hollins market
- Genevieve B. "Gen" Miller, a retired sales associate and homemaker, died Wednesday from heart failure at St. Joseph's Nursing Home in Catonsville. She was 95.
- Two men were shot in separate incidents Sunday in Baltimore, police said, and both were expected to survive their injuries.
- Charles Kelley stands in Baltimore's historic Lexington Market, chowing down on a Faidley's famous overstuffed crab cake sandwich.
- Baltimore's Hampton Inn to open the Deck at Camden Yards on opening day
- Restaurant known for dedication to community sees steep revenue decline
- More news: Aquarium hosts dining event, Max's Empanadas closing
- Zella's Pizzeria floundered after the original owners left, and the restaurant eventually closed.
- Community-supported agriculture programs fill up fast, even this early in the year
- There are signs of a thaw around Hollins Market, the west-side neighborhood whose fortunes have flowed and ebbed over the past few decades.
- Building a trolley on Baltimore's Charles Street might ring some bells, but a shuttle bus makes far more sense
- E. William "Bill" Scriba, a former T. Rowe Price treasurer and vice president who dedicated himself to supporting The Johns Hopkins University, died Aug. 28 at his residence in an assisted-living community in Sunnyvale, Calif., of undetermined causes.
- Renee Stout, 2012 winner of the Sondheim Artscape Prize, explores spirituality and culture through her alter ego, Fatima Mayfield.
- The 'Bizarre Foods' chef says Shin Chon in Ellicott City is one of top ten Korean BBQ experiences in America.
- Andrew Zimmer is in Baltimore filming for his Travel Channel show "Bizarre Foods America." Zimmern is steadily Tweeting out the Instagram images from his visit.
- Despite Baltimore's closing 15 years ago of the City Life Museums, there remains tremendous interest in the H.L. Mencken House.
- The calendar said June, but Scott Garrity's tie screamed Christmas.
- 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.
- An proposal to use tax incentives to encourage health care providers to improve access and quality of care in underserved communities could Maryland's glaring health care disparities, if accompanied by adequate safeguards against fraud
- As the Charm City Circulator grows, the value of the free shuttle bus to Baltimore's economy becomes increasingly apparent
- 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.
- Patrick's of Pratt Street claims to be the oldest Irish Pub in the United States. Hard to believe, but try finding an older one.
- Baltimore Behavioral Health says sale of property would stabilize finances
- 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.