Bits of Work

Brrr! I write this column on Monday morning. I’m looking at four degrees. If memory serves me, and it rarely does, I don’t believe we were in the single digits all last winter.

Dean’s List

Dean’s List

Stephen (Stavros) Viglas of Edgartown, has been named to the dean’s list at Suffolk University for the fall semester. He is a junior, majoring in sociology.

Itchy Gitchy

If you heard the news, go to the “head” of the class.

Hot off the presses is the report that there is a new treatment for the perennial problem that plagues parents and schools everywhere. Lice now have a new enemy. After years of acclimating to traditional treatments and evolving resistant strains, the bugs will now have to contend with a new FDA-approved drug that gives parents a lice-ense to kill.

News Update: Thursday, January 27 - Three Arrested in Oak Bluffs Drug Seizures

Three men were arrested on drugs and gun charges Wednesday after a search in an Oak Bluffs home revealed 175 marijuana plants, a shotgun rifle and ammunition, according to a press release from the Oak Bluffs police department.

Brothers Joseph DePriest, 41, and Luke DePreist, 31, face charges in Edgartown district court of illegal cultivation of marijuana and weapons violations, Oak Bluffs police chief Erik Blake said, after a search warrant was executed at their home at 2 Dreamers Way in Oak Bluffs.

Oak Bluffs Selectmen Doubt Usefulness of DRI Checklist

The ongoing discussion of the role of the Martha’s Vineyard Commission in reviewing commercial development continued on Thursday as Oak Bluffs officials took aim at the regional planning commission’s development of regional impact (DRI) checklist.

After a commission meeting last Monday where Edgartown selectman Michael Donaroma urged more leniency in the Upper Main street business district, Oak Bluffs selectmen and town planning board members echoed some of the same sentiments during a joint workshop on Tuesday.

Wheels Stopped in Edgartown, Tour Operator Appeals to State

Edgartonians are fiercely proud of their narrow streets, the widow’s walks, 18th century homes, gardens with perfect roses on white picket fences. They prefer you enjoy it by foot (careful with the thorns); as the town Web site explains, “To view and appreciate this town fully, you must walk its streets.”

Downtown residents fiercely reinforced the message at a public hearing on Tuesday, pleading with selectmen to keep four-wheeled tours away from their village.

Digital Footprints Make Deep Impressions

Most people use social media sites on the Internet to share stories with friends, post pictures of their vacations with family or a night on the town or check up on a long lost friend.

Others use these sites to taunt, harass and bully people who are different from them.

Summer Resident Earns Golden Globe Top Honors

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.

shipwreck

Heroic Rescuers Up for Posthumous Award

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

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.

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