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THE SAUGUS ADVOCATE – FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 4, 2022 Page 15 SPORTS | FROM PAGE 6 chems pretty much traded basket for basket with the hosts but couldn’t cut into the lead and trailed 44-34 at halftime. The Sachems did decrease the lead to 60-54 after three quarters and pulled within six on several occasions but couldn’t get any closer. The Hornets seemed to have an answer every time Saugus threatened. In the end, a 16-6 surge by Manchester-Essex to begin the fourth quarter sealed the deal for the hosts. Saugus got a strong offensive effort from Manderson, PROJECT | FROM PAGE 14 and ‘a negro girl named Violet’ in the household of Taylor’s daughter, Anna. “Murphy also details the many and varied stories related to King Pompey, who Murphy calls ‘the best-known African American in the Lynn and Saugus area.’ Murphy provides a useful overview of the histories written of Pompey, including Alonzo Lewis’s History of Lynn (originally published in 1829) and Nathaniel Mortimer Hawkes’s Hearths and Homes of Old Lynn with Studies in Local History (1907), and was featured in the show, Centenniid games. The following night, Saugus traveled to Gloucester to take on the Fishermen and fell short by a 60-48 count. This time Mabee topped the score sheet for the Sachems with 16 points. He was followed by Barbosa’s nine points and Manderson’s eight. After this evening’s game at Masco, the Sachems return home to host undefeated Beverly on Tuesday. The Sachems suffered a 46-point loss at Beverly back in early January when they were coming off a three-week layoff due to the COVID-19 surge. Saugus’s Max Anajjar leaped high to challenge a three-point shot in Monday’s game at Manchester-Essex. who finished in double figures and shot well from the threeal Pageant, in 1915 in a scene titled ‘The Crowning of King Pompey.’ “Murphy does comment on the show that ‘considering the time period, it is entirely possible that this scene was used as an excuse to have a minstrel show in blackface. It is interesting that, although many of the other scenes are elaborated on in the History of Saugus that accompanies the program of the pageant, Pompey is not mentioned elsewhere in the book.’” Essex County has been designated a National Heritage Area by Congress, a “place with natural, cultural, and historic resources” that constitutes an impoint stripe. Mabee, Tapia-Gately and Max Anajjar also had solportant landscape. Salem Maritime received funding for this project from the Civil Rights Initiative, a project to document and preserve African American history in the National Park System. The report will serve as an invaluable tool for students, teachers, public historians, scholars and all others seeking to learn and share stories of African American residents of Essex County. —“African Americans in Essex County, Massachusetts: An Annotated Guide” is available only online and can be downloaded at www.nps.gov/ articles/000/african-americans-in-essex-county.htm. 8. The world’s biggest snow maze, Snowlandia in Zakopane, is in what country: Finland, Poland or Switzerland? 9. On Feb. 7, 1867, what February 4 is National Wear Red Day – to raise awareness about what disease? 2. The February flower is primrose; what does the name primrose mean? 3. When making cowboy (campfire) coffee, what inedible ingredient is sometimes added? 4. On Feb. 5, 1825, in Troy, N.Y., Hannah Montague created the first of what type of collar for her husband’s shirts? 5. Do pandas have fur at birth? 6. Legend has it that the Hanging Gardens of Babylon were part of what group of seven? 7. On Feb. 6, 1988, who made a slam dunk from the free throw line to win his second-straight slam dunk contest? popular Wisconsin-born children’s book series author was born? 10. On what continent is the deepest ice sheet on land (having a base below sea level), the Bentley Subglacial Trench in Marie Byrd Land? 11. In Dickens’ “David Copperfield,” who said, “We are so very ’umble”? 12. In what country would you find a pogonip, which is a dense winter fog having frozen particles in deep mountain valleys? 13. Does chocolate grow on vines or trees? 14. On Feb. 8, 1828, what French author of adventure novels, including “Around the World in Eighty Days,” was born? 15. In the Brothers Grimms’ telling of “Cinderella,” what are the slippers made of: diamond, glass or gold? 16. What spice is said to taste like a combination of cinnamon, clove and nutmeg? 17. February 9 is National Pizza Day; the World Pizza Championship, which includes Freestyle Acrobatic Dough Tossing, takes place in what country? 18. What is the smallest dog breed? 19. Who said, “Darkness cannot drive out darkness; only light can do that. Hate cannot drive out hate; only love can do that”? 20. February 10 is World Pulses Day; what are pulses? ANSWERS 1. Heart disease 2. It comes from the Latin prima rosa, which means “first” and “rose.” 3. Eggshells 4. Detachable (which reduced her laundry load and led to Troy becoming “Collar City” as other makers “followed suit”) 5. No 6. Seven Wonders of the Ancient World 7. Michael Jordan 8. Poland 9. Laura Ingalls Wilder 10. Antarctica 11. Uriah Heep 12. Western USA 13. Trees 14. Jules Verne 15. Gold 16. Allspice 17. Italy (Parma) 18. Chihuahua 19. Martin Luther King, Jr. 20. Edible seeds of the legume family

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