Amy Mulvihill's picture
January, 20th 2012

Hopkins Professors Want to Revamp Calendar

Apparently, there is some sort of sporting match taking place this weekend that has everyone in a bit of a tizzy, so I hesitate to even attempt to discuss anything else . . .

BUT, this story about overhauling the traditional calendar caught my eye a few weeks ago and deserves some attention. In an ironic twist, I haven't had time to post about until now, so, here goes:

The new calendrical system is proposed by two Hopkins scholars, astrophysicist Richard Henry and economist Steve Hanke. It would see the year divided up so that every calendar date would always fall on the same day of the week. For example, Christmas, December 25, would always occur on a Sunday. They would do this by inserting a "leap week" at the end of December every five or six years in place of a leap day at the end of February every four years. They argue that this new system—the largest change to our Western timekeeping system since Pope Gregory XIII instituted the Gregorian calendar in 1582—would simplify scheduling irregularities thereby saving businesses, governments, and individuals time (heh) and...

Evan Serpick's picture
January, 20th 2012

The Raven, Part Two (Brady's Lament)

(with apologies to original Ravens fan, E.A. Poe)

 

Once upon a Sunday clearly, while I pondered weak and weary,

Over many a quaint and spurious memory of playoff wins galore,

While I nodded, nearly napping, suddenly there came a tapping,

As of some one gently rapping, rapping at my locker door,

“Tis some reporter,” I muttered, “tapping at my locker door –

Only this, and nothing more.”

 

Ah, distinctly I remember back to when I lost my temper,

When any single hope of victory wrought its ghost upon the floor.

Eagerly I wished the morrow – how I wished not to remember,

From my deepest depths of sorrow—sorrow for the brutal 2009 disaster,

For the brutal and vicious smackdown I endured on that vicious score.

Nameless here for evermore.

 

And the brutish mean uncertain rustling of each purple Raven

Scared me – filled me with fantastic terrors never felt before;

So that now, to still the beating of my heart, I stood repeating,

“’Tis some reporter entreating entrance at my chamber door-

Some early reporter entreating entrance at my chamber door;-

This it is and nothing more...

5:12 pm Comment Count Tags: sports
John Lewis's picture
January, 19th 2012

Ending Boston's Baseball AND Football Seasons

Wouldn't it be incredibly satisfying to end Boston's baseball and football seasons in a span of just a few months? First, the O's turn into Red Sox-killers down the stretch and send them packing in late September, and now, the Ravens can send the Pats packing, too. After putting up with all those Sox fans at Camden Years over the years and enduring that Monday Night Football debacle in 2007—when the Ravens played a brilliant game but melted down in the final few minutes—it would be sweet revenge.   

And are you as tired as I am of hearing how much Belichick and Brady love Ed Reed? It's even more tiresome than the Reed/Flacco fiasco. 

5:59 pm Comment Count Tags: orioles, Ravens
Max Weiss's picture
January, 18th 2012

Purple Pagoda Power!

Patterson Park

Ca-caw!! Don't ya just love the way Patterson Park decked out the Pagoda in honor of the Ravens?

 

Photo via Friends of Patterson Park.

Evan Serpick's picture
January, 17th 2012

Baltimore the 5th Most Tolerant City in America

In honor of Martin Luther King Day, The Daily Beast did some research to determine the most tolerant cities in America. They weighed the number of hate crimes per 100,000 people, the scope of anti-discrimination laws, attitudes regarding same-sex marriage and religious tolerance, and the diversity of the population.

It may be just that classic Baltimore inferiority complex talking, but I was happily surprised to see that we finished 5th in the country, ahead of New York, Los Angeles, and Chicago (all of which finished in the top 20). In at number one was the university town of Durham, North Carolina (Honolulu, San Francisco, and Miami finished 2, 3 and 4.)

Nice work, Baltimore!

[photo courtesy of The Daily Beast]

 

 

5:41 pm Comment Count Tags: ranking
Evan Serpick's picture
January, 16th 2012

Desperate Times for The Sun?

If you've read a couple of my past blog posts on the subject, you know that I'm no fan of the way The Sun has structured its paywall (primarily, in that it charges print subscribers an additional fee for digital access). 

Well, as I said I might do in one of those posts, I went ahead and cancelled my home delivery subscription. I figured, if I'm going to pay for the content one way or the other, I'll pay the cheaper way, the way that gives me full access to all articles, plus blogs, etc., in a format that's most convenient to me. I would've been happy to hold onto my home delivery—as I've done with The New York Times—if the digital access was included in my subscription, but, alas, it wasn't. I called and cancelled about a month ago.

Then, this weekend the Saturday Sun was...

6:28 pm Comment Count Tags: Media
John Lewis's picture
January, 12th 2012

Is This the Best We Can Do?

Education Week just named Maryland public schools the best in the nation for the fourth year in a row. Let's take a second to acknowledge that accomplishment. Okay, time's up. Now, let's take a few minutes and look below the surface. Maryland actually received a B+ grade (87.8%), and no state received an A. Maybe it's not totally surprising, but it is sobering that none of the 50 states can boast of having a truly excellent school system. The average score was 76.5 percent, a solid C, with the likes of Nebraska and South Dakota slipping into D territory. In Maryland, we nearly got a D (71.7%) in the Equity in K-12 Achievement category, and we scored a C in Teacher Accountability and a C+ in Assessments. So there's still plenty of work to be done, #1 ranking or not. And let's hope the poor folks in South Dakota recognize that getting F's in Teacher Incentives and College Readiness is probably connected to the F the state received for Spending.

Jess Blumberg's picture
January, 10th 2012

Jim Irsay pulling for the Ravens

Jim Irsay, Indianapolis Colts CEO whose father was widely demonized for yanking the Colts out of Baltimore nearly 30 years ago, is apparently rooting for the Ravens to win the Super Bowl this year.

About two hours ago, he tweeted, in not-so-plain English: "I'd love 2c Steve B get the Trophy and Baltimore n Indy...got tons of friends there n it's only fitting with my good friend R Berry n tow!"

"Steve B" is obviously referring to Ravens owner Steve Bisciotti, while "R Berry" is former Baltimore Colts wide receiver Raymond Berry, who will help present the Lombardi Trophy to the Super Bowl winner.

This seems like a pathetic attempt to connect to the Baltimore franchise, now that his Indianapolis Colts (who went 2-14 without Peyton Manning this season) aren't in the playoffs. I'm not sure what "friends" Irsay is referring to in this town, because I've certainly never met any.

What do...

1:21 pm Comment Count Tags: Ravens, Twitter
Evan Serpick's picture
January, 9th 2012

Local Gay Marriage Advocates and Opponents Gear Up For a Fight

In the January issue of Baltimore, writer Justin Snow previews the prospects that a gay marriage bill will pass the Maryland legislature this year after such a measure failed last year in "Gay Marriage, Take Two." Maryland would be the sixth state to legalize gay marriage and the bill seemed to have enough support to pass last year, until a strong campaign against it—organized largely by local religious communities—derailed it.

This year, both sides are gearing up for another fight—and, again, religious groups are among the most vocal. A group called Maryland Marriage Alliance held news conferences late last year to announce its plans to oppose any gay marriage bill. “God created marriage as a union of...

4:37 pm Comment Count Tags: politics
Max Weiss's picture
January, 5th 2012

2012: A Spacey Odyssey

Good news for fans of David Fincher, Kevin Spacey, Netflix, and a 75 million economic impact on the state of Maryland. (Seriously, you have to be a fan of at least one of those things, right?)

Starting this spring, the acclaimed director Fincher (The Girl With the Dragon Tattoo, The Social Network) will be filming a series for Netflix right here in the Baltimore region. (This isn't Fincher's first time filming in Baltimore, by the way: The Hopkins campus doubled as Harvard in The Social Network). Called House of Cards, the show, about political ambition and intrigue, is based on the BBC series of the same name. The first season is slated for 13 episodes.

Can I say that I'm . .geeked? First of all, I love me some Kevin Spacey and kind of wish he hadn't taken off so many years in his prime to go all high-brow and head up...

6:57 pm Comment Count Tags: film