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Pauline H. "June" Brannan, artist
Pauline H. "June" Brannan, an artist and former owner of a Mount Washington frame shop, died Tuesday of congestive heart failure and kidney disease at Greater Baltimore Medical Center. The longtime Ruxton resident was 85. The daughter of farmers, Pauline...
Tags: Timonium, Glen Burnie, Heart Failure, Greater Baltimore Medical Center, Colonial Heights (Colonial Heights, Virginia)
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Tracking the long-distance travels of dust
Spring stirs pollen, and also dust — high-flying dust that's blown thousands of miles to reach North America in greater amounts than scientists have known before, with potential impact on the climate and air quality. Mineral dust rises from dry...
Tags: Science and Technology, Science, Pacific Ocean, Kennedy Space Center, Greenbelt (Prince George's, Maryland)
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Global Virus Network moves into UM BioPark
A global nonprofit that battles the spread of viruses has moved into the University of Maryland BioPark after sprouting from the university's Institute of Human Virology. Global Virus Network is the west side research park's newest tenant. It moved from...
Tags: Preventative Medicine, Drugs and Medicines, Viral Diseases and Infections, Diseases and Illnesses, Disease Prevention
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2nd Annual Adam Thompson 5K Run/Walk raises funds for college scholarships
The 2nd Annual Adam Thompson 5K Run/Walk will be held Sunday, April 28, at 8 a.m. at Harford Community College, 401 Thomas Run Road in Bel Air. The race, on a USA Track and Field Certified Course, honors the memory of Adam Thompson, a first-year...Tags: Harford Community College, Nursing, Entertainment Events, Family, Financial Aid
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State police hope unique knife used in UMES killing will bring tips
The weapon used to kill a University of Maryland Eastern Shore student in February has a "unique orange and black camouflage handle" that investigators hope will "prompt the memory of someone who may have seen the knife before," Maryland State Police said...
Tags: Weaponry, Colleges and Universities, Maryland State Police, Unrest, Conflicts and War, Murder
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Deep in a former gold mine, scientists hunt for dark matter
LEAD, S.D. — The scientists don hard hats, jumpsuits and steel-toed boots to pile into a metal cage for a rumbling 11-minute descent into an abandoned South Dakota gold mine. They step over old mine-cart rails, through rough-walled tunnels and...
Tags: Science and Technology, Science, Nobel Prize Awards, Physics, Gold and Precious Material
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Howard student says community college path helped her grow by degree
Howard Community College student Katie Dunklee won't name the four-year school — her top choice — that turned her down for admission out of high school, but nowadays she doesn't lament the rejection. In fact, to hear the Elkridge resident...
Tags: Schools, Catonsville, Towson University, Colleges and Universities, Financial Aid
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Alice Cohill Marquez, 100
Alice Cohill Marquez, of Stafford Hall, Clear Spring, Md., died Friday, April 5, 2013, at her home. Born July 10, 1912, in Cohill Station near Hancock, Md., she was the eldest daughter of the late Leo Aloysius and Anna Marie Bevans Cohill. Mrs....Tags: Roman Catholicism, Bethesda (Montgomery, Maryland), Arts and Culture, Montgomery County (Virginia), Towson University
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UMMS plans ambulatory care center at Maryland General Hospital site
The University of Maryland Medical System is planning to build a $50 million ambulatory care center, for outpatient services, on the campus of Maryland General Hospital. Initial plans for the seven-story structure were revealed at the city's...
Tags: University of Maryland Medical Center, Colleges and Universities, Maryland General Hospital, Hospitals and Clinics
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Margaret C. Doyle, teacher and poet
Margaret C. Doyle, a retired public school English teacher and poet who later taught for many years at the Renaissance Institute, died Thursday from complications following surgery at Baltimore Washington Medical Center. The former longtime Pikesville...
Tags: Roland Park, The New York Times, Sykesville, Pikesville, Catonsville
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Cooksville victim's friends, family fight parole one signature at a time
When Christopher Cheswick learned that the drunken driver who killed his son Matthew might be paroled after little more than a year in prison, he turned to Facebook to post his outrage and heartbreak. Carl Braun had a different reaction: He launched...
Tags: Punishment, Personal Weapon Control, Baltimore County, Interior Policy, Prisons
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5 questions with … Stuart L. Ritter
As a senior financial planner with Baltimore money manager T. Rowe Price, Stuart Ritter spends much of his time on the job — and off — educating people about personal finance. April is Financial Literacy Month, and as many surveys show...
Tags: Science and Technology, Social Security, Howard County General Hospital, Personal Finance, Retirement
Apr 12, 2013
|Story| Baltimore Sun
Apr 12, 2013
|Story| Baltimore Sun
Apr 11, 2013
|Story| Baltimore Sun
Apr 11, 2013
|Story| Baltimore Sun
Apr 10, 2013
|Story| Baltimore Sun
Apr 8, 2013
|Story| Los Angeles Times
Apr 8, 2013
|Story| Baltimore Sun
Apr 7, 2013
|Story| Herald Mail
Apr 25, 2013
|Story| Baltimore Sun
Apr 22, 2013
|Story| Baltimore Sun
Apr 14, 2013
|Story| Baltimore Sun
Apr 21, 2013
|Story| Baltimore Sun
Original site for University of Maryland, College Park topic gallery.