Letters to the Editor

HOME INSURANCE MESS

Editors, Vineyard Gazette:

Gazette Chronicle: One of Six

One of Six

From the Vineyard Gazette editions of December, 1982:

To Protect Coastline, No One Size Fits All

I was pleased to read your editorial Shifting Sands in the Nov. 16 issue of the Gazette. Sediment management is a critical issue facing most of the world’s coastal communities. In a 1988 report to the Martha’s Vineyard Commission I wrote: “The Martha’s Vineyard shoreline is undergoing a process of coastal evolution caused primarily by rising sea level. The dominant theme is shoreline retreat due to submergence and wave erosion of the shore land.

Moujabber Attorneys Sue Commission

Attorneys for the Oak Bluffs resident who illegally built a three-story garage along the North Bluff three years ago have sued the Martha’s Vineyard Commission.

Attorneys for Joseph G. Moujabber filed a complaint in Dukes County Superior Court on Nov. 16 challenging the commission’s unanimous decision last month to review the controversial garage project — dubbed Garage Mahal by some critics — as a development of regional impact (DRI).

Hello, Soleil

Hello, Soleil

Pamela S. Harris Daugherty and Lenston H. Daugherty 3rd of Oak Bluffs announce the birth of a daughter, Soleil Zenobia Sayeeda Daugherty, on Dec. 4 at the Martha’s Vineyard Community Hospital. Soleil weighed 4 pounds, 8 ounces at birth.

actors

The Homecoming Showcases Children in Depression-Era Play

Years ago, Daniel Cuff was cast in the role of a tree in his sixth grade play. Now Mr. Cuff, as a high school junior, has blossomed with an accomplished performance as Clay-Boy Spencer, a role which bonds the vast cast of characters together in The Homecoming, in production at the Vineyard Playhouse through Dec. 22.

Mr. Cuff plays the dual role of narrator and eldest child of the family. Clay-Boy wistfully recalls that poignant, long ago Christmas Eve when he, yet a child, struggled to know and be known by his father.

Susan Klein

Oak Bluffs Christmases of Old Retold by Native Susan Klein

Storyteller par excellence Susan Klein captured the imagination of more than 40 people Saturday night at the Unitarian-Universalist Society of Martha’s Vineyard on Main street in Vineyard Haven, with her program entitled Silent Night, An Evening of Christmas Stories.

The raconteuse from Oak Bluffs opened with a sound check: “We’re recording all live performances from here on — just because.” Because, Ms. Klein explained, when she was old and gray she wanted to sit back and listen to us laugh again.

Kevin Ryan

Miracle Is How Ageless Morals Translate in Easy Punchlines

Again and again, it seems, Christmas brings us face to face with the same old question. Where does a rabidly materialistic society like our own get off celebrating the man who taught poverty by reveling in a superfluity of consumer goods? Perhaps they didn’t juggle exactly the same paradox, but the monks of 12th century England labored over the same vexing question of how best to reconcile Christian piety with the pull of earthly delights.

Wins Gift

Wins Gift

Priscilla Summers of Williamsburg, Va., won a $100 gift certificate at Henley’s Needlepoint in Edgartown. The drawing, which occurred on Dec. 9, was the third annual drawing in conjunction with the Edgartown Board of Trade’s Christmas in Edgartown.

Bob Lee Maria Danielson

Sounds of Silence and Static Give Way to Celebration as WVVY Turns On 93.7

For the past three years, the static of nearby stations filled radio frequency 93.7 FM. On Friday morning a week ago, the static was replaced with silence. Around 4:30 p.m, there was a beep. And then a song came over the airwaves.

So that night, even as a slew of Island musicians took the stage at the Chilmark Community Center to raise money for an Island family, and as Islanders took cover from the steady drizzle and caught up with friends over freshly baked cornbread and homemade chowder, a radio from a car parked outside blared a steady stream of music.

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