Tularemia Team to Visit

A new team of scientists, including one from the federal
Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), has begun
arriving on the Island to investigate what could be another
outbreak of pneumonic tularemia, and they are calling on
landscapers to help.

Stan Murphy's Art and Work

You can tell from his paintings that Stan Murphy likes work, especially the physical kind that toughens the hands.

Preserving a Rural Way of Life


Rebecca Gilbert and Randy Ben David have roots - both the
human and botanical variety.


On their farm off North Road in Chilmark they grow root
vegetables such as beets, carrots and onions, and they have wild
root herbs including sweet grass and ginseng.


Rebecca and Randy also have family roots that run as deep as
the rich, sweet soil they cultivate without chemical fertilizers
or pesticides.

New Island Health Initiative

The idea is not new. Dr. Milton Mazer had it some 30 years ago when he did his paradigm social psychology study on the Island that resulted in the book People and Predicaments. Dr. Felton Earls had it a few years later, when he launched a long-term study of how Island children handle stress.

Town Reconsiders Smoking Ban

Special town meetings are supposed to be tame housekeeping
affairs, but Thursday's session in Oak Bluffs will steer voters
into some dicey territory — asking them to reconsider the ban on
smoking in bars and to release $110,000 to settle unspecified
lawsuits against the town.

State Forest Gets Help


State Forest Gets Help

By JOSHUA SABATINI


The Department of Environmental Management's Division of
Forests and Parks has begun to implement a new management plan
for the 5,000-acre Manuel F. Correllus State Forest.


Concerned about the risk of forest fires, DEM, the state
agency responsible for managing the forest, has focused its
energies on clearing firebreaks or "safe zones" on the land's
perimeter and interior, a plan discussed for several years.

SSA Hears from Public


SSA Hears from Public

By JULIA WELLS


Invite more public participation. That was the message to
the Steamship Authority board of governors last week from a
small gathering of Vineyard residents.


"I would like to encourage you to reconsider your policy of
only permitting public comment at the end of your meetings.

New Tularemia Case Confirmed

Pneumonic tularemia is back. Confirming this year's first case of the pneumonic form of the disease, public health officials said yesterday they are prepared to call in the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) to investigate.

To Track Majestic Osprey to the Ends of the Earth

Gus Ben David, director of Massachusetts Audubon's Felix Neck Wildlife Sanctuary in Edgartown, takes a four-wheel-drive vehicle out into the field by the osprey pole that is visible from the entrance road to the sanctuary. Accompanying Mr. Ben David, in the passenger seat, is longtime cohort Tim Baird of Edgartown, an Island electrician. They are transporting Mr. Ben David's' 20-year-old golden eagle, named Chameli, in the back of the vehicle. The eagle acts as the lure in what is about to transpire.

Rental Market Hits Slowdown

The Vineyard's summer rental market is soft this season.

How low the market has slumped, reasons for the dip and long-term projections have yet to be determined, but real estate agents across the Island feel the hit.

Some companies slowed slightly this season while others experienced as much as a 20 per cent fall. Real estate brokers feel the pinch in a variety of ways — dollars, volume of inquiries, length of vacation stays — but all are reporting a downward turn.

Many of the agencies see a correlation between a jump in rental prices and the slowdown.

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