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Reading that Dan Rodricks has written his last column for The Baltimore Sun hurts (“Dan Rodricks: In Baltimore, a dream job and a wonderful life. Thank you.” Jan. 10). He may not be a ...
Jan. 13). While their styles and subject matter differ, Rodricks reminds me of Michael Olesker, another talented writer who for many years wrote a column for The Baltimore Sun. Here’s wishing ...
I will truly miss Dan Rodricks (“Sun publisher: Nobody asked me, but The Sun will miss Dan Rodricks,” Jan. 10)! Who is going to help us with pointing out the hypocrisy and shortcomings of U.S ...
I write to join the thousands of Baltimore Sun readers lamenting the end of Dan Rodricks’ columns (“Nobody asked me but The Sun will miss Dan Rodricks,” Jan. 12). His columns were both a joy ...
I read with tears in my eyes the news that Dan Rodricks is leaving The Baltimore Sun (“Dan Rodricks: In Baltimore, a dream job and a wonderful life. Thank you.” Jan. 10). Like Dan, I am a ...
Few cities are fortunate enough to have a columnist like Dan Rodricks, who is retiring from The Baltimore Sun after more than 48 years of chronicling the area’s stories through deeply reported ...
I subscribe to The Baltimore Sun to get my Baltimore fix, to see how the Orioles and Ravens are doing, to read the obituaries (unfortunately some familiar names there), and to read Dan Rodricks ...
Are we going to grow up and move on? Are we going to stop fighting the Civil War? Are we ever going to recognize that ethnic, racial and gender diversity is a plus for the country, fundamentally ...
What a beautiful column Dan Rodricks wrote in Monday’s print edition of The Baltimore Sun (“Dan Rodricks: Punditry nobody asked for — on Hogan, Alsobrooks, polls and pupusas,” Oct. 14).
Well, it took Dan Rodricks to lay out the coherent and well thought out argument against privatizing public space at Harborplace (“Dan Rodricks: Harborplace does not need 900 apartments to be a ...
Everybody likes a happy ending, at least once in a while. So you will be pleased to hear that Katherine Carver’s book on abandoned dogs is full of happy endings — that is, lots of adoptions.
On a freezing Saturday night in Denver in January 2013, Jacoby Jones sealed his legacy as the leading man in a golden Ravens memory. Most of us never knew him personally, of course, but Jones will ...
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