And Now, a Younger Mr. Silva Is Stepping Up to Make Music with Dad, Albeit Differently

Milo Silva's name may not yet be familiar in most Island music circles, but that will change. Milo Silva, 17, is the son of Island blues musician Maynard Silva, and this week they will share a stage.

Maynard has performed for years as a top blues musician. Maynard is a hard beat, foot stomping performer with a raspy voice. He has put out several CDs and has a strong Island and off-Island following.

Milo's music is of another world - from Central Asia.

Nantucket Boat Line Governor Never Wavered in Love of Island

Grace S. Grossman, the diminutive and crusading Nantucket Steamship
Authority governor whose love and work for her island knew no
boundaries, died last Thursday after a brief illness. She was 80.

"It's about the Nantucket people. I represent what the
Nantucket people want," she said in an interview with the Gazette
in January.

Partners in Vineyard Golf Club Apply Pressure to Build Homes

Acting through their Boston attorney, the managing partners for the Vineyard Golf Club have been engaged in a series of quiet threats and maneuvers in recent weeks - all aimed at avoiding a Martha's Vineyard Commission review of a new plan to build 16 luxury houses for members at the golf club.

The commission expressly denied all member housing when it approved the golf club five years ago.

Pennywise Path Plan Wins MVC Approval

Ruling that the dire need for low-cost rental housing trumps traffic
concerns, the Martha's Vineyard Commission voted unanimously last
night to approve the Pennywise Path affordable housing project in
Edgartown.

New Land Bank Purchase Will Preserve 84 Acres on Chilmark's Middle Road

New Land Bank Purchase Will Preserve 84 Acres on Chilmark's
Middle Road

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By ALEXIS TONTI

The Martha's Vineyard Land Bank announced this week that it
will buy 84 acres of land in Chilmark, a sprawling property that rises
nearly 200 feet from Middle Road to a ridgeline with views of the south
shore.

New Research: Island's Extinct Heath Hen Was a Unique Bird

Now a genetic study of the skins of scores of heath hens, all of them from the Vineyard, shows that the Island bird, although it looked and behaved much like its supposed parent species in the Midwest, was a wholly distinctive creature. Genetically it was more different from the greater western prairie chicken - that supposed parent species - than the Midwestern bird is from any other family member in its genus, which includes the lesser prairie chicken, the endangered Attwater's prairie chicken of eastern Texas, and even the sharp-tailed grouse. It is possible that instead of being a subspecies of the prairie chicken - which scientists have considered it to be since it was first typed in the last years of the nineteenth century - the heath hen might have been a species unto itself.

Appeals Board Vetoes Garage

Appeals Board Vetoes Garage

For a Second Time, Oak Bluffs Says It's an Illegal Structure;
in Next Week's Chapter, a Request to Move It

By CHRIS BURRELL

They declared the building illegal, called the permit application
perjurious and refused to resurrect a building permit for a three-story
structure towering up from Joseph G. Moujabber's backyard in Oak
Bluffs.

Boatline Interim Manager Will Tackle Reservations and Ticketing Problems

Boatline Interim Manager Will Tackle Reservations and Ticketing
Problems

By JULIA WELLS
Gazette Senior Writer

HYANNIS - Steamship Authority governors bid a quick adieu to
chief executive officer Fred C. Raskin and voted without dissent
yesterday to name Wayne Lamson, their longtime treasurer, as interim
general manager for the next four months.

"Wayne, it's a pleasure, thank you," said
Barnstable governor and board chairman Robert O'Brien during the
monthly boat line meeting held here yesterday morning.

For Second Time, Aquinnah Voters Reject Budget Override; A Difficult Year Aheadult Year

For Second Time, Aquinnah Voters Reject Budget Override; A Difficult
Year Ahead

By JULIA WELLS

Voters in Aquinnah spoke - and loudly - for the second
time in four weeks yesterday, rejecting a $130,000 general override to
Proposition 2 1/2 by a decisive margin in a special town election.

The final count was 75-56 against the override to the state-mandated
tax cap. There was only one question on the ballot. The vote echoed a
special election last month, when voters rejected a $260,000 override by
three votes. The final count then was 40-37.

New Tularemia Case Confirmed; Disease in Fifth Year on Island

For the fifth summer in a row, a rare and potentially fatal disease called tularemia continues to surface on the Vineyard.

State public health officials yesterday confirmed this year's first case of tularemia: a male landscaper from Edgartown who became ill in early June. Another landscaper from Edgartown is listed as a probable tularemia case, pending follow-up blood tests.

Both men are under 30 years of age and have undergone medical treatment for the disease, public health officials said.

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