walmart
- Walmart should rethink its plans to move from Abingdon to a site closer to Bel Air off Route 924 and Plumtree Road, Harford County Executive David Craig said Tuesday.
- Aberdeen police released a video Tuesday of the suspect in Violet R. Ripken's abduction, but continue to say little in the investigation for the man authorities say is armed and dangerous.
- One writer of a Letter to the Editor of The Aegis voices opposition to proposed new Walmart.
- A Baltimore County Circuit Court judge ruled Wednesday that Ebony Odoms acted in self defense in a bleach fight at a Lansdowne Walmart last fall.
- Aberdeen: Royal Farms to build two stores on Route 40 in Aberdeen
- Walmart community input meeting
- Voter ID laws aim to restrict access to the ballot box
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- The addition of a shelter for bus riders is only part of the improvements a Catonsville bus stop near the intersection of North Rolling Road and Route 40 will receive.
- Harford County could get at least two more Royal Farms stores, in Aberdeen and near Forest Hill, while another store previously planned for Aberdeen continues to move forward, a city official said.
- The Walmart in Hampstead has expanded with groceries and new layout
- Superstore wants to build large property on Route 924
- Harford County officials may have been reluctant to talk about a Walmart coming to the Emmorton area south of Bel Air when the subject first came up a year ago, but the developer of the site off Route 924 and Plumtree Road is moving forward with the project regardless.
- Baltimore County officials praised residents for patience in the aftermath of Friday's storms, but urged them to remain patient until power is restored.
- The Greenspring Station establishment Tark's Grill was among many Baltimore-area eateries and grocery stores that not only lost prime weekend business but also lost merchandise — food that went bad in the heat.
- Klein's ShopRite of Maryland, an institution in Harford County, is moving into Baltimore and urban sections of Baltimore County.
- The Patterson Mill Middle School Destination Imagination Team would like to thank the many businesses and families who made it possible for the team to attend, and compete, at the Global Finals Competition in Knoxville, Tenn.
- Amanda and Ryan Velivlis, of Parkville, like millions of families rely on government aid to make ends meet since the recession began, said Diana Pearce, author of the 2012 Self-Sufficiency Standard report for Maryland.
- Baltimore Del. Jill P. Carter wants Baltimore markets, restaurants and hotels to clean up their acts.
- Grocery shoppers can use smartphones to download deals, scan bar codes, get personalized offers
- The Aegis police blotter lists the most recent arrest, crimes and other police reports.
- Grocery shoppers are looking for bargains – and increasingly going online with their smart phones or electronic tablets to find them fast, say executives at Safeway.
- "It was through in 20 seconds it's hard to believe so much damage could happen in so little time," said Brian Schorr as he stood outside his Fallston home Saturday morning. Schorr's home is the first in a group of 20 three-story, detached homes with narrow lots on the north side of the 200 block of Milton Avenue, just off Belair Road, where what several witnesses say was a tornado swept through around 6 p.m. Friday, shearing or uprooting trees and damaging homes and businesses.
- Fish and chips, made with local rockfish, is delicious and inexpensive
- The short life spans of Cordish's prior gaming undertakings raises the question of how long the developer will maintain a stake in Maryland Live, especially if it fails to stop a large casino from being built in Prince George's County.
- As people around Fallston waited for power to return Saturday, they began to pick up the pieces — and relive the sudden terror of the powerful storm.
- A band of severe storms battered the Baltimore area Friday afternoon, spawning a flurry of tornado warnings and flooding roads.
- The Aegis police blotter lists the most recent arrest, crimes and other police reports.
- Maryland's state retirement system says it will vote against the election of Wal-Mart Stores' board because it isn't confident in the independence of the directors.
- The Arbutus Arts Festival will have more than 200 crafters and plenty of kid friendly events. The 39th annual fair takes place on May 20 and offers an opportunity for local crafters to show off their goods.
- Opposition to the proposed liquor store attached to the Columbia Wegmans points to the anti-competitive nature of Maryland liquor laws.
- Online shoppers prefer Walmart to Target. That's one of the findings of an index released today that scores the top 100 online retailers on customer satisfaction.
- The Aegis police blotter lists the most recent arrest, crimes and other police reports.
- Supermarket chains like Wegmans and Harris Teeter are trying to find ways around Maryland's ban on groceries selling wine, drawing pushback from Maryland's powerful liquor lobby and package goods stores but support from consumers hoping for one-stop shopping.
- Supermarket chains like Wegmans and Harris Teeter are trying to find ways around Maryland's ban on groceries selling wine, drawing pushback from Maryland's powerful liquor lobby and package goods stores but support from consumers hoping for one-stop shopping.
- The Aegis police blotter lists the most recent arrest, crimes and other police reports.
- Pit bulls are no more likely to be aggressive than any other dog.
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- Rep. Elijah E. Cummings, the top Democrat on the House Oversight and Government Reform Committee, on Monday requested a meeting with Wal-Mart officials in response to allegations that the retailer covered up a bribery scheme to expand its business in Mexico.
- A man who allegedly robbed a bank in downtown Forest Hill late Thursday afternoon was apprehended a short time later near Walmart in Fallston.
- Best Buy will close its Inner Harbor and Hunt Valley stores by May 12, the company announced Saturday.
- Though Mark Harvey did not face criminal charges for running onto Camden Yards' diamond last week, Maryland's criminal trespass laws offer the Orioles and other businesses the opportunity to keep troublemakers away by uttering three simple words: "Don't come back."
- According to documents released by police, officers have been called to the Lansdowne Walmart about 1,600 times in the past four years since the big-box store opened ¿ an average of more than once a day.
- A Lansdowne woman was ordered to stay out of Walmart for five years after pleading guilty to second-degree assault Wednesday in connection with a bleach and Pine-Sol fight
- The arrival of a cargo vessel from Guatemala early Monday morning marked the largest single raw sugar shipment ever to any port east of the Mississippi.
- Haribo, the candy maker that gave the U.S. the fruity, chewy candy in the early 1980s, sees untapped demand. The German company is angling for an even bigger share of the market.
- The Aegis police blotter lists the most recent arrest, crimes and other police reports.