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An issue of (gun) control

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One of the contributors to Red Maryland scoffed today at City Councilman Jim Kraft’s attempt to bring legislative powers to the Baltimore City Council to regulate guns.

“The faith of liberals in laws, no matter how sporadically or inefficiently enforced, never ceases to amaze,” writes RM’s streiff.

For his part, Kraft argued at Monday’s council meeting, “Our colleagues in other parts of the state don’t really understand the severity of the gun problem in Baltimore. We need to be able to pass our own laws.”

streiff’s argument:

1. The criminals in Baltimore who use firearms — and there are many — wouldn’t be deterred by the prospect of breaking a law.

2. It has been “fairly well documented” that Baltimore juries are reluctant to convict accused felons. (Can any attorneys speak to this?)

The situation’s definitely a bleak one, but Streiff seems to be of the opinion that there’s nothing we can do to curb the illegal use of firearms in the city (“assuming for the sake of argument that criminals can be deterred at all”).

Would a stricter gun control law have any effect on violent crime, and should the City Council be able to pass one?

Is there anything that can be done legislatively, or are outreach programs and community centers a better approach?

-JACKIE SAUTER, Multimedia Editor

Category: Baltimore

Black bear brouhaha

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After a lot of protesting and politicking, Maryland’s black bear hunting season ended much more quietly than it started.

The hunt ran from Monday, Oct. 22, to Thursday, Oct. 25, with 51 bears killed. Our Department of Natural Resources had a target of between 50 and 70 bears, with 59 percent of the successful hunters living in the hunt area of Garrett and Allegany counties.

DNR opened up Maryland’s first bear-hunting season in 2004 after 51 years. This year, 2,804 hunters put their name in the lottery for a permit, with 452 getting to participate. Doesn’t exactly sound like a free-for-all bloodbath to me.

All these numbers may seem cold and meaningless to those groups who vehemently campaigned against the hunt, but I would be curious to see how many of those upset with the hunt actually live in the western counties where the bear population is centered. Also, if the DNR couldn’t use a well-managed hunting program to control the population, what other methods could they use for a species that has bounced back in recent years?

The DNR is not the NRA, and it would seem to me that the biologists in the field have a better understanding of the issue than those on their soapbox several counties away.

-FRANCIS SMITH, Special Publications Assistant Editor

Category: Uncategorized

Under Armour’s next challenge

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Now that they’ve conquered the sports world, Under Armour is looking to take over the malls of America.

The apparel maker is kicking off its crusade at the Westfield Annapolis Mall Thursday when it opens up a 4,500-square-foot store — just a fraction of a 240-000-square foot addition at the mall.

The store is worthy of a TV studio — with CNBC in town to do a live spot that’s exactly what it was when I visited yesterday. You walk into it from the mall through a tunnel and are welcomed with gray walls and lights hanging down. The company was going for the look and feel of a stadium’s underbelly — sans the musty smell of standing water, I would assume.

Like most stores these days, there are bright colors, blaring bass-driven music and videos. In all, it’s designed to attract the younger sports enthusiast.

But the question is, will this work? Are amateur athletes really going to go to the mall for their gear when they can run into the nearest Dick’s Sporting Goods? Will they undertake the challenges of holiday traffic and parking lots filled with minivans to buy their latest running shoes when they can go online?

Only time will tell. But I’m not one who likes to wait. So let me know: Will you frequent the mall for the latest Under Armour gear or will you keep going to Dick’s, Modell’s or the World Wide Web?

-LOUIS LLOVIO, Business Writer

Category: Business, maryland

On the agenda: freedom for cable?

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Reports are swirling today, suggesting that the FCC will change the rules that keep apartment-dwellers from choosing their own cable providers.

The change, which would allow residents in apartment buildings to choose providers similarly to how cell phone service operates, is on the agenda for today’s hearing.

NYT quotes Kevin J. Martin, chairman of the commission: “Exclusive contracts have been one of the most significant barriers to competition.”

Mr. Martin has also pressed the cable companies to offer so-called “a la carte” plans that would permit subscribers to buy individual channels, or groups of channels, at lower rates than they now pay. Here’s what cable operators say about prices at present (PDF).

Are your choices for cable service limited, like mine are? I have only one choice in my building: Comcast, which is notorious for terrible customer service.

Would you be interested in an a la carte plan? If so, which channels would you want?

-JACKIE SAUTER, Multimedia Editor

Category: Business

Towson U president plays nicely online

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Bob Caret, president of Towson University, has a Facebook profile and a blog – and he’s proud of it.

In a recent BBJ article, the school administrator discussed the level to which he’s embraced social media to “connect” with his students.

“I don’t think we have any choice when it comes to using the new technology,” Caret told the BBJ.

And even though he only has about 50 friends (the average college student has a couple hundred, at least), Caret only befriends students that he knows personally – a rarity on the site, where students often compete for the most “friends”.

Caret’s level of restraint wasn’t echoed by Salisbury Univ. President Janet Dudley Eshbach, who came under fire earlier this month when her family photographs – and captions – were considered inappropriate by some viewers.

Do you have a Facebook profile? Have you checked out your son or daughter’s? What kind of privacy settings would you set?

-JACKIE SAUTER, Multimedia Editor

Category: Uncategorized

Haunted halls of academe

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According to a story on the Capital News Service wire, several buildings at some of Maryland’s colleges and universities are haunted.

At the University of Maryland, College Park, the Rossborough Inn on U.S. Route 1 is home to “Miss Betty,” who is rumored to have been a nurse at the inn during the Civil War. She has been sighted by several people wearing a yellow dress.

At Morrill Hall, mysterious noises and smells have been detected, and on stormy nights, according to Anne Turkos, an archivist at Hornbake Library, people have heard a piano playing in Marie Mount Hall, even though there hasn’t been a piano in the building for years.

For more ghostly tales, check out the Web site of the Maryland Ghost and Spirit Association, which tracks and documents apparitions around the state.

What ghostly spirits have you seen or heard?

-PAUL SAMUEL, Associate Editor

Category: University of Maryland

Doing the minimum

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The U.S. Congress is doing its best to do nothing with the alternative minimum tax (AMT) yet again. It seems the tax that was intended to affect only a certain higher-income tax bracket will hit a larger swath of taxpayers than it did last year. What’s the reason? No adjustment for inflation.

Is there a reason for not having this adjustment that a regular accounting-impaired individual like myself could understand? Better yet, does anyone think the AMT will ever simply do what it was intended to do?

Of course, our representatives and senators have known all year long that this had to be dealt with, yet it’s still on the books with no real resolution. So, now the IRS is only a few weeks away from having its paperwork and software ready for this upcoming tax year, and our lawmakers’ inaction or action will have serious consequences.

Either more income-earners fall under the AMT than last tax year, or the whole filing process is delayed from the get-go (due to new forms and software required to deal with congressional changes) if Congress does the unexpected — and does something.

-FRANCIS SMITH, Special Publications Assistant Editor

Category: taxes

Business news anchor or adult film star?

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According to Radar magazine, I know Fox Business better than Rupert Murdoch himself.

That’s because I scored an 8/10 on its “Fox Business Anchor or Porn Star?” quiz.

Now, the attractiveness of cable news anchors is no secret; neither is its influence on hiring decisions.

You can view pictures and descriptions of the anchorwomen on newsgroper.com, where the reviewer says he watches the channel on mute. Some of their advice (“Always take your receipt”) and backgrounds (reporter for Lifetime Television) is slightly hair-raising. However, one is a former Goldman analyst and CNBC correspondent and another worked for CNN.

Are Rupert’s cronies better-looking (or less qualified, or both) than their counterparts at CNBC or MSNBC?

Or, are they unfairly targeted because Murdoch makes waves?

-JACKIE SAUTER, Multimedia Editor

Category: Uncategorized

First responders to fire… an insurance company?

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Wildfires are ravaging homes in southern California this week, but there are a select few homeowners who may be able to rest easy.

They are clients of American International Group, Inc., which offers a Wildfire Protection Unit for 150 ZIP codes in California and Colorado.

The unit has six trucks armed with fire retardant and hoses that respond whenever a fire comes within three miles of a client’s home.

As Bloomberg reports, “such protection doesn’t come cheap. It’s available only to customers of AIG Private Client Group, which serves affluent individuals and their families. The average customer spends $19,000 a year on the insurance, which may also cover yachts, art collections and ransom demands.”

It’s worth repeating: ransom demands.

About 55,000 customers are with AIG Private Client Group in the U.S.; and about 150 homes have been helped this week.

How much would you pay for this service?

Is it right that some homeowners may lose their house, while a neighbor’s home is protected?

-JACKIE SAUTER, Multimedia Editor

Above: Nick Atkins, of the U.S. Dept. of Forestry, hoses down a burning cottage near Running Springs, Calif., Tuesday, Oct. 23. (AP Photo/Marcio Jose Sanchez)

Category: Uncategorized

The art of the power breakfast

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You hear a lot of talk these days about the importance of breakfast. It’s not just for nutrition’s sake anymore; it’s key to business success.

The WSJ published a review of the best power breakfasts earlier this week, and the descriptions were enough to get my mouth watering. Raymond Sokolov enjoyed lemon souffle pancakes and oatmeal brulee while eavesdropping on the hurried conversations of movers and shakers, coast to coast.

He writes:

For one, the power breakfast is the least exclusive, easiest reservation to cop in the whole frenzied universe of fine dining. In fact, you don’t need a reservation (except perhaps at the Regency) and you absolutely don’t need to spend the night in the hotel where you consume your gilt-edged lox.

Other people with my lack of star quality have also figured this out, and you will see many of them, along with normal and subnormal hotel guests in Los Angeles’s Bel-Air and Peninsula hotels, at Boston’s Langham as well as at the Hay-Adams in Washington and New York’s Regency.

Our sister blog also dug into the topic, recently adding a weekly “Freshly Squeezed” post from one of Long Island’s hot breakfast spots.

To you, I ask: do you dine out for breakfast? If so, where do you choose to start your day in Baltimore?

-JACKIE SAUTER, Multimedia Editor

Category: Business

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