A Rhode Island girl sent a partially eaten cookie and carrot sticks to her town’s police department.
Life & Culture
Arts, entertainment, food and books news from the Kennebec Journal and Morning Sentinel.
Jan. 24, 1978: Surprise dinner party held for employee’s 40 years of service at Waterville store, Colby outdoor laboratory considered for natural landmark, and ‘snow shoveling can be dangerous’ says doctor
Visit Centralmaine.com/archive to view nearly 200 years’ worth of history at your fingertips.
Jan. 23, 2000: Activists protest abortion outside the State House in Augusta, Unity triplets mourned after fire destroys their home, and Hall-Dale High School focuses on safety
Visit Centralmaine.com/archive to view nearly 200 years’ worth of history at your fingertips.
Viles Arboretum experiments with ‘Forest of the Future’
As climate change alters conditions for Maine’s flora, the arboretum experiments with non-native trees to figure out which species could thrive in warmer conditions.
Radicchio – the leafy vegetable that’s almost too pretty to eat
But get over that. It’s also delicious, in season now and available from your local farmer.
What do Mainers say when it comes to the ethics of eating lobster? Pass the butter
Whether the fishery is harming the endangered right whale is a matter of vehement debate, but local chefs, restaurateurs, fishmongers and ordinary people are still cracking into Maine’s iconic crustacean.
State’s only biennial to showcase 35 established and emerging artists
The exhibit at the Center for Maine Contemporary Art in Rockland opens Saturday and runs through May 7.
Maine was once home to a pioneering U.S. tofu expert
In the late 1970s, Peter Golbitz began making tofu in his home kitchen in Bar Harbor. He went on to an illustrious career in the soybean field.
Jan. 22, 1985: Gay Tolerance Day canceled at Madison High School, Belgrade Road home in Oakland destroyed by fire, and Maine musicians ‘sorry not to play’ in presidential inaugural parade in Washington D.C.
Visit Centralmaine.com/archive to view nearly 200 years’ worth of history at your fingertips.
Jan. 21, 1954: Augusta shop turns out 100 types of signs used throughout Maine, new fire captain for Augusta named, and ice-glazed highways cause injuries in region
Visit Centralmaine.com/archive to view nearly 200 years’ worth of history at your fingertips.