university of cincinnati
- One Principal, Three Counsel and Six Associates Recently Joined Law Firm in Baltimore, Frederick, Tysons Corner and Washington, D.C. Offices Miles & Stockbridge is pleased to announce that Dwight W. Stone II has joined the law firm as a principal in its nationally-recognized Products Liability & Mass Torts Practice Group and the Consumer Product Safety Commission & Regulatory Compliance practice within it. Before joining Miles & Stockbridge, Stone was a partner at another Maryland law firm. He has more than 20 years of litigation experience, representing clients in various state and federal courts and administrative agencies and focusing on products ...
- Gerald G. Altman Jr., known to generations of Baltimore radio talk show listeners as "Gerry from Pikesville" who gave voice to various liberal and progressive causes, died Monday of heart failure at Northwest Hospital. He was 92.
- For several Calvert Hall athletes, the crowning moment of their high school careers came Wednesday afternoon.
- Plank today kicked off the annual Cupid's Cup Entrepreneurship Competition and is accepting applications from undergraduate and graduate students or recent alumni who are 30 or younger.
- Each candidate was asked to provide the same information for the voters guide to the Nov. 3 Laurel city elections.
- The complications of police body cameras can be managed. Maryland can show how.
- Whether it's dancers, musicians or actors, these young up-and-coming artists in the Baltimore region are eager to make their mark in the world. Here's a look at five local talented young performers rising to the top.
- Kenneth Alan Beem, a retired Montgomery College geology professor and antiques writer, died of cardiac arrest June 3 in Pittsburgh, Pa. He was 72.
- Howard Magazine profiles three up-and-comers in the arts: Courtney Spears, a member of elite dance company Ailey II; Sola Fadiran, winner of Howard County Arts Council¿s Rising Stars competition; and Amanda Yuan, a musical theater actress who, at 16, has multiple TV appearances under her belt.
- nder Armour continued to compile new collegiate partnerships, signing an agreement with the University of Cincinnati athletics department to become the official outfitter of Bearcats teams.
- Make no mistake -- a Ravens victory over the Pittsburgh Steelers on Saturday night would be music to the ears of Freddie Scott, the onetime Baltimore Colts receiver.
- Carroll Hospital Center announced the addition of several new providers to its repertoire of health care specialists at Carroll Health Group, the hospital's affiliated multi-specialty practice group.
- Richard E. Kleinfelder, a retired construction manger who earlier had been in heavy equipment sales, died Saturday at Stella Maris Hospice of amyotrophic lateral sclerosis, more commonly known as Lou Gehrig's disease. He was 66.
- Carroll Hospital Center announced the addition of several new providers to its repertoire of health care specialists at Carroll Health Group, the hospital's affiliated multi-specialty practice group.
- Ernest L. Caldwell Jr., a retired senior city planner and urban designer who did early studies for what became Oriole Park at Camden Yards, died of complications of Parkinson's disease July 8. The Stoneleigh resident was 74.
- Lauren Hudson doesn¿t exercise leadership like a typical captain of a defense.
- Dr. Charles J.E. Arnold, former chief of radiology at North Arundel Hospital and more recently at the University of Maryland St. Joseph Medical Center, died Wednesday of undetermined causes at his Greenspring Valley home. He was 72.
- Maryland firefighters and municipalities are at odds in a high-stakes debate over a state law that presumes some cancers are related to fighting fires for purposes of awarding workers' compensation.
- After firing Brian Billick following the 2007 season, the Ravens selected John Harbaugh as their next head coach, choosing him over a group of candidates that included Rex Ryan, the team's defensive coordinator. It was an unconventional decision at the time, hiring a longtime special teams coordinator for the Philadelphia Eagles over one of the architects of the Ravens' vaunted defense and the popular choice of the players.
- A recap of the Nov. 21 episode of 'Glee," wherein Sam and New York don't seem to mix all that well
- No money will be changing hands when the Maryland All-State Community Band performs a concert on Sunday, July 21 at 2 p.m. at River Hill High School in Clarksville. That's because the concert is free and the musicians are not paid.
- Timonium United Methodist Church tout accomplishments graduates, Paul Young, author of "The Shack" C. Baxter Kruger, author of "The Shack Revisited" to speak on at Timonium United Methodist Church, daughter of Ted and Nadine Oswald lands job with Houston Grand Opera
- Col. Phil Kasten, Chief Deputy of the Carroll County Sheriff's Office, announced his candidacy Wednesday for Sheriff, nearly two weeks after Sheriff Ken Tregoning said he would not run for reelection in 2014.
- Abe Bortz, the Social Security Administration's first historian and a voracious collector of books, died Tuesday of lymphoma at his home in Pikesville. He was 93.
- Hereford High boys lacrosse goes for sixth straight state title this season
- Dr. Benjamin H. Cassutto, a veterinarian and Army veteran, died Thursday of cancer at Nanticoke Hospital in Seaford, Del. He was 52.
- Walt Himelstein, an Owings Mills environmental chemist and entrepreneur, invented the Pure reusable glass drinking bottle, which features a shock-absorbing plastic sleeve that holds together the glass if it cracks.
- Architects live and breathe design, blissfully losing themselves in details most people would never notice — the bevel of a trim, the way light falls across a room, squared legs or curved. So what happens, we wondered, when two such aesthetes come together under one roof?
- Q&A with Raven specials teams coordinator Jerry Rosburg
- Ravens-49ers: Father, sons and football: Thanksgiving for Harbaugh family at M&T Bank Stadium
- Anne Healy, a visionary head mistress who led the way in integrating Roland Park County School and taking it into the computer age, died Wednesday afternoon of post-polio syndrome at Gilchrist Hospice Care in Towson. She was 97.
- Anne Healy, a visionary head mistress who led the way in integrating Roland Park County School and taking it into the computer age, died Wednesday afternoon of post-polio syndrome at Gilchrist Hospice Care in Towson. She was 97.
- Leader of Spring Grove to take over amid recent violence at Perkins hospital