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Thursday, June 23, 2011

Dog Found On Shad Point Road: UPDATE

Hello.  We have found a male shitzu dog on Shad Point Road in Salisbury.  The owner can call 410-251-2402.

How Do Our Legislators Rank?

The 2011 Roll Call is out! Released for the last 25 years by the group Maryland Business for Responsive Government (MBRG), the Roll Call scores each member of the Maryland General Assembly on bills that are important to Maryland businesses.

So … How do our Senators and Delegates from the Eastern Shore rank?

SENATE

2011 Score

Cum. Score

E. J. Pipkin

100

83

Richard Colburn

100

84

Jim Mathias

45

54

HOUSE

2011 Score

Cum. Score

Steve Hershey

100

--

Jay Jacobs

100

--

Mike Smigiel

91

73

Rudy Cane

9

35

Addie Eckhardt

100

86

Jeannie Haddaway

93

82

Norm Conway

20

59

Mike McDermott

100

--

Charles Otto

100

--

So, who stands up for business on the Shore? It doesn’t look like Rudy Cane, Norm Conway, and Jim Mathias are too worried about job creation in Maryland … unless it’s GOVERNMENT JOBS.

CORRECTION - This post originally showed Del. Norm Conway with a 2011 score of 100 and Del. Mike McDermott with a 2011 score of 20. The numbers were reversed. We apologize to Del. McDermott for the mistake.

H/T – Len Lazarick @ Maryland Reporter

BREAKING NEWS: Earl Bradley Found Guilty on All Counts

Former Lewes and Milford pediatrician Earl Bradley was found guilty Thursday afternoon on all counts stemming from the rape, assault and exploitation of more than 100 underage victims over a 10-year period.

Superior Court Judge William Carpenter Jr. announced his verdicts in front of a Georgetown Superior Courtroom that was filled with more than 60 onlookers and nearly 20 members of the Delaware Corrections Department and Capitol Police.

Bradley was found guilty of 14 counts of first-degree rape, five counts of second-degree assault and five counts of sexual exploitation of a child. Sentencing for the crimes will come Aug. 26 at 10 a.m. Each first-degree rape charge could carry with it a penalty of up to life in prison.

READ MORE …

EMERGENCY STREET REPAIR

The City of Salisbury Public Works Department will be repairing a utility patch that has failed causing uneven pavement surfaces and potholes at the intersection of CAMDEN AVE, CARROLL ST, and RIVERSIDE DRIVE.
 TH 8 p.m. – 3 a.m.
MONDAY JUNE 27
 
EXPECT DELAYS
WEATHER PERMITTING

BREAKING NEWS: Men Charged In Plot To Attack Military Recruiting Station

Two men arrested and charged with plotting to attack a Seattle military recruiting station.

MILLER: Conservatives’ Spending Pledge

Tea Party inspires ‘Cut, Cap, Balance’ vigilance on debt-ceiling negotiations

House and Senate conservatives rallied Wednesday around a pledge to vote against any debt-ceiling increase that fails to include enforceable reductions in the size of the federal government. The "Cut, Cap, Balance" pledge to put Uncle Sam on a diet includes cuts in outlays, caps on future spending authority and passage of a balanced-budget amendment that would limit taxing and spending.

The first day's effort has been encouraging. Sen. Jim DeMint, South Carolina Republican, has 10 colleagues on board. He'll need another 30 to block a bad deal. "Let's see Democrats and President Obama try and explain that they want to shut down government because they refuse to balance our budget," Mr. DeMint told The Washington Times. "The American people won't stand for it. Now is the time to fight."

The House conservatives' Republican Study Committee (RSC) came up with Cut, Cap, Balance to restrict spending at 18 percent of gross domestic product. Rep. Jim Jordan, the RSC chairman, told The Washington Times that his group "put the ball on the field" and "with this pledge, conservatives in the House, Senate and all across the country have now picked it up and begun to run with it." There are 42 grass-roots groups coordinating efforts to promote the issue around the country, including Club for Growth, FreedomWorks, Tea Party Express and Let Freedom Ring.

Many inside and outside the Beltway are skeptical of closed-door leadership negotiations after being let down by April's continuing resolution in which a promised $100 billion in cuts ultimately failed to yield any real savings. According to the Congressional Budget Office, this year's spending is already $132 billion higher than last year's.

They also lack faith in politicians sticking to spending caps beyond the next election, which is why the pledge seeks to amend the Constitution. "We agree we need immediate spending cuts, caps and entitlement reform, but that's exactly what Washington did in the '90s when we were $5 trillion in debt," Mr. DeMint told The Times. "Now Gramm-Rudman is ignored, the entitlement reforms never materialized, and debt has exploded to over $14 trillion. Americans won't be fooled again; they know none of these grand promises will ever happen unless we force Washington to do it with a balanced-budget amendment."

For the "Cut, Cap, Balance" pledge to work, more members will have to sign on to it in the next couple of weeks. With a big push from the Tea Party and related groups, that could happen. Americans sent an unmistakable message in November that business as usual was over. The debt-limit deal is the last opportunity this year for Republican leaders inside the Beltway to prove they're serious about shrinking our out-of-control federal leviathan.

Grand Jury Indicts Man After Del. Woman Loses $73K

WILMINGTON, Del. (AP) -- The Delaware Attorney General's office says a New Jersey man has been indicted in a case in which a 62-year-old woman lost $73,000 in an investment scheme.

Attorney General Beau Biden said in a statement on Wednesday that 37-year-old John J. Papaneri, of Mount Laurel, N.J., has been charged with 15 counts of securities fraud and theft for soliciting the funds from the woman in the scheme.

Papaneri was arrested on May 18. State officials say he met the victim last February and told her he was a partner in a business that sells energy-efficient refrigeration units.

Authorities say he later contacted her in Delaware and asked her to invest in his company for a promised return of thousands of dollars but she received no money despite her investment.

Information from: The News Journal of Wilmington, Del.,
http://www.delawareonline.com/

QUOTE OF THE DAY

“We’re not moving toward Hitler-type fascism, but we’re moving toward a softer fascism: Loss of civil liberties, corporations running the show, big government in bed with big business. So you have the military-industrial complex, you have the medical-industrial complex, you have the financial industry, you have the communications industry. They go to Washington and spend hundreds of millions of dollars. That’s where the control is. I call that a soft form of fascism — something that’s very dangerous.”


Ron Paul

Salisbury Police Department Violating The Charter

Not long ago a friend of mine who lives on the Downtown Plaza was hit up for a $35.00 Fine for parking in a One Hour spot for more than an hour. In fact, several cars Downtown were hit with the same fine.

However, here's the problem. The tickets were written at and around 2:30 AM. My friend called the Police Officer the next day to contest the ticket and when he arrived he stood there and said, what does that sign say. He explained how this was 2:30 in the morning and that there is NO violation after 4:30 PM. The Officer said, the sign says one hour, I'll see you in Court.

I did some digging into this and there is absolutely no doubt, the Officer is 100% wrong. While so many of us are doing whatever we can to help boost our local economic and development in Downtown Salisbury, this is exactly the reason why we continue to hit a brick wall.

It goes even further. Did you know that if you are a SU Student living Downtown you get a special discount of 50% off parking if you park in the City Garage. Now I'm not sure just how many Students live Downtown but why not EVERYONE who lives Downtown? It makes no sense. Its not as if the City's Parking Garage is filled to capacity, not anywhere near.

It's simple things like a special discount that could encourage people to want to live Downtown. Why stop there. Why not come up with a plan for all Downtown residents to have a place to put their daily trash. In most cases, there is no place for these residents to discard their trash, so it ends up filling the cans daily on the Plaza.

In the mean time, the SPD needs to stop writing tickets and the citizens need to be informed that this is wrong. The meters are only in effect from 8:00 AM to 4:30 PM.

Today's Wildlife Photo

Found on the Albero Ranch.

Click on image to enlarge.

An Aspirin A Day May Fight Skin Cancer

Daily aspirin may protect against melanoma

Long-term use cut risk of deadly skin cancer by almost half, study finds

An aspirin a day may keep melanoma at bay, a new study suggests.

After scrutinizing the medical records of 1,000 people, an international team of researchers have determined that the risk of melanoma was cut by almost half when people took a daily dose of aspirin for at least five years. 

“Our data at least support the hypothesis that long-term steady aspirin use has an effect,” said study co-author Dr. Robert Stern, a professor of dermatology at Harvard Medical School and chief of dermatology at Beth Israel Deaconess Hospital in Boston.

Previously, the only melanoma prevention advice cancer experts could give was for people to stay out of the sun and get their skin checked for early warning signs of the disease. If melanoma isn’t detected early, it can be deadly.

Come Meet U.S. Senate Candidate Dan Bongino

Come meet U.S. Senate Candidate Dan Bongino (www.bongino.com) at the next WCRC Meeting.

June 27 , 2011
Refreshments 6:30 pm Meeting Starts 7:00 pm
Location: Salisbury Chamber of Commerce
144 East Main Street, Salisbury, MD


Issa: DOJ Claims Are 'Out Right Lie'

Rep. Darrell Issa’s office tells Newsmax that a published report claiming the California Republican was briefed about the “Fast and Furious” weapons operation is an “outright lie.”

The Washington Post on Tuesday stated that Issa, chairman of the House Oversight and Government Reform Committee, was told of the operation, which allowed automatic weapons to fall into the hands of Mexican drug cartels, at an April 2010 meeting and raised no objection.

But Issa spokesman Frederick Hill told Newsmax on Thursday that “what is reported in the Washington Post is an outright lie.

Representative Issa did not learn about the operation until after the death of [Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms, and Explosives] agent Brian Terry” in December 2010.

The "Fast and Furious” operation oversaw the sale of weapons to known and suspected suppliers for Mexican drug cartels. The program was designed to go after drug traffickers, but two of the guns were found at the Arizona crime scene where agent Terry was killed.

Hill told The Hill newspaper that Issa was not briefed at the April 2010 meeting, during a meeting with officials from the ATF — a Justice Department agency — and did not learn about the controversial gun-tracking program until this year.

Spokesman Hill told The Daily Caller that the Justice Department has been shopping the Issa story around town. “We have had people who have contacted us before the Washington Post,” he said. “They told us people in the Justice Department were trying to push this story and I think a number of publications didn’t think it was credible or, for whatever reason, decided not to run it.”

Issa has been sharply critical of the Fast and Furious operation and has called for the resignation of ATF acting Director Kenneth Melson.
Referring to the Justice Department’s alleged efforts to plant the Issa story, Hill told Newsmax: “There are serious questions of integrity at the Justice Department right now.

“There are people within the Justice Department who have to be afraid for their careers now.”

Read more

Somerset County Sheriff's Office Press Release

Joshua Alan Sanders of Marion Station, arrested 6-17-11 on charges of possession of suspected marihuana, and possession of drug paraphernalia. The arrest was the result of a traffic stop conducted by Deputies in Princess Anne. Sanders was later released on personal recognizance.

Alvin Thompson Jr. of Princess Anne, arrested 6-17-11 on a warrant regarding violation of probation. Thompson was held on a $35,000 bond.

Derek A. Stephens of Princess Anne, arrested 6-18-11 on a warrant regarding failing to appear in court. Stephens was held on a $400.00 bond.

Robert Allen Parkinson Sr. of Wenona, arrested 6-20-11 regarding failure to control speed to avoid collision, failure to return to scene of an accident, and failure to stop after unattended vehicle accident. Deputies were called to the Deal Island area regarding a motor vehicle accident with property damage. Parkinson was later released on citations pending trial.

Lamar Dontez Whittington of Crisfield, arrested 6-20-11 on a warrant regarding failure to appear in court. Whittington was later held on a $250.00 bond.

Melvin Leon Brunson of Westover, arrested 6-20-11 on a warrant regarding violation of probation. Brunson was held on a $25,000 bond.

Shawn david Sturgis of Princess Anne, arrested 6-21-11 on a warrant regarding failing to appear in court. Sturgis was held on a $50,000 bond. Jerrell Maurice Savage of Salisbury, arrested 6-21-11 on a warrant regarding failing to appear in court. Savage was held on a $250,000 bond.

Christopher Dewight Burrell of Quantico, arrested 6-21-11 on a warrant regarding possession of marihuana. The arrest was a result of a traffic stop conducted by Deputies on Ocean Highway, Westover.  Burrell was released on personal recognizance.

HURT: No Ifs, Ands Or Butts: FDA Warning Photos Faked

For decades, the federal government has accused tobacco companies of running a campaign of relentless deception in order to sell cigarettes and convince customers that their product will make you sexy, skinny, cool or whatever.

On Tuesday, the government unveiled its latest salvo in its campaign against these companies.

Tobacco peddlers will soon be forced to emblazon every package of their product with graphic new warnings that show what the government says will happen to you if you smoke cigarettes.

One warning shows a cadaver lying on a steel table, chest zipped closed by giant staples. Another, a pair of nastily corroded lungs. In another image, an infant is confined to an incubator and hooked up to a breathing tube. In one startling image, a man is puffing on a cigarette with wisps of smoke escaping a tracheotomy hole in the center of his throat.

There is only one problem with the federal government’s great campaign of graphic images aimed at combating the deceit of tobacco companies and rescuing us from our stupid selves.

The images are fabricated.

More

Northeast Emissions Plan Helps Maryland Shift To Clean Energy And Avoid Fossil Fuel Pollution

The Regional Greenhouse Gas Initiative (RGGI) is helping Maryland meet our energy challenges by providing needed investments in energy efficiency and renewable energy—cutting pollution, curbing dependence on fossil fuels, and fostering pioneering clean energy approaches that can be adopted by other states, according to a report released today by Environment Maryland.  According to the report, A Program that Works: How the Regional Greenhouse Gas Initiative is Helping the Northeast Shift to Clean Energy and Reduce Pollution from Fossil Fuels; the program has led to more than $38 million in clean energy investments leading to more than $105 million in energy savings and contributing $225 growth in economic activity in Maryland.

“RGGI has been a key part of Maryland’s plan to reduce pollution and move us toward clean energy. We look forward to working with our state’s leaders to strengthen and improve the program for a cleaner, more secure energy future in Maryland,” said Tommy Landers, Environment Maryland Campaign Director.

“Maryland has become a national leader in combating the global climate change crisis. Our efforts to implement RGGI have helped us avoid dangerous carbon dioxide emissions and take steps toward creating a cleaner, more sustainable state. For our prosperity, and for our current and future generations, we must take action on climate change now – not later,” said Maryland Governor Martin O’Malley (D).

State leaders in ten northeast states from Delaware to Maine took a decisive step on clean energy when they created RGGI to limit carbon pollution from power plants. Full implementation of the program began in 2009, making it the first cap on global warming pollution implemented anywhere in the United States. Two and a half years later, RGGI is successfully sparking investments in clean energy solutions in the region and demonstrating the workability of a program that requires polluters to pay for the right to emit carbon pollution and that invests the money in measures that will reduce emissions and promote local clean energy.  

“RGGI programs raise awareness of what is possible in the realm of energy efficiency. We can affordably build homes that use a tenth of the energy used by most of today’s homes.  The only question is: why would we do anything else?  Locally, regionally, and nationally we can be doing so much more when it comes to efficiency and clean energy to benefit our economy, our environment, and public health.  Smart, forward-thinking investments in programs like RGGI will help drive an economic renaissance and put us on the path of growth, innovation and prosperity,” said Michael Hindle, Acting Chair of the Mid-Atlantic Passive House Alliance as well as Principal, Owner, and Certified Passive House Consultant with INDRAlogic Architecture and Chesapeake Passive House.

Despite widespread support for the clean energy and energy efficiency benefits of RGGI, some industry groups, led by the well-financed Americans for Prosperity, , cinhave launched an aggressive campaign including highly misleading ads in an effort to convince these states to pull out of the program.

Overall, RGGI participating states are investing 80 percent of proceeds in a variety of consumer benefit programs, including programs to improve energy efficiency, to accelerate the deployment of renewable energy technologies, and to provide energy bill payment assistance to low-income ratepayers. According to data compiled by ENE-Environment Northeast, RGGI has contributed to more than $860 million in consumer savings, 16,000 new jobs, and $2 billion in economic growth in the ten participating states.

The report asserts that by maintaining and improving RGGI, using its funds wisely, and implementing complementary policies that support its clean energy goals, Maryland can build on RGGI’s success and maintain its leadership in the march towards clean energy. Specifically, Maryland and the other RGGI states should:
  • Strengthen RGGI’s cap on carbon emissions. A stronger cap will allow RGGI to function better as an incentive to move to cleaner energy sources and improve the states’ ability to make clean energy investments. 
  • Invest all RGGI funds to clean energy programs. Investing in energy efficiency and clean energy measures will provide energy bill relief to customers large and small and make achieving the environmental goals of the program easier.
  • Consider expanding RGGI to include additional states. RGGI has proven itself as a framework for capping pollution and funding clean energy. One of the best ways to build on that success would be to bring additional states on board with the effort. RGGI has inspired the creation of similar initiatives in other parts of the country.

ATF hosts 1st Gay Pride Observance Despite Scandal

The Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives (ATF) on Wednesday sponsored its first Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual and Transgender (LGBT) Pride Month program at its headquarters in Washington, D.C. despite being embroiled in a controversial probe.

As part of the program, Acting ATF Director Kenneth Melson provided remarks while Rep. Barney Frank (D-MA) served as Wednesday's keynote speaker.
 
The celebration was in recognition of the accomplishments and contributions of lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender Americans to ATF and the nation, and to promote awareness of the LGBT culture.

ATF works to ensure sexual orientation discrimination and prejudice are not tolerated in our workplace, said Melson.

"ATF is an equal employment opportunity environment where effective and equitable participation is encouraged. We are grateful that the Honorable Rep. Frank could share his experiences with our workforce as we celebrate diversity today," he said.

Congressman Frank spoke about his experiences serving as an openly gay congressman for the 4th Congressional District of Massachusetts and his rise to Democrat stalwart status.

ATF created its LGBT affinity group called ATF Pride with the primary goal of ensuring equal employment opportunity and enhancing development opportunities for LGBT employees at the agency, according to its press office.

The ATF has been underfire for an alleged operation that contributed to the deaths of Americans.

More

Negotiations Not Going Well For VP Biden

The bipartisan deficit-reduction talks led by Vice President Joe Biden are getting testy. The Wall Street Journal reports sources say both sides are growing more entrenched. Democratic lawmakers insist on tax hikes. Republicans insist on changes in entitlement programs. President Obama will quiz Democratic negotiators today. Negotiators are under an August 2 deadline to agree to raise the U.S. debt limit from its current ceiling of $14.3 trillion.

USPS Stops Funding A Portion Of Retirement Plan

The Postal Service will stop funding the defined benefit portion of the Federal Employees Retirement System in an effort to free up cash to pay its bills. The Justice Department will now decide on whether USPS has the right to suspend payments and receive credit for $6.9 billion in overpayments. The Office of Personnel Management has refused to credit USPS's overpayment to the fund. Postal Officials say the move will save USPS $230 million a month.

Put Good Money After Good Money

If your a business owner looking to expand and grow your business in a tough economy, consider an ad with Salisbury News where you'll get the biggest response from local viewers than anyone else for the money.

Our ads are only $100.00 a month. Since every one and their brother comes to Salisbury News, stand out and be recognized. You are welcome to contact me and hear about the additional services we provide for the $100.00 a month and you'll be forever convinced there is no better place to advertise.

Contact me at alberobutzo@wmconnect.com.

Maryland Gets $8 Mil To Help Find Federal Jobs

The state of Maryland has landed a nearly $8 million grant from the federal government to help more people find federal jobs. The Baltimore Business Journal reports Maryland will use the money to help connect the state's residents with BRAC-related jobs. BRAC is expected to result in 60,000 new jobs in Maryland, including 20,000 federal jobs at Aberdeen Proving Ground and Fort Meade, plus another 40,000 private-sector jobs.

WAR IS A RACKET

WAR is a racket. It always has been.

It is possibly the oldest, easily the most profitable, surely the most vicious. It is the only one international in scope. It is the only one in which the profits are reckoned in dollars and the losses in lives.

A racket is best described, I believe, as something that is not what it seems to the majority of the people. Only a small "inside" group knows what it is about. It is conducted for the benefit of the very few, at the expense of the very many. Out of war a few people make huge fortunes.

In the World War [I] a mere handful garnered the profits of the conflict. At least 21,000 new millionaires and billionaires were made in the United States during the World War. That many admitted their huge blood gains in their income tax returns. How many other war millionaires falsified their tax returns no one knows.

How many of these war millionaires shouldered a rifle? How many of them dug a trench? How many of them knew what it meant to go hungry in a rat-infested dug-out? How many of them spent sleepless, frightened nights, ducking shells and shrapnel and machine gun bullets? How many of them parried a bayonet thrust of an enemy? How many of them were wounded or killed in battle?

Out of war nations acquire additional territory, if they are victorious. They just take it. This newly acquired territory promptly is exploited by the few – the selfsame few who wrung dollars out of blood in the war. The general public shoulders the bill.

And what is this bill?

This bill renders a horrible accounting. Newly placed gravestones. Mangled bodies. Shattered minds. Broken hearts and homes. Economic instability. Depression and all its attendant miseries. Back-breaking taxation for generations and generations.

NOTHING HAS CHANGED IN 77 YEARS

Congressman McFadden on the Federal Reserve Corporation Remarks in Congress,1934
The Federal Reserve- A Corrupt Institution

“Mr. Chairman,we have in this Country one of the most corrupt institutions the world has ever known. I refer to the Federal Reserve Board and the Federal Reserve Banks,hereinafter called the Fed. The Fed has cheated the Government of these United States and the people of the United States out of enough money to pay the Nation’s debt. The depredations and iniquities of the Fed has cost enough money to pay the National debt several times over.

“This evil institution has impoverished and ruined the people of these United States,has bankrupted itself,and has practically bankrupted our Government. It has done this through the defects of the law under which it operates,through the maladministration of that law by the Fed and through the corrupt practices of the moneyed vultures who control it. Some people who think that the Federal Reserve Banks United States Government institutions. They are private monopolies which prey upon the people of these United States for the benefit of themselves and their foreign customers;foreign and domestic speculators and swindlers;and rich and predatory money lender. In that dark crew of financial pirates there are those who would cut a man’s throat to get a dollar out of his pocket;there are those who send money into states to buy votes to control our legislatures;there are those who maintain International propaganda for the purpose of deceiving us into granting of new concessions which will permit them to cover up their past misdeeds and set again in motion their gigantic train of crime.

“These twelve private credit monopolies were deceitfully and disloyally foisted upon this Country by the bankers who came here from Europe and repaid us our hospitality by undermining our American institutions. Those bankers took money out of this Country to finance Japan in a war against Russia. They created a reign of terror in Russia with our money in order to help that war along. They instigated the separate peace between Germany and Russia,and thus drove a wedge between the allies in World War. They financed Trotsky’s passage from New York to Russia so that he might assist in the destruction of the Russian Empire. They fomented and instigated the Russian Revolution,and placed a large fund of American dollars at Trotsky’s disposal in one of their branch banks in Sweden so that through him Russian homes might be thoroughly broken up and Russian children flung far and wide from their natural protectors. They have since begun breaking up of American homes and the dispersal of American children. “Mr. Chairman,there should be no partisanship in matters concerning banking and currency affairs in this Country,and I do not speak with any.”

“In 1912 the National Monetary Association,under the chairmanship of the late Senator Nelson W. Aldrich,made a report and presented a vicious bill called the National Reserve Association bill. This bill is usually spoken of as the Aldrich bill. Senator Aldrich did not write the Aldrich bill. He was the tool,if not the accomplice,of the European bankers who for nearly twenty years had been scheming to set up a central bank in this Country and who in 1912 has spent and were continuing to spend vast sums of money to accomplish their purpose.

“We were opposed to the Aldrich plan for a central bank. The men who rule the Democratic Party then promised the people that if they were returned to power there would be no central bank established here while they held the reigns of government. Thirteen months later that promise was broken, and the Wilson administration,under the tutelage of those sinister Wall Street figures who stood behind Colonel House,established here in our free Country the worm-eaten monarchical institution of the “King’s Bank”to control us from the top downward,and from the cradle to the grave”.

“The Federal Reserve Bank destroyed our old and characteristic way of doing business. It discriminated against our 1-name commercial paper,the finest in the world,and it set up the antiquated 2-name paper,which is the present curse of this Country and which wrecked every country which has ever given it scope;it fastened down upon the Country the very tyranny from which the framers of the Constitution sought to save us”.

Source

What The Hell's Wrong

Someone please tell me what the HELL's wrong with all the people that run this country! Both republicans & Democrats.

We're "broke" & can't help our own Seniors, Veterans, Orphans, Homeless etc.?

In the last months we have provided aid to Haiti , Chile , Pakistan, Libya, Egypt and Turkey .. And now Japan

Literally, BILLIONS of DOLLARS!!!

Our retired seniors living on a 'fixed income' receive no aid nor do they get any breaks while our government and religious organizations pour
Hundreds of Billions of $$$$$$'so and Tons of Food to Foreign Countries!
We have hundreds of adoptable children who are shoved aside to make room for the adoption of foreign orphans.

AMERICA: a country where we have homeless without shelter, children going to bed hungry, elderly going without 'needed' meds, and mentally ill without treatment - etc, etc.

YET.......................
They have a 'Benefit' for the people of Haiti on 12 TV stations, ships and planes lining up with food, water, tents clothes, bedding, doctors and medical supplies.

Imagine if the *GOVERNMENT* gave 'US' the same support they give to other countries.

Sad isn't it?

MARYLAND LAW ENFORCEMENT LAUNCHES ANNUAL CHIEFS’ CHALLENGE CAMPAIGN

Law Enforcement Officials Seek Community Participation in Lifesaving Initiative

Maryland State Police Salisbury Barrack will join more than one hundred law enforcement agencies across the state in an effort to educate the public on the lifesaving and injury-reducing benefits of safety belt/child seat use. Additional attention will focus on the reduction of aggressive driving and driving while impaired. This campaign will take place from May through December 2011.

The Maryland Chiefs of Police, Sheriffs, Campus Safety Directors, and Maryland State Police Barrack Commanders challenge their law enforcement personnel to design community-outreach programs and events to recruit community partners, and to conduct enhanced educational and enforcement initiatives. In Wicomico County, state and local law enforcement officials will be conducting an aggressive driving campaign, entitled the Smooth Operator Program. This enforcement initiative will be from July 3 to July 9, 2011.

10 States That Consume Too Much Fast Food

Want fries with that?

Americans love fast food. (We spent $165 billion on it in 2010.) But we don't all love it equally. Like the obesity rate, fast-food consumption varies widely by region. Residents of some states disproportionately choose fast food over other options when they go out to eat, with consequences for the state’s collective health.

Using government data on the percentage of restaurants in each state that serve fast food and the percentage of dining-out dollars the average resident spends in them each year, Health.com identified the 10 states where fast-food consumption is most prevalent. Here they are, in alphabetical order.

Next: Alabama

Who Is Abandoning Salisbury’s Neighborhoods?

On June 7th Salisbury Mayor Jim Ireton vetoed the budget passed by the Salisbury City Council the previous evening. As we noted at the time, Ireton’s rationale for vetoing the budget was long on rhetoric but short on substance.

One item Ireton used to attack council members Debbie Campbell, Terry Cohen, and Tim Spies was:

Neighborhood Lighting Upgrades - I support. Council has turned its back on taxpayers in the Canal Woods and Spring Chase neighborhoods. Citizens expect city government to hold up its end of the bargain and provide services. …Has council really turned its back on those neighborhoods? Well, if your definition is refusing to spend tax dollars on something because some residents want shiny new street lights then I guess you can make that argument. However, if your definition is providing services WHEN NEEDED then I don’t think so.

Do the neighborhoods of Canal Woods and Spring Chase NEED new street lights? Let’s look.

Canal Woods has, admittedly, an odd mix of street lights. There are some (on the left) that are brown and boxy. There are others that look more like what we think of when we talk about city street lights (on right). They all appear to be working. Therefore we have to ask what all of the hullabaloo is about.

It should also be noted that there is one light as you enter Canal Woods which has a broken lens. The light works, but the lens is broken. The city has a separate budget line for repairing street lights. This has NOTHING to do with the city council’s decision not to replace the lights in Canal Woods.

What about Spring Chase? Their lights (on right) all appear to be working. The neighborhood may want them replaced. Perhaps they offend Jim Ireton’s personal aesthetic. Who knows.

The bottom line is simple – if the neighborhood has working street lights, how is this “abandoning our neighborhoods”?

Perhaps this would just be a case of agreeing to disagree. However, the rhetoric coming from the administration has been increasingly inflammatory, culminating in the Mayor implying that some members of council were racists. In addition, some of the Mayor’s “allies” (in reality people who will support anyone who opposes Campbell, Cohen, and Spies) have resorted to putting up deliberately false information online and claiming that refusing to replace perfectly serviceable street lights is somehow “political payback”. One example is the photo on the left. Posted by one of the more disreputable local bloggers, it purports to be a street light from either Canal Woods or Spring Chase. As evidenced by the photos above, you can clearly see that it is not.

We are forced to ask the question – Couldn’t more be accomplished for city residents by attempting to work together rather than attacking someone because you disagree with them?

The 10 States That Restrict Personal Freedom

The debate about who is “free” in the United States is older than the Bill of Rights. Whether people are better off with laws designed to protect them but limit their freedom, or with very few laws, allowing them to fend for themselves, clouds the issue.

24/7 Wall St. reviewed the George Mason University’s biannual “Freedom in the 50 States” report authored by the school’s Mercatus Center, a libertarian think tank. According to the report’s authors, they “explicitly ground [their] conception of freedom on an individual-rights framework. In [their] view, individuals should be allowed to dispose of their lives, liberties, and properties as they see fit, as long as they do not infringe on the rights of others.” As a result, a more “free” state in the study will have more liberal social policies and more conservative economic policies. The report considered “a wide range of public policies, from income taxation to gun control, from homeschooling regulation to drug policy.

The Freedom report ranks individual liberty of state residents based on three major categories: fiscal freedom, personal freedom, and regulatory freedom. Fiscal freedom involves issues including state taxes, government spending, and wages. Regulatory freedom involves the impact that local laws have on personal economic choices and property, including labor regulation, mandatory health insurance, and eminent domain. Personal freedom involves individual choice, such as the right to drink, smoke and shoot guns.

Is your state among the most restricted when it comes to freedom? Read on to find out.

Rutgers Is Latest College to Sell Naming Rights to Stadium

In contrast to the ubiquity of corporate-named stadiums in the NFL, the vast majority of college football stadiums have stuck with their traditional names. The dominoes may be starting to fall, though, after Rutgers sold the Rutgers Stadium naming rights to High Point Solutions for a reported $6.5 million over 10 years.

NJ.com quotes the Rutgers athletic director, noting he doesn't mention High Point Solutions by name:

"I am satisfied and excited. The climate is difficult for everybody. ... We feel really, really good about it, not only given the climate but also because we were being picky about a partner. We were trying to find someone who has the same core values and a New Jersey-based company. And in the end, we're thrilled with the results."

According to ESPN, Rutgers will be only the 15th school to play home games in a corporately-named stadium, and five of those play in NFL arenas.

Do you think college football will go the NFL soul-selling route, or will tradition continue to hold off greed?

Rutgers reaches stadium naming rights deal [NJ.com via ESPN, Newsvine]

from Phil Villarreal @ The Consumerist

Wicomico County Health Department To Hold Rabies Clinic On 7/13/2011

“ONLY YOU CAN PROTECT YOUR PET FROM RABIES”: Wicomico County Health Department to Hold Rabies Clinic

(Salisbury, MD) The Wicomico County Health Department will be hosting a rabies vaccination clinic on Wednesday, July 13th at the Parsonsburg Fire Department from 6:00 p.m. to 8:00 p.m. Residents interested in bringing their pets for vaccination should be aware of the following:
Pets must be brought by a responsible adult; Dogs must me secured on a leash; Cats must be in a carrier or box with air holes; Only dogs and cats will be vaccinated; Pet owners are encouraged to bring previous rabies vaccination records so that their animals may receive a 3 year vaccine. Otherwise, a 1 year vaccination will be given; $10 per animal. Cash only. No Checks.

Maryland Law requires all dogs and cats older than four months to be currently vaccinated to protect them against rabies. The rabies virus is present in every county in Maryland and every year many pets in Maryland are needlessly euthanized due to exposure to suspected or confirmed rabid animals. Health Officials are urging residents to protect their pets and vaccinate them before it is too late. Rabies vaccine is the best way for pet owners to protect the pets they love.
Vaccination is a simple, easy process. Don’t hesitate to vaccinate. Only you can protect your family and pets from the deadly rabies virus. For more information, please call the Wicomico County Health Department, Environmental Health Division at 410 546-4446 or visit the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention website at http://www.cdc.gov/rabies/.

All animal bites or scratches should be reported to the Wicomico County Health Department at (410) 546-4446 during business hours and 410-543-699

Verdict To Be Announced In Delaware Pediatrician Case

GEORGETOWN, Del. (AP) -- A former Delaware pediatrician charged with sexually assaulting scores of young patients over more than a decade is about to learn the verdict in his criminal trial.

The judge presiding over the case of Earl Bradley was to deliver his verdict on Bradley's guilt or innocence Thursday afternoon.

The 58-year-old Bradley waived his right to a jury trial after the judge denied a defense motion to suppress videotaped evidence seized during a 2009 search of Bradley's former office complex in Lewes. Prosecutors said Bradley recorded more than 13 hours of videos showing him abusing the children, mostly toddlers.

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Today's Survey Question

How do you rate President Obama's handling of the war in Afghanistan?

14-Year-Old Faces Adult Rape Charges

Baltimore Boy Accused Of Raping Teenager

BALTIMORE -- A 14-year-old boy faces adult charges in the rape of a 14-year-old girl, police said.


Baltimore City police said the alleged rape took place May 27 at a house near Union Park.


Police identified the 14-year-old as Shemarr Gilbert, who officers took into custody Wednesday morning.

Source

Sussex County Council to Discuss “Anti-Criticism” Policy

After the American Civil Liberties Union of Delaware complained that an anti-criticism policy for speakers at Sussex County Council meetings violated the law, the council will discuss a possible change to those rules next week.

The county's legal staff has been reviewing the policy -- which bars speakers from personally criticizing county officials -- and a possible draft change may be presented at Tuesday's council meeting, county spokesman Chip Guy said Wednesday.

The ACLU contends the policy, adopted in 2009, is unconstitutional because it discriminates against certain viewpoints. In a letter last month, the organization cited a 2005 federal court ruling in New Jersey that struck down a school board rule barring statements that were "personally directed."

The policy sets time limits for speakers during the "additional business" portion of the weekly meetings, requires residents to speak about county business and bars criticism related to personnel decisions or "matters ... that are personal in nature." It does not bar residents from criticizing county decisions or council members' actions.

The council meeting is scheduled to begin at 10 a.m. at the County Administration Building on The Circle in Georgetown.

from the Wilmington News-Journal

LOST DOG – Lab / Pit Mix

His name is Cullen and he is a 1 1/2 year old Lab / Pit mix. He was wearing a black collar and he got out of his kennel on Sat, June 18th. He is a big part of our family and we miss him!!

We live near the Centre at Salisbury (mall).

If you find Cullen, please contact Kandi at 443-614-1389 or by email at futurekandidavis@yahoo.com

Cardiologist Defends Self at Licensing Hearing

The Towson cardiologist accused of placing cardiac stents into patients who didn't need them had a chance to defend himself Wednesday before the Maryland Board of Physicians, which is deciding whether the doctor should retain his license.

The board that oversees physicians' licensing and discipline had charged Dr. Mark G. Midei last June with falsifying patients' records so it would appear they needed treatment.

Hearings are closed to the public, but Midei's lawyer, Stephen B. Snyder, said the doctor "was able to articulate all the issues before the full board, and I think they were receptive."

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BREAKING NEWS: New Home Sales Fall For First Time In Three Months

Sales of new single-family homes fell 2.1% in May from April to a seasonally-adjusted annual rate of 319,000 units, slightly higher than the 310,000-unit rate economists had been expecting.

Move Over Funnel Cakes, Fried Kool-Aid Is Here

DEL MAR, Calif. (AP) - Move over funnel cakes and corn dogs, deep-fat fried Kool-Aid is here.

"Oh, the moment of truth," said Joe Cocoba, a 31-year-old nursing student before biting into the glistening brown dough ball with a pink fluffy interior. "I can taste it (the Kool-Aid)! It's good."

San Diego County fair goers can't seem to get enough of the newest, oily treat that debuted at "Chicken Charlie's" food stand about two weeks ago when the annual event kicked off at the Del Mar horse race track and fairgrounds, about 20 miles north of San Diego.

Charlie Boghosian _ aka "Chicken Charlie" _ is the man behind the creations. The 42-year-old Boghosian has spent two decades testing the limits of what can be cooked in grease and still taste good. Each year, he adds new, unusual items to his popular food stand.

This year, it's fried Kool-Aid.

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Wicomico Employee Unions Support Public Education, Forgo Negotiations On Pay

As the financial challenges grow to providing public education to Wicomico County children, associations representing the administrators, teachers and classified staff of Wicomico County Public Schools have stepped up to help ensure that available dollars can be spent in the classroom.

This spring, the members of the Wicomico County Education Association (WCEA) and the Association of Public Schools Administrators and Supervisors (APSAS) agreed to continue working under the terms of their existing contracts, without opening negotiations on a pay increase or any language changes. This marks the second consecutive year the members of APSAS have agreed to forgo formal contract negotiations. Wicomico is the only school system in the state in which cooperation of this magnitude is taking place.

“Teachers have recognized the impact the economy has had on the county’s budget as well as the education budget,” said Dave White, president of WCEA, which represents teachers. “While the funds are not there, public education must be there for the county to continue to grow and thrive into the future.”

The principals, assistant principals, other administrators and supervisors who are members of APSAS recognize the financial constraints the school system faces, said Bryan Ashby, WESPA president. “We wanted to be partners in a solution, to keep our relationship with the school system strong.”

The Wicomico Education Support Personnel Association (WESPA), which represents classified employees, sought minimal changes in language in the agreement for its members and did not receive a pay increase for Fiscal Year 2011-12.

For most employees of Wicomico Schools, the 2011-2012 school year will be the third straight year without a step increase or cost-of-living adjustment. In fact, due to recent legislative changes, employees will lose 2% of their pay this year as that amount shifts to cover the cost of administering the state retirement system, helping the state balance its budget. A 2% tax credit for teachers, to help offset the cost of classroom materials they purchase, will be unavailable after December.

“We are very appreciative of our associations working with us and understanding the constraints we are under. Over the past year, we have built a stronger relationship with all of the employee groups, and much greater respect for each others’ roles,” Board President L. Michelle Wright said. “I look forward to another good year of working together on behalf of students through difficult budget times.”

Jason Leopold Discusses New FCC Report On The State Of Local Media (Video)

Truthout Deputy Managing Editor and investigative reporter Jason Leopold spoke with Free Speech TV's Laura Flanders last week during the annual Netroots Nation conference. Flanders and Leopold discussed the state of the media, building off of a recent report issued by the Federal Communications Commission (FCC) that highlighted the need for more local news coverage and underscored the importance of nonprofit media organizations. Flanders and Leopold also talked about the media reform project Truthout has been involved in for the past several months, supported by The Media Consortium, a collective of news organizations that aims to raise awareness and highlight media reform issues such as net neutrality and the proposed merger of AT&T.

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Rent-to-Own Electronics Can Cost You 3 Times Retail

For decades, rent-to-own services like Rent-A-Center have advertised themselves as an affordable way to purchase pricey electronics and appliances by making monthly payments. But while it might seem tempting to make a small monthly payment on a huge TV, an investigation by our smarter siblings at Consumer Reports says you could end up paying upward of three times the retail price if you go the rent-to-own route.

While CR admits there are lures to some rent-to-own plans, like the ability to just return the item to the store when you can no longer make payments, the negatives outweigh the benefits:

“Consider the deal for a $612 Toshiba laptop computer we found at one rent-to-own store. It was being offered at $38.99 a week for 48 weeks, for a total of $1,872, excluding sales tax and other charges. That's the same as buying the laptop at the manufacturer's suggested retail price and financing it at an interest rate of 311 percent. You could buy three of the laptops outright for that $1,872.”

CR points out that you'd actually fare better by financing on a high-interest-rate credit card. Figuring a 29.99% interest rate and still paying $38.99/week (about $156/month), you'd save more than $1,000 compared with renting-to-own and you'd own the laptop in only 20 weeks, instead of 48.

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BREAKING NEWS: U.S. To Release Millions Of Barrels From Oil Reserve

U.S. to release 30 million barrels from Strategic Petroleum Reserve due to Middle East unrest, Energy Department says.

BREAKING NEWS: Plunging Oil Prices, Weak Jobs Data Slam Stocks

The Dow tumbled more than 150 points in early trading after plummeting oil prices and downbeat economic data weighed on traders' confidence.

Cost Of Wars A Rising Issue As Obama Weighs Troop Levels

Washington — President Obama will talk about troop numbers in Afghanistan when he makes a prime-time speech from the White House on Wednesday night. But behind his words will be an acute awareness of what $1.3 trillion in spending on two wars in the past decade has meant at home: a ballooning budget deficit and a soaring national debt at a time when the economy is still struggling to get back on its feet.

As Mr. Obama begins trying to untangle the country from its military and civilian promises in Afghanistan, his critics and allies alike are drawing a direct line between what is not being spent to bolster the sagging economy in America to what is being spent in Afghanistan — $120 billion this year alone.

On Monday, the United States Conference of Mayors made that connection explicitly, saying that American taxes should be paying for bridges in Baltimore and Kansas City, not in Baghdad and Kandahar.

The mayors’ group approved a resolution calling for an early end to the American military role in Afghanistan and Iraq, asking Congress to redirect the billions now being spent on war and reconstruction costs toward urgent domestic needs. The resolution, which noted that local governments cut 28,000 jobs in May alone, was the group’s first venture into foreign policy since it passed a resolution four decades ago calling for an end to the Vietnam War.

And in a speech on the Senate floor on Tuesday, Senator Joe Manchin III, Democrat of West Virginia, said: “We can no longer, in good conscience, cut services and programs at home, raise taxes or — and this is very important — lift the debt ceiling in order to fund nation-building in Afghanistan. The question the president faces — we all face — is quite simple: Will we choose to rebuild America or Afghanistan? In light of our nation’s fiscal peril, we cannot do both.”

Demonstrators describing themselves as “angry jobless citizens” said they would picket the Capitol on Wednesday to urge members of Congress to use any savings from Mr. Obama’s troop reductions to create more jobs. The group sponsoring the demonstration, the Prayer Without Ceasing Party, said in a statement on Tuesday that it was “urging the masses to call their congressmen and the president to ensure that jobs receive a top priority when the troops start returning to America.”

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BREAKING NEWS: Oil Dives Below $92 On IEA Announcement

Crude oil plunges below $92 a barrel after IEA announces plans to release 60 million barrels of emergency oil stockpiles and hints at further action if needed. Half of the release will come from the U.S. Strategic Petroleum Reserve.

Writer Sells 1 Million Self-Published Kindle Books

The publishing industry may be struggling, but you wouldn't know it from the success of some ebook writers, including one who has become the first self-published author to sell 1 million Kindle downloads.
Moco News reports the author, John Locke, is one of only eight to have earned the distinction. His latest book is appropriately 45titled How I Sold 1 Million Ebooks in 5 Months.
The 60-year-old man from Kentucky has written nine novels and sells them for $0.99. That includes his thriller Saving Rachel, which made it to the New York Time's ebook bestseller list.
If you read ebooks, what sort of books do you buy, and how much does pricing play a factor in what you'll try?
The First Self-Published Author To Sell 1 Million Kindle Books [Moco News via Engadget]
from Phil Villarreal @ The Consumerist

Best Buy to Launch Cloud Music Service

Looking to edge in on the turf shared by Amazon, Google and Apple, Best Buy unveiled its own cloud music service, which lets users access their songs stored on remote storage through various devices.
Yahoo News reports Best Buy's service, which will come in free and paid flavors, allows users to store songs offline, potentially saving on data charges that could be culled from having to stream all your tunes. Currently the service piggybacks off your iTunes library, not letting those without iTunes in to play.
Best Buy offers a tutorial on how to use the service in a blog post.
If you use cloud storage for music or data, which service is your favorite?
Best Buy soft launches Music Cloud service [Yahoo News]
from Phil Villarreal @ The Consumerist

BREAKING NEWS: Weekly Jobless Claims Rise

Initial jobless claims came in worse than expected last week, rising to 429,000 from a revised 420,000 the week prior. Economists had expected a smaller increase to 415,000.

Budget Gimmicks Explained

Last week, California Governor Jerry Brown vetoed a budget that he said was filled with gimmicks — or as he put it, “legally questionable maneuvers, costly borrowing and unrealistic savings.” Editorial boards have praised Brown for exercising responsible fiscal judgment. Meanwhile, Brian Joseph of the Orange County Register has written that Brown’s own budget plan uses gimmicks, too.

All this begs the question: What qualifies as a budget gimmick? There’s no textbook answer to that question. But there are certain techniques that states sometimes use to make the budget look balanced when it arguably isn’t. If there’s one thing all of these tricks have in common, it’s that they push this year’s budget problem off into the future.

Here are five common budget gimmicks states use:

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Maryland Board of Education Delays Action on Suspensions

After strong objections surfaced from educators around the state, the Maryland State Board of Education delayed Tuesday any action on proposals to ensure that students who are suspended are dealt with fairly and quickly.

Board members seemed unlikely to be swayed by opposition, but they asked state Education Department staff to gather more information from those who object to their proposals.

The proposal would require a superintendent to decide within 10 days whether a student would be placed on long-term suspension or expelled. If the student receives a long-term suspension, parents have the right to appeal. Some students are being held out of school during the appeal process.

    The board proposes that students must be able to return to school on the first day after they have served their suspension, even if the parents file an appeal.

    The state board has been considering changes to the disciplinary codes because of cases in the past year in which students seemed to have been punished harshly for minor infractions or had no access to schooling while under long-term suspension.

    READ MORE …

    More People Getting Their Clothes Mended or Altered

    Now that the economic downturn has well set in and there's no booming recovery around the corner, it's a good moment to take stock of the little things that have changed. Ed, a dry cleaner in Brooklyn, says, "I'm seeing a lot more repairs, a lot more patches."

    Instead of throwing away clothes that have a rip or don't fit, more of his customers are asking for work done. His customers are telling him, "Let it out, let it in," he says, getting pants that are too tight adjusted, dresses that are too wide cinched up.

    It seems the "everything is disposable" mentality has gone in for alterations.

    "People are holding onto stuff longer," says Ed.

    And not to put Ed out of a job, but if you want to save even more money than just repairing clothes rather than buying new ones, here's a complete guide to mending your own clothes.

    Are you a small business owner? How have you noticed your customers' behaviors changing in response to harder times? Sound off in the comments.

    How to Mend Clothes [HowStuffWorks]

    from Ben Popken @ The Consumerist

    Barry Brittingham Appointed to Worcester Board of Ed

    Tuesday, June 21, 2011, the Worcester County Commissioners appointed Barry Brittingham, Sr. to fill the District 2 vacancy on the Board of Education (BOE).

    Mr. Brittingham is a graduate of Stephen Decatur High School. He served the nation as a member of the United States Army for three years and went on to serve the residents of our community as a member of the Worcester County Sheriff’s Office for 26 years prior to retiring in August 2010.

    Mr. Brittingham has been married to his wife, Iris, for 33 years. The couple has three grown children, all of whom attended Worcester County public schools and graduated from Stephen Decatur High School. Mr. Brittingham volunteers with many area nonprofit agencies and is an active member of the community.

    For more information, contact Kim Moses, public information officer, at (410) 632-1194.

    Delaware Senate Passes Tax-Cut Legislation for Banks

    Legislation that would lower taxes on banks based in Delaware and provide subsidies for new jobs created in the financial-services industry flew through the state Senate on Tuesday.

    Senate Bill 91, which passed 21-0 with no debate, would reduce the alternative bank franchise tax rate and lower the amount of assets that Delaware-based banks hold nationally that are subject to the levy.

    The bill also creates a $1,250 tax credit for every new job created for banks that bring 200 or more new jobs to the state and invest at least $15,000 per new employee in capital improvements.

    Cutting the alternative bank franchise tax would require lawmakers to forgo $3.4 million of revenue in the 2012 fiscal year that begins July 1 and $8.5 million in revenue in the 2013 fiscal year.

    READ MORE …

    Artists Wanted for Outdoor Paint Event

    $1000 to First Prize Winner!

    Artists may still join the Ocean City Paint Out scheduled for Saturday and Sunday, July 16th and 17th.  One Thousand Dollars will be awarded the winner of “Artists Paint Ocean City” on Saturday and Sunday, July 16thand 17th.  The second prize is $500 and third is $250.  The Art League of Ocean City is sponsoring this event and the Ocean City Development Corporation is providing the prize money.  Artists will paint throughout the city.  A complimentary light fare dinner will be served to artists (and guest) on Saturday at the Art League of Ocean City.  On Sunday from 4—7:30 pm there will be a show exhibit and sale on Somerset Street off the boardwalk.

    “We are excited about the number of artists who have signed up for this event and hope visitors take advantage of the opportunity to buy local artwork at the sale on Sunday.  We are fortunate to have so many talented artists participating,” said ALOC president, Margaret Spurlock.

    Artists may register by July 1st and get further information by calling the Art League at 410-524-9433, Paige Ruby at 410-208-1614, Margaret Spurlock at 410-218-6380 or online at www.artleagueofoceancity.org

    Smoke from Carolina Fire Arrives in Worcester County

    Areas of Worcester County are experiencing smoke and odor conditions resulting from a wildfire that originated in Dare County, North Carolina. 

    The Worcester County Fire Marshal’s Office urges residents to be aware of this situation and to avoid calling 911 to report general, non-specific smoke and odor conditions, which may be caused from the North Carolina fire. This would assist Worcester County Emergency Services, the Fire Marshal’s Office and our volunteer fire companies from using resources unnecessarily. 

    The smoke from the North Carolina fire has traveled up the Eastern Shore, prompting calls to the Worcester County Fire Marshal's Office from individuals in the Pocomoke, Public Landing, Stockton, Girdletree, Snow Hill and Assateague Island areas. Today's strong northeasterly winds have driven the smoke inland in some areas of the county. 

    The National Weather Service has advised the Worcester County area could see a worse condition this evening due to the winds decreasing, the heat and high humidity.  An Air Quality Alert is likely later this afternoon.

    We greatly appreciate the public’s increased awareness and cooperation during this period.  As always, please dial 911 to report any specific emergencies. Information about the smoke advisory is available at http://www.erh.noaa.gov/akq.

    Libertarians, Greens Get Back on Ballot for 2014

    The Libertarian and Green parties regained their official status on election ballots Tuesday after retired Anne Arundel Circuit Judge Eugene Lerner found they had collected enough signatures on petitions.

    “It is great news for third parties in Maryland,” said Libertarian Party Chairman Bob Johnston.

    The judge ruled that the State Board of Elections should not have invalidated many of the signatures the parties collected on petitions. The candidates for governor of the two minor parties did not receive enough votes last year to continue their official status, and needed to collect registered voters’ signatures to get back on the ballot.

    Lerner found that there was “sufficient cumulative information” on the petitions to validate that the signatures were from registered voters. The decision is part of long-running legal disputes over what information is required from voters who sign petitions.

    The ruling means that the two parties can nominate candidates in Baltimore City municipal elections this year and on state ballots through 2014.

    “Obviously we disagree with the judge’s decision,” said David Paulson, a spokesman for the attorney general’s office, which represented the elections board. “No decision has been made about appealing, but obviously that is an option.”

    Mark Grannis, an attorney for the political parties, said the parties had each collected more than 12,000 signatures. They needed to collect 10,000 to regain their official status.

    from Len Lazarick @ Maryland Reporter

    GOP Awards Business with Tort Reform

    For the last two decades, Larry Mocha has had a simple request for lawmakers in his home state of Oklahoma: make it harder for people to file lawsuits against businesses.

    Mocha, the 65-year-old owner of APSCO, Inc., a small, Tulsa-based company that makes truck parts, has a personal reason for his pursuit. In the late 1980s, he faced a pair of lawsuits from people claiming that faulty parts made by Mocha’s firm had led to personal injuries. Mocha strongly denied the accusations, but he never had a chance to prove himself in court because his insurance company — fearful of a big payout if a jury sided with the plaintiffs — forced him to settle, costing the insurer $600,000. Later, the insurance company dropped him altogether, even though he insists he never did anything wrong in the first place.

    The episode was a turning point for Mocha. He says it nearly cost him the business that his father had started in 1964. He joined the local, state and national chambers of commerce — even rising to the level of board member with the U.S. Chamber — and lobbied lawmakers relentlessly in Oklahoma City and Washington to do more to protect businesses from the threat of costly lawsuits. He says he visited the nation’s capital for the first time in the early 1990s and “knocked on every Senate door” in an attempt to draw attention to his cause.

    READ MORE …

    TSA Modifies Screening of Young Children

    After incidents like this pat-down of an infant at a Kansas City airport landed the Transportation Security Administration in a public relations mess, the head of the agency said this morning that TSA has changed its policies regarding the screening of small children.

    Speaking to the Senate Homeland Security and Governmental Affairs Committee, TSA chief John Pistole said screeners have been told to make repeated attempts to screen young children instead of resorting to a pat-down.

    Even so, Senator Rand Paul took Pistole to task over the screening of children:

    READ MORE …

    Recall Elections Surge in State and Local Governments

    The new president of Arizona's state Senate, Russell Pearce, had only 21 days to enjoy that position before opponents began circulating petitions in January to recall the freshly reelected conservative.

    That's more time than Jim Suttle had. The night the Democrat was elected mayor of Omaha in 2009, backers of his rivals began to talk online about trying to remove him from office. Suttle barely survived a recall election in January.

    Once a political rarity, recall elections are surging in local and state governments.

    The number of mayors who faced recalls doubled in 2010 from the previous year, the U.S. Conference of Mayors said. Anti-tax activists even tried to recall two Democratic U.S. senators last year, only to be shot down by courts, which noted that there are no provisions for recalls in federal law.

    READ MORE …

    The Rise of “Declinism” in 2012 Presidential Race

    “Declinism” is everywhere in Republican presidential politics these days.

    Former Minnesota governor Tim Pawlenty used the word while defending his ambitious economic plan at last week’s debate; “This president is a declinist,” Pawlenty said. “He views America as one of equals around the world.”

    The term was also regularly invoked at this weekend’s Republican Leadership Conference in New Orleans — particularly by Rep.Thaddeus McCotter (R-Mich.), a longshot potential presidential candidate.

    All of the “declinism” talk prompts a simple question: What is it exactly?

    READ MORE …

    Pulitzer Winner Admits That He Is An Illegal Alien

    A Pulitzer Prize-winning journalist who covered presidential politics and the 2007 Virginia Tech shootings for The Washington Post is going on network television to announce he is an illegal immigrant

    Jose Antonio Vargas tells ABC News in interviews airing Thursday and Friday that he is outing himself as one of millions of illegal U.S. immigrants after living with the secret for years. He also told his story in a New York Times Magazine essay published online Wednesday. 

    "I'm done running. I'm exhausted," Vargas wrote. "I don't want that life anymore." 

    He referred a request for comment to his public relations team, which did not immediately make him available Wednesday. 

    READ MORE …

    Club for Growth Goes After Jon Huntsman

    The conservative powerhouse Club for Growth has taken a decidedly harsh view of former Utah governor Jon Huntsman’s fiscal approach in a new, detailed analysis of his record in office.

    While Huntsman’s tax policies get a positive review, his record on government spending, regulation and health-care reform come in for considerable criticism in a new “presidential white paper” released by the Club.

    “Between his inexcusable record on spending and his statement that ‘health care is a right’, Governor Huntsman has a lot of explaining to do if he wants to win the Republican nomination,” said Club for Growth President Chris Chocola.

    In its white paper, the Club notes that Huntsman at one point considered an individual mandate for health-care coverage and created a government-run health-care exchange. The organization argues that he expanded state government unnecessarily in the 2000s.

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    Don’t Bend Your iPod

    Adolescence is a time for people to learn by doing, but here's one bit of advice we'd like share with the future of America now: As tempting as it may be, don't go bending your iPod — or really any electronic device — back and forth until it breaks, the battery explodes and the ambulances come.

    Unfortunately, our words come too late for a New Hampshire high-schooler, who felt the need to mangle his iPod until the casing broke and the battery inside began sparking and smoking.

    A second lesson we'll share with the youth of today, if this happens, don't pour water on your sparking and hissing iPod.

    READ MORE …

    Texas Woman Stops Robbery “Punks”

    Disgusted with all the "lawlessness" these days,  a brave Texas woman chased three men who tried to steal a few cases of beer from a Walmart, the Houston Chronicle reported. Ironically, the heroine's name is Monique Lawless.

    On Sunday, she watched three men walk out of the store without paying for the cases of beers they had in tow. Determined to stop them, Lawless told the clerk to watch her purse.

    READ MORE …