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

Wednesday, January 17, 2007

20070117 Thieves steal Cash from Taneytown Church

Thieves steal Cash from Taneytown Church

Wednesday, January 17, 2007 9:34 AM

NEWS RELEASE

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

CONTACT Lieutenant Phil Kasten, Carroll County Sheriff’s Office

100 North Court Street

Westminster, MD 21157

410-386-2759

“Thieves steal Cash from Taneytown Church

Taneytown, Carroll County, Maryland, January 17, 2007 ----

Carroll County Sheriff’s Deputies are investigating the reported theft of approximately $1200 cash and checks belonging to the Taneytown Baptist Church in the 4100 BLK of Sells Mill Road.

Early Tuesday January 9th, a member of the congregation discovered that thieves had removed the money from an unlocked office cabinet inside the church. The monies were fees collected for a trip taken by the parish youth group. The Sheriff’s Office investigation continues…

Anyone with information about this incident is asked to contact the Carroll County Sheriff’s Office at 410-386-2900, or the toll free anonymous TIPS Hotline at 1-888-399-TIPP (8477).

# # #

Tuesday, January 16, 2007

20070107 For Lester White old coins are priceless

For Lester White old coins are priceless

January 16th, 2007

I had missed this story and just found it.

Cassandra A. Fortin has a story in the January 7, 2007 edition of the Baltimore Sun, about local Westminster merchant Lester White and his coin shop:

For dealer, old coins are priceless

Westminster's Lester White cherishes the stories behind the money

Mr. White is a real asset to historic downtown Westminster. Entering his shop and talking with Mr. White is a sheer delight – but then again I am also a numismatist and share his passion for coins.

“…White, now 72, has become well known among collectors and their children. The Westminster numismatist - a person who studies coins, tokens, medals or paper money - opened White's Emporium in 1987, now a coin shop on Main Street.”

[…]

Then he opened White's Emporium, which started as an antique and coin shop. Later he closed the antique portion of the business to focus on coins. He bought unique coins, rather than rare ones, to sell, he said.

"I don't seek out the expensive coins," said White, who has been active in as many as eight coin clubs around the country. Instead, he looks for coins that tell a story.

[…]

Most of White's teaching takes place when patrons visit the shop looking for a coin. He works with the adult and younger customers, said Robert Ruby, the president of the Carroll County Coin Club.

[…]

His generosity is second only to his desire to introduce people to the stories behind the coins. He said he starts by helping the budding numismatists understand the stages of collecting.

Read the rest of the article here.

Westminster has quite a few merchants like Mr. White – different passions and different merchandise – same town, same sense of community.

We need more stories like this – and we can use more merchants and shops like this in downtown Westminster. It is what we do best.

Meanwhile, next chance you get - visit Westminster, visit our shops and enjoy one of our many great restaurants.

Kevin

####

20070112 Gaggle, Alec Baldwin and Global Warming


Today's Gaggle: January 12, 2007

Posted by Gaggle on January 12, 2007 - 04:48.

I thought it was worth an encore...

http://newsbusters.org/taxonomy/term/257

Click here for instructions on running Gaggle daily on your own site. There's also an archive of previous toons available here.


And for more fun than you can stand, read about "Actor Alec Baldwin -- since he woke up one morning believing that he understood politics and had an opinion that American’s would be interested in hearing -- has said and written a lot of absurd things. His recent rant at HuffnPuff has to rank high on his growing list of most inane. Please take a seat, and secure all fluids. You’ve been warned..."

Read it here.

Hat Tip: Brutally Honest -

Alec Baldwin unhinged


Monday, January 15, 2007

20070114 Baltimore remembers Harlow Fullwood


January 15th, 2007

Baltimore’s WJZ Ch. 13 web site is carrying an AP story on Mr. Harlow Fullwood passing away.

http://wjz.com/topstories/local_story_014101033.html


(AP) Baltimore, MD Baltimore businessman and philanthropist Harlow Fullwood Junior has died. He was 66.


Fullwood died from advanced stages of diabetes at the Manor Care nursing home in Baltimore County.


Fullwood was a former police officer, Baltimore Colt football player and Kentucky Fried Chicken franchise owner.


He founded an organization called the Fullwood Foundation. In its 19 years, the organization helped hundreds of young people attend college.


Fullwood died shortly after the 19th annual Fullwood Foundation breakfast this afternoon.


####

200701113 A commentary on the new director of national intelligence





A commentary on the new director of national intelligence Mike McConnell

For other related posts click hereor here.


For a bit more information, click here…


This photo: Rear Admiral John McConnell, 1990


Nation

New Intel Chief: Wrong for the Job , Jan. 10, 2007 | By Robert Baer


...Baer says the CIA needs to stop its overreliance on technology and outsourcing of intelligence. But that's not likely to happen under Mike McConnell...


[Related Where Does Negroponte Leave Intelligence? The director's surprising move to the State Department raises new questions about much-needed reforms in the spy community]



_____

Robert Baer, (“a former CIA field officer assigned to the Middle East, is the author of See No Evil and, most recently, the novel Blow the House Down.”) has gone to what many consider to be the “unusual task” of writing a dissent about appointing retired Rear Admiral John Michael "Mike" McConnell - - and then having it published in “Time” magazine.



Among the important points that need to be called to your attention:


[…]

“…The CIA is hemorrhaging people, with the vast majority leaving to work for contractors, like Booz Allen. They're lured by higher salaries and double dipping (on top of their government retirement packages). They often end back up at the CIA with a green contractor's badge, doing pretty much the same job. The important difference is they answer to the company they work for, not the CIA.


“I'm told that today contractors outnumber staff employees. As one CIA officer told me, ‘You walk in the building and all you see is green badges, all doing the retiree shuffle, keeping their heads down, focusing on holding on to their jobs.’ ”


[…]


"You know as well as I do," he said. "Contractors won't take risks. You can't send them out into the field to recruit new sources. They know they make a mistake and they're gone." He's right. It's a lot easier to replace a contractor than it is to fire a government employee.”


[…]


“Rank and file at the CIA will look at McConnell's appointment as part of a trend shifting intelligence away from human sources, the CIA's bread and butter, to the Pentagon, the NSA, technology and outsourcing.”


[…]


“But bin Laden, like most terrorists, has dropped off the digital grid. To find him you need a warm body, not just cool gear.” (my emphasis)


Read the entire piece here: New Intel Chief: Wrong for the Job


####

Sunday, January 14, 2007

20070114 Mr. Wissing has found some Humor in the House

Mr. Wissing has found some Humor in the House

January 14, 2007

David Wissing over at “The Hedgehog Report” has a great post, “Humor in the House.”

It is a video of the fun that breaks out when “A question posed by a Member from the floor asking for procedural clarification.”

Mr. Wissing found it on “Gateway Pundit.”

He also wrote, “By the way, Nancy Pelosi has felt enough heat that she has now agreed to change the just passed minimum wage bill to include American Samoa before it reaches President Bush’s desk.”

Be sure to read his post and view the video. Find it here.

http://www.hedgehogreport.com/index.php/6681

Kevin

20070112 Commissioner Minnich’s State of the County Address

20070112 Commissioner Minnich’s State of the County Address

Commissioner Dean L. Minnich’s remarks

at the Carroll County Chamber of Commerce Commissioner’s

For more information, please see the Carroll County Times, Baltimore Sun and Baltimore Examiner’s coverage.

Kelsey Volkmann of The Examiner wrote “Water, economic growth, highways subjects of state of county address” on Jan 12, 2007. Read it here.

Baltimore Sun reporter Laura McCandlish wrote “Commissioners raise water, traffic concerns” on January 14th, 2007. Read it here.

Marjorie Censer of the Carroll County Times wrote an article which was published on Friday, January 12, 2007, “Commissioner talks water during address.”

Water shortages in Carroll pose a challenge to the county’s growth, but planned reservoirs could alleviate the problem, Commissioner Julia Walsh Gouge said at the annual state of county luncheon Thursday.

The county’s additional residents mean it needs more water than it did in the past, and Maryland Department of the Environment regulations have limited the county’s allocations from wells, she said.

[…]

At the luncheon, organized by the Carroll County Chamber of Commerce and held at Martin’s Westminster, Gouge warned that completion of the reservoirs could still be at least a decade away. Water shortages might make it more difficult to develop the county as planned, both she and Commissioner Dean Minnich said.

Gouge said the limitations on municipal water supplies could push development into farmland, while Minnich focused on their potential to affect the county’s economic development.

Read the rest of her article here.

_____

Commissioner Dean L. Minnich’s remarks

at the Carroll County Chamber of Commerce Commissioner’s

State of the County presentation luncheon

Thursday, Jan. 11, 2007

Martin’s Westminster

611 words

State of the county – 2007

Carroll County’s partners in economic development efforts are the Maryland Department of Business and Economic Development, and the Economic Alliance of Greater Baltimore. We have also added emphasis over the past few years to our commitment to working with the Carroll County Chamber of Commerce and other business associations in the county.

First among our priorities is to help local, existing businesses to prosper and grow. Then we work on recruiting new industry to add to the industrial tax base.

Part of that commitment shows in the development of a new “priority permitting” system to designate significant economic development projects and streamline site review processes.

Also, we developed “Enterprise Carroll,” offering grants for existing businesses in key industries. It invests in new concepts to help companies grow from concept to reality, upgrade technology, pay for research.

We make available Inc. Link, a customized software tool to help firms keep up with issues on training and workforce development, among other things.

We consolidated Four Partners with One Purpose as a small business training and resource center. EDC underwrites the cost of training at CCC in cooperation with Md. Small Business Development Center and Start-up Carroll.

Business and Employment Resource Center provides workforce development services to local business.

The expanding local economy in 2006 grew by $2 million, 2 hundred 10 thousand, 792 dollars, or 15 percent, the largest commercial/industrial base growth in the region. Nearly a million square feet of space was built or renovated, and Carroll County gained 2,533 jobs in 2005.

Spec building shows a healthy trend. More than 60,000 feet of new flex space has been constructed at the Air Business Center, and land is being graded along the Md. 97 Technology Corridor for additional buildings. The Westminster Technology Park is ready to market and several developers have expressed interest.

We’ve worked with General Dynamics and Flowserve as they have expanded, and welcomed new companies like HR Nicholson and Kellogg Snacks Jacketing. Warfield stands to provide space for the expansions and relocations of firms that will be looking for technology-based workforces.

In our publication, Carroll County Profile, stats from the Md. Dept of labor, licensing and regulation for 2005 show a total labor force of 90,928 – smallest labor force in the region, but also with an unemployment rate of only 2.6 percent, among the lowest in the state.

We are, of course, a county of commuters; in the 2000 census, 55.1 % of our workers commuted outside the county.

We’re working to reduce that percentage. There is some irony in the fact that many of our residents who must bear most of the tax burden for services have created the need for those services by moving here in search of less density, less industrial congestion, and less vehicular traffic. That same industrial congestion that contributed to the density and vehicular congestion helped pay the bills where they were.

The largest employer in the county is the public school system, with 3,342 people. Carroll Hospital Center is the largest private sector employer, with 1,438. Springfield Hospital Center, often overlooked as an economic entity, has 833 workers, and Random House, 830. County government, excluding the Sheriff’s department and the courts system, has 650 employees.

Others with more than 300 employees include McDaniel College, Fairhaven, Joseph A. Bank Clothiers, Northrup Grumman, English American Tailoring, EVAPCO, General Dynamics Robotic Systems, Inc., and Carroll Lutheran Village.

The department of economic development is actively engaged in the comprehensive plan update with the department of planning. We have selected Parsons Brickerhoff as a consultant to analyze our industrially and commercially zoned lands and recommend changes in infrastructure and funding strategies that will help us lay the footprint that today’s prospects require.

In short, we have broadened the scope of participation and cooperation, inside the county government, between governments and private sectors, and sharpened our focus on specifics in developing a strategy to make the most of the best resources we have – a high-quality pool of potential employees.

We have made incremental progress, we continue to strive for consistency, balance and preservation of the quality of life that our residents seek.

####

20070112 Mark Tapscott has the story behind this picture


Mark Tapscott has the story behind this picture

January 12th, 2007

Read that story here: “Do You Know Why Bush Cried?

Cross Posted

UPDATE: (I just found a reference to this on Don Surber’s Charleston Daily Mail blog: He is a human being… January 11th, 2007 by donsurber: Rick at Brutally Honest takes a close-up look at the president ... Brutal. Honest. )

And I believe that the photo belongs to: REUTERS/Jim Bourg (UNITED STATES).


####

Saturday, January 13, 2007

20070112 The White House Weekly Review

The White House Weekly Review

January 8-12, 2007

Monday, January 8, 2007

President Bush met with European Commission President Jose Barroso. The two leaders continued discussions on a number of key global challenges, including strengthening our cooperation to advance peace and security in the Middle East and Afghanistan, promoting energy security, stopping the genocide in Darfur, combating terrorism, increasing prosperity and economic development around the world, and advancing free and fair trade.

In the afternoon, President Bush met with bicameral and bipartisan members of Congress on the fifth anniversary of No Child Left Behind. When he came to Washington, President Bush worked with Republicans and Democrats to pass the No Child Left Behind Act (NCLB), which he signed into law in 2002. Since NCLB was passed, we have seen major improvements in student achievement all across America, and by reauthorizing this important legislation, we can help make our schools a gateway to opportunity for every child.

President Bush Welcomes European Commission President José Barroso to the White House

In Focus: Global Diplomacy

President Bush Marks Fifth Anniversary of No Child Left Behind

Fact Sheet: The No Child Left Behind Act: Five Years of Results for America's Children

Tuesday, January 9, 2007

No official public events.

Wednesday, January 10, 2007

President Bush delivered an address to the Nation to discuss the new strategy in the way forward in Iraq.

"The challenge playing out across the broader Middle East is more than a military conflict. It is the decisive ideological struggle of our time. On one side are those who believe in freedom and moderation. On the other side are extremists who kill the innocent, and have declared their intention to destroy our way of life. In the long run, the most realistic way to protect the American people is to provide a hopeful alternative to the hateful ideology of the enemy, by advancing liberty across a troubled region."

President Bush's Address to the Nation

Fact Sheet: The New Way Forward in Iraq

Highlights of the Iraq Strategy Review (PDF)

In Focus: Renewal in Iraq

Thursday, January 11, 2007
President Bush participated in the posthumous presentation of the Medal of Honor to Marine Corporal Jason Dunham, who gave his life to save his fellow troops when he fell on a hand grenade in Iraq. He then traveled to Fort Benning, Georgia, where he participated in lunch with military personnel and families. He later delivered remarks before participating in a demonstration of infantry training at Fort Benning.

"The Medal of Honor is the highest award for valor a President can bestow. The Medal is given for gallantry in the face of an enemy attack that is above and beyond the call of duty. The Medal is part of a cherished American tradition that began in this house with the signature of President Abraham Lincoln... With this Medal we pay tribute to the courage and leadership of a man who represents the best of young Americans. With this Medal we ask the God who commands us to love our neighbor as ourselves to wrap his arms around the family of Corporal Jason Dunham, a Marine who is not here today because he lived that commandment to the fullest."

President Bush Presents Medal of Honor to Corporal Jason Dunham

President Bush Visits with Military Personnel and Families at Fort Benning, Georgia

In Focus: Defense

Friday, January 12, 2007
President Bush signed the Magnuson-Stevens Fishery Conservation and Management Reauthorization Act of 2006. This Act embraces the President's priorities of ending overfishing and rebuilding our Nation's fish stocks through more effective, market-based management and tougher enforcement. It also provides stronger tools to achieve progress internationally to ensure healthy fish stocks, promote better management, and halt destructive fishing practices based on sound science.

President Bush Signs the Magnuson-Stevens Fishery Conservation and Management Reauthorization Act of 2006

Fact Sheet: Magnuson-Stevens Fishery Conservation and Management Reauthorization Act
Sunday, January 7, 2006

Statement on Federal Disaster Assistance for Kansas

Statement on Federal Disaster Assistance for Nebraska

Monday, January 8, 2007

Ask the White House
Margaret Spellings, Secretary of Education discussed the fifth anniversary of the No Child Left Behind Act on Monday.

Statement on Federal Disaster Assistance for Otero County, Colorado

Statement on Federal Disaster Assistance for Colorado

Presidential Delegation to Attend Inauguration of His Excellency Rafael Vicente Correa Delgado

Presidential Delegation to Attend Inauguration of His Excellency José Daniel Ortega Saavedra

Personnel Announcement

Tuesday, January 9, 2007

President Bush Selects Fred Fielding to Serve as Counsel to the President

Press Briefing by Tony Snow

Memorandum for the Secretary of the Interior

Nominations Sent to the Senate for the Judiciary

Nominations Sent to the Senate

Nominations Sent to the Senate

Personnel Announcement

Wednesday, January 10, 2007

Background Briefing by Senior Administration Officials

Nominations Sent to the Senate

Personnel Announcement

Vice President's Remarks to a Joint Session of the Virginia General Assembly

Thursday, January 11, 2007

Text of a Letter from the President to the Speaker of the House of Representatives

President Bush Signs H.R. 486, H.R. 4588, H.R. 6060, and H.R. 6345

Briefing by the Secretary of State, Secretary of Defense, and Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff

Press Gaggle by Gordon Johndroe

Martin Luther King, Jr., Federal Holiday, 2007

Religious Freedom Day, 2007

Nominations Sent to the Senate

Friday, January 12, 2007

Ask the White House
Brett McGurk, Director for Iraq, National Security Council, discussed the President's Address to the Nation on the way forward in Iraq on Friday.
President Bush to Welcome United Nations Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon to the White House

Press Briefing by Tony Snow

Presidential Delegation to Attend Inauguration of His Excellency Marc Ravalomanana of Madagascar

President Bush Signs H.R. 6338, the "Geneva Distinctive Emblem Protection Act of 2006"

President Bush Signs H.R. 482, H.R. 1245, H.R. 4709, H.R. 4997, H.R. 5483, H.R. 5948, and H.R. 6338

Saturday, January 13, 2007

President's Radio AddressEmbargoed until 10:06 AM ET

For More Information From This Week Please Visit http://www.whitehouse.gov/news/

20070103 Worcester County Murder Suspect Arrested


FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASEJanuary 13, 2007

WORCESTER COUNTY MURDER SUSPECT ARRESTED

(Baltimore, MD) – Police arrested a Baltimore County man early this morning who is wanted for the murder of a Worcester County woman whose body was found Thursday evening.

Just after 12:00 a.m. today, a team of Maryland State Police, Baltimore City Police and Baltimore County Police officers arrested Gregory W. Stokes, 30, whose last known address was the unit-block of Right Elevator Drive, Middle River, Md. Stokes was arrested on a warrant from Worcester County charging him with first degree murder. He is expected to be taken before a District Court commissioner in Baltimore County later this morning for a bond hearing.

An around-the-clock search for Stokes led state and allied police to several locations in Baltimore County yesterday. At about 12:00 a.m. today, police went to a residence in the 6200-block of Alumore Way, in Baltimore, where Stokes was arrested without incident. He was taken to the State Police Golden Ring Barracks for processing.

The investigation into the death of Pamela Balk is being conducted by the Worcester County Bureau of Investigation.

CONTACT: Worcester County States Attorneys Office

410-632-2166

###

CONTACT: Program Manager Gregory ShipleyOffice of Media Communications & Marketing410-653-4236 (Office) 410-653-4200 (through Headquarters Duty Officer)

20070112 Mark Tapscott has the story behind this picture


Mark Tapscott has the story behind this picture

January 12th, 2007

Read that story here: “Do You Know Why Bush Cried?

Cross posted
####

20070112 Randy Rager - Businessman remembered for character



Randy Rager - Businessman remembered for character

January 12, 2007 – posted February 12, 2007

The hyperlink is dead and someone asked me the other day about Randy Rager… I have another post about Mr. Rager here: “20070106 Local accountant Randy Rager died last Saturday.”

http://www.carrollcountytimes.com/articles/2007/01/12/news/local_news/newsstory4.txt

For other current news and information in Carroll County, the Carroll County Times web site is here: http://www.carrollcountytimes.com/

Meanwhile, I’ll post this article in which Carroll County Times writer, Ryan Marshall captured quite well who and what Randy Rager was and the impact of his death on the community… The words below belong to the Carroll County Times.

By Ryan Marshall, Times Staff Writer

Friday, January 12, 2007

City officials and members of the Westminster business community remembered Randy Rager Thursday as a man of integrity and character, whose death left a personal and professional void.

“If you looked up ‘gentleman’ in the dictionary, you’d find a picture of Randy,” Westminster mayor Thomas Ferguson said.

Rager, who died Saturday at the age of 53, was the president of the Rager, Lehman & Houck accounting firm.

Rager’s firm provided outside audits for the city, Ferguson said.

His loss leaves a hole in the community, the mayor said.

County Commissioner Dean Minnich was a neighbor of Rager and got to know him at neighborhood functions.

Although they were only acquaintances, Minnich said he’ll remember Rager as a solid citizen and a good neighbor, husband and father.

“I appreciate the relationship he had with his family,” Minnich said.

Along with his wife, Peggy, Rager is survived by children Maggie, Sam and Ally.

“People like the Ragers are the bedrock of our community,” Minnich said. “Everything we like about Carroll County is represented by people like [them].”

Ferguson cited Rager’s character, integrity and genuineness as the qualities he’d most remember.

A person like Randy Rager enriches the community, Ferguson said.

Rager served on the board of Carroll County Hospital Center for 10 years starting in the late 1980s.

The hospital’s president and CEO John Sernulka remembered Rager as a born leader with quiet authority.

He served four years as the board’s chairman, chaired the finance committee and served on several other boards and committees at the hospital.

“When he spoke, he had something to say, and people listened,” Sernulka said.

Rager served 10 years on the board, the maximum amount anyone is allowed to serve consecutively before taking at least a two-year break. Rager was asked to come back to the board after his break and was in the second year of his second 10-year term.

Sernulka called Rager for guidance on tough decisions about hospital issues, he said.

They last spoke at the board’s Jan. 2 meeting, where Rager was appointed to work on issues of transparency in the hospital’s procedures.

“Everything he spoke was truth,” Sernulka said.

Rager also served on the development committee at St. John Catholic Church in Westminster. Officials there remembered him as a strong leader and dedicated father.

Rager was a good person to have at the table when a decision was being made, the Rev. Patrick Carrion said.

He had a steady, calm presence at meetings and listened to what people had to say before he made his feelings known, Carrion said.

Monsignor Arthur F. Valenzano knew Rager for 14 years and admired his integrity and dedication to his family.

Rager was always at his children’s sporting and other events and was an active father, Valenzano said.

For church administrators who are often required to deal with numbers even if they don’t have a natural ability for them, Rager was an invaluable resource, Valenzano said.

“If Randy said the numbers were right, you kind of felt the numbers were right.”

On Monday night, the Westminster Common Council passed a memorial resolution honoring Rager’s contributions to the community and the accounting profession.

Rager’s sudden death was a loss for the City of Westminster as well as his family, Mayor Ferguson said Thursday.

“To have it end in a snap of a finger is hard to take.”

Reach staff writer Ryan Marshall at 410-857-7865 or rmarshall@lcniofmd.com.


20070112 Klingons in the White House

Klingons in the White House

January 12, 2007

Don Surber calls to our attention that there are ‘There are Klingons in the White House’.

Hot Air has video of Rep. David Wu, D-Ore., making that statement about the White House. Wu serves on the Education and the Science committees…”

Thanks for the heads-up Mr. Surber.

####

Well – I like Klingons, I guess: 20060914 Klingon Wedding

20070112 Some wisdom about the silliest debate in journalism


Some Wisdom About the Silliest Debate in Journalism

From Tapscott's Copy Desk

More From this Blog : “Tapscott's Copy Desk

January 4, 11:26 AM - - January 12th, 2007

I was looking for this post when I posted “20070110 Tapscott and Surber have moved their blogs to newspapers.”

Mark Tapscott was kind enough to e-mail a link to me earlier this morning. Thank you.

I could not agree more with what Mr. Tapscott has to say about the issue of traditional “newsprint” journalism versus internet journalism – “Blogging.”

Actually I feel it is an artificial construct developed by some folks in the blogging community in order to make themselves feel more relevant or some folks in the traditional newsprint world who feel threatened.

Most traditional newsprint reporters have been wonderful – if not fun, with whom to work.

Then again, I have run across some stiff opposition and absolute obstructionism on the part of some folks, who shall go unnamed.

And for the most part, not from the newspaper industry – (read: usually liberals who hide behind their political ideology as a fragile identity.)

Although a certain Baltimore Sun reporter or two (not all of them, to be sure – some have been great…) has had a lot of attitude; but I have not been able to distinguish if this “attitude” is not as much because I am a blogger or if it is not just a manifestation of their elitist attitude in general towards the general public, former and current elected or appointed officials or anyone and everyone in the journalism world who is not so privileged to work for the Baltimore Sun.

And the Associated Press. My gosh, what is their problem? In the fortunate instance or two when I either broke a story or was in the lead, AP went out of their way to not mention me. Not so with the Gazette…

Thanks to the wonderful folks – and a great editor - who carry one of my columns, Patuxent Publishing, I am, perhaps, the first blogger to be credentialed by Maryland State government to cover the Maryland General Assembly.

The press pool in Annapolis has been great. Certain liberal legislators have gone out of their way to either ignore me ob disparaging. Heckfire - whatever.

So like I’ve said, with the exception of some isolated incidents with individuals with a general “attitude problem,” I have had very little problem with organizations, other reporters or elected or appointed officials to respond or cooperate on articles for the blog.

A few individuals have gone out of their way to be accommodating. To mention several off the top of my head; Carroll County Commissioner Dean L. Minnich and Republican Minority Whip Allen Kittleman are in the top ten easily. To mention others would be a disservice to the many that have gone beyond the call of duty to get me information and be responsive.

Meanwhile, Mr. Tapscott wrote:

Bloggers and mainstream journalists are polar opposites, right? No love lost between them. One represents the future, the other the past. The traditional reporters do all the work, then the bloggers come along and tear it apart.

And so goes the argument.

Regardless which side of this one you happen to line up on, I am literally on both sides, being a mainstream journalist by career and a blogger by choice. I know a little bit about the strengths and weaknesses of both, and there are many on each side.

The fact is, however, that mainstreamers and bloggers (as well as other online journalists) ought to be cooperating rather than conflicting. If they sought out mutual strengths instead of emphasizing what each sees as the other's weaknesses, together they could do some incredible journalism.

That's been my view for a long time…

Read the rest of his post here. He goes into some greater depth and refers to another article which was apparently part of the etiology of his post…

Also read: “20061209 Is a new age of American Journalism by Mark Tapscott

Kevin

####

20070112 Some wisdom about the silliest debate in journalism

http://kevindayhoff.blogspot.com/2007/01/20070112-some-wisdom-about-silliest_13.html

20070112 Some wisdom about the silliest debate in journalism

From Tapscott's Copy Desk

More From this Blog : “Tapscott's Copy Desk

January 4, 11:26 AM - - January 12th, 2007

I was looking for this post when I posted “20070110 Tapscott and Surber have moved their blogs to newspapers.”

Mark Tapscott was kind enough to e-mail a link to me earlier this morning. Thank you.

I could not agree more with what Mr. Tapscott has to say about the issue of traditional “newsprint” journalism versus internet journalism – “Blogging.”

Actually I feel it is an artificial construct developed by some folks in the blogging community in order to make themselves feel more relevant or some folks in the traditional newsprint world who feel threatened.

Most traditional newsprint reporters have been wonderful – if not fun, with whom to work.

Then again, I have run across some stiff opposition and absolute obstructionism on the part of some folks, who shall go unnamed.

And for the most part, not from the newspaper industry – (read: usually liberals who hide behind their political ideology as a fragile identity.)

Although a certain Baltimore Sun reporter or two (not all of them, to be sure – some have been great…) has had a lot of attitude; but I have not been able to distinguish if this “attitude” is not as much because I am a blogger or if it is not just a manifestation of their elitist attitude in general towards the general public, former and current elected or appointed officials or anyone and everyone in the journalism world who is not so privileged to work for the Baltimore Sun.

And the Associated Press. My gosh, what is their problem? In the fortunate instance or two when I either broke a story or was in the lead, AP went out of their way to not mention me. Not so with the Gazette…

Thanks to the wonderful folks – and a great editor - who carry one of my columns, Patuxent Publishing, I am, perhaps, the first blogger to be credentialed by Maryland State government to cover the Maryland General Assembly.

The press pool in Annapolis has been great. Certain liberal legislators have gone out of their way to either ignore me ob disparaging. Heckfire - whatever.

So like I’ve said, with the exception of some isolated incidents with individuals with a general “attitude problem,” I have had very little problem with organizations, other reporters or elected or appointed officials to respond or cooperate on articles for the blog.

A few individuals have gone out of their way to be accommodating. To mention several off the top of my head; Carroll County Commissioner Dean L. Minnich and Republican Minority Whip Allen Kittleman are in the top ten easily. To mention others would be a disservice to the many that have gone beyond the call of duty to get me information and be responsive.

Meanwhile, Mr. Tapscott wrote:

Bloggers and mainstream journalists are polar opposites, right? No love lost between them. One represents the future, the other the past. The traditional reporters do all the work, then the bloggers come along and tear it apart.

And so goes the argument.

Regardless which side of this one you happen to line up on, I am literally on both sides, being a mainstream journalist by career and a blogger by choice. I know a little bit about the strengths and weaknesses of both, and there are many on each side.

The fact is, however, that mainstreamers and bloggers (as well as other online journalists) ought to be cooperating rather than conflicting. If they sought out mutual strengths instead of emphasizing what each sees as the other's weaknesses, together they could do some incredible journalism.

That's been my view for a long time…

Read the rest of his post here. He goes into some greater depth and refers to another article which was apparently part of the etiology of his post…

Also read: “20061209 Is a new age of American Journalism by Mark Tapscott

Kevin

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