Windemere Shakeup Follows Severe Strain of Financial Losses

Windemere Shakeup Follows Severe Strain of Financial Losses

Leaders at the Martha's Vineyard Hospital announced yesterday
that the administrator of the Windemere Nursing Home and
Rehabilitation Center has resigned.

Tom Dresser, who took over the top post at Windemere eight months
ago, resigned for personal reasons and to pursue other professional
interests, according to a WNR board member who spoke with the Gazette
late yesterday. WNR Inc. is the corporate name for Windemere.

Loss of Passenger Ferries in Vineyard Haven Hits Hard at Businesses Along Beach Road

There are no ripples or wake anymore, but the impact of no Schamonchi and no fast ferry from New London, Conn., has hit some businesses in Tisbury hard, especially along Beach Road where the ferries used to dock and disgorge tourists by the hundreds.

Bus Ridership Climbs Sharply

Bus Ridership Climbs Sharply

Vineyard Transit Authority Puts Number of Passengers on Bus Routes
at Roughly 400,000 For July and August Alone

By JOSHUA SABATINI

The Martha's Vineyard Regional Transit Authority carried close
to 400,000 people in the fiscal year from July 1, 2000 through June
30, 2001. Transit authority administrator Angie Gompert said she
estimates 200,000 people were served this July and another 200,000 in
August.

New Plan Cuts Wildfire Threat

The Department of Environmental Management's Division of Forests and Parks won permission Tuesday to move forward with new efforts to manage the 5,200-acre Manuel F. Correllus State Forest.

The high risk of forest fires poses a danger for residents abutting the state property. In June, Bob Durand, secretary of the Executive Office of Environmental Affairs, arrived on the Vineyard with news of an initiative to address that danger.

SSA Public Hearing Set Tuesday at Crucial Stage in Planning for Future

SSA Public Hearing Set Tuesday at Crucial Stage In Planning for Future

By JULIA WELLS

Gazette Senior Writer

The Steamship Authority will host a public hearing on the Vineyard early next week, marking a crucial juncture in a tangled discussion about the future of the boat line that was established to serve the two Islands - and about the role of expanded ferry service between the Vineyard and New Bedford.

The hearing begins at 7 p.m. on Tuesday in the Oak Bluffs School.

Survivors of Rape and Sexual Violence Speak to Dark Side of Vineyard Life

Survivors of Rape and Sexual Violence Speak to Dark Side of Vineyard Life

By MANDY LOCKE

She's the girl next door. She's the waitress who serves you at your favorite spot on Circuit avenue. She teaches your children. She dates your brother. She sits next to you in biology class.

She's your daughter, your sister, your mother, your wife.

Moped Laws Are Ignored; Injuries Tell Tragic Tale

Oak Bluffs selectman Todd Rebello this week all but admitted that town officials have done a lousy job making moped dealers abide by town regulations, and selectmen agreed Tuesday night to improve local enforcement.

Moped Laws Are Ignored; Injuries Tell Tragic Tale

Two middle school teachers from Florida, Judy and Barnard Lorence, should be back in their classrooms getting ready for a new school year, but there's no chance of that now.

Nobel Laureate Joseph Murray: Remarkable Life in Medical Field

His own story is told through the stories of others: A World War II aviator whose face and hands were burned beyond recognition; a young boy who was abandoned by his mother and locked away in an institution for 20 years because of a facial deformity; identical twins who were the first successful kidney transplant patients in history.

Eleven years ago, Dr. Joseph E. Murray won the Nobel Prize in Medicine for his pioneering kidney transplant work in the 1950s.

Town Demands No More Buses

West Tisbury center may be a natural crossroads and the ideal hub for Vineyard transit buses to transfer riders, but West Tisbury selectmen said they have had enough of the buses converging on their narrow and historic main street.

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