First approval given for senior living development at site of current Marriott HQ bethesdamagazine.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from bethesdamagazine.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
Live music, food, alcohol will be available
June 14, 2021 | 4:20 pm
June 14, 2021
share this
For pups sniffing out some fun this summer, the Montgomery County Parks Department will host a pop-up place to play in Chevy Chase on July 8.
The one-afternoon pop-up dog park will be held from 6 to 8 p.m. at Elm Street Urban Park.
There will be live music, food and alcohol for sale to human attendees. Dogs are free to romp in a fenced-in park.
There will be separate sections for large and small dogs, according to the Montgomery County Parks Department.
The event will be held about 1 mile from the location of a future permanent dog park location in downtown Bethesda.
Share
Source: AP Photo/Jim Vertuno
Yeah, what she said does warrant an inquiry. What the hell is going on with these so-called diversity trainings? We all know they’ve morphed into bash white people seminars, along with being a vehicle to peddle woke nonsense. Coca-Cola did one of these, and one of the slides in the presentation talked about employees being less white. The circus over there has temporarily ended after the general counsel abruptly left the company. What happened in Maryland is an entirely different level of crazy. Apparently, during one of these seminars, a state employee compared police officers to Nazis. This was bound to happen. The Daily Caller obtained the video:
County Seeks to Eliminate Street Names Honoring Confederates, Slaveowners
In an attempt to rid Montgomery County of street names tied to the Confederacy and slavery, employees of the Montgomery County Planning Department, part of The Maryland-National Capital Park and Planning Commission (M-NCPPC), currently are researching area street and park names.
In Potomac, Jubal Early Court, J.E.B. Stuart Road and J.E.B Stuart Court will be renamed under the Streets and Parks Facilities Renaming Project, which is a joint effort with the Planning Board, Montgomery Planning and the Montgomery County Parks Department.
These street names are in “a subdivision that was created many decades after the Civil War that appear to intentionally use Jeb Stuart’s name in order to valorize and honor the Confederate cause,” said Casey Anderson, chair of the planning board. New names have not yet been chosen.