Dean’s List

Dean’s List

Devin M. Colter, the son of Richard and Deborah Colter of Edgartown, was named to the Ithaca College Dean’s List for the spring semester 2008.

Mr. Colter plans to enter the Park School of Communications at Ithaca College in the fall to major in filmmaking and photography. He is a 2007 graduate of Martha’s Vineyard Regional High School.

Summer Sales: Mixed Review

While some business owners predicted a bleak summer season on the Vineyard due to record high gasoline prices and a sagging national economy — an outlook made worse by the devastating Fourth of July fire in Vineyard Haven — the mid-term economic report card for the season has so far been a mixed bag.

Selectmen Sign Deal To Buy Home Port at Far Lower Price

Chilmark selectmen signed an agreement Tuesday to purchase the Home Port restaurant, along with two neighboring waterfront lots, for a dramatically reduced price of $2 million.

The agreement, negotiated by selectman J.B. Riggs Parker on behalf of the board of selectmen with owners Will and Madeline Holtham, is almost half the price of a $3.9 million sale agreement rejected by Chilmark voters in 2005, though it does not include a lot with a dock currently used for restaurant parking.

MV BBS welcome screen

Island Internet Pioneers Recall First Bytes

The Internet did not arrive on the Island by chance, like the skunk and the raccoon. It was deliberately brought here by an anxious group of like-minded computer enthusiasts. Twenty years ago, it wasn’t even known on the Vineyard as the Internet.

Today, business on the Island doesn’t get done without a byte or a bit being exchanged. The Internet today is in every town hall, most municipal buildings and in just about every household. The world is linked to the Vineyard and the Vineyard is linked to the world.

Carl Pope

U.S. Energy Crisis Sees Sierra Club Unite With Foes

T. Boone Pickens is a Republican billionaire from Texas who handsomely funded the Swift Boat campaign against John Kerry. Carl Pope is a veteran of the environmental movement, executive director of the Sierra Club and fierce critic of both George Bush and John McCain.

That the two men are in furious agreement on the need for a radical overhaul of U.S. energy policy, Mr. Pope said, says something very bad about the recent state of politics.

Glass, Paper, Cardboard: Recycling Riddle Solved

It is one of the enduring pieces of Martha’s Vineyard lore: you take your recycling to the transfer station, separate it as directed into containers for plastics, paper, cardboard, aluminum and so on, and then at the end of the day it all gets tossed in together and dumped.

Like glass, the myth recycles endlessly. But it is a myth.

Catch a Dream at Outerland; Do It for Community Services

Even Art Buchwald had his dream.

“I imagine it this way,” he wrote in a 2002 column in this newspaper. “I am going to be cremated and then have my ashes dropped over every cocktail party on Martha’s Vineyard. It’s the only way I can make all the parties held here in the summer. I want Cape Air, the friendly, nine-seat airline, to fly me . . . The plane takes off from Martha’s Vineyard Airport, and Mike Wallace is in charge of dropping the ashes.”

Gazette Around the Island

Today’s Vineyard Gazette is being delivered to every mailbox on the Island. We hope you enjoy the news, issues, features, information and events calendar in today’s paper. If you would also enjoy a signed copy of Espresso Love proprietor Carol McManus’s new cookbook Table Talk: Food Family Love (retail price $22.95), you can get one free with a subscription to the Gazette, at an on-Island rate of $41 a year. Enjoy 70 issues of the Gazette a year. Renew your subscription and your family mealtimes, your mind and body.

Board Proposes Road for Special Protection

The West Tisbury byways committee has recommended including the Dr. Fisher Road in an expanded Martha’s Vineyard Commission special ways protection zone, after hearing complaints from residents about an increasing number of dump trucks and trash haulers traveling on the road.

House Bond Bill Would Fund Seawall

The Massachusetts House of Representatives last week unanimously approved an environmental bond bill with a healthy allocation of $1.5 million for Oak Bluffs to help repair the retaining wall along Sea View avenue that partially collapsed in February.

The bill also includes $500,000 to build a new stand-alone public fishing pier adjacent to the Oak Bluffs Steamship Authority pier.

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