The Portland Daily Sun, Wednesday, December 14, 2011

Page 1

WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 14, 2011

VOL. 3 NO. 222

PORTLAND, ME

PORTLAND’S DAILY NEWSPAPER

699-5801

FREE

Paul’s Oil Service

Two found dead in Bayside

Today’s Cash Price

“This is a very huge shock.” Friends say couple helped them, provided a safe place to stay. See the story on page 6

War policy See page 2

$

9

3.39

Additional .02/gal. Senior Cit. Discount 100 gal. min.

780-6710 1178 Brighton Ave. Portland

Portland Police Officer Dan Rose secures the scene where two people were found dead in an Oxford Street apartment Tuesday. The Office of the Chief Medical Examiner has responded to the scene and has begun investigating the manner and cause of death, Portland Police Lt. Gary Rogers reported. An autopsy is scheduled for today, he said. (DAVID CARKHUFF PHOTO)

LePage budget plan spurs response from Brennan Social-service cuts debated today. See page 3

ly SAV AVE E Dai Deal S 5 0% % 50

Pay just $$10 for a $$20 voucher

Sports Pub & Grill

110 Cotton Street Portland ME 04101

Internet Offer Only! VISIT PORTLANDDAILYSUN.ME FOR THIS AND OTHER GRE AT OFFERS


Page 2 — THE PORTLAND DAILY SUN, Wednesday, December 14, 2011

Life goes on without Facebook (NY Times) — Tyson Balcomb quit Facebook after a chance encounter on an elevator. He found himself standing next to a woman he had never met — yet through Facebook he knew what her older brother looked like, that she was from a tiny island off the coast of Washington and that she had recently visited the Space Needle in Seattle. “I knew all these things about her, but I’d never even talked to her,” said Balcomb, who had some real-life friends in common with the woman. “At that point I thought, maybe this is a little unhealthy.” As Facebook prepares for a much-anticipated public offering, the company is eager to show off its momentum by building on its huge membership: more than 800 million active users around the world, but the company is running into a roadblock in this country. Some people, even on the younger end of the age spectrum, just refuse to participate, including people who have given it a try. One of Facebook’s main selling points is that it builds closer ties among friends and colleagues. But some who steer clear of the site say it can have the opposite effect of making them feel more, not less, alienated. “I wasn’t calling my friends anymore,” said Ashleigh Elser, 24, a graduate student in Charlottesville, Va. “I was just seeing their pictures and updates and felt like that was really connecting to them.” To be sure, the Facebook-free life has its disadvantages in an era when people announce all kinds of major life milestones on the Web. Ms. Elser has missed engagements and pictures of new-born babies. But none of that hurt as much as the gap she said her Facebook account had created between her and her closest friends. So she shut it down. Many of the holdouts mention concerns about privacy. Those who study social networking say this issue boils down to trust. Amanda Lenhart, who directs research on teenagers, children and families at the Pew Internet and American Life Project, said that people who use Facebook tend to have “a general sense of trust in others and trust in institutions.” She added: “Some people make the decision not to use it because they are afraid of what might happen.” Lenhart noted that about 16 percent of Americans don’t have cellphones. “There will always be holdouts,” she said.

SAYWHAT...

...people are spreading Facebook around the world...” —Mark Zuckerberg

–––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––– DIGEST––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––

THEMARKET

3DAYFORECAST Today High: 40 Record: 57 (1881) Sunrise: 7:07 a.m.

Tomorrow High: 48 Low: 41 Sunrise: 7:08 a.m. Sunset: 4:05 p.m.

DOW JONES 66.45 to 11,954.94

Tonight Low: 32 Record: -9 (1893) Sunset: 4:04 p.m.

Friday High: 45 Low: 25

S&P 10.74 to 1,225.73

NASDAQ 32.99 to 2,579.27

TODAY’SJOKE

THETIDES

“One in three Americans will be obese by 2050. Could be 2025 if McDonald’s equips the drive-thru with E-Zpass.” — Denis Leary

MORNING High: 1:05 a.m. Low: 6:57 a.m. EVENING High: 1:08 p.m. Low: 7:31 p.m. -courtesy of www. maineboats.com

––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––– WORLD/NATION–––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––

Afghanistan plan would reduce NATO combat role KABUL, Afghanistan (NY TIMES) — The senior American commander in Afghanistan said Tuesday that his plans for next year would emphasize deploying American and allied military trainers directly within Afghan security units, which could lessen the direct combat role of NATO and accelerate local forces’ taking the lead in a growing number of missions. The commander, Gen. John R. Allen of the Marine Corps, said he also was striving to consolidate security gains against Taliban forces in their traditional strongholds in the south and to counter insurgents crossing from Pakistan into volatile eastern Afghanistan. The death of two dozen Pakistani border troops in a NATO attack last month — which the United States said was an

accident but which outraged officials in Islamabad and the public at large — has complicated coordinating security missions along the porous eastern border of Afghanistan. General Allen said he spoke by telephone on Monday with Gen. Ashfaq Parvez Kayani, the Pakistani Army chief, as part of a continuing American effort to cool tensions. Declining to characterize the private comments of his Pakistani counterpart, General Allen did express a cautious optimism that Pakistan would order the return of its personnel to border security coordination centers. “I do have a sense of progress,” General Allen said, noting that he ended his discussions confident that Pakistan wants “to restore as much normalcy as we can to the border coordination as early as

we can.” General Allen spoke during a visit to Afghanistan by Defense Secretary Leon E. Panetta. In retaliation for the deaths of its frontier troops, Pakistan withdrew its personnel from border security coordination centers and shut down routes used to move supplies to NATO forces in Afghanistan from its territory. General Allen said that land routes from the north, and air routes into Afghanistan, were costlier but ensured that his forces had ample supplies. The broad challenge facing the American-led mission is how to protect gains in security, and press ahead against a tenacious insurgency, even as the number of allied troops drops. Of the 33,000 additional troops ordered to Afghanistan by President Obama at the end of 2009, 10,000 are scheduled to return home by the end of

this year and the rest by next September. That will leave the American troop presence at 68,000, with 38,000 more troops from NATO and other partner nations. Afghan security personnel total 305,000 today, and are scheduled to expand to 352,000 by the end of next year. An accelerated program to install small numbers of allied military trainers within larger numbers of Afghan security units, as described by General Allen, certainly could help fulfill the American and NATO campaign plan — but with far fewer American troops. These plans for what General Allen called an “increased advisory role” for American and allied troops within the Afghan national security forces will accelerate next year and be fully in place by 2014, when the current NATO mandate expires.

Email alerted James Murdoch to hacking U.S. safety board urges cellphone ban for drivers LONDON (NY TIMES) — An e-mail chain released Tuesday by a parliamentary panel investigating the phone hacking scandal shows that Rupert Murdoch’s son James received and responded to messages in 2008 that referred to widespread phone hacking at The News of the World tabloid, the first documentation that he may have been notified of the wider problem long before he has admitted. James Murdoch responded to the panel in a letter, saying that he had opened the e-mails on his BlackBerry and had not read their full contents at the time or since. The e-mail chain was sent to the panel as part of an internal investigation by News International, the tabloid’s parent company. The e-mails contain warnings from lawyers that the phone hacking was more widespread than previously thought. The messages were passed on to the editor of The News of the World at the time, Colin Myler, who forwarded them to Mr. Murdoch, who replied within minutes, saying he would be available to discuss the matter.

The Parliamentary committee is investigating allegations that the tabloid illegally intercepted the voicemail messages of hundreds, perhaps even thousands, of people in the news between 2001 and 2009. Earlier this year, News International admitted that employees routinely hacked the cell phones of celebrities, royals and other people in the news after a cascade of revelations followed by dozens of lawsuits. At least 18 former News of the World employees have been arrested, and the 168-year-old newspaper itself was shuttered this summer. In several intense and dramatic sessions of the Parliamentary committee this year, Mr. Murdoch, the head of his father’s European and Asian businesses, and his former executives have engaged in a war of words over the crucial question of what he knew, and when. The executives have said he was informed in 2008 that the company line — that phone hacking was the work of one “rogue reporter” — was not true. They say Mr. Murdoch

James Murdoch in east London in July. (NY TIMES PHOTO)

approved an unprecedentedly large settlement of £725,000 in a phone hacking lawsuit that year with full knowledge that others were involved. Mr. Murdoch has consistently countered that he knew nothing and that the settlement, which included a confidentiality clause, just made financial sense. The e-mail chain, from Saturday, Jun. 7, 2008, discusses that lawsuit, brought by a British soccer union boss, Gordon Taylor. One lawyer says the case is a “nightmare scenario,” because it might uncover other voicemail interceptions and names other journalists implicated, the other notes that Mr. Taylor wants to demonstrate that hacking was “rife throughout the organization.”

(NY TIMES) — A federal traffic safety agency is recommending that states prohibit all drivers from using cellphones, for talking or texting. The National Transportation Safety Board said on Tuesday that it had voted to recommend the ban on the use of mobile devices by drivers, citing what it said were the risks of distracted driving. The recommended ban applies to hands-free devices, a recommendation that goes further than any state law to date. The agency said it is recommending that drivers be allowed to use their phones for emergency purposes. “No call, no text, no update is worth a human life,” said Deborah A. P. Hersman, chairman of the N.T.S.B., an independent federal agency that is responsible for promoting traffic safety and investigating accidents and their causes. It will be up to the states to decide whether they want to follow the agency’s recommendation.


THE PORTLAND DAILY SUN, Wednesday, December 14, 2011— Page 3

y ail

D a l 50% D e PayOFF just 10 for Internet Offers Only!

CO

20 voucher

$ $ AY 10 buys you a 20 LUNCH Voucher Maestros Italian Cuisine

3358 WM Hwy, North Conway, NH 03860 $

LAC

Sports Pub and Grill

$

$

NW

BER

110 Cotton St, Portland, ME 04101

VISIT PORTL A NDDA ILYSUN.ME FOR THIS A ND OTHER GRE AT OFFERS

$

Save 10 • Pay Only 37 IA O N M/S Mount Washington 80’s Wave Cruise 211 Lakeside Ave., Weirs Beach, Laconia, NH 03246

LIN

$

10 buys you a $20 Voucher

Gosselin’s Hot Tubs/Pools/Spas 122 Wight Street, Berlin, NH 03570

Brennan to testify against planned DHHS cuts Mayor at hearing in Augusta today BY CASEY CONLEY THE PORTLAND DAILY SUN

When Portland Mayor Michael Brennan was first elected to the Maine House in 1992, he served on a committee that found nearly $100 million in cuts needed to close a budget shortfall in the state Department of Health and Human Services. A few years later, when the same department faced a $1 billion shortfall, Brennan sat on a committee in the Maine Senate that found $350 million in cuts. Both times, he said, the savings were found without large-scale cuts in services or programs. “This is not a unique circumstance,” Brennan said yesterday, referring to the LePage adminBrennan istration’s recent discovery of a $220 million shortfall in the Maine DHHS over the next two years. “And for the governor to be claiming that this is a financial crisis, and calling for the wholesale elimination of programs that would cause tens of thousands of people to lose health coverage really ignores the history of what has happened in this state” and how previous budget gaps have been closed, Brennan continued. Today, Brennan will make the case before a panel in Augusta that Gov. Paul LePage’s proposal will shift costs to large cities like Portland, Lewiston and Bangor and deny services to thousand of city residents. He is expected to be joined by hundreds of local officials, health workers and social service providers who will speak against the proposal. “It’s a massive transfer of cost to the local level, and in particular to service center communities” like Portland that draw a larger percentage of Mainers in need of social services, the mayor said yesterday.

Although it’s not clear how the final plan will look, LePage’s current proposal would change Medicaid (MaineCare) eligibility rules in a way that ends coverage for up to 65,000 low-income adults. According to the city, the plan would also: • Threaten the city’s two federally-qualified health centers, which subsidizes care for people who can’t pay with extra reimbursements for serving people on MaineCare. With fewer people on MaineCare rolls, those health centers may no longer be viable. • Scale back or eliminate funding for targeted case management services conducted by the city’s Social Services Division, including services provided at the city’s Family Emergency Shelter, Oxford Street Shelter and Refugee Services division. These agencies are dealing with record demand, and case management LePage services are generally used to move homeless into stable housing and help them find jobs. • Reduce or eliminate many local programs funded by the Fund for Healthy Maine, which supports public health initiatives statewide. City and schoolsponsored flu clinics, school-sponsored dental sealant programs for low-income students, and Healthy Portland, which targets obesity citywide, could all be on the chopping block. • Result in the complete elimination of funding for Private Non-Medical Institutions, which serve upwards of 6,000 Mainers in residential support programs. Locally, programs run by Serenity House, Milestone, Opportunity Alliance and Shalom House that target critical substance abuse, mental health and support services would be affected. Elderly and people with developmental disabilities could also be forced to move out of residential programs if the funding is cut. Without these programs, Brennan and other city officials worry that Portland’s state-mandated gen-

eral assistance program — which is funded in part from local taxpayers — would be stretched even further. LePage’s spokesperson, Adrienne Bennett, says the cuts are necessary to close the budget shortfall, which was discovered earlier this month. “We’ve got a $220 million shortfall and it needs be addressed,” she said. “If we do not do it, by April 1, HHS will run out of money to pay for the Medicaid program. ... When the governor says it’s crisis time, it means, literally, that we are running out of money.” More broadly, she says Maine has some of the most generous Medicaid eligibility guidelines in the country. Bennett also blamed the problem on Democrats, which until last fall held the Blaine House and the Legislature for almost a decade. “Yes, we’re talking about a significant number of people coming off enrollment of Medicaid ... but for the better part of the last 15 years, (Democrats) have used the program as a mechanism to provide affordable health insurance for everyone, and Medicaid is not intended to be for that.” She added that the program was designed “for our most vulnerable, and we need to restructure it and redesign it back to the original intent.” Amid concerns for those who will lose coverage, Bennett cited a law passed by the Legislature last spring was designed to make it easier for people to buy private health insurance. Supporters say the law will lower health care costs, although its too soon to know whether that’s true or not. Brennan, who served as Majority Leader of the state Senate and still has colleagues in Augusta, predicted the final plan would look different than what’s currently proposed. “My guess at this point is that the administration is putting a plan forward which is using a worstcase scenario,” he said. “I can’t imagine they thing they are going to achieve or get everything they are proposing, and are using the public hearing process to gauge how much opposition there is in the public.”

Bigger share of state cash for Medicaid (The New York Times) Medicaid has steadily eaten up a growing share of state budgets over the past three years, while education has been getting a smaller slice of the pie. That is one of the changes that the lingering economic downturn and the changing American economy have wrought on state finances, according to an analysis of state spending over the last few years released Tuesday by the National Association of State Budget Officers. The increased spending on Medicaid, the state and federal health program for the poor, was driven by steadily rising medical costs, an infusion of money from the federal stimulus bill and a significant rise in the number of people who became poor enough to qualify for the program as the downturn wore on. The Medicaid program accounted for 21.9 percent of all state expenditures in

2009 and 22.3 percent in 2010, and is estimated to account for 23.6 percent in 2011, the report found. At the same time the share spent on elementary and secondary education has declined, dropping to 20.1 percent in 2011 from 21.5 percent of all state expenditures in 2009. Education used to make up a bigger share of state spending. When the association first began compiling the report in 1987, elementary and secondary education made up the biggest share of state spending, and higher education the second-biggest share. Medicaid surpassed higher education as the second-biggest state program in 1990, and in 2003 it became largest state program for the first time. Since then it has vied with schools for the biggest share of state spending, but for the past three years it has been in the lead, with an increasing margin.

BUY AMERICAN Whirlpool

Cabrio Platinum High Energy Laundry Pair SAVE $590* ON THE PAIR *AFTER REBATES

WTW8200YW: 4.6 Top-Load Washer • Reg. $8.99 WED8200YW: 7.6 Electric Dryer • Reg. $8.99 MADE

E IN TH

USA E, OH

CYLD

MADE

E IN TH

USA N, OH

MARIO

ON SALE PAY ONLY

$1208 AFTER REBATES

146 Rand Road, Portland LIMITED OFFER! (Exit 47 off I-95) CALL TODAY 772-8436


Page 4 — THE PORTLAND DAILY SUN, Wednesday, December 14, 2011

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

Time, distance and clarity Above Rome’s pale yellow and dusky orange buildings, the sky somehow looks bluer than it does almost anywhere else. Did I take proper note of that when I saw it all the time? When it was the canopy over my waking, my working and the all-consuming, all-distracting tedium of daily life? I worry I didn’t. And I wonder how, during the two years when I called Rome home and wandered frequently through the Villa Borghese park, I never noticed an especially lush, shady patch near the Galleria Borghese that I stumbled across recently, on a return trip. Like the sky’s vividness, the discovery unsettled me. So did the ––––– regular peal of church bells, a The New York music that must have been the Times soundtrack of my past but that I remembered only vaguely. It seems I failed to hear it — to listen — back then. This is the stretch of the calendar, from Thanksgiving through New Year’s, when many of us revisit the places we’ve left behind. These journeys can be difficult, and I don’t mean the brawls over the overhead

Frank Bruni

see BRUNI page 5

Natalie Ladd is trying out new eateries. Her “What It’s Like” column will return next week.

We want your opinions 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.

Portland’s FREE DAILY Newspaper David Carkhuff, Editor Casey Conley, City Editor Matthew Arco, Reporter THE PORTLAND DAILY SUN is published Tuesday through Saturday by Portland News Club, LLC. Mark Guerringue, Adam Hirshan, Curtis Robinson Founders Offices: 477 Congress Street, Suite 1105, Portland ME 04101 (207) 699-5801 Founding Editor Curtis Robinson Website: www.portlanddailysun.me E-mail: news@portlanddailysun.me For advertising contact: (207) 699-5801 or ads@portlanddailysun.me Classifieds: (207) 699-5807 or classifieds@portlanddailysun.me CIRCULATION: 15,100 daily distributed Tuesday through Saturday FREE throughout Portland by Jeff Spofford, jspofford@maine.rr.com

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

The British Euro farce LONDON — The British, or rather English, mistrust of what lies beyond the Channel has always been fathomless. W.H. Auden, observing a “cult of salads,” jested that “before very long” the south of England would resemble “the Continong.” There across the sea, on a suspect Continent, lay lands of constitutions, Napoleonic legal codes, defeated armies, imperfect freedom, rabies, wife-swapping and garlic. Auden, of course, was writing before the birth of the Tory Eurosceptic, the pinstriped effluence of an ex-imperial nation. This specimen’s ascendancy was reflected in Prime Minister David Cameron’s veto of a Europe-bolstering treaty change to defend the euro through greater fiscal cooperation and tougher sanctions on nations going Greek. The Euro-sceptic wants less Europe not more. In the place of “ever closer union,” the Eurosceptic wants ever looser union and, if possible, none whatsoever. In his or her — and it’s overwhelmingly his — heart beats the spirit of Britain’s “finest hour” and the United Kingdom (with a little help from the Yanks) holding out against the Luftwaffe. Only now the object of resistance is Germany’s glum Frau Merkel.

Roger Cohen ––––– The New York Times Or so the Tories see it. Since Cameron’s “No,” there’s been much chatter about the return of Britain’s “bulldog spirit.” Selfdelusion is a lingering attribute of former imperial nations adjusting to a lesser reality. In fact Cameron, playing the wrong chips without partners or preparation, was not so much opposed on grand principle as eyeing an opportunity to extract concessions for the very City of London financial institutions seen as the villains of the 2008 meltdown and its dire aftermath. That was politically inept — less the fighting spirit of the Normandy hedgerows than the self-regarding hypocrisy of the giant offshore hedge fund that Britain often resembles these days. Even without an election five months away, Nicolas Sarkozy, the French president, would have been tempted to avoid shaking Cameron’s hand. With an election the snub for perfidious Albion was

too good to pass up. Of course The Sun, the British tabloid whose dislike of Gauls is exceeded only by its disdain for Germans, shot back at Sarko: “Who do you think E.U. are?” After uncertain mumblings, the deputy prime minister, Nick (“don’t call me a doormat”) Clegg, managed to reach beyond this theater to something approaching strategic reflection. Declaring himself “bitterly disappointed” at Cameron’s decision, he said: “There’s nothing bulldog about Britain hovering somewhere in the mid-Atlantic, not standing tall in Europe, not being taken seriously in Washington.” There is no Euro-sceptic strategy; at most there’s a tactic for short-term political gain. For a long time the post-Cold-War widening of Europe to 27 members put off the need for deepening. This suited Britain, which was never interested in political union but saw advantage in a borderless European market. Now the euro crisis has exposed the need for a federative push to give the shared currency political backbone. In so doing, it has also exposed the basic British ambivalence that twice caused De Gaulle to say “Non” to U.K. membership. see COHEN page 5


THE PORTLAND DAILY SUN, Wednesday, December 14, 2011— Page 5

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

A baby’s holiday wish list Hi, everyone. This is Baby Boy. My mom is exhausted so I am letting her sleep while I hack into her computer. Your password is my birthday? Great security measure, Mom. I updated it to the geographical coordinates of Moscow, just because I can. I didn’t find any big secrets worth sharing with you, dear reader. I did find her Christmas list, however. I think the Not Yet Invented division of Santa’s workshop closed because of union disputes but here is her sad wish list should any of you feel simultaneously creative and giving. Maggie’s Wish List 2011. 1) Scented Markers. Baby Boy keeps asking for art supplies, which reminds me of when scented markers were all the rage in 1983. When else would art time turn into fight club? We had gang wars over the red one. Whoever got it would lock themselves in the bathroom inhaling cherry fumes like an addict. Beware if you crossed me! I would hold you down and make you smell the black licorice one until you cried. I promise the art suppliers that if you make fantasy-friendly scents geared toward Mom, your profits, as

Maggie Knowles ––––– Use Your Outdoor Voice well as quality crafting time with the fam, would skyrocket. Potential flavors: Orange/Mimosa. Black/New Mercedes Leather. Green/Angelina Jolie’s Emerald. Pink/St. Barth’s Sand. Yellow/George Clooney. 2) Vitamin Nail Polish. Moms chase their kids to force vitamins down their throats, but how often do we remember to take ours? But we always remember to do our nails! Vitamin fortified polish promises a gorgeous chip-free finish all while time-releasing calcium, B-12, biotin and vitamin D into the bloodstream. Oooh, maybe they can do a special one with timereleased caffeine! 3) Mommy Seeking Missile. At some point these wars will be over and all those defense technicians will need projects. Start developing a small missile that attaches to the backs of kids.

Anytime the wee one has wandered off at the park or is hiding under the clothing rack at the mall, the Mommy Seeking Missile activates zooming them safely back to their parent. 4) Designer Doggie Bags. Carrying around telltale plastic bags of dog poo is one of my least favorite activities. Right down there with hop scotch (see below). What if there were biodegradable poo bags that looked like the most fabulous designer purses? What better reward than fashion for scooping up steamy droppings? Sparkly Coach wristlets for toy poodles and Chihuahuas. Chanel leather shoulder bags for terriers and boxers. Hermes Birkin for St. Bernards and Sheepdogs. Walking the dog at 5 a.m. in the rain is your new runway! 5) Whine Activated Mouthpieces. a la the Grinch. “That’s the one thing he hated. The noise, noise, noise, noise, noise!” By noise I am sure he meant whining. Are you with me that something has to be done about whining? What about a device that detects whining and plays your favorite song instead? It regulates tempo to the rhythm of the foot stomping and arm waving. Now

your little whiner becomes an endless, entertaining source of Madonna, Radiohead and Bob Dylan. (This also works for complaining spouses. “What’s that? I didn’t do the dishes? Well, let’s just talk about that while you perform California Gurls again, Miss Perry!”) 6) Depends Leg Warmers. Once you have kids, sneezing, coughing and jumping jacks are dreaded occurrences. God forbid all three happen at once. Since leg warmers are a big trend right now, designers should line them with extra-absorbent materials that discreetly wick away loose drips and drops. Jumping rope? Sounds super! Let me just grab my leg warmers, wink! Here is my dad’s wish list: 1) Find way to get Maggie to stop eating granola in my car. (Doesn’t she know 50% of it falls between the seats???) 2) Find a way to get Maggie to make me more steak. (Maggie Knowles is a columnist for The Portland Daily Sun. Her column appears Wednesdays. Email her at maggie@portlanddailysun.me.)

Those church bells must have been the soundtrack of my past BRUNI from page 4

bin. Nor do I mean what Thomas Wolfe did when he contemplated the messiness of going home again, stirring up resentments and confronting how much we — and it — have changed. What weighs on me is the opposite: how much everything has no doubt stayed the same, coupled with the recognition that I didn’t appreciate or really even examine it before. The sorrow lies there. About a year ago I visited Chapel Hill, N.C., where I went to college, for the first time since I graduated in 1986. I ran an old running route, just to see if it conformed to my memories. It did, in that I knew exactly where to turn and how soon the next juncture would come along. Then again it didn’t, because what I encountered along the way — the columned rotunda to my left, the storybook quadrangle to my right — had a grace and even a majesty I’d never registered before. I felt location envy, about a location I’d inhabited for no fewer than four years. And with each stride I grew more disappointed in myself, and angrier, for having missed or at least ignored so much of this when it more or less belonged to me and was there for the taking. Col-

lege was when I first, and last, had Joni Mitchell in my head, so I was well acquainted with the refrain of “Big Yellow Taxi” and its deceptively chirpy insistence that “you don’t know what you’ve got till it’s gone.” But I turned a deaf ear to the song’s message as surely as I turned a blind eye to the arboretum beside the campus planetarium, though it, too, skirted the route of my runs. My friend J. says that I shouldn’t beat up on myself, and makes the excellent point that we’re not only older and wiser when we circle back to our former homes but we’re also, even more crucially, unencumbered guests able to take their measure and siphon off their pleasures in a way we couldn’t before. But it’s also true that we’re often just plain oblivious to the scenery right in front of us. By being closest, it’s farthest away. I’m not talking about obvious, monumental stuff. More than half of my New York friends haven’t been to the Metropolitan Museum of Art in five years or bothered with the Empire State Building in 20. But they know full well that they’re denying themselves glorious art and a God’s-eye view; it’s a conscious decision, made with the belief that they can always treat themselves later. That’s a foolishness all its own.

I’m talking about subtle, incidental blessings that are strangely invisible to us. My friend N. realized that there was a towering, flowering Schefflera plant in front of her childhood home in California only after she’d moved to New York and begun coveting one in a Manhattan store, which wanted $500 for it. I’ve met a half dozen people on my Manhattan block who have never set foot inside the corner bakery, Levain, which makes what might be the best chocolate chip cookies in the city. And it’s not because these neighbors of mine are dieting. A few of them don’t even know the bakery’s there, though there are lines out the door some weekends. I doubt any of the food got by me when I lived in Rome. Food seldom does. But too much else did. On my recent stay my companion halted in his tracks one afternoon to point out the heart-tugging perfection of the square we were in. It was the Piazza di Sant’Ignazio, one long side of which is traced by elaborately curved 18th-century buildings that evoke a rococo chest of drawers. I’d zoomed through it repeatedly years ago. And never once lingered. On this occasion I did. And then, my lesson learned, I stopped by again the next morning, before I headed to the airport and lost the precious chance.

‘It’s only when the tide goes out that you learn who’s been swimming naked’ COHEN from page 4

As Warren Buffett has observed, “It’s only when the tide goes out that you learn who’s been swimming naked.” The mid-Atlantic, as America pivots to Asia, could prove a lonely place for Britain, whose economy is heavily dependent on the euro zone. Of course, the fiscal pact Britain rejected still has to be turned from words into reality — and if Mario Draghi, the president of the European Central Bank, declines to provide the liquidity to keep European bond and money markets working time could still run out on the euro before reform is enacted. Still, a watershed has been reached. The air has been cleared. The proposed pact represents a necessary if tardy admission: that the euro was an

irrevocable step toward the political and particularly fiscal integration that alone can sustain the currency. Ever closer union means just that. With a touch more finesse and a lot less bombast Britain could have accompanied this process without adopting the euro. Instead, it’s isolated. Perhaps it’s not a coincidence that Cameron’s veto coincided with a young Euro-sceptic Tory member of Parliament, Aidan Burley, finding himself at a stag party in Val Thorens — a French ski resort with a German-sounding name — along with a bunch of mates dressed up in Nazi SS uniforms and performing Nazi salutes in an atmosphere of great jollity. Burley, who’s had to apologize, footed the bill for the festivities. Britain’s defiant freedom and independence are

real virtues proven over time. The thing about the Euro-sceptics behind Cameron’s Brussels bungling is they turn past glory into posturing theater. Their nostalgia for British greatness is often no more than the trumpeting of a bunch of insular snobs who seem to have a hard time restraining their inner-fascist. Marx observed that history repeats itself, first as tragedy, then as farce. Having a British prime minister say he’ll only go along with Germany saving the euro if City of London banks get an exemption from a financial transactions tax, while a Tory M.P. parties with Nazi lookalikes, and another Tory boasts of Cameron having “played a blinder,” is about as farcical as it gets. (You can follow Roger Cohen on Twitter at twitter. com/nytimescohen.)


Page 6 — THE PORTLAND DAILY SUN, Wednesday, December 14, 2011

ABOVE: Portland Police Officer Dan Rose patrols behind the police tape Tuesday. The Office of the Chief Medical Examiner has responded to the scene of two unattended deaths in a basement apartment, police reported. RIGHT: A police vehicle at the scene. (DAVID CARKHUFF PHOTOS)

Two found dead in Bayside apartment BY DAVID CARKHUFF THE PORTLAND DAILY SUN

Restaurant & Sports Bar

G R DiMillo’s BAY SID E

D inner Features New York Sirloin...................................16.95 served with your choice of FF or Pasta Haddock................................................16.95 served with your choice of FF or Pasta

C om e Spend Your Football Sunday W ith U s! Sunday D rink Specials 95¢ Miller Lite Drafts Mimosas & Bloody Marys $3.50 2 for 1 pizza Yes... We have the NFL Package! 118 Preble St., Portland, ME at the entrance to Downtown Portland

207-699-5959 • www.grdimillos.com

Pizza - Pasta - Parmagiana - Espresso - Cannoli - Steak

Pizza - Pasta - Parmagiana - Espresso - Cannoli - Steak

A couple found dead Tuesday by a maintenance worker at their Bayside apartment building were depicted by friends as good Samaritans who welcomed homeless into their Oxford Street and who had hoped to regain custody of their infant child and move to Puerto Rico. At about 12:19 p.m. Tuesday, Portland police responded to a basement apartment at 257/259 Oxford St. for a report of an unattended death. Officers arrived and found the bodies of two victims in the apartment, an adult female and an adult male, police said. Authorities were notified of the bodies by a maintenance worker at the apartment building, according to Lt. Gary Rogers, a spokesman for the Portland Police Department. "He made the discovery and then notified police," Rogers said. The Office of the Chief Medical Examiner has

“He was my best friend. They were really good people. They had hearts of gold, they took me in when I didn’t have a place to go.” — Michael Bisson responded to the scene and has begun investigating the manner and cause of death, Rogers reported. An autopsy is scheduled for today, he said. No names have been released. "We really can't make a determination (as to what precipitated their deaths), and it will be something that the medical examiner's office will have to do," Rogers said. "It's just tragic," said Michael Bisson, who knew the man, identified as "Miguel." "He was my best friend. They were really good people. They had hearts of gold, they took me in when I didn't have a place to go," Bisson said.

“It’s not a hotdog if it’s not a Chicago Dog”

Wednesday Special

Chicago Dog Open Mon.-Sat. 11-8, Sun. 11:30-6

chicagodogsofmaine.com • 510-6363 285 US Route 1 Scarborough

Bisson said he and his girlfriend lived with the couple until recently. "I met him when I was at the shelter, and I didn't have a place to go, so they'd let me come over and stay with them anytime, they opened the door, fed me," he recalled. Bisson said he had no sense that anything was wrong. Melissa Cortes said the couple were recent transplants to Portland. "His name's Miguel, but everyone calls him 'Angel.' He was an awesome dude. He'd help anybody in the world. You could be depressed and he'd make you laugh, you'd forget about being depressed," Cortes said. "He had a lot of motivation, his baby is in DHHS (Department of Health and Human Services) custody, and he was very motivated to get her back." Other friends agreed that Miguel had lost custody of a child, described as an 8-month-old baby. "He was only in Portland about six months," Cortes said. "They came up here because Maine is the only place right now that has a family shelter. He and his wife came up here to get stable. Some other things happened, and they were working on getting their kid back, and Angel was doing really good. I'm shocked." Cortes was one of several friends gathered outside the apartment Tuesday, talking and comforting each other. Many people drifted down the street, which diverges from Portland Street in the Bayside neighborhood. Jerry Huff said he has lived in the apartment complex for two years and also knew the couple, particularly Miguel. "He was living there, he and his old lady were trying to work together to get their daughter back. He was a good guy, he was working. He was a good guy," Huff said. "He was good friends with everybody, real good friends with everybody," Huff said. Nicole Hampton, who described herself as a close friend, agreed that the couple were well liked. "They were really good people, they didn't do drugs, they weren't junkies," she said. "Miguel had been working for a few weeks at Wendy's. He and his wife were getting back together, they have a daughter they (DHHS) were going to see DEATHS page 7


THE PORTLAND DAILY SUN, Wednesday, December 14, 2011— Page 7

ABOVE AND LEFT: Portland Police Department personnel secure the scene of two unattended deaths on Oxford Street Tuesday. (DAVID CARKHUFF PHOTOS)

Discovery ‘quite a shock’ DEATHS from page 6

give custody to; Miguel's mother's in Puerto Rico, they were supposed to move there shortly and raise their daughter down there. This is all basically quite a shock," Hampton said. Hampton agreed that the couple helped those who needed a place to sleep. Near the scene of the police investigation are several homeless shelters and support services for the homeless, including the nonprofit Preble Street Resource Center and the city-run Oxford Street Homeless Shelter. Hampton said, "I stay at the shelter right now, and anytime I didn't feel like staying at the shelter, for a lot of us, if we needed a place to stay or just wanted to get out of the shelter for the night, they would let us crash on the floor." Hampton described a group of acquaintances and friends dealing with the stunning news. "We're all very close, especially all of us homeless people, we have that family thing," she said. "This is a very huge shock." Bisson wondered why the bodies weren't found sooner. "Nobody had seen them, nobody did nothing," he said. Hampton said she wondered what had happened to the couple. "I myself had a feeling a couple of days ago that something just wasn't right because they always took the blankets down from the windows in the morning, they always had a routine, we would see them over at the soup kitchen in the morning having coffee," she said. Cortes fought tears as she watched police enter and exit the apartment, investigating the scene beyond a barrier of police tape. "I didn't believe it, so I had to come down. He was a really nice see POLICE page 8

The Cohen -Tra cy Tea m

FRIENDLY DISCOUNT & REDEMPTION

7 5 John Roberts Rd., South Portland,M E 04106 207 -831-0495 w w w.thecohentracyteam .com

AGENCY LIQUOR STORE WESTBROOKS PREMIUM ONE STOP SHOP FOR A FULL SELECTION OF THE FINEST BEER WINE AND SPIRITS

CT!

NTRA

ER CO

UND

DISCOUNTED CIGARETTS, TOBACCO & TUBES

CIGARETTE & TOBACCO SPECIAL SALE PRICES

BEER SPECIAL SHIPYARD Pumpkinhead 12 pk.. . . . . . .13.99++ Sam Adams Winter Variety 12pk..................13.99++ Sierra Nevada Celebration 12 pk..........13.99++

• Marlboro BEST SELECTION ON Special Blend OF FRUITY WINES SALE! Choose from: Ice Wine • Camel Crush Chocolate • Strawberry Chocolate Rasberry • Blueberry Monstrer • Golden Harvest And Many Many 2 fo $ 3.00++ • 1839 • Largo More!

922 Main St. Westbrook

856-2779 • 591-7022

Gift Certificates Available Redemption Center – 6 Cents Everyday

C ape E lizabeth $196,900

Scarborou gh $419,000

W estbrook N ew Price!$164,900

G ray $174,900

JU ST L ISTE D !W estbrook $174,900

ON

ER C

UND

JU ST L IST E D !B u xton $169,000

T! TRAC

W aterboro $139,900

WINE SPECIALS Cavit 1.5...............................................10.99++ Yellow Tail 1.5.......................................8.49++ Lindemann 1.5......................................8.49++ Barefoot 1.5..........................................8.99++ Woodbridge 1.5...................................9.99++ 750 ml $2.99++ • 1.5 ml $4.99++ or 2 for $8.99++

O ld O rchard B each N EW PRICE $89,900

Been think ing about buying a house or refinancing your current hom e? W hat are you w aiting for? Rates are low,low,low !D on’t w ait another day. Callm e! Linda C.Cohen Loan O fficer-N M LS # 7 92205 Cum berland County M ortg ag e, 207 -831-957 4 • 152 U.S.Route 1,Scarboroug h M E 0407 4


Page 8 — THE PORTLAND DAILY SUN, Wednesday, December 14, 2011

Police familiar with Oxford Street apartment complex POLICE from page 7

guy, a very nice guy," Cortes said. At least one person at the scene described the area as a place with a troubled history. Two properties, including 259 Oxford St., recently were auctioned and were the subject of a legal proceeding that required changes to tenancy and management of the rentals, based on a history of unrest there. In July, buildings at 255/259 Oxford St. were sold at public auction. The 17 units comprising the two buildings brought a price of $375,000, and went to Marc Fishman of Fishman Realty Group. The address of 259 Oxford St. also is where a scuffle with a suspect led to Portland Police Officer Dan Knight, the department’s Senior Lead Officer for Sector 2, suffering serious injury to his leg. Knight went into the unit looking for Matthew Tozier, 32, of Portland, who was wanted by police for several outstanding warrants.

Friends of a couple found dead at 257/259 Oxford St. comfort each other Tuesday. (DAVID CARKHUFF PHOTO)

According to police, Knight found him on the second floor of the building, but Tozier didn’t want to be taken into custody, and a struggle ensued at the top of a landing, with both men tumbling down the flight of stairs together. Then Tozier ran out the front door

with Knight in pursuit. Tozier was captured on Elm Street, arrested and charged with assault on an officer and resisting arrest. Tuesday's investigation into the unattended deaths in the basement apartment at 257/259 Oxford St. marks the second

Treat your special face or the face of someone you love to personal, caring and relaxing Skin Care this Holiday Season!

KOSMEIN Skin Care Center Holistic and Clinical Facials Electrolysis Facial Waxing Skin Care & Cosmetics Gift Certificates Available

* Professional, private & soothing setting * Day and evening appointments * Free convenient parking & location * Over 25 years of experience

Call Karen Carey for holiday specials and to book your appointment at 854-0110 672 Main Street, Westbrook — www.KosmeinDaySpa.com

incident of death under suspicious circumstances in 16 days in Portland. To date, there have been no arrests in the fatal stabbing of Carlos Ramos, who died at Maine Medical Center Nov. 28 after he was stabbed inside his Forest Avenue apartment, and investigators won't say if

his death was a homicide, self inflicted or an accident. Anyone with information regarding the unattended deaths at Oxford Street or concerning the fatal stabbing on Forest Avenue is asked to call the Portland Police Department at 874-8533.


THE PORTLAND DAILY SUN, Wednesday, December 14, 2011— Page 9

A locally owned & operated family business specializing in American Made brands.

Wishing our customers a Happy and Safe Holiday Season support your community

BUY LOCAL support your country

BUY AMERICAN

Looking For Us? We’ve Moved!

Our NEW Location 146 Rand Rd., Portland

772-8436 • Just off The Maine Turnpike (I-95) exit 47


DAILY CROSSWORD TRIBUNE MEDIA SERVICES

by Lynn Johnston

By Holiday Mathis SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 21). Sometimes you forget to use your position to share yourself fully with others. Today you’ll take the responsibility to heart. You’ll be warm when others are distant. Instead of breaking the ice, you’ll melt it. SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21). Every adventure involves an element of danger. If there is no danger, it might be an exciting experience, but it’s not really an adventure. You’re in the mood to take on risks and adventure. CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19). You’ll be involved in a group effort and will be very aware of the fact that your friends are also your teammates. Try to develop a strategy that will allow everyone to win together. AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18). In order to be a superstar in any area of the world, you have to get involved in every aspect of it. You’ll dive for deeper knowledge and also for adjacent information. PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20). Some of your greatest triumphs will happen because of the particular way you pick yourself up after a fall. Knowing this, you’re not afraid to slip up, and you’ll radiate the kind of confidence that makes mistakes less frequent. TODAY’S BIRTHDAY (Dec. 14). You’ll build your network of supporters, friends and customers. Your relationship with yourself is the most important one you’ll nurture. You’ll find new reasons and ways to appreciate who you are, grow your talents and care for yourself on every level. January unites lovers. February brings a financial breakthrough. Pisces and Virgo people adore you. Your lucky numbers are: 20, 14, 2, 4 and 25.

by Paul Gilligan

ARIES (March 21-April 19). Much will depend on what kind of friend you are. Try to think ahead about what a friend might need from you. Also consider the expectations you’ve already set up and how you’ll deliver on them, or not. TAURUS (April 20-May 20). You want to have a good time and be a big contributor to the social swirl, but you have so much on your mind that social goings-on might not seem like a huge priority. GEMINI (May 21-June 21). Buried pain has a way of staying buried until someone clever acts as a kind of metal detector to remind you where the heavy elements are hidden. A Scorpio or Cancer person could serve this purpose for you. CANCER (June 22-July 22). You accept that you have created your experience, and now you wonder whether it’s quite the way you meant it to be. Something definitive will happen to let you know whether it’s working for you or not. LEO (July 23-Aug. 22). Where you spend your time will be crucial to the way relationships develop or don’t. Go where you’re sure to be in the mix with all the players who are in your game. VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22). Your word is good. You’ll knock yourself out to make sure you do what you say you’ll do. It’s part of why you’re confident: You trust yourself to deliver, and others trust you, too. LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 23). So many people don’t think about the details, but you do, and it gives you an advantage. Because you are concerned about the initial impression you make on others, you’ll come across even better than you intended.

by Jan Eliot

HOROSCOPE

by Chad Carpenter

Solution and tips at www.sudoku.com

TUNDRA Stone Soup Pooch Café For Better or Worse LIO

Fill in the grid so that every row, every column, and every 3x3 box contains the digits 1 thru 9.

by Mark Tatulli

Page 10 — THE PORTLAND DAILY SUN, Wednesday, December 14, 2011

1 5 10 14 15 16 17 18

20 21 22 23 25 26 28 31 32 34 36 37 38

ACROSS Coat or shawl Bird bills Likelihood King’s vestment “Little Orphan __” Actress Garr “__ old cowhand from the Rio...” Imprint at the top of business stationery Four and six Charitable gifts Row of shrubs Rot Man’s title Drunk “__ and Gretel” __ over; delivers Spanish friend Get-up-and-go Heron’s cousin Escapes Whitecap, e.g.

39 Prefix with stop or specific Actress Sally Less colorful Female monster Hoodwink Ooh and __; express delight 46 Hooded jacket 47 Tips one’s hat in respect 50 In the __; healthy 51 Facial twitch 54 Joined to no one 57 One of Michael Jackson’s brothers 58 Highest point 59 Cost 60 “Do __ others...” 61 Malicious look 62 Mary __ Moore 63 Personalities 40 41 42 44 45

1

DOWN Legal order

2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 19 21 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 32

Italy’s capital Deserting Writing instrument Romantic song Foe Crawling bugs Doctor’s bag Look at Significant __; partners Owner’s paper Boring situation Faction Huge horned beast, for short Experts Finishes Droops Part of the leg Forbidden Hurried Analyzing and rating Dwelt Frothy drinks

33 35 37 38 40 41 43 44 46 47

Ferrer or Blanc French mother Trout or turbot __ off with; steal Banquet Make coffee Roof beam Temper; anger Portion Twofold

48 In the past 49 Renown 50 Hockey’s __ Esposito 52 “Tell __ the marines!” 53 Pigeon sounds 55 Likely 56 Sob 57 Weekday: abbr.

Yesterday’s Answer


THE PORTLAND DAILY SUN, Wednesday, December 14, 2011— Page 11

––––––– ALMANAC ––––––– Today is Wednesday, Dec. 14, the 348th day of 2011. There are 17 days left in the year. Today’s Highlight in History: On Dec. 14, 1911, Norwegian explorer Roald Amundsen (ROH’-ahl AH’-mun-suhn) and his team became the first men to reach the South Pole, beating out a British expedition led by Robert F. Scott. On this date: In 1799, the first president of the United States, George Washington, died at his Mount Vernon, Va., home at age 67. In 1819, Alabama joined the Union as the 22nd state. In 1861, Prince Albert, husband of Queen Victoria, died at Windsor Castle at age 42. In 1936, the comedy “You Can’t Take It With You” by George S. Kaufman and Moss Hart opened on Broadway. In 1946, the United Nations General Assembly voted to establish U.N. headquarters in New York. In 1961, a school bus was hit by a passenger train at a crossing near Greeley, Colo., killing 20 students. In 1975, six South Moluccan extremists surrendered after holding 23 hostages for 12 days on a train near the Dutch town of Beilen (BY’-luhn). In 1981, Israel annexed the Golan Heights, which it had seized from Syria in 1967. In 1985, Wilma Mankiller became the first woman to lead a major American Indian tribe as she took office as principal chief of the Cherokee Nation of Oklahoma. In 1986, the experimental aircraft Voyager, piloted by Dick Rutan and Jeana Yeager, took off from Edwards Air Force Base in California on the first non-stop, non-refueled flight around the world. One year ago: The White House insisted the implementation of President Barack Obama’s landmark health care law would not be affected by a negative federal court ruling, and the Justice Department said it would appeal. Today’s Birthdays: Jazz musician Clark Terry is 91. Singer-actress Abbe Lane is 80. Actor Hal Williams is 73. Actress-singer Jane Birkin is 65. Actress Patty Duke is 65. Pop singer Joyce Vincent-Wilson (Tony Orlando and Dawn) is 65. Entertainment executive Michael Ovitz is 65. Actress Dee Wallace is 63. Rhythm-and-blues singer Ronnie McNeir (The Four Tops) is 62. Rock musician Cliff Williams (AC/DC) is 62. Actor-comedian T.K. Carter is 55. Rock singer-musician Mike Scott (The Waterboys) is 53. Singermusician Peter “Spider” Stacy (The Pogues) is 53. Actress Cynthia Gibb is 48. Actress Natascha McElhone is 42. Actress-comedian Michaela Watkins is 40. Rhythm-andblues singer Brian Dalyrimple is 36. Actress KaDee Strickland is 36. Actress Tammy Blanchard is 35. Actress Sophie Monk is 32. Actress Vanessa Hudgens is 23.

WEDNESDAY PRIME TIME Dial

8:00

5

CTN 5 The Humble Farmer

6

Up All WCSH Night Å

7

WPFO

8

WMTW

10

MPBN

11

WENH

8:30

9:00

DECEMBER 14, 2011

9:30

10:00 10:30 11:00 11:30

Portland Water District Thom Hartmann Show Grit TV

Whitney Harry’s Law “Bad to Law & Order: Special “The Wire” Worse” Harry represents Victims Unit “Russian a biology teacher. Brides” Å Å The X Factor “Performance” The I Hate My News 13 on FOX (N) remaining four finalists perform. (N) Teenage (Live) Daughter The Middle Suburga- Modern Barbara Walters Presents the 10 “Major tory “Char- Family Å Most Fascinating People of 2011 (N) Changes” ity Case” (In Stereo) Å Nature The elephant ma- NOVA “Darwin’s Darkest Hour” Charles Darwin’s triarch Echo. (In Stereo) theory of evolution. (In Stereo) Å (DVS) Å (DVS) Antiques Roadshow Antiques Roadshow Christmas With the “Madison” Japanese Two circa-1958 prototype Mormon Tabernacle bamboo sculpture. chairs. Å Choir-David Archuleta America’s Next Top The Victoria’s Secret Excused (In American Model The judges Fashion Show (In Ste- Stereo) Å Dad “Haylchoose the winner. reo) Å ias” Å Survivor: South Pacific Criminal Minds A series CSI: Crime Scene Five contestants turn on of beatings in Philadel- Investigation “Genetic each other. (N) phia. (N) (In Stereo) Disorder” (N) Burn Notice Con artist. Burn Notice Å Law Order: CI

News

The Office “New Leads” News 8 WMTW at 11PM (N) Charlie Rose (N) (In Stereo) Å

Helen of Troy The truth about Helen of Troy. (In Stereo) Å It’s Always That ’70s Sunny in Show Å Phila. WGME Late Show News 13 at With David 11:00 Letterman Paid Prog. Cops Å

12

WPXT

13

WGME

17

WPME

24

DISC Sons of Guns Å

25

FAM Pixar-Films Movie: ››› “Finding Nemo” (2003) Ellen DeGeneres

26

USA NCIS “Swan Song”

27

NESN NHL Hockey Boston Bruins at Ottawa Senators.

Bruins

Daily

28

CSNE Patriots Wednesday

Sports

SportsNet Sports

30

ESPN College Basketball

31

ESPN2 College Basketball

33

ION

Sons of Guns (N) Å NCIS “Pyramid” Patriots Wednesday

Moonshiners (N) Å

Sons of Guns Å The 700 Club (N) Å

Psych (N) Å

Burn Notice Å Instigators Dennis

SportsCenter Special (N) (Live) College Basketball

Movie: ››› “Top Gun” (1986) Tom Cruise.

Update Tonight Show With Jay Leno The Office “Employee Transfer” Nightline (N) Å

Sticks

SportsCenter (N) Å Year/Quarterback

Criminal Minds Å

Criminal Minds Å

Wizards

Shake It

34

DISN Pixie

“Beauty and the Beast”

35

TOON MAD

Ed, Edd

King of Hill King of Hill Amer. Dad Amer. Dad Fam. Guy

Fam. Guy

36

NICK My Wife

My Wife

’70s Show ’70s Show George

Friends

37

MSNBC The Ed Show (N)

Shake It George

Rachel Maddow Show The Last Word

Friends

Good Luck

The Ed Show

38

CNN Anderson Cooper 360

Piers Morgan Tonight

Anderson Cooper 360

Erin Burnett OutFront

40

CNBC Coca-Cola

60 Minutes on CNBC

Crime Inc.

Mad Money

FNC

The O’Reilly Factor (N) Hannity (N)

Greta Van Susteren

The O’Reilly Factor

43

TNT

The Mentalist Å

Leverage Å

Southland Å

44

LIFE Movie: “A Nanny for Christmas” (2010) Å

41

46

TLC

Virgin Diaries Å

The Mentalist Å Toddlers & Tiaras

Movie: “A Boyfriend for Christmas” (2004) Å Toddlers & Tiaras (N)

Toddlers & Tiaras

47

AMC Movie: ›››› “White Christmas” (1954) Bing Crosby. Å

48

HGTV House

49

TRAV Man, Food Man, Food Hot & Spicy Paradise

Cght-Cmra Cght-Cmra Man, Food Man, Food

50

A&E Storage

Storage

52

Hunters Storage

BRAVO Top Chef: Texas

Income

Kitchen

Storage

Storage

Work of Art

Movie: ›››› “White Christmas”

Property Brothers (N) Hoggers

Top Chef: Texas (N)

Property Brothers Hoggers

Hoggers

Top Chef: Texas

55

HALL Movie: “A Princess for Christmas” (2011) Å

56

SYFY Ghost Hunters Å

57

ANIM River Monsters

River Monsters

River Monsters

River Monsters

58

HIST Brad Meltzer’s Dec.

Brad Meltzer’s Dec.

Brad Meltzer’s Dec.

Brad Meltzer’s Dec.

60

BET

61 62 67 68 76

Ghost Hunters Å

Motives: Behind the Scenes Film preview. Å

Movie: “Lucky Christmas” (2011) Å Ghost Hunters Å

Ghost Hunters Å

Movie: ›‡ “The Rich Man’s Wife” (1996) Å

COM Chappelle Chappelle South Park South Park South Park South Park Daily Show Colbert FX

Movie: ››‡ “X-Men Origins: Wolverine”

TVLND Home Imp. Home Imp. Raymond TBS

Big Bang

Big Bang

SPIKE UFC Unleashed

Big Bang

American Horror Story American Horror Story Raymond

Cleveland The Exes

Big Bang

Funniest Commercials Conan (N) Å Movie: ››› “Under the Tuscan Sun” (2003)

78

OXY Tori & Dean: Home

Tori & Dean: Home

146

TCM “Fear and Desire”

Movie: ›› “Huckleberry Finn” (1920)

DAILY CROSSWORD BY WAYNE ROBERT WILLIAMS

Cleveland The Exes

Movie: ››‡ “Unleashed” (2005) Jet Li, Bob Hoskins. (In Stereo)

1 5 9 14 15 16 17 18 20 22 23 24 27 30 33 35 36 39 40 43 44 45 46

ACROSS Sharp rebuke Trig ratio Monks’ leader Hawaii, before ‘59 Hydroxyl-carbon compound Also-ran French play part Religious traveler Start of a Guy Goden quote Bro or sis Common pair? Indonesia islands Avant-garde French artist Riyadh resident Folklore baddies Pal of Pooh Replace a stopper Bruins of coll. sports Part 2 of quote Bologna eight Put in a pyramid & the rest Feeling remorse

“Pandora-Flying”

48 Early Christian pulpit 49 Go out with 50 Hot tub 51 William Tell’s canton 54 Golfer Ernie 56 End of quote 62 Brand name paste 65 Judicial garment 66 Hunting dog 67 Completed 68 Bedazzled 69 Palm starches 70 Soviet news agcy. 71 Methods

1 2 3 4 5 6 7

DOWN Distinct mus. tones Walesa of Solidarity Gulf of the Ionian Sea Squeeze Whole note Any part of JFK Intrusive

8 9 10 11 12 13 19 21 24 25 26 27 28 29 31 32

34 37 38

Borden’s bovine “The Tempest” king Cher’s Sonny Big inits. in camping “__ the land...” Take a shot at Ending for a belief Small crown Symbol of MacDonald’s Interact Repayment period of a foreign loan Adds protective layers to Weed out “The Merchant of Venice” lady Letter-clarification words Housekeeper in “The Barber of Seville” Remove innards Molecular unit Forest workers

41 Geologic span 42 Levi’s “Christ Stopped at __” 47 Security providers 52 “Kidnapped” auth. 53 Fort Knox unit 55 Stable bedding 56 Less Italian

57 58 59 60 61 62

Sea lettuce Day of the wk. Davenport state Toe the line Beatty and Kelly Questioning interjections 63 Mauna __ 64 Kisser

Yesterday’s Answer


THE

Page 12 — THE PORTLAND DAILY SUN, Wednesday, December 14, 2011

CLASSIFIEDS PROFESSIONAL DIRECTORY

CLASSIFIEDS • CALL 699-5807 DOLLAR-A-DAY CLASSIFIEDS: Ads must be 15 words or less and run a minimum of 5 consecutive days. Ads that run less than 5 days or nonconsecutive days are $2 per day. Ads over 15 words add 10¢ per word per day. PREMIUMS: First word caps no charge. Additional caps 10¢ per word per day. Centered bold heading: 9 pt. caps 40¢ per line, per day (2 lines maximum) TYPOS: Check your ad the first day of publication. Sorry, we will not issue credit after an ad has run once. DEADLINES: noon, one business day prior to the day of publication. PAYMENT: All private party ads must be pre-paid. We accept checks, Visa and Mastercard credit cards and, of course, cash. There is a $10 minimum order for credit cards. CORRESPONDENCE: To place your ad call our offices 8:30 a.m. to 5 p.m., Monday through Friday, 699-5807; or send a check or money order with ad copy to The Conway Daily Sun, P.O. Box 1940, North Conway, NH 03860. OTHER RATES: For information about classified display ads please call 699-5807.

Animals

For Rent

For Rent

For Sale

ABANDONED cats and kittens seek foster and permanent homes. Barn cats also available. (207)797-3014, www.feralfelines.net.

PORTLAND- Danforth, 2 bedrooms, heated, renovated Victorian townhouse, 2 floors, 1.5 baths, parking. $1400/mo (207)773-1814.

PORTLAND- Woodford’s area. 3 bedroom heated. Large bright rooms, oak floor, just painted. $1300/mo. (207)773-1814.

A New Queen Plush-Top Mat tress Set $150- Must Sell (207)591-4927.

Labradoodle Puppies Ready to go Dec. 17th. $1200 heath certified. Non-shed hypoallergenic. For more info email: info@karlaspets.com. PIT Bull/ Bull Mastiff pups. Born Sept. 26th. Very friendly, nice colors, good with kids and other animals. Parents on premise. $600 or trade for hunting equipment/ tools, etc. (603)539-7009.

PORTLAND- Maine MedicalStudio, 1/ 2 bedroom. Heated, off street parking, newly renovated. $550-$875. (207)773-1814.

PORTLAND- Munjoy Hill- 3 bedrooms, newly renovated. Heated, $1275/mo. Call Kay (207)773-1814.

PROFESSIONAL DIRECTORY

Land WINDHAM- 1 bedroom, utilities plus cable included. Yard parking, partial rent for some work. (207)892-7150.

CONWAY LAKE: Will trade deepwater lot w/ tri-dock for commercial property or permitted land. 207-754-1047.

For Rent-Commercial PORTLAND Art District- Art studios, utilities. First floor. Adjacent to 3 occupied studios. $325 (207)773-1814.

PROFESSIONAL DIRECTORY

Fu ll Service Shack’s Restau ran t & Top Dogs Fam ily Spo rts Pu b Pub H a ppy H o ur Nice family atmosphere!

D & M AUTO REPAIR “We want the privilege of serving you”

MAJOR & MINOR REPAIRS Auto Electronic Diagnosis

Cooling Systems • Brakes • Exhaust Check Shocks • Struts • Tune-ups Engine State Inspection • Timing Belts Lights Valve Jobs • Engine Work Interstate Batteries • Towing Available

DICK STEWART • MIKE CHARRON • 767-0092 1217 Congress St., Portland, ME 04102

SPECIAL DECEMBER PRICING YOU TRUST US TO CLEAN YOUR HOME, NOW TRUST US TO HEAT YOUR HOME

INTRODUCING THE GUARDIAN HEATER ® BY AERUS with Active PCO Technology • Exclusive Active PCO Technology send out “scrubbers” to remove contaminants from surfaces • Combines everything you want in a heater: energy-efficiency, effectiveness & safety • Safety features prevent fires and make it safer for children & pets • Doesn’t emit harmful fumes or carbon monoxide • An energy efficient way to heat your environment

Buy one at regular price get 2nd

HALF OFF!

Call Today To Learn More About Creating Safe, Healthy Environments 352 Warren Ave. Portland • 207-871-8610 or toll free 1-888-358-3589

M o n-F ri 4-7 F ree H o rs d’o euvres! $5.00 W ell D rinks $2.00 Lite Pints

Eat-in or Take-out • 854-9555 • 1 00 Larrabee Road, W estbrook

PORTLAND AUTO RADIATOR Established 1948

FULL AUTOMOTIVE SERVICES The Best Place in Town to Take a Leak

WINTERIZATION SPECIALS •Tune-ups •Coolant flushes •Test & Check Antifreeze 1129 Forest Ave., Portland • 207-797-3606

The Bradley Foundation of Maine Miracle on 424 Main Street

HOPE

Computer Sales and Service Serving Seniors over 55 and the Disabled Computers starting at only $50.00 includes Microsoft Office 2007 Professional Plus & Microsoft Antivirus We service what we sell for $15.00 an hour! Open for sales to the general public.

Portland Scooter Company Super Santa Sale!

All in-stock inventory now on sale for Christmas! SPECIAL ORDERS NOT A PROBLEM, ONLY 10 DAYS FOR DELIVERY

Now Conveniently Located At

27 Vannah Ave Portland 772-8722 409-6178 Monday-Friday 8:30am–4:30pm, Saturday 10am–3pm

Westbrook, ME • 591-5237 Mon-Fri 9am-5pm; Sat 8:30am-2pm We now accept Visa, MasterCard and Discover

75 Oak Street, Portland, ME

Benefits of Tai Chi Chih Blood Pressure Control • Arthritis Relief For information call Raymond Reid (207) 518-9375 www.taichichihstudio.com Check Out Our Gift Certificates for the Holidays and Our New Winter Class Schedule

FREE APPLIANCE DISPOSAL Why pay excessive transfer station disposal fees?

SPECIAL - $5.00 Falafel Burger or Cheeseburger or Hummus Salad Gyro with chips & soda 24 MONUMENT SQUARE | 699-5577

• Refrigerators/ Freezers • Air Conditioners • Dehumidifiers/ Humidifiers • Washers/ Dryers • Stoves/Ovens • Microwave Ovens • Household White Goods

ZOOM IN ON A BUYER!

Advertise your goods and services in the Classifieds and reach thousands of potential buyers daily. Call today to place your ad and make a sale quickly.

Green State Resource Recovery (207)318-9781 Freon and Refrigerant Recovery Service Universal Waste Specialists • EPA and Maine DEP compliant

The Daily Sun Classifieds


THE

THE PORTLAND DAILY SUN, Wednesday, December 14, 2011— Page 13

CLASSIFIEDS

Roommate Wanted SHARE large apt with dish washer, w/d, includes heat, cable, wifi, $600/mo plus half electricity, gas, hot water. (207)899-5109.

Services CEREMONIES MARRIAGE, commitment and renewal ceremonies officiant. Will help you write your vows. Barbara (207)856-6876.

Services

Wanted To Buy

Yard Sale

PROFESSIONAL DIRECTORY

DUMP GUY

I pay cash today for broken and unwanted Notebooks, Netbooks, and Macbooks. Highest prices (207)233-5381.

SOUTH Paris Coin/ Marble Show- 12/17/11, American Legion Post 72, 12 Church St, 8-2pm. (802)266-8179. Free admission.

TIRED OF PLUCKING?

We haul anything to the dump. Basement, attic, garage cleanouts. Insured www.thedumpguy.com (207)450-5858.

DEADLINE for classifieds is noon the day prior to publication. 699-5807

PROFESSIONAL DIRECTORY

PROFESSIONAL DIRECTORY

ST ! “A Local Moved We’ve Company Selling American Made Products” 146 Rand Rd., Portland 772-8436 Just off The Maine Turnpike (I-95) exit 47

R O U D WAT E R

TIRE

AUTO

www.stroudwaterauto.com for special offers and discount coupons 656 Stroudwater St. Westbrook • 854-0415

Automotive Repair Foreign & Domestic

ANNIE’S MAILBOX Dear Annie: My husband and I have noticed that his sister’s husband has been rather cool to us for quite some time. We can barely get a civil hello from him at family events, yet he is warm and friendly to others. To the best of our knowledge, we have not done or said anything that would warrant the cold shoulder. My husband and I have many friends and are well respected in our community. We have tried not to let his attitude bother us, but it hurts. We live in the same community and attend the same church, so avoiding him is not an option. He recently was a no-show at a family gathering at our home. My husband mentioned this to another relative and was told that it was because of me. I was dumbfounded. I have no clue why he dislikes me. We have never argued or had an unpleasant incident. I would apologize in a minute if I only knew what for. What can I do? -- Clueless Dear Clueless: It’s possible that your brother-in-law misinterpreted something that happened involving you, and the only way to clear it up is to find out what occurred. Your husband can speak to his brother-in-law (or his sister) privately, say you are mortified that you may have done something to offend him and ask how the situation can be remedied so all of you can have a warmer relationship. We hope it helps. Dear Annie: I am a recently divorced 40-year-old woman and have started seeing someone I really enjoy being with. My problem is, four years ago, I had to have four of my front teeth pulled due to a gum disease. I am wondering when and how to tell this man my teeth are fake. I want him to know, but I am embarrassed and scared of his reaction. Please help. -- Toothless in Pennsylvania Dear Toothless: Unless you are afraid your teeth will come loose with vigorous kissing, this is one of those things that

don’t require revelation until the relationship has progressed to physical intimacy. Hopefully, he will care enough about you that it won’t bother him when you say, “There’s something you should know about my teeth.” (By the way, if you can afford them, dental implants can take care of this issue permanently.) Dear Annie: I am “Spell Check Is Your Friend.” I wrote about a college friend who is a special-ed teacher with poor English skills. I was stunned at the responses. It seems most people feel that as long as a teacher is a nice person, it doesn’t matter whether she is qualified to do the job. I am not spiteful or jealous. I am simply concerned about the children who are learning improperly. And although they are special-ed kids, they are not babies. They are 5th and 6th graders. Trust me, I’m not talking about a typo here and there. I’m talking about endless run-on sentences, no knowledge of homonyms or punctuation, and repeat misspellings of basic common words. Yes, she is a very nice person, but would you want your kids in her classroom? I wouldn’t. Today my friend posted on Facebook that she is worried about the upcoming evaluations. I didn’t call the Board of Ed about her, but I still wonder whether I should. My intent is not to get her fired. Rather, it is to get her into an English refresher course. It would only benefit her students’ education, and I think that’s the most important thing. -- Spell Check in New York Dear New York: Unfortunately, despite your best intentions, chances are your complaints could get her fired. We still think this is something best handled by the school and the parents, and we are certain they either know about her inadequate English skills or find them to be less important than her other attributes.

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, 5777 W. Century Blvd., Ste. 700, Los Angeles, CA 90045.

Prickly City

by Scott Stantis

Electrolysis: The Permanent Solution for Unwanted Hair •Private and Confidential •Pleasant and Courteous Staff • Effective on Any Hair Color or Thickness • Proven Results

KOSMEIN SKIN CARE CENTER • 854-0110 Days & Eves by Appt. Only www.kosmeindayspa.com

TWIN ELECTRIC “Lighting Your Way Into The Future” • Fu lly L icensed • Fu lly Insured • Free E stim ates

• Fast/Q uality Service • N o Job T oo Sm all • 24/7 Service

(207) 318-8808

Randy MacWhinnie

twinelectricme@aol.com

Master Electrician/Owner

The Bradley Foundation of Maine Miracle on 424 Main Street

HOPE

Computer Sales and Service Serving Seniors over 55 and the Disabled

Christmas Sale

20% OFF

We service what we sell for $15.00 an hour! Open for sales to the general public.

until Christmas

Westbrook, ME • 591-5237 Mon-Fri 9am-5pm; Sat 8:30am-2pm

with this ad

Computers starting at only $50.00 includes Microsoft Office 2007 Professional Plus & Microsoft Antivirus

We now accept Visa, MasterCard and Discover


Page 14 — THE PORTLAND DAILY SUN, Wednesday, December 14, 2011

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

Wednesday, December 14 PACTS transportation meeting 8 a.m. Twenty-six state legislators, town/ city councilors and congressional delegation staff members will attend a transportation policy briefing at the Ocean Gateway Terminal in Portland. Senator Bill Diamond (Windham), Senator Ron Collins (Wells) and Representative Ann Peoples (Westbrook), all members of the Legislature’s Transportation Committee, will lead part of the discussion. The Portland Area Comprehensive Transportation System (PACTS) will host the event. Nathan Poore, Falmouth town manager and current chair of the PACTS Policy Committee, will welcome everyone at 8 a.m. The purpose of the briefing is to raise the awareness of elected officials of certain transportation opportunities and challenges in the Greater Portland region before the beginning of the next session of the Legislature. Maine’s and Greater Portland’s transportation leaders are rising to the challenges and opportunities in this time of continued budget cutting and red tape reduction. Transportation investments are closely linked with our economic prosperity and with our quality of life. During the coming six months the Legislature and town and city councils of our region will develop budgets that set the short term priorities for this new reality. The 90-minute session will include presentations and discussions of these topics: The nation’s and state’s transportation funding situation; highlights from the PACTS 2011 Destination Tomorrow regional transportation plan; the $200 million unmet need for upgrading collector roads in the PACTS region; the PACTS plan to regionalize traffic signal system management; and recent transportation success stories. For more information, contact John Duncan, PACTS director, at 774-9891.

Civic Center Board of Trustees 8 a.m. There will be a special meeting of the Cumberland County Civic Center Board of Trustees. The purpose of the meeting is to interview three architectural/engineering firms for the upcoming Civic Center renovation. The meeting will be held in the main lobby meeting room. www.theciviccenter. com/events

Walk Or Roll To School

ments for Commercial and Residential Properties at the University of Southern Maine Wishcamper Center. Efficiency Maine is working in all sectors of Maine to improve energy efficiency, reduce costs, and strengthen our economy. This forum will provide an overview of the residential, commercial, and industrial projects funded by Efficiency Maine over the last year and examine the energy saving results. Michael Stoddard, executive director, will present an overview of Efficiency Maine’s energy efficiency and renewable energy goals for 2012. www. e2tech.org

Reading Flash Mob 5 p.m. “Maine Humanities Council and LibraryThing are joining forces for a Reading Flash Mob on Thursday December 15, to coincide with Portland’s annual downtown Merry Madness festival. Bring a book and meet them outside Longfellow Books at 5 p.m. We’ll read in public until around 6:30 p.m. All ages, all books, all book formats welcome!”

Merry Madness 5 p.m. to 6 p.m. Merry Madness kicks off at the Portland Regency Hotel, 20 Milk St., and 70 participating stores in downtown Portland stay open until 10 p.m. offering complimentary refreshments to holiday shoppers. The kickoff at the Portland Regency Hotel features choral music from Davis Hartwell and Stuart Tisdale, fantastic raffle prizes from distinct downtown shops and free hors d’oeuvres from 5 p.m. to 6 p.m. donated by the Portland Regency Hotel and local businesses including Sebago Brewing Company, Seadog Brewing Company, Rira’s Irish Pub, Leonardo’s Pizza, Buck’s Naked BBQ, and Love Cupcakes. Commemorative Merry Madness wine glasses and coffee mugs are for sale at the Portland Regency Hotel for $6 and $5 respectively and complimentary maps of open stores are available for shoppers. For more information visit www.portlandmaine.com.

Film: ‘Better This World’

8:30 a.m. The Ocean Avenue Elementary The Maine Narrow Gauge Railroad Train takes part in “The Polar Express Train” excursion now through Dec. 23. The 7 p.m. How did two boyhood friends School has received a $1,000 grant to begin train ride is 45 minutes and starts at the Narrow Gauge and heads to the “North Pole” where visitors meet Santa Claus. from Midland, Texas wind up arrested on terrorism charges at the 2008 Repuba walk and bike to school program. To cele- (COURTESY PHOTO) lican National Convention? “Better This meeting is the annual meeting for the election of officers brate the award, Mayor Michael Brennan will World” follows the journey of David McKay and Bradley and board members. “If you haven’t already done so, be participating in the park and walk event and co-presentCrowder from political neophytes to accused domestic terrorplease bring $5 to pay your dues and vote. There will also ing a check to the school on behalf of the National Center ists with a particular focus on the relationship they develop be a presentation about the Medical Marijuana Dispensary. for Safe Routes to School. Oakie, the Oakhurst mascot, will with a radical activist mentor in the six months leading up to WENA meetings are held in the community space on the also be walking with the kids to the school. Depart 8:30 their arrests. “A dramatic story of idealism, loyalty, crime and upper level of the Reiche Community Center, adjacent to the a.m. at Heselstine Park (Ocean Avenue and Irving Street betrayal, ‘Better This World’ goes to the heart of the War on Reiche Community School at 166 Brackett St. Meetings are at after the Rite Aid). If you want to learn more go to www. Terror and its impact on civil liberties and political dissent in 6:30 p.m., generally on the second Wednesday each month.” oapto.org or contact Kristin at 807.4700 or ksk@oapto.org. post-9/11 America.” $7/$5 for SPACE Gallery members and ‘Striped Bass Fishing in Maine & Beyond’ Portland SCORE’s Annual Holiday Luncheon students with ID. 7:30 p.m. “The State of Striped Bass Fishing in Maine & noon. Secretary of State Charlie Summers will be the ‘The Christmas Bride’ by Snowlion Rep Beyond,” by Duncan Barnes and Mac McKeever from the keynote speaker at Portland SCORE’s Annual Holiday 8 p.m. New England premiere of the Charles Dickens Coastal Conservation Association. At the monthly meetLuncheon at the Woodlands Club in Falmouth. Portland holiday musical, “The Christmas Bride,” based on “The ing of the Saco River Salmon Club, Duncan Barnes and SCORE provides small business services to local entrepreBattle of Life,” a Christmas story by Charles Dickens. Dec. Mac McKeever from the Coastal Conservation Associaneurs through face-to-face counseling and a series of busi15-21 at Lucid Stage, 29 Baxter Boulevard, Portland, by tion will speak on “The State of Striped Bass Fishing in ness workshops. Over 40 local volunteer business mentors Snowlion Repertory Company, a new theater company Maine & Beyond.” Prior to the presentation, at 7 p.m., serve our community through entrepreneur education in Portland. Book by MK Wolfe, music and lyrics by Noel there will be a business meeting for the club. The prededicated to the formation, growth and success of small Katz, musical direction by Jim Colby, directed and choreosentation is free, open to the public and will take place at business. For more information call Portland SCORE at graphed by Al D’Andrea, with John Ambrose, David Arthur the conference center inside Cabela’s retail store at the 772-1147, reach SCORE online at http://portlandme.score. Bachrach (appears courtesy of Actors Equity Association), corner of Haigis Parkway and Payne Road in Scarbororg, or email SCORE at info@scoremaine.com. Jaymie Chamberlin, Elizabeth Lardie, Brian McAloon, Wilough. “The Saco River Salmon Club is a nonprofi t orgaBuy Local Member Mixer liam McCue, Annie O’Brien, Cynthia O’Neil, Fran Page, nization of fi shermen and conservationists dedicated 6 p.m. to 7:30 p.m. Buy Local Member Mixers are inforMarissa Sheltra, Bill Vaughan. Thurs., Dec. 15, Fri., Dec. to restoration of Atlantic Salmon to the Saco River. The mal networking and social events for members, friends, 16, Sat., Dec. 17 at 8 p.m.; Sat., Dec. 17 at 2 p.m.; Sun., club has been raising salmon fry from eggs and stocking and anyone who would like to know more about Portland Dec. 18 at 3 p.m.; Tue., Dec. 20, Wed., Dec. 21 at 8 p.m. the fry in the Saco since 1983. The club currently operBuy Local. “Come unwind and celebrate with other indie biz Tickets: 899-3993 or www.lucidstage.com; $17/$15 stuates a state-of-the-art hatchery in Biddeford, advocates enthusiasts, plus get updates on the latest happenings in dent and senior. “‘The Christmas Bride’ is a joyous holifor salmon restoration and assists with fi sh surveys and the Buy Local scene” Portland Museum of Art, 7 Congress day tale of love lost and found, home and family, faith habitat improvement. New members are welcome.” For Square. “We’ll be raffling off this new 42-inch HD LCD Vizio and forgiveness. From the bright English countryside to more information visit www.sacosalmon.com. Flatscreen TV, donated by The Marsh Agency Insurance on the dark underbelly of London town, this charming musiWedneday evening. Raffle tickets are available for $5 each cal follows young Marion Jeddler on her journey of disThursday, Dec. 15 or 5 tickets for $20. Purchase your tickets at the followcovery through a world filled with delightful Dickensian ing member businesses: Longfellow Books, Marsh Agency, characters and featuring a lively musical theater score. Planet Dog, University Credit Union, Videoport.” Suitable for all ages! Energy Efficiency Improvements talk 7:15 a.m. to 9:30 a.m. Environmental & Energy TechnolWest End Neighborhood Association meeting see next page ogy Council of Maine presents Energy Efficiency Improve6:30 p.m. The next West End Neighborhood Association


THE PORTLAND DAILY SUN, Wednesday, December 14, 2011— Page 15

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

house_overview.shtml

Photos with Santa at Children’s Museum

noon. Friday Local Author Series with Kristine Bertini, author of “Strength for the Sandwich Generation: Help to Thrive While Simultaneously Caring for Our Kids and Our Aging Parents,” Meeting Room 5, Portland Public Library.

2 p.m. to 4 p.m. Children’s Museum & Theatre of Maine. “Santa’s making some early visits to Portland this year and his favorite spot is right here at 142 Free Street! He’ll visit to the Museum & Theatre two more times: on Dec. 17 and 23 from 2-4 p.m. Sit on his lap, tell him your wish and don’t forget to say cheese — you can take home a 5”x7” photo from your visit in a festive paper frame for just $7.” www.kitetails.org

The Polar Express

Caroling in the park

2:45 p.m. The Polar Express is back, with an early train time of 2:45 p.m. and another First Class car. Fridays, Saturdays and Sundays through Dec. 23. The Polar Express will come to life when the Maine Narrow Gauge train departs its Ocean Gateway depot for a journey to the “North Pole.” Holiday decorations inside the train will add to the festive atmosphere as guests on board meet the conductor, have hot chocolate and a treat, listen to a reading of the enchanting story over our sound system, and sing carols. Santa will ride back with everyone to the train station from a special outpost of the North Pole and every child will receive their special bell on board the train. www.mainenarrowgauge. org/polar-express/

4:30 p.m. to 6:30 p.m. Friends of the Eastern Promenade invites the public to join in “for a favorite holiday tradition as we go a-caroling on the Prom and around Munjoy Hill. Carolers will meet at the Fort Allen Park bandstand at 4:30 p.m., just in time for the Christmas Boat Parade of Lights. We’ll begin by crooning carols as boats adorned with sparkling lights cruise the harbor. Sheet music will be provided, so never mind if you can’t remember all the lyrics to ‘The Twelve Days of Christmas.’ Afterwards, we’ll gather to warm up and enjoy refreshments at a private home.” http:// easternpromenade.org

Friday, Dec. 16 Friday Local Author Series at PPL

Gideon Bok Wall Drawings 7 p.m. Covers artist lecture and closing reception at SPACE Gallery. Free, all ages. “Gideon Bok worked in the gallery through November and December on a charcoal wall drawing, using SPACE as the subject. Gideon’s interior paintings and drawings highlight the passage of time, usually utilizing the space where the work is made. They feature the changing cast of characters who have stopped by, records strewn about, and other artifacts such as musical instruments, empty bottles, and semi-complete paintings. Gideon will give a slide talk about his work and we’ll celebrate the completion of this project at SPACE.” Presented with support from The Artists Resource Trust and Bangor Savings Bank.

Nutcracker Burlesque 7:30 p.m. This December, Vivid Motion’s holiday classic – Nutcracker Burlesque – returns to the St. Lawrence Arts Center, 76 Congress St., Portland. The show opens on Friday, Dec. 16, and runs Dec. 16-18 and Dec. 20-23; all shows with a 7:30 p.m. curtain. All seats are $15; order online at www.vividmotion.org or in person with cash or check at Longfellow Books, One Monument Way, Portland. Nutcracker Burlesque is not appropriate for children.

‘The Christmas Bride’ 8 p.m. Dec. 15-21, Snowlion Repertory Company presents: “The Christmas Bride,” a joyous holiday tale of love lost and found, home and family, faith and forgiveness. Showtimes are Dec. 15, 16, 17, 20 and 21 at 8 p.m., Dec. 17 at 2 p.m., and Dec. 18 at 3 p.m. The Dec. 17 matinee is ASL interpreted, and will be followed by a visit from Santa and Mrs. Claus! Lucid Stage, 29 Baxter Blvd., Portland. 899-3993

Saturday, Dec. 17 Port of Portland: A Ship-Shaped History in Bath 9:30 a.m. to 5 p.m. Maine Maritime Museum, Bath. Saturday, Dec. 17 through Sunday, May 13, 2012. General admission. “Maine Maritime Museum’s latest exhibit presents a vision of the history of Maine’s Gateway City as portrayed by the ships that have transited Portland Head to clear Spring Point Ledge, a series of vessels as diverse as the different eras they represent; vessels that have brought hope, grief, sustenance, prosperity, disapp ointment, and a good day’s work to its people.” For more information visit www.MaineMaritimeMuseum.org or call 443-1316 during business hours.

Bethel author Harry Faulkner in Portland 11 a.m. to 1:30 p.m. Bethel author Harry Faulkner will conduct a book signing at Works Bakery Café in Portland. Faulkner will be signing copies of his books “Brothers of Another Realm,” “The Gaslight’s Glow” and “The Quest for the Blue Star: Bloodlines.” “It has been an extreme pleasure to work with this talented and dedicated author,” said PublishAmerica Public Relations Director Shawn Street. “We look forward to a successful book signing event on the 17th.” Visit www.facebook.com/publishamerica.publisher and www.publishamerica.com

Music in the House 1 p.m. to 3 p.m. Music in the Longfellow House with pianist David Maxwell. Hear the newly-restored Chickering piano in the Longfellow House. Regular house tours will feature special musical accompaniment. Henry Wadsworth Longfellow purchased the Chickering square grand piano in 1843 when he came to Portland, during his honeymoon with his second wife, Frances Appleton. Holiday house tours will feature special musical accompaniment on the newly-restored Chickering piano. Participation available on a first-come, first-served basis. www.mainehistory.org/

Italian Heritage Center Band 7 p.m. Holiday Concert: With a Twist, Italian Heritage Center Band at Deering High School; in the Deering High School Auditorium. $10 at the door or call Bob at 781-8284 to get advance tickets for $7 or $6 for seniors. Students are free. Come in for a nice evening concert featuring The Italian Heritage Center Band, a local Portland band with about 50 members through the community. It is a nonprofit organization which rehearses at the center but is not affiliated with it. Nina Oatley is the Director. The IHCCB will be collecting non-perishable foods at the concert to support the Stone Soup Kitchen of Biddeford in their effort to fight hunger in Maine. For more information visit their website: www.italianheritagecenterband.com

Sunday, Dec. 18 Holiday Christmas Music 1 p.m. to 3 p.m. Eastland Park Hotel Greenhouse Room, Christmas Cantata and individual selections. Free punch and cookies.

Carols in the Library 2 p.m. to 3:30 p.m. Carols in the Library with the Choral Art Society. At the Longfellow House, Christmas carols in the Brown Library performed by the Choral Art Society, one of Maine’s premier choral groups. Seating is limited and registration is required. Please call 774-1822 to register. www. mainehistory.org/house_overview.shtml

Vesper Service and Pageant of the Nativity 4:45 p.m. First Parish Unitarian Universalist Church will present its 85th annual Vesper Service and Pageant of the Nativity in the historic Meeting House at 425 Congress St., just off Monument Square in downtown Portland. The public is most cordially invited to attend. First performed in 1926, First Parish Church’s Pageant of the Nativity continues its holiday tradition 85 years later. “Non-denominational in nature, this event makes no political or religious statement. Rather it uses a combination of music, historic text, and tradition to honor the birth of one of history’s great prophets. ‘The Pageant is an opportunity to stop and take an hour to quiet our hearts and reflect on the season,’ says First Parish minister, the Rev. Christina Sillari.” FMI: 7735747.

the Oratorio Chorale. Tickest on sale through PortTix. 270.842.0800.

Wednesday, Dec. 21 St. Augustine of Canterbury healing service 7 p.m. St. Augustine of Canterbury Church will hold a healing service in accordance with the Rites of the Church. The service will be followed by the Mass which includes the Holy Eucharist. The healing service includes anointing with oil and the laying on of hands as contained in Holy Scripture and according to the rites of the Church. Persons are welcome to attending both the healing service and the Mass that follows. St. Augustine’s is a Traditional and Orthodox Anglican Catholic Community, part of the worldwide Traditional Anglican Communion, with members in 44 countries. St. Augustine of Canterbury Church worships at 9:30 a.m. on Sunday, and Wednesday at 7 p.m. at the Cathedral Pines Chapel at 156 Saco Ave. in Old Orchard Beach. Father Jeffrey W. Monroe is Vicar and Fr. Joseph Bizimana is Asst. Vicar. For additional information, contact 799-5141.

Thursday, Dec. 22 Trinity Episcopal labyrinth 4 p.m. to 7:30 p.m. Trinity Episcopal at 580 Forest Ave. (entrance in rear) is offering its indoor Chartre-style labyrinth for meditative walks. Allow about 30 minutes. FMI 772-7421.

Friday, Dec. 23 ‘The Victorian Nutcracker’ 2 p.m. and 7.30 p.m. “Portland Ballet Company brings its own unique New England version of the Nutcracker to Merrill Auditorium with its beloved ‘The Victorian Nutcracker.’ The show, which takes the classic Nutcracker story and sets it in historical Portland, Maine with sets, costumes, and characters inspired by historical figures, will be performed twice at Merrill Auditorium on Friday, Dec. 23 at 2 p.m. and 7.30 p.m. The cast of professional dancers from the Portland Ballet Company, accompanied by the Portland Ballet Orchestra, is known for its lively, entertaining and beautiful Nutcracker. The Victorian Nutcracker features Portland Ballet Company’s professional dancers as well as Portland School of Ballet students selected by audition. This year’s conductor is Sean Newhouse, assistant conductor at the Boston Symphony Orchestra. Newhouse made an acclaimed last-minute debut with the Boston Symphony in February 2011, conducting Mahler’s Ninth Symphony on two hours’ notice in place of James Levine.” Tickets are available through PortTix at www.porttix.com. For details, visit www.portlandballet.org.

Tuesday, Dec. 20 Gingerbread Dream House. 2 p.m. Children’s Museum & Theatre of Maine. “Create Your Gingerbread Dream House. One of our favorite holiday traditions: the Annual Gingerbread House Workshops! We’ll supply a sturdy house kit and all the candy and icing you need to create a beautiful house to take home. The houses are pre-assembled, making them perfect for little hands — and leaving you time to focus on fancy flourishes!” www. kitetails.org

DEPA Business After Hours 5:30 p.m. to 7:30 p.m. The DownEast Pride Alliance hosts its “Business After Hours” Networking Event at the Cumberland Club, 116 High St., Portland. “Cash bar, lite food & media table. Bring business cards to share. See you there for ‘cocktails & conversation!’ Sponsored by Norman Hanson & Detroy, RBC Wealth Management & Sunday River. Find DEPA on Facebook and www.depabusiness.com

Christmas with Cornils 7:30 p.m. Christmas with Cornils, A Kotzschmar Christmas features Municipal Organist, Ray Cornils along with a variety of guests such as The Kotzschmar Festival Brass, The Parish Ringers, the Choral Art Society Camerata and

CHARLIE’S DINER Open Christmas Day from 9 - 12 Join us for a special CHRISTMAS BREAKFAST 1557 Bridgton Road Westbrook • 854-0048 We accept all major credit cards

Mon.-Thurs. 7am-2pm Fri. 7am-8pm Full Dinner Menu Sat. 7am-2pm Sun. 7am-1pm Breakfast only

BYOB


Page 16 — THE PORTLAND DAILY SUN, Wednesday, December 14, 2011

Former school board member tapped to take top admin job BY MATTHEW ARCO THE PORTLAND DAILY SUN

A former chairman of the Portland School Board has been tapped to take the reins of one of the district's top administrative positions. The school board approved Superintendent James Morse's recommendation to hire former board member Peter Eglinton as a top school administrator. The vote took place Tuesday during the school board's Eglinton regular monthly meeting. Morse's nomination of Eglinton passed unanimously. "It's clear to me that he has steadfast dedication," said Kate Snyder, chairwoman of the board, adding she was extremely pleased to be able to accept the superintendent's nomination. Eglinton said, quipping, "It is great to be here, I can't get away." He told the school board, "I look forward to working with all of you." Eglinton served as chairman of the school board when members approved hiring Morse as school superintendent. He is a Portland resident with a long list of public and private sector work that Morse says makes him the best candidate for the job as chief operations officer.

“Peter was by far the most outstanding candidate, and we’re thrilled to be able to nominate him.” — Schools Superintendent James Morse "Peter was by far the most outstanding candidate, and we're thrilled to be able to nominate him," Morse said in an interview prior to last night's meeting, explaining that about a dozen applicants applied for the position. Morse said he interviewed three finalists for the position and couldn't pass on Eglinton's professional experience, which includes serving as a policy analyst in the White House under two former presidents. "The other two applicants were very credible, but Peter really stood out among the three," Morse said. Eglinton will supervise the district's daily operations ranging from maintenance, food services to transportation, Morse said. His annual salary will be $115,000. The superintendent said Eglinton left the school board about 13 months ago. State law prohibits former board members from being appointed to an administrative position within 12 months of stepping down from the board, Morse said.

Mail is delivered near Cumberland Avenue in Portland Tuesday. A consolidation effort, aimed at reversing a loss of $3.8 billion by the Postal Service at the end of the 2009 fiscal year in October, started with about 3,300 stations and branches. Now, a decision has been delayed to next spring. (DAVID CARKHUFF PHOTO)

Post office closure reprieve praised U.S. Rep. Mike Michaud and U.S. Rep. Chellie Pingree both applauded the U.S. Postal Service’s announcement Tuesday that it has agreed to delay the closing or consolidation of any post office or mail processing facility until May 15, 2012. According to the Postal Service, it will continue all necessary steps required for the review of these facilities during the interim period, including public input meetings. “This is good news, but it isn’t the end of the road,” said Michaud. “I am committed to making sure Mainers continue to have access to the vital services that our post offices and their employees provide. I’m hopeful that Congress can work with the Postal Service to come up with a plan moving forward that results in as few post office closings as possible.” a U.S. Postal Service today decision to delay closing post offices until May of 2012. Currently, 30 Maine post offices are on the list for closure.

“This is welcome news for all the small Maine towns that depend on the local post office,” said Pingree. “This will give us more time to explain to the Postal Service how critical these offices are for our communities and to come up with a better solution for the service’s fiscal problems. There are several things we should be pursuing before closing the door on these Main Street staples. It should also give a little relief to the many people who have contacted me about the issue. I appreciate that the Postal Service is responding to the incredible amount of concern people have voiced.” There are eight offices in Pingree’s district currently on the list for closure: Chamberlain in Bristol, Bowdoin, Cliff Island and Station A in Portland, East Parsonsfield, East Vassalboro, Sebasco Estates in Phippsburg, and Trevett in Boothbay Harbor. Matinicus Island was on the list but was recently removed. — Staff Report


Turn static files into dynamic content formats.

Create a flipbook
Issuu converts static files into: digital portfolios, online yearbooks, online catalogs, digital photo albums and more. Sign up and create your flipbook.