Baltimore Evening Sun
 
September 2, 2017View email in browser
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As new academic year begins, Baltimore schools aim to broaden offerings beyond math, reading

City Schools CEO Sonja Santelises is putting a renewed emphasis on teaching history, science, music and art — the subjects, she says, that make kids want to come to school.

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Congress returns to work, with crushing deadlines on debt ceiling, Harvey funding

Congress returns to Washington on Tuesday facing a full plate of must-pass measures.

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Residents in Harvey's path return to find devastation at their doorsteps

A week after Hurricane Harvey roared into Texas, thousands of displaced people are seeing their devastated homes for the first time.

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In Baltimore's crime blame game, judges are the top target

With exceptional violence raging across Baltimore, many top officials have started pointing their fingers of blame toward the city’s judges.

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Ravens quarterback Joe Flacco returns to practice eight days ahead of opener at Bengals

Flacco returned to the practice field just eight days before the Ravens open the regular season against the Cincinnati Bengals.

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Targets for public school performance proposed in Maryland

Are they realistic or ambitious? State sets targets for school performance.

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Zurawik: 'The Deuce,' the latest from David Simon, offers critiques on par with 'The Wire'

As hard as it is to imagine a more searing critique of capitalism than "The Wire," David Simon does that in "The Deuce."

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Kondwani Fidel opens up about his viral essay and giving a voice to black experiences in Baltimore

Local writer Kondwani Fidel's most recent essay, “How a young boy has been decaying in Baltimore since age 10: A Death Note," went viral. 

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Exploring the positives and negatives of the Orioles' return to a six-man rotation

The Orioles have the statistical proof this year that a six-man rotation works, but there are plenty of pitfalls to work around.

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Rodricks: Nobody asked me about Mosby, Kaepernick or the state song, but ...

Nobody asked me, but while Mosby wants people to know that there’s no “overnight solution” to violence, she offered no such understanding for her predecessor.

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