All the art to behold as Maine museums reopen their doors centralmaine.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from centralmaine.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
East Texas plumbers, city officials give tips on reintroducing water into your home
East Texas plumbers, city officials give tips on reintroducing water into your home By Jeremy Thomas | February 22, 2021 at 11:44 AM CST - Updated February 23 at 9:12 AM
(KTRE) - With boil water orders lifted, plumbers and city officials are asking you to take some additional steps to make sure water is flowing through your home and not causing additional damages.
Just off Atkinson Drive in Lufkin, Strickland Plumbing & HVAC trucks have been on the go for days.
“People not being able to shut their water off, pipes burst under the house, businesses without water trying to get back going to serve food,” said owner Kevin Strickland. “It’s been pretty eventful, to say the least.”
Portland Museum of Art opens exhibition about 2020, online only – for now Untitled features new work by 25 Maine artists.
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“We Gonna Be Alright,” a digital print by Ryan Adams, is part of the new “Untitled” exhibition hosted by the Portland Museum of Art – for now on its website and in person when the museum reopens.
Courtesy of Portland Museum of Art
It seems fitting that an exhibition dedicated to 2020 will open online.
Someday – that elusive someday – the Portland Museum of Art will open “Untitled: Art from Maine in a Time” to the public, so people can actually see the exhibition in person and experience art in the flesh. For now, virtual content will fill the void.
It’s time to put the past in the history books and begin the difficult, but achievable job of rebuilding, beginning with rebuilding a governance structure..
Idaho man gets lengthy prison sentence for shooting Eagle police officer last summer Jacob Scholl, The Idaho Statesman
Feb. 5 An Emmett man who pleaded guilty to shooting an Eagle police officer last year was sentenced to a decades-long prison term Friday.
Matthew Stillhallis Kelly, 21, was sentenced to up to 54 years in prison, with eligibility for parole after 35 years. In November, Kelly pleaded guilty to felonies for assault or battery on certain personnel with an aggravated enhancement and grand theft by receiving or possessing stolen property.
Kelly was the subject of a multihour manhunt last July 13 after Eagle police officer Brandon Austin was shot. Austin tried to pull over Kelly after the Emmett man was seen driving a yellow motorcycle that was believed to be stolen from a Canyon County home.