lexington market
- Powerball jackpot is up to $325 million. The next drawing is Saturday.
- A seafood dinner was riding on Sunday's AFC Championship game for the mayors of Baltimore and Boston, who each wagered a local favorite food on their hometown teams.
- A vision for the "greening" of downtown Baltimore is starting to take shape less than a year after city leaders proposed ambitious goals to keep and attract businesses and residents by making public areas more inviting.
- Bereavement is a deep pit of sorrow, but a caring hand can help pull you out
- Mary C. Walker, a retired Peabody Institute director of alumni relations who had been a special assistant to the school's director, died of cardiovascular disease Dec. 22 at the Edenwald Retirement Community. She was 100.
- Mary C. Walker, a retired Peabody Institute director of alumni relations who had been a special assistant to the school's director, died of cardiovascular disease Dec. 22 at the Edenwald Retirement Community. She was 100.
- Polock Johnny's stall at Lexington Market to close before year's end, winding up 43-year stay
- Gilbert Sandler describes how, after Pearl Harbor, Baltimoreans worked and played, worried and sacrificed under the shadow of war
- The jumbo lump crab cake: Did the mania all start at Faidley?
- A woman reported that she was raped near the University of Maryland's Baltimore campus last month after getting off a bus, according to an alert from campus police.
- Classic TV: Al Roker implies that Natalie Morales wants to drink wine in the morning!
- Baltimore and several non-profits are working to get nutritious foods into poor neighborhoods.
- Baltimore and several non-profits are working to get nutritious foods into poor neighborhoods.
- The cardboard models showed what a new town hall near Cross Street Market in Federal Hill could look like.
- Flood damage had disrupted deliveries, but all is returning to normal, owner promises
- As Baltimore's mayoral primary neared, candidates rapped on doors, waved bright signs, groused about reporters, rode a bus, ate chicken wings, and shook hands – lots and lots of hands.
- Mere seconds after setting his foot on the bustling sidewalk outside of Lexington Market, Frank M. Conaway Sr. is surrounded first by a small group of admirers, quickly followed by hordes of hanger-ons howling his name.
- The city's first venture into Indy Car street racing will tie up traffic for much of a week and disrupt transit patterns for at least five days as the city turns some of its busiest downtown streets into a speedway.
- Less than a month out from Sept. 13 primary, we look at how local media are covering the City of Baltimore mayor's race
- G. Krug and Son fabricates ornamental pieces the old-fashioned way
- Baltimore State's Attorney Gregg Bernstein announces results of investigation into the shooting at the Select Lounge, in which one police officer mistakenly shot and killed a colleague during a brawl outside
- Maryland has a split personality when it comes to illegal immigrants — a divide illustrated this year by the legislature's passage of a bill to provide college tuition breaks to undocumented state high school graduates only to have it put on hold by a citizen petition.
- Take this list as personal suggestions, from one neighbor to another.
- The man who died after his van was struck by a stolen car Saturday in Northwest Baltimore has been identified as Wendell Hairston, 60, a longtime Baltimore city schools teacher and musician.
- Downtown Partnership says plan to revitalize west side Baltimore market will benefits customers, merchants
- The Baltimore parking official in charge of managing contracts at city-owned garages "exerted influence" on garage operators to hire a firm owned by her then-boyfriend, according to the city's inspector general.
- Four decades after watching the 1968 riots, a Baltimorean reflects on a return of optimism and conviviality
- Gaia uses hybrid creatures and historical figures to revitalize worn-out urban sites
- The Maryland Transit Administration will hold a series of open houses this month for local residents to share their views about proposed designs for the 20 light rail stations planned for the east-west Red Line.
- Hundreds of Marylanders — hands on their hearts, crisply saluting or wiping away tears — lined streets and gathered at landmarks to bid personal farewells to William Donald Schaefer
- William Donald Schaefer — the former mayor, governor and comptroller who left an indelible mark on Baltimore — is heading back to the city this afternoon for one last tour.
- From Faidley's at Lexington Market to the Washington Monument, from Camden Yards to the Inner Harbor, a motorcade will ferry the body of William Donald Schaefer Monday afternoon on a two-hour farewell trip through the hometown that he loved and led.
- While the setting feels authentically Chinese, the kitchen doesn't always deliver.