Unusual Chilmark Walkway Plan Aired

An unusual plan by a private landowner to build and pay for a
619-foot wooden walkway across property owned by the Martha's
Vineyard Land Bank will go before the Chilmark conservation commission
on Wednesday.

Business Leaders in Vineyard Haven Pitch Plan to Allow Sale of Beer, Wine

Business Leaders in Vineyard Haven Pitch Plan to Allow Sale of Beer,
Wine

By MARK ALAN LOVEWELL

A new initiative to allow the sale of alcohol in Vineyard Haven
landed without warning in front of the Tisbury selectmen this week. At
their regular meeting Tuesday the board received for review a draft
article that would allow restaurants to sell beer and wine to patrons.

The plan to convert Vineyard Haven from a dry to a wet town has the
backing of a group of local business owners and also the Tisbury
Business Association.

Steamship Authority Weathers Changes Through Long Year

Steamship Authority Weathers Changes Through Long Year

By JAMES KINSELLA

As 2004 got under way at the Steamship Authority, there was some
question about whether there would be a Steamship Authority in the
future.

In mid-January Nantucket governor Grace Grossman confirmed that she
had been exploring since the previous summer whether that island should
secede from the boat line, an entity created by the state in 1960 to
ensure reliable, affordable ferry travel between Martha's
Vineyard, Nantucket and the mainland.

Wampanoags Ask High Court to Reconsider Sovereignty Case

Wampanoags Ask High Court to Reconsider Sovereignty Case

By JAMES KINSELLA
Gazette Senior Writer

The Wampanoag Tribe of Gay Head (Aquinnah) has asked the
Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court (SJC) to reconsider a case
freighted with long-term implications for the tribe's sovereignty
and land use powers.

The tribe's attorney, Douglas J. Luckerman of Lexington, filed
the motion last Thursday with the SJC, the highest court in
Massachusetts.

On Dec. 9, the SJC ruled against the tribe in the case.

Commission Begins Islandwide Planning

Commission Begins Islandwide Planning

Three-Year Initiative Starts in January as MVC Updates Comprehensive
Plan with Eye Toward Deep Study of Issues

By IAN FEIN

The Martha's Vineyard Commission will kick off a three-year
Islandwide planning effort in 2005, hoping to develop a comprehensive
set of guidelines by which the commission and individual towns can
manage future growth on the Vineyard.

"It's long overdue and it's needed
desperately," said commission member Nathaniel Orleans, who
introduced the idea last spring.

Island Celebrates New Year's Eve Tonight

New York city may have Times Square and the ball drop, but Islanders
looking to ring in the new year need look no further than Vineyard Haven
to find their New Year's Eve fix.

The annual Last Night First Day celebration, sponsored by the
Tisbury Ambulance Association, begins today, and with warmer weather
forecast and new activities planned organizers are predicting this
year's event will be one of the most successful.

Sri Lanka: The Alexanders Escape Horrors on Trip to Asia

When Todd and Kara Alexander left for a month-long vacation to Sri
Lanka a week before Christmas, the Oak Bluffs couple was looking forward
to relaxing in the warm sun and white sand beaches of Arugam Bay.

Mrs. Alexander is in the early stages of pregnancy, and the thought
of a beach resort they had read about in the travel guide sounded like
an ideal tonic.

More Students, Higher Scores: High School Cracks SAT Exam

More Students, Higher Scores: High School Cracks SAT Exam

By IAN FEIN

Efforts to improve SAT scores at the Martha's Vineyard
Regional High School are apparently paying off.

For the second consecutive year the graduating class of seniors
posted the school's best average scores on both the verbal and
math sections of the key college entrance exam. The class of 2004 also
had the highest percentage of Vineyard students to ever take the test
- with 152 of 181 graduates, or 84 per cent, giving up a Saturday
morning to put their No. 2 pencils to work.

Safe at Home: Wounded War Vet Returns

Christmas came three days early for the family of U.S. Army Sgt.
Randy Dull.

Early Wednesday evening, as the sun set and lit the sky the color of
salmon, Sergeant Dull -  who was wounded in Iraq by a roadside
bomb two months ago - arrived at the Martha's Vineyard
Airport to a hero's welcome.

Pages