Taylor Toole's Film Will Appear in Boston Festival, Island Theatres

Taylor Toole's Film Will Appear in Boston Festival, Island
Theatres

By MANDY LOCKE

Fourteen months ago, when he was begging and borrowing his way
through 12 grueling days of directing his first film on Martha's
Vineyard, Taylor Toole had doubts about finishing the project.

Let alone making it onto a selective list of short features
premiering at the Boston Film Festival this weekend.

Oak Bluffs Water Has Chlorine Boost

Oak Bluffs Water Has Chlorine Boost

By CHRIS BURRELL

The tap water in Oak Bluffs has tested clean for a week now, but the
chlorine added to combat bacteria levels detected early last month has
left town water tasting and smelling like a swimming pool.

"The chlorine is very strong, and it's not
pleasant," resident Selena Roman told the Gazette yesterday.
"We typically drink tap water, and we're not drinking it
now. It's horrible."

Schooner Juno Journeys Toward Saturday Launch

The shed behind the Tisbury Marketplace was built to house the
construction of Rebecca back in 1997. The shed was just big enough to
accommodate the schooner as her builders laid the keel, sawed out the
frames and installed the bowsprit and boomkin that would help fasten her
spars and rigging to hull and deck.

With Vineyard Heading Back to Class, Dozen Teachers Enter Their Last Year

With Vineyard Heading Back to Class, Dozen Teachers Enter Their Last
Year

By CHRIS BURRELL

For a dozen Vineyard public school teachers, the new academic year
that opens this week is a huge benchmark for them and a big headache for
administrators.

The reason? All 12 teachers will lay down their chalk at the
year's end, their collective retirements forcing principals and
the Vineyard schools superintendent Dr. Kriner Cash to recruit
replacement teachers at a rate nearly three times the level in a typical
year.

County Manager Choice Quit Law Practice After Facing Fund Allegations

County Manager Choice Quit Law Practice After Facing Fund
Allegations

By ALEXIS TONTI

Three days before the new Dukes County manager will sign his
contract, news surfaced that he gave up his license to practice law amid
allegations of professional misconduct.

The county commissioners said yesterday they had learned about the
incident several months ago, when E. Winn Davis, the executive secretary
of the town of Hanson, was first named as a finalist for the position.

Mainland Manhunt Ends Here; Suspect Seized in Aquinnah

A high-octane mainland manhunt for two suspects who were allegedly involved in a wild crime spree in Braintree last week led police to the tiny town of Aquinnah on Saturday night, where one of the suspects was found holed up in a private home.

William Brymer, 31, of Quincy, was arrested without incident by a large contingent of local police late Saturday, following a tip that eventually led them to a private home on Lobsterville Road in the remote western reaches of the Vineyard.

Joseph Carter with Isabel Powell

Adding History to Island’s Heritage Trail: Sunday Gathering Held in Honor of Isabel Powell

Some 250 people gathered Sunday on a glorious late-summer day to honor Ms. Isabel Powell, the matriarch of the Powell family, and the memory of Cong. Adam Clayton Powell Jr. A diverse crowd gathered to pay their respects to Ms. Powell and to take part in the making of history as the Heritage Trail dedicated its 17th site.

Tabernacle Requires More Fixes; Architects Call for a New Roof

Tabernacle Requires More Fixes; Architects Call for a New Roof

By CHRIS BURRELL

The bill to restore the Tabernacle was supposed to run just $1
million and cover the basics: new stained-glass windows, re-flashing the
roof and a serious scrape-and-paint job of the rusting iron structure.

But three years after mounting an ambitious fund-raising campaign to
pay for the project and start up an additional endowment fund worth $1
million, leaders in the Camp Ground now say they need almost twice the
money to do the job right.

Rabbi Broitman: Hebrew Center Is Embracing a New Arrival

It was a reverent and quietly momentous occasion. Sixty-three years after its incorporation by 10 Island families, the Martha's Vineyard Hebrew Center installed its first full-time rabbi.

Saying, "We do this with the hope and expectation in our hearts that this blessing of having you as our spiritual leader will enable all of us to grow spiritually and in knowledge of Torah," Hebrew Center president Edward Schwartz officially installed Rabbi Caryn Beth Broitman.

Measuring the Summer: Seasonal Pace Slows a Bit; Is Vineyard in Transition?

Traffic was down, but parking tickets were up. The weather was changeable; ditto for the restaurant and retail business. The wild blueberries were not so hot, but the fishing was great - lots of big bass and small bluefish, and on the full moon in July the fluke were so thick in some places you could practically throw out an old shoe and catch one.

These are the benchmarks of the summer of 2003, and as the official summer season came to a close this week, the people of the Vineyard took a quick look back, and most could agree on two things:

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