loyola university chicago
- Catonsville High School principal leaving for Baltimore school
- John H. Schmidt, a retired Lucent Technologies manager who had served for nearly four decades with the Maryland Air National Guard, died March 20 at Howard County General Hospital of heart failure. He was 80.
- The 2015 Harford County Teacher of the Year Award will be named at a banquet Wednesday, March 25, at the Bayou Restaurant in Havre de Grace.
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- Cornelius F. Sybert Jr., a retired Howard County Circuit Court judge whose legal career spanned four decades, died.
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- Atholton junior guard Brandon Willis sits down to talk about this season, his career, interests off the basketball court and goals for the playoffs.
- The Boys¿ Latin basketball team had too many offense weapons and too much hustle for Annapolis Area Christian School.
- James O'D Maher, a retired Foreign Service Officer, died Jan. 31 at his home in Washington's Morgan Adams neighborhood of cancer.
- The Ravens and Orioles stadiums haven't undergone a liquor board inspection in years, records show. The Royal Farms Arena? Not since 2013. And, at Baltimore's Horseshoe Casino — home of the city's only 24-7 liquor license — officials have yet to conduct an unannounced inspection. The liquor board says that's about to change..
- A Loyola University resident assistant and biology major was killed in a car accident Friday in Colorado, the university reported.
- Kaitlin Pukita and Jeffrey Bullock are engaged to be married in August 2015.
- Maryland charities Johns Hopkins University and the University of Maryland and U.S. Naval Academy all report offshore investment accounts
- Thursday was quite a night for River Hill soccer at Loyola University's Ridley Athletic Complex, where the school's blue shined on the field and ruled the stands. It also was nothing new. The sweep marked the fourth time the River Hill boys and girls soccer teams won state championships in the same year.
- A crowd stood around as pumpkins were catapulted through the air, smashing into pieces in the grass Tuesday afternoon behind Arbutus Middle School.
- Calynne Moore and Thomas Street were married at the Carroll Count Court House on Sept. 17, 2014.
- Dr. Charles K. "Bucky" Peters Jr., a well-known Catonsville dentist who practiced for 53 years, died Friday at his Catonsville home of cancer. He was 83.
- Howard J. McNamara, who delivered men and materiel to Utah Beach during the D-Day landings of June 6, 1944, and later became insurance manager for the city of Baltimore, died Saturday at St. Agnes Hospital of heart failure. He was 95.
- Used as an estate and farm by David Maulden Perine, Baltimore¿s register of wills throughout the mid-1800s, Homeland was officially declared a community in 1924 when it was purchased by the Roland Park Co.
- Dr. Felix A. Khin-Maung-Gyi, executive chairman and founder of Chesapeake Research Review, LLC, died Thursday at his Elliott City home of undetermined causes. He was 58.
- Glenelg High graduate Caroline Bowman is starring as Eva Peron in "Evita" at the Kennedy Center. She and other local artists who launched from Columbia are venturing back to town for "Bringing Broadway to Columbia," a Columbia Center for Theatrical Arts benefit at Toby's Dinner Theater Oct. 13. The show, staged every couple years, is a large-scale, variety program that brings theater and musical performers together at the place where many of them got their start.
- Both county executive candidates promised they would be "hands-on" supporters of local business if elected to the county's top seat.
- Christiana Homeschool Academy, a classical education hybrid homeschool program, begins classes for the year.
- The Francis Scott Key High School Class of 1963 presented a $1,000 scholarship to graduating senior Brady Weller at the Senior Awards Ceremony June 5.
- Hamilton G. Walker Jr., a retired chemical engineer who later established a custom furniture making business, died FridayJUL11 of cancer at his Stevensville home.
- Cedar Lane Regional Park, a popular venue for soccer and lacrosse tournaments in Bel Air, plans to unveil a new, state-of-the-art electronic scoreboard on Saturday.
- Fights between small groups of black and Latino students are recent events – but inclusiveness, tolerance and a positive climate are present daily in classrooms at Digital Harbor. In my 44 years in Baltimore City Schools, I have not experienced a more diverse or vibrant school. Judge us by our long-term record, not by isolated incidents.
- Six-time Rolling Road club champion Bassler tried to qualify for U.S. Open
- In Anne Arundel County, Republican county executive candidates Laura Neuman and Steve Schuh are engaged in a bruising primary fight.
- Banking industry veteran and native Baltimorean Scott Wilfong got involved with the Living Classrooms Foundation to help improve lives in some of East Baltimore's neediest neighborhoods, including Perkins Homes, the Fayette Street corridor and McElderry Park.
- Six seats on the Harford County Board of Education will be filled in this year's election, the first time that's happened since state legislation passed five years ago setting up a board with six elected and three appointed members.
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- Timonium poet Ann Kolakowski writes about lost town of Warren where her grandmother grew up and which is now the site of Loch Raven Reservoir in new collection, "Persistence: Poems of Warren, Maryland."
- Jackie Carrera leaving as president/CEO of Parks and People Foundation after 21 years. She is moving to California for her husband's job.
- Baltimore police are investigating a stabbing that took place in the Winston-Govans neighborhood Monday evening.
- A fifth-grade math and science teacher whose principal calls her the "cream of the crop" and whose students say makes them forget they're learning equations and elements was named Baltimore City's 2014 Teacher of the Year.
- George L. "Len" Novotny, a retired manager who was active in youth lacrosse for three decades, died Sunday of cancer at Lorien Mays Chapel and Skilled Nursing. He was 73.
- It's an Olympics of sorts for financial analysts in training. A team of five business school students from the University of Baltimore have advanced to a national round of a global challenge to create the best equity research report about a public company. They will compete Wednesday in Denver with student teams from across North America and South America.
- Dorothea Arvin Rawlings, a former teacher Barclay Elementary School, died of cancer March 9 at Gilchrist Hospice Care in Towson. The West Baltimore resident was 73.