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    Feb 27, 2013 |Story| Baltimore Sun
  1. How to fix the Catholic Church

    The Roman Catholic Church is at the most perplexing time in it's storied, at times sordid, history. For the first time in more than 600 years, a pope has chosen to retire, due mostly to deteriorating health issues. Is that truly the most prominent...

    Tags: Vatican City, Christianity, Religion and Belief, Roman Catholicism, Benedict XVI

  2. Feb 26, 2013 |Story| Baltimore Sun
  3. Two reported dead in Aberdeen Proving Ground diving accident Tuesday

    Two people died as a result of a diving accident at Aberdeen Proving Ground on Tuesday afternoon, the Army confirmed. The deaths were said to be two Navy divers who were working in the installation's Underwater Explosion Test Facility, also known as...

    Tags: Lakes and Ponds, Diving, Baltimore County, Aberdeen Proving Ground, Accidental Death

  4. Mar 14, 2013 |Story| Baltimore Sun
  5. Robber steals cash, Chinese food at gunpoint [Crime Log]

    The following is compiled from police reports from the Towson and Cockeysville precincts. Our policy is to include descriptions when there is enough information to make identification possible. A food delivery driver was robbed at gunpoint as he tried...

    Tags: Theft, Perry Hall

  6. Mar 13, 2013 |Story| Baltimore Sun
  7. Cecilia Bollinger, homemaker

    Cecilia C. Bollinger, a homemaker and retired secretary and bookkeeper of a roofing company, died Monday of complications from dementia at Gilchrist Hospice Care in Towson. The Lutherville resident was 96. Born Cecilia Curley in Baltimore, she was the...

    Tags: Towson, Charles Street, Annapolis, Timonium, Alzheimer's Disease

  8. Mar 12, 2013 |Story| Baltimore Sun
  9. Community policing can help mend city

    Baltimore City Police Commissioner Anthony Batts has myriad issues to tackle as we delve deeper into 2013. Some priorities are the open air drug markets on our streets, the vacant housing issue (which has devoured many a city rowhouse), gangs, homelessness, and finding ways to make our neighborhoods and communities safer places in which to live.
    Baltimore City Police Commissioner Anthony Batts has myriad issues to tackle as we delve deeper into 2013. Some priorities are the open air drug markets on our streets, the vacant housing issue (which has devoured many a city rowhouse), gangs,...

    Tags: Anthony W. Batts

  10. Mar 8, 2013 |Story| Baltimore Sun
  11. The 'stop snitching' mantra protects criminals

    The Baltimore City Police are looking for a suspect in a brazen daytime murder witnessed by many, but no one is talking. In keeping with the urban street code where no one speaks for fear of retaliation, De'ontae Smith's murder the day of the Ravens downtown parade remains a mystery ("Police believe stabbing victim was downtown for parade" Feb. 6).
    The Baltimore City Police are looking for a suspect in a brazen daytime murder witnessed by many, but no one is talking. In keeping with the urban street code where no one speaks for fear of retaliation, De'ontae Smith's murder the day of the Ravens...

    Tags: Murder, Crime, Law and Justice

  12. Mar 6, 2013 |Story| Baltimore Sun
  13. Baltimore man, 81, loses his home following lottery fraud

    The first caller told Norman Breidenbaugh he had won $2.5 million in a foreign sweepstakes, but there was a catch: Breidenbaugh needed to send $2,000 in fees before collecting his earnings.
    The first caller told Norman Breidenbaugh he had won $2.5 million in a foreign sweepstakes, but there was a catch: Breidenbaugh needed to send $2,000 in fees before collecting his earnings. Other calls followed, promising Breidenbaugh millions more...

    Tags: Lifestyle and Leisure, U.S. Secret Service, Federal Trade Commission, Corporate Crime, Consumers

  14. Mar 6, 2013 |Story| Los Angeles Times
  15. Alvin Lee dies at 68; guitar virtuoso with Ten Years After

    At the Woodstock music festival in 1969, the British blues-rock band Ten Years After burst onto the U.S. music scene with a searing rendition of <a href="http://bit.ly/VgdLdl">"I'm Going Home"</a> featuring the fleet-fingered Alvin Lee whaling away on guitar.
    At the Woodstock music festival in 1969, the British blues-rock band Ten Years After burst onto the U.S. music scene with a searing rendition of "I'm Going Home" featuring the fleet-fingered Alvin Lee whaling away on guitar. When the "Woodstock"...

    Tags: Entertainment Events, Michael Moore, Physiology, Concerts, Music

  16. Mar 7, 2013 |Story| Baltimore Sun
  17. Harford Gymnastics athletes perform well in support of breast cancer awareness

    Harford Gymnastics, along with 2,600 other athletes from across the country, competed at the Pink Invitational in Philadelphia, Pa.., Feb. 22 to 24 to support Unite for Her and breast cancer awareness. Harford's Level 7 team shined, taking first place...

    Tags: Philadelphia (Philadelphia, Pennsylvania), Hershey (Dauphin, Pennsylvania), Allentown, Beam Gymnastics, Demographics

  18. Mar 6, 2013 |Story| Los Angeles Times
  19. Giffords returns to site of Tucson mass shootings

    Survivors of the 2011 mass shooting in Tucson, Ariz., including former Rep. Gabrielle Giffords, and victims' loved ones gathered at the site of the attack Wednesday to call for tougher gun-control laws. Giffords, her husband, Mark Kelly, and others took...

    Tags: Mark Kelly, Sandy Hook Elementary School, Politics, Gabrielle Giffords, Interior Policy

  20. Mar 6, 2013 |Story| Los Angeles Times
  21. Angry fan calls cops after Manchester United's Nani gets red card

    It's safe to say that the red card against Manchester United midfielder Nani in the club's Champions League match against Real Madrid on Tuesday was a controversial decision. Some might go as far as to call it a crime.
    It's safe to say that the red card against Manchester United midfielder Nani in the club's Champions League match against Real Madrid on Tuesday was a controversial decision. Some might go as far as to call it a crime. No, seriously, someone actually...
  22. Mar 4, 2013 |Story| Baltimore Sun
  23. Deacon in child porn charge was former schools worker

    A longtime deacon at a Fullerton church was charged Friday with possessing "numerous files of child pornography," Baltimore County police said.
    A longtime deacon at a Fullerton church was charged Friday with possessing "numerous files of child pornography," Baltimore County police said. William Steven Albaugh, 67, a deacon at St. Joseph's Roman Catholic Church on Belair Road, was arrested at his...

    Tags: Christianity, Apple iPad, Religion and Belief, Verizon Communications, Roman Catholicism

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