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

Monday, March 19, 2007

20070319 CCBOC Agenda

The agenda for the Carroll County Commissioners

for the week of March 19th, 2007

Board of County Commissioners

Julia W. Gouge, President

Dean L. Minnich, Vice President

Michael D. Zimmer, Secretary

Carroll County Government

225 North Center Street

Westminster, Maryland 21157

410-386-2043; 1-888-302-8978

fax 410-386-2485; TT 410-848-9747

Agenda for the Week of March 19, 2007 ~ Revision 1

Please Note: This weekly agenda is subject to change. Please call 410-386-2043 to confirm a meeting you plan to attend. All meetings will be in Room 300A, (Unless otherwise noted) Carroll County Office Building.

  • Indicates Outside Activities

Monday – March 19, 2007

9:00 a.m. Capital Project Tour of Carroll County

Commissioners Gouge, Minnich & Zimmer

1:30 p.m. ADMINISTRATIVE ~ Closed

6:00 p.m. Fifteenth Annual Awards Dinner

Carroll County Human Relations Commission

New Windsor Conference Center

Commissioners Minnich & Zimmer

Tuesday – March 20, 2007

9:00 a.m. Planning & Zoning Commission

County Office Building ~ Room 003

Commissioner Gouge

9:00 a.m. Tour of the Carroll County Regional Airport

Westminster, MD

Commissioner Zimmer

2:00 p.m. Conference with Colonel Hutchins of the Maryland State Police

County Office Building ~ Room 300A

Commissioners Gouge, Minnich & Zimmer

5:00 p.m. Baltimore Museum of Art ~ Board of Trustees Meeting

Baltimore, MD

Commissioner Zimmer

Wednesday – March 21, 2007

7:30 a.m. North Carroll High School Career Day

Guest Speaker, Commissioner Minnich

6:00 p.m. Carroll Community College ~ Board of Trustees

Westminster, MD

Commissioner Gouge

Thursday – March 22, 2007

9:30 a.m. Board of County Commissioners Open Community Discussion

Carroll County Office Building ~ Room 300 A

10:00 a.m. Board of County Commissioners Open Session

Department of Management & Budget Recommended Community

Improvement Plan Work Session ~ Mr. Ted Zaleski

1:30 p.m. Board of County Commissioners Open Session

Bid Approval ~ Hot Mix Asphalt Overlay of Five (5) Roads

Department of Public Works ~ Mr. J. Michael Evans

Bureau of Purchasing ~ Mr. Rich Shelton

Pre-Approval of Four (4) Byrne Justice Assistance Grants (BJAG)

1. Group Therapy ~ Local Management Board

2. Intensive Outpatient Drug Treatment ~ Health Department

3. Re-Entry Program for Mentally Ill Inmates ~ Granite House/HSP

(Human Services Program)

4. DWI Treatment Program ~ Detention Center

Invitation to Negotiate the FY2008 Community Partnership Agreement

Department of Citizen Services ~ Mrs. Jolene Sullivan

Bureau of Management & Budget ~ Mr. Ted Zaleski

Chief of Staff Time ~ Mr. Steve Powell

CLOSED ~ Personnel

ADMINISTRATIVE ~ Closed

Friday – March 23, 2007

10:00 a.m. Department of Management & Budget recommended Community

Improvement Plan Work Session ~ Mr. Ted Zaleski

Saturday – March 24, 2007

8:45 a.m. South Carroll Business Association Expo ~ Ribbon Cutting Ceremony

Liberty High School

Commissioner Zimmer

Sunday – March 25, 2007

8:05 a.m. “The Commissioners’ Report” – WTTR

Commissioner Minnich

20070319 African orphans make special visit

Mar 19, 2007 3:00 AM
by Kelsey Volkmann , The Examiner

Bel Air, Md. - They watched Disney on Ice, shopped at a mall and rode escalators for the first time.

Maryland, after all, is far away from the girls’ home in Namibia, Africa the Children of Mount Zion Village, an orphanage established by Mount Zion United Methodist Church in Bel Air and still operating thanks to donations and volunteers from churches throughout the state.

“It’s a lot for them to take in,” said Sarah Dorrance, a seminary student and missionary advocate at Calvary United Methodist Church in Mount Airy, one of the orphanage’s sponsors.

Read the rest of the article here.

Disclosure: I volunteer with the 4-H Therapeutic Riding Program of Carroll County and I kinda know the volunteer whose image appears in the photograph…

####

20070319 Tulipbirds

Tulipbirds
(c) Kevin Dayhoff
March 19th, 2007

Saturday, March 17, 2007

20070317 Who Knew

Who knew?

March 17th, 2007

I don’t know anything unless Katie Couric and the Baltimore Sun tell me.

I received the e-mail "Do you know? I didn't know! How could we?" below from Uncle R2.

_____

Of Iraq, I no longer have a clue as to what information is correct and what is not correct. I do know that e-mail reports, personal interviews with Iraq War veterans and posts on milblogger web sites are consistently in sharp contrast with the “news” we receive from the mainstream media.

In my Tentacle column, “An Uneasy Truce on December 20th, 2006 I wrote:

In particular, the veteran who served in the Kurdish Province had several opportunities to view CNN reports on actions in which he participated and was dismayed by the slant and spin; to the point where he hardly recognized the events as reported.

It will be interesting to see just how our greater society will be affected in future years by the military veterans of Iraq and Afghanistan.

The experience of the politics over the war has caused many of them to lose faith in much of our country's national leaders because they play parlor-politics with the deadly opera of life and death in a combat zone.

And their experience with the news media has caused many veterans to not only distrust, but to disdain the traditional mainstream media.

This stands in contrast with the last overseas armed conflict which fermented social and political upheaval on the home front, the Vietnam War. The government got a black eye, but the media came out smelling like a rose.

Read the rest of The Tentacle column here: An Uneasy Truce

_____

Here is the e-mail that I just received…

Do you know? I didn't know! How could we?


Did you know that 47 countries' have reestablished their embassies in Iraq?


Did you know that the Iraqi government currently employs 1.2 million Iraqi people?


Did you know that 3100 schools have been renovated, 364 schools are under rehabilitation, 263 new schools are now under construction and 38 new schools have been completed in Iraq?


Did you know that Iraq's higher educational structure consists of 20 Universities, 46 Institutes or colleges and 4 research centers, all currently operating?


Did you know that 25 Iraq students departed for the United States in January 2005 for the re-established Fulbright program?


Did you know that the Iraqi Navy is operational? They have 5 - 100-foot patrol craft, 34 smaller vessels and a naval infantry regiment.


Did you know that Iraq's Air Force consists of three operational squadrons, which includes 9 reconnaissance and 3 US C-130 transport aircraft (under Iraqi operational control) which operate day and night, and will soon add 16 UH-1 helicopters and 4 Bell Jet Rangers?


Did you know that Iraq has a counter-terrorist unit and a commando Battalion?


Did you know that the Iraqi Police Service has over 55,000 fully trained and equipped police officers?


Did you know that there are 5 Police Academies in Iraq
that produce over 3500 new officers each 8 weeks?


Did you know there are more than 1100 building projects going on in Iraq?


They include 364 schools, 67 public clinics, 15 hospitals, 83 railroad stations, 22 oil facilities, 93 water facilities and 69 electrical facilities.


Did you know that 96% of Iraqi children under the age of 5

have received the first 2 series of polio vaccinations?


Did you know that 4.3 million Iraqi children were enrolled in primary school by mid October?


Did you know that there are 1,192,000 cell phone subscribers in Iraq and phone use has gone up 158%?


Did you know that Iraq has an independent media that consists of 75 radio stations, 180 newspapers and 10 television stations?


Did you know that the Baghdad Stock Exchange opened in June of 2004?


Did you know that 2 candidates in the Iraqi presidential election had a televised debate recently?


OF COURSE WE DIDN'T KNOW! WHY DIDN'T WE KNOW?

OUR MEDIA WOULDN'T TELL US! Instead of reflecting our love for our country, we get photos of flag burning incidents at Abu Ghraib and people throwing snowballs at the presidential motorcades.


Tragically, the lack of accentuating the positive in Iraq serves two purposes: It is intended to undermine the world's perception of the United States thus minimizing consequent support, and it is intended to discourage American citizens. !


---- Above facts are verifiable on the Department of Defense web site. http://www.defenselink.mil/ .......Pass it on! Give it a Wide Dissemination!


If you can read, thank a soldier. If you can read this piece in English, thank an American soldier!

####

20070317 Shades of Britney

Shades of Britney

March 17, 2007

I picked up new glasses the other day. I did not choose a Britney Spears eyewear frame. I did not have time to get a tattoo and my head shaved on the way home.

Already go that t-shirt in July 1972 in USMC Reserve boot camp…

####

20070317 an unusual addition to the Supplemental Appropriations bill

... an unusual addition to the Supplemental Appropriations bill

March 17, 2007

H/t: The Baltimore Reporter

by Kathy at misterpolitics.com

Lifesite.com highlights an unusual addition to the Supplemental Appropriations bill to fund the war in Iraq. Democrats have included funding for “emergency contraception” for Planned Parenthood.

What does Planned Parenthood and emergency contraception have to do with the war in Iraq?

Just asking.

####

20070317 Presidential limo okay after motorcade mishap in snow


Presidential limo okay after motorcade mishap in snow

Fortunately the mishap did not involve the presidential limo – pictured above.

Spring can some anytime now

March 17th, 2007

True to form for Maryland weather, after a couple of mild days in which I actually saw some folks gallivanting-about in their short sleeves; Friday’s weather sure was a wake up call that winter is not quite over and we live in Maryland.

In Maryland, if you don’t happen to like the weather one day – just wait 24 hours, it is sure to change.

I really did not have to go out in the frozen mess on Friday. I was just a happy to enjoy a snow day and do some much needed and overdue research for some upcoming columns.

Pictured above are some images I captured late Friday evening of the snow monsters that dutifully prowl the Westminster streets during a snow event.

It looks like one of the vehicles in the presidential motorcade heading up to Camp David had a bit of a mishap: “President OK after vehicle in motorcade crashes.”

Fortunately the mishap did not involve the presidential limo – pictured at the top of this story.

####

Friday, March 16, 2007

20070316 3 New Jersey Divers Die Off Florida Keys

3 New Jersey Divers Die Off Florida Keys While Exploring Sunken Ship

March 16, 2007

I have friends who do a good bit of diving... Stories such as this always give one pause for thought...

KEY LARGO, Fla. —

Three friends from New Jersey, all experienced divers, died Friday while exploring the wreckage of a sunken ship off the Florida Keys, police said.

The men were taking part in a penetration dive into the wreckage, a type of dive which is "more dangerous than routine diving," Monroe County Sheriff's spokesperson Becky Herrin told FOXNews.com.

"These wrecks can be very confusing inside," Herrin said. "There's a lot of places to go wrong."

Causes of death for the men have not yet been determined.

The four men were friends traveling together to explore the wreckage of the USS Speigel Grove, according to a press release from the Sheriff's Department.

Herrin estimated that a total of eight to ten divers die yearly throughout the Keys, from a variety of different causes.

http://www.foxnews.com/printer_friendly_story/0,3566,259210,00.html

####

20070315 State News

State News

March 15, 2007

H/t: GOPCharlie

House moves budget toward a final vote

http://www.washtimes.com/metro/20070314-104821-7700r.htm

House lawmakers gave tentative approval yesterday to the fiscal 2008 budget that includes no tuition increases for state colleges but more than half a billion in increases for K-12 public schools.

The $30.3 billion budget, which starts in July, includes $567 million extra for public schools in the final year of an education-reform plan known as the Thornton Act.

Still, state Republicans said the plan will result in fiscal disaster and suggested a spending freeze.

Such a plan would result in a delay in Thornton money to school districts and likely tuition increases at state colleges. Republicans who backed the plan said the state doesn't have much choice. Projections show the state could be $1.5 billion short next year.

"We have large, looming fiscal problems," said Anthony J. O'Donnell, Southern Maryland Republican who brushed aside arguments Democrats already cut Mr. O'Malley's proposal.

"If you have a dollar and you add 12 pennies to it, that's not a reduction," he said.


House GOP effort to cut budget falls short

http://www.baltimoresun.com/news/local/bal-md.cuts15mar15,0,7531993.story?coll=bal-local-headlines

House Republicans failed in an effort to force deep cuts in Gov. Martin O'Malley's proposed budget yesterday, a move they said was necessary to prevent tax increases next year but one that Democrats said would diminish public safety and hinder education.

With annual gaps of more than $1 billion between spending and revenue expected in the next few years, Republicans proposed cutting all new spending from O'Malley's $30 billion budget, a reduction of $800 million.

"If we begin to deal with the deficit issue this year, it's manageable," said Del. Gail H. Bates, a Howard County Republican who serves on the House Appropriations Committee. "If we wait and do nothing this year and that additional spending is in place, next year we're talking serious cuts."


House debates $30 billion budget

GOP amendment to freeze 2008 spending at 2007 level voted down Wednesday

http://www.fredericknewspost.com/sections/news/display.htm?StoryID=57923

Three Frederick County delegates defied their party Wednesday by voting against a GOP amendment to essentially freeze the state's 2008 budget at the 2007 level.

Delegates Don Elliott, Rick Weldon and Paul Stull were among seven Republicans who joined Democrats to vote down the GOP amendment to a $30.3 billion budget proposal debated in the House.

"Next year local governments will get clobbered," said Minority Leader Tony O'Donnell, R-Southern Maryland.

Delegate Joe Bartlett is a Frederick Republican who found himself in the minority of those of the eight-member Frederick County delegation who opposed the amendment. He agreed with O'Donnell.

"We are asking that our government live within its means, just like every family in my district," Bartlett said. "The problem is that government spends too much, and taxes are already too high. By rejecting this responsible and sensible amendment, we have condemned Maryland's residents to higher taxes in the future. Period."


Preliminary budget OK'd

http://www.herald-mail.com/?module=displaystory&story_id=160961&format=html

A Democratically ruled Maryland House preliminarily approved a $30 billion state budget Wednesday, squelching a Republican attempt to limit spending and delay additional school funding.

On the current course, Marylanders should "brace themselves for a massive tax increase next year," Del. Christopher B. Shank, R-Washington, said on the House floor, citing a projected $1.5 billion deficit.

Democrats argued that the Republican proposal would critically hurt funding in several crucial areas.

A Republican chart showed their proposed 2008 spending increase at 1.5 percent vs. 6.5 percent for the version on which the House voted.


Bid to Cut Md. Budget Fails

GOP Targeted Education Spending

http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2007/03/14/AR2007031402777.html

The Maryland House of Delegates yesterday gave preliminary approval to a $30 billion state budget plan, turning back a Republican effort to slash education spending, and moved toward passage of an ambitious proposal to reduce the number of Marylanders without health insurance.

House Minority Leader Anthony J. O'Donnell (R-Calvert) called the GOP proposal "a simple solution" designed to avoid even more difficult choices in the coming year. "Massive tax increases," O'Donnell said. "That's what facing us unless we act now."


Indictment of Md. power

Prosecutors confront twists and challenges in Bromwell corruption case

http://www.baltimoresun.com/news/local/politics/bal-te.md.bromwell15mar15,0,5271929.story

Five years ago, Thomas L. Bromwell Sr. learned how deeply FBI agents had penetrated his inner circle.

James Eick, a Bromwell friend, had agreed to wear a recording device for federal agents. He was to capture any potentially incriminating conversations with the former Maryland state senator suspected of accepting illegal kickbacks while in office, according to prosecutors.


Tougher Md. public information laws sought

http://www.hometownannapolis.com/cgi-bin/read/2007/03_14-01/TOP

On the surface, Maryland has a tough public information law.

Unlike in 28 other states, its a crime to deny access to a public document. Violators can be convicted of a misdemeanor and fined up to $1,000.

But courts rarely impose such penalties, and advocates for open government believe thats partly because its difficult to pursue a case against someone suspected of violating the law.

While we have laws with very nice-sounding titles, theres no teeth to the enforcement, said Del. Michael Smigiel, an attorney who has represented newspapers in freedom of information cases.


Mooney gets call from cardinal

Keeler urges state senator to vote today for repeal of the death penalty

http://www.baltimoresun.com/news/local/politics/bal-md.mooney15mar15,0,6281429.story?coll=bal-local-headlines

Sen. Alex X. Mooney fielded a surprise call this week from Cardinal William H. Keeler, who urged the Frederick Republican to vote today for a repeal of the death penalty.

Their five-minute chat, though notable because of the caller's position as archbishop of Baltimore, is one of many conversations Mooney has had as he considers his position on a bill to get rid of the state's capital punishment law.


Jessamy mourns death of intimidation bill

http://www.examiner.com/a-619945~Jessamy_mourns_death_of_intimidation_bill.html

Baltimore City States Attorney Patricia Jessamy said Wednesday shes upset the Maryland House Judiciary Committee killed a bill that would have strengthened Maryland law against witness intimidation.

Even though we failed this year, witness intimidation continues to be a very serious problem, Jessamy said.

Jessamy testified in February in favor of a House of Delegates bill, sponsored by Keith Haynes, D-District 44, that would toughen Marylands law against witness intimidation to include sentences of up to 20 years, instead of five years, for many crimes against children, domestic violence and sexual assault.


"Green" bills could affect local businesses

http://www.wcbcradio.com/index.php?option=com_content&task=view&id=6899&Itemid=35

With a newly elected Democratic governor many observers believe the state of Maryland is demonstrating a large shift to the left in its public policy. One area of concern for western Marylanders is the push for environmental legislation, or green bills. State senator George Edwards said businesses such as AES and New Page could be at risk because they use coal.


Should all of Maryland Ban Smoking?

http://www.wcbcradio.com/index.php?option=com_content&task=view&id=6898&Itemid=35

Should the state of Maryland follow the lead of Baltimore City and ban smoking in bars and restaurants? State senator George Edwards answered with a resounding no on Wednesday mornings Dave Norman show. Edwards said the reach of government in peoples lives is getting out of hand.


Decision to halt horse park brings relief, disappointment

http://www.hometownannapolis.com/cgi-bin/read/2007/03_14-38/TOP

The state's decision to withdraw plans for an equestrian center at the former Naval Academy Dairy Farm in Gambrills has disappointed horse lovers but relieved the dairy's neighbors who are opposed to the plan.

Jim Steele, the chairman of Maryland Horse Industry Board, announced at yesterday's board meeting that plans to build the center on the 857-acre site have been dropped.


Hearing pushed on city raises

Councilman Mitchell says public should have a chance to testify on bill

http://www.baltimoresun.com/news/local/baltimore_city/bal-md.ci.raises15mar15,0,4369401.story?coll=bal-local-headlines

Baltimore City Councilman and mayoral candidate Keiffer J. Mitchell Jr. called yesterday for a hearing and a vote on proposed pay raises for the city's elected officials, igniting what could become the first political showdown of this election year.

Responding to a proposal pending in the City Council that would give double-digit salary increases to the mayor, City Council president and other officials, Mitchell said the public should have a chance to testify on the bill. He said he does not support the raises.


Capital Notebook

O'Malley to name Brenner to PSC

Few senators at sex bill hearing

Wiretapping on school buses?

http://www.baltimoresun.com/news/local/politics/bal-md.notebook15mar15,0,7224271.story?coll=bal-local-headlines


National News

Rep. Roscoe Bartlett presented with NAM Award

http://www.herald-mail.com/?module=displaystory&story_id=160957&format=html

Recognizing his strong voting record in support of American manufacturing and a pro-growth, pro-jobs agenda during the 109th Congress, the National Association of Manufacturers honored U.S. Rep. Roscoe Bartlett, R-Md., with its Award for Manufacturing Legislative Excellence during a presentation hosted by Volvo Powertrain North America.

The NAM Award is presented to members of Congress who vote in the best interest of the manufacturing economy at least 70 percent of the time on "key manufacturing votes" as designated by a special committee of NAM member companies, large and small. Bartlett's voting record was 75 percent.


Taking the battle to Congress

A shipbuilding association is pushing to boost the size of the U.S. Navy, and some legislators are now on board with the idea.

http://www.dailypress.com/business/local/dp-80867sy0mar15,0,2090152.story?coll=dp-business-localheads

With the size of the Navy's battle force fleet having fallen to 275 ships - the lowest level since before World War I - the American Shipbuilding Association has called on Congress to significantly increase the money the nation devotes to ships.

And now there's a move afoot to make that increase happen.

The fleet size issue is bound to come up during a hearing today on national defense sealift funding, said Lisa Wright, a spokesman for Roscoe Bartlett, R-Md., the ranking member of the Seapower & Expeditionary Subcommittee.

"He wants to build more ships," Wright said of Bartlett. "The oceans are the same size they've always been and the indispensable role of the U.S. as a world leader has not changed ... If you reduce the number of ships too much, you can't maintain the forward presence you need."


O'Malley travels to D.C. with funding requests

Governor gives wide-ranging list to Md. congressional delegation

http://www.baltimoresun.com/news/local/bal-te.md.delegation15mar15,0,4335957.story?coll=bal-local-headlines

On his visit to Capitol Hill yesterday to meet with Maryland's congressional delegation, Gov. Martin O'Malley brought with him a red binder fat with requests: 148 priorities worth more than $200 million.

Sen. Benjamin L. Cardin asked him to consider adding one more: global warming.

"Maryland the state is particularly vulnerable," the Democratic senator said. "Sea level change is clearly a matter that is of direct interest."


Signs Of Progress Seen In Baghdad Security Push. "Bomb deaths have gone down 30 percent in Baghdad since the U.S.-led security crackdown began a month ago. Execution-style slayings are down by nearly half. The once frequent sound of weapons has been reduced to episodic, and downtown shoppers have returned to outdoor markets favored targets of car bombers. There are signs of progress in the campaign to restore order in Iraq, starting with its capital city. ... 'I would caution everybody about patience, about diligence,' U.S. spokesman Maj. Gen. William C. Caldwell said Wednesday. 'This is going to take many months, not weeks, but the indicators are all very positive right now.'" (Robert H. Reid, "Some Progress May Mean Hope For Baghdad," The Associated Press, 3/15/07)


The New York Times' David Brooks Says The Democrats' Iraq Policy Is "Divorced From Realities On The Ground." "But does anybody think that Iraqi leaders, many of whom have seen their brothers and children gunned down, need a cold dose of reality delivered from the U.S. Congress? ... The intelligence agencies see chaos if the U.S. withdraws. Carl Levin, based on phantom intelligence, sees newly incentivized Iraqis returning to reason and moderation. ... What [Democrats] want to do is be against Bush without accepting responsibility for any real policy, so they have concocted a vaporous policy of distant withdrawal that is divorced from realities on the ground." (David Brooks, Op-Ed, "The Long Exit," The New York Times, 3/15/07)


The White House Says Senate Democrats' Iraq Resolution "Infringes Upon The Constitutional Authority Of The President." "The resolution 'infringes upon the constitutional authority of the President as Commander in Chief by imposing an artificial timeline to withdraw U.S. troops from Iraq, regardless of the conditions on the ground or the consequences of defeat,' the White House statement said. 'The legislation would hobble American commanders in the field and substantially endanger America's strategic objective of a unified federal democratic Iraq that can govern, defend, and sustain itself and be an ally in the war on terror.' ... Administration officials said, if adopted, the Senate resolution would essentially make Congress a 'co-commander in chief,' a competing source of judgments on how to conduct the war. 'The Constitution commits the exclusive power to the president as commander in chief to make the decisions necessary to conduct the war,' said White House spokesman Tony Fratto." (Shailagh Murray and Michael Abramowitz, "Democrats' Resolution On Iraq Reaches Senate Floor," The Washington Post, 3/15/07)


U.S. And Iraq Launch Aggressive Campaign To Curb Oil Smuggling. "U.S. and Iraqi forces have launched an aggressive campaign to curb the oil smuggling that is helping to destabilize the fragile Baghdad government and finance insurgents, adding another facet to the Bush administration's latest pacification plan for Iraq. In concert with stepped-up military and reconstruction initiatives, U.S. troops for the first time are maintaining a round-the-clock presence at the sprawling oil refinery here, Iraq's largest. Soldiers from the U.S. Army's 82nd Airborne Division also are cracking down on illegal gasoline stations, arresting refinery workers suspected of corruption and using sophisticated data-sifting methods to identify which senior Iraqi officials might have ties to black-market oil rings. The Iraqi government, meanwhile, has begun what it calls Operation Honest Hands, which put the entire refinery under Iraqi military control." (Yochi J. Dreazen, "U.S., Iraq Launch Campaign To Cut Oil Smuggling," The Wall Street Journal, 3/15/07)


Captured Al-Qaida Operative Khalid Sheikh Mohammed Confesses To Masterminding 9/11 Terror Attacks. "Khalid Sheikh Mohammed cemented his position as al-Qaida's most ambitious operational planner when he confessed in a U.S. military tribunal to planning and supporting 31 terrorist attacks, topped by 9/11, that killed thousands of innocent victims since the early 1990s. The gruesome attacks range from the suicide hijackings of Sept. 11, 2001 which killed nearly 3,000 to a 2002 shooting on an island off Kuwait that killed a U.S. Marine. ... President Bush announced that Mohammed and 13 other alleged terror operatives had been moved from secret CIA prisons to the U.S. Naval Base at Guantanamo Bay last year. They are considered the 14 most significant captures since 9/11." (Katherine Shrader, "Al-Qaida No. 3 Says He Planned 9/11," The Associated Press, 3/15/07)


OMB Director Rob Portman Says The Democrats' Path To Balancing The Budget Is "Paved With Higher Taxes, Higher Spending." "The Democratic blueprint fails to tackle the long-term fiscal debacle facing Social Security and Medicare, the federal retirement programs that will be swamped by the upcoming retirement of the Baby Boom generation. ... 'It's a missed opportunity because this is a nonelection year,' countered White House budget director Rob Portman in an interview. Traditionally, Congress is most aggressive on politically sensitive budget issues in such odd-numbered years. 'Their path to balance is paved with higher taxes, higher spending and what can only be characterized as budgetary slights of hand,' Portman said in a subsequent statement." (Andrew Taylor, "Few Tough Choices In Senate Dems' Budget," The Associated Press, 3/15/07)


Thursday, March 15, 2007

20070314 This week in the Westminster Eagle

This week in the Westminster Eagle
March 14th, 2007
Westminster Eagle

The high cost of twin tragedies at Bowling Brook
Last Thursday must have been another long and difficult day for Bowling Brook Preparatory Academy.
It was on that day that the academy's last remaining eight students boarded a van and left. Then the prep school's license was turned over to an official from the Maryland Department of Juvenile Serv...[Read full story]

Education Notes County opens enrollment for prekindergarten
The Carroll County Pubic Schools prekindergarten program is accepting applications for the 2007-08 school year. Children must be age 4 by Sept. 1, 2007. Students will attend classes five days a week for two-and-a-half hours at no cost to parents.
Appli...[Read full story]

Competition is sweet at Mid-Atlantic cake show
The sweet smell of butter cream frosting and cake filled the Carroll County Agriculture Center over the weekend as the Mid-Atlantic Cake Show and Wedding Cake Competition brought cakes of all sizes and shapes from states as far as Texas, Ohio and New Jersey together.
"It has been a very good show,...[Read full story]



Pillows for soldiers are one mom's mission
There's nothing like resting your head on a comfortable pillow at the end of a long day.
But that luxury isn't always available to many American soldiers currently serving overseas.
Staffers and families at TriStar Martial Arts in both Eldersburg and Westminster recently held a collection to try...[Read full story]



News Briefs Mudgett's Finksburg center faces review
The proposal for a new shopping center at Dede Road and Route 140 in Finksburg will face the county's Planning and Zoning Commission next week.
The Mudgett family, which owns and operates the existing Mudgett Auto Body on Dede Road, is seeking approval for...[Read full story]



Local Scout traveled globally, acted locally on path to Eagle
All work and no play may make Jack a dull boy, but it helped make Westminster's Ian Ellett an Eagle Scout
At a Scouting "Court of Honor" this past Sunday, Ellett, 17, was recognized for more than 12 years of hard work as a Scout with Troop 2040, and most notably for the past two years, when he com...[Read full story]

A little kick in the Irish
At a glance, it looks like a game of soccer. When you watch a little longer, though, one starts to notice elements of football, too. And volleyball.
And even basketball?
Gaelic football, the national sport of Ireland, has found a following here in Carroll County, and Westminster resident J...[Read full story]



A foundation for Habitat, Westminster
The details are still being ironed out and the contracts haven't been signed, but the city of Westminster and the local chapter of Habitat for Humanity are already hoping their deal to build a home on a vacant tract on Union Street will set an example for providing housing for low- to moderate...[Read full story]



Recreation
Balanced effort helps North Carroll girls win 3A-2A title
Track and Field
The North Carroll girls' team got a big lift from a newcomer to the indoor circuit, while the Liberty boys relied on a wildly successful veteran at the indoor track and field state championship meet.
North Carroll utilized title performances from senior Katie Hursey and junior Je...[Read full story]



Focus on People
Group efforts Legion Riders' efforts benefit Carroll Hospice
The Legion Riders of Westminster, based at Carroll American Legion Post 31, recently donated $500 to Carroll Hospice. The riders had decided to make Carroll Hospice the group's primary charity.
Gina Stanley, legion rider charity liaison officer, is ...[Read full story]



Business Briefs
Main Street Minute Smiling faces remind us: Don't worry, be happy
Last week we had another cold, snowy day -- another of those days when the children go from being happy about no homework to being crabby about being bored.
With the cloudy days overshadowing the sunny ones lately, it's easy to share their bad moods...[Read full story]



Opinion
No matter who counts it, traffic will remain a point of dispute Editorial
Who's better at counting cars? The county or developers?
Speakers at a hearing last week said it doesn't matter, because both parties have to work with the same rules and standards when conducting traffic studies.
County officials are considering a change in the way Carroll considers...[Read full story]



The Passing Parade
Worth the price of a ticket
Wouldn't you know it, after all the meetings I attended over the years open to the public, I missed the one recently -- a county "roundtable" meeting where the proposed bond bill was discussed -- that had a true element of excitement to it.
Fortunately, I saw a video of it, confirming what I'd hea...[Read full story]



For Better or Worse
If it can't take the heat, it's not likely under warranty
"What's wrong?" Doug asked, walking into the kitchen to see me standing over a cold oven holding a tray of seasoned Cornish hens stuffed with wild rice.
Sitting on the countertop were four porcelain ramekins filled with creme bržlŽe mixture. ...
OK, who am I kidding?
I was trying to heat up th...[Read full story]



Community Calendar
Community Calendar ARTS
> The Carroll Community College Campus Activities Board Spring Film Series continues this week. Films begin at 7 p.m. and are shown at the theater in the Scott Center, 1601 Washington Road. The movies are free and open to the community, but children must be accompanied by a parent or guardia...[Read full story]





Community Rallies behind Bowling Brook On March 2, Bowling Brook Preparatory Academy in Keymar announced that after 50 years in operation, it would close on March 9.
The closing comes in the wake of the death of one of the students on January 23.
Since the closing was announced, many Carroll Countians have rallied in sup...[Read full story]
[Local news archives]


####

20070314 The Journalist


The journalist – on deadline. Daily Photoblog

March 14th, 2007

Wednesday, March 14, 2007

20070314 Grocery Store check out line literature


Grocery Store check out line literature

March 14, 2007 Daily Photoblog

I was minding my own business in the grocery store check out when I noticed a couple of folks ahead of me getting all animated and gesturing towards the grocery store check out line literature.

Amused and curious; when I got to that place in line I looked to the shelf and just cracked-up.

Hey, whatever floats your boat?

Who knows – maybe the articles are true?

It was first time I have ever seen folks actually purchase these papers. Except when I was younger I would purchase them from time to time for collage materials.

I could go on – but I guess I’ll stop while I’m behind.

What a hoot.

####