Commentary

 

 

 

From Gazette editions of July, 1934:

Here it is, mid-July on Martha’s Vineyard, a pleasant time at a pleasant place. We are always tempted at about this phase of every summer season to look around and take stock; or, if that is too businesslike a phrase to use in association with the Island, to form a picture of the busy, idle summer.

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When the Gazette called for a visual exploration of patriotism, we gave no directions on how artists should express their ideas.

Because, to crib from President Obama, “That is the true genius of America, a faith in the simple dreams of its people, the insistence on small miracles. That we can say what we think, write what we think, without hearing a sudden knock on the door.”

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We the People

On the eve of Independence Day, with parades, picnics and baseball games on deck and flags flying from every corner, it is also a time to pause and remember who we are as a people and what we stand for as a nation. Two hundred and thirty-three years after the founding of the country, what are the principles and values that guide American society?

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DESPERATELY NEEDED

Editors, Vineyard Gazette:

After four years of being on the Chilmark housing committee and with a success rate of one home site in those four years I decided to see if it was possible to privately create housing faster. I found a great piece of land in West Tisbury abutting a sweet path to the school and imagined the generations of families to come that would appreciate the location and I was empowered by this vision.

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As we approach eight years of war, too many military families are quietly coming apart at the seams. The public hears the most dramatic stories and statistics — soldiers killing their wives, themselves, each other. Less well known are the effects that prolonged war and multiple deployments have had on our daily lives. As the wife of a commander of a battalion that deployed last year, I know that many of us feel embittered, powerless and disconnected from the Army in which we and our husbands serve.

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No Chicken, This Dog

From a Gazette edition of July, 1956:

About twenty-two miles south-southwest of Noman’s Land in the heaving swells of the open ocean, something of a miracle occurred on Thursday of last week. A wire-haired fox terrier, only part of his muzzle visible, was sighted and picked up by the ketch-rigged motor sailer Seer, owned by Harry Bellas Hess, well known in these waters.

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