WESTMINSTER – At 5 feet 3 inches and 145 pounds Timothy Schlauch doesn’t resemble the muscle-rippled prison guards portrayed in the movies
Maryland
Encroaching Development Makes for Unfriendly Skies for Small Airports
ANNAPOLIS – Small suburban airports are increasingly at odds with development interests in Maryland as the surging economy provides landowners with strong incentives to cash in their airports or the open spaces around them
County Planners Probe Secret to Making Airports, People Compatible
ANNAPOLIS – Like special agents Fox Mulder and Dana Scully on TV’s “X- Files,” Craig Rovelstad and Wendy Irminger are working together on a flying- object mystery
Aging Baby Boomers Will Drive Graying of Maryland’s Population
WASHINGTON – The number of Maryland residents aged 65 and older will grow 67 percent by 2020 and the aging trend will be felt in every part of the state, according to the Maryland Office of Planning
As Marylanders Live Longer, Officials Are Optimistic They Will Live Better
WASHINGTON – Elizabeth Boehner, director of the Montgomery County Area Agency on Aging, recalls how members of her grandparents’ generation often expected to spend their final years in what her aunt called “the old age home
Baltimore Sewage Plants Fall Short of Nutrient Removal Limits; Rivers Suffer
BALTIMORE – Seven days a week, 24 hours a day, 150 million gallons of musty sewage churns through 12 vats at the Back River Wastewater Treatment Plant for nitrogen removal treatment
Two Maryland Towns Ranked Among Best in Nation for Senior Living
WASHINGTON – Annapolis and Chestertown are among the country’s 50 best places for older adults to live, according to the May/June issue of Modern Maturity magazine
Trees Pose Biggest Hazard to Maryland Hunters, As Tree-Stand Use Takes Off
WASHINGTON – The number of Maryland hunters injured in tree-stand accidents has risen so dramatically that falls from tree stands are now the most common type of hunting accident reported in the state
Hunting Accident Victims Less Likely Than Most to Have Had Safety Training
WASHINGTON – Maryland hunters who have not taken the state’s hunting safety course might want to consider enrolling: The life they save may be their own
Tuskegee Airman Spent Life Shooting for the Sky; Now Honored With School Name
LANHAM – As a child, Herbert Flowers would look into the sky and picture himself floating above the clouds and soaring through the heavens