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

Monday, March 24, 2008

20080324 McCain asks when Clinton will apologize to Petraeus

McCain asks when Clinton will apologize to Petraeus


March 24, 2008


Hat Tip:

http://www.memeorandum.com/080326/p10#a080326p10

Brianinmo / BLOGS FOR JOHN McCAIN:

McCain Asks When Hillary Clinton Will Apologize to Gen. Petraeus - Video — Here is Sen. John McCain on March 24, 2008 asking when Sen. Hillary Clinton will apologize to Gen. David Petraeus for her remarks last year ridiculing the idea that “The Surge” strategy in Iraq was working.

****

Courtesy of “Blogs for McCain

McCain Asks When Hillary Clinton Will Apologize to Gen. Petraeus - Video

http://blogsforjohnmccain.com/mccain-asks-when-hillary-clinton-will-apologize-gen-petraeus-video

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=sXcXzoHjqhE

Here is Sen. John McCain on March 24, 2008 asking when Sen. Hillary Clinton will apologize to Gen. David Petraeus for her remarks last year ridiculing the idea that "The Surge" strategy in Iraq was working. McCain also said both Clinton and Obama are advocating a policy of "disaster and defeat" in Iraq.

UPDATE: For reference, here is Hillary Clinton's statement to Gen. David Petraeus on Sept. 11, 2007:

Hillary Calls Petraeus Report Unbelievable

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=e0isifAC8IQ

Sen. Hillary Clinton told GEN Petraeus Tuesday in the Senate Armed Services Committee testimony that his testimony required the "willing suspenion of disbelief." After naming it a failed policy in Iraq, Petraeus pointed out that she knows Congress...

_____

Discussion: The Impolitic, Sister Toldjah, Comments from Left Field, Hot Air, Macsmind, Stop The ACLU, Forum: News/Activism and No More Mister Nice Blog

Discussion:

Libby Spencer / The Impolitic: Hillary and McCain — I'm back to work today so just a short post at the moment.

Sister Toldjah: McCain to Hillary: When will you apologize for Petraeus remark?

Tas / Comments from Left Field: I Can Has Accountability?

Ed Morrissey / Hot Air: Video: McCain demands apology to Petraeus from Hillary

Macranger / Macsmind: McCain to Hillary - Apologize to General Patraeus

Jay / Stop The ACLU: (Video)McCain: When Will Hillary Apologize to General Petraeus?

Blogs for John McCain / Forum: News/Activism: McCain Asks When Hillary Clinton Will Apologize to Gen. Petraeus - Video

Steve M. / No More Mister Nice Blog: D'OH! — I'm sure John McCain was saving this up …

All Related Discussion

RELATED:

Glenn Greenwald / Salon: What can and cannot be spoken on television

Reuters: Chavez says U.S. relations could worsen with McCain

Discussion: Hot Air and BLOGS FOR JOHN McCAIN

20080324 Westminster mayor and Common Council agenda

Westminster mayor and Common Council agenda

City Council

City Council Members | Minutes of City Council Meetings

CITY OF WESTMINSTER, MARYLAND

Mayor and Common Council Meeting of March 24, 2008

AGENDA

1. CALL TO ORDER – 7:00 P.M.

2. MINUTES OF THE MEETING OF MARCH 10, 2008

3. CONSENT CALENDAR:

a. February 2008 Departmental Operating Reports

b. Good Cause Waivers GCW 07-02 (128 Liberty Street); 07-03 (176 Liberty

Street); 07-04 (Lot 56, Locust Avenue); 07-05 (Lots 14/16 Spruce Avenue);

07-06 (Black Oak Lane); 07-07 (514/516 Willow Avenue); and 07-09 (33

West George Street) – Thomas Beyard

4. REPORTS FROM THE MAYOR

5. REPORTS FROM STANDING COMMITTEES

6. UNFINISHED BUSINESS:

a. Master Water Resources Agreement and Supplemental

Agreements 1 – 4 with the County Commissioners – Marge Wolf

b. Pennsylvania Avenue

7. NEW BUSINESS:

a. Budget Amendment – Dr. Robert Wack

b. Approval of Letter of Intent with Episcopal Housing Corporation

Concerning 59, 61, and 63 Union Street – Thomas Beyard

8. DEPARTMENT REPORTS

9. CITIZEN COMMENTS

10. ADJOURN

Easter years ago was a time for new clothes and Easter Egg Hunts - by Kevin Dayhoff

Easter years ago was a time for new clothes and Easter Egg Hunts

Sunday Carroll Eagle, Sunday, March 23, 2008 by Kevin Dayhoff long version

Sunday Carroll Eagle, Sunday, March 23, 2008 by Kevin Dayhoff
Happy Easter.  Yes it’s not quite warm out although warmer weather should be just around the corner.  The first day of spring was – thankfully – last Thursday. 

And yes, it seems like Christmas was just yesterday.  As a matter of fact, Easter will not be this early again for about – oh, another 220 years or so in the year 2285.

The last time Easter was this early was in 1913, but in 1818, Easter arrived on March 22.  If you usually associate Easter with April, there is good reason.  According to an ecclesiastical mathematician in desperate need of a life, the “cycle of Easter dates repeats after exactly 5,700,000 years, with April 19 being the most common date, happening 220,400 times.”

For those of you following along in your book at home, the story of Easter - the Resurrection of Christ - is told in Matthew 28: 8-20, Mark 16: 9-20, Luke 24:13-49, John 20: 11-21 and Acts 1: 1-11.  However the best version is 1 Corinthians 15: 3-9, because it was written by my favorite writer, Paul of Tarsus, only a few years after it all happened in 33 AD.

For those of us who grew up in the church Easter marked the opportunity to wear our “Easter Sunday Best” new clothes.

Another childhood memory is that all the church services and activities during Holy Week and Easter were observed with strict pomp and ceremony as dictated any number of ecclesiastical liturgists in the congregation.

I learned at a very young age that the difference between a terrorist and liturgist is you can negotiate with a terrorist.  For those readers who aren’t aware of ways of the church, a liturgist is sort of like a “parliamentarian” in public meeting – only with an edge.

We have new pastors at our church and I can’t wait to see how they deal with liturgy issues.  If they are smart, they will nod appropriately and do as they are told by the congregational liturgists and repeat “et cum spiritu tuo” as often as possible.

Keep up with me now.  In the “Introductory Rite,” the pastor or a cantor will say, “The grace of our Lord Jesus Christ and the love of God and the fellowship of the Holy Spirit be with you all.”  At that point the congregation responds, “And also with you.”

However, if you go back to original Latin, the response is “et cum spiritu you,” which means “and with your spirit.” 

I learned at in my Religion III class (MWF 10:10) at Elon College that one does not question the translation.  I once asked Professor Overton why the translation was wrong.  (Remember religion professors are liturgists on steroids…) 

“Because that is the way it has always been Mr. Dayhoff.  Do you have any additional impertinent questions to share with the class today?”

“Good.  Now please explain to the class why the remainder of the Chronicler’s history – Ezra, Nehemiah – is not paralleled in the Deuteronomic History, which concludes with the Exile.”

Professor Overton emphasized the word “Exile.”  I caught his drift.  It was then that I realized that the fear of liturgists that I had learned as a child was real.  You could say it was my “Road to Damascus” experience in learning the liturgist mantra, “that’s the way we have always done it,” the hard way.

Of course, throughout Carroll County’s history, the celebration of Easter has always had an emphasis on the religious aspects of the holiday.  However childhood thoughts of Easter in Carroll County are full of memories of community Easter Egg Hunts.

I only vaguely remember Easter Egg Hunts in the Westminster Playground.  60 years ago, the Venture Club of Westminster sponsored the annual event on Easter Sunday.  An article in the Democratic Advocate on March 26, 1948 also detailed a planned concert by the Westminster Municipal Band; an invocation by Father William T. McCrory, Assistant Pastor of St. John's Catholic Church and that City Councilman J. Albert Mitten would be Master of Ceremonies.

I was recently asked about Easter parades in Westminster and I have no recollection of any such parades.  More research is on order, however, local historian Joe Getty noted in an article he wrote a number of years ago for the Historical Society of Carroll County: “Easter Monday parades were held in Westminster in 1884, 1885, and 1887.  After a short lapse, a large parade was held in 1892…”

For the folks who have asked about story behind the historical marker at the old Post Office at the corner of Main Street and Longwell Avenue, that will be the subject of a future column.  Meanwhile, there is an Easter connection.

However, according to the Historical Society in 1899 “Carroll County was selected by the U. S. Post Office Department as the first county to receive full Rural Free Delivery.  Edwin W. Shriver was the leading proponent of countywide service…  He initiated an experimental delivery on Easter Monday 1899 and full service was inaugurated on December 20th.”

In other news, 85 years ago, on March 23, 1923, the Democratic Advocate newspaper ran a story about a controversy over a proposed site for a high school to be built in Sykesville to serve southern Carroll County.  The article reported that some folks wanted the school to be in Eldersburg and not in Sykesville.

The Carroll Record carried an article on March 23, 1972 which noted that the Carroll County commissioners had asked the state to accelerate the Route 30 by-pass around Manchester and Hampstead.  “Construction funds are presently ear-marked for 1975 and 1976.”

Of course, over 35 years later, the portion of the road around Hampstead is not quite completed.  Speaking of the Hampstead by-pass, word is that there is a movement to name it after the late Carroll County Delegate Richard C. Matthews.

Delegate Matthews, from Hampstead, passed away on December 13, 2007 and was the subject of my December 30th Sunday Eagle column.  The popular elected official faithfully served Carroll County in Annapolis from 1967 to 1994 and it is only fitting and appropriate that the road be named after him.



*****

Sunday, March 23, 2008

20070418 April 18, 2007 Westminster Road Runners Club Westminster, Maryland Main Street Mile.



Other posts which mention Dr. David Herlocker may be found here: Westminster Road Runners Club or westminster road runners club

19401030 20080321 David Webb Herlocker

20070418 Westminster Maryland Main Street Mile

Carroll County Times photographer, Kyle Nosal, runs to get a photo…

Her article: “Road runners” appeared in the Thursday, April 19, 2007 edition of the Carroll County Times…

Westminster Police officer Tony Ott (gray shirt - center) kept everything moving smoothly throughout the event…

Kenny Carlisle (L) and Tony Ott

Kevin Dayhoff writes from Westminster Maryland USA.

www.kevindayhoff.net http://www.youtube.com/kevindayhoff http://www.livejournal.com/

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

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

“When I stop working the rest of the day is posthumous. I'm only really alive when I'm writing.” Tennessee Williams

_____

Other posts which mention Dr. David Herlocker may be found here: For other posts on running or the Westminster Road Runners Club please click on: Sports Running or Westminster Road Runners Club or Westminster Sidewalks and Trails or westminster road runners club or westminster sidewalks and trails. or westminster annual main street mile or sports running or dave herlocker. The Westminster Road Runners Club web site is here: http://www.carr.org/%7Ewrrc/

19401030 20080321 David Webb Herlocker



David W. Herlocker, 67, of Westminster

October 30, 1940 – March 21, 2008

David Webb Herlocker, 67, of Westminster, died unexpectedly but peacefully at his home on Friday, March 21, 2008.

Born October 30, 1940 in Chicago, Illinois, he is the son of Donald Herlocker and the late Betty Comfort Herlocker. He was raised in Peoria, Illinois.

He was a 1962 graduate of Knox College and graduated from the University of Illinois at Champaign-Urbana in 1966 with a doctorate in inorganic chemistry.

In 1966, he began a long career teaching chemistry at Western Maryland College, now McDaniel College. He served as the Chemistry Department chair department chair for many years. He retired in 2006 and was named an emeritus faculty member. He was a member of Phi Beta Kappa, the American Chemical Society, and other professional organizations.

He began running in the mid 1970s and was a member of the Westminster and York Road Runner Clubs. He was an organizer of many road races in and around Westminster, including the Main Street Mile. After an accident in 1995 left him unable to run, he continued to walk daily with friends. He was a recognizable figure at many races with his loyal canine companion, Badie.

He was a long-time member of Grace Lutheran Church and served on the church council and scholarship committee. He was active in Ardent Folk, a ministry providing meals to those in need.

He was a member of the parent organizing committee which founded the Westminster Montessori School in 1974. He helped to develop and implement the school’s chemistry curriculum. Since his retirement he has volunteered weekly in their science classes.

An avid sports fan, he followed the Chicago Cubs, Chicago Bears, and the McDaniel women’s basketball and volleyball teams. He was a 27-year member of a book club and a lover of history and trivia.

Remembering him are children and partners Caryn Herlocker Meade and Adam Meade of Raleigh, NC and Daniel Herlocker and Ellen Keelan of Brattleboro, VT; father Donald Herlocker of Canton, IL; brother and sister-in-law William and Hilda Herlocker of Kildeer, IL; sister and brother-in-law Linda and Peter Speck of Wanganui New Zealand; grandchildren Evan and Georgia Meade; former wife and friend Helen Herlocker; and numerous friends.

A memorial service will be held 11 a.m. on Tuesday, March 25 at Grace Lutheran Church, 21 Carroll St, Westminster with his pastors Rev. Kevin and Martha Clementson officiating.

Inurnment of ashes will be in Grace Lutheran Church Columbarium.

In lieu of flowers, memorial donations may be made to Grace Lutheran Church in support of the Ardent Folk social ministry.

Online condolences may be made to the family at www.fletcherfuneralhome.net.

*****

Other posts which mention Dr. David Herlocker may be found here: ... For other posts on running or the Westminster Road Runners Club please click on: Sports Running or Westminster Road Runners Club or Westminster Sidewalks and Trails or westminster road runners club or westminster sidewalks and trails. or westminster annual main street mile or sports running or dave herlocker. The Westminster Road Runners Club web site is here: http://www.carr.org/%7Ewrrc/


19450323 Cleric - Rev. Dr. Lowell F. Ensor, pastor of the Methodist Church at Westminster - Urges Repeal of Jim Crow Law

Cleric - Rev. Dr. Lowell F. Ensor, pastor of the Methodist Church at Westminster - Urges Repeal of Jim Crow Law

Democratic Advocate, March 23, 1945.

Following taken from Baltimore Sun March 18: Rev. Dr. Lowell F. Ensor, pastor of the Methodist Church at Westminster, yesterday urged support of the repeal of the Jim Crow law in Maryland.

He declared a state that will send citizens to the fighting fronts of the world and at the same time deny to any group of those citizens equal rights, is un-American and un-Christian.

Reference to this law was make in his sermon, in which he also urged opposition to a Senate bill now in the Legislature that would permit sale of alcoholic beverages in Carroll county hotels, and a House bill that would allow pari-mutuel betting on horse racing at Baltimore county and Carroll county fair grounds.

20080316 The Carroll Sunday Eagle: Palm Sunday 1942 was a time of high snow and higher anxiety by Kevin Dayhoff

Last Sunday’s, March 16th, 2008 Sunday Carroll Eagle column was:

Palm Sunday 1942 was a time of high snow and higher anxiety

03/16/08 by Kevin Dayhoff EAGLE ARCHIVE (806 words)

http://news.mywebpal.com/news_tool_v2.cfm?pnpID=978&NewsID=885695&CategoryID=19662&show=localnews&om=1

Email this story to a friend

Many people have been commenting about how early Easter is this year. In fact, the last time Easter was as early as March 23 was 1913.

(I think they had wooden jelly beans back then.)

But a later Easter doesn't ensure good weather for Holy Week. I wonder how many readers remember the Palm Sunday blizzard of 1942. It was the fifth worse snowstorm in Carroll County history, as folks were greeted by 22 inches of snow on March 29, 1942.

It also included an important "first," as noted in a newspaper article: "Our municipal authorities, for the first time, saw fit to clear the greater portion of Main Street, and some of the important cross streets.

"Whatever the cost, we would say it certainly was an important step. ... The work was done by Thomas, Bennett and Hunter, road contractors, using their large road graders. The removal was rapid and proved to be a most successful method."

That Sunday, just months after America entered World War II, was a time a great anxiety.

One newspaper editorial explained: "1942 will enter in the midst of the (most) destructive war the world has ever known. The picture is a dark one, filled with doubts, uncertainties, a year that will test the mettle of our citizens, our men in service, but there is no doubt that all will stand the test and unite in the defense of our country, our flag and our president."

During that Palm Sunday of 1942, peace on Earth was, unfortunately, not in the minds of all. One fear on the minds of local folks was, "What to do in the event of an air raid?"

At the end of 1941, the "Air Raid Warden for Carroll County," W. Warfield Babylon, published a full newspaper page with detailed instructions as to what to do if the enemy were to launch an air raid on Carroll County.

It was a different time and a different era.

How many of us can remember the "Civil Defense Shelters" scattered through the county? How many had air raid shelters in the basement of their homes?

The air raid instructions began with advice that, alas, could be useful even today:

"Above all, keep cool.

Don't lose your head.

Do not crowd the streets, avoid chaos, prevent disorder and havoc.

You can fool the enemy.

If planes come over, stay where you are.

Don't phone unnecessarily.

The chance you will be hit is small."

Of course, the anxieties of the 1940s have been replaced by the anxieties of 2008, including rapidly increasing prices for essentials, taxes and concerns about the economy.

Yet one challenge Carroll did not have in 1942 was debt. An historical reference to a Jan. 2, 1942 article in The Sun touted that the Board of County Commissioners "paid off $25,000 to make Carroll County debt-free.

"Carroll County was probably the only county in Maryland in 1942 that could claim such a distinction. With a tax rate of 90 cents on $100, Carroll had the lowest tax in the state with the exception of Queen Anne's County. Two-thirds of tax money collected from county residents went to fund schools."

***

Today, Palm Sunday is here and many of us can't wait for spring.

Christians celebrate today as "Passion Sunday" -- the day that Jesus entered Jerusalem to a path covered with palm branches. The crowds that greeted him also waved palm branches. (One can read all about it in Matthew 21:1-11; Mark 11:1-11; Luke 19:28-44; and John 12:12-19.)

Palm Sunday can appear anywhere on the calendar from March 15 to April 18. If you're like me, you wonder why the dates vary from year to year.

It's because Easter is celebrated on the first Sunday after the "Paschal Full Moon." To make it even more a mystery, the Paschal Full Moon is not an astronomical event, but a date calculated by folks with a huge Excel spreadsheet in 325 AD.

Really.

Of course, I don't bother remembering when Palm Sunday and Easter occur on the calendar -- I just ask my wife. Women have mysterious powers that allow them to know these things.

Hope springs eternal

Heading back to 1942 again, Bob Hope hosted the 14th Academy Awards at the Biltmore Hotel in Los Angeles. Best picture was, "How Green Was My Valley."

OK, movie buffs, for this week's Sunday Carroll Eagle coffee mug, what was the other famous movie from 1941, often heralded as perhaps the best film ever made -- yet it did not win the Academy Award for best picture? Here's a hint: In the spirit of spring, think of the word, "Rosebud."

Think you know? Send me an e-mail at kdayhoff@carr.org and we'll draw one winner from the magic hat.

Heck, I'll even fill the mug with jelly beans. (Not the wooden kind.)

When he's not dreaming of spring, Kevin Dayhoff writes from Westminster. E-mail him at kdayhoff AT carr.org.

Kevin Dayhoff writes from Westminster Maryland USA.

www.kevindayhoff.net http://www.youtube.com/kevindayhoff http://www.livejournal.com/

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

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

“When I stop working the rest of the day is posthumous. I'm only really alive when I'm writing.” Tennessee Williams

NBH

*****

The Sunday Carroll Eagle: October 28, 2007 - On October 28th, 2007 the publication for which I write, The Westminster Eagle and The Eldersburg Eagle, (which is published by Patuxent Newspapers and owned by Baltimore Sun); took over the Carroll County section of the Baltimore Sun.

“The Sunday Carroll Eagle ” is inserted into the newspaper for distribution in Carroll County. For more information, please contact:

Mr. Jim Joyner, Editor, The Westminster Eagle

121 East Main Street

Westminster, MD 21157

(410) 386-0334 ext. 5004

Jjoyner AT Patuxent DOT com

For more posts on “Soundtrack” click on: Sunday Carroll Eagle

http://kevindayhoff.blogspot.com/search/label/Sunday%20Carroll%20Eagle

20071028 The Sunday Carroll Eagle introduction

http://kevindayhoff.blogspot.com/2007/10/20071028-sunday-carroll-eagle.html

Also see: Monday, October 22, 2007: 20071021 Baltimore Sun: “To our readers”

http://kevindayhoff.blogspot.com/2007/10/20071021-baltimore-sun-to-our-readers.html

Saturday, March 22, 2008

20080322 New York Governor Eliot “Mr Clean” Spitzer redux

New York Governor Eliot “Mr Clean” Spitzer resigns – and Why do women stand by their cheating husbands?

Yesterday, the Associated Press reported that an analysis “a year's worth of expense reports for Spitzer's office and his campaign committee shows little sign the money was used for illicit activities.”

AP: No red flags in Spitzer expense reports

http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20080321/ap_on_re_us/spitzer_travel_1

By DAVID B. CARUSO, Associated Press Writer Fri Mar 21, 2:18 PM ET

Ever since the prostitution scandal shoved Gov. Eliot Spitzer out the door, people have wondered: Did he spend taxpayer dollars or campaign money to subsidize trysts?

An analysis by The Associated Press of a year's worth of expense reports for Spitzer's office and his campaign committee shows little sign the money was used for illicit activities.

Read the entire article here: AP: No red flags in Spitzer expense reports

Earlier I had written:

March 12, 2008 – March 15, 2008

http://youtube.com/watch?v=Ik_Q9aeH_PU

Just last week, just when you were about to get your nerve up to watch or read the news, the story broke that (now former) New York governor Eliot Spitzer – “The gov-love client number 9” - had violated his marriage vows and broken a number of laws by having an extra-marital affair with an “aspiring singer.”

All right, you follow the news. You know the story. This is a family oriented newspaper…

As the news continued to unfold, it started to read like a bad plot for a “B” movie or a harlequin novel. In New York, even Governor Spitzer’s more ardent enemies were in disbelief when the story broke and passed off the initial reports as a bad practical joke.

For those of us who simply dread winter, spring can’t come soon enough. For those of us who are old enough to understand that good times and bad times are cyclical; perhaps some sunshine, spring flowers, the end of the current Maryland General Assembly session, and some resolution on the many pressing challenges facing our local, and national government will brighten our outlook.

Of course, recently a study was released that folks with a positive outlook live longer and healthier lives, so the other day I endeavored to adopt a “cheer up, things could be worse attitude.”

I cheered up and sure enough – things got worse…

Locally, county and municipalities are grappling with how to fund all the goods and services of which local citizens are demanding with the reality that tax revenues are declining.

Revenues for local government are declining as the cost to operate government continues to escalate and it is starting to sink-in that the Maryland legislature increased taxes last fall yet cut back on the amount of money flowing into the coffers of local government.

Juxtapose this with the fact that Governor Spitzer, a multi-billionaire, threw away as much as $80,000 on his extra-curricular activities. Just think of how much a difference that kind of money would’ve made in our local community?

Governor Spitzer mercifully resigned on March 12 and ended a sensational 48 hours of salacious melodrama of position, power, greed, and human failings. It has probably ended the career that was considered so bright that his name was being bantered about as a 2012 or 2016 presidential candidate.

There are many lessons to be learned by this sad, sordid saga.

*****

Why do women stand by their cheating husbands?

http://youtube.com/watch?v=pWq5nbPmbIk

March 15, 2008

Last week the story broke that (now former) New York governor Eliot “Mr. Clean” Spitzer, otherwise known as “love client no. 9,” had violated his marriage vows and broken a number of laws by taking “acting lessons” with an “aspiring-singer.”

Governor Spitzer mercifully resigned on March 12 and ended a sensational 48 hours of salacious melodrama of position, power, greed, and human failings.

Our first thoughts go out to his family. This is first and foremost a personal tragedy. Our hearts went out to his wife, Silda Spitzer, as she stood by her husband in two key press conferences.

Folks who ask why she did that are overlooking the obvious. Why didn’t he apologize directly to her? For the love of Pete, why didn’t she haul-off and clobber the miserable slug?

Mrs. Spitzer, his wife for 21 years, by all accounts is quite accomplished and well educated and has essentially forsaken her career for his – and to raise three daughters.

The ironies abound in this tragedy…

That was the introduction of the Westminster Eagle column I filed over the weekend. It will appear in the paper this coming Wednesday, March 19, 2008

Meanwhile, on March 15th, 2008, Sabra Gertsch for Fox Phoenix News excellently explored the question that many of us have on our minds: Why Do Women Stand By Their Cheating Husbands?

After being publicly humiliated by reports of her husband hiring prostitutes Silda Spitzer stands by her man. That was the case during Wednesday morning's press conference...

For more videos on currents events and issues, go to Town Hall Videos - http://www.townhall.com/video/

_____

Kevin Dayhoff writes from Westminster Maryland USA.

www.kevindayhoff.net

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

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

“When I stop working the rest of the day is posthumous. I'm only really alive when I'm writing.” Tennessee Williams

20080211 Sykesville Council meeting agenda

MAYOR AND TOWN COUNCIL OF SYKESVILLE AGENDA FOR

MONDAY, MARCH 24, 2008, 7:00 P.M.

QUORUM: Mayor

MINUTES: Town Clerk

TREASURER’S REPORT: Town Treasurer

PUBLIC CONCERNS

BUSINESS:

South Branch Park – Charrette continuation – Sean Davis

Public Safety Report

Infrastructure Financing - Recommendation

Solid Waste and Recycling Initiatives – First Public Workshop at the April 14th meeting

Budget Committee – First meeting will be held on Tuesday, April 8, 2008

Recycling Poster Contest – Selection of three judges

OTHER:

CLOSED SESSION:

Legal Consultation –

2. Property Acquisition –

3. Personnel –

Lots of things to do in Town on Sunday April 6, 2008!

East Side/West Side: Life Stories

Sunday April 6, 2008

2:30 pm

at the Historic Colored Schoolhouse

Long-time Baltimore City residents share their life stories.

Sykesville's own Rosie Dorsey Hutchinson will share her

memories of the schoolhouse

Be prepared to sing along to the songs of yesteryear

Young people are encouraged to come along with

their parents and grandparents

Dedication of the Purman Memorial Library

and Thelma Wimmer Day

Sunday April 6, 2008

1 pm to 2:30 pm at the Gate House Museum

First Curator of the Museum, Jim Purman who passed on March 5, 2007,

will be honored as the Museum dedicates the research library to him.

Come Visit the Railroad Cars and the Model Railroad Displays
next to the Sykesville contract Post Office and Old Main Line Visitor Center

The first Sunday of every month (April 6, 2008 next one)
1 pm to 5 pm