I got an e-mail from Dan O’Leary, the president of the Greater Highland Crossroads Association. If the number of exhibitors and participants are any indication of how the event will turn out for tomorrow’s Highland Day, it looks like the best year ever! All four corners of the crossroads will be chock-a-block with displays. Please drive carefully as you enter the event area and follow the directions of the Boy Scout Troop 702. Opening ceremonies are slated to begin Saturday, Oct. 4 at 11 o’clock sharp. You can follow this link and look up the schedule of events.
No one can guarantee that your car will never be stolen. But, if it is, why not have some way to easily identify it? VIN etching is one way. And, it’s free.
The Howard County Police Department will be conducting a session Oct. 7 at 5:30 p.m. at 8214 Reservoir Road, in Fulton.
Here’s how the process works. A stencil of the VIN is made and cut into several strips of tape, the strips are placed onto a clean portion of glass, and then the strips are dabbed with hydrofluoric acid (glass etching acid). The police officers will even clean your windows before the etching process starts.
Here is the information you’ll need to bring along: the owner’s full name, address, telephone numbers, vehicle tag number, make, model, year, style and color of the vehicle. Send this in an email to Janet Stabile at jstabile@howardcountymd.gov. Of course, forms can be completed on site. Folks interested need to bring their vehicle(s) (duh!) and the registration card(s). You can download the form as a PDF document by clicking on VIN Etching Form
The Reservoir High School Marching Band has been practicing hard for the upcoming United States Scholastic Band Assoc. competition that is going to be held Saturday, Sept. 27 at Centennial High School from 6 to 8 p.m.
Doors open at 5 p.m. and tickets are $10 for adults, $5 for children older than 13 and free for those younger than 13. This kind of band competition is fun to watch. Come see what the kids have been working on.
In a couple weeks, the community of Highland will be celebrating its annual fall festival called Highland Day. One of the planned events is the second annual “Student Arts and Letters Competition” sponsored by Sandy Spring Bank.
All students from kindergarten through 12th grade are invited to participate and express their opinions, thoughts, or viewpoints via a couple forms of creative endeavor based on this year’s theme, “What Maryland Means to Me.”
Executives from the bank will award a fifty-dollar U.S. Savings Bond to the winning entries. Winning entries will be selected based on creativity, originality, presentation and appropriateness. The three divisions are: Division 1: Kindergarten through fifth grade, Division 2: sixth through eighth grade and Division 3: ninth through twelfth grade.
All private, public and home school students within their age group are entitled to enter. Organizers will accept original entries in two categories: creative writing and art. Creative writing entries can be an essay, a narrative, a short story, a poem or a song.
Art entries can be a drawing, photograph, photo collage, computer-generated creation, sculpture or painting. Any Maryland-centric topic can be used such as history, people, landmark, business, the environment, animals, personal experience, the ABCs of Maryland or any other similar idea. Your entry may be displayed in the shops at Highland during the festival.
If your son or daughter plans to take a crack at this, they need to get started right away. For more information about the competition to include competition rules or specific submission details, you can go to the Highland website and look for the link to the Arts & Letters Competition, or contact the competition coordinator at Kelly@eventsorg.com.
I was just informed that the free car wash, scheduled for Saturday, Sept. 13, has been canceled due to the pending inclement weather. So sorry. There will be others. Cheers.
Having covered everything from T-ball to championship rodeo (once, in the same day), Sean Wallace is passionate about sports -- hockey and the three-time Stanley Cup champion New Jersey Devils, in particular -- and journalism. He taught himself how to type by re-creating box scores from the paper when he was 8 years old. Check out The Devils Made Me Do It for news and notes on our area teams and players in the national spotlight or something out of the ordinary.
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