There are good reasons why the killing of Trayvon Martin, a 17-year-old black youth who was shot to death by a neighborhood watch volunteer while walking through a gated community in Florida, has attracted national outrage.
Editorials
VIEW FROM ELSEWHERE: Crowdsourcing opens door to better science
In the decade since Wikipedia showed how it could be done, there has been an extraordinary democratization of knowledge.
VIEW FROM ELSEWHERE: Baby boomer boom must spur program reform
As the U.S. unemployment rate has dropped over the past year, a persistent refrain from many quarters has been that part of the drop can be chalked up to people removing themselves from the labor force.
VIEW FROM ELSEWHERE: In spite of rules, congressional junkets still happen
You may have heard this phrase: “You can’t get something for nothing.”
OUR OPINION: Weak or absent ethics laws give Maine an ‘F’
Is Maine one of the most corrupt states in the nation?
VIEW FROM ELSEWHERE: Should survivor’s benefits go to babies conceived after dad’s death?
The Supreme Court heard arguments Monday in a case titled Astrue v. Capato, but a better name for it might be “In re: Brave New World.”
OUR OPINION: Maine voters seem smarter as casinos decline
That seems an odd question to ask in Maine, where the state’s first slots-only “racino,” Hollywood Slots in Bangor, last fall got approval from Penobscot County voters to add table games (blackjack, poker, roulette, etc.) and changed its name to Hollywood Casino to reflect its elevated status.
VIEW FROM ELSEWHERE: Al-Qaida-like terrorism in France
For more than a decade after the attacks of Sept. 11, 2001, France avoided the spectacular plots, attributed to al-Qaida or its sympathizers, that shocked Britain, Spain and Germany.
VIEW FROM ELSEWHERE: Flip ya for it:Paper or $1 coin?
As of December, the U.S. government is no longer in the business of minting $1 coins with the faces of U.S. presidents on them, except a limited number for collectors.
OUR OPINION: Tourism degree will fill valuable niche for Maine
For decades, the Maine University of Maine System prepared qualified engineers and managers to take good jobs in the pulp-and-paper industry. People looking for work in tourism, Maine’s biggest industry, however, have never had a similar option.