Young Booters Kick Season With a Shiver

It was as cold as charity at 8:30 a.m. on the West Tisbury School soccer fields last Saturday. The wind cut right through you, and it was periodically spitting rain.

The Vineyard’s fall youth soccer season was ending, not with a bang, but with a shiver.

It might have seemed a sad end to the season — particularly considering that the previous week’s play had been abandoned to the remnants of Hurricane Noel — except that the kids didn’t seem to mind at all.

greyhound

Sophomores Speak Out

This is our second stint as editors for Sophomores Speak Out. This week we have a different set of opinions on everything from Halloween to school, child abuse and even greyhounds. Enjoy the read.

— Breanne Russell and Troy (85) Small

Why Help Darfur?

By Eric Fletcher >

Revived Nantucket Bay Scallop Harvest Pushes Down Prices

Vineyard consumers are enjoying the lowest retail prices on bay scallops in at least ten years thanks to a renewed abundance of the tasty bivalve on Nantucket.

The Nantucket resurgence has been pushing down wholesale as well as retail prices on both Islands.

At Menemsha Seafood in Chilmark, owner Stanley Larsen said the retail price for bay scallops is around $16. His cousin, Louis Larsen of the Net Result, a fish market in Vineyard Haven, said the retail price is about the same at his store.

Galleries Host Benefit

Galleries Host Benefit

Granary Gallery, Gardner Colby Gallery and Field Gallery all are coming together to host a benefit for one of their own. Eighty artists will be donating proceeds of the sale of their artwork to benefit Dee Dee Hagen, wife of artist John Hagen. She was recently diagnosed with malignant melanoma.

The benefit will take place on Saturday, Dec. 9 at 6 p.m. at the Granary Gallery, located on Old County Road in West Tisbury. For more information, call 508-693-0455.

Vineyarders Climax Season Against Traditional Rival

It’s been a season of peaks and valleys for the Vineyard football team.

They shot out to a 5-0 record to start the season and earned a top rank in their division by the Boston Globe. And as if that weren’t enough, a news crew from NBC taped two 30-minute segments that will air later this year during a halftime of the network’s NFL Sunday Night Football program. Meanwhile, Sports Illustrated published a story showcasing the Vineyarders.

First Quarter Moon

Tomorrow night’s first quarter moon appears in the zodiacal constellation Capricornus.

Temperatures

Temperature: Precip.

Day Max. Min. Inches.

Fº Fº

Nov. 9 46 32 .00

Nov. 10 50 41 .19

Nov. 11 43 31 .00

Nov. 12 42 26 .00

Nov. 13 54 32 .17

Nov. 14 56 33 .10

Nov. 15 60 46 .00

Water temperature in Edgartown harbor: 55º F.

Stories in Two Languages

Stories in Two Languages

Portuguese/English Story Time is back. Saturday, Nov. 17 at 10:30 a.m. at the Oak Bluffs Public Library. Stories will be about bears, and we’ll have snacks and a craft.

Português/inglêsHistória Tempo volta. Osábado, novembro 17 em 10:30 SOU na Carvalho Blefes BibliotecaPública. Ashistóriasestarão sobre ursos, enós teremos lanches e um artesanato.

Generous State Grant Will Assist With Solar Panels

Foundations for the new Martha’s Vineyard Hospital won’t be poured until spring, but already the hospital has big plans for the rooftops.

This week the hospital received notice from the Massachusetts Technology Collaborative, the state’s development agency for renewable energy and the innovation economy, that the hospital will receive a $198,000 design and construction grant for solar electric panels atop the new building.

cool cash

Extra Cheese and Charity on Top: Students Boost Hospital Coffers

They held the anchovies but not much else as several hundred hungry Vineyarders sold out the seventh annual Pizza Night at the Tisbury School last Friday night to benefit the Martha’s Vineyard Hospital.

A little more than an hour into the two-hour event, the last of more than 100 pizzas prepared by school teachers and staff had been munched or ordered by students, family and hospital well-wishers. The event has become a fall institution on the Island, according to senorita Oly Wirtz, school Spanish teacher and multilingual hostess at the door.

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