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Casco Bay Weekly (1989) Casco Bay Weekly

9-21-1989 Casco Bay Weekly : 21 September 1989

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Recommended Citation "Casco Bay Weekly : 21 September 1989" (1989). Casco Bay Weekly (1989). 38. http://digitalcommons.portlandlibrary.com/cbw_1989/38

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ascj •. ,'-.' \. .' ~,. .- ~ ~-" . ~ . , . , -~- .. . , ~'. -.;;. Greater Portland's news and arts weekly ~i~~ '.} _ ~ - . , ~.' ",. ,I :.... __ SEPT. 21, 1989 An oil spill that never happened left a green stain on me. • On Tuesday, September 12, an imaginary 200,000 gallons of crude oil spilled into Casco Bay just off the Eastern Prom so that the Coast Guard could test the readiness of Portland's cleap.up crews. Within 'an hour, local contractors were on the scene to con- tain the peat moss used to simulate the spill; within four hours, Governor John McKernan and a pack of journal- ists were on the scene to soak up the pUblicity. I stayed ashore. I'd seen this act before. While growing up in Anchorage, Alaska, I watched similar demonstra- tions of how well-prepared the oil companies were - just in case oil ever spilled into the then-pristine waters of Prince William Sound. And, yes, the Governor of Alaska showed up ." for many of those demonstrations, too. But once that tanker hit Bligh Reef, it became clear that the hole in the cleanup plan was bigger than the one in the Exxon Valdez. COYER STORY by Monte Paulsen PHOTOS by Tonee Harbert This time, watching hom the shore, the hole in the plan was clear to me: the next environmental disaster had to happen before it could be cleaned up. That's an .acceptable risk- unless the next big disaster is some- thing like the depletion of the ozone layer, something that can't be cleaned up. Standing along Casco Bay and thinking about Prince William Sound, I began to wonder if politicians and environmentalists would ever be able to get past rescuing the environment

.~ and start removing the forces that ..,., endanger it. And so it was that I went looking for the Greens. CONnNIED on page 8 Casco Bay 011 spill drill.

UPDATES page 2 LISTINGS page 14

WEIRD NEWS page 3 TUNES page 16

TALK page 4 POOK page 20

VIEWS page 6 CLASSIFIEDS page 21

COVER page 8 PUZZLE page 23 Dogman bites back. Live from the morgue. See page 4. CALENDAR page 12 See page 2. 5epkmber 21, 1989

Coats With a Flair Live Fashion as you like il•.• From: nourished by design ... found althe Clolhes Horse. Featuring the Swing Coat in a blend of cashmere and wool from the Sponsors of the Rolling Stones' Anders collection. Designed in Paris, made in Belgium. 66Steel ·Wheels" Tour Exdusively at These Tickets Are For You! Kaplow regains dogs; sues everybody THE WEEK IN BRIEF: City stalls Dogman eviction Lobstermen want In Fish Ex Locallobstermen, boiling mad at getting rock-bottom prices, Chief Chitwood gave David "the Dogman" And just in case the court order isn't enough, want to sell their lobsters atthe Portland Fish Exchange. AI Caron, Koplow his dogs back, even as Gty Manager the city has been pressuring Koplow's landlord to a Portland consultant hired recently by 25 locallobstermen, said Ganley remained ready to evict him from his York evict him from the lot where he lives in a van. that lobstermen have been pocketing less money for their crusta,­ Street home. "My understanding," said Ganley "is that J.B. ceans while prices at restaurants and supermarkets remain steady. With a television crew in tow, Koplow ap­ Brown (the owner of the empty lot) has requested Havinglobsters at the Portland Fish Exchange-a publicly funded proached Police Chief Michael Chitwood at the city intervention." market begun in 1987 - "will make dealers compete with each Portland Police Station on Sept. 18 and agreed to But David Gass, a property manager at J.B. other in the light of day," Caron said. He expects the directors of obey a court order to leash his dogs. Chitwood, Brown, said that the city initially contacted him, the Portland Fish Exchange to decide in October. who had impounded the dogs 18 days earlier, through building inspector Arthur Addato, and told Koplow that since he was ready to obey the told him to give the Dogrnan the boot. Addato law, he could retrieve his dogs from the Canine told Gass that the van violates zoning ordinances Local stations exiled on dial Control Center. Chitwood said that the Dogman and that J.B. Brown was subject to fines. Public Cable president Thomas Rutledge announced that he will be expected to pay over $500 in impounding Gass said that he was never fond of Koplow's will bump two local "public access" channels to the end pi the fees, but he didn't make him fork over the money abode, but never upset enough to pressure the cable dial in order to free up more- prominent positions for a right away. Dogman to leave. Once the city put the pressure national comedy channel and a pay-per-view channel. Beginning The Dogmanheaded right down to the Canine on, said Gass, he made plans to have the Dog­ Nov. 1, USM'sCommunityCable Network,channel160n the dial, Control Centeron Forest A venue and escorted his man's van towed on Sept. 14. will be bumped to channel 37; Portland's access station, channel dogs from the pound onleashes. Then, two blocks But before the truck arrived, Ganley told him to 4 on the dial, will be bumped to channel 39. Mark Somers, from the pound, he set them free. wait, said Gass. "We were ready to tow," he said. president of the Southern Maine Cable Television Consortium, "As far as I'm concerned, he lied to us," sald But 'The city said to wait, that they didn't want to said there's little his group can do to stop it: "We have no legal legs Chitwood. ruffle any feathers." to stand on, and Public Cable has no moral legs to stand on." Chitwood said that he's not sure what his next The city backed offbecause of the publicity that move will be, but he isn't calling strategy sessions followed Koplow's arrest. "I didn't want to jump to figure it out: "He's walking his dogs. Fine. This into that along with the dogs," said Ganley. "I Jetport expansion takes off is not a priority. We'll do what is expected of us." don't want the perception that we have a vendetta A plan to double the size of the Portland Jetport got off the Budweiser Is giving away five pair of Rolling Stones concert But Gty Manager Ganley is treating it like a against David Koplow." ground with an $18 million expansion plan presented to the tickets. How do you win? Simple. Mail your name, address, and 105 EXCHANGE STREET, PORTLAND priority. Heinstructed Oty Attorney David Lourie Meanwhile, the Dogman has bitten back with Portland City Council on Sept. 11, but it still needs approval from phone number to: Budweiser.lRolling Stones, c.fo Y1 01 -FM, PO m--5260. HOURS 10-6, MON.-SAT. to get a court order to impound the dogs again. a court action of his own. Koplow filed a suit in voters before it flies. City Transportation Director Thomas F. Box 1319, Portland, ME 04104. 'The instruction 1 have... is to proceed with a U.s. District Court seeking $1.6 million in dam­ Valleau said the plan envisions building a new free-standing further court order," said Lourie, adding that "we ages from Chitwood, the officers who arrested terminal which will be connected to the existing terminal by a Can't wait? Fax: 883-9741. Then listen to Y1 01 -FM starting could probably seize the dogs on the previous him, Ganley, the Portland City Council and all second-story pedestrian bridge. The terminal would add four Monday, Sept. Z 5. When you hear your name called on the air court order" but that a new order might be re­ inhabitants of the Oty of Portland. new gates to the four existing gates as well as doubling baggage you've got ten minutes and one second to call in. quired to give teeth to the action. AIIdy N..""".,. claim space. Voters will have the final say on the plan on Nov. 7. Dr. Priscilla Oby If you can name any two of the slogans on this page Budweiser DiMillo's to float bigger boat has usecl over the years, you're on your way to one of the is pleased to announce Rolling Stones shows at Sullivan Stadium In Foxboro, Mass. the opening of her new Health issues explored at conference Antonio DiMillo, owner of DiMillo's Floating Restaurant in Isn't that easy? Portland Harbor, wants to trade up his floating restaurant for a Thanks to your friends at: office at: bigger model, but waterfront regulations might prevent his ship I Cambodians to buy new temple from coming in. DiMillo has put his 800 seat restaurant up for sale, and ~F~~~~~ 323 Marginal Way but has not yet had a zoning approval for the 1,300-seat boat yet Portland, Me. Local health care providers are gaining a new of unusual Asian diseases and types of hepatitis to be built. If the boat turns out to be substantially bigger, the perspective on Cambodian Health care while and parasitic diseases contracted in crowded refu­ zoning board will need to decide two things in terms of the 1987 Cambodiansaregainingsomething themselves: a gee camps, he said. Dr. Oby would like to open her office to all family waterfront referendum that stated that waterfront development new Buddhist temple. While conference members focussed on healthy must be exclusively for marine-related uses: whether a restaurant members for their general health care including: Dith Pran, Photographer bodies, local Cambodians focussed on heal thy bobbing in water is a marine related use; and whether DiMillo's • Complete Physicals· Gynecologic Exams whose escape from the Khmer Rouge in Cambo­ spirits. According to Pirun Sen, a leader in the is exempt from the requirement because it was boiling and boir • Osteopathic Manipulation • Well-Child Care dia was dramatized in the movie, "The Killing Cambodian community, his community finally bing before the referendum passed. Proudly distributed by National Distributors, S«»uth Portland • Individual Counseling Fields," spoke at the Maine Medical Center on has found a site for a Buddhist Temple. Proud distributors of Budwelser® • Bud Light® • Mlchelob® • Office Hours: Mon·Fri 8 AM- SPM Sept. 19. Pran was the keynote speaker at a pro­ A plan to convert a bam in Buxton into a temple Michelob®Classic Dark • Michelob®Dry • Busch • Natural Light • LA Additional hours: Wed. 6-8pm by appointment gram for Maine health care professionals, teach­ fell through this summer when Buxton residents Two Portland Square started Carlsberg Beer • Elephant Malt Liquor For an appointment, please call ers, and others who provide services to Cambo­ opposed the plan. But Sen said that the new Construction began Sept. 11 on Two Portland Square, a seven­ 773-2109. dian refugees. There are about 1,000 Cambodians temple location, on the outskirts of Portland at 2 story building that will resemble One Portland Square in its brick, Directions: Exil7 (Franklin SL) off 295 - Ample free parking. in Maine Dedham St., should go through without proir granite, and stone exterior. Pamela Gechijian, Marketing Man­ In the audience beepers beeped and stetho­ lems. Prin says that the small house costs $60,000 ager for Massachussets developer Northland Management, said scopes dangled. and that his people have put up $30,000 and are that even though the building isn' t due to be completed until the Pran told of his struggle and survival during awaiting final approval fora $3O,OOObank loan for late fall of 1990, 55 percent of the space has been pre-rented by the mid '70s in Cambodia's "killing fields," when the balance. "That is not a big deal" for the bank, UNUM and Aetna Casualty and Insurance Co. People who think that country was in the grip of Khmer Rouge said Prin, who expects to close on the house that the Portland real estate market is soft should take a hard look guerillas. within 30 days. at this, Gechijian said. "This shows that there is an underlying 1here are 100,000 Cambodians here because The Cambodian community has been using a strength in the economy," she said. they can't stand the tyranny of their own land," third-floor apartment at 145 Cumberland Ave. as c:.LAA_1 said Pran, referring to Cambodian refugees that a home for its local monk, Mang So, and as a ~~~EJAV. have been entering the since the makeshift Buddhist temple (CBW 1/15/89). But early '80s. Sen said that along with the quarters being tight, WEIRD NEWS: Pran asked that his audience, composed pri­ members of his community decided it would be copy.oday! marily of doctors, nurses, and social workers, try wiser to own something than to spend money on orA sherriff's office in Florida received an emergency call that • • • ® • • to understand the unique make-up of their Cam­ rent. Libyan leader MuammarGadhafi was dining at Denny's. Michael • • • • bodian patients. "These refugees here suffer deep The new place will still be small for the suir Belman, a 34-year-old jeweler from Cocoa who was eating with In Scarborough at... from Khmer Rouge," Pran began, "make them stantialCambodiancommunity here, but Sen said his 3-year-old son, says it isn't the first time he's been mistaken for Tangerine's understand who you are - make friends with it is a good start. '''This is just a small place where Gadhafi. He describes his predicament as being "at times fun and Pat's Pizza Len Libby's them." we could have a meeting. It will be a good home at times fearfuL" Maytag Laundry Uncle Andy's, Resturant Pran said that to a rural Cambodian accus­ for the monk and a place to study and do medita­ orA 59-year-old antiques dealer died while inhaling nitrous Oak Hill Redemption Center Anjon's Hero's Sandwich Shop Dunstan Sch'ool House ton'led to taking medical concerns to a Buddhist tion ... Wewantto find a better situation- maybe oxide from a dental anesthetic machine. He was found wearing a bigger - someday. It's not everything but our Donut Hole So. Maine Liquors VI~lY:'~ Mhnk or folk healer, something as basic asa blood rubber apron that stretched from neck to mid-thigh; three woolen Cumberland Farms Pine Point Seafood test or taking blood pressure can cause confusion people can feel like they have something." cardigans, a woman's blouse, two pairs of women's slacks and a Black Point Market Clam Bake . 4iiiiJ ... __ _ and fear. Sen said he was grateful to local churches pair of black bloomers. He was surrounded by 112 pages' worth Prouts Neck Market Amato's • Save time and mone~.. selection of vid_s to Also attending the conference was Dr. Natha­ which, after the plan in Buxton fell through this of magazines, photos, watercolors and other materials, all con­ Rodger's Skit Sport Marshview Resturant Hawe ~our movies AU. of PORnAJlD and Ironhouse Brigg's Variety delivered & pick up! PEAKS ISLAND. niel James, whose small practice treats many summer, raised money for the temple search. cerning "bondage and sexual activity related to anesthesia and 773-1999 Cambodians. Local practitioners need to beaware AIIdy NertmUI1I dental procedures." September 21, 1989 5 4 CASCO &y Wakly OWN YOUR ~4~. .~ 110 OWN HOME • ".G'-At{ ..olKS FOR ONLY 146 Ocean St., South Portland Proudest Tel. 799-SAVE U8ed & OUI-of-Prinl Book8 We buy boob, 100. $15 Tue. to Fri. 11-5, Sat. 12-4 by Andy Newman Printers In Other times by 'chance ... , RECENfl.Y ACQUIRED PERDAY** PHOTOGRAPHY BOOKS Portland Ansel Adams Annie Leibovitz Paul Caponigro Robert Mapplethorpe Quality Commercial Printing Garry Winogrand & Direct Mail under Jerome Liebling Joel Meyerowitz one roof. .. • Five mode~ to choose from Eliot Porter • Hom:s as low as $39,950 ... and much more! . • Financing availab~ It's done right, on time • Full Contr.v;ting SeM:e Stop in for a few minutes, or browse for hours. Enjoy! & with a smile! • Over 1,0001.ots available or build on your land . • PRTNTEX FREE HOME PLANNING KIT' CONTINUOUS OPEN HOUSE The full story of Showcase. Over 20 pages M-F II am-7 pm. 9 am-5 pm • Sun. 12-5 pm of homes, options, prices & buying tips. Naples: Rte. 302, E. of Rte. 35. Across • 6 models. financing from Mardon Marina, (207) 693-6996 • full contracting. building lots Turner: Turner Plaza, Rte. 4 (207) 225-3234 Solid Wood Showcase is your Custom Home Specialist. Unlimited capabilities - from the incredible value of Premier to 3000 sq. ft. luxury homes. Furniture . Made In Maine Visit us today. 1-800-344-6552 SYSTEMS of Portland, Inc. 34 Diamond St. ~I,~ P.O. Box 10139 Concepts in Comfort Portland, Maine 04104 SHOWCASE HOAfES,INC. []l builds a complete line of SETTING THE PACE IN AFFORDABLE HOUSING RE"LTO't handsome affordable furniture. CBW/Tonee Harbert 774-1456 *Not Available in all cases. Certain conditions apply. **$49,950 at 10% - 30 yean; 9 FODEN RD. SO. PORTLAND· 775-4312 A conversation with ACROSS FROM UPS Chris Clark When in Chris Clark never has to tell his patients to people faint from watching the body being opened CRUISE THE STEAMBOAT hold stili. Clark, a technician In Maine up for the first time and seeing the chest cavity and Portland I Medical Center's morgue, assists all the organs exposed. $15 SELLS YOUR ITEM can always pathologists with autopsies. Also, some of the odors here are hard to take. It ROUTES ABOARD LONGFELLOW II would probably be easier for someone with a GUARANTEED! be found at Warn" to 11:30 How long have have you been working In medical background to do this than just someone Lobster Fisheries and Island History Cruise BOOKS the morgue? off the street. Need to sell a car? Sofa? Stereo? I've been here since 1983 and I worked in a Adults $8.50 Seniors $7.50 Children $6.50 ETC. "September & October this cruise also departs at 8:30 funeral home for 10 years prior to that. But you get used to It? Bookcase? Maybe even an old 12:05 to 12:55 -Virginia Woolf You never get used to it. You think of it. I What do you call the dead bodles7 always feel they're a person even though they're Lunchtime Harbor Cruise pair of dentures? let Casco Bay You could caIl them cadavers but we'd just as gone. You treat them with respect: you don't yank All seats $3.50 soon call them patients. them and pull them around. I always like to cover 1:30 to 3:00 Weekly's Guaranteed Classifieds ••••• 0.0 ••••••••••••••••• 0 ...... genital areas, some pathologists like to cover the Ughthouse and Shipwreck Cruise work for you. Place an ad for BOOKS ETC 1: Do you refer to them by name? face. So you're not looking at a person. You're just Adults $8.50 Seniors $7.50 Children $6.50 No, each patient has an autopsy number. going in to do the job. three consecutive weeks, and if - ., 3:30 to 5:00 • e.-'--: ~ •••••• e •• eo ••••• !~! ••••••~ •••• Tell me about some of these tools? Naturalist Cruise your item isnlt sold by then, weill Would you autopsy someone you knew? Feed Gulls! Watch Seals! 38 Exchange St. Old Port We have a policy that if we know someone, we These are rib cutters. This is a brain saw, and after you open the skull up, you twist this other Breathtaking foliage in the autumn. continue running the ad, for free, (207) 774-0626 will not work on them. It gets too close. If it's a Adults $8.50 Seniors $7.50 Children $6.50 relative or someone close to us, we have another tool and that exposes the brain. These are bowel until it is sold. technician step in. scissors, these are hemosta ts ... 5:30 to 7:00 Portland Headlight Cruise How many corpses are In the hospital Is an open-casket funeral possible after an Featuring seafaring folk music The CBW Guarantee applies only to the morgue at one time? autopsy7 All Seats $8.50 An average day might have three or four. The We do nothing to disfigure the face, and every­ 7:30 to 10:00 'Wheels' and 'Stuff For Sale' categories. Ads hospital figures maybe 1,000 go through here a thing else can be hidden by clothes, so a patient can Sunset & Harborlight Cruise are limited to 30 words, and are limited to year and we autopsy roughly 180 a year. be shown afterward. Sat. Sept. 23 one item. No refunds. This guarantee is not Who gets an autopsy? What's the temperature Inside the morgue? Steamboat applicable to businesses which derive regular It depends if the family wants the autopsy. If It's kept below 40 degrees. Trio income from the sale of items in these they die in the hospital, usually the doctor will ask All seats $12.50 if the family wishes an autopsy. If the family wants Are people actually stiff? categories. To continue running your ad, you an autopsy, we perform it; if they don't, we don't. Rigor mortis sets in. Usually within an eighteen­ must notify us by Monday, noon of the fourth hour period rigor mortis will come and go. It. + STUNTERS + DELTAS Are there different types of autopsies? usually takes six hours coming. six hours staying. week, your ad will'run. Missing the deadline + DIAMONDS + PARAFOILS There are two types. One where we already and six hours going. voids the guarantee. +ANDMORE! know the cause of death and we're only confirming the doctor's diagnosis. The other kind is forensic Do people ask you a lot of questions about 91f ------I pathology where we're looking for the cause of what you do? To place your ad, use our convenient form on page 21, death. It's not a topiC of conversation that I bring up. If or call Mark Kelleher at OIllJ !PDf! %J'PE people ask what I do, I tell them. I had more 1------s1fam What might someone find difficult about comments from people when I worked in a funeral For AH Ye Mighty doing this? home. Usually I just say I work in a laboratory at Wind Related /Yeeds WeIl, for one thing. not a lot of people want to the hospital. One Long Wharf· Portland· 774-3578 775-6601 3 Wharf St•• Old Port be around dead people. That's one thing. And it 871-0038 does get very graphic a lot of times. I've seen Andy NewmslIl prefers working with people who have a pulse. 6 Casco Bay Wukly September 21 , 1989 7

Save 10% - 50% on everything in our store to celebrate our new street This space is for opinions. Your EAl' YOURS: views are here, and sometimes ours. Please be brief when you write, and License to carry that the makers of alcoholic beverages are decision rather than pretend that somehow please include a phone number MAXWELL'S running scared. Anheuser-Busch and Na­ only illegal drugs are the problem? (which will not be published) so Specialty Housewares Your article "Guns in the city" misses the tional Distributors, in their PR campaign that we can verify your letter. 773-7977 mark on the NRA. Your statements about lead us to believe that their only concern is Send your VIEWS to: VIEWS, 100 COMMERCIAL Sf, PORTLAND the "cop killer" bullets are incorrect. Idonot the public well being when, in fact, they Casco Bay Weekly, 187 Clark St., Enjoy Portland's finest and most convenient JUSf NORTH OF OJ MILLO'S like poor media coverage. supported lowering the drinking age to 18, George K Dreher, MD Portland, ME. 04102 , fitness center. We have the equipment and the "A unique selution of beautiful products from making it more available to teenagers. They Medical Director amenities you want at a price you can live with. Maine and around the world." also opposed every effort put before the Chemical Dependency Unit f~~ legislature for a returnable bottle bill until St. Mary's Hospital JOIN BEFORE SEPT. 30 AND GET A FREE T-SHIRT! Karl A. Kluge finally the good sense of the Maine state • NO INITIATION FEE· FREEZE POLICY AVAILABLE ·12X12 Portsmouth, N.H. legislature prevailed. All this is in the name US: JACUZZI • NAUTILUS CENTER • AEROBICS • SAUNAS • of profits. STEAM ROOMS • 3 TANNING BOOTHS • LlFECYCLES • p.s. I have a license to too. Anheuser-Busch and National Distribu­ STAIRMASTER • ROW ERGOMETER. JAZZERCISE • SELF carry, PUBUSHER Gary Santaniellc DEFENSE COURSES • MASSAGE THERAPY tors claim that the vast majority of drinkers consume alcohol moderately, responSibly, Cops should fight crime EDITOR Monte Paulsen and asa refreshment. While this maybe true The Lone Chitwood rides into town to Portland ARegency NRA opposed II cop for many Americans I wonder if it is true for become the darling of the Portland Press ARTS & ENTERTAINMENT Manicure • Hair Waxing the vast majority. I work at an alcohol and and vows to fight corruption, loud obnox­ Ann Sitomer HEALTH CLUB Pedicure • Tinting killer" bullets drug rehab and the vast majority of our ious behavior and disorderly conduct -and, lentl re rootl I'¥'txows & eyelashesl NEWS & UPDATES 20 MILK ST. - OLD PORT 774-4200 "Guns in the City" (CBW 8/31/89) ig­ patients are admitted for alcoholism. Many oh yeah, rape, burglary and drug dealing - AndyNamnan nores an important statistic, the number of of our patients suffer from dual addictions even though the latter three aren't getting PHOTOGRAPHS MONDAY IS MEN'S DAY Maine citizens who have a valid pennit to and report that they consume beer daily. the attention they deserve. But he makes up Oller expires 9130189 Tonee Harbert carry weapons, and who are charged with I can only say, that to me, there is very for it on the disorderly conduct. I know that IUUSTUnONS ",\\ T~/~ some criminal activity involving those little difference between drugs and alcohol. I'll sleep a little easier knowing that the TokiOshima ~ ..t ... weapons. The reason this statistic is ignored One is legal and the other is not. Crack, "menace" David Koplow and his band of is that the number is practically zero. Law cocaine. alcohol and prescription drugs wild dogs are put in their place at last. PlODUCnON MANAGER abiding gun owners pose no threat to the when abused are all dangerous. Mr. Chitwood sure took control the other Elissa Conger public safety. The problem is the misuse of night when hejumped on the hood of his car DESIGN fireanns by criminals who are anned de­ yelling orders to a lively group gathered Truth Hawk spite existing laws, and will remain armed -r1 ,,/"1'1 ~ W c..,;J.. "'1W'o.. outsidea pub, while his faithful, hot-headed, DULL \ regardless of additional restrictions. Thomas Woodman power-hungry followers in blue sucked a CIRCUUnoN MANAGER RELATIVES? 32A 1VIt\11(I'.t: ST. • OLD PORT Gun control laws wrongfully target hon­ Portland 20-year-old women from her car when she Diane DesMarais KROSS FROM THE PORTlAND REGEI'I.ICY est gun owners and sportsmen without af­ was pulling out of a parking space, and FOR APPr. CALL 775-5485 CIRCUUnON fecting criminals. The failure of these mis­ charged her with failure to disburse. Jim , Winn Orr guided attempts at crime control is clearly Meanwhile the press started showing up. Elke Rosenberg, PA Trisha evident in cities like Washington, D.C. and Mr. Chitwood loves the press and the press New York which are plagued by increas­ All drugs a problem loves him - they go everywhere together. ADVERTISING ~~Communi ingly violent crime despite the strictest gun '1'mgoing to shut you down!" heyells to the Annie Lewis, Garry Young control in the nation. The advertisement on page 28 of your owner of a high-spirited bar, where musi­ Cable Netwo "Guns in the City" misrepresents the Aug. 10 issue was brought to my attention. cians play, people dance, and fishennen, CWSIFIEDS week of .. rIU,... , posi tion of the National Rifle Associa tion. The basic theme of the ad seemed to be that alongwithotherworking-

I Earth First! No compromises•

Bumed-out after a series of of defeats, five ' says officially. The Earth First! Journal, how­ environmentalists went camping in the Mexi­ ever, carries a regular column, "Dear Ned can desert in 1980. By the time they got back to Ludd," about monkeywrenching and does take Arizona they had created Earth First!, the most an editorial position in favor of the practice.) radical environmental group on the American Of the monkeywrenching tactics editOrially scene. favored, tree spiking has been most con trover­ Dave Foreman, a balding cruiserweight sial. In 1986 a sawmill worker in northern about six feet tall, was joined by Howie Wolke, was badly injured when his saw a Wyoming representative of Friends of the shattered on hitting a spike in a log. Earth Earth; Bart Koehler and Ron Kesar, both First!, has drawn ire for the incident, though Natural working consen.

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1 4 ClISco Bay Weekly , PORTLAND SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA I TOSHIYUKI SHIMADA, MUSIC pi RECTOR & CONDUCTOR 65TH SEASON 1989-90 Sat., September 23, 8 P.M. 874-0000 Portland City Hall Auditorium 18 Monument Square and Comer of Fore &Exchange BOWDER Fanfare WAGNER Die Meistersinger: Prelude BRUCH Violin Concerto No.1 Compiled by Ann Sitomer WAGNER BRITTLE BOD U.tlng. mu.t be recolved by 5 pm the Thursday prior to publlc.tlon Ann Slt_r, C.sco B.y W ....1y, 187 C ..rk St... " Port.. nd 04102 Tristan und Isolde: with GlffHORSE Prelude and Liebestod STRAUSS, R. Till Eulenspiegel's KYOKO TAKEZAWA Merry Pranks $ 22, $18, $14, $ 8 Call 773-8191 Concert Sponsor: WGME-TV

• Our deck is still open for you sunworshipers! • Luncheon Specials Every Day!

Frl. & Sat. Sept. 22-23 So. 0' Love AI Pacino and Ellen Barkin The Bre.kdown (rock) Moose Alley, star in Ihis murder Hick. Pacino is a cop 46 Market, Portland. 774-5246. Do tho Righi ThIng Spike Lee's third investigating the murder of men who St.vlo .nd lhe BI.ckoul. (rock­ major release, "00 The ~ight Thing." is have been seduced through personal abilly) Angie's, Commercial St, Pon­ a funny, almost theatrical movie about ads in the paper. land. conflict between young and old, male What's Where Tumor.nd Hooch Tom Hanks plays The W.vobro.k... (rock) Old Pori and female, Italians and Blacks, Blacks a cop with a dog Both boys work to Tavern, 11 Moulton, Portland. 774- and Koreans, people who are comfori­ bust a drug-smuggling ring and still 0444. Frl. & Sat. able with the status q.JO and those who Oeneral Cinemas have time for a romance Spill 50 (rock) Dry Oock, 84 Commer­ want to ovenhrow it The movie takes Maine Mall cial, Ponland. 774-3550. Sept. 29-30 SILVER ~ on one hot day in a black neigh- M.... Mall Road, 5 _land No Ro.1 Nolghbo.. (rock) Spring SUN/SEPTEMBER 24 cod in Brooklyn, where little things 77..... 1022 Point Cafe, 175 Pickett, S. Ponland. build into a riot. Amidst the ruthless rap ...... ""In CRI 767-4627. 1::10, ':15, 7:20, 10 (opens Sap 22) of Brooklyn, Spike Lee has proven that _elL... CRI Blocky.reI (rock) John Martin's Manor, doing the right thing is easier said than 1:(5,':15,7,9::10 700 Main St. , S. Portland. 775-5642. ...., U•• afMII videotape (AI SMALL done - and that believing that what Scott Oakloy Oazz) Blue Moon, 425 you're doing is the right thing is harder 1,3:10, 5:20, ~::IO, 9:45 111m. & "ootch CPGI Fore St., Portland. 871-<)663. still. 12:45, 3, 5:10, 7:15,9:25 (Ihrough Sap 21) .. ••mln (acoustic) The Shawmut Inn, SCREEN p_th_ CPG·131 E.Ung Raoul Lovely and nasty com­ Kennebunkpon. 967-3931. HAPPy HOYR 12:45. 3:45,7,9:50 ACTS Tho Abyaa is the latest from down edy about a couple in financial trouble L.eth.IW•• _ • cal under, and this time ifs not Australia. who stumble upon a uniq.Je way to 1:45, 4. 7:05. St30 4-6 MON.-FRI The undersea epic offers great deep­ bring in extra money: they murder n.._.I_131 1, 4. 7, 10 on the waterfront sea special effects, but the plot is be­ people they lure in by offering them IU_.. IRI SATURDAY+ wildering. A submarine, a nuclear sexual favors. 1, 3:10, 5:20, 7:25, 9:36 ~hrough Sap 21) in the Old Port warhead a deranged naval officer and Exqulalto Corpse. is the Maine pre­ v ••••, Clemont. Trio (fiddlers) an alien Creature all !i9ure in the story. Raoul's, 865 Forest Ave., PorHand. 84 Commercial Street miere of the first feature film by the Nickelodeon Ed Harris and Mary Elozabeth Mastran­ Venezuelan director Temistocles 773-6886. Portland, ME • 774-3550 tonio star. Lopez. The movie is about the perver­ TOfT1lIe ~:;t5~ ' PorUand Tho T.n.m.n, Tho Devil Dog. Allco'. Ro.t.lINnt Folk musician sion of a player from Okla­ FiISt matinee on Sal-Sun only and Shotgun (rock) Geno's, 13 brown Ario Guthrie plays his music and sings Th. Jleclulg. CRI St., Portland. 761-2506 . homa in . The comic 1:25,4:10.7:10.9:30 an epic about dumping trash. thriller is a satire on the urban soene. Do the Rght thing IRI Unclo Buck is John Candy's annual Rockln' Yibrallon(reggae) Tree Cafe, Athena, CA. is a documentary on L.thlll W ..pon II Danny Glover and 1:15,4:20,7:15, 9:40 ~hrough Sop 21 ) summer comedy - this year directed 45 Danfonh, Portland. 774-1441 . Southern rock 'n roll (no, "Freebird" htman (PG-t31 by John Hughes. Uncle Buck comes to Tho Bre.kdown (rock) Moose Alley, Mel Gibson play two cops flghung South 1:20.4:05. 6:50, D:15 please.) The main attractions are African drug smugglers. Lots of prod­ Uncle IIuck CPO) stay and take care of his nephew and 46 Market, Portland. 714-5246. ~lUtluxl'sFtmt R.E.M. and the 8-52'S, two bands who uct placement and politically correct 1:10.4:20,7. 0:20 nieces Stovl•• nd tho BI.ckoul. (rock­ went from the college rado circuit to _d P.... _Sely CPCI When Harry Mot S.lIy Meg Ryan abilly) Angie's, Commercial St, Port­ asides make up the bulk of thiS one. 1,4:15. 6:45. 9:15 the big time. . The movie starts in the beginning 01 a __ "UT\' lI.t ..IIV IPC'''I and Billy Crystal play on-and-off ac­ land. B.tman Michael Keaton IS Bruce quaintances, who challenge the sup­ The W.v.bre.k... (rock) Old Port Pilla and Steak Sandwiches car chase; plot is someming which o1:30,4.7:30.9;.1:5 __t_11 Wayne, fighting against an oppressive never seems to cross the prOducer's position that men and women cannot Tavern, 11 Moulton, Ponland. 774- 1:15,':20 (opens Sap 22) be friends. This isn't a movie that gets 0444 evil world of Gotham CIty lorded by the I mind. ... No Evl, Hoar JI. hli Joker (Jack Nicholson). The sets are 7:15,9:40 (opens Sap 221 one thinking about the meaning of Spill 50 (rock) Dry Dock, 84 Commer­ designed by Anton Furst, who deSigned modern relationships, but it is Ihor­ cial, Ponland. 774-3550. the sets for 's "Full Metal The Movies oUlJhly enjoyable. The short segments No R ••I N.lghbo.. (rock) Spring Jacket." among other films. The mOVie 10 Exchange, Portklnd of Interviews with married couples add Point Cafe, 175 Pickett, S. Ponland. has a wonderful /001<. Unforiunately, m-9600 spice to the love story between Crystal 767-4627. the plot and characters fall far shon of Ath..... GA and Ryan. Blocky.rd (rock) John Manin's Manor, Sap 20-23 the movie's menacing and profound Wed-5aI at 7:15, 9 700 Main St., S. Portland. 775-5642. sets. Sat mat at 1:15 Scott O.kl.y (jazz) Blue Moon, 425 B"ck R.ln Michael Douglas plays and IlIch.... 1II Fore St., Portland. 871-0663. TUE/SEPTEMBER 26 NYC cop delivering a Japanese Cop to Sap 2.-26 ....mln (acoustic) The Shawmut Inn, RSun __ at!) the police in Osaka. Moo-Tue at 6::30 Kennebunkport. 967-3931 . Bunny ukol~ MlaalngOtto Pre~in­ Sop 23-25 ge(s thriller IS about an Amencan Sat at 3, Sun at 7 ACTIVE mother who goes to to pick up Mon arB her illegitimate daughter from school aunn,. t..k. I. 1I1 ••ln, SUNDAY+ and discovers no one fitting herdaugh­ 5op2'-26 Lunch 11-4 Dinner 4-10 Sun ill " 9:30 CULTURE ter's description has ever been en­ Tue aiD C.... Chenlo, .nd the Red HOi Lounge open until 1:00 rolled there. Laurence Olivier, Carol E .....I.Il • .....,.... CRI Loul.l.n. B.nd (zydeco) Raoul's, 5411>27-30 865 Forest Ave., Portland. 773-6886. 33 INDIA ST. Lynley, Keir Dullea and Noel Coward Wed·Sat a17. 9 star. Salml,3 D.nl Tribesmen (reggae) Raoul's, WED/SEPTEMBER 27 PORTlAND 865 Forest Ave., Portland. 773-6886. Tho Pacugo Gene Hackman plays Cinema City Scott Ful.om (acoustic) Moose Alley, an Army sergeant who is ass_igned the Wos1brook Plaza 46 Market St., Portland. 774-5246. 85.... 9116 MUSIC job 01 delivering a prisoner (Tomr"!'Y Th. Nlghillfo. (r&b) Old pon Tavern, 773-3530 AlllrMS Ihr~h Thursday; call ahead 11 Moulton, Portland. 774-0444. lee Jones) from Germany to stand tnal lor frida.;::angeo BRUNO'S in the states. The prisoner turns out to UncI. IPGI Free parking. VISA. MASTERCARD • AMERICAN EXPRESS be an assassin hired to sabotage the 7,9, weekend mall, 3 __ H.~ lI.t "I!y CRI signing of a nuclear disarmament treaty 7:15, 9:15 between the U.S and the Soviet Union. "_1-'" The J(Id8 TUESDAY+ The story wanders midde ground 7:15,9:15, weekend mall all:1S. 3:15 the DooId ...... _Sely IPOI between obscure and sophomoric, but CLUBS Small Act. (reggae) Tree Cafe, 45 7. 9, weekend mats at 1. 3 Danfonh, Portland. 774- t 441 . its real substance is drawn from the ..ton ... IPO.UI fear of nuclear annihilation and a lack 7,9, weekend mats at 1. 3 Tho Spldon (rock) Old Pori Tavern, of trust in the people who make the de­ THURSDAY+ 11 Moulton, Portland. 774-0444. cisions which allect the fate of the Evening Star Schedule subieCt to change eanh. Unfortunately, there are too many Tontine MaN. Brunswick T.l M.h.1 (blues) 7and 10pm, Raoul's, Ruby's Choice stereotypes and too much preying upon 729-5486 865 Forest Ave., Portland. 773-6886. fears to make this anything more than Do TIM Right Thing CRI ..on.... .nd N.llonol Poopl.. WEDNESDAY+ 7.9:1 5 a moderately entenruning spy flick. G.ng (rock) Tree Cafe, 45 Danforth, Tho W.II... (reggae) Tree Cafe, 45 P.ronlhood Ron Howard'staleofchild Bowdoin College Portland. 774-144 t. Danfonh, Ponland. 774-1441 . Dead Poot. Soc.. ly Peler Weir's rearing in middle-dass America. Steve Brunswick Savoy Trufflo (rock) Moose Alley, 46 MI.. X.nno Don'I (c&w) Zootz, 31 movie is about a group ofschoolboysin Manin plays the man with a high pres- Market, Ponland. 774-5246. Forest Ave, Portland. 773-8187. The Whigs (rock) Geno's, 13 Brown, a strict New England prep school who sure job, who wants to be superdad. Italian Film Sorle. The Spiders (rock) Old Port Tavern, Sept. 22 The Island Theater, Peaks Island Oct. 4 Raoul's Dance Party THUISEPTEMBER 28 7 pm, Sm,h Aud1orium. Sils Hall Portland. 761-2506. 11 Moulton, Portland. 774-0444. are inspired by an English teacher While Jason Robards and a cast of Ro... lllnl". C.rol & The Chllnno .. (rock) Old Sept. 23 Cumberland Club, Private Party Oct. Private Party, Andover, Mass. (Robin Williams) to look beyond the thousands meander through some -Rom. ctttil aperta­ Red Llghl R.v_ (r&b) FIaoul's, 865 6 DARK HOLLOW ordinary and to live their own dreams tasteless humor about family life, pep- Sap 21 PonTavem, 11 Moulton, Portland. 774- Forest Ave., Portland. 773-6886. Sept. 26 Anniversary for Horsefeathers, Oct. 7 Lake Sunapee, N.H., Private Party rather than conform to the expecta- pered with a few serious and poignant lIo_IIInI'. 0444. DANCE! DANCE! DANCE! - .. Oenenlo dell. lIov... • Acllvo Culluro (reggae) Spring Point Private Party Oct. 11 Raoul's Dance Party tions of their parents and schoolmas- moments. Sap 28 Cafe, 175 PICkell, S. Ponland. 767- ters. Williams' acting does little to in- Robecc. Alfred Hitchcock'sfirstAmeri- 4627. Sept. 27 Raoul's Dance Party Oct. 13-14 Dry Dock spire, but his character gives the rest of can movie is about the second wife C ..nder .nd Cerman Cinema DANCING+ Fresh Baked Pies; 7 Smllh Auditorium. SlUs Hall Blocky.rd (rock)John Manin's Manor, Sept. 30 Portland Country Club Oct. 14 Aft., Bethel Inn, Private Party the story the impetus it needs to carry (Joan Fontaine) of the brooding noble- pm, Hung.... Y.. ra - In • Rich a..nd 700 Main St., S. Portland. 775-5642. Zootz, 31 Forest, Portland. Thu: house on without him. Using the haunting and man (Laurence Olivier), who is haunted dlraded ~unJ BrOcknar Quality is always in style. mysucal images that have become his by the memory of the first wife Re- mu. ic and new music; Fri: Post Mod­ Every Wednesday Night is Ladies Night at Raoul's tredemark, Weir makes the boys' initia- becca. The dassic suspense flick won ern - all ages; Sat: latest dance music; Film and Video Club Sun: request night; Tue: Hip House - all tion into life, love and poetry extraord~ the Academy Award for Best Picture in with the Red light Revue - Ladies Admitted Free! Take one home today! Smith Auditorium. Slll& Hall FRIDAY+ ages. 773-8187. nary. . 1940. Allc.'. R...... Now booking weddings and corporate parties fo.. fall &: winter'. Don'I Look Now Donald Suther1and Rlchllrd III Laurence Olivier directed Sap 22. 7::10 and 10 pm Hot Property and Brokon Toy. htlntl R• oul and Julie Christie star in director Nicho- and played the title role in his captivat- Sop 23, 7::10 and 10 pm (rock) Geno's, 13 Brown St., PorHand. las Roeg's suspenseful tale about .a ing Interpretation of Shakespeare's 761 -2506. MORE+ Specializing in Weddings, Corporate & Private Functions and Nightclubs. couple who are haunted by the guilt traQedy. Olivier's per10nmance shows Inspecto.. (rock) Raoul's, 865 Forest Sap ."mo",'ZT, 3:30 and 8 pm CALL 883-2802 over the loss of their daughter. The ollnis Incomperable skills as an actor. Kresge Audtorium. VIsual Arts Cenler Ave., Portland. 773-6886. chilling movie is show in Venice. John Gielgud, FIalph Richardson and Phl.h (funk) Tree Cafe, 45 Danfonh, Claire Bloom also star. Portland. 774-1441. I 6 Usco Bay Wukly &plnrlber 21, 1989 1 7

S.squlc.nt.nnl.1 Cel.b•• tlon sponsored by the New Gloucester Authentic Greek Pizzeria Historical Society Sep 24, 2 pm at the Universalist Meeting House, Rt. 231, Call ahead Jor Jaster service New Gloucester. Free and open to the .'. public. For more information, call 926- .: ... 4469. 797-9030 .':' ::' :.: .. a.ttl. of D_ring Oaks The 300th anniversary of the largest battle be­ tween Indians and Whites ever fought on Maine soil will be celebrated Sap THE WHIGS 30, 10 am at the newly restored battle by Dave Marsh marker in Deering Oaks Paril, Port­ ON land. State Representative Herb Adams withTNB will give a description of the battle and representatives of Maine's Penobscot and Passamaquoddy tribes will make HOT PROPERTY with a presentation. The 19th century battle mariler, which has been restored by BROKEN TOYS the Parkside Neighborhood Associa­ MUSIC STAGE tion, will be unvei led. The ceremony is A Funny Thing H.pp.ned on t ... free and open to the public. W.y to the Fonom Steven Sond­ Auction Msl_ i-A Sep 30 at the THE TALISMEN heim's musical through Oct 23 at the First Parish Congregational Church in OgunqJit Square Theater in Ogunquit. Saco. Preview 6-7 pm; silent auction at with THE DEVIL DOGS Showtime is 8 pm. For more informa­ 7 pm; live auction at 8 pm. Admission is SHOWS tion, call 646-5151. $2, including door pnzes. desert and from New York City and SHOTGUN Th. Lion In Wlnt•• James Goldman's beverages. comedy about King Henry of England, Pe.c.w.lk '8910-kilometerfundrais­ LOOK. THE SIAMESE TRIPLETS Sat. 9-30 his Queen, his mistress and his three ing walk based in 15 Maine communi­ THURSDAY+ ties Oct 1, 1 pm. Monies raised will help sons under one rooflo celebrate Christ­ H 0 USE o F P I Z Z A liOR". THE HEADLESS HORSEMEN Fri 10-13 AI.x...... String Qu•• t.t (classi­ mas Sep 21-23, 28-30 at 8 pm at the the Maine Peace Campaign's efforts on arms control and non-intervention­ cal) Works performed are String Quar­ Thomas Inn & Playhouse, RI. 302, Dine In or 1373 Washington Avenue Open Daily tet Op. 76, No. 1 by Haydn. String South Casco. Tickets are $101$8. For ist foreign policy and in p'articular an Take Out EI :J it. W~: fill a·] ii i !J: I· fliS Iffi. II Quartet No.2 by Janacek, and String reservations, call 655-3281. effort to ban cruise miSSile testing in Portland 11:00 to 10:00 Quartet in D Major, Op. 44, No.1 by A Coupl. of Whit. Chicks Sitting Maine, resettling a village in EI Salva­ Mendelssohn, 7:30 pm at the Rockport Around T.lklng Comedy presented dor and a third portion, designated by Opera House, Rockport. TIckets are by the Boothbay Summer Theater, the walker, will go toward groups that $81$4: For more information, call 236- Boothbay Harbor. Performances are are woriling for a variety of human 2823. Fri-Sat at 8 pm through Oct 8. Tickets needs efforts. For more information on 1.ln M.clnto.h (Scottish folk singer) are $11.50-$15. For more information, IocaJ walks: Portland, 772-0266; Brun­ CALI.ING 7:30 pm, Chase Hall Lounge, Bates call 633-6186. swick/Bath, 729-8104; Biddeford,Saco, College, Lewiston. Admission is $1. B ...f_t In t ... P.rk by Neil Simon 284-9219; Yarmouth/Freeport, 846- DR_Y pertormed by the Embassy Players 5194; or statewide 773-1782. Rock & roll confidential Sap 21-Oct 8 at the Schoolhouse Arts Center, Rts. 35 and 114, Sebago Lake. FRIDAY+ Pertormances are Thu-Sat at 8 pm, Dc. Y says! Here's a football odd­ pleasure to those who try me. Do Sunat2. TIckets are $10/$6. For more Freedom and housing Saxophonl.t Ju"u. Hemphill of information, call 642-3743. ity... Although there have been many you know which horse in history the World Saxophone Quartet (jazz) T ....t .. of MI.... & D.nc. Tony cases in high school and collcge has won the most money raciog... 8:15 pm, Bates College Chapel, lewis­ Montanaro and Karen Hurll pertorm football down through the years Answer is Kelso... He holds the all­ When I'm alonein the car, which was the place island country hasn't helped the economy, be­ ton. TICkets are $81$5. For reserva­ Sep 22. 8 pm at the Portland Pertorm­ where the radio used to be a brother, there is now cause Grenada recently issued a $3 Bruce Spring­ tions, call 785-6135. ing Arts Center, 25A Forest Ave., Port­ where a team has scored as many as time record bywinning $1,977,896... 1.ln M.clnto.h (Scottish folk singer) land. TIckets are $101$8. For ticket in­ 100 points in one He made all that in jUst a cassette machine. Sometimes I pile a stack of steen stamp. The picture looks like it is from the 8 pm, Curtis Little 'rheater, The Choco­ formation, call n4-0465. game, did you know 63 races, so it turned out tapes in the passenger seat and just take off Tunnel of Love tour and the stamp is available late Church, 804 Washington. Bath. Tom DeLuc. blends comedy and TIckets are $6 in advance, $8 at the -Imaginism- in a performance Sep 23, that NO pro team in that he made an average aimlessly. That's what I was doing one night last from Marlen Stamps, 156 B Middle Neck Rd., door. For reservations, call 729-3185. 8:30 pm in Kresge Auditorium, Visual the National or Ameri­ of over $30,000 each time Sch __• F ... (folk) Benefit for SI. winter when I reached over and picked up a box Great Neck, NY 11021. Arts Center, Bowdoin College, Brun­ DANCE can leagues has ever he stepped on the turf for Patrick's School at 7:30 pm, McAuley swick. TICkets are $4. Tickets are Soper'. or ... TI...... perform on fiddle, labeled Van Halen. Lee Ballinger has sent it to • The estate of Randy Rhoads, the Ozzy High School Auditorium, Stewns Aw, available at the Events Office, Moulton , piano and string bass Sep been able to do itL.As a race. After you drink me, but I couldn't remember why. Van Halen Osborne guitarist who was killed in a plain crash Portland. TIckets are $8, available at Union. 22,8 pm, followed by contra-, square­ a matter of fact, none Michelob Dey - you Cumberland Electronics, Tony's Do­ and circle-daricing taught and called Squ.t. Local playwright Martin Jones' hascomeclose ... Most didn't have a new on the way and we in 1982, has donated $50,000 to establish a schol­ nut Shop and SI. Patrick's School. For play about homelessness in Maine is by Dan Pearl of Boston in Chase Hall will find no aftertaste. rarely trade bootlegs. But I was on a rainy night arship fund for the study of classical guitar at more information, call n2-2521. performed by the Mad Horse Theatre Lounge, Bates College, Lewiston. points ever scored in I start cold, I finJsh Folk Song Sw.p (folk) Regular Company Sep 28-Oct 22. Perform­ Admission is $4. For more information, one game by an Nfl. clean and I cefresh cruise, so I snapped it in and braced myself. UCLA. monthly meeting for people who like to ances are Thu-Sat at 8 pm, Sun at 7 call 786-6330. What emerged was an acoustic guitar and an • The Blues Foundationhasestablished a toll­ sing, play or listen at 7:30 pm at the pm at the company·s new theater at T ... Nutcrack•• Portland Ballet Com­ or Afl. team arc 73 ... completely.Did you Kennebunkport Community House. For 955 Forest Ave, Portland. Tickets are pany is holding auditions Sep 23 at That record was set know that when the first accordian and then the singer came in, chanting free number to "answer any and all blues related more information, call 985-4343. $10-$14. For more information, call their studios, 341 Cumberland Ave., by the Chicago Bears in 1940 ... It U.S. Open golf tournament was ina language of which I didn't know a word. The questions." Put them to the test at 1-800-727- 797-3338. Portland. Characlerauditions for adults, Go... The Soyikwa Institute of African 1-1 :30 pm; Ballet, adults and children does seem odd, doesn't it, that with played, in 1895, officials could find music was pretty, kind of the way Peter Gabriel' s 0641. Theatre on tour from South Africa per­ (at least 8 years old), 1:30-2:15 pm; all the scoring power of the big only 11 golfers in the entire nation to can be,and thesingingundercutit totally. I let the SATURDAY+ forms a musical tale of a young dancer Advanced Pointe Dancers, 2:15-3 pm. league pro football teams, none has enter the tourney!. .. A 19-year old who realtzes her African identity through Pertormances of 'The Nutcracker" will B ..v. Combo (polka-punk)8 pm, Port­ - tape run, not understanding a syllable of what An appeal the wisdom of an elderly spiritual healer be at Biddeford's City Theater Dec 1- ever reached close to 100 points in assistant pro, Horace Rawlins, won land Pertorming Arts Center, 25A For­ the guy was going on about but transfixed any­ Daniel Wolff writes: For the past two years Sep ·29-30, 8 pm in Gannett Theater, 17. For more information, call 772- any game in their entire history. the first U.S. Open. Beer is a good est Ave., Portland. TIckets are avail­ Pettigrew Hall, Bates College, lewis­ 9671. way. By the time the first verse was over J'dfigure I've helped produce benefits for the homeless by able at the PPAC box office. 774-0465. ton. Tickets are $51$3. For reserva­ c..co Bsy Clogg... begin a new Mkhelob Dey says -lllke being pact of the good life - Drink re­ Portl.nd Symphony Orc.... t •• tions. call 786-6161. session of classes Sep 24, 6:30-8 at called Dc.Y! I bring cefreshing sponsibly! LOOKING out the artist and the record: Ciu Jian ("Sway performing artists in New York Gty. Hundreds (classical) 8 pm. James Bowder's Fred "The Inflst.bl. M.n" G.rbo the School of American Dance, 17 Jen") and Ado's ''"The Long March for Rock and of artists involved, thousands of dollars raised: -Fanfare lor a New Season: commis­ .nd Randy Judkln. pertorm mime, Bishop St., Portland (892-8005); Sep sioned for the PSO, Bruch's Violin Con­ Roll." all very successful. I think of them as failures. Not juggling, magic and circus feats Sep 27, 7-8:30 pm at Lon9fellow School in certo No.1 in G Minor (featuring violin­ 30, 7:30 pm at the Waldo Theater in Brunswick (725-4048); Sap 25, 7-8:30 ist Kyoko Takezawa), Wagner's Prel­ Freeport's FOR A few weeks before Pam Yates had written only because homelessnesscontinues to increase, Waldoboro. TIcketsare$10inadvance, at the School of American Dance, Rt. from China, where she was working somewhere but because we weren't able to make a lasting ude to 'Die Meistersinper'" and Prelude $5 for children under 17. For more in­ 302. N. Windham (892-8005). Bicentennial and Liebstod from 'Tn stan and Isolde" formation, call 832-6373. Th. Body L.nguage D.nc... celebration! west of Shanghai on the first Chinese American link between the artists involved and the home­ and Strauss·s -TIll Eulenspiegel's Merry PI.c_l Auditions for Hank Beebe's Benefit pertormance for the Maine feature film coproduction. She'd heard Gu Jian's less themselves. After one of the events, an artist Pranks.' Concert is preceded by a free comical spoof on community theatre Center on Deafness Sap 30, 8 pm at concert preview with Toshi~uki will be held Sep 24-25, 7 pm at the the Portland Performing Arts Center, music and got excited enough to arrange to make told me: "I feel better now when I walk down the Shimada at 7 pm. Tickets are $22, $18, Schoolhouse Arts Center at Sebago 25A Forest Ave., Portland. The danc­ a music video of a song from his new album. street and see someone without a place to sleep." $14 and $8 at the PSO box office, 773- Lake. There are 22 roles for people ers developed "Signdance: a style of 8191. ranging in age from the late teens to the dancing that uses sign language for When Yates next had some time in Beijung, she It struck me as exactly the wrong conclusion. St_mboal Trio (jazz) Harbor cruise earfy 60s. The show is scheduled Nov the hearing impaired. Tickets are $20, 7:30-10 pm aboard the Longfellow II shot "No More Disguises" in Tiananmen Square. Not long ago, 1 learned about a convention 2-19. For more information, call 642- available by calling 761-2533 or 781- departing 1 Long Wharf, Portland. 3743 or 773-1648. 3294. The completed video begins in the Square that thousands of homeless people are holding in TIckets are $12.50. For more informa­ tion, call n4-3578. before dawn, with the street lights on and no Washington, D.C. precedingthe0ct0ber7Housing M.'ne Stst. Choir (gospel) Perform­ people around. As titles float across the top of the Now! rally. This meeting will be Oct. 4-5 and ance and talk on the history of gospel music and its importance to the Afri­ screen, people begin drifting across the square seems like areal chance for the poor and the can-American at3 pm on the Campus Friday, September 29th like ghosts; only when the music picks up inten­ homeless to begin to take the battle for housingin Mall (101 Gibson Hall, in case of rain), Bowdoin College, Brunswick. Free and Saturday, September 30th sity do they become fully substantial. Suddenly, their own hands. And if the history of civil rights open to the public. Gray's Wharf as Ciu Jian declares ''Your freedom belongs to and anti-war movements is any indication, the Boothbay Harbor heaven and earth/Your courage to you alone" people most affected are also those most effective the camera zooms across the vast empty space of in working for change. TUESDAY+ DON'T GET MAD••• GET UPSET! the square to the giant image of Mao, and then 50 what can we do? A newsletter written by A LlttI. Lunch Music (classical) Bag lunchipr&oseason concert preview at dissolves to shots of individuals up against a and for the New York homeless pointed out DowntownGALA Work •• App ..cl.tlon ON THE 12 noon at the First parish Church wall: Soldiers, children, peasants, businessmen, recently that the media's coverage of this daily Parish House, 425 Congress St., Port­ D.y Free coffee from Green Moun­ land. Free and open to the public. For tain, a Portland Press Herald and a a Tibetan, a trendy girl with the greatest green disaster is allowed to "pick and choose through more information, call 761-1522. Port Bakehouse Danish will be given to striped gloves you've ever seen. The music ex­ their vested interest what voices to give voice to: Vlollnl.t E".. Strau.-Bow... the first 1,000 downtown worilers who (classical) W~s by Bach, Beethoven stop by the tables in MonumentSquare, plodes and recovers, Ciu Jian bearing down on what information about the struggle to share and and Schubert at 12 noon, in the Olin Tommy's Paril and Congress Square whatto withhold." I don't want that to happen to Arts Center Concert hall, Bates Col­ Sep 21, 7-10 am. People will be invited WALL every sound, the drums banging a backbeat lege, Lewiston. Free and open to the to register to win one of three -Best supported by synth and rumbling guitar. Then the homeless convention. public. Weekend in Maine- prizes. The day is begins solarized black and white footage of dem­ Artist can provide a real alternative to the S.nlo. R.clt.1 (classical) Kelly sponsored by the Intown Portland Ex­ OPENING+ Bickford, bassoon, performs at 8 pm, change, a downtown buSiness organi­ . onstrations, as dreamlike as the video's begin­ regular media. Thousands of homeless mapping Corthell Concert Hall, USM Gorham . zation dedicated to enhancing the N.ncy M.rgo". G.II.ry, 367 Fore copy today! I Congress Street, Free and open to the public. economic environment and quality of St., Portland. 'Chicago: New Art ning, interspersed with shots of the band, of out their strategy at a national convention sends life in intown Portland . Forms,' 20th century decorative and • • • • ¢ • • • • • • 772-3932 everyday life in the square in full color, of the out a potentially powerful message. Artists have F.II F•• hlon Show presented by the applied arts by Ronald Baron, Raymon Our jewelry is already half the cost of retail__ _ saxman on a back street. At the end, a trio of the tools to bring that message to a wider audi­ Women's Council of Realtors with total Elouza, Jeff Perrone, Rand Schiltz, in Saco at UPCOMING+ Impressions, Dino International Furs Peggy Steinway and Patti Warashina But now all Gold and Diamonds are 25% Off! images spells out the complexity of Ciu Jian's ence in a complex, personal and telling way. and Kathryn's and Parrots, and special Sep 22-24. 775-3822. Aquaboggin Water Slides So I'm inviting you to cover the homeless PI.nl.t Ev. Vl.. lk (classical) Sep 28, guest commentator Neila Smith Sep USM Gorh.m Art G.".ry -Prints" • Stereos • 'lVs • Musical Instruments vision: The amazing guy who faced down the 7:30 pm, Walker Art BUilding, Bowdoin 21, 5-8 pm at the Italian Heritage Center. includes work from the collection of Getty Mart Tools • Antiques • Guns • VCRs tank in the square; CiuJian himself, again declar­ convention. If you can't get there, I guarantee College, Brunswick. Works by Schu­ TIckets are $10. For more information, Maurine and Robert Rothchild, prints Available for mann, Ravel and Scriabin. Free and call n5-5876 or 799-150 1. published by USM, and works printed Bill O'Neil's Rifles & Hand Guns On Sale 10 - 3..0% OFF ing "My courage belongs to me alone"; people there are homeless people in your town who weddings, special events, open to the public. Mslne HI.toric.1 Socl.ty Auction by Thomas Black and Richard Wilson company and private parties. House of Rock & Roll Buy early for hunting season_ filling away from the square at the end of a day's could use whatever "coverage" you could pro­ St.t. St... t T ..dltlon.1 J.zz The ?Uclion features a wide variety of Oct 1-19. Opening reception Sap 28, 4 Bsnd (New Orleans jazz) Benefit for outstanding antiques, services, and col­ pm. Hours: Sun-Thu 12-4 pm. 780- Van Heusen Factory Outlet Porlland While work, isolated,crowded, heads down. ("No More vide. A song? A video? The only limitations on the Mame Audubon Society Sep 29, lectables to benefit the historical soci­ 5409. Call: 774-4349 or 767-0873 Store Panasonic 19" Color 1Vs Like New Iller Disguises" will be the opening film at this fall's the possibilities are the limitations of the imagi­ 8:30 pm at the State Street Church, ety Sep 22, '7J'm (preview 3:30-4:30 D.nforth St... t G.II.ry, 34 Dan­ Maine Aquarium $195. State St., Portland. Donation is $5. forth, Portland. -Ripening and Decay: ONLY "Ia.,t! New York Film Festival.") nation. pm, social an solent auction 5:30-7 Sept22-23 B_thov.n .nd Amowltt (classi­ pm) at Sprague Hall, Rt. 77, Cape paintings and photography by 15 art­ PRIVATE PARTIES Funtown USA 4 STORES TO SERVE YOU cal) Pianist Michael Arnowitt performs Elizabeth. For more information, call IStS and an original piano composition Mobile Store & Gas 498 Congress Street, Portland. 330 Lisbon Street, Lewiston three of Beethoven's sonatas which 772-1822. on the exhibit by ShelWin Day. Open­ Pop IHe Amowitt is pertorming chronOlogically Sp.ghettl Din..." sponsored by USM ing reception Sap 29. 5-9 pm. Exhibit Sept. 29-30 Saco Shop 'N Save 155 Froqt Street, Bath· 185 Water Street, Augusta • Poor countries have always put out celeb­ TUNES is excerted from Rock & Roll Confidential, where Sep 29, 8 pm in st. Luke's Cathedra, Student nurses Sep 23, 4:30-6:30 pm continues through Oct 13. Hours: Tu&o PRIVATE PARTIES 143 State St., Portland. TIckets are $81 at the United Methodist Church, Rt. 1, Sat 11 am-5 pm. n2-6245. TCBY uWe buy anything worth buying" rity stamps asa way to raise money and Grenada Davis Marsh gives his monthly disoourses on the politics $6, available at Amadeus Music or by Dunstan Corner, Scarborough. Admis­ has been among the most active postal pushers. of the music industry. Subscriptions are $24 a year from calling 871-8023. sion is $4.50 for adults, $2.50 for chil­ FI 1.1. SIZE Norge Village dren under 12. ... BUY • SELL • TRADE Evidently the 1983 U.5. invasion of theCaribbean Box 15052, Long BeRch, CA 90815. MORE+ U :Xl In EYI'EIlT\lI"U:'T Xplm!'- 21, 1989 19 1 • Casco Bay Weekly

HOM Sound C.II.rI.. North 58 Maine St., Brunswick. New workS by Common Ground Country Fair John Muench through Sop 24. Hours: Coastweek Mon·Sat 10:30 am-5 pm. 725·4191. Coastweek is a week-long brary to introduce historical WbyWeight? You might want to stop for cooking demonstrations and O'F...... II G.".", 46 MaineSt., Brun· celebration of the coast, fea­ references on coastal develop­ coffee on your way to the Com­ workshops on spiritual well­ swic!<. New paintings by Ruthanne Fall is here, school is open, and now it's Hamson through Oct 28. 729-8228. turing coastal clean ups and ment and maritime economy Dressing for business mon Ground Country Fairbe­ being, Thom.. M ....orI.1 Libra" Scott SENSE Sep 27 at 12 noon and Sep 28 at doesn't have to mean time for you to sign up, slim down & save! cause there won't be a drop of This year's keynote speaker Dy.er.Rd., Cape Elizabeth. PhotChemic PhotoJo_II8III: A CrltI_1 Per­ special educational programs. pamUngs by L. Murray Jamison through .ectlv. Michael Kienitz, photojour­ For information on the local 5:30 pm (774-1822). forgetting fashion, caffeine (or a bite of chocolate) is Jim Hightower, the Texas Oct 14. Hours: Mon, Wed, Fri-Sat 9 nalist and free-lance. photographer, clean-ups, see the Calendar. At least, not with SIX anywhere on the fair grounds. Commissioner of Agriculture am·5 pm, Tue, Thu 9 am·9 pm. 799· speaks Sep 21, 4 pm In Beam Class­ • Seafaring Art. Gallery talk 1720. room, Visual Arts Center, Bowdoin Special programs in the and tour through the museum, _1¢A\i!ti1 I_ The fair is an annual celebra· who has promoted sustainable College, Br.unswick. Free and open to WEEKS Greater Portland area are as focusing on marine-related art clothing. A selection of tionof traditional lifestyles and and diversified agriculture in the public. For more information, call 725-3151. follows: pieces Sep 27 and 29,12:30 pm separates designed with $25 healthy living. The Maine Or· Texas. Poet" ....dlng by D.vld W.lk.r atthe Portland Museumof Art a little bit of something ganic Farmers and Gardeners Admission is $4 for adults Sop 21, 8 pm at Raffles Cafe Book­ • Ferry Beach State Park in store, 555 Congress, Portland. For Saco offers nature walks led (775-6148). from menswear, but Association's annual bash is and $2 for children, seniors more information, call 761·3930. with a decidedly The Southem M.I,.. Whol. un­ by experienced staff for adults • Portland Waterfront Tour. being held Sept. 22-24 at the and MOFGAmembers. (Chil­ feminine point of gullge Support Croup Peg Hill­ and schoolchildren Sep 25-29 Department of Resources will Windsor fairgrounds, east of dren, seniors and MOFGA man speaks on relating math and lit· view ...city dressing with (283-0067). give two toUTS from the Spring Augusta on Route 32. members are admitted free on erature Sop 21,4-5:30 pm (followed by the comfort of country, a covered dish supper at 5:30) at the Point Marina in South Port­ OFF THE Wilson School, Cumberland. • Art and Archeology of The fair offers Maine-fla­ Friday.) available in a variety of Coastal Maine. Lecture on land Sep 29,10 am-2 pm (289- vored entertainment, farming Some of the highlights from Portl.nd Writ... N.twork Informal scrumptious shapes discussion of reference materials for maritime art and archeology 2291 or 799-3380). and gardening demonstra­ this year's fair schedule are the writer Sop 21 , 7:30 pm in the Public and shades. tions, activities for children, listed below. Safety Building, 109 Middle St., Port· at Sep 27,7:30 p,m, in 44 Payson • Sea Creatures. Hands-on Only at Amaryllis. land. Maurice Hunter will lead the dis­ Smith Hall, USM Portland presentation with tidal animals cussion and will bring his extensive offer Friday WALL reference library for browsing. Free (780-4920). and the creation of seaweed good thru •••m. 11 ••m. Drum M.klng Workshop Primal and open to the public. For more infor­ prints Sep 30, 10 am at the 10-7-89 Opening ceremonies with Ssipsis, a Keynote Address by Jim Hightower Sound Journey presents a weekend mation, call 773-0847 or 871-0466. • Public Forum on Water Penobscot poet and artist (Sun­ (Maine Stage) workshop with Northeast Coast primal W ••t. M.negernent 1.. _ .nd Quality Issues for Maquoitand Children's Museum in Port­ flower Commons) 1:30 p.m. Instrument maker Deborah Sparks. How Cltlz.... Cen P.rtlclp.8t. Middle Bay, Casco Bay and land (797-5483). 9:30 ••m. Fiddle Contest (Maine Stage) Participants will engage in the creative In Decl.lon M.k1ng JeNney Thaler, African Dance and Drumming 3 p.m. process and create a Plains style In­ attorney specializing in environmental Merrymeeting Bay. Public In­ • Low Tide Walk. Guided (Schoolhouse) . Earth Walk with herbalist dian drum by the conclusion of the law speaks at a forum sponsored by formation forum with speak­ walk examining the adapta­ 10 • .In, Barbara Robidoux workshop. Sop 22-24. For more infor· the Portland Area League of Women Amazing Lulu, mime (meet at Agricultural Demo Tent) mation, call 985-4306. Voters Sop 21, 7 pm at the Holiday Inn ers from the Department of tions and feeding behavior of (Children's Area) 4p.m, Modem J.p.,..s. PrInt. The col­ 88 Spring St, Portland. Forum is free Environmental Protection, the intertidal plants and animals 11.,m. New Forest Practice Legislation & lector, Mrs. John Rich, gives a gallery and open to the public, but reserva­ Amaryllis Clothing Co. Sonnts Service Station Museum, the Small Woodlot Owner talk on the exhibit currently on the walls tions are needed for achair, 774-3289. Conservation Law Foundation Sep30,11:30amatKettleCove 41 Exchange Street, narrative tours of Sonny's life (Agricultural Demo Tent) at the Portland Museum of Art Sep 21 Crul.. MI.. " .. Admiral Eugene J. and Friends of Casco Bay, ad­ in Cape Elizabeth (772-2321). Portland, ME 04101 through the remnants of a 19605 7 p.m. 5:15 pm and Sop 22, 12:30 pm at the Carroll will make a presentabon 'To 772-4439 service station (Growth Stage) Saturday Night Livel Entertainment PMA, Cor)qress SQuare. Portland. Talk Cruise or Not to Cruise - That is the dressing both fresh and coastal • The Friends of Casco Bay 12 noon by Jackson Gillman, Randy IS free with museum admission. For Maine Question' Sop 21, 7:30 pm at water quality issues Sep27, 1- offer a day-long conference on Mercer Bog String Band JUdkins, David Neufeld and Hot more information, call 775-6148. the Chocolate Church, 804 Washing­ (Maine Stage) Shots (Maine Tent) Art .nd Socl.1 R ••pon.lblllty ton St., Bath. Opposing views will be 4 pm at Bowdoin College (774- marinewaterqualityonCasco DNNER 12:30 p,m. Painter Mary Bernstein will lead a dis­ given by Alexander Schnee from the 9891 or 622-7146), Bay, including workshops and LUNCH Energy Options & Conservation cussion fOCUsing on an, social respon­ Sunday National Institute for Public Policy. For (Schoolhouse) •••m. slblhty, and the balance and conflicts more information, call 772-0680. • Ecology program for chil­ a field trip on the bay Sep 30, 1 p.m. between the two Sop 22, 7:30 pm at the Bhut.n: The Dragon Kingdom Slide dren at the Maine Aquarium 8:30 am at the USM Campus $3.95 $5.95 Wine Making Demonstration by The Spiritual Celebration: Ancient Circle Union of Maine Visual Artists Building show on Himalayan countries given by Purple Foot Dances and a service patterned at the Maine Writer's Center, 190 in Saco offers slide shows on Center (774-4627). 3 p.m. to 10 p.m. after a Friends meeting (Whole Life Davis Bloom Sop 21, 7 pm at the 11 a.m. to 3 p.m. & Sun. 12-9 p.m. (Agricultural Demo Tent) Mason St., Brunswick. Free and open Saxena Art Gallery, 27 Wharf SI., slide shows and tidepools 1:30 p.m. Tent) to the public. Portland. Free and open to the public. • The Shore Tour. Guided Juggling Workshop with Rick 10 • .In. Ch.rl.. Thompson'. "Monn. along with other activities Sep nature walkforadultsand chil­ How Clean? Examining the Ethics For more information, call 761-{)303. ----- FEATURING our #1 Seller ----- Adains (Children's Area) V.nn." is the subject of a gallery talk He.t In He.lth. C.ncler .nd Wor­ 27, 11:30 am-4 pm (284-4512). dren Oct 1, 2 pm at Wolf Neck 2p.m. of Organic Agriculture beinQ .given by Larry Lutchmanslngh, .hlp Among the T.mll. of South (Schoolhouse) Vegetable Culture - Questions and associate professor of art Sop 24, 3 pm Indl ••nd Sri unk. Anthropologist • Maine Historical Society Woods State Park in Freeport 11 • .In. at Walker Art Building, Bowdoin Answers (Agricultural Demo Tent) Human Juke Box (Gazebo Area) tr.t Dennis McGilvray speaks Sop 22, 3 offers a tour of the society's li- (865-4465). CHICKEN PARMIGIANA 3 p.m. Colldge of Art, Brunswick. Free and pm in Beam Classroom, Visual Arts Blue Hill Brass Band (Maine Stage) 12 noon Ope" to the public. For more informa· Sandy River Ramblers Center, Bowdoin College, Brunswick. (CHOICE OF SALAD OR PASTA) Acupuncture and the Laws of tion . call 725-3275. Free and open to the public. For more (Maine Stage) Sundays, Mondays, Tuesdays, Wednesdays, Thursdays Nature (Whole Ufe Tent) Expnrlrnent.1 Films Will Hindle's information, call 725-3151 . 1 p.m. 6:45 p.m. 'Watersmith,' a dassic of American Good through September Vegetables form the Sea Fernlnl.t Splrlt... 1 Community Evening Entertainment with Cathie experimental film, was described by holds a ritual and introduction Sep 22, Comput.r Prof.s.lo_l. for So­ Po.try R •• dlng b, Andr.1 Stebbins and Loose Ends, Ed (Country Kitchen Demo) Vir.cent Camby as "beautiful abstract cl.1 R ....o ...lbllit' meet Sop 25, Cod.... cu. National Radio commen­ 2 p.m. 7: 30 pm at the YWCA, Spring St., Morris, Different Shoes pattern of lines of energy, A kind of ode Portland. Members of the FSC will 5:30 pm at PRVTC, Room 340, 196 tator and poet, Sop 28, 7 pm at Raffles (Maine Stage) Flute Workshop (Children's Area) to physical grace.' Also being shown Allen Ave., Portland. This meeting's Cafe Bookstore, 555 Congness, Port· One Danforth Street, Portland • 772-0873 Manure Pitch-Olf create a participatory ritual concerning are selections from the Filmers Alma­ personal and social change. For more topic is 'Computers, Ethics and Educa· land. Free and open to the public. For ~. (Small Grandstand) nac, 16 1112 hours of Super-S film tion.' For more information on CPSR, more information, call 761·3930. Sheep Shearing Contest Information, call 871-0618. Saturday made by 112 filmmakers from the a.ck to the Futu... : A Populist call Kent Gordon at 797-3324, M.n, Volc.. : Cens.... hlp 1•• _ •••m. (Outside Show bam) Americas, Europe and Japan. Films Project Your P __I B ••tAmeri· In M.lne Discussion to celebrate free Goat Show (Show Barn) 5:30 p.m. P.rspectlv. Jim Hightower, Texas are being shown Sop 25, 8 pm at the can Institute of Banking i~ sponsoring a speech with panelists William Coogan, .:30 ••m. Closing Parade & Cirde Dance Commissioner of Agriculture, discusses Tree Cafe, 45 Danforth St., Portland. alternative agriculture, organic farm· public seminar with image/color con· political science department at USM; Youth Horse Show (Show Ring) Ent.rlng the M.ln.t.... m: Women sultant Deborah Bacharach Sep 25 , Deborah Locke, librarian at Westbrook 10 ••m, ing, etc. as he believes it should apply HOSPITAL PATIENTS Sculpto.. In the 20th C.ntu" to the food policy if the U.S. Sop 22, 7 6:30-9:30 pm atSMVTi. Sominar fee is High School and Mark Somer, manag­ Agriculture in Central America Ann Sutherland Harris, professor of art pm in Kresge Auditorium, Bowdoin $25. Registration deadline is Sop 22. ing director of Portland Stage Com· (Schoolhouse) history at the University of Pittsburgh, College, Brunswick. Free and open to For more information, call 774-7842. pany. Jim Brunelle, columnist for the ,~ for Better Health Care ~ name and speaks Sop 26, 7:30 pm in Kresge the public. otcI Fl...... Unfurling Ojar Kain­ Portland Press Herald, is the modera· Auditorium, Visual Arts Center, Bow· 1.I.nd Joum." R.n.wlng Our ins, public relations director of the tor. Sponsored by the Maine Civil lib­ save 200/0 to 70% on home health care" doin College. Brunswick. Free and open VI.lo... for E.rth is the theme of the American Latvian Association and an erties Union and the Portland Public If yru're about to be discharged from a local hospital, tell Library Sep 28, 7 pm at the Portland G ....t AtI.ntlc Tour .nd T ..v.l, to the public. New England Environmental Educa· exr:n on Latvian and Soviet Affairs R.ku Workshop on an old Japanese wil give his views on the liberation Public Library. For more information, the discharge nurse you want the most afforda.ble home 981 Forest Ave., Portland. Porcelain tion Alliance Annual Conference Sop clay firing technique Sep 2S, 6-9 pm movements within the Soviet Union call 774-5444. nursing agency in sootheI'll MaIne to handle home works by poller Carol GriHith from 22-24 on Hurricane Island, Penobscot your Wi/dow and Oct 8, 12-4 pm at the Center for Bay. Workshops and ~eneral sessions Sop 25, 7:30 pm in USM Portland C_loglc.1 COMld.... tl_ for Thomaston during Sop. Hours: Mon­ nursing care. Native Art, Rt. 1 in Woolwich. For more will focus on heightening awareness of Camous Center. Admission is $5 for W ••t. DI...... I .nd W.t.r Sup. RESIDENTIAL & COMMERCIAL Fri 9 am·5:30 pm. information, call 442-8399. the public, for Worfd AHairs Council pII•• John Williams, director of the Why? Because our rates are up to 70% lower than the J_n Whit,.., p.,.on C.II." of the natural world and clarifying per­ $3 hydrogeology division of the Maine Art, Westbrook College, 716 Stevens Art of the Stran~. Unu.... 1 .nd sonal goals to enable effective envi­ members, $1 for students. For more largest home health agen~ the Occult is the subject of Weird and ronmental education leadership. For information, call 780-4551. Geologic Survey, speaks as part of the Ave., Portland. Mixed media works by Wonderful Art show Oct 20-Nov 4 at Cello E ...embl. Music of various series 'The Changmg Face of Maine: agency they w1ll usualq discharge Judith Nelson through Oct 29. Hours: more information, call Cindy Krum at ~ ~ ~. MORE The Center for The Arts, 804 Washing­ styles will be played and studied Tues· Environmental Issues and Problems in you to if you don't speak up. 774-2441. Tue-Fri 10 am-4 pm (Thu until 9), Sat­ days at 7 pm in the choir room of the the Geosciences' Sop 28, 8 pm in 113 Sun 1-5 pm. 797·9546. ton, Bath. Entries in any medium for C ....tlng. T.rr.rlurn Workshop Sop Better Health Care is a fully this juried exhibit will be accepted Oct 23, 9:30 am-12:30 pm at Maine Immanual Baptist Church, beginning Carnegie Science Hall, Bates College, ON THE WALL M.I,.. Po"_ M.rk.t, 376 Fore Sop 26. Students, amateurs and pro· Lewiston. Free and open to the public. staffed, Medicare certified home SWlF€HING rrO '€OMPAcr DISC ? SI., Portland. Group display of potters 10, 10 am-4 pm . A maximum of three Audubon Society's Gilsland Farm entries may be submitted. For more Sanctuary in Freeport. For more infor· fessional cellists are welcome. The T ...kklng Through K.slvnlr .nd in the cooperative through Sop 26. health care agency with over 100 information, call 442-8455. mation, call 781-2330. series will culminate in a public per­ ud.kh Slide show on Himalayan Sound Al[erna[ives, Ponland's newest music SlOre wants [0 Hours: Sun-Wed 10 am-6 pm, Thu·Sat P.p.tmllklng Workshop Learn to The Enduring R.I.v.nc. of the formance of the entire cello orchestra. countries given by Sanjay Saxena Sop RN's, LPN's, CNA's, Homsmakers, 10 am·9 pm . 774-.1633. make [he switch easier. We'll pay you $ for [hose old AROUND TOWN+ make handmade paper and explore Bill of Right. Symposium with a dis· For more information, call 775-C578 or 28, 7 pm at the Saxena Art Gallery, 27 Physical, Speech and Occupational Portl.nd Public Llltra", Monument elements of coHage Oct 1, 9 am·4 pm, tirljluished panel induding political 761-4639. Wharf SI., Portland. Free and open to and offer you a greal selection of low priced CDs. Square, Portland. Recent abstract therapists available 24 hours a dajy; Portl.nd Mila• ..,. of Art Seven 20 Danforth Street Studio, Portland. SCIentist Nadine Strossen, syndicated The Lew: A .Jungl.n Perspectlv. the public. For more information, call A[ last there is an alternative! paintings by Janice May Scott through Congress Square, Portland. Hours: Cost is $65, induding materials. For columnist Jeffrey Hart, and Mark William F. Furber, attorney, speaks at 761-C303. 7 daors a waek. But to save mon~ Tue-Sat, 10-5; Sun, 12-5; Free on Sop 29. Hours: Mon, Wed and Fri 9 more information, contact Libby Ly­ Kessler, assistant professor of political the weekly Jung Seminar Sop 26, 4 pm South Africa: The Plight of the by am~ pm, Tue and Thu 12-9 pm and you have to ask for us name. Thursday even ings, 5-9. Andrew Wyeth man at 761-2500. science at Bates Sop 23, lOam in the in the Faculty Room, Massachusetts BI.ck Worn.n .nd the Role of in Maine: Solections from the Holly and Sat 9 am·5 pm . 871-1700. M.I,.. Arts Convnl.. lon IMtltu­ Olin Arts Center Concert Hall, Bates Hall, Bowdoin College, Brunswick. Free Artl.t Panel discussion with a panel Anhur Magill Collection, an exhibit of Portl.nd School of Art, Baxter Gal· tlonel Support Program gives College, Lewiston. Free and open to and open to the public. of South African actors from the cast of lery, 619 Congress St., Portland. Stu· over 60 drawings and watercolors grants to fund arts programs and proj· the public. SocI.1 Inv.. tlng for the '80. .nd 'Goree; representatives from the dent Show through Oct 14. Hours: Mon· (through Sep 24); Perspectives: ects in non-profit organizations state­ Silk•• nd T ....I. In th. Grand a.,ond is the topic of an investment Maine Project on Southem Africa and Celeste Roberge. (through Oct 8); Wa· Fri 10 am·5 pm (Thu until 7 pm), Sun wide. Deadine is Oct 2. Guidelines Hot.1 St,I.: The Draped .nd seminar sponsored by the Maine So­ Bates theater director Buddy Butler. tercolorsby Amencan Masters (through 11-4 pm. 775-5152. and application forms are available by Uphol.tered Int.rlo.. of Vlcto­ curities Corp Sop 26, 5:30-8:45 pm in Panel moderated by the chair of the BETTER HEALTH CAREt INC. Right B.nque C.f., 225 Federal, Oct 15); Japanese Prints, landscapes, contacting the Maine Arts Commis· ... M ....loMArlene Palmer Schwind 303 Payson Smith Hall, USM Portland. Maine Rainbow Coalition Brenda "I\eioe better becaus8 Wl1 oolJJr care" figures and abstract images (through Portland. Works by Peter Herley sion, State House Station '25, Au­ and Laura Sprague of the Victoria For reservations or more information, Humphrey. Panel discussion is Sop 37 A Street, So. R:>rtJ.and, ME 04106 Nov 12). 775~148. through mid-October. 774-3074. call 775-C800. 28, 7:30 pm in Chase Hall Lounge, gusta, 04333. 289·2724. Society will com pane the interior of Portland: 76,"0680·Brunswick: 729·8W·Blddefooo: 28a.3632 a.mdoff 26 Free St., Port· Unlv... It, of Southem M.lne Victoria Mansion to that of 19th century ERectiv. Strat.gl•• for Pe.. o_1 Bates College, Lewiston Freeandopen c.".", D.nforth St.... t C.U." In Port­ AN UAL OPPO!ITUNITY EIiPI.Il'i'ER land. William Manning: Aurora and AREA Gallery, Campus Center. The "nd, a non-profit alternative gallery, grand hotels Sop 24, 3 pm at the Port· S.f.t, .nd S.1f Def..... is the to the public. Temple Sories through Sop 30. Also at Art of Revolution: Political Poster An invites artists 60 and over to submit land Museum of Art, Congress Square, topic of the Business Women's Net­ H_n-Pow.red Flight Jean.Jo­ from Latin America through Sop 22; , - the gallery, a selection of 19th and work for a juried thematic exhibition Portland. For more information, call work of Maine monthly meeting Sop seph Cote, an aeronautical engineer earty 20th century an. Hours: Mon·Fri 'Southem Exposure,' exhibit 01 tex· Do tided 'The Essence of Maine.' Juror 775-6148. 27, 6 pm at the Ramada Inn, Congress from MIT discusses the Daedalus 10 am·5 pm, Sat 12-4 pm. 772-5011. tiles. wood carvings, ceramic vessels Martin Dibner will select winners for The Destruction of the AI.. bn St., Portland. Membership is open to Project, which produced a world dis­ a.yvt.w G.IIe", 75 Market SI., Port· and figures from Guatemala, Ecuador, both professional and amateur catego· R.ln Fo.... t.: FI.. t the W.ter. all women interested in making per­ tance record for human·powered Hight land. New paintings by Scoll Moore Mexico, Brazil and other Latin Ameri· ries. Work must be delivered by Nov 3. Now the Wood. Lecture and video sonal and professional contacts. For Sop 29, 4 pm in 113 Carn9\lie Science , can countries Sep 25-Oct 27. Hours: you like through Sop 30. Tue·Sat 10 am-6 pm. For details send self·addressed hosted by the Maine Group of the Si­ more information and reservations Hall. Bates College, LeWiston. Free • 773-3007. Mon-Sat 10 am-l0 pm. Sun 12-5 pm . stamped envelope to 'Essence of erra Club Sop 25, 7 pm at the Public contact Kim Kalicky at 773-3821. ' and open to the public. Bruno'., 33lndiaSt" Portland. Ras·Cul 780-4090. Maine" c/o Danforth Street Gallery, 34 Safety Building, 109 Middle SI., Port­ Llt.ra" Lunch Rep. Neil Poide speaks The SubJect of Autoblog.. ph, Collages by H.w. Andrews III from Sop Danforth St., Portland, 04101, Atten· land. Free and open to the public. For on 'Does Politics Mix with Writing?" Talks and panel discussions by nation· Casco Bay 18. tion Helen Rivas. more information, call 389- \796. Sop 27, 12:30 pm at the Kennebunk· ally recognized scholars examine the C.f. Alw.,., 47 Middle SI., Portland. The Common Cround Count" F.lr The Futu... of South Afrlc.: Th. port Community House. Bringyourown art of autobiography Sop 29-Oct 1 at Constructions by Daniel McCusker and OUT OF TOWN+ is looking for a design to become the P.llng of Ap.rth.ld Senti lunch; dessert and beverages will be the Sonesta Hotel in Portland. Regis· photographs by John Kramer on view provided. $2 donation benefits River tration is $15 for one day of atten­ , . Attorn., G.n.r.I'. C.II.r, 1990 postOf'. Artists may submit one or Thovejane, an official wi th the African through Sop. 174-9399. two designs by Nov. 1 on any theme re­ National Congress, speaks Sop 25, 7 Tree Arts and the friends of Gr.aves dance, $50 for conference. For more , , Weekly? De.n Velent9ll. G.II.", 60 Hamp· Sp.c., State Office Building, 6th floor, Augusta. Prints by Robert Shetterly lating to agriculture. The selected pm In the OilnArts CenterConcenHall Mamorial Ubrary. For more informa· information, can 780-4295. -STRESS REDUCTION shire St., Portland. 'Duty, Pleasure and design will be usad for the 1990 fair Bates College, Lewiston. Free and open tion, call 985·4343. AqUllculture Gulf of Maine Aquarium Please let our advertisers know. Nature,' new work by Greg Parker through Sop 29. 299-2724. K.nnebunk Writ... CroUp All writ· tour of aquaculture facilities in North­ -PERSONAL GROWTH Bowdoin Co".ge M ...... ,. of Art, poster and t·shirt. Irs important that the to the public. through Oct 15. Hours: Thu 5-9 pm, style be a appropriate for silk·sCl'een­ John W.,n•• Soc.. II.m. Androg. ers, published or unpublished, are wei· ern Maine Sop 30. Leave Portland at Thankthernforsupporting Sat-Sun 12-5 pm. 772-2042. Brunswick. Carol Plyant: Paintings -SPIRITUAL ENRICHMENT through Oct 1. Hours: Tue-Sat 10 am- ing, which requires a minimum of blend­ yn" The VI.t_m Exporl.nc. come Sop 27, 7 pm at the Kennebunk 8:30 am to tour Great Eastem Mussel EI MI... dor, 50 Wharf SI., Portland. Free Library. For more information, call Farms in Tenant Harbor and SteeI­ Portland's Powerful Alternative. 8pm, Sun 2·5 pm. 725-3275. ing anellor shading. Pastels and water­ Evan Carton, department of English at , ' Salazar's Maxico works on paper are colors are not appropriate. Submis­ the University of Texas in Austin, 985-4343. head aqua-culture operation in So. HAL MERMELSTEIN on the walls. Sales will benefit Danforth The Cent.r for tutlv. Art, RI. I, T.xts Thllt M.tter Discussion led by Woolwich. Native American art 442- sions will be iuried and the selected speaks Sop 25, 7 pm In Beam Class­ Thomaston. Cost is $20 for Aquarium Street Gallery, a non-profit alternative artist will necetve a $500 honorarium. room, Visual Arts CentOf', Bowdoin Sandra Brunk. who will discuss Aes· members, $24 for non·members. 30 WEBB ROAD art space at 34 Danforth SI. For more 8399. chylus' 'Agamemnon.' and USM pro· Reservations are requined, call 772- EI_nt. 56 MaineSI., Brun· For more information, contact the College, Br.unswick. Free and open to WINDHAMI ME 04082 information, call 775-6245. c.".", Common Gr.ound Fair, PO Box 2176, the public. fessor Gloria Duclos, whose topic will 2321. Ev... 0.11.", 7 Pleasant St., Port­ swick. Ceramic sculptures by Sharon Townshend and tapestry rugs by Mor­ Augusta, ME 04338 or phone 623- be the 'Aeneid' Sop 27, 7 pm in 503 CoscoBov land. Eliot Porter's portfolios 'Trees' 5115. Luther Bonney Hall, USM Portland. 892-9042 ris David Donenfeld are on exhibit and 'Certain Passages' are on exhibit Free and open to the public. For mone through Oct 7. Hours: Tue-Sat 10 am- through Nov 3. Hours: Tue-Sat 10 am- MORE+ ~EEKLY 6 pm, Sun 2-5 pm. 729-1108. information, call 780-4330. 6 pm (Thu until 9). 879-0042. MORE+ 20 CAsco &y WukJy SqlLmber 21, 1989 21 Secreta o' the Shore Tour of the Noodl. Doodl. Box Play about two D.y 0 ... is looking for a volunteer to Younger WIdowalWldow_ Sup­ park's rocky shore Sap 24, 2 pm at clowns and a drum majOrette who repair and re-upholsterse_al wooden, port Group Men and women 50 years Wolfe Neck Woods State Parll, Free­ comes between them Sap 23 and 30 at stuffed chairs. This is a short-term of age and younger who have been port Programs is free and begins at the 10 am and 2 pm; Sap 24 and Oct 1 at project and requires furniture repair widowed within the last three years are benches beside the second parking 12:30 and 3 pm at the Theater at Mon­ skills. Job can be done during the day, invited to attend a support group to Index lot. For more information, call 865- mouth, Monmouth. For reservations in the evenin!! or on weekends. For help and encourage each other through animals home services 4465 or 289-3821. and information, call 933-9999. more informallon, call the Center for the normal grief process. Eight meet­ antiques learning Socret. of the Fo... t Autumn walk Ston.. '01' Kids Portland Public Li­ Voluntal)' Action at 874-1015. ings will be held in Yarmouth on Tues­ aucbons legal services program will introduce school and other brary (871-1700): Mon, Wed and Fri, Children'. Mus.um of Maino is day evenings beginning Sap 28. There auditions lost & found groups to forest and wildlife ecology 10:30 am; Riverton Branch Library looking for volunteers to show the will be a small donation, although no billboard musicai instruments Sap 26-Nov 17 at Maine Audubon (797-2915): Fri, 10:30 am (beginning museum to the public and demonstrate one will be turned away for inability to biz services notices Society's Gilsland Farm Sanctuary in Sap 22); Peaks Island Branch (766- how the exhibits worll. The job also pay. For more information, call 846- boats person to person MORE Falmouth. Topics include plant and 5540): Wed, 10:15 am; Scarborough includes occasional office worll. The 5285 or 846-94BO. body & soul recreation animal succession, animal signs, mi­ Public library (883-4723): Wed, 10:30 museum is looking for students ages Tho F.mlly CrI.l. Shelter holds buSiness opportunities ride board gration and bird study. Advance reser­ am and 1 pm (3-5 year olds) and Tue, 12 and up to work after school until weekly women's support groups in catering roommates SENSE vations are required'. For more infor­ 6:30 pm (4-5 year oIds); Prince Memo­ 4:30 pm or adults anytime between Portland and Brunswick, offering mu­ child care stuff for sale mation, call Carol LeMere a1781-233O. rial library, Cumberland (82~31BO): . 9:30 am-4:30 pm. For more informa­ tual support and education for women datings~s wanted , . F1nal W_torn Promonade W.lk· CI... to Homo Bicycling Day Trips Wed, to:30 am (2-3 year oIds); Thu, tion, call the Center for Voluntal)' Ac­ who are or have experienced violence employment wheels c::...? Ing Tour Greater Portiand Landmarks Slide show looking at half-iI1Cj information, call 78G-4249. Sonosta'. Annual 5 K W_n'. tl)'ing. Sublet to • straight. Share 2-bdrm apt. in WI LL: ARTISTS' DI.tanc. Running F ••tlv.tbene­ house at Crescent Beach. 7 spacious apartment with suitable tenant or sorx;(Lj~t1~ fits the McAuley Residence, a transi­ miles from town. Mature water view on Eastern Prom. Victorian Gorham home. STUDIO SPACE consider other tional housing program for women professional non-smoker. $200 per month includes $275 plus phone costs. At last a downtown historic 772-0208 agreement for alone or with children Oct 1, 8:30 am at $220 plus shared utilities, heat. Please call and leave Easy commute to all building devoted to artists­ nIT WEtrlBE!\GEl\ the Sonesta Hotel, High St., Portland. Cumberland & Yorll County equivalent value. sculptors, photographers avail. Oct. 1.767-3152. message 774-6519. and art related people at Pre-registration is $6. Make check towns. 892-5356. ROOMMATE Male or ROOMMATE WANTED affordable rates of $135- payable to Sonesta 5K, Maine Track by Lynda Barry PROFESSIONAL MfF 25 Club, P.O. Box B008, Portland, ME, Female wanted for 3-bdrm. Share home on Highland CALL: 878·2435 $275 per month for rooms apt one block from Prom. Lake in WIIlT 61VlfJ6 M~ hardwood floors and bay stores. $275 plus, 878-2312. Just a two-minute walk to Join other Portland artists OUT Ai'lD MY SISnR I\-1E SIGNAL 10 Cit,:! ANO window to share with non· beach and tennis. By owner, at Th. Artl.t. Studio. smoking professional. A NO-PAIN, all-gain, all­ $232,000. 766-2116. LOST black and gray Maine & HUG OU12- OliO TOO. Sl\~ \(EPT GIVING OUR. coon cal. Has blue collar with Guitar, Bass Located near Mercy around good deal is what you 799·4759 bell, answers to Bubba. Last .... Vocal Lessons UNCLE JO\-lt-l THE SIGNAL 10 TAKE T\-IE Hospital. $290 plus 1/2 get with a Casco Bay Weekly -.;..;=--.....,,;;;;,,;--- .. utilities, avail. 10-1. 773- classified. It's simple, cheap seen on Roussin St. in Old 865 Forest Ave. PICTURES. MY MNT WI\..OA \

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