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WEEKLY NEWS<br />

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PERMIT #168<br />

PAID<br />

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OCTOBER 14, 2021 • VOL. 60, NO. 41<br />

By Katelyn Sahagian<br />

SERVING THE COMMUNITY SINCE 1957<br />

Chamber of Commerce<br />

celebrating 90 years<br />

16 PAGES • ONE DOLLAR<br />

The Peabody Area Chamber of<br />

Commerce (PACC) is celebrating a<br />

milestone birthday by throwing a party<br />

for its members.<br />

The chamber is celebrating 90 years<br />

of bringing local businesses together<br />

with a steak dinner, raffles, and entertainment<br />

on Nov. 4 from 5:30 to 9 p.m.<br />

at Spinelli’s event venue.<br />

“It’s to really celebrate the successes,<br />

determination, and resiliency of our<br />

businesses,” said PACC Chair Beth<br />

Amico.<br />

She added that the chamber plans<br />

to honor the four board members who<br />

are stepping down and to welcome<br />

four new board members taking their<br />

places.<br />

“This is a birthday celebration but<br />

also a business celebration to truly just<br />

By Katelyn Sahagian<br />

PACC, PAGE 2<br />

Planning Board hints at new<br />

32-townhome development<br />

The Planning Board is waiting on the<br />

final stages of peer review to turn a vacant<br />

storefront into 32 townhouse units, complete<br />

with 60 parking spaces and 20 visitor<br />

parking spaces.<br />

68 Prospect St., which used to be a<br />

Lahey Medical Imaging building, is going<br />

to be demolished and turned into market<br />

rate and affordable townhouses. The property<br />

was initially proposed in May; K.<br />

Hoyle Construction bought the property<br />

FILE PHOTO | JAKOB MENENDEZ<br />

The Peabody Area Chamber of Commerce plays host to a number of city<br />

events, showcasing businesses and individuals in the community.<br />

for $3 million in June.<br />

“Phase one would be to start with 12<br />

units,” said John Keilty, the lawyer representing<br />

K. Hoyle Construction at the<br />

Planning Board meeting on May 20.<br />

Six of the townhouses will be affordable<br />

housing, said Keilty. In addition to building<br />

the initial 12 townhouses, the construction<br />

group will fix a sidewalk that leads to the<br />

property and they will add a landscape<br />

buffer for privacy.<br />

The total plan for the townhouse development<br />

is to have five buildings that contain<br />

the 32 two-bedroom units. Each unit<br />

will have a one car garage and an exclusive<br />

driveway.<br />

In the May meeting, City Planner<br />

Andrew Levin said that K. Hoyle<br />

Construction knew it would have to receive<br />

peer reviews for certain aspects of the<br />

project. In the meeting on Oct. 7, Levin said<br />

that the peer reviews had been completed.<br />

“I would expect to have the applicants<br />

back at the next meeting to discuss 68<br />

Prospect St.,” said Levin. “The Department<br />

of Public Services is in the process of reviewing<br />

the peer reviews right now and<br />

making comments.”<br />

Library<br />

lectures<br />

focussing on<br />

Black authors<br />

By Katelyn Sahagian<br />

In a push for more inclusivity in their programming,<br />

the Peabody Institute Library’s<br />

four-week fall lecture series will focus on<br />

Black American writers.<br />

“I want to have anti-racism and diversity<br />

and ethic identity be an overarching<br />

theme that permeates all of our programming,”<br />

said Senior Programming Librarian<br />

Gabriela Toth. “So not all of the programming<br />

will be about that, but I want to make<br />

everything very inclusive.”<br />

The return of the library’s in-person lecture<br />

program will kick off Oct. 20 at 11 a.m.,<br />

and will feature Harvard comparative literature<br />

professor Theo Theoharis leading a<br />

discussion on “Giovanni’s Room’’ by James<br />

Baldwin and “The Penguin Anthology of<br />

20th Century American Poetry,” edited by<br />

Rita Dove.<br />

“I’ve heard people say ‘I was an English<br />

major and I haven’t had a chance to talk<br />

about books like this for 50 years,’”<br />

said Toth of the library’s popular lecture<br />

programming.<br />

Theoharis’ lecture series is funded by the<br />

Peabody Library Foundation and McCarthy<br />

Family Foundation, a charity fund through<br />

Bank of America.<br />

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2<br />

Register of Deeds sees<br />

big buy, big changes<br />

By Sam minton<br />

A property on Essex Center<br />

Drive didn't come cheap for the<br />

buyers, as the office building sold<br />

for $6.46 million recently.<br />

The UBS Financial Services<br />

building on 8 Essex Center Drive<br />

is a three-story, 68,000-squarefoot<br />

office building that was<br />

constructed in 1982. Besides<br />

UBS, the office building is home<br />

to Sports Medicine North, East<br />

Boston Savings Bank, Keypoint<br />

Partners, and the Massachusetts<br />

Public Employees fund.<br />

Southern Essex District Register<br />

of Deeds John O'Brien said<br />

that this is definitely a "top-dollar<br />

number."<br />

"Everything is selling," he<br />

said. "As you know, prices have<br />

gone crazy. ($6.46 million) is a<br />

substantial amount of money for<br />

an office building."<br />

PGA Realty Company, based<br />

in North Andover, has purchased<br />

the building which will earn the<br />

commonwealth of Massachusetts<br />

nearly $30,000 as a result of the<br />

excise tax on the sale.<br />

O'Brien said that bringing in<br />

this significant amount is important<br />

for the state.<br />

"Recording fees are one thing,<br />

Peabody Chamber<br />

of Commerce is<br />

celebrating 90 years<br />

PACC<br />

From page 1<br />

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166 Holten Street • Danvers<br />

(corner of Center & Collins)<br />

978-762-6366 • 978-535-2474<br />

www.DonWinslowAutoBody.com<br />

but when something like this sells<br />

for that amount of money, the excise<br />

tax is considerable," he said.<br />

"The registry, we average about<br />

$250,000 a day in recording fees<br />

and excise taxes. We take in an<br />

awful lot of money for the commonwealth<br />

so anytime we get a<br />

sale like that it's good."<br />

O'Brien is actually nearing<br />

the end of his time as a Register<br />

of Deeds after 50 years of public<br />

office, dating back to a Lynn<br />

City Council campaign when he<br />

was just 19 years old. O'Brien has<br />

been a Register of Deeds since<br />

1976.<br />

Once his term ends in three<br />

years, O'Brien has decided that<br />

he will not be seeking reelection<br />

for a multitude of reasons, including<br />

a Lewy Body Dementia<br />

diagnosis as well as Parkinson's<br />

disease.<br />

O'Brien has been outspoken<br />

about the diagnosis and hasn't<br />

shied away from talking about<br />

his condition.<br />

"It's time for me to retire at<br />

the end of this term and let someone<br />

new (come in)," he said. "I'll<br />

be the past and they will be the<br />

future, and they will probably<br />

have ideas that I have never even<br />

dreamed of. That's how it goes."<br />

have fun and have some<br />

laughs,” Amico said, adding<br />

that the celebration will “recognize<br />

the hard work and dedication<br />

that businesses have had<br />

over these last 12-18 months.”<br />

Over the past fiscal year,<br />

Amico said, there have been 38<br />

new members and 14 members<br />

who have rejoined the chamber.<br />

Amico said that she felt it was<br />

important to honor and welcome<br />

those businesses who,<br />

even through the pandemic,<br />

thought it was important to belong<br />

within PACC’s extended<br />

family.<br />

“Not only are they saying<br />

‘we need to do our best to stay<br />

open and be available for clients<br />

and customers,’ but they’re also<br />

saying ‘we’re investing in our<br />

community through being a part<br />

of the chamber,’” Amico said.<br />

Tickets will be $70 per<br />

person. Sponsorship opportunities<br />

are available for purchase in<br />

the program as well, and must<br />

be purchased by Oct. 28. To<br />

learn more about the event or<br />

about sponsorship, email Maria<br />

Terris at Maria@peabodychamber.com.<br />

We want to hear<br />

from you!<br />

Send us a letter at<br />

editor@weeklynews.net.<br />

Letters should be no more<br />

than 300 words.<br />

WEEKLYNEWS.NET - 978-532-5880 OCTOBER 14, 2021<br />

PHOTO | SPENSER HASAK<br />

Peabody World War II veteran Bill Locke thanks those in attendance at Brooksby Village during<br />

a celebration of his 100th birthday on Friday.<br />

Library lecture series will focus<br />

on Black American authors<br />

AUTHORS<br />

From page 1<br />

World War II veteran<br />

turns 100 at Brooksby<br />

By HannaH CHadwiCk<br />

Theoharis has been a professor<br />

at Harvard since 1985,<br />

and has also enjoyed speaking<br />

opportunities across Asia,<br />

Europe, and the United States.<br />

He has written and translated<br />

several books, including<br />

“Joyce’s Ulysses: An Anatomy<br />

of the Soul,” “Ibsen’s Drama:<br />

Right Action and Tragic Joy,”<br />

and “Before Time Could Change<br />

Them: The Complete Poems of<br />

Constantine P. Cavafy.”<br />

The library’s lecture program<br />

The Brooksby Village Veterans<br />

group held a surprise birthday<br />

celebration Friday in honor<br />

of resident and U.S. Navy veteran<br />

William E. Locke Sr., who<br />

turned 100 years old on Thursday.<br />

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

was in attendance, and presented<br />

a citation to Locke on<br />

behalf of the Senate, which honored<br />

him for his achievements.<br />

House Speaker Ronald Mariano<br />

and Gov. Charlie Baker were not<br />

in attendance, but sent their congratulations.<br />

State Rep. Thomas<br />

Walsh (D-Peabody) also made<br />

an appearance. Together with<br />

state Rep. Sally Kerans (D-Danvers),<br />

they also had citations for<br />

the veteran.<br />

Mayor Edward A. Bettencourt<br />

Jr. sent his congratulations<br />

through a video and had a Peabody<br />

T-shirt and blanket delivered<br />

for the ceremony, which<br />

was held at Brooksby Village<br />

Senior Living Community’s<br />

MacIntosh Building.<br />

While approximately 60 attendees<br />

were on hand to mark<br />

the milestone, Locke made it<br />

clear that he wasn’t too impressed<br />

with what many others<br />

might consider an accomplishment.<br />

“You people act as if this was<br />

something great,” Locke told his<br />

fellow veterans. “I’ll let you in<br />

on a little secret: Anyone can be<br />

100; all you have to do is wake<br />

up each morning.”<br />

Locke, an Everett native, was<br />

born in 1921. He graduated from<br />

Everett High School in 1940,<br />

then enlisted and served in the<br />

U.S. Navy during World War II.<br />

He served overseas in Europe,<br />

with most of his time devoted to<br />

working with the repair unit in<br />

has been a fixture for years, Toth<br />

said, adding that attendance increased<br />

during the virtual series<br />

throughout the pandemic when<br />

Theoharis focused on American<br />

playwrights.<br />

Toth said it was her mission<br />

to take an established program<br />

and add more representation for<br />

people of color.<br />

“As a start, I thought I would<br />

ask the people already doing<br />

programs to incorporate inclusivity<br />

into their programs,” Toth<br />

said. This lecture series will be<br />

one of her first programs in her<br />

new inclusivity plan. “I actually<br />

the British Isle.<br />

“We repaired ships that were<br />

damaged in the convoy,” said<br />

Locke. “I came over in a convoy<br />

that lost a few ships because the<br />

submarines were chasing us, but<br />

we were very fortunate to make<br />

it out of there”<br />

There were plans for Locke to<br />

be deployed during World War<br />

II, but these plans disintegrated<br />

when the U.S dropped two<br />

nuclear bombs over Hiroshima<br />

and Nagasaki in August of 1945;<br />

days later, Japan surrendered to<br />

the Allies.<br />

Locke served for three years<br />

in the Navy before returning to<br />

Massachusetts. Upon returning<br />

home, he started to work as an<br />

apprentice plumber in the Boston<br />

Navy Yard. He also enrolled<br />

at Fitchburg State University,<br />

where he studied to be a math<br />

VETERAN, PAGE 6<br />

spoke to Theo and said, ‘why<br />

don’t we do something on Black<br />

authors or people of color?’”<br />

Toth said that the library will<br />

order copies of both books covered<br />

in the lecture, and will provide<br />

them to attendees. Patrons<br />

wishing to sign up for the program<br />

can do so on the library’s<br />

website at www.peabodylibrary.org.<br />

The program is free and Toth<br />

is planning on holding it in the<br />

Sutton Room at the library. The<br />

library does require all visitors to<br />

wear masks and to social distance.


OCTOBER 14, 2021<br />

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

Man sentenced<br />

for trafficking<br />

fentanyl through city<br />

Peabody Veterans Memorial High School is seen in winter.<br />

High school students get<br />

jump start in CTE program<br />

BY ANNE MARIE TOBIN<br />

The district is looking to connect<br />

Peabody High School students<br />

with area businesses as a<br />

part of its internship program.<br />

Program Director Dr. Chris<br />

Lord says the focus for now is<br />

on placement of CTE (career and<br />

technical education) students in<br />

their respective fields, which he<br />

says will better prepare the students<br />

years down the road when<br />

they enter the workforce.<br />

"The internship program has<br />

been around for a while, and that's<br />

exactly what it does, it offers our<br />

students a unique opportunity to<br />

gain real-world work experience,"<br />

Lord said. "For now, it's more of a<br />

pilot program, but our hope is to<br />

take it to scale for all of Peabody<br />

High. We're working through the<br />

chamber (Peabody Area Chamber<br />

of Commerce) and hope to present<br />

it to the Rotary Club soon."<br />

Lord said the school is hoping<br />

to place 40 upper-class CTE students.<br />

The CTE program features<br />

six disciplines ― cosmetology,<br />

electronics (fiber optics/drones),<br />

culinary arts, early-childhood education,<br />

medical assisting, and protective<br />

services.<br />

Twelve medical assisting students<br />

have signed up and will be<br />

placed in various departments<br />

at the Lahey Clinic starting in<br />

November. Lord said the Lahey<br />

partnership has been in place for<br />

"several years now, and is the<br />

most mature internship offered by<br />

FILE PHOTO<br />

the school."<br />

Twenty-two early education<br />

seniors have signed up to begin<br />

work at various elementary<br />

schools and the Higgins Middle<br />

School. The school has also<br />

reached out to Kindercare and the<br />

in-house For Kids Only (FKO)<br />

programs with a start date of the<br />

beginning of the third quarter.<br />

The culinary arts program has<br />

10 interns who will be placed in<br />

local restaurants, including Not<br />

Your Average Joe's and Maki<br />

Sushi. These internships are paid<br />

and will take place during school<br />

hours and/or after school starting<br />

sometime in February.<br />

Twelve seniors in the cosmetology<br />

program will be placed in<br />

paid internships at local salons,<br />

where they will work during<br />

school hours and/or after school.<br />

"The goal is to get the kids the<br />

hours they need to get their licenses<br />

by the end of April and then get<br />

into the salons sometime after that<br />

in May for their internships," Lord<br />

said.<br />

According to Lord, the school<br />

is working with the Peabody Police<br />

and Fire Departments and<br />

local courts to place up to four<br />

criminal justice interns in unpaid<br />

positions sometime after the start<br />

of the third quarter. The school is<br />

also working with RCN to arrange<br />

paid internship positions for three<br />

seniors in the electronics engineering<br />

program with a potential start<br />

date in April.<br />

Students will be on-site at participating<br />

businesses during the<br />

school day several times per week<br />

between 11 a.m.-2 p.m. or after<br />

school for one to three hours per<br />

day.<br />

Students can also earn community<br />

service credits toward graduation.<br />

Forty community service<br />

hours are required to graduate.<br />

The program includes guest<br />

speakers from local businesses<br />

who will come to Peabody High<br />

to speak to interested students<br />

about the opportunities they offer.<br />

The internships are part of an<br />

ongoing effort to improve the<br />

quality of Peabody's CTE program,<br />

which recently underwent a<br />

major overhauling after receiving<br />

a $175,000 Skills Capital Grant<br />

from the state. The grant was used<br />

to modernize the kitchen used<br />

for the culinary arts program and<br />

upgrade its electronics labs by<br />

purchasing fiber-optic equipment,<br />

robotics arms, hot-air soldering<br />

stations, drone kits, and 3D printers.<br />

During a visit and tour of the<br />

CTE facilities at the high school,<br />

Gov. Charlie Baker lauded the<br />

district for its emerging public-private<br />

partnership with RCN, which<br />

has committed to hiring up to four<br />

students as paid interns.<br />

“Having the first certified fiber-optics<br />

program in the country<br />

will be a good thing for RCN, for<br />

Peabody, and hopefully it will be a<br />

jumping-off point for a lot of other<br />

programs in the Commonwealth,”<br />

Baker said.<br />

BY GAYLA CAWLEY<br />

BOSTON — A 30-year-old<br />

man was sentenced to nine years<br />

in prison Wednesday in federal<br />

court for his involvement in a<br />

fentanyl-trafficking operation<br />

that extended from New York<br />

to Peabody, the U.S. Attorney’s<br />

office said.<br />

James De La Cruz, of New<br />

York, pleaded guilty on May 7<br />

to one count of conspiracy to<br />

distribute and to possess with intent<br />

to distribute one kilogram or<br />

more of heroin and 400 grams or<br />

more of fentanyl and one count<br />

of possession with intent to distribute<br />

one kilogram or more of<br />

heroin and 400 grams or more of<br />

fentanyl, prosecutors said.<br />

As part of his sentencing, De<br />

La Cruz will have three years of<br />

supervised release following his<br />

prison term, prosecutors said.<br />

De La Cruz spoke to a cooperating<br />

witness several times<br />

and then met with the witness in<br />

September and October of 2019<br />

to arrange a large drug shipment<br />

from New York to the Boston<br />

area. This shipment took place<br />

on Oct. 21, 2019, with De La<br />

Cruz and his co-defendant, Juan<br />

Santos Roque, driving from<br />

New York to Peabody with approximately<br />

10 kilograms of<br />

fentanyl and six kilograms of<br />

heroin in a hidden compartment<br />

in Santos Roque’s vehicle, prosecutors<br />

said.<br />

After meeting with the cooperating<br />

witness, law-enforcement<br />

agents arrested both men.<br />

Santos Roque pleaded guilty<br />

to the drug charges in October<br />

2020 and was sentenced on May<br />

12 to 63 months in prison and<br />

two years of supervised release,<br />

prosecutors said.<br />

PACC EVENT<br />

Total Arts! ribbon cuting<br />

FOR THE WEEKLY NEWS<br />

You are cordially invited to<br />

celebrate Total Arts! A Creative<br />

Arts Workshops, a new PACC<br />

Member and Peabody business!<br />

Thursday, Oct. 14th @<br />

10:30am<br />

2 Bourbon St. #100<br />

Peabody, MA 01960<br />

Total Arts! believes that everyone<br />

can express themselves<br />

through the creative arts, and<br />

they strive to provide a place to<br />

allow for exploration, discovery,<br />

and creation for children, youth,<br />

and adults.<br />

Looking for a house?<br />

Check the real estate section!


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 />

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WEEKLYNEWS.NET - 978-532-5880 OCTOBER 14, 2021<br />

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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 />

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WEEK LY<br />

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MONDAY 10/04<br />

Accidents<br />

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

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

Monday at Northshore Mall; at<br />

2:37 p.m.<br />

A report of a motor vehicle<br />

crash at 2:12 p.m. Monday at<br />

4 Centennial Drive; at 4:09 p.m.<br />

Monday at Double Bull Taphouse<br />

at 210D Andover St.; at 7:06<br />

p.m. Monday at 2 Cross St. and<br />

174 Andover St.<br />

Complaints<br />

A report of a neighborhood<br />

dispute at 7:10 p.m. Monday<br />

at 278 Newbury St. A caller reported<br />

a neighbor was shining a<br />

flashlight into her unit.<br />

Vandalism<br />

A report of vandalism at 2:17<br />

p.m. Monday at 5 Perkins St.<br />

A caller reported political signs<br />

were damaged.<br />

TUESDAY 10/05<br />

Arrests<br />

Kyle NE Crosman, 30, of 51<br />

Harris St., Apt. 1, was arrested<br />

and charged with operating a<br />

motor vehicle with a suspended<br />

license and marked lanes violation<br />

at 12:39 p.m. Tuesday.<br />

Accidents<br />

A report of a motor vehicle<br />

crash at 7:40 p.m. Tuesday at<br />

79 Lynnfield St; at 2:37 p.m.<br />

Tuesday at LifeTime Fitness at<br />

210L Andover St.<br />

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

motor vehicle crash at 4:39 p.m.<br />

Tuesday at Caribe Restaurant at<br />

80 Walnut St. A crash involving<br />

a scooter was reported; at 12:57<br />

p.m. Tuesday at 15 Main St. and<br />

0 Nichols Lane.<br />

Breaking and Entering<br />

A report of a breaking and entering<br />

at 9:53 a.m. Tuesday at 4<br />

Downing Road. Police reported<br />

someone had entered the home<br />

through the patio door and rummaged<br />

through the resident’s<br />

room. Nothing appeared to have<br />

been taken.<br />

A report of a motor vehicle<br />

breaking and entering at 5:54<br />

p.m. Tuesday on Wallis Street.<br />

Complaints<br />

A report of unemployment<br />

fraud at 9:10 a.m. Tuesday at 2<br />

Jeffrey St.<br />

Overdose<br />

An overdose in the women’s<br />

bathroom was reported at 1:33<br />

p.m. Tuesday at Double Bull<br />

Taphouse at 210D Andover St.<br />

The female left the scene and<br />

was found in the mall.<br />

A report of an overdose<br />

at 5:08 p.m. Tuesday at 286<br />

Newbury St. The person was<br />

taken to Salem Hospital.<br />

WEDNESDAY 10/06<br />

Accidents<br />

A report of a motor vehicle<br />

crash at 3:40 a.m. Wednesday at<br />

2 Peabody Road and 502 Lowell<br />

St.; at 8:01 a.m. Wednesday on<br />

Andover Street; at 8:06 a.m.<br />

Wednesday at The Container<br />

Store at 210C Andover St.; at<br />

11:55 a.m. Wednesday at 243<br />

Washington St. and 1 Allens<br />

Lane; at 3:54 p.m. Wednesday<br />

at Walgreens at 35 Main St.; at<br />

7:06 p.m. Wednesday at 119<br />

Tremont St. and 50 Mt Vernon<br />

St.<br />

A hit-and-run motor vehicle<br />

crash was reported at 7:51 a.m.<br />

Wednesday at 64 Prospect St.;<br />

at 11:45 a.m. Wednesday at<br />

Nordstrom at 210N Andover<br />

St.; at 7:01 p.m. Wednesday at<br />

Walgreens at 35 Main St.<br />

A medical emergency was reported<br />

at 9:54 a.m. Wednesday<br />

at Meadows Golf Course at 58<br />

Granite St. A caller reported<br />

someone in a golf course drove<br />

off the embankment near the<br />

15th hole. The man was taken to<br />

Salem Hospital.<br />

Assault<br />

A report of an assault and battery<br />

at 7:22 p.m. Wednesday at<br />

JCPenney at 210J Andover St. A<br />

caller reported he was pushed in<br />

the store. The juvenile male was<br />

returned to the custody of his<br />

father.<br />

THURSDAY 10/07<br />

Arrests<br />

Kairo Costa, 24, of 190 Bridge<br />

St., Apt. 2211, Salem, was arrested<br />

and charged with unlicensed<br />

operation of a motor vehicle,<br />

no inspection/sticker, use<br />

of an electronic device while operating<br />

a motor vehicle, and on<br />

warrants at 2:45 p.m. Thursday.<br />

Accidents<br />

A report of a motor vehicle<br />

crash involving a pedestrian at<br />

8:17 a.m. Thursday on Allens<br />

Lane. An officer reported a child<br />

may have been struck by a motor<br />

vehicle. The officer later reported<br />

the child was not struck;<br />

the child was almost hit by a car<br />

and then fell off his bicycle.<br />

Complaints<br />

A report of fireworks at 12:27<br />

a.m. Thursday on Dark Lane.<br />

A caller thought there was a<br />

gun fight on Dark Lane. Police<br />

could not locate anything; a resident<br />

in the area told police that<br />

there were fireworks a couple of<br />

streets away.<br />

At 6:27 p.m. Thursday, a caller<br />

reported that scooters were interfering<br />

with traffic on Jubilee<br />

Drive.<br />

Disturbance<br />

At 12:08 a.m. Thursday, a dispute<br />

over tips resulted in an employee<br />

from Londi’s being fired.<br />

Vandalism<br />

A caller wanted to report that<br />

their vehicle had been egged<br />

at 1 Rita Road at 10:26 p.m.<br />

Thursday.<br />

FRIDAY 10/08<br />

Medical Emergency<br />

At 1:27 a.m. Friday a caller<br />

believed they had hypothermia<br />

and was transported to Salem<br />

Hospital.<br />

At 9:16 a.m. Friday, a customer<br />

at The Peabody Diner fell<br />

off their stool and was taken to<br />

Salem Hospital.


OCTOBER 14, 2021<br />

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

Seniors<br />

TIPS FOR SURVIVORS OF A PANDEMIC: MANAGING STRESS<br />

A pandemic is an epidemic of disease that often spreads quickly across far-reaching areas affecting<br />

many people. Few pandemics have affected as may communities around the world as the coronavirus<br />

disease 2019 (COVID-19) pandemic.<br />

Pandemics and other disasters involve physical danger and also stress that can overwhelm survivors’<br />

usual coping strategies, both during and after the disaster. After a pandemic or other disaster, people<br />

often notice changes in how they feel, think, and act, and they may not realize that these changes are<br />

reactions to the disaster.<br />

Survivors may be at higher risk of intense reactions if they live in communities where many people<br />

got sick; they had the disease themselves, or they had health, mental health or substance abuse<br />

conditions before and during the pandemic. Pandemics, unlike other types of disasters to not have a<br />

clear beginning and ending, sometimes leading to increased uncertainty and distress. This tip sheet<br />

describes common reactions after pandemics and other disasters and suggest ways to cope. It also<br />

covers financial stress and signs of the urgent need for mental health assistance and lists sources of<br />

help and support.<br />

COMMON REACTONS TO DISASTERS<br />

Survivors often notice changes in their thinking, feeling, and behavior during and after a disaster, as<br />

well as physical signs and symptoms.<br />

Changes related to thinking may include nightmares, confusion, trouble making decisions, trouble<br />

concentrating, difficulty with remembering things and inability to listen to others.<br />

Changes in feelings may include increased or overwhelming fear, anxiety, depression, irritability and<br />

anger, hopelessness, or guilt. Survivors may also experience a sense of disconnection, or not caring<br />

about things, as well as inability to feel joy or sadness.<br />

Changes in behavior may include having an exaggerated startle response trouble sleeping, or more<br />

arguments with others. Survivors may also notice that they are eating too much or too little, crying<br />

more often, having angry outbursts, or spending more time alone. Their substance use may increase.<br />

Physical signs and symptoms may include headaches, stomachaches, or diarrhea; loss of appetite;<br />

sweating or having chills; remorse (shaking) or muscle twitches; higher or lower energy than usual;<br />

or being unable to relax.<br />

TIPS TO MANAGE DISTRESS AFTER A PANDEMIC<br />

Coping skills and strategies can help you deal with the distress that is common among disaster<br />

survivors. Modeling these strategies can also help your family through phases of disaster recovery.<br />

Make and use Your connections. Build close relationships with others, especially with those who<br />

accept and understand your feelings, and take time to enjoy the close relationships you have.<br />

Socializing with others can reduce stress and create a sense of support and connection. Try<br />

volunteering, visiting family, calling a friend, or reaching out to a faith leader.<br />

Find Purpose. After a disaster there may be time to reflect on what is important to you in life and to<br />

make sure you’re spending the most time on things that matter most to you. Take part in activities<br />

you find enjoyable and meaningful, or create a plan to move in that direction.<br />

Have a Flexible Routine. Create a routine or daily schedule. Have a plan to accomplish required<br />

tasks, and create a flexible routine to accomplish them. Routines provide a sense of control over your<br />

life and reduce stress and uncertainty. Flexible routines allow you to accommodate unexpected events<br />

or urgent needs that arise while also maintaining a degree of consistency.<br />

Manage Thoughts. In challenging times, it is easy for your attention to focus more on the negative.<br />

To counter this tendency, remind yourself of transitions and challenges you have successfully navigated<br />

in the past. It may be helpful to remember coping methods that worked for you then, as they may also<br />

News Intake. Try not to overconsume news. Doing so has been shown to increase stress levels<br />

and anxiety. It may be helpful to identify a few sources you trust and plan to consult regularly; stick<br />

with those sources; and set a daily time limit for reading, watching, and listening to news.<br />

Sense of Humor. Use humor to reduce stress. Watch a funny movie or podcast, read a good book,<br />

or tell a funny joke to someone you know.<br />

Physical Care. Eat healthy meals and snacks, drink plenty of water, and get enough rest. Avoid<br />

excessive amounts of caffeine and alcohol. Model these behaviors for your family.<br />

Exercise. Set aside time for regular exercise of other physical activity as research shows this<br />

reduces stress and anxiety while also boosting physical health. If your schedule doesn’t allow for long<br />

segments of activity, take a couple of 5-minute walks instead. Try to make regular physical activity a<br />

part of your everyday routine.<br />

Get outside. Visit a local park or other beautiful space. Find time to step outside regularly and move<br />

around. The fresh air will decrease stress while providing a boost to physical and mental health.<br />

Write in a Stress Journal. Take 15-20 minutes each day to reflect upon stress and write down your<br />

thoughts and feelings. If you take time during the day to address stress, it is less likely at night to<br />

interfere with sleep.<br />

Celebrate Successes, and Make Time for Activities You Enjoy. Know it is okay to experience<br />

joy in the disaster recovery process and have moments of success even after a pandemic or other<br />

disaster. Return to doing things you enjoy with your family and spending time with friends.<br />

When to Seek Professional Support. Reactions to disasters dissipate in time for many survivors.<br />

However, some survivors may experience reactions that persist over time, cause them distress and get<br />

in the way of their daily lives; especially survivors with a recent history of intense stress or health<br />

conditions. Here are examples of more serious reactions after a disaster.<br />

<br />

<br />

<br />

<br />

<br />

<br />

<br />

<br />

Disorientation or confusion, and difficulty communicating thoughts<br />

Limited attention span and difficulty concentrating<br />

Overwhelming guilt and self-doubt<br />

Feelings of hopelessness<br />

Frequent mood swings or continuous crying<br />

Reluctance to leave home<br />

Fear of crowds, strangers or being alone<br />

Increase use of drugs, alcohol, or prescription medication<br />

Helpful Resources:<br />

Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services<br />

Administration (SAMHSA)<br />

Toll free 1-877-726-4727<br />

SAMHSA Disaster Technical Assistance Ctr.<br />

1-800-308-3515<br />

Helplines:<br />

SAMHSA Disaster Distress Helpline<br />

1-800-846-8517<br />

National Suicide Prevention Lifeline<br />

1-800-273-8255<br />

Treatment locator<br />

SAMHSA’s National Helpline: 1-800-662-4357.


6<br />

WEEKLYNEWS.NET - 978-532-5880 OCTOBER 14, 2021<br />

World War II veteran turns 100<br />

VETERAN<br />

From page 2<br />

and industrial arts teacher. After<br />

he graduated, he became a teacher<br />

for the city of Medford. He<br />

later moved on to Winchester,<br />

where he taught for 25 years in<br />

the town’s school district at the<br />

McCall Junior High School.<br />

Locke and his wife, Barbara<br />

(Breslow, of Lynn), settled in<br />

Reading, where they raised six<br />

children. He was very active<br />

with the town and was a member<br />

of multiple boards and committees,<br />

including the Board of<br />

Assessors, which he served off<br />

and on as chairman. He is currently<br />

the oldest and longest-tenured<br />

member of the Thomson<br />

Country Club in North Reading,<br />

which he joined with his family<br />

in 1964.<br />

Seven years ago, Locke’s<br />

wife died, which led to him<br />

moving to Brooksby Village.<br />

Locke quickly made friends and<br />

discovered the Brooksby Veterans<br />

club. He plays golf and shuffleboard<br />

almost every week with<br />

neighbors and friends.<br />

“He is a member of the Greatest<br />

Generation,” said Steve Patten,<br />

Peabody’s director of veterans<br />

services, who organized<br />

the event. “He lived through so<br />

much history, yet he is so humble<br />

and kind.”<br />

PHOTOS | SPENSER HASAK<br />

Peabody World War II veteran Bill Locke looks over a citation he received from Mayor Edward<br />

A. Bettencourt Jr. during a celebration of his 100th birthday.<br />

Bill Locke of Peabody smiles as he looks on during a celebration<br />

of his 100th birthday.<br />

Steve Patten, director of Veterans Services for Peabody, honors Locke in a speech.<br />

Patten presents Locke with a hat as a gift on his 100th birthday.<br />

State Sen. Joan Lovely honors Peabody World War II veteran Bill Locke by<br />

giving him a citation amongst other gifts.


OCTOBER 14, 2021<br />

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

Religious News<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 />

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

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

org<br />

Saint Adelaide and Saint Ann<br />

are now a collaborative<br />

One pastor: Rev. David C.<br />

Lewis<br />

Saint Adelaide Parish<br />

708 Lowell St.<br />

Peabody, MA 01960<br />

Masses: Vigil Mass 4:00 PM<br />

Saturday<br />

8:30 & 10:00 AM Sunday -<br />

12:00 Noon Latin Mass.<br />

8:30 Mass live streamed<br />

www.saintadelaide.org<br />

Saint Ann Parish<br />

140 Lynn St.<br />

Peabody, MA 01960<br />

Vigil Mass on Saturday 4:00<br />

PM<br />

Sunday 9:30 AM and is live<br />

streamed<br />

www.catholic-church.<br />

org/~st-ann-peabody/public_<br />

html//<br />

Temple Ner Tamid<br />

Service Times<br />

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

Friday: 8 p.m.<br />

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

office@templenertamid.org<br />

368 Lowell St.<br />

Peabody, Mass.<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://stjohnpeabody.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 />

St. Clare of Assisi<br />

(non-Roman)<br />

Our Parish family welcomes<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-Otero,<br />

O.S.F.<br />

978-804-2250<br />

www.stclarepeabody.org<br />

Holy Mass: Saturdays at 3<br />

p.m.<br />

St. Clare Mission (feeding<br />

the 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<br />

Life’s Transitions<br />

Small Group Worship & Bible<br />

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

a.m. Sundays. For info, prayer or<br />

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

or office@northshorebaptistchurch.org.<br />

Congregation Tifereth Israel<br />

Congregation Tifereth Israel,<br />

8 Pierpont St., Peabody, will be<br />

open for High Holiday services<br />

in person. Rosh Hashanah,<br />

Tuesday, Sept. 7, and Wednesday,<br />

Sept. 8, at 9:30 AM. Yom<br />

Kippur, Wednesday, Sept. 15, at<br />

7:30 PM, and Thursday, Sept.<br />

16, at 9:30 AM. All services will<br />

also be available through Zoom<br />

and a link will be emailed to all<br />

members.<br />

Congregation Tifereth Israel<br />

8 Pierpont Street<br />

Peabody, MA 01960<br />

Tel. 978.531.8135<br />

web: www.ctipeabody.org<br />

Carmelite Chapel<br />

Carmelite Chapel in the<br />

Northshore Mall<br />

Holy Mass:<br />

Monday through Friday:<br />

Noon and 3 p.m.<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<br />

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 Saturday:<br />

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

Phone: 978-531-8340<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://<br />

allsaintsepiscopalnorthshore.<br />

org/, and we are also on Facebook,<br />

Twitter and Instagram.<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 is<br />

required (call the church at 978-<br />

774-1150).<br />

Outreach<br />

Join us on the third Sunday<br />

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

50 bagged lunches for the food<br />

insecure in Peabody. Contact the<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<br />

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<br />

10 a.m.<br />

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

Meeting ID: 967 6077 5904<br />

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

Perfect Paws Pet Ministry,<br />

the third Sunday of each month<br />

at 5 p.m.<br />

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

j/990855545?pwd=YVN4bzFhOEpLZkY3Y1dxQkt2OTJMdz09<br />

Meeting ID: 990 855 545<br />

Password: Saintfranc<br />

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

1150 or email allstoffice@<br />

gmail.com<br />

Peace,<br />

Michelle Behling, Parish Administrator<br />

Michelle Behling, Parish Administrator<br />

All Saints Episcopal Church<br />

of the North Shore<br />

46 Cherry Street<br />

Danvers, MA 01923<br />

Rooted in<br />

Extraordinary Care<br />

Our staff is stronger then ever and<br />

ready to care for you or your loved one.<br />

Whether it is after a hospital stay, or for long-term care, we’re here to care for you.<br />

Always.<br />

Offerings Include:<br />

• Experienced clinical team<br />

• Short-term recovery stays<br />

• Physical, Occupational & Speech Therapy<br />

• Long-term inpatient skilled care<br />

• Respite stays<br />

• Hospice care<br />

96 Forest Street<br />

Peabody, MA 01960<br />

www.pilgrimrehab.org<br />

Call us for compassionate care you can count on. 978-532-0303


8<br />

Ramona Musker, 84<br />

LYNNFIELD - Ramona Musker<br />

(Felix), 84, of Lynnfield, died on<br />

Friday, October 1 at The Palmettos<br />

of Bluffton assisted living center in<br />

Okatie, South Carolina.<br />

Beloved wife of the late Thomas<br />

H. Musker, of Lynnfield. Devoted<br />

mother of Oscar J. Musker and<br />

his wife Janine Brunelle Musker<br />

of Lynn, Susan Oliva and her<br />

husband Richard Oliva of Okatie,<br />

SC, Joseph Musker, of Washington<br />

DC, and grandmother of Joseph D.<br />

Oliva, living in Lynnfield. Cherished<br />

sister of Emma, Jorge, Carlos, Jose<br />

and their families of Mexico. She<br />

is also survived by in-laws, cousins,<br />

nephews, nieces, and other<br />

relatives in the United States and<br />

Mexico.<br />

Ramona was born in El Dorado,<br />

Sinaloa, Mexico on November 12,<br />

1936. She met Tom Musker in<br />

Mexico around 1960 and “took<br />

a chance” to move to Massachusetts<br />

for what proved to be a long,<br />

loving marriage until Tom died in<br />

2002. Ramona had an Associate’s<br />

Degree and became a dedicated<br />

wife, caregiver, and mother at their<br />

home in Lynnfield. She enjoyed<br />

playing tennis, bowling, dining out,<br />

dancing, and gardening when she<br />

had free time.<br />

Once Tom passed in 2002, Ramona<br />

spent much of her time with<br />

family friends, as well as with her<br />

tennis team friends. Whether family<br />

friends, tennis or bowling friends,<br />

neighbors, or her caregivers at Palmettos<br />

in her final months, Ramona’s<br />

“sass” and silly humor made<br />

EXETER, NH - Leslie Esach “Doc”<br />

Silvern passed away on Saturday,<br />

October 2, 2021, at the age of 80<br />

in Exeter, NH. He died peacefully<br />

after being surrounded by loved<br />

ones in his final days.<br />

Doc was born in Manhattan,<br />

New York on December 27, 1940<br />

to father, Dr. Louis Silvern, and<br />

mother, Henrietta Silvern. Though<br />

born in the city, his happiest childhood<br />

memories were those spent<br />

outdoors, on his family’s farm in<br />

Highland, NY, where he moved<br />

when he was 13. Doc was a brilliant<br />

electrical engineering graduate<br />

of Clarkson University who<br />

went on to travel the world selling<br />

and marketing high-tech products,<br />

before running his own business<br />

as a service engineer. He was a<br />

proud Rotarian and active, cherished<br />

member of all the communities<br />

he was a part of.<br />

During college, Doc met his beloved<br />

wife of 60 years, Margaret<br />

Reilly Silvern. Together they raised<br />

two children, Suzanne and Mark,<br />

in Lynnfield, MA, where they were<br />

active members of the community<br />

for more than 30 years. Doc<br />

was the proud grandfather of Suzanne’s<br />

children Nathan, Samuel,<br />

and Grace, and Mark and his wife<br />

Anne’s children Emma and Tabitha,<br />

whom he adored and shared endless,<br />

fond and beautiful memories<br />

people laugh, love her, care for her,<br />

and never forget her. Her energy,<br />

humor, and thoughtfulness will<br />

never be forgotten.<br />

Service Information: A private<br />

funeral service for close family<br />

and friends will be held at the<br />

McDonald Funeral Home at<br />

19 Yale Avenue, Wakefield on<br />

Thursday October 14, at 11am,<br />

immediately followed by a burial<br />

service at Puritan Lawn Memorial<br />

Park, 185 Lake Street, in<br />

Peabody.<br />

Flowers are welcomed. In lieu<br />

of flowers, memorial contributions<br />

may also be dedicated to<br />

Ramona’s name to The American<br />

Cancer Society via the following<br />

website: www.cancer.org<br />

(click “DONATE” in the top right<br />

corner).<br />

Leslie Esach Silvern, 80<br />

1940 - 2021<br />

with.<br />

Doc’s love for simple pleasures<br />

brought him to seek joy in being<br />

outside skiing at Sugarloaf Mountain,<br />

fishing, golfing, working in the<br />

yard, feeding the birds, and caring<br />

for the many dogs he had the honor<br />

of loving in his life. He lived every<br />

day to the fullest and touched<br />

the life of everyone he met. Anyone<br />

who knew him, even for a little<br />

while, will forever love him dearly.<br />

The family requests those who<br />

wish to express sympathy to consider<br />

making a donation to 3 Dogs<br />

Rescue in Berwick, Maine (PO Box<br />

228, Berwick, ME 03901, www.3dogsrescue.com)<br />

in honor of<br />

his life.<br />

WEEKLYNEWS.NET - 978-532-5880 OCTOBER 14, 2021<br />

Moses Brown III<br />

PEABODY - Moses Brown III was<br />

born on February 13, 1943 in<br />

Faunsdale, AL to the late Moses<br />

Brown, Jr. and Velma Williams.<br />

Moses was one of 8 children. He<br />

was also known as “Mose” by his<br />

family and friends. Mose departed<br />

this life on October 6, 2021<br />

at 12:05pm in Burlington, MA.<br />

Mose accepted Jesus Christ as his<br />

Lord and Savior in his early teens<br />

and joined the Little Zion Baptist<br />

Church in Faunsdale, AL. He remained<br />

a member there until he<br />

left Faunsdale. Growing up in the<br />

country, Mose liked the outdoors,<br />

farming, and animals. He liked<br />

planting and growing a garden.<br />

One of his favorite things to do<br />

was to walk out into the fields and<br />

look all around. He said this would<br />

help him to think. Mose attended<br />

school in Hale County in Sunshine,<br />

AL.<br />

Mose left Faunsdale to follow his<br />

brother Rudolph to Lynn, MA seeking<br />

better job opportunities. He<br />

secured a job as a crane operator<br />

at Eastman Kodak in Peabody, MA.<br />

However, Mose returned home<br />

to Faunsdale to marry his high<br />

school sweetheart, Minnie Walker.<br />

They united in Holy Matrimony<br />

on July 8, 1967. They returned to<br />

Lynn, MA and made it their home.<br />

From this union, two children were<br />

born. Mose continued to work for<br />

Eastman Kodak for 25 years before<br />

retiring in 1992 at the age of<br />

49.<br />

Mose later joined Minnie as a<br />

member of Zion Baptist Church,<br />

Lynn, MA where he served as a<br />

Trustee until his death. Mose had<br />

a love for riding motorcycles. He<br />

was a founding member of the<br />

North Shore Wanderers Motorcycle<br />

club serving as the Treasurer<br />

since the club’s beginning in<br />

1993. He was fondly known as<br />

“Big Dogg” traveled the United<br />

States on his motorcycle, going as<br />

far west as California and as far<br />

south as Florida. He enjoyed investing<br />

in real estate, spending<br />

time in his gardens, and shooting<br />

pool with friends. Memories<br />

of Mose will be cherished by his<br />

devoted wife, Minnie Brown, of 54<br />

years. He was preceded in death<br />

by his brothers Armstead Williams,<br />

James (Jeff) Williams, John Ed<br />

Williams, Rudolph Briggins, and<br />

Charles (Cutton) Williams. He<br />

is survived by his sister, Mildred<br />

(Joseph) Henderson (Harvest, AL)<br />

and brother, Joseph (Carol) Brown<br />

(Lynn, MA). Mose leaves the following<br />

of his children behind, Tara<br />

Dellofano (Hyattsville, MD), Dexter<br />

(Stephanie) Brown (Salem, MA),<br />

Angela (Phillip) Owens (Salem,<br />

MA), Stephanie (Virgil) Mitchell<br />

(Swampscott, MA), Levar Jackson<br />

(Somerville, MA), Kimberly Jackson<br />

(Jacksonville, FL). He leaves<br />

behind 12 Grandchildren and 3<br />

Great Grandchildren. Mose also<br />

leaves his treasured motorcycle<br />

club, the North Shore Wanderers, a<br />

host of nieces, nephews, extended<br />

family members and friends.<br />

Service Information: In lieu<br />

of sending flowers, the family<br />

is asking that you consider a<br />

donation to the American Diabetes<br />

Association. www.<br />

goodrichfuneralhome.com<br />

Spiritual<br />

Care<br />

Week<br />

FOR THE WEEKLY NEWS<br />

In celebration of Spiritual<br />

(Pastoral) Care Week, October<br />

24 - 30, Care Dimensions recognizes<br />

our 16 chaplains—including<br />

Sharon Dunbar-Link and<br />

Robert Hagopian of Peabody —<br />

for the outstanding professional<br />

chaplaincy and pastoral counseling<br />

they provide patients at end<br />

of life. As part of our interdisciplinary<br />

teams, our chaplains care<br />

for patients wherever they live:<br />

in their homes, in skilled nursing<br />

facilities, and in assisted-living<br />

communities, in hospitals, and at<br />

our inpatient hospice facilities in<br />

Lincoln and Danvers.<br />

“Our chaplains are a very important<br />

part of Care Dimensions’<br />

interdisciplinary team available<br />

to each hospice patient,” said<br />

Care Dimensions President and<br />

CEO Patricia Ahern. “They give<br />

ecumenical guidance and pastoral<br />

support in accordance with<br />

each family’s wishes and belief<br />

system. Our chaplains are the<br />

women and men who live our<br />

mission every day to deliver<br />

and coordinate spiritual support,<br />

comfort, strength and peace to<br />

patients and their families.”<br />

About Care Dimensions<br />

Care Dimensions is the largest<br />

hospice and palliative care<br />

provider to adults and children<br />

in Massachusetts. As a nonprofit,<br />

community-based leader<br />

in advanced illness care, Care<br />

Dimensions provides comprehensive<br />

hospice, palliative care,<br />

and grief support in more than<br />

95 communities in Eastern Massachusetts.<br />

Founded in 1978<br />

as Hospice of the North Shore,<br />

Care Dimensions cares for patients<br />

wherever they live ― in<br />

their homes, in skilled nursing<br />

facilities and assisted-living<br />

communities, in hospitals, or at<br />

our two inpatient hospice facilities,<br />

the Care Dimensions Hospice<br />

House in Lincoln and the<br />

Kaplan Family Hospice House<br />

in Danvers. Additionally, Care<br />

Dimensions HomeMD program<br />

provides in-home primary care<br />

to patients over age 65 in select<br />

communities on the North Shore<br />

and Greater Boston who have<br />

difficulty leaving home. The<br />

Care Dimensions Learning Institute<br />

educates more than 7,000<br />

health care professionals and<br />

community members each year<br />

on advanced illness and endof-life<br />

topics. Please visit www.<br />

CareDimensions.org to learn<br />

more about Care Dimensions.<br />

Have a story? We Let love us to know! hear from Contact you. the Editor,<br />

Write to the Editor,<br />

syarin@essexmediagroup.com<br />

tgrillo@essexmediagroup.com


OCTOBER 14, 2021<br />

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

Sports<br />

FILE PHOTO<br />

Steven Woods threw four touchdowns passes for Bishop<br />

Fenwick in a win over Cardinal Spellman Friday.<br />

Bishop Fenwick<br />

bounces back with<br />

win over Spellman<br />

PHOTO | SPENSER HASAK<br />

Peabody’s Michael Perez, left, sheds a tackle from Swampscott’s Harry Riddell during a game<br />

at Coley Lee Field at Friday night.<br />

Swampscott grabs late<br />

score to slip past Peabody<br />

FOOTBALL<br />

By Sam Minton<br />

PEABODY — It isn’t how<br />

you start but how you finish,<br />

and the Swampscott football<br />

team was able to hang on for<br />

a 28-21 victory over Peabody<br />

in a Northeastern Conference<br />

bout at Coley Lee Field Friday<br />

night.<br />

With more than 100 yards<br />

rushing, senior Xaviah Bascon<br />

led the Big Blue in rushing and<br />

also to victory.<br />

Head coach Bob Serino said<br />

that his running back “knows<br />

how it is” and believes he can’t<br />

do it by himself.<br />

“He complements his line<br />

and our line after the first drive<br />

said ‘run the ball,’” said Serino.<br />

“(Bascon) is a good running<br />

back but he compliments his<br />

line every game.”<br />

The Tanners got on the<br />

scoreboard quickly, driving 63<br />

yards in just over five minutes.<br />

Sophomore Alexander Silva<br />

broke off a 35-yard run before<br />

senior Shea Lynch threw a<br />

five-yard touchdown to senior<br />

Michael Perez to give Peabody<br />

a 7-0 lead with 9:22 left in the<br />

first quarter.<br />

Peabody’s defense started the<br />

game on a positive note as well,<br />

forcing a Big Blue three and out<br />

and regaining possession with<br />

7:35 left in the opening quarter.<br />

Swampscott bounced back,<br />

stopping Peabody at its own 37.<br />

Bascon returned the punt back<br />

to Peabody’s 36 and the Big<br />

Blue made quick work of the<br />

Tanners defense with quarterback<br />

Cameron O’Brien seeing<br />

a hole and rushing 38 yards to<br />

make it 7-7 with three minutes<br />

left in the first quarter.<br />

The Big Blue showed their<br />

dominance once more after<br />

stopping Peabody, driving 66<br />

yards down the field in a drive<br />

that lasted nearly 10 minutes.<br />

Staring at their own 34-yard<br />

line, they found the end zone<br />

with some trickery as junior<br />

Chris Ferragamo took a reverse<br />

10 yards to the end zone to give<br />

Swampscott a 14-7 lead with<br />

five minutes left in the second<br />

quarter.<br />

Peabody responded with a<br />

four-minute, 66-yard drive that<br />

concluded with Colin Ridley<br />

taking a pass from Lynch 27<br />

yards to the end zone and once<br />

again tying the game at 14-14<br />

with 1:14 left in the half.<br />

It seemed that the scoring<br />

was done for the half, but the<br />

Big Blue drove 40 yards in less<br />

than a minute and junior Elijah<br />

Burns fought his way to the<br />

end zone after catching a laser<br />

from the arm of O’Brien to<br />

give Swampscott a 21-14 lead<br />

entering halftime.<br />

After stopping Swampscott<br />

from getting another touchdown<br />

to start the third quarter,<br />

Peabody started its first drive of<br />

the half from its own 41 with<br />

9:16 left in the third. It took<br />

four minutes for the Tanners to<br />

drive down the field as Lynch<br />

connected with Danny Barrett<br />

in the air for a 20-yard touchdown<br />

to tie the game up at<br />

21-21 with just over five minutes<br />

left in the quarter.<br />

Thanks to a combination<br />

of mental mistakes from<br />

Swampscott and some quality<br />

defending, Peabody forced the<br />

Big Blue offense to return to the<br />

sidelines empty-handed once<br />

more. The Tanners regained<br />

possession with just over a<br />

minute left in the third quarter<br />

looking to gain a late lead over<br />

Swampscott, but they couldn’t<br />

take advantage and were forced<br />

to punt with just under 10 minutes<br />

left in the game.<br />

Serino told his players at the<br />

beginning of the year that the<br />

only team that could beat the<br />

Big Blue was themselves.<br />

“Tonight, we almost beat ourselves<br />

with penalties,” he said.<br />

“We have a lot of work to do<br />

and sometimes they are physical<br />

mistakes, sometimes they<br />

are stupid mistakes. We can’t<br />

have that many penalties.”<br />

The X-factor for the Big Blue<br />

came through when needed<br />

most, with Bascon receiving<br />

a heavy dose of carries and<br />

punching it home from two<br />

yards out to give Swampscott a<br />

28-21 lead with 4:22 left in the<br />

game.<br />

The Big Blue’s defense answered<br />

the bell on Peabody’s<br />

final drive of the night, securing<br />

a sack with 1:27 left in<br />

the game to force a turnover on<br />

downs and clinch the victory.<br />

Now 1-4, The Tanners head<br />

to Winthrop next Friday (7).<br />

The Big Blue, on the other<br />

hand, are 5-0 and return home<br />

to Blocksidge Field to face<br />

Danvers Friday (7).<br />

FOOTBALL<br />

By Mike Alongi<br />

The Bishop Fenwick football<br />

team bounced back from<br />

last week’s loss with a big win<br />

Friday, taking down Catholic<br />

Central League opponent<br />

Cardinal Spellman by a score of<br />

31-0 on the road.<br />

Quarterback Steven Woods<br />

completed 17-of-23 passes for<br />

162 yards and four touchdowns<br />

By Sam Minton<br />

PEABODY ― With the high<br />

school hockey season just around<br />

the corner, the commonwealth is<br />

struggling to find referees.<br />

Massachusetts Hockey<br />

President Bob Joyce recently sent<br />

out a statement explaining that the<br />

state is currently dealing with a<br />

severe referee shortage. The organization<br />

has lost 900 referees since<br />

the beginning of the COVID-19<br />

pandemic.<br />

“The referee pool is dwindling,<br />

and we need to take steps<br />

in a positive manner to reverse<br />

this,” said Joyce. “ Our officials<br />

are everyday people just like our<br />

parents, who have real jobs but try<br />

to work a side job to help our kids<br />

play a game, earn a little extra income,<br />

and give back to the game.<br />

It would appear that many people,<br />

for whatever reason, have lost this<br />

understanding and somehow believe<br />

that our officials need to be at<br />

the same level as what they see on<br />

TV at the college or NHL level.”<br />

The main culprit of the dropoff<br />

is abuse from parents, coaches,<br />

and players. Since the start of<br />

the youth season, the organization<br />

has already had to deal with<br />

some serious situations, such as a<br />

young female referee quitting in<br />

the middle of a set of games due<br />

to parent harassment and a referee<br />

needing a police escort after an 8U<br />

game.<br />

in the win for Fenwick, with<br />

receiver Jason Romans (eight<br />

receptions for 85 yards and two<br />

touchdowns) catching two of<br />

them. Costa Beechin and Chris<br />

Faraca each had a touchdown<br />

reception, while Aidan Silva<br />

kicked a field goal. Running<br />

back Troy Irizarry led the team<br />

on the ground with 10 carries<br />

for 86 yards.<br />

Fenwick (4-1) hosts<br />

Archbishop Williams Friday<br />

(7).<br />

Massachusetts hockey<br />

suffering from ref shortage<br />

The organization reiterated that<br />

itself along with USA Hockey has<br />

a zero-tolerance policy for abuse<br />

of officials. Coaches and players<br />

can be suspended and parents can<br />

be banned from attending future<br />

games.<br />

“Again, we ask you to practice<br />

patience and good judgement,”<br />

said Mass Hockey. “The children<br />

are all watching us and following<br />

our example. We all need to make<br />

a better effort to respect the officials<br />

and keep them working.”<br />

Tyler Conrad, a Peabody resident,<br />

has officiated youth hockey<br />

games in the North Shore and<br />

around Massachusetts for four<br />

years. While he admitted that<br />

some parents, coaches, and<br />

players can mouth off, in his experience<br />

he has had mostly positive<br />

encounters.<br />

“Ninety-nine percent of the<br />

time when you give someone respect<br />

you get it back,” he said.<br />

Conrad likes to get himself in<br />

a good mood before games and<br />

introduce himself to parents and<br />

coaches in order to build more<br />

of a familiar relationship with the<br />

group to try and prevent instances<br />

of abuse.<br />

“I skate hard, I’m respectful<br />

to everybody, I have a good time<br />

with the kids and then usually they<br />

work with me,” he said.<br />

If you are interested in becoming<br />

an official, visit https://<br />

www.mahockey.org/maofficials.


10<br />

WEEKLYNEWS.NET - 978-532-5880 OCTOBER 14, 2021<br />

2 Large<br />

Cheese Pizzas<br />

$17.99<br />

HIGH SCHOOL SPORTS SCHEDULE<br />

THURSDAY<br />

Boys Soccer<br />

Peabody at Bishop Fenwick (3:30)<br />

Field Hockey<br />

Lynnfield at Triton (3:45)<br />

Revere at Peabody (4)<br />

Northeast at Bishop Fenwick (4)<br />

Volleyball<br />

Bishop Fenwick at Arlington Catholic (5:30)<br />

FRIDAY<br />

Football<br />

Pentucket at Lynnfield (6:30)<br />

Peabody at Winthrop (7)<br />

Archbishop Williams at Bishop Fenwick (7)<br />

Golf<br />

Bishop Fenwick at CCL Championships (8)<br />

Saugus at Peabody (4)<br />

Boys Soccer<br />

Lynnfield at Triton (3:45)<br />

Girls Soccer<br />

Triton at Lynnfield (3:45)<br />

Field Hockey<br />

Peabody at Gloucester (4)<br />

Volleyball<br />

Peabody at Melrose (5:30)<br />

North Andover at Lynnfield (5:30)<br />

SATURDAY<br />

Boys Soccer<br />

Bishop Stang at Bishop Fenwick (3:30)<br />

Girls Soccer<br />

Bishop Fenwick at Bishop Stang (10)<br />

Volleyball<br />

Bishop Stang at Bishop Fenwick (11)<br />

Cross Country<br />

Bishop Fenwick at Catholic Memorial Invitational<br />

(9)<br />

By Sam Minton<br />

PEABODY ― The Peabody<br />

volleyball team secured its seventh<br />

straight win, defeating the<br />

Salem Witches 3-0 on Wednesday<br />

evening.<br />

“I think we played really well,”<br />

said Peabody head coach Lisa<br />

Keene. “It’s always nice to have<br />

home-court advantage. We still<br />

have a lot of stuff that we are<br />

working on, but one of the best advantages<br />

of today was getting a lot<br />

of other players in that haven’t had<br />

as much playing time.”<br />

The Tanners got off to a fast<br />

start, jumping out in front 9-1 in<br />

the first set. Salem called a timeout<br />

in an attempt to stop Peabody’s<br />

momentum but the service provided<br />

from senior captain Sarah<br />

Broughton was too much for the<br />

Witches to handle as they lost the<br />

first set 25-4.<br />

Broughton struck four aces in<br />

the first set alone while Peabody<br />

also got help from junior captain<br />

Isabel Bettencourt, who had two<br />

aces as well as one kill.<br />

Salem coach Craig Massey said<br />

after the match that his side was<br />

clearly not ready for Peabody’s<br />

strong serving.<br />

Pizza • Hot & Cold Subs • Dinners<br />

• Salads • Sandwiches • Side Orders<br />

• Pasta Dinners • Fish Dinners<br />

• Calzones • Homemade Soups & Chowder<br />

We deliver!<br />

MONDAY<br />

Boys Soccer<br />

St. Mary’s at Bishop Fenwick (3:30)<br />

Marblehead at Peabody (4)<br />

Girls Soccer<br />

Peabody at Marblehead (4)<br />

Bishop Fenwick at St. Mary’s (4)<br />

Field Hockey<br />

North Reading at Lynnfield (4:15)<br />

Peabody at Revere (6)<br />

Volleyball<br />

Peabody at Beverly (5:30)<br />

TUESDAY<br />

Boys Soccer<br />

North Reading at Lynnfield (4:15)<br />

Girls Soccer<br />

North Reading at Lynnfield (4:45)<br />

Field Hockey<br />

Bishop Fenwick at Manchester-Essex (TBD)<br />

Volleyball<br />

St. Mary’s at Bishop Fenwick (5:30)<br />

Hamilton-Wenham at Lynnfield (6)<br />

WEDNESDAY<br />

Boys Soccer<br />

Swampscott at Peabody (4)<br />

Bishop Fenwick at Austin Prep (4)<br />

Girls Soccer<br />

Peabody at Swampscott (4)<br />

Austin Prep at Bishop Fenwick (7)<br />

Field Hockey<br />

Saugus at Peabody (6)<br />

Volleyball<br />

Danvers at Peabody (5:30)<br />

Cross Country<br />

Bishop Fenwick at CCL Championships (3)<br />

Manchester-Essex at Lynnfield (3:30)<br />

Peabody at Gloucester (4)<br />

Peabody tops Salem<br />

on the court<br />

VOLLEYBALL<br />

“They serve really, really strong<br />

and they pass very well, and they<br />

just keep pressure on you,” he said.<br />

The second set was a much<br />

closer battle, with both sides<br />

trading points to start the set. Once<br />

again, service was the X-factor for<br />

the Tanners as they edged out to a<br />

10-5 lead. Junior Michaela Alperen<br />

had an impressive showing in the<br />

set, tallying two of her three total<br />

aces in the second set.<br />

After the close start, Peabody<br />

took the second set 25-15.<br />

The Tanners were once again<br />

able to get out in front early, scoring<br />

five unanswered points and leading<br />

Salem 6-1. The Witches attempted<br />

to claw back, narrowing the deficit<br />

to 19-10, but Peabody proved too<br />

powerful and took the third and<br />

final set 25-11.<br />

Sophomore Abby Bettencourt<br />

also had an impressive game for<br />

the Tanners, racking up 12 assists<br />

in the win over Salem.<br />

Massey said that his side will<br />

learn from the loss and switch up<br />

some things on offense.<br />

“We need to vary our offense,”<br />

the Salem coach said. “We got too<br />

reliant on setting the same position.<br />

We need to be more dynamic on<br />

what we are doing offensively.”<br />

Peabody is now 8-3 on the<br />

season.<br />

FILE PHOTO<br />

Bishop Fenwick’s Keiron Murray, left, scored one goal for the Crusaders in a win over Arlington<br />

Catholic Monday.<br />

Early goals propel Bishop Fenwick<br />

past Arlington Catholic<br />

BOYS SOCCER<br />

By Sam Minton<br />

ARLINGTON ― The Bishop<br />

Fenwick Crusaders boys soccer<br />

team didn’t wait long to score,<br />

and they defeated the Arlington<br />

Catholic Cougars 2-0 on<br />

Monday afternoon.<br />

While Bishop Fenwick head<br />

coach Julius Pertillar said that<br />

his squad needed to work on<br />

some areas of its game, he was<br />

happy to get the win.<br />

“They performed well,” he<br />

said. “We just have to focus on<br />

finishing. We defended well.<br />

We possessed the ball well. The<br />

boys had a really good game<br />

considering we are coming off<br />

a big loss versus Masconomet<br />

and they stepped up to the<br />

challenge.”<br />

The Crusaders got on the<br />

attack early with senior Ryan<br />

Morgenstern rifling a shot on<br />

net in the first five minutes<br />

of the match. Two minutes<br />

later, senior captain Ryan Noci<br />

notched the first goal of the<br />

game with a beautifully-curled<br />

shot into the right corner of the<br />

net.<br />

The beautiful strikes would<br />

continue as senior captain<br />

Keiron Murray sent his own<br />

long-range missile into the back<br />

of the net in the 20th minute to<br />

give the Crusaders a 2-0 lead.<br />

Senior goalkeeper Charlie<br />

Vu had a comfortable first half<br />

as the combination of winning<br />

the possession battle along<br />

with a strong performance from<br />

the Bishop Fenwick back line<br />

meant that he didn’t have to<br />

deal with a lot of pressure.<br />

Arlington Catholic would<br />

get their first opportunity in the<br />

final third with a free kick close<br />

to the box with less than 15<br />

minutes to go in the first half,<br />

but Alex Hananian skied the<br />

shot over the crossbar.<br />

The second half wasn’t as<br />

pleasing for the Crusaders. For<br />

the first 10 minutes, Bishop<br />

Fenwick was on the back foot<br />

as it struggled to get into the<br />

final third. The Cougars’ back<br />

line learned their lesson after a<br />

difficult first half.<br />

Still, Pertillar was impressed<br />

with how his side played for<br />

the entire 80 minutes and even<br />

took some of the blame for the<br />

team’s finishing struggles.<br />

“Actually, in the second half<br />

we had a lot of opportunities,”<br />

said the coach. “ We just have<br />

to finish them. I just have to<br />

do a better job in training and<br />

doing some more stuff in front<br />

of the goal. I’ve been working a<br />

lot on the build-ups and playing<br />

through the midfield, now I got<br />

to work harder on the team with<br />

finishing.”<br />

In the second half, Arlington<br />

Catholic got some great goaltending<br />

from Jake Abreau. This<br />

included an impressive save just<br />

over an hour into gameplay and<br />

a kick save in stoppage time.<br />

Bishop Fenwick is now 3-4-4<br />

this season.<br />

Bishop Fenwick shuts out St. Mary’s<br />

FIELD HOCKEY<br />

By Sam Minton<br />

LYNN ― The Bishop<br />

Fenwick Crusaders field hockey<br />

team got the better of their rival,<br />

the St. Mary’s Spartans as they<br />

tallied a 4-0 victory on Tuesday<br />

at Manning Field.<br />

Bishop Fenwick put pressure<br />

on the Spartans early on, but<br />

head coach Victoria Ault’s side<br />

showed their defensive skills<br />

and withstood the constant barrage<br />

from the Crusaders. Still,<br />

Ault said after the match that,<br />

defensively, the group started<br />

the match “asleep.”<br />

Bishop Fenwick would get<br />

a corner in the first five minutes<br />

and it took advantage of<br />

the opportunity, going up 1-0<br />

with a beautiful hit shot from<br />

captain Emily McPhail that<br />

found the back of the net. The<br />

Crusaders had multiple opportunities<br />

from the corner<br />

but failed to extend their lead<br />

with additional chances in the<br />

eighth, ninth, and 12th minutes.<br />

Spartans goalie Adri Bowkey<br />

made some impressive stops,<br />

including a diving save at the<br />

end of the second quarter that<br />

kept Lynnfield in the match.<br />

Corners have not always been<br />

a strong suit for the Crusaders,<br />

so head coach Marybeth<br />

Mahoney was pleased to see the<br />

squad find the back of the net.<br />

“We’ve definitely had a lot of<br />

games where we weren’t converting,<br />

so we’ve just talked a<br />

little bit about looking up before<br />

you initiate whatever you are<br />

going to do and I think they did<br />

a good job of doing that a little<br />

later in the game,” she said.<br />

After the match, Ault said<br />

that Bowkey had a great performance<br />

against Fenwick,<br />

especially for someone who<br />

has never played field hockey<br />

before.<br />

“For her first year out as<br />

goalie, I’m really impressed<br />

with her skills and her ability<br />

to stop as many (shots) as she<br />

did,” said the head coach.<br />

“Yesterday she had 10 saves<br />

against (Bishop) Feehan; today<br />

she did a hell of a job against<br />

(Bishop) Fenwick.”<br />

The Spartans found success<br />

on the counter, catching Bishop<br />

Fenwick off guard. With 11<br />

minutes left in the second<br />

quarter, Yirsy Queliz had St.<br />

Mary’s first scoring opportunity<br />

but the shot went wide in the<br />

near post.<br />

The second half started just<br />

like the first, with the Crusaders<br />

continuing to put the Spartans<br />

defense under constant pressure.<br />

Bowkey continued to<br />

make some great saves but there<br />

was nothing she could do four<br />

minutes into the third quarter as<br />

Rayne Millett lofted a shot into<br />

the net. Moments later, Emma<br />

Perry found the back of the net<br />

to make it a 3-0 lead for Bishop<br />

Fenwick.<br />

Bishop Fenwick found the<br />

back of the net once again in<br />

the third quarter with Sam<br />

Montecalvo scoring as time expired<br />

and giving the Crusaders<br />

a 4-0 lead heading into the final<br />

quarter.<br />

Bishop Fenwick is now 7-1-2.


OCTOBER 14, 2021<br />

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

Peabody comes up short against Swampscott<br />

PHOTOS | Spenser Hasak<br />

Peabody’s Danny Barrett hangs on to a pass as he’s hit by Swampscott’s Cole<br />

Hammernick during a game Friday night at Coley Lee Field.<br />

Peabody quarterback Shea Lynch scrambles out of the pocket as he looks for<br />

an open receiver.<br />

Peabody’s Derek Patturelli breaks through a hole in the<br />

Swampscott defense as he rushes the ball.<br />

The Peabody football team comes out of the tunnel prior to Friday night’s game.<br />

Peabody’s Alexander Silva is tripped up by Swampscott’s Xaviah Bascon.<br />

Peabody’s Colin Ridley breaks into the open field en route to<br />

scoring a touchdown.


12<br />

WEEKLYNEWS.NET - 978-532-5880 OCTOBER 14, 2021<br />

Bishop Fenwick boys soccer grabs conference win<br />

PHOTOS | Vanessa Leroy<br />

The Bishop Fenwick boys soccer team huddles together before the first half of its game against Arlington Catholic Monday.<br />

Bishop Fenwick’s Ryan Morgenstern, right, steals the ball<br />

away from an Arlington Catholic player.<br />

Bishop Fenwick’s Ryan Arneil, right, takes possession of the ball.<br />

Bishop Fenwick’s Jaiden Fils-Aime, right, defends the ball against Arlington Catholic’s Alex<br />

Nalbaudyon.<br />

Tyler Mullen prepares to settle the ball during a game against<br />

Arlington Catholic Monday.


OCTOBER 14, 2021<br />

PACC FREE EVENT<br />

Destination Creation courses<br />

for the weekly news<br />

Destination Creation has<br />

announced it will be offering a<br />

complimentary, six-week course<br />

to help businesses reach new<br />

customers through product differentiation<br />

as well as digital<br />

means. The course is designed<br />

to help independent businesses<br />

and communities stand out and<br />

increase customer traffic from<br />

both local consumers and consumers<br />

from miles away. The<br />

course ($800 value) is being<br />

offered through the Peabody<br />

Chamber of Commerce and<br />

Peabody Main Streets. Upon<br />

completion of the course, businesses<br />

are eligible to receive a<br />

$2,500 grant to implement an<br />

idea to create a new website and<br />

improve their online presence,<br />

add e-commerce capabilities, or<br />

enhance social media channels.<br />

The course is first-come, firstserved<br />

and is limited to the first<br />

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

30 participants. For more information,<br />

go to www.peabodychamber.com.<br />

Classes begin on<br />

Monday, Oct. 4 and run through<br />

Nov. 8 from 6-8 p.m. via Zoom.<br />

The class will be led by Deanne<br />

Healey, the only certified Destination<br />

Creation instructor in<br />

Massachusetts, and Jon Schallert.<br />

Schallert has interviewed<br />

more than 10,000 independent<br />

business owners in nearly 600<br />

cities to develop his proprietary<br />

"Destination Business" program.<br />

Inn to Opportunity<br />

for the weekly news<br />

Citizens Inn is hosting a<br />

“Citizens Inn To Opportunity”<br />

campaign launch/open house on<br />

Saturday, Oct. 16 from 2-5 p.m.<br />

at Haven From Hunger, 71 Wallis<br />

St., Peabody. The event features<br />

a behind-the-scenes tour<br />

of the newly renovated Haven<br />

from Hunger facility. Participants<br />

will have the opportunity<br />

to learn about food insecurity<br />

and homelessness that is facing<br />

the community and how Citizens<br />

Inn can partner with the<br />

community to transform those<br />

challenges “Inn to” Opportunity.<br />

All guests will be required to<br />

wear masks during the indoor<br />

tours. There will be an outdoor<br />

reception with live music and<br />

refreshments. The deadline to<br />

register is Oct. 8. Please go to<br />

https://bit.ly/3z5uDQ to reserve<br />

a time for a 15-minute tour. For<br />

questions or additional information<br />

contact Rachel Leibowitz<br />

at 978-735-1585 or rleibowitz@citizensinn.org.


14<br />

WEEKLYNEWS.NET - 978-532-5880 OCTOBER 14, 2021<br />

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LEGAL NOTICE<br />

MORTGAGEE'S SALE OF REAL ESTATE<br />

By virtue of and in execution of the Power of Sale contained in a certain mortgage<br />

given by Matthew C. Cotter and Wendy J. Morello to National City Bank, dated May<br />

23, 2007 and recorded in Essex County (Southern District) Registry of Deeds in<br />

Book 26876, Page 140 (the "Mortgage") of which mortgage Trinity Financial<br />

Services, LLC is the present holder by Assignment from PNC Bank, National<br />

Association, successor by merger to National City Bank to US Mortgage Resolution<br />

LLC dated September 24, 2018 and recorded at said Registry of Deeds in Book<br />

37058, Page 585, and Assignment from US Mortgage Resolution LLC to Trinity<br />

Financial Services, LLC dated August 1, 2019 and recorded at said Registry of<br />

Deeds in Book 38061, Page 213, and Assignment from US Mortgage Resolution<br />

LLC to Trinity Financial Services, LLC dated August 1, 2019 and recorded at said<br />

Registry of Deeds in Book 38123, Page 259, for breach of conditions of said<br />

mortgage and for the purpose of foreclosing the same, the mortgaged premises<br />

located at 9 Market Street, Peabody, MA 01960 will be sold at a Public Auction at<br />

2:00 PM on November 16, 2021, at the mortgaged premises, more particularly<br />

described below, all and singular the premises described in said mortgage, to wit:<br />

A certain parcel of land with the buildings thereon, located in Peabody, Essex<br />

County, Massachusetts, being shown as Lot 389 on a plan entitled "Richardson<br />

Farms, Section 1, Peabody, Mass." owned by Campanelli builders, Inc., April 16,<br />

1960, Bradford Saivetz & Associates, Inc., Consulting Civil Engineers, duly<br />

recorded with Essex South District Registry of Deeds, Plan Book 95, Plan 70.<br />

Said premises are bounded and described as follows:<br />

Westerly by Market Street, one hundred twenty-four (124) feet;<br />

Northerly by Lot 388 on said plan, one hundred six (106) feet;<br />

Easterly by Lot 376 on said pan, one hundred forty-seven and 11/100 (147.11)<br />

feet; and<br />

Southerly by Wayne Road by Three bounds, fifty-four and 67/100 (54.67) feet;<br />

thirty-one and 45/100 (31.45) feet; and thirty-one and 42/100 (31.42) feet.<br />

Said premises contain 15,200 square feet, more or less.<br />

Subject to and with the benefit of easements and restrictions of record, if any,<br />

insofar as now in force and applicable.<br />

Excepting and excluding from this conveyance the fee in said Market Street and<br />

Wayne Road opposite said lot, but with the benefit of the right to use the street<br />

and ways shown on said plan in common with others lawfully entitled thereto as<br />

set forth in deed referred to below.<br />

For title see deed recorded in book 26696 page 2.<br />

For mortgagor's title see deed recorded with the Essex County (Southern<br />

District) Registry of Deeds in Book 26696, Page 2.<br />

The property will be sold subject to a mortgage in the principal sum of<br />

$360,000.00 given to Taylor, Bean & Whitaker Mortgage Corp. dated March 30,<br />

2007 recorded with the Essex County (Southern District) Registry of Deeds in Book<br />

26695, Page 4.<br />

The premises will be sold subject to any and all unpaid taxes and other<br />

municipal assessments and liens, and subject to prior liens or other enforceable<br />

encumbrances of record entitled to precedence over this mortgage, and subject to<br />

and with the benefit of all easements, restrictions, reservations and conditions of<br />

record and subject to all tenancies and/or rights of parties in possession.<br />

Terms of the Sale: Cashier's or certified check in the sum of $5,000.00 as a<br />

deposit must be shown at the time and place of the sale in order to qualify as a<br />

bidder (the mortgage holder and its designee(s) are exempt from this<br />

requirement); high bidder to sign written Memorandum of Sale upon acceptance of<br />

bid; balance of purchase price payable by certified check in thirty (30) days from<br />

the date of the sale at the offices of mortgagee's attorney, Korde & Associates,<br />

P.C., 900 Chelmsford Street, Suite 3102, Lowell, MA or such other time as may be<br />

designated by mortgagee. The description for the premises contained in said<br />

mortgage shall control in the event of a typographical error in this publication.<br />

Other terms to be announced at the sale.<br />

Trinity Financial Services, LLC<br />

Korde & Associates, P.C.<br />

900 Chelmsford Street<br />

Suite 3102<br />

Lowell, MA 01851<br />

(978) 256-1500<br />

Cotter, Matthew, C., 21-038386<br />

LEGAL AD<br />

NOTICE OF PUBLIC HEARING<br />

Notice is hereby given that the City Council of the City of Peabody will conduct a<br />

public hearing on THURSDAY EVENING, OCTOBER 28, 2021, at 7:30 P.M., in the<br />

Frank L. Wiggin Auditorium, 24 Lowell Street, Peabody, MA, and remotely via Zoom<br />

on the application from JEREMY MARTIN, 467 Reservoir Road, Lunenberg, MA,<br />

MA REQUESTING THE TRANSFER A CLASS 2 MOTOR VEHICLE LICENSE from<br />

AUTO CHOICE OF PEABODY, INC. for property to continue to operate at 249<br />

ANDOVER STREET, Peabody, MA.<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: October 14, 2021<br />

LEGALS<br />

WEEKLY NEWS: October 4, 21 and 28, 2021<br />

PEABODY CITY COUNCIL<br />

COUNCILLOR MARK J. O'NEILL<br />

CITY COUNCIL PRESIDENT<br />

Allyson M. Danforth<br />

City Clerk<br />

NOTICE OF MORTGAGEE'S SALE OF REAL ESTATE<br />

By virtue and in execution of the Power of Sale contained in a certain mortgage<br />

given by Helda C. Medina to The Savings Bank, dated January 28, 2008 and<br />

recorded in the Essex County (Southern District) Registry of Deeds in Book 27493,<br />

Page 346 of which mortgage the undersigned is the present holder, by assignment<br />

from:<br />

Mortgage Electronic Registration Systems, Inc., as nominee for Financial Freedom<br />

Acquisition, LLC, its successors and assigns to CIT Bank, N.A., recorded on<br />

October 23, 2015, in Book No. 34463, at Page 113<br />

The Savings Bank to CIT Bank, N.A., recorded on August 24, 2016, in Book No.<br />

35199, at Page 363<br />

CIT Bank, N.A. to WVMF Funding, LLC, recorded on October 17, 2018, in Book No.<br />

37087, at Page 407<br />

for breach of the conditions of said mortgage and for the purpose of foreclosing,<br />

the same will be sold at Public Auction at 1:00 PM on November 1, 2021, on the<br />

mortgaged premises located at 10 Lincoln Road, Peabody, Essex County,<br />

Massachusetts, all and singular the premises described in said mortgage,<br />

TO WIT:<br />

The land with the buildings thereon situate on Lincoln Road in said Peabody, being<br />

shown on a plan entitled "Preliminary Proposed Subdivision of Land Owned by<br />

Manuel C. Mello, Peabody, Mass. April 18, 1958, Kenneth W. Richardson, Reg.<br />

land Surveyor recorded with Essex South District Registry of Deeds, Book 4597,<br />

Page 83, bounded and described as follows:<br />

NORTHERLY by Lincoln Road, 75 feet;<br />

EASTERLY by land now or formerly of Mello, 123.49 feet;<br />

SOUTHERLY by land now or formerly of said Mello, 75.15 feet; and<br />

WESTERLY by land now or formerly of said Mello 118.82 feet.<br />

Containing 9,086 square feet, according to said plan.<br />

Being the same premises conveyed to the herein named mortgagor (s) by deed<br />

recorded with Essex South District Registry of Deeds in Book 6657, Page 657.<br />

For mortgagor's (s') title see deed recorded with Essex County (Southern<br />

District) Registry of Deeds in Book 6657, Page 657.<br />

These premises will be sold and conveyed subject to and with the benefit of<br />

all rights, rights of way, restrictions, easements, covenants, liens or claims in the<br />

nature of liens, improvements, public assessments, any and all unpaid taxes, tax<br />

titles, tax liens, water and sewer liens and any other municipal assessments or<br />

liens or existing encumbrances of record which are in force and are applicable,<br />

having priority over said mortgage, whether or not reference to such restrictions,<br />

easements, improvements, liens or encumbrances is made in the deed.<br />

TERMS OF SALE:<br />

A deposit of Five Thousand ($5,000.00) Dollars by certified or bank check<br />

will be required to be paid by the purchaser at the time and place of sale. The<br />

balance is to be paid by certified or bank check at Harmon Law Offices, P.C., 150<br />

California St., Newton, Massachusetts 02458, or by mail to P.O. Box 610389,<br />

Newton Highlands, Massachusetts 02461-0389, within thirty (30) days from the<br />

date of sale. Deed will be provided to purchaser for recording upon receipt in full<br />

of the purchase price. The description of the premises contained in said mortgage<br />

shall control in the event of an error in this publication.<br />

Other terms, if any, to be announced at the sale.<br />

WVMF FUNDING, LLC<br />

Present holder of said mortgage<br />

By its Attorneys,<br />

HARMON LAW OFFICES, P.C.<br />

150 California St.<br />

Newton, MA 02458<br />

(617)558-0500<br />

2016040036<br />

Weekly News: October 7, 14 and 21, 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, OCTOBER 28, 2021, at 7:30 P.M., in the Frank L. Wiggin Auditorium,<br />

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

DREW DONARUMO PLUMBING AND HEATING, INC., 82 Margin Street, Peabody,<br />

MA for a SPECIAL PERMIT REQUESTING TO USE A PORTION OF THE PREMISES<br />

FOR A PLUMBING AND HEATING BUSINESS AND TO CONTINUE TO USE THE<br />

EXISTING SECOND FLOOR FOR RESIDENTIAL APARTMENTS at said 82 MARGIN<br />

STREET, Peabody, MA as filed in accordance with Sections 1.5, 6.1 and 15.7 of<br />

the Peabody Zoning 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: October 14 and 21, 2021<br />

LEGALS<br />

PEABODY CITY COUNCIL<br />

COUNCILLOR MARK J. O'NEILL<br />

CITY COUNCIL PRESIDENT<br />

Allyson M. Danforth<br />

City Clerk<br />

Need a question answered?<br />

contactus@essexmedia.group


OCTOBER 14, 2021<br />

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

Donate to Danvers — emergency blood and platelet shortage<br />

The American Red Cross is<br />

experiencing an emergency blood<br />

and platelet shortage and must collect<br />

10,000 additional blood products<br />

each week over the next month<br />

for the blood supply to recover and<br />

meet hospital and patient needs.<br />

Donors of all blood types – especially<br />

type O – and platelet donors<br />

are urged to make an appointment<br />

to give now and in the weeks ahead<br />

to overcome this current shortage.<br />

Don’t wait. People across the<br />

country depend on the generosity<br />

of blood donors. Make an appointment<br />

to give blood or platelets as<br />

soon as possible by using the Red<br />

Cross Blood Donor App, visiting<br />

RedCrossBlood.org or calling<br />

1-800-RED CROSS (1-800-733-<br />

2767).<br />

Blood drive safety:<br />

Each Red Cross blood drive<br />

and donation center follows the<br />

highest standards of safety and infection<br />

control, and additional precautions<br />

– including face masks for<br />

donors and staff, regardless of vaccination<br />

status – have been implemented<br />

to help protect the health<br />

of all those in attendance. Donors<br />

are asked to schedule an appointment<br />

prior to arriving at the drive.<br />

Danvers:<br />

10/14/2021: 1 p.m. - 6:15 p.m.,<br />

Danvers Blood Donation Center,<br />

99 Rosewood Drive<br />

10/15/2021: 8:30 a.m. - 2 p.m.,<br />

Danvers Blood Donation Center,<br />

99 Rosewood Drive<br />

10/15/2021: 10 a.m. - 3 p.m.,<br />

Amity Mosaic Lodge, 30 High<br />

Street<br />

10/16/2021: 8:30 a.m. - 2 p.m.,<br />

Danvers Blood Donation Center,<br />

99 Rosewood Drive<br />

10/17/2021: 8:30 a.m. - 2 p.m.,<br />

Danvers Blood Donation Center,<br />

99 Rosewood Drive<br />

10/18/2021: 1 p.m. - 6:15 p.m.,<br />

Danvers Blood Donation Center,<br />

99 Rosewood Drive<br />

10/19/2021: 1 p.m. - 6:15 p.m.,<br />

Danvers Blood Donation Center,<br />

99 Rosewood Drive<br />

10/20/2021: 1 p.m. - 6:15 p.m.,<br />

Danvers Blood Donation Center,<br />

99 Rosewood Drive<br />

10/21/2021: 1 p.m. - 6:15 p.m.,<br />

Danvers Blood Donation Center,<br />

99 Rosewood Drive<br />

10/22/2021: 8:30 a.m. - 2 p.m.,<br />

Danvers Blood Donation Center,<br />

99 Rosewood Drive<br />

10/23/2021: 8:30 a.m. - 2 p.m.,<br />

Danvers Blood Donation Center,<br />

99 Rosewood Drive<br />

10/24/2021: 8:30 a.m. - 2 p.m.,<br />

Danvers Blood Donation Center,<br />

99 Rosewood Drive<br />

10/25/2021: 9 a.m. - 2 p.m.,<br />

Hilton DoubleTree Hotel, 50 Ferncroft<br />

Road<br />

10/25/2021: 1 p.m. - 6:15 p.m.,<br />

Danvers Blood Donation Center,<br />

99 Rosewood Drive<br />

10/26/2021: 1 p.m. - 6:15 p.m.,<br />

Danvers Blood Donation Center,<br />

99 Rosewood Drive<br />

10/27/2021: 1 p.m. - 6:15 p.m.,<br />

Danvers Blood Donation Center,<br />

99 Rosewood Drive<br />

10/28/2021: 1 p.m. - 6:15 p.m.,<br />

Danvers Blood Donation Center,<br />

99 Rosewood Drive<br />

10/29/2021: 8:30 a.m. - 2 p.m.,<br />

Danvers Blood Donation Center,<br />

99 Rosewood Drive<br />

10/30/2021: 8:30 a.m. - 2 p.m.,<br />

Danvers Blood Donation Center,<br />

99 Rosewood Drive<br />

10/31/2021: 8:30 a.m. - 2 p.m.,<br />

Danvers Blood Donation Center,<br />

99 Rosewood Drive<br />

LYNNFIELD<br />

5 EVANS RD<br />

$1,505,000<br />

B: Elizabeth Fogarty<br />

S: Alissa A Baird & Jeffrey M Baird<br />

729 MAIN ST<br />

$690,000<br />

B: Anna P Pastor & Hansel Suharli<br />

S: Elizabeth W Fogarty<br />

5 SMITH FARM TRL<br />

$1,050,000<br />

B: Julie Tammaro<br />

S: Douglas G Soderberg<br />

13 UNDERHILL RD<br />

$1,100,000<br />

B: Allison D Cavalieri<br />

S: Debra A Fleming & Joseph R Fleming<br />

PEABODY<br />

28 BOULDERBROOK DR U:28<br />

$373,500<br />

Real Estate Transfers<br />

B: Ellaranne Roland & Leonard Roland<br />

S: Lorraine Yuelapwan<br />

2 DAVIS TER<br />

$595,000<br />

B: Theresa Bandeira<br />

S: Mcdonald Helen Est & Keith Mcdonald<br />

3 DOUGLAS ST<br />

$477,000<br />

B: Jelver Vasquez<br />

S: James E Atkinson Jr<br />

32 ELAINE AVE<br />

$690,000<br />

B: Kimberly Berg & Michael Berg<br />

S: Joseph J Cerase Tr, Tr for Elaine Ave<br />

Cerase NT<br />

2 HAMILTON RD<br />

$720,000<br />

B: Robert Haberek & Breanne Normoyle<br />

S: Lisa Nadeau & Steven Nadeau<br />

11 HARVARD ST<br />

$840,000<br />

B: Angelo Orlandella Jr & Anonietta<br />

Orlandella<br />

S: Catherine Geomelos & Michael P<br />

Geomelos<br />

23 MARGARET RD<br />

$685,000<br />

B: Patrick Attridge & Rachel Attridge<br />

S: Daniel M Fabrizio Tr, Tr for Fabrizio FT<br />

500 NORTHSHORE RD U:3A<br />

$225,000<br />

B: Matthew K Rohnke<br />

S: Michelle L Archambault<br />

MORTGAGEE'S SALE OF REAL ESTATE<br />

By virtue and in execution of the Power of Sale contained in a certain Mortgage<br />

dated July 6, 2006 given by Suzanne Eser to Members Mortgage Company, Inc.<br />

recorded in Essex County (Southern District) Registry of Deeds at Book 25861,<br />

Page 161, the undersigned Massachusetts Institute of Technology Federal Credit<br />

Union being the present holder of said mortgage by Assignment of Mortgage from<br />

Members Mortgage Company, Inc. to Massachusetts Institute of Technology<br />

Federal Credit Union dated July 6, 2006 recorded in the Essex County (Southern<br />

District) Registry of Deeds at Book 25861, Page 182, for breach of the conditions<br />

of said Mortgage and for the purpose of foreclosing the same will be sold at Public<br />

Auction at:<br />

11:00 A.M. on Thursday, November 18, 2021<br />

upon the hereinafter-described premises, known as and numbered as 24 Endicott<br />

Street, Peabody, Essex County (Southern District), Massachusetts, all and<br />

singularly the premises described in said mortgage, to wit:<br />

The land with the buildings thereon, situated in Peabody, Essex County,<br />

Massachusetts on 24 Endicott Street, bounded and described as follows:<br />

eginning at the Southerly corner of said premises and thence running<br />

ortheasterly by land formerly of Stimpson, about two hundred and fourteen feet;<br />

hence running Northerly by land formerly of James Ware, one hundred twenty feet<br />

o Endicott Street; thence running Southwesterly by said Endicott Street,<br />

wenty-five feet; thence running Southerly by the Lawrence Branch of the Boston &<br />

aine Railroad, formerly the Essex Railroad, about two hundred and fifty feet to<br />

the point begun at.<br />

Together with the benefit of all easements of record, if in force and applicable.<br />

or title reference see deed to me dated May 26, 1998 recorded at the Essex<br />

South District Registry of Deeds at Book 14833, Page 189.<br />

he above-described premises shall be subject to all easements, restrictions,<br />

unicipal or other public taxes, assessments, liens or claims in the nature of liens,<br />

utstanding tax titles, building, zoning and other land use laws and all permits and<br />

pprovals issued pursuant thereto, including, without limitation, orders of<br />

onditions, and existing encumbrances of record created prior to said Mortgage, if<br />

here be any. Said premises are to be sold subject to the right of redemption of<br />

he United States of America, if any there be.<br />

ERMS OF SALE: The highest bidder shall be required to make a deposit of<br />

10,000.00 to the holder of said Mortgage, in cash or by certified or bank<br />

ashier's check at the time and place of said sale of said premises. The balance of<br />

he purchase price is to be paid to said holder in cash, by certified check or bank<br />

ashier's check, and thereupon the deed shall be delivered, in thirty (30) days<br />

rom the date of sale at the firm of Cunningham, Machanic, Cetlin, Johnson,<br />

arney & Tenney, LLP, Attorneys for said holder, 220 North Main Street, Suite<br />

01, Natick, Massachusetts. The successful bidder shall be required to sign a<br />

emorandum of Terms of Sale. The description of the premises contained in said<br />

ortgage shall control in the event of an error in publication.<br />

ther terms, if any, to be announced at the time and place of sale.<br />

ASSACHUSETTS INSTITUTE OF TECHNOLOGY<br />

EDERAL CREDIT UNION<br />

resent Holder of Said Mortgage,<br />

By its Attorneys,<br />

CUNNINGHAM, MACHANIC, CETLIN,<br />

JOHNSON, HARNEY & TENNEY, LLP<br />

220 North Main Street, Suite 301<br />

Natick, MA 01760<br />

(508) 651-7524<br />

eabody Weekly: October 14, 21, 28, 2021<br />

PEABODY CITY COUNCIL<br />

LEGAL AD<br />

NOTICE OF PUBLIC HEARING<br />

Notice is hereby given that the City Council of the City of Peabody will conduct a<br />

public hearing on THURSDAY EVENING, OCTOBER 28, 2021, at 7:30 P.M., in the<br />

Frank L. Wiggin Auditorium, 24 Lowell Street, Peabody, MA, and remotely via Zoom<br />

on the application from FARM STREET REALTY GROUP LLC, 2 Washington Street,<br />

Peabody, MA requesting an OUTDOOR DINING LICENSE at said 2 WASHINGTON<br />

STREET, Peabody, MA as filed in accordance with Section 5.4.6 of the Peabody<br />

Zoning Ordinance as shown on a plan of land dated August 30, 2021.<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<br />

October 14, 2021<br />

PEABODY CITY COUNCIL<br />

COUNCILLOR MARK J. O'NEILL<br />

CITY COUNCIL PRESIDENT<br />

Allyson M. Danforth<br />

City Clerk<br />

Catch up with your<br />

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Find out what properties<br />

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WEEKLYNEWS.NET - 978-532-5880 OCTOBER 14, 2021<br />

Bridgewell Day of Giving<br />

Photos | Newhall Fields Community Farm<br />

Bridgewell staff and farm volunteers alike are all smiles at the Bridgewell Day of Giving.<br />

A happy pup is excited to help out at Newhall Fields Community<br />

Farm.<br />

Two volunteers examine some of the farm’s leafy greens.<br />

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been making fresh, authentic and healthy<br />

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a trusted partner as they expand around<br />

New England and across the country.<br />

It’s time to make your move to<br />

Salem Five Bank.<br />

Learn more at SalemFive.com/business<br />

JOSEPH’S<br />

BAKERY<br />

Lawrence, MA<br />

Banking • Investments • Insurance • Mortgage<br />

Salem Five Bank is a Member of both the FDIC and DIF. Mortgage Products provided by Salem Five Mortgage Company,<br />

LLC, NMLS ID 4662,<br />

. Wealth, Trust, Investment and Insurance Products are provided by Salem Five<br />

Investment Services and Salem Five Insurance Services and are not FDIC insured, not bank guaranteed, not a deposit, not<br />

insured by any federal government agency and may lose value.

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