State Board Approves Leases, Sale, of Montgomery Schools

ANNAPOLIS – A state board Wednesday voted to lease four former Montgomery County schools and sell another to private organizations

Freshmen Legislators Learn the Basics

ANNAPOLIS – Most classes touring the State House are full of jean-clad students, but one touring this week is dressed in suits

State Treasurer Says Size (of Plaque) Matters

ANNAPOLIS – State Treasurer Richard N

Program Aims to Get Welfare Dads Involved With Their Kids

WASHINGTON – Richard Marshall said he used to do two things really well: Play basketball and sell drugs

Retired Military Personnel Can Sue for Malpractice, Court Rules

A federal appeals court Monday said a widower can sue the government for medical malpractice in the 1992 death of his wife, a Navy corpsman who died at the National Naval Medical Center in Bethesda

Driver Error To Blame for Fatalities on Route 301, Study Reports

WASHINGTON – A State Highway Administration study blames driver error, not the roadway itself, for the recent rash of fatalities on U

Project Could Turn Dredge, Poultry Manure Into Usable Soil

WASHINGTON – State and federal agencies hope to turn an environmental problem into a solution by combining poultry manure with harbor dredge to make a fertile soil substitute

Tuition Is Leveling Off, But College Fees Continue to Climb

WASHINGTON – Tuition is not the only thing on the rise on Maryland college campuses

Beach-Bound Holiday Travelers Put the ‘Sand’ in Turkey Sandwiches

WASHINGTON – It’s over the river and through the woods to grandmother’s beach house we go this Thanksgiving

USDA Asks Which Was First: Bigger Turkey or Unhatched Egg?

WASHINGTON – As turkey breeders produce heavier and heavier birds, the number of fertilized turkey eggs that do not hatch has also grown, causing concern among U