the portland daily sun, friday, october 28, 2011

16
FRIDAY, OCTOBER 28, 2011 VOL. 3 NO. 190 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 A voice for every Portlander Paid for by Carmona for Mayor, Vana Carmona, Treasurer, PO Box 15111, Portland, ME 04112 Mayoral money race getting clearer Campaign finance reports aren’t due to City Hall until this afternoon, but early lings suggest that, when all is said and done, some mayoral candidates will spend $50,000 or more on the election. Financial reports filed ahead of today’s deadline showed Michael Brennan raised $41,075, not including a $5,000 loan he made to his campaign on Oct. 26. Charles Bragdon raised $1,135, Richard Dodge raised $1,985, according to their respective filings. Meanwhile, a political action commit- tee called The Portland Committee for Economic Development has launched in recent weeks to help elect Jed Rathband. According to its filing with the city, the group has already spent $11,200 in sup- port of Rathband’s campaign, including about $10,000 in radio ads. The PAC’s officers are former school board candidate Frank Gallagher, devel- oper Drew Swenson and artist Daniel Pepice, the filing indicates. Lawmakers want better gas pump data AUGUSTA – Members of the legisla- ture’s Agriculture, Forestry and Conser- vation Committee yesterday got some answers to questions about accuracy of gas pumps in the state Thursday, but were told the outdated database used by the Bureau of Weights and Measures could not answer all their questions. “I just got the error rate information this morning, “Hal Prince, Director of the Bureau said in an interview follow- ing the meeting. “I am going to ask if they can tell me how much of that is over delivering and how much is under delivering, but I don’t know when or if I will get answer.” He told the panel that after news accounts indicated several stations in dif- ferent parts of the state had been over- charging and undercharging consumers; the Offi ce of Information Technology was asked to determine an error rate from the Weights and Measure’s inspec- tion records. They provided a report that indicated that in 2010 the agency tested 8,214 gas nozzles and 432 were malfunc- tioning for an error rate of 5.26 percent. Rep. Jeffrey Timberlake, R-Turner, asked Prince how much of the error rate was attributed to pumps over-delivering see GAS PUMPS page 9 BY MAL LEARY CAPITOL NEWS SERVICE Milestone Foundation, pictured at center, is one of two local shelters affected by changes to federal reimbursement claim rules (CASEY CONLEY PHOTO). Portland’s social service providers are scrambling to meet new federal guide- lines due to be take effect Monday, saying an already serious situation with home- less shelters in the city is about to get worse. Beginning Nov. 1, changes to federal reim- bursement claims for certain facilities that provide refuge for the city’s homeless will force two local shelters to turn away dozens of people. The new rules will impact the Mile- stone Foundation and Serenity House, offi - cials said. The federal mandate — which forces the two shelters to remove a combined 60 beds — means adding additional people to other shelters already “bursting at the seams,” says John Shoos, a chairman of the Portland’s Emergency Shelter Assessment Committee. Shelters in ‘crisis’ amid rule change BY MATTHEW ARCO PORTLAND DAILY SUN see SHELTERS page 9 Brennan raises $41K but spends most of it; PAC spends $11K on Rathband radio spots BY CASEY CONLEY PORTLAND DAILY SUN see MONEY page 6

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The Portland Daily Sun, Friday, October 28, 2011

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Page 1: The Portland Daily Sun, Friday, October 28, 2011

FRIDAY, OCTOBER 28, 2011 VOL. 3 NO. 190 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

A voice for every Portlander Paid for by Carmona for Mayor, Vana Carmona, Treasurer, PO Box 15111, Portland, ME 04112

Mayoral money race getting clearerCampaign fi nance reports aren’t due to

City Hall until this afternoon, but early fi lings suggest that, when all is said and done, some mayoral candidates will spend $50,000 or more on the election.

Financial reports filed ahead of today’s deadline showed Michael Brennan raised $41,075, not including a $5,000

loan he made to his campaign on Oct. 26. Charles Bragdon raised $1,135, Richard Dodge raised $1,985, according to their respective filings.

Meanwhile, a political action commit-tee called The Portland Committee for

Economic Development has launched in recent weeks to help elect Jed Rathband. According to its filing with the city, the group has already spent $11,200 in sup-port of Rathband’s campaign, including about $10,000 in radio ads.

The PAC’s officers are former school board candidate Frank Gallagher, devel-oper Drew Swenson and artist Daniel Pepice, the filing indicates.

Lawmakers want better gas pump data

AUGUSTA – Members of the legisla-ture’s Agriculture, Forestry and Conser-vation Committee yesterday got some answers to questions about accuracy of gas pumps in the state Thursday, but were told the outdated database used by the Bureau of Weights and Measures could not answer all their questions.

“I just got the error rate information this morning, “Hal Prince, Director of the Bureau said in an interview follow-ing the meeting. “I am going to ask if they can tell me how much of that is over delivering and how much is under delivering, but I don’t know when or if I will get answer.”

He told the panel that after news accounts indicated several stations in dif-ferent parts of the state had been over-charging and undercharging consumers; the Offi ce of Information Technology was asked to determine an error rate from the Weights and Measure’s inspec-tion records. They provided a report that indicated that in 2010 the agency tested 8,214 gas nozzles and 432 were malfunc-tioning for an error rate of 5.26 percent.

Rep. Jeffrey Timberlake, R-Turner, asked Prince how much of the error rate was attributed to pumps over-delivering

see GAS PUMPS page 9

BY MAL LEARY CAPITOL NEWS SERVICE

Milestone Foundation, pictured at center, is one of two local shelters affected by changes to federal reimbursement claim rules (CASEY CONLEY PHOTO).

Portland’s social service providers are scrambling to meet new federal guide-lines due to be take effect Monday, saying an already serious situation with home-less shelters in the city is about to get worse.

Beginning Nov. 1, changes to federal reim-bursement claims for certain facilities that provide refuge for the city’s homeless will

force two local shelters to turn away dozens of people. The new rules will impact the Mile-stone Foundation and Serenity House, offi -cials said.

The federal mandate — which forces the two shelters to remove a combined 60 beds — means adding additional people to other shelters already “bursting at the seams,” says John Shoos, a chairman of the Portland’s Emergency Shelter Assessment Committee.

Shelters in ‘crisis’ amid rule changeBY MATTHEW ARCO

PORTLAND DAILY SUN

see SHELTERS page 9

Brennan raises $41K but spends most of it; PAC spends $11K on Rathband radio spots

BY CASEY CONLEYPORTLAND DAILY SUN

see MONEY page 6

Page 2: The Portland Daily Sun, Friday, October 28, 2011

Page 2 — THE PORTLAND DAILY SUN, Friday, October 28, 2011

Global markets jump on Europe’s Greek debt deal(NY TIMES) — Stocks rallied around the

world on Thursday, pushing the broader market in the United States back onto positive ground for the year, after Euro-pean leaders reached a deal to spread the pain of restructuring Greece’s debt and try to bring the crisis in the euro zone under control.

While the deal helped to restore confi -dence to the fi nancial markets, analysts noted that questions remained about how it would be implemented. They also wor-ried that fully fi xing the problems of exces-sive debt and weak growth could take years.

Still, after days of anticipation, the mar-kets put whatever uncertainties remained behind them, at least for now. Financial stocks in particular were up more than 6 percent.

The Dow Jones industrial average soared 339.51 points to close up 2.86 percent at 12,208.55, while the broader Standard & Poor’s 500 index was up even more, 3.43 percent, at 1,284.56 and the Nasdaq com-posite index rose 3.32 percent to 2,738.63.

The S.&P. moved into positive territory for the year on Thursday, up about 2.1 per-cent. The Dow was up more than 5 percent and the Nasdaq more than 3 percent for the year.

Stocks closed up as much as 6 percent in Europe, after a strong showing in Asia.

It was a marked turn-around from just a few weeks ago, when anxiety over the European debt crisis helped push Wall Street to the brink of a bear market. On Oct. 3, the S.&P. 500 was down 19.4 per-cent from its high on April 29.

The latest news from Europe came early Thursday, when offi cials from the Euro-pean Union and the International Mon-etary Fund reached a deal with bankers to write down the face value of their Greek debt by 50 percent, hoping to reduce the ratio of the country’s debt to gross domes-tic product to 120 percent by 2020. Econo-mists believe that is essential if Greece is not to default on its loans.

Offi cials also agreed that European banks would need to raise more capital and said they would increase the euro zone bailout fund to $1.4 trillion, a move that they hope will provide the capacity neces-sary to keep Italy and Spain from follow-ing Greece’s painful path.

“The most important outcome is it seems to remove from the table fears of an immi-nent bank crisis,” said David Joy, chief market strategist for Ameriprise Finan-cial. “What this does is it buys Europe time to do the hard work of initiating structural reforms.”

But like others, he injected a note of cau-tion: “It addresses the symptoms, but not the disease. They need to follow through,

there is no question.”Economists noted that the deal Thurs-

day was but the latest in a series of such agreements addressing the debt crisis, which are usually followed by gains, then losses in the fi nancial markets.

After the last deal was struck in July, for example, stocks and bonds in Europe and the United States gave it a positive recep-tion. But the sentiment soon turned and markets failed to sustain their gains. The S.&P. in the United States fell below 1,300 after about a week. and eventually sank to its lowest level for the year.

“Overall, then, while the plans represent a step forward, we suspect that they will soon be viewed in the same way as every other policy response during this crisis — as too little, too late,” Jonathan Loynes, an economist with Capital Economics, wrote in a research note.

He said he still expected a “prolonged recession in the euro zone,” further market turbulence, and continued to have doubts about the future of the euro itself “in its current form.”

The Euro Stoxx 50 index, a barometer of euro zone blue chips, closed up 6.1 per-cent, while the FTSE 100 index in London gained 2.9 percent. In Paris, the main index was up 6.3 percent, while Frankfurt’s was 5.35 percent higher.

Financial shares led European indexes.

Economicgrowth speeds up

(NY TIMES) — Eco-nomic growth in the United States picked up in the third quarter, the Commerce Depart-ment said Thursday, in an encouraging sign that the recovery, while still painfully slow, has not stalled.

Total output grew at an estimated annual rate of 2.5 percent from July to Septem-ber, still modest but almost double the 1.3 percent rate in the second quarter, the department reported.

The pace, however, was not brisk enough to recover the ground lost in the economic bust, lower unemploy-ment or even substan-tially dispel fears of a second recession.

Banks reassured by deal; Italy remains a worryFRANKFURT (NY TIMES) — European banks

may win back a measure of confi dence from a plan that would compel them to arm themselves for a plunge in the value of Greek debt.

The mandatory recapitalization was one of the main achievements of European leaders’ summit meeting that ran into the early hours Thursday in Brussels. But it will not be enough to erase doubts about banks’ creditworthiness and restore their access to international money markets, analysts said.

The big problem is that Italy, with its dysfunc-tional politics and nearly 2 trillion, or around $2.8 trillion, in outstanding debt, has supplanted Greece as the biggest threat to European banks and the big-gest source of investor anxiety.

If Italy were to have trouble servicing its debt, no amount of fresh capital could protect the European banking system.

“Everything depends on Italy,” said Lüder Gerken, director of the Center for European Policy in Freiburg, Germany. “If Italy goes under, a recapital-ization won’t do anything.”

“Italy has to make fundamental reforms,” he added. If not, “then the euro is history.”

Like most of what emerged from Brussels, the plan to strengthen banks was seen as good, but not quite good enough.

The measures start to address the fragility of the European banking system, one of the core elements of the debt crisis. Continental banks generally have lower reserves than their U.S. counterparts, making

them less able to absorb losses from their holdings of government bonds or other troubled assets.

As a result, many European banks have been cut off by U.S. money market funds and other wholesale lenders, and have become dependent on emergency funds provided by the European Central Bank.

The recapitalization plan would compel 70 Euro-pean banks to raise an estimated 106 billion by mid-2012, according to the European Banking Authority, which will oversee the drive.

They will be required to hold reserves equal to 9 percent of the money they have at risk. And they will be required to recognize market losses in their holdings of government bonds.

Banks would also get government guarantees to help them issue bonds for longer periods, though details remain to be worked out.

Analysts said the guarantees were one of the most positive aspects of the plan because they would help provide banks with a steadier source of funds.

Banks can increase their reserves by hanging on to profi ts rather than distributing them to share-holders, or by selling assets to reduce overall risk. As a last resort, they can turn to their governments or the euro zone rescue fund. But most will do any-thing to avoid the government involvement and the accompanying restrictions on executive pay that would result.

“One thing goes without saying: We do not intend to make use of public funds,” Eric Strutz, the chief fi nancial offi cer of Commerzbank in Frankfurt, said in a statement.

Page 2 — THE PORTLAND DAILY SUN, Friday, October 28, 2011

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

–––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––– DIGEST––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––Cities begin crackdown on ‘Occupy’

protests

SAYWHAT...It’s no fun to pro-test on an empty

stomach.”—Michael Bloomberg

OAKLAND, Calif. (NY Times) — After weeks of cau-tiously accepting the teem-ing round-the-clock protests spawned by Occupy Wall Street, several cities have come to the end of their patience and others appear to be not far behind.

In Oakland, in a scene reminiscent of the antiwar protests of the 1960s, the police fi lled downtown streets with tear gas late Tuesday to stop throngs of protesters from re-entering a City Hall plaza that had been cleared of their encampment earlier in the day.

Those protests, which resulted in more than 100 arrests and at least one life-threatening injury, had appeared ready to ignite again on Wednesday night as supporters of the Occupy movement prom-ised to retake the square, where the encampment site was fenced off.

After about an hour of speeches, the crowd removed the fences around the site. The number of protesters swelled to about 3,000 people, but the demon-stration remained peaceful. Leaders led a series of call-and-response chants. “Now the whole world is watching Oakland,” was one phrase that was repeated as pass-ing cars honked in approval. The police had gone, com-pared with a heavy presence the night before.

The offi cial protest broke up around 10 p.m. local time, peacefully, with protesters dancing, carrying American fl ags and generally celebrat-ing what seemed to be a well-attended demonstration.

Shortly after the end of that protest, however, hundreds of demonstra-tors began to wander down Broadway, Oakland’s cen-tral thoroughfare, in an unplanned march. The Oak-land police, who had been noticeably absent during the protests at City Hall, began donning protective riot gear as demonstrators chanted and tried to board Bay Area Rapid Transit trains. Sev-eral entrances to the BART system were closed, agitat-ing protesters and adding to an increasingly tense atmo-sphere in Oakland, which had exploded in violence a mere 24 hours earlier.

The impromptu march con-tinued west toward Oakland’s waterfront as it became more apparent that there was little central organizing structure.

About 10:25 p.m., a crowd of a thousand protesters arrived at Oakland’s police headquarters and began mill-ing about. Some tried to put garbage cans in the street, while others beseeched the crowd to remain peaceful.

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Page 3: The Portland Daily Sun, Friday, October 28, 2011

THE PORTLAND DAILY SUN, Friday, October 28, 2011— Page 3

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NYPD offi cers face ticket-fi xing charges(NY TIMES) — Prosecutors on

Thursday began notifying more than a dozen New York City police offi cers that they must surrender by midnight to face charges in a long-running inves-tigation into the widespread practice of fi xing tickets for colleagues, family members and friends, several people with knowledge of the matter said.

Most of the 16 offi cers who are expected to face charges are offi cials in the union that represents offi cers, the Patrolmen’s Benevolent Associa-tion, the city’s largest police union, the people said. Also among those facing charges are two sergeants and a lieu-tenant, the people said.

The accusations against the men, one of the people said, were included in several indictments containing a total of as many as 1,000 counts. Ten of the offi cers were expected to be charged with multiple counts of fi xing tickets, while six were expected to be charged with unrelated corruption counts, the people said.

The ticket charges will involve more than 300 traffi c summonses that were fi xed, one of the people said, noting that about 800 instances of ticket-fi xing arose during the three-year inquiry.

The alleged crimes unrelated to ticket-fi xing include narcotics cor-ruption, covering up an assault and, in the case of a lieutenant who had been assigned to the Internal Affairs Bureau and worked on the case in its early stages, leaking information about it to union offi cials, the people have said. The lieutenant is expected to be charged with a misdemeanor.

Five civilians were also expected to be charged in the case, including two drug dealers, one of the people said.

The investigation began in Decem-ber 2008 with an anonymous com-plaint that an offi cer in the 40th Precinct, in the Bronx, was providing protection for a drug dealer, several of the people have said. After investiga-tors developed enough information to obtain a court-ordered wiretap on the offi cer, they began hearing conversa-tions about fi xing tickets, the people said.

A grand jury in the case heard from about 80 witnesses over about six months, the people said. They voted over a period of several weeks, with the ticket-fi xing charges including grand larceny, tampering with public records, conspiracy and offi cial miscon-duct, the people said.

GLBT group endorses Strimling for mayor

The DownEast Pride Alliance, a gay and gay friendly business-networking group in Southern Maine, has endorsed Ethan Strimling for mayor of Portland.

In its latest newsletter, the alliance said it was “proud to stand behind Ethan Strimling for Mayor.”

“His commitment and support of the gay community is without precedent. With the best chance for winning, Ethan Strimling has our back on GLBT issues,” the group said in a statement.

The group noted that Strimling ran Dale McCormick’s campaign for Con-gress in 1996 when she came within 2,000 votes of being the fi rst out les-bian in Congress. In 1998, he joined the Executive Committee of Maine Won’t Discriminate, as it tried to beat back the People’s Veto

of Maine’s ENDA (Employment Non-Discrimination Act). In 2008, he joined the board of Equality Maine and chaired the legislative committee as it passed Equal Marriage through the Maine Legislature. He continues his service on the Board as they try to fi nish the job in gaining marriage rights for all people.

“As Mayor of Portland, equality will always be front and center for Ethan as he looks for ways to ensure that all Portland people are treated equally,” the alliance’s founders wrote.

“I am honored to have the confi dence and support of the (Downeast Pride Alliance) as we enter the fi nal weeks of my campaign,” Strimling said in a statement. The group “stands for equal-ity, civil rights and fairness, issues that affect everyone in this city and this state. They will continue to be impor-tant as we work to bring more jobs and more economic equality to Portland.”

Gift card start-up gets $12M investment

Porltand-based gift card start-up CashStar announced this week that it has secured $12 million in new fund-ing. The company said in a statement that the funding would support its continued expansion into the digital gifting business, a rapidly growing segment of the $90 billion plus gift card market.

The investment was led by FTV Capital and included existing inves-tors Steven Boal, president and CEO of Coupons.com, and Passport Capital. The funding will be used to help drive continued adoption of digital gifting and grow CashStar’s retail brand network, which includes Starbucks, Gap, Best Buy, Williams-Sonoma, The Home Depot, Staples and nearly 200 other companies.

“We know from the recent RSR Research report and other data that consumers and businesses crave more personal and convenient ways to send digital gifts. CashStar’s digital plat-form makes this possible for the fi rst time,” said David Stone, CEO of Cash-Star.

Sea Dogs founder and media executive dies

Daniel Burke, who had successful career as a media executive before buying the Portland Sea Dogs, passed away this week. He was 82.

The cause was complications of Type 1 diabetes, according to a state-ment by the family, which has been powerful in American business and mass communications.

Mr. Burke is survived by Harriet “Bunny” Burke, his wife of 54 years, four children; Steve Burke of Phila-delphia, PA, Frank Burke of Chat-tanooga, TN, Sally McNamara of Wellesley, MA and Bill Burke of Cape Elizabeth, ME, and fourteen grand-children.

A visitation service will be held at the Graham Funeral Home, 1036 Post Road in Rye, New York on Sunday, October 30 from 3:00pm to 7:00pm. The funeral service will take place at St. Martha Church, 30 Portland Road, Kennebunk, Maine on Tuesday, November 1 at 11:00am.

In lieu of fl owers, his family requests that donations be made to Maine Medical Center, The Partnership for a Drug Free America, and the Naomie Berrie Diabetes Center at Columbia University Medical Center.

The New York Times contributed to this article.

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

Page 4: The Portland Daily Sun, Friday, October 28, 2011

Page 4 — THE PORTLAND DAILY SUN, Friday, October 28, 2011

“ALL political lives, unless they are cut off in midstream at a happy juncture, end in failure,” wrote Enoch Powell, the contro-versial but often perspicacious British politician, “because that is the nature of politics and of human affairs.” But the political lives of tyrants play out human affairs with a special intensity: the death of a democratic leader long after his retirement is a pri-vate matter, but the death of a tyrant is always a political act that refl ects the character of his power. If a tyrant dies peacefully in bed in the full resplendence of his rule, his death is a the-ater of that power; if a tyrant is executed while crying for mercy in the dust, then that, too, is a refl ection of the nature of a fallen regime and the reaction of an oppressed people.

This was never truer than in the death, last week, of Col. Muammar el-Qaddafi . The only difference between his death and those of so many other tyrants across history was that it was fi lmed with mobile phones, a facility unavailable to contem-poraries of, say, the Roman emperor Caligula.

Despite brandished phones and pistols, there was some-thing Biblical in the wild scene, as elemental as the deaths of King Ahab (“the dogs licked up his blood”) and Queen Jezebel (thrown off a palace balcony). It was certainly not as terrible as the death of the Byzantine emperor Andronicus I, who was beaten and dismembered, his hair and teeth pulled out by the mob, his handsome face burned with boiling water. In modern times, it was more frenzied than the semi-formal execution, in 1989, of the Romanian dictator Nicolae Ceausescu, but not as terrible as the ghastly lynching, in 1958, of the innocent King Faisal II of Iraq (age 23) and his hated uncle, who were sup-posedly impaled and dismem-bered, their heads used as soccer balls. In 1996, the pro-Soviet former president of Afghanistan,

N a j i b u l l a h , was castrated, dragged through the streets and hanged.

Western lead-ers and intel-lectuals fi nd Colonel Qad-dafi ’s lynching distasteful — Bernard-Henri Lévy worried it would “pollute the essential morality of an insurrect ion” — yet there are sound politi-cal reasons for the public cull-ing of the self-p r o c l a i m e d king of kings. Colonel Qad-dafi ’s tyranny was absolutist, m o n a r c h i c a l and personal. The problem with such dic-tatorships is that as long as the tyrant lives, he reigns and terrorizes. As Churchill put it, “dictators ride to and fro upon tigers from which they dare not dismount.”

Only death can end both the spell to bewitch and the preroga-tive to dominate — and some-times, not even death can snuff out power. “The terror inspired by Caligula’s reign,” wrote Sue-tonius, “could be judged by the sequel.” Romans were so terri-fi ed of the emperor that it was not enough to assassinate him. They wanted to see him dead: fearing it was a trick and lack-ing cellphone footage, they had to be convinced. The mile-long line of Libyans who were keen to see Colonel Qaddafi ’s cadaver in its shop-refrigerator-tomb would understand this perfectly.

When Catherine the Great overthrew her husband, Peter III, in 1762, she knew that if anything happened to him, she would be blamed. Yet her entou-rage, led by her lover, Grigory Orlov, realized that as long as

he lived, he remained the legiti-mate autocrat: they strangled him. His body was displayed to prove that he was dead, but nonetheless, Peter III impostors tormented Catherine for the rest of her life. Henry IV experienced similar troubles after the death of Richard II; a host of pretend-ers haunted the usurper.

But such comebacks may be history: the cellphone videos, which show Colonel Qaddafi being beaten, and later, the bullet holes in his dead body, rob his last followers of the mys-tique necessary to lead an insur-gency in his name, charged with all the excitement of a (Saddam Hussein-style) heroic leader on the run. His preposterously exu-berant cult of personality was surely shattered by the spectacle of his pathetic demolition.

Sometimes the killing of tyrants is specially designed to echo the leader’s vices. Shajar al-Durr, an Egyptian sultan’s widow who became (uniquely in

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Dictators get the deaths

they deserveBY SIMON SEBAG MONTEFIORE

THE NEW YORK TIMESOp-Ed Contributor

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

We welcome your ideas and opinions on all topics and consider every signed letter for publication. Limit letters to 300 words and include your address and phone number. Longer letters will only be published as space allows and may be edited. Anonymous letters, letters without full names and generic letters will not be published. Please send your letters to: THE PORTLAND DAILY SUN, [email protected]. You may FAX your letters to 899-4963, Attention: Editor.

We want your opinions

Hastening slowly through fall

see next page

Caterpillars have begun to appear outside my mudroom door. They look barely animate and thickly pelted, like moss creeping up the door frame in indi-vidual inches. I wonder about the feel of caterpillar fur, but some natural caution keeps me from touching them. They are a great improvement over the slugs and the millipedes that crept up the door all summer long. The slugs looked like thick, muddy drops of gelatinous rain. There is no analogy for the millipedes. I pretend not to know they are there.

After months of rain, there is a bright sky overhead. The chickens lie in blobs of sun. The milkweed has blown, and the sun now sets in the southwest corner of the pasture. Among the humans, there is a sudden yearning for wood-stove gaskets and log-splitters. We hold off on lighting that fi rst fi re, because once it’s burning the smell of wood smoke will lead us by the nose into winter.

There is so much to be done, and yet the tempta-tion is to just sit in the sun and listen to the hickory nuts falling. A fl ight of sugar maple samaras — their winged seeds — has already landed. Chipmunks, which always seem to be rushing somewhere, pause and eat a maple seed.

Every evening at dusk, fi ve turkeys come down from the woods. They begin as substantial beings — still enough light for that — but soon become shad-ows, ghosting across the clover and rye, bringing a wildness with them. I always wish that when they catch sight of me, they will stand and perhaps nod in my direction. But no. They lift their skirts and hasten through the gate until they fi nd the right distance to resume their minute inspection of the pasture. They keep me at the edge of some turkey-horizon. I watch in hopes of being watched back. Perhaps I already am.

BY VERLYN KLINKENBORGTHE NEW YORK TIMES EDITORIAL

Op-Ed Contributor

Page 5: The Portland Daily Sun, Friday, October 28, 2011

THE PORTLAND DAILY SUN, Friday, October 28, 2011— Page 5

Muslim history) a sultan in her own right, was noto-rious for her extravagance. When she murdered her new husband in 1257, his concubines beat her to death with her own clogs — both a sign of Arab contempt and the medieval equivalent of death by stiletto. It was said that Edward II, notorious for homosexual relationships with his favorites, was killed with a red-hot poker. The upside-down sus-pension of the dead Mussolini with his mistress in a town square signaled the end of his pretensions to Caesarian heroism and Casanovan machismo.

For someone who so thrived in the age of tele-vision, an impresario of many a circus of public violence, Colonel Qaddafi faced an entirely fi tting end. When he asked his frenzied killers, who had known no other ruler in their lives, “Do you not know the difference between right and wrong?” he had already taught them the answer. We may call this auto-tyrannicide. The manically terrifying but ruthlessly brilliant Mamluk sultan Baibars I, was more literally a victim: according to some accounts, he regularly poisoned his guests until, in 1277, he absentmindedly downed a glass of poisoned fer-mented camel’s milk himself. During the Crusades, the Atabeg of Mosul and Aleppo (in today’s Iraq and part of Syria), Zangi, who liked to castrate the children of enemies, and possibly his boy lovers as well, was supposedly stabbed in his bed by one of those humiliated eunuchs. When Stalin suffered a stroke in 1953, he had recently arrested dozens of doctors for treason. He lay in his own urine for more than 12 hours before his henchmen dared to call a doctor. He was not murdered — like Colonel Qaddafi , he was the author of his own destruction.

There is no greater achievement for the tyrant — short of immortality — than to die in his own bed. He must control the time, place and consequence of death. This is possible with a gradual illness. “Now Herod’s sickness greatly increased upon him ... God’s judgment upon him for his sins,” wrote Josephus about the king of Judea. “His entrails had ulcers ... an aqueous and transparent liquor had settled itself around his feet and the bottom of his belly. His genitals were rotting and gave birth to worms.” Yet the suppurating Herod managed to kill one rebellious son and arrange the succession of three more before succumbing.

Unlike monarchs, who pass power to their heirs at the moment of death to ensure the survival of the regime, tyrants must simply survive as long as possible. Hence inhumane struggles by indefati-gable doctors to keep ailing dictators — Chairman Mao, Leonid I. Brezhnev, Marshal Tito, General Franco — alive. Only the ingenious North Koreans have solved this problem by declaring Kim Il-sung immortal, perpetual president.

The courtiers of modern tyrants have sought to avoid the inconvenience of death by creating new hereditary monarchies. Outside the Arab world, the Kims of North Korea, Kadyrovs of Chechnya, Kabi-las of Congo and Aliyevs of Azerbaijan all achieved this dictator’s dream. Few in the Arab world have done the same. Hafez al-Assad of Syria, who ruled from 1970, died in his bed in 2000, passing the presidency to his son Bashar. Colonel Qaddafi , Mr. Mubarak and Mr. Hussein all dreamed of it. But the spoiled heirs of such hereditary tyrannies usu-ally lack the talent of their fathers.

ALL tyrannies are virtuoso displays over many years of cunning, risk-taking, terror, delusion, nar-cissism, showmanship and charm, distilled into a spectacle of total personal control. Tyrants are the greatest of all actor-managers — omnipotent impresarios. They will last only as long as prestige, prosperity and a vestige of justice are maintained. Uninhibited bloodletting can also work — as Bashar al-Assad and Iran’s supreme leader, Ayatol-lah Ali Khamenei, have demonstrated — until luck eventually runs out in the shape of treason, outside interference or a tsunami of rebellion like the Arab Spring. It is hard to imagine that there would be anything but giblets left if those two now fell into the hands of their people.

If a tyrant cannot die in his own bed, the best he can do is try to stage manage his downfall, because such characters fi nd it unthinkable to exist without ruling. Colonel Qaddafi , like many others, was so narcissistic that he fi rst denied the fact of the revo-lution before embracing his own reckless, heroic role, the drama of the last stand: “I have set my life upon a cast,” says Shakespeare’s Richard III, “and I will stand the hazard of the die.” Colonel Qaddafi could have saved his family and thousands of lives by retiring to a villa and later facing the Interna-tional Criminal Court. Yet the narcissist envisages his downfall only as a mise-en-scène featuring his followers, family and country, consumed in his bonfi re of egomaniacal nihilism. Colonel Qaddafi must have planned to die in battle like Richard III and Macbeth, or to kill himself. Yet this monstrous

poseur totally bungled his own death.The master class in the death of tyrants was given

by Hitler who, even as Russian legions fought their way into Berlin, kept control long enough to plan and execute his testament, marriage and suicide: control to the end in a kerosene-fueled garden Göt-terdämmerung. But not even he achieved the bril-liant dignity of the death of Charles I, denounced as a “man of blood” by his Puritan tormentors, whose grace before execution set a standard that Colonel Qaddafi could only dream of: “I am a martyr of the people,” he said before facing the ax. “I go from a corruptible to an incorruptible crown where no dis-turbance can be, no disturbance in the world.”

Simon Sebag Montefi ore is the author of “Jerusa-lem: The Biography.”

from preceding page

Page 6: The Portland Daily Sun, Friday, October 28, 2011

Page 6 — THE PORTLAND DAILY SUN, Friday, October 28, 2011

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PACs are not required to disclose where they get their funds and are not subject to the same contribu-tion limits as individuals and busi-nesses. Under state law, the most a business or individual can give to a municipal candidate is $350.

Pepice said in an interview that much of the money the group raised came from the “business commu-nity in Portland and from a range of individuals and upstart busi-nesses who feel same way we do.”

He did not say how much money the group has raised to date.

“We intend to spend every dollar we have to spread our message,” he said, adding, “For this race, I am feeling like we are going to put every cent we have behind our win-ning candidate, Jed Rathband.”

Rathband, who was endorsed this

week by the Portland Community Chamber’s PAC, has not filed a campaign finance report with City Hall.

These fi nance reports list fund-raising activities from the date can-didates began their campaigns until Oct. 25 and expenses. Candidates won’t have to fi le another campaign fi nance report until Dec. 20.

Campaign finance reports are closely watched in any campaign by political observers and the media, who use them to guage a candi-date’s overall viability.

Fundraising and donations speak to a candidate’s overall level of sup-port, Ted O’Meara, who ran Eliot Cutler’s 2009 gubernatorial cam-paign, said recently.

For much the same reason, can-didates keep close tabs on how much their opponents have raised, and how much money they have to

use between now and Election Day, which is Nov. 8.

According to Brag-don’s fi nance report, he raised $120 from two donors and gave $1,015 of his own money. Most of the money Bradgon lent himself was spent on campaign adver-tisements in a weekly

newspaper he launched this summer called the Portland Maine Gazette. He has $0 cash on hand, according to his report.

Dodge’s report shows $1,140 in cash donations from seven people, a $350 in-kind dona-tion from Samuel’s Bar and Grill and $50 he gave himself. He also raised $645 in cash donations under $50.

Dodge has spent $1,460, including $30.60 to TD Bank for campaign checks and $35.00 to TD Bank for an overdraft charge and has $524.90 cash on hand.

Brennan’s report shows $37,125 in donations of more than $50 and another $3,950 in donations of $50 or less. As of Oct. 25, he had spent $26,722 and had $14,352 on hand.

But According to a supple-mental 24-hour report he filed with the city on Oct. 27, Brennan has loaned his cam-paign $5,000, which was not listed on the campaign filing. This 24-hour report also shows a $18,920 expense to CG Direct, of Portland, for “mail house services.”

Ethan Strimling, who did not file

a report with the city yes-terday, has submitted two 24-hour reports.

One report filed Oct. 27 showed a $5,420 expenditure to Baldacci Communications, which is run by Bob Baldacci, brother of former Democratic governor John Baldacci. The other report, also filed Oct. 27, showed a $10,541 expen-diture to Daylight Commu-nications, of Ipswich, Mass., for direct mail, printing and portage services.

In a press release, Ralph Carmona said he raised $12,500 for his campaign, although he has not yet filed a report with City Hall.

Other candidates either did not return a phone call seeking comment on fund-raising or declined to discuss fundraising.

“We’re going to wait to release our numbers tomor-row when we officially report,” said Strimling, who added, “we feel very con-fident about our relative financial position going into the final two weeks.”

Candidates have until 4:30 p.m. today to file reports

with the city clerk’s office.

MONEY from page one

Bragdon

Brennan

Dodge

Fundraising totals shed light on a candidate’s overall appeal

Ex-aides describe chaotic Cain campaign If Herman Cain feels his man-

agement skills are up to any chal-lenge, some of his former staff members think he should have started with the disorder in his own campaign.

Mr. Cain has hardly shown up in New Hampshire and Iowa, they said, spending the bulk of his time on a book tour through the South. He occasionally mishandled

potential big donors or ignored real voters. His campaign churned through the small staff; last week, his campaign announced the appointment of the veteran cam-paigner Steve Grubbs, his third Iowa leader in four months.

Even bumper stickers have been hard to come by.

And then there was that e-mail to the staff about traveling in a

car with Mr. Cain: “Do not speak to him unless you are spoken to,” the memo said.

“I found it odd,” said a former staff member who liked to prep Mr. Cain for appearances while driving. The aide, who spoke on the condition of anonymity, quit not long afterward, citing the e-mail as a deciding factor.

—The New York Times

Page 7: The Portland Daily Sun, Friday, October 28, 2011

THE PORTLAND DAILY SUN, Friday, October 28, 2011— Page 7

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Page 8: The Portland Daily Sun, Friday, October 28, 2011

Page 8 — THE PORTLAND DAILY SUN, Friday, October 28, 2011

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Slapping at Syria, Turkey shelters anti-Assad fi ghtersANTAKYA, Turkey — Once one

of Syria’s closest allies, Turkey is hosting an armed opposition group waging an insurgency against the government of President Bashar al-Assad, providing shelter to the com-mander and dozens of members of the group, the Free Syrian Army, and allowing them to orchestrate attacks across the border from inside a camp guarded by the Turkish military.

The support for the insurgents comes amid a broader Turkish cam-paign to undermine Mr. Assad’s government. Turkey is expected to impose sanctions soon on Syria, and it has deepened its support for an umbrella political opposition group known as the Syrian National Coun-cil, which announced its formation in Istanbul. But its harboring of lead-ers in the Free Syrian Army, a mili-tia composed of defectors from the Syrian armed forces, may be its most striking challenge so far to Damas-cus.

On Wednesday, the group, living in a heavily guarded refugee camp in Turkey, claimed responsibility for killing nine Syrian soldiers, including one uniformed offi cer, in an attack in restive central Syria.

Turkish offi cials describe their relationship with the group’s com-mander, Col. Riad al-As’aad, and the 60 to 70 members living in the “offi -cers’ camp” as purely humanitarian. Turkey’s primary concern, the offi -cials said, is for the physical safety of defectors. When asked specifi cally about allowing the group to organize military operations while under the protection of Turkey, a Foreign Min-istry offi cial said that their only con-cern was humanitarian protection

and that they could not stop them from expressing their views.

“At the time all of these people escaped from Syria, we did not know who was who, it was not written on their heads ‘I am a soldier’ or ‘I am an opposition member,’ ” a Foreign Ministry spokesman said on the con-dition of anonymity in keeping with diplomatic protocol. “We are provid-ing these people with temporary resi-dence on humanitarian grounds, and that will continue.”

At the moment, the group is too small to pose any real challenge to Mr. Assad’s government. But its Turkish support underlines how combustible, and resilient, Syria’s uprising has proven. The country sits at the intersection of infl uences in the region — with Iran, Hezbollah in Lebanon, Saudi Arabia and Israel — and Turkey’s involvement will be closely watched by Syria’s friends and foes.

“We will fi ght the regime until it falls and build a new period of sta-bility and safety in Syria,” Colonel As’aad said in an interview arranged by the Turkish Foreign Ministry and conducted in the presence of a For-eign Ministry offi cial. “We are the leaders of the Syrian people and we stand with the Syrian people.”

The interview was held in the offi ce of a local government offi cial, and Colonel As’aad arrived protected by a contingent of 10 heavily armed Turk-ish soldiers, including one sniper.

The colonel wore a business suit that an offi cial with the Turkish For-eign Ministry said he purchased for him that morning. At the end of the meeting, citing security concerns, the colonel and a ministry offi cial advised that all further contact with his group be channeled through the

ministry.Turkey once viewed its warm ties

with Syria as its greatest foreign policy accomplishment, but relations have collapsed over the eight months of antigovernment protests there and a brutal crackdown that the United Nations says has killed more than 3,000 people.

Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan of Turkey was personally offended by Mr. Assad’s repeated failure to abide by his assurances that he would undertake sweeping reform. Turkish offi cials predict that the Assad government may collapse within the next two years.

“This pushes Turkish policy further towards active intervention in Syria,” said Hugh Pope, an analyst with the International Crisis Group. He called

Turkey’s apparent relationship with the Free Syrian Army “completely new territory.”

“It is clear Turkey feels under threat from what is happening in the Middle East, particularly Syria,” said Mr. Pope, who noted that in past speeches Mr. Erdogan “has spoken of what happens in Syria as an internal affair of Turkey.”

Turkish offi cials say that their gov-ernment has not provided weapons or military support to the insurgent group, and that the group has not directly requested such assistance.

Still, Colonel As’aad, who thanked Turkey for its protection, made it clear that he was seeking better weapons, saying that his group could infl ict damage on a Syrian leadership that has proven remarkably cohesive.

BY LIAM STACKTHE NEW YORK TIMES

Col. Riad al-As’aad, the commander of the Free Syrian Army, thanked Turkey for its protection and made it clear that he was seeking better weapons. (NY TIMES/ ED OU PHOTO)

Page 9: The Portland Daily Sun, Friday, October 28, 2011

THE PORTLAND DAILY SUN, Friday, October 28, 2011— Page 9

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“That’s just an incredible, incredible bump,” he said, refer-ring to the additional space that will be needed.

The directive comes from the Centers for Medicare and Med-icaid Services, CMS, and passed through by the state’s Department of Health and Human Services. The change means CMS will no longer reimburse the roughly $2 of every $3 dollars for certain ser-vices that it has in the past.

“If those (beds are not) avail-able then it puts pressure on other shelters where they’re already full,” Shoos said.

The Emergency Shelter Assess-ment Committee helps tracks shelter occupancy in the city.

Shoos says an average of 350 people a night were sleeping at a Portland shelter in June. The already high number has increased to about 384 people per night in September.

“We’ve been in overfl ow now for quite some time,” he said, referring to term used for hous-

ing additional people when the regular sleeping areas hit max capacity.

“We are using the facilities that should only really be used tempo-rarily,” Shoos said. “In the last six months it’s just been incredibly diffi cult.”

Nearly 34 percent of people entering Portland shelters are homeless for the fi rst time, accord-ing to committee reports.

A conglomerate of social service providers have been scrambling for a solution and say a temporary Band-Aid fi x would likely involve moving the homeless to the Preble Street shelter.

“This is a crisis on top of a situ-ation where we’ve been seeing increasing numbers of individuals experiencing homelessness,” said Doug Gardner, director of Port-land’s Health and Human Ser-vices Department.

“It’s on top of the situation where we’re already into overfl ow and we’re already over capacity for emergency sheltering,” he said. “The best that we can come up with so far is to use Preble Street’s

day shelter.”The plan means opening the

Oxford Street shelter during the day and then ushering people to Preble Street’s day shelter later on in the day, said Jon Brad-ley, associate director at Preble Street.

“This is an emergency plan,” he said. “We’ve been using overfl ow pretty much every night for most of this year, … (but) it’s the only option that we’ve come up with, so far.”

Bradley explained that, if nec-essary, Preble Street may use its dining hall as a sleeping area if overfl ow goes beyond maximum capacity.

“It’s going to be challenging,” he said. “We’ve been working on this and we will continue. We see this Band-Aid as very short term.”

As of Thursday afternoon, discussions were still ongoing in an effort to fi nd more per-manent solution. Offi cials said they expected future collabora-tive efforts between the city and Portland’s various social service groups.

SHELTERS from page one

Rule change adds to pressure on city shelters

and how much was attributed to pumps under-delivering gasoline to consumers. Prince said he could not answer that question.

“I wish I had better information, but unfortunately I don’t,” Prince said.

He told lawmakers he gets lim-ited data from the existing pro-gram. He said he would like to use the data the inspectors gather to aid in the scheduling of inspec-tions or in analyzing if there are any trends that should be investi-gated.

“I will try to get that information from OIT,” or Offi ce of Information Technology, Prince said.

He got a quick comment from Rep. Dean Cray, R-Palmyra, on that statement.

“Good luck with that,” he said. Cray is sponsor of a bill to abolish OIT and have each agency handle their technology needs. He claims to have heard numerous com-plaints about OIT.

“After listening to what was said today there is no way to say if there is any out right fraud so to speak, “ said Sen. Roger Sher-man, R-Houlton, co-chairman of the committee. “I think just to make every one’s mind a little

easier they probably should con-tinue to push the IT people to get a system that works better than this.”

He said committee members read the published comments of Agriculture Commissioner Walter Whitcomb that the Department was working to fi x the problem and they are taking him at his word.

“We know it is a problem and we are working to fi x it,” Whitcomb said two weeks ago, “Believe me, it is a high priority.”

Prince gave the panel an over-view of the inspection process that is carried out by both state inspectors and local sealers hired by municipalities. He also showed the panel a $500 spe-cially made fi ve-gallon stainless steel container used to measure accuracy of gas pumps. He also said he has been given approval to replace a broken device used to measure octane content in fuel.

“We have been only testing when we have had a consumer complaint,” he said, “and that is expensive, about $150 a test. This will allow us to do spot checks on octane content again, and not just spot checks of nozzle accuracy,”

Prince said replacing the old system, which is used to track all of the inspections done by his staff, is not as simple as it sounds. He said he is working with OIT to fi nd a software program that not only will replace the old system he uses but can be used by other inspectors within the Department of Agriculture.

“We are talking with several vendors, “he said, “We are also looking at a system that appears to be universally accepted through-out the state and that may be the solution.”

Prince said any new system will have a cost to buy and implement and that will be a budget issue for Commissioner Whitcomb and the legislature.

“We need to be able to move all the data we have in the existing database to any new system, “he said. “It is very important to have all of that history to use in a new system.”

Rep. Peter Edgecomb, R-Cari-bou, the co-chairman of the panel, said it will be up to the committee to make sure the existing system is fi xed or replaced. He also shared the concerns raised about OIT and its operations.

“We are going to have to ride herd on this, “he said.

GAS PUMPS from page one

State looks to boost accuracy at the gas pumps

Page 10: The Portland Daily Sun, Friday, October 28, 2011

Page 10 — THE PORTLAND DAILY SUN, Friday, October 28, 2011

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HOROSCOPE By Holiday Mathis

ARIES (March 21-April 19). You wouldn’t mind hearing about how bril-liant you are, and yet, strangely, those around you are not mentioning it today. Here’s your astrologer, picking up the slack: You are brilliant! TAURUS (April 20-May 20). Choose your teachers carefully. Kindness and intelligence go hand in hand. Further-more, anyone who is supposedly wise but doesn’t know how to love is a fraud. GEMINI (May 21-June 21). As you expand emotionally and physically, note that the very nature of stretching is that it goes beyond the usual range of motion. That said, it doesn’t have to actually hurt to do you some good. CANCER (June 22-July 22). You’ve been known to keep lists of important things, and yet lately you’ve fallen out of the habit. It’s true that you can remember quite a lot; however, you’ll feel much freer if you commit the items to paper instead. LEO (July 23-Aug. 22). The outside world is cacophony. You have to close the doors to get some peace. Also, some people in your life are quite noisy, though you may not notice this until they leave. You’ll experience fi rst-hand why silence is golden. VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22). You get the impression that the authority fi gures don’t know what’s going on, at least not completely. You have a better view of the day-to-day realities at the ground level, and there is opportunity in this position. LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 23). The solution to today’s problems will be a synthesis of information from various people. Instead of asking “who” is right, you ask “what” is right. And you realize that there is not one person who holds all of the correct answers.

SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 21). There’s a reason why most organiza-tions appoint one person to be the leader and not an entire group of people. Committees can be more trou-ble than they are worth. You’ll see an illustration of this today. SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21). You realize that you don’t have to own things in order to get good use out of them. You’ll do everything you need to do using what is borrowed, rented or available to the public. How conve-nient! CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19). You have a knack for turning a neces-sity into an object of loveliness. The total satisfaction of seeing the manifes-tation of your idea will be well worth the effort you put forth in its development. AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18). Justice never sleeps. It will be crucial to your own sleeping patterns that you sort out an unjust situation in your waking hours. Do what it takes to keep your own conscience clear, and encour-age others to do the right thing, too. PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20). You will inspire and empower the people around you. The best part is that you don’t have to be in charge of things for this dynamic to happen. You simply contribute in a way that others admire. TODAY’S BIRTHDAY (Oct. 28). This year you solve small problems, and big ones solve themselves. With your own brand of practical magic, you’ll turn a dysfunctional scene into a highly profi t-able scenario. A key introduction hap-pens in November, and it’s amazing how one person can expand your hori-zons. Invest in yourself and your talent in May. Aries and Gemini people adore you. Your lucky numbers are: 19, 3, 22, 48 and 20.

ACROSS 1 Mouselike

insectivore 6 Down the __; at a

late date 10 Folded over 14 Crown 15 Not working 16 “...lived happily __

after.” 17 Long-plumed

heron 18 Mothers of fawns 19 Deep wet mud 20 At any time 22 Develop 24 Miner’s fi nds 25 Oiled 26 Reese or Herman 29 Made of a cereal

grain 30 Find a sum 31 Rough __;

preliminary version 33 Mountaintops 37 Near

39 Less risky 41 Eat 42 Take an extra base 44 Adjust an alarm 46 Actress __

Thompson 47 Henry VIII’s royal

house 49 __ hound; long-

eared dog 51 Char 54 Lahr or Parks 55 Growth of alga

and fungus 56 From dusk till

dawn 60 Poker bet 61 Killer whale 63 Home of snow 64 Forest animal 65 Grave 66 Small bony fi sh 67 Singer/actor

Nelson __ 68 Peepers 69 __ over; delivers

DOWN 1 One-dish meal 2 On drugs 3 Seldom seen 4 Previously, to a

poet 5 Irrigated 6 Carousels and

roller coasters 7 Stench 8 Stein contents 9 Sahara or Gobi 10 Lamented 11 Misfortunes 12 Chutzpah 13 Cornered 21 Swerves 23 Biden, for short 25 Fence openings 26 Skillets 27 Correct text 28 Margin 29 Bid 32 Burr or Spelling 34 Feels sick 35 Leg joint

DAILY CROSSWORDTRIBUNE MEDIA SERVICES

36 Chair or bench 38 Fish __; site for

developing and breeding

40 Refuse to obey 43 Gospel writer 45 Sully 48 Signify; mean 50 Mark of shame or

discredit

51 Part of a sword 52 Like school paper 53 Performed 54 Tattles 56 Pinnacle 57 Narrow valley 58 __ on to; clutch 59 Little children 62 Singer Orbison

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

Solution and tips at

www.sudoku.com

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Yesterday’s Answer

Page 11: The Portland Daily Sun, Friday, October 28, 2011

THE PORTLAND DAILY SUN, Friday, October 28, 2011— Page 11

FRIDAY PRIME TIME OCTOBER 28, 2011 Dial 8:00 8:30 9:00 9:30 10:00 10:30 11:00 11:30 5 CTN 5 S. KatsosOutlookComedyMidnight MausoleumDungeon

6 WCSHChuck Morgan helps Chuck with a surprise. (N) Å

Grimm “Pilot” Nick Burkhardt discovers he is a Grimm. (N) Å

Dateline NBC (In Ste-reo) Å

News Tonight Show With Jay Leno

7 WPFOKitchen Nightmares Ramsay visits a Califor-nia eatery. (N) Å

Fringe “Novation” Nina Sharp visits Walter in the lab. (N) Å

News 13 on FOX (N) The Office “Counsel-ing” Å

The Of-fice “Ben Franklin”

8 WMTWExtreme Makeover: Home Edition “McPhail Family” (N) Å

Extreme Makeover: Home Edition “McPhail Family” (N) Å

20/20 (N) (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

Great Performances: Miami City Ballet Dances Balanchine and Tharp (N) (In Stereo) Å

Charlie Rose (N) Å

11 WENHPriceless Antiques Roadshow

Antiques Roadshow

Great Performances: Miami City Ballet Dances Balanchine and Tharp (N) (In Stereo) Å

loopdiver: Journey

Independent Lens Fred Fay’s fight for disability rights. (N) Å

12 WPXTNikita “343 Walnut Lane” Finding Nikita’s father. (N) Å

Supernatural Evil clones of Sam and Dean are created. (N)

Excused (N) Å

American Dad Å

It’s Always Sunny in Phila.

That ’70s Show Å

13 WGMEA Gifted Man Michael runs into a former patient. (N) Å

CSI: NY “Get Me Out of Here!” A fraternity prank leads to a death.

Blue Bloods “Black and Blue” A call from a church leads to trouble.

WGME News 13 at 11:00

Late Show With David Letterman

17 WPME College HockeyMonk Serial-killer case. Monk (In Stereo) Å Discovery

24 DISC Gold Rush (N) Å Gold Rush (N) Å Flying Wild Alaska (N) Gold Rush Å

25 FAM “The Addams Family” Movie: ››‡ “Addams Family Values” (1993) The 700 Club (N) Å

26 USA NCIS “Hide and Seek” Movie: ››› “Drag Me to Hell” (2009) Premiere. CSI: Crime Scene

27 NESN College HockeyInstigatorsDailyFootballDailyOutdoors

28 CSNE TailgatePatriotsQuick Boys in SportsSportsNetPatriotsSportsNet

30 ESPN College Football BYU at Texas Christian. (N) (Live) SportsCenter (N) Å

31 ESPN2 XVI Pan American Games (N) (Live) NFL Live (N) Å

33 ION Psych (In Stereo) Å Psych (In Stereo) Å Psych (In Stereo) Å Psych (In Stereo) Å

34 DISN WizardsANT FarmJessie (N) ButtowskiVampireGood LuckPhineasGood Luck

35 TOON Star WarsThundr.King of HillKing of HillAmer. DadAmer. DadFam. GuyFam. Guy

36 NICK Fred 2 Sponge.’70s Show’70s ShowGeorgeGeorgeFriendsFriends

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

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

40 CNBC Marijuana: Pot IndustryAmerican GreedAmerican GreedMad Money

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

43 TNT Law & OrderMovie: ››› “G.I. Jane” (1997, Drama) Demi Moore. Å Ransom

44 LIFE Reba Å Reba Å Reba Å Reba Å Reba Å Reba Å Reba Å Reba Å

46 TLC Say YesSay YesSay YesSay YesBridesBridesSay YesSay Yes

47 AMC Movie: ›› “Survival of the Dead” (2009) The Walking DeadTalk Dead Jason-Hell

48 HGTV Hunters Hunters Hunters Hunters Hunters Hunters Hunters Hunters

49 TRAV Ghost AdventuresGhost Adventures (N) The Dead Files (N) Ghost Adventures

50 A&E Criminal Minds Å Criminal Minds Å Criminal Minds Å Criminal Minds Å

52 BRAVO Housewives/NJ Movie: ›‡ “Resident Evil” (2002, Horror) Movie: “Resident Evil”

55 HALL Little House on PrairieFrasierFrasierFrasierFrasierFrasierFrasier

56 SYFY WWE Friday Night SmackDown! (N) Å Sanctuary “Monsoon” Fact or Faked

57 ANIM Fatal Attractions Å Animal PhobiaAnimal PhobiaAnimal Phobia

58 HIST AmericanAmericanAmericanAmericanHairy BikeHairy BikeAround the World in 80

60 BET Rickey Smiley: Live From AtlantaSteve Harvey: Still Trippin’ Stand-up routine. Å

61 COM Tosh.0Tosh.0Work.South ParkTosh.0Stand-UpSouth Park Jackass 2

62 FX Movie: ››‡ “Twilight” (2008, Romance) Kristen Stewart. Movie: ››‡ “30 Days of Night”

67 TVLND Married Married Raymond Raymond Raymond Raymond King King

68 TBS Browns Browns Payne Payne Movie: ››‡ “Yes Man” (2008) Jim Carrey.

76 SPIKE Gangland Å Gangland Å Gangland Å Movie: “Die Hard 2”

78 OXY “The Amityville Horror” Movie: ›› “Hide and Seek” (2005) Å “Angels & Demons”

146 TCM Movie: ››› “Dead Ringer” (1964) Bette Davis. “The Black Room” Movie: “The Other”

––––––– ALMANAC –––––––

Today is Friday, Oct. 28, the 301st day of 2011. There are 64 days left in the year.

Today’s Highlight in History: On Oct. 28, 1886, the Statue of Liberty, a gift from the people of France, was dedicated in New York Harbor by President Grover Cleveland.

On this date:In 1636, the General Court of Massachu-

setts passed a legislative act establishing Harvard College.

In 1776, the Battle of White Plains was fought during the Revolutionary War, result-ing in a limited British victory.

In 1858, Rowland Hussey Macy opened his fi rst New York store at Sixth Avenue and 14th Street in Manhattan.

In 1919, Congress enacted the Volstead Act, which provided for enforcement of Pro-hibition, over President Woodrow Wilson’s veto.

In 1936, President Franklin D. Roosevelt rededicated the Statue of Liberty on its 50th anniversary.

In 1940, Italy invaded Greece during World War II.

In 1958, the Roman Catholic patriarch of Venice, Angelo Giuseppe Roncalli, was elected pope; he took the name John XXIII.

In 1962, Soviet leader Nikita Khrushchev informed the United States that he had ordered the dismantling of missile bases in Cuba.

In 1991, what became known as “The Perfect Storm” began forming hundreds of miles east of Nova Scotia; lost at sea during the storm were the six crew members of the Andrea Gail, a sword-fi shing boat from Gloucester, Mass.

One year ago: Investigators with the president’s oil spill commission said tests performed before the deadly blowout of BP’s oil well in the Gulf of Mexico should have raised doubts about the cement used to seal the well, but that the company and its cementing contractor used it anyway.

Today’s Birthdays: Jazz singer Cleo Laine is 84. Actress Joan Plowright is 82. Musician-songwriter Charlie Daniels is 75. Actress Jane Alexander is 72. Singer Curtis Lee is 70. Actor Dennis Franz is 67. Actress Telma Hopkins is 63. Olympic track and fi eld gold medalist Bruce Jenner is 62. Actress Annie Potts is 59. Microsoft co-founder Bill Gates is 56. Rock musician Stephen Morris (New Order) is 54. Rock singer-musician William Reid is 53. Actor Mark Derwin is 51. Actress Daphne Zuniga is 49. Actress Lauren Holly is 48. Actress Jami Gertz is 46. Actor Chris Bauer is 45. Actor-comedian Andy Richter is 45. Actress Julia Roberts is 44. Country singer-musician Caitlin Cary is 43. Actor Jeremy Davies is 42. Singer Ben Harper is 42. Country singer Brad Paisley is 39. Actor Joaquin Phoenix is 37. Singer Justin Guarini is 33. Pop singer Brett Dennen is 32. Rock musician Dave Tirio (Plain White T’s) is 32. Actress Troian Bellisario is 26.

ACROSS 1 Bank transactions 6 Hurricane’s

aftermath 11 Ultimate degree 14 Baby hooter 15 “Fear of Fifty”

author Jong 16 Wooly female 17 Matrimony? 19 Sebaceous cyst 20 Flushed 21 More like a

wallfl ower 23 Random selectee 27 Television award 29 Joan on “Dynasty” 30 Violent

intimidation 31 Acted silently 32 Invisible

emanations 33 Darby or Novak 36 Conks on the

head 37 Von Bismarck and

Graham 38 Sicilian volcano

39 Silvery-gray 40 Henry __ Lodge 41 Component

pieces 42 Beatty/Hoffman

box-offi ce bomb 44 Garden fi gures 45 Most impulsive 47 In error 48 “The Zoo Story”

dramatist 49 “Final Analysis”

star 50 Kilmer of “The

Doors” 51 Tops of Alpert’s

Mexican bikinis? 58 Cousin of an

ostrich 59 Fail to be 60 Look after 61 Beluga product 62 War advocates 63 Sanctuary

DOWN 1 Gehrig of baseball 2 Hold title to

3 Rope-a-dope pugilist

4 Snare 5 Anti-infl ammatory

drug 6 “Demian” author 7 Bohemian 8 By way of 9 Halloween’s mo. 10 Roman emperors 11 A minute in the

Big Apple? 12 Twill weave 13 Inductance unit 18 Puts on 22 SHO rival 23 Dance in duple

time 24 Hodgepodges 25 Color of the sky

over Graceland? 26 Past spouses 27 EDS founder 28 Time periods 30 One-on-one

teacher 32 Awaiting the pitch 34 Chip-making giant

35 Weighty 37 Feeling one’s __ 38 Son of Seth 40 Fastest land

animal 41 Let loose 43 Ship’s pronoun 44 Senator Jake the

astronaut 45 Vocal enthusiast 46 Besieged site of

1836 47 Noteworthy acts 49 Gooey mass 52 Pension $ 53 Adherent of

Judaism 54 Actress Arthur 55 Gun it in neutral 56 Ingested 57 Male offspring

Yesterday’s Answer

DAILY CROSSWORDBY WAYNE ROBERT WILLIAMS

Page 12: The Portland Daily Sun, Friday, October 28, 2011

Page 12 — THE PORTLAND DAILY SUN, Friday, October 28, 2011

Electrolux • Kirby • Panasonic • Eureka • Orek • Electrolux • Kirby • Panasonic • • Eu

reka • Orek • E

lectrolu

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ic • Eureka • Orek • Electrolux • Kirby • Panasonic • Eureka • Orek • Electrolux • E

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Page 13: The Portland Daily Sun, Friday, October 28, 2011

THE PORTLAND DAILY SUN, Friday, October 28, 2011— Page 13

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ANNIE’S MAILBOX Dear Annie: I have been seeing my boyfriend for more than a year. “Keith” was divorced three years ago, but he and his ex-wife live in the same town and have four kids together, one of whom still lives with her. I am bothered by their relationship, which goes beyond normal concerns for the children. They talk and text or see each other nearly every day, and it’s not always about the kids. She was a controlling wife who regularly emasculated Keith. She has money, so she pays him child support, and I’m guessing it’s a substantial amount. He doesn’t work and survives on her money. They have keys to each other’s houses, and she will walk into his home and use his dishes and pool as if they were still hers. This bothers him, but he doesn’t do anything about it. Her mail still comes to his house, so he has to deliver it to her. She “hires” him to do jobs like moving her furniture. The only disagreements we have had are about her and her intrusive and controlling nature. I believe this relation-ship is unhealthy, and I refuse to have her in my life. I’ve told Keith that I will not share him. I fear he would return to her in a heartbeat if she asked, mostly because of the money. I realize they must be in touch for the kids’ sake, and I’m OK with that. But he is unwilling to limit the relationship with his ex, so I’ve put ours on hold. Do you think that rela-tionship is normal? -- Unwilling To Share Dear Unwilling: We think Keith is still dependent, fi nan-cially and emotionally, on his ex. If he refuses to limit their contact and you are concerned that he would go back to her “in a heartbeat,” we’d say your relationship is doomed. It’s time to move on. Keith is essentially unavailable. Dear Annie: I was in charge of a recent event that was a huge success. Our committee planned it for a long time and raised a good amount of money.

My boss was also on the committee. Our business donated money, which we used to purchase snacks. Another business donated cases of water. After the event, my boss gathered all of the leftover snacks and water and took them with her. The next day, she told a co-worker that another committee member said it was OK to donate the items to another event she was involved in. She also left the labels on the items, saying they were com-pliments of our business when they are actually the property of the event. What bothers me most is that she never men-tioned it to me. It seems sneaky. Do you think this was a tacky thing to do? -- Team Captain Dear Captain: If you were in charge of the event, the boss should have asked whether it was OK if she took the left-overs and donated them elsewhere. However, we suspect she thought no one would mind if one donation benefi ted two good causes. She could have handled it more ethically, but it serves no purpose to hold a grudge. Dear Annie: I’d like to tell “Sad Wife” that parental favor-itism is not unusual. My fi rst husband had three siblings. His parents doted on all of them, but not on my husband. My current husband also has three siblings and a similar situation. One thing I noticed in both cases is that parents give their attention to the children they think need it most. To the left-out child, it feels like favoritism, but I truly believe the par-ents consider that child to be the most loved and think they need to dote on the others. I fi nally told my husband’s par-ents how he felt, and they were mortifi ed. Please tell “Sad Wife” not to feel bad for her husband. Feel bad for the siblings. -- Making My Husband Feel Special Ev-ery Day

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.

Wal-Mart employees fi le new bias case

(NY TIMES) — After the Supreme Court in June tossed out a massive class-action lawsuit fi led by women who claimed they were discriminated against by Wal-Mart Stores, the lawyers for the plaintiffs vowed to pursue the case using new tactics.

On Thursday, the plaintiffs did just that, fi ling an amended lawsuit that narrows the class from all of the women who work or have worked at Wal-Mart and Sam’s Club stores, estimated at 1.5 million, to those in the retailer’s California regions, estimated to be at least 45,000 current employees and 45,000 former employees.

Attorneys for the plaintiffs said the lawsuit was the fi rst of many that will be fi led against the world’s largest retailer alleging discrimination against women in pay and advancement.

In its June ruling in Dukes v. Wal-Mart, the Supreme Court did not determine whether the women were discriminated against it. Rather, in its 5-4 decision, it concluded that the plaintiffs had not met requirements that the class have a question of law or fact in common.

Writing for the majority, Justice Antonin Scalia said the case involved “literally millions of employ-ment decisions.” The plaintiffs, he added, were required to point to “some glue holding the alleged reasons for all those decisions together.”

The origins of the lawsuit date to 1999 when Stephanie Odle was fi red after complaining that she was discriminated against because of her sex. She said he had discovered that a male employee with the same job and less experience was making $10,000 a year more than her.

Her boss explained that the man had a family to support.

G.O.P. pushes military custody for terror suspects

WASHINGTON (NY TIMES) — Congressio-nal Republicans increasingly reject any use of the civilian criminal justice system for handling cases involving Al Qaeda, hardening their stance in a dispute with the Obama administration over whether such suspects should be held and pros-ecuted exclusively by the military.

Republican senators are pushing to include a provision in a 2012 military authorization bill that would require Qaeda suspects accused of plotting attacks and who are not American citizens to be held in military custody — even people arrested in the United States. The White House opposes such a blanket rule.

Amid negotiations over the bill, Republicans — who see their position as a potent election issue in 2012 — delivered an overwhelming show of unity in support of such ideas late last week, as 45 of the party’s 47 senators voted for a similar proposal to ban civilian trials for such “enemy combatants.” The endorsement highlighted a dramatic shift to the right in the politics of counterterrorism since President Obama succeeded George W. Bush.

Mr. Bush used the criminal justice system for some cases and the military system for others, as has Mr. Obama. In recent years, the once-fi erce criticism from liberals about the legitimacy of any use of military detention and tribunals has become muted. Meanwhile, Republicans, who accepted the hybrid approach under Mr. Bush, increasingly reject any use of the civilian system.

“The goal posts are moving,” said Robert Chesney, a law professor at the University of Texas at Austin. “In the Bush years, there was little com-plaint from the right about keeping both civilian and military options — least of all for persons captured in the U.S. But now the Congressional Republican consensus is moving toward a mono-lithic military approach, to the point where things Bush did would today be denounced as weak.”

Page 14: The Portland Daily Sun, Friday, October 28, 2011

Page 14 — THE PORTLAND DAILY SUN, Friday, October 28, 2011

SOCIETY OF SOUTHERN MAINE

CRAFTSMEN – 2011 SHOW SCHEDULE –

20th Annual Holiday Craft Show McAuley High School

631 Stevens Ave., Portland Nov. 5th 9-4; Nov. 6th 10-3

18th Annual Made in Maine Christmas Craft Show Mt. Ararat High School

73 Eagle’s Way, Topsham Nov. 19th 9-4; Nov. 20th 10-3

Home for the Holidays Craft Show Scarborough High School

11 Municipal Drive, Scarborough Friday, November 25th 10-4

Saturday, November 26th 9-4

www.societyofsouthernmainecraftsmen.org

Always FREE

Admission

ALL SHOWS JURIED

FREE PARKING

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Friday, Oct. 28

Gorham Art Fair6 p.m. to 9 p.m. A Celebration of Commu-nity 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 viewing and special events.”

Southern Maine Home Show4 p.m. Oct. 28-30, Southern Maine Home Show at the Portland Expo, Portland. “The state’s largest fall show.” http://home-shownet.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 charm-ing musicals in one — all with the same plot but told through fi ve different and distinct musical 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 Saturday, 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 pro-gram offerings at www.usm.maine.edu/music.

‘Mozart’s Sister’6:30 p.m. “Mozart’s Sister,” Friday, Oct. 28, 6:30 p.m.; Saturday, 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 moviesatthe-museum.org.

‘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 acc laimed 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 Fop-piano 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 Satur-day, Oct. 29. DEA’s Maine Resident Agent in Charge Michael Wardrop said the pro-gram 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 ecomaine 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 Blue-berry Road, off outer Congress Street, just on the other side of the Maine Turn-pike 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 Port-land, 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 Timeat the Portland Museum of Art11 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 van-ishing ways of life, Lesley MacVane talks about her relationship 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 chil-dren will have a unique opportunity to experience live theatre in their own lan-guage 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 perfor-mances and workshops are sponsored by the Davis Family Foundation, 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 (vid-eophone). 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 con-tact the American Sign Language Lab at USM. ASL student interpreters may purchase a package that includes both the interpreter’s workshop and the per-formance at $30. Both workshops are at the Wishcamper building, 34 Bedford St., Portland, at Room 211. The perfor-mance is at the Talbot Auditorium, Luther Bonney building, 90 Bedford St., Port-land. Details of the performances 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 Monument 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 activi-ties. 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 tech-niques 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

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Page 15: The Portland Daily Sun, Friday, October 28, 2011

THE PORTLAND DAILY SUN, Friday, October 28, 2011— Page 15

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audience. With an esteemed tradition of innovation and excellence, which began in the 19th century with the American premieres of Handel’s Mes-siah (1818), the Handel and Haydn Society over the last 20 years have given important historical perfor-mances of core repertoire and intro-duced 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-commissioned 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 along-side the Janes in this mixed bout. MRD welcomes 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. General Admission: $5

Sid Tripp’s 16th annual Halloween Bash9 p.m. to 1 a.m. Sid Tripp of local marketing fi rm Proactive Resources Design and business networking group The DownEast Pride Alliance will hold his 16th annual Halloween 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. Pre-concert lecture. Concert at 2 p.m. Concert Lecture with Maine State Historian Earle G. Shettleworth, Woodfords Congregational Church, 202 Woodfords St., Portland. “The PSQ and special guest Maine State Historian Earle G. Shettleworth will present the World Premiere of a string quartet by Portland native John Knowles Paine, composed in Port-land c.1855. Also on the program is Walter Piston’s String Quartet 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. Subsidized 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 Chil-dren’s Museum & Theatre of Maine is quickly becoming a tradition. Last year hundreds of costumed children and families arrived to collect candy and prizes, march in an indoor cos-tume parade throughout the exhib-

its, 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; Hal-loween Parade (3:30 p.m.) and Monster Mash (3:30 p.m. to 4:30 p.m.): Pirates, princesses, superheroes, kitty cats – all are welcome in the Halloween Parade. All activities take place at the Children’s Museum & Theatre of Maine, 142 Free St. in Portland. Halloween Bash activi-ties 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 information, 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! Mae-stro 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 ‘Sym-phonie Fantastique,’ and ‘The Chill of the Orchestra’ by American composer Russell Peck. Dancers from Portland Ballet will join in ‘Bella’s Lullaby’ from ‘Twilight’ and lead the entire audi-ence in the zombie dance stylings of Michael Jackson’s ‘Thriller.’” Merrill Auditorium.

Bluestocking Films — Films by Women4 p.m. “BFS was conceived by fi lmmaker Kate Kaminski and is a collaboration between Gitgo Produc-tions and the St. Lawrence. Because women fi lmmakers are underrep-resented in the fi lmmaking industry and largely misrepresented in forms of media worldwide we are thrilled to create a series within Maine that supports women fi lmmakers and provides them with a state of the art venue to showcase their craft.” The USM Women and Gender Studies Program, the Maine Film Offi ce and the Maine Film and Video Associa-tion are co-sponsoring the event. For more information on the Bluestocking Film Series contact Whitney McDorr at [email protected] or by telephone at 347-3075 or Kate Kaminski at [email protected]. www.stlawrencearts.org

Monday, Oct. 31

Violin Masterclass at USM4 p.m. The University of Southern Maine School of Music will host Charles Dimmick, concertmaster of the Portland Symphony Orchestra, for a violin masterclass, at 4 p.m. in Corthell Concert Hall, USM Gorham. In addition to the PSO, Dimmick performs with the Boston Modern Orchestra Project and Rhode Island Philharmonic, as well as the Boston Pops, Boston Lyric Opera, Opera Boston and Chamber Orchestra of Boston. He is a former USM School of Music assistant professor of violin. Tickets to the masterclass cost $6, and can be purchased at the door. The class is free for USM music students, faculty, and staff, as well as USM Youth Ensemble members. For more information on the USM School of Music’s fall con-cert season and programs of study, visit www.usm.maine.edu/music. Sign up for e-notices, or fi nd us on Facebook as USM School of Music,

www.facebook.com/Music.USM.

Tuesday, Nov. 1

‘I Can’t Remember. I Can’t Forget’9 a.m. to 4 p.m. Hospice of South-ern Maine will host a day-long confer-ence in Scarborough, titled “I Can’t Remember. I Can’t Forget: Spiritual Journeys of Alzheimer’s Patients and Combat Veterans at End of Life.” The national speaker, The Rev. Dr. Kathleen Rusnak PhD, author of the book, “Because You’ve Never Died Before,” will speak in the morning session on the topic of recognizing and maximizing the spiritual possibili-ties of the Alzheimer’s patients, and in the afternoon on the inner spiritual battles combat soldiers wage at end of life. The event takes place at The Landing at Pine Point in Scarborough and costs $40 per person. Snacks and Lunch will be provided. Register online at www.hospiceofsouthern-maine.org.

Tuesday, Nov. 1

‘I Can’t Remember. I Can’t Forget’9 a.m. to 4 p.m. Hospice of South-ern Maine will host a day-long confer-ence in Scarborough, titled “I Can’t Remember. I Can’t Forget: Spiritual Journeys of Alzheimer’s Patients and Combat Veterans at End of Life.” The national speaker, The Rev. Dr. Kathleen Rusnak PhD, author of the book, “Because You’ve Never Died Before,” will speak in the morning session on the topic of recognizing and maximizing the spiritual possibili-ties of the Alzheimer’s patients, and in the afternoon on the inner spiritual battles combat soldiers wage at end of life. The event takes place at The Landing at Pine Point in Scarborough and costs $40 per person. Snacks and Lunch will be provided. Register online at www.hospiceofsouthern-maine.org. For more information, call 289-3678 or e-mail [email protected]

Wednesday, Nov. 2

Legislative forum with a panel of elected offi cials7:30 a.m. to 9 a.m. The Falmouth Cumberland Community chamber will host legislators from Augusta. Mary Nelson, Dick Woodbury, Mark Dion and Meredith Burgess will present a panel focused on issues affecting businesses in the community. The event will be held in the Falmouth Memorial Library.

Michelle Malkin in South Portland11:15 a.m. Conservative columnist and author at the Portland Marriott at Sable Oaks, South Portland. Spon-sor Reception with Michelle Malkin, followed at noon by Luncheon and Remarks. “Michelle Malkin began her career in newspaper journalism a decade ago as an editorial writer and columnist for The Los Angeles Daily News, moving on to The Seattle Times in 1996. Her column, now syndicated, appears in 100 papers nationwide, including The New York Post, Miami Herald, Washington Times, The Dallas Morning News, The Modesto Bee and The Detroit News. Malkin launched her Web site, MichelleMalkin.com,

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Page 16: The Portland Daily Sun, Friday, October 28, 2011

Page 16 — THE PORTLAND DAILY SUN, Friday, October 28, 2011

Thursday, Nov. 3

The History Of Maine Skiing11 a.m. to 2 p.m. The Maine Charitable Mechanic Association at 519 Congress St., Portland. www.mainecharitablem-echanicassociation.com. Scott Andrews presenting The History Of Maine Skiing. Refreshments. FMI call 773-8396 or visit www.skimuseumofmaine.org.

Poet and author Gray Jacobik5 p.m. Poet and author Gray Jacobik read-ing from her work, on the seventh fl oor Events Room, Glickman Library, Portland campus of the University of Southern Maine. Free. Call 892-9831.

Good vs. Evil: Anthony Bourdain and Eric Ripert 7:30 p.m. “Culinary arts take center stage in this evening of storytelling that serves up frank and provocative insight into what really goes on behind the kitchen doors. Anthony Bourdain, chef, author of Medium Raw and Kitchen Confi dential and host of The Travel Channel’s ‘No Reservations’and Eric Ripert, renowned chef of Le Bernar-din, author and regular guest on Bravo’s ‘Top Chef’ share tales and muse on the place of food in our personal, community and global life. VIP tickets include premiere seating, invitation to an exclusive meet-and-greet reception with Bourdain and

Ripert at Grace Restaurant, complimentary hors d’oeuvres, a VIP tour laminate and a limited edition poster. No discounts, no exchanges; a non-subscription event. Con-tains strong language.” Merrill Auditorium. http://portlandovations.org

Friday, Nov. 4

Annual Key4Women Forum11:30 a.m. to 2 p.m. KeyBank will host the Annual Key4Women Forum, “Creating a Cul-ture of Courage: The New Leadership Chal-lenge.” Leadership and customer service expert Cindy Solomon will discuss: four types of courage and when and how to invoke each for success in business, why fi nding the cour-age to move forward is the key to success in today’s new business economy, and how to inspire courage personally and professsion-ally. Women in business: business owners, leaders, decision makers and nonprofi t directors. Marriott Sable Oaks, 200 Sable Oaks Drive, South Portland. $30, payable to McAuley Residence. Contact Sherry Brown, KeyBank, 207-874-7230, or register online at www.key.com/womensforum. (Advance reg-istration is required.)

Poet and author Brigit Pegeen Kelly2 p.m. Poet and author Brigit Pegeen Kelly: informal talk at 2 p.m.; 4 p.m. reading from her work; in seventh fl oor Events Room, Glickman Library, Portland campus of the University of Southern Maine. Free. Call

780-4291.

Back Cove Artists at MCMA5 p.m. to 8 p.m. First Friday Art Walk, Back Cove Artists showing their watercolors. Eight artists formed this group of watercol-orists in 1987. Among the artists are Joan Bennert, Joan Connick, Bernie & Barbara Wall. The Maine Charitable Mechanic Asso-ciation at 519 Congress St., Portland. www.mainecharitablemechanicassociation.com.

First Friday Art Walk: Gideon Bok and Xander Marro5 p.m. to 8 p.m. SPACE Gallery. With the support of the Artist’s Resouce Trust, Gideon Bok will work through the month of November and into December, using the gallery as the subj ect for a charcoal life drawing on one of the gallery walls. Gideon’s interior paintings and drawings highlight the passage of time, usually utiliz-ing the space where the work is made. They feature the changing cast of characters who have stopped by, records strewn about, and other artifacts such as musical instru-ments, empty bottles, and semi-complete paintings. Accompanying this wall drawing will be a collection of perspective paintings Gideon has painted, reproducing more than 200 LP record covers unifi ed by loose con-ceptual threads. In the annex, a last look at Xander Marro’s Cursed New England. www.space538.org/events.php

The Beauty of Darfur; The Tragedy

of Genocide at First Friday Art Walk5 p.m. to 9 p.m. As part of First Friday Art Walk, the Via Agency will open its doors at the Baxter building, 619 Congress St., Portland to host a very special event to bring awareness to and help efforts to end the genocide in Darfur. Come view inspir-ing and breath taking works of art created by Falmouth and Yarmouth High School student artists that feature contrasting work representing Darfur’s beauty, and the tragic genocide. Tom Andrews, President and CEO of United to End Genocide* and former Maine Congressman will be on hand for conversation and will lead a dialog with Maine’s Sudanese Community. The Pih-cintu Multicultural Chorus, directed by Con Fullam, award-winning producer, musician, and songwriter, will be lending their voices to this occasion and will be performing a selection of songs. Viewing the artwork, mingling with the artists, survivors, and Tom will take place between 5:00-7:30 PM. Student musicians will perform light back-ground music. At 7:30 PM there will be a performance by Pihcintu, an international immigrants children’s choir. At 7:45 there will be remarks by Tom Andrews and a dialog with Maine’s Sudanese Community members. El- Fadel Arbab, a survivor of the genocide in Darfur, an Educator, and Sec-retary of the Fur Cultural Revival met with students at Yarmouth and Falmouth to edu-cated them about the genocide. It was from those meetings and further research on the

students’ part that the art is being inspired and created. This event is in collaboration with VIA Agency, Falmouth High School, Yarmouth High School, USM Offi ce of Multi-Cultural Student Affairs, Fur Cultural Revival, Pihcintu, and NAACP Portland Branch.

Claddagh Award Ceremony6 p.m. The Maine Irish Heri-tage Center, 34 Gray St., Portland, welcomes the public to the fourth annual Claddagh Award Ceremony to honor William J. Ryan and to raise funds for the MIHC. William J. Ryan is retired as Chairman of the Board of TD Bank, N.A. http://www.main-eirish.com

Maine Brewers Festival6:30 p.m. The 18th annual Maine Brewers Festival will be held on Friday and Saturday, Nov. 4 and Nov. 5, as New Englanders come together to celebrate the local Maine craft beer community. The Evening with the Brewers VIP Ses-sion will kick off the festival weekend on Friday night, and the highly anticipated festival will begin on Saturday after-noon with two high-energy sessions. Festival attendees will receive a complimentary logoed tasting glass (real glass!) with tick ets to enjoy 12, 4-oz pours of Maine craft beer. Saturday Happy Hour Session: 1:30 p.m. to 5 p.m.; doors open at 1 p.m. Food and store sales start at 1 p.m. Taps open at 1:30 p.m. Eve-ning Session: 6:30 p.m. to 10 p.m.; doors open at 6 p.m. Food and store sales start at 6 p.m. Taps open at 6:30 p.m. Portland Expo. http://learny-ourbeer.com

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