Advertisement
HomeCollectionsCaudill
IN THE NEWS

Caudill

FEATURES
By John Dorsey and John Dorsey,SUN ART CRITIC | December 7, 1995
Michela Caudill's photographs of people with AIDS and their care givers have a strange effect: They make you feel outside. That is to their credit.Caudill has spent the last two years photographing people with AIDS and the range of their care givers: doctors and nurses, but also friends, family and volunteers. The result is an exhibit of black and white photographs that tells the stories of a few individuals, accompanied by texts to reveal the courage of the sick and the devotion of the care givers.
Advertisement
FEATURES
By John Dorsey and John Dorsey,Sun Art Critic | October 21, 1994
Two interesting but flawed shows currently at neighboring colleges, Loyola and Notre Dame, involve children, either directly or indirectly. Both involve photos and texts -- one mostly photos and one mostly texts.At Loyola, local photographer Michela Caudill shows photos of residents at Woodbourne Center, an institution for emotionally disturbed children and teen-agers. In 1992, Caudill received a grant from the center to photograph the residents in their daily lives, interacting with one another and with the staff.
FEATURES
By Stephanie Shapiro and Stephanie Shapiro,Sun Staff Writer | September 28, 1994
From her Federal Hill apartment, photographer Michela S. Caudill used to watch the teen-agers from Southern High School stream past on their way home, intrigued by their big hair and their noisy, restless energy."
NEWS
August 5, 1994
In an opinion requested by a prosecutor, Maryland's attorney general said yesterday that a Frederick County judge erred when he dropped a rape charge against a man accused of sexually assaulting his estranged wife at gunpoint.Frederick County Circuit Judge G. Edward Dwyer Jr. dismissed the charge against Charles Caudill, citing an exemption in Maryland's marital rape law -- namely, that the couple had engaged in consensual sex before the rape and while they were separated.But Attorney General J. Joseph Curran Jr. said in a written opinion that the judge's interpretation of the rape law was flawed, that "if force is used in the commission of a rape, it doesn't make a bit of difference whether there was a mutual cohabitation even the day before the incident."
FEATURES
By Mary Corey and Mary Corey,Staff Writer | April 11, 1993
Helen Schlossberg and Gil Cohen fill an empty nest with the 0) sound of musicWhen Helen Schlossberg and Gil Cohen became empty nesters, they faced what many parents do: the sound of silence. Their daughter, Ellie, wasn't practicing the bassoon in her room; their son, Jeffrey, wasn't composing at the piano. No one was singing."We missed having music in the house," says Ms. Cohen, "so we decided to import our own."Not just any music, either. Five times a year, BSO musicians, Peabody students and other performers turn the Cohens' Mount Vernon condominium into a recital hall.
NEWS
By Alan J. Craver and Alan J. Craver,Staff Writer | July 26, 1992
A Bel Air man will be sentenced to six years in jail and pay $10,000 in restitution for a November 1991 drunken-driving accident that killed an 11-year-old girl.Alan Boris Caudill, 34, entered a plea agreement for manslaughter by vehicle and driving while intoxicated after prosecutors presented a statement of facts during a Harford Circuit Court hearing Thursday.As part of the agreement, Mr. Caudill is to be sentenced to 10 years in prison, with four years of the term to be suspended.Mr. Caudill will be formally sentenced Sept.
NEWS
December 1, 1991
Marine Pvt. Robert L. Caudill, son of Robert A. and Tina M. Caudill of Aberdeen, recently completed recruit training.During the training cycle at Marine Corps Recruit Depot, Parris Island, S.C., recruits are taught the basics of battlefield survival and introduced to military routine, personal and professional standards.Caudill is a 1988 graduate of Aberdeen High School.BUNGORI AT APGPvt. Alex R. Bungori has completed a vehicle-repair course at Aberdeen Proving Ground.Students were taught trouble-shooting, replacement and adjustment of components and assemblies of wheeled vehicles.
NEWS
By Carol L. Bowers and Carol L. Bowers,Staff writer | December 1, 1991
County police agencies have little documentation of crimes occurringat the four adult bookstores in Harford, though a county councilman says crime is the main reason he appointed a committee to draft a bill to regulate the stores.Councilman Philip J. Barker, D-District F, said he appointed the committee because he sees a need "to regulate unlawful activity that might be associated with adult bookstores."The committee is scheduled to meet again at 10 a.m. Dec. 6 in theCounty Council chambers, in the County Courthouse in Bel Air."
FEATURES
By Mike Giuliano and Mike Giuliano,Special to The Evening Sun | August 15, 1991
Eight artists who maintain studios at the School 33 Art Center are also sharing a group exhibit in its main gallery. For the public, it's a welcome opportunity to see some of the artwork made here; for the artists, it must have been nice during this scorching summer to have to carry their work only from second floor studios down to the first floor gallery.The one photographer in the bunch, Michela S. Caudill, is represented by a black-and-white photographic series, "Portrait of a Law Firm," that has promising intentions it can't quite pull off.Caudill says in an artist's statement: "I have deliberately avoided the formal poses and stylized portraits which typify corporate photography."
NEWS
By Melanie Waddell and Melanie Waddell,Contributing writer | June 30, 1991
The Bel Air Volunteer Fire Company's "Firehouse Road Rally," a fund-raiser scheduled for yesterday, has been postoned until late October for lack of entrants.The road rally had five entries as of last week. But between 60 and 80 entries are needed to cover organizationalcosts, said Peter Caudill, a fire department member and mechanic at Auto Village in Bel Air.A new date will be announced later, said Caudill.The first-time rally would raise money for the Bel Air Fire Department. The entrance fee is $25. If 80 entries were received it would raise $2,000.
Baltimore Sun Articles
|
|
|
Please note the green-lined linked article text has been applied commercially without any involvement from our newsroom editors, reporters or any other editorial staff.