NEWS
February 25, 2006
Henry William Morin, a retired Social Security Administration specialist and big-band enthusiast, died of complications from a stroke Monday at Spa Creek Nursing Center in Annapolis. He was 86. Mr. Morin was born in Whittemore, Mich., and raised in Berkley, Mich., a suburb of Detroit. A trombonist, he served with the 11th Armored Division Band during World War II and fought at the Battle of the Bulge. After the war, Mr. Morin enrolled at Michigan State University on the GI Bill and earned a bachelor's degree and two master's degrees, one in history and the other in political science.
NEWS
April 19, 2007
Herbert L. Morin Sr., a retired sales engineer and World War II veteran, died Saturday of cancer at Gilchrist Center for Hospice Care. The Owings Mills resident was 88. Mr. Morin was born in Covesville, Va., and during the Depression moved to West Baltimore with his family. He graduated from Polytechnic Institute in 1937 and began electrical engineering studies at the University of Maryland, College Park. During World War II, he enlisted in the Army Air Forces and flew C-47s in the European Theater.
SPORTS
By Don Markus and Don Markus,Staff Writer | March 8, 1992
COLLEGE PARK -- Walt Williams gave Matt Morin his nickname -- Buck -- and, in turn, the first-year team manager helped a then-burgeoning star with the mechanics of his jump shot.Maryland coach Gary Williams didn't know Morin's real name for nearly a month after he started working for the Terrapins. Since then, the two have developed a bond that goes beyond lugging equipment bags.Except for his teachers, nobody here calls Morin by his first name, or even his last. Given how many people around campus know him -- and there aren't many who don't -- he may be the second most-famous Buck in the history of Maryland basketball.
NEWS
By Dana Hedgpeth and Dana Hedgpeth,SUN STAFF | August 18, 1998
A 22-year-old Columbia man received a 23-year jail sentence for the home invasion and robbery of a man in Long Reach village last year."This case represents a citizen's worst nightmare," said Thomas W. Rafter, a Howard County prosecutor. "It was a random, violent invasion of his home. [The victim] was held at knifepoint, tied up and left in a pool of his own blood by Frazier."Brett Nathan Frazier of the 5400 block of White Mane was convicted of robbery with a deadly weapon, assault and theft.
NEWS
March 16, 2005
On Tuesday, March 15, 2005, ISADORE "HENRY" GREENFELD; beloved husband of Ida Greenfeld (nee Schames); loving father of Joel Greenfeld of Clearwater, FL, Marshall Greenfeld of Lake Walie, SC, and Suzanne Morin of Owings Mills, MD; father in law of Tara Greenfeld and Paul Morin; adored grandfather of Judy Evans, Debbie Hobbs, Steven Greenfeld, Jamie Steinberg and Nicole Morin; great-grandfather of Kelsey and Ashley Hobbs and Reid Steinberg. Services at Sol Levinson and Bros., Inc., 8900 Reisterstown Road at Mt. Wilson Lane, on Thursday, March 17 at 1 P.M. Interment Beth Hamedrosh Hagodol Congregation Cemetery - Rosedale.
BUSINESS
By Ted Shelsby and Ted Shelsby,Sun Staff Writer | February 21, 1994
Just when you thought it was safe to loosen the purse strings and celebrate an improving economy, along comes Bill Morin with a sobering warning.One in every four workers will lose their jobs by the end of the decade, he says.The outlook is no better for those graduating from college this June. They, Mr. Morin says, can expect to change jobs seven to nine times during their careers -- four involuntarily.A lifetime job is almost a thing of the past, he says. "Firings are becoming a way of life.