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SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 26, 2011
VOL. 3 NO. 210
PORTLAND, ME
PORTLAND’S DAILY NEWSPAPER
699-5801
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Are you black and blue from Black Friday? Hardy shoppers camp outside big boxes; others crave a slower pace BY DAVID CARKHUFF THE PORTLAND DAILY SUN
The phrase “starving artist” may not exactly describe Dennis Hare, so he was taken aback when potential customers threw change at the foot of his easel. Hare, an artist painting landscapes in Monument Square on Black Friday, said he planned to return today if the weather allows, despite some unintended insults he withstood. “I’m new to Portland, I’ve lived here for six months, all summer long I painted Fort Williams Park, and now see BLACK FRIDAY page 20
ABOVE LEFT: Roseann Wenzler and 12-year-old Zach Wenzler of Durham camp out in front of the Best Buy big-box store in Topsham on Thanksgiving evening in anticipation of a midnight opening for Black Friday. ABOVE RIGHT: Dennis Hare, an artist painting in Monument Square on Black Friday, said customer traffic for his paintings was poor, but he loved the artistic environment. (DAVID CARKHUFF PHOTOS)
Old Port buildings slow-dance atop Hitchcock muck
Gilbert’s Chowder House bears the brunt of a neighboring building, which leans on this smaller Old Port denizen. Cracks have appeared, and officials continue to keep an eye on the situation. (CURTIS ROBINSON PHOTO)
BY CURTIS ROBINSON THE PORTLAND DAILY SUN
The Old Port has long been a great
place for a slow dance. Especially among its buildings. And for one of its more interesting waltzes, check out the cracked facade and loose bricks around Gilbert’s Chowder House at 92 Commercial St., just around the corner from Custom House Wharf. There, a four-story brick building leans hard against its one-story neighbor. see GILBERT’S page 5
Five more arrests at OccupyMaine camp Protest group blames outsiders to movement BY CASEY CONLEY THE PORTLAND DAILY SUN
One person was hospitalized and five people were arrested after a series of unrelated incidents at OccupyMaine’s Lincoln Park camp between Thursday and Friday, according to Portland police. The arrests come at a time when city officials have shown an increasing wariness of the anti-Wall Street protesters, which first took up residence
in the park about seven weeks ago. The disturbances began at about 5 a.m. Thursday when a 20-year-old Portland man told police an OccupyMaine member beat him for refusing to leave Lincoln Park. The victim said he was told to leave the park because he is not a member and was knocked to the ground and punched and kicked when he refused, police see ARRESTS page 8
Local holiday book roundup Victim, witness advocate works ‘under the radar’ Portland lights its Christmas tree See Bob Higgins on page 4
See the story on page 7
See the story and photos, page 11