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

Tuesday, September 04, 2007

20070904 An answer to Mr. Duck’s question about Port Tobacco


An answer to Mr. Duck’s question about Port Tobacco

September 4th, 2007

Dear Mr. Delusional Duck,

Of course, you are aware that there is no such thing as a silly question.

Although I have not dealt with Port Tobacco officials in recent years, to the best of my knowledge, Port Tobacco is still a functioning municipality with active government officials and an active government. I just called the executive director of the Maryland Municipal League, Scott Hancock and he confirmed it.

The current information on Port Tobacco can be found on the Maryland Municipal League web site, which can be found here: http://www.mdmunicipal.org/mmlhome/index.cfm

A brief description of Port Tobacco can be found here: http://www.mdmunicipal.org/cities/index.cfm?townname=PortTobacco&page=home

A link list for all Maryland municipalities can be found here: http://www.mdmunicipal.org/cities/citiesweb.cfm

Please save/bookmark the Maryland Municipal League web site address: http://www.mdmunicipal.org/mmlhome/index.cfm

For any questions about municipalities in the state of Maryland, the Maryland Municipal League (MML) should be your first stop.

If the information is not readily available on the web site, there are phone numbers on the web site for you to call a Maryland Municipal League staff member (http://www.mdmunicipal.org/about/staff.cfm) who you will find to be very much in the customer service business and will be very helpful and knowledgeable. They are a wonderful, friendly, and extraordinarily helpful group of folks.

Please find an overview of the organization here: http://www.mdmunicipal.org/about/overview.cfm

Briefly: The Maryland Municipal League, founded in 1936, works as a advocate for municipalities throughout the State of Maryland, strengthening the role and capacity of municipal government through research, legislation, technical assistance, training and the dissemination of information for its members.

MML is a statewide organization in Maryland composed solely of municipal officials.

The Maryland Municipal League represents 157 municipal governments and 2 special taxing districts throughout the state of Maryland. The MML is a voluntary, nonprofit, nonpartisan association controlled and maintained by city and town governments.

Disclosure: I served on the Maryland Municipal League Board of Directors annually for five consecutive years, from June 2000 to May 2005.

I graduated from the University of Maryland Academy for Excellence in Local Government in June 2001.

I served on the Maryland Municipal League’s Legislative Committee in 1999-2000 and 2001-2002.

I served as Secretary/Treasurer of the Carroll County Chapter of the Maryland Municipal League for five years (12/07/1999 – 05/16/2005).

I was first elected to the Westminster City Council in May of 1999 and served as the Mayor of Westminster from May 2001 until May 16th, 2005.]

Any additional questions – never hesitate to be in touch. Although I am no longer an elected municipal official, I remain passionate about the good work most local municipal government performs for the citizens we serve. I have not a clue as to why all urban concentrations are not incorporated. Local folks making decisions for local families is always the best way to preserve and protect quality of life and health, safety and welfare.

Thanks for all the great work on the blog. We were all happy for ya to get the attention of the Washington Post“'Duck' Blog Spreads Its Wings in Charles” on August 26th, 2007

Kevin Dayhoff www.kevindayhoff.net

Related links: Maryland Municipal League: http://www.mdmunicipal.org/mmlhome/index.cfm

Posts on “Soundtrack” about the Maryland Municipal League: http://kevindayhoff.blogspot.com/search/label/Maryland%20Municipal%20League

Pasted here for your convenience are links for information on all of Maryland municipalities – on the MML web site:

A B C D E F G H I J K L

Aberdeen

Accident

Annapolis

Baltimore

Barclay

Barnesville

Barton

Bel Air

Berlin

Berwyn Heights

Betterton

Bladensburg

Boonsboro

Bowie

Brentwood

Brookeville

Brookview

Brunswick

Burkittsville

Cambridge

Capitol Heights

Cecilton

Centreville

Charlestown

Chesapeake Beach

Chesapeake City

Chestertown

Cheverly

Chevy Chase

Chevy Chase Section 3

Chevy Chase Section 5

Chevy Chase View

Chevy Chase Village

Church Creek

Church Hill

Clear Spring

College Park

Colmar Manor

Cottage City

Crisfield

Cumberland

Deer Park

Delmar

Denton

District Heights

Eagle Harbor

East New Market

Easton

Edmonston

Eldorado

Elkton

Emmitsburg

Fairmount Heights

Federalsburg

Forest Heights

Frederick

Friendship Heights

Friendsville

Frostburg

Fruitland

Funkstown

Gaithersburg

Galena

Galestown

Garrett Park

Glenarden

Glen Echo

Goldsboro

Grantsville

Greenbelt

Greensboro

Hagerstown

Hampstead

Hancock

Havre de Grace

Hebron

Henderson

Highland Beach

Hillsboro

Hurlock

Hyattsville

Indian Head

Keedysville

Kensington

Kitzmiller

Landover Hills

La Plata

Laurel

Laytonsville

Leonardtown

Loch Lynn Heights

Lonaconing

Luke

M N O P Q R S T U V W X Y Z


Manchester

Mardela Springs

Martin's Additions

Marydel

Middletown

Midland

Millington

Morningside

Mountain Lake Park

Mount Airy

Mount Rainier

Myersville

New Carrollton

New Market

New Windsor

North Beach

North Brentwood

North Chevy Chase

North East

Oakland

Oakmont

Ocean City

Oxford

Perryville

Pittsville

Pocomoke City

Poolesville

Port Deposit

Port Tobacco

Preston

Princess Anne

Queen Anne

Queenstown

Ridgely

Rising Sun

Riverdale Park

Rock Hall

Rockville

Rosemont

Salisbury

Seat Pleasant

Secretary

Sharpsburg

Sharptown

Smithsburg

Snow Hill

Somerset

St. Michaels

Sudlersville

Sykesville

Takoma Park

Taneytown

Templeville

Thurmont

Trappe

Union Bridge

University Park

Upper Marlboro

Vienna

Walkersville

Washington Grove

Westernport

Westminster

Willards

Williamsport

Woodsboro

20070904 How to Avoid the Freshman 15

How to Avoid the Freshman 15

September 4th, 2007

This post is dedicated to everyone who just dropped-off a loved-one at college.

I try and follow nutrition issues because a younger family member wants to be a nutritionist and I felt that a good uncle would wanna participate in meaningful conversations… I’m not sure that it’s working, but that might be the stuff of another conversation.

I was howling when I read the part “Unfortunately, as a diet plan, 47 bowls of cereal per day doesn't work so well.”

Our loved-one, whom we just dropped-off at college, immediately bypassed the fresh fruit, tempting wraps, and salads and began wolfing-down bowls of cereal… As much as I am also a cereal-lover myself, cereal must be a college freshman thing.

Me, I was addicted to macaroni and cheese in college. We would purchase it by the case.

Anyway… I just received this in an e-mail…

from Jen Hubley

When I was in school, there was a rumor going around that the cafeteria meat arrived in large crates marked: GRADE D. SUITABLE FOR PRISONS AND STATE UNIVERSITIES. The taste of the food did nothing to dispel the myth.

In the Spotlight

5 Ways to Get Fat in College

Surprisingly, the general yuckiness of the food did nothing to prevent me from overeating. If anything, it made me stuff food down faster and pig out on desserts more than I normally would. And, of course, all of that led to a common college student disorder: The Mysterious Shrinking Pants Syndrome.
- Exercise Guide Paige Waehner

Fight the Freshman 15

The real culprit was probably the overabundance of carbs we were all eating. If dinner is lousy, it makes sense to load up on free cereal. Unfortunately, as a diet plan, 47 bowls of cereal per day doesn't work so well.

Weight Loss Guide Jennifer R. Scott

Stress and the Freshman 15

If you're an emotional eater, freshman year of college is extra hard. For most of us, it's the first time we were away from home and responsible for ourselves.
- Stress Management Guide Elizabeth Scott, M.S.

####

20070817 “Retirement Wave Building Among House Republicans” by Congressional Quarterly


Retirement Wave Building Among House Republicans” by Congressional Quarterly

September 4th, 2007 – Researching different dynamics of the 2008 elections, I recently came across an article in the Congressional Quarterly that helped lay out some of the challenges… Writing for the Congressional Quarterly, Greg Giroux reports that five House Republicans have recently announced their retirement from office – and not seeking re-election…

Retirement ‘Wave’ Building Among House Republicans?

Congressional Quarterly

By Greg Giroux | 3:45 PM; Aug. 17, 2007 |

The announcement Friday by former House Speaker J. Dennis Hastert, R-Ill., that he will not seek re-election in 2008 capped a week in which three veteran House Republicans in a 24-hour span declared that the current 110th Congress would be their last.

Hastert’s announcement — coupled with similar ones Thursday by Ohio Rep. Deborah Pryce and Mississippi Rep. Charles W. “Chip” Pickering Jr. — brought to five the number of House Republicans who are not seeking re-election next year, compared with two on the Democratic side.

While nearly 15 months remain until the November 2008 election, the retirement decisions of Hastert, Pryce and Pickering will stoke speculation of a larger “wave” of GOP departures that would seriously hamper the party’s quest to make the 16-seat gain that they need to regain the House majority they lost last November.

[…]

Read the rest of the article here: Retirement ‘Wave’ Building Among House Republicans?

20070904 Submerging the truth about the fate of the Chambers Farm

Submerging the truth about the fate of the Chambers Farm.

September 4th, 2007

Contrary to what is being circulated; the Union Mills reservoir project in Carroll County will add another layer of protection to the site of the “pumpkin papers,” and this national treasure is not threatened.

I just finished reading Submerging History on “Red Maryland” by Crossposted: on “The Main Adversary.”

I read – and appreciate both blogs. In my appreciation of both blogs I can only understand that the authors on both blogs want to get it right and understand the importance of making available factual information about any particular subject.

I have also read with great sadness: The House of Chambers [Miller, John J.]

… tried to kill himself, Whittaker Chambers wrote a letter to his . . . spy case, which had driven Chambers to what he called "spiritual . . . land that their son, John Chambers, never has left. "My family will . . .

Posted in National Review / Digital on Friday Aug 10, 2007 at 11:25 AM

I can perhaps understand why Mr. Newgent felt alarmed – and the need to spread that “alarm” about the future of the integrity of such a national treasure as the “Pumpkin Papers”….

In “20070307 A sordid saga of communists, reservoirs, congressman, and pumpkins,” I wrote:

“Folks who have been “had” by the great “seizing” conspiracy are in good company - with ah, count them, 12 members of Congress who wrote to the Carroll County Board of Commissioners on January 12th, 2007…”

[…]

In a response to Congressman Bartlett’s January 3rd, 2007 letter, which he penned in addition to the gang of twelve Congressmen’s January 12, 2007 letter, the Carroll County Board of Commissioners wrote on January 18th, 2007:

“With regard to the Pipe Creek Farm specifically, Carroll County has no intention of negatively impacting the field identified as the location of the famed “pumpkin patch” and has designed the reservoir in a way that minimizes impacts on the balance of the farm. Indeed, the impact anticipated by the planned reservoir… is limited to the northeastern edge of the farm where the Pipe Creek stream crosses the property.

The Pipe Creek farm is already protected from future residential development by easement sold to the Maryland Agricultural land Preservation Foundation (MALPF) in 2001. Carroll County has no interest in acquiring Pipe Creek Farm land for the purpose of constructing the reservoir beyond… the ‘normal pool level.’ We estimate this direct impact on the Pipe Creek farm to equal roughly 15.5 acres. The balance of the farm, approximately 346.5 acres, remains undisturbed and under the full control and ownership of its present owner…”

The “National Review” article painstakingly attempted to be as factual as possible, it nevertheless unfortunately did a disservice to not only the reader but also to the “National Review.” It seemingly purposefully mislead or at least at a minimum easily allowed the reader to be left with the impression that the site of the “Pumpkin Papers” was in danger – when this impression could not be farther from the truth.

I know Carroll County history and I am familiar with the history Whittaker Chambers and the Pumpkin Patch – and I also know the history of the deliberations about building a reservoir at the Union Mills location since it was first discussed in the mid-1970s.

The protection of the site of the Pumpkin Papers and the Chambers Farm has always been of the foremost concern in any discussion. I have known many of the folks behind the proposal and the conservative credentials of one of main promoters of the reservoir (he has since passed away) in the 1970s is beyond reproach.

To be certain, the Union Mills Reservoir is a proposal on a piece of paper and has many regulatory hurdles to cross - - including a survey and assessment of any and all national treasures that may lie within binocular range of the proposed reservoir.

Also, please be aware that the protection of the site of the Pumpkin Papers is important as is the basic health safety and welfare of all Carroll Countians who would benefit from having adequate supplies of drinking water in the future.

These two protections and dynamics are not mutually exclusive.

At this point the only thing “splashing about” in the discussions and deliberations is the misinformation that are being promulgated about the proposed Union Mills Reservoir and any perceived impact on the site of the Pumpkin Papers.

For additional reading please see my other “Soundtrack” posts: Chambers – Whittaker Chambers and the “Pumpkin Papers”

But if you are concerned about the future of the “Pumpkin Patch,” the Chambers Farm and what, if any impact the proposed Union Mills reservoir will have on this irreplaceable national treasure, please read in particuler:

20070323 A reader responds to my post on the Chambers Property and reservoir

And: 20070308 Winchester Report: “A Sordid Saga.”

If anyone has addition thoughts or concerns, please feel free to be in touch.

Kevin Dayhoff

20070831 Hugh Hewitt: A book about Iraqi interpreters in need of being published

Hugh Hewitt: A book about Iraqi interpreters in need of being published

September 4th, 2007 – I have been meaning to write about the Iraqi translators and interpreters – and as yet have not made the time available. For other posts on Soundtrack on this go to: Iraq War Iraqi translators and interpreters, D9000

And/or read the post: 20070719 AP: Denmark Pulls Out Dozens of Iraqi Aides

Meanwhile Hugh Hewitt has a post about: A book about Iraqi interpreters in need of being published

Friday, August 31, 2007

A Book In Need Of A Publisher

Posted by: Hugh Hewitt at 10:51 AM

Robert C. J. Parry is a California Army National Guard officer who was in South Baghdad during 2005. While he was there, he worked to train Iraqi police officers, and quickly found that the most important - and undervalued - tool that he had was the Iraqi interpreters who translated everything his team said.

Without them, there was no training. And without training Iraqi Security Forces, there is no way we can be victorious. However, just being an interpreter means taking you life into your hands - hundreds of them have been murdered - and going on patrol means facing the same risks as soldiers. One "terp" from Robert's battalion was killed by an IED.

Robert is a public relations executive, a recently graduated USC MBA and published author of several OpEds in the Los Angeles Times and Los Angeles Daily News.

He's currently circulating a manuscript, and is looking for an agent or publisher who is interestd in telling this compelling story of brave Iraqis who have gone "all in" with their American liberators. They remember what life was like under Hussein, and what life will be like if freedom fails.

[…]

It is a short post – read the entire article here: A Book In Need Of A Publisher

20070903 Panama set to begin $5bn project

Panama set to begin $5bn project

Monday, 3 September 2007

This very brief article caught my eye as I have always been fascinated with the history of, and the building and operation of the Panama Canal. I have had friends take a cruise through the canal and their reports confirm that it remains on my list of “must things to do” before I get too old to enjoy.

Panama is set to start work on a $5bn (£2.4bn) building project to widen the Panama Canal to increase its capacity.

The project involves adding a third set of locks that will enable modern ships to use the canal. Many tankers are now too large for the 50-mile (80km) route.

Panama residents overwhelmingly backed the plan in a referendum held in 2006.

The entire, albeit very short article can be found here: Panama set to begin $5bn project

Sunday, September 02, 2007

20070828 Gonzales and the D.C. sharks


Gonzales and the D.C. sharks

Jay Ambrose (read his brief bio here: Jay Ambrose Senior Fellow Independence Institute brief bio) has written an illuminating take on Alberto resigning as U. S. attorney general.

Hat Tip: Carroll County Times: Gonzales driven by beliefs By Jay Ambrose in the Sunday, September 02, 2007 publication of the paper

Gonzales and the D.C. sharks

Alberto Gonzales is resigning as U.S. attorney general, and here is what critics of all stripes are saying: He was blindly, brainlessly loyal to President Bush, gave atrocious advice, was an incompetent managerial mangler and klutzy in his own self-defense.

[…]

Where some critics go wrong is in supposing the Gonzales recommendations were nothing more than a lickspittle exercise of telling Bush what he wanted to hear. The assumption is that, for this hardworking son of a construction worker, being constantly in agreement was the loyal thing to do to a benefactor who as governor of Texas had appointed him to three top state positions and then, as president, brought him to Washington's upper echelons.

Gonzales has surely been loyal to Bush, but a better explanation of his advice comes from a supporter pointing to Gonzales' far-from-erroneous belief that the 9/11 attacks revealed a major security threat requiring different answers from what previously had protected the nation. It wasn't spineless groveling that brought him to some advice that, in the estimation of many, went much too far, but a sense of immense responsibility for keeping this nation safe.

The critics seem to me most amiss in applauding the all-out assault on Gonzales for the firing of nine U.S. attorneys. While there are hints of unethical doings here, that's about it: hints. Nothing illegal has been demonstrated, and it remains a fact despite leftist shoulder-shrugging that President Bill Clinton fired 93 U.S. attorneys as his political prerogative with scarcely a murmur of protest.

[…]

In the end, the Gonzales story seems one about a decent man who came to Washington not as a total innocent, but as someone who didn't know exactly what he was letting himself in for and without certain skills required for thriving or even surviving at top levels. He's headed elsewhere soon, but may find himself pursued by D.C. sharks intent on taking more bites out of his hide. That possibility speaks more poorly of the country's current political temper than it does of Gonzales.

Jay Ambrose, formerly Washington director of editorial policy for Scripps Howard newspapers is a columnist living in Colorado.

Read the entire column here “Gonzales driven by beliefs By Jay Ambrose” on the Carroll County Times website or if you are reading this at a later date and the Carroll County Times’ link is dead – go here: Gonzales and the D.C. sharks

Saturday, September 01, 2007

20070831 Maryland Governor Martin O’Malley’s August 2007 press releases

Maryland Governor Martin O’Malley’s August 2007 press releases

August 31st, 2007

August 31 Governor O’Malley Selects Trial Courts Judicial Nominating Commission Members

August 31 Governor O’Malley and Secretary Perez Announce Plans for Living Wage Implementation

August 29 Governor O'Malley Announces New Inmate Release Policy; Inmates to be Released Closer to Home, Re-Entry Service

August 28 Governor O’Malley, County Executive Ulman Visit Howard County High School

August 27 Governor O'Malley, County Executive Smith Attend First Day of School in Baltimore County

August 23 Governor O'Malley Appoints Nancy King to Maryland State Senate

August 22 Governor O'Malley Announces Federal Drought Assistance to Help Maryland Farmers

August 20 Governor O'Malley Participates in First Day of School in Prince George's County

August 18 Governor O'Malley Delivers Address to Maryland Association of Counties

August 17 Governor O'Malley Accepts Donation of Maryland's First Solar Utility Vehicle

August 16 Governor O'Malley Attends Opening Ceremony of Newly Renovated Tarry A. While Guest House

August 16 Governor O'Malley Meets with Local Homeland Security Emergency Officials

August 15 Governor O'Malley Presents Delegatge Robert Cannon with Citation for State Public Service

August 9 Maryland Energy Administration Announces New Residential Energy Efficiency Programs for Marylanders

August 8 Governor O'Malley Appoints Six to Health Care Access and Reimbursement Task Force

August 7 O'Malley Announces Consent Decree, Assistance for Homeowners with Dry Wells on Lower Eastern Shore

Friday, August 31, 2007

20070831 This week in The Tentacle

This week in The Tentacle

August 31st, 2007

Friday, August 31, 2007

Kuzemchak's Not Listening

Roy Meachum

All the sound and fury coming out of City Hall these days belong to a single alderman. Donna Kuzemchak obviously wasn't listening to voters in the last election.

City Charter revisions - An Ambitious Task

George Wenschhof

The decision by Mayor Jeff Holtzinger to review the 20-plus articles that make up the Charter of City of Frederick is a worthwhile and much needed endeavor. A regularly scheduled interval for future comprehensive charter reviews should also result from this action.


Thursday, August 30, 2007

The 126th Annual Maryland State Fair

Chris Cavey

The best 11 days of summer 2007 are upon us and that means just one thing - The 126th Annual Maryland State Fair. For those of us who "work" the Fair, it means meeting and greeting the public while "selling your wares" in the main Exhibition Hall. My sale is, as always, The Maryland Republican Party.

WE GET LETTERS!

A reader in Emmitsburg takes issue with Tony Soltero's column of last week on the need to raise taxes. CLICK HERE!


Wednesday, August 29, 2007

"The Crocodile Dundee Factor"

Kevin E. Dayhoff

September 15 is fast approaching. That's when Gen. David H. Petraeus will give his report to Congress on the progress in the war in Iraq.

General Petraeus has become a household name in America as the military mind tapped to head-up President George W. Bush's new way forward - or "surge" initiative announced in January.


Even though most people are well aware of General Petraeus, one wonders how many are aware of the work of Dr. David Kilcullen.


Any definitive discourse as to why the current military efforts in Iraq are successful must include some knowledge of Dr. Kilcullen, an Australian counterinsurgency expert.


_____


Senator Clinton: A Gambling Woman

Katie Nash

Sen. Hillary R. Clinton (D., NY) and her staff are working hard to portray her as a centrist, with their eye on the prize of 2008. This strategy was successful for her husband, but can a centrist win in the Democratic primary election? It appears the Clinton machine is going for double or nothing.


Tuesday, August 28, 2007

"The Big Easy" Ain't Easy

Roy Meachum

Tomorrow brings Hurricane Katrina's second anniversary. The world ended for much of the New Orleans I grew up in, on August 29, 2005. Not my neighborhood though.

The Proboscis Monkeys - Sarawak Part 2

Tom McLaughlin

I have a big nose and have always been teased about it. I once considered a nose job, but one teacher told me it was a good strong Roman nose and I should be proud of it. During the summer months it often becomes bright red, refusing to tan with the rest of me. I guess this is the reason I became enamored with the Proboscis Monkey's of Borneo.


Monday, August 27, 2007

Solution or Problem: Which part are you?

Richard B. Weldon Jr.

I'm writing this from a fourth floor balcony overlooking the Atlantic Ocean. Families are spread out on the sand below; children are frolicking in the wind-whipped surf. The Maryland Association of Counties summer conference is in full swing.

Orang Hutan - Sarawak Part 1

Tom McLaughlin

Okay, let's get this straight. It's Orang Hutan, not orangutan. Orang means man and hutan means forest in the Malay language. Orang Hutan. Impress your friends by saying I read an article about the Orang Hutan on The Tentacle and then politely correct them when they say orangutan.


Friday, August 24, 2007

Christian Concern?

Roy Meachum

Charity to Muslims is "Zagat," which requires the faithful to share with their less privileged brothers and sisters. In the Old Testament, Jews were told to turn away from their table no one needy. The very essence of Christ's teaching was we must comfort all other human beings.

The Business of Taking Care

Patricia A. Kelly

A crucial interstate highway bridge connecting two important sister cities in the United States of America recently collapsed. One of the last missing bodies came out of the water just this week.

The Sounds of Summer

Edward Lulie III

Recently the dull roar of lawnmowers, that ever constant background sound of summer, has vanished. It seems that those sun-drenched - but rainless skies - had shriveled away any need for the grass to be cut.


Thursday, August 23, 2007

Doctrinaire Consequences

Tony Soltero

About a year ago or so, the Minnesota legislature drafted a budget bill that, among other things, included a gas tax to be used for infrastructure investment. The bill easily passed the state's legislature and went to Republican Gov. Tom Pawlenty for his signature.

August 22, 2007

Edward Hopper: Poet of the ordinary

Kevin E. Dayhoff

Edward Hopper's "Nighthawks," 1942, oil on canvas, depicts a voyeuristic portrayal of ambiguous urban alienation and impersonalization as three customers and a soda jerk spend time together in the harsh glare of artificial light in the middle of the night.

The voyeuristic stark world of American Scene realist artist Edward Hopper was recently displayed at the Museum of Fine Arts in Boston.

August 15, 2007

The Subprime Mortgage Mania Mess

Kevin E. Dayhoff

After several weeks of Wall Street volatility, it appears that the market has hopefully finally exhaled and calmed down.

20070827 A dream come true: Feather Fund helps girl purchase the pony she has always wanted By Carrie Ann Knauer, Carroll County Times Staff Writer

20070827 A dream come true: Feather Fund helps girl purchase the pony she has always wanted By Carrie Ann Knauer, Carroll County Times Staff Writer

Carroll County Times

A dream come true: Feather Fund helps girl purchase the pony she has always wanted

By Carrie Ann Knauer, Times Staff Writer
Monday, August 27, 2007

Skylar Hull, 9, pets her Chincoteague pony, Nevaeh’s Precious Angel, given to her by the Feather Fund, at her Manchester home Thursday.

Skylar Hull wrote in her Feather Fund application essay that she has wanted a pony since she was 5 years old.

“Every time I had a birthday, I’d ask ‘Is there a pony in the pasture for me?’ ” said the 9-year-old Manchester resident.

Skylar’s dreams came true this month when a local charity, the Feather Fund, helped her purchase a Chincoteague pony.

Each year, the Feather Fund receives about a dozen applications from children who want a Chincoteague pony, said Lois Szymanski, a member of the board of directors. The organization sees distributing the ponies as a way for children to learn responsibility, care and respect, as well as teaching the concept of “giving back” that was embodied by Carollynn Suplee, who inspired the creation of the organization.

The applications are evaluated by the board of directors. They are looking for children who can’t afford to buy a pony by themselves and for evidence of a strong work ethic.

Skylar was chosen for her efforts to raise money on her own, and for her passion for wanting a pony, Szymanski said.

“She eats, sleeps and dreams ponies,” she said.

Skylar’s mother Barbara Hull said her daughter had always loved ponies, but when she started helping their neighbor muck out horse stalls and clean their hooves, she and her husband realized it was more than a fleeting interest.

[…]


Read the entire article here:
A dream come true: Feather Fund helps girl purchase the pony she has always wanted


Reach staff writer Carrie Ann Knauer at 410-857-7874 or
carrie.knauer@carrollcountytimes.com.

HISTORY OF THE CHINCOTEAGUE PONIES

The legend is that these ponies swam ashore from a Spanish vessel that had capsized off the coast, around the year 1600. Once on the islands, they became stunted under the harsh environment. To keep from starving, they ate coarse saltmarsh cordgrass, American beachgrass, thorny greenbrier stems, bayberry twigs, seaweed and even poison ivy. The horses bred down to the unique breed known today as the Chincoteague Pony.

There are two groups of these ponies descended from the original Arabian horses that survived the legendary shipwreck.

The Virginia Herd consists of approximately 130 ponies and is owned by the Chincoteague volunteer fire department. The ponies graze in the Chincoteague National Wildlife Refuge, located on the Virginia portion of Assateague Island.

The Maryland Herd consists of approximately 140 ponies and is owned by the Maryland Park Service.

The famous annual “Pony Round-up” and “Pony Swim” is held each year during the month of July. The Chincoteague Volunteer Firemen herd the ponies off their island at slack tide, through the seawater channel to Virginia. On the last Wednesday of every July, the ponies are gathered for the sale the next day.

Source: The National Chincoteague Pony Association

THE FEATHER FUND

The Feather Fund was created in 2003 to carry on the memory of Carollynn Suplee, a woman who purchased her first pony to donate to Lois Szymanski’s daughters in 1995, even though they were strangers.The two families met at the annual Chincoteague Island Pony Swim and Round-Up sale. For the Szymanskis, it was a tradition, but Suplee, then a resident of Herndon, Va., was there for the first time on a visit to her husband’s mother.

Szymanski’s daughters, Ashley and Shannon, had saved $500 and wanted to buy a pony, though their parents knew that the ponies sold for much more. After watching 40 ponies sell at the auction at prices well over the girls’ savings, the girls started to give up hope, when they were introduced to Suplee.

Suplee had come to the auction to purchase a pony and donate it back to the island, part of her way of “giving something back” after recently surviving brain tumor surgery. Suplee had missed the opportunity to purchase the ponies that were set aside to be re-released, so she had decided to buy a pony for a child that couldn’t afford the price on their own.At first the family resisted, but then saw how much the act meant to Suplee and accepted. The girls bought a brown foal with a white feather-shaped mark on its shoulder and named him Sea Feather.

The Suplees continued to return to the island for several years to purchase ponies for children or to release them into the wild. But in 2003, her cancer returned, and she passed away that November. The Szymanskis, Suplee’s family and friends, decided to honor Carollynn Suplee’s memory by continuing her mission. They named the organization the Feather Fund because Suplee believed feathers were signs from God, as referenced in the Bible’s Psalm 91.

Source: www.featherfund.org


http://www.carrollcountytimes.com/articles/2007/08/27/news/local_news/newsstory1.txt

20070827 A dream come true: Feather Fund helps girl purchase the pony she has always wanted By Carrie Ann Knauer, Carroll County Times Staff Writer

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Thursday, August 30, 2007

20070828 Making America Safer By Defeating Extremists In The Middle East

WHITE HOUSE FACT SHEET: MAKING AMERICA SAFER BY DEFEATING EXTREMISTS IN THE MIDDLE EAST

8/28/2007

THE WHITE HOUSE

Office of the Press Secretary

(Reno, Nevada)

___________________________________________________________

For Immediate Release August 28, 2007

Making America Safer By Defeating Extremists In The Middle East

President Bush Explains Why Winning The Fight In Iraq Is Key To Countering The Ambitions Of Al Qaeda And Iran

Today, President Bush Will Address The American Legion National Convention In Reno, Nevada, To Explain Why Defeating Extremists In The Middle East Is Essential To American Security And Why Success In Iraq Is Vital To Winning This Battle. America is engaged in a great ideological struggle against violent Islamic extremists around the world, and the fight for the future of the Middle East is a key aspect of this struggle.

X America Has Enduring And Vital Interests In The Middle East.

We seek a region of secure democratic states at peace with each other, participating in an open global market and existing as partners in the war on terror.

We seek to dry up the stream of recruits for al Qaeda by helping nations offer their people a path to a more hopeful future.

We seek an Iran whose government is accountable to its people instead of to leaders who promote terror and pursue the technology that could be used to develop nuclear weapons.

We seek to advance a two-state solution for Israelis and Palestinians to live side by side in peace and security; and

We seek justice and dignity and human rights for all people of the Middle East.

Achieving this future requires hard work and strategic patience, but our security depends on getting it done.

X The Most Important And Immediate Way To Counter The Ambitions Of Al Qaeda, Iran, And Other Forces Of Instability And Terror In The Middle East Is To Win The Fight In Iraq. The challenge in Iraq comes down to this: either the forces of violent e xtremism succeed and our enemies advance their interests in Iraq, or the forces of freedom succeed and we advance our interests.

If Violent Extremists Were Allowed To Prevail In The Middle East, The Region Would Be Dramatically Transformed In A Way That Could Imperil The World

The Violent Islamic Radicalism That Inspires Extremists In The Middle East Has Two Main Strains. Allowing these forces of radicalism to drive America out of the Middle East could result in disaster for the region's people, danger to our frien ds and allies, and a direct threat to American peace and security.

1) The First Strain Is Sunni Extremism, Embodied By Al Qaeda And Its Terrorist Allies. These extremists hope to impose their dark vision across the Middle East by raising up a violent and radical caliphate that spans from Spain to Indonesia. They kill fellow Muslims in places like Algeria, Jordan, Egypt, and Saudi Arabia in an attempt to undermine their governments. And they kill Americans because they know we stand in their way they attacked U.S. Embassies in Africa in 1998, attacked the USS Cole in 2000, killed nearly 3,000 people on 9/11, and plot to attack us again.

2) The Second Strain Is Shia Extremism, Supported And Embodied By Iran's Government. Iran is the world's leading state sponsor of terrorism, and the United States is working with friends and allies around the world to confront the danger presented by actions of Iran's government. Iran's leaders threaten the security of nations everywhere by:

Actively pursuing technology that could be used to develop nuclear weapons;

Arresting visiting American scholars who have committed no crimes and pose no threat to their regime;

Backing Hezbollah terrorists who are trying to undermine the democratic government of Lebanon;

Funding the terrorist groups Hamas and Palestinian Islamic Jihad, which murder the innocent, target Israel, and destabilize the Palestinian territories;

Sending arms to the Taliban in Afghanistan, which can be used to attack American and NATO troops and Afghan civilians; and

Sending arms to extremists in Iraq that are used against Coalition and Iraqi troops, and Iraqi civilians.

These Two Dangerous Strains Of Extremism Vying For Control Of The Middle East Have Now Closed In On Iraq In An Effort To Bring Down Its Young Democracy

Sunni Extremists, Led By Al Qaeda, Are Staging Sensational Attacks On Innocent Men, Women, And Children In Iraq In An Attempt To Stoke Sectarian Violence. These violent extremists' ranks include foreign fighters from a variety of countries in the region who travel to Iraq through Syria. Their operatives have killed those see king to build a new future for the Iraqi people, and their operations seek to create images of chaos and carnage to break the will of the American people. Their targets include everyone they consider infidels including Christians, Jews, Yezidis, Shia, and even fellow Sunnis who do not share their radical distortion of Islam.

Shia Extremists, Backed By Iran, Are Training Iraqis To Carry Out Attacks On Our Forces, The Iraqi Government, And The Iraqi People. Members of Iran's Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps Qods Force are supplying extremist groups with funding and weapons, including sophisticated improvised explosive devices (IEDs). With the assistance of Hezbollah, they have provided training for violent forces active inside Iraq.

X The Attacks On Our Bases And Our Troops Using Iranian-Supplied Munitions Have Increased In The Last Few Months Despite Pledges By Iran To Help Stabilize The Security Situation In Iraq. Recently, Coalition forces seized 240-millimeter rocket s that had been manufactured in Iran this year and provided to Iraqi extremist groups by Iranian agents.

X The Iranian Regime Must Halt These Actions At Once. Some say Iran's leaders are not aware of what members of their own regime are doing. Others say Iran's leaders are actively seeking to provoke the West. Either way, Iranian leaders bear the responsibility for aiding attacks against Coalition forces and the murder of innocent Iraqis.

The Fight In Iraq Has A Direct Impact On The Safety Of Americans Here At Home. We have seen what violent extremists will do when American forces are actively engaged in Iraq, and we can envision what they would do if they were emboldened by American forces in retreat. For all those who ask whether the fight in Iraq is worth it, imagine an Iraq where militia groups backed b y Iran control large parts of the country, and al Qaeda has established sanctuaries to safely plot future attacks on targets all over the world, including the U.S. Homeland and they could use billions of dollars in oil revenues to buy weapons and pursue their deadly ambitions.

The Momentum Is On Now Our Side In Iraq Our New Strategy Is Seizing The Initiative From Our Enemy, And Giving It To The Iraqi People

Our New Strategy Is Showing Results In Better Security.

X Sectarian violence has sharply decreased in Baghdad.

X Since January, we have killed or captured an average of more than 1,500 al Qaeda terrorists and other enemies of Iraq's elected government each month.

X Al Qaeda is being displaced from former strongholds in Baghdad, Anbar, and Diyala provinces.

X We have conducted operations against Iranian Qods Force agents whose group supplies lethal munitions to extremist groups.

X We have targeted Iranian-backed Shia militants and their supply networks and Prime Minister Maliki has courageously committed to pursue them.

Our New Strategy Is Resulting In Encouraging Developments At The Local Level, And As Iraqis Take Control Over Their Lives At The Local Level, They Will Demand More Action From Their National Leaders In Baghdad. In the cities and neighborhoods where they live, Iraqis are increasingly reaching accommodations with each other, with the Coalition, and with the government in Baghdad. This reconciliation is coming from the bottom up; it is having an impact in the fight against the enemy; and it is building a solid foundation for a democratic Iraq.

X In Anbar The Province That Had Been Called "Lost" To The Enemy Increasing Numbers Of Local Sunnis Have Turned Against Al Qaeda. Local sheikhs have joined with American forces to drive the terrorists out of the capital city of Ramadi, and elsewhere, residents are providing critical intelligence, and tribesmen have joined the Iraqi police and security forces.

X Many Iraqis Who Once Felt Marginalized Are Rejoining The Political Process. Virtually every city and town in the province now has a mayor and a municipal council, and local officials are forming ties with the central government in Baghdad because these Sunni leaders now see a role for their people in the new Iraq. In an encouraging sign, the central government is beginning to respond with funding for vital services and reconstruction, and with increased security forces.

X In Other Provinces, There Are Also Signs Of Bottom Up Progress. For example, in Diyala province, the city of Baqubah re-opened six of its banks, providing residents with capital for the local economy. And in Ninewa province, local officials have established a commission to investigate corruption, with a local judge empowered to pursue charges of fraud and racketeering.

Iraq's Government Still Has More Work To Do To Meet Many Of Its Legislative Benchmarks, But It Is Also Important To Note That Many Of The Goals Behind These Benchmarks Are Being Achieved Without Legislation. For example, the national government is already sharing oil revenues with provinces despite the fact that no formal law has been passed.

X The President Is Encouraged By The Agreement Reached Sunday Night By The Top Leaders In Iraq's Government. These leaders agreed on several draft pieces of legislation that are at the core of national reconciliation and are among the benchmarks identified by the United States Congress, including a draft law on de-Baathification reform and draft legislation on provincial powers. T hese measures still have to be passed by the Iraqi parliament, but the agreement shows that Iraq's leaders can put aside their differences, sit down together, and work out tough issues central to the fate of their country.

X Iraq's Government Is Also Making Gains In Other Important Areas. Electricity production is improving, and Iraq's pa rliament has passed about 60 pieces of legislation, including a $41 billion budget that includes $10 billion for reconstruction and capital investment.

X It Makes No Sense To Respond To Military Progress By Claiming That We Have Failed Because Iraq's Parliament Has Yet To Pass Every Law It Said It Would. Improving security is the precondition for making gains in other areas. In two weeks, General Petraeus and Ambassador Crocker will return to Washin gton to deliver an interim assessment of the situation on the ground and the prospects for the future. This status report comes less than three months since the surge became fully operational. Congress should listen to it in its entirety and withhold conclusions until they can hear these men out.

Our Strategy Is Also Showing Results At The International Level. The international community increasingly understands the importance of a free Iraq, and we will continue to rally the world to this noble and necessary cause.

X International Compact For Iraq: The United Nations and Iraq with support from the International Monetary Fund, the World Bank, and nations from around the globe have finalized an International Compact for Iraq that will bring new economic assistance and debt relief in exchange for aggressive economic reform. So far, the Iraqis have made significant progress mee ting IMF economic benchmarks.

X Neighbors Conference: The Iraqis have convened a Neighbors Conference that is bringing together nations in the region to help the Iraqis through specific security, economic, and diplomatic cooperation. As part of these diplomatic initiatives, Prime Minister Maliki has met with his counterparts in Turkey, Syria, and Iran to urge support for his nation.

X United Nations: The United Nations Security Council has decided to expand its mission in Iraq, and is seeking to help with local elections and reconciliation. The United Nations will soon name a new high-ranking envoy to Iraq, to coordinate the UN's expanded support for that country.

X Saudi Arabia: Saudi Arabia is looking to open a new embassy in Baghdad.

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