periodicals
- Baltimore breaking news includes the body of a drowned swimmer being recovered, stabbings in Anne Arundel County and a Forest Hill house fire.
- The publisher of the Urbanite, a free monthly magazine focused on Baltimore urban affairs, said Wednesday she is seeking an investor to help the publication expand its digital media strategy.
- Pigtown resident Daryl Landy believes he's one of a growing number of Americans striving for better, not bigger, living quarters, and this week he's launched a new online magazine devoted to living, working and playing in small spaces.
- For transgender attack victim Chrissy Lee Polis, trauma remains
- Sports columnist Ken Rosenthal discusses a moment that wrote itself
- Jack W. Germond reflects on his time as The Sun's political columnist
- Joe Queenan has a soft spot for Baltimore and wants Hollywood to stop picking on the city.
- Jonah Goldberg says the case of the pro-gay-marriage foreign policy aide was mishandled
- Baltimore Sun Editor Mary Corey The Sun's 175th anniversary
- Leggy star doesn't exactly reveal much -- informationwise -- in new cover spread
- Baltimore Sun reporters, columnists and editors analyze the Achilles' injury to Ravens linebacker Terrell Suggs.
- BWI ranking: BWI ranks sixth out of 22 largest U.S. airports in magazine survey
- Pickup of 'VEEP' great news for local TV production workers
- Instant Analysis: Baltimore Ravens trade first-round pick in NFL draft
- In advance of the first round of the 2012 NFL draft, Baltimore Sun columnist Mike Preston gives his take on six college prospects who are linked to the Ravensin the latest mock drafts from prominent national analysts.
- Lou Panos, 86, who was inducted last week into the Maryland/Delaware/DC Press Association's Hall of Fame, cranked out articles, editorials and columns for the Associated Press for 20 years and later for the Baltimore Sun and the Patuxent Publishing Company newspapers, including the Towson Times.
- After decades of climbing the corporate ladder, Traci Lucien of Laurel stepped back to take care of her personal life, adopting a daughter at age 49.
- Susan Elizabeth "Susie" Mudd, who owned and edited Music Monthly, a publication that reported on Mid-Atlantic rock bands and musicians, died April 5 of cancer at Sinai Hospital. She was 56.
- Brent Bozell goes culture-warrior whacko in attacking it
- Craig Burke, publisher of Washington Jewish Week, said he helped rally the investors years ago who bought that paper, and more recently proposed that they consider bidding for the owner of the Baltimore Jewish Times. Now that they are poised to take over the company, he said he's eager to step into the Park Avenue offices and begin learning the business.
- John Lloyd Bergbower, a Johns Hopkins Medicine security vice president who as a city police commander battled drug buyers in Southwest Baltimore, suffered a fatal fall at his North Baltimore home April 1 and died later that day at Sinai Hospital. The North Baltimore resident was 60.
- "Savage U," which brings columnist Dan Savage and his producer, Lauren Hutchinson, to a different college campus each week for frank discussions with students about sex, will likely stir some culture-war controversy when it debuts at 11 p.m. Tuesday on MTV.
- A key creditor in the bankruptcy of the Baltimore Jewish Times and Style Magazine publisher has become the third bidder for the company, raising the prospect of new ownership.
- Hateful language is a kind of vandalism that, left unchecked, can tear at the fabric of society
- A backstage look at the making of "VEEP" in Baltimore.
- Baltimore Sun reporters, columnists and editors analyze the Denver Broncos' reported acquisition of former Indianapolis Colts quarterback Peyton Manning.
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- Online political powerhouse a C-SPAN star on Super Tuesday
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- Sitting at a table in a school cafeteria in Severna Park, Anne Arundel County Executive John R. Leopold didn't look like a politician under siege as he spoke to residents for hours on a recent evening.
- XXL's annual Freshman 10 list did not include Baltimore rappers Los or Mullyman, but does it really matter?
- Meghan Cain, a sophomore at Notre Dame Prep in Towson, is the winner of Sheppard Pratt's statewide "Love Your Tree" poster competition — and her work will be printed on all of The Center for Eating Disorders' marketing materials this year — she used words cut out from Seventeen magazine as the foundation of her poster.
- I'll be on that panel - Other topics include Santorum, Syria coverage
- The end of Pat Buchanan's career at MSNBC is part of a new, politically correct censorship in America.
- Life can be an unexpected journey, a fact evident in the pages of the book Lynn Abercrombie helped create about life with her late husband, National Geographic writer and photographer Tom Abercrombie.
- Food & Wine Magazine lets America vote for its favorite pastry chef
- Baltimore Sun reporters, columnists and editors analyze the Orioles' trade of Jeremy Guthrie to the Colorado Rockies for Jason Hammel and Matt Lindstrom.
- Early Texans turnovers helped the Ravens build a lead in 20-13 win
- Jonah Goldberg: Everyone from Charlie Sheen to Occupy Wall Street parlayed failure into something profound
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- Several people were arrested at malls across Maryland as police broke up crowds of hundreds lined up to buy Nike Air Jordan Concords, part of a nationwide frenzy over the new sneakers that prompted a number of disturbances.