RICHMOND — Five candidates are lined up for the Board of Selectmen, but there is only room enough for two of them on the board.
June 2012
Heavy hitters have big impact on PACs
A group that advocates against excessive special interest spending in Maine politics has released a study showing that local legislators have raised more than $12 million from “heavy hitter” donors over the last 10 years.
SUPERIOR COURT
AUGUSTA — A 33-year-old Augusta man pleaded guilty Wednesday in Kennebec County Superior Court to a charge of possession of sexually explicit materials of a minor under 12.
Waters recede, leaving a mess
GARDINER — Norma Layne baked a batch of brownies and some homemade bread for a crew manning the pumps for the past three days at the Gardiner Sportsmen’s Club.
Storm-tossed rockweed covers state park beach
SCARBOROUGH — Officials at Scarborough Beach State Park say it could take as long as two weeks to remove a 3-foot-high wall of rockweed that last weekend’s storm pushed onto the beach, the largest amount employees have seen in 30 years.
Crime spree nets Bass Harbor man five years in prison
AUGUSTA — A Bass Harbor man will spend five years in prison for stealing three vehicles in one night and crashing one of them into a house, which caught fire and forced the homeowners from their beds.
FRIDAY’S EVENTS
Music: Music entertainer Barry Wood will present pop classics, soft rock of the 1950s, 60s and 70s and traditional country, 2 p.m. and 7 p.m., Araxine Wilkins Sawyer Memorial, 371 Sawyer Road, Greene; free admission; 946-5311 or www.sawyer-foun dation.com.
Hall-Dale Middle School honors announced
FARMINGDALE — Hall-Dale Middle School has announced its second-trimester honor roll.
Teen in court on arson, burglary
AUGUSTA — A 15-year-old boy accused of burglarizing several homes on a Togus Pond island and burning one of them to the ground last month was in court Thursday to face those charges for the first time.
Gloomy weather slowing pollination
MACHIAS — It’s been a cold, wet and foggy spring along the Down East coastline, which doesn’t bode well for the wild blueberry crop.