Recovery in Swordfish Industry Follows Strict Management Plan

Top scientists at the National Marine Fisheries Service (NMFS) and
fish conservation advocates are reporting a significant increase in the
numbers of swordfish swimming in the North Atlantic. Although waters
around the Vineyard have yet to see any recovery, the numbers of
juvenile fish have improved significantly.

Question 4 Attracts Mounting Interest

The purple and white bumper stickers are somewhat primitive,
produced on a home computer with no stickum, so they have to be fixed to
bumpers with Scotch tape. But if bumper stickers that fall off in the
rain carry a message about the group that made them, then in this case
the message is grass roots and underfunded.

Add to that, committed.

Edgartown Planning Board Faces Dilemma on Size of Mansions

Edgartown Planning Board Faces Dilemma on Size of Mansions

By MANDY LOCKE

The Edgartown planning board is torn.

The fracture - slow yet certain - led to a tense clash
last week.

Only one item appeared on the board's agenda - a project
that has inched toward a vote since Richard Schifter filed his
intentions with the board last spring.

Chilmark Voters Rewrite Zoning for New Homesites

Chilmark residents interested in owning a home may find the going a
little easier since voters at a special town meeting Monday night
approved a significant rewriting of zoning bylaws to create new
homesites in the years ahead.

The special town meeting at the Chilmark Community Center drew 174
voters.

Let Good Times Roll for Grads in Class of 1960

Let Good Times Roll for Grads in Class of 1960

By C.K. WOLFSON

The cheerleaders are now grandmothers.

And they're celebrating. It's a communal 60th birthday
party hosted by Island members of the Class of 1960 - the first
graduating class of Martha's Vineyard Regional High School.

Two Drown in Sengekontacket

A fishing trip on Sengekontacket Pond turned tragic Monday
when two men from Oak Bluffs drowned accidentally several hours after
paddling a one-person kayak out to a sandbar and casting their lines.

Political Season Brings Island Decisions

Against the backdrop of a heated race for Massachusetts governor and a slew of ballot initiatives on everything from bilingual education to income tax, voters on Martha's Vineyard will face their own subset of important electoral decisions on the first Tuesday in November this year.

Cost of Meals Drives Students to Distraction

It doesn't happen often that students and school administrators find common ground so quickly, but a single question has united them for the time being: What's up with the cost of a school lunch?

Night Fire in Edgartown Leaves Fourteen Brazilians Homeless

Night Fire in Edgartown Leaves Fourteen Brazilians Homeless

By MANDY LOCKE

Charred Portuguese prayer books, scalded refrigerators and a
few box springs are all that remain of the worldly possessions of 14
Brazilians who had been living in a three-bedroom house in Edgartown.

Martha's Vineyard Commission Rejects Golf Development Plan by Thin Margin

Torn down the middle for the third time in three years, the expressions eloquent and heartfelt on both sides of the street, a strained and weary Martha's Vineyard Commission voted 9-8 to reject the Down Island Golf Club plan for the southern woodlands late on Wednesday night.

"The applicant has come back with changes to the plan and the word is that he has addressed all of our concerns. But he hasn't ever addressed my main concern and that's my concern about the character and identity of Martha's Vineyard," declared commission member James Athearn.

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