Monday, July 22, 2024

Quote of the Day


“I want to win. It’s that simple. I know what winning does at the highest level. I profited from it when I owned a nightclub. I also know what it did for the community and I live in this community. It’s a pretty dark place when they aren’t winning.”


— Alex Gray, Waterfront Concerts founder and a leader of the new Bear Down Collective, said of a new effort to help UMaine Black Bears student-athletes get paid.


Today’s Top Maine Stories

Democrats received the news that Biden was dropping out with relief and turned their attention to the future. Many questioned his ability to beat Trump in November after a disastrous debate performance. Members of Maine’s congressional delegation praised Biden’s decision, calling it the “right decision for the country.”

Jared Golden gets increasing special interest money despite “no corporate PAC” vow.  Golden’s opponent in the 2nd Congressional District race, state Rep. Austin Theriault, has charged him with hypocrisy for taking this kind of money.

A historic cleanup of the Penobscot River is finally beginning. Depending on how effective it is, the mercury cleanup could become a model for remediating industrial pollution in other freshwater bodies across Maine. This is how they plan to extract, bury and dredge the chemical.

These four homes on the market are among Maine’s oldest. There are plenty of historic homes around the state that have been lovingly preserved or restored, including a number of properties built even before the American Revolution ended.

UMaine is finding new ways to help athletes get paid to stay competitive. The newly formed Bear Down Collective connects donors, supporters and businesses with student-athletes, who can earn money through Name, Image and Likeness deals.

He sat in a Maine jail cell for 85 days without an attorney. Wayne Boulier's case highlights the two tiers of the state’s criminal justice system, in which one tier can afford to hire representation and the other relies on state-funded lawyers.

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Maine in Pictures

More News from Around the State

From the Opinion Pages

Life in Maine

Maine is facing a boom in the population of Japanese beetles, feasting on our leaves, berries and beans. For nearly a century, Maine has tried to beat this crawling green foe with few results.

If you’re out birding in July, don’t stand under a turkey vulture. Its stomach acid is so strong that it can devour the victims of rabies, anthrax and other deadly diseases with total immunity. It will vomit in self-defense.

Don’t mess with a mama loon. This bald eagle did and learned the hard way that the pecking order doesn’t mean much when it gets between a mama loon and her chick.

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