Baltimore, Prince George’s Reign as State’s Murder Capitals

WASHINGTON – Baltimore City and Prince George’s County accounted for over 75 percent of all Maryland murders in the past two decades, despite making up less than a third of the population, a Capital News Service analysis shows

Va. Tech Shooting Leaves Maryland Colleges Reevaluating Security Measures

WASHINGTON – Maryland’s higher education institutions are waiting for more details about the Virginia Tech shooting that left 33 dead Monday before reviewing their security measures, but vowed changes if needed

Global Warming Equals Post-nasal Drip?

WASHINGTON – If you could stop rubbing your itchy, watery eyes for one second, put down the tissue and look around, you’d see an increasing number of sneezing, sniffling sad sacks just like you

^Md. Emergency Crews Show Off Homeland Security Purchases

WASHINGTON – It’s the size and shape of a tractor-trailer, but the ambulance bus is meant for hauling as many as 20 patients on stretchers plus medics

Wynn Boosts Bill for Colorectal Cancer Screening

WASHINGTON – With blacks dying in greater percentages from colorectal cancers, and screening an easy way to slow the disease, Rep

Region’s Top Execs Seek Federal Security Help

WASHINGTON – The Washington region needs federal help providing security in seven glaring areas, including responding to weapons of mass destruction, the chief executives of Maryland, Virginia and the District told U

Maryland Escapes Worst of Subprime Loan Problems — For Now

WASHINGTON – Maryland’s subprime loan foreclosure rate of 2 percent for the last quarter of 2006 was among the lowest in the country, bucking the national trend toward alarming rates

^Maryland Escapes Worst of Subprime Loan Problems — For Now

WASHINGTON – Maryland’s subprime loan foreclosure rate of 2 percent for the last quarter of 2006 was among the lowest in the country, bucking the national trend toward alarming rates

Cardin Supports Subpoenas in U.S. Attorney Scandal

WASHINGTON – Maryland Democrat Ben Cardin and fellow members of the Senate Judiciary Committee, flexed their constitutional muscle in voting Thursday to authorize the use of subpoenas in a investigation into the firing of eight U