NATIONAL HARBORD — Visitors can take an icy trip around the world to see how the holidays are celebrated in many other countries — and never leave home — thanks to the annual ICE exhibit at the Gaylord Hotel.
Effort to link presidential election to popular vote grows
WASHINGTON –Controversy over the just-concluded presidential election has brought a renewed call for states to pass a bill making the popular vote the basis for determining the winner in the presidential election. Voters would still choose Electoral College representatives, but…
Women Urge President Obama to Grant Clemency to More Women
WASHINGTON, D.C.–As the Obama presidency reaches its final days so, too, comes the opportunity to grant federal inmates convicted of non-violent offenses a second chance through clemency. In Washington, Wednesday, dozens gathered across from the White House to urge the…
Students React to Presidential Election
College Park, Md. — Dissent over the election of republican Donald Trump hit the campus of the University of Maryland where hundreds turned out to express their concern about what might lie ahead under a Trump administration.
Bus crash in Baltimore results in six deaths
BALTIMORE. Md. – A school bus with a driver and aide on board crashes into a car and MTA bus leaving six people dead. Police are looking into the cause of the accident.
Gov. Larry Hogan Proposes Budget Cuts
ANNAPOLIS, Md.–Governor Hogan asks the state Board of Public Works to approve $82 million in cuts to reduce a projected $250 budget shortfall. The Board gave its unanimous approval.
Former Baltimore City Mayor Sheila Dixon announces write-in candidacy
With just four weeks until the General Election, Sheila Dixon announces she will run as a write-in candidate after losing to Democratic Candidate Catherine Pugh.
MD Civil Air Patrol sends relief in wake of Hurricane Matthew
Fort Meade, Md– Members of Maryland Wing Group II travel to South Carolina to volunteer in the wake of Hurricane Matthew.
Group Calls on Maryland Lawmakers to Force Drug Makers to Explain Price Hikes
With the cost of prescription drugs continuing to go up — in some cases more than doubling the price of some widely used medications over the past five years — one local advocacy group is calling on the Maryland legislature to approve an initiative requiring drug companies to explain the reason for those increases.