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Otenasek instrumental in preserving Baltimore's port
The Sun obituary about Dr. Mildred Otenasek (Nov. 26) failed to mention one very important civic contribution back in 1955 and 1956. Then-Gov. Theodore McKeldin included Dr. Otanesek on the committee to change the Port of Baltimore and make it more...Tags: Maryland General Assembly
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Police arrest five in raid on Catonsville saloon in 1912
An article in the Nov. 23, 1912, edition of The Argus reported a raid on a local drinking establishment. Samuel Bloom saloon on Frederick road at Paradise was raided Sunday night at 7 o'clock by Patrolmen Hutson and Phelps, of the Canton Police Station....Tags: Emergency Incidents, Arts and Culture, Dining and Drinking, Annapolis, Dance
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Port cargo numbers ahead of 2011 record
With the first three quarters of 2012 in the ledger, the Helen Delich Bentley Port of Baltimore appears poised to top several of last year's cargo records. Officials said that through the first nine months, the port's public and private terminals...
Tags: Hurricane Sandy (2012)
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Carnival offers weekend sailing from Baltimore
After Hurricane Sandy forced the cancellation of its planned seven-day Caribbean cruise, the Baltimore-based Carnival Pride has a new offer for travelers. The ship will sail a two-day cruise on the Chesapeake, departing from the Port of Baltimore on...Tags: Carnival Cruise Lines, Tourism and Leisure, Hurricane Sandy (2012), Arts and Culture, Cruises
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Giant cranes arrive in port, marking new era for cargo handling
The future of the port of Baltimore eased through the morning haze Wednesday, limboed under the Bay Bridge with room to spare, ducked under the Key Bridge and arrived dockside at Seagirt Marine Terminal just in time for dinner.
Fourteen stories tall...Tags: Panama, Chesapeake Bay Bridge
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Helen Delich Bentley's name fumbled at event honoring her
The Baltimore SunHelen Delich Bentley served five terms in Congress, was chairwoman of the Federal Maritime Commission and has the Port of Baltimore named for her. So you’d think that at the National Maritime Day celebration last Saturday (5/19) in Baltimore...Tags: Inner Harbor
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Matte deserved a spot on the 175 athletes list
Helen Delich Bentley is right on point in criticizing the omission of Tom Matte from The Sun's historical list of outstanding Maryland athletes ("Tom Matte deserves spot on greatest list," May 15). Anyone who's old enough to remember the Baltimore Colts'...Tags: Baltimore Colts, Football, Sports
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The Interview: Bentley on a maritime promise lost
The Baltimore Sun's front page on July 22, 1959, carried the news accompanied by a six-column photo: The world's first nuclear-powered cargo ship had been launched at Camden, N.J.
The christening of the $47 million N/S Savannah was bigger than news about...Tags: Inner Harbor, Arts and Culture, Museums, Dwight D. Eisenhower, Nuclear Power
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City crafts first zoning overhaul in 40 years
After the Mount Vernon United Methodist Church was ravaged by a lightning-strike fire four years ago, the Hampden neighborhood was left with what appeared to be an unusable building. But Mark Dent saw more than a burned-out shell of an old stone church....
Tags: Crime, Law and Justice, Waterway and Maritime Transportation Industry, Belinda Conaway, Religion and Belief, Mount Vernon
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Rendell urges business group to back 'essential' public works projects
Infrastructure could be the least sexy word in the English language, former Pennsylvania Gov. Ed Rendell acknowledged to his audience Monday morning, but "it is essential to everything we do." While roads, rails and the electric grid — just to name...
Tags: Edward G. Rendell, Suez Canal, Science and Technology, Timothy M. Kaine, Politics
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Theodore K. Sanderson Jr., port specialist
Theodore K. "TK" Sanderson Jr., a retired Maryland Port Administration operations specialist who was also an avid outdoorsman, died Oct. 24 from complications of Alzheimer's disease at his White Marsh home overlooking the Bird River. He was 77.
"Ted...Tags: Canoeing and Kayaking, Science and Technology, Technology, Alcoa Incorporated, Maryland Department of Transportation
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Sandy's economic impact on Baltimore area likely modest
General Motors' manufacturing plant in White Marsh lost about a day and a half to Cyclone Sandy. But it sustained no damage, missed no shipping deadlines and expected to quickly make up for lost time. Though that's just about the best-case scenario, it's...
Tags: Hurricane Sandy (2012), Sales, Baltimore Gas and Electric Co., Employees, Restaurant and Catering Industry
Dec 7, 2012
|Story| Baltimore Sun
Nov 19, 2012
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Nov 20, 2012
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Oct 31, 2012
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Jun 20, 2012
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May 22, 2012
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May 23, 2012
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May 27, 2012
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Nov 13, 2012
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Nov 12, 2012
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Nov 6, 2012
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Nov 4, 2012
|Story| Baltimore Sun
Original site for Port of Baltimore topic gallery.
