
Shawn Nason of Rockland holds up the ticket he uses to take the 5:20 p.m. Metro Breez passenger bus from Freeport to Portland, where he later picked up a Concord Coach Lines bus back the other way, and home to Rockland. Nason said he likes to shop around in Freeport and dine at the restaurants.

Roofers take advantage of a nice fall day to work on the roof of First Parish Church Congregational on Main Street in Freeport.

Boys do some after-school skateboarding near the Freeport Town Office.

Sculptures hang in a staircase at Durham Community School. Principal Wil Pidden said that the sculptures are a component of the seventh- and eighth-grade work on risk-taking. The students rotate through their music, physical education, multi media, engineering and art classes working within the shared context of “learners have to take risks to learn.” This is the art feature from art teacher Ashley Shoukimas’s class, where students have to be able to work with a variety of students they would not usually work with and create a piece of public art that is then displayed in a way that challenges the perception of where art would be displayed. Student teams make the sculptures out of bubblewrap and tape and use their own torsos and limbs as the “molds” by which the sculptures are created, Pidden said. They identify where they want the art displayed and plan their sculpture’s pose accordingly.
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