SKOWHEGAN — The following cases were closed from July 2, 2012, to July 13, 2012, in Somerset Superior Court.
September 2012
Business resource night planned
PITTSFIELD — The town of Pittsfield will host a Business Resources Forum from 6 to 8:15 p.m. Thursday, Sept. 25, at the Warsaw Middle School Gym, 167 School St.
Alleged Bingham bank robber among indicted
SKOWHEGAN — A Waterville man has been indicted by a Somerset County grand jury on a charge that he robbed the Bingham branch of Camden National Bank last month.
Davis honest, has strong sense of values
As former CEO of the Winthrop Area Federal Credit Union, I have known Scott Davis for more than 25 years, as a member of and as one of the presidents of our board of directors.
MAINE COMPASS: Voters must press both parties to address climate change
This summer, flooding, hot spells, drought and firestorms are beginning to show us that climate change will be the defining issue of this century.
Behind the scenes of natural gas battle
AUGUSTA — Kennebec Valley municipal and business leaders prodded for action, but still the administration stood firm: Gov. Paul LePage wasn’t publicly taking sides in central Maine’s two-company natural gas war.
Most Ayla Reynolds evidence processed
WATERVILLE — Evidence technicians have processed most items that investigators removed from the home of missing toddler Ayla Reynolds, according to a police spokesman.
Political conventions should pay their own bills
There once was a time when political conventions were vital to conducting American democracy. There also once was a time when horse-drawn carriages were essential to travel long distances.
Kosovo graduates to independence
In violent spasms through the 1990s, the country forged together as Yugoslavia broke apart, its component republics reasserting their independence following vicious ethnic conflicts. Today, another section of the Balkans, the province of Kosovo, emerges out of the chaos of the ’90s as Europe’s newest independent country.
BILL NEMITZ: Lawn signs surplus makes name-recognition overload
One week from Tuesday, six weeks to the day before the Nov. 6 election, Maine’s electoral class of 2012 will be allowed under state law to plunk down their campaign signs alongside highways and byways all over this otherwise picturesque state.