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

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

Wednesday, November 28, 2007

20071128 CyberAlert

CyberAlert

Wednesday November 28, 2007


1. NBC's Williams Avoids Controversy with Edwards, Not with Giuliani Three weeks ago, when NBC anchor Brian Williams interviewed Rudy Giuliani, Williams raised Giuliani's closeness to Bernard Kerik and pressed him on Iraq as he pointed out how 2007 had become "the bloodiest year" in the war, but in an interview with John Edwards aired Tuesday night, Williams stuck to softballs and didn't bring up the indictment of a major Edwards donor or push Edwards about how the "surge" in Iraq he rejected is working. The two interviews are the most recent in the "Making of the President" series on the NBC Nightly News. In the taped session with Republican presidential candidate Giuliani aired on November 6, Williams inquired: "Let's talk about your friend Bernard Kerik. Press reports are, as recently as today, that he could be a few days away from indictment, perhaps. When was the last time, first of all, that you spoke with him?" And on Giuliani supporting the war: "We just learned today '07 is the bloodiest year in Iraq. What would you do in Iraq starting today?" But with Democratic candidate Edwards Tuesday night, Williams stuck to the horse race and sympathetic personal issues.

2. ABC's Moran: Obama a 'Fresh Face' Who Represents 'Real Change' According to Nightline host Terry Moran, Iowa voters are listening to Barack Obama's "real argument, that he is tomorrow, a fresh face who represents a real change from our bitter, polarized politics." The ABC anchor, who profiled the Democratic candidate for the Tuesday edition of the program, spent part of the interview interpreting the feelings of caucus voters. He gushed: "You get the sense they know they might be part of something big here, something historic." After listening to one Iowan laud Obama's leadership, he prompted the man: "It would be an historic thing, Barack Obama?"

3. Russert Praised Clinton on Mideast Peace Then, Scoffs at Bush Now On Tuesday's Today show NBC's Washington bureau chief, Tim Russert, scoffed at President Bush's attempt to broker Middle East peace at the Annapolis conference, as he derided it as a "Hail Mary pass." However, nine years ago, when Bill Clinton made a failed attempt at Mideast peace, in the midst of his impeachment, Russert praised the former President on the October 23, 1998 Today show: "As the impeachment hearings grind on, could you have a situation where next year the President cannot go to the Judiciary Committee on a particular day because he's receiving the Nobel Peace Prize? That's the kind of irony the White House looks at as they look at the success of President Clinton on this day."

4. NBC Highlights Returning Iraqis: 'I Can't Wait to Get Back' "There is a noticeable trend under way. A growing stream of Iraqis who left to escape the killing, many of them going to Syria, now reversing their migration," anchor Brian Williams highlighted Tuesday evening as the NBC Nightly News became the first broadcast network evening newscast to air a full report on the trend. From Baghdad, reporter Tom Aspell showcased a mother who exclaimed: "I'm so excited" and "I can't wait to get back." Aspell explained: "Though safer, life in Syria turned out to be hard. $300 a month rent and food for the family of seven wiped out their savings. So when the Iraqi government offered free bus tickets to Baghdad, today's opportunity was too good to miss." Adding the caveat that a safer Iraq is not the main motivator, Aspell noted: "A recent UN survey...found most Iraqi refugees are returning home not because Iraq is any safer, but because they're running out of money, and Syria is clamping down on visas." Aspell, however, acknowledged upbeat trends: "Refugees coming back to Baghdad are going to see a lot of changes. There are more people in the streets, shops are open and traffic everywhere." Though Aspell pointed out how "it is still a dangerous city," another mother, nonetheless, decided: "Thank God we returned and found the situation better than when we left."

Check Out the MRC's Blog

The MRC's blog site, NewsBusters, "Exposing and Combating Liberal Media Bias," provides examples of bias 24/7. With your participation NewsBusters will continue to be THE blog site for tracking and correcting liberal media bias. Come post your comments and get fresh proof of media misdeeds at: http://www.newsbusters.org

A usually-daily report, edited by Brent H. Baker, CyberAlert is distributed by the Media Research Center, the leader since 1987 in documenting, exposing and neutralizing liberal media bias.

The 2,535th CyberAlert. Tracking Liberal Media Bias Since 1996
6:35am EST, Wednesday November 28, 2007 (Vol. Twelve; No. 208)

20071128 Mike Huckabee Ad: "Chuck Norris Approved"

I like the Mike Huckabee Ad: "Chuck Norris Approved"

November 28, 2007

Mike Huckabee and Chuck Norris review facts about Governor Huckabee.

Added to YouTube: November 18, 2007

####

20071209 Starry Night featuring Marvin Hamlisch at Carroll Community College


Starry Night, Carroll County's premier, upscale holiday kick-off event is back!


November 28th, 2007

On Sunday December 9, 2007 6:00 PM: Join us for this elegant, festive event, featuring Marvin Hamlisch. Experience an evening of elegance in the transformed Babylon Great Hall on the Carroll Community College campus and make this an event to remember all season long!

This year's event will feature a formal cocktail hour followed by an exclusive concert by Marvin Hamlisch. Starry Night proceeds benefit the Carroll Community College's Partners Campaign. Through Carroll Community College Foundation's efforts, the Partners Campaign is seeking to raise money to enable the college to continue to be Carroll County's premier learning community for state-of-the-art college experiences, baccalaureate preparation, and a lifelong education that is both convenient and affordable.

Tickets are now on sale!

To reserve your tickets, or for more information on this exciting event contact the Foundation Office at 410-386-8168. You may also download a ticket order form and mail or fax in your ticket request.

Sponsorship opportunities are still available, call 410-386-8155 for more information.

MARVIN HAMLISCH

Marvin Hamlisch's life in music is notable for its great versatility as well as substance.

As composer, Hamlisch has won virtually every major award that exists: three Oscars, four Grammys, four Emmys, a Tony and three Golden Globe awards; his groundbreaking show, A CHORUS LINE, received the Pulitzer Prize.

He is the composer of more than forty motion picture scores including his Oscar-winning score and song for THE WAY WE WERE and his adaptation of Scott Joplin's music for THE STING, for which he received a third Oscar. His prolific output of scores for films include original compositions and/or musical adaptations for SOPHIE'S CHOICE, ORDINARY PEOPLE, THE SWIMMER, THREE MEN AND A BABY, ICE CASTLES, TAKE THE MONEY AND RUN, BANANAS and SAVE THE TIGER.

Marvin Hamlisch holds the position of Principal Pops Conductor with the National Symphony Orchestra. (This is the first time that anyone has held such a position). He is also the Principal Pops Conductor for the Pittsburgh and San Diego Symphony Orchestras.

Mr. Hamlisch was Musical Director and arranger of Barbra Streisand's 1994 concert tour of the U.S. and England as well as of the television special, "Barbra Streisand: The Concert" (for which he received two of his Emmys). He served in the same capacities for her Millennium concerts.

Hamlisch is a graduate of both Juilliard and Queens College (where he earned a Bachelor of Arts degree). He believes in the power of music to bring people together. "Music can make a difference. There is a global nature to music, which has the potential to bring all people together. Music is truly an international language, and I hope to contribute by widening communication as much as I can."

http://www.carrollcc.edu/foundation/events/starrynight/default.asp

http://www.carrollcc.edu/

Tuesday, November 27, 2007

20071125 NPR: Bush Gives Mideast Peace a Last Try


Bush Gives Mideast Peace a Last Try

Listen Now [8 min 48 sec] add to playlist

Weekend Edition Sunday, November 25, 2007 · The Arab-Israeli conflict has not been high on President Bush's agenda until now. A conference in Annapolis, Md., is seen as a "relaunch" of a process meant to move the two sides toward peace. Ghaith Al-Omari and Daniel Levy of the New America Foundation discuss prospects for progress at the summit.

AP News Wire: World News

Syria to Attend Mideast Peace Conference

from The Associated Press

DAMASCUS, Syria November 25, 2007, 10:59 a.m. ET · Syria will send its deputy foreign minister to the U.S.-sponsored Mideast peace conference in Annapolis, Md. because the issue of the Israeli-occupied Golan Heights has been added to the agenda, the state-run news agency said Sunday.

Read the entire article here: Bush Gives Mideast Peace a Last Try

Related NPR Stories

Nov. 24, 2007

Expert Looks at Topics on Tap for Peace Meeting

Nov. 23, 2007

U.S. Praises Saudis, Syria for Attending Summit

Nov. 23, 2007

Skepticism over Annapolis Mideast Summit

Nov. 23, 2007

Iran's Rise Prompts New Push for Mideast Peace

Nov. 22, 2007

Israelis Await Annapolis with Hope, Skepticism

Nov. 21, 2007

White House to Convene Mideast Talks

Nov. 20, 2007

No Agenda Yet for Annapolis Peace Talks

####

Monday, November 26, 2007

20071126 Westminster Mayor and Common Council Meeting

20071126 Westminster Mayor and Common Council Meeting

City Council

City Council Members Minutes of City Council Meetings

CITY OF WESTMINSTER, MARYLAND

Mayor and Common Council Meeting of November 26, 2007

AGENDA

1. CALL TO ORDER – 7:00 P.M.

Fallfest Check Presentations

Water Sewer Rate Structure Presentation

2. CONSENT CALENDAR

October Departmental Operating Reports

3. BIDS

Recommendation to accept Bid from Seal Analytical for a

Discrete Analyzer for the Wastewater Treatment Plant

4. REPORTS FROM THE MAYOR

5. REPORTS FROM STANDING COMMITTEES

6. ORDINANCES AND RESOLUTIONS

a. Resolution R-07-13 regarding Extension of Time for Final Action

on Sectional Map Amendment No. 07-1

b. Ordinance 772 Historic Tax Credits Amendment

7. UNFINISHED BUSINESS

a. Revised Carroll Cable Regulatory Commission Agreement

8. NEW BUSINESS:

a. Brightview of Westminster, LLC – Deed of Easement and Deed of

Relinquishment

9. DEPARTMENT REPORTS

10 CITIZEN COMMENTS

11. ADJOURN

This Meeting will be held at the John Street Quarters of the Westminster Fire Company,

28 John Street, Westminster, MD. Free parking is available.

Wednesday, November 21, 2007

20071121 This week in The Tentacle

This week in The Tentacle

Wednesday, November 21, 2007

General Assembly Journal Special Session 2007 Part -3

Richard B. Weldon Jr.

No amount of prognostication could have seen the mess that this special session became. Called by Gov. Martin O’Malley to address the structural deficit, we found ourselves in the midst of a political test of wills between the House and Senate.


Taxarians at the Gate

Kevin E. Dayhoff

Happy Thanksgiving. We have so many things for which to be thankful. The first of which is our men and women in uniform who continue to perform admirably in difficult circumstances.


Christmas Difficulties

Tom McLaughlin

One of the hardest things during the Christmas season is deciding what to get the parents. I have just finished an article for the local Ocean City fish wrapper about infections in the elderly and I have some suggestions.


Tuesday, November 20, 2007

Another Political Cabal

Roy Meachum

In a curious way Jennifer Dougherty's dive back into election campaigning may be related to the example set by James E. McClellan. The ex-mayor could have been inspired by Frederick's former political boss.


Turkey and a Bitter Pill

Farrell Keough

With Thanksgiving quickly approaching, it is a time of reflection for us all. Family, friends, health, rights, and many other freedoms we enjoy and should be thankful to have in this most incredible of nations. Only because we were fortunate enough to have God’s blessing and be born in this country do we have the bounty of these privileges and the freedoms that accompany them.


Monday, November 19, 2007

The Politics of “Borking”

John W. Ashbury

Recently in my “in” email basket appeared a missive asking me to financially support Dick Durbin, Democrat U.S. senator from Illinois. It came from a friend in Tennessee and surprised me, for I always thought she had a conservative streak. Boy, was I wrong.


Friday, November 16, 2007

Norman Mailer, Don't Rest in Peace – Part 2

Roy Meachum

No news was happening that Saturday, October 22, 1967. So I wandered away from the camera crew, looking for anything to add to the March on the Pentagon story. That's how I happened to be inside the building when the well-publicized face appeared between a pair of buttoned up suit jackets.


Injustice and Time for a Change

Edward Lulie III

Learning how to deal with adversity is one of the things that helps build character and it plays a huge role at times in the lives of football players, both in high school and in the National Football League as well.


Thursday, November 15, 2007

The New Robber Barons

Tony Soltero

What would happen if the National Football League did away with its referee corps? While some might find excitement in the idea of each team doing whatever it desires to defeat its opponent, it's obvious that the resulting avalanche of injuries, disputed play and game outcomes, and other forms of disorder would destroy the league's credibility and ultimately cost it revenues as fans switch to other, less chaotic forms of entertainment.


Wednesday, November 14, 2007

Frederick and The Geography of Nowhere

Kevin E. Dayhoff

The alarm has been sounded, “Starbucks is coming. Starbucks is coming.” No word yet as to whether or not a “coffee party” has been organized to dump coffee grounds into Carroll Creek.


The Nobel Economics Prize

Tom McLaughlin

Setting my brain from its usual position of reverse to forward, I elected to try to unravel the Nobel Prize in Economics. This was awarded to three Americans “for having laid the foundation of mechanism design theory.”


Tuesday, November 13, 2007

Don't Rest in Peace, Norman Mailer Part 1

Roy Meachum

Serious literary authors and small-town journalists, we take care of our own. The death last week of Pulitzer Prize winning Norman Mailer earned lots of space, in national media as well as the local press.


10 Dumb Questions I Get

Nick Diaz

I am a motorcyclist. For 37 of my 60 years I’ve been riding motorcycles. It all goes back to my youth in my native Cuba, where I spent summers riding horses at my godfather’s cattle ranch.


Falling into One’s Lap

Katie Nash

The past two weeks have involved a series of tax-raising schemes put forth by the O’Malley Administration and his minions. Unfortunately for taxpayers, there seems to be little resistance from moderate Democrats.


Monday, November 12, 2007

General Assembly Journal Special Session 2007 Part – 2

Richard B. Weldon Jr.

First, it was hailed as the most progressive re-write of a tax code in the nation. Liberal and progressive advocacy groups celebrated Gov. Martin O’Malley’s planned income tax revision as a just and responsible shift of the tax burden away from the working poor and onto the backs of the wealthy.


Worcester County and Slots

Tom McLaughlin

When it was announced that Ocean Downs raceway had been selected as a location for a slots parlor, local rich hotel-condo and real estate owners had an angina attack.

Tuesday, November 20, 2007

20071119 Special Report Annapolis

Special Session Report – Annapolis

Senate Republican Caucus

Senator David Brinkley Minority Leader

Senator Allan Kittleman Minority Whip

November 19, 2007 (2:41 a.m.)

50 days until the 2008 Session

Massive Regressive Tax Increase Passed in Dead of Night

Over Next Four Years, Tax Package Nets Almost $7 Billion More From Taxpayers

Average Increase of $1,222 Per Every Man, Woman and Child in Maryland

DLS Projects That Structural Deficit Still Exists Over Next 3 Years

  • Special Session Called for Deficit Reduction Fails to Meet Goals: Fiscal projections prepared by the Department of Legislative Services indicate that even with the massive tax increases mandated by the O’Malley Administration, structural deficits will continue over the next three years. Year-end balances projected for FY 2009 and FY 2010 will require rainy day fund balance transfers to eliminate the deficit. In FY 2011, a structural deficit of $49 million exists in spite of the fact that Maryland taxpayers will pay an additional $4 billion over that time period.

  • Overall Effect of Tax and Fee Increases Are Gargantuan: Total impact of the O’Malley tax package will be $6.9 billion of net new taxpayer funds over the next four years. Structural deficits will also exist in out-years if voters reject the slots referendum or if revenues from video lottery terminals fail to materialize at the level of DJS projections (anticipated to be $422 million in FY 2012). The tax increase amounts to $1,222 per every man, woman and child in Maryland – or almost $5000 per family of four.

  • The Grand Illusion of Budget Cuts: While the media has reported that “budget cuts” have been part of the equation in Annapolis, the final product primarily contains only “language of intent” since the Governor has not presented a budget bill before the legislature. Many of the cuts were offset or backfilled by new program spending, including an additional $1 billion in spending for the Chesapeake Bay Fund, Higher Education Investment Fund and expansion of health care programs.

  • SURPRISE! New MVA Fee Appears in Final Bill: Without any public notice, House Bill 5 emerged from an “informal” conference committee with a new MVA fee increase. The fee for a title certificate will be raised 120% (from $23 to $50) under amendments adopted by both chambers. While Governor O’Malley protested against such fee increases last summer as being too onerous for working-class families, his tax package as enacted will raise $32 million per year from this fee increase.

  • And the Winner of the Sales Tax Expansion Sweepstakes Is - Computer Services: Apparently, the presiding officers rejected the advice of Comptroller Peter Franchot, who lobbied against the computer services proposal because “computer firms form the nucleus of the state's new economy” and that the sales tax “plays into the hands of those who would unfairly question Maryland's business climate.” Franchot also questioned the long-term ramifications of this tax that would cripple our computer industry and “undermine our ability to compete effectively in the global technology marketplace.”

20071113 House vote on SB2 Tax Reform and Transportation Act of 2007

20071113 House vote on SB2 Tax Reform and Transportation Act of 2007

Seq No. 0098November 18, 200710:12 PM
Presiding: Speaker Busch Legislative Date: November 13, 2007

General Assembly Of Maryland
House of Delegates
2007 Special Session

Floor Amendment (Haddaway) Rejected (46-74)
SB 2 Ways and Means Report No. 6
The President
Tax Reform and Transportation Investment Act of
2007
Favorable with amendments adp - ON 2ND RDG
FLOOR AMD Del. Haddaway /263225/1
46 Yeas 74 Nays 1 Excused 13 Not Voting 7 Excused (Absent)

Voting Yea - 46
Aumann Frank Kipke Mizeur Sossi
Bartlett George Krebs Myers Stein
Beitzel Glassman Lafferty O'Donnell Stifler
Bobo Gutierrez *Malone Pendergrass Stull
Boteler Haddaway McComas Rice Walkup
Costa Impallaria McConkey Riley Weldon
Dwyer Jennings McDonough Schuh
Eckardt Kach McKee Shank
Elliott Kelly Miller Shewell
Elmore King Minnick Smigiel
Voting Nay - 74
Speaker Busch DeBoy Hecht Levi Ross
Ali Donoghue Heller Levy Rudolph
Barkley Doory Hixson Love Schuler
Barnes Dumais Holmes Manno Simmons
Barve Feldman Hubbard McHale Sophocleus
Benson Frick Hucker McIntosh Stukes
Bohanan Frush Ivey Morhaim Taylor
Branch Gaines Jones Niemann Turner_V
Braveboy Gilchrist Kaiser Oaks Valderrama
Bromwell Glenn Kirk Pena-Melnyk Vallario
Bronrott Griffith Kramer Proctor Vaughn
Clagett_G Hammen Krysiak Ramirez Waldstreicher
Conaway Harrison Kullen Reznik Walker
Conway Haynes Lawton Robinson Wood
Davis Healey Lee Rosenberg
Not Voting - 13
Beidle Clagett_V Jameson Olszewski Weir
Cardin Guzzone Mathias Tarrant
Carter James Murphy Turner_F
Excused From Voting - 1
Anderson
Excused (Absent) - 7
Bates Cane Montgomery Stocksdale
Burns Howard Nathan-Pulliam

* indicates vote change

Monday, November 19, 2007

20071118 Bush to Highlight Virginia Thanksgiving Site by Sonja Barisic


Bush to Highlight Va. Thanksgiving Site

By SONJA BARISIC Sunday, November 18, 2007

The Pilgrims' feast in Massachusetts has always overshadowed Berkeley Plantation's place in history. Now, a planned visit from President Bush has some Virginians giving thanks for the recognition.

On Monday, the president plans to stop by the plantation on the banks of the James River, where English settlers held a thanksgiving service almost two years before what is traditionally known as the nation's first Thanksgiving in New England.

[…]

When Capt. John Woodlief and his crew of 37 men came upon the site on Dec. 4, 1619, they fell to their knees and read a proclamation stating that the day of their ship's arrival should be "yearly and perpetually kept holy as a day of thanksgiving to Almighty God."

The country's first 10 presidents all spent time at the plantation. The ninth president, William Henry Harrison, was born at Berkeley and wrote his inaugural address in an upstairs bedroom there. He gave the nearly two-hour speech on a cold, wet day, caught a cold that developed into pneumonia and died a month later.

Lincoln also visited Berkeley, while Union troops were encamped there during the Civil War.

A drummer with those troops, John Jamieson, bought Berkeley in 1907. His son and daughter-in-law restored the mansion and his grandson, Malcolm E. "Jamie" Jamieson, now owns it.

[…]

Read the entire piece here: Bush to Highlight Va. Thanksgiving Site

On the Net:

Berkeley Plantation: http://www.berkeleyplantation.com/

Pig Pardon petition: http://www.pigpardon.com

http://www.townhall.com/news/us/2007/11/18/bush_to_highlight_va_thanksgiving_site?page=full&comments=true

Saturday, November 17, 2007

20071116 Display Features Work of Retired State police photographer


DISPLAY FEATURES WORK OF RETIRED STATE POLICE PHOTOGRAPHER

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

November 16, 2007

WHAT: “AN OFFICER’S EYE”

PHOTOGRAPHIC EXHIBIT OF THE LATE

TROOPER FIRST CLASS (RET) HOYT JONES

WHEN: NOW THROUGH THE END OF NOVEMBER

Tues., Thurs., Friday, 11 a.m. to 6 p.m. Sat., 11 a.m. to 3 p.m.

WHERE: EUBIE BLAKE NATIONAL JAZZ AND CULTURAL CENTER

GALLERY

847 NORTH HOWARD STREET

BALTIMORE, MD 21201

410-225-3130

The photography work of the late Trooper First Class (Ret) Hoyt Jones is on display in the gallery of the Eubie Blake National Jazz and Cultural Center. The display features scenes from Baltimore City and from the Baltimore Police Department and the Maryland State Police.

TFC Jones was a member of the Maryland State Police from 1967 through 1989. He was an official State Police photographer for many years, as a member of what is now the Office of Media Communications.

Prior to his service with the Maryland State Police, TFC Jones was a U.S. Marine Corps photographer. After his retirement from the State Police, he was a photographer for the City of Baltimore.

This display resulted from the efforts of Mr. Charles Smith who was a protégé of TFC Jones. Mr. Smith is now a field photographer for the FBI.

TFC Jones passed away in 2005.

###

CONTACT: Mr. Gregory Shipley

Office of Media Communications & Marketing

410-653-4236 (Office) 410-653-4200 (through Headquarters Duty Officer)

20071114 Winterthur exhibit looks at Americans' love affair with pets

Winterthur exhibit looks at Americans' love affair with pets

Wednesday November 14, 2007

By RANDALL CHASE Associated Press Writer

WILMINGTON, Del. (AP) -- Visitors to Winterthur sometimes experience a "Wow!" moment when touring the museum's permanent and traveling collections, but the newest exhibit offers a bit of a twist.

"Bow-wow!" might be the more appropriate response to "Pets in America," which traces Americans' love affair with their animals from the 18th century to the present.

In what may be a first for Winterthur, visitors can bring their own pet photos or portraits, which will be displayed and archived as part of the museum's record of the exhibit.

The family friendly exhibit, on view through Jan. 20, is the brainchild of Katherine Grier, a professor in Winterthur's American material culture program. The show grew from her research into human-animal relationships in the United States while she was at the University of South Carolina, where the exhibit debuted two years ago.

Winterthur is the fifth stop for the show, which is next scheduled to travel to Florida. At Winterthur, it is being supplemented with about 40 items from the museum's collection.

The exhibit, based on Grier's acclaimed 2006 book of the same name, begins by linking pet keeping in America to its earlier roots, amusingly illustrated with ornate cages used in the Far East to house pet crickets - prized both for their chirping songs and competitive fighting.

Read the rest of the article here: Winterthur exhibit looks at Americans' love affair with pets

20071115 Westminster Eagle columns Aug 1 through Nov 15 2007

Westminster Eagle columns Aug 1 through Nov 15 2007

November 15th, 2007

Kevin E. Dayhoff Wednesday, November 14 One more helping of grits, with a Dr. Pepper and a side of fruitcake

Most people who know me know that I like to eat.

And regular readers of this column know that one of my favorite foods is grits.

After the Aug. 1 column in The Eagle, "Song of the South: No grits, no glory," I heard from many folks who also like grits.

Mike Shaw of Shaw Farms wrote that he "j... [Read full story]

Jerry Barnes: county state's attorney and veteran

Westminster Eagle: November 7, 2007

As Veterans Day fast approaches -- it's this Sunday, Nov. 11 -- it's appropriate to remember that service to our country is a cherished tradition in Carroll County.

And so it was that in May 1968, Jerry F. Barnes joined the U.S. Army.

Today, we know Mr. Barnes as Carroll County State's Attorney.... [Read full story]


Billy Bob threw something off the Route 140 bridge

Westminster Eagle: October 31, 2007

It was 40 years ago, the late summer of 1967 that we first learned from "Mama" that the nice young preacher, Brother Taylor "said he saw a girl that looked a lot like you up on Choctaw Ridge. And she and Billy Joe was throwing somethin' off the Tallahatchie Bridge."

I first heard that song, "Ode t... [Read full story]


OK, so who was Herb Ruby?

Westminster Eagle: September 26, 2007

That's the question we posed last week when we talked about the placement of the Ruby Field sign at Westminster High's football field.

Let's begin this way -- when was the last time you attended a Friday night local high school football game?

We all know that local sports teams are one of the st...

[Read full story]


Resetting a local gem to mark Ruby Field

Westminster Eagle: September 19, 2007

I had the pleasure of attending the "rededication" of the Ruby Field sign under the scoreboard at the Westminster High School football field right before the Westminster v. Francis Scott Key football game on Friday evening, Sept. 7.

A gathering of friends and family of the late Coach Herb Ruby was... [Read full story]


Thursday, October 25 2007 Wm. Jennings Bryan stirred the pot in 1900 visit By Kevin E. Dayhoff

Wednesday, October 17 2007 Celebrating a Westminster 'citizen soldier' By Kevin E. Dayhoff

Wednesday, October 10 2007 We can honor county's firefighting history by preventing disaster By Kevin E. Dayhoff

Wednesday, October 03 2007 Early television in Carroll got a great reception By Kevin E. Dayhoff,

Special to the Eagle Wednesday, September 12 2007 'An extraordinary guy who did extraordinary things'

Wednesday, September 05 2007 Day at State Fair fills us with Carroll County pride By Kevin E. Dayhoff

Wednesday, August 29 2007 Coffee, doughnuts and ice cream in Boston By Kevin E. Dayhoff

Wednesday, August 22 2007 County fair emerged with Carroll's agricultural awareness By Kevin E. Dayhoff

Wednesday, August 15 2007 Bergman: Closing credit for a master of cinema By Kevin E. Dayhoff

Wednesday, August 08 2007 Agriculture in Carroll has always been 'fair' game By Kevin E. Dayhoff

Wednesday, August 01 2007 Song of the South: No grits, no glory By Kevin E. Dayhoff

Links: http://news.mywebpal.com/news_tool_v2.cfm?pnpid=978&show=archivelist&searchsel=archives&om=1&requesttimeout=100

If any of the links have expired for a piece of which you would like to read, e-mail me at kevindayhoff AT gmail DOT com. Thanks.

20071113 Newsday.com: Ex-Walter Reed Chief to Run Fort Detrick By David Dishneau

Newsday.com: Ex-Walter Reed Chief to Run Fort Detrick

By DAVID DISHNEAU, Associated Press Writer

November 13, 2007 HAGERSTOWN, Md.

A two-star general who was fired as the head of Walter Reed Army Medical Center amid reports of shoddy treatment of wounded soldiers will oversee U.S. biological weapons defense research as commander of Fort Detrick, the Army said Tuesday.

Maj. Gen. George W. Weightman, a physician who works in the Army surgeon general's office in Falls Church, Va., will command both Fort Detrick in Frederick and the U.S. Army Medical Research and Materiel Command there, Army spokesman Paul Boyce said.

Weightman had been at Walter Reed for six months when The Washington Post began publishing stories in February about recovering soldiers languishing in dilapidated housing and their families complaining of inattentive administrators.

The disclosures forced the resignations of then-Army Secretary Francis Harvey and then-Army Surgeon General Lt. Gen. Kevin Kiley.

When Weightman was fired from the Army's flagship hospital March 1, the Army said senior officials "had lost trust and confidence" in his leadership abilities to solve the problems at Walter Reed. In September, the top Pentagon health officer, Dr. S. Ward Casscells, said the military's medical community "got a black eye that we didn't completely deserve."

Read the entire article here: Newsday.com: Ex-Walter Reed Chief to Run Fort Detrick