university of arizona
- Sexual assault is not merely a chance byproduct of an uninhibited, inebriated moment. Decades of research show that perpetrating sexual assault reflects a man’s beliefs about women at the time of the assault, regardless of whether alcohol is involved.
- An autopsy was performed on Amy Metz on Jan. 25, 2016, by Dr. Meghan Kessler with the Office of the Chief Medical Examiner in Baltimore. The autopsy report lists the cause of death as undetermined. The manner of death also was listed as undetermined.
- Home-based primary care, or house calls, have shown to reduce health care spending and provide better outcomes for patients.
- When she's not working to improve economic opportunity in Baltimore, Shannon Landwehr helps rescue dogs and cats from kill shelters in the South.
- Girls play ball in boys' world. Defying convention, a smattering of girls play baseball and many are the only girl on the team.
- Flagship high school participates in national celebration of college decisions
- Many people may consider themselves poor spellers, but for stroke survivors, spelling can be even more challenging as damage to the brain can cause errors such as spelling "lion" as "tiger."
- Looking for Maryland's highest-paid state employees? You'll find them in University of Maryland locker rooms in College Park and its medical school in Baltimore.
- Edward C. Saffell Jr., a teacher and artist whose works reflected Maryland and Baltimore-based themes, died.
- After her son¿s battle with leukemia, the University of Maryland women¿s basketball coach makes the most of time with her family.
- My Mexican father applied to colleges in the United States in the late 1940s and was offered scholarships by the University of Arizona and by Western Reserve (now Case Western Reserve) in Cleveland. His father sat him down and drew a line from west to east across a map of the United States and said: "Below this line, they don't like Mexicans." It was a fateful moment.
- Two local wrestling coaches and an accomplished former high school wrestler will be inducted into the Maryland chapter of the National Wrestling Hall of Fame next month.
- Sigma Alpha Epsilon, among the nation's largest and most storied college fraternities, eliminated the controversial "pledging" process Sunday, saying new members once referred to as "pledges" immediately would be treated as fairly and equally as more senior brothers.
- Mercedes C. Samborsky, an accomplished musician who changed careers later in life and became a lawyer whose specialty was family law, died Jan. 31 of heart failure at Franklin Square Medical Center. She was 84.
- Dr. Kathy A. McGovern, who had conducted cell research and was also an educator, died Dec. 1 of complications from a stroke.
- Cindy Kleback, a 15-year veteran of library work, was announced Tuesday as the new branch manager.
- 'NBC Sunday Night Football' isn't just in a league of its own when it comes to NFL telecasts. Last night's broadcast of the Baltimore Ravens 13 to 10 win over the Pittsburgh Steelers was another gold-plated example of that truth.
- Dr. Zlatko Tesanovic, a Johns Hopkins University physics professor who advised his visiting academic colleagues where they should eat in Baltimore, died of an apparent heart attack July 26 at the George Washington University Hospital in Washington, D.C., after collapsing at Reagan National Airport. The Canton resident was 55.
- The Disabled American Veterans have honored retired Army veteran and Harford County State's Attorney Joseph I. Cassilly as the organization's Outstanding