CP_MBHC_20230201_1_A01
IN THIS ISSUE
PUBLIC SAFETY
SPORTS
ART
MHD police partner with clinician
Girls finish in three-way tie for title
Fogle on display at Stetson Gallery
Page 4
Page 9
Page 16
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PAID
MARBLEHEAD, MA PERMIT NO. 25
NEWS FOR PEOPLE, NOT FOR PROFIT.
TM
February 01, 2023
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VOLUME 1, ISSUE NO. 10
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MARBLEHEADCURRENT.ORG
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ON SOCIAL @MHDCURRENT
EDUCATION
Educators wrapping heads around ChatGPT Some students have handed in AI chatbot work as their own BY WILLIAM J. DOWD Concerns that local students might tap into the cutting-edge artificial intelligence offered by ChatGPT to do their schoolwork for them have been realized, Superintendent John Buckey told the Marblehead Current. The powerful, multilingual chatbot can instantaneously perform literary analysis, compose original poems, write short fiction and compute
complex math problems. “This is so new, districts are trying to get up to speed quickly as they discover more about it,” Buckey said. “We just did a professional development on the topic.” OpenAI, a private artificial intelligence research organization whose founders include Elon Musk, developed ChatGPT. The organization released the chatbot on Nov. 30 and it became wildly popular
overnight. Today, its usage is in the millions. “It uses a deep learning technique called transformerbased neural networks to generate human-like text,” wrote ChatGPT when the Current asked the chatbot about itself. “It can be fine-tuned for various natural language processing tasks such as language translation, question answering and text summarization.” Marblehead High School
Assistant Principal Lindsay Donaldson recently prepared and disseminated information about ChatGPT to educators. “Our teachers are learning more about the pitfalls of ChatGPT and reviewing if there can be positive applications of the technology,” said MHS Principal Dan Bauer. Bauer and Buckey confirmed incidents where students handed in ChatGPT-generated work as their own.
HISTORY
“We want students producing authentic assignments that cause them to engage critically in their thinking about topics and assignments,” Bauer said. Passing off ChatGPT-created work constitutes plagiarism and cheating, violating the MHS student handbook’s section titled “academic integrity expectations.” “If a teacher suspects ChatGPT, P. A5
GRIM DISCOVERY
Body found on beach is man from Peabody
A dream come true
After ‘double take,’ woman walking dog ran to call police BY WILLIAM J. DOWD, LEIGH BLANDER AND KRIS OLSON
CURRENT PHOTO / NICOLE GOODHUE BOYD
Marblehead Fire Chief Jason Gilliland has become the proud owner of a classic 1939 model 80 Mack combination pumper/ ladder truck.
After more than 40 years away, Marblehead fire truck finds its way home BY CHRIS STEVENS Nearly everyone has a vehicle they dream about owning. Maybe it’s a sports car, luxury vehicle, decked-out Harley or even a fire truck. “Every firefighter, I think, dreams of owning their own fire truck,” said Marblehead Fire Chief Jason Gilliland. And for Gilliland, that dream has come true. Gilliland recently became the proud owner of a classic 1939 model 80 Mack combination pumper/ladder truck. If that weren’t exciting enough, it is an
original Marblehead fire truck. Gilliland said he’d looked off and on for a truck he could call his own, something small enough to store, ideally with an open cab. He wasn’t sure it would ever happen. Then he got a phone call from a guy who said he had something he thought belonged to Gilliland. “I hate calls like that,” Gilliland said with a laugh. “I said, ‘What could you possibly have that belongs to me?’” When Sunapee, New Hampshire Assistant Fire Chief Dana Ramspott said it was a vintage Marblehead fire
truck, Gilliland said, “OK, now you’ve got my attention.” Ramspott immediately sent photos. “It’s pretty funky looking,” Gilliland said, showing the photo Ramspott sent. “I’m not a real big fan of the swayback, but it belonged to Marblehead, so you know what, I’m interested.’”
A little history
Along with photos, Ramspott also sent Gilliland the original “bill card,”
A body discovered on a beach at the end of Edgemere Road on Salem Harbor on Thursday, Jan. 26 was identified two days later as that of a missing Peabody man, authorities announced. The Office of the Chief Medical Examiner confirmed the body was that of Michael Gray, 31, of Peabody, Essex County District Attorney Paul F. Tucker, Marblehead Police Chief Dennis King, Salem Police Chief Lucas Miller and Peabody Police Chief Thomas Griffin confirmed in a joint statement issued Jan. 28. Gray’s family reported him missing on Dec. 11. A day later, investigators found some articles of clothing connected to Gray on Juniper Beach in Salem. In January, State Police and local dive teams searched for Gray over several days in the water off the Salem beach. Marblehead resident Ellie Tomlinson found the body around 4 p.m. while walking her golden retriever. Her waterfront house sits abuts the beach entrance where she discovered the body, across Salem Harbor from the area previously searched. When Tomlinson came across the body, she thought it was a Halloween decoration.
TRUCK, P. A8 BODY, P. A4
HISTORY
Banner year for the Glover’s Regiment march Annual observance pays homage to Revolutionary War hero BY WILLIAM J. DOWD
CURRENT PHOTO / NICOLE GOODHUE BOYD
Revolutionary War reenactors march past the Old Town House during the annual funeral procession for Gen. John Glover.
BLACK CYAN MAGENTA YELLOW
It was a chilly and clear night for Glover’s Marblehead Regiment’s annual march from the Old Town House to Old Burial Hill to pay homage to Gen. John Glover. As the sun retreated, Capt. Seamus Daly led the march as a
banner-year crowd of about 150 people trailed behind the singlefile line of reenactors. The Old Historic District came alive. People stepped out of their front doors. Children and parents pulled back the curtains to take a peek at the passing contingent. Some joined in the march.
Robert and Zoey de Saint Phalle brought out their son, Leo. The little boy repurposed his Revolutionary War uniform. “He was George Washington for Halloween, but he is often in costume,” said Zoey de Saint Phalle. “We generally do turn out for all the fun, wacky Marblehead stuff.” Once at Old Burial Hill, Daly stood in front of Glover’s tomb, GLOVER, P. A3