NEWS
By Alison Knezevich, The Baltimore Sun | November 10, 2012
A Lutherville woman died Saturday in a single-vehicle wreck in Cockeysville after a deer hit her car and she drove into a light pole, Baltimore County police say. Suzanne Natalie Selby, 62, was traveling southbound on Beaver Dam Road in a 2003 Honda Accord and approaching Texas Station Court when a deer ran into the driver's side of her vehicle, police said. She continued southbound, crossed the northbound lanes of Beaver Dam Road, and struck a light-support pole on the northeast corner of the intersection.
EXPLORE
Staff reports | November 10, 2012
Baltimore County Police say a woman was killed Saturday in a single car crash in the Cockeysville area. According to police, at 1:20p.m., Nov. 10, police and fire personnel responded to the area of Padonia Road and Beaver Dam Road for a report of an accident involving injuries. When officers arrived, they discovered a Honda had run into a light support pole at Beaver Dam Road and Texas Station Court. Police said they believe the car, which was driven by a woman in her 60s, was traveling southbound on Beaver Dam Road approaching Texas Station Court when the car was struck by a deer. The Honda then struck a light support pole. The driver of the Honda was pronounced dead at the scene by medical personnel. She was later identified by police as Suzanne Natalie Selby, 62, of Lutherville.
NEWS
By Frederick N. Rasmussen, The Baltimore Sun | November 9, 2012
Mary Ann Malinowski, a homemaker and former longtime Southeast Baltimore resident, died Oct. 22 of complications from dementia at Keswick Multi-Care Center. She was 93. Mary Ann Essel was born and raised in a home on Elsrode Avenue. She was a graduate of the old St. Paul's Secretarial School, family members said. She was married in 1936 to Walter S. Malinowski Sr., who was chief maintenance engineer at the Esskay meatpacking plant in Highlandtown. He died in 1981. Mrs. Malinowski lived on Woodstock Avenue in Southeast Baltimore before moving to Keswick about 20 years ago. She had been a den mother for Cub Scout Troop 92 and was a fan of the Roman Catholic Shrine of the Little Flower's Drum and Bugle Corps.
ENTERTAINMENT
by Richard Gorelick and The Baltimore Sun | November 8, 2012
Saigon Remembered has reopened in the Cranbrook Shopping Center in Cockeysville. In an email to his faithful customers, owner and executive chef Trang Nguyen said that this is "third and most intimate incarnation of Baltimore's first and finest restaurant dedicated to serving authentic Vietnamese and Pan Asian cuisine. " Nguyen also told his customers that the new Saigon Remembered, unlike the first incarnations on Belair Road and across from the Senator movie theater on York Road, has plenty of free parking.
EXPLORE
October 25, 2012
Cockeysville Middle School is set to host the 18th annual celebration for the Kids Helping Hopkins program, on Thursday, Oct. 25, 4:40 to 6:45 p.m. Speakers attending the event at the school, 10401 Greenside Drive, will talk about the impact of Kids Helping Hopkins, a program that has involved thousands of students from throughout Baltimore County and the state. The event will honors Children's Champions - those who have particularly aided the program - and 2011-2012 participating schools will be recognized.
NEWS
By Frederick N. Rasmussen, The Baltimore Sun | October 23, 2012
Viera de G. Williamson, a volunteer and longtime active member of Towson Unitarian Universalist Church, died Oct. 10 from complications of dementia at Emeritus Towson Assisted Living. She was 86. The daughter of Russian Count Alef de Ghize and Eleanor May Jencks de Ghize, a Baltimore artist, Viera de Ghize was born in Mount Kisco, N.Y., and moved with her parents in the late 1920s to a Cockeysville farm. After graduating from the George School in Newtown, Pa., she was studying journalism at Antioch College in 1945 when she married Richard Williamson, who was an Army Air Forces officer.
NEWS
By Yvonne Wenger, The Baltimore Sun | October 13, 2012
Maryland State Police are looking for three men who kidnapped a man in Cockeysville, crashed his 2011 Nissan Frontier on Interstate 83 at the Padonia Road exit and fled the scene. The victim was found unharmed on Thursday around midnight after one of the suspect's crashed the truck on the southbound ramp for Padonia Road in Timonium, police said. The three suspects allegedly approached the victim outside an establishment in the 10000 block of York Road when the men forced their way into the victim's truck and directed him to drive north.
NEWS
By Jacques Kelly, The Baltimore Sun | October 12, 2012
John Randolph Bland, a retired salesman, died Oct. 5 of diabetes complications at Dulaney Valley Assisted Living. The Cockeysville resident was 70. Born in Baltimore and raised in Catonsville, he was the great-grandson of John R. Bland, the founder of United States Fidelity & Guaranty Co. He attended Gilman School and was a 1960 graduate of St. Paul's School for Boys, where he played lacrosse and football. He served in the Air Force as a medic and was stationed in Birmingham, Ala. A salesman, he sold calculators and frozen meat products at Dutterers of Manchester.
NEWS
By Jessica Anderson, The Baltimore Sun | August 22, 2012
A Cockeysville woman was charged in her mother's January death after authorities found the 91-year-old woman on a toilet, where she had been left for two days. A Baltimore County grand jury on Aug. 15 indicted Sharon Caslow, 65, for manslaughter for leaving her mother in a bathroom in their home in the 1000 block of Hidden Moss Drive. Medics were called to the home Jan. 17, where they found Audrey Caslow seated on a toilet and determined that she had been there for two days, police said.
EXPLORE
Staff reports | August 22, 2012
Baltimore County's Office of the Chief Medical Examiner has ruled the January death of a 91-year-old woman from Cockeysville a homicide - and as a result, her daughter has been indicted for manslaughter. Police said that on Jan. 17, at 3:33 p.m., county medical personnel were dispatched to the 1000 block of Hidden Moss Drive, and found Audrey Caslow, 91, in a bathroom. Medical personnel determined that she had been there for two days, according to a press released from police. She lived at the home with her daughter, Sharon Caslow.