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- Vehicles will soon start rolling off ships at the former Sparrows Point steel mill in Baltimore County.
- It means that the Buckeyes, ranked fifth in the preseason, will have to readjust again going into their season opener Saturday against Navy at M&T Bank Stadium. Redshirt freshman J.T. Barrett will start in Miller¿s place.
- The Aberdeen area could soon get a new place to shop, and stay overnight, near the busy I-95 interchange at Route 22.
- According to law enforcers in Maryland and Louisiana, Fred Douglas Brooks III is based in Houston and back to his old ways, overseeing the complex logistics of supplying kilograms of heroin from Mexican sources to wholesalers in Baltimore, New Orleans, New York, and elsewhere, and laundering the high-volume flow of cash that comes back to him in return.
- We have reached the halfway point in the LPGA schedule, and there is some great golf being played by a lot of gals out here. The Ricoh Women's British Open marks our third major of the year and second major in the past three tournaments leading up to the International Crown at the end of the month.
- The Harford County Sheriff's Office and Maryland State Police report:
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- The bride's love for water led to a nautical-themed celebration at the Baltimore Museum of Industry
- Crimes reported in Towson, Timonium,Cockeysville April 25- May 4
- French economist Thomas Piketty gets it wrong. It's a failure of democratic governments to act responsibly, not the shortcomings of capitalism that is failing America's workers and middle class.
- As Chinese students spending their senior year at The John Carroll School, William Du and Sunny Lu knew how it felt to wait weeks to get mail from home or to miss their families.
- An derelict service station on a high visibility corner along Bel Air's busy Baltimore Pike corridor finally is being torn down to make way for a medical office building.
- Navy will play eight of their 12 games in 2014 in Maryland, including two in Baltimore
- Nnamdi Egbuaba, a St. Frances linebacker originally from Nigeria, had 19 sacks this fall. He plans to sign with Maryland on national signing day.
- Guests of Lt. Gov. Anthony G. Brown in the state's skybox at the Redskins' stadium contributed about $20,000 to his campaign to become governor, according to the latest filings in that race.
- At 1:30 p.m. on a sunny December weekday, just down the hill from the prestigious Baltimore City College high school, shattered glass and blood stained the street.
- As he runs for governor, Lt. Gov. Anthony Brown has hosted politically influential guests — including lobbyists, campaign contributors and union leaders — in the state's skybox at Redskins stadium, records show.
- Online retailer Amazon has partnered with the U.S. Postal Service to provide Sunday package delivery at no extra cost in two key cities, and plans to expand the program dramatically in the next year.
- Show chronicles African-American history from the 1600s to the present and includes rare copy of the Emancipation Proclamation
- A man in Edgewater stole a FedEx package off of a doorstep on Tuesday and tried to stab a teenager who chased him down, Anne Arundel County police said.
- Bel Air Town Center, which will soon be home to Maryland's first drive-through only Starbucks, recently got a facelift. The 93,000-square-foot neighborhood shopping destination, at the intersection of Routes 1 and 24, has undergone a $1 million renovation and improvement program.
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- Of the 631 public grade crossings in Maryland, only 20 percent are gated, according to FRA records.
- Five air traffic control towers in Maryland that had been slated to shut down in June as a result of federal budget cuts are now expected to remain open, federal officials said Wednesday — easing fears that the closures could have backed up traffic at BWI Marshall Airport.
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- Private pilots across Maryland and two commercial airlines will have their wings clipped next month as the Federal Aviation Administration closes five air traffic control towers as part of an effort to comply with across-the-board budget cuts mandated by Congress.
- Towson Police are alerting neighborhoods and residents along the Charles Street corridor about four thefts from the front of homes that have occurred in the last two weeks.
- Man exiting his vehicle in Towson robbed by men armed with machete, handgun.
- Two Harford County athletes climaxed their indoor track and field seasons with victories in the MPSSAA state meet in Landover Monday and Tuesday.
- The Ravens lost four of last five regular season games, but never lost faith
- Many business owners interviewed along Bel Air's Main Street this week said they had no problem with the U.S. Postal Service's plan to eliminate Saturday mail delivery to homes and businesses, some going so far to say the move makes sense for the postal service. Similar sentiments were expressed by people in downtown Havre de Grace, with most saying they won't mourn the passage of Saturday mail.
- Ravens fans going to New Orleans share their Super Bowl stories and photos.
- Baltimore Ravens middle linebacker allegedly used deer antler spray that contains a substance banned by NFL
- Four companies in the Baltimore area are among the best places to work in the nation, according to a list released Thursday.
- Baltimore Ravens general manager Ozzie Newsome comments on decision to dismiss offensive coordinator Cam Cameron.
- Baltimore, Washington fans enjoy a banner year for sports.
- It may be the case that providing curbside delivery to neighborhoods like Kelly Glen is prohibitively expensive, but if that's the case, curbside delivery should be cut to all similarly situated neighborhoods.
- Jordan Latham spent his freshman year at Xavier homesick and missing his family. Now he's back in Baltimore and playing well for Loyola, while spending plenty of time with younger brother Myles, who has autism.
- Within UPS's Information Services Group in Timonium, a team of 80 mathematicians and engineers make projections for the shipping world of the future. The group designs the technology behind the routing and dispatching of packages handled by the brown delivery trucks during peak holiday season.
- Baltimore Sun columnist Mike Preston answers a selection of reader questions about the Ravens' 31-28 overtime loss to the Washington Redskins on Sunday at FedEx Field.
- Backup QB Kirk Cousins did what was needed after RGIII went down with an injury
- It was a painful loss for the Ravens even beyond the frustration of a 31-28 overtime setback against the Washington Redskins on Sunday at FedEx Field.