vehicles
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A Reisterstown man was charged with two counts of second-degree assault Saturday, Aug. 27 after allegedly attacking a woman and a man in Winfield.
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- Party platforms show Democrats and Republican hold opposite views of the future of U.S. public transportation
- It has become a pleasurable challenge to sit opposite Jonathan Flombaum in the Sun’s podcast studio and listen to him think out loud. An assistant professor in
- The Finksburg-based motorcycle club The Unchained Few MC has helped children with disabilities get through life a little easier.
- As today's computer-powered vehicles become increasingly connected to drivers and their lives and capable of transmitting data to the outside world, civil liberties organizations and driver advocacy groups have begun raising concerns with regulators, legislators and industry leaders.
- Three Maryland agencies participated in the annual survey by the Consumer Federation of America and the North American Consumer Protection Investigators. The survey compiled the top, worst and fastest-growting complaints.
- Longtime Baltimore grocery chain Stop Shop and Save is in the process of closing its last four locations, leaving behind some neighborhoods without a grocery store to call their own.
- A highlight of the 33rd festival, held this weekend, is the costumed parade known as 'Playing Mas'
- A former repair auto shop on Bel Air's North Main Street could be the site of a microbrewery and restaurant and a key for development on the north side of town, according to the business owner.
- Peter Allen Denzer, founder of Peter's Inn in Fells Point and avid motorcycle enthusiast, died June 30
- In 2013, the future of the Laurel Independence Day car show looked bleak. Dan Sivley said the Laurel Fourth of July committee could not find anyone to pick up the torch when, after a dozen straight years of organizing the car show, he stepped back.
- As summer swings into view and the lengthening days and higher sun push the mercury to brow-sweating levels outside, the AAA Mid-Atlantic auto club would like motorists to think about how hot it can get inside a car, according to spokeswoman Christine Delise.
- Early one morning this past week, Jack Kane was pacing around a Glen Burnie warehouse reviewing paperwork and checking equipment, making sure everything was in order to deliver scores of voting machine to regional polling stations.
- Hampden community divided over plans for a Residential Permit Parking zone in the Rotunda mall area.
- Nearly a dozen witnesses struggled to explain the odd situation of a steer running around in Baltimore city to police dispatchers in tapes of the calls released to the media Thursday night
- A suspected Black Guerrilla Family gang member under surveillance in an ongoing narcotics investigation struck another vehicle with his SUV in an attempt to flee from FBI agents causing them to fire 19 rounds, striking him six times, according to a detailed report of the fatal shooting.
- Vernon J. Jones, a former mechanic and auto salesman who established the Jones Junction Auto Group in Harford County, died Monday of complications from Parkinson's disease at his Bel Air home. He was 88.
- Boston-based Zipcar announced Monday the opening of a new office in Harbor East, next to a new on-street city bike corral. The company has more than doubled its workforce to seven employees, said spokeswoman Lindsay Wester,
- Six vehicles set to be auctioned off at Bel Air Auto Auction were damaged by fire early Wednesday morning, the Office of the State Fire Marshal reported.
- The Puma Store and Journeys Kidz, which had planned summer openings at Arundel MIlls, are now open, the mall management said Wednesday.
- A significant number of Baltimore-area residents are struggling with so many challenges — from a lack of education to a lack of a car — that they're hard-pressed to land a job and even harder-pressed to find one that can lift them out of poverty, according to a regional group of government agencies, foundations and other players.
- Instead of driving on May 30, commuters rode their bikes to work in the company of others, as part of Bike to Work Day, which was rescheduled from an original date of May 16 that was cancelled due to weather.
- The officer, Symchay Kon Bendu, 29, of North Laurel, faces four counts of second-degree assault, a reckless driving charge and a negligent driving charge in connection with the June 8 accident, which occurred on a one-way road that connects Route 100 east bound to Route 10 south bound.
- Outside Pimlico Race Course, peanuts, barbecue and even jewelry were on sale for Preakness fans, as well as the "ice cold" water for a dollar offered by enterprising people at every major event in the city.
- Police need to take a smarter approach to combating the threat posed by illegal dirt bikes
- The Bel Air Police Department will see a slight cut in funding during fiscal year 2015, but eligible employees will get merit raises and the department will purchase new technology and more new police cars, Chief Leo Matrangola said.
- Business owners have the right to prevent unauthorized parking in their lots, but motorists need to be protected, too.
- An Aberdeen man is without an SUV, after his brand new 2014 Jeep Cherokee Sport caught fire Friday afternoon when he drove it into a field to feed ducks at a pond on his property, fire investigators said.
- The proposed $15.8 million FY 2015 budget includes several substantial public works renovation projects said Randy Robertson, Bel Air's director of public works, during a work session Tuesday evening.
- Changing gas industry, viability of Howard gas stations lead to proposed task force