By Rand Paul
Obama acts as though we no longer have a Constitution
Independent voices from the TWT Communities

In his 26 years with The Washington Times' sports section, Dave Fay left lasting impressions on everyone that he met. He's been described as crusty, cynical, blunt, sour and above all else, a good man.
TODAY ON WASHINGTONTIMES.COM
TODAY ON WASHINGTONTIMES.COM
TODAY ON WASHINGTONTIMES.COM
.296/.398/.523, 458 HRs, 1,512 RBI, 225 SB
.297/.381/.477, 287 HRs, 1,257 RBI, 147 SB
.296/.398/.523, 458 HRs, 1,512 RBI, 225 SB
"I was really surprised at how there was definitely a segment of our fan base that kind of revered him for being the guy that was there every day for so long," former Times writer Corey Masisak said. "I mean, the guy's in the Hall of Fame — I don't think there's really any other way to put it."
"Guys our age say that people older than us were old-school, mostly because they were old. But I think he kind of was — he really lived by all the old-school newspaper guidelines and didn't take crap from anybody," Masisak said. "There were a couple stories that went around the press box at Verizon Center that were pretty legendary ... right before I took over the beat, a guy ticked him off, and he threw coffee on him."