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The Baltimore Examiner was launched as a new daily newspaper in the city in 2006 by the Philip Anschutz-owned Clarity Media Group as part of a new national newspaper chain of several publications in numerous cities named "Examiner", that at the time began with and included the old The San Francisco Examiner (founded 1863 and owned since 1880 by founder William Randolph Hearst (1863-1951), and ...
The Baltimore Examiner: Baltimore: 2006 2009 The Baltimore Exchange: Baltimore: Baltimore Gazette: Baltimore: 1862 1875 The name was revived in 2016 as a fake news website. Baltimore Guide Baltimore: 1927 2016 Baltimore Morning Herald: Baltimore: 1900 Baltimore News [4] Baltimore: 1873 1934 Also published as Evening News, 1873-1875, Baltimore ...
The Baltimore Afro-American; Baltimore Business Journal; ... African-American News and Issues; Buena Suerte; Examiner Newspaper Group; Jewish Herald-Voice; The Leader;
The autopsy of the Baltimore black man who died after being hurt while in police custody shows he suffered a "high-energy injury" like those in shallow-water diving accidents, the Baltimore Sun ...
The Baltimore Banner; Baltimore Beat; Baltimore Chronicle; Baltimore Commercial Journal and Lyford's Price-Current; Baltimore County Advocate; The Baltimore County Union; The Baltimore Examiner; The Baltimore Exchange; Baltimore Gazette; Baltimore Jewish Life; Baltimore Jewish Times; Baltimore News-American; The Baltimore Sun; Baltimore Times ...
The letter to the Maryland attorney general and others came from former Washington, D.C., chief medical examiner Roger A. Mitchell and was signed by over 400 doctors, according to The Sun.
In 2008, The Baltimore Examiner hired him as a columnist. [2] After The Baltimore Examiner closed in 2009, [3] he began writing for its sister newspaper, The Washington Examiner, where he wrote until his death. [4] Kane was also a visiting professor at the Writing Seminars at Johns Hopkins University. [2]
Baltimore is a major media market, even though the city is only a 45-minute drive northeast of Washington, D.C.. The city's primary daily newspaper, The Baltimore Sun, and other Baltimore-area affiliated newspapers are property of David Smith, executive chairman of Sinclair Broadcast Group, who owns more than 200 television stations, including Fox 45. [1]