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FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 3, 2012 VOL. 4 NO. 1 PORTLAND, ME PORTLAND’S DAILY NEWSPAPER 699-5801 D a i l y D a i l y D e a l D e a l visit PORTLANDDAILYSUN.ME for this and other great offers $ 1 9 f o r a $ 3 9 S h a m p o o , S t y l e $ 1 9 f o r a $ 3 9 S h a m p o o , S t y l e $ 19 for a $ 39 Shampoo, Style & E y e B r o w W a x P a c k a g e & E y e B r o w W a x P a c k a g e & Eye Brow Wax Package 1041 Brighton Avenue Travel Local: The Eclectic East End See page 8 FREE The “eyes” have it at the Maine College of Art. From 5 p.m. to 9 p.m. tonight during the First Friday Art Walk, MECA will host an exhibition, film screening and celebration of the “Inside/Out” project, a temporary public art project that featured massive portraits arrayed around Portland. Here, one of the portraits gazes down on Free Street from the back of the MECA building. (DAVID CARKHUFF PHOTO) Former church eyed as for-profit space. See page 6 Misgivings over special zone for Williston-West Seeing the big picture in art — Page 7 Losing in court, Occupy has until Monday to clear out of Lincoln Park See page 3
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Page 1: The Portland Daily Sun, Friday, February 3, 2012

FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 3, 2012 VOL. 4 NO. 1 PORTLAND, ME PORTLAND’S DAILY NEWSPAPER 699-5801

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The “eyes” have it at the Maine College of Art. From 5 p.m. to 9 p.m. tonight during the First Friday Art Walk, MECA will host an exhibition, fi lm screening and celebration of the “Inside/Out” project, a temporary public art project that featured massive portraits arrayed around Portland. Here, one of the portraits gazes down on Free Street from the back of the MECA building. (DAVID CARKHUFF PHOTO)

Former church eyed as for-profi t space. See page 6

Misgivings over special zone for Williston-West

Seeing the big picture in art — Page 7

Losing in court,

Occupy has until Monday to clear out of Lincoln

ParkSee page 3

Page 2: The Portland Daily Sun, Friday, February 3, 2012

Page 2 — THE PORTLAND DAILY SUN, Friday, February 3, 2012

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

–––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––– DIGEST––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––Path is

found for spread of

Alzheimer’s

SAYWHAT...You can’t process me with a normal

brain.”—Charlie Sheen

(NY Times) — Alzheim-er’s disease seems to spread like an infection from brain cell to brain cell, two new studies in mice have found. But instead of viruses or bacteria, what is being spread is a distorted protein known as tau.

The fi nding answers a longstanding question and has immediate implications for developing treatments, researchers said. And they suspect that other degen-erative brain diseases like Parkinson’s may spread in a similar way.Alzheimer’s researchers have long known that dying, tau-fi lled cells fi rst emerge in a small area of the brain where memories are made and stored. The disease then slowly moves outward to larger areas that involve remembering and reasoning.

For more than a quarter-century, researchers have been unable to decide between two explanations. One is that the spread may mean that the disease is transmitted from neuron to neuron, perhaps along the paths that nerve cells use to communicate with one another. It could simply mean that some brain areas are more resilient than others and resist the disease longer. The new studies provide an answer. And they indicate it may be possible to bring Alzheim-er’s disease to an abrupt halt early on by preventing cell-to-cell transmission, perhaps with an antibody that blocks tau.

The studies, done inde-pendently by researchers at Columbia and Harvard, involved genetically engi-neered mice that could make abnormal human tau proteins, predominantly in the entorhinal (pronounced en-toh-RYE-nal) cortex, a sliver of tissue behind the ears, toward the middle of the brain, where cells fi rst start dying in Alzheimer’s disease. As expected, tau showed up there. And, as also expected, entorhinal cortex cells in the mice started dying, fi lled with tan-gled, spaghettilike strands of tau.

Over the next two years, the cell death and destruc-tion spread outward to other cells along the same network. Since those other cells could not make human tau, the only way they could get the protein was by transmission from nerve cell to nerve cell.

And that, said Dr. Samuel E. Gandy, associate direc-tor of the Alzheimer’s Dis-ease Research Center at Mount Sinai School of Medicine in New York, was “very unexpected, very intriguing.”

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(NY Times) — When the nation’s largest breast cancer advocacy organization considered in October cutting off most of its fi nancial sup-port to the nation’s largest abortion provider, the breast cancer group was hoping for a quiet end to an increasingly controversial partnership.

Instead, the organization, the Susan G. Komen for the Cure foundation, is now engulfed in a controversy that threatens to undermine one of the most successful advocacy campaigns. The foundation’s decision to eliminate most of its grants to Planned Parenthood for breast cancer screening caused a cascade of criticism from prominent women’s groups, politicians and public health advocates and a similarly strong

outpouring of support from conservative women and religious groups that oppose abortion.

John D. Raffaelli, a Komen board member and Washington lobbyist, said Wednesday that the deci-sion to cut Planned Parenthood funding was made out of the fear that an investigation of Planned Par-enthood by Republican Representative Cliff Stearns would damage Komen’s credibility with donors.

The organization’s longtime support of Planned Parenthood had already cost it some support from anti-abortion forces, Raffaelli said. But the board feared that charges that Komen supported organizations under federal investiga-tion for fi nancial improprieties could take a fur-ther and unacceptable toll on donations, he said.

Uproar as breast cancer group ends partnership with Planned Parenthood

CAIRO (NY Times) — Clashes broke out here and in other Egyptian cities on Thursday, as thousands of people unleashed their fury at the authorities over the deaths of 73 people, many of them soccer fans, after a match the night before in the city of Port Said. That melee, the bloodiest outbreak of lawlessness since the ouster of President Hosni Mubarak one year ago, threatens

to provoke a new crisis for Egypt’s halting political transition.

In Cairo on Thursday evening, police offi cers fi red tear gas to try to drive back thousands of protesters who descended on Tahrir Square. Many were soccer fans waving the fl ags of both teams involved in the Wednesday match. They were joined by many others who have been demanding that the

military cede power. Across the spectrum, most appeared to believe that the military had at minimum allowed the violence to occur, and rumors that the authorities had added to it were rife, adding to deep disquiet over the failure of the transitional government to re-establish a sense of order and stability. Similar clashes were reported in cities across the country.

Fury at soccer game deaths in Egypt drives new clashes

Effort to rebrand Arab spring backfi res in Iran

TEHRAN (NY Times) — It was meant to be a crowning moment in which Iran put its own Islamic stamp on the Arab Spring. More than a thousand young activists were fl own here earlier this week (at government expense) for a con-ference on “the Islamic Awakening,” Tehran’s effort to rebrand the popu-lar Arab uprisings of the past year.

As delegates fl ooded into a vast auditorium next to a space needle in western Tehran, a screen showed images of the Iranian revolution in 1979, morphing seamlessly into footage of young Arab protesters in Tunisia, Egypt, Bahrain, Libya and Yemen. But there was a catch. No one was invited from Syria, whose autocratic president, Bashar al-Assad, is a crucial Iranian ally. The Syrian protesters are routinely dis-missed by Tehran’s government as foreign agents — despite the fact that they are Muslims fi ghting a secular (and brutal) dictatorship.

That inconvenient truth soon marred the whole script. As the conference began, a young man in the audience held up a sign with the word “SYRIA?” written in English. Applause burst out in the crowd, followed by boos. Audi-ence members began chanting the slogan of the Syrian protest-ers: “God, freedom and Syria!” But they were drowned out by others chanting pro-Assad slogans.

TODAY’SJOKE“The person I want checking IDs at the airport are bounc-ers ‘cause they’re the only ones who can spot a fake. So, if a terrorist rolled up, he’d be like, ‘Uh, here you go.’ Bouncer be like, ‘Says you’re born in June. What’s your sign, bro?’” — Nick Kroll

In manufacturing, a plan to lure jobs back to America

WASHINGTON (NY Times) — In his State of the Union address, President Obama called for a wide-ranging package of policies to help create American manu-facturing jobs, including trade enforce-ment measures, business tax breaks and worker training programs.

In many ways, the proposal is surprising, as few economists now consider manufac-turing a potent engine for job growth in the United States. Manufacturers have added about 330,000 jobs in the country in the last two years. But the growth followed three decades of decline, during which compa-

nies like automakers and textile companies slashed payrolls by about 7.5 million. That has led many economists to say the recent turnaround might be nothing more than a correction from the depths of the recession.

But the administration argues that big trends — like rising wages in developing countries, falling wages in America and a weaker dollar — have made moving work-ers to or keeping workers in the United States a much more viable option. And they say that manufacturers will continue to add jobs domestically, especially with a little help from Washington.

“We have a huge opportunity, at this moment, to bring manufacturing back,” Mr. Obama said in his address to Con-gress. “But we have to seize it. Tonight, my message to business leaders is simple: Ask yourselves what you can do to bring jobs back to your country, and your country will do everything we can to help you succeed.”

The proposal stems from a belief that after “a long period where people felt the wind was in our face, the wind is with us,” said Gene Sperling, director of the White House National Economic Council. “It’s not fi ghting against the trends. It’s actually working with them.”

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Page 3: The Portland Daily Sun, Friday, February 3, 2012

THE PORTLAND DAILY SUN, Friday, February 3, 2012— Page 3

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Occupy given its second deadline to leave parkAfter judge rules overnight camping is not protected by law, city issues deadline to vacate: 8 a.m. Monday

OccupyMaine and members of its Lincoln Park encampment have been put on notice.

The order was signed Thursday and promptly delivered to protesters as promised, just 24 hours after a judge ruled overnight camping in the park is not protected by law.

Any tents or personal belongings left in the park after 8 a.m. Monday will be removed, and any indi-viduals in the park between 10 p.m. and 6:30 p.m. will be arrested, according to City Manager Mark Rees.

"Any structures, belongings or other items left in the park ... will be considered waste material and will be picked up by the city and disposed of as such," read the order signed by Rees.

It goes on to say anyone in the park between restricted hours "and refuses to leave may be arrested" and charged with criminal trespass, pur-

suant to city code.The notice was sent to Occupy members after a

Superior Court judge's ruling Wednesday, and fol-lowing two meetings with the group's attorney, John Branson.

"They want to see some effort begin pretty soon," said Branson, explaining his clients hoped to have at least two weekends to dismantle the encampment.

"It's a lot of work," he said.The protesters discussed the judge's decision

during a three-hour-long general assembly meeting Wednesday evening.

Despite some campers remaining determined to stay in the park following the eviction deadline, some protesters indicated they were willing to work with the city and plan to host a weekend cleanup in Lincoln Park.

"In general, the sense was people would abide by the city's permit," said Sam Swenson, a member of OccupyMaine who has been heavily involved with the group, but has not been camping in Lincoln Park.

Branson described Wednesday's general assembly as "a very emotional" gathering, adding no decision was made by his clients on whether to pursue the group's lawsuit against the city of Portland.

"This is their priority right now," he said, referring

to vacating the park.Branson added, "And making sure it's done with dig-

nity and respect — which is what both sides want."City offi cials said Thursday a dumpster had

already been delivered to the park and that they expect the deadline will give protesters enough time to clean and vacate.

"We're taking them at their word, which is that they wish to be good stewards of the park and leave it in good condition," said Nicole Clegg, a city spokes-woman.

"We're certainly hoping they will be true to their word and spend this weekend removing their belongings," she said.

Clegg declined to comment on how the city would handle protesters who refuse to leave, saying shortly after the judge's ruling that Portland offi cials were taking things "one step at a time."

Three fi rms throw hats in ring to do Civic Center renovation

Three construction companies with Maine ties are seeking the job of reno-vating the Cumber-land County Civic Center.

Cianbro, a national fi rm with headquar-ters in Pittsfi eld; Con-sigli Construction Co. Inc., a construction manager and gen-eral contractor head-quartered in Milford, Mass., with offi ces in Portland, Enfi eld,

Conn., and Williamstown, Mass.; and Wright-Ryan Construction Inc. of Portland submitted "responses" to a county solicitation to become construc-tion managers of the Civic Center job.

Voters in November approved the $33 million renovation projectThe county's budget for a construction manager is estimated at $28 million to $29 million, said Neal Pratt, chair-man of the Civic Center board. The balance of the funds will pay for pro-fessional services and non-construc-tion related costs, Pratt said.

"We're very pleased that we've gotten responses from three such

BY MATTHEW ARCOTHE PORTLAND DAILY SUN

“We’re taking them at their word, which is that they wish to be good stewards of the park and

leave it in good condition.” — Nicole Clegg, city spokeswoman

BY DAVID CARKHUFFTHE PORTLAND DAILY SUN

see RENOVATION page 15Pratt

Page 4: The Portland Daily Sun, Friday, February 3, 2012

Page 4 — THE PORTLAND DAILY SUN, Friday, February 3, 2012

The most embarrassing moments to watch this political season have occurred as Mitt Romney has pretended to be an angry, fi re-breathing true conservative. The evidence suggests that in his soul he’s a moderate pragmatist, but he has fl ip-fl opped like a frantic fi sh in hopes of hiding his reasonableness.

Newt Gingrich, Romney’s main rival for the

Where are the Romney Republicans?

Nicholas D. Kristof–––––

The New York Times

Republican presidential nomi-nation, is denouncing Romney with one of the ugliest slurs in the Republican lexicon: a Mas-sachusetts moderate. Other moderate Republicans are savaged as RINOs — Republi-cans in name only — as if they emerged from an ugly mutant strain.

Yet, in fact, as a new his-tory book underscores, it is the Gingriches and Santorums who are the mutants. For most of its history, the Republican Party was dominated by those closer to Romney than to social conservatives like Rick Santorum, and it is only in the last genera-tion that the party has lurched to the hard right.

The new book, “Rule and Ruin,” by Geoffrey Kabaservice, a former assistant history professor at Yale, notes that, to compete in the primaries, Romney has had to fl ee from his own political

see KRISTOF page 5

––––––––––––– COLUMN –––––––––––––

Portland’s FREE DAILY NewspaperDavid Carkhuff, Editor

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Every fi rst Friday night of the month, all through the year, hot or cold, doesn’t matter, they come out in droves. A Manhattan buzz on the streets of Portland. Not for fi fteen minutes or so, like when a hockey game at the Civic Center gets over, but for hours. A bus-tling crowd of culture vultures sashaying into art venues up and down the street, gathered around street performers, and cheering like mad for bands up there wail-ing away on stage in Monument Square.

Some venues stand out, like Salt Gallery and SPACE Gallery, but the razzle-dazzle goes on at other art galleries and private studios all over intown. There’s sixty or so venues listed in the Downtown Arts District bro-chure actually. Can you imagine. That’s the charm of First Friday, that it happens everywhere you look. This thanks to Andy Ver-ossa, of Aucocisco Galleries, who conceived of the First Friday Art Walk and orchestrated the whole thing at the beginning. No one could have predicted that it would become what it has though. And all in the name of art.

First Friday Art Walk could lose its curfew, keep its vibe

We should have known some-thing big was up when the Porte-ous building got taken over by the Maine College of Art. That was a harbinger of things to come. When Porteous moved to the Mall and “the art school” became MECA, things started rolling and they haven’t stopped yet.

But, oh my, there are shortcom-ings. This is Portland and not Manhattan, after all, and here-abouts there is a tendecy to not get it quite right. Take having First Friday get over at eight o’clock, for instance. In other more urbane places that might be the time such an event begins. Here, the evening’s just getting started and it’s lights out, time to go home. No sense fretting about it though, that’s the way it is and that’s the way it’s going to be.

Count on it. Eight it is and eight it will be. Ask one of the Down-town Arts District people about it and you’ll fi nd that to be the case. They’ll be very respectful of your point of view then give you what to them what is is a very good reason for things being the way they are. You’ll look at them with your brow wrinkled, know-ing that what they’re saying just doesn’t make sense, but they’ll say it confi dently, eyes unblinking, the discussion will end, and eight it will be. Hey, if you lived in Skow-hegan you wouldn’t even have a First Friday Art Walk to go to at all, so get over it and be grateful for what you have.

But there’s something else.

see GALLANT page 5

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

Cliff Gallant

–––––Daily Sun Columnist

When Porteous moved to the Mall and “the art school” became MECA, things started

rolling and they haven’t stopped yet.

All letters columns and editorial cartoons are the opinion of the writer or artists and do not refl ect the opinions of the staff, editors or pub-lisher of The Portland Daily Sun.

We welcome your ideas and opinions on all topics and consider every signed letter for publication. Limit letters to 300 words and include your address and phone number. Longer letters will only be published as space allows and may be edited. Anonymous letters, letters without full names and generic letters will not be published. Please send your letters to: THE PORTLAND DAILY SUN, [email protected].

We want your opinions

Page 5: The Portland Daily Sun, Friday, February 3, 2012

THE PORTLAND DAILY SUN, Friday, February 3, 2012— Page 5

A few weeks ago, Rick Santorum got some criticism for saying the Supreme Court erred in saying states may not outlaw contraception. The idea that Americans could legally be forbidden to buy condoms or birth control pills struck most people as a gross violation of personal liberty.

They are right, of course. But many of those who think it’s wrong to forbid Americans to buy contraceptives think it’s just fi ne to require them to buy contraceptives. In this group, unfortu-nately, are President Barack Obama and Health and Human Services Sec-retary Kathleen Sebelius, who are hell-bent on enforcing that mandate on nearly everyone.

Under the Obama health care plan, employers that provide health insur-ance to employees must purchase coverage for contraceptives and steril-ization. Individuals who buy their own policies have to get the coverage even if they’ve taken a vow of celibacy.

For Catholic institutions, this is not trivial. The church regards artifi cial contraception as a violation of the natural order, insisting that “each and every marital act must of necessity retain its intrinsic relationship to the procreation of human life.”

The administration makes only miserly room for such views. Churches are effectively excused from the man-date, but other religious institutions

Inoculating against religious freedom

— such as hospitals, universities and charitable organizations — are not.

A hospital may be named after a saint, founded by an order of nuns, replete with crucifi xes and motivated by the teachings of Jesus, but too bad: It will be treated as the moral equiva-lent of Harrah’s casinos or Bain Capi-tal. Those in charge may regard birth control as inherently evil, but they will have to pay for it anyway.

This is particularly ungenerous con-sidering that the administration has provided an exemption for another group. The Amish are excused from the individual mandate to get cover-age because they have religious objec-tions to insurance of any kind.

The administration wants to make sure that all women have access to contraception at no cost. But some will fi nd it has the opposite effect.

Employers that furnish health insurance have to cover it. But employers don’t have to furnish health insurance — and some of those with a religious mission may

decide not to.When the District of Columbia

passed a law that forced Catholic Charities to provide medical insur-ance to the same-sex partners of its employees, the agency elected to simply drop coverage for spouses.

Anyone left without health insur-ance under the administration’s rule can go to new state-run health insur-ance exchanges to buy individual policies. But here again, the adminis-tration rejects freedom of conscience. The only policies available will include coverage for contraceptives — includ-ing those the church regards as “abor-tion drugs” — and sterilization.

This overbearing approach is not essential to health care reform. Expe-rience indicates that freedom can coexist with general access to contra-ception.

In the past, employers have gener-ally been able to make their own deci-sions, and most cover it. According to the Guttmacher Institute, nine out of 10 company policies pay for pre-scription birth control. The federal employee plan allows insurers with religious scruples to sell policies that don’t include such coverage — which doesn’t prevent anyone from getting policies that do.

This is an issue on which the Catho-lic Church is drastically at odds with prevailing opinion and practice. Its

position has a way of bringing out latent anti-Catholic sentiment. Writ-ing in The Huffi ngton Post, June Car-bone and Naomi Cahn sneer at “the male hierarchy’s opposition to birth control.” The issue, they insist, “is too important to be left in the hands of a small number of men in robes.”

But religious freedom is too impor-tant to be left in the hands of people who see it as an obstacle to be pushed aside whenever it’s inconvenient. Anytime it is feasible to let organiza-tions and individuals follow the dic-tates of faith, it’s essential that they be permitted to do so.

That’s established policy in many areas. When the military relied on the draft, Quakers were allowed to opt out because of their pacifi sm. When a Seventh-Day Adventist was fi red for refusing to work on her Sabbath, the Supreme Court said she was eligible for unemployment benefi ts. Prison offi cials have to accommodate the reli-gious practices of inmates.

Why? Out of respect for religious freedom and diversity. Most Ameri-cans regard that tradition as a mark of civic health. In this case, the admin-istration treats it as an illness to be cured.

(Steve Chapman blogs daily at newsblogs.chicagotribune.com/steve_chapman.)

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

In Portland, the evening’s just getting started and it’s lights outGALLANT from page 4

Something very big. Bigger than the night getting over almost before it begins. It’s that almost no one buys art. Huh? It’s been said that the creative pro-cess is not complete until a piece is framed and up on someone else’s wall. Doesn’t anyone get that? Art is to be lived with! How do galleries survive? Well,

ah, as a matter of fact, not many do for very long. There’s no lack of appreciation, the ooh’s and ah’s abound, but no one’s expected to buy art. It’s a Port-land thing. Very uncool to apply even subtle pres-sure.

Oh well, maybe we haven’t gotten it quite right yet, but Portland is continually growing and rein-venting itself, so who knows. As soon as you think

you’ve got it fi gured out, you haven’t. It’s neither Manhattan nor Skowhegan, nor is it some compos-ite of the two, it’s uniquely Portland, and it’s at it’s best on the fi rst Friday of the month.

(Cliff Gallant of Portland is a regular columnist for The Portland Daily Sun. Email him at [email protected].)

record and that of his father, George Romney, a former governor of Michigan who is a symbol of mainstream moderation.

“Much of the current conservative movement is characterized by this sort of historical amnesia and symbolic parricide, which seeks to undo key aspects of the Republican legacy such as Reagan’s elimination of corporate tax loopholes, Nixon’s environmental and labor safety programs, and a variety of G.O.P. achievements in civil rights, civil liberties, and good government reforms,” Kabaser-vice writes. “In the long view of history, it is really today’s conservatives who are ‘Republicans in name only.’ ”

After all, the original Massachusetts moder-ates were legendary fi gures in Republican history, like Elihu Root and Henry Cabot Lodge. Theodore Roosevelt embraced progressivism as “the highest and wisest form of conservatism.” Few did more to promote racial integration, civil rights and indi-vidual freedoms than a Republican, Earl Warren, in his years as chief justice.

Dwight Eisenhower cautioned against excess military spending as “a theft from those who hunger and are not fed.” Richard Nixon proposed health care reform. Ronald Reagan endorsed the same tax rate for capital gains as for earned

income. Each of these titans of Republican Party history would today risk mockery for these views.

Republican history is also populated with harder-line conservatives, like Senator Robert Taft of Ohio, dubbed “Mr. Republican.” But he worked closely with Democrats, was willing to raise taxes and disapproved of anti-intellectual populism. Consider the time Taft’s wife was asked at a rally whether her husband was a common man.

“Oh, no,” Kabaservice quotes her as responding. “He was fi rst in his class at Yale and fi rst in his class at Harvard Law School.” The crowd gave the couple a standing ovation.

What happened?That’s a long and gradual story beginning with

Senator Joe McCarthy’s success in galvanizing working-class suspicions of government elites and continues with an angry backlash at changing mores and liberalized abortion laws. Conserva-tive Southern whites moved into the Republican Party. Newer media voices like Rush Limbaugh and Glenn Beck made extremism seem congenial — while making bipartisanship feel treacherous.

I grew up in Oregon at a time when the state was dominated by Republican progressives like Gov. Tom McCall, a passionate environmentalist, and Mark Hatfi eld, an opponent of the Vietnam War. At that time, political paranoiacs tended to vote Democratic for candidates like George Wallace;

over time, they migrated to the state’s Republican Party — and swallowed it up.

My fi rst editor, Jeb Bladine, of The News-Reg-ister in McMinnville, Ore., describes his newspa-per as “independent Republican” in the spirit of earlier Republicans. But then social conservatives staged a grass-roots overthrow of the moderate Republican apparatus in the late 1970s and early ’80s, and focused on abortion and gay rights.

“Moderates simply gave up participating after being ostracized,” Bladine remembers. “It became almost impossible to nominate a Republican for statewide offi ce who had any chance of winning in a statewide vote.”

Yet political parties are not suicidal. When they overreach, they (often) learn. The Democrats did that when they embraced a Southern centrist named Bill Clinton. The British Labor Party was marginalized when I lived in Britain in the early 1980s, but Tony Blair transformed it and revived it about 15 years later. And in Oregon over the last decade, Bladine notes, social wedge issues have lost their force, and moderate Republicans have re-emerged.

Could the same happen nationally? Sure, it seems impossible at the moment. But if Romney somehow manages to make the Republican Party safe for moderates again, that’ll be a triumph for his party — and for the country.

Republican history is populated with harder-line conservativesKRISTOF from page 4

Steve Chapman

–––––Creators

Syndicate

Page 6: The Portland Daily Sun, Friday, February 3, 2012

Page 6 — THE PORTLAND DAILY SUN, Friday, February 3, 2012

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‘This may well be the beginning of the undoing of the Western Prom area,’ says one skeptic of proposal

The new owner of Williston-West church is seeking city approval to convert the parish into a residence, corporate offi ces and create a for-profi t concert hall in the sanctuary.

Currently, Williston-West sits in a residential zone that doesn’t allow offi ces or for-profi t concert spaces. Owner Frank Monsour wants the city council to create a special contract zone to accommodate those uses.

Monsour wants to add parking spaces to the church courtyard, renovate the sanctuary to create a performance space, and add up to 3,600 feet of offi ce space for his Brisbane, Australia-based company Majella Global Technologies, according to the zoning application. Williston-West is located at 32 Thomas St. in the West End.

As proposed, the second and third fl oor of the parish house would be converted into a residence for Monsour or his son, Sebastian, when they are in the country. Both men are from Australia.

The city has yet to take any action on the request

for a contract zone, but a planning board public hearing on the matter is scheduled for Tuesday, Feb. 14. The city council has fi nal authority over zoning matters.

For now, renovation plans for the church and adja-cent parish house are still relatively vague, but some West End residents are already wary.

“This may well be the beginning of the undoing of the Western Prom area, because there are other churches in the area, big buildings … that people are having a tough time maintaining,” said Charles Remmel, who lives across from the church.

If the city approved this zone change request, it could lead to other requests from property owners to convert historic properties from residential to com-mercial uses, he predicted.

Roughly 50 people attended a neighborhood meet-ing on the proposal Wednesday night, and a straw poll indicated most neighbors oppose the project, said Anne Pringle, head of the Western Prom Neigh-borhood Association.

The Monsours did not attend the meeting, and Pringle said it was “unfortunate” that their repre-

sentatives “had to weather the strength of the oppo-sition and the concerns” from neighbors.

Pringle, a former Portland mayor who has lived in the neighborhood since the 1970s, said residents are worried about parking, noise and other issues on concert nights. There are also questions about what might happen to the church down the road if the zoning change is approved and Monsour sells the building.

“The question is … is that the most appropriate reuse of the structure,” Pringle said yesterday.

The congregation at Williston-West merged with Immanuel Baptist last year, and Monsour bought the church in December for $657,900. At the time, Monsour was told about the restrictive zoning rules in place for the four-tenths acre property.

For Remmel, a local attorney who has lived across the street from Williston-West for more than 30 years, the proposal raises questions about balancing the history and character of the neighborhood with the broader goal of preserving historic buildings.

BY CASEY CONLEYTHE PORTLAND DAILY SUN

The congregation at Williston-West merged with Immanuel Baptist last year, and Frank Monsour bought the Thomas Street church, shown above, in December for $657,900. (CASEY CONLEY PHOTO)

see ZONING page 15

Eyebrows raised over parish rezoning

Page 7: The Portland Daily Sun, Friday, February 3, 2012

THE PORTLAND DAILY SUN, Friday, February 3, 2012— Page 7

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Matt Hanson of Timberland Drywall of Gorham handles some fi nal interior work at Oak Street Lofts. Tonight, during Portland’s First Friday Art Walk, Avesta Housing will hold an open house for Oak Street Lofts, which the housing agency billed as “a new addition to the city’s arts district that features 37 affordable, artist•friendly effi ciency apartments.” (DAVID CARKHUFF PHOTO)

Oak Street Lofts open house

MECA students relish larger-than-life effort

Massive portraits of ordinary people gazing down on Portlanders from res-taurants, offi ce buildings and even the stairs in the Maine College of Art couldn't go unnoticed.

But tonight, the public can pull back the curtain on this attention-grabbing art installation and learn about its origins.

From 5 p.m. to 9 p.m. tonight during the First Friday Art Walk, MECA will host an exhibition, fi lm screening and celebration of the "Inside/Out" project, a temporary public art project that started last fall and sought to share the experiences of "everyday Port-landers, their voices and portraits." A fi lm screening of a documentary by No Umbrella Media about the art installation is scheduled for 7 p.m.

and 8 p.m. Events will take place on the second fl oor of MECA's Porteous Building.

For 16 students in MECA's Public Art class, tonight's Art Walk exhibition will include a virtual walk-through of how the students found their subjects, crafted the looming portraits and arrayed the images in public places.

Jake Michaud and Sarah Capra show a timeline that explains some of the behind-the-scenes work that went into the “Inside/Out” art installation. (DAVID CARKHUFF PHOTO)

BY DAVID CARKHUFFTHE PORTLAND DAILY SUN From 5 p.m. to 9 p.m. tonight during

the First Friday Art Walk, the Maine College of Art will host an exhibition, fi lm screening and celebration of the “Inside/Out” project. Events will take place on the second fl oor of MECA’s

Porteous Building.

see ART page 16

Page 8: The Portland Daily Sun, Friday, February 3, 2012

Page 8 — THE PORTLAND DAILY SUN, Friday, February 3, 2012

The electic East End

We decide to explore the neigh-borhood we will soon be calling home. Even with snow on the ground, Munjoy Hill’s critical mass of shopping, arts, culture, and great food offers plenty of opportunities to get out of the cold. The once rough and gritty neighbor-hood has become one of Portland’s most salty and stylish destinations.

Spared by the Great Fire of 1866, the East End is still home to historic narrow streets and an eclectic archi-tectural mix. From grand mansions to funky Victorian apartments, stately Greek Revivals, and modest shingled homes, the Hill is as diverse as it is fascinating. Check out this neigh-borhood renaissance on the Hidden Gardens tour in the spring. For a bird’s-eye view of Portland and Casco Bay, climb the 86-foot Portland Obser-vatory. Restored and painted a soft colonial red, the wooden tower is open from Memorial Day through Colum-bus Day. The stairs are a great work-out.

Live music, theater, fi lms, and spe-cial events engage audiences year-round at St. Lawrence Arts. Long a work-in-progress, the 1897 stone church sanctuary was torn down, but the surviving Gothic parish hall thrives. Friday Art Walks rock at the St. Lawrence, and the work of a local artist is always on display. “Images of Cuba” by photographer Marta Morse is up this month. Resident Good Theater’s “Next Fall” runs until mid-February — it’s not too late to grab a ticket.

The quirky shops and boutiques on the East End focus on Maine’s inde-pendent art and design culture. Angela Adams’s studio-showroom features brightly colored graphic-print rugs, home furnishings, and chic handbags. Her husband and partner, Sherwood Hamill, also creates his retro-inspired modern furniture onsite. Both Angela and Sherwood feature designs called, “Munjoy.” I’m saving up for her red “Fern” rug and don’t care how long it takes.

Find whimsical housewares, acces-sories, and hand-made paper lighting at Ember Grove. This funky storefront features stylish jewelry and retro-inspired sculptural pieces by Maine artists like Rush Brown. Ferdinand, up the street, may be singlehandedly saving small presses with their col-lection of cards, t-shirts, offbeat jew-elry and vintage fi nds. My daughter bought all of her Valentines at Fer-dinand — I hope she sends me one. The Elizabeth Fraser Gallery has an affordable collection of ever-changing original artwork — she will paint por-traits of your pet for you!

On the East End, chefs crank out creative and hearty fare for breakfast,

lunch, and dinner. I’m unabashedly addicted to the Front Room’s gnoc-chi with poached eggs, pancetta and spinach, delightful at any hour, day or night. This popular spot was one of the fi rst to give the Hill a cozy (and some say, noisy) place to eat. Check out the Maine beer selection at their popular happy hour — if you can fi nd a seat. The Blue Spoon restaurant is a favor-ite for robust fi sh stew and grazing over a meze plate at lunch. Bar Lola is everyone’s special-occasion pick for small plates with big fl avors, plus a great prix fi xe menu and fl exible pric-ing. If you’re feeling especially indul-gent, the chef will cook something just for you.

Across Congress Street, Hilltop Cof-fee’s neighborhood vibe includes a sal-vaged-wood bar, sunny front window, and is some of the most desirable early-morning real estate in town. I’ve done some jockeying for a table myself during “peak” hours. Next door, the Rosemont Market offers fresh-baked bread, pastry, and hefty rustic sandwiches stuffed with local meats and cheeses. The store is lined with grains, spices, and crates of some of the prettiest fruits and vegetables in Portland. Sample their collection of not-too-expensive wines at regular

wine tastings.Another classic and

affordable option is an “Italian” sandwich of ham, provolone, and peppers, pickles, onions, tomatoes, olives and oil from Colluc-ci’s Hilltop Market. With a bag of salt and vinegar chips, the humble Italian is Portland’s grab-and-go staple. And if you’re in need of something sweet, try the new Bakery On The Hill’s chocolate peanut butter brownie — amazing.

Coffee By Design is a locally owned micro-roaster with four coffee houses — two of them in the East End. This thriving business is a deep source of pride to Mainers like me who care about sustainable environmental practices. Don’t miss their coffee tast-ings or “cuppings” throughout the month of February.

And last but not least, iconic Micucci’s anchors the East End from their ances-tral home on India Street. This beloved Italian specialty store captures the essence and fl avors of Portland’s “Little Italy,” with Italian cheeses, cured meats, pesto, olive oil, plus dried and fresh

h a n d - m a d e pasta. Micucci’s bakery also fea-tures addictive Sicilian pizza by baker, Steven Lanzalotta. Get there early to grab a slice of pillowy heaven right out of the oven. A desper-ate queue starts at around 11 a.m. and doesn’t stop until the last slice is sold.

Munjoy Hill’s grassy — now snowy — prom-

enade slopes down to Casco Bay and presides over some of the best all-season views in Portland, perhaps in all of Maine. If there’s a cruise ship in port, “the prom” is an ideal spot to marvel at its size. It makes great sledding in the winter and picnicking in the summer. Families walk with dogs, children, and sleds in tow, while bikers and joggers follow the paved trail along the shore below. The East End is quirky, festive, eco-friendly, delicious, and independent. I think we’ll be very happy there.

(Elizabeth Margolis-Pineo is a writer and creator of “http://Epicuri-ousTravelers.com.)

Travel Local–––––

Elizabeth Margolis-

Pineo

FAR LEFT: The rooftops of Munjoy Hill.LEFT: Affordable art is in abundance at Elizabeth FraserGallery. BELOW: Valentine cards fi ll a rack at Ferdinand. BOTTOM: Lunch at the Blue Spoon. INSET BELOW: Shallots at Rosemont Market. (Photos by Elizabeth Margolis-Pineo)

––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––TRAVEL–––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––

Page 9: The Portland Daily Sun, Friday, February 3, 2012

THE PORTLAND DAILY SUN, Friday, February 3, 2012— Page 9

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A portion of Munjoy Street between Moody and Wilson streets was closed Thursday after a sewer line collapsed, according to

city offi cials, who said the line needing repair dates back to the 1860s. More than 57,000 feet of Portland sewer line is at least

100 years old, according to offi cials. In a separate construction job, due to a water main break, traffi c was being detoured on

Devonshire Street, between Deering Avenue and Noyes Street, the Portland Water District reported yesterday. Crews expected work to continue into the evening hours but conclude by today. The leak was on a 16-inch main, but the cause of the leak was unknown. The district also reported repair work at 15 Common-wealth Drive, off Forest Avenue, and at 378 Sawyer St. in South Portland, between Broadway and Cottage Road. For updates on

district projects, see https://epwd.pwd.org/Leaks/PwdLeaks.aspx. For updates on city projects, visit http://www.ci.portland.

me.us. (MATTHEW ARCO PHOTO)

Water, sewer line work affects streets in Portland, South Portland

Summers scheduled to speak at Maine Chiefs of Police Association awards ceremony, banquet tonight

Maine Secretary of State Charlie Summers will be speaking at an awards ceremony concluding the Maine Chiefs of Police Association’s Annual Ban-quet tonight at 7 p.m. at the Wyndham Hotel, the Secretary of State’s offi ce reported.

The awards are chosen by the Maine Chiefs of Police, Awards Committee. Police chiefs recommend Law Enforcement offi cers, fi refi ghters and civil-ians of the state “who they believe are deserving of awards that commend their heroic acts of lifesaving, bravery or their dedication and outstanding com-mitment to law enforcement.”

For more information on the awards, contact Robert M. Schwartz, Executive Director at 838-6583.

— Staff Report

Page 10: The Portland Daily Sun, Friday, February 3, 2012

Page 10 — THE PORTLAND DAILY SUN, Friday, February 3, 2012

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HOROSCOPE By Holiday Mathis

ARIES (March 21-April 19). The balance of nature requires that noth-ing is “all good.” That’s why you fully appreciate the examples of extreme kindness and integrity that show up in your life today. TAURUS (April 20-May 20). There are things you wouldn’t recommend to your friends or family but that you choose for yourself nonetheless. It’s a function of being intimately acquainted with your own taste and tolerances. GEMINI (May 21-June 21). You appreciate one who is charming and clever, but what you love most is when those qualities are coupled with a large dose of practicality. It’s the doers who change the world. CANCER (June 22-July 22). You’ll be creative. Much of what you dream up would take so much time and energy to pull off, that you’d hardly fi nd joy in it. But there’s at least one idea that you can implement now to instantly improve your life. LEO (July 23-Aug. 22). There is nothing to be resolved in this day’s work. Rather, you’ll get the most out of the day if you keep exploring. You’ll enjoy testing out your various options and courting new ambitions as well. VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22). Plan a trip, preferably involving a plane. An aerial view of your life on earth will have an expansive infl uence on your mind-set. The bigger you think, the bigger you’ll accomplish. LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 23). New pat-terns are forming in your life. It will be nearly impossible to tell where you are in a cycle until you’re reasonably deep in the sequence. Stay aware; assume

the best and march on. SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 21). There will be much that gets lost as people try to relay information verbally. Written correspondence is better, but the best way of all is to show how everything relates in action. SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21). You are being subtly infl uenced to step up your game. You realize that the competition is stiff and that the other players are in it to win. You’ll send quiet signals that say, “Bring it on.” CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19). You might not be entirely proud of your production level thus far this week, but go easy on yourself. You tend to forget that you need recreation in your life, too. AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18). Depending on the route, a step side-ways is sometimes the best way to move up. You could really use a map, at least fi guratively. Ask around to see if anyone knows the lay of the land. PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20). Know what your unique offerings are. Not everyone can do what you’re doing. Others may have the resources, but they don’t think like you, and that’s what makes the difference. TODAY’S BIRTHDAY (Feb. 3). You’re not afraid to surrender yourself to admiration, and your enthusiasm attracts new connections and friends. Financial and personal growth oppor-tunities come to you in March. You’ll stand behind your loved ones in April and cause them to strive. You’ll make a game-changing discovery in May. Leo and Cancer adore you. Your lucky num-bers are: 6, 2, 33, 39 and 50.

ACROSS 1 Prayer before

meals 6 Air pollution 10 Fail to include 14 Refueling ship 15 Chime 16 Cause of woe 17 “Faust” or “Aida” 18 Lowdown 19 Convinced 20 Ceased 22 Went off course 24 Offi cial stamp 25 Population __;

crowdedness 26 Tailors and

seamstresses 29 For the __;

ridiculous 30 Edison’s initials 31 No longer fresh 33 Usual sites for

clothing tears 37 Stomach __;

Tums’ target 39 Child or teen

41 Let fall 42 Midafternoon hour 44 Adjust a clock 46 “__, Sweet as

Apple Cider” 47 Apartments 49 Tree house access 51 Kneecap 54 List of dishes 55 Shocked 56 High-jumping

hoopster’s play 60 Soak up; absorb 61 Black-__ peas 63 Make amends 64 Misplace 65 Tall stalk of marsh

grass 66 Ms. Zellweger 67 Had debts 68 Agile; lively 69 Put clothes on

DOWN 1 “__ grief!” 2 Juicy & ready to

be eaten

3 Beer cousins 4 Moderate red 5 Rubber pencil

ends 6 Sales pitch 7 Repair 8 Clumsy lout 9 Actor Danny 10 __ with; unable to

take one’s mind off of

11 Native New Zealander

12 Bay 13 Child’s bear 21 Delicious 23 Finishes 25 Counts calories 26 “Now!” in the ER 27 Apiece 28 Dam in a river 29 Bessie Smith’s

music 32 Vital artery 34 Parched 35 A la __; topped

with ice cream

DAILY CROSSWORDTRIBUNE MEDIA SERVICES

36 Shadowbox 38 Conquered 40 Hayes or Hunt 43 Perpendicular

add-ons 45 Huge mug 48 Changes a bit 50 Housecoat 51 Mr. Picasso 52 Shining

53 The ones over there

54 Like a garden after the rain

56 Forest animal 57 Sharpen 58 Small bills 59 Pegs for Els 62 Slangy reply

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

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Page 11: The Portland Daily Sun, Friday, February 3, 2012

THE PORTLAND DAILY SUN, Friday, February 3, 2012— Page 11

FRIDAY PRIME TIME FEBRUARY 3, 2012 Dial 8:00 8:30 9:00 9:30 10:00 10:30 11:00 11:30 5 CTN 5 S. Katsos Outlook Comedy Midnight Mausoleum Dungeon

6 WCSHWho Do You Think You Are? Martin Sheen traces his family tree.

Grimm “Organ Grinder” Nick discovers a deadly black market.

Dateline NBC (In Ste-reo) Å

News Tonight Show With Jay Leno

7 WPFOKitchen Nightmares Revitalizing the menu at Park’s Edge. (N) Å

Fringe “Making Angels” A killer uses a toxin from the future.

News 13 on FOX (N) The Office “The Con-vention”

The Office (In Stereo) Å

8 WMTWShark Tank A fragrance that smells like money. (N) Å

Primetime: What Would You Do? (N) (In Ste-reo) Å

20/20 (In Stereo) Å News 8 WMTW at 11 (N)

Nightline (N) Å

10 MPBNWashing-ton Week (N) Å

Need to Know (N) Å

Maine Watch

Inside Washing-ton Å

Michael Feinstein’s American Songbook (N) Å

Charlie Rose (N) (In Stereo) Å

11 WENHPriceless Antiques Roadshow

Antiques Roadshow

Mark Twain Clemens grows up in Missouri. (In Ste-reo) (Part 1 of 2) Å (DVS)

Independent Lens Civil rights activist Daisy Bates. (N) Å (DVS)

12 WPXTNikita “Clean Sweep” Percy holds Oversight members hostage. (N)

Supernatural Attacks in which victims are branded. (N) Å

Excused (N) Å

American Dad Å

It’s Always Sunny in Phila.

That ’70s Show Å

13 WGMEA Gifted Man “In Case of Blind Spots” Michael saves a drowning man.

CSI: NY A role-playing game results in a death. (N) Å

Blue Bloods “The Job” Danny and his family encounter a gunman.

WGME News 13 at 11:00

Late Show With David Letterman

17 WPME College Hockey Monk Å Monk Å Law CI

24 DISC Gold Rush Å Gold Rush (N) Å Bering Sea Gold (N) Gold Rush Å

25 FAM “Ace Ventura” Movie: “Dodgeball: A True Underdog Story” The 700 Club Å

26 USA Law & Order: SVU Law & Order: SVU Law & Order: SVU CSI: Crime Scene

27 NESN College Hockey Instigators Daily Football Daily Football

28 CSNE NBA Basketball New York Knicks at Boston Celtics. (Live) Celtics SportsNet Sports

30 ESPN NBA Basketball New York Knicks at Boston Celtics. (N) NBA Basketball: Lakers at Nuggets

31 ESPN2 NFL Kickoff (N) (Live) SportsCenter Special Boxing Isaac Chilemba vs. Edison Miranda. (N)

33 ION Cold Case “Detention” Flashpoint Å Flashpoint Å Cold Case “Debut”

34 DISN Movie: ›› “Bedtime Stories” (2008) Å Austin Good Luck Jessie Jessie

35 TOON Star Wars Generator King of Hill King of Hill Amer. Dad Amer. Dad Fam. Guy Fam. Guy

36 NICK Sponge. Kung Fu George George ’70s Show ’70s Show Friends Friends

37 MSNBC The Ed Show (N) Rachel Maddow Show Lockup Lockup: Raw

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

40 CNBC American Greed American Greed American Greed Mad Money

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

43 TNT Movie: ››› “Wedding Crashers” (2005) Owen Wilson. Å Franklin & Bash Å Franklin

44 LIFE Amer. Most Wanted Amer. Most Wanted Amer. Most Wanted Amer. Most Wanted

46 TLC Say Yes Say Yes Say Yes Say Yes Four Weddings (N) Say Yes Say Yes

47 AMC Movie: ›››› “Unforgiven” (1992, Western) Clint Eastwood. Å Movie: “Unforgiven”

48 HGTV Million Dollar Rooms Million Dollar Rooms Hunters Hunters Hunters Hunters

49 TRAV Ghost Adventures Ghost Adventures The Dead Files Å Ghost Adventures

50 A&E Shipping Shipping Shipping Shipping Shipping Shipping Shipping Shipping

52 BRAVO Housewives/Atl. Movie: ››› “The Bourne Supremacy” (2004) Matt Damon. Bourne Su

55 HALL Little House on Prairie Little House on Prairie Frasier Frasier Frasier Frasier

56 SYFY WWE Friday Night SmackDown! (N) Å Merlin (N) Å Being Human

57 ANIM Infested! (In Stereo) Infested! (N) (In Stereo) Confessions: Hoarding Infested! (In Stereo)

58 HIST American American American American American American American American

60 BET The Game Together The Game The Game Movie: ››‡ “The Longshots” (2008) Å

61 COM Tosh.0 Tosh.0 Key South Park Tosh.0 Russell John Mulaney

62 FX Movie: ››‡ “Mr. & Mrs. Smith” (2005, Action) Brad Pitt, Angelina Jolie. UFC UFC

67 TVLND Home Imp. Home Imp. Raymond Raymond Cleveland The Exes Raymond King

68 TBS Payne Payne Payne Payne Movie: ›› “The House Bunny” (2008) Å

76 SPIKE Movie: ››‡ “Pirates of the Caribbean: Dead Man’s Chest” (2006) “Fist of the Warrior”

78 OXY House “Safe” Å House “All In” Å House (In Stereo) Å House (In Stereo) Å

146 TCM Movie: ›››› “Gandhi” (1982, Biography) Ben Kingsley, Candice Bergen. Å Passage

––––––– ALMANAC –––––––

ACROSS 1 Part of G.E. 5 Al or Tipper 9 Treaties 14 Type of IRA 15 Nameless auth. 16 Earth pigment 17 Singing groups 19 Old-time actor

Ernest 20 Street-sign abbr. 21 Watch 23 Become ill 26 Brynner of “The

King and I” 27 LSD, for short 28 Sierra Nevada

resort 29 Capital of North

Carolina 31 School founded

by Henry VI 32 __ appetit! 33 Tisiphone’s cohort 36 Miss a step 37 Backup group 39 Govt. med. grp. 40 Basis of

operations

42 Give it a go 43 Blow the whistle? 44 Represent

conventionally 46 “...__ the Lord” 47 Olympian Korbut 49 Winning service 50 Aromatic resins 51 Kenya’s capital 53 Real looker 54 Fathers 55 Nightclub

entertainer 60 China’s Zhou __ 61 Capital of Togo 62 Large fl ightless

birds 63 Examines 64 Pitcher on a

bedstand 65 Northern

Scandinavian

DOWN 1 Fraction of a joule 2 Online chuckle 3 Season in

Burgundy 4 Verify

5 Greek physician 6 Diffi cult concern 7 Hold up 8 Endow with a

spirit 9 Cooking vessels 10 Property holding 11 Group in a loft 12 Roman fountain 13 Gender identifi ed 18 Native Canadian

people 22 Indistinct 23 Precipitous 24 Medical prefi x 25 Broadway

beauties 26 Three Gorges Dam

river 29 Actor/director

Howard 30 They: Fr. 32 Research facility 34 Pledge of

faithfulness 35 Expletives 37 Porker’s pad 38 Shakespearean

contraction

41 Fix one’s eyes upon

43 North Carolinian 45 Frozen

cliffhanger? 46 Part of CBS 47 Beginning 48 ‘’Mule Train’’

singer Frankie 50 Prospector

52 Medical suffi x 53 Agatha Christie’s

title 56 In what way? 57 Thurman of “The

Truth About Cats & Dogs”

58 Eat late 59 Letters for

Kreskin?

Yesterday’s Answer

DAILY CROSSWORDBY WAYNE ROBERT WILLIAMS

Today is Friday, Feb. 3, the 34th day of 2012. There are 332 days left in the year.

Today’s Highlight in History:On Feb. 3, 1959, rock-and-roll stars Buddy

Holly, Ritchie Valens and J.P. “The Big Bopper” Richardson died in a small plane crash near Clear Lake, Iowa.

On this date:In 1783, Spain formally recognized American

independence.In 1865, President Abraham Lincoln and Con-

federate Vice President Alexander H. Stephens held a shipboard peace conference off the Vir-ginia coast; the talks deadlocked over the issue of Southern autonomy.

In 1913, the 16th Amendment to the Constitu-tion, providing for a federal income tax, was rati-fi ed.

In 1924, the 28th president of the United States, Woodrow Wilson, died in Washington, D.C., at age 67.

In 1930, the chief justice of the United States, William Howard Taft, resigned for health reasons. (He died just over a month later.)

In 1943, during World War II, the U.S. trans-port ship Dorchester, which was carrying troops to Greenland, sank after being hit by a German torpedo; of the more than 900 men aboard, only some 230 survived.

In 1959, An American Airlines Lockheed Elec-tra crashed into New York’s East River, killing 65 of the 73 people on board.

In 1971, New York City police offi cer Frank Serpico, who had charged there was widespread corruption in the NYPD, was shot and seriously wounded during a drug bust in Brooklyn.

In 1972, the XI Olympic Winter Games opened in Sapporo, Japan.

In 1991, the rate for a fi rst-class postage stamp rose to 29 cents.

In 1998, Texas executed Karla Faye Tucker, 38, for the pickax killings of two people in 1983; she was the fi rst woman executed in the United States since 1984. A U.S. Marine plane sliced through the cable of a ski gondola in Italy, send-ing the car plunging hundreds of feet, killing all 20 people inside.

One year ago: Tens of thousands of protesters staged unprecedented demonstrations against Yemen’s autocratic president, Ali Abdullah Saleh, a key U.S. ally in battling Islamic militants, as unrest inspired by uprisings in Egypt and Tunisia spread further in the Arab world. Actress Maria Schneider, who was Marlon Brando’s young co-star in Bernardo Bertolucci’s steamy “Last Tango in Paris,” died in the French capital at age 58.

Today’s Birthdays: Comedian Shelley Berman is 87. Football Hall-of-Famer Fran Tarkenton is 72. Actress Bridget Hanley is 71. Actress Blythe Danner is 69. Singer Dennis Edwards is 69. Football Hall-of-Famer Bob Griese is 67. Singer-guitarist Dave Davies (The Kinks) is 65. Singer Melanie is 65. Actress Morgan Fairch-ild is 62. Actress Pamela Franklin is 62. Actor Nathan Lane is 56. Rock musician Lee Ranaldo is 56. Actor Thomas Calabro is 53. Actor-director Keith Gordon is 51. Actress Michele Greene is 50. Country singer Matraca Berg is 48. Actress Maura Tierney is 47. Actor Warwick Davis is 42. Actress Elisa Donovan is 41. Musician Grant Barry is 35. Singer-songwriter Jessica Harp is 30.

Page 12: The Portland Daily Sun, Friday, February 3, 2012

Page 12 — THE PORTLAND DAILY SUN, Friday, February 3, 2012

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

For information about classifi ed display ads please call 699-5807.

CLASSIFIEDS • CALL 699-5807

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Help Wanted

PROFESSIONAL DIRECTORY PROFESSIONAL DIRECTORY

Front Desk & Sales AssociatePossible career opportunity

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Autos

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For Rent

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For Rent-Commercial

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For Sale

1 absolute bargain- Brand newqueen mattress + box spring-$150- Call (207)591-4927.

1 Bretton Woods Ski Lift ticket a$70 value, only $40/obo. Goodany day. Call (603)723-4032.

For Sale

BEDROOM- Solid cherrywoodsleigh bed. Dresser, mirror,chest, night stand. New! Cost$2,200 sell $895. (603)235-1773

CLASSIC Wooden Motorola ste-reo phonic LP player withAM/FM radio from the 1950'sstill works, $100, 723-4032.

COOK Healthy with a Black &Decker Food/ Rice cooker w/ in-struction booklet, hardly used,$15, 723-4032.

CUSTOM glazed kitchen cabi-nets. Solid maple, never in-stalled. Cost $6,000 sacrifice$1,595. (603)833-8278.

Services

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

ESTABLISHED remodeling com-pany- Family rooms, baths,kitchens, painting. Call Phil(207)807-2586.

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I pay cash today for broken andunwanted Notebooks, Net-books, and Macbooks. Highestprices (207)233-5381.

St. Judes - $5

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537 C O N G R E SS ST., ST 404, P O R T L A N D 207-775-4335 • w w w .g o o dm an law firm .co m

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Service Y ou Can Count O n Since 1 981 New Winter Hours: 9–3 • Tue. - Fri.

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The Bradley Foundation of Maine Miracle on 424 Main Street

HOPE Computer Sales and Service Serving Seniors over 55 and the Disabled

Computers starting at $94.40 tax included. Complete with software and a 17” LCD Monitor.

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Starting Date 2nd week of Feb. The Elves’ Playground

Now booking parties for all ages

591-5237 ask for Susan or Jerry for more information

Page 13: The Portland Daily Sun, Friday, February 3, 2012

THE PORTLAND DAILY SUN, Friday, February 3, 2012— Page 13

SHOP THESELOCAL

BUSINESSESTo advertise in our professional directory talk to your ad rep or

contact 207-699-5801 or [email protected]

TH

E CLASSIFIEDSCLASSIFIEDSPROFESSIONAL DIRECTORY PROFESSIONAL DIRECTORY

Prickly City by Scott Stantis

ANNIE’S MAILBOX Dear Annie: I am one of nine children. There is a large age gap between us because my younger siblings are from a second marriage. They are 3, 5 and 7. Since moving out a few years ago, I have begun to see my mother in a different light. As a child, whenever I needed something, I was always told to ask my father because she “didn’t have the money.” I accepted this. However, I now see how often Mom tells her children she doesn’t have mon-ey for them, but somehow fi nds it for herself. She is a very selfi sh person. Several times in the past few years, she has called to say how upset she is that she has no money to get my younger siblings Halloween costumes or school supplies or to send them on fi eld trips. I always step up and offer fi nancial as-sistance. But I am beginning to notice that soon after help-ing her out, Mom somehow fi nds the money to go out to a nice dinner, take a trip or buy a new gadget for herself. I feel used and misled, but when I’ve said so, Mom re-plies that I’m inconsiderate and only care about money. A few times, she has threatened to not let me see my siblings if I keep being so “rude and uncaring.” What should I do? I love my siblings and don’t want to lose contact. -- Sibling Support Dear Sibling: Tell your mother you would be happy to get the kids Halloween costumes and school supplies -- and then go get them. Don’t give the money to Mom if you think she is misusing it. Instead, put it directly where the assis-tance is needed. But do it with the utmost concern and sin-cerity. Dear Annie: I am a woman who doesn’t care much for babies. What do I say to those who expect me to hold their infant? Some people actually thrust their little bundle into my arms without even asking.

I have never had any desire to have children, and I don’t see what the appeal is. Babies are messy, leaky, smelly and noisy, as well as demanding and expensive. I understand that not all women feel as I do, so when I’m around moth-ers, I say nice things about their kids and have positive com-ments when shown pictures. However, these same parents are shocked to learn that I am not as thrilled with their little darlings as they are. Is there a nice way to say, “I think your baby is sweet, but I feel more comfortable when the little tyke is on someone else’s lap”? -- Not a Mommy Dear Not: No matter how nice you are, some people will be offended that you don’t admire their child as much as they do. If they ask you to hold the baby, reply with alarm, “Oh, no, I couldn’t possibly. I’m afraid I would drop it.” If they push the baby toward you, put your hands up and back away. You are under no obligation to participate in this ritual, and if others can’t understand your attitude, so be it. Dear Annie: “Hurt and Confused in Wisconsin” said her husband’s stepmother is emotionally abusive. She had trou-ble reconciling this with the biblical command to honor thy mother and father. I am a minister who has counseled many in this position. “Honor thy mother” means do not speak to or about a par-ent in a disrespectful manner and do not treat them hurt-fully. Do not refuse help for an honest need. Do not exploit or abuse them. However, some people are nasty and cannot be reasoned, pushed or coerced into changing. Catering to their behavior only makes it worse. It is possible to honor thy mother from a distance, so I recommend they have as little contact as pos-sible. I will keep them in my prayers. -- Mishawaka, Ind.

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, 737 3rd Street, Hermosa Beach, CA 90254.

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Page 14: The Portland Daily Sun, Friday, February 3, 2012

Page 14 — THE PORTLAND DAILY SUN, Friday, February 3, 2012

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

see next page

Friday, Feb. 3

Oak Street Lofts open house5 p.m. to 7 p.m. “Oak Street Lofts at 72 Oak St. in Portland offi cially opened on Jan. 17. This newest addition to the Arts District features 37 units of affordable, artist-friendly effi ciency apartments developed by Avesta Housing. By the end of January, nine of the units will be occupied. Avesta is continuing to accept applications for the remaining units.” The public is invited to participate in an open house from 5 p.m. to 7 p.m. during the First Friday Art Walk. Apartment tours will be available and refreshments will be served. The fi rst fl oor gallery will showcase the art of Maine College of Art Woodworking & Furniture Design students. The press is welcome to attend and current tenants, as well as the proj-ect design team, are expected to be available for comment. For more information, call553.7777 or see www.avesta-housing.org/properties/60/Oak-Street-Lofts

Tanja Alexia Hollander: Are You Really My Friend?5 p.m. to 7 p.m. Join the Portland Museum of Art to cele-brate the opening of “Tanja Alexia Hollander: Are You Really My Friend?”. Artist Tanja Alexia Hollander and Museum Director Mark Bessire will be present to answer questions as part of the Museum’s Free Friday Evenings and Port-land’s First Friday Art Walk. This event is part of Portland on Ice, Portland’s Winter Festival Jan. 28-Feb. 4.

First Friday Art Walk at Constellation Gallery5 p.m. to 8 p.m. The Constellation Gallery will be welcom-ing visitors with entertainment, refreshments and, of course, the wide range of original art and reasonably priced prints provided by our eight resident artists and invited contribu-tors. “Check out ‘Symbols of Love,’ our February show on exhibit in the main gallery.” 511 Congress St.

First Friday Art Walk at Mayo St.5 p.m. to 8 p.m. Kat Lamont, printmaker; Zak Taillon, pho-tographer; Liz Hardy, sculptor. Opening reception 5 p.m. to 8 p.m. http://mayostreetarts.org/calendar

‘Lost Trail And Beyond’5 p.m. to 8 p.m. First Friday Art Walk opening of “Lost Trail And Beyond,” illustrations by Ben Bishop, at The Green Hand Bookshop, 661 Congress St., Portland. On display through the month of February. “Ben Bishop gives us a look at some of his original art, including some recently published in Donn Fendler’s ‘Lost Trail,’ an adaptation of Fendler’s classic Maine book, ‘Lost on a Mountain in Maine.’ Ben will be on hand during the opening with copies of his books for a signing, and other portfolio items for your perusal and enjoyment. FMI: Contact Michelle Souliere at 253-6808 or [email protected].

First Friday at the Meg Perry5 p.m. to 8 p.m. First Friday Art Walk at the Meg Perry Center, 644 Congress St., Portland. “This art show presents

the work of clients, staff and consumers affi liated with the Opportunity Alliance (formerly Youth Alternative Ingraham) in Maine. The mission of Youth Alternatives Ingraham is to partner with communities and individuals to deliver a full spectrum of social services and mental health care that begins prenatally and continues throughout the lifespan. Our programs advance healthier lives, happier families, and stronger communities. Some of the art you will see in this show was created in weekly art groups where themes of recovery, hope, empowerment, community, and creativ-ity are used to further delve into complicated stories of struggle in recovery and community empowerment.” http://yimaine.org

First Friday Art Walk with MCMA5 p.m. to 8 p.m. Maine Charitable Mechanic Association display in Mechanics’ Hall Library, “The MCMA Free Draw-ing School, 1875 to 1988.” The event will feature a con-tinuing exhibit of drawings from the MCMA drawing classes of the late 1800s. Architectural drawings of Will S. Aldrich (ca. 1886), who was a student and draughtsman for MCMA; past president and renowned architect John Calvin Ste-vens; along with blueprints and instruction samples from the Free Drawing School of Mechanical and Architectural drawing classes. Also on exhibit are instructor log books of students and bios of the instructors. 519 Congress St. www.mainecharitablemechanicassociation.com

Fourth annual Downtown Showdown cancelled5:30 p.m. until 7 p.m. Sunday River and Sugarloaf resorts and the city have cancelled the fourth annual Downtown Showdown rail jam event in Portland’s Monument Square.

‘Le Harve’ at the PMA6:30 p.m. Movies at the Museum, Portland Museum of Art. Friday, Feb. 3, 6:30 p.m.; Saturday, Feb. 4, 2 p.m.; Friday, Feb. 10, 6:30 p.m.; Saturday, Feb. 11, 2 p.m.; Sunday, Feb. 12, 2 p.m. NR. “In this warm-hearted portrait of the French harbor city that gives the fi lm its name, fate throws young African refugee Idrissa (Blondin Miguel) into the path of Marcel Marx (André Wilms), a well-spoken bohemian who works as a shoe shiner. With innate optimism and the unwavering support of his community, Marcel stands up to offi cials doggedly pursuing the boy for deportation.” www.portlandmuseum.org/events/movies.php

Mad Horse Theatre Company’s ‘Becky Shaw’ 8 p.m. Mad Horse Theatre Company presents “Becky Shaw,” “the Pulitzer Prize fi nalist and smash hit by Obie Award winning playwright Gina Gionfriddo. In what The New York Times calls ‘a comedy of bad manners,’ a woman fi xes up her romantically challenged best friend with her husband’s mysterious co-worker. The date goes horribly awry, forcing the matchmakers to examine their own rela-tionship and leading the daters to an emotional detente.” Written by Gina Gionfriddo, directed by James Herrera. Tickets are $22 student/senior $20. The Maine Premiere of “Becky Shaw” marks the fi rst time Mad Horse Theatre Company has produced a work by Gionfriddo. It also marks the directorial debut of company member James Herrera, who jumped at the chance to helm a cast made up entirely of Mad Horse Theatre Company members. According to Herrera, the cast made his transition from actor to director easier than it could have been. Thursday, 7:30 p.m.; Friday and Saturday, 8 p.m.; Sunday, 2 p.m. Lucid Stage. http://madhorse.com/gallery/show/becky_shaw.php

Artist Tanja Alexia Hollander photographed more than 600 Facebook “friends” in their homes all over the world. The result is a collection of portraits “that create a window into the home as each subject defi nes it.” Hollander and Portland Museum of Art Director Mark Bessire will be present today at 5 p.m. to answer questions as part of the Museum’s Free Friday Evenings and Portland’s First Friday Art Walk. (COURTESY IMAGE)

An AFL-CIO union representative stands in Monument Square beyond an OccupyMaine sign. On Sunday, Feb. 12, at 1 p.m., Andrew Bossie, executive director of Maine Citizens for Clean Elections, will join members and friends of Allen Avenue will present Occupy Maine, “Money And Politics,” a talk at Allen Avenue Unitarian Universalist Church, 524 Allen Ave., Portland. The conversation is about the origin, meaning, importance, and future of the Occupy Maine movement. (DAVID CARKHUFF FILE PHOTO)

Page 15: The Portland Daily Sun, Friday, February 3, 2012

THE PORTLAND DAILY SUN, Friday, February 3, 2012— Page 15

well-known and highly respected fi rms," Pratt said. Pratt said he received a copy of the initial

responses from these three fi rms Thursday, and that the board would hold a special meeting on Monday at 8 a.m. to talk about the proposals.

The Civic Center board will request a more formal proposal including a bid from the preferred com-pany and offi cials will negotiate a fee with that fi rm, Pratt said.

"If they're all in the same range, we may end up interviewing all three of them," he said.

Tentative date for interviews is Friday, Feb. 17."We'll do our due diligence and we'll pick the fi rm

that we think will do the best job," Pratt said.On Dec. 21, the Civic Center board selected WBRC

Architects/Engineers and Sink Combs Dethlefs as the architects and engineers for the renovation job.

Surveyors have worked on establishing baseline data about the existing building, which is over 34 years old. The architects will construct plans in col-laboration with the construction manager, which is the equivalent of a general contractor, Pratt said. Building plans will be fi nalized and adopted, and the county's design and construction teams will need to "get on the same page" to establish a formal plan, Pratt said. Then, there will be the decision of how long to close the Civic Center.

"I do want to have a sense pretty quickly, hopefully in the next couple of months at minimum, of what we're looking at for a construction schedule," Pratt said.

Calling the candidate construction managers "three terrifi c fi rms," Pratt said, "It's obviously an

ambitious project."The portfolios of the respective companies include

several high-profi le renovation projects.Consigli Construction Co. Inc. refurbished and

expanded the Bowdoin College Museum of Art, in a $20.8 million renovation and expansion that was completed in 2007.

Cianbro built the six-level parking garage at the Portland International Jetport; renovated and remodeled a 32,000-square-foot retail store for L. L. Bean in Columbia, Md.; and managed the architec-tural and engineering design and the construction of L.L. Bean’s 457,000-square-foot, two-story distribu-tion center in Freeport.

Wright-Ryan Construction Inc., among its credits, renovated and expanded the historic Knox County Courthouse in Rockland, at a cost of $4.46 million.

RENOVATION from page 3

Tentative date for interviews with companies is Friday, Feb. 17

“As to abutters, they are almost uniformly opposed to it, and they are frightened,” he said. “Would the city, for the purpose of saving a city building, (oppose) a neighborhood?”

Remmel said the current proposal would inject business and entertainment uses into a neighbor-hood that for more than 30 years has had restrictive zoning aimed at preserving the character of historic residential homes. He’d rather see the property be used solely for housing.

During a recent phone conversation with Prin-gle and Remmel, Monsour was “very up front” with his plans to use the site for offi ces and a for-profi t concert venue. Although the conversation was cor-dial, Remmel said both sides “agreed to disagree” on future uses for the church.

Monsour’s company, Majella Global, previously rented offi ce space in the Time and Temperature Building in downtown Portland. The company website said yesterday that the new U.S. headquar-ters for the company is at 32 Thomas St.

Attempts to reach Monsour yesterday were not successful. A woman who answered the phone directed a reporter to another executive, who did not return a phone call.

The zoning application fi led with the city offers broad ideas for the church if the contract zone were approved, but no specifi c plans. For instance, it’s not clear what sort of concert venue the sanctuary would become, how many people it would hold, or where they would park. Also unclear is how many people would work from Majella’s offi ces.

Even without opposition from the neighborhood — which has numerous homes and condos valued

at $500,000 or more — getting approval for the con-tract zone might be tough. Some planning board members and city councilors are becoming increas-ingly skeptical of patchwork zoning that results from contract zones.

Indeed, one city councilor said this week that the proposal was “DOA,” meaning dead on arrival.

ZONING from page 6

Remmel said both sides ‘agreed to disagree’ on future uses

First Friday Free Film Series8:30 p.m. The Meg Perry Center, 644 Congress St., Port-land, welcomes the public to “Renaissance 2.0,” “to free humanity from imperial control.” “The video chronicles how we are approaching the end of the current basis of western civilization — the debt-based monetary system. Come watch this video series, ‘Renaissance 2.0,’ which explores ways that our lives will be profoundly changed as we approach the end of post-Enlightenment rationalism. Bring a refreshment and a snack to share. Join in a lovely discussion following the presentation. Free and open to the public.” For further information call Occupy Maine at 221-5899.

Saturday, Feb. 4

Race Up Boston Place8 a.m. On-site registration at One Boston Place begins for the Race Up Boston Place. Registration fee is $50 in addi-tion to the $100 fundraising minimum. “In 2009 and 2010, the Local 740 Portland Fire Department returned to Maine with the Race Up Boston Place fi refi ghter trophy in tow. In 2011, the guys were defeated by the Needham Fire Depart-ment, by a mere 18 seconds.” Next year, the Portland team will be back. “The race to the top this coming February is sure to be exciting. The 2012 Race Up Boston Place stair-climb will be held on Feb. 4 at One Boston Place in the Mellon Financial Building. Sponsors for the event include: CB Richard Ellis, Aeropoint Security Enterprises, WZLX 100.7, Mix 104.1, Captivate Network, Boston Magazine, and Whole Foods Market. All participants are responsible for a $35 registration fee as well as a $100 fundraising mini-mum. All proceeds benefi t lung disease research, advocacy and programs as well as anti-tobacco and clean air initia-tives in Massachusetts. Visit www.climbofyourlife.org for more information.

Year of the Dragon10:30 a.m. The Chinese and American Friendship Asso-ciation of Maine will ring in the Year of the Dragon at its new venue, the Westbrook Performing Arts Center, 471 Stroudwater Street, Westbrook, starting at 10:30 a.m. The

new venue has a huge auditorium and plenty of parking. As usual, at 11 a.m., the CAFAM Chinese School students’ Chinese dance program will highlight the festivities. The Riverview Foundation will present lively martial arts dem-onstrations. There will be lots of children’s activities includ-ing several tables with fun arts and crafts as well as face painting. Adults can enjoy a panel discussion, featuring Eliot Cutler, on the mutual importance of China and Amer-ica today. Maine author Susan Conley will read from her new book Foremost Good Fortune and will do a book sign-ing. You can learn to play Mah Jong and attend Chinese cooking demonstrations, Yummy Chinese food provided by BubbleMainea and dumplings by the Chinese School. Vendors will be selling craft items from China and books related to China. Admission: Adults $6, Children under 12 $4, Children 2 and under free. CAFAM members: Adults $4, Children $3. Family: $20. Go to www.cafammaine.org.

Adoptable dogs in Scarborough 11 a.m. to 1 p.m. Join the Animal Welfare Society Mobile Adoption Team and visit with some adoptable canines at the Pet Quarters, 486 Payne Road, Scarborough. For more information, call Animal Welfare Society at 985-3244 (www.animalwelfaresociety.org) or Pet Quarters at 885-5005.

‘Puss ‘n Boots’11 a.m. This winter, Acorn Productions’ “Fairy Tale Play-ers,” an ensemble of children, teens and adults who have studied at the Acorn Acting Academy, continues its third season of productions with Producing Director Michael Levine’s adaptation of “Puss ‘n Boots.” “The production is suitable for audiences of all ages, and centers around the story of a clever cat who helps her mistress win the love of a prince by pretending to be the Marquis de Carrabas. Along the way, we meet a crazy cast of characters including spoiled sisters, a foolish hare, and a lonely ogre. Acorn’s comedic version of the well-known fairy tale is directed by Karen Ball, and the script includes references to King Lear and the Occupy Wall Street Movement for the more sophisticated audience members. There are eight actors ranging in age from 9 to 17 in the show, which runs from Jan. 28 to Feb. 12 in the Acorn Studio The-ater in Westbrook.” Saturday, Feb. 4 at 11 a.m.; Sunday, Feb. 5 at 2 p.m.; Saturday, Feb. 11 at 11 a.m.; Sunday, Feb. 12 at 2 p.m. Acorn Studio Theater, Dana Warp Mill, 90 Bridge St., Westbrook. Admission: $8 adults; $6 kids 12 and under. FMI: www.acorn-productions.org or 854-0065.

13th Annual Sleigh Day in N. Yarmouthnoon to 3 p.m. Skyline Farm hosts its 13th Annual Sleigh Day, in conjunction with its new exhibit, “Winter Transpor-tation: From Horse to Horseless.” The cost is $8, or $30/family, which includes a sleigh ride given by J. L. Gray & Son of Monmouth and his pair of Percherons. The event is free for Skyline Farm members, sleigh drivers, and children ages 5 and under. Dress warmly.The museum exhibit, also open on Sundays from 1-4 p.m., Feb. 5 through March 25, features such horse-drawn vehicles as a 1780s Pleasure Wagon, Fid-dler Gig, Doctors Gig, Van Tassel, Maine State Prison made Concord Buggy, Surrey, Bronson, Extension Top Phaeton, and a Rockaway along with a special side exhibit: “Canadian Sleighs”, on loan from Willowbrook Museum. Storm date is Sunday, Feb. 5. For more information, call Lynn at 899-5837 or Pam at 829-5708. Skyline Farm, a nonprofi t organization, is located at 95 The Lane, North Yarmouth.

Dan Zanes and Friends1 p.m. Dan Zanes and Friends Family Series presented by Portland Ovations at Hannaford Hall, University of Southern Maine. This show is sold out. “Dan Zanes & Friends create fun-fi lled, rockin’ interactive dance parties wherever they go, performing exuberant, handmade 21st-century music that transcends language, genre, and age.”

Valentine’s Day with the Rat Pack7 p.m. Anthony’s Dinner Theater and Cabaret presents a Val-entine’s Day show, “A Tribute to the Rat Pack.” $39.95 per person includes free rose for every lady plus fi ve-course dinner. Show starts at 7 p.m. Call 221-2267 for reserva-tions. Free parking, handicap accessible. www.anthonys-dinnertheater.com

‘Next Fall’ by Good Theater7:30 p.m. “Next Fall” by Geoffrey Nauffts, Jan. 25 to Feb. 19. “Good Theater presents the Maine premiere of this recent Best Play Tony Award nominee. A charming, funny and touching play about life and love from one of the writers of the hit TV series, Brothers & Sisters.” Directed by Brian P. Allen and starring Joe Bearor, Rob Cameron, Matt Delamater, Moira Driscoll Abbie Killeen and Tony Reilly. St Lawrence Arts Center, 76 Congress St. Wednesdays 7 p.m. ($15), Thursdays 7 p.m. ($20), Fridays 7:30 p.m. ($20), Saturday 7:30 p.m. ($25), Sundays 2 p.m. ($25) with a special added matinee on Sat-urday, Feb. 11, 3 p.m. ($20). 885-5883.

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from preceding page

“As to abutters, they are almost uniformly opposed to it, and they are frightened. Would

the city, for the purpose of saving a city building, (oppose) a neighborhood?” —

Charles Remmel, who lives across from the former church

Page 16: The Portland Daily Sun, Friday, February 3, 2012

Page 16 — THE PORTLAND DAILY SUN, Friday, February 3, 2012

"It's been a really good experi-ence," said Jake Michaud, one of the students involved in "Inside/Out." "We've been able to work with such an eclectic number of individuals from the community. From talking to people and talking to them about the project and what we've been trying to do, they're like, 'Oh yeah, we've totally noticed one of those posters or one of those banners.' So it defi nitely has caught some eyes."

MECA partnered with TedxDi-rigo, a group of innovators and "change-makers," to launch the project and fi nd spaces to display the portraits. The original idea came from French street artist JR, who envisioned massive self-por-traits of ordinary people and their stories and visions.

Last fall, MECA students embarked on Maine's version of the global art project. "The temporary public art project featured voices and portraits shared on the streets of Portland, on the web, and on the radio," according to MECA.

Sarah Capra, one of the students involved, recalled how people would come up to her during outdoor installations.

"We had a lot of people who stopped to talk to us and asked us what we were doing, and then we got to ask them what they would like to see changed about Portland," she recalled.

Michaud said, "The city itself is just a well of untapped creative opportunity and potential, part of

what this project is all about is tap-ping into that and exposing things that are not normally recognized or seen."

Installations at Brian Boru and Thompson's Point were "wonderful examples of how we were able to work with some community mem-bers and people who own these sites, they were so excited about the project and just so open to letting us install and working with us," Michaud said.

Capra added, "There's that huge possibility of failure, but we worked so hard together and so well as a team, that we managed to get everything done, and it all came out so awesome."

The Public Art class also included Gianna Caranfa, Kyle DiMare, Jodi Ferry, Kristin Fitzpatrick, Madi Gantos, Peter Hyde, Isabel Kelley, Ellie Little, Liz Long, Sara Moser, Zack Nelson, Sarah Oppelt, Stephie Farrell and Agee Tibke.

Local participants in MECA's Inside/Out project included the city of Portland, Creative Trails, Culti-vating Community, Parkside Neigh-borhood Center, Company of Girls, The Telling Room, the Institute of Contemporary Art at MECA, Mark Marchesi, Pete Nenortas, Michael Berube, Parallax Partners, No Umbrella Media and Winky Lewis.

RIGHT: Jodi Ferry, one of the Maine College of Art students who participated in the “Inside/Out” public art project, walks past one of the portraits on the stairs at MECA. (DAVID CARKHUFF PHOTO)

ART from page 7

MECA student says art installation ‘defi nitely has caught some eyes’