Visit Centralmaine.com/archive to view nearly 200 years’ worth of history at your fingertips.
Life & Culture
Arts, entertainment, food and books news from the Kennebec Journal and Morning Sentinel.
March 15, 2000: Clinton police chief tells woman he will look into fatal attack on her dog, a federal grand jury alleges North Vassalboro resident threatened University of Vermont officials, and a snowy forehand at the Colby College tennis courts
Visit Centralmaine.com/archive to view nearly 200 years’ worth of history at your fingertips.
St. Patrick banished the snakes. Local vegans banish corned beef
Tofu, tempeh and seitan can all stand in for corned beef in the boiled dinner that’s traditional for St. Patrick’s Day.
Movie Review: ‘One Life’ impossible not to be moved, J.P. Devine writes
This is the story behind James Hawes’ new film that opens tomorrow in Waterville.
On Music: Folksinger, storyteller Antje Duvekot to return to Portland venue
Gifted singer-songwriter is coming to one of the best listening rooms in New England on March 23.
March 13, 1976: Fairfield woman gets rare ’29’ hand in cribbage game, former Waterville man promoted at life insurance company in Vermont, and this 12-year-old is ‘all smiles’ after winning the Waterville Junior High School spelling bee yesterday
Visit Centralmaine.com/archive to view nearly 200 years’ worth of history at your fingertips.
March 12, 2001: Land board ponders plan to save Lakeside Orchards in Manchester, new study tries to improve Maine teacher’s pay, and meet state’s ‘creme de la creme’ for schol foreign-languages in Augusta
Visit Centralmaine.com/archive to view nearly 200 years’ worth of history at your fingertips.
Ukraine’s first Oscar is hailed as a reminder of war’s horrors as Russian drones strike buildings
Ukraine’s human rights chief Dmytro Lubinets praised the documentary for showing ‘the truth to the whole world.’
Victims of Catholic nuns feel overlooked in the clergy sex abuse crisis
‘It’s time to restore the balance,’ they say, in addressing sexual abuse by women in religious orders and positions.
80 years after D-Day, a World War II veteran will wed near beaches where U.S. troops landed
A 100-year-old American World War II veteran plans to marry his 96-year-old fiancee in France as part of that country’s 80th anniversary celebration of D-Day.