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LYNNFIELD WEEKLY<br />

NEWS<br />

MARCH 7, 2019 • VOL. 63, NO. 10<br />

Inside: 01940 The Magazine<br />

SERVING THE COMMUNITY SINCE 1957<br />

16 PAGES • ONE DOLLAR<br />

IN THE NEWS<br />

Page 2:<br />

Running for<br />

a cause<br />

Page 9:<br />

Lynnfield Middle<br />

School honor roll<br />

Page 10:<br />

Girls Hockey team<br />

pounds St. Mary’s<br />

PRSRT STD<br />

ECRWSSEDDM<br />

U.S. POSTAGE<br />

PAID<br />

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LYNNFIELD, MA 01940<br />

WOBURN, MA<br />

Volunteer firefighters join LFD<br />

PHOTO | SPENSER HASAK<br />

The new Lynnfield Fire Department recruits, from left, Paul Hartz III, Ignazio LaFauci, and<br />

Anthony Gulla.<br />

By Thomas Grillo<br />

Three on-call volunteer<br />

firefighters have joined the<br />

Lynnfield Fire Department.<br />

Paul Hartz III, Anthony<br />

Gulla, and Ignazio LaFauci<br />

were among 24 graduates from<br />

a dozen fire departments who<br />

completed 240 hours of firefighter<br />

training to meet National<br />

Fire Protection Association certification.<br />

They all hope to become<br />

full-time firefighters.<br />

Hartz, 45, whose day job is<br />

an EMT for a private ambulance<br />

company, said working<br />

as a first responder is less demanding<br />

than his previous job.<br />

“Before becoming an EMT<br />

I was a chef for more than 20<br />

years, and being an EMT is actually<br />

less stressful,” he said.<br />

“For the most part we handle<br />

only one patient at a time, as<br />

opposed to feeding hundreds.”<br />

Gulla, 22, a Peabody native<br />

who works as a landscaper but<br />

hopes this volunteer job with<br />

the fire department will lead to<br />

becoming a firefighter.<br />

“I’ve wanted to be a<br />

firefighter since I was<br />

8-years-old,” he said. “I saw<br />

the red truck driving by and<br />

thought to myself, I can do<br />

that. As a call firefighter, I’m<br />

starting at the bottom to work<br />

my way up.”<br />

In addition to fighting fires,<br />

Gulla said he likes the idea of<br />

making people comfortable<br />

when faced with a disaster.<br />

“I like helping people,” he<br />

said.<br />

Legislation<br />

would<br />

end youth<br />

tackle<br />

football<br />

By Thomas Grillo<br />

If two Beacon Hill lawmakers<br />

get their way, elementary<br />

school athletes<br />

will have to find an alternative<br />

to tackle football.<br />

But opponents are pushing<br />

back, saying the measure is<br />

misguided.<br />

House Minority Leader<br />

Bradley Jones Jr. (R-North<br />

Reading), whose district includes<br />

parts of Lynnfield,<br />

and Rep. Paul Schmid III<br />

(D-Westport) have proposed<br />

No Organized Head Impacts<br />

to Schoolchildren or the NO<br />

HITS Act. The controversial<br />

measure would limit the contact<br />

sport to eighth-graders<br />

and older.<br />

If enacted, tens of thousands<br />

of youthful football<br />

players would be sidelined<br />

across the state. But advocates<br />

say children as young<br />

as 9 years old average 251<br />

head impacts a season. It’s<br />

time, they say, to outlaw<br />

tackling.<br />

Proponents say there’s<br />

substantial evidence that<br />

shows repeated head trauma<br />

can cause serious complications<br />

for a child’s developing<br />

brain.<br />

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2<br />

INDEX<br />

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

Obituaries ....................................................................................... 8<br />

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

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

Religious Notes .............................................................................. 7<br />

Seniors ........................................................................................... 6<br />

Sports .....................................................................................10-12<br />

Town takes aim at<br />

unsafe traffic locations<br />

By Thomas Grillo<br />

John C. Olimpio CPA<br />

Certified Public Accountant • Attorney at Law<br />

161 South Main Street Suite 307 • Middleton, MA 01949<br />

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All Services Provided for Businesses and Individuals<br />

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LYNNFIELD<br />

WEEKLY<br />

NEWS<br />

Lynnfield is seeking state<br />

money to improve vehicle, pedestrian<br />

and bicycle safety at<br />

more than a dozen trouble spots.<br />

Grants ranging from $25,000<br />

to $400,000 are available annually<br />

from the Massachusetts<br />

Department of Transportation’s<br />

competitive Complete Streets<br />

program. A “Complete Street” is<br />

one that provides safe and accessible<br />

options for all travel modes.<br />

A committee including the<br />

town administrator, Department<br />

of Public Works director,<br />

planner, engineer, police chief,<br />

and the superintendent of<br />

schools, have listed 15 priority<br />

locations. They are seeking the<br />

public’s feedback at a meeting<br />

on Thursday, March 14 at the<br />

Lynnfield Middle School at 7<br />

p.m.<br />

Town Administrator Robert<br />

Dolan, Town Engineer Charles<br />

Richter, and the town’s consultant<br />

will discuss the program,<br />

which leverage state<br />

funding for road and sidewalk<br />

enhancements.<br />

Among the priority locations<br />

include:<br />

● Pedestrian crossing improvements<br />

at Huckleberry Hill<br />

School, Summer Street School,<br />

Middle School and Chestnut<br />

Street that would include pedestrian<br />

crossing signals, and<br />

school zone radar signs.<br />

● Improvements to pedestrian<br />

crossing at South Common and<br />

Main streets.<br />

● Installation of a sidewalk<br />

on Main Street from Pine Hill<br />

Road to Lowell Street.<br />

If Lynnfield gets the maximum<br />

grant, they are likely to<br />

complete one the projects.<br />

The Baker administration has<br />

awarded $33 million in construction<br />

funding since creating<br />

the program three years ago.<br />

Richter said this is the first<br />

time Lynnfield has applied for<br />

funding and invites residents to<br />

make their voices heard.<br />

We reach EVERY<br />

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Let us help get your<br />

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please contact Ernie Carpenter at<br />

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WEEKLYNEWS.NET - 978-532-5880 MARCH 7, 2019<br />

Running for a cause<br />

Mark Hudson with sons, Grant and Luke.<br />

He is a long-time marathoner<br />

with four Boston Marathons<br />

under his belt, but Mark Hudson<br />

stopped running when his son<br />

Grant was diagnosed with Type<br />

1 diabetes at 2 years old.<br />

Running his typical 80-100<br />

miles a week wasn’t possible<br />

when Mark would spend his<br />

nights getting up to take care of<br />

Grant. Now Mark is back and<br />

ready to run his first marathon<br />

in nine years, this time for an<br />

extra special cause.<br />

As a member of Team Joslin,<br />

he will be running the Boston<br />

Marathon to support the Joslin<br />

Diabetes Center, a leading diabetes<br />

research and treatment facility<br />

where his son is a patient.<br />

Grant’s care was transferred<br />

to Joslin a few years after he<br />

was first diagnosed, and his parents<br />

are thankful for the switch.<br />

“Our experience at Joslin has<br />

Secrets to an organic lawn<br />

presented at Town Hall<br />

Learn how to protect your<br />

family from pesticides and develop<br />

a plan for natural lawn<br />

care.<br />

The Lynnfield and Wakefield<br />

Conservation Commissions<br />

and the Lynnfield Pesticide<br />

Awareness Committee will<br />

sponsor “Secrets to a Healthy<br />

Lawn,” a free workshop.<br />

The event will take place<br />

in the Joseph Maney Hearing<br />

Room/Selectmen’s Room of<br />

Lynnfield’s Town Hall at 55<br />

Summer St. on Wednesday,<br />

March 20 at 7 p.m.<br />

Presented by horticulturist<br />

Chip Osborne, attendees will<br />

been unbelievable, especially<br />

the support. They provide everything,<br />

from diet to on-call<br />

support,” Mark said.<br />

Joslin has been crucial for<br />

their family’s experience with<br />

Grant’s diabetes, so running as<br />

a part of Team Joslin was an<br />

easy choice for Mark.<br />

The whole family leads an active<br />

lifestyle, including Grant.<br />

Now age 7, he plays baseball,<br />

soccer, and basketball. This can<br />

be challenging, as Mark and his<br />

wife, Sarah, have to constantly<br />

monitor his blood sugar while<br />

he exercises and know when to<br />

pull him aside for some juice or<br />

a snack.<br />

“Grant plays sports non-stop,<br />

and his courage and persistence<br />

make us extremely proud,” said<br />

his father.<br />

Grant loves running just like<br />

his dad. He ran his first 5K in<br />

be taught how to minimize the<br />

dangers of pesticides found in<br />

lawn care products and build a<br />

safe alternative plan for lawn<br />

and garden maintenance.<br />

Topics covered will include<br />

soil health, watering,<br />

re-seeding, fertilizers, and<br />

natural pest and weed control<br />

techniques. It will be followed<br />

by a question and answer session.<br />

This workshop will review<br />

best practices for both<br />

do-it-yourselfers and those<br />

looking to hire a professional<br />

landscaper.<br />

Chip Osborne is co-founder<br />

of the “Living Lawn Project”<br />

Lynnfield last Fourth of July —<br />

a race Mark used to run pushing<br />

Grant in a stroller.<br />

Mark is hoping to raise<br />

$15,000 to support Joslin.<br />

He has a local fundraiser<br />

coming up and is planning<br />

a few more before the race.<br />

For more of Mark’s story and<br />

to donate to his cause, visit:<br />

https://www.crowdrise.com/o/<br />

en/campaign/joslin-diabetes-center-inc-boston-2019/<br />

markhudson14.<br />

Joslin Diabetes Center is<br />

world-renowned for its deep<br />

expertise in diabetes treatment<br />

and research. A federally designated<br />

Diabetes Research<br />

Center, affiliated with Harvard<br />

Medical School, Joslin is dedicated<br />

to finding a cure for<br />

diabetes and ensuring that<br />

people with diabetes live long,<br />

healthy lives.<br />

in Marblehead and owner of<br />

Osborne’s Organics. He has 20<br />

years’ experience creating safe,<br />

sustainable, and healthy athletic<br />

fields and landscapes through<br />

organic turf management and<br />

35 years’ experience as a professional<br />

horticulturist.<br />

His experience with conventional<br />

pesticides led him to realize<br />

their health risks, leading<br />

to a shift to a safer, natural<br />

approach.<br />

For question about the workshop,<br />

please contact Patty<br />

Fabbri at (781) 334-6774 or<br />

Emilie Cademartori at (781)<br />

334-9495.


MARCH 7, 2019<br />

Legislation would end youth tackle football<br />

FOOTBALL<br />

From page 1<br />

Children who started tackle<br />

football before age 12 were<br />

more likely to have degenerative<br />

brain disease and<br />

Alzheimer’s disease at younger<br />

ages, according to an American<br />

Neurological Association study.<br />

But athletic program directors<br />

say the legislation goes too far.<br />

“Football directors and<br />

coaches understand why they are<br />

proposing something like this,<br />

we just think it’s an awful overreach,”<br />

said Steven Connolly,<br />

president of Lynnfield Pioneer<br />

Youth Football & Cheer.<br />

Today’s youth football is different<br />

from a decade ago, he said.<br />

For example, coaches are required<br />

to be Heads Up Footballcertified.<br />

The program by USA<br />

Football, the national governing<br />

body for amateur players, is designed<br />

to advance safety.<br />

In addition, rushing the<br />

punter, and blocking and tackling<br />

leading with the head, is<br />

prohibited; helmet technology<br />

has improved and an EMT is at<br />

every game, he said.<br />

“Head injuries in football<br />

games are on the decline, while<br />

we are still seeing sprained<br />

ankles and wrists,” Connolly<br />

said. “If this is approved, there<br />

will be 160 kids in Lynnfield<br />

looking for something to do.”<br />

Peabody mother Stephanie<br />

Mastrocola has two boys who<br />

play football, a 13-year-old<br />

eighth-grader who plans to<br />

join the high school team and<br />

a 12-year-old who will be<br />

a Gladiator next fall. She is<br />

against banning tackle football.<br />

“Let parents, not the state,<br />

make these decisions for our<br />

children,” she said.<br />

William Woods, president<br />

of Peabody Youth Football &<br />

Cheer, said he’s sure there will<br />

be lots of debate.<br />

“Today’s game considerably<br />

limits not only head injuries,<br />

but injuries as a whole,” he said.<br />

If it passes, 150 kids in Peabody<br />

won’t be able to play.”<br />

Rule changes have eliminated<br />

cut blocking, the dangerous<br />

practice of going after a player’s<br />

legs, Woods said.<br />

Still, contained in the proponent’s<br />

materials is a comment<br />

from Biff Poggi, head football<br />

coach at St. Frances Academy,<br />

a predominantly African-<br />

American Catholic high school<br />

in East Baltimore. He’s not sure<br />

a child can be taught the appropriate<br />

way to block and tackle.<br />

“They’re not ready physically<br />

or emotionally,” he said. “We<br />

don’t let kids drive before the age<br />

of 16 for a reason. There ought to<br />

be really thoughtful legislation<br />

around the game of football. The<br />

consequences are too severe.”<br />

While the legislation has<br />

support from the Brain Injury<br />

Association of Massachusetts,<br />

the Concussion Legacy<br />

Foundation, and former New<br />

England Patriots linebacker Ted<br />

Johnson, a three-time Super<br />

Bowl winner with Tom Brady,<br />

one lawmaker has withdrawn<br />

his endorsement.<br />

State Rep. Donald Wong, a<br />

Saugus Republican, originally<br />

one of 17 co-sponsors, has<br />

asked his name be removed.<br />

“First, I heard from constituents<br />

who asked me to sign on<br />

because everyone wants to stop<br />

concussions,” he said. “But once<br />

I did, I got phone calls, emails and<br />

text messages from other constituents<br />

who asked me to sign off.”<br />

Officials from Saugus Pop<br />

Warner called Wong to say<br />

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

their coaches instruct the young<br />

players on how to avoid head<br />

contact, he said.<br />

For example, he said, the<br />

youthful linemen and running<br />

backs avoid the three-point<br />

stance. Used at the start of a play,<br />

it requires one hand to touch<br />

the ground while the other arm<br />

is cocked back to the hip. As a<br />

result, it’s almost impossible to<br />

avoid helmet-to-helmet contact.<br />

There seems to be diversity<br />

of opinion when it comes to the<br />

topic among football legends<br />

and the NFL.<br />

Former NFL coach John<br />

Madden has said 6-, 7-, and<br />

8-year-old kids should not be<br />

learning tackling drills.<br />

“They’re not ready for it,”<br />

he said during a round-table<br />

discussion on an NFL Network<br />

series. “They can play flag<br />

football. And with flag football<br />

you can get all the techniques.<br />

Why do we have to start with a<br />

6-year-old who was just potty<br />

trained a year ago and put a<br />

helmet on him and tackle?”<br />

But NFL Commissioner<br />

Roger Goodell offered a different<br />

point of view.<br />

“I started playing tackle<br />

football when I was 7, and I<br />

wouldn’t give up a single day of<br />

that,” he said.<br />

Jones declined multiple requests<br />

for an interview.<br />

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From page 1<br />

LaFauci, a 25-year-old physical<br />

therapy assistant and personal<br />

trainer from Lynnfield,<br />

said he wants a career with a<br />

purpose.<br />

“My goal is to be a full-time<br />

firefighter,” he said<br />

The department has nine fulltime<br />

firefighters and 35 on call.<br />

They are paid hourly when they<br />

respond to a call. Fire Chief<br />

Glenn Davis said the men were<br />

selected by a hiring committee.<br />

“I appreciate the fact that they<br />

came forward and want to give<br />

back to their community,” he<br />

said. “I look forward to working<br />

with them.”<br />

State Fire Marshal Peter<br />

Ostroskey said the Call/<br />

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They may be called to rescue a<br />

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They practice first under nonfire<br />

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WEEKLYNEWS.NET - 978-532-5880 MARCH 7, 2019<br />

Police Log<br />

Summons<br />

Peter Malan, 24, of 114<br />

Nahant St., Apt. 3, Wakefield,<br />

following a motor vehicle complaint<br />

on Condon Circle on<br />

Saturday at 12:58 p.m. for the<br />

unlicensed operation of a motor<br />

vehicle, an uninsured vehicle<br />

and attaching plates. Phil’s<br />

Towing on scene.<br />

Accidents<br />

Minor motor vehicle crash<br />

with property damage reported<br />

on Wednesday at 9:45 a.m. at<br />

771 Salem St. and 462 South<br />

Broadway. Officer reports no<br />

injuries and the Massachusetts<br />

State Police is on scene.<br />

Motor vehicle crash with<br />

property damage reported<br />

on Tuesday at 7:28 a.m. at<br />

Starbucks at 420 Market St.<br />

Officer assisted with paperwork<br />

exchange.<br />

Alarms<br />

Burglar alarm canceled by<br />

the alarm company at 18 Olde<br />

Towne Road on Thursday at<br />

8:52 a.m.<br />

Accidental fire alarm pulled at<br />

Charles Schwab at 200 Market<br />

St. on Thursday at 11:43 a.m.<br />

Call handled by the Lynnfield<br />

Fire Department.<br />

A 911 call from 215 Edgemere<br />

Road was received on Friday<br />

at 1:47 a.m. Call referred to<br />

Peabody Police Department.<br />

A 911 hangup call was received<br />

on Wednesday at 11:25<br />

a.m. from the Summer Street<br />

School at 262 Summer St.<br />

Officer reports no service<br />

necessary.<br />

Accidental burglar alarm triggered<br />

by the homeowner at 470<br />

Main St. on Wednesday at 8:31<br />

p.m.<br />

A 911 hang up call from 2<br />

Locksley Road on Tuesday at<br />

10:14 p.m.<br />

Alarm company reported an<br />

accidental burglar alarm at 21<br />

Midland Road on Wednesday at<br />

2:49 a.m. Officer reports everything<br />

is OK, checked out property<br />

with homeowner.<br />

False burglar alarm reported<br />

at Lynnfield High School at 275<br />

Essex St. on Wednesday at 5:37<br />

a.m. Officer reports all is secure.<br />

Accidental burglar alarm reported<br />

at 10:34 a.m. Monday at<br />

34 Heritage Lane. Officer reports<br />

all is secure.<br />

Fire alarm reported at the<br />

Boston Sports Club at 425<br />

Walnut St. on Monday at 6:03<br />

p.m.<br />

Canceled burglar alarm at<br />

Tommy Bahama at 1330 Market<br />

St. on Monday at 9:36 p.m.<br />

Unsecured door reported at<br />

the Huckleberry Hill School at 5<br />

Knoll Road on Tuesday at 12:08<br />

a.m. Officer reports door No. 10<br />

was not locked and was unable<br />

to secure it. Officer tried to contact<br />

custodian and left message.<br />

Accidental burglar alarm reported<br />

at 10:34 a.m. Monday at<br />

34 Heritage Lane. Officer reports<br />

all is secure.<br />

Fire alarm reported at the<br />

Boston Sports Club at 425<br />

Walnut St. on Monday at 6:03<br />

p.m.<br />

Canceled burglar alarm at<br />

Tommy Bahama at 1330 Market<br />

St. on Monday at 9:36 p.m.<br />

Unsecured door reported at<br />

the Huckleberry Hill School at 5<br />

Knoll Road on Tuesday at 12:08<br />

a.m. Officer reports door No. 10<br />

was not locked and was unable<br />

to secure it. Officer tried to contact<br />

custodian and left message.<br />

Animal Control<br />

Caller reported a hawk on the<br />

LYNNFIELD WEEKLY<br />

NEWS<br />

(USPS Permit #168)<br />

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

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

News and Advertising Offices: 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 />

Advertising Reps: Ralph Mitchell rmitchell@essexmediagroup.com<br />

Patricia Whalen<br />

Ernie Carpenter<br />

pwhalen@essexmediagroup.com<br />

ecarpenter@essexmediagroup.com<br />

David McBournie dmcbournie@itemlive.com<br />

Retail Price: $1.00<br />

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

Classified Ads: Monday, noon;<br />

No cancellations accepted after deadline.<br />

The Lynnfield 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 Lynnfield<br />

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

available in several locations throughout Lynnfield. The Lynnfield 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 Lynnfield 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 Lynnfield Weekly News, P.O. Box 5, Lynn, MA 01903. © 2016 Essex<br />

Media Group, Inc.<br />

road in front of 195 Summer<br />

St. that is causing traffic problems<br />

on Monday at 5:06 p.m.<br />

Police unable to locate animal.<br />

The Animal Control officer was<br />

contacted.<br />

Complaints<br />

Caller reported motor vehicle<br />

damaged in the parking lot at<br />

Sunrise Assisted Living at 55<br />

Salem St. on Thursday at 7:07<br />

am. Officer report damage was<br />

from a snow removal company.<br />

Resident of 30 Stillman Road<br />

reported footprints on his property<br />

on Thursday at 2:14 p.m.<br />

Caller reported two suspicious<br />

men who appear to be attempting<br />

to break into the home<br />

at 7 Saunders Road on Thursday<br />

at 2:17 p.m.<br />

Disabled auto reported at<br />

330 Walnut St. at 1 Alexandra<br />

Road on Thursday at 10:09<br />

p.m. Officer stood by for Gaeta’s<br />

Towing.<br />

Resident from 4 Charing<br />

Cross would like to speak with<br />

police about an incident which<br />

occurred a few days ago on<br />

Thursday at 7:10 p.m.<br />

Caller reports a vehicle is<br />

parked overnight at 78 Pine Hill<br />

Road on Wednesday at 3:52<br />

p.m.<br />

Report of an open window in<br />

the house across the street from<br />

1 Hunting Lane on Wednesday<br />

at 4:33 p.m. Officer shut the<br />

window and all is secure.<br />

Police assisted with traffic<br />

control at 605 Walnut St. at 1<br />

Sparhawk Drive on Wednesday<br />

at 5:14 p.m. as a disabled tractor<br />

trailer made a delivery.<br />

Resident at 20 Fletcher Road<br />

wants police to check his home<br />

because he found an open door<br />

inside the garage on Wednesday<br />

at 8:46 p.m. Officer reports all is<br />

OK.<br />

Motor vehicle in road reported<br />

on Thursday at 6:16 a.m. at 11<br />

Homestead Road. Officer spoke<br />

with resident and had them remove<br />

the vehicle.<br />

Officer wanted at 1303 Essex<br />

Village on Tuesday at 1:30 p.m.<br />

Report taken.<br />

Caller reports a black SUV<br />

parked in a no parking zone at<br />

the Elizabeth Green Library at 18<br />

Summer St. on Tuesday at 5:57<br />

p.m. Officer reports all vehicles<br />

are parked legally.<br />

Victoria’s Secret at 710 Market<br />

St. reported several larcenies<br />

over the last week on Tuesday at<br />

6:10 p.m. Officer took report.<br />

Report of a gray BMW with<br />

New Hampshire plates playing<br />

loud music at 375 North<br />

Broadway on Tuesday a 11:02<br />

p.m. Officer spoke with operator<br />

who was advised to lower<br />

volume.<br />

Caller reported wires down at<br />

4 Orchard Lane at 4 Apple Hill<br />

Lane on Monday at 10:22 a.m.<br />

Officer reports call handled by<br />

the Reading Municipal Light<br />

Department.<br />

Tree down reported on<br />

Monday at 10:49 a.m. at the 99<br />

Restaurant at 317 Salem St. Call<br />

handled by the Department of<br />

Public Works.<br />

Report of a tree blocking the<br />

road at 450 Chestnut St. at 3<br />

Alderney Way on Monday at<br />

11:05 a.m. Officer reports services<br />

rendered.<br />

Larceny reported at Whole<br />

Foods Market at 100 Market St.<br />

on Monday at 1:15 p.m.<br />

Live wires down at 59 Edward<br />

Ave. on Monday at 3:30 p.m.<br />

Tree fallen on a house reported<br />

at 27 Canterbury Road<br />

on Monday at 3:47 p.m. Call<br />

handled by the Lynnfield Fire<br />

Department.<br />

Officer wanted at Center<br />

Market at 588 Main St. for a man<br />

who left his keys in his vehicle<br />

on Monday at 4:45 p.m. and is<br />

unable to locate the car. Officer<br />

checked the area and could not<br />

locate the calling party.<br />

Caller reported a tree into a<br />

house at 372 Summer St. on<br />

Monday at 5:53 p.m. Officer<br />

reports the accident happened<br />

hours ago and the tree company<br />

and insurance adjuster are on<br />

scene.<br />

Report of a street light that<br />

has become detached and is<br />

blowing in the wind on Partridge<br />

Lane on Monday at 8:40 p.m.<br />

Caller reported wires down at<br />

4 Orchard Lane at 4 Apple Hill<br />

Lane on Monday at 10:22<br />

a.m. Officer reports call handled<br />

by the Reading Municipal Light<br />

Department.<br />

Tree down reported on<br />

Monday at 10:49 a.m. at the 99<br />

Restaurant at 317 Salem St. Call<br />

handled by the Department of<br />

Public Works.<br />

Report of a tree blocking the<br />

road at 450 Chestnut St. at 3<br />

Alderney Way on Monday at<br />

11:05 a.m. Officer reports services<br />

rendered.<br />

Larceny reported at Whole<br />

Foods Market at 100 Market St.<br />

on Monday at 1:15 p.m.<br />

Live wires down at 59 Edward<br />

Ave. on Monday at 3:30 p.m.<br />

Tree fallen on a house reported<br />

at 27 Canterbury Road<br />

on Monday at 3:47 p.m. Call<br />

handled by the Lynnfield Fire<br />

Department.<br />

Officer wanted at Center<br />

Market at 588 Main St. for a man<br />

who left his keys in his vehicle<br />

on Monday at 4:45 p.m. and is<br />

unable to locate the car. Officer<br />

checked the area and could not<br />

locate the calling party.<br />

Caller reported a tree into a<br />

house at 372 Summer St. on<br />

Monday at 5:53 p.m. Officer<br />

reports the accident happened<br />

hours ago and the tree company<br />

and insurance adjuster are on<br />

scene.<br />

Report of a street light that<br />

has become detached and is<br />

blowing in the wind on Partridge<br />

Lane on Monday at 8:40 p.m.<br />

Medical Aid<br />

Lynnfield Fire Department<br />

received a request for medical<br />

attention at 856 Salem St. on<br />

Thursday at 10:36 a.m. Patient<br />

taken to Massachusetts General<br />

Hospital.<br />

Ambulance company requested<br />

assistance at 47<br />

Underhill Road on Thursday<br />

at 2:40 p.m. to get a resident<br />

into the home. Lynnfield Fire<br />

Department handled the call.<br />

Ambulance requested at<br />

American Eagle Outfitters at 740<br />

Market St. on Wednesday at<br />

4:48 p.m. Patient taken to Salem<br />

Hospital.<br />

Medical aid rescue requested<br />

at Davio’s Restaurant at 1250<br />

Market St. on Wednesday at<br />

7:30 p.m. Officer reports patient<br />

refused assistance.<br />

Caller reported an 81-year-old<br />

man was experiencing shortness<br />

of breath at 7 Lookout Terrace<br />

on Tuesday at 10:23 a.m. Patient<br />

taken to the hospital.<br />

Request for an ambulance at<br />

2 Pocahontas Way on Tuesday<br />

at 1:40 p.m. for an elderly man<br />

with an irregular heartbeat.<br />

Patient taken to the hospital.<br />

Caller reported a person<br />

having a seizure at Claire’s at<br />

660 Market St. on Monday at<br />

6:30 p.m.


MARCH 7, 2019<br />

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

Letter to the editor<br />

In praise of the rail trail<br />

On Tuesday, April 9, we will<br />

be asked for a second time to<br />

vote on the proposed rail trail<br />

along MBTA land.<br />

Since the rail trail project was<br />

approved by one vote at Town<br />

Meeting, I have seen opinion<br />

pieces opposed to this project. I<br />

feel compelled to write in support<br />

of the trail and encourage<br />

voters to learn more about this<br />

proposed recreational path for<br />

yourself.<br />

A group of local residents,<br />

known as the Friends of the<br />

Lynnfield Rail Trail, has been<br />

gathering information about the<br />

proposed trail for years. Please<br />

take advantage of their efforts<br />

and check out their website:<br />

http://www.lynnfieldrailtrail.<br />

org/home.html.<br />

I have found the FAQs to be<br />

especially informative about<br />

the expected costs and benefits<br />

of the trail. I’ll cite a few of the<br />

many facts found there. The expected<br />

costs are not high. Our<br />

cost to lease the land for the trail<br />

from the MBTA for 99 years is<br />

zero. The cost to maintain the<br />

trail will be about $5,000 annually,<br />

and it is expected that volunteer<br />

efforts and donations can<br />

supply much of this.<br />

Home sales slid during the shiver season<br />

BY THOMAS GRILLO<br />

Even if no volunteer support<br />

is provided, John Tomasz,<br />

Lynnfield’s director of the<br />

Public Works Department, has<br />

estimated maintenance costs at<br />

$6,800 per year plus occasional<br />

boardwalk repair of $2,000.<br />

What about a cost of increased<br />

crime?<br />

There is just no reason to expect<br />

an increase. Interviews with<br />

chiefs of police from Danvers,<br />

Topsfield, Newburyport,<br />

Bedford and Lexington have all<br />

revealed that properties along<br />

rail trails experience levels of<br />

crime that are either similar to<br />

or less than other parts of their<br />

communities.<br />

Roughly speaking, if we divide<br />

$7,800 annually by 4,200<br />

homes in Lynnfield, we are<br />

talking about a local recreational<br />

path that costs peanuts,<br />

less than $2 per year for every<br />

Lynnfield household.<br />

Now, what about the benefits?<br />

Even if you don’t plan to use<br />

the trail yourself, there’s a good<br />

chance it will increase your<br />

property’s value.<br />

Real estate brokers in<br />

Newburyport, Danvers,<br />

Lexington and Bedford who<br />

have listed and sold properties<br />

Single-family home sales<br />

dropped to start the year in<br />

Lynnfield as freezing temperatures<br />

and multiple snow storms<br />

kept potential buyers away, according<br />

to The Warren Group,<br />

the Boston real estate tracker.<br />

The number of homes sold<br />

in January slipped to a dozen,<br />

down from 16 for the same<br />

month a year ago, a 25 percent<br />

drop. But as hot markets like<br />

Does<br />

Lynnfield<br />

matter to your<br />

business?<br />

Send your message to<br />

every household in town.<br />

A speakeasy? In Lynnfield? DiFillippo is right at home<br />

Women have<br />

cornered<br />

the Market<br />

01940 Magazine is the only publication that is<br />

delivered to all 5,000 households in Lynnfi eld.<br />

For information please contact:<br />

Ernie Carpenter<br />

Director of Sales<br />

ecarpenter@essexmediagroup.com<br />

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

ESSEX MEDIA GROUP<br />

along their rail trails say the<br />

presence of the rail trail had no<br />

detrimental effect on the marketing<br />

of their properties and<br />

in most instances had a positive<br />

impact on the value of homes.<br />

The greatest benefits will be<br />

to the Lynnfield residents who<br />

use the trail to get more exercise<br />

in the fresh air, enjoy recreation<br />

with neighbors, and appreciate<br />

Reedy Meadow.<br />

My husband and I moved to<br />

Lynnfield four years ago, and<br />

we have two young children.<br />

The great schools were a big<br />

draw, and so was MarketStreet,<br />

the Summer Concerts on the<br />

Town Commons, and the possibility<br />

of a rail trail near our<br />

home.<br />

The rail trail would be a lowcost<br />

benefit that gets more of<br />

us outside, walking and riding<br />

our bikes together. This is the<br />

kind of town I envisioned when<br />

I moved here, and the kind of<br />

town where I want to raise my<br />

kids.<br />

Whatever your own views,<br />

please be a well-informed voter<br />

on April 9. See you at Town<br />

Meeting, and hope to see you<br />

on the rail trail.<br />

Kristen Cooper<br />

Lynnfield saw last year, despite<br />

slower sales, prices continued<br />

to rise.<br />

The medium price for a single<br />

family home swelled by nearly<br />

4 percent to $653,500, up from<br />

$619,500 one year ago.<br />

WINTER 2018<br />

Weekly ask<br />

the expert<br />

This week’s expert is<br />

Tom Patch<br />

Loan Officer<br />

MLO# 142695<br />

Direct: 781-309-1807<br />

tpatch@meploans.com<br />

Question: Are there programs<br />

with 100% financing?<br />

Answer: YES!!<br />

VA loans are guaranteed by the US<br />

Department of Veterans Affairs for<br />

veterans, current military members,<br />

reservists and select surviving<br />

spouses (provided they haven’t<br />

remarried). They can be used for<br />

single-family homes, condos, multiunit<br />

homes, manufactured homes<br />

and new construction.<br />

These loans allow veterans to<br />

purchase properties with no down<br />

payment!!<br />

VA loans allow veterans to qualify<br />

for larger loan amounts than<br />

traditional conforming loans.<br />

Tom Patch is an expert in VA loans<br />

and MEP offers special incentives<br />

for our veterans. Call for more<br />

information at 781-309-1807.<br />

MEP is a mortgage banking firm providing<br />

mortgages to homeowners throughout New<br />

England and other parts of the United States.<br />

This is a recurring column that will appear every<br />

other week as a service to the local community.<br />

MEP is locally owned and operated with corporate<br />

headquarters in Lynnfield.<br />

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

mortgage related questions, please contact Tom<br />

Patch at 781-309-1807.<br />

MEPLoans.com / NMLS#1936


6<br />

WEEKLYNEWS.NET - 978-532-5880 MARCH 7, 2019<br />

Seniors<br />

LYNNFIELD<br />

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

Lunch: Lentil soup.<br />

*****<br />

Aerobics, TOPS meeting.<br />

SENIOR CENTER<br />

stitch and chat. 9:15 a.m.<br />

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

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

*****<br />

Wednesday, March 13<br />

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

Trips<br />

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

8:30 a.m. Exercise room,<br />

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

Yoga, Mah Jongg lesson,<br />

Monday, March 11<br />

Zumba, hairdresser. 9 a.m.<br />

March 12 Celtic Angels St<br />

Paddy’s Show at Venus de<br />

Milo — $92<br />

March 13 New England<br />

Flower Show — $21<br />

March 20 IKEA — $5<br />

March 27 Calef’s Country<br />

Store and Tuckaway Tavern<br />

— $5<br />

Activities<br />

Thursday, March 7<br />

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

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

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

“Adult Foster Care of<br />

the North Shore has<br />

offered unwavering<br />

support from day one.<br />

When I was admitted for<br />

emergency surgery, the<br />

AFCNS team made<br />

sure my brother<br />

was in good<br />

hands while<br />

I recovered.”<br />

Parkinson’s support group.<br />

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

11 a.m. Aerobic dance<br />

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

Lunch: Meatloaf. 12:30<br />

p.m. Veterans coffee social,<br />

Bridge.<br />

*****<br />

Friday, March 8<br />

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

friend’s breakfast. 9 a.m.<br />

Blood pressure and file of<br />

life, hairdresser, Broadway<br />

jazz dance class, acrylic<br />

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

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

Chair yoga video. 10:30<br />

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

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

line dance/tap dance, chair<br />

yoga, sit and tone with Darci.<br />

11 a.m. Yoga for strength.<br />

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

movie: Ocean’s Eight. Noon<br />

Bowling, oil painting. 12:30<br />

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

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

*****<br />

Tuesday, March 12<br />

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

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

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

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

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

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

Intermediate Italian, friends<br />

Big Band dance. 10 a.m. Tai<br />

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

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

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

Knee care, Tripoley, artist<br />

drop in, alternations with<br />

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

video -free. 10 a.m. Chair<br />

yoga, embroidery. 10:15<br />

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

a.m. Lunch: Corned beef and<br />

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

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

PETER A. TORIGIAN<br />

SENIOR CENTER<br />

Activities<br />

Thursday, March 7<br />

8-9 a.m. Breakfast. 8 a.m.<br />

Legislative breakfast. 8:30<br />

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

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

dancing, advanced painting.<br />

10 a.m. Fall risk evaluation.<br />

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

1 p.m. Sing-along. 2 p.m.<br />

Show rehearsal.<br />

*****<br />

Friday, March 8<br />

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

*****<br />

Monday, March 11<br />

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

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

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

Bridge, model ship building,<br />

Bingo. 2 p.m. Caregivers support<br />

group.<br />

*****<br />

Tuesday, March 12<br />

8-9:30 a.m. Cafe breakfast.<br />

9 a.m. Taxes, hug-a-bears.<br />

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

Exercise with Edye, Bunka<br />

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

dancing. Noon Mah Jongg.<br />

12:30 p.m. Crocheting/knitting.<br />

4 p.m. Drivers meeting.<br />

*****<br />

Wednesday, March 13<br />

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

Reacts, rug hooking, wood<br />

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

12:30 p.m. Low vision<br />

~ Toots, Caregiver to Brother, George<br />

club, watercolor class.<br />

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

group, model ship building.<br />

978-281-2612<br />

AdultFosterCareNS.com<br />

Celebrating 15 Years<br />

St. Patrick’s Day party.<br />

Contact the<br />

Editor,<br />

PIERCING THE OPIOID MYTH<br />

Tell us your<br />

stories,<br />

As the American public struggles to deal with an opioid epidemic<br />

that is ruining lives as well as taking them, a new study suggests that<br />

these drugs do not deserve their reputation as powerful painkillers.<br />

According to a year-long study of people suffering from chronic<br />

backaches or hip or knee arthritis, opioids were found to work no<br />

better than over-the-counter drugs or other non-opioids at reducing<br />

problems with walking or sleeping. On top of that, researchers found<br />

that opioids provided only slightly more pain relief than the other<br />

drugs. Therefore, researchers concluded that opioids are an inferior<br />

choice to pain relievers such as ibuprofen and acetaminophen,<br />

because they also carry more risk for complications such as addiction<br />

and death.<br />

We Want To<br />

Hear From You!<br />

tgrillo<br />

@essexmediagroup.com<br />

Opioids can be addictive even when only taken for a short period of<br />

time. Your pharmacist is your best source of information about<br />

preparing for and recognizing an opioid overdose and can also help<br />

you use self-care and other non-opioid pain relievers to manage pain.<br />

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

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

HINT: In 2017, U.S. government guidelines said that opioid<br />

treatments are not the preferred treatment for chronic pain and should<br />

only be used if other methods do not work.<br />

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


MARCH 7, 2019<br />

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

Religious Notes<br />

Calvary Christian<br />

Church<br />

47 Grove St., Lynnfield<br />

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

Senior Pastor Timothy<br />

Schmidt would like to invite<br />

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

Sunday worship services at<br />

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

p.m. and 6:30 p.m. Children’s<br />

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

all Sunday morning services.<br />

Hispanic Service: Sunday<br />

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

Chapel. Celebrate Recovery:<br />

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

Adult Ministry: Wednesday<br />

at 7 p.m. ages 18-30’s. Youth<br />

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

ages 12-18. Weekly Prayer<br />

Meetings: Monday - Friday<br />

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

p.m. Church office hours are<br />

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

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

contact our church office<br />

at 781-592-4722, office@<br />

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

website www.lynnfield-ccc.<br />

org.<br />

Centre Congregational<br />

Church<br />

5 Summer St., Lynnfield,<br />

781-334-3050 or www.<br />

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<br />

Church of Christ. Whoever<br />

you are and wherever you<br />

are on life’s journey, you are<br />

welcome. Our worship services<br />

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

Sunday morning. We strive<br />

to provide inspiring, downto-earth<br />

messages that are<br />

applicable to everyday life.<br />

We are committed to providing<br />

children a warm, safe,<br />

and inclusive environment<br />

with vibrant and engaging<br />

Children’s Programming<br />

(Godly Play, Whole People<br />

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

and trained and consistent<br />

staff, incorporating opportunities<br />

for stories, music, and<br />

service. Free nursery care is<br />

available for children up to<br />

age 4, with a new transition<br />

class beginning in January<br />

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

have a Young Families Group<br />

that offers fellowship opportunities<br />

for parents and children<br />

together. We have ample<br />

parking in a large lot behind<br />

the church and the facility is<br />

handicap accessible. Please<br />

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

or visit www.Centre-Church.<br />

org for updated information<br />

about our ministries and<br />

activities.<br />

Please feel free to contact<br />

the church office if you<br />

would like more information<br />

about any of these activities.<br />

(781-334-3050 or office@<br />

centre-church.org)<br />

Office Hours at the church<br />

are 9 a.m. – 3 p.m. Monday<br />

– Friday.<br />

Tower Day School is located<br />

at Centre Congregational<br />

Church and Director, Leah<br />

O’Brien may be reached at<br />

towerdayschool@gmail.com<br />

or 781-334-5576.<br />

Lynnfield Community<br />

Church<br />

735 Salem St., Lynnfield<br />

(781) 599-4421<br />

LynnfieldCommunity<br />

Church.org.<br />

Lynnfield Community<br />

Church welcomes you to<br />

Sunday worship at 10-11 a.m.<br />

Following our service, join us<br />

for coffee and fellowship in<br />

Marshall Hall. Parking is behind<br />

the church and there are<br />

entrances in front and on the<br />

side of the building. Please<br />

visit soon.<br />

Messiah Lutheran<br />

Church<br />

708 Lowell St., Lynnfield<br />

781-334-4111<br />

Email: pastor@mlcspirit.<br />

org<br />

The Sunday morning<br />

schedule begins at 9 am with<br />

an inter-generational Growing<br />

Together hour of Bible Study,<br />

prayer, fun and service.<br />

Sunday morning worship is<br />

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

yet family-friendly style.<br />

At 7:01 Wednesday is the<br />

min-week prayer service. All<br />

are welcome to join in prayer<br />

for families and friends,<br />

schools and communities, the<br />

nation and the world. Those<br />

who cannot make it in person<br />

may send their prayer requests<br />

to pastordaveb@mlcspirit.org<br />

Rev. Dr. Jeremy Pekari and<br />

Rev. David Brezina serve<br />

Messiah Lutheran Church.<br />

Lynnfield Catholic<br />

Collaborative<br />

112 Chestnut St.,<br />

Lynnfield<br />

Our Lady of the<br />

Assumption and St. Maria<br />

Goretti<br />

The Lynnfield Catholic<br />

Collaborative, comprised of<br />

Our Lady of the Assumption<br />

Church, Salem and Grove<br />

Streets, and Saint Maria<br />

Goretti Church, 112 Chestnut<br />

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

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

by email: jsano@ola-smg.<br />

org or by visiting the website:<br />

lynnfieldcatholic.org.<br />

The Pastoral Leadership<br />

Team: The Pastor is Rev. Paul<br />

E. Ritt, the Parochial Vicar<br />

is Rev. Anthony Luongo and<br />

the Deacons are Thomas<br />

O’Shea and Ed Elibero.<br />

Donna Delahanty is Director<br />

of Parish Ministries.<br />

Office hours: Monday<br />

through Thursday 8 a.m. - 4<br />

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

closed for holidays.<br />

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

St. Maria Goretti (112<br />

Chestnut Street, Lynnfield)<br />

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

Sunday: 10 a.m.<br />

Tuesdays and Thursdays: 9<br />

a.m.<br />

St. Paul’s Episcopal<br />

Church<br />

127 Summer St.,<br />

Lynnfield<br />

781-334-4594<br />

Rev. Rob Bacon serves as<br />

rector of St. Paul’s Episcopal<br />

Church. Founded in 1918,<br />

its mission is to connect with<br />

God and each other through<br />

worship, prayer, service, and<br />

study.<br />

We offer Sunday services at<br />

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

care is available, as well as<br />

classes for K-6 students.<br />

Students in grades 7-12<br />

meet at 10 a.m. the 2nd & 4th<br />

Sundays of the month for discussion,<br />

learning, sharing, socializing,<br />

volunteering. This<br />

Youth Group participates in<br />

the local, ecumenical Giv2,<br />

which gives teens opportunities<br />

to live their faith through<br />

service.<br />

On Mondays, at 6 p.m.,<br />

St. Paul’s parishioners and<br />

friends gather for Centering<br />

Prayer. Introduction to<br />

Centering Prayer is offered<br />

the first Monday of the month<br />

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

and Bible Study are offered<br />

Wednesday mornings, from 9<br />

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

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

or email to office@<br />

stpaulslynnfield.org.<br />

Temple Emmanuel<br />

120 Chestnut St.,<br />

Wakefield<br />

Temple Emmanuel of<br />

Wakefield is affiliated with<br />

the Jewish Reconstructionist<br />

Communities. We offer a<br />

contemporary approach to<br />

Judaism while maintaining a<br />

respect for traditional Jewish<br />

values. We are a caring and<br />

inclusive community through<br />

learning and community activities.<br />

Besides Shabbat and<br />

Festival services, there is a<br />

Sisterhood and Temple Reads<br />

Book Club, Shabbat dinners,<br />

concerts and other programs.<br />

Consult the temple website<br />

and Facebook page for updated<br />

information.<br />

Temple Emmanuel’s<br />

mission is to be an inclusive<br />

and welcoming Jewish<br />

Reconstructionist Community<br />

devoted to learning, spirituality,<br />

and caring for each individual.<br />

At Temple Emmanuel<br />

we are building a vibrant<br />

future in honor of our past,<br />

utilizing ancient traditions<br />

to provide meaning and sustenance<br />

in our contemporary<br />

lives. There is a chairlift to<br />

the second floor social hall.<br />

Visitors are encouraged to<br />

come to services and events<br />

that interest them.<br />

Shabbat services, led by<br />

Rabbi Greg Hersh are held<br />

most Friday evenings at 7:30<br />

p.m. and Saturday mornings<br />

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

Second Saturday morning is<br />

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

a Jewish Meditation Circle is<br />

on the third Friday evening at<br />

7:30 p.m.<br />

Visit<br />

www.<br />

WakefieldTemple.org for<br />

complete schedule of services,<br />

family events, and<br />

Continuing Education<br />

programs.<br />

The Temple website<br />

(www.WakefieldTemple.<br />

org) has the complete list<br />

of Rosh Hashanah and Yom<br />

Kippur services. Seats may<br />

be reserved by calling Phil<br />

617-688-0870.<br />

The Church of Jesus<br />

Christ of Latter-day Saints<br />

400 Essex St., Lynnfield.<br />

lds.org<br />

Sunday services and classes<br />

are from 9 a.m. to noon;<br />

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

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

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

Primary and Youth Classes;<br />

Youth Night and Boy/Cub<br />

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

Bishop: Matthew Romano,<br />

781-334-5586. Family<br />

History Center, Wednesdays<br />

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

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

before coming due to weather<br />

or for summer hours.<br />

Wakefield-Lynnfield<br />

United Methodist Church<br />

273 Vernon St., Wakefield<br />

Pastor: Glenn M. Mortimer<br />

Sunday<br />

Worship<br />

Services:<br />

Summer: Sunday, July 1<br />

through Labor Weekend Sun.<br />

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

Service.<br />

School Year: Sept. 8<br />

through June 30, 2019 - 10:30<br />

a.m.<br />

Knit, Pray & Crochet<br />

Ministry meets at 10 a.m. on<br />

the 1st and 3rd Mondays of<br />

each month at the church to<br />

chat, learn to knit & crochet<br />

and to make items like blankets,<br />

hats, mittens, scarves,<br />

prayer shawls and prayer<br />

squares for people in need.<br />

Following the service,<br />

we enjoy Fellowship at our<br />

Coffee & Conversation time.<br />

There are also many ways<br />

to serve the community<br />

through volunteer opportunities,<br />

social groups and<br />

committees like Ecumenical<br />

Youth Group, Choir, Book<br />

Club, Sunday School, Bible<br />

Study, United Methodist<br />

Women, Ministry Leadership<br />

Team, Card Care Club, Craft<br />

Fair Committee, just to name<br />

a few. We offer our building<br />

to groups like Happy Hearts<br />

Preschool, Cub Scouts,<br />

Girl Scouts, Wakefield Arts<br />

& Crafts Society, Music<br />

Together-Preschool Music,<br />

Kids Curtain Call Drama<br />

for Middle Schoolers, and<br />

Wakefield Toy Swap. We are<br />

also a Project Linus Blanket<br />

Drop-off spot.<br />

We have musicians “In the<br />

House” as our Pastor, Rev.<br />

Glenn Mortimer, and his wife,<br />

Elizabeth, are musicians, and<br />

incorporate music into special<br />

church services for all to<br />

enjoy. For more information<br />

about our church, please call<br />

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

1359 or email us at our new<br />

email WLUMC273@gmail.<br />

com. Visit us on Facebook<br />

www.facebook.com/<br />

methodistchurchwakefield.<br />

LYNNFIELD<br />

WEEKLY<br />

NEWS<br />

We reach EVERY<br />

household in Lynnfield<br />

every week.<br />

Let us help get your<br />

message in front of all<br />

of Lynnfield.<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


8<br />

Helping out the<br />

A Bed for Every Child initiative<br />

WEEKLYNEWS.NET - 978-532-5880 MARCH 7, 2019<br />

Obituaries<br />

Students from Our Lady of<br />

Assumption (OLA) School, and<br />

the St. Maria Goretti and Our<br />

Lady of the Assumption faith<br />

formation programs, spent a<br />

Saturday morning last month<br />

building, sanding, and painting 10<br />

beds for “A Bed for Every Child”<br />

initiative of the Massachusetts<br />

Coalition for the Homeless.<br />

The project is part of<br />

the Lynnfield Catholic<br />

Collaborative’s continuing support<br />

for “A Bed for Every Child.”<br />

The Collaborative raised more<br />

than $10,000 last December to<br />

help pay for 41 beds for needy<br />

children.<br />

To learn more about the A Bed<br />

for Every Child initiative, visit<br />

https://www.mahomeless.org/abed-for-every-child-initiative.<br />

To watch a video of the Lynnfield<br />

Catholic Collaborative’s<br />

bed-building event, go to<br />

https://www.youtube.com/<br />

watch?v=73UqQw2Bd0s&t=2s.<br />

Romain (DiPaolo) Bavaro<br />

LYYNFIELD, REVERE,<br />

SAUGUS — Romain (Di-<br />

Paolo) Bavaro of Peabody<br />

formerly of Revere<br />

on February 28, 2019.<br />

Beloved wife of the late<br />

Vincent Bavaro. Devoted<br />

mother of Renae<br />

Coleman and her husband<br />

Kerrie of Lynnfield.<br />

Cherished grandmother of Ava<br />

and Christian Coleman. Dear sister<br />

of Teresa Lynch and her late<br />

husband Edward of Revere, and<br />

Michael DiPaolo Sr. and his wife<br />

Jane of Saugus. Adoring aunt of<br />

Shawn and Juliann Lynch, and<br />

Michael DiPaolo Jr., Peter, Christopher<br />

and Dominique DiPaolo.<br />

Service information: A Funeral<br />

will be held at<br />

the Paul Buonfiglio<br />

& Sons-Bruno Funeral<br />

Home 128 Revere<br />

St., Revere, on Friday,<br />

March 8, 2019,<br />

at 9 a.m. Memorial<br />

Mass in St. Anthony’s<br />

Church at 10 a.m. Relatives<br />

and friends are<br />

kindly invited. A memorial visitation<br />

will be held on Thursday<br />

from 4-8 p.m. Interment<br />

Holy Cross Cemetery. In lieu<br />

of flowers donations can be<br />

made to Donation Processing,<br />

The Michael J. Fox Foundation,<br />

P.O. Box 5014, Hagerstown,<br />

MD 21741-5014. For guest<br />

book www.Buonfiglio.com<br />

A Bed for Every Child’s Program Director Tina Giarla and Lynnfield Catholic Collaborative’s<br />

pastor, the Rev. Paul Ritt.<br />

Hard at work: Isabella Paolini, Joy Pham, OLA eighth-grade teacher Christine Geaney, and<br />

Jack Swales.<br />

Catering<br />

available<br />

SU CHANG’S<br />

Authentic Chinese Cuisine<br />

Functions<br />

from 2-200<br />

All Your Special Events<br />

Can Be Celebrated at Su Chang’s<br />

Live Music From 6:30-8:30 on Wednesdays<br />

Rehearsal Dinners • Anniversaries • Birthdays • Holiday Parties<br />

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

Prayer to the Blessed Virgin<br />

(never known to fail)<br />

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

you. Thank you.<br />

M.D.S.<br />

Marino Cuozzo, 94<br />

Have a story to share?<br />

Need a question answered?<br />

contactus@essexmedia.group<br />

EAST BOSTON, RE-<br />

VERE, SCITUATE —<br />

CUOZZO ~ “Buddy”<br />

Marino, 94, formerly of<br />

both East Boston and<br />

Lynnfield passed away<br />

peacefully at home in<br />

Scituate surrounded by<br />

his loving family. Born<br />

October 9, 1924 in East<br />

Boston to Rose and Valentino<br />

Cuozzo, who came to America<br />

in 1913 from Casino, Italy. Beloved<br />

husband of Barbara (Laurano)<br />

Cuozzo. Treasured father of<br />

Rozanne Saggese of Lynnfield,<br />

Janis Pustizzi of Saugus, Debra<br />

Roberts and her husband Brian<br />

of Lynnfield, Valeri Williams, her<br />

son Jack and his father Robert<br />

of Scituate, Deirdre Gibbons<br />

and her husband Ed of Little<br />

Silver, NJ, Marino Cuozzo, Jr. of<br />

Wilmington and Kym Buckovich<br />

and her husband Paul of<br />

Scituate. Cherished grandfather<br />

of 16, great grandfather of 17<br />

and great, great grandfather<br />

of 2. Marino lived a storied<br />

life growing up in East Boston<br />

during the depression with his<br />

8 sisters and only brother Guy.<br />

His mother Rosie was his hero.<br />

He volunteered throughout the<br />

years for the East Boston Columbus<br />

Day celebrations and<br />

Parade of which he was Grand<br />

Marshall. This man truly loved<br />

a parade. In 1969 Marino was<br />

named Man of the Year by the<br />

East Boston Veteran’s Council.<br />

He was East Boston Kiwanian of<br />

the year in 1994 and served as<br />

Revere Kiwanis President from<br />

1993-1995. Marino served our<br />

country as a Marine Corporal in<br />

Okinawa and Guadalcanal from<br />

1943-1946. His love of music<br />

and the drums deepened here<br />

as he was honored to be the<br />

drum major proudly representing<br />

the Marine Corps<br />

Marching Band. Upon<br />

returning from overseas<br />

Marino’s love of<br />

style flourished when<br />

he opened his clothing<br />

store, Bud Elliott, in<br />

Lynn. In 1961 he was<br />

appointed Director of<br />

the Boston Housing Authority<br />

and upon retiring moved<br />

his family to Lynnfield. It was<br />

here that Marino found his passion<br />

for building. He built strong,<br />

beautiful, unique homes ~ each<br />

of the five homes he built was<br />

a reflection of his extraordinary<br />

style. Dad loved simple pleasures.<br />

He would always stop to<br />

kiss a baby’s head or smell a<br />

beautiful rose. He loved animals,<br />

beautiful music, Christmas, and<br />

let’s not forget dessert. If you<br />

were lucky enough you had the<br />

pleasure of seeing and hearing<br />

him play his drums. Shopping<br />

on a Saturday for the perfect<br />

suit, shoes or Fedora just made<br />

him happy. Marino was a man of<br />

Grace, a proud father and Marine<br />

who loved his country and<br />

his family with all of his heart.<br />

He will be the best dressed man<br />

in heaven. There will never be<br />

another like him ~ ever. He will<br />

never be forgotten. Our very own<br />

personal movie star.<br />

Service information: A Funeral<br />

Mass will be held at Our<br />

Lady of the Assumption Church,<br />

17 Grove St., Lynnfield on Saturday,<br />

March 9, at 11 a.m. Following<br />

the Mass his family invites<br />

you to a celebration of his<br />

sweet life at Spinelli’s, Route<br />

One South, Lynnfield, MA.<br />

Please omit flowers, remembrances<br />

can be made in Marino’s<br />

name to Norwell VNA and<br />

Hospice, 120 Longwater Drive,<br />

Norwell, MA 02061. Semper Fi


MARCH 7, 2019<br />

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

Lynnfield Middle School honor roll<br />

HIGH HONORS-GRADE 6<br />

Tyler Adamo<br />

Alexander Adreani<br />

Raffi Arkun<br />

Arianna Atsales<br />

Adishree Batchu<br />

Gauri Bhatia<br />

Juliana Botta<br />

Nicholas Brandano<br />

Caitlin Buoniconti<br />

Clara Caulfield<br />

Lucy Chamberlin<br />

Taylor Collins<br />

Kaitlyn Connelly<br />

Julia Corrente<br />

Paul Daley<br />

Nila Dharma<br />

Lucia Dias<br />

Adriana DiCorato<br />

Rayna Downey<br />

Brady Field<br />

Christopher Fleming<br />

Kaila George<br />

Aanya Gupta<br />

Emma Harnett<br />

Ella Hayman<br />

Erin Higdon<br />

Morgan Hubbard<br />

Shlok Kudrimoti<br />

Lauren Lane<br />

Rachel Lim<br />

Maxwell Lin<br />

Ciara Long<br />

Jack Mackey<br />

Paige Martino<br />

Liam McCarthy<br />

Madison McCarthy<br />

Michael McCarthy<br />

Isaac Medford<br />

Abby Miles<br />

Charles Morgan<br />

Erika Pasquale<br />

Brandon Qesja<br />

Matthew Reinold<br />

Joshua Robins<br />

Aubrey Rocha<br />

Emma Rose<br />

Parminder Saini<br />

John Settipane<br />

Olivia Sieve<br />

Matthew Squadrito<br />

Kimberly Staffier<br />

Timothy Sullivan<br />

Nicole Trifonov<br />

Ava Willoughby<br />

Cora Witherell<br />

HONORS - GRADE 6<br />

Huseyn Aghayev<br />

Ava Anderson<br />

Joel Anthony<br />

Roxanne Beatrice<br />

Erik Bell<br />

Gregory Benedetto<br />

Jonathan Biggar<br />

Gabriella Bottaro<br />

Hailey Burrill<br />

Marissa Calamari<br />

Christopher Calnan<br />

Chase Carangelo<br />

Isabella Carroll<br />

Samuel Childress<br />

Elizabeth Considine<br />

Maxwell D’Amore<br />

Olivia DeLeo<br />

Gavin DeLuties<br />

Cassidy Dembro<br />

Ava Diranian<br />

Camryn Donovan<br />

Maeve Donovan<br />

Jesse Dorman<br />

Christopher Duprey<br />

Anna Feury<br />

Alexander Fleming<br />

Ty Goldberg<br />

Ella Gould<br />

Elizabeth Grieves<br />

Chloe Gromko<br />

Ariana Guarracino<br />

William Kennedy<br />

Jonas Koyle<br />

Massimo LoGrasso<br />

Chloe LoNigro<br />

Nicholas Lozada<br />

Lauren MacDonald<br />

Tyler Maddocks<br />

Ava Mazzone<br />

Iain McCarthy<br />

Shea McCarthy<br />

Kye McClory<br />

Elijah Mendese<br />

Adayna Mitchell-Forde<br />

Michael Murphy<br />

Bridget Murray<br />

Layla Najeeb<br />

Maximus Nastari<br />

Aidan Norton<br />

Andrew Orlofski<br />

John Pascucci<br />

Zachary Pincus<br />

Sarah Powers<br />

Walter Radulski<br />

Dillon Reilly<br />

Lily Rocco<br />

Kayla Santo<br />

Sierra Scanlon<br />

Jason Sewyck<br />

Isabella Shrewsbury<br />

Kye Smyrnios<br />

Nicole Sorrentino<br />

Olivia Sullivan<br />

Anthony Tammaro<br />

Emily Toscano<br />

Taylor Valiton<br />

HONORABLE MENTION<br />

GRADE 6<br />

Abdel Qader Abdalla<br />

Jared Bernabei<br />

Cade Buklarewicz<br />

Kelan Cardinal<br />

Jay Carpenter<br />

Owen Considine<br />

Enzo DeLuca<br />

Zaniya Dixon<br />

Gabriella Giannasca<br />

Nicholas Groussis<br />

Maxwell Guertin<br />

Jack Kouyoumdjian<br />

Ryan Kyes<br />

Amelia Luongo<br />

James Mahoney<br />

Gia Marotta<br />

Amare Nieves<br />

Will Norton<br />

Benjamin Pimentel<br />

Gabriel Schumacher<br />

Brady Waxman<br />

Joseph Wing<br />

HIGH HONORS - GRADE 7<br />

Keely Briggs<br />

Katie Buonopane<br />

Addison Connelly<br />

Madison Danese<br />

Cristina Donovan<br />

Max Halsey<br />

Janhavi Joglekar<br />

Russell Kasdon<br />

Brendan Manoogian<br />

Steven Migliero<br />

Hailey Mihalchik<br />

Chloe Milne<br />

Ryan Nguyen<br />

Joseph Raffa<br />

Kurt Rothermund<br />

Zoe Sipcic<br />

Alexandra Sykes<br />

David Tracy<br />

Srivanth Tudi<br />

Viola Wertz<br />

Megan Woods<br />

HONORS - GRADE 7<br />

Lucas Adreani<br />

Niccolo Antidormi<br />

Alex Baldini<br />

Zacory Benedetto<br />

Sophie Bergeron<br />

Eva Bockoff<br />

Elizabeth Calnan<br />

Paul Capodilupo<br />

Melissa Caprio<br />

Rory Carvalho<br />

Maria Chambers<br />

Abraham Chehab<br />

Nathaniel Clancy<br />

Lilly Collins<br />

Hannah Corkhum<br />

Joseph Cucciniello<br />

Julian Curran<br />

Christopher Daniels<br />

Ava Delaney<br />

Lilyana DeLeo<br />

Kiera Doherty<br />

Hannah Doyle<br />

Sophia Fiorentino<br />

Ava Gamache<br />

Samantha Geary<br />

Olivia Goguen<br />

Liam Gorman<br />

Brendan Heffron<br />

Nicholas Hubbard<br />

Catherine Kampersal<br />

Maeve Kennedy<br />

Mia Kent<br />

Chloe Kustka<br />

Sumeet Lampert<br />

Gavin Leuci<br />

Ryan MacEachern<br />

Bianca Marano<br />

Julia Marino<br />

Jake Martinho<br />

Madeline Mastrangelo<br />

Jason McCausland<br />

Luke McQueen<br />

Anthony Morales<br />

Isabelle Moschella<br />

Owen Mullin<br />

Devin O’Connor<br />

Alexa Petruccelli<br />

Luke Prokopis<br />

Ava Remon<br />

Samaya Saab<br />

Kasey Schena<br />

Madelin Sieve<br />

Brendan Sokop<br />

Nathan Turney<br />

Ivan Vargas<br />

William Vittiglio<br />

Owen White<br />

Ryan Zannella<br />

HONORABLE MENTION<br />

GRADE 7<br />

James Atsales<br />

Emilie Bell<br />

Paul Breslow<br />

Sophia Brown<br />

Drew Carney<br />

Jack Carpenter<br />

Katherine Cash<br />

Megan Collins<br />

Jake Connell<br />

Brennan Curley<br />

Dylan Damiani<br />

Ryan DeBenedictis<br />

Dhimitri Dono<br />

John Driscoll<br />

Maxim Faleyev<br />

Brian Flores-Cuvedo<br />

Anthony Grabau<br />

Alyssa Gray<br />

Dylan Greenstein<br />

William Hardisty<br />

Cole Hawes<br />

Nicholas Kozakis<br />

Christopher Ladd<br />

Quinn Lavey<br />

Allison Mack<br />

Cole Manfredonia<br />

Ryan Michalski<br />

Jaelynn Moon<br />

Jack Neenan<br />

Adrianna Pascuccio<br />

Jack Prokopis<br />

Laci Robbins<br />

Olivia Scire<br />

Mark Sweeney III<br />

Britney Sylvester<br />

Livia Tare<br />

Emily Thompson<br />

Emma Tran<br />

Victoria Wing<br />

HIGH HONORS - GRADE 8<br />

Katherine Adamo<br />

Vincent Benvenuto<br />

Nate Buklarewicz<br />

Celia Carbone<br />

Julia Carbone<br />

Henry Caulfield<br />

Courtney Cumming<br />

Madison Daigle<br />

Aran Dharma<br />

Finley Ezekiel<br />

Alexander Gentile<br />

Evyenia Georges<br />

Genna Gioioso<br />

Ella Gizmunt<br />

Maria Gravini<br />

Julia Ho<br />

Sumaedha Konduri<br />

Marianne Lane<br />

Gianna Leach<br />

Carissa LoNigro<br />

Grace McKrell<br />

Daniel McSweeney<br />

Kyle Morais<br />

Sofia Raffa<br />

Maria Raslavicus<br />

Owen Santarella<br />

Cierra Serabian<br />

Brian Solomon<br />

Emme Speicher<br />

Tiffany Touchette<br />

Abigail Travers<br />

Alana Villar<br />

HONORS - GRADE 8<br />

Cole Adams<br />

Sahil Akhter<br />

Lauren Amico<br />

Jake Ballaro<br />

Charles Beatrice<br />

Devin Bolger<br />

Aidan Burns<br />

Jack Calichman<br />

Sophia Calle<br />

Anthony Cassano<br />

Matthew Ciampa<br />

Kevin Connolly<br />

Chloe Considine<br />

Ella Deirmendjian<br />

Jack DiGangi<br />

Daniel Dorman<br />

Ethan Downey<br />

Steven Dreher<br />

Nolan Drislane<br />

Sophia Faro<br />

Ella Feury<br />

Sidarth Gaonkar<br />

Janelle Gaudette<br />

Isabella George<br />

Trinity Gesamondo<br />

Cassie Giordano<br />

Hannah Gromko<br />

Bianca Guarracino<br />

Robert Higdon<br />

Adam Ho<br />

Ainsley Hurley<br />

Gabrielle Jacobs<br />

Kevin Julian<br />

Rafik Khodr<br />

Owen Klee<br />

Eliza Koyle<br />

Fisher Luba<br />

Nicholas Lucich<br />

Pearse MacDonald<br />

James Marini<br />

Robert Marley III<br />

Ava Marotta<br />

Colin McCormick<br />

Isabella Mendese<br />

Domenic Micieli<br />

Payton Munion<br />

Jamil Ndansi<br />

Mia O’Brien<br />

Alyssa O’Keefe<br />

Damon O’Neil<br />

Margaret Ozanian<br />

Chloe Palumbo<br />

Jason Passatempo<br />

Charlotte Radulski<br />

Margaret Reardon<br />

Justin Rose<br />

Rahdin Salehian<br />

Kailee Shieh<br />

Avi Shrivastava<br />

Lana Sutera<br />

Ava Zalvan<br />

HONORABLE MENTION<br />

GRADE 8<br />

Joenel Aguero<br />

Teanne Alfama Polanco<br />

Nathan Alves<br />

Brian Ballaro<br />

Charles Capachietti<br />

Rogan Cardinal<br />

Saniyah Charles<br />

Veronica Coletta<br />

Daniel Corrente<br />

Drew Damiani<br />

Angelo DeLuca<br />

Andrea Ellis<br />

Chase Goldberg<br />

Coleen Golden<br />

Harrison Grasso<br />

Jake Guertin<br />

Ryan Hooper<br />

Emely Lopez Mendez<br />

Nathan Lopez<br />

Kiera Mallett<br />

Camden Marengi<br />

Sophia Mazzone<br />

Brandon McCarter Jr<br />

John McKrell<br />

Christian Murphy<br />

Emily Palumbo<br />

Ella Pescione<br />

Brendan Powers<br />

Nicholas Razzaboni<br />

Mariana Rocha<br />

Munir Safwan<br />

James Sharkey<br />

Richard Sjoberg<br />

Jake Vinci


10<br />

WEEKLYNEWS.NET - 978-532-5880 MARCH 7, 2019<br />

Sports<br />

Tanners making hockey history<br />

By Daniel Kane<br />

and Mike Alongi<br />

The No. 11 PeabodyLynnfield/North Reading girls hockey<br />

team kept its record-breaking season alive, shocking No.<br />

6 St. Mary’s, 4-0 in the first round of the Division 1 tournament<br />

Monday at John A. Ryan Arena in Watertown.<br />

“We feel amazing right now,” Tanners coach Michelle<br />

Roach said. “We have worked so hard all season. The kids<br />

really put it out there, they gave it everything they. We told<br />

them, ‘don’t leave anything on the ice. St. Mary’s is a great<br />

team.’ And I think we showcased that tonight. A lot of people<br />

underestimate us so we were looking to send a message.<br />

I think we did that.”<br />

Abigail Buckley was amazing in net for the Tanners with<br />

38 saves. Peabody captains Sammie Mirasolo and Jessica<br />

Robert each scored twice.<br />

“Abby played out of her mind,” Roach said. “She’s really<br />

the backbone of our team. She sets the tone from the back of<br />

the net. All those saves that she makes give us momentum<br />

to push forward.<br />

“I think it started last week against Winthrop,” Roach<br />

added of Buckley. “She played unbelievable last week. We<br />

had a few days of very tight, focused practices and they<br />

have been on their A-game. She knows she has to get up<br />

and be a leader. She always rises to the occasion.”<br />

While the two teams had played each other just three<br />

times going into the game, all won by St. Mary’s, the behind-the-scenes-connections<br />

between the two have the<br />

makings of a long-time rivalry.<br />

Two of the top four Spartans snipers, Mady Hentosh, a<br />

senior captain, and eighth-grader Jenna Chaplain live in<br />

Peabody, while both starting goalies — Buckley and St.<br />

Mary’s counterpart Lauren Vaccaro -- have enjoyed all-star<br />

caliber careers and live in Lynnfield. Vaccaro and Buckley<br />

played together on the Peabody/Lynnfield team as freshmen<br />

during Roach’s rookie season in 2015-2016 when the<br />

Tanners won just six games.<br />

On the coaching side, Roach was one of a handful of pioneering<br />

female players who helped establish the St. Mary’s<br />

varsity program back in 2003. She also played two years<br />

on the boys team before St. Mary’s established a girls club<br />

team in 2001.<br />

In 2009-2011, Roach was back at her alma mater as an assistant<br />

coach under Spartans’ coach Frank Pagliuca. During<br />

her tenure the Spartans won three state titles and built a 100-<br />

game unbeaten streak.<br />

Roach’s assistant coaches, Amanda Donahue and<br />

Roach’s brother, Stephen Roach, are also St. Mary’s graduates.<br />

Donohue played three years of varsity hockey under<br />

Pagliuca, winning a state championship in 2013.<br />

Prior to the game, Donohue said she was sure Pagliuca<br />

would have something up his sleeve.<br />

She was wrong.<br />

The Spartans had flashes of offense in the second period,<br />

but overall Pagliuca was disappointed with St. Mary’s<br />

effort.<br />

“I just think from the drop of the puck we got outplayed<br />

the entire game,” Pagliuca said. “Credit to Peabody. They<br />

wanted it more, they beat us to loose pucks and we were just<br />

out of sync all night. Unfortunately it was our worst performance<br />

at the worst time, but most of that was Peabody just<br />

outworking us.”<br />

The Tanners got off to the better start in the first period<br />

while dominating possession time but couldn’t capitalize.<br />

The Spartans kept Peabody on the perimeter, with several<br />

blocked shots and nine first-period saves from Vaccaro<br />

keeping the Tanners scoreless.<br />

With one minute remaining in the period St. Mary’s got<br />

some offense going with a man advantage. The Spartans<br />

got what they were looking for on the power play with a<br />

nice shooting chance for Chaplain in the slot but Buckley<br />

made the save to keep the game tied at 0-0.<br />

“I thought we controlled most of the first,” Roach said.<br />

“So we were a little disappointed going into the locker room<br />

without having put something in the back of the net. We<br />

knew we just had to keep working and eventually something<br />

was going to go.”<br />

Midway through the second, St. Mary’s got on the power<br />

play again and were all over the Tanners. But Buckley rose<br />

to the occasion with a flurry of fantastic saves to keep the<br />

Sammie Mirasolo scored twice in the Tanners’ win over Winthrop.<br />

game scoreless.<br />

With three minutes remaining in the second, Robert skated<br />

the puck out of her own zone and kept going, slipping by<br />

a Spartan defender and ripping a wrist shot that found the<br />

back of the net to put Peabody ahead 1-0.<br />

Robert wasn’t done there. The senior captain made another<br />

nice play with less than minute to go on the penalty<br />

kill, stealing the puck and going on a breakaway that she<br />

finished to extend the lead to 2-0.<br />

Mirasolo came up big in the third period. Midway through<br />

the third, she carried the puck into the St. Mary’s zone on a<br />

three-on-one rush and ripped a high shot that found the back<br />

of the net. Just over three minutes later, Mirasolo scored<br />

again, using her speed to breakaway from a Spartan defender<br />

and ripping another shot to put Peabody up 4-0 and ice<br />

the game.<br />

The Tanners will take on No. 3 Methuen in the quarterfinals<br />

Thursday, March 7 (5:30) at O’Brien Arena in Woburn.<br />

The Tanners earned the right to play the five-time state<br />

champion Spartans with a 2-0 win over Winthrop last<br />

Wednesday at the James McVan/Louis O’Keefe Rink in<br />

Peabody — their first-ever tournament win,<br />

Roach, who has been at the helm for four years, attributed<br />

the win to her team’s tireless work over the years.<br />

“It means a lot to all of us but I’m especially happy for<br />

these girls who have worked so hard over the past few<br />

years,” said Roach. “We set so many goals for ourselves<br />

this year and we really wanted to reach them, so to start<br />

knocking items off our list has been really great for us.”<br />

In somewhat fitting fashion, it was three of the longest-tenured<br />

veterans who won this one for the Tanners. Senior<br />

Kathryn DiGiulio scored both goals for Peabody, while<br />

Robert added one assist. In net, Buckley had one of her best<br />

games of the season with a 25-save shutout.<br />

FILE PHOTO<br />

“I think Kat probably had one of the best overall games<br />

out of anyone tonight,” said Roach. “And Abby just had a<br />

typical Abby Buckley night where she stood on her head. I<br />

think it’s really special for those girls because of how hard<br />

they’ve worked. They’re the backbone of our team and I<br />

couldn’t be happier for them.”<br />

Winthrop certainly had its chances throughout the game,<br />

including a pair of breakaway opportunities and a couple of<br />

wide-open nets. But a combination of bad bounces and big<br />

plays by Peabody kept the Vikings off the board.<br />

Winthrop freshman goalie Summer Tallent had a solid<br />

game, notching 21 saves.<br />

The first period saw the Tanners outshoot Winthrop 12-5.<br />

After coming close to a goal several times, including on a<br />

power play, Peabody finally broke through with just over a<br />

minute left in the period. As Winthrop was trying to clear<br />

the puck out of its own zone, Robert stepped in, took control<br />

of the puck and sent it down behind the net. DiGiulio took it<br />

from there, quickly circling around the net and firing a shot<br />

past Tallent to give Peabody the 1-0 lead.<br />

It was a very similar story in the second period, except<br />

this time it was Winthrop that outshot Peabody. Both teams<br />

got a chance on the power play as well, but neither could<br />

cash in. Then, with under two minutes to go in the period,<br />

Peabody made its move. After making a steal in the defensive<br />

zone, DiGiulio raced up the ice in a two-on-one with<br />

Jen Flynn. As they came into the Winthrop zone, DiGiulio<br />

faked a pass to get enough room to shoot and fired a shot<br />

from the right circle to put the Vikings up 2-0.<br />

Winthrop got another power play chance in the third period,<br />

but once again the Vikings couldn’t cash in. And although<br />

Winthrop went on a torrid run of scoring chances in<br />

the final few minutes of the game, Buckley and the Tanners<br />

stood tall and skated away with the shutout win.


MARCH 7, 2019<br />

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

Girls basketball rebirth continues<br />

By Anne Marie Tobin<br />

It pays to be in the right place<br />

at the right time.<br />

Nobody knows that better<br />

than the No. 6 Lynnfield girls<br />

basketball team, which hardly<br />

broke a sweat Sunday afternoon<br />

with a 69-43 rout over No. 4<br />

Greater Lawrence at Greater<br />

Lawrence.<br />

With the win, the Pioneers<br />

advanced to an all-Cape Ann<br />

League semifinal matchup<br />

Wednesday, March 6, at<br />

Whittier Tech (7 p.m.) against<br />

Amesbury, the No. 2 seed (results<br />

too late to print).<br />

Junior captain Melissa<br />

Morelli had a double-double<br />

with 16 points and 14 rebounds<br />

while freshman Cate<br />

MacDonald scored a game-high<br />

21 points with seven rebounds<br />

and two steals.<br />

The game was the second<br />

straight lop-sided tournament<br />

win for the Pioneers — and the<br />

second straight game in which<br />

the outcome was pretty much<br />

decided by halftime.<br />

Despite the win, Pioneer<br />

coach Peter Bocchino was<br />

not happy with the Pioneers’<br />

performance.<br />

“We did not play well at all<br />

tonight and we are going to<br />

have to play a lot better against<br />

Amesbury,” Bocchino said.<br />

“There was way too much<br />

selfish play going on. They settled<br />

for the first available shot<br />

on offensive instead of working<br />

the ball around to get the best<br />

look. And you could see that<br />

we shot the ball horribly as a<br />

team as a result. Our fours and<br />

fives got caught sleeping for the<br />

most part in that they were not<br />

moving with the ball. We are<br />

going to need a miracle unless<br />

we tighten up the screws on<br />

defense.”<br />

MacDonald had a hot hand<br />

early with 11 first-quarter points<br />

to help the Pioneers jump out to<br />

an 18-4 lead.<br />

The Pioneers kept their foot<br />

on the gas in the second period.<br />

This time it was sophomore<br />

captain and point guard Grace<br />

Klonsky and junior captain<br />

Tori Morelli who stepped up.<br />

Klonsky opened the quarter<br />

with a pretty behind-the-back<br />

layup. After a three-pointer by<br />

Greater Lawrence senior forward<br />

Laisha Joaquin, Melissa<br />

Morelli swished two free<br />

throws, then polished off a fastbreak<br />

layup (from twin sister<br />

Tori) to bump the lead to 24-9.<br />

But the Pioneers were only<br />

getting started. Melissa Morelli<br />

knocked down two jumpers,<br />

then Klonsky added two<br />

more with a highlight reel under-handed<br />

scoop to stretch the<br />

lead to 20, 32-12. Junior Jaslyn<br />

Abreu temporarily stopped the<br />

bleeding with a bucket, but<br />

Lynnfield took up where it left<br />

off.<br />

The Pioneers closed out the<br />

half with a 7-0 run on a threepointer<br />

by freshman Riley<br />

Hallahan, a back door layup by<br />

Tori Morelli (from Melissa) and<br />

a Klonsky steal and coast-tocoast<br />

layup to send the Pioneers<br />

into halftime with a 25-point<br />

lead, 39-14.<br />

The Reggies showed no quit,<br />

however and opened the second<br />

half with a 5-0 run to get the<br />

lead down to 20,39-19. But that<br />

was as close as the Reggies got<br />

the rest of the game.<br />

Klonsky had a solid allaround<br />

game with 10 points,<br />

four steals and three rebounds,<br />

while Hallahan contributed<br />

six points and four rebounds<br />

off the bench. Sophomore<br />

Ava Buonfiglio also delivered<br />

quality minutes off the bench<br />

with six points, five rebounds<br />

and three assists.<br />

“Playing soft games like we<br />

have had in the first two rounds<br />

is tough,” Bocchino said. “We<br />

should have had 100 points tonight,<br />

that’s the type of game<br />

this was. The only thing to<br />

come out of games like this one<br />

is that we were able to get the<br />

bench kids in early and they got<br />

a lot of minutes.”<br />

Bocchino highlighted the<br />

play of Klonsky, MacDonald<br />

and Hallahan.<br />

“Grace was unbelievable<br />

handling the ball and both<br />

she and Cate were flawless<br />

at both ends of the court both<br />

offensively and defensively,”<br />

Bocchino said. “Riley got a lot<br />

of minutes and she played really<br />

well, especially considering she<br />

is undersized yet plays two<br />

positions, the two and the four,<br />

and it’s physical out there. She<br />

takes a beating at times.”<br />

Also contributing to the winning<br />

effort were sophomore<br />

Ava Buonfiglio (5 points, 3 rebounds);<br />

Tori Morelli (4 points,<br />

7 rebounds); freshman Abby<br />

Adamo (3 points); freshman<br />

Lucy Cleary (3 rebounds, 2<br />

points) and sophomore Caroline<br />

Waisnor (2 points, 4 rebounds).<br />

On Feb. 27, the Pioneers<br />

achieved something that hadn’t<br />

pulled off since Barack Obama<br />

was in the White House. They<br />

won a tournament game — their<br />

first since 2009.<br />

In their own gym, the<br />

Pioneers manhandled No. 11<br />

Charlestown (9-10) in front of<br />

a large and enthusiastic home<br />

crowd, defeating the visitors in<br />

a rout, 53-9.<br />

MacDonald scored a gamehigh<br />

12 points and added<br />

four rebounds, five steals and<br />

a block, while sophomore<br />

Caroline Waisnor scored nine<br />

points with three steals and two<br />

rebounds. The Morelli twins<br />

had solid all-around games with<br />

six points each. Melissa also<br />

chipped in six rebounds, a steal<br />

and block, while Tori added two<br />

rebounds, three blocks and three<br />

steals. Freshman Lucy Cleary<br />

was strong in the paint, coming<br />

PHOTO | ANNE MARIE TOBIN<br />

Cate MacDonald, left, scored a game-high 21 points and pulled down seven rebounds in the<br />

Greater Lawrence win. She’s seen here battling the Reggies’ Shanely Henriquez.<br />

2 Large<br />

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in off the bench and grabbing a<br />

game-high seven rebounds.<br />

“This is the type of game<br />

where you walk a fine line and<br />

the girls knew that so I think<br />

instinctively they didn’t have<br />

their strongest motor going,”<br />

said Bocchino, this year’s Cape<br />

Ann League Kinney Division<br />

Coach of the Year. “The good<br />

news we were able to rest some<br />

of our kids who are nursing injuries<br />

and we got everyone a lot<br />

of minutes. We had a slow start<br />

and our three-point shooters<br />

didn’t shoot the ball well, but<br />

we didn’t have to.”<br />

Both teams started tentatively<br />

and turned the ball over on their<br />

first two possessions. Melissa<br />

Morelli broke the ice about a<br />

minute in with a turn-around<br />

jumper.<br />

Lynnfield enjoyed a considerable<br />

size advantage, which<br />

the Pioneers leveraged into<br />

a 14-0 lead after the opening<br />

quarter. Charlestown continued<br />

to struggle at both ends of the<br />

court the rest of the half.<br />

After Waisnor drained a<br />

three-pointer to start the second<br />

quarter, Charlestown finally got<br />

on the board with a free throw<br />

by junior Alizey Marshall to cut<br />

the Pioneers’ lead to 17-1 with<br />

6:35 left in the half<br />

That was as close as the<br />

Townies came. Lynnfield went<br />

to the bench and it closed out<br />

the half with a 29-1 Pioneer<br />

lead.<br />

Charlestown showed some<br />

life in the third quarter and put<br />

seven points on the board but it<br />

was too little too late.<br />

“Lynnfield was tough, they<br />

came right out and punched<br />

us in the face,” said Townies<br />

first-year coach Chris Bilodeau.<br />

“”We struggled from the start<br />

to get on track, but I was<br />

proud of our effort, especially<br />

Alizey, who was playing with<br />

a sprained ankle but gave it her<br />

all tonight. We’ve had had great<br />

year and with most of the girls<br />

coming back next year, I think<br />

we have something to build on<br />

in the future.”<br />

For Lynnfield, freshman<br />

Riley Hallahan (6 rebounds) and<br />

freshman Anna Radulski (5 rebounds,<br />

steal) had four points<br />

each, while freshman Abby<br />

Adamo (2 steals) hit one threepointer.<br />

Freshmen Cat Ciolfi<br />

(steal) and Morgan DeGrazia<br />

(steal) chipped in two points each.<br />

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12<br />

WEEKLYNEWS.NET - 978-532-5880 MARCH 7, 2019<br />

PHOTO | ALICIA GOMES<br />

The Masconomet/Lynnfield gymnastics team displays its state championship<br />

banner.<br />

Gymnasts give school<br />

a state championship<br />

By Anne Marie Tobin<br />

While the student-athletes on the Lynnfield<br />

girls basketball team are still alive<br />

and fighting for a state title, three other<br />

Lynnfield High student-athletes beat<br />

them to it and became the first Lynnfield<br />

students to earn state championship bragging<br />

rights since the girls tennis team won<br />

a Division 3 state title in 2014.<br />

Sophomore Makayla Greene and<br />

freshmen Lanah Rosenwald and Amber<br />

Gamache attained the dream of a lifetime<br />

this past Saturday at Algonquin Regional<br />

High School in Northborough as the<br />

Masconomet/Lynnfield girls gymnastics<br />

team made history, winning the first state<br />

championship in program history, thanks<br />

to a clutch performance in the final rotation<br />

of the night.<br />

The Chieftains finished with 148.975<br />

points while Mansfield was second with<br />

146.650 points and Newton South was<br />

third with 146.575 points. By virtue of<br />

their top-three finishes, all three teams<br />

qualified for the March 9 New England<br />

Championship meet (TBA).<br />

The meet was a three-way race with<br />

Masco held a slight lead going into the<br />

floor exercise, but Mansfield amped up<br />

the pressure and closed the gap with a<br />

38.75 performance on the beam.<br />

The Chieftains answered right back by<br />

posting the top-two scores in the floor exercise<br />

to seal the victory. Gracy Mowers<br />

(9.60) and Katelyn Aylwin (9.50) finished<br />

one-two, and the celebration was on.<br />

Mowers, the 2018 all-around champion,<br />

won the vault with a score of 9.825<br />

and finished second in the all-around this<br />

year with 37.60 points behind Alqonquin’s<br />

Elizabeth Debroczy, who won<br />

with 37.850 points.<br />

Masco tuned up for the state meet with<br />

a win last weekend at the North sectional<br />

championship meet. The win was the first<br />

sectional title in 10 years for the Chieftains,<br />

who were led by Aylwin (38.475)<br />

and Mowers (38.350) one-two- finish in<br />

the all-around.<br />

McCullough ends<br />

with a flourish<br />

By Anne Marie Tobin<br />

PROVIDENCE — Lynnfield/North<br />

Reading wrestler Sean McCullough’s magical<br />

season wound to a close Saturday at the<br />

55th Annual New England Interscholastic<br />

Wrestling Championships at Providence<br />

Career and Technical Academy.<br />

The junior captain won his first two<br />

matches to advance to the quarterfinals of<br />

the 182-pound weight division. That’s the<br />

good news.<br />

The bad news is his next round opponent<br />

was only Abraham Spurlock of Brookline<br />

High.<br />

Spurlock, the Division 1 Central Division,<br />

State Division 1 and All-States champion,<br />

led 4-0 midway through the second period,<br />

then polished off the match with a pin win<br />

in 2:51.<br />

“To go 2-2 at the New England Tournament,<br />

where everyone seems to be a state<br />

champion or runner-up, is an incredible<br />

accomplishment,” said Lynnfield/North<br />

Reading coach Craig Stone. “Obviously, he<br />

would have liked to place, but considering<br />

how far he has come from last year, everything<br />

looks very positive going forward and<br />

he will use this experience as motivation for<br />

next season.”<br />

McCullough took on New Hampshire<br />

state runner-up Zack Brickner (Hollis-<br />

Brookline) in the consolation quarterfinals<br />

and came up on the wrong end of an 18-3<br />

major decision.<br />

McCullough opened the tournament with<br />

a pin win (3:33) over Connecticut’s Jack<br />

Cronin (Nonnewaug High) in the Round<br />

of 32. McCullough trailed 10-8 in the backand-forth<br />

bout before putting Cronin away<br />

in the second period. Cronin was the 2019<br />

Connecticut state runner-up.<br />

In the Round of 16, he took on another<br />

New England state runner-up in Maine’s<br />

Cameron Bourget (Lisbon Falls/Oa Hill).<br />

He was solid from start to finish en route to<br />

a 12-4 decision over Bourget.<br />

McCullough finished the season with a<br />

46-9 overall record and now has 102 career<br />

wins. He won the North Division 2 sectional<br />

and Cohasset Invitational tournaments, was<br />

second at the Pentucket Holiday tournament<br />

and Cape Ann League/Northeastern<br />

Conference Championship meet; third at<br />

the Wakefield Lisitano Memorial tournament;<br />

and finally placed second in the<br />

Division 2 state tournament and seventh in<br />

the All-State tournament.<br />

FILE PHOTO<br />

Sean McCullough made the quarterfinals of the New England wrestling championships<br />

in Rhode Island.<br />

Pioneer hockey team ousted in overtime<br />

By Anne Marie Tobin<br />

BILLERICA — When it comes to heartbreaking<br />

defeat, the Lynnfield boys hockey team has cornered the<br />

market.<br />

For the third time in four years, the Pioneers hopes for a<br />

Division 2 North championship went up in smoke, walk-off<br />

style, in the opening round. Feb. 26 at Chelmsford Forum,<br />

it was the No. 7 Tewksbury Redmen who played the role<br />

of spoiler, defeating the No. 10 Pioneers in overtime, 2-1.<br />

Lynnfield coach Jon Gardner said the Pioneers had their<br />

chances.<br />

“We took over a period to get going, but we had that<br />

breakaway in the first that they needed to convert but<br />

didn’t,” said Gardner. “We had a great power play (in the<br />

third) that the puck almost trickled in that laid in the crease<br />

and we couldn’t bang it in and we had a solid third period.”<br />

Pioneer goaltender Aidan Kelly, delivered a performance<br />

for the ages. He was under assault for nearly the entire<br />

game, but stood on his head, making one spectacular save<br />

after another to keep the Pioneers in the game. Until overtime,<br />

that is.<br />

And it all happened so fast.<br />

With two minutes left in the four-on-four session, George<br />

DeRoche and John Simonetti rushed into the offensive<br />

zone on a two-on-one. Tewksbury defenseman Michael<br />

Arsenault leveled DeRoche with a cross-check, then rushed<br />

the offensive zone where he blasted a blistering wrist shot<br />

inside the far post, to punch Tewksbury’s ticket to the<br />

quarterfinals.<br />

For most of the first two periods, the Redmen kept the<br />

Pioneers pinned in their defensive zone, but Kelly was up to<br />

the task to keep it scoreless through two.<br />

“I don’t know how many shots they had but it had to me<br />

in the 30’s,” said Gardner. “Aidan was just amazing.”<br />

The last period was full of back-and-forth action with<br />

both teams flying up and down the ice.<br />

Lynnfield caught its first real break of the game when<br />

Tewksbury took a charging penalty with 11 seconds left in<br />

the second period.<br />

With a man-up advantage, Lynnfield came out energized<br />

at the start of the third period and peppered Tewksbury<br />

goalie Pat Letourneau with several shots. Jaret Simpson<br />

started the barrage with a blast from the left point, that sent<br />

Letourneau scrambling. DeRoche picked up the rebound<br />

and tried to poke it home, but was denied.<br />

Ronnie Fuccillo rifled a wrist shot from the right point<br />

just wide. The puck popped back to Simpson in the middle,<br />

whose shot was saved. The rebound was loose in front dangling<br />

inches from the goal line where Will Garofoli had a<br />

couple of swipes at it with Letourneau sprawled on the ice,<br />

but could not poke it home.<br />

Tewksbury killed of the rest of the penalty before Garofoli<br />

had another chance but couldn’t convert.<br />

“That penalty sparked us but we just couldn’t create<br />

shooting a shooting lane,” said Gardner.<br />

Tewksbury countered. Will O’Keefe unleashed a wrister<br />

from the left face off circle to put the Redmen on top, 1-0,<br />

with 11:30 left.<br />

A minute later, DeRoche was robbed on a wrap-around<br />

attempt. Thirty seconds later, Kelly returned the favor with<br />

a spectacular save of his own.<br />

On the counterattack, junior forward John Simonetti and<br />

Garofoli broke into the offensive zone in chase of a loose<br />

puck, but lost a foot race to the puck to Letourneau, who<br />

dove, head first to poke the puck away. The puck bounced<br />

back to Simonetti in the slot, who had an empty net with<br />

Letourneau down and out, but misfired wide. Two faceoffs<br />

later, Simonetti won the draw and played the puck<br />

to DeRoche, who drilled a wrist shot home with 7:54 left<br />

in regulation.<br />

The defeat marked the second straight year in which the<br />

Pioneers lost a last-second thriller. Last year, the Pioneers<br />

were stunned by Wilmington, which scored the game-winning<br />

goal with only 3.4 seconds left in regulation to win 2-1.<br />

“This was not as tough as last year’s loss when it was a<br />

50-50 game,” said Gardner. “This one they came out right<br />

away and blitzkrieged us. I say we didn’t start on time as<br />

we were sleepwalking through the first 20 minutes. We had<br />

a breakaway that we should have cashed in on. I”m all for<br />

swallowing the whistle but there were a couple that should<br />

have been called like when they had seven men on the ice<br />

in the third period.”<br />

Gardner highlighted the entire defensive unit including<br />

Jeff Floramo, Danny Mack and Leo Quinn.<br />

“Our defense blocked a ton of shots tonight and the kids<br />

played tough,” Gardner said.


MARCH 7, 2019<br />

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

PEABODY CITY COUNCIL<br />

AN ORDINANCE AMENDING CHAPTER 30<br />

"VEHICLES FOR HIRE"<br />

OF THE CODE OF THE CITY OF PEABODY<br />

BE IT ORDAINED BY THE CITY COUNCIL OF THE CITY OF PEABODY AS FOLLOWS:<br />

SECTION ONE: The Code of the City of Peabody adopted on January 9, 1986,<br />

and amended, is hereby further amended as follows:<br />

Section 30-37 of Division 2 License entitled "Granted by Council; terms and<br />

conditions" of the Code of the City of Peabody, Massachusetts, is hereby<br />

amended as follows:<br />

By adding a new sub-section (c) as follows:<br />

NON-CITY TAXI CAB COMPANY:<br />

In addition, a licensed and registered taxi cab company with a regional dispatch<br />

center from communities directly abutting the City of Peabody (Salem, Lynn,<br />

Danvers, Middleton, and Lynnfield only) may apply for a Taxi Cab License/s as<br />

allowed under Section 30-38 and shall be limited to a maximum of two (2)<br />

licenses.<br />

The non-City of Peabody company shall present to the City Clerk at the time of<br />

application a current taxi cab License and certificate of business from their<br />

community, and proof of insurance which must to be equivalent or exceeding what<br />

is required under Section 30-43. All other City of Peabody ordinances under this<br />

Chapter regarding licensing procedures, inspections, fees, penalties, taxi fare<br />

rates, etc. shall apply to non-City of Peabody companies.<br />

The City Council shall review the application and vote to approve or deny the<br />

issuance of the license. Upon city council approval, the city clerk and police<br />

department shall be empowered to issue all licenses/externally marked license<br />

number in accordance with this article. This requirement shall not apply to<br />

limousine or livery businesses. Any non-city of Peabody company not licensed<br />

under this section shall be subject to a fine enumerated under Section 30-22.<br />

SECTION TWO:<br />

That Section 30-22 entitled fines be amended by striking the following:<br />

1st offense $75.00<br />

2nd offense $125.00<br />

3rd offense $250.00<br />

And inserting in place herein the following:<br />

A violation of this Chapter of the City Code shall be subject to a penalty as<br />

enumerated under Section 1-10 entitled General Penalty.<br />

SECTION THREE:<br />

That Section 30-44 entitled "Fees" be amended by adding the following language<br />

after the first paragraph:<br />

For every Non-City vehicle license granted under the provisions of this article<br />

for a taxi license only, there shall be paid to the city clerk a fee of $60.00 for<br />

vehicles with 1-8 seats; and $75.00 for vehicles with over eight seats for the<br />

use of each license.<br />

SECTION FOUR: All ordinances or parts of ordinances inconsistent herewith are<br />

hereby repealed.<br />

SECTION FIVE: This ordinance shall take effect as provided by law.<br />

INTRODUCED OCTOBER 11, 2018<br />

ORDERED PUBLISHED JANUARY 24, 2019<br />

PUBLISHED FEBRUARY 7, 2019<br />

ADOPTED FEBRUARY 28, 2019<br />

PUBLICATION OF ADOPTION MARCH 7, 2019<br />

Weekly News: March 7, 2019<br />

Legal Notice<br />

There will be a Tree Removal Hearing on March 8, 2019 @ 9:00am at the<br />

Recreation, Parks & Forestry Department office located at 50 Farm Avenue,<br />

Peabody, MA, for the removal of a Public Shade Tree(s) at the following<br />

location(s).<br />

Address: 8 Lisburn Street As per the petition of (Laura Harold)<br />

Peabody, MA 01960<br />

Per Order of Brian Grant, Tree Warden<br />

Weekly News: February 28, March 7, 2019<br />

Legal Notice<br />

There will be a Tree Removal Hearing on March 11, 2019 @ 11:30am at the<br />

Recreation, Parks & Forestry Department office located at 50 Farm Avenue,<br />

Peabody, MA, for the removal of a Public Shade Tree(s) at the following<br />

location(s).<br />

Address: 23 Granite Street As per the petition of (Michael Santos)<br />

Peabody, MA 01960<br />

Per Order of Brian Grant, Tree Warden<br />

Weekly News: February 28, March 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 will<br />

conduct a public hearing on THURS-<br />

DAY EVENING, MARCH 28, 2019, at<br />

7:30 P.M., in the Frank L. Wiggin<br />

Auditorium, City Hall, 24 Lowell Street,<br />

Peabody, MA on the application from<br />

WALNUT STREET AUTO SALES, 55<br />

Walnut Street, Peabody, MA REQUEST-<br />

ING TO AMEND THEIR CLASS 2<br />

MOTOR VEHICLE LICENSE BY ADDING<br />

THE NAME OF EDWARD CESPEDES<br />

TO SAID LICENSE at 55 WALNUT<br />

STREET, Peabody, MA.<br />

PEABODY CITY COUNCIL<br />

COUNCILLOR JON G. TURCO<br />

CITY COUNCIL PRESIDENT<br />

Timothy E. Spanos<br />

City Clerk<br />

Weekly News: March 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, MARCH 28,<br />

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

Wiggin Auditorium, City Hall, 24 Lowell<br />

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

from SEQUOIA BUILDERS, INC, 33<br />

Columbia Street, Swampscott, MA FOR<br />

A SPECIAL PERMIT SEEKING TO<br />

ALLOW THE OFFICE AND SHOP OF A<br />

CONTRACTOR at 58 FOSTER STREET,<br />

Peabody, MA as filed in accordance<br />

with Sections 4.2.5, 6.1 and 15.7 of<br />

the Peabody 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: March 7, 14, 2019<br />

City of Peabody<br />

Zoning Board of Appeals<br />

LEGAL NOTICE<br />

Notice is hereby given that the Board<br />

of Appeals of the City of Peabody will<br />

hold a Public hearing on Monday,<br />

March 18, 2019 at 7:00 p.m. at the<br />

Wiggin Auditorium, City Hall, 24 Lowell<br />

Street, Peabody, MA 01960 on the<br />

application of American Construction<br />

Corporation c/o Attorney John Keilty,<br />

for a Variance from the Provision of<br />

the Zoning Ordinance 2018, as<br />

amended, Sections 7.1 as it applies<br />

to the premise known as 3 Mt.<br />

Pleasant Drive, Peabody, MA, Map<br />

029, Lot 006.<br />

Petitioner seeks a variance to allow<br />

Front Yard of 24.7 feet where 50 feet<br />

is required; Rear Yard of 47.5 feet<br />

where 50 feet is required; Left Side<br />

Yard of 31.8 feet where 40 feet is<br />

required; Right Side Yard of 19.3 feet<br />

where 40 feet is required; and 324<br />

square feet of access and parking<br />

space area where 350 square feet is<br />

required.<br />

The property is located in a BR Zoning<br />

District. The application and plan are<br />

available to the public and can be<br />

viewed at the City Clerk's Office and<br />

Board of Appeals Office, City Hall in<br />

advance and prior to the Public<br />

Hearing.<br />

Board of Appeals<br />

Frances Bisazza-Gallugi, Chairperson<br />

Weekly: February 28, March 7, 2019<br />

City of Peabody<br />

Zoning Board of Appeals<br />

LEGAL NOTICE<br />

Notice is hereby given that the<br />

Board of Appeals of the City of<br />

Peabody will hold a Public hearing on<br />

Monday, March 18, 2019 at 7:00<br />

p.m. at the Wiggin Auditorium, City<br />

Hall, 24 Lowell Street, Peabody,<br />

Massachusetts 01960 on the application<br />

of Frederick Peterson, 121<br />

Winona Street, Peabody, Massachusetts,<br />

for a Variance from the<br />

Provision of the Zoning Ordinance<br />

2017, as amended, Section 7.2 as it<br />

applies to the premise known as 121<br />

Winona St., Peabody, Massachusetts,<br />

Map 045, Lot 003.<br />

Petitioner is proposing an addition and<br />

requires relief from Right-Side Yard<br />

Setback where 20' are required and 7'<br />

are proposed. The property is located<br />

in a R1 Zoning District.<br />

The application and plot plan are<br />

available to the public and can be<br />

viewed at the City Clerk's Office and<br />

Board of Appeals Office, City Hall in<br />

advance and prior to the Public<br />

Hearing. The application and plot plan<br />

will also be available at the time of the<br />

Public Hearing.<br />

Board of Appeals<br />

Frances Bisazza-Gallugi, Chairperson<br />

Weekly: February 28, March 7, 2019<br />

City of Peabody<br />

Zoning Board of Appeals<br />

LEGAL NOTICE<br />

Notice is hereby given that the<br />

Board of Appeals of the City of<br />

Peabody will hold a Public hearing on<br />

Monday, March 18, 2019 at 7:00<br />

p.m. at the Wiggin Auditorium, City<br />

Hall, 24 Lowell Street, Peabody, MA<br />

01960 on the application of Thomas<br />

and Emily Holden for a Variance from<br />

the Provision of the Zoning Ordinance<br />

2018, as amended, Section<br />

7.2 as it applies to the premise known<br />

as 115 Lynnfield St., Peabody, MA,<br />

Map 101, Lot 022A.<br />

Petitioner is proposing a deck and<br />

needs relief to Side Yard where 13'+/-<br />

is proposed and 20' are required. The<br />

property is located in a R1B Zoning<br />

District. The application and plot plan<br />

are available to the public and can be<br />

viewed at the City Clerk's Office and<br />

Board of Appeals Office, City Hall in<br />

advance and prior to the Public<br />

Hearing. The application and plot plan<br />

will also be available at the time of the<br />

Public Hearing.<br />

Board of Appeals<br />

Frances Bisazza-Gallugi, Chairperson<br />

Weekly: February 28, March 7, 2019<br />

Every day<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 will<br />

conduct a public hearing on THURS-<br />

DAY EVENING, MARCH 28, 2019, at<br />

7:30 P.M., in the Frank L. Wiggin<br />

Auditorium, City Hall, 24 Lowell Street,<br />

Peabody, MA on the application from<br />

BOYD CYCLES, 25A Walnut Street,<br />

Peabody, MA REQUESTING THE<br />

TRANSFER OF A CLASS 2 MOTOR<br />

VEHICLE LICENSE at said 25A<br />

WALNUT STREET, Peabody, MA.<br />

PEABODY CITY COUNCIL<br />

COUNCILLOR JON G. TURCO<br />

CITY COUNCIL PRESIDENT<br />

Timothy E. Spanos<br />

City Clerk<br />

Weekly News: March 7, 2019<br />

Legal Notice<br />

There will be a Tree Removal Hearing on March 8, 2019 @ 9:15am at the<br />

Recreation, Parks & Forestry Department office located at 50 Farm Avenue,<br />

Peabody, MA, for the removal of a Public Shade Tree(s) at the following<br />

location(s).<br />

Address: 6 Pinewood Road As per the petition of (Dawn Luck)<br />

Peabody, MA 01960<br />

Per Order of Brian Grant, Tree Warden<br />

Weekly News: February 28, March 7, 2019<br />

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Paul DeNisco<br />

Mason Contractor<br />

Brick • Block • Stone<br />

Concrete • Tile<br />

978-532-4066<br />

Repairs - Big or Small<br />

Home...<br />

Where you deserve to be


MARCH 7, 2019<br />

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

COLDWELL BANKER<br />

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

576 Lowell Street<br />

Newly constructed energy efficient home offers<br />

exquisite craftsmanship with luxurious features.<br />

Louise Touchette 617-605-0555<br />

Search 72413979 on cbhomes.com<br />

Peabody | 4/2.1 | $629,900<br />

Sale Pending 9 Amy Road<br />

Picture perfect Colonial located on a cul-desac<br />

in desirable West Peabody!<br />

Joyce Cucchiara 978-808-1597<br />

Search 72454999 on cbhomes.com<br />

Peabody | 3/3 | $469,900<br />

Sale Pending 372 Lynnfield Street<br />

Beautiful Cape style 3 bedroom, 3 full bath home<br />

features a renovated open kitchen design with<br />

combined dining and living room area.<br />

Dan Donovan 617-304-9976<br />

Search 72454175 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 | 4/2.1 | $1,165,000<br />

18 Sawyer Lane<br />

From the moment you enter this impeccable<br />

4- Bedroom Colonial you will feel the<br />

warmth and comfort of this home.<br />

Karen Johnson 781-367-8482<br />

Search 72456613 on cbhomes.com<br />

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

9 Overbook Road<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 />

Middleton | 4/2.1 | $869,000<br />

178 Lake Street<br />

Spectacular new construction built in 2017<br />

offers 10 rooms, 4 bedrooms, 2.1 bathrooms<br />

in a desirable lot with circular driveway.<br />

Louise Touchette 617-605-0555<br />

Search 72453658 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 />

Saugus | 3/2 | $499,900<br />

Just Listed 7 Bacon Drive<br />

Completely redecorated sun-filled home<br />

with freshly painted interior and gleaming<br />

hardwood floors throughout first floor!<br />

Carol DiCiaccio 781-820-3517<br />

Search 72458401 on cbhomes.com<br />

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

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 />

Middleton | 2/2.1 | $479,900<br />

70 Fuller Pond Road Unit 174<br />

Only Available unit at most desired Fuller<br />

Pond Village, sited in most private location<br />

of the community.<br />

Carol DiCiaccio 781-820-3517<br />

Search 72450502 on cbhomes.com<br />

Salem | 2/2 | $469,900<br />

Just Listed 51 Lafayette Street #504<br />

Exceptional condo with two walls filled with<br />

windows offering sun drenched living space<br />

and breathtaking views of Salem Harbor.<br />

Joyce Cucchiara 978-808-1597<br />

Search 72459114 on cbhomes.com<br />

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

Sale Pending 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 />

Saugus | 1/1 | Apartment<br />

1565 Broadway<br />

A new, thoughtful and inspired mixed-use<br />

community, Essex Landing will be a unique<br />

village with exciting amenities.<br />

Louise Touchette 617-605-0555<br />

Search 72313257 on cbhomes.com<br />

ColdwellBankerHomes.com<br />

Peabody<br />

Commercial 160 Main Street<br />

Residential units and retail space ideal for<br />

a restaurant, hair dressing or nail salon, pet<br />

store, insurance agency , etc. Excellent drive<br />

by visibility with plenty of parking. Currently in<br />

process of being built.<br />

Joyce Cucchiara 978-808-1597<br />

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

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

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

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

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

Wilmington | $1,550,000<br />

Commercial 374 Main Street<br />

Large open rooms, generous storage, office<br />

space, conference/sitting rooms, and ramp<br />

for handicap access.<br />

Denise Moynihan/Stephen Velonis<br />

Search 72446813 on cbhomes.com<br />

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16<br />

WEEKLYNEWS.NET - 978-532-5880 MARCH 7, 2019<br />

Home...<br />

Where you deserve to be

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