It’s a free event that will include food trucks (not free), vendors, and even possibly small games on the back half of the field if there’s room.
It’s a free event that will include food trucks (not free), vendors, and even possibly small games on the back half of the field if there’s room.
The big box retail chain, specializing in home decor products, will open their first Maryland location in Frederick this summer and will follow up with their second Maryland location in Gaithersburg this fall.
The Frederick store will be located at 1811 Monocacy Blvd.
As first reported by Biz Journals, Black Ankle Vineyards has recently decided to expand, purchasing farms in Carroll County and Montgomery County. “The Montgomery County location, a 230-acre farm at 25201 Peach Tree Road in Clarksburg, was purchased for about $1.7 million in December, and they bought the Carroll County farm, a 150-acre property on Rinehart Road in Westminster, the next month for $706,000.” (https://www.bizjournals.com/baltimore/news/2018/03/26/with-two-new-farms-mount-airys-black-ankle.html)
The Carroll County location will primarily be used to grow more grapes for wine production, while the MoCo location in Clarksburg will include a tasting room similar to their Mount Airy location.
iPic will be hosting their Teacher Appreciation Day on Tuesday, 5/8/18, by offering teachers a free premium ticket (not a premium plus ticket).
Just go to www.iPic.com to view showtimes and make sure you bring your valid teacher ID (seating based on availability and offer cannot be retrieved online).
Though some believe the heat may have been the cause, the exact reason for the sprinkler going off isn’t known. The fire department was able to come and take care of the situation.
The incident occurred late in the afternoon, so it did not impact classes during the day.
Though it was the first in Montgomery County, it was fifth in the D.C. Metro area, and the 241st in America. A burger, fries, and a drink would go for under .50 cents. The Glenmont location was the second McDonald’s to open in MoCo, opening a few years after the Rockville location. It is currently the only two-story McDonald’s in Montgomery County. Featured photo shows a postcard of the first McDonald’s as it looked in the 60s.
https://www.instagram.com/p/CplFdHDu-Ne/?igshid=YmMyMTA2M2Y=
The new location will be known as “Quincy’s Uptown” and is currently expected to open this summer, according to a server at their Gaithersburg location (they also have a North Bethesda location– Quincy’s South).
The Damascus restaurant will have a pretty big back patio (pictured below) and rumor has it they will be serving crabs on the patio in the summer!
Firehouse Subs has opened their second MoCo restaurant. It’s located in Rockville at 28 Upper Rock Circle off of Shady Grove Rd. next to Cava and near the soon-to-come MOM’s […]
With almost 1,200 total votes, the four winners of our poll were Gabe Albornoz (top left in our photo, 127 votes), Steve Solomon (top right in our photo, 96 votes), Danielle Meitiv (bottom left in our photo, 93 votes), and Shruti Bhatnagar (bottom right in our photo, 91 votes). Other top-vote getters included Will Jawando (89 votes), Jill Ortman-Fouse (74 votes), Marilyn Balcombe (68 votes), Evan Glass (62 votes), Hoan Dang (61 votes), and incumbent Hans Riemer (57 votes). Full mock election results can be found here: www.mocoshow.com/blog/moco-mock-election-county-council-at-large
This was not a scientific poll, as the poll was available to any person of any age (in order to vote in Montgomery County elections you must be a resident of the county and at least 18 years of age).
After a few months of speculation, I received another tip today informing me that Sephora will be coming to Downtown Crown. After making a couple phone calls, a representative from […]
The 6’1, 220 pound O’Daniel was a linebacker at Clemson, where he played four seasons after redshirting in 2013. He is projected to be an inside-the-box-safety or linebacker/safety hybrid in the NFL. He won a national championship with Clemson in 2016.
He attended high school and played football at Good Counsel in Olney, where he was a running back and linebacker. As a senior he was named the Montgomery Sentinal’s Offensive Player of the Year and the Gazette’s Montgomery County Player of the Year. That year he also made the Washington Post’s All-Met First Team.