These light up stick figure people were my favorite Halloween costume of the night. And then of course there’s a photo of my own boys for good measure.


My View of Life on the Dock
These light up stick figure people were my favorite Halloween costume of the night. And then of course there’s a photo of my own boys for good measure.


Photo courtesy Al Bezanson. Al writes: Here’s Tom two years ago on a November lunchtime harbor sail. He had a mind that never grew old. What a delight to be in his company!
By Marvin Pave GLOBE CORRESPONDENT
Tom Halsted was a 28-year-old intelligence officer and photo interpreter assigned to the State Department in October 1962 when he received a telephone call before breakfast to report to the office.
“Something was up,” Mr. Halsted would later recall.
That “something” turned into the Cuban missile crisis. He shuttled among several agencies and offices — including the State Department, the Kennedy White House, the Pentagon, and the Central Intelligence Agency — during the tense “13 days” showdown between the United States and Soviet Union.
“Like many other players in the drama,” he wrote in a letter to the Gloucester Daily Times, he shared “the same dread of unknown horrors to come” and was relieved when the Soviet Union removed the missiles from Cuba. He added he “will always look upon it as one of the pivotal events in my life.”
Mr. Halsted, who served as special assistant in the US Arms Control and Disarmament Agency during the Johnson administration and as its director of public affairs during the Carter presidency, died of kidney cancer Oct. 7 in his Gloucester home a day before his 84th birthday.
He worked and lectured, in and out of government, on intelligence, national security, and arms control issues, including the SALT I and II negotiations, the Non-Proliferation Treaty, and the nuclear test ban treaties.
“What drew people to Tom was his sincerity,” said his friend John Tierney, a former congressman who is executive director of the Council for a Livable World and the Center for Arms Control and Non-Proliferation in Washington, D.C. “He was smart and engaging, passionate and knowledgeable, and never did anything halfway.”
Mr. Halsted, a staunch Democrat who was the Council for a Livable World’s national director from 1967-71, supported Tierney’s campaigns when Tierney served as the US representative from the Sixth Congressional District. The council endorses congressional candidates who are arms control advocates and support its outlook on national security issues.
After leaving Washington in 1981, Mr. Halsted was executive director of Physicians for Social Responsibility. He then managed the Curtis/Hopkinson family estate in Manchester-by-the-Sea, where he served on the Conservation Commission, chaired the Board of Selectmen, and joined the town’s Democratic Committee.
A prolific writer of letters to the editor, he also published a blog called Beam Reach, which was subtitled “Musings from a life ashore and at sea,” and explored topics ranging from sailing to politics to cancer treatment.
In 1999, Mr. Halsted moved to Gloucester, where he was a member of the Gloucester Democratic City Committee and was a docent at the Cape Ann Museum.
“He could envision all too well the dangers of a nuclear war and the arms race, and shared his views on nuclear proliferation in a variety of settings,” said Karen Bell, who chairs the committee. “In a world where weapons have again become an urgent and even frightening issue, I am only one among many who will miss his wise counsel and his sense of moderation tempered by history.”
At the museum, Mr. Halsted was highly regarded for his knowledge of Cape Ann, including its artists and paintings, and sailing ships and maritime life. He was also a contributor to its magazine.
Ronda Faloon, the museum’s executive director, praised his work on an advisory board that was involved in the installation of the museum’s first formal Maritime/Fisheries galleries. “Tom had an inquisitive mind. His interests and enthusiasms knew no bounds,” she said.
“The sea has always been a part of my life,” Mr. Halsted, who loved sailing the coasts of Maine and Nova Scotia, wrote in an August blog post. “Every summer, from the time I was an infant, I could hear the boom of surf bursting on the rocks below our grandparents’ house, the sifting of tumbling pebbles and the louder clatter of larger stones as a just-broken wave drew back before rolling forward again. . . . Salt was in the air I breathed.”
Born in Cambridge, Thomas Addison Halsted grew up in Dedham, a son of Dr. James A. Halsted, a leading researcher in nutrition, and the former Isabella Hopkinson, the daughter of renowned portrait artist Charles Hopkinson.
Mr. Halsted’s parents’ marriage ended in divorce, and his father married Anna Roosevelt, the daughter of President Franklin D. Roosevelt and Eleanor Roosevelt.
“I knew Anna was extraordinary from the moment I met her,” Mr. Halsted wrote in an unpublished memoir. “I discovered in her a good friend and caring person who genuinely wanted to help me grow up into a responsible and productive adult.”
He graduated in 1950 from Phillips Exeter Academy, where he was art editor of the yearbook and a member of the dramatic and yacht clubs. Mr. Halsted served in the Army and attained the rank of captain while working as a photo interpreter specializing in Soviet strategic weapons programs. He completed his degree in international affairs in 1965 at George Washington University.
“A few times in my life I have worked almost to exhaustion in order to complete a task that I wanted to do right, no matter how trivial,” Mr. Halsted wrote. “Once it was leading a patrol in Panama and carrying a sick soldier seven miles down a mountain; once it was struggling to help bring a legislative victory in the US Senate.”
Mr. Halsted married Joy Appel in 1955. Among their favorite activities were sailing and cross-country drives. “When we met I felt he was enchanting and totally engaging,” said Joy, a professional artist. She recalled that during the Cuban missile crisis, when her husband was rarely home, “I painted the kitchen table.”
In a memoir titled “Twenty Six Random Things About Myself,” Mr. Halsted said he married Joy “because she had the most wonderful laugh, amazing creative talent and an insatiable curiosity about everything . . . and because she saw something in me, too.”
In addition to his wife, Mr. Halsted leaves his daughter, Beth Paddock of Gloucester; his son, Thomas Jr. of Bellingham, Wash.; his sisters, Elinor Moore of Belfast, Maine, and Isabella of Amherst; and his brother, Charles of Davis, Calif.
A private celebration of his life will be held during the Christmas season at the Cape Ann Museum.
“He valued and taught me to value integrity, honesty, loyalty, and friendship,” his daughter said, “and showed me that intellectual curiosity was to be pursued whenever possible.”
His son said that he inherited from Mr. Halsted “an insatiable curiosity about the world, a love of languages and of culture. He deeply cared about his country and he wanted to make sure that free speech and honest dialogue were available to everyone.”
Marvin Pave can be reached at marvin.pave@rcn.com.
Photo courtesy Al Bezanson. Al writes: Here’s Tom two years ago on a November lunchtime harbor sail. He had a mind that never grew old. What a delight to be in his company!

On Tuesday, November 7th, 5:30 – 8pm we’ll be warming up the studio with a belated post-expansion toast? pre-holiday mixer? post-summer grief support group?
Who cares what the occassion is… Let’s call it Self-Care Soirée!
All evening long, the Saltwater Massage Team will be serving up mini massage treatments and Valerie from Nature’s Body Art & Soulstice Shop in Rockport, MA will be hand-painting her beautiful henna tattoos!! And of course, sweet treats and sparkly drinks will be served.
Service Menu:
15 Minute Deep-Therapeutic Neck/Shoulder/Back Massage ($20)
15 Minute Cupping Massage “Spot Treatment” ($20)
Henna Tattoos range $5 – $25, depending on design
Combos:
15 Min. Massage + Medium Henna ($25)
15 Min. Massage + Large Henna ($35)
**10% off retail products and gift certificates!!**
come see our collection small batch skincare, organic bath & body, handmade jewelry, soy candles, clothing and other happiness inducing products!
Here’s the latest feature for our readership- “I’m Offended That You’re Offended” in which we highlight Fake Outrage Culture at it’s finest on a daily or semi-daily basis.

Part 2
Source: nbc4i.com
“Some believe if you don’t have a Polynesian decent, it’s culturally wrong to dress as Disney’s Moana for Halloween.”

Yes the heroine in one of the latest Disney hits. Even Disney isn’t safe from the PC Police. SMH
The downed trees were cleared from the road and driveways although it looks as though it may be a few more days before power is restored and cars are allowed to park at the Lighthouse lot.
The GREAT news is that the four trees that the Monarchs consistently roost in overnight, year after year after year, were spared, and came through with flying colors!
Jude Seminara has provided us with his perspective of the oft told James Merry – Dogtown tale.
The Matador of Gloucester
In the mid-morning of Sunday, September 18, 1892, three local men, Henry and Chester Norwood and Isaac Day discovered the bloody and battered body of 60 year old James Merry wedged between two boulders near the Dogtown Road. His abdomen had been ripped open. Nearby, Patrick Nugent’s Jersey bull was in an agitated condition, bellowing and stomping his hooves, his horns stained with blood. Mr. Day left immediately to summon the police, and Officer Ropper, accompanied by the Undertaker Lloyd and medical examiner Quimby came to investigate.
Tradition holds that Merry had, while a sailor, visited Spain and became interested in bull fighting. When he returned to Gloucester, he raised a bull from a calf and practiced wrestling it in Dogtown. The night before he was killed, the story goes, he was drinking up in town and was challenged to wrestle the bull. The bull won, goring Merry with its horns. While a romantic story, it is simply untrue.
James Merry was born in Edgecomb, Maine, one of three sons, in 1832 to Heram and Betsey Merry. He was in Gloucester sometime prior to 1850, at which time he was recorded as James Murray, fisherman in the census. According to the vital records of Gloucester, he married Catherine Witty in 1856. The Merrys had three children: James Howard, Frank, and Carrie. Carrie died of typhoid fever at the age of 14 in 1878. Merry’s brother David Murray was lost at sea in 1859 and is memorialized in the cenotaph at the Fisherman at the Wheel statue. His other brother Jonathan left Gloucester shortly after David’s death to returned to Maine.


The Berkshire Eagle has done a great job covering the Berkshire Museum’s puzzling year of undoing. The museum has consigned 40 of its most recognized and regarded works of art to finance an expansion and rebrand. Sotheby’s Berkshire Museum sales commence Nov 13th.
Read the Attorney General’s complete filing here:
Norman Rockwell’s sons lobbied hard for the art to stay in Pittsfield, per the artist’s intent. One granddaughter penned a different opinion, a plea to George Lucas–a major Rockwell collector– hoping he’d acquire them for his future illustration museum. Sotheby’s has unveiled billboards. The museum is firm on selling. Next steps?
it’s up to the Berkshire Superior Court judge to hear both sides tomorrow morning.



The older we get, the more we lose; this is the law of impermanence. We lose loved ones, cherished dreams, physical strength, work, and relationships. Often, it seems like loss upon loss. All these losses bring up enormous grief that we must be prepared to embrace completely, if we are to live with open hearts.” – Ram Dass
By connecting with our bodies and breath, we give ourselves the opportunity to cultivate a self-healing practice through physical postures and meditation. Drawing from both ancient wisdom and modern therapeutic techniques, this two hour workshop incorporates: Yin Yoga, Slow Flow, Reiki, and Gentle Qi Gong.
Please join Deana Bacon, Tara Briggs, and Paul Findlen for this sacred guided journey, as we discover the healing power of grace, and are reminded that we are all in this together. Pre-register to secure your spot. $35 for two hour workshop.
Sign Up Now! or at…
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Kathy Bucholska, a member of Local Colors Artists’ Cooperative, will be showing her new line of jewelry and mixed media, inspired by Frida Kahlo, a Mexican artist and feminist, to benefit the US citizens of hurricane ravaged Puerto Rico. She’ll display her jewelry and mixed media from October 23 through November 3 and donate 50% of her show sales to The Boston Foundation/Latino Legacy Fund (http://www.tbf.org/puertorico). The funds will go to Puerto Rican disaster relief, sustainable rebuilding and support of Puerto Ricans migrating to Massachusetts as a result of the hurricane. Connected to Frida Kahlo’s art, the show also includes the traditional Mexican Day of the Dead altar, celebrated this time of the year, where the public can leave remembrances of ones who have journeyed on. Local Colors has often made this cultural tradition of the altar available to the public in prior years.
“I have always been intrigued by the life of Frida Kahlo and her controversial art. Many of her self-portraits show her in various types of jewelry which served as an inspiration” says Kathy. “It allowed me to expand my creativity with bolder, more culturally diverse designs and at the same time, give me an opportunity to offer support to our fellow citizens in Puerto Rico.”
Kahlo’s work often included symbols of the traditional Day of the Dead celebration so in the spirit of celebrating her life and inspiration, Kathy installed a Day of the Dead altar for the public to post a remembrance of a loved one, friend, favorite artist or just someone who has been an inspiration. She also saw it as an opportunity to raise much needed funds for the people of Puerto Rico who after almost four weeks are still struggling for water, food and electricity.
Kathy will be working all day at the Local Colors Artists’ Cooperative, 121 Main Street, Gloucester on October 30 from 10 to 6 pm where she is offering cider and cookies and an opportunity to ask questions about the exhibit and the cause. Regular hours are daily from 10 to 6, 978-283-3996.



While a lot of us wait patiently for the power to come back on, we can be grateful that the sun is out to warm us up a bit! Hoping everyone gets their power by the end of today!! Happy Halloween!
We spent last night at Cape Ann’s Marina and Resort. The boys swam in the pool, we ate dinner, and then went upstairs so that Thatch could finish homework and get a decent night’s sleep knowing that Halloween night wouldn’t lend itself to lots of rest and that we have late nights planned much the rest of the week as well.
Here is the sunset and then sunrise over the cut bridge from the deck of our room. Maybe not as spectacular as some, but it was really nice to fall asleep and wake up with such a nice view.


PRESS RELEASE
The Gloucester Meetinghouse Foundation and TownGreen/2025 present a
Community symposium called ‘HISTORIC PRESERVATION & ARCHITECTURAL SUSTAINABILITY?’ at the Meetinghouse, Saturday, November 11, 2:00-6:00pm
BRIEF DESCRIPTION: The event will explore whether preserving our older homes and buildings is compatible the goal of becoming “green” through presentations, responses from a distinguished panel, and ample time for audience Q&A.
MORE INFO: Cape Ann is actively pursuing two goals that are sometimes viewed as separate or opposed. One is for the preservation of our historic buildings and homes, especially as Gloucester’s 400th anniversary approaches in 2023. The other is to seek alternate sources and minimize energy consumption, reducing our overall carbon footprint to counter the global forces of climate change.
We ask the question of whether preservation and sustainability can be complementary rather than competitive goals. The Symposium is designed to provide a friendly and informative forum in which residents may interact with professionals to see how these two worthy goals may go together.
The mission of TownGreen/2025, an initiative under the GMF and working with the Gloucester Clean Energy Commission, is to help Gloucester become less reliant upon fossil fuels and approach being carbon neutral in a decade.
More information is available at http://www.gloucestermeetinghouse.org
LOCATION: The historic (1806) Gloucester Meetinghouse, home of the Gloucester Unitarian Universalist Church, on the green at the corner of Church & Middle Street. Parking is available on the green, next door at St. John’s Church, and at the Sawyer Free Library. Side entrance with an elevator is at 10 Church St.
ADMISSION: Free (offerings gratefully accepted), refreshments available
MORE INFORMATION (not for publication)
EVENT CONTACT: Charles Nazarian, president, Gloucester Meetinghouse Foundation at c.nazarian@gloucestermeetinghouse.org or 978-821-5291
November 11th 2017, Symposium
Historic Preservation & Architectural Sustainability
Draft Sequence (revised 10-30-17)
2:00pm Welcome & Statement of Purpose Charles Nazarian
2:10 Greeting from the Mayor Sefatia R-Theken
2:15 Review of Terms/Definitions Maureen Aylward
2:25 Vision of Carbon-Neutral: TG/2025 Susan Hogue
2:40 Q&A panel
2:50 Break
3:00 Historic Preservation Guidelines Prudence Fish
3:15 Example: City Hall Maggie Rosa
3:30 Conserve, Fix or Replace…greener? Action, Inc.
3:40 Q&A panel
3:50 Break
4:00 Building Products & LEED Measures Peter Nobile
4:30 One Builder’s Perspective Carl Thomsen
4:40 Q&A panel
5:00 Solar Sharing Program Isaac Baker
5:15 Carbon Sequestration, RTT Dick P.
5:30 Example: AirKrete Dana Nute
5:40 Q&A panel
5:55 Closing Charles N.
6:00 Sortie
Panel:
Paul McGeary Former City Council President, Member CEC
Bill Remsen Preservation & Restoration Architect
Walter Beebe-Center Owner, Essex Restoration (TBD)