new york university
- After a long drive from Arizona, prosecutors say, Dmytro Holovko pulled up to a meeting spot on Liberty Road and unloaded hundreds of pounds of marijuana — another successful shipment for a drug ring accused of using Baltimore as a hub in a distribution network that brought in $1 million a month.
- Just like the team they love, Oriole fans always find a way. And Orioles fans in New York City have started flocking to the Horsebox, a two-and-a-half year old bar on Avenue A in the East Village.
- Improving classroom instruction is the most critical issue
- Kathryn Klein, M.D., M.P.H. and an assistant professor of ophthalmology at the Krieger Children's Eye Center at the Wilmer Institute, is seeing patients at the Wilmer Eye Institute at Bel Air (formerly Parris-Castoro Eye Care Center).
- Ronald A.J. Wilson, a retired accounting executive and Vietnam veteran, died June 30 from complications of pneumonia at Dartmouth-Hitchcock Medical Center in Lebanon, N.H. The former Roland Park resident was 67.
- After six years, Bruce Keating recently stepped down as district coordinator for the highly popular AARP Tax-Aide Program in Harford County
- Baltimore County Tuskegee Airmen Lemuel Lewie and Cyril Byron will serve as grand marshals of the Towson Fourth of July Parade.
- Election Integrity Maryland says it has found hundreds of dead people listed on voter registration rolls in Baltimore and Prince George's counties, as well as residents who have registered in multiple places and addresses that are vacant lots. But their findings have been called into question as exaggerated and politically motivated.
- The 40-member cast assembled by 2nd Star director Brian Douglas brings fresh vitality to "Fiddler on the Roof," playing at Bowie Playhouse in Whitemarsh Park.
- Annapolis' Bay Theatre and Infinity Theatre are joining together to present summer children's shows. The companies will collaborate for three original productions for kids ages 3-10.
- When a 91-year-old veteran is forced to prove he is a citizen, you know something is wrong
- The Town of Bel Air has 13 group homes, and five of them are concentrated within a two-block radius near Broadway and Franklin Street, creating a "community killer," one resident said.
- Plain-spoken but visionary, Arunah S. Abell got his paper, the Baltimore Sun, off to a smashing start.
- The problem with 'scientific' explanations for political leanings
- Liberal researchers are taking wild flights of fancy in interpreting scientific data to marginalize conservatives as reactionaries.
- Tim and Trevor White are making a name for themselves as a producer-director team
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- Hateful language is a kind of vandalism that, left unchecked, can tear at the fabric of society
- Kennedy Krieger's senior occupational therapist helped children with feeding and swallowing issues
- Actor coming to Baltimore discuss his movie 'The Broken Tower'
- Retired Edgewood Arsenal scientist studied the effects of a poison gas surprise attack on military personnel
- A significant number of Baltimore teachers — in some schools as many as 60 percent of the staff — have received unsatisfactory ratings on their midyear evaluations as the system moves to implement a new pay-for-performance contract that's considered a bellwether for a national movement.
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- Cal Thomas asks: Why should a state like South Carolina be punished for the sins of the past?
- An Muslim college student finds that going to an Islamic country did not mean an end to anti-Muslim prejudice.
- The Ivy bookshop in north Baltimore will have new owners in January: Ann and Ed Berlin.
- The new Consumer Financial Protection Bureau seeks input on private education loans as it prepares to write a report on them for Congress.
- Dr. H. Leonard Warres, a World War II combat surgeon who later became a radiologist and was head of outpatient radiology at what is now the University of Maryland Medical Center, died Wednesday of multiple organ failure at North Oaks retirement community in Pikesville. He was 99.
- Dr. H. Leonard Warres, a World War II combat surgeon who later became a radiologist and was head of out-patient radiology at what is now the University of Maryland Medical Center, died Wednesday of multiple organ failure at North Oaks retirement community in Pikesville. He was 99.
- The private developers of two high-profile state projects are seeking financing through a program that lets wealthy foreigners invest $500,000 and, in return, go to the front of the line for green cards and possible U.S. citizenship.
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