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NEWS
May 28, 1997
In Sunday's editions, an article about the state high school tennis championships incorrectly listed the school for players Howie Edelstein and Matt Hanna. They are from South River.The Sun regrets the error.Pub Date: 5/28/97
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SPORTS
By Mark Hoeflich and Mark Hoeflich,CONTRIBUTING WRITER | May 25, 1997
In Sunday's editions, an article about the state high school tennis championships incorrectly listed the school for players Howie Edelstein and Matt Hanna. They are from South River.The Sun regrets the error.When the time came for Broadneck's doubles team of Howie Edelstein and Matt Hanna to seize their destiny at yesterday's state tennis championships, they did so with the strong play and intensity that have carried them throughout this season.Feeling unfulfilled after three previous trips to the state tournament, which resulted in one second- and two third-place finishes, Edelstein and Hanna combined for three strong service games and some dominating net play to defeat Don Ho and Danny McBride of Blair, 6-2, 6-1, for their first state doubles title at Essex Community College.
SPORTS
By Pat O'Malley and Pat O'Malley,SUN STAFF | May 2, 1997
Kristen Kapusta of Annapolis and South River's Howie Edelstein are winners of the Dick Hart Awards for basketball. Each will receive a $1,500 scholarship at the Dick Hart Memorial Golf Classic on June 23 at Bay Hills in Arnold.Hart coached boys basketball at Andover for 30 years and was to be the North County coach before dying of a brain tumor.The award is voted on by county coaches and goes to an unsung hero who is also an outstanding student. Hart, never one to seek personal accolades, was a symbol of discipline, hard work, dedication and team play.
NEWS
By Dennis O'Brien and Dennis O'Brien,SUN STAFF | September 4, 1996
A Baltimore woman sued yesterday the Hanover construction supply company where she once worked, claiming she was denied a raise and then fired for complaining about being sexually harassed at a company-sponsored party.Patricia Boycheck, 37, alleges in a $1 million suit filed in Anne Arundel Circuit Court that she was fired last year by Number One Supply Corp. for "refusing to be sexually harassed without complaint."The suit alleges that Boycheck, a billing clerk, and four other female employees were required to go to a party the company gave for a major customer on July 12, 1995.
NEWS
By Ed Brandt and Ed Brandt,Sun Staff Writer | June 26, 1995
Robert Edelstein is trying to stop a $12 million gorilla by screaming at it. John Maple says the gorilla is coming through, but he'll work to ease the pain.Mr. Edelstein and several of his neighbors are in the path of an extension of Red Run Boulevard in Owings Mills. The extension is designed to open 1,200 acres, most of it farmland, to commercial development and considerably widen Baltimore County's employment base.Mr. Maple is county project manager for the extension, which will run parallel to Interstate 795 and connect Owings Mills Town Center with Franklin Boulevard.
SPORTS
By RAY FRAGER | January 7, 1994
Cleaning out the notebook, sorting through the mail, checking the oil, flushing the radiator, replacing the air filter -- all part of our 14-point service:* Fred, that's what he said: Sometimes, you may wonder how some folks ever got on television. But then there's ESPN pro football grapevine vintner Fred Edelstein. After the Redskins fired coach Richie Petitbon, Edelstein was asked if there were any candidates to replace Petitbon other than the widely reported Norv "What Kinda First Name Is That?"
NEWS
By Knight-Ridder Newspapers | December 2, 1993
HIBBING, Minn. -- A Northwest Airlink passenger plane has crashed in foggy, rainy weather just east of Hibbing, killing all 18 people on board.The plane was on its final approach to Chisholm-Hibbing Airport when it tore into a hill of taconite waste last night, said Hibbing police spokesman Bill Allegrezza.The cause of the crash wasn't known early today, but other pilots reported heavy icing in the area at the time. Weather forecasters said planes landing in Duluth at the time were heavily iced.
SPORTS
By VITO STELLINO | August 22, 1993
The Selling Game is almost over for Baltimore in its bid to gain an NFL expansion franchise.That means it's nearly time for the city to start playing the Political Game.Since Baltimore had fewer than 550 club seats left as of noon Friday, it now seems almost certain the city will achieve a sellout this week.By virtually any standard, that means the city will have the best financial package to offer the NFL.St. Louis doesn't have as many club seats, and Charlotte, N.C., ** doesn't have public funding for a stadium.
SPORTS
By RAY FRAGER | July 9, 1993
Hit in the air, back, back, back to boothWith All-Star Week upon us, what better time than now to pick a baseball broadcasting all-star team?And to those who answer a better time would be never, I say you're just sour because Archi Cianfrocco (whom I nominate for Official David Letterman Cheap Laugh Reference, replacing Joey Buttafuoco, who might have been copyrighted by NBC, for all we know) didn't make the All-Star roster.As always, voting for the broadcasting all-stars has been conducted under supervision of U.N. observers led by Jimmy Carter.
NEWS
By Chicago Tribune | December 15, 1992
CHICAGO -- When meteorologists predicted a severe winter for the Chicago area, Barry Rankin pictured cold and white.But the temperature was downright balmy yesterday for a day in mid-December, and the stuff covering Mr. Rankin's Lincolnwood home, his car and his patio wasn't white. Nor was it as pure as the driven snow.It was dark and lumpy, and it was, unfortunately, Lincolnwood's turn.Mr. Rankin and his neighbors in the north suburb apparently have become the latest victims of a rather irritating phenomenon over the past several weeks afflicting communities under O'Hare International Airport's flight paths.
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