Missing Person in PG County
foxbaltimore.com![]()
The Prince George’s County Police Department is seeking the public’s help in locating a critical missing person identified as 20 year-old David Johnathan Scherr. He was last seen at 2:00 pm on December 19, 2012, near the University of Maryland campus in College Park. Scherr may be driving a black 2013 Ford Escape with Maryland tags 3AX4875. Scherr was last seen wearing a purple Ravens shirt and white plaid shorts. Anyone with information on David Scherr’s whereabouts is asked to call the Prince George’s County Police Department’s District I Investigative Section at (301) 699-2601.
Read More at: http://foxbaltimore.com/news/features/top-stories/stories/prince-georges-county-police-seeking-critical-missing-person-17059.shtml?wap=0#.UNgJUolevve
I was in the same music ensemble in college with this guy. If you have any information about his whereabouts, please contact the PG County Police. If you don’t have info, please reblog and spread the word!
Glendale Hospital (Haunted)


Located in Glendale MD, Near Electric Ave and Old Pond Road
This hospital had its heyday back in the early 1900`s, but was abandoned in the late 1970`s. The hospital is made up of six different buildings on opposite sides of the road. The hauntings seem to take place in the two structures closest to the road on your right. Most doors and windows have been broken out and abandoned medical equipment is scattered everywhere within the buildings. Sightings have included a large pack of ghost dogs, ghostly patients wandering the second floor, and smoke coming from the crematorium. People have also complained of noises such as banging and yelling coming from the hospital walls. Other reports have been claims of hearing screams and sometimes laughter…inside there is sometimes a strong odor of burning flesh and smoke coming from where they used to burn the bodies…in one particular room there is said to be sightings of a man in a straightjacket who went insane after watching his family being murdered by an intruder to his home while he hid in a closet…he was so overcome with the guilt that he didn`t help his family that he went insane and eventually killed himself when he broke into the room where they kept the medication and overdosed.
So, there’s this other school that’s in my area called Roosevelt high school, and they’re pretty much supposed to be the creme of the crop of all schools in Prince George’s county, and some students really hated a teacher for messing up their grades so they sent her this

Listen, i’m a student (not at this school), a photographer, a county government advocate for student rights, a scholar, an athlete, as well as a blogger and many other things, but the only thing I never forget what I am is a human being.
These people, have obviously lost their sense of humanity.
Maryland.
I really can’t wait to release this “Maryland” record…I been listening to it on repeat for an hour. Maryland needed this record…everybody that comes from the DMV shouts out DC on their records.
I’m originally from DC (Riggs Park, on the NE side), but I’m a PG County nigga. I ain’t lived in DC since I was really young. PG made me the man I am. I think more people should feel proud of reppin’ PG and Maryland in general. There’s always been a stigma with here, the whole “Maryland ass nigga” term and such. I’mma show niggas that it’s aight to be proud of this shit.
Prince George’s considers copyright policy that takes ownership of students’ work [Washington Post]
washingtonpost.comOh hell no! This is all kinds of bad.
Teachers would have to cede ownership of the curricula they develop to the district, even though that’s their own work? What the fuck?
I’m really curious about, were this proposal to pass, whether a student would have any legal recourse to protect their intellectual property. God forbid a student do some amazing research as a high school student, only for that to be claimed by the fucking district.
A proposal by the Prince George’s County Board of Education to copyright work created by staff and students for school could mean that a picture drawn by a first-grader, a lesson plan developed by a teacher or an app created by a teen would belong to the school system, not the individual.
The measure has some worried that by the system claiming ownership to the work of others, creativity could be stifled and there would be little incentive to come up with innovative ways to educate students. Some have questioned the legality of the proposal as it relates to students.
“There is something inherently wrong with that,” David Cahn, an education activist who regularly attends county school board meetings, said before the board’s vote to consider the policy. “There are better ways to do this than to take away a person’s rights.”
If the policy is approved, the county would become the only jurisdiction in the Washington region where the school board assumes ownership of work done by the school system’s staff and students.
David Rein, a lawyer and adjunct law professor who teaches intellectual property at the University of Missouri in Kansas City, said he had never heard of a local school board enacting a policy allowing it to hold the copyright for a student’s work.
Universities generally have “sharing agreements” for work created by professors and college students, Rein said. Under those agreements, a university, professor and student typically would benefit from a project, he said.
“The way this policy is written, it essentially says if a student writes a paper, goes home and polishes it up and expands it, the school district can knock on the door and say, ‘We want a piece of that,’ ” Rein said. “I can’t imagine that.”
The proposal is part of a broader policy the board is reviewing that would provide guidelines for the “use and creation” of materials developed by employees and students. The boards’s staff recommended the policy largely to address the increased use of technology in the classroom.
Board Chair Verjeana M. Jacobs (District 5) said she and Vice Chair Carolyn M. Boston (District 6) attended an Apple presentation and learned how teachers can use apps to create new curricula. The proposal was designed to make it clear who owns teacher-developed curricula created while using apps on iPads that are school property, Jacobs said.
It’s not unusual for a company to hold the rights to an employee’s work, copyright policy experts said. But the Prince George’s policy goes a step further by saying that work created for the school by employees during their own time and using their own materials is the school system’s property.