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The
Martha's Vineyard Times is a weekly publication.
July 14 - July 20, 2005 Edition
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July 14, 2005
By
Doug Cabral
The
Times receives 20 or more letters each week, and we publish nearly
every one. We often remind readers that we welcome their letters and
delight in their eagerness to discuss their views of Vineyard matters.
Because they know what they want to say and why they want to say it,
the letter writers are always a step or two ahead of us, and we often
find ourselves scrambling to adapt our letter guidelines to the changing
tone and pattern of written communication among Islanders. From time
to time, its necessary to say a few words about what works and
what doesnt when it comes to Letter to the Editor. So, here
is a collection of nagging issues that confront Times editors as they
receive letters from you and prepare them for publication:
Irregardless is not a word. It pretends to be one in some letters
sent to The Times for publication, but we are on guard against such
imposters, and we step right in.
Something that is unique is entirely and always one of a kind. It
cannot be approaching the condition of uniqueness and be unique at
the same time. Consider for instance the phrases very unique,
almost unique, so unique, pretty much
unique, unbelievably unique. Each of these wears
a suit of clothes that whispers meaning but screams nonsense. By the
way, to give credit where its owed, the lattermost of these
phrases may have the color of truth about it, although absolutely
not what the letter writer had in mind.
Comprise, the transitive verb, means to include, to sort of get your
arms around. As, Marthas Vineyard comprises six towns. Marthas
Vineyard is not comprised of six towns. The verb acts on its own with
respect to the things its speaking about. You dont need
to know what is is. One more example: The committee comprises the
chairmen of the board of selectmen in each town
Niggardly means stingy or covetous. It has nothing to do with any
racial or ethnic group. Still, the sound of it can get a letter writer
into hot water, so we avoid it.
Citizens of this and other countries may be deprived of their rights
and privileges for any of a variety of reasons, some legal and some
not. When it happens, the citizen is disfranchised, not disenfranchised.
The right to vote or hold elected office or spit in the street, or
whatever it might be, was a franchise or license, and the citizen
has been dis-sed. Thats disfranchisement.
A target limit of 800 to 1,000 words for letters means that what were
hoping for is 200 to 300, that 1,200 or 1,500 or 2,000 are not even
the in the 800-1,000 word ballpark, that its not how many words
you use, its whether you use the right ones and how you arrange
the ones you select that makes the point you are trying to make. Pouring
the words on can drown your thought.
People send us letters describing the horrible treatment they received
from a shop owner, a restaurant owner, a landlord, a tenant, a lawyer,
a cop, another driver in a (red, black, silver, Chevy, Ford, Toyota
you choose) pickup, a bus driver, a taxi driver, a former lover,
an ex-husband, the next door neighbor with the awesome sound system.
As a rule, we dont publish such letters, juicy as the stories
might seem. The letter writer may be justified in exposing the aforementioned
tenant, landlord, cop, etc. for the psychopath he or she really is,
but we dont know if the letter writer is a) correct, b) truthful,
c) delusional. And, unless several complaints accumulate about the
same neighbor, ex-husband, shop owner, etc. we are unable to detail
a reporter to make a thorough and responsible independent investigation
of the circumstances that gave rise to the letter. For the most part,
its inside baseball to us.
(Wait a minute, strike that part about the lawyer and the cop. Of
such matters we will often take an investigatory interest. The same
is true of stories concerning elected and appointed public officials.)
How do we choose the letters we feature? Although we publish most
letters, some get special, jump to the head of the line, standout
treatment. They earn this prominence by being well written, timely,
topical, and fresh, which means not about some dried up topic or an
issue whose airing is more appropriate in another publication
Foreign Policy, for instance. Brevity helps too.
Who chooses the headlines? Generally, we do.
Do you have to be a real person to get a letter published? Of course,
and you must show us that you are the real person you say you are.
Is anything off limits? Absolutely, but we cant tell you what
until you ask, so keep those cards and letters coming. |
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