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

Saturday, September 08, 2007

20070907 News Clips


News Clips

September 7, 2007

STATE NEWS

Sales tax solution

O'Malley expects higher, wider levy to fight crisis

http://www.baltimoresun.com/news/local/bal-te.md.omalley07sep07,0,6396240.story

Gov. Martin O'Malley said yesterday that he expects the state will increase the sales tax and expand it to cover services as part of a solution to Maryland's $1.5 billion budget shortfall. Underscoring the politically painful decisions the budget crisis will entail, the governor also said he might not include the full amount required by the Thornton education funding law in next year's budget. That would effectively cut $137 million in aid planned for local schools.

"All of this is going to require a lot of courage, a lot of fortitude and a lot of foresight on behalf of al l of our leaders in the General Assembly in order to make votes that are unpopular today but are the right thing to do for tomorrow and the next generation," O'Malley said in an interview on WYPR-FM's Marc Steiner Show.

BRAC requires marketing Md.

Officials try to persuade defense workers reluctant to move here

http://www.baltimoresun.com/news/local/bal-md.ar.marketing07sep07,0,7188483.story

State officials, trying to persuade military families to move to Maryland when their jobs are transferred here over the next few years, plan to open an office near Fort Monmouth, N.J., that will offer information on real estate, attractions and other vital facts about the Free State.

The plan is part of efforts to market the state to thousands of employees in Virginia and New Jersey who are being re located to Fort Meade, Aberdeen Proving Ground and elsewhere in Maryland as part of the base realignment and closure process known as BRAC.

"We are going to do everything in our power to make the transition as easy as possible," Gov. Martin O'Malley said yesterday in Crownsville before a council overseeing the state's military installations. "We want to look at this as a big positive."

Bond rating falls a notch

Aquarium's marks lowered by Moody's over cash concerns

http://www.baltimoresun.com/news/local/baltimore_city/bal-md.ci.aquarium07sep07,0,1662905,print.story

The National Aquarium took a hit yesterday when Moody's Investors Service downgraded its bond rating, voicing concerns about the attraction's depleted cash reserves - particularly as a multimillion-dollar aquatic cent er project looms on the horizon.

Moody's knocked the aquarium from an "A2" rating to an "A3," a move that would make it more expensive to borrow money. Aquarium officials played down Moody's assessment, saying that the attraction remains in a solid financial situation.

"Nobody wants to have their rating downgraded, but the fact is this is still a good rating," said David M. Pittinger, the aquarium's executive director. "The important thing is to put it in perspective. We are operating in the black."

O'Malley blasts schools superintendent

http://www.examiner.com/a-921137~O_Malley_blasts_schools_superintendent.html

State School Superintendent Nancy Grasmick must step down. Gov. Martin O'Malley expressed his displeasure in the state's top education official Thursday during a radio show in which he called her leadership abilities into question.

O'Malley also wants the authority to select the superintendent himself, rather than rely on the appointed state board of education, which now names the superintendent.

"We need greater alignment between the governor and the superintendent of schools," O'Malley said on the Mark Steiner show on WYPR radio. "That trust does not exist between Dr. Grasmick and myself."

Grasmick spokesman Bill Reinhard said, "We really don't have any interest in commenting on the governor's remarks."

Voters say mayor's race ignores critical issues

http://www.examiner.com/a-921121~Voters_say_mayor_s_race_ignores_critical_issues.html

Crime, crime and more crime. That's been the primary topic in Baltimore's mayoral contest, and some say with good reason. A rising homicide rate and a spate of high-profile violent crime mean that public safety should be the No. 1 topic of the campaign.

But other residents and advocates say quality-of-life issues - the city's penchant for writing parking tickets, high auto insurance rates and a vexing pubic transportation system - are rarely raised but are just as important.

Colleges adopt student-loan rules in wake of national probe of industry

http://www.examiner.com/a-921126~Colleges_adopt_student_loan_rules_in_wake_of_national_probe_of_industry.html

All of Maryland's 60-some universities have adopted student loan regulations after a national investigation of the industry revealed some financial aid of ficers - including one at The Johns Hopkins University - received kickbacks from lenders.

University officials are prohibited from receiving anything of value from lending institutions in exchange for steering students toward those lenders, according to the new code of conduct established by Maryland Attorney General Doug Gansler established.

County GOP gives boot to chairman

http://www.examiner.com/a-921136~County_GOP_gives_boot_to_chairman.html

The Anne Arundel Republican Central Committee ousted its chairman in a move that many county GOP members called a black eye for the party.

Committee members said Collins failed as a leader by not pushing for voter registration, delaying subcommittee assignment and not quelling internal disputes. He has been the chairman since November. Many GOP members called the committee's action disgraceful. Although others agreed Collins had to go, they disapproved of the committee's methods.

O'Malley rips slots opponents, Grasmick

http://www.washingtontimes.com/article/20070907/METRO/109070041/1004

Gov. Martin O'Malley yesterday criticized opponents of legalizing slot machines and Maryland schools Superintendent Nancy S. Grasmick, saying he would like to replace her as soon as possible.

When asked by a caller on a radio show why he supports slots after having called them "morally bankrupt" while serving as mayor of Baltimore, Mr. O'Malley said that he is ready to compromise and that state lawmakers should be too.

Senate President Thomas V. Mike Miller Jr., a slots supporter, said Mr. O'Malley has yet to use his gubernatorial power to force Mr. Busch's hand.

"The governor's going to have to use the hammer of his office to deliver the final product," said Mr. Miller, adding his office will become a second home to the governor in the coming months as they work to close the shortfall.
Mr. O'Malley said he would like to replace Mrs. Grasmick because he does not trust her.

"It's not so much a matter of like as a matter of trust," he said. "That trust does not exist between Dr. Grasmick and myself."

"I think overall in our state, we've made a mistake in insulating [superintendents] from the... accountability that comes with a direct appointment from the elected executive," he said.

Subsidized Projects Struggling, Audit Finds

http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2007/09/06/AR2007090602559.html

Several projects subsidized by Maryland's economic development agency are in financial trouble, legislative auditors reported yesterday, citing, in particular, a resort in Western Maryland and a golf course in Calvert County.

Rocky Gap Lodge & Golf Resort, the state-subsidized retreat built for $45 million a decade ago to revive an economically depressed area, has operated in the red for years and is $27 million in debt, the auditors said.

Also, two Baltimore nursing homes defaulted on payments to bondholders last year.

Although Gov. Martin O'Malley (D) has said he favors granting gambling licenses to horse-racing tracks, Senate President Thomas V. Mike Miller Jr. (D-Calvert), a strong backer of slots, said yesterday that an additional venue at Rocky Gap could put the hotel in the black and help the state budget by drawing customers from neighboring West Virginia and Pennsylvania.

The audit also criticized the economic development agency's accounting controls. About $30 million in checks for leases and other payments that the headquarters received last year were not immediately deposited in the bank, leaving the agency open to fraud.

EDITORIALS/OP-EDS

What's the rush?

http://www.baltimoresun.com/news/opinion/editorial/bal-ed.vote07sep07,0,1739918.story

We applaud the effort under way in Congress to increase confidence in the integrity of voting machines used around the country, but draw no comfort from a mandate that Maryland and five other states would have a year or less to replace the expensive equipment just recently purchased.

The very worthy goal of legislation expected to be taken up shortly by the House is to ensure that electronic or computerized voting equipment provide a paper backup system that can be used to verify that votes were cast as intended and to double-check tallies in the event of a recount.

But the November 2008 timetable for buying and installing such equipment - plus training elections board staff and volunteer judges - is a recipe for more of the human-error-inspired chaos that has proved the greatest bane of the current voting equipment.

Again, we understand the importance of ensuring confidence in balloting that often these days decides elections by the barest of margins. But no model of voting machine is utterly tamper-free, and certainly none is worth acquiring so quickly that the odds of simple human error are increased exponentially.

Free advice

http://www.gazette.net/stories/090707/polilee223736_32365.shtml

There's no free lunch. But know-it-all columnists are full of free advice.

Here's some for various Maryland elected officials.

Governors are humans, too.

They need ways to relax and unwind from their stress-filled jobs. Bob Ehrlich played golf. Harry Hughes played the trumpet. Parris Glendening played the field. Martin O'Malley likes to knock back a few Guinesses and play in his Celtic rock band, O'Malley's March. He's even cut a few CDs.

If I were O'Malley's political advisor, an unlikely scenario, I'd tell him to drop the band and take up stamp collecting. If he thinks last year's press of events demanded his full attention, wait until he sees 2008. Trust me, Governor O'Malley, now is not the time for a guitar-playing governor. The looming hard times need a Caesar, not a Nero.

No, if Democratic lawmakers must make the tough vote for taxes and slots they want their leader, Governor O'Malley, right in the middle of it. They want O'Malley's fingerprints all over the tax?

Slots package and the best way to do this is by making him submit a state budget showing exactly which taxes he supports and exactly which slots plan he favors. Once his political fate is tied to the package he'll be forced to pull out the stops to get it passed.

Budget, ballot, bounty and more

http://www.gazette.net/stories/090707/poliras223738_32366.shtml

While watching to see if the General Assembly's much-anticipated special session evaporates like a mirage, House Speaker Mike Busch once again is the central character. He's out to subvert Gov. Martin O'Malley's plan to use slots money to help balance the budget and he thinks he can do that by avoiding a special session. So he's playing keep-away. The longer he avoids talking specifics, the harder it is for O'Malley to work out the myriad details to increase taxes and legalize s lots.

A lawsuit against Governor O'Malley alleging that a veteran state employee was fired because he was (a) a Republican or (b) white could make for interesting court testimony.

O'Malley had as much right to fire Reichart as former Gov. Bob Ehrlich had to fire those at-will employees he let go. It's known as politics. Candidate O'Malley angrily denounced Ehrlich for his actions during last year's campaign but now the shoe is on the other foot.

When the General Assembly meets, rest assured the ''richest state" line with be dragged into countless debates to prove Maryland taxpayers can afford virtually any proposal to aid the state's underclass. I can hear it now: ''For the richest state to allow this condition to continue is outrageous ... ''For a state with so much wealth, we can afford (fill in the blank)."

Will state's primaries matter?

Not with so many states scheduled to vote by Feb. 12, but state leaders hoping to make noise

http://www.gazette.net/stories/090707/polinew03639_32359.shtml

By the time Maryland's primary election day arrives Feb. 12, voters in more than 30 states will already have cast their ballots, prompting questions about the effort earlier this year to advance the state's primary date by three weeks. An earlier spot on the calendar would give Maryland a stronger voice in the party nominating process, Democratic leaders reasoned when they proposed the change.

Since then, numerous states have leapfrogged Maryland - 23 will hold their primaries or party caucuses Feb. 5 alone - bumping it to almost the end of the line.

The state party's top legislative leaders, Del. Anthony J. O'Donnell (R-Dist. 29C) of Lusby and Sen. David R. Brinkley (R-Dist. 4) of New Market, are expected to head up Thompson's Maryland campaign, putting them at odds with the GOP's golden boy, former Gov. Robert L. Ehrlich Jr., who is backing former New York mayor Rudolph W. Giuliani.

Their presidential loyalties shouldn't be mistaken for disunity among the party faithful, O'Donnell said.

Other Republicans said the GOP is not in turmoil. And in the end, the real election takes place in November, O'Donnell said. ''To me, it's not a matter of whether or not a certain temperament is alive and well in the Republican Party, but how far off the scale left the Democratic Party has gone."

''The Republican Party has always said we're the big-tent party," said Del. Adelaide C. Eckardt (R-Dist. 37B) of Cambridge, who has yet to settle on a presidential candidate. ''There's room for a lot of individual opinions."

NATIONAL NEWS

FEC fines group critical of Gilchrest

Pork labelers fail to register as political committee

http://www.delmarvanow.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20070907/NEWS01/709070312/1002

A conservative, free market group that worked on behalf of Republican candidates in the 2000 and 2004 elections has agreed to pay $350,000 in civil penalties this week for failing to register as a political committee.

The Federal Election Commission said the Citizens Club for Growth spent $1.28 million during the two election cycles advocating the election or defeat of federal candidates.

The FEC said the committee acted as a political committee that should have publicly reported its contributions and expenditures.

This is the same group that chastised U.S. Rep. Wayne Gilchrest, R-Md., last month for voting for 50 amendments it considered excessive spending, and endorsed his main primary challenger, Maryland Sen. Andrew Harris, R-7-Baltimore County. Gilchrest's office has called the report a biased political stunt meant to frame him in a poor light.

"This 'analysis' was put together by the very same New York-based special interest group that has spent hundreds of thousands of dollars to defeat Congressman Gilchrest in the past," according to a statement from his office. "The Club for Growth analysis is based on a series of votes that were staged ... You could vote for each of these amendments to the spending bills and claim to be a fiscal conservative."

A Harris spokesperson said he still accepts the endorsement despite the settlement. "They've restructured themselves with the FEC. They paid the fine," said Harris Political Director Chris Meekins. "We accept an endorsement as long as they abide by FEC rules."

Nethken Drops Out Of Congressional Race

http://wjz.com/local/local_story_250101422.html

Former Cumberland mayor Frank Nethken says he is no longer a candidate for Congress in Maryland's 6th District. He had announced in May that he would challenge incumbent MD Republican Congressman Roscoe Bartlett in the upcoming GOP primary.

Senate OKs $963 million for Md. bases

http://www.baltimoresun.com/news/local/bal-md.money07sep07,0,7913765.story

The Senate voted yesterday to approve $963 million for construction at the state's military facilities, including $698.6 million for the base realignment and closure work that is expected to bring tens of thousands of jobs to Maryland.

"Today's vote brings us one step closer to helping Maryland's military bases implement the 2005 BRAC recommendations," Sen. Barbara A. Mikulski said. "We fought to win BRAC as Team Maryland, and I will continue to fight to make sure Maryland has what it needs in the federal checkbook to strengthen and upgrade military facilities."

"This funding will help provide the nation's military organizations with the facilities they require to meet their mission in defense of our nation," Mikulski said.

Maryland's two senators, Democrats Mikulski and Benjamin L. Cardin, voted for the package. Cardin called it "critical to our current and future military mission."

20070908 Officials: Sen. Hagel not to run again AP


Officials: Sen. Hagel not to run again

By DAVID ESPO, AP Special Correspondent September 8, 2007

WASHINGTON - Nebraska Sen. Chuck Hagel, a persistent Republican critic of the Iraq war, intends to announce on Monday he will not seek a third term, according to Republican officials.

The officials also said Hagel does not plan to run for the White House in 2008, despite earlier flirting with a candidacy.

The 60-year-old senator arranged a news conference for Monday in Omaha, Neb., to make his formal announcement. The officials spoke on condition of anonymity to avoid pre-empting the event.

The decision by Hagel is the latest in a string of setbacks for minority Republicans in the Senate, who must defend 22 of the 34 seats on the ballot next fall.

Last week, Sen. John Warner of Virginia announced his retirement, a decision expected to create an intensely competitive race for a seat he probably would have held easily had he decided to run again.

Nebraska is one of the most Republican states in the nation, but Hagel's retirement could open the way for former Democratic Sen. Bob Kerrey to attempt a political comeback. […]

Read the entire article here: Officials: Sen. Hagel not to run again

20070906 Bethesda firm touting benefits of an incinerator by Sherry Greenfield

Bethesda firm touting benefits of an incinerator by Sherry Greenfield

Thursday, Sept. 6, 2007

Bethesda firm touting benefits of an incinerator

by Sherry Greenfield | Staff Writer

A political consulting and market research firm in Bethesda is contacting media in Frederick County to tout the benefits of incinerators.

Bill Holleran, vice president of Potomac Incorporated, called The Gazette last week to offer its services in the newspaper’s reporting of a proposed jointly built trash incinerator for Frederick and Carroll counties.

He wanted to talk about the positive attributes of the Montgomery County Resource Recovery Facility in Dickerson, which is similar to what Frederick and Carroll counties are considering building. The firm’s president, Keith Haller, confirmed that Covanta Energy, which built and operates the Montgomery County incinerator, is a client, but would not say specifically if Covanta paid Potomac Incorporated to call media in Frederick County.

Covanta Energy has placed a bid to build a similar incinerator for Frederick and Carroll counties.

[…]

Frederick County officials are looking into building an incinerator that burns trash and turns it into fuel to generate electricity that could be sold to an electric company, and turned to Praisner to learn about Montgomery’s experience in building one. Michael Marschner, director of Frederick County’s Utilities and Solid Waste Management, said Tuesday the county did not hire Potomac Incorporated to educate residents on the benefits of incinerators.

‘‘They are not working for Frederick County,” Marschner said. ‘‘I don’t think we need a public relations person. I think we need education.”

Marschner confirmed that Conventa is one of two waste management companies that bid for the job of building a joint incinerator for both Frederick and Carroll counties, a Frederick plant only, or a Carroll plant only.

The other company is Wheelabrator Technologies of Houston, Texas.

[…]

‘‘We do not need a public relations firm,” said Robin B. Davidov, executive director of the authority. ‘‘I can do that myself.”

Read the entire article here: Bethesda firm touting benefits of an incinerator

20070905 Westminster Eagle Week in Review


Westminster Eagle Week in Review

Wednesday, September 5th, 2007 - Posted Saturday, September 8th, 2007

Kevin E. Dayhoff


Day at State Fair fills us with Carroll County pride
What better way to spend one of the last hoorahs of summer than enjoying a day at the Maryland State Fair?

The fair, which ended its run on Monday, is always a sensory overload of lights, sounds, smells, food and the people watching, not to mention the traditional fair favorites such as the animal...
[Read full story]

Local News Saturday, September 08

Recreation


LEVEL PLAYING FIELD

Balance is theme in Carroll County as 2007 football campaign begins

Two years ago, football teams at Westminster and South Carroll high schools reached Maryland state championship games in their respective classifications.

That same year, Francis Scott Key and Winters Mill also made postseason appearances as Carroll County placed four of its seven schools in the MPSSAA state playoffs.

It's possible that same scenario could happen in 2007.

While several teams were depleted by graduation, the quality of football in the county appears to be at an all-time high. Consider th...
[Read full story]


Test scores are in, but warrant a closer look
The results are in, but county education officials last week weren't quite sure whether they warranted a cheer ... or a more subdued pat on the back.

Just as students were settling back into school, Carroll County Public Schools staffers were diving last week into a detailed analysis of new High S...
[Read full story]


Family treasures at HSCC
Appraisal Day taps into history and family pride

It's interesting to see what people have in their attics, basements and stored away in closets.

For Timmi Pierce, executive director of the Historical Society of Carroll County, one of the most interesting "finds" during last year's HSCC Antiques ...
[Read full story]

Focus on People


Focus on People
Venturing Crew earns environmental honor

Representatives of the Maryland Department of Natural Resources and Boy Scouts of America this month presented the youth of Venturing Crew 202 with the William T. Hornaday Award for significant service in the field of natural resource conservation.

To ear...
[Read full story]

Business Briefs


Business Briefs
Primm takes new position at New Windsor

New Windsor State Bank has announced that Louna S. Primm recently joined the bank in the position of executive vice president and chief lending officer.

In the new role, she is responsible for NWSB's commercial, residential and consumer lending.

Primm h...
[Read full story]

Opinion


Commuter service trial run might be a way to test transit waters
Editorial

The Board of County Commissioners raised a few eyebrows recently with a reported discussion of the future of transit service in Carroll County and whether there's any desire to connect with neighborhoods closer to, or even in, Baltimore city.

In the wake of that discussion, a longtime ...
[Read full story]

Wolf at the Door


Commuters could milk the railway lines for all they're worth
I'm always fascinated about the words or sayings we use.

I once heard a man at a gathering say, "Well, I waited and took the milk train down to Baltimore."

I couldn't help but ask him if he knew where or how that expression started. I then had an opportunity to use some stored up facts.

Farmer...
[Read full story]

Culleton on Carroll


Taxpayers support those who spend in the wrong places
I think Ebenezer Scrooge must have been a Republican. And if he lived today, he would buy a McMansion in Carroll County.

Scanning the local papers I find that the wealthier people get the stingier they are. For example, our commissioners get paid about the same as the beginning salary for a comput...
[Read full story]

[Local news archives]

YMCA weighing options


Walking through the Westminster Inn last week, Jeff Sprinkle couldn't help but remember his days in the building as a student.

Both he and his father, Sprinkle said, attended school at the Inn when it was a schoolhouse. Despite the fact that the classrooms have been converted to bedrooms and the d...
[Read full story]


Test scores are in, but warrant a closer look
The results are in, but county education officials last week weren't quite sure whether they warranted a cheer ... or a more subdued pat on the back.

Just as students were settling back into school, Carroll County Public Schools staffers were diving last week into a detailed analysis of new High S...
[Read full story]


Teens' creativity reaps reward from library
For the fifth year, middle school and high school youth of Carroll County were given an opportunity to show off their writing chops during the Carroll County Public Library's Summer Shorts contest.

The five county library branches collected a total of 70 entries over the course of the summer.

La...
[Read full story]


News Briefs
Steam and Gas show at Farm Museum, Sept. 7-9

The Mason Dixon Historical Society Inc. will host its 45th annual Steam and Gas Round-Up at the Carroll County Farm Museum, 500 S. Center St., Friday-Sunday, Sept. 7, 8 and 9, 7 a.m. to dusk each day. The day starts with breakfast, 7-10 a.m., and a flag...
[Read full story]


Fun and games for a good cause: Youth Services Bureau
The second annual Day to Play on Saturday, Sept. 8, in Westminster promises a fun time for children and adults alike, but also has a serious mission in mind -- helping raise money for the Carroll County Youth Services Bureau.

The Day to Play fund-raiser calls on teams of participants to scour the ...
[Read full story]


More Headlines

Family treasures at HSCC

Education Notes

Education Notes

09/05/07
By Heidi Schroeder


Email this story to a friend

Mad about Monarchs at Bear Branch

Carroll County Outdoor School and Bear Branch Nature Center will sponsor "Monarch Madness" on Sunday, Sept. 23, noon to 4 p.m. at Bear Branch Nature Center.

Participants will celebrate the arrival of autumn by learning about the annual migration of Monarch butterflies to and from Mexico. They will also have the chance to meet a life-sized Monarch butterfly and caterpillar while enjoying butterfly and native plant walks, a monarch life cycle exhibit, monarch migration tag and release, native plants and butterfly items for sale. Discussions during the day will include monarch "stations," native gardening and Baltimore Checkerspot butterfly restoration.

There will also be crafts, games, face painting and butterfly storytelling. Food, beverages and souvenirs will be for sale.

Call 410-848-2517 or e-mail bbnc@carr.org for more information. Bear Branch Nature Center is located at 300 John Owings Road in Westminster.

> The Carroll County Board of Education will meet on Monday, Sept. 10, 5 p.m., in room 007 of the board offices, 125 N. Court St., Westminster. The public is invited to attend. The agenda and back-up materials for the meeting will be available for review on BoardDocs at the CCPS Web site at www.carrollk12.org.

> The Westminster Elementary School Parent Teacher Organization will meet at the school on Monday, Sept. 17, 3:30 p.m. For more information, e-mail WestminsterPTO@yahoo.com.

> Westminster High School's Instrumental Music Boosters will hold an indoor-outdoor Craft Fair, Flea Market and Yard Sale on Saturday, Sept. 8, 7 a.m. to 2 p.m. at Westminster High School, 1225 Washington Road in Westminster. There will be food and door prizes, as well as a children's corner with baby sitting.

For more information, call Annette at 410-857-9673. Proceeds benefit Westminster High Instrumental Music.

> A public hearing on the boundary line changes for Ebb Valley Elementary School and the new northeast high school will be held Monday, Sept. 17, 7 p.m. at North Carroll High School, 1400 Panther Drive, Hampstead.

I want to hear about upcoming events and achievements at your school. Share items with me by phone at 410-386-0334 or by e-mail at hschroeder AT patuxent.com.

Sports Notes


'Beastlax' seeking players for grades 10-12

The Beastlax 7-on-7 Fall Lacrosse League is looking for high school age players in 10th, 11th and 12th grades.

All games will be held in Westminster on Saturday afternoons, Sept. 15-Oct. 20. E-mail or call for information, at [Read full story]


Reporter's Notebook


* BIG SHOES TO FILL ... Graduation took many top players from 2006. Just two of the county's top five rushers and two of the top 10 receivers return, so this could be a rebuilding year for several teams. Also, only two regular quarterbacks are back for 2007: Liberty's Colton Weaver and North Carroll...
[Read full story]

Key Games to Watch
From cross-county road trips to cross-town rivalries, the 2007 Carroll County high school football schedule has several critical matches at key times. For some, these contests could set the tone of the 2007 campaign early on; for others, a late-season road game or poor weather could make the differe...
[Read full story]

More Headlines GAME FACES

Coffee, doughnuts and ice cream in Boston by Kevin Dayhoff
My wife and I recently spent our annual "history week trek" in Boston, Mass.

We had already completed our obligatory family vacation at the beach. For the additional annual week away, often in the past we have headed south to the "grits belt" for a "history-and-working" vacation. Williamsburg, Va....
[Read full story]

Thursday, September 06, 2007

20070906 News Clips


News Clips

Sept. 6, 2007

STATE NEWS

House to look for solutions to $1.5 billion budget shortfall

http://www.baltimoresun.com/news/local/politics/bal-md.busch06sep06,0,1681219.story

House Speaker Michael E. Busch says leaders in his chamber will hold briefings over the fall on tax proposals and slot machine gambling in an effort to find solutions to Maryland's projected $1.5 billion budget shortfall. The Anne Arundel County Democrat said he remains opposed to handling the budget problems in a special session, which Gov. Martin O'Malley and Senate President Thomas V. Mike Miller support. He said he is opposed to legalizing slots but will listen to the O'Malley administration's proposals on the issue.

O'Malley legal counsel to be insurance chief

http://www.baltimoresun.com/news/local/politics/bal-md.tyler06sep06,0,4555628.story

Gov. Martin O'Malley plans to make one of his closest advisers the new insurance commissioner, a job that could play an integral role in efforts to expand health insurance coverage and maintain the availability of property coverage in risky coastal zones. O'Malley will appoint Ralph S. Tyler III, a former Baltimore City solicitor who is now the governor's legal counsel, officials said.

Del. Warren E. Miller, a Howard County Republican, said that if the commissioner sides too heavily with consumers, insurance companies will stop writing policies in the state. "I hope we don't go back to the days where the regulator was wanting something for free," Miller said. "You have to be fair and balanced."

Rare mosquito-borne virus found on Shore

Risk to humans low because insects feed mostly on birds, official says

http://www.baltimoresun.com/news/health/bal-mosquito0905,0,4820979.story

A rare mosquito-borne virus that infects birds, horses and humans has been found in an Eastern Shore swamp, its first appearance in Maryland in four years, state agriculture officials say. Risk of the virus remains low for humans and horses because the infected mosquito species, Culiseta melanura, feeds primarily on birds. Reported cases are extremely rare. There have been 250 cases nationwide since 1964, and only four since then in Maryland, according to the CDC.

Blacks in suburbs failing Md. exams

Poor results at some high schools called surprising

http://www.baltimoresun.com/news/education/bal-te.md.tests06sep06,0,6220406.story?page=1&coll=bal_tab02_layout

When Maryland's top school officer proposed that the state back away from its tough high school testing program last week, one reason might have been the troubling performance of some suburban schools. An alarming pattern of failure is surfacing: Minority students, especially African-Americans, are struggling to pass the exams in the suburban classrooms their families had hoped would provide a better education.

"It's inexcusable," said Ella White Campbell, a retired city educator and executive director of the Liberty Road Community Council. "You can't say it's income that's the problem. And education levels are very high. ... The disconnect is in the fact that you have an educated community that has not realiz ed kids are not getting the basics."

"It is shocking, in the sense that these children should be achieving at a higher level," said Jack Jennings, president of the Center on Education Policy, an organization that has studied high-stakes testing across the nation.

But after several years of enforcing tests for graduation, Jennings said, high percentages of students are usually passing. The question, he said, is whether Grasmick and the state board can muster enough legislative support to keep the standard intact. "Now you can see the motivation," he said, for Maryland School Superintendent Nancy S. Grasmick to propose that students who repeatedly fail tests have an opportunity do a senior project instead. The State Board of Education will consider the plan next month.

Electronic message signs bill wallows in debate despite no adoption in sight

http://www.examiner.com/a-919067~Electronic_message_signs_bill_wallows_in_debate_despite_no_adoption_in_sight.html

Anne Arundel County Councilman Jamie Benoit knew his signs bill would not get any love. He didn't get support from the county administration, and 11 of the 12 people who testified at Tuesday's council meeting opposed the bill.The bill did get the most attention of any bill, as council members devoted more than an hour to debating a bill that many knew wouldn't pass.

Benoit cited safety issues, claiming the signs are a big distraction for drivers. Cohen said he sponsored the bill mainly for the aesthetic issue, saying the electronic signs damage the county's image. The new law could create an "enforcement nightmare" and overburden county employees, said Alan Friedman, director of governmental affairs for County Executive John R. Leopold.

Solar water heating system affordable with tax credits

http://www.examiner.com/a-919057~Solar_water_heating_system_affordable_with_tax_credits.html

Energy-efficient home improvements can have long- and short-term cost effects for Marylanders. There are federal, state and, in some cases, local tax credits available to people who pay for energy-saving home improvements, said Bob Cassel, director of tax services for Baltimore-Washington Financial Advisers. "I'm not sure how many people are aware of these credits," Cassel said. "They get to upgrade their home at a low cost and those changes are saving them money in the long run."

Through the state's Solar Energy Grant Program, which went into effect in January 2005, the Maryland Energy Administratio n issues grants to residents who choose solar water heating for their home. Homeowners may receive back 20 percent of a system's cost or a maximum grant of $2,000.

Miller urges special session

http://www.washingtontimes.com/article/20070906/METRO/109060057/1004

Senate President Thomas V. Mike Miller Jr. is telling chamber leaders to prepare for a special General Assembly session by next month to resolve a state budget crisis, charging ahead with plans regardless of House leadership opposition and further widening the rift between the state's "Two Mikes."

Mr. Miller, Southern Maryland Democrat, has told Senate budget committee members that they will meet through the month to prepare for a special session at the end of October, said Senate Minority Leader David R. Brinkley, a Frederick Republican on the chamber's Budget and Taxation Committee. "What Miller is doing is trying to cast light on the indecisiveness," Mr. Brinkley said yesterday. "He wants to see some movement one way or the other."

The Choice of the Maryland GOP: Ron Paul

http://blog.washingtonpost.com/annapolis/2007/09/the_choice_of_the_maryland_gop.html?nav=rss_blog

A curious thing happened this year at the Maryland Republican Party booth at the State Fair: A GOP presidential straw poll was won by Ron Paul, the idiosyncratic congressman from Texas who is a fierce critic of the Iraq war.

All told, nearly 1,000 people cast ballots in the Maryland GOP's first-ever presidential straw poll at the Fair. The party said the straw poll was open everyone of voting age, regardless of party affiliation, who stopped by the GOP booth.

"The final vote showing Ron Paul won is a lesson for all campaigns of how grassroots politics can make all the difference," said Chris Cavey, first vice chairman of the Maryland Republican Party and co-chairman of the party's State Fair Planning Committee. "The Paul campaign repeatedly e-mailed their base of support to turn out at the State Fair to cast a vote for Dr. Paul, and in doing so, demonstrated that a small organized operation can beat the odds."

County Schools Face Test of the State's Making

Even as Class of 2009 Posts Strong Results, Exit Exams Have Yet to Achieve a Passing Grade

http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2007/09/05/AR2007090501133.html

Montgomery County's Class of 2009 has attained pass rates near 90 percent on each of the High School Assessment exams that all students must take to graduate.

But while the pass rates are relatively high on each of the biology, English, algebra and government exams, officials don't yet know how many students have passed all four tests. Tension is mounting across the state over the exams, which place Maryland among a growing number of states -- about half -- that require students to demonstrate basic skills in return for a diploma.

Education leaders say they support the notion of an exit exam but feel Maryland's test could rob worthy students of a chance to graduate if, for example, they lack adequate English skills.

To allay such fears, state Superintendent Nancy S. Grasmick last week proposed an alternate route to a diploma for students who fail exit exams but still want diplomas: a portfolio of academic projects that demonstrate mastery of the subject.

More county students taking SAT, but scores decline
School officials applaud increase, say improved curriculum will raise scores

http://www.gazette.net/stories/090607/prinnew150913_32361.shtml
The number of Prince George's County students taking the Scholastic Aptitude Test, a college entrance exam, has increased, however, overall test scores declined this year. involve more children in taking the test," said Owen Johnson, chairman of the county school board. ''It just indicates that we're doing what we need to do to prepare those kids for college. That means that people are paying attention to it ... and that's great news for us." County school officials said the lower scores could be attributed in part to the increase in test takers, including those who would not have considered taking the SAT in previous years but were encouraged by teachers and administrators.

Frederick commissioner wants county to lead legal challenge
Jenkins' proposal challenges 1982 decision that public schools must educate illegal immigrants

http://www.gazette.net/stories/090607/carrnew63425_32356.shtml

Frederick County Commissioner Charles A. Jenkins said Tuesday that he wants the county to lead the way in a legal challenge to a 1982 Supreme Court decision that forces schools to enroll illegal immigrants. In order for parents to enroll their children in Frederick County Public Schools, they must prove residency in the county, their child's date of birth, and vaccinations.

Jenkins (R) is proposing legislation that would require all agencies that receive county money - which includes schools - to verify that the people they help are in America legally, before the funding is provided. Jenkins believe s the federal government has failed to protect the U.S. border, and he wants to submit a bill to the Maryland General Assembly that would set up a challenge to the Supreme Court's 1982 decision.

State Horse Park Is Up for Discussion in Howard

Site Could Generate $9 Million in Tax Revenue, Study Estimates

http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2007/09/05/AR2007090500153.html

Howard County officials might consider whether they want to pursue a state horse park that encountered local opposition in neighboring Anne Arundel County.

County Council member Greg Fox (R-Western County) was scheduled to introduce legislation this week that would create a task force to study whether the county should proceed with a state facility sought after for several years by Maryland equine enthusiasts.

A state feasibility study last year estimated that spending by horse park visitors could total more than $122 million and generate more than $9 million annually in state and local tax revenue.

EDITORIALS/OP-EDS

Close that loophole

http://www.baltimoresun.com/news/opinion/bal-ed.taxes06sep06,0,2475514.story

The average taxpayer should be fuming over the recent legislative audit of the Maryland Department of Assessments and Taxation. Not because of the various oversights or recordkeeping problems the auditors uncovered. Those are correctable. Not so the legal loophole that has allowed owners of multimillion-dollar commercial properties to dodge taxes that the rest of us routinely pay. And the problem is getting worse.

Gov. Martin O'Malley says he wants to close the loophole, and the House of Delegates has voted to do so in the past. The chief obstacle is the state Senate, where members seem to prefer racetrack owners to homeowners. It's time those who own the state's most valuable commercial properties paid their fair share. Before the legislature raises any taxes or fees to close the state's projected $1.5 billion deficit, it should make sure the existing ones are being applied equitably.

We're wealthiest on the backs of others

http://www.examiner.com/a-916855~Editorial__We_re_wealthiest_on_the_backs_of_others.html

Maryland edged New Jersey to win the wealthiest state in the country label according to recent U.S. Census statistics.

Many economic development officials gushed about the result - showing the state's median income reaching $65,1 44 in 2006 - saying it signified the strength of Maryland's economy and the quality of its work force.

But the reason Maryland holds that position is in large part because it siphons tax dollars from other parts of the country in the form of high paying federal government jobs and positions created by federal government contracts. That is not a stable foundation on which to build a strong economy long term.

NATIONAL NEWS

House votes to rename I-395 in Ripken's honor

http://www.baltimoresun.com/news/local/bal-md.ripken06sep06,0,7771229.story

On the 12th anniversary of Cal Ripken Jr.'s record-tying 2,130th consecutive game, the House of Representatives voted yesterday to rename a section of Interstate 395 after the former Orioles star.

"He inspired the people of Baltimore every season with his quiet and unassuming dedication to his work and continues to do so in retirement through numerous charitable works and his youth baseball foundation," said Rep. John Sarbanes, a Baltimore County Democrat who sponsored the measure.

The rest of Maryland's House delegation co-sponsored the bill, as did Reps. Mike Doyle of Pennsylvania and Joe L. Barton of Texas, managers, respectively, of the Democratic and Republican congressional baseball teams.

Bartlett's suit against county sent back to district court

http://www.fredericknewspost.com/sections/news/display.htm?StoryID=64691\

An appeals court overturned a U.S. District Court judge's dismissal of a lawsuit brought against Frederick County by a developer and Rep. Roscoe Bartlett, R-6th, and his wife.

The lawsuit accuses the county of breach of contract by denying a public water and sewer request for a proposed nursing home and retirement community on the Bartlett's Buckeystown property. The suit will be sent back to district court in Baltimore.

####

20070906 Tributes continue for Coach Jack Molesworth

Tributes continue for Coach Jack Molesworth

September 6th, 2007

I was delighted to receive an e-mail earlier today from Coach Jack Molesworth’s son, John Molesworth.

Mr. Molesworth called to my attention that the Baltimore Sun had a write-up about Coach Molesworth in the Wednesday, September 5, 2007 edition of the paper. And that “Paul Gordon is writing a piece in next week's Frederick Gazette.” We’ll look forward to Mr. Gordon’s story…

I played football for Westminster High School from 1968 to 1971 and would attend an occasional then-Western Maryland College football game during Coach Molesworth’s tenure there. Although I only knew him well enough to exchange hellos, I was always impressed with the high regard for which he was held in the community.

Fortunately there are many folks in central Maryland who have worked hard and touched many lives. However Coach Molesworth was one of those rare individuals who leave an enduring legacy preparing many young men and women for a future of accomplishment.

Meanwhile, if you are not familiar with the life’s work of Coach Molesworth, be sure to read Fred Rasmussen’s piece in the Baltimore Sun.

I have been a fan of Mr. Rasmussen’s stellar writing for many years and he comprehensively captured the essence of this amazing individual. But then again, we would’ve expected nothing less from Mr. Rasmussen.

The story can be found here:

John Molesworth

[ Age 80 ] Former director of Maryland Public Secondary Schools Athletic Association also coached college football.

By Frederick N. Rasmussen | Sun reporter, September 5, 2007

John E. "Jack" Molesworth, former executive director of the Maryland Public Secondary Schools Athletic Association and a Western Maryland College football coach, died Friday at Frederick Memorial Hospital of complications from a fall. He was 80.

[…]

In 1948, Mr. Molesworth enrolled at Western Maryland College, where he played center for the Green Terrors football team and boxed.


"He was tall and lanky and always played with a lot of heart. He was also a member of our 1951 undefeated football team," said Victor J. Makovitch, a teammate who became a Carroll County school principal.


"He also ran a successful college catering business with Leroy Merritt, his roommate," said his college sweetheart and wife of 55 years, the former Nancy Walker, a retired Frederick County teacher. "They cooked and delivered hot dogs to students in the dorms."


After earning a bachelor's degree in history in 1952, Mr. Molesworth was a teacher and assistant football coach at Mount Airy High School, St. Paul's School and Westminster High School


From 1957 to 1966, he was head coach and director of athletics at Frederick High School and worked in a similar capacity at Gov. Thomas Johnson High School from 1966 to 1971. In 1971, he was appointed vice principal of Westminster High School, which opened that year…

[…]

"He was the consummate professional," said Sam Case, a retired Western Maryland provost. "He believed in the educational process and always put his kids and players first. In his coaching, he always exhibited the highest ideals in integrity and sportsmanship."


Rick Carpenter, a sports psychologist and a former athletic director, described Mr. Molesworth as a "role model for the men he coached. He was the type of coach every parent would want their son to play for."

Read the entire article here: John Molesworth

Also, be sure to read: “Molesworth had impact on sports by Stan Goldberg

Originally published September 03, 2007, By Stan Goldberg Fredrick News Post Sports Editor

FEW PEOPLE HAVE had as great an impact on Maryland high school sports than Frederick County's Jack Molesworth, who died on Friday at the age of 80. People in the county who knew him mainly think of Molesworth as the head football coach at Frederick and then Thomas Johnson high schools. But it was his work with state high school sports in the 1970s that may well be his greatest legacy.

Read Mr. Goldberg’s entire piece here: mMolesworth had impact on sports by Stan Goldberg

Another good read is that penned by my Tentacle editor, John Ashbury on September 6th, 2007: “R.I.P. Jack Molesworth

William Shakespeare once wrote "The evil that men do lives after them, / The good is oft interred with their bones." That won't be the case with Jack Molesworth.


When he passed away last week from complications from a fall in which he broke his neck, the outpouring of affections was nearly overwhelming. But that came from friends and relatives who knew him best.


[…]


For generations of young men and women, his legacy will remain with them for the rest of their lives. For thousands who never met him, his accomplishments in training those who were struggling to reach adulthood will remain a quiet heritage. He helped shape their lives in ways foreign to most of them. But it worked wonders.


The news of his passing was followed by newspaper articles and commentaries which - for the most part - listed the facts of his life, but failed to provide the flavor of this man who dedicated his long life to the betterment of the society into which he was born.

Read the rest here: R.I.P. Jack Molesworth

Indeed.

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 and Winchester Report.

20070906 Jack Molesworth passed away August 31 2007

Jack Molesworth passed away August 31 2007

Mr. John Molesworth

September 6th, 2007

As originally published, in its entirety on Sunday, September 2, 2007 in the Frederick New-Post.

John E. "Jack" Molesworth died on August 31, 2007 at Frederick Memorial Hospital of complications from a fall. He was 80 years old.

Born on April 3, 1927 in Baltimore, Jack was the only son of the late John R. Molesworth and Margaret Burgee Molesworth of Monrovia. He graduated from Frederick High School in 1944, then enlisted in the United States Marine Corps, where he served with the second Marine Division in the occupation of Japan. After completion of his service Jack attended Western Maryland College, where he boxed, played football and, along with his roommate, ran a successful student catering business.

After graduating in 1952, Jack held positions as a teacher and assistant football coach at Mount Airy High School, Saint Paul's School in Baltimore and Westminster High School. Jack became head coach and Director of Athletics at Frederick High School and then Gov. Thomas Johnson High School, where he coached championship teams.

In 1971, Mr. Molesworth took the position of vice-principal at the new Westminster High School, where he stayed briefly due to being offered the position of executive director of Maryland Public Secondary Schools Athletic Association for the Maryland Department of Education. Molesworth held this position for 10 years until his retirement in 1981.

After retirement, Jack took his dream job as head football coach at his alma mater, Western Maryland College, where he stayed for five years. During his career, Jack also served for twelve years on the National Federation Football Rules Committee and two years on the National Federation of High School Athletic Associations Executive Council.

Active in the Frederick community, Molesworth was a member of the Frederick Rotary, V.F. W. Post 3285, the Elks Club, the American Legion and was a communicant at Calvary Methodist Church. His national affiliations include Lifetime Membership in the American Football Coaches Association and the National Football Foundation. Mr. Molesworth's honors include Hall of Fame induction in the Alvin Quinn Y.M.C.A. Sports Hall of Fame, the Maryland High School Athletic Directors Hall of Fame and the Maryland High School Football Coaches Hall of Fame.

More important than his professional accomplishments, Jack was most proud of his role as mentor to generations of young men in the Frederick community that he coached and taught. Jack was an avid reader, history buff and golfer.

Mr. Molesworth is survived by his wife of 55 years, Nancy Walker Molesworth, two daughters, Janet Hough and husband Terry of Ocean City, Jean Molesworth Kee and husband Edward of Alexandria, Va. and a son, Dr. John Molesworth and wife Debbie of Frederick. Jack is also survived by grandchildren Sarah, Ted, and Caroline Kee, and Laura, Jack, and Kelly Molesworth; and step-grandchildren Coby Hough and Julie Hough Keefer.

The family will receive friend from 3 to 8 p.m. on Tuesday, September 4 at the Keeney and Basford P.A. Funeral Home, 106 East Church Street, Frederick. Funeral services will be held at 10 a.m. on Wednesday, September 5 from Calvary United Methodist Church, corner of Bentz and West Second Streets, Frederick. His pastor, the Rev. Kenneth R. Dunnington, will officiate. Interment will be in Mount Olivet Cemetery, Frederick.

Memorial contributions may be made in memory of Jack Molesworth to the Frederick Memorial Hospital Emergency Department Fund, Frederick Memorial Hospital, 400 West 7th St., Frederick, MD 21701.

Online condolences may be expressed with the family at http://www.keeneybasford.com/.

×PaperDate 9/2/07

http://www.fredericknewspost.com/sections/local/obit_detail.htm?obitID=22370

Also see:

Molesworth had impact on sports
| No writer | By: Stan Goldberg | 09/03/07 | 671 words

Molesworth was the Executive Secretary of the Maryland Public Secondary Schools Athletic Association from 1971 to 1981 years and also the state supervisor of physical education the first seven of those years. His responsibilities got so big the job was split into two positions the final three years.

Molesworth is in critical condition
| Sports | By: Sarah Fortney | 08/30/07 | 255 words

Jack Molesworth, 80, was put on life support at Frederick Memorial Hospital after he fell Aug. 22, his son John Molesworth said.

Thursday, September 6, 2007

R.I.P. Jack Molesworth

John W. Ashbury

William Shakespeare once wrote "The evil that men do lives after them, / The good is oft interred with their bones." That won't be the case with Jack Molesworth.