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Tom talks with Debbie Hines, the author of Get Off My Neck: Black Lives, White Justice, and a Former Prosecutor's Quest for Reform.
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Midday theater critic J. Wynn Rousuck reviews Pride & Prejudice which runs at Baltimore Center Stage through November 10.
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Military service is a welcomed option for young aspirants who want to serve the interests of the nation and democracy. The GOOD News is United States Army has introduced new programs and initiatives to enhance recruitment. One of the notable efforts is the “Future Soldier Prep Course” which provides fitness and academic training to help potential recruits meet enlistment standards.
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Midday speaks with Prince George's County Executive Angela Alsobrooks about her campaign for U.S. Senate as early voting is set to start October 24.
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Maryland DOT proposes $670 million in budgets cuts that would essentially cripple maintenance and repair plans for Baltimore transit. Will they go through?
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We get a preview of Doors Open Baltimore, an architectural citywide festival.
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Midday explores Baltimore City's Ballot Question F which allows voters to weigh in on changes to Inner Harbor Park that are critical to the future development of Harborplace.
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We talk with an urban forester about how fall colors are created, and why trees shed their leaves for survival.
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A Stoop story from Deborah Keene about friends, frolicking in the woods, and fresh water.
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Changing times, changing attitudes, changing lives.
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Babbitt, starring Tony-winner Matthew Broderick, runs through November 3 at the Shakespeare Theatre Company in Washington.
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Just over a year since the Israeli campaign in the Gaza Strip began, we hear perspectives from Marylanders with intimate connection to the Palestinian occupied territories.