Aquinnah: Energy Coop Goes to Special Meeting

The Aquinnah landfill is legal.

Selectmen last week said the town received a landfill license on Jan. 14 from the state Department of Environmental Protection.

Receipt of the license ends a year of environmental department reviews and inspections, which followed a town paperwork snafu several years ago that led to a failure to renew the license.

Selectmen also voted to place three articles on the Feb. 12 special town meeting warrant.

hockey

Boys’ Basketball Team Suffers Defeats, Threatening Postseason

Just about every game this season for the boys’ high school basketball team has gone right down to the wire, which has provided last-minute thrills for some fans but conversely has caused something like an ulcer for coach Mike Joyce.

“All these games seemingly are decided by a single shot in the final seconds,” Mr. Joyce said following the Vineyarders’ 86-85 loss to Wareham on Tuesday. “It may be great for the fans, but it’s not easy on the coach. I think they’re trying to give me a heart attack.”

Center for Women’s Health Welcomes New Midwife

The Martha’s Vineyard Hospital’s Center for Women’s Health has announced that Nancy Leport, a certified nurse midwife, has joined the center’s medical practice.

Ms. Leport, a longtime Island resident, completed her midwifery training at Columbia University in 1997. She previously served the Vineyard community as a nurse in the maternity department of the hospital.

students

Martin Luther King Jr. Day Observed

In 1964, spurred to action> by the assassination of President John F. Kennedy, a group of Vineyard residents from all walks of life and all ethnicities joined together to carry on the charge for change and hope the president had urged. They held their initial meetings at St. Andrew’s Episcopal church in Edgartown and quickly became the first and only Island chapter of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People.

Dean’s List

Dean’s List

Jacqueline Panek of Vineyard Haven made the dean’s list at Nichols College in Dudley for the fall 2007 semester.

Island Co-Housing Backs New Open Mike Sessions

Open Mike at Island Co-Housing, a new monthly series that continues Friday, Feb. 1 at 6 p.m., is designed to encourage any and all youngsters to play and enjoy each other’s music.

When organizer Paul Lazes read an article in the Gazette a few months back about surveys revealing the alarming attempted suicide rate at the high school, he decided he needed to take action. “It is my firm belief that a vibrant music scene of young performers is achievable on the Vineyard,” he said.

Jupiter and Venus

The best planetary show of the month takes place early in the morning. The two brightest planets in our night sky appear together as a close pair. Venus and Jupiter are doing a planetary dance and they can be seen close to the horizon an hour before sunrise.

Oak Bluffs

HOLLY NADLER

508-693-3880

(sunporch@vineyard.net)

The moon has been so dramatically full this week — so fat and blazing and low on the horizon — that some people have had to break out sunglasses for their evening stroll with the dog.

The moon’s glow was particularly taunting on those extremely freezing nights earlier in the week when you had to wonder how a heavenly body could shed major light and zip heat.

Welcome Annie Grace

Welcome Annie Grace

Annie Grace Combra was born at Brigham and Woman’s Hospital in Boston on Jan. 10. She weighed 8 pounds, 5 ounces. Annie Grace is the third child of Richard and Jennifer Combra and the baby sister of Sophie and Richard 3rd. The grandparents are Brenda and Robert Lynch of Rochester, Sue Curely of Oak Bluffs, Richard and Dawn Combra of Oak Bluffs and Jack and Roxie Curley of Marion.

English Conversation

English Conversation

The Edgartown library has begun a winter semester of free English conversation classes, led by Nancy Gardella. The class meets on Tuesdays from 5 to 7 p.m. at Edgartown town hall. Class dates are Jan. 29; Feb. 5, 12 and 19; and March 4, 11 and 18.

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