Opinion
Bar None
From a 1932 Gazette:
To those who would look intelligently upon the distant past of Martha’s Vineyard, an authority to be commended is Charles H. Brown, Vineyard Haven attorney at law. A Vineyarder of a Vineyard family, Mr. Brown was, nevertheless, born in Charlestown, Mass., but, coming to the Island at the age of six months, he may justly claim the Vineyard as his only home. His father was a physician who practiced on the Vineyard.
The news in my morning newspa per was not good. Indeed, it was frightful and depressive. But why should it be otherwise when agendas seeded and fertilized by politicians and statesmen run amok. No matter what ensign they wave from No. 10 Downing Street, the White House, the Houses of Parliament, Capitol Hill, the Kremlin or from a palace in Baghdad, their acts spell disaster with a capital D. Think death, depression, dismemberment for warrior and civilian alike.
In recognition of national Teach Children to Save Day last month April 12, the Martha’s Vineyard Savings Bank sponsored its 10th annual essay contest for fifth, sixth and seventh graders. The topic for this year’s essay was: In our world where financial differences have wide gaps, explain what the differences are between “wants” and “needs.”
The contest was judged on May 10 at the Martha’s Vineyard Regional High School by Peg Regan (past principal), Todd Sawyer (English teacher) and Ann Tyra (bank trustee).
PRAISE RUPERT
Editors, Vineyard Gazette:
The following letter was sent to the Tisbury selectmen reacting to complaints about a rooster in the neighborhood:
I have no answers to the world’s big problems. I’m no guru,” wrote artist, teacher and peace-promoter Winslow Myers in a recent e-mail. Although he lives high up in Vermont in Stowe, he’ll be speaking here this weekend. He’s the author of Living Beyond War: A Citizen’s Guide (Orbis Books, $16) and director of a group, Beyond War, that for the past 25 years has worked to change the world’s thinking about military aggression and nuclear armament.
Joe Cressy
Salty and scholarly
Haltingly clear
What Joe Cressy spoke
You wanted to hear
Scottish and kilted
Malt in his hand
Reciting keenly
So Scots understand
Heeling on Halcyon
Bound for the sky
Cresting and leaning
A tear in his eye
Mary and daughters
