04.08.2021 Views

PWN080521

You also want an ePaper? Increase the reach of your titles

YUMPU automatically turns print PDFs into web optimized ePapers that Google loves.

The #1 Selling<br />

Real Estate Office<br />

in Lynnfield*<br />

NEW LISTING! COMING SOON! SOLD<br />

WEST PEABODY<br />

$285,000<br />

SAUGUS<br />

WILMINGTON<br />

$1,150,000<br />

4,400 SQ FT<br />

COMMERCIAL/<br />

RESIDENTIAL<br />

DANVERS<br />

$1,300,000<br />

COMMERCIAL SPACE<br />

FOR LEASE<br />

LYNN<br />

Call for details<br />

Joyce Cucchiara<br />

978-808-1597<br />

Sandy Moroney<br />

978-210-7386<br />

Denise Moynihan<br />

781-872-1200<br />

*MLS PIN 1/1/18 - 12/31/2018<br />

PEABODY<br />

WEEKLY NEWS<br />

Steve Macdonald<br />

508-982-5005<br />

Annie L. Belmer<br />

857-559-3977<br />

WOBURN, MA<br />

PERMIT #168<br />

PAID<br />

U.S. POSTAGE<br />

ECRWSSEDDM<br />

PRSRT STD<br />

AUGUST 5, 2021 • VOL. 60, NO. 31<br />

SERVING THE COMMUNITY SINCE 1957<br />

16 PAGES • ONE DOLLAR<br />

Peabody West wins state Little<br />

League Championship<br />

By Mike Alongi<br />

GLOUCESTER — The<br />

dream summer is alive and well<br />

for the Peabody West Little<br />

League team, as the cardiac<br />

kids from the west side of town<br />

put together a weekend for the<br />

ages and came away with the<br />

Massachusetts Little League<br />

state championship trophy following<br />

a 6-5 win over Pittsfield<br />

American Sunday afternoon at<br />

Boudreau Field.<br />

It’s been 12 years since the<br />

last time Peabody West took<br />

home a Little League state<br />

championship. That team went<br />

all the way to Williamsport,<br />

Pa., thanks to a Matt Hosman<br />

walk-off grand slam home run<br />

against Rhode Island secured<br />

the Tanners the New England<br />

Regional title.<br />

“It was a tough start, but<br />

we’re grateful that we didn’t<br />

hang our heads and we kept<br />

fighting,” said Peabody West<br />

manager Mark Bettencourt. “I<br />

give a ton of credit to Pittsfield.<br />

They’re a great team, and they<br />

could easily be the ones representing<br />

Massachusetts in the regional.<br />

But when you play one<br />

game, anything can happen.<br />

Today we were lucky enough to<br />

play the better game.”<br />

Just the fact that Peabody<br />

West was in Sunday’s championship<br />

game was a longshot a<br />

STATE TITLE, PAGE 9<br />

PHOTO | JAKOB MENENDEZ<br />

The Peabody West team exploded in excitement<br />

after beating Pittsfield 6-5 in the Massachusetts<br />

State Little League Championship.<br />

Peabody’s Heather MacLean makes it<br />

to Olympic 1500-meter semifinal<br />

PHOTO | JAKOB MENENDEZ<br />

Michele Maurice, left, watches her daughter,<br />

Heather MacLean, run in the Women’s 1500-<br />

meter qualifiying race in the Olympics.<br />

By Anne MArie ToBin And<br />

Mike Alongi<br />

PEABODY — For the first<br />

time in more than 20 years, the<br />

city of Peabody sat back in awe<br />

as one of its own competed on<br />

the grandest stage possible.<br />

And boy, were they in awe.<br />

Under the bright lights of<br />

primetime television in the<br />

United States Sunday night —<br />

and the boiling heat of Tokyo<br />

on Monday morning local time<br />

— Peabody native Heather<br />

MacLean made it through to<br />

the semifinal round of the women’s<br />

1500-meter at the Tokyo<br />

Olympics by running a time of<br />

4:02:40 in the third and final<br />

heat of the night.<br />

“I wasn’t nervous at all when<br />

she was in seventh (place);<br />

she’s a sneaky one and that’s<br />

her style,” MacLean’s mother<br />

Michele Maurice said with tears<br />

of joy in her eyes after the race.<br />

“I’m probably going to go home<br />

and just wait for Heather’s call,<br />

which usually comes around<br />

4:30 in the morning. Not many<br />

people like getting calls that<br />

early, but that’s one call that I’m<br />

going to be ecstatic to take.”<br />

Peabody residents from all<br />

OLYMPIAN, PAGE 10<br />

Debbie Caniff<br />

617-771-2827<br />

ZBA rejects<br />

Oak Street<br />

40B in<br />

Peabody<br />

By SAM MinTon<br />

PEABODY — The Zoning Board of<br />

Appeals voted unanimously Monday to<br />

reject a plan for a proposed Chapter 40B<br />

affordable housing development on Oak<br />

Street.<br />

The ZBA had been considering a permit<br />

for the so-called “Locus” site for years<br />

prior to the board’s 5-0 vote to deny plans<br />

for the project this week.<br />

Throughout the process, board members<br />

had been weighing concerns from<br />

the city’s Police and Fire departments,<br />

the mayor’s office and residents. Some of<br />

those concerns have included the area’s<br />

history of flooding, possible issues with<br />

access for emergency vehicles and general<br />

contract issues.<br />

Former Fire Chief Steven Pasdon said<br />

he was concerned about the lack of access<br />

that emergency vehicles would have in the<br />

area if the development was constructed.<br />

Pasdon said he was worried about not<br />

having “360-degree access” around the<br />

proposed building in what he described as<br />

an “already-congested area.”<br />

In addition, Pasdon said that the city<br />

has not yet been able to solve its flooding<br />

issue in the downtown area, which has<br />

been a concern since 2016. The problem is<br />

ZBA, PAGE 3<br />

The #1 Selling<br />

Real Estate Office<br />

in Lynnfield*<br />

*MLS PIN 1/1/18 - 12/31/2018<br />

RETAIL UNIT FOR SALE NEW LISTING! SOLD NEW LISTING!<br />

LYNNFIELD<br />

$2,800/mo<br />

Rossetti/Poti Team<br />

781-718-4662<br />

WEST PEABODY<br />

$649,900<br />

Joyce Cucchiara<br />

978-808-1597<br />

LYNNFIELD<br />

$839,000<br />

Gale Rawding<br />

617-784-9995<br />

LYNNFIELD<br />

Louise<br />

Bova-Touchette<br />

617-605-0555<br />

WOBURN<br />

$324,900<br />

Evelyn Rockas<br />

617-256-8500<br />

Rita Fitzgerald<br />

978-204-2503


2<br />

WEEKLYNEWS.NET - 978-532-5880 AUGUST 5, 2021<br />

Opposition grows against<br />

proposed Peabody peaker plant<br />

By Sam minton<br />

PEABODY — Residents are<br />

calling upon Gov. Charlie Baker<br />

to step in as the Massachusetts<br />

Municipal Wholesale Electric<br />

Company (MMWEC) looks to<br />

build a peak capacity generator<br />

at the Waters River Plant.<br />

According to the Clean<br />

Power Coalition, clean energy<br />

advocates from across the<br />

Commonwealth have stated that<br />

Baker is obligated to carry out<br />

the Decarbonization Roadmap<br />

law, ensure accountability, and<br />

intervene in the Department of<br />

Public Utilities (DPU) hearing<br />

process.<br />

Their argument, advocates<br />

say, is that the DPU hearing<br />

officer refused to consider essential<br />

requirements of the law<br />

in reviewing the MMWEC proposal<br />

to build Project 2015A, a<br />

55-megawatt capacity resource<br />

to provide capacity to 14 municipal<br />

light companies (MLPs).<br />

The group is asking Baker<br />

to enforce the Decarbonization<br />

Roadmap law, claiming that the<br />

peaker plant is inconsistent with<br />

plans laid out by the roadmap.<br />

According to the MMWEC,<br />

which is looking to build the<br />

plant, the facility — which will<br />

run only 239 hours per year —<br />

would be in line with the “need<br />

for reliability resources and<br />

balancing resources as intermittent-renewable-generating<br />

resources become the dominant<br />

source of electricity for the region,”<br />

which is laid out in the<br />

roadmap.<br />

In past hearings, citizens<br />

and experts raised concerns<br />

about the impact of the plant on<br />

public health, the environment,<br />

and the climate crisis. State<br />

Sen. Joan Lovely (D-Salem)<br />

and state Reps. Lori Ehrlich<br />

(D-Marblehead) and Sally<br />

Kerans (D-Danvers) have said<br />

that they want a comprehensive<br />

public health and environmental<br />

review, with special attention<br />

put toward environmental justice<br />

communities in the area.<br />

The Massachusetts Climate<br />

Action Network (MCAN) and<br />

Clean Energy Group (CEG)<br />

have also recently released an<br />

assessment for energy storage<br />

alternatives for the natural-gasand<br />

oil-powered peaker plant<br />

proposed by the MMWEC for<br />

Peabody. The report investigated<br />

the viability of battery<br />

technology as a replacement for<br />

the proposed fossil fuel peaker<br />

plant. The findings were that<br />

standalone batteries could provide<br />

significant savings in cost<br />

to MLPs.<br />

“When accounting for capital,<br />

fuel, and operations and<br />

maintenance costs, as well as<br />

for the expected energy and<br />

ancillary services revenue, the<br />

net cost of batteries is projected<br />

to be significantly lower than<br />

that of Project 2015A,” read the<br />

assessment.<br />

The report concludes that a<br />

battery-storage option for the<br />

project is cost-competitive,<br />

reduces global and local emissions,<br />

reduces noise levels, and<br />

alleviates harms on overburdened<br />

environmental-justice<br />

communities.”<br />

According to its website,<br />

MMWEC disputes the claims<br />

that batteries are a viable option.<br />

During a June 22 public<br />

meeting at the Torigian Senior<br />

Center, MMWEC outlined the<br />

reasons why batteries are not<br />

a suitable option. MMWEC<br />

said it has reached out to five<br />

utility-scale battery manufacturers<br />

and developers to review<br />

updated battery technologies<br />

and their applicability to the<br />

Peabody site in delivering the<br />

desired capacity hedge that<br />

Project 2015A is designed to<br />

provide.<br />

“A battery-producing similar<br />

capacity will not fit on the<br />

Peabody site. MMWEC continued<br />

with an analysis to compare<br />

a battery installation to<br />

Project 2015A, assuming the<br />

site was large enough to accommodate<br />

a similar-sized utility<br />

scale battery,” MMWEC said.<br />

“The analysis concludes that<br />

Project 2015A would provide<br />

capacity at a cost of $4.28 per<br />

kw-month for a 30-year period.<br />

A similar-sized battery would<br />

produce capacity at a cost of<br />

$9.24 per kw-month for a 15-<br />

year period. While battery costs<br />

have declined over the past few<br />

years, the degradation characteristics<br />

of batteries lead to a<br />

shorter useful life and output<br />

reduction compared to a simple<br />

cycled turbine.”<br />

MMWEC stated at that same<br />

meeting that the peaker project<br />

would produce fewer emissions<br />

than 94 percent of similar resources<br />

in the region, thereby<br />

improving air quality.<br />

When running, “it will be<br />

displacing emissions, resulting<br />

in a net reduction of carbon<br />

emissions (and that) without<br />

the capacity resources, grid reliability<br />

is at risk,” the company<br />

said. “Over the last 10 years, all<br />

of its energy projects have been<br />

carbon free. MMWEC is currently<br />

developing a 7-megawatt<br />

solar project (Project 2020A)<br />

on the MMWEC site.”<br />

Other benefits cited by<br />

MMWEC include increased<br />

stabilization of rates and protection<br />

against volatile capacity<br />

prices MLPs would be facing<br />

if forced to buy capacity on the<br />

open market.<br />

“By supporting the capacity<br />

requirements, the project allows<br />

(MLPs) to pursue additional<br />

carbon-free energy resources,”<br />

said MMWEC in the<br />

presentation.<br />

Peabody Area Chamber of Commerce Summer Events<br />

MassHire Employee<br />

Resources Webinar<br />

Date and Time:<br />

Thursdays 2pm<br />

July 15th - September<br />

Location:<br />

Virtual<br />

Fees/Admission:<br />

No Fee<br />

Website:<br />

https://www.mass.gov/<br />

topics/masshire<br />

Registration:<br />

https://www.eventbrite.<br />

com/e/masshire-employer-resources-webinar-tickets-163047115311<br />

PACC Annual<br />

Summer Shindig -<br />

Olympic-Sized Fun!<br />

Date and Time:<br />

Get your car looking<br />

great this summer<br />

Before<br />

Don Winslow’s<br />

AUTO B O D Y<br />

Celebrating 49 Years<br />

After<br />

MON-FRI 8-5 • SAT. 9-12<br />

166 Holten Street • Danvers<br />

(corner of Center & Collins)<br />

978-762-6366 • 978-535-2474<br />

www.DonWinslowAutoBody.com<br />

Thursday, August 12th<br />

5:00 to 8:00 pm<br />

Location:<br />

Smith Barn<br />

38 Felton St. Peaobdy MA<br />

01960<br />

Fees/Admission:<br />

Tickets: $40 per person advance<br />

At the Door: $50 per person<br />

Sponsorship<br />

Packages<br />

Available<br />

Description:<br />

Join us for our annual PACC<br />

Annual Summer Shindig on<br />

Thursday, August 12th at<br />

5:00pm at the Smith Barn!<br />

Enjoy a fun night of food, adult<br />

beverages and games. A great<br />

company outing opportunity!<br />

PACC Health and<br />

Wellness Expo 2021<br />

Date and Time:<br />

Sunday Aug 22, 2021<br />

5-8pm<br />

Location:<br />

Leather City Commons<br />

53 Lowell Street Peabody<br />

MA 01960<br />

Fees/Admission:<br />

Admission to the Expo is Free!<br />

Description:<br />

Put the stress of 2020 behind<br />

you with our 16th Annual Health<br />

& Wellness Expo, happening<br />

on Sunday, August 22nd on<br />

Leather City Commons during<br />

the Mayor’s Concert featuring<br />

Renee and the Renegades.<br />

Learn and experience the latest<br />

in health and wellness trends<br />

with over 20 area businesses<br />

and organizations. There will be<br />

a food truck and craft beer featured.<br />

There’s something for everyone<br />

from home organization<br />

tips, to healthy eating to spring<br />

cleaning your financials.<br />

Attendee admission is free!<br />

PEABODY LIONS<br />

29th Annual Golf<br />

Tournament<br />

Date and Time:<br />

Monday Sep 13, 2021<br />

12:00 PM - 6:00 PM<br />

Registration/Lunch: Noon<br />

Event: 12:30 Shotgun<br />

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

Service to all faiths<br />

Complete Pre-Need Planning<br />

Medicaid Approved Trust &<br />

Insurance Plans<br />

19 YALE AVE.,<br />

WAKEFIELD, MASS.<br />

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

Spacious Modern Facilities<br />

Ample Private Parking<br />

Handicapped Accessible<br />

Area Code 781<br />

245-3550 • 334-9966<br />

Location:<br />

Thomson Country Club<br />

2 Mid Iron Drive<br />

North Reading, MA<br />

Fees/Admission:<br />

Entrance Fee: $165/golfer<br />

SPONSORSHIPS:<br />

$1500 Flag Sponsor —<br />

GolfStatus.org applies your<br />

company name & branding on a<br />

professional 2-sided pin flag at<br />

EVERY hole.<br />

$1250 Premier Technology<br />

Sponsor — GolfStatus.org applies<br />

your company name &<br />

branding exposure on tournament’s<br />

website and within all<br />

functions on mobile golf app.<br />

$1000 Double Eagle Sponsor<br />

— 4 golfers, tee sign prominently<br />

posted on the course at one of<br />

the 18 holes, company name &<br />

branding exposure on all print<br />

materials, mobile golf app/website<br />

access, lunch & dinner.<br />

$800 Eagle Sponsor — 4<br />

golfers, tee sign prominently<br />

posted on the course, mobile<br />

golf app/website access, lunch<br />

& dinner.<br />

$100 Hole Sponsor — name<br />

on tee sign prominently posted<br />

on the course at one of the 18<br />

holes.<br />

Website:<br />

http://www.e-clubhouse.org/<br />

sites/peabody/<br />

Contact Information:<br />

For more information please<br />

contact Lion Kayla (978-587-<br />

6255), or Lion Peter (978-535-<br />

4828) or email peabodylionsclub@gmail.com.<br />

Description:<br />

Our primary fundraiser,<br />

hosted at the Thomson Country<br />

Club, North Reading, MA supporting<br />

PEABODY LIONS<br />

CHARITIES, a nonprofit organization<br />

serving the Peabody<br />

area. For more than 75 years,<br />

PEABODY LIONS continues<br />

to assist local residents with<br />

vision and sensory impairments.<br />

This includes obtaining<br />

and receiving services and<br />

equipment such as eyeglasses,<br />

vision screenings and technology.<br />

PEABODY LIONS<br />

CHARITIES also works to support<br />

elders and families, and<br />

assists in a variety of community-related<br />

initiatives in alignment<br />

with all of the LIONS<br />

Service areas:<br />

VISION<br />

DIABETES<br />

HUNGER<br />

YOUTH<br />

ENVIRONMENT<br />

HUMANITARIAN<br />

Our golf tournament is open<br />

to all individuals and organizations!<br />

We continue to strive<br />

for a record number of golfers<br />

and sponsors to enjoy a day of<br />

golfing supporting our community.<br />

Please consider becoming<br />

a partner with the PEABODY<br />

LIONS with one of our sponsorship<br />

opportunities.<br />

“WE SERVE!”<br />

Thank you all & hope to see<br />

you at our event!


AUGUST 5, 2021<br />

Power UP!<br />

August<br />

Poolside @<br />

Torigian YMCA<br />

Leave those expensive referral<br />

groups behind.<br />

Power UP! is the best 90<br />

minutes you can invest in your<br />

business.<br />

How, you ask? Because we<br />

don’t leave anything to chance.<br />

• Guest speakers to learn from<br />

• Give your pitch to the entire<br />

group<br />

• One on One meetings<br />

• Complete list of contact information<br />

of like minded individuals<br />

who also want to grow<br />

their business.<br />

• No compulsory attendance<br />

or weak referrals<br />

Each month, you’ll get the<br />

best of both worlds:<br />

1/3 of the attendees are regulars<br />

providing the opportunity<br />

to build strong relationships<br />

that produce referrals; 1/3 of<br />

attendees attend occasionally<br />

allowing you to reconnect and<br />

1/3 are first timers giving you<br />

an ever growing way to get new<br />

business or increase your referral<br />

base.<br />

Why is Power UP! different?<br />

Business professionals who<br />

are active in a local chamber<br />

of commerce are interested in<br />

building long term relationships<br />

that produce strong, repeat referrals<br />

— for you and them.<br />

This month’s host & Chamber<br />

for Good Nonprofit of the<br />

month is the Torigian Family<br />

YMCA!<br />

They truly have something<br />

to offer every member of our<br />

community!<br />

Chamber for Good Series<br />

Sponsor: Peabody Wealth<br />

Advisors<br />

Power Up Series Sponsor:<br />

Salem Five<br />

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

Peabody Institute<br />

Library Summer<br />

Concert: Dance Caliente<br />

The Peabody Institute Library<br />

will be hosting ballroom dance<br />

duo Dance Caliente for an interactive<br />

performance and lessons<br />

on Monday, August 30th,<br />

at 7 PM in the Sutton Room, as<br />

we welcome our patrons back<br />

to indoor programming at the<br />

library.<br />

This special performance<br />

represents the last entry in our<br />

spring/summer concert series<br />

for 2021. The performance is<br />

funded by the Peabody Institute<br />

Library Foundation and the<br />

McCarthy Family Foundation.<br />

Interested patrons can sign<br />

up at https://peabodylibrary.<br />

assabetinteractive.com/calendar/summer-concert-series-dance-caliente/.<br />

More details and the link to<br />

sign up are below.<br />

Monday, August 30th:<br />

Ballroom and Latin dance duo<br />

Dance Caliente<br />

Together as Dance Caliente,<br />

Raul Nieves and Eileen<br />

Herman-Haase share a compelling<br />

magnetism as master<br />

teachers, choreographers and<br />

performers. Their goal is to impart<br />

the joy of partner dancing<br />

onto their students. They welcome<br />

students of varying ages<br />

and experience.<br />

Dance Caliente will do an<br />

interactive sampler performance.<br />

They will perform 4-5<br />

various dances (i.e. Waltz,<br />

Swing, Argentine Tango, Salsa,<br />

Foxtrot), and leave time in between<br />

each performance for a<br />

short lesson on that dance. The<br />

lessons will be interactive and<br />

low-impact, tailored to seniors<br />

and beginners, and do not require<br />

a partner. Audience members<br />

can sit back and watch<br />

Raul and Eileen, or get up and<br />

dance themselves!<br />

FOR FURTHER<br />

INFORMATION CONTACT:<br />

Gabi Toth<br />

Senior Adult Services and<br />

Public Programming Librarian<br />

978-531-0100 x17<br />

gtoth@noblenet.org<br />

Municipal Light Commission<br />

preparing for heated race<br />

Thanks<br />

from<br />

Joseph<br />

Lane<br />

We would like to thank our<br />

neighbors on Joseph Lane,<br />

Lowell St. and Cider Mill<br />

for being so cooperative and<br />

gracious during the preparation<br />

and filming of the Apple<br />

Studios movie “Spirited” at<br />

our home. Also, many thanks<br />

to the Lynnfield Police and<br />

Fire departments for their assistance<br />

and oversight during<br />

the process. Our family was<br />

delighted and excited to host<br />

Ryan Reynolds, Will Ferrell<br />

and Octavia Spencer. The director,<br />

Sean Anders, and the entire<br />

crew were great. We hope<br />

that our neighbors were able to<br />

share in the excitement of the<br />

event as well.<br />

Best regards,<br />

Diane Tilley & Nat Ruccolo<br />

Joseph Lane<br />

By Sam minton<br />

PEABODY — The deadline<br />

has passed for candidates to<br />

pull papers for upcoming city<br />

elections — and there is definitely<br />

one race to keep an eye<br />

on.<br />

The contest that could be the<br />

most contentious is a six-candidate<br />

race for two open seats on<br />

the Peabody Municipal Light<br />

Commission. The candidates<br />

are Thomas Paras and Robert<br />

Wheatley, who are running<br />

for reelection, and challengers<br />

Raymond Melvin, MaryBeth<br />

Mallia, Tracy Valletti and Joel<br />

Brenner.<br />

Peabody Municipal Light<br />

Plant (PMLP) manager<br />

Charles Orphanos believes<br />

that it is a great thing to have<br />

so many people running for the<br />

commission.<br />

“It’s an election process, so<br />

it’s a fair and even process,”<br />

said Orphanos. “I think that’s<br />

a wonderful process.”<br />

Project 2015A, which would<br />

install a peaker plant in the<br />

city, has been a point of contention<br />

among residents. Some<br />

have been outspoken against<br />

the plant, but Orphanos doesn’t<br />

believe that this factor has led<br />

to an increase in candidates<br />

running against Paras and<br />

Wheatley.<br />

“I know three out of the four<br />

people that took out papers<br />

aside from the incumbents,”<br />

Staff members gather around the flagpole outside Peabody’s municipal light plant.<br />

Orphanos said. “One of them<br />

(Raymond Melvin) ran last year<br />

or two years ago for a commission<br />

seat and he was not successful<br />

his last time around. I<br />

believe one of the other ones<br />

(MaryBeth Mallia), their name<br />

has been around the city for a<br />

while. Her husband owns a local<br />

towing company and I believe<br />

she might have even ran for city<br />

council a few years back, and<br />

Joel Brenner has come to many<br />

commission meetings over the<br />

past several years.”<br />

Wheatley has been involved<br />

with the light plant for 24 years<br />

and also doesn’t believe that the<br />

increase in candidates can be<br />

tied to the 2015A project.<br />

“I have no idea because I<br />

don’t associate with any of<br />

these people that are running,”<br />

Wheatley said. “The only<br />

one (I know) would be the<br />

other incumbent that’s running<br />

(Thomas Paras), he and I<br />

would probably agree on most<br />

of the stuff. I have no idea why<br />

they (the other candidates) are<br />

running.”<br />

The PMLP’s main duties involve<br />

playing a part in setting<br />

rates for the city as well as<br />

looking for sustainable energy<br />

sources for Peabody.<br />

COURTESY PHOTO | PMLP


4<br />

PEABODY<br />

WEEKLY NEWS<br />

(USPS #66)<br />

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

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

News and Advertising Offices: 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: Sophie Yarin syarin@essexmediagroup.com<br />

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

Sports Editor: Mike Alongi malongi@essexmediagroup.com<br />

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

Patricia Whalen pwhalen@essexmediagroup.com<br />

Ernie Carpenter ecarpenter@essexmediagroup.com<br />

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

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

Classified Ads: Monday, noon;<br />

No cancellations accepted after deadline.<br />

The Peabody 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 Peabody<br />

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

Looking for a house?<br />

Check the real estate section!<br />

PEABODY WEEKL Y<br />

N E WS<br />

20<br />

MAIL TO PEABODY WEEKLY NEWS, P.O. BOX 5, LYNN, MA 01903<br />

CHECKS AND MONEY ORDERS ALSO ACCEPTED.<br />

MAKE PAYABLE TO: ESSEX MEDIA GROUP, INC.<br />

WEEKLYNEWS.NET - 978-532-5880 AUGUST 5, 2021<br />

Monday 7/26<br />

Complaints<br />

A report of suspicious activity<br />

at 5:54 p.m. Monday on Margin<br />

Terrace. A caller reported a man<br />

was walking around the neighborhood<br />

with a clipboard for<br />

more than three hours. An officer<br />

reported the man works for<br />

RCN.<br />

Suspicious activity was reported<br />

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

at Wardhurst Shish Kebab &<br />

Steakhouse. A caller reported<br />

someone was struck by a car on<br />

a bicycle. An officer reported the<br />

person was gone upon arrival.<br />

A well-being check was conducted<br />

at 8:47 p.m. Monday after<br />

a caller reported another resident<br />

of Fairweather Apartments at 20<br />

Central Ave. who was possibly<br />

intoxicated and kicked his door.<br />

Police reported the man struck<br />

a door with a golf club. Kevin<br />

Sousa, 63, of 20 Central St., Apt.<br />

408, was issued a summons for<br />

malicious destruction of property<br />

and property damage to<br />

intimidate.<br />

Vandalism<br />

Vandalism was reported at<br />

11:26 a.m. Monday at Peabody<br />

City Garage at 50 Farm Ave.<br />

A caller reported items were<br />

stolen.<br />

A report of vandalism at 7:07<br />

p.m. Monday at Extended Stay<br />

America at 200 Jubilee Drive.<br />

A caller reported her vehicle<br />

was vandalized by the roofing<br />

company.<br />

Tuesday 7/27<br />

Arrests<br />

Vipulkumar D. Patel, 46, of<br />

21 Diane Road, was arrested<br />

and charged with two counts<br />

of assault and battery with a<br />

dangerous weapon at 12 a.m.<br />

Tuesday.<br />

Accidents<br />

A report of a motor vehicle<br />

crash with injuries at 3:22 p.m.<br />

Tuesday at 50 Tremont St. Police<br />

reported a vehicle rolled over<br />

three times. Two people were<br />

taken to Salem Hospital.<br />

A report of a motor vehicle<br />

crash at 5:13 p.m. Tuesday<br />

at Capone’s Restaurant at<br />

147 Summit St.; at 7:12 p.m.<br />

Tuesday at Bridge to Learning at<br />

567 Lowell St.<br />

A motor vehicle crash was reported<br />

at 6:32 p.m. Tuesday at<br />

21 Andover St. Thales Lago, 27,<br />

of 27 Tremont St., was issued<br />

a summons for following too<br />

close and unlicensed operation<br />

of a motor vehicle.<br />

Breaking and Entering<br />

A report of an attempted burglary<br />

at 11:36 p.m. Tuesday at<br />

16 Crowninshield St.<br />

Theft<br />

A report of a larceny at<br />

10:52 a.m. Tuesday at 10<br />

Crowninshield St. A caller reported<br />

a stolen package.<br />

A larceny was reported at 1:13<br />

p.m. Tuesday at Alliance Health<br />

Police Log<br />

at Rosewood at 22 Johnson<br />

St. A patient reported $200 in<br />

missing cash.<br />

A report of a larceny at 8:52<br />

p.m. Tuesday at Northshore Mall<br />

at 210N Andover St. A caller<br />

reported leaving a wallet on a<br />

couch in the mall and said there<br />

was $480 missing from it after<br />

the wallet was returned by customer<br />

service.<br />

Wednesday 7/28<br />

Arrests<br />

Patrick Joseph Corning, 38,<br />

homeless, was arrested and<br />

charged with assault and battery<br />

with a dangerous weapon at<br />

9:19 p.m. Wednesday.<br />

Accidents<br />

A report of a motor vehicle<br />

crash at 9:24 a.m. Wednesday at<br />

D’orsi’s Bakery and Delicatessen<br />

at 197 Washington St.; at 12<br />

p.m. Wednesday at T.J. Maxx<br />

at 300 Andover St.; at 4:24 p.m.<br />

Wednesday at 119 Bartholomew<br />

St.; at 1:22 a.m. Thursday at 15<br />

Buttonwood Lane.<br />

Complaints<br />

A report of a fight at 9:19<br />

p.m. Wednesday at Leather<br />

City Commons at 77 Lowell St.<br />

A caller reported approximately<br />

five people were brawling in the<br />

commons; one was reportedly<br />

using a large stick as a weapon.<br />

A 38-year-old man was arrested<br />

(see arrests).<br />

A report of suspicious activity<br />

at 10:05 a.m. Wednesday at 2<br />

Bowen Road. A caller reported<br />

he was scammed out of $180<br />

worth of Pokemon cards.<br />

Thursday 7/29<br />

Arrests<br />

Michael E. Pingaro, 37, of 78<br />

Beaver St., Salem, was arrested<br />

and charged with OUI-drugs<br />

second offense, marked lanes<br />

violation and negligent operation<br />

of a motor vehicle at 1:31 p.m.<br />

Thursday.<br />

Accidents<br />

A report of a FedEx truck that<br />

crashed into a hydrant at 5:30<br />

p.m. Thursday at 29 Endicott St.<br />

DPW was notified.<br />

Breaking and Entering<br />

A report of a motor vehicle<br />

breaking and entering at 12:26<br />

p.m. Thursday at Jesus The<br />

Living World at 36 Walnut St.<br />

Theft<br />

A report of a larceny at 6:54<br />

a.m. Thursday at Acura of<br />

Peabody at 233 Andover St. A<br />

manager reported wheels were<br />

stolen off the lot.<br />

Check fraud was reported<br />

at 3:31 p.m. Thursday at 11<br />

Kittredge St.; at 11:54 a.m.<br />

Friday at 101 Brooksby Village<br />

Drive.<br />

Friday 7/30<br />

Accidents<br />

A report of a motor vehicle<br />

crash at 8:11 p.m. Thursday<br />

at 124 Foster St. and 163<br />

Washington St.; at 8:34 a.m.<br />

Friday at 155 Andover St. and 2<br />

Loris Road; at 1:39 p.m. Friday<br />

at Chase Bank at 210C Andover<br />

St.<br />

A report of a hit-and-run<br />

motor vehicle crash at 1:10 p.m.<br />

Friday at Wake Up Pretty at 139<br />

Lynnfield St.<br />

Overdose<br />

A report of an overdose at 9:37<br />

a.m. Friday at Dunkin’ Donuts at<br />

672 Lowell St. The person was<br />

taken to Beverly Hospital<br />

Saturday 7/31<br />

Accidents<br />

On Saturday at 3:12 p.m. a<br />

driver involved in a crash on<br />

Chestnut Street was taken to<br />

Salem Hospital.<br />

Disturbance<br />

At 11:02 p.m. on Saturday<br />

a caller reported an altercation<br />

in the parking lot at Sonic<br />

on Newbury Street. The caller<br />

added that he believed one individual<br />

pulled out a handgun.<br />

Sunday 8/1<br />

Accidents<br />

At 11:06 a.m. Sunday a caller<br />

reported that her vehicle was<br />

hit while parked on Paleologos<br />

Street.<br />

Disturbance<br />

On Sunday at 5:38 a.m. a<br />

caller reported that a female<br />

was walking naked in downtown<br />

Peabody.<br />

At 2:44 p.m on Sunday a<br />

caller reported that employees<br />

were fighting at Qdoba on 229<br />

Andover Street.<br />

Scams<br />

A caller reported that she had<br />

been scammed out of $15,000<br />

at 11:13 a.m. on Saturday.<br />

Well-Being Check<br />

At 1:08 p.m. on Saturday<br />

a caller requested a wellness<br />

check that resulted in an individual<br />

being sent to Beverly<br />

Hospital.


AUGUST 5, 2021<br />

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

Religious News<br />

Congregation Tifereth Israel<br />

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

Twitter and Instagram.<br />

Phone: +1 929 205 6099 US<br />

St. Clare Mission (feeding the<br />

The next Congregation<br />

Tifereth Israel Shabbat service is<br />

scheduled for Friday, August 13,<br />

at 7:30 PM. It will be held both<br />

in person at our synagogue at 8<br />

Pierpont Street, Peabody, and<br />

also on Zoom. The Zoom link is<br />

sent to all members several days<br />

prior to the service. To be added<br />

to the email list, please leave a<br />

voice mail message at 978-531-<br />

8135, or email info@ctipeabody.<br />

Rabbi David Kudan<br />

Music Director Bryna Toder<br />

Tabasky<br />

Prayer Leader Gary Gillette<br />

489 Lowell St.<br />

Peabody, Mass<br />

978-535-2100<br />

www.templetiferetshalom.org<br />

Temple Ner Tamid<br />

Service Times<br />

Sunday to Thursday: 7 p.m.<br />

Friday: 8 p.m.<br />

In-person Worship<br />

Join us for our modified service<br />

of the Holy Eucharist at<br />

8:30 Sunday mornings, with<br />

COVID-19 safety protocols in<br />

place. Advanced registration<br />

is required (call the church at<br />

978-774-1150).<br />

Outreach<br />

Join us on the third Sunday of<br />

each month as we prepare 40-50<br />

bagged lunches for the food in-<br />

Perfect Paws Pet Ministry, the<br />

third Sunday of each month at 5<br />

p.m.<br />

https://zoom.us/<br />

j/990855545?pwd=YVN4bzF-<br />

hOEpLZkY3Y1dxQkt2OT-<br />

JMdz09<br />

Meeting ID: 990 855 545<br />

Password: Saintfranc<br />

Parish office: Call 978-774-<br />

1150 or email allstoffice@gmail.<br />

com<br />

hungry)<br />

Saturdays at 11 a.m.-1 p.m.<br />

Mission Outreach Services<br />

(Homelessness Outreach)<br />

Call Jill at 267-481-5725.<br />

Al-Anon Meetings<br />

Find us at:<br />

https://alanonma.org/<br />

North Shore Baptist Church<br />

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

Sharing God’s Truth for Life’s<br />

org.<br />

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

secure in Peabody. Contact the<br />

Peace,<br />

Transitions<br />

President Elliot Hershoff<br />

Soloist Joanne Pressman<br />

Congregation Tifereth Israel<br />

8 Pierpont Street<br />

Peabody, MA 01960<br />

Tel. 978.531.8135<br />

web: www.ctipeabody.org<br />

St. John Lutheran Church<br />

Worship: 9:30 a.m., Sunday,<br />

in-person and on Zoom<br />

Bible Study: 11 a.m.<br />

22 Ellsworth Road, Peabody<br />

Website: https://stjohnpea-<br />

Holidays as published.<br />

Join Us Online.<br />

Services and all other programs<br />

are being held virtually<br />

using Zoom, Facebook and<br />

YouTube<br />

Rabbi Richard Perlman<br />

Associate Rabbi Bernie<br />

Horowitz<br />

Visit our website<br />

www.templenertamid.org<br />

Contact office<br />

978-532-1293<br />

church office (978-774-1150) if<br />

you would like to donate food or<br />

help prepare the lunches.<br />

We also have the following<br />

Zoom services and fellowship<br />

opportunities:<br />

Worship on Sundays at 10 a.m.<br />

https://zoom.us/j/134596872<br />

Meeting ID: 134 596 872<br />

Phone: 929-205-6099<br />

Coffee hour on Tuesdays at 10<br />

a.m.<br />

https://zoom.us/j/201985541<br />

Michelle Behling, Parish<br />

Administrator<br />

Michelle Behling, Parish<br />

Administrator<br />

All Saints Episcopal Church<br />

of the North Shore<br />

46 Cherry Street<br />

Danvers, MA 01923<br />

978-774-1150 / allstoffice@<br />

gmail.com<br />

St. Clare of Assisi<br />

(non-Roman)<br />

Our Parish family welcomes<br />

Small Group Worship & Bible<br />

Study (in-person) - 10:30 a.m.<br />

Sundays. For info, prayer or<br />

help, contact us at 978-535-6186<br />

or office@northshorebaptistchurch.org.<br />

Carmelite Chapel<br />

Carmelite Chapel in the<br />

Northshore Mall<br />

Holy Mass:<br />

Monday through Friday: Noon<br />

and 3 p.m.<br />

body.org<br />

Church phone: 978-531-1731<br />

Pastor: The Rev. Charles N.<br />

Stevenson<br />

Email: stjohnpastor@earthlink.net<br />

For the Zoom link, please<br />

email the pastor.<br />

Temple Tiferet Shalom<br />

Services and all other programs<br />

are being held virtually<br />

via Zoom and StreamSpot.<br />

Services Friday evenings at<br />

office@templenertamid.org<br />

368 Lowell St.<br />

Peabody, Mass.<br />

All Saints Episcopal Church<br />

of the North Shore<br />

Good morning and thank you!<br />

All Saints Episcopal Church of<br />

the North Shore in Danvers has<br />

in-person worship, as well as<br />

Zoom opportunities on Sunday<br />

mornings and throughout the<br />

week. Our webpage is https://allsaintsepiscopalnorthshore.org/,<br />

Meeting ID: 201 985 541<br />

Phone: + 1 929 205 6099<br />

Frank Time Discussion on<br />

the second Wednesdays of each<br />

month at 5:15 pm<br />

https://us02web.zoom.<br />

us/j/85499949543<br />

Meeting ID: 854 9994 9543<br />

Phone: +1 929 205 6099<br />

Morning Prayer on Fridays at<br />

8:30 a.m.<br />

h t t p s : / / z o o m .<br />

us/j/96760775904<br />

everyone. We are not here to<br />

condemn, criticize, or judge<br />

you. Rather, we want to offer<br />

our love, our support, and our<br />

prayers for you. Your presence is<br />

an important part of our celebration<br />

of the Mass and when you<br />

are not here, you are missed!<br />

The Rev. Fr. Mike Otero-<br />

Otero, O.S.F.<br />

978-804-2250<br />

www.stclarepeabody.org<br />

Holy Mass: Saturdays at 3<br />

Saturday: Noon, 4 and 5:30<br />

p.m.<br />

Sunday: Noon<br />

Confession:<br />

Monday through Friday<br />

11-11:45 a.m. and 2-2:45 p.m.<br />

Saturday<br />

11-11:45 a.m. and 2:45-3:45<br />

p.m.<br />

Gift Shop<br />

Open Monday through<br />

Saturday: 11 a.m.-5 p.m.<br />

7:30 p.m. and Saturday morn-<br />

and we are also on Facebook,<br />

Meeting ID: 967 6077 5904<br />

p.m.<br />

Phone: 978-531-8340<br />

Seniors News<br />

Ways to prevent falls<br />

For the Weekly NeWs<br />

Important information from<br />

the National Center for Injury<br />

Prevention and Control:<br />

There are four things you can<br />

do to prevent falls:<br />

Speak up. Talk openly with<br />

your health care provider<br />

about fall risks and prevention.<br />

Have your doctor review your<br />

medicines.<br />

Keep moving. Begin an exercise<br />

program to improve your<br />

strength and balance.<br />

Get an annual eye exam.<br />

Replace eyeglasses as needed.<br />

Make your home safe:<br />

Remove clutter and tripping<br />

hazards. Contact your local<br />

community or senior center<br />

for information on exercise<br />

fall-prevention programs, and<br />

options for improving home<br />

safety.<br />

Stay independent: One in<br />

four people 65 and older fall<br />

each year. What can you do to<br />

stay independent?<br />

Many people make financial<br />

plans for retirement, but not everyone<br />

plans for other changes<br />

that may come with age. This<br />

includes changes in your mobility<br />

and your ability to get<br />

around.<br />

It isn’t easy to talk about, but<br />

as we get older, physical changes<br />

can make it harder to get around<br />

and do things we want or need<br />

to do, like driving, shopping or<br />

doing household chores. (There<br />

may be a time when you still<br />

need to get around, but can no<br />

longer drive.)<br />

You might not have mobility<br />

problems now, but you could in<br />

the future. You may even know<br />

others who already do: perhaps<br />

a parent, relative, friend or<br />

neighbor. While it may not be<br />

possible to prevent all of these<br />

changes, there are actions you<br />

and your loved ones can take<br />

today, and as you age, to help<br />

keep you safe and independent<br />

tomorrow.<br />

Oosterman’s Rest Home offers a warm, homelike<br />

setting and more personalized care at lower costs<br />

than those big institutional facilities.<br />

Come see for yourself the personalized care<br />

our residents receive.<br />

For more information, call Kate Oosterman<br />

at 781-665-3188<br />

93 Laurel Street<br />

Melrose<br />

781-665-3188<br />

706 Main Street<br />

Wakefield<br />

781-245-4778


6<br />

Brooksby Farm<br />

in Peabody<br />

employs<br />

worldwide<br />

By AllyshA DunnigAn<br />

PEABODY — Local produce<br />

lovers may not be aware,<br />

but Brooksby Farm, located at<br />

54 Felton St., has a program<br />

offering standing, seasonal employment<br />

to individuals from<br />

other countries.<br />

During the busy season,<br />

typically April to December,<br />

Brooksby’s crops need the<br />

oversight of additional workers.<br />

The farm contracts out with<br />

the federal work program H-2A,<br />

also known as the Temporary<br />

Agricultural Employment of<br />

Foreign Workers program.<br />

Through this program, seven<br />

to eight employees from overseas,<br />

typically Jamaica in<br />

Brooksby’s case, are brought in<br />

to assist at the farm.<br />

Under H-2A, the U.S.<br />

Citizenship and Immigration<br />

Services (USCIS) can approve<br />

an employer’s petition for these<br />

workers and the workers will<br />

become city employees with<br />

access to insurance and other<br />

benefits.<br />

Brooksby filed an application<br />

with the Department’s<br />

Employment and Training<br />

Administration (ETA) stating<br />

that there are not sufficient<br />

workers who are “able, willing,<br />

qualified and available”, and<br />

that the employment of individuals<br />

from another country<br />

will not affect the wages and<br />

working conditions of workers<br />

similarly employed in the U.S.<br />

Brooksby has to get certified<br />

to employ the workers and must<br />

follow the federal guidelines associated<br />

with H-2A, including<br />

initially attempting to find U.S.<br />

workers to fill these jobs before<br />

offering them to individuals<br />

from abroad.<br />

This program requires<br />

Brooksby to pay special rates<br />

and provide housing and transportation<br />

to the job site; additionally,<br />

it must guarantee<br />

an offer of employment for a<br />

total number of hours equal to<br />

at least 75 percent of the work<br />

period specified in the contract.<br />

The city’s Recreation, Parks<br />

and Forestry Director, Jennifer<br />

Davis, said Brooksby has three<br />

generations of workers who<br />

have been coming back to<br />

Brooksby year after year. She<br />

said one of these individuals<br />

became a full-time employee a<br />

few years ago and asserted that<br />

everyone who participates in<br />

this program works very hard.<br />

These workers assist with<br />

jobs on the farm including harvesting<br />

and maintaining the<br />

fruits and vegetables, working<br />

in the store, assisting with the<br />

care of the animals and other<br />

duties related to the operations<br />

and maintenance of the farm.<br />

“It’s a great program and it’s<br />

so cool to see people coming<br />

back each year,” Davis said.<br />

“They work really hard and it’s<br />

a great opportunity.”<br />

Brooksby Farm is open<br />

Tuesday through Saturday from<br />

9 a.m. to 4 p.m.<br />

WEEKLYNEWS.NET - 978-532-5880 AUGUST 5, 2021<br />

Peabody Historical<br />

Society & Museum offers<br />

several new events<br />

Local 21’s Quest for a<br />

Moral Economy will be held<br />

via Zoom on Wednesday Aug.<br />

25 at 1 p.m.<br />

In collaboration with the<br />

Mass Cultural Council, Dr.<br />

Lynne Nelson Manion will<br />

host a presentation to provide<br />

insight on the leather industry<br />

and its workers in the 20th century<br />

through the lens of a local<br />

leather union. She will offer a<br />

“hands-on” opportunity to utilize<br />

the tools of the historian through<br />

artifacts/primary sources. For<br />

the second part of the presentation,<br />

participants are asked to<br />

bring an artifact (object) or document<br />

or photo that is important<br />

to them. The event is free, thanks<br />

to a grant from the Bridge Street<br />

Fund, a special initiative of Mass<br />

Humanities. To register, go to<br />

https://peabodyhistorical.org/<br />

programs-exhibits/.<br />

It’s officially summer in the<br />

city of Peabody.<br />

After a long year of waiting and<br />

hoping, the Free Summer Concerts<br />

series at Leather City Common on<br />

Lowell Street resumed in front<br />

of a large and energetic audience<br />

with a Sunday night performance<br />

from the Brian Maes Band.<br />

Essex Brewing Co.,Tipico<br />

Express food truck and Fans<br />

of Allan’s Ice Cream provided<br />

beer and other cold treats.<br />

Upcoming concerts will be<br />

held on the following dates: Aug.<br />

1, Lisa Love Experience; Aug.<br />

8, All That 90’s Band; Aug. 15,<br />

Tangerine; Aug. 22, Renee and the<br />

Renegades; Aug. 29, Road Salt.<br />

Also in collaboration with the<br />

Mass Cultural Council, Boston<br />

on Fire: A History of Fires and<br />

Firefighting in Boston will be<br />

held on Wednesday, Sept. 22<br />

via Zoom at 1 p.m.<br />

Journalist Stephanie Schorow<br />

is the featured speaker. Fires<br />

have shaped Boston since its<br />

founding on a narrow peninsula<br />

in 1630. Schorow tells the dramatic<br />

tales of seventeenth-century<br />

fires (which were viewed<br />

as signs of God’s wrath), the<br />

1834 Ursuline convent fire,<br />

the Great Fire of 1872, the<br />

Chelsea conflagrations of 1908<br />

and 1973, the tragic Cocoanut<br />

Grove nightclub fire of 1942,<br />

the Vendome Hotel collapse<br />

that killed nine firefighters in<br />

1972 and an arson ring that terrorized<br />

the city in the 1980s.<br />

In her book of the same name,<br />

there are also chapters devoted<br />

Ample free parking will be<br />

available throughout the concert<br />

series on Railroad Avenue<br />

and behind the Ancient Order of<br />

Hibernians (AOH).<br />

Peabody Mayor Edward A.<br />

Bettencourt Jr., had plenty of<br />

other “great news” to share with<br />

city residents last week:<br />

Bettencourt said the Peter<br />

A. Torigian Senior Center<br />

has fully reopened and, once<br />

again, is offering its popular<br />

lunch program for seniors 60<br />

and older. Lunch is served<br />

daily Monday through Friday<br />

at 11:30 a.m. All classes and<br />

most activities at the Center<br />

have resumed as well. The<br />

to two key Boston innovations:<br />

the Hunneman fire engine and<br />

the citywide fire alarm system<br />

(first in the nation) developed<br />

by William Francis Channing<br />

and Moses Farmer. There is no<br />

charge to participate, thanks to<br />

a grant from the Bridge Street<br />

Fund, a special initiative of<br />

Mass Humanities. To register,<br />

go to https://peabodyhistorical.<br />

org/programs-exhibits/.<br />

On Wednesday, Oct. 13, historian<br />

Alan Pierce will conduct<br />

a lecture on the Jewish History<br />

of Peabody. The event is scheduled<br />

to be held at the Smith Barn<br />

at the Felton-Smith Historic site<br />

on Felton Street in Peabody.<br />

The lecture is free for society<br />

members. For non-members,<br />

there is a $5 fee. The location is<br />

handicap accessible. For more<br />

information, call the Society at<br />

978-531-0805.<br />

Peabody summer fun<br />

continues for the local news<br />

Senior Center is located at 75R<br />

Central Street.<br />

The city is once again offering<br />

military veterans free,<br />

round-trip shuttle service to<br />

their medical appointments, including<br />

those at VA hospitals in<br />

Bedford and Jamaica Plain. To<br />

book rides, veterans should call<br />

978-538-5928 at least one week<br />

prior to their appointment.<br />

Bettencourt added that the<br />

Health Department’s Vaccine<br />

Ambassadors have been out<br />

and about throughout the city,<br />

visiting neighborhoods and<br />

businesses to answer questions<br />

that residents may have about<br />

COVID-19 vaccines.<br />

SOUTHERN KITCHEN. COUNTRY MUSIC. 100+ WHISKEYS.<br />

1 MAIN STREET DOWNTOWN PEABODY<br />

WWW.STANZYS.COM<br />

EARLY BIRD SPECIAL<br />

20% OFF YOUR BILL<br />

4PM-6PM DURING THE MONTH OF AUGUST<br />

*VALID ONLY ON FOOD-DOES NOT INCLUDE ALCOHOLIC BEVERAGES*<br />

*MUST PRESENT THIS COUPON DURING YOUR VISIT*


AUGUST 5, 2021<br />

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

Duncan Robert Alan McInnes, M.D., 75<br />

1946 - 2021<br />

LYNNFIELD - Duncan Robert<br />

Alan McInnes, M.D. age 75, of Lynnfield<br />

died Wednesday, July 28 at<br />

his home surrounded by family.<br />

Born in Brandon, Manitoba,<br />

Canada on June 20, 1946 he was<br />

the son of the late John Duncan<br />

and Coline (Wedgwood) McInnes.<br />

Rob was raised and educated<br />

in Kenora, Ontario, Canada. Following<br />

high school he attended<br />

the University of Toronto where<br />

he received his medical degree in<br />

1971. He married Diane McInnes<br />

(Syrnyk) in 1968 and had two<br />

sons, Colin and Brandon. He<br />

continued his education with his<br />

fellowship in Reproductive Endocrinology<br />

and Infertility at McGill<br />

University in Montreal, Canada,<br />

where he then practiced for several<br />

years as the director of their fertility<br />

clinic. He married Lucie McInnes<br />

(Filiatrault) in 1988, adding children<br />

Jade and Alix to the family. He<br />

worked several years at St Mary<br />

Medical Center in Long Beach,<br />

CA, followed by a move to Boston<br />

Regional Medical Center, where he<br />

stayed until 1998. Rob then made<br />

his way to Massachusetts General<br />

Hospital where he worked as a fertility<br />

specialist until his retirement<br />

in 2016 at the age of 70.<br />

An avid reader, he was always<br />

learning and had a lifelong curiosity.<br />

From high school valedictorian<br />

to fellowship mentoring later<br />

in his career, he loved and found<br />

great fulfillment in his work. Later<br />

in life, he and Lucie enjoyed RVing<br />

and visiting family, with many visits<br />

down to Florida with siblings and<br />

to Saskatoon and beyond. He was<br />

always dedicated to his patients,<br />

his wife, his children and grandchildren.<br />

He was the beloved husband of<br />

Lucie (Filiatrault) McInnes. He was<br />

the loving father of Colin McInnes<br />

of Saskatoon, Canada, Brandon<br />

McInnes of Saskatoon, Jade Tanner<br />

and her husband Jayson of<br />

North Smithfield, RI and Alix Berube<br />

of Tewksbury, MA. He was the<br />

brother of Lynne Thompson and<br />

her husband Ross of Stonewall,<br />

Canada and Bill McInnes and his<br />

wife Chris of Mount Horeb, WI. He<br />

is also survived by his seven grandchildren:<br />

Dylan and Tia McInnes,<br />

Isabelle, Myles, and Quinn Tanner,<br />

and Hailey and James Berube.<br />

Service Information: Funeral<br />

Services will be private. Arrangements<br />

were in the care of<br />

the McDonald Funeral Home,<br />

Wakefield.<br />

In lieu of flowers, donations<br />

may be made to: Resolve New<br />

England, resolvenewengland.<br />

org an organization providing<br />

resources and information to<br />

families dealing with infertility.<br />

ZBA rejects<br />

Oak Street<br />

40B in<br />

Peabody<br />

ZBA<br />

From page 1<br />

such that the proposed building<br />

would be in danger of going underwater<br />

if flooding occurred. Current<br />

Fire Chief Joseph Daly expressed<br />

those same concerns in May.<br />

Police Chief Thomas Griffin<br />

said he noticed that there would<br />

be an increased risk for motor-vehicle<br />

crashes in the area,<br />

particularly in the winter months.<br />

‘It’s reasonable to assume that<br />

some impatient commuters will<br />

seek alternative routes when<br />

leaving the neighborhood to<br />

avoid the increased traffic, especially<br />

during peak commuter<br />

hours and this will funnel these<br />

vehicles through narrowly, predominantly-residential<br />

streets<br />

that are not suitable for the increased<br />

traffic,” said Griffin.<br />

Griffin said the increased traffic<br />

that would result from the development<br />

would cause significant<br />

congestion on Washington Street.<br />

“Washington Street at Oak<br />

Street already has significant<br />

traffic issues, especially with<br />

Aborn Street’s location that is in<br />

close proximity to Oak Street,” he<br />

said. “The increased traffic from<br />

the proposed project site will<br />

only exacerbate this problem.”<br />

Griffin also said that the proposed<br />

building would be out of<br />

scale and character with the rest<br />

of the neighborhood. In addition,<br />

he suggested that it would be<br />

more difficult to remove snow<br />

from the property.<br />

Ward 2 Councilor Peter<br />

McGinn said the ZBA made an<br />

informed decision, adding that<br />

he agrees with the board’s vote<br />

to deny the plan.<br />

“I think it’s a well-informed<br />

decision and I think it was an<br />

outcome that makes sense for<br />

the area,” said McGinn.<br />

By Sam minton<br />

PEABODY — For some,<br />

golf might seem like a game<br />

for rich old folks but Jim<br />

McHugh is trying to spread<br />

the game to a younger, more<br />

diverse audience.<br />

McHugh used to be the<br />

athletic director for Bishop<br />

Fenwick up until 1999 when<br />

he became a vice principal<br />

at St. Mary’s, where he also<br />

coached the golf team.<br />

However, the last two years<br />

saw McHugh’s return to<br />

Fenwick, where has coached<br />

their team ever since.<br />

The Meadow at Peabody<br />

serves as Fenwick’s home<br />

course, sharing the turf<br />

with Peabody High School.<br />

McHugh said that he and<br />

Peabody coach Peter Cronin<br />

get along well and so do the<br />

two teams.<br />

McHugh said that his favorite<br />

holes on the course are<br />

the par-five on hole seven as<br />

well as hole 17. He also added<br />

that The Meadow is in its best<br />

shape in 20 years.<br />

But the Fenwick coach<br />

said he didn’t always love the<br />

game, especially when he was<br />

younger.<br />

“When I was young, I<br />

didn’t think golf was the thing<br />

to do. Some of my friends did<br />

and we’d argue,” McHugh<br />

said. “My friend would say<br />

that you got to be athletic to<br />

play golf and I would say ‘no<br />

you don’t.’ We used to argue<br />

all the time.”<br />

When McHugh went to<br />

Salem State College (now<br />

University), he took a few<br />

golf courses and that jump<br />

started his passion for the<br />

29 LONGBOW CIRCLE, LYNNFIELD<br />

Star<br />

of<br />

the<br />

week<br />

Jim McHugh spreading the game<br />

of Golf to a younger generation<br />

PHOTO | SPENSER HASAK<br />

Jim McHugh, coach of the Bishop Fenwick golf team and employee<br />

of The Meadow at Peabody Golf Course, is looking forward<br />

to the start of the season.<br />

game.<br />

The passion is there from<br />

the younger generations’<br />

perspective, according to<br />

McHugh. He stated that<br />

the Peabody Recreation<br />

Department runs a program at<br />

the course on Thursdays and,<br />

due to classes filling up, they<br />

were forced to add more spots<br />

— the sessions are still full.<br />

The program doesn’t just<br />

help those new to the game.<br />

McHugh says that Cronin’s tips<br />

help him improve as a player.<br />

“Coach Cronin works a lot<br />

on the basics and emphasizes<br />

basics and it actually helps<br />

me the next day because I’m<br />

going back to basic,” he said.<br />

McHugh said that he’s noticed<br />

kids playing a lot this<br />

A Proud Supporter of a Healthy Lynnfield<br />

WWW.ELLENCRAWFORDSELLS.COM<br />

FOR SALE – $999,000<br />

MOVE IN READY - 4 bed, 3 bath, beautifully<br />

updated, home office and gunite pool<br />

Ellen Rubbico Crawford,<br />

PREMIER AGENT<br />

617-599-8090<br />

ellen.crawford@raveis.com<br />

A percentage of every transaction is donated back to the community.<br />

summer and believes that more<br />

accessible prices might have<br />

something to do with that.<br />

“It’s only $10 for the youth,<br />

so it’s a great deal for Peabody<br />

people,” he added.<br />

When it comes to golfing,<br />

McHugh doesn’t think there’s<br />

a better place for kids to get<br />

their start than at The Meadow<br />

at Peabody.<br />

“We’ve had a lot of rain,<br />

but the maintenance department<br />

is doing an excellent<br />

job,” he said. “They’re all<br />

dedicated people here. Peter<br />

(Cronin) runs a good ship<br />

here with all his workers and<br />

replacing divots and sand and<br />

stuff like that. It really makes<br />

the course, for the price, the<br />

best around.”


8<br />

WEEKLYNEWS.NET - 978-532-5880 AUGUST 5, 2021<br />

WHAT TO WATCH<br />

Thursday, Aug. 5<br />

ACROSS<br />

1 Close-mouthed person<br />

5 Manage for oneself<br />

9 Leaflet<br />

14 Rabbit<br />

15 “— Window”<br />

16 Cliffside refuge<br />

17 Surrounded by<br />

18 State clearly<br />

20 Monotony<br />

22 Pamplona cheer<br />

23 Account entry<br />

24 Racing shell team<br />

26 Sediment<br />

28 Stress<br />

32 TV fare<br />

36 Daughter of Hyperion<br />

37 Separate<br />

39 Indira’s father<br />

40 Sit for a portrait<br />

42 Testify<br />

44 Claims<br />

45 Flower parts<br />

47 Fastener<br />

49 Struck a match<br />

50 Flowed out<br />

52 Determination<br />

54 Pencil point<br />

56 Blend<br />

57 Rider’s shout<br />

60 Cut timber<br />

62 Traffic no-no’s (hyph.)<br />

66 Excessively emotional<br />

69 Ancient Mexican<br />

70 Domed residence<br />

71 Social standing<br />

72 Fix tea<br />

73 Rose’s defense<br />

74 Command to Rover<br />

75 Solidifies<br />

DOWN<br />

1 Talk online<br />

2 Hobbling<br />

3 Like the Mojave<br />

4 Physicians<br />

5 Incriminatory schemes (hyph.)<br />

6 Always, in poems<br />

7 Alliance acronym<br />

8 Bore a hole<br />

9 T, in Athens<br />

10 Offered again on eBay<br />

11 What Hamlet smelled (2 wds.)<br />

12 Write up a speeder<br />

13 Be rife with<br />

19 Average grades<br />

21 Pliny’s bear<br />

25 Under — (secret)<br />

27 German article<br />

28 7UP rival<br />

29 Origins<br />

30 Snake shapes<br />

31 Not hunched<br />

33 Hot pepper<br />

34 Space shuttle’s path<br />

35 Damp-smelling<br />

38 Weight deductions<br />

41 Type of computer program<br />

43 Bluegrass State<br />

46 Get the point<br />

48 Be patient<br />

51 Limp-watch painter<br />

53 Cookie litter<br />

55 House elements<br />

57 Scintilla<br />

58 Lofty<br />

59 Scandinavian city<br />

61 Annoying insect<br />

63 Not frequent<br />

64 Moscow turndown<br />

65 Familiar sayings<br />

67 Director — Howard<br />

68 Claire or Balin<br />

Lil Duval: Living My Best Life<br />

ALLBLK<br />

Building off of his wildly successful 2018 single “Smile (Living<br />

My Best Life),” Lil Duval employs his special brand of humor<br />

as he takes an intimate and hilarious look at life, sex, relationships,<br />

and the world in his first stand-up special. Filmed<br />

before a star-studded, live audience in Atlanta, the hourlong<br />

special also features appearances from actress Bresha Webb<br />

(Marlon), comedians Gary “G Thang” Johnson and Navaris<br />

“Navv” Greene, and social media star Pretty Vee.<br />

Furry Friends Forever: Elmo Gets a Puppy<br />

HBO Max<br />

There will be a new resident on 123 Sesame Street when the<br />

beloved kids education series returns with new episodes this<br />

fall — Tango, Elmo’s adopted puppy. This half-hour animated<br />

special from Sesame Workshop introduces the dog and<br />

shows how she made her way to Sesame Street. In the special,<br />

Elmo and Grover discover a sweet, stray puppy — whom<br />

they quickly name Tango — and embark on an adventure<br />

throughout the neighborhood with friends Cookie Monster,<br />

Abby Cadabby and Oscar the Grouch. Together, they search<br />

for the local pet adoption fair in the hopes of finding her a<br />

“forever home.” Sesame Workshop says that the introduction<br />

of Tango — who will be a mainstay in future Sesame Street<br />

content — allows for consistent modeling of safe behavior<br />

and age-appropriate help with a pet. In the special and beyond,<br />

Elmo and his friends will show preschoolers how to<br />

meet a new animal, gently play with and brush a pet, teach<br />

new tricks, give baths and, most especially, show love and<br />

affection for their furry friends.<br />

The Suicide Squad<br />

HBO Max<br />

Feature Film Exclusive!<br />

This delightfully fun DC follow-up finds the squad back together<br />

with King Shark (Sylvester Stallone). The government<br />

sends these most dangerous supervillains on a jungle<br />

search-and-destroy mission with plenty of rules for the<br />

newbies to abide by. The film stars Margot Robbie as Harley<br />

Quinn, Pete Davidson as Blackguard, John Cena as Peacemaker,<br />

Idris Elba as Bloodsport and Joel Kinnaman as Rich<br />

Flag. The Suicide Squad is also in theaters today; it will be<br />

available to stream on HBO Max’s Ad-Free plan for 31 days.<br />

Hart to Heart<br />

Peacock<br />

New Series!<br />

Actor/comedian Kevin Hart hosts this hourlong talk show in<br />

which he invites A-list talent to sit back, have a glass of wine<br />

and engage in an unfiltered conversation. From award-winning<br />

musicians to top actors, the guests on the show will<br />

represent Hart’s range of interests and influences, and he<br />

assures viewers that no topic is off limits. New episodes of<br />

Hart to Heart will drop in batches on Thursdays, starting with<br />

the first three episodes today. Guests will be announced each<br />

week ahead of the drop (the first week’s guest list had not<br />

been announced at presstime).<br />

Teddy<br />

Shudder<br />

Original Film!<br />

Twenty-something Teddy lives in a foster home and works as a<br />

temp in a massage parlor as a scorching hot summer begins.<br />

Teddy ends up scratched by a beast in the woods — the wolf<br />

that angry local farmers have been hunting for months — and<br />

as weeks go by, animal impulses soon start to overcome the<br />

young man.<br />

Summer Under the Stars: Margaret Rutherford<br />

TCM, beginning at 6 a.m.<br />

Catch a Classic!<br />

Dame Margaret Rutherford, the Oscar-winning British actress<br />

whose career encompassed stage, films and television from<br />

the 1920s-60s, gets her first Summer Under the Stars celebration<br />

on Turner Classic Movies today. You’ll see her in her<br />

Oscar-winning role (for Best Supporting Actress) in the 1963<br />

drama The V.I.P.s; in her beloved appearances as Agatha<br />

Christie’s sleuth Miss Marple in Murder, She Said (1961),<br />

Murder at the Gallop (1963), Murder Most Foul (1964) and<br />

Murder Ahoy! (1964); in comedies like Blithe Spirit (1945)<br />

and The Importance of Being Earnest (1952); and more.<br />

Major League Baseball: Atlanta at St. Louis<br />

ESPN, 8 p.m. Live<br />

Freddie Freeman and the Atlanta Braves are at Busch Stadium<br />

in St. Louis for a Thursday night clash with Nolan Arenado<br />

and the Cardinals.<br />

grown-ish: “A Boy Is a Gun”<br />

Freeform, 8 p.m.<br />

A serious turn: Following a police shooting of an unarmed<br />

Black man, Doug (Diggy Simmons) and new Hawkins Hall<br />

freshman Kiela (Daniella Perkins) clash over whether her<br />

scheme to use his party to raise awareness is the best idea.


AUGUST 5, 2021<br />

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

Sports<br />

Peabody West wins Little League state title<br />

STATE TITLE<br />

From page 1<br />

mere 12 hours earlier. Having<br />

lost the first two games of the<br />

round-robin tournament, Peabody<br />

West needed to both win and put<br />

together a big run differential<br />

Saturday night in order to be one of<br />

the top two teams. It did just that,<br />

beating Needham National, 8-0, to<br />

punch its ticket to the big game.<br />

Jimmy DiCarlo led the offensive<br />

attack for Peabody West<br />

on Sunday, going 3-for-3 with<br />

a double and three RBI. Aiden<br />

Horgan went 1-for-3 with an RBI,<br />

while Gabe Casiano went 1-for-2<br />

with an RBI. Brendan Kobierski<br />

added a hit in the win.<br />

“We’re a team that strives on<br />

throwing strikes on the mound,<br />

playing good defense and getting<br />

timely hitting, and over the past<br />

few days the hitting hasn’t been<br />

there,” said Bettencourt. “After<br />

the second game, we just worked<br />

on making contact and putting the<br />

ball in play. Our goal was to force<br />

the other team to make plays, and<br />

we did that in both of the last two<br />

games.”<br />

Cullen Pasterick did all the work<br />

on the mound, pitching a complete<br />

game and allowing five runs on<br />

eight hits with two strikeouts.<br />

“Cullen pitched an unbelievable<br />

game,” said Bettencourt. “He<br />

threw strikes, mixed up his pitches<br />

and his speed and he got some<br />

great defense behind him. It was a<br />

real grind-it-out effort.”<br />

Pittsfield American got off to a<br />

strong start in this one, as Christian<br />

Barry led off the bottom of the first<br />

inning with a deep solo home run<br />

over the right field fence to make<br />

it 1-0. Cam Blake reached on an<br />

error after that, and two batters<br />

later he was knocked home via an<br />

RBI single from Kevin Konefal to<br />

give Pittsfield a 2-0 lead.<br />

But, as has been the case all<br />

summer, Peabody West fought<br />

back.<br />

It started with an infield single<br />

from Kobierski. After two walks<br />

loaded up the bases, Casiano<br />

stepped in and laced an RBI single<br />

into left field to make it a 2-1 game.<br />

After Pittsfield got a strikeout<br />

on the next batter, DiCarlo came<br />

up with the hit of the day when<br />

he roped a three-run double into<br />

the left-center field gap to give<br />

Peabody West the lead. Five<br />

pitches later, DiCarlo scored on a<br />

passed ball to put Peabody West<br />

up 5-2.<br />

Pittsfield got one run back in the<br />

bottom of the second after scoring<br />

on a Peabody West throwing<br />

error, but Bettencourt came out<br />

to settle down his team before<br />

things got out of control — which<br />

has become a familiar theme this<br />

summer.<br />

Peabody West added another<br />

run in the top of the fourth after<br />

Broughton kept the inning alive<br />

with a pinch-hit, two-out double.<br />

DiCarlo followed up with an<br />

infield single before Horgan<br />

smacked an RBI single down the<br />

left-field line to make it 6-3.<br />

But Pittsfield continued to<br />

threaten. After RBI singles from<br />

Barry and Jack Belafontaine made<br />

it 6-5, Pittsfield had the tying and<br />

go-ahead runs on base with one<br />

out. After a heads-up, force-out<br />

play at third got the lead runner,<br />

DiCarlo made a great stab on a<br />

line drive from Sebastian Herrera<br />

to end the inning and keep the lead<br />

in Peabody West’s hands.<br />

Pasterick handled the rest from<br />

there, allowing just one hit over<br />

the final two innings. After a line<br />

drive out right at DiCarlo ended<br />

the game, the dugout emptied and<br />

the party began.<br />

Peabody West will enjoy this<br />

win for a day, but then it’s back to<br />

work in preparation for the New<br />

England Regional, which will take<br />

place from Aug. 8-14 at A. Bartlett<br />

Giamatti Little League Leadership<br />

Training Center in Bristol, Conn.<br />

Peabody West will now be known<br />

as Team Massachusetts.<br />

“We’ll be out there Tuesday<br />

through Friday, and then we<br />

head down there Saturday,” said<br />

Bettencourt. “We’re just going to<br />

continue to do what got us here<br />

— work hard as a group with<br />

everyone giving 120 percent in<br />

practice, so that when the game<br />

comes there’s nothing to be nervous<br />

about. We say it all the time<br />

with the (Peabody High) football<br />

and baseball teams — ‘put the hay<br />

in the barn.’ Once we know we’re<br />

ready, there’s nothing to be nervous<br />

about.”<br />

PHOTO | JAKOB MENENDEZ<br />

Peabody West’s Aidan Horgan receives his medal after the<br />

team won the Massachusetts Little League state title Sunday<br />

in Gloucester.<br />

Rooted in<br />

Your Health<br />

PILGRIM REHABILITATION<br />

& SKILLED NURSING<br />

Our team of clinical professionals get you home feeling<br />

healthier and stronger following an illness or surgery. You at<br />

your best! We are proud to offer high quality rehabilitative<br />

care through our Steps to Strength Program including:<br />

PHYSICAL, OCCUPATIONAL & SPEECH THERAPY<br />

IV THERAPY • WOUND CARE<br />

You can trust in us for your care,<br />

call 978-532-0303<br />

PHOTO | JAKOB MENENDEZ<br />

The members of the Peabody West Little League team pose<br />

with their state championship banner on Sunday. Peabody<br />

West is made up of Ty Lomasney, Cullen Pasterick, Damian<br />

Gregory, James DiCarlo, Ryan Skerry, Thad Broughton,<br />

Anthony Modugno, Aidan Horgan, Mark Bettencourt,<br />

Brendan Kobierski, Gabriel Casiano, Stephen Saggese and<br />

Jackson Taylor.<br />

96 Forest Street • Peabody, MA 01960<br />

www.pilgrimrehab.org


10<br />

Peabody’s Knight,<br />

Fenwick’s Emerson<br />

earn Item All-Star nods<br />

By Mike Alongi<br />

Following a stellar season that<br />

saw him become a dominant<br />

pitching force in the Catholic<br />

Central League and help lead<br />

his team to a second straight<br />

Division 2 state title, St. Mary’s<br />

junior Aiven Cabral has been<br />

named the 2021 Item Player of<br />

the Year for baseball.<br />

Cabral was nearly unhittable<br />

on the mound in 2021, allowing<br />

just five runs on 32 hits in 64<br />

2/3 innings of work. He went<br />

8-0 and also notched an impressive<br />

106 strikeouts on the year,<br />

earning him CCL Pitcher of the<br />

Year honors in the process.<br />

Cabral also did it with the bat,<br />

knocking in eight RBI over the<br />

course of the year and holding<br />

down the No. 3 spot in the order.<br />

Six players have also been<br />

named to the 2021 All-Item<br />

team for baseball, with Angel<br />

Gonzalez (Lynn English), Pat<br />

D’Amico (St. John’s Prep),<br />

Charlie Titus (Marblehead), Scott<br />

Emerson (Bishop Fenwick),<br />

Bobby Jellison (Salem) and Ryan<br />

Knight (Peabody) all earning<br />

recognition.<br />

Gonzalez was the go-to guy for<br />

the English offense this season,<br />

batting a stellar .435 with an onbase<br />

percentage of .629 and an<br />

eye-popping OPS of 1.455. His<br />

one home run, two doubles, two<br />

triples and eight RBI all helped<br />

give him a slugging percentage<br />

of .826 and earn him Greater<br />

Boston League MVP honors.<br />

But he didn’t only contribute<br />

with his bat. Gonzalez also performed<br />

on the mound, pitching<br />

10 2/3 innings over four appearances<br />

and going 3-0. He also<br />

notched one save, had 15 strikeouts<br />

for the year and posted an<br />

ERA of 1.31.<br />

D’Amico, a Lynnfield native,<br />

wrapped up his Prep career on a<br />

high note after earning Catholic<br />

Conference all-star honors. The<br />

senior third baseman paced the<br />

Division 1 North champion<br />

Eagles from the leadoff spot,<br />

batting .391 with a 1.218 OPS.<br />

D’Amico hit four home runs to<br />

go along with seven doubles,<br />

scored 21 runs and stole 11<br />

bases. He’s now moving on to<br />

the next level, where he’ll join<br />

fellow Lynnfield native Jonathan<br />

Luders on the roster at Seton Hall<br />

University.<br />

2 Large<br />

Cheese Pizzas<br />

$15.99<br />

Open for take-out<br />

and delivery<br />

Titus took home NEC all-conference<br />

honors after a strong<br />

season both behind the plate and<br />

at bat. Titus caught one of the<br />

deepest rotations in the league<br />

while also hitting .353 and<br />

knocking in 25 RBI — good for<br />

second-most in the NEC.<br />

Emerson was one of the best<br />

hitters on the entire North Shore<br />

this season, hitting a stellar .465<br />

and leading the Crusaders with<br />

20 RBI, both of which ranked<br />

in the top five on the North<br />

Shore. A CCL all-star selection,<br />

Emerson’s 33 hits and 24 runs<br />

scored were also among the most<br />

in the area. He also appeared in<br />

eight games on the mound and<br />

posted a 0.75 ERA in 9 1/3 innings<br />

pitched.<br />

Jellison was one of the most<br />

difficult outs in all of baseball<br />

this spring and summer, getting a<br />

hit in just about half of his at-bats<br />

on the entire season. An NEC allstar<br />

selection, Jellison hit a stellar<br />

.499 and had 27 hits. He drove in<br />

13 runs, scored 20 runs and stole<br />

nine bases.<br />

But he was also a reliable<br />

pitcher for the Witches, striking<br />

out 46 batters in 40 innings of<br />

work and taking home four wins.<br />

Knight, the Tanners’ center<br />

fielder who will be playing<br />

Division I ball at the University<br />

of Hartford next year, hit .404<br />

and put up an on-base percentage<br />

of .550 in 2021. He had 19 hits,<br />

scored 20 runs and stole 15 bases<br />

on the year.<br />

Also earning 2021 Item All-<br />

Star Team honors for baseball<br />

are Colby Magliozzi, Terence<br />

Moynihan, Lucas Fritz (St.<br />

Mary’s); Yordi Contreras,<br />

Clodys Prandys (Lynn English);<br />

Ethaniel Almendarez, Nico<br />

Galeazzi (Lynn Classical);<br />

Tucker Destino, Alex Gonzalez<br />

(Bishop Fenwick); Trent Balian,<br />

Evan Balian (Lynnfield);<br />

Godot Gaskins, Jacob Sherf,<br />

Sami Loughlin (Marblehead);<br />

Juan Tolentino, Justin Powers,<br />

Brendan Smith (Peabody);<br />

Max Doucette, Mike Popp<br />

(Revere); Jack Doyle, Ethan<br />

Doyle (Salem); Nathan Ing,<br />

Jason Casaletto (Saugus); Sam<br />

Belliveau, DJ Pacheco, Payton<br />

Palladino (St. John’s Prep);<br />

Connor Correnti, Nate Stern<br />

(Swampscott); Bobby Hubert,<br />

David DiCicco (Winthrop).<br />

WEEKLYNEWS.NET - 978-532-5880 AUGUST 5, 2021<br />

PHOTO | JAKOB MENENDEZ<br />

Michele Maurice, center left, poses with her family after watching her daughter, Peabody’s<br />

Heather MacLean, qualify for the women’s 1500-meter semifinal race at the Tokyo Olympics.<br />

MacLean makes it to 1500-meter<br />

semifinal in her Olympic debut<br />

OLYMPIAN<br />

From page 1<br />

over town gathered to take in<br />

the race after the night’s installment<br />

of the Peabody Summer<br />

Concert Series on the Leather<br />

City Common, and were treated<br />

to a massive screen placed up<br />

on stage for all to see. When<br />

MacLean was shown on the<br />

big screen prior to the race, you<br />

could likely hear the cheers all<br />

the way across the entire city.<br />

“Watching her tonight and<br />

throughout this whole experience<br />

is just surreal,” said<br />

Maurice. “It’s hard to grasp. She<br />

called me today and said, ‘I love<br />

you mommy,’ and the last thing<br />

I told her was to go and get it.”<br />

A total of 45 (split into three<br />

heats of 15) of the world’s best<br />

runners representing 24 countries<br />

competed in the event.<br />

Ranked 23rd in the world,<br />

MacLean competed in the third<br />

and final heat — widely considered<br />

to be the fastest of the three.<br />

She entered the race with the<br />

fourth fastest time of the year.<br />

The top six runners from each<br />

heat along with the next six runners<br />

with the fastest times qualified<br />

for the semifinal round on<br />

Aug. 4. The top five runners<br />

from each semifinal heat plus the<br />

next two runners with the fastest<br />

times advance to the final, which<br />

will be held on Aug. 6.<br />

MacLean ran a smart race from<br />

start to finish Sunday, keeping<br />

herself in the middle of the pack<br />

for the majority while maintaining<br />

a solid pace throughout.<br />

As the heat approached its<br />

final 400-500 meters, MacLean<br />

pushed herself a little harder and<br />

crossed the finish line in fifth<br />

place — guaranteeing her a spot<br />

in Wednesday’s semifinal.<br />

MacLean almost didn’t make<br />

it to Tokyo. She finished sixth<br />

in her semifinal heat of the 1500<br />

last month at the trials in Eugene,<br />

Ore. As only the top five from<br />

each semifinal plus the next two<br />

fastest runners would advance<br />

to Tokyo, MacLean’s Olympic<br />

dreams appeared to be over.<br />

Not so fast.<br />

MacLean and her New<br />

Balance Team Boston coach<br />

Mark Coogan protested the race<br />

results, claiming she had been<br />

tripped. The officials agreed<br />

and advanced her to the final. A<br />

second chance was all MacLean<br />

needed. Working her way from<br />

the back half of the field over the<br />

final 800 meters, she finished<br />

strong, chasing down a former<br />

national champion to finish third<br />

in 4:02.9.<br />

Simply put, MacLean has established<br />

herself as one of the<br />

best professional runners in the<br />

country. She had a standout career<br />

at UMass - Amherst from<br />

2013-18. She was the first<br />

cross-country All-American<br />

for the Minutewomen and won<br />

an Atlantic 10 title as a senior.<br />

She also added an indoor All-<br />

American mark in the 3,000 as a<br />

junior and several New England<br />

Championships. She is the first<br />

Olympian in the history of the<br />

UMass track-and-field program.<br />

In January, MacLean posted<br />

the fastest time in the world in<br />

the mile (4:27.54) at American<br />

Track League Meet No. 1. She<br />

won the 1500 meter at the New<br />

Balance Indoor Grand Prix,<br />

posting the best American time<br />

in the event this year (4:06.32).<br />

She also led the nation in the<br />

800m this year following a<br />

2:00.53 time at American Track<br />

League Meet No. 4. She was<br />

named U.S. Track and Field<br />

New England’s Athlete of the<br />

Month for February.<br />

“I would say for starters the<br />

success comes from being a<br />

part of a great team,” MacLean<br />

said. “It’s been amazing working<br />

with coach Mark Coogan. He’s<br />

brought me a long way. I have<br />

six teammates and we’re all so<br />

supportive of each other and<br />

build each other up. It’s a great<br />

support system.”<br />

Peabody’s last Olympian was<br />

swimmer Samantha Arsenault<br />

(now Samantha Livingstone),<br />

who represented the United<br />

States at the 2000 Olympic<br />

Games in Sydney, Australia.<br />

She won a gold medal in the<br />

women’s 4×200 freestyle relay<br />

with teammates Diana Munz,<br />

Lindsay Benko and Jenny<br />

Thompson. The team set a new<br />

Olympic record in the event<br />

final of 7:57.80.<br />

“There is a tremendous sense<br />

of pride in the community whenever<br />

we have an Olympian, and<br />

it’s wonderful to have another<br />

Olympian after more than 20<br />

years since Samantha,” said<br />

Mayor Edward A. Bettencourt<br />

Jr. “This only happens once in a<br />

generation, so this is extremely<br />

exciting for Heather and her<br />

family and the city.”<br />

As for what’s next, Bettencourt<br />

said a decision to hold a viewing<br />

party for the semifinal on<br />

Wednesday morning has not yet<br />

been made.<br />

“It’s at a weird time, so we’re<br />

still thinking it through,” he said.<br />

“We’ll talk with the family and<br />

will certainly do whatever we<br />

can to promote Heather. Hers is<br />

an amazing story and we are all<br />

behind her all the way.”


AUGUST 5, 2021<br />

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

Peabody West captures state championship<br />

PHOTOS | Jakob Menendez<br />

Peabody West’s Jimmy DiCarlo celebrates after scoring on a passed ball in the Massachusetts Little League state championship game Sunday afternoon.<br />

Cullen Pasterick pitched a complete game on the mound for Peabody West in its state championship<br />

victory.<br />

Pasterick connects for a hit against Pittsfield American Sunday<br />

afternoon.<br />

The Peabody West Little League team celebrates after winning<br />

the Massachusetts state title Sunday in Gloucester.<br />

Thad Broughton, left, scored the go-ahead run against Pittsfield American in the Little League<br />

state championship game Sunday.


12<br />

WEEKLYNEWS.NET - 978-532-5880 AUGUST 5, 2021<br />

Peabody watches one of its own in Olympics<br />

PHOTOS | Jakob Menendez<br />

A big-screen TV projects Peabody native Heather MacLean’s 1500-meter qualifying heat race at the 2020 Tokyo Olympics Monday night. MacLean’s mother<br />

Michele Maurice, right, was one of the many in attendance.<br />

Heather MacLean’s mother Michele Maurice, left, celebrates after MacLean qualified for the 1500-meter semifinal race at the Tokyo Olympics.


AUGUST 5, 2021<br />

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

The Lisa Love Experience<br />

comes to Leather City Common<br />

PHOTOS | Jakob Menendez<br />

Lisa Love sings to the packed crowd that formed on<br />

the Leather City Common.<br />

Paul Martin, left, from Danvers, dances with Beth Donahue from Peabody.<br />

Billy Garzone, Lisa Love’s husband, throws his hand in the air<br />

right before performing a guitar riff.<br />

James Mickey dances with his daughter, Malia Mickey.<br />

The crowd<br />

puts their<br />

hands in<br />

the air in<br />

jubilation as<br />

the Lisa Love<br />

Experience<br />

performs the<br />

iconic song<br />

“Shout” by the<br />

Isley Brothers.


14<br />

WEEKLYNEWS.NET - 978-532-5880 AUGUST 5, 2021<br />

Classified<br />

Legal Notice<br />

There will be a Tree Removal Hearing on Friday August 20, 2021@ 9:15 am at<br />

the 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: 13 Loris Road<br />

Peabody, MA 01960<br />

WEEKLY: August 5, 12, 2021<br />

Legal Notice<br />

There will be a Tree Removal Hearing on Friday August 20, 2021 @ 9:00am at<br />

the 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: 26 Baldwin Street<br />

Peabody, MA 01960<br />

WEEKLY: August 5, 12, 2021<br />

LEGAL AD<br />

NOTICE OF PUBLIC HEARING<br />

Notice is hereby given that the City Council of the City of Peabody, acting as the<br />

Special Permit Granting Authority, will conduct a public hearing on THURSDAY<br />

EVENING, AUGUST 26, 2021, at 7:30 P.M., in the Frank L. Wiggin Auditorium, 24<br />

Lowell Street, Peabody, MA, and remotely via Zoom on the application from<br />

STEVEN LOMASNEY, 48 Russell Street, Peabody, MA for a SPECIAL PERMIT FOR<br />

INDOOR RECREATION, SPECIFICALLY, TO OPERATE A BASEBALL AND SOFTBALL<br />

TRAINING FACILITY WITH A RETAIL STORE ACCESSORY TO SAID FACILITY at 635<br />

LOWELL STREET, SUITE A 60-70 (FORMER T.J. MAXX SPACE), Peabody, MA as<br />

filed in accordance with Sections 4.2.5, 6.1 and 15.7 of the Peabody Zoning<br />

Ordinance.<br />

For remote participation using the Zoom platform, please visit<br />

www.peabody-ma.gov under "City Calendar" on the home page or contact the City<br />

Clerk's office. Zoom information will not be available until the Friday before the<br />

meeting.<br />

Weekly News: August 5 and 12, 2021<br />

PEABODY CITY COUNCIL<br />

COUNCILLOR MARK J. O'NEILL<br />

CITY COUNCIL PRESIDENT<br />

Allyson M. Danforth<br />

City Clerk<br />

As per the petition of (Matthew Chellar)<br />

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

As per the petition of (Frank Madmedina)<br />

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

• Residential<br />

• Commerical<br />

• Industrial<br />

ALL PAVING INSTALLED BY<br />

ROAD PAVING MACHINES TO<br />

INSURE UNIFORM SURFACES<br />

=FULLY INSURED=<br />

NOTICES<br />

MISC.<br />

Component Engineer II - positions<br />

offered by Arrow Electronics Inc.<br />

(Peabody, MA). Respons for ensur'g<br />

that the components inspected are in<br />

accordance w/manufacturers specs as<br />

shown w/the manufacturers data<br />

sheets Apply online: https://bit.ly/<br />

34IkG7u<br />

Panagiotis Skagos (Peter)<br />

G&P Painting & Carpentry<br />

Finished Carpentry.<br />

Anything Custom made.<br />

Cabinets.<br />

New Decks.<br />

Any repairs around your home.<br />

Power Washing.<br />

Paint your home. And many more ...<br />

978-531-8583 • gppc1@yahoo.com<br />

CUSTOM PAVING<br />

3rd Generation Paving Contractor<br />

• Emergency Winter Maintenance<br />

• Parking Lots • Patchwork<br />

• Private Roads • Sealcoating<br />

Serving the North Shore since 1981<br />

WEST<br />

PEABODY<br />

(978) 535-8980<br />

(800) 227-1652<br />

www.CustomAsphaltPaving.com<br />

CLEANING/<br />

MAINTENANCE<br />

House and Roof washing services<br />

Pressure Washing Service<br />

Gutter Brighting<br />

Concrete. Stucco. Wood .<br />

Sports Courts / Tennis Courts<br />

Residential and commercial<br />

Northshore Softwash<br />

978-317-1700<br />

REAL ESTATE<br />

BURIAL PLOTS<br />

At Puritan Lawn Memorial Park<br />

(Peabody) new lot for 2 urns,<br />

781-596-0434<br />

• CARPENTRY • TILE<br />

• PAINTING<br />

978-314-4191<br />

LICENSED & INSURED<br />

amoutsoulashomeimprovementservices.com<br />

Follow us<br />

on Facebook<br />

Baystate Paving<br />

and Landscape Design<br />

DRIVEWAYS, WALKWAYS, PARKING LOTS, ROADWAYS<br />

RESURFACING, REPAIRS, SEALCOATING, HARDSCAPES,<br />

RETAINING WALLS, DRAINS, PAVER PATIOS,<br />

ARCHITECTURAL LANDSCAPING,<br />

DELIVERY OF LOAM, MULCH, STONE, AND AGGREGATE<br />

Call for free estimates:<br />

978-826-5363<br />

The Leonard Co.<br />

Residential Window<br />

& Screen Cleaning<br />

Yard clean-ups<br />

Gutter cleaning<br />

Power Washing<br />

Comp. Clean-outs<br />

Graffiti removal<br />

theleonardco.com<br />

Call 617.512.7849<br />

for a FREE estimate<br />

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

If you need it clean,<br />

we’re on the scene...<br />

Paul DeNisco<br />

Mason Contractor<br />

Brick • Block • Stone<br />

Concrete • Tile<br />

978-532-4066<br />

Repairs - Big or Small<br />

Have something to sell?<br />

We can help!<br />

Does your company need employees?<br />

Placing a help wanted ad is<br />

great for finding the skilled<br />

workers you need.<br />

781-593-7700, ext.2<br />

Have a story to share? Need a question answered?<br />

contactus@essexmedia.group


AUGUST 5, 2021<br />

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

The great blue yonder<br />

A great blue heron takes wing from the backyard of resident Stephen Urquhart.<br />

PHOTO | STEPHEN URQUHART<br />

LYNNFIELD<br />

24 ASHWOOD RD<br />

$539,900<br />

B: Robert Skane & Tyavanna Skane<br />

S: Michael Petraglia & Nora Shams<br />

26 EDGEMERE RD<br />

$1,030,000<br />

B: Cristina L Petersen & Brett J Petersen<br />

S: Elaine Moorman & Stephen Moorman<br />

1 FALL WAY<br />

$625,000<br />

B: 24 Bow Inv Prop LLC<br />

S: Gloria J Flordeliza<br />

3 LARA RD<br />

$1,150,000<br />

B: Alyssa A Dimaria & Peter J Dimaria<br />

S: Jessica Capodilupo & Paul Capodilupo<br />

25 MELCH RD<br />

$725,000<br />

B: Jeffrey Lupien & Jennifer Lupien<br />

S: Capitol Management LLC<br />

22 PARTRIDGE LN U:22<br />

$550,000<br />

B: Erika Streib<br />

S: Juiling Lu Tr, Tr for Juiling Lu LT<br />

855 SALEM ST<br />

$557,000<br />

B: Alessandra D Barbosa & Eber DaSilva-<br />

Dossantos<br />

S: Carolina N Nascimento & Edson F<br />

Nascimento<br />

909 SALEM ST<br />

$625,000<br />

B: Hyve Development Grp LLC<br />

S: John F Alzate<br />

12 SAUNDERS RD<br />

$710,000<br />

B: Jeffrey W Eldridge<br />

S: Eleanor R Campbell & Norman W Campbell<br />

PEABODY<br />

5 BENEVENTO CIR<br />

$875,000<br />

B: Lisa A Gendreau & Roland G Gendreau<br />

S: Susan D Stone<br />

25 CEDAR GROVE AVE<br />

$465,000<br />

B: Eric Morin<br />

S: James A Lyons<br />

Real Estate Transfers<br />

4403 DEERFIELD CIR U:4403<br />

$440,000<br />

B: Richard Cumming<br />

S: Sandra Lerner<br />

1 DUBLIN RD<br />

$755,000<br />

B: Venetia R Christopher & Christos Vlachos<br />

S: Kenneth J Mclean & Gregory J Mclean<br />

25 EISENHOWER RD<br />

$721,000<br />

B: Daniela Lewis & Edward J Lewis<br />

S: Jennifer S Lawrence & James A Spinos<br />

5 FAIRVIEW RD<br />

$640,000<br />

B: Jennifer Blood<br />

S: Christopher Garofalo & Jennifer Garofalo<br />

1 GEDNEY DR<br />

$777,777<br />

B: German E Mancera & Ingrid D Pardo<br />

S: Deena E Cole & Joel C Solimine<br />

12 GRANT ST<br />

$655,000<br />

B: Laila Mouaouia<br />

S: John R Brackett & Debra Vietri<br />

1804 HOLLOW TREE CT U:1804<br />

$491,000<br />

B: Debra Shannon & William Shannon<br />

S: Michael R Gergely & Staci Gergely<br />

47 HOLTEN ST<br />

$693,000<br />

B: Rufino Matos<br />

S: Dauntless Path LLC<br />

24 KENWOOD RD<br />

$705,200<br />

B: Parisa Peyvast & Ali Shahrestani<br />

S: Sandra C Valentim<br />

129 LOWELL ST U:4<br />

$370,000<br />

B: Nicole F Kovil<br />

S: Joanna Johnston<br />

66 MARGIN ST<br />

$563,000<br />

B: Nathaniel S Barton & Paula Francois<br />

S: Heather E Quarles<br />

12 MONSON DR<br />

$665,000<br />

B: Barbara H Blandford & Paul D Blandford<br />

S: Carol A Leonard Tr, Tr for 12 Monson Dr<br />

Peabody RT<br />

21 OAK AVE<br />

$735,000<br />

B: Cassio Raggi & Santos G Gonzalez-Ramos<br />

S: William H Madden Jr Tr, Tr for K A Madden<br />

2019 T<br />

18 PERLEY AVE<br />

$500,000<br />

B: Jackie Moran & James F Moran Jr<br />

S: Kenneth P Shea Tr, Tr for 18 Perley Avenue<br />

RT<br />

40 PROCTOR CIR<br />

$370,000<br />

B: Constitution Prop LLC<br />

S: Lauretta M Silva & Robert J Silva<br />

4 RAVENWOOD RD<br />

$675,000<br />

B: Gilmar P Fagundes<br />

S: Alyssa A Dimaria & Peter J Dimaria<br />

7 ROCKDALE AVE<br />

$450,000<br />

B: Joseph D Vaudo<br />

S: Suzanne L Coughlin Tr, Tr for Lohring FT<br />

15 STYLES DR<br />

$720,000<br />

B: Michael P Gochis & Nancy E Gochis<br />

S: Edward Mattuchio<br />

1 WILLIS RD<br />

$640,000<br />

B: Nicholas W Bertone & Chayanna B Dasilva<br />

S: Lori S Mchugh Tr, Tr for 1 Willis Road Peabody<br />

NT<br />

4202 WOODBRIDGE RD U:4202<br />

$440,000<br />

B: Heidi Fyfe & Judy R Fyfe<br />

S: Breen Joseph A Est & Christopher J Igo<br />

Lynn-Lynnfield Line<br />

NEW CONDOMINIUMS<br />

243-247 Parkland Ave. Lynn<br />

Just reduced! $639,900<br />

OPEN HOUSE 8/7<br />

Saturday 12:00 to 2:00<br />

and 8/8 Sunday 12:00 to 2:00<br />

617-308-6451 • 617-750-7671<br />

TOP REALTY TEAM<br />

Clements Realty Group


16<br />

WEEKLYNEWS.NET - 978-532-5880 AUGUST 5, 2021<br />

*ON MARKET*<br />

*ON MARKET*<br />

23 LYNN SHORE DRIVE, LYNN 603 GAZEBO CIRCLE, READING<br />

NEW *ONTHIS MARKET* WEEK<br />

NEW THIS WEEK<br />

NEW THIS WEEK<br />

29 LONGBOW CIRCLE, LYNNFIELD 44 PILLINGS POND ROAD, LYNNFIELD<br />

88A MAPLE AVENUE, WOBURN<br />

NEW COMING THISNEXT WEEK WEEK<br />

COMING IN AUGUST<br />

COMING IN NEXT AUGUST WEEK<br />

COMING IN SEPT<br />

10 ROCK STREET, NORTH READING<br />

39 BROADWAY #304, MALDEN<br />

37 BENEVENTO CIRCLE, PEABODY<br />

85 PINE HILL ROAD, LYNNFIELD<br />

UNDER AGREEMENT<br />

UNDER AGREEMENT<br />

UNDER AGREEMENT<br />

UNDER AGREEMENT<br />

32 HERITAGE LANE, LYNNFIELD 4 FORBES WAY, PEABODY 3 HILL STREET, NORTH READING 5 LONGBOW CIRCLE, LYNNFIELD<br />

UNDER AGREEMENT<br />

UNDER AGREEMENT<br />

UNDER AGREEMENT<br />

UNDER AGREEMENT<br />

21 PINTA DRIVE, TEWKSBURY 18 HICKORY HILL, WAKEFIELD 69 STARK AVENUE, REVERE 55 WASHINGTON STREET, GROVELAND<br />

23 Wildewood Drive, Lynnfield*<br />

405 Main Street, Lynnfield<br />

7 Homestead Road, Lynnfield<br />

4 Michaels Road, Lynnfield<br />

26 Edgemere Road, Lynnfield<br />

55 Pillings Pond Road, Lynnfield<br />

4 Gerry Road, Lynnfield<br />

527 Salem Street U12, Lynnfield<br />

56 Jordan Avenue, Wakefield<br />

4 Ravenwood Road, Peabody<br />

23 Erwin Road, N. Reading*<br />

17 Shady Hill Road, Reading*<br />

*representing buyer<br />

Marjorie.Youngren@raveis.com 781-580-9357<br />

www.MarjorieSells.com

Hooray! Your file is uploaded and ready to be published.

Saved successfully!

Ooh no, something went wrong!