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Dr. Dolan Hubbard, professor and chairperson of the Department of English and Language Arts at Morgan State University
- Dr. Dolan Hubbard, professor and chairperson of the Department of English and Language Arts at Morgan State University is gearing up to cap off an amazing opportunity.
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- Police departments across Maryland were ordered to stop collecting DNA from suspects of certain crimes last week, the result of a ruling in the state’s highest court, the Maryland Court of Appeals.more More Arrow


FILE - In this file photograph taken Oct. 7, 2010, a CSX train rolls along the tracks passing another CSX train in Buffalo, N.Y. Higher rates are helping freight railroad CSX Corp. boost profits by 14 percent despite lower coal shipments. CSX said Tuesday, April 17, 2012 that it earned $449 million, or 43 cents per share, in the first quarter, up from $395 million, or 35 cents per share, a year ago.
- The search for new and better paying jobs for Baltimoreans could lead straight to the same place where 17,000 area residents are already directly employed: The Port of Baltimore. In a study completed by the Brookings Institution, a Washington D.C. based nonprofit public policy organization, Baltimore’s next economic growth spurt could come, with some key investments, from the transportation industry.
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 Commissioner Fred Bealefeld
- Most seemed stunned to hear of the unexpected retirement of Fred Bealefeld after 31years with the Baltimore City Police Department, the last five as commissioner.more More Arrow


 Avi and Eliyahu Werdesheim coming out of the courtroom
- Corey Ausby, the 16-year-old Baltimore youth allegedly beaten by a former community watch member and his brother, testified in court April 25 that he did not want to press charges against the two. more More Arrow


 Michael Cryor
- Michael Cryor will be granted an Honorary Doctorate of Humane Letters from Montclair State University at the institution’s May commencement exercises and will also deliver the commencement address. more More Arrow


 Phylicia Barnes
- A year after the body of North Carolina teen Phylicia Barnes was discovered in a Maryland river, a Baltimore grand jury has indicted a man on a first-degree murder charge in connection with her death. more More Arrow


In this undated photo provided by the Baltimore Police, Eliyahu Werdesheim is shown in Baltimore. Werdesheim is charged with second-degree assault, carrying a dangerous weapon with intent to injure and false imprisonment in an attack on a teen while patrolling for a Jewish neighborhood watch group in Baltimore in November 2010.
- Avi and Eliyahu Werdesheim, two brothers allegedly responsible for the beating of a 15-year-old African American male walking in an Orthodox Jewish community, were able to hold off facing a judge in court April 23. more More Arrow


- Fire department captains of companies facing closure are calling on community support in hopes that citizen outcries will help their life-saving services from the chopping block. more More Arrow


 Former Mayor Sheila Dixon responds to all of the jokes aimed at her during her Roast and Toast, held at Power Plant Live's Comedy Factory April 19
- Friends and foes alike met at Baltimore’s Power Plant Live’s Comedy Factory last week to “Roast and Toast” former Mayor Sheila Dixon.more More Arrow


Secretary of Education, Dr. Lillian M. Lowery
- Delaware Secretary of Education Lillian M. Lowery, who led that state's successful efforts to win two ‘Race to the Top’ grants, is coming to Maryland to lead the nation’s No 1 ranked state school system, Maryland State officials announced April 20.
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- Every year 4,500 teens are counted among the fatalities reported to the CDC as a result of drinking and driving. more More Arrow


Prom Dress Giveaways offer students an affordable way to attend prom, while also gaining access to free, clean, top of the line dresses- some donated with tags still attached.
- Driven by the need to be in the running for best dressed, hundreds of thousands of teen girls and boys flock to shopping malls, boutiques, and tuxedo shops every Spring for prom gear. more More Arrow


 John C. Wood went missing on April 6 after he left the house on his own accord. Anyone with information on the whereabouts of John C. Wood is asked to call Baltimore County Police at 410-853-3650 or 410-307-2020.
- Baltimore County Police are asking for the public’s help in finding 17-year-old John C. Wood of the Parkville area of Baltimore County.more More Arrow


 The Right Rev. Adam J. Richardson Jr., presiding prelate and his wife, Connie Speights Richardson, Episcopal supervisor of the Second Episcopal District.
- AME Churches in the Second Episcopal District shared in the hospitality of the Empowerment Temple, where the Rev. Dr. Jamal Bryant is pastor, as their 196th Annual Conference was held from April 9-14.more More Arrow


- Maryland is now the first state in the nation to officially ban Roxarsone, a product added to chicken feed to prevent disease and produce fatter chickens. more More Arrow


Dr. Sylvester James Gates, Physics Professor, discusses the physics of football
- Over 400 middle and high school students embarked on the campus of the New Psalmist Baptist church in anticipation of discovery and adventure in the world of STEM. more More Arrow


Dr. Eugene M. DeLoatch, Ph.D., Founding Dean, Clarence M. Mitchell, Jr. School of Engineering at Morgan State University
- The 1960’s was a decade of firsts: the first heart transplant surgery was performed and the science fiction series Star Trek made its TV premiere.more More Arrow


The Three Amigos have chosen to remain anonymous.
- The perplexing Maryland Mega Millions conundrum was solved on Tuesday when the agency announced the true winners of the hefty cash prize.
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Senate President Thomas V. Mike Miller, left, Gov. Martin O’Malley, center, and House Speaker Michael Busch, right, attend a bill signing ceremony in Annapolis, Md., on Tuesday, April 10, 2012, hours after a revenue package to avoid more than $500 million in state budget cuts failed in the Maryland General Assembly. O’Malley described the budget package failure as “pretty much the low point of my experience here.”
- The Maryland General Assembly’s budget impasse could have a devastating impact for the state’s jurisdictions if a special session is not called.
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 a man dressed as a Powerball stands by a couple who did not want to be identified as they hold a large prop check showing their winnings at the lottery's headquarters in Baltimore.
- BALTIMORE (AP) — The holder of a winning Mega Millions ticket sold in Maryland claimed a share of the record-breaking $656 million prize on Monday, but will remain anonymous, state lottery officials announced.more More Arrow


Customers stream in and out of the 7-11 on Liberty Road that sold one of three tickets to the largest Mega Millions jackpot on record.
- It looked like business as usual at the Liberty Road McDonald’s and the workers there couldn’t comment one way or the other, but everyone wants to know the skinny on the outcome of the “storied” lottery ticket that supposedly garnered a third of last week’s Mega Millions game.
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Voters trickled in and out of the Central Branch of the Enoch Pratt Free Library early Tuesday, April 3, 2012.
- Voters straggled to the voting booths for the 2012 primary election all day on Tuesday. No lines. No waiting. more More Arrow


- A new gambling bill that would bolster the state’s casino industry and create a revenue windfall for parts of Maryland, including the city of Baltimore, is making its way through the Maryland General Assembly.



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Drs. Bill and Camille Cosby
- “History will recognize them as leaders in the community and in education,” Ralph Moore, director of the St. Frances Academy Community Center, said about Drs. Bill and Camille Cosby. more More Arrow


FILE - In this Feb. 23, 2012 file photo, Sen. C. Anthony Muse, D-Prince George's, speaks during a debate on possible amendments to a gay marriage bill in Annapolis, Md. Experts say that despite a deep field of candidates, the race to represent Maryland in the U.S. Senate is not very competitive. University of Maryland Baltimore County political science professor Laura Hussey said Sen. Benjamin Cardin is largely expected to earn the Democratic nod in Maryland's primary election, Tuesday, April 3, 2012. However, Muse, who is among the eight candidates challenging Cardin, says he is confident his grassroots campaign has made enough inroads to topple the incumbent.
- WASHINGTON - Candidate C. Anthony Muse, running to unseat Sen. Ben Cardin, defended his campaign literature, which singled out Jews in the upper chamber, as "educational tools" designed to emphasize the low numbers of Blacks in Congress.

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 Morrell Park Elementary/Middle School
- The American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU) is decrying the arrest March 29 of four elementary school children in a Baltimore school, calling the act inexcusable. more More Arrow


- City officials released the financial plan to run the city for the 2013 Fiscal Year and close the deficit of $46 million looming over the city last week. more More Arrow


Focusing on portraiture, Belle Massey’s subjects range from the abstract to family members to celebrities and strangers.
- Belle Massey has always felt the need to create outside of herself.more More Arrow


- For nine consecutive years, Heal a Woman to Heal a Nation Inc.’s annual conference has been enriching the lives of those in the community by empowering women.more More Arrow