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Monday, May 07, 2012

DealBook: Investors Likely to Reserve Judgment on France and more - Edited by Andrew Ross Sorkin The New York Times

DealBook: Investors Likely to Reserve Judgment on France and more - Edited by Andrew Ross Sorkin The New York Times
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1. M & A: Judge Halts Martin Marietta Bid for Vulcan Materials
2. INVESTMENT BANKING: Stock Trading Continues to Fall After Crisis
3. PRIVATE EQUITY: Blackstone Said to Be Set for a Calpers Investment
4. HEDGE FUNDS: Hedge Fund Intensifies Attack on Yahoo Amid Storm Over Padded
Résumés
5. OFFERINGS: Is Mark Zuckerberg Ready to Lead a Public Company?
6. VENTURE CAPITAL: Which Start-Up Is the Next Big Thing?
7. LEGAL/REGULATORY: Dewey Leadership Acknowledges the Firm Could Close
- Top Story -

DealBook: Edited by Andrew Ross Sorkin The New York Times
Monday, May 7, 2012
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To view this email with images, go to:
http://www.nytimes.com//indexes/2012/05/07/dealbook/dealbookemail/index.html
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For the latest updates, go to:
http://www.nytimes.com/dealbook
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TOP STORIES
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Buffett Talks Succession and Taxes at Berkshire's
Annual Meeting
Tens of thousands of shareholders gathered at the
CenturyLink Center in Omaha to take in Warren E. Buffett's
pronouncements on his massive conglomerate, the global
economy and whatever else tickles his or investors' fancy.
DealBook's Andrew Ross Sorkin was one of the reporters on
stage to ask questions as well.

Hanging over this year's festivities was Mr. Buffett's
disclosure that he has received a diagnosis of prostate
cancer. He has taken pains to emphasize that the disease was
caught early and that he plans to keep working for a long
time.

Mr. Buffett addressed the succession issue again, as well
as the ongoing controversy over his principle of raising tax
rates on the wealthiest Americans and his management
philosophies. He also briefly mentioned a deal that would
have been worth more than $20 billion, but said he had
discarded the idea after deciding the takeover would have
been too expensive.

DEALBOOK:
http://dealbook.nytimes.com/2012/05/05/live-blog-berkshires-2012-annual-meeting/?nl=business&emc=dlbka10_20120507

Treasury to Sell A.I.G. Shares at $30.50
Apiece
The government continues to unwind its stake in American
International Group, as the insurer slowly recovers from the
depths of the financial crisis.

The Treasury Department announced that it would sell
163,934,426 shares of A.I.G. - or roughly $5 billion -
at $30.50 apiece. A.I.G. plans to buy back around $2 billion
of the stock.

"We're continuing to make significant progress exiting
our investment in AIG," Assistant Secretary for Financial
Stability Tim Massad, said in a statement. "We remain
hopeful that taxpayers will ultimately recover every single
dollar invested in the company, which is something few would
have expected during the depths of the financial crisis."

DEALBOOK:
http://dealbook.nytimes.com/2012/05/07/treasury-to-sell-a-i-g-shares-at-30-50/?nl=business&emc=dlbka10_20120507

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 For the latest updates, go to:
http://www.nytimes.com/dealbook
Investors Likely to Reserve Judgment on
France
The incoming French president, François Hollande, may spend
more than investors would prefer to revive the French
economy, and may not immediately undertake certain labor
market and business reforms that are seen as necessary. But
analysts say investors are likely to give France a grace
period, The New York Times reports.

NEW YORK TIMES http://www.nytimes.com/2012/05/07/business/global/wary-markets-likely-to-wait-to-cast-vote-on-france.html?ref=business&nl=business&emc=dlbka22_20120507

A Contrarian Bet on Greece
Just two months after investors in Greek debt were forced to
accept a 75 percent loss on their holdings, some
distressed-debt investors see a buying opportunity, The New
York Times reports.

NEW YORK TIMES http://www.nytimes.com/2012/05/05/business/global/bondholders-bullish-on-greece.html?ref=todayspaper&nl=business&emc=dlbka22_20120507

An Heir Takes His Place at L'Oréal
Jean-Victor Meyers, 25, must convince shareholders he has
what it takes to sit on the board of L'Oréal in place of
his grandmother, Liliane Bettencourt, the matriarch of the
French cosmetics company, The New York Times reports.
Looming over the transition is the question of whether
Nestlé, which owns just under 30 percent of the company,
might one day make a play for the 30 percent stake owned by
the Bettencourt family.

NEW YORK TIMES http://www.nytimes.com/2012/05/06/business/jean-victor-meyers-the-new-prince-of-loreal.html?ref=business&nl=business&emc=dlbka22_20120507

After Facebook, Wielding Political
Influence
Chris Hughes, a Facebook co-founder who recently became the
publisher and editor in chief of The New Republic after
buying a majority stake in the magazine, has been making the
rounds in New York political and literary society, The New
York Times reports.

NEW YORK TIMES http://www.nytimes.com/2012/05/06/fashion/chris-hughes-and-sean-eldridge-are-the-new-power-brokers.html?ref=todayspaper&nl=business&emc=dlbka22_20120507

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1. MERGERS & ACQUISITIONS --------------------------------------
Judge Halts Martin Marietta Bid for Vulcan
Materials
In granting an injunction, Chancellor Leo E. Strine Jr. of
the Delaware Chancery Court found that Martin Marietta had
breached confidentiality agreements between the two
companies.

DEALBOOK:
http://dealbook.nytimes.com/2012/05/04/judge-halts-martin-marietta-bid-for-vulcan-materials/?nl=business&emc=dlbka23_20120507

Westlake Abandons $1.2 Billion Bid for Georgia
Gulf
The decision follows acquisition talks with Georgia Gulf's
management that had been aimed at creating one of the
largest producers of building materials like olefins and
vinyls.

DEALBOOK:
http://dealbook.nytimes.com/2012/05/04/westlake-abandons-1-2-billion-bid-for-georgia-gulf/?nl=business&emc=dlbka23_20120507

Micron Said to Enter Exclusive Talks for
Elpida
The chip maker Micron Technology won the right to exclusive
talks after offering more than $2.5 billion for Elpida
Memory, its failed Japanese rival, Reuters reports, citing
an unidentified person with direct knowledge of the deal.

REUTERS http://www.reuters.com/article/2012/05/07/us-elpida-micron-idUSBRE8430QA20120507

DigitalGlobe Rejects Offer From GeoEye
DigitalGlobe, a satellite imaging company, said on Sunday
that the $792 million takeover offer from its rival GeoEye
was too low, Reuters reports.

REUTERS http://www.nytimes.com/2012/05/07/technology/digitalglobe-rejects-takeover-bid-from-geoeye.html?ref=todayspaper&nl=business&emc=dlbka23_20120507

Citigroup Records a Higher Value for Brokerage
Stake
Citigroup, which is selling pieces of its stake in the
Morgan Stanley Smith Barney brokerage, said in a regulatory
filing that the fair value of the asset was higher than the
$10 billion recorded on its balance sheet, Bloomberg News
reports.

BLOOMBERG NEWS http://www.bloomberg.com/news/2012-05-04/citigroup-sees-brokerage-s-fair-value-rising-before-sale.html

Comcast to Unload Part of A&E Stake
Comcast said in a regulatory filing last week that its
NBCUniversal division exercised an option to sell "a
substantial portion" of its stake in A&E Television
Networks, a deal that could be worth about $2 billion, The
Wall Street Journal reports.

WALL STREET JOURNAL http://online.wsj.com/article/SB10001424052702304749904577384642829634950.html?mod=WSJ_business_whatsNews

Buyer for Taiwanese TV Company Laments Regulatory
Delay
The conglomerate Want Want China Holdings said delays in the
approval of its $2.4 billion deal to buy China Network
Systems from MBK Partners had cost it an additional $300
million, Reuters reports.

REUTERS http://www.reuters.com/article/2012/05/07/us-mbk-taiwan-idUSBRE84608H20120507

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2. INVESTMENT BANKING --------------------------------------
Stock Trading Continues to Fall After
Crisis
The average daily trades of American stocks on all exchanges
was 6.5 billion in April, nearly half of the peak in 2008 of
12.1 billion, according to Credit Suisse Trading Strategy,
The New York Times reports. This decline has come even as
American stocks have doubled in price in the last three
years.

NEW YORK TIMES http://www.nytimes.com/2012/05/07/business/stock-trading-remains-in-a-slide-after-08-crisis.html?ref=business&nl=business&emc=dlbka24_20120507

Broker Rebates Seen as a Conflict of
Interest
Payments that brokers collect from stock exchanges in return
for sending them business could be costing mutual funds,
pension funds and other investors as much as $5 billion a
year, according to a new study by the financial consulting
firm Woodbine Associates, The New York Times reports.

NEW YORK TIMES http://www.nytimes.com/2012/05/07/business/rebates-to-brokers-are-seen-as-a-conflict-of-interest.html?ref=todayspaper&nl=business&emc=dlbka24_20120507

Ally Financial's Mortgage Woes
The overall picture at Ally Financial, which is still 74
percent owned by taxpayers, is improving. But the
company's mortgage unit, Residential Capital, is in
trouble, prompting speculation that it may file for
bankruptcy, Gretchen Morgenson writes in The New York Times.

NEW YORK TIMES http://www.nytimes.com/2012/05/06/business/troubled-mortgage-unit-threatens-ally-financial.html?ref=business&nl=business&emc=dlbka24_20120507

Barclays Aims to Attract U.S. Depositors
The British bank is opening an online savings bank in the
United States as a way to help finance its American credit
card business, and is offering depositors interest rates of
about 1 percent, The Wall Street Journal reports.

WALL STREET JOURNAL http://online.wsj.com/article/SB10001424052702304488504577384100381710504.html?mod=WSJ_hp_LEFTWhatsNewsCollection

Signs of Life in London's Financial Job
Market
In London's financial sector, new job vacancies increased
by 9 percent in April compared with March, but were still
down 27 percent compared with a year earlier, according to a
recruiter, The Financial Times reports.

FINANCIAL TIMES http://www.ft.com/intl/cms/s/0/7a4dcadc-95f9-11e1-9d9d-00144feab49a.html?ftcamp=published_links%2Frss%2Fworld_uk_business%2Ffeed%2F%2Fproduct#axzz1u8WntZZ6

Why Bankers Quit
New York magazine surveyed 74 current or recently departed
finance workers who are members of Escape the City, an
online community that offers advice for "corporate
professionals who want to 'do something different,'"
to find out what gave them second thoughts about working in
finance.

NEW YORK http://nymag.com/news/intelligencer/topic/bankers-2012-5/

UBS Takes Risky Mortgage Securities to
Market
This week, the Swiss bank is seeking buyers for
collateralized debt obligations with a face value of $1.5
billion, dating to the height of the boom, Bloomberg News
writes.

BLOOMBERG NEWS http://www.bloomberg.com/news/2012-05-07/ubs-bets-on-toxic-debt-demand-after-fed-s-record-sale-mortgages.html

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For the latest updates, go to:
http://www.nytimes.com/dealbook
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3. PRIVATE EQUITY --------------------------------------
Blackstone Said to Be Set for a Calpers
Investment
The Blackstone Group is close to securing an account from
Calpers, the largest public pension fund in the United
States, Reuters reports, citing an unidentified person
familiar with the matter.

REUTERS http://www.reuters.com/article/2012/05/04/us-blackstone-calpers-idUSBRE8431IT20120504

Blackstone Buys a Singapore Business Park
With the purchase of the StarHub Green project from SEB
Asset Management for about $172 million, the Blackstone
Group made its first acquisition in Singapore, Reuters
reports, citing an unidentified person familiar with the
deal.

REUTERS http://www.nytimes.com/reuters/2012/05/07/business/07reuters-blackstone-singapore.html?src=busln&nl=business&emc=dlbka31_20120507

3i Said to Be in Talks to Sell Enterprise
The British private equity firm is in advanced talks with
the Spanish infrastructure company Ferrovial to sell
Enterprise, which offers support services to utilities and
public sector customers, The Financial Times reports, citing
unidentified people close to the situation.

FINANCIAL TIMES http://www.ft.com/intl/cms/s/0/7020115e-9776-11e1-83f3-00144feabdc0.html#axzz1uAYWVYl3

HgCapital Puts Drug Company on the Block
HgCapital is looking to sell Mercury Pharma, which it bought
in December for £178 million ($287 million), and has chosen
Jefferies to handle the sale, The Financial Times reports.

FINANCIAL TIMES http://www.ft.com/intl/cms/s/0/ab4f8042-9790-11e1-9b05-00144feabdc0.html#axzz1uAYWVYl3

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4. HEDGE FUNDS --------------------------------------
Hedge Fund Intensifies Attack on Yahoo Amid Storm
Over Padded Résumés
Third Point, which is the middle of a contentious proxy
battle with Yahoo, called for the dismissal of the
company's chief executive, Scott Thompson, after revealing
that he had inaccurately stated his credentials.

DEALBOOK:
http://dealbook.nytimes.com/2012/05/04/hedge-fund-intensifies-attacks-on-yahoo-as-storm-grows-over-padded-resumes/?nl=business&emc=dlbka32_20120507

A Cheerleader for the Hedge Fund Industry
Anthony Scaramucci, the founder and managing partner of
SkyBridge Capital, who is trying to make hedge fund
investing accessible to the less-wealthy, "thinks
attention is an undervalued commodity," Jessica Pressler
writes in New York magazine. "While his peers in the hedge
fund industry only occasionally emerge, groundhoglike, to
declaim somberly on the markets, 'the Mooch,' as he is
known, is a petite man-shaped fireball of energy, constantly
orbiting the public sphere and blazing a trail through
social events with a steady stream of charmingly
self-effacing stories."

NEW YORK http://nymag.com/news/business/themoney/anthony-scaramucci-2012-5/

Icahn Said to Sell LightSquared Debt
Carl C. Icahn sold his $250 million debt holdings in
LightSquared, the beleaguered wireless company run by Philip
A. Falcone, apparently making a profit, Reuters reports,
citing unidentified people familiar with the matter. In
addition, LightSquared's creditors were said to grant a
second week-long extension to Mr. Falcone in negotiations to
avoid a potential bankruptcy.

REUTERS http://www.nytimes.com/reuters/2012/05/06/business/06reuters-lightsquared-icahn.html?src=busln&nl=business&emc=dlbka32_20120507

BLOOMBERG NEWS http://www.bloomberg.com/news/2012-05-06/falcone-s-lightsquared-said-to-get-week-credit-extension.html

Ackman's Borders Bet
An upcoming book, "The Alpha Masters: Unlocking the Genius
of the World's Top Hedge Funds," says that William A.
Ackman lost $200 million on his investment in Borders last
year, calling it "a big mistake on the buy," The New
York Post reports.

NEW YORK POST http://www.nypost.com/p/news/business/bill_borders_problem_CKw4hgrvxviPpSK2TH6AaP

Paulson Said to Extend a Losing Streak
John A. Paulson's Advantage Plus fund lost 6.7 percent in
April, bringing its slump so far this year to 8.8 percent,
Bloomberg News reports, citing two unidentified people
briefed on the returns.

BLOOMBERG NEWS http://www.bloomberg.com/news/2012-05-04/paulson-hedge-fund-said-to-extend-slump-with-april-loss.html

--------------------------------------

5. I.P.O./OFFERINGS --------------------------------------
Is Mark Zuckerberg Ready to Lead a Public
Company?
Henry Blodget writes in the New York magazine cover story:
"As Facebook embarks on its I.P.O. 'road show,' the
question of just how good Zuckerberg is will trail it: His
control of the company is such that a bet on the company's
stock is a bet on him. Investors will be wagering on an
entrepreneur who's committed himself to getting better and
better as a leader. But they'll also be betting on one
whose commitment to his long-term vision is so deep that he
just might drive Wall Street crazy."

NEW YORK http://nymag.com/news/features/mark-zuckerberg-2012-5/

Zuckerberg's Control Over Facebook May Be a New
Model
In at least 10 of last year's tech I.P.O.'s, a special
class of shares gave founders more votes than new
shareholders, Bloomberg News reports.

BLOOMBERG NEWS http://www.bloomberg.com/news/2012-05-07/zuckerberg-stock-grip-becomes-new-normal-in-silicon-valley-tech.html

The 'Willy Wonka' of Silicon Valley
Mark Pincus, Zynga's chief executive, who refers to
himself half-seriously as "a kind of Willy Wonka,"
presides over a headquarters that resembles one of the
company's games, The Financial Times writes.

FINANCIAL TIMES http://www.ft.com/intl/cms/s/0/f7ff2b72-942a-11e1-bb47-00144feab49a.html#axzz1u8WntZZ6

A Week of Small I.P.O.'s
This week's deals, none of which is larger than $200
million, may compete for attention with Facebook, which is
due to trade next week, The Wall Street Journal reports.

WALL STREET JOURNAL http://online.wsj.com/article/SB10001424052702304752804577384911794213928.html?mod=WSJ_Markets_LEFTTopStories

--------------------------------------

6. VENTURE CAPITAL --------------------------------------
Which Start-Up Is the Next Big Thing?
Path, Taskrabbit, Square, Quora, Dropbox, Airtime, Pinwheel,
Pinterest, Uber? The New York Times lets you vote on your
choice.

NEW YORK TIMES http://www.nytimes.com/interactive/2012/05/07/technology/start-ups-next-big-thing.html?ref=technology&nl=business&emc=dlbka34_20120507

In Scotland, Angel Investors Organize
Scottish angel investors operate with an unusual degree of
organization, forming syndicates that, as one professor put
it, behave "like mini venture capital funds," The
Financial Times reports.

FINANCIAL TIMES http://www.ft.com/intl/cms/s/0/44ab515a-95d7-11e1-a163-00144feab49a.html#axzz1u8WntZZ6

Letting You Text Pictures You Probably
Shouldn't
Snapchat, an increasingly popular iPhone app, lets users
send each other pictures that automatically disappear after
several seconds, but the service isn't without risks, Nick
Bilton writes on Bits.

NEW YORK TIMES BITS http://bits.blogs.nytimes.com/2012/05/06/disruptions-indiscreet-photos-glimpsed-then-gone/?ref=business&nl=business&emc=dlbka34_20120507

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7. LEGAL/REGULATORY --------------------------------------
Dewey Leadership Acknowledges the Firm Could
Close
In a memo sent late Friday afternoon, Dewey & LeBoeuf
management acknowledged for the first time that the firm
could shut down.

DEALBOOK:
http://dealbook.nytimes.com/2012/05/04/dewey-leadership-acknowledges-that-firm-could-close/?nl=business&emc=dlbka35_20120507

Dewey & LeBoeuf Confronts a New Reality
James B. Stewart writes in The New York Times: "The
circumstances at Dewey may turn out to be extreme. But the
firm's messy decline lays bare the harsh realities of
today's law practice, and shatters the perception, still
held by many members of the bar, that however transformed in
recent decades by the realities of the market, law is at
heart still a guild, a brotherhood (and increasingly a
sisterhood) - in short, a profession more than a
business."

NEW YORK TIMES http://www.nytimes.com/2012/05/05/business/deweys-collapse-underscores-a-new-reality-for-law-firms-common-sense.html?ref=todayspaper&nl=business&emc=dlbka35_20120507

Spanish Banks Resist a 'Bad Bank' Rescue
Proposal
The largest Spanish commercial banks, Santander and BBVA,
which have big investments overseas, have opposed the idea
of having the government set up an asset management company
to house banks' toxic assets, The New York Times reports.

NEW YORK TIMES http://www.nytimes.com/2012/05/07/business/global/spanish-banks-resist-idea-of-bad-bank-bailout.html?ref=business&nl=business&emc=dlbka35_20120507

Spain Said to Plan a Rescue of Bankia
Spain plans to provide Bankia with cash injections and new
managers, as part of a rescue of a bank whose toxic loans
have placed it at the center of the country's crisis,
Reuters reports, citing unidentified people.

REUTERS http://www.nytimes.com/reuters/2012/05/07/business/07reuters-bankia.html?src=busln&nl=business&emc=dlbka35_20120507

Regulators Unveil Tighter Rules for Municipal
Bonds
Looking to prevent debt disasters like the one in Jefferson
County, Ala., federal regulators issued new rules on Friday
that are intended to curb practices like Wall Street
firms' underwriting a state's bonds while helping other
customers trade against them, The New York Times reports.

NEW YORK TIMES http://www.nytimes.com/2012/05/05/business/tighter-rules-are-issued-on-municipal-bond-deals.html?ref=todayspaper&nl=business&emc=dlbka35_20120507

Crackdown on Corruption Overseas
James Surowiecki writes in The New Yorker: "When you read
the business pages these days, you can be forgiven for
thinking that international commerce is a cesspool of graft.
Yet, by historical standards, things have never been
cleaner. What's changed is how strenuously governments are
cracking down on corruption."

NEW YORKER http://www.newyorker.com/talk/financial/2012/05/14/120514ta_talk_surowiecki

India Said to Begin an Antitrust Investigation of
Google
Indian regulators are looking into Google's online
advertising business, The Wall Street Journal reports,
citing unidentified government officials familiar with the
matter.

WALL STREET JOURNAL http://online.wsj.com/article/SB10001424052702304363104577389280326071526.html?mod=WSJ_hp_LEFTWhatsNewsCollection

A Case for Regulatory Robots
Jason Zweig writes in The Wall Street Journal: "Investment
advisers are being examined infrequently, inconsistently and
incompletely - largely because regulators are outnumbered
and reliant on outmoded technology. In a business world that
routinely runs on 'big data,' it's time to put
computers on the case."

WALL STREET JOURNAL http://online.wsj.com/article/SB10001424052702304020104577384211255978898.html?mod=WSJ_Markets_LEFTFourthNews

--------------------------------------
For the latest updates, go to: http://www.nytimes.com/dealbook or http://m.nytimes.com/dealbook.
*****

Delegation says county stands to lose $1 million in special session By Jim Joyner, Carroll Eagle


Delegation says county stands to lose $1 million in special session


Carroll County's Delegation to Annapolis said this past week that the county would be better off under the state's "doomsday" budget, and stands to lose some $1 million in state funding in a special session of the Maryland General Assembly.

In a May 3 meeting with the Board of County Commissioners in Westminster — one day before Gov. Martin O'Malley announced a special session to convene May 14 — members of the delegation said the "doomsday" budget actually represents one that they feel is more fiscally responsible ... and winds up better for the county.

"I challenge that moniker ... it's not a doomsday budget," said Sen. David Brinkley (R-Dist. 4). "Frankly, the budget still goes up by $700 million, and I think the citizens are expecting us to live within our means as they are having to do so."

Legislators said even with cuts under the "doomsday" budget, Carroll County would actually be better off under that scenario than if a special session happened.



State Sen. Joe Getty (R-Dist 5), who chairs the Carroll delegation, said that because certain elements of the budget didn't pass in the 2012 General Assembly stalemate, Carroll County wound up with more money than it's likely to get if the General Assembly takes another run at a budget reconciliation… http://www.baltimoresun.com/explore/carroll/news/ph-ce-delegation-joint-meeting-0505-20120506,0,2867218.story

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Update: see also


by Kevin Dayhoff


This is the time of the year when many citizens turn their attention to the budget processes of Carroll County government and its eight municipalities. No matter where you live in Carroll County, money matters.

Statewide, Gov. Martin O'Malley has announced that on Monday, May 14, the General Assembly will get together for a couple of days to raise taxes and enact more laws, rules and regulations. (For more on this read, "Delegation says county stands to lose $1 million in special session," on ExploreCarroll.com.)... http://www.baltimoresun.com/explore/carroll/opinion-talk/ph-ce-eagle-archive-0513-20120509,0,1799107.story


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2012 Meets "1984"

TheTentacle.com The 2012 Maryland General Assembly special session meets Orwell's 1984 By Kevin E. Dayhoff http://www.thetentacle.com/ShowArticle.cfm?mydocid=5111



Amid rancorous opposition from Republicans and rising discontentment among segments of the ruling Democrats, the curtain rose Monday for an attempt at a carefully choreographed special – 431th – session of the Maryland General Assembly opera.

It was on May 4 that Gov. Martin O’Malley announced that the legislature would get together for a couple of days to raise taxes and enact more laws, rules and regulations in Maryland.

Paradoxically, Jim Joyner wrote in www.ExploreCarroll.com on May 6 that the Carroll County delegation observed that “the county would be better off under the state's ‘doomsday’ budget, and stands to lose some $1 million in state funding in a special session of the Maryland General Assembly…

“‘I challenge that moniker ... it's not a doomsday budget,’ said Sen. David Brinkley (R., Carroll/Frederick). ‘Frankly, the budget still goes up by $700 million, and I think the citizens are expecting us to live within our means as they are having to do so.’ ”… http://www.thetentacle.com/ShowArticle.cfm?mydocid=5111

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Related:





Bryan Sears - Patch: Busch, O'Malley Call For Budget Compromise

Busch, O'Malley Call For Budget Compromise


Budget bill must be passed by midnight or General Assembly will extend its session. By Bryan P. Sears Email the author April 9, 2012 http://belair.patch.com/articles/busch-o-malley-call-for-budget-compromise


Gov. Martin O'Malley and House Speaker Michael Busch called on the Senate to compromise on a state budget in time for the General Assembly to end its session at midnight.

"The one constitutional obligation we have is to pass a balanced budget," said Busch, adding that House members assigned to the conference committee were prepared to complete negotiations.

"Because one chamber has an obsession with a certain issue, that they do not want to concur on the budget until that issue is resolved does not initiate any responsible stand for us not to deal with the budget that is in front of us," said Busch, speaking of a Senate effort to expand gambling to include table games and a sixth casino location in Prince George's County.

"They have 11 hours to comply and get the bill through the Senate and to the House or we do not meet our constitutional obligation," said Busch.

"This budget should have been passed three days ago," Busch said.

O'Malley seconded Busch and asked for both chambers to resolve their differences…http://belair.patch.com/articles/busch-o-malley-call-for-budget-compromise

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Blair Lee: Who won, the House or the Senate? How do you pick a winner when there's no final score yet? http://kevindayhoff.blogspot.com/2012/05/blair-lee-who-won-house-or-senate-how.html



How do you recap a baseball game that's still in extra innings? How do you pick winners and losers when there's no final score yet?

Right now, the House and Senate teams are tied at the top of the 10th with House Speaker Mike Busch pitching to Senate President Mike Miller who's behind, 0 and 2, with two outs and nobody on. Gov. Martin O'Malley is doing TV interviews in the press box where, asked which team he's backing, replies, “Who's playing?”

In this high-profile, high-stakes showdown the smart money says Miller blinks first. Not because he can't take the heat (which has reached the boiling point), but because the only thing more precious to Mike Miller than gambling legislation is protecting his position as president of the Senate.

The heat on Miller has grown merciless: the media, labor unions, the state employees, Busch, O'Malley, Comptroller Peter Franchot, etc., all blame Miller for triggering the so-called doomsday spending cuts by holding an income tax bill hostage until he gets his gambling bill (a new P.G. County gaming casino and table games for all six gambling venues).

Miller loves playing hardball; he started in the State House as a page back in 1966. So attacking Miller is a waste of time. But attacking his senators is how to make Mike Miller fold… http://www.gazette.net/article/20120420/OPINION/704209696/-1/blair-lee-who-won-the-house-or-the-senate-how-do-you-pick-a-winner&template=gazette

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Gazette - Danielle E. Gaines: With two special sessions possible, groups want their bills considered http://kevindayhoff.blogspot.com/2012/05/gazettenet-with-two-special-sessions.html


Leaders want second gathering to focus on gaming

by Danielle E. Gaines, Staff Writer Friday, April 27, 2012


As the clock struck midnight on Sine Die, many Annapolis insiders were struck by the number of significant bills, most notably the budget, that failed to pass both chambers.

With Gov. Martin O’Malley (D) indicating this week that he could call two special sessions — one in May to pass a revenue bill to accompany the budget and one later in the summer to consider an expansion of gaming in the state -— the door has been opened to lobbyists, interest groups and lawmakers looking to reintroduce old measures or new legislation altogether… http://www.gazette.net/article/20120427/NEWS/704279642/1122/blizzard-of-beats/With-two-special-sessions-possible-groups-want-their-bills-considered&template=gazette


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*****

Sunday, May 06, 2012

Phil Grout's 'Harvest of Hope' one of many items for sale Grace Ch fair exchange

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Friday, May 04, 2012

Phil Grout chats with folks at his opening at Off Track Art in Westminster


Phil Grout chats with folks at his opening at Off Track Art in Westminster

Art Saves Lives

Citybiznews: CEOs Rank Maryland near Bottom 10 States for Business 2012 - cbl


EDITOR'S
 TOP 5

CEOs Rank Maryland near Bottom 10 States for Business 2012

By Bill Murphy
BALTIMORE -- For the eighth time in a row, Texas has been voted the best state for business in Chief Executive magazine's

CEOs Rank Maryland near Bottom 10 States for Business 2012 - cbl

Posted May 4, 2012


By Bill Murphy

BALTIMORE -- For the eighth time in a row, Texas has been voted the best state for business in Chief Executive magazine's annual survey of CEOs.

In this year's survey, Florida moved up from number three last year to number two. North Carolina ranked third, Virginia was sixth and Georgia came in eighth.

Of the 50 states ranked, the bottom-placed included New York (49th), Massachusetts (47th), New Jersey (45th), Connecticut (44th), Pennsylvania (43rd) and Maryland (40th). California earned the dubious honor of being ranked dead last for the eighth consecutive year.

Texas won high marks for its business-friendly tax and regulatory environment. Its workforce quality was second only to Utah's… http://baltimore.citybizlist.com/1/2012/5/4/CEOs-Rank-Maryland-near-Bottom-10-States-for-Business-2012--cbl.aspx


Thursday, May 03, 2012

“Child of the Universe,” the latest exhibition by Phil Grout opens Friday at Off Track Art in Westminster

“Child of the Universe,” the latest exhibition by Phil Grout opens Friday at Off Track Art in Westminster


Award-winning Carroll County photojournalist, fine art photographer, and author, Phil Grout, will appear for the opening of his latest exhibition Friday, May 4, 2012, at Off Track Art in Westminster.

His latest exhibit, titled “Child of the Universe,” is a collection of 40 black and white images that come to life from Grout’s 45 years of documenting life in Americas, Africa, Asia and India.

Grout is no stranger to Off Track Art, where he exhibited extensively from January through June in 2011.

Previously Grout had a critically acclaimed retrospective show at Birdie’s Cafe, 233 E. Main St., Westminster, MD ran in November and December 2010. That show, “44/40,” spanned over four decades of Grout’s work, from Vietnam to Africa, Plains Georgia, to Carroll County; and included almost 70 pieces of work.

“I’ve never done a show like this,” said Grout in an interview last Wednesday. “This show focuses upon our humanity and what binds us together… It’s 40 4-by-6 inch framed black and white images of people and runs the gamut of emotions,” explained Grout.

For example, in “Afua's Hands,” Grout reminisces “Her name was Afua Nyame. At 83 she was the oldest cocoa farmer in the village of Odaho, Ghana, West Africa. In Harvest of Hope, a book by Grout for SERRV International, he wrote, “Hope carves trails in an old woman's hands then plows furrows up her arms, and all trails lead back home where food is never scarce and the medicine is always half full.”

In another photograph, “Giving Thanks,” Grout shares that it “is a portrait I made in 1971 of John and Irene Wolf saying grace in their humble Taneytown home. John was a huckster who hauled livestock to the Woodsboro auction for over 50 years. He would return many times with box lots of 19th century tools.

“Over the years he built an extensive collection of Americana and hand-wrought farm implements and tools. The Wolfs helped shine the light on my path which lead me round the world in search of the threads which bind us together as human beings.”

Since 1966 that path has lead Grout and his work throughout North, South and Central America, Asia and Africa gathering images for newspapers, magazines, wire services, and book publishers.

According to his website, philgrout.com, and a series of e-mail interviews, Grout said he “started to learn his craft as a photographer in 1966 working as a photojournalist for the U.S. Navy covering naval operations in Vietnam.

“But I quickly learned it wasn’t the images of war I was hunting, but more the face of humanity as I roamed the back alleys of Saigon; Hong Kong; Sasebo, Japan and Olongopo, Philippines.”

With pictures and words Grout, “became a gatherer of the threads which bind us together as human beings.”

After the war, Grout “came home and settled in rural Maryland with his wife, Mary Lou, and worked for nearly 10 years as a photographer, reporter, and editor for the Hanover Evening Sun in Westminster.”

Since moving to Carroll County, Grout has authored three critically acclaimed photo essay books. His work has been awarded by the Associated Press as well as various arts organizations. It has also been featured in art galleries throughout the United States.”

According to Grout, “I fell in love with this land and its people who worked the land in my new rural home. That love pulled me away to Plains, Georgia in the late 70’s to complete my first book as I lived in an abandoned sharecropper’s home near President Jimmy Carter’s farm, and learned first hand the rigors of working the land and documenting the “tillers of the soil.”

His first venture into the book world won him national critical acclaim, including recognition from Publisher’s Weekly which called A Spell in Plains “a triumph.”

In the 1980’s Grout took his camera throughout the developing world in Africa, Asia, Latin America, and India documenting the work of various relief organizations. 

A second book of photography, “Seeds of Hope,” “grew from the splinters left in the wake of a hurricane which cut a path through Nicaragua in 1988,” recalled Grout.

Grout then went on to live in Ghana, West Africa in 2002, with an extended family of cocoa farmers to create his latest book, “Harvest of Hope,” a portrait of those who toil to bring us chocolate.

Grout, who is also an avid gardener, is constantly pushing the artistic envelope in search of new and innovative ways to tell a story, over the past four decades he has explored drawing, blacksmithing, woodworking, papermaking, and new photographic processes in photography.

In a May 21, 1995 article in the Baltimore Sun, credits his father, Gerald C. Grout, for his interest in art and photography. “He’s the one who really got me into photography. He was a physician and a fine photographer. He had his own darkroom, and I used to watch him,” Grout told Sun writer, Ellie Baublitz.

At the time, the article in 1995 described Grout’s show at the Carroll County Arts Center, also a retrospective, “Jubilee: A Photographic Retrospective.”

“Like his father, Mr. Grout has a studio and darkroom in his Westminster home, where he develops prints, standard photos as well as what he calls ‘photoglyphs’ and an even newer image using handmade paper,” wrote Baublitz in 1995.

“His photographs capture people, animals, and nature, mostly in black and white, few in color, some as photoglyphs.

The photoglyphs are a relatively new method of developing prints that Mr. Grout discovered while experimenting with chemicals,” observed Baublitz.

“For those who have the time, Mr. Grout can tell the story behind (each of) his photographs.”

Indeed, his photographs all tell a short philosophical story about Grout’s worldwide travels in the four decades of a life rich in storytelling and experiences.

Grout is “Good picture shooter and a colleague in journalism… (We worked together) starting in the Navy and then at the Hanover Evening Sun… I have three or four walls covered with his work in my home…. (I) recommend you stop by and see his stuff,” said former Carroll County Commissioner and fellow Vietnam veteran, Dean Minnich

Sherri Hosfeld Joseph, the owner of Birdie’s and an artist and critically acclaimed photographer herself, added, “Phil Grout is one of the greatest photojournalists of his generation. We are truly blessed as a community that he has chosen our stories to document. His work will leave you awestruck.”

After his work in Africa, Phil returned to his first love, photojournalism, and newspapers in 2006, freelancing for Patuxent Publishing and its string of papers in central Maryland. His photo illustrations regularly appear in Carroll Magazine as well.

Phil’s photography and reporting have been awarded by the Associated Press, Maryland-Delaware-D.C. Press Association as well as various arts organizations.

"Child of the Universe," a collection of 40 black & white images opens Friday, May 4, 5:30-7:30, at Off Track Art, an artists’ collective and gallery located in the historic Liberty Building at 11 Liberty Street – next to the railroad tracks, off of the Sentinel parking lot at the corner of West Main St and MD 27-Liberty St - in the historic downtown of Westminster, Maryland. The exhibition runs through the month of June.





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Google profile: https://profiles.google.com/kevindayhoff/ “Each one should use whatever gift he has received to serve others, faithfully administering God’s grace in its various forms.” 1 Peter 4:10
*****

Eagle Archive: Indoor plumbing captured the imagination of Westminster in 1891

Eagle Archive: Indoor plumbing captured the imagination of Westminster in 1891

By Kevin Dayhoff, kevindayhoff@gmail.com April 30, 2012

When spring rolls around, many of us have home improvement projects to tackle. But few of those result in community-wide interest or historical significance. (Unless, that is, you count the alligator-filled moat I was thinking about installing.)

But on April 29, 1891, Dr. Jacob J. Weaver Jr. of Uniontown began the construction of an indoor bathroom — and kept a detailed dairy of the project to preserve for history.

Of course, having an indoor bathroom was a big deal in those days.

"The idea of an indoor bathroom was almost unknown until the early 20th century," according to historian Jay Graybeal, who wrote about Weaver's bathroom construction diary a number of years ago for the Historical Society of Carroll County.

Today, the historical society has Weaver's diary on file, in case you'd like to consult his plans. His project was completed on June 2 at a cost of $554. Your results may vary.

We should note that the First National Bank of Westminster made sure Weaver was "flush" with cash — the bank loaned him $500 for the project earlier in April.

On April 26, 1927, the City of Westminster was also looking forward to a few improvements. It was on that date that the Maryland General Assembly approved legislation to allow the city to borrow a total of $75,000 at a rate of interest not to exceed 4 1/2 percent.

The legislation specifically noted "that the money derived from the sale of said bonds shall be used and applied exclusively to the paving and improving of the streets, curbs, and gutters of the town, heretofore decided upon by the Mayor and Common Council of Westminster." … http://www.baltimoresun.com/explore/carroll/news/community/ph-ce-eagle-archives-0429-20120430,0,6008258.story


*****

Wednesday, May 02, 2012

Joe Ebaugh honored for 50 years of service at the Westminster Fire Dept.


Joe Ebaugh honored for 50 years of service at the Westminster Fire Dept.

Blair Lee: Who won, the House or the Senate? How do you pick a winner when there's no final score yet?


Blair Lee: Who won, the House or the Senate? How do you pick a winner when there's no final score yet?



How do you recap a baseball game that's still in extra innings? How do you pick winners and losers when there's no final score yet?

Right now, the House and Senate teams are tied at the top of the 10th with House Speaker Mike Busch pitching to Senate President Mike Miller who's behind, 0 and 2, with two outs and nobody on. Gov. Martin O'Malley is doing TV interviews in the press box where, asked which team he's backing, replies, “Who's playing?”

In this high-profile, high-stakes showdown the smart money says Miller blinks first. Not because he can't take the heat (which has reached the boiling point), but because the only thing more precious to Mike Miller than gambling legislation is protecting his position as president of the Senate.

The heat on Miller has grown merciless: the media, labor unions, the state employees, Busch, O'Malley, Comptroller Peter Franchot, etc., all blame Miller for triggering the so-called doomsday spending cuts by holding an income tax bill hostage until he gets his gambling bill (a new P.G. County gaming casino and table games for all six gambling venues).

Miller loves playing hardball; he started in the State House as a page back in 1966. So attacking Miller is a waste of time. But attacking his senators is how to make Mike Miller fold… http://www.gazette.net/article/20120420/OPINION/704209696/-1/blair-lee-who-won-the-house-or-the-senate-how-do-you-pick-a-winner&template=gazette

++++++++++++++++++++++

Gazette - Danielle E. Gaines: With two special sessions possible, groups want their bills considered http://kevindayhoff.blogspot.com/2012/05/gazettenet-with-two-special-sessions.html


Leaders want second gathering to focus on gaming

by Danielle E. Gaines, Staff Writer Friday, April 27, 2012


As the clock struck midnight on Sine Die, many Annapolis insiders were struck by the number of significant bills, most notably the budget, that failed to pass both chambers.

With Gov. Martin O’Malley (D) indicating this week that he could call two special sessions — one in May to pass a revenue bill to accompany the budget and one later in the summer to consider an expansion of gaming in the state -— the door has been opened to lobbyists, interest groups and lawmakers looking to reintroduce old measures or new legislation altogether… http://www.gazette.net/article/20120427/NEWS/704279642/1122/blizzard-of-beats/With-two-special-sessions-possible-groups-want-their-bills-considered&template=gazette

*****