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    Sep 18, 2001 |Story| Baltimore Sun
  1. Maryland's lost

    Sept. 19, 2001 Still more Maryland residents are dead or missing in the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks. Amelia Fields Amelia Fields, 38, a clerical worker who had been transferred to the Pentagon on Sept. 10, is listed as missing. Mrs. Fields grew up...

    Tags: Environmental Pollution, High School Sports, Christianity, Career and Workplace, Sex

  2. Oct 25, 2001 |Story| Baltimore Sun
  3. 'No guarantees' that mail is safe, postmaster says

    Sun Staff
    Trying to reassure postal workers and an anxious public, the postmaster general moved to shore up the U.S. postal system against biological attack -- even suggesting that people should wash their hands after touching their mail. "We're telling people...

    Tags: Skin Lesion, Arts, Career and Workplace, Mail Order Industry, Fairfax (Fairfax, Virginia)

  4. Sep 25, 2001 |Story| Chicago Tribune
  5. Families find sweet memories to help them through grief

    Days after the terrorist attacks killed James F. Murphy IV, his family found something he had given his father just a month before. It was a flag. Like countless flags sprouting on lawns and hanging from homes and buildings around the country, it now...

    Tags: Tourism and Leisure, Air and Space Accidents, Disasters and Accidents, Detroit Tigers, Rutgers University

  6. Sep 25, 2001 |Story| Baltimore Sun
  7. Tornadoes kill 2 in Maryland

    Sun Staff
    A tornado blazed a 10-mile-long path of destruction through Central Maryland at rush hour yesterday afternoon, killing two Howard County sisters and injuring dozens of people while ripping the roofs off buildings and flinging cars through the air. The...

    Tags: Environmental Pollution, Disasters and Accidents, Maryland Terrapins, University of Maryland, College Park, Career and Workplace

  8. Mar 6, 2005 |Story| Baltimore Sun
  9. Modern combat lacking in old medical supply

    Sun National Staff
    Even after the bullet cut through his leg and severed his femoral artery, 1st Lt. David R. Bernstein had a chance. The shooting stopped quickly, and a soldier trained in combat medical care was at Bernstein's side almost immediately. Helicopters landed,...

    Tags: U.S. Army, Defense, Plastic Surgeons, International Military Interventions, Armed Conflicts

  10. Jan 2, 2002 |Story| Baltimore Sun
  11. Damage to Pentagon is barely noticeable now

    Associated Press
    WASHINGTON -- The victims' families and the nation still grieve, but the once-charred and jagged western flank of the Pentagon no longer looks much like the scene of an American tragedy. Except for flags waving from two 140-foot-tall cranes, the...

    Tags: Crime, Law and Justice, American Airlines, Inc., Aircraft Hijacking, House Building, Terrorism

  12. Sep 12, 2001 |Story| Chicago Tribune
  13. Disaster drills are no match for chaos of reality

    The people who work at the New York State Emergency Center in Albany report to work each day--underground, in a bunker surrounded on all sides by four feet of reinforced concrete--in preparation for a medical disaster. On Tuesday, the disaster occurred....

    Tags: Disasters and Accidents, Health and Medical Professionals, Disasters, Unrest, Conflicts and War, Emergency Planning

  14. Sep 13, 2001 |Story| Chicago Tribune
  15. President comes face to face with devastation

    President Bush on Wednesday personally inspected the effects of a terrorist attack that killed hundreds of people at the Pentagon but according to his aides was aimed at him. "I am overwhelmed by the devastation," the president said as he stood before...

    Tags: Disasters and Accidents, George W. Bush, American Airlines, Inc., Fairfax (Fairfax, Virginia), White House

  16. Sep 12, 2001 |Story| Baltimore Sun
  17. Medical workers treat host of injured

    Sun Staff
    Doctors and hospitals scrambled yesterday to treat more than 2,000 burned, broken and crushed patients taken from the wreckage of the World Trade Center. Medical officials set up makeshift emergency rooms, appealed for volunteer staff and set up triage...

    Tags: Disasters and Accidents, Statue of Liberty, Health and Medical Professionals, Broken Bones, Hartford (Hartford, Connecticut)

  18. Sep 19, 2001 |Story| Baltimore Sun
  19. Maryland's lost

    Still more Maryland residents are dead or missing in the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks. Amelia Fields Amelia Fields, 38, a clerical worker who had been transferred to the Pentagon on Sept. 10, is listed as missing. Mrs. Fields grew up in Somerset...

    Tags: Hospitals and Clinics, Unrest, Conflicts and War, Fort Meade (military base), Somerset County (Maryland), Health

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Washington Hospital Center Photos
Oxygen tanks are seen in the ready room to be used for...
(April 30, 2009)
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