November 2005

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Features

Strange Beauty

In the drabness of November you take color wherever you can find it.

My Own Private Antiques Road Show

It took an off-season expedition through the shops of southern Maine to give me the dreaded antiquing bug.

Speaker of the House

Once considered the most powerful man in Washington, Congressman Thomas B. Reed, of Portland, left a legacy so complicated politicians are still squabbling over it.

Table of Contents

Letters to the Editor

150 Reasons to Give Thanks We Live In Maine

In no particular order

Battle of the Microbrews

We pit ten Maine beers against each other in a blind taste test to determine the tops in hops.

Where in Maine?

This beautiful hill was contested ground during the Aroostook War ? and again in the past few years. Can you identify it?

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Calendar of Events

November Highlights

Late fall is the perfect season to visit the state?s theaters, concert halls, and museums.

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Dining Down East

One Fifty Ate, South Portland

A loose cooperative of chefs and bakers brings the funk to Spring Point.

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Down East Bookshelf

Voices of Maine

A new short-story collection showcases the state?s premier writers at their briefest and best.

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Down East Traveler

Winter Planner

No need to hibernate! Enjoying the cold months is easy in Maine.

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Flashpoint: Perry

Living on the Edge

Will a liquefied natural gas terminal bring prosperity to Pleasant Point and Perry?

The End of the Line for LNG

Passamaquoddy Bay is the last, not-so-best site for a liquefied natural gas terminal in Maine.

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Inside Maine

Sunday Jazz

The Portland Museum of Art serves up a musical brunch sure to lift your spirits.

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I Remember

My Fixer-Upper Man

Bruce and I have been married fifteen years, and we?ve yet to live in a finished house.

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North By East

Honorary Natives

Opinions, advisories, and musings from the length and breadth of Maine

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The Maine Viewpoint

Military Cheers and Tears

Maine survived the base-closing process much better than many expected.

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The Talk of Maine

Turkeys Gone Wild

Maine?s wild turkey reintroduction program may have succeeded all too well.

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What's In A Picture?

Tree Huggers

In 1961 sorority sisters at UMaine Orono put a new twist on the cramming craze.