Lucy May has spent the last 10 weeks in Southmead Hospital hospital where she was born three month early. To celebrate the release of their daughter proud parents Sarah and Andy Darbon arranged to be picked up in a stretch limousine. Lucy May was born weighing just 922 grams about the same as a bag of sugar. Sarah said: “I would like to thank Mike from Sodbury Stretch for the limousine, and also to my parents who have been wonderful.
Several people called us to complain about Blessed Limousine.
We heard about kids stranded and about unauthorized charges put on credit cards. And when we started asking questions, we found out Blessed Limo is operating without a license.
The driver wiping down his Denali was about to pick up a fare right down the street. See, we called Seattle’s Blessed Limousine for a ride from KING 5 to the airport.
Here’s the secret: The company doesn’t have a valid limo license and they had no idea the customer was me.
The driver sped away from me, but the company can’t run from their customers’ complaints.
Automakers go to great lengths to keep their designs secret, but more often than not they leak out somehow. One way in which design sketches of upcoming automobiles find their way from the studio out into the public realm has been the patent office of the European Union. The latest to leak out from the bureau is a stretched limousine version of the new Mercedes-Benz E-Class. In this case, it wasn’t just one sketch that leaked out, but several, detailing a range of factory-available modification possibilities for the mid-size luxury sedan, starting with a slight increase and extending all the way up to a full extra set of doors like those found on funeral home limos. Likely to be called the E-Class Pullman, the stretched Mercedes is likely to benefit from all manner of luxury equipment to transport its occupants in opulent comfort to rival even its corporate cousins from Maybach. Follow the link to Autoblog to view more of the patent sketches, and stay tuned for more information as Mercedes prepares the new E-Class Pullman for market debut.
Bobby Parrish has seen plenty of famous college football coaches stroll largely unnoticed onto Williamson High School’s campus over the years.
Seven big guys piling out of a stretch limousine is hard to ignore, though. Auburn has had seven assistants carpooling around to a few dozen state high schools this week to evaluate prospects and get acquainted with prep coaches.
A limousine company has fired the driver who was arrested Friday night in Lowell for allegedly drunk driving while ferrying local high school students around on their prom night.
Lynette’s Limousine Company said yesterday it had dismissed Brian Harrison, 45, of Tewksbury, who had worked for the company for three years, and had no previous problems.
The company said it is deeply shocked, troubled, and embarrassed by the exercise of poor judgment by Harrison. He was arrested after one of seven students from Lowell Catholic High School called her parents to report that Harrison seemed intoxicated when he came to pick them up at a movie theater Friday evening.
The students’ parents took them home.
Harrison is to be arraigned Monday in Lowell District Court. He could not be reached for comment.