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NEWS
By Gus G. Sentementes, The Baltimore Sun | March 26, 2012
Owen Daly II, who served in the Navy during two wars and was a top executive at two Baltimore-based banks, died Thursday of heart failure at his Lutherville home. He was 87. Mr. Daly was born in Denver, Colo., and attended the Gilman School in Baltimore, where he graduated in 1943. His father had graduated from Gilman. After graduation, Mr. Daly attended a Navy program at the University of Pennsylvania, after which he served as an assistant gunnery officer in the Pacific theater for three years during World War II. He would later serve in the Korean War for two years and left the Navy as a lieutenant.
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SPORTS
By Matt Vensel and The Baltimore Sun | February 9, 2012
Terrell Owens didn't play in the NFL in 2011, and the 38-year-old is currently playing for the Allen Wranglers of the Indoor Football League. T.O. said Wednesday that there is no question he can still help an NFL team. And he cited the Ravens as a team that proves his point (that sound you hear is the rumor mill beginning to churn). “I know I can play. That's not even a question that I can play. You look at the NFC Championship and the AFC Championship. You look at those games, especially the NFC championship.
ENTERTAINMENT
By Sam Sessa, The Baltimore Sun | February 8, 2012
Michael Owen has spent a lot of time around love - even as he began to lose his faith in it. As the artist behind the Baltimore Love Project, Owen has painted the image of hands forming the word "love" on 11 walls scattered throughout the city. In June 2010, when he and his wife, Shelley, separated (their formal divorce is pending), he almost quit the project. How could he keep painting this word when he barely believed in it? Instead, Owen, 29, threw himself at his work, finishing more murals than ever.
NEWS
By Frederick N. Rasmussen, The Baltimore Sun | February 7, 2012
John B. "Jack" Owens, who had been a principal in the family-owned Owens Yacht Co., the legendary Annapolis boat builder, and later established a real estate firm, died Saturday of heart failure at his Naples, Fla., home. He was 96. Mr. Owens was born in Detroit, where his father was a vice president of Westinghouse Electric Corp. and his mother was a homemaker. After his wife's death in 1918, the elder Mr. Owens moved his children to Spa Creek in Eastport, Annapolis, so relatives could help him raise his daughter and four sons.
NEWS
By Frederick N. Rasmussen, The Baltimore Sun and Baltimore Sun reporter | November 7, 2011
David Rogers Owen, an internationally known maritime lawyer and accomplished yachtsman, died Friday in his sleep of unknown causes at the Blakehurst retirement community in Towson. The former longtime Riderwood resident was 97. "The death of David Owen is the passing of an era. He practiced during the Golden Age of maritime law in the post-World War II years, when there were hundreds of American flagged ships and ship owners," said a nephew, Tony Whitman, a maritime lawyer with the Baltimore firm of Ober/Kaler.
EXPLORE
July 18, 2011
Long Reach, 365; Oakland Mills, 241 Medley Relays 15-18M: 1. LR (A. Douglas, K. McDonald, M. Jackson, S. Foster), 2:06.42. 9-10M: 1. LR (C. Gilmore, S. Davies, J. Watt, D. Kundrat), 1:20.92. 11-12M: 1. LR (O. Stang, X. Castle-Smith, J. Corley, C. Patton), 2:31.39. 13-14M: 1. LR (A. Gliese, C. La Gow, M. Watt, J. Soriano), 2:10.15. Individual Medley 15-18B: 1.A. Douglas, LR, 1:05.70; 2. D. Pierce, OM; 3. A. Saad, LR. 15-18G: 1. P. Brown, OM, 1:03.87; 2. V. Radcliffe, LR; 3. S. Foster, LR. 9-10B: 1. C. Gilmore, LR, 1:28.
NEWS
By Mary Gail Hare, The Baltimore Sun | July 11, 2011
Police Officer Sarah Miller has already filled her new headquarters in Columbia's Owen Brown Village Center with large wall maps, informational brochures and community fliers, dozens of coloring books and a bowl brimming with lollipops. After months on bicycle patrol, she knows her territory and now has a spot from which she can direct efforts to safeguard the village she serves. "I wanted as many maps as possible," she said. "Owen Brown can be a confusing area geographically.
SPORTS
June 29, 2011
Still better than most Sam Farmer Los Angeles Times There aren't many athletes who could overcome a devastating knee injury this late in a career and come back to make a contribution. Then again, Terrell Owens is a physical freak who has defied long odds before — think of the way he recovered to play in the Super Bowl against the Patriots. Yes, his abilities have been on the decline, but I don't see him ending his career on such a quiet note. While there's always a chance he could retire before the start of the season, I think it's more likely he tries to bounce back in time to hook on in the last quarter of the season with a team making a playoff run. Even at 38, which he'll be then, he'll likely be better than a lot of third or fourth receivers around the league.
NEWS
By Jonathan Pitts, The Baltimore Sun | June 25, 2011
She fell in love with ballet as a child, as many young girls do, and Susan Savage didn't lack for promise. She learned her first plies and pirouettes at a feeder school for the Royal Academy of Dance in Calgary, Alberta, Canada. But when she turned 13, her family pulled up roots and moved to West Texas, a part of the world known more for football than for fouettes en tournant (spins with a sideway kick). "Not exactly a hotbed for my life's passion," she says. Fifty years later, Savage got a chance to return to the pastime she never got out of her system.
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