PEABODY

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PEABODY
WEEKLY NEWS
Serving the community since 1957
MAY 12, 2016 • VOL. 60, NO. 19
COMMUNITY
20­­ PAGES • ONE DOLLAR
The Force is with O’Donnell
Third quarter Principal’s
List: Higgins Middle School
Page 7
Grabbing a
Pint for Pete
INDEX
Classifieds....................................... 16-17
Food....................................................... 9
Obituaries............................................... 5
Police Log............................................... 4
Real Estate...................................... 18-19
Religious Notes...................................... 8
Seniors................................................... 6
Sports............................................... 11-14
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Sweet ending for
Peabody in Danish Cup
Page 12
Photo | Mark Clavin / Boston Red Sox
Photo | Bob Roche
Ella O’Donnell brought the Boston Red Sox good luck Monday
night when she tossed out the ceremonial first pitch in a game.
The home team went on to beat the Oakland Athletics 14-7. She’s
seen here with Wally dressed as a Jedi. The 10-year-old Peabody
resident has been diagnosed with cancer. The Peabody Centennial
Committee gave Ella and her family EMC Club tickets and transportation to the game. The Red Sox dream package was generously
donated by former School Committee member David McGeney.
Jody and Phil Mitchell host a “Pints4Pete” night at Champions
Pub in Peabody.
By Thomas Grillo
Former Boston College baseball captain Peter Frates was diagnosed with a debilitating disease four years ago at 27.
But rather than sink into a depression over Amyotrophic
Lateral Sclerosis (ALS), commonly known as Lou Gehrig’s
PINTS Page 3
Downtown
feels like home
By Leah Dearborn
The City Council approved the layout for a downtown housing complex with a ground floor restaurant.
Plans for the property were presented by Kaloutas’ attorney Jack Keilty and Brigitte Fortin Design,
a Marblehead architect. The proposal includes an eatery and construction of a second and third floor for
housing.
James Kaloutas, president of Kaloutas Painting,
bought the brick one-story, 8000-square-foot building
at 34 Railroad Avenue in 2005 for $877,000.
There upper floors will contain 15 two-bedroom
units.
The restaurant will have indoor seating for 104 and
outdoor seating for 90. Music is being considered for
the restaurant, but it would require a separate permit.
HOUSING Page 3
Photo | Leah Dearborn
Left, Attorney Jack Keilty speaks about plans for housing and a restaurant
at the Peabody City Council for a site on Railroad Avenue as Zach Millay, of
Brigitte Fortin Design, displays them for the audience.
2
WEEKLYNEWS.NET - 978-532-5880
MAY 12, 2016
American popular music of the
“So Close to Home” with
author Alison O’Leary World War II era at the Peabody Library
Did you know that German
U-boats were in US waters during
World War II? Authors Alison
O’Leary and Michael Tougias not
only discovered that U-boats came
within 50 miles of the region’s
southeastern coastline during the
war, they also found the true story
of a family separated by a U-boat
attack near New Orleans.
On May 26 at 7 p.m, Alison
O’Leary returns to the South
Branch to relay this harrowing, inspiring tale of a family’s struggle to
survive. Her presentation of her and
Tougias’ book “So Close to Home:
A True Story of an American
Family’s Fight for Survival during
World War II” will include slides,
excerpts from the text and the history of this family and how they
were affected by the invasion.
The program is free and open
to the public, but space is limited
and registration is required. It will
take place at the South Branch of
the Peabody Institute Library at
78 Lynn St. For more information
and to register for this program,
please go to peabodylibrary.org
or call 978-531-3380.
Tai Chi for healthy aging at
the Peabody Library
The Peabody Institute Library
is offering “Tai Chi for Healthy
Aging.” This eight-week class begins on Thursday, June 2 at 11 a.m.
at the Main Library at 82 Main St.
Tai Chi is a graceful form of
exercise that involves a series of
movements, which are performed
in a slow, focused manner combined with controlled breathing.
It is a low- impact exercise that
puts minimal stress on muscles
BOSTON
FENCE
and joints, making it suitable for
many older adults. Tai Chi improves balance, increased leg
strength, reduce fear of falling,
improve mobility, increase flexibility, and improve psychological
health. No previous Tai Chi experience is necessary for participation in the class. For more information and to register, please call
978-531-0100 ext. 10, or register
online at peabodylibrary.org.
110 Park Street, Beverly, MA
FREE ESTIMATES
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The Peabody Institute Library
is presenting “Swinging Our Way
to Victory: American Popular
Music of the World War II Era,”
a lecture presented by Kevin
Comtois. The event will be held
on Thursday, May 19 at 6:30 p.m.
at the Main Library, at 82 Main
St. This audio visual presentation
will review American popular
music from the World War II
era. Beginning with the Tin Pan
Alley, Minstrel and Jazz music so
popular in the 1920s and 30s, this
presentation will examine how
the subject matter, style and purpose of American music changed
with the eruption of war in Europe
and Asia and the impact here at
home. By reviewing American
popular music of the World War
II era, we will also be examining
issues of race, gender, economics
and religion in American culture
at a time when these issues were
just beginning to explode into the
American consciousness.
Presenter Kevin Comtois
teaches U.S. History, World
History,
American
Music
Metaphysical Mysteries seminar at the
South Branch of the Peabody Library
Have you ever wanted to learn
more about the metaphysical
mysteries in our world and beyond? Medium Linnea Star will
be at the South Branch of the
Peabody Institute Library for a
two-part metaphysical seminar
in which she will teach attendees
what mediumship is truly about.
If you want to learn about how
mediums converse with the Spirit
World, find out about the metaphysical aspects of the world
around you or understand the
tools mediums use in their craft,
this lecture series promises to be
an enlightening experience.
In the first session on Thursday,
June 2, Linnea Star will lecture
on some of the aspects of being
a medium including apports,
clairaudience,
clairvoyance,
dreams and mystical crystal divination. In the second session
on Thursday, June 23, she will
lecture about different topics,
including psychometry, synchronicity, numerology, the tarot deck
and precognition. Each session
will conclude with a mediumship
demonstration in which she will
read the room. Personal readings
Group. There are books that describe travel experiences or have
such a sense place that they transport you somewhere else, without
SUBSCRIBE
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are not guaranteed and Linnea
Star will not be able to read each
person attending. Both sessions
will run from 6:30 to 8:30 p.m.
Both sessions are free and open
to the public, but space is limited
and registration is required. You
are welcome to attend one or both
of these metaphysical seminars,
but register for each session you
plan to attend. For more information and to register for this
program, please go to peabodylibrary.org or call 978-531-3380.
New monthly book discussion
group at the South Branch
The
Peabody
Institute
Library’s South Branch is offering a new book discussion
group: the Wanderlust Book
CONFIDENCE
SELF-ESTEEM
AND DISCIPLINE
History, U.S. Government &
Politics, International Relations
and Constitutional Law. He recently published his first book
“Troubadours & Troublemakers:
The Evolution of American
Protest Music.” This event is generously sponsored by the Friends
of the Peabody Institute Libraries.
For more information and to
register, please call 978-5310100 ext. 10, or register online at
peabodylibrary.org.
Est. 1978
Over 45 Years
Experience
Visit our website for more about us!
www.brucemccorry.com
ever having to leave your favorite
reading spot. If you have a sense
of wanderlust, enjoy gaining
an understanding of what other
people have experienced traveling the world, or if you want to
compare other people’s experience with your own experiences,
this is the group for you. This informal group will discuss books
about traveling, the experience
of being abroad, and exploring
new places. No travel experience is necessary to participate.
“Armchair travelers” are most
welcome.
Each month the group will
read a new selection. For the first
meeting on June 9th at 7PM, they
will be reading “In a Sunburned
Country” by Bill Bryson and
discuss future selections for the
group to read. If possible, please
read the book prior to attending
the discussion. Books will be
available at the South Branch on
a first-come, first-served basis.
Feel free to register online at
peabodylibrary.org or contact
Al Hayden (978-531-3380 x11,
[email protected]) if you
want to join the group or would
like more information.
This book group is free and
open to the public. It will take
place the second Thursday of each
month at 7 p.m. in the community
room of the south branch of the
Peabody Institute Library located
at 78 Lynn St. Registration is
requested.
MAY 12, 2016
WEEKLYNEWS.NET - 978-532-5880
New housing
for downtown
HOUSING, FROM PAGE 1
Keilty was also careful to add
that they don’t know who will occupy the restaurant, or whether
the housing units will be condominiums or apartments.
The new building would
be constructed on the original foundation, he added. The
25,548-square-foot parcel is
assessed at $564,700.
While some councilors objected to the project saying it
will create a parking congestion problem, but it was mostly
well-received.
“Anything that brings life,
cleanliness and an attractive
venue is nothing but a plus,”
Create a flower garden with little care
said Councilor-at-Large David
Gravel. “This is exactly in the
sweet spot of what we’ve been
talking about over the past four
years for revitalization. The best
thing possible is to keep people
investing our downtown so we
can bring it back to life.”
When asked about marketing the site to prospective buyers, Keilty was hopeful.
“We need someone with confidence in the city of Peabody,”
he said. “I think this is a very
viable project.”
The council approved Kaloutas’ application with the instruction that he build market-rate
condos or apartments on the
second and third floors, and not
low-income housing.
Grabbing a
Pint for Pete
PINTS, FROM PAGE 1
Disease, a progressive neurodegenerative illness that causes muscle weakness, paralysis,
and ultimately, respiratory failure, Frates joined a movement
to find a cure for an illness that
can’t be treated or cured.
Frates helped launch the ALS
Ice Bucket Challenge and people lined up to get dunked in ice
water for the charity. Among the
stars to take the challenge include Matt Damon, Tom Cruise,
Leonardo DiCaprio, Bradley
Cooper, Taylor Swift, Tina Fey
and Emily Blunt.
So far a whopping $200 million has been raised worldwide.
Now, they can add a little more
to that total. About $5,200 was
raised last weekend at Pints4Pete, a global fundraising event
created by Frates where friends,
family and complete strangers,
gather at a local pub to raise
funds and awareness for ALS.
The event was held for the
first time at Champions Pub on
Foster Street.
“I don’t know Pete, but as a
parent, when you hear stories
like that, it hits home,” said Jody
Mitchell whose husband, Phil
Mitchell and Kevin Houlden coown the bar. “When I saw the
Pints4Pete thing, I figured my
husband had a way to help in a
small way and we wanted to do
it.”
Instead of selling admission
tickets to the pub, the owners prefered selling chances
to silent auctions and raffles.
Among the items offered were
restaurant gifts cards - one person won $1,000 in gift cards.
Others walked away with lottery tickets, a signed Boston
Bruins hockey stick, a signed
3
pin by golfer Steven Bradley
and wine gift baskets.
“It was our first time and we
are already thinking of ways we
can make it better for next year,”
Mitchell said. “We are so excited
about it.”
ALS was first described in
1869 by French neurologist
Jean-Martin Charcot, according
to the ALS Association. But it
wasn’t until 1939 that Lou Gehrig brought international attention to the disease. Sadly, the illness ended the career of the
New York Yankees first
baseman who was one of baseball’s most loved players, the
association said.
On July 4, 1939, Lou Gehrig
Appreciation Day at Yankee Stadium, Gehrig gave a speech that
moved players and fans when he
said, “For the past two weeks you
have been reading about a bad
break I got. Yet today I consider
myself the luckiest man on the
face of the earth.”
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Grow a beautiful flower garden
with minimal care by investing a
little of time at the start of the season
to reduce on-going care. Always
match flowers to the growing conditions and the care you are willing
to provide. Low maintenance
plants need minimal or no deadheading and staking. This means
you’ll be growing good-looking
plants with little effort on your part.
And if the plants are suited to the
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Properly space the plants,
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Encourage branching on
enjoy more colorful flowers with making sure they have sufficient single stemmed plants with a
room to reach their full size. soft pinch. Remove just the
less pruning and grooming.
Ageratum, angelonia, calibro- Overcrowding means you will be uppermost portion of the stem
choa and many of the newer pe- thinning or dividing plants more where the leaves and tip are
tunia cultivars are just a few of the often or battling disease problems starting to develop. Soon you
annuals that do not need regular instead of enjoying the full beauty will have a well branched plant
deadheading for continual bloom. the plants provide.
and more blossoms.
Consider removing flowers on anInclude perennials like willow amsonia, bugbane, Solomon seal, tur- nuals at planting. This allows plants
tlehead and sedum autumn joy for to focus energy on establishing roots
lower maintenance and big results. instead of flowers. Can’t bear to do
Prepare the soil and pro- this? Then remove the flowers on
vide proper fertilization before every other plant or every other row.
planting. Work several inches of Then a week or two later remove
compost or other organic matter the flowers on the remaining plants.
into the top 8 to 12 inches of soil You will soon be rewarded with full
to improve drainage and water compact plants that will produce
holding ability. Incorporate a low more flowers throughout the season.
nitrogen organic fertilizer like
Pinch back long and leggy
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WEEKLYNEWS.NET - 978-532-5880
Police log
PEABODY
WEEKLY NEWS
Serving the community since 1957
(USPS 020-732)
Telephone: (978) 532-5880 • Fax: (978) 532-4250
Mailing Address: P.O. Box 5, Lynn, MA 01903
News and Advertising Offices: 110 Munroe St., Lynn, MA 01901
Office Hours: 8 a.m. to 5 p.m., Monday through Friday
www.weeklynews.net
Editor:
Thomas Grillo
[email protected]
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Advertising Reps: Ralph Mitchell
[email protected]
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Subscription Rate: $35 per year (51 issues) • Single Copy: $1.00
Deadlines: News: Monday, noon; Display Ads: Monday, noon;
Classified Ads: Monday, noon;
No cancellations accepted after deadline.
The Peabody Weekly News is published 51 times per year on Thursday by Essex Media Group, Inc. No issue is printed during the week of Christmas. Periodicals Postage
paid at Lynn, Mass., and other post offices. The Peabody Weekly News is delivered
via US Mail to homes and businesses in Peabody. It is also available in several locations throughout Peabody. The Peabody Weekly News will not be responsible for
typographical or other errors in advertisements, but will reprint that part of an advertisement in which a typographical error occurs if notified immediately. Advertisers
must notify the Peabody Weekly News of any errors in advertisements on the FIRST
day of insertion. The publisher reserves the right to reject, omit or edit any copy
offered for publication. POSTMASTER: Send address changes to Peabody Weekly
News, P.O. Box 5, Lynn, MA 01903. © 2016 Essex Media Group, Inc.
Maire Guinee has been
inducted into National
Spanish Honor Society
The
Assumption
College
Department of Modern &
Classical Languages & Cultures
said that Maire Guinee of
Peabody has become a member
of Sigma Delta Pi, the national
Spanish honor society. Guinee, a
member of the class of 2018 was
inducted into the honor society on
Thursday, April 7.
“We are excited to welcome the
new members to Assumption’s
chapter of Sigma Delta Pi,” said
Maryanne Leone, associate professor of Spanish and one of the
advisors of Assumption’s Spanish
honor society, in a statement. “It
is with great pride that we rec-
ognize this group of students for
their hard work, discipline, and
love for the study of the Spanish
language and Hispanic cultures.”
The Assumption College Phi
Rho chapter was founded in 2004,
and is one of 530 of its kind across
the globe. Initiation into the society requires a grade point average of 3.0 or higher in Spanish
courses, as well as a minimum of
one third-year level Spanish literature course or Hispanic culture
and civilization course. Students
must also have a minimum of
three semesters of college study
and be ranked among the top 35
percent of their class.
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MAY 12, 2016
Tuesday, May 3
2:30 p.m. Well-being check requested at 12 Barrett Road. Report
of a woman at the residence possibly overdosing on pills. The woman
was not there when police arrived.
They found her at Farnham Park.
She was taken to Salem Hospital.
2:37 p.m. Report of a hit and
run accident at Red’s Kitchen &
Tavern on 131 Newbury St. Fatima Tariff of 79 Tremont St., Malden, was charged with unlicensed
operation of a vehicle and leaving
the scene of property damage.
2:46 p.m. Report of a motor
vehicle accident at East Boston
Savings Bank at 67 Prospect St.
A car drove into a pole. Police investigated and notified the municipal light company.
3:47 p.m. Motor vehicle accident reported at Bonkers Fun
House on 535 Lowell St. No injuries or tows reported. Officer documented incident.
4:17 p.m. Well-being check
requested at 300 Andover St. A
detail officer at the Verizon Communications strike was flagged
down with a report of a black Toyota Rav4 with two small children
locked inside for over 20 minutes.
Officer reported the vehicle was
gone upon arrival.
5:01 p.m. Report of a motor vehicle accident at 6 Esquire Drive.
A passerby reports an altercation
following the accident. Officer reported no injuries and no tows.
5:34 p.m. Lifeline activation
call at 21 Canterbury Drive. Report of woman with heart palpitations. She was taken to Salem
Hospital.
8:15 p.m. Report of theft at
YMCA on 259 Lynnfield St. Front
desk staff reported five phones
were stolen. Officer documented
the items.
9:15 p.m. Report of possible
overdose at Five Guys on 227
Andover St. Caller reported the
patient was unresponsive. Victim
was taken to Lahey Hospital.
10:59 p.m. Motor vehicle stop
made at 282 Washington St. Michael Magee was charged with
operating an uninsured and unregistered motor vehicle.
to the bus stop. Animal control was
notified and she was taken to North
Shore Children’s Hospital.
9:20 a.m. Caller reported they
found a pet parrot on the Salem/
Peabody border. There were no
parrots that had been reported
missing in Peabody.
10:06 a.m. Police went to 26
Warren St. to serve a warrant.
Cedric Wongus of 36 Lyman St.,
Lynn, was arrested on multiple
other department warrants.
10:35 a.m. Store employee
from Hollister Co. at 210 Andover St. reported past shoplifting
of more than $1,300 worth of
merchandise. Officer reported
this was previous incident but the
store wanted to forward surveillance video. Officer forwarded it
to the correct personnel.
11:05 a.m. Report of a motor
vehicle stop at 49 Washington St.
Danya Sosa-Ruiz from 824 Border St., Boston, was summoned
for a revoked registration and and
uninsured motor vehicle.
1:35 p.m. Report of a disabled
motor vehicle at Dunkin Donuts
on 162 Washington St. A person
was obstructing traffic. Officer reported it was a tractor trailer and
spoke to the operator. He was
sent on his way.
2:47 p.m. Police assist parties in restoring peace. Reported
there was a dispute with a landlord, but the woman retrieved her
belongings and money back. Officer documented and all was clear.
3:07 p.m. Motor vehicle stop
made at 2 State St. Operator did
not like receiving a citation from
the State Police. A citation was
issued for loud, objectable noise,
failure to use care in turning and a
seat belt violation.
5:00 p.m. Report of a missing
person at 33 Holten St. Women
reported her brother, Charles Allen, has been missing since the
previous day at 10 a.m. Officers
wrote a report and put him in the
system as a missing person with
mental health issues.
6:12 p.m. Report of breaking
and entering at 14C Rockdale
Park. Officer reported no forced
entry and the backdoor may not
have been locked. A couple items
Wednesday, May 4
1:28 a.m. Report of graffiti at
Myra Distributors on 7 Webster
St. Officer documented incident.
3:07 a.m. Medical emergency
at 101 Brooksby Village Drive.
Report of a woman who fell and
had a head injury. She was taken
to Salem Hospital.
8:12 a.m. Medical emergency at
11 Wheeler St. Report of a woman
who was bit by a dog on her way
Thursday, May 5
12:19 a.m. Gunshots reported
at Mobile Estates on 286 Newbury
St. Women reported that someone shot a bullet through her mobile home. An officer spoke with
people who were sitting around
the corner. They said they had
seen a silver four-door car twice
and the occupants were wearing
hoodies. Officer documented.
9:32 a.m. Police served a
warrant at 187 Lowell St. They
made an arrest of Kyle Liford of
the same residence on multiple
offenses and a warrant from another department.
12:23 p.m. Motor vehicle stop
made at 136 Lowell St. Raymundo Peralta of 47 Aborn St. was
summoned for unlicensed operation of a motor vehicle.
1:56 p.m. Report of a truck
dumping lumber at 0 Bartholomew
St. An officer checked the area but
was unable to locate the vehicle.
There was no lumber impeding traffic. The Department of Public Works
was called to handle the situation.
Got tech questions?
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were missing from the residence.
Police documented the incident.
7:00 p.m. Report of people operating under the influence. Two
people were found passed out in a
vehicle. Ashley Agabides of 1650
Dorchester Avenue, Dorchester,
was charged with another department warrant. Michael Vitale of 24
Mcclure St., Revere, was charged
with operating under the influence.
7:07 p.m. Well-being check
requested at 16 Crowninshield
St. Salem Hospital was asked to
check on a patient that left there
with an IV in his right arm. They
wanted the ambulance to remove
the IV if the party was found. EMS
was unable to find the patient.
8:00 p.m. Report of a motor vehicle accident on 207 Lynn St. A
vehicle hit a parked car and there
were injuries. Officer reported one
patient was taken to Salem Hospital and two vehicles were towed.
10:36 p.m. Report of a neighborhood dispute at 3 Lowe St. Caller
reported his neighbor downstairs
refused to stop smoking marijuana
in the house. Officer reported they
spoke to both parties and the landlord was aware of the situation.
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for people who are not techies.
That’s why they exist, to educate, by explaining and sharing
solutions that you will understand
and get relief. Charles Hoover
and a few other tech experts
will be on hand to answer your
questions. Not only is Hoover a
super tech, who has been in the
computer troubleshooting business for a long time, an owner
of Boston TechCollective, a
Somerville cooperative serving
business and residential clients.
This meeting is being held at
the McCarthy Auditorium at the
Peabody Municipal Light Plant,
201 Warren St. Extension. For
more information, visit northshorecomputer.org.
MAY 12, 2016
WEEKLYNEWS.NET - 978-532-5880
Obituaries
5
Pet of the week
Afonso Pinella, 91, of Lynnfield passed away April 30 in
Danvers. Pinella, a native of Peru, was born in Chiclayo on January
6, 1925 and was the son of the late Jose and Catalina Pinella. He
came to the U.S. as a young man and went on to graduate from the
Massachusetts Institute of Technology in 1966. During his career
he worked with NASA, Bell Laboratories and eventually retired
from Lucent Technologies. He enjoyed traveling, especially trips
that took him to Peru.
Pinella was the beloved husband of the late June (Monroe) Pinella
who died in 2011. He was the loving brother of Jose “Pepe” Pinella
and Ernesto Pinella of Peru and the late Arminda, Olga, Carlos, Luis
and Moraima Pinella and Jose, German and Nicolas Leguia. He was
the brother in-law of Kathleen (Monroe) Maurer and her husband
Donald of Seabrook, N.H. and Norman Monroe and his wife, Verna
of Wash. He is also survived by his many nieces and nephews in
Peru as well as his close friends, Jose Ferreyros, Alicia Graham,
Javier Collao and Pablo de la Flor and Luis Ortiz.
Local residents make
Dean’s List at WIT
The
following
residents
have made the Dean’s List
at Wentworth Institute of
Technology for the spring semester: Matt Germano, Lynnfield,
and Michael Moreschi and
Cezary Kubel, both of Peabody.
Founded in 1904, Wentworth is
an independent,
institution offering career-focused education through 19
bachelor’s degree programs in
areas such as applied mathematics,
architecture, business management, computer science, computer
networking, construction management, design, engineering and engineering technology.
Snowflake is a 2-year-old Chihuahua male. He is up-to-date on his shots and has been neutered. He traveled
from Georgia to Salem to find a new home and family. Snowflake can be choosy with whom he trusts. If you give
him a few moments of your time, he will become your best friend. Snowflake prefers to be your one and only as
he does not like to share his people with other four-legged. Snowflake loves to go for walks and enjoys playing
fetch and running around in a fenced in yard. He loves to cuddle, once he knows his people. If you are interested
in meeting to adopt Snowflake, please visit him at the Northeast Animal Shelter located at 347 Highland Avenue
in Salem. Visiting hours are Monday through Friday from 10 a.m. to 8 p.m. and weekends from 10 a.m. to 6
p.m. You can also view all available pets on the NEAS website, neas.org.
Polak of Coldwell Banker
recognized for leadership
Christopher Polak, manager of
the Coldwell Banker Residential
Brokerage in New England, was
named to the NRT President’s
Council.
The council recognizes the
branch managers of the top 20
percent of about 790 offices nationwide within the network who
demonstrate exemplary leadership and management skills.
NRT, Coldwell’s parent company, calls itself the nation’s
largest residential real estate brokerage company.
Polak has received this recognition numerous times. He and
other top-performing branch
manager will be honored in
September at a special retreat at
Amelia Island, Fla.
We want to hear
from you!
Send us a letter at
[email protected].
Letters should be no more
than 300 words.
197 Washington Street
Peabody, MA 01960
978-532-0102
Start Planning Now for Your
Special Occasion • Graduation
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Include Cake, Pastry and Food
FOUR-FOOT COLOSSAL SUBS...
• Chi c k e n P a r m
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Also a Wide Selection of Calzones! And don’t
forget dessert... Themed Cakes Much More!
HOT FOODS:
Food Trucks &
Fenway Tickets!
It's all part of Fun Fridays.
Come join us for Fun Fridays at our new branch in Lynnfield.
Every Friday in May, there will be a food truck on-site from noon to 2:00 pm.
We’ll be giving out prizes and raffling off four tickets to Fenway all day!
It’s all to celebrate the Grand Opening of our new branch.
Why not stop by tomorrow and make your Friday even more fun?
• H o m e m a d e Me a t b a l l s • S a u s a g e s • S a u s a g e / M e a t b a l l c o m b o
• Sausage, Peppers & Onions • Chicken Parmesan • Lasagna
• Eggplant • Chicken, Broccoli & Ziti (garlic or alfredo)
• C h i c k e n o r S a u s a g e c a c c i a t o r e o v e r Zi t i
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• Chicken Fingers (Reg. or Buffalo) • Calzones
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5/10/16 10:56 AM
6
WEEKLYNEWS.NET - 978-532-5880
MAY 12, 2016
Seniors
June 4-5
“Home Fit”. Food: Vegetable
Cape Cod and Martha’s Quiche
Vineyard, hotel, tours, breakfast, boxed lunch. $359
*****
Wednesday, May 18
*****
9
a.m.
Sewing/Repair,
June 7-8
Aerobics, Rug Hooking,
Summit Inn at Killington, Wood Carving, 10:15 a.m.
Vt., full breakfast, dinner, Zumba, 12:30 p.m. Model
sightseeing. $229
Ship Building, Ballroom
Dance Lessons, Golden
TORIGIAN COMMUNITY
Agers, 2 p.m. Homeless
LIFE CENTER
Providers Meeting. Food:
Meatloaf
Cape May, 2 nights at the
Saturday, May 13
******
Marquis de Lafayette Hotel,
8 a.m. Beginner Oil
*****
Wednesday, May 25
4 meals, guided tours. $499
Painting, TOPS Weigh In, Thursday, May 19
Perkin Cove, Summer is on
9 a.m. Aerobics, TOPS 7:30 and 9:30 a.m. Walking
*****
the way. $5
Meeting, 9 a.m. Computer Group, 8:30 a.m. Quilting,
Help, 10:30 a.m. Coping 9:15 a.m. Whist, 9:20 a.m.
w/ Grief/Loss, 11:15 a.m. Big Band Dancing, 9:30 a.m.
Chair Yoga, 12:30 p.m. Oil Painting (Advanced),
Bingo, Reiki by appt., Ping 10 a.m. Bridge, 12:30 p.m.
Pong. Food: Fish cakes
Bocce, Consumer Affairs
Presents: “How to Spot
******
Skimming Devices”, 1 p.m.
Monday, May 16
Sing-Along. Food: Turkey
9 a.m. Aerobics, Duplicate sandwich
Bridge, 10 a.m. Bridge,
Drill Team, 11:15 a.m.
*****
Zumba, 12:30 p.m. Model Friday, May 20
Ship Building, Bingo. Food. 8
a.m.
Oil
Painting
Bone-in chicken breast
(Beginner), TOPS Weigh
In, 9 a.m. Aerobics, Sen.
*****
Lovely’s District Hour,
Tuesday, May 17
Computer
Help,
TOPS
7:30 and 9:30 a.m. Walking
Group, 9 a.m. Hug A Bears,
“I lost my job and was looking
Peabody Kiosk, 9:15 a.m.
for something more satisfying.
Whist, 9:30 a.m. and 12:30
My friend told me that I could
p.m. Japanese Bunka, 10
be a Caregiver for a disabled
a.m. Exercise w/ Edye, 10:30
or chronically ill adult, and
a.m. Line Dancing, 12 p.m.
through MassHealth receive
Crocheting/Knitting,
Mah
monthly compensation. It was
Jongg, 12:30 p.m. AARP
exactly the type of fulfilling
******
Thursday, May 26
Cape Cod Luncheon Train,
Hyannis Mass. Two-hour
Saturday, May 14
Behind the scenes at Federal scenic train ride and lunch.
Hill in Providence R.I., $89
******
lunch samples and tour. $87
Wednesday, June 1
Assembly Row, Somerville,
******
$5.
Wednesday, May 18
Newburyport Mass. Shops
*****
stroll and dine $5
June 1-3
LYNNFIELD SENIOR
CENTER ACTIVITIES
Take
Steps to
Strength
at Pilgrim
job I was looking for. I am
now a caregiver, or as I call it,
a second father to Ron
and Arthur. Thanks to AFC,
my family and heart
have grown!”
Meeting, Coping w/ Grief/
Loss, 11:15 a.m. Chair Yoga,
12:30 p.m. NARFE Mailing,
Bingo, 1 p.m. Scrabble. Food:
Italian sausage
*****
Monday, May 23
9 a.m. Aerobics, Duplicate
Bridge, 9:30 a.m. Podiatry,
10 a.m. Bridge, Drill
Team, 11:15 a.m. Zumba,
12:30 p.m. Model Ship
Building, Bingo, 2:30 p.m.
Caregivers Support Group,
PCOA Board Meeting, 6:30
p.m. Green Peabody. Food:
Breaded chicken
*****
Tuesday, May 24
7:30 and 9:30 a.m. Walking
Group, 9 a.m. Hug A Bears,
Peabody Kiosk, 9:15 a.m.
Whist, 9:30 a.m. Veteran’s
Group, Exercise w/ Edye,
9:30 a.m. and 12:30 p.m.
Japanese Bunka, 10:30
a.m. Line Dancing, 12
p.m. Crocheting/Knitting,
Mah Jongg, 12:30 Monthly
Movie.
Food:
Cheese
Lasagna
~ Winston
Caregiver to Ron and Arthur
978-281-2612
AdultFosterCareNS.com
Celebrating 15 Years
Discover a tranquil setting for recovering and regaining strength following surgery
or a hospital stay. Pilgrim’s newly opened short-term rehab unit Steps to Strength
combines the comforts of home with award-winning clinical care.
• 5-star CMS rated
• Separate private entrance, dining
room and living room with fireplace
• New private and semi-private rooms
with enhanced amenities
• Garden/tranquility courtyard
• Expanded rehabilitation gym with
state-of-the-art equipment
• Rehab professionals on-site 7 days
a week.
Proud to be a not-for-profit rehabilitation and skilled nursing center.
Call today to learn more about Pilgrim’s award-winning care.
96 Forest Street • Peabody, MA 01960
2011
SILVER
978-717-1001
www.pilgrimrehab.org
We’re Perfecting the Art of Superior Care
HYPERTENSION MEDICATIONS
For those diagnosed with high blood pressure, many doctors choose thiazide
diuretics (“water pills”) as a first line treatment. These medications, which are quite
cost-effective, reduce blood pressure by flushing excess water and sodium from the
body. If these drugs prove to be ineffective or problematic, physicians will likely next
consider either angiotensin-converting enzyme (ACE) inhibitors or angiotensin II
receptor blockers (ARBs) for managing hypertension. Both types of drugs work by
preventing a hormone (angiotensin) from constricting blood vessels and increasing
blood pressure. However, these drugs are not generally well tolerated by
African-Americans, who may be better served by calcium channel blockers (CCBs),
which work by relaxing blood vessels. They also help people with migraines and
abnormal heart rhythms.
High blood pressure often has no direct cause. However, certain risk factors may
increase your chances of developing it, although some, such as age, gender, race,
and family history, cannot be controlled. What, if any, high blood pressure medications are you taking? At VILLAGE PHARMACY, we urge you to take the time to do a
little research about a product before its use, and if you aren’t sure of correct usage
and safety, come to us here in the Colonial Shopping Center and consult with an
expert. Questions? Call 781.334.3133.
HINT: Drugs known as beta blockers work by blocking the effects of the hormone
epinephrine (adrenaline), thereby causing the heart to beat more slowly and less
forcefully.
MAY 12, 2016
WEEKLYNEWS.NET - 978-532-5880
Learning how Israel’s
Parliament works
If you ever wanted to understand the workings of Israel’s
parliamentary-s​tyle democracy,
Israeli Politics 101 is for you.
It is taught by Samuel Crystal,
political affairs director and
Consulate General of Israel to
New England. Topics will include: how elections function,
the coalition/opposition relationship, a breakdown of the 10
current parties within Israel’s
Knesset, checks and balances
and the roles of the legislature, executive, and judiciary
branches.
Sessions will be held on
Wednesdays, June 8 and 29, 7 to
8:30 p.m. at Temple Ner Tamid,
368 Lowell St., Peabody.
The class is free and co-sponsored by Lappin Foundation,
Consulate General of Israel to
New England and Temple Ner
Tamid.
RSVPS requested to
Susan Feinstein at 978-7404431 or email [email protected]. Walk-ins are
welcome.
Stoneham Theatre
Company’s Young
Company presents
“As You Like It”
The Peabody Institute library
will sponsor a performance of
William Shakespeare’s “As
You Like It,” presented by the
Stoneham Theatre Company’s
Young Company. In the Forest
of Arden, Rosalind seeks refuge
after being wrongly banished
from her home. Her exile quickly
becomes an adventure when
she encounters colorful fools,
witty rustics, and the lovesick
Orlando. The witty humor and famous philosophy make it one of
Shakespeare’s most popular comedies to study and perform.
This performance will be held
at East End Veterans Memorial
Park, which is around the corner
from the library located at 45
Walnut St. In case of inclement
weather the performance will
take place in the Sutton Room of
the library. There is no charge for
this program and all are welcome.
Please bring a chair or blanket to
sit on at the park. Please register
in advance to reserve your space.
For more information and to register, go to peabodylibrary.org or
call 978-531-0100, ext. 29.
SPRING
SAVINGS!
7
Higgins Middle School Third Quarter
Grade 6
Principal’s List
Adam Abdulghani, Lily Baglio, Marissa Bell, Isabella Bettencourt, Sarah Broughton, Nicholas Caputo,
Victoria Cheffro, Cameron Collins, Alexandria Crowe, Ava Dambrosio, Lilly Dame, Isabella Decicco,
Emily Dicologero, Olivia Dragani, Laura Espinal, Samuel Etienne, Amire Garcia, Kellan Gehan, Ancelin
Halo, John Howland, Joseph Hutchinson, Lindsey Josselyn, Emily Kelly, Michelle Kopani, Ella Kritikos,
Joshua LeClerc, Abigail Leonard, Kimberly Manyanga, Jason Martarano, Santina Marzino, Mykayla
Mastrocola, Isabella McCarthy, Logan McGonigle, Benjamin McKiernan, Zachary Medailleu, Evan
Morgan, Theola O’Furie, Oluchi Okananwa-Nnadozie, Jacob Palhares, Meg Price, Samantha Rowe,
Michael Saraceni, Madeleine Scacchi, Jacquelyn Scopa, Kloira Sharka, Tyler Smith, Madeline Talbot,
Scott Turner, Sofia Valencia, Robert Villalona, Panagiotis Vlismas, Jake Westin
Grade 7
Principal’s List
Aja Alimonti, Steven Baker, Olivia Barrete, Maggie Bena, Alexa Bettencourt, Houda Bouchiba,
Lily Bromberger, Joseph Brown, Mikayla Buckley, Samantha Cahill, Carly Calnan, Sean Collins,
Alex Denisco, Kristina Derrivan, Dante DiGianfelice, Jack Donovan, Jenna Durkin, Scott Emerson,
Amanda Farhat, Eric Ferguson, Harrison Fisher, Nicholas Fursey, Dahlia Furtado, Rachel Gagnon, Ryan
Ginchereau, Ourania Gkika, Stephanie Guglielmo, Kayla Hartnett, Emma Hayward, Sophia Hollingshed,
Thelma Hollingshed, William Houvardas, Jonathan Jalbert, Abigail Kilbride, Christopher Kilbride,
Amber Kiricoples, Madison Knight, Ryan Knight, Kiely Leonard, Adrianna Lomanno, Jake Malionek,
Emma Margossian, Emily Marshall, Nada Mohammed, Sarah Monsini, Max Murphy, Jacqueline
Nazzaro, Sydney O’Donnell, Alysa Pare, Brandon Pszenny, Jenna Rich, Daniel Richard, Joana Ripa,
Jaelyn Rossignoll, Nicholas Sablone, Swetha Saravanakumar, Kira Shapiro, Bjorn Shurdha, Natalia
Siepka, Samantha Silva, Francisca Sousa, Zoe Torres, Mia Tsaparlis, Christopher Tsaparlis
Grade 8
Principal’s List
Magdalena Anderle, Jessica Bacelar, Danielle Barrasso, Colleen Crotty, Mason Davis, Megan Doherty,
Ana Clara Fernandes, Emma Garvey, Brianna Gomes, Kaycie Goudreau, John Guiney, Erin Hennigan,
Olivia Kiricoples, Jordyn Labbe, Diana Le, Julianne LeBlanc, Madelyne Lomasney, Kelly Melin, Kyle
Morfis, Sydney Nagle, Elizabeth Newton, Olivia O’Connor, Anthony Perez, Cameron Rich, Abigail
Ryder, Alexander Selvo, Amanda Stanton, Kaitlyn Swenson, Sasha Syska, Rebecca Truong, Alexandra
Turco, Tamera Whitmore
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8
WEEKLYNEWS.NET - 978-532-5880
MAY 12, 2016
Religious Notes
All Saints Episcopal Church
of the North Shore
allsaintseposcopalnorthshore.org
All Saints Episcopal Church of the
North Shore, formerly St. Paul’s in
Peabody and Calvary in Danvers,
now worshipping together as one at
46 Cherry St., Danvers, across from
the Danvers Town Hall. Service of
Holy Communion and Homily every
Sunday at 8:00 a.m. and 10:00 a.m.
Summers one service at 9:00 a.m.
You’ll be welcome here. For more
information call the church office at
978-774-1150.
Calvary Baptist
4 Coolidge Road, Peabody
978-531-0914, Pastor Caleb Ingersoll and Pastor Andy Katzmire
Sunday worship at 10:00 a.m. followed by coffee and fellowship.
Nursery care and activities for young
children provided during worship.
During the school year, Kids Connection meets Tuesdays at 6:30 p.m. and
Youth Group meets Thursdays at 7
p.m.
Centre Congregational, UCC
An Open & Affirming Congregation of the United Church of Christ
Summer and Main St., Lynnfield
781-334-3050, centre-church.org
Interim pastor: Rev.Estelle Margarones
Office hours at the church are 9:00
a.m.-3:00 p.m. Monday through Friday. The building is handicap accessible. To be invited to church events
and see event pictures, like us on
Facebook: facebook.com/centrechurchucc. The New England Pastoral Institute which offers counseling
at the church may be reached by
calling 603-890-6767 for an appointment. Tower Day School, Preschool
and Kindergarten, may be reached by
calling 781-334-5576.
Carmelite Chapel
Northshore Mall, Peabody
978-531-6145
Mass schedule: Monday-Friday,
8:30 a.m., noon and 3 p.m.; Saturday,
8:30 a.m. and noon; Sunday Vigil, 4
and 5:30 p.m. Confessions: Monday-Friday, 11:30 a.m.-noon and
2:30-3 p.m., Saturday, 10:45-11:45
a.m. and 2:45-3:45 p.m. or by appointment.
Chabad of Peabody
682 Lowell Street, Peabody
978-977-9111, jewishpeabody.com
Chabad of Peabody holds services
weekly. Call or e-mail Rabbi Schusterman at rabbi@jewishpeabody.
com. For event times and dates visit
the website. Chabad runs a Hebrew
School for children on Wednesday,
and has an informal weekly drop-in
class on Kabbalah and other holiday
events. Hebrew School registration is
now open. Call Raizel at the number
above or email her at [email protected].
Community Covenant Church
33 Lake Street, West Peabody
978-535-5321, Rev. Joel Anderle
communitycovenantlive.org.
Community Covenant is a warm
and inviting church in the Evangelical, Protestant tradition. All are welcome!
The Reverend Joel Anderle, our Senior Pastor officiates at worship services every Sunday at 11:00 a.m. Sunday School for all ages is held from
9:45 a.m. to 10:45 a.m. each Sunday
before worship.
For more information please contact the church office. Our church is
handicap accessible.
Congregation Sons of Israel
Corner of Park and Spr i ng
Streets Peabody
978-532-1624, peabodyshul.org
Also on Facebook
Friday Sabbath services are the first
Friday of each month at 7:30 p.m. Sun-
day morning services are at 9:00 a.m.
Congregation Tifereth Israel
8 Pierpont St., Peabody
978-531-8135
First United Methodist
24 Washington St., Peabody
978-531-0095, Pastor Seok-Cheol
Shin
Bible-centered praise and worship
service, Sunday at 10:30 a.m. with
Holy Communion every Sunday. All
are welcome. Pastor hours: Mon.,
Tues. and Thurs., 1-5 p.m. There is a
nursery room. The church is handicap
accessible. Lynnfield Community Church
735 Salem St., Lynnfield
(781) 599-4421
LynnfieldCommunityChurch.org.
Lynnfield Community Church welcomes you to Sunday worship at
10:00-11:00 a.m. Following our service, join us for coffee and fellowship in Marshall Hall. Parking is behind the church and there are
entrances in front and on the side of
the building. Please visit soon.
Messiah Lutheran
708 Lowell St., Lynnfield
781-334-4111 for Church; 781334-6591 for Pre-school.
A personal and traditional approach
allows Messiah to care for people and
share God’s Word. Join us for worship
on Sundays at 10:30. Mens’ Ministry,
Christian Education, Financial Peace
University, Community Service, and
other opportunities to grow in your
faith. Served by Rev. Dr. Jeremy Pekari and Rev. David Brezina. mlcspirit.
org.
New Destiny Christian
Spring Hill Suites, Peabody
978-373-4340
Pastors are David and Mary Jane
Wing. A full Gospel/Prophetic
church. Sunday service at 9:30 a.m.
North Shore Baptist
706 Lowell St., Peabody
978-535-6186
SUNDAY: Adult Sunday School
begins at 9:00 a.m., followed by refreshments and fellowship time.
Worship Service begins at 10:30
a.m. All are welcome. Monday:
Men’s Group Study at 7:00 p.m.,
Thursday: Prayer Meeting, 7:00 p.m.
Visit our website for more information or to leave a prayer request.
NorthShoreBaptistChurch.org Lynnfield Catholic Collaborative,
Our Lady of the Assumption and
St. Maria Goretti
Mass Schedule: Wednesday May 4
4:00 p.m. @ Our Lady of Assumption. Thursday May 5: 7:00 a.m. @
St. Maria Goretti, 9:00 a.m. @ Our
Lady of Assumption, 7:00 p.m. @
St. Maria Goretti
The Lynnfield Catholic Collaborative, comprised of Our Lady of the
Assumption Church, Salem and
Grove Streets, and Saint Maria
Goretti Church, 112 Chestnut St.,
Lynnfield, may be reached by calling
781-598-4313 or by email: jsano@
ola-smg.org or by visiting the website: lynnfieldcatholic.org.
The Pastoral Leadership Team:
The Pastor is Rev. Paul E. Ritt, the
Parochial Vicar is Rev. Anthony Luongo and the Deacons are Thomas
O’Shea and Ed Elibero. Donna Delahanty is Director of Parish Ministries.
The parish business office is located at 17 Grove Street. Office hours
are Monday through Thursday, 8:00
a.m.to 4:00 p.m., and Friday, 8:00
a.m. to 12:00 noon. Closed holidays.
First Friday Adoration: SMG - 8:30
a.m. to 12:00 p.m.
Eucharistic Adoration: SMG - 7:00
p.m. to 8:00 p.m., Wednesday
Weekend Mass Schedule: 4:00
South Church Day School
50 years dedicated to quality childcare
Enrolling now for Fall 2016
Licensed by EEC
Ages 2.9 months to 5 years
Mon. through Fri. 9 a.m.-noon (extended hours available)
9 a.m.-3 p.m.
Contact us for an application!
It is our policy to admit children of any race, religion,
gender or ethnic origin
60 Prospect St. Peabody 978-531-4385 [email protected]
Conveniently located across from the Northshore Mall
p.m. at OLA & 4:00 p.m. at SMG;
7:00 a.m. at OLA, 9:00 a.m. at OLA,
10:00 a.m. at SMG, 11:00 a.m. at OLA
and 5:00 p.m. at SMG
Weekday Mass Schedule: OLA
9:00 a.m. Monday, Wednesday and
Friday; SMG 9:00 a.m. Tuesday and
Thursday.
Our Lady of Fatima
50 Walsh Ave., Peabody
978-532-0272, Fr. Christopher
Gomes
Choir Dir.: Noreen Galopim; Organi s t : A u d r e y S u l l i v a n . O f fi c e
hours: Monday to Friday, 1-5 p.m.
Mass schedule: Monday-Thursday, 9
a.m. (Portuguese); Friday at 6 p.m.
(Portuguese); Saturday at 9 a.m. (Portuguese) (and Vigil at 5:00 p.m. English); Sunday 9 a.m. (English); 11:30
a.m. (Portuguese); 6 p.m. (Portuguese). Confessions: Saturday, 4:004:45 p.m.; Baptisms, 2nd and 4th Sundays. Exposition of the Blessed
Sacrament, every Friday, 5-6 p.m. Religious Education Classes for Grades
1-6 at 8:00 a.m. and Grades 7-10 at
10:00 a.m. on Sundays.
St. Adelaide
708 Lowell St., Peabody
978-535-1985
Team Ministry: Rev. Raymond Van
De Moortell, and Rev. David C. Lewis. Weekend Mass Schedule: Saturday, 4 p.m., Sunday, 8:30, 10 and
11:30 a.m. Holy Day Masses: 9 a.m.
and 7 p.m.; Latin Mass: 1 p.m. Sunday. Confessions: Saturday, 3-3:30
p.m.; Baptisms: first Sunday of the
month at 2:30 p.m.; Choir rehearsals
on Thursdays, 3:45 p.m. for children
and 7 p.m. for adults. Exposition of
the Blessed Sacrament: first Friday of
the month, 9:30 a.m.-noon and
Wednesdays from 5:30-6:30 p.m.
AA Meetings: Thursdays, 7 p.m. Religious Education classes (grades
1-10) are held in the church hall from
Sunday through Thursday.
St. Ann’s Parish
136 Lynn St., Peabody
978-531-1480
Rev. Charles Stanley; Richard W.
Cordeau, Deacon 978-531-1480; M.
Ellen Fitzgerald, Pastoral Associate
978-531-9625. Office of Religious
Education: 140 Lynn St., M. Ellen
Fitzgerald, Religious Education Dir.,
978-531-5791; Leanne Amirault, Preschool Dir., 978-532-3329 or 978-5319521. Daily Mass: Saturday at 4 p.m.
and Sunday at 8:30 and 10:30 a.m.
Daily Mass: 9 a.m.
St. Clare of Assisi Catholic Community
(non-Roman)
Rev. Mike Otero-Otero, O.S.F.
Located at and with courtesy by St.
John Evangelical Lutheran Church
32 Ellsworth Road at King St., Peabody
Saturday Vigil Mass at 3:00 p.m.
We offer valid seven sacraments Baptism, Confirmation, Holy Communion, Confession, Marriage, Holy
Orders, and the Anointing of the
Sick. Please call 978-804-2250.
St. John Lutheran
Ellsworth Rd. at King St., Peabody
978-531-1731, stjohnpeabody.org
The Rev. Charles N. Stevenson, pastor. St. John is a member of the Evangelical Lutheran Church in America
and Lutheran Congregations in Mission
for Christ. Sunday worship at 9:30 a.m.
with nursery care provided and coffee
and fellowship following; Sunday
School at 11 a.m; Bible Study, Wednesday at 7:30 p.m. Holy Communion is
celebrated the first and third Sunday of
each month and on certain festivals.
St. John the Baptist
17 Chestnut St., Peabody
978-531-0002 stjohnspeabody.com
Pastor: Very Rev. John E. MacInnis, VF; Parochial Vicar: Rev. Mario
Guarino, FDP and Rev. Paul G.M.
McManus; Deacon: Leo A. Martin;
Mass: Monday-Saturday, 6:45 a.m.
and 4 p.m. (on Saturday); Sunday at
8, 10 and 11:30 a.m. (Spanish) and 5
p.m..
St. John’s Thrift Shop, 19 Chestnut
Street, Peabody (behind City Hall) is
open Thursdays, 9-12, Fridays and
Prayer to the Blessed Virgin
(never known to fail)
O most beautiful flower of Mount Carmel, fruitful
vine, splendor of Heaven, Blessed Mother of the
Son of God, Immaculate Virgin, assist me in my
necessity. O Star of the sea, help me and show me
where you are my Mother. O Holy Mary, Mother of
God, Queen of Heaven and Earth, I humbly
beseech you from the bottom of my heart to succor
me in my necessity (make request). There are none
that can withstand your power. O Mary, conceived
without sin, pray for us who have recourse to thee
(three times). Holy Mary, I place this cause in your
hands (three times). Say this prayer for 3
consecutive days and then you must publish and it
P.F.
will be granted to you. Thank you.
Saturdays 9 a.m.-1:00 p.m.
Food Pantry on the last Sunday of
the month from 9:30 a.m. - 1 p.m. in
the Pastoral Center basement. St.
John, the Baptist School is now accepting applications. Programs available for 2, 3, 4 and 5-year-olds and
grades 1-8. Extended day available
for all students. Visit: stjohns-peabody.com or call 978-531-0444, ext.
340.
St. Paul’s Episcopal
127 Summer St., Lynnfield
(781) 334-4594, stpaulslynnfield.org.
Rev. Robert Bacon, rector
St. Paul’s Episcopal Church worships at 8:30 and 10:00 a.m. on Sundays. The 8:30 a.m. Holy Eucharist
is a said service. The 10.00 a.m. Holy
Eucharist service includes music
with hymns and choir. Sunday
school begins at 9:40 a.m. for children ageded 5 and older. Child care
is available for younger children. St.
Pauls also offers a Wednesday Holy
Eucharist at 9:00 a.m., followed by
Bible/Book Study. All are welcome.
Call the church office at 781-3344594 or email office @stpaulslynnfield.org for more information.
St. Thomas the Apostle
3 Margin St., Peabody
978-531-0224
Rev. John MacInnis, VF; Office
hours: Monday-Friday, 9 a.m.-12:00
p.m.; Fax: 978-531-6517. Religious
Education Office at 5 Margin St.:
978-531-1010. Pastor: Very Rev.
John MacInnis, VF; Parochial Vicar:
Rev. Steven Clemence; Pastoral Assistant: Sr. Janelle Sevier, SND; Coordinator of Religious Education;
Lisa Trainor; Music Director: Regina
Matthews; Admin. Assistants: Sheila
Lynch and Tracy Palen. Mass schedule: Saturday, 4 p.m.; Sunday, 8:30
(family) and 10:30 a.m., 7 p.m. (Brazilian); Thrift Shop: Saturdays 9 a.m.
to 2p.m.; Visit our website: saintthomasparish.net.
St. Vasilios Greek Orthodox
Church
5 Paleologos St., Peabody
978-531-0777, stvasilios.org
Pastor: Rev. Christopher Foustoukos; Pastor Emeritus: Andrew Demotses; Pastoral Assistant: Deacon Robert
Fadel; Worship schedule: Sunday Matins at 8 a.m., Divine Liturgy at 9
a.m., Church School at 10:30 a.m.11:30 a.m.; Weekly feast days as announced: Matins at 8 a.m., Divine Liturgy at 9 a.m.
Second Congregational
12 Maple St., Peabody
978-531- 0477, Rev. Jonathan
Chubb
Worship services at 10:15 a.m. each
Sunday. The church is wheelchair
accessible. Childcare is available
during worship service for children
through age five. Children’s Church
during service, ages 6-12. Sunday
School, ages two through adult from
9:15-10:15 a.m. For Bible study and
Book Group schedules, call the office.
South Congregational
60 Prospect St., Peabody
978-531-1964, southchurch.net
Sr. Pastor: Grant Hofnagle. Sunday
service is at 10 a.m. Communion
service is the first Sunday of each
month. Children pre-K thru 5th
grade programs during the Sunday
service, animated stories and activity
sheets. Our Sunday worship service
blends both traditional hymns and
contemporary praise.
Monthly Fellowship Dinner, is the
second Saturday of each month at
5:30 p.m. in Fellowship Hall. Call the
office if attending or need information. Monthly Prayer Service is the
second Sunday of each month, at 7
p.m. in the sanctuary.
Sovereign Grace Community
Church
6 Bourbon Street, Peabody
978-210-7413
sovG.us, [email protected]
sovG is a family friendly church offering a contemporary Sunday Morning Worship Service at 10 a.m. Sunday School is offered during worship
for kids through 5th grade. There is a
full staffed nursery. For students in
7th-12th grades, our Youth Group
meets Sunday evenings from 7-9 p.m.
Email Youth Director Will Coley at
[email protected] for information about
Youth Group.
Michael Williams, Lead Pastor.
Visit: facebook.com/michaelwillyamz. Helping people connect with
God, each other and the needs in our
community.
Temple Tiferet Shalom
489 Lowell St., Peabody
978-535-2100, templetiferetshalom.org
The Temple Shabbat Services are
Fridays at 7:30 p.m. The Temple offers Preschool, Religious School, Bar
and Bat Mitzvah instruction, Confirmation classes, Chai Club and youth
groups. Social action and adult education programs are an integral component of the temple.
Temple Emmanuel
120 Chestnut St., Wakefield
(781) 245-1886, wakefieldtemple.
org.
Temple Emmanuel of Wakefield is
located at 120 Chestnut St. in Wakefield. There is a chair lift to the second floor.
Temple Emmanuel is a conservative synagogue serving residents in
several communities, including Lynnfield and Peabody.
Rabbi Vivie Mayer, a Reconstructionist rabbi, will be leading in prayer
during the High Holy Days. Information about fall programming and
High Holiday Seats will be available
during the High Holy Days.
Temple Ner Tamid
368 Lowell St., Peabody
978-532-1293, templenertamid.org
Cantor Steve Abramowitz, Beth
Hoffman, synagogue administrator.
Service schedule: evening minyans
held Sunday-Thursday at 7:30 p.m.,
morning minyans; Sunday morning
minyans at 9 a.m.; Shabbat services:
Fridays at 8 p.m., Saturdays at 9:30
a.m. Religious School classes offered
for kindergarten through seventh
grade, Confirmation program for
grades 8-10. Israeli dance group most
Tuesday nights at 8 p.m. Contact Grace
Newman 978-535-2292. TNT has a
large Jewish youth group on the North
Shore for grades 3-12. Contact Sue
Callum at 978-535-0834 or leap2659@
aol.com for more information. The
temple offers an active Men’s Club,
Sisterhood, Social Action Committee
and Adult Education. Interfaith couples
and non-traditional families are welcome.
The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints
400 Essex Street, Lynnfield
lds.org - Sunday services and classes are from 9 a.m. to noon; 9-10:10
Sacrament Meeting; 10:20-11 a.m.
sunday School; 11:10-noon, Primary
and Youth Classes; Youth Night and
Boy/Cub Scouts: Tuesdays at 7 p.m.;
Bishop: Matthew Romano, 781-3345586. Family History Center (open
to the public) Wednesdays 10 a.m. to
9 p.m.; Thursday, 10 a.m to 4 p.m.
Please check before coming due to
weather or for summer hours).
Wakefield Ly nnfield United
Methodist Church
273 Vernon St., Wakefield with
Pastor: Glenn M. Mortimer
Join us for inspiring worship at
10:30 am. During worship youth are
invited to attend Sunday School and
Nursery Care in our classrooms. The
church is handicapped accessible.
The church office is open 9 am-12
pm Tuesday through Friday mornings. Call (781) 245-1259.
This week’s Ministries and Activities: Sunday, 5/15: Adult Choir
Rehearsal at 9:15 a.m.
Sunday Pentecost Worship Service at 10:30 a.m.
Sunday School and Nursery Care
at 10:30 a.m.
Wednesday, 5/18: Bible Study
7pm
27 Johnson St., Peabody
978-535-4112
Rev. Ralph Wetherington, Sr. Pastor
Sunday School at 9:00 a.m. each
Sunday morning for ages 2 through
high school and adult, followed by
coffee and fellowship in Lyons Hall
from 10:00-10:30 a.m.; Worship Service at 10:30 a.m. each Sunday morning (Nursery/ childcare is provided
through age 5). Rock Solid: (Senior
and Junior High Youth groups) Sundays at 6:00 p.m.; College and Career
Young Adults is the 2nd and 4th Sundays at 6:30 p.m.; Women’s Bible
Study: Wednesday at 9:15 a.m. (Childcare is provided); Pioneer Girls: (for
girls in grades 1-8) is Wednesday evenings at 7:00 p.m.; Christian Service
Brigade: (for boys in grades 1-12) is
Wednesday evenings at 7:00 p.m.;
Girls Growth Group: (for High
School girls) is Wednesday evenings at
7:00 p.m. and the Pastor’s Class meets
Wednesday evenings at 7:30 p.m.
Visit: westchurchpeabody.org or
call 978-535-4112 for more information.
MAY 12, 2016
WEEKLYNEWS.NET - 978-532-5880
9
Learn Cooking Techniques, Not Recipes
ZUCCHINI CAKELETS
What child wouldn’t eat their veggies when they looked like this? In a thrift shop, I found a cast aluminum pan
from “William Sanoma” that bakes little cakes that resemble carrots, radishes, pea pods and cabbage shapes and
made little zucchini cakes using the molds. They were so much fun to bake and even more fun to eat.
By Rosalie Harrington
When I walked into the kitchen at
Rosalie’s, I spotted the new “girl,”
as we called them back in the day,
doing some food preparation. As
soon as she saw me, she quickly
put away some papers that she had
on the counter - a typed recipe, as
it would turn out, something she
had learned to make at the cooking
school she had previously worked at
in Cambridge. The recipe she was
preparing was for a fancy French
cake known as a “rollade,” which is
sprinkled with hazelnuts and chocolate and rolled like a jelly roll before
being cut into one inch pieces.
I wasn’t crazy about a French dessert on my menu, given the restaurant’s northern Italian theme, but
I encouraged her, as I did all of my
kitchen staff, to be creative - as long
as I approved of the outcome. This
young chef, let’s call her Diane, had
worked in a French restaurant and
had spent some time cooking in
France as well, and she was proud
of what she had learned studying in
France for a time. Most of the recipes on my menu were ones I had
grown up with and learned from my
mother and grandmothers - no formal
training. For several weeks now I had
been teaching the new girl to prepare
my food, and I was amazed that
she was hiding her “rollade” recipe
from me, something that I was not
vaguely interested in serving and
which is generic in nature - it was
easy to tell by tasting it that it was a
sponge cake spread with ground hazelnuts and chocolate and rolled into
what is referred to as a jelly roll. I
didn’t need her recipe to make one, I
knew instinctively how it was made.
Another time I will have a chat with
her, I told myself, but not an hour before we opened for dinner.
My restaurant was considered
Northern Italian because of the
emphasis that I put on sauces other
than the heavy tomato sauce that
has its origin in the south and which
most Americans still associate with
Italian. The menu had the kind of
cooking that my grandparents had
many disagreements over. Nono
was from Rome and Noni was from
Abrruzze, and they differed a lot on
which cooking was better. No one in
the Boston are had done a Northern
Italian restaurant and I thought in
1973 that the time was ripe for this.
Students in my classes seemed to
love my light cream sauces, my
homemade ravioli that were stuffed
with local lobster, lasagna with béchamel sauce and pesto. Desserts
were luscious, like Tira Misu, cannoli, ricotta cheesecake. If it worked
All of your ingredients should be at room
temperature.
—Preheat your oven to 350. Grease and flour your
baking pans and tap out the excess flour.
—In a bowl, whisk together 1 1/2 cups of flour, 1/4
tsp. baking powder and a half tsp. each of baking
soda and salt and any spices you like: 1/4 tsp.
cloves and nutmeg and a generous tbsp. cinnamon.
—This would be a good time to try some of the spices,
in tiny amounts, that are supposedly very good for you
like turmeric and cumin. You might want to keep that
batter separately, so you can experiment with confidence.
—Set aside the dry ingredients and in a large bowl
whisk together (or use your mixer) 2 eggs, 1 1/2 tsp.
vanilla extract, 1/2 cup vegetable oil and one cup
sugar and blend until pale in color, about one minute.
—Using a spatula, fold in the flour mixture and stir until
well blended. Grate two medium zucchini. You can use
your food processor as well. You will need about a cup.
—Fold in the zucchini carefully, until well combined
- but do not over-mix.
—If you are lucky enough to have the garden patch
well with my classes, it was sure to
be a hit as a restaurant, I figured.
A week later, I asked Diane if we
could have coffee together. I refreshed her memory about her trying
to hide the recipe for the “rollade.”
She didn’t have much to say, just
something about “my recipes mean
a lot to me.” I explained to Diane,
as I teach my students, that cooking
isn’t about memorizing recipes, it’s
about learning techniques. “I can
think about making so many dishes
from zucchini - soup, salads, pasta
dishes, cakes, I think I can do a whole
book on just the zucchini,” I will say
to people who are overly focused on
recipes. Furthermore, I had shared so
much with her. There has to be mutuality in this relationship, I assured
her, and In any relationship. “And
although I am not crazy about introducing French dishes to the menu,
there must be some techniques that
you learned at ‘school’ that could
benefit our customers,” I told her. It
was a good chat and she worked at
Rosalie’s for another year before she
left to open a restaurant out of state.
pan from William Sanoma spoon a tbsp. into the carrot,
radish and pea pod mold and two tbsp. into the cabbage mold, spreading the batter evenly in the molds.
Your mini muffin pan will work well, too. About a tbsp. in
each. Keep an eye out for the little veggie candies that
you can decorate with later if you use your muffin tin.
—Bake until the center of the cakes spring back
when touched and a toothpick inserted in the center
will come out clean, 10 to 12 minutes.
—Meanwhile make a glaze: In a small saucepan over
medium heat combine 1/4 cup each of water and sugar
and a half tsp. vanilla and bring to a simmer, stirring to
dissolve the sugar. Remove from the heat and cool.
—Transfer to a wire rack and cool for ten minutes. Remove
the cakelets from the pans or your muffin tin and set them
on a wire rack over a baking sheet to collect the drips
—Using a pastry brush, lightly brush the cakelets
with the glaze. Let cool before serving. You will have
enough batter to make a small cake or you can make
more of the mini cakes after washing, drying and
greasing and flouring the pans again.
Sometimes, when we are entertaining, friends will ask if they can help
me in the kitchen because they would
love to learn to make a particular item;
fresh pasta, perhaps, a sauce or a favorite dessert. In most cases, it isn’t really that they don’t know a recipe, it’s
that there’s a certain technique they
haven’t mastered that stands in their
way - like how to saute or to deglaze
a pan and do a reduction. Once they
learn the technique in question, not
only can they solve the challenge of
making the meal that interests them,
but a world of other recipes become
open to them.
My favorite dessert, an upside
down apple tart, or “tarte tatin,”
strikes many as too difficult to tackle
because of the unique lineup of skills
required to execute different parts
of the process. This seems overwhelming to people until they see
each technique and learn it for themselves. A recipe is still needed to
make the tart the first several times,
but it is knowing those techniques
that opens the door for people.
Listen to the level of detail in the
tarte tatin: First, you need to caramelize the sugar, meaning you must
melt the sugar while paying careful
attention to make sure it doesn’t
burn. Then, you have to pour the caramelized sugar into a pie plate, but
the plate should be warm so that the
sugar flows easily, otherwise it will
harden instantly like a candy brittle.
Simple thing to do, but you need to
know the trick. A pie crust is made
ahead of time and refrigerated for
half an hour, which makes it easier to
roll out. The apples are peeled and
sprinkled with lemon juice to prevent
them from browning. Then they are
sauteed in some brown butter and
zest of a lemon and sugar. Only the
zest, the top layer of skin, is zested
- using a special peeler - while the
white, the pith, is avoided.
The apples are quartered and arranged on top of the caramel and
then the dough is rolled and placed
on top, it is fluted and baked in a preheated oven and after it is baked it
is immediately inverted over a plate
being careful not to spill the hot juice
on your arm or hands. Now there’s
an important technique to master!
The tarte tatin is gorgeous and delicious and people enjoy watching it
come together and then devouring it
with vanilla ice cream. Reading this
might seem like I’m trying to discourage you from trying it, but my
goal is really just to convince you to
focus on learning the skills that are
most commonly used in cooking to
“crack the code” of creating dishes
you love. Over time, you’ll find the
same techniques being used in tons of
dishes, and you’ll realize you’re not
cooking from recipes but, rather, by
using the techniques that make each
dish possible. This is when cooking is
fun! One day, you may even feel bold
enough to try making a tarte tatin.
Julia Childs was a favorite
cookbook author of mine and her
books are still wonderful to learn
from because she conveys the
skills needed to master basic techniques, offering a wonderful introduction to the culinary arts. If
you pick up any of the new or old
cookbooks, look for the ones that
give some detail so that you can
better master the techniques that
will set you free in the kitchen.
10
WEEKLYNEWS.NET - 978-532-5880
MAY 12, 2016
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WEEKLYNEWS.NET - 978-532-5880
11
Sports
PHOTOS | BOB ROCHE
At left, Peabody’s Nick Palma dives back to first on a pickoff throw to Swampscott’s Jake Cooper. At right, the Tanners got a strong performance in defeat by Pat Maguire.
Baseball team struggles to find identity
By Anne Marie Tobin
PEABODY — Will the real Peabody
baseball team please stand up.
To say that the Tanners’ 2016 season has
been inconsistent is putting it mildly. The
Tanners have struggled to find their identity, be it pitching or hitting. In its defense,
Peabody, as always, has played an extremely challenging non-league schedule
with four games against top eight ranked
Eastern Massachusetts teams.
But on a chilly Friday night at Bezemes
Field, the Tanners (7-4) showed signs that
they may finally be figuring it all out.
They not only beat the rain, they also
beat visiting Malden Catholic, 5-3 in perhaps their finest all-around effort of the
season.
Starting pitcher Jake Zeuli carried a
perfect game into the fifth inning before
Michael Gerardi broke the ice with a
leadoff walk. Zeuli went the distance to
pick up his second win of the season. It
was the first time in 11 games this season
that a Peabody pitcher delivered a complete-game performance.
On Monday, the Tanners got another
strong performance on the mound from
Pat Maguire, but lost 3-1 at Swampscott.
Peabody’s only run came in the first inning
when Nick Palma singled, reached third on
an error and scored on a double steal.
“It’s frustrating, we did a nice job
against a good team, they got timely hits
and we didn’t,” Peabody coach Mark
Bettencourt said. “We got an early run on
some tomfoolery, but that was it, they had
our number tonight.”
Against MC, Jake Gustin (two runs
scored, double), Palma (two doubles, two
RBI, run scored) and Chris Gillen (double)
led the Tanners with two hits each.
The Lancers came into the game
as the eighth ranked team in Eastern
Massachusetts according to the Boston
Globe’s most recent poll.
All that meant nothing to a fired-up
Tanner squad, which came out swinging.
“We knew that it was a big game, but we
were not at all intimidated,” Palma said.
“We have had games when we came out
not ready to play and it showed. Tonight,
we were ready and we were aggressive
with the bats, then relied on our defense to
get the win.”
Zeuli had an easy first inning. He set the
Lancers down in order on two grounders
PHOTO |ANNE MARIE TOBIN
Jake Zeuli carried a perfect game into the fifth inning as the Tanners defeated Malden
Catholic last Friday.
to second baseman Jon Lawrence, then
caught Ethan Harris looking.
Gustin led off the bottom of the inning
with a single to right then stole second.
Palma sliced an off-field double down
the left field line that scored Gustin from
second. Center fielder Ben Irvine singled Palma home to make it 2-0, then
stole second. First baseman Jake Doherty
reached on an error by the shortstop to
keep the line moving for designated hitter
Eric DeMayo. His routine grounder to
short should have ended the inning on a
force at second base. Instead, it was mishandled, allowing Irvine to score and give
the Tanners a 3-0 lead after one.
Peabody made it 4-0 with a run in the
bottom of the second. Gustin hit a one-out
double to left. Anthony Iannuzzi moved
him to third with a ground ball back to
Lancers’ starter Dave Fisher. Palma picked
up his second RBI with another double, this
one pulled to right field, to knock home
Gustin and knock Fisher out of the game.
Fisher was relieved by Iannuzzi’s
brother, sophomore Nick Iannuzzi. He
promptly gave up a single to center to third
baseman Chris Gillen, but escaped the inning when Palma was cut down at the plate
trying to score.
After that, Iannuzzi was brilliant, al-
lowing only three runners, one hit and one
run in 4.1 innings of relief.
The only run Iannuzzi gave up was courtesy of brother Anthony. He earned family
bragging rights with a sacrifice fly to right
in the fourth that scored second baseman
Jon Lawrence, who led off the inning with
a walk.
Trailing 5-0, Malden Catholic made a
game of it in the top of the fifth.
Gerardi led off with a walk, reached
second on a balk and scored on a single
by Kellen Field. Field took second on the
throw home and scored on a single by
Brendan LaVallee, making it 5-2, Peabody.
In the top of the fifth, Zeuli got the first
two hitters on routine ground balls. Gerardi
hit a bomb to right field but was gunned
down at third 9-6-5 (Palma to Gustin to
Gillen) trying to stretch the double into a
triple.
“We work on relays all the time at practice and stress how important execution is
in games,” Bettencourt said. “It was great
to see them pull off a great play when we
needed it.”
Gillen led off the bottom of the inning
with a long double to right field, but was
picked off by Nick Iannuzzi. Iannuzzi retired the next five batters easily, striking
out the side in the bottom of the sixth.
Zeuli caught Gerardi looking to start the
top of the seventh. Field singled and scored
on LaVellee’s RBI double to center that
made it 5-3. Zeuli settled down and sealed
the win with a ground ball to Gustin at
short and his eighth strikeout of the game.
Five of Zeuli’s punch outs were called
third strikes.
“My fastball had a good bite to it, low
and outside and they just couldn’t hit it
when I threw strikes,” Zeuli said. “I knew
my defense could handle anything they hit
at them and they had my back today and
came up with some big plays when we
needed them, especially the play at third in
the sixth.”
For Palma, the key to the win, and the
key to the rest of the season, is all about
attitude.
“We came ready to play from the very
start today,” he said. “We knew it was a
big game and we just were fired up. We
need to come into every game excited to
play and ready to play with confidence and
that’s what we did today. We jumped out
aggressively with the bats and that momentum carried us the entire game. We can
play with anyone if we come out like we
did tonight.”
Bettencourt agreed.
“I was happy that we were excited to
play and came out with such intensity,”
he said. “I made only two trips to the
mound and the level of confidence with
all the players was the best I have seen all
year long, and they showed it the way we
played. We weathered a couple of storms,
and kept out cool and stayed focused.
Today, they learned how important it is to
show up ready to play.”
Peabody 3, Saugus 1
The win was the second straight for
Peabody, which beat Saugus 3-1 two days
earlier.
The Tanners stole nine bases, played
playing aggressive baseball got timely hitting up and down the order. Maguire got the
win, going four innings, allowing two hits
and striking out five. Palma pitched two solid
innings in relief, allowing one hit and striking
out two. Zeuli had an RBI single, while Ben
Irvine (single, two stolen bases) scored
the game-winning run. Gustin, Doherty,
Lawrence also had base hits and stolen bases,
while Gillen had one base hit and two stolen
bases. Aaron Dollin also singled.
Peabody’s next game is Monday, May
16 against Lynn English at home (4).
12
WEEKLYNEWS.NET - 978-532-5880
MAY 12, 2016
An order of Danish for boys lacrosse, please
By Anne Marie Tobin
PEABODY — When it
comes to high school lacrosse in
Peabody, there is nothing sweeter
than the Bob Danish Cup — the
annual cross-town rivalry game
between Peabody High and
Bishop Fenwick.
This year’s game, won by
Peabody 9-8 in overtime, was
the best ever, said Danish, who
coached lacrosse at Peabody
High from 1977 to 1994; and also
coached football at Fenwick.
“It was the best played game
and most exciting game ever in
the history of the cup,” Danish
said. “The two goalies played
great and neither team had any
quit in them, just a great lacrosse
game from start to finish.”
Attackman Devin Hennessey (2
goals, 4 assists) scored the gamewinner on a sweet wrap around
move at 1:59 of the overtime.
Hennessey was named Peabody’s
MVP, while senior midfielder
Dan Hannon netted a hat trick and
was Fenwick’s MVP.
Peabody has owned the cup,
winning five straight since the
game debuted in 2011, most of
them rather handily.
This year, however, was
shaping up to be a different story.
Down by two goals with under
four minutes to play, Fenwick rallied to score twice, including the
equalizer with 16 seconds left, to
force overtime.
With the momentum and the
ball following a Peabody faceoff
violation, it looked like it might
finally be Fenwick’s turn to hoist
the cup.
Peabody freshman goalkeeper
Austin Leggett, however, had
other ideas and stuffed Fenwick’s
all-time leading scorer, Peabody
resident Chris Napolitano 10 seconds in. Leggett, making only his
second varsity start since stepping
in for the injured Jake Destefano,
also made a game-saving save on
Hannon at the end of regulation.
Fenwick kept up the offensive
pressure. Freshman midfielder
Brian Harrington of Peabody
slipped a pass to Hannon, who
found junior midfielder Chris
Terry alone in front. But Leggett
denied him with a tremendous
save. The Crusaders outshot
Peabody 4-1 in the overtime. But
all it took was one, for Peabody
thanks to Hennessey.
Senior midfielder Sam Mitchell
staked Fenwick to a 1-0 32 seconds in. Hennessey matched up
at the 8:17 mark, with freshman
Sports schedule
THURSDAY, MAy 12
Boys tennis
St. Mary’s at Peabody, 4
Boys lacrosse
Gloucester at Peabody, 6
Girls lacrosse
Fenwick at Spellman, 3:30
Softball
Shawsheen at Fenwick, 3:45
FRIDAY, MAY 13
Girls lacrosse
Peabody at Winthrop, 4
Boys tennis
Peabody at Beverly, 4
Girls tennis
Beverly at Peabody, 4
Pope John at Fenwick, 3:30
Baseball
Fenwick at Austin Prep, 7
SATURDAY, MAY 14
Boys lacrosse
Danvers at Peabody, 10
Williams at Fenwick, 1
Girls lacrosse
Fenwick at Williams, 1
MONDAY, MAY 16
Baseball
English at Peabody, 4
AC at Fenwick, 3:30
Softball
Peabody at English, 4
Fenwick at AC, 3:45
Track
English at Peabody, 4
Girls tennis
Peabody at Revere, 4
Boys tennis
Lynnfield at Fenwick, 3:30
Girls lacrosse
Fenwick at AC, 3:45
Boys lacrosse
AC at Fenwick, 4
TUESDAY, MAY 17
Boys lacrosse
Peabody at Danvers, 4
WEDNESDAY, MAY 18
Baseball
Peabody at Danvers, 4
Fenwick at Williams, 3:30
Softball
Danvers at Peabody, 4
Williams at Fenwick 3:30
Girls lacrosse
Marblehead at Peabody, 5:30
Fenwick at Ham-Wenham, 5
Boys lacrosse
Mystic Valley at Fenwick, 7
Track
Spellman at Fenwick, 3:30
Boys tennis
Spellman at Fenwick, 330
Girls tennis
Fenwick at Spellman, 3:30
PHOTO | BOB ROCHE
Victorious Peabody boys lacrosse players celebrate Devin Hennessey’s
game-winning goal in the Danish Cup game against Bishop Fenwick.
Stephen Ell getting an assist. a tough loss.”
Senior Jay Luna-Gil picked up
Fenwick regained the lead with
1:34 to play on Hannon’s first the ball off the faceoff and raced
goal (from senior Jake Mitchell). downfield. He dished to Santerre,
With one second left, Ell flicked who took it to X, hit Ell cutting
off a weak shot that Crusaders’ out front to give Peabody its
junior goalie Deven Fiandaca of largest lead of the game at 7-4 at
Peabody had in his grasp, but ap- the 11:01 mark.
Fenwick closed to 7-6 on goals
peared to have dropped, thinking
the quarter had ended, allowing from Napolitano and Hannon
Peabody to knot the score at 2-2. with 4:30 left. After Pare won the
Senior Tyler Flynn scored the ensuing faceoff, Ell took a nice
only goal of the second quarter feed from Hennessey and netted
(from Hennessey), sending the his fourth goal of the game, reteams into halftime with Peabody storing Peabody’s two goal game
at 8-6 with 3:58 to play.
on top, 3-2.
After Sam Mitchell won the
The Tanners stretched the lead
to 6-4 in the third quarter on goals faceoff, Fenwick coach Steve
by senior captain Cam Cordaro Driscoll called a timeout. Eight
(from junior Tim January), Ell seconds later, Jake Mitchell
(from Hennessey) and senior found Hannon alone in front to
Aiden Santerre. Hannon and Jake close to 8-7.
“I’d like to say I drew it up that
Mitchell scored for Fenwick,
Sophomore Landon Pare won way, but all I told them was that
the opening faceoff of the fourth they needed to come in on the top
quarter. With senior captain side with four men down low, and
Frankie Falco on the sidelines that’s pretty much what they did,”
with a concussion, Pare handled Driscoll said.
With 1:11 to play, the Tanners
most of the faceoff duties.
“He did a good job being had a chance to ice the game
pressed into action only re- with a man up opportunity, but
cently,” Peabody coach Tony lost possession in an attempt to
O’Donnell said. “We also had play the keep away game, giving
Owen (Brewster) taking a few, Fenwick new life.
(from
Jake
but losing7-3Frankie,
is a 8:58:44
real AM Harrington
Mario LPW.ai who
1 4/28/2016
tenacious fighter on faceoffs was Mitchell) rifled a bullet past
Leggitt to tie the game at 8-8 with
only 16 seconds left in regulation.
Fenwick caught another huge
break when Peabody was called
for a faceoff violation, giving
The Crusaders the possession,
but Leggitt was up to the task, denying Hannon’s bullet with under
10 seconds to play.
Ell had a big day with four
goals, while Santerre and Flynn
each had one goal and one assist. Fenwick’s Jake Mitchell and
Harrington each had a goal and an
assist.
After the game, O’Donnell said
that the Danish Cup isn’t so much
about winning or losing.
“It’s about making memories,”
he said. “Whether they win the
game or lose the game, 20 years
from now they will remember the
game. Our kids are friends with
most of the Fenwick kids, some
of them have grown up together,
and some of them actually came
to our team dinner last night,
that’s how close they are. Tonight
we just worked hard through our
mistakes and neither team quit.”
While obviously disappointed,
Driscoll said he is confident that
Fenwick will break through.
“This is such a special game
and today showed what this crosstown rivalry can do to get kids up
for a big game,” he said. “We
know that our turn will come.
Driscoll had high praise for the
defensive unit.
“I can’t say enough about
our defense, he said. “Bobby
Lombardi played tremendous,
as did (Peabody residents) Tyler
Layton and Deven, who has had
his ups and downs but tonight was
his first complete game from start
to finish and he is only a junior.
He also had high praise for
Napolitano and Harrington, both
of Peabody.
“Brian has such a bright future and is an incredibly talented
player and so gifted and mature
for a freshman,” he said. “Chris,
obviously, is always a factor
whether he scores one goal or 10,
and played hard tonight and never
quit.”
MAY 12, 2016
WEEKLYNEWS.NET - 978-532-5880
13
Saugus rains supreme on Tanner softball
By Joyce Erekson
PEABODY — You don’t have
to tell the Peabody High softball
team that when it rains, it pours.
They already know.
The Tanners were cruising
along with a 4-1 lead over a tough
Saugus team when the rains
came. First it was the “break out
the umbrellas” sort of rain and
then it started raining runs, lots
of runs, and they all came off
Saugus bats. The Sachems scored
11 times in the sixth inning to defeat Peabody, 13-5, a week ago
Wednesday at the Kiley School.
The
Tanners
rebounded
Monday with a 2-0 shutout win
over Swampscott at home.
Tianna Dawe pitched a complete-game two-hitter. She struck
out seven, walked two and was
1-for-3 with an RBI. Amanda
Crawford slugged a home run,
helping the Tanners improve to
7-6.
Against Saugus, three walks
and a hit batter didn’t help the
Tanner cause, but the Sachems
were swinging the bats to beat
the band. After getting only one
hit through the first five innings,
they sent 15 batters to the plate
in the sixth. They pounded out
eight hits including two doubles.
Dawe started for the Tanners with
Mallory LeBlanc coming on in
relief after Dawe (7 hits, 5 walks,
1 strikeouts, 3 hit batters) walked
in a run with the bases loaded to
put Saugus up 6-4.
LeBlanc (5 hits, hit batter)
couldn’t stop the bleeding either.
Saugus hitters, as it turned out,
were just heating up despite the
raw temperatures (in the mid 40s)
and the steady rain.
“We made too many mistakes,”
Peabody coach Butch Melanaphy
said. “That killed us. Some of
the mistakes were made by seniors. They were mistakes that
Lexie Zammer (walk) scored on a
passed ball.
The lead was short-lived.
Saugus (7-3) came into the
game riding a four-game winning streak with some of those
wins coming against the traditional iron of the Northeastern
Conference (Revere, Classical
and Danvers).
In the sixth, Saugus catcher
Mikayla Niles doubled over the
right fielder’s head to drive in the
first run. Jillian Cooper was hit
by a pitch with the bases loaded
to cut the Peabody lead to one at
4-3.
Emma Howard’s single with
the bases loaded tied the game
and Saugus took the lead for
good on an RBI single by Pauline
Ascolese. As it turned out, the
Sachems were just getting started.
Saugus added six more runs
with another bases-loaded walk
and a two-run single by Sheehan.
Allesia Salzillo drove in a run on
PHOTO | ANNE MARIE TOBIN
Alyssa Alpheren scored a run in Peabody’s loss to Saugus.
shouldn’t be made … obviously
Tianna had a tough outing. She
seems to have that one bad inning, but we also made mistakes
behind her and that hurt us.”
Peabody got on the board early,
taking a 1-0 lead in the first inning. Alyssa Alperen got things
going with a lead-off single up
the middle. She advanced on
a LeBlanc sacrifice bunt and
ended up scoring on an infield
error. Saugus came right back
in the top of the second and tied
the game when a throw down to
second base ended up getting past
the outfielder, scoring Caitlin
Sheehan, who had reached on a
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Although Dawe struggled at
times over the next few innings,
the Sachems were unable to capitalize.
Peabody, meanwhile,
added three more runs in the
fourth inning to take a 4-1 lead.
Crawford led off the inning
with a walk, but was erased on a
fielder’s choice by Dawe. Katie
Tansey reached on an error to put
runners at first and third, setting
the stage for Kaitlin ThibodeauCory, who drove in Dawe with a
sacrifice fly to right field. The 2-1
lead went to 3-1 when Alperen
walked with the bases loaded,
bringing in Tansey. The Tanners
added one more that inning when
a line drive to right field with a
second run scoring when the
ball was bobbled. Niles rang one
off the centerfield fence on the
fly to drive in a run and Cooper
added the final touch that inning
with an RBI single, putting the
Sachems up 12-4. Saugus would
score one more run in the top of
the seventh when pitcher Brooke
Westmoreland (5 hits, 3 walks)
hit a line-drive that cleared the
centerfield fence at warp speed
for a solo home run. Peabody
would get one back in the bottom
of the seventh on an RBI single
by Dawe.
“The kids kept fighting,”
Saugus coach Steve Almquist
said. “They were hanging in
there and hanging in there. I told
them if they keep hitting the ball
hard eventually it’s going to fall.
Luckily we got a couple of breaks
with some walks and some hit
batters that we were able to take
advantage of.”
14
WEEKLYNEWS.NET - 978-532-5880
MAY 12, 2016
Girls lacrosse team clinches tourney spot
By Katie Morrison
and Anne Marie Tobin
SAUGUS — The Peabody girls
lacrosse team is making it look
easy.
Last year, the team’s postseason fate went down to final two
games before the Tanners defeated
Lynnfield to punch their tournament ticket with an 8-8 record.
This year, the Tanners (9-2)
have left nothing to chance,
needing only 11 games to
qualify for the Division 1 North
tournament.
Thursday, Peabody picked up
its ninth win at Gloucester, dominating the Fishermen, 15-4. Earlier
in the week, the Tanners defeated
Saugus, 13-2, on a dreary Tuesday
afternoon at Coley Lee Field.
The team followed up the
Gloucester win with a 12-5 win
against Wilmington on Monday.
Amanda Bradley scored five
goals. Lauren Wolff (3 goals),
Chloe Gizzi (2 goals, assist)
and Kirsten Bradley (2 goals)
also scored, while Kelly Crotty
and Sarah Buckley had assists.
Gianna Denisco had nine saves.
Against Gloucester, five different
Tanners had multiple-point games,
including Gizzi, Wolff, Amanda
Bradley, Kirsten Bradley and Ali
Carney, while Michaela Jacks,
Alyssa Shashaty, Carla Patania and
Buckley played well on defensive.
Denisco had six saves.
Against Saugus, the Tanners
got goals from eight different
players, allowing them to work on
their set offensive plays against a
surprisingly feisty Saugus squad
that is in its first varsity season.
Nonetheless, Peabody coach
Dennis Desroches was not taking
the Sachems lightly.
“I thought it was important
today because on Saturday, we
had a rough time being patient on
offense and letting plays develop,”
said Desroches. “Today, we told
them to be patient and let the plays
run through once or twice, and
don’t try to force anything.”
The Tanners got on the board
right away as Kirsten Bradley took
the ball to the net uncontested in
the first 20 seconds of play. Emma
Rigol added a goal a minute later,
and a turnover led to another quick
goal for Peabody from Gizzi.
The Sachems took some time to
get their bearings defensively, and
three more goals (from Kirsten
Bradley, Wolff and Amanda
Bradley) gave Peabody a 6-0 lead
after 10 minutes.
The Tanners took a 9-0 lead into
By Matt Fraser
PEABODY — From a wonloss perspective, this has not been
a pleasant season for Peabody
boys tennis. The Tanners’ 0-11
record is not representative of the
team’s effort and morale.
Both were on display in a 4-1
loss to visiting Lynn Classical
Friday. A doubles sweep effectively sealed the win for the Rams
which won by default at third singles, due to a season-long shortage
of roster spots on Peabody.
“It’s obviously a disadvantage
in terms of scoring, but, even more
so, on our winning mindset,” said
Tanners’ first-year coach Keith
McCabe, who is recruiting potential players while teaching eight
grade at the middle school.
“My job includes finding athletes who don’t play a spring sport
and introduce them to the game; so
it’s a numbers thing as much as it
is a lack of experience. It’s been a
challenge staying upbeat but this is
a really great group of guys. We’re
under no illusions about what we
are as a team so we’re doing our
best to improve every day.”
Senior captain Djordje Sz­
mardzic had the lone win, his first
of the season, defeating Simon
Kazimierczyk (6-2, 6-3).
“He’s had his ups and downs but
he continues to show up and compete so it was great seeing his hard
work finally pay off,” said McCabe.
“I thought I had everything
working out there (today), my
serving being the only exception,” said Smardzic.
“(Kazimierczyk) is big kid. I
tried to keep him moving, up and
down and side to side as much as
possible,” Smardzic said.
The same approach was used
(in favor of the Rams) at first singles where sophomore Moses Ba
defeated junior Sam Gottsegen,
6-3, 6-2, to wrap up the final
match of the day.
Gottsegen and Ba exchanged
three points to begin a lengthy
first set before Ba’s agility frustrated Gottsegen into dropping
the final three points.
In the second set, the opponents again exchanged points
until the score stood tied at two
games each. Ba would once again
PHOTO | KATIE MORRISON
Emma Rigol’s early goal against Saugus helped the Tanner clinch a berth in the state tournament.
the half, but Saugus was able to
slow down the Peabody offense
and apply some defensive pressure.
“Saugus tried to come out and
pressure the ball and everyone off
the ball, so it was important that
we didn’t panic with someone in
our face playing uptight defense
like that,” said Desroches.
The Sachems limited the
Tanners to four goals in the
second half, as Peabody got a
chance to go to its bench and
play some of their substitutes.
The in-your-face style of defense
the Sachems employed led to a
few turnovers, and kept Peabody
away from the net.
Gizzi scored twice and notched
two assists for Peabody, and
Wolff added three goals and an
assist. Rigol scored again early
in the second half, and Jillian
Amirault, Jacks and Caroline
O’Niell added one goal each.
While the score may not indicate a strong defensive effort from
the Sachems, Crepeau knows that
the score doesn’t tell the whole
story, especially when a first-year
team is taking on a powerhouse.
“I actually think the defense
played their best game of the
season today and I’ll think everything is improving every day,”
Crepeau said.
Tanner boys tennis team keeps on keepin’ on
find his rhythm, this time through
serving, leading to four straight
games to close out the match.
Classical took an early 2-0 lead
with the sweep in doubles, featuring wins from Calvin Cheung/
Mehdi Bakhouch (6-0, 6-0 over
Ben Leavitt/Tommy Richards) as
well as Gerry Ennis/Patrick Gibb
(6-0, 6-1 over Brendan Long/Rob
Picano).
“They’re all competing to the
best of their abilities but they’re
all new to the game of tennis,” said
McCabe of the Tanners’ tandems.
“The chemistry is there. It’s just a
matter of inexperience,” McCabe
said.
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school registration open
Registration for the Peabody
Basketball School is open. The
school is operated by Peabody
High boys varsity coach Thad
Broughton.
The staff consists of coaches
and players from Peabody High
School. To sign up, contact the
Peabody Recreation Department
ASAP as space is limited.
The school will be held June
27-July 1 and July 18-22 at
Peabody High from 9 a.m. to 2
p.m. Participants may sign up for
one week or two. The school is
open to boys entering third grade
through ninth grade. The cost is
$125 per week.
For further information or to
register, contact Ann Gray at the
Peabody Recreation Department
at 978-536-7130. Online registration is available at peabodyrecreation.com. Participants may also
register at the Peabody Recreation
Department office located at 50
Farm Ave.
15
CITY OF PEABODY
ZONING BOARD OF APPEALS
CITY OF PEABODY
ZONING BOARD OF APPEALS
CITY OF PEABODY
ZONING BOARD OF APPEALS
LEGAL NOTICE
LEGAL NOTICE
LEGAL NOTICE
Notice is hereby given that the
Board of Appeals of the City of Peabody will
hold a Public hearing on Monday, May 23,
2016 at 7:00 p.m. at the Wiggin Auditorium, City Hall, 24 Lowell Street, Peabody,
Massachusetts 01960 on the application
of Scott Lee, 3 Spinale Road, Peabody,
Massachusetts, for a Variance from the
Provisions of the Zoning Ordinance 2013,
specifically Section 7.2 as it applies to the
premises known as 3 Spinale Road, Map
054, Lot 102E, Peabody, Massachusetts.
Petitioner seeks a variance for
proposed addition and needs relief to rear
yard of 23+/- feet instead of 35 feet required; and front yard of 19+/- feet instead
of 20 feet required
Property is located
in an R1A zoning district. The plot plan and
application are available for review at the
City Clerk and Board of Appeals Office, City
Hall and will be available at the time of Public Hearing.
Notice is hereby given that the
Board of Appeals of the City of Peabody will
hold a Public hearing on Monday, May 23,
2016 at 7:00 p.m. at the Wiggin Auditorium, City Hall, 24 Lowell Street, Peabody,
Massachusetts 01960 on the application
of Kevin O’Donnell, 16 Granite Street, Peabody, Massachusetts, for a Variance from
the Provisions of the Zoning Ordinance
2013, specifically Section 7.2 as it applies
to the premises known as 16 Granite Street,
Map 103, Lot 058, Peabody, Massachusetts.
Petitioner seeks a variance for
proposed Accessory Structure and needs
relief to right side yard of 0+/- feet instead
of 5 feet required; and proposed 672 square
foot in area rather than 500 s.f. allowed.
Property is located in an R1
zoning district. The plot plan and application
are available for review at the City Clerk and
Board of Appeals Office, City Hall and will be
available at the time1x4.5
of Public Hearing.
3 Spinale rd
Board Of Appeals
Frances Bisazza-Gallugi
Chairperson
Private Party Ad
Weekly News
May 5 and May 12, 2016
Notice is hereby given that the Board of
Appeals of the City of Peabody will hold a
Public hearing on Monday, May 23, 2016,
at 7:00 p.m. at the Wiggin Auditorium City
Hall, 24 Lowell Street, Peabody, Massachusetts 01960 on the application of Michael S.
Hinchion and Elizabeth F. Paulino, c/o John
R. Keilty, Esquire, for a Variance from the
Provisions of the Zoning Ordinance 2014,
specifically Section 7.2 as it applies to the
premises known as 8 Winnegance Avenue,
Map 109, Lot 62, Peabody, Massachusetts.
Petitioners seek a variance to subdivide the
property into two lots, Lots 1 and 2.
Lot 1: The applicant seeks lot area of 8,634
s.f. rather than 15,000 s.f.; frontage 81.00
feet rather than 125 feet as required; front
yard setback of 15 feet rather than 20 feet
(existing) and minimum buildable lot width
of 51 feet rather than 60 feet (existing).
Lot 2:
The applicant seeks frontage for
Lot 2 of 45.62 feet rather than 125 feet as
required.
The property is located in an R-1A zoning
district. The plot plan and application are
available for review at the City Clerk and
Board of Appeals Office, City Hall and will
be available at the time of Public Hearing.
The Board will consider
1x4.5 the matter on Remand from the Superior Court, Civil Docket
16 Granite
No. 1577CV00852-A.
Board of Appeals
Frances Bisazza-Gallugi,
Chairperson
Private Party Ad
Weekly News
Ad to run: May 5 and May 12, 2016
Board of Appeals
Frances Bisazza-Gallugi.
Chairman
Private Party Ad
Weekly news
Ad to run: May 5 and May 12, 2016
DRS. MERLE, ZICHERMAN & ASSOCIATES
CITY OF PEABODY
ZONING BOARD OF APPEALS
LEGAL NOTICE
Notice is hereby given that the
Board of Appeals of the City of Peabody will
hold a Public hearing on Monday, May 23,
2016 at 7:00 p.m. at the Wiggin Auditorium, City Hall, 24 Lowell Street, Peabody,
Massachusetts 01960 on the application of
Manuel F. Rabbitt, Esq., 55 Ferncroft Road,
Suite 201, Danvers, Massachusetts, for a
Variance from the Provisions of the Zoning
Ordinance 2013, specifically Section 7.2 as
it applies to the premises known as 140 Winona Street, Map 044, Lot 086, Peabody,
Massachusetts.
Petitioner desires to subdivide
the lot into Lot A and Lot B. Each of these
lots would contain at least the minimum lot
area of 20,000 square feet as required in the
R-1 Single Family Zoning District. Relief for
Lot A: Lot frontage of 20+/- feet instead of
1x5Lot Width of 20+/125 feet required; and
8 Winnegance
feet instead of 93.75
feet required; Relief
for Lot B: Lot frontage of 104.86+/- feet instead of 125 feet required; and side yard of
4+/- feet instead of 20 feet required.
Property is located in an R1A
zoning district. The plot plan and application
are available for review at the City Clerk and
Board of Appeals Office, City Hall and will be
available at the time of Public Hearing.
Board of Appeals
Frances Bisazza-Gallugi,
Chairperson
Private Party Ad
Weekly News
Ad to run: May 5 and May 12, 2016
PEDIATRIC DENTISTRY & ORTHODONTICS SINCE 1975
PEDIATRIC DENTISTS
Stuart G. Merle, D.M.D.
Alan R. Zicherman, D.D.S.
Federico F. Lago, D.M.D.
Toral G. Joshi, D.D.S.
John M. McLay, D.D.S.
Timothy M. Finelli, D.D.S.
Dentistry for Adults
Children & Adults
www.mzdental.com
ORTHODONTIST
MEDICAL ARTS BUILDING
One Roosevelt Avenue
Peabody, MA 01960
(978) 535-2500
We wish to congratulate the following members of the “NO CAVITY CLUB”
for the month of APRIL, 2016
A Special Thank You to all of the parents who assisted with this achievement.
Ada Agustin
Madison Muise
Nadia DelSonno Chaz Goodwin
Isabella Bettencourt Sofia DelSonno Nevaeh Goodwin Michael Muise
Julia Bode
Adriana Demille Francesco Guarino Michael Murphy
Kristina Bode
Olivia Dibella
Giuseppe Guarino Damien Noto
Abigail Brogna
Courtney Dimarzo Benjamin Hardenstine Joseph Nugent
Samantha Brogna Richard Dimarzo Camden Hill
Steven O’Hara
Lucas Budomo
Aidan Pais
Cassandra Donovan Luc Hoch
Samantha Cahill Matthew Dragicevic Isabella Iacobucci Alessandra Parello
David Canedo
Devon Espinola Sean Jagodynski Gianna Parello
Meadow Jordan Angelina Parziale
Brendan Ciampa Jacob Espinola
Brayden Clary
Spencer Parziale
Kaylie Feldberg Owen Jordan
Manahil Khan
Brianna Clary
Jasper Peiken
Sawyer Field
Christian Kocur Kayla Perez
Olivia Costa
Kaitlin Flaherty
Sophia Costa
Marissa Perez
Shamus Flaherty Robert Lavey
Ty Couillard
Nathaniel Perez
Danati Fronouto Emily Lima
Cam Cuzzi
Genaro Fronouto Nathan Mangiafico-Mi Jacob Pincus
Daniela D’Alleva Julianne Gabriel Jake Martin
Tyler Pincus
Mia Mastrangelo Owen Pollock
Ryan Dacy
Tori Gagnon
Louis Minaya
Grace Davie
Caitlin Reilly
Taylor Gallant
Aiden DeFrancesco Mackenzie Garcia Ava Molineaux
Olivia Reilly
Jay DellaPorta
Jacqueline Gardikas Kate Molineaux Isabella Rozza
Frank Molle
Shayla DellaPorta Jada Gonzalez
Matthew Ryder
Thomas Deller
Joshua Gonzalez Kyle Montenario Andre Santos
Anthony Schipilliti
Julianna Schipilliti
Meghan Sears
Tabitha Sears
Tarah Shea
Joseph Sousa
Kendall Stalder
Thomas Surett
CITY OF PEABODY
ZONING BOARD OF APPEALS
LEGAL NOTICE
Notice is hereby given that the
Board of Appeals of the City of Peabody will
hold a Public hearing on Monday, May 23,
2016 at 7:00 p.m. at the Wiggin Auditorium, City Hall, 24 Lowell Street, Peabody,
Massachusetts 01960 on the application of
Timothy McDonald, 3 Rose Circle, Peabody,
Massachusetts, for a Variance from the
Provisions of the Zoning Ordinance 2013,
specifically Section 7.2 as it applies to the
premises known as 3 Rose Circle, Map 101,
Lot 089, Peabody, Massachusetts.
Petitioner seeks a variance
for proposed deck and needs relief in the
rear yard of 17+/- feet instead of 35 feet
required; and relief for addition with right
side yard of 12+/- feet instead of 15 feet required; and rear yard of 29+/- feet instead of
35 feet required.
Property is located
in an R1 zoning district. The plot plan and
application are available for review at the
City Clerk and Board of Appeals Office, City
Hall and will be available at the time of Public Hearing.
Board of Appeals
Frances Bisazza-Gallugi,
Chair Person
Private Party Ad
Weekly News
Ad to run: May 5 and May 12, 2016
Avery Swanson
Elijah Swanson
Nathaniel Swanson
Ava Targett
Natalia Targett
David Tashjian
Robert Tashjian
Adrianna Todisco
Nicholas Tracchia
Jennifer Urena
Noah Wade
CITY OF PEABODY
PEABODY CITY COUNCIL
LEGAL NOTICE
NOTICE OF PUBLIC HEARING
Notice is hereby given that the City Council
of the City of Peabody, acting as the Special Permit Granting Authority, will conduct
a public hearing on THURSDAY EVENING,
MAY 26, 2016, at 7:30 P.M., in the Frank
L. Wiggin Auditorium, City Hall, 24 Lowell
Street, Peabody, MA on the application from
DMC AUTO DETAIL INC., 25 Perkins Street,
Peabody, MA FOR A SPECIAL PERMIT TO
OPERATE AN AUTO DETAILING BUSINESS
at 23 UPTON STREET, PEABODY, MA as
filed
in accordance with Sections 4.2.5, 5, 6.1
and 15.7 of the Peabody Zoning Ordinance.
PEABODY CITY COUNCIL
COUNCILLOR PETER M. MCGINN
CITY COUNCIL PRESIDENT
Timothy E. Spanos
City Clerk
Weekly News
MAY 12 and 19, 2016
16
WEEKLYNEWS.NET - 978-532-5880
MAY 12, 2016
Legals
NOTICE OF MORTGAGEE’S SALE OF REAL ESTATE
By virtue and in execution of the Power of Sale contained in a certain
mortgage given by Scott M. Price, Brenda M. Price to Mortgage Electronic Registration Systems,
Inc. as nominee for 1-800-East-West Mortgage Company dated October 3, 2003, recorded with
the Essex County (Southern District) Registry of Deeds in Book 21888, Page 91; said mortgage
was then assigned to BAC Home Loans Servicing, LP fka Countrywide Home Loans Servicing,
LP by virtue of an assignment dated August 2, 2011, and recorded in Book 30580, at Page 396,
CITY OF PEABODY
and further assigned to U.S. Bank Trust, N.A., as Trustee for LSF9 Master Participation Trust by
PEABODY CITY COUNCIL
virtue of an assignment dated April 21, 2015, and recorded in Book 34027, at Page 365, of which
mortgage the undersigned is the present holder for breach of conditions of said mortgage and
AN ORDINANCE AMENDING SECTION 19-81
for the purpose of foreclosing the same will be sold at PUBLIC AUCTION at 10:00 AM on June 8,
“PARKING PROHIBITED – HANDICAP ZONE”
2016, on the mortgaged premises. The entire mortgaged premises, all and singular, the premises
OF THE CODE OF THE CITY OF PEABODY
as described in said mortgage:
The land in Peabody, together with the buildings thereon, bounded and
BE IT ORDAINED BY THE CITY COUNCIL OF THE CITY OF PEABODY AS FOLLOWS:
described as follows: Northeasterly : by Lot 379 shown on plan hereinafter mentioned, 100 feet;
Southeasterly: by Sheldon Road, 50 feet; Southwesterly: by Lot 377 shown on said plan; 100 feet;
SECTION ONE:
That Section 19-81 entitled “Parking Prohibited, Handicapped Zone”
and Northwesterly: by Lot 368 shown on said plan, 50 feet. Be all of said measurements more or
of the Code of the City of Peabody, Massachusetts, is hereby amended
less, or however otherwise bounded, measured or described. Being Lot 378 as shown on a plan
by inserting therein the following:
of “Gardner Park”, Peabody, Mass., owned by the O’Connell Real Estate Trust recorded with Essex
South District Registry of Deeds, Book of Plans 25, Pan 38. For title reference see Deed Book
In front of and along the property line of 45 Washington Street
17832, Page 340
In front of and along the property line of 1 Krochmal Road
Subject to and with the benefit of easements, reservation, restrictions, and taking of
(sign posted on Krochmal Road side)
record, if any, insofar as the same are now in force and applicable.
In the event of any typographical error set forth herein in the legal description of the
SECTION TWO: All ordinances or parts of ordinances inconsistent herewith are hereby repealed.
premises, the description as set forth and contained in the mortgage shall control by reference.
This property has the address of 4 Sheldon Road, Peabody, MA 01960
SECTION THREE: This ordinance shall take effect as provided by law.
Together with all the improvements now or hereafter erected on the property and all
easements, rights, appurtenances, rents, royalties, mineral, oil and gas rights and profits, water
rights and stock and all fixtures now or hereafter a part of the property. All replacements and
INTRODUCED
MARCH 31, 2016
additions shall also be covered by this sale.
ORDERED PUBLISHED
MARCH 31, 2016
Terms of Sale:
Said premises will be sold subject to any and all unpaid
PUBLISHED
APRIL 14, 2016
taxes and assessments, tax sales, tax titles and other municipal liens and water or sewer liens
ADOPTED
MAY 5, 2016
and State or County transfer fees, if any there are, and TEN THOUSAND DOLLARS ($10,000.00)
PUBLICATION OF ADOPTION
MAY 12, 2016
in cashier’s or certified check will be required to be paid by the purchaser at the time and place of
the sale as a deposit and the balance in cashier’s or certified check will be due in thirty (30) days,
SUBMITTED TO HIS HONOR THE MAYOR, MAY 6, 2016
at the offices of Doonan, Graves & Longoria, LLC, 100 Cummings Center, Suite 225D, Beverly, MA
APPROVED BY HIS HONOR THE MAYOR, MAY 6 7, 2016
01915, time being of the essence.
The Mortgagee reserves the right to postpone the sale to a later date by public proclamation at the time and date appointed for the sale and to further postpone at any adjourned
______________________________________________
saledate by public proclamation at the time and date appointed for the adjourned sale date.
(Hon. Edward A. Bettencourt, Jr., Mayor)
The premises is to be sold subject to and with the benefit of all easements, restrictions, leases, tenancies, and rights of possession, building and zoning laws, encumbrances, condominium liens, if any and all other claim in the nature of liens, if any there be.
ATTEST_____________________________________
In the event that the successful bidder at the foreclosure sale shall default in purchas(Timothy E. Spanos, City Clerk)
ing the within described property according to the terms of this Notice of Sale and/or the terms
the Memorandum of Sale executed at the time of foreclosure, the Mortgagee reserves the right
Weekly News
45oftoWashington+1
Krochmal
sell the property by foreclosure
deed to the second highest bidder, providing that said second
May 12, 2016
highest bidder shall deposit with the Mortgagee’s attorneys, DOONAN, GRAVES, & LONGORIA
2x5.5
LLC, 100 Cummings Center, Suite 225D, Beverly, MA 01915, the amount of the required deposit
as set forth herein within three (3) business days after written notice of the default of the previous
highest bidder and title shall be conveyed to the said second highest bidder within thirty (30) days
of said written notice.
If the second highest bidder declines to purchase the within described property, the
Mortgagee reserves the right to purchase the within described property at the amount bid by the
second highest bidder.
The foreclosure deed and the consideration paid by the successful bidder shall be
held in escrow by DOONAN, GRAVES, & LONGORIA LLC, (hereinafter called the “Escrow Agent”)
CITY OF PEABODY
until the deed shall be released from escrow to the successful bidder at the same time as the
PEABODY CITY COUNCIL
CITY OF PEABODY
consideration is released to the Mortgagee, thirty (30) days after the date of sale, whereupon all
PEABODY CITY COUNCIL
obligations of the Escrow Agent shall be deemed to have been properly fulfilled and the Escrow
LEGAL NOTICE
Agent shall be discharged.
NOTICE OF PUBLIC HEARING
LEGAL NOTICE
Other terms to be announced at the sale.
NOTICE OF PUBLIC HEARING
Dated: April 28, 2016 U.S. Bank Trust, N.A., as Trustee for LSF9 Master Participation Trust By:
Notice is hereby given that the City Council
Reneau J Longoria. Esq., DOONAN, GRAVES, & LONGORIA LLC 100 Cummings Center, Suite
of the City of Peabody, acting as the SpeNotice is hereby given that the City Council
225D Beverly, MA 01915 (978) 921-2670, www.dgandl.com52099 (PRICE) FEI # 1078.01704
cial Permit Granting Authority, will conduct
of the City of Peabody, acting as the Spe05/12/2016, 05/19/2016, 05/26/2016
a public hearing on THURSDAY EVENING,
cial Permit Granting Authority, will conduct
MAY 26, 2016, at 7:30 P.M., in the Frank
a public hearing on THURSDAY EVENING,
Weekly News
L. Wiggin Auditorium, City Hall, 24 LowMAY 26, 2016, at 7:30 P.M., in the Frank
MAY 12, May 19, May 26, 2016
ell Street, Peabody, MA on the application
L. Wiggin Auditorium, City Hall, 24 Lowell
from FARHAD & FARID, INC, c/o Rezzaqul
Street, Peabody, MA on the application from
Chowdhury, President, 99 Florence Street,
JERMAINE ANDERSON, 123 Killam Hill
Malden, MA FOR A SPECIAL PERMIT TO
Road, Boxford, MA FOR A SPECIAL PERMIT
OPERATE A CONVENIENCE STORE at 139
TO HOLD A KENNEL LICENSE at 147 SUMLYNNFIELD STREET, UNIT 100, PEABODY,
MIT STREET, UNIT 6, PEABODY, MA as filed
MA as filed in accordance with Sections
in accordance with Sections 4.2.5, 5, 6.1
4.2.5, 5, 6.1 and 15.7 of the Peabody Zonand 15.7 of the Peabody Zoning Ordinance.
ing Ordinance.
PEABODY
CITY OF PEABODY
1x4 CITY COUNCIL
PEABODY CITY COUNCIL
COUNCILLOR
CITY OF PEABODY
ZONING BOARD OF APPEALS
139
Lynnfield stPETER M. MCGINN
COUNCILLOR PETER M. MCGINN
CITY COUNCIL PRESIDENT
ZONING BOARD OF APPEALS
CITY COUNCIL PRESIDENT
LEGAL NOTICE
Timothy E. Spanos
LEGAL NOTICE
Timothy E. Spanos
City Clerk
Notice 1x4
is hereby given that the
City Clerk
Notice is hereby given that the
Board of Appeals
of the City
147 Summit
St. of Peabody will
Weekly News
Weekly News
Board of Appeals of the City of Peabody will
hold a Public hearing on Monday, May 23,
MAY 12 and 19, 2016
May 12 and 19, 2016
hold a Public hearing on Monday, May 23,
2016 at 7:00 p.m. at the Wiggin Auditori2016 at 7:00 p.m. at the Wiggin Auditorium, City Hall, 24 Lowell Street, Peabody,
um, City Hall, 24 Lowell Street, Peabody,
Massachusetts 01960 on the application of
Massachusetts 01960 on the application of
MJP Properties, Inc. (Michael Panzero), 78
Louis and Donna Canuel, 32 Broad Street,
Essex Street, Middleton, Massachusetts, for
Peabody, Massachusetts, for a Variance
a Variance from the Provisions of the Zonfrom the Provisions of the Zoning Ordiing Ordinance 2013, specifically Section
nance 2013, specifically Section 7.2 as it
7.2 as it applies to the premises known as 5
applies to the premises known as 32 Broad
Fairview Road, Map 124, Lot 163, Peabody,
Street, Map 056, Lot 089, Peabody, MassaMassachusetts.
chusetts.
Petitioner proposes to volunPetitioner seeks a variance for
tarily demolish and reconstruct the sinproposed addition and needs relief to left
gle family dwelling on the pre-existing,
side yard of 14+/- feet instead of 20 feet
non-conforming lot. The petitioner seeks
required; Relief for accessory structure of
the following relief from the Board of Ap660 square feet instead of 500 square feet
peals: Proposed front yard setback of
allowed and right side yard for accessory
11.5+/- feet rather than 20 feet required; and
structure of 5+/- feet instead of 10 feet reside setback of 6+/- feet rather than 15 feet
quired.
required.
Property is located in an R1
Property is located in an R1A
zoning district. The plot plan and application
zoning district. The plot plan and application
are available for review at the City Clerk and
are available for review at the City Clerk and
Board of Appeals Office, City Hall and will be
Board of Appeals Office, City Hall and will be
available at the time 1x5
of Public Hearing.
available at the time of Public Hearing.
5 Fairview Rd
Board of Appeals
Board of Appeals
Frances Bisazza-Gallugi,
Frances Bisazza-Gallugi,
Chairperson
Chairperson
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Private Party Ad
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CITY OF PEABODY
ZONING BOARD OF APPEALS
LEGAL NOTICE
Notice is hereby given that the Board of
Appeals of the City of Peabody will hold a
Public hearing on Monday, May 23, 2016
at 7:00 p.m. at the Wiggin Auditorium, City
Hall, 24 Lowell Street, Peabody, Massachusetts 01960 on the application of 9 Bourbon Street Nominee Trust, John Athanasopoulos, 12 Presidential Circle, Beverly,
Massachusetts, for a Variance from the
Provisions of the Zoning Ordinance 2013,
specifically Section 7.2 as it applies to the
premises known as 9 Bourbon Street, Map
036, Lot 019, Peabody, Massachusetts.
Petitioner desires to construct a
building with a left side yard of 20+/- feet
rather than 100 feet required; a front yard of
15+/- feet rather than the 50 feet required;
a rear yard of 6+/- feet rather than 50 feet
required; a front yard landscape buffer of
variable width with a minimum of 4+/- feet
in depth rather than the 25 feet required; a
left side neighborhood buffer of zero feet in
depth rather than the neighborhood buffer
depth required; a left side yard landscape
buffer of 15+/- feet in depth rather than
the 25 feet required; a right side landscape
buffer of variable width with a minimum of
zero; a rear yard landscape buffer of variable
width with a minimum of zero; 6 street trees
rather than the 17 required; a waiver from
providing an off street loading area; and 38
parking spaces rather than 40 spaces required.
Property is located in a BR zoning district. The plot plan and application
are available for review at the City Clerk and
Board of Appeals Office, City Hall and will be
available at the time of Public Hearing.
Board of Appeals
Frances Bisazza-Gallugi
Chairperson
Private Party Ad
Weekly News
Ad to2x8
run” May 5 and May 12, 2016
sale of realestate
Classifieds
HELP WANTED
NOTICE: Don’t pay to find work before you get the job.
Legitimate job placement firms that work to fill specific positions cannot charge an upfront fee. For free information
about avoiding employment service scams, write the Federal
Trade Commission at Washington DC 20580 or call the National Fraud Information Center at 800-876-7060
ROOFERS AND LABORERS: Drivers license helpful, not
required. At least 2 years experience. Please call and leave
message. 978-531-9557
HOUSEKEEPER NEEDED: Housekeeper needed Tuesdays
and Fridays from 8:30 am until 1:00 pm. Non Professionals
only need apply. 781-334-6753
ART/HOUSE PORTRAITS
HOUSE PORTRAITS: House portraits by Paula Costello (as
seen in the Weekly News on the Back Page). The perfect
gift for Mother’s Day and Father’s Day. Prices start at only
$60.00 (11 x 14). Gift certificates available. 781-3343997
AUTO AUCTION
NOTICE: Notice is herein given by Mallia’s Towing Inc. 1611x5 Mass. 01960. Pursuant to the
163 Washington St. Peabody
32255,
Broad
Provision of M.G.L.c.
section 39A that on May 31st 2016
at 12:00pm at 161-163 Washington St Peabody MA 01960
the following Motor vehicle will be sold at private sale to satisfy our garage keeper’s lien thereon for towing and storage
charges and expenses of notices and sale.
Vehicle Description: 2008 Dodge Avenger, Registration # 5CT
M7. Vehicle Owner: Samantha Covency, 22 School Street,
Rockport MA 01966
Mary Beth Mallia 978-531-9832
FREE STUFF
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We’ll run your line classified ad for free stuff for FREE! Call
in, mail, or drop off your ad to us and we’ll run it for 2 issues
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free item.
CEMETERY PLOT
PURITAN LAWN: Cemetery, two plots, historical section.
Will negotiate. Section One, lot 1141, graves 1 and 2. Please
call 781-275- 8831
MAY 12, 2016
WEEKLYNEWS.NET - 978-532-5880
HANDYMAN
Classifieds
17
LANDSCAPING
LANDSCAPING
FURNITURE FOR SALE
CONFERENCE TABLE: Solid walnut L84” by W37” conference table with glass
top in perfect condition with matching chairs. $500 or best offer. Call Richard
at 978-857-5387.
EXECUTIVE DESK: Solid cherry wood L71” by W35” executive desk with leather inlays and leather chair with matching solid cherry wood credenza L35” by
W21” in perfect condition. New retail $6000. $1000 or best offer. Call Richard
at 978-857-5387.
TV ARMOIRE: Brand new Teak TV Plasma Armoire. Original purchase price
$3600. Absolutely perfect condition $1000 or best offer. Purchaser must provide
own moving. Call Richard at 978-857 5387.
COMPUTER SERVICES
PC GEEK FOR HIRE: Home/small office. PC running slow? Annoying pop-ups?
Spyware and virus removal, software/hardware upgrades and installs, network
and Internet set up. Maintenance and system tune-ups to improve performance.
No hidden charges or gimmicks. Call Glen 978-531-1984.
FREE COMPUTER CHECKUP, A $75.00 Value!: A complete review of your
computer system. Computer services, support and training also available. Call
Chris at All-Tech Networks today for immediate scheduling. 978-535-4193.
APPLE CERTIFIED: Switching PC to a Mac? Need help picking out a new Apple
Computer? Need help with your iMac, MacBook, iPad, or iPhone? Call Joe Apple Certified: 978.210.2835
Carpentry • Painting
Rotted Trim • Attic Stairways
Glass & Screen Repair • Recaulking
Doors & Locks Installed • Tile Repair
Odd Jobs • Masonry • Gutters
Custom Shelving
No Job Too Small!
On Time. Done Right.
Lynnfield 781-334-3070
Peabody 978-531-5939
www.mrhandyman.com
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Spring Clean-up
Fall Clean-up
Established 1984 • Fully Insured
If you wish to place a lost and found ad ... It’s FREE... Just call me and I will
run your ad for 2 weeks free... From pets to treasures... We’re here to help...
978-532-5880 ext. 325 or [email protected]
****************
Ferrari
Landscaping Company
• Specializing in weekly lawn maintenance
• Spring and fall cleanups
• Trimming of hedges and bushes
• Mulching and mulch delivery ($25 delivery fee)
• Premium red, $58 per yard
• Dark black, $51 per yard
• All major credit cards accepted
• Fully insured
Call 781-586-1452
CARPENTRY • PAINTING • TILE
978-314-4191
L
&I
ICENSED
CARPENTRY
Landscape Design
& Construction
www.ScenicLandscapeInc.com
LOST & FOUND
READER NOTICE: This newspaper will never knowingly accept any advertisement that is illegal or considered
fraudulent. If you have questions or doubts about any ads on these pages we advise that before responding
or sending money ahead of time, you check with the local Attorney General’s Consumer Fraud Line and /or
the Better Business Bureau. Also be advised that some phone numbers published in these ads may require an
extra charge. In all cases of questionable value, such as promises of guaranteed income from work-at-home
programs, money to loan, etc., if it sounds too good to be true – it may in fact be exactly that. This newspaper
cannot be held responsible for any negative consequences that occur as a result of your doing business with
any of these advertisers.
978-921-1666
NSURED
www.amoutsoulashomeimprovementservices
.com
Follow us on
Facebook
LANDSCAPING
Green Care Landscaping
DONEGAN
LANDSCAPING
NOW BOOKING
SPRING
CLEAN-UPS
781-632-5282
Residential
Lynnfield
Commercial
Residential & Commercial
SPRING CLEAN-UP
CLARKE BROTHERS
31 Years Experience Licensed and Insured
Additions - Decks - Siding - Kitchens
Windows - Roofing - Gutters
Call Today For Free Estimates
Remodeling of All Types
•Mulch •Dethatching
•Bobcat Work
•Weekly Maintenance
•First mowing free
Paul DeNisco
Mason Contractor
Brick • Block • Stone
Concrete • Tile
Free Estimates
978-532-4066
978-535-5665
Fully Insured
Licensed
D.S. HANDYMAN REPAIRS
Carpentry/Rotted Wood/Odd Jobs
REMODELING
Doors/Windows/Decks/Stairs & Gutters
781-838-1415 INSURED
w w w. c l a r k e b r o t h e r s . c o m
• Spring Clean-Up
• Complete Lawn Care
• Weekly Maintenance
• Tree & Branch Removal
• Shrub & Hedge
Pruning & Removal
978-535-0507
Free Estimates
HANDYMAN
Spring clean-ups
Weekly, Maintenance
Mulch • Pruning • Rootilling
978 968 8228
978 531 8257
HELP WANTED
TELEPHONE OPERATOR
Act as a Receptionist who will be responsible for
projecting a positive image for the PMLP.
The duties include courteous operation of a telephone
control console and various clerical functions
including filling in for Clerk and Cashier. Must be a
high school graduate. Ability to speak a language in
addition to English is preferred but not essential.
Please submit your cover letter and resume to
Barbara Previte at [email protected]
Repairs - Big or Small
PAINTING
BOB’S
LANDSCAPING SERVICE
978-532-9521
LICENSED
MASONRY
DUN-RITE
PAINTING AND PAPERHANGING
John Bettencourt
• Carpentry of all Types • Ceramic Tile
MASS. CERTIFIED LANDSCAPE PROFESSIONAL #1182
CLEAN-UPS
LOW COST MOWING
MON/TUES
978-535-6200
978-532-1588
Member of the Better Business Bureau
BALDASSARI
PAINTING
• Interior/Exterior Painting
• Residential/Commercial
• Wall Papering
Est
. 19
• Wall Paper Removal
75
• Power Washing
• Gutter Cleaning
• Window Washing
FREE
Licensed
Estimates & Insured
Fred Jr. Baldassari
978-688-0161 • 781-953-6890
WWW.BALDASSARIPAINTING.COM
PAINTING
18
WEEKLYNEWS.NET - 978-532-5880
POOL
PAVING
MAY 12, 2016
SEPTIC
The Leonard Co. is a cleaning
contractor for condominium
associations and new
construction.
AM
PAVING
“Making Old Driveways
Look New”
Driveway Widening
Walkways
New & Resurface Asphalt
Landscaping
and Cement Work
Alexander Moura
978-532-6440
Free Estimate
www.ampavingpeabody.com
LIMA
EXCAVATION & PAVING
Site Work
•Sewer and water service
•Houses and additions
•Retaining walls
Stamped Concrete
-Driveways
-Walkways
-Patios
-Pool Decks
Pool openings
and Closings
Pool painting
and resurfacing
Filter repair
and replacement
Winter and Summer
Safety Covers
781-502-8483
We want to hear
from you!
Send us a letter at
[email protected].
Letters should be
no more than
300 words.
Real Estate Transfers
37 Goodale St.,: Elizabeth Dube to
Hanh T. Tran, Dai V. Ho and Dai
Ho, $475,500 (sale dated 5-4.)
22 Roosevelt Ave.,: Michael A.
and Julieanne Barretto to Gerald
B., Jr., and Rosaly M. MacKillop,
$564,000 (sale dated 5-5.)
1100 Salem St., Unit 1: Maria
Elena Novia and Susan C. Cone,
Personal Representatives under
the will of Elaine D. Novia, to Donald J. and Margaret B. Coolican,
$375,000 (sale dated 5-5.)
2 Burnham Road: Rachel Stadfeld
to Scott J. and Kathleen E. Inman
Langis, $310,000 (sale dated 5-5.)
7 Ledgewood Way, Unit 7, Bldg.
7: Rosemary Angeramo, trustee of
the Rosemary Angeramo Revocable Trust, to Paul S. and Linda A.
Kelly, $295,000 (sale dated 5-6.)
11 Baldwin St.,: Stephanos and
Haritomeni Frangias to Noah and
Hillary Clark, $370,000 (sale dated
5-6.)
2 Gates Road: Nancy A. Mudge
to Karla Ferrante along with Paul,
Jr., and Brittany Vallatini, $525,000
(sale dated 5-6.)
Roll Off Specialists
• Residential • Commercial
• Roll Off Containers - 15 ~ 20 ~ 30 yarders
FREE DELIVER Y & PICK-UP
SAME DAY SERVICE
Residential Window & Screen Cleaning
Snow Blowing Services
Snow Plowing
Ice Melt Application (no salt or sand)
Power Washing
Comp. Clean-outs
Light Demolition
Call 617-512-7849 for a FREE estimate
or email: [email protected]
If you need it clean, we’re on the scene...
DEMOLITION Baths, Kitchens, Barns, Sheds
REMOVAL OF Stone Walls, Concrete,
www.quickdisposal.com
Real Estate
11 Stevens St.,: Arthur and Maria Pavlo, trustees of the Stevens
Eleven Realty Trust, to Olger, Selajdin and Fitnete Mema,, $450,000
(sale dated 5-2.)
QUICK INC
DISPOSAL
781-246-2090
508-954-0820
100 Bartholomew St.,: Paul and
Eleftheria Ruocco to Timothy and
Darlene Connors, $607,500 (sale
dated 5-2.)
TRASH REMOVAL
TREE REMOVAL
CALL QUICK DISPOSAL - NORTH SHORE
Call Jack
17 Ethel Ave.,: Robert E., and Jill
E. Girard to Shawn M. Mahoney,
$265,000 (sale dated 5-2.)
The Leonard Co.
All Materials, etc.
Paving
•Driveways, walkways etc.
PEABODY
TRASH REMOVAL
11 Pinecrest Ave.,: Ellen Gelin to
Phillip A. Ragusa, $385,000 (sale
dated 5-6.)
52 Russell St.,: William T., Jr., and
Pamela A. Martin to Jeffrey and
Kelly Taylor, $426,200 (sale dated
5-6.)
11 Stuart Road: Daniel and Mary
E. Powers to Justin D. and Cindy A.
Powers, $425,000 (sale dated 5-6.)
11 Stuart Road: Justin D. and Cindy A. Powers to Daniel and Mary
E. Powers, nominal fee (life estate
interest only, (sale dated 5-6.
LYNNFIELD
MARIBITO
TREE SERVICE
Looking for a house?
Check the
Real Estate Section!
978.979.4071
Removals, Pruning,
Stump Grinding
Real Estate
BERT BEAULIEU
Past president and Realtor of the Year
North Shore Association of Realtors
Cell:
(781) 253-3408
Fax:
(781) 213-7983
E-Mail: [email protected]
Website: bertbeaulieu.com
220 Broadway, Suite 402: Peter
Gizzi to 402 North, LLC, John F.
Morello, manager, $220,000 (sale
dated 5-2.
1200 Salem St., Unit 171: Carl
Alviti and Abraao Gomes Vieira
to Leo J. and Dianne DiGirolamo,
$379,900 (sale dated 5-3.)
OPEN HOUSE: 636 Main St. Lynnfield
Sunday, May 15th from 2-4 p.m.
1106 Salem St., Unit 106: James
P. and Kathleeen E. Hohmann to
GJM Development, LLC., $224,000
(sale dated 5-4.)
8 Westway: William E. and Gloria
Rowe to John W. Pool, $560,000
(sale dated 5-4.)
15 Ramsdell Way, Unit 21:
Spring-L Realty, LLC, of Wakefield, Said Abuzahra, manager, to
Carmine Guarracino and Cheryl A.
Angelo, $669,900 (sale dated 5-5.)
87 Oak Ridge Ter;,: Diana Daigle
to Subin and Kaynaz Bagwadia,
$620,900 (sale dated 5-5.)
1200 Salem St., Unit 125: Margaret
A. Gianatasio, trustee of the Margaret A. Gianatasio Trust, to Peter
and Arlene T. Cronin, $399,000
(sale dated 5-5.)
FIRST AD!
RARE, LOVELY ANTIQUE COLONIAL 4 bedroom, 2 1/2 bath,
complete with three room potential in-law or home office
with separate entrance. Center entrance Colonial has
antique charm with today's amenities, huge great room,
updated kitchen and baths all on a beautiful level lot, set
back from the street.
$799,900
MAY 12, 2016
WEEKLYNEWS.NET - 978-532-5880
LYNNFIELD
$799,900
Custom Built Contemporary set back from street, 3BRs, 1.31
acres, private lot, updated KIT, 2 car garage, great inlaw potential.
LYNNFIELD
LYNNFIELD
$949,900
LYNNFIELD
$699,000
NEW CONSTRUCTION
NEW CONSTRUCTION
NEW CONSTRUCTION! Colonial abutting golf course, open concept living, EIK with white cabinets, HW floors, home office, 3BRs,
master suite, 2 car garage.
NEW CONSTRUCTION! Colonial abutting golf course, open concept living, EIK with white cabinets, HW floors, home office, 3BRs,
master suite, 2 car garage.
SPACIOUS 4 BEDROOM EXECUTIVE CAPE, with full finished
lower level ideal for extended family, central air/vac, maple and
granite kitchen with center island, gas heat (6 zone).
Nikki Martin
Nikki Martin
Rossetti/Poti Team
Nikki Martin
LYNNFIELD
$899,900
19
$629,900
LYNNFIELD
$575,000
LA
Congratulations
ND
Agent of the Month
for April, 2016
Joyce Cucchiara
WONDERFUL MULTI-LEVEL HOME, with nice updates, hardwood floors, cathedral ceilings, cherry kitchen with granite, 3
bedrooms, 2 car garage, bonus room and more!
EXCELLENT LOCATION! OPPORTUNITY TO BUILD YOUR
DREAM HOME! Located at the end of a cul-de sac is this spectacular piece of land in a beautiful residential neighborhood.
Over an acre! Land is currently staked.
Joyce Cucchiara
NORTH READING
!
Joyce Cucchiara
$769,900
MELROSE
$339,900
MIDDLETON
$1,185,000
MIDDLETON
$659,900
FIR
AD ST
!
BEAUTIFUL EXPANDED CAPE Cul-de-sac location featuring
gorgeous kitchen with grante counters and newer appliances,
Fireplaced living room with hardwood floors, spacious family
room with sliders to deck, and huge master bedroom upstairs.
Kathy Baldassari
MIDDLETON
$1,129,000
ATTACHED COLONIAL with level yard, 2BRs, HW floors, third
level with bonus room plus LL for laundry. Off street parking
Broker
Evelyn Rockas
NAHANT
$359,900
CUSTOM BUILT 4BR Colonial with open concept living, formal
DR/LR, stone FP, sunroom, FPcd master suite, 3 car garage.
Broker
Rossetti/Poti Team
TOPSFIELD
$3,500,000
SPECTACULAR TOWNHOUSE AT FULLER POND Open floor plan
living and dining room, gourmet kitchen with top-of-the-line
appliances, first floor master suiteand fireplaced loft overlooking
the first floor.
Louise Touchette
TOPSFIELD
$639.900
FIR
AD ST
!
NEW CONSTRUCTION in new subdivision, 12 room Colonial, 5
bedrooms, 3.5 baths, 3 car garage with all the bells and whistles.
Rossetti/Poti Team
MELROSE
$549,900
BY THE SEA….charming 3BR home with nice updates!
Remodeled KIT, HW floors, huge great room with cathedral
ceilings.
Joyce Cucchiara
LYNN
$399,000
CUSTOM ESTATE has stunning foyer with grand staircase and
granite floor. Home features gourmet kitchen, Library, parlor,
casual living room, guest suite and more!
13 ROOM GAMBREL COLONIAL on treed lot, 4 bedrooms, family
room off updated cherry kitchen, home office, mudroom, craft
room, master suite, window seats. Huge garage, tons of storage!
Joanne Stewart
DANVERS
$299,900
Evelyn Rockas
BOSTON
5,900,000
FIR
AD ST
!
TWO FAMILY side by side units, close to center, plenty of parking, HW floors, vinyl siding, new roof and many other updates!
Close to public trans.
Michelle Roberto
PRISTINE HOME IN WARD 1 3 bedrooms, 1.5 bathrooms,
hardwood floors,updated and move-in ready. Living room with
fireplace, finished lower level, yard, driveway, new roof, and
storage shed.
Joanne Stewart
DESIREABLE END UNIT at Old Salem Village with first floor master bedroom, with master bathroom, three closets, and sliding
door to deck. High ceilings in combination living/dining room
and loft area above. Huge attic for storage and full basement.
Joyce Cucchiara
PREMIER FRONT-FACING HOME on an upper floor has views
of Back Bay, custom interior, open floor plan, 2 bedrooms,
2½ bathrooms, Gas fireplace, 24 hour concierge, and deeded
parking.
Louise Bova-Touchette
Christopher Polak, VP/Managing Broker
1085 Summer Street, Lynnfield, MA 01940
781-334-5700
NewEnglandMoves.com
20
WEEKLYNEWS.NET - 978-532-5880
MAY 12, 2016
Say NO to
LOCK BOX
Realty Firms
Old fashioned
where it counts!
At Northrup we don’t use lockboxes,
and we never will because we don’t
think letting strangers roam your home
is the best way to sell your house.
There for YOU...when
you need it most!
When you hire a Northrup Realtor®
they will represent you and your home
every step of the way, not just at the
listing and closing.
The Northrup Difference.
Every time your house is shown one of
our Realtors® will be there to point out
features, avoiding confusion and potential
obstacles while maximizing the value of
your home.
The Realtors you can trust!
Other firms have come and gone, but
we have stood the test of time. With 60+
years of experience and 5,000 sales
under our belt we are the firm you can
trust with one of the biggest financial
decisions of your life.
Bernie Starr - Broker/Owner • Richard Tisei - Broker/Owner
Donna Aloisi
Bert Beaulieu
Cheryl Bogart
Helen Bolino
Kim Burtman
Christine Carpenter
David Comeau
Kerry Connelly
Virginia Ciulla
Julie Daigle
Alex DeRosa
Eric Doherty
Elena Drislane
Lori Kramich
Michelle Marcoulier
Maria N. Miara
Marilyn Phillips
Marcia Poretsky
Gale Rawd i n g
Debra Roberts
Northruprealtors.com • 26 Main Street, Lynnfield • (781) 334-3137
Maureen Rossi - DiMella
Patrice Slater
Donna S nyd e r
Ron Supino
&
(781) 246-2100