johns hopkins bayview medical center
- Herbert E. Naunton, a retired construction project manager and a Maryland National Guard veteran, died Wednesday of central nervous system lymphoma at Gilchrist Hospice Care in Towson. He was 74.
- With Hurricane Joaquin making its way toward the East Coast, many events have been canceled in Maryland.
- The parents of a one-month-old have been charged in his death after he was submerged in hot a bath in July, Baltimore County police said.
- Two people were flown to a trauma center after a crash Wednesday afternoon in Bel Air's Route 22 area.
- An apparent explosion in Columbia's Clary's Forest neighborhood has fire and rescue officials battling a three-alarm fire.
- A 20-year-old man suffered second-degree burns in a Sunday morning fire in Joppa, fire officials said.
- Dr. David E. Bush, a cardiologist and an internationally known educator who was a recognized expert in the fields of cardiac computed tomography and angiography, died Sept. 3 of cancer at the Johns Hopkins Hospital. He was 63.
- Dr. Patricia "Pat" Charache, an internationally known Johns Hopkins Medicine infectious diseases specialist and medical microbiologist who also had been a distinguished professor of pathology, died Saturdayof complications following surgery at the Edenwald retirement community in Towson. She was 85.
- An Aberdeen man charged with first-degree murder in the fatal shooting of a man in Perryman on Aug. 25 was ordered remain in jail without bond by a Harford County District Court judge Friday afternoon, despite concerns about medical treatment raised by public defenders.
- Joan S. Shnipper, a former vice president of communications and public affairs at the University of Maryland Medical Center and University of Maryland Medical System, died Monday of respiratory failure at Gilchrist Hospice Care in Towson. She was 64.
- An Aberdeen man accused of fatally shooting his wife's one-time boyfriend in Perryman last week was formally charged with murder Monday but remained in the hospital in police custody.
- Baltimore County police said Monday they are investigating the death of a toddler whose foster mother left her in a car outside an Edgemere church earlier this month.
- At least three people were injured in a boat fire Sunday at a marina in the Dundalk area, Baltimore County emergency officials said.
- The Harford County Sheriff's Office said it has charged a man in connection with the shooting death of another man in Perryman Tuesday morning.
- Mr. Hogan and his partisans have spent the last eight weeks like Goldilocks, moving from message to message, desperately searching for one that is just right. And, in this newspaper, they tested their most ridiculous message yet: Disinvesting in the Baltimore region demonstrates Governor Hogan's commitment to restoring a One Maryland governing philosophy. Nothing could be further than the truth.
- An overnight fire at an apartment building in Southeast Baltimore displaced residents and sent one person to the hospital, Baltimore fire officials said.
- An Aberdeen man, who told police he was assaulted by his cousin earlier this week, ended up being arrested and charged in connection with the incident, police said.
- An investigation is continuing into an explosion at a Maryland National Guard facility in Havre de Grace that injured an employee Friday afternoon
- Investigators with the Harford County Sheriff's Office are searching for a suspect involved in the shooting of a woman in Edgewood Sunday night.
- Two women were killed in a car crash in Dundalk Thursday night, Baltimore County police said.
- Emergent BioSolutions plans to separate its biosciences research and manufacturing businesses, but will maintain its growing Baltimore production facility, company officials said Thursday.
- The Baltimore City Detention Center dates to 1859, and in recent years it has been criticized for crumbling infrastructure, overcrowding and mismanagement.
- Two motorcyclists were injured in a crash in the Street area Sunday evening, Maryland State Police reported.
- Two people are dead after a 37-foot boat struck a concrete abutment just south of the Francis Scott Key Bridge early Sunday morning, emergency officials said.
- The Southeast District received some much needed curb appeal on Friday after volunteers and police officers added new landscaping to the Eastern Avenue police station.
- If you've ever used the Baltimore Beltway in rush hour to get from Owings Mills to Social Security headquarters or the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services in Woodlawn, you know it's a nightmare.
- Gaithersburg biotechnology company Emergent BioSolutions will make a treatment for the Ebola virus at its East Baltimore manufacturing facility, the company said Monday.
- F. Robert Hunter III, 62, chief financial officer of DAP, Inc. who had been a DeWalt power tools executive, died of a heart attack July 15 at the Johns Hopkins Bayview Medical Center.
- I've seen it three times now - most recently Friday afternoon - while waiting for the bus at St. Paul and 23rd in Baltimore: A young guy, fashionably urban, sporting a baseball cap, smartphone in hand, earbuds in ears, texting while skateboarding, living dangerously.
- More than 750 cyclists are involved in accidents with vehicles across Maryland annually, according to state figures, a number that has been growing in recent years and has raised concerns among bikers, bicycling advocacy groups and public safety officials, alike.
- Alphonse "Al" Buccino, an esteemed mathematician who worked for the White House and served as a college dean, died July 6 after a brief illness at Union Memorial Hospital. The 84-year-old had dementia.
- The Johns Hopkins University and the University of Maryland plan to open one of the country's largest computing centers this month.
-
- A woman was killed in a two-vehicle crash on Havre de Grace's Route 155 Wednesday evening, Maryland State Police reported
- Whether they're doing the stop-and-go stutter of rush hour on the Beltway, or waiting for a bus that once again is running late, Baltimore area workers face one of the nation's longest average commuting times, a new analysis by the Associated Press found. It takes nearly 31 minutes on average to get to or from work in the Baltimore region, the sixth longest in the country, the AP study found. Only workers in such notoriously congested areas such as New York, Washington, Southern California and
- A 48-year-old Aberdeen man accidentally shot himself shortly after 10 p.m. Friday, Aberdeen Police reported.
- Baltimore has suffered a major economic setback with short-sighted decision to derail the Red Line
- The Baltimore City Council this week green-lighted plans for a major mixed-use development on 20 formerly industrial acres opposite the Johns Hopkins Bayview campus.
- Higher fares for bus and rail rides are justified — if it means the Red Line moves forward
- Towson Area Citizens on Patrol will be handing out awards June 9 and among the honorees are Bernard Gerst, chief of Towson University's Police Department and his staff, and the late Bill Toohey, a longtime spokesman for county police.
-
- An elderly man died after being rescued from a burning Randallstown home Monday morning, while a woman also pulled from the home was in critical condition.
- Three people were exposed to hydrochloric acid Friday morning after a hose used to transport hydrochloric acid burst at a Middle River aircraft facility.
- A Maryland Transportation Authority employee was killed on I-95 near Havre de Grace, causing back-ups of up to seven miles for southbound traffic from Cecil into Harford counties Thursday afternoon, Maryland State Police reported.
- The aches and fatigue from Lyme disease can be debilitating, but for one in five infected the troubles don't end with a course of antibiotics. This "post-treatment Lyme disease syndrome" afflicting so many of the 300,000 or so believed to contract the disease annually is a focus of a new center at Johns Hopkins Medicine.
- A Joppa man was shot in the leg early Monday morning in what he told Harford sheriffĀæs deputies was a drive-by shooting.
- Robert D.H. Harvey, a career Baltimore banker who rose from bank runner to leading the effort that resulted in the founding of the old Maryland National Bank and later served as chairman and CEO of Maryland National Corp., died.
- Good morning, Baltimore! Here's what you need to know for Tuesday.
- An Abingdon man who fell into a fire pit and burned his hands early Saturday morning has been discharged from the hospital.
- A bicyclist was injured in a possible hit-and-run Saturday evening in Aberdeen, city police reported.