Journalist @baltimoresun writer artist runner #amwriting Chaplain PIO #partylikeajournalist

Journalist @baltimoresun writer artist runner #amwriting Chaplain PIO #partylikeajournalist
Journalist @baltimoresun writer artist runner #amwriting Md Troopers Assoc #20 & Westminster Md Fire Dept Chaplain PIO #partylikeajournalist

Thursday, January 17, 2008

20080109 Westminster Eagle: Districting plan faces hearing in January by Bob Allen

Westminster Eagle: Districting plan faces hearing in January by Bob Allen
Posted January 17, 2008
01/09/08 By Bob Allen



Bill would create four districts, one at-large
The latest proposal to expand the Board of County Commissioners from three to five members will be open for public comment at a hearing set for Jan. 19 in Westminster.
State Del. Donald Elliott (R-Dist. 4B) said he co-created the plan with State Sen. Allan Kittleman (R-Dist. 9). It calls for four commissioners to be elected by districts with a fifth elected at-large, or county-wide.
The at-large commissioner would serve as president of the Board of Commissioners.
Under the plan, Carroll voters would vote for two commissioner candidates, one running in their district and one at-large.
On the eve of the General Assembly opening in Annapolis this week, Elliott said he believes his proposal has enough bipartisan support to get it through the assembly. A similar plan failed to make it to the floor in 2006, mostly because of disagreement over how and where district lines should be drawn.
"Last (time) a lot of people felt the (commissioner) districts should align with state legislative districts," Elliott said. "This time, that has been done to the extent that it could be done."
The failed proposal also differed in that it called for five commissioners, all elected by district. That's what voters selected in a 2004 referendum.
Elliott said his four-district plan is a compromise that carves out districts as equitably as possible, based on population, a per capita balance between registered Republicans, Democrats and independents and geography.
"The bottom line is, we are trying to make a compromise with this," Elliott said. "I feel very strongly that with this county growing the way it is, a change in governance is in order."
Skeptics have said the new proposal should not go forward because it differs from the five-district plan chosen in the 2004 referendum -- and as a result may eventually be overturned in court.
Elliott says his proposal does not need to go to referendum and is on solid legal ground.
"We're not violating the public's wishes," he said. "We have checked with the Attorney General's office and we have a written opinion from them that this is not in violation of the referendum and that we are not doing anything illegal.
"For some of these people (who oppose his plan), they are using that (argument) as a way to try to kill this bill, as in the past," he added. "There are still people who want three commissioners and others who still want five at-large commissioners.
Janet Jump, former president of the Board of Elections who also served on the committee that drew up the initial districting plan, likes Elliott's revised plan and thinks a commissioner-by-district system is long overdue.
"Carroll County is very diverse; South Carroll is a world away from North Carroll," Jump said. "These (sectional) differences deserve to be honored and recognized in running the county government, and the present system doesn't do this."
"I think creating districts is the only way we can recognize these differences," she said.
Elliott said his plan is modeled after Charles County and it works effectively there.
"I've talked to people in Charles County and other counties (where the board of commissioners has been expanded) and they told me it does make a difference," he said.
The new five-commissioner plan has been submitted to members of Carroll's delegation to Annapolis. The delegation will vote on it sometime after taking public comment at the Jan. 19 hearing.
"If approved by the delegation, it will be dropped in the hopper and be voted on by the Maryland General Assembly," he said. "Hopefully this time we have bipartisan support we need."
The public hearing on the proposed five-commissioner plan and other local bills proposed for the 2008 General Assembly is scheduled for 9 a.m. to noon, Saturday, Jan. 19, in Room 003 of the County Office Building, 225 N. Center St., Westminster.
####

20080116 Carroll County Times columnist will be missed


Carroll County Times columnist will be missed

Letters to the Editor for Wednesday, January 16, 2008

Carroll County Times

Wednesday, January 16, 2008

Editor:

I was sad to read in the Neighbors of Central Carroll section of the paper on January 11 that Ruth Seitler has discontinued her column for health reasons.

Seitler has delighted readers, historians and fellow writers for almost 20 years with her column, "Of Times Past."

Charles Caleb Colton wrote in 1825: "Our admiration of fine writing will always be in proportion to its real difficulty and its apparent ease."

Seitler always made fine writing look easy and many readers were delighted with her insights and experiences.

Her column was comforting, and comfortable, and best read curled up on the couch with a warm cup of tea and honey. She always gave her readers a break from the hecticness of today as she took us on a journey back to times past.

Her son, Jim Seitler wrote the last column in which he noted that his mom "loved writing (the) column every week. She would often read it to me and tell me about the letters or calls she had received from 'her readers.'"

He wrote poignantly: "As children we think that time stands still and as adults we realize that it moves faster than we want."

Ruth Seitler wrote for so many years that many of us took it for granted that she would write forever. Obviously, time moves faster than we want.

It was apparent that she loved writing, and as one of her many dedicated readers I loved reading her writing. Her column will be missed. Our hearts and prayers go out to her and her family. Thank you for sharing the last 20 years.

Kevin Dayhoff

Westminster

http://www.carrollcountytimes.com/articles/2008/01/16/news/opinion/letters/letters762.txt


20080117 Times Watch: Anger Continues Over the Times' Sleazy Story on Killer Veterans


Times Watch: Anger Continues Over the Times' Sleazy Story on Killer Veterans

Outrage over a sleazy Times story on U.S. veterans who come home and kill.

Posted by: Clay Waters 1/17/2008 11:21:07 AM

Outrage continues to boil over the Times' front-page story on veterans coming home from Iraq and Afghanistan and committing murders and was immediately discredited by cursory research as journalistically and statistically worthless. The Times' main finding, that 121 veterans either committed a killing in this country or are charged with one, was useless without context, which the Times either couldn't or didn't provide.

Armed Liberal tackled the story on that very point the day it appeared:

"I keep asking the simple question -- well, what does it mean? How do these 121 murderers compare with the base rate of murderers in the population? And the answer appears to be damn well."

Thursday's New York Post ran a scathing editorial on the Times' "Killer Vet Lie" and called on Public Editor Clark Hoyt to respond:

"Indeed, it's impossible to take issue with the statistics cited by reporters Deborah Sontag and Lizette Alvarez -- because their article doesn't have any.

"For most editors, that would be a red flag. Not at the Times, not in a piece that appealed to the editors' dearest prejudices."

"Is the number of killings by combat vets dramatically higher than the rate involving people of the same age who've never served in the military?

"It's a good question -- in fact, it's the key question. But the Times never asked it. Or, if it did, it never reported the answer.

"Perhaps for good reason -- because the statistics tell a far different tale than that appearing in the Times."

Indeed, those who've run the numbers on various sets of crime statistics finds that one is significantly safer around veterans than around same-aged peers. The Post's military correspondent Ralph Peters did some crunching:

"…to match the homicide rate of their [nonmilitary] peers, our troops would've had to come home and commit about 150 murders a year, for a total of 700 to 750 murders between 2003 and the end of 2007" -- six times the number the Times cited."

Bob Owens has a comprehensive piece at Pajamas Media, where he dug in further into the individual cases and found that "of those 121 summaries [in a sidebar story], 40 do not show direct ties between the stresses of deploying to combat zones and the homicides for which these veterans were charged, and of those, 14 were of highly dubious nature."

The Weekly Standard has a useful roundup of the most cogent criticism of the story, which doesn't seem to be getting much in the way of defense from the left wing of the blogosphere (except for the dead-enders at the Huffington Post, naturally).

####

20080116 This week in The Tentacle

This week in The Tentacle

Wednesday, January 16, 2008

“When all else fails, read the Constitution”

Kevin E. Dayhoff

Last Thursday, Carroll County Circuit Court Judge Thomas F. Stansfield delivered a decision in the lawsuit filed by Republicans, which sought to overturn more than $1.3 billion in new taxes passed in the special session of the Maryland General Assembly in November.


Joining The Great Society

Norman M. Covert

Whether one likes it or not, this is the moment when the reality of socialism strikes my generation in the face. We cannot avoid it. All manner of protestations about the rightness of conservative values cannot compete with the reality of Big Government – and truly this is not George Bush’s fault.


Tuesday, January 15, 2008

Elitist Commissioners

Roy Meachum

John "Lennie" Thompson and the commissioners he continues to dominate see Frederick's development strictly in terms of profit hungry and all-powerful builders.


What’s Behind This Moratorium?

Farrell Keough

To moratorium or not to moratorium; that is not necessarily the question. Whether ‘tis nobler in the mind to suffer the traffic jams and loss of beautiful landscape, or take action against our development issues and end them…


Monday, January 14, 2008

Lessons Learned

Steven R. Berryman

I consider myself fortunate to have witnessed the quasi-legal proceedings of the Ahmadiyya Muslim Community, Inc.’s (AMC) hearings to obtain approval of a special exception that would allow them to build a 43,000 square foot convention building in Walkersville.


General Assembly Journal 2008 – Volume 1

Richard B. Weldon Jr.

With the tension of the recently completed special session still hanging thick in the Annapolis air, and the unusual spring-like warmth banishing the normal overcoats and gloves, 188 legislators again descended on the state capitol to begin the 425th session of the Maryland General Assembly.


Friday, January 11, 2008

The Clinton Gimmick

Roy Meachum

Hillary Clinton won New Hampshire, in spite of polls – and there were more than several – that showed she was running 5-13 points behind Barack Obama. But they were all taken before she turned on tears in a Portsmouth diner.


Thursday, January 10, 2008

Teenagers and Judges

Norman M. Covert

The “Help Wanted” Sign is on display at the Elections Board of Frederick County, which has put out a general plea to hire 17-year-olds as election judges for the February 12th Primary Election and the November 4 Presidential Election. Adults are welcome, too, but the teens would certainly be a plus, according to election officials.


Wednesday, January 9, 2008

The Special Session Lawsuit

Kevin E. Dayhoff

The 425th session of the Maryland General Assembly begins today. Hopefully, the first order of business for that august body will be to re-visit and fix all the problems created during the special taxing session last November.


“The Worst of Times”

Tom McLaughlin

Let’s start the New Year again. Roll back the clock to December 31 and kiss one another at the stroke of midnight.


Tuesday, January 8, 2008

The Obama Factor

Roy Meachum

One-time Democratic frontrunner Hillary Clinton goes into today's New Hampshire primary a surprising underdog.


Understanding Middle School Math

Nick Diaz

The job of the typical middle and high school mathematics teacher is a challenging one, as evidenced by the kinds of questions and statements made by students, parents, and school administrators; these are the people who comprise our “constituency”, if I may.


Monday, January 7, 2008

Presidential Wannabes – The GOP Field

Richard B. Weldon Jr.

Since offering unwanted advice to national presidential candidates seems to be the new media cottage industry, here’s my attempt to play with the big boys.

Tuesday, January 15, 2008

20080114 Tom LoBianco’s initial blog post


More good news in the Maryland blogosphere; Tom LoBianco, the Maryland state politics reporter with the Washington Times has started a blog on the Washington Times’ website.

Check it out:

Main | With O'Malley, everyone's a critic »

Greetings and salutations

Posted on January 14, 2008 5:30 PM

Welcome to my blog, be sure to check in frequently for updates on Maryland politics.

[…]

The regular session of Maryland's General Assembly runs through early April. So keep your eyes here for updates throughout the day on some of the frontburner topics this session: taxes, homosexual "marriage," energy policy, the state's death penalty and illegal immigration.

I'll also link my stories for the day here and try to work in some of the best of the Maryland blogosphere from the state's citizen journos.

So let's get kickin' with my story today on the lack of civility in Gov. Martin O'Malley's "One Maryland."

LoBianco On Maryland

20080115 Next Monday is Lyndon Baines Johnson Day

Next Monday is Lyndon Baines Johnson Day

January 15, 2008

Hat Tip: Delusional Duck

Don Surber has the story…

Hillary to celebrate Lyndon Baines Johnson Day instead.

[…]

But she did get booed in New York as she spoke at a birthday celebration for the slain civil rights leader, reported Fox News, the most trusted name in TV news

It’s Hillary “Goldwater Girl” Clinton who has a dream – which includes reinventing history, including her own. Of course, there are two sides to the story. And I’m sure you are surprised that the “The Caucus (for Clinton)” blog on the New York Times web site has another take on the matter.

PS:

Sisu has the scoop the Goldwater Girl history and more: “Chatty Hillary”:

Goldwater Girl Hillary Rodham was the crème de la crème, smarter and savvier sis of two also-ran brothers from a wealthy Chicago suburban family. Hillary! quit the campus Republican party and got religion at Wellesley College, where she famously studied at Saul [ends justify the means] Alinsky's knee.

Her thesis, written under his tutelage, was suppressed by Wellesley at her request, and Alinsky is totally absent from her Wikipedia entry. Make of that what you will.

Above, in the flower of her youthful beauty (no attribution) left and right as a Wellesley senior in 1969, when her graduation speech made Time mag as she declared "We're searching for a more immediate, ecstatic and penetrating mode of living." Aren't we all? Then came Yale Law School and her destiny, Slick WIlly. Immediate, ecstatic and penetrating, indeed.

Sorta related: An interesting take on “Goldwater Girl.”

####

20080115 Next Monday is Lyndon Baines Johnson Day

20080114 Andy Green, Erin Sullivan, and Tom LoBianco talk with Marc Steiner on WYPR

Andy Green, Erin Sullivan, and Tom LoBianco talk with Marc Steiner on WYPR

The Marc Steiner Show

January 14th through 18, 2008

Monday, January 14th, 2008

Noon-1:00 LISTEN HERE

The 425th legislative session of Maryland's General Assembly got underway last week. What are the biggest issues expected to be? Marc talks with Andy Green of the Baltimore Sun, Erin Sullivan of the Baltimore City Paper, and Tom LoBianco of the Washington Times.

####

20080114 Special Session lawsuit appealed

Special Session lawsuit appealed

The Hat Tip goes to Beth Ward and the Carroll County Times who broke the story late Monday afternoon.

[…]

An appeal of Carroll County Circuit Judge Thomas Stansfield's dismissal of the lawsuit was filed Monday afternoon in Carroll County Circuit Court.

[…]

Five Republican legislators and a Carroll County businessman are appealing a judge's decision that there was no merit to a lawsuit seeking to overturn the results of November's special session of the General Assembly.

[…]

I’ve pasted the Notice of Appeal below:

IN THE CIRCUIT COURT FOR CARROLL COUNTY

MICHAEL D. SMIGIEL, SR., et al.

Plaintiffs

v.

PETER FRANCHOT, et al.

Defendants

Case No.: 06-C-07-049648

NOTICE OF APPEAL

Notice is hereby given that Plaintiffs Michael D. Smigiel, Sr., John C. Pardoe, David R. Brinkley, Allan H. Kittleman, Anthony O'Donnell, and Christopher Shank, by Irwin R. Kramer, their attorney, appeal to the Court of Special Appeals of Maryland from the judgment entered in favor of Defendants on January 10, 2008 by the Circuit Court for Carroll County, Maryland, as

reflected in the Circuit Court’s Opinion and in its Declaratory Judgment of that same date.

/s/

_________________

Irwin R. Kramer

KRAMER & CONNOLLY

Suite 211

500 Redland Court

Owings Mills, Maryland 21117

(410) 581-0070

Counsel for Plaintiffs

CERTIFICATE OF SERVICE

I HEREBY CERTIFY that on January 14, 2008, a copy of the foregoing was sent via email attachment (by agreement of counsel) to:

Austin C. Schlick, Esquire

Assistant Attorney General

Office of the Attorney General

200 Saint Paul Place

Baltimore, Maryland 21202

Terry A. Berger, Esquire

Suite 500

9141 Reisterstown Road

Owings Mills, Maryland

/s/

________________

Irwin R. Kramer

Monday, January 14, 2008

20080114 Maryland Blogger Alliance as of Jan 14th 2008

Maryland Blogger Alliance as of Jan 14th 2008

Pillage Idiot (Rockville)
Soccer Dad (Baltimore)
Maryland Conservatarian (Rockville)
The Baltimore Reporter (Baltimore)
Technosailor (Woodlawn)
monoblogue (Salisbury)
Crablaw (Reisterstown)
Kevin Dayhoff (Westminster)
Politics, Hon (Baltimore)
blogger1947 (Gwynn Oak)
Jousting for Justice (Owings Mills)
The Voltage Gate (Frostburg)
Howard County Md. Blog (Ellicott City)
The Hedgehog Report (Columbia)
The Pubcrawler (Gaithersburg)
C. Dowd's Blog (Lansdowne)
Oriole Post (Silver Spring)
Escape from Pianosa (Baltimore)
Maryland Politics Today (Laurel)
The Greenbelt (Laurel)
Leviathan Montgomery (Silver Spring)
Going to the Mat (Frederick)
Pines Above Snow (Columbia)
Creating a Jubilee County (Pr George's)
Talk Lab (Columbia)
Inside Charm City (White Marsh)
The Candid Truth (Pasadena)
PG Chic (Pr. George's)
Mike's Nether Land (Severna Park)
Tinkerty Tonk (Abingdon)
It's Our Wits That Make Us Men (expat)
abolitionofman.com (Baltimore)
Red Maryland (Boonsboro)
Capital Punishment (Annapolis)
The Spewker (Pikesville)
The Main Adversary (Baltimore)
GOPinionPlus (Linover)
Annapolis Politics (Annapolis)
That's What I Think! (Columbia)
mad anthony (Nottingham)
Common Sense (Williamsport)
Maryland Chesapeake Blog (Annapolis)
PsychoPhil (expat)
Red Writes (Columbia)
Clark's Picks (Chestertown)

20080114 Westminster Mayor and Common Council Meeting Agenda

Westminster Mayor and Common Council Meeting Agenda City Council

City Council Members | Minutes of City Council Meetings

CITY OF WESTMINSTER, MARYLAND

Mayor and Common Council Meeting of January 14, 2008

AGENDA

1. CALL TO ORDER – 7:00 P.M.

Marriage Resource Center Presentation

2. MINUTES OF THE MEETINGS OF NOVEMBER 12 (CLOSED SESSION)

AND DECEMBER 10, 2007

3. CONSENT CALENDAR:

November Departmental Operating Reports

Memorandum of Understanding with the Frederick Police Department

Withdrawal of Sectional Map Amendment No. SMA 07-1 – 59, 61, and 63 Union Street

Lease of Plaza in Front of Library from the Board of County Commissioners

City/County Medford Quarry Agreement

Appointment of Bond Counsel and Preston

4. REPORTS FROM THE MAYOR

5. REPORTS FROM STANDING COMMITTEES

6. ORDINANCES AND RESOLUTIONS

Introduction of Ordinance No. 774 – Text Amendment No.

TA07-1 - Separation of the Department of Planning and Public Works

Resolution No. R08-2 – Designation of Library Plaza as Public Park

7. UNFINISHED BUSINESS:

a. None as of January 10, 2008

8. NEW BUSINESS:

a. None as of January 10, 2008

9. DEPARTMENT REPORTS

10. CITIZEN COMMENTS

11. ADJOURN

UPCOMING SPECIAL MEETINGS: TUESDAY, JANUARY 22, 2008 – GROWTH AND ANNEXATION COMMITTEE, CITY HALL AT 6:30 P.M.; AND TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 12, 2008 – STATE HIGHWAY ADMINISTRATION ROUTE 31 FOLLOW-UP MEETING, COUNTY OFFICE BUILDING BASEMENT AT 7:00 P.M.

Editors note: Check out Westminster's new Downtown Business Guide


Sunday, January 13, 2008

20080110 Singing Revolution Director James Tusty to Speak at Cinema Sundays this Sunday, January 13


Singing Revolution Director James Tusty to Speak at Cinema Sundays 1/13

January 10, 2007

Cinema Sundays is delighted to announce that not only will we be screening The Singing Revolution on Sunday 1/13 but we are thrilled that the Director and Producer of the film James Tusty will be joining us.

We are all looking forward to his insight into this well reviewed documentary. Following the film you can count on the usual stimulating Cinema Sundays Q & A. I look forward to seeing you for this special event this Sunday at 10.

Jonathan Palevsky, Cinema Sundays Host.

_____

20080108 “The (Estonia) Singing Revolution” documentary at the Charles Jan. 13, 2007

The Singing Revolution

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=DA9PmZo-2jo

A film by James and Maureen Trusty. It is the story of how culture saved a nation. http://www.singingrevolution.com/

For posts on “Soundtrack” about the Westminster MarylandPaide Estonia Sister City partnership, click here: Estonia Paide Westminster Maryland Sister City Partnership For other posts on Estonia, click here: Europe Estonia EE

Saturday, January 12, 2008

20080102 Carroll County NAACP annual Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. Breakfast on January 19, 2008


Carroll County NAACP annual Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. Breakfast on January 19, 2008

Wednesday, January 02, 2008 – Posted January 12, 2008

The Carroll County NAACP will hold our 5th Annual Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. Breakfast on January 19th at Martins Westminster 8:00 a.m.

For tickets call the NAACP office # 410-751-7667

Thank you for your support.

Jean Lewis, President

Carroll County NAACP

20080104 “The Rosa Parks Story” to be shown at the Carroll Arts Center January 21, 2008


“The Rosa Parks Story” to be shown at the Carroll Arts Center January 21, 2008

MEDIA RELEASE January 4, 2008 Posted January 12, 2008

For more information contact: Sandy Oxx Sandyoxx1 AT earthlink.net or 410/848-7272

“The Rosa Parks Story” at the Carroll Arts Center

The Carroll County Arts Council continues its annual tradition of honoring the memory of Dr. Martin Luther King with a day of family activities. On Monday, January 21, the Arts Center will host two free screenings of the made-for-tv movie “The Rosa Parks Story,” at 10:30 am and 2 pm. The 2002 film stars Academy Award nominee Angela Basset as Rosa McCauley Parks.

Parks, who was raised in the Deep South in the days of Jim Crow, when “separate but equal” was the law, but not a reality. Even at an early age, she refused to believe that she was inferior to anyone. Rosa is forced to cope with many degrading and humiliating situations, particularly a failed attempt at registering to vote.

She later goes on to work as a secretary at the NAACP and on their behalf, raises many questions on the position of Black people in society.

In 1955 she created the spark that ignited the modern Civil Rights Movement when, after a long day’s work, she took the only available seat in the first row of the bus. When the driver demanded that the Black passengers clear the row for a White woman, Rosa refused to comply. The resulting uproar in the South throws Rosa and her family into the Ku Klux Klan’s ring of hatred, but also into the NAACP’s limelight.

This compelling true story demonstrates the power a single act of defiance can have over an ancient tradition of injustice.

The film is Not Rated and runs 94 minutes.

From noon to 2 pm that day, youngsters and the parents are invited to attend a drop-in art workshop where together they can create a masterpiece inspired by the legendary words of Dr. King, “I have a dream……” Workshop leaders are Mahlia Joyce and Jose Flores.

For more information about the free events, call 410/848-7272 or visit www.carr.org/arts. The Carroll Arts Center is located at 91 W. Main Street in downtown Westminster.

20080114 Agenda for Mayor and Council Meeting for Sykesville for January 14, 2007


Agenda for Mayor and Council Meeting for Sykesville for January 14, 2007

MAYOR AND TOWN COUNCIL OF SYKESVILLE

Preliminary AGENDA FOR

MONDAY, JANUARY 14, 2008, 7:00 P.M.

QUORUM: Mayor

MINUTES: Town Clerk

TREASURER’S REPORT: Town Clerk

PUBLIC CONCERNS

BUSINESS

1. Warfield Complex – Master Developer

2. Public Safety Report

3. Introduction - FY 2008 and FY 2009-2013 Capital Improvement Plan (CIP)

4. Solid Waste and Recycling

5. Conservation Efforts

6. Committee to Evaluate Town Salaries and Benefits

7. Mayor and Town Council Retreat

OTHER:

CLOSED SESSION:

1. Legal Consultation –

2. Property Acquisition –

3. Personnel –

And…

The Town of Sykesville's contract Post Office will be closed on

Wednesday, January 16, 2008 from 9 am until 2:30 pm

for changes that are being made to our equipment by the US Postal Service

7th Annual Sykesville Golf Outing

Friday April 18, 2008

1 pm

Waverly Woods Golf Club

2100 Warwick Way

Marriottsville, MD 21104

Sponsored by Sykesville Parks and Events

Come support the programs and have fun!

Proceeds will go to support the Parks & Events Committee

for Activities for Children in Sykesville.

Friday, January 11, 2008

20080111 I am exercising - Blogging is hard work.

I am exercising - Blogging is hard work
True Geek!

January 11, 2008

Will someone please tell my well-intentioned sister-in-law, that I am exercising? Blogging is hard work.

Can someone run to the frig and get me another Arizona Green Tea with ginseng and honey so that I may have my beauty and taste revived. I’m kinda exhausted over here…

####

20080111 I am exercising - Blogging is hard work.

I am exercising - Blogging is hard work
True Geek!

January 11, 2008

Will someone please tell my well-intentioned sister-in-law, that I am exercising? Blogging is hard work.

Can someone run to the frig and get me another Arizona Green Tea with ginseng and honey so that I may have my beauty and taste revived. I’m kinda exhausted over here…

####

20080111 Ozzy brings us this week’s Thank Goodness It’s Friday

Ozzy brings us this week’s Thank Goodness It’s Friday

January 11, 2008

It’s been a long week. Turn up the volume and settle back and enjoy. Whatever inference to current events may very well be up to your imagination… “Your lips are so cold I don’t what else to say.”

Ozzy Osbourne - No More Tears

Oh what the heck. A big thanks to Don Surber.

The light from Obama is a jolt of despair
He’s the first black candidate who has a prayer
Your levee of tears taught the people you might not come back
The Audacious Hope will bring another attack.

Your Billy told you that you’re not supposed to lose to strangers
Look in the mirror tell me do you think your life’s in danger here?
No more tears

Another vote passes and you lost big time
The deadline approacheth and you’re falling behind
You see Barack is gaining, will you lose the presidency?
You close your eyes as the pressure rises and you run out of money
No more tears

So now is it over? Will we just say good-bye?
I’d like to move on and make the most of the night
Maybe the Senate is not so bad a place
Your lips are so cold, what can you do to save face?
I never wanted it to end this way, before November
Believe me when I say the lesson is one to remember:
No more tears

Now play this and go back to work.

####

20080110 Annual Carroll Co. NAACP Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King Writing Contest


Annual Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King Writing Contest

Posted January 10th, 2008

In the past, in my capacity as a (former) elected official and a member of the Carroll County NAACP, I have helped judge this contest. I have always been impressed with the quality of the writing and inspired by our youngest generation’s thoughts.

_____

McDaniel College, the Carroll County Public Schools Department of Minority Achievement and Intervention Programs, the Carroll County Chapter of the NAACP and the MLK Celebration Committee, and the Office of Multicultural Services are hosting the annual Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. writing contest.

The essay contest is for area Carroll County students in grades 4-12. All essays are due January 18, 2008 to Zephia Bryant, Director of Multicultural Services, McDaniel College, 2 College Hill, Westminster, MD 21157-4390.

A celebration honoring Dr. King and the winners of the contest will be held on Monday, February 4, 2008 at 6:30 p.m. in the Alumni Hall at McDaniel College.

Three prizes will be awarded to the winners of the contest, each including cash prizes in the amount of $100 (high school winner), $75 (middle school winner), and $50 (elementary school winner), as well as a certificate, MLK commemorative T-shirt, and a gift bag.

For more information, please contact Patricia Levroney, Minority Achievement Liaison, Carroll County Public Schools (ptlevro AT k12.carr.org or 410-386-1680).

####

Thursday, January 10, 2008

20080110 Update on Smigiel v Franchot decision

Update on Smigiel v Franchot decision

January 10, 2007 7:45 PM

I put the text of the decision up on www.kevindayhoff.net. You can find it here: 20080110 Smigiel v Franchot C-07-49648 (Summary Judgment) Text

It’s a really good read. In addition to this post, 20080110 Judge rules procedural error does not nullify tax increases, I have a longer piece up on the Westminster Eagle: http://news.mywebpal.com/index.cfm?pnpid=978

EAGLE ALERT: Judge rules procedural error does not nullify tax increases

In reading the text, be sure to not miss:

"Although the Court is inclined to agree with the Plaintiffs regarding the reprehensible nature in which the Legislature conducted itself, the remedy they seek in redress is too drastic a notion to accept. The Court can simply not agree that when a technicality in procedure is violated, the entire slate of lawfully enacted legislation should be invalidated."

“Ultimately, this Court is loathe to allow for the relief sought by Plaintiffs inasmuch as it would give rise to a most terrible precedent.”

“While the Court herein holds that the legislation at issue passes constitutional muster, it feels compelled to observe that if the actions presented by way of deposition are business as usual for the General Assembly, the citizens of Maryland deserve far better.”

Kevin Dayhoff

Kevin Dayhoff writes from Westminster Maryland USA.

www.kevindayhoff.net

E-mail him at: kdayhoff AT carr.org or kevindayhoff AT gmail.com

His columns and articles appear in The Tentacle - www.thetentacle.com; Westminster Eagle Opinion; www.thewestminstereagle.com, Winchester Report and The Sunday Carroll Eagle – in the Sunday Carroll County section of the Baltimore Sun. Get Westminster Eagle RSS Feed