Journalist @baltimoresun writer artist runner #amwriting Chaplain PIO #partylikeajournalist

Journalist @baltimoresun writer artist runner #amwriting Chaplain PIO #partylikeajournalist
Journalist @baltimoresun writer artist runner #amwriting Md Troopers Assoc #20 & Westminster Md Fire Dept Chaplain PIO #partylikeajournalist

Sunday, January 21, 2001

20010121 SDOSM Ronald Reagan's 5 Greatest (Or Infamous) Quotes

Ronald Reagan's 5 Greatest (Or Infamous) Quotes

January 21, 2001

1. How do you tell a communist? Well, it's someone who reads Marx and Lenin. And how do you tell an anti-communist? It's someone who understand Marx and Lenin.

2. Those young people [demand] the right to send blood to the enemy in Vietnam. I think they should be allowed to do that--providing they send it in the original container." -- as governor of California on anti-war protestors

3. Depression is when you're out of work. A recession is when your neighbor is out of work. Recovery is when Jimmy Carter's out of work." -- on his opponent in the 1980 presidential campaign

4. I'm not worried about the deficit. It's big enough to take care of itself." -- on the federal budget, 1984

5. The party official asks a farmer how thinks are going, and the farmer replies that the harvest is so bountiful that the potatoes would reach the foot of God if piled on top of one another. 'But this is the Soviet Union,' says the commissar. 'There is no God here.' The farmer replies, 'That's right. There are no potatoes either.' -- a favorite joke about the former U.S.S.R.

http://www.flatironsreview.com/final_word.htm

Friday, January 19, 2001

RAVENS WEEK IN WESTMINSTER


In addition to lighting-up the Westminster City Hall and Clock Tower in purple light - Westminster Mayor and Common Council, appointed officials, and staff where Ravens t-shirts in celebration of Ravens Week in Westminster January 18, 2001

RAVENS WEEK IN WESTMINSTER

PRESS RELEASE - January 18, 2001

Contact: Mayor Kenneth A. Yowan 410-848-2522

WESTMINSTER'S SHOW OF SUPPORT FOR THE BALTIMORE RAVENS

As the summer home of the Baltimore Ravens' Training Camp at Western Maryland College, and to express the overwhelming support of the City of Westminster in the Ravens' bid for the Super Bowl XXXV Championship, the following arrangements have been made:

A Mayor's Proclamation will be presented during the Monday, January 22, 2001 Mayor and Council Meeting beginning at 7:00 p.m., declaring the week of January 22, 2001 through January 28, 2001 "Ravens Week in Westminster" 

Ravens AFC Champion banners will be hung on city light poles.

Support banners will be hung across Main Street.

City Hall and the old Clock Tower will be awash in purple light.

The Press and members of the public are welcome and invited to attend the Monday, January 22, 2001 Council Meeting.

KENNETH A. YOWAN, Mayor

KAY: ked

+++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++

MAYOR’S PROCLAMATION

                                  RAVENS WEEK IN WESTMINSTER

WHEREAS, once upon a midnight dreary some seventeen years ago, the fans of the State of Maryland, and the City of Westminster lost their beloved National Football League team. And for year after year eagerly wished the morrow, dreaming dreams that no mortal had ever dared to dream before, but for twelve long years the silence was unbroken, and the darkness gave no token; and

WHEREAS, in October 1995, there came a tapping at our chamber door, a tapping louder than before, and when the shutters were flung open, in there stepped the stately RAVENS of the saintly days of yore; and

WHEREAS, in the summer of 1996, these proud birds landed on the campus of Western Maryland College in Westminster to conduct training camp prior to their inaugural season as our proud reentry into the National Football League; and

WHEREAS, only five years later, led by Brian Billick and sporting the most tenacious defense ever known, this ebony bird has beguiled my formerly sad fancy into smiling, and opponent after opponent now pleads "Take thy beak from out my heart, and take thy form from off my door" but the proud RAVENS quoth "Nevermore"; and

WHEREAS, this coming Sunday evening, it is our fervent belief that come the end of the game, there will be the RAVENS, never flitting, but rather sitting atop the NFL standings, merely this, and nothing more,

NOW, THEREFORE, I, Kenneth A. Yowan, Mayor of the City of Westminster, do hereby proclaim the week of January 22-28, 2001 as RAVENS WEEK IN WESTMINSTER, in recognition of their SUPER season, and I commend this observance to all our citizens and encourage one and all to show their support by "thinking purple" through garb and decoration.


Signed at City Hall, this
Twenty-Second day of January
in the year Two Thousand One.                                              


KENNETH A. YOWAN

    Mayor
++++++

Dayhoff Soundtrack: www.kevindayhoff.net
Dayhoff Carroll: www.kevindayhoff.org

Monday, January 01, 2001

20010100 About the 4H Therapeutic Riding Program of Carroll County

UPDATED: November 2nd, 2006

ALL the information below – AND MORE - is found on the 4-H Therapeutic Riding Program of Carroll County web site at: http://www.trp4h.org/index.html

What is Therapeutic Riding?

Therapeutic riding is an individualized program of learning to ride a horse which takes into account a person's physical, mental, and emotional strengths and limitations. The horses, staff, and volunteers involved in therapeutic riding have all been carefully selected and trained to accommodate the physical, mental, or social disabilities of the rider.

Improved physical strength, balance, mobility and coordination are accomplished through the physical act of riding a horse. Increased attention, concentration, learning, and verbal skills are inherent in learning the skills necessary to ride successfully. Bonding with the horse, making new friends, and respecting authority are some of the social improvements we see. Improvements in self esteem, self control, and confidence also arise from the experience of success in learning to ride. Therapeutic riding is fun and effective!

Mission Statement

The 4-H Therapeutic Riding Program of Carroll County will provide persons with disabilities the opportunity to benefit from a continuous program of therapeutic horseback riding, in a safe environment, under the instruction of professionally trained staff, at a locally available facility.

It is the policy of the MD Cooperative Extension that no person shall be subjected to discrimination on the grounds of race, color, gender, religion, national origin, sexual orientation, age, marital or parental status, or disability.

Who We Are

Our History

The 4-H Therapeutic Riding Program of Carroll County was established in 1978 to provide an opportunity for children and adults with disabilities to benefit from riding horses. Beginning with lessons at a local farm, the program moved to the Ag Center outdoor ring and then to the indoor arena in 1997. Everyone associated with the 4-H Therapeutic Riding Program is a volunteer, including riding instructors, therapists, horse handlers, and side-walkers.

Our horses were originally borrowed and brought to lessons weekly. Now all are donated, loaned or leased to the program. During each session they are stabled and cared for on land loaned by the Farm Museum and then sent to vacation homes. Many are retired from successful careers in the show ring, hunt field, dressage arena, or as schooling horses or backyard ponies. All are trained specifically to work in our therapeutic riding program and handle unusual sights, sounds, and sensations, such as wheelchairs, canes, bouncing balls, unbalanced riders, side-walkers crowding close.

In its 28 years of operation, more than 100 horses and 4000 volunteers have worked together to provide therapeutic riding classes to more than 2000 riders.

What We Do

TRP Today

4-H TRP of Carroll County offers a one-hour lesson of 4 to 6 riders, similar in age or ability, that focuses on individual riding skills while gaining a therapeutic benefit. These benefits include improving muscle tone and strength, improving hand/eye coordination and balance, improving peer interaction and communication, increasing self-esteem, and developing a sense of control. Ten-week sessions are held each fall and spring. Each session seats 45-50 riders using 7 horses, assisted by 50 volunteers. Volunteers accrue more than 1300 hours of service during each session.

At the beginning of each session Instructors establish goals for each rider, working with the rider, parents or guardian. They create a wide variety of activities and exercises designed to increase the student's ability to listen, learn, and communicate.

Riders work on their horsemanship skills and willingness to try new things. Students may be taught how to help groom and tack their horses. Classes include arena riding, trail rides, and group activities.

For some riders this is their competitive sport of choice. They strive to compete at the local, national, and international levels in equestrian sports. 4-H TRP riders regularly compete in horse shows at Freedom Hills, Thorncroft, Devon, Special Olympics, and Maryland Challenged Equestrian Trials.

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