State’s Uncertified Teachers Show More Experience

WASHINGTON – Amy Gorman had no teaching experience and no teaching certificate when she was put in charge of a 12th-grade English class in Prince George’s County last winter

Lanham Co. Keeps Up National Tree’s Appearances

WASHINGTON – There was the year when the top went out and the year when only the top was lit

‘Sweet 16’ Calls Mikulski No. 1

WASHINGTON – On a mid-November afternoon, the women of the United States Senate filed into Sen

More Students Come to USM System

WASHINGTON – Enrollment at the University System of Maryland is up 5 percent from last fall, with most of the additional students concentrated at the University of Maryland University College, which serves nontraditional students

Voter Turnout Fails to Top 2002

WASHINGTON – Though more Marylanders were registered to vote in Tuesday’s election than in 2002, voter turnout didn’t increase, unofficial counts show

Ehrlich, Steele Win — in Student Election

WASHINGTON – Democrats may have won Maryland’s gubernatorial and Senate races in Tuesday’s election, but among the state’s grade-school voters, it was the Grand Old Party that won

UMD Gives Uprooted Military Employees Tuition Break

WASHINGTON – Military civilian employees and their families moving to Maryland in the base realignment process will qualify for in-state tuition at the University System of Maryland without having to meet the 12-month residency requirement, the Board of Regents decided last week

Baltimore County Shows Off Underachieving Students’ Success

BALTIMORE – James Allen, 16, says he was a “D” student and a “class clown” until a program called AVID at Pikesville High School in Baltimore County set him on the path to college

Spirits Come Alive for Randallstown Woman

WOODLAWN – Once upon a midnight dreary, Beverly Litsinger got a visit from Edgar Allan Poe

Flanagan Extols Toll Lanes to Feds

WASHINGTON – A loosening of federal regulations could make it easier for Maryland to realize its statewide network of express toll lanes, Transportation Secretary Robert Flanagan told the U