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ondon L ChowderA tasty blend of the fabulous noteworthy and absurd. 20 p o r t l a n d monthly magazine CloCkwisefromtopleftCoreytempletonColinsargentmonkpressphotomiChaelsalwitzmdJesiCawaller The colorful buoys hanging along the fence in front of the Wadsworth Long- fellow House on Congress Street spring from the imagination of Portland art- ist Natasha Mayers. During her semes- ter as artist-in-residence at USM she in- vited students to paint lobster buoys as the flags of more than 70 nations from which Mainers have emigrated. As part of Maine Historical Societys larg- er 400 Years of New Mainers ex- hibit they have proved so popular that MHS has no immediate plans to remove them. The Jetport is soon to install a set. Eventually wed like to put them in the water says Mayers maybe Back Cove to photograph them and then they may tour the state. Welcome Buoys marine biologist and University of maine graduate student Jesica Waller has won a science visual- ization award from Popular Science magazine for information made beautifulher dazzling photograph of a tiny feathery maine lobster larva. it was three weeks old and five millimeters in length says Waller i mounted a nikon camera on a dissecting microscope. her research on the effects of climate change on lobster life spans has made me appreciate the fishery more than ever. But i still eat lobster regularly my favorite place is muscongus By lobster in Round Pondthe view is incredible. Wee Bug It isnt just calling its also crawl- ing with actors including our own USM theater alum Tony Shalhoub who is be- ing directed by his old friend Stanley Tucci in sert and is co-starring with Geoffrey Rush and Clmence Posy in Final Portrait about the life of Swiss painter and sculptor AlbertoGiacometti. Before Michael Salwitz MD acquired a near-derelict 1949 Pullman Standard rail car in the 1990s and restored it into the gleaming Louis Sockalexis in hon- or of the Penobscot Native American baseball player from Old Town for whom the Cleveland Indians were named simply because he says I have been a baseball fan since I was five years oldOK a Cleveland Indians fan. Now fully Amtrak-certified the Louis is for sale for 310000 plus shipping. John Suscheck CEO of Ozark Mountain Railcar who is brokering the sale notes that The interior of the Louis has been done in an art-deco style with a nod toward the southwestern. Dr. Salwitz and his wife have traveled Am- trak lines across the country for 15 years and he says the Sockalexis name engenders questions wherever we go and were happy to relate the story of the Penobscot whose feats on the diamond have rarely been equaled. ozarkmountainrailcar.com Rail Simple