Nobel Winner Joseph Murray: Vigorous at 88
By JACK SHEA
Dr. Joseph E. Murray chooses to live a simple life and at 88 he
remains full of awe and wonder at the world.
And despite being lionized as a medical pioneer for half his life,
he is somehow right-sized. The natural beauty of the Vineyard gives him
all he needs, he says.
In a recent conversation at his home on Chappaquiddick, the Nobel
Prize-winning surgeon used poetry to illustrate how his Island home
enables him to experience his life.
Many Businesses Report a Healthy Summer
By JACK SHEA
Two months of warm, sunny weather and a modest but not overwhelming
increase in visitors over last year combined to make a rosy
end-of-season business report - at least by most accounts.
Heading into Labor Day weekend, some Island businesses are reporting
gains of five to seven per cent over last year, while some retailers and
restaurants had gains of 10 per cent or more.
Study Released by Youth Task Force Shows Drinking Remains Prevalent,
but Fewer Teens Smoke Cigarettes
Survey results released this week about risky behavior among Island
middle school and high school students reveal few surprises about drug
and alcohol use.
Globally, women are the fastest growing population of people
infected with AIDS. And women and girls of color in the United States
and around the world have been hit the hardest.
Two of Us: Robert and Marietta Cleasby: So Many Camp Ground Summers,
This Couple Has Stopped Counting
John Edwards came out swinging not only against Republicans, but also against his Democratic opponents during his Friday night campaign stop on Martha's Vineyard.
Mr. Edwards, struggling behind Hillary Clinton and Barack Obama in the contest for the party's nomination, said Mrs. Clinton was uncommitted to the big changes America had to make, and Mr. Obama was too conciliatory in his pursuit of change.
Chappaquiddick Homes Allowed
Appeals Court Backs Edgartown in Affordable Homesite Case; Attorney
for Town Blasts Ten Suing Neighbors
By JULIA WELLS
Without reservation, the Massachusetts Court of Appeals upheld the
town of Edgartown last week in the Chappaquiddick affordable homesite
case that has attracted attention throughout the Cape and Islands
region.
Presidential candidate Hillary Clinton on Saturday called the Bush administration incompetent, the federal Katrina response an embarrassment and the national health care crisis a moral imperative.
Amid compliments and congratulations, the Martha's Vineyard
Commission on Thursday unanimously approved the 35,000-square-foot YMCA
building to be built across from the regional high school on
Edgartown-Vineyard Haven Road following a whirlwind session of
deliberations that wrapped up in under ninety minutes.
Boat Line Reports Summer Traffic Is Up
By MIKE SECCOMBE
If the traffic on Vineyard roads seems worse this summer and the
straggling crowds more numerous, it's not an illusion. The most
recent figures on ferry traffic prove it.
Numbers released by the Steamship Authority this week show more than
230,000 passengers and almost 40,000 cars were carried for the month of
June alone, a six per cent increase in people and almost three per cent
increase in cars compared with last June.