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James Perry

NEWS
March 29, 2007
On March 25, 2007, JAMES PERRY CARTER. Friends may call at the family owned MARCH FUNERAL HOME EAST, 1101 E. North Avenue on Friday after 8:30 A.M., where the family will receive friends on Saturday at 11:30 A.M. Funeral services will follow at 12 P.M.
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EXPLORE
March 5, 2013
Harford Community College is pleased to announce those students named to the dean's list for the fall 2012 semester. Students on the list have achieved high academic honor. In qualifying for the dean's list, a student must receive all As and Bs grades and have a 3.50 to 3.75 GPA (grade point average). Full-time students must have completed 12 credit hours during the semester. Part-time students are eligible after having completed 12 credit hours and then completing six credit hours during the current semester.
NEWS
November 2, 2003
On October 31, 2003, JAMES PERRY GOODMAN, SR., devoted husband of Margaret V. Goodman (nee Wheat), beloved father of Carolyn Taylor and her husband Steven, James Goodman, Jr and his fiancee Mary Kay, and Nancy Bopst. Also survived by three grandsons, Bradley Taylor, Danny Bopst, and Jamie Bopst, and one great-granddaughter Tiffany. Devoted brother of May Baxter, Louise Aversa, Kenneth Goodman and Beverly Haines. Friends are invited to call at the Burgee-Henss-Seitz Funeral Home, Inc., 3631 Falls Road, on Sunday from 3 to 5 and 7 to 9 P.M. Services on Monday at 1 P.M. Interment in Bethlehem-Steltzes Cemetery.
NEWS
October 4, 2005
On OCTOBER 2, 2005, JAMES O. PERRY Friends may call the at the family owned, MARCH FUNERAL HOME EAST, 1101 E. North Avenue on Wednesday, after 8:30, A.M, where the family will receive friends on Thursday, at 1:30 P.M. followed by funeral services at 2 P.M. See www.marchfh.com
FEATURES
March 28, 1993
Stephen E. Wease, a student at Mount St. Joseph Hig School, has been named a finalist in the 1993 National Merit Scholarship competition.*Janki Kokilepersaud of Essex received the Alumni Association's Moses S. Koch Scholarship at Essex Community College.*Gyl Beth Johnson, daughter of Brenda and George Johnson of Baltimore, a graduate student in the School of Architecture, Ohio State University, received the 1993 Foreign Study Fellowship from the International Studies Department to study during the spring quarter at the University of Genoa and in Rome.
NEWS
By Frank D. Roylance and Frank D. Roylance,SUN STAFF | December 15, 1995
The demand for early American prints and maps is burgeoning. Dealers and librarians say soaring prices have fueled the kind of rare-book mutilations and thefts reported this week by a lengthening list of libraries, including the George Peabody Library in Baltimore.The FBI still is seeking a man in his mid-40s who was detained briefly at the Peabody Library last week after cutting a map from an 18th- century book. He is now a suspect in what appears to have been a methodical, four-day, slice-and-run expedition up the East Coast, hitting university libraries in North Carolina, Virginia and Baltimore.
NEWS
Andrea K. Walker, The Baltimore Sun | September 18, 2011
A spray-paint artist who recently won a temporary court order that allows him to create his work along Ocean City 's boardwalk without a permit was arrested Sunday at Baltimore's Inner Harbor. Mark Chase was arrested about noon when he attempted to set up an area where he could paint at Light and Pratt streets. A police spokesman confirmed the arrest but said further details were not yet available. Video viewed by The Baltimore Sun shows police telling Chase that he could not paint without a permit.
NEWS
By Laura Lippman and Laura Lippman,Staff Writer | December 3, 1992
A Baltimore Circuit Court judge upheld yesterday the constitutionality of budget cuts made by Gov. William Donald Schaefer, leaving in place reductions in welfare benefits and the elimination of the state's medical assistance program.Chief Judge Robert I. H. Hammerman's ruling may have ended the first legal test ever of a 1939 Maryland statute that empowers the governor to cut any department's budget -- by up to 25 percent -- when a budget shortfall is projected.Lawyers for six plaintiffs affected by the cuts had brought suit, arguing that the statute violated the constitutional principle of separation of powers by allowing the governor to usurp the legislature's role in shaping the budget.
NEWS
By Patrick Hickerson and Patrick Hickerson,Staff Writer | July 29, 1992
HANCOCK -- The object of yesterday's First National Bank Cycle Across Maryland (CAM) was simple: Stay on the bike for the three major climbs.While tour organizers had warned cyclists about the 25-mile segment that climbed the peaks of Polish Mountain, Town Hill and Sideling Hill, most riders finished the course without stopping once for exhaustion during the climbs. The challenging course and a short day of cycling made for many satisfied participants, who streamed into Hancock before noon.
NEWS
By Peter Hermann and Peter Hermann,SUN STAFF | January 20, 1996
The Thursday night stabbing of a corrections officer at the Baltimore City Detention Center and a tip that a gun had been smuggled into the Madison Street jail triggered a lockdown yesterday that is expected to last through the weekend.Police found more than 100 homemade weapons yesterday after searching the cells of half the 2,800 inmates, and state prison officials said that number could triple when the search is finished.The guard was not injured seriously.LaMont W. Flanagan, commissioner of the state Division of Pretrial Detention and Services, said the lockdown and search show that "we are dealing with violent offenders who only transfer the violence from the streets to inside these walls."
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