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284 result(s) for "Guthrie. F"
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BIRTHS LAKE MEDICAL CENTER
Mr. and Mrs. Larry Brewer, Leesburg, girl; Mr. and Mrs. Frank Fodrie, Mount Dora, girl; Mr. and Mrs. Jerry Stringfellow, Mount Dora, girl.
Portion of I-29 named after fallen trooper
\"The life of Fred Guthrie will not soon be forgotten,' said State Rep. Nick Marshall, 30th District. \"Because the magnitude of what Trooper Guthrie was able to accomplish in his short time with us is truly amazing.' The memorial highway along I-29 between Missouri Highway 273 and Missouri Route E was officially renamed the Trooper Fred F. Guthrie Jr., Memorial Highway. Mr. Guthrie was a resident of Platte County but was assigned to the area of Big Lake on Missouri Highway 118 at Missouri Highway 111 in Holt County, Mo. \"No greater sacrifice was that of Trooper Guthrie offering up his own life protecting and serving his community,' Mr. Marshall said. \"True greatness doesn't come from your position but comes through service. He was a hero.'
HIGHER FALSE-ALARM FINES ARE PROPOSED ; COUNCILMAN SAYS UNNECESSARY CALLS ARE WASTING TIME
\"False alarms could be stopped,\" [Dion F. Guthrie] said. \"If you set one off, you pick up the phone and give them a code. Then they turn it off and stop the policeman from coming. But it's easier to say, `I'll tell them when they get here.' That's not what we want.\" \"Whenever deputies respond to an alarm, no matter how many times they've been there, they have to walk around the perimeter,\" said Sgt. Christina Presberry, spokeswoman for the county sheriff's office. \"When we get these false alarms, it does take the deputy a while to clear that call. That's the big point: It's time- consuming.\" \"It takes about 20 minutes at the larger schools,\" said Sgt. Douglas Keithley of the county sheriff's office, who often responds to false-alarm calls. \"You have to walk around the schools. There's nothing you can do in five minutes. You walk around, look at the windows, check the doors and look into the classroom.\"
Harford debates facilities statute ; School-crowding law said to be broken
[Dion F. Guthrie]'s concerns focused on three schools in the Fallston area - C. Milton Wright High School, Fallston Middle School and Fallston High School. The schools are each projected to be over capacity for the coming school year, but are predicted to fall below the 105 percent threshold next year when the opening of a new middle and high school complex will trigger countywide redistricting. Guthrie said there is no guarantee that the new school at Patterson Mill will open on schedule or that redistricting will achieve the goal of relieving pressure in Fallston. He called them \"assumptions.\" \"With the addition of Patterson Mill, capacity issues at most middle and high schools will be under APF limits, at least for the short term. The exception appears to be Aberdeen H.S. which will be over the limit,\" wrote the board's chairman, Councilman Richard C. Slutzky, in a May report.
Marie F. Guthrie
  Survivors include her husband of 55 years, Charles W. Guthrie of Lynn Haven; her children, Cynthia Smith and husband, David, of Milton, Fla., David Guthrie and wife, Sandi, Kenneth Guthrie and wife, Amy, all of Southport, Fla., and Cathrine Mount and husband, Kelly Jr., of Lynn Haven; her brother, James R.
Measure could suspend building ; School crowding bill aims to control development; Lower enrollment cap sought; Some say more would stifle growth in county
A bill to be introduced Tuesday by County Councilman Dion F. Guthrie to address the problem of crowded schools would shut down the bulk of the southern half of Harford County to new housing development, according to county officials. Guthrie's bill is similar to one proposed two weeks ago in Baltimore County that was designed to ease school crowding there. Anne Arundel, Carroll and Howard counties also have adequate public facilities laws that bar development in regions where schools are crowded. Tina Janouris, president of the Harford County Council of PTAs, welcomed the new effort to reduce class size. She said her organization, an umbrella group of county PTAs, \"has long endorsed reducing the adequate public facilities threshold number to 105 percent.\"
CORRECTIONS AND CLARIFICATIONS
An article in Sunday's editions about drinking water in the Jacksonville area of Baltimore County included an incomplete account of an attorney's description of carbon filtration systems for wells.
Correction
An article in Sunday's editions about drinking water in the Jacksonville area of Baltimore County included an incomplete account of an attorney's description of carbon filtration systems for wells. Such systems are not typically recommended for use by people with compromised or undeveloped immune systems if the filtration systems do not include an ultraviolet light to reduce bacteria growth, said Mary V. Koch, a lawyer representing area residents in a class action lawsuit.
CITY/COUNTY DIGEST
A Howard County business executive has been indicted by a grand jury on two felony sexual offense charges involving a minor, a spokesman for the state's attorney's office said yesterday. Steven R. Chamberlain, 50, chairman of Lanham-based Integral Systems Inc., was charged with two misdemeanors in June, accused of sexually assaulting a 14-year-old girl in his home between November 2003 and May 2004. The charges were made public in a Securities and Exchange filing in November. The misdemeanor charges were dropped yesterday and replaced with the felony third-degree sexual offense and sexual abuse of a minor charges, said T. Wayne Kirwan, spokesman for the state's attorney's office. Efforts to reach Chamberlain by phone yesterday evening at his addresses in Columbia and Clarksville were unsuccessful.
Adequate facilities proposals rejected ; Harford amendments targeted school crowding
The council rejected all four of the task force's proposed amendments, which were introduced by [Dion F. Guthrie]. They included: A proposal from the Harford County Council of PTAs that preliminary approval for new housing construction be withheld by the county in any school district in which a school exceeds 110 percent of its designed capacity or is projected to reach 110 percent in four years. Guthrie first proposed changes in the APF laws, as they are commonly called, in March when he sought to correct situations that has some schools operating at 20 percent and 29 percent above their student capacity.