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

Thursday, September 13, 2007

20070907 Francis Scott Key vs Westminster High Game Video Clips




Westminster High School – Francis Scott Key football game at Ruby Field on Friday, Sept. 7 in Carroll County Maryland. www.kevindayhoff.net

Francis Scott Key vs Westminster High Game Video Clips

September 7, 2007

I took three quick videos at the Westminster – Francis Scott Key football game on Friday, Sept. 7 in Carroll County Maryland.

I had the pleasure to attend the “rededication” of the “Ruby Field” sign under the scoreboard at the Westminster High School football field right before the Westminster – Francis Scott Key football game on Friday, Sept. 7.

After the rededication ceremonies, I stayed to watch some of the game and took several short videos…

Update: Steve Jones, writing in the Westminster Eagle, wrote about the game on September 12, 2007:

“The Eagles utilized a standout defense that limited Westminster to just 53 yards on the ground and big plays from two unlikely heroes to record a 14-9 win over the host Westminster Owls in the season opener for both teams Friday night.”

More: 20070912 Westminster Eagle: Eagles top Owls to gain early edge in county

Westminster Eagle

For the latest in Carroll County Sports coverage, read Steve Jones in the Westminster Eagle

Related on Soundtrack: Sports in Carroll County, Sports in Carroll County Football, Sports in Carroll County Football Westminster High School

20051207 Carroll Public Schools’ Extracurricular Activities teaches values

Update: See also: 20070912 Westminster Eagle: Carroll County High School Football Results and Schedule

And:

20070912 Westminster Eagle: Eagles top Owls to gain early edge in county

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20070907 Francis Scott Key vs Westminster High Video Clip 1

20070907 Francis Scott Key vs Westminster High Game Clip 2

20070907 Francis Scott Key vs Westminster High Game Clip 3

_____

Kevin Dayhoff September 7th, 2007 www.kevindayhoff.net

20070907 Francis Scott Key vs Westminster High Game Video Clips

20070912 Westminster Eagle: Carroll County High School Football Results and Schedule

Westminster Eagle: Carroll County High School Football Results and Schedule

High School Football Results & Schedule

Westminster Eagle

For the latest in Carroll County Sports coverage, read Steve Jones in the Westminster Eagle

Related on Soundtrack: Sports in Carroll County, Sports in Carroll County Football, Sports in Carroll County Football Westminster High School

09/12/07

Friday, September 7, 2007

Century 35, South Hagerstown 20

Francis Scott Key 14, Westminster 9

Middletown 53, Liberty 36

North Carroll 32, Joppatowne 17

South Carroll 26, Williamsport 6

Winters Mill 13, Walkersville 7

Friday, September 14, 2007

Century at Walkersville (7 p.m.)

Frederick at Winters Mill (7 p.m.)

Liberty at Brunswick (7 p.m.)

North Carroll at Francis Scott Key (7 p.m.)

Westminster at South Carroll (7 p.m.)

Winters Mill 13, Walkersville 7

Game of the Week

North Carroll at Francis Scott Key

Friday, 7 p.m.

Both teams won their season openers last week. Francis Scott Key used a second-half rally to edge Westminster, 14-9, while North Carroll powered over Joppatowne by a 32-17 score. It will be a battle between North Carroll's explosive offense and the Eagles' stout defense. With one county victory in hand, Francis Scott Key can take a solid lead in the Carroll race with a win over the visiting Panthers.

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20070912 News Clips


News Clips

Sept. 12, 2007

STATE NEWS

A Dixon victory

Rawlings-Blake defeats Sarbanes in Democratic race for City Council president amid low turnout

http://www.baltimoresun.com/news/local/elections/bal-te.md.ci.elect12sep12,0,5780061.story?coll=bal_tab01_layout

Sheila Dixon, the hard-driving West Baltimore politician who became the city's first female mayor, easily defeated Keiffer J. Mitchell Jr., a scion of one of the nation's prominent civil rights families, in a low-turnout Democratic mayoral primary yesterday. In the race for City Council president, Stephanie C. Rawlings-Blake, the incumbent, beat Michael Sarbanes in a contest that pitted the children of two respected political leaders against each other.

"I have never been more honored in my life than I am right now at this very moment," Dixon, 53, told jubilant supporters at a Canton victory party last night. "I am your humble servant and will work tirelessly on your behalf."

Disillusion with City Hall has many voting by not voting

http://www.baltimoresun.com/news/bal-marbella0912,0,962030.column?coll=bal_tab01_layout

Howard Hamlin wouldn't cross the street to vote yesterday. Literally. "I've given up because of so many disappointments," Hamlin said. "They say one thing and do another." I guess you could say Hamlin, a tractor-trailer driver, voted by not voting. Most of the city, in fact, voted against voting yesterday, with election officials reporting one of the lowest turnouts for a mayoral contest in years - about 28 percent, or close to 83,000 voters. It i sn't for lack of issues - people so often cite the two main ones that I've started to think of them as one word, crimeandschools. It wasn't for lack of candidates, many of whom offered plans and even, in some cases, generated personal enthusiasm.

But for the most part, there seems to be a disconnect: People know what the problems are - they've certainly been around long enough - and yet they've stopped believing the solutions are going to come from City Hall.

Arundel executive's dinner party raises money, eyebrows

http://www.baltimoresun.com/news/local/annearundel/bal-md.ar.leopold12sep12,0,2587257.story

Many of the guests were developers with multimillion-dollar projects planned in Anne Arundel County. The price of admission was the state maximum for a campaign contribution: $4,000. And the host at Monday night's exclusive dinner at the Baltimore Marriott Waterfront was County Executive John R. Leopold, who was swept into office pledging that developers would no longer be allowed "to drive public policy in the county." John G. Gary, a Republican who served as county executive from 1994 to 1998, said he doesn't "see anything wrong" with Leopold's fundraising because it's a fact of life in politics.

Talks on ash upset panel

Lack of updates by state and BBSS frustrates council

http://www.baltimoresun.com/news/local/annearundel/bal-ar.ash12sep12,0,6955144.story

Anne Arundel County Council members expressed frustration yesterday that they know little about negotiations between the state's environmental agency and the operator of a fly-ash dump site to clean up contaminated wat er in Gambrills.

Without updates from either the Maryland Department of the Environment or the dump operator, BBSS Inc., the council members said it's difficult for them to make an informed decision on a bill to ban the further dumping of coal ash, a byproduct of coal-fired power plants.

"If we are going to have a bill on such an important subject, it would be nice to have MDE here," said County Council Chairman Ronald C. Dillon Jr.

Councilwoman Cathleen M. Vitale said she had some "fundamental questions." "There are discussions between MDE and Constellation, and we have no sense about what those negotiations are," said Vitale, a Severna Park Republican. "I feel like we are doing this in a hole."

BGE demands GOP stop mailing spoof statements

http://www.examiner.com/a-929978~BGE_demands_GOP_stop_mailing_spoof_sta tements.html

The parent company of Baltimore Gas and Electric is demanding Baltimore County's Republican central committee stop mailing spoof billing statements that mock the company and the governor.

"It is obvious that the party is using the mark and the BGE [overall appearance] to draw attention to its mailing and to deceive recipients about the identity of the mailing's author," Constellation attorney Steven Tiller wrote in a letter to party Chairman Chris Cavey this week.

Constellation is threatening a lawsuit if the party does not stop distributing the mailing and is demanding the names and addresses of all recipients.

Cavey said the committee has already complied with Constellation's request and said the committee never intended "anything malicious."

Lawyers: Panhandling law unfairly targets homeless

http://www.examiner.com/a-929962~Lawyers__Panhandling_law_unfairly_targets_homeless.html

An Anne Arundel County plan to fine roadside panhandlers $500 unfairly targets the poor, say homeless and free-speech advocates. "They are making it a crime to be poor and homeless," said Mary Slicher, executive director of Project for People Lacking Adequate Shelter and Employment. The ACLU, noting politicians can still campaign on Anne Arundel streets, raised concerns about this apparent double standard. "If it's unconstitutional to prevent politicians from asking for money, it's unconstitutional to ban poor people from asking for money," said David Rocah, staff attorney for the American Civil Liberties Union.

Rocah dismissed Anne Arundel County Executive John R. Leopold's argument that the panhandling ban was to save solicitors from getting hurt in traffic. "If it's safe for politicians, it's safe for other people," Rocah said.

Tax Is Deemed Legal but Unwise

http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2007/09/11/AR2007091102028.html

A special tax designed to repay developers for roads, green space and other amenities at Clarksburg Town Center is legal but could lead to overpaying developers who may be able to seek repayment more than once for the same project, a Montgomery County report said yesterday.

Taxpayers might be asked to pay twice for some amenities because developers who have been reimbursed for projects are allowed to try to include them in the special taxing district, known as a development district. Council staff members said yesterday that no developer has been paid twice.

Development Ban Lifted, With Caveats

http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2007/09/11/AR2007091102045.html

City leaders in Annapolis, where many residents have long complained that growth is changing the face of the historic community, voted this week to lift a moratorium on major development and limit growth to areas with adequate public infrastructure and services.

Monday's action came more than a year after the City Council decided, in July 2006, to impose the moratorium until a so-called adequate public facilities ordinance could be adopted. The ordinance requires that, if necessary, developers add or upgrade public infrastructure, including water and sewer, storm water, recreational and maintenance facilities.

Alderman David H. Cordle Sr. (R-Ward 5), who helped introduce the bill Sept. 11, 2006, said, "It's time to stop dragging our feet with it." Cordle noted that by addressing traffic in the adequate pu blic facilities ordinance, the city might effectively cede authority to the state and county, which oversee many of the roadways in Annapolis.

"We would lose every bit of power we have," Cordle said.

Ehrlich Not Ready to Stop Lambasting Democrats

http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2007/09/11/AR2007091102049.html

Robert L. Ehrlich Jr. is nearly nine months removed from the governor's mansion, but he is still seeking money from supporters to counter the "liberals" in Annapolis.

In a solicitation sent last week, Maryland's former Republican governor -- who has been coy about his political future -- asks for donations of $120 to help pay for newsletters and other communications "needed to tell the truth about Annapolis."

Most of Ehrlich's firepower is directed at plans to close part of a looming $1.5 billion state budget shortfall with tax increases. "The liberals in Annapolis are talking about holding a special session of the legislature this fall -- when they think no one will be paying attention -- to push their tax hikes through," Ehrlich writes.

If Ehrlich does not seek a grudge match with O'Malley in 2010, he has the option of running for the U.S. Senate seat now held by Sen. Barbara A. Mikulski (D-Md.).

EDITORIALS/OP[EDS

Patience and politics

http://www.baltimoresun.com/news/opinion/editorial/bal-ed.feud12sep12,0,6013527.story

Gov. Martin O'Malley reignited his public clash with state schools Superintendent Nancy S. Grasmick last week, suggesting that he will soon be looking for her replacement. But for all Mr. O'Malley's wishful thinking, and whatever one may think about some of Ms. Grasmick's actions, she does not serve at the pleasure of the governor - nor should she.

Ms. Grasmick is one of the longest-serving superintendents in the state and the nation, and she enjoys a wide reputation for raising standards and pushing accountability.

Her bosses are the 12 members of the Maryland State Board of Education, and her latest four-year contract runs until June 30, 2008.

The long view
http://www.baltimoresun.com/news/opinion/editorial/bal-ed.cityracesf12sep12,0,7096646.story

As mayor, Sheila Dixon should be looking forward now. She can afford to stop taking it "one day at a time"; her first-pl ace finish in yesterday's Democratic primary gave her that.

And while Ms. Dixon does have a Republican challenger, the last time voters elected a mayor from the GOP was 1963 and Birmingham was erupting, political bosses ruled City Hall, and Ms. Dixon was 10 years old.

The issues most on Baltimore voters' minds today - crime, schools, housing - are complex problems that deserve urgent attention, but also sound thinking and comprehensive solutions that involve every strata of the city

State's suburbs nurture diversity

Region saw 38% rise in immigrants in 6 years, census figures show
http://www.baltimoresun.com/news/local/bal-te.md.census12sep12,0,3210232.story?coll=bal_tab01_layout

Marylanders are increasingly diverse and better educated and endure commutes more grueling than those in nearly any ot her state in the nation, according to figures released today by the U.S. Census Bureau.

Immigrants are fueling population growth even in places not previously known for having ethnic enclaves.

"It's partially a spillover from the Washington metro area," said Audrey Singer, an immigration fellow at the Brookings Institution in Washington, adding that relative affordability makes the Baltimore area attractive to new arrivals.

Unlike decades past, immigrants are bypassing cities for the suburbs, said Singer, who noted that the immigrant population of the Baltimore suburbs doubled in the 1990s.

Don't drink the tax Kool-Aid

http://www.examiner.com/a-929947~Editorial__Don_t_drink_the_tax_Kool_Aid.html

The tax code favors the rich?

That's Gov. Martin O'Malley and certain Democratic state legislators' deceptive potion as they canvas state media declaring the need to raise taxes on everyone in the form of higher state income and sales taxes to finance the $1.5 billion "structural" deficit.

Legislators consistently spend more of our money than we have, and extra money to play with provides no incentive to cut waste.

Until they address the core reason for the "structural" deficit, all tax debate should be canceled.

Now more than ever, we need the ICC

http://www.gazette.net/stories/091207/montedi201234_32360.shtml

There's a new kink in the contorted battle over a vital highway, the Intercounty Connector between Interstate 270 in Gaithersburg and I-95 in Laurel.

A raft load of political leaders in neighboring Prince George's County are throwing their support behind a federal lawsuit filed by environmental groups and homeowners to block the thoroughfare's construction, parts of which are already under way.

In addition to flagging worries that the ICC will decimate the environment, and that the lengthy review and approval process ignored fresh studies on air and water pollution, the politicians also are fretting the $2 billion-plus price tag of the toll road is imprudent as Maryland stares down a budget crisis.

Political dialogue on taxes needed

Necessary opposition ideas are missing from state battle

http://www.delmarvanow.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20070912/OPINION01/709120395

Maryland Gov. Martin O'Malley is towering high on the tax hike bully pulpit, and no one seems to want to step up and challenge him with any alternatives to raising a slew of state levies.

The two-party system in Maryland might be at its weakest point ever. The absence of Republicans in the tax hike battles means that O'Malley only has to convince his Democratic counterparts that more taxes are needed.

Their resistance, at least so far, can only be described as passive at best. The point here isn't that Republicans are needed to keep taxes from being raised; the point is that an opposition party which offers counterpoint ideas is needed to ensure some checks and balances.

All we're hearing now is the sound of one hand clapping. Political dialogue is needed -- quickly.

NATIONAL NEWS

District 1 candidate field builds

7 have filed, 3 are considering -- and there's still months to go in Congressional race

http://www.delmarvanow.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20070912/NEWS01/709120360/1002

With exactly five months until Maryland's 1st Congressional District voters cast their primary ballot Feb. 12, seven candidates have stated their intentions to run, and three more could make an announcement soon.

A race this crowded hasn't been seen on the Eastern Shore since 1996 when 12 challengers -- seven Democrats and five Republicans -- filed to remove U.S. Rep. Wayne Gilchrest, R-Md., from office after his third term. Gilchrest took 65 percent of vote in the primary, and defeated Steven R. Eastaugh in the general election by 50,000 votes. Despite the increased competition, Gilchrest has not altered a single campaign strategy.

"He feels that if he does a good job, and explains why he votes the way he does, then people can make an intelligent decision and re-elect him," said Tony Caligiuri, Gilchrest's spokesperson. "Honest to God, he does not have campaign strategy sessions about these kinds of things.

"Gilchrest reported more than $350,000 in cash on hand in last quarterly filing. His key challenger, state Sen. Andy Harris, R-7-Baltimore County, earned about $175,000 for his war chest. Harris's campaign has scheduled a major fundraiser Oct. 18 with former Republican Gov. Robert Ehrlich.

Fighting for BRAC dollars

Brown: Minority business issues still need attention

http://www.gazette.net/stories/091207/busimlo204731_32356.sh tml

The Pentagon's Base Realignment and Closure program is expected to create a multibillion-dollar contracting pie in Maryland in the coming years. For one thing, the BRAC program does not contain specific minority contracting goals, officials said during a meeting Sept. 5 in Silver Spring coordinated by the Maryland?District of Columbia Minority Supplier Development Council.

The state's goal is to award 25 percent of contracts to minority- and women-owned companies. That figure was 22 percent last fiscal year, up from 15.6 percent in 2003, according to a state report. Brown said he will ''engage the federal delegation" - including Sens. Barbara Mikulski and Benjamin Cardin - to make sure the process allows minority businesses a fair opportunity to win BRAC-related contracts.

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20070913 Townhall’s Today’s Opinions

Townhall’s Today’s Opinions

Thursday, September 13, 2007

Amanda Carpenter: Democrats Disregard Petraeus and Crocker Recommendations

Army General David H. Petraeus and Ambassador Ryan C. Crocker told Congress the President?s surge has started to make political reconciliation possible, but Democrat leadership is unwilling to give the Iraqi government more time and are intensifying calls for withdrawl.

Matt Towery: Public Opposition To Small Troop Reductions Raises Similarity To Carter Days

By a 43 percent to 36 percent margin, poll respondents said they'd be less likely to vote for the Republican nominee for president if a substantial number of troops "have not been withdrawn from Iraq by Election Day."

Suzanne Fields: Inspired by the Nazis

A few days before the sixth anniversary of 9/11, a young man ranting in Arabic accosted a rabbi walking home from his synagogue in an upscale neighborhood of Frankfurt, and stabbed him.

William Rusher: Only time will define the Republican nominee

With former Sen. Fred Thompson's official declaration of his candidacy, the race for the Republican presidential nomination has now assumed the shape that seems likely to characterize it right down to the finish line.

Donald Lambro: GOP looks for edge in early primaries

Republicans are having a field day in Michigan and Florida, accusing the Democrats' presidential front-runners of planning to boycott the states' early primaries next January.

George Will: Is Fred necessary?

Fred Thompson's plunge into the presidential pool -- more bellyflop than swan dive -- was the strangest product launch since that of New Coke in 1985.

Paul Weyrich: The Thompson Campaign

At last Fred D. Thompson is in the race. We shall soon learn whether Thompson lives up to expectations.

Cal Thomas: The non-candidate: God

There is one person who is definitely not running, but may be invoked as the ultimate adviser. That would be God.

Larry Elder: Oprah's Great Black Hope

According to Winfrey, she bases her support not on politics, but because Obama's candidacy sends a message of "hope."

Emmett Tyrrell: Campaigning with the Clintons and the Same Old Gang

It has happened again. Last Monday (Sept. 10) at 6:40 p.m., just as the network news programs were getting under way, the Clinton presidential campaign released some disturbing news.

Marvin Olasky: Emphasize Earning, Dump Dependency

Is international poverty best fought by distributing aid or by selling inexpensive products with names such as MoneyMaker?

Dick Morris and Eileen McGann: Iowa vs. America

In America, Hillary Clinton holds a solid and enduring 15- to 20-point lead over Barack Obama, who, in turn, enjoys a 2-to-1 advantage over John Edwards, who languishes in third place.

Ann Coulter: From the halls of Malibu to the shores of Kennedy

Democrats claim Gen. David Petraeus' report to Congress on the surge was a put-up job with a pre-ordained conclusion. As if their response wasn't.

Caroline B. Glick: Column One: Where America and Iraq converge

General David Petreaus and US Ambassador to Iraq Ryan Crocker's long-anticipated Congressional testimonies this week were edifying on two levels.

Hugh Hewitt: 9/11 Anniversary: What?s the Future for al Qaeda?

On the sixth anniversary of 9/11, Hugh Hewitt, host of the nationally syndicated ?Hugh Hewitt Show,? interviewed Pulitzer Prize winning author of ?The Looming Tower: al Qaeda and the Road to 9/11? Lawrence Wright about General Petraeus?s report on the Iraq war, the new bin Laden videotape and the global threat of al Qaeda.

Diana West: Compulsory Universal Health Insurance -- Neither a New Idea, Nor a Good One

In 1912, Theodore Roosevelt considered "mandatory universal health insurance" a high domestic priority. Critics at the time, including physicians, pharmacists, insurers and businesses, deemed mandatory health insurance authoritarian -- and even un-American.

Amanda Carpenter: Petraeus Responds to MoveOn.org

Army General David H. Petraeus told a group of reporters: ?Needless to say? and to state the obvious?I disagree with the message of those that were exercising the First Amendment right that generations of soldiers have sought to preserve for Americans. Some of it was just flat, completely wrong and the rest was at least more than arguable.?

John McCaslin: On the American dime?

He's a Democratic congressman indicted on 16 federal counts of bribery. He was videotaped by the FBI accepting $100,000 from an investor wearing a wire. His home was raided by federal agents who discovered $90,000 wrapped in aluminum foil in the freezer. Most recently, his congressional office was searched.

Rich Galen: Petraeus - Pia Pium

General David Petraeus, PhD testified before the appropriate House and Senate Foreign Affairs and Armed Services Committees over the past two days and, as expected by anyone who has ever been in the same room with him, bowled them over.

Chuck Colson: The Fertility Gap: More Christians on the Way

Every time you turn around, a presidential candidate whips out his Bible?or a position paper?to let us know how faithful he or she is. Senator John Edwards (D-N.C.) says God "would be happy with the fact that" he's focused on people without health care. Senator Barack Obama (D-Ill.) says we should "discuss religion . . . in the positive sense of what it tells us about our obligations towards one another." Republicans, also, are quick to point out how faith informs their policies.

Tony Blankley: The War On Terror Six Years On

As we start the seventh year since the Sept. 11 attacks, many in the United States and other countries seem largely baffled and conflicted about the nature of the world in which we live.

Austin Bay: The Petraeus-Crocker Testimony

"Are we fixed yet?" House Armed Services Committee Chairman Ike Skelton's question -- asked after Gen. David Petraeus' microphone failed to work -- is something of a metaphor both for Washington and Baghdad.

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20070912 Hatch on Move On by Don Surber


Don Surber calls to our attention: Hatch on Move On

September 12th, 2007 by donsurber


Reference: "20070910 The General Petraeus New York Times Ad"

A grownup has stood up in the Senate to denounce the “Betray Us” ad by MoveOn.org. The Democratic Party should be ashamed that it took Republican Sen. Orrin Hatch of Utah to say what has to be said — and to defend the honor of a man who was unanimously appointed by the Senate.

A taste of what he said:

“Now, anyone who has had the opportunity to meet the General, and anybody who has bothered to follow his career or his academic pursuits, knows that these are dangerous and unwarranted allegations. However, there might be a silver lining to this slander. Libel, really, because it was printed The New York Times. Now, all of America understands MoveOn.org and other groups like it are called the nutroots of our society. These people are nuts and they don’t care who they hurt, they don’t care who they smear they don’t care who they libel. Politics is more important than anything else and power is the most important anything of all.”

[…]

Support the troops? Then support the No. 1 Troop — General David Petraeus.

[…]

Read his entire post here: Hatch on Move On

And if “Don Surber” is not part of your daily reading it should be. Find it here: Don Surber

The video is here and here.

http://s23.photobucket.com/albums/b372/DonSurber/?action=view&current=HatchOnMoveOn.flv



20070912 Hatch on Move On by Don Surber

20070912 Recovery efforts underway from recent 3 alarm fire in Mount Airy


Recovery efforts underway from recent 3 alarm fire in Mount Airy

September 5, 2007 – September 12th, 2007

by Kevin Dayhoff

09/02/2007 Mount Airy Fire Photos by SD and M Dorrance


In the early morning hours of Sunday, Sept. 2, the town of Mount Airy was awakened to a three-alarm fire in the 200 block of South Main Street.


The damage is estimated to be around $4 million for six businesses, and five apartments destroyed in the historic main downtown business district of Mount Airy. The businesses affected by the fire, included Larienzo’s Brick Oven Cafe, A Do or Dye Day Spa & Salon, Déjà vu, Retro Metro, Inspiration Point, and the Olde Towne Restaurant.


An empty lot vacated by a fire which destroyed a grocery store a number of years ago separated the fire from the newly renovated Town Hall, which was unharmed.


Two buildings were destroyed, the Watkins building owned by Bill Chapman and the Bohn building owned by Rob Scranton. The American Red Cross provided assistance for the displaced apartment residents.


Over a hundred firefighters from Carroll, Frederick, Montgomery, and Howard counties fought the blaze. There no reports of injuries.


Fighting the fire was reported to have been difficult and complicated by a relatively narrow Main Street, overhead wires, various other access issues, and challenges with obtaining enough water. None of the buildings or businesses involved had sprinkler systems.


The small town of about 8,200 residents which straddles the Frederick and Carroll County line has been the scene of disastrous fires in the past - on February 24, 1903, March 25, 1914, June 4, 1925, and May 9, 1969. Another fire on February 10, 1935 destroyed the old Mount Airy High School on North Main Street.


Mount Airy Councilwoman Wendi Peters, a 3rd generation elected town official said she was at the fire most of day on Sunday. “The fire brought back sad memories of the mill fire (in 1969.) I was young at the time. My father was a firefighter. I will always remember the charred smell… from the smoke.”


The fire was “shocking and devastating” as she watched the fire with many of the town’s residents. “There were a lot of heavy hearts. I spent a great deal of time talking with the business owners and helping feed the firefighters. We have a really strong community and we will rebuild. But it will take the entire community.”


Scranton is investigating setting up temporary modular buildings in the parking lot at the train station on Main Street; such as those used in the aftermath of the tornado which destroyed vast portions of the southern Maryland town of La Plata a number of years ago.


U.S. Rep. Roscoe Bartlett, Dist.-6, and various state and Carroll County officials are scheduled to visit for the purpose of determining what state, federal or county aid may be available for the community in their efforts to rebuild.


“It is our hope that by next week the businesses will have a base of operations (in the modular buildings),” said Peters. “It was clear at the (emergency town council) meeting (the night after the fire,) from telephone calls and e-mails that the community is coming together behind rebuilding.”


Donations to help those affected by the fire can be left at the Mount Airy Town Hall, 110 S. Main Street, or sent to the Mount Airy Disaster Relief Fund, P.O. Box 53, Mount Airy MD, 21771 or any New Windsor State Bank branch. All donations are tax deductible.





Kevin Dayhoff writes from Westminster Maryland USA.

E-mail him at: kdayhoff AT carr.org



Wednesday, September 12, 2007

20070912 This week in The Tentacle

This week in The Tentacle

Wednesday, September 12, 2007

Jack Molesworth touched many lives

Kevin E. Dayhoff

Ever since John E. "Jack" Molesworth, 80, a Western Maryland College graduate, accomplished Frederick and Carroll County area football coach and educator, died August 31 at Frederick Memorial Hospital from injuries from a fall, accolades and tributes have poured in from community leaders about the life accomplishments of this great man.


Tuesday, September 11, 2007

Media Guru

Roy Meachum

Whatever just charges can be made of ineptness in the current White House, nobody doubts the president has displayed genius in selecting his media gurus. Whoever currently holds the job is performing in the bedazzling tradition of his predecessors.


Monday, September 10, 2007

A Political Manifesto - Part One

Richard B. Weldon Jr.

Who am I? This is a rhetorical question, but also an important exploration of philosophy, a political self-assessment in the face of aging, maturing, and awareness.


Friday, September 7, 2007

"Remember Me"

Roy Meachum

The realization first popped up in Rome, in 1968. An Italian-American Marine lance corporal hijacked a TWA flight in California. In what turned out to be the longest hijacking in history, Raffaele Minichiello diverted the jet to the land where he was born 20 years before. He broke the law. No question.

Halloween 2008 Nightmares

Edward Lulie III

This is over a year early but here are two separate nightmarish dreams for Halloween 2008, one for the political left and one for the political right.sweet dreams all.


Thursday, September 6, 2007

R.I.P. Jack Molesworth

John W. Ashbury

William Shakespeare once wrote "The evil that men do lives after them, / The good is oft interred with their bones." That won't be the case with Jack Molesworth.

Michael Vick - A Perspective

Patricia A. Kelly

Make no mistake. Michael Vick was wrong. Raising dogs under cruel conditions, torturing them as they are trained to fight, killing them painfully when they fail to live up to expectations.It's wrong.


Wednesday, September 5, 2007

Mount Airy: The Little Town That Could

Kevin E. Dayhoff

In the early morning hours of last Sunday, the town of Mount Airy was rudely awakened just past 4 A.M. to a three-alarm fire. Hardly anything strikes fear in the heart of a community as does a major fire.

The Great Barrier Reef

Tom McLaughlin

Cairns, Australia (pronounced cans), is located at the very top of the eastern coast also known as the Gold Coast. A resort town, it is the jumping off point for explorations on the Great Barrier Reef or "the reef" as known there.


Tuesday, September 4, 2007

And Still They Go

Roy Meachum

Writing two weeks ago I listed the more prominent departures from the White House, but I strongly pointed out the men and women should not be compared to "rats deserting a sinking ship." I may have been wrong.

The Path to Change

Farrell Keough

The paradox of white blindness and an inability to acknowledge minorities as people is one of the real life problems set forth in the book White Guilt - How Blacks & Whites Together Destroyed the Promise of the Civil Rights Era by Shelby Steele.


Monday, September 3, 2007

Breaking Ground

Richard B. Weldon Jr.

Last week's mail included an invitation to a ground-breaking ceremony. This isn't a small event. This ceremony, designating the beginning of a major construction project, signals the most significant change in the history of my hometown.

The Barber of Seville

Tom McLaughlin

It's like the Grand Canyon, the Sistine Chapel, or the Madonna. You just have to see it. You can't describe it, put it on postcards or watch it on television.

20070912 Reuters: Japanese PM Abe announces resignation By Yoshiyasu Shida

Reuters: Japanese PM Abe announces resignation By Yoshiyasu Shida

This is a bit of a setback…

Reuters: Japanese PM Abe announces resignation

Wed Sep 12, 2007 1:07 AM EDT

By Yoshiyasu Shida

TOKYO (Reuters) - Embattled Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe, struggling after a bashing at the polls and suffering low support rates, said on Wednesday that he would resign.

The hawkish 52-year-old Abe took office just one year ago promising to boost Japan's global security profile and pursue economic reforms and growth.

Media reports of the surprise decision caused the yen and stocks to slip, on concerns about political uncertainty.

On Sunday, Abe had indicated that he would step down if he failed to extend a Japanese naval mission supporting U.S.-led operations in Afghanistan.

Opposition parties, which won control of parliament's upper house in the July poll and can delay the enabling legislation, had been preparing to grill him on the topic in parliament on Wednesday afternoon.

"The timing is astonishing. It's a huge surprise. He said he would risk his job in passing the antiterrorism law, so I don't know why he is resigning before making the effort," said Koichi Haji, chief economist at NLI Research Institute.

The LDP and its junior partner suffered a drubbing in the July election, and his support ratings have floundered amid a row over pensions and a series of financial scandals involving cabinet ministers.

LDP Secretary-General Taro Aso, a close Abe ally who shares most of his hawkish views on security policy, is generally seen as frontrunner to succeed as LDP president and hence, prime minister.

Read the rest here: Japanese PM Abe announces resignation


20070911 Cybercast News Service News on the Web

Cybercast News Service News on the Web

By Susan Jones, CNSNews.com Senior Editor

September 11, 2007 03:08 pm

Fox News:
Crocker: Withdrawal Plan Could Spark Iraqi 'Street Fight'
Las Vegas Sun/AP:
Bush Marks Sept. 11 Anniversary with Moment of Silence
WTOP/AP:
Key Republican Questions Iraq Strategy
New York Times:
'Empty Calories' From Petraeus, Crocker
Washington Times:
Vietnam Veterans Memorial Vandalized
Washington Times:
Congress Ready to Cut Funding for UN Human Rights Council
Denver Post:
Teachers to broach 9/11 carefully, if at all
Washington Post:
Clinton's Campaign To Return $850,000
Her Team Cuts Ties To a Top Fundraiser Jailed in Fraud Case
Boston Globe:
Petraeus sees 2008 troop cut but long road to Iraq stability
Surge is called effective, violence level still high
Boston Globe:
Ad critical of general 'Betray Us' assailed in GOP camp
Boston Globe:
MoveOn's McCarthy Moment
Washington Post:
The General Does Battle With . . . a Broken Mike
Washington Times:
General defends report, integrity
Washington Times:
Democratic hopefuls shun 'war on terror' label
Washington Times:
Al Qaeda still plotting another U.S. attack
USA Today:
Homeland Security ramps up screening for private planes
New rules set for U.S.-bound flights
Fox News:
Petraeus: Al Qaeda in Iraq Still Dangerous, But Not as Strong
USA Today:
Giuliani's role in '01 gives him slight edge
USA Today:
Iraqi forces can't secure nation alone, al-Maliki says
Rocky Mountain News:
Bin Laden wants 'caravan' of martyrs
Houston Chronicle/AP:
Senators move to stop Mexican trucks
Fox News/AP:
Scientists: Computers May Soon Be Smarter Than Humans
Fox News/AP:
Buffalo Bills Tight End's Spinal Cord Injury 'Catastrophic,' Life-Threatening
BBC:
Rocket injures dozens in Israel
Washington Post:
Teams to Take Up Issues of Palestinian Statehood
Boston Globe:
Burglary at Romney Hqtrs. Not Politically Motivated
Boston Globe:
Companies Develop 'Carbon Labels' for Their Products
66 pounds of gases were emitted in producing this shoe
San Francisco Chronicle:
UC to seek court order to remove tree sitters
Las Vegas Sun/AP:
Firefighters Plan to Read Names on 9/11
BBC:
US: Wiretaps 'foiled terror attacks'
Boston Globe:
Hurricane season forecasts were off
Washington Post:
Newborn Baby Tossed Out With the Trash
Washington Post:
Craig Asks Court to Waive His Guilty Plea
Chicago Sun-Times:
Mexican rebel group takes credit for attacks that cut oil and gas supplies
Fox News:
Controversy Clouds 9/11 Memorial
BBC:
EU gives up on 'metric Britain'
USA Today:
Hagel to retire from Senate after term
Boston Globe:
Jane Wyman; ex-wife of Reagan, Dies

19470912 - 60 years ago today: Congoleum Rug Company Damaged By Fire

19470912 - 60 years ago today: Congoleum Rug Company Damaged By Fire

Democratic Advocate, September 12, 1947.

19 Pieces of Equipment From 13 Companies Bring Blaze Under Control In Large Warehouse At Cedarhurst

—The Congoleum plant at Cedarhurst, along the W. M. R. R. suffered its second heavy loss by fire Monday night when the rag warehouse caught fire from combustion. The building was sheet iron and 700 feet long. The first occurred years ago.

The following fire departments fought the blaze: Arcadia, Owings Mills, Pikesville; Sykesville, Boring, Glyndon, Reisterstown, Hereford, Cockeysville, Towson, Ellicott City, Pleasant Valley, Union Bridge, Mount Airy, Manchester, Hampstead and Westminster.

It was estimated that 300 firemen with 19 pumpers poured water into the rag piles for several hours before it was brought under control. During the height of the fire, flames were visible a mile and a half away, attracting hundreds of spectators.

A plant official reported that the warehouse was filled to capacity with from 5,000 to 10,000 tons of baled rags. No estimate of the damage was given by company officials.

The warehouse stands beside the North Branch of the Patapsco River, from which firemen pumped water, and is separated from another large building by railroad tracks.

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