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My name is Keith Michaud and this is “Letters From Away,” a blog written by a Mainer living outside the comfortable and sane confines of New England. The blog is intended for Mainers, whether they live in the Pine Tree State or beyond, and for anyone who has loved ’em, been baffled by ’em or both. Ayuh, I am “from away.” Worse still, I live on the Left Coast – in California. Enjoy! Or not. Your choice.
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- How Maine Became a Laboratory for the Future of Public Higher Ed | The Chronicle of Higher Education
- Angus King Urges Interior Department To Reconsider Offshore Drilling Proposal | Mainepublic.org
- Maine Voices: Higher education, employers must work together for bright future | Portland Press Herald
- Stunning reversal: McDaniels turns down Colts’ job to stay with Patriots | The Associated Press via the Portland Press Herald
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Category Archives: Law and Order
Man charged with topless coffee shop arson wants trial moved | Bangor Daily News
Posted in Law and Order, Maine
Tagged Grand View Topless Coffee Shop, Kennebec County, naked, nude, Raymond Bellavance Jr., topless, Vassalboro
25,000 Mainers may lose their jobless benefits | The Kennebec Journal, Augusta, ME
Posted in Economy, Law and Order, Politics and government
Tagged benefits, Congress, Economy, jobless, recession, unemployment
Allagash Falls a muskie barrier — for now | Bangor Daily News
Posted in Environment, Food and Drink, Law and Order, Maine, Outdoors, Politics and government
Tagged Allagash Falls, Allagash River, Allagash Wilderness Waterway, bass, brook trout, invasive fish, Maine Department of Inland Fisheries and Wildlife, migration, muskellunge, muskie, sports fishery, St. John River, U.S. Army Corps of Engineers
To all veterans — Thank You!
[Sorry for not getting this posted earlier. I was working on another project and simply could not get to this until now. Here are links to some of the stories presented in the two major Maine newspapers on this Veterans Day. You don’t have to like war to deeply appreciate that young men and women are willing to put down their lives in defense of this nation. I thank all who have worn the uniform or otherwise served in the defense of this country. – KM]
More than 1,000 remember fallen Marine and a ‘life lived full throttle’ | Bangor Daily News
Editorial: Veterans Day 2010 | Bangor Daily News
Maine soldier was killed by small-arms fire in Afghanistan | Bangor Daily News
Veterans Day: Old Town students offer thanks | Bangor Daily News
Veterans honored at Machias high school | Bangor Daily News
Korean War veterans honored in Dover-Foxcroft | Bangor Daily News
Brewer ceremony recognizes military service | Bangor Daily News
SAD 4 students thank veterans in moving assembly | Bangor Daily News
Video: Injured Gulf War veteran finds solace in seclusion | Bangor Daily News
Parade, ceremony honor veterans in Portland | Portland Press Herald
Mainers across the state thank vets today | Portland Press Herald
Nemitz: ‘The memories don’t leave you’ | Portland Press Herald
Editorial: Veterans Day honors all who wore the uniform | Portland Press Herald
Posted in Law and Order, Maine, Politics and government
Tagged airmen, defense, Marine, military, sailor, soldier, uniform, veterans, Veterans Day, vets, war
Bangor election warden dismissed over cop-gun flap | Bangor Daily News
Political change has familiar feel, George Mitchell says | Maine Sunday Telegram
It was November 1988. Maine’s own George Mitchell had just been elected Democratic majority leader of the U.S. Senate. And high atop his to-do list was a sit-down with then-Republican minority leader Sen. Robert Dole.
“I said to him, ‘This job is hard enough under the best of circumstances. It’s impossible under bad circumstances,’ ” Mitchell recalled last week.
And so Mitchell and Dole agreed on a few ground rules:
Never surprise each other.
Never try to embarrass each other.
And finally, be as fair as possible to each other under whatever circumstances might arise.
“We kept our word for six years,” Mitchell said. “Bob Dole and I never had a harsh word pass between us – in public or in private.”
Ah, the good old days.
Click for the rest of the column by Bill Nemitz in the Maine Sunday Telegram.
Some clarity around new Maine political poll | DownEast.com
[I haven’t had a time to read or analyze this poll, so I won’t comment about the candidates and issues, but I thought I’d offer it up for those of you in Maine who might be voting in the coming election. The link below is to Mike Tipping’s blog on DownEast.com and there is a copy of the poll results attached to the blog entry. I recommend reading Tipping’s comments – and reservations – on the poll before diving into the poll itself. – KM]
Some clarity around new Maine political poll | DownEast.com
Posted in Economy, Law and Order, Politics and government
Tagged DownEast.com, election, political race, poll, Portland Press Herald, survey
Presque Isle man receives France’s highest honor | Bangor Daily News
PRESQUE ISLE, Maine — On June 20, 1944, just four days after his 19th birthday, Eugene E. Sawyer was embroiled in World War II, far away from birthday cake and a party with family and friends in Houlton.
Sawyer, a member of the U.S. Army’s 9th Infantry Division, 47th Regiment, 2nd Battalion, was in Normandy, participating in the Allied forces’ retaking of the Cotentin, also known as the Cherbourg Peninsula. A machine gunner in H Company, Sawyer soon became involved in the infamous “hedgerow fighting” around St-Lo, France.
“It was the dead of night, around 3 a.m.,” the now 85-year-old Presque Isle resident recalled Sunday, sitting in his apartment surrounded by personal war memorabilia. “We couldn’t see a thing.”
Crowded into a foxhole with five other people, Sawyer said he and the other men decided to look around and find out where they were. It was, he acknowledged Monday, a big mistake.
“We were right on top of a tank,” he said. “It was so dark and the tank was camouflaged so well that we didn’t see it until it started firing. They shot us point-blank.”
Sawyer suffered shrapnel wounds in his left shoulder, an injury that led to his first medal, a Purple Heart. By the time his military career was over, he had accumulated 13 more medals.
Sawyer thought that the medal count was final — until Sunday evening.
Click for the rest of the story by Jen Lynds in the Bangor Daily News.
Posted in Law and Order, Maine history, Politics and government
Tagged 2nd Battalion, 47th Regiment, Army Pvt. Rex Nason, Aroostook County, Bronze Star, Cherbourg Peninsula, Cotentin, Elvert “Buck” Pooler, Eugene E. Sawyer, foxhole, France, Korean War, Legion d’honneur medal, Legion of Honor, Presque Isle, Presque Isle Elks Club, Purple Heart, St-Lo, U.S. Army’s 9th Infantry Division, World War II, wounded
