KATHIE CASE
508-627-5349
First, I would like to wish everyone a Happy New Year. My New Year’s resolution is to figure out how to take care of my computer when it goes haywire. It usually wins but eventually I get it back where I can work it.
NANCY GARDELLA
508-693-3308
I want to warn you there is going to be a custody battle in my neighborhood that will make Britney Spears and K-Fed look like United Parents of America.
HOLLY NADLER
508-693-3880
In the Agatha Christie novels someone always gets around to observing, “De mortuis nisi nil bonum,” which means, as we all know, “Speak nothing but good of the dead.” This is always in response to a police inspector (or Miss Marple or Hercule Poirot) asking, “Why would anyone want to kill your Great-Aunt Beatrice?” The object of this query always starts with the “De mortuis” bit before launching into an all-out character assasination.
For Rick Karney, director of the Martha’s Vineyard Shellfish Group, 2008 is becoming the Year of the Blue Mussel.
In recent weeks, Mr. Karney’s group has received positive news about the prospects of raising blue mussels in local waters.
While the Island group already raises juvenile bay scallops, quahaugs and oysters for participating towns on a regular basis, the organization also is participating in a blue-mussel experiment that could expand aquaculture to the open water.
It was an up-and-down week for the Vineyard’s high school sports teams.
The boys’ hockey team won a pair of games to inch closer to a berth in the state tournament, while the girls’ basketball team lost both a blowout against an unknown opponent and a tight game against a familiar rival. Meanwhile, the girls’ hockey team shook off a slow start and began to show potential, while the boys’ basketball team won a game by 30 points and lost another by a single bucket.
Boys’ Hockey
Fish Talk
Fish, Fish, Fish will be the topic of Louis Larsen’s talk at the next Friends of the Library speakers bureau at 2 p.m. Sunday, Jan. 20, at the Vineyard Haven library. Mr. Larsen is the owner of the Net Result. Refreshments will be served following the talk.
Tonight’s crescent moon appears low in the western sky after sunset in the zodiacal constellation Aquarius. The moon reaches first quarter phase on Tuesday and is in the zodiacal constellation Pisces.
Curl up in the early winter dark and enjoy classic American literature as part of the new travelling Islandwide reading group called Fictions of Race in 20th Century America.
JOHN S. ALLEY
508-693-2950
Bone-chilling cold opened the New Year. But as Mark Twain said, “If you don’t like the New England weather, wait five minutes.” This week the weather was better than seasonable. Some business establishments had their doors wide-open during the day, people and joggers were dressed in T-shirts and shorts, and strangers were practicing golf in the agricultural society field.
JANE N. SLATER
508-645-3378
Greetings from Chilmark where the January thaw is much appreciated. The mild weather has stimulated lots of activity in the bird world. I hope the birders had a successful count last week. The resident flock of crows in Menemsha recently spent the day cleaning out our house gutters . . . we think they spotted something green growing there.