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Hollins Market

Highlights

A collection of news and information related to Hollins Market published by this site and its partners.

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    Jun 1, 2012 |Column| Baltimore Sun
  1. Circulator bus grows, attracts mix of riders

    Baltimore's free bus, the Charm City Circulator, takes on its newest destination next week, Fort McHenry. Beginning Monday, the route known as the Banner will begin linking riders from Light Street through the harbor and South Baltimore and Locust Point to the fort's gates. It will traverse a renovated Fort Avenue Bridge, which neighborhood activist Karen Johns successfully clamored to have repaired, in time for the Sailabration festivities this month.
    Baltimore's free bus, the Charm City Circulator, takes on its newest destination next week, Fort McHenry. Beginning Monday, the route known as the Banner will begin linking riders from Light Street through the harbor and South Baltimore and Locust Point...

    Tags: Charm City Circulator, Locust Point, Fort McHenry, Tide Point Waterfront Park, Lombard Street

  2. Apr 30, 2012 |Story| Baltimore Sun
  3. Mencken House: A home, and legacy, to treasure

    Despite what you may have heard, the "house museum" is not dead in Baltimore City. The H.L. Mencken House (officially closed since 1997 by the bankruptcy of the City Life Museums) has had more than 100 visitors during two recent weekends. The Johns...

    Tags: Johns Hopkins University, Mark Twain, Museums, H.L. Mencken, Colleges and Universities

  4. Jan 17, 2012 |Story| Baltimore Sun
  5. Expanding access to health care

    Gov.Martin O'Malley's administration is proposing to establish a number of health enterprise zones to address the glaring health disparities along racial and class lines that end lives prematurely and cost the state hundreds of millions of dollars a year in additional medical costs. This is a promising idea that deserves further exploration; the need is obvious, the disparities are well-documented and a plan to test the program's effectiveness through a series of pilot projects offers an affordable, relatively low-risk approach to the problem.
    Gov.Martin O'Malley's administration is proposing to establish a number of health enterprise zones to address the glaring health disparities along racial and class lines that end lives prematurely and cost the state hundreds of millions of dollars a...

    Tags: Roland Park, Hospitals and Clinics, Health Care Reform (2009), Government Health Care, Vaccines

  6. Feb 9, 2012 |Story| Baltimore Sun
  7. A Christmas tie in June, a court bailiff, and a car accident

    The calendar said June, but Scott Garrity's tie screamed Christmas.
    The calendar said June, but Scott Garrity's tie screamed Christmas. Thinking it was inappropriate attire for his job as a bailiff at a the Baltimore District Court building on Patapsco Avenue, Garrity sought a way to change. He called his son to bring...

    Tags: Justice System, Holidays, Patapsco, Justice System, Christmas

  8. Jan 24, 2012 |Story| Baltimore Sun
  9. Obama targets economy, taxes in address

    With the presidential election in full swing and Congress mired in gridlock, President Barack Obama used his third State of the Union address Tuesday to sound a populist message on the economy, outlining a series of policies he said would give the middle class "a fair shot" at prosperity.
    With the presidential election in full swing and Congress mired in gridlock, President Barack Obama used his third State of the Union address Tuesday to sound a populist message on the economy, outlining a series of policies he said would give the...

    Tags: Mitch Daniels, Business, Roscoe G Bartlett, Dorchester County, Benjamin L. Cardin

  10. Oct 30, 2011 |Story| Baltimore Sun
  11. Dining review: Patrick's of Pratt Street in Hollins Market

    John Houser III reviews Patrick's of Pratt Street, which claims to be the United States oldest Irishpub still in existence.
    The Baltimore Sun
    John Houser III reviews Patrick's of Pratt Street, which claims to be the United States oldest Irishpub still in existence. Patrick's of Pratt Street was founded was established by the great great-uncle of its current owners in 1847 and has been in its...

    Tags: Dining and Drinking, Pratt Street, Restaurants

  12. Nov 2, 2011 |Story| Baltimore Sun
  13. A real game-changer for Baltimore

    Whether the Baltimore Grand Prix will ever prove itself a "game-changer" for the city, as Mayor Stephanie Rawlings-Blake predicted, may be debatable, but there is one investment of recent years that may actually live up to that title. Instead of drawing visitors to Baltimore for one weekend out of the year, it's doing so year-round and boosting downtown businesses (and job opportunities) in the process.
    Whether the Baltimore Grand Prix will ever prove itself a "game-changer" for the city, as Mayor Stephanie Rawlings-Blake predicted, may be debatable, but there is one investment of recent years that may actually live up to that title. Instead of drawing...

    Tags: Stephanie Rawlings-Blake, Public Transportation, Inner Harbor, Hospitals and Clinics, Fort McHenry

  14. Nov 1, 2011 |Story| Baltimore Sun
  15. City launches circulator line from Hopkins Hospital to downtown

    Baltimore added a third line to its free Charm City Circulator service Tuesday, with the launch of the new Green Route at Johns Hopkins Hospital.
    Baltimore added a third line to its free Charm City Circulator service Tuesday, with the launch of the new Green Route at Johns Hopkins Hospital. The Green line will run from Hopkins Hospital through Fells Point and Harbor East before heading north to...

    Tags: Stephanie Rawlings-Blake, Inner Harbor, Public Officials, Waterway and Maritime Transportation, Tide Point Waterfront Park

  16. Aug 7, 2011 |Story| Baltimore Sun
  17. George Ganjon, farmer, dies

    George Gilbert Ganjon, a retired Carroll County farmer who was a founder of the Downtown Farmers Market, died of kidney failure Aug. 1 at Dove House in Westminster. He was 82.
    George Gilbert Ganjon, a retired Carroll County farmer who was a founder of the Downtown Farmers Market, died of kidney failure Aug. 1 at Dove House in Westminster. He was 82. Born in Baltimore, he grew up near the Hollins Market in the southwestern...

    Tags: Wars and Interventions, Carroll County (Maryland), Jones Falls, Jones Falls Expressway, Diabetes

  18. Sep 15, 2011 |Story| Baltimore Sun
  19. City mental health clinic having trouble meeting payroll

    Employees of the West Baltimore mental health and substance abuse clinic Baltimore Behavioral Health Inc. have complained of bounced paychecks in recent weeks, and state health officials say they are monitoring to make sure patient care doesn't suffer as a result of low morale among the staff.
    Employees of the West Baltimore mental health and substance abuse clinic Baltimore Behavioral Health Inc. have complained of bounced paychecks in recent weeks, and state health officials say they are monitoring to make sure patient care doesn't suffer...

    Tags: Hospitals and Clinics, Substance Abuse, Medicaid, Wages and Pensions, Pratt Street

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