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

Friday, July 31, 2009



*****

Carroll County 4H FFA Fair: “The Conversation”

Carroll County 4H FFA Fair: “The Conversation”


July 30, 2005 - July 30, 2009

Carroll County Agriculture Center Board members stop for a quick conversation during the week of the Carroll County 4-H FFA Fair – four years ago - on July 30, 2005

Click here for a larger image.

To see the July 2009 Carroll County 4-H Fair Schedule go here: JY2009 Carroll County Md 4-H and FFA Fair Schedule http://tinyurl.com/m94c9t

For Fair coverage over the years, go here: 4H Carroll Co 4H FFA Fair

For 2009 Fair coverage go here: 4H Carroll Co 4H FFA Fair 2009

Check out Carroll County Times staff writer Carrie Ann Knauer’s fair blog at www.carrollcountytimes.com/talk/4h.

(20070730b3_Cowmania: http://twitpic.com/c7b9e)

20050730-CCFair-(1)LMCBbsm.gif

20050730 sdosm CCFair July 30 2005 The Conversation

http://twitpic.com/c88gw Carroll County 4H FFA Fair: “The Conversation” 20050730-CCFair-(1)LMCBbsm http://tinyurl.com/ntat7j

http://kevindayhoff.blogspot.com/2009/07/carroll-county-4h-ffa-fair-conversation.html http://tinyurl.com/ntat7j
*****

Thursday, July 30, 2009

Recent Explore Carroll articles and columns by Kevin Dayhoff



Recent Explore Carroll articles and columns by Kevin Dayhoff

And a letter to the editor in which I was mentioned…

High winds in Sykesville might not be a twister
Published July 27, 2009 by Carroll Eagle, Eldersburg Eagle
SYKESVILLE — Strong winds whipped through Carroll County’s rolling hills Sunday evening was enough to cause damage to homes, but the National Weather Service says that it did not appear to be a tornado. The storm downed trees and power lines, damaged cars ... ...

Lighting the faces of children, and a dark day for taxation
Published July 26, 2009 by Carroll Eagle
... of state and national government, we may be feeling "very blue over the outcome" for many years. When he is not feeling blue over taxes, Kevin Dayhoff may be reached at kevindayhoff AT gmail.com, or visit him at http://www.westminstermarylandonline.net/. ...

Hoby Wolf advocates for things the county has already done
Published July 26, 2009 by Carroll Eagle
... on this project. They have. On Feb. 26, 2007, Commissioner Michael Zimmer visited Harford County's facility (along with Eagle columnist Kevin Dayhoff.) Then, the board traveled to York, Pa., on April 30, 2007, to view that operation. They have also been to ... ...

Westminster council meeting details city improvements and comprehensive plan
Published July 25, 2009 by Westminster Eagle
... for the annual Christmas parade. With that, council president Damian Halstad gaveled the meeting to a close and folks quickly paraded out the door.

Jackson's death created a wave of empathy in Westminster
Published July 19, 2009 by Carroll Eagle, Westminster Eagle
... our citizens on hearing the mournful intelligence of Jackson's death ..." When he is not listening to the music of the "Jackson 5," Kevin Dayhoff may be reached at kevindayhoff AT gmail.com, or visit him at http://www.westminstermarylandonline.net/....

Hampstead man arrested for setting Greens Apartments fire
Published July 13, 2009 by Carroll Eagle, Westminster Eagle
damage is estimated at $450,000, according to fire marshals. Kevin Dayhoff contributed to this report....

DAYHOFF: 11th Air Cavalry Troop memorial recalls service of Carroll natives
Published July 11, 2009 by Westminster Eagle
... to help honor these men and their families, as well those others named on the memorial who paid so dearly in the service of their community and nation.

Bringing Corbit's Charge, and Douglass, back to Westminster
Published July 5, 2009 by Carroll Eagle
... for his age," Crutcher responded that Douglass has "rested a lot" over the years. When he's not traveling back in time to the 1800s…

DAYHOFF: Margaret Mitchell wrote what she knew; the rest is gone with the wind
Published July 2, 2009 by Westminster Eagle
... And that is all I know for right now. Hope you and your family have a great Fourth of July weekend.

Westminster was all abuzz for the great fly roundup of 1914
Published June 28, 2009 by Carroll Eagle
... reminds me that it was Groucho Marx who once said, "Time flies like an arrow; fruit flies like a banana." When he is not swatting flies…visit him at http://www.westminstermarylandonline.net/....


DAYHOFF: Hoffa Field and the Sheathing of the Sword
Published June 23, 2009 by Carroll Eagle, Westminster Eagle
... . Lightner and the June 1922 American Sentinel newspaper article have left us with an extensive and fascinating account of the “The Sheathing of the Sword.”

'Year without summer' killed crops ... and created a monster
Published June 21, 2009 by Carroll Eagle, Westminster Eagle
... village folk that it's not a bad idea to keep a torch handy on these cool summer nights. When he is not playing with laboratory-harnessed lightning…

Historic Blue Ridge College bell dedicated In Union Bridge
Published June 20, 2009 by Westminster Eagle
UNION BRIDGE — Several hundred folks braved threatening weather June 20 to witness the unveiling and dedication of the historic 1900 Blue Ridge College bell in Lehigh Square, the original site of the college which had thrived in Union Bridge from 1898 to ... ...

When city got 'sole' in the 1920s, it was cause for a celebration
Published June 14, 2009 by Carroll Eagle
... be the guest speaker. There will be a retirement ceremony for worn flags. Guests may bring old flags for retirement. When he is not waving the flag…

Remember when you could walk to work in Westminster?
Published June 7, 2009 by Carroll Eagle
When he's not on a "walk-about" in Westminster…

Company H: from the Frizellburg greenhouses to the sands of Omaha Beach
Published June 3, 2009 by Westminster Eagle
... (have) come a long way from the old parade field in Frizellburg.” Kevin Dayhoff writes from Westminster.

Dayhoff: New councilmember tackles alleged hit and run driver
Published June 1, 2009 by Westminster Eagle, Carroll Eagle
... Westminster city police arrived and took control of the situation The accident is under investigation. All in a day’s work. Kevin Dayhoff writes from Westminster.

In 1925, planting the seeds of employment, production
Published May 31, 2009 by Carroll Eagle
When he's not roaming the streets of historic Westminster looking for old factories…

Celebration of memory and change
Published May 26, 2009 by Westminster Eagle
This year’s Westminster Memorial Day ceremonies witnessed many changes over the past — although the solemn tradition of 142 years continued. On Memorial Day the normal hustle and bustle of downtown Westminster paused to remember fallen veterans, and ... ...

Dayhoff: Maryland National Guard Company H, had its beginnings in the flower business
Published May 22, 2009 by Westminster Eagle
... We are deeply indebted to those who fought and died to give us the unalienable right to live free and cherish liberty in the pursuit of happiness. Kevin Dayhoff writes from Westminster.

20090728 Recent Explore Carroll articles columns by KED


*****

July 30 1890 Construction of the Library of Congress

July 30 1890 Construction of the Library of Congress

http://tinyurl.com/mkzsuv

http://memory.loc.gov/

Library of Congress

Item Title
Construction of the Library of Congress, Washington, D.C., July 30, 1890.

Created/Published
1890 July 30.

Notes
Source unknown.

Subjects
Building construction.
Library of Congress Thomas Jefferson Building (Washington, D.C.)
Panoramic photographs.
Cyanotypes.
United States--District of Columbia--Washington (D.C.)

Related Names
Handy, Levin C. (Levin Corbin), 1855-1932, photographer.

Medium
1 photographic print : cyanotype ; 9 x 32 in.

Call Number
LOT 12042-1 no. 8

SPECIAL TERMS OF USE
No known restrictions on publication.

Part of
Panoramic photographs (Library of Congress)

Repository
Library of Congress Prints and Photographs Division Washington, D.C. 20540 USA

Digital ID
(
digital file from intermediary roll film copy) pan 6a36140 http://hdl.loc.gov/loc.pnp/pan.6a36140

18900730 sdosm Construction of Lib of Congress

US Govt Federal Lib of Congress, US st Washington DC, History This Day in History, History photos,

*****

Saara - Südame hääl (singel 2009)

Saara - Südame hääl (singel 2009)

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=A2vnSpMUYwc



Muusika: Rhys Fulber & Heiti Mangmann
Sõnad: Saara Kadak

Hoiad kinni veel eilsest?
Surub alla see sind.
Vabasta ja sa näed,
suudad edasi minna.

Kui näed miski sul ees on,
võta vabadus minna
Avasta, näed siis
õige tegu see oli.

Tihti puruned seest sa,
tea õnn on eluviis.
Eesmärk pole see
astu edasi sa.
Astu

Peegel näitab sind vaid nii,
kuidas mõtted on peas
Luba vaid, avastad
endas uue külje.

Läinud aeg see on eilne
tunned surub sind alla.
Oota veel, kuula siis
see on südamehääl.
Hääl

Läinud aeg see on eilne
tunned surub sind alla.
Oota veel, kuula siis
see on südamehääl.
Hääl

Läinud aeg see on eilne
tunned surub sind alla.
Oota veel, kuula siis
see on südamehääl.
Hääl

Läinud aeg see on eilne
tunned surub sind alla.
Oota veel, kuula siis
see on südamehääl.
Hääl

20090728 sdosm Saara Südame hääl
*****

Lighting the faces of children, and a dark day for taxation

Lighting the faces of children, and a dark day for taxation

July 11, 1947 Westminster Lions Club presented Westminster Playground Lights and It was only a little over 60 years ago that Maryland first implemented a sales tax -- on July 1, 1947. http://tinyurl.com/krhy3h

EAGLE ARCHIVE By Kevin Dayhoff Posted on www.explorecarroll.com 7/26/09

http://explorecarroll.com/community/3217/lighting-faces-children-dark-day-taxation/ http://tinyurl.com/krhy3h

If there's anything that jumps out for an historian in any review of old newspaper articles, it's the age-old cliche that the more things change, the more they stay the same.

Such a dynamic is certainly the case when one examines the events of July in Carroll County history.

At the last meeting of the mayor and Westminster Common Council, Ron Schroers, director of recreation and parks for the city, made presentations about service groups contributing to the city.

More than 60 years ago the July 11, 1947, edition of the now-defunct Democratic Advocate carried an article with much of same news.

It reported that the Westminster Lions Club had presented the mayor and council with their "latest improvement" to the Westminster playground — lights.

[…]

In other news from the 1940s, taxes were, of course, just as controversial then as they are today.

It was only a little over 60 years ago that Maryland first implemented a sales tax -- on July 1, 1947.

Read the entire article here: Lighting the faces of children, and a dark day for taxation

EAGLE ARCHIVE By Kevin Dayhoff Posted on www.explorecarroll.com 7/26/09

http://explorecarroll.com/community/3217/lighting-faces-children-dark-day-taxation/ http://tinyurl.com/krhy3h

20090726 SCE Lighting faces children dark day taxation sceked
*****

Wednesday, July 29, 2009

Alexis de Tocqueville and Charles Carroll of Carrollton


Alexis de Tocqueville and Charles Carroll of Carrollton

July 29 2009 by Kevin Dayhoff http://tinyurl.com/lyt9pw

Today is the birthday of a famous French aristocrat, Alexis de Tocqueville, who published in 1835 what many historians to this day, consider to be the foremost classic analysis of American culture, society, and government, “Democracy in America.”

To see a copy of “Democracy in America,” go here: http://xroads.virginia.edu/~HYPER/DETOC/home.html; or here: http://ebooks.adelaide.edu.au/t/tocqueville/alexis/democracy/.

For more information on “Democracy in America,” go here: http://www.tocqueville.org/.

Alexis-Charles-Henri Clérel de Tocqueville was born on July 29, 1805 in Paris.

Today’s segment of “The Writer’s Almanac,” narrated by Garrison Keillor, noted, “In 1831, (Tocqueville) was 25 years old, and he and Gustave de Beaumont, who was just 29, were sent by the French government to study the prison system in America. They arrived in Manhattan at sunrise on May 11, 1831.”

According to my Elon College history textbook, “The American Nation,” written by John A. Garraty, Tocqueville wrote at the time, “We are leaving with the intention of examining, in detail and as scientifically as possible, all the mechanism of that vast American society which everyone talks of and no one knows… We are counting on bringing back the elements of a fine work.”

[I used notes from my 1971 Elon College history class for the http://www.explorecarroll.com/ column I wrote last night for this Sunday’s Archives column on this topic. (Click here for a larger image: http://twitpic.com/c0ysz)

In addition to my Elon College history textbook, “The American Nation,” written by John A. Garraty.

In the fall of 1971, I had Mrs. Holt for History 211-E, 9:05 AM, MWF. The classroom was in CO-206.

In the spring of 1972, I had George Troxler for History 212-G, 10:10 AM, MWF. The classroom was in CO-213.]

In 1831, our fledgling nation was much on the minds of the French for many reasons, but most notably for the fact that it was in that year that France and the United States teetered on the brink of war over monetary claims accumulated against the French for their actions during the Napoleonic Wars.

The dispute raged-on for years and was prosecuted, for the most part, by President Andrew Jackson, who was not only upset with the French, but also with Great Britain – and Canada – and native Americans...

In today’s world, Jackson would have been diagnosed with an anger management problem. Eventually, the French settled the dispute because, as Garraty puts it, Jackson “showed poor judgment, being ready to take monumental risks to win petty victories… (It) reinforced the impression held by foreigners that the United States was a rash young country with a chip on its shoulders and pathologically mistrustful…”

It is an attitude held by much of Europe to this day.

Historians have developed a number of explanations as to why these young writers made the trip. One accounts says: “Both were at odds with the new government of Louis Philippe,” (the last King of France, Louis-Philippe I,) who had just come to power on August 13, 1830, and they were looking for an excuse to leave France.

Whatever the reason, the result was an ageless classic which is studied and interpreted over and over again, to this day.

My Elon College history textbook, “The American Nation,” written by John A. Garraty, observed that “… many of the fundamental traits of the (American) society Tocqueville analyzed may still be observed in America today.”

For example, “The Writer’s Almanac” segment notes that Tocqueville observed: “The American Republic will endure until the day Congress discovers that it can bribe the public with the public's money.”

The “Almanac” segment reports, “For the next nine months, they traveled more than 7,000 miles, from New England to Wisconsin to Louisiana.” I have yet to determine whether or not they came through what we now know as Carroll County.

Although there is an oblique Carroll County connection nevertheless because the man, after whom our county is named, Charles Carroll of Carrollton, was one of the many Tocqueville interviewed – just before Carroll died on November 14, 1832.

Carroll, who was, at the time Tocqueville interviewed him, the last surviving signer of the Declaration of Independence. He was also the only Catholic to sign; and was considered to be one of the wealthiest men in the U.S.

One publication on the travels and work of Tocqueville notes “Tocqueville interviewed presidents, lawyers, bankers and settlers and even met with Charles Carroll of Carrollton, Maryland…”

Carroll was probably a fascinating interview because it was not until after his death that his reputation was rehabilitated…

Dr. Bradley J. Birzer is currently writing a new biography on Carroll, “American Cicero: The Life of Charles Carroll (Lives of the Founders) ,” that is scheduled to be released in February 2010.

In a recent interview with Dr. Bradley J. Birzer, in the Washington Times, (Hat Tip: “Against The Grain,”) it was brought out that Carroll “was one of Alexis de Tocqueville's main informants. So there are moments in de Tocqueville's Democracy in America … when he is being critical of the democratic spirit, and it seems very clear to me that he is taking that from his interview with Carroll…

“He was so critical of what happened to the republic after the founding. He's very critical of the democratic element in the American republic - he's worried that self-interest and greed are replacing republican virtue.”

“So from the late 1700s, Carroll starts being called ‘the hoary-headed aristocrat.’ He starts to be seen as a relic of an older age. But after Carroll dies, there's a resurgence of his reputation. All across the country, the headlines read, ‘The last of the Romans is dead.’”

20090729 sdosm pubver Tocquevilles America

People Charles Carroll of Carrollton, People Tocqueville Alexis de, History 1830s, History This Day in History, Dayhoff writing essays history, Colleges Universities Elon, Dayhoff Elon College University,
*****

WBAL: More Charges Against Mayor Sheila Dixon

MORE CHARGES AGAINST MAYOR SHEILA DIXON

July 29, 2009

A Baltimore grand jury has handed up two more criminal indictments against mayor Sheila Dixon. Read them at wbal.com. For more, stay with am 1090, WBAL radio.

Baltimore's Mayor Indicted Again

A grand jury has returned two indictments against Mayor Shelia Dixon. Dixon has been indicted on some of the charges that were dismissed by a Baltimore judge back in May.

Read one indictment against Mayor Dixon. View File

Read the second indictment handed up by the grand jury against Dixon. View File

Related Articles

Dixon Throws Punches After Indictment; Supporters Speak Out; Former Prosecutor Criticizes Mayor's Lawyer (Saturday, January 10, 2009)

Dixon's Attorney's Wants Specifics In Mayoral Probe (Thursday, March 26, 2009)

Dixon Lawyers: Grand Jurors "Misled" (Thursday, April 23, 2009)

Mayor's Former Boyfriend Cuts Plea Deal (Monday, June 22, 2009)

The hits just keep coming, in yesterday’s news:

PATERAKIS AND HOLTON INDICTED

A Baltimore grand jury has indicted businessman John Paterakis and councilwoman Helen Holton for violating campaign finance laws. For more, listen to am 1090, wbal, or go to wbal.com

Maryland Beach Gets Five Star Rating

City Will Hire 50 Beat Cops With Stimulus Money

Ravens Fans Flocking To Training Camp

Assessing Storm Damage In Baltimore County

Three Dead After Street Sweeper Accident In White Marsh

Microsoft, Yahoo team up to ding Google with Bing

SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -- Microsoft Corp. has finally roped Yahoo Inc. into an Internet search partnership, capping a convoluted pursuit that dragged on for years and setting the stage for them to make a joint assault against the dominance of Google Inc....

Microsoft, Yahoo team up to ding Google with Bing
Health care progress seen on Capitol Hill
Gates: Some US troops may be leaving Iraq early
Alleged DC Holocaust museum shooter indicted
Fed survey: Stabilization seen in some regions
Mom of decapitated baby: 'I didn't mean to do it'
911 caller in Gates case hurt by racist label
Pregnant women front of line for swine flu vaccine

After stunning loss, Phelps rebounds with record

ROME (AP) -- Now that's more like it. Michael Phelps bounced back from a stunning loss with something more familiar - another world record Wednesday....

After stunning loss, Phelps rebounds with record
Brett Favre says no to a comeback with the Vikings
Federer wants to play in Davis Cup playoff
Descenza sets world record in 200 butterfly
Massa takes first steps since high-speed crash
Schumacher to make comeback to replace Massa
Perfect into sixth, Buehrle unravels against Twins
Wainwright stymies Dodgers in 10-0 win

20090729 sdosm WBAL More Charges Against Mayor Sheila Dixon
*****

A Tribute to Paul Causey of Westminster MD Elon College Class of 1950.




I used notes from my 1971 Elon College history class for the http://www.explorecarroll.com/ column I wrote last night for this Sunday’s Archives col http://twitpic.com/c0ysz


It brought back many memories, including:


20080630 A Tribute to Paul Causey of Westminster MD Elon College Class of 1950.
Kevin Dayhoff Soundtrack: www.kevindayhoff.net http://kevindayhoff.blogspot.com/
Kevin Dayhoff Art:
www.kevindayhoff.com
Kevin Dayhoff Westminster:
www.westgov.net

Thursday, May 14, 2009

Kevin Dayhoff Fall 1971 Elon College


Kevin Dayhoff Fall 1971 Elon College

19710000 KED Elon College Football.JPG

Kevin Dayhoff Soundtrack: www.kevindayhoff.net http://kevindayhoff.blogspot.com/
Kevin Dayhoff Art:
www.kevindayhoff.com
Kevin Dayhoff Westminster:
www.westgov.net
Sphere: Related Content


*****

Obama walks past fire engine this AM...

Obama walks past fire engine this AM from Oval Office to Mari... on Twitpic
Hat Tip: markknollerhttp://twitpic.com/c0r42 - Obama walks past fire engine this AM from Oval Office to Marine One on South Lawn.
Obama walks past fire engine this AM from Oval Office to Marine One on South Lawn.
*****

The Verve - Bittersweet Symphony

The Verve - Bittersweet Symphony

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Zx3m4e45bTo



20090728 sdsom The Verve Bittersweet Symphony
*****

Being obnoxious isn’t a crime by Maureen Dowd

Bite Your Tongue by Maureen Dowd

July 26, 2009 Op-Ed Columnist Bite Your Tongue By MAUREEN DOWD WASHINGTON Being obnoxious isn’t a crime.

As we reflect on the arc of civil rights dramas from Jim Crow to Jim Crowley, my friend John Timoney, the police chief of Miami, observes: “There’s a fine line between disorderly conduct and freedom of speech. It can get tough out there, but I tell my officers, ‘Don’t make matters worse by throwing handcuffs on someone. Bite your tongue and just leave.’ ”

As the daughter of a police detective, I always prefer to side with the police. But this time, I’m struggling.

No matter how odd or confrontational Henry Louis Gates Jr. was that afternoon, he should not have been arrested once Sergeant Crowley ascertained that the Harvard professor was in his own home.

President Obama was right the first time, that the encounter had a stupid ending, and the second time, that both Gates and Crowley overreacted. His soothing assessment that two good people got snared in a bad moment seems on target.

It escalated into a clash of egos — the hard-working white cop vs. the globe-trotting black scholar, the town vs. the gown, the Lowell Police Academy vs. the American Academy of Arts and Letters.


Read the rest of her column here: Being obnoxious isn’t a crime

20090726 sdosm Bite Your Tongue by Maureen Dowd

July 26, 2009 Op-Ed Columnist Bite Your Tongue By MAUREEN DOWD WASHINGTON Being obnoxious isn’t a crime.

http://www.nytimes.com/2009/07/26/opinion/26dowd.html?scp=2&sq=&st=nyt
*****
Kevin Dayhoff Soundtrack: http://www.kevindayhoff.net/

Recent columns and multimedia by Maureen Dowd of The New York Times.

  • Bite Your Tongue

    By MAUREEN DOWD. Published: July 25, 2009. WASHINGTON. Skip to next paragraph. Fred R. Conrad/The New York Times. Maureen Dowd ...
  • Times Topics: Op-Ed Columnists

    By MAUREEN DOWD. Race, class and testosterone will always be a ... By MAUREEN DOWD. Americans are so addicted to techno-surfing that they've ...
  • Columnist Biography: Maureen Dowd

    Maureen Dowd, winner of the 1999 Pulitzer Prize for distinguished commentary, became a columnist on The New York Times Op-Ed page in 1995 after having ...
  • Obama's Big Screen Test

    By MAUREEN DOWD. Published: February 21, 2007. BEVERLY HILLS, Calif. Skip to next paragraph. Fred R. Conrad/The New York Times. Maureen Dowd. ...
  • Pharisees on the Potomac

    By MAUREEN DOWD. Published: July 18, 2009. Like cats that have lost their whiskers, ... Fred R. Conrad/The New York Times. Maureen Dowd ...
  • Vice in Go-Go Boots?

    By MAUREEN DOWD. Published: August 31, 2008. PITTSBURGH. Skip to next paragraph. Fred R. Conrad/The New York Times ...
    • United States of Shame

      Forum: Maureen Dowd's Columns. W. drove his budget-cutting Chevy to the ... The Minimalist: 101 Simple Salads for the Season; Maureen Dowd: ...
  • Pixilated Over Pixels

    Maureen Dowd. Go to Columnist Page ». Women are faking it in bedrooms all over America. “When my husband says, 'Can you believe how much ...
  • The Tracks of Our Tears

    Maureen Dowd. Go to Columnist Page ». I grew up in the nation's capital, but I' ve never seen blacks and whites here intermingling as they ...

20090728 sdosm Recent columns by Maureen Dowd

*****
Kevin Dayhoff Soundtrack: http://www.kevindayhoff.net/

Tuesday, July 28, 2009

Transcript of Cambridge 911 Call

FOXNews.com: RAW DATA: Transcript of Cambridge 911 Call

The following is a transcript of the 911 call a neighbor made on July 16 reporting a possible break-in at the home of Harvard professor Henry Louis Gates Jr.

Retrieved Monday, July 27, 2009

http://www.foxnews.com/politics/2009/07/27/raw-data-transcript-cambridge/

911 OPERATOR: 9-1-1, what is the exact location of your emergency?

FEMALE WITNESS CALLER: Hi, I'm actually at (inaudible) street in Cambridge, the house number is 7 Ware Street.

911 OPERATOR: OK ma'am, your cell phone cut out, what's the address again?

FEMALE WITNESS CALLER: Sorry, it's 7 Ware Street. That's W-A-R-E Street.

911 OPERATOR: The emergency is at 7 Ware Street, right?

FEMALE WITNESS CALLER: Well no, I'm sorry. 17. Some other woman is talking next to me but it's 17, 1-7 Ware Street.

911 OPERATOR: What's the phone number you're calling me from?

FEMALE WITNESS CALLER: I'm calling you from my cell phone number.

911 OPERATOR: All right, tell me exactly what happened?

FEMALE WITNESS CALLER: Um, I don't know what's happening. I just had an older woman standing here and she had noticed two gentlemen trying to get in a house at that number, 17 Ware Street. And they kind of had to barge in and they broke the screen door and they finally got in. When I had looked, I went further, closer to the house a little bit after the gentlemen were already in the house. I noticed two suitcases. So, I'm not sure if this is two individuals who actually work there, I mean, who live there.

911 OPERATOR: You think they might have been breaking in?

FEMALE WITNESS CALLER: I don't know 'cause I have no idea. I just noticed.

911 OPERATOR: So you're saying you think the possibility might have been there? What do you mean by barged in? You mean they kicked the door in?

FEMALE WITNESS CALLER: No, they were pushing the door in. Like, umm, the screen part of the front door was kind of like cut.

911 OPERATOR: How did they open the door itself with the lock?

FEMALE WITNESS CALLER: They, I didn't see a key or anything 'cause I was a little bit away from the door. But I did notice that they pushed their (interrupted).

911 OPERATOR: And what do the suitcases have to do with anything?

FEMALE WITNESS CALLER: I don't know, I'm just saying that's what I saw.

911 OPERATOR: Do you know what apartment they broke into?

FEMALE WITNESS CALLER: No, they're just they first floor. I don't even think that it's an apartment. It's 17 Ware Street. It's a house, it's a yellow house. Number 17. I don't know if they live there and they just had a hard time with their key but I did notice that they kind of used their shoulder to kind of barge in and they got in. I don't know if they had a key or not because I couldn't see from my angle. But, you know, when I looked a little closely that's what I saw.

911 OPERATOR: (inaudible) guy or Hispanic?

FEMALE WITNESS CALLER: Umm.

911 OPERATOR: Are they still in the house?

FEMALE WITNESS CALLER: They're still in the house, I believe, yeah.

911 OPERATOR: Were they white, black or Hispanic?

FEMALE WITNESS CALLER: Umm, well there were two larger men, one looked kind of Hispanic but I'm not really sure. And the other one entered and I didn't see what he looked like at all. I just saw it from a distance and this older woman was worried thinking someone's breaking in someone's house, they've been barging in. And she interrupted me and that's when I had noticed otherwise I probably wouldn't have noticed it at all, to be honest with you. So, I was just calling 'cause she was a concerned neighbor, I guess.

911 OPERATOR: OK, are you standing outside?

FEMALE WITNESS CALLER: I'm standing outside, yes.

911 OPERATOR: All right, the police are on the way, you can meet them then they get there. What's your name?

FEMALE WITNESS CALLER: Yeah, my name is (deleted).

911 OPERATOR: All right, we're on the way.

FEMALE WITNESS CALLER: Ok. All right, I guess I'll wait. Thanks.


20090727 Raw Data Transcript of Cambridge 911 call
*****

Committee Votes to Send Nomination of Sotomayor to Senate Floor

Committee Votes to Send Nomination of Sotomayor to Senate Floor

Washington Post News Alert 12:00 PM EDT Tuesday, July 28, 2009

Committee Votes to Send Nomination of Sotomayor to Senate Floor

http://tinyurl.com/mm9q7f

The Senate Judiciary Committee has approved President Obama's first Supreme Court pick Sonia Sotomayor in a largely party-line vote, sending the nomination to the floor. The full Senate is expected to vote next week…

[…]
This morning's vote was as notable for its sharp polarization between the political parties as it was for its lack of drama. All the members had announced in advance how they intended to vote.

Sen. Lindsey Graham (S.C.), a conservative, was the only Republican to join the committee's dozen Democrats in supporting Sotomayor. Two of the veteran GOP senators who voted against her, Charles E. Grassley (Iowa) and Orin Hatch (Utah), have never before opposed a Supreme Court nominee.

The committee's vote was more polarized than its September 2005 vote on the nomination of John G. Roberts Jr., who is now the Supreme Court's chief justice, when Democrats joined the panel's Republicans in supporting his confirmation. This morning's vote, however, was less divided than it had been for the court's most recent member, Samuel A. Alito Jr., in January 2006 when the panel split entirely along party lines.

[…]


For more information, visit washingtonpost.com

http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2009/07/28/AR2009072801180.html?hpid=topnews

20090728 sdosm Nomination of Sotomayor to go to Senate Floor
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Mozilla Releases Firefox 4.0 Interface Mockups


Mozilla Releases Firefox 4.0 Interface Mockups

Jason Cross Jul 28, 2009 1:54 am http://ow.ly/ipaH

Just days after releasing some proposed interface changes to Firefox 3.7 on its wiki, the Mozilla Foundation has put up a page to explore interface changes in Firefox 4.0.

Read more here: http://ow.ly/ipaH

Hat Tip: pcworld What might Firefox 4.0 look like? Mozilla offers a sneak-peek: http://ow.ly/ipaH

techlider Firefox 4.0 têm telas divulgadas pela fabricante Mozilla: Depois de divulgar algumas imagens do Firefox 3.7, a M.. http://bit.ly/jVzLl

20090728 sdosm Mozilla Releases Firefox 40 Interface Mockups
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North Korean Beer Commercial

North Korean Beer Commercial

Retrieved July 28, 2009

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=m3GQkCzJygU



20090728 sdosm North Korean Beer Commercial
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