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Headlight
and community School for our school of Marblehead High November 15, 2023 Written by the students .com www.mhsheadlight all 2023 - 2024 Issue of what we’d just experienced,
Live music, poetry, holiday fun
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IN THIS ISSUE
Shining a light on the news you care about!
in varisending pictures to work has been featured broadcasts. of us feverishly in other parts of ous newspapers and family revealed friends and This year, as his wife country, and the world, of lo- the state, the to my parents, helicopters by a sense of gratitude. circled I was struck cal news programs even that here, in our town, to cap- I felt lucky overhead in an attempt blocks away from my creature. a mere few hobbit-like house, ture the breathtaking delight ancient, creaky, Children and adults alike transported through space be may I excitement year as the nights in the surprise and and and time each of these yearly installations, and the air grows coolonly draw grow longer creativwith each year, they er, all through the generous his family, and more visitors. our ity of Tom Saltsman, to As my family and I made who bring their vision the chilly his team, night of the way back home on with life on the spookiest autumn night, buzzing year. majesty the excitement and
es: From pirates to primat the into Marblehead’s portal for unknown is back another Halloween
Georgia Marshall, Freshman
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dreamland that I to ex- inside the forest Have you ever wanted left. shipwreck, had just always plore a ghostly pirate I, like others, have Egypcreep through an ancient how Saltsman comes a life-sized wondered tian tomb, or gaze at creations. “I have a dragon? up with his breathing, blinking that I jot down ideas resident sketchbook year,” he Look no further than throughout the whole in home. my wife wanted architect Tom Saltsman’s Mar- says. “This year and I wanted to Saltsman has been wowing Hal- to do a forest annual his comour with blehead so this was projects on do a giant, loween construction of those ideas.” A sign past eight bination Pleasant Street for the of the pillars in the Sep- posted on one Norweyears. Every year around driveway explains how tember, he begins constructing gian myth plays into this year’s that people a giant masterpiece Norwegian culture on Hal- masterpiece. by nature line up to walk through strongly influenced is following loween and several According to myth, out of dis- and legend. nights. Built entirely the country’s forests objects, throughout carded materials, found rock trolls whose these dwell giant giant sleeping troll. to life at night and specialized pieces, Saltsman's incredible from stony bodies come touched by when constructions have ranged roar- and are frozen a spaceship to a breathing, this sunlight. Though not the cleverto ing King Kong statue, strong and powerful, sleep- est, they are year’s creation, a giant creatures in Harry Norwegian influencing ing troll inspired by Anonymous Student Potter and The Hobbit. one of cons of folklore. The troll isn’t the only Weighing the pros and imcomsculptures that After many years of being Flags have become more a trouble many of us creations, these Halloween years. this issue is legend. several and last myth the pressed by Saltsman’s by mon in the pro-rule side, there's could out- is inspired everything face. On I was sure that nothing I’ve noticed, seem students may feel There's a flag for I’m sure All of them, ideol- the fact that ando last year’s - though an element of magic. - every sexuality, every to think one way or year about to include even most ‘pressure’ I felt the same last dragon cottage, built ogy or political party, the presence of these mom, dad, From the a flag. other due to can on Halloween of the previous one. My clubs or groups have However, the argument I arrived and exhibited USA, many flags. younger brother, and second year living in However, across the that the students rarely bundled up 2018, my begun ban- be made my first year exat all and on Pleasant Street, school districts have chilly Marblehead and ever notice the flags the in flags hats creThese and in jackets one of Saltsman’s ning specific flags. it’s in a positive way. Friday, Oc- periencing Lives when they do autumn-night air on Egyptian cobra godside, some believe mainly include the Black to nose ations, to the flags. On the anti-rule Pride and supernatural, a Amendtober 3rd, to come nose (BLM) First 2022, Matter violation of troll. A dess built in committee this is a seems to lurk with the giant sleeping protected by Recently, our school down mysterious feeling When asked ment rights, as it is crowd of people stretched corner. been considering creating the Tinker Test, which is a set of every has around impossible effectively the road, making it favorite of his creations, a policy that would use to limit what stuof the troll about his country rules schools “I would probably to catch a glimpse cannot do at school ‘ban’ all flags but the Antici- Saltsman said, would dents can and Tinfrom the back of the line. say the walking man.” and state flag. All others of free speech. The line inched have to approval in terms and for reasons I pation grew as the have to go through an specifically states that excla- Unfortunately, commit- ker Test along and we heard more the only one my famcould not prohibit process in the school insane!” can’t recall, of anxi- “school officials the mations of, “That was tee. This stirred up lots free speech] only on after what ily has missed! masterpieces are or not the [students and “Wow!” Finally, ety about whether All of these that the speech might we reached around the suspicion felt like a millennia, environment” impressive. And all of BLM and Pride flags disrupt the learning dropped unique and question: come down. When the driveway. My jaw lingering would a . On the opposing leave school them troll they had (uscourts.gov) when I saw the enormous a small team of peoasked about whether might refute this argushape. How could this, many side, some curled in a stiff rock-like that a “political any knowledge of possibly build such incredible saying ple by rugment sharp, for a save This He is composed of only two months? students were unaware, is not free speech. his fin- creations in texts went agenda” back to the ged stone-like material, hard work and perthe fact that a few brings us once again so slightly, The answer: ever team his the of twitching and it. gers Moines case around about surface sistence. Saltsman body Tinker v. Des revealing a bright-red How does the student evenings and weekends origin of the ‘Tinker skin. Soft work on I inter- 1960s (the beneath cracked rocky September and Octhe dissent argued truly feel about this rule? escaping throughout and re- Test’), where these projects, a snores can be heard It is a strange parviewed several students We en- tober to finish One the same thing. from his cavernous belly. the entrance to the ceived multiple statements. we allel to be drawn, but a parallel mouth tarp covering flags tered through his gaping for- driveway from curious residents student explains,“The relevant, nonetheless. into a us as stu- shockingly their before Hallowand were transported put in school represent person is entitled to to until a few days Each appeared take that Don’t est wonderland the public can finally dents and as people. the flag situation. As due to the een, when On the opinion on stretch on for miles finished masterpiece. away our right to that.” an opinion article, I will The strong, see the there sim- this is not on the illusion of mirrors. training as an archiother side, others say sharing my own take pine imme- Saltsman’s in commu- not be to this process. “I comforting scent of I will emphaply shouldn’t be any into the tect is central student situation. However, did diately hit me as I crept school for theater and students argue that nal spaces. A separate branches of went to also be size that many and built things. woodland area. Real should not be made said, “Teachers should painted a lot of set design classes this decision these Hallowpine trees and intricately allowed to decorate their the input of the public. for- I started building but in the without walls depicting a beautiful at the Coffin-Gerry weeks, the people the way they want, I weaved een projects shouldn't In the coming Mash,” he est surrounded me. cafe and the halls there up Marblehead schools make a school for the Monster into who trees seems for mache body issue building these through paper be any.” The student able to debate the I was says. He began thing: we may be of small craggy cave, where the public took noto mainly agree on one their decision, instead foun- parties, and in the mak- and make evolved into a Committee met by a trickling stone are entitled to a part watching as the School of bats tice. It eventually town event, tain and the projection annual ing of this policy. Upon grand-scale, makes it for them. huddling in a dark corner. people from across of wonder, attracting leaving, I felt a sense and beyond. His a bit longer Marblehead wishing I could stay
HEADLIGHT
NONPROFIT ORG PRSRT STD U.S. POSTAGE
Student reports on flag debate
PAID
MARBLEHEAD, MA PERMIT NO. 25
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Red flag over new policy
NEWS FOR PEOPLE, NOT FOR PROFIT.
TM
024 Headlight Staff 2023-2
Kate Twomey TECHNOLOGY EDITOR: Benji Boyd, Rachael Albert ASSISTANT EDITORS: Bumagin and Mona Gelfgatt Kane, Nina Lees, EDITORS-IN-CHIEF: Ila Samuel Jendrysik, Anya Tucker Crane, Aislin Freedman, John Bender, Grey Collins,Zaltsman REPORTERS: Cole Barbeau, Weiss, Benjamin Georgia Marshall, Livia FACULTY ADVISOR: Thomas
November 15, 2023
| VOLUME 1, ISSUE NO. 49
Higgins
| MARBLEHEADCURRENT.ORG
| ON SOCIAL @MHDCURRENT
TAX DISPUTE
Shrine of St. Nicholas is suing town Validity of tax bill at crux of dispute BY WILLIAM J. DOWD The leaders of the Shrine of St. Nicholas in Marblehead have filed a lawsuit against the town, arguing the town assessed property taxes for fiscal year 2024 on a property that should be tax-exempt because it is used for religious purposes. Marblehead officials met with town counsel behind closed
doors Monday to discuss the litigation, filed in Essex Superior Court. “Town counsel is handling the situation, but they’re going to brief [the Select Board and Board of Assessors] simultaneously to keep us informed as to the proceedings,” said Town Administrator Thatcher Kezer said on Nov. 10. Kezer confirmed that the tax bill in question amounts to $2,965, assessed on the parcel at 120 Pleasant St. On Sept. 1, Essex Superior
Court Judge Kristen Buxton denied the shrine’s request for a preliminary injunction, which would have prevented the town from taxing the shrine’s property. “Plaintiff has failed to establish either a likelihood of success on the merits or irreparable harm,” Buxton wrote. The lawsuit against the town is surfacing while the shrine’s leader, Brian Andrew Bushell, and general counsel, Tracey
SUIT, P. A7
CURRENT PHOTO / WILLIAM J. DOWD
Shrine of St. Nicolas and Marblehead Brewing Company are both located at 124 Pleasant St., right, while the property in dispute at 120 Pleasant St., left, is a separate building.
HARBOR LANDMARK
Local couple wants to tear down historic house, upsetting residents Owners say they’re rebuilding to protect home from rising seas, storm surge BY LEIGH BLANDER A Marblehead couple hopes to demolish a historic house on the harbor has asked the town for permission to build a larger one on the same lot. The request has prompted an outcry from some neighbors and residents. Holly and Jerome O’Neill went before the Planning Board on Tuesday, Nov. 14, after the Current went to press. Visit MarbleheadCurrent.org for updates on that meeting. The O’Neills purchased 84 Harbor Ave. (not far from the Eastern Yacht Club) in April 2023 for $3.65 million. They currently live on Orchard Street. At a Conservation Commission meeting on Nov. 9, the O’Neills’ land development engineer Scott HOUSE, P. A7
PUBLIC SAFETY
Fatality prompts new look at Pleasant Street safety ‘Road diet’ viewed as one solution BY WILLIAM J. DOWD
COURTESY PHOTO / RICK DODGE
The home at 84 Harbor Ave. was built in the 1880s and is easily recognizable from Marblehead Harbor.
The recent death of 80-year-old Karl Johnson after being hit on Pleasant Street has renewed attention on pedestrian and bicyclist safety on the busy road. Johnson was hit while crossing Pleasant between Smith Street and Mohawk Road. Police Chief Dennis King said the cause remains under active investigation. Johnson’s death comes 14 years after Allie Castner, a 15-year-old Marblehead High School student, was killed a stone’s throw away from where a vehicle struck Johnson. Pleasant Street is a two-lane road that intersects with several major cross streets leading to schools, residential neighborhoods and downtown Marblehead. Sections with commercial development and on-street parking limit sight lines for turning vehicles SAFETY, P. A7
HOLIDAY GIVING
Edith would be proud Founder’s spirit lives on in annual effort to ensure no senior is forgotten COURTESY PHOTO
An article that appeared in a local newspaper in Lackawanna, Pennsylvania, in 1952 details Edith Dodge’s life before Marblehead, including as chief clerk for the Lackawanna Selective Service Board during World War II.
BY KRIS OLSON Even accounting for its recent pandemic-induced hiatus, Marbleheaders likely have at least some familiarity with the Edith Dodge Memorial Fund. Founded as the “Holiday Elderly Fund” by the town’s first
Council on Aging director, the Dodge Fund seeks to ensure that no Marbleheader over the age of 80 is forgotten while everyone around them is celebrating with family and friends. In December, volunteers deliver gifts — boxes of cookies and bags of clementines — to
those still living in town. Age is the only criteria to make the gift list. Financial circumstances have nothing to do with it. People may also be aware that, since its inception, the massive mobilization of Marblehead mirth has been quarterbacked by strong, energetic older women, as others have risen to meet the standard Dodge herself set. But until recently, Joan Cutler, 80, now in her 13th year as Dodge Fund president, knew little about Dodge’s life before she moved to Marblehead to be
closer to her daughters. That all changed a couple of years ago when, out of the blue, she got a message on social media from a stranger, passing along a story that had appeared in a local newspaper in Lackawanna, Pennsylvania, “the sixth in a series of seven articles on women in government,” on Aug. 15, 1952. The story describes how Dodge had already been an active volunteer in her community
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DODGE, P. A3