15, Wakefield, was<br />

summoned following a motor vehicle<br />

crash at Kernwood Plaza, at<br />

12 Salem St. on Wednesday at<br />

8:52 a.m. for the unlicensed operation<br />

of a motor vehicle.<br />

Richard A. Swanson, 23, of 16<br />

Settlement Road, Sandown, N.H.,<br />

following a motor vehicle crash<br />

on Friday at 11 a.m. for operating<br />

an uninsured motor vehicle.<br />

Accidents<br />

Motor vehicle crash with<br />

property damage reported at<br />

Kernwood Plaza, 12 Salem St.<br />

on Wednesday at 8:52 a.m. See<br />

summons of Gardenya Paulo.<br />

Caller reported a rollover crash<br />

in front of Flagship Motors at<br />

385 Broadway, Route 1 North<br />

on Wednesday at 7:46 p.m.<br />

Massachusetts State Police to<br />

handle.<br />

Minor motor vehicle crash reported<br />

at 100 Walnut St. and 425<br />

Market St. on Tuesday at 7:37 a.m.<br />

Officer stood by for paperwork exchange.<br />

Phil’s Tow contacted.<br />

Caller reported a motor vehicle<br />

crash at Condon Circle with<br />

no personal injury on Tuesday<br />

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at 8:37 a.m. Officer reports<br />

checked the area but unable to<br />

locate.<br />

Minor motor vehicle crash<br />

reported with no personal injuries<br />

on Tuesday at 10:01 a.m. at<br />

100 Walnut St. and 425 Market<br />

St. Officer reports assisting with<br />

paperwork.<br />

Motor vehicle crash reported<br />

on Route 128 South at Exit 43<br />

on Tuesday at 4:49 p.m. Officer<br />

stood by for tow.<br />

Report of a motor vehicle<br />

rollover crash with injuries on<br />

Wednesday at 6:07 a.m. at Route<br />

128 North at Exit 43. Officer reports<br />

party taken to the hospital.<br />

Motor vehicle reported off the<br />

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

at 275 Essex St. on Wednesday<br />

at 7:44 a.m. Officer reports car<br />

removed.<br />

Motor vehicle crash reported<br />

at 954 Salem St. at 1 Locust St.<br />

on Friday at 11 a.m. <strong>Lynnfield</strong><br />

Fire Department reports operator<br />

refused assistance.<br />

Motor vehicle crash involving a<br />

motorcycle with property damage<br />

reported at Condon Circle on<br />

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

no personal injury.<br />

Motor vehicle crash reported<br />

“Specialists in the Glass & Window Industry”<br />

LYNNFIELD WEEKLY<br />

NEWS<br />

(USPS Permit #168)<br />

Telephone: 781-593-7700 • Fax: 781-581-<strong>31</strong>78<br />

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

News and Advertising Offices: 110 Munroe St., Lynn, MA 01901<br />

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

www.weeklynews.net<br />

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

Reporter: Thomas Grillo tgrillo@itemlive.com<br />

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

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Patricia Whalen<br />

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David McBournie dmcbournie@itemlive.com<br />

Retail Price: $1.00<br />

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

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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 />

on Sunday at 4:32 p.m. at 1<br />

Rourke Lane and 275 Lowell St.<br />

Officer reports no personal injury.<br />

Motor vehicle reported stuck<br />

in a snow bank at Condon Circle<br />

on Monday at 10:50 a.m. Officer<br />

reports Gaeta’s Tow has the vehicle<br />

and an accident report.<br />

Motor vehicle crash reported<br />

on Tuesday at 2:27 a.m. at the<br />

Route 128 South ramp at Walnut<br />

Street. Officer reports operator<br />

refused medical treatment.<br />

Alarms<br />

Front or pantry room burglar<br />

alarm sounded at 21 Chatham<br />

Way on Saturday at 4:14 p.m.<br />

Officer reports all is secure.<br />

Accidental burglar alarm on<br />

Sunday at 1:47 p.m. at 8 Hunting<br />

Lane. Officer confirmed it was<br />

an accident.<br />

Burglar alarm at 5:10 p.m.<br />

on Sunday at Bluemercury at<br />

1245 Market St. Officer reports<br />

rear door was unsecured, walk<br />

through confirmed all is OK.<br />

Report of a burglar alarm in<br />

the family room at 5 Driftwood<br />

Lane on Sunday at 7:05 p.m.<br />

Officer reports all appears to be<br />

in order.<br />

A 911 hangup call from<br />

Chico’s at 325 Market St. on<br />

Monday at 11:36 a.m. Officer<br />

spoke with employee who confirmed<br />

call was accidental.<br />

False burglar alarm reported<br />

on Monday at 1:46 p.m. at 16<br />

North Hill Drive. Officer checked<br />

exterior and everything appears<br />

to be OK and spoke with<br />

resident.<br />

Alarm company called in a fire<br />

alarm activation on Monday at<br />

2:56 p.m. at 7 Longbow Road.<br />

<strong>Lynnfield</strong> Fire Department<br />

checked the exterior, no one at<br />

home, alarm still sounding.<br />

Boiler room and basement<br />

motion detector sounded at 1<br />

Skinner Lane on Monday at 3:47<br />

p.m. Officer reports alarm company<br />

called to cancel.<br />

Burglar alarm sounded in the<br />

boys’ gym at <strong>Lynnfield</strong> High<br />

School at 275 Essex St. on<br />

Monday at 4:02 p.m.<br />

False burglar alarm reported<br />

at 33 Daventry Court on Monday<br />

at 4:53 p.m. Officer reports all<br />

appears to be in order.<br />

Unsecured front door at RN<br />

Esthetics & Laser at 40 Salem<br />

St., Building 3 on Monday at<br />

5:11 p.m. Officer reports door<br />

secured.<br />

A 911 hangup at 21 Bluejay<br />

Road on Monday at 7:10<br />

p.m. Officer confirmed it was<br />

accidental.<br />

Motion detector sounded<br />

burglar alarm on Monday at<br />

8:48 p.m. at the Summer Street<br />

School at 262 Summer St.<br />

Officer reports all appears to be<br />

in order.<br />

Animal Control<br />

Caller reports dog left outside<br />

tied to post at Temazcal at 500<br />

Market St. on Thursday at 11:13<br />

p.m. Officer reports call was<br />

unfounded.<br />

Caller reports her chocolate<br />

Lab named Bruno escaped her<br />

home at 8 Willowdale Drive on<br />

Saturday at 7:52 p.m. She said<br />

he is wearing a yellow collar.<br />

Officer reports Animal Control<br />

officer is unavailable. Dog found<br />

on Horseshoe Drive and will be<br />

returned to the owner.<br />

Complaints<br />

<strong>Lynnfield</strong> Fire Department<br />

reports they are responding to<br />

a motor vehicle into a snowbank<br />

at St. Paul’s Church at 127<br />

Summer St. on Tuesday at 8:53<br />

a.m. Officer reports vehicle removed<br />

by Phil’s Tow.<br />

Caller reports vehicle stuck<br />

in a snowbank at 136 Main St.<br />

and 3 Edward Ave. on Tuesday<br />

at 1:30 p.m. Officer reports<br />

Phil’s Tow contacted, vehicle<br />

removed from snowbank, Phil’s<br />

Tow canceled.<br />

Disabled motor vehicle reported<br />

in the northbound left<br />

lane on Broadway near <strong>Lynnfield</strong><br />

Commons on Tuesday at 6:36<br />

p.m. Offer reports Phil’s Tow on<br />

scene.<br />

Abandoned vehicle reported<br />

on Hilltop Road on Friday at<br />

9:21 a.m. Officer reports vehicle<br />

is legally parked, it has a flat<br />

tire and a note was left on the<br />

windshield.<br />

Caller reports people skating<br />

on Pillings Pond and he is concerned<br />

ice may not be thick<br />

enough on Friday at 4:15 p.m.<br />

Officer reports skaters are done<br />

for the day and have been advised<br />

that pond is unsafe.<br />

Property check requested<br />

at 505 Main St. on Saturday at<br />

1:29 a.m. Officer reports all is<br />

OK. Parking lot lights were never<br />

turned off.<br />

Caller reports a violent, intoxicated<br />

woman at 4 Greenmeadow<br />

Drive on Saturday at 3:30 a.m.<br />

Officer reports patient taken to<br />

the hospital.<br />

Report of a motor vehicle<br />

without a license plate is parked<br />

on Grove Street on Saturday at<br />

10:38 a.m. Officer reports plate<br />

is in the rear window.<br />

Report of a pickup truck<br />

parked on Lakeview Drive during<br />

the parking ban on Sunday at<br />

11:22 p.m. Officer spoke with<br />

owner who said he will move the<br />

vehicle to the yard.<br />

Suspicious person reported<br />

walking around the parking lot<br />

at J.M. Electrical at 471 North<br />

Broadway on Monday at 7:05<br />

a.m. Officer reports taxi called to<br />

take party to Gloucester.<br />

Report of a motor vehicle<br />

stuck in a snowbank at Starbucks<br />

at 420 Market St. on Monday at<br />

2:09 p.m. Officer reports Phil’s<br />

Tow removed the vehicle and requested<br />

an accident report.<br />

Medical Aid<br />

Caller from Panera Bread at<br />

430 Market St. requested an<br />

ambulance on Tuesday at 9:54<br />

a.m. Officer reports patient<br />

taken to Lahey Medical Center in<br />

Burlington.<br />

Medical rescue call from 76<br />

Canterbury Road on Tuesday at<br />

1:28 p.m. Officer reports patient<br />

taken to the North Shore Medical<br />

Center.<br />

Well-being check requested<br />

for a resident at 972 Main St.<br />

on Tuesday at 2:34 p.m. Officer<br />

reports home health aide is with<br />

the resident.<br />

Request for an ambulance at<br />

223 Salem St. on Tuesday at<br />

2:58 p.m. Officer reports patient<br />

taken to the hospital.<br />

Well-being check requested<br />

at 402 Ross Drive on Friday at<br />

10:12 a.m. Greater Lynn Senior<br />

Services reported resident<br />

does not answer the telephone.<br />

Officer reports resident is not at<br />

home.<br />

Well-being check requested<br />

for a resident who has fallen at<br />

11 Walnut St. on Friday at 12:08<br />

p.m. <strong>Lynnfield</strong> Fire Department<br />

reported patient refused<br />

assistance.<br />

Caller from Fitness Together at<br />

10 Post Office Square requested<br />

an ambulance on Friday at 12:56<br />

p.m. Officer reports patient refused<br />

assistance.<br />

Medical aid requested on<br />

Saturday at 8:34 a.m. at 24<br />

Edgemere Road. Officer reports<br />

patient taken to Winchester<br />

Hospital.<br />

Caller reports a man in his<br />

70s or 80s wearing jeans and a<br />

jacket is walking in the snow on<br />

Newhall Road and appears confused<br />

on Saturday 10:20 p.m.<br />

Officer reports unable to locate<br />

anyone.<br />

Medical aid requested for<br />

a man who fell at 972 Main<br />

St. on Saturday at 11:41 p.m.<br />

Officer reports person refused<br />

assistance.<br />

Caller reports a 38-year-old<br />

woman fainted at 120 Salem St.<br />

on Sunday at 9:04 a.m. Officer<br />

reports patient taken to the<br />

hospital.<br />

Report of a confused<br />

78-year-old man at 5 Ashley<br />

Court on Sunday at 9:25 a.m.<br />

Officer reports patient taken to<br />

the hospital.<br />

Request for medical aid<br />

on Sunday at 7:08 p.m. at 28<br />

Highland Ave. for a person<br />

having difficulty breathing.<br />

Officer reports patient taken to<br />

the hospital.<br />

Possible stroke reported at<br />

<strong>Lynnfield</strong> Commons at 375<br />

North Broadway, Apt. B2109 on<br />

Sunday at 11:08 p.m. Patient<br />

taken to the hospital.<br />

Well-being check requested<br />

on a child on Alexandra Road on<br />

Monday at 10:39 a.m. Officer reports<br />

child is OK.<br />

Request for medical aid for<br />

a child requested from 24 Olde<br />

Towne Road on Monday at 1:11<br />

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

Alarm company called for<br />

medical aid at 500 Ross Drive<br />

on Monday at 9:34 a.m. Patient<br />

taken to the hospital.


JANUARY <strong>31</strong>, 2019<br />

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

Super Bowl LIII<br />

In the younger,<br />

cheaper NFL, Super Bowl<br />

champs get cut, too<br />

Sources: Ticketmaster, NFL.com, Nielsen, superbowlbets.com, wilson.com, nationalchickencouncil.org,<br />

usbankstadium.com, primesport.com<br />

Graphic: Staff, Tribune News Service<br />

Looking for<br />

past issues?<br />

Find them on<br />

weeklynews.net<br />

Catering<br />

available<br />

SU CHANG S<br />

Authentic Chinese Cuisine<br />

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From<br />

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Once again, our New England<br />

Patriots are in the Super Bowl!!<br />

Don’t forget to order your take-out for Super Bowl Sunday Feb. 3<br />

GO PATS!!!<br />

BY EDDIE PELLS<br />

ASSOCIATED PRESS<br />

A word of warning to all those<br />

soon-to-be Super Bowl champions<br />

in New England or Los<br />

Angeles: Don’t get too comfortable.<br />

You might be looking for a<br />

job fairly soon.<br />

The NFL’s inexorable trend<br />

of going younger and cheaper<br />

does not bypass the best teams<br />

in the league. In fact, it may<br />

help them stay as good as they<br />

are.<br />

An Associated Press analysis<br />

of Super Bowl champions over<br />

the past seven years revealed<br />

that title teams shed an average<br />

of 20.4 players off their 53-man<br />

rosters from the Super Bowl<br />

to Week 1 of the next season.<br />

That’s 38.5 percent. On average,<br />

the new players had 1.8<br />

fewer years of experience than<br />

the players they replaced.<br />

The findings were in line<br />

with data analyzed by the AP<br />

that showed a steady trend<br />

downward in experience of all<br />

teams despite attempts in the<br />

2006 and 2011 collective bargaining<br />

agreements to stem<br />

that tide. Average experience<br />

on opening-day rosters has<br />

dropped from 4.6 years to 4.3<br />

since 2005 .<br />

“I mean, look, there’s a lot<br />

of turnover in the National<br />

Football League on every<br />

team in every year,” Patriots<br />

coach Bill Belichick said.<br />

“It’s the National Football<br />

League. Teams turn over a lot<br />

of players and a lot of coaches<br />

every single year, every single<br />

team.”<br />

No team does it with quite<br />

the high-profile effectiveness as<br />

the Patriots, who have collected<br />

five Super Bowl titles since<br />

373 Lowell St., Peabody • Tel. 5<strong>31</strong>-3366 • Fax 5<strong>31</strong>-3060<br />

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

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

www.SuChangsPeabody.com<br />

2002, and will be going for No.<br />

6 on Sunday against the Rams.<br />

New England’s five Super<br />

Bowl champions turned over<br />

an average of 19.2 players the<br />

season after they won their<br />

titles. The season after their<br />

2015 win over the Seahawks,<br />

they brought in 24 new players<br />

— the biggest number among<br />

all the teams surveyed in this<br />

analysis.<br />

How does all this turn out?<br />

Not very well, except for the<br />

Patriots. Of the past seven Super<br />

Bowl teams, none has repeated.<br />

Two have returned to the Super<br />

Bowl to lose. Two have lost in<br />

the playoffs. Three didn’t even<br />

make the playoffs.<br />

The 2003-04 Patriots are the<br />

last team to repeat.<br />

Belichick’s famously unsentimental<br />

view of rosters, and the<br />

players who fill them, has led to<br />

some of the most awkward, unpopular<br />

and sometimes downright<br />

messy break-ups in recent<br />

memory.<br />

Coming off a season in which<br />

the Patriots lost the AFC title<br />

game, Belichick traded away<br />

linebacker Jamie Collins — to<br />

the then 0-8 Browns, no less<br />

— in the middle of the 2016<br />

season. New England won the<br />

Super Bowl that year.<br />

SUPER BOWL SPECIALS<br />

ITALIAN PAN PIZZA<br />

Cut in 24, 36 or 48 slices (Toppings extra)<br />

CRISPY CHICKEN WINGS<br />

(Buffalo or Regular)<br />

25 or 50 pieces<br />

CHICKEN FINGERS<br />

(25 or 50 pieces)<br />

BUFFALO CHICKEN FINGERS<br />

(25 or 50 pieces)<br />

(Cold only)<br />

4 FOOT COLOSSAL SUBS<br />

FINGER SANDWICH PLATTERS<br />

$25 00<br />

$19 95 (25pc)<br />

$39 98 (50pc)<br />

$23 50 (25pc)<br />

$47 00 (50pc)<br />

$27 50 (25pc)<br />

$53 00 (50pc)<br />

$59 99<br />

Italian, American, Ham & Cheese, Turkey & Cheese, Roast Beef & Cheese<br />

$59 99<br />

24 Mixed Sandwiches: Seafood, Chicken, Tuna Salad,<br />

Roast Beef & Cheese, Ham & Cheese, Turkey & Cheese<br />

Ask for our other<br />

hot and cold<br />

catering menu<br />

selections<br />

Football theme cupcakes<br />

Mini football cakes<br />

Super Bowl layer cakes<br />

Ty Law, Adam Vinatieri,<br />

Vince Wilfork, Richard<br />

Seymour. Lawyer Milloy,<br />

Jimmy Garoppolo, Wes Welker,<br />

Damien Woody. New England<br />

said goodbye to all of them<br />

when they still had gas left in<br />

the tank.<br />

They unexpectedly benched<br />

the cornerback who saved the<br />

2015 Super Bowl, Malcolm<br />

Butler, at the Super Bowl three<br />

years later, then let him go via<br />

free agency. Drew Bledsoe got<br />

injured in 2001 and his days<br />

were numbered. He got traded<br />

to the Bills after a backup<br />

named Tom Brady stepped in<br />

and did fairly well.<br />

Through it all, Brady and<br />

Belichick have been the<br />

constant.<br />

“Some of it is perception, and<br />

some of it is reality,” said Eric<br />

Winston, the former NFL offensive<br />

lineman who is now the<br />

president of the players’ union.<br />

“Every NFL team, in certain<br />

areas, goes through maturations<br />

and goes through the process<br />

of, ‘How do we build a team?’<br />

And then it changes. One year,<br />

it’s finding a few older free<br />

agents who can play. Another,<br />

everyone wants to get younger<br />

when the Seahawks win with an<br />

average age of 26.4.”<br />

CALZONES<br />

Meatball, Ham & Cheese,<br />

Italian Cold Cuts, Chix<br />

Parm, and more<br />

Please place your Super Bowl orders by Sat. Feb 2<br />

Open Sunday 7 a.m. - 2 p.m. Monday-Saturday 7 a.m. - 7 p.m.<br />

197 Washington St., Peabody, MA • 978-532-0102


6<br />

WEEKLYNEWS.NET - 978-532-5880 JANUARY <strong>31</strong>, 2019<br />

Religious Notes<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<br />

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

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

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

morning services. Hispanic Service:<br />

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

Chapel. Celebrate Recovery: Monday<br />

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

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

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

ages 12-18. Weekly Prayer Meetings:<br />

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

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

are Monday- Friday 8:30 a.m. to 4:30<br />

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:<br />

Larainne Wilson<br />

An Open and Affirming<br />

Congregation of the United Church<br />

of Christ. Whoever you are and wherever<br />

you are on life’s journey, you are<br />

welcome. Our worship services are<br />

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

We strive to provide inspiring, downto-earth<br />

messages that are applicable<br />

to everyday life. We are committed<br />

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

and inclusive environment with<br />

vibrant and engaging Children’s<br />

Programming (Godly Play, Whole<br />

People of God, and Brick-by-Brick)<br />

and trained and consistent staff, incorporating<br />

opportunities for stories,<br />

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

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

with a new transition class beginning<br />

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

also have a Young Families Group<br />

that offers fellowship opportunities<br />

for parents and children together.<br />

We have ample parking in a large<br />

lot behind the church and the facility<br />

A MODIFIED APPROACH<br />

According to a 2016 global review, about 10 million lives per year could<br />

be at risk due to increasing antimicrobial resistance. This is because<br />

every time someone uses an antibiotic drug, a small population of naturally<br />

resistant microbes survives and shares its resistance with other<br />

microbes. Because antibiotic overuse and misuse has led to the development<br />

of bacteria unaffected by antibiotics, scientists worry about what<br />

our next line of defense against bacteria will be. As it turns out, researchers<br />

have recently discovered that a simple modification of existing<br />

antibiotics may be the answer. When researchers attached small proteins<br />

called “antimicrobial peptides” to the antibiotic vancomycin, the antibiotic<br />

became more powerful against two strains of bacteria that had become<br />

drug-resistant.<br />

In addition to antibiotic resistance, overusing antibiotics can lead to<br />

other problems. Antibiotics kill many different bacteria, including the good<br />

ones that help keep the body healthy. Sometimes taking antibiotics can<br />

cause a person to develop diarrhea due to a lack of good bacteria that<br />

help digest food properly. For more information, please call VILLAGE<br />

PHARMACY at 781-334-<strong>31</strong>33. Our pharmacy is located in the Colonial<br />

Shopping Center and open Mon.-Fri., 9-8; Sat. 9-5; and Sun. and<br />

holidays, 9-1:30.<br />

HINT: According to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention<br />

(CDC), antibiotic-resistant germs infect around 2 million people and are<br />

responsible for around 23,000 deaths annually in the United States.<br />

Colonial Shopping Center • 590 Main St. <strong>Lynnfield</strong>, MA 01940 • 781-334-<strong>31</strong>33<br />

PEABODY<br />

WEEKLY<br />

NEWS<br />

We reach more<br />

households in<br />

Peabody than ANY<br />

other periodical.<br />

Let us help get your<br />

message out.<br />

ESSEX MEDIA GROUP<br />

For more info on EMG’s publications,<br />

please contact Ernie Carpenter at<br />

781-593-7700 ext. 1355 or<br />

ecarpenter@essexmediagroup.com<br />

is handicap accessible. Please find<br />

us on Facebook at facebook.com/<br />

CentreChurchUCC or visit www.<br />

Centre-Church.org for updated information<br />

about our ministries and<br />

activities.<br />

Please feel free to contact the<br />

church office if you would like more<br />

information about any of these activities.<br />

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

Office Hours at the church are 9<br />

a.m. – 3 p.m. Monday – Friday.<br />

Tower Day School is located at<br />

Centre Congregational Church and<br />

Director, Leah O’Brien may be<br />

reached at towerdayschool@gmail.<br />

com 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.<br />

org.<br />

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

welcomes you to Sunday worship<br />

at 10-11 a.m. Following our service,<br />

join us for coffee and fellowship in<br />

Marshall Hall. Parking is behind the<br />

church and there are entrances in front<br />

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

visit soon.<br />

Messiah Lutheran Church<br />

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

781-334-4111<br />

Email: pastor@mlcspirit.org<br />

The Sunday morning schedule<br />

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

Growing Together hour of<br />

Bible Study, prayer, fun and service.<br />

Sunday morning worship is held<br />

at 10:30 in a traditional yet family-friendly<br />

style.<br />

At 7:01 Wednesday is the minweek<br />

prayer service. All are welcome<br />

to join in prayer for families and<br />

friends, schools and communities,<br />

the nation and the world. Those who<br />

cannot make it in person may send<br />

their prayer requests to pastordaveb@<br />

mlcspirit.org<br />

Rev. Dr. Jeremy Pekari and<br />

Rev. David Brezina serve Messiah<br />

Lutheran Church.<br />

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

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

Our Lady of the Assumption<br />

and St. Maria Goretti<br />

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

Collaborative, comprised of Our Lady<br />

of the Assumption Church, Salem and<br />

Grove Streets, and Saint Maria Goretti<br />

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

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

4<strong>31</strong>3 or by email: jsano@ola-smg.org<br />

or by visiting the website: lynnfieldcatholic.org.<br />

The Pastoral Leadership Team:<br />

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

Parochial Vicar is Rev. Anthony<br />

Luongo and the Deacons are Thomas<br />

O’Shea and Ed Elibero. Donna<br />

Delahanty is Director of Parish<br />

Ministries.<br />

Office hours: Monday through<br />

LYNNFIELD<br />

SENIOR CENTER<br />

Trips<br />

Feb. 6 Brine in<br />

Newburyport — $5<br />

Feb. 7 Eastern Canada trip<br />

talk by Collette Tours, noon.<br />

Sign up in the trip office.<br />

Feb. 13 The Barnacle<br />

Restaurant, Marblehead — $5<br />

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

a.m. - 12 p.m., closed for holidays.<br />

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

St. Maria Goretti (112 Chestnut<br />

Street, <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<br />

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

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

God and each other through worship,<br />

prayer, service, and study.<br />

We offer Sunday services at<br />

8:30 a.m. and 10 a.m. Child care is<br />

available, as well as classes for K-6<br />

students.<br />

Students in grades 7-12 meet at<br />

10 a.m. the 2nd & 4th Sundays of<br />

the month for discussion, learning,<br />

sharing, socializing, volunteering.<br />

This Youth Group participates in the<br />

local, ecumenical Giv2, which gives<br />

teens opportunities to live their faith<br />

through service.<br />

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

parishioners and friends gather for<br />

Centering Prayer. Introduction to<br />

Centering Prayer is offered the first<br />

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

Holy Eucharist and Bible Study are<br />

offered Wednesday mornings, from 9<br />

- 11 a.m. For more information go to:<br />

www.stpaulslynnfield.org. or email to<br />

office@stpaulslynnfield.org.<br />

Temple Emmanuel<br />

120 Chestnut St., Wakefield<br />

Temple Emmanuel of Wakefield<br />

is affiliated with the Jewish<br />

Reconstructionist Communities. We<br />

offer a contemporary approach to<br />

Judaism while maintaining a respect<br />

for traditional Jewish values. We are<br />

a caring and inclusive community<br />

through learning and community activities.<br />

Besides Shabbat and Festival<br />

services, there is a Sisterhood and<br />

Temple Reads Book Club, Shabbat<br />

dinners, concerts and other programs.<br />

Consult the temple website<br />

and Facebook page for updated<br />

information.<br />

Temple Emmanuel’s mission is<br />

to be an inclusive and welcoming<br />

Jewish Reconstructionist Community<br />

devoted to learning, spirituality, and<br />

caring for each individual. At Temple<br />

Emmanuel we are building a vibrant<br />

future in honor of our past, utilizing<br />

ancient traditions to provide meaning<br />

and sustenance in our contemporary<br />

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

floor social hall. Visitors are encouraged<br />

to come to services and events<br />

that interest them.<br />

Shabbat services, led by Rabbi<br />

Greg Hersh are held most Friday evenings<br />

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

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

Second Saturday morning is a Tot<br />

Shabbat at 9:30 a.m. and a Jewish<br />

Seniors<br />

Activities<br />

Thursday, January <strong>31</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. Manicurist,<br />

stitch and chat. 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. 11 a.m. Aerobic dance<br />

Meditation Circle is on the third<br />

Friday evening at 7:30 p.m.<br />

Visit www.WakefieldTemple.<br />

org for complete schedule of services,<br />

family events, and Continuing<br />

Education programs.<br />

The Temple website (www.<br />

WakefieldTemple.org) has the complete<br />

list of Rosh Hashanah and Yom<br />

Kippur services. Seats may be reserved<br />

by calling Phil 617-688-0870.<br />

The Church of Jesus Christ of<br />

Latter-day Saints<br />

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

Sunday services and classes are<br />

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

Sacrament Meeting; 10:20-11 a.m.<br />

Sunday School; 11:10-noon, Primary<br />

and Youth Classes; Youth Night and<br />

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

Bishop: Matthew Romano, 781-<br />

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

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

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

check before coming due to weather<br />

or for summer hours.<br />

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

Methodist Church<br />

273 Vernon St., Wakefield<br />

Pastor: Glenn M. Mortimer<br />

Sunday Worship Services:<br />

Summer: Sunday, July 1 through<br />

Labor Weekend Sun. Sept. 2, 2018<br />

10 a.m. Worship Service.<br />

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

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

Knit, Pray & Crochet Ministry<br />

meets at 10 a.m. on the 1st and<br />

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

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

and to make items like blankets,<br />

hats, mittens, scarves, prayer<br />

shawls and prayer squares for<br />

people in need.<br />

Following the service, we<br />

enjoy Fellowship at our Coffee &<br />

Conversation time.<br />

There are also many ways to serve<br />

the community through volunteer<br />

opportunities, social groups and committees<br />

like Ecumenical Youth Group,<br />

Choir, Book Club, Sunday School,<br />

Bible Study, United Methodist Women,<br />

Ministry Leadership Team, Card Care<br />

Club, Craft Fair Committee, just to<br />

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

groups like Happy Hearts Preschool,<br />

Cub Scouts, Girl Scouts, Wakefield<br />

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

Preschool Music, Kids Curtain Call<br />

Drama for Middle Schoolers, and<br />

Wakefield Toy Swap. We are also a<br />

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

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

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<br />

more information about our church,<br />

please call the church office at (781)<br />

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

email WLUMC273@gmail.com.<br />

Visit us on Facebook www.facebook.<br />

com/methodistchurchwakefield.<br />

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

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

*****<br />

Friday, February 1<br />

8 a.m. Friend’s breakfast.<br />

8:12 a.m. Exercise room. 9<br />

a.m. Blood pressure and file<br />

of life, Broadway jazz dance<br />

class, hairdresser, acrylic<br />

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

CONTINUED ON PAGE 7


JANUARY <strong>31</strong>, 2019<br />

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

Seniors<br />

CONTINUED<br />

FROM PAGE 6<br />

9:30 a.m. Tai Chi. 10 a.m.<br />

Chair yoga video. 10:30 a.m.<br />

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

Mac and cheese.<br />

*****<br />

Monday, February 4<br />

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

Alice, exercise room. 8:45<br />

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

Gentle Pilates, hairdresser,<br />

tax assistance (by appointment),<br />

Walmart shopping. 10<br />

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

dance - tap, topic of the day,<br />

chair yoga video, sit and tone<br />

with Darci. 11 a.m. Yoga for<br />

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

Roast chicken. Noon Bowling,<br />

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

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

training, computer (sign up).<br />

*****<br />

Tuesday, February 5<br />

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

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

shopping - Ross Drive. 8:45<br />

a.m. Exercise under the<br />

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

9:15 a.m. Walking meditation.<br />

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

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

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

a.m. Lunch: Pulled pork.<br />

12:15 p.m. Rotary Elder Act<br />

meeting - all welcome. 12:30<br />

p.m. Computer class - sign<br />

up, Bridge, watercolor class,<br />

Veterans Affairs Bingo trip,<br />

successful singles.<br />

*****<br />

Wednesday, February 6<br />

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

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

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

with Anita, Tripoley,<br />

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

Aerobics video. 10 a.m.<br />

Chair yoga, welcome coffee,<br />

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

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

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

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

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8<br />

Rep. Jones’ views on<br />

Gov. Baker’s state<br />

budget message<br />

House Minority Leader<br />

Bradley H. Jones, Jr. whose<br />

district includes <strong>Lynnfield</strong>,<br />

Middleton, Reading, North<br />

Reading, praised the $42.7 billion<br />

budget plan proposed by<br />

Gov. Charlie Baker last week.<br />

“Gov. Baker’s budget proposal<br />

charts a fiscally responsible<br />

path for the commonwealth<br />

by limiting spending increases<br />

to 1.5 percent over projected<br />

fiscal year 2019 levels and depositing<br />

another $297 million<br />

to shore up the state’s rainy day<br />

account,” the Republican said<br />

in a statement. “Both steps are<br />

prudent given the downturn in<br />

revenue numbers we’ve seen so<br />

far for the month of December<br />

and the first half of January.”<br />

He said one of the 2017-<br />

2018 legislative session’s biggest<br />

missed opportunities was<br />

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WEEKLYNEWS.NET - 978-532-5880 JANUARY <strong>31</strong>, 2019<br />

The race is on for<br />

By Thomas Grillo<br />

A handful of candidates have<br />

lined up to seek municipal posts<br />

in the town election set for<br />

Tuesday, April 9.<br />

So far, Selectman Richard<br />

Dalton, Board of Assessor<br />

Richard O’Neil, Library<br />

Trustees Richard Mazzola<br />

and Faith Honer-Coakley,<br />

and School Committeeman<br />

Richard Sjoberg are seeking<br />

reelection.<br />

Joseph A. Markey is seeking<br />

to fill the Town Moderator post<br />

vacated by Arthur Bourque who<br />

has moved to Florida.<br />

Two new candidates are<br />

seeking to join the Planning<br />

Board including Thomas<br />

Wallace and Alan Dresios.<br />

Planning Board Clerk Charles<br />

Wills is seeking a one-year<br />

term. Stacy Dahlstedt is running<br />

for School Committee.<br />

Open spots include:<br />

○ Town Moderator for a oneyear<br />

term.<br />

○ Board of Selectmen, one<br />

seat for a three-year term.<br />

○ Board of Assessors, one<br />

seat for a three-year term.<br />

○ Board of Library Trustees,<br />

two seats for a three-year<br />

term.<br />

○ Planning Board, one seat<br />

for a five-year term, and one<br />

seat for a one-year term to fill<br />

the unexpired term of John<br />

Gioioso who resigned.<br />

○ School Committee, two<br />

seats for a three-year term.<br />

town election<br />

PHOTO | OWEN O’ROURKE<br />

<strong>Lynnfield</strong> City Clerk Trudy Reid going through nomination<br />

papers filed by candidates seeking municipal office.<br />

City Clerk Trudy Reid<br />

said one seat for the Housing<br />

Authority has been eliminated.<br />

The Massachusetts<br />

Department of Housing &<br />

Community Development is<br />

changing the makeup of the<br />

board. Until the state issues<br />

new regulations, she said the<br />

seat up for re-election will be<br />

eliminated. If the incumbent<br />

chooses to do so, he may remain<br />

in the position as a holdover<br />

until final regulations are<br />

released.<br />

There’s still time to get into the<br />

race. The deadline to submit nomination<br />

papers is Tuesday, Feb. 19.<br />

To get your name on the<br />

ballot, nomination papers must<br />

be certified with at least 50 signatures<br />

of <strong>Lynnfield</strong> registered<br />

voters.<br />

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10<br />

WEEKLYNEWS.NET - 978-532-5880 JANUARY <strong>31</strong>, 2019<br />

Sports<br />

Girls hockey defeats Oakmont<br />

By Anne Marie Tobin<br />

The Peabody/<strong>Lynnfield</strong> girls<br />

hockey team scored early and<br />

often Saturday afternoon, defeating<br />

visiting Oakmont 7-0 at<br />

James McVann-Louis O’Keefe<br />

Ice Rink.<br />

With the win, the Tanners improved<br />

to 9-3-1 and need one<br />

more point to qualify for the<br />

tournament.<br />

“Tonight we worked in our<br />

depth and tried some different<br />

combinations,” said coach<br />

Michelle Roach. “Our future<br />

is great and now we are close<br />

to clinching a tournament spot.<br />

With the rest of our schedule I<br />

am confident we can do that.<br />

We controlled our own play and<br />

did not get thrown off our game<br />

no matter what the opponent<br />

was doing. Tonight was a good<br />

bounce-back.”<br />

Jenna Mack (<strong>Lynnfield</strong>)<br />

notched her first varsity point<br />

with a second-period assist. Jenn<br />

Flynn (<strong>Lynnfield</strong>) had a big day<br />

with a goal and two assists, while<br />

Maria Pierce also had three points<br />

on two goals and one assist.<br />

Junior captain Sammie Mirasolo<br />

(2 goals), senior captain Jess<br />

Robert (goal, assist), and senior<br />

captain Kat DiGiulio (goal, assist)<br />

had two points each. Sadie Geran<br />

(<strong>Lynnfield</strong>), Carolyn Garofoli<br />

(<strong>Lynnfield</strong>) and Catherine<br />

Sweeney (<strong>Lynnfield</strong>) chipped in<br />

one assist each.<br />

Junior Jeny Collins (North<br />

By Anne Marie Tobin<br />

PEABODY — The <strong>Lynnfield</strong>/Wakefield<br />

boys and <strong>Lynnfield</strong> girls swim teams<br />

wrapped up the regular season this past<br />

Saturday (Jan. 26) against Austin Prep at<br />

the Torigian Family YMCA. The boys team<br />

defeated the Cougars 81-58 to remain undefeated<br />

at 7-0, while the girls team fell,<br />

91-58.<br />

Johnny Stumpf, Chris Anastasiades and<br />

Antonio Anastasiades were double winners.<br />

Stumpf won the 200 free (2:04.09) and<br />

100 fly (59:06), while Chris Anastasiades<br />

won the 200 individual medley (2:07.91)<br />

and 100 breast (1:04.41) and Antonio<br />

Anastasiades won the 50 free (23.00) and<br />

100 back (1:04.69).<br />

Matt Pecjo won the 100 free (59.<strong>31</strong>) and<br />

placed second in the 50 free (25.44).<br />

Pecjo, Chris Anastasiades, Nick Alphen<br />

(<strong>Lynnfield</strong>) and Stumpf won the 200<br />

medley relay (1:53.63).<br />

Pecjo, Alphen, David Blake (<strong>Lynnfield</strong>)<br />

and Jack Michalski (<strong>Lynnfield</strong>) won the<br />

400 free relay (4:12).<br />

Alphen won the 500 free (6:35.85) also<br />

placed second in the 100 fly (1:05.30).<br />

Alex Kent, Stumpf, and Chris and<br />

Antonio Anastasiades won the 200 free<br />

relay (1:41.40). Kent also placed second<br />

in the 200 free (2:17.47) and 100 free<br />

PHOTO | ANNE MARIE TOBIN<br />

Jenna Mack notched her first varsity point in the win over<br />

Oakmont.<br />

Reading) pitched a shutout in<br />

goal.<br />

Peabody came out firing in the<br />

first period, scoring four goals<br />

in the first seven minutes to take<br />

a commanding 4-0 lead. Robert<br />

started things off with a pretty<br />

goal just 1:43 in (from DiGiulio<br />

and Flynn). DiGiulio started<br />

the play with a strong rush over<br />

the blue line, then centered to<br />

Flynn. Flynn’s shot was saved,<br />

but Robert was right there to pop<br />

home the rebound.<br />

DiGiulio doubled the lead<br />

about two minutes later (from<br />

Robert).<br />

Pierce got in on the party two<br />

minutes later, scoring two goals,<br />

PHOTO | JANE SKELLEY<br />

Divers Mia Lemieux, Anna Schmidt and<br />

Keira Rothwell swept the diving competition<br />

against Austin Prep.<br />

(1:01.84).<br />

Also scoring points for the Pioneers were<br />

Blake, third in the 200 IM (2:37.46 and<br />

third in the 100 breast (1:20.10); Michalski,<br />

third in the 50 free (29.16) and 100 free<br />

(1:23.38); Melkonian, fourth in the 100<br />

back (1:27.53); Antonio Anastasiades,<br />

Blake, Kent and Shant Melkonian, second<br />

in the 200 medley relay (1:59.19); and<br />

Michalski, Melkonian, Andrew Rosenberg<br />

and Shane McQueen (<strong>Lynnfield</strong>), second in<br />

the 200 free relay.<br />

The highlight of the girls meet was the<br />

diving competition, which was swept by the<br />

Pioneers. Mia Lemieux took first (185.4),<br />

Keira Rothwell took second (142.425) and<br />

the first unassisted at 9:18 and<br />

the second when she flipped a<br />

rebound home on the backhand<br />

at the 7:57 mark. DiGiulio and<br />

sophomore Paige Thibedeau<br />

(North Reading) were credited<br />

with assists.<br />

Mirasolo added two second-period<br />

goals to stretch the lead to<br />

6-0, the first one coming on a<br />

power play just <strong>31</strong> seconds in with<br />

Pierce and Garofoli assisting. On<br />

the second, Pierce started the play,<br />

feeding the puck into the slot to<br />

freshman Kaila Griffin (North<br />

Reading). Her shot was saved but<br />

the rebound found its way back to<br />

the right point, where Sweeney<br />

drilled a wrist shot. Mirasolo collected<br />

the rebound and slammed<br />

it into the back of the net.<br />

Flynn capped the scoring with<br />

a goal (from Mack) with about<br />

five minutes to play in the second<br />

period. Mack and Flynn pulled<br />

off a pretty give-and-go (Mack<br />

to Flynn to Mack), but Mack was<br />

robbed. Flynn won the ensuing faceoff<br />

and played it back to Mack<br />

at the point, She slipped it back to<br />

Flynn, who flipped it under the<br />

crossbar to make it 7-0.<br />

In the third period, freshman<br />

Lily Piscatelli, Griffin and senior<br />

captain Grant all had quality<br />

scoring chances only to be denied.<br />

The lopsided score gave Roach<br />

the luxury of going to the bench<br />

early and often.<br />

“The second line again played<br />

great and we got a lot of players<br />

ice time, and they played very well<br />

from top to bottom,” Roach said.<br />

“Lily Piscatelli, sophomore Elise<br />

Staunton and Charlotte all played<br />

great, especially Charlotte. She<br />

can play any position and tonight<br />

you saw her versatility playing on<br />

both the power play and penalty<br />

kills. We have a talented squad<br />

and tremendous depth, so I think<br />

we showcased that today. We are<br />

still on top of the league and have<br />

some big league games coming<br />

up, so we will see.”<br />

One of those big games is<br />

Friday, Feb. 1 at McVann-<br />

O’Keefe when the Tanners square<br />

off against NHL conference rival<br />

Beverly.<br />

Boys, girls split weekend swim meet<br />

Anna Schmidt placed third (119.25).<br />

<strong>Lynnfield</strong> picked up four second-place<br />

finishes in all. Sadhvi Sreeram finished<br />

second in the 200 free (2:28.50) and also<br />

finished fourth in the 100 free (1:06.59),<br />

while Gillian Skelley finished second in<br />

the 500 free (7:57.50) and fifth in the 100<br />

breast (1:34.17). Liz Sykes finished second<br />

in the 200 IM (2:38.94) and third in the 100<br />

back (1:12.08).<br />

Caitlin Hooper finished third in the 100<br />

fly (1:18.03) and fourth in the 200 free<br />

(2:23.66).<br />

Avery Comeau finished fourth in the<br />

200 IM (2:52.75) and fifth in the 100 back<br />

(1:19.04).<br />

Michelle Marder finished third in the<br />

100 free (1:05.19) and fourth in the 50 free<br />

(29.06).<br />

Anna Maria Ferrante (fourth in the 100<br />

fly, 1:22.91), Sabrina Al-Mayahi (fourth in<br />

the 100 breast, 1:33.41) and Olivia Murphy<br />

(fifth in the 50 free, 30.84) also placed in<br />

individual events.<br />

Sykes, Marder, Sreeram and Hooper<br />

placed second in the 200 free relay (1:59.41)<br />

and third in the 400 free relay (4:29.<strong>31</strong>).<br />

Both teams are back in the pool Sunday,<br />

Feb. 3 at the CAL Championship meet at<br />

Salem State (8 a.m.).<br />

100th point<br />

PHOTO | ROBIN<br />

DEBENEDICTIS<br />

<strong>Lynnfield</strong> High’s George<br />

DeRoche had two goals<br />

and an assist, reaching<br />

the 100-point mark in a<br />

4-1 win over Pentucket<br />

Saturday.<br />

Wrestlers<br />

place two<br />

in tourney<br />

By Anne Marie Tobin<br />

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

wrestling team placed two<br />

wrestlers and finished eighth<br />

out of 13 teams with 53 points<br />

at Saturday’s Cape Ann League.<br />

Northeastern Conference Open<br />

hosted by Masconomet.<br />

Junior captain Sean<br />

McCullough (2-1) finished<br />

second in the 182-pound division<br />

for a second straight year.<br />

This was McCullough’s third<br />

tournament final this season.<br />

Junior captain Stuart Glover<br />

(2-2) placed fourth in the 126-<br />

pound division. It was Glover’s<br />

first time placing at the CAL/<br />

NEC tournament.<br />

“This is as tough as a strong<br />

sectional tournament with<br />

teams from the Cape Ann,<br />

Northeastern Conference and<br />

Greater Boston League,” said<br />

LNR coach Craig Stone. “On<br />

the positive side, we had seven<br />

of our 10 wrestlers winning<br />

matches and scoring team<br />

points and five out of those<br />

were wrestling in their first<br />

CAL/NEC tournament.”<br />

Other Black and Gold wrestlers<br />

winning matches were<br />

Christian Real-Costa (106,<br />

1-2); junior captain Timmy<br />

Leggett (132, 1-1, retired due<br />

to illness); Cam Randazzo (145,<br />

1-2); Ryan McCullough (152,<br />

1-2) and Giovanni Colucciello<br />

(170, 1-2).<br />

“Obviously, I would have<br />

liked to have more place finishers,<br />

but the place result does<br />

not measure the consistent<br />

progress we have been making<br />

throughout the season,” Stone<br />

said.


JANUARY <strong>31</strong>, 2019<br />

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

Boys give Melrose tough test<br />

HIGH SCHOOL SCHEDULE<br />

Thursday, Jan. <strong>31</strong><br />

No events scheduled<br />

By Anne Marie Tobin<br />

It might not have won the game, but the<br />

<strong>Lynnfield</strong> boys basketball team (6-8) delivered<br />

one of its most complete all-around efforts<br />

Sunday afternoon before going down to visiting<br />

Melrose, 66-59.<br />

Clay Marengi led the Pioneers with 17<br />

points and also hauled down nine rebounds,<br />

despite spending significant minutes on the<br />

bench with four fouls. Jack Ford (3 rebounds, 3<br />

steals) scored 11 points, while Jackson Cleary<br />

(5 rebounds) scored 10. Tony Hunt (8 points, 7<br />

rebounds, steal) and Max Boustris (6 rebounds,<br />

4 points, 3 steals) had solid all-around games.<br />

“Watching this game you can see the growth<br />

of the team,” said <strong>Lynnfield</strong> coach Scott<br />

MacKenzie. Yes, we are two games under<br />

.500 but we can still walk out of the building<br />

knowing how far we have come. We’ve gone<br />

5-1 over our last six games so I think the kids<br />

are more confident in themselves. Even though<br />

we missed some shots, we got great shots and<br />

looks tonight.”<br />

The game was nearly a complete reversal of<br />

the first meeting between the two teams when<br />

Melrose won in a rout, 56-42. Melrose dominated<br />

the glass at both ends of the court.<br />

Sunday, it was the Pioneers who seized the<br />

momentum early and shot lights out from beyond<br />

the arc with Marengi (two), Ford, and<br />

John Astrofsky combining to drain four threepointers<br />

in the first seven minutes to help the<br />

<strong>Lynnfield</strong> build a 21-11 lead. With 30 seconds<br />

left in the half, Melrose cut the deficit to 21-14<br />

with a three.<br />

The second quarter was back-and-forth.<br />

<strong>Lynnfield</strong> broke a 25-25 deadlock with a 6-0<br />

run, capped by a three-pointer from Boustris,<br />

to bump its lead to six, <strong>31</strong>-25. Melrose answered<br />

with an 8-0 run, the final two points on<br />

a buzzer-beating layup to take its first lead of<br />

the game, 33-<strong>31</strong>.<br />

Melrose carried the momentum into the<br />

second half and threatened to put the game out<br />

of reach in the third as the Raiders stretched<br />

their lead to 44-38. Boustris and Cleary closed<br />

out the quarter with free throws to make it a<br />

four-point game at 44-40 going into the fourth.<br />

By Mike Alongi<br />

LYNNFIELD — Friday night<br />

simply wasn’t the night for the<br />

<strong>Lynnfield</strong> girls basketball team,<br />

as the Pioneers fell to Division 1<br />

powerhouse Masconomet 49-15<br />

at <strong>Lynnfield</strong> High. The Pioneers<br />

struggled on both sides of the ball,<br />

especially with turnovers against<br />

Masconomet’s press defense, and<br />

fell into a hole they couldn’t dig<br />

out of.<br />

“(Masconomet) has been a<br />

powerhouse for some time, and<br />

they’ve really been giving it to<br />

us over the past few years,” said<br />

<strong>Lynnfield</strong> coach Peter Bocchino.<br />

“We had way too many issues<br />

with turnovers all game and we<br />

couldn’t hit shots tonight, and<br />

that’s no recipe for victory.”<br />

Melissa Morelli led the<br />

Pioneers with eight points and<br />

three rebounds, while Catherine<br />

MacDonald added three points<br />

and seven rebounds. Tori Morelli<br />

had two points and two rebounds,<br />

while Ava Buonfiglio had a solid<br />

game off the bench with five rebounds.<br />

Grace Klonsky and Anna<br />

Radulski also had good performances<br />

in the loss.<br />

The Pioneers did a good job<br />

Melrose opened the quarter with backto-back<br />

buckets to take its largest lead of the<br />

game, 48-40. A pair of baskets from Connell<br />

(4 points) sandwiched around two Melrose free<br />

throws and a pretty dish from Connell to Hunt<br />

cut the deficit to 50-46 with 5:30 left.<br />

After a Melrose three-point play, Cleary answered<br />

with a three to make it 53-49. After a<br />

thunderous Melrose dunk, Hunt came up with<br />

a clutch offensive rebound and put-back to<br />

make it, 55-51, with 3:20 to play, but that was<br />

as close as good as it got for the Pioneers.<br />

Down by eight, 62-54, Cleary banked<br />

in a trey with 47 seconds to play to give the<br />

Pioneers a glimmer of hope. After two Melrose<br />

free throws, Connell (from Hunt) made it a<br />

two-possession game at 64-59 with 24 seconds<br />

left, but Melrose sealed the win with two free<br />

throws.<br />

MacKenzie singled out Hunt and Boustris.<br />

“Tony is the smartest kid on the team with<br />

the highest basketball IQ,” MacKenzie said.<br />

“He is a 5’9” power forward who has to play<br />

at the top of the zone and on the baseline press<br />

defensively early on with their<br />

zone. Eventually the Chieftains<br />

started hitting shots over the top to<br />

counteract it. Masconomet’s Mak<br />

Graves hit three 3-pointers and<br />

scored 11 points in the period to<br />

help stake the Chieftains to a 14-5<br />

lead.<br />

“This is honestly the first time<br />

in quite awhile where we stuck<br />

with them for most of the first<br />

quarter, which was nice to see,”<br />

Bocchino said. “But eventually<br />

that press defense that they’re so<br />

good at running got to us.”<br />

In the second quarter,<br />

Masconomet pounced on numerous<br />

turnovers to break the<br />

game open and go up by as many<br />

as 14 points.<br />

Bocchino says that this is an<br />

issue that his team has run into this<br />

year when it matches up against<br />

opponents from higher divisions.<br />

“We have a pretty young team,<br />

and I think they just haven’t seen<br />

enough of that kind of pressure to<br />

be able to work through it yet,”<br />

Bocchino said. “When we go up<br />

against teams that don’t run that<br />

pressure-style defense, we excel.<br />

But teams that can put pressure on<br />

us take us right out of our offense<br />

PHOTO | KRISTINE MARENGI<br />

<strong>Lynnfield</strong>’s Tony Hunt, left, tangles with Melrose’s Luka Vlajkovic during Friday’s<br />

game. Hunt had his best game of the season, coach Scott MacKenzie said.<br />

and he creates so many offensive rebounding<br />

opportunities. This might have been his best<br />

and most complete game this year, and Max<br />

also played well, he is also undersized but does<br />

everything we ask of him.”<br />

With five games left, MacKenzie feels<br />

<strong>Lynnfield</strong> can make a big push to qualify for<br />

the tournament.<br />

“Earlier in the season, it seemed like the kids<br />

expected things to go south, but now they don’t,<br />

and are able to stay in games, like tonight. All<br />

we can do is throw some haymakers at some<br />

people and see what happens. Hopefully things<br />

will go our way.”<br />

Steven Dwyer helped the cause with two<br />

points, two rebounds and three assists.<br />

<strong>Lynnfield</strong> 60, Masco 53<br />

The Pioneers jumped out to a 16-point lead,<br />

32-16, in the first half over the host Chieftains,<br />

then hung on in the second half for the win. Ford<br />

led all scorers with 19 points, while Marengi<br />

scored 14 points and Connell scored 10. Hunt<br />

(7 points), Boustris (4 points) and Dwyer and<br />

Cleary (3 points each) also contributed.<br />

Girls basketball struggles vs. Masconomet<br />

and we have a tough time.”<br />

The second half was no better<br />

for the Pioneers, who mustered<br />

only five points the rest of the way.<br />

Now at .500 on the season, the<br />

Pioneers (7-7) need to win three of<br />

their final six games to qualify for<br />

the tournament.<br />

“We’ve just got to keep working<br />

on the things we’ve been working<br />

on all year and I think we’ll be in<br />

good shape,” said Bocchino.<br />

<strong>Lynnfield</strong> 48, Winthrop 43<br />

At <strong>Lynnfield</strong> Jan. 24, the<br />

Pioneers shook off a slow start,<br />

then held off a couple of fourthquarter<br />

Winthrop rallies.<br />

The Pioneers led by 11 with six<br />

minutes left. The Vikings closed<br />

to within four on two occasions in<br />

the final four minutes, but a combination<br />

of timely shot-making<br />

and clutch defensive plays on the<br />

part of the Pioneers sealed the win.<br />

“It was a good second-half<br />

win,” said <strong>Lynnfield</strong> coach Peter<br />

Bocchino. “We needed this win<br />

if we are going to make the tournament.<br />

Our defense kept us in<br />

the game when we needed it after<br />

going man-to-man, and that’s<br />

when we got some easy fast-break<br />

baskets. That turned up the intensity<br />

and we capitalized on their<br />

turnovers.”<br />

With under a minute left,<br />

<strong>Lynnfield</strong> led by four, 44-40.<br />

After an offensive rebound by<br />

MacDonald (3 points), Klonsky<br />

(7 points) found Tori Morelli (16<br />

points), who laid it in to make it<br />

46-40 with 49 second to play.<br />

Winthrop missed the front end of<br />

a one-and-one, with MacDonald<br />

(14 points) grabbing a huge rebound<br />

and dishing to Klonsky,<br />

who was intentionally fouled<br />

with 32 seconds to go. Klonsky,<br />

who had struggled from the<br />

free throw line earlier, came up<br />

clutch, swishing the first of two<br />

double-bonus throws to make it<br />

47-40.<br />

“That was a big free throw because<br />

it made it a two-and-a-half<br />

possession game,” said Bocchino.<br />

MacDonald grabbed an offensive<br />

rebound on Klonsky’s miss<br />

and then made one of two free<br />

throws after another intentional<br />

foul to put the game out of reach,<br />

48-40, with 26 seconds left.<br />

Caroline Waisnor (9 points),<br />

Melissa Morelli (7 points) and<br />

Riley Hallahan (6 points) also<br />

scored.<br />

Friday, Feb. 1<br />

Boys basketball<br />

N. Reading at <strong>Lynnfield</strong>, 6:30<br />

Peabody at M’head, 7<br />

Fenwick at Cathedral, 6:30<br />

Girls basketball<br />

<strong>Lynnfield</strong> at North Reading, 7<br />

M’head at Peabody, 7<br />

Cathedral at Fenwick, 6:30<br />

Girls hockey<br />

Beverly at Pea/Lfd, 5:15<br />

Saturday, Feb. 2<br />

Boys hockey<br />

Medford at <strong>Lynnfield</strong>, 12<br />

Williams at Fenwick, 6<br />

Wrestling<br />

L’field at Dual Meet Champ., TBA<br />

Gymnastics<br />

NEC League meet, 4<br />

Boys hockey<br />

Medford at Peabody, 4<br />

Swimming<br />

CCL Open at SJP, 11<br />

Sunday, Feb. 3<br />

Swimming<br />

CAL Open at Salem State, 9<br />

Girls basketball<br />

Arlington at Peabody, TBA<br />

Girls hockey<br />

AC at Fenwick, 9<br />

Boys hockey<br />

Low. Cath. at Fenwick, 1:30<br />

Monday, Feb. 4<br />

Boys basketball<br />

<strong>Lynnfield</strong> at Danvers, 4<br />

Tuesday, Feb. 5<br />

Wrestling<br />

<strong>Lynnfield</strong> at Danvers, 5:30<br />

Boys basketball<br />

<strong>Lynnfield</strong> at Georgetown, 6:30<br />

Peabody at Winthrop, 7<br />

Spellman at Fenwick, 6:30<br />

Girls basketball<br />

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

Winthrop at Peabody, 7<br />

Fenwick at Spellman, 6:30<br />

Track<br />

CAL Open at RLTAC, 6<br />

Gymnastics<br />

Fenwick at Beverly, 7<br />

Wednesday, Feb. 6<br />

Boys hockey<br />

Newburyport at <strong>Lynnfield</strong>, 8:15<br />

Fenwick at AC, 8<br />

Girls hockey<br />

Peabody at Winthrop 6:10<br />

St. Joe’s at Fenwick, 4:10<br />

Wrestling<br />

Peabody at Danvers, 6:30<br />

Gymnastics<br />

Malden at Fenwick, 7:30<br />

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12<br />

WEEKLYNEWS.NET - 978-532-5880 JANUARY <strong>31</strong>, 2019<br />

To:<br />

Geoffrey W. Gongas<br />

(SEAL)<br />

COMMONWEALTH OF MASSACHUSETTS<br />

LAND COURT<br />

DEPARTMENT OF THE TRIAL COURT<br />

18SM007726<br />

ORDER OF NOTICE<br />

and to all persons entitled to the benefit of the Servicemembers Civil Relief Act, 50<br />

U.S.C. c. 50 §3901 et seq.:<br />

Plaza Home Mortgage, Inc.<br />

claiming to have an interest in a Mortgage covering real property in Peabody,<br />

numbered 58 County Street, Unit 1, 58 County Street Condominium, given by<br />

Geoffrey W. Gongas to Mortgage Electronic Registration Systems, Inc., as nominee<br />

for Union Trust Mortgage Corporation, dated December 24, 2014, and recorded in<br />

the Essex County (Southern District) Registry of Deeds in Book 33763, Page 569,<br />

and now held by the Plaintiff by assignment, has/have filed with this court a<br />

complaint for determination of Defendant's/Defendants' Servicemembers status.<br />

If you now are, or recently have been, in the active military service of the United<br />

States of America, then you may be entitled to the benefits of the Servicemembers<br />

Civil Relief Act. If you object to a foreclosure of the above mentioned property on<br />

that basis, then you or your attorney must file a written appearance and answer in<br />

this court at Three Pemberton Square, Boston, MA 02108 on or before March 4,<br />

2019 or you will be forever barred from claiming that you are entitled to the<br />

benefits of said Act.<br />

Witness, GORDON H. PIPER, Chief Justice of said Court on January 15, 2019.<br />

Attest: Deborah J. Patterson<br />

Recorder<br />

14412<br />

Weekly News: January <strong>31</strong>, 2019<br />

PEABODY CITY COUNCIL<br />

PEABODY CITY COUNCIL<br />

LEGAL AD<br />

NOTICE OF PUBLIC HEARING<br />

LEGAL AD<br />

NOTICE OF PUBLIC HEARING<br />

ACROSS<br />

1 Bungalow<br />

5 Popular lily<br />

10 “NOVA” network<br />

13 Accumulate<br />

15 Assumed name<br />

16 Gold, in Tijuana<br />

17 Pine cousin<br />

18 Temple figure<br />

19 Zilch<br />

20 Groves<br />

22 Port near Hong Kong<br />

24 Non-flying birds<br />

25 Scowls<br />

27 Just look<br />

30 Desire<br />

<strong>31</strong> Bonny miss<br />

32 Meted out<br />

34 Lawn wetters<br />

38 Tanker cargo<br />

39 Really tiny<br />

40 Ernesto Guevara<br />

41 Lump of dirt<br />

43 Spiral-horned antelope<br />

45 Diva’s tune<br />

46 Different<br />

48 Reddish-brown<br />

50 Biggest, as a shirt<br />

53 Fish-eating flier<br />

54 Hiked the price<br />

55 Hammerlock pro<br />

59 Time span<br />

60 Border state<br />

63 Recital piece<br />

64 Square-dance partner<br />

65 Probably hungry<br />

66 Mutiny<br />

67 Sighs of distress<br />

68 Dull finish<br />

69 Contradict<br />

DOWN<br />

1 Angel’s topper<br />

2 Sharif of the movies<br />

3 Cleopatra’s wooer<br />

4 Avoids<br />

5 Ace and joker<br />

6 Mournful cry<br />

7 Rights movement word<br />

8 Sci. room<br />

9 Noted sci-fi writer<br />

10 Puerto Rican port<br />

11 Pipe material<br />

12 Goes it alone<br />

14 Hoaxes<br />

21 Wept over<br />

23 Overcome<br />

25 Kermit’s color<br />

26 Young chap<br />

27 Coalition<br />

28 Staircase part<br />

29 Fjord port<br />

30 Distinct<br />

33 Immature raptor<br />

35 Linen color<br />

36 Vibrate<br />

37 Madonna ex<br />

42 Rx directive<br />

43 Codgers’ queries<br />

44 Have the boldness to try<br />

45 Helped a thief<br />

47 Monotony<br />

49 Auto-racing family<br />

50 “Hasta --!”<br />

51 Talk-show host -- Winfrey<br />

52 Aussie minerals<br />

53 Rust away<br />

55 Grind, as an ax<br />

56 Garage job<br />

57 Utopia<br />

58 Depend confidently<br />

61 Spiral molecule<br />

62 Near the stern<br />

Notice is hereby given that the City<br />

Council of the City of Peabody, acting<br />

as the Special Permit Granting<br />

Authority, will conduct a public hearing<br />

on THURSDAY EVENING, FEBRUARY<br />

28, 2019, at 7:30 P.M., in the Frank<br />

L. Wiggin Auditorium, City Hall, 24<br />

Lowell Street, Peabody, MA on the<br />

application from RUGGIERO FAMILY<br />

MEMORIAL HOME, INC., 971 Saratoga<br />

Street, East Boston, MA and<br />

TODISCO PROPERTIES, LLC,28 Jennifer<br />

Lane, Peabody, MA FOR A SPECIAL<br />

PERMIT SEEKING TO USE THE<br />

BASEMENT AND FIRST FLOOR OF THE<br />

EXISTING BUILDING AS A FUNERAL<br />

ESTABLISHMENT AND TO ALLOW THE<br />

2ND FLOOR RESIDENTIAL APART-<br />

MENT TO REMAIN at 10 CHESTNUT<br />

STREET, Peabody, MA as filed in<br />

accordance with Sections 4.2.5, 6,<br />

and 15.7 of the Peabody Zoning<br />

Ordinance.<br />

PEABODY CITY COUNCIL<br />

COUNCILLOR JON G. TURCO<br />

CITY COUNCIL PRESIDENT<br />

Timothy E. Spanos<br />

City Clerk<br />

Weekly News: January <strong>31</strong>,<br />

February 7, 2019<br />

PEABODY CITY COUNCIL<br />

LEGAL AD<br />

NOTICE OF PUBLIC HEARING<br />

Notice is hereby given that the City<br />

Council of the City of Peabody, acting<br />

as the Special Permit Granting<br />

Authority, will conduct a public hearing<br />

on THURSDAY EVENING, FEBRUARY<br />

14, 2019, at 7:30 P.M., in the Frank<br />

L. Wiggin Auditorium, City Hall, 24<br />

Lowell Street, Peabody, MA on the<br />

application from FAMILY ENTERTAIN-<br />

MENT GROUP, LLC D/B/A "IN THE<br />

GAME", 535 Lowell Street, Peabody,<br />

MA SEEKING TO INSTALL AN<br />

ELECTRONIC MESSAGE BOARD AF-<br />

FIXED TO THE BUILDING AT THE<br />

ENTRANCE TO THE "IN THE GAME"<br />

ENTERTAINMENT COMPLEX at said<br />

535 LOWELL STREET, Peabody, MA<br />

as filed in accordance with Sections<br />

6.1, 11.4.8 and 15.7 of the Peabody<br />

Zoning Ordinance.<br />

PEABODY CITY COUNCIL<br />

COUNCILLOR JON G. TURCO<br />

CITY COUNCIL PRESIDENT<br />

Timothy E. Spanos<br />

City Clerk<br />

Weekly News: January <strong>31</strong>,<br />

February 7, 2019<br />

Notice is hereby given that the City<br />

Council of the City of Peabody, acting<br />

as the Special Permit Granting<br />

Authority, will conduct a public hearing<br />

on THURSDAY EVENING, FEBRUARY<br />

14, 2019, at 7:30 P.M., in the Frank<br />

L. Wiggin Auditorium, City Hall, 24<br />

Lowell Street, Peabody, MA on the<br />

application from NUTRE, LLC., 3<br />

Bourbon Street, Peabody, MA FOR A<br />

SPECIAL PERMIT SEEKING TO UTI-<br />

LIZE THE PROPERTY AS A COMMER-<br />

CIAL KITCHEN TO ALLOW FOR FOOD<br />

PROCESSING ON SITE at 23 UPTON<br />

STREET, Peabody, MA as filed in<br />

accordance with Sections 4.2.6, 6,<br />

and 15.7 of the Peabody Zoning<br />

Ordinance.<br />

PEABODY CITY COUNCIL<br />

COUNCILLOR JON G. TURCO<br />

CITY COUNCIL PRESIDENT<br />

Timothy E. Spanos<br />

City Clerk<br />

Weekly News: January 24, <strong>31</strong>, 2019<br />

RELOCATING?<br />

“Helpful tips”<br />

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

trouble-free move!<br />

Designate a drawer for<br />

essentials such as<br />

sheets and towels for<br />

quick access the first<br />

night you move into<br />

your new home.<br />

Plan a garage/yard<br />

sale before you move.<br />

Fresh coffee, baking<br />

soda, or charcoal in a<br />

sock, placed inside<br />

your refrigerator will<br />

keep the inside smelling<br />

fresh and clean.<br />

Pack your current<br />

phone book — it’s a<br />

quick easy reference to<br />

the folks back home.


JANUARY <strong>31</strong>, 2019<br />

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

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$85,000<br />

B: Viviane Martins<br />

S: Adair L Junior & Viviane<br />

Martins<br />

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B: James Mcdonnell<br />

S: Thomas R Mccarthy & Tina<br />

L Mccarthy<br />

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B: Paxina Shitto<br />

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B: Barbara C Frahm Tr, Tr for<br />

Lafayette T<br />

S: Jean M Souza Tr, Tr for<br />

Kateco RT<br />

167 RUSSELL ST<br />

$537,500<br />

B: Kristie Forni & Michael Forni<br />

S: Kayla M Nassar & George J<br />

Varelas<br />

1200 SALEM ST U:155<br />

$450,000<br />

B: Carol A Ogrady & Francis M<br />

Ogrady<br />

S: Mary A Lipman<br />

24 WISEMAN DR<br />

$438,000<br />

B: Nancy J Delaney Tr, Tr for 24<br />

Wiseman Drive RT 2019<br />

S: David Seymour Tr, Tr for 24<br />

Wiseman Drive RT


14<br />

WEEKLYNEWS.NET - 978-532-5880 JANUARY <strong>31</strong>, 2019<br />

Joyce Cucchiara<br />

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* MLS PIN, Jan. 1-Dec. <strong>31</strong>, 2018. Real estate agents affiliated with Coldwell Banker Residential Brokerage are independent<br />

contractor agents and are not employees of the Company. ©2018 Coldwell Banker Residential Brokerage. All Rights Reserved.<br />

Coldwell Banker Residential Brokerage fully supports the principles of the Fair Housing Act and the Equal Opportunity Act.<br />

-<br />

Owned by a subsidiary of NRT LLC. Coldwell Banker and the Coldwell Banker Logo are registered service marks owned by<br />

Coldwell Banker Real Estate LLC.


JANUARY <strong>31</strong>, 2019<br />

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

COLDWELL BANKER<br />

<strong>Lynnfield</strong> | 5/4.1 | $1,999,000<br />

6 Ramsdell Way<br />

Stunning Colonial set back on lavish grounds<br />

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

Louise Touchette 617-605-0555<br />

Search 72422368 on cbhomes.com<br />

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

576 Lowell Street<br />

Newly constructed energy efficient home offers<br />

exquisite craftsmanship with luxurious features.<br />

Louise Touchette 617-605-0555<br />

Search 72413979 on cbhomes.com<br />

<strong>Lynnfield</strong> | 3/2 | $589,900<br />

623 Salem Street<br />

Another beautifully renovated home in<br />

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

Joe Addario 781-820-3672<br />

Search 72422139 on cbhomes.com<br />

<strong>Lynnfield</strong> | 3/1 | $549,900 | 111 Locksley Road<br />

Open House Fri. 5 - 6 Sat & Sun 11:30 - 1:30<br />

3 bedroom Ranch in desirable Sherwood Forest<br />

neighborhood with stunning water views!<br />

Nikki Cappadona-Martin 781-710-1440<br />

Search 72446460 on cbhomes.com<br />

Peabody | 4/2.1 | $585,000<br />

13 Tara Road<br />

Instantly appealing Colonial home with an<br />

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

most sought-after neighborhoods.<br />

Joyce Cucchiara 978-808-1597<br />

Search 72421555 on cbhomes.com<br />

Peabody | 4/2 | $549,900<br />

Just Listed 3 Roosevelt Ave<br />

Have fun cooking in the kitchen featuring hickory<br />

cabinets, ceiling fan and granite countertops while<br />

your guests relax at the island with 6+ seating.<br />

Evelyn Rockas 617-256-8500<br />

Search 72445136 on cbhomes.com<br />

Peabody | 4/2 | $459,900<br />

2 Heath Road<br />

Spacious living room with a bay window<br />

offering southern exposure for a warm &<br />

inviting sun drenched room.<br />

Joyce Cucchiara 978-808-1597<br />

Search 72428451 on cbhomes.com<br />

Andover | 4/2.1 | $1,049,000<br />

Just Listed 8 Mortimer Drive<br />

Pristine one owner custom built Colonial featuring<br />

4 spacious bedrooms, formal dining room, and<br />

fireplaced living room.<br />

Rossetti/Poti Team 781-718-4662<br />

Search 72439800 on cbhomes.com<br />

Beverly | 3/3 | $1,150,000<br />

11 Thissell Street<br />

Elegant first floor residence at the most<br />

prestigious address in Pride’s Crossing.<br />

Carol DiCiaccio 781-820-3517<br />

Search 72072071 on cbhomes.com<br />

Middleton | 5/4.2 | $1,250,000<br />

1 Warren Drive<br />

Step into a dramatic sunny, open 2-story family<br />

room with cathedral ceilings, loft, fireplace and<br />

deck which open into an entertaining kitchen.<br />

Karen Johnson 781-367-8482<br />

Search 72<strong>31</strong>7464 on cbhomes.com<br />

Middleton | 3/4 | $969,900<br />

9 Overbook Drive<br />

Piece of Paradise in this custom built Colonial<br />

that abuts Middleton Golf Course.<br />

Rossetti/Poti Team 781-718-4662<br />

Search 72413335 on cbhomes.com<br />

Newton | 7/5.3 | $1,900,000<br />

9 Old Orchard Road<br />

This unique antique home features 7<br />

bedrooms, 7 fireplaces.<br />

Rossetti/Poti Team 781-718-4662<br />

Search 72253513 on cbhomes.com<br />

Boston | 2/2.1 | $1,199,999<br />

65 East India Row U:10B<br />

1600+ sq. ft. Harbor Towers residence on<br />

10th floor with gorgeous views of the city.<br />

Louise Touchette 617-605-0555<br />

Search 72404186 on cbhomes.com<br />

Boston | 1/1.1 | $960,000<br />

Reduced 121 Portland Street Unit 202<br />

Sophisticated 1 bedroom, 1.5 bathroom<br />

condominium in desirable North End location.<br />

Louise Touchette 617-605-0555<br />

Search 72377588 on cbhomes.com<br />

ColdwellBankerHomes.com<br />

Saugus | 3/3 | $529,000<br />

Just Listed 294 Walnut Street<br />

Open concept floor plan in main living<br />

space with combined kitchen, dining and<br />

living area.<br />

Louise Touchette 617-605-0555<br />

Search 72446123 on cbhomes.com<br />

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

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

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

and are not employees of the Company. ©2018 Coldwell Banker Residential Brokerage. All Rights Reserved. Coldwell Banker Residential Brokerage fully supports the principles of the Fair Housing Act and the Equal<br />

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

Salem | 2/2.1 | $429,900<br />

48 Cavendish Circle Unit 48<br />

Main level open floor plan with half bath;<br />

(gas) fireplace in the living area. and<br />

hardwood flooring throughout.<br />

Simon Templar 617-680-3684<br />

Search 72424457 on cbhomes.com<br />

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16<br />

WEEKLYNEWS.NET - 978-532-5880 JANUARY <strong>31</strong>, 2019<br />

LYNNFIELD $499,000<br />

WAKEFIELD - $399,000<br />

SALEM - $349,900<br />

DESIRABLE SHERWOOD FOREST<br />

NEIGHBORHOOD. Easy living 2 bedroom<br />

Ranch, hardwood floors throughout, 2 fireplaces;<br />

living room with French doors to deck and yard.<br />

Many updates.<br />

EVENINGS: 978-273-0699<br />

THIS COZY 5 ROOM RANCH FEATURES open<br />

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bedrooms and 1 full bath. Ready for updates!<br />

EVENINGS: 781-844-5990<br />

ONLY A COUPLE BLOCKS AWAY FROM SALEM<br />

HARBOR! Walk to the Forest River Park. 3 bedroom<br />

Colonial with large rooms. 2 driveways, one on each<br />

side of the house. Large eat-in kitchen with rear<br />

mudroom. Replacement windows. This one is ready<br />

for your finishing touches.<br />

EVENINGS: 617-791-2922<br />

WEST PEABODY - $489,900<br />

LYNNFIELD - $649,900<br />

SALE PENDING!<br />

JUST LISTED!<br />

LOVELY RANCH STYLE HOME with open floor<br />

plan, 3 bedrooms, one and a half baths,<br />

oversized 2 car garage with plenty of room for a<br />

workstation. Professionally landscaped lawn,<br />

irrigation and inground pool.<br />

SEVEN ROOM MULTI-LEVEL HOME LOCATED IN<br />

GREAT LYNNFIELD LOCATION. Two full baths<br />

and three good sized bedrooms. Featuring gas<br />

fireplace, partially finished basement with numerous<br />

updates throughout this home.<br />

EVENINGS: 978-590-1628<br />

EVENINGS: 781-258-3408<br />

LYNNFIELD - $399,000<br />

WAKEFIELD - $490,900<br />

BEVERLY - $649,900<br />

GREAT OPPORTUNITY. The back Yard is Large<br />

(19,300 sq. ft lot) Needs some work. Front to Back<br />

Living room with Fireplace, Formal Dining Room,<br />

Hardwood Floors, Built-Ins, Wide Windows-lots of<br />

light, Porch. New septic to be installed before closing.<br />

EVENINGS: 617-784-9995<br />

COZY 6 ROOM RANCH WITH VINYL SIDING, 3<br />

bedrooms with hardwood, FP living room, sun<br />

porch off kitchen, large basement playroom with<br />

exterior access. Great cul-de-sac location.<br />

EVENINGS: 617-285-3329<br />

GREAT INVESTOR OPPORTUNITY for this 3<br />

family + an additional unit in the front, street<br />

level, currently used as a hair salon with a single<br />

station. Newer roof. Convenient to Rt 128. Within<br />

walking distance to train station.<br />

EVENINGS: 617-791-2922<br />

Donna Aloisi<br />

Bert Beaulieu<br />

Cheryl Bogart<br />

Helen Bolino<br />

Bernie Starr - Broker/Owner • Richard Tisei - Broker/Owner<br />

Kim Burtman<br />

Christine Carpenter<br />

Kerry Connelly<br />

Virginia Ciulla<br />

Julie Daigle<br />

Alex DeRosa<br />

Marshall D’Avanzo<br />

Elena Drislane<br />

Sarah Haney<br />

Lori Kramich<br />

Kara Maciorowski<br />

Penny McKenzie-Venuto<br />

Maria N. Miara<br />

Catherine Owen<br />

Marilyn Phillips<br />

Marcia Poretsky<br />

Jaclyn Prizio<br />

Gale Rawding<br />

Maureen Rossi-DiMella<br />

Debra Roberts<br />

Ron Supino<br />

Patrice Slater<br />

Northruprealtors.com • 26 Main Street, <strong>Lynnfield</strong> • (781) 334.<strong>31</strong>37 & (781) 246.2100

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