Receives Degree

Receives Degree

Patrick Rolston of Vineyard Haven received a degree in marketing in May from Johnson & Wales University in Providence, R.I.

Deer Shotgun Week Begins With Hunters Out in Force

After a slow start due to poor weather, the shotgun season for deer is in full swing.

As of Wednesday afternoon — the third day of the two-week shotgun season — a total of 67 deer had been checked in at the station at Manuel F. Correllus State Forest, while 35 had been checked in at the Wampanoag tribe station in Aquinnah.

Through the first week of shotgun season last year, by comparison, 200 deer were checked in at the state forest and 122 were checked in with the tribe.

fire damage

Deon’s North Tisbury Restaurant Closes Following Thanksgiving Weekend Fire

A fast-moving fire swept through Deon';s restaurant on State Road in North Tisbury on Sunday night, completely destroying a preparation area in the rear of the building and causing severe structural and smoke damage to the kitchen and dining area.

Owners of the year-round restaurant said the eatery would be closed for repairs until at least the spring and may not reopen until summer.

The state fire marshall announced yesterday that the fire was caused by a wall heater in the preparation area at the rear of the restaurant.

West Tisbury Must Ask School District To Apply for Turbine

A wind turbine project in West Tisbury hit a snag recently when a town committee that has been shepherding the project discovered that it had tapped the wrong group to prepare an application for a $40,000 state feasibility study.

The wind energy committee learned that because the turbines are planned for the West Tisbury School, the grant application to the Massachusetts Collaborative Technology Project must come from the Up-Island School District, not the town.

Outerland Will Close Doors for Winter

Outerland, the Island’s main music venue, will close Jan. 1 and not reopen again until spring.

Outerland owner Barry Rosenthal came before the Edgartown selectmen on Monday to request a change in his liquor license from year-round to seasonal, one month after he had been granted permission to shift from seasonal to year-round. He said his reasons are strictly financial. “It has been bleeding money since September,” Mr. Rosenthal said.

Correction

Correction

A Nov. 16 story in the Gazette about the sale of Thimble Farm reported inaccurately on the farm’s status in 2000 after former owners Bencion and Patricia Moskow sold the development rights to the Martha’s Vineyard Land Bank. The farm remained in continuous operation until it was sold to Lawrence Benson in 2002. The Gazette regrets the error.

concert

Taste of the Vineyard’s Legendary Music Scene

Perched in the second row of a community hall at five o’clock in the afternoon, a plate of reconstituted Thanksgiving food balanced in one hand, and a decent glass of red in the other — it was an unusual way to take in a festival of modern music. No poorly maintained toilet facilities, no vomit, no overweight rave casualties passed out at your feet. Nevertheless, it was how Martha’s Vineyard’s musical elite saw fit to present themselves on Sunday.

Commercial Season Opens For Scalloping Up Island

The commercial bay scalloping season opened yesterday in Aquinnah. Aquinnah is the last town on the Island to open the commercial season. Fishermen have been harvesting scallops in Edgartown, Oak Bluffs, Chilmark and Tisbury.

The Yard Added to Select Catalogue of Philanthropy

The Yard, a performing artists’ dance colony in Chilmark, is among 54 charitable organizations newly listed in the 2007 Massachusetts Catalogue of Philanthropy, a publication mailed to the 120,000 wealthiest families in the state. The catalogue, published yearly since 1997, links charities and benefactors.

Island Woman Wins 5K

Island Woman Wins 5K

Amory Salem of Edgartown has won the women’s division of the annual Thanksgiving Day 5K in Oak Bluffs several times — but this is the first year she also out-ran the men as well to win. Congratulations.

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