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Posted: 9/8/2012 4:38:33 PM EST
Maine quarterback Marcus Wasilewski (7) looks to pass under pressure from Boston College defensive end Kasim Edebali (91) during the first half of an NCAA college football game at Alumni Stadium in Boston, Saturday, Sept. 8, 2012. (AP Photo/Mary Schwalm)
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Posted: 9/8/2012 4:38:33 PM EST
Maine quarterback Marcus Wasilewski (7) reacts after throwing an incomplete pass during an NCAA college football game against Boston College at Alumni Stadium in Boston, Saturday, Sept. 8, 2012. (AP Photo/Mary Schwalm)
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Posted: 9/8/2012 4:38:33 PM EST
Boston College quarterback Chase Rettig (11) looks to pass during an NCAA college football game against Maine at Alumni Stadium in Boston, Saturday, Sept. 8, 2012. (AP Photo/Mary Schwalm)
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Posted: 8/28/2012 11:13:46 PM EST
Delegates from the state of Maine protest during the presentation of rules during the Republican National Convention in Tampa, Fla., on Tuesday, Aug. 28, 2012. (AP Photo/Lynne Sladky)
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Posted: 8/21/2012 2:34:14 PM EST
A voter arrives at a polling location to vote in Portland, Maine November 3, 2009. REUTERS/Joel Page
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Posted: 8/21/2012 2:34:14 PM EST
A voter arrives at a polling location to vote in Portland, Maine November 3, 2009. REUTERS/Joel Page
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Posted: 8/21/2012 10:08:35 AM EST
In this photo made Friday, Aug. 3, 2012, passengers on the Mary Day gather as they pass a rocky ledge occupied by seals in Penobscot Bay off Camden, Maine. The 90-foot Mary Day, which is celebrating its 50th season, is the first schooner in the Maine windjammer fleet to be built specifically to accommodate passengers. Its sleeping cabins are heated and have nine feet of headroom. (AP Photo/Robert F. Bukaty)
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Posted: 8/21/2012 10:08:35 AM EST
In this photo made Friday, August 3, 2012, Captain Barry King mans the helm of the schooner Mary Day on a three-day cruise on Penobscot Bay off Camden, Maine. The 90-foot Mary Day, which is celebrating its 50th season, is the first schooner in the Maine windjammer fleet to be built specifically to accommodate passengers. Its sleeping cabins are heated and have nine feet of headroom. (AP Photo/Robert F. Bukaty)
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Posted: 8/21/2012 10:08:35 AM EST
In this photo made Thursday, Aug. 2, 2012, passengers read, work on crossword puzzles, and just relax on the deck of the schooner Mary Day during a three-day cruise on Penobscot Bay off Camden, Maine. The 90-foot Mary Day, which is celebrating its 50th season, is the first schooner in the Maine windjammer fleet to be built specifically to accommodate passengers. Its sleeping cabins are heated and have nine feet of headroom. (AP Photo/Robert F. Bukaty)
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Posted: 8/21/2012 10:08:35 AM EST
In this photo made Saturday, August 4,, 2012, Kim Trankina of Marietta, Ga., relaxes in the morning sun with coffee and a book aboard the schooner Mary Day. The windjammer anchored for the night in a cove off Isleboro, Maine. The 90-foot Mary Day, which is celebrating its 50th season, is the first schooner in the Maine windjammer fleet to be built specifically to accommodate passengers. Its sleeping cabins are heated and have nine feet of headroom. (AP Photo/Robert F. Bukaty)
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Posted: 8/21/2012 10:08:35 AM EST
In this photo made Friday, Aug. 3, 2012, the schooner Mary Day sits at anchor in the morning fog off South Brooksville, Maine. The 90-foot Mary Day, which is celebrating its 50th season, is the first schooner in the Maine windjammer fleet to be built specifically to accommodate passengers. Its sleeping cabins are heated and have nine feet of headroom. (AP Photo/Robert F. Bukaty)
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Posted: 8/21/2012 10:08:35 AM EST
In this photo made Friday, August 3, 2012, Captain Barry King, on the guitar, joins passengers Sarah Washburn, playing violin, and her husband, Ryan Jesperson, during a musical evening aboard the Mary Day off Ilseboro, Maine. The 90-foot Mary Day, which is celebrating its 50th season, is the first schooner in the Maine windjammer fleet to be built specifically to accommodate passengers. Its sleeping cabins are heated and have nine feet of headroom. (AP Photo/Robert F. Bukaty)
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Posted: 8/21/2012 10:08:35 AM EST
In this photo made Friday, August 3, 2012, Olivia Trankina of Marietta, Ga., and Liz Archibald of Clarks Summit, Penn., leap from the bowsprit of the schooner Mary Day in Bucks Harbor in South Brooksville, Maine. The 90-foot Mary Day, which is celebrating its 50th season, is the first schooner in the Maine windjammer fleet to be built specifically to accommodate passengers. Its sleeping cabins are heated and have nine feet of headroom. (AP Photo/Robert F. Bukaty)
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Posted: 8/21/2012 10:08:35 AM EST
In this photo made Thursday, Aug. 2, 2012, Sawyer King, 12, the son of the captain, rides on the bowsprit of the 90-foot passenger schooner Mary Day, while sailing on a foggy afternoon in East Penobscot Bay off Little Deer Isle, Maine. The 90-foot Mary Day, which is celebrating its 50th season, is the first schooner in the Maine windjammer fleet to be built specifically to accommodate passengers. Its sleeping cabins are heated and have nine feet of headroom. (AP Photo/Robert F. Bukaty)
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Posted: 8/21/2012 10:08:35 AM EST
In this photo made Friday, Aug. 3, 2012, passenger Paul Ernest of Lynnfield, Mass., left, takes a turn at the helm during a three-day cruise on the schooner Mary Day on Penobscot Bay off Camden, Maine. The 90-foot Mary Day, which is celebrating its 50th season, is the first schooner in the Maine windjammer fleet to be built specifically to accommodate passengers. Its sleeping cabins are heated and have nine feet of headroom. (AP Photo/Robert F. Bukaty)
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Posted: 8/21/2012 10:08:35 AM EST
In this photo made July 6, 2012, the schooner Mary Day, right, sails in a schooner race with other members of Maine's windjammer fleet off Rockland, Maine. The 90-foot Mary Day, which is celebrating its 50th season, is the first schooner in the Maine windjammer fleet to be built specifically to accommodate passengers. Its sleeping cabins are heated and have nine feet of headroom. (AP Photo/Robert F. Bukaty)
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Posted: 8/13/2012 11:08:23 AM EST
In an Aug. 1, 2012 photo, Crystal Stroud, 26, of Mississippi, rests and re-supplies with her 3-year-old Dachsund, Polly, in Harpers Ferry, W.Va. Stroud is hiking the Appalachian Trail northward from Georgia to Maine this summer. Like the people who hike it, the Appalachian Trail is always moving. Technically, Tuesday marks the 75th anniversary of its completion. But the 2,180-mile path stretching across 14 states from Springer Mountain, Ga., to Katahdin, Maine, is never really finished. (AP Photo/Vicki Smith)
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Posted: 8/9/2012 9:18:21 PM EST
Lobstermen take a break while doing maintenance work, Thursday, August 9, 2012, in Portland, Maine. Plentiful lobsters this season has depressed the prices that lobstermen have been getting, to below $3 a pound. In recent weeks Maine lobstermen stayed off the water for several days to try to let the market rebound. (AP Photo/Robert F. Bukaty)
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Posted: 8/9/2012 9:18:21 PM EST
Lobsters are unloaded from a fishing boat Thursday, Aug. 9, 2012, in Portland, Maine. Maine's lobster harvest seems to be hitting an economic wall, with a plentiful catch causing low prices that is disgruntling lobstermen in Canada. They have set up blockades around some plants to prevent delivery of Maine lobster they say is stealing their livelihood. (AP Photo/Robert F. Bukaty)
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Posted: 8/9/2012 5:23:38 PM EST
Lobstermen take a break while doing maintenance work, Thursday, August 9, 2012, in Portland, Maine. Plentiful lobsters this season has depressed the prices that lobstermen have been getting, to below $3 a pound. In recent weeks Maine lobstermen stayed off the water for several days to try to let the market rebound. (AP Photo/Robert F. Bukaty)