The robot nicknamed ‘Double’ lets 13-year-old Abby Fisher go back to school from her kitchen table.
Susan Kimball Reports
Susan Kimball: No rest for the weary during lambing season
Spring means all hands on deck at Maine’s largest sheep farm in Windham.
Young boxing champs keep their eyes on the prize: A better life
Two half brothers from Portland have high hopes in and out of the ring.
Buxton kindergartners excel in Chinese language class
Students in MSAD 6 take language and culture lessons from Feng Yu, a visiting teacher from China.
Survivors of burn injuries build confidence and self-esteem at Fire and Ice Camp
The winter camp put on by the Portland Fire Department gives youths four days to do things they’ve never done, with no pressure to ‘explain your story over and over again.’
Holocaust survivor: ‘It’s what you give’ that defines you
Kurt Messerschmidt lived through incarceration at Auschwitz, served as cantor at Temple Beth El in Portland, and at age 100, still finds purpose in helping people.
Susan Kimball: Through grit and robotic technology, paralyzed Portland man walks
Brian Walker, injured in a four-wheeler accident a year ago, takes his first steps in a wearable exoskeleton and says he ‘felt like normal again.’
Adults with developmental disabilities read to cats, and they all benefit
STRIVE members find joy and boost literacy by reading to cats at the Animal Refuge League.
Seventeen-year-old campaign manager is an ‘old soul’ with a passion for politics
Michael Michaelson has been at the helm of two successful Portland City Council races in the past two years.
Portland coffee bean wholesale business growing to help Rwanda
The founders of Rwanda Bean Co. pledge to return 50 percent of the company’s profits to a farming community in the East African nation.