PORTLAND, Maine -- About two dozen women drew a crowd of onlookers when they shed their shirts and marched downtown in Maine's largest city to promote what they call equal-opportunity public toplessness. Organizer Ty MacDowell said the point of the April 3 march in Portland was that a topless woman out in public shouldn't attract any more attention than a man who walks around without a shirt. The Portland Press Herald reported that by the end of the march, more than 500 people had amassed -- a mix of marchers, young men snapping photos, oglers and people just out enjoying a sunny, warm day. It's not illegal for a woman to be topless in public in Maine, and police said there were no incidents or arrests.
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