baltimore polytechnic institute
- If Baltimore needs a model for creating vocational education programs, officials need to go no further than Green Street Academy charter school.
- The death of Moe Krome is great loss for Carroll and law enforcement throughout the state. A library of information and institutional memory has been lost.
- Baltimore City Public Schools CEO Sonja Santelises said the findings demonstrate that the district is failing students.
- William Joseph Moulds Sr., a retired mathematics chair at Baltimore's Poly and Howard County mathematics supervisor, died of heart and kidney failure.
- Mauricio has earned his degree from the prestigious Baltimore Polytechnic Institute and is heading to Ivy League Brown University
- The track and field state championship meet resumed at Morgan State University on Saturday, May 25, 2019.
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- Sheila Sachs, an attorney who handled the divorces of prominent local figures and sat on the Baltimore City School Board, died of cancer Sunday at Gilchrist Hospice Care. The Village of Cross Keys resident was 78.
- Dr. G. Edward Reahl, who had been chief of orthopedic surgery at Mercy Medical Center for nearly three decades, died Saturday of congestive heart failure at his Guilford home. He was 87.
- A proposal to offer free SAT and ACT test prep to Baltimore students is good for the testing company who stands to get paid by the school system, but not necessarily for students.
- A student was stabbed inside Patterson High School on Monday, according to district officials, marking the second time a Baltimore student has been stabbed on or near school grounds in less than a week.
- Charles Edward Winebrenner Jr., a retired baked goods distributor who held leadership positions in the Masonic Order, died Friday of complications of a fall. He was 91 and resided at the Maryland Masonic Home in Cockeysville.
- And when you hear the ambitions of America's youth, you feel a sense of obligation to leave them a better country.
- After retiring earlier this month, world champion skier and Under Armour athlete Lindsey Vonn visited the Baltimore brand's campus Tuesday as she prepares for the next phase of career, including philanthropy and encouraging young girls in the sport.
- Baltimore attorney Ivan Bates once represented Jason Hodge and Andre Haydel. On Friday, he learned the men were both killed in Baltimore’s latest wave of violence.
- William F. Wilke, a retired mechanical and general contractor who owned and operated his own business, died Jan. 16 from complications of a stroke at MedStar Franklin Square Medical Center. The Timonium resident was 95.
- The Ingenuity Project, an advanced match and science program, is expanding to James McHenry Elementary/Middle School in Hollins Market next year.
- Library administrator was active in Baltimore's civil rights movement
- Walking around the Coppin State University campus, Florine Camphor looks like a octogenarian cheerleader, wearing a sequin hat, blue suit and gold shirt for the school colors.
- Westminster lawyer practiced law in Carroll county for 48 years.
- Richard E. Blanchard, a wholesale toy business owner who later operated a trio of popular Rehoboth Beach, Del. variety shops, died of multiple organ failure Nov. 17 at Gilchrist Hospice Care in Towson.
- Here are some key takeaways from Maryland's new school accountability system that assigns star ratings to each of the state’s more than 1,300 schools, ranging from one star to five stars.
- The majority of Maryland’s struggling schools are concentrated in Baltimore City, according to rankings released Tuesday.
- Baltimore City Public Schools officials hosted a panel discussion of how the community can tackle the problem of students who lash out physically at school.
- Eugene F. Baldwin, a retired Baltimore City public schools English teacher who later worked as an editor, died Nov. 12 from an aneurysm at Holy Family at Merrimack Valley Hospital in Haverhill, Mass. The former longtime Catonsville resident was 74.
- A trio of violent events in Baltimore schools has revived discussions about school safety and the debate over how students are punished.
- A cafeteria worker at one Baltimore school was injured Tuesday in an alleged assault involving students, and a teacher at another city school was punched by a student Wednesday, district officials confirmed.
- Veterans, relatives, students and officials gathered at the War Memorial downtown to commemorate the armistice.
- The 130th City-Poly annual football classic will be held Nov. 2 at Morgan State University after having been mostly played for the last 20 years at M&T Bank Stadium.
- Phillip J. Correlli Sr., a semi-retired Baltimore roofer and saxophone player, died Sept. 22 of a heart attack at his Hampden home. He was 77.
- Dr. Thomas Cripps, a historian of African-American cinema and a retired Morgan State University professor, died of Alzheimer’s disease complications on his 86th birthday, Sept. 17, at Symphony Manor.
- Henry "Pete" Clements, a Baltimore Polytechnic Institute graduate who went on to become a colonel in the U.S. Air Force and associate director of NASA's Johnson Space Flight Center, died of an acute cardiac event Aug. 10 in McMahan, Texas. He was 92.
- Gov. Larry Hogan publicly rebuked Baltimore schools CEO Sonja B. Santelises on Wednesday, accusing her of failing to live up to her commitments on a timetable to air-condition seven schools where students were dismissed early as a result of the heat.
- The fourth annual African Griot Book Festival for Children, in Druid Hill Park, aimed to connect children with history and culture that they don’t often learn about in school or see in the media.
- Shop Maryland Tax-Free Week starts Sunday as the state allows consumers to buy some goods, particularly clothing and shoes, without paying the state's 6 percent sales tax. It comes just in time for back-to-school shopping.
- Edward William “Buddy” Gahan, a retired tile salesman who hunted on the Eastern Shore, died of Alzheimer’s disease complications Aug. 2 at Symphony Manor. The Mays Chapel resident was 90.
- Minor league pitcher and Haussner's bartender
- Elmer B. Kurrle, whose Kingsville grocery store was a neighborhood destination for decades, died July 14 from pneumonia at Franklin Square Medical Center. He was 90.
- Dr. Savas Tsakiris, a Dundalk dentist who was a co-owner of the Boulevard Diner, died Saturday from pancreatic cancer at the University of Maryland St. Joseph Medical Center. The Hunt Valley resident was 66.
- Educator was a graduate of Columbia University and headed the Community College of Baltimore City.
- Domino Sugar's distribution manager, the longest-tenured member of the company, is retiring after more than 50 years at the company.
- Charles F. Steinmetz, a music promoter who booked popular music acts at local venues, died of cancer June 30 at Upper Chesapeake University of Maryland Medical Center.
- Baltimore Women United and other local activist groups organize and help to lead a rally in support of "immigrants' rights" — and to resist the Trump administration's immigration policies.
- Harry M. Will, a mechanical engineer and consultant who brought his expertise to hospitals, education and religious facilities as well as industrial and commercial buildings, died Tuesday of multiple myeloma at Talbot Hospice in Easton. He was 86.
- Everett Charles “Chuck” Dann Jr., a former Ellicott City resident and retired trial attorney who worked on environmental and product liability cases, died of a stroke June 16 at his home in Los Angeles, Calif. He was 71.
- With the start of summer Thursday, harmful ground-level ozone pollution is likely to rise as temperatures do in the coming months.
- Retired Motor Vehicles administrative law judge had been a Bethlehem Steel Sparrows Point manager
- Alvin A. Jones Sr., founder of a Baltimore financial services company who earlier had been an H&R Block executive, died June 5 from complications of dementia at Keswick Multi-Care Center. he was 76.
- Donald E. Smith, a retired U.S. Defense Department engineer who worked in the field of rockets and missiles, died May 16 from prostate cancer at the Fairhaven Retirement Community in Sykesville. He was 99.
- On Sunday morning, Baltimore Polytechnic Institute’s seniors will walk across the stage for their graduation ceremony. Among them will be four students heading to Ivy League schools in the fall and six students who earned a perfect score on at least one SAT section or subject test.