Polly Hill Arboretum Hosts Botany Expert Peter Raven

Polly Hill Arboretum Hosts Botany Expert Peter Raven

By IAN FEIN

If development continues at its current pace, our planet will stand
to lose roughly two-thirds of its species by the end of the century,
according to renowned botanist Peter H. Raven.

Dreams Come True at Monday Auction with Art Buchwald

The dreams are coming to town. Exotic, international dreams.
Adventurous, open-ocean dreams. Exhilarating celebrity-filled dreams.
Delicious gourmet dreams.

They all arrive on Monday afternoon in the gardens of the Harborside
Inn - more than 50 experiences and items that pretty pennies could
not buy unless they are bid on Monday night at the 28th annual Possible
Dreams Auction to benefit Martha's Vineyard Community Services.

Tribal Member Has Deep Sense of Place

Tribal Member Has Deep Sense of Place

By IAN FEIN

Durwood (Woody) Vanderhoop knows all too well the encroaching
pressures imposed on the average Vineyard resident - like a lack
of affordable housing, eroding environmental resources and a loss of
cultural traditions.

They are the same things his ancestors in the Wampanoag Tribe of Gay
Head (Aquinnah) have been struggling with for the last 350 years.

Land Court Denies Bid to Halt Affordable Homes

Land Court Denies Bid to Halt Affordable Homes

By IAN FEIN

A Massachusetts Land Court judge last week solidly denied a motion
for reconsideration from a group of neighbors who are trying to fight
three affordable one-acre homesites on Chappaquiddick.

Edgartown town counsel Ronald H. Rappaport yesterday said the ruling
- which directly rejected a series of claims made by the
neighbors' attorney - speaks volumes about the nature of the
case.

State Defeats Housing Bank

The Massachusetts house of representatives dealt a crippling blow to Vineyard affordable housing advocates last week, voting 91-64 on Thursday to defeat legislation that proposed creating a public housing bank on the Island.

The vote was especially stinging because the proposal - which would have taxed real estate transactions to fund affordable housing initiatives - was already effectively dead for the year. Even if the house had approved the bill last week, it would have been subject to a gubernatorial pocket veto with no chance for an override.

Private Ferry Companies Draw Increasing Share of Passengers

Private Ferry Companies Draw Increasing Share of Passengers

By JAMES KINSELLA
Gazette Senior Writer

The popularity of Steamship Authority ferries with trucks continues
to grow.

But the number of people riding the Authority ferries compared with
last year is essentially flat. The number of automobiles, which the boat
line defines as including sport utility vehicles, has dipped a bit.

Deadlines of All Kinds Loom for State Attorney General

Deadlines of All Kinds Loom for State Attorney General

By MAX HART

With less than two months to go before the state primary and only
minutes before he is due at a political fundraiser, Massachusetts
attorney general and Democratic gubernatorial candidate Thomas F. Reilly
is more worried about his next 24 hours as a Red Sox fan.

"Any trades yet?" Mr. Reilly asked Sunday afternoon,
less than one day until Major League Baseball's trading deadline.
"Do we have any new pitchers?"

Vineyard Vibes Electrifies with Three Shows

An evening of Motown on Saturday night was like a time warp,
bringing the packed audience at Outerland back to the 1950s and 1960s,
when bands and artists like Smokey Robinson and the Miracles, The
Supremes, The Temptations, Stevie Wonder and The Jackson Five were
topping charts and forever changing the face - and soul - of
American music.

As U.S. Gas Prices Soar, Islanders Go to the Pump and Still Pay Much More

With gasoline prices at an all-time high across the country, the
Vineyard stands in the top ranks for prices paid at the pump, as the
cost of premium gas climbed above the four dollar mark at most Island
stations this week and regular trailed not far behind.

Middle East Queries for Jody Powell Are Few

Middle East Queries for Jody Powell Are Few

By JAMES KINSELLA
Gazette Senior Writer

Joseph (Jody) Powell Jr., who served as press secretary to President
Jimmy Carter, can understand that some restrictions on gun ownership are
reasonable.

And Mr. Powell can see why some Americans, especially Americans of
African descent, would not necessarily be fond of the Confederate flag.

Pages