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, October 22, 2006

20061020 32 Maryland municipal officials endorse Michael Steele

October 20, 2006

32 Maryland Mayors and Municipal

Leaders Endorse Michael Steele


ANNAPOLIS, MD – Today, 32 Maryland mayors and municipal leaders presented Michael Steele with a letter of endorsement for his campaign for U.S. Senate.


Michael Steele said, “I have worked hand in hand with mayors and municipal leaders all across this state to produce real results for their towns and municipalities, and I will take this same commitment to getting something done with me to the United States Senate.”


The mayors signed a letter stating, “As a municipal official, I have seen first hand Michael Steele’s commitment to our state’s 157 municipalities. As Lieutenant Governor, he has visited our towns and municipalities, bringing state government resources directly to local government. To date, Michael Steele has visited 110 municipalities, and kept his promises to local officials.”


Mayors and Municipal Leaders Supporting Michael Steele:


Carroll County elected officialsElected officials with which I have worked with in the past.


Some Carroll County officials who are not on the list really jumps out…


This is a fairly significant list as it contains a number of critical opinion makers and more than a few folks who have crossed party lines.


John Bunnell – Cecilton; Judith Cox – Rising Sun; Ellen Cutsail – Union Bridge; Theresa Hartman – Aberdeen; Dave Yensan – Aberdeen; Jay Jacobs – Rock Hall; Jim Eberhardt – Perryville; Frank White – Princess Anne; Harry Piscapia – Galena; Jay Parker – Princess Anne; George Mayer – Federalsburg; Robert Willey – Easton; Jackie Ebersole – Rosemont; Betty Ballas – Federalsburg; Bob Bruchey – Hagerstown; Terence Hanley – Bel Air; Don Bradley – Hurlock; Robert Flickinger – Taneytown; Shanice Shields – Salisbury; Wendi Peters – Mount Airy; Randy Rudy – Aberdeen; Steve Farkas – New Windsor; Sam Pierce – New Windsor; Allan Imhoff – Frederick; Brad Jewitt – Berwyn Heights; Gary Nelson – Mt. Airy; Joe Fisona – Elkton; Steve Goldston – Princess Anne; Paul Chamberlain – Taneytown; Garland Hayward – Princess Anne; Cheye N. Calvo – Berwyn Heights; W. Jeff Holtzinger – Frederick

20061021 CNN’s Anderson Cooper, a spotter for enemy snipers


CNN’s Anderson Cooper, a spotter for enemy snipers

October 21st, 2006







(Image: http://men.style.com/images/gq/talkback/120105/GQopenLetterh.jpg)

The Saturday, October 21, 2006 web page for WBAL TV in Baltimore is carrying an Associated Press story that “[s]ome members of Congress are asking the Pentagon to remove CNN reporters embedded with U.S. combat troops.”

This after "Anderson Cooper 360" broadcast “a video showing insurgent snipers targeting U.S. soldiers.”

Well duh?

Oh, you know Anderson Cooper. Look up “cult of personality” and you’ll see a picture of Mr. Cooper.

For quite some time, there are many of us who just figured that CNN is a subsidiary of “Al Jazeera.”

When a friend of a family member got back from a tour of duty in Iraq; he once commented that many of America’s sons and daughters in uniform have grown disillusioned with CNN’s reporting of the war.

All too frequently, when they would see an operation, in which they participated, covered by CNN, they did not recognize the operation for which they just completed as it was being reported - - and that CNN had a demoralizing affect on our troops as it consistently reported only the negative.

When news programming on cable was in its infancy, it was news-junkie’s nirvana. I was personally thrilled to have CNN available. As the years unfolded, I have arrived at a point in which I assiduously avoid CNN as I have learned that I do not get a complete picture and in some instances in the past, I have concluded that the information that I received from CNN could not be relied upon to give me a complete and accurate overview of the news.

Can someone explain to me just why in the world would an American news-outlet feature enemy troops in a position to kill one of America’s sons or daughters in uniform? How would Mr. Cooper feel if it were to be his child, uncle or some other family member – or neighbor – or colleague, whatever; in the sights of the enemy sniper?

In my personal experience, I have heard the "unvarnished truth" line before and it has been my experience that when I hear that line, my pants-legs feel wet as in someone peeing on my leg and telling it is raining.

The article on the WBAL web site is pasted below. Read it and be disgusted.

_____

TheWBALChannel.com

http://www.thewbalchannel.com/news/10127376/detail.html

Pentagon Urged To Remove Embedded CNN Reporters

POSTED: 8:30 am EDT October 21, 2006

UPDATED: 8:38 am EDT October 21, 2006

SAN DIEGO -- Some members of Congress are asking the Pentagon to remove CNN reporters embedded with U.S. combat troops.

The chairman of the House Armed Services Committee and two Republican colleagues are denouncing the network's broadcast of a video showing insurgent snipers targeting U.S. soldiers. They said it's tantamount to airing an enemy propaganda film.

The tape came to the network through contact with an insurgent leader. It aired Wednesday on the program "Anderson Cooper 360" and was repeated Thursday.

In the letter to Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld, committee chairman Duncan Hunter writes that "CNN has now served as the publicist for an enemy propaganda film featuring the killing of an American soldier."

CNN producer David Doss wrote in a Web log Thursday that the network televised the footage in an effort to present the "unvarnished truth" about the Iraq war.

####

20061021 Two eggs corned beef hash grits and MOM

Two eggs, corned-beef hash, grits and Mayor O’Malley

Saturday, October 21st, 2006 by Kevin Dayhoff

Caroline and I were having breakfast in Ocean City, MD this morning when in through the door walks Mayor Martin O’Malley. He came right over and sat with us for awhile. Mayor O’Malley and I worked together on many municipal issues of common interest when I was the Mayor of Westminster and I thoroughly enjoyed working with him.

We talked a little about the gubernatorial contest, but not much. We both know what it is like to be in the middle of a campaign and get “campaigned-out” and “peopled-out.” He was by himself and dressed very causally and obviously not in campaign mode.

We’re both in the “Mayor’s Club,” which bears a mutual understanding and respect for each other for the often existential, if not Quixotic difficulties of running a city, politics and governance.

I wrote a preface in the Fall of 2005: “20050620 Baltimore strength liability for O’Malley:”

I have a huge amount of respect and admiration for Mayor O’Malley.

On June 20th, 2005, Baltimore Sun writer, David Nitkin wrote a soft-ball fluff piece for the Mayor O’Malley campaign called: “Baltimore a strength and liability for O'Malley - - Mayor focuses on recent positive news after FBI report of more violent crime; Statistics could hurt expected run for governor.”

Actually, it is another example of excellent writing by a very talented Mr. Nitkin, except for one problem; it may have been a nice column, but it was not “straight-down-the-middle news. It was a white paper analysis for the strengths, weaknesses, opportunities and dangers that lay ahead for a Mayor O’Malley gubernatorial bid.

It is a wonderful example of everything for which the Baltimore Sun deserves the highest of criticism.

The Baltimore Sun does not use permalinks, so I cannot link you to the article. Since it is an excellent subjective analytical piece on the challenges of running for higher office after serving as a mayor of a city, I will post it on the blog and link you to the post. Go here and read it. It is a must read. And it will give you some insight as to why I respect Mayor O’Malley so much and enjoy his company and look forward to working with him in the future after Governor Ehrlich wins a second term as governor.

Not everyone is cut out to be governor and not everyone is cut out to be a mayor. There is no leadership depth in the City of Baltimore. We need Mayor O’Malley where he is and Governor Ehrlich where he is.

Mayor O’Malley’s idea of running the state and Governor Ehrlich’s vision are different. Period. I reject the zero-sum game paradigm or the concept that one must be a bad elected official or a bad person in order for the other to be good.

It is business and everyone needs to make a decision as to who’s ideas and vision are best for you and I and thousands of other Marylanders.

Who can protect you and your family from crime and violence? Who can best facilitate the education of your children? Who will do best to bring jobs, business and a positive economic climate to our state and our communities? Who can keep our taxes as low as possible?

There is plenty of room for debate, discussion, dialogue and disagreement. Leave the personal stuff out of it.

Right now, Saturday morning, Oct. 21st, 2006, we’re traveling up the road on Rte 50, but I remember a post just recently when I mentioned how nice it is to have friends who have a life other than politics and issues. I won’t be able to find the hyperlink to the post until I find my next Wi-Fi connection. (It’s: “20061002 Drinking the Kool-Aid.”)

Sooo, Mayor O’Malley, Caroline and I really avoided talking about politics and talked about kids, family and friends. It was nice to see him, outside of the political arena.

Caroline and I were in Ocean City for an employee event put on by the company with which she works. We left Westminster yesterday in the early afternoon and arrived just in time for the event. The trip to Ocean City was relatively uneventful, except for a relatively long back-up at the Bay Bridge.

The weather in Ocean City this morning is gorgeous so we decided to not hurry home and have a late breakfast. Of course I wanted a place that served grits. We found such a place at the corner of PhiladelphiaCoastal Highway and 16th StreetLayton’s.

I tried to catch up with Delegate Jim Mathias – the former Mayor of Ocean City. We also enjoyed working with him in our previous life. I did talk on the phone briefly with Salisbury Mayor Barrie Tilghman.

In order to find Delegate Mathias’ phone number, as the numbers I had in the cell phone did not reach him, I needed to go on the web. I had my laptop up in the car and we ended up cruisin’ Ocean City looking for a Wi-Fi connection in order to get my e-mails and go to www.jimmathias.com.

I felt like the computer-geek that I am. “Okay, found a connection. Pull in that parking space. No back up a couple feet. Yep, that’s it. Don’t move.”

Pray for my wife.

Speaking of Wi-Fi and being a geek, as we were traveling through Salisbury, I wanted a cup of coffee. So, we searched-out looking for“Panera Bread,” or something like that, that would have Wi-Fi.

Which we found. While I was eating my chiabatta bread and drinking my coffee, Caroline and I were surfing the web and checking our e-mails. Too cool.

When is Westminster, MD going to get Wi-Fi?

Talk with you later. It’s my turn to do a little of the driving.

Kevin Dayhoff writes from Westminster Maryland USA. E-mail him at: kdayhoff@carr.org www.thetentacle.com Westminster Eagle Opinion and Winchester Report www.thewestminstereagle.com www.kevindayhoff.com has moved to http://kevindayhoff.blogspot.com/

N. Gregory Mankiw - The Pigou Club Manifesto: Raise the Gas Tax

http://gregmankiw.blogspot.com/2006/10/pigou-club-manifesto.html

FRIDAY, OCTOBER 20, 2006


The Pigou Club Manifesto

In today's Wall Street Journal, I offer a manifesto for the Pigou Club, the elite group of pundits and policy wonks with the good sense to advocate higher Pigovian taxes. (Click here for a partial membership list.)

Raise the Gas Tax By N. Gregory Mankiw

With the midterm election around the corner, here's a wacky idea you won't often hear from our elected leaders: We should raise the tax on gasoline. Not quickly, but substantially. I would like to see Congress increase the gas tax by $1 per gallon, phased in gradually by 10 cents per year over the next decade. Campaign consultants aren't fond of this kind of proposal, but policy wonks keep pushing for it. Here's why: .... http://gregmankiw.blogspot.com/2006/10/pigou-club-manifesto.html
*****

Friday, October 20, 2006

20061019 The Honda Video




The Honda Video

October 19, 2006

As many folks are aware, I really like television commercials – well, at least the unique and artistic commercials, such as the “20060619 The Zurich Television Commercials.”

Recently I was e-mailed the link to the Rube Goldberg-like Honda video. Please find that commercial here.

Hat Tip: “Mayor Zoom” And thanks a bunch!

The e-mail states: “There are no computer graphics or digital tricks in the film. Everything you see really happened in real time exactly as you see it. The film took 606 takes. On the first 605 takes, something, usually very minor, didn't work.

They would then have to set the whole thing up again. The crew spent weeks shooting night and day. By the time it was over, they were ready to change professions. The film cost six million dollars and took three months to complete including full engineering of the sequence.

It is fast becoming the most downloaded advertisement in Internet history. Honda executives figure the ad will soon pay for itself simply in "free viewings" (Honda isn't paying a dime to have you watch this commercial!). When the ad was pitched to senior executives, they signed off on it immediately without any hesitation - including the costs.

Everything you see in the film (aside from the walls, floor, ramp, and complete Honda Accord) is parts from those two cars. The voiceover is Garrison Keillor.

Oh. and about those funky windshield wipers. On the new Accords, the windshield wipers have water sensors and are designed to start doing their thing automatically as soon as they become wet. It looks a bit weird in the commercial.”

Please enjoy this way-cool video.

Kevin Dayhoff writes from Westminster Maryland USA. E-mail him at: kdayhoff@carr.org http://www.thetentacle.com/ Westminster Eagle Opinion and Winchester Report http://www.thewestminstereagle.com/ www.kevindayhoff.com has moved to http://kevindayhoff.blogspot.com/

20061020 A nice quick profile of First Mariner’s Ed Hale


A nice quick profile of First Mariner’s Ed Hale

Hale keeps his focus on achieving success

October 20, 2006 – Read more on “Soundtrack” here: Business Banking

1st Mariner Bank

Kelly Carson, of The Examiner has a nice quick-read profile of Ed Hale. For those who have followed his career, he’s the little engine that could… And everyone’s working class hero.

BALTIMORE - Edwin Hale Sr. has tunnel vision.

He focuses on success.

As chairman and chief executive officer of Baltimore’s 1st Mariner Bank, owner of the Baltimore Blast indoor soccer team

[…]

“I went from being a trucking guy to being a banker overnight,” Hale said. “It was a religious experience.”

One thing led to another during the turbulent banking days of the 1990s, and the Bank of Baltimore eventually melded into today’s Wachovia Bank.

“It was not a happy day,” Hale said of the day when the Bank of Baltimore was sold to the first of a few corporate interests. But part of the deal to sell the bank was that Hale not be prevented from starting another bank, which he did 11 years ago.

“I felt comfortable being chairman of a bank,” Hale said. “And I knew doing a local bank would work.”

Read he rest here: Hale keeps his focus on achieving success

####

20061019 Residential Household Hazardous Waste Drop Off Event


Residential Household Hazardous Waste Drop Off Event
October 19th, 2006

Carroll County will host a “Residential Household Hazardous Waste Drop Off Event,” this coming Saturday, October 21st, 2006 from 8 a.m. to 2 p.m.

It will NOT be at the landfill. The drop-off will take place at the Carroll County Vehicle Maintenance facility at 1250 Old Meadow Branch Road.

Please be sure to look over what is acceptable and what is not acceptable pasted above. [Updated: the image is too hard to read…

Acceptable:
Gasoline, Gas/Oil Mix; Oil base paints and thinners; Solvents; Stains; Sealants; Pesticides, Insecticides and herbicides; Photographic chemicals; Pool chemicals; Household Batteries; and household cleaners.

NOT acceptable: Latex paint - - latex paint can be disposed with regular trash. It must be solidified by using an absorbent agent, which can include cat litter, sand, mulch or whatever. Also not acceptable is Medical waste; explosives and ammunition; radioactive materials; compressed gas tanks and cylinders; rechargeable and vehicle batteries; asbestos and “Business (Commercial, Industrial, Farm.)” I’m sure Ms. Legge means that you can’t bring business, commercial or farm waste to the drop-off event and not that you can dispose of your business or farm…]

If you need additional information – call Aunt Vinnie Legge, Chief, Bureau of Solid Waste at: (410) 386-2633.

####

20061019 10 Most Read Articles on NYTimes from the past two weeks

10 Most Read Articles on NYTimes.com from the past two weeks

@TIMES - Inside NYTimes.com
Thursday, October 19, 2006
-----------------------------------------

Here are the 10 Most Read Articles on NYTimes.com from the past two weeks (as of 9 a.m. ET, October 19).


1) Yankee Dies in Plane Crash, Official Says By MARIA NEWMAN and WILLIAM K. RASHBAUM, Published: October 11, 2006 Cory Lidle, a pitcher for the New York Yankees, was killed today when a plane crashed into a residential high-rise building on New York City's Upper East Side, a city official confirmed.
http://www.nytimes.com/2006/10/11/nyregion/12crashcnd.html?ex=1176609600&en=795e29d8531a1b74&ei=5087&excamp=mkt_at1

2) To Be Married Means to Be Outnumbered By SAM ROBERTS, Published: October 15, 2006 Married couples, whose share of American households has been declining for decades, have slipped into a minority.
http://www.nytimes.com/2006/10/15/us/15census.html?ex=1176609600&en=99c95d1dd848dcb2&ei=5087&excamp=mkt_at2

3) Evangelicals Fear the Loss of Their Teenagers By LAURIE GOODSTEIN, Published: October 6, 2006 Evangelical Christian leaders are warning one another that their teenagers are abandoning the faith in droves.
http://www.nytimes.com/2006/10/06/us/06evangelical.html?ex=1176609600&en=b29752956653649f&ei=5087&excamp=mkt_at3

4) Seduced by Snacks? No, Not You
By KIM SEVERSON, Published: October 11, 2006 According to Prof. Brian Wansink's research, people make over 200 food decisions a day -- and are outwitted at every turn.
http://www.nytimes.com/2006/10/11/dining/11snac.html?ex=1176609600&en=dceeac04bfda2b2e&ei=5087&excamp=mkt_at4

5) Old but Not Frail: A Matter of Heart and Head By GINA KOLATA, Published: October 5, 2006 A central issue only now being systematically addressed is why some people age well and others do not.
http://www.nytimes.com/2006/10/05/health/05age.html?ex=1176609600&en=12e93a3c6d843c52&ei=5087&excamp=mkt_at5

6) An Elephant Crackup?
By CHARLES SIEBERT, Published: October 8, 2006 Attacks by elephants on villages, people and other animals are on the rise. Some researchers are pointing to a species-wide trauma and the fraying of the fabric of pachyderm society.
http://www.nytimes.com/2006/10/08/magazine/08elephant.html?ex=1176609600&en=c3e89a06bff6d039&ei=5087&excamp=mkt_at6

7) A History of Sex With Students, Unchallenged By DAVID KOCIENIEWSKI, Published: October 10, 2006 A N.J. school district is being sued for failing to stop a woman with an appetite for under-age boys.
http://www.nytimes.com/2006/10/10/nyregion/10teacher.html?ex=1176609600&en=d2d193fb08657bb5&ei=5087&excamp=mkt_at7

8) Study Links Extinction Cycles to Changes in Earth's Orbit and Tilt By JOHN NOBLE WILFORD, Published: October 12, 2006 Scientists say periodic changes in Earth's orbit may account for the apparent regularity with which new species of mammals emerge and then go extinct.
http://www.nytimes.com/2006/10/12/science/earth/12extinct.html?ex=1176609600&en=9fc4a5a53674ca70&ei=5087&excamp=mkt_at8

9) As Exemptions Grow, Religion Outweighs Regulation By DIANA B. HENRIQUES, Published: October 8, 2006 Religious organizations enjoy an abundance of exemptions from regulations and taxes. And the number is multiplying rapidly.
http://www.nytimes.com/2006/10/08/business/08religious.html?ex=1176609600&en=a72b34791f8cf28a&ei=5087&excamp=mkt_at9

10) With YouTube, Student Hits Jackpot Again By MIGUEL HELFT, Published: October 12, 2006 Jawed Karim, one of YouTube's three founders, hit the equivalent of the Powerball when Google bought the site.
http://www.nytimes.com/2006/10/12/technology/12tube.html?ex=1176868800&en=70ce5340ae85d3c3&ei=5087&excamp=mkt_at10

Thursday, October 19, 2006

20061018 Workforce Housing in Carroll County

20061018 Workforce Housing in Carroll County

Workforce Housing Issues in Carroll County
October 18th, 2006

Kelsey Volkmann of the Baltimore Examiner wrote a piece the other day on the challenges of a dwindling inventory of workforce housing in Carroll County.

This issue has been much discussed in the last number of years.

I’ve always felt that one of the major impediments to developing additional workforce housing in Carroll County was government red-tape and zoning. I still feel that way. Often workforce housing requires a higher density in a given development and zoning laws and, to get real about it, much of the Carroll County public is in no mood for higher densities.

The key issue not covered by the article is that Carrollinians have no interest in any housing in Carroll County these days. To be certain, I have no doubt that there is a bias in Carroll County against workforce housing. But to be candid, many of the folks that are moving into many of these half-million dollar mansions in Carroll County are presenting as quite “elitist.”

One of the latest cutting edge models is a mixed use overlay that allows for housing to be included in a commercial development. The idea, which, to the best of my knowledge, has not been discussed, is to put housing above the stores in retail and commercial developments, read: shopping centers.

The beauty of it is that facilitates home ownership, albeit a condo-type housing, but it is nevertheless, home ownership, where the jobs are and the commercial portion of the development helps bring down the construction costs and makes the housing more affordable.

Of course, the challenge in Carroll County is the knee-jerk reaction to ANY development in Carroll County, residential, commercial, employment-base or whatever.

And actually, unless a developer brings overwhelming return for the community, in terms of additional water, open space and recreation, school pad sites or some such infrastructure improvement, I guess I’m not interested in the houses either.

Now commercial tax base and employment opportunities, that’s a different story…

Anyway, Ms. Volkmann’s story can be found here.

It begins: “Both the waiting list for housing vouchers and the demand for affordable housing continues to grow in Carroll County, but stereotypes about work force housing will have to be shattered before it is embraced, housing advocates say.

People “visualize ... 70-year-old black women who are going to come in from Baltimore and shoot up the neighborhood with AK-47s,” said James Upchurch, president of Interfaith Housing Alliance Inc., a nonprofit that has built affordable housing in Westminster, Hampstead, Union Bridge and Taneytown. “But the typical person is more likely to be their Aunt Milly.””

One of the key paragraphs, for me, was: “The key to work force housing is making zoning “inclusionary” — where developers are encouraged to build a certain percentage of affordable housing in each development — a model first adopted in Montgomery County 30 years ago, [James Upchurch, president of Interfaith Housing Alliance Inc.,] said.”

Read the rest of “Affordable housing faces hurdle of bias;” it is well worth the time.

Kevin Dayhoff writes from Westminster Maryland USA. E-mail him at: kdayhoff@carr.org http://www.thetentacle.com/ Westminster Eagle Opinion and Winchester Report http://www.thewestminstereagle.com/ www.kevindayhoff.com has moved to http://kevindayhoff.blogspot.com/

Wednesday, October 18, 2006

20061010 John J. Rush Sr. Obituary October 10, 2006


Mr. Rush’s obituary appeared in Oct. 18, 2006 Westminster Eagle… (The first obit is for Peggy Martin; Mr. Rush is the third obit.)

John Jay Rush Sr., 81, of Westminster died Oct. 10, 2006, at the Continuum Care Nursing Home in Sykesville.


Born Jan. 27, 1925, in Trenton, N.J., he was the son of the late Milton and Clara Bainbridge Rush. He was the husband of Bebe Rush, his wife of 53 years, whom he married Dec. 28, 1952.

He was a graduate of Hamilton High School and a graduate of Temple University in Philadelphia with a degree in business administration. He was transferred to Westminster in 1957 while working with Southern States Cooperative, and later took a position with General Cooper and Brass Co. of Philadelphia as a salesman until his retirement in 1992 after 30 years of service. He also was a Realtor with Century 21 Charles J. Plunkert Inc. for several years.

He became active in the Boy Scouts of America when he joined a troop in Trenton, N.J., in 1937 at the age of 12. His time in that troop, led by "Pops" Skeleton, developed an interest in scouting that lasted 66 years. While a scout in this troop, he went to Philmont Scout Ranch for the first time, and traveled there several times during his long career in scouting. After service in the Army Air Corps during World War II and starting his family, he returned to Scouting as Cub Master of Cub Pack 381 in Westminster in 1963. He then stepped in as "temporary" Scoutmaster of Scout Troop 381 in 1961, retiring 34 years later as Scoutmaster Emeritus in 2003, after seeing more than 100 boys attain the coveted award of Eagle Scout under his leadership. He received numerous scouting awards, including the Silver Beaver, the God and Country Award, the Distinguished Scoutmaster Award, the Frontier District Award of Merit, Scout of the Year, and was named a James E. West Fellow.

He was member of the American Legion Post 31, Veterans of Foreign Wars Post 467, and a charter member of the First United Presbyterian Church. He was the recipient of the Rotary Club Outstanding Citizen of the Year in 1990. He was an avid train collector.

Surviving, in addition to his wife, are sons and daughters-in-law Randy L. and Sherry Rush of Cumberland, John J. Jr. and Cindy Rush of Herndon, Va.; grandchildren Peter, Alan, Jessica, Beth, Courtney and Tracey; brother Robert Rush of Knoxville, Tenn.; nephew and spouse Barry and Sally Rush of Seaside Park, N.J.; and mother-in-law Evelyn Gobble of Abingdon, Va.

He was predeceased by brother and sister-in-law Horace and Gloria Rush.

A memorial service will be held at 3 p.m. Saturday, Nov. 4, at the First Presbyterian Church, 65 Washington Road, Westminster, with the Rev. Frederick Eckhardt officiating.

There will be no public viewing.

Memorial contributions may be made to the John J. Rush Sr. Scout Memorial Fund for Deserving Scouts, P.O. Box 381, Westminster, MD 21158.

Arrangements are by Pritts Funeral Home & Chapel, 412 Washington Road, Westminster.

20061017 MSNBC list Political Blogs Maryland


MSNBC’s October 17th, 2006 list of Maryland Blogs about key Maryland political races:

20061017 MSNBC list Political Blogs Maryland

MSNBC’s Political Blogs Maryland

Who is Talking About Me Now?”

Hat Tip: Stephanie Dray’s Jousting for Justice, Who is Talking About Me Now?”

October 17th, 2006 post

http://www.joustingforjustice.com/?q=node/121

http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/15287637/

Read what bloggers are saying about key races.

Maryland Moment

Maryland Politics Watch

Maryland Politics Now

Crablaw’s Maryland Weekly

monoblogue

Olliver Willis: Like Kryptonite to Stupid

Free State Politics

Political Yak

The League Reassembled

Jousting for Justice

####

Tuesday, October 17, 2006

Anna Politkovskaya killed October 7, 2006


Russian journalist Anna Politkovskaya interviewed in the Guardian by James Meek on October 15, 2004

Anna Politkovskaya killed October 7, 2006

Anna Politkovskaya murdered in Moscow

http://www.moredevastation.com/actualite/2006/10/7/anna-politkovskaya-murdered-in-moscow.html

Special reports
Chechnya
Russia

Interactive guides

Russia's offensive in Chechnya
1994-96 war

From the Guardian archive

31.08.1996:
31.08.1996: Chechen war is over, says triumphant Lebed
18.12.1994: 18.12.1994: Yeltsin begins to lose war of words over Chechnya
12.12.1994: 12.12.1994: Russian forces steamroll into breakaway republic

World news guide
Russia

Media
Chechen foreign ministry
Chechenpress state information agency
Chechen Times
Moscow Times
Gazeta.ru
Russia Journal
Interfax news agency

Putin's Russia by Anna Politkovskaya is published by Harvill. To order a copy for £8.99 with free UK p&p, call the Guardian Book Service on 0870 836 0875, or go to
www.guardian.co.uk/bookshop.

The murder of the Russian journalist Anna Politkovskaya is an irremediably great tragedy. The conflicting rights Anna Politkovskaya, r.i.p. and perspectives involved in the Chechen situation notwithstanding, Russia is now so much less than she has been
_____

Dispatches from a savage war
http://www.guardian.co.uk/women/story/0,,1327791,00.html

Poison and death threats won't stop Anna Politkovskaya from reporting the truth about Chechnya. She talks to James Meek

Friday October 15, 2004

The Guardian

Anna Politkovskaya was born into Soviet high society; the kind of privileged, metropolitan elite that knew abroad better than it knew the factories of the Urals, and whose children were guaranteed comfortable jobs in the rambling bureaucracies of Moscow.

Half a life later, in her 40s and a mother of two children, Politkovskaya found herself alone at night in the Chechen hills, fleeing through the darkness. She was running from the Russian security service, the FSB, which wanted to arrest her, but out there in the highlands of a lawless region steeped in bloodshed, she could have fallen victim to anyone or anything; Chechen bandits, Russian or Chechen government death squads, a broken neck. It was Europe, in 2002.

"I walked the whole night," she says. "I wanted to stay alive! It was terrifying. I reached the [Chechen] village of Stary Atagi at dawn. I stayed there for a day and a night, keeping my head down ..." She talks about it for a while, then seems to check herself, feeling perhaps that telling a stranger about one of the numerous occasions in her career as a journalist that she faced a threat of imprisonment or serious harm is irrelevant to the serious business of reporting. "These are just details," she says, finally.

In the bland setting of a publisher's London flat, you can see in Politkovskaya, one of the bravest of Russia's many brave journalists, the different ages of her life, and her looking serious in each of them: the bookish student of the 1970s, the earnest, curious young Soviet reporter, the journalist who embraced the freedoms of perestroika in the late 1980s, the veteran of Russia's recent conflicts who returns time and again to Chechnya to enrage the Kremlin leadership as it seeks to make of Vladimir Putin an infallible khan.

Her seriousness is not just her frown, her severe glasses and full head of grey hair. It's the tension, anger and impatience in her whole body, making clear that her sense of the continual injustice being perpetrated in her homeland never leaves her, that she can't shut it out in a way almost all British journalists, even the campaigning, radical kind, can.

It's a surprise, then, to see her start to laugh and make fun of the Guardian's photographer when he gets her to pose for him. "Photographers always do that," she says, in her hesitant English. "They get people to do things they don't normally do." The photographer gets quite annoyed and you realise that Politkovskaya is still young (she's 46). And still hopeful. The author picture on the back of her new book, Putin's Russia, is so self-consciously tragic, and its subject matter so bleak, that I ask her whether she thinks it might take generations for her country to become truly free.

"I wouldn't ever want to say it would take generations," she says. "I want to be able to live the life of a human being, where every individual is respected, in my lifetime."

Politkovskaya was born in New York, where her Soviet Ukrainian parents were UN diplomats, in 1958, five years after the death of Stalin. She was sent back home to be educated and after school entered one of the most prestigious university departments in the USSR, the journalism faculty of Moscow State University. Among its other advantages, her parents' diplomatic status enabled them to smuggle banned books into the country for her, and she was able to write her dissertation about a normally forbidden poet, the emigre Marina Tsvetayeva.

After graduation, Politkovskaya worked for the daily Izvestiya, then moved to the in-house paper of the state airline monopoly Aeroflot. "Every journalist got a free ticket all year round; you could go on any plane and fly wherever you wanted. Thanks to this I saw the whole of our huge country. I was a girl from a diplomatic family, a reader, a bit of a swot; I didn't know life at all."

With the coming of perestroika, Politkovskaya switched to the independent press which began to emerge and flourish: first Obshchaya Gazeta, then Novaya Gazeta (New Newspaper). None of the terrible things that have happened in Russia since the coming to power of the reformer Mikhail Gorbachev in 1985 have persuaded Politkovskaya that it would have been better to preserve the USSR.

"From an economic point of view, life became very difficult," she says, "but politically it wasn't shocking at all. It was simple happiness, that you could read and think and write whatever you wanted. It was a joy. You need to endure a great deal in the way of economic hardship for the sake of freedom."

Hardly had the new countries of the former Soviet Union begun to stand on their feet, however, than a series of internal wars broke out. The most savage of them, continuing to this day, involves various attempts by Russian government troops to regain control over the small region of Chechnya. Politkovskaya became one of the most dogged reporters of that conflict.

Russians speak of two Chechen wars: the first, under Yeltsin, from 1994 to 1996, ended with a peace deal and troop withdrawal under pressure from the media and public. When Putin invaded for a second time, in 1999, he took steps to ensure that the media would not embarrass him with reports about the reality of Russia's brutality in Chechnya. If, as Politkovskaya believes, stopping the first Chechen war was the Russian media's greatest achievement in the relatively free Yeltsin years, the second Chechen war has been its greatest disaster. Once an independent voice among many, Novaya Gazeta is now among the few Russian media outlets which have not yet been intimidated into toeing the Kremlin line.

The second Chechen war began by costing Politkovskaya her marriage. She returned home to Moscow one day in 1999, fresh from reporting on a long-range Russian rocket attack in Grozny which had hit a market and a maternity hospital, killing scores of people, including women and children, to hear her husband tell her: "I can't take this any more." Recently, it almost cost her her life, when, on her way to Beslan in the early hours of the school hostage crisis, she was slipped poison in a cup of tea. In between, she has experienced countless death threats from Russian troops, Chechen fighters and the other, more shadowy armed groups operating in the margins of the war. The kidnappings, extrajudicial killings, disappearances, rapes and tortures she has reported on in Chechnya have left her convinced that Putin's policies are engendering the terrorists they are supposed to eliminate.

"To this day there's torture in any FSB branch in Chechnya, like the so-called 'telephone', where they pass an electric current through a person's body. I've seen hundreds of people who've been through this torture. Some have been tortured in such an intricate way that it's hard for me to believe that it was done by people who went to the same sort of schools that I did, who read the same textbooks."

Politkovskaya has no regrets about the times she has stepped outside the role of reporter in recent Chechen terrorist attacks - as a negotiator in the Moscow theatre siege, and as a would-be negotiator at Beslan, before she was poisoned. "Yes, I went beyond my journalistic role," she says. "But it would be quite wrong to say that doing so was a bad move from a journalistic point of view. By setting aside my role as journalist I learned so much that I would never have found out being just a plain journalist, who stands in the crowd along with everyone else."

She has harsh words for what she sees as the west's kid-glove treatment of Putin and Russia. "Most of the time they forget the word Chechnya. They only remember it when there's a terrorist act. And then it's, 'Oh!' And they start their full coverage up again. But virtually nobody reports on what is really going on in that zone, in Chechnya, and the growth of terrorism. The truth is that the methods employed in Putin's anti-terrorist operation are generating a wave of terrorism the like of which we have never experienced."

The Bush-Blair "war on terror" has been of enormous help to Putin, Politkovskaya says. Many people in Russia gained perverse comfort from the pictures of US abuses in Abu Ghraib prison. "I've heard it many times. In Russia you hear people talking about it with pride: that, 'We treated the blacks like this before the Americans did, and we were right, because they are international terrorists.'

"Putin's begun to try to prove on the world stage that he's also fighting international terrorists, that he's just a part of this fashionable war. And he's been successful. He was Blair's best friend for a while. When, after Beslan, he began to state that we were seeing virtually the hand of Bin Laden, it was appalling. What's Bin Laden got to do with it? The Russian government created these beasts, brought them up, and they came to Beslan and behaved like beasts."

The only way for the west to regain moral authority, Politkovskaya argues, would be for it to treat Putin as it treats Alexander Lukashenko, the autocratic, bullying president of Russia's neighbour Belarus - not sanctions, but a more personal, tailored form of ostracism. "It's impossible to talk on the one hand about the monstrous scale of victims in Chechnya and the spawning of terrorism and then lay out the red carpet, embrace Putin and tell him: 'We're with you, you're the best.' That shouldn't be happening. I understand, our country's a big market, it's very attractive. I understand it very well. But we're not second-class people, we're people like you, and we want to live."


20041015 Russian journalist Anna Politkovskaya
20061007 Anna Politkovskaya killed
20061017 SDOSM
Journalists Politkovskaya-Anna

Kevin Dayhoff www.kevindayhoff.net http://kevindayhoff.blogspot.com/

20061016 Secretary Kris Cox to visit Carroll County


Secretary Kris Cox to visit Carroll County Wed. October 18th, 2006
Posted October 16th, 2006

A volunteer with the Ehrlich – Cox leadership team e-mailed me earlier in the day to say that Secretary Kris Cox will be visiting Carroll County this Wednesday, October 18th, 2006.

She is to be the featured speaker at the Republican Women’s Club of Taneytown that evening.

She has scheduled some free time prior to the event and would like to have a meet-and-greet with the Republican leaders in Carroll County.

All of the Republican candidates on the November ballot, members of the Central Committee, representatives of the Ehrlich and Steele statewide campaigns and Zac Moffett of the Victory campaign have been invited to attend.

Senator Haines has reserved a room at Maria’s at the Westminster Inn for this get-together and the event will begin at 4 p.m.

We have been informed that Secretary Cox will offer comments about her personal background and her experiences on the campaign trail. Each of the campaigns will have an opportunity to describe the current political environment and GOTV strategies as we head into the home stretch of the campaign.

####

20061016 The Examiner Editorial Franchot’s empty gesture




The Examiner Editorial Franchot’s empty gesture
October 16, 2006

The Baltimore Examiner had a wonderful editorial in the Monday, October 16, 2006 edition of the paper: The Examiner Editorial: Franchot’s empty gesture

Mr. Farbissiner Franchot is a moonbat who has perfected the art of professional outrage. He is extraordinary proficient at being a particularly unpleasant gentleman, who has led a remarkable life unencumbered by accomplishment.

If it were not for partisan politics, Mr. Franchot would still be at the larval stage of a coat hanger.

That Mr. Franchot would form a “business advisory group,” is wonderful theatre of Clintonesque proportions and a continuation of the intellectual dishonesty that pervades his life.
_____


Oct 16, 2006 5:00 AM

BALTIMORE - Last week, Democratic comptroller candidate and D.C. lobbyist Peter Franchot said he was forming a business advisory council. The group of 40 “business executives and leaders” from around the state are supposed to provide him with insight on economic and community development issues.

Good for him. But since it’s one of the first times he has shown a remote interest in fiscal responsibility, it strikes us as a bit late.

He campaigned for the job during the primary season with promises to raise teacher salaries, protect the environment, build more schools and support universal health care, among other issues. As comptroller, he won’t be able to do any of those things. The job requires the office holder to vote on state contracts, collect taxes and to oversee the state pension fund.

And it’s not as if the advisory council will contribute to Franchot’s economic enlightenment.

The vast majority of the group are lawyers, communications experts, investors, consultants and bankers, who push money and agendas around rather than create jobs and products. A few board members actually run businesses, but sorely lacking are entrepreneurs, who create the vast majority of jobs.

What does Casper Taylor, the former speaker of the Maryland House of Delegates, know about making payroll? And for such a progressive candidate, only a handful of advisers are women.

And as recent current events show, many board members of public companies — who are paid — can only find time to rubber-stamp executive decisions. So the success of a volunteer committee seems highly unlikely. Besides, “leaders” achieve that status by focusing on their work, not on extracurricular activities.

If Franchot really cares about being a “fiscal watchdog,” he must focus on evaluating whether the state’s pension investments make sense and on ensuring the efficient and secure collection of taxes.

####

20061016 Carroll Co Republican Candidates Contact Info


CARROLL COUNTY REPUBLICAN CANDIDATES and CONTACT INFORMATION:
Posted October 16th, 2006


Additional information and photos can be found on the Carroll County Republican Central Committee website at: http://ccgop.net/eo.shtml
Republican Central Committee of Carroll County P.O. Box 2108, Westminster, Maryland 21158.2108


The Carroll County campaign headquarters, which officially opened on June 10th, is located at 51 East Main Street, Westminster, MD


Governor Ehrlich/ Kristen Cox
Governor/Lt. Governor
Cstottlemyer@bobehrlich.com
www.bobehrlich.com




Larry Haines
State Senate
larry@larryhainesrealtyco.com
www.senatorlarryhaines.com

Allan Kittleman
State Senate
alan@kittleman.com
www.kittleman.com

Donald Elliott
House of Delegates
delegatedon@verizon.net


Tanya Shewell
House of Delegates
tanyashewell@yahoo.com
www.tanyashewell.com

Nancy Stocksdale
House of Delegates
Nancystocksdale@yahoo.com
www.nancystocksdale.com

Susan Krebs
House of Delegates
skrebs@adelphia.net
www.susankrebs.com

Dean Minnich
County Commissioner
www.deanminnich.com/commissioner
www.deanminnich.com

Julia Gouge
County Commissioner

Michael Zimmer
County Commissioner
zimlaw@verizon.net
http://www.voteforzimmer.com/

Jerry Barnes
State’s Attorney

Donald Sealing
Clerk of the Circuit Court
Sealingforclerk@aol.com

Paul Zimmermann
Register of Wills
Atticus90@hotmail.com

Dorothy Utz
Orphans Court


Herbert Reisig
Orphans Court

John Carbaugh
Orphans Court
jaynjay@qis.net

Ken Tregoning
Sheriff


I am a Republican because:
I believe the strength of our nation lies with the individual and that each person’s dignity, freedom, ability and responsibility must be honored.


I believe government must practice fiscal responsibility and allow individuals to keep more of the money they earn.


I believe the proper role of government is to provide only those critical functions that cannot be performed by individuals or private organizations and that the best government is that which governs least.


Finally, I believe the Republican Party is the best vehicle for translating these ideals into positive and successful principles of government.


####

Any additions or corrections, please e-mail me at kdayhoff@carr.org. Thanks


Kevin Dayhoff writes from Westminster Maryland USA. E-mail him at: kdayhoff@carr.org http://www.thetentacle.com/ Westminster Eagle Opinion and Winchester Report http://www.thewestminstereagle.com/ www.kevindayhoff.com has moved to http://kevindayhoff.blogspot.com/


20061016 Gov to St Elections Brd Resolve NAACP concerns

Governor to State Elections Board – Resolve NAACP concerns

Posted October 16, 2006

[For previous posts on Maryland State Board of Elections Administrator and the Maryland primary election fiasco, please see: “20060923 The Linda Lamone Vote-o-matic” and “20060917 Cartoon MD Primary Election Voters What Voters” and “20060915 Crablaw is staying on top of Maryland’s primary election fiasco” and “20060923 Lamoned again and again.”]

_____

Speaking today with Bruce S. Gordon, President & CEO of the NAACP, Maryland Gov. Robert L. Ehrlich has called upon the Maryland State Elections Board to resolve he NAACP’s concerns about Maryland’s upcoming general election.

Of course, since the “state elections administrator for life” has been protected from any lack of performance of her duties by Senate President Thomas V. Mike Miller, Jr., (D - 27, Calvert & Prince George's Counties) and House Speaker Michael Erin Busch (D - Dist. 30 Anne Arundel County); what does she care about any request from Governor Ehrlich.

Remember, Ms Lamone no longer works for Maryland’s executive office as it has for decades and decades. She is now “appointed by the State Board of Elections with Senate advice and consent;” which means she essentially has a job for life as a result of the 2005 Maryland General Assembly’s “Linda Lamone – appointment for life legislation.” Remember: 2005 SB 444/HB 675: “State Elections Office and State Elections Advisory Committee” sponsored by Senator Hollinger and Delegate Hixson?

Oh, anyway, below please find a press release about the Governor’s interest that the State Board of Elections address the concerns of the NAACP - - and the Governor’s letter to NAACP president Gordon:

Governor Ehrlich Calls on State Board of Elections to Resolve NAACP Concerns

ANNAPOLIS – Governor Robert L. Ehrlich, Jr. today called on the Maryland State Board of Elections to expeditiously resolve concerns held by the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People (NAACP) and Governor Ehrlich about Maryland’s elections process. Governor Ehrlich spoke today with Bruce S. Gordon, President & CEO of the NAACP, about Maryland’s election environment.

“The NAACP and I share strong concerns about Maryland’s current election system, including the reliability of electronic poll books, the dependability of electronic voting machines, and the training and supply of election judges,” said Governor Ehrlich. “
To ensure that every Marylander has access to a fair and accurate election system, the State Board of Elections must act expeditiously to address my concerns and those of the NAACP.”

Mr. Gordon encouraged the State to 1) hold demonstrations of the new voting machines in key precincts statewide; 2) formulate a contingency plan to use in the event voting machines malfunction; 3) ensure the electronic poll books are updated; 4) make certain there are adequate numbers of trained election judges who arrive at the polls on time and remain for the entire day; 4) verify that each precinct has a sufficient number of provisional ballots; 5) maintain privacy for citizens whether they vote using tough-screen or paper ballots; 6) ensure that voters fully understand how to cast an absentee ballot.

Governor Ehrlich supports the NAACP’s efforts and is encouraging the State Board of Elections to expeditiously resolve them. The Governor’s letter to the State Board of Elections is attached.


----- #### -----

20061016 Dear Mr. Gordon

Mr. Bruce S. Gordon, President & CEO
National Association for the Advancement of Colored People
4805 Mt. Hope Drive
Baltimore, Maryland 21215-3297

Dear Mr. Gordon:

Thank you for the opportunity to speak by telephone about Maryland’s election environment. Please know that the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People (NAACP) and I share strong concerns about the integrity of the General Election to be held on November 7. To be sure, I support your request for key actions to be taken prior to the General Election to ensure a fair, accurate and accessible election process and I call on the State Board of Elections to take those actions.

The problems encountered by the citizens of Maryland during the September 12primary are unacceptable. Marylanders deserve an election process that provides free, open and unfettered access to cast a ballot and that gives voters confidence that their vote will be accurately counted.

Regrettably, the leadership of the General Assembly has dramatically altered the administration and oversight of the state’s elections over the past four years. Local elections administrators throughout the state have been overloaded with complex legal changes and questionable technology, among other problems, all of which led to the Primary Election fiasco this past September.

In addition, the General Assembly since 2003 has insulated the State Elections Administrator from accountability to the Governor’s Office and, in many respects, to the State Board of Elections. The General Assembly passed legislation that makes it impossible for the State Board to fire the State Administrator, even for actions of illegality and gross misconduct, unless the State Senate confirms a successor, thus virtually eliminating accountability at the top level of the state’s elections system. The General Assembly also handcuffed the State Board’s decision-making process by requiring a super-majority vote (4 of 5 members) before it can take any actions.

Unfortunately, state law does not grant me authority to require the State Board of Elections to perform the six specific items delineated in your letter. Nonetheless, I support the actions you are requesting and, in fact, have called for many of these actions over the course of the past several weeks and months. I can assure you that these topics, especially the contingency plan for voting machine malfunctions and the upgrading of e-pollbooks, are priorities that I have stressed with the board and the State Administrator in public meetings of the State Board of Public Works.

Last year, I appointed a bipartisan elections commission chaired by former U.S. Attorney George Beall, consisting of 5 Democrats and 4 Republicans. This panel made a number of improvement recommendations and forewarned that the local elections boards were not prepared for rapid changes in elections administration and that more resources from the State Administrator were necessary to plan for the implementation of new laws (early voting) and new technology (e-pollbooks). In their rush to gain every political advantage, the leadership of the General Assembly ignored these warnings and created the unstable elections system that we saw in the Primary and still face in the General Election.

In direct response to your Maryland Election Protection Operation effort, I will send a copy of your letter and my response to Mr. Gilles W. Burger, Chairman of the State Board of Elections, and request that they provide a full and complete response to your six proposals within the next week.

Again, I sincerely appreciate the leadership and initiative of the NAACP in protecting the elections process for all citizens of the state and look forward to your continued cooperation in this effort.

Very truly yours,
Robert L. Ehrlich, Jr.
Governor

####For previous posts on Maryland State Board of Elections Administrator and the Maryland primary election fiasco, please see:

20060923 The Linda Lamone Vote-o-matic” and “20060917 Cartoon MD Primary Election Voters What Voters” and “20060915 Crablaw is staying on top of Maryland’s primary election fiasco” and “20060923 Lamoned again and again.”

Kevin Dayhoff writes from Westminster Maryland USA. E-mail him at: kdayhoff@carr.org www.thetentacle.com Westminster Eagle Opinion and Winchester Report www.thewestminstereagle.com www.kevindayhoff.com has moved to http://kevindayhoff.blogspot.com/