On Sunday night, Jan. 16, Jeffrey Levy-Hinte, a West Tisbury summer resident, won the Golden Globe award for best movie in the category of comedy or musical. The movie he produced is called The Kids Are All Right, a feature film that explores the complex journey of parenthood through the story of a lesbian couple raising their two children.
Jan. 18 marked the 127th anniversary of one of the worst marine disasters in southeastern Massachusetts, when the 275-foot steamer City of Columbus foundered on the rocks of Devil’s Bridge and sank a half mile off Gay Head. A total of 103 passengers and crew were lost.
Health Care Access Funds
The county of Dukes County was awarded $25,000 from the Blue Cross Blue Shield of Massachusetts Foundation to continue the Vineyard Health Care Access Program.
The program provides comprehensive enrollment, education and retention services with a focus on coverage maintenance and appropriate use of health care services. The organization also provides detailed information on establishing and using a primary care home, identifying a primary care provider and limiting emergency room usage to true medical emergencies.
A few weeks ago when Sienna Dice met her grandmother for the first time, the older woman began sniffing her. Big sniffs. Audible sniffs. The kind of sniffs one might expect to receive after not washing for a while.
But her grandmother was in no way upset or even mildly concerned with Sienna’s grooming habits. She was merely welcoming her granddaughter back home, after 10 years, in traditional Cambodian custom.
The nonprofit Island Housing Trust, a community land trust serving Martha’s Vineyard, is currently accepting nominations for six community representatives to its board of directors.
Community members with expertise and skill in business finance, housing development, project financing, organizational leadership, fund-raising, housing services, and real estate and contract law are encouraged to apply.
Fibromyalgia Support
The Martha’s Vineyard Fibromyalgia Support Group will have their first meeting on Wednesday, Jan. 26 from 6:30 to 8:30 p.m.
For more information and for the location, contact mvfmsg@aol.com.
West Tisbury town officials have mostly agreed that the rocks will have to go.
Members of the town historic district commission appeared before selectmen on Wednesday to denounce the large boulders in front of the recently renovated town hall which they feel are not in keeping with the town historic district.
“The rocks were an easy temporary thing, they weren’t on any official plans,” said historic district commission chairman Sean Conley. “It’s like making a cake and then putting ugly frosting on it.”
Ronnie Simonsen was most likely look ing forward to singing O Holy Night on Christmas at Triumphant Cross Lutheran Church in Salem, N.H. He loved to sing. But on Dec. 15 Ronnie lost his fight against leukemia. He was 55.
“The good news is that recurring thoughts of sorrow are overshadowed by feelings of joy, knowing that our son enriched the lives of so many,” said Jake Karrfalt, Ronnie’s stepfather.
Community service was the theme at the annual Martin Luther King Jr. dinner at the Harbor View Hotel on Monday night. More than 100 people attended the four-hour event which included speeches and an awards ceremony, concluding with the swearing in of officers of the local branch of the NAACP, both new and renewed. “Martin Luther King Jr.’s legacy lives in the hearts and minds of all of us who believe the world can be a better place. Let us not make the mistake of thinking that only great heroes can make a difference.
Geography is a demanding discipline as stumped students of the Edgartown School discovered on Tuesday morning at the schoolwide geography bee. But while the Thousand Islands Bridge and Wabash River eluded school geo-buffs, by correctly placing Tianjin in China, eighth grader Charlie Morano will now enjoy the grand prize of another written test and a chance to qualify for the National Geographic Bee in Washington, D.C.
For almost 15 years the Edgartown School has taken part in the National Geographic Bee, thanks in large part to the efforts of teacher Gary Smith.