robin roberts
- Former Orioles ace Mike Mussina saw his vote total climb again in the balloting for the Baseball Hall of Fame, but missed out on induction, while Chipper Jones, Vladimir Guerrero, Jim Thome, and Trevor Hoffman earned induction as the class of 2018.
- As a high-level Division I athlete and aspiring broadcaster, Chloe Pavlech occupies an unlikely space in the media-sports Venn diagram. She has come to realize that success on the court and in the broadcast studio is possible. And when you can combine the two? All the better.
- Jonah Goldberg says national media didn't get the verdict they wanted, so they're going after 'stand your ground' as a consolation prize
- Robin Roberts returns to anchor Good Morning America, five months after a bone transplant to treat MDS
- Jim Palmer became the third Orioles great to be immortalized in bronze and put on display in the Garden of Greats behind center field at Camden Yards on Saturday afternoon, joining Frank Robinson and Earl Weaver and awaiting the arrival of Eddie Murray, Cal Ripken and Brooks Robinson later this season.
- Three-time Cy Young Award winner Jim palmer will have his sculpture unveiled at Camden Yards at a ceremony Saturday at 2:15 p.m.
- The underlying medical condition that contributed to the death of writer and filmmaker Nora Ephron and is forcing ABC news anchor Robin Roberts to get a bone marrow transplant is a rare and complicated disease that scientists are still trying to figure out.
- "Good Morning America"co-host George Stephanopoulos used the adjective "staggering" to describe the response to his on-air partner Robin Roberts' announcement this week that she has a blood disease and needs a bone marrow transplant.
- Robin Roberts of Good Morning America has MDS and we tell you what it is.
- When so many conservative disrespect marriage, no surprise traditional values are in trouble
- Maybe CBS News, not ABC, should have taken victory lap on Obama same-sex interview.
- Biden's comments accelerated Obama's acceptance of gay marriage
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- An American businessman detained for four months after the presumed death of his traveling companion in Aruba said Thursday he had nothing to do with her disappearance.
- The New York hotel maid who says she was sexually assaulted by Dominique Strauss-Kahn, former chief of the International Monetory Fund, has broken her silence in an interview with ABC's Robin Roberts that will air Monday on "Good Morning America."