the portland daily sun, saturday, june 4, 2011

16
SATURDAY, JUNE 4, 2011 VOL. 3 NO. 88 PORTLAND, ME PORTLAND’S DAILY NEWSPAPER 699-5801 FREE D a i l y D a i l y D e a l D e a l S A V E 5 0 % S A V E 5 0 % SAVE 50% P a y j u s t $ 1 2 Pay just $ 12 f o r $ 2 4 o n for $ 24 on p e r f o r m a n c e o f I d a s H a v i n a Y a r d S a l e performance of “Ida’s Havin’ a Yard Sale” visit PORTLANDDAILYSUN.ME for this and other great offers 5 Depot Street, Freeport, ME 04032 C A M P C A M P F I D D L E H E A D F I D D L E H E A D 2 0 1 1 2 0 1 1 “A FUN-TASTIC WAY TO SPEND THE DAY!” JUNE 27-AUGUST 26 FULL DAY / HALF DAY CAMPS A week long “hands on” Arts & Science experience that gives our campers a fun-filled day working with professional instructors in a variety of mediums! Including Theatre & Fairy House Camps! A “MUST DO” THIS SUMMER! CALL 883-5720 383 US Route One Scarborough ME www.fiddleheadscarborough.org 865 Spring Street, Westbrook (near Cinemagic, next to Portland Glass) BEGINNER CLASSES for June & July Salsa Swing Ballroom Just $40 for any 4 week class Never to late to join a class! www.pulsemaine.com 207-899-1435 [email protected] ZUMBA CLASSES only $ 5 per class Bring in this ad and take $ 10.00 OFF ONE AD PER PERSON 630 Forest Avenue, Portland • 207-773-TECH (8324) We Refill Printer Cartridges! You Save up to 60% • Most ink-jet cartridges refilled in 10 minutes or less • All major brands for HOME and BUSINESS • Compatible ink-jet and laser cartridges available • 100% Satisfaction Guaranteed $ 2 . 0 0 O F F $ 2 . 0 0 O F F $ 2.00 OFF O n e c o u p o n p e r p u r c h a s e . N o c a s h v a l u e . O n e c o u p o n p e r p u r c h a s e . N o c a s h v a l u e . One coupon per purchase. No cash value. C o u p o n m u s t b e p r e s e n t e d a t t i m e o f p u r c h a s e . C o u p o n m u s t b e p r e s e n t e d a t t i m e o f p u r c h a s e . Coupon must be presented at time of purchase. www.inkspotstores.com NOW OPEN at... The Celebrity Summit cruise ship berths last summer at the Maine State Pier. Today marks the start of cruise ship season for this summer. The cruise ship Indepen- dence, an American Cruise Line ship, will call to port in Portland today, arriving at 8 a.m. at the Ocean Gateway Terminal. The ship will depart Sunday, June 5 at 3 p.m. The Independence officially kicks off the 2011 cruise ship season for the city, Portland officials reported. Fifty-nine ships carrying a record-setting 86,099 passengers are expected to call to the Port of Portland from June to October, the city reported. The berthing schedule includes a number of maiden visits including Cunard’s Queen Elizabeth, the Caribbean Princess and Norwegian Jewel. The Enchantment, with 2,250 passengers, is the first large cruise ship visit scheduled for the season, berthing at the Portland Ocean Terminal June 18. (DAVID CARKHUFF FILE PHOTO) Advocacy group hoping to sway housing vote The advocacy group Homeless Voices for Justice is trying to rally supporters ahead of a possible city council vote Monday that could impact housing in Portland for years to come. Amy Regan, community organizer for Homeless Voices for Justice, says her group wants the council to pass a proposed amendment to the Housing Replacement Ordinance. The amendment would close a loophole that essentially exempts from the ordi- nance certain renovations that eliminate apartments. "We are really trying to turn out as many people as we can," said Regan, adding, "We know the amendment will not pass if we are the only ones there." Regan said the group has held rallies BY CASEY CONLEY THE PORTLAND DAILY SUN “We are really trying to turn out as many people as we can. We know the amendment will not pass if we are the only ones there.” — Amy Regan, community organizer for Homeless Voices for Justice, about Monday’s City Council meeting see HOMELESS VOICES page 15 Cruise ship season christened today

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The Portland Daily Sun, Saturday, June 4, 2011

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Page 1: The Portland Daily Sun, Saturday, June 4, 2011

SATURDAY, JUNE 4, 2011 VOL. 3 NO. 88 PORTLAND, ME PORTLAND’S DAILY NEWSPAPER 699-5801 FREE

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The Celebrity Summit cruise ship berths last summer at the Maine State Pier. Today marks the start of cruise ship season for this summer. The cruise ship Indepen-dence, an American Cruise Line ship, will call to port in Portland today, arriving at 8 a.m. at the Ocean Gateway Terminal. The ship will depart Sunday, June 5 at 3 p.m. The Independence offi cially kicks off the 2011 cruise ship season for the city, Portland offi cials reported. Fifty-nine ships carrying a record-setting 86,099 passengers are expected to call to the Port of Portland from June to October, the city reported. The berthing schedule includes a number of maiden visits including Cunard’s Queen Elizabeth, the Caribbean Princess and Norwegian Jewel. The Enchantment, with 2,250 passengers, is the fi rst large cruise ship visit scheduled for the season, berthing at the Portland Ocean Terminal June 18. (DAVID CARKHUFF FILE PHOTO)

Advocacy group hoping to sway housing voteThe advocacy group Homeless Voices for

Justice is trying to rally supporters ahead of a possible city council vote Monday that could impact housing in Portland for years to come.

Amy Regan, community organizer for Homeless Voices for Justice, says her group wants the council to pass a proposed amendment to the Housing Replacement Ordinance.

The amendment would close a loophole that essentially exempts from the ordi-nance certain renovations that eliminate apartments.

"We are really trying to turn out as many

people as we can," said Regan, adding, "We know the amendment will not pass if we are the only ones there."

Regan said the group has held rallies

BY CASEY CONLEYTHE PORTLAND DAILY SUN

“We are really trying to turn out as many people as we can. We know the amendment will not pass if we are the only ones there.” — Amy Regan, community organizer for

Homeless Voices for Justice, about Monday’s City Council meeting

see HOMELESS VOICES page 15

Cruise ship season christened today

Page 2: The Portland Daily Sun, Saturday, June 4, 2011

Page 2 — THE PORTLAND DAILY SUN, Saturday, June 4, 2011

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–––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––– DIGEST––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––Dr. Jack

Kevorkian dies at 83

SAYWHAT...A doctor is fasci-nated by death,

and pain.”—David Boehm

(NY Times) — Dr. Jack Kevorkian, the medical pathol-ogist who willfully helped dozens of terminally ill people end their lives, becoming the central fi gure in a national drama surrounding assisted suicide, died on Friday in Royal Oak., Mich. He was 83.

He died at William Beau-mont Hospital in Royal Oak, having been admitted there recently with kidney and respi-ratory problems, said Geoffrey N. Fieger, the lawyer who rep-resented Dr. Kevorkian in sev-eral of his trials in the 1990s.

Mayer Morganroth, a friend and lawyer, told The Associ-ated Press that the offi cial cause of death would most likely be a blood clot.

In arguing for the right of the terminally ill to choose how they die, Dr. Kevork-ian challenged social taboos about disease and dying while defying prosecutors and the courts. He spent eight years in prison after being convicted of second-degree murder in the death of the last of some 130 ailing patients whose lives he had helped end, beginning in June 1990.

His critics were as impas-sioned as his supporters, but all generally agreed that his stubborn and often intemper-ate advocacy of assisted sui-cide helped spur the growth of hospice care in the United States and made many phy-sicians more sympathetic to those in severe pain and more willing to prescribe medication to relieve it.

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4,454U.S. military deaths in Iraq.

SANA, Yemen (NY Times) — Yemen’s embattled leader, Ali Abdullah Saleh, was injured Friday in an opposition attack that rocked the presidential palace with explosions and killed sev-eral guards, his spokesman said. It was the fi rst time that Mr. Saleh had been the target of an attack during months of political turmoil.

The spokesman, Abdel al-Jandi, prom-ised throughout the day that Mr. Saleh, who he said was hospitalized with “scratches”

on his face, would appear at a television news conference. But after hours of delay, state TV aired only an audio message from the president. In the short recording, Mr. Saleh said “I am fi ne,” although he spoke in a tired, heavy-tongued voice that sug-gested he might be under sedation.

He made clear that he blamed the al Ahmar family — whose tribal militia has been fi ghting him in the capital for almost two weeks — for the attack. He called the Ahmars “outlaws” and said they had “noth-

ing to do with the Square” where peaceful protests have taken place for the past four months. The government shelled the home of one of the Ahmar brothers, Hamid, after the palace attack.

A spokesman for Mr. Ahmar’s brother, Sadiq, denied that his family’s forces were behind the attack, and said that the gov-ernment had staged the assault to justify more violence against the tribesmen.

It was unclear what types of munitions were used.

Yemeni president wounded in palace attack

(NY Times) — After several months of strong job growth, hiring in the United States slowed sharply in May, suggesting the economy may be running out of steam once again.

The Labor Department reported on Friday that the nation added 54,000 nonfarm payroll jobs last month, after an increase of about 220,000 jobs in each of the three previous months. May’s job gain was about a third of what econo-mists had been forecasting.

The unemployment rate ticked up to 9.1 percent from 9.0 percent in April.

“The economy clearly just hit a brick wall,” said Paul Ashworth, chief United States economist at Capital Economics. “It’s almost as if it came to a complete standstill.”

While most economic analysts do not believe that the country will slide back into a recession — which would technically mean that the economy would start shrinking again — they acknowledge that with such low levels of hiring, the recovery is barely perceptible to many Americans. The jobs defi cit has not gotten nearly as much polit-ical attention as the nation’s unsus-tainable fi scal defi cit, however.

Hiring in U.S. slowed in May (NY Times) — Syrians poured into the streets Friday in

some of the largest antigovernment protests yet despite the shutdown of much of the country’s Internet network, which has been crucial to demonstrators’ ability to mobilize and a major source of information for those outside the country.

The worst violence Friday appeared to be in the restive city of Hama, where at least 40 protesters were killed in a continuation of a brutal nationwide government crackdown that has lasted for months, according to local activists. That report could not be immediately confi rmed.

Friday’s demonstrations against the authoritarian rule of President Bashar al-Assad were fueled in part by escalating anger over the torture and killing of a 13-year-old boy from the southern region of Dara’a. The boy, Hamza Ali al-Kha-teeb, has become a symbol of government oppression after a video of his mutilated body was circulated on YouTube.

Syrian protesters mass again despite harsh crackdown

THETIDESMORNING

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EVENINGHigh: 1:44 p.m.Low: 7:29 p.m.

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Page 3: The Portland Daily Sun, Saturday, June 4, 2011

THE PORTLAND DAILY SUN, Saturday, June 4, 2011— Page 3

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Orchestra quintet teams up with Portland Sea Dogs for June 12 event

On Sunday, June 12, members of the Portland Symphony Orchestra will don their fi nest Red Sox jerseys and make their way to Hadlock Field for a fi rst-ever collaboration with the Portland Sea Dogs, the orchestra and the baseball franchise announced jointly Friday. The 1 p.m. game is against the Bowie Baysox.

The PSO Brass Quintet, which includes three prin-cipal players of the symphony, will provide the pre-game entertainment for members of the Sea Dogs’ Hood Kids Club. “Based on the PSO’s KinderKonzert program, this will be an entertaining, interactive musical experience with kids encouraged to have fun while listening and learning about the instru-ments,” the groups reported in a press release. “PSO trumpet player Betty Rines will throw out the fi rst pitch of the game.”

PSO Brass Quintet members include John Schnell and Betty Rines, trumpet; Carolyn Cantrell, horn; Nic Orovich, principal trombone; and Don Rankin principal tuba.

Serving the city of Portland, the state of Maine and northern New England, the Portland Sym-phony Orchestra is the largest performing arts orga-

nization in Maine. Established in 1923, the PSO is comprised of 82 professional musicians and teach-ers and presents concerts and education programs that reach over 60,000 people every year. For more information about the PSO visit www.portlandsym-phony.org.

The Portland Sea Dogs are Double-A affi liate of the Boston Red Sox. Fans can purchase tickets online at www.seadogs.com.

Catholic Charities Maine opening thrift store this morning in Portland

Catholic Charities Maine, which serves over 40,000 people of all faiths throughout Maine, announced the opening today of a new thrift store in Portland.

The 10,000-square-foot store located at 244 St. John St. in Union Station Plaza in Portland will be offi cially opened today with a special ribbon cutting ceremony attended by Catholic Charities board members, staff and invited guests, the charity reported.

The store will provide employment, job training, and volunteer opportunities. The store has created seven paying jobs.

The offi cial opening is planned for 10.30 a.m. The facility is part of an effort to reduce reliance

on grants and government funding for the provi-sion of services and a way to have a source of funds for emergency needs that arise in the communities Catholic Charities serves, the organization reported.

LePage comments on upheld vetoLegislators agreed with Gov. Paul LePage Thurs-

day as they sustained the governor’s fi rst veto measure, LePage noted in a press release. A week earlier, LePage vetoed LD 1222, “An Act To Promote Fairness in Negotiations between Health Insurance Carriers and Health Care Service Providers” citing the bill as a “one-size-fi ts-all” law which would pre-vent businesses from pursuing novel and creative approaches to achieve competitive advantages. He went on to argue that Maine’s antitrust laws are strong and the he has no doubts that the Attorney General will enforce those laws.

The original bill prohibited the use of the “most favored nation” clause, which is a participation agreement between a carrier and a health care service provider that bans, or grants the carrier an option to prohibit, the provider from entering into a participation agreement with another carrier to provide services at a lower price. Because the origi-nal bill received broad support, the governor has put forth a similar proposal for next session.

–––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––– NEWS BRIEFS –––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––

Page 4: The Portland Daily Sun, Saturday, June 4, 2011

Page 4 — THE PORTLAND DAILY SUN, Saturday, June 4, 2011

see ROBINSON page 5

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

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].

We want your opinions

––––––––––––– LETTERS TO THE EDITOR –––––––––––––

Curtis Robinson

–––––Usually

Reserved

Portland’s FREE DAILY NewspaperDavid Carkhuff, Editor

Casey Conley, City Editor Matt Dodge Reporter

Founding Editor Curtis RobinsonTHE PORTLAND DAILY SUN is published

Tuesday through Saturday by Portland News Club, LLC.Mark Guerringue, Adam Hirshan, Curtis Robinson Founders

Offi ces: 181 State Street, Portland ME 04101 (207) 699-5801

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CIRCULATION: 15,100 daily distributed Tuesday through Saturday FREE throughout Portland by Jeff Spofford, [email protected]

Homeless Voices for Justice warn of worsening conditions

Editor,

The Portland Daily Sun article (May 28, 2011, "Higher Demand, Higher Rents") highlighted an issue that Homeless Voices for Justice is all too familiar with. Renters on low or fi xed incomes, from students to senior citizens, are fi nding it harder than ever to fi nd a decent, affordable apartment in the city. And it is about to get worse.

Downtown Portland has lost over 100 affordable rental units in the past fi ve years, without required replacement. Most recently, the city granted per-mission to the new owners of the Eastland Park Hotel to transition their 54 rental apartments into hotel rooms.

An exception in the Housing Replacement Ordi-nance allowed this, which is a loss that is not only felt by those who call the Eastland home, but is truly a community loss. There have been rental apartments available at the Eastland since it was built 87 years ago. An amendment to address this loophole will be before the City Council this coming Monday. HVJ urges you to attend and ask our Council to vote FOR this amendment.

Our neighborhoods are stronger when everyone can afford a decent home. Replacing lost housing units is essential for the healthy mix that keeps our city vibrant. We live in neighborhoods with mixed income, ownership and rent affordability, which promotes the health, safety, and welfare of us all.

Until the countless men, women, families and youth who are living in substandard housing and sleeping on couches, and until the 500-plus who will lay their head on a shelter mat tonight have a safe place to call home, our communities cannot afford to continue to lose apartments, especially effi ciency City vowing to shape up

with strict graffi ti lawsLike a middle-aged family guy

deciding to “get back into shape this summer,” Portland is once again vowing to tackle its peren-nial graffi ti problem.

This time, no kidding, seriously, it’s not going to just make a bit announcement at dinner and renew the membership at the Y before lapsing into its couch-surf-ing municipal habits.

Well, if things are going to shape up, graffi tti-wise, then June is a big month. The city council is scheduled for a June 20 fi rst reading of new laws that would prohibit even possessing “graffi ti implements,” prohibit shopkeepers from selling such implements (like markers) to minors without parental consent and create new fi nes an public service requirements in addition to criminal prosecutions.

That’s just for those youthful scoffl aw vandals, so that’s not been very controversial. But part of the overhaul will require prop-erty owners to clean up graffi ti at their own expense. Upon notifi ca-tion, the owners will have 10 days to provide the city with an accept-able removal plan.

It’s a diffi cult concept to grasp, this requirement that the victim clean up the crime. It’s like having to pay parking tickets after somebody steals your car. It’s like somebody breaks into your store and steals a TV and the city wants sales tax. It’s like that town in Alaska when Sarah Palin was mayor that charged sexual assault victims for the rape kits used to investigate the case (okay, that’s a bit too far, but you get the idea and can make up your own list).

Even as somebody who has fl ip-fl opped on the graffi ti issue so many times I should seek the GOP presidential nomina-tion, this all seems a bit harsh. And some people who know a lot more about the tagging-artist-whatever vandalism community swear all this attention will make things worse.

But, then, look around – clearly something has to change ...

I asked around to see what worked in other places and one well-informed local resident said that, historically, only one tech-nique has proven effective: Snip-ers.

They were kinda serious.You can see the results down

on the waterfront. There’s a good slab of the old Berlin Wall there, and on the “free” side there’s still fading graffi ti and on the Soviet side, aside from some sad recent tagging, it was pristine concrete.

Okay — score one for the tag-gers. I may fi rmly sit upon the proverbial fence on the specifi c issue today, but I know which

see LETTERS page 5

As one supporter of the new rules told me recently, “you fi nd somebody who supports graffi ti,

I’ll likely show you somebody who hasn’t had to clean their

wall for a while.”

Page 5: The Portland Daily Sun, Saturday, June 4, 2011

THE PORTLAND DAILY SUN, Saturday, June 4, 2011— Page 5

Focus on cars running red lights

ROBINSON from page 4

apartments with low rents. HVJ believes safe, affordable homes should be considered just as vital to economic stability as commercial development. Strengthening this ordinance will preserve and replace homes that are so desperately needed.

dee Clarke and Amy Regan, Homeless Voices for JusticePortland

Bicyclists must heed law, but how about those cars?

Editor,

Kudos to the Daily Sun for the striking May 27 front-page photo of the cyclist in gross violation of the

law — riding against the fl ow of traf-fi c (“Study: State bike-friendly, but lacking enforcement,” Matt Dodge). We know, of course, that in a head-on collision, the cyclist will get the worst of it — that is perhaps an understatement.

Be that as it may, the law is the law, as I always say.

I hope the Daily Sun will continue in this vein. I suggest that Matt Dodge or David Carkhuff, camera in hand, now station themselves at the corner of Congress and High streets to take the photos of the many car drivers running red lights (I said, “Red lights,” not yellow lights). These potential killers also deserve front-page cover-age. Pas vrai?

Lee KembleMember of the “Greatest Generation”Portland

LETTERS from page 4

side of that wall I was on.But then I see one of our beloved

news boxes covered in ink and stick-ers and feel that familiar ownership bile rising in my throat. Because, as one supporter of the new rules told me recently, “you fi nd somebody who supports graf-fi ti, I’ll likely show you somebody who hasn’t had to clean their wall for a while.”

I once talked to a property owner downtown who was as perplexed as I am over the issue. She worked at the art college, was a longtime supporter of street art, under-stood the signifi cant cultural and politi-cal role graffi ti has played as an outlet for the repressed... but she was meet-ing with police and considering hiring security.

“Maybe I’m just getting older,” she mused.

At least few will claim the city isn’t transparent on this issue. Meet-ings have been held and neighborhood associations engaged. Granted, these were less “fact-fi nding” and more pep rallies for the new laws, but they still get the word out.

How much are city offi cials backing the laws? Trish McAllister, Portland’s neighborhood prosecutor, openly lob-

bies neighborhood associations to back the changed.

In a recent email to the associations, she said “... I am writing to ask you to spread the word so that supporters of the ordinance will call their city coun-cilors and/or appear in person at the

fi rst reading/public hearing on this matter before the full City Council...”

We fence-sitters have to envy her clarity, and she’ll need it because tempers are going to run hot over the victims-must-pay aspect of this ordinance. Unfor-tunately, the other implications — like locking up kids for tagging, or prosecu-tion for the intent to commit graffi ti — won’t hit the fan for a while.

Into that fray I’ll try and refrain from pointing out that none of this matters without enforcement – graf-fi ti is illegal now, but we don’t see too many prosecutions. No way around it – shaping up going to hurt.

(Want to hear more on this issue? I'm launching a new Channel 5 TV

interview program Monday at 7:30 p.m., and my guest is Tim Clorius, perhaps the most well-known street-to-gallery aerosol artist.)

(Curtis Robinson is founding editor of The Portland Daily Sun.)

Portland’s graffi ti law

Here are key provisions of Port-land’s new graffi ti ordinance, as explained by prosecutor Trish McAl-lister in a letter to the city’s neigh-borhood associations. She says the new ordinance: • defi nes graffi ti as “any inscrip-tion, word, fi gure, design, painting, writing, drawing or carving that is marked, etched, scratched, drawn, painted or otherwise applied to property without the prior authori-zation of the owner of the property, regardless of the content or nature of the material used;” • prohibits graffi ti and imposes fi nes and community service upon those caught in the act (this would be in addition to criminal prosecu-tion); • prohibits possession of graffi ti implements in certain cases (under circumstances presumed to evi-dence the intent to apply graffi ti); • prohibits the sale of graf-fi ti implements to minors without parental consent; • regulates the sale of graffi ti implements; • requires property owners to remove graffi ti from their property or come up with a removal plan that is approved by the city within 10 days of notice.

Some implications of rules won’t hit the fan for a while

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

Page 6: The Portland Daily Sun, Saturday, June 4, 2011

Page 6 — THE PORTLAND DAILY SUN, Saturday, June 4, 2011

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To set up private or group classes call (207)518-9375 or email Raymond Reid at [email protected]

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Two Tides Seafood

Open Fri, Sat, & Sun 10am to 6pm Call for additional hours 207-839-3019

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Ban on texting while driving in Maine signed by governor

Governor Paul LePage signed legislation Friday that bans texting and driving. The bill’s sponsor, Sen. Bill Diamond, D-Cumberland County, joined the gov-ernor Friday as LD 736, “An Act to Prohibit Texting while Driving,” was signed into law.

“All too often we see drivers with one hand on the wheel and their attention diverted from the road to a cell phone,” LePage said in a press release. “While many motorists are able to multitask as they drive, the safest driving is done when drivers direct full atten-tion to the road and their surroundings.”

Senator Diamond who served as Maine Secretary of State from 1989 to 1997 is a member of the Transpor-tation Committee, the press release stated. In 2009, the senator sponsored Maine’s distracted driving law which took effect that same year.

This law will go into effect 90 days after legislative session ends. A person who violates this law may be issued a fi ne of not less than $100.

‘Yes On 1’ campaign in Falmouth makes its case today at news event

Today at 11 a.m., Falmouth’s “Yes On 1” campaign plans a news conference at the community’s School Farewell Festival, in front of Plummer-Motz Ele-mentary School, the corner of Lunt Road and Middle Road in Falmouth.

On June 14, Falmouth residents will go to the polls to decide on Question 1, a plan to re-use the former Lunt/Plummer-Motz elementary school campus to create a multi-purpose town center. This plan calls for generating revenue by selling the Pleasant Hill Fire Station, the current Falmouth Memorial Library, and acreage behind the Lunt and Plummer-Motz Schools, notes a brochure on the campaign. The Falmouth Memorial Library will raise an additional $1.25 million from private sources, and the town’s capital reserve fund will provide up to $1.5 million,

according to proponents. Question 1 on the June 14 ballot in Falmouth reads: “Shall the order entitled ‘Order authorizing the renovation of the Plummer-Motz/Lunt School complex into a community center, relocated Falmouth Memorial Library, and leasable space at a cost not to exceed fi ve million six hun-dred fi fty thousand dollars ($5,650,000) using up to $1,500,000 from the Town’s undesignated fund bal-ance and other available sources but not including new property tax revenues’ be adopted?”

City council poised to vote on Bayside land sale, city manager

On Monday at its 7 p.m. meeting, the Portland City Council will vote on the sale of a 3.25-acre parcel of land in the Bayside neighborhood to a Miami-based developer, according to the meeting agenda.

Sponsored by the Community Development Com-mittee, the order authorizes Portland acting city manager Pat Finnigan to execute a purchase and sale agreement for the city-owned property with a purchase price of $700,000/acre.

The intended use of the site is a mixed-use proj-ect to include commercial and/or retail space on the fi rst fl oor, upper fl oor parking, and market rate residential units, according to the developer. The proposed project also includes a privately owned and operated minimum 500-space parking structure.

Also on Monday, the council is poised to appoint Mark H. Rees as Portland City Manager, effective Sept. 1, and approve a three-year employment con-tract. Rees’ base salary will by $143,000 and include a vehicle allowance, relocation reimbursement and health and retirement benefi ts, the agenda states.

The council will also vote on a proposed graffi ti ordi-nance. Sponsored by the Public Safety Committee, the amendment to the Portland City Code creates a new ordinance that defi nes graffi ti, and prohibits pos-session of graffi ti implements, the sale of such imple-ments to minors. The ordinance would also require property owners to remove graffi ti from their property or come up with a removal plan that is approved by the city within 10 days of notice, or face civil penalties. It would also allow the city to remove the graffi ti if the owner refuses to do so and assess a fee.

State police note holiday fatalities, fi res, trooper’s crash into moose

Two people died on Maine roads during Memo-rial Day weekend, the Maine Department of Public Safety reported in a bulletin. The two fatal crashes took place in Surry and in Windham.

“In addition to the two highway deaths, the weekend was marred by the drowning deaths of a father and his young son in Ripley and the deaths of an elderly couple inside their Trenton house,” the bulletin stated. “The drowning was investigated by State Police, and Fire Marshals responded to the fi re. The state’s fi re death count now stands at 17, according to the Fire Marshals Offi ce, the most deaths since 1992, at this

point in the year. In 1992 and also in 1989, there had been 18 fi re deaths by June 1. 1992 ended the year with 28 fi re deaths and there were 32 deaths at the end of 1989. This year’s number is a stark contrast to last year, when nine people died during 2010 — the safest year ever in Maine for fi re deaths.”

“Speeders of the week,” cited by troopers for trav-eling over 100 mph, included Wesley Chasse, 25, of Bangor who was stopped on his motorcycle May 25 along Interstate 95 in Bangor after being clocked at 108 mph, the bulletin stated. It was the second time in two weeks that Chasse was stopped for speeding — both times by Trooper Christopher Hashey, who was driving an unmarked cruiser.

Hashey also charged Nathan McGinnis, 19, of Pal-myra with speeding at 103 mph. McGinnis’ car was stopped on Interstate 95 in Etna on May 26. Daniel Fox, 25, of Orrington was cited for speeding at 101 mph. Fox was stopped on Interstate 95 in Bangor by Trooper Kyle Willette on May 27. And in south-ern Maine a teenager was charged with speeding at 101 mph on the Maine Turnpike. Alyssa Horne, 18, of Eliot was driving a Nissan Versa when she was stopped in Wells by Sgt. Jim Urquhart. All four speeders were cited with criminal speeding, which is a crime versus a traffi c infraction.

Finally, the bulletin noted that Trooper Chuck Michaud escaped serious injuries at 1:30 a.m. on May 29 “when his cruiser slammed into a moose on Route 228 in Woodland. The impact demolished the 2009 Ford Crown Victoria and killed the animal, which exploded into the passenger compartment. Michaud was showered with glass from the wind-shield and had assorted bumps and bruises. He was responding to assist another trooper with a combat-ive man.”

Robinson launches CTN interview show with graffi ti artist discussion

CTN, Channel 5, public-access TV, welcomes a new show by Portland Daily Sun founding editor Curtis Robinson. The monthly show, titled “Usu-ally Reserved” (like his Daily Sun column), will air starting Monday, June 6 at 7:30 p.m. Viewers can also catch it at 1:30 a.m. on Wednesdays; 6:30 a.m. on Thursdays; and 1:30 p.m. on Fridays, to repeat monthlong. The show is viewable on Time Warner in the Greater Portland area and on the Internet worldwide.

Robinson said “Usually Reserved” is a 30-minute program also available on video by demand on CTN’s website, www.ctn5.org. The show will allow viewers to join Robinson as he’s “taking part in a civic dis-cussion,” seizing on a detail of what he would nor-mally discuss in his column and bringing it into a longer format.

“It’s sort of an extension of the column,” he said. “This is a chance for a bit more long-form inter-view. ... You fi nd these interesting people, I would just like to quote them at length and this is a good way to do that.”

The set will include blow-up replicas of The Portland Daily Sun, Portland’s free daily.

–––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––– NEWS BRIEFS –––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––

Page 7: The Portland Daily Sun, Saturday, June 4, 2011

THE PORTLAND DAILY SUN, Saturday, June 4, 2011— Page 7

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Page 8: The Portland Daily Sun, Saturday, June 4, 2011

Page 8 — THE PORTLAND DAILY SUN, Saturday, June 4, 2011

P ortland $219,000

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Portland High School releases over 200 Bulldogs into the wild

Portland High School gradu-ated over 212 students on Thursday morning as part of the school’s 190th graduation exercises. Graduates, family and friends gathered in Port-land’s Merrill Auditorium for the ceremony, with Mikhaila Fogel delivering the salutatory address and Marc Korobkin speaking as valedictorian. (MATT DODGE PHOTOS)

Grainger gives $10,000 to PATHS

Grainger Industrial Supply of Portland has donated $10,000 to Port-land Arts and Technol-ogy High School, PATHS reported. The money will be used to help improve student performance in the carpentry, machining and robotics, plumbing, recreation and marine repair, woodworking and welding programs.

John Testa, Grainger’s branch manager, pre-sented the check to PATHS, a school with the dual focus of prepar-ing students for careers and college. Grainger pro-vides materials, resources and operations for many area businesses in the construction, health care, landscaping, food ser-vice and manufacturing industries.

— Daily Sun

Page 9: The Portland Daily Sun, Saturday, June 4, 2011

THE PORTLAND DAILY SUN, Saturday, June 4, 2011— Page 9

Page 10: The Portland Daily Sun, Saturday, June 4, 2011

Page 10 — THE PORTLAND DAILY SUN, Saturday, June 4, 2011

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HOROSCOPE By Holiday Mathis

ARIES (March 21-April 19). The job before you isn’t diffi cult, but it is all-encompassing. Accomplishing this will take a union of mind, body and spirit. You’ll gather yourself, remind yourself of your purpose and dive in. TAURUS (April 20-May 20). Your powers of imagination are strong. So close your eyes and conjure up a lazy scene. All you need to do is relax and enjoy yourself. Your best opportunities come along when you’re in a chilled out mood. GEMINI (May 21-June 21). Every-thing comes at a cost, though the cur-rency is not always money. Insist on being more helpful, even when you have someone in your life who is more than willing to do the work for you. CANCER (June 22-July 22). You want to take care of the needs of those around you, and they seem to need you more than usual. You’ll fulfi ll your role and their requirement. Then it’s time to think about yourself. LEO (July 23-Aug. 22). You can’t help what you’ve already done. You can only trust that you had your rea-sons at the time. And the stellar choice you make today is precisely because of the way things happened so long ago. VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22). You’re a giver, that’s for sure. Your fi rst response is to think of the needs of other people. But you have needs, too, and you’ll have more to give if you take the time to fi ll your own well. LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 23). Consider taking a reprieve from the process of getting your life together in order to live your life as it is. The former takes so much energy, and the latter will be

mighty enjoyable. SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 21). When you try to stop doing some-thing, you will do it more because you are still focusing on the “something.” So decide on a new mode of behavior, and focus yourself there. SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21). You have social skills and will have the opportunity to use them and teach them to others through your example. You would be amazed if you knew how infl uential you really are. CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19). You like a challenge that allows you to know your own strength and tough-ness. The one that comes along today will be both mental and physical. AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18). You work hard to please others, even when no one asks you to do so or bothers to thank you for it. Anyway, the outside world cannot compensate you more than your own moral conscience. PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20). You are such a versatile designer that you are not always sure which medium to work in. You will be especially effective in applying your creativity to the area of food, decor and conversation. TODAY’S BIRTHDAY (June 4). Education fi gures prominently for you this year. Your mind is open, and so you receive more help from people and organizations and also from the ethereal realms. You’ll be an agent of healing for your family this month. Next month brings better money man-agement, and you’ll implement new systems for smoother living. Virgo and Scorpio people adore you. Your lucky numbers are: 10, 4, 35, 2 and 7.

ACROSS 1 Bigwig, for short 4 Phi Beta __ 9 Puncture 13 Highest cards 15 Of birds 16 Despise 17 Reds or Angels 18 Female goat 19 Loud melee 20 Sleepiest 22 Shade trees 23 Colorful duck 24 Hem and __;

pussyfoot 26 Sea __; spiny

ocean creature 29 Using a pepper

mill 34 Less common 35 $1000 36 Anti’s vote 37 Coffi n platform 38 Fork part; tine 39 Wet 40 Deadly snake 41 Banquet 42 Sharpens

43 __ to say; obviously

45 False religious teaching

46 Belonging to you and me

47 Enlarge a hole 48 Celebrity 51 Make laws 56 New Zealander,

familiarly 57 Happening 58 Far’s opposite 60 Doing nothing 61 Common __; good

judgment 62 Actress Harper 63 Disorder 64 Look of scorn 65 __ up; arrange

DOWN 1 Brewery tub 2 Decorated a cake 3 “...a partridge in a

__ tree...” 4 Wichita resident 5 To no __;

fruitlessly 6 Evergreen tree 7 Skillets 8 “__ goes”; free-

spirited attitude 9 Clever 10 Rear section of a

plane 11 Tiny particle 12 Wagers 14 __ a fi re; throw

a blanket over fl ames

21 River dam 25 In addition to 26 Of the city 27 Elevate 28 Thin pancake 29 Disgusting 30 __ and rave; carry

on 31 Absurd 32 Monikers 33 __ Rose Lee 35 Mardi __ 38 Incomparable;

unequaled 39 Latent; inactive

DAILY CROSSWORDTRIBUNE MEDIA SERVICES

41 Respiratory ailment

42 Cure 44 Flat-bottomed

boats 45 __ Prynne; “The

Scarlet Letter” heroine

47 Hose down

48 Like nonfat milk 49 Rising & falling of

the waves 50 Pointed tools 52 Level; fair 53 Autry or Barry 54 Golf pegs 55 Alleviate 59 OPQ followers

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

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Yesterday’s Answer

Page 11: The Portland Daily Sun, Saturday, June 4, 2011

THE PORTLAND DAILY SUN, Saturday, June 4, 2011— Page 11

SATURDAY PRIME TIME JUNE 4, 2011 Dial 8:00 8:30 9:00 9:30 10:00 10:30 11:00 11:30 5 CTN 5 Focus on Bulletin Commissioners Mtg Community Bulletin Board

6 WCSH2011 Stanley Cup Final TBA at Vancouver Canucks. Game 2. From Rogers Arena in Vancouver, B.C. (N) (In Stereo Live) Å

News Saturday Night Live Å

7 WPFOCops “Street Pa-trol No. 2”

Cops (In Stereo) (PA) Å

America’s Most Wanted: America Fights Back (N) Å

News 13 on FOX (N)

The Office “The Coup”

Fringe The team visit a town where disfigured people try to hide.

8 WMTWThe Bachelorette Ashley eliminates three suitors. (In Stereo) Å

Extreme Makeover: Weight Loss Edition “Rachel” Å

News 8 WMTW at 11 (N)

Cold Case “Forensics” Å

10 MPBNMoments to Remember: My Music Number 204 (In Stereo) Å

Great Performances “Eric Clapton Crossroads Guitar Festival 3” Crossroads Guitar Festival in Chicago. Å

OUT in America Å

11 WENHMoments to Remember: My Music Number 204 1950s and ’60s hits. (In Stereo) Å

Great Performances Crossroads Gui-tar Festival in Chicago. Å

12 WPXTUgly Betty Cal hires Wilhelmina’s replace-ment. (In Stereo) Å

Community Auditions

Scrubs (In Stereo) Å

Entourage “No More Drama”

True Hollywood Story A look at the Kardashian family. Å

American Dad Å

13 WGMECHAOS (In Stereo) Å NCIS: Los Angeles (In

Stereo) Å (DVS)48 Hours Mystery A teenager’s parents are killed. (In Stereo) Å

WGME News 13 at 11:00

Entertain-ment To-night (N)

17 WPME Movie: ››› “Garden State” (2004) Zach Braff. Deadliest Catch Å The Unit Å

24 DISC Killing bin Laden Å Surviving D-Day (N) (In Stereo) Å Killing bin Laden Å

25 FAM Movie: ››› “The Sixth Sense” (1999) Bruce Willis. Movie: ›››‡ “Jurassic Park”

26 USA Law & Order: SVU Law & Order: SVU Law & Order: SVU In Plain Sight Å

27 NESN MLB Baseball: Athletics at Red Sox Innings Red Sox Daily Dirty

28 CSNE World MLS Soccer SportsNet SportsNet SportsNet

30 ESPN NASCAR Racing Nationwide Series: Chicago. (N) (Live) SportsCenter (N) (Live) Å

31 ESPN2 College Softball Update College Softball All Access

33 ION Movie: “Dr. Dolittle 3” Movie: ››‡ “Jumpin’ Jack Flash” (1986) Stephen Collins Colors

34 DISN Wizards Good Luck Good Luck Good Luck Suite/Deck Suite/Deck Suite/Deck Suite/Deck

35 TOON Movie: “Madagascar” Venture King of Hill King of Hill Fam. Guy Boondocks Boondocks

36 NICK Big Time Victorious Ninjas iCarly My Wife My Wife ’70s Show ’70s Show

37 MSNBC Lockup: Holman Lockup Lockup Lockup: Pendleton

38 CNN CNN Presents Å Piers Morgan Tonight CNN Newsroom CNN Presents Å

40 CNBC American Greed The Suze Orman Show Debt/Part Debt/Part American Greed

41 FNC Huckabee (N) Justice With Jeanine Stossel War Stories/North

43 TNT Movie: ››› “Gran Torino” (2008) Clint Eastwood. Å Movie: ››› “Gran Torino” (2008)

44 LIFE “And Baby Will Fall” Movie: “Maternal Obsession” (2010) Å Movie: “Homecoming”

46 TLC Niecy Nash’s Wedding Bash (N) Å My Big Fat Gypsy Niecy Nash’s

47 AMC Movie: ›››‡ “The Shootist” (1976) Å Movie: ››› “El Dorado” (1967) John Wayne.

48 HGTV Summer Block Block Antonio House House Hunters Hunters

49 TRAV Ghost Adventures Ghost Adventures Ghost Adventures Ghost Adventures

50 A&E Parking Parking Storage Storage Parking Parking Parking Wars Å

52 BRAVO Housewives/NJ Housewives/NJ House “Epic Fail” House “The Tyrant”

55 HALL Movie: “Pollyanna” Movie: ››‡ “The Princess Diaries” (2001) Julie Andrews. Frasier

56 SYFY Movie: “Total Recall” Movie: “Red Faction: Origins” (2011) Premiere. Movie: “Dragon Wars”

57 ANIM My Cat From Hell Å Cats 101 Å Dogs 101 Å My Cat From Hell Å

58 HIST American Pickers Å Pawn Pawn American American American American

60 BET Movie: ›››‡ “Ray” (2004) Jamie Foxx, Kerry Washington. Premiere. Å Harlem

61 COM Movie: ›› “Beerfest” Katt Williams Patrice O’Neal: Elep. Katt Williams: Pimp

62 FX Movie: ››› “X-Men” Movie: ››› “X-Men 2” (2003, Fantasy) Patrick Stewart, Hugh Jackman.

67 TVLND All-Family All-Family Raymond Raymond Raymond Raymond Raymond Raymond

68 TBS Movie: ››› “I Love You, Man” (2009, Comedy) Franklin & Bash Å “Dick and Jane”

76 SPIKE The Ultimate Fighter The Ultimate Fighter The MMA fighters’ battle it out for a UFC contract.

78 OXY Movie: ›› “Where the Heart Is” (2000) Natalie Portman. Movie: ›› “Where the Heart Is”

146 TCM Movie: ›››› “Dodsworth” (1936, Drama) Å Movie: “Payment on Demand” Faces

––––––– ALMANAC –––––––

Today is Saturday, June 4, the 155th day of 2011. There are 210 days left in the year.

Today’s highlight in history:On June 4, 1940, during World War

II, the Allied military evacuation of more than 338,000 troops from Dunkirk, France, ended.

On this date:In 1783, the Montgolfi er brothers fi rst

publicly demonstrated their hot-air balloon, which did not carry any passengers, over Annonay, France.

In 1784, opera singer Elizabeth Thible became the fi rst woman to fl y aboard a Mont-golfi er hot-air balloon, over Lyon, France.

In 1892, the Sierra Club was incorporated in San Francisco.

In 1910, the Ballets Russes premiered its dance adaptation of the Rimsky-Korsakov suite “Scheherazade” in Paris.

In 1919, Congress approved the 19th Amendment to the U.S. Constitution guar-anteeing citizens the right to vote regardless of their gender, and sent it to the states for ratifi cation.

In 1939, the German ocean liner St. Louis, carrying more than 900 Jewish refu-gees from Germany, was turned away from the Florida coast by U.S. offi cials.

In 1942, the Pacifi c Battle of Midway began during World War II.

In 1954, French Premier Joseph Laniel and Vietnamese Premier Buu Loc signed treaties in Paris according “complete inde-pendence” to Vietnam.

In 1986, Jonathan Jay Pollard, a former Navy intelligence analyst, pleaded guilty in Washington to conspiring to deliver informa-tion related to the national defense to a for-eign government, specifi cally Israel. (He is serving a life prison term.)

One year ago: On his third personal trek to the Gulf disaster, President Barack Obama said that he saw some progress in fi ghting the enormous oil spill but that it was “way too early to be optimistic.” Death claimed Jack Harrison, 97, survivor of the Great Escape plot by Allied prisoners in World War II.

Today’s Birthdays: Actor Bruce Dern is 75. Musician Roger Ball is 67. Actress-singer Michelle Phillips is 67. Jazz musi-cian Anthony Braxton is 66. Rock musician Danny Brown (The Fixx) is 60. Actor Parker Stevenson is 59. Actor Keith David is 55. Actress Julie Gholson is 53. Actor Eddie Velez is 53. Singer-musician El DeBarge is 50. Actress Julie White is 50. Actress Lind-say Frost is 49. Tennis player Andrea Jaeger is 46. Rhythm-and-blues singer Al B. Sure! is 43. Actor Scott Wolf is 43. Comedian Horatio Sanz is 42. Actor Noah Wyle is 40. Rock musician Stefan Lessard (The Dave Matthews Band) is 37. Actor-comedian Rus-sell Brand is 36. Actress Angelina Jolie is 36. Actor Theo Rossi is 36. Rock musician JoJo Garza is 31. Model Bar Refaeli is 26.

ACROSS 1 Holds up 5 Racetrack

confi gurations 10 Deepest male

voice 14 Evangelist Roberts 15 Alternative beau 16 Hayworth or

Moreno 17 In a tedious

manner 19 Algerian port 20 Civic or Accord 21 Solid-state joining

process 23 More cozy 26 Over thar 27 Most cruel 30 Pasturage grass 31 Farrow of

“Rosemary’s Baby”

33 On the wagon 34 Dieter’s lunch,

perhaps 35 Magnani or

Pavlova 37 Fully gratifi ed

39 French head 40 Mooch 42 Land of lamas 44 Golfer’s gadget 45 Fossil resin 46 Expand 48 Rock-tour

employee 50 Scottish sculptor

Paolozzi 53 Cheap ornaments 56 Filmdom’s Flynn 57 Hearty’s partner 58 Arising anew 61 Colorado tribe 62 Just perfect 63 Olin of “The Ninth

Gate” 64 Tampa Bay team 65 Curvy letters 66 Historic time

periods

DOWN 1 Some IRAs 2 Hunter

constellation 3 American

showmen

4 Large heavy hammer

5 Gold of Guadalajara

6 Ebullient enthusiasm

7 With, along the Seine

8 “Fiesque” composer

9 In a foxy fashion 10 Common

worldwide rodent 11 Large breed of

dog 12 Inconclusive

chess result 13 “Gidget” star 18 Lengthy heroic

tales 22 Pursues

persistently 24 Slaughter in the

Hall of Fame 25 Mail-in money-

back offer 28 Begin to become

established 29 High-pitched

31 World War II chief of staff

32 Ladylove 36 Elderly condition 38 Kind of bolt or

heat 41 French avant-

garde composer Satie

43 More loyal 47 Sooth a sore

throat 49 Uncanny 51 Prima __ 52 Namesakes of a

Russian saint 54 Knight and Mack 55 Observes 59 West of “My Little

Chickadee” 60 RRs on trestles

Yesterday’s Answer

DAILY CROSSWORDBY WAYNE ROBERT WILLIAMS

The Argyle Sweaterby Scott Hilburn

Page 12: The Portland Daily Sun, Saturday, June 4, 2011

Page 12 — THE PORTLAND DAILY SUN, Saturday, June 4, 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

TH

E CLASSIFIEDSCLASSIFIEDSHelp Wanted Help Wanted

Prickly City by Scott Stantis

ANNIE’S MAILBOX Dear Annie: My mother was physically and mentally abused as a child. I know because I have been listening to the horror stories since I was 5 years old. I am now in my 40s and, quite frankly, am running out of compassion for her. First of all, I resent her dumping this on me when I was so young. Second, I know plenty of people who had rotten childhoods, but they eventually made peace with the past and stopped whining about it all the time. I understand vent-ing as a part of the healing process, as I have been in therapy myself. But I don’t get any sense that my mother is trying to heal. We cannot have a conversation without her bringing up some awful incident or begging me to tell her why my grand-parents didn’t love her. She tells the same dreary stories over and over almost word for word, and it sounds like self-pity to me. I don’t know why my grandparents didn’t love her. And she abused me, too, in exactly the same ways, but refuses to admit it. Is there any halfway polite way to tell her to grow up and shut up? Or am I just being a witch with a capital B? I once suggested she get therapy, and she nearly screamed the house down proclaiming she’s not “nuts” and doesn’t need “a shrink.” Any suggestions? -- Indiana Dear Indiana: Your mother isn’t “nuts,” but she absolute-ly needs therapy. She cannot let go of the past, nor has she found a healthy way to deal with it. She is also being abusive to you by bringing this up over and over and expecting you to somehow take away the pain. The next time she starts up, tell her it is too diffi cult for you to listen to her childhood stories and you will no longer be her emotional punching bag. Then leave. If she needs to vent, she should talk to a professional. Dear Annie: Are people no longer taught common courte-sy? I am a neatly dressed senior citizen. Due to an accident, I

have nerve damage to my face. Even though I have had exten-sive reconstructive surgery, the disfi gurement is still visible. I have tried to make the best of what life has handed me and rarely think about it. However, I was walking through an upscale department store, not far from the cosmetics department. Two clerks there began staring and laughing. I was embarrassed and con-tinued walking briskly when one of the Store Bullies yelled mockingly across the store, “May I help you?” even though I was no longer near their section. I was so humiliated that I left the store and have no intention of ever returning. I will happily take my business where I am treated with respect. I fi nd this behavior totally lacking in class, consideration and intelligence. What should I have done? -- Looks Aren’t Everything Dear Looks: You should have taken the names of those rude clerks and reported them to the manager. They are dam-aging the reputation of the store and should be reprimanded, not only for the way they treated you, but because they will behave this way toward others unless told to stop. Dear Annie: I read the letter from “Gone to the Gym,” who complained that there were overweight women in her doc-tor’s offi ce. I have two doctors who smoke and drink, and nurses who smoke behind offi ce doors. Even the lab tech reeks of ciga-rettes. It is the old saying of “do as I say and not as I do.” Health is a personal choice for the individual. I choose to be healthy whether or not my physician leads a healthy life. I see skinny people working at McDonald’s, but I don’t jump to the con-clusion that fast food makes you skinny. Where you work has no bearing on how healthy you are. -- Realistic in L.A.

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:• Medical Records Clerk- F/T Temp. Min two yrs ofc exp. Familiar-ity with healthcare billing and diagnostic coding preferred. Computerliterate.• LNA- Per Diem. Provide care and activities of daily living for multi-ple residents of the Merriman House. Experience and NH LNA licenserequired.• LPN/RN- Per Diem. Rotating 12 hour shifts• RN- FTE 0.9. Medical-Surgical Nurse, BLS/ACLS certified. Day/Night, 12 hr shifts. Experience preferred.• RN- Full-Time. ACLS/PALS/BLS and some acute care experienceand critical care experience preferred. Must take rotating call. Positiveattitude, team player, computer skills and critical thinking skills re-quired.• Office RN- FTE 0.6 and Per Diem. Office experience preferred.BLS required. Willing to be a team player, NH License. CoumadinTherapy Certification or willingness to obtain.• Collections- Full-time. Initiate collection of accounts through writ-ten, verbal and personal contact with the patient or specified guarantor.Recommend changes & procedures as necessary to the Director of Pa-tient Financial Services or Billing Manager.• RN- Per Diem. Med Surg Nurse, BLS/ACLS certified. Day/Night,12 hr shifts. Experience preferred.

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

OPENING:Executive Director

Mountain Top Music Center's Board of Trustees seeks a crea-tive and dynamic leader who communicates a passion for musicand for high-quality music education. Our ideal candidate willpossess the ability to lead a skilled faculty and to promote theMTMC mission effectively; will have strong interpersonal skillsand the ability to play a positive role in Mountain Top's commu-nity; will have strong business and administrative skills plus mu-sic teaching and program development abilities; and will be re-sponsible for the planning, growth, and development of theschool, as well as for the efficient operation of MTMC, with theguidance and support of the Board.

Mountain Top Music Center's mission is to enrich lives andbuild community by providing inspiring music education and byoffering performance and listening opportunities throughout thegreater Mount Washington Valley area. A non-profit commu-nity music school founded in 1996, MTMC currently has 11faculty members who teach 350+ children, young people andadults at multiple partner locations as well as at the main officeand instructional facility in Conway, NH.

The position is available almost immediately;an ideal starting date would be July 1.

Please send applications and nominations to:

MTMC Search CommitteeP.O. Box 1228

Conway, NH 03818

Autos

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The Daily Sun Classifi eds

Page 13: The Portland Daily Sun, Saturday, June 4, 2011

THE PORTLAND DAILY SUN, Saturday, June 4, 2011— Page 13

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Saturday, June 4

Grand opening of 10-mile Forest City Trail8:30 a.m. Portland Trails will celebrate its 20th znniversary on National Trails Day with the grand opening of the Forest City Trail. Activities are scheduled throughout the day including a ribbon cutting ceremony at noon at the Casco Bay High School and PATHS campus. Portland Trails recently made major improvements to the walking trails behind the school buildings that are part of the Forest City Trail. Portland Trails co-founder Tom Jewell will lead a guided walk of the Forest City Trail with Bob Crowley, winner of “Survivor: Gabon,” the hit reality television series. RSVPs will be required for this 10-mile hike across Portland. A $10 registration fee includes lunch. Individual guided walks of the major open spaces along the Forest City Trail will also be offered as part of the day’s festivities. 8:30 a.m.: Portland Trails Trail Man-ager Jaime Parker will lead a tour through the Fore River Sanctuary. Meet at the Frost and Congress Street trailhead; 10 a.m.: City Arborist Jeff Tarling of Portland Public Services will offer a tour of Evergreen Cemetery. Meet at the Duck Pond in the Cemetery; 1 p.m.: Portland Trails Board Member Roger Berle will lead a walk through the Presumpscot River Preserve starting from the Overset Road trailhead.

Maine Walks for Haiti9 a.m. A family-friendly walk/run around Portland’s Back Cove trail to help improve health care in northern Haiti. 9 a.m. to 10 a.m., registration; 10 a.m. to 10:15 a.m., welcome remarks; 10:15 a.m., runners start; 10:20 a.m. walkers start; 11 a.m. to 1:30 p.m., Après walk festivities. “Maine Walks for Haiti is a great opportunity for people of all ages to get involved with an international humanitarian cause and make a tangible dif-ference in the lives of many Haitians. Proceeds from the event benefi t Maine’s Konbit Sante Cap-Haitien Health Partnership. Strollers and dogs on leashes are welcome. Registration is $10 (school teams and children are free). Enjoy Haitian music, art, storytelling, and more!” Entertainment by: Gifrants, musician, Charlot Lucien, storyteller, DJ, Harold Similien. Since 2001, Konbit Sante staff and volunteers have worked in collabora-tion with the Haitian Ministry of health and other partners to build local capacity in all aspects of the health system” For more information on Konbit Sante, visit www.healthyhaiti.org.

USM Arboretum Day and Plant Sale in Gorham9 a.m. to noon. The dedication of the Joe B. Parks Rho-dodendron Garden, gardening workshops, children’s activi-ties and refreshments are all part of the inaugural University of Southern Maine Arboretum Day and Plant Sale. The free, public event will be held, rain or shine, adjacent to the USM Academy Building on USM’s Gorham campus. The Acad-emy Building overlooks School Street (Route 114). Park-ing is available at 68 School St. The garden dedication will be at 9:30 a.m., followed by workshops every 15 minutes. The plant sale will include vendors from O’Donal’s Nurs-ery, Meservey Farms and local garden clubs. “The Joe B. Parks Rhododendron Garden, located in front of the historic Academy Building, is “green” in more ways than one. All the plants are hybridized rhododendrons and azaleas that the late Dover, New Hampshire horticulturalist Joe Parks developed to withstand the New England climate and resist insects. Parks once said he struggled for more than 40 years with ‘a disease known as gardening.’ In 2007, he donated plants from his backyard gardens and took the lead in devel-opment of Dover’s Joe B. Parks River Walk and Gardens. Parks, who died in 2010, also decided to move plants from his home in Dover to USM for the use and enjoyment of the entire community. Benches and original artwork from the Parks’ home have been woven into this large garden space that serves as an outdoor classroom and a place for refl ec-tion.” 780-4714, [email protected].

New Gloucester History Barn Open House9 a.m. to noon. The next monthly New Gloucester His-tory Barn Open House will be held at the History Barn, right behind the Town Hall on Route 231. Historic photos and vehicles are on display. The next Open House will be July 2 and will feature a public reading of the Declaration of Independence.

Used book and DVD sale at Windham Hill church9 a.m. to 2 p.m. A used book and DVD sale will be held at the Windham Hill United Church of Christ at 140 Windham Center Road in Windham. There will be a huge selection of fi ction, nonfi ction, and children’s books available. FMI call the church at 892-4217.

Maine Historical Society annual meeting9:30 a.m. to 12:30 p.m. Maine Historical Society Annual Meeting: Looking (Back) At Television. “Join us to conduct the offi cial business of MHS, and for a look at the early days of television in Maine. The annual meeting includes awards, the welcoming of new Trustees, and a talk by Fred Thompson, former head of the Maine Broadcasting System (1983-1998). MHS membership and registration for the event required.” For more information, click here. To regis-ter, please call 774-1822.

‘Empowering Self and Mastering Intuition’9:30 a.m. to 12:30 p.m. Unity of Greater Portland, 54 River Road, Windham will be holding a special workshop called “Empowering Self and Mastering Intuition — Finding One’s Own Real Divinity.” It will be presented by Terri-Lynn John-son. It will focus on: Surrendering the Ego and Finding the Real You; learning to follow the Inherent Guidance from Within; cultivate and expand our senses; mastery through observation; unveiling the Present Moment; free yourself from old restrictive programs; feed the Internal Fire. For the past 20 years, Johnson has led workshops for audi-ences around the world helping people access and utilize their vibrant healing resources. When not lecturing, she is a counselor, nutritionist, yoga teacher and transformational specialist. 893-1233 or visit www.unitygreaterportland.org.

Westbrook Together Days10 a.m. Westbrook Together Days. This annual event put together by the Westbrook Community Chamber brings together the best of Westbrook, local groups, local artisans, local service clubs, and great food along with amusement rides. “We will have 20-30 performers and entertainers as well as a parade down Main Street Saturday morning and our Annual Auction Saturday afternoon. The festivities are concluded with our fabulous Fireworks show at 9:30 p.m. Saturday night. Riverbank Park, 655 Main St., Westbrook. June 3-June 4. Friday 3 p.m. until 10 p.m. Saturday 10 a.m. until 10 p.m. No cost for admission. Tickets can be pur-chased for amusement rides.

Herbal Primer Workshop10 a.m. to 2 p.m. An Herbal Primer Workshop will be held at the Sabbathday Lake Shaker Village, Route 26, New Gloucester. The workshop covers all the basics of herb growing from starting seeds to using what you grow. Bet-sey-Ann Golon, Shaker Village herb gardener, is the instruc-tor. Fee: $40 (pre-registration required).

Maine Narrow Gauge Railroad Volunteer Training 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. Lunch provided. “Retired? Interested in history? Looking for a fun part-time activity? The Maine Narrow Gauge Railroad has immediate openings for train crew! We are looking for individuals who enjoy talking with visitors and residents about the history of Maine. Volunteer whenever is convenient for you –- we run trains seven days a week along the waterfront. We offer a fun and enjoyable environment to volunteer in the community this summer. No technical skills are needed — training provided.” www.mainenarrowgauge.org. Limited seats available on June 4, please RSVP to 828-0814 or e-mail: [email protected].

League of Women Voters convention10 a.m. to 4 p.m. The League of Women Voters of Maine will hold its biennial convention at the Glickman Library, Uni-versity of Southern Maine, Portland campus. Registration is $35 and the event is open to the public. “Maine Secretary of State Charlie Summers will be the morning speaker. He will discuss Maine’s laws, rules and experience governing the Citizen Initiative/People’s Veto. Mr. Summers was elected by the 125th Legislature to serve as Maine’s 48th Secretary

of State. He served as State Director to U.S. Senator Olym-pia Snowe from 1995 to 2004. He served two terms as State Senator, representing Scarborough, Saco and Old Orchard Beach. He is also a Commander in the U.S. Navy Reserve and served in Afghanistan and Iraq on active duty. Univer-sity of Southern Maine Associate Professor Ron Schmidt, Ph.D. will be the afternoon speaker. He will discuss the history, uses and politics of the Citizen People’s Veto in Maine. Dr. Schmidt currently serves as Chair of the Politi-cal Science Department. He specializes in political theory, racial and ethnic politics and urban politics. He received his Ph.D. from the University of California, Berkeley, and is the author of This Is The City: Making Model Citizens in Los Angeles, 2005. The afternoon plenary session will vote on whether the Maine League should conduct a study to understand how Maine’s citizen referenda have operated in the past and what changes, if any, should be proposed to the Constitution, statutes, or departmental regulations.” [email protected] or 622-0256 or visit the League’s website at www.lvwme.org.

Westbrook Together Days10 a.m. to 10 p.m. Westbrook Together Days. This annual event put together by the Westbrook Community Chamber features local groups, local artisans, local service clubs and amusement rides. Expect 20-30 performers and entertainers as well as a parade down Main Street Saturday morning and the auction Saturday afternoon. The festivities are concluded with a fi reworks show at 9:30 p.m. Saturday night. Riverbank Park, 655 Main St., Westbrook. June 3-June 4. Saturday 10 a.m. until 10 p.m. No cost for admission. Tickets can be pur-chased for amusement rides.

Local Sprouts Cafe one-year anniversary10 a.m. to 10 p.m. Local Sprouts Cafe, 649 Congress St. Local Sprouts Cooperative is celebrating the One Year Anni-versary of Local Sprouts Cafe with a daylong celebration with music, art, dance and food and drink specials. Music will include Papadello, Ahmad Hassan Trio, Meghan Yates, Butcher Boy, Leif Sherman Curtis, Robin Jellis, Jimmy Dority, Tucker Louisos Daniels, Gaelle Robins, Jonah Fertig and others. There will be a dance performance in the after-noon, art making and facepainting and the celebration will be for all ages. 899-3529, [email protected]

The Dave Astor Reunion Show1 p.m. to 3:30 p.m. The Dave Astor Reunion Show at Port City Music Hall, 504 Congress St. Featuring Dave Astor with Tony Boffa, Steve Romanoff, and Fred Thompson. Community participation and memories welcome! “Join us to remember and celebrate one of Maine’s best-loved homegrown television shows, The Dave Astor Show (For Teenagers Only). The program, which aired on Saturday afternoons from 1956-1971, featured students from area high schools performing dance routines and other produc-tions. The Dave Astor Show was Portland’s own version of American Bandstand. ...The program will be followed by a dance party!” $5 suggested donation at the door. http://www.mainehistory.org

Shannon Verrill Calamity Janes in a bout with the Providence Killah Bees on May 14. Maine Roller Derby action resumes today at 6 p.m. at the Portland Expo. (Photo by Scott Lovejoy Jr.)

Page 14: The Portland Daily Sun, Saturday, June 4, 2011

Page 14 — THE PORTLAND DAILY SUN, Saturday, June 4, 2011

Shape Note Singers in New Gloucester1 p.m. to 4:30 p.m. Shape Note Singers will be gathering for their annual singalong at the Sab-bathday Lake Shaker Village, Route 26, New Gloucester. The singalong is open and free of charge to the public.

‘My Perestroika’ at the PMA2 p.m. “My Perestroika” screening at the Portland Museum of Art.Saturday, June 4, 2 p.m.; Sunday, June 5, 2 p.m. NR. “‘My Perestroika’ follows fi ve ordinary Russians living in extraordinary times — from their sheltered Soviet childhood, to the collapse of the Soviet Union during their teen-age years, to the constantly shifting political land-scape of post-Soviet Russia. At the center of the fi lm is a family.”

College of the Atlantic commencement2 p.m. College of the Atlantic will hold its 39th commencement. This will be COA’s largest graduation, with 85 seniors and two graduate students. Actress Jane Alexander, former head of the National Endowment for the Arts, will give the commencement address. Like every COA event, this will be a green celebration. Young sci-entists, entrepreneurs, novelists, artists, public policy analysts, potential medical practitioners and organic farmers from 11 nations, including the United States, and 24 states will be receiv-ing diplomas. Among them are a Watson fellow, a Goldwater Scholar, a Udall scholarship honorable mention, three recipients of Garden Club of Amer-ica scholarships, three recipients of Kathryn W. Davis Projects for Peace awards and a recipient of an international poetry prize. All will be receiving degrees in human ecology, COA’s one major.

SMCC Composite Technology meeting4:30 p.m. to 6 p.m. Southern Maine Community College is holding a public meeting to provide information about the Associate in Applied Science Degree in Composite Tech-nology scheduled for initial offering at the SMCC Midcoast Campus at Brunswick Landing in the fall. Applications are currently being accepted, and anyone interested in learning more about the program or admission procedures is encour-aged to attend. “Composite technology is designated as a high growth/high demand industry in Maine. SMCC is work-ing with regional employers to provide a skilled workforce to meet increasing demands.” Resilient Communications at Brunswick Landing. Enter the former BNAS through the main Cook’s Corner entrance. For more information on the degree program, contact Randi Paine at 741-5624.

Latin Dance with Dj Johnny Mambo!5 p.m. to 9 p.m. “Crystal, Heather, & Maria Cron will be going to Cuba this summer with the Pastors for Peace Friend-shipment Caravan. They are asking for support. Every year people opposing the U.S. blockade against Cuba join Pas-tors for Peace in taking taken humanitarian aid to the island. On their way to Cuba this year, they will travel in buses and trucks through 130 US and Canadian cities. They’ll be col-lecting construction, medical, and educational supplies for our Cuban sisters and brothers. People they meet along the way will learn about Cuba and the U.S. blockade. Crystal is considering study at the Latin America School of Medicine in Havana, so she’ll be visiting that school.” Doors open at 5 p.m., dinner served at 5:30, dance begins at 6:30 p.m. Hope.Gate.Way, 185 High St., Portland. Donation of $15 is suggested. Admission includes a Cuban/Peruvian meal, including Flan. For more information about this event, call Maria at 272-2071. People unable to attend may send dona-tions to: Crystal Cron, 117 North St., Portland, ME 04101. Let Cuba Live of Maine (www.letcubalive.org) sponsors the proceedings. For information about Pastors for Peace and the Friendshipment, go to www.pastorsforpeace.org.

Calamity Janes vs. Queen City Cherry Bombs6 p.m. Calamity Janes vs. Queen City Cherry Bombs (NHRD home team) in Maine Roller Derby action. “Portland Expo. TD Bank will be sponsoring a table for the Special Olympics at the June 4 and June 18 bouts. Stop by on your way to your seats to meet some Special Olympic Athletes and donate to the cause. Last year the Bank helped raise over $1,000,000 and has committed to raise another $1 mil-lion in 2011.” Tickets $10 adv.; $13 doors; $5 kids 6-12; free for kids 5 and under. After-party at Empire Dine & Dance. http://www.mainerollerderby.com/events

Fairy Tale Players7 p.m. In June, Acorn Productions wraps up the com-pany’s second season of performance by the “Fairy Tale Players,” an ensemble of kids, teens and adults who have studied at the Acorn Acting Academy. The troupe’s last production of the season is the classic fairy tale Rapun-zel, adapted and directed by Acorn faculty member

Stephanie Ross, who is also the Director of Drama at Massabesic High School. “Acorn’s version of the classic story begins with a young couple who desperately want a child. An evil enchantress Dame Gothel manipulates them into promising her their fi rst born in exchange for all the Rampion (otherwise known as Rapunzel) vegetable they can eat. Saving the day are a delightful garden of enchanted vegetables who talk, sing and put themselves in harm’s way in order to help Rapunzel and her heroic Prince fi nally fi nd their way back together.” The produc-tion runs from June 3 to 19 in the Acorn Studio Theater in Westbrook, with tickets $7 for adults and $5 for kids 12 and under. Rapunzel is suitable for all ages, especially younger children who will love the antics of the garden vegetables. Call Acorn at 854-0065 or visit www.acorn-productions.org for more info or to order tickets.

George Clinton & Parliament Funkadelic 8 p.m. George Clinton & Parliament Funkadelic on the Maine State Pier, presented by Maine State Pier Concert Series. “Funk legend and Rock and Roll Hall of Fame member George Clinton and the Parliament Funkadelics kick off the Maine State Pier Concert Series. This show promises the best funk concert dance party complete with vendors, street performers and beer garden, all set against the backdrop of Portland Harbor.” General admission seating. All tickets $30 including $3 service fee. Rain or Shine. All tick-ets will be mailed. https://tickets.porttix.com/public/show.asp or www.kahbang.com/maine-state-pier-concert-series

Sunday, June 5

Bicycle Coalition of Maine’s Women’s Ride9 a.m. This all-women’s ride is suited for all ages and fi tness levels, with distances of fi ve, 15, 25 and 50. The ride offers beautiful views of the countryside and coast. Proceeds benefi t the Bicycle Coalition of Maine’s work to improve bicycling in Maine. Preregistration is encouraged. For more information or to pre-register, go to www.BikeMaine.org or call 623-4511. L.L. Bean’s Casco Conference Center, Casco Street Freeport. Rides begin at 9 a.m. www.BikeMaine.org.

Unity Center for Sacred Living10 a.m. to 11 a.m. Unity Center for Sacred Living, “an open, interfaith, Oneness oriented Spiritual Community ... here to evolve consciousness through what we call The New Spirituality,” is holding services. “We know that the essence of Spirit is within each and every one of us, and our aim is to create a safe and sacred space for each person to explore their own perception of Spirituality. UCSL offers weekly gatherings that are informative, creative, interactive, and sometimes ceremonial followed by fellowship.” Sun-days from 10 a.m. to 11 a.m. at the Williston-West Church, Memorial Hall (second fl oor), 32 Thomas St., Portland. For more information, call 221-0727 or email [email protected].

St. Augustine of Canterbury Church services10 a.m. St. Augustine of Canterbury Church will add a 10

a.m. Sunday morning Holy Communion service and a Wednesday evening Holy Communion ser-vice at 7 p.m., beginning on June 5. The parish worships at 4 p.m. on Sunday at the Cathedral Pines Chapel at 156 Saco Ave. in Old Orchard Beach. Father Jeffrey W. Monroe is Vicar and Father Joseph Bizimana is assistant Vicar. For additional information, contact 799-5141.

Psychic Sunday at Lucid Stage11 a.m. to 4 p.m. Psychic Sunday at Lucid Stage. $1. 29 Baxter Boulevard, Portland. Maine’s Pre-mier Psychic Event! Admission $1. Readings, demonstrations, crystals and gems, and much more! 899-3993. www.LucidStage.com

Lemonade Day Mainenoon to 5 p.m. Portland residents have a chance to savor plenty of lemonade and encourage bud-ding entrepreneurs at the same time. This Sunday, hundreds of youth from all over greater Portland will set up their lemonade stand business and start selling lemonade for the fi rst-ever Lemonade Day Maine. Lemonaders will lure potential customers with their unique — and in most cases, home-made — lemonade recipes, creative stands and clever marketing tactics. Lemonade Day’s goal is to teach kids how to start and run their own lem-onade business. Participants in Lemonade Day Maine learn how to develop a business plan, set goals, establish a budget, seek investors, market their lemonade and provide customer service. The young entrepreneurs are encouraged to spend a little, save a little and share a little of their hard-earned cash with a charity of their choice. For more information, visit maine.lemonadeday.org.

Monday, June 6

Bridge Music Festivalnoon to 8 p.m. King Middle School and the Portland School Department will present the fourth annual Bridge Music Festival. This year’s event will take place at the Bandstand in Deering Oaks Park in Portland (rain loca-tion King Middle School Cafetorium). “The Bridge Music Festival’s mission is: To establish and foster a connection between student and professional musicians in greater Portland; to encourage performers to refl ect upon the importance and transformative power of music educa-tion in their lives; to afford students invaluable experience through actively participating in the planning, production, and execution of the festival; to raise awareness and support for local performing artists.” http://www.bridge-musicfestival.org

Cancer Resource Open House5:30 p.m. to 8 p.m. “Have you been meaning to introduce someone to the Cancer Community Center but haven’t known the best way to do it? Here is your answer. The Cancer Community Center has teamed up with the City of South Portland Wellness Committee to provide a free Cancer Resource Open House for the general public. The Open House will feature a whole bunch of cancer-related practitioners and speakers who will share their expertise on supplemental supports such as: Meditation, Massage, Pilates, Acupuncture, Immunity-boosting diet, Cancer sup-port groups, the Maine Buddy Program, and much more. South Portland Police Offi cer, Linda Barker, fi nished cancer treatment and found herself wondering why she hadn’t reached out to the Cancer Community Center while in treat-ment.” http://cancercommunitycenter.org/openhouse.htm

Cheverus High School graduation6 p.m. Cheverus High School announced that the speaker at the Class of 2011 graduation ceremony will be Richard Clifford, SJ, founding Dean of Boston Col-lege’s School of Theology and Ministry. The ceremony will be held at Merrill Auditorium in Portland. Richard J. Clifford, S.J., a native of Lewiston, Maine, is Professor of Old Testament. He taught biblical studies at Weston Jesuit School of Theology in Cambridge from 1970 to 2008. He was ordained as a Jesuit priest in 1966. He in graduate of Boston College (A.B., M.A.), Weston School of Theology (S.T.L.) and Harvard University (Ph.D.). He was General Editor of the Catholic Biblical Quarterly and is a former President of the Catholic Biblical Association. As well as teaching and lecturing in scholarly circles, he also is active in adult education in various New England dioceses. He is also the author of many academic and religious articles and publications. This year’s Valedicto-rian is Deirdre C. Lambert. Lambert is the daughter of Kim Caldwell and John Lambert of Cumberland Foreside. She will be addressing her class and guests at the gradu-ation ceremonies. Salutatorian of the Cheverus Class of 2011 is Jessica A. Kraus. Kraus is the daughter of Kath-leen and Jonathan Krause of Kennebunkport.

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

Phillip Brackett, 11, shows his nearly completed lemonade stand, which he’s planning to set up in the Old Port on Sunday from noon to 5 p.m. as part of Lemonade Day. Bangor Savings Bank is Lemonade Day Maine’s title sponsor. Strategic Partners include the Children’s Museum and Theatre of Maine, the Boys and Girls Club, the Portland and South Portland Recreational Departments, Learning Works, the Portland Public Library, the Root Cellar and the Munjoy Hill Neighborhood Organization. (COURTESY PHOTO)

Page 15: The Portland Daily Sun, Saturday, June 4, 2011

THE PORTLAND DAILY SUN, Saturday, June 4, 2011— Page 15

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Council to weigh $967,000 outlay for rulingThe Portland City Council will vote Monday on

appropriating $967,000 for payment of a jury award with interest and costs to Portland Company, the waterfront landowner that won an eminent domain lawsuit against the city.

The appropriation would allow payment up to $967,000, although the city disputes some of the interest charges accrued since the condemnation of easement rights in 2005.

"The amount that the city will be paying in pre-judgment interest could be signifi cantly less than the plaintiff ’s calculation ($243,014.53) because the city’s attorneys believe that a much later date in time (September 13, 2009) should be used to initiate the calculation of pre-judgment interest," according to the agenda item sponsored by city attorney Gary Wood.

Typically, items like this one must be read on two separate days, but "because of the accrual of post-judgment interest, staff is recommending that second reading be waived and the Order be enacted as an emergency. Emergency passage requires seven votes for passage after public comment," the agenda states.

A Cumberland County Superior Court jury on

May 26 awarded $715,000 to the Portland Company. With interest and fees, the total cost to the city could be $967,000.

The case stemmed from development planning near the Ocean Gateway terminal.

"The city acquired what has been called Parcel A in 1993 for $800,000 from Canadian National Rail-road," the agenda explains. "Parcel A was encum-bered by track connection rights created in 1865 to connect two tracks from the main line to a station on India Street. The Portland Company had those rights as a successor in title until 2005 when the city condemned the rights in order to remove them from the parcel. The condemnation order divided Parcel A into three parcels (A-1, A-2 and A-3) for the pur-pose of the condemnation. ... In 2005, the City sold Parcel A-2 to Riverwalk for $850,000. The portion of the Portland Company’s track connection rights

running over A-1 and A-2 were acquired by River-walk at that time for $100,000, at no cost to the city, allowing development to proceed on A-2 unencum-bered by those rights, which were also removed from Parcel A-1 which is now the extension of Hancock Street.

"In 2010, the city sold 2,775 square feet of parcel A-3 to Jackrabbit Property LLC (Mike Marino) for $89,000, which was a purchase price of $1.4 million per acre ($32.00 per square foot). In the litigation, the two appraisers valued the parcel at roughly $34 per square foot. With approximately three acres remaining in parcel A-3, with the track connection rights removed, the parcel has an appraised value of approximately $4.2 million. With the track connec-tion rights on Parcel A-3 in an undetermined loca-tion the parcel was considered unmarketable by the city which restricted its use to surface parking."

In the case Portland Company v. City of Portland, the Portland Company sued the city over the taking for $1.4 million, which was the company's appraised value of the easement, Wood explained.

In addition to the jury award of $715,000, the Portland Company has submitted a bill of costs for $6,939.20 plus $243,014.50 in prejudgment interest, Wood noted.

partnering with Pine Tree Legal and other advocates in hopes of demon-strating that the ordinance has strong local backing.

Regan and other advocates are par-ticularly concerned about revisions to the ordinance that were approved last year, which some say created a new loophole for property owners that want to eliminate units within an existing dwelling.

Indeed, last year's changes to the ordinance included a provision that exempted the “consolidation or elimination of dwelling units within an existing structure.” That clause allowed the Eastland Hotel to convert at least 50 apartments back into hotel rooms without incurring housing replacement fees.

The ordinance requires developers pay up to $50,000 per unit of housing that they eliminate during construc-tion or renovations. With the Eastland project alone, the city could have col-lected about $2.5 million for future affordable housing projects in the city.

Under the revisions being consid-

ered by the council, apartments that are converted into hotel or motel rooms would no longer be exempted from the ordinance.

The proposed amendments would also defi ne what’s considered a dwell-ing unit and clarifi es various exemp-tions. As proposed, anyone who buys a building that’s been carved into apartments could “recreate the origi-nal home” without being subjected to the $50,000-per unit housing replace-ment fees.

Property owners who convert 20 studio apartments into, say, 15 one-bedroom apartments, would also be exempt, but only if all of the units in the building remained dwelling units.

A recent analysis of the city's hous-ing stock since the ordinance was passed shows that at least 100 afford-able rental homes have been removed from the housing stock since 2006. That includes 60 units at the former YWCA, seven apartments at 660 Con-gress Street and the reduction of 54 apartments at the Eastland, accord-ing to the survey, released by Home-less Voices for Justice.

"Our goal is to engage the commu-

nity in a conversation that frames housing replacement as benefi cial to our economic stability. A hotel or other business development should not be more valuable than homes for our neighbors, without required replace-ment of these homes," the group says in a brochure.

The group says there is already a shortage of single-occupancy apart-

ments in Portland, and that further reductions could lead to higher rents and ultimately increase homelessnes.

The measure was given a fi rst read-ing by the city council last month. It was endorsed by the city council's Housing Committee by a 2-1 vote, with Councilor Jill Duson opposed.

The city council meets at 7 p.m. Monday at City Hall.

HOMELESS VOICES from page one

Proposed amendments would defi ne what’s considered a dwelling unit

BY DAVID CARKHUFFTHE PORTLAND DAILY SUN The appropriation would allow payment up to

$967,000, although the city disputes some of the interest charges accrued since the condemnation

of easement rights in 2005.

Jay York, a local photographer and property owner who sat on a panel discussing graffi ti versus street art several months ago at Space Gallery, is immortalized in spray paint on the “free wall” on the Eastern Prom Trail. “I must have pushed some buttons with my outspokenness about graffi ti,” York said. (JAY YORK PHOTO)

Graffi ti artists have fun with local critic

Page 16: The Portland Daily Sun, Saturday, June 4, 2011

Page 16 — THE PORTLAND DAILY SUN, Saturday, June 4, 2011

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Zoe Romano (left) and Mayor Nick Mavodones pause Friday before running from Longfellow Square to the Boys and Girls Clubs of Southern Maine Portland Clubhouse, where the mayor then proclaimed Friday as “Zoe Goes Running Day.” The event was in celebration of Romano’s transcontinental run from Huntington Beach, Calif., to Charleston, S.C. Romano, a Portland High School graduate, embarked on her cross country run in early January to benefi t Boys & Girls Clubs nationwide. Running between 25 and 30 miles a day, Romano was the fi rst woman to complete an unsupported transcontinental run in approximately fi ve months, running more than 2,500 miles overall, and raised more than $13,000 for Boys & Girls Clubs, the city reported. (DAVID CARKHUFF PHOTO)

Running for a cause