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WEDNESDAY, MARCH 28, 2012 VOL. 4 NO. 39 PORTLAND, ME PORTLAND’S DAILY NEWSPAPER 699-5801 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 5 0 % 5 0 % 50% O F F O F F OFF P a y j u s t $ 2 5 f o r a $ 5 0 v o u c h e r P a y j u s t $ 2 5 f o r a $ 5 0 v o u c h e r Pay just $ 25 for a $ 50 voucher t o w a r d a n y L i f e C o a c h i n g P a c k a g e t o w a r d a n y L i f e C o a c h i n g P a c k a g e toward any Life Coaching Package w i t h D e b B e r g e r o n , C P C C , A C C w i t h D e b B e r g e r o n , C P C C , A C C with Deb Bergeron, CPCC, ACC Ocean of Possibilities Personal and Professional Life Coaching Step to the center See David Brooks, page 4 FREE Tim McLain, a longtime board member, pauses from helping to process deliveries at the Portland Food Cooperative, says price is only part of the equation — he likes feeling “closer to the things I consume” and echoes the idea that the co-op is part of Portland’s food community. (CURTIS ROBINSON PHOTO) New co-op adds to city’s slow, very slow, food movement — See page 6 Planners back Eastern Cemetery master plan See page 9 Developers: Elm Terrace helped inspire nearby elderly housing complex Memories of classic delis See Natalie Ladd, page 4 Official: Turmoil at state housing authority won’t hinder either project — See page 9

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Page 1: The Portland Daily Sun, Wednesday, March 28, 2012

WEDNESDAY, MARCH 28, 2012 VOL. 4 NO. 39 PORTLAND, ME PORTLAND’S DAILY NEWSPAPER 699-5801

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

Daily Daily Deal Deal 50% 50% 50%

OFF OFF OFF Pay just $ 25 for a $ 50 voucher Pay just $ 25 for a $ 50 voucher Pay just $ 25 for a $ 50 voucher

toward any Life Coaching Package toward any Life Coaching Package toward any Life Coaching Package with Deb Bergeron, CPCC, ACC with Deb Bergeron, CPCC, ACC with Deb Bergeron, CPCC, ACC

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Tim McLain, a longtime board member, pauses from helping to process deliveries at the Portland Food Cooperative, says price is only part of the equation — he likes feeling “closer to the things I consume” and echoes the idea that the co-op is part of Portland’s food community. (CURTIS ROBINSON PHOTO)

New co-op adds to city’s slow, very slow, food movement — See page 6

Planners back

Eastern Cemetery

master plan See page 9

Developers: Elm Terrace helped inspire nearby elderly housing complex

Memories of classic

delisSee

Natalie Ladd,

page 4

Offi cial: Turmoil at state housing authority won’t hinder either project — See page 9

Page 2: The Portland Daily Sun, Wednesday, March 28, 2012

Page 2 — THE PORTLAND DAILY SUN, Wednesday, March 28, 2012

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

–––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––– DIGEST––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––SAT, ACT to tighten

rules

SAYWHAT...I didn’t fail the test, I just found 100

ways to do it wrong.”—Benjamin Franklin

(NY Times) — Stung by a cheating scandal involving dozens of Long Island high school students, the SAT and ACT college entrance exams will now require stu-dents to upload photos when they sign up for the exams, and offi cials will check that image against the photo iden-tifi cation the students present when they arrive to take the test, the Nassau County dis-trict attorney said Tuesday.

The change was one of several announced Tuesday in the aftermath of the cheat-ing cases, in which high-scor-ing students used fake IDs to take SATs or ACTs for other students. Twenty teenagers from fi ve schools in Nassau County were arrested last fall, fi ve of them suspected of taking tests for others and the other 15 accused of paying them $500 to $3,600 to take the tests.

The new rules apply nation-wide, and the Nassau County district attorney, Kathleen M. Rice, said in a statement that they would take effect in the fall. Rice said a goal of the new requirements was to close the gaps in test security that had allowed students to impersonate other students. The photograph that students will be required to upload will be printed on their admission ticket and the roster at the test center. The statement said the photos would be retained in a database that high school and college admissions offi cials can look at.

Under another new require-ment, test registrants will have to provide their gender. Offi -cials said last year that one of the fi ve teenagers arrested as a test-taker, Samuel Eshag-hoff, a 2011 graduate of Great Neck North High School, was said to have taken tests for girls and had shown fake iden-tifi cation.

Mr. Eshaghoff pleaded not guilty to the charges after his Sept. 27 arrest. A spokesman for Ms. Rice, John Byrne, said some of the students who were arrested had pleaded guilty, but because they were considered youthful offend-ers under state judicial pro-cedures, their records were sealed, and he could not dis-cuss them.

Another new rule calls for would-be test-takers to list their high school when they sign up. “This will ensure that high school administrators receive students’ scores as well as their uploaded photo,” according to a statement from Ms. Rice’s offi ce. “This back-end check will pro-vide another opportunity for cheaters to be caught.” The statement said home-schooled students or others who are not in high school — those in the military, for example — “will follow a slightly different registration

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(NY Times) Many legal scholars, includ-ing some conservatives, have been predict-ing that the Supreme Court will uphold the 2010 health care overhaul. But after Tuesday’s arguments, when several justices asked skeptical questions about the heart of the law, a political lens seemed relevant, too.

When Congress passed the law, 9 out of 10 Democrats voted for it, while not a single Republican, in either the House or the Senate, did so. In the lower courts, judges appointed by Democratic presidents voted mostly — but not entirely — to uphold the law. And judges appointed by Republican presidents voted mostly — but not entirely — to overturn at least part of it.

It is obviously too early to know what

the Supreme Court will do, despite the rush of commentary after Tuesday’s much-watched hearing. But skeptical questions from the bench are often an indicator of how justices will ultimately vote — and many court experts expressed surprise at the apparent agreement among the con-servatives, including Justice Anthony M. Kennedy, the likeliest swing vote.

Justice Kennedy, along with Justices Samuel A. Alito Jr. and Antonin Scalia and Chief Justice John G. Roberts Jr. all asked questions suggesting that they had a problem with the constitutionality of the mandate requiring most Americans to buy insurance. Justice Clarence Thomas, as usual, did not ask any questions, but he

is widely expected to vote to overturn the mandate.

All fi ve of those justices were appointed by Republican presidents, while the four justices expected to vote to uphold the health care law were all appointed by Democrats. This is the fi rst time in at least 50 years that the court frequently splits along directly partisan lines.

Both sides, of course, will say that their votes are based only on the law, and both sides can indeed fi nd constitutional prec-edent to support their arguments. Yet if there is a higher legal truth about the law’s constitutionality, the judges who have ruled on the case so far have yet to agree to it.

Analysis: On health care law, a familiar split

WASHINGTON (NY Times) — After a series of violent episodes and setbacks, support for the war in Afghanistan has dropped sharply among both Republicans and Democrats, according to the latest New York Times/CBS News poll.

The survey found that more than two-thirds of those polled — 69 percent — thought that the United States should not be at war in Afghanistan. Just four months ago, 53 percent said that Americans should no longer be fi ghting in the confl ict, more than

a decade old.The increased disillusionment

was even more pronounced when respondents were asked their impressions of how the war was going. The poll found that 68 percent thought the fi ghting was going “somewhat badly” or “very badly,” compared with 42 percent who had those impressions in November.

The latest poll was conducted by telephone from March 21 to 25 with 986 adults nationwide. It has a margin of sampling error of plus or minus three percentage points.

Poll: Support in U.S. for Afghan war drops sharply

(NY Times) — The Environmental Protection Agency pro-posed the fi rst federal limits on greenhouse gas emissions from new power plants on Tuesday, moving in tandem with market forces that are already moving the industry from coal to natural gas.

In the United States, the electric power sector produces 40 percent of the nation’s heat-trapping carbon dioxide emis-sions, the bulk of them generated by coal-fi red plants. Still, the agency emphasized that the proposed rules would apply only to future construction, not to existing plants or others for which permits have already been granted.

The declining price of natural gas has made it the fuel of choice for companies planning new plants, and the latest gas-fi red generation on the drawing boards is expected to easily meet the new standards without adding new controls. The challenge will be far greater and possibly prohibitive for new coal plants, whose emissions are dirtier but will have to meet the same standard.

For new generation of power plants, new rules from EPA

TODAY’SJOKE“My goal this year is to buy a Prius so I can be the anti-Prius driver. Be like, ‘Yeah, that’s my Prius, the one with the gun rack and the McCain sticker on the back and the dead deer carcass roped to the hood.’”

— Mo Mandel

Before the London games, the grumbling about moneyLONDON (NY Times) —

Money was so scarce at the 1948 London Olympics that the athletes brought their own towels, shipped food in from abroad, and slept in army bar-racks and college dormitories. The budget, 760,000 pounds, was paid by sponsors after Prime Minister Clement Attlee declared that a depleted coun-try struggling in the aftermath of World War II should not have to shoulder the burden of the Games, too.

Sixty-four years later, Brit-ain is in the grip of a modern fi nancial crisis, one that it is addressing by preaching

parsimony and making deep public-sector cuts. But even as it grapples with nearly nonex-istent growth and an 8.4 per-cent unemployment rate, the highest in 17 years, it is spend-ing almost $15 billion (and counting) to host the Summer Games.

In November, Prime Minis-ter David Cameron signaled the country’s desire to “show-case the best of Britain to a massive global TV audience” by doubling the budget, to 80 million pounds, or to about $125 million, for the opening and closing ceremonies.

“You can take two attitudes

to the Olympics,” Jeremy Hunt, the culture secretary, said late last year. “You can say: These are times of austerity, and therefore we should pare them down as much as possible. Or, you can say: Because these are times of austerity, we need to do everything we possibly can to harness the opportunity.”

But that message has not been universally popular in a place where the government is trying to cut, not spend, its way out of fi nancial trouble. While some Britons are approaching the Olympics with excitement and pride, others feel that in a time of retrenchment and

pain, the last thing the coun-try should be doing is splash-ing out on what is essentially a 17-day party for the rest of the world.

“The need to bung another 40 million pounds into what-ever all-singing, all-dancing spectacular the director of ‘Trainspotting’ and ‘Slumdog Millionaire’ has in mind dem-onstrated how fundamentally the organizers have misjudged so much about these Games,” Richard Williams wrote in The Guardian, referring to the fi lm director Danny Boyle, who is orchestrating the opening cer-emony.

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Page 3: The Portland Daily Sun, Wednesday, March 28, 2012

THE PORTLAND DAILY SUN, Wednesday, March 28, 2012— Page 3

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

Gay marriage proponents name new campaign manager, unveil website

The Maine Freedom to Marry Coalition, a group supporting an initiative on the fall ballot in Maine to legalize gay marriage, announced Tuesday its new name for the campaign, Mainers United for Marriage.

The group also issued the name of its website, MainersUnited.org; and the selection of a new cam-paign manager, Matt McTighe.

McTighe is the public education director in Maine for Gay & Lesbian Advocates & Defenders, or “GLAD.”

“The Constitution promises all people equal pro-tection under the law, and we are committed to fulfi lling that promise for all Maine families this November,” said Shenna Bellows, executive director of the ACLU of Maine. “All loving, committed cou-ples deserve the freedom to marry.”

The ACLU of Maine team has worked very closely with McTighe over the last two years, according to a press release from the group.

“Matt McTighe is smart, strategic and dedicated to making Maine a better place,” said Zach Heiden, legal director of the ACLU of Maine. “We are very excited that he has agreed to lead this ballot cam-paign for marriage fairness.”

McTighe has signifi cant experience as the politi-cal director for MassEquality, advancing marriage fairness in Massachusetts, and he worked in Wash-ington to successfully defeat the “Federal Marriage Amendment,” which opposed same-sex marriage.

Mainers United for Marriage cited 105,000 people who signed the group’s petition to qualify for the ballot. Maine voters in 2009 rejected a gay marriage law passed by the legislature.

Summers offi cially announces run for U.S. Senate seat held by Snowe

On Tuesday, Secretary of State Charlie Summers announced his bid for the U.S. Senate seat held by Olympia Snowe.

A member of the Maine State Senate, a military veteran, a state director to Senator Snowe, and the regional administrator of the U.S. Small Business Administration are among the qualifi cations Sum-mers cited in a statement to supporters.

The Committee to Elect Charlie Summers, based in Scarborough, released a statement that read in part: “Our next senator must help provide families relief from the increasing burden of health care — not with Obamacare, but with common sense solu-tions like allowing businesses and individuals to purchase health insurance like any other insurance — from the lowest cost provider anywhere in the United States and making the cost of that insurance like the cost of a mortgage, 100 percent deductible from an individual’s federal income tax.”

Portland Club to host debate for Democratic U.S. Senate candidates

On Saturday evening, March 31, from 5:30 p.m. to 7:30 p.m., the Portland Club will host a debate

between the Democratic primary candidates for the U.S. Senate, an organizer announced.

All four candidates who will be on the Democratic primary ballot have communicated their attention to take part in the debate, said Cliff Gallant, event organizer. Gallant is a columnist for The Portland Daily Sun.

This event follows last fall’s debate between the candidates for Portland mayor that was held at the club and proved to be very successful, Gallant said.

An identical event featuring the Republican pri-mary candidates will be scheduled at the club in the near future, and after the June 10 primaries date a debate featuring the nominees of the two parties and any Independent candidates will be held at the club, Gallant reported.

The Democratic primary candidates are: Cynthia Dill, current State Senator from Cape Elizabeth; Matt Dunlap, of Old Town, a former State legisla-tor and Secretary of State; Jon Hinck, current State senator from Portland; and Benjamin Pollard, a Portland businessman and educator.

The debate will consist of four segments, includ-ing candidates’ opening statements; questions and responses; candidates’ questions to other candi-dates; and candidates’ closing statements.

The Portland Club is located at 156 State St.

In new plan, Sussman majority owner of MaineToday Media

MaineToday Media, parent company of the Port-land Press Herald and other Maine newspapers, announced yesterday it has fi nalized a fi nancial restructuring plan with Maine Values LLC, owned by Maine res-ident Donald Sussman, “to fund stabilization and growth plans at the state’s largest media com-pany.”

“Maine people deserve healthy, fi nancially stable daily news-papers that deliver unbiased, professional news on the impor-tant issues facing our state and our country,” said Sussman. “Although I would have preferred the original arrangement that combined a loan with a smaller equity stake, at the end of the day I want to do what is best for the com-pany.

“This will mark the fi rst time in 14 years these newspapers are Maine-owned,” the company reported in its press release.

Tux Turkel, a staff writer for Maine Today Media, wrote in an article in the Portland Press Herald Tues-day, “Initially, Sussman had planned to lend MTM $3.3 million, acquire a 5 percent equity stake in the company and gain a seat on the board of directors. The fi nancial structure changed, however, during fi nal negotiations. Institutional investors, includ-ing out-of-state pension funds, asked for impor-tant changes to the original package announced in February. Sussman’s fi nancial contribution still adds up to the same amount of money, $3.3 million. But instead of a loan, the money is being used for a straight purchase of private stock. The result is that Maine Values will have a 75 percent ownership stake in the company, rather than 5 percent.”

Turkel describes Sussman as a “wealthy business-

man and philanthropist.” Sussman, who is the hus-band of U.S. Rep. Chellie Pingree, D-Maine, vowed in an interview with Turkel to stay out of editorial decisions.

MOFGA to teach organic gardening classes statewide Wednesday, April 4

The Maine Organic Farmers and Gardeners Asso-ciation will sponsor a statewide educational event — Grow Your Own Organic Garden — at more than 35 different locations in Maine on Wednesday, April 4, from 6 p.m. to 9 p.m., the group announced yes-terday.

The workshops are open to the public, “and are designed to provide gardeners with essential skills and knowledge needed to make a transition from conventional to organic gardening.”

All participants will receive a resource packet and free organic seed. Area towns, sponsoring regional offi ces, and instructors are as follows: Bath — RSU 1 Adult Education, 443-8255, bath.mai-neadulted.org. Instructor: Ben Dearnley Gardiner — MSAD 11 Adult Education, 582-3774, www.msad11.org/adulted Instructor: Michele Roy Gray — MSAD 15 Adult & Community Education, 657-2620, www.MSAD15.org. Instructor: Richard Brzozowski Lewiston — Lewiston Adult Education, 795-4141, www.lewistonadulted.org. Instructor: Bridgette Bartlett Scarborough — Scarborough Adult Learning Center, 730-5040. Instructor: Lisa Fernandes Topsham — Merrymeeting Regional Adult Education, 729-7323, www.merrymeeting.org. Instructor: Nathan Drummond Wells — Wells-Ogunquit Adult Community Education, 646-4565, Instructors: Marilyn & Rick Stanley A session is planned April 18, in Freeport at the library, 865-3307; instructor: Tracey Weber.

For details, visit www.mofga.org.

DAILY SUN STAFF REPORTS

Sussman

Page 4: The Portland Daily Sun, Wednesday, March 28, 2012

Page 4 — THE PORTLAND DAILY SUN, Wednesday, March 28, 2012

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].

On May 23-24, 1865, the victorious Union armies marched through Washington. The columns of troops stretched back 25 miles. They marched as a single mass, clad in blue, their bayonets pointing skyward.

As Wilfred McClay wrote in his book, “The Mas-terless,” spectators were transfi xed and realized that the war had changed them. These troops had gone to war as a coalition of states, with different

Step to the center

DavidBrooks–––––

The New York Times

uniforms in different colors. But they came back as a cen-tralized unit, with a national identity and consciousness.

American history can be seen as a series of centralizing events — the Civil War, World Wars I and II, the Progressive Era, the New Deal and the Great Society.

Many liberals have tended to look at this centralizing process as synonymous with modernization — as inevitable and proper. As problems like inequality get bigger, govern-ment has to become more cen-tralized to deal with them. As corporations grow, government has to grow to counterbalance them.

Many conservatives have looked at these inex-orable steps toward centralization with growing alarm. Complicated problems, many have argued, are best addressed by local people on the ground.

see BROOKS page 5

We want your opinions

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Full Belly Deli on Brighton Avenue is celebrating their 25th anniversary this month and owner David Rosen is proud, yet plagued with a bit of tzuris (Yid-dish for troubles, woes or worries) experienced by most long-time restaurant owners these days when thinking about the future.

“My goals for the future are to keep things like they were in the past,” Rosen states. “We need to stay busy, profi table and keep people coming through the door.”

I didn’t live in Portland 25 years ago, or even several years later, when Rosen and his late father Jack were in start-up mode, having reopened the deli after the original owner, George Bress, shut it down due to cancer. However, I did live in southeast Florida as a child, and delicates-sens were a cherished and antici-pated part of my early dining out experiences. Our favorite was a place called Wolfi e’s on East Sun-rise Boulevard, and it was an off-shoot by a deli-restaurant master named Wolfi e Cohen, who started up in Miami. Wolfi e’s smelled like corned beef and pastrami heaven. The artery-hardening

Twenty-fi ve years worthof delectable deli memories

overstuffed sandwiches, house made half-sour pickles, the slaw, the cheesecake, all were to die for.

The Wolfi e’s of my youth was everything a real deli was sup-posed to be. Real as in the New York City delis, like Carnegies, Katz’s and 2nd Avenue, to name a few. Somewhere along the time line, it went from being legit-Kosher to Kosher-style, which means meat and dairy were rarely served together in one fake, plas-tic wicker basket, but you could order a BLT. I was already sec-ond-and-a-half generation from Ellis Island, so Kosher-style was fi ne by me.

Early in the morning these days, when the pastrami and corned beef are simmering on Brighton Avenue, Full Belly Deli smells like Wolfi e’s did and I fi nd every excuse to visit Portland’s

own, and only, Kosher-style deli. Rosen’s mother, Saralee, can usu-ally be found sitting in the back with coffee and a muffi n, and the two of us have become fast friends. While David Rosen is a kind man of very few words, his mother is full of stories about the old days, and talks about her fi fty-one years of wedded bliss to “the most won-derful man ever.” Hoping to learn something about relationships (for example, why is New Guy still New Guy?), she is one of my favor-ite new/old friends.

When asked what people are prompted to think of when they think about Full Belly Deli, in the present day, the younger Rosen said it all depends upon which generation you’re a member of. “Some of the older people come in looking for what they remem-ber from George’s. People who have moved away and come back to visit their children, or who grew up here. They’re looking for true deli like a corned beef sandwich with mustard on rye, or Lima bean and barley soup. They don’t want what the younger generation wants, which

see LADD page 8

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

NatalieLadd–––––

What It’s Like

Page 5: The Portland Daily Sun, Wednesday, March 28, 2012

THE PORTLAND DAILY SUN, Wednesday, March 28, 2012— Page 5

It’s not easy letting him go. Not easy at all. Sort of like swearing off bed-time Ben & Jerry’s: there’s valor and the promise of self-improvement in the sacrifi ce, but also the sad aware-ness that the world just got a little less naughty. A little less fun.

No matter. It’s time to cut Newt out of our diets.

He has no nutritional value, cer-tainly not at this point, as he peddles his ludicrous guarantee of $2.50-a-gal-lon gasoline, a promise that would be made only by someone with his own bottomless strategic reserve of crude. Doubly oily entendre intended.

There were calls for him to desist two weeks ago, after he lost Alabama, which abuts his home state of Georgia. But they fell on a deaf Newt.

There were fresh appeals last week, when he failed to wring even one measly delegate from Illinois on Tues-day and then Louisiana on Saturday. But Newt doesn’t need anything as prosaic as delegates, so long as there’s still pocket lint from Sheldon Adelson and the warmth of Callista’s frozen smile.

If he refuses to quit, we in the news media must quit him. Starve him of his very sustenance: attention. Exert a kind of willpower that we’ve lacked in this primary, which we turned into too much of a circus by encouraging too many clowns.

We’ve begun. As the weekend came to a close, The Times’s Trip Gabriel reported that Gingrich’s “full-time traveling press corps is down to a handful of embedded television reporters.” The Associated Press, The Atlanta Journal-Constitution and even Politico had packed up their bags. I envision Newt as a larger, grayer, windier version of the little boy at the end of “Shane,” watching the last

A farewell to Newt

of these stubborn scribes recede into the horizon, begging them for one last sweet tweet, promising a tasty sound bite about Trayvon Martin or Robert De Niro or ... “The Hunger Games!” There must be some harbinger of cul-tural decline to rail about there! Do “Hunger Games” contestants use food stamps? Those are always good for a diatribe or three.

I implore Fox News to pull up its drawbridge, CNN to bolt its doors. If a Newt falls in the forest and not a single news anchor listens, can he really hang around?

He says he’s propelled by a desire to promote “big ideas,” but his candidacy has devolved into ever smaller talk and ever more desperate sideshows that drag an already undistinguished debate ever lower. Late last week he actually resurrected the Obama-as-Muslim bile, saying the president’s policies raise legitimate suspicion in voters’ minds.

In truth Newt 2012 has never been a lofty enterprise. Although he loves to tout his intellectualism, he got what brief traction he did for visceral and theatrical reasons, with fi ts of rage and fl ights of fancy.

He took off when he lashed out at “the elites,” pretending not to be one of them. He soared when he savaged the news media. He rocketed to a colony on the moon.

And he illustrated a dynamic that will survive this campaign season and

that we should all think about: how much the profusion of cable channels, Web outlets, other news platforms and commentary of all kinds (includ-ing this column) rewards fl amboy-ance, histrionics and a crowded fi eld. A brash candidate is never more than a bellow away from three minutes of air time or two paragraphs some-where. The beast is ravenous, and I don’t mean Newt.

Yes, the serial surges of the Repub-lican contest since August had grounding in a fi ckle electorate and changeable polls. But we eagerly abetted them. En route to our beige destiny of Mitt, we craved color. And showcased it.

Newt is one of the few surviving pea-cocks, especially if you discount Ron Paul, who’s less peacock than emaci-ated ostrich — never airborne, head in the sand — and so consistently dis-counted that no one even bothers to implore him to fold his tent. No one can remember that he pitched one.

It’s time to forget Newt as well. His delegate count is closer to Paul’s than

to Rick Santorum’s. His strategy — a generous noun — hinges on a replay of the 1920 Republican convention, which picked Warren G. Harding on the 10th ballot.

The 10th ballot? That’d really send the Republican nominee into the gen-eral election with a head of steam. I can see the bumper stickers now. Newt: Battle ready. Ballot hardened.

Great politicians are memorialized with holidays, monuments, libraries. For Newt I think an ice cream fl avor is in order, something in the clogged vein of Chubby Hubby or Chunky Monkey, although not so physique-focused. Nutty Professor is too obvi-ous a suggestion, though it opens the door to pralines, aptly Southern.

Maybe Peaches ’n’ Scream? That would honor the state he comes from while acknowledging the state he’s been in — unsubtle, overwrought. Not qualifying for the Virginia primary was a blow akin to Pearl Harbor. The Palestinians are “an invented” people.

Newt is empty calories. A pointless pint of them.

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

Alexander Hamilton was not shy about concentrating powerBROOKS from page 4

FrankBruni–––––

The New York Times

Centralized government inevitably leads to oli-garchic government. The virtue of the citizenry depends on local control, personal initiative and intimate connections. These things are being bleached away.

The Obama health care law represents another crucial moment in the move toward centralization. With its state insurance exchanges, Obamacare is not as centralized as a single-payer system. Still, it centralizes authority in at least four ways.

First, while government has always had the power to regulate contracts and business activity, Obamacare compels people to enter into activity so that it can regulate them. This new ability to compel activity opens up vast new powers.

Second, Obamacare centralizes Medicare deci-sions — and the power of life and death — within an unelected Independent Payment Advisory Board. Fifteen experts are charged with control-ling costs from the top down.

Third, Obamacare would continue the central-ization of the nation’s resources — absorbing an estimated $1.76 trillion over the next 10 years.

Finally, it would effectively make health care a political responsibility. When you go to a cam-paign town hall in, say, Britain, you discover that many of the questions are about why somebody’s back or dental surgery didn’t go well and what

the candidate can do to fi x it. Once voters assume that national politicians are responsible for their health care, national politicians become more active in running the health system.

So this is a big moment. Obamacare forces us again to have an election about how centralized government should be.

Those of us in the Hamiltonian tradition sit crossways in this debate. Alexander Hamilton was not shy about concentrating power in Wash-ington if he thought centralized authority was necessary to achieve national goals. On the other hand, he did not believe central decision-makers had the ability to direct an infi nitely complex and changing world. He centralized goal-setting while decentralizing decision-making.

In that tradition, my own view is that the indi-vidual mandate is perfectly acceptable policy. We effectively have a national health care system. We all indirectly pay for ill, uninsured people who show up at emergency rooms. If all Ameri-cans are in the same interconnected health care system, I think it’s reasonable for government to insist that all Americans participate in the insurance network that is the payment method for that system.

But I think the Obama administration made a disastrous error in centralizing so many of the cost-control elements of the new health care system. I don’t care how many comparative effec-

tiveness research studies are commissioned, there is no way centralized dirigistes can keep up with a complex, innovative system. There is no way gov-ernment can adapt quickly to failure.

There is no way planners can know how many employers will drop coverage, how many doctors will refuse to see patients in expanded Medicaid, how to write uniform rules governing the state insurance exchanges, how many people will or won’t enter high-risk pools, how Congress will undermine any painful cuts the executive branch does make, how doctors will evade efforts to con-trol their revenue, how doctor shortages will pop up, how spending is best controlled.

From a Hamiltonian perspective, the decentral-ized premium support model is a better way to control costs: government insists everybody has coverage but then encourages companies, families and Medicare benefi ciaries to engage in a regu-lated process of discovery to fi nd the best care at the lowest cost.

So, yes, let’s have another round in the debate about how centralized American government should be. Let’s watch liberals and conservatives duke it out. But remember there has always been a Hamiltonian alternative: centralize the goals, but decentralize the means people take to get there. Universal coverage is a worthy goal. Decentralized competition is the way to make it affordable.

Page 6: The Portland Daily Sun, Wednesday, March 28, 2012

Page 6 — THE PORTLAND DAILY SUN, Wednesday, March 28, 2012

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Co-op adds to city’s slow, very slow, food movement

Call it part of the “slow food” movement.

Very slow.With a dash of caution, too.A half-dozen years after initial

meetings and more than three years after its formal incorpora-tion, the Portland Food Co-Op is fi nally ready to begin stock-ing shelves and welcoming members at its new Hampshire Street store, one block up from Congress Street at the foot of Munjoy Hill.

The effort has grown to more than 300 members who pay $100 in refundable “capital,” complete an orientation meeting and pledge to work three hours a month – payment plans and special consideration for those on public assistance are avail-able. An all-volunteer approach has kept the co-op debt free and — coupled with donations and a fi ve-year, rent-free lease on a 4,700-square-foot former tobacco products warehouse — has kept the organization moving along.

The building donation, along with $40,000, came from hedge fund manager and, now, Port-land Press Herald newspaper majority owner Donald Suss-man who owns several proper-ties around the store.

But, even with the new mile-stones, there’s no reason to rush on in.

For one thing, the next step will be using the “store” as a pick-up point only for food pre-ordered by members from any of several major warehouses. After that, and maybe not until the end of 2012, the plan is to stock shelves with common “milk and eggs” items that members order most.

Even then, the store will be a members-only facility, organiz-ers say.

“At this point,” explains co-op board member Rachelle Curran, “we have chosen a model that’s not quite like any other ... using technology to create a new model.”

It works like this: Members can order online from any of sev-eral large wholesale warehouses through the co-op website, get-ting prices usually reserved for large institutional buyers. More than 40,000 items are available, and along with the warehouses the co-op has similar deals with groups focused on linking small farms with consumers.

One catch is that you have to

order enough that the distribu-tors consider it a “bulk order,” but the co-op software allows members to see who wants to split the order. The only time you could not buy a product is when the minimum order is not met.

“It’s more convenient to walk into Whole Foods,” admits Curran. “But you don’t get that sense of community.”

The co-op charges a 10 percent markup on all purchases, a level set by members.

“I’ve been really amazed how, so far, we’ve had almost 100 per-cent involvement,” says Curran, an environmental health advo-cate and Gorham native who became a food co-op fan while living in New York.

She says her work here is “inspired” by visiting the famed Park Slope Co-op, a sort of legend among stores using the “buyers’ agent” model.

At the Hampshire store on Monday, an open door attracted curious neighbors.

“When are things getting going?” asked Erica Thompson, an acting teacher pausing on her way to catch the Peaks Island ferry.

“We have been going,” answers Tim McLain, another longtime board member who was helping process deliveries.

In addition to sometimes brief-ing passers by, McLain, a mas-sage therapist in his day job, also helps conduct ongoing surveys of grocery pricing, says most items come at about a 25 percent dis-count over most retail stores – but he admits that, from time to time, an item will be more expensive.

But, he adds, price is only part of the equation — he likes feel-ing “closer to the things I con-sume” and echoes the idea that the co-op is part of Portland’s food community.

All this caution, and aversion to debt, will be music to the ears for fans of the Good Day Market, itself a legendary Portland co-op that operated from 1970 until 1997, closing not long after moving to an East End location reported to be more expensive. Published reports cited mount-ing debt as a reason for closing.

The co-op’s third annual mem-bership meeting will be held at the store, starting with a pot luck dinner at 6 p.m. and a busi-ness meeting to follow. One dis-cussion item will be hiring the group’s fi rst full-time sort-of manager.

But that’s not planned until either late summer or maybe even the fall.

No hurry.

Tim McLain, a longtime board member, pauses from helping to process deliveries at the Portland Food Cooperative. (CURTIS ROBINSON PHOTO)

BY CURTIS ROBINSONTHE PORTLAND DAILY SUN

Page 7: The Portland Daily Sun, Wednesday, March 28, 2012

THE PORTLAND DAILY SUN, Wednesday, March 28, 2012— Page 7

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French fusion: Venue dons ‘nouveau chapeau’

Known most nights a week for bass-pounding club music or live local bands, the Venue tried out a different sound last Saturday — dinner and musical theater with a distinctively French fl avor.

"Chanson: If we only have love" is a tribute to the lives and music of Jacques Brel and Edith Piaf, French singers whose own tragic lives can be traced through their lyrics. The musi-cal revue was written by Gar Roper, co-owner of the Venue, and was per-formed by the Freeport Players. A longtime fan of music as well as a res-taurateur, this is the fi rst time Roper has fused the two. The theater side of the Venue was packed, but the pub side had its fair share of Saturday night regulars, and Roper was doing his level best to handle the challenge.

"Where's the green room?" Betsy Roper asked her husband.

"I don't know what that is," he said.Although a relative novice, he was

able to juggle all of these jobs with aplomb, demonstrated as he went in search of a coat rack and stopped at the bar to make sure the pub-food sports bar patrons felt comfortable in this foreign surrounding. They were in to watch college men's basketball Elite's Eight, and they were a bit bemused by the dinner-theater crowd. A writer from New England Biker News stopped by to talk. She was looking to have the Venue as a stop on an upcoming motorcycle run.

The Venue waitstaff were caught in a culture clash, as well, as they seemed dressed more for the club than French music. "This night really is the biggest challenge for them. They're young. ... " Roper said, "but the single-style club runs only as a fad, and then fades. We're in for a longer experience of food and entertainment."

To make room for the packed house of theater-goers, the Venue had to shift a moveable wall toward the pub crowd, and the fusion was complete.

"This is our fi rst foray into dinner-theater. We're thinking of doing it Sunday nights," said Roper, a novelist and poet, whose main business is as an independent market research con-sultant.

The restaurant was retrofi tted for the evening, the stage set up with cafe tables, wine bottles, and glasses in a continuation of the audience, who dined before the show. Draperies to one side were from another event, but Roper kept them up.

"They look Parisian, like Gertrude Stein's parlor," he said.

Even though the career paths of Edith Piaf and Jacques Brel were about 15 years apart — and they

never sang together — in many ways, their music can be coupled, "celebrat-ing the triumph and tragedy of Paris and her people," Roper said. This was an encore performance. It had more of the joys of a celebration than the jit-ters of opening night. "The stars have had extra months to prepare and practice."

When introducing the meal, Roper joked with his guests that they were offering the best in French food — "porcupine, armadillo, sting ray."

The menu consisted of a three-course meal, featuring fi rst a salad. "Just a little Italian dressing, and let it work its way for everyone," Roper advised the head chef, Paul Matara-ice. Next came a choice of prime rib, baked stuffed haddock, or vegetable lasagna with white cream sauce. One would have a Bordeaux, if following Betsy's advice for a wine with the meal, a Sea Glass Chardonnay if one followed Gar's lead. For dessert, folks enjoyed cannoli and coffee or tea.

The show opens with a series of images from Paris in the 1920s, pro-jected on a back screen, initially positive with piano music. Then the bombs come, and familiar architec-ture becomes a scene of ruin. The screen darkens and lights come up on fi ve characters in black.

Jane Bradley is a singer and key-board player in the local band "Not too Shaap." Ellen Ebert has been involved in theater in Freeport for nearly 25 years. Daric Ebert started his career as a "stage dad" for his daughter Emily who was in "Hold on Molly," the fi rst production of the group that became Freeport Players. Marc Brann narrated the show and sang a couple songs. Elizabeth Guffey was central of the fi ve performers, literally at the middle mic for the fi rst number, and as managing/artistic director of Free-port Players. She sang the Edith Piaf pieces and was particularly powerful in "L'hymme a l'amour," a declaration of unbounded love.

The audience was treated during intermission to a special guest singer. Marie-Claire Owens, a 9-year-old songstress, belted out "Caresse sur l'ocean" from "Les Choristes." Even though she was tuckered out from a 9 a.m. basketball game, she still roused the crowd with her version of the French song.

"Chanson" is the fourth play that Roper has written. He also has a comedy with the characters Tom Lehrer, Shelly Burman, Bob Newhart and Bill Cosby. He wrote a musical tribute to the American protest music of the 1960s, and he's got a spoken-word piece that features poets T.S. Eliot and Maine's own E.A. Robinson.

It’s a new look at The New Venue on Forest Ave.BY TIMOTHY GILLIS

SPECIAL TO THE PORTLAND DAILY SUN

Gar and Betsy Roper

see VENUE page 8

Page 8: The Portland Daily Sun, Wednesday, March 28, 2012

Page 8 — THE PORTLAND DAILY SUN, Wednesday, March 28, 2012

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"But this is the fi rst time we've been able to mount one of the plays," he said.

"I'd like to see the arts expand across all of Portland. This should be seen as the northern terminus of art and cul-ture in New England, like a Nashville of the north," said Roper, who chan-nels these thoughts into OMNI, his think-tank company which stands for Open Minds, New Ideas.

The Ropers have been married for 47 years, and they have seen their share of varied professions. From 1989 to 2007, they owned and operated a summer camp in Poland Springs.

Once Camp Pesquasawasis, run by the Diocese of Portland, the site next became the Samantha Smith World Peace Camp, named for the Maine youth who wrote to Yuri Andropov, then Soviet Premier, telling of her fears of a nuclear war between their countries. By then, the Ropers were involved. Their daughter, Jane, vis-ited the Soviet Union in 1988, and the following year 26 Soviet camp-ers came here. Their son, Kevin, is

in a band called "The Project" and is beginning to teach music. He's trained in the Suzuki method and will be likewise showing his stu-dents how to play by ear. Betsy says she is supposed to be retired, but she stays busy with family, activities, some of the accounting, photography, and genealogy.

A couple of younger kids who attended the dinner-theater were asked what they thought of it.

"There were some familiar melo-dies," Ryan said.

"I liked the way their stories were weaved in," said Natalie.

The Venue, located at 865 Forest Ave., almost across from Baxter Woods, goes by the tagline, "The New Venue," a reference to a same-named business that preceded it.

Venue schedule

Sunday — jazz luncheonMonday — sports/wing night

Tuesday — Best of Portland (open mic)Wednesday — Blues Jam

Thursday — 18+ club nightFriday — 207 DJ light showSaturday — live local bands

VENUE from page 7

Venue co-owner: ‘I’d like to see the arts expand across all of Portland’

An audience is treated to French music at the Venue on Forest Avenue. (COURTESY PHOTO)

is pizza, a calzone, a steak sandwich, or even a Reuben. I’ve had caretakers of people in hospice who call in for a tongue or chopped liver sandwich for someone who can barely eat.”

Knowing Full Belly Deli can’t rest on laurels of sandwiches gone by (typically these straightforward classic creations were never on white bread and never, ever with mayo), Rosen plans to keep his gen-erationally well-balanced menu items intact. “Everything is made fresh here and it’s the best quality we can fi nd. We just have to keep people coming in, old and new.”

The Down Low: The last time I rode past Wolfi e’s, it was an adult entertainment establishment with a menu for different tastes. Gone are the walls plastered with head shots of celebrities, gone are are the dog-eared

menus and crammed tables, gone are schmaltz smeared aprons on cranky, ancient (even then!) servers, and gone are the cases upon cases of desserts. My memories of the sensory experi-ence aren’t gone, though, and come rushing back when I pull into The Full Belly Deli parking lot.

Check out www.savethedeli.com. Overseen by deli fanatic, David Sax, it will make your mouth water just to share his observations. Sodium intake aside, you’ll wish you were a dining companion on his globe-trotting, deli seeking road trip.

(Natalie Ladd is a columnist for the Portland Daily Sun. She has over 30 continuous years of corporate and fi ne-dining experience in all front-of-the-house management, hourly and under-the-table positions. She can be reached at [email protected].)

Memories of classic delicatessensLADD from page 4

Page 9: The Portland Daily Sun, Wednesday, March 28, 2012

THE PORTLAND DAILY SUN, Wednesday, March 28, 2012— Page 9

Developers: Elm Terrace helped inspire nearby elderly housing

Elm Terrace, a Portland public housing project that became a poster child for critics seeking to scale back spending at the Maine State Housing Authority, is taking shape along High Street, and planners are reviewing a project that developers say was inspired by Elm Terrace.

In a twist of local affordable housing development, Elm Terrace actually helped spawn a neighboring project, the elderly housing complex known as Dan-forth on High, which was reviewed Tuesday by the Portland Planning Board.

Neighbors brought up the idea of building housing across from Elm Terrace, on a parking lot across High Street, and now Danforth on High is poised to be the result of those suggestions, explained Erin Cooperrider, development director for Community Housing of Maine, the nonprofi t organization devel-oping both housing complexes.

"That's what triggered our conversations," she told the planning board Tuesday during a public workshop.

"Generally the ideas come to us from outside, we're not looking for them," Cooperrider said, but noted demand for senior housing and the ideal loca-tion for Danforth on High.

Elm Terrace, a 38-unit low-income housing com-plex, recently received state approval to proceed, but at a lower per-unit cost than originally bud-geted.

Crews today can be seen prepping the corner lot at Elm Terrace while other workers renovate an existing building on the site. This complex should be completed around the fi rst week of January 2013, according to Cullen Ryan, executive director of Community Housing of Maine.

Danforth on High, meanwhile, is entering the Portland planning review pipeline after receiving historic preservation approval by the city.

Neither project will be affected by a high-profi le

shake-up at MaineHousing, involving the resigna-tion of its director, Dale McCormick, earlier this month, according to Deborah Turcotte, MaineHous-ing spokeswoman.

"None of the projects that have been approved through the QAP (qualifi ed allocation plan) will be affected," Turcotte said.

Any projects currently under way won't be held up by turmoil in the agency, she confi rmed.

Facing legislation that would have allowed her board to remove her, Dale McCormick resigned on March 20 from her position as director of the Maine State Housing Authority, effective the end of this month.

On Monday, Maine State Treasurer Bruce Poli-quin stated in a letter that the new MaineHousing board "will refocus on its core mission: to help thou-sands of vulnerable Maine families on waiting lists for affordable housing and heating assistance, given the constraints of limited taxpayer dollars. This is also an excellent opportunity to explore other ways to help Maine families-in-need. To that end, we expect close scrutiny of every program and their associated costs within an environment of complete transparency."

Prior to McCormick's resignation, Poliquin was specifi cally critical of Elm Terrace, writing at one point, "During the past several years, Maine State Housing Authority (MSHA) has funneled federal, state, and local tax dollars to fi nance the construc-tion of 1,100-square-foot low-income apartments costing up to $292,000 each. Scrutiny by the new MSHA board stalled the Elm Terrace units in down-town Portland, once budgeted at $314,000 each. In December, the MSHA executive director approved the 38 Elm Terrace units at a cost to taxpayers of $265,000 per apartment."

In a response letter, MaineHousing clarifi ed that it had not approved the Elm Terrace project, and that the housing authority had "demanded that the developer reduce the cost to $265,000 per unit."

In the wake of this controversy, the only housing projects that may face changes by new MaineHous-ing administration would be new proposals, as the housing authority is in the process of rule making and public hearings about its qualifi ed allocation plan, a process which determines how new projects would be scored, Turcotte explained.

That updating of the allocation approach will be ongoing over the next fi ve or six months, she said.

Planners urge adoption of Eastern Cemetery master plan

Increased development around Eastern Cemetery — combined with city policy seek-ing master plans for all city parks and open spaces— is pushing offi cials closer to a new plan for the area.

Portland's planning board Tuesday recom-mended the city council adopt a master plan for Eastern Cemetery. The recommendation, coming on the heels of approval by the city's historic preservation board, followed months of research and study by a nationally known consultant.

In an assessment of Eastern Cemetery, Chicora Foundation, a Columbia, S.C.-based nonprofi t heritage preservation organization, found about $200,000 in maintenance needs.

Staff did not support a change in zoning for the cemetery from "recreation and open space" to "resource protection zone," noting that the source protection zone is a designa-tion where cemeteries are not a permitted use.

But otherwise, planners were enthusiastic about the plan.

"This is a great story," said planning board

member Bill Hall.Community group Spirits Alive wrote grant pro-

posals to acquire money for a master plan and contracted with Chicora Foundation. For just over $12,000, the foundation studied Eastern Cemetery

and drafted its assessment.Part of the plan, according to Deborah

Andrews, historic preservation program manager, is "to provide direction, estab-lish priorities and recommend appropriate preservation methodologies for city staff and volunteers as they conduct ordinary maintenance or take on specifi c improve-ment projects within the cemetery."

The 350-year-old, 6.8-acre Eastern Cem-etery is the city's oldest burial ground on the peninsula, and listed on the National Register of HIstoric Places.

Vandalism enforcement, maintenance, removal of trash and public access were among the concerns raised in the draft plan. Inspection of below-ground tombs also is needed, which could carry a “signifi -cant cost,” the consultant noted.

Recommendations from Chicora Founda-tion include arrangement with city staff for year-round access to the cemetery; cur-rently, park rangers open and close the

cemetery for fi ve months a year, the foundation reported.

The draft plan was brought forward by the city's Department of Public Services and Spirits Alive.

Elm Terrace affordable housing complex takes shape along High Street this week. (DAVID CARKHUFF PHOTO)

BY DAVID CARKHUFFTHE PORTLAND DAILY SUN

Eastern Cemetery at 224 Congress St. is the focus of a proposed master plan, spearheaded by the city and by cemetery caretakers Spirits Alive. (DAVID CARKHUFF FILE PHOTO)

BY DAVID CARKHUFFTHE PORTLAND DAILY SUN

Page 10: The Portland Daily Sun, Wednesday, March 28, 2012

Page 10 — THE PORTLAND DAILY SUN, Wednesday, March 28, 2012

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HOROSCOPE By Holiday Mathis

ARIES (March 21-April 19). You’ll be brilliant at calming yourself down so that you can take on potentially stress-ful challenges. You’ll take controlled action instead of reacting from a place of fear and anxiety. TAURUS (April 20-May 20). Grudges don’t harm anyone except the person who holds them. You’ll let a grievance go for this reason, and also because there are too many far more pleasant things on which to focus. GEMINI (May 21-June 21). Just as furry animals get fl uffi er when they’re apprehensive or angered, something may happen to make your “fur” stand on end momentarily. Another person will fi nd it reassuring to know that you care. CANCER (June 22-July 22). You know what you’re good at. You’ll apply yourself in your area of expertise and easily accomplish what others cannot do but by the uttermost exertion of their abilities. LEO (July 23-Aug. 22). The journey is long, and what happens today is not a solid indicator of all that will happen. There will come a day when the forces that once seemed to keep you out of a certain “club” will instead be inviting you in. VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22). What makes today fun is that you’ll be in just the kind of mood to throw yourself into situations, mix things up and see what happens. If you make a mistake, you’ll soon recover. LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 23). Exciting projects are incredibly labor intensive. By the end of the day, you may feel that the better part of your energy has been poured into one rather frivolous endeavor that somehow still seems worthwhile.

SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 21). By late morning, you’ll feel ready to take on the world. You’re likely to get caught in the middle of a confl ict. Responding well to the situation at hand takes a high level of energy and awareness. SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21). You have a serious responsibility to yourself. If you’re not loving and caring for yourself as though you were one of the most important people in the whole world, you’re ducking that responsibil-ity. CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19). If your resources were cards, you would play them as though you’d been dealt the best hand in the history of the game. From that perspective, you’ll see many glorious options. AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18). You’ll be wondering whom you can trust. Don’t waste time with those who inspire doubt in you. Put the people who always take your call or who call you back immediately on the top of your list. PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20). You feel that you could be more effective if you maximized a certain relationship or grew it into something strong. Improved and more frequent communication will begin the process. TODAY’S BIRTHDAY (March 28). You will diversify this year, letting go of the known route in favor of adventure. A fresh assignment brings success in a relatively short amount of time. In June, you’ll enjoy improved behavior and per-formance from those who are account-able to you in some way. A coach or loving partner spurs you to personal heights in August. Capricorn and Libra people adore you. Your lucky numbers are: 8, 40, 2, 12 and 30.

ACROSS 1 Steal from 4 Becomes frayed 9 Come __ may;

unfailingly 13 Astaire or

MacMurray 15 “Little Orphan __” 16 Vagabond 17 Precious 18 Caruso or

Pavarotti 19 Globes 20 Deadlock 22 Crew members 23 Bloody 24 Siesta 26 In need of a

haircut 29 Personal charm 34 Salaries 35 Forest opening 36 __-tac-toe 37 Ardent 38 Liquor 39 Half-quart

40 Singer Tormé 41 Smoothly

charming 42 From the time that 43 Not fi t for

consumption 45 Pleaded 46 Diminish 47 Boast 48 Big celebration 51 Profi table 56 Roberts or Idle 57 Abraham’s son 58 Under the weather 60 Bullets 61 Chutzpah 62 In this place 63 Meg or Nolan 64 Overwhelming

desire for more 65 Used a shovel

DOWN 1 Country postal

service 2 Gold and silver

3 Tempo 4 Too diluted 5 Foe 6 Ballerina __

Pavlova 7 Public uprising 8 Love ballad 9 Ms. Goldberg 10 Israeli dance 11 Abridged form of a

word, for short 12 Throw 14 Hauled 21 Cabin wall pieces 25 “__ we there yet?” 26 Hindu teacher 27 Refuge 28 Nimble; spry 29 Piece of garlic 30 Mistiness 31 Cause a burning

pain 32 __ pie; holiday

favorite 33 __ up; misbehaved 35 Hockey score

DAILY CROSSWORDTRIBUNE MEDIA SERVICES

38 Aboil 39 Like a glutton 41 Bro or sis 42 Do an usher’s job 44 Low-level cleric 45 __ oneself; got

ready for a jolt 47 Courageous 48 Equipment

49 Branch of the military

50 Peru’s capital 52 __-friendly; easy

to learn 53 Give a hoot 54 Competed 55 Beige shade 59 Beer barrel

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

Solution and tips at

www.sudoku.com

TU

ND

RA

by C

had

Carp

ente

r

Yesterday’s Answer

Page 11: The Portland Daily Sun, Wednesday, March 28, 2012

THE PORTLAND DAILY SUN, Wednesday, March 28, 2012— Page 11

WEDNESDAY PRIME TIME MARCH 28, 2012 Dial 8:00 8:30 9:00 9:30 10:00 10:30 11:00 11:30 5 CTN 5 Local Vets Visit Portland Water District Thom Hartmann Show ICA TV Update

6 WCSHWhitney (N) Å

Are You There, Chelsea?

Bent “HD” (N) (In Ste-reo)

Bent “A-Game” (N) (In Stereo)

Rock Center With Brian Williams (N) (In Stereo) Å

News Tonight Show With Jay Leno

7 WPFOAmerican Idol “9 Finalists Compete” The 10 final-ists perform. (N) (In Stereo) Å

News 13 on FOX (N) The Of-fice “Night Out” Å

The Office (In Stereo) Å

8 WMTWThe Middle “Hecking It Up” Å

Suburga-tory Å

Modern Family Å

Happy End-ings (N) Å

Missing Becca makes a questionable agreement. (In Stereo) Å

WMTW News 8 at 11 (N)

Nightline (N) Å

9 TWC TV Mainely Motorsports Ridin Paid Prog. Maine Auto King Classic Arts Showcase

10 MPBNNature “Giant Lives” The great whales. (In Stereo) Å (DVS)

NOVA Personalized, gene-based medicine. (N) Å (DVS)

Quest for the Lost Maya The rise and fall of a Mayan society. (N)

Charlie Rose (N) (In Stereo) Å

11 WENHAntiques Roadshow “El Paso” Fiji split whale’s tooth necklace.

Antiques Roadshow “Bismarck” Painting of railroad train. Å

Inside Fenway Park: An Icon at 100 (N) (In Stereo)

Movie: “Jews and Base-ball: An American Love Story” (2010)

12 WPXTOne Tree Hill Brooke deals with her father’s betrayal. (N) Å

America’s Next Top Model Fashion week in Toronto. (N) Å

Excused (In Stereo) Å

American Dad Å

It’s Always Sunny in Phila.

That ’70s Show Å

13 WGMESurvivor: One World Al-legiances are thrown into question. (N) Å

Criminal Minds Bodies are found in a national forest. Å (DVS)

CSI: Crime Scene Investigation “Freaks & Geeks” Å (DVS)

WGME News 13 at 11 (N)

Late Show With David Letterman

17 WPME Burn Notice Å Burn Notice Å Law Order: CI OurMaine Law CI

24 DISC Sons of Guns Å Sons of Guns (N) Å Triggers: Change Sons of Guns Å

25 FAM Jumanji Movie: ››› “Zathura” (2005) Josh Hutcherson. Premiere. The 700 Club Å

26 USA NCIS Å (DVS) NCIS “Tell-All” Psych “Autopsy Turvy” Fairly Legal Å

27 NESN Heartland Poker Tour Heartland Poker Tour Daily Daily Daily Dennis

28 CSNE NBA Basketball Utah Jazz at Boston Celtics. Celtics SportsNet Sports SportsNet

30 ESPN NBA Basketball: Magic at Knicks High School Basketball SportCtr

31 ESPN2 ATP Tennis Sony Ericsson Open, Men’s and Women’s Quarterfinals. (N) SportCtr NFL Live

33 ION Cold Case Å Cold Case Å Criminal Minds Å Criminal Minds Å

34 DISN Random Movie: ››‡ “Hannah Montana: The Movie” Good Luck Austin Shake It

35 TOON NinjaGo Level Up King of Hill King of Hill Amer. Dad Amer. Dad Fam. Guy Fam. Guy

36 NICK My Wife My Wife George George ’70s Show ’70s Show Friends Friends

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

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

40 CNBC Mob Money: American Greed American Greed Mad Money

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

43 TNT Law & Order Law & Order Law & Order “Seer” CSI: NY “YoungBlood”

44 LIFE Wife Swap Å Wife Swap Å Wife Swap Å Wife Swap Å

46 TLC To Niecy To Niecy Untold Stories of ER Obsession Obsession Untold Stories of ER

47 AMC Movie: ›››‡ “Die Hard” (1988, Action) Bruce Willis. Å “Die Hard-Veng.”

48 HGTV Property Brothers Income Kitchen House Hunters Property Brothers

49 TRAV Man, Food Man, Food Amazing Amazing Man, Food Man, Food Sandwich Paradise

50 A&E Storage Storage Dog Dog Duck D. Duck D. Duck D. Duck D.

52 BRAVO Interior Therapy Interior Therapy Million Dollar Listing Happens Interior

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

56 SYFY Ghost Hunters Å Ghost Hunters Inter. Monster Man (N) Ghost Hunters Inter.

57 ANIM River Monsters River Monsters: Unhooked “Killer Catfish” River Monsters

58 HIST Larry the Cable Guy Larry the Cable Guy American American American American

60 BET Movie: ››› “The Brothers” (2001) Movie: ››‡ “I Think I Love My Wife” (2007) Chris Rock.

61 COM Chappelle Chappelle South Park South Park South Park Ugly Amer Daily Show Colbert

62 FX Movie: ›‡ “The Waterboy” (1998, Comedy) Movie: ›‡ “The Waterboy” (1998, Comedy)

67 TVLND Home Imp. Home Imp. Raymond Raymond Cleveland Divorced King King

68 TBS Fam. Guy Fam. Guy Fam. Guy Fam. Guy Big Bang Big Bang Conan (N)

76 SPIKE Auction Auction Auction Auction Am Digger Am Digger Repo Repo

78 OXY Bad Girls Club Bad Girls Club Special Brooklyn 11223 Movie: ›› “Enough”

146 TCM Movie: ››› “Gypsy” (1962, Musical) Rosalind Russell. Å Movie: ››› “The Cincinnati Kid”

––––––– ALMANAC –––––––

ACROSS 1 Stroke gently 4 Start of a George

Iles quote 11 Civil War letters 14 “Float like a

butterfl y” boxer 15 Female

protagonist 16 Legal NY bookie

parlor 17 Be an executive

control freak 19 Blue Eagle org. 20 Send out 21 Gaucho’s

grasslands 23 Get lost! 26 Part 2 of quote 29 “Pagliacci”

baritone 31 Be litigious 32 Contender 33 One of the Finger

Lakes 35 Pager signal 38 Former draft

letters

39 Part 3 of quote 42 Recipe meas. 44 Off yonder 45 Apple drinks 48 JFK stats 50 PC pic 52 “Taxi” dispatcher 53 Part 4 of quote 57 Forward part of a

ship 58 Sickly lack of color 59 Group of zealots 61 Worldwide

workers’ grp. 62 Lab containers 68 Neighbor of Ida. 69 Cultural value

systems 70 Jan. honoree 71 Lady of Sp. 72 End of quote 73 Shifty

DOWN 1 Dawber or Shriver 2 Inventor Whitney 3 Minor muscle

spasm

4 “For __ the Bell Tolls”

5 Of blood 6 Speaks from a

soapbox 7 Many, many

moons 8 Routing word 9 Author Madeleine

L’__ 10 Film units 11 Person with expert

knowledge 12 Flashing lights 13 Degraders 18 Makes a new knot 22 Off-road 4-wheeler 23 Urban rds. 24 Miler Sebastian 25 Russian ballerina 27 French inn 28 Sighted 30 Eight: pref. 34 __ Wiedersehen! 36 & so forth 37 Collins of Genesis 40 Small silvery

swimmer

41 Takes on as one’s own

42 Form of bowling 43 Kleptomaniac 46 Carnival city, for

short 47 Put in stitches 49 SSS word 51 Carve 54 Uses a lasso

55 Hull of hockey 56 “The Double

Man” poet 60 Tilt to one side 63 Wed. follower 64 Actor Steiger 65 “__ Pinafore” 66 Right-angled joint 67 Wild blue yonder

Yesterday’s Answer

DAILY CROSSWORDBY WAYNE ROBERT WILLIAMS

Today is Wednesday, March 28, the 88th day of 2012. There are 278 days left in the year.

Today’s Highlight in History:On March 28, 1942, during World War II, Brit-

ish naval forces staged a successful raid on the Nazi-occupied French port of St. Nazaire in Oper-ation Chariot, destroying the only dry dock on the Atlantic coast capable of repairing the German battleship Tirpitz.

On this date:In 1834, the U.S. Senate voted to censure

President Andrew Jackson for the removal of fed-eral deposits from the Bank of the United States.

In 1854, during the Crimean War, Britain and France declared war on Russia.

In 1898, the Supreme Court, in United States v. Wong Kim Ark, ruled that a child born in the United States to Chinese immigrants was a U.S. citizen.

In 1935, the notorious Nazi propaganda fi lm “Triumph des Willens” (Triumph of the Will), directed by Leni Riefenstahl, premiered in Berlin with Adolf Hitler present.

In 1939, the Spanish Civil War effectively ended as Madrid fell to the forces of Francisco Franco.

In 1941, novelist and critic Virginia Woolf, 59, drowned herself near her home in Lewes, East Sussex, England.

In 1969, the 34th president of the United States, Dwight D. Eisenhower, died in Washing-ton, D.C., at age 78.

In 1978, in Stump v. Sparkman, the U.S. Supreme Court upheld, 5-3, the judicial immunity of an Indiana judge against a lawsuit brought by a young woman who’d been ordered sterilized by the judge when she was a teenager.

In 1979, America’s worst commercial nuclear accident occurred inside the Unit 2 reactor at the Three Mile Island plant near Middletown, Pa.

In 1987, Maria von Trapp, whose life story inspired the Rodgers and Hammerstein musical “The Sound of Music,” died in Morrisville, Vt., at age 82.

In 1990, President George H.W. Bush pre-sented the Congressional Gold Medal to the widow of U.S. Olympic legend Jesse Owens, who was honored for his “humanitarian contributions in the race of life.”

One year ago: Vigorously defending Ameri-can attacks in Libya, President Barack Obama declared in a nationally broadcast address that the United States intervened to prevent a slaughter of civilians. Yet he ruled out targeting Moammar Gadhafi , warning that trying to oust him militarily would be a mistake as costly as the war in Iraq.

Today’s Birthdays: Former White House national security adviser Zbigniew Brzezinski is 84. Country musician Charlie McCoy is 71. Movie director Mike Newell is 70. Actress Conchata Ferrell is 69. Actor Ken Howard is 68. Actress Dianne Wiest (weest) is 64. Country singer Reba McEntire is 57. Olympic gold medal gymnast Bart Conner is 54. Rapper Salt (Salt-N-Pepa) is 46. Actress Tracey Needham is 45. Actor Max Perlich is 44. Movie director Brett Ratner is 43. Country singer Rodney Atkins is 43. Actor Vince Vaughn is 42. Rapper Mr. Cheeks (Lost Boyz) is 41. Actor Ken L. is 39. Rock musician Dave Keuning is 36. Actress Annie Wersching is 35. Actress Julia Stiles is 31. Singer Lady Gaga is 26.

Page 12: The Portland Daily Sun, Wednesday, March 28, 2012

Page 12 — THE PORTLAND DAILY SUN, Wednesday, March 28, 2012

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

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

CLASSIFIEDS • CALL 699-5807

TH

E CLASSIFIEDSCLASSIFIEDS

PROFESSIONAL DIRECTORY

SHOP THESELOCAL BUSINESSESTo advertise in our professional directory

talk to your ad rep or contact207-699-5801 or [email protected]

PROFESSIONAL DIRECTORY

PROFESSIONAL DIRECTORYAnimals

PIT Bull/ Bull Mastiff pups. BornSept. 26th. Very friendly, nicecolors, good with kids and otheranimals. Parents on premise.$300 or trade for hunting orequipment / too ls , e tc .(603)539-7009.

Autos

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

[email protected] for autos and trucks, somem e t a l s . C a l l S t e v e(207)523-9475.

For Rent

PORTLAND- Danforth, 2 bed-rooms, heated, renovated Victo-rian townhouse, 2 floors, 1.5baths, parking. $1400/mo(207)773-1814.

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For Rent

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Services

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Wanted To Buy

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

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Sales & Service 772-0053

New Beginner Classes Every Week For information call Raymond Reid

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www.taichichihstudio.com

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Page 13: The Portland Daily Sun, Wednesday, March 28, 2012

THE PORTLAND DAILY SUN, Wednesday, March 28, 2012— Page 13

TH

E CLASSIFIEDSCLASSIFIEDSPROFESSIONAL DIRECTORY PROFESSIONAL DIRECTORY

Prickly City by Scott Stantis

ANNIE’S MAILBOX Dear Annie: I am a 54-year-old lesbian in a 23-year relation-ship. My partner and I have begun to hate traveling. Don’t get me wrong. We love and enjoy exotic places, but dealing with stupid and rude people is getting old. Our problem has to do with the ladies room. We are often mistaken for men and questioned. I don’t get it. Some women seem shocked by us and occasionally make a scene as if we chose the wrong bathroom. While we don’t wear makeup or frilly clothes, we also don’t wear suits, ties and wingtips. I wear earrings, female clothing and a wedding band set. Think Ellen DeGeneres. These ignorant women need some education. Please tell them they are rude and hurtful. If our presence makes them uncomfortable, maybe they should leave the bathroom. Many of the encounters make me feel bad for days. I just want to be left alone. What can I say to nip this in the bud? -- Santa Cruz, Calif. Dear California: Unless you want to act super-girly when you enter a foreign bathroom, there’s not much you can do to head off such an encounter before it happens. Try working on your response instead. This has nothing to do with you personally. You are simply bumping into women who don’t often have the opportunity to interact with those who appear to be different -- whether in dress or manner -- and so they react with various degrees of surprise, some of which can be quite hurtful. Use these encounters to educate these women by ignoring their shock, holding your head up and being ex-ceedingly polite and possibly charming. Dear Annie: My wife, “Gert,” and I are in our mid-80s, re-tired and in good health. Gert worked for the same company for nearly 40 years and was well-liked. She still goes back to visit every Wednesday and sits in the coffee room and gabs all day with the workers when they take their staggered breaks.

I can’t help but think this has a tendency to lengthen break times and disrupt productive company time. If I were the manager, I would not allow this, but he doesn’t interfere. My main concern, though, is that this habit interferes with our being able to get away together for a few days during the week when hotel rates are lower and traffi c is lighter than on weekends. I have asked Gert to stop this practice, but she refuses. Am I selfi sh to think she should spend more time with me so we can plan and enjoy mutual activities during the time we have left in this life? -- Husband Dear Husband: Well, no, but this activity gives her a great deal of pleasure, and it would be considerate of you to work around it. In fact, she might resent your forcing the issue, in which case, those little vacations won’t be as much fun as you’d like. And perhaps if you stop pressuring her to spend more time traveling during the week, she’d be more willing to do so on occasion, especially if you give her plenty of notice to rearrange her offi ce schedule. Be supportive of her emo-tional needs, and hopefully, she will be equally supportive of yours. Dear Annie: So, “J” is afraid she might have to tip the clerk from the grocery store if she gets help while shopping with her two children. She states that she always returns her cart. While she is doing that, who is watching her kids? This policy could very well be management’s way of of-fering protection to parents who might otherwise leave their children unsupervised in the car while they return the cart. Would she rather have her children snatched by a pedophile just to save a tip? I sure wish this service had been available when I used to shop with our children. She should quit looking a gift horse in the mouth. -- M.

Annie’s Mailbox is written by Kathy Mitchell and Marcy Sugar, longtime editors of the Ann Landers column. Please e-mail your questions to: [email protected], or write to: Annie’s Mailbox, c/o Creators Syndicate, 737 3rd Street, Hermosa Beach, CA 90254.

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Suspect robs Brighton Ave. store at gunpoint

Police are searching for a man who robbed the Xtra Mart at 865 Brighton Ave. Monday night.

The suspect threatened a clerk with a handgun and fl ed the store with cash, according to Lt. Gary Rogers, Portland police spokesman.

“He was wearing a hoodie sweatshirt and a mask, a dark-colored mask to cover the lower part of his face,” Rogers said.

The incident was reported at 9:30 p.m. MondayYear to date, the police department reported 22

robberies in the city. Last year at this time, police responded to 25 robberies, Rogers said.

A hoodie-style sweatshirt is one common piece of apparel used by robbers, to the point that some stores post warnings that customers are not allowed inside wearing them.

Suspicious garb can tip off witnesses to a potential crime, Rogers said.

“We believe there have been some occasions where people are preparing to do the robbery but when they’re confronted they leave,” Rogers said.

Anyone with information about Monday night’s robbery should call 874-8479.

Police are searching for a man who robbed the Xtra Mart at 865 Brighton Ave. Monday night. Anyone with information should call 874-8479. (COURTESY IMAGE)

BY DAVID CARKHUFFTHE PORTLAND DAILY SUN

N.Y. food co-op’s decision on boycott vote approaches

Reporters and television trucks have been coming and going for days. Activists have been leafl etting with new urgency. Politicians and pundits have weighed in. And emotions, in at least one instance, have spilled over into fi sticuffs.

Tensions at the Park Slope Food Co-op in Brook-lyn have been climbing toward a breaking point as the membership of the venerable community insti-tution prepared to vote on Tuesday night whether to hold a referendum on a proposal to boycott products made in Israel.

The debate has overwhelmed the store and its community of about 16,300 members and generated a low-scale media frenzy.

“It’s very distracting,” said Joe Holtz, general manager of the co-op.

Anticipating a huge crowd, the co-op management has moved the vote from the usual location for its monthly general meetings — a nearby synagogue — to the auditorium of Brooklyn Technical High School in Fort Greene. As of Tuesday afternoon, more than 1,460 members had signed up to attend.

The boycott lobby is part of an international move-ment — called Boycott, Divestment and Sanctions, or B.D.S. — that is trying to compel the Israeli gov-ernment to change its policies toward Palestin-ians, including withdrawing from the Palestinian territories.

BY KIRK SEMPLETHE NEW YORK TIMES

Page 14: The Portland Daily Sun, Wednesday, March 28, 2012

Page 14 — THE PORTLAND DAILY SUN, Wednesday, March 28, 2012

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

see next page

Wednesday March 28

Free Income Tax Preparation10 a.m. to 5:30 p.m. Free Income Tax Preparation at the Portland Public Library. The AARP Foundation Tax-Aide program is offering free federal and state of Maine income tax preparation and free electronic fi ling in Portland at the Main Branch of the Public Library at 5 Monument Square. With electronic fi ling and direct deposit, refunds can be received in as little as eight days. Although walk-ins are accepted, appointments are preferred. To make an appoint-ment, call 776-6316.

Putting a record out on vinyl webinar6:30 p.m. The next installment in the Portland Music Foun-dation’s “Music as a Profession” Series. “Maybe you’ve heard about the analog renaissance’ or the ‘return of vinyl.’ While CD sales have been falling steadily, vinyl sales have seen increases of 33 percent (2009), 14 percent (2010), and a whopping 39 percent in 2011. Some 3.9 million vinyl LPs were sold last year, which Nielsen claims is the most vinyl albums ever sold in a single year.” If you’re considering going the vinyl route with your next record, you absolutely need to be in on this Portland Music Foundation webinar. Participants include Jay Millar from United Record Press-ing, based in Nashville; Billy Fields, Senior Director of Sales and Account Management at Warner/Elektra/Atlantic; Wil-liam Etheridge, head of Eternal Otter Records; and Chris Brown, head of marketing at Bull Moose Music. For more information, email [email protected].

‘Not Just Chickens Cross Roads’7 p.m. to 9 p.m. Gilsland Farm, free program at Maine Audubon. “Not Just Chickens Cross Roads: The Maine Audubon Wildlife Road Watch Roads are an integral part of our lives, getting us to all the places we need to go for work and play. But roads have an enormous impact on wildlife and habitat, affecting up to 20 percent of the landscape, fragmenting habitat, creating barriers to wildlife travel and collision risks for wildlife, especially worrisome for some endangered species. With changes to habitats due to cli-mate change these problems for wildlife are even more signifi cant. Maine Audubon, in partnership with UC Davis, MaineDOT, and Maine Inland Fisheries and Wildlife, created the Maine Audubon Wildlife Road Watch website in 2010 to engage citizen scientists throughout Maine. Volunteers from around the state participate by adding any observa-tions to the website. www.maineaudubon.org/wildliferoad-watch. The Maine Audubon Speaker Series is a free monthly program at the Gilsland Farm Center in Falmouth. Contact Mike Windsor, staff naturalist, at 781-2330, ext 237.

‘Little Me’ at St. Lawrence7 p.m. “Little Me,” the musical comedy by Neil Simon (book), Cy Coleman (music), and Carolyn Leigh (lyrics) will be presented by Good Theater March 7 to April 1 at the St. Lawrence Arts Center, 76 Congress St. on Munjoy Hill in Portland. “Little Me” is directed by Brian P. Allen with musical direction by Victoria Stubbs, leading the three-piece band, and choreography by Tyler Sperry. Perfor-mances for Little Me are as follows: Wednesdays 7 p.m. ($20), Thursdays 7 p.m. ($20), Fridays 7:30 p.m. ($25), Saturday 7:30 p.m. ($30), Sundays 2 p.m. ($30) with a special added matinee on Saturday March 24, 3 p.m. ($25). Call 885-5883 for reservations and information. www.goodtheater.com

‘The Truth of All Things’7 p.m. University of Maine Law Alumnus Kieran Shields ‘96 will be giving a talk about his new book, “The Truth of All Things” in the University of Southern Maine Portland Bookstore. Copies of the book will be on sale after the talk. This event is free and open to the public. “The Truth of All Things” follows newly appointed Deputy Marshal Archie Lean, who is called in to investigate a prostitute’s murder in Portland, Maine. Lean soon discovers the murder is just one in a series of ritualized killings that are reminiscent of the Salem witch trials. Lean must decipher the patterns and rituals of these murders before the killer can close in on his fi nal victim. Kieran Shields grew up in Portland. He graduated from Dartmouth College and the University of Maine School of Law. He currently lives on the coast of Maine with his family. “The Truth of All Things” is Shields’ fi rst novel. For more information, contact USM Tradebook Manager Barbara Kelly, at 780-4072.

‘Uncle Bob’ by Mad Horse Theatre Company7:30 p.m. Mad Horse Theatre Company’s Dark Night Series returns with Austin Pendleton’s “Uncle Bob.” “Uncle Bob” marks the directorial debut of Mad Horse Theatre Company member Nate Speckman. It stars guest artists Jacob Cote and Paul Haley. The production opened Monday, March 19, and will run on Monday, Tuesday and Wednesday evenings through March 28. All performances will be at Lucid Stage, 29 Baxter Boulevard, in Portland. Show time is 7:30 p.m. All performances are Pay What You Can, with a suggested donation of $10.

Thursday, March 29

Falmouth Memorial Library fundraiser ends5 p.m. to 7 p.m. Falmouth Memorial Library’s month-long silent auction and annual fundraiser, “Beauty and the Books,” will end on Thursday, March 29. Dozens of art and craft items are available for bidding. On Thursday, March 29, a Grand Finale Reception will be held from 5 p.m. to 7 p.m. in the library’s Russell Room. Refreshments from local vendors will be served. FMI call 781-2351.

‘Ulysses’ for the fun of it6 p.m. The Maine Irish Heritage Center is offering litera-ture lovers a unique opportunity to experience “Ulysses” by James Joyce by listening to it being performed by Irish actors, Jim Norton and Marcella Riordan. Hosted by Ellen Murphy, this event is every Thursday at 6 p.m. through June. Audiobooks version of the novel. Library at the Maine Irish Heritage Center, 34 Gray St., Portland. 899-0505.

WHS Girls Basketball Boosters meeting6:30 p.m. Jm Richards, Westbrook High School Girls Bas-ketball Booster president, announced that the WHS Girls Basketball Boosters will be holding an annual “Election of Offi cers” meeting in March. All residents of Westbrook are welcome to attend and participate, at the WHS Cafe. A partial agenda includes year in review; fi nances; upcoming fundraisers, elections.

PATHS Fashion Show benefi t 6:30 p.m. The fashion marketing program at Portland Arts and Technology High School (PATHS) presents “Collection 2012,” a fashion show featuring original student garments, at 6:30 p.m. in the Portland Public Library’s Rines Auditorium. Tickets are $5 for adults and $3 for students. They will be sold at the door. A portion of ticket proceeds will benefi t Scarborough-based Partners for World Health, a nonprofi t group that sends health care volunteers and unused medical equipment to third world countries. The fashion marketing program received a $450 grant from Painting for a Purpose to help promote the nonprofi t group.

Maine Festival of the Book7 p.m. This year’s Maine Festival of the Book, to be held in Portland from March 29 to April 1, once again boasts a full schedule not just for adults, but for younger ages, too. Children and youth programming will be featured on Satur-day, March 31 from 10 a.m. to 2:30 p.m. at the Abromson Center, University of Southern Maine, Portland. Program-ming includes readings and book-related, hands-on activi-ties with children’s authors and illustrators Brenda Reeves Sturgis, Lynn Plourde, Rebekah Raye, Jeannie Brett, Bar-bara Walsh, Anne Sibley O’Brien, Reza Jalali, Maria Testa, and Nathan Walker, along with programs featuring young adult authors Amalie Howard, Elizabeth Miles, and Sarah L. Thomson, graphic novelist Ben Bishop, and the profes-sional writers of The Telling Room. Program topics include family pets, multicultural stories, and mountain adventures, along with vampires, turkeys, cows, squirrels, and other creatures, too. Additional children and youth authors will be

at the festival selling books and signing them from noon to 2 p.m. on Saturday. Thursday, March 29, 7 p.m. — An Evening with John Cole, Glickman Family Library, Univer-sity of Southern Maine, Free. A lecture by John Cole, found-ing director of the Center for the Book, Library of Congress (presented in conjunction with Maine Humanities Council and the Katech Cheney Chappell ’83 Center for Book Arts at USM.) Friday, March 30, 7:30 p.m. — Opening Night: Tony Horwitz, Abromson Center, University of Southern Maine. Pulitzer Prize-winner Tony Horwitz, author of the historical narratives Midnight Rising and Confederates in the Attic gives an illustrated talk. (Tickets to benefi t Maine Reads at www.mainereads.org starting in February.). For a complete festival schedule go to www.mainereads.org.

Portland Children’s Film Festival7 p.m. East End Community School is sponsoring the fi rst Portland Children’s Film Festival on Thursday, March 29 through Sunday, April 1 at several locations throughout the city. The festival will feature local, national and inter-national children’s fi lms and workshops, the school dis-trict reported. Local fi lms will include a premiere of short fi lms produced by Portland children ages four to 11. Elementary schoolchildren in Portland submitted fi lms as part of the festival’s Young Filmmakers Contest. The winning fi lms will be shown at the Red Carpet Premiere at the Nickelodeon Cinemas on Thursday, March 29 at 7 p.m. and at the Portland Public Library on Saturday, March 31 at 12:45 p.m. The festival will take place at Nickelodeon Cinemas, St. Lawrence Arts and Cultural Center, Zero Station, East End Community School, the University of Southern Maine’s Masterton Hall at 71 Bed-ford Street, the Portland Public Library and the Portland Museum of Art. See a complete schedule of events at www.portlandchildrensfi lmfestival.com.

‘Lady Day at Emerson’s Bar & Grill’ premieres at Freeport Factory Stage7:30 p.m. The Freeport Factory Stage will premiere the “soulful and shattering production” of “Lady Day at Emer-son’s Bar & Grill,” on Thursday, March 29. “This production features the incomparable jazz singer, Mardra Thomas as Billie Holiday, with local musician Flash Allen at the piano. Directed by Julie George-Carlson, ‘Lady Day’ is a fi ctional account of the fi nal appearance by Billie Holiday at a seedy night club in Philadelphia, only four months before her death at the age of 44. The play, written by Lainie Robert-son, was originally produced in 1989 and has enjoyed great success in regional theaters for the past 20 years.” ‘Lady Day at Emerson’s Bar & Grill’ runs from March 29-April 14, Thursdays, Fridays and Saturdays at 7:30 p.m. and Sun-days at 2 p.m. All Thursday performances are “Pay-What-You-Can” — ticket prices for all other performances are $19 general admission and $15 seniors and students with ID. Group discounts and subscription tickets are available. For reservations call the box offi ce at 865-5505 or visit the website, www.freeportfactory.com.

Known for her realistic portrayal of Billie Holiday in concert and on the theatrical stage, Mardra Thomas is a true jazz vocalist with a voice well suited to showcase Holiday’s sculptured phrasing that stamped a signature style on jazz singing. The Freeport Factory Stage will premiere the soulful and shattering production of “Lady Day at Emerson’s Bar & Grill,” on Thursday, March 29. (COURTESY PHOTO)

Page 15: The Portland Daily Sun, Wednesday, March 28, 2012

THE PORTLAND DAILY SUN, Wednesday, March 28, 2012— Page 15

‘Ghosts’ at SPACE7:30 p.m. “What happens when we cannot bring ourselves to leave? Norwegian playwright Henrik Ibsen staged the answer in 1881 with Ghosts, portraying a world of sexual repression, religious hypocrisy, and the inescapable infl u-ence of our parents’ choices. Local theater company Lorem Ipsum (The Threepenny Opera, Blood Wedding, Ubu Roi) revisits this piece of classical theater with the help of Last House Productions and Budget Fabulous Films, giving an immersive theater experience to Ibsen’s timeless examina-tion of duty and deceit.” $10, all ages. Also Friday through Sunday, SPACE Gallery. www.space538.org/events.php

‘The Effect of Gamma Rays on Man-in-the-Moon Marigolds’ at Lucid Stage8 p.m. Mad Horse Theatre Company presents the American classic with the tongue twisting title, “The Effect of Gamma Rays on Man-in-the-Moon Marigolds,” by Paul Zindel. The play opens March 15, and runs Thursday to Sunday through April 1, at Lucid Stage in Portland. “Zindel’s masterpiece, which won an Obie Award, a New York Drama Critics Circle Award, and the coveted Pulitzer Prize for Drama, tells the story of single mother Beatrice Hunsdorfer, and her teenage daughters, Ruth and Matilda. Abandoned by her husband and saddled with two children, Beatrice hates the world. She thinks she just needs the right opportunity, and every-thing will get better. Older sister Ruth knows the reputation her mother has around town, but she seems sadly fated to repeat her mother’s mistakes in her own life. Shy Matilda, or Tillie, is the joke of her school and her family, until a teacher opens her eyes to the wonders of science. When Tilllie’s project on the effect of gamma rays on man-in-the-moon marigold seeds is chosen for the school science fair, the dysfunctional family dynamic comes to a head.” www.lucidstage.com

Friday, March 30

Victoria’s Wonderama11 a.m. to 4 p.m. This spring, Victoria Mansion will host an exhibit titled, Victoria’s Wonderama, a collection of artwork inspired by the Steampunk Movement. “A combination of science fi ction and the post-industrial era, the Steampunk Movement envisions an alternate world in which steam is widely used to power technology. Followers of the move-ment examine both contemporary technology as well as Victorian-era innovations within the context of steam power. The end result? Artwork that is both retro and futur-istic with a distinctly Victorian tinge. The exhibit will open March 30 and run through April 21. Hours are 11 a.m. to 4 p.m., Wednesday-Saturday. All admissions are only $10. Free croquet on the lawn Saturdays April 7, 14 and 21, weather and turf conditions permitting. The Carriage House Museum Shop is closed during this exhibit. Regular season tours of the Mansion will resume May 1. www.victoriaman-sion.org/events_rentals/events.aspx

Falmouth Historical Society table games11:30 a.m. to 3:30 p.m. At Holy Martyrs Church, 266 Fore-side Road, Falmouth. “Did you register for The Falmouth Historical Society’s biannual fundraiser table games on March 30 from 11:30 am to 3:30 pm. Call your friends who play bridge or other table games. Put a foursome together and enjoy a light lunch and beverages. $12/person and all proceeds benefi t The Falmouth Historical Society. For res-ervations call Mary Honan at 781-2705 or The Society at 781-4727.”

Peter Bebergal at the Portland Public Librarynoon to 1 p.m. Peter Bebergal, author of “Too Much to Dream.” The Friday Local Author Series is held from noon to 1 p.m. in the Main Library’s Meeting Room 5. Portland Public Library.

April Fools Weekend events at The Woods2 p.m. The Woods at Canco, an independent senior living community located at 257 Canco Road in Portland, invites area seniors to its free April Fools Weekend events March 30 through April 1. Events include a women’s Tripoli chal-lenge on March 30 at 2 p.m., a singing performance with Dave on March 31 at 3 p.m., and Name That Tune on April 1 at 3 p.m. To RSVP, or to learn more, please call The Woods at Canco at 772-4777.

Birdie Googins at Emerald City6 p.m. Maine Queen of Comedy is releasing a DVD of her stand up comedy show: “Birdie Googins: Acciden-tally Maine’s Only Supermodel & Possible Future Queen.” “Fabulously popular, superbly glamorous, always making a cutting edge fashion statement that only a super model can make. Ms. Googins will be making her appearance at Emerald City in Portland on Friday, March 30, from 6 p.m. to 8 p.m. promoting her DVD and signing autographs. DVD’s

will be available for purchase, with autograph … priceless!!” 564 Congress St.

The Reverend Osagyefo Uhuru Sekou7 p.m. The Reverend Osa-gyefo Uhuru Sekou in Port-land. “Considered one of the foremost religious leaders of his generation, Reverend Sekou is an author, docu-mentary fi lmmaker, public intellectual, organizer, pastor and theologian. Reverend Sekou will read from his col-lection ‘Gods, Gays, and Guns: Essays on Religion and the future of Democracy’ at Longfellow Books at 7 p.m. Longfellow Books events are open to the public and always free to attend.

Maine Festival of the Book7:30 p.m. This year’s Maine Festival of the Book, to be held in Portland from March 29 to April 1, once again boasts a full schedule not just for adults, but for younger ages, too. Children and youth programming will be featured on Saturday, March 31 from 10 a.m. to 2:30 p.m. at the Abromson Center, University of Southern Maine, Port-land. Programming includes readings and book-related, hands-on activities with chil-dren’s authors and illustrators Brenda Reeves Sturgis, Lynn Plourde, Rebekah Raye, Jeannie Brett, Barbara Walsh, Anne Sibley O’Brien, Reza Jalali, Maria Testa, and Nathan Walker, along with programs featuring young adult authors Amalie Howard, Elizabeth Miles, and Sarah L. Thomson, graphic novelist Ben Bishop, and the professional writers of The Telling Room. Program topics include family pets, multicultural stories, and mountain adventures, along with vampires, turkeys, cows, squirrels, and other creatures, too. Additional children and youth authors will be at the festival selling books and signing them from noon to 2 p.m. on Sat-urday. Friday, March 30, 7:30 p.m. — Opening Night: Tony Horwitz, Abromson Center, University of Southern Maine. Pulitzer Prize-winner Tony Horwitz, author of the historical narratives Midnight Rising and Confederates in the Attic gives an illustrated talk. (Tickets to benefi t Maine Reads at www.mainereads.org starting in February.). For a complete festival schedule go to www.mainereads.org.

Stache Pag9:30 p.m. Mustaches will tickle the fancy of Portlanders, with the fi fth annual Stache Pag, to be held Friday, March 30, at Port City Music Hall, and “The International Moustache Film Festival brought to you by Progressive” Saturday, March 31, at the Deering Grange Hall, Portland. The Stache Pag is when dozens of moustachioed men from across Maine, and the world, will compete for trophies in four moustache cat-egories: The Uncle Rico, The Magnum PI, The 1899 Maine Legislature and The Thigh Tickler. After several rounds of rigorous judging, crowd applause determines the winner of each category. The March 30 event will be held at Port City Music Hall. 7:30 p.m. — Special Advance World Pre-miere screening of inaugural Stache Film Fest exclusively for Stache Pag contestants and VIP’s. 9:30 p.m. — Doors open to public. A portion of the proceeds from the event go to benefi t MENSK and MyStacheFightsCancer. Visit www.stachepag.com. “The International Moustache Film Festi-val brought to you by Progressive” will be Saturday, March 31, at the Deering Grange Hall, Portland, with screenings at 3 p.m. and 7 p.m. The fi lm festival proceeds are going to benefi t the non-profi t fi lm archive Northeast Historic Film in Bucksport. Visit www.stachefi lmfest.com

Saturday, March 31

Adoptable Dogs in Sanford 11 a.m. to 1 p.m. The Animal Welfare Society Mobile Adop-tion Team will visit Tractor Supply, 1170 Main St., Sanford with adoptable dogs. For more information, call Animal Wel-fare Society (www.animalwelfaresociety.org) at 985-3244 or Tractor Supply at 490-0034.

Maine Festival of the Booknoon. This year’s Maine Festival of the Book, to be held in Portland from March 29 to April 1, once again boasts

a full schedule not just for adults, but for younger ages, too. Children and youth programming will be featured on Saturday, March 31 from 10 a.m. to 2:30 p.m. at the Abromson Center, University of Southern Maine, Portland. Programming includes readings and book-related, hands-on activities with children’s authors and illustrators Brenda Reeves Sturgis, Lynn Plourde, Rebekah Raye, Jeannie Brett, Barbara Walsh, Anne Sibley O’Brien, Reza Jalali, Maria Testa, and Nathan Walker, along with programs featuring young adult authors Amalie Howard, Elizabeth Miles, and Sarah L. Thomson, graphic novelist Ben Bishop, and the professional writers of The Telling Room. Program topics include family pets, multicultural stories, and mountain adventures, along with vampires, turkeys, cows, squirrels, and other creatures, too. Additional children and youth authors will be at the festival selling books and signing them from noon to 2 p.m. on Saturday. www.mainereads.org.

‘Swan Lake’2 p.m. Performances of “Swan Lake” are scheduled for 2 p.m. on Saturday, March 31, and 2 p.m. on Sunday, April 1. Tickets are on sale through Porttix at 842-0800, online at www.porttix.com, or at the Merrill Auditorium box offi ce: noon to 6 p.m., Monday through Saturday. Tickets are priced at $20-$40, and discounts are available for groups, seniors and children. “Maine State Ballet is one of the state’s leading performing arts institutions. Its two major components are the School for the Performing Arts, offer-ing instruction in several dance styles to more than 500 children and adults; and the Maine State Ballet Company, comprised of more than 25 professional dancers who train and perform at many venues throughout the year. Two local foundations, the Sam L. Cohen Foundation and the Davis Family Foundation, each contributed $7,500 to the produc-tion. The funds will be used to offset technical costs of the ambitious production, including special lighting.” For more information, call Maine State Ballet at 781-7672, or visit www.mainestateballet.org.

Portland Women’s Rugby Football Club2:30 p.m. “With the announcement of USA Rugby’s plan to create more women’s teams, the Portland Women’s Rugby Football Club is ready to train hard, play harder, and defend their championship title this spring. This past fall, the Portland Women’s Rugby team won the Northeast-ern Rugby Union Champions title in New Jersey, earning them the number one seed in the country and a place at the USA Rugby Nationals in Virginia Beach in November. After a loss to the Sacramento Amazons and then two con-secutive wins against Memphis and Burlington, the team fi nished fi fth place in the nation for DII Women’s Rugby.” On Saturday, March 31, PWRFC will host their home opener with a 2:30 p.m. kickoff against Norwich University at their home fi eld, 120 Fox St. in Portland. For more information about PWRFC, or questions about joining, contact Presi-dent Brittney Braasch ([email protected]) or visit www.MaineWomensRugby.com.

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see next page

Emerald City, 564 Congress St., will host Birdie Googins for a CD release on Friday at 6 p.m. (COURTESY PHOTO)

Page 16: The Portland Daily Sun, Wednesday, March 28, 2012

Page 16 — THE PORTLAND DAILY SUN, Wednesday, March 28, 2012

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The International Moustache Film Festival3 p.m. and 7 p.m. “The International Mous-tache Film Festival brought to you by Pro-gressive” will be Saturday, March 31, at the Deering Grange Hall, Portland, with screen-ings at 3 p.m. and 7 p.m. The fi lm festival proceeds are going to benefi t the non-profi t fi lm archive Northeast Historic Film in Bucksport. Visit www.stachefi lmfest.com

Cesar Chavez Observance3 p.m. to 5 p.m. Maine Global Institute presents a Cesar Chavez observance at the First Parish of Portland, 425 Congress St. in observance of Chavez’s birthday and the 50th anniversary of his founding of the United Farm Workers of America. “The growing importance of Chavez going into this century is much more than that of being a union and Latino civil rights leader. Over 65 percent of the New England sup-ported Chavez boycott efforts during the 1970s because he sought to address the basic human needs of America’s poorest working people. Last year, we celebrated the fi rst ever observance ever held at First Parish with presentations on the universal-ity and diversity of Chavez. This March 31 promises to be a discussion on what the values of Chavez mean for this American century.” 518-9177

Haiti Empty Bowl Supper5 p.m. to 7 p.m. The annual Sacred Heart/St. Dominic Church Empty Bowl Supper to support Christ the King School in Morne Rouge, Haiti, will take place in the church hall at the corner of Mellen and Sherman streets (parking on the street and in the PROP LOT at Cumberland and Mellen). All proceeds go to teacher salaries and chil-dren’s nutrition for the six-grade school.

Guests receive a bowl, soup, and bread. All are welcome. The suggested donation is $10. Haiti crafts will be for sale. Haitian folk music. 773-6562

Owl Prowl6 p.m. to 10 p.m. Take part in a unique nighttime adventure — calling in owls during breeding season. $35/$45. www.maineaudubon.org

Country Western Night at Anthony’s7 p.m. Anthony’s Dinner Theater and Cab-aret. March 31. Starring Gloria Jean from Maine Country Music Hall of Fame along with her group Timeless and Paul Andrulli and Jim Cavallaro. Call 221-2267 for reservations. Free Parking, Handicap Accessible, Beer & Wine, www.anthonysdinnertheater.com

U.S. Senate Democratic primary candidates debate5:30 p.m. to 7:30 p.m. The Portland Club will be hosting a debate between the Democratic primary candidates for the U.S. Senate. All four candidates who will be on the Democratic primary ballot have communicated their attention to take part in the debate. The Democratic primary candidates are: Cynthia Dill, current State Senator from Cape Elizabeth; Matt Dunlap, of Old Town, a former State legislator and Secretary of State; Jon Hinck, current State senator from Portland; and Benjamin Pol-lard, a Portland businessman and educator.

Monday, April 2

‘The Faces of Legal Aid in Maine’10 a.m. to 7 p.m. “The often invisible faces of Mainers in need of legal assistance will be brought to light in a new exhibit by pho-tographer Martha Mickles at the Portland Public Library.” The show, “Justice for All: The Faces of Legal Aid in Maine,” will be held from Monday, April 2 through mid-July

in the lower level of the Portland Public Library next to the Rines Auditorium. It is sponsored by the Maine Bar Foundation. “The pictorial series documents the experi-ences of real Maine people seeking justice within Maine’s legal system. It features the faces of seniors who may lose their homes, young mothers fi ghting for their children’s education, and immigrants trying to reunite with their families. It promotes the right to legal assistance among people who often go unnoticed by the general public.”

Illuminating The Beauty and Tragedy of Darfur6 p.m. “In November 2011 students from Falmouth High School participated in an extraordinary event as part of First Friday Art Walk that brought awareness to the genocide in Darfur, Sudan through their magnifi cent works of art. Once again, you have the opportunity to view these inspir-ing and breathtaking works of art created by Falmouth student artists representing Darfur’s beauty contrasted with the tragic genocide.” Illuminating The Beauty and Tragedy of Darfur will be the new “beauti-fully lit” gallery’s fi rst opening in the the-ater lobby at Falmouth High School. The Pihcintu Multicultural Chorus, directed by Con Fullam, who were recently featured

on the Today Show, will be lending their voices to this occasion. “I am touched to the heart each time I hear them sing,” said Reza Jalali, head of Multi-Cultural Affairs at the University of Southern Maine. The Malika Sudanese dancers will be back on the theater stage in Falmouth. Viewing the artwork, mingling, meeting with the art-ists, and sampling Sudanese food will take place between 6 p.m. and 7 p.m. Student musicians will perform light background music. At 7 p.m. there will be a perfor-mance by Pihcintu and the Malika dancers. This event is free, but donations at the door will be gratefully accepted for United to End Genocide and the Fur Cultural Revival.

Third Coast Listening Room: Lights Out7:30 p.m. “Third Coast International Audio Festival directors Johanna Zorn and Julie Shapiro host an evening of stories about metaphorical and literal darkness: blackouts, blindness, lost love, and misadventures in space. Come out for an audio ‘screening’ in the dark, and to learn more about the 2012 Third Coast ShortDocs Challenge.” Co-Pre-sented by SPACE and The Salt Institute for Documentary Studies. $5 suggested dona-tion, free for SPACE Gallery members, all ages. www.space538.org/events.php

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Rahma Hussein, 18, works at the East End Community School garden, Wednesday, where the Culti-vating Community Youth Growers program tends to the beds. In season, the program also sells veg-etables at the Boyd Street Urban Farm at Kennedy Park, next to Franklin Street. On Sunday, April 22, the public celebrate Earth Day by coming out to Cultivating Community’s Boyd St. Urban Farm in downtown Portland and help the nonprofi t organization get ready for the 2012 growing season. (DAVID CARKHUFF FILE PHOTO)