Tips Fail to Lead Police to Baby's Mother
By MANDY LOCKE
One week after a baby was abandoned on the steps of St.
Augustine's Church in Vineyard Haven, police have still not found
the infant's mother.
"We're not much further along than we were last week,
but we're still aggressively working on it," said State
Police Sgt. Jeff Stone, a detective assigned to the Cape and Islands
district attorney's office.
Boatline CEO to Quit; Will Stay for Transition; Board to Begin
Search
By ALEXIS TONTI
Ending months of uncertainty and speculation, Steamship Authority
chief executive officer Fred C. Raskin told boat line governors
yesterday in an executive session that he will resign - but not
quite yet.
In Wake of Garage Flap, Ripples Widen
By CHRIS BURRELL
The hammers are quiet over at the controversial Moujabber garage in
the North Bluff neighborhood of Oak Bluffs, but the political dust
hasn't begun to settle.
Just over a month after work on the three-story garage was halted,
neighbors in this enclave between the harbor and Nantucket Sound have
now banded together into a homeowners association.
If you're craving hot doughnuts and apple fritters late at night, get an early start: Last call at the back door of a downtown bakery in Oak Bluffs is now officially half past midnight.
An Infestation of Caterpillars Gobbles Foliage
By JULIA WELLS
Breakfast, lunch and dinner are over - or almost over -
and now it's time for a rest.
Summer Camp Cut as Voters Balance Aquinnah Budget
By JULIA WELLS
Gazette Senior Writer
Faced with the bleak prospect of shutting down the town when the
fiscal year runs out six days from now, voters in Aquinnah balanced
their annual budget last night by cutting salaries and expense accounts
to the bone and eliminating a popular summer camp for children.
Doctors Say Abandoned Baby Will Recover; Police Probe on
By MANDY LOCKE
A newborn baby boy, abandoned on the stoop of St. Augustine's
Church early Tuesday morning, turned the corner yesterday, and doctors
are now hopeful the infant will fully recover from his traumatic first
hours of life.
Aquinnah Leaders Make Painful Budget Choices After Failure of
Override
By JULIA WELLS
Gazette Senior Writer
Swinging the proverbial budget ax, selectmen and town department
heads in Aquinnah took their first whacks yesterday at trying to cut
$260,000 from a $2.4 million town budget.
"We're here tonight to try and come up with some cost
savings," declared Aquinnah selectman and board chairman Carl
Widdiss.
Don't Fall for Misconceptions on Ticks, and Remain Vigilant,
Experts Tell Forum
By BRIEN HEFLER
Coming home from a day at the beach, a hike through nature's
splendor or a walk in the backyard, one may find a hard, foreign body on
their person, holding fast and feeding voraciously. It's a
familiar and unsettling feeling here on the Island, one of the worst
areas in the state for ticks and tick borne illnesses.
Under the Party Tents, a Tasting of Summer
$175,000 Is Raised in Two-Day Event to Benefit Trust
By JESSIE ROYCE HILL
It is one of the Vineyard's few events at which everyone wears
shoes. Tasseled, pointy, strappy and high. They call it a stroll, but
the women, in their pink and green Lilly Pulitzer ensembles, more
likely teeter from vendor to vendor as they withdraw their heels from
the fresh grass into which they've sunk. The gentlemen, a
formation of navy blazers and bowties, outpace them.