periodicals
- Baltimore Sun reporters, columnists and editors share their thoughts after the New England Patriots' 28-24 win over the Seattle Seahawks in Super Bowl XLIX.
- Columnist shares insights into FOGO - the fear of getting old
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- George G. "Greg" Plitt Jr., a Gilman School graduate and actor who was considered the No. 1 male fitness model in America, died.
- Isaiah Lamb, who was featured in a Sports Illustrated article about homeless athletes, earned a basketball scholarship to Marist.
- Authorities say a Maryland native and fitness model featured on the cover of numerous magazines was killed after he was struck by a train in Southern California.
- Columnist reflects appreciatively on her mother's many wonderful qualities
- Without the freedom to offend -- even in the most outrageous way -- freedom is circumscribed and tepid.
- It turns out that what terrorists really hate is when you laugh at them, says Leonard Pitts Jr.
- Have a Baltimore Ravens-related topic for Baltimore Sun columnist Mike Preston?
- Columnist Mike Preston picks three key matchups in the Ravens' divisional round playoff game vs. the New England Patriots.
- The Ravens are coming off a 30-17 win over the Pittsburgh Steelers in the AFC wild-card round, and they visit the New England Patriots for a divisional playoff game Saturday. As he does each week, columnist Mike Preston took a handful of reader questions about the team.
- The "next generation of science" is at risk unless major changes are made to increase opportunities for young researchers, Johns Hopkins University President Ronald Daniels wrote in a scientific journal article published Tuesday.
- Carroll Seniors columnist: Valuing the elderly requires changing values
- Science has come a long way from the days when we believed the universe revolved around the Earth, lobotomies were the best treatment for depression and germs didn't exist. But while you probably won't read any studies of alchemy or bloodletting in respected scientific journals, it doesn't mean the days of publishing inaccurate and misleading research are behind us. In fact, 2014 was a banner year for the promotion of some pretty dubious and downright silly research.
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