Amy Calder covers Waterville, including city government, for the Morning Sentinel and writes a column, “Reporting Aside,” which appears Saturdays in both the Sentinel and Kennebec Journal. She has worked at the newspaper since 1988, including a stint as bureau chief for the Somerset County Bureau in Skowhegan, and has covered a variety of beats. A Skowhegan native (who is proud to say she was born in Waterville), she holds a bachelors in English from University of Hartford and completed post-graduate work in the School of Education at University of Massachusetts at Amherst. She holds more than two dozen awards from the Maine Press Association and New England Associated Press News Executives Association. Calder lives in Waterville with her husband, Philip Norvish, a retired Sentinel reporter and editor.
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PublishedMay 26, 2019
Listen to ‘that scream in your belly,’ television writer-producer David E. Kelley tells Colby class of 2019
An overcast sky turned sunny as 460 Colby seniors in the class of 2019 received degrees Sunday at the college’s 198th commencement on the Miller Library lawn on the Mayflower Hill campus.
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PublishedMay 26, 2019
Morning Sentinel May 26 police log
Waterville area police reports for May 26, 2019.
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PublishedMay 25, 2019
Central Maine Sunday May 25 police log
Augusta and Waterville area police reports for May 25, 2019
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PublishedMay 23, 2019
Actor Ed Harris donates $75,000 to Waterville art and film center project
Harris, who starred in the 2005 HBO film “Empire Falls,” which was filmed in Waterville, says the city holds a “fond place in my heart.”
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PublishedMay 23, 2019
Children’s Discovery Museum to start leasing Waterville church this summer
Members of the Waterville City Council on Wednesday toured the First Congregational United Church of Christ on Eustis Parkway with museum officials.
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PublishedMay 22, 2019
Cannon in Waterville’s Castonguay Square moved to Veterans Memorial Park
The German howitzer was requisitioned by the local Waterville American Legion and placed in Castonguay Square in 1925, where it remained for 94 years until Wednesday.
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PublishedMay 21, 2019
Waterville council takes first votes to further Golden Pond Wealth Management expansion
Residents of Wilson Park objected to a proposed addition to the financial services firm at 129 Silver St., saying they worry about what would happen to the building if it were sold in the future.
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PublishedMay 20, 2019
Waterville council to address request by financial services business to expand
The City Council on Tuesday also will consider increasing the cost of purple plastic trash bags by $1 per package for the next four years to make trash and recycling collection a self-supporting operation.
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PublishedMay 20, 2019
Clean up, grand re-opening planned for Waterville Oxbow Trail
Kennebec Messalonskee Trails and Five County Credit Union will host a cleanup and grand re-opening of the Oxbow Trail off Cool Street from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. June 1, National Trails Day.
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PublishedMay 20, 2019
Car struck by mail truck hops curb, crashes on steps of Waterville business
No one was injured Monday when a mail truck exiting Getchell Street onto College Avenue struck a Mustang convertible, sending the convertible over a curb and knocking down a fire hydrant before landing on the second step of R.E. Drapeau Inc.
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