fitness
- Newspaper's editorial opinion on vital gun issue is an embarrassment
- Center Stage launches 51st season with Marx Brothers adaptation
- The Columbia Association Board of Directors approved the mind-body wellness concept for the organization's downtown fitness club, which it is planning on opening in the Rouse Company building in September of 2014.
-
-
-
-
-
- The Bel Air town commissioners are scheduled to vote on an Inter-Agency Police Services Agreement during their Sept. 16 town meeting, an agreement designed to cement Bel Air police officers' participation in a municipal SWAT team.
- 5th District Volunteer Fire Department's country breakfasts start Sept. 15, magazine sale at Clarksville Middle School kicked off Sept. 10, registration is now open for Sports on Sunday
- Jones has been sidelined ever since playing in the Ravens' third preseason game, just learning Friday that he was being cleared medically after dealing with fluid that built up in his chest.
- Tropical Storm Lee devastated Ellicott City's Main Street, but it also sparked community action to address environmental concerns.
- On paper, Maryland's 47-10 victory over Old Dominion is noteworthy because the Terps -- who averaged 20.1 points per game last season -- rolled up gaudy offensive numbers for the second straight week.
- Ravens starting defensive lineman Arthur Jones is a happy man, writing a series of positive updates on social media after being sidelined for the past few weeks with an undisclosed illness.
- Now that our Rodgers Forge and Gaywood students are back to school, we wish them the very best, whether they are continuing in the same school or have begun the next level of their education. May this year meet their expectations and may each succeed in all of their endeavors.
-
-
-
-
-
-
- In the Laurel Leader's monthly History Matters column, a day in 1962 is remembered when the city welcomed home resident Lawrence R. Bailey, an Army major serving as the assistant Army attache in Vientiane who was shot down and held prisoner in Laos for 17 months.
-
- Scrabble at the Bain Center perfect way for seniors to scrabble their brains.
- The six members of Boy Scout Troop 832's Cobra patrol ahcieve rank of Eagle Scout, Appalachian Service Project group from Timonium United Methodist Church returns fom successful mission in North Carolina,
- A look at the 12 public and two private school boys soccer teams in Howard County heading into the 2013 season.
- Baltimore Orioles fans Katie Cox and Scott Smith headed to their favorite field of dreams for their reception.
- The 26,0000 sq. ft. facility, which opened in December of last year, offers training and game facilities for baseball, softball, lacrosse, soccer and field hockey
-
-
-
-
-
-
- More than six years after a cadet burned to death in a botched training exercise in a vacant house, Baltimore firefighters will have a new "live burn" building to conduct such exercises under safer circumstances.
- A community pays tribute to the first Baltimore County police officer killed in the line of duty since 2000
- Scrabble at the Bain Center perfect way for seniors to scrabble their brains.
-
- Seth Beckman's family and friends acknowledged he had made a bad decision the night of Aug. 17, part of a chain of events that ended with him losing his life after a fatal confrontation with a Harford County sheriff's deputy, but they made it clear during his funeral Saturday that his 19 years on Earth should not be defined by that moment.
- Summer programs needed to boost student achievement
- Even after Labor Day, Rehoboth has plenty of activities which don't involve sand or sun. Here are 10 things to do in Rehoboth for $20 or less.
- Attendees will learn about what CA¿s different departments are in charge of; how CA¿s annual charge is calculated and used each year; how the CA Board of Directors runs its meetings; Columbia¿s open space; CA¿s sports, fitness and health offerings; and its focuses on responsible watershed and energy management.
- Much of the attention over what changes federal health reform will bring has focused on doctor's visits and hospital stays. But what about dental care?
- Theodore C. Houk, known to many as Baltimore County's jogging doctor, is back out on the road again, but slower and on a much shorter leash.
-
-
-