Paul J. DiBartolo
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On the Blog Post A Candidate’s Blog: Transcript Five
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On the Blog Post Kubrick's Paths of Glory

Paul J. DiBartolo
2:10 pm on Tuesday, May 21, 2013
Thank you, Robert, for the comment. As for bias, your comment about the French seems to suggest that they thought Kubrick had a bias against...what is your personal opinion? Did you think there was any bias evidenced on Kubrick's part that came through in the film?
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On the Blog Post Kubrick's Paths of Glory

Paul J. DiBartolo
2:07 pm on Tuesday, May 21, 2013
Thanks for the reply, Matt. (Thank you, also, for ignoring the inhuman Bean). One last question, which did not get answered, did you think there was any bias evidenced on Kubrick's part that came through in the film.
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On the Blog Post A Candidate’s Blog: Transcript Five

Paul J. DiBartolo
1:10 pm on Tuesday, May 21, 2013
Yea, I can set my watch by this. Nothing like continuity.
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On the Blog Post A Candidate’s Blog: Transcript Five

Paul J. DiBartolo
9:20 am on Tuesday, May 21, 2013
>> "If you do not want to get a ticket- don't go thru a red light and break the law."
>> "Just stop at the red light and you won't get a ticket."It always comes down to that, right? I can always tell when someone has actually read the blog. You, my friends (James, Diane, and Ron), have not. Either that or you did not understand it. I prefer to give you the benefit of the doubt and accept that you didn't have the time to read it before making your comment.
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On the Blog Post Kubrick's Paths of Glory

Paul J. DiBartolo
7:58 am on Tuesday, May 21, 2013
Matt, could you elaborate for us, please? Exactly how hip was this teacher? Back in my day we had teachers that were smoking grass and probably sharing it with some of the sutdents; is that considered hip? What about this particular teacher is it that you think made him/her hip; surely not just showing this movie? And then the great idea to show this to young people to teach them about war...what was it that made this piece such a great representative movie to show high-schoolers about war? Does this movie have a bias one way or the other in your opinion? If so, is that what makes it so great and was that bias clear to the students watching it?
BTW, given that none of you went to the movie theater to pay to see this movie, wouldn't you say that you were all somewhat of a captive audience? -
On the article Camden County to Introduce Bike & Trail Master Plan

Paul J. DiBartolo
10:31 pm on Sunday, May 19, 2013
You know me, Deb, if it wasn't for sarcasm...oh well.
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On the Blog Post A Candidate’s Blog: Transcript Five

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On the Blog Post Sequester Closes IRS May 24, Four Other Days; Filing and Payment Deadlines Unchanged
Paul J. DiBartolo
11:36 am on Sunday, May 19, 2013
ReplyUnpaid vacation...bad idea...more idle time to think up groups to harass. You see, it was all done by the lower class of worker; upper-management knew nothing about it. It was all just a big joke. Who's got time for a bunch of whiny taxpayers don't know how to take a joke?
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On the article Camden County to Introduce Bike & Trail Master Plan

Paul J. DiBartolo
11:32 am on Sunday, May 19, 2013
"I need your clothes, your boots and your bicycle." (thanks to Ahh-nold)
Paul J. DiBartolo
5:34 pm on Tuesday, May 21, 2013
Regarding speed limits: the Black Horse Pike, what I would call the alternate route from north-to-south, is basically one lane in both directions with a center lane for turning and has posted speed limits of 40-mph and 45-mph with the exception of the middle of town (Blackwood center city, at least). After Church Street passes beneath Route 42 and changes into Blackwood Clementon Road, it widens into two lanes in both directions and at points includes three lanes in a single direction. Blackwood Clementon Road is not residential so I'm wondering what the traffic engineers were thinking when they made it so wide if not to support 50-mph traffic. The normal state speed limit, unless posted, is 25-mph residential and 50-mph business.