Utah Bound: Vineyard Team Joins Olympics for Luge Event

Jim Pringle and David Maddox left the Vineyard last weekend bound for the Winter Olympics in Salt Lake City, but don't expect to see the two buddies from Vineyard Haven lighting the torch, waving Old Glory or snagging medals.

State Agency Shuts Office on Vineyard; Future Is Uncertain

State Agency Shuts Office on Vineyard; Future Is Uncertain

By MANDY LOCKE

It's much quieter these days at 1 Douglas Way in Oak Bluffs.
Barbara's not around. Neither are many of the 112 Islanders who
rely on the Department of Transitional Assistance for emergency shelter,
food stamps, health care and job placement assistance.

Boat Line Candidate Abruptly Drops Out

The search for a new chief executive officer for the Steamship
Authority took an unexpected turn late yesterday when one of the leading
candidates for the job suddenly dropped out.

Oak Bluffs Dog Wins Reprieve in Court

A month ago, the death decree for an Oak Bluffs dog implicated in a cat-killing incident was unanimous. But last week, acting on an appeal from the dog's owners, Edgartown district court magistrate Thomas Teller spared the pet's life and overturned the ruling of all five Oak Bluffs selectmen.

State Attorney General Files Brief in MVC Case

State Attorney General Files Brief in MVC Case

By JULIA WELLS

The Massachusetts Attorney General sided with a Connecticut housing
developer this week in a key legal dispute that is expected to decide
whether the Martha's Vineyard Commission has the right to review
low and moderate income housing projects under Chapter 40B, a section of
state law commonly known as the anti-snob zoning statute.

The groundbreaking case goes to the heart of the unique powers
vested in the commission by the state legislature more than 25 years
ago.

Tisbury Police Ask Voters for Staff Help

Tisbury Police Ask Voters for Staff Help

Union Wants Two Additional Officers;Issue Will Appear as April
Article on Town Meeting Warrant

By JOSHUA SABATINI

An unprecedented move by the Tisbury police union will put the
debate over staffing of the town police force before the voters at town
meeting time in April.

Tularemia Investigation Nears Finish

From the start, scientists have viewed the outbreak of tularemia on Martha's Vineyard as an ecological puzzle, never a case of bio-terrorism, despite tularemia's recognized status as a bacteria ideally suited for terrorism.

Steamship Authority Board Interviews Strong Field of Finalists for CEO Position

Steamship Authority Board Interviews Strong Field of Finalists for
CEO Position

By JULIA WELLS
Gazette Senior Writer

The key to success for the Steamship Authority, a Coast Guard
admiral said yesterday, is to be clear in its own vision.

"I would set the vision for the organization," said Rear
Adm. George Naccara. "But I also need to know what the board
expects from me - what is your long-term vision?"

Vineyard Blooms in Warm and Weird Weather; Butterflies, Roses and Lilacs Lead Parade

When the groundhog awakens from his long winter nap tomorrow at
dawn, he will rise from his hole in the ground and think he overslept.
If he lived on the Vineyard, he'd think it was already spring.

Forsythia are in bloom, and in the past week there have been
sightings of honeybees and, in West Tisbury, a butterfly. Snow drops are
in bloom in various places from Edgartown to West Tisbury.

Inmates Turn Creative Skills to Mosaic Art

It's probably not what any jail warden expected an art class
to look like: inmates wrapping sheets of glass and whole plates in a
towel and then smashing them to bits. Depending on how you looked at it,
the razorlike shards were either a huge security risk or an innovative
art material critical for making mosaics.

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