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Logan

NEWS
March 12, 1992
James H. Logan, a yardmaster for Conrail in Hagerstown, died Friday at Washington County Hospital in Hagerstown after he was injured in an automobile accident on Interstate 70 while on his way to work. He was 47.Services for Mr. Logan, who lived on Amy Lane in Randallstown, were being held today at the Greater Bethlehem Temple, 8334 Liberty Road, Randallstown.He worked for Conrail about 20 years in Baltimore, Washington and Hagerstown. Earlier, he was employed briefly by the Chesapeake and Potomac Telephone Co.A native of Baltimore and a graduate of the Carver Vocational-Technical High School, he served in the Army in Korea in the mid-1960s.
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NEWS
By David Michael Ettlin and David Michael Ettlin,Staff Writer | December 2, 1992
Susanne Rene Logan, a waitress who received a multimillion-dollar settlement last month for catastrophic brain injuries resulting from an abortion procedure at a Prince George's County clinic, died of pneumonia yesterday at Maryland General Hospital.Ms. Logan, who was 35, lost the ability to walk, speak, swallow and control many bodily functions and had severe memory lapses as a result of a lack of oxygen during the abortion performed Sept. 9, 1989, under general anesthesia administered by uncertified personnel.
NEWS
August 6, 2003
Kathleen J. Logan, a homemaker and former bookkeeper, died of a stroke Thursday at St. Agnes HealthCare. She was 80 and a resident since 1993 of Charlestown Retirement Community. Born Kathleen Joy in Anacortes, Wash., she was raised in Seattle. During World War II, she worked at the Pentagon in Washington as a bookkeeper. From 1945 to 1955, she was a bookkeeper at the University of California at Los Angeles and for the Atomic Energy Commission. In 1945, she married Roy K. Logan, an electronics technician at Goddard Space Flight Center in Greenbelt.
NEWS
July 3, 1994
Everette P. Logan, a retired steel worker and teacher, died June 23 of a heart attack in his Dolfield Avenue residence. He was 80.He was a foreman and inspector at Bethlehem Steel Corp.'s Sparrows Point plant from 1950 until his retirement in 1978. Earlier, he worked in his native Richmond, Va., for the Railway Express Agency and the Virginia State Employment Service, and was an insurance agent.He attended Richmond schools and earned his bachelor's degree from Virginia Union University in 1934.
SPORTS
By Special to The Sun | September 22, 1992
LOTHIAN -- Marty O'Rear reeled off seven birdies and a bogey, and partner Sam Logan protected the margin with pars at the last two holes, as the pair won the annual Middle Atlantic PGA Pro-Assistant championship with a 6-under-par 34-3266 at Old South Country Club yesterday.O'Rear, who has been at Sully National Driving Range in Sterling, Va., since July, made all his birdies from inside 12 feet. He highlighted the round with a sand wedge shot to 6 inches for a birdie-2 at the 150-yard 16th to provide the winning margin.
NEWS
By Fred Rasmussen and Fred Rasmussen,SUN STAFF | November 13, 1995
John E. Logan Sr., whose fascination with the construction business began when he was a youngster and culminated in his founding of a Baltimore construction equipment supply firm, died Thursday of complications of a stroke at his Guilford residence.Mr. Logan, who was 87, retired in 1978 as president of McClung-Logan Equipment Co., which he had started in 1939."He grew up in Texas, in Baltimore County, and worked along with his brothers in the quarries there," said a son, John E. Logan Jr., secretary and treasurer of the Washington Boulevard company.
SPORTS
By HEATHER A. DINICH | May 2, 2007
Offensive lineman Antonio Logan-El, who committed to Maryland as a sophomore but stunned the program with his highly publicized decision to choose Penn State, will transfer to Towson, he said yesterday. "Me and my family sat down and talked things through," said Logan-El, a Forestville native who was considered the top offensive lineman in the state by Rivals.com. "We thought it was a great fit for me." Logan-El said he will finish the semester at Penn State.
SPORTS
By Tara Finnegan and Tara Finnegan,Contributing Writer | January 10, 1993
Poly forward Kelly Logan has shown symptoms of being a freshman, but only off the basketball court.Off the court, the 14-year-old sits in a classroom chair, squirms a bit and manages a nervous smile.But on the court, she is composed and controlled. That intensity under pressure recently helped key the Engineers to a 36-33 win over Edgewood in the semifinals of the Poly Classic Tournament.With the score tied and less than a minute left in regulation, Logan had two shot opportunities, both from three-point range, to win the game.
SPORTS
By HEATHER A. DINICH and HEATHER A. DINICH,SUN REPORTER | January 25, 2006
Dressed in a sharp black suit accented by a Maryland-red tie, 17-year-old Antonio Logan-El sat before a television camera yesterday at ESPN Zone in Baltimore, surrounded by Maryland football fans waving red pompoms and holding Terps signs. Highlights of his football games at Forestville High School in Prince George's County flashed on a giant screen behind him as the top offensive lineman in the state turned his college commitment into prime-time entertainment. Logan-El first pulled a Florida cap out of a bag before declaring it wasn't the school for him and tossing it aside.
NEWS
By DAN RODRICKS | December 21, 2008
One summer night, Darryl Logan picked up the phone in his mother's house and called me. It took a lot for him to do that. He'd been using heroin for a long time. He'd squandered an education that had been given to him - a poor kid from Lanvale Street - at one of Baltimore's fine private schools. He'd dropped out of college and gone into "the life." Long before I knew him, Darryl Logan had become a hustler, selling dope on trash-strewn corners to support his habit. Asking for help was not easy for him. But that night in 2005, he asked.
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