The 7 a.m. fire on Quaker Ridge Road destroys the garage but firefighters save the house.
July 2012
Pittsburgh suburb shoots off fireworks in cemetery
One woman says she couldn’t visit her husband’s grave because the cemetery was closed so workers could set up the display.
House arrest denied for convicted Pa. monsignor
Judge M. Teresa Sarmina agrees with prosecutors who say Monsignor William Lynn should be treated like any other felon and remain jailed until his sentencing.
NH hospital faces new suits for hepatitis cases
Almost 60 former patients – including 27 who tested positive for the blood-borne viral infection – have now filed suit against Exeter Hospital.
First NATO truck crosses Pakistan border
The reopening is a rare bright spot in relations between the U.S. and Pakistan, which had closed the routes in retaliation for American airstrikes in November that killed 24 Pakistani troops.
BUSHNELL ON BOOKS: “Intervention” and “The Maine Garden Journal”
Famed French dramatist Moliere (1622-1673) once complained: “I always write a good first line, but I have trouble in writing the others.” Fortunately, Maine’s well known writer Richard Russo doesn’t have that problem.
TRAVELIN’ MAINE(RS): Hit the brakes when you reach Damariscotta
Have you been to Damariscotta lately? If your answer is: “Well, I drove by it on my way to Boothbay Harbor,” then you need to discover the brakes on your motor vehicle! Stopping in this small town is no longer an option. It’s a necessity!
Our 24-hour mini-vacation here featured a stay at the elegant Alewives and Ales Bed & Breakfast, lunch at the Damariscotta River Grill, dinner at King Eider’s Pub, a hike on conservation lands that border the river, and — of course — shopping at the original Reny’s.
Damariscotta’s got it all!
BOOKS: ‘Fun House’ has serious plot, humor
BY OLINE H. COGDILL Sun Sentinel FUN HOUSE By Chris Grabenstein Pegasus Crime ($25) The Jersey Shore — not the TV show — often becomes a mecca for summer tourists. But for Iraqi War veteran John Ceepak, the resort town of Sea Haven, N.J., is where he lives and what he protects as one of […]
BOOKS: Most people don’t realize libraries lend e-books
ST. LOUIS — Most U.S. libraries lend e-books, but that’s news to the general public: Only 22 percent realize the fast-growing digital format is available for free, according to a new survey. And even fewer — 12 percent of e-book readers have borrowed an e-book from the library in the past year, according to a poll released recently by the Pew Research Center’s Internet and American Life Project.