DelMarVa's Premier Source for News, Opinion, Analysis, and Human Interest Contact Publisher Joe Albero at alberobutzo@wmconnect.com or 410-430-5349
Attention
Friday, May 27, 2011
SALISBURY CITY COUNCIL HOLDS EMERGENCY MEETING TO CORRECT ADMINISTRATIVE BUDGET ERROR
DNA Tests Find "Disturbingly Widespread" Seafood Fraud
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This Is How TV Ads Are So Loud
But how can that be? TV ads are soooo much louder than the TV shows, right? Well, as WIRED reports, most ads actually never go above the FCC recommended volume limits. The difference is that the TV shows are well below that level, saving the peak volume part for that big explosion or gun fight, while TV ads are right at the limit the whole time. The audio engineers increase the volume on all of the audio, then clip it off right at the loudness limits.
Which is why I use for commercials what the audio engineers haven't been able to design around (yet), the mute button.
Source »
Former NC Priest Admitted Delaware Sexual Abuse
The admission by the former Rev. James O'Neill was outlined in a court ruling obtained by The Associated Press in a lawsuit between O'Neill's religious order and its insurance company.
O'Neill was a member of the Oblates of St. Francis de Sales and the former principal of Salesianum School in Wilmington, where he was accused of molesting Eric Eden over several years beginning in 1976.
Eden has settled lawsuits with Salesianum, the Oblates and the Diocese of Wilmington.
Source
Judge: Corporate Donations Ban Unconstitutional
Ruling cites Citizens United, says corporations have same rights as individuals to contribute to campaigns
PUBLIC NOTICE
SALISBURY: ARE YOU READY FOR SOME . . . MORE TAXES?
THE CHICKEN
He awoke before the Pearly Gates, where St. Peter said, 'You died in your sleep, Ed.'
Ed was stunned. 'I'm dead? No, I can't be! I've got too much to live for. Send me back!'
St. Peter said, 'I'm sorry, but there's only one way you can go back, and that is as a chicken.'
Ed was devastated, but begged St. Peter to send him to a farm near his home.
The next thing he knew, he was covered with feathers, clucking and pecking the ground.
A rooster strolled past. 'So, you're the new hen, huh? How's your first day here?'
'Not bad,' replied Ed the hen, 'but I have this strange feeling inside. Like I'm gonna explode!'
'You're ovulating,' explained the rooster. 'Don't tell me you've never laid an egg before?'
'Never,' said Ed.
'Well, just relax and let it happen,' says the rooster. 'It's no big deal.'
He did, and a few uncomfortable seconds later, out popped an egg!
He was overcome with emotion as he experienced motherhood.
He soon laid another egg -- his joy was overwhelming.
As he was about to lay his third egg, he felt a smack on the back of his head, and heard.....
"Ed, wake up! You shit the bed!"
Getting OLD just ain't what they said it would be!
Millionaire CIA Spook Derails Texas No Groping Bill
House Passes $690 Billion Dollar Defense Authorization Bill
Willards Fireworks
Wicomico County Sheriff's Office Press Releases
Incident: Assault / Vandalism
Date of Incident: 26 May 2011
Location: Nokomis Avenue, Salisbury, MD
Suspect: Ramiaro T. Shuler, 24, Salisbury, MD
Narrative: On 26 May 2011 at 2:10 AM, a deputy from the Wicomico County Sheriff’s Office
responded for a reported altercation in the street near the intersection of Nokomis Avenue and Manoa
Boulevard. Upon arrival, the deputy met with a female victim who advised that her live in boyfriend,
Ramiaro Shuler, struck her during an argument and then busted out the side window of her vehicle with a
tire iron. The deputy observed both signs of injury on the victim and shattered glass that corroborated her
account.
The deputy placed Shuler under arrest and transported him to the Central Booking Unit where he was
processed and taken in front of the District Court Commissioner. After an initial appearance, the
Commissioner detained Shuler in the Detention Center in lieu of $10,000.00 bond.
Charges: Assault 2nd Degree
Malicious Destruction of Property
Gentle Thoughts For Today
A penny saved.....
The older you get, the tougher it is to
The easiest way to find something lost
He who hesitates....
Did you ever notice:
If you think there is good in everybody....
The sole purpose of a child's middle name.....
There's always a lot to be thankful for if you
Did you ever notice:
Aging:
The older we get, the fewer things seem
Some people try to turn back their odometers.
When you are dissatisfied and would like
You know you are getting old when everything
One of the many things no one tells you
Long ago when men cursed and beat the ground
PUBLIC NOTICE
Current, Former Washington Redskins Make Goal Line Stand For TSA Worker Unionization
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Pricey Trash Cans Stolen, Sold For Scrap
The reporter who covered this story for KDKA contacted scrap yards, and estimated that the fifty stolen cans would have sold for $1,500-$2,000. Total, not each.
http://consumerist.com/2011/05/city-paid-1000-for-metal-trash-cans-thieves-sell-them-for-scrap-metal.html
USPS To RIF Employees Today
Computer Errors Free 450 High-Risk Prisoners
In California, where the state has been ordered to ease prison overcrowding by releasing some "low-level" prisoners, computer errors allowed for the release of 450 inmates considered to have a "high risk for violence." It's definitely not what the U.S. Supreme Court had in mind when it recently issued its ruling to throttle down the prison population.
More than 1,000 additional prisoners presenting a high risk of committing drug crimes, property crimes and other offenses were also let out, officials said.One of the big reasons behind the glitch: The computer program prison officials used to make assessments regarding early releases "does not access an inmate's disciplinary history," and it also "relies on a state Department of Justice system that records arrests but is missing conviction information for nearly half of the state's 16.4 million arrest records, according to the inspector general report," the Times said.
No attempt was made to return any of the offenders to state lockups or place them on supervised parole, said inspector general spokeswoman Renee Hansen.
All of the prisoners were placed on "non-revocable parole," whose participants are not required to report to parole officers and can be sent back to prison only if caught committing a crime. The program was started in January 2010 for inmates judged to be at very low risk of reoffending, leaving parole agents free to focus on supervising higher-risk parolees.
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PUBLIC NOTICE
BREAKING LOCAL NEWS: UPDATE
Update: Victim was seen in water and they have now lost visual. Sounds like one person only. Its a over turned kayak.
UPDATE #2: They just recovered the body in the pond. The Medical Examiner and Chaplain have been called in. Its official. They have the victim in Laurel's boat and are going to the ramp.
Our thoughts and prayers go out to this person and their Family. A special thank you to ALL of those involved in recovering this individual.
2011 Sunscreen Ratings Released
Archaeology Day at Zwaanendael Museum
Shipwrecks will serve as the theme of the Zwaanendael Museum’s Archaeology Day program that will take place on 10 a.m.-4:30 p.m. Saturday, May 28, at the Zwaanendael Museum located at 102 Kings Highway in Lewes. Admission to the event is free and open to the public. For more information, call 645-1148.
In addition to historical information and a display of artifacts recovered from Lewes’ Roosevelt Inlet Shipwreck, the festival will include outdoor displays and activities provided by the southern Delaware chapter of the Archaeological Society of Delaware, and a hands-on program in which children retrieve artifacts from a water-filled pool, followed by analysis and drawing of the “recovered” materials.
The Political Doctrine Of Statism
This is why I believe Ron Paul's book Liberty Defined to be one of the most important statements of our time. He defines liberty clearly and cleanly as freedom from coercive interference from the state. That is how the liberal tradition from Aquinas to Jefferson to Rothbard understood it, too, for there is no greater threat to liberty than the state. Its powers must be crushed if we are to revisit what liberty means.
Ron goes further to apply the principle of liberty in many of the most controversial areas of modern life. The purpose here is not to detail some governing blueprint. What Ron seeks to do is much more important. He seeks to fire up the human imagination in ways that permit people to think outside the prevailing statist norms.
In 1945, Ludwig von Mises wrote a similar book called Omnipotent Government: The Rise of the Total State and Total War. It is probably the most blistering and thorough attack on National Socialism ever written. He details the peculiar characteristics of Nazi-style statism (its nationalism rooted in the worship of bloodlines). Just as importantly – and very unusually for this genre of writing – Mises sought to explain how Nazism is only a symptom of a larger problem, which is statism itself. He regarded statism as a special doctrine that people come to embrace often without entirely understanding its teaching and claims. It emerges within a context of economic or security emergency.
There is always some great excuse for the trashing of the human freedom that built civilization as we know it. If the state cannot find one, it is glad to invent one. A population that is ideologically gullible or afraid for its security can permit government to run roughshod over people's rights and liberties, and a government that gains such power never gives it back on its own. Rights and liberties must be reclaimed by the people themselves, and the spark that makes this happen is reversing the conditions that permitted the rise of statism. The people must lose their gullibility through ideological enlightenment, and they must lose their sense of fear that the world will fall apart if the tyrant is not in control.
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PUBLIC NOTICE
A Letter To The Editor
Hook, Line And Sinker
Failure To Act On Debt Could Spell Trouble For Economy
Without action, Treasury will be forced to stop paying some big bills
BREAKING NEWS: Pending Home Sales Unexpectedly Plunge In April
Maryland Pushes Ahead On Implementing Health Care Reform
Continue Reading...
'Dramatic' Bay Bridge Toll Increases Threaten Beach Towns
The Maryland Transportation Authority is talking about raising the price for most drivers to cross the bridge from $2.50 to $5. The change would be made in October. Under the plan, by 2013, the price would be jacked up again to $8 one-way.
"Some of the rates I've heard proposed are a little dramatic," says Ocean City Mayor Rick Meehan.
Meehan says if the toll hikes become reality, they could affect his town.
"It may be bad timing. With gas prices going up and then you talk about tolls, sometimes timing's everything," the Mayor says.
He's hoping for some kind of compromise.
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Most Maryland Agencies Closed Friday For Furlough Day
The service reduction day on Friday is one of five for most state employees in fiscal year 2011. The furlough does not apply to emergency workers.
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Is Sarah Palin Launching a Bid for President?
Multisource political news, world news, and entertainment news analysis by Newsy.com
Reports of a new Arizona home, a feature-length film, and a bus tour are all fueling speculation that Palin will make a 2012 bid for the White House.Latin America Progresses Forward - a Victory for Gay Rights
An Unlikely Victory
As the world's largest Roman Catholic country, Brazil was an unlikely venue for such a promising gay rights victory. The Roman Catholic Church has actively fought proposals for same-sex unions in Brazil, arguing that the Brazilian Constitution defines a "family entity" as "a stable union between a man and a woman."2The Catholic Church responded to the recent ruling with outrage. As Archbishop Anuar Battisti put it, the Supreme Court's decision marked a "frontal assault" on the sanctity of the family.3
The Catholic Church is losing its power in Brazil, which helped pave the way for the Supreme Court's recent decision in favor of homosexuals. Nevertheless, homophobia retains a tenacious grip on Brazilian society. Despite the fact that the nation boasts the world's largest gay pride parade, the LGBT movement has been unable to achieve fundamental progress and quell discrimination at a societal level. For instance, Marcelo Cerqueira, the head of the Gay Group of Bahia, claims the country is "number one when it comes to assassination, discrimination and violence against homosexuals."4Additionally, in a disconcerting report, the Gay Group of Bahia found that 260 Brazilian gay people were murdered in 2010, exemplifying the level of hostility towards homosexuals.5Because of this discriminating environment, gay rights activists traditionally have had little success in Brazil. Most notably, Congress disregarded proposals for gay rights legislation for nearly ten years.
The Supreme Court’s recent ruling was therefore a major turning point after a history of protracted, unsuccessful struggles. The judicial decision was made in response to two lawsuits, one of which was filed by Rio de Janeiro Governor Sérgio Cabral and the other by the Office of the Attorney General. While Congress repeatedly ignored requests for equal rights for gay Brazilian citizens, the Supreme Court argued that "Those who opt for a homosexual union cannot be treated less than equally as citizens."6In this way, by appealing to the judicial system, the LGBT movement was able to achieve success despite deep-seated hostility throughout Brazilian society and in other branches of the government.
Latin America's Gay Rights Revolution
Professor Omar Encarnación of Bard College calls the recent string of gay rights legislation in Latin America a "gay rights revolution."7Brazil's ruling came on the heels of several other noteworthy gay rights victories in Latin America, such as Uruguay’s legalization of same-sex civil unions in 2007. Shortly thereafter, in 2010, Argentina became the first Latin American nation and eighth nation worldwide to legalize gay marriage. Other landmark decisions in the past few years include Uruguay's decision to allow all men and women, regardless of sexual orientation, to serve in the military and Mexico City's legalization of same-sex civil unions.
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Young And Homeless: From The Streets To College
Daniella, 20, a second-year student majoring in Sociology with a minor in Urbanization, has strawberry blonde hair, a bright smile and an optimistic attitude. She lives with a friend from church in an apartment not far from campus, paying her own rent and utilities.
But prior to December, she lived at a Transitional Living Center (TLC) operated by the Fresno County Economic Opportunities Commission, which provides housing services to homeless youth aged 18-24.
Having left behind the substance abuse and instability that characterized the environment of her two previous homes, Daniella was just looking for a place where she could focus on her schoolwork and move toward a positive future.
"When I was 14 I realized that with my predicament, I wasn't going to be successful in school or with anything," Daniella said about her childhood. "I needed to move out [of my mom’s house.] I was going crazy.”
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Step Back in Time at Indian River Life-Saving Museum
Delaware Seashore State Park invites you to take a step back in time. Over one hundred years ago, the surfmen of the United States Life-Saving Service patrolled the beaches of the Delaware Coast every night, scanning the waters for signs of ships in distress. The Indian River Life-Saving Station Museum is offering a unique program that will allow participants to walk the surfmen’s beat, patrolling the same beaches and scanning the same waters they would have covered a century ago.
The crew at the Life-Saving Station will conduct an evening lantern tour of the museum on Friday, May 27th at 8:30pm. The tour will be led by an interpreter dressed in the uniform of the turn-of-the-century Life-Saving Service patrol. Learn about shipwrecks, surfmen’s duties, and the changing Delaware coast over time. Afterward, the tour will head out to the beach with their lanterns to patrol the Delaware coast. Live the history of the United States Life-Saving Service while enjoying a stroll in the sand in Delaware Seashore State Park.
The Indian River Life-Saving Station and Museum is located on Route 1, 3.5 miles south of Dewey Beach and 1.5 miles north of the Indian River Inlet. The program fee is $10 per person, and pre-registration is required. Dress for the weather! To register for this or other programs at the Life-Saving Station, call 302-227-6991.
WCBOE Proposes to Unnecessarily Spend $500,000
While the Wicomico County Board of Education (WCBOE) has announced that they will save taxpayers $120,000 by changing bus routes, they also propose spending $462,000 to re-pave and expand a parking lot … that doesn’t need it.
WCBOE proposes to spend $462,000 from the “School Construction Fund” (a maintenance account) to expand and re-pave the parking lot at Quantico’s Westside Primary School. There’s just one problem – the lot doesn’t appear to need re-paving.
Yes, it appears that the parking lot and driveway could use some patching. It probably wouldn’t do any harm to give the lot a nice over coat as well. Informed sources estimate that this could cost $30,000 – $40,000.
Why, then, should the taxpayers fund an unnecessary half million dollar project? According to a WCBOE board member, who we won’t embarrass by naming, the parking lot needs to be expanded because some parents have to park on the street on PTA nights!
That’s right, children at Beaver Run Elementary don’t have functioning water fountains in their school, but Westside needs a new parking lot so that parents won’t have to walk an extra 50 yards!
This is one more reason why Wicomico citizens are so disenchanted with the WCBOE. Yes, there are a VERY few who simply don’t want to spend ANY money on education. Most citizens simply request that the WCBOE spend their tax dollars WISELY.
To view all of the photos taken (in larger sizes), CLICK HERE.
BREAKING NEWS: Personal Spending, Income Rise In April
Editors Notes: Are you buying it?
Barney Frank’s “Friends with Benefits”
by Michelle Malkin
If you want to watch a corruptocrat start sputtering like Porky Pig with allergies, confront him with three simple words: conflict of interest. Asked this week about his role in securing an ex-lover's highly coveted job at government mortgage giant Fannie Mae, Massachusetts Democratic Rep. Barney Frank retorted:
"Aba-dee aba-dee aba-dee aba-dee."
Or that's what it sounded like, anyway. Frank was rather miffed about the recent disclosure that he helped former lover Herb Moses land a job with the behemoth lender while sitting on a House committee that regulates lenders a decade ago. The Boston Herald reported Thursday that Frank immediately invoked the Everybody Does It card: "It is a common thing in Washington for members of Congress to have spouses work for the federal government. There is no rule against it at all."
Worcester County Cuts Spending … a Little
The Worcester County Commissioners were presented Wednesday with a balanced budget of $163.5 million, just $304,758 higher than the 2011 budget of $163.2 million. Even so, they cut an additional $99,725 in expenses as they went through the items line by line.
Among the additional cuts were costs for copying, travel, office supplies, dues and subscriptions, prosecution expenses, software maintenance agreements, heating fuel oil and temporary clerical staff.
The savings will go into the stabilization fund, a fund for money that is not allocated to a department. They used some of that money, however, to contribute to nonprofits. They agreed to donate $15,000 to Diakonia with the condition that the town of Ocean City makes the same contribution. They also voted to give $3,000 to the American Red Cross Lower Shore Chapter, but Commissioners Louise Gulyas and Madison Bunting voted against that motion.
In a unanimous vote at the end of the day, the commissioners approved Bunting’s motion to direct the staff to look into the possibility of consolidating some departments as a cost-saving measure.
Will Maryland Kick In $400 Million for Proposed Arena / Convention Center Project?
The Greater Baltimore Committee Wednesday unveiled a grand, $900 million plan for Baltimore’s Inner Harbor that will include a new, privately financed 18,500-seat arena topped by a 500-room hotel, both attached to an expanded Baltimore Convention Center.
The $325 million arena and $175 million hotel would be built on the site of the Sheraton Inner Harbor Hotel at Conway and Charles streets owned by Willard Hackerman of Whiting-Turner Contracting Inc. and would be privately financed. But the project is dependent on being attached to a convention center that would double in size if the state will kick in bonds for the $400 million expansion.
The arena would replace the 50-year-old 1st Mariner Arena, which seats 14,000, without having to tear down the old structure between Lombard and Baltimore streets a few blocks away.
The Greater Baltimore Committee plan also includes redeveloping Rash Field, at the Inner Harbor, as a more vibrant waterfront park, building a pedestrian bridge over the narrowest point of the harbor and constructing a sound and light show for the harbor.
The Inner Harbor is “worn and it needs to have a facelift,” said Don Fry, president of the Greater Baltimore Committee.
Fry said both Gov. Martin O’Malley and Mayor Stephanie Rawlings-Blake had reviewed the overall plans.
A Face Lift in Ocean City
If you're headed downy ocean for the Memorial Day weekend, you might notice something different on the beach: There's more of it.
A $9 million replenishment effort over the winter pumped 900,000 cubic yards of new sand onto Ocean City's beaches to widen and shore up parts that had eroded. That is one of a number of changes visitors will notice as the town launches another summer vacation season — changes that tourism officials say are vital even in a resort community where familiarity is what has drawn generations of families year after year.
"I think the folks in Ocean City that are successful are the ones who re-invent every year," said Dean Langrall, marketing director of the Jolly Roger Amusement Parks, which is debuting a new zipline. "You need a new wrinkle."
School to Start Earlier …
… and a LITTLE More Efficiently
Kudos to the Wicomico Board of Education (WCBOE) for deciding to tweak the 2011 – 2012 school schedule a little and save $120,000 in the process by consolidating bus routes.
Yes, I know that some readers are clutching their chests as they keel over – G. A. Harrison praising the WCBOE! I’m sure the affected bus contractors don’t think this is such a great idea either. However, saving $120,000 of the taxpayers’ money isn’t anything to sneeze at.
Don’t worry, SbyNEWS has another piece later today that will perk up the most vociferous WCBOE critic.
Navy Researcher Links Toxins in War-Zone Dust to Ailments
"From my research and that of others, I really think this may be the smoking gun," says Navy Capt. Mark Lyles, chair of medical sciences and biotechnology at the Center for Naval Warfare Studies at the Naval War College in Newport, R.I. "It fits everything — symptoms, timing, everything."
Lyles and other researchers found that dust particles — up to 1,000 of which can sit on the head of a pin — gathered in Iraq and Kuwait contain 37 metals, including aluminum, lead, manganese, strontium and tin. The metals have been linked to neurological disorders, cancer, respiratory ailments, depression and heart disease, according to the Environmental Protection Agency. Researchers believe the metals occur both naturally and as a byproduct of pollution.
Researchers in and out of the military say the particles are smaller and easier to inhale than most dust particles, and that recent droughts in the region have killed desert shrubs that helped keep down that dust. The military's heavy vehicles have pounded the desert's protective crust into a layer of fine silt, Lyles says. Servicemembers breathe the dust — and all it carries — deeply into their lungs.
The dust contains 147 different kinds of bacteria, as well as fungi that could spread disease, Lyles found. Since the wars began in Iraq in 2003 and in Afghanistan in 2001, the military has seen a 251% increase in the rate of neurological disorders per 10,000 active-duty servicemembers, a 47% rise in the rate of respiratory issues and a 34% increase in the rate of cardiovascular disease, according to a USA TODAY analysis of military morbidity records from 2001 to 2010. Those increases have researchers seeking possible causes.
Despite the research by Lyles and others, and the documented spikes in respiratory illnesses, Defense Department officials contend there are no health issues associated with the dust.
"The (Defense Department) has examined the concerns raised by the studies accomplished by Capt. Lyles," says Craig Postlewaite, who heads up the Secretary of Defense's Force Readiness and Health Assurance Office. He said the military found the dust is "not noticeably different from samples collected in the Sahara Desert and desert regions in the U.S. and China."
Lyles initially analyzed dust samples from Iraq and Kuwait in 2003 to help determine a way to keep the grit from rendering medical equipment useless.
"When I saw the data, I said, 'Oh my God. This can't be right,'" Lyles says.
More : http://www.usatoday.com/news/military/2011-05-11-Iraq-Afghanistan-dust-soldiers-illnesses_n.htm