the portland daily sun, february 23, 2011

16
WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 23, 2011 VOL. 3 NO. 15 PORTLAND, ME PORTLAND’S DAILY NEWSPAPER 699-5801 FREE RIGHT: Crossing guide Tom Schmaling, 68, works Longfellow Square, ushering people across busy State and Congress streets. (DAVID CARKHUFF PHOTO) see CROSSING page 9 Cross? Not even with the pigeons BY DAVID CARKHUFF THE PORTLAND DAILY SUN The statue of poet Henry Wadsworth Longfellow keeps him company, although there’s a downside for Tom Schmaling. Pigeons. “I almost got hit a couple of times, so I don’t stand too close to this statue,” said Schmaling, a crossing guide at Longfellow Square, about the pigeon droppings that fall from the sky. It’s all in a day’s work for Schmaling, who’s in his second year as one of the city’s ‘Sticks and stones’ has to go; bullies do real harm See Maggie Knowles’ column on page 5 The mystery of ‘Two Drop’ See Bob Higgins on page 4 A chef has a bone to pick with his locals See Natalie Ladd’s column on page 8 Despite all his hard work and participation from a high-profile national leader, the fledgling exhibition Charlie Wynott is hosting this weekend is bound to go to pot. Well, technically speaking, medical-grade cannabis. The first-ever Maine Medical Marijuana Expo 2011, or “Expo Cannabis,” organized by Wynott’s Maine Medical Marijuana Resource Center kicks off this Saturday at the Fireside Inn & Suites, fea- turing vendors, panel discussions with caregivers and doctors and a visit from U.S. Rep. Barney Frank, D-Mass. The Expo organizers say that it seeks to be inclusive to all those interested in learning more about cannabis, including those who are looking into becoming registered caregivers, but don’t expect to see smoke billowing out from the con- ference room of the Fireside Inn. “I don’t want people to think it’s a pot party by any means,” said Wynott. “Basically it’s an educational, informational event for the patients and for anyone else involved in medical marijuana — however, people who are not directly involved might still be interested,” he said. Wynott, an AIDS patient of 23 years, started the nonprofit, all-volunteer MMRC to advocate for medic- inal marijuana and improve patient access to the drug. All proceeds from the expo will go towards a patients’ ID program and helping low-income patients afford their prescriptions, according to Wynott. Cannabis expo hits town this weekend Frank BY MATT DODGE THE PORTLAND DAILY SUN see EXPO page 3 BY MATT DODGE THE PORTLAND DAILY SUN see SPACE page 6 Italian Kitchen ANTHONY’S 60% 0FF 151 Middle Street, Portland Buy a $25.00 voucher for $10.00 Resolving a quandary that has puzzled astrophys- icists for years, Nat May confirmed Tuesday that Space is, in fact, expanding. Of course, that’s “Space” with a big “S,” more the nonprofit Congress Street home of touring indie music acts and art house films than celestial bodies and giant, swirling balls of gas. The venue will annex a neighboring space, taking over the former home of Mainely Frames at 534 Congress and is scheduled to be renovated as an auxiliary to the main facility at 538 Congress by this summer. “We’re not changing how we work — we’re just increasing our capacity to do more,” said May, execu- tive director of Space Gallery. “We’ve needed addi- tional space for some time, the fact that it is in same building makes it a really good, obvious choice for us,” he said. It turns out that Space is, indeed, expanding

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Page 1: The Portland Daily Sun, February 23, 2011

WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 23, 2011 VOL. 3 NO. 15 PORTLAND, ME PORTLAND’S DAILY NEWSPAPER 699-5801 FREE

RIGHT: Crossing guide Tom Schmaling, 68, works Longfellow Square, ushering people across busy State and Congress streets. (DAVID CARKHUFF PHOTO)

see CROSSING page 9

Cross? Not even with the pigeons

BY DAVID CARKHUFFTHE PORTLAND DAILY SUN

The statue of poet Henry Wadsworth Longfellow keeps him company, although there’s a downside for Tom Schmaling. Pigeons.

“I almost got hit a couple of times, so I don’t stand too close to this statue,” said Schmaling, a crossing guide at Longfellow Square, about the pigeon droppings that fall from the sky.

It’s all in a day’s work for Schmaling, who’s in his second year as one of the city’s

‘Sticks and stones’ has to go; bullies do real harm

See Maggie Knowles’ column on page 5

The mystery of ‘Two Drop’

See Bob Higgins on page 4

A chef has a bone to pick with his locals

See Natalie Ladd’s column on page 8

Despite all his hard work and participation from a high-profi le national leader, the fl edgling exhibition Charlie Wynott is hosting this weekend is bound to go to pot.

Well, technically speaking, medical-grade cannabis.The fi rst-ever Maine Medical Marijuana Expo

2011, or “Expo Cannabis,” organized by Wynott’s Maine Medical Marijuana Resource Center kicks off this Saturday at the Fireside Inn & Suites, fea-turing vendors, panel discussions with caregivers

and doctors and a visit from U.S. Rep. Barney Frank, D-Mass.

The Expo organizers say that it seeks to be inclusive to all those interested in learning more about cannabis, including those who are looking into becoming registered caregivers, but don’t expect to see smoke billowing out from the con-ference room of the Fireside Inn.

“I don’t want people to think it’s a pot party by any means,” said

Wynott. “Basically it’s an educational, informational event for the patients and for anyone else involved in medical marijuana — however, people who are not directly involved might still be interested,” he said.

Wynott, an AIDS patient of 23 years, started the nonprofi t, all-volunteer MMRC to advocate for medic-inal marijuana and improve patient access to the drug. All proceeds from the expo will go towards a patients’ ID program and helping low-income patients afford their prescriptions, according to Wynott.

Cannabis expo hits town this weekend

Frank

BY MATT DODGETHE PORTLAND DAILY SUN

see EXPO page 3

BY MATT DODGETHE PORTLAND DAILY SUN

see SPACE page 6

Italian Kitchen ANTHONY’S

60% 0FF 151 Middle Street, Portland

Buy a $25.00 voucher for $10.00

Resolving a quandary that has puzzled astrophys-icists for years, Nat May confi rmed Tuesday that Space is, in fact, expanding.

Of course, that’s “Space” with a big “S,” more the nonprofi t Congress Street home of touring indie

music acts and art house fi lms than celestial bodies and giant, swirling balls of gas.

The venue will annex a neighboring space, taking over the former home of Mainely Frames at 534 Congress and is scheduled to be renovated as an auxiliary to the main facility at 538 Congress by this summer.

“We’re not changing how we work — we’re just increasing our capacity to do more,” said May, execu-tive director of Space Gallery. “We’ve needed addi-tional space for some time, the fact that it is in same building makes it a really good, obvious choice for us,” he said.

It turns out that Space is, indeed, expanding

Page 2: The Portland Daily Sun, February 23, 2011

Page 2 — THE PORTLAND DAILY SUN, Wednesday, February 23, 2011

Chaos grows in Libya; Qaddafi defi ant

Antigovernment protesters in the main square of Tobruk, Libya. (Asmaa Waguih/Reuters/New York Times)

TOBRUK, Libya — Libya appeared to slip further into chaos on Tuesday, as Col. Muammar el-Qaddafi vowed to “fi ght until the last drop of my blood” and clashes intensifi ed between rebels and his loyalists in the capital, Tripoli.

Opposition forces claimed to have con-solidated their hold over a string of cities across nearly half of Libya’s 1,000 mile Mediterranean coast, leaving Colonel Qad-dafi in control of just parts of the capital and some of southern and central Libya, including his hometown.

Witnesses described the streets of Trip-oli as a war zone. Several residents said they believed that massacres had taken place overnight as forces loyal to Colonel Qaddafi drove through the streets opening fi re at will from the backs of pickup trucks.

“They would drive around, and they would start shooting, shooting, shooting,” said one resident reached by telephone. “Then they would drive like bandits, and they would repeat that every hour or so. It was absolute terror until dawn.”

Human Rights Watch said it had con-fi rmed at least 62 deaths in the violence in Tripoli so far, in addition to more than 200 people killed in clashes elsewhere, mostly in the eastern city of Benghazi, where the uprising began last week. Opposition groups estimated that at least 500 people had been killed.

For a second time, Colonel Qaddafi appeared on state television. Dressed in brown robes with a matching turban, he

sometimes shouted and seemed to tremble with anger as he delivered a harangue that lasted some 73 minutes. His lectern was planted in the middle of the old wreck-age of his two-story house in the Aziziyah barracks in Tripoli, a house American war-planes had destroyed in a 1986 air raid and which he has left as a monument to American perfi dy.

In the rambling, sometimes incoherent address, he said those challenging his gov-ernment “deserved to die.” He blamed the unrest on “foreign hands,” a small group of people distributing pills, brainwashing, and the naïve desire of young people to

imitate the uprisings in Egypt and Tuni-sia.

Without acknowledging the gravity of the crisis in the streets of the capital, he described himself in sweeping, megaloma-niacal terms. “Muammar Qaddafi is his-tory, resistance, liberty, glory, revolution,” he declared.

Earlier, the state television broadcast images of a cleaned up Green Square in central Tripoli, the scene of a violent crack-down Monday night. It showed a few hun-dred Qaddafi supporters waving fl ags and kissing photographs of him for the cam-eras.

BY KAREEM FAHIM AND DAVID D. KIRKPATRICK

THE NEW YORK TIMES

NAIROBI, Kenya — Somali pirates on Tuesday killed four American hostages who had been sailing on a yacht through Somalia’s pirate infested seas, one of the deadliest episodes since the modern-day piracy epidemic began several years ago, American offi cials said.

American naval forces had been shadow-ing the hijacked yacht, called the Quest, for several days and were in the process of negotiating with the pirates, military offi -cials said. As soon as they saw a burst of gunfi re on board, the offi cials said, Navy Seals rushed to the yacht in assault craft, shooting one of the pirates and stabbing another.

But American offi cials said the pirates had already shot all four hostages, includ-ing a retired couple from California that had been sailing around the world — New Zealand, Tahiti, Galápagos, Hawaii, China, India and beyond — for more than six years, blogging all the way.

It is not clear why the pirates killed the

hostages — whether accidentally during a fi refi ght or possibly out of revenge for the Somali pirates killed by American sharp-shooters in a hostage situation in 2009.

Maritime analysts who monitor pirate activity said the killings were unusual and may have stemmed from a highly-combus-tible mix of around 20 pirates and four hostages squeezed together on a sailboat with limited food, water and space. In the past, when pirates have hijacked smaller vessels, they usually transfer the hostages to a much bigger boat, a so-called mother ship, which functions as a fl oating base in the middle of the ocean.

President Obama was tracking the event closely, said the White House press secre-tary, Jay Carney, and had authorized “the use of force in the case of an imminent threat to those hostages.”

Somalia’s piracy problem is an outgrowth of the rampant violence and lawlessness spiraling out from a desperately poor, heavily-armed and war-ravaged country that has languished without a central gov-ernment for more than 20 years.

Piracy is one of the biggest businesses now in Somalia, with tens of millions of dollars earned by ransoming hostages. In recent months, though, the pirates have become more militant — some building land-based armies, others teaming up with Islamist insurgents who chop off hands and detonate suicide bombs in an attempt to terrorize the Somali public.

It was almost unheard of, just a few years ago, for Somali pirates to harm their captives, but recently the pirates have also become more vicious, maritime offi cials said, torturing some hostages and forcing some at gunpoint to go with them on raids.

Some piracy analysts say the increase in violence may be a refl ection of the intense pressure from the world’s most powerful navies. Dozens of warships from China, Russia, the United States, Britain and others prowl Somalia’s coastline, trying to protect the tens of thousands of ves-sels that traverse these waters. Still, the pirates seem to be winning.

Just about every week another ship gets hijacked.

Four Americans held on hijacked yacht are killedBY JEFFREY GETTLEMAN

THE NEW YORK TIMES

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

–––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––– DIGEST––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––Risky trip to stardom,sanctuary

SAYWHAT...Do not let your ambitions become

a sanctuary for your failures.”

— Bryant H. McGill

(NY Times) — A Hondu-ran teenager gained fame as the star of a documen-tary fi lm that showed the dangers faced by children who ride across Mexico atop freight trains to cross illegally to the United States. But the boy, Kevin Casasola, rode the trains again, and now he has been granted asylum in the United States, his lawyer said on Monday.

The documentary, “Which Way Home,” directed by Rebecca Cam-misa, won an Emmy award for HBO last year and was nominated for an Oscar. Ms. Cammisa took her cameras onto the lurching trains, fi lming a cohort of children riding north as they dodged tunnels, trees and criminal predators, fi ghting loneli-ness and hunger. It tells of several children who died or disappeared along the way.

Kevin, who was 14 in the fi lm, was its most appeal-ing protagonist, with his daring clowning on freight car roofs and his determina-tion to make it to the United States to fi nd work so he could send money back to his mother. During the fi lming he was detained by American border agents and deported to Honduras. The documentary showed the desolation and need that drove him to leave his home village in the fi rst place.

The documentary drew an outpouring of concern for the children to its Face-book page. Some Ameri-cans offered to adopt Kevin, although his mother fi gured prominently in the fi lm and in his motives for riding the trains.

In Mexico, the impact was even greater, and Kevin became something of a legend. Ms. Cammisa sent the fi lm to rural villages as a warning to restless teenagers that they should not attempt a similar trip. The country’s fi rst lady, Margarita Zavala, helped distribute it, and during a state visit to Washington last May, she said that Mexican babies were being named Kevin as a result of its popularity.

Ms. Cammisa said she tried to persuade Kevin to stay in Honduras, using donations raised by the fi lm to pay for him to take a course in mobile phone repair.

But last July, she said in an interview, Kevin called her from a detention center in California. After a two-month journey on the trains, he had crossed the border and was doing farm work near El Centro. He had been arrested by the local police, who suspected he was an illegal immigrant.

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Page 3: The Portland Daily Sun, February 23, 2011

THE PORTLAND DAILY SUN, Wednesday, February 23, 2011— Page 3

Saturday at the Expo begins with a panel discus-sion with local doctors who support the use of medi-cal marijuana and who will answer questions for patients or prospective patients.

The event will feature 20 to 30 vendors, including dispensary operators, caregivers and care-giving col-lectives, grow suppliers and others vital to Maine’s newest medical industry.

Speakers throughout the day include Neil Frank-lin, executive director of L.E.A.P (Law Enforcement against Prohibition), District 120 Rep. Diane Rus-sell, former Cumberland County Sheriff Mark Dion and Wendy Chapkis, University of Southern Maine

professor and author of “Dying to Get High,” a book chronicling one patients group’s fi ght to obtain can-nabis.

Congressman Frank, a longtime medical mari-juana advocate, will deliver the expo’s keynote address.

“Barney has been an advocate for marijuana in general for a number of years — mostly on medical marijuana issues — and has proposed a couple bills on the federal level for medical marijuana,” said Wynott.

“We wanted to recognize him for his work and asking for continuing support with this [issue],” he said.

Wynott has initially planned to host the Patients

Choice Cannabis Awards on Sunday as part of the Expo, but circumstances outside of his control made the strain-versus-strain competition impossible for the time being.

“It didn’t turn out the way I wanted it,” he said. “I wanted it to be prestigious, very involved, with lot of different entries, but I just didn’t have enough time to get into it.”

Wynott hopes to give the contest another shot sometime this summer, likely in conjunction with one of the pro-marijuana festivals that take place through the warmer months on Harry Brown’s Farm in Starks.

For more information on the Maine Medical Mari-juana Expo 2011, visit asamaine.org.

EXPO from page one

Expo on; Patients Choice Cannabis Awards postponed

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Maine guardsman who died had fl u, mom says

LEWISTON — A 19-year-old Maine native who died last weekend during military basic training had been suf-fering from the fl u, according to pub-lished reports.

Jordan Chase, a Lewiston native, was enrolled in boot camp at Fort Jack-son, S.C. He was hospitalized on Feb. 12 but died Sunday. His mom, Rhonda Tilley, also of Lewiston, says her son was suffering from pneumonia and the H1N1 “swine” fl u before he died, the Associated Press is reporting.

Family members say they don’t believe they have all the answers in the incident, but don’t blame anyone for their son’s death, the AP says.

City weighs old approach to snow removal problem

A Portland city councilor wants to review snow removal policies this summer, including a measure allow-ing city crews to dump snow into Portland Harbor, the Forecaster is reporting.

Portland long used its adjacent nat-ural waterways to dump snow piles after large winter storms, but in 2005 the practice came under fi re from people who worried about putting salt and other contaminants into Casco Bay, the paper said. Currently, the city hauls snow to lots on Outer Congress Street and Somerset Street.

The city would need a state permit to begin dumping snow into the harbor, the Forecaster, a weekly paper based in Falmouth, is reporting.

“I think we should explore if it can be done in a safe way,” Suslovic is quoted as saying. “Running diesel trucks 40 minutes round trip out to Congress Street has an environmen-tal impact, too.”

Changes to sidewalks shoveling ordinance nixed

The Transportation Committee last week rejected a proposal to amend the city’s ordinance governing side-walk snow removal, the Forecaster is reporting. Under current rules, prop-erty owners must shovel sidewalks in front of homes and businesses after storms or face fi nes.

Some residents living on major thoroughfares sought the revisions because city plow trucks created mas-sive snow piles, making it diffi cult to clear their sidewalks. But opponents of the change said city offi cials can and do exercise discretion when it comes to fi ning residents for not clearing sidewalks, the Forecaster is reporting.

The measure, sponsored by Coun-cilor Ed Suslovic, failed 2-1, the Fore-caster said.

Universities get $500,000 grant to aid manufacturing

University of Southern Maine and University of Maine at Orono have been awarded a grant worth almost $500,000 to provide technological assistance to private sector manufac-turing projects.

Maine Technology Institute awarded the three-year grant as part of the agency’s “Cluster Initiative,” to help precision manufacturers in Maine expand and increase hiring, the USM offi cials said in a news release.

The Cluster Initiative Program awards up to $500,000 annually to programs that support Maine’s tech-nology sectors and businesses, the news release said.

The funds will be used to hire per-sonnel and equipment to expand ser-vices currently provided over the next three years.

Copper thieves strike Maine beach community

OLD ORCHARD BEACH — Thieves are stealing copper from seasonal homes in the beachfront community of Ocean Park, and local police are stepping up their patrols, the Port-land Press Herald is reporting.

Thieves don’t have to break in to the homes to get access to the valuable copper components. The paper says people have been known to “scurry” underneith the raised properties to remove any exposed copper pipes or wiring.

Copper was stolen from at least six homes last month, the paper said, and police still can’t reach some of the property owners to tell them.

Police have begun checking homes in Ocean Park, and are asking resi-dents to keep an eye out, the paper says.

Offi cials: Paper mill will close if sale falls through

EAST MILLINOCKET — The owners of a paper mill here say they’ll close the facility if a tentative deal to sell this plant and another one in Millinocket to a private equity fi rm falls apart, the Bangor Daily News is reporting.

Meriturn Partners, a San Francisco-based investment fi rm, has signed a letter of intent to buy the Katahdin Paper Co. mill in East Millinocket, as well as shuttered paper mill one town over, the paper said. But Brookfi eld Asset Management, the mills’ cur-rent owners, have given the legally-mandated 60-day notice with the U.S. Department of Labor that it will close the mill if a buyer isn’t found.

Bangor Daily News said the East Millinocket mill has not made money in several years. Meriturn Partners, which has pledged to modernize the facilities, has until April 29 to fi nalize the sale, the paper said.

East Millinocket mill employs about 450 people, while the closed mill in Millinocket had about 175 workers when it closed, the paper said.

U.S. Cellular names sales manager in South Portland

U.S. Cellular recently named Kyla Khuu to sales manager for the U.S. Cellular retail store at the Maine Mall in South Portland, the company reported.

“Khuu will direct activities and inspire associates to deliver the best

customer service in the industry, which is backed by a cus-tomer survey from Consumer Reports that ranked the company as the best wireless car-rier,” the company stated in a press release. In her new role, Khuu ensures that her teams of

associates are helping customers and potential customers learn about the company’s high-speed nationwide net-work and The Belief Project, an array of innovative initiatives that recog-nize customer loyalty with bundled national plans that offer customers the freedom to enjoy benefi ts without signing continuous contracts.

With “no contract after the fi rst,” new customers who complete a two-year contract will never have to sign another one and will continue to get guaranteed upgrades to the newest phones at promotional prices every 18 months, U.S. Cellular reported.

“Customers get valuable rewards just for being customers and can get even faster upgrades in as little as 10 months when they use their rewards,” the press release stated.

“At U.S. Cellular, we believe that each customer deserves the best wire-less experience and Kyla helps us delight them with all of the unique benefi ts of being a U.S. Cellular cus-tomer,” said Eric Conlon, director of sales for U.S. Cellular in New Eng-land.

Prior to her current role, Khuu was sales manager of U.S. Cellular’s store in Bangor.

Khuu

Page 4: The Portland Daily Sun, February 23, 2011

Page 4 — THE PORTLAND DAILY SUN, Wednesday, February 23, 2011

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

Not Seattle! Home prices in the “Queen City” of the Northwest were not supposed to go south. This isn’t Miami, Phoenix or Las Vegas, where sun-

Federal policies skew house values

everywhere

tanned speculators built big, borrowed big and went bust with a bang.

Yet just as the bubble markets seem to be set-tling (though on a still sandy bottom), property owners in formerly confi dent places like Seattle, Minneapolis and Atlanta are seeing their own late-in-the-downturn down-turn.

Seattle home prices have fallen 31 percent from their 2007 high, according to econo-mists at Zillow, the real estate website. Zillow thinks Seattle residential property has another 10 percent to go.

If sharp price drops can happen in Seattle, Min-neapolis and Atlanta, then real estate is an even riskier investment than previously imagined. But

see HARROP page 5

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

FromaHarrop–––––

Creators Syndicate

Portland’s FREE DAILY NewspaperCurtis Robinson Editor

David Carkhuff, Casey Conley,Matt Dodge Reporters

THE PORTLAND DAILY SUN is published Tuesday through Saturday by Portland News Club, LLC.

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All letters columns and editorial cartoons are the opinion of the writer or artists and do not refl ect the opinions of the staff, editors or pub-lisher 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, [email protected]. You may FAX your letters to 899-4963, Attention: Editor.

We want your opinions Over the weekend, the big dig-ital glowing idol we know as the “time and temperature” clock changed the message, and some Portlanders were stumped as to what the new message was all about.

Never fear, reader, I’m on it. Monday being a holiday, I had to wait for folks to return to their offi ces and check voicemails, but my initial suspicions about the message were confi rmed.

First off, some background. For many months, the clock has shown the time and tempera-ture, and the message “CALL JOE,” referring people to call the law offi ces of Joe Bornstein. Folks who were injured or had some legal business to pursue have been advised through this unique outdoor ad. Suddenly on Sunday, the message changed to “TWO DROP.”

I walked on the sidewalk next to the building with unease. Did the sign mean that some-one was planning to drop two of something from the upper fl oors on my unsuspecting head? What was to be dropped? Pianos, eggs and bricks all came to mind, along with irritated feral cats.

Turns out, this is a donation. I called around, and eventually ended up talking with THE Joe Bornstein, and he cleared the

‘TWO DROP’ mystery solved

matter up in short order.Every year, Rotary Interna-

tional has an awareness cam-paign to spread the word about ending polio in the world. They must be doing a bang-up job, because in 1988 there were 340,000 cases of polio world-wide. In 2009 there were 1,604, a drop of over 99 percent. And, to do the work of Captain Obvi-ous and make the point Rotary might make: That’s still about 1,604 too many.

All thanks to donors, research, and two little drops of oral polio vaccine.

Bornstein was happy do donate the time on the clock. “It took a little convincing, the landlord is down in New York, and was a bit hesitant to change it for just a week. When we told him what we were up to, he eventually came around.”

But why Portland? Bornstein, in his connections with various local Rotarians, responded. “I was asked to do it by my friend

John Marr over at MEMIC. There are still pockets of polio around the world, and the Bill

see HIGGINS page 5

Bob Higgins–––––

Daily Sun Columnist

Portland’s Time and Temperature build-ing usually fl ashes a “Call Joe” ad for Joe Bornstein, but this week the message is different. (FILE PHOTO)

Page 5: The Portland Daily Sun, February 23, 2011

THE PORTLAND DAILY SUN, Wednesday, February 23, 2011— Page 5

When I was in sixth grade, there was this girl “JK” that didn’t like me. It started with eye-rolls and sneers when she passed me in the hall.

Then she got braver and would tell me I had a big nose and would make fun of my hair. Then she got her friends to join in. They would get in my face and ask me why I “looked so retarded” or why I wore such ugly clothes. Then JK stole my new pair of basketball shoes that I had saved up to buy (that was a lot of babysitting at $3 an hour).

Rather than confront her about it (even when she had them on her feet) or tell my parents, I quit the team. I was humiliated. Ashamed. Scared to go into the bathroom alone.

But it never occurred to me that I was being bullied. She never touched me and that’s what I associated with the term. But living in that terrifi ed state of the unknown was awful. I would have rather been smacked around.

That is nothing compared to what kids have to deal with today.

Back then, bullying was pretty much contained to the playground or halls. Some punk pushing another for his lunch money or some witch girl stealing shoes.

Today’s kids have it coming at them

‘Sticks and stones’ has to go; bullies do real harm–––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––– OPINION ––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––

from all angles: texts, sexts, blocked calls, Facebook, emails, webcams, Tweets and IM’s, as well as old fash-ioned gossip and rumor spreading.

That ancient sticks and stones crap has to go. I have been (accidently) punched and I can’t recall what that feels like. But damn if I don’t remem-ber every insult that has been hurled my way. Most people are that way. The psychological effect far outlasts any bruises. Victims can suffer from depression, loneliness, sleeplessness and low self-esteem. Researchers say they are more likely to abuse drugs and alcohol and partake in reckless sexual behavior. And worse. Just look at the stories of teens committing sui-cide over hateful words.

Bullying is an epidemic in schools.I spoke with several teachers about

the bullying policy in their respec-tive schools, public and private alike. “Confl ict resolution” seems to be the buzzword. Yet, the very nature of a

confl ict is to be in a struggle, contro-versy or quarrel with an idea, activity, person etc. As in, “My dry cleaner and I are in a confl ict over red wine stains on my wedding dress that were not there when I dropped it off.”

In a bullying situation, a victim is being scared, threatened and hurt by someone else — actions that need no mutuality of misunderstanding. Therefore, having an aggressor and victim sit and try to “work through their problems” is ridiculous when the problem is that half of that situation is a jackass.

A 2010 study released by the Josephson Institute of Ethics in Los Angeles showed that more than 50 percent of high schoolers have been bullied or have been the bully. Of the 43,300 teens surveyed, 24 percent think school is unsafe and an unhappy place to be. Sickeningly, 28 percent of students feel violence is OK in school; 10 percent have brought a weapon to school.

Yet, bullying still isn’t something taken seriously by adults. It is easy to wipe it away with the “stick up for yourself, it builds character” cloth. Think about it from a kid’s point of view. Coming to a parent and saying “Will calls me names/laughs at me/shoves me …” is mortifying. Our

number one job as parents is to keep our children safe. But how can we pro-tect them from something that can be as invisible as radon?

We can empower our kiddos from a young age. The best way to do this is enroll them in martial arts. Most martial arts are actually non-violent sports, advocating discipline and self-respect. Bullies are cowards who pray on the (perceived) weak. They aren’t going to push around a kid who exudes a high level of confi dence. And if a situation does arise where physi-cal contact exists, your child has the tools to protect themselves — and hopefully others. It is heartbreaking to hear stories of a kid getting bullied while a group stands by and watches in silence. What more fuel does a bully need? If your confi dent child sat next to a victim at lunch or volunteered to be their partner in math, anything to dissuade an attack, (it doesn’t have to be a physical interference) the bully would soon lose interest.

We need to advocate for our own kids so they become empowered to advocate for others. Childhood to too short and precious to be lived in fear.

(Maggie Knowles is a columnist for The Portland Daily Sun. Her column appears Wednesdays.)

Maggie Knowles

–––––Use Your

Outdoor Voice

Bornstein was happy to donate time on the clock for a good causeHIGGINS from page 4

Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac perpetrated a scamHARROP from page 4

while this development is not good for sellers, it offers a valuable lesson to us all.

Government policies have helped whip up home prices in both bubbly and seemingly froth-free markets. If Washington, D.C., really wants to help people buy homes — and I don’t see why that should be a public goal — it should let house prices fall as they may.

I’m not normally a government-is-the-problem type, but in this fi asco, it was. Ironically, the gov-ernment program that many on the right blame for the disaster, the anti-redlining Community Reinvestment Act, was not at fault. Most of the bad subprime loans issued at the height of the frenzy were made by institutions outside CRA rules.

Where conservatives and smart liberals rightly point fingers is at Fannie Mae and Fred-die Mac. These privately owned companies had quite a scam going. They would buy and repack-age risky loans that the taxpayers, in effect, guaranteed. Their executives spared no expense in lobbying Congress to preserve the deal and in

paying themselves.The time has come to wind down the twins,

though not too quickly. They and the Federal Housing Administration now back 90 percent of all new mortgages. The housing market would totally collapse were this government support to be suddenly withdrawn. We must act with care.

Another government subsidy that needs to go: the tax deduction for mortgage interest. Many homeowners regard this deduction as something a white-bearded man brought down from Mount Sinai. But it does several unwanted things. It favors homebuyers over renters. It encourages people to borrow more money simply to get a tax advantage. It deprives the Treasury of needed revenues — an estimated $500 billion from 2010 through 2013.

President Obama’s defi cit reduction commis-sion recommended capping the mortgage interest deduction for home loans exceeding $500,000 (the limit is now $1 million). It would bar such deduc-tions for second-home mortgages and home equity loans. Let’s stop it altogether.

Would that be the end of home-owning as we know it? Hardly. Canada doesn’t allow any deduc-

tions for mortgage interest, and its housing market is far healthier than ours. Indeed, that could be a reason.

Shellshocked private lenders are now demand-ing that borrowers put more skin in the game. They’re requiring about 20 percent of the sales price upfront. Obama recently called for raising the down payment on conventional mortgages guaranteed by Fannie or Freddie to 10 percent.

Buyers who can’t come up with the dough are stampeding the FHA, whose mortgages require a down payment of only 3.5 percent. Small wonder that half the home loans issued last year were FHA-backed. Taxpayers should worry about being on the hook for them.

Government housing programs may yearn to help people buy homes. In practice, they make homes more expensive and therefore less afford-able. They are also why a housing bust that started in Vegas, didn’t stay in Vegas.

(To fi nd out more about Froma Harrop, and read features by other Creators Syndicate writers and cartoonists, visit the Creators Syndicate web page at www.creators.com.)

and Melinda Gates Foundation is working at chip-ping away at those. As part of what Rotarians do in raising awareness, I was proud to donate time on Maine’s only outdoor billboard.”

The sign will run all week, and then be switched back to the old “CALL JOE.”

This isn’t the only sign in Portland, though. Over the week, while passing home at night, I’ve noticed a white Rotary symbol and “END POLIO NOW” projected onto the front of the Portland Museum of Art.

According to information posted on the World Health Organization (WHO) website, “Polio is a highly infectious disease caused by a virus. It invades the nervous system, and can cause total paralysis in a matter of hours. The virus enters the body through the mouth and mul-tiplies in the intestine. Initial symptoms are fever, fatigue, headache, vomiting, stiffness in the neck and pain in the limbs. One in 200 infec-tions leads to irreversible paralysis (usually in the legs). Among those paralysed, 5% to 10% die when their breathing muscles become immobi-lized.”

The last major outbreak of polio in the U.S. was in 1952, where there were over 58,000 cases. Aside from a few very sporadic rural cases among the Pennsylvania Amish community, it has all but been eradicated in the U.S.

When you look up at the sign this week, think about that for a second. A crippling disease, brought to a halt by an oral vaccine. And nice call, Joe.

“TWO DROP” indeed.

(Bob Higgins is a regular contributor to The Portland Daily Sun.)

Page 6: The Portland Daily Sun, February 23, 2011

Page 6 — THE PORTLAND DAILY SUN, Wednesday, February 23, 2011

SPACE Gallery, an alterna-tive arts and music venue at 538 Congress, announced plans Tuesday to expand into a adjacent space at 534 Congress by this summer. The new space will host the types of art installations, workshops and residency programs that were limited by the original location’s use as a live music venue. In this fi le photo from last summer, two artists install wallpaper for Kimberly Con-very and Kreh Mellick’s show “Some. Things. Curious.” which saw SPACE trans-formed into a living room with wallpaper, family portraits, vignettes and texture. (MATT DODGE FILE PHOTO)

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The new space will be used primar-ily for large-scale art installations, workshops and residency programs which the existing space, doubling as a live music venue, cannot host. “We look forward to having this new gal-lery for those ambitious projects that don’t fi t well in a performance space that requires a lot of room,” said May.

Since opening in 2002, the non-profi t alternative arts venue has hosted a number of large-scale art installations in its gallery space, but May said wariness about block-ing sight lines or minimizing capac-ity for live music or fi lm events has prevented the gallery from executing some installations to their liking.

“Right now when we have any kind of a project, art installation or event it typically needs to coexist or be limited by other events that are happening,” said May, citing the “Dis-tance Don’t Matter” installation in Fall 2009 by New York graffi ti artist Swoon.

“They could have done so much more if we didn’t make them stay clear of middle of room so you had sight lines for shows. If we did a similar project in the new gallery it wouldn’t affect the rest of our pro-gramming,” said May.

While May said Space has been

very successful in its eight years on the scene, doubling its annual budget since 2005 and attracting a steady fl ow of culturally relevant artists and musicians, the new Space will not be used in exactly the same way, although live music hasn’t been ruled out.

“We’re not trying to duplicate the gallery we already have. We’re really fond of our current performance space, but there are times when we have music shows, conversations or smaller performances where the cur-rent space feels a little bit too big,” said May

May credits a supportive artis-tic community with Space’s expan-sion, saying that “... it’s donations that allow us to take a leap like this. We’ve grown at a really exciting rate in the last fi ve years, and I think it speaks to Greater Portland’s readi-ness for the kind of programming we’re doing.”

“We’ve grown at a really excit-ing rate in the last fi ve years,

and I think it speaks to Greater Portland’s readiness for the kind of programming we’re doing.” —

Nat May of Space Gallery

SPACE from page one

Arts venue expanding

Workers sickened at Apple supplier in China

SUZHOU, China — Last week, when Apple released its annual review of labor conditions at its global suppliers, one startling revelation stood out: 137 workers at a factory here had been seriously injured by a toxic chemical used in making the sig-nature slick glass screens of the iPhone.

Apple, describing it as a “core violation” of worker safety, said that it had ordered the contractor to stop using the chemical and to improve safety conditions at the plant. Apple also said that it would monitor the medical conditions of those workers.

But in interviews last weekend, nearly a dozen employees who say they were harmed by the chemi-cal said they had never heard from anyone at Apple.

Instead, they said the contractor — a Taiwanese-owned company called Wintek — had pressed them and many other affected workers to resign and accept cash settlements that would absolve the fac-tory of future liability, charges the company denied.

“We hope Apple will heed to its corporate social responsibility,” said Jia Jingchuan, 27. He said expo-sure at the Wintek plant to the chemical, known as n-hexane, had left him with nerve damage and made him so hypersensitive to cold that he now must wear down-insulated clothing even indoors. “Usually someone my age doesn’t wear this type of pants,” he said raising his voice. “Only 50- or 60-year-old men wear something like this.”

On Monday, however, a Wintek spokesman denied that the company was pressing workers to resign or sign papers absolving the company of future liabil-ity.

The company said it was working with medical professionals to assess the health of workers. Jay Huang, the spokesman, even suggested that Wintek would pay for medical care should the symptoms persist after workers resign.

“Wintek’s policy of handling this is to put workers’ benefi t as the fi rst priority,” he said.

BY DAVID BARBOZATHE NEW YORK TIMES

Page 7: The Portland Daily Sun, February 23, 2011

THE PORTLAND DAILY SUN, Wednesday, February 23, 2011— Page 7

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Commercial real estate is the focus of free seminar at Portland law fi rm

The Portland law fi rm Murray, Plumb & Murray will be hosting a free seminar: “Commercial Real Estate Basics for New Investors” on Tuesday, March 1, from 4:30 p.m. to 6 p.m. at the fi rm’s offi ce at 75 Pearl St. in Portland.

Drew Anderson and Timothy Boulette, directors at Murray, Plumb & Murray, will present the “Com-mercial Real Estate Basics” seminar. They will lead a general discussion on the basic elements of invest-ing in commercial real estate, including choosing a broker, valuation, choice of entity, negotiation and purchase process, fi nancing and property manage-ment options, according to a company press release. This discussion will be of interest to people who are or may be fi rst-time commercial property purchas-ers, either as investment vehicles or as homes for their businesses.

Reservations are required. To reserve a seat, con-tact Kathy Willette at 523-8243 or at [email protected]. Refreshments will be provided.

Wood heat for homes subject of study at College of the Atlantic

College of the Atlantic is involved in a study about the use of wood for heating, using a federal grant administered by the University of Maine, the Bar Harbor-based college reported.

COA students, faculty and staff are looking into the “viability of wood as a renewable, effi cient, local and less polluting heating resource” for Hancock County, according to a college press release. The Hancock County Firewood Project will be present-ing some of its preliminary fi ndings at a forum at 7 p.m. in the second fl oor auditorium of the Ellsworth City Hall on Thursday, Feb. 24 titled “Local Heat: The Hancock County Firewood Project.”

The funds for the project come from EPSCoR, the Experimental Program to Stimulate Competitive Research, a program of the National Science Foun-dation offering funding to states that have histori-cally received only minimal amounts of research and design grants from the national government. COA has received $75,000 this year to fund research into the potential uses of the Hancock County woodshed. The project is titled “Developing Our Energy Future.”

About 20 students along with faculty and staff are looking into issues such as who in Hancock County is using fi rewood-and the reasons for and against using it — as well as the health of the county’s for-ests, its suitability for fi rewood, the impact wood burning has on the air and water, and other emis-sions concerns. Other associated projects-much of it spearheaded by students-range from working with elementary school students to teach them how to conduct surveys to exploring whether softwoods can be transformed into butanol to fuel automobiles.

The members of the Firewood Project are hoping for feedback and ideas. For more information on the “Local Heat: The Hancock County Firewood Project” forum, or to provide feedback about the project, con-tact Gray Cox at [email protected], or call 801-5712 or 288-5015.

DAILY SUN STAFF REPORTS

The entrance to the Cumberland Club greets visitors on High Street. “Built as a private residence in 1800, a full 20 years before Maine would become the nation’s 23rd state, the building in which The Cumberland Club resides was built by John Kimball, a prolifi c builder of Federal-style homes in Newburyport, Mass.,” reports the club’s website (www.cum-berlandclub.org). (DAVID CARKHUFF PHOTO)

–––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––– REAL ESTATE BRIEFS –––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––– Historic clubhouse

Page 8: The Portland Daily Sun, February 23, 2011

Page 8 — THE PORTLAND DAILY SUN, Wednesday, February 23, 2011

Zach Broda said Spun Arts & Apparel at 543 Congress St. is a clothing and art store that focuses on the underground clothing and music cultures. (DAVID CARKHUFF PHOTO)

Spun Arts & Apparel

––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––– WHAT’S IN A NAME? –––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––

LOCATION: 543 Congress St.CONTACT: 518-9720 or

on FacebookHOURS: Monday through Thursday, 10 a.m. to 8 p.m.; Friday and Satur-day, 10 a.m. to 9 p.m.; and Sunday,

noon to 7 p.m.

Zach Broda said Spun Arts & Apparel at 543 Congress St. is a clothing and art store that focuses on the underground clothing and music cultures. “Aimed at elec-tronic music, hip-hop, and jam festival followers, we try to carry brands that can’t be found many other places in our area. The name SPUN came about because it was a word used for both clothing and music. Records are spun, and cloth is spun to make clothing,” he wrote. Broda added a diction-ary defi nition: “SPUN: Verb: The Past tense and past participle of SPIN. Ex. To spin records. Adjec-tive: Formed or manufactured by spinning.”

NatalieLadd–––––

What It’s Like

Geographically speaking, restau-rants in Maine tend to coincide with much of the rest of the political prac-tices and philosophies that we embody in the Pine Tree state.

Southeastern Maine and the sea-sonal coastal regions are fi lled with a multitude of edgy bar menus, bodegas, and bistros offering items that take innovative liberties with recipes and price points.

Move northwest and inland, and with the exception of a few hot spots on the map (Thistles in Bangor, comes to mind and successfully boasts, "Clas-sical International Cuisine — Fine Dining with a Latin Flair") things turn far more conservative and pre-dictable, with economic demograph-ics dictating how far from mid-right a restaurant can venture and thrive.

The political metaphor is fun to think about, but for the foodies among us not so much fun to be stuck in the middle of. Jeff Graham, owner of the brunch and lunch house, Stone Dog Cafe on Route 302 in Windham, met with me over an antipasto special at Norm's last week for some Q&A about the business.

What's going on with the restaurant scene in Windham these days?

Jeff Graham: "Ask 10 different people and you'll get 10 different answers. We’ve had fi ve dinner paces close in North Windham in Novem-ber and December, only to have two

reopen immediately, resembling almost exactly what was there before. People are more budget conscious crazy and a family of four is going to Little Caesar's for $5 pizza. They're hitting the chains instead of keeping the money local. And it's nuts... who do I cater to? If I tried to serve this antipasto platter for $12.99 for lunch at my place, someone would ask where the fries are.

Being the 'Lakes Region' the Wind-ham area has a split personality. Windham is like a bedroom commu-nity of Portland, right? My build-ing has been many restaurants and when I opened in 2003 it was great. The summer was rocking and I had a line out the door for brunch every day. It's still that way in the summer, but it's almost impossible to get through the rest of the year. Being a break-fast and brunch place, I didn't expect that much of a seasonal drop and we go from 12 full-time servers to four when summer ends. Look, I'm a local guy from Gorham. I started washing

dishes at 12 and have worked with some of the biggest names in Port-land. Roger Bintliff and David Turin were key infl uences in my 20-some-thing year long career, but the locals have offi cially pissed me off."

Give me a solid example of the local behavior that has you so frustrated.

JG: When the word got out that Charlie Beigg's was closing their doors forever people came out in droves and Beigg's did huge summer numbers their last two weekends. Beigg's has been around forever and it was like a famous painter or something. In Windham, you're celebrated when you're dead. It's 'death versus food.' And people are fi nicky for the same old stuff. It's boring. I want to serve a really good meal of value instead of a just a cheap meal. It's demoralizing but it would be a little less painful to put out the same stuff all the time if it paid the bills."

How much of this do you have to own? What can you do to turn things around?

JG: "Oh, I'll turn it around... I'm not giving up. Don't get me wrong, I like these people and want to make good, interesting food. I read the comment book every day, but I just want them to get it. To get that they are the locals that are putting other locals out of business.

"My prices are pretty reasonable, even by Windham standards. I guess

I have to maximize hours and seats over the summer month and that may mean expansion. My staff knows everybody. I use the best, freshest stuff I can get, but my costs are higher than the guy in town who can run to the dock, and I don't want to compro-mise. I'm also willing to advertise and try new marketing ideas, but I don't want to give the place away with free-bies and discounts that leave people feeling ripped off when they have to pay full price. There are some guys out there that are too arrogant to advertise. I'm arrogant about other stuff because I know I'm right in this."

What's the story behind the name?JG: "Stone was my fi rst dog. A rott-

weiler and just a sweetheart. If you look around the cafe, you'll see actual paw prints in the plaster on the walls and most of the art is dog themed."

Ah ... like Binga's Wingas. Most people don't know that Binga is co-owner Alec Altman's dog ... So, what's Nirvana for Stone Dog Cafe?

JG: "I’m thinking about closing after New Year’s Day next year and maybe just doing weekends through March. I’d like to have the ability to actually create during breakfast, lunch and dinner. I have these great things in my head, and would like to have people respond positively and come back again and again. I’d like to have unlimited resources for better

A chef has a bone to pick with his locals

see LADD page 9

–––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––– RESTAURANT COLUMN –––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––

Page 9: The Portland Daily Sun, February 23, 2011

THE PORTLAND DAILY SUN, Wednesday, February 23, 2011— Page 9

34 crossing guides.“Me and my buddy here, we stand

out in the cold and rain, it’s like I’m a mailman ... except I haven’t got a chair,” Schmaling quipped, gesturing to the statue.

Paid through the city’s parking divi-sion, crossing guides work approxi-mately 10 hours a week during the school year and have all school vaca-tions and the summer break off, accord-ing to the city’s website.

The city has a total of 28 school cross-ing locations, which will soon be 29 with the opening of the Ocean Avenue School, covered by 34 crossing guides, city spokesperson Nicole Clegg reported. Crossing guides work approximately two hours per day. Starting pay is $9.25 per hour and $10.25 per hour for “fl oat-ers.”

Schmaling said he fi gures the tax-payer is getting a good bank for a buck.

“I get a half a dozen kids a day... you divide that into 10 bucks (an hour), that’s not too bad for the city,” he said.

It’s been a tough winter for the refl ector-jacketed fi gures who occupy key corners in the city. On Jan. 24, it was 13 below zero — “it’s amazing that I even

came in,” Schmaling said with a smile.Last week, Schmaling dressed down as tempera-

tures climbed toward 50 degrees, but the norm for winter apparel is something a bit warmer.

“The thing is you’ve got to wear lots of clothes, layers of clothes and move around a lot,” he said.

Schmaling said his son also works for the parking division, “but he hands out tickets.” Schmaling’s job is less stressful than that of a parking enforce-ment offi cer, although he doesn’t take lightly the responsibility of ushering people across busy inter-sections.

Still, Schmaling tries to maintain a sense of humor, marveling at the assortment of characters who pass through Long-fellow Square.

“We have such a variety of people here, it’s incred-

ible, I’ve seen all kinds of people here. It’s like the center of the universe,” he said.

Schmaling himself could be counted as one of those characters — he tackles his job with humor and personality to spare.

“I was thinking of doing standup, usually when I get a captive audience I go to town on them. I always think of something funny to say,” he confessed.

Schmaling knows that there are warmer days ahead — and not just here in Maine.

“What I’m doing is basically working out here in the cold and the rain and everything so I can stand on the deck of a cruise ship in August and go to Bermuda. What I make here in a year pays for my cruise tickets. I can’t complain about that,” he said.

The city of Portland is accepting resumes and applications through Friday, March 4 for 2010-2011 school year crossing guides. For details, visit www.ci.portland.me.us/jobs.asp.

“The thing is you’ve got to wear lots of clothes, layers of clothes and move around a lot.” — Tom Schmaling, on

the key to working as a crossing guide in the winter

CROSSING from page one

ABOVE: Crossing guide Tom Schmaling pauses for a break at Longfellow Square last week. BOTTOM LEFT: Schmaling monitors a busy intersection where Congress and State streets converge. (DAVID CARKHUFF PHOTOS)

curb appeal and updates, but I do think we do a good job overall. I just want to take it to the next level."

Wow, Dinner. What’s the vision?JG: "Yep, dinner. One of my mentors taught me to

hit right back while being hit, and I’d like to open the Sun Room at Stone Dog Cafe; for summer evenings, and hopefully beyond. As far as the vision from the kitchen, I like to do minimalistic cooking and keep techniques and ingredients simple. I believe in buying the best. The highest quality. I don’t believe in a huge spice rack or over complicating anything.

Just give me kosher salt, raw garlic, some fresh rose-mary and a piece of swordfi sh. Oh, and linen and a simple yet varied wine list."

And how would your staff describe you?JG: "Arrogant, condescending, and mean, but cre-

ative, funny and intelligent. You were talking about the politics and restrictions of Maine restaurant locations, but you know, like most Chefs I run a fas-cist regime. It’s not a democracy at Stone Dog Cafe, but even I have an ego swallowing point when some-one has a good idea. And you mentioned the word vision before; it has to come from the top."

My Take: Mud season is on the way and the drive

from town takes about 15 minutes. Prices range form $5 to $13 and Jeff is going to have to fi gure out a way to put his killer corned beef hash on the dinner menu. The Lobster Florentine served Bene-dict style isn’t just for summer folks either. Hollan-daise is replaced by a delightful caramelized onion, bacon and heavy cream reduction over chunks of lobster meat and fresh baby spinach, all assembled on an English muffi n.

(Natalie Ladd and her “What’s It Like” column take a weekly look at the culinary business in and around Portland.)

LADD from page 8

Stone Dog Cafe owner refl ects on restaurant business in Windham

“We have such a variety of people here, it’s incred-ible, I’ve seen all kinds of people here. It’s like the center of the universe.” — Tom Schmaling on

Longfellow Square

Crossing guide sees it all at busy square

Page 10: The Portland Daily Sun, February 23, 2011

Page 10 — THE PORTLAND DAILY SUN, Wednesday, February 23, 2011

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HOROSCOPE By Holiday Mathis

ARIES (March 21-April 19). As long as you stay in the mindset of experi-mentation, you won’t get frustrated when the elements don’t come together as planned. You’ll be as attractive as you are playful. TAURUS (April 20-May 20). It won’t matter how agreeable you are today because what people most want to hear from you is your true opinion. The more honest you are the more they like you. GEMINI (May 21-June 21). There’s a certain emotional distance that feels right. That’s why when you push a person away, he or she will naturally want to come closer to lessen the gap and maintain the desired amount of dis-tance. CANCER (June 22-July 22). You may feel uncertain about a relationship, but that doesn’t make it less interest-ing to you. In fact, your uncertainty may be what keeps you coming back to this intriguing situation. LEO (July 23-Aug. 22). You are sen-sitive to your environment. You notice things that others do not. Sometimes this causes you to feel overwhelmed. Try to focus on the big picture. Don’t get bogged down in details. VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22). You want something more if you’re not sure that you will be able to have it. Others are the same. Use this principle to create demand for your goods or ser-vices. LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 23). You’ll take a lesson from your personal his-tory and apply it well now. It’s wonderful that you can use your past to create a future fi lled with more of the things you want out of life.

SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 21). Before you venture out to get things done in the world, do your research. Good communication will save you time and money today. Make sure that the right people are going to be there to provide what you need. SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21). You can only do so much working alone. Get together with those who have a dif-ferent skill set from yours. When you banter around ideas in a small group, you’ll generate new and exciting plans. CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19). Preparation will be the single factor that contributes the most to your success. Give yourself plenty of time to think things through and plot out a plan of attack. AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18). Your loyalty shines as you continue to show your support. You’ll give visual and auditory evidence that you understand what a loved one is going on about, even when you don’t. PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20). You thrive with a regimen, but today it ben-efi ts you to fl y off a bit and give in to a few of your impulses. Your spontaneity makes life wondrous, not just for you but for everyone around you. TODAY’S BIRTHDAY (Feb. 23). You’ll be highly motivated to develop your skills and talents this year. In April, new encouragement comes in the form of a special relationship. May brings an emphasis on religion, education and cultural pursuits. There’s money from a fresh source in June. July is the ideal time to travel. Wedding bells ring in October. Scorpio and Aries people adore you. Your lucky numbers are: 20, 16, 47, 44 and 49.

ACROSS 1 Trial location 6 Actor __ Garrett 10 Has __ in one’s

pants; is jittery 14 Happening 15 Bridal veil material 16 Tight 17 Spooky 18 Small bills 19 Blair or Danza 20 Make longer 22 Tooth coating 24 Finishes 25 Exact 26 Property destroyer 29 “Go get the ball,

Fido!” 30 Actor Wallach 31 Written slander 33 “Ode on a Grecian

Urn” poet 37 Jokes 39 Sleeping place 41 Urgent 42 Sooty residue

44 Nitrogen and oxygen

46 Meadowland 47 Spring month 49 Temporary moral

failings 51 Ardor 54 Insulting remark 55 Distributes 56 Bilateral 60 Extended family

group 61 Concept 63 Out of the way 64 Roof’s edge 65 Rich soil 66 Overeat 67 Recolored 68 Sharp, shrill cry 69 Go in

DOWN 1 Cheney or Biden,

for short 2 At any time

3 Fiddling Roman emperor

4 Acting as one 5 Everlasting 6 Political voting

alliances 7 Talk wildly 8 Highest club 9 Abandon 10 Tied on 11 Wynonna’s mom 12 Melodies 13 Fashion 21 Speak off the cuff 23 Less popular

chicken piece 25 Throws stones at 26 ‘70s Chevrolet

model 27 Word of lament 28 Near 29 Wild 32 Start 34 Feels sick 35 Acacia or alder 36 Bodies of water

DAILY CROSSWORDTRIBUNE MEDIA SERVICES

38 Added salt and spices to

40 Phone greeting 43 Barbecue rod 45 Bratwurst or

knackwurst 48 In an optimistic

way 50 Penitentiary

51 Walked back and forth

52 Alleviate 53 One in bondage 54 Wetland 56 Greenish blue 57 Soil 58 Rim 59 Bambi, for one 62 Unknown John

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

Solution and tips at

www.sudoku.com

TU

ND

RA

by C

had

Carp

ente

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Yesterday’s Answer

Page 11: The Portland Daily Sun, February 23, 2011

THE PORTLAND DAILY SUN, Wednesday, February 23, 2011— Page 11

WEDNESDAY PRIME TIME FEBRUARY 23, 2011 Dial 8:00 8:30 9:00 9:30 10:00 10:30 11:00 11:30 5 CTN 5 Main Social Justice Portland Water District Meeting Community Bulletin Board

6 WCSHMinute to Win It Aron Ralston comepetes for charity. (N) Å

Minute to Win It Aron Ralston comepetes for charity. (N) Å

Law & Order: Special Victims Unit “Bully” (N) (In Stereo) Å

News Tonight Show With Jay Leno

7 WPFOAmerican Idol “Hollywood Round, Part 4” Perform-ing songs by the Beatles. (N) (In Stereo) Å

News 13 on FOX (N) Frasier (In Stereo) Å

According to Jim “No Surprises”

8 WMTWThe Middle “Hecks on a Plane”

Better With You (N) Å

Modern Family (N) Å

Mr. Sun-shine (N) Å

Off the Map “Es Un Milagro” The medevac helicopter crashes. (N)

News 8 WMTW at 11PM (N)

Nightline (N) Å

10 MPBNHigh School Basketball

High School Basketball Eastern Maine Class A Tournament, Second Semifinal: Teams TBA.

Nova scienceNOW Technologies may change life in future.

Charlie Rose (N) (In Stereo) Å

11 WENHAntiques Roadshow Lucy M. Lewis Acoma Pueblo pottery. (N)

American Experience “Jimmy Carter” President Jimmy Carter’s leadership. (In Stereo) Å (DVS)

Blue Realm “Whale Sharks: Gentle Giants” (In Stereo) Å

12 WPXTAmerica’s Next Top Model Fourteen become finalists. (N) Å

Shedding for the Wed-ding Nine couples face grueling workouts. (N)

Entourage “Play’n With Fire”

TMZ (N) (In Stereo) Å

Extra (N) (In Stereo) Å

Punk’d (In Stereo) Å

13 WGMESurvivor: Redemption Island A kind gesture draws attention. (N)

Criminal Minds “Coda” Reid connects with an autistic child. (N)

Criminal Minds: Sus-pect Behavior “Lonely Hearts” (N) Å

WGME News 13 at 11:00

Late Show With David Letterman

17 WPME Burn Notice Å Burn Notice Å Curb Earl Star Trek: Next

24 DISC MythBusters Å Sons Sons Desert Car Kings (N) MythBusters Å 25 FAM Funniest Home Videos Funniest Home Videos Funniest Home Videos The 700 Club Å 26 USA NCIS “Honor Code” NCIS “Under Covers” NCIS “Frame-Up” Fairly Legal Å 27 NESN Spotlight Red Sox Red Sox Live Daily Dennis Daily Daily

28 CSNE College Basketball The Baseball Show Sports SportsNet Celtics Pregame

30 ESPN NBA Basketball: Thunder at Spurs NBA Basketball: Clippers at Hornets

31 ESPN2 College Basketball College Basketball Baylor at Missouri. (Live) College Basketball

33 ION Without a Trace Å Without a Trace Å Criminal Minds Å Criminal Minds Å 34 DISN Movie: ››› “Meet the Robinsons” Fish Good Luck Good Luck Suite/Deck Suite/Deck

35 TOON Dude Destroy King of Hill King of Hill Amer. Dad Amer. Dad Fam. Guy Fam. Guy

36 NICK My Wife My Wife Chris Chris Lopez Lopez The Nanny The Nanny

37 MSNBC MSNBC Live (N) Rachel Maddow Show The Ed Show (N) The Last Word

38 CNN Parker Spitzer (N) Piers Morgan Tonight Anderson Cooper 360 Å 40 CNBC American Greed American Greed American Greed (N) Mad Money

41 FNC The O’Reilly Factor (N) Hannity (N) Greta Van Susteren The O’Reilly Factor (N)

43 TNT Bones (In Stereo) Å Bones (In Stereo) Å Bones (In Stereo) Å Southland Å 44 LIFE Reba Å Reba Å Meth: County Crisis Meth’s Deadly High How I Met How I Met

46 TLC Toddlers & Tiaras Toddlers & Tiaras Toddlers & Tiaras (N) Toddlers & Tiaras

47 AMC Movie: ›››› “The Godfather, Part II” (1974, Crime Drama) Al Pacino, Robert Duvall.

48 HGTV House Property House First Place Hunters Holmes Inspection Income

49 TRAV Man, Food Man, Food Carnivore Man, Food Man, Food Man, Food Man, Food Man, Food

50 A&E Dog Dog Dog Dog Storage Storage Storage Storage

52 BRAVO Top Chef Å Top Chef “Lock Down” Top Chef (N) Å Top Chef Å 55 HALL Little House on Prairie Movie: “A Kiss at Midnight” (2008) Faith Ford. Gold Girls Gold Girls

56 SYFY Ghost Hunters Å Ghost Hunters (N) Face Off (N) Ghost Hunters Å 57 ANIM I Shouldn’t Be Alive I Shouldn’t Be Alive I Shouldn’t Be Alive (N) I Shouldn’t Be Alive

58 HIST Ancient Aliens Å Ancient Aliens “The Evidence” Å Weird Weapons Å 60 BET BET Honors Honorees include Cicely Tyson. The Game The Game The Mo’Nique Show

61 COM Chappelle Chappelle South Park South Park South Park Tosh.0 Daily Show Colbert

62 FX Movie: ››‡ “Hancock” (2008) Will Smith. Justified (N) Justified

67 TVLND Sanford Sanford Raymond Raymond Cleveland Retired at Cleveland Retired at

68 TBS Browns Browns Payne Payne There Yet? There Yet? Conan (N)

76 SPIKE 1,000 Ways to Die Ways Die Ways Die Ways Die 3 Sheets Ways Die Ways Die

78 OXY Movie: “You, Me and Dupree” Å Movie: ›› “Rumor Has It...” (2005) Å Rumor

146 TCM Movie: ››› “All the King’s Men” (1949) Å Movie: ›››› “You Can’t Take It With You”

––––––– ALMANAC –––––––

Today is Wednesday, Feb. 23, the 54th day of 2011. There are 311 days left in the year.

Today’s Highlight in History:On Feb. 23, 1861, President-elect Abra-

ham Lincoln arrived secretly in Washington to take offi ce, following word of a possible assassination plot in Baltimore.

On this date:In 1685, composer George Frideric

Handel was born in Germany.In 1836, the siege of the Alamo began in

San Antonio, Texas.In 1848, the sixth president of the United

States, John Quincy Adams, died in Wash-ington, D.C., at age 80.

In 1870, Mississippi was readmitted to the Union.

In 1927, President Calvin Coolidge signed a bill creating the Federal Radio Commis-sion, forerunner of the Federal Communica-tions Commission.

In 1942, the fi rst shelling of the U.S. mainland during World War II occurred as a Japanese submarine fi red on an oil refi n-ery near Santa Barbara, Calif., causing little damage.

In 1945, during World War II, U.S. Marines on Iwo Jima captured Mount Suribachi.

In 1954, the fi rst mass inoculation of children against polio with the Salk vaccine began in Pittsburgh.

In 1970, Guyana became a republic within the Commonwealth of Nations.

In 1981, an attempted coup began in Spain as 200 members of the Civil Guard invaded the Parliament, taking lawmakers hostage. (However, the attempt collapsed 18 hours later.)

One year ago: The House Energy and Commerce Committee, looking into cases of sudden, unintended acceleration of Toyota automobiles, heard tearful testimony from Rhonda Smith, of Sevierville, Tenn., who said her Lexus raced out of control to speeds up to 100 miles an hour. Dutch skater Sven Kramer lost the Olympic gold medal to Lee Seung-hoon of South Korea when coach Gerard Kemkers sent him the wrong way on a changeover during the 10,000-meter speedskating race at Vancouver.

Today’s Birthdays: Actor Peter Fonda is 71. Pro and College Football Hall of Famer Fred Biletnikoff is 68. Author John Sandford is 67. Singer-musician Johnny Winter is 67. Country-rock musician Rusty Young is 65. Actress Patricia Richardson is 60. Rock musician Brad Whitford (Aerosmith) is 59. Singer Howard Jones is 56. Rock musician Michael Wilton is 49. Country singer Dusty Drake is 47. Actress Kristin Davis is 46. Tennis player Helena Sukova is 46. Actor Marc Price is 43. Actress Niecy Nash is 41. Rock musician Jeff Beres is 40. Coun-try singer Steve Holy is 39. Rock musician Lasse Johansson is 38. Actress Emily Blunt is 28. Actress Dakota Fanning is 17.

ACROSS 1 Flat-bottomed

vessel 5 Gear tooth 8 Eucalyptus eaters 14 Dracula’s wrap 15 Down Under bird 16 Serengeti bounder 17 Having a single

magnetic direction 19 Diminish 20 Start of a Golda

Meir quote 22 Get the point 23 Writer Levin 24 Raw mineral 25 Female rabbit 28 Tina of “30 Rock” 29 Cutting a narrow

cut 31 Nods off 34 “The Wind in the

Willows” character 35 Whisker 36 Contrite one 37 Part 2 of quote 38 A single time

39 Bus. letter abbr. 40 Vases with bases 41 Welcome 42 Equivocated slyly 44 Sawbuck 45 AARP members 46 Stephen of

“Citizen X” 47 Hanoi holiday 48 Network of

“Frontline” 51 End of quote 54 Violinist Menuhin 57 Following the

correct path 58 Mutilated 59 Inarticulate grunt 60 Tiny arachnid 61 Roofed

passageway 62 Singer Orbison 63 Downhill coaster

DOWN 1 Desert Storm

missiles 2 Tippy vessel

3 Express a thought 4 Expressed sorrow 5 Aromatic leaf

stalks 6 Home of Creighton

University 7 Spiritual guide 8 Percy who was Pa

Kettle 9 Brunch choice 10 Church projection 11 Vegas intro 12 Pub offering 13 __ Juan

Capistrano 18 NYC theater

awards 21 Grinding teeth 25 Lane or Keaton 26 Chilled 27 Heronlike wading

bird 28 Flowerless plants 29 Puget or Pamlico 30 Sticker on a rose 31 Ties 32 External

33 Greek letters 34 Ripped into 37 Holiday season 41 Square one 43 Worn away 44 Peevish 47 Dance for two 48 Danger 49 Sew loosely 50 Knight’s mount

51 Romulus’s successor

52 Customary time 53 Sailors’ drinks 54 “Goomba

Boomba” singer Sumac

55 Knack for music 56 __ jacet

Yesterday’s Answer

DAILY CROSSWORDBY WAYNE ROBERT WILLIAMS

Page 12: The Portland Daily Sun, February 23, 2011

Page 12 — THE PORTLAND DAILY SUN, Wednesday, February 23, 2011

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 fi rst 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 offi ces 8:30 a.m. to 5 p.m., Mon-day 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 classifi ed display ads please call 699-5807.

CLASSIFIEDS • CALL 699-5807

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E CLASSIFIEDSCLASSIFIEDS

Prickly City by Scott Stantis

ANNIE’S MAILBOX Dear Annie: Our niece, “Jane,” is 51 years old, an alcoholic and a divorcee. She lives in a home owned by her mother, who also pays all her bills. Jane’s only job has been part-time summer work, and she was laid off last year. Jane refuses to pay rent or get help of any kind. Her parents (my sister and her husband) have loaned her a car, and they have done all the repairs to her house. Now Jane refuses to let them come over and visit. Jane meets a lot of guys at the local bar, and some of them move in with her for short periods of time. She and her three grown children go to our sister’s home for meals on a regular basis, as well as all holiday celebrations. Yet Jane treats her mother terribly, sometimes refusing to speak to her. My sister is 76. She’s tired of cooking for other people, but it keeps hap-pening. I know my sister and her husband have spoiled this girl, and they disregarded our advice that they are enablers who make matters worse. My sister used to complain about the way Jane lived, but she’s totally given up. She has been fi ght-ing depression for years, but now has given up on that, as well, and has decided to be miserable. It feels like we have lost the person we knew. Is there any-thing my siblings and I can do to help my sister? -- Missing Our Sister Dear Missing: Your sister fi gures it’s too late for Jane to learn how to support herself and fears that if she stops enabling, she will lose all contact with her daughter and grandchildren. She could be right. But your sister is only postponing the in-evitable, making herself unhappy in the interim. All you can do is be supportive: Take your sister out to lunch a couple of times a week. Go to the movies. Invite her over often. Also encourage her to seek counseling for herself, and perhaps she

will fi nd the strength to deal with Jane. Dear Annie: Five years ago, my son passed away unexpect-edly. His wife did not have the cash on hand to pay for the funeral service, so I loaned her the funds. She promised to repay me after she received the insurance money. As you might expect, she reneged on the deal and has not spoken to me since. She has also cut off all contact with our two grandchildren. Now she has “accepted” an offer from my brother to buy the kids new computers. My brother will buy one, and they want me to purchase the other one. I don’t feel obligated to cooperate because I already bought her a computer just before my son died, and she still owes me for the funeral. What is your take on this? -- Father-in-Law in Chino Valley, Ariz. Dear Arizona: This is the bribe you have to pay to see your grandchildren again. If you can afford it, we think it’s worth it. But make sure she understands that resuming regular con-tact with the grandchildren is the exchange for forgiving her debt (which she will never repay anyway), and for the new computer. And try your best to say it gently. Dear Annie: I have a better response to “Jim in Omaha,” who asked if there are rules about the arm rests in movie the-aters. When I was in elementary school back in the 1940s, I was taught that the armrest to your right is yours, leaving the one on your left to the person sitting on your left. If you happen to be sitting on the right side of an aisle, you would have both armrests. This also applies to airplane seats. -- Antique School Teacher in Oregon Dear Oregon: We like it. We can only hope patrons will fol-low your teachings.

Annie’s Mailbox is written by Kathy Mitchell and Marcy Sugar, longtime editors of the Ann Landers column. Please e-mail your questions to: [email protected], or write to: Annie’s Mailbox, c/o Creators Syndicate, 5777 W. Century Blvd., Ste. 700, Los Angeles, CA 90045.

ARE YOU READY FOR A CHANGE? Enjoy the quality of life found in theMt. Washington Valley while working in a progressive hospital that matchesadvanced medical technology with a compassionate approach to patient care.Join our team and see what a difference you can make!In addition to competitive salaries, we offer an excellent benefits package that in-cludes health/dental, generous paid time off, matching savings plan, educationalassistance and employee fitness program. We have the following openings:• Registration Clerk- Temporary F/T and P/T – Minimum two yearsoffice experience. Familiarity with healthcare billing and diagnosticcoding preferred.• Clinical Coordinator- Full-Time, RN with Wound Care exp. Resp.to coordinate clinical activities of the Wound Care Center. Must haveorganizational and leadership skills. Bachelor’s Degree in Nursing pref.Maintains and demonstrates competency in BLS, infection control,safety and all unit required skill review.• LNA- Full-time- Provide care and activities of daily living multipleresidents of the Merriman House. Exp and NH LNA license required.• Clinical Applications Support- Full-time. Support AmbulatoryEMR System, RN with IT experience. Clinical Informatics Degreepreferred. 5yrs recent ambulatory experience required. Clinical liaisonbetween IT and the clinical practices.• Office Assistant- Part-time, Responsible for all functions of the frontdesk, including answer telephone, photocopy medical records and fil-ing. Previous medical office and coding experience preferred.• Cook- Per Diem, 3 years experience in food preparation and sanita-tion or equivalent combination of education and exp. Preferred. ServeSafe certified pref. High School Diploma or GED.• Diabetes Nurse Educator- Full-time, Involves both individual andgroup instruction in Diabetes self-management skills. Responsible forthe insulin pump/CGSM programs and assist with inpatient hypergly-cemic protocols. Needs to be a self-starter and exp. In DiabetesCare/Education. Req’s incl. CDE, BSN & NH nursing license.• Biller- Per Diem, Performs billing and collections functions of ac-counts with balances due from insurance companies. 2 yrs business col-lege or specialized program preferred. Office and hospital exp pref.• Physical Therapist- Per Diem, Min Bachelor’s Degree in PhysicalTherapy. Previous inpatient exp pref. Current NH PT License andCPR Cert req. Wknd and Wkday cov.• RN- Full-time, 40 hr/wk with rotating call, OR exp, min 1 yr pref.ACLS, BLS & PALS with 3 months.

A completed Application is required to apply for all positionsWebsite: www.memorialhospitalnh.org.

Contact: Human Resources, Memorial Hospital, an EOEPO Box 5001, No. Conway, NH 03860.

Phone: (603)356-5461 • Fax: (603)356-9121

Announcement

COIN SHOWSaturday 2/26! American LegionHall, Post 35, 413 Broadway,South Portland. 8-2pm. FMI(802)266-8179.

Autos

BUYING all unwanted metals.$800 for large loads. Cars,trucks, heavy equipment. Freeremoval. (207)776-3051.

MARK’S Towing- Paying cashfor late models and free junk carremoval. (207)892-1707.

For Rent

PORTLAND- Danforth Street, 2bedrooms, heated, newlypainted, hardwood floors.$ 8 5 0 / m o . C a l l K a y(207)773-1814.

For Rent

PORTLAND- Maine Medical-Studio, 1/ 2 bedroom. Heated,off street parking, newly reno-v a t e d . $ 4 7 5 - $ 8 5 0 .(207)773-1814.

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

PORTLAND- Woodford’s area. 1bedroom heated. Newly in-stalled oak floor, just painted.$675/mo. (207)773-1814.

WESTBROOK large room eff.furnished, utilities pd includescable. Non-smokers only$195/weekly (207)318-5443.

For Rent-Commercial

PORTLAND Art District- 2 adja-cent artist studios with utilities.F i r s t f loor . $325 -$350(207)773-1814.

For Sale

BOXED- new sectional sofachocolate brown $399 call899-8853.

BRAND new full/ twin mattressset-in plastic $115 call 899-8853.

IMPORTED leather sofa mintcond. Worth $1100 take $475call 899-8853.

KING sleighbed oak w/ mattressset all new asking $395 call396-5661.

BED- Orthopedic 11 inch thick

super nice pillowtop mattress

& box. 10 year warranty,

new-in-plastic. Cost $1,200,sell Queen-$299, Full-$270,

King-$450. Can deliver.

235-1773

SELLING a queen pillowtopmattress set- never used $135must sell 396-5661.

For Sale

BEDROOM- 7 piece Solid

cherry sleigh. Dresser/Mirror

chest & night stand (all dove-

tail). New in boxes cost $2,200Sell $895. 603-427-2001

CUSTOM Glazed Kitchen Cabi-

nets. Solid maple, never in-

stalled. May add or subtract to

fit kitchen. Cost $6,000 sacri-fice $1,750. 433-4665

Lost

LOST keys on Congress St, be-tween Casco St and MetroPulse. Call (207)772-8566.

Services

DUMP RUNSWe haul anything to thedump. Basement, attic, garagec l e a n o u t s . I n s u r e dwww.thedumpguy.com(207)450-5858.

LAUNDRY SERVICEPick up, wash, dry, & deliver (ordrop-off). Portland & surround-ing areas. FMI & rates(207)879-1587.

MASTER Electrician since 1972.Repairs- whole house, rewiring,trouble shooting, fire damage,code violations, electric, waterheater repairs commercial re-frigeration. Fuses to breakers,g e n e r a t o r s . M a r k @(207)774-3116.

Wanted To Buy

BASEBALL Cards- Old. Seniorcitizen buying 1940-1968. Rea-sonable, please help. Lloyd(207)797-0574.

I buy broken or unwanted lap-tops. Cash today. Up to $100 fornewer units. (207)233-5381.

Yard Sale

SOUTH Portland Coin/ MarbleShow- 2/26/11, American LegionPost 25, 413 Broadway, 8-2pm.(802)266-8179. Free admission.

St. Judes - $5

“Can you send me prices for display ads in the Sun... I am really happy with the results from the Sun classifi eds and I want to expand... I have tried the other papers... zero replies... nothing even comes close to The Sun...”

— An advertiser who gets results using the Sun’s classifi eds.

To place a classifi ed call 699-5807

The Daily Sun Classi� eds

Page 13: The Portland Daily Sun, February 23, 2011

THE PORTLAND DAILY SUN, Wednesday, February 23, 2011— Page 13

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

see next page

Wednesday, Feb. 23

Winter Family Fun Day10 a.m. to 3 p.m. Fort McClary State Historic Site, Kittery; outdoor games, snowshoeing, ice skating, maple sugaring, nature walks, tree identifi cation, fort history, winter survival demonstration, animal tracking, bon fi re; hot lunch pro-vided; adults, 12-64, $1.50; all others free; for more infor-mation, call 384-5160.

High School Basketball Tournament starts at Civic Center6 p.m. Western Maine Class “A” and “B” Girls’ and Boys’ High School Basketball Tournament at the Civic Center. Runs through Saturday, Feb. 26. Feb. 23 — Class “A” Boys’ Semi-fi nals - one ticket valid for both games: 6 p.m. game #1; 7:30 p.m. game #2. Feb. 24 — Class “B” Girls’ Semi-fi nals: 3 p.m. game #1; 4:30 p.m. game #2; Feb. 24 — Class “B” Boys’ Semi-fi nals: 7:30 p.m. game #1; 9 p.m. game #2; Feb. 25 — Class “A” Girls’ Semi-fi nals: 6: p.m. game #1; 7:30 p.m. game #2; Feb. 26 — Class “B” Girls’ and Boys’ Regional Finals: 2 p.m. Girls’ Final; 3:45 p.m. Boys’ Final; Feb. 26 — Class “A” Girls’ and Boys’ Regional Finals: 7 p.m. Girls’ Final; 9 p.m. Boys’ Final.

James Voorhies at MECA6 p.m. Visiting curator lecture by James Voorhies at the Maine College of Art. Voorhies is the director of the Bureau For Open Culture in Columbus, Ohio and North Adams, Mass. “The organization works intentionally to re-imagine the art exhibition as a discursive form of education that cre-ates a kind of new public sphere or new institution. Pre-viously, he was deputy director at the Wattis Institute for Contemporary Arts at the California College of the Arts in San Francisco. His exhibitions often manifests themselves within sculptures/installations that other, more traditional institutions would fi nd a diffi cult time exhibiting. This ranges from a parade to a garden to a hot air balloon taking off from a Walmart parking lot.” Voorhies said, “We work intention-ally to re-imagine the art exhibition as a discursive form of education that creates a kind of new public sphere or new institution. Exhibitions take shape as installations, screen-ings, informal talks and performances and occur in parking lots, storefronts, libraries, industrial sites, country roads, gardens and galleries.” www.bureauforopenculture.org

Family Finances Seminar6:30 p.m. to 8:30 p.m. The Institute for Financial Literacy has launched a new interactive personal fi nance seminar series. “Taught by certifi ed educators and open to the gen-eral public, the seminars are designed to improve fi nan-cial literacy in Maine. In this session, you will learn how to manage your family fi nances like a business and teach your children important fi nancial literacy skills.” All seminars are being held at the Institute’s new campus conveniently located near the Maine Mall at 260 Western Ave. in South Portland. Cost is $50 per adult/$75 couple. Attendance is

limited and advance registration is required. To register, please call 221-3601 or email help@fi nanciallit.org. www.fi nanciallit.org

Peace Rally for Darfur7 p.m. to 9 p.m. Fur Cultural Revival (part of The Darfur Community Center of Maine) will hold a Peace Rally for Darfur at The Meg Perry Center, 644 Congress St., Port-land. Fur Cultural Revival (part of The Darfur Community Center of Maine) presents a rally for peace. This event is free and open to the public; however, donations will be accepted for Fur Cultural Revival. Speakers will include El-Fadel Arbab, as well as local activists and members of the Sudanese refugee communities. There will be a showing of the short documentary fi lm, “Tents of Hope.” Sudanese snacks and refreshments will be served.

Thursday, Feb. 24

Overeaters Anonymous10 a.m. Scarborough, W. Scarborough Methodist Church, Route 1 and Church St., oa.org for more info.

Wisdom At Work Seriesnoon to 1 p.m. Portland Public Library is hosting a four-part series on work each Thursday in February in Rines Audi-torium. The series is sponsored by Heart At Work Career Counseling and Amy Wood, Success Strategist. The last presentation in the series is titled “Your Job Doesn’t Have To Be Perfect For Life To Be Good” presented by Creighton Taylor of Thrive! Life Coaching.The public is invited to this free series. Heart At Work Career Counseling, Outplace-ment Services & Second Half of Life Planning, 25 Middle St. 775-6400.

Portland police forum with the Maine Center on Deafness6 p.m. The Portland Police Department with assistance from the Maine Center on Deafness will host a forum with the city’s deaf population to discuss safety concerns and ways the department can improve its relationship with the community. The forum will provide an opportunity for members of the deaf community and those connected to them, including family members, employers and neighbors, to share their thoughts openly and hear from the depart-ment about efforts to ensure that Portland is an inclusive and safe community for all. “I am committed to ensuring that all members of our community have a safe space to share their safety concerns, which is why I am so apprecia-tive to members of the deaf community for reaching out to the department,” stated Portland Police Chief James Craig. “This forum will help facilitate a better understanding of their unique issues and through this open communication, I am confi dent we will build a stronger relationship.” ASL interpreters will be available at the forum. Deering Masonic Lodge, 102 Bishop St. For more information about the forum, call 874-8927 or email [email protected].

‘The Hancock County Firewood Project’7 p.m. “Local Heat: The Hancock County Firewood Project” a discussion on wood heat and the potential uses of the Hancock County woodshed, College of the Atlantic. Ells-worth City Hall at 7 p.m. in the second fl oor auditorium. Free. For more, contact Gray Cox at [email protected], 801-5712 or 288-5015.

2011 Oscar-Nominated Short Films: Animation7:30 p.m. Shorts International presents the 2011 Oscar-Nominated Animated Short Films. SPACE Gallery. ANI-MATED – 65 min (estimated TRT with titles, etc – 85 min.); Day & Night – USA, 6 min.; Let’s Pollute – USA, 6 min.; The Lost Thing – Australia/UK, 15 min.; Madagascar, carnet de voyage (Madagascar, a Journey Diary) – France, 11 min.; The Gruffalo – UK/Germany, 27 min.; Plus Highly-Com-mended Animated fi lms: The Cow Who Wanted To Be A Hamburger – USA, 6 min.; Urs – Germany, 10 min. www.space538.org

Dan Bern and Common Rotation8 p.m. After collaborating on an indie movie soundtrack “Drones,” Dan Bern and Common Rotation have con-tinued to work on various projects together. Projects include recordings for Jonathan Demme’s Off-Broadway production of Beth Henley’s “Family Week,” an album of new Dan Bern material, Dan Bern Live in LA, and the upcoming release of Dan Bern’s greatest hits recorded live in New York. Dan Bern is best known for his prolifi c songwriting and electric live persona. He has released a dozen albums while spending well over a decade per-forming everywhere from local coffee shops to Carnegie Hall. Since releasing his fi rst album in 1997, Dan Bern has amassed a strong underground following built on endless touring and his prodigious output of songs in all forms. Beginning in 2007, Bern focused much energy on motion pictures — he used his talents and sharp wit to compose over a dozen songs for the Jake Kasdan/Judd Apatow music biopic-spoof “Walk Hard: The Dewey Cox

Story” and wrote the title song for Jonathan Demme’s documentary, “Jimmy Carter: Man From Plains.” Bern also composed songs the Nick Stoller/Judd Apatow fi lm “Get Him to the Greek,” starring Russell Brand and Jonah Hill, newly released on DVD. With the release of his 1997 self-titled debut, Iowa native Dan Bern became the latest thing, following the likes of John Prine, Elliott Murphy, Steve Forbert, Loudon Wainwright III as a serious song-writer with a penchant for humorous songs. He will appear at One Longfellow Square, 181 State St., Suite 201. $15. www.onelongfellowsquare.com or www.danbern.com

Friday, Feb. 25

Range Ponds Kids Ice Fishing Derby.9 a.m. to noon. Range Ponds State Park, Poland Spring; part of the Sebago Lake Rotary Derbyfest and Statewide Derby; limited to children ages 12 and under. Sponsored by Kittery Trading Post, registration for this derby is free although there is $1.50 park admission fee for adults ages 12-64, free admission for all others; run in cooperation with the “Hooked on Fishing” program and the Maine Depart-ment of Inland Fisheries and Wildlife. The fi rst 500 children to register for the derby will receive a free ice-fi shing rig, compliments of Kittery Trading Post. For more information on the event and registration, go to www.icefi shingderby.com/maine/kids-derby

Racin’ Preview 20114 p.m. Legendary Maine racers Phil and Bob Libby will be the focus of an extensive Maine Vintage Race Car Associa-tion display at Northern New England’s biggest and best wintertime stock car racing showcase, Racin’ Preview 2011, set for Friday and Saturday, Feb. 25-26 at the Port-land Exposition Building on Park Street (U.S. Route 1). Both Phil and Bob Libby are members of the Beech Ridge Hall of Fame, the Maine Vintage Race Car Association Hall of Fame and the NEAR New England Hall of Fame. Cars from the Libby stable have been lovingly restored and many will be on display at Racin’ Preview 2011. Doors at the Portland Expo open at 4 p.m. on Friday, Feb. 25, with several auto-graph opportunities and other activities ongoing through 10 p.m. Saturday show hours are 9 p.m. until 9 p.m. For further information please call (603) 447-4251 or email [email protected]. Current associate sponsors of Racin’ Preview 2010 include Racin’ Paper, Mainely Motorsports, LaQuinta, R & D Racing and Fabrication of Limerick, and Wayne Elston’s Speed Shop of Carmel.

‘Made in Dagenham’ at the PMA6:30 p.m. Portland Museum of Art Movies at the Museum series features “Made in Dagenham” on Friday, Feb. 25, 6:30 p.m.; Saturday, Feb. 26, 2 p.m.; Sunday, Feb. 27, 2 p.m. Rated R. “Set against the backdrop of the 1960s, Made in Dagenham is based on a true story about a group of spirited women who joined forces, took a stand for what was right, and in doing so, found their own inner strength. Although far from the Swinging Sixties of Carnaby Street, life for the women of Dagenham, England is tinged with the sounds and sights of the optimistic era, heard on their radios and seen on their TV sets. Rita O’Grady refl ects that upbeat era who, along with her friends and co-workers at the city’s Ford Motor Factory, laugh in the face of their poor conditions. Lisa is a fi ercely intelligent Cambridge-educated woman who feels a bit trapped, tending to the home with a husband that suggests she keep her opinions to herself. She may not live in the same world as the other women, but she shares their views. No one thought the revolution would come to Dagenham, until one day, it did. Rita, who primarily sees herself as a wife and mother, is coerced into attend-ing a meeting with shop steward Connie, sympathetic union representative Albert, and Peter Hopkins, Ford’s Head of Industrial Relations.”

Eat Write: Nourishment for Mouth and Mind7 p.m. Mayo Street Arts presents Eat Write: Nourishment for Mouth and Mind as part of the ongoing LIT series hosted by Megan Grumbling. In addition to a reading by Maine Poet Laureate Betsy Sholl and performances by actors Paul Haley, Michael Howard and April Singley, the evening will feature informal dinner, a wine tasting competition, and an axiom-busting puppet show based on the work of Francois Rabelais. “Its cold, its February, there just aren’t a lot of sur-prises this time of year much less large social gatherings, so we wanted to have an event where people can get together and forget their heating bills for a while” says Grumbling, a poet and host of the LIT series which is in its third year. Betsy Sholl is the author of several books, including her most recent, Rough Cradle. In addition, Grumbling, who is a theater critic for the Portland Phoenix and who often works with local actors, has enlisted Haley, Howard, and Singley to perform readings, which will range from Falstaff drinking his mead to Bloom frying the famous kidney. www.mayostreetarts.org

Leslie Trentalange stars in “Crazy Lil’ Thing Called Love,” playing its fi nal weekend Friday through Sunday at Old Port Playhouse. (COURTESY PHOTO)

Page 14: The Portland Daily Sun, February 23, 2011

Page 14 — THE PORTLAND DAILY SUN, Wednesday, February 23, 2011

Auditions for ‘Who’s Tommy’7 p.m. Auditions for “Who’s Tommy” produced by Studio Theatre of Bath, will be held Feb. 25, 26 and 27 at the Choc-olate Church Arts Center. Auditions will begin at 7 p.m. on Feb. 25 and at 2 p.m. on Feb. 26 and 27. Actors are wel-come to prepare a song from the show, or bring sheet music for a song of your choice. Non-singing and chorus roles are also available. We are looking for actors, singers and dancers age 16 and up. “This wonderful show is directed by Studio Theatre of Bath president Thomas Watson with musical direction from Courtney Babbidge. Studio Theatre is a fi nancially secure, semi-professional theatre company that provides a technically superior and creative theatre experience.” P.O. Box 710, Bath, ME. http://studiotheatre-ofbath.com

‘Animal Farm’ play performedat College of the Atlantic in Bar Harbor7:30 p.m. “All animals are equal, but some animals are more equal than others.” That wryly amusing line captures much of the political awareness of the twentieth century. The source, George Orwell’s classic cautionary fable “Animal Farm,” has been turned into a play by College of the Atlantic visiting faculty member Andrew Periale. It will be performed Friday through Sunday, Feb. 25 to 27. Performances will be Friday at 7:30 p.m., Saturday at 2 and 7:30 p.m., and Sunday at 2 p.m. “In Orwell’s novella, Farmer Jones is chased off the farm by his own animals, who then set about running it in an egalitarian, socialist manner. Before long, though, it becomes clear that most of the animals are working for the benefi t of the pigs. By play’s end, one pig controls everything, and the ‘lower animals’ are far more oppressed than they were under Farmer Jones. It is recommended for adults and children 13 and older. Admission is free to COA students, faculty and staff. For others it is $3, with profi ts supporting youth scholarships at a Journey’s End Farm Camp. Gates Community Center, College of the Atlantic, 105 Eden St., Bar Harbor. 288-5015 or [email protected].

‘Harriet Tubman Visits A Therapist’ 7:30 p.m. “Harriet Tubman Visits a Therapist and Other Conversations of Color; A Celebration of African Ameri-can History” at Lucid Stage, located at 29 Baxter Bou-levard. The event will include a concert, a play, and an opening of a visual arts exhibition at Portland’s newest performing arts venue. “It will open with a concert of traditional freedom songs performed and narrated by Mehuman Jonson. Jonson is an award-winning song-writer and performer, who has performed and toured with artists who include Nora Jones, Meshell N’ Degeo-cello, and Ani Difranco. The concert will be followed by a staged reading of the award-winning, one-act play ‘Harriet Tubman Visits A Therapist’ by Maine playwright Carolyn Gage. The play won the Off-Off Broadway Short Play Festival, and will be performed by actors Shatema Brooks, a Rockland resident currently living in Portland and Maureen Emerson of Portland. The performers will participate in a panel discussion following the play. An exhibition of a series of paintings by Rockland artist Jonathan Frost will be shown in the lobby. This series, titled ‘The Death of Jimmie Lee Jackson’ tell the story that inspired the famous Selma-to-Montgomery Marches of 1965. The event is a fund-raiser for Maine Freedom Trails, to support their network of marked sites across the state that acknowledge individual, organizational and community participation in the Underground Railroad and the abolitionist movement. This network includes the Portland Freedom Trail, which winds through the Old Port and Munjoy Hill.” Tickets for the event are $10-$20, slid-ing scale, and reservations may be made at the Lucid Stage website, www.lucidstage.com, or by calling Lucid Stage’s Box Offi ce at 899-3993. The evening is partially funded by a grant from the People of Color Fund of the Maine Community Foundation.

Stuart McLean & The Vinyl Cafe7:30 p.m. Stuart McLean & the Vinyl Cafe, Canada’s answer to Garrison Keillor, returns to Merrill Auditorium for a live version of the popular show that airs on Maine Public Broadcasting. The Vinyl Cafe, which premiered in 1994, airs the trials and tribulations of Dave, the owner of the word’s smallest record store … where the motto is, “we may not be big but we are small.” Presented in associa-tion with Maine Public Broadcasting. Tickets $42 (includes service fee). Student and family prices available by calling 842-0800.

2011 Oscar-Nominated Short Films: Live Action7:30 p.m. SPACE Gallery presents Shorts International, the 2011 Oscar-Nominated Live Action Short Films. LIVE ACTION – 101 min. (estimated TRT – 110 min.); The Con-fession – UK, 26 min.; The Crush – Ireland, 15 min. God of Love – US, 18 min.; Na Wewe – Belgium, 19 min.; Wish 143

– UK, 24 min. www.space538.org

‘Crazy Lil’ Thing Called Love’8 p.m. “Crazy Lil’ Thing Called Love” is an adult comedy about love, sex and relationships at the Old Port Playhouse. The critics and audiences have given this show excellent reviews and this is the fi nal weekend! With shows on Friday at 8, Saturday at 2 p.m. and 8 p.m. and Sunday at 2 p.m. All seats $15. Box Offi ce 773-0333. Old Port Playhouse, 19 Temple St. Portland. oldportplayhouse.com

Kerri Louise with Tuck at the Comedy Connection8:30 p.m. From WE’s Two Funny, Kerri Louise with Tuck. Tickets $15. Portland Comedy Connection, 16 Custom House Wharf. Also Saturday. Reservations: 774-5554. $7.50. Schedule and information: www.mainecomedy.com. Box offi ce open Thurs.-Sat., noon to 10 p.m.

Saturday, Feb. 26

Henry Wadsworth Longfellow 2.5K road race, other events8 a.m. The Longfellow Chorus, Orchestra and featured soloists celebrate the 204th birthday of native son Henry Wadsworth Longfellow — in the poet’s boyhood church--with a 2.5K road race through the heart of downtown Portland, a showing of the Mike Leigh fi lm “Topsy-Turvy,” performances of cantatas by Franz Liszt (“The Bells of Strasbourg Cathedral”) and Arthur Sullivan (“The Golden Legend”) that use the same Longfellow text, and the win-ning cantatas from The Longfellow Chorus International Composers Competition: “By the Seaside,” by Jonathan Blumhofer, Worcester, Mass., and Piers Maxim, Brussels,

Belgium. Bass-baritone Tyler Putnam — the son of a Maine lobsterman and a Chebeague Island municipal librarian — sings his hometown debut. The First Parish in Portland, 425 Congress St. 232-8920 or www.longfellowchorus.com

Winter Family Fun Day10 a.m.-3 p.m. Aroostook State Park, “Maine’s First State Park,” Presque Isle; cross-country skiing, snowshoeing (instruction provided), ice skating, sledding, snowmobile tote rides, guided nature interpretation walks; dog-sled rides, $2 donation; hot lunch provided; adults, 12-64, $1.50; all others free; for more information, call 768-8341.

Riverlands Winter Greens Snowshoe Hike10 a.m. to 1 p.m. Androscoggin Riverlands State Park, Turner; presented by Mike Auger, Androscoggin Land Trust; participants will learn how to identify trees and shrubs and learn how they provide food and shelter for the animals in the park; a 2.6-mile loop; children’s edu-cational program; includes visit to hike sponsor, Nez-incot Farm, a historic organic farm, and store, in Turner; some snowshoes available, please call ahead to reserve; refreshments; for more information or for groups inter-ested in attending, contact Laura Keating at (207) 557-0352 or [email protected]

Longfellow’s 204th birthday party10 a.m. Join the Maine Historical Society for Longfel-low’s 204th birthday! Special guests will read Longfel-low’s poetry, and there will be craft activities, prizes, cake and a birthday card for Henry for everyone to sign. Fun for all ages! The party is free and open to the public. www.mainehistory.org

Family Finances Seminar10 a.m. to noon. The Institute for Financial Literacy has launched a new interactive personal fi nance seminar series. “Taught by certifi ed educators and open to the general public, the seminars are designed to improve fi nancial liter-acy in Maine. In this session, you will learn how to manage your family fi nances like a business and teach your children important fi nancial literacy skills.” All seminars are being held at the Institute’s new campus located near the Maine Mall at 260 Western Ave. in South Portland. Cost is $50 per adult/$75 couple. Attendance is limited and advance regis-tration is required. To register, please call 221-3601 or email help@fi nanciallit.org. www.fi nanciallit.org

Maine Medical Marijuana Expo/Awards11 a.m. Portland will host Maine’s fi rst ever marijuana expo and patients choice awards at the Fireside Inn & Suites, Portland. Question and answer sessions, Saturday at 11 a.m.; Mark N. Dion, State Representative and former Cum-berland County Sheriff, 3 p.m. Saturday; U.S. Rep. Barney Frank, D-Mass., 5 p.m. to 7 p.m. reception, RSVP, donation to the patients fund requested. RSVP 854-1616. Maine Leg-islative update: Sunday, 11 a.m., Rep. Diane Russell District 120 and Rep. Deborah Sanderson, Dist rict 52, Maine legis-lative update, proposed legalization bill and amendments to LD 1811; medical marijuana bills for this session of the 2011 125th legislaure. www.asamaine.org

Author Hannah Holmes at Bull Moose2 p.m. to 4 p.m. Portland author Hannah Holmes will be at the Bull Moose Scarborough store at 456 Payne Road for a book signing and to present her new book, “Quirk: Brain Science Makes Sense of Your Peculiar Personality.” “Holmes traveled to psychology labs around the world to determine ‘what exactly is a personality? What purpose does it serve? How did we each end up with a different one?’ She delves into the recesses of ground-breaking human and animal brain science and emerges with the con-clusion that genes, hormones, and neurotransmitters guide our interactions with the world and hence craft our person-alities. QUIRK examines the biological basis of important personality traits such as ‘the political party you support, the car you drive, the likelihood that you’ll cheat on your spouse, and even the way you eat M&Ms’; it is neurosci-ence for the masses.” Holmes is also the author of The Well-Dressed Ape, Suburban Safari, and The Secret Life of Dust. Her writing has been determined to be “amusing and illuminating” (Outside); “full of interesting facts” (The Washington Post Book World); and “juicy and humorous” (Publishers Weekly starred review). Holmes graduated from the University of Southern Maine with a degree in English, proceeded to travel the world as a journalist, and has since settled down back home to write books and observe the planet. For more information, visit www.hannahholmes.net

‘Crazy Lil’ Thing Called Love’2 p.m. and 8 p.m. “Crazy Lil’ Thing Called Love” is an adult comedy about love, sex and relationships at the Old Port Playhouse. The critics and audiences have given this show excellent reviews and this is the fi nal weekend! With shows on Friday at 8, Saturday at 2 p.m. and 8 p.m. and Sunday at 2 p.m. All seats $15. Box Offi ce 773-0333. Old Port Play-house, 19 Temple St. Portland. oldportplayhouse.com

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from preceding page

see next page

Dan Bern is best known for his prolifi c songwriting and magi-cal stage presence. He has released about a dozen albums since 1997, while performing everywhere from small clubs to Carnegie Hall. Bern will perform at One Longfellow Square on Thursday. (COURTESY PHOTO)

On Saturday, the Longfellow Chorus, Orchestra and featured solo-ists celebrate the 204th birthday of native son Henry Wadsworth Longfellow. (FILE PHOTO)

Page 15: The Portland Daily Sun, February 23, 2011

THE PORTLAND DAILY SUN, Wednesday, February 23, 2011— Page 15

Jeremy Bailey at MECA6 p.m. Maine College of Art presents a one-night lecture/performance by Jeremy Bailey. It’s a live, collaborative soft-ware performance, led by Toronto-based Bailey, a video and performance artist whose work is often confi dently self-deprecating in offering hilarious parodies of new media vocabularies. His work has been featured in numerous exhibitions and festivals internationally including upcoming exhibitions at Tate Liverpool and the New Museum in New York. He has been described by Filmmaker magazine as “a one-man revolution on the way we use video, comput-ers and our bodies to create art.” http://jeremybailey.net/wordpress/.

Romantic songs at Anthony’s Dinner Theater7 p.m. Kelly Caufi eld performs romantic songs at Anthony’s Dinner Theater. Free rose to every lady all month. $39.95 per person. Feb. 12, 19 and 26. Call for Reservations. 221-2267. www.anthonysdinnertheater.com

Sunday, Feb. 27

Psychic Sunday at Lucid Stage11 a.m. to 4 p.m. Participants will include: Joyce Halli-burton (psychic), Kate Holly-Clark(Runes), Lisa Nigthfeather (psychic), Antika Nueva (gems and jewelry), Henna By Amy, Oh Baby Cafe, and many more. www.lucidstage.com

Gail Donovan book signing11:30 a.m. to 12:30 p.m. Gail Donovan will sign her latest children’s book, “What’s Buggging Bailey Blecker?”, at the Cathedral Shop at the Cathedral Church of St. Luke. The Cathedral Shop is located at 143 State St.

Meet Your Farmers and Fishermen 1 p.m. to 4 p.m. Attend “Meet Your Farmers and Fisher-men: A Celebration of Community Supported Agriculture and Fisheries” in a location near you on Sunday, Feb. 27. “This event is part celebration and part education, as local farmers, fi shermen and other food producers come together with members of the community to share infor-mation about opportunities to enjoy local foods while sup-porting these enterprises in a meaningful way. Farms with Community Supported Agriculture (CSA) programs ask you to commit to purchasing a share of the coming harvest before the season begins. The benefi t? You get to provide the farm with much-needed capital in the off-season while getting your locally grown food direct from the farm at a fair price. In addition to farms with CSA shares, local fi shermen with Community Supported Fisheries (CSF) shares will also be present in some locations. Portland, Woodfords Church, 202 Woodford St. (note this location will run from 1 p.m. to 4 p.m.) Use the Maine CSA Directory on the website of the Maine Organic Farmers and Gardeners Association, www.mofga.net, to fi nd the CSA opportunities in your area.” The event is co-sponsored by the Maine Organic Farmers & Gardeners Association (MOFGA) and local organizations at each site. Admission to this event is free.

‘Crazy Lil’ Thing Called Love’2 p.m. “Crazy Lil’ Thing Called Love” is an adult comedy about love, sex and relationships at the Old Port Playhouse. The critics and audiences have given this show excellent reviews and this is the fi nal weekend! With shows on Friday at 8, Saturday at 2 p.m. and 8 p.m. and Sunday at 2 p.m. All seats $15. Box Offi ce 773-0333. Old Port Playhouse, 19 Temple St. Portland. oldportplayhouse.com

‘2011 Civil Rights Movie Nights’4 p.m. The Maine Civil Liberties Union and the National Lawyers Guild student chapter of the University of Maine

School of Law present “2011 Civil Rights Movie Nights,” a monthly series of fi lms examining legal controversies regarding civil liberties and civil rights. The series launches this Sunday, Feb. 27 with “Inherit the Wind,” the classic 1960 fi ctionalized depiction of the famous 1925 “Scopes Monkey Trial” in which a Tennessee school teacher was prosecuted for teaching the theory of evolution. Future showings: March 27: “The People vs. Larry Flynt”; and April 24: “American Violet.” All showings are at 4 p.m. in the Talbot Lecture Hall, Luther Bonney Hall, and are free and open to the public. A short discussion of the issues raised by the fi lm will follow each showing. For more information, please contact the MCLU at 774-5444 or [email protected].

Secret Lives of Comedians7:30 p.m. Tickets $10, available online at www.LucidStage.com or through Lucid Stage’s Box Offi ce at 899-3993, 29 Baxter Boulevard. “Produced by Cloud Morris and Brian Brinegar, this monthly series features stand-up comedy, sketch comedy, ‘surprised guests,’ and other disturbing delights! Special guests are Nicholas LaVallee, Sarah Fra-zier, Bill Gray and Cliff Gallant.”

Monday, Feb. 28

Maine Restaurant Week Signature Event5 p.m. to 8 p.m. Expanding on last year’s legendary cock-tail competition, the March 2011 Maine Restaurant Week kick-off Signature Event introduces a two-pronged des-sert competition. Taking place on at the Masonic Temple in Portland, the Signature Event celebrates the priceless indi-viduality behind Maine’s cocktail shakers and sugar shacks. Cookies challenge cakes and cupcakes take on truffl es in the “How Sweet It Is” portion of the competition, but only one can win. Guests at The Signature Event have the fi nal say in this people’s choice face-off. Notably, many competi-tors are exclusively bakers and confectioners, expanding Restaurant Week’s sphere of infl uence beyond traditional restaurants. Founded in 2009, this is the third year for this statewide event. Participating restaurants offer specially priced menus from March 1-12. For restaurant names, menus and special event information, visit www.maineres-taurantweek.com.

Cold River Bartenders Bash5 p.m. to 8:30 p.m. The spirit of healthy competition is alive and well in Maine’s mixology world, according to partners at Maine Distilleries (www.mainedistilleries.com and www.facebook.com/mainedistilleries). Partners have announced their list of 30 Maine bartenders now competing in a two-month contest for the 15 coveted mixology slots at its upcoming “2nd Annual Cold River Bartenders Bash.” The Bash, to take place at Portland’s Ocean Gateway, will pit 15 well-known Maine bartenders against each other in a friendly “shaker-to-shaker” competition to create “The Ulti-mate Cold River Cocktail.” For more information, visit www.mainedistilleries.com or call 865-4828.

Violence Intervention Partnership offi cials to speak before Republican City Committee7 p.m. Faye E. Luppi, J.D., the project director of the Cum-berland County Violence Intervention Partnership, will be the featured speaker at the meeting of the Portland Repub-lican City Committee. The meeting will be held at Foreside Real Estate Management’s offi ce at 76 Elm St., Portland, beginning at 7 p.m. “Since 1998, the Cumberland County Violence Intervention Partnership (VIP) has coordinated our community response to domestic violence. Project partners are the District Attorney’s Offi ce, Family Crisis Services, the Sheriff’s Offi ce and Jail, Maine Pretrial Services, the Dis-trict II Police Chiefs, Bangor Theological Seminary, and the

Department of Correc-tions. Other community partners include Pine Tree Legal, Maine Medical Center, local universities, and Catholic Charities Maine. Their goals are to: 1) keep domestic vio-lence victims safe in the community; 2) hold the offenders accountable; and 3) change how our community thinks about domestic violence. The project has brought more than $3 million in grant funding to the county.” For more information on the meeting, please call Barbara Harvey at 837-2400. For more infor-mation on the project see www.cumberland-county.org.

from preceding page

The Chebeague and Cumberland Land Trust will host a snowshoe hike at the Rines Forest in Cumberland on Sunday, March 6. (COURTESY PHOTO)

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Page 16: The Portland Daily Sun, February 23, 2011

Page 16 — THE PORTLAND DAILY SUN, Wednesday, February 23, 2011

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Thursday, Feb. 24

Dan Bern w/ Common Rotation at One Longfellow Square8 p.m. Dan Bern is best known for his prolifi c song-writing and electric live per-sona. He has released a dozen albums while spending well over a decade performing everywhere from local coffee shops to Carnegie Hall. Since releasing his fi rst album in 1997, Dan Bern has amassed a strong underground follow-ing built on endless touring and his prodigious output of songs in all forms. Beginning in 2007, Bern focused much energy on motion pictures – he used his talents and sharp wit to compose over a dozen songs for the Jake Kasdan/Judd Apatow music biopic-spoof “Walk Hard: The Dewey Cox Story” and wrote the title song for Jonathan Demme’s documentary, “Jimmy Carter: Man From Plains.” Bern also composed songs the Nick Stoller/Judd Apatow fi lm “Get Him to the Greek,” star-ring Russell Brand and Jonah Hill, newly released on DVD. Growing up on the same block in New York, Common Rotation bandmates Adam Busch, Eric Kufs, and Jordan Katz can’t remember a time when they weren’t making music together. Fifteen years later, this sentiment is still true—although the venue has changed to Southern Cali-fornia. Their melodic blend consists of acoustic guitar, trumpet, banjo, harmonica, and dobro. Demanding rel-evancy from the pop music medium, the very distinct voice of Common Rotation is defi ning the modern folk song. Common Rotation continues to self-distribute their brand of modern folk music to a growing audience of dedicated fans while working within the framework of the music indus-try. $15, all ages.

Jacob Augustine, Nicole Atkins & The Black Sea at Port City Music Hall8 p.m. Jacob Augustine, Nicole Atkins & The Black Sea at Port City Music Hall. Advance: $10; door: $12; VIP: $20. With special guests Cotton Jones and Jacob Augustine. “If Jacob Augustine didn’t exist in Portland, it would be necessary to invent him. Possessing the stage presence and integrity of a fi rebrand preacher (except without all the answers), Augustine commands urgency and attention. His nine-piece misfi t gospel band blends the Western-Baltic fl ourishes of Beirut with the post-punk immediacy of World/Inferno, but it’s the unadorned earnestness of the man him-self that binds it all together.” Nicole Atkins & The Black Sea is planning to do “a ridiculous amount of touring,” she writes on her website (http://mondoamore.nicoleatkins.com/press-bio). “An inveterate road warrior, Atkins is eager to adapt the fi nely crafted songs of Mondo Amore for the in-your-face directness of live performance.”

Friday, Feb. 25

Buille featuring John Doyle 8 p.m. Buille was formed in 2004 by Armagh born brothers Niall and Cao-imhín Vallely along with Paul Meehan and Brian Morrissey as a vehicle to perform a body of new tunes written in a tradi-tional style with contem-porary arrangements. The resultant sound was picked up on by Donald Shaw and Vertical Records who immediately offered to produce and release the groups’ debut album. “Buille” was released in 2005 to rave reviews and was described in the Irish Times: “Buille is as fresh a breath that’s blown through traditional (and roots) cir-cles in a long, long time.” John Doyle’s gifts as a guitarist, songwriter, vocal-ist, and producer have played an essential role in the ongoing renaissance of Irish traditional music. John was playing profes-sionally by the age of 16, and soon moved to New York City, where he began playing with Eileen Ivers and Seamus Egan. He fi rst rose to international promi-nence with Solas (Gaelic for “light”), the all-star Irish/American band whose

emergence heralded the arrival of a new generation of bold, inventive traditional musicians. $20, all ages.

Saturday, Feb. 26

Flogging Molly at The State Theatre7:30 p.m. What makes a band truly remarkable? Insightful lyrics? Memorable melodies? Blow-your-mind live perfor-mances? Truth is, it takes all of those things - along with boundless enthusiasm, an infectious energy and a supreme devotion to the fans. In the case of Flogging Molly, the band is that rare gem that possesses all of these traits and more, and because of this they have established themselves as one of the most beloved bands performing today. Money-brother and The Drowning Men join. $30 advance, $32 day of show.

Juanito Pascual at One Longfellow8 p.m. Juanito has won praise around the globe as a respected new voice in this most Spanish of musical genres. He is recognized in Spain as a unique and creative voice with mesmerizing virtuosity, warm and evocative playing, and original compositional style. He has been a featured artist in some of the best-known fi ne arts centers, clubs, and festivals in the United States, including the renowned Tanglewood Jazz Festival, New York’s 92nd St. Y, Blue Note Jazz Club, Boston’s Jordan Hall and Regattabar, and count-less colleges and performing arts centers. He has also been

featured on National Public Radio’s “The World” program, as well as countless television and radio programs. Pascual has been called “one of the hottest fl amenco guitarists in recent years” by National Public Radio, which in Pascual’s case is just the jumping off point for the Minneapolis native’s musical vision. Pascual’s sound is a truly organic blend of a mastery of traditional and contemporary fl amenco with his love of heroes ranging from Jimi Hendrix and Miles Davis, to the Grateful Dead and J.S. Bach. Pascual is joined by world-class ensemble of gifted artists including fl amenco singer/dancer Jose Moreno, violinist Rohan Gregory, and percussionist Sergio Martinez. $17, all ages.

MODNIGHT dance party9 p.m. What seems like ages ago, Dj Ian Paige’s MOD-NIGHT dance party residency at The White Heart (R.I.P.) kept Portlanders moving all year long to the fi nest in Soul, Mod, Britpop, Psych, and Dub tunes. Given the wildly pop-ular soul parties at SPACE lately, it seems like a good time to bring back a good thing. The rules are simple — look sharp and dance till you drop. SPACE Gallery. $3, 21 plus. http://www.space538.org/events.php

Monday, Feb. 28

Decompression Chamber Music Season Three6 p.m. One Longfellow Square presents Concert #2, “Ger-many” Mendelssohn. Bring someone who has never been to a Chamber Music Concert and the newbie gets in free. “This ‘rush hour’ concert series is designed for you! Stop in for an entertaining hour on your way home from work. Bring a date! Have glass of wine, listen to beautiful music, become a connoisseur.” Goup Bio, Piotr Buczek, Colin Davis, Mark Berger, and Decompression Chamber Music creator Priscilla Hayes Taylor combine their expertise, humor, and artistic talents to bring fi ve compelling new concerts of sumptuous music. ($10 adv/$12 door). http://onelongfellowsquare.com

Tuesday, March 1

Lake Street Dive at One Longfellow8 p.m. Lake Street Dive is a Pop Music Play-Date. The ensemble derives inexhaustible energy from the joy of invention and creation together. Their exuberant live shows and carefully crafted studio albums share a blissful irrever-ence for convention and an undying devotion to melody, spontaneity and groove. One Longfellow Square. ($10). http://onelongfellowsquare.com

Wednesday, March 2

Clash now at Port City Music Hall9 p.m. “One of Portland’s best-loved music series, The Clash of the Titans has a new home for its eighth season at Port City Music Hall. Every Wednesday, hand-picked supergroup’s of Portland’s brightest musicians come together to recreate hits from some of the most infl uen-tial artists of all time. The audience votes on the mightiest Titan left standing at the end of the night.” $5 cover at the door. Acts include: March 2 — Rolling Stones vs. Thin Lizzyl March 9 — The Ramones vs. The Clash; March 16 — The Zombies vs. The Association; March 23 — Sound-garden vs. Pearl Jam; March 30 — The Cure vs. Joy Divi-sion; April 6 — Madonna vs. Lady Gaga; April 13 — Stevie Wonder vs. Ray Charles; April 20 — Combined With Phx Best Of — Fleetwood Mac vs. Tom Petty; April 27 — Steely Dan vs. Hall And Oates; May 4 — Skip Week; May 11 — Eminem vs. Snoop; May 18 — Rocky Horror Picture Show vs. Grease; May 25 — Queen vs. David Bowie. www.port-citymusichall.com

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“This is the record I’ve been wanting to make since I was 12,” says Nicole Atkins of her album, “Mondo Amore.” “It has so many layers, it’s able to do whatever it wants without defi ning itself as one thing.” It’s been a tumultuous three years since the release of Atkins’ acclaimed 2007 debut, “Neptune City,” but the wait has proved worth it, critics say. “Mondo Amore” is a “courageous, provocative work, fraught with dra-matic tension, sweeping emotions and musical ambition.” Atkins will appear at Port City Music Hall on Thursday. (COURTESY PHOTO)