Kevin Dayhoff - Soundtrack Division of Old Silent Movies - www.kevindayhoff.net - Runner, writer, artist, fire and police chaplain. The mindless ramblings of a runner, journalist, and artist: National and International politics. For community see www.kevindayhoff.org. For art, writing and travel see www.kevindayhoff.com
Monday, November 24, 2008
Recent Explore Carroll columns by Kevin Dayhoff
November 23, 2008
Turkey, stuffing, illegal radios and rowdy college kids
Published November 23, 2008 by Sunday Carroll Eagle
This Thursday is Thanksgiving, and we at The Eagle hope you have a great turkey-day with lots of food, friends and family. Perhaps because of our...
Welcome to the Coffee Shop Bank and Trust Company
Published November 19, 2008 by Westminster Eagle
I was sad to see last week that the Pour House Café on East Main Street in Westminster was closing. The unreal irony of the...
At Westminster polls in 1920, the 'Women Disappointed Them'
Published November 16, 2008 by Sunday Carroll Eagle
EAGLE ARCHIVE The fact that women gained the right to vote was a milestone that got mixed reviews in Carroll County after the 19th Amendment...
Life work of Sargent Shriver began in Westminster
Published November 12, 2008 by Westminster Eagle
Twenty years ago this week the community was abuzz in anticipation of one of Carroll County's most celebrated native sons, Robert Sargent Shriver Jr. returning...
Patriotic, misty-eyed and corny about our Election Day
Published November 9, 2008 by Sunday Carroll Eagle
EAGLE ARCHIVE Last Tuesday, after two years, 45 debates and $2.4 billion spent, American voters finally had their day. Is it just me, or does...
Junction and Lenny Moore explain what teens are thinking
Published November 5, 2008 by Westminster Eagle
On Thursday, Nov. 6, Junction Inc. will host a substance abuse and awareness program sponsored by the Board of County commissioners at 6 p.m....
After this long campaign season, we have many reasons to celebrate
Published October 31, 2008 by Sunday Carroll Eagle
This coming Tuesday is General Election Day, and I hope everyone takes the time to vote. Along with our freedom of speech, the right to vote...
Silvery Moon celebrates auxiliary's golden anniversary
Published October 29, 2008 by Westminster Eagle
Fifty years ago on Sept. 2, 1958, the Carroll Hospital Center Auxiliary was officially formed. Its first president was Gladys Wimert. Other community leaders...
William Jennings Bryan was the life of the party in 1900
Published October 24, 2008 by Sunday Carroll Eagle
I was watching the debate the other night -- you know, for the folks who, for some reason, want to be president -- when a...
Seems we're more in a 'Panic' than a 'Depression'
Published October 22, 2008 by Westminster Eagle
Anyone remember the Panic of 1907? Well, let me refresh your memory. On Oct. 22, 1907, one of the more dramatic financial failures in American...
We had joy, we had fun, we had sidewalks in the sun
Published October 17, 2008 by Sunday Carroll Eagle
EAGLE ARCHIVE I'm writing this week's column within feet of the Atlantic Ocean in Nags Head, N.C. And I mean, literally, "feet from the ocean."...
Tragedy comes home to Carroll in fallen officers
Published October 15, 2008 by Westminster Eagle, Eldersburg Eagle, Sunday Carroll Eagle
It's a sad fact that five Maryland police officers have died in the line of duty in 2008. But it's a curious fact that four...
Real-life 'Flash of Genius' saw his final days in Sykesville
Published October 12, 2008 by Sunday Carroll Eagle, Eldersburg Eagle, Westminster Eagle
EAGLE ARCHIVE The next time you're driving around Carroll County and it starts to drizzle just a tad, but sure to thank your former neighbor,...
A Culinary Experience is food for thought on a tough topic
Published October 8, 2008 by Westminster Eagle, Eldersburg Eagle
On Monday, Oct. 13, the Rape Crisis Intervention Service of Carroll County will hold its ninth annual "A Culinary Experience," at Martin's Westminster. This is...
Westminster's Clock Tower will stand the test of time
Published October 1, 2008 by Westminster Eagle
Kevin Dayhoff kdayhoff@carr.org Ask anyone to name the most cherished landmark in Westminster, and most will say it's the Westminster Clock Tower, which sits atop the old...
Clock fund tolls for thee
Published October 1, 2008 by Westminster Eagle
Foundation seeks $35,000 for repairs More than 100 years old, the Westminster Clock Tower has taken a licking and, for the most part, it has...
Pardon my French, but where do these words come from?
Published September 28, 2008 by Sunday Carroll Eagle
EAGLE ARCHIVE This week, we visit an event that took place long before Carroll County was formed -- yet affects English speakers worldwide to this...
Letters
Published September 24, 2008 by Westminster Eagle
Are we, as parents, ready for the new school year? The summer flies by and another school year has begun. Even if you don't have...
Time to look toward shaping Westminster's the future
Published September 24, 2008 by Westminster Eagle
In last week's column I discussed the real challenge facing Westminster as the need for an open community conversation over the growth of city government,...
A few things to chew on as we contemplate Taneytown history
Published September 21, 2008 by Sunday Carroll Eagle
This Sunday we turn our attention to the northern part of Carroll County. For the convenience of folks in south Carroll, though, we'll...
Be critical of spending, but MML has been worthwhile
Published September 17, 2008 by Westminster Eagle
There has been a fair amount of discussion of late regarding published accounts of the June trip by 15 appointed and elected officials from Westminster...
League of extraordinary gentlemen (and women) serving Maryland
Published September 14, 2008 by Sunday Carroll Eagle
Between scholarships, the cost of conferences and its plan to create geocache sites in local municipalities, the Maryland Municipal League has been the...
Appreciating the composed chaos of the GOP Convention
Published September 10, 2008 by Westminster Eagle
I spent last week at the Republican National Convention at the Xcel Energy Center in St. Paul, Minn. The Xcel Center is a hockey arena...
For many years, the convention 'party' came to Baltimore
Published September 5, 2008 by Sunday Carroll Eagle
This past week I was fortunate to have the opportunity to travel with the Maryland Delegation to the 2008 Republican National Convention at...
Power of art contributes to a community's vibrancy
Published September 3, 2008 by Westminster Eagle
This week's column is a bit of a travel log, but one that relates to life here in Westminster. Recently I had an opportunity to...
A town divided found purpose and prosperity as a unified Westminster
Published August 31, 2008 by Sunday Carroll Eagle
EAGLE ARCHIVE Last Sunday we looked at the early history of the western end of Westminster. It was a little more than 80 years ago...
Economic development will revitalize Pennsylvania Avenue
Published August 27, 2008 by Westminster Eagle
At a recent meeting of the Westminster Common Council, it was announced that Councilman Greg Pecoraro will chair another Pennsylvania Avenue initiative, and that Councilwoman...
Years ago, folks celebrated sticking The Forks in Westminster
Published August 24, 2008 by Sunday Carroll Eagle
The City of Westminster has recently been working to form a group to study the Pennsylvania Avenue of town. In that context, it's interesting that back...
I speak today in favor of adventures in 'behindular zone'
Published August 20, 2008 by Westminster Eagle
Well, I did it. Come a little closer, and I'll tell you all about it. All right, maybe not all about it. After all, this...
And now, for this week's installment of 'La Policia'
Published August 17, 2008 by Sunday Carroll Eagle
Carroll County's reputation for low crime and an aggressive approach to public safety is not a recent phenomenon. On July 16, 1925, the editor of the...
Future of police protection delayed, but crime doesn't rest
Published August 13, 2008 by Westminster Eagle
On Thursday, Aug. 7, the Board of County Commissioners voted 2-1 to not move forward with a plan to form a county police department...
Future of police protection delayed, but crime doesn't rest
Published August 13, 2008 by Eldersburg Eagle, Westminster Eagle
On Thursday, Aug. 7, the Board of County Commissioners voted 2-1 to not move forward with a plan to form a county police department...
Turkeys, fires and failed presidents were the stuff of old newspapers
Published August 10, 2008 by Sunday Carroll Eagle
As today's newspapers race into the Internet age, many folks might be fascinated with the look and feel of newspapers from the 1800s and early...
Carroll rides tall at the Chincoteague Pony auction
Published August 6, 2008 by Westminster Eagle
With pen in hand, Carroll County author Lois Szymanski looked up from a copy of one of her latest books, "Out of the Sea: Today's...
Fire and water have been volatile mix in Sykesville
Published August 3, 2008 by Sunday Carroll Eagle
It was 85 years ago, in the late afternoon of Monday, July 30, 1923, that an historic and terrible rainstorm hit Sykesville and other areas...
Destructive behavior from those contentious combines
Published July 30, 2008 by Westminster Eagle
On Saturday evening, the air was hot, thick and muggy, flavored with anticipation and seasoned with a hint of petroleum fumes. More than 5,000 fans...
Westminster's sacred places are shrines of community life
Published July 27, 2008 by Sunday Carroll Eagle
EAGLE ARCHIVE Since this is a Sunday column, I do hope it's fitting to talk about sacred places. Not necessarily houses of worship, mind you, though those...
Westminster's sacred places are shrines of community life
Published July 25, 2008 by Sunday Carroll Eagle
Since this is a Sunday column, I do hope it's fitting to talk about sacred places. Not necessarily houses of worship, mind you, though those are...
Viva la bicyclette de Carroll
Published July 23, 2008 by Westminster Eagle
Today, as you are reading this, the 95th Tour de France is in Stage 17. This year's race began on July 5. After 23 days,...
Memories from City Hall and e-mail from the great beyond
Published July 20, 2008 by Sunday Carroll Eagle
Westminster purchased the property for its City Hall, on Emerald Hill Lane, from the estate of George W. Albaugh in September 1939 for the grand...
Appreciating Tony Snow's passion for life
Published July 16, 2008 by Westminster Eagle
Saturday, July 12, former White House press secretary Tony Snow, 53, died of cancer. I certainly never knew him, yet after following his too-short career for...
Westminster's Civil War role didn't end at Corbit's Charge
Published July 13, 2008 by Sunday Carroll Eagle
The last several weeks have been busy in Carroll County, and one of the busiest was during the June 27-29 events surrounding the commemoration of...
Smith & Reifsnider was too hot to handle in July 1938
Published July 9, 2008 by Westminster Eagle
Seventy years ago, Carroll County was reeling from the aftermath of fireworks of an unwelcome variety -- one of the biggest fires in the county's...
What a concept: sharing the wealth and pain of tax increases
Published July 6, 2008 by Sunday Carroll Eagle
"Gov. (William Preston) Lane does not like taxes ... but as long as you have colleges to take your money, ... you are to have...
The merry marry month of June
Published July 2, 2008 by Westminster Eagle
As we say goodbye to the month of June, bachelors can breathe a sigh of relief that they've survived what has historically been the traditional...
Years ago, trip to the beach required help from a little ferry
Published June 29, 2008 by Sunday Carroll Eagle
EAGLE ARCHIVE For many Carroll County residents, summertime means an opportunity to make an annual family trek to Ocean City, Md. Some of my fondest childhood memories...
Westminster's past included days of swine and meters
Published June 25, 2008 by Westminster Eagle
There have been many critter problems in the history of Westminster, but none seems to have caused as much a stir as what to do...
20081123 recent Explore Carroll columns by Kevin Dayhoff
“Munchie run” by a Salisbury University student from Westminster leads to MTV infamy
Lindsey Staymates, 20, of Westminster, talks to Deputy First Class Rob Parker of Wicomico County Sheriff’s Office near Salisbury University. Staymates’ appearance on the MTV show “Busted” garnered her the dubious distinction of “Miss Busted 2008.” ((Photo courtesy MTV))
November 23, 2008
Score another great story by talented Explore Carroll writer Charles Schelle. If you are not reading Mr. Schelle’s stuff on http://www.explorecarroll.com/, you’re missing out…
First the video that Mr. Schelle found:
Munchie Run
After receiving a DUI just two days earlier, a 19-year Lindsay is again stopped by an officer, this time for underage drinking while walking.
Now Mr. Schelle’s article in the Sunday Carroll Eagle:
'Munchie run' gone bad leads to MTV infamy
Westminster native 'Busted' on reality TV By Charles Schelle schelle@patuxent.com Posted on www.explorecarroll.com 11/23/08
Lindsey Staymates of Westminster was just "walking on the feet" to the "hungry store."
But she wound up on MTV with a ticket from police. Now, she's Miss Busted 2008.
"I actually don't regret it all," said Staymates, 20, a sophomore at Salisbury University. "I just see it as another life event."
Staymates received nationwide attention for her comical, yet eye-opening, appearance on the MTV show "Busted." The show is a sort of "Cops" for a younger generation, featuring footage of crimes committed by 17- to 25-year-olds and the consequences they face. In Staymates case, she says she was starving on May 11 after a night of drinking and headed to Hardee's. But after being previously cited for driving under the influence, she decided to jog to Hardee's.
That's when Deputy First Class Rob Parker of the Wicomico Sheriff's Office -- and an MTV crew -- spotted her.
The deputy performed a preliminary breath test, and Staymates blew a .16, twice the legal limit if you're 21. (The legal limit for people under 21 in Maryland is .00.)
But Staymates didn't see what was wrong with jogging to Hardee's, even if she was drunk.
"I was walking ... on the feet!" she told Parker in a plea that started her 15 minutes of fame. "I was hungry! ... I'm like, 'I'm walking to the ... hungry store!' "
Today, in retrospect, Staymates said she wasn't sure what would come out of the episode, mostly because she's not sure what happened.
"I didn't have any idea of what I said," she admits.
But suddenly, people recognized the Westminster High School graduate at Salisbury -- and back home in Westminster.
Read the entire article by Mr. Schelle here: 'Munchie run' gone bad leads to MTV infamy
http://explorecarroll.com/news/1628/munchie-run-gone-bad-leads-mtv-infamy/
20081123 Munchie run by Wster Sbury U student leads to MTV infamy
Sunday, November 23, 2008
New York Times Op Ed columnist suggests Bush turn the presidency over to Pelosi for a Thanksgiving present…
No, this is not April Fools Day and to the best of knowledge, this is not a spoof.
And no this is not humor from The Onion or a Katie Couric dream sequence.
It’s well, read on…
New York Times Op-Ed Columnist Time for Him to Go By Gail Collins Published: November 22, 2008
Gail Collins photo by Tony Cenicola/The New York Times
Seriously. We have an economy that’s crashing and a vacuum at the top. Bush — who is currently on a trip to Peru to meet with Asian leaders who no longer care what he thinks — hasn’t got the clout, or possibly even the energy, to do anything useful. His most recent contribution to resolving the fiscal crisis was lecturing representatives of the world’s most important economies on the glories of free-market capitalism.
Putting Barack Obama in charge immediately isn’t impossible. Dick Cheney, obviously, would have to quit as well as Bush. In fact, just to be on the safe side, the vice president ought to turn in his resignation first. (We’re desperate, but not crazy.) Then House Speaker Nancy Pelosi would become president until Jan. 20. Obviously, she’d defer to her party’s incoming chief executive, and Barack Obama could begin governing.
Read the entire column here: New York Times Op-Ed Columnist Time for Him to Go By Gail Collins
http://www.nytimes.com/2008/11/22/opinion/22collins.html
20081122 NYT Op Ed Columnist Time for Him to Go By Gail Collins
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Do We Need the Big Three? by George Will Tuesday, November 18, 2008
Do We Need the Big Three? by George Will Tuesday, November 18, 2008
WASHINGTON -- "Nothing," said a General Motors spokesman last week, "has changed relative to the GM board's support for the GM management team during this historically difficult economic period for the U.S. auto industry." Nothing? Not even the evaporation of almost all shareholder value?
GM's statement comes as the mendicant company is threatening to collapse and make a mess unless Washington, which has already voted $25 billion for GM, Ford and Chrysler, provides up to $50 billion more -- the last subsidy until the next one.
[…]
The answer? Do nothing that will delay bankrupt companies from filing for bankruptcy protection, so that improvident labor contracts can be unraveled, allowing the companies to try to devise plausible business models. Instead, advocates of a "rescue" propose extending to Detroit the government's business model for the nation -- redistributing wealth from the successful to the failed, an implausible formula for prosperity.
[…]
Those Democrats, their rhetoric notwithstanding, really care most about the union. "Saving the planet" comes second and last comes the health of the auto companies.
{…}
Read the entire column here: Do We Need the Big Three? by George Will
20081118 Do We Need the Big Three by Will Nov18 2008
Running on empty – What a difference an election makes
November 23, 2008 by Kevin Dayhoff
By the end of last week the prospect of an auto bailout was running on four flat tires.
However, with the backdrop of the economy continuing to remain at the forefront of the media spotlight, the “Detroit Three,” General Motors, Ford and Chrysler, continue their tours de force beg-a-thon performance in the media with a great deal of support coming from the Democrat Party.
What a difference an election makes. If you will remember, during the election campaign, the Democrats railed about the increase in the national debt, increased spending, and failed economic policies.
And of course, earlier in the 2008 presidential campaign, when the price of oil and gasoline spiked, it was President George W. Bush’s fault. After the price of gas fell precipitously, the Democrats and their media sycophants fell strangely silent.
Moreover, on Election Day, when the Wall Street rallied, the media credited the prospects of the election of presidential candidate Illinois Sen. Barack Obama with the reasons for the uptick in the stock market.
The day after the election the stock market had the largest percentage drop in history on the day after an election. The media was silent – as in crickets chirping…
Many credited the election victory of Senator Obama on the chaos in the economy. Of course, the great paradox is that the very same foxes, House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, D-Calif., Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid, D-Nev., House Financial Services Committee chair Barney Frank, D-Mass., and Senate Banking Committee chair Sen. Chris Dodd, D-Conn., who caused the chaos in the financial henhouse have now been rewarded and are now in charge of protecting and fixing it. (See It’s the Congress, Stupid!, Congress and the Rattlesnake – Part 1, Congress and The Rattlesnake – Part 2, Congress and The Rattlesnake – Part 3.)
Now these very same folks want to work their magic on the automobile industry in the United States – with taxpayer money, of course. They want to further raise the national debt by bailing out the Detroit Three – which is the focus of my “The Tentacle” column this week: Rewarding Bad Behavior
As an aside, speaking of changing his tune, you will notice that President-elect Obama has been eerily silent about Iraq, Guantanamo Bay Naval Base, and other aspects of his war on the Bush Administration’s national security polices now that he has been given a number of national security briefings.
Nevertheless, there remains a nagging concern that international terrorists are still plotting to kill Americans and we are still fighting two interminable ground wars overseas. The Iranians and North Koreans are still playing with their nuclear erector sets. Somali pirates are seizing ships in one of the world’s busiest shipping lanes outside of the Gulf of Aden.
And in spite of the predicted outbreak of the Age of Aquarius as a result of the recent election, we find ourselves in economic chaos which continues to escape appropriate hyperbole and reactionary rhetoric.
Congress and our critical financial conglomerates have behaved so badly that their behavior raised the specter that the United States and the world would revisit the joys and riches of the Medieval Ages if something was not done.
Yet last week, the financial bailout had the look and feel of a circular firing squad as Treasury Secretary Henry Paulson stood before the nation, and said something to the affect: “You know, about that initial bailout strategy… Well nevermind, the facts have changed and we now have a new and improved pyramid scheme to sell you.”
His performance had all the reassuring aspects of a snake oil salesman from the 1890s as he sketched-out a new approach to encourage consumer confidence, borrowing, and get American families back in the mood for opening their pocketbooks.
No word as to how many Google searches occurred for “economic feudalism” last week as Americans started to feel like feudal serfs being sacrificed as a result of the lack of leadership of the overlords.
If this were not enough of a witches brew, many Americans – and the stock market – continue to feel morning sickness in a pregnant pause of anxiety over president-elect Obama’s election rhetoric to revisit free trade agreements, raise taxes, and unleash a new social-welfare system upon the nation that would make President Franklin D. Roosevelt green with envy.
Intellectual, morally and economically, a glance at Washington these days indicates that it not only the Detroit Three that is in trouble these days, the American taxpayer is more at risk than ever as a result of Congress running on empty.
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20081119 Running on empty (752 words)
Alcalde y Westminster Común reunión del Consejo de 24 de noviembre de 2008
Domingo, 23 de noviembre de 2008
Westminster Mayor and Common Council Meeting of November 24 2008 Alcalde y Westminster Común reunión del Consejo de 24 de noviembre de 2008
City Council Members Minutes of City Council Meetings Los miembros del Consejo de la Ciudad de las actas de las reuniones del Consejo de la Ciudad
AGENDA CITY OF WESTMINSTER, MARYLAND AGENDA City of Westminster, Maryland
Mayor and Common Council Meeting of November 24, 2008 Alcalde y común de la reunión del Consejo de 24 de noviembre de 2008
1. CALL TO ORDER – 7:00 PM LLAMADA AL ORDEN - 7:00 PM
Presentation by Task Force on Office Supplies Procurement Presentación a cargo del Grupo de Tareas sobre suministros de oficina de adquisiciones
Mayoral Proclamation – Municipal Government Works Month – Maryland Municipal League Mayoral proclamación - Gobierno Municipal de Obras mes - Maryland Liga Municipal
2. MINUTES OF THE MEETING OF NOVEMBER 10, 2008 ACTA DE LA REUNIÓN DE NOVIEMBRE 10, 2008
3. PUBLIC HEARINGS: AUDIENCIA PÚBLICA:
Ordinance No. 792 – Revisions to Chapter 164 Entitled “Zoning and Subdivision of Land” – Thomas Beyard Ordenanza N º 792 - Revisión del capítulo 164, titulado "Zonificación y la subdivisión de la tierra" - Thomas Beyard
Ordinance No. 793 – Revisions to Chapter 124 entitled “Sewers and Sewage” and Chapter 160 entitled “Water” – Thomas Beyard Ordenanza N º 793 - Revisión del capítulo 124 titulado "Sistemas de saneamiento y aguas residuales" y en el capítulo 160 titulado "Agua" - Thomas Beyard
Amended Ordinance No. 795 – Utility Fee Ordinance – Thomas Beyard Modificado la Ordenanza N º 795 - Utilidad de la Ordenanza de pago - Thomas Beyard
4. CONSENT CALENDAR: CALENDARIO DE CONSENTIMIENTO:
October 2008 Departmental Operating Reports Octubre 2008 informes de los departamentos de funcionamiento
Regional Automated Enforcement Center Agreement – Chief Spaulding Regional de Centro de la ejecución automatizada de acuerdo - Jefe de Spaulding
5. REPORTS FROM STANDING COMMITTEES Los informes de las comisiones permanentes
6. ORDINANCES AND RESOLUTIONS: Ordenanzas y resoluciones:
Adoption of Ordinance No. 791 – General Revisions to City Code – Thomas Beyard Aprobación de la Ordenanza N º 791 - General Revisiones de Código de ciudad - Thomas Beyard
Adoption of Ordinance No. 792 – Revisions to Chapter 164 Entitled “Zoning and Subdivision of Land” – Thomas Beyard Aprobación de la Ordenanza N º 792 - Revisión del capítulo 164, titulado "Zonificación y la subdivisión de la tierra" - Thomas Beyard
Adoption of Ordinance No. 793 – Revisions to Chapter 124 entitled “Sewers and Sewage” and Chapter 160 entitled “Water” – Thomas Beyard Aprobación de la Ordenanza N º 793 - Revisión del capítulo 124 titulado "Sistemas de saneamiento y aguas residuales" y en el capítulo 160 titulado "Agua" - Thomas Beyard
Adoption of Ordinance No. 794 – General Fee Ordinance – Thomas Beyard Aprobación de la Ordenanza N º 794 - Tasa Ordenanza General - Thomas Beyard
Adoption of Amended Ordinance No. 795 – Utility Fee Ordinance – Thomas Beyard Aprobación del modificado la Ordenanza N º 795 - Utilidad de la Ordenanza de tasas - Thomas Beyard
Introduction of Ordinance No. 796 – Amendment of Water and Sewer Chapters Regarding Rates Introducción de la Ordenanza N º 796 - Modificación de agua y alcantarillado lo que respecta a los capítulos Tarifas
Introduction of Ordinance No. 797 – Amendment to Utility Fee Ordinance Regarding Water and Sewer Rates Introducción de la Ordenanza N º 797 - Modificación de la Ordenanza de tasas de utilidad lo que respecta a agua y alcantarillado Tarifas
7. UNFINISHED BUSINESS: Asuntos pendientes:
a. Water and Sewer Rate Structure Study Agua y alcantarillado estructura de los tipos de estudio
8. NEW BUSINESS: NUEVOS NEGOCIOS:
a. Approval of Agreement CB-1108 – Commitment of Intent for the Redevelopment and Occupancy of the City Park Concession Stand/Community Building – Ron Schroers Aprobación del Acuerdo CB-1108 - Compromiso de Intención para la rehabilitación y ocupación de la Ciudad Parque Concesión Stand / Comunidad Edificio - Ron Schroers
9. DEPARTMENT REPORTS DEPARTAMENTO DE INFORMES
10. CITIZEN COMMENTS COMENTARIOS CIUDADANO
11. ADJOURN Aplazamiento
PLEASE NOTE: THE DECEMBER 8, 2008 MEETING OF THE MAYOR AND COMMON COUNCIL WILL TAKE PLACE AT THE JOHN STREET QUARTERS OF THE WESTMINSTER FIRE COMPANY. Tenga en cuenta: el 8 de diciembre de 2008 la reunión del alcalde y consejo común se llevará a cabo en la calle Juan cuartas partes de la empresa WESTMINSTER fuego. FREE PARKING IS AVAILABLE. Aparcamiento gratuito está disponible.
20081124 Westminster Mayor and Common Council Meeting of November 24 2008 20081124 Westminster y el Alcalde Común reunión del Consejo de 24 de noviembre de 2008
Westminster Mayor and Common Council Meeting of November 24 2008
City Council Members Minutes of City Council Meetings
AGENDA CITY OF WESTMINSTER, MARYLAND
Mayor and Common Council Meeting of November 24, 2008
1. CALL TO ORDER – 7:00 P.M.
Presentation by Task Force on Office Supplies Procurement
Mayoral Proclamation – Municipal Government Works Month – Maryland Municipal League
2. MINUTES OF THE MEETING OF NOVEMBER 10, 2008
3. PUBLIC HEARINGS:
Ordinance No. 792 – Revisions to Chapter 164 Entitled “Zoning and Subdivision of Land” – Thomas Beyard
Ordinance No. 793 – Revisions to Chapter 124 entitled “Sewers and Sewage” and Chapter 160 entitled “Water” – Thomas Beyard
Amended Ordinance No. 795 – Utility Fee Ordinance – Thomas Beyard
4. CONSENT CALENDAR:
October 2008 Departmental Operating Reports
Regional Automated Enforcement Center Agreement – Chief Spaulding
5. REPORTS FROM STANDING COMMITTEES
6. ORDINANCES AND RESOLUTIONS:
Adoption of Ordinance No. 791 – General Revisions to City Code – Thomas Beyard
Adoption of Ordinance No. 792 – Revisions to Chapter 164 Entitled “Zoning and Subdivision of Land” – Thomas Beyard
Adoption of Ordinance No. 793 – Revisions to Chapter 124 entitled “Sewers and Sewage” and Chapter 160 entitled “Water” – Thomas Beyard
Adoption of Ordinance No. 794 – General Fee Ordinance – Thomas Beyard
Adoption of Amended Ordinance No. 795 – Utility Fee Ordinance – Thomas Beyard
Introduction of Ordinance No. 796 – Amendment of Water and Sewer Chapters Regarding Rates
Introduction of Ordinance No. 797 – Amendment to Utility Fee Ordinance Regarding Water and Sewer Rates
7. UNFINISHED BUSINESS:
a. Water and Sewer Rate Structure Study
8. NEW BUSINESS:
a. Approval of Agreement CB-1108 – Commitment of Intent for the Redevelopment and Occupancy of the City Park Concession Stand/Community Building – Ron Schroers
9. DEPARTMENT REPORTS
10. CITIZEN COMMENTS
11. ADJOURN
PLEASE NOTE: THE DECEMBER 8, 2008 MEETING OF THE MAYOR AND COMMON COUNCIL WILL TAKE PLACE AT THE JOHN STREET QUARTERS OF THE WESTMINSTER FIRE COMPANY. FREE PARKING IS AVAILABLE.
20081124 Westminster Mayor and Common Council Meeting of November 24 2008
Sykesville Mayor and council agenda for November 24 2008
MAYOR AND TOWN COUNCIL OF SYKESVILLE
AGENDA FOR
MONDAY, NOVEMBER 24, 2008, 7:00 P.M.
QUORUM: Mayor
MINUTES: Town Clerk
TREASURER’S REPORT: Town Treasurer
PUBLIC CONCERNS
BUSINESS
FY 2008 Town Audit - Report
Public Safety Report – Chief Williams
Solid Waste and Recycling Initiatives – Proposal
Springfield Hospital Annexation – Discussion
Allocation of Surplus Budget Funds in Parks & Events, Gate House, & Little Sykes Railway
Historic District Commission – Appointments
Proposed FY 2009 Budget Amendment
OTHER:
Carroll County Chapter of Maryland Municipal League Dinner in Taneytown on Thursday, December 4, 2008 at 6:30 p.m. Dinah needs to know by Monday night. Thanks.
Christmas Open House – Saturday, December 6, 2008 – Santa Arrives at 6 p.m.
Sykesville Historic House Tour – Sunday, December 7, 2008 – 1 – 6 p.m.
CLOSED SESSION:
1. Legal Consultation
2. Property Acquisition
3. Personnel
Main Street Christmas CelebrationDowntown Main StreetSaturday December 6, 2008 6 pm to 9 pm Santa Clause will arrive in town by Fire Truck & light the town Christmas tree at 6:00 PM. He will greet the kids till 9:00 at the Red Caboose. The S&P Railway will have its model train displays open offering complimentary hot chocolate & coffees Come Downtown for that Hometown Main St Holiday Charm and browse our beautifully decorated window displays.
20081124 Sykesville Mayor and council agenda for November 24 2008
Thursday, November 20, 2008
Today in the DC Examiner: The Coming Conservative Ascendancy
November 20, 2008
Now that I have your attention!
Examiner Editorial: Barack Obama's strongest critic during the 2008 presidential campaign could turn out to be his most important ally in the coming energy debate.
Chris Stirewalt: Believe it or not, there are actually some differences between the Great Emancipator and The One.
Meghan Cox Gurdon: Will be back next week
Examiner OpEds:
* Mark Hyman says it's time to stop the bailouts and starve that beast on the Potomac.
* Michael Caputo introduces Joe the Plumber to Eliot Spitzer.
* John Wonderlich of the Sunlight Foundation sees technology as Obama's key tool for bringing about change in Washignton.
* Jeremy Lott and Eric Heidenrich of the Capital Research Center contend voters definitely did NOT go green in the 2008 election.
* Pamela Villarreal of the National Center for Policy Analysis hopes we all can save our 401(K)s before the GRA becomes a reality.
The Coming Conservative Ascendancy? I almost forgot:
Tapscott's Copy Desk:Notes on the Coming Conservative Ascendancy
20081120 Today in the DC Examiner The Coming Conservative Ascendancy
With One Voice concert November 22, 2008 to benefit Family and Children’s Services of Central Maryland
Family and Children’s Services of Central Maryland
Fifth Annual Concert: With One Voice
This musical and choral extravaganza will take place at the magnificent St. John's Church in Westminster. All proceeds will benefit the Carroll County Domestic Violence Safe House. Please join us for an evening you will not soon forget.
Enjoy performances by:
Old Line Statesman Barbershop Chorus
Children's Chorus of Carroll County
Carroll Singers
Coram Deo
Organist Amy Kwan
McDaniel College Madrigal Singers
New Life for Girls Choir
Nation of 3
Cara Wolf
When & Where
Tickets
Saturday, November 22, 2008 7:30 p.m.
St. John's Catholic Church
43 Monroe Street
Westminster, Maryland 21157
Adults $10 Children 16 and under $5
Tickets are tax deductible
Purchase tickets:
FCS Counseling Office
22 N. Court Street
Westminster, MD 21157or call 410-876-1233
Posted November 20, 2008
Non-profits Family Children’s Services
http://www.fcsmd.org/
http://www.fcsmd.org/events/withonevoice.htm
20081120 With One Voice concert November 22 2008
Junction disclosure and information
November 20, 2008
Click here for posts on Soundtrack on Junction.
The web site for Junction can be found here: http://www.junctioninc.org/
I’ve been a member of the board of Junction since October 2000.
Junction is a local Westminster Carroll County Maryland private nonprofit agency for substance abuse prevention and outpatient drug treatment. It provides prevention, intervention, and treatment of substance abuse for individuals, their families, and the community through education, counseling, community collaboration, and leadership in Carroll County.
It was incorporated on September 27, 1971. A month after incorporation, on December 6, 1971, it opened its doors in the historic Carroll County Jail on Court Street in Westminster.
Junction Inc., http://www.junctioninc.org/, (410) 848-6100, 98 North Court Street, P. O. Box 206, Westminster, MD 21158
http://kevindayhoffwestgov-net.blogspot.com/search/label/Non-profits-Junction
http://kbetrue.livejournal.com/tag/non-profits-junction
20081120 Junction disclosure and information
Charlie Mann, driver for S Lease Warner and WFD member died Nov 17, 2008
November 20, 2008
Charles A. ‘Pappy’ Mann, 86, of Westminster
Charles Adam “Pappy” Mann, 86, of Westminster died Monday, Nov. 17, 2008, in Westminster.
Born June 8, 1922, in Patapsco, he was the son of the late Harry H. Mann Sr. and Agnes A. Frank Mann. He was the husband of Thelma D. “Sis” Buckingham Mann, his wife of nearly 67 years.
He was an active member of Benjamin’s Krider’s United Church of Christ in Westminster. He worked as a delivery truck driver throughout Carroll County for S. Lease Warner — Carroll Independent Fuel Co. before retiring in 1995.
During the World War II era, he was active in Minutemen and assembled aircraft at Glen L. Martin.
He was a member of the Westminster volunteer fire company for more than 40 years. During his life, he worked as a home delivery salesman for Quality Cleaners and serviced area business in the first 7-UP distributorship in Carroll and Frederick counties.
He enjoyed working on Wheel Horse lawn tractors and mowing lawns for his neighbors and family.
Surviving, in addition to his wife, are sons and daughters-in-law Charles R. “Bobby” and Mara Mann of Westminster, Gerald R. “Jerry” and Mary Mann of St. Louis, and Daniel L. and Bonnie Mann of Finksburg; a brother, Clayton Mann of Taneytown; 10 grandchildren; 11 great-grandchildren; and several nieces and nephews.
He was predeceased by siblings Harry H. Mann Jr., Margie Virginia Wilson, William F. Mann; and two great-granddaughters.
A funeral service will be held at 3 p.m. Sunday at Myers-Durboraw Funeral Home, 91 Willis St., Westminster, with his pastor, the Rev. Jennifer Walters, officiating. Interment will follow in Sandymount United Methodist Church Cemetery in Finksburg.
The family will receive friends from 2 to 4 and 7 to 9 p.m. Saturday, and from 2 p.m. until the time of service Sunday at the funeral home.
Memorial contributions may be sent to Benjamin’s Krider’s United Church of Christ, 208 Krider’s Church Road, Westminster, MD 21158; or Carroll Hospice, 292 Stoner Ave., Westminster, MD 21157.
Online condolences may be made to the family at www.myersdurborawfh.com.
2008117 19220608 Charlie Mann WFD S Lease Warner
Mann Charlie 19220608 2008117 WFD S Lease Warner
Democracy Now: Ex-CIA Officials Tied to Rendition Program and Faulty Iraq Intel Tapped to Head Obama’s Intelligence Transition Team
November 18, 2008
Related:
Melvin Goodman: "Change in Intelligence?"
Glenn Greenwald: "John Brennan and Bush's Interrogation/Detention Policies"
John Brennan and Jami Miscik, both former intelligence officials under George Tenet, are leading Barack Obama’s review of intelligence agencies and helping make recommendations to the new administration. Brennan has supported warrantless wiretapping and extraordinary rendition, and Miscik was involved with the politicized intelligence alleging weapons of mass destruction in the lead-up to the war on Iraq. We speak with former CIA analyst Melvin Goodman and Michael Ratner of the Center for Constitutional Rights.
AMY GOODMAN: It’s been less than two weeks since Obama’s election. Speculation is already rife about the change he intends to bring to Washington’s intelligence community. The Washington Post reported last week that Obama is expected to replace the country’s top two intelligence officials over their support for controversial Bush administration policies like torture and electronic surveillance. Director of National Intelligence Mike McConnell and CIA chief Michael Hayden reportedly wish to remain on the job.
No appointees have been named as yet, but questions are already being raised about the people heading Obama’s transition efforts on intelligence policy. John Brennan and Jami Miscik, both former intelligence officials under George Tenet, are leading the review of intelligence agencies and helping make recommendations to the new administration. Brennan has supported warrantless wiretapping and extraordinary rendition, and Miscik was involved with the politicized intelligence alleging weapons of mass destruction in the lead-up to the war on Iraq.
I’m joined now by Washington, D.C.—in D.C. by former CIA and State Department analyst Mel Goodman. He’s a senior fellow at the Center for International Policy, director of the Center’s National Security Project. His latest book is called Failure of Intelligence: The Decline and Fall of the CIA. He is also co-author of Bush League Diplomacy: How the Neoconservatives are Putting the World at Risk.
We’re joined here in New York by Michael Ratner, president of the Center for Constitutional Rights. His latest book is The Trial of Donald Rumsfeld: A Prosecution by Book.
We welcome you both to Democracy Now! I want to start with Mel Goodman in Washington. Long years at the Central Intelligence Agency and the State Department. You’ve just written an op-ed piece in the Baltimore Sun that looks at these two top transition officials. Explain who they are and what they represent.
[…]
MELVIN GOODMAN: OK. John Brennan was deputy executive secretary to George Tenet during the worst violations during the CIA period in the run-up to the Iraq war, so he sat there at Tenet’s knee when they passed judgment on torture and abuse, on extraordinary renditions, on black sites, on secret prisons. He was part of all of that decision making.
Jami Miscik was the Deputy Director for Intelligence during the run-up to the Iraq war. So she went along with the phony intelligence estimate of October 2002, the phony white paper that was prepared by Paul Pillar in October 2002. She helped with the drafting of the speech that Colin Powell gave to the United Nations—[inaudible] 2003, which made the phony case for war to the international community.
So, when George Tenet said, "slam dunk, we can provide all the intelligence you need,” [inaudible] to the President in December of 2002, it was people like Jami Miscik and John Brennan who were part of the team who provided that phony intelligence. So what I think people at the CIA are worried about—and I’ve talked to many of them over the weekend—is that there will never be any accountability for these violations and some of the unconscionable acts committed at the CIA, which essentially amount to war crimes, when you’re talking about torture and abuse and secret prisons. So, where are we, in terms of change? This sounds like more continuity.
AMY GOODMAN: I want to turn to excerpts from a December 2005 interview with John Brennan, the former CIA official now leading Obama’s intelligence transition. Brennan was interviewed by Margaret Warner on the NewsHour with Jim Lehrer about his views on the Bush administration’s practice of extraordinary rendition.
Read the entire article and interview here: Ex-CIA Officials Tied to Rendition Program and Faulty Iraq Intel Tapped to Head Obama’s Intelligence Transition Team
20081118 DemNow Ex CIA tapped to head Obama intel transition team
Wednesday, November 19, 2008
Today in the DC Examiner: An Auto Bailout is Like Sending Arsonists to Fight Fires
November 19, 2008
Will Obama back missile defense or back missile defense into history?
Examiner Editorial: Liberals have been saying for decades that missile defense can't work, even as the U.S. Army and Navy are repeatedly and successfully testing land and sea-based systems that destroy incoming missiles. Will Barack Obama listen to the liberals or the military?
S.J. Masty's Time Machine: Maybe Charlie Chan can solve the mystery of who shot the GOP.
Jay Ambrose: Our Denver-based Herald of the Rockies is having second thoughts about Obama's first promises.
Tapscott's Copy Desk: Harry Reid and Robert Byrd falsified government data on job creation. Will the Mainstream Media call them on it?
And don't miss a former GM manager's explanation for why she opposes a federal bailout for Detroit's Big Three: You will find Lori Roman's Op-Ed here: “An Auto Bailout is Like Sending Arsonists to Fight Fires”
20081119 Today in the DC Examiner: An Auto Bailout is Like Sending Arsonists to Fight Fires
This week in The Tentacle
Wednesday, November 19, 2008
Rewarding Bad Behavior
Kevin E. Dayhoff
Instead of tooling down the highway in the fast lane, two months after General Motors celebrated its 100th Birthday on September 16, it found itself huddled over at an intersection with fate, harassing passers-by with a tin pan in hand.
William C. Durant formed General Motors (GM) as a holding company in 1908 for Buick. He subsequently took on overwhelming debt by purchasing the manufacturers of Oldsmobile, Cadillac, Elmore and Oakland. After a dramatic drop in automobile sales, Mr. Durant lost control of the company two years later to one of the many powerful bankers’ trusts of the time.
A hundred years later, the “Detroit Three,” – Ford, GM and Chrysler – have lost control of their companies to the United Auto Workers (UAW.)
After decades of being blackmailed with the threat of crippling union strikes, the Detroit Three finds themselves with uncompetitive work rules. It manufactures products which continue to languish with the perception that they lack the quality of their competitors. They offer numerous models, in which the American consumer has little or no interest. They make these automobiles with enormously uncompetitive salaries and benefits; and now the American taxpayers are being asked to bail them out.
Read the entire column here: Rewarding Bad Behavior
Fulfilling A Dream
Tom McLaughlin
“What has possessed you, Tom,” many have asked. “Leaving the country for Borneo Island for a year,” they wonder. “And what about your health?”
Baltimore Hippodrome's "Grinch"
Roy Meachum
What a delightful idea! Baltimore's Hippodrome Theatre decided to bring in for the holidays "Dr. Seuss' How the Grinch Stole Christmas! The Musical."
Tuesday, November 18, 2008
New Terms and Limits in Iraq
Roy Meachum
While George W. Bush's order to invade Iraq made headline news, the several papers I read cast the real outcome somewhere in the back pages.
A Once-A-Year Happening
Farrell Keough
“[A]m I my brother’s keeper?” This was the statement Cain gave to God when questioned about the location of Abel, whom Cain murdered. It has become part of our cultural colloquialisms – generally applied when asking about our responsibility to help others.
Walkersville’s Welcome Wagon
Joe Charlebois
Well, the ugly head of unforeseen consequences has reared its ugly head. The Town of Walkersville, in its determination to keep the Ahmadiyya Muslim Community from building their worship and conference facilities, has ultimately broken the back – if not the pocketbook – of the Banner School family.
Monday, November 17, 2008
Avoiding The Temptation
Richard B. Weldon Jr.
I supported John McCain throughout the recent presidential election. Having written an entire column about why, there's no reason to re-plow that field.
Befuddled in Frederick
Steven R. Berryman
What strange days we are living in. My sympathy goes out to those whose intellectual process it is to attempt to make sense of the world around them.
Landfill & Waste-to-Energy Q & A
Joan McIntyre
My last column (from November 6) generated many questions. Trash in Frederick County certainly seems to be the hot topic. Trash is a given and we need to get out of our holding pattern. So, here I've done my best to address many of your questions.
Friday, November 14, 2008
Newly "Dis-Organized" Party
Roy Meachum
Three months after Franklin Delano Roosevelt was sworn in as the first Democratic president since Woodrow Wilson, Oklahoma-born comedian Will Rogers said on his weekly radio show: "You've got to be optimist to be a Democrat and you've got to be a humorist to stay one." Mr. Rogers was also quoted: "I belong to no organized political party – I’m a Democrat."
Thursday, November 13, 2008
Onward and Upward, Not Backwards
Tony Soltero
Now that the election is behind us, there's no shortage of analyses being offered by pundits left, right, and center about “What It All Means.” So here are a few bullet points of my own as a contribution to the discussion.
My President
Patricia A. Kelly
I’ve lived a pretty long time. I was alive and conscious during the civil rights movement. In fact, during that time, my mom drove my brother and me through the South every summer to visit my grandparents.
Wednesday, November 12, 2008
The Incredibly Shrinking Republican Party
Kevin E. Dayhoff
The ink is hardly dry on the “historic” election of Illinois Sen. Barack Obama and already those with 20/20 hindsight are dissecting and revising the two-year ordeal, known as the 2008 presidential election, with the conviction of someone who has just seen a flying saucer land in the backyard.
Just Bustin’ Out All Over
Tom McLaughlin
It was as if a massive salt water wave swept over the country and washed away all of the hate and intolerance. I felt cleansed, jubilant and am still high from the November 4 election results. No more African-Americans, or Chinese-Americans, or Native Americans. We are all Americans.
Tuesday, November 11, 2008
Please, Jennifer, Not Again
Roy Meachum
Jennifer Dougherty's loss record for elections stands four-to-one after Tuesday's drubbing by Rep. Roscoe Bartlett. The only time she won, incumbent Mayor Jim Grimes shot himself in the foot. Repeatedly. When she tried for a second term, her own party dumped her; the first mayor in modern times to be defeated in a primary.
“It’s Good To Be A Teacher…”
Nick Diaz
Work-to-rule, teachers’ contract, planning time, Board of Education, FCTA, negotiated agreement – these topics, and more, have surfaced recently in Frederick concerning local education issues.
Monday, November 10, 2008
Election Post Mortem
Steven R. Berryman
Election 2008 is over. America now has a new president-elect, and an opportunity to evaluate just what Barack Obama’s victory means. Here are some lessons learned along with some 20/20 hindsight.
20081119 This week in The Tentacle
Historical Society of Mount Airy Hall of Fame Nominations
http://www.carr.org/mtairy/
November 19, 2008
The Historical Society of Mount Airy, MD, Inc. is soliciting nominations for the 2009 Hall of Fame program.
All local organizations and individuals are invited to nominate a person or persons to be considered for this honorable position.
The purpose of the Hall of Fame is to honor truly deserving people, living or deceased, of Mt. Airy and the immediate surrounding areas, who by work, service, volunteerism, word or deed, made the community a better place for everyone.
Also honored will be those who were born here and went on to bring honor and glory to the community by their efforts, deeds, or life’s work outside of the area. By honoring these individuals, it is believed that their stories will inspire others to greater achievement and make everyone aware of the fabric that is woven into our home - Mt. Airy, Maryland.
Nomination forms for the Mount Airy Hall of Fame may be found at the Mount Airy Town Hall, the Mount Airy Museum, and on our website at http://www.carr.org/mtairy/. Follow the links to the Historical Society, then Hall of Fame, and finally nomination forms - or by clicking here.
Any person or group is eligible to submit nominations to the committee using this form. Candidates should be considered from the following fields: business, community-civic service, education, historical, humanitarian, political, religious, sports-recreational, or a general category.
Please send all nomination forms to HALL OF FAME COMMITTEE, P.O. Box 244, Mount Airy, MD 21771. All nominations must be in the hands of the committee by Saturday, December 6, 2008.
After the close of nominations, a committee will review all nominations and select the persons who will be inducted into the Mount Airy Hall of Fame.
The induction will be held on March 17, 2009 at the American Legion Home, on Prospect Road.
Visit the Mount Airy Museum to learn about the people who have been inducted into the Mount Airy Hall of Fame.
Related:
Table of Contents
Lecture Series - May 2008
Town Museum
Museum History
Hours of Operation
Past Officials
E-m@il for more information
Historical Society
Hall of Fame
Newsletters
Sep 08
May 08
Feb 08
Brochures
Historical Buildings
Historical Buildings
Membership Brochure
Related Links
Join the Historical Society
Howard County Historical Society
Historic Mt. Airy B&O planes
20091118 Historical Society of Mount Airy Hall of Fame Nominations
Tuesday, November 18, 2008
Today in the DC Examiner: Are we bailing out dead donkeys?
November 18, 2008
Examiner Editorial: Treasury Secretary Henry Paulson is handing out billions of tax dollars to selected Wall Street firms, but refuses to disclose any details of who, how much or with what in return. This is a major scandal-in-the-making.
Quin Hillyer: The Supreme Court agrees to hear another case that could put McCain-Feingold regulation of political speech in the legal garbage can where it belongs.
Examiner OpEd: John Hawkins pens an open letter to GOP members of the U.S. Senate, challenging them to try something new.
20081118 Today in the DC Examiner Are we bailing out dead donkeys?
Monday, November 17, 2008
CyberAlert for Monday November 17 2008
The 2,772nd CyberAlert. Tracking Liberal Media Bias Since 1996
9:05am EST, Monday November 17, 2008 (Vol. Thirteen; No. 217)
1. CBS's Kroft Pushes Obama to See U.S. in 1930s-Like Depression 60 Minutes viewers got better economic rationality Sunday night from President-elect Barack Obama than from the journalist who interviewed him. CBS's Steve Kroft proposed: "People are comparing this to 1932. Is that a valid comparison, do you think?" Obama didn't accept the comparison: "Well, keep in mind that 1932, 1933 the unemployment rate was 25 percent, inching up to 30 percent. You had a third of the country that was ill housed, ill clothed..." But Kroft wouldn't let go of trying to paint the America of 2008 as dire as 1932. Eight minutes later in the interview, when Obama related how he was reading briefing papers and had read about Abraham Lincoln putting political rivals in his cabinet, Kroft returned to the Depression: "Have you been reading anything about the Depression? Anything about FDR?"
2. Howell: 'Most Washington Post Journalists Voted for Obama. I Did' A week after Washington Post Ombudsman Deborah Howell agreed with readers who saw "a tilt toward Democrat Barack Obama" in the paper's campaign coverage, Howell this Sunday admitted she voted for Obama and "bet" that so did "most" in the Post's newsroom: "I'll bet that most Post journalists voted for Obama. I did. There are centrists at The Post as well. But the conservatives I know here feel so outnumbered that they don't even want to be quoted by name in a memo."
3. ABC's Cuomo Has Few Follow-ups for 'Campaign Boogeyman' Ayers Good Morning America news anchor Chris Cuomo on Friday conducted an interview with former bomber William Ayers that qualified as neither a softball or a grilling of the ex-domestic terrorist. Although he did challenge Ayers, he didn't interrupt when the Chicago professor insisted that America fought a "violent terrorist war" or when the '60s radical characterized the U.S. government as murdering thousands "every month" during Vietnam. Additionally, the online version of the ABC story referred to Ayers as a "campaign boogeyman," while co-host Diane Sawyer in an introduction for the piece defensively explained: "The name of Bill Ayers, William Ayers, was used as kind of a political weapon by the Republicans." During the segment, Cuomo even editorialized that Ayers is now a "respected professor" at the University of Illinois. Respected, perhaps, by leftists and radicals, but many Americans still hold great anger towards Ayers and his terrorist group the Weather Underground.
4. Chris Cuomo Hits Ayers on Bombings; Skips Specific Victims In part two of Good Morning America's Friday interview with former bomber William Ayers, news anchor Chris Cuomo did challenge the ex-'60s radical on whether or not he was a terrorist. But after Ayers contended "It's not terrorism because it doesn't target people. It doesn't target people to either kill or injure," the journalist failed to offer specifics that would refute that point. Cuomo could have easily cited the example of John Murtagh. He was a child in 1970 when the Weather Underground, founded by Ayers, placed multiple bombs, one underneath the gas tank of the family car, at the home of his New York judge father. However, while not pressing Ayers on specific victims, he did skeptically wonder: "How can a sophisticated academic like yourself believe that the inherent recklessness of exploding bombs that you know too well killed three of your own- you know the potential for deadliness there."
5. CNN's Quest: Europe 'Starving' for Obama, Want Bite of Hillary During Friday's Situation Room, CNN correspondent Richard Quest predicted that the international community would react favorably if Hillary Clinton would become the next Secretary of State: "Absolutely amazed, outstanding reaction -- I've little doubt. Remember, Hillary Clinton is an international superstar, known around the world. There would be some reservations, bearing in mind everyone saw the bruising Democratic primary....But no question, the gravitas -- the authority that she would bring would be welcomed around the world." He later made a bizarre analogy about European reaction to the election of Barack Obama: "You're talking about people who have been like starving men, who have suddenly been given a food [sic] and a meal and it tastes brilliant to them."
6. So Eager for Obama Neuharth Wants Inauguration Moved to December "People who elect a new President are eager for the change to take place. The sooner the better," USA Today founder Al Neuharth argued in his Friday column in which he asked, coincidentally just a week-and-a-half after Barack Obama's election: "Why wait until late January to turn the Oval Office over to a new President elected in early November?" He proposed: "We should move the President's inauguration up to the first Tuesday in December, one month after the election." After all, "the time lag" is "too long in these modern times when crises need the earliest possible attention."
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.
20081117 CyberAlert for Monday November 17 2008
Harry Zook, former member of the WFD and the WPD died Nov. 14, 2008
November 17, 2008
Harry A. Zook, 83, of Westminster
Harry Arthur Zook, 83, of Westminster died Friday, Nov. 14, 2008, at Carroll Hospice Dove House.
Born Nov. 16, 1924, in Hanover, Pa., he was the son of the late Arthur Abraham and Ruth Zincon Zook.
He was a 1943 graduate of Westminster High School and was a World War II Navy veteran. He was a retired police sergeant with the Westminster Police Department, joining the force in December 1954 and retiring in March 1982.
He was a member of Grace Lutheran Church, Fraternal Order of Police Lodge No. 20 and a former member of the Westminster fire company.
Surviving are a daughter, Barbara E. Zook of Westminster; son and daughter-in-law John and Lori Zook of Westminster; and a grandson, Torey Daniel Zook.
He was predeceased by a son, William "Billy" Zook; and a sister, Delores Zook Ecker.
A funeral service will be held at 11 a.m. Wednesday at Pritts Funeral Home & Chapel, 412 Washington Road, Westminster, with his pastor, the Rev. Kevin Clementson, officiating. Interment will be in Westminster Cemetery.
The family will receive friends from 2 to 4 and 6 to 8 p.m. Tuesday at the funeral home.
Memorial contributions may be sent to Grace Lutheran Church, 21 Carroll St., Westminster, MD 21157.
Online condolences may be made at www.prittsfuneralhome.com.
20081114 19241116 Harry Zook WPD WFD
People Zook-Harry
Today in the DC Examiner: Secret ballots for the lame ducks, but not for American workers?
November 17, 2008
Examiner Editorial: When the congressional party caucuses convene to elect new leadership this week, they will do so with the secret ballot. Guess who wants to abolish secret ballots in the work place?
Melanie Scarborough: All that changes on inauguration day is who gets the goodies.
Examiner OpEd: Andrew Moylan of the National Taxpayers Union wonders what might have happened had John McCain opposed the Wall Street bailout.
Tapscott's Copy Desk: What's this, a Washington Postie defending Sarah Palin?
20081117 Today in the DC Examiner Secret ballots for the lame ducks
At Westminster polls in 1920, the 'Women Disappointed Them'
At Westminster polls in 1920, the 'Women Disappointed Them'
By Kevin Dayhoff Posted on www.explorecarroll.com 11/16/08
Sunday Carroll EAGLE ARCHIVE
The fact that women gained the right to vote was a milestone that got mixed reviews in Carroll County after the 19th Amendment to the U.S. Constitution was ratified on Aug. 18, 1920.
It was an argument four decades in the making.
In 1878, a constitutional amendment to grant women the right to vote was introduced by Sen. A. A. Sargeant of California. Suffrage supporters called the proposal the "Anthony Amendment," for Susan B. Anthony.
When President Woodrow Wilson delivered his State of the Union message to Congress in December 1916, women in the galleries unfurled a large banner that read, "Mr. President, What Will You Do For Woman Suffrage?"
In October 1920, after women were finally allowed to vote, local newspapers carried several articles about women and the election, according to research for the Historical Society of Carroll County by historian Jay Graybeal.
An Oct. 29, 1920, newspaper article carried the headline: "The Republican Meet, A Remarkable Gathering." The article read: "On Tuesday evening the Armory in this city was filled both to its seating and standing capacity with men and women voters of the county to hear the issues of the campaign discussed. ...
Read the rest of the column here: At Westminster polls in 1920, the 'Women Disappointed Them'
http://www.explorecarroll.com/community/1576/westminster-polls-1920-women-disappointed-them/
20081116 At Westminster polls in 1920, the 'Women Disappointed Them'