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Inside the Dugout: Seeing through the ‘maniacal cope’ of some O’s fans
Reactions to the playoff loss have been extreme. Mike Elias doesn’t need to be.
Orioles General Manager Mike Elias has a lot questions to answer this offseason.
Church sues Maryland, says it can’t be investigated for discrimination
Lawyers for the Seventh-day Adventist Church are arguing that the First Amendment allows it to ask employees to “uphold their religious beliefs.”
Exterior of the Edward A. Garmatz United States District Courthouse in Baltimore, MD as seen on 5.20.24
Letter: With Harborplace, it’s time to move past nostalgia and embrace progress
Colin Tarbert, president and CEO of Baltimore Development Corp., shares a history with Harborplace — but he says it’s time to move past nostalgia and embrace progress.
The Baltimore skyline is seen above the Harborplace pavilions and the Inner Harbor.
Baltimore City Council votes to ban gas-powered leaf blowers. Here’s when it starts.
Baltimore’s City Council voted on Monday to ban gas-powered leaf blowers in the city.
Baltimore is poised to ban noisy, polluting gas-powered leaf blowers, with offenders subject to fines.
Baltimore City Council wants to raise property tax rates on vacant homes
The plan would set the property tax rate on vacant properties at triple the current level for the first year it is in effect and then quadruple the current rate in subsequent years.
Owners of vacant properties would pay higher tax rates if Baltimore City Council approves legislation introduced Monday.
Bishme Cromartie talks Blackness, politics and grief ahead of Baltimore visit
In advance of Bishme Cromartie launching the Baltimore Museum of Industry’s new “Labor + Innovation” speaker series on Wednesday, the designer opened up about grief, politics and Blackness.
NEW YORK, NEW YORK - FEBRUARY 13: Designer Bishme Cromartie poses with models at the Bishme Cromartie presentation during New York Fashion Week at The Ritz-Carlton NoMad on February 13, 2024 in New York City. (Photo by Albert Urso/Getty Images)
JPMorgan Chase helped revive Detroit. Now they’re betting big on Baltimore.
Those familiar with the bank’s work said JPMorgan Chase can help Baltimore fill its empty storefronts, reduce its vacant housing surplus and bring more good-paying jobs to city residents — all crucial to its financial sustainability.
People enjoy downtown Detroit, Mich. on Sept. 19, 2024.
Meet the couple helping to frame Baltimore’s culture and history
JLP Custom Picture Framing in the Old Goucher neighborhood of Baltimore has been around for about 50 years and has been owned since 2006 by Thom and Carol Stone.
Thom, left, and Carol Stone, owners of JLP Custom Picture Framing, are interviewed inside their store in Baltimore on Wednesday, October 2, 2024.
Baltimore’s Jewish community, state leaders remember Oct. 7 at Beth El
More than 1,500 gathered at Beth El Congregation in Pikesville Monday night to remember the lives lost last year during Hamas’ Oct. 7 attack.
Attendees of the October 7 Baltimore Community Commemoration event get emotional during a speech about Israeli hostages at the Beth El Congregation in Pikesville, Md., on Oct. 7, 2024.
Pregnant woman’s fatal shooting among cases linked to alleged hit men in new indictment
The two men are accused of carrying out a string of contract shootings and killings across Baltimore over a bloody eight-month period.
Angel Smith was seven months pregnant when she and fiance Yahmell Montague were gunned down in 2022. Police and prosecutors are now charging two alleged hit men in their killings.
Ahead of homecoming, Maryland universities ramp up security with drones, license plate readers
Following the string of shootings during homecoming celebrations in recent years, campus police departments are implementing additional security measures and protocols.
Baltimore police and fire department respond to the scene at Morgan State where at least four people were shot.
With October’s arrival, new laws take effect in Maryland
One law, which alters regulatory requirements for the marketing and sale of electricity and gas, has already been challenged in court.
October is here, which means there are hundreds of new laws taking effect across Maryland.
Will your vote on the redevelopment of Harborplace matter? A court will decide.
The fate of a nearly $1 billion plan to reimagine Baltimore’s downtown waterfront now rests in the hands of judges.
Harborplace renderings show massive residential units envisioned by the developer.
One year since Oct. 7, Maryland’s Jewish and Palestinian communities grapple with fallout
In the days leading up to the first anniversary of Hamas’ Oct. 7 attack, locals with ties to both Israel and Gaza assembled peacefully across Maryland.
At left, Matan Boltax, who was at the Nova music festival when Hamas launched its attack on Oct. 7, 2023, shared his story with people at the ARIEL Chabad Center in Pikesville. At right, people gather with signs at a rally Sunday afternoon in Columbia, Md., in support of Palestine.
Why few communities chose Baltimore’s high-risk, high-reward opioid legal strategy
Baltimore joined that exclusive group last month, launching a trial against the drug distributors McKesson and AmerisourceBergen that has been six years in the making.
Members of the BRIDGES Coalition hold a demonstration in front of City Hall in Baltimore in July.
How to cope with the end of the world
It’s the (possible) end of the world as we know it, and we don’t feel fine. But we can control how we think, talk and breathe our way through it.
It seems like the end of the world. Put down the phone, take a deep breath and focus on things you can control.
Morgan State marching band to play in Rose Parade, ‘the granddaddy of them all’
The Magnificent Marching Machine was invited to the Pasadena Tournament of Roses, leaving it just one invite shy of the Triple Crown of parade events.
Someone wearing a blue and orange marching band uniform plays a trumpet on a football field in front of the rest of the marching band.
These Hampden businesses insist they’re haunted
Hampden’s merchants and restaurateurs opened their doors for a new walking ghost tour this month. Turns out, the whole neighborhood thinks it's haunted.
Tour guide Mars Duque leads a Haunted Hampden Ghost Tour, with a stop outside of Modern World on 36th Street in Baltimore on Thursday.
Maryland State Teacher of the Year is once again from Baltimore City
Kat Locke-Jones was one of seven teachers from around the state selected as finalists.
Kat Locke-Jones Maryland Teacher of the Year
Cecelia Williams Bryant, of Bethel AME, was ‘committed to prayer’
Rev. Cecelia Williams Bryant was a mentor and leader in the African Methodist Episcopal Church. She died on Sept. 26 at age 77.
Cecelia Williams Bryant helped establish the AME Church in India and the Ivory Coast, and raised her children to be “global citizens,” her family said.
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