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Donna Bethea, health care analyst
Donna Bethea, a health care analyst and longtime Northwest Baltimore resident, died of leukemia Tuesday at Gilchrist Hospice Care in Towson.
She was 44.
Ms. Bethea was born in Baltimore and raised on Brighton Avenue. She was a 1985 graduate of...Tags: Leukemia, UPS Inc., Frederick (Frederick, Maryland), Bowie, For-Profit Colleges
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Police Blotter
Harford County sheriff's deputies and Maryland State Police report: Aberdeen Samuel Elijah Brown, 22, of the 400 block of South Law Street, was arrested on a bench warrant Tuesday in a case in which he was charged with driving under the influence of...Tags: Theft, Havre de Grace, Crimes, Bel Air (Harford, Maryland), Maryland State Police
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Cordray appointment: A win for Obama -- and the public
President Barack Obama owes congressional Republicans at least a thank-you card for their efforts to block Richard Cordray as head of the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau. That GOP leaders continue to howl over Mr. Obama's decision on Wednesday to...Tags: Jacksonville (Indiana, Pennsylvania), Elizabeth Warren, Richard Cordray, Elections, Consumers
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Poised Wolf Blitzer stands up to, backs down Gingrich in CNN debate
The Baltimore SunYessssssss. God is in his heaven, and for a couple of minutes Thursday night during CNN's GOP debate, the relationship between the press and grandstanding TV politicians was finally back in balance. When moderator Wolf Blitzer asked Newt Gingrich if...Tags: CNN (tv network), Elections, Executive Branch, Regional Authority, Wolf Blitzer
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Home from war, still on a mission
This holiday season, thousands of families are welcoming home children, siblings, spouses and parents from the Middle East. For family members and service members alike, this return marks a long-anticipated and joyful reunion. But for the soldiers,...Tags: Iraq, Immigration, Substance Abuse, Kabul (Afghanistan), Afghanistan
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Latest Md.-made tug is bound for Baltimore's harbor
The shipbuilding future of Maryland is 90 feet long and smells of Spanish cedar and fresh paint.
Tied to the dock, with tradesmen swarming on deck and below, the Hunting Creek bobs gently on the Wicomico River. Within weeks, the tugboat with the gleaming...Tags: Manufacturing and Engineering, Port Deposit, Shipbuilding, Bethlehem Steel, Port of Baltimore
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Helen H. Fingles, apartment manager, dies
Baltimore Sun reporterHelen H. Fingles, former assistant manager of a University Parkway apartment building, died Aug. 14 of chronic obstructive pulmonary disease at her Ocean City home. The Mercy Ridge Retirement Community resident was 81. The daughter of a construction...Tags: Colleges and Universities, Condos, Roland Park, Notre Dame of Maryland University, Diseases and Illnesses
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Irene whips Maryland
Marylanders began cleaning up from Hurricane Irene this morning but mostly the state emerged from the storm without significant damage or widespread flooding, as feared.
Emergency officials cautioned that high winds are expected throughout the day as the...Tags: Disasters, New York City, Anne Arundel County, Tropical Storms, Weather Warnings
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Betty Skelton, 'fastest woman on Earth'
Betty Skelton, a daredevil pilot who was a three-time national aerobatics champion and became known as the "fastest woman on Earth" when she set speed records in airplanes and automobiles, died Aug. 31 at her home in The Villages, Fla. She was 85. She...Tags: The Washington Post
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Farm-City celebration kicks off with Farm Walk at Clark's Elioak Farm
The annual Howard County Farm-City Celebration gets underway Saturday, Sept. 17 from 80 to 9:30 a.m. with a free farm walk along the hayride path at Clark's Elioak Farm that is open to individuals and families. From Sept. 17 to Oct. 2, the Farm-City...Tags: Christianity, Farms, Economic Policy, File Sharing, Clubs and Associations
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Port of Baltimore leads U.S. in autos in first half
Baltimore surpassed New York to handle more auto tonnage than any other port in the United States during the first six months of 2011, the Maryland Port Administration reported Monday. The agency said it handled more than 538,000 tons of autos during the...Tags: Mercedes-Benz, Manufacturing and Engineering, Automotive Equipment, Chrysler, United States Census Bureau
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Joan Brown Sadler, nurse, gardener, BSO volunteer, dies
Joan Brown Sadler, a nurse, avid gardener and volunteer for the Baltimore Symphony Orchestra, died June 28 of breast cancer at Mercy Hospital.
The longtime Roland Park resident was 76.
"She would always say she was a professional volunteer," said her...Tags: Roland Park, Severna Park, Baton Rouge, Breast Cancer, Agricultural Research and Technology
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Dec 27, 2011
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Aug 19, 2011
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Aug 28, 2011
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Sep 4, 2011
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Sep 12, 2011
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Sep 19, 2011
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Jul 4, 2011
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