CORWITH CRAMER rescues Haitians at sea

When the CORWITH CRAMER rescued 49 desperate Haitians last month from a dismasted open boat in the Caribbean, the rescuers got a lot of press. The 134-foot brigantine, operated by Sea Education Association of Woods Hole, sighted the overloaded wooden vessel March 9, 45 miles north of Jamaica, the island where the fleeing Haitians hoped

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Government and Island Tradition

Maine people, with their strong tradition of local government, make many decisions at annual town meetings. On islands at least, the town meeting season begins in March and extends into June. This month we report on the March crop of island town meetings. The Legislature, meanwhile, is deep into its winter-spring deliberations, some of which

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Look at Yourselves!

To the editor: I’d like to get my two cents in on this lobster debate. How pitiful you pick on the recreational lobster fisherman, with his five-trap limit fishing out of a 14-15 foot boat… They pay an awful high price for those five traps, equaled out you couldn’t afford to fish the amount of

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Perspective

To the editor: In the March 2005 issue of Working Waterfront, you published an article entitled “Trap Limits, Ten Years Later.” On page 24 of that issue, under the unfortunate and derisive heading of “Weekend Warriors”, Clive Farrin, Zone E Vice-Chair, expressed concern about the buildup of the “recreational” (non-commercial) lobster effort. He reports that

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Wrong Guy

To the editor: The pic. you have on the front page of your website is not Ted Christie. It is Jim Merryman, from Harpswell. Tom Allen Fishing Families for Harpswell [Several others, including the author of our story on trap limits, pointed out the same error, for which we apologize. –ed.]

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