the portland daily sun, tuesday, october 25, 2011

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TUESDAY, OCTOBER 25, 2011 VOL. 3 NO. 187 PORTLAND, ME PORTLAND’S DAILY NEWSPAPER 699-5801 FREE VISIT PORTLANDDAILYSUN.ME FOR THIS AND OTHER GREAT OFFERS D a i l y D a i l y D e a l D e a l $ 1 0 P a y j u s t $ 1 0 f o r a Pay just $ 10 for a $ 2 0 $ 2 0 3 d a y p a s s $ 20 3 day pass 5 0 % 5 0 % 50% O F F O F F OFF Stephanie Wilburn described the scene early Sunday morning after a homemade chemical bomb was through into Lincoln Park, where Occupy Maine protesters have set up camp over the past month (MATTHEW ARCO PHOTO). Police probe chemical bomb at Lincoln Park Portland police are trying to determine who tossed a homemade explosive into Occupy Maine’s camp last weekend, and whether that person should face federal charges if arrested. Acting Chief Michael Sauschuck said Monday that investigators collected evi- dence from the scene in Lincoln Park shortly after a chemical bomb was tossed from a vehicle into campsite at about 4 a.m. Sunday. He described the homemade device as a “chemical bomb or an acid bomb,” and that it had the potential to cause significant harm to the protesters. “The chemicals involved are, generally speaking, chemicals found in any kitchen or bathroom,” he said, adding that com- ponent is typically mixed together in a plastic bottle with some other agent that sparks a chemical reaction.”We don’t believe it was that large, but … it could have certainly caused serious injury depending on the circumstances.” No injuries reported immediately fol- lowing the blast, which Sauschuck said was powerful enough to lift a table it BY MATTHEW ARCO THE PORTLAND DAILY SUN see BOMBING page 8 LePage wants child labor law revised AUGUSTA – Gov. Paul LePage says the state should leave work decisions up to children and their parents when they are not in school, and limit state laws restricting child labor to safety issues, but some argue that is already state policy. “I don’t see why kids can’t go to work when they are 14 or 15,” he said in an interview. “I’m talking about summer months and vacation, not when they are in school.” LePage said teens should be encour- aged to work during the summer months and current law discourages them from working. He said he has heard from several parents about how long it takes to get a work permit for vacation periods from school and said in one case a teen had a job lined up, but had to wait weeks for a permit. “A sixteen year old needs to get a permit; it takes three weeks to get a permit,” he said, “Three weeks to get through the superintendent to the Department of Labor to get a permit. That’s outrageous.” LePage said if a kid and their parents want the teen to be able to work during a vacation or during the summer months, they should be able to work. He said all of the other protections in child labor law, like the prohibition against working around dangerous machinery would still be in place. “Why should they not just be able to go to work,” he said, “it makes no sense to me.” see LABOR page 7 BY MAL LEARY CAPITOL NEWS SERVICE Rees: Fire boat policy to change City officials are revising departmen- tal policies and procedures following a recent accident involving a fi re boat that landed two fi refighters on unpaid suspension. Portland’s city manager says he is working closely with fi re Chief Fred LaMontagne to review policy pertain- ing to the $3.2 million MV City of Port- BY MATTHEW ARCO THE PORTLAND DAILY SUN see FiREBOAT page 7

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The Portland Daily Sun, Tuesday, October 25, 2011

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Page 1: The Portland Daily Sun, Tuesday, October 25, 2011

TUESDAY, OCTOBER 25, 2011 VOL. 3 NO. 187 PORTLAND, ME PORTLAND’S DAILY NEWSPAPER 699-5801 FREE

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

Daily Daily Deal Deal

$ 10 Pay just $ 10 for a Pay just $ 10 for a $ 20 $ 20 3 day pass $ 20 3 day pass

50% 50% 50% OFF OFF OFF

Stephanie Wilburn described the scene early Sunday morning after a homemade chemical bomb was through into Lincoln Park, where Occupy Maine protesters have set up camp over the past month (MATTHEW ARCO PHOTO).

Police probe chemical bomb at Lincoln ParkPortland police are trying to determine

who tossed a homemade explosive into Occupy Maine’s camp last weekend, and whether that person should face federal charges if arrested.

Acting Chief Michael Sauschuck said Monday that investigators collected evi-dence from the scene in Lincoln Park shortly after a chemical bomb was tossed from a vehicle into campsite at about 4 a.m. Sunday. He described the homemade device as a “chemical bomb or an acid bomb,” and that it had the potential to cause signifi cant harm to the protesters.

“The chemicals involved are, generally speaking, chemicals found in any kitchen or bathroom,” he said, adding that com-ponent is typically mixed together in a plastic bottle with some other agent that sparks a chemical reaction.”We don’t believe it was that large, but … it could have certainly caused serious injury depending on the circumstances.”

No injuries reported immediately fol-lowing the blast, which Sauschuck said was powerful enough to lift a table it

BY MATTHEW ARCOTHE PORTLAND DAILY SUN

see BOMBING page 8

LePage wants child labor law revisedAUGUSTA – Gov. Paul LePage says

the state should leave work decisions up to children and their parents when they are not in school, and limit state laws restricting child labor to safety issues, but some argue that is already state policy.

“I don’t see why kids can’t go to work when they are 14 or 15,” he said in an interview. “I’m talking about summer months and vacation, not when they

are in school.”LePage said teens should be encour-

aged to work during the summer months and current law discourages them from working. He said he has heard from several parents about how long it takes to get a work permit for vacation periods from school and said in one case a teen had a job lined up, but had to wait weeks for a permit.

“A sixteen year old needs to get a permit; it takes three weeks to get a permit,” he said, “Three weeks to get through the superintendent to the

Department of Labor to get a permit. That’s outrageous.”

LePage said if a kid and their parents want the teen to be able to work during a vacation or during the summer months, they should be able to work. He said all of the other protections in child labor law, like the prohibition against working around dangerous machinery would still be in place.

“Why should they not just be able to go to work,” he said, “it makes no sense to me.”

see LABOR page 7

BY MAL LEARYCAPITOL NEWS SERVICE

Rees: Fire boat policy to change

City offi cials are revising departmen-tal policies and procedures following a recent accident involving a fi re boat that landed two fi refi ghters on unpaid suspension.

Portland’s city manager says he is working closely with fi re Chief Fred LaMontagne to review policy pertain-ing to the $3.2 million MV City of Port-

BY MATTHEW ARCOTHE PORTLAND DAILY SUN

see FiREBOAT page 7

Page 2: The Portland Daily Sun, Tuesday, October 25, 2011

Page 2 — THE PORTLAND DAILY SUN, Tuesday, October 25, 2011

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

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SAYWHAT...Hearing is a form of touch. You feel

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—Evelyn Glennie

(NY Times) — After he lost much of his hearing last year at age 57, the composer Richard Einhorn despaired of ever really enjoying a con-cert or musical again. Even using headsets supplied by the Metropolitan Opera and Broadway theaters, he found himself frustrated by the sound quality, static and interference.

Then, in June, he went to the Kennedy Center in Wash-ington for a performance of the musical “Wicked.” There were no special headphones. This time, the words and music were transmitted to a wireless receiver in Mr. Einhorn’s hear-ing aid using a technology that is just starting to make its way into public places in America: a hearing loop.

“There I was at ‘Wicked’ weeping uncontrollably — and I don’t even like musi-cals,” he said. “For the fi rst time since I lost most of my hearing, live music was per-fectly clear, perfectly clean and incredibly rich.”

His reaction is a common one. The technology, which has been widely adopted in Northern Europe, has the potential to transform the lives of tens of millions of Americans, according to national advocacy groups. As loops are installed in stores, banks, museums, subway stations and other public spaces, people who have felt excluded are suddenly back in the conversation.

A hearing loop, typically installed on the fl oor around the periphery of a room, is a thin strand of copper wire radiating electromagnetic signals that can be picked up by a tiny receiver already built into most hearing aids and cochlear implants. When the receiver is turned on, the hearing aid receives only the sounds coming directly from a microphone, not the back-ground cacophony.

“It’s the equivalent of a wheelchair ramp for people who used to be socially isolated because of their hearing loss,” said David G. Myers, a professor of psy-chology at Hope College in Holland, Mich., who is hard of hearing. “I used to detest my hearing aids, but now that they serve this second purpose, I love the way they’ve enriched my life.”

After his fi rst encounter with a hearing loop at an abbey in Scotland, where he was shocked to sud-denly be able to understand every word of a service, Dr. Myers installed a loop in his own home and successfully campaigned to have loops installed at hundreds of places in Michigan, includ-ing the Grand Rapids airport and the basketball arena at Michigan State University.

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Moderate Islamist party claims victory in Tunisia

TUNIS — A moderate Islamic party appeared to emerge as the big winner in Tunisia on Monday as preliminary results leaked out in the voting for an assembly to draft a constitution and shape a new government in this small North African coun-try, where a revolution in Janu-ary inspired uprisings across the Arab world.

The party, Ennahda, won at least 30 percent of the votes cast on Sunday, and party offi -cials told a news conference the party had come out ahead in nearly every voting district. Ali Laredi, a top offi cial of the party, said it expected to receive possi-bly more than 50 percent when the fi nal results are tallied.

Calling his party “the most modernist” Islamic political movement in the Arab world — meaning the most committed to principles of democracy and pluralism — Mr. Laredi pre-dicted that it would now “lead the way” for others around the region.

Ennahda offi cials were

already beginning discussions to form a unity government with the four or fi ve other more lib-eral parties that were expected to get representation in the con-stituent assembly, which is to draft the constitution.

Millions of Tunisians cast votes on Sunday in the election, which was widely watched as the possible pioneer for votes in Egypt and Libya, where longtime autocrats were felled by uprisings energized by the Tunisia revolution.

There had been some expecta-tion that Ennahda would to win at least a plurality of seats in the assembly. The party’s lead-ers had vowed to create another kind of new model for the Arab world, one reconciling Islamic principles with Western-style democracy.

Final results were expected to be computed within days. In the meantime, those still strug-gling through the postrevolu-tionary uncertainty of places like Libya and Egypt watched Tunisia “with a kind of envy,” said Samer Soliman, a professor at the American University in Cairo and an Egyptian political

activist.Libyans and Egyptians

acknowledge that Tunisia was not only the fi rst but also the easiest of the Arab revolutions, because of its relatively small, homogenous, educated popula-tion and because of the willing-ness of the Tunisian military to relinquish power. The success of Tunisia offers inspiration, but perhaps few answers, for Egyp-tians or Libyans who hope to follow in its footsteps.

Libya’s interim leaders on Sunday proclaimed their revo-lution a success and laid out an ambitious timetable for the election of their own constitu-ent assembly. But they have yet to solve the problem of unifying the loosely organized brigades of anti-Qaddafi fi ghters under the control of an interim author-ity to govern Libya until then, much less lay the groundwork for elections.

And with Egypt a little more than a month away from a vote for a new Parliament, its interim military rulers have so far balked at adopt-ing many of the election pro-cedures that enabled Tunisia’s

election to proceed smoothly. Among them are inking voters’ fi ngers to ensure people vote only once, transparent ballot boxes, a single election day rather than staggered polls, and weeks of voter education before the balloting. Also, in Egypt, the interim military rulers have not agreed to relinquish any of the army’s power over either the next Parliament or a planned con-stitutional panel.

For Tunisians, though, the scenes at the polls on Sunday — a turnout far above expecta-tions, orderly lines stretching around blocks, satisfi ed smiles at blue-inked fi ngers — already seemed to wipe away 10 months of anxiety and protests over the future of the revolution that ousted Zine el-Abidine Ben Ali. For the fi rst time in their his-tory, many Tunisians said, they expected an honest count of their ballots to determine the country’s future.

“Today is the day of indepen-dence,” said Amin Ganhouba, 30, a technician. “Today we got our freedom, and our dignity, from the simple act of voting.”

BY DAVID KIRKPATRICKTHE NEW YORK TIMES

LONDON — Julian Assange, the founder of WikiLeaks, said Monday that his controversial Web site could be forced to shut down by the end of the year because a 10-month-old “fi nan-cial blockade” had sharply reduced its donations.

Calling the blockade a “dan-gerous, oppressive and undemo-cratic” attack led by the United States, Mr. Assange said at a news conference here that it had deprived his organization of “tens of millions of dollars,” and warned, “If WikiLeaks does not fi nd a way to remove this blockade, we will not be able to continue by ... the new year.”

Since the end of 2010, fi nan-cial intermediaries, including Visa, MasterCard, PayPal and Western Union, have refused to allow donations to WikiLeaks to fl ow through their systems, he said, blocking “95 percent” of the Web site’s revenue and leaving it to operate on its cash reserves.

— The New York Times

WikiLeaks is broke, could close down

Calif. farmers paid not to plant crops

BRAWLEY, Calif. — Three generations of Al Kalin’s family have worked their 2,000 acres of carrots and sugar beets, wheat and alfalfa for almost a century in the Imperial Valley, a scorch-ing swath of Southern Califor-nia desert that was unfi t for farming until water from the Colorado River was diverted here in 1901.

But now Mr. Kalin and his brother enjoy a choice that their parents and grandparents never had. They can continue to farm all their land, or they can stop farming some of it and earn more than $500 an acre — more than the market value of a crop like alfalfa in a given year — simply by not using the water required to nourish those crops. Water saved is sent on to thirsty cities and suburbs to the west: San Diego, Los Angeles and Palm Springs.

With water increasingly scarce in the West, some other communities are allowing farm-ers to sell their allotment of it for whatever price they can

fi nd, in some cases thousands of dollars for the amount it takes to grow an acre of a crop. But this comes with a hitch. Working farms provide jobs and income to their many suppliers. There are 450 farmers in the Imperial Valley, but half the jobs held by the 174,000 resi-dents are tied to agriculture.

When land is idled, the com-munities around the farms can wither. Residents here point to the neighboring Palo Verde Valley, where farmers can sell more than a quarter of their water supply at much higher prices in a process they control. As a result, nearly a third of the agricultural land was not farmed this year; over time, businesses and workers have suffered.

Imperial’s fear is that a cen-tury after Colorado River water

allowed this land to be a cornu-copia, unfettered urban water transfers could turn it back into a desert. So the deal that Impe-rial water managers struck limits how much water can be sold and for what price, and it controls how much acreage is enrolled in the program and for how long.

Many farmers, including the Kalins, have resisted the temp-tation to sell. “There is some-thing about that fallowing, it just doesn’t sit well with my brother and I,” Mr. Kalin said.

BY FELICITY BARRINGERTHE NEW YORK TIMES

Al Kalin in a fi eld on his farm in Southern California’s Imperial Valley. A program offers farmers money to keep land fallow and divert water to cities, but his family has chosen not to participate (New York Times PHOTO).

Page 3: The Portland Daily Sun, Tuesday, October 25, 2011

THE PORTLAND DAILY SUN, Tuesday, October 25, 2011— Page 3

Obama proposes changes to mortgage program

WASHINGTON — The federal gov-ernment said on Monday that it would overhaul a program that lets homeown-ers refi nance mortgage loans at lower interest rates to address problems that have limited participation to less than a million borrowers, far below the lofty estimates when the program started in 2009.

The White House described the changes as part of a broader plan to boost the economy through measures that do not require legislative action, refl ecting a pragmatic recognition that Congress is deadlocked on economic issues, and a political effort to blame Republicans for the standoff.

“We have far too many Americans who have paid their bills and done everything right on their mortgages and yet they’re still stuck with inter-est rates of 6 or 7 percent,” said Shaun Donovan, the secretary of Housing

and Urban Development. The existing program, he said, “has not reached the scale that we had hoped and the scale that it needs to reach.”

The broader refi nancing program, which will still take months to imple-ment, will let people qualify for new loans no matter how far the value of their homes have declined, and without regard to their fi nancial situations so long as they have made at least six con-secutive monthly mortgage payments. The plan also will reduce the fees that borrowers must pay, for example by dis-pensing with the need for an appraisal in many cases and by automatically transferring mortgage insurance to the new loan.

The plan also seeks to encourage banks and mortgage companies to participate by eliminating their legal responsibility for problems with the original loan, a signifi cant fi nancial benefi t in many cases.

But the government maintained the narrow focus of the original program,

signifi cantly limiting the potential impact of the changes. The refi nancing offer only applies to loans in the port-folios of the government-owned mort-gage fi nance companies Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac. It only applies to loans that they acquired before May 31, 2009. And it only applies to loans worth more than 80 percent of the value of the home. In other words, it does not matter how deeply a homeowner is underwa-ter — the loan can be worth twice the value of the home — but owners with more equity are not eligible.

The government estimates the revised program will allow perhaps 1 million homeowners to refi nance — less than it once projected would ben-efi t from the original program.

“Our goal in pursuing these changes is to create refi nancing opportunities for these borrowers, while reducing risk for Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac and bringing a measure of stability to housing markets,” said the agency’s acting director, Edward J. DeMarco.

BY BINYAMIN APPELBAUMTHE NEW YORK TIMES

Netfl ix loses 800k customers since June, shares tank

(New York Times) — Netfl ix jolted its already shell-shocked shareholders with a third-quarter fi nancial report that portrayed a company in crisis.

Netfl ix’s blooper reel, released Monday, included an even larger cus-tomer exodus than the company had foreseen after announcing an unpopu-lar price increase in July.

Netfl ix shares shed $31.19, or more than 26 percent, to $87.35 in Monday’s extended trading. The company, which is based in Los Gatos, Calif., ended Sep-tember with 23.8 million U.S. subscrib-ers, down about 800,000 from June. Netfl ix had predicted it would lose about 600,000 U.S. subscribers in a fore-cast released last month.

Netfl ix shares shed $31.19, or more than 26 percent, to $87.35 in Monday’s extended trading.

Page 4: The Portland Daily Sun, Tuesday, October 25, 2011

Page 4 — THE PORTLAND DAILY SUN, Tuesday, October 25, 2011

Yup, there is another petition fl oating around. Not just in the streets of Portland, or even only in the state of Maine. This one is being circulated nationally, with some fairly lofty goals.

The idea is a simple one. Use the wonderful technology of that beast we’ve created called the internet to jump-start a national movement of independents, using the idea of an “on-line” nomination and pri-mary process to pick a candidate by the technological literati.

The petition going around is designed to “hold” a place on any future Maine and national ballot for a candidate to be named later. Sounds all nice and democratic like...until you dig and fi nd out who is behind it.

I got the original tip from a blog posting, about petition gathering in front of a local post offi ce. The folks getting the signatures were a bit confused, as they were report-edly telling potential signers that only unaffi liated party members (you know, Independents) could sign the petition. That should raise a fl ag with any Maine voter, since anyone can sign any petition in this state, provided they are registered to vote here.

Then, about a week later, a friend asked me to do some look-ing into it. He’d heard of this group, but knew little about them.

About that petition...

On the national side, the search was easy. Getting down to local, it gets weirder.

Nationally, a group calling itself “Americans Elect” (have to be care-ful on the spacing of that one) was organized from the collapse of a couple of heavy hitter political organizations. Remember a group called “Unity 08,” with member-ship in Maine of our former Gov-ernor, Angus King? It was a group designed to haul folks from the edges of the party to the center, advocating the election fo centrist candidates.

“Unity08” became “Unity12” with the arrival of another elec-tion season. Then, the morphing process began to take hold. Peter Ackerman, former head of both groups and a former Wall Street fi nancier over at Drexel/Burnham/Lambert (you remember them, along with Michael Milliken, the folks behind the last economic collapse in the junk bond trading market) changed the name of the group to “Americans Elect.”

The group then changed its IRS

designation from a 527 Corpora-tion (the kind that has to tell the government who is funding them) to my all time favorite, a 501(c)(4) group, that can raise as much money as it wants, spend it infl u-encing politics, and never have to disclose where all the shekels came from.

That sounded awful familiar to me. Knowing my history of dis-taste for the whole “No Labels” thing, the digging struck gold. I’ve been repeatedly told there is “no connection” between the “No Labels” group and former failed Gubernatorial candidate Eliot Cutler’s “OneMaine” group, though both groups frequently appear and appeal together.

Want to guess who is on the “National Board of Advisors” of “Americans Elect?” Our old buddy, Eliot Cutler.

With very little scratching or sniffi ng, you can smell money.

Sniffi ng around the national group, names begin to appear that read like a “who’s who” of politcal fi xers, snake oil ped-dlers, con men, grifters, drifters, and malcontents. Kellen and and Michael Arno of Arno Political Consulting are on board. They have a storied history with peti-tion gathering, among them alleg-

see HIGGINS page 5

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

Bob Higgins–––––

Daily Sun Columnist

–––––––––––––––– LETTERS ––––––––––––––––

Portland’s FREE DAILY NewspaperDavid Carkhuff, Editor

Casey Conley, City Editor Matthew Arco, 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

Website: www.portlanddailysun.meE-mail: [email protected]

For advertising contact: (207) 699-5801 or [email protected]

Classifi eds: (207) 699-5807 or classifi [email protected]

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

Editor,

The mayoral race is an opportunity to elect a mayor who will best serve the city under the newly enacted city charter. This charter does not make the mayor the chief executive offi cer, nor does it usurp any of the powers previously granted to the city manager. This was a deliberate decision made by the commission based upon the proven effectiveness of the city man-ager form of government.

Portland needs a leader who understands the respective roles played by the city manager and the mayor. The new mayor was designed to be a “policy” mayor – one who can articulate a vision for the city and have the political skills to establish the necessary coalitions within the city council and the community. The charter does not grant the mayor authority to run the daily affairs of city government.

The mayor does have a strong role in holding the city manager accountable for implementing the policy decisions set by the mayor and the council. The city manager and the mayor must work together – they must be a team that can lead the city forward.

Michael Brennan best understands these impor-tant distinctions. He is focused on major policy issues such as economic development, education and trans-portation. He has the experience and skills to work collaboratively with leaders in Portland and beyond. This is why I am supporting him.

Tim HoneyPortland

(The writer is a former Portland city manager).

Brennan understands how to use powers, limits of elected mayor

‘Sheer disgust’ with article on Monument Square malcontent

Editor:

Perhaps your readers do not understand that “Spe-cial to the Portland Daily Sun” means that “”A Monu-ment of Malcontent?” (10/22/2011)was not written by one of your reporters.

In fact, there is no indication who wrote this despi-cable and fallacious article. You provide no detail on this stringer, if he indeed actually falls into that lofty category.

Michael J. Tobin began with a thesis, “the people in Monument Square are creepy” and supposedly inter-views 28 people who just happen to speak perfect English -- in impossibly full and grammatically cor-rect sentences.

see LETTERS page 5

Page 5: The Portland Daily Sun, Tuesday, October 25, 2011

THE PORTLAND DAILY SUN, Tuesday, October 25, 2011— Page 5

If it weren’t so tragic, the current European crisis would be funny, in a gallows-humor sort of way. For as one rescue plan after another falls fl at, Europe’s Very Serious People — who are, if such a thing is possible, even more pompous and self-regarding than their American counterparts — just keep looking more and more ridiculous.

I’ll get to the tragedy in a minute. First, let’s talk about the pratfalls, which have lately had me humming the old children’s song “There’s a Hole in My Bucket.”

For those not familiar with the song, it concerns a lazy farmer who com-plains about said hole and is told by his wife to fi x it. Each action she sug-gests, however, turns out to require a prior action, and, eventually, she tells him to draw some water from the well. “But there’s a hole in my bucket, dear Liza, dear Liza.”

What does this have to do with Europe? Well, at this point, Greece, where the crisis began, is no more than a grim sideshow. The clear and present danger comes instead from a sort of bank run on Italy, the euro area’s third-largest economy. Inves-tors, fearing a possible default, are demanding high interest rates on Italian debt. And these high interest rates, by raising the burden of debt service, make default more likely.

It’s a vicious circle, with fears of default threatening to become a self-fulfi ll-ing prophecy. To save the euro, this threat must be contained. But how? The answer has to involve creat-ing a fund that can, if necessary, lend Italy (and Spain, which is also under threat) enough money that it doesn’t need to borrow at those high rates. Such a fund probably wouldn’t have to be used, since its mere existence should put an end to the cycle of fear. But the potential for really large-scale lending, certainly more than a trillion euros’ worth, has to be there.

And here’s the problem: All the various proposals for creating such a fund ultimately require backing from major European governments, whose promises to investors must be credible for the plan to work. Yet Italy is one of those major governments; it can’t achieve a rescue by lending money to itself. And France, the euro area’s second-biggest economy, has been looking shaky lately, raising fears that creation of a large rescue fund, by in effect adding to French debt, could simply have the effect of adding France to the list of crisis countries. There’s a hole in the bucket, dear Liza, dear Liza.

You see what I mean about the situ-ation being funny in a gallows-humor fashion? What makes the story really pain-ful is the fact that none of this had to happen.

Think about countries like Britain, Japan and the United States, which have large debts and defi cits yet remain able to borrow at low interest rates. What’s their secret? The answer, in large part, is that they retain their own currencies, and investors know that in a pinch they could fi nance their defi cits by printing more of those currencies. If the European Central Bank were to similarly stand behind European debts, the crisis would ease dramatically.

Wouldn’t that cause infl ation? Prob-ably not: whatever the likes of Ron Paul may believe, money creation isn’t infl ationary in a depressed economy. Furthermore, Europe actually needs modestly higher overall infl ation: too low an overall infl ation rate would condemn southern Europe to years of grinding defl ation, virtually guaran-teeing both continued high unemploy-ment and a string of defaults.

But such action, we keep being told, is off the table. The statutes under which the central bank was estab-

lished supposedly prohibit this kind of thing, although one suspects that clever lawyers could fi nd a way to make it happen. The broader prob-lem, however, is that the whole euro system was designed to fi ght the last economic war. It’s a Maginot Line built to prevent a replay of the 1970s, which is worse than useless when the real danger is a replay of the 1930s.

And this turn of events is, as I said, tragic.

The story of postwar Europe is deeply inspiring. Out of the ruins of war, Europeans built a system of peace and democracy, constructing along the way societies that, while imperfect — what society isn’t? — are arguably the most decent in human history.

Yet that achievement is under threat because the European elite, in its arrogance, locked the Continent into a monetary system that recreated the rigidities of the gold standard, and — like the gold standard in the 1930s — has turned into a deadly trap.

Now maybe European leaders will come up with a truly credible rescue plan. I hope so, but I don’t expect it.

The bitter truth is that it’s looking more and more as if the euro system is doomed. And the even more bitter truth is that given the way that system has been performing, Europe might be better off if it collapses sooner rather than later.

The hole in Europe’s bucketPaul

Krugman–––––

The New York Times

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edly tricking people to register to vote as Republicans, and in one Massachu-setts race,” paid signature collectors from APC revealed that an unknown but large number of signatures for a petition to remove the right to same-sex marriage in Massachusetts had been collected through fraud. The col-lectors told voters that they were sign-ing a petition about a different issue, or that the petitions were in favor of same-sex marriage.”

That isn’t even mentioning the sig-nature gathering knucklehead out at the Maine Mall two years ago who, while getting signatures for the Oxford Casino measure, called one of my co-workers a foul name, and then punched me in the head when I went out to see what his specifi c problem was.

Then, there is the wonderful coopera-tion of fellow travelers “independent-voting.org” who have been pimping the prospect of an independent movement for years. They successfully managed to get New York Mayor Michael Bloom-berg elected for a third term, with a

unity coalition of the New York social-ist movement. Bloomie paid off heavy, securing them an $8.1 million dollar center for their trouble.

Is this what you want, how you pic-ture center-left and center-right Inde-pendents behaving? With payoffs and grease?

As far as Maine goes, there efforts might account for nothing. In order to secure a spot on the ballot, petitions in this state have to be either in the form of nominating petitions or party petitions. Both kinds have to be regis-tered with the offi ce of the Secretary of State’s offi ce and checked for correct legal wording, as well as a record kept of the folks behind it.

Can you picture our secretaru of state agreeing to any kind of “online” voting shenanigans when the state of Maine has no control over the pro-cess? We can’t see the candidates, the software, the vetting process, how delegates are picked, nothing. This in a state where there has been a tem-pest in a teapot over students regis-tering to vote here legally, but being accused of fraud.

As of this date, no such records of any group called “Americans Elect” exists as registered with our secretary of state. That makes the petitions about as valuable as economy brand toilet paper, or unaccredited career school liberal arts degrees.

Unless they are just gathering names, for name lists of future poten-tial donors, or some other unmention-able purpose.

As always, be careful what you sign. Do research fi rst. When I fi nally ran into this group on the streets of Port-land last week, I hit the man presenting the petition with a couple of these gems. He seemed unaware of any of this.

That means either the petition signa-ture gatherers are getting lied to, and are just passing the fi bs on down the line, or the wrangling and strangling of election year politics are using that old “divide and conquer” strategy to sepa-rate people into smaller and smaller self-identifying groups, only to unite them under things they never agreed to at a later date.

The election season can only get sil-lier from here.

A reporter has a responsibility to write an article without a preconceived thesis. A reporter has a responsibility to quote what people actually say. A reporter has a responsibility to be able to provide his notebook for quotes for his editor

I realize that some (but not “many” as Tobin claims) are afraid of the modern city-scape that is Portland. However, we cannot pander to the “some,” and we certainly should do nothing to cleanse Monument Square based on some vague defi nition of what is “creepy” to “some.”

Portland’s downtown is lively, vibrant, and is a microcosm of society. Street people are as worthy as offi ce people.

The Portland Daily Sun owes it to its readers to run a disclaimer on the fi rst page that it cannot verify Tobin’s quotes; then the Daily Sun should do its own article on what a representa-tive sample of people think about Mon-ument square.

Peter B. HaywardPortland

LETTERS from page 4

As always, be careful what you sign. Do research fi rst.HIGGINS from page 4

Square story fl awed

Page 6: The Portland Daily Sun, Tuesday, October 25, 2011

Page 6 — THE PORTLAND DAILY SUN, Tuesday, October 25, 2011

JERUSALEM (NY TIMES) — Israel announced Monday that it had reached an agreement with Egypt, with American assistance, for the release of Ilan Grapel, an American law student from Queens who also holds Israeli citizenship.

Mr. Grapel, who was arrested in Egypt in June and charged with spying for Israel, is to be exchanged for

25 Egyptians, including three minors, held in Israeli jails. Egypt’s state television had a similar announce-ment Monday, Agence France-Presse reported.

No date was given for the release, but it is expected to be within days. The Israeli security cabinet is to con-vene Tuesday to approve the deal; the 25 Egyptians are not classifi ed

as security prisoners, so there is not likely to be much opposition.

Although the accord had been in the works for a while, it was fi nal-ized only after the E g y p t i a n - b r o k e r e d exchange between Israel and Hamas last week. An Israeli soldier, Sgt. First Class Gilad Shalit, returned home from Gaza in return for the release of the fi rst batch of a total of more than 1,000 Pales-tinians from Israeli jails, many convicted of deadly terrorist attacks.

Representative Gary L. Ackerman of New York, a Democrat from Queens, said he had worked to secure the release of Mr. Grapel, 27, a constituent and former intern in Mr. Ackerman’s offi ce.

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Libya’s interim leaders to investigate Qaddafi killing

BENGHAZI, Libya — The leader of Libya’s interim government announced the creation of a formal committee of inquiry on Monday to examine the circumstances of Col. Muammar el-Qaddafi ’s death last week.

In his announcement, Mustafa Abdel-Jalil, chairman of the Tran-sitional National Council, acknowl-edged that pressure from foreign powers and rights groups — including some that have supported the rebel-lion against Colonel Qaddafi — had prompted the decision to investigate how the Libyan leader wound up dead with a bullet to the head.

But it was unclear how much authority the committee would have or whether anyone would be held accountable. Mr. Abdel-Jalil hinted that the fatal shots might have come from Colonel Qaddafi ’s supporters. That suggestion is sharply at odds with the video evidence that surfaced after his death.

The grisly images established that Colonel Qaddafi ’s was killed shortly after fi ghters seized him on Thursday. His capture followed a NATO air-strike on an armed convoy that was leaving Surt, his hometown, where he had spent two months as a fugi-tive after the fall of Tripoli. One of his sons, Muatassim, also was captured and killed, apparently while in cus-

tody.The videos showed victorious fi ght-

ers manhandling Colonel Qaddafi , who appeared to be bleeding and in distress but conscious, after they pulled him from a large drainage pipe where he had hidden after the NATO assault. Subsequent video showed his bruised corpse, with at least one bullet wound to his head.

Transitional National Council mem-bers have said that Colonel Qaddafi was killed during a gunfi ght between his captors and Qaddafi loyalists. But the videos cast doubt on that explana-tion.

“In response to international calls, we have started to put in place a com-mission tasked with investigating the circumstances of Muammar Qaddafi ’s death in the clash with his circle as he was being captured,” Mr. Abdel-Jalil told journalists in the eastern city of Benghazi, the birthplace of the revolu-tion that ousted Colonel Qaddafi .

On Sunday, Mr. Abdel-Jalil formally proclaimed to thousands of revelers in Benghazi that the revolution was offi -cially over. The announcement laid the basis for elections and a new govern-ment within 20 months, but left unan-swered the challenge confronting the interim leaders over how to disarm and unify the anti-Qaddafi fi ghters who are a law unto themselves. Mr. Abdel-Jalil also suggested that Islam would be the legal basis for the state.

Libyans have been celebrating Col-onel Qaddafi ’s death, but Mr. Abdel-Jalil said many were disappointed

that the former leader would not stand trial for the crimes committed during his brutal 42-year rule.

In offering a possible new expla-nation for the death, Mr. Abdel-Jalil suggested that Colonel Qaddafi ’s sup-porters feared he would have impli-cated them in his atrocities if he had survived and gone to trial.

“Let us question who has the inter-est in the fact that Qaddafi will not be tried,” he said. “Libyans want to try him for what he did to them, with executions, imprisonment and cor-ruption. Free Libyans wanted to keep Qaddafi in prison and humiliate him as long as possible. Those who wanted him killed were those who were loyal to him or had played a role under him. His death was in their benefi t.”

The new theory appeared to be an attempt to defl ect questions about the government’s handling of Colonel Qaddafi ’s fi nal moments.

There was no immediate comment on Mr. Abdel-Jalil’s announcement from the brigade of fi ghters credited with capturing both Colonel Qaddafi and his son and bringing their bodies to Misurata. The city suffered enor-mously from attacks by Colonel Qad-dafi ’s forces during the height of the revolution.

Authorities in Misurata have put the bodies on display in a cold-storage meat locker while they have argued over where and when to bury them. The Associated Press quoted a local military spokesman, Ibrahim Beit-almal, as saying that the burial was

likely to take place on Tuesday. He said Colonel Qaddafi and his son would be interred in unmarked graves in a secret location to avoid vandalism. In Surt, new evidence was emerging that anti-Qaddafi fi ghters had committed widespread reprisal killings after Col-onel Qaddafi ’s death. Dozens of bodies lay outside a Surt hotel, where the monikers of at least 10 anti-Qaddafi militias were scrawled on the walls. The hands were bound on many of the bodies, and they appeared to have been shot in the head. A number of homes were also burning, apparently pillaged by Colonel Qaddafi ’s oppo-nents.

Over the weekend, another Qad-dafi son, Seif al-Islam, who remains at large, vowed from an undisclosed location to avenge his father. “We continue our resistance,” he said in an audio message broadcast by Al Arrai, a Syrian television station that had also broadcast Colonel Qaddafi ’s screeds against his enemies while he was a fugitive.

“I’m in Libya, alive, free and intend to go to the very end and exact revenge,” the message said. “I say go to hell, you rats, and NATO behind you. This is our country; we live in it, and we die in it and we are continuing the struggle.”

Mr. Abdel-Jalil was fl anked at the news conference in Benghazi by former rebel offi cers, and much of it involved reassurances that the needs of the veterans would be met in the new Libya.

BY ADAM NOSSITER AND RICK GLADSTONETHE NEW YORK TIMES

Page 7: The Portland Daily Sun, Tuesday, October 25, 2011

THE PORTLAND DAILY SUN, Tuesday, October 25, 2011— Page 7

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LePage said it is important to instill a good work ethic in teens because it will help them through their adult life. He said not all kids can handle a job and school at the same time, so it is important they can work during vacation periods if they want to work.

Rep. David Burns, R-Whiting, sponsored a bill aimed at loosen-ing limitations on teens working while in school. He said he would have addressed the Governor’s concerns if he had been aware of them earlier this year.

“I didn’t try to go after every-thing, “he said. “I think the Gover-nor has a good idea and we should consider it.”

Burns said too many decisions that should be made by parents and children have been preempted by unnecessary government laws and regulations. He said teens working outside of the school year should be allowed to work if they want to without needing a permit.

Rep. Robert Hunt, D-Buxton, serves on the Labor, Commerce, Research and Economic Develop-ment Committee. He said the real-ity is that the permitting process provides a needed protection for

children.“It’s there to make sure they

are not being taken advantage of, they are not working more hours than they should, “ he said, “ these are important things we put into law because at some point in the past somebody didn’t do what they should for kids.”

Hunt said he would be willing to look at proposal to streamline the permit process, but he said having the schools involved is important because not all par-ents are as responsible as most in doing what is best for a teen. He said the reality is teens can work at most jobs.

“All of these laws were passed for a reason, “said William Murphy, Director of the Bureau of Labor Education at the Uni-versity of Maine. “We had some horrendous conditions in this country and in this state where children were being exploited. Parents often needed to have their kids work to just help to put food on the table.”

He said teens working during vacation periods need the same protections as teens working part time during the school year to make sure they are not being exploited by anyone. He said it

is unfortunate, but a reality, that some employers and some parents may not put the best interests of the teen fi rst.

LePage also said more teens could join the workforce right out of high school if employers could pay them a training wage. He said in many jobs teens have no experi-ence and need to acquire the skills needed for the job.

“I think we need to have a train-ing wage, “he said. “I think we would see more hired and have jobs if they could be paid a train-ing wage as they learned the skills they needed for a job.”

Burns agreed but said his attempt at getting a training wage based on what federal law got shot down in the legislature. Hunt said there was good reason Burns proposal was defeated because a training wage is unfair.

“You see some employers just using it to get cheaper labor,” he said. “You see them constantly fi ring and hiring to pay only the lower wage.”

LePage can introduce any pro-posal into the legislature, even those previously defeated. He did not say whether either a training wage or a work permit bill would be part of his January agenda.

LABOR from page one

Legislator: existing labor laws in place to protect kids

land IV — specifi cally regarding civilians being allowed aboard.

The news comes more than two weeks after the boat was knocked out of full service when it hit an underwater object, causing about $38,000 worth of damage. A pre-liminary investigation into the incident determined that the inci-dent was preventable and that a dozen civilians, including fi refi ght-ers’ family members, were riding on the vessel at the time of the collision.

The U.S. Coast Guard is con-ducting a separate investigation into the incident, which dam-aged the vessel’s rudder and propeller.

During a sit down with The Portland Daily Sun Monday, Mark Rees said that he was astonished to learn that civilians and family members were on the vessel during what offi cials maintain was a training exercise.

He explained that while it’s common for non-department per-sonnel to be transported on the boat for city-related business, civil-ians and family members should not be permitted to ride the vessel

for no reason.“What shouldn’t be condoned

is what happened last weekend, where they were transporting civilians without any clear connec-tion to public service,” Rees said.

He explained that he fi rst learned of the collision the day it occurred — Oct. 15 — though an e-mail. It wasn’t until nearly a week after the accident, and fol-lowing several conversations with LaMontagne, that he was told there were family members and civilians on the boat, he said.

“I told him I was fl abbergasted that that type of activity was going on,” Rees said. “Based on his inves-tigation, he assured me that it was an anomaly, and that this type of stuff does not happen on a regular basis.”

The accident happened near Fort Gorges in Casco Bay. Capt. Christopher Goodall and fi re-fi ghter Joseph Murphy were placed on 10 and three days sus-pension, respectively, at the start of this week.

Rees and other city offi cials say they are prohibited from discuss-ing details of the accident, citing personnel rules and union con-tracts.

However, City Hall maintains that fi refi ghters were training at the time of the accident, saying fi re boat pilots and crew members are required to log a certain number of hours on the boat. Although it’s not immediately clear exactly what training exercises the men were performing, Rees explained that simply piloting the vessel was a form of training.

“Part of their training is to do just that,” he said, referring to simply just piloting the boat.

“Based on what the chief told me, they were on a training exercise and there were family members who were invited on board to, not participate, but to be on the boat while they were on their training exercise,” said Rees, adding, “The chief believes that this was an iso-lated incident.”

Rees said he doesn’t anticipate that there will be further disciplin-ary actions following the accident. He said the one thing likely to change are the policies and proce-dures.

“I think there was a lack of clear cut guidelines as to how civilians can access the fi re boat,” Rees said. “We’re working on very clear guidelines going forward.”

Rees: ‘We’re working on very clear guidelines’FIREBOAT from page one

Page 8: The Portland Daily Sun, Tuesday, October 25, 2011

Page 8 — THE PORTLAND DAILY SUN, Tuesday, October 25, 2011

landed near.Offi cials at the Portland Police

Department have contacted the U.S. Attorney’s Offi ce and the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explo-sives in an effort to determine whether the person, or persons, behind the incident will face federal charges.

Under state statute, the incident would fall under criminal use of explo-sives — a Class C felony that could carry at least a year behind bars, Sau-schuck said.

“We take this extremely seriously,” he said.

Investigators aren’t sure whether the person who tossed the device was specifi cally targeting the pro-testers.

About an hour before the bomb went off in Lincoln Park, patrol offi cers on a routine call in the area behind City Hall reported hearing what sounded like an explosion somewhere in the area. Offi cers were not able to fi nd any remains from the fi rst incident, but they suspect it’s connected to the Occupy Maine bombing, Sauschuck said.

“We do not believe that Occupy

Maine was the sole target of this incident,” he said. “We feel … that those two incidents may be con-nected.”

The top commander also noted that

while “something like this is defi nitely uncommon,” there is a spike in chemi-cal bomb activity around the Hallow-een season, Sauschuck said.

Despite some assurances that the incident could have been random act not intended to terrorize the group, Occupy Maine protesters say they felt targeted.

“I was paralyzed with fear,” said Shane Blodgett, a protester from Augusta who has been at the camp-site for two weeks.

“The device that was thrown into the camp woke me from a deep sleep,” he said, describing how he thought someone had fi red a gun and shot another person in the campsite.

“It absolutely terrifi ed me,” he added.

Stephanie Wilburn, who was awake and only a few feet away from the device when it exploded, described seeing the vehicle sought by police at least two other times prior to the explosion.

At about 1:45 a.m. the car drove past the camp honking its horn. Later, at about 3:15, the vehicle drove by again and someone shouted that the protesters ought “to get jobs,” she said. It was last seen at about 4 a.m. —

moments before the explosion.“It sounded like a 12-gauge shot-

gun went off right next to my head,” Wilburn said. “I breathed in (the dust) and it was not very pleasant.”

Protesters were in the process of moving their tents away from the road Monday and beefi ng up their secu-rity teams, which consist of groups of people watching over the campsite 24 hours a day.

The incident caught the attention of local lawmakers, who described the event as a “dangerous and insidious act of violence.”

“The Occupy Maine protesters have been exercising their right to protest in a non-violent, respectful manner,” state Rep. Diane Russell, D-Portland, said in a statement. “Maine people are better than this.”

“Whether you believe in the Occupy Maine/Wall Street movement or not, it is unacceptable to put people’s lives in danger,” state Sen. Justin Alfond, a Portland Democrat, said in a state-ment.

Police are asking anyone with infor-mation on the incident or the vehicle — an older model silver four-door sedan, possibly a Toyota or Nissan — contact detectives at 874-8575.

BOMBING from page one

Chemical bomb sounded like a 12-gauge shotgun blast, protester says

Stephanie Wilburn prepares a meal Sunday afternoon in Lincoln Park, home to the Occupy Maine protesters. (MARGE NIBLOCK PHOTO)

U.S. Envoy to Syria leaves amid threats

BEIRUT, Lebanon — Robert S. Ford, the American ambassa-dor to Damascus who has emerged as an out-spoken critic of Syria’s crackdown on a seven-month uprising, has left the country after receiv-ing what American offi -cials called threats to his safety.

The departure Sat-urday was the latest turn in the tumultu-ous tenure of Mr. Ford, whose visits to restive cities like Hama and attendance of a funeral for a slain activist made him a visible and con-troversial fi gure. Since the uprising erupted in March, he has stayed vocal in his criticism of government repression, taking to his Facebook page and the embassy’s web site to castigate the government or offer his version of events there.

Haynes Mahoney, the newly arrived embassy’s charge d’affaires, said Monday no date was set for Mr. Ford’s return, and he cautioned that his departure did not mean the American gov-ernment had withdrawn Mr. Ford from the post.

— New York Times

Page 9: The Portland Daily Sun, Tuesday, October 25, 2011

THE PORTLAND DAILY SUN, Tuesday, October 25, 2011— Page 9

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Slaughter of horses goes on, just not in the U.S.

LINCOLN, Neb. — The closing of the country’s last meat processing plant that slaughtered horses for human con-sumption was hailed as a victory for equine wel-fare. But fi ve years later just as many American horses are destined for dinner plates to satisfy the still robust appetites for their meat in Europe and Asia.

Now they are carved into tartare de cheval or basashi sashimi in Mexico and Canada.

That shift is one of the many unintended consequences of a de facto federal ban on horse slaughter, according to a recent federal government study. As the domestic market for unwanted horses shrinks, more are being neglected and abandoned, and roughly the same number — nearly 140,000 a year — are being killed after a sometimes grueling journey across the border.

“When they closed the plants, that put more of a hardship on our horses than the people who wanted to stop the slaughter can imagine,” said John Schoneberg, a Nebraska horse breeder who recently took in three horses from a nearby farmer who said that he was unable to pay for feed and would otherwise turn them loose.

The study’s fi ndings have been fi ercely contested by animal wel-fare groups, which argue that most of the problems stem from the economic downturn and the high price of feed. The study also breathed new life into the long-smoldering battle over whether to allow the resumption of domestic horse slaughter or, alternatively, to prohibit the ani-mals from being shipped abroad for their meat.

In recent weeks lawmak-ers have pushed Congress to take action in both directions. The Government Accountabil-ity Offi ce, which conducted the study, concluded that either option would be better than the status quo, but advocates on both sides, while hopeful, said a reso-lution did not appear imminent.

“It’s just a hot political issue,” said Dr. Whitney Miller, a lobby-ist for the American Veterinary Medical Association, which sup-ports allowing horse slaughter. “It’s hard to see something defi ni-tive happening.”

The effect of the standoff has been deeply felt in rural states like Nebraska. Horse breeders and the owners of livestock auc-tions say that eliminating slaugh-ter basically removed the fl oor for horse prices, allowing the market to collapse and forcing many out of the business. One reason, they say, is that owners are now forced to pay hundreds of dol-

lars to euthanize and dispose of unwanted horses when they used to receive about that much to sell them to slaughterhouses.

This year, Nebraska became one of a number of states — along with Arkansas, Montana, North Dakota and others — that have pushed to resuscitate the dor-mant horse slaughter industry, which produced meat valued at an estimated $65 million a year before closing. Gov. Dave Heine-man of Nebraska, a Republican, signed a law to take steps to reg-ulate horsemeat at the state level that passed the single-chamber legislature, the Unicameral, with only one dissenting vote.

These efforts have been fi ercely opposed by animal rights groups, which rejected as ridiculous the argument that horses would be better off if they could be killed for meat. Pointing to their own research, they say any increase in improper care for horses can be connected to the economy, rather than to the elimination of slaughter. And if prices have declined, they say, that is because the ban removed an incentive to overbreed horses.

Wayne Pacelle, the presi-dent and chief executive of the Humane Society of the United States, said that horse owners should commit to providing life-time care for the animals. He said surveys had found widespread opposition to killing horses for their meat.

“Horses are different than cows and pigs in one very important sense, in that they are not raised for slaughter,” he said.

But there is an enduring chasm in how horses are viewed.

“A horse, to me, is a livestock animal like a cow, sheep or a goat,” said Orbie Bonnett, a Nebraska rancher who stopped selling horses after prices plum-meted. “A lot of folks nowadays look at a horse like a pet, like a dog or a cat. When you have a lot of money folk looking at this that way, well, there goes your slaughterhouses, there goes your market and there goes your horse folk — they just can’t make it anymore.”

The United States, much of it

settled on horseback, has never really taken to eating horse except in times of need. But elsewhere, the meat — lean and protein-rich — is prized as a deli-cacy. Selling to a slaughterhouse has long been a way to make some money, to get rid of an old or unwanted horse no longer able to perform at a racetrack, show ring or ranch.

The last slaughterhouses for horses, in Texas and Illinois, closed after Congress stripped fi nancing for federal inspections of horse slaughter in 2006, a move that effectively banned the sale of the meat. That year, only 105,000 horses were slaughtered domestically; 33,000 from the United States were slaughtered abroad. Last year, 138,000 or more were slaughtered abroad, according to government fi gures. (The population of horses in the United States is about nine mil-lion.)

“It’s slightly hypocritical to allow these horses to be slaugh-tered anyway up in Canada or Mexico and not allow people here to get the income or serve the meat,” said Hugue Dufour, a chef in New York who cooked horse while working in Canada.

Now owners have to pay to get rid of horses. Debby Brehm, director of the Nebraska Quarter Horse Association, spent $200 last month to euthanize a sick horse and $150 more for it to be hauled to a rendering plant. Other owners keep them but are unable to bear the thousands of dollars a year it can cost to feed and care for them. As a result, the sight of malnourished animals is familiar, Ms. Brehm said, and stories abound of horses aban-doned on public and private land and even, in one audacious case, in someone else’s horse trailer.

“You see a lot of malnourished and abandoned horses that prob-ably would have been humanely slaughtered before,” said Windy Allen, a horse trainer in the state.

Others say the ban is costing them money, too.

The Southeast Nebraska Live-stock Auction used to sell about 100 horses every month, but now that may be the total for a year.

BY A.G. SULZBERGERTHE NEW YORK TIMES

John Schoneberg, a Nebraska breeder who has taken in hungry horses, says a slaughtering ban has not improved horses’ lives. (Brian Lehmann/NY TIMES Photo)

Page 10: The Portland Daily Sun, Tuesday, October 25, 2011

Page 10 — THE PORTLAND DAILY SUN, Tuesday, October 25, 2011

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Saturday’s Answer

HOROSCOPE By Holiday Mathis

ARIES (March 21-April 19). There’s no way around it. No matter how attrac-tive and aligned with the universe you are, at some point getting what you want will require effort. That point comes today, and you couldn’t be more ready for it. TAURUS (April 20-May 20). You no longer feel the need to put in your two cents about another person’s life. You can tell that this person is going to work things out in his or her own unique way, and you’re content to quietly watch. GEMINI (May 21-June 21). The truth packs a powerful punch. Like a strong drink, it takes some getting used to. Not everyone can handle a full glass of it. Add more sugar to the mix, and it will go down easier. CANCER (June 22-July 22). Increasing your self-reliance will not push a loved one away. It will, in fact, make your relationship stronger. You are growing toward a less dependent but more bonded arrangement with a loved one. LEO (July 23-Aug. 22). Whereas many around you seem dissatisfi ed, you tune in to your environment and notice much that is good in it. You can be a quiet leader in this regard, infl u-encing others with nothing more than your manner of being. VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22). Out of these snatches of things seen, heard or otherwise perceived, you form some rather unique conclusions. Your point of view is a rare one, and with a little creativity, you can turn it into great art. LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 23). Punctu-ality is important to you, though today you may fi nd it stressful to accom-plish. One way not to be late is to have nowhere to be. Consider clearing your schedule for a few days.

SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 21). Everyone can benefi t from objective feedback. But not everyone can take it. You’ll be among the emotionally strong ones. With great maturity, you will learn all you need to know to move to the next level. SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21). You’ll be emotionally resilient and strong. You will fi nd out what people think about you, and you’ll use the information to hone your image and work to create a maximum effect. CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19). You’re a friendly person who realizes that not everyone can be as outgoing as you. A happy-go-lucky mood makes it easier for you to put yourself out there. If you don’t get the reaction you would prefer, it’s no big deal. AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18). You will be an excellent negotiator because you won’t get caught up in matters of pride. There’s little that would hurt your feelings about the deal anyhow; it’s just business. Seeing things like this gives you an advantage. PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20). Your creed is: Nothing ventured, nothing gained. You enter into new situations, ready to think on your feet. Don’t pres-sure yourself to take things too far, though. It’s probably enough just to smile and say hello. TODAY’S BIRTHDAY (Oct. 25). Your star qualities will be recognized, in part because you sense what your best ideas are and push forward until you see them in reality. There’s a career breakthrough in December. January offers new excitement on a personal level. You’ll see new parts of the world in March and June. Love signs are Sag-ittarius and Aquarius. Your lucky num-bers are: 4, 1, 20, 40 and 13.

ACROSS 1 Melody 5 “Remember the

__!” 10 Discussion 14 Ajar 15 Enclosed car 16 Vagabond 17 Work hard 18 Row of shrubs 19 Hole-making tools 20 Intertwines 22 Flocks of geese 24 Galloped 25 __ power; energy

from the sun 26 Straighten 29 Piece of cookware 30 Defamatory writing 34 “The __ Ranger” 35 Singer Tormé 36 Ottawa’s nation 37 Hotel 38 Locators 40 Canister 41 Swerved off

course 43 Climbing plant 44 Actor Gregory 45 Miscalculated 46 Pod vegetable 47 Like seawater 48 Uproar 50 Triangular sail 51 Barrette

alternative 54 Leisurely reading

of an article 58 A single time 59 Happen 61 Gray wolf 62 Small bills 63 Express gratitude

to 64 __ to be; once was 65 Short fast race 66 Categorizes 67 À la __; pie lover’s

request

DOWN 1 Carry

2 Perched atop 3 Guitarist Young 4 Widen 5 Pale-faced 6 Spike & Bruce 7 __ up; tally 8 Fly larva 9 Ryan or Tatum 10 Displeasure 11 Long doleful cry 12 Qualifi ed 13 Fling 21 Trash barrel 23 Celebrations 25 Army member 26 Still breathing 27 Recluse 28 Central 29 Bic product 31 Biblical tower 32 Offi cial decree 33 Ungracefully tall

and thin 35 Prefi x with night or

section 36 Weep

DAILY CROSSWORDTRIBUNE MEDIA SERVICES

38 Disgusted 39 Perón or Gabor 42 Reinvigorate 44 Bland

nourishment 46 South American

cloak 47 Man’s title 49 Public uproars

50 Sleazebags 51 Parka’s feature 52 “__ Karenina” 53 Frosts a cake 54 Football kick 55 Mediocre 56 Not up yet 57 Ore deposit 60 Taurus or Jetta

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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Page 11: The Portland Daily Sun, Tuesday, October 25, 2011

THE PORTLAND DAILY SUN, Tuesday, October 25, 2011— Page 11

TUESDAY PRIME TIME OCTOBER 25, 2011 Dial 8:00 8:30 9:00 9:30 10:00 10:30 11:00 11:30 5 CTN 5 LighthouseAgingHaskell-HouseThom Hartmann ShowGrit TVUpdate

6 WCSHThe Biggest Loser The contestants compete as one team. (N) (In Stereo) Å

Prime Suspect “Bitch” A murdered woman is found in a dumpster.

News Tonight Show With Jay Leno

7 WPFOThe X Factor Hopefuls perform for the judges. (N) (In Stereo Live) Å

News 13 on FOX (N) The Office (In Stereo) Å

8 WMTWLast Man Standing (N) Å

Man Up! (N) Å

Dancing With the Stars Contestants face elimina-tion. (N) Å

Body of Proof Megan’s daughter helps with a case. (N) Å

News 8 WMTW at 11PM (N)

Nightline (N) Å

10 MPBNNature Climate, vegeta-tion and animals of the Andes. Å

History Detectives A Civil War soldier’s letter. (In Stereo) Å

Frontline “Death by Fire” Arson conviction. Å (DVS)

Charlie Rose (N) (In Stereo) Å

11 WENHAre You Being Served?

Keeping Up Appear-ances

As Time Goes By Å

Outnum-bered Å

Reggie Per-rin Å

The Red Green Show

Globe Trekker “Bolivia” Lake Titicaca; Witches Market.

12 WPXTRinger Bridget’s past catches up with her. (In Stereo) Å

Ringer Bridget gets infor-mation about Andrew. (In Stereo) Å

Excused (N) Å

American Dad Å

It’s Always Sunny in Phila.

That ’70s Show Å

13 WGMENCIS “Thirst” A man dies from being force-fed liquid. (N)

NCIS: Los Angeles A discovery about a mur-dered man. (N)

Unforgettable “Friended” Carrie and Al investigate a murder.

WGME News 13 at 11:00

Late Show With David Letterman

17 WPME Cold Case Å Cold Case “Hubris” Law Order: CIDollarCops Å

24 DISC AuctionAuctionAuctionAuctionExtreme DrugAuctionAuction

25 FAM “Haunted Mans.” Movie: ››› “Monsters, Inc.” (2001, Comedy) The 700 Club (N) Å

26 USA Law & Order: SVULaw & Order: SVULaw & Order: SVUPsych Å

27 NESN English Premier League SoccerDailyRoushDailyDennis

28 CSNE College FootballSportsSportsNetSticksSportsNet

30 ESPN The Real Rocky (N) World, PokerWorld, PokerSportsCenter (N) Å

31 ESPN2 XVI Pan American Games (N) (Live) E:60 (N) NFL Live

33 ION Criminal Minds Å Criminal Minds Å Flashpoint (N) Å Flashpoint Å

34 DISN Shake ItMovie: “Twitches Too” (2007) Å ANT FarmJessieShake ItVampire

35 TOON LooneyGumballKing of HillKing of HillAmer. DadAmer. DadFam. GuyFam. Guy

36 NICK Sponge.Sponge.’70s Show’70s ShowGeorgeGeorgeFriendsFriends

37 MSNBC The Ed Show (N) Rachel Maddow ShowThe Last WordThe Ed Show

38 CNN Anderson Cooper 360Piers Morgan TonightAnderson Cooper 360Erin Burnett OutFront

40 CNBC Big Mac: Inside60 Minutes on CNBCAmerican GreedMad Money

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

43 TNT Bones (In Stereo) Å Bones (In Stereo) Å Bones (In Stereo) Å Southland Å

44 LIFE Unsolved MysteriesMovie: “Accused at 17” (2009) Cynthia Gibb. Unsolved Mysteries

46 TLC Extreme Extreme 19 Kids19 KidsCoupleCoupleExtreme Extreme

47 AMC “Halloween 4: The Return of Michael Myers”“Halloween 5: The Revenge of Michael Myers”

48 HGTV First PlaceFirst PlacePropertyPropertyHouseHuntersHuntersProperty

49 TRAV In AmericaIn AmericaMysteries-MuseumOff Limits “Hawaii” (N) Bizarre Foods

50 A&E Storage Storage Storage Storage Storage Storage Hoggers Hoggers

52 BRAVO Housewives/NJRachel Zoe ProjectMad Fash.FashionRachel Zoe Project

55 HALL Little House on PrairieFrasierFrasierFrasierFrasierFrasierFrasier

56 SYFY “30 Days of Night” Movie: ›› “My Bloody Valentine” (2009) Movie: › “Valentine”

57 ANIM Blue Planet: Seas/LifeBlue Planet: Seas/LifeBlue Planet: Seas/LifeBlue Planet: Seas/Life

58 HIST Zombies: A Living History (N) Å Top Shot (N) Å Top Shot (N) Å

60 BET Movie: ››‡ “Why Did I Get Married?” (2007) Re.- LinesRe.- LinesRe.- LinesRe.- Lines

61 COM Work. Tosh.0 Tosh.0 Tosh.0 Tosh.0 (N) Work.Daily ShowColbert

62 FX Movie: ››‡ “Surrogates” (2009) Bruce Willis. Sons of Anarchy (N) American Horror Story

67 TVLND Married Married Raymond Raymond Raymond Raymond King King

68 TBS Big BangBig BangBig BangBig BangBig BangBig BangConan (N)

76 SPIKE AuctionAuctionAuctionAuctionAuctionFlip MenFlip MenAuction

78 OXY The Bad Girls ClubThe Bad Girls ClubThe Sing-Off The groups perform hip-hop hits.

146 TCM Movie: ››› “55 Days at Peking” (1963) Charlton Heston, Ava Gardner. “We Can’t Go”

––––––– ALMANAC –––––––

Today is Tuesday, Oct. 25, the 298th day of 2011. There are 67 days left in the year.

Today’s Highlight in History:On Oct. 25, 1854, the “Charge of the Light

Brigade” took place during the Crimean War as an English brigade of more than 600 men charged the Russian army despite hopeless odds and suffered heavy losses.

On this date:In 1859, radical abolitionist John Brown

went on trial in Charles Town, Va., for his failed raid at Harpers Ferry. (Brown was convicted and hanged.)

In 1881, artist Pablo Picasso was born in Malaga, Spain.

In 1910, “America the Beautiful,” with words by Katharine Lee Bates and music by Samuel A. Ward, was fi rst published.

In 1929, former Interior Secretary Albert B. Fall was convicted in Washington, D.C., of accepting a $100,000 bribe from oil tycoon Edward L. Doheny.

In 1962, U.S. ambassador Adlai E. Ste-venson presented photographic evidence of Soviet-built missile bases in Cuba to the U.N. Security Council.

In 1971, the U.N. General Assembly voted to admit mainland China and expel Taiwan.

In 1981, on the centenary of the birth of Pablo Picasso, the artist’s painting “Guer-nica” was returned to Spain after spend-ing four decades in the possession of the Museum of Modern Art in New York.

In 1986, in Game 6 of the World Series, the Boston Red Sox lost to the New York Mets, 6-5, on a wild pitch and an error in the tenth inning, forcing a seventh game, which the Mets ended up winning.

One year ago: In Indonesia, an earth-quake triggered a tsunami off western Sumatra that killed more than 460 people and destroyed homes, mosques and other buildings.

Today’s Birthdays: Actress Jeanne Cooper is 83. Actress Marion Ross is 83. Country singer Jeanne Black is 74. Basket-ball Hall of Famer Bobby Knight is 71. Author Anne Tyler is 70. Rock singer Jon Anderson (Yes) is 67. Rock musician Glenn Tipton (Judas Priest) is 64. Actor Brian Kerwin is 62. Actor Mark L. Taylor is 61. Rock musi-cian Matthias Jabs is 55. Actress Nancy Cartwright (“The Simpsons”) is 54. Country singer Mark Miller is 53. Rock musician Chad Smith is 50. Actress Tracy Nelson is 48. Actor Michael Boatman is 47. Actor Adam Goldberg is 41. Actor-singer Adam Pascal is 41. Rock musician Ed Robertson (Bare-naked Ladies) is 41. Actress Persia White is 41. Country singer Chely Wright is 41. Vio-linist Midori is 40. Actor Craig Robinson is 40. Actor Michael Weston is 38. Actor Zach-ary Knighton is 33. Actor Mehcad Brooks is 31. Actor Ben Gould is 31. Rhythm-and-blues singer Young Rome is 30. Pop singer Katy Perry is 27. Rock singer Austin Winkler (Hinder) is 27. Singer Ciara is 26.

ACROSS 1 Share of the booty 4 New Zealand

Polynesian 9 “Ode on a Grecian

Urn” poet 14 Light gray 15 Not from this

world 16 Allow in 17 Contemporary

dining choice 20 Projection on a

basilica 21 Bullets 22 Crow’s cry 23 Erase 26 Queen of the Bible 28 Indefi nite amount 29 Pro’s foe 32 Jewish scholar 35 Arms storehouse 38 Shutter part 39 Stressful situations 43 Paper bets 44 Female ruler 45 Highest country

47 Ms. Trueheart 48 007, for one 51 Serengeti

carnivore 54 “No Exit” writer 56 Theater-sign

letters 58 Fetish 61 Living space 62 Kings of the

kitchen 66 Ta-ta, Fifi 67 Sports turf type 68 Have dinner 69 Denoted 70 Itsy-bitsy 71 Network of

“Nature”

DOWN 1 England’s Seven

Years’ War acquisition

2 Annual golf tourney

3 In this manner 4 West of “My Little

Chickadee” 5 Completely 6 Portraitist’s

materials 7 Lively dance 8 Anvil in the ear 9 German monarch 10 Sullivan and Asner 11 Friendly 12 Rocker Turner 13 Mutton dish 18 Sign of victory 19 Sound of distaste 24 Crusty old sailors 25 Follow logically 27 Gets some rays 30 In-offi ce duration 31 All thumbs 33 Saloon 34 Lesley Gore song,

“__ My Party” 35 Analyze ore 36 Lot measure 37 Wind-blown soil 39 Tailor’s fastener 40 Small deer 41 Elation

42 Peak in Thessaly 46 Release 48 Meryl of

“Silkwood” 49 Module

classroom 50 Leavening agents 52 Nice no 53 Ready to swing 55 Cheerleader’s

word 56 Shell game, e.g. 57 Was a passenger 59 If not, then 60 Give out 63 Hibernation

chamber 64 Large, ornamental

vase 65 Coquettish

Yesterday’s Answer

DAILY CROSSWORDBY WAYNE ROBERT WILLIAMS

Page 12: The Portland Daily Sun, Tuesday, October 25, 2011

Page 12 — THE PORTLAND DAILY SUN, Tuesday, October 25, 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:

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Page 13: The Portland Daily Sun, Tuesday, October 25, 2011

THE PORTLAND DAILY SUN, Tuesday, October 25, 2011— Page 13

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ANNIE’S MAILBOX Dear Annie: I come from a family of seven kids. Last spring, our oldest sister, “Susan,” was diagnosed with lung cancer, and it has spread. We have rallied around and take turns spending time with her. We recently found out that “Tom,” Susan’s husband of 30 years, has been cheating on her for the past fi ve. They live in a small town, and everybody knows. (I found out by over-hearing women talking at the grocery store.) Susan fi led for divorce two years ago, but when Tom was diagnosed with prostate cancer, she stopped the process to take care of him. She thought this would wake him up, but apparently, his girl-friend was “taking care” of him, too. Tom has no problem be-ing seen about town with this woman, who is also married with young children. In all of our visits, Susan has yet to men-tion the affair. We also don’t know what to do about her two grown children who know nothing of their father’s activities, even though all their friends are aware of it. Tom isn’t likely to proceed with the divorce because it would make him look bad, but he undoubtedly thinks if he waits long enough, Su-san will die. This is making us all sick. Any of us would gladly take her in, but we don’t know how to broach the subject. -- Perplexed Siblings Dear Siblings: Please allow Susan to bring up her hus-band’s affair. There is no way to know whether she would be relieved to talk about it or whether it would simply be more stress than she can handle. It may comfort her to think her siblings believe her marriage is solid. Instead, tell her that all of you would like the opportunity to provide a place for her in your own homes. Let her know how much you love her and want this chance to spend time together. In spite of your loving offer, however, Susan may prefer to stay where she is. (And please leave the kids out of it. We suspect they know more than you think.)

Dear Annie: I have noticed disturbing behavior occurring on a website that is supposed to be used for educational in-teraction between schools. One student taunted another and even said no one liked her. Is this classifi ed as cyberbullying? What was said was cer-tainly harmful and hurtful. How do you suggest I inform the school that this is going on? -- Student Trying To Make a Dif-ference Dear Trying: Yes, this is cyberbullying and should be re-ported to all the schools that use this website. These sites should be regularly monitored to prevent just such activity. Talk to your parents, and ask them to call or visit the principal with a printout of the offending page, or ask if you can bring it up on the school computer. The principal should handle it from there. Dear Annie: “Workplace Dilemma” said her small offi ce consists of only her and a part-time employee, and her boss’s boss won’t pay her overtime. You said an hour a week is not that much, but, Annie, in a year, it could add up to a week’s pay. Also, not paying overtime could be against the law, de-pending on her position. She can fi nd out at www.dol.gov/compliance/laws/comp-fl sa.htm. “Workplace” should keep a notebook nearby and docu-ment everything she does, and then fi nd time to talk to her boss objectively. Further, if the boss is so dependent upon her, she should get a signifi cant raise. -- New Hampshire Dear N.H.: Even though we said “Workplace” should be paid, many readers were angry with us because we also said an hour a week isn’t that much if you like your job. (And a few pointed out that for an extra 12 minutes a day, they would gladly take her job.) We hope she will check to see whether she is legally owed overtime and then take the necessary steps to ensure she gets it.

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.

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699-5807Classifi eds

(NY TIMES) — Representative Gabrielle Giffords was in North Carolina on Monday to receive addi-tional therapy as she continues to recover from a gunshot wound to the head, her Congressional staff said in a statement.

Ms. Giffords is scheduled to be in Asheville until Nov. 4, to work with a therapist who has been involved with her treatment. Ms. Giffords’s offi ce did not release the name of the therapist.

Ms. Giffords was shot Jan. 8 in a supermarket parking lot in Tucson during a public event. Six people were killed and 13 were wounded, including Ms. Giffords.

Jared Loughner, 23, who has been charged with shooting Ms. Giffords.

ABC News announced last month that Ms. Gif-fords, Democrat of Arizona, would sit down for an interview with Diane Sawyer, as part of an hourlong special to be broadcast on Nov. 14, the day before the publication of her memoir, “Gabby: A Story of Courage and Hope,” written by Ms. Giffords and her husband, Mark Kelly. Ms. Giffords has recorded the fi nal chapter of the book for an audio edition of the memoir.

Giffords arrives in North Carolina for treatment

WEEHAWKEN, N.J. (NY TIMES) — An offi cial with direct knowledge of the plan says Formula One is coming to New Jersey in June 2013 with a race on the Hudson River shoreline just minutes from New York City.

The person says the Grand Prix event will take place in Weehawken and West New York, with the Manhattan skyline as a backdrop. The person spoke to The Associated Press on the condition of anonymity Monday because the race has yet to be announced. A press conference is scheduled in Wee-hawken on Tuesday, and will likely be attended by New Jersey governor Chris Christie.

The U.S. hasn’t hosted a Formula One race since 2007 in Indianapolis, an event won by Lewis Ham-ilton.

A race is scheduled for Austin, Texas, in 2012.The Formula One race would likely stroll through

River Road, which runs alongside the Hudson River, allowing for clear views of the New York City sky-line.

Offi cial: Formula 1 race coming to NJ in 20613

Page 14: The Portland Daily Sun, Tuesday, October 25, 2011

Page 14 — THE PORTLAND DAILY SUN, Tuesday, October 25, 2011

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

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Tuesday, Oct. 25

Food safety training10 a.m. to 3 p.m. “ Many organizations and community groups rely on volunteer cooks for a variety of food events. Come join Kathy Savoie, MS RD, Extension Educator for this 5-hr food safety training. You will learn about planning and purchasing food, storing food supplies, preparing food, transporting, storing and serving cooked foods and how to handle those leftovers.” Also Nov. 9, 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. UMaine Learning Center, Cooperative Extension 75 Clearwater Dr., Suite 104, Falmouth. To register: call 781-6099 or 1-800-287-1471 (toll free in Maine) or e-mail [email protected]. Reg-ister by Oct. 18 and Nov. 2. There will be a 30-minute lunch break during the class. Bring your own lunch.

LearningWorks Pathways Out of Poverty panelnoon to 2 p.m. LearningWorks’ fourth Community Con-versation will focus on strategies individuals and busi-nesses can take action against poverty. A panel of distinguished community leaders, including Tom Wright, a founder of Wright-Ryan Construction, will discuss their personal path out of poverty and the individuals and organizations that had an impact on their journey. The discussion will be followed by break out discus-sion sessions that will give individuals and businesses concrete strategies for making a difference in the fi ght against poverty. The event is sponsored by Bangor Sav-ings Bank, People’s United Bank, Unitil and the Maine Medical Center. The event is from noon to 2 p.m. at the Portland Public Library, 5 Monument Square. The event is free and open to the public, but registration is required. For more information, visit www.learningworks.me.

DownEast Pride Alliance ‘Business After Hours’ 5:30 p.m. to 7:30 p.m. A networking event at Grace res-taurant, 15 Chestnut St., Portland. Cash bar, lite food and media table. Event underwritten by Liz Winfeld of RBC Wealth Management and Norman Hanson & DeTroy. Bring business cards to share. Find DEPA on Facebook and www.depabusiness.com

Wednesday, Oct. 26

Richard Shain Cohen, ‘Healing After Dark’noon to 1 p.m. Richard Shain Cohen, “Healing After Dark.” Brown Bag Lecture. “In 1927 in the fi eld of health care an unusual event occurred. Morris Aaron Cohen, M.D. founded the Boston Evening Clinic, a unique and never before con-ceived facility for the treatment of the indigent and low-wage earners who could not afford to lose a day’s pay. It was an endeavor that achieved success against overwhelming odds.” Portland Public Library’s Brown Bag Lecture Series features bi-weekly reading and question-and-answer ses-sions with authors from around the nation as well as those who hail from right here in Maine. Regularly scheduled Brown Bag Lectures are on Wednesdays from noon to 1 p.m. in the Main Library’s Rines Auditorium. All Brown Bag Lectures are free to the public. Guests are encouraged to bring their lunch; coffee provided by Coffee By Design.

Organic Research Centre talk in Bar Harbor4:10 p.m. Researchers from one of the top institutes focused on organic agriculture will be offering a talk at Col-lege of the Atlantic in Bar Harbor in the college’s McCor-mick Lecture Hall. The group is from the Organic Research Centre, or ORC, at Elm Farm in Newbury, England. They will be talking about their research on innovations in organic agriculture, agroforestry, and the public good that results from organic farming. ORC, along with COA and the Uni-versity of Kassel’s Faculty of Organic Agricultural Sciences in Germany, form the Trans-Atlantic Partnership, focused on sustainable food systems. The researchers coming are Bruce Pearce, PhD, senior programme manager, who has been researching the implications of genetically modifi ed foods, Jo Smith, PhD, an agroecology researcher focused on temperate agroforestry systems, and Roger Hitchings, principal consultant focused on organic horticulture includ-ing fruit, composting, soil management and fertility, techni-cal conversion planning and protected cropping. The trio will share advances in sustainable food systems research from England. They will be introduced by COA junior Polly McAdams who completed an internship at the ORC last summer. The talk by the ORC researchers is a special Human Ecology Forum. For more information, contact Mat-thew Doyle Olson at 801-5688 or [email protected]. It is free and open to the public.

‘Wind Power in Maine’6 p.m. to 8 p.m. The Environmental and Energy Technol-ogy Council of Maine (E2Tech) will sponsor a public forum on Maine’s evolving wind energy resource. The general public is invited to attend this forum, which will examine the questions surrounding transmission, air quality and the economics of this type of energy generation. The forum,

which is open to the general public will be held in Orono at the University of Maine, and will include a satellite tele-conference location at USM. “Wind Power in Maine: Learn about the facts; answers about the impact on jobs, the environment, and Maine’s people.” The forum will be held at University of Maine in Orono, at Wells Conference Center, Room 1. There will be a satellite, teleconference location at the University of Southern Maine’s Portland Campus in the Lee Community Room, Wishcamper Center. The forum will be moderated by Chris Facchini, of WLBZ, and panelists will include: Charles Colgan, Muskie School of Public Ser-vice, USM; Colin High, Resource Systems Group, Vt.; Brian Conroy, Director of Electric System Engineering, Central Maine Power Company; Gary Hunt, Professor of Economic, University of Maine. The forum is free of charge. The panel will examine transmission issues and consider costs and current-day concerns, as well as the long-term economic and environmental impacts, while reviewing the goals for our region’s energy future.

‘American Nations’ book event7 p.m. Book Event: “American Nations: A History of the Eleven Rival Regional Cultures of North America,” with pre-senter: Colin Woodard, author, at Maine Historical Society. “Join us for a fresh look at regional identity in the United States and its profound impact on American politics — the subject of Woodard’s much-anticipated new book. North America was settled by people with dist inct religious, politi-cal, and ethnographic characteristics, creating regional cul-tures that have been at odds with one another ever since. ... Woodard is an award-winning journalist and author of ‘Ocean’s End, The Lobster Coast,’ and ‘The Republic of Pirates.’” www.mainehistory.org

Nosferatu with Live Original Score7:30 p.m. A special screening of the F.W. Murnau’s clas-sic 1922 silent fi lm, “Nosferatu.” A Philiadelphia and Bos-ton-based quintet, led by pianist and composer Brendan Cooney, will perform Cooney’s original score for the fi lm, which mixes klezmer devices, gypsy grooves, avant-garde textures, and classic horror-fi lm camp, evoking both the moods of Transylvania and German Expressionism. A Hal-loween treat! SPACE Gallery. More information at: www.nosferatu2011.com

Thursday, Oct. 27

Red Cross Blood Drive at Scarborough Bull Moose11 a.m. to 4 p.m. Vampires aren’t the only ones out for blood this month. The Red Cross will hold a blood drive at Bull Moose, 456 Payne Road, Scarborough. For more infor-mation, call 885-9553. All donors will receive a $5 Panera gift certifi cate and be entered to win a gift basket including a $50 Bull Moose gift card and a USB record player.

CTN 25th anniversary5:30 p.m. CTN 25th anniversary gala event at Empire Dine and Dance, 575 Congress St. RSVP, call 775-2900, ext. 200. Celebration of 25 years of programming by Community Televi-sion Network.

Planet Dog’s seventh annual Halloween Party6 p.m. to 7:30 p.m. Planet Dog’s seventh annual Halloween Party will feature free spooky brew and lots of slimy drool along with a Best Home-Made Costume Contest. First prize winner will receive a Bowser Bed worth $100, second and third prize winners will receive a cauldron of free Planet Dog “treats.” The store will be packed with scary, howling, happy dogs and humans. Free beer, other refreshments and free treats for two and four legged trick or treaters will be given out. Kids welcome. Judging starts at 6:30 p.m. sharp. The Planet Dog Company Store located at 211 Marginal Way in Portland. This is a free event for dog lovers and their animal companions. However, donations are always encouraged and accepted for the Planet Dog Foundation to help them support organizations that enable dogs to give back to humans in need. 347-8606

Mayoral Candidates meeting7 p.m. The India Street Neighborhood Association is host-ing a Mayoral Candidates meeting on at St. Peter’s Church on Federal Street, starting promptly at 7 p.m. All candidates will be invited. Those who attend will be asked a series of questions relating to their ideas for the offi ce and to the India Street Neighborhood. Each candidate will have a chance to address each question. Answers should be brief and will be kept to a uniform time. The meeting is open to all interested citizens. If there are any questions or comments, please respond to: [email protected].

Poets Theater of Maine Halloween production7:30 p.m. Poets Theater of Maine announced its Hallow-een production, “The Raven, Ghouls, and Renewal: Pagan Poems and Stories for Halloween,” directed by Assunta Kent, at Mayo Street Arts in Portland. Doors open 7 p.m. Admission $7, $4 students and seniors. The show weaves together traditional Halloween stories recounted by storyteller Deena Weinstein, dramatic performances of eerie poetic clas-sics by Edgar Allan Poe, Helen Adams, and Christina Ros-setti, and a ritual poem by Poets Theater of Maine co-founder Annie Finch. Halloween, called Samhain in pagan tradition, is thought to be the time when the door between the dead and living is open. “The Raven, Ghouls, and Renewal” reconnects the scary, fun elements of the holiday with its ancient meaning of rebirth. Admission is $7 for the general public, and $4 for students and seniors. Recommended for ages 12 and up. Mayo Street Arts is located at 10 Mayo St. (off Cumberland Avenue on Munjoy Hill).

Characters from “The Wizard of Oz” enjoy a Halloween tradition. The public is invited to the annual Dress Up Halloween Bash, at the Children’s Museum & Theatre of Maine, on Sunday, Oct. 30. (COURTESY PHOTO)

Page 15: The Portland Daily Sun, Tuesday, October 25, 2011

THE PORTLAND DAILY SUN, Tuesday, October 25, 2011— Page 15

‘The Spirits of Vaudeville’8 p.m. Dark Follies presents “The Spirits of Vaudeville.” Oct. 27 to Oct. 29 at 8 p.m., matinee at 2 p.m., Oct. 29. Portland’s favorite vaudevillians take to the stage to present you with a Halloween inspired variety show full of tricks and treats. With dancing witches, juggling spooks and sneaky black cats you giggle and you’ll scream (with delight)! An evening full of performances by Kait-ma, The Lovely Janice, Maxwell, Cait Capaldi, Moira, Lady Selcouth, the Mighty Scavenger, the Dark Follies Rhythm Orchestra and more! Lucid State, 29 Baxter Boulevard, Portland. $10 (advance/student/senior), $12 at door. www.darkfollies.com or www.lucidstage.com.

Friday, Oct. 28

Gorham Art Fair6 p.m. to 9 p.m. A Celebration of Community and the Arts with Friends and Family. Also Saturday, Oct. 29 from 9 a.m. to 3 p.m. “We are super excited to be having a Friday view-ing and special events.”

Southern Maine Home Show4 p.m. Oct. 28-30, Southern Maine Home Show at the Port-land Expo, Portland. “The state’s largest fall show.” http://homeshownet.com/109080.html

Musical of Musicals (The Musical!) at USM8 p.m. Sometimes one musical just isn’t enough. You’ll get fi ve hilarious and charming musicals in one — all with the same plot but told through fi ve different and distinct musi-cal styles — when you come see The Musical of Musicals (The Musical!) at the University of Southern Maine School of Music. Directed by USM School of Music faculty member Ed Reichert, Musical! will be performed Friday and Satur-day, Oct. 28 and 29 at 8 p.m., and Sunday, Oct. 30 at 2 p.m., in the USM School of Music’s Corthell Concert Hall, Campus Drive, USM Gorham. Tickets cost $15 general public; $10 seniors/USM employees; $5 students/children. For reservations, call the USM Music Box Offi ce at 780-5555. Sponsored by Saco & Biddeford Savings Institution. Find out more about the USM School of Music’s fall season and program offerings at www.usm.maine.edu/music.

‘Mozart’s Sister’6:30 p.m. “Mozart’s Sister,” Friday, Oct. 28, 6:30 p.m.; Sat-urday, Oct. 29, 2 p.m.; Sunday, Oct. 30, 2 p.m. Movies at the Museum, Portland Museum of Art, Fridays, Saturdays and Sundays. Tickets: $7 and available on the day of the show. For a complete list of movies, visit moviesatthemu-seum.org.

Damnationland 20117 p.m. “Damnationland 2011 will premiere at The Nick-elodeon with a 9:15 show to follow, because the 7 p.m. show will defi nitely sell out. ... This year, six fi lmmakers from Maine strut their stuff, hoping to make you quiver, shiver, and shake!” Also, there will be a screening in the following theaters following the premiere in Portland. Waterville — Railroad Square Cinema; Belfast — The Colonial; Brunswick — The Frontier; Bridgton — The Magic Lantern, Friday, Oct. 28 and Saturday, Oct. 29. Rockland — The Strand, Saturday, Oct. 29, 10 p.m. and Sunday, Oct. 30, 3 p.m.; Auburn — Flagship Cinemas, Thursday, Oct. 27 at 7 p.m., Friday, Oct. 28 at 7 p.m. and 9 p.m., Saturday, Oct. 29 at 7 p.m. and 9 p.m. www.damnationland.com

‘Phantom of the Opera’7:30 p.m. “The Friends of the Kotzschmar organ present the 1925 silent horror fi lm, ‘Phantom of the Opera,’ for their annual Halloween show. Critically acclaimed and sought after as theatre organist and silent fi lm accompanist, Scott Foppaino, returns to the Ktozschmar bench to accompany this silent classic. The Portland Ballet will perform Danse Macabre by Camille Saint-Saens prior to the fi lm.” The Kotzshmar Organ Halloween Silent Film, Scott Foppiano organist. Merrill Auditorium. Kids under 12 are free but must have ticket. Call 842-0800 for details. https://tickets.porttix.com/public/show.asp

Saturday, Oct. 29

Drug Take-Back program10 a.m. to 2 p.m. Ecomaine will again be a host site for the U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration’s free Drug Take-Back program from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. on Saturday, Oct. 29. DEA’s Maine Resident Agent in Charge Michael Wardrop said the program is offered, “so that everyone can rid their medicine cabinets and care facilities of those potentially harmful medications which impact our public safety, per-sonal well being and clean environment.” “Troop G of the

Maine State Police will be at eco-maine as individuals drive up to drop off any quantity of unwanted drugs. No questions. No forms to fi ll out. The ecomaine site is in Portland at 64 Blueberry Road, off outer Congress Street, just on the other side of the Maine Turnpike from UNUM.”

Harvestfest 201110 a.m. to 4 p.m. Saturday, Oct. 29 is the big day for Harvestfest 2011, featuring games, carnival attractions, prizes, food, and “the Great Race across Portland.” All at Faith Temple, 1914 Congress St. In Portland, just east of the Jetport. Everyone is welcome! For more information, please call 773-6334 or log onto www.Apostolicfaith-temple.com.

Time Lapse: Photographing over Time11 a.m. to noon. Portland Museum of Art. ‘Three photographers share how photographing the same theme over time affects both photographer and subject. Jon Edwards documents traditional and vanishing ways of life, Lesley MacVane talks about her relation-ship with the people of Cliff Island, and Melonie Bennett shows her work taken of her family over the years. Artists’ presentations will be followed by a facilitated discussion with Susan Danly, curator of the Madeleine de Sinéty: Pho-tographs exhibition.” Free with museum admission.

Little Theatre of the Deaf to perform in Maine11 a.m. “Deaf and hard of hearing children will have a unique opportunity to experience live theatre in their own language this October as the Little Theatre of the Deaf performs at the University of Southern Maine and at the Baxter School for the Deaf. The Little Theatre of the Deaf is a small ensemble composed of Deaf and hearing actors from the acclaimed National Theatre of the Deaf, based in Hartford, Conn. It performs children’s theatre for Deaf and hearing audiences and their families, bringing both worlds together on one stage. The performances and workshops are sponsored by the Davis Family Foun-dation, the New England Foundation for the Arts and the Friends of Baxter School.” Tickets for the performance at USM are available at $8 and can be purchased through the American Sign Language (ASL) Lab at USM, 49 Exeter St., Portland. 780-5957 (voice), 780-4069 (TTY), or 766-7097 (videophone). The children’s workshops are free and limited to 25 participants on a fi rst come-fi rst-served basis. Children wishing to participate should also contact the American Sign Language Lab at USM. ASL student interpreters may purchase a package that includes both the interpreter’s workshop and the perfor-mance at $30. Both workshops are at the Wishcamper building, 34 Bedford St., Portland, at Room 211. The performance is at the Talbot Auditorium, Luther Bonney building, 90 Bedford St., Portland. Details of the perfor-mances and workshops can be found at http://www.ntd.org/wordpress/?page_id=3.

Banned Book Film Festival, ‘Carrie’1:30 p.m. Portland Public Library, Meeting Room 5, 5 Mon-ument Square, Portland. “Since the inception of Banned Books Week in 1982, libraries and bookstores throughout the country have staged events and local readings as part of their activities. Please join Portland Public Library for this series of fi lms that was conceived from well-known banned books. A discussion will follow after each screening for those who wish to stay and participate.” Stephen King’s “Carrie.”

Handel and Haydn Society3 p.m. Portland Ovations brings the Handel and Haydn Society to Hannaford Hall at USM Portland for an afternoon concert . Approaching its bicentennial in 2015, the Handel and Haydn Society is the oldest continuously performing arts organization in the United States. Founded in Boston in 1815, the Handel and Haydn Society is internationally recognized for its revelatory style of using the instruments and techniques of the composer’s time. The mission of the Society is to perform Baroque and Classical music at the highest levels and share that music with a large and diverse audience. With an esteemed tradition of innovation and excellence, which began in the 19th century with the Ameri-can premieres of Handel’s Messiah (1818), the Handel and Haydn Society over the last 20 years have given important historical performances of core repertoire and introduced innovative programs to great acclaim. They also won a

Grammy award in 2002 for their recording of Sir John Tavener’s Lamentations and Praises, co-commis-sioned with Chanticleer.

Calamity Janes vs. Rock Coast Rollers5:30 p.m. See some Maine-on-Maine action as Maine Roller Derby’s Calam-ity Janes and RIP Tides take on the Rock Coast Rollers. “MRD’s newest members, the R.I.P. Tides, are a group of fi erce fresh meat who will make their debut at Happy Wheels alongside the Janes in this mixed bout. MRD wel-comes RCR, a new league from Rockland, as these two teams battle for the fi rst time!” Doors at 5 p.m. Happy Wheels, 331 Warren Ave., Portland. Tickets: Purchase advance tickets online or at the door. Gen-eral Admission: $5

Sid Tripp’s 16th annual Halloween Bash

9 p.m. to 1 a.m. Sid Tripp of local marketing fi rm Proac-tive Resources Design and business networking group The DownEast Pride Alliance will hold his 16th annual Hallow-een Bash at Mariner’s Church on 386 Fore St. in Portland with exciting live band Under The Covers to perform. Tripp is expecting a similar attendance of over 400 people at this year’s event, and doors will open at 9 p.m. and the party will continue until 1 a.m. This year’s theme is zombies, so bring your best ghoulish costume and makeup. $20 cover (check, cash or cards accepted); ages 21 and up. Costume required, cash bars.

Sunday, Oct. 30

Portland String Quartet 2011-2012 season opening concert with Maine State Historian1 p.m. Concert at 2 p.m. Pre-concert Lecture with Maine State Historian Earle G. Shettleworth, Woodfords Congre-gational Church, 202 Woodfords St., Portland. “The PSQ and special guest Maine State Historian Earle G. Shettle-worth will present the World Premiere of a string quartet by Portland native John Knowles Paine, composed in Portland c.1855. Also on the program is Walter Piston’s String Quar-tet No. 1, and Charles Ives’ String Quartet No. 1, ‘A Revival Service.’ A reception will follow the concert.” Cost: $22 gen-eral admission, $20 seniors, free for 21 and younger. Subsi-dized or free tickets available upon request. LARK Society for Chamber Music, 761-1522, [email protected].

Kids’ Halloween Bash at children’s museum1:30 p.m. “Trick-or-Treat at the Children’s Museum & The-atre of Maine is quickly becoming a tradition. Last year hundreds of costumed children and families arrived to col-lect candy and prizes, march in an indoor costume parade throughout the exhibits, and boogie at the Monster Mash dance party. Mask Making (1:30 p.m. to 2:30 p.m.); Trick-or-Treat (2:30 p.m. to 3:30 p.m.): Come in costume, and bring a bucket; Slime Making (3 p.m. to 3:30 p.m.): Volunteers from USM’s Chemistry Club will lead visitors through the ooey, gooey science of slime making; Halloween Parade (3:30 p.m.) and Monster Mash (3:30 p.m. to 4:30 p.m.): Pirates, princesses, superheroes, kitty cats – all are wel-come in the Halloween Parade. All activities take place at the Children’s Museum & Theatre of Maine, 142 Free St. in Portland. Halloween Bash activities are free with admission ($9/person, under 18 months free). The Museum & Theatre is open from noon to 5 p.m. on Sundays. For more informa-tion, visit www.kitetails.org or call 828-1234.

Discovery Concert: Symphony Spooktacular2:30 p.m. “ Discover a Halloween experience fi lled with symphonic thrills and chills for the whole family! Maestro Robert Moody leads the ghouls and goblins of the PSO in some of the greatest ‘spooktacular’ music ever written for orchestra, including the ‘Funeral March of a Marionette’ by Gounod, music from Berlioz’s ‘Symphonie Fantastique,’ and ‘The Chill of the Orchestra’ by American composer Russell Peck. Dancers from Portland Ballet will join in ‘Bel-la’s Lullaby’ from ‘Twilight’ and lead the entire audience in the zombie dance stylings of Michael Jackson’s ‘Thriller.’” Merrill Auditorium.

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from preceding page

Nosferatu 2011 tour kicks off this month, with a stop at SPACE Gallery in Portland on Wednesday. (COURTESY IMAGE)

Page 16: The Portland Daily Sun, Tuesday, October 25, 2011

Page 16 — THE PORTLAND DAILY SUN, Tuesday, October 25, 2011

Modest farmer, fantasy mogul

The National Fantasy Baseball Championship, a contest paying a top prize of $100,000, draws an elite col-lection of contestants — computer geniuses, deep-pocketed stockbrokers and money managers, maybe a young man or woman looking to be the next Billy Beane or Theo Epstein.

But the contest over the years has produced only one two-time champion: Lindy Hinkelman, a 59-year-old pig farmer from Greencreek, Idaho.

Hinkelman, who has won two of the

last three titles in one of the country’s most highly regarded contests, does not have a perfect answer for how he has been able to do it, but he is happy to offer his gut take on it all.

“Raising pigs and this baseball thing really go together,” he said. “There are certain things in farming — keeping track of productivity, indexes for your sows, the genetic lines there. To do well, you’ve got to be pretty profi cient in numbers. Math has always been my strong suit. I can see things with the numbers.”

“That’s just my theory,” he cautioned with modesty. “I have no proof.”

What he does have is in excess of $300,000 in prize money earned over the last three years.

While some fantasy football leagues offer bigger prizes, the N.F.B.C. says its payout is tops in fantasy baseball, and the Fantasy Sports Trade Association, which represents over 100 member companies in the fantasy sports industry, said it was unlikely that anyone had won more prize money than Hinkelman.

Hinkelman, however, is not looking to, oh, get involved in fi xing the Baltimore Orioles.

“These guys working in front offi ces know so much more about this than I would ever dream o f,” he said. “These guys grew up in the game. I have no ambitions of doing that.”

Fantasy baseball got its start in 1980 with the devel-opment of Rotisserie League Baseball, named for a New York restaurant where a group of people, led by the longtime journalist Daniel Okrent, fi rst played it. In the game, participants draft actual players and follow them throughout a season, getting points based on how those players perform in actual games.

The games exploded in popularity with the rise of the Internet. And while fantasy football has eclipsed baseball in popularity, the fantasy sports association said, roughly 13 million people play fantasy baseball.

Hinkelman looks for undervalued players, as does Beane, the Oakland A’s general manager, who was played by Brad Pitt in the movie “Moneyball.” He volunteered to draft 14th in his 15-team league this year, and targeted three players who ended up doing signifi cantly better in 2011 than in 2010: Matt Kemp of the Los Angeles Dodgers, Justin Verlander of the Detroit Tigers and Curtis Granderson of the Yankees.

His faith was rewarded, as Kemp and Granderson turned in seasons worthy of the Most Valuable Player award and Verlander should be a lock for the Ameri-can League Cy Young Award.

“Those three guys really made up my team there,” Hinkelman said. He had Kemp and Verlander on his 2009 prizewinner, giving him a personal connection of sorts, even though he has never met any of the play-ers. “These guys are like personal friends to you, even though you don’t know them.”

He also got top performances from late-round picks like Cleveland shortstop Asdrubal Cabrera and Tampa Bay relief pitcher Kyle Farnsworth.

Despite his stars, the 2011 season still came down to the fi nal game for Hinkelman, who battled K. J. Duke, a San Diego investment portfolio manager, for most of the season. Duke, who played in a differ-ent league, also had Kemp and Verlander, along with Clayton Kershaw of the Dodgers, a contender for the Cy Young Award in the National League. But an off year by his fi rst-round pick, the Yankees’ Alex Rodri-guez, held him back.

As in “Moneyball,” in which little-known Scott Hat-teberg hits a dramatic game-winning home run, a relative unknown cinched Hinkelman’s victory.

Hinkelman plucked the St. Louis Cardinals’ Allen Craig off the waiver wire late in the season, and when outfi elder Matt Holliday went down with an injury, Craig stepped in and went on an offensive tear. In the fi nal game of the season, an 8-0 Cardinals victory over the Houston Astros, Craig hit a ninth-inning solo home run.

“For that baseball game, it was a meaningless hit,” Duke said, “but it cost me $80,000.”

The N.F.B.C. league attracted 390 players last year, each paying a $1,400 entry fee. Players can enter more than one team. Players have included the fi lm director Nick Cassavetes, the television actor James Roday and the entertainer Meat Loaf.

Lindy Hinkelman doesn’t mind if his fantasy baseball competitors underestimate him because he is a pig farmer (NEW YORK TIMES PHOTO)

BY DAN FOSTTHE NEW YORK TIMES