dartmouth college
- LoveYourBrain Yoga is offering sessions at Yoga on York in Towson to help people who have sustained traumatic brain injuries and their caregivers find physical independence, regain their cognitive abilities, and develop a sense of community with others.
- North Carroll High School and Dartmouth College graduate Tim Wunderlich placed sixth in the decathlon at the USA Track & Field Championships
- Jay Moyer is being inducted into the Carroll County Sports Hall of Fame as part of the Class of 2018.
- Cal Thomas: The Parkland, Fla., teen upset by criticism from a Fox talk show host is "cowardly" and "immature."
- Robert G. Levy, who pursued careers in law and academia and was an accomplished sailor, died Jan 29 from pancreatic cancer at his Roland Park home. He was 85.
- James C. "Jim" Owings Jr., a retired University of Maryland math professor who had a penchant for collecting AMC Eagles automobiles, died Jan. 12 from lung cancer at Stella Maris Hospice. The lifelong Riderwood resident was 77.
- Edwin B. jarrett Jr., a retired insurance executive who was an accomplished woodworker, died Oct. 27 from pancreatic cancer at the Blakehurst Retirement Community in Towson. He was 86.
- William K.S. Tobin, former dean of the National Cryptologic School,, died Saturday of heart failure at his Ellicott City home. He was 79.
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- Robert E. Hecht Sr., former chairman of the board and chief executive officer of the old Baltimore Federal Financial who was an active supporter of Catholic Charities, died Saturday from congestive heart failure and coronary artery disease at the Charlestown retirement community. He was 91.
- The Mustangs' class of 2016 faced many challenges, both personal and shared, but on Friday, the 353 graduating seniors of C. Milton Wright High School were gathered for one last time, ready to walk across the stage and move on from school.
- Like many voters outside Maryland, Tom Lanzetta had never given Martin O'Malley much consideration until the two-term governor showed up on his television screen this week for the first Democratic presidential debate.
- Lutherville resident Dr. Scott Krugman is named Pediatrician of the Year by the Maryland Chapter of the American Academy of Pediatrics.
- Kelly Polen, a software developer and musician, ended his life Sunday. He was 34.
- Mike Millemann has spent nearly 50 years representing the disempowered, the despised and the dispossessed, from convicted murderers and abandoned mental patients to taxpayers stuck with the tab left by a crooked pol
- Dr. Thomas Scott Wilson, 63, a physician and official of Medstar Good Samaritan and Union Memorial hospitals, died in his sleep of cardiac arrest June 14 at his Roland Park home.
- As Martin O'Malley sets out on an ambitious campaign for president, he is courting the type of young voters who fueled Barack Obama's victories in 2008 and 2012. He relies on words like "this generation" and "new leadership" to make a not-so-subtle point about his opponents.
- Attempting to push back on the idea that his presidential campaign is a nearly insurmountable long shot, Martin O'Malley arrived in New Hampshire on Sunday to sell himself as a fresh and progressive alternative to front-runner Hillary Clinton.
- Dr. Stanley Kogan, a retired oral surgeon who had been chief of the Department of Dentistry at Sinai Hospital and what his now Northwest Hospital, died Friday at his Pikesville home of cardio-pulmonary complications. He was 84.
- Story about the 2015 inductees into the Howard County Women's Athletics Hall of Fame
- Dr. Steven S. Sharfstein, president of Sheppard Pratt Health System, announced Thursday that he will retire next year.
- For house concert impresarios like Daniel Weiser and Wendy Shuford, there's no place like home. Weiser, an accomplished pianist, is trying to build a network of house concerts in north Baltimore, including at his own house in Guilford. And Shuford, who doesn't pay a musical instrument, regularly invites people to her small apartment in Cross Keys for concerts by musicians, such as one Nov. 7 by a couple from Maine who play Celtic folk music.
- In the wake of domestic violence incidents involving Ray Rice, Ray McDonald and Greg Hardy, the NFL is making some additions to its staff to help guide league policies.
- George W. Hilton, a retired college professor who specialized in transportation economics whose definitive books on railroads and shipping also included the seminal history of the Maryland & Pennsylvania Railroad, died Aug. 4 at Lorien Health Park in Columbia. He was 89.
- Stoneleigh swim coach Brian Loeffler would have been ecstatic with a team of just 200 swimmers.
- Edward J. Rasmussen, a retired insurance broker and Japanese writer-translator, died June 20 of pneumonia at Gilchrist Hospice Care in Towson. He was 95.
- Anne Arundel County voters will chose between Republican Steve Schuh and Democrat George F. Johnson IV for their next county executive.
- In Anne Arundel County, Republican county executive candidates Laura Neuman and Steve Schuh are engaged in a bruising primary fight.
- For years, those fishing in East Coast waterways have faced bans on felt-soled boots and urgings that they scrub their gear to combat the spread of a pervasive algae.
- Sexual assaults on campus remain a chronic problem that demands a tougher response from policymakers and college administrators
- Charles M. Cahn Jr., a retired Baltimore attorney who had been the managing partner of Blades & Rosenfeld, died Feb. 10 of heart failure at Roland Park Place. He was 92.
- Richard M. Lansburgh, a retired clothier, philanthropist and arts patron, died of multiple organ failure Tuesday at the Levindale Hebrew Geriatric Center one day short of his 92nd birthday. He lived in North Baltimore.
- Managing director of General Atlantic has been on Hopkins board since 2010
- Taymour Tamaddon discusses his first six months after becoming manager of Price's Health Sciences Fund.
- Johns Hopkins University edged closer to the top 10 of national universities on the U.S. News and World Report annual rankings, which were released Tuesday.
- The general who led the Pentagon's review of the largest leak of classified documents in U.S. history told a military judge on Wednesday that their publication revealed tactics, strained relations with some allies and caused some Afghans to stop cooperating with Americans.