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Unplug tv's, computer when not in use
Sopranos creator talks to Star-Ledger
Sun attempt to survive challenged
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Thompson vaults into top GOP ranks
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A Hate Crime By Any Other Name
24 new species discovered in rainforest
Carroll GOP leaders cleared of charges

Chandler family out of Tribune/LATimes
Fred Thompson's entry plus for McCain
White women surge for Hillary
GOP Leader to seek expulsion of Jefferson
Terror Plot shows danger in boring targets
Putin Put Off at Missile Defense in Europe
Why the Media plays down Fort Dix Gang
Countdown for Israel's extinction
Dateline sex predator charged as flasher
• Calif. lets gays in prison have conjugal visits
• Political Junkie: There is risk to No-Iowa
Congressman Bartlett to run for 9th term

• Memorial Website to Sgt. James Dean
• O'Malley BRAC Team Meets
Twenty Eight New Planets Discovered
• Alabama Homeland Security Ends Dragnet
• Polish Gov't: Teletubbies Promote Gayness
Bloody weekend in New Orleans, 5 slain
Louisiana High Court Gives OK to Execute
   Man Who Raped 8-year-Old Family Member

Golfer Drives Cart Off a Cliff at Hole Two
• Duo Tried to Sell Coke Secrets to Pepsi
• 60-Year-Old Mom Has Twin Baby Boys
• Antifreeze Chemical Found in Toothpaste
Truckers pose deadly threat for motorists
Hard work for displays at St. Mary's City
• Florida Outlaws Electronic Voting
• Hershey's Sues Pot Brownie Chef
• Woman Loses Her Head at Sausage Factory
• Gunman Goes On Rampage Near U of Idaho

• China Harvests Organs From Live Prisoners
• After US Trade Talks China Invests $3billion
• Jimmy Carter: 'Bush Worse than Nixon'

• Gas Prices Hit All-Time High
• Birds Fly Cross-Continent for Raw Sewage
US Soldiers Banned From Myspace,YouTube
Religious Right Abandoning Giuliani
• Romney Widens Lead in New Hampshire
Bay Journal Column: Shad and Shared Cars
Read Greg Laxton's story of Link Wray

• Md Democrat Chief Now Hoyer's Main Man
• No More Take Home Cars for Guv's Staff

Bush Says Wolfowitz Did Nothing Wrong
Jerry Falwell Meets His Maker
• 21 of 916 Checked Were Without Seatbelt

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O'Malley Winds Down Traveling Tax

Show With Plea for Quick Action

By KATE PRAHLAD
Capital News Service
        ANNAPOLIS - After a week in which he laid out bits and pieces of his plan to close a $1.7 billion budget shortfall, Gov. Martin O'Malley laid out the whole tax plan Thursday and emphasized repeatedly that January will be too late to act on it.
        "This could turn from $1.7 billion into $2.2 billion if we sit back and wait," said O'Malley, who has said he wants to call a special session this fall to deal with the budget. "We can't afford a half a billion dollars more."
        O'Malley then turned to a decidedly low-tech method to illustrate state spending: Sketching the "house" that is Maryland on a dry-erase board, he drew education as the foundation, public safety as the roof, and health as the walls. Those three areas make up 83.5 percent of the state's spending.
        The governor pledged to continue building the foundation, saying his budget plan would let the state keep funding the Thornton education plan. It has grown faster than state officials expected and has driven much of the budget crisis.
        But O'Malley told a receptive audience at Annapolis Elementary School late Thursday that growth in school spending would be slowed down in his next budget.
        Under the Thornton plan, education funding grew by $567 million in this year's budget, the last year that increases in school aid were phased in. In 2009, the education budget will rise by a comparatively modest $119 million by capping an inflationary index for two years.
        "We're still moving forward, but just a little more moderately," O'Malley said.
        He said his administration will begin budgeting for the Geographic Cost of Education Index, a formula to offset geographic differentials in school costs that was called for in Thornton but never funded. It will be phased in over three years.
        "None of this is going to be easy and all of this is going to be hard," O'Malley said. "And I'm not at all unmindful of the sacrifices required."
        Under the governor's plan, those sacrifices include almost $2 billion in budget cuts, tax increases and revenues from legalized slot-machine gambling.
        The wealthiest Marylanders would see their income tax bills go up, while businesses would face a higher corporate income tax. The revenues from that hike would go to transportation and higher education, he said.
        Sales tax would increase by one cent per dollar and would be expanded to include services like health clubs and tanning salons that are not currently taxed. The cigarette tax would double to $2 per pack, with some revenues going to health care initiatives. Meanwhile, property tax would be reduced by 3 cents per $100.
        Businesses would also have to participate in combined reporting, which would make it harder for multistate companies to shift profits to others states and avoid Maryland taxes.
        "I understand that this is going to be painful for some people -- smokers, millionaires who rent," O'Malley said.
        Lt. Gov. Anthony Brown echoed O'Malley's sentiment that the plan would work best if implemented as soon as possible.
        "We really can't wait until January," Brown said. "It's going to be way more effective if we come in in November."
 

Quick! Toss the drugs out the window!

PARK HALL (July 23) - Maryland State Police report that on Sunday, July 22, 2007 at 11:30 pm, TFC Grimes initiated a traffic stop on a gray Ford Focus on Willows Road off Route 5 in Lexington Park (the same intersection as shown above) for exceeding the posted speed limit.  As the vehicle stopped, the rear passenger threw something from the vehicle.    Contact was made with the female driver, 28, of Lexington Park and the rear passenger, a male juvenile, 17, of Lexington Park who later admitted throwing something from the vehicle.  A baggie of marijuana was recovered from the area.  The juvenile was taken into custody and transported to the Leonardtown Barracks where he was processed for possession of marijuana and later released to his legal guardian pending further action by Juvenile Services.

'Copper, They Stole My Copper!'


MECHANICSVILLE (July 23) -Maryland State Police report that on Saturday, July 21, 2007 at 8:29 am, TFC Fleetwood responded to a reported Theft from a residence under construction on Dos Santos Way in Mechanicsville.  Contact was made with the male complainant who advised unknown suspect(s) stole one roll of blank copper sheeting - 14” x 100’, one roll of blank copper sheeting - 20” x 100’, 20 copper panels, 2’ x 17”, 10 pieces of 10’ copper drip edge and miscellaneous copper scrap.  Total estimated loss $2,300.00. 

Shooting at Legends Parking Lot Ends in Arrest after Chase
WALDORF -- (July 23)  According to Charles Sheriff's Office Public Information Officer Kristen Simko, on July 22 at 10:10 p.m., Charles County Sheriff’s officers responded to Kenrick Court and Thompson Lane in Indian Head for the report of an assault. Investigation revealed Kenneth Edward Groves, 44, of Indian Head left a note on a 32-year-old Indian Head man’s doorstep regarding complaints about the man’s dogs. The man confronted Groves and Groves grabbed him by the throat and threw him off the property. During the officers’ investigation, Groves became disorderly and was arrested without further incident. No one was injured. Groves was charged with second-degree assault and disturbing the peace. He was being held at the Charles County Detention Center pending an appearance before a district court commissioner. Officer C. Stufft investigated.

 















 

 

 

 

                               
 
 

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