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TODAY’S TOP STORIES

Don’t bet on $500 apartments coming to the Bangor Mall. The idea was one of several big changes the crumbling mall’s owner teased last week in court.

Bangor has launched its search for a new city manager. The start of the process comes more than a month after the announcement that Debbie Laurie will step down on May 30.

Connecticut is buying Maine solar power for less than we pay. But the disparity ties into how the large-scale Connecticut projects typically lead to lower costs than small-scale projects here under Maine’s net energy billing program.

A Maine musician got his stolen drums back in an elaborate Hollywood-style sting. The set was among the first built by a college friend whose clients now include Dropkick Murphys, Rancid and Sum 41.

Rockland gave a financial boost to a new workforce housing project. City councilors on Monday agreed to give $100,000 in tax revenue to as-yet-unnamed developers who have proposed to build 12 units.

NEWS FROM AROUND THE STATE

MAINE IN PICTURES

Evan Casas sits in his Cumberland living room Thursday, with his custom set of SJC drums, made 25 years ago by the company’s founder when the two were college friends. The drums were stolen in February, but Casas got them back on New Year’s Eve after internet sleuths and police intervened with a sting operation. Credit: Troy R. Bennett / BDN

FROM THE OPINION PAGES

Relatives and supporters of Israeli hostages held by Hamas in Gaza hold photos of their loved ones on Aug. 15, 2024, during a protest calling for their return in Tel Aviv, Israel. (AP Photo/ Credit: Ariel Schalit / AP

“The people in charge owe peace to the people they claim to represent. And maybe, just maybe, those leaders could be closing in on a deal this week to at least pause the carnage, end the captivity, and perhaps offer a small chance for a more enduring peace to take hold after more than a year of brutal violence.”

Editorial: Another chance for Israel and Hamas to choose peace

LIFE IN MAINE

Enjoy these videos from Maine’s viral firewood YouTubers. You may have read about these “woodhounds” in Maine who are sharing their daily business.   

Invasive plants may be helping ticks spread across Maine. A new five-year, $1.8 million grant-funded University of Maine research project aims to find out for sure.

Here are the nutritional benefits of wild meat. “The fact that the fruits of our labor in the deer woods is good for us just makes the successful hunt all that much sweeter,” V. Paul Reynolds writes.

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