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Portland, Maine. Yes. News is good here! THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 12, 2013

VOL. 5 NO. 126

PORTLAND, ME

PORTLAND’S DAILY NEWSPAPER

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Lincoln Park deja vu: Could city sale spur another illegal camp? — See page 6 9/11: Maine salutes the military, honors the fallen

The Portland Fire Department and Police Department memorialized the victims of the Sept. 11 attacks during a wreath laying ceremony at Fort Allen Park on Wednesday. Fire Chief Jerome LaMoria (right) and Police Chief Michael Sauschuck (left) were accompanied by City Manager Mark Rees (middle) while they laid wreaths at a memorial in the park, with the color guard from both PFD and PPD at attention. Later on Wednesday the PFD sponsored a blood drive with the American Red Cross. The state remembered the Sept. 11, 2001 attacks with a variety of ceremonies and events. Governor Paul LePage and First Lady Ann LePage visited Freeport and Brunswick. For more photos, see pages 8-9. (CRAIG LYONS PHOTO)

Putin’s play on Syria — See page 4

A personal story about prostate cancer diagnosis, treatment

— See Karen Vachon, page 4

Food truck operators could discover new opportunities from amended ordinances — See page 7


Page 2 — The PORTLAND Daily Sun, Thursday, September 12, 2013 Page 2 — THE PORTLAND DAILY SUN, Thursday, September 12, 2013

Men can blame estrogen, too

(NY Times) — It is the scourge of many a middleaged man: he starts getting a pot belly, using lighter weights at the gym and somehow just doesn’t have the sexual desire of his younger years. The obvious culprit is testosterone, since men gradually make less of the male sex hormone as years go by. But a surprising new answer is emerging, one that doctors say could reinvigorate the study of how men’s bodies age. Estrogen, the female sex hormone, turns out to play a much bigger role in men’s bodies than previously thought, and falling levels contribute to their expanding waistlines just as they do in women’s. The discovery of the role of estrogen in men is “a major advance,” said Dr. Peter J. Snyder, a professor of medicine at the University of Pennsylvania, who is leading a big new research project on hormone therapy for men 65 and over. The new frontier of research involves figuring out which hormone does what in men, and how body functions are affected at different hormone levels. While dwindling testosterone levels are to blame for middle-aged men’s smaller muscles, falling levels of estrogen regulate fat accumulation, according to a study published Wednesday in the New England Journal of Medicine, which provided the most conclusive evidence to date that estrogen is a major culprit in male midlife woes. And both hormones are needed for libido.

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(NY Times) — Michael Ollis was not even in high school when terrorists slammed jetliners into the World Trade Center towers. This summer, 12 years later, he was serving his third combat tour with the United States Army when insurgents attacked his base in Afghanistan. Staff Sergeant Ollis, 24, a Staten Island native, was killed. He was one of 92 New Yorkers who enlisted after 9/11 and died in

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battles that were spawned in the smoldering rubble of ground zero. As the families of those killed on 9/11 gathered on Wednesday morning in New York, Pennsylvania and Virginia to mark the anniversary of the attacks, Sergeant Ollis’s death, one of thousands during a decade of war, offered a reminder that the costs of what happened 12 years ago are still being borne across the globe.

Edwin Aviles, 41, who lives in Brooklyn and was working near ground zero just before the memorial Wednesday, said time had done little to ease his sense that there are enemies looking to harm New York. “I don’t think anything has changed,” he said. “Just like then, just like now we got to stay on point. Got to stay on top of everyone else. Anything can happen at any given moment.”

Suicide bombs hit Egypt Planned as call to act, Obama’s military in Sinai, kill nine speech became a plea for time EL-ARISH, Egypt (NY Times) — In near-simultaneous attacks, a pair of suicide bombers rammed their explosivesladen cars into military targets in Egypt’s volatile Sinai Peninsula on Wednesday, killing at least nine soldiers and nudging the conflict there closer to a full-blown insurgency. The bombings in the town of Rafah on the border with the Gaza Strip appear to be a deadly response by insurgents to a military crackdown on their north Sinai hideouts that has reportedly left over three dozen dead. Suicide attacks are a new element in the wave of political violence triggered initially by the ouster of Egypt’s Islamist President Mohammed Morsi on July 3, and intensified by a violent crackdown on his supporters’ protest camps. They suggest that al-Qaida-inspired groups may be developing a new capability to strike at security and other targets, both in Sinai and elsewhere in Egypt. One of the two bombings in the town of Rafah brought down a two-story building housing the local branch of military intelligence.

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WASHINGTON (NY Times) — Members of Congress from both sides of the aisle returned to work Wednesday, relieved that President Obama had called off a vote on military action in Syria, postponing a political confrontation that few in Washington want to have. In the afternoon, the Senate formally ended its consideration of a resolution authorizing military force against the Syrian government and moved on to an energy efficiency bill. The showdown over United States military intervention appears to be over, at least for now. But even as the president earned praise for being willing to pursue a diplomatic

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response in Syria, it was what he did not say on Tuesday night in his 16-minute address from the East Room of the White House on Tuesday night that may ultimately shape the broader reaction to his remarks in the days ahead. The president did not say how long he would wait to see if President Bashar al-Assad relinquishes control of the chemical weapons that officials say he used to gas his own people. Obama did not detail the steps that the United States would demand from Syria as proof that the diplomatic efforts were more than a delaying tactic to avoid a strike from cruise missiles and American bombers.

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Police investigate stabbing, blunt force trauma on Oxford Street Daily Sun Staff Reports

The Portland Police Department is trying to determine what led to an incident that left two men with stab wounds and a third with blunt force trauma on Oxford Street Wednesday. The police were called to 255 Oxford St. at 1:21 p.m., after receiving a report of a stabbing, according to a press release, and officers at the scene found two people with stab wounds and a third with blunt force trauma. Police say all three people are being treated at local hospitals for non-life threatening injuries, and are thought to be the only people involved in the incident. Anyone with information about the incident is asked to contact the Portland Police Department at 207-874-8533. Community members may submit tips by going to the Portland Police Department website: www. portland-police.com and clicking “Submit an Anonymous Crime Tip.” Finally, anonymous phone tips can be left on the police department’s Crime Tip line: 874-8584.

Horse tests positive for EEE A horse euthanized due to neurological signs last week in Oxford County tested positive for Eastern Equine Encephalitis, or EEE, the Maine Center for Disease Control and Prevention and the Maine Department of Agriculture, Conservation and Forestry announced Wednesday. The horse was vaccinated for EEE and West Nile virus a year ago, but had not received a booster dose, the agencies reported in a press release. EEE is a virus that is transmitted through the bite

of an infected mosquito. Eight pools of mosquitoes have tested positive for EEE in York County this year. Maine last saw EEE in horses in 2009, when 15 horses died of the disease. “EEE, which is carried by mosquitoes, is a fatal, viral disease in horses. The virus can affect human beings if they are bitten by mosquitoes that carry the virus,” Dr. Michele Walsh, state veterinarian said. “People cannot acquire EEE infection from sick animals, only from the bite of an infected mosquito.” EEE virus is carried by mosquitoes, which pick it up from infected wild birds. The virus replicates in birds, which act as natural reservoirs for the disease. Signs of the disease in horses include: stumbling or poor balance, unusual behavior and lethargy. Other symptoms include head pressing, circling, tremors, seizures and eventual coma. “EEE is preventable in horses through vaccination,” Walsh said. “If more than six months has elapsed since a horse has been vaccinated, a booster vaccination may be needed.” Vaccination can also protect against WNV, which has not been detected in Maine so far in 2013, but was detected in 2012, and has been detected in a neighboring states this year, the press release stated. Horse owners should contact their own veterinarians to decide if booster shots are needed, the state agencies advised. Revaccination is recommended if more than six months have passed since the last vaccination when exposure to infected mosquitoes is likely. Other animals besides people and horses can be affected by EEE. The virus can also affect specialty livestock, such as llamas, alpacas, emus, ostriches and other farm-raised birds, such as quail and ducks. “This EEE activity in mosquitoes and horses should serve as a reminder to health care providers that humans are at risk from this disease, as well,” said Dr. Sheila Pinette, director of Maine CDC. Although many persons infected with EEE have no apparent illness, those who develop symptoms do so usually three to 10 days after the bite of an infected mosquito, she said.

––––––––––––––––––––––––––––– OBITUARY –––––––––––––––––––––––––––––

Frances E. White, 84 WINDHAM — Frances E. White, 84, passed away on Sept. 9, 2013, at Ledgewood Manor in Windham. She was born on June 18, 1929, in St. Stephen, New Brunswick, the daughter of Edmund and Martha (Halford) McLain. She grew up in Calais, graduating from Calais High School. Frances worked for many years at different locations as a housekeeper, retiring from the Baron Center in Portland. She led a very active life, as she loved walking, biking and swimming, including swimming in the St. Croix River when she was younger. Frances was predeceased by her husband, John G. White in 1991, her parents and her sisters, Mary Hill, Jacquie Dotten

and Nancy Mosher. She is survived by her nine children; Carmen Patterson and her husband Steve, Jane Cummings, Andrew Cummings, Kathy Thomas and her husband Brian, Jackie Weit-

zell and her husband Walter, Nancy Andrews, Dottie Dill and her husband Duane, Patty Anderson and her husband Dennis, Michael Cummings and his wife Amanda and step-son John White, as well as several grandchildren and great-grandchildren. She is also survived by her sisters, Jane Reinhart, Joyce Schaibo and Ann Asali. Friends and family are invited to visitation on Friday, Sept. 13, 2013 from 10 a.m. to 11 a.m., followed by a funeral service at 11 a.m. at A.T. Hutchins Funeral and Cremation Services, 660 Brighton Ave, Portland. Interment will follow at Calvary Cemetery, South Portland. To offer words of condolence and share memories with the family, please go to www.athutchins.com

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Page 4 — The PORTLAND Daily Sun, Thursday, September 12, 2013

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Who do you trust?

WASHINGTON — Vladimir Putin, who keeps Edward Snowden on a leash and lets members of a riotous girl band rot in jail, has thrown President Obama a lifeline. The Russian president had coldly brushed back Obama on Snowden and Syria, and only last week called John Kerry a liar. Now, when it is clear Obama can’t convince Congress, the American public, his own wife, the world, Liz Cheney or even Donald “Shock and Awe” Rumsfeld to bomb Syria — just a teensy-weensy bit — PootyPoot (as W. called him) rides, shirtless, to the rescue, offering him a face-saving way out? If it were a movie, we’d know it was a trick. We can’t trust the soulless Putin — his Botox has given the former K.G.B. officer even more of a poker face — or The New the heartless Bashar al-Assad. York Times By Tuesday, Putin the Peacemaker was already setting conditions. Just as Obama and Kerry — with assists from Hillary and some senators — were huffing and puffing that it was their military threat that led to the

Maureen Dowd –––––

see DOWD page 5

We want your opinions All letters columns and editorial cartoons are the opinion of the writer or artists and do not reflect the opinions of the staff, editors or publisher of The Portland Daily Sun. We welcome your ideas and opinions on all topics and consider every signed letter for publication. Limit letters to 300 words and include your address and phone number. Longer letters will only be published as space allows and may be edited. Anonymous letters, letters without full names and generic letters will not be published. Please send your letters to: THE PORTLAND DAILY SUN, news@portlanddailysun.me.

–––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––– COLUMN ––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––

A personal story of prostate cancer, treatment A few years ago at a family gathering, my siblings and cousins where taken aback by our fathers. Two brothers — well into their 80s, balding gray hair, big hearing aids, stood hunched, one propped with a cane, the other leaning hard on the countertop. Looking over, I assumed it was the typical political debate between the two of them, they’re so convinced they can solve the world’s problems. As we all Better with hung out in the kitchen, my father bellows out to my uncle: Age How’s your prostate? (!!) Surprise, surprise — they weren’t talking politics; rather it was an intense conversation about the most common fear that aging men face — prostate cancer. It caused us to choke on our beers, and break into laughter. Of course, cancer is no laughing matter; but how it came out struck us funny. It was nice to see the brothers checking in on each other and swapping war stories on the joys of aging. Good for them. Pondering what took place, it dawned on me: Women talk. They find therapy in each other. They grow. They heal. Breast cancer has become a social concern. Exposed with pink ribbons; it’s commonplace to talk breast cancer. Prostate cancer, in contrast, by virtue of who it affects, is different; men tend to be less open and comfortable talking about

Karen Vachon

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what ails them. According to the American Cancer Society, one in six men will be diagnosed with prostate cancer. Prostate cancer is the second leading cause of cancer death among American men; lung cancer is number one. A few weeks ago, at a Think Local Community Networking meeting in Scarborough, Russell Harvie stood up to give the educational moment. As is typical at this meeting, a four-minute presentation is given to educate the group on something they may not be aware of. The best presentations are always the ones that involve a personal story. Russ’ story brought me back to the family party in the kitchen — I learned something that could help my dad and uncle. “In the fall of 2007, I was diagnosed with prostate cancer. No one likes to hear that word and we were pretty devastated that I was going to have to face that diagnosis,” explained Harvie. Among his brothers (he’s one of six), three of them have now been treated for prostate cancer. His older brother had paved the way, being treated in 2006 at Loma Linda University Hospital in Loma Linda, Calif. Russ visited his brother in California when his brother was having his treatments. His brother chose Proton Radiation; Harvie was impressed with how his brother responded to the treatment. So, after receiving his diagnosis, Russ decided he would be treated at the same facility. By February 2008, Russ and his wife, Helen drove across country and enrolled in a three-month treatment program see VACHON page 5


The PORTLAND Daily Sun, Thursday, September 12, 2013— Page 5

–––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––– OPINION ––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––

California hospital offered treatment sive and painless. According to the website, www.protons.com, the benat Loma Linda University Hospital. efits are many: non-invasive, pain“When you arrive, they make a pod less, more accurate treatment; higher for you out of plastic lined foam,” doses of targeted treatment can be explained Harvie. “You are always in used without damaging healthy tisthis pod for treatments; it is made espesues and organs; treatment is done cially for you. The Proton beam comes outpatient; radiation doesn’t require from a great big machine and gets shot recovery time; minimal impact on through the hip. They rotate hips each energy level; minimal risk of impoday. The treatment goes directly to the tency; lower risk of side effects. Other site of the tumor and does not affect benefits that Harvie shared: no loss of any other organs. The treatment only hair and no diapers. lasts a few minutes and then you are While Russ Harvie had to go to free the rest of the day.” California to receive his alternative The couple rented a home. They treatment — a “radiation vacation” made the very best of the experience, he won’t forget, more Proton Treatwhich they refer to as their “Radiament facilities have cropped up. tion Vacation.” They met a hundred Russell Harvie opens up about Today, 11 facilities across the country other couples who were also away prostate cancer and shares his are in operation, with more in devel“radiation vacation.” (KAREN from home. They formed a great com- VACHON PHOTO) opment; in the near future, there will munity, and made friends for life. They be 20 facilities across the U.S. Mastraveled to L.A., San Diego, Temecula Wine Country, sachusetts General Hospital is now offering treatand other places. There were support groups, potment. Harvie’s willingness to share his story has lucks, and Russ’ house was the party house. “If you convinced me that prostate cancer should become have to have prostate cancer, this is the way to go,” party talk. The next time our family gets together, says Harvie. I’m armed with the courage to ask my dad and my Unlike more conventional prostate cancer treatuncle: How’s your prostate? And know that I have ment, Proton therapy is different. Using a focused found something they may find helpful. ray of proton particles, the treatment delivers high doses of radiation with great precision, accurately (Karen Vachon is a Scarborough resident. She is a targeting cancer cells without causing damage to licensed health and life insurance agent and active healthy tissues around the prostate. Physicians are community volunteer. To follow her on Facebook, go able to adapt the treatment to make it non-invato: http://www.facebook.com/karenvachonhealth.) VACHON from page 4

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Hitting rough patch, Kerry walked back the walking back DOWD from page 4

breakthrough, Putin moved to neuter them, saying they’d have to drop their military threat before any deal could proceed. The administration’s saber-rattling felt more like knees rattling. Oh, for the good old days when Obama was leading from behind. Now these guys are leading by slip-of-the-tongue. Amateur hour started when Obama dithered on Syria and failed to explain the stakes there. It escalated last August with a slip by the methodical wordsmith about “a red line for us” — which the president and Kerry later tried to blur as the world’s red line, except the world was averting its eyes. Obama’s flip-flopping, ambivalent leadership led him to the exact place he never wanted to be: unilateral instead of unified. Once again, as with gun control and other issues, he had not done the groundwork necessary to line up support. The bumbling approach climaxed with two off-the-cuff remarks by Kerry, hitting a rough patch in the role of a lifetime, during a London press conference Monday; he offered to forgo an attack if Assad turned over “every single bit of his chemical weapons to the international community” and promised, if they did strike, that it would be an “unbelievably small” effort. A State Department spokeswoman walked back Kerry’s first slip, but once the White House realized it was the only emergency exit sign around, Kerry walked back the walking back, claiming at a Congressional hearing Tuesday that he did not “misspeak.” The president countered Kerry’s second slip with NBC’s Savannah Guthrie Monday night, declaring that “The U.S. does not do pinpricks,” which Kerry parroted at the hearing Tuesday, declaring that “We don’t do pinpricks.” For good measure, Obama, in his address to the nation Tuesday night, made sure the world knew: “The United States military doesn’t do pinpricks.” Where the mindlessly certain W. adopted a fig leaf of diplomacy to use force in Iraq, the mindfully uncertain Obama is adopting a fig leaf of force to use diplomacy in Syria.

Even as Democrats tiptoed away from the red line, eager to kick the can of Sarin down the road, their own harsh rhetoric haunted them. Kerry compared Assad to Hitler last week, and Harry Reid evoked ”Nazi death camps” on the Senate floor Monday. Again, an echo of the misbegotten Iraq. Making his hyperbolic case for war, W. was huffy with Germans on a visit in 2002, irritated that they did not seem to grasp the horror of “a dictator who gassed his own people,” as he put it to a Berlin reporter. Obama cried over the children of Newtown. He is stricken, as he said in his address Tuesday, by “images of children writhing in pain and going still on a cold hospital floor” from “poison gas.” He thought — or thought he thought — that avenging the gassing was the right thing to do. But W., once more haunting his successor’s presidency, drained credibility, coffers and compassion. While most Americans shudder at the news that 400 children have been killed by a monster, they recoil at the Middle East now; they’ve had it with Shiites vs. Sunnis, with Alawites and all the ancient hatreds. Kerry can bluster that “we’re not waiting for long” for Assad to cough up the weapons, but it will be hard for him to back it up, given that a new NBC/Wall Street Journal poll indicates that Joe Sixpack is now a peacenik; in 2005, 60 percent of Republicans agreed with W. that America should foster democracy in the world; now only 19 percent of Republicans believe it. W., Dick Cheney and Rumsfeld launched a social engineering scheme to change the mind-set in the Middle East about democracy and the mind-set at home about the post-Vietnam reluctance to be muscular about imposing our values through war. They did manage to drastically change the mind-set in the Middle East and at home, but in the opposite way than they intended. In a crouch after 9/11, the country was happy to punish an Arab villain, even the wrong one. That mass delusion, plus the economic vertigo, has sent Americans into a permanent crouch. And that’s too bad.

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Page 6 — The PORTLAND Daily Sun, Thursday, September 12, 2013

Deja vu? If city council votes to sell Congress Square Park land, an illegal camp could result Opponents of Congress Square Park sale proposal say they don’t want to ‘muddy the waters’ with an encampment prior to Monday’s vote, but afterward ... who knows? By David Carkhuff THE PORTLAND DAILY SUN

Approaching the two-year anniversary of the Occupy Maine encampment in Portland’s Lincoln Park, a member of the movement said he knows of people who would stage a similar protest in Congress Square Park — if, on Monday, the Portland City Council votes to sell a parcel of the park to the company renovating the old Eastland Park Hotel. “Not that this is a threat, by any means, but the cause and effect is going to happen,” said William Hessian, an artist and activist and member of Occupy Maine, a local movement that sprang up in 2011 around the same time as the Occupy Wall Street protests. “If, on Monday, the park is sold, there probably will be people who will be (launching) an occupation where there will be arrests,” Hessian said. Hessian made the comments in response to questions from The Portland Daily Sun about the likelihood of a repeat of the Lincoln Park encampment happening as a result of the public opposition to the city selling part of Congress Square Park. Occupy Maine began its “protest” encampment in Lincoln Park on Oct. 3, 2011, setting up tents and a mini community in the city park near Franklin Street. City councilors voted in December 2011 to deny Occupy Maine protesters a permit to continue camping overnight in Lincoln Park. The group sued to contest that decision, but Cumberland County Superior Court Judge Warren Thomas Warren ruled that the city had authority to deny the permit. A city order and notice to remove structures and belongings from Lincoln Park and to abide by the park’s daytime hours was posted outside the encampment, and the campers were out in February 2012. Last Friday, police responded to Congress Square Park as opponents of the city’s sale proposal appeared poised to camp there after park hours. “We did camp out that first day, and there was a camp-out,” Hessian noted. About a dozen people were there just a few minutes before 11 p.m. Friday, Sept. 6, and many said they were willing to get arrested but they relented because of the arguments against that type of civil disobedience, Hessian said. “We thought that bringing negative attention to the park would dilute the other messages,” he said. Hessian also credited Police Chief Michael Sauschuck for doing “a really good job” of dealing with the situation, coming down and talking to protesters and letting them know that they had to leave. But on Monday, if the Portland City Council votes to sell a portion of the park, Hessian said he wouldn’t be surprised if protesters decided to camp there and risk arrest. For now, Hessian and other opponents of the sale are hoping the public will research information they have compiled. The “Save Congress Square” or “Congress Square Summer: Save Public Space” (https://www.facebook. com/groups/354969907890642) Facebook page contains articles and information about the issue, he said. A group seeking a public vote on the sale have a website, The Friends of Congress Square Park (http://congresssquarepark.org). Supporters of the sale proposal have launched their own Facebook page, Revitalize Congress Square (https://www.facebook.com/YesonCongressSquare). Hessian said he is part of the Friends group with

RockBridge Capital — the owners of the soon-to-open Westin Portland Harborview Hotel, formerly the Eastland Park Hotel — aim to use an acquired piece of Congress Square Park to build a 9,400-square-foot events center off the hotel. The 4,800 square feet remaining of the plaza would be the subject of a redesign and visioning process by the city. The Portland City Council will deliberate on the proposal at a meeting Monday. (DAVID CARKHUFF FILE PHOTO)

its “Citizens’ Initiative that will offer greater protection to Parks and Open Spaces throughout the city,” as stated on its website. “We 100 percent support what they’re doing as far as tactics, this new initiative is really, really awesome and needs to be looked at by the city council,” he said. On Wednesday, the Friends of Congress Square Park issued a press release noted it’s asking Mayor Michael Brennan and city councilors for “one-on-one meetings to discuss the fate of the park in the heart of Portland’s downtown.” “We’re aiming to meet with as many councilors as possible,” said Dave LaCasse, the Friends’ treasurer. “We’re not taking any councilor’s vote for granted, and we’re not giving up on any one, especially after the resounding support for the park at Monday night’s council meeting.” Members also took heart from the City Council’s decision last Monday to receive nearly four hours of public testimony and then postpone a deliberation and possible vote until Sept. 16. Friends Board member John Eder said in the press release, “We’re taking the council’s postponement of the vote as a big win for public neighborhood parks like ours. We’ve been saying all along that selling a downtown park for the first time in the city’s history will set a horrible precedent and we think our message has given the Councilors pause about voting against the public’s wishes.” The group also cited a recent Public Policy Polling poll which found that 49 percent of Portland voters polled were against selling Congress Square Park, with only 34 percent in favor. The group’s petition for a citizens’ initiative would add Congress Square and 34 other parks to the City Land Bank for protection. The city has proposed to sell 9,500 square feet, the majority of Congress Square Park, to RockBridge Capital and retain 4,800 square feet of the park as a part of the effort to redesign the space. On Aug. 21, the city’s Housing and Community Development Committee voted 3-1 to recommend the full council pass a purchase and sales agreement between the city and RockBridge Capital to sell the portion of the park to the hotel developers for $523,000. RockBridge — the owners of the soon-to-open

Westin Portland Harborview Hotel, formerly the Eastland Park Hotel — aim to use the acquired piece of the park to build a 9,400-square-foot events center off the hotel. The 4,800 square feet remaining of the plaza would be the subject of a redesign and visioning process by the city. Save Congress Square (https://www.wepay.com/ donations/save-congress-square) has a fundraising goal of $1 million in an effort to outbid RockBridge and secure the park for public use. Fifty days remain in this fundraising campaign. “Congress Square Park now has a WePay site! We believe that we can raise an endowment that is more than the assessed value of $55 a square foot as a vacant lot,” the group noted. “We are going worldwide and aiming for 1 million dollars, so that we can outbid the amount and create an endowment that would take care of the park for the future.” “If it is just about money, they should give us time to raise money and the people could buy back their own park,” Hessian said. Meanwhile, on Monday, expect a march at 5 p.m. from Congress Square to City Hall, he said. For now, opponents of the sale don’t seem inclined to camp in the park, as Hessian noted that the push to preserve the park would likely suffer if they did. “We didn’t want to muddy it with making a big stand,” he said.

In February 2012, Portland Police Lt. Bill Preis talks on a cell phone in Lincoln Park while Public Services crews remove remnants of the Occupy Maine camp. Talk of another encampment emerging in Congress Square Park may gain steam if the city pursues a sale, one activist said. (DAVID CARKHUFF FILE PHOTO)


Food truck operators could discover new opportunities from amended ordinances By Craig Lyons THE PORTLAND DAILY SUN

As amendments to Portland’s food truck ordinances move forward to the City Council, the cleaned up language could lead to new opportunities for mobile restaurateurs. The council’s Public Safety, Health and Human Services Committee on Tuesday recommended the passage of a series of amendments to the city’s ordinances that remove some of the barriers created by the original language around food trucks regulations, obstacles that weren’t originally intended. Aside from the amendments, the committee asked the city to consider a recommendation that came out of the Food Truck Task Force opening up public land to the mobile food vendors using a request for proposals process. City Manager Mark Rees said he wasn’t aware of the discussion around using city land but it’s something worth looking at more closely. City Councilor Jill Duson said she thinks the food truck operators should get together and suggest some of the locations that are most appealing to them for clustering since they know the business better than the city’s staff. The amendments to the ordinances related to food trucks — which were passed unanimously — will allow trucks to be parked with 65 feet of each other but not an open restaurant; restructure the permitting process and fee; increase the size limits on trucks; and ease the time restrictions for trucks to set up in metered parking spaces, giving them an extra two hours. Sarah Sutton, a co-owner of Bite Into Maine food truck, said when the city started to consider allowing food trucks, the most exciting opportunity was being able to use public land as a location. She said the task force recommended the city use an RFP process to rent to food truck operators. When she started to look at that option during the winter, Sutton said, that’s when she discovered some of the language in the ordinance was not in line with the task force’s intent — namely blocking any clustering and the permitting costs. “This is really a starting point in my eyes,” Sutton said, now that the city is amending the ordinance. Clustering was one of the goals of the task force because it would allow the operators to share resources in private lots, said Doug Fuss, a member of the task force and the owner of Bull Feeney’s. “There are huge advantages,” he said, and since the trucks are allowed in many areas that lack easy access to food, they could thrive in a group. “I’m actually quite excited about seeing the food trucks around town,” said Councilor Cheryl Leeman, because it creates a whole new venue for Portland diners to try new food options. “I don’t see anything that causes me any heartburn with regard to the suggested changes we have before us,” she said.

The PORTLAND Daily Sun, Thursday, September 12, 2013— Page 7


Page 8 — The PORTLAND Daily Sun, Thursday, September 12, 2013

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ABOVE: The Portland Fire Department and Police Department memorialize the victims of the Sept. 11, 2001 attacks during a wreath laying ceremony at Fort Allen Park in Portland on Wednesday. (CRAIG LYONS PHOTO) LEFT: The state remembered the Sept. 11, 2001 attacks with a variety of 12th anniversary ceremonies and events. Here, sitting in the front row in the Brunswick event are (from front to back) Sgt. Colin Little and his wife, Rose Little; Petty Officer First Class Rose Little with Kelsey, 8, of Bath; and Donna and Douglas C. Wallace. Douglas Wallace received a Purple Heart from Gov.Paul LePage for his service in World War II. Wallace served from March 13, 1943 to Jan. 16, 1946, an Army private first class. His service included duty in the Pacific. BOTTOM LEFT: Gov. LePage thanks Wallace before presenting the Purple Heart. Several veterans received recognition, including World War II veteran Quartermaster James Friedlander; and First Lady Ann LePage presented Blue Star Service Flags to families with members in the military. (DAVID CARKHUFF PHOTOS)


The PORTLAND Daily Sun, Thursday, September 12, 2013— Page 9

ABOVE: Portland Fire Department and Police Department memorialize the victims of the Sept. 11, 2001 attacks by marching to a wreath laying ceremony at Fort Allen Park in Portland on Wednesday. (CRAIG LYONS PHOTO)

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PICTURED CLOCKWISE FROM TOP: The posting of colors at the ceremony in Brunswick Wednesday, called, “A Day to Remember: National September 11th Commemoration,” by the George T. Files Post 20, American Legion. ABOVE MIDDLE RIGHT: Purple Heart recipient Douglas C. Wallace leaves the ceremony in Brunswick with Donna Wallace. ABOVE: The LePages pose with Gary Wheeler of Topsham, who said he is a Navy veteran of 21 years and nine months. ABOVE CENTER: Gov. LePage pauses prior to his keynote speech. He recalled being in his office on the morning of Sept. 11, 2001, and stunned by the news, going home to watch the coverage on television. “We should not let anything divide us as a nation,” the governor said. LePage also issued a plea for peace. “Today, as I stand here, I pray, I pray that we don’t go to another war,” he said, noting he met one member of the military who was deployed six times in the past 12 years. (DAVID CARKHUFF PHOTOS)

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Today’s Birthdays: Actor Dickie Moore (“Our Gang”) is 88. Actor Freddie Jones is 86. Actor Ian Holm is 82. Actress Linda Gray is 73. Singer Maria Muldaur is 71. Actor Joe Pantoliano is 62. Singer-musician Gerry Beckley (America) is 61. Original MTV VJ Nina Blackwood is 61. Rock musician Neil Peart (Rush) is 61. Actor Peter Scolari is 58. Kansas Gov. Sam Brownback is 57. Actress Rachel Ward is 56. Actress Amy Yasbeck is 51. Rock musician Norwood Fisher (Fishbone) is 48. Actor Darren E. Burrows is 47. Rock singer-musician Ben Folds (Ben Folds Five) is 47. Actorcomedian Louis (loo-ee) C.K. is 46. Rock musician Larry LaLonde (Primus) is 45. Actor Josh Hopkins is 43. Actor Paul Walker is 40. Country singer Jennifer Nettles (Sugarland) is 39. Actor Ben McKenzie is 35. Singer Ruben Studdard is 35. Basketball player Yao Ming is 33. Singer-actress Jennifer Hudson is 32. Actress Emmy Rossum is 27.

DAILY CROSSWORD TRIBUNE MEDIA SERVICES

by Lynn Johnston

CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19). You don’t want to put your signature on your work; you want your work to (SET ITAL) be (END ITAL) your signature. When people can tell it’s your work by the work itself, you’ll have reached the level of originality you desire. AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18). Love is a bit of an obstacle course these days, and you may find yourself tunneling under or scaling over enormous barriers to emotional intimacy. It makes jumping through the hoops seem like child’s play. PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20). Lie detectors are designed on the premise that dishonesty causes bodily stress. You’ll take some of the pressure off by getting rid of the expectation or rule that is keeping people from telling the truth. TODAY’S BIRTHDAY (Sept. 12). You bring self-care to a new level this year, and this favorably affects everyone. An investment will pay in five weeks. October shakes up relationships and sets you on a more pleasurable course. Make the most of educational opportunities in November and July -- doing well sets the tone for your financial future. Capricorn and Virgo people adore you. Your lucky numbers are: 44, 2, 14, 38 and 5.

by Paul Gilligan

ARIES (March 21-April 19). Everything has its time. The object that is coveted, revered and utterly reflective of this moment will lose value after this moment has passed. It’s something to think about before you take out your wallet. TAURUS (April 20-May 20). Your cells regenerate, and your spirit restores. It’s like you’re becoming younger with every hour today, and you don’t have to make any kind of effort to do so. You’re naturally optimistic. GEMINI (May 21-June 21). People who aren’t sure whether they can help you or not will be reserved until they determine exactly how they can be of service. Make it easy. Talk about what will move you forward. CANCER (June 22-July 22). Your weaknesses are offset by your considerable strengths. But just think about what you could do in a partnership with someone who is strong in the areas where you are weak. Seek collaboration. LEO (July 23-Aug. 22). Giving is not always a sacrifice. Being generous has a way of exhilarating you, especially when you see the difference your contributions make in the lives of others. VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22). Strip away some of what you were taught. It’s not that the lessons were wrong or inferior; it’s just that they were given to you from someone else’s experience. Work from your own experience instead. LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 23). No one can give you more time, but people can sure help you waste the time you have. Actively guard against distractions. Anticipate what could happen to knock you off your game, and prepare a defense. SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 21). You’ll be working by yourself. This scenario makes it challenging to know how you compare to others in the marketplace. Ask both insiders and outsiders their opinion. Get another point of view. SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21). If you follow your whimsy, it might be considered lollygagging. It might also lead to enormous joy. If you have fun with what you’re doing, you’ll find success.

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Page 10 — The PORTLAND Daily Sun, Thursday, September 12, 2013

1 6 10 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 22 24 25 26 29 30 31 33 37 39 41

ACROSS Play the guitar Con game Arden & Plumb Africa’s Sierra __ Robust Enclosed shopping area Sworn statements Leave out “Guilty” or “Not guilty” Enjoyment Moral principles Four and five Width __ together; joined forces Vessels on a florist’s shelf Run up a tab Measuring stick Wallace and Huckabee __-do-well; bum Gung-ho Ginger cookie

42 44 46 47 49 51 54 55 56 60 61 63 64 65 66 67 68 69

Deadly snake West Point student Go wrong Blaring device on a police car Nice-looking Withdrew, as from the Union One of the martial arts Pressed Ornamental backyard basin First word in a warning “The Farmer in the __” Zodiac sign Live life on the __; take risks Malicious Actress Burstyn Deceased Afternoon rests Overuses the perfume

1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 21 23 25 26 27 28 29 32 34 35 36

DOWN Feed the pigs Bluish-green Learn by __; memorize Let go of, old-style More cluttered Seacoast Arrived Muhammad __ Metric system measures Stress Legally binding Vote into office Wide cut Inappropriate Abound Exposed __ fide; genuine Amazed Requirement Meat shunner Bound a corset Leg joint British peer Agile

38 40 43 45 48 50 51 52 53

Felt bitter about Happen again Carousel, e.g. Little child Blush City in Alabama __ with; backed Wear away Cuban dance

54 Clayburgh and St. John 56 Radar screen image 57 Qualified 58 Long journey 59 __ Christian Andersen 62 Zsa Zsa’s sister

Yesterday’s Answer


The PORTLAND Daily Sun, Thursday, September 12, 2013— Page 11

––––––– ALMANAC ––––––– Today is Thursday, Sept. 12, the 255th day of 2013. There are 110 days left in the year. Today’s Highlight in History: On September 12, 1943, during World War II, German paratroopers took Benito Mussolini from the hotel where he was being held by the Italian government. On this date: In 1846, Elizabeth Barrett secretly married Robert Browning at St. Marylebone Church in London. In 1888, entertainer Maurice Chevalier was born in Paris. In 1913, Olympic legend Jesse Owens was born in Oakville, Ala. In 1938, Adolf Hitler demanded the right of selfdetermination for the Sudeten (soo-DAYT’-un) Germans in Czechoslovakia. In 1942, during World War II, a German U-boat off West Africa torpedoed the RMS Laconia, which was carrying Italian prisoners of war, British soldiers and civilians. In 1953, Massachusetts Sen. John F. Kennedy married Jacqueline Lee Bouvier (boo-vee-AY’) in Newport, R.I. In 1960, Democratic presidential candidate John F. Kennedy addressed questions about his Roman Catholic faith, telling a Southern Baptist group, “I do not speak for my church on public matters, and the church does not speak for me.” In 1962, in a speech at Rice University in Houston, President John F. Kennedy reaffirmed his support for the manned space program, declaring: “We choose to go to the moon. We choose to go to the moon in this decade and do the other things, not because they are easy, but because they are hard.” In 1963, “The Spy Who Came in from the Cold,” a novel by John le Carre, went on sale in Britain. In 1977, South African black student leader Steve Biko died while in police custody, triggering an international outcry. In 1986, Joseph Cicippio, the acting comptroller at the American University in Beirut, was kidnapped (he was released in December 1991). In 1992, the space shuttle Endeavour blasted off, carrying with it Mark Lee and Jan Davis, the first married couple in space; Mae Jemison, the first black woman in space; and Mamoru Mohri, the first Japanese nat’l to fly on a US spaceship. Ten years ago: In the Iraqi city of Fallujah, U.S. forces mistakenly opened fire on vehicles carrying police, killing eight of them. The U.N. Security Council ended 11 years of sanctions against Libya. Five years ago: A Metrolink commuter train struck a freight train head-on in Los Angeles, killing 25 people. (Federal investigators said the Metrolink engineer, Robert Sanchez, who was among those who died, had been text-messaging on his cell phone and ran a red light shortly before the crash.) One year ago: The U.S. dispatched an elite group of Marines to Tripoli. Libya, after the mob attack that killed the U.S. ambassador and three other Americans. President Barack Obama strongly condemned the violence, and vowed to bring the killers to justice; Republican challenger Mitt Romney accused the administration of showing weakness in the face of events in the Middle East.

THURSDAY PRIME TIME 8:00

Dial 5

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FAM Movie: “Richie Rich”

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Olbermann (N) (Live)

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House “The C-Word”

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CNN Anderson Cooper 360

Piers Morgan Live (N)

AC 360 Later (N)

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DAILY CROSSWORD BY WAYNE ROBERT WILLIAMS

1 6 10 14 15 16 17 20 21 22 23 26 30 31 32 33 36 37 38 41 42

ACROSS Old World lizard Lowest parts of small intestines Small barracuda Religious grp. River of Thebes Forearm bone Not hiding feelings Sailors’ grp. Bear bedroom White-tailed eagle Register operator Type of general Saturn’s wife Skier’s transport Worldwide workers’ grp. Saudis and Omanis, e.g. Throw Pudgy Regretful words Bangor’s summer hrs. Soft-drink choice

43 44 45 46 47 49 53 54 55 56 62 63 64 65 66 67 1 2 3 4

Runs in neutral Busy one Lit. collection Top pitcher Molasses liquors Caustic solutions Bit of Morse Code Color of the Italian sky Diligent insect Soul mate Blind trio of rhyme Manchurian border river North Dakota city Cloyingly sentimental Adorable Mimickers DOWN Type of committee Davis of “Thelma & Louise” Diarist Nin African nat.

5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 18 19 24 25 26 27 28 29 31 33 34 35 36

Invoice abbr. Spiritual Paint a picture with words Bridge authority Culbertson Loser to DDE Litigants Abundant Part of SASE Menlo Park initials Lofty poems “The Omen” star King of the road? By the very nature of the deed 44th President Blue shade Having wings Some IRAs Tithed amount One-celled animal Actress Winona Location on a sailing ship Pointers

39 Army vehicle 40 Theatres in old Rome 46 Bard grad, e.g. 48 Choreographer Alvin 49 Actress Woodard 50 ‘’Mule Train’’ singer Frankie 51 Guaranteed to get

52 Editor’s marks 54 Ring match 56 PA nuclear reactor that leaked 57 __ jacet 58 Wks. off work 59 Ostrich-like bird 60 Singer Sumac 61 Rim of a cup

Yesterday’s Answer


Page 12 — The PORTLAND Daily Sun, Thursday, September 12, 2013

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For Rent-Commercial TRUCK parking & Office, Rt 16 Ossipee, NH near Tractor Supply. Plug-in available. FMI 603-455-0280.

JACK Alltrade, semi-retired, looking for projects. Build, rebuild, plumb, paint, electrify. Trustworth with references. (207)415-7321.

Rentals Wanted 1 bedroom or room for rent, retiree, Bath or Biddeford area. (207)233-6056.

Find Job Descriptions, additional Open Position listings, And online applications at www.memorialhospitalnh.org Contact: Human Resources, Memorial Hospital, an EOE PO Box 5001, No. Conway, NH 03860. Phone: (603)356-5461 • Fax: (603)356-9121

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ANNIE’S MAILBOX

Dear Annie: My dad’s cousin, “John,” is an internist from another state. During my younger sister’s wedding weekend, Dr. John stayed with us. Two days before the wedding, my sister was stressed and couldn’t sleep. John offered her Ambien. The pill was blue and in a blister pack. He gave her two, even though the label states you shouldn’t take them unless you can get six hours of sleep. My sister absolutely didn’t have time for that. I have a prescription for Ambien, and it’s white. I have no idea what John gave my sister. At the hairdresser’s the next day, she was totally zoned out. Isn’t it wrong for physicians to dispense such medications without a prescription? There have been several incidents in the past where John has given prescription medications to my family members without seeing them. He once sent my dad expired ointments for a rash that turned out to be shingles. When my mother had pneumonia, he told her to take flu medication. He didn’t examine them, nor did he write a prescription. What do you think I should do? -- Furious and Concerned Dear Furious: First of all, Ambien can come in different colors, depending on the dosage. We assume these are sample drugs that John happens to have handy. The real issue is that your family is eager to take advantage of John’s ability to provide such medication for free and without needing to see their regular physician. They have the option not to follow his advice or take what he offers, but they prefer the convenience. Dear Annie: You’ve printed letters about theater and concert patrons who stand up or squash you in your seat. I have a better one. I sat in the worst seat on Broadway. I understand “obstructed view.” This was NO view.

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I was in the front row. All I could see was a staircase and the backs of actors who were seated in chairs on stage. I was brokenhearted. I found an usher at intermission and demanded to be seated elsewhere. She told me this is what happens when you buy discount tickets at the last minute. But she took me to the last row of the theater and said, “This way you can see the terrific part with the mirror.” I gasped, “There’s a mirror?!” The second act was great, although I had to ask the people next to me to stop texting during the performance. Afterward, I found the usher and thanked her. Then I wrote the box office manager and the theater owners and asked that they please stop selling this seat. I haven’t heard back. -- Don’t Stick a Broadway Baby in a Corner Dear Baby: Most theaters have at least one horrible seat, but it’s hard to know that when you purchase at the last minute, especially when those tickets are discounted. There’s a reason those are the seats that are left. Good for you for speaking up and finding a kind usher willing (and able) to seat you elsewhere. Dear Annie: “Still Waiting” complained that few people reciprocate dinner invitations anymore. Since moving to an active senior community two years ago, my husband and I have hosted about 18 dinners in our home, everything from casual suppers to large parties. Reciprocation in these friends’ homes has been rare, but we don’t care. We’ve enjoyed every one of the meals. We don’t have special cooking skills, and hosting a dinner takes time and effort, but it’s fun and has the added advantage of cozy chats that don’t happen in a noisy restaurant. -- W.

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Annie’s Mailbox is written by Kathy Mitchell and Marcy Sugar, longtime editors of the Ann Landers column. Please e-mail your questions to: anniesmailbox@comcast.net, or write to: Annie’s Mailbox, c/o Creators Syndicate, 737 3rd Street, Hermosa Beach, CA 90254.

Prickly City

by Scott Stantis

— $ENSATIONAL SAVING$ — In The Classifieds


The PORTLAND Daily Sun, Thursday, September 12, 2013— Page 13

–––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––– EVENTS CALENDAR–––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––

Thursday, Sept. 12 Wayside Food Programs food drive

9 a.m. to 7 p.m. “To rebuild food inventory that has dwindled over the summer, Wayside Food Programs will hold a three-day food drive on Sept. 12-14 that will be hosted by Whole Foods Market, located at 2 Somerset St. in Portland. Running from 9 a.m. to 7 p.m. Thursday through Saturday, the food drive will focus on collecting food for in-need families served by Wayside and its partner agencies. In addition, on Sept. 14 from 9:30 to 11 a.m Whole Foods will hold a ‘Kids Day of Service,’ during which children and parents will assemble food bags for Wayside to distribute to Portland Community Policing. To find out more about ‘Kids Day of Service’ and to sign up, visit http://ptlkidsdayofservice. eventbrite.com/. Space is limited.”

Crossroads International Celtic Festival

2 p.m. and 7 p.m. “The hills and valleys of picturesque Western Maine will come alive with music Sept. 11-15, when the inaugural Crossroads International Celtic Festival (Crossroads) takes place at multiple venues throughout Western Maine communities including unique locations like Stratton Brook, the newest hut in the Maine Huts & Trails system; Washburn-Norlands Living History Center in Livermore; Celebration Barn Theater in South Paris; and Skye Theatre in South Carthage. These venues, along with the scenic towns and villages of Rangeley, Stratton, Carrabassett Valley, Kingfield, Phillips, Farmington, South Carthage, Rumford, Oxford, Lovell, Fryeburg and Bethel will host an impressive group of more than 100 musicians, singers, dancers, storytellers and artists. Joining some of Maine’s finest musicians will be performers from around the world including Nova Scotia, Cape Breton, Prince Edward Island, New Brunswick, Quebec, Scotland, Ireland, and across the United States.” Thursday, 7 p.m. shows (unless otherwise noted), Peaks with Perks, Stratton Brook Hut, Carrabassett Valley (2 p.m.), Gawler Family. Celtic Reflections, Brick Church for the Arts, Center Lovell, Long Time Courting, Chrissy Crowley & Owen Marshall, Frank Ferrel & Rob Choiniere & Smokey McKeen. Celtic Cabaret, 49 Franklin, Rumford, Squid Jiggers, Kathleen Gorey McSorley & Jacqueline Schwab, Scot Grassette. Acadian Showcase, Skye Theatre Performing Arts Center, South Carthage, La Virée, Boréal Tordu, Lina Boudreau Trio, Les Hay Babies. Fiddles on the Frontier, Eustis Community Building, Eustis (Stratton), Buddy MacDonald & Rachel Davis, Don & Cindy Roy, Dwayne and Duane. Working Together, Oxford County Fair (6 p.m.), Sprag Session, Cassie and Maggie MacDonald. Friday, 7 p.m. (unless otherwise noted), Going back to the Future, Deertrees Theatre, Harrison, Sprag Session, Dominique Dupuis, Long Time Courting. Tradition Bearers, Celebration Barn Theater, South Paris, The Press Gang, Gawler Sisters, Cassie and Maggie MacDonald. History takes a Turn, Outdoor Center at Sugarloaf, Carrabassett Valley, Stanley & Grimm & Hunter Engstrom, T’Acadie, Kathleen

The public can join Maine Audubon on the “Bald Eagles of Merrymeeting Bay” excursion Saturday, Sept. 21, 8:30 a.m. to 1:30 p.m. to Boothbay Harbor. The group will board the boat in Boothbay Harbor for a trip across Sheepscot Bay to the Sasanoa River then up the Kennebec River to Merrymeeting Bay. Weather and tides permitting, the group will return to Boothbay via the Kennebec. Here, bald eagles feast in a field near Merrymeeting Bay in Brunswick. (DAVID CARKHUFF PHOTO) Gorey McSorley & Jacqueline Schwab, Franklin County Fiddlers & Burton MacIntyre. Boys will be Boys, Phillips Area Community Center, David Munnelly & Mick Conneely, Squid Jiggers, Ten Strings and a Goat Skin. A Touch of Class, Emery Community Arts Center, Farmington, Maeve Gilchrist Trio, Dwayne and Duane, Matt Heaton. Saturday, 7 p.m. (unless otherwise noted), Music New Brunswick, Our Roots are Showing, Rumford Falls Auditorium, Arseneault, Dominique Dupuis, Lina Boudreau Trio. Hands Across Borders, Leura Hill Eastman Performing Arts Ctr., Fryeburg, David Munnelly & Mick Conneely, Boréal Tordu, Buddy MacDonald & Rachel Davis, Stanley & Grimm. Music for the Soul, Old South First Congregational Church, Farmington, Don Roy Ensemble, Matt & Shannon Heaton and Friends, Chrissy Crowley & Owen Marshall. Lumber is King, Church of the Good Shepherd, Rangeley, Lissa Schneckenburger, Maeve Gilchrist Trio, Frank Ferrel. Step into the Past,

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‘The Otraska Tragedy’ at Evergreen Cemetery

5 p.m. Evergreen Cemetery event. Join Steve Sesto, Friends of Evergreen Docent for “The Otraska Tragedy” Historic Walking Tour on Thursday. “On a warm morning in October 1861 seven young men sailed forth from Portland for a day of fishing aboard the Otraska. A sudden squall surprised them and led to the sinking of the vessel and the deaths of all but one. Stroll through Evergreen as we weave the tale of the Otraska, her crew, their lives and demise.” Regularly scheduled Historic Walking Tours are held every Saturday, 10:30 a.m., and Sunday, 2 p.m., through October and are led by an experienced History Docent team. No need to pre-register, just meet at the cemetery office near the visitors signs. Cost: $7 per person, $5 for members, children under 12 free. Visit FriendsOfEvergreen.org for the full tour schedule.

Working Harbor Guided Tour

PROFESSIONAL DIRECTORY

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Washburn-Norlands Living History Ctr., Livermore, Gawler Family, Northfield, Edith & Bennet. Sunday, Closing: Families Bringing it all Together, Bingham Auditorium, Bethel, 2 p.m., Arseneault, Alba’s Edge & Laura Scott dancers & Ed Pearlman, Ten Strings and a Goat Skin.http://crossroadscelticfestival.com

5 p.m. to 7 p.m. “Portland’s Working Harbor Guided Tour by Portland Senior Planner Bill Needleman. Join us and Portland Senior Planner Bill Needleman for a fascinating update to last year’s history and planning tour of the port of Portland. From West Commercial Street to East Commercial Street, learn about the latest and future developments, the working piers, and the evolving marine economies. Suggested $5 donation for Portland Trails members, $7 for non-members.” http://trails.org/programs

Mad Horse Theatre sneak peek event

6 p.m. to 8 p.m. “Join Mad Horse Theatre Company at their performance space for refreshments and a sneak peek at the upcoming 2013-2014 season. Thursday, Sept. 12 from 6 p.m. to 8 p.m. at the Hutchins School, 24 Mosher Street, South Portland. Mad Horse Company and Board members will be on hand to offer exciting details about our upcoming season, special events, volunteering opportunities, subscriptions and ways you can participate and support Mad Horse Theatre. It was a great first season at Mad Horse in our new home and this year we have a powerful lineup of award-winning plays, including three Maine premieres and special events. ‘The School for Lies’ by David Ives, Maine Premiere, Sept. 26 to Oct. 13; ‘Vigils by Noah Haidle,’ Maine Premiere, Jan. 16 to Feb. 2, 2014; ‘Orphans’ by Lyle Kessler, March 13 to 30, 2014; ‘Grey Gardens’ book by Doug Wright, music by Scott Frankel, lyrics by Michael Korie, Maine Premiere, May 29 to June 22, 2014.” For more information call 730-2389, visit the Facebook page or www. madhorse.com. see next page


Page 14 — The PORTLAND Daily Sun, Thursday, September 12, 2013

–––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––– EVENTS CALENDAR––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––– from preceding page

Freeport Players’ ‘Indoor/Outdoor’

7:30 p.m. Freeport Players present “Indoor/Outdoor,” by Kenny Finkle. September 12-29, Fri./Sat. 7:30 p.m., Sun. 2 p.m. Pay-what-you-want Preview Sept. 12, 7:30 p.m. Freeport Performing Arts Center, 30 Holbrook St, Freeport. “A light comedy about an indoor cat who longs for the wild outdoors. Tickets $15 at the door, $10 in advance, available online at www.fcponline.org/tix.htm or in person at the Thrift Store at Freeport Community Center, 43 Depot Street, Freeport. FMI: www.fcponline.org or 865-2220.”

POV screening of ‘Small Urban Spaces’

7:30 p.m. “Social Life of Small Urban Spaces” by William H. Whyte at Portland Public Library for Summer POV Documentary Films series, in partnership with the City of Portland Planning & Urban Development Department. “American Promise” will be screened at a later date. For more information visit www.pbs.org/pov. Portland Public Library, 5 Monument Square, Portland, 871-1700, www.portlandlibrary.com. “This screening is part of a series sponsored by the City of Portland Planning & Urban Development Department who will be partnering with SPACE Gallery and Portland Public Library to provide three opportunities to learn and talk about public open space in September. These entertaining and enlightening programs will address topics ranging from Portland’s history to urban design to the sociology of parks and are designed to keep engaged citizens involved in ongoing and future discussions about urban space. The public can join historian Scott Hanson and walk through the centuries to learn more about Congress Square, the five-way intersection and surrounding properties at the center of the city’s visioning process or watch an engaging documentary highlighting the ways people use urban open space. All programs are free and open to the public. For additional information or questions, contact Urban Designer Caitlin Cameron at ccameron@ portlandmaine.gov or find updates at www.portlandmaine. gov/planning.”

Friday, Sept. 13 ‘A House in the Sky’ talk at PPL

6:30 p.m. Amanda Lindhout and Sara Corbett to speak about “A House in the Sky” at the Portland Public Library, in the Rines Auditorium. “‘A House in the Sky,’ co-written by Amanda Lindhout and renowned journalist Sara Corbett, gives an astoundingly haunting yet redemptive and gorgeously written account of Lindhout’s experience as a young woman backpacking across the world, her aspirations as a journalist, the devastating 15 months she spent in captivity in Somalia, and her decision to counter the violence she endured by founding an organization to help the Somali people rebuild their country.” Amanda Lindhout is the founder of the Global Enrichment Foundation, a nonprofit organization that supports development, aid, and education initiatives in Somalia and Kenya. Sara Corbett has been a contributing writer at The New York Times Magazine since 2001. Her work has also appeared in National Geographic; Elle; Outside; O, The Oprah Magazine; Esquire; Mother Jones; and Travel and Leisure.

Crossroads International Celtic Festival

7 p.m. “The hills and valleys of picturesque Western Maine will come alive with music Sept. 11-15, when the inaugural Crossroads International Celtic Festival (Crossroads) takes place at multiple venues throughout Western Maine communities including unique locations like Stratton Brook, the newest hut in the Maine Huts & Trails system; WashburnNorlands Living History Center in Livermore; Celebration Barn Theater in South Paris; and Skye Theatre in South Carthage. These venues, along with the scenic towns and villages of Rangeley, Stratton, Carrabassett Valley, Kingfield, Phillips, Farmington, South Carthage, Rumford, Oxford, Lovell, Fryeburg and Bethel will host an impressive group of more than 100 musicians, singers, dancers, storytellers and artists. Joining some of Maine’s finest musicians will be performers from around the world including Nova Scotia, Cape Breton, Prince Edward Island, New Brunswick, Quebec, Scotland, Ireland, and across the United States.” Friday, 7 p.m. (unless otherwise noted), Going back to the Future, Deertrees Theatre, Harrison, Sprag Session, Dominique Dupuis, Long Time Courting. Tradition Bearers, Celebration Barn Theater, South Paris, The Press Gang, Gawler Sisters, Cassie and Maggie MacDonald. History takes a Turn, Outdoor Center at Sugarloaf, Carrabassett Valley, Stanley & Grimm & Hunter Engstrom, T’Acadie, Kathleen Gorey McSorley & Jacqueline Schwab, Franklin County Fiddlers & Burton MacIntyre. Boys will be Boys, Phillips Area Community Center, David Munnelly & Mick Conneely, Squid Jiggers, Ten Strings and a Goat Skin. A Touch of Class, Emery Community Arts Center, Farmington, Maeve Gilchrist Trio, Dwayne and Duane, Matt

Maine Open Lighthouse Day is Saturday. Open Lighthouse Day in Maine is the largest effort of its kind in the country. The popular event is coordinated by the U.S. Coast Guard in partnership with the Maine Office of Tourism and the American Lighthouse Foundation. (DAVID CARKHUFF PHOTO) Heaton. Saturday, 7 p.m. (unless otherwise noted), Music New Brunswick, Our Roots are Showing, Rumford Falls Auditorium, Arseneault, Dominique Dupuis, Lina Boudreau Trio. Hands Across Borders, Leura Hill Eastman Performing Arts Ctr., Fryeburg, David Munnelly & Mick Conneely, Boréal Tordu, Buddy MacDonald & Rachel Davis, Stanley & Grimm. Music for the Soul, Old South First Congregational Church, Farmington, Don Roy Ensemble, Matt & Shannon Heaton and Friends, Chrissy Crowley & Owen Marshall. Lumber is King, Church of the Good Shepherd, Rangeley, Lissa Schneckenburger, Maeve Gilchrist Trio, Frank Ferrel. Step into the Past, Washburn-Norlands Living History Ctr., Livermore, Gawler Family, Northfield, Edith & Bennet. Sunday, Closing: Families Bringing it all Together, Bingham Auditorium, Bethel, 2 p.m., Arseneault, Alba’s Edge & Laura Scott dancers & Ed Pearlman, Ten Strings and a Goat Skin. http://crossroadscelticfestival.com

petitor Magazine, and Fodor’s Travel have all recognized The Lobsterman Triathlon as one of the top races in the USA. A true destination race, it draws a sell-out crowd from 25 states to Freeport, Maine. September 14th is the perfect day for this spectacular Olympic-distance Triathlon & Lobster Bake creating a full day endurance festival that will appeal to all types of athletes and their families. In 2013, The Lobsterman Triathlon will again almost certainly sell out months before race day.” http://www.lobstermantri.com/event

7:30 p.m. September 13 and 14: Crowbait Club presents The King Of Crows Show, two nights only at Mayo Street Arts in Portland, Friday, Sept. 13, doors at 7 p.m., show at 7:30 p.m., $10; Saturday, Sept. 14, doors at 7 p.m., show at 7:30 p.m., $10. The show features 11 original 10-minute plays by Brent Askari, Laurie Brassard, Beth Smith Chasse, Charlie Cole, Hal Cohen, Michael Kimball, Janet Lynch, Cullen McGough, Howard Rosenfield, Katy Rydell and April Singly. Directed by Harlan Baker, Nate Speckman, April Singly, Core Gahne and Stephanie Ross. Produced by Cullen McGough, Michael Tooher, April Singly, Charlie Cole and Beth Smith Chasse. http://mayostreetarts.org/calendar

Shaker Hill Apple Festival

The King Of Crows Show

Freeport Players’ ‘Indoor/Outdoor’

7:30 p.m. Freeport Players present “Indoor/Outdoor,” by Kenny Finkle. September 12-29, Fri./Sat. 7:30 p.m., Sun. 2 p.m. Pay-what-you-want Preview Sept. 12, 7:30 p.m. Freeport Performing Arts Center, 30 Holbrook St, Freeport. “A light comedy about an indoor cat who longs for the wild outdoors. Tickets $15 at the door, $10 in advance, available online at www.fcponline.org/tix.htm or in person at the Thrift Store at Freeport Community Center, 43 Depot Street, Freeport. FMI: www.fcponline.org or 865-2220.”

Saturday, Sept. 14 The 2013 Lobsterman Triathlon

7:30 a.m. The 2013 Lobsterman Triathlon is scheduled for Saturday, Sept 14. “The Lobsterman Triathlon is one of the most popular destination races in New England, attracting athletes from across the U.S. Ranked as a Top Race in America, The Lobsterman Triathlon and Aquathon features a stunning venue on the coast of Freeport. A truly amazing Maine experience, complete with a full lobsterbake following the race, the Lobsterman is as good as triathlon gets. Men’s Health, Triathlete Magazine, Inside Triathlon, Com-

5K Run and Walk to benefit STRIVE

8 a.m. STRIVE for 5-Foden Road 5K and Neighborhood Block Party. Located in South Portland on Sept 14. Start time 8 a.m. “After the run/walk join us for a large block party, with over 20 businesses participating with family fun activities. FMI or to register, visit www.pslstrive.org or call 774-6278. 28 Foden Road, South Portland. Fees: $20 per person for the run/walk. Block party is free and open to the public. ww.pslstrive.org 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. The fourth annual Shaker Hill Apple Festival will take place Saturday and Sunday, Sept. 14 and 15 from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. at the grounds of the former Alfred Shaker Village on Shaker Hill Road in Alfred, off Routes 202 and 4. “The Festival is co-sponsored by the York County Shelter Programs (YCSP), Friends of the Alfred Shaker Museum, The Brothers Apple Store, and Giles Family Farm. There will be a juried arts and crafts fair, silent auction, penny auction, pig raffle, yard sale, book sale, farm booth, antique car rides, children’s activities with the popular Balloon Man — and live music. Tim Janis will appear on Saturday and Rock Bottom on Sunday. Food choices will include Lunch Wagon, Healthy Food Options and The Bakery at Notre Dame will offer its delicious baked goods. The Juried Arts and Crafts Fair will include dozens of booths featuring a plethora of crafts. There are still openings for artists and craftspeople wishing to participate. Contact Michelle Wilson at michellewilson@creativemw.com. The auctions and raffle (for a dressed, farm-raised pig) will run both days. The Alfred Shaker Museum and The Museum Shop will be offering a number of events on both days. All proceeds from the Museum activities will benefit the Friends of the Alfred Shaker Museum.” Benefit for the York County Shelter Programs. http://www.yorkcountyshelterprograms.org

Eastern Cemetery tours

1:30 p.m. Regularly scheduled tours at Eastern Cemetery with Spirits Alive, through Oct. 13. Wednesdays 1:30 p.m.; Saturdays 10:30 a.m.; Sundays 1:30 p.m. “This tour will take you through the 6-acre site while a guide explains the history of the grounds, those buried within, the types of stones and an overview of how the site fits into the history of Portland.” http://www.spiritsalive.org/tours/index.htm see next page


The PORTLAND Daily Sun, Thursday, September 12, 2013— Page 15

–––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––– EVENTS CALENDAR––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––– from preceding page

Falmouth Antique Appraisal Day

11 a.m. to 1 p.m. “Falmouth Antique Appraisal Day sponsored by Falmouth Historical Society. Dig in your attic and basement for your treasures and bring them to be appraised by Falmouth’s own Foreside Antiques, Inc. Saturday, Sept. 14 from 11 a.m. to 1 p.m. Cost $5 per item to benefit Falmouth Historical Society. Location: Falmouth Heritage Museum, 60 Woods Road, Falmouth. FMI: Jeannie at 781-2351 or jmadden@falmouth.lib.me.us.”

Catapalooza cat adoption in Brunswick

11 a.m. to 4 p.m. On Saturday, Sept. 14 and Sunday, Sept. 15, from 11 a.m. to 4 p.m., Coastal Humane Society will host a Catapalooza adoption event in effort to place all cats recovered from a hoarding situation into homes. Kittens 6 months or younger will be $109, and kittens 6 months to 1 year will be $85. All cats 1 year and older will be fee-waived. The Coastal Humane Society of Brunswick serves 14 communities. http://www.coastalhumanesociety.org/about-us/

Funtown USA final weekend

11 a.m. to 5 p.m. Postseason discount for Funtown USA rides in Saco, Sept. 14-15. Discount rates are only available at the park. Big Funtown (48 inches tall or taller): $22. Little Funtown (38 inches tall to under 48 inches tall): Free this weekend only! Senior Funtown (60 plus years old): $16. Final weekend of the season. http://www.funtownusa.com/information.php?info_ id=3

Cape Elizabeth Church of the Nazarene

noon. “The Cape Elizabeth Church of the Nazarene will be celebrating our annual Homecoming Weekend during Sept. 14-15. The weekend kicks off with a picnic on Saturday, Sept. 14 at noon at the Two Lights State Park Picnic Pavilion. All are welcome to join us for food, fun, and fellowship. We will continue the celebration at 10:45 a.m. on Sunday, Sept. 15 during our worship service at Cape Church of the Nazarene, 499 Ocean House Road. Feel free to bring family and friends!”

Maine Open Lighthouse Day

noon to 3 p.m. Maine Open Lighthouse Day. “One of the largest events of its kind in the country. Lighthouses across the state are open to visitors for tours of the towers and keeper’s houses.” “The State of Maine’s fifth annual Open Lighthouse Day will take place on Saturday, September 14th with lighthouses open throughout the state and free entry available to visitors on this one day. The popular event is coordinated by the U.S. Coast Guard in partnership with the Maine Office of Tourism and the American Lighthouse Foundation.” www. lighthouseday.com

Crossroads International Celtic Festival

7 p.m. “The hills and valleys of picturesque Western Maine will come alive with music Sept. 11-15, when the inaugural Crossroads International Celtic Festival (Crossroads) takes place at multiple venues throughout Western Maine communities including unique locations like Stratton Brook, the newest hut in the Maine Huts & Trails system; Washburn-Norlands Living History Center in Livermore; Celebration Barn Theater in South Paris; and Skye Theatre in South Carthage. These venues, along with the scenic towns and villages of Rangeley, Stratton, Carrabassett Valley, Kingfield, Phillips, Farmington, South Carthage, Rumford, Oxford, Lovell, Fryeburg and Bethel will host an impressive group of more than 100 musicians, singers, dancers, storytellers and artists. Joining some of Maine’s finest musicians will be performers from around the world including Nova Scotia, Cape Breton, Prince Edward Island, New Brunswick, Quebec, Scotland, Ireland, and across the United States.” Saturday, 7 p.m. (unless otherwise noted), Music New Brunswick, Our Roots are Showing, Rumford Falls Auditorium, Arseneault, Dominique Dupuis, Lina Boudreau Trio. Hands Across Borders, Leura Hill Eastman Performing Arts Ctr., Fryeburg, David Munnelly & Mick Conneely, Boréal Tordu, Buddy MacDonald & Rachel Davis, Stanley & Grimm. Music for the Soul, Old South First Congregational Church, Farmington, Don Roy Ensemble, Matt & Shannon Heaton and Friends, Chrissy Crowley & Owen Marshall. Lumber is King, Church of the Good Shepherd, Rangeley, Lissa Schneckenburger, Maeve Gilchrist Trio, Frank Ferrel. Step into the Past, Washburn-Norlands Living History Ctr., Livermore, Gawler Family, Northfield, Edith & Bennet. Sunday, Closing: Families Bringing it all Together, Bingham Auditorium, Bethel, 2 p.m., Arseneault, Alba’s Edge & Laura Scott dancers & Ed Pearlman, Ten Strings and a Goat Skin.http://crossroadscelticfestival.com

The King Of Crows Show

7:30 p.m. September 13 and 14: Crowbait Club presents The King Of Crows Show, two nights only at Mayo Street Arts in Portland, Friday, Sept. 13, doors at 7 p.m., show at 7:30 p.m., $10; Saturday, Sept. 14, doors at 7 p.m., show at 7:30 p.m., $10. The show features 11 original 10-minute plays by Brent Askari, Laurie Brassard, Beth Smith Chasse, Charlie Cole,

Hal Cohen, Michael Kimball, Janet Lynch, Cullen McGough, Howard Rosenfield, Katy Rydell and April Singly. Directed by Harlan Baker, Nate Speckman, April Singly, Core Gahne and Stephanie Ross. Produced by Cullen McGough, Michael Tooher, April Singly, Charlie Cole and Beth Smith Chasse. http://mayostreetarts.org/calendar

Sunday, Sept. 15 ‘Hear ME Run’ 10K trail run

7:30 a.m. “On your mark, get set, go for the next great race with music at every mile. The ‘Hear ME Run’ 10K trail run takes place on Back Cove Trail in Portland on Sunday, Sept. 15 at 7:30 a.m. rain or shine. For $30 you’ll get entry into this race, a race t-shirt, live entertainment at every mile. ... This first-annual run takes participants on a paved trail run from Back Cove to Eastern Promenade and back. Top male and female winners receive prizes from Portland Stage, Paddle Portland and Smart Alex Jams. Top age group winners, both male and female will take home prizes as well. Live entertainment from Pejepscot Station, DJ CxD featuring Booster, Myron Samuels, the Rogue Pogies and more! Race sponsors include: The Portland Phoenix, Stantec, Starkey, Bangor Savings Bank, Hannaford and Maine Running Company. For more information on the race visit www.hear-me-now.org.”

LOVE 146 talk at The Rock Church

8:30 a.m., 10 a.m. and 11:30 a.m. LOVE 146 co-founder Rob Morris will speak about his experiences and what LOVE 146 is all about. He will inspire and motivate you to

join LOVE 146 to act against modern day slavery/exploitation of children. Tickets for the upcoming Freedom Gala on Friday, Oct. 4 will also be on sale. www.freedomme.com.” At The Rock Church of Greater Portland (www.trcportland. com), 66 Gorham Rd Scarborough, 883-7625

Blue Mass at Cathedral of the Immaculate Conception

10 a.m. “Hundreds of local, state and federal law enforcement officers, firefighters and emergency personnel will be recognized for their dedication and self-sacrifice at the annual Blue Mass on Sunday, Sept. 15, at 10 a.m. at the Cathedral of the Immaculate Conception in Portland. Attending members of the public safety community, proudly wearing their uniforms, will process from Federal Street to the Cathedral. At 9 a.m., the group will gather on Federal Street between the Portland Fire Department and the U.S. District Courthouse. At approximately 9:20 a.m., the procession will begin down Federal, Pearl and Congress Streets before continuing on Franklin Street, where public safety personnel will walk under a large American flag, held up by two Portland Fire Department ladder trucks, before entering the Cathedral. Color guards will be on hand, as will the Maine Public Safety Pipe and Drum Corps, which will perform outside the Cathedral before and after the Blue Mass. Monsignor Andrew Dubois, Moderator of the Curia for the Roman Catholic Diocese of Portland, will celebrate the Mass which bestows blessings upon all who contribute to public health and safety in Maine. In addition, law enforcement officers, firefighters and emergency personnel who have given their lives in the line of duty will be remembered.” Call 321-7810, or e-mail dave. guthro@portlanddiocese.org


Page 16 — The PORTLAND Daily Sun, Thursday, September 12, 2013

Alpha Company staff from the Marine Corps Reserve Training Center Members of Alpha Company Marines, who fall under the 25th Marine Regiment — including Petty Officer First Class Jill Osborne (center) of Bath — gather in Brunswick Wednesday for “A Day to Remember,” a Sept. 11th commemoration for the 12th anniversary of the terrorist attacks on America. These are the inspector instructors based at the former Brunswick Naval Air Station. They work at a Marine Corps Reserve Training Center that was dedicated a year ago to 1st Lt. James Zimmerman, a Marine from Maine who was killed while serving in Afghanistan in November 2010. On Aug. 12, 2012, Gov. Paul LePage and First Lady Ann LePage attended the dedication and ribbon cutting ceremony for what was then the new Marine Corps Reserve Training Center in Brunswick. The governor and his wife attended Wednesday’s ceremony for the 9/11 anniversary. (DAVID CARKHUFF PHOTO)

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