- Exploring Lincoln Maine
Transcription
- Exploring Lincoln Maine
Penobscot Valley FREE Explorer April 12, 2012 “Local Faces, Local Names, Local News - We Are Your Hometown Paper” Volumn -- Edition Volumn Edition144 Volume 1 1-1Edition www.pvexplorer.com Chester, Burlington, E. Millinocket, Edinburg, Enfield, Howland, Kingman, Lakeville, Lee, Lincoln, Lowell, Mattawamkeag, Maxfield, Medway, Millinocket, Passadumkeag, Patten, Springfield, Winn, Woodville, The Tim Horton’s Question of the Week What do you think should be the name of the new MA Mascot? And the new Mascot is... By steVe BRoWn LINCOLN – Meet the new (and as yet unnamed) mascot of the Mattanawcook Academy Lynx. According to Shelley McIntyre, President of the RSU #67 Athletic Boosters, it was a parent that first approached her with the idea of getting a new mascot suit. The old one Lucky the Lynx - had been out of service for a while, so Shelley said she would share his idea and see what people thought. She first floated it to her class while substitute teaching, and See Mascot on page 2 Hawkes takes on Region III position Melissa Quintela - "Leon" Jason Smith - "Larry" It’s Prom Time B R e y Matt Guiod - "Curry" Shelly Crosby - "Leo" oGeR K MILLINOCKET – Just in time for spring prom season a truckload of gowns was delivered to St. Marten’s Thrift Shop in Millincket. The gowns were gathered and donated by the Key Club of Catherine McCauley High School in South Portland. The gowns were not just delivered by truck; they filled the truck. Many were brand new and never worn. Last winter, the Key Club of Catherine McCauley sent a load of winter clothing and boots to Sue Smith - "Lincoln" St. Marten’s. At the time, Mrs. Ek promised to bring some gowns up in the spring. The response by the McCauley girls was amazing. It is rare for the words, gown and truckload to be used together, but that is just what happened. The gowns are all sizes, colors and styles, including a few two piece gowns. St. Martens Thrift shop is open to the public on Wednesdays and Thursdays each week and has a wide variety of items for people of all ages. Mary Lou Corriveau at left and Dot Howard in center of St. Marten’s Thrift Shop in Millinocket receive many gowns from Candace Anderson Ek of Portland. Duncan McIntyre - "Linc" By Steve Brown Region III in Lincoln has a new director. On March 28 Mary Hawkes, who has been acting in the role of assistant director, was officially given the position. The previous director, Alan Dickey, is remaining at Region III to assist Hawkes in the transition. Starting as a bookkeeper in 1989, Hawkes has filled a variety of roles at Region III over the past 23 years, ranging from transportation director to business manager. She was instrumental in bringing the first local internet provider into the Lincoln area -- working on a grant that led to Region III installing a data line, routers and a bank of modems at their West Broadway location, and then selling the first dial-up internet accounts to residents in the surrounding towns. Hawkes’ oversight of the dayto-day operation of the service See Hawkes on page 2 Over the top The Minions volleyball team won the Every 15 Minutes fundraiser tournament at Mattanawcook Academy this past weekend. Front row left to right: Ariel Vanedestine, Adam Boyington, Kassy Taylor. Back row: Jason Clay, Jeremy Drost, Justin Cloukey, JJ Murchison. Biz Profile Exploring Salmon Brook By steVe BRoWn Mike Bisson - "Missing" Kelli McLeod - "Bezo (the Abanaki-Penobscot word for lynx)" Shelley McIntyre - "Linc" I have a hairy little dog. I know that isn’t a particularly rare attribute for a dog, as almost every breed comes fully equipped with follicles. But my dog (Zaccheus – or Zacky for short) is a Peeka-Poo, which is a cross between a Pekinese and a Poodle. Why anyone would attempt such a thing I cannot say, but I have one, and learned after I brought See Biz on page 2 Abigail Brown shows off Zacky before (left) and after (right) his day at the spa. Center, Melissa Kimball gets re-acquainted with Zachy at her shop. In case you missed it - News from around the area 202 West Broadway in Lincoln The place where people meet to greet and eat! As of Wednesday, April 10, 2012, the United States National Debt was $15,641,933,967,438. Each Citizen’s share was $49,919, and each Taxpayer’s share was $137,957. Bowers Mountain project in jeopardy LINCOLN - The Land Use Regulation Commission voted 5-0 last Friday, April 6 to deny First Wind subsidiary Champlain Wind’s request to withdraw its proposal to build a 27-turbine wind farm on Bowers Mountain. As a result of the LURC vote, the largest wind developer in Maine could face defeat for the Purchase any vehicle and receive a $50 Citgo Gas Card. 30 River Road ~ Lincoln ~ 794-2202 ncountryauto.com first time. Bowers Mountain is located just east of Springfield, on the Penobscot/Washington county line. Now LURC is free to reject the project at a May 4 special meeting. Opponents of the plan object to the visual effect it would have on nearby lakes and ponds. The company has reduced the original number of wind turbines and the project’s footprint. Stearns High School honor roll MILLINOCKET – The thirdquarter honor roll at Stearns High School: High honors, seniors: Samantha Donley, Lillian Dow, Steven Gregory, Taylor Lane, Alyssa McLean, Ashley Rollins, Andrea Steward; honors: Alisha Arsenault, Danielle Currie, Chelsea Cyr, Dustin Harvey, Ryan Hibbs, Connor Stevens, Josh Studer, Shuai Ni Tan (Grace) and Jeremy Tinkham. High honors, juniors: Leo Delmotte, Tyson Girsa, Sigrid Koizar, William Leighton, Mark Lyons, Kristen Manzo, Alexandria Mooney, Taylor Pelkey, Reegan Waite, Emily Wark, Zhen Yu (Dennis); hon- See News on page 2 YOU ARE APPROVED!!! No Credit, Poor Credit, No Co-signer needed, Bankruptcy, Divorce, other financial hardships, Unemployment, Disability, Social Security, Alimony and/or Child Support 2010 Ford Fusion 4dr SDN SEL FWD 27,481 miles ~ Call for Pricing 2 News Maine Communities Seek Business Friendly Recognition Pre-paid heating oil protections become law GARDINER – Maine has a new law designed to provide greater protections to consumers who use pre-paid home heating contracts. LD 1895, An Act To Protect Consumers by Strengthening the Laws Governing Prepaid Home Heating Oil Contracts, was signed into law by Governor Paul LePage on March 30. The new law addresses the issue of oil dealers taking prepayments from customers, but then failing to supply the fuel, Mascot Continued from Page 1 the idea spread “just like a wildfire”. They were so excited about it that Shelley brought it up at the next booster meeting, and the other members shared the students’ enthusiasm. The group had to sort through quite a few ugly costumes before a few senior girls finally found the one they all felt would represent the school well. The boosters started spreading the word that a fundraising campaign had begun, and they were quickly awed by the positive response of the community. The school staff, students, fans, and area businesses all pitched in to bring the new mascot home. The cheerleaders did a pie-in-the-face contest that brought in over $100. Local Traci Gauthier, Director of the Lincoln Lakes Area Chamber of Commerce, stands to the Governor’s left during a recent meeting to have several communities in the state declared ‘Business Friendly’. “The goal of the program is strategy. Augusta, Maine - There are These communities should many communities across to encourage a business friendMaine striving to enhance and ly climate in municipalities be congratulated that they are expand business opportunities. throughout the State and better taking a proactive approach In an effort to acknowledge position Maine for economic to being considered business friendly, said Department of each for their continued com- prosperity,” said Gov. LePage. A review team will now begin Economic and Community mitment to becoming business friendly, Governor Paul LePage looking at each community’s Development Commissioner, is recognizing those cities and application to determine if that George Gervais. “Our Departcommunity is eligible to be rec- ment will work with any Maine towns. A total of 19 cities and towns ognized as “business friendly”. community that wants to earn from Aroostook to York County Multiple areas of criteria will be this designation; we want every are the first to be potentially considered including customer Maine city and town to be busiconsidered as a “Certified Busi- service, business involvement ness friendly.” The 19 Maine communities ness Friendly Community”. The and collaboration, input from Program was announced last the public and licensing and being considered in this first month by Governor LePage permitting. Each community round are: Augusta, Bath, Biddwhich recognizes communities will be evaluated on an individ- eford, Brewer, Bucksport, Cumfor following the Governor’s ual basis. Communities deemed berland, Falmouth, Gorham, lead by understanding the im- “Business Friendly” will be rec- Guilford, Houlton, Kennebunk, portance of promoting job cre- ognized by Governor LePage in Lincoln, Pittsfield, Presque Isle, Continued from Page 1 ation, reducing red tape and be- May and will become a key part Rumford, Saco, Sanford, South him home that his hair continues to grow. If we do not get him a of Maine’s business attraction Portland and Waterboro. ing “open for business”. haircut regularly he turns into a and Hawkes is excited about to increasing the school’s ties mop head. Call me sheltered, but growthe opportunities to continue with area businesses. Region to effect a positive direction III currently offers both adult ing up I never considered the Continued from Page 1 for Region III in her new role. ed classes and also specialized possibility of taking my pet to allowed Region III to provide Currently Region III serves training courses that are be groomed. Our house pets free dial-up access to all of 184 students from five area designed to give companies were mostly cats, and they took the area schools. Later, when high schools that draw from 28 the skilled workforce they need care of that aspect of their lives technology advanced and a towns in our area. Participants to compete in this difficult themselves, and I was good with new state program offered in the programs offered by economy. In the past the school that. But then my children and free data lines to area schools, Region III have won awards has crafted courses in Autocad, I were given this furry little Hawkes oversaw the program for excellence in their particular various computer specialties bundle of joy, and I found myat Region III that trained fields of concentration, with the and other technologies that self in the position of having no teachers and administrators most recent being the culinary area businesses needed. And idea where to take him. The vet from schools all around the students who were honored according to Hawkes, their didn’t seem like the right anregion on how to utilize on April 3 for their first-place involvement with the Lincoln swer. After all, he wasn’t sick, their new internet pipelines. finish in the state’s first National Lakes Region Chamber of and I don’t go to the hospital Hawkes has been involved in Restaurant Association Prostart Commerce’s “Touch a Truck when I need a trim. Thankfully, writing many grants at Region Invitational. But above contest – Touch a Trade” event a friend told me about Salmon III over the years. In all they awards, Hawkes is most proud during the Expo on April 28 Brook Grooming in Winn. Since starting ExploringLintotal approximately $700,000 of Region III’s performance is another example of Region and are responsible for a number in helping students achieve III’s commitment to preparing coln.com, and even more so of positive changes at the school. success after high school. Over students for successful careers. now that the Penobscot Valley One of the grants was used to 75 percent of Region III students Hawkes says she is looking Explorer is on the scene, I take make the facility completely go on to post-secondary school forward to leveraging Region a camera almost everywhere I asbestos-free. Another led to the education and Hawkes’ primary III’s greatest strengths – a go. Sometimes I will leave it at installation of an elevator and focus in her new role will be to strong staff and dedicated board home if I am just running out, others were used to help Region position the school to continue members – toward meeting but when it comes to checking out a new business or place it III become certified as ADA- to equip the students with those goals. will definitely be at my side. So compliant. Much has changed the skills they need to excel. the first time I visited Salmon during her tenure at the school Hawkes is also looking forward Biz Hawkes News Continued from Page 1 ors: Sarah Bogue, Stephanie Decker, Thomas Fiske, Kyle McVey, Jordan Morrow. High honors, sophomores: Elijah Harmon, Sydney Sennett, Baileigh Studer; honors: Seth Brown, Shawn Cyr, Molly Donley, Sophia Dow, Mikayla Glidden, Zachary Hartley, Christopher Johansen, Kacie McLaughlin, Tyson Tracy. High honors, freshmen: Tanner McLaughlin; honors: Danielle Babineau, Andrew Carney, Connor Clogston, Kayla Daigle, Michael Di Bona, Abby Fiske, Jordan Fournier, Beverley Guay, Ryan Hallett, Nicole Knowlton, Marc Morneault, Nicole Vadnais, Lily Young. Lincoln police meeting goals LINCOLN – The Lincoln Po- lice Department’s clearance rate is 31 percent, matching Chief William Lawrence’s goal, he reports. The clearance rate reflects an increase of nearly 30 percent. The department roster is now at full staff, with six full-time and 10 reserve officers. Lawrence also reports that a detective’s position has been filled with an officer with about 12 years of experience. The community was burdened with unsolved burglaries and thefts and the department was understaffed in previous years, the chief said. Millinocket residents lose power BANGOR- Some 2,241 Bangor Hydro-Electric Co. customers in the area lost electric power at about 10:30 a.m. this past Monday due to an equipment failure. Power was restored by Monday afternoon, Bangor Hydro reported. A culture clash at UMaine ORONO – Pro-life and traditional marriage activists demonstrated this past Monday at the University of Maine, which was beginning its Pride Week in support of gay and transgender rights. The Genocide Awareness Project displayed graphic images of genocide alongside those of aborted fetuses. Those demonstrators, along with two gay marriage opponents, debated and at times clashed with students on the other side of those issues. A crowd of students, officials and faculty stood in a circle and cheered as a rainbow flag was raised over the university mall. Thursday, April 12, 2012 Committee backs MPBN funding AUGUSTA – In a unanimous vote last Thursday, April 5, the legislature’s Appropriations Committee rejected Gov. Paul LePage’s proposal to eliminate all state funding for the Maine Public Broadcasting Network. An amendment drafted by Sen. Roger Katz, R-Augusta, directs Finance Commissioner Sawin Millett and the Maine Emergency Management Agency to work with MPBN to determine what it costs to provide the statewide emergency-alert system. The amendment also would require MPBN to report on its future plans and how it might use its transmission bandwidth to provide other services to the state for a fee. Katz’s amendment was key to the unanimous vote. leaving the consumers with neither oil nor the money they paid. The law requires that a dealer offering prepaid contracts for home heating oil, kerosene or liquefied petroleum gas register the dealer’s intent to do so with the commissioner of the Deprtment Professional and Financial Regulation by June 30 of each year. It also requires the dealer to file a report with the commissioner by October 31 each year to demonstrate compliance with the law. “Maine people can have confidence that the vast majority of our fuel dealers are completely reputable and honest in their dealings with customers,” Governor LePage commented. “To discourage the rare case when a dealer doesn’t meet its obligation, however, Maine law has now been strengthened.” Any registered dealer who fails to provide the required report or who makes a false statement on it will be referred to the Attorney General’s Office. businesses, led by Clay GMC and Transition Hair and Tanning, also donated to the cause. According to Shelley, Transitions ran a special on tanning in March, and then donated a portion of every package sold that month. That resulted in a check for $150 towards the project, which went to buy an extra set of hands and feet for the mascot, equipping him for both indoor and outdoor events. When it was all said and done, approximately $1200 was raised to bring the new mascot home. Shelley says “We live in a pretty amazing community when it comes to this kind of stuff. They love school spirit as much as we do.” Now that he has arrived, the boosters are facing a new challenge: the newest Lynx needs a name. While some feel that he should retain the name of his predecessor, the majority of those polled think that Lucky has retired, and the new Lynx needs a name all his own. If you have a suggestion, send it in to [email protected], and we’ll pass it along to Shelley and the boosters. In addition to the selection of the name, according to Shelley there is one more aspect of the mascot fundraiser that needs to be resolved. She claims that Mr. Pietras, the MA principal, promised to dye his hair maroon if the fundraiser for the new mascot was successful. Shelley’s question, now that the costume is here, is “When will Mr. Pietras make good on his promise?”. We at the Penobscot Valley Explorer share her question, and will be glad to document the answer when Mr. Pietras fulfills his vow. Brook I went prepared to explore the business and document my experience. Salmon Brook Grooming is owned and operated by Melissa Kimball. Melissa has been grooming cats and dogs in Winn since 2002. Originally an animal technician working at a veterinarian’s office, Melissa found her niche in the Lincoln area by starting her own shop. She is a professional groomer certified by the Oklahoma School of Dog Grooming, and I can testify that she does a great job. I have a tendency to put off doing things that will take time or cost me money, so I waited before visiting Melissa until my dog couldn’t see through his bangs. I actually felt a little bad when I brought him in, because Zacky can be sketchy with strangers, and I didn’t figure sitting through a shampoo, cut and nail trimming would improve his demeanor. I would have tried to do it myself, but I do not have the time, skill, or patience to cut his hair and nails. Sometimes the best course of action is to call in a professional, and for me pet grooming is one of those times. I have to say that when I picked up my dog after his first visit to Melissa, I was pleasantly surprised at how well it went. First, he looked good. The tangled mop was gone, and my dashing, well-defined little dog was back. But beyond looking good, I think he felt good, too. I had expected him to resist her tooth and nail (literally), but instead he was happy as he could be. I suppose being rid of all that extra hair made him feel brand new. And not only was it painless for Zacky – Melissa had really taken all of my pain out of the process, too. Scheduling his appointment was simple, she got him in right away, and I just came back a couple hours later to a well-groomed pooch. And to be honest, I found the price to be very reasonable. So much so, that after thinking about what it would have taken of me to attempt it myself, I found myself saying “Really? Are you sure?”. If you need your dog or cat groomed, I encourage you to give Melissa and Salmon Brook Grooming a try. She offers grooming, ear cleaning, nail clipping, and even nail painting(!). Thank the Lord I have a male dog, so that I don’t have to comment on that idea… Former MTA chief gets three years PORTLAND - The former head of the Maine Turnpike Authority was sentenced on Friday, April 6 to three years in prison for misusing up to $230,000 in agency funds. Using credit and gift cards paid for by the MTA, Paul Violette stayed at five-star hotels and ate at high-end restaurants here and abroad among his lavish purchases. Violette pleaded guilty in February to stealing $150,000 to $230,000 from the authority for his personal use from 2003 and 2010. House majority leader, according to a report from The Maine Wire. MaineToday Media’s majority owner is Donald Sussman, husband of liberal Congresswomen Chellie Pingree and a major donor to liberal causes. MTM published the Portland Press Herald, the Kennebec Journal in Augusta and the Morning Sentinel in Waterville. According to The Maine Wire, the papers refused to run Curtis’ piece based on its criticism of the paper’s owner and his spouse. Please apply to: ‘Violette law’ is signed AUGUSTA - A bill allowing Maine courts to order the forfeiture of retirement benefits for a state employee convicted of a crime was signed into law last Friday, April 6 by Gov. Paul LePage. What became known as the “Violette bill” surfaced, the Associated Press reports, amid a scandal in which former Maine Turnpike Executive Director Paul Violette was sent to jail for theft of public funds. The new law will allow the court to award the pension to the spouse, dependent or former spouse of the convicted employee. E.O.E. MaineToday Media bans GOP letter PORTLAND – MaineToday Media has refused to run a piece by Republican Phil Curtis, the Cummings Health Care Facility, Inc. 5 Crocker Street, Howland Has an immediate opening for a R.N. Charge Nurse for 11-7 shift part time, R.N. Charge Nurse per diem, C.N.A. part time and per diem Susan Bailey, R.N. Director of Nursing Monday-Friday (207) 732-4121 House approves child care measure AUGUSTA - The Maine House voted 76-66 this past Monday to support a bill that removes the collective bargaining rights for private child care providers who receive state subsidies. L.D. 1894 passed the Senate last week. Following another round of voting, the bill will go to Gov. Paul LePage who supports the measure. It repeals a law passed by the Democraticcontrolled legislature in 2008 to allow providers who are not state employees, but receive state subsidies, to unionize. Approximately 200 of the state’s 1,300 family childcare providers have joined the Maine State Employees Association for union representation. Relax Browse our inventory of New and Pre-owned vehicles at... www.thorntonbros.com Serving the Lincoln and Millinocket regions at: 125 Main Street, Lincoln Toll Free 1-800-244-8666 Rejuvenate Escape We are a full service hair and beauty salon Call for an appointment to pamper yourself today! 184 West Broadway ~ Lincoln ~ 794-6145 3 Thursday, April 12, 2012 Community Calendar & News NewsWorthy Stepping Off The Edge A Los Angeles man was stripped of his stair climbing championship title after it was discovered that he used an elevator during the competition. Miguel Larios stunned a field of elite stair racers when he reached the top of the 62-story Aon Center in a record-breaking 7 minutes and 45 seconds. He claimed that his quick time was due to the intimate knowledge he had gained of the building during the ten years he had worked there. After security video of Larios taking the elevator during the competition surfaced, he was stripped of both the title and his job. Another racer was declared this year’s climbing champion with a time of 8 minutes and 2 seconds. More than 750 people participated in the stair climbing race as a fund raiser for the American Lung Association of California. While many elite racers took part, most of the entrants viewed it as a fun event and were happy to just reach the top. All’s Fair Children may know the difference between right and wrong long before we thought. A study published in the scientific journal “PloS One” (www.plosone. org) found that by 15 months of age most infants have a sense of fairness. And this sense of fairness is directly related to their willingness to share. When shown videos of an actor splitting food between two people, the babies spent more time looking at scenes showing an unequal division of the food. Next, the children were asked to share their favorite toys. Of the kids who were willing to share the toys, 92 percent had spent more time watching the video of unfair division of food. Researchers suggest that these children were surprised by the unequal distribution and that it violated their sense of fairness. The study also suggests that the link between moral judgments and behavior is developed earlier than previously believed. The Gift of Communication Most of us have never heard of LORM, but for the deafblind population of Europe it is a primary form of communication. Developed in the late 19th century by Heinrich Landesman - who lost his hearing at age 15 and was blind by his 30s LORM is a hand touch alphabet where a “speaker” uses the tips of his fingers to stroke a “listener’s” hand, communicating different letters and punctuation. The main drawback of this method is that the parties must be touching to communicate. LORM has leapfrogged into the 21st century with the development in Berlin of the Mobile LORM Glove, which allows the deafblind to “talk” over distances. The glove contains sensors that are activated when the speaker strokes the glove. The letters are transmitted through a Bluetooth device and mobile phone to the listener’s phone, then received by a glove worn by the listener. The glove vibrates in a way that simulates the stroking of the hand touch alphabet, relaying the speaker’s words to the listener. For the first time, the deafblind can use LORM to communicate over distances and messages can be shared with several people at once. The message can also be transmitted to the cell phone of a sighted person in the form of a text message, and the sighted person can text a response to the deafblind person. Obesity-Autism Link Need another reason to eat healthier and move more? A recent study has found that children born to very overweight or obese mothers are more likely to develop autism. A study of 1,000 children found that those whose mothers were obese had a 67 percent higher rate of autism that those born of healthy-weight moms. They also showed more than double the chance of having developmental delays. The study is published in the May edition of “Pediatrics” (http://pediatrics. aappublications.org/). Since a third of American women of child-bearing age are obese, these findings are significant. Earth Day Challenge for Kid Artists - deadline end of April! As Earth Day approaches, the Natural Resources Council of Maine (NRCM) is inviting Maine elementary school age kids to create images of a pollution-free world, in honor of Earth Day and Rachel Carson’s contribution to a cleaner environment. The artworks may be up to 8.5” by 11” and will be featured in a slide show on NRCM’s website. In addition, artwork submitted will automatically be considered for use as an image on a tee-shirt for NRCM’s 5k and kid’s “fun run” event in September, to will honor the anniversary of the publication of the book, Silent Spring. The event, dubbed “Rachel’s Run and Kids’ Fun,” will raise funds for and awareness about NRCM’s ongoing work to keep toxic chemicals out of Maine’s air, water, wildlife, and forests. 2012 marks the 50th anniversary of Silent Spring by Rachel Carson, a book that helped launch the environmental movement and changed our society by illustrating the connection of human beings with all other life around us. Rachel Carson demonstrated the effects of dangerous chemicals, most notably the pesticide DDT, on the environment, particularly on birds. Bald eagles and other species suffered huge population declines as a result of this poison. Submissions for the Earth Day slideshow may be mailed or dropped off, by the end of April, to the Natural Resources Council of Maine, 3 Wade St, Augusta, ME 04330. Alternatively, photographs of the artwork, or questions about the event, may be emailed to Stacie Haines at [email protected] . For up to date information about Bangor Hydro, visit www.bhe.com Thursday, April 12 BANGOR - “Stages of Grief”, an informational session sponsored by St. Joseph Hospice. For information, call Renee Hunter at 907-1810. St. Joseph Hospital, Broadway; 6 p.m. BANGOR – Fields Pond Book Discussion Group, “The Animal Dialogues: Uncommon Encounters in the Wild” by Craig Childs. Free. Bangor Public Library, Harlow St.; 7 p.m. Friday, April 13 OLD TOWN - Spaghetti supper and silent auction to benefit Animal Orphanage. $15/ family. Takeout available. Old Town Elementary School; 4:30 p.m. ORONO – Jazz Night at Orono Arts Cafe. A jazz-focused version of the regular monthly session. $5/adults, $3/students through high school. Those wishing to perform may sign in at 6:30 and be ready for the show to begin at 7. Programs should be appropriate for a family audience and last about 10 minutes. For information contact mary.bird@umit. maine.edu or call 866-2578. Keith Anderson Community House, 19 Bennoch Rd.; 6:30 p.m. Saturday, April 14 MEDWAY - Community Indoor Yard Sale & Expo - A Cure for Log Cabin Fever. Proceeds from table rentals to benefit the Katahdin Relay for Life. Medway Middle School; 9 a.m. to 3 p.m. ORONO - Eastern Maine Orchid Society’s Orchid Sale & Raffle. New and unusual orchids; minis and standards. Club members on hand to answer all your questions. FREE and open to the public. Clapp Greenhouses, Umaine; 9 a.m. to 1 p.m. MILFORD – Baked Bean Supper to benefit the Animal Orphanage. $7/adults, $2/children. Takeout available. Milford Congregational Church; 4:30 to 6:30 p.m. EDDINGTON – Eagle Scout Fund Raiser. Baked bean supper (w/chop suey option) and dessert auction from 4 - 6 p.m. Live entertainment to follow from 6-9 pm. All the proceeds will go toward an Eagle Scout project, consisting of a Veteran’s Memorial. For information, contact Scott Baillargeon at 207-659-6373 or umpd66@ aol.com. Eddington Elementary School, 440 Main Rd.; 4 - 9 p.m. PLUG IN ELECTRIC CAR WITH RANGE EXTENDING GENERATOR Sunday, April 15 HAMPDEN - Brunch Bingo, new program every 3rd Sunday of the month. Breakfast starts at 9 a.m. followed by Lunch menu at 12 noon, along with regular Bingo. Held every month. For information contact Bill Sinclair at 862-2553 or HAMPDENVFW@TDS. NET. Hampden Post 4633 VFW, 41 Canoe St.; begins at 9 a.m. BANGOR - Guest Speaker The Rev. Dr. Charles T. Crabtree, president of Zion Bible College, Haverhill, Mass. For information contact Rev. Ron Morris at 947-0324. Glad Tidings Church, 1033 Broadway; 10 a.m. and 6 p.m. Monday, April 16 to Friday, April 20 HOLDEN - April Vacation Camp at Fields Pond Audubon Center. A week of exploration, play and all around fun while learning about our role in this wonderful world. Open to children ages 6-12. Choose the days you like or come for the whole week! $40/day member, $50/day nonmember; $200/ week member, $250/week nonmember. Advance registration required. Please call 989-2591 or register online at www.maineaudubon.org. Fields Pond Audubon Center, 216 Fields Pond Rd.; 9 a.m. to 3 p.m. Friday, April 20 BANGOR - Broadway’s Next Hit Musical is coming to the Gracie Theatre at Husson (which, if you think about it, is Off Broadway!). Master improvisers gather made-up song suggestions from the audience and create a spontaneous evening of music, humor and laughter. The audience votes for their favorite song and watches at the cast turns it into a full-blown improvised musical. For information go to http://www.gracietheatre.com. Gracie Theatre, Husson University, 1 College Circle; 7:30 p.m. How to get your news in the paper If you represent a civic, fraternal, veterans or non-profit community service organization, we encourage you to send your news and photos to Hometown Newspapers. Here are some simple guidelines for publication. 1. Our deadline for community news briefs and calendar items is 4 p.m. Monday for publication in the following Thursday issue. 2. E-mail submissions are preferred, but news items can also be sent by regular mail. Due to the volume of requests, we cannot accept news briefs or calendar listings by phone. 3. Be sure the information is complete, such as location, time of the Birding by Ear HOLDEN – Mastering bird songs isn’t as overwhelming as it seems. You just need to learn a few simple tricks. Bob Duchesne will demystify the art of birding by ear in this very effective audio-visual presentation. event, admission cost and phone number or e-mail contact information. 4. Please send all photos as a JPEG attachment, not embedded in the text. Be sure that all persons are identified in small group photos. Very small or out-of-focus photos will not be accepted for publication. 5. We reserve the right to edit all HOLDEN – Join University of Maine’s forest vegetation instructor, Steve Sader, for a tree id walk and more. Learn how to use a plant key to identify unknown species. Steve will demonstrate how to measure the height of a tree with a clinometer (participants will have a chance to take the measureto explore the nature center and/ ment themselves). Participants or the outdoors for themselves. Fields Pond Audubon Center, Holden, Sunday, April 22, DOVER-FOXCROFT, ME— 2-3:00 p.m. Start Your Own Plants from Cost: $10/member; $15/non- Seed is the latest program in member. Advance registration is the You Can series. It will be required. Please call 989-2591 held Thursday, April 26th from or register online at www.mai- 10:00 am- 12:00 pm at Charneaudubon.org. lotte White Center, 572 Bangor Road, Dover-Foxcroft. Cost is $5 and you can register through the wood? Join Pete Robinson PVAEC by calling 564-6525. at his farm for hands-on wood What’s the best way to start splitting and firewood cutting seeds? High seedling mortalifrom a woodpile. ties and leggy, unhealthy plants Pete Robinson has managed a woodlot for 20 years, and has been President of the Small Woodlot Owners Association of Maine (SWOAM) for several years. Fields Pond Audubon Center, Holden, Tuesday, April 24, 7 p.m. Presented by Bob Duchesne, President of Maine Audubon Penobscot Valley Chapter. $10 for members, $15 for nonmembers. Mantis Yoga for Children (ages 3-7) HOLDEN – Join certified yoga teacher and Audubon naturalist, Holly Twining, for an insect inspired yoga class filled with movement, games, books, and laughter. We will take a nature walk after class to enjoy the outdoors and locate some live insects. Parents can choose to drop children off for the class Heat for less DOVER-FOXCROFT, ME— Firewood Processing is the latest program in the You Can series. It will be held Saturday, April 21st from 9:00 am- 11:00 am at Leaves ‘n Blooms Greenhouse, 1467 Bangor Road, Dover-Foxcroft. Cost is $10 and you can register through PVAEC by calling 564-6525. Thinking of augmenting your heat source with wood? Not sure how to process Stk. #12-006 SAVE an ADDITIONAL $1,000 with AARP Bonus on Impalas! articles for space and clarity. Rest assured, however, that all basic information will be included. Questions? Drop us a note at [email protected]. Spring Tree Identification Workshop Eat for less DISTANCE MATTERS: CHEVY HAS 10 MODELS OVER 30 MPG 2012 CHEVROLET VOLT BREWER – Maine Professional Guides Assn. Anniversary Banquet. Annual banquet and membership meeting begins at 5 p.m. with a cash bar, followed by the membership business meeting at 5:30 and dinner at 6. Meeting covers election of next year’s officials, legislative news and more. Also enjoy the guest speakers, recognition awards, auction of donated items and door prizes. $40 per person, $70 per couple, or $265 for a table of eight. Jeff’s Catering, 5 Coffin Ave.; 5 p.m. 2012 SILVERADO EXTENDED CAB 4X4 Stk. #12-051 2012 CHEVY IMPALA LT will also learn how to build their own plant press. Bring along a hand lens and binos if you have them. Fields Pond Audubon Center, Holden, Saturday, April 28, 1-4 p.m. $25 for /members, $35 for nonmembers. Advance registration is required. Register online at www.maineaudubon. org or call 989-2591. that never perform well when moved to the garden are some of the common problems that will be discussed. Learn the best gardening practices for starting plants in the home. You’ll bring home a newly planted seed that you started in class. Patricia Jones and Amanda Costello are graduates in the Master Gardeners program through UMaine Extension. THE FIRST. THE FASTEST. 4G LTETM IS HERE. Get the first 4G LTE network in town and be with the only wireless company that gives you rewards. Come in today and check out the Samsung Galaxy S® Aviator® II for $99.99 SamSung galaxy S® aviator® ii $ 9999 After $100 mail-in rebate that comes as a Mastercard® debit card. Applicable Smartphone Data Plan required. New 2 yr. agmt. and $30 act. fee may apply. Pricing available only at locations listed $22,988* MSRP $27,995 SALE Price includes rebate tax & title extra $349 Per Month Lease 36 months. SALES TAX INCLUDED! 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Trademarks and trade names are the property of their respective owners.Android, Google Play, Gmail and Google Maps are all trademarks of Google, Inc.©2012 U.S. Cellular.DEV_BW_457 4 Thursday, April 12, 2012 Op-ed Stop the Presses! Editorial & Local News We’ve Got Mail To The Editor: By Cynthia Izon Journalists have a tremendous responsibility to report the facts. Editorials and letters to the editor are the places where people’s opinions should be aired. Not in the news stories. Although, we in the United States of America are known for “Freedom of Speech”, that does not entitle journalists to exploit the truth or withhold it in the news. And yet, down through the years in American history the truth is too often exploited, or completely absent from the news. The Cary Grant movie “His Girl Friday” is hilarious and sad at times, in its portrayal of the newspaper industry. It showed how a newspaperman would sell his own mother for a sensational story because sensation sells newspapers. Even Joseph Pulitzer, creator of the Pulitzer Prize for Journalism, defended sensationalism because he thought that people needed to know about crime in order to combat it. His competitor, William Randolph Hearst, is credited with helping to start the Spanish-American War. When his illustrator, Frederic Remington, asked to be allowed to come home because Havana was too quiet, Hearst replied, “Please remain. You furnish the pictures and I’ll furnish the war.” A tidbit of history that I found to be interesting: the earliest reported newspaper was printed in China in 713 and was called “Mixed News”. I wonder how much “freedom of speech” they were allowed? I’m sure that the emperor received glowing reports from the press since a bad report could’ve meant a beheading. I’m just guessing. Newspapers have held tre- mendous sway with their readers. The have the power to whip the mobs into a frenzy, to “dethrown” a political candidate, or help a candidate win. They also have the power to silence their opposition. Just ask Maine’s House Majority Leader, Phil Curtis. He recently submitted an editorial to Maine Today Media and it was rejected. Why, you ask? Because the editorial pointed out that Chellie Pingree’s husband, Donald Sussman, bought the Maine Today Media company that owns the Portland Press Herald, Kennebec Journal, and Morning Sentinel. Here is an excerpt from House Majority Leader, Phil Curtis’ editorial as printed in www. themainewire.com, “Democrats routinely decry the influence that big corporations and big money hold over our political process. How hypocritical it is to see two of their standardbearers—the congresswoman who is a leader in the “progressive caucus” and her husband who is one of the largest patrons of Democratic causes in the country—use their money to infiltrate the institutions that give Maine people their news. Sussman pledges to stay out of any editorial decisions the newspapers make. I have news for Donald: buying a newspaper is an editorial decision. No matter how much Donald says outwardly that he wants his new media outlets to be unbiased, bias will be inherent and intractable. Journalism ethics expert Bob Steele called Sussman’s ownership a legitimate concern.” If you still believe that Don- ald Sussman will stay out of any editorial decisions that his newspaper makes then I have some swamp land that I would like to sell to you. You’ll hardly notice the mosquitoes. I would expect a liberal to continue buying newspapers from Sussman’s company, but conservatives? You are simply giving your money to left-wing causes and as I heard the governor say at a Lincoln Day Dinner in Somerset, you’re just paying them to lie to you. It’s one thing if the newspaper allows both sides to speak. That’s great. But Maine Today Media showed its true colors by rejecting Representative Curtis’ editorial. In keeping with sensationalism why didn’t they take the opportunity to allow his editorial and then turn around and capitalize on it to draw more readers? Have someone from their side write an editorial favoring them. Start a firestorm to sell more papers. Or maybe I shouldn’t give them any ideas. Don’t expect those papers to inform the public, especially those in Pingree’s district, of Pingree’s pending investigation from the Federal Elections Commission for taking Sussman’s private jet to a 2010 fundraiser in New York. Don’t expect them to report on the times that she has been cited for breaking campaign finance laws by not reporting her donations. Ironically at the same time as she is hypocritically spouting “get money out of politics”. Don’t expect them to print the truth. Thomas endorses Plowman for U.S. Senate S R taff eport RIPLEY – State Sen. Douglas Thomas will support one of his colleagues in the six-way Republican primary for U.S. Senate. The Ripley lawmaker announced that he’ll back State Sen. Debra Plowman of Hampden in the primary to succeed retiring U.S. Senator Olympia Snowe. “I think if she can win the primary, she stands the best chance to beat (Angus) King,” Thomas said Sunday. “Debbie is a real conservative and has been for the 16 years she’s served in the Legislature. Check her record. She and her husband own PDQ Door in Hampden, so she understands how tough it is to run a business in Maine. I like the rest (of the contenders), but think Debbie is best.” Plowman said she was pleased with the endorsement. “I am honored to be Doug’s choice,” said the Hampden lawmaker. “Doug and I have worked together for the last 8 years in the Legislature and I have great respect for Doug. He works hard and cares deeply.” Thomas served three years in the Maine House before being elected to the State Senate in 2010. Plowman is currently serving her fourth term in the State Senate. She was first elected to the House of Representatives in 1992, where she represented Hampden, Newburgh and Dixmont. She was re-elected to the House for three more terms, serving a total of 8 years on the Legislature’s Judiciary Committee including 6 years as the ranking member. In 2000, she returned to the private sector to help run PDQ Door, the family business. But after a four year break, she won a three way primary for the State Senate in 2004, and went on to win three more elections in District 33. Plowman is also a member of the American Legislative Exchange Council’s Civil Justice Task Force, and the National Conference of State Legislatures’ Standing Committee on Legislative Effectiveness. Other candidates in the Republican U.S. Senate primary are Richard A. Bennett, former President of the Maine Senate; Scott D’Amboise, former Lisbon Falls Selectman; Charles E. Summers, Jr., Maine Secretary of State; Bruce Poliquin, Maine State Treasurer; and William Schneider, Maine Attorney General. What is an op-ed piece? Most newspapers feature an editorial page where they tout their own views. We are no exception. Traditionally the page opposite the editorial page has been referred to as the “Op Ed” page and has been used for the publication of opinion pieces written by authors with no formal affiliation with the newspaper. The Citizen Journal utilizes a slightly different format that combines our editorial pieces with the opinion pieces from others on a consolidated page. We want to be very clear that the content of The columns published on these pages are the opinions of the writers alone, and do not reflect the opinions or endorsements of Hometown Newspapers, or its affiliate editions or staff. We welcome the opportunity to publish your views. Letters to the editor should be 250 words or less and include a full name, town of residence and a daytime phone number. Phone numbers will be deleted from published letters. Hometown Newspapers reserves the right to accept or reject letters Penobscot Valley Explorer Publisher/Editor Robert Pushard [email protected] Assoc. Publisher/Editor Jan Laux [email protected] General Manager Patti McCluskey [email protected] Regional Manager Steve Brown [email protected] Graphic Artist Tyler Hunt [email protected] Hometown Newspapers, LLC Highlands Journal & Moosehead Times Somerset Times & SV Weekly Citizen Journal 61 Main Street #5 Bangor, ME 04401 207-990-1109 ~ Fax 207-990-1108 www.PVExplorer.com ~ www. svweekly.com the editorial page - whether written by us or contributed by others - is opinion based. You may agree or disagree with the expressed opinions, but we hope you will agree with us that all who wish to express their opinions should be heard. based on content or length, and prefers letters be submitted electronically by email at editor@ svweekly.com. Letters can be submitted by regular mail to 61 Main Street #5 Bangor, ME 04401 Mike Heath and Paul Madore protested at Orono to stop people from accepting ‘sodomy based marriage’. So they are not against lesbians? Do you know that the word sodomy was actually used as a term for any type of sex that was not missionary. It was used for oral sex, sex outside of marriage, other positions etc. I do not, in any way, under any circumstance think gay marriage will make a straight person be gay. I do think that some people experiment and some people Nancy Rotkowitz Dover Foxcroft What’s happening in our town? B J R , y anice ideout president Here it is, Spring already. I haven’t written a column since Christmas. But now we are getting back into the spring of things. Thanks for being patient and I do hope that you will all support us this year in the many events that we will be doing. Thank you, Kathleen for returning to a committee. Thanks to Dale, Brenda, Sally, and Jean for their volunteering to make all that we do possible. We are sponsoring a NFI Athlete to be on the Special Olympic team again this year in June. We are also giving 2 scholarships to deserving graduating seniors from Mattawamkeag. We did sponsor the Boy Scouts of America again this year. We have decided to have a Mother’s Day Supper on May 10. We will be having smothered beef, potato, vegetable, breads and drinks. There will be different kinds of cakes for dessert. We have had to raise the price of our meals due to the high cost of food. The charge for adults will be $7, senior citizens (60 and over) will be $6.50, and children (12 and under) will be $4. All mothers will be charged $4 for their meal-they deserve a break!! We have decided to have our “Fun Day” on July 28. That is the same day as the Mattawamkeag class reunion. The theme will be “TV Shows”. We do hope that we will have many participants in the parade this year. We will have more information available in our next column. If you have any questions about what’s going on, you can contact either Dale (736 – 7680) or me (736 – 4731). We do have a lot of work to do outside of this year. scraping and painting the park benches, getting new flowerpots, and planting flowers outside the municipal building. We will help clean up the cemetery and put spring flowers in the urns there. We are always willing to accept volunteers to help us. We do have two ladies from Lincoln and one from Macwahoc. They just want to help us a spruce up our town a little; we certainly do appreciate their help. If you are looking to do something with your idle time, come see us or call. We can have a good time while we work! Our next meeting is on April 16 at 10 AM at the municipal building. Enjoy the nice spring weather. By Senator Susan Collins Elected office is a place for public service, not personal gain. As demonstrated by the recent press stories, however, questions have been raised about whether lawmakers have been exempt - legally or practically - from the reach of our laws and regulations prohibiting insider trading. For example, what if a Member of Congress learned, in a classified briefing, that a major defense contractor was about to declare bankruptcy and that Member sold his stock before the news was made public? Is this fair? Is it legal? “60 Minutes” first raised these troubling questions in a report late last year. And the allegations come at a time when, unfortunately, the public’s faith in Congress is already extremely low. A recent Gallup poll shows that nearly 70 percent of the American public has little or no confidence in Congress. Other polls show that Americans rate Members of Congress at or near the bottom of the list in terms of perceived honesty and ethical standards. This erosion of public trust is not confined to Congress, but it taints the public’s view of our entire federal system. With the many challenges our nation faces, we must act to restore and to deserve - the trust of the American people. Recently, the President signed into law the most significant ethics reform in many years. The clear message of this new law, which I support, is that Members of Congress are not above the law. This common-sense legislation, known as the Stop Trading on Congressional Knowledge, or STOCK, Act, makes it crystal clear that members of Congress are forbidden from trading on insider information. My committee, Homeland Security and Governmental Affairs, held a hearing on this bill shortly after the “60 Minutes” report aired. At the time, we learned that despite reassurances from legal experts and the Securities and Exchange Commission that no so such exemption actually existed, there was persistent disagreement about the issue. That’s why I felt it was important to send a very clear message that Members of Congress are not exempt from the insider trading laws, and that is exactly what this bill does. In addition, top federal agency employees who have real influence within their agencies will also be subject to these same rules. And all will have to report online, making information easily accessible to the public. The STOCK Act, which passed the Senate with overwhelming bipartisan support, is a small, but meaningful, example showing that elected representatives do hear our constituents and we can work across the aisle. I believe we sent a strong message that makes it absolutely clear that Members of Congress and their staffs are expected to play by the same rules as the public, and are not exempt from insider trading laws. This new law reassures the American people that elective office is a place for public service, not private gain. People using the Windows Vista operating system should be aware that Tuesday (4/10) was the last day of mainstream support for the widely used operating system. The OS was originally released in 2006 as a follow-up to Windows XP. This change does not mean that users are simply out there on their own. The OS is now in Extended Support. Extended Support offers free security updates while most other updates are available for a fee. Mainstream support for Win- dows XP ended in 2009. The OS has been in Extended Support since then and will remain supported until April 2014. Windows Vista users will enjoy Extended Support until April of 2017. Congress Should Play by the Same Rules Mainstream Support for Windows Vista Ends PVExplorer.com “For Local News, Events, And Sports” *Computer Virus Removal *Computer Sales & Service *Printers *Large Inventory of Low Priced PC Cables, Upgrades, Accessories & Software 93 W. Broadway, Lincoln 794-8797 Open Monday-Friday 9-6 [email protected] Crossroads Restaurant (207) 736-3020 was not coined until 1947. How was it in a 2000 year old book? Don’t preach Jesus, preach what Jesus preached. Compassion and love for all. Oh, and divorce, he really didn’t like divorce. But I don’t hear Mike and Paul talking about that...hmmmm Vote for Same Gender Marriage in November. Thousands of Maine families are counting on you. Mattawamkeag Community Pride THE AREA’S COMPUTER PROBLEM SOLVER FOR OVER 8 YEARS 270 Main St. in Mattawamkeag, ME use drugs and alcohol and do all kinds of things they would not normally do. But I know that there are people out there who are gay, period. Born that way. Who live in monogamous loving family based relationships. This has proven several times over especially when Hitler put them through their paces and tried to make them straight or die. Thousands died. If you are questioning the Bible’s interpretation please read Peter Gomes writings on the subject. The word homosexual BENTO’S GROCERY & DINER and Molunkus Stream Tavern 428 US Highway #2, Macwahoc, ME 04451 207-765-2417 ~featuring~ * Fresh from the oven pizza * Home cooked specials * And the unbelievable Molunkus Laker Sub! The Bento family welcomes you! Fashion Forward Jewelry at Affordable Prices Every third item is 50%-Off Lifetime Replacement Guarantee Treat yourself to a Jewelry Shopping Spree in the comfort of your home or office www.liasophia.com/cherylrussell 207-631-6391 lia sophia Thursday, April 12, 2012 The Outdoor Notebook Outdoor Outdoors in Maine Realities of Global Warming By Bob Cram The winter we’ve just experienced should be enough for even the most skeptical to consider the reality of global warming. Few sub-zero stretches and long snow-less periods this winter culminated with days in March that reached into the 80s. But global warming is a complicated process and many people still argue about its actual cause. Global warming is a fact, not a theory. It’s measurable. It is a proven fact, for instance, that so-called “greenhouse gases” that trap the sun’s heat within the atmosphere and prevent it from radiating back into space, most commonly carbon dioxide (CO2), have increased in the atmosphere by nearly 100 parts per million in the last 140 years. Both CO2 levels and temperatures have risen sharply since 1950. Most of this is directly attributable to man. We have clear cut land and like much but that’s an average. In the colder regions, like the Arctic and Antarctic, the change has been more dramatic, as much as nine degrees on the Antarctic Peninsula. Here are some examples: In 1979 the arctic ice pack stretched from edge to edge of the landmasses that surrounded it. Since that time the ice pack has shrunk nine percent per decade. Some climate models show that all the arctic ice will be gone in summer by the end of this century. Imagine being able to take a cruise to the North Pole instead of going by dogsled. President Taft signed legislation creating Glacier National Park in Montana in 1910. At that time the park was home to an estimated 150 glaciers. Since then the number has decreased to fewer than 30. Scientists predict that in the next 30 years most if not all the park’s glaciers will be gone. burned forests. We are driving cars, trucks and airplanes and heating homes with fossil fuels at a frenzied rate. And there are now nearly eight billion of us doing it. The earth’s average temperature has risen one degree in the last 100 years. That doesn’t sound Mt. Kilimanjaro in Tanzania, famous from the book and movie “The Snows of Kilimanjaro”, has lost almost all its snow cover since 1912. On average, freshwater breakup in the Northern Hemisphere now occurs nine days earlier than it did 150 years ago. Autumn The Sunday Hunting Bugaboo By V. Paul Reynolds freeze-up comes 10 days later. It’s true that warming and cooling trends have happened fairly often in the past. A thousand years ago Europe was a relatively warm place for much of the year. Wine grapes grew in England and English wine competed with French varieties. But by some 400 years ago the Thames River in London froze repeatedly and growing wine grapes in that country was a thing of the past. We also know from ice borings taken from Greenland and Antarctic glaciers that sometimes very rapid climate changes occurred in the distant past, sometimes in as little as a decade. But this usually happened due to the influence of such things as massive volcanic eruptions that spewed gases into the world’s atmosphere and cut off the sun’s heat. We are now seeing significant changes in the Earth’s climate in decades without the influence of cataclysmic natural forces, changes that once took thousands of years to occur. Man-made greenhouse gases are increasing in our atmosphere at a faster rate than plants and the oceans can absorb them. Ocean levels are rising as glaciers melt and their melt waters flow to the sea. Just one foot of rise in the average ocean level will bring drastic consequences to coastal cities like New York and Boston. And low-lying countries like the Seychelles in the Indian Ocean will simply disappear. We are driving more fuelefficient cars, conserving more and recycling many things. Public outcries about cutting rain forests and burning jungles are slowly reducing the effects of these climate-changing processes. And public awareness of the changes around us may lead to reversal of what many see as an inevitable decline. In the meantime the upside of all this, in Maine at least, is lower heating costs, earlier springs, longer summers and longer-lasting falls. Even considering the shorter length of winter sports activities, that may not be such a bad thing. The Barn Door Bringing in the gang By Deb McKay Opened my door on Easter Morning to find it snowing. Quite a surprise to me and very unexpected. The horses were in the barn warm and dry with newly bedded stalls. Which brings up a topic every horse owner thinks about - Bedding. Whether to use shavings or sawdust? Wood Pellets? Corn Pellet? Pine Shavings? Cedar Shavings? Paper? Where to get it? The local mill, a hardware store, the local big box store or the chain of national animal supply stores? With the price of gas rising every day it seems, just driving to get the bedding is now something to consider. What price do we want to pay for something which we put into a stall only to dig it out and throw it away the next day? Only horse people can be so crazy, even cat litter lasts longer. A gracious friend and hay supplier has a small wood mill which he uses constantly and produces wonderful fine cedar sawdust and shavings. He generally was creating a pile of it as waste material. When I found that out, I simply asked if I could haul it away for him. He was pleased, because now he no longer has to clean out his shop, the boys and I will gladly come to sweep and shovel and his pile has diminished considerably. There is something about the smell of cedar in the barn that brings a lift to my step and pleasure to the senses. Then comes the next step of the bedding issue, what to do with all that used bedding and the animal byproducts mixed in? Some can be used on gardens, lawns and fields as fertilizer. Aand I will admit I have an over abundance of black, loose, wonderfully composted manure available. Of course moving it without equipment means using manual labor, shovels and wheelbarrows. Not something I KD Stable Deb McKay - Owner/Instructor (207) 738-2248 www.kdstable.com 202 Thomas Hill Lee, Maine 04455 “Ride with Pride” Only 15 minutes from downtown Lincoln 5 really like doing. Think about this folks, we drive to town, load up on bedding, distribute it throughout the stalls, the next day we sift through said bedding and haul the unwanted parts to the manure pile, which will set a few months until we dig down and refill the wheelbarrow with the bedding we originally dumped there, to haul it to the garden to plant our vegetables in. Wait a minute, I think that perhaps I am looking at this wrong. We have created a circle of recycling which provides our table and shelves with naturally grown, healthy fruits and vegetables to eat fresh and can for winter. ( If you have trouble finding that wonderful black gold of manure, stop by KD Stable and we will show you a golden mountain of it which you may partake of to your hearts content. We will even lend you the shovel and wheelbarrow to move it with.) As I think of it, isn’t it best that we create or are part of the circle of life? On this Easter Sunday, with the snow coming down and the wind blowing hard, perhaps it is a good thing to talk about bedding stalls and the resulting vegetable garden this summer. Looking forward to warm days, blue skies and plants growing in the freshly turned earth fertilized with composted manure and the first sprigs of vegetables pushing their way skyward. I think I’ll get a cup of tea and the latest seed catalog to browse. Join me? This winter the task force that studied the question of why Maine was experiencing a huge decline in nonresident hunters released its findings. Although the task force came up with a few good ideas, and even some useful statistics, it timidly tippy-toed around one key reason why nonresident hunters aren’t coming to Maine: no Sunday hunting. Here is the sum and total of the report’s comment on Sunday hunting. “Sunday hunting was much discussed by task force members; the group was evenly divided on whether to recommend a revisit to this contentious issue.” Why did the task force more or less write off Sunday hunting as a lost cause? One member of the group, Don Kleiner, said that past efforts to legislatively change Maine’s longstanding prohibition of Sunday hunting had been repeatedly shot down by lawmakers. He also indicated that Maine’s new commissioner of fish and wildlife, Chandler Woodcock, would be unlikely to support another attempt to open Maine to Sunday hunting. Kleiner felt that it was a lost cause and a waste of energy. Dave Maynard, the only nonresident to serve on the task force, said that he frankly was “frustrated and disappointed” that the group shunted aside the Sunday hunting issue. Maynard agrees that allowing Sunday hunting in Maine would go a long way toward bringing nonresident hunters back to the Pine Tree State. Another task force member, Aroostook County guide and outfitter Tenley Bennett, said that she, too, was concerned about the report’s lack of emphasis on Sunday hunting and its potential to fix the problem. Bennett would like to see some legislative initiative that would create a limited Sunday hunting permit for Maine’s north woods. An unnsuccessful attempt to do just this was attempted a few years ago by the Sportsman’s Alliance of Maine (SAM). George Smith, SAM’s former director, says that he has “given up on Sunday hunting.” Too much opposition from guides, oufitters and landowners, says Smith. Since a vast majority of the states across the country that offer big game hunting do permit Sunday hunting, you don’t have to go far to get feedback from nonresident hunters who stopped coming to Maine in the fall. Chuck Murphy, from Westport, Massachusetts: “No hunting on Sunday makes no sense---there is no logical reason. Especially when 39 other states allow some sort of Sunday hunting. This really gets me angry.” Eustis Guide Ray Craemer, who also favors Sunday hunting, pinpoints the other main reason why Maine has lost more than 30 percent of its nonresident hunters in the last decade: “Spend more money on deer recovery and less trying to answer questions we already know the answers to,” says Craemer. What did the task force have to say about the part that a declining deer herd has had on hunter decline? Not much, especially considering its irrefutable causal impact on hunting license sales. Here’s the task force finding: “Nonresident hunters have responded to...lack of marketing effort, exacerbated by a drop in the whitetail population...” Interestingly enough, Fish and Wildlife Commissioner Chandler Woodcock says that he is not opposed to Sunday hunting in Maine, that he is keeping an open mind, as is the governor. Again the task force deserves credit for generating some good, creative ideas that collectively can help make Maine more attractive to nonresident hunters. For example, allowing nonresident deer hunters to hunt on Maine’s opening day would be a good “game starter” It is blatantly discriminatory and provincial. How many nonresident hunters have been driven to other states by this short-sighted regulation? As the nostrom goes, “drastic times require drastic measures.” So what if Sunday hunting in Maine is controversial! That is no reason to shy away from the issue, if it has positive potential to resolve a truly critical and damaging trend. The task force closes its report this way: “Maine’s decline in Nonresident hunter numbers is more significant than the national trend would suggest. There are significant hunter numbers in the drive to market that may be encouraged to add Maine as a hunting destination. We recommend that the legislature implement our recommendations to have every out of state hunter add Maine to their “bucket list” of destinations to hunt.” It seems logical that, unless Maine policymakers address the monumental issues that affect hunter behavior - deer numbers and Sunday hunting - reversing the nonresident hunter trend will be difficult. Isn’t it time to revisit the Sunday hunting issue? The author is editor of the Northwoods Sporting Journal. He is also a Maine Guide, co-host of a weekly radio program “Maine Outdoors” heard Sundays at 7 p.m. on The Voice of Maine NewsTalk Network (WVOM-FM 103.9, WQVM-FM 101.3) and former information officer for the Maine Dept. of Fish and Wildlife. His e-mail address is [email protected] and his new book is “A Maine Deer Hunter’s Logbook.” Free Drifting Penobscot Bronze B J S y oel usen “Nobody ever got a heart attack fighting a trout. Those smallmouth bass there are tougher than a bad mother-inlaw, and you got such a bunch of big ones over here.” Lefty Kreh, the originator of this and many other hilarious one-liners, has become a legend in fly fishing circles around the world. Name almost anything with gills and he has caught it on a fly. Even so, with all his fishing travels and wrangling of countless species worldwide, Lefty would tell you that the smallmouth bass is his favorite of all the freshwater species. Like Lefty, the smallmouth bass was the first fish I remember catching on a fly, and with the Penobscot River running through my back yard, it seems fitting. The big water of the Penobscot is renowned smallmouth territory and draws both spin casting and fly fishers alike, and with good reason. The river is rich in baitfish, crayfish, as well as insect hatches, and a multitude of other feeding opportunities to keep the resident smallmouth population booming in both number and size. I often see bass seekers working the riverbanks looking for that next aggressive strike and the thrilling acrobatic leaps of a hard fighting smallmouth that follow. Popular stretches of the river extend from Howland and south to the greater Bangor area. However, in my experience the best fishing for smallmouth can be had further north of the Howland Dam in the stretches along route 2 that pass through the little towns of Mattawamkeag, Winn, and further south through Lincoln. This 30 mile stretch offers excellent structure fishing around countless islands, boulders, and grassy shallows. Small cold water tributaries provide optimal hunting grounds where smallmouths capitalize by ambushing careless baitfish. Four pound smallmouth are not uncommon, but the challenge of landing these large fish becomes apparent quickly after a solid hook-up, as they go airborne again and again in an attempt to shake the hook. If you were looking for a good work out for your forearm, then you’ve settled on the right approach. Even mid-size fish put up a fight that can fold your wrist. Like trout, smallmouth bass have a preferred range of water temperature where they will feed aggressively. Spring fishing in cold water can be very slow, but once the water hits 55-60 degrees the action starts to heat up. Usually this occurs sometime in May and corresponds with the spawning period. The action leading up to and following the spawn can be extraordinary, with spawning activity usually stretching into mid-June. However, excellent fishing continues through the entire summer with an occasional hiatus during the hottest periods of the day. For those interested in fly fishing these waters as Lefty and I do, only a narrow selection of flies is needed. Fly fishing around the spawning period will be most successful with sub- Lincoln area trail report surface flies such as a simple Woolly Bugger. I prefer an olive Woolly Bugger with a beadhead to give the fly better action in the water, and to sink the fly to the desired depth quicker. Another excellent subsurface fly is the Clouser Minnow, which was designed specifically for smallmouth bass by an applauded fly tier and fisherman named Bob Clouser. Excellent top-water flies include bug poppers and large stonefly imitations, such as The Bugmeister. Silently working a fly along the riverbanks and shallows from a canoe or drift boat is my preferred style. The lack of a rumbling engine really takes the edge off and provides the perfect sense of calm when that big bronze-back clobbers your topwater bug popper. If you are interested in fly fishing the Penobscot River for the first time, a Maine guide can get you onto full-tilt smallmouth fishing with a fly rod or spin caster in a flash. To name one I know personally: Kevin McKay, a master Maine guide in Brewer, is a well-known Penobscot guide and excellent fly fishermen who loves seeking smallmouths. Visit maineguide. com to browse Maine’s many experienced guides. Contributed by Henry Carey, Penobscot Off-Road Riders There has been a lot of work going on the last couple of weeks. The bridge over Rocky Brook has had ramps put in, making it easier for ATV’s to get across. The trail behind Why Not Stop has been fixed and the wet holes have been filled with the help of Treeline. The Club unloading site now has 4 picnic tables so folks will have more places to set. We have work dates planned for the 14th and 21st of April. If the weather holds and we don’t get a lot of rain, I think the trails will open soon. A view of the bridge across Rocky Brook. The bridge recently had ramps installed to make crossing easier. Thursday, April 12, 2012 Opinions & Columns The Frary Home Companion The Maine Conservative Voice Partisanship in the good old days Lawbreaker By: Andy Torbett By Professor John Frary In December 1980 a former student and his wife treated me to dinner at the Toledo Restaurant in Manhattan. We had much to talk about and by the time we arrived at dessert there was only one other customer in the place. Our conversation had turned to Reagan’s election and it drew this old gentleman to our table like a magnet. He asked to join us, saying that he couldn’t resist joining a talk about politics. He turned out to be a fascinating conversationalist with a fine fund of stories about his career in the old Tammany Hall Democratic machine. His principle job as a precinct captain in the ‘20s and ‘30s was making sure that all the Democrat ducks were in a row come voting day. This meant making sure that Democrats who weren’t ill, relocated, dead or in jail got to the polls. He claimed that he failed to predict the turn out accurately in only one election. His precinct included the luxury apartments known as ”The Dakotas.” In those days the doormen would not allow a Democratic precinct captain on the premises, but that had never been a problem. The residents were all registered Republicans and he counted them as votes for the Republican candidate. His single miscalculation was in the 1932 election. The members and servants of a family living there were neighbors of Franklin D. Roosevelt in Dutchess County so they had personal reasons more important than party loyalty. In those days registration as a Democrat or Republican was more binding than marriage vows are these days. Party affiliation was a generally reliable indicator of your choice of candidate, barring exceptional circumstances like personal friendship. I’m told my maternal grandmother, who was the same age as the old Tammany Hall guy, opposed mixed marriages. She didn’t believe Republicans should marry Democrats. Today contestants for office usually run against opposing candidates first and foremost. In times past they ran against the opposing party along with the opposing candidates. If you want to get an idea of real partisanship read the words of Indiana’s Gov. Oliver Morton: “Everyone who shoots down negroes in the streets, burns negro school-houses and meeting-houses, and murders women and children by the light of their own flaming dwellings, calls himself a Democrat. In short, the Democratic Party may be described as a common sewer and loathsome receptacle into which is emptied every element of treason, North and South, every element of inhumanity and barbarism which has dishonored the age.” Rep. Owen Lovejoy (R-Illinois) was even more eloquent: “The principle of enslaving human beings because they are inferior, is this: If a man is a cripple, trip him up; if he is old and weak, and bowed with the weight of years, strike him, for he cannot strike back; if idiotic, take advantage of him; and if a child, deceive him. This, sir, this is the doctrine of Democrats and the doctrine of devils as well, and there is no place in the universe outside the five points of hell and the Democratic Party where the practice and prevalence of such doctrines would not be a disgrace.” Those words were spoken in the years following the Civil War when feelings were still hot and Republicans could say with perfect accuracy that every Union soldier shot, bayoneted or blown up was wounded or killed by a Democrat. There had been no Republican Party in the South until after the war. Republicans like Lovejoy and Morton naturally ignored the anti-slavery Democrats who fought in blue uniforms, but “political license” allows them at least as much latitude as “poetic license.” Or, as Democratic Speaker Tip O’Neill once observed, “Politics ain’t bean bag.” After things had calmed down, with the Rebs and Yanks more or less reconciled, Maine’s great Thomas Brackett Reed could still say, “We live in a world of sin and sorrow. That’s why there’s a Democratic Party,” That’s what real partisanship used to look like. Last year a Republican won a special congressional election in a New York district where registered Democrats outnumber Republican five-to-one. Party registration is still a big part of political calculations, but it’s not what it used to be. Professor John Frary of Farmington is a former U.S. Congress candidate, a retired history professor, a board member of Maine Taxpayers United and an associate editor of the International Military Encyclopedia. He can be reached at jfrary8070@aol. com. The Knit Ditz Stash Meditations By Diane Oliver How’s your stash? Years ago when I only knew how to crochet, it seemed that the only yarns available (at least where I shopped) were mass-produced acrylics. I didn’t have a firm grasp on gauge or yarn weight, so my purchases were based solely on color. My gauge ignorance didn’t cause any issues with blankets and if the cardigan intended for the newborn was so small it only fit his teddy bear, so be it. Because I was only crocheting the occasional gift item, I had no need to buy yarn in advance. My tiny “stash” was comprised of the leftovers of various projects and was, for the most part, baby pastel colored. Each new project called for a trip to the craft store. When I started knitting and discovered the world of online knitting forums, I was fascinated by the variety of colors and fibers other knitters were using. I made it my mission to find sources for those beautiful yarns. As I merrily clicked away at online yarn stores and shopped at local yarn stores (LYS), my baskets filled with bright selections that I just had to have. I was especially attracted to highly variegated yarns in wild colors. Initially I really enjoyed working with these colorful yarns. I liked the way they dressed up the basic socks I was making. But as I learned complex knitting techniques, I found myself using more solid or semi-solid yarns. This change in knitting style necessitated even more shopping trips, and more gorgeous yarn found its way into my yarn hutch. Then two things happened almost simultaneously that caused me to cast a critical eye toward my stash – the economy tanked and I developed a touch of anxiety about my stash. The economy is selfexplanatory. Like many Americans, I suddenly had less money for discretionary spending. I no longer hit the “buy now” button with impunity. I thought – and still continue to think - long and hard about each yarn purchase. Before buying yarn from my LYS, I put it back on the shelf and walk away; if I still want the yarn next week, then I’ll buy it. Instead of filling my online cart so my total is large enough to qualify for free shipping, I’m more likely to whittle my choices down to one item and happily pay the shipping. And instead of being haunted by the thought that if I don’t buy now I’ll never get my hands on a particular yarn, I recognize that there will always be more yarn. So even if I don’t buy that limited-time-only colorway, there will be another equally beautiful skein in the future. My yarn anxiety was caused by having too much of a good thing. Because I found myself buying multiple versions of similar yarns, the sheer quantity of yarn was overwhelming. And while I’m still in love with most of my stash, some of those earliest purchases were still there, mocking me. I began to feel an amazing amount of stress about these underappreciated yarns, until I could no longer ignore them. I finally reached the point where I knew I had to act. Now when I select stash yarn for a new project, I look at those older purchases first. I’m trying to think of creative ways to use those yarns and, surprisingly, I’ve fallen back in love with some of them. Of course, there are others that I don’t enjoy at all. And when I don’t enjoy working with a yarn, I stop using it. Life is too short to spend my free time doing something that doesn’t bring me joy. It’s time for these yarns to find a new home where they will be loved. My stash is slowly becoming what I want it to be – both in quantity and in style. I might always have a skein or two of what-was-I-thinking yarn in there, but now it more closely resembles a well-curated collection than a schizophrenic nightmare. So once again, how’s your stash? Lincoln Library News By Library Director Linda Morrill We invite members of Lincoln at Story Jam for children ages 5 and surrounding communities and up. Listen to stories, learn to visit the Lincoln Memorial new songs and participate in Library at 21 West Broadway other creative activities. to discover everything we · Wednesdays at 11 a.m. Bring have to offer the community. your baby (ages 24 months Check out the latest fiction and and under) to Baby & Me each non-fiction located on our new week to listen to age appropriate books display shelf; read the stories, songs and more. Bangor Daily News, Lincoln · Wednesdays at 4 p.m. Lego News or pick up your free copy Club meets weekly at the library. of the P.V. Explorer; check out Bring a friend and create terrific our DVD collection of over new Lego creations. For ages 5 1,000 titles for all ages, including and up. popular titles and educational · Thursdays at 11 a.m. Toddler titles too; select one or more Tales for children ages 5 and of our collection of books on under. Join the story time fun CD; check out the latest Maine with stories, songs and other fiction and non-fiction; select creative activities. from a large collection of large · Every day is game/puzzle print books; and so much more. day! Check in at the children’s Residents and non-resident check-out desk for assistance in taxpayers may sign up for a locating our collection of games library card free of charge. and puzzles for all ages. All of our programs are free and Non-residents may purchase a library card for $15.00 single do not require pre-registration. We have programs for adults membership and $25.00 for a as well. We invite adult readers family membership. For children we offer the (ages 18 and up) to check out our “Fireside Chat” book following programs weekly: · Tuesdays at 4 p.m. Join the fun discussion held twice a month at the library. We have two meetings per month, the third Wednesday of each month at 5:10 p.m. and the third Thursday of each month at 2 p.m. New members are welcome to join anytime. Please contact Mary Jo Hammond at 794-2765 for more information. The next book will be Stuart Woods' “Chiefs”. Borrow one of the Efficiency Maine Kill-A-Watt monitors to detect power use by your appliances and electronics. At the Lincoln Memorial Library we have four Killa-Watt devices that may be borrowed. Each kit contains an updated “How to Use” sheet. The kits may be borrowed for three weeks. Once you use the monitor you can figure out how much each appliance/electronic device uses. They are available at the adult check-out desk. Get more information about any of our programs by calling 794-2765 or at http://www. lincolnmaine.org. We are a nation of laws. It is how we maintain the public peace. Our businesses rely on laws to validate and insure the contracts in which they operate. Law is the means to hold the members of a civil society accountable to decency and responsibility. I would suspect that a majority of Americans have at one time or another found themselves crossways to some rule or regulation. While we all may grouse and grumble at the results of our negligence or maybe just plain rebellion, oftentimes it soon becomes clear that some laws were put there for the protection of the public. So we respectfully submit to the repercussions of our actions. Not so for the members of the Democrat Party, who forage the halls of Washington, D.C. in search of more slush funds to consume. The Federal government is supposed to pass a budget each year. It’s the law. Senate President Harry Reid has refused to even allow budgets, passed by the House of Representatives, to come to the floor to be voted on and now the Federal government has not had an operating budget for three years. The “Honorable” Mr. Reid claims that the Republican-led House has not put forth a budget to vote on. Yet the House has repeatedly put forth bi-partisan budgets, passed in the House, that Reid will not acknowledge for a vote. The Senate President seems more content to break the law than to honor the legisla- tion of a duly elected House of Representatives, the laws that govern him and responsibilities required of him that are vested in the position and authority he currently retains. Perhaps Mr. Reid is pouting in frustration that the budgets presented by President Obama cannot make it out of the House with a single positive vote. Yes, the House of Representatives have voted unanimously against the executive budget proposals on multiple occasions. Barack Obama has proven to be so inept on matters of budget that both Democrats and Republicans have refused to have the President’s fiscal disaster on their hands and have voted a resounding bi-partisan “no”. That’s zero, Z.E.R.O, zero votes for the President. Strapped with a leader in the Oval Office that is feckless at best on matters of economy, Harry Reid has decided that perhaps it is best if the law does not apply to him. Better no budget, than a balanced budget. Sadly, Mr. Reid, even the nation of Mexico has an operating budget. Shouldn’t we at least try? But Mr. Reid is not the most notable lawbreaker amongst Democrat leaders. President Obama now finds the signature act of his administration in direct challenge to the Law of the Land, the Constitution. As ObamaCare weighs before the Justices of the Supreme Court, the President has taken the unprecedented tact of threatening the highest court of the United States while it is in deliberation. The President challenged the court’s authority to judge the constitutional merit of a law, which is one of the primary purposes of the Supreme Court. This outraged the American people and rightly so. The President has spent the week trying to “walk back” his words, but curiously, trying to couch his words in such a way as to leave his threat on the table. This leaves the citizens of the United States with these questions: If the President is the Constitutional lawyer he claims to be, then is he simply an inept, incompetent lawyer or is he someone who fundamentally disdains the system of checks and balances that founding fathers established? If you were a Party who believed the government should rule the people, not the people rule the government, wouldn’t you view laws that held you accountable and checked your actions as frustrating encumbrances or barriers to the advance of your agenda? Something to think about. What is certain is this: When we the citizens break a law, we pay a fine or face incarceration. When our leaders in Washington break the law and are exposed, they, by their actions, tell we the people to simply go to Hades. Right Minded, but Left of Center Rush, Angus and volunteerism By John R. Clark Let’s get Rush out of the way first. I think others have expressed enough outrage so I don’t have to. I’ll simply say this: If you are a follower of this thing masquerading as an intelligent life form, you have my pity and utter contempt. I suspect you lost the ability to think independently quite some time ago and aren’t someone I’d feel comfortable having anywhere near me. On a positive note, this creature is doing amazing things in terms of alienating over 50 percent of the voters in America with his comments. Good thing he supports Republicans. I realized shortly after writing last week’s column that I had misspelled Senator Snowe’s last name. I apologize for doing so. On the subject of the open Senate seat, I was very excited when Chellie Pingree indicated she was considering running. I’d very much like to send another woman to represent Maine in the U.S. Senate. However, she realized almost immediately once Angus King entered the race, her chances were markedly diminished. That was, I’m sure a personal disappointment, but an insightful move. I thought overnight about a King candidacy and reached the same conclusion the editorial folks at the Bangor Daily News did. Sending an accomplished independent to represent Maine in the Senate is a very attractive idea. One, in fact that I’d love to see happen in other states, if not this year, then in 2014. I was a state employee under King’s administration and had my gripes, but there’s no getting around the fact that he’s smart, tough and could be a huge deal maker/breaker in a sharply divided and polemic body which is what we’re likely to have again come January 2013. I found it interesting that the first poll done following his announcement had him beating all comers handily. I had an interesting conversation with an educator last week that’s worth sharing. We were talking about all the kids who are in crisis, have trouble fitting in or who are just plain lost in our school system. Believe me, there are plenty of them. We try endless grant/ government programs to “fix” the problem, but there’s a pretty effective and low-cost solution. I’ve mentioned it before and it’s worth noting again. Any youngster who has a positive, nurturing and respectful relationship with an adult has a fighting chance of surviving adolescence in more or less one piece. You don’t need to join an organization to make such a connection. Don’t get me wrong, there are some excellent groups focused on doing this, but the fewer layers of “stuff” we put between acts of compassion and those giving/receiving them, the better off we are. Have you made a positive impact on a youngster recently? On to the ongoing disaster called the computer problem at DHS. Isn’t it time we completely dismantled this train wreck called a department and started from scratch. Want to bet nobody gets fired for lying, incompetence or wasting your tax dollars in this big buck fiasco? Millinocket Memorial Library Notes By Director John McManus This is the first of my monthly columns for the Explorer. Each month I plan on writing about the various aspects of the library; i.e. library services such as Interlibrary Loans, technology, library issues, etc. The history of the library is relatively recent. In early 1919, a Library Committee was formed to study the need for a library in Millinocket. A warrant was then drawn up and presented at the annual town meeting in March 1919. According to the official accounts of the meeting, the library warrant was nearly voted down until Sidney Stevens, a lawyer who was on the committee, proposed that the name for the new library be changed from the Millinocket Free Public Library to the Millinocket Memorial Library to honor those men from town who had fallen in the war. Changing the name changed a lot of minds and the library became a reality. The first location for the library was on the corner of Penobscot Ave. and Central St. in the Gonya block where a barbershop is now. As time passed it quickly became obvious that the major problem facing the library was lack of adequate housing for the growing collection. In order to expand, the library needed to be in a new location. Over the years, many possible sites were debated and rejected. It was not until 1961 that the library was to occupy the land that had once been the site of the Great Northern Hotel. A new building was constructed, the collection was moved and the new library was dedicated on Dec. 11, 1963. The old adage that the only constant is change is certainly true when describing the library. While the physical plant has been altered slightly over the years, the ways in which the library conducts its business are considerably different from what had gone on before. In recent years, the need for more space has once again become an issue. Luckily several factors have alleviated the need to expand. The first factor has been judicious weeding. This process eliminates material that has not been used in years, eliminating irrelevant non-fiction particularly in the sciences and health - and discarding books that are damaged beyond repair. The other factor has been technology. Patrons can now The columns published on these pages are the opinions of the writers alone, and do not reflect the opinions or endorsements of Hometown Newspapers, or its affiliate editions or staff. We welcome the opportunity to publish your views. Letters to the editor should be 250 words or less and include a full name, town of residence and a daytime phone number. Phone numbers will be deleted from published letters. Hometown Newspapers reserves look for information beyond the physical walls of the library. The internet has become a major source for patron interests. One example of this is Interlibrary loan, which has made acquiring materials easier. The staff can search and find materials that are not in our library but are available in other libraries both in the state and elsewhere. The MARVEL databases, acquired by the Maine School and Library Network, allows students and adults access to information resources that were never available before on one site. Future articles will explore other areas of the library. This column has only addressed one issue. There are many more. In the meantime, I welcome any comments, criticism or suggestions from my readers. Please send these to [email protected]. Also, please visit our website, www.millinocket.lib.me.us to see the services we have to offer, monthly acquisitions, events and much more. We are in the process of redesigning our site. Again, any suggestions are welcome. We’ll see you next month! the right to accept or reject letters based on content or length, and prefers letters be submitted electronically by email at [email protected]. Letters can be submitted by regular mail to 61 Main Street #5 Bangor, ME 04401 Thursday, April 12, 2012 Tongue-in-Cheek Opinions & Columns In 500 Words Or Less… Deep Trouble By Chuck McKay Flashbacks to childhood trauma always result in cheap entertainment, which is why I knew this week I would have to write about my turn in the dunk tank. It started out as a way to raise some money for a local charity. But when I climbed in, it immediately turned into something more sinister -- basically an opportunity for thousands of angry people around the community to release some pent-up hatred by repeatedly humiliating and degrading a tub of water. Sitting on that platform, waiting for that first plunge, took me back to one of the diving boards at the Bangor YWCA pool where as a fourth-grader I fidgeted and shook for several minutes before the menacing swim instructor nearly threw me in the water. I guess this is what constituted a “swim class” back in the 1980s. As part of the “non-swimmers” group, this aquatic genius had allowed me to fart around in the shallow end for five weeks, dog paddling and doing fruity little kicking drills while holding onto the side of the pool. Then, on the last day of class I was supposed to fearlessly dive into the deep end as though it were as natural and intuitive as picking a scab. Everyone else gleefully hopped into the water, wearing only their swimsuits. I put myself at the end of one line and another pathetic little guy named Heath kept himself at the end of the other, each of us armored in enough Styrofoam to close a municipal landfill. When our turns came, Heath and I stood on our respective diving boards, stricken by the simple facts of the situation: breathing was necessary to continue existence and being underwater evidently made breathing just about impossible. Incredulous, the instructor told everyone we were “making a mountain out of a molehill.” He strode onto Heath’s diving board and tossed him flailing and screaming into the water. It took me only a second to decide that if my lungs were going to fill with water anyway, I might as well avoid Heath’s humiliation. So I grabbed my nose and hopped in. The worst part is, that pinhead probably went home thinking he had taught us how to swim. In reality, I didn’t touch the water again for years. To this day, I still won’t go under without holding my nose, and while I can maneuver in deep water when necessary I generally avoid it, being about as graceful and efficient a swimmer as your average Dodge Durango. In how many other potentially lethal situations do we expect kids to learn by just jumping It begins with a cup of coffee... in and learning to cope? Imagine if we taught people to drive that way. “Just pay attention and wear your seat belt, and you’ll be fine. Now GET IN THE CAR.” Fortunately, my inadequate swimming skills were not much of a problem in the dunk tank, since it was only four feet deep. I was able to use some of the larger ice cubes to keep myself afloat until my feet found the bottom. Overall, it wasn’t that bad. I don’t know what the big deal is about throwing a ball to dump somebody in the water. It’s not like I didn’t need the bath. The kids had a good time and the whole experience forced me to reflect on a character-shaping event from my past and realize, after much introspection, that I could eek out another 600 words this week by whining about it. Whew! Chuck McKay is a Maine freelance writer and lifeguard. His website is www.sardinereport. com. Mr. Mike’s Musings Shaking hands with Obama: A once-in-a-lifetime experience Mom’s Eye View men in Coast Guard uniforms. We finally were led through a metal gate onto the jetport tarmac and re-assembled inside a gated area. About a dozen reporters and television cameras were set on a platform to our right. We were separated from the general Portland terminal to enable even tighter security. “If I could have your attention, there a few things I want to go over,” said the lead security man in front of our gated area. “Please do not give the president any gifts. We can take care of that later. And don’t hand him a pen to sign anything.” “How about taking pictures? Is that okay?” asked someone in the crowd. “Yes,” said the security man. “Just look at all those reporters with cameras over there.” To the left on the tarmac we could hear the whirl of a helicopter and guessed it was for emergencies. Security people, official greeters and other important-looking folks roamed the expansive tarmac. Then we saw it, at first a dot in the sky to the north, an approaching plane. It was the legendary jet known as Air Force One. After landing and taxiing out of sight for a few minutes, it rolled broadside in front of us about 75 yards away. The rear hatch door opened first and dozens of suited and uniformed people poured onto the tarmac. I wondered what free, now costs money. What is this world coming to? Will we soon be charged for the air we breathe? As part of the morning “routine,’ I usually try to catch the early morning local news, especially the weather. I know. I can look out the window and get a sense of what the day may be like. But remember, it’s part of a routine. But on this morning the remote for the television didn’t work. My goodness, no Kevin Mannix, no weather forecast. I won’t know what to wear! This was an easy fix. Two new batteries and there he was, wrapping up the weekend forecast. But what about today Kevin? The day was not going to be exceptionally busy, but there were a few people I needed to see. Coffee, a well rounded tire, clothes I thought might match the day’s temperature and I was ready to hit the road. Three blocks from the house I realized that I had forgotten my cell phone. What to do? I could turn around and pick it up or I could try to make it through the day without it. Isn’t that what we all did not so many years ago, before the advent of the cell phone? This need for constant contact has become an obsession. I should have just kept going. When I picked it up, I discovered that I had not charged the battery as I normally do. Once charged, it beeped, rang and sputtered, making all kinds of noises resulting from missed calls to appointment reminders from the calendar function. Whatever happened to those little pocket calendars anyway? By now, the day was ‘out of sync.’ Nothing big, just a bunch of little things. I decided to stop, regroup and get another cup of coffee. The clerk at the drivethru must have sensed that it had not been the best morning of the week and gave me an extra large coffee for the price of a regular. “It was a special today,” she said. I thanked her and headed down the road. Now, I have this idea for an invention. It’s called the ‘auto bib’, designed for those of us who eat and drive at the same time. Every once and awhile I have been known to spill just a bit of something on a freshly laundered white shirt, and wouldn’t you know that this particular morning... My hope is that tomorrow will be a better day. For starters, I just bought a new coffee maker. Medication virgin By Mike Estrada – WTOS FM 96.7, 101.1, 105.1 FM All the ‘special guests’ were packed inside a classroom at the Air National Guard building on the grounds of the Portland International Jetport. “Hey, look outside,” she said. I craned my neck to see two men in uniform, securing highpowered rifles inside backpacks and readying to ascend to the surrounding rooftops. “Yup,” I thought, the president must really be on his way.” Thanks to The Boy’s connections from a college internship in Washington, D.C., we got a once-in-lifetime experience: a chance to see the president of the United States in person! Obama was on a whirlwind tour of Burlington, Vt. and Portland to raise funds for his reelection campaign. To say the small crowd was awestruck would not be an exaggeration. The feeling of anticipation was much like seeing the inside of a major league ballpark for the first time or catching a glimpse of a movie star. It was an unreal, out-of-body type experience as we anticipated seeing the leader of the free world. Security was tight. Men in suits with earpiece communication devices mulled about. After exiting the building to assemble outside, we were checked off a guest list and examined with hand-held metal detectors. And that included everyone assembled, even four young By Jan Laux Humans are creatures of habit. We get up each day from a ‘hopefully’ restful night’s sleep, refreshed and ready to tackle the challenges of a new day. Much of our day is based upon a personal routine that we have developed over time and while daily activities may vary to some degree there is a core that remains constant and provides structure for the day. They are the things we come to expect and don’t think much about. But when that daily routine is disturbed, it can send the entire day into a tailspin. Part of my daily routine includes making coffee. Coffee, water, flip the switch and by the time I get back from walking the dog , the coffee is ready. Except this morning! When I entered the house, there was no aroma of freshly brewed coffee. Had I forgotten to turn on the switch? I didn’t think so. I tried turning on the coffee maker several more times and got the same result. Absolutely no sign of life. Dead! Thank goodness for the AE Robinson store just around the corner. Almost at the store, I notice that the car turned the corner with a bit of sluggishness. I pull over, get out and notice that the front right tire seems a bit low on air pressure. Not flat, but almost. Did you know it now costs money to put air in your tires? Something that used to be By Debra Colby-Conklin all those people could be doing. Then the front door opened and the president appeared! He fairly danced down the stairs, paused to shake hands with Portland mayor Michael Brennan and strutted to our group. It was clear he had time for a personal greeting. Obama live is very much like Obama on film. He’s thin, but not skinny. He’s every bit of 6’1” tall. His dark suit and silver necktie fit him impeccably. I snapped photos like a tinsel town reporter at a Hollywood premiere. The president was immersed in the crowd – and shrouded by grim-looking Secret Service people behind. I thrust out my hand from the back. “M. President,” I said. He answered, “How are you sir?” as he grasped my hand with a firm, but not too tight shake. As he moved among the line I couldn’t help but ask “Who do you like in the Final Four?” He answered, “Kentucky looks pretty tough.” Wow, he’s not just a president. He knows his sports! PVExplorer.com NORTHERN PENOBSCOT TECH REGION III Accepting applications for: FINANCE COORDINATOR Year Round, 40 hr. per week position. This position requires significant experience in accounting and all phases of bookkeeping to include AP, PR, GL as well as Budget Prep, Administering Benefits and Annual Audit Prep. Also requires demonstrated ability in computer use, accounting software (ADS Profund a plus), solid working knowledge of MS Office applications and excellent organizational skills with the ability to work under timelines. Candidate must have excellent interpersonal skills with strong ability to multi-task as well as working independently & collaboratively in an articulate and effective manner. Qualifications include: Five years experience. Prior school experience and Post Secondary education preferred. Hourly Wage commensurate with education and experience. Excellent benefits. All Applicants will submit: cover letters, resume, three letters of reference and completed application. Apply to: Director Northern Penobscot Tech Region III 35 West Broadway Lincoln, ME 04457 (207-794-3004) Applications will close when position is filled. EOE “The best way to learn something new is to try it.” After a recent visit to the doctor’s office he told me he was going to prescribe some medication for my insomnia, but that it would be the lowest dose available and that I was supposed to half that as well. When I asked him why such a super-low dosage he called me a “medication virgin” meaning a person without a history of prescription drug use. I found myself smiling at being called a “virgin” anything. After forty-nine years, two marriages and two children, to be called a “virgin” seemed humorous to me. As I drove home though, I began to think more about the term “virgin” and how it might otherwise apply to other things besides its most obvious use. The more I thought about it the more I realized I was more of a “virgin” than I imagined myself to be. That there were still a ton of things I had yet to do. *Travel virgin – I’ve travelled by car to a lot of places and flew on a plane a couple of times, even taken the monorail around Vegas and a shuttle bus to get from one place to another. I’ve taken the Greyhound to Boston and been taxied around in a yellow cab, but I’ve never travelled anywhere by subway within the city. I’ve never ridden in a tractor trailer truck down the highways and byways of America. I’ve never toured from state to state in a travel trailer and I’ve never floated around on a cruise ship dropping anchor in one faraway port after another. *Scuba diving virgin – I’ve waded into the ocean, rushed into the crashing surfs at Old Orchard, rode the tide back in on a boogie board at Popham Beach and cast a fishing road into the surf, but have never been beneath the waves to see what lives there. I fantasize about floating the length of a coral reef in Hawaii. Or watching a school of fish scoot past me and to maybe even see a manta ray lift itself from the sandy bottom and then glide away through the water. *Gold card carrier virgin – I have yet to receive my first gold card despite paying off several credit cards over the years and never missing a payment. Granted the balances I’m given are small, but I feel justified in believing I should receive some acknowledgement of my perfect credit card rating by being rewarded with a fancy gold card. *Being on a committee virgin – I guess to be on a committee you have to believe in something strongly enough to want to change the direction of it or persuade the voters into believing that your way is the best way. I’ve never believed that strongly in anything. I tend to believe that everyone has their own opinions and it’s not up to me to manipulate them into believing my opinion is the only right one. As much as I’d like to be experienced about a great many more things, I feel being a virgin can’t be all bad. It simply means that there are a lot more challenges and opportunities for me out there. And I hope to be ready for them…after a good night’s sleep…with the help of a super-low dosage prescription med. (To contact Deb, email her at: [email protected]) Newman’s K9 Corner Is “co-ownership” the best choice? By Betsy Newman I co-own an adult female Vizsla in addition to owning my ever-so-spoiled male Vizsla Luke. The reason I co-own the female is so that I can have a puppy from a future litter to show in the “Bred by Exhibitor” class in dog shows. The reason I want to show in that class is due to some necessary steps in becoming a dog show judge which remains a goal of mine. The co-ownership of this dog makes sense. It is a means to an end and up to the moment I take that dog’s puppy in the ring I am just a name on paperwork sitting in some archive at the AKC. I have nothing to do with the dog on a day to day basis. She is the ever-so-spoiled dog that lives in another house…another house that is owned by a very good friend as a matter of fact. Luke is co-owned as well. My daughter Ashley and I are listed on his paperwork as co-owners. This also makes sense to me. If anything were to happen to me Luke would pass to Ashley along the same idea as a joint checking account not having to go through probate. What makes no sense to me however is “someone” entering into a co-ownership agreement with “someone” who up to the moment of signing on the dotted line they were total strangers? There is so much muddy water that has to be navigated when two people own one dog you either have to know and trust the partner really (and I mean really well) or you have to make sure the agreement between the two parties is iron clad having every detail spelled out while being blessed by a good attorney. Strangers co-owning a strangers dog is a concept that is growing in popularity unfortunately. Aware of laws that dictate the number of dogs you can own in any one household in addition to the social stigma associated with puppy mills, some breeders (representing a cross section of all breeds including mixed breeds like Schnoodles, Doodles, Puggles, etc., etc.) are getting around all of that by putting their breeding stock into coowner homes. It is a neat trick, unless you are the uneducated new co-owner in the hands of a dishonest breeder. While on the surface getting a “valuable” adult animal “free” seems like a good deal, you will be expected in most instances to spend your money on veterinary visits and grooming and food. Meanwhile you may lose all of your rights pertaining to actually choosing that veterinarian or groomer you are paying in addition to what food you feed. I ran into an example of just how complicated all of this can get a few weeks ago at my kennel with a new co-owner of one of the mixed breeds that are so popular. They had answered an ad for the dog. I had to call the breeder/co-owner upon drop off to verify the dog’s inoculation record before accepting the dog for boarding. I ended up putting the person in front of me on the phone with the breeder who was demanding to speak to her. One was insisting the dog could be left here because of our good reputation, the other was demanding it be brought back to them for the duration of the vacation because it said so in their two year contract….never mind the fact that the breeder lived close to three hours away in the opposite direction. That is the tip of the iceberg of things that can go wrong so I would advise as in all cases “look before you leap” as coownership is not for everybody. Betsy Newman owns Moosehead Trail Boarding Kennel and Back to Basics Obedience training in Newport, ME. She is a professional groomer, trainer and show handler and a retired Animal Control Officer, veterinary assistant and breeder. Sports Beantown Breakdown Sporty Sermon Red Sox: A Closer Look - The Case for Daniel Bard Making a big stink By Shelby Gilcott I walked back into my old stomping grounds last weekend: The Portland Expo. A friend lent me his courtside season tickets for a Maine Red Claws game, and my mom and I took advantage. We sat two seats back on the floor. Our entire surroundings smelled like man sweat. The mascot, Crusher, jumped on the seat in front of me and my mom and I immediately looked at each other with wrinkled noses. “Eww! He stinks!” I said. The players and mascot were stinky, yes (nothing had changed there), but the game was far from that. The Red Claws are, in my eyes, the strongest I have ever seen them as a team. They are ranked 6th in the East and have more energy, more spunk and chemistry on the court. I was impressed to watch such a transformed team from last season. There were only two players who are the same from last season. We were sitting so close to the basket (right beside it) that we felt like we were right in the action (hence courtside seats). The game ball landed right in my lap during one play and the ball boy who was crouched beside us had to be aware of falling players also. The neat thing about watching and following the D-League is there is so much turnover and players moving up and down the spectrum of talent. The greatest part of our trip last Friday night was the fact that, from when I arrived to when I left, I felt a great sense of pride. I was proud of what I did for such an outstanding organization (no, I am not trying to suck up). All I am saying is that it was nice to sit and enjoy a game without the stresses of an intern position. I was there. And I was soaking in ALL the action, the other fans, the entire halftime show and got to watch as an outsider—a fan. I even have gained a relationship with the owner of the Claws. Now that is what you call networking at its best. There is nothing stinky about that either. And I don’t regret a bit of it. I also noticed that they replaced me, the public relations intern, with another blonde girl (not that color of hair has any- BASEBALL 11, 3:30 May 22, at Bangor Christian, 4 May 24, Greater Houlton Christian, 3:30 May 25, Bangor Christian, 3:30 May 29, at PVHS, 4 By Nathan Conley thing to do with it) who looked like she knew what she was doing on the outside, but was intimidated to death on the inside. I know exactly what you’re going through, honey. I have all kinds of stories to tell about my game-night experiences involving season-ticket holders, the mascot, etc. Now I can say I was mimicking a season-ticket holder for a day. Heck, we even had our own waitress! And anyone could tell that we hadn’t had this status before because the perky waitress actually jumped us when she came over to ask what she could get us. Oh, well, it was great while it lasted. Not to mention that the Red Claws won. P.S. I hope everyone had a very safe and happy Easter! Katahdin Spring Sports Schedule April 23, at PVHS, 4 p.m. April 26, at Southern Aroostook, 3:30 April 30, Schenck, 3:30 May 2, S. Aroostook, 3:30 May 3, at Hodgdon, 4 May 8, at Schenck, 4:30 May 10, Hodgdon, 3:30 May 15, Greater Houlton Christian, 3:30 May 19, Deer Isle-Stonington (2), SOFTBALL April 23, at PVHS, 4 p.m. April 26, at Southern Aroostook, 3:30 April 30, Schenck, 3:30 May 2, S. Aroostook, 3:30 May 3, at Hodgdon, 4 May 8, at Schenck, 4:30 May 10, Hodgdon, 3:30 May 15, at East Grand, 3:30 May 19, Deer Isle-Stonington (2), 11, 3:30 May 22, at Bangor Christian, 4 May 24, East Grand, 4 May 25, Bangor Christian, 3:30 May 29, at PVHS, 4 Schenck Spring Sports Schedule BASEBALL April 18, PVHS, 4 p.m. April 20, at Bangor Christian, 4:30 April 23, at Mattanawcook, 4:30 April 25, Deer Isle-Stonington, 4:30 April 30, at Katahdin, 3:30 May 1, at Penquis, 4:30 May 4, at PCSS, 4:15 May 8, Katahdin, 4:30 May 9, at Stearns, 4:30 May 11, Penquis, 4:30 May 14, Mattanawcook, 4:30 May 16, at PVHS, 4 May 18, PCSS, 4:15 May 22, at Deer Isle-Stonington, 4:30 May 28, Bangor Christian, 1 May 30, Stearns, 4:30 SOFTBALL April 18, PVHS, 4 p.m. Thursday, April 12, 2012 April 20, at Bangor Christian, 4:30 April 23, at Mattanawcook, 4:30 April 25, Deer Isle-Stonington, 4:30 April 30, at Katahdin, 3:30 May 1, at Penquis, 4:30 May 4, at PCSS, 4:15 May 8, Katahdin, 4:30 May 9, at Stearns, 4:30 May 11, Penquis, 4:30 May 14, Mattanawcook, 4:30 May 16, at PVHS, 4 May 18, PCSS, 4:15 May 22, at Deer Isle-Stonington, 4:30 May 28, Bangor Christian, 1 May 30, Stearns, 4:30 BOYS TENNIS April 23, at Stearns, 4 p.m. April 25, at PCSS, 4 April 30, Lee, 4 May 2, DI-Stonington, 4 May 4, Mattanawcook, 4 May 5, at Fort Kent, 4 May 7, at DI-Stonington, 4 May 9, Stearns, 4 May 15, Lee, 4 May 17, at Mattanawcook, 4 May 19, Sumner, 4 May 22, PCSS, 4 GIRLS TENNIS April 23, at Stearns, 4 p.m. April 25, at PCSS, 4 April 30, Lee, 4 May 2, DI-Stonington, 4 May 4, Mattanawcook, 4 May 5, at Fort Kent, 4 May 7, at DI-Stonington, 4 May 9, Stearns, 4 May 15, Lee, 4 May 17, at Mattanawcook, 4 May 19, Sumner, 4 May 22, PCSS, 4 Almost Track Season! MA graduates Ashley Thurlow and Hilary Pelkey pose with their javelins after practicing in the fields behind Mattanawcook Academy in Lincoln. Now that the back end of the Red Sox bullpen has an ERA higher than the point total on Bobby Jenks’ driver’s license, it’s time for a little reevaluation. This isn’t the type of article I wanted to be writing four games into the season. I’ve been calling for Bard’s inclusion to the rotation for several months now and I finally got my wish. Two blown saves in a single game now has me reconsidering, and Bobby Valentine should be doing the same. The departure of Papelbon this offseason left a gaping hole in Boston’s bullpen, but a trade with Oakland, which netted Andrew Bailey, helped to seemingly fill that enormous void. Unfortunately for the Red Sox, Bailey’s thumb decided to fall apart before the season started and the timetable for his return remains a mystery. In a somewhat surprising move, Valentine named Alfredo Aceves the closer in Bailey’s absence, even though he has never been a closer at any point over his entire career. His audition for the new role went about as well as Ozzie Guillen’s recent interview with Time Magazine. Aceves not only recorded an out Monday Night in Toronto, which he had not yet accomplished this year, but he also actually notched his first save of the season. Despite this one successful appearance, the level of concern still has to be alarm- ingly high. Mark Melancon, who was also acquired by the Red Sox via trade this offseason, did have minimal experience as closer last season with the Astros. Once the news of Bailey’s thumb injury broke, many assumed he’d be the likely candidate to take over, or at least be the safety valve if whoever was chosen struggled with the new role. However his start to the season has been just as disastrous as Aceves’. If these woes continue, the Red Sox won’t be left with too many other viable options. The organization’s stance regarding Daniel Bard’s transition to a starter has been staunch, but another slow start for April could cause management’s mentality to shift. Ever since the announcement of Lackey’s Tommy John surgery, I have been a huge advocate for a move to the rotation for Bard, and even as stubborn as I am, sensibility and logic are difficult arguments to ignore. Another trade seems unlikely, considering the timing and circumstances surrounding this precarious situation for the Red Sox. Therefore the solution will almost definitely need to be found within the organization. Taking every pitcher’s experience into account, all signs would point to Bard being the guy best suited for this role. Besides, this was the season he had been groomed for his entire career in Boston anyway. This was exactly the vision that the team had for Bard given Papelbon’s propensity for chasing the big contract. Desperate times call for desperate measures. Just as the situation with Lackey’s injury dictated the decision to move Bard to the rotation, the Bailey injury should now take precedence. You cannot win games in the AL East without a quality closer and it typically takes a little experience to make a quality closer. Aceves has none. He does have experience as a starter, though. Aceves was 10-2 with a 2.61 ERA in 114 innings last year and performed adequately in the rotation when called upon. Although it flies completely in the face of everything the Red Sox prepared for in spring training, switching the two pitchers’ current roles would be the best solution for the Red Sox moving forward. It would be the least painful move but could also potentially breed the most success. It’s a much easier fix the first weak of the season as opposed to a mid-season overhaul. It takes a lot to admit a mistake. Trust me. I know. But if the Red Sox fail to place the team above their egos now, then they could end up being really sorry later… again. we had,” he said. “When people played Stearns, they were sore for a week.” It hadn’t always been that way for Stearns football. While the basketball team was a state Class A power in the 1960s, football languished. “Stearns football had been a door mat,” Trainor recalled. “Then we won Little Ten championships in the ‘70s. The kids started to believe in themselves.” Hockey, meanwhile, wasn’t played on the high school level north of Waterville until the 1980s. It was Waterville, St. Dom’s, Lewiston, Edward Little and Brunswick – and that was it. But the hockey boom of the ‘70s caught on. By the mid70s, Stearns started up a youth program. Trainor was the coach. Then, in ‘84, he coached the Minutemen’s first varsity hockey team. Trainor was 42 at the time. “It was one of the hardest things that I ever did,” he recalled. “I had a full load of teaching. We were traveling to practices at the University and then when the season started, all the games were away.” Trainor’s tennis teams were comprised largely, as he recalled it, of kids from his neighborhood. He coached the Minutemen to a Class B East championship in 1985. Twenty years later, his girls team was one of the best around. Now, it’s Lori Lincoln’s job to guide Stearns through its tennis season. Trainor might just catch a match or two. Everybody will know him. “There’s a guy who deserves some recognition,” Preble said. Trainor taught biology and was a guidance counselor at Stearns, retiring about a decade ago. He obtained his masters in education from the University of Maine in 1978. He and Pat have three grown children – Dave, Jan and Paul. They still see a lot of each other at games. Trainor gave much to his Alma Mater B L G y arry rard MILLINOCKET – A football season has come and gone without David Trainor on the sidelines of the Stearns Middle School team, preparing them for the varsity level. Now, with spring sports at hand, the Minutemen get a chance to miss Trainor all over again. Trainor, a 1960 Stearns graduate, had been coaching tennis at the school for the better part of the past 37 years. As if that’s not enough, Trainor was the school’s first ever hockey coach, back in 1984. Nowadays, as he enjoys retirement with his wife Pat, Trainor has time to watch his grandsons play football. He’s certainly done his part for his alma mater. “I enjoyed it,” Trainor said. “Just to see the kids do well.” That, in the words of Stearns Athletic Director Chris Preble, sums up Dave Trainor as a coach. “He didn’t do it for the attention,” Preble said. “He did it for the kids. He was pretty constant in our athletic program.” Trainor, a football player in high school, served as a manager on the legendary George Wentworth’s Stearns basketball teams. “I was built too much like a football player to play basketball,” he joked. Trainor’s middle school football team went undefeated in 2006. Right on cue, the Minutemen won the Eastern Maine Class C varsity title four years later. That didn’t surprise him. “The success that we had was the consistency and the quality of the young men that Razors Edge Hair, Nails and Tanning Salon We are a full service salon specializing in all your needs! Holly, Jen, Elizabeth, Andrea, Lisa, Desiree, & Ann (207) 794-6300 150 West Broadway, Suite 2 | Lincoln, Maine 04457 Monday & Wednesday 9 - 8 Tuesday, Thursday, Friday 9 - 5 | Saturday 9 - 1 Exploring your world! April is Town & Country month! More Sports News at: Stop in to see the fantastic 2012 selection of New Chrylser Town & Country minivans! PVExplorer.com See Paul, Rob or Bill Thornton or Derryl Niles for details! 852 Dexter Road Corinna, ME 04928 207-278-7740 1-800-242-2374 FAX: 207-278-7745 www.bergsportswear.com Serving the Lincoln and Millinocket regions at: 125 Main Street, Lincoln ~ Toll Free 1-800-244-8666 Shop 24/7 at: www.thorntonbros.com Thursday, April 12, 2012 Sports/Campus MA announces ‘State’ nominees Wrapping Up March Music Madness By Krista McComb Members of the MA Jazz Band perform. LINCOLN – The nominees for the 2012 Girls and Boys State convention have been announced. Girls and Boys State are summer events where students learn about government by participating in elections and legislative activities in an educational setting. The program is open to students who have completed their junior year of high school. Among other objectives, the goal of the ‘State’ programs includes fostering students leadership skills, educating participants about the American system of government, providing insight into American traditions, and stimulate in students a desire to maintain and participate in the American form of government. This year’s nominees are: (from left to right) Samantha Miller, Isaac Ocana, Courtney Burris, Joshua Wheeler and Ciara Tolman. PATTY’S RACE The Patricia Lynn Corbin Memorial Walk/Run “When someone you love becomes a memory, the memory becomes a treasure” START TIME: (rain or shine) Sunday May 20, 2012 1:00 pm, Lee Academy, Lee Maine. Race Day Registration begins at 11:00 am; Pre-Registration: See below COURSE: 5K, beautiful woods trails, dirt roads and some pavement. FACILITIES: Lee Academy facilities, bathroom/changing rooms. Water stations. AWARDS: Certificates to the following finishers; Male and Female: 1st, 2nd and 3rd overall. Male and Female: 1st, 2nd and 3rd in the following age categories; 12 and under, 13–18, 19-29, 30-39, 40-49, 50-59, 60-69, 70 and over. 3 No duplicate award winners. No separate awards category for walkers. REGISTRATION FEE: $10.00, payable to “Lee Academy” for “Patty’s Race”. T-shirt to first 200 registrants. PRE REGISTRATION AND / OR SPONSORSHIPS: Please mail completed registration form with check (and/or sponsorship check) to: Lee Academy, c/o Tabitha Jacobs, 26 Winn Rd., Lee, ME 04455 Tel. 207-738-2252 For Info. contact: Michael and Robin Corbin, Tel. 738-4354, e-mail [email protected]; Or Todd Thurlow, Tel. 738-2089 (H) or 738-2251 (LA), Or visit www.pattysrace.com Waiver & Registration Form; Patricia Lynn Corbin Memorial Walk/Run. I know that running/walking is a potentially hazardous activity. I am medically able and properly trained. I assume all risks associated with my participation in this event including, but not limited to; falls, conditions of the course and effects of the weather including heat and humidity; all such risks being known to me. Having read this registration form and waiver, knowing these facts and in consideration of your accepting my entry; I for myself and anyone entitled to act on my behalf, waive and release Lee Academy, event organizers, sponsors, and officials from all claims or liabilities of any kind arising out of my participation. Name: _________________________________________________Tel. #___________ LINCOLN – March was a month dedicated to music at Mattanawcook Academy and all around the country. Music In Our Schools Month or MIOSM is a month-long event that was invented to draw attention to the significance of music education in the schools and community. This was MA’s first year celebrating the month of music in March. MA wrapped up the month with a final performance Monday, March 26th. The Tri-M performed a Solo and Ensemble Night that was free and open to the public. Students performed classical pieces such as Ludwig Van Beethoven’s “Seventh Symphony” and “Fur Elise.” There were also vocal performances by Nikki Smith, and Merissa Jordan in “Homeward Bound,” and Courtney Shaw and Brianah Weston in “Don’t Get Around Much Anymore.” Tri-M is a new addition to the school this year, honoring students who are musically involved as well as academically exceeding. It is offered to sophomores, juniors and seniors who are currently involved in a music class and have a cumulative GPA of 90 or better. The society of Modern Music Masters was originally founded by Alexander Harley and his wife Frances in 1936, and has since become a program of the National Association for Music Education and officially renamed Tri-M in 1983. Our own Tri-M chapter founded the 6,426th chapter of the society. Earlier in the month, March 17th, the Jazz band went to the Maine State Instrumental Jazz Festival at Mount Desert Island High School in MDI. They placed 5th in division 4, with a total score of 83. Trevor Marcho, band director, said they played well but went against some “very tough judges.” Senior jazz members Erica McPhail and Connor Smart earned certificates for their solos during the performance. The band also got the school involved with celebrating the month of March by playing music in the cafeteria during lunch. Each Friday was dedicated to a different style of music. They covered classic rock, pop, country and a student’s choice day. The schools atmosphere seemed to enhance and students even joined in by dancing during their lunch. The purpose of MIOSM is to stress the importance of music education in schools. It’s an attempt to gain the support of teachers, students, parents and members of the community. As Tri-M and jazz band member Connor Smart puts it, “music to me is like a means to an end, whether that end be a day, a week, or a life time. To ask what its importance is to me is like the importance of food or water. It’s not just a hobby or something I do, its a part of each and every day, and without music I’m not sure how those days would go. But if the end-goal of a day is some form of happiness, than I’m pretty sure music is a tool to achieve it.” Points add up in state math meet Lee Academy finishes well BANGOR – The Bangor Auditorium, known primarily as the ‘Mecca’ of eastern Maine basketball was the site, Tuesday, of the 36th annual Maine State Math Meet. More than 900 students from more than 90 Maine high schools gathered for the final meet of the serason which began last October. Locally, the students from Lee Academy set the bar. Freshman Yuri Li garnered 64 individual points to place 2nd in his class. Li’s points contributed to a team total of 401 points, enough to allow Lee Academy to tie for 4th place in their team division. For more information on the Maine State Math Meet, and for complete scores, visit their website at www.maml.net. PVEXPLORER.COM Address: _______________________________________________________________ T-Shirt Size: S__ M__ L__ XL__ XXL__ Sex: M___F___ Age Group____________ E-mail__________________________________________________________________ ____________________________ Signature ___/____/___ Date _________________________ Parent/Guardian if under 18 Patty Lynn was a Lee Academy honor student, and on the x-c and ski teams. She was a 17 year old Junior when she was killed in an automobile accident May 8, 2002, while returning home from an after school appointment. Most memorable about Patty was her endearing personality and caring ways, including her giggle and beautiful smile. She was a sincere friend to all. Please join us in honoring her memory while benefiting a scholarship fund established in her name. Both Runners and Walkers welcomed. List your FREE Classified ad at PVExplorer.com Visit us for the area’s best selection of new and used vehicles! We’re making plans for your future. Your Hometown Chrysler, Dodge and Jeep dealer Serving the Lincoln and Millinocket regions at: 125 Main Street, Lincoln Toll Free 1-800-244-8666 www.thorntonbros.com Kirk M. Fogg, CFP ® T CERTIFIED FINANCIAL PLANNER Gordon Brook FINANCIAL LLC Charting your future through sound wealth management. Northwoods Real Estate “Serving Maine and the Katahdin Region since 1984” Licensed Forester on Staff Land, Residential, Recreational and Commercial Properties P.O. Box 59, 26 Balsam Drive Millinocket, ME 04462 207-723-9086 Office 207-723-2092 Fax www.northwoods-realestate.com [email protected] 8 Taylor St., Lincoln, ME (207) 794-8088 On the web: www.gordonbrook.com Offering: Investments, Insurance, and Retirement Plans, IRAs and IRA Rollovers. Securities offered through Securities America Inc., Member FINRA/ SIPC and advisory services offered through Securities America Advisors Inc. Kirk Fogg, Representative. Gordon Brook Financial LLC. and the Securities America companies are unaffiliated. soCial News Share the News! J��e� A���� & D������� S�r�tt�� Have an exciting event happening? An engagement? A wedding? A Baby? A reunion? Want to share the good news? Send it in and we’ll help spread the news. That is, after all, what we do! Visit us at PVExplorer.com for all the details. You can submit right on our website. It’s fast, easy, and FREE! Friends forever we will be whether walking on the beach or sailing on the sea. Just like a page out of a fairy tale the storybook romance comes true. With great joy we announce that we are getting married! James Allen and Danielle Stratton would like to announce they are engaged!! The brideto-be plans on attending University of Maine at Fort Kent in the fall of 2012 for nursing. The groom-to-be is planning on attending Washington County Community College in the fall of 2012 for welding. A summer July 2014 wedding is in the making. PVExplorer.com Thursday, April 12, 2012 Christian Civic League of Maine Stay informed on what’s happening in Augusta. Join our weekly e-mail list by going to... www.cclmaine.org puZZles Last Weeks Answers Cuts, Custom Color, Perms, Facial Waxing, Manicures, Pedicures, Facials, Tanning bed and booth, fitness classes in the lower loft (207) 794-6260 High Performance Hair Salon 42 Main St., Lincoln, ME 04457 Thursday, April 12, 2012 oBituaries & FaitH Margaret G. Hopkins MILLINOCKET - Margaret Gerry Hopkins, 76, died peacefully Wednesday, April 4, 2012, surrounded by her family at the Millinocket Regional Hospital. The youngest of nine children, she was born March 12, 1936 in Millinocket to Bernard E. and Blanche A. (McManemon) Gerry. “Mickey”, as she was known to friends and family, was a lifelong resident of Millinocket. After graduating from the Mercy Hospital School of Nursing in Portland, she began her career in health care as a nurse at the Millinocket Community Hospital. Following a brief time as an industrial nurse for Great Northern Paper Company, she returned to the hospital to become its director of nursing, manager of patient services and finally chief operating officer, a position she held until her retirement in 1997. In addition to her degree in nursing, Mickey earned a B.S.degree from Unity College and was enrolled in a masters program at Husson College. She is survived by her loving spouse of 49 years, Arnold R. Hopkins of Millinocket; a son, Jonathan Hopkins and his wife Lynn of Hookset, Steven W. White N.H.; a daughter, Sarah Gatzoulis and her husband Arthur of Manchester, N.H.; a sister, Betty Corrigan of Portland; a brother, Bishop Joseph Gerry O.S.B., St. Anselm College, Manchester, N.H.; four grandchildren, Stephen and Sam Hopkins, and George and Christina Gatzoulis; and several nieces, nephews and cousins. In addition to her parents, Mickey was predeceased by four sisters, Mary Blanche Gerry, Barbara Tibbitts, Catherine Clark and Nora Cooper; and two brothers, Rev. Jude Gerry O.S.B. and Bernard Gerry, Jr. Friends visited with the family from 6-8 p.m., Tuesday, April 10 at the Lamson Funeral Home, 11 Tamarack St., Millinocket, where a Prayer Service was held at 7:30 p.m. conducted by the officers and members of St. Martin’s Council #680, Knights of Columbus. A Mass of Christian Burial was celebrated at 11 a.m., Wednesday, April 11 at Christ the Divine Mercy Parish at St. Martin of Tours Catholic Church, 19 Colby St., Millinocket with Bishop Joseph Gerry celebrant. Interment will be at the Millinocket Cemetery. SMYRNA MILLS - Steven W. “10-10” White,” 59, passed away March 27, 2012 with his work family at his side. He was born Aug. 30, 1952 in Island Falls, the son of Ernest “Buck” and Mildred (Bragdon) White. Steven had a huge, loving heart. He married the love of his life, Ruby Corneil, April 7, 1973. He was extremely dedicated to his family and he took great pride in his grandson, “Leo.” He volunteered as captain of Oakfield Fire Department, as well as always being there to lend a hand to anyone who asked and he would fix it the “White” way. He was employed by Gerald Pelletier Inc. and was proud to be an “American Logger.” He took great pride in his work and he spoke highly of his work family. He will be greatly missed by all. Steven was predeceased by his father and mother; two brothers, Donnis and Phillip White; one sister, Dorothy; father-in-law, Phillip Corneil; and daughter-of-heart, Avis Noyes. Charles H. Priest LOWELL - Charles H. “Charlie” Priest, 82, husband of the late Lenora P. “Nonie” Priest, passed away April 3, 2012. He was born Oct. 3, 1929, in Lowell, the son of Haller Varney Priest and Alice (Olmstead) Priest. Charlie loved hunting, fishing and going cross-country skiing. His camp at Escutarsis Lake was special to him, and he enjoyed the people there and helping them out. He loved family gatherings where he could spend time with his grandchildren. Charlie was a very dedicated citizen of the town of Lowell, where he served many terms as selectman and was fire warden for many years, as well as whatever else was needed for the good of the town. In addition to his parents and his wife, he was predeceased by a granddaughter, Molly E. Priest; daughter-inlaw, Jacqueline Priest; sister, He is survived by his wife, Ruby of Smyrna Mills; two daughters, Jill and Matt Furrow of Merrill, and Kim and Dean McLaughlin of Dyer Brook; one grandson, Matthew “Leo” Furrow; a granddaughter-of-heart, Brandilynn Noyes; three brothers, Pete and Linda of Missouri, Hiarm and Joan of Connecticut, and Harris and Patti of Oakfield; three sisters, Doliphine “Sissy” White of Smyrna, Ella Smith of Oakfield, and Virgina Tucker of Smyrna; two sisters-in-law, Barbara White of Merrill, and Penny White of Dyer Brook; mother-in-law, Glady Corneil; two brothers-in-law, Phillip and Patty Corneil of Smyrna, and John Corneil of Merrill; and several nieces and nephews. A service was held at 11 a.m., Saturday, March 31 at Bethel Pentecostal Church, Oakfield, with the Rev. Sterling Lawrence officiating. A luncheon followed at the community center in Oakfield. ney Cram; three sisters, Leona Snowman, June Thompson and Annie Seavey; and several nieces and nephews. There will be no services. Arrangements are with Clay Funeral Home, 7 Lee Rd., Lincoln. Clay Funeral Home Lounge areas provide comfortable settings for visiting. 7 Lee Road Lincoln, Maine 04457 L 207-794-2941 or 1-800-734-2941 Phyllis Carrier; brother, Fred Stevens; and sister, Ellen Shorey. He is survived by five sons, Everard Priest of Manchester, N.H and Ruth Thurlow of Burlington, Kerry and Lynn Priest of Hampden, Charles Jr. and Susan Priest of Lowell, Kendall Priest and Elizabeth Lamphier of Brunswick, and Christopher Priest of Lincoln; two sisters, Marcia Ploski and Grace Fossett; 10 grandchildren; four greatgrandchildren; and several nieces and nephews. Friends called at 12 noon, Friday at Clay Funeral Home, 7 Lee Rd., Lincoln, where funeral services will be held at 2 p.m. with the Rev. John Fennell officiating. Interment was at West End Lowell Cemetery. In lieu of flowers, donations in his memory may be made to Lung Association of Maine, 122 State St., Augusta, ME 04330. Erma E. Grover HOWLAND - Erma E. Grover, 94, went to be with the Lord April 5, 2012 at a Howland health care facility. She was born April 2, 1918 in Danforth, the daughter of the late James and Helena Mason. Erma was predeceased by her husband, George P. Grover; two sons, Joseph J. and G. Philip Grover; and one daughter, Glenna M. Armour. She is survived by two daughters, Donna L. Keim and Geraldine N. Lee, both of Howland. She has many Our expandable chapel is comfortable for small services and can be expanded to seat up to 500 people. Katherine A. Cram EAST MILLINOCKET Katherine A. Cram, 84, died April 2, 2012 at a Lincoln hospital. She was born Feb. 4, 1928 in Medway, the daughter of David J and Florence B (Thompson) Cram. She is survived by a son, Sid- 13 grandchildren, great-grandchildren, great-great-grandchildren, nieces and nephews. Erma was the last of her family of 10 children - seven brothers and three sisters. A special thank you to Cummings Health Care Facility for taking such good care of her during the past two years. At her special request, there will be no services planned. Arrangements with Clay Funeral Home, 7 Lee Rd., Lincoln. [email protected] Lamson Funeral Home www.lamsonfh.com 11 Tamarack St. Millinocket, Maine Phone: (207) 723-4000 17 Western Ave. East Millinocket, Maine Phone: (207) 746-3817 Reflections in Faith Resurrection Day, So........ By Jeyy miCK, pastoR, BanGoR Baptist ChuRCh The previous Sunday was of days on earth, and ascended into course Easter. Now that Amer- heaven as described in Acts 1:9. ica is more of a pluralistic na- For if one believed that mestion, the hype and grandeur of sage, they would have no other this holiday that it generated conclusion other than Jesus was from the past has slowly moved the Son of God. This would be aside. After all, we are now a stretch for many today in our about 2,000 years from this mi- scientific world of enlightenraculous event. ment. Today, many in our country However, the fact is that Jesus and the world do not believe was seen by many after his resthat a man named Jesus lived a urrection, including by over 500 life without sin, died for the sins people at one time! It seems to of mankind on a Roman cross, reckon, if that many witnesses was buried in a borrowed tomb, saw him after his death and buriand three days later was raised al, one might conclude it hapfrom the dead, lived for 40 more pened. But to admit that would mean we would be accountable to a higher being and one day face him and give an account for our life. In our crazy world of very little responsibility and accountability, who would want that? Not many. So, we dismiss the event as a myth, or explain it away, and move on with our lives as if it did not happen. But, what if it did happen? Through his resurrection, Jesus made it applicable to you and me today, 2,000 years after the fact, but how? First, by demonstrating his immeasurable love, Jesus lived for me. God loved the world so much he sent his Son into the world to redeem mankind, John 3:16. Man had been separated from God because of original sin committed in the Garden of Eden at the dawn of creation. Scripture states that Jesus came to seek and to save those who were lost, lost in their sin. Secondly, his resurrection demonstrated his astonishing sacrifice, he died for me. He underwent suffering and anguish for those who mocked and beat him. He also suffered for you and me! Since we have all fall- en short of the glory of God, he came for us and went through a horrific sacrifice. Many cannot imaging that God would enter his creation and be crucified and suffer at the hands of his creation. Yet, this is what scripture teaches and this is what separates Christianity from all the other religions of the world. Lastly, his resurrection offered an enduring hope; Jesus rose from the dead for me. The crucifixion without the resurrection would have been meaningless. Many a man had died a martyr and had been crucified during the time of Jesus. Tens of thousands were crucified in the Roman Empire, so one more was not even a thought. But only one was raised from the dead to never die again. That was Jesus of Nazareth! You may be thinking, can’t buy it Jerry, too sci-fi for me. It is hard to believe, but that is what makes it so wonderful. Only God could do something like that. If you trust him by faith you can receive his immeasurable love, his astonishing sacrifice, and receive his enduring hope/guarantee of eternal life. Church Directory Chester Lincoln Chester Baptist Church - 794-2541 Seventh Day Adventist Church - 794-3361 Maranatha Riverside Church - 794-3338 Lincoln Christian Fellowship - 403-1346 Lincoln Center Church Of God - 794-2730 Lincoln Center Baptist Church - 794-2842 Living Hope Church Of Nazarene - 746-3760 First Congregation Church Of E. Millinocket - 746-5575 Lighthouse Baptist Church - 794-6822 First Congregational Church - 794-6613 Calvary Temple Assembly - 746-5274 First Bible Baptist Church - 794-6650 Congregation Church Inc. - 794-3152 Community Evangel Temple - 794-6181 Church Of Jesus Christ Of Latter Day Saints - 794-2929 Enfield Baptist Church - 732-4200 Church of God Pentecostal - 794-2730 East Millinocket Enfield Howland Mattawamkeag United Methodist Church - 732-3589 Howland Baptist Church - 732-3170 Zion Pentecostal Church - 736-7655 Church Of God - 736-7676 Bible Baptist Church - 736-4791 Lee Lee Baptist Church - 738-2747 Medway Jesus Community Outreach - 746-3648 Glad Tidings Church Of God - 746-5304 Millinocket St. Peters Church - 746-3333 St. Martin of Tours Parish - 723-5902 St. Andrews Episcopal Church - 723-5893 Millinocket Baptist Church - 723-6681 First Pentecostal Church - 723-6223 First Congregation Church - 723-5591 First Baptist Church - 723-5580 Church Of The Nazarene - 723-4533 Passadumkeag Passadumkeag Baptist Church - 732-3270 Springfield Springfield Congregational Church - 738-2155 West Enfield Church Of God - 732-3014 Winn St. Thomas Episcopal Church - 736-2010 Thursday, April 12, 2012 BusiNess resourCe iNFormatioN CeNter Accounting Automotive Ferland Accounting Service Dave’s Automotive R Used Car Sales Serving all your automotive needs! Antiques Wheel House Auto Body Exhaust●Struts●Shocks I/Car Certified Great Selection of Antiques & Collectibles Event Center Weddings Meetings Parties Club Activities Dances Fundraisers & Auctions Rt. 69 ~ Detriot/Plymouth Line Kevin Lane, Owner/Operator 207-453-4100 564-8526 676 Milo Rd Sebec, ME www.sebeceventcenter.com Automotive Route 2 Antique Mall Fabrication Greenville Antiques & Collectibles Napa 814 Main Rd. (Rt. 2) Carmel, ME Open Daily 10-5 (7 days) Store: 207-848-7699 Funeral & Cremation Services Sebec 4 Corners 257-2435 Spray On Bedliners Free Estimates Rental Available All Insurance Companies Honored Rt. 201 North in Fairfield 2 mi off I-95 Event Center Commercial 207.695.0304 Cell: 280.0442 email: [email protected] Complete Auto Body & Collision Repair at the Fairfield Antiques Mall Visit Booth #26 Electric Inc. Heating Oil*LP Gas 564-3406 1-800-564-3835 Dover-Foxcroft, ME 04426 email: [email protected] Residential 695-3103 day 965-2827 eve Jack Whttier & Sons ® We Buy, Sell & Take Consignments! Booth Rental Available [email protected] 26 Moosehead Lake Rd. 207-695-3585 Hours: 7 AM - 5 PM Saturday 7AM - 12 Noon Apparel Carpentry Certified Welder, Heavy Equipment Mechanic & Fabrication Construction and Dock Work “When Quality and Reliability Count” Fleamarket Bull Moose Spruce Street, Greenville, ME 04441 207-695-2649 ● 207-280-3568 Join us at the Bangor VFW Hall Closed for Christmas & New Years weekends. Re-open weekend of Jan. 7th Cleaners ARCHITECT VICKI WOLFERTZ Outer Hammond St. We specialize in all types of Heirlooming Gift Certificates Available Full Service Dry Cleaning Alterations Leather & Suede Cleaning Repairs Automobiles Vender Space Always Available. Come check out all the great prices on 1000’s of great items old and new. Call 299-5071 or 852-5296 for Info Fire Wood Camp CheCks $250 to Thousands JoeRichardsLogging.com for late wrecks! Delivered or picked up Randy, 745-0275 - 8AM-Noon (207) 474-0000 Scott T. Adams [email protected] Dan C. Adams [email protected] Gas & Groceries Hanson Landworks Shirley, ME Contractors 695-2216 or 280-2277 Penobscot Developers Acepting New Customers for Snow Removal No Job is Too Small or Too Big Fully Insured Firewood For Sale $225.00 a Cord Cut/Split/Delivered Septics, landscaping and construction from the ground up. Full Service Supermarket and Quality Citgo Gas Always priced competitively Pay at the Pump Cash exceptors Everyday 3 cents discount on all cash and debit gas sales Jewelry Jewelry Repair & Manufacturing Sizing - Watch Batteries - Clock Repair Buyers of Precious Metals & Precious Stones Batteries & Sizing while you wait Tuxedo Rentals - New & Rental Wedding Gowns Bridal Consultations WE ♥ REFERRALS 103 Center St. Brewer, Maine Jerry & Marian (207) 217-6526 Lumber Minden St. Greenville 695-4583 or 1-800-HEY-GRVL Lincoln Medway Lounsbury’s Davis Pharmacy Ricks Market Rite Aid Tim Hortons HAN Hannaford Hogan Tire Why Not Shop Lloyds Store Gilmores Restaurant Steaks & Stuff Doc’s Place McDonalds Pat’s Pizza & Video Cigarette Shopper Golden Jade Timber House Circle K Lennies Superette Big Apple Marianne’s Country Diner Aerie Enfield Enfield General Store Howland 95 Market Bridge Street Market Emmy’s Restaurant Handy Stop Corner Store Lee Raymonds Variety Macwahoc Bento’s Grocery & Diner Mattawamkeag C.N.Brown PJ’s Millinocket McDonalds AT Cafe Rideouts Katahdin G Rite Aid Pangburns IGA Hannaford Patten Patten Drug 61 Main Street, Bangor, Maine 04401 207-990-1109 Fax 207-990-1108 CROUSE LUMBING P Shane Crouse ● Master Plumber 207-876-4056 402 North Dexter Road ● Sangerville, ME 04479 Fully Insured Recycling 241 Main Rd., Rt. 2 Carmel, ME 207-679-7077 ● Fax: 207-355-0080 Restaurants Kelly’s landing greenville Jct. 695-4438 Mon, Thurs, Fri 11 am to 8:30 pm sat & sun 7 am to 8:30 pm Tues & Wed Closed Great Food Great Atmosphere On the Shore of Moosehead Lake Rubbish Recycling & Trash Roll off can service Call: 695-2709 Salon St. Jean MaSonry & MooSehead driftwood Transition Hair and Tanning *Fireplaces *Tile Instalation *Walkways *Drftwood Handrails *Driftwood Art (207) 695-2120 Cell: 280-0266 P.O. Box 84, Greenville, ME 04441 Metal Work New k c Tru es l Sca Still going Strong! NEWPORT M E TA L S Paying Competitive Prices Buying Everything from LIGHT IRON to COPPER Call 368-4443 E. Millinocket Plumbing Masonry HOURS: Mon-Fri 8am-4pm, Sat 8am-Noon Where you can find us! Complete Construction Driveways, Parking Lots & Roads Recycled Asphalt ~ Free Estimates Dover-Foxcroft Phone: 564-2939 Cell: 322-2231 Toll Free: 800-640-5657 Commercial/Residential PickuP is available Penobscot Valley Explorer Quality Paving Moosehead Rubbish noW ACCEPting CArS 510 W. Broadway~Lincoln 207-290-0200 Since 1983 689 Main Street Corinth, ME 207-285-7500 LoCaL Firewood Tree Services Land Clearing 695-8986 280-0461 Green Point Auto *Affordable * Cremation *Funeral Services Hours: 9AM-5PM Sat & Sun Now Thru Spring 2012 Computers Sales & Repairs BUYING JUNK CARS 445 Waterville Road ~ Skowhegan, Maine 04976 Music, Food concession, door Prizes & More We will match any competitors advertised price! Local, professional architect available to help you with your next project whether it’s commercial, residential, new construction, an addition or renovation. Free consultation. Tel:207-997-3543 Fax: 207-997-2007 PO Box 1653 Greenville, ME 04441 Email: [email protected] Across from Dorr’s Equipment 9 Court Street Skowhegan, ME 207-474-2098 Open Mon. thru Fri. 9am - 5pm Cremation & Funeral Service & Bridal Shop Tim Cogswell - Owner Moosehead Lake Region Tel (207) 534-7355 Cell 215-5974 Architect Dan & Scott’s Townsend Jewelry Decks Garages Additions CAMERON ASPHALT PAVING Family Owned & Operated Fully Insured Builders Inc. New Construction Remote Camps & Cabins Paving McKusick Petroleum 121 East Road Greenville, Maine 04441 East Road Accounting, Bookkeeping, & Quarterly Reports 695-4459 Painted Shutter Antiques Fuel Electrical “Your Full Service Salon”! 104 Main Street Lincoln, ME 04457 207-794-0909 [email protected] Thursday, April 12, 2012 15 The Closed Case Report Excerpts from the Lincoln and Millinocket District Court files The following cases were adjudicated between March 8 and April 9, 2012: Christopher L. Brann, 39, of Gardiner was sentenced on a charge of unattended lines. Fine $100. Brandon Michael Briggs, 23, of Kingman was sentenced on a charge of violating a protective order. 48 hours. James Brousseau, 36, of Rhode Island was sentenced on a charge of operating an unregistered snowmobile. Fine $200. Nick N. Brown, 43, of Winslow is sentenced on a charge of violating snowmobile noise level limits. Fine $100. Robert L. Bugdin,, 48, of New York was sentenced on a charge of operating snowmobile left of center. Find $100. Aaron S. Burke, 27, of Mattawamkeag was sentenced on a charge of operating an unregistered and snowmobile. Fine $200. Douglas J. Burrill, 25, of Kingman was sentenced on a charge of attaching false plates. Fine $150. Pasquale Caruso, 41, of Massachusetts was sentenced on a charge of operating a snowmobile left of center. Fine $100. Elicia Cassetta 26, of Bangor was sentenced on multiple charges of operating while license is suspended or revoked. Total fine $1000, total jail time 10 days. Murry Benedict Cassidy,Jr., 48, of Jay, was sentenced on a charge of violation of Baxter State Park rules. Fine $200. Christopher C. Chambers, 29, of Old Town was sentenced on a charge of failure to register vehicle. Fine $100. Daniel P. Charest, 35, of Sydney was sentenced on a charge of violating snowmobile noise level limits. Find $100. Lindsey B. Chebegia,, 62, of Lincoln was sentenced on a charge of allowing a dog to be at large. Fine $50. Rachelle R. Clippinger, 41, Patten, committing unlawful use, fine $350. David M. Cobb, 63, Danforth, speeding 30+ MPH, fine $350. Jeffrey R. Colella, 28, Waltham, operating snowmobile left of center, fine $100. Ronald Cooper, 45, Massachusetts, operating snowmobile left of center, fine $100. Paul S. Creswell, 52, Massachusetts, operating unregistered snowmobile, fine $200. Leroy R. Crowe, 35, Masstown, operating snowmobile left of center, fine $100. Kevin N. Demmons, 45, Milford, fishing rule violation, fine $120. Richard Dormeyer, 43, New York, operating unregistered snowmobile, fine $200. Tyler Dyer, 23, Palermo, operating unregistered snowmobile, fine $200. Douglas Emery, 57, Massachusetts, operating snowmobile left of center, fine $100. Ryan H. Federico, 22, East Millinocket, possession of marijuana, fine $350. Andrew Federman, 22, Old Town, fishing without a valid license, fine $123. Kimberly Fortine, 27, Lincoln, failure to register vehicle, fine $100. Russell C. Gagham, 44, Winthrop, operating snowmobile left of center, fine $100. Laurie A. George, 38, Millinocket, domestic violence assault, fine $300. Laurie A. George, 38, Millinocket, possession of marijuana, fine $350. Arnold Goryan, 31, Lincoln, harassment by telephone, fine $150. Justin W. Grass, 25, Windham, of violating condition of release, fine $250. Justin W. Grass, 25, Wimdham,Theft by unauthorized taking or transfer, fine $250, restitution $70. Cameron Grillo, 22, Freeport, fishing rule of violation, fine $120. Wayne Guiggey, 66, Sherman, operating ATV on public way, fined $100. Dale A. Haley, 28, Stonington, operating unregistered snowmobile, fined $200. Desiree Harrison, 32, Stacyville, criminal mischief, fine $100, restitution $411.30. Alan S. Heath, 49, West Paris, possession of marijuana, fined $350. Tim R. Hersom 38, New Hampshire, operating snowmobile left of center, fine $100. Tim R. Hersom, 38, New Hampshire, operating unregistered snowmobile, fined $200. Don Higgins, 38, Massachusetts, operating snowmobile left of center, fined $100. Hugh J. Hill, 45, Howland, domestic violence assault, 48 hours. Hugh J. Hill, 45, Howland, violating conditions of release, seven days. Stephen Hodgetts 49, Massachusetts, failure to provide and display registration, fined $100. Whitley Hussey, 20, Passadumkeag, operating while license is suspended or revoked, fine $500, 48 hours. Whitley Hussey, 20, Passadumkeag, violating condition of release, 48 hours. Mark Ingersoll, 38, Massachusetts, operating snowmobile left of center, fine $100. Michael T. Ingersoll, 44, Massachusetts, operating snowmobile left of center, fine $100. David C. Ireland, Jr., 39, Howland, operating while license is suspended or revoked, fine $250. Timothy J. Irish,27, of Plymouth, operating unregistered snowmobile, fine $200. Joshua R. Johnstone, 33, Brunswick, violation of Baxter State Park rules, fine $200. Jamie A.Kaelin, 33, Hersey, shooting from a motor vehicle or motor boat, fine $200. Jamie a Kaelin, 33, Hersey, rule violation, fine $100. Tamera S. Lebron, 20, of Millinocket, operating vehicle without a license, fined $200. LR Hamilton Holdings, Princeton, rule violation, fine of $500. Lori A. Mason, 57, New York, failure to provide and display registration, fine $100. Scott J. McGarry, 43, Massachusetts, operating snowmobile left of center, fine $100. John S. McNeill, 42, Massachusetts, operating snowmobile left of center, fine $100. Gregory S. Moore, 33, Patten, shooting from a motor vehicle or motor boat, fine $200. Gregory S. Moore, 33, Patten, rule violation, fine $100. William Moulton, 18, Lincoln, theft by authorized to use, 45 days, suspended; operating while license suspended or revoked, fined $250; operating vehicle without a license, 48 hours, suspended; operating a vehicle without license, 48 hours, suspended, restitution $50.; Theft by unauthorized use of the property, 45 days, suspended, restitution $50. Roberto Nizolazzo, 42, Massachusetts, operating unregistered snowmobile, fine $200. Theresa Osborne, 45, Lincoln, allowing minor to operate, fine $100.. Justin Perry, 20, East Millinocket, minor possessing liquor, fine $200. Rickie Poplawski, 25, New York, operating snowmobile on plowed road, fine $100. Dwight L. Priest, 55, Enfield, failure to register vehicle, fine $100. Joseph S. Provencher, 20, Poland, operating snowmobile left of center, fine $100. Scott M. Quinn, 47, Massachusetts, operating snowmobile left of center, fine $100.\ Karla L. Ramsay, 53, Island Falls, theft by authorized taking or transfer, fined $100. Coty L. Reed,, 18, Enfield, violating condition of release, 48 hours; domestic violence assault, 48 hours; criminal mischief, 48 hours; minor possessing liquor, fine $250. Clinton F. Rhoades, 33, Springfield, violating protective order, 48 hours; violating protective order, 48 hours; violating conditions of release, fine $250; violating protective order, fine $250. Jeremy L. Rodrigue, 26, Woolwich, violating snowmobile noise level limits, fine $100. Daniel Scott, 40, Pennsylvania, operating unregistered snowmobile, fine $200. Tonya Searles, 26, Webster, attaching false plates, fine $150. David M. Silva, 52, Medway, operating snowmobile on plowed road, fine $100. Tony Silver, 46, West Paris, possessing fish in violation, fine $120. Gerald W. Smith, 55, East Millinocket, operating under the influence, fine $900, 12 days. James M. Smith, 58, Plymouth, ice fishing with more than five lines, fine $100. Jason Spingel 28, Millinocket, sale and use of drug paraphernalia, fined $300. Susan Stanhope, 45, Lincoln, failure to register vehicle within 30 days, fine $150. John C. Sweet,III, 43, Mount Desert, unattended lines, fine $100. Brad Tash, 30, Chester, ice fishing with more than five lines, fine $100. Eric Theriault, 19, East Millinocket, minor possessing liquor, fine $200. Tony Turcote, Litchfield, violation of Baxter State Park rules, fine $200. Brady S. Vose, 22, Lincoln, theft by unauthorized taking or transfer, fine $250. Andrew G. Wescott, 29, Windham, operating while license is suspended or revoked, fined $750. Coleman Winfield, 57, Auburn, operating snowmobile left of center, fine $100. Timothy M. York, 21, East Millinocket, terrorizing, fine $100. Excerpts from the Penobscot County Jail log April 2 April 4 Matthew Burch 24, of Old Town was arrested on an outstanding warrant. Alyssa Farrington, 20, of Hudson was arrested on charges of unlawful possession of synthetic hallucinogenic drugs, unlawful possession of scheduled drugs, unlawful furnishing of synthetic hallucinogenic drugs, unlawful trafficking in scheduled drugs, and unlawful possession of scheduled drugs. April 3 Elicia Noreen Cassetta, 26, of Milford was arrested on a charge of operating while license is suspended or revoked in an outstanding warrant. Joseph Kirk Crandall, 34, of Howland was arrested on outstanding warrant. April 5 39, of Milford was arrested on charges of criminal trespass and domestic violence terrorizing. April 6 Corey Eben Carr, 35, of Old Town was arrested on charges of domestic violence assault and obstructing the report of a crime. Brandon Thomas Whalen, 20, of Howland was arrested on a charge of violating a protective order. Michael Gary Thibodeau, Something we can do now to address high gas prices By ConGRessman miKe miChaud The Dodd-Frank Wall Street Reform and Consumer Protection Act of 2010 gave the Commodity Futures Trading Commission (CFTC) new authority to prevent speculation and profiteering in oil futures trading. While most Americans didn’t know that Congress included this critical provision in this bill, it’s long past time that CFTC uses its new authority to tackle high gas prices. A lot of things impact the cost of oil – production levels, demand, supply disruptions, natural disasters, speculation, and international affairs all play a role. And there has been an overarching debate on the causes of recent oil price swings. Some say price spikes are caused entirely by the fundamentals of supply and demand. Others contend that excessive speculation in the oil futures market and other issues are to blame. But that debate has been largely ended. A lot of factors explain the high prices we are seeing, but it’s not as simple as conventional supply and demand calculations. The facts bear this out. According to the Energy Information Administration, the supply of oil and gasoline is higher today than it was three years ago, when the national average price for a gallon of gasoline was just $1.90. And, while the national average price of gasoline is close to double that now, the demand for oil in the U.S. is at its lowest level since April of 1997. In addition, according to the International Energy Agency, in the last quarter of 2011 the world oil supply rose by 1.3 million barrels per day while demand only increased by 0.7 million barrels per day. Yet, during this same period, the price of Texas light sweet crude rose by over 12%. Meanwhile, oil speculators now control over 80 percent of the energy futures market, a figure that has more than doubled over the past decade. Groups as diverse as Exxon Mobile, Goldman Sachs, the Saudi Arabian government, the American Trucking Association, Delta Airlines, the Petroleum Marketers Association of America, and the St. Louis Federal Reserve have all indicated that excessive oil speculation significantly increases oil and gasoline prices. In fact, recent reports found that excessive Wall Street oil speculation adds $.56 a gallon to the price we all pay at the pump – money that’s lining the pockets of hedge fund managers and that Americans shouldn’t be paying. As the cost to fill our gas tanks continues to skyrocket, the CFTC continues to drag its feet on imposing strict speculation limits to eliminate, prevent, or diminish excessive oil speculation. Although the CFTC has taken some initial steps in the right direction, they are not strong enough and not yet in force due to Wall Street opposition and delays in oversight and data collection. This is simply unacceptable and must change. That’s why I joined my colleagues in urging them to take immediate action. I’ve also pushed the Appropriations Committee to adequately fund the CFTC’s operations so they have the resources necessary to make a real difference and finally get the job done. While there is no silver bullet to solving our high energy prices, we should pursue an allof-the-above strategy to tackle the problem. In my opinion, we must develop new domestic energy sources, expand oil and gas production, and reduce our overall reliance on oil through greater efficiencies and the development of clean, renewable energy. Maine has taken the lead on developing biomass, wind and tidal power, and federal policies should continue to support the growth of these local sources of energy. Our nation’s energy security is critical to our economic growth and ability to make our way out of this recession. Right now, CFTC’s primary duty should be to ensure that the prices Americans pay for gasoline and heating oil are fair and that the markets operate free from fraud, abuse, and manipulation. Ending excessive speculation on Wall Street, which we know adds directly to the price we pay at the pump, is a no-brainer. The CFTC must do what current law mandates and end excessive oil speculation once and for all. April 7 Ashley Dickinson, 20, of Millinocket was arrested on an outstanding warrant. Tamara Shadel Lebron, 20, of Millinocket was arrested on charges of unlawful possession of scheduled drugs, receiving stolen property, and violating conditions of probation. April 8 Cathrin Deltorto, 33, of Lincoln was arrested on a charge of criminal trespass. Send your photos and community news to news@ pvexplorer. com Penobscot County Due to a change in how arrest warrents are processed by the state’s court systems, we are currently unable to obtain active warrants for publication. According to a spokesperson for the Maine State Court System, the problem should be rectified shortly. Have you thought about adding to the family? There is something about the pitter-patter of little feet on the floor that turns a house into a home. And if that pitter-patter happens to come from a family member with 4 feet, well... twice the blessings! The Penobscot Valley Humane Society currently has a wide selection of cats, kittens, and dogs available for adoption. Whether you are seeking that mature feline friend for lazy Sunday mornings on the sofa, the high energy of a young kitten, or a canine friend for bounding romps through the woods, they may have your match. Currently, in addition to their wonderful selection of cats, they are also foster parenting a Saint Bernard, a Beagle mix, and a Lab and Shepard mix. So if a furry friend is in your future, stop by or give us a call. You’ll be glad you did. Penobscot Valley Humane Society (207)794-3457 Park Avenue, Lincoln 16 Thursday, April 12, 2012 Students act out HOWLAND – Twenty eight students at the Hichborn Middle School in Howland put on a show Friday. And what a show it was! The Performing Arts Workshop is an 8 week workshop that focuses on teaching the fundamentals of performing on stage. The workshop develops skills in the areas of singing, acting and dancing. The program was drected by Lana St.Cyr. Friday’s variety show performances were the culmination of the 8 week program. The show included acts which touched on the issues facing todays youth such as bullying in the school systems and being a “Contagious” friend (being a good influence and to not surround yourself with those who are a bad influence). The show also featured an act about the effects of cancer in our community. Other acts were purely just for fun and entertainment. The performance ended the night with a Big Finale which was a choreographed dance routine involving all 28 performers called “Dancing through the Decades”. The cast offered 2 performances. The first was offered to their peers during an in-school assem- bly, while the second performanceheld Friday evening was open to the public. Based on the very positive the workshop and performances have generated, the students are already planning on what they want to do next year! VETERANS BENEFITS SEMINAR APRIL 12, 2012, at 6:00 PM Sponsored By SUNBURY VILLAGE RETIREMENT COMMUNITY 922 OHIO STREET BANGOR, MAINE 04401 RESERVE YOUR SEAT NOW TELE: 207-262-9600 DID YOU KNOW…?? 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