Chapter 27: The Calm Before the Storm

In this year-long serialized novel set on the Vineyard in real time, a native Islander (“Call me Becca”) returns home after two decades to help her eccentric Uncle Abe keep his landscaping business, Pequot, afloat. Abe has a paranoid hatred of Richard Moby, the chief executive of an off-Island wholesale nursery, Broadway. Convinced that Moby wants to destroy Abe personally, and all Island-based landscaping/nursery businesses generally, Abe is obsessed with “taking down” Moby.

gallery

Jeff Serusa’s Seaworthy Gallery Offers Fresh Perspectives on a Timeworn Theme

November is an unusual time to open an art gallery on Martha’s Vineyard. The summer crowds, with their disposable incomes and endless leisure time, have been replaced by the year-round residents with their bills and 40-hour work weeks. And in this economic climate, with art markets large and small starting to feel the trickle-down effect from the crisis on Wall Street, artists and dealers alike might find themselves seeking shelter from the storm with other pursuits, or even abandoning ship all together.

Temperatures

Temperature: Precip.

Day Max. Min. Inches.

Fº Fº

Nov. 7 68 53 .08

Nov. 8 59 58 .03

Nov. 9 60 55 .32

Nov. 10 59 38 Trace

Nov. 11 57 35 .00

Nov. 12 50 33 .00

obama

Sophomores Speak Out

The Presidential election has been a huge issue in the sophomore class and students have followed every step of the way. This week many of our writers are reflecting on what happens now that we have a new president.

There is an overwhelming sense of hope and excitement among the students expressed best on our class bulletin board entitled Yes We Can! We are facing the future feeling part of this new world and a sense that we have seen real history made mixed with a little fear for our new president.

— Elaine Weintraub, advisor

flag

Honoring Country With Service of All Kinds

On Veterans Day we rouse ourselves to an unusual patriotic fervor, waving flags, watching the marchers, perhaps even laying a wreath at the grave of a veteran — known or unknown — to give our thanks. Then we go home and resume our daily chores without looking back.

What can we do to really honor those that have served for their country in war? I wondered last Tuesday. The answer was not long in coming — reinstate the draft, make service to our country obligatory for every citizen.

Gazette Chronicle: Sovereign Nation

Sovereign Nation

From Gazette editions of November, 1983:

Letters to the Editor

NOT QUITE

Editors, Vineyard Gazette:

Copper and Gold

Copper and Gold

The beech trees that heavily populate the North Shore of the Vineyard are showing spectacular foliage this year; their coppery gold canopies refract the late afternoon light which fades all too quickly during the shortened days of late autumn.

Bridges to Here and There

Bridges to Here and There

Like so many of its projects that the Island has seen over the years, the Massachusetts Highway Department’s plan to rebuild the two bridges that span Beach Road between Edgartown and Oak Bluffs is full of hope and promise — and also surprise.

Budgets for Learning

Budgets for Learning

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