The Portland Daily Sun, Thursday, September 29, 2011

Page 1

THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 29, 2011

VOL. 3 NO. 170

PORTLAND, ME

PORTLAND’S DAILY NEWSPAPER

See city manager Mark Rees’ update on page 3

City urged to let farmer’s market vendors sell unpasteurized milk

The lost decade

‘Miss Saigon’ See Michael J. Tobin’s theater review, page 8

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Farmer’s market fans: Raw milk given a raw deal

Police chief search draws a crowd

See David Brooks’ column on page 4

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BY DAVID CARKHUFF THE PORTLAND DAILY SUN

The federal government frowns on it, the state allows it and now farmers and their customers are asking the city to permit the sale of raw milk at Portland's three farmer's markets. Raw milk could become legal to sell at the city's farmer's markets if advocates can convince a city committee and the full city council to change local rules that currently exclude it. "Every farmer's market throughout the state of Maine allows the sale of raw milk, and for Portland not to just makes no sense at all," said Doug Donahue, organic dairy farmer with Balfour Farm in Pittsfield, who supports the ordinance change. "To be able to purchase Doug Donahue of Balfour Farm in Pittsfield displays raw milk, which he had on hand it anywhere else in the city Wednesday as part of an order by Rosemont Bakery. Donahue and other farmers believe without being able to at the the city should allow raw milk sales at the farmer's market. (DAVID CARKHUFF PHOTO) farmer's market, I just don't

“We’ve got a lot of unhappy customers.” — Doug Donahue, organic dairy farmer with Balfour Farm in Pittsfield understand it." In March 2000, the city amended the farmer's market ordinance to add pasteurized milk and milk products as allowable items for sale; unpasteurized milk and milk products remained off limits, according to city spokesperson Nicole Clegg. "Because raw milk has never been a part of the ordinance, it has never been permitted to be sold during the farmer's market," Clegg said. By the end of the year, that could change. The city council's see MILK page 6

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The Portland school district is planning to add staff within the next month to ease crowded classrooms and meet special needs at several city schools, Superintendent James Morse said this week. For now, he said the district’s most pressing need is for another kindergarten teacher at Reiche Community School, where class sizes in that grade are among the largest in the district.

“I wouldn’t be making this recommendation if I thought we could get by without them. I wouldn’t bring any ‘I wish I hads’ to the board. These are desperately needed positions.” — Jim Morse, schools superintendent, on overcrowding in Portland schools and solutions he proposes But Morse is also considering asking the school board to approve up to five new education technician positions, which would assist teachers at Ocean Avenue and other

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Page 2 — THE PORTLAND DAILY SUN, Thursday, September 29, 2011

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Where Washington needs fixing, way up there WASHINGTON — Add this to the list of pressing concerns in the nation’s capital: on Tuesday it was dealing with cracks in one of its best-known symbols. A climber in a safety harness clung to the top of the Washington Monument for most of the afternoon, fastening ropes so that a team of architects and engineers can inspect the damage wrought by the earthquake last month. The slow going of the work, together with the threat of rain, delayed the team’s rappelling until Wednesday. But the spectacle, unfolding a dizzying 555 feet off the ground, became a tourist attraction, with passers-by squinting at the ant-size man moving around slowly on the monument’s peak. The monument has been closed since the Aug. 23 quake, and it will stay that way until engineers determine the extent of the damage, officials from the National Mall and Memorial Parks said. One crack, in a block close to the top, was four feet long and more than an inch wide, large enough to allow light to shine in. Bob Vogel, the superintendent of the National Mall and Memorial Parks, said Monday that the structure was sound. The assessment will identify flaws to repair.

SAYWHAT... Monuments are for the living, not the dead.” — Frank Wedekind

Tonight Low: 57 Record: 27 (1957) Sunset: 6:26 p.m.

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3DAYFORECAST Today High: 65 Record: 85 (1945) Sunrise: 6:36 a.m.

Tomorrow High: 73 Low: 56 Sunrise: 6:37 a.m. Sunset: 6:24 p.m. Friday High: 71 Low: 48

DOW JONES 179.79 to 11,010.90 NASDAQ 55.25 to 2,491.58 S&P 24.32 to 1,151.06

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THETIDES Thursday High:12:30 a.m., 12:49 p.m. Low: 6:35 a.m., 7:08 p.m. Friday High:1:23 a.m., 1:40 p.m. Low: 7:25 a.m., 8:02 p.m.

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As scorn for vote grows, protests surge around globe MADRID — Hundreds of thoudeep in Europe, with boycotts and sands of disillusioned Indians strikes that, in London and Athens, cheer a rural activist on a hunger erupted into violence. strike. Israel reels before the largBut even in India and Israel, est street demonstrations in its where growth remains robust, history. Enraged young people in protesters say they so distrust Spain and Greece take over public their country’s political class and squares across their countries. its pandering to established interTheir complaints range from est groups that they feel only an corruption to lack of affordable assault on the system itself can housing and joblessness, common bring about real change. grievances the world over. But Increasingly, citizens of all ages, from South Asia to the heartland but particularly the young, are of Europe and now even to Wall rejecting conventional structures Street, these protesters share like parties and trade unions in something else: wariness, even favor of a less hierarchical, more contempt, toward traditional poli- In Greece, a protest in front of the Finance Ministry. Parliament passed a property-tax participatory system modeled in law Tuesday. ticians and the democratic politimany ways on the culture of the cal process they preside over. Web. They are taking to the streets, in part, because they have little faith In that sense, the protest movements in democracies are not altoin the ballot box. gether unlike those that have rocked authoritarian governments this “Our parents are grateful because they’re voting,” said Marta Solayear, toppling longtime leaders in Tunisia, Egypt and Libya. Protestnas, 27, referring to older Spaniards’ decades spent under the Franco ers have created their own political space online that is chilly, somedictatorship. “We’re the first generation to say that voting is worthtimes openly hostile, toward traditional institutions of the elite. less.” The critical mass of wiki and mapping tools, video and social netEconomics have been one driving force, with growing income working sites, the communal news wire of Twitter and the ease of inequality, high unemployment and recession-driven cuts in social donations afforded by sites like PayPal makes coalitions of likespending breeding widespread malaise. Alienation runs especially minded individuals instantly viable.

Even those cleared of crimes can stay on F.B.I.’s watch list WASHINGTON — The Federal Bureau of Investigation is permitted to include people on the government’s terrorist watch list even if they have been acquitted of terrorism-related offenses or the charges are dropped, according to newly released documents. The files, released by the F.B.I. under the Freedom of Information Act, disclose how the police are instructed to react if they encounter a person on the list. They lay out, for the first time in public view, the legal standard that national security officials must meet in order to add a name to the list. And

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they shed new light on how names are vetted for possible removal from the list. Inclusion on the watch list can keep terrorism suspects off planes, block noncitizens from entering the country and subject people to delays and greater scrutiny at airports, border crossings and traffic stops. The database now has about 420,000 names, including about 8,000 Americans, according to the statistics released in connection with the 10th anniversary of the Sept. 11 attacks. About 16,000 people, including about 500 Americans, are barred from flying.

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Administration asks justices to rule quickly on health law WASHINGTON — The Obama administration asked the Supreme Court on Wednesday to hear a case concerning the 2010 health care overhaul law. The development came unexpectedly fast and makes it all but certain that the court will soon agree to hear one or more cases involving challenges to the law, with arguments by the spring and a decision by June, in time to land in the middle of the 2012 presidential campaign. The Justice Department said the justices should hear its appeal of a decision by a three-judge panel of the United States Court of Appeals for the 11th Circuit, in Atlanta, that struck down the centerpiece of the law by a 2-to-1 vote. “The department has consistently and successfully defended this law in several courts of appeals, and only the 11th Circuit Court of Appeals has ruled it unconstitutional,” the Justice Department said in a statement. “We believe the question is appropriate for review by the Supreme Court.

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More than a dozen so far apply for Portland police chief position BY MATTHEW ARCO THE PORTLAND DAILY SUN

The search for a new chief of police has started, and the city has received at least 14 applications as of Wednesday — less than a week after the position was officially advertised. City Manager Mark Rees announced his decision to hold a national search for a new top commander during a Public Safety Committee meeting on Sept. 13. Since that time, Portland has started receiving applications and Rees named members of an interview committee. According to the job description, the city is looking for someone with 10 years of law enforcement experience, five years of which are in a department comparable to Portland’s, and at least three years of experience with upper-level command. Candidates must also have at least a bachelor’s degree. Stated expectations of the position range from working together with top city staff, managing the department of 216 employees and an annual operating budget of $13.4 million, to cooperating with numerous social services agencies to address the city’s homeless and transient population, according to the job description. The deadline for submitting an application is Oct. 18 at 5 p.m. Applications will then be vetted by city staff before they are turned over to the newly appointed interview panel, which will conduct interviews and details the pros and cons of each candidate. “The interview panel is not going to rank candidates,” said Nicole Clegg, the city’s spokeswoman. “They will be giving an assessment of each (candidate).” Members of the 12-person panel are: Anita LaChance, assistant city manager; Doug Gardner, director of Portland’s Health and Human Services; Gary Hutcheson, president of the Police Supervisors Officers Benevolent Association; Sally Chandler, NAACP representative; Kelley MacDonald, chair-

woman of the Citizens Police Review Committee; Gary Wood, city attorney; Fred LaMontagne, fire chief; Eric Nevins, president of the Police Benevolent Association; Mariano Mawein, chairman of the Sudanese Community Association; Michael Bourque, president of Portland Community Chamber of Commerce; Suzanne McCormick, president and CEO of United Way of Greater Portland, and Belinda Ray, East Bayside Neighborhood Association. “These folks will do the interviews and the assessment center will come and do its process,” Clegg said. The city plans to release its bid process for finding an assessment center by the end of the month. One will be selected by Nov. 11 and chosen candidates will participate in a series of real life scenarios administered by the center. The entire hiring process is expected to cost between $10,000 and $15,000, Rees said. Members of the interview panel were chosen for their area of expertise and to have a wide Rees scope of views, opinions and knowledge be part of the selection process, Clegg said. Members say they are excited to get started. “I think the perspective that I’m bringing to the interview process for the new chief is that I’m looking for someone who shares the philosophy that law enforcement is important in bringing social change to the community,” said McCormick, who works with a number of city nonprofits in her role at the United Way.

Arrest made in cold case Maine State Police arrested a 55-year-old Industry man Wednesday in connection with a homicide case left unsolved for more than three decades. Jay Mercier was charged with murder after he was indicted earlier this month by a Somerset County grand jury. Police say forensic technology was used recently to link Mercier to the death of Rita St. Peter. St. Peter’s body was found in Anson on July 5, 1980. She was 20 at the time and was last seen walking across the bridge from Madison to Anson after a night drinking with her friends at a nearby bar. The case remained active since the time of her death, police said. The case was advanced by a recent review of the evidence at the state police crime lab. Officials would not say specifically what evidence was tested or how Mercier was linked to the murder. He was arrested at his Industry home without incident at about 8:30 a.m., police said. He has worked as a laborer for most of his life and was living with a girlfriend at the time of his arrest, police said. St. Peter is survived by a daughter and a half sister. Mercier was being held at Somerset County Jail. — Matthew Arco

“We need someone who wants to be part of solutions in our community and goes beyond just sort of the traditional notion of just enforcing the law,” she said, adding that “someone who is committed to community policing” would be a strong candidate in her view. “I’m coming from the perspective of the business community,” said Bourque, of the local Chamber of Commerce. “I think there’s a sense (in the business community) that there’s been some good things that have happened in the police department in the past couple of years and … there’s some things that we want to make sure continue,” he said. “Preserving what we have here — which is an important retail, tourist and business district — … are things that are important to those that are there now and those that may start a business in the future.” Ultimately though, the decision will come down to Rees’ recommendation. Final interviews done by Rees are expected to take place by sometime mid-December. A finalist will be selected by Jan. 6, according to the tentative schedule. The Portland Police Department has been under the command of acting Chief Michael Sauschuck since August. Sauschuck took command after former Chief James Craig left the department for a position in Cincinnati; he was hired following a national search. Some city councilors have said publicly that Sauschuck should be named chief, while others favor opening the position up to a nationwide search. Rees said during the Public Safety Committee meeting that he made his decision after getting preliminary feedback on the issue from city officials and staff. He said he approved of the work being done by Sauschuck and that he expected him to be strong candidate for the position if he applies. Rees’ recommendation must meet City Council approval. (Contact Matthew Arco at matt@portlanddailysun.me.)

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Page 4 — THE PORTLAND DAILY SUN, Thursday, September 29, 2011

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Shared meals, shared knowledge This year, Slow Food USA, which defines “slow food” as good for its eaters, its producers and the environment — a definition anyone can get behind — set out to demonstrate that slow food can also be affordable, not only a better alternative to fast food but a less expensive one. The organization issued a $5 Challenge with the inspired rallying cry of “take back the ‘value meal’,” which in most fast food restaurants runs somewhere around five bucks. Under the leadership of its president, Josh Viertel, Slow Food has moved from a group of rah-rah supporters of artisanal foods to become a determined booster of sustainability and of real food for everyone. Last month it called for people to cook pot luck and community dinners ––––– for no more than $5 per person. The New York “We gave ourselves a month to Times launch the first big public day of action in what we hoped would become an ongoing challenge,” says Viertel. “In those four weeks we hoped to organize 500 people to host meals on Sept. 17. Our dream was to have 20,000 people participate.” They did far better than the 500-meal mark; more than 5,500 people hosted dinners, and more than 30,000 enjoyed the new value meal. Slow Food intends

Mark Bittman

see BITTMAN page 5

We want your opinions All letters columns and editorial cartoons are the opinion of the writer or artists and do not reflect the opinions of the staff, editors or publisher of The Portland Daily Sun. We welcome your ideas and opinions on all topics and consider every signed letter for publication. Limit letters to 300 words and include your address and phone number. Longer letters will only be published as space allows and may be edited. Anonymous letters, letters without full names and generic letters will not be published. Please send your letters to: THE PORTLAND DAILY SUN, news@portlanddailysun.me. You may FAX your letters to 899-4963, Attention: Editor.

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The lost decade? If you want a big swig of despair, listen to the people who know something about the global economy. Roger Altman, a former deputy Treasury secretary, is arguing that America and Europe are on the verge of a disastrous double-dip recession. Various economists say it will be at least another three years before we see serious job growth. Others say European banks are teetering — if not now, then early next year. Walter Russell Mead, who teaches foreign policy at Bard College, recently laid out some worst-case scenarios on his blog: “It is about whether the international financial system will survive the next six months in the form we now know it. It is about whether the foundations of the postwar order are cracking in Europe. It is about whether a global financial crash will further destabilize the Middle East. ... It is about whether the incipient signs of a bubble burst in China signal the start of an extended economic and perhaps even political crisis there. It is about whether the American middle class is about to be knocked off its feet once again.” The prognosis for the next few years is bad with a chance of worse. And the economic conditions are not even the scary part. The scary part is the political class’s inability to think about the economy in a realistic way.

David Brooks ––––– The New York Times This crisis has many currents, which merge and feed off each other. There is the lack of consumer demand, the credit crunch, the continuing slide in housing prices, the freeze in business investment, the still hefty consumer debt levels and the skills mismatch — not to mention regulatory burdens, the business class’s utter lack of confidence in the White House, the looming explosion of entitlement costs, the public’s lack of confidence in institutions across the board. No single one of these currents prolongs the crisis. It is the product of the complex interplay between them. To put it in fancy terms, the crisis is an emergent condition — even more terrible than the sum of its parts. Yet the ideologues who dominate the political conversation are unable to think in holistic, emergent ways. They pick out the one factor that best conforms to their preformed prejudices and, like blind men grabbing a piece of the elephant, they persuade themselves they understand the whole thing.

Many Democrats are predisposed to want more government spending. So they pick up on the one current they think can be cured with more government spending: low consumer demand. Increase government spending and that will pump up consumer spending. When President Obama’s stimulus package produced insufficient results, they didn’t concede that maybe there are other factors at play, which mitigated the effects. They just called for more government spending. To a man in love with his hammer, every problem requires a nail. Many Republicans, meanwhile, are predisposed to want lower taxes and less regulation. So they pick up on the one current they think can be solved with tax and regulatory cuts: low business investment. Cut taxes. Reduce regulation. All will be well. Both orthodoxies take a constricted, mechanistic view of the situation. If we’re stuck with these two mentalities, we will be forever presented with proposals that are incommensurate with the problem at hand. Look at the recent Obama stimulus proposal. You may like it or not, but it’s trivial. It’s simply not significant enough to make a difference, given the size of the global mess. We need an approach that is see BROOKS page 5


THE PORTLAND DAILY SUN, Thursday, September 29, 2011— Page 5

Decoding the God complex Medical schools are starting to train doctors to be less intimidating to patients. And patients are starting to train themselves to be less intimidated by doctors. We haven’t completely gotten away from the syndrome so perfectly described by Alec Baldwin’s arrogant surgeon in the movie “Malice”: “When someone goes into that chapel and they fall on their knees and they pray to God that their wife doesn’t miscarry or that their daughter doesn’t bleed to death or that their mother doesn’t suffer acute neural trauma from postoperative shock, who do you think they’re praying to? ... You ask me if I have a God complex. Let me tell you something: I am God.” But there have been baby steps away from the Omniscient Doctor. The federal Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality has begun a new campaign to encourage patients to ask more pertinent questions and to prod doctors to elicit more relevant answers. “I used to think, ‘He’s a doctor. Who am I to ask a question?’ ” Bill Lee, a Baltimore man who has suffered 10 heart attacks, says in a video on the agency’s Web site urging people to speak up. Patients have more options, a flood of Internet information and a bombardment of drug ads listing side effects — and that can be terrifying. It adds to the general anxiety level that health insurance costs are rising sharply and that President Obama’s health care law seems headed toward the Supreme Court. The “experts” are always issuing guidelines, which are soon contradicted by another set of “experts.” It happened with the recommended age for regular mammograms, and it’s happening with guidelines on hormone replacement for postmenopausal women. First, estrogen was going to be the fountain of

youth. Then hormone replacement therapy was going to spell doom, causing heart disease, stroke and breast cancer. And now, as The ––––– Wall Street Journal reported on Tuesday, “some experts are reachThe New York ing a more nuanced view of the Times risks and benefits and concluding that hormone therapy may still be a good option for healthy women in their 50s, depending on their symptoms, family history and worst fears.” Each patient, a Michigan gynecologist told The Journal, is like a Rubik’s Cube, and must get an individual solution. That is also the message of a new book, “Your Medical Mind: How to Decide What Is Right for You,” by Jerome Groopman, an oncologist, and his wife, Pamela Hartzband, an endocrinologist, both members of the Harvard faculty and staff physicians at Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center in Boston. Few people have done as much to demystify medicine as Dr. Groopman, who has written four other books and lots of New Yorker essays aiming to help doctors understand that patients are often neglected allies with good intuition, and to help patients get confidence and control by understanding how doctors think. Like a Middle East peace broker, he aims to lower the stress level and bring together two sides who perpetually misunderstand each other. With his white beard, 6-foot-5 stature and friendly manner, the Queens native certainly looks trustworthy. Stephen Colbert once accused Groopman of “trying to look like God.” And I can say from personal experience — since I’ve known him, he’s provided guidance that helped save the lives of three members of my family — that he is a fierce, sensitive and generous patient advocate. (And an aficionado of Irish literature.)

Maureen Dowd

Dr. Hartzband and Dr. Groopman warn against excessive reliance on overreaching so-called experts and nebulous metrics and statistics. “The answer often lies not with the experts but within you,” they write, adding that the Albert Einstein line is apt: “Not everything that can be counted counts, and not everything that counts can be counted.” The authors stress that “the best” and “informed” can be subjective terms, and that your prognosis can often look very different if you “flip the frame” of reference. They try to decode the Orwellian language that prevents physicians and patients from cooperating, and show how doctors can project their own preferences on patients. They interview patients who are Doubters and Minimalists, who may agree with Voltaire’s view that “the art of medicine consists in amusing the patient while nature cures the disease.” And they interview Believers and Maximalists, who go for radical treatments too quickly. They confess that they have a mixed marriage: Dr. Hartzband tends to be a Doubter (her mom’s mantra was “Doctors don’t know everything”) while Dr. Groopman tends to be a Believer (a status that got shaken when he jumped into a spinal fusion operation that had “disastrous consequences.”) “The unsettling reality,” they write, “is that much of medicine still exists in a gray zone, where there is no black or white answer about when to treat or how to treat.” But they are both optimists who warn against the “focusing illusion” — focusing on what will be lost after a colostomy, mastectomy, prostate surgery or other major procedures. “The focusing illusion,” they write, “neglects our extraordinary capacity to adapt, to enjoy life with less than ‘perfect’ health.”

All too often , we let the perfect be the enemy of the good BITTMAN from page 4

to make this an ongoing project, and is calling for a repeat performance of the $5 Challenge for Oct. 24, which not coincidentally is Food Day. (That’s another subject, but I encourage you to click that link; the six goals on Food Day’s home page succinctly sum up the current issues in food.) Frugality in cooking has a long and powerful history and a pathetic present. With the exuberant abundance of the post-war half-century, many Americans forgot the lessons brought over from the old countries, honed during the rapid but harsh development of the 19th century, the lean years of the Depression, the rationing of the 1940s. Old-timers made soup from scraps, saw potatoes as a main course and considered three squares the pinnacle of good living. Can you imagine? Now fast-food joints litter the eight-lane thoroughfares that rip through most cities and suburbs. If you want a pizza, you reach into the freezer or make a phone call; you get hungry, you pop something in the microwave, pull into the drive-thru, wait on a line. We have become accustomed not to real food but to “convenience,” one of the filthiest of modern catchwords, and to the ill health and waste associated with it. (Some estimate that 50 percent of all food produced in the U.S. is wasted, and that doesn’t include the junk that isn’t worth producing in the first place.) Though cooking is healthier for land and bodies,

marketing, habit, social pressures and the false belief that it’s expensive (it isn’t, as I demonstrated in this Review piece Sunday), have all but killed it. To become a healthier, more sustainable population — in every sense of both adjectives — one of the major goals of the foreseeable future must be to encourage a shift from ubiquitous fast food to the all-but-vanished craft of cooking and associated thrift. How that might happen is the subject of thousands of conversations, but the movement is in full swing, as the Slow Food campaign demonstrates. Showing that buying normal ingredients from a regular grocery store and cooking them at home is cheaper than going out to eat doesn’t present much of a challenge, but feedback I get when I write about this shows both that it surprises some people while leaving others wondering why this common knowledge isn’t more common. One problem is that too often we let the perfect be the enemy of the good. If we paint the only acceptable alternative to fast food as local, sustainable, organic and fair, we make it nearly impossible to progress along the spectrum from bad food to better food. Ethical, sustainable food is surely the ideal, but to get there we have to encourage the purchase and preparation of available food that can then be cooked (or eaten raw, for that matter) at home. There are millions of people throughout the country who routinely buy and cook “slow food” — I’d prefer the term “real food,” but whatever — and spend very

little money doing it. (Five dollars per person is a generous, even unachievable budget in many kitchens, but it really is no more than the cost of fast food — and for many people it’s a trifle — and it’s a sum that will allow and encourage cooks to upgrade to sustainably raised food.) Slow Food wanted to find out how thrifty shopper-cooks do what they do, and to encourage them to share their tips and tricks with one another and with as many neighbors as possible, and the site on which they do so is fun and inspiring. All of this is indeed a “challenge” largely because we’ve strayed so far from our roots. Real food, generally speaking, is seasonal food, a notion that has been reduced to pumpkins turned into jack-o-lanterns, followed by cranberry sauce (sweetened with high-fructose corn syrup, no less). Yet shopping and cooking seasonally means eating more locally, eating less imported food, relying on staples like grains and beans, reducing your food’s carbon footprint and eating a healthier diet — all desirable outcomes. There is a steep learning curve here, along with the well-publicized issues of access. Not just seasonal food but any fresh food is difficult to find for some people, and even more people have no idea what to do with it once they bring it home. Slow Food believes that the very best way to build the kind of social movement needed to produce the systemic changes that they seek is to start small: to share knowledge and to share meals. What’s wrong with that?

We need an approach that is both grander and more modest BROOKS from page 4

both grander and more modest. When you are confronted by a complex, emergent problem, don’t try to pick out the one lever that is the key to the whole thing. There is no one lever. You wouldn’t be smart enough to find it even if there was. Instead, try to reform whole institutions and hope that by getting the long-term fundamentals right you’ll set off a positive cascade to reverse the negative ones.

Simplify the tax code. End corporate taxes and create a consumption tax. Reshape the European Union to make it either more unified or less, but not halfway as it is now. Reduce the barriers to business formation. Reform Medicare so it is fiscally sustainable. Break up the banks and increase capital requirements. Lighten debt burdens even if it means hitting the institutional creditors. There are six or seven big institutions that are fundamentally diseased, from government to bank-

ing to housing to entitlements and the tax code. The Simpson-Bowles report on the deficit was an opportunity to begin a wave of institutional reform. But that proposal died because our political leaders are too ideologically rigid to take on big subjects like tax reform, which involve combining Republican and Democratic ideas. The failure to seize that moment was one of the Obama administration’s gravest errors. The world economy has many rigidities. The worst ones are in people’s heads.


Page 6 — THE PORTLAND DAILY SUN, Thursday, September 29, 2011

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clerk several more times in the head and face with his fist. “The suspect then grabbed the beer and walked to the pickup truck,” Rogers said. Police are searching for a green Chevy S-10 pickup. The suspect was described as a white male about 5 feet 10 inches tall and weighing between 190 and 240 pounds, with short hair. Officials say another man — described as a white male with shoulder-length gray hair, 5 feet 10 inches tall and weighing 250 pounds — was standing near the pickup truck. A third white male was driving the vehicle, Rogers said. At least two people witnessed the attack. People with information are asked to contact the Portland Police Department at 874-8533 or text an anonymous tip from a mobile phone using keyword “GOTCHA” plus their message to 274637 (CRIMES).

Health and Recreation Committee is scheduled to consider the matter at its Nov. 15 meeting, and after that, with two readings by the city council, the ordinance could be amended. If approved, raw milk sales could begin at the winter market, which runs January through April at the Maine Irish Heritage Center. Currently, a Wednesday market in Monument Square and a Saturday market in Deering Oaks Park are operating tentatively through November, with no allowed raw milk sales, per the ordinance. The issue is controversial. Pasteurization — heating milk to at least 130 degrees for at least 45 seconds, or 160 degrees for at least 15 seconds — was invented in 1864 and has become the federally preferred method of milk preparation. The federal government says pasteurization can stave off food-borne pathogens. But raw-milk advocates say pasteurization sterilizes milk of its nutrients, without providing proven safety benefits. A crowd of raw-milk advocates approached the city's Health and Recreation Committee at its meeting Tuesday night, but the item of raw milk wasn't on the agenda, so no decisions were made. "They didn't really want to talk about it last night, but we kind of pushed the issue, there were quite a few customers from the market who showed up," Donahue said. Clegg said farmers periodically request additions to the list of items allowed for sale at farmer's market, but this is the first time for raw milk to come up. "Over time, we have added other items that they produce on their farms, like the hard cider is a new one, there's been a request to add that to the ordinance," she said. The exclusion of raw milk is

“We actually pasteurized when we first started doing farmer’s markets here in the state, we pasteurized some, and we couldn’t get rid of it. Nobody wanted it. We would literally bring quite a bit to market and we would take every bit of it home, we didn’t sell any.” — Doug Donahue, organic dairy farmer with Balfour Farm in Pittsfield strictly based on the ordinance language, Clegg said. "The state allows it as long as it's labeled properly. Stores can sell it, this is just because it's the farmer's market and we have a particular ordinance that applies to items that can be sold there," she said. Donahue said popular desire for raw milk is cresting. "Raw milk is huge, there's huge demand for it," he said. "On the milk, I would say that nearly everybody wants unpasteurized milk, period," Donahue said. "We actually pasteurized when we first started doing farmer's markets here in the state, we pasteurized some, and we couldn't get rid of it. Nobody wanted it. We would literally bring quite a bit to market and we would take every bit of it home, we didn't sell any." Still, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention's National Center for Infectious Diseases is one federal agency that discourages the consumption of raw milk. "Raw milk and raw dairy products may carry many types of disease-causing germs such as Campylobacter, Escherichia coli, Listeria, Salmonella, Yersinia, and Brucella," the center reports on its website. "When raw milk or raw milk products become contaminated, people who eat the contaminated foods can get sick." Donahue said raw-milk advocates can rebut these arguments. "There's an issue with anything, you buy lettuce from here at the farmer's market, you could buy it from the grocery store, and it could make you sick. There's a

chance that you could go to the grocery store and buy a pound of hamburger, and if you don't handle it properly, it's going to make you sick," he said. Keeping raw milk cold is one safe-handling staple emphasized on the raw-milk websites. But the sites contain volumes of information contesting the foodsafety arguments of the federal government. The website, realmilk.com, reports that in Maine, "raw milk sales are legal on the farm and in retail stores. Raw milk and raw milk products must have a label on the product containing the words 'not pasteurized.' Farmers do not have to obtain a permit to sell raw milk if their sales are only on the farm and they do not advertise." In New Hampshire, realmilk. com reports that raw milk sales are legal "on the farm, through home delivery, through the final consumer purchasing directly from a milk pasteurization plant, and at a boarding house provided that the milk is produced on the premises and the boarding house dining room displays a sign stating that raw milk is served therein." It is possible to purchase raw milk or obtain it from herd shares in 39 out of 50 states, the site states. Members of the public in Maine's largest city are pushing for raw milk, Donahue said. For now, the Portland farmer's markets won't be the place to find it, which is causing some chagrin. "We've got a lot of unhappy customers," Donahue said.


THE PORTLAND DAILY SUN, Thursday, September 29, 2011— Page 7

Amazon unveils tablet that undercuts iPad THE NEW YORK TIMES

politan, Vanity Fair, Wired and Glamour. “We’re building premium products at non-premium prices,” said Mr. Bezos. “We are determined to do that.” Mr. Bezos also introduced a speedy custom-built mobile browser, called Amazon Silk, which he said was “cloud-accelerated,” combining Amazon’s computing

Board could vote on new hires at Oct. 4 meeting SCHOOLS from page one

“I wouldn’t be making this recommendation if I thought we could get by without them,” he said yesterday. “I wouldn’t bring any ‘I wish I hads’ to the board. These are desperately needed positions.” It will cost about $170,000 to fund all six positions, Morse estimated. In a Sept. 27 memo to the school board, he said the city’s high schools and middle schools are showing stable enrollment numbers and acceptable class sizes. In fact, most city schools have fewer students this year compared with last year, but certain grades at certain elementary schools are the exception. “Elementary numbers in Kindergarten at Reiche, 5th grade at Presumpscot, Kindergarten and 4th grades at Ocean Avenue, and 2nd and 3rd grades at Lyseth continue to be problematic in terms of numbers,” he wrote in the memo. Reiche’s three kindergarten classrooms have 21, 21 and 22 students each, compared with the districtwide average of about 19 students per kindergarten class. Beyond the numbers, changing demographics at the West End school have also proved challenging. For instance, district officials estimate that 44 percent of the students in Reiche’s incoming kindergarten class are English

language learners. Kevin Brewster, one of two “teacher leaders” at Reiche, said yesterday that each kindergarten class has about four students that speak little or no English and “three or four others” that know some English. Administrators at the school have already prepared a list of students that would populate a new classroom if the teacher position is funded. “We made sure they are balanced for gender, English-language learners and (kids with) special needs,” he said. The school board discussed the possible hires at a workshop Tuesday night, though no decisions were made. The board could vote on the new hires at its meeting on Oct. 4. It’s become common in the past few years for the district to hire a handful of new teachers or teacher aides after the school year starts, said Elizabeth Holton, an at-large school board member. Based on what’s been presented, she said the district is seeking fewer new hires this year than in years past. “My personal position is that if we need to fill a need in a classroom, if there are too many kids in one classroom, especially in younger grades, and with a more challenging population, then I am totally in support of providing them with the teacher that they need,” she said. Any new ed. tech positions

would likely be assigned to schools located off Peninsula, where enrollment figures changed dramatically this year with the opening of Ocean Avenue School, which is already at capacity. “Consideration should be given to hire an aide for each building to assist teachers in meeting student needs,” Morse wrote in the memo. “In addition to classroom based Ed Tech needs, we need to consider the addition of a half-time Medical Ed Tech at the Lyseth/Moore campus.” The medical position is necessary to help school nurses care for students with serious medical conditions, Morse said. Last year, the school district eliminated almost 80 positions through layoffs and an early retirement incentive. Among those laid off were nearly threedozen teachers and support staff who had just a year or two of experience. Unlike veteran teachers who are laid off, Morse said the district is not obligated under the current collective bargaining agreement to rehire these socalled “probationary” teachers when new positions open up. He said the district would “certainly” consider applications from laidoff teachers. Depending on several factors, Morse predicted the new hires could be in the classroom within two weeks after the jobs are approved.

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cloud with the Kindle Fire device. “It’s truly a technical achievement,” he said. Amazon plans to begin taking preorders for the Fire on its Web site immediately, and they will start shipping Nov. 15. Mr. Bezos said the company was “making many millions of these.” The Kindle Fire includes a free cloud-based storage system, meaning that no syncing with cables is necessary. Mr. Bezos seemed to take a swipe at Apple, saying, “That model that you are responsible for backing up your own content is a broken model.” This first model of the Fire sends and receives data only over Wi-Fi, not cellular networks. Like the iPad’s screen, the screen on the Fire has so-called in-plane switching technology, meaning that unlike some LCD screens it can be viewed from a variety of angles, not just straight on. Mr. Bezos also introduced several new e-readers, including the Kindle Touch, a lightweight version of its current Kindle models, with the addition of infrared touch features to the black-and-white display. The Touch, which costs $99, has no buttons, and users navigate by tapping the sides of the screen. The device is available for preorder beginning Wednesday and will start shipping Nov. 21.

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Page 8 — THE PORTLAND DAILY SUN, Thursday, September 29, 2011

ARTS –––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––– THEATER REVIEW–––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––

‘Miss Saigon’ provides emotional capstone “Miss Saigon,” Ogunquit Playhouse The Ogunquit Playhouse closed its 79th season brilliantly with the epic love story, “Miss Saigon.” Taking inspiration from the Puccini opera “Madame Butterfly,” Ogunquit’s production captures your heart and your emotions, proving once again why the Playhouse is America’s foremost summer theatre. Musical Director, Ken Clifton, has provided the best vocals of the season. To hear the ensemble sing is worth the price of admission times ten. Director Paul Dobie creates a solid foundation with many emotional layers that are well paced and actionpacked. Choreographer Robert Tatad set every mood perfectly, from the smallest choreographed nuances to the well-executed dance numbers. Jennifer Paz (Kim) and Gregg Goodbrod (Chris) set the stage ablaze with their powerful Broadway caliber performances. Paz’s character arc convincingly went from virginal, shy girl to strong survivalist during the Vietnam War. Goodbrod’s American soldier gave emotionally charged conflict as his life is torn apart by the war. Paz and Goodbrod’s vocals blended perfectly, their solo numbers a stand-out. Goodbrod’s vocals in Ellen and Chris, was a highlight. Although the script unites the two characters unbelievably fast, their performances leave no doubt of their unwavering love and self sacrifice. Raul Aranas (Engineer) slithers into his role with triple threat talent, giving the audience a love-hate relationship that often leaves you laughing. Nik Walker (John) gave the show-stopping number of the evening with his powerhouse performance of “BuiDoi.” His fine acting, character transitions and relationships were clearly defined. Amanda Rose (Ellen) brought another show-stopping number to the stage with the conflicted, “Now That I’ve Seen Her.” Austin Ku (Thuy) did not have the acting strength or look needed for the ferocity of his jilted role. The ensemble was collectively outstanding and individually multi-talented. Opening number, “The Heat Is On In Saigon,” was an immediate show-stopper, beautifully staged. The entire show taking your emotions hostage and staying with you long after

Michael J. Tobin ––––– Theatre Talk the last note is brilliantly sung. A personal “job very well done” to my former classmate, Gary Thomas Ng, who played several roles in the ensemble. The period costumes were provided by Costumes World, nothing wrong but nothing spectacular. Set design by Michael Anania was appropriate; however, the execution was not as tight as previous shows. The playbill states that costumes and sets had been Jennifer Paz and Gregg Godbrod star in Ogunquit Playhouse’s production of one of Broadway’s alldesigned and built for time emotional blockbusters, “Miss Saigon.” (COURTESY PHOTO) other theaters — and they looked it. However, the certainly worthy of the accolades it received. much anticipated helicopter sequence was very well Next season, the Playhouse celebrates 80 years. done and a show-stopper. Lighting design by RichI personally hope they continue to “push the artisard Latta provided a professional, well-executed tic envelope” when selecting their season. Shows look, complementing each scene. Sound designer, being considered next summer include “9 to 5,” “The Jeremy Oleksa, eventually found the right balance Buddy Holly Story,” “Victor/Victoria,” the return of for the singers, as the seven very talented musicians “Menopause the Musical,” and several other (thankplayed almost non-stop for three hours. fully) not-overly-done titles. Ogunquit Playhouse provided thousands of people “Miss Saigon” plays though Sunday, Oct. 23. For with a season of top-notch musicals and I will miss more information go to www.ogunquitplayhouse.org my monthly date with their professional producor call 646-5511. tions. My unexpected favorite show was “Summer Of Love,” a production that touched me (and the (Michael J. Tobin has been a professional actor, direcaudience) on so many levels and proved what techtor, theatre administrator and educator for 30 years nical excellence truly is. Bravo Michele Lee! “Avenue in theaters throughout New England and around the Q” gave me so many laugh-out-loud moments with Country. Mr. Tobin has performed and directed in 350a super-stellar cast. “Legally Blonde” was just plus shows Off-Broadway, National Tours, Regional plain fun with the unstoppable, very talented Sally Theatre, Summer Stock, Children’s Theatre and ComStruthers. “Music Man” was my least favorite but munity Theatre. Mr. Tobin lives in South Portland.)

–––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––– MUSIC CALENDAR –––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––

Thursday, Sept. 29 Rubblebucket at Port City 7 p.m. Rubblebucket’s second studio album, Omega La La produced by Eric Broucek (LCD Soundsystem, !!!, Holy Ghost) @ DFA Studios & mastered by Joe Lambert (Animal Collective, Dirty Projectors, Herbie Hancock) was released on June 21. Port City Music Hall.

Chris Botti at Merrill 7:30 p.m. Merrill Auditorium, Portland. “Since the release of his 2004 critically acclaimed CD ‘When I Fall In Love,’ Chris Botti (pronounced boat-tee) has become the largest selling American instrumental artist. His success has crossed over to audiences usually reserved for pop music and his ongoing association with PBS has led to four No. 1 Jazz Albums, as well as multiple Gold, Platinum & Grammy Awards. Over the past three decades, he has recorded and performed with the best in music; including Frank Sinatra, Sting, Josh Groban, Michael Buble, Paul Simon, Joni Mitchell, John Mayer, Andrea Bocelli, Joshua Bell and Aerosmith’s own Steven Tyler.” http:// portlandovations.org

Connor Garvey CD Release 8 p.m. Local favorite and nationally touring folk troubadour

Connor Garvey returns to One Longfellow Square to release his 4th album “Where Ocean Meets Land.” One Longfellow Square. http://www.onelongfellowsquare.com

Friday, Sept. 30 New England Americana Songwriter’s Night 8 p.m. Six acclaimed local songwriters from around the Northeast will team up for one show. The event is free to the public. The line-up includes: Sarah Blacker: www.sarahblacker.com; John Colvert: www.johncolvert.com; Sam Otis Hill: www.samotishill.com; Jay Baisner (of This Way): www.thiswayband.com; Jeff Conley: www.jeffconleyband. com; Patrick Coman: www.patrickcoman.com. At Port City Blue. www.portcityblue.com

Rodney Crowell at One Longfellow 8 p.m. Rodney Crowell honed his songwriting chops with his compadres Townes Van Zandt and Guy Clark. He was at the center of Emmylou Harris’s Hot Band in the 70s; he’s a Grammy-winning songwriter and he produced then-wife Rosanne Cash’s chart-topping work of the 80s. One Longfellow Square. http://www.onelongfellowsquare.com

Rodney Crowell with Kris Kristofferson at the Nashville Walk of Fame Induction Ceremony on Nov. 7, 2010. (COURTESY PHOTO)

Big Blood in Biddeford 8 p.m. Big Blood, Garm, Inspector 22 at The Oak & The Ax, 140 Main St., Biddeford. Also art opening with new work by Colleen Kinsella. http://theoakandtheax.blogspot.com see next page


THE PORTLAND DAILY SUN, Thursday, September 29, 2011— Page 9

–––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––– MUSIC CALENDAR ––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––– from preceding page

Saturday, Oct. 1 Elizabeth Mitchell 11 a.m. SPACE Gallery, in association with Bloom Arts & Events, presents Elizabeth Mitchell. A Smithsonian Folkways Recording artist, Mitchell has been recording and performing music for children since 1998. Elizabeth was the first new children’s music artist signed to Smithsonian Folkways Recordings in the 21st century. Also 2 p.m. http://www.space538.org/events.php

Emilia Dahlin in New Gloucester 7:30 p.m. The Village Coffeehouse in New Gloucester is very excited to once again feature Emilia Dahlin. Ms. Dahlin was recently selected as one of the top ten local musicians to put on your “must see” list by Down East magazine. She was also voted best local female vocalist in 2005, 2006, 2007 and was winner of the Great Waters Songwriting Competition in Wolfboro, New Hampshire. She’s a “self-made original” and the quintessential indie musician, wearing the hat of artist, manager, booking agent, and publicist at once. For more information see, www.emiliadahlin. com. The Village Coffeehouse is located at the First Congregational Church at the corner of Rt. 231 and Gloucester Hill Rd., New Gloucester, Maine. Tickets at the door are $10 for adults and $5 for seniors and children. For more information call Julie Fralich 926-3161 or the church office 9263260. Show starts at 7:30 p.m. For more information on the Coffeehouse, see www. villagecoffeehouse.org.

Johnson’s Crossroad 8 p.m. Johnson’s Crossroad has been described by friends and fans as everything from “Appalachian Soul” to “Hillbilly Metal.” The new album ‘Mockingbird’ puts songwriter Paul Johnson squarely in line with names like Guy Clark or Zac Brown and his powerful voice evokes memories of folk stars like Tom Waits, Taj Mahal or Burl Ives. The sincerity of his songs and simplicity of his lyrics make you want to pour a brew, put your feet up or head to the hills. Johnson’s Crossroad makes you remember what is important in life. Moses Atwood is carving his tremendous raw talent into a powerful, yearning musical voice. Over the next several years he plans to sculpt a truly great contribution to American music. www. onelongfellowsquare.com

Sunday, Oct. 2 Season Opening Celebration for PSO 2:30 p.m. Portland Symphony Orchestra with Robert Moody, conductor, and Awadagin Pratt, piano. Also Tuesday at 7:30 p.m. Merrill Auditorium. https://tickets.porttix. com/public/show.asp

An Evening with Primus 8:30 p.m. SOLD OUT. State Theatre presents Primus. Primus’ major label debut was the album Sailing the Seas of Cheese. The album was supported by the singles “Jerry Was a Race Car Driver” and “Tommy the Cat,” both of which appeared on MTV. Fans of “South Park” will recognize their work in the theme song. www. statetheatreportland.com

Tuesday, Oct. 4 Shinji Masuko (DMBQ, Boredoms) with AWAAS at SPACE Gallery 9 p.m. Shinji Masuko, founder of legendary Japanese psych outfit DMBQ and principal guitarist with noise rock titans Boredoms since 2004, comes to SPACE in support of his first solo release, Woven Music. http:// www.space538.org/events.php

Wednesday, Oct. 5 Jackson Browne Solo 7:30 p.m. “Playing guitar and piano, Jackson Browne will perform songs from his entire body of work, with varying set lists. He has released two albums of acoustic music, Jackson Browne — Solo Acoustic, Vol. 1 & 2. In Rolling Stone’s four star review of Volume 2.” Merrill Auditorium. https://tickets.porttix.com/public/show.asp

The Mutineers CD release 8 p.m. Local acoustic music trio/ quartet The Mutineers celebrate the release of “Drover’s Bones,” their third album of traditional and original songs with unique and soulful arrangements. The Mutineers’ third recorded project is officially due out on Oct. Lovewhip, the Jamaica Plain, Mass.-based electro group , whips up furiously infectious dance songs. The group will 5, when the trio will host a CD- perform at Bubba’s Sulky Lounge on Saturday, Oct. 15. (COURTESY PHOTO) release party at One Longfeldies, richly textured harmonies and vibrant on Middle Street in Portland is going to low Square in Portland. www. dancing. Shifting Caribbean tempos onelongfellowsquare.com explode in a mass of funk and hip-hop as and Afro-Cuban beats propel the Choir’s Grant Street hosts a party for the release undiscovered musical treasures from of their debut album with friends, dancing, Saturday, Oct. 8 Haiti, Dominica and Cuba. From laments and great music. Headliners Grant Street and protests to celebrations of enduring Orchestra will close out the night in a cavUSNA Men’s Glee Club love and freedom - each note evokes a alcade of funk, with help from a handful of 7:30 p.m. Portland Symphony Orchestra powerful story handed down in song special guests. A few new songs will debut, with Robert Moody, conductor; the U.S. through generations. The Grammy-nomalong with an expansion of their already Naval Academy Men’s Glee Club directed inated ensemble is quickly earning its impressive horn section. by Dr. Aaron Smith. “The PSO is thrilled place alongside Ladysmith Black Mamand honored to open the 2011-2012 Pops bazo, Soweto Gospel Choir and Sweet Saturday, Oct. 15 season with one of America’s premier Honey in the Rock as one of the great men’s choral ensembles. The 80 Midshipchoirs of the world.” https://tickets.portmen in the group, directed by Dr. Aaron tix.com/public/show.asp Lovewhip at Bubba’s Smith, will perform choral masterpieces, 9 p.m. Lovewhip and The Whipettes with Grant Street Orchestra popular music, patriotic songs, traditional Mr. Dereloid at Bubba’s Sulky Lounge in 8 p.m. Seven-piece Funk/Hip-Hop group sea shanties, and a variety of other works. Portland. Boston’s Lovewhip plays elecGrant Street Orchestra is having a party Anchors aweigh!” https://tickets.porttix. tro disco pop, world rock. www.facebook. to celebrate the arrival their first full length com/public/show.asp com/Lovewhip album “Passionately Late.” The Big Easy

Tuesday, Oct. 11 Screaming Females with The Underground Railroad To Candyland, Mouth Washington 8 p.m. With a mash-up of punk and diybased influences New Jerseys Screaming Females is coming back to Portland for their first headlining show at SPACE. Known as one of the hardest working bands in North America, they are moving their way through New England after a European tour to promote the re-release of their first album Baby Teeth. California’s playful pop-punk The Underground Railroad To Candyland will open along with Portland’s own DIY rocker princes Mouth Washington. SPACE Gallery.

SOLAR TOUR Saturday October 1st

Wednesday, Oct. 12 Jonathan Richman, Tommy Larkins 9 p.m. Jonathan Richman has been writing songs, making records and performing live for most of his life, winning fans and making friends around the world with his guileless honesty and playfully catchy compositions. He began playing guitar at the age of 15, and in the early 1970s formed the Modern Lovers, whose raw, minimalist sound and emotionally forthright songs helped to lay the groundwork for punk rock. Over the years, Jonathan’s music has absorbed a multitude of influences, from doo-wop to country to a variety of international styles, without sacrificing the artist’s effervescent personality. SPACE Gallery.

Friday, Oct. 14 Creole Choir of Cuba 8 p.m. Presented by Portland Ovations at Merrill Auditorium. “Celebrating roots, resistance, and the irresistible rhythms of life, the Creole Choir of Cuba captivates audiences with their passionate melo-

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SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 21). You have a different level of awareness and therefore will not follow the same path as those around you. You’ll do your own thing and find your own way of avoiding pitfalls and potholes. SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21). There is a wide spectrum of choices available to you, but they are not all so readily seen. You won’t really understand your options until you’ve experienced a few of them, so dive in. CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19). Your sacred wish will be mysteriously granted. If you asked 10 people why the practice of sacred wishing works, you would get 10 different answers, and all of them would be, in a way, true. AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18). Your DNA does dictate some aspects of your life, though perhaps not as many as you thought. You’ll embrace your physical gifts and find a way to frame your limitations that makes them seem like assets. PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20). You will be generous with your time and your creativity. This generosity is attractive to many, and you’ll have to be careful about whom you let into your life so as not to be taken advantage of. TODAY’S BIRTHDAY (Sept. 29). Your professional life will be invigorated, and you will take pleasure in finding new ways to be useful to others when you are not working. You’ll receive unexpected gifts and money now through October. In 2011, creative projects are instrumental to a healing process. Romance is featured in April. Aries and Taurus people adore you. Your lucky numbers are: 40, 1, 25, 38 and 10.

DAILY CROSSWORD TRIBUNE MEDIA SERVICES

by Lynn Johnston

By Holiday Mathis you.

by Paul Gilligan

ARIES (March 21-April 19). People will follow and learn from you. You are someone people want to be like. You will effortlessly provide quality education and responsible recreation. It’s just who you are. TAURUS (April 20-May 20). You have a network of friends, but you are not dependent on them and do not feel the need to be in constant contact with them. Because you are your own person, you have more to give your friends. GEMINI (May 21-June 21). You’ll chuckle wisely and walk with the shamans. Maybe you’ll get caught up in the race again or return to other kinds of silliness tomorrow. But for now, you’re peacefully “over” it all. CANCER (June 22-July 22). You’re on a roll, and the momentum will continue to build as long as you don’t interrupt it. You stay focused on what’s going great in your life, and the great happenings just keep coming. LEO (July 23-Aug. 22). You are helpful by nature to such a degree that you can hardly hold back your help from anyone who appears to need it. You should be careful not to assume people are in need, though. Ask to be sure. VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22). You know that your life has a purpose, but you’re not always sure exactly what that purpose is and how you could manifest it to the greatest effect. You’ll get some clarity on the matter today. LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 23). Keep marching forward. Don’t tiptoe, and don’t run. The best approach will be steady, temperate, measured and determined. If you are working with a team, they easily will fall in step with

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, Thursday, September 29, 2011

1 5 10 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 22 24 25 26 29 30 34 35 36 37 38 40

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41 43 44 45 46 47 48 50 51 54

64 65 66 67

Golfer’s aide Solemn pledge Actress Bonet Leg joints Crash into Grows weary Actor Ustinov Ear of corn __ to; against “The __ City”; St. Louis, MO Departs Cramps Uncle Ben’s product Knowledge of traditions Northeastern U. S. state Actress Paquin BPOE members Drive too fast Lewd glance

1 2

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58 59 61 62 63

3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 21 23 25 26 27 28 29 31 32 33

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35 36 38 39 42

“__ whiz!” Chop down Ascends Actor Selleck Removes from the throne 44 Conservative’s opposite 46 Baggage porter 47 Little child

49 50 51 52 53 54 55 56 57 60

76ers & 49ers Boxed up Womanizer’s look Combine Make coffee Autry or Kelly Chablis or port Zits Twelve months Hurry

Yesterday’s Answer


THE PORTLAND DAILY SUN, Thursday, September 29, 2011— Page 11

––––––– ALMANAC ––––––– Today is Thursday, Sept. 29, the 272nd day of 2011. There are 93 days left in the year. Today’s Highlight in History: On Sept. 29, 1789, the U.S. War Department established a regular army with a strength of several hundred men. On this date: In 1829, London’s reorganized police force, which became known as Scotland Yard, went on duty. In 1907, the foundation stone was laid for the Washington National Cathedral, which wasn’t fully completed until this date in 1990. In 1918, Allied forces began their decisive breakthrough of the Hindenburg Line during World War I. In 1938, British, French, German and Italian leaders concluded the Munich Agreement, which was aimed at appeasing Adolf Hitler by allowing Nazi annexation of Czechoslovakia’s Sudetenland. In 1957, the New York Giants played their last game at the Polo Grounds, losing to the Pittsburgh Pirates, 9-1. (The Giants moved to San Francisco.) In 1982, Extra-Strength Tylenol capsules laced with cyanide claimed the first of seven victims in the Chicago area. (To date, the case remains unsolved.) In 1986, the Soviet Union released Nicholas Daniloff, an American journalist confined on spying charges. In 2005, John G. Roberts Jr. was sworn in as the nation’s 17th chief justice after winning Senate confirmation. One year ago: Anti-austerity protests erupted across Europe; Greek doctors and railway employees walked off the job, Spanish workers shut down trains and buses, and one man rammed a cement truck into the Irish parliament to protest the country’s enormous bank bailouts. Today’s Birthdays: Actress Lizabeth Scott is 89. Actor Steve Forrest is 86. Actress Anita Ekberg is 80. Writer-director Robert Benton is 79. Singer Jerry Lee Lewis is 76. Actor Ian McShane is 69. Jazz musician Jean-Luc Ponty is 69. Actress Patricia Hodge is 65. TV personality Bryant Gumbel is 63. Rock singer-musician Mark Farner is 63. Rock singer-musician Mike Pinera is 63. Country singer Alvin Crow is 61. Actor Drake Hogestyn is 58. Singer Suzzy Roche (The Roches) is 55. Comedian-actor Andrew “Dice” Clay is 54. Rock singer John Payne (Asia) is 53. Actor Roger Bart is 49. Singer-musician Les Claypool is 48. Actress Jill Whelan is 45. Actor Luke Goss is 43. Rock musician Brad Smith (Blind Melon) is 43. Actress Erika Eleniak is 42. Actress Emily Lloyd is 41. Actress Natasha Gregson Wagner is 41. Actress Rachel Cronin is 40. Actor Alexis Cruz is 37. Actor Zachary Levi is 31. Country singer Katie McNeill is 29. Rock musician Josh Farro is 24.

THURSDAY PRIME TIME 8:00

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SEPTEMBER 29, 2011

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24

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25

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NCIS “Judgment Day”

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35

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Baseball Tonight (N)

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ANT Farm Wizards

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38

CNN Anderson Cooper 360

Piers Morgan Tonight

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John King, USA

40

CNBC Supermarkets

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The Coffee Addiction

Mad Money

41

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Greta Van Susteren

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43

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Bones (In Stereo) Å

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44

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47

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48

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49

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50

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52

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56

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57

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60

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78

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DAILY CROSSWORD BY WAYNE ROBERT WILLIAMS

South Park South Park Tosh.0

1 6 10 14 15 16 17 19 20 21 23 28 29 30 32 33 34 36 39 40 41

Daily Show Colbert

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Adventures

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42 Kind of horse or cow 43 Tense 44 House gofer 45 Slangy turndown 47 Fizzle 48 Roof overhangs 49 Sidestepped 52 Twisted doughnuts 54 Attire 56 Be penitent 57 Delibes and Durocher 58 Stewart doing a Scottish dance? 64 Aphrodite’s boy 65 Tooted 66 Get all melodramatic 67 Hindu attire 68 Sailing vessel 69 American Beauties

1 2 3 4

DOWN Straight punch QB Manning Hospital wing Capital of North

5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 18 22 23 24 25 26 27 31 34 35 37 38 40 44

Carolina Medicine man Disencumbered NCAA grouping Milne’s Winnie Projecting nose Of primitive groups Marley with hair extensions? Inspiring reverence “Angie Baby” singer Helen Fanatic fan Raptor’s plunge Operatic highlights Thickheaded Little with the needy? Pressed Funny Old fogy Related group Owed Type of beaver? Garb for a girl Nearer the ground Sicilian capital

46 Andre of the courts 48 Evader 49 Bucolic valleys 50 “Carmen” or “Norma,” e.g. 51 Annual Kentucky event 53 Capacious coffeepot 55 “Damn Yankees”

siren 59 Dawn lawn coverage 60 Hole maker 61 Goddess of the dawn 62 Summer at the Sorbonne 63 Bandleader Brown

Yesterday’s Answer


Page 12 — THE PORTLAND DAILY SUN, Thursday, September 29, 2011

NY police to examine pepper-spray episode at ‘Occupy Wall Street’ protest and questioned whether the snippet he saw offered enough context to evaluate what occurred. Asked about the episode at a press briefing on Wednesday, Mr. Kelly did not offer an explanation for why Inspector Bologna selected the four women out of the larger crowd as a target. “I don’t know what precipitated that specific incident,” he said, but added that demonstrators as a group were engaged in “tumultuous conduct” and were “intent on blocking traffic” as they marched down University Place on their return from Union Square to the financial district, where the protesters have been encamped for more than a week. Mr. Kelly said concerns about the pepper spray episode had been referred to the Civilian Complaint Review Board, an independent agency that investigates allegations of police misconduct. Mr. Kelly said the department would also “look at it ourselves as

well,” and added that the internal inquiry would be handled by the Internal Affairs Bureau. Inspector Roy T. Richter, the head of the Captains Endowment Association, the union that represents the upper echelons of city officers, said that he was not surprised the police brass was reviewing the role of officers at the demonstrations, “given the notoriety the Wall Street protests have attracted in the media.” He added that Deputy Inspector Bologna “will cooperate with whatever investigative body the police commissioner designates to perform this review. Deputy Inspector Bologna’s actions that day were motivated by his concern for the safety of officers under his command and the safety of the public. The limited use of pepper spray effectively restored order without any escalation of force or serious injury to either demonstrator or police officer.”

THE

(NY TIMES) — Police Commissioner Raymond W. Kelly said on Wednesday that the Internal Affairs Bureau will look into the decision of a high-ranking officer to use pepper spray on a number of female protesters at an Occupy Wall Street demonstration on Saturday. The pepper spray episode occurred on East 12th Street, where police officers arrested some protesters and corralled others behind orange mesh netting. It was captured on video recordings made by several protesters from different vantage points. The video, which has been posted on YouTube, shows a deputy inspector walking up to a group of women standing on the sidewalk behind the orange netting and shooting pepper spray at them. The deputy inspector, identified as Anthony Bologna, then walked away. Commissioner Kelly said he had seen video of the pepper spraying only on a television newscast,

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BUYING Junk vehicles, paying cash. Contact Joe (207)712-6910.

COMPASS Project rowboatSeaworthy, $399/obo. Call (207)774-6779.

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ANNIE’S MAILBOX Dear Annie: I have been married to “George” for 11 years. In the past two, George and I have had sex only three times. Lately, when I go to kiss him, he turns away. I have asked George if there is someone else or if he has a medical issue, but he denies both. I’ve been told I am quite attractive, but he seems interested only in the financial stability I provide. I am so frustrated. The only thing keeping me here is that I am taking classes at a local college and am close to finishing. I would like to save my marriage, but can’t do it by myself. Am I wasting my time? I don’t get the impression that George even likes me, let alone loves me. -- Need an Outsider’s Insight Dear Need: If George thinks he has a medical problem, he should be willing to see a doctor -- and you should encourage him to do so. If he were having an affair or if he were gay, however, he might not tell you. Get some counseling and figure out whether it is worth staying in this loveless marriage. Dear Annie: My sister is getting married next spring. My husband and I are excited for her, but we live in the Midwest, and they are getting married in Hawaii. My husband and I don’t make much money. We’ve been saving for three years to go to Hawaii on our anniversary in January. We would prefer to go on our own vacation rather than deplete our savings in order to attend my sister’s wedding. To be fair, it didn’t cost my sister a dime to attend my wedding, and even she has admitted that she was a lousy maid of honor -- rude and demanding. Now my sister is furious that we are not planning to attend. She has demanded that I put my student loans into forbearance, get a second job, go without my husband, or

that we use our vacation funds. I feel that if she wants to have a destination wedding, great, but she can’t expect people to spend that kind of money, and she has no right to dictate how others choose to spend their money. She has been quite nasty to me and is badmouthing us to our friends and family. Am I wrong not to spend our money for her wedding? -- Frustrated with Finances Dear Frustrated: We will admit that your sister sounds like a selfish spoiled brat, but we also believe one should make every effort to attend major family events. You already have the money saved up to go to Hawaii. Why not combine your vacation with her wedding? After the rest of the guests go home (or before they arrive), you and your husband can enjoy the trip you planned, even if it is not on the exact day you wanted. This is what family members do when they love each other (although your sister certainly doesn’t make it easy). Dear Annie: I read the letter from “Suffering Soon-toBe Ex,” whose wife left him after he made the incredible blunder of saying he wished he’d found his wife’s sister first. A few years ago, my co-worker made a huge mistake during a business conference call. The very next day, he wrote on the white board in his office, “Think fast. Talk slow.” I thought you might want to pass this sage advice along to your readers. We were able to save the client. I hope “Soon” is as fortunate. -- Slow Talker Dear Slow: We hope so, too. Thanks for the excellent words to live by.

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

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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.


THE PORTLAND DAILY SUN, Thursday, September 29, 2011— Page 13

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

Thursday, Sept. 29 140th annual Cumberland County Fair 7 a.m. Senior Citizens Day — Old Time Radio Gang - Bobby Reed, Fourth Annual Classic Car Show — Lawnmower Racing — Hysong Gospel Group. Special Ride Promotion Pay $15 Ride All Rides. Weighing Oxen, Horses and Steers, 7 a.m. to 9 a.m.Through Oct. 1. www.cumberlandfair.com

Grand opening of Sustainability and Energy Alternatives Center at SMCC 10 a.m. Southern Maine Community College will celebrate the grand opening of its Sustainability and Energy Alternatives Center at the College’s South Portland campus. Developed through federal and state grants, the SEA Center is the centerpiece of SMCC’s new initiatives to drive sustainability, including the development of new college courses and workforce training in renewable energy, energy auditing and weatherization. Equipped with state of the art equipment, the SEA Center lab offers students the chance to work with a broad array of renewable energy systems, including solar photovoltaic and solar hot water systems, as well as fully functional pressurized test house that is used to train energy auditors. The Center will also serve as a forum for community events, educational programs, and other activities relating to sustainability and energy efficiency. The event will feature Congresswoman Chellie Pingree and SMCC President Ronald Cantor who will mark the occasion with comments at 10 a.m. Following the speaking part of the program, SEA Center Director John Brautigam will demonstrate some of the unique tools used in the Center, including the “pressure house.”

Necessary Work opening at City Hall 5 p.m. to 8 p.m. The city of Portland and Art at Work will sponsor a reception for the opening of Necessary Work, an exhibit showcasing some of the art, stories, photographs, and poems created during Portland’s last four years with Art At Work. Specific projects represented by the artwork include Forest City Times, Lines Portland, Public Works, Ties That Bind, Thin Blue Lines, and City Writers Group. The opening reception will feature a welcome from City Manager Mark Rees, followed by members of the Portland Police Department reading poems and performing excerpts from the original performance Radio Calls as well as a few stories from Public Service’s Construction Crew and the City Writers Group. The event is free and open to the public. Light refreshments will be served. The exhibit will continue through March, with more work to be added from two new citywide projects — Portland Works and Meeting Place. City Council Chambers Gallery, City Hall, Portland.

Artspace hosted by Creative Portland 6 p.m. Creative Portland is hosting a presentation by Artspace — a nonprofit based in Minneapolis, Minn. that specializes in the development of artist live/work space — in the Rines Auditorium of Portland Public Library. The meeting is free and open to the public. The 30-45 minute interactive presentation will include information about Artspace’s model for developing artist live/work space and examples of their projects throughout the country. Following the presentation, attendees will be invited ask questions, provide feedback and contribute their views on community needs and interest in such a project in Portland. This meeting is part of a two-day visit by representatives from Artspace to provide a preliminary assessment for the development of artist live/work space in the city. During their visit, Artspace will meet with a variety of stakeholders, including developers, city officials, community members, funders, artists and cultural institutions to ascertain the needs, issues and interest in this type of project. While in Portland, Artspace will visit potential development sites, including the St. Lawrence Arts Center on Munjoy Hill, the Portland Public Works garage at 55 Portland Street, and several properties at the corners of Hampshire and Federal Streets in the India Street neighborhood. They will also participate in a driving tour of the city to view properties in the Bayside neighborhood and along Commercial Street.

The Decline of River Herring 7 p.m. to 8 p.m. Doors open at 6:30 p.m. Gulf of Maine Research Institute. 350 Commercial St. “River herring (alewives and blueback herring) have played an important historical role in New England’s coastal communities and in the ecology of coastal rivers and nearshore regions of the Gulf of Maine. Populations have exhibited dramatic declines over the past 20 years despite efforts to remove dams and restore waterways. There are many suspects in the recent declines, including striped bass predation, habitat degradation, water flow problems, and continued poor passage at dams. However, the most talked about cause is the bycatch of river herring in the mid-water trawl fishery. Dr. Michael P. Armstrong will discuss a close examination of new data that indicates that bycatch may be part of the problem, but not the primary cause for the recent decline.” Please RSVP to Patty Collins, lectures@gmri.org; 228-1625.

Keith Darling gives his dog a wide leash ... or no leash. Nathaniel, a Golden retriever, carries his own leash, something he has learned to do quite well, according to Darling. They were walking along State Street. On Saturday, dog owners are welcome at the Woofminster Dog Show & Cover Dog Challenge with Planet Dog at Camp Ketcha, Scarborough from 1 p.m. to 4 p.m. (DAVID CARKHUFF FILE PHOTO)

Friday, Sept. 30 140th annual Cumberland County Fair 7 a.m. There are so many exciting things planned for this milestone anniversary. 7 a.m. to 9 a.m. Weighing all Draft Horses and Oxen; 9 a.m. to 9 p.m. Exhibition Hall, Museum, Sugar House, Horticulture Open. Cumberland Fair Maine Maple Day — International Horse Pulling: USA vs. Canada — Debbie Meyers. www.cumberlandfair.com

Moore Students Community Service Project 1 p.m. A team of eighth grade students at Lyman Moore Middle School in Portland will present their public policy proposal about encouraging students to participate in community service to the Rotary Club of Portland at Holiday Inn by the Bay. The team created the proposal last school year as part of Project Citizen, a program that involves students in researching current problems and proposing solutions. They were one of four teams chosen to represent Moore at the Project Citizen State Showcase in Augusta last May. The team’s proposal would require all Maine schools to take two field trips every year that focus on community service. Each school could pick their field trip destination as long as the teachers and students could tie it to improvements in the community. Team members are Abdirisak Musse, Hilary Kingsbury, Joey Burke, Katy Cyr, Alysha Alling and Julia Jordan. Moore Assistant Principal Kathleen Ball served as their Project Citizen mentor and she will accompany them to the Rotary Club presentation. Moore seventh graders will participate in Project Citizen again this year. In the past, Moore’s Project Citizen teams have won state and national awards, generated grant funds for student-initiated projects and helped to influence public policy issues in Portland. For more information about the program, please contact David Hilton at hiltoda@ portlandschools.org.

First Lady Michelle Obama in Portland 1 p.m. to 2 p.m. Ocean Gateway Pier, Obama Victory Fund 2012 — Afternoon Reception with the First Lady. The Maine Democratic Party writes, “Please help us welcome Michele Obama to Maine. Click on this link for more details: http://my.barackobama.com/sep30portofportland? custom1=5173794 or call us at 622-6233.” Email rfleury@ barackobama.com

Bird Walk at the Quarry Run 5:30 p.m. to 6:30 p.m. Bird Walk at the Quarry Run. “Join Derek and Jeannette Lovich from Freeport Wild Bird Supply

for a birding walk in the Quarry Run, they’ll be looking for migrant sparrows and other species that like the weedy fields of the old landfill. Trekkers will also look at the changing habitat at the Quarry, especially the proliferation of invasive plants. There’s a possibility of seeing 10 species of sparrows, as well as rare-but-regular visitors, particularly Dickcissel and Orange-crowned Warbler. Meet at the Quarry Run in the Ocean Ave Recreational Area.” www. trails.org/events.html

‘Confessions of a New Age Refugee’ 7 p.m. “Losing My Religion: Confessions of a New Age Refugee,” written and performed by Seth Lepore, directed by Thomas Griffin. The Hive, Kennebunk; $12 advance/$15 door Tix for show available at www.brownpapertickets.com or visit www.thehivekennebunk.com; www.facebook.com/ thehivekennebunk. The Hive, 84 Main St., Kennebunk.

New England Americana Songwriter’s Night 8 p.m. Six acclaimed local songwriters from around the Northeast will team up for one show. The event is free to the public. The line-up includes: Sarah Blacker: www.sarahblacker.com; John Colvert: www.johncolvert.com; Sam Otis Hill: www.samotishill.com; Jay Baisner (of This Way): www.thiswayband.com; Jeff Conley: www.jeffconleyband. com; Patrick Coman: www.patrickcoman.com. At Port City Blue. www.portcityblue.com

Saturday, Oct. 1 140th annual Cumberland County Fair 7 a.m. There are so many exciting things planned for this milestone anniversary. 7 a.m. to 9 a.m. Weighing all Draft Horses and Oxen; 9 a.m. to 9 p.m. Exhibition Hall, Museum, Sugar House, Horticulture Open. World of Horses Show, NPPA Truck Pull, Don Campbell, Brian Wardwell. 8 a.m. Make-A-Wish Foundation Tractor Pull, Front of Grandstands. www.cumberlandfair.com

Portland Jetport: Open house for new terminal 9 a.m. to noon. Public open house for the Portland International Jetport’s brand new expanded terminal. From 9 a.m. to noon, visitors will be able to tour the new facility before it officially opens for business on Sunday, Oct. 2. This is a family friendly event and refreshments and giveaways will be available for children. Parking vouchers will be provided for this event. Portland International Jetport, 1001 Westbrook St., Portland. see next page


Page 14 — THE PORTLAND DAILY SUN, Thursday, September 29, 2011

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Greater Portland Christian School homecoming 10 a.m. Greater Portland Christian School is holding its homecoming; at 10 a.m., Maine Christian School Sports League JV Game, Grace Christian Academy @ GPCS JV; noon, Girls Varsity Soccer (MPA), Calvary Chapel @ GPCS; 2 p.m., Varsity Boys Soccer (MPA), Acadia Christian @ GPCS; 4 p.m., Alumni Game; 5:30 p.m., Alumni Cookout. “GPCS Invites all Alumni back to cheer on our soccer teams and participate in the annual Alumni Soccer Game.”

Maine Marathon Kids’ Mile 10 a.m. Portland’s Back Cove will be the scene of the first Maine Marathon Kids’ Mile, beginning at 10 a.m. The event will benefit Big Brothers Big Sisters of Southern Maine and is part of the Maine Marathon, which take place the following day. To participate, athletes must be 7 to12 years of age on the day of the race. Medals will be awarded to all finishers and trophies will be given to the top three boys and the top three girls. Official Maine Marathon Kids’ Mile t-shirts will be given to the first 500 athletes who register for the race. Race registration can be done online at www.KidsMile.kintera.org, or in-person on the day of the race from 8 to 9:40 a.m. at the Maine Marathon start line, near the Hannaford entrance on Bedford Street in Portland. There is a $12 entry fee for the Kids’ Mile (only $10 for registrations returned to the BBBS or postmarked by Monday, Sept. 19). Prizes will be given to all participants raising more money for Big Brothers Big Sisters. The names of athletes who raise $100 or more over the registration amount will be entered into a drawing to win an iPad. The drawing will take place right after the race on Saturday, Oct. 1. Online registration can be done by visiting: www.KidsMile.kintera.org. The site also introduces all the fundraising opportunities, qualifying participants to win the extra prizes. Call 773.5437 or email info@somebigs.org with questions. Media sponsors are MaineBiz, FOX23 and Q-97.9. Big Brothers Big Sisters of Southern Maine is committed to making a positive difference in the lives of young people, focusing on prevention, primarily through professionally supported one-toone relationships with volunteers. For more information may call 773-KIDS or visit www.somebigs.org.

Brunswick Fall Festival 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. Brunswick Fall Festival, Downtown Brunswick and Town Mall. The Brunswick Dog Park Committee will host fundraising/fun activities for dogs and owners on the mall in Brunswick. Additionally, there will be a sidewalk sale, arts and crafts show, apple pie contest, free flu shots, and loads of children’s activities including face painting, balloon sculptures, “Candy Playtime” with Wilbur’s Chocolates, and Life Is Good “Playmakers” who work with children who are survivors of natural disasters or trauma.

Kat Powers at The Mill Store 10 a.m. to noon. Join Kat Powers, a Maine based, do-ityourself enthusiast, instructor, and interior decorator for a free workshop on painted furniture at The Mill Store located at Payne Road in Scarborough. Kat will share time saving tips and tricks for professional looking painted and stained finishes. Also, learn how to create your own antique looks with weathered and distressed painted finishes. To register call 885-9200. This is a free workshop but space is limited so call today.

Downtown Brunswick Fall Festival 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. In Downtown Brunswick: on the Town Mall, at Brunswick Station and on Maine Street, fun activities for the whole family. Sidewalk sale; craft fair; dog events; free flu shots; fire prevention activities; music; children’s activities; apple pie contest; downtown restaurant activities; Wilbur’s Fine Chocolates “Candy Play”; geocaching event. FMI, www.brunswickdowntown.org

Play me a Story: (Not too) Scary Stories 10:30 a.m. “What makes you feel scared? Whether it’s bullies or monsters under the bed — we’ve got a story to help you cope! Join Theater for Kids as we read slightly scary stories and not too terrifying tales, then act out your inner monster in an interactive workshop.” Email theaterforkids@ portlandstage.org or call 774-1043, ext. 117 with questions or to sign up. Theater for Kids at Portland Stage Company, 25A Forest Ave.

Cathryn Falwell at Maine Audubon’s Apple Day 10:30 a.m. Children¹s book illustrator/author Cathryn Falwell will read from and talk turkey about her new picture book “Gobble, Gobble,” as part of Maine Audubon¹s Apple Day, 10 a.m. to 2 p.m.). “Learn the secrets of the wild turkeys from Maine Audubon, follow the tracks of Maine wildlife in the Gobble Trail Game ... and create nature journals with the wildlife facts you gather. Cathryn will be signing her many nature picture books until 1 p.m. All ages, but best for 4-9.” Gilsland Farm Audubon Center, 20 Gilsland Farm Road, Falmouth,. 781-2330. Free.

Sixth annual Woofminster 1 p.m. to 4 p.m. Sixth annual Woofminster Dog Show &

Cover Dog Challenge, contests: games, puppy parade, raffles, scavenger hunt, bake sale, agility demonstrations, face painting, kids’ crafts. Rain or shine. All well-behaved dogs and people without dogs are welcome. Camp Ketcha, Scarborough, tickets are $10 for adults and $5 for dogs and kids (children under 2 free). They can be purchased at the Planet Dog Company Store at 211 Marginal Way, Portland (347-8606) or by calling Planet Dog at 800-381-1516.

‘The Last New England Vampire’ Eastern Cemetery event 2 p.m. to 4 p.m. “What better place to celebrate the book launch of ‘Mercy: The Last New England Vampire’ than in a cemetery? Join award-winning author Sarah L. Thomson to celebrate the release of her new young adult novel. ...” At the Eastern Cemetery, 224 Congress St., Portland. “Take a ‘Dead Girl’ tour of the cemetery, a tour of teens buried in the cemetery led by cemetery caretakers Spirits Alive; get your own ghoulish photo taken at a photo booth; and look for sightings of Mercy Brown’s ghost wandering the graveyard. Thomson will also sign copies and read from the book, and all visitors will leave with a memento of ‘Mercy.’ ‘Mercy’ breaks new ground in the genre of young adult vampire stories in that it is inspired by a true story. Mercy Brown and her family lived in Exeter, R.I., in the late 1890s, when the New England vampire tradition held powerful sway. When Mercy’s family members began to die, fear struck deep in the hearts of the small community. Following Mercy’s death, when her brother took sick, villagers convinced Mercy’s father to have the corpse exhumed. They dug out her heart, burned it, and fed it to her brother. He too died — as Mercy had — from tuberculosis. ... A former children’s book editor at HarperCollins and Simon & Schuster, Thomson now lives in Portland.” The event is sponsored by Islandport Press, the Portland Public Library, Spirits Alive, and Curious City. In the event of rain, the event will be held at the Teen Room at Portland Public Library, 5 Monument Square. For information about the event, contact Curious City at 420-1126. For more information about the book, please call 846-3344, visit www. islandportpress.com or e-mail books@islandportpress.com.

ALHAN Middle Eastern Music Ensemble 8 p.m. Mayo Street Arts is please to present ALHAN Middle Eastern Music Ensemble as part of its Performing Arts and Culture Series. Mayo Street Arts, 10 Mayo St., Portland. Doors at 7:30 p.m., performance at 8 p.m.; admission $10. “ALHAN Middle Eastern Music Ensemble performs classical and popular Arabic and Turkish music of the 17th to the 21st centuries. The group features Eric LaPerna; riqq, darbuka and nay, Tom Kovacevic; oud, nay and vocals, Madeleine Hanna; lead vocals and frame drum and Megumi Sasaki; violin. ... The Performing Arts and Culture Series highlights the artistic and cultural diversity of performing artists of greater Portland while building community in the Kennedy Park/East Bayside Neighborhood.” www.mayostreetarts.org

Sunday, Oct. 2

start and finish of the race. The three races start at 7:45 a.m. from the same locations. Proceeds from this year’s race will go to benefit Camp To Belong Maine, an organization that connects and reunites siblings who have been separated because of foster care or other out-of-home care. In 2010, a total of $35,000 was donated to Camp to Belong. Also, several organizations participate each year to raise money for their causes, including the Leukemia and Lymphoma Society’s Team in Training, the Center for Grieving Children and the Maine Children’s Cancer Program. www.mainemarathon.com

Firefighters’ Memorial Sunday Service noon. Portland Fire Department, Portland Veteran Firemen’s Association and the City of South Portland Fire Department will hold their annual Memorial Sunday Service in honor of firefighters who lost their lives in service to these two cities. First held in 1892 to remember all deceased firefighters, and now held on the first Sunday in October every year, this service has become an important tradition for the surviving family and friends of those firefighters who lost their lives in the line of duty as well as the firefighting community. The names of twenty Portland firefighters and two South Portland firefighters will be read as a bell tolls at the Portland Veteran Firemen’s Monument, erected in 1913, at the Forest City Cemetery. The names to be read include Hoseman Thomas Burnham of Engine Company 2, who lost his life April 28, 1903 fighting the Holyoke Wharf fire that a month later claimed the life of Hoseman Clarence Johnson of Engine Company 3, Deputy Chief William Steele who died as a result of the inhalation of nitric acid fumes from a carboy spill in the basement of the HH Hay’s Drug Store in 1913, and Private Thomas O’Connor, who lost his life July 12, 1960, when Engine 4 and Ladder 3 collided at the intersection of Spring and Brackett Streets responding to an alarm on Orchard Street. The memorial serves as a reminder to the community of the risks firefighters face as well as the deep connections firefighters hold for each other and the cities they promise to protect. The service begins with a procession led by bag pipe to the Portland Veteran Firemen’s Association Monument. Members of both departments and the veterans association will speak followed by Roll Call of the members who died in the line of duty. The memorial concludes with the laying of floral wreaths. Each year more than fifty family members attend the service to pay their respects. Forest City Cemetery, 232 Lincoln St., South Portland.

Portland, Maine Tweed Ride 2 p.m. to 5 p.m. Portland Velocipede, 45 York St., announced a Portland, Maine Tweed Ride. “A leisurely ride around the peninsula with stops to take in the scenes, chat, and admire each other’s attire and bicycles. Dashing and dapper riding attire of the tweed, woolen, and vintage-inspired variety is essential. Let’s hope for a crisp autumn afternoon. Ride will conclude at the Portland Pie Company, just a few doors down from Portland Velocipede. Rain or shine.”

Fifth annual 20 Mile Meal Fryeburg Fair 7 a.m. Fryeburg Fair, established in 1851, will host its 161st annual eight day fair Oct. 2-9 in Fryeburg. The Fryeburg Fair is considered to be one of the best agricultural fairs in the U.S. The eight days of Fryeburg Fair include over 3,000 head of cattle, horses, sheep, goats, hogs, poultry, rabbits, oxen and more. Fair events include Woodsmen’s Field Day, horse and ox pulling, draft horse tandem hitches up to eight, pig scrambles, calf scrambles, cooking contests, flower shows, exhibition halls of crafts, handiwork, photos, art, forest and wood products, fiber products; a full museum of old farm equipment and memorabilia with live demonstrations; the “Little Red Schoolhouse” built in 1835; the milking parlor, firemen’s musters, sheepdog trials, tractor pulling, 4WD pulls and pari-mutuel harness racing on the Fair’s half-mile track. Entertainment is everywhere with singers, musicians, bands, and performers in the Fair’s park areas. This year’s night shows headliners are – “Always Patsy Cline,” “John Stevens & The Beantown Orchestra,” “Stealing Angels,” “Randy Houser,” “David Foster & The Mohegan Sun All Stars,” & “Hotel California.” Scrumptious and vast food selections are everywhere at the Fair! The annual Fireworks show is always fantastic and the Grand Parade is two hours of Fryeburg Fair’s best on display. Tickets are $10 per person per day with children under 12 free. Gates open at 7 a.m.; buildings open 9 a.m. to 9 p.m. Harness Racing 1:30 p.m. Tuesday thru Sunday. Night Shows at 8 p.m., Oct 3-8, Monday thru Saturday. For more information on Fryeburg Fair, go to www.fryeburgfair.org.

20th Annual Maine Marathon/Relay 7:45 a.m. to 3 p.m. 20th Annual Maine Marathon/Relay & Maine Half Marathon Day Festival to be held on Baxter Boulevard Ext. from Forest Avenue to Preble Street and continuing on to Washington Avenue. Runners will congregate in the area between Forest Avenue and Preble Street for the

2 p.m. to 5 p.m. Cultivating Community’s fifth annual 20 Mile Meal will be held at Turkey Hill Farm in Cape Elizabeth. About 20 of southern Maine’s chefs will be preparing a locavorion meal made from ingredients harvested or raised at Turkey Hill or within 20 miles. Tickets are $40 for adults and $20 for those age 7-11. Kids under 7 get in for free. 120 Old Ocean House Road, Cape Elizabeth.

A Celebration of the English piano 3 p.m. A Celebration of the English piano: Sonatas and Songs by Haydn, Beethoven & Clementi at the Cathedral Church of St. Luke, Emmanuel Chapel, 143 State St., Portland. The program will include Beethoven’s “An die ferne geliebte”, generally acknowledged to be the first song cycle. The artists are: Sylvia Berry, fortepiano and Timothy Neill Johnson, tenor. Cost: $15/$10 students and seniors. Contact: Albert Melton, Cathedral Musician, 772-5434

Blessing of the Animals 4 p.m. Blessing of the Animals at St. Augustine of Canterbury Anglican Church, 156 Saco Road (Route 5), Old Orchard Beach. The blessing is open to all who want pets or other animals blessed in the traditional manner of the Church. Further Information, 772-2492.

‘Importance of Historic Preservation on Munjoy Hill’ 7 p.m. to 8 p.m. Gary Berenson, executive director of the Maine Jewish Museum, and Leonard W. Cummings Sr., chair of the Executive Committee to Restore the Abyssinian Meeting House, will give a talk on “The Importance of Historic Preservation on Munjoy Hill: Etz Chaim Synagogue and the Abyssinian Meeting House.” The talk will take place at the University of Southern Maine from 7 p.m. to 8 p.m., at the Glickman Family Library, seventh floor, University Events Room, 314 Forest Ave., Portland. Reception to follow. The talk and reception are free and open to the public. see next page


THE PORTLAND DAILY SUN, Thursday, September 29, 2011— Page 15

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Beer & W ine Eat-in or Take-out

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

from preceding page

Monday, Oct. 3 Portland mayoral forum 7 p.m. to 9 p.m. The Portland Music Foundation (PMF) and the Portland Arts & Cultural Alliance (PACA) are teaming up to present a Portland mayoral forum focused on issues and policies related the city’s arts, culture and music community on from 7 p.m. to 9 p.m. (doors open at 6 p.m.) at the State Theatre at 609 Congress St. The event is free and open to the public. All qualified candidates for the position of Portland’s first elected mayor have been asked to participate in a 90-minute session consisting of multiple rounds of questions pertaining to Portland’s creative community. Community members may submit questions to the candidates for consideration in advance by posting them on the Facebook page of either PMF or PACA, or by emailing info@portlandarts.org. For more information on the Portland Music Foundation, see www.PortlandMusicFoundation.org. For more information on the Portland Arts and Cultural Alliance, see www.PortlandArts.org

Acorn Productions season launch 8 p.m. Acorn Productions, a nonprofit company based in the Dana Warp Mill in downtown Westbrook, opens its 14th season of productions. “Acorn is unique in the area in that the company presents a variety of different types of live productions, including festivals, studio theater presentations of classic plays children’s theater, and unconventional performances of the work of William Shakespeare. In all of Acorn’s work, the emphasis is on education, whether it be training actors of all ages, mentoring playwrights and vaudeville performers, or assisting audiences in accessing work by offering free and low-cost productions. The company’s 2011/12 season will include new editions of Phyzgig and the Maine Playwrights Festival, three plays by the Fairy Tale Players, a new approach to monthly Naked Shakespeare performances at the Wine Bar on Wharf Street, and three classic plays presented in the Acorn Studio Theater in Westbrook.” For the 2011/12 season, Naked Shakespeare will focus on creating a series of themed-performances, to debut at the Wine Bar on the first Monday of the month and eventually tour to other locations in the area. The first presentation of the season is “Drunks and Fools,” an evening featuring some of Shakespeare’s most outrageous and memorable characters, which will be performed first on Oct. 3. The next collection of shorts is entitled “Will’s Willies,” and it showcases some of the bard’s most macabre and disturbing imagery. Audiences can experience this show on Nov. 7. For the holiday season, Naked Shakespeare brings “Lovers and Cross Dressers” to the Wine Bar on Dec. 5. The titles and content for the late winter and spring shows will be announced in December. All Naked Shakespeare performances are free with an $8 suggested donation. Acorn Productions. Wine Bar on Wharf Street, Portland. Monday, Oct. 3 at 8 p.m. — “Drunks and Fools.” Free, suggested donation $8. FMI: 854-0065 or www.acorn-productions.org

Tuesday, Oct. 4 Book Talk: ‘Our Game Was Baseball’ noon. Presenter: John Hodgkins, author, at the Maine Historical Society. “Get in the mood for the World Series with this wonderful new memoir of growing up with the Temple Townies in the 1940s and ‘50s. ‘Our Game Was Baseball’ follows ‘A Soldier’s Son,’ Hodgkins’ poignant memoir of his childhood in Temple, Maine during World War II. Hodgkins finds and interviews former team members, recounts his own passion for the Townies, and recounts the central role the Townies played in the life of this western Maine community.” www.mainehistory.org

Wednesday, Oct. 5 Senator George Mitchell to speak at USM/Wright Express Event 7:30 p.m. to 9 p.m. Senator George Mitchell will be joined by USM President Selma Botman at the Second Annual USM Wright Express Leadership and Creativity Event Series, “Understanding the Middle East and Its Significance on the World Stage.” The event will be held at Hannaford Lecture Hall in the Abromson Community Education Center on the USM Portland campus. Tickets for this annual scholarship fundraiser are $20 general admission and $15 seniors and students, with group rates available. FMI, visit the website at http://usm.maine.edu/giving/WEXseries or call 780-4714. “This will be the Senator’s first presentation in Maine on the Middle East since completing his duties as Special Envoy for Middle East Peace, a position he held

M o re tha n just H o t do gs

until May 2011. USM President Selma Botman, a scholar of modern Middle Eastern politics with a Ph.D. in history and Middle Eastern Studies from Harvard University, will provide commentary. Sponsored by Wright Express Corporation, 100 percent of proceeds will support scholarships for USM students.”

•W ings •Sandw iches •Salads •Beer & W ine •Big screen fo r fo o tball! •N ice fam ily atm o sphere

Thursday, Oct. 6

No w O pen

Eggs & Issues with Gov. Paul LePage 7 a.m. Join the Portland Community Chamber for Eggs & Issues events this October. Governor Paul LePage will speak and give updates on the state of Maine. “As this is a highly attended event, please register no later than Oct. 3.” At the Holiday Inn by the Bay in Portland, from 7 a.m. to 9 a.m. Click here to register for Gov. LePage, and here for Sen. Snowe. http://portlandmecoc. weblinkconnect.com/cwt/External/WCPages/WCEvents/EventDetail.aspx?EventID=316

LePage

Westbrook Eagles Harvest Supper 5 p.m. to 6:30 p.m. Harvest Supper, Westbrook Eagles Post No. 2977, 89, Saco St., Westbrook. Admission $7 adults, $3.50 kids.

Internet safety and cyber bullying 5:30 p.m. to 7:30 p.m. Deering High School in Portland will hold an informational night for students and parents about Internet safety and cyber bullying; in the school library. The public is invited to attend free of charge. For more information, please call 874-8260.

North Deering Neighborhood Association meeting to develop a Crime Watch Organization 6 p.m. “People in the North Deering section of Portland will gather at the Lyman Moore Middle School to fight crime in their neighborhood. For several months the North Deering Neighborhood Association has been meeting with members of the Portland Police to create a Crime Watch Organization. ‘The police have been great,’ says NDNA President Tim St. Hilaire. ‘Lead Officer Andjelko Napijalo has shown us where the crimes are occurring and helped us organize the foundation for the crime watch.’ St. Hilaire says North Deering is not exactly a hot-bed of crime. But this summer there have been cars and homes broken into, cases of vandalism, and other property crimes that are very upsetting to people. Now, with signs posted throughout the neighborhood declaring the neighborhood to be a Crime Watch zone, the Neighborhood Association hopes to get as many people involved as possible in watching for suspicious behavior. The NDNA has used its funds to purchase the signs. Now, working with the Portland Police, they want to get more people involved.”

Fort Allen Park Restoration Workshop 7 p.m. The Portland Historic Preservation Board will review preliminary options for the restoration and rehabilitation of Fort Allen Park. The meeting will take place in Room 209 at City Hall, 389 Congress St. “Friends of the Eastern Promenade has hired the design team of Martha Lyon and Regina Leonard to design the Fort Allen Park Restoration Plan. The plan will reinstate the park’s historic character, preserve its scenic views and re-establish deteriorating monuments, in addition to providing historically appropriate lighting, site furnishings, fencing, walkways and interpretative signage and kiosks. Further public meetings to seek input from park users and residents will be scheduled as the plan evolves.”

Madeleine Peyroux hosts fundraiser at State Theatre for York County shelter 7:30 p.m. World-renowned jazz singer, Madeleine Peyroux, will perform a benefit concert for the York County Shelter Programs with special guest, Nellie McKay, at the State Theatre at 609 Congress St. in Portland. In 1996, Time Magazine pronounced Peyroux’s debut album, “Dreamland,” “the most exciting, involving vocal performance by a new singer this year.” In 2006, Peyroux performed a live session for “Live from Abbey Road” at Abbey Road Studios. In 2007, she was awarded Best International Jazz Artist at the BBC Jazz Awards. Her latest album, “Bare Bones,”was released in June 2011. Additional information about her music can be accessed at: www.madeleinepeyroux.com. Tickets for the fundraiser for the York County Shelter are $39, $35, and $25 and are on sale now and available in person at the Cumberland County Civic Center Box Office, or they can be charged by phone at 800-7453000 and online at www.statetheatreportland.com see next page

For Take-out O rders 854-9555 1 00 Larrabee Road, W estbrook


Page 16 — THE PORTLAND DAILY SUN, Thursday, September 29, 2011

Clock washer Tom Higgins with Portland Public Services power washes the clock tower from Union Station, the historic landmark once located on St. John’s Street, as part of clean-up at Congress Square Wednesday. Maine Memory Network states, “Union Station was first opened on June 25, 1888 and was the terminus for the Boston & Maine, Maine Central and the Portland & Ogdensburg Railroad lines. It was torn down in 1961.” (DAVID CARKHUFF PHOTO)

Officials laud sale of Katahdin area mills DAILY SUN STAFF REPORT Governor Paul LePage announced Wednesday the final closing on the purchase of the Katahdin area mills. The state and its partners including Cate Street Capital and Brookfield Asset Management took the final steps necessary Wednesday morning to complete the sale, he said. “With hundreds of people starting to get back to work, it’s a great day for Maine,” LePage said. “With the soaring unemployment rate in the Millinocket area we’re excited to restore these jobs and explore new areas for economic growth.” U.S. Senator Olympia J. Snowe, R-Maine, also applauded the completion of the sale of the Katahdin region mill properties, stating in a release, “This is great news for the people of the Katahdin region and for the people of Maine. This sale will save jobs at these historic mills and preserve the vitality of Maine’s paper industry, which has been the bedrock of this community’s economy for generations.”

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Friday, Oct. 7 Trunk Show: South Street Linens 5 p.m. to 8 p.m. Museum Store, Portland Museum of Art. During October’s First Friday Art Walk, the Museum Store will host a Trunk Show featuring South Street Linens. South Street Linen is owned by three midcareer artists who are now applying their particular sensibilities to making hand stitched and block printed linen scarves. Their inspiration comes from well-worn ephemera, the geometric patterns of architecture, and things Japanese and Scandinavian.

Two Fabulous Fashion Exhibits at MHS 5 p.m. to 8 p.m. First Friday Art Walk at Maine Historical Society. “See two fabulous fashion-themed shows, ‘Having in Paris a Great Success’: French Fashion, 19281936 on display in the Earle G. Shettleworth, Jr. Lecture Hall and ‘Dressing Up, Standing Out, Fitting In: Adornment & Identity in Maine,’ on display in the museum. Mingle with friends, enjoy refreshments and music, and discover Maine history. www.mainehistory.org

‘Moment Before the Moment’ 5 p.m. to 8 p.m. Featuring Photographer, Stephanie Hatzenbuehler and Graphic Artist Morgan McAllister DiPietro in “Moment Before the Moment” at the Gallery at Harmon’s and Barton’s, 584 Congress St., Portland. 774-5948. Artist’s Reception, First Friday Art Walk. Exhibiting through October; open daily 8 a.m. to 5 p.m., Sat. 8 a.m. to 3 p.m.

‘The Dark Side of Chocolate’ 7 p.m. Come see the movie “The Dark Side of Chocolate,”at Allen Avenue UU Church, 524 Allen Ave., Portland. “Then sample some fair trade chocolate with an opportunity to buy some. Talk about what we can do to bring an end to this slavery. Movie is not appropriate for children. Co-sponsored by church committees.”

Open Mic/Poetry Slam in Auburn 7:15 p.m. Open Mic/Poetry Slam. First Universalist Church of Auburn, 169 Pleasant St. Free. FMI 783-0461 or www. auburnuu.org.

Portland Playback Theatre: ‘Facing Fear’ 7:30 p.m. “Our First Friday theme for October 7 is Facing Fear. Our internal alarm system serves us well, but sometimes fear itself is our greatest challenge. As a matter of

cold fact, Fear, with a capital F, may be the most fundamental emotional background of what we are as human beings. Do you have a story of a time when fear was front and center? We bet you do. Come and share your story — or just come to witness. Portland Playback Theatre is now in its sixth year and has ‘played back’ hundreds of stories. If you haven’t had your story improvisationally enacted you’re really missing something! Learn more at www.portlandplayback.com.” At CTN5, right next to MECA, at 516 Congress St. $5 at the door.

Portland Maine Film Festival 10 p.m. Portland Maine Film Festival is thrilled to present: A Tribute to Mort Todd, at The Nickelodeon. “Raised in Maine Todd built his career in entertainment, most notably comics, film and animation. At 23, Mort was Editor-in-Chief of the humor magazine Cracked; he launched the Marvel Music imprint at Marvel Comics and has worked with The Rolling Stones, AC/DC, KISS and Alice Cooper to release graphic novels packaged with CDs and software.” The Portland Maine Film Festival features contemporary, entertaining and informative movies, as well as, panel discussions and networking opportunities for local filmmakers. Please join us for our second year and support the motion picture arts in Maine. Festival runs through Oct. 9.


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