A ruling on whether Boston can ban news-boxes in the Back Bay may be handed down as early as Monday, the Boston Phoenix, a plaintiff in the case, reports. "As far as the Back Bay is concerned, aesthetics are far more important than the exchange of ideas," Seth Gitell writes in the Phoenix.
In "Swimming with Sharks," the Colorado Springs Independent looks into how predatory lenders are eating credit-hungry debtors alive in this faltering economy. Terje Langeland writes that, "Julio Bonilla just wanted to borrow $4,000 to pay for some improvements to his split-level home ... By the time he walked out of the loan office, the 47-year-old Bonilla -- who speaks limited English -- had been talked into refinancing both of his mortgages, consolidating various credit-card debts and purchasing thousands of dollars worth of insurance, all rolled into one new loan totaling $164,000." Now his wife has lost her job, and they can't make the payments on the high-interest loan. Worse yet, the practice is perfectly legal.
It first appeared to be a simple stickup gone bad, but police investigating the killing of pet-shop owner Sarkis Antonyan found much more than that. Christine Pelisek and Charles Rappleye writing for LA Weekly, discovered that for more than a decade, Antonyan had run scams and opened new enterprises for a burgeoning Armenian crime scene, including massive rip-offs from the $450 million state recycling program. Antonyan's rise and fall provide a rare window on the life behind the suburban facade of one of L.A.'s most anonymous immigrant communities.
"Finally, a newspaper war," writes Carlos Santos in the Richmond Times-Dispatch. "Journalistic headbutting. A scramble for ads. Recruiting skirmishes. It's a grudge match to boot. Start the presses. Since earlier this month, two hip, breezy, irreverent, free weekly alternative newspapers have been locked in a bitter battle for advertising dollars and readers in a small market likely to sustain only one." In this corner, AAN-member C*Ville Weekly, and in the opposite corner, The Hook, launched by C*Ville's co-founder and former editor, Hawes Spencer.
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