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Tuesday, November 29,
2005
BECOME LIKE CHILDREN
"Truly, I say to you, unless you turn and
become like children, you will never enter the kingdom of heaven."
(Matthew 18:3)
QUOTATIONS FOR THE DAY
"The spectacle of the sky overwhelms me.
I'm overwhelmed when I see in an immense sky, the crescent of the
moon, or the sun."
(Joan Miro)
"The soul looketh steadily forwards
creating a new world before her, leaving worlds behind her."
"Though we travel the world over to find
the beautiful, we must carry it with us or we would find it not."
(Ralph Waldo Emerson)
AUGUSTA CELEBRATES
PUBLIC INDECENCY
The revelation by the Kennebec Journal?
that semi-nude women are modeling lingerie in the window of a
downtown Augusta store has met with an indifferent yawn from the
public, and a snickering leer from those entrusted with protecting
the public. The store ?Spellbound? on Water Street pays models to
exhibit its product ? very revealing women's underwear ? three times
a week. The owner, Felicia Stockford, is a former teacher at Cony
High School in Augusta.
But mere nudity is not the whole story.
When one League member walked past the store last week, he saw an
eighteen year old standing in the window dressed in a costume too
perverse to be mentioned here. After he warned the store owner that
he was about to call the police, he was told ?Go right ahead ? there
is nothing you can do about it.? Later he was told by the Augusta
police that there is no city ordinance against that sort of conduct.
The Boston Globe said that the
scantily-clad women in the shop were ?downtown Augusta?s latest
attraction? which ?brings life and beauty to an often colorless
street.?
Readers were bemused by the description and
photos in the Kennebec Journal, although the photos were toned down
a great deal.? Stacy Gervais, owner of Stacy?s Hallmark down the
street was reported as saying ?It's like a New York thing. It's
urban. It's edgy." Gervais also said that the use of the models
attracted business to the downtown area. Well, not exactly.
Gervais might have been thinking of
Governor John Baldacci?s ?Creative Economy? which hopes to redo
Maine on the model of San Francisco or Boston. But he seemed to be
unaware of the fact that Mayor Rudy Giuliani cleaned up Times Square
a long time ago, and any models ?modeling? lingerie in store windows
these days are quickly arrested for public indecency. Unlike those
who see ?Spellbound? in Augusta as a chance to improve the local
economy, Giuliani correctly realized that smut is a drain on a
city?s economy.
Spellbound, the store where all this takes
place, is less than a mile from the Capitol Building,? where
visiting students from Hodgkins Middle School in Augusta picked up
condoms from a gay and lesbian expo. It is interesting that the
owner of Spellbound is a former public school teacher, in light of
the fact that the state routinely promotes? homosexuality in our
public schools.
Ideas have consequences in the real world;
and the notion that women should be exposed on Main Street to
gratify the public?s burning lust also has consequences. The day
after the Kennebec Journal ran its story making light of women
parading around semi-nude in Augusta, it ran a story about a
fourteen year old girl who was found murdered by a pond in Fayette.
While the pundits in the local media and our ?town fathers? were
snickering about public indecency, they were also neglecting to tell
the public that the rate of forcible rape in Augusta is five times
higher than the national average.
But why should the display of naked bodies
for profit show up first in Augusta, our state capital? Is there a
cause and effect relationship between nudity in a store window and
the mindset of our legislators?? Perhaps the sight of naked women in
a shop window is the ideal symbol for a philosophy of government
which treats the problems of society in purely economic terms, and
holds to a creed of action which teaches that everything can be
bought and sold ? including votes. The natural outcome of this
corrupt way of thinking is now on display on Water Street in
Augusta, less than a mile from the Capitol Building and the
Governor?s Office, and at a funeral parlor in Fayette. ? by Fritz
Spencer
The only recourse left to honest citizens
is to contact the members of the Augusta City Council and demand
that they immediately take action to enforce the laws regarding
public lewdness; or in the absence of such laws, to pass a new city
ordinance to prohibit the public display of indecency. The e-mail
addresses of the Mayor of Augusta, and the members of the city
council are listed below.
William Dowling, Mayor
wdowling@ci.augusta.me.us
Thomas A. Sotir
tsotir@ci.augusta.me.us
Donna R.Doore
ddoore@ci.augusta.me.us
David L. Gomeau
dgomeau@ci.augusta.me.us
Karen D. Foster
kfoster@ci.augusta.me.us
Kim J. Davis
kdavis@ci.augusta.me.us
Sylvia V. Lund
slund@ci.augusta.me.us
Stanley C. Koski
skoski@ci.augusta.me.us
Donna E. Lerman
dlerman@ci.augusta.me.us
Stephen Langsdorf
slangsdorf@ci.augusta.me.us
William R. Bridgeo
wbridgeo@ci.augusta.me.us
CD BY PAULIE HEATH
MEETS WITH RAVE REVIEWS ?
AND HATRED FROM GAY ACTIVISTS
In the wake of the November 8th gay rights
vote, intimidation by homosexual activists is showing no sign of
abating. If anything, efforts to silence all opposition to
homosexuality are increasing. Anyone who shares a principled
objection to homosexuality can expect to incur the wrath of gay
rights activists in one form or another.
Following the recent election on Question 1
Paulie Heath, wife of the Mike Heath the Executive Director of the
Christian Civic League, became the recipient of two nasty online
reviews on amazon.com by gay rights activists who advised readers
not to buy Paulie?s CD entitled "Under the Shadow."? Other
reviewers, who didn?t have a political point to make, gave Paulie?s
work rave reviews saying that ?her music is written from the heart
and expresses strong Christian beliefs.? Another reviewer praised
her music in the highest possible terms, and said that one song
brought ?tears of joy? to her eyes.
Readers interested in Paulie's ministry can
visit
www.amazon.com
and search for "Paulie Heath" or visit
www.paulieheath.com
MAINE STATE MUSEUM
TO SHOWCASE NATIVE GENIUS
OF MAINE INVENTORS
Dr. Edwin Churchill, Curator of the Maine
State Museum, will give a talk Wednesday evening at 7:00 p.m. at the
Maine State Museum in Augusta on some of the more interesting
devices Maine inventors have created. In addition to discussing the
inventions of Chester Greenwood, inventor of the ear muff and the
whistling tea kettle, Dr. Churchill will tell the story behind many
interesting domestic gadgets Maine inventors have designed, among
them a ?Bait and Vegetable Cutter.?
Dr. Churchill points out that Maine
inventors were issued between twenty and thirty thousand patents,
including the first patent, Patent No. 1, by John Ruggles of
Thomaston.? Shortly after Ruggles came up with his invention, he was
elected to the U.S. Senate.
The patent by Ruggles is the first known
locomotive patent. By adding cogs and springs, Ruggles?s invention
enabled locomotives to go up hills for the first time, and to travel
along icy and slippery rails. Ruggles?s devices were used on the
locomotives which ran on the old Veazie line terminating in Old
Town, which was the first railway in New England, and the second in
the United States.
Maine inventors are unique in that many of
their inventions pertain to useful instruments for the home and
farm, and are made with an eye towards the beauty of the device.?
The Maine State Museum is currently compiling a comprehensive list
of all the patents issued to Maine inventors.
Admission to the lecture tomorrow night at
the Maine State Museum is free.
SKILL IN
SMALL MATTERS
?Giotto, a distinguished Roman painter, was
desired by one of the Popes to paint a panel in the Vatican. Some
doubt of his ability, however, being entertained, the Pope's
messenger first asked him for a sample of his work. Instead of
offering any of these, he took a sheet of white paper, and with a
single stroke of his pencil drew a perfect circle, and handed it to
his visitor.
The latter, in surprise, reminded him that
he had asked for a design. ?Go,? said Giotto: ?I tell you his
Holiness asks nothing else of me.? He was right, for the evidence of
his command of the pencil was accepted as conclusive, and his
eccentric though reasonable reply gave rise to the proverb ?Round as
Giotto's O."
"To do a small thing well is the best proof
of ability to do what is great.? (from the Biblical Encyclopedia.)
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