continuing education
- Howard Community College is part of a three-college consortium that will launch a Mount Airy-based health care training center to propel job seekers into those high-demand careers, HCC officials said.
- The Maryland Institute College of Art announced a $10 million gift, the largest in its history, on Wednesday, saying the money will be used to expand graduate programs and research.
- State and local officials from Carroll, Frederick and Howard community colleges are scheduled to attend a ground breaking ceremony on Monday, July 25, for the new Mount Airy College Center for Health Care Education.
- Solar Decathlon houses can be viewed in September
- After retiring as head of publications for the U.S. Department of State in September 2009, George Clack, then 63, figured he had the time to devote to writing an online journal. Now he teaches his craft.
- Enoch Pratt and Verizon team up to keep Baltimore kids from falling behind
- Aaron Greenfield's work as a Baltimore attorney representing Holocaust survivors and family members earned him an invitation to join a special committee of the U.S. Holocaust Memorial Museum.
- Dr. Betty W. Robinson, a psychiatrist who had been director of inpatient services at the Walter P. Carter Center in downtown Baltimore and an associate professor at the University of Maryland School of Medicine, died at 84.
- Dr. Betty W. Robinson, a psychiatrist who had been director of inpatient services at the Walter P. Carter Center in downtown Baltimore and an associate professor at the University of Maryland School of Medicine, died at 84.
- The Harford County Education Association announced it was seeking an impasse in negotiations for teacher raises with the Board of Education.
- Sheila Song earns a doctorate in pharmacy from University of Maryland School of Pharmacy, in Baltimore, and inspired by her paternal grandmother who partially raised her, plans to specialize in geriatric pharmacy.
- Calendar of events bulletin board for Baltimore Messenger
- William Donald Schaefer — the former mayor, governor and comptroller who left an indelible mark on Baltimore — is heading back to the city this afternoon for one last tour.
- How employers are making their workplaces healthier