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15 result(s) for "Smart, F Edward"
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Tiny plantation honors longtime town selectman 55-year veteran has no plans to retire
SEBOEIS PLANTATION - Friends and residents of this tiny plantation of about 40 people on Saturday will honor F. Edward Smart, who has served as the town's assessor/selectman for 55 years. Smart, who was born here, has no plans to retire from town service. This year he stepped down as chairman of the Board of Assessors and Selectmen, but is still serving as second assessor/ selectman. Smart was a dairy farmer and worked at a Howland sawmill making boat oars and canoe paddles. Later he and his wife, Georgia, operated a cross-country ski area at the family homestead.
Senators Express Concerns About Security of 5G Networks
Members of the Senate Commerce, Science, and Transportation Committee this week expressed concerns about the security of 5G networks, especially due to Chinese telecom vendor Huawei Technologies Co. Ltd. Lawmakers and witnesses at the hearing, the committee's first of the 116th Congress, also discussed a myriad of other topics, including the importance of making additional spectrum, especially mid-band frequencies, available to carriers. [...]the administration should provide us with a real, quantifiable 5G threat assessment so we can work fully to make sure our network is secure. \"With the telecommunications industry on the precipice of significant new investments in equipment and software to power 5G services, it is critically important that federal authorities charged with national security decisions provide clear, unambiguous directions regarding the national security needs for all communications networks,\" he added.
Trade Publication Article
HAMPTON HIGH BAND DIRECTOR ACQUITTED, SCOLDED
\"The sun doesn't set, nor rise, nor does the world revolve, around your band,\" said Hampton General District Court Judge C. Edward Knight III, adding that [Tory F. Smart] should \"plug into reality.\" After hearing testimony from police, Knight said Smart might not have \"knowingly\" interfered with officers performing their duties. \"He is getting the benefit of the doubt,\" Knight said. \"There's a question over whether (obstructing justice) was truly his intent.\" One officer, Michael Brown, said that when he explained to Smart that he had to stop his band to help quell the fighting, Smart responded: \"It's your job to deal with those people, and I'll deal with my band.\" And officer Norberto Cruz testified that when he tried to get band members themselves to stop playing, Smart told them: \"Don't listen (to the police officer). Listen to me.\"
PART II: OBITUARY OF EMINENT PERSONS DECEASED IN 1915
JANUARY (pg. 131-135). FEBRUARY (pg. 135-139). MARCH (pg. 139-144). APRIL (pg. 144-149). MAY (pg. 149-153). JUNE (pg. 153-156). JULY (pg. 156-159). AUGUST (pg. 159-162). SEPTEMBER (pg. 162-167). OCTOBER (pg. 167-172). NOVEMBER (pg. 172-174). DECEMBER (pg. 174-178).
Lawmakers Rush to Back a National Alert System
Sensitive to public sentiment, members of the House and Senate conducted dueling news conferences blaming one another for inaction. Amber alerts, in which bulletins about abductions are quickly distributed through the news and posted on highway signs, were named in recognition of Amber Hagerman, a 9-year-old Texas girl who was kidnapped and killed in 1996.
Not all of city's woes are Street's fault
For those who throw the words \"corruption\" and \"pay-to-play\" around blithely, consider that after an exhaustive, fine-toothed comb of an investigation, city treasurer Corey Kemp was the only city official indicted and convicted. That's one person in eight years. None would be the goal but only one doesn't hint at the magnitude of corruption that the mayor has been associated with, according to his detractors. The sports complex was completed and veritable Center City rebirth occurred, including projects like the National Constitution Center, the President's House, the Kimmel Center and the Symphony House.