Monday, November 25, 2024 | Baltimore, MD
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UMMC begins construction of $219M downtown cancer center expansion

The University of Maryland Medical Center kicked off a $219 million expansion of its downtown cancer center on Friday with a ceremonial groundbreaking by government officials, hospital leaders and members of the community. The 198,000-square-foot, nine-story addition will allow UMMC to care for more patients, a necessity as the number of cancer patients treated at the University’s Marlene and Stewart Greenebaum Comprehensive Cancer Center has tripled since 2004.

Community technology center opens in Montgomery Co.

A new technology center in Montgomery County celebrated its grand opening Saturday. The ignITe Hub is intended to serve as a place for business owners, students, and life-long learners to get IT training and access to state-of-the-art technology. Located on Montgomery College’s Rockville Campus, the ignITe Hub will be where community members “can grow their technology and coding skills, learn to create apps, collaborate to solve problems and create or improve existing products and services,” according to a statement from Montgomery County Council.

Read More: WTOP
Annapolis-based nonprofit prepares to set sail for Greenland to study climate change on the newly commissioned sailboat

There’s a saying among oceanographers that the bigger your ship, the better your research. The Annapolis-based Ocean Research Project would like to prove that adage wrong. Saturday at City Dock, the nonprofit commissioned its newest research vessel, the R/V Marie Tharp, a 72-foot, steel-hulled sailboat named for a 20th century marine cartographer who received little credit for her work mapping the ocean floor and developing the theory of continental drift. Because of arcane rules forbidding women onboard ships, Tharp did much of her groundbreaking work on land while her research partners took credit. Her namesake, by contrast, will sail around the world.

Baltimore designer aims to turn heads with Preakness hats

Preakness may be a gathering centered around horse racing, but for Baltimore native Lacey Johansson, who has been attending festivities for decades, the hats steal the show. “I just liked the hats, and it’s a special day for Baltimore, and it’s the best day to be in Baltimore,” said Johansson, 42, who attended the pre-Preakness Black-Eyed Susan event as a toddler and grew up going to the horse races nearly every year. “It’s just a lot of fun to get dressed up and take the time to think about what you’re going to wear.”

Maryland internship program trains firefighters of tomorrow

Three firefighters entered a building that simulated a burning third-floor apartment fire. In the training exercise, Bryan Duvall douses the flames with a hose while Tiffany Huber and Riley Becker search for a missing firefighter. The rescuers’ vision is impaired as they grasp for their comrade, who lies limp on the floor. The downed firefighter’s mask is not working properly. It could be broken. Moving quickly, Huber and Becker replace the mask by the feel of their gloved hands and prepare to move the victim. Duvall joins them to lend support. The three start to drag the victim toward the stairwell.

There is a rapidly expanding, virtually unregulated competitor to medical cannabis in Maryland. It’s called Delta-8.

The CDC issued a health alert in September about Delta-8, saying there were 660 adverse events related to Delta-8 reported from January through July 2021, including 119 hospitalizations. Nearly 40% of the adverse events involved people under 18. “As the state’s medical cannabis regulator, we receive a lot of calls, emails, other correspondence from patients and parents concerned about what they think are medical cannabis products,” Tilburg said. “In actuality, they end up being Delta-8 THC products. … They are untested, unregulated and it’s unknown largely what is within them.”

Read More: Baltimore Sun
Under Armour details design for ‘iconic’ new HQ at Port Covington

Under Armour’s new global headquarters at Port Covington will sport a bold, five-story glass and timber cube wrapped in a polymer coating designed to glow at night. The new version shown by Under Armour (NYSE: UAA) Wednesday is significantly scaled back from what the sportswear giant originally envisioned when it started work on Port Covington seven years ago. The campus will have room for 1,500 workers, a fraction of the original 10,000-worker campus first projected by Under Armour when it was riding a corporate high.

University of Maryland Medical Center hopes new Baltimore cancer center will advance treatment, care

What if in the next few years patients with cancer in their lungs or blood could sit in a chair, get an infusion of their own modified cells to wipe out their cancer and go home? Cancer researchers and doctors around the country are working on it — not only replacing rounds of toxic chemotherapy with the most advanced immunotherapies but also making the cutting edge treatments more readily accessible and even comfortable.

Read More: Baltimore Sun
ReBUILD Metro On A Mission To Tackle Baltimore’s Vacant Housing Problem
A local nonprofit organization is on a mission to reduce the number of vacant homes throughout Baltimore City. The organization, ReBUILD Metro, has developed a unique and successful strategy for successful strategy since it was founded in 2002. “So, our vision became that we wanted to create a home and community environment from the rail station down to Hopkins, two of the most important venues in our city,” Rev. Calvin Keene, the group’s cofounder, told WJZ.  “And recognizing if we could make that connection, we could make a significant difference in the community in which people were living.”
Read More: WJZ
Constellation Energy — Baltimore’s newest public company — reports $106M profit after spinoff from Exelon

Constellation Energy reported a $106 million profit in its first quarter since returning as a standalone, publicly traded company. The figure was in stark contrast to the $793 million loss the energy supplier posted in the first quarter of 2021, in part the result of a crippling ice storm that wreaked havoc on Texas’ energy industry. Since then, the company (NASDAQ: CEG) has benefited from favorable market conditions and lower nuclear fuel costs, the company said on Thursday.

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