CURRENT EDITION: baltimore (none)🔄 Loading BlueConic...EDITION HISTORY: No changes tracked
🔵 BlueConic: ___🍪 Cookie: ___ UNKNOWN🔗 Query: ___✏️ Composer: ___

International news

    Baltimore Poly grad John Clauser wins Nobel Prize in physics
    Clauser, a 1960 Poly grad, would spend time in his father’s lab at Johns Hopkins.
    An illustration of John Clauser, one of the Nobel Prize in Physics winners for 2022. The illustration in black and gold on a white background shows a smiling white man with a crew neck shirt.
    Queen Elizabeth’s death: What happened to civility?
    The challenge for those of us who engage with social media is how to introduce facts that expose someone's flaws while maintaining civility.
    Queen Elizabeth II in London in 2011.
    ‘It’s like your dearest great-aunt has passed’: British Marylanders consider the impact of Queen Elizabeth’s death
    Britons with Maryland ties talk about the death of Queen Elizabeth II.
    HM Queen Elizabeth II is greeted by children on her walk from NASA’s Goddard Space Flight Center mission control to a reception in the center’s main auditorium May 8, 2007 in Greenbelt, Maryland. The queen is on the last of a six-day visit to the U.S with her husband, Prince Philip, the Duke of Edinburgh.
    Queen Elizabeth II’s death reverberates across Baltimore, a city that played a role in her accession to the throne
    Her uncle fell in love with a Baltimore woman and cleared the path for Elizabeth’s reign.
    Queen Elizabeth II smiles as she sits in the stands at a football game between the University of Maryland and the University of North Carolina, October 19, 1957. In her row, from left to right: University of Maryland President Wilson Elkins, the Queen, Governor Theodore McKeldin, Mrs. Dorothy Elkins, and Prince Philip, Duke of Edinburgh. Courtesy of University of Maryland Archives.
    Queen Elizabeth II dead at 96 after 70 years on the throne
    The palace announced the queen died at Balmoral Castle, her summer residence in Scotland, where members of the royal family had rushed to her side after her health took a turn for the worse.
    Britain's Queen Elizabeth II waits in the Drawing Room before receiving Liz Truss for an audience at Balmoral, in Scotland, Tuesday, Sept. 6, 2022, where Truss was invited to become Prime Minister and form a new government. Buckingham Palace says Queen Elizabeth II is under medical supervision as doctors are “concerned for Her Majesty’s health.” The announcement comes a day after the 96-year-old monarch canceled a meeting of her Privy Council and was told to rest.
    Longtime Baltimore resident and broadcaster recounts witnessing attack on world-renowned writer Salman Rushdie in Chautauqua, New York
    Rushdie was stabbed in the abdomen and neck Friday morning as he was about to give a lecture.
    Author Salman Rushdie at the Blue Sofa at the 2017 Frankfurt Book Fair (Frankfurter Buchmesse) on October 12, 2017 in Frankfurt am Main, Germany.
    Full circle: Liberians find home in Maryland, the state where their ancestors departed from more than 150 years ago
    Marylanders of Liberian descent will celebrate Liberian Independence Day on Tuesday July 26, 2022, connecting to a history that includes formerly enslaved Blacks departing for the West African country from Maryland in the early 19th century.
    Carleen Goodridge prepped various Liberian dishes such as a salad with tomatos, cucumber, mango, papaya, and onion, palm butter stew, snapper, shrimp and chicken, mashed cassava, and par-boiled rice as a celebration of her culture and Liberia’s Independence Day on July 24, 2022.
    How a team from Baltimore turned data from the James Webb Space Telescope into the images seen around the world
    Release of first full-color images from the telescope marks the culmination of more than three decades of work.
    Attendees take a selfie with the banner outside of the Steven Muller Building at the James Webb Space Telescope Science Launch.
    How a Baltimore social worker became the tough U.S. arms negotiator with Russia
    Wendy Sherman’s unlikely origin story traces from her youth in Baltimore and work in Maryland state government to leading U.S. arms negotiations with world powers.
    Deputy Secretary of State Wendy Sherman virtually meets with Bureau of Population, Refugees, and Migration staff to thank them for their work assisting refugees and displaced people around the world, at the U.S. Department of State, on March 24, 2022. Photo courtesy of Freddie Everett, U.S. State Department
    Load More Stories
    Oh no!

    Something went wrong. Please try again in a few minutes. If the problem persists, please contact customer service at 443-843-0043 or customercare@thebaltimorebanner.com.