Michael is a Maine-raised photojournalist who has been on staff at the Morning Sentinel since August 2010. He is a 2002 graduate of Sterling College in Vermont where he studied experiential education with at-risk youth populations. Prior to becoming a photojournalist he traveled the United States, Canada and Nepal as a climber, exploring some of the world’s largest and most impressive mountain ranges. Living in a van and climbing 300 days a year led him to the Forest Service as an initial attack wildland firefighter in Colorado. Michael next landed at Metropolitan State University in Denver in 2005 where he continued his education in photojournalism. From there he interned at the Fort Collins Coloraodoan, The Advocate in Baton Rouge and the Jackson Hole News and Guide. His first staff photojournalism job was with the Fort Collins Coloradoan in 2007. In 2010 Michael, a 1994 graduate of Edward Little High School, returned to Maine and a job with the Morning Sentinel. During the last 10 years, he's has received multiple grants from the Pulitzer Center on Crisis Reporting to report on topics ranging from the Ebola epidemic, women and children’s healthcare and diamond mining in Sierra Leone to energy and climate in Labrador. He has won multiple national awards, including in the Best of Photojournalism competition as well as the National Press Photographers Association (small market) photographer of the year in 2018, 2019 and 2020.
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PublishedMay 31, 2013
STILL LIFE: Pig in a poke
Chef Mikael Andersson checks the temperature of the pig with the help of Chef Ramon Managad, left, during preparations for a pig roast in honor of Colby College food service workers employed by Sodexo, at Colby College on Friday. Sodexo annually throws a pig roast party for its employees.
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PublishedMay 31, 2013
STILL LIFE: Tall ship, taller ship
The Margaret Todd, a 151-foot-long, four-masted schooner, is dwarfed by the anchored, 51,000-ton Crystal Symphony cruise liner in Bar Harbor on Monday.
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PublishedMay 30, 2013
STILL LIFE: Swollen waters
Laura St. Peter, right, stands with her son Vincent Tibbetts, 3, as Brandy Pouliot, far left peers into the swollen Messalonskee Stream from a bench on the new North Street boat launch dock on Thursday. After several days of rain the clouds broke ushering in more summer-like weather with the temperature touching 80 degrees for the next couple of days.
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PublishedMay 27, 2013
STILL LIFE: Wet weeding
Cameron Mills, 21, of the Colby College grounds crew, whacks weeds in his rain slickers as rain falls in Waterville Friday afternoon.
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PublishedMay 24, 2013
STILL LIFE: Weeding crew
Yvonne Lefebvre, left, and Priscilla Jackson, right, both members of the Central Maine Gardening Club, weed the flower gardens outside the Alfond Youth Center on North Street in Waterville on Thursday. The gardening club will be running a a fundraiser plant sale at the Methodist church at 22 School St. in Oakland on June 8, from 8 a.m. – 12 p.m.
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PublishedMay 24, 2013
STILL LIFE: Community gardeners
Elizabeth Vigue wipes rain from her brow as Chuck Kittrel plants peppers in their section of the Waterville Parks and Recreation garden on North Street in Waterville Friday afternoon. The couple rented the space for $10 for the summer season.
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PublishedMay 17, 2013
STILL LIFE: Flight of the quad kite
Dan LaRochelle, of Waterville, takes advantage of the blustery weather with his 9-foot quad-line kite on the fields at Colby College on Friday.
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PublishedMay 14, 2013
PHOTOS: St. Francis de Sales Catholic Church demolition
St. Francis de Sales Catholic Church, its rectory and its parish hall, on Elm Street in downtown Waterville, are being demolished this week to make way for a housing project.
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PublishedMay 4, 2013
STILL LIFE: Women Build Day
Tina Cook, far left, Khristina Thayer, left center, Kelsey Atwood, right center and Alice Stinson measure vinyl siding during the Lowe’s Women Build Day at the Habitat for Humanity house on Jaques Lane in Oakland on Saturday. About 30 women volunteered their skills and sweat for the day, making up nearly 75 percent of the workforce at the job site.
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PublishedApril 20, 2013
STILL LIFE: Special visit from Santa
Zachary Korbet, 4, is greeted by Santa Claus at Champions in Waterville on Saturday. Korbet was diagnosed with leukemia in January and is receiving treatment at Maine Children’s Cancer Program in Scarborough. Santa’s visit was part of a benefit to help offset treatment costs. The Christmas theme was catered to Zach’s affinity for the holiday.
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