FREE - The Baltimore Guide

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FREE - The Baltimore Guide
WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 9, 2013
Inside...
FREE
News.......................... 1-5, 23
Calendar.......................... 6-7
Features..........................8-11
Sports................................13
Crime.............................14-15
BG u i d e
a l t i m o re
BALTIMORE GUIDE 1
Serving
East Baltimore
since 1927
MEXICAN
MAKEOVER:
New restaurant
replaces Shuckers
in Fell’s Point
Page
526 S. Conkling Street | 410 -732- 660 0 | i n fo@baltimoregu i de.com | w w w.baltimoregu i de.com
23
Wednesday, OCTOBER 9-Tuesday, OCTOBER 15, 2013
Above: Korena Kilby and Vikki Smith
celebrate the opening of the Shops
at Canton Crossing with Red Robin,
one of 28 food, retail and service
establishments either already open
or set to open by next year.
Left: Hampstead Hill Academy
students welcome the Shops at
Canton Crossing with the beat of
a drum. They are, from left, Roy
Hartman, Jerrod Smith, Tyheim
Wilkinson, Austin Korycki and
Kamiron Eggleston. | Photos by Erik Zygmont
Canton Crossing now open, including Target anchor store
by ERIK ZYGMONT
[email protected]
The Shops at Canton Crossing, a 326,000 square-foot retail center,
have officially opened.
Target, DSW, Five Below, Old Navy and others are open for
business, while others, such as Jimmy John’s, Michaels and a second
Samos location, will open before the end of the year. 2014 will bring a
Harris Teeter supermarket, Atwater’s Cafe, Chick-fil-A and Canton
Crossing Wine & Spirits Shop, among others.
An opening ceremony yesterday included comment from Mayor
Stephanie Rawlings-Blake and Lieutenant Governor Anthony Brown,
both of whom spoke after press time.
t Catholic
t Catholic
t College
t College
Prep Prep
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Area businesspeople attended in abundance.
“All the suits have come out to play,” observed Canton resident and
historian Zippy Larson, adding that she is very much in favor of the
development. “Having Target here is heaven.”
The project is being developed and managed by BCP Investors, a
partnership of developers including Mark Sapperstein of 28 Walker
Development, Doug Schmidt and Neil Tucker of Chesapeake Real
Estate Group, and David Strouse of Birchwood Capital Partners.
“We have received constant feedback from area residents that
shopping close to home instead of traveling to the suburbs will greatly
improve their quality of life,” said Tucker in a statement.
JoinJoin
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usan
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November
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guest appearance
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by Pastor
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Lee
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by the Maryland
Province Jesuits
Province Jesuits
Special guest appearance by Pastor Lee Michaels of Heaven 600
420
South
420
Chester
South Chester
Street tStreet
t www.cristoreybalt.org
t 410-727-3255,
t 410-727-3255,
ext. 1003
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|Where|Where
learninglearning
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420
S. Chester
Street
•www.cristoreybalt.org
www.cristoreybalt.org
• 410-727-3255,
ext.
DENNIS E. CUOMO
Attorney At Law
* CRIMINAL CASES
* D.W.I/TRAFFIC
(Former Assistant States’
Attorney)
* PERSONAL
INJURY
ACCIDENT CASES
* DIVORCE
SEPARATION
CUSTODY
* WILLS AND
ESTATE
ADMINISTRATION
323-325 S. Conkling Street
410-675-7900
2 BALTIMORE GUIDE
WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 9, 2013
Youngster raises money for kidney research
by Erik zygmont
[email protected]
A few weeks ago, the Guide reported that
seven-year-old Jake Rusnak, a Dundalk
resident and student at St. Casimir School in
Canton, was attempting to swim 100 laps in
the pool at the Y of Central Maryland’s Swim
Center in Dundalk.
Jake’s father, Andrew Rusnak, reports that
Jake did indeed complete the swim—1.4
miles total—in one hour, eight minutes, and
seven seconds. He swam the first mile in 48
minutes, 34 seconds, a personal record.
Jake, who has one kidney, was accepting
pledges for the feat. His success netted a total
of $2,200, to be split down the middle between
the Y of Central Maryland and the National
Kidney Foundation of Maryland.
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This is based on 180 and 360 months respectively.
Jake is happily exhausted after his 1.4-mile swim. Here he is with his sister Sarah
Idzi, left, holding his new niece Layla, his brother John Pidjanowski, his father
Andrew Rusnak, and his mother Lori Rusnak. | Photo courtesy of Andrew Rusnak
Our Opinion and Yours
Soup kitchens part of the problem
To the Editor:
I’m aware of the vagrant problem in downtown Baltimore, but I believe it’s because many are
being “imported” by soup kitchens and charitable outreach efforts. We all agree helping the
homeless is wonderful, and I’ve volunteered many times. However, it’s wrong for an organization
to set up a soup kitchen and not monitor the actions of clients.
Unfortunately, homeless outreach organizations and charitable soup kitchens lack respect for
the communities they invade. And I use the word “invade” deliberately. Your articles failed to
say where the vagrants causing the trouble in Fell’s Point came from. In spite of neighborhood
opposition, homeless outreach sites want to expand.
Unless the homeless outreach effort is serving the immediate neighborhood, it’s wrong for
them always to insist they locate where they are not welcome. Once they have a nexus,
expanding the client base is usually the next goal. I saw this on Cathedral St. The soup kitchen
was bringing in vagrants, drug addicts and the homeless from miles around. Fortunately, it has
relocated elsewhere. Sadly, if neighbors protest (as they usually do), no one listens. Even lawsuits
have been filed against activists for trying to stop an expansion!
Until the community, the city government and charitable organizations find a way to work
together, vile situations like those taking place in Upper Fell’s Point and Patterson Park will
continue. The city has a glut of empty buildings where charitable outreach facilities could locate.
It’s time they stopped declaring war on middle class neighborhoods where their clients often
cause serious problems!
Rosalind Ellis Heid, Inner Harbor
BALTIMORE GUIDE 3
WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 9, 2013
Liquor Board denial illuminates different opinions in Fell’s Point
4
d by DANIELLE SWEENEY
8 [email protected]
g Doug Atwell, a managing partner and
l bartender at Rye, 807 S. Broadway, lost his bid
n to transfer a new liquor license into Fell’s
l Point on Oct. 3.
Atwell sought to transfer a BD-7 (a sevenday tavern license) into the neighborhood to
open Ellington’s, a high-end market selling
food, alcohol, and cocktail implements at 805
S. Broadway, next door to Rye, an upscale
cocktail bar and restaurant.
“We hope to become a source for hard to
find items that we are...often asked about
during our nightly service at Rye, including
bitters, syrups, ice molds, and cocktail
books,” a written description of Ellington’s,
provided by Atwell in July, stated.
In addition to food, cocktails, and
merchandise, the market would have offered
tastings and cocktail-making and spirits
education classes in the evenings. Atwell also sought permission to have
outdoor seating. The license would have been
transferred from an establishment in Curtis
Bay, within the 46th legislative district.
The Baltimore City Board of Liquor License
Commissioners denied the request because
the Fells Point Community Organization
strongly opposed having a new liquor license
brought into the neighborhood from outside of
Fell’s Point, period.
FPCO contends that Fell’s Point has 68
operational liquor establishments and 76
licenses, and doesn’t need any more. The
organization voted over the summer to oppose
liquor license transfers from outside of Fell’s
Point and to handle restaurant liquor licenses
on a case-by-case basis.
The other neighborhood organization in the
area, the Fell’s Point Residents’ Association,
had voted “not to oppose” the transfer—the
group does not typically vote to explicitly
“support”—provided that Atwell signed a
memorandum of understanding, which he did.
The contents of the MOU between him and
FPRA were not discussed in detail at the
hearing.
At last Thursday’s hearing, several members
of FPCO gave testimony as to why they
believed the neighborhood didn’t need another
liquor license from outside, and why the
neighborhood needed to seek a balance of
liquor-serving establishments and non liquorserving establishments.
Joanne Masopust, president of FPCO, said,
“This is not personal. It’s not about whether
these are nice guys. It’s about the number of
liquor licenses in the neighborhood.”
After an hour-long, contentious hearing,
Stephan Fogleman, chairman of the Liquor
Board, said, “We cannot find a concrete need
for this [establishment]. Unanimous opposition
trumps ‘not opposing.’ We deny the transfer at
this time.”
Fogleman said the residents presented some
of the same concerns the Liquor Board heard
a few months ago during the CrossBar hearing.
CrossBar der Biergarten was a large beer
garden proposal for Cross Street, shot down
due to strong community opposition to an
additional bar coming to Federal Hill.
Masopust was pleased with the board’s
decision. She said that it’s important for
community organizations to take a position.
“Either support or oppose. Don’t take a
non-position of ‘not to oppose’ something,”
she said.
Masopust added that the decision gave
hope to neighborhoods like Federal Hill and
Fell’s Point, neighborhoods that are, she said,
“liquor rich” already, that the Liquor Board
might hear their concerns.
Daniel Atzmon, board member of FPRA
and the organization’s Liquor Board liaison,
said he was disappointed.
“Speaking personally as someone who
attended the hearing, the FPRA had executed
a very strong MOU that addressed all of
FPCO’s stated issues, which were not with the
bar, but the idea of another license,” he said.
One stipulation of the MOU was that if
Ellington’s failed, the liquor license would
have to be sold outside of Fell’s Point.
“In addition to the restrictions on the
license,” Atzmon said, “there were restrictions
on the hours, the sale of package goods, and a
provision requiring that future owners abide
by the MOU,” he said.
“Not only were the concerns around having
another license in the neighborhood addressed
by the MOU, I feel that the ruling was very
unfair as the entire discussion had nothing to
do with 805 S Broadway, but with one group’s
objection to the idea of having a new liquor
license come in from outside the immediate
neighborhood.”
Atzmon added: “It should be noted that no
such prohibition exists,” he added.
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Douglas Paige, the acting executive
secretary at the Liquor Board, said that it
would take state law to prohibit the transfer of
licenses from outside of a neighborhood.
“Right now, licenses are restricted by
legislative district (and also ward and percent),
but legislators could restrict them by
neighborhood if they chose to,” Paige said,
adding that he is not aware of any such law in
the 46th district at this time.
“However, community members could be
talking to their reps about such a possibility. I
would not be surprised,” he added.
Without a prohibition on such transfers,
Atzmon says the Board should “evaluate each
application on its merits, which was not the
case with 805 S Broadway.”
“They were unfairly denied a license for
reasons having nothing to do with the proposed
establishment and licensees, but rather
for exercising their legal right to purchase a
license from within the 46th district.”
Melvin Kodenski, Doug Atwell’s lawyer,
said he did not have any comment on the
decision at this time.
Ellington’s had been scheduled to open
this fall.
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4 BALTIMORE GUIDE
WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 9, 2013
Apex goes to auction; wasn’t always XXX
by DANIELLE SWEENEY
[email protected]
The Apex Theater, 108 S.Broadway, will be
auctioned on the premises on Friday at 11 a.m.
by A.J. Billig and Company Auctioneers.
The 6750-square-foot theater has been in
the XXX film entertainment business since
the 1970s. Previously, the Apex was one of
three prominent theaters on Broadway and
showed first run-films.
According to the auctioneer’s description,
the theater’s interior features a ticket booth,
580-seating-capacity theater, his and her
restrooms, and two front and two rear exits on
the first floor. The second floor has a
mezzanine with projection room, powder
room and two utility rooms. The interior is in
need of renovation, according to the
auctioneer.
Ken Crowley, who co-owns Lombard
Hardware, says he remembers going to the
Apex, the Cluster, and the Broadway theaters
as a kid in the early 1960s. “I remember the Apex being a nice theater
actually,” he says. “The Apex had first-run
films. the Cluster had horror movies, and the
Broadway had classic films.”
Crowley says he and he siblings went to the
a lt i m o re
BG
UIDE
526 S. Conkling St., Baltimore, MD 21224
{£ä‡ÇÎӇÈÈääÊUÊL>Ìˆ“œÀi}Ո`i°Vœ“
Office Hours: Monday-Friday 9 am-4 pm
Perry Corsetti, Publisher
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Jackie Miller, Circulation, Billing & Classifieds
410-732-6600 ext. 1
“ˆiÀJL>Ìˆ“œÀi}Ո`i°Vœ“
Erik Zygmont, Editor
410-732-6603 / 410-732-6600 ext. 5
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Danielle Sweeney, Reporter
410-732-6603 / 410-732-6600 ext. 5
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Jill Criscudo, National Account Manager
410-732-6600
VÀˆÃVÕ`œJL>Ìˆ“œÀi}Ո`i°Vœ“
Lisa Nemec, Account Executive
410-732-6616 ext. 2
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Jessica Chaney, Account Executive
410-732-6618 ext. 3
V…>˜iÞJL>Ìˆ“œÀi}Ո`i°Vœ“
Julie M. Kichline, Art Director
410-732-6600 ext. 8
ŽˆV…ˆ˜iJL>Ìˆ“œÀi}Ո`i°Vœ“
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Contributing Photographers
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Contributing Writer
˜`Þʈ˜`â>Ž, The Birds House
©2013 Baltimore Media Guide, LLC.
All rights reserved. Member MDDC.
movies on Sundays after church. “Mom gave
us 50 cents each—15 for the movie and 25
cents for soda and popcorn. The other 10 I
used for comic books.”
In those days, he says, theater owners didn’t
“clear” the theater after each showing, so
patrons could watch the movie twice if they
wanted. Crowley says he recalls seeing a lot of
film noir and thrillers at the Apex.
“A couple of Alfred Hitchcock films, some
Robert Mitchum movies, too,” he says.
Then the theater became an adult movie
house, and Crowley stopped paying attention
to it.
He hopes the Apex’s future owner will turn
the space into a venue to benefit the community,
like an art space, gallery, or something
similar to the Creative Alliance—which was
developed out of the old Patterson Theater on
Eastern Ave. Chris Ryer, director of the Southeast
Community Development Corporation in
Highlandtown, says he could see the space
appealing to a nonprofit.
But old theaters come with their share of
challenges.
“The thing about a theater building is that it
is the blessing of the building code (and the
Apex Theater in Upper Fell’s Point. | Photo by Erik Zygmont
fire department) for assembly. That’s why
churches like it, or theaters, or performing arts
spaces—they need that,” says Ryer, who is
known for his involvement in property
development. ”Unfortunately the codes
change, and any developer will have to bring
it up to the modern code when they redevelop
it,” he says.
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News ...........
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Calendar ........... ......... 1-5
Features ........... ........... 6 & 7
Senior ........... ............. 9-11
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2
Sports...........
.....................1
3
Crime............
...........
Real Estate ........... ..........14
.............19
The Baltimore Guide is looking for careerminded individuals. Duties include building
a client base, reaching targeted revenue
goals, understanding the client’s needs
and making appropriate advertising
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Red Line panel
meets tough
crowd in Canton
BY ERIK ZYGMO
NT
EZYGMO
Jim Craig
Jim Craig
(410) 752-1300
410-752-1300
[email protected]
[email protected]
912 Light St.
2829
O’Donnell St.
Federal
Hill
Canton
2829 O'Donnell St.
1121 Merritt Blvd.
Canton
NT@BALTIMOREGU
a l t i m o re
BG
UIDE
1121 Merritt Blvd.
912 Light St.
Dundalk
Serving
East Baltimore
since 1927
526 S. CONKLIN
G STREE T | 410
-732- 660 0
| I N FO@BALT IMOREGU
IDE.COM | W W
WEDNESDAY
W.BALTIM OREGUID
E.COM
, JUL
JULY 17-TUESDAY
, JULY
L 23, 2013
LY
Page 11
ARTSCAPE:
Local artists
and residents
can beat the
heat and still
enjoy art
via Artscape’s
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Federal Hill
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IDE.COM
When public
comment was
and an agenda
curtailed
construction was item on Boston St.
residents left more not reached, Canton
Red Line Citizens than fuming from a
’ Advisory Council
meeting.
Residents near
the
stretch
of
Boston
between Montfor
d Ave. and Hudson St.
where the Red
St.-Line
to the surface as train would transition
it
opposed that aspectheads east—have long
The last time of the project.
presented to the Red Line plans were
Canton commu
January public
nity, at a
forum, Marylan
Administration
d Transit
engineers gave
two traffic
re-routing options
for the prolong
construction of
ed
transition. Both the Boston St. tunnel
were soundly rejected
the residents
by
businesses that and Boston St.-area
attended that meeting
One option was
.
to close a stretch
of Studen
CONTINUED ON
ts of John
PAGE 5
vacation. They Ruhrah Elementary and Middle
are,
School were excited
Serrano, Hernan from left: Jennifer Jara-Siz
about their new
a, Brian
Torres and Noelia
DENNIS E.
playground,
Guaricela. | Photo Perez, Jim Jara-Siza, Monica
CUOMO
Lemus-Rodrigu even during summer
by Erik Zygmont
Attor ney At
ez, Dariana Lopez,
Law
Alex
* CRIMINAL CASES
* D.W.I/TRAFFIC
(Former Assistant States’
Attorney)
* PERSONAL
INJURY
ACCIDENT CASES
* DIVORCE
SEPARATION
CUSTODY
* WILLS AND
ESTATE ADMINISTRATION
Familiarity with Canton, Fell’s Point,
Butcher’s Hill, Little Italy, Highlandtown,
Brewer’s Hill, Greektown and Dundalk a plus.
Principals step
BY ERIK ZYGMO
NT
outside the offic
EDITOR@BALTIMO
e, build playgrou
nd in Greektown
COM
“I think it’s nice,”
John Ruhrah Element said student Monica LemusSchool, located
in Greektown at
Rodriguez of
ary and Middle
Fait Ave. and Rappoll
“We don’t have
beneficiary of its
School’s new playgrou
to grow up too
annual Commu
nd.
fast. We’ve still
nity Service Day. a St., as the
inside of us.”
Mary Donnelly,
got a little kid
principal of John
had applied to
The playground
Ruhrah, said that
receive
was actually built
her school
principals from
with missing pieces the new playground. The
old playground,
across the country. last Wednesday, July 10, by
and safety issues,
Elementary School
May, she said.
The National Associa
was dismantled
Principa
in midtion of
ls chose Baltimo
its annual conferen
“Parents were raising
re as the location
ce, and the associat
money to put in
for weren’t
ion chose John
a new playgrou
anywhe
re near where we
nd, but we
Ruhrah
needed to be,”
she said.
REGUIDE.
323-325 S. Conklin
g Street
410-675-7900
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Ryer adds that the space could also attract a
private owner interested in a creative space.
“It will have a large open space with a fairly
high ceiling. It could be reused as a home,
studio, or gallery by an artist or a group of
artists, if it’s cheap enough.”
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BALTIMORE GUIDE 5
WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 9, 2013
Attention nosy neighbors: Here is your
chance to get inside the Jones’ house
by Erik zygmont
[email protected]
The annual Butchers Hill House Tour aims
to prove that not all row houses are the same.
In fact, they’re not even all row houses.
This Sunday, Oct. 13, noon-5 p.m., the tour
includes seven never-before-been-toured
homes among 10 total houses and one pop-up
art gallery.
Roman Hnatyshsyn has owned the 150year-old Bankard Mansion carriage house
since 1993. The mansion, a huge brick
structure with a luxurious lawn at the
intersection of Baltimore and Chester, is
easily visible to passerby. Just a little north, at
9 N. Chester St., the carriage house stands out
too, as a fully separate structure that, with its
decidedly non-rectangle geometry, could be a
quaint library building in a very small town.
The Guide and Hnatyshsyn were unable to
connect via phone, but he sent us some facts
about the carriage house.
Both the mansion and the carriage house
changed hands several times—it was the
dwelling place for a beer baron and later, a
possible gambling kingpin. In the 1930s, it
was the Hebrew Home for the Incurables, the
predecessor of the Levindale Hebrew Geriatric
Center and Hospital.
In the 1950s, it was Jimmy’s Crab House.
“A lady in my church recounts that extra
large male crabs were a dollar a dozen, and
soft shells were 10 cents,” wrote Hnatyshsyn,
adding that there is a downstairs room in the
carriage house, once used for crab storage,
encased in four inches of cork.
The estate was vacant following the 1970s.
A Johns Hopkins professor bought the carriage
house for $3,000 from the city in the early
1980s, Hnatyshsyn wrote, and made it into a
livable home.
Hnatyshsyn’s isn’t the only carriage house
on the tour. In 2006, Deborah Jennings
bought one at 2214 Boyer St. It was little more
than a shell and a very rough interior. Jennings’
carriage house is built in the traditional row
house style. The two-story structure,
landlocked between two similar carriage
houses, has an opening for a vehicle on the
ground floor and two windows above.
Rather than have a garage door, Jennings
left the vehicle opening doorless. Tenant Pam
Fraser pulls her car into the front of her house,
and then walks to her front door, which is set
at the rear of the car port. Jennings explained
that a garage door would have blocked
CONTINUED ON PAGE 17
Inset: In this photo, taken inside 2214
Boyer St. prior to the renovation,
it is clear that the home is a fixerupper. Below: The interior of 2214
Boyer St., fully rehabbed. | Photo
courtesy of Deborah Jennings
Pastime Perfections
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6732 HOLABIRD AVENUE • 410-282-2888
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Haircut (includes shampoo) •••••••••••••••••••••••$8.00
Long Hair, Shampoo and Set •••••••••••••••••••• $15.00
Permanents with Cut and Style ••••••••••••••$40 & up
Tint, Touch-up with Style ••••••••••••••••••••••• $25.00
Frosting, Highlights with Style •••••••••••••••••• $50.00
Eyebrow Waxing ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••$7.00
A UNISEX SALON: For the young and young at heart !
Closed Sunday and Monday. Open Tuesday through Saturday. Please call for salon hours.
Swim School
Session 8
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October 21 - December 1
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10 OFF
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• Adult Warm Water Therapy & Aerobics
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6 BALTIMORE GUIDE
WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 9, 2013
COMMUNITY CALENDAR
Send your events to dsweeney@
baltimoreguide.com. Events are due at
noon on the Friday prior to publication.
Wednesday, October 9
Bilingual Community Yoga: Wednesdays,
7:30-9 p.m. at the Virginia Baker Rec Center,
Patterson Park. Info: 410-396-9156.
Preschool Leaps: Wednesdays, 11 a.m.
Stories, songs, and fun for preschoolers.
Southeast Anchor Library, 3601 Eastern Ave.
Info: 410-396-1580.
Fell’s Prospect Community Association Meeting: The FPCA meeting is
scheduled for Oct. 9, at 7:30 p.m., at Cristo Rey
High School, 420 S. Chester St. Thursday, October 10
Highlandtown Farmers Market: The
market is held inside the grass lot of the Abbott
Memorial Church at Bank St. and Highland
Ave. from 4-8 p.m., every Thursday through
Oct. 31.
Friday, October 11
Christopher Columbus (Donald Castranova),
stands beneath the statue of himself at the
Columbus Piazza at Inner Harbor last Sunday,
the day of the annual Columbus Day Parade.
|Photo by Tom Scilipoti
“Durang, Durang”: Performances of
“Durang, Durang,” an evening of live music,
mixed media, and laugh-out-loud lampoonery
at Fell’s Point Corner Theater, are Fridays and
Saturdays at 8 p.m. and Sundays at 2 p.m.
through Oct. 13. Info/tickets: www.fpct.org.
Saturday, October 12
Canton Dumpster Day: Canton residents
are invited to dispose of bulk trash items from
11 a.m.–3 p.m. at the Canton Waterfront Park.
The following items are prohibited: building
materials, household appliances, tires and tire
rims, household hazardous waste (batteries,
paint, propane tanks, toner cartridges), and
recyclables (glass, plastic bottles, metal, tin
cans, and cardboard).
Sports Clubs for Kids: Free sports
clubs for boys and girls ages 5-15 at Patterson
Park Youth Sports & Education Center, Oct.
5, 12, 19, and 26 from 9-10:30 a.m. Choose
from flag football or quickball (a fun, fastpaced game combining baseball and softball
skills ). Located at 200 S. Linwood Ave. (next
to the ice rink and pool). Stop by Saturday to
sign up or call 410-878-0563, or email
[email protected] for more info.
Fell’s Point Farmers’ Market: The market
is held on Saturdays, 7:30 a.m.-12:30 p.m., on
Broadway Square. Music, food, farms, and
fun.
Butchers Hill Dumpster Day: On
Saturday, Oct. 12, a dumpster will be placed
on the 100 block of S. Chester St. for Butchers
Hill residents. Info: www.butchershill.org.
Dundalk
Village
Farmers
Market: Saturdays, June 8-Nov.16,
6 a.m.-12:30 p.m. Shipping Place at
Dunmanway (park behind Dundalk Post
Office), 45 Shipping Pl. Info: 410-282-2540.
Farmstand at FutureCare: Farmstand
Saturdays are held at FutureCare, 1300 S.
Ellwood Ave,. from 9 a.m.–noon.
Sunday, October 13
Butchers Hill House Tour: Start at the
white house by the fountain at Patterson Park
Ave. and Lombard St. A self-guided, easywalking, house tour featuring 10 diverse and
unique homes, seven never seen before. All
proceeds go to local nonprofits and two local
K-8 schools. Oct. 13 at noon. Tickets are $12
in advance, $15 the day of the tour. Info:
butchershill.org.
Monday, October 14
Patterson Place Meeting: The Patterson
Place Association will meet on Monday, Oct.
14 at 7 p.m. at their new location: 27 S.
Patterson Park Ave. Info: 410-276-3766.
CCA
Economic
Development
Committee Meeting: The Canton
Community Association’s Economic
Development Committee will meet Oct. 14 at
6:30 p.m. at the Broom Factory Conference
It’s Ravioli Time!
homemade ravioli,
imported spaghetti,
homemade meatballs
St. Leo’s Catholic Church
in Little Italy
THE SPAGHETTI RAVIOLI DINNER
Sunday, November 3 • 12-6 • 914 Stiles St.
Adults $12 • Children $6 • Carry-out 50¢ extra
Dinner includes: ravioli or spaghetti, meatballs, salad, bread, coffee
Available for purchase: cannoli, Italian cookies, wine and soft drinks
Carryout in the Church Hall on Exeter Street
For Information: 410.675.7275
Come and make homemade ravioli at St. Leo’s on October 12 & 19
beginning at 9 a.m. Lunch will be served.
œÀʓœÀiʈ˜vœÊÜÜÜ°…>՘Ìi``՘}iœ˜ÃVœ“ÊUÊÜÜÜ°iëÀiV°Vœ“É`՘}iœ˜Ã
BALTIMORE GUIDE 7
WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 9, 2013
COMMUNITY CALENDAR
sRoom, suite 235. The following proposals are
,scheduled to be presented: 3400 Dillon St.;
t931 Binney St.; 718 South Curley St.; 2809
tBoston St. (former Bay Cafe’), and 527 S.
Luzerne Ave.
dStitch and Bit*h: Bring what you are
.working on and hang out at Baltimore
Threadquarters on Oct. 14 at 4 p.m. 518 S.
Conkling St. Info: 443-759-9627.
Zumba: Mondays, 6:30-7:30 p.m., Virginia
eBaker Rec Center, Patterson Park. Cost is $7
kper class; all levels and drop-ins welcome.
-Children under 16 must be accompanied by an
dadult. Info:410-276-3676.
l
lSave the Date:
2Oct. 17, Wildlife Gardening Association:
:Learn how to transform your urban dwelling
into a native wildlife paradise. Thursday, Oct.
17, 1-3 p.m., Patterson Park Branch, Pratt
Library, 158 N. Linwood Ave. Free and
ndelivered in English and Spanish with
.simultaneous kids’ activities. Register: 410.558-2473 or [email protected].
.
Oct. 24, Race for Education: The St. Casimir
t
Home & School Association will sponsor its
n
annual Race for Education on Thursday, Oct.
c
24 in the circle park adjacent to St. Casimir
t
Church, from 8:15 a.m. to noon. All students,
e
faculty, and staff will run, jog, sprint, and walk
GREAT FOOD!
Homemade Russian
Dishes
Baked Goods
Delicious Desserts
Russian Tea Room
Imported Russian Beer
laps to help raise funds for the school. If you
wish to make a contribution, please send it to
the school at 1035 S. Kenwood Ave., 21224. A
donor form may be found at www.
stcasimirschool.us. Contact Kara Masaitis at
443-858-1116 with any questions.
Oct. 26, Free Foreclosure Solutions
Workshop: The event will be held at St.
Casimir Church, 2800 O’Donnell St. The
event is co-sponsored by the Pro Bono
Resource Center of Maryland, Southeast CDC,
and Councilman Jim Kraft. Those interested
in receiving a free foreclosure legal consultation
at the event should contact the Pro Bono
Resource Center of Maryland at 1-800-3961274, ext. 3052, to pre-register and learn how
to prepare for the legal consult.
Angle Parking on Fait Ave.: The Baltimore
City Department of Transportation will begin
the installation of angle parking on Fait Ave.
from Linwood Ave. to Conkling St. starting
Oct. 10. This street will be converted to oneway west bound with angle parking being
installed on the north side of the street. This
work will take approximately two weeks. The
start date and completion times are estimates
only and may vary depending on weather
conditions. Parking restrictions will be posted
at least 72 hours ahead of any work activity.
Parking violators will be ticketed and towed.
Our Lady of Mt. Carmel School
is proud to announce open
enrollment for Pre-K to 12
Enrolling Now!
Pre-K to 12!
U OPEN FOR ENROLLMENT
Uʈ˜>˜Vˆ>Ê>ˆ`Ê>Û>ˆ>Li
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œ“«ï̈ÛiÊ̅ïVÊ*Àœ}À>“Ã
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music programs
UÊ/À>˜Ã«œÀÌ>̈œ˜Ê̜
“A community invigorated with faith,
>Ìˆ“œÀiÊ>˜`
infused with knowledge, inspired to serve”
Harford Counties
410-238-1163ÊUÊwww.olmcmd.org
£Çä{Ê"`Ê>ÃÌiÀ˜ÊÛi°ÊUÊ>Ìˆ“œÀi]ÊÊÓ£ÓÓ£
“Today’s Livability in Yesterday’s Houses”
Butchers Hill House Tour
3UNDAY/CTOBERsNOONTOPM
Tickets: at event oradvance purchase online
www.butchershill.org
Start at the White House in Patterson Park
LIVE
ENTERTAINMENT!
Washington Balalaika
Society
Lyman Ukrainian
Dancers
Beltway Balalaikas
EAT IN
OR
CARRY OUT
Samovar
FREE PARKING
8 BALTIMORE GUIDE
WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 9, 2013
A hustler reflects on a
game (and a life)
well- played
by ERIK ZYGMONT
[email protected]
Seventy-four-year-old Jack Domm recently won the
Bronze medal in billiards in the 2013 Maryland
Senior Olympics, a title which puts him in esteemed
company. Most pool players of Jack’s age have a
certain history, beyond recreational play.
“You see those guys in the tournaments—
most of them were hustlers at one time,”
Domm says.
The “hustlers” to whom he refers are pool
sharks—characters for whom pool was as
much a livelihood as a game. Eddie “Fast
Eddie” Felson, Paul Newman’s character
in “The Hustler” and later in “The Color
of Money,” is a good example.
Domm won’t call himself a hustler,
but he does have a personalized, ivoryjointed cue made for him by Danny
Janes, a Baltimorean, owner of Joss
Cues, who made the cues for “The
Color of Money.” Domm notes that the
ivory joint, now off the market, plays
better than plastic or steel, but it’s also
a dead giveaway.
“If you wanted to win some money,
you couldn’t take a stick like this into
the pool hall with you,” he laughs.
Domm says that he came to the game
later in life.
“I’ve only been playing since I was in
my 20s,” he says.
As for the majority of pool players back
then, gambling came with the territory.
Domm must have enjoyed pool very much,
because he was certainly willing to pay a
high price for it.
“I was losing $40 to $50 a week,” he remembers, and that was in the 1950s.
“Some guy, he felt sorry for me, he said, ‘I’m
going to show you something about this game,
because you can’t go on like this,’” Domm says.
From there, things improved.
“I learned not only about the game, but about the
gambling aspect,” he says, adding that he later toured the
East Coast with an “older gentleman” who was quite the
hustler, playing $1,000 games at times.
Now those days are over.
“Most people today are just doing it to ‘play pool,’ for fun,”
Domm says. “You have to be almost a part of a closed society to take
part in the gambling part of it.”
Domm himself plays “just for fun” nowadays, but he takes his fun
seriously.
WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 9, 2013
“I got started last year,” he says. “I was sick
of lying around all the time now that I’m
retired.”
Domm still works part time for Everd
Roofing; before that he ran the Domm Roofing
Company, known throught High-landtown for
“Domm Good Roofs.”
“We were very well-known in the area,” he
says. “People got so they didn’t even want to
bargain prices—they just wanted us to do their
roofs.”
Long before roofing or billiards, Domm
established himself in Highlandtown as football
player, first for the Red Shield Boys Club, and
then for Patterson High School, which was
then located at Linwood Ave. and Pratt St. in
the northeast corner of Patterson Park. The old
building has just been renovated into luxury
apartments.
As a member of the Red Shield team, one
highlight of Domm’s career was dieting down
to 100 pounds to play in the “Piggybank Bowl”
at halftime during a Colts game in Memorial
Stadium. Channel 11 did a spot on Domm:
“Jack Domm trims weight to go to Piggybank
Bowl.”
On the Red Shield team, Domm was coached
by Teddy Venetoulis, who would later become
a Baltimore County executive. The athletic
director for the Red Shield Boys Club was none
other than Utz Twardowicz, Domm says.
When he matured into an offensive tackle
and defensive lineman for Patterson High
School, Domm played on what is today’s Utz
Twardowicz Field. Under coach Irv Biasi in the
mid-1950s, the team posted a superior record,
winningtheMarylandScholasticChampionship
nearly every year and traveling up and down
the East Coast.
They got media coverage that rivals today’s
pro teams, Domm says.
“It made you feel like one of the big-time
celebrities to be in the newspapers like that,”
he says.
Today, when not playing pool, Domm spends
time with his wife and volunteers for a trapneuter-spay program to control the population
of local stray cats.
BALTIMORE GUIDE 9
Left: At least Jack Domm’s teammates
supported him when he dieted down to 100
pounds to play in the “Piggybank Bowl”
at halftime during a Colts game. Right: No,
that’s not male-patterned baldness on Jack
Domm, number 74 on the Patterson High
School football team. As part of an initiation
ritual, the older players shaved the freshmen’s
heads. “They told me, ‘We’re going to make
you look like coach,’” recalls Domm. Opposite
page: Domm won a bronze medal in billiards
at the 2013 Maryland Senior Olympic Games.
| Photo by Jack Domm
HALLOWEEN PET COSTUME CONTEST
GRAND PRIZE
4 tickets to the Haunted Dungeons at Fort Howard
($60 value) Tickets valid October 25th and 26th only.
Winning photo published in the November 6th edition of the Baltimore Guide.
To enter, send us a photo of your pet in a Halloween Costume. Email entries to [email protected],
then look for our favorites on our Facebook page www.facebook.com/baltimoreguide.
4$POLMJOH4UtXXXCBMUJNPSFHVJEFDPN
410-732-6600
Entries must be received by October 23, 2013. Images should be 300 dpi, 5” wide or larger. Web resolution not acceptable for print.
Entries must include pet’s name, owner’s name, address, phone and email.
10 BALTIMORE GUIDE
WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 9, 2013
ICE
10lbs
20lbs
40lbs
CROWN
BAIL BONDS
Cash up to $5,000
of winning lottery
tickets at any time
24 Hour Service
* Receive up to 30 FREE
410-391-6900
Tickets
with
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Cash up to $5,000 of winning
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at in!
any time
MD STATE LOTTERY CASH-IN HEADQUARTERS
Wine
• Spirits
Ice
Snacks
•
KENOBeer •Cigarettes
and receive
up• to
30• FREE
TICKETS
with cash in!
• Soda • Kegs
We n
ow
Good feature
H
Ice C umor
ream
"//,9Ê",-Ê,
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• Western Union • Money Orders
• Check Cashing
• Bill Payment Center • Lottery • Keno
DECEMBER
We Sell
Cellular
Minutes
RACE
TRAX
OPEN
Home Phone Service
- No Credit Check Unlimited Long Distance
SUNDAY
SALE SPECIALS
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December
Concha y Toro........................1.5L
$5.49
19th
Sutter Home White Zin...........1.5L
$5.89
10am
Jim Beam...............................1.75L $17.99
Smirnoff Vodka.......................750mL $8.99
Crown Royal...........................750mL $17.99
L܏ÕÌÊ
........................................................... 1.75 L
Captain Morgan Spiced Rum. 750mL $10.99
/…ÀiiÊ"ˆÛiÃÊ
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.....................................
1.75 L
Cooks Sparkling
Wine............
750mL $3.99
1.75L
$12.99
Seagrams Vodka....................
-i>}À>“ÃÊ6œ`Ž>
............................................
1.75 L
Canadian Mist........................1.75L $10.99
>«Ì>ˆ˜ÊœÀ}>˜
............................................. 1.75 L
Heineken.....................12oz cans/case $19.99
ˆ“Êi>“
1.75 L
Amaretto........................................................
Disaronna...............750mL $15.99
œ“L>ÞÊ->««…ˆÀi .......................................... 1.75 L
OCTOBER SPECIALS
OPEN . $24.49
LATE . $17.99
CHRISTMAS . $13.33
EVE . $19.99
. $19.99
. $29.16
ÀœÜ˜Ê,œÞ>Ê ..................................................
1.75 L . $34.99
75¢ OFF
ÀœÜ˜Ê,œÞ>Ê>VŽ
.........................................
1.75 L . $34.99
All Liquor
All Case Beer
750mL or Larger
(Warm ..................................................
Only)
«œÌ…ˆVÊ,i`
750 ML ....$6.99
SALE ITEMS EXCLUDED
SALE ITEMS EXCLUDED
Cash or Debit Only. Expires
Cash or Debit Only. Expires
12/31/04......................................
7œœ`LÀˆ`}iÊ
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1.5 L ....$7.99
KINGS DISCOUNT LIQUORS
KINGS DISCOUNT LIQUORS
8226 Pulaski Hwy.
8226 Pulaski
Hwy.
˜>ÀÞÊi>`Ê
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750 ML ....$6.69
œ««œ>Ê*ÀiÃi˜ÌÃÊ­>ÊyÊ>ۜÀî .......................... 750 ML ....$5.33
$1.00 OFF
All Wine1.5 L ....$7.33
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...............................
750mL or Larger. Sale
Items Excluded
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Àˆ“ià ...................................................... 750 ML ....$6.66
75¢ OFF
Representatives from “Park Barker Brewing,” a local homebrew outfit, get ready for
Oktoberfest at Breath of God Lutheran Church. Steve Gondol, left, and Mike Minncino, right,
are brewing—you guessed it—Oktoberfest. | Photo courtesy of Kevin Koenig
12/31/04
Are you over 60 and feeling depressed
or having memory problems?
SALE ITEMS EXCLUDED Cash or Debit Only. Expires 12/31/04
KINGS DISCOUNT LIQUORS • 8226 Pulaski Hwy.
MAIL IN REBATES
AVAILABLE ON MANY
PRODUCTS
Stop in for Details!
CASH FOR COINS
CASH OR DEBIT
ON ALL SALE
ITEMS.
AT KING’S
LIQUORS!
Bring a bag, bucket or cookie jar of coins.
We will count it, sort it and give you cash!
Johnny Bev’s Wine of the Month
750 ML
$7.33
ATM on prem
MONTE
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TOSCANO
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8226 Pulaski
Hwy
• Rosedale, MD ONLY
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410-686-2770
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Ridge, Seghesio, Sonoma-Cutrer, Chateau St. Jean, Caymus,
Stags Leap, Fracchia Malvasia Di Casorzo, D’Astl Voulet,
as well as a wide variety of Ice Wines,
Organic Wines, Italian Wines and Spanish Wines.
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BALTIMORE GUIDE 11
WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 9, 2013
Hunt for beer October also turns up sausages, family fun
by ERIK ZYGMONT
[email protected]
Oktoberfest. Leave it to the Germans to
take a booze bash and turn it into something
wholesome. Go to the real Oktoberfest, or
the myriad of other beer-centric festivals in
Germany, and, along with the one-liter mugs
of high-test brew you’ll see kids eating
chocolate-covered strawberries, oompah
bands blowing, sausages roasting, and elderly
couples relaxing.
At the Bergkirchweih, the second-biggest
beer festival in Germany (next to Oktoberfest),
a friend noted that his family had been
reserving a table every year of his life. Since
the festival is over 10 days long, and he is 40,
he estimated that he had spent over a year of
his life at Bergkirchweih.
Baltimore’s not there yet, but the Southeast
does have a couple impressive Oktoberfest
events—with the same, family-friendly vibe,
lined up for this month.
Oktoberfest at Breath of God
Lutheran Church
Sunday, Oct. 13, 1 p.m., Breath of God
Lutheran Church, Clinton and Pratt streets.
This Oktoberfest includes nine homebrews
to taste, German beer to quaff, and German
food including sausages from Binkert Meat
Products.
Kevin Koenig, who is organizing the
event, said the idea came about at a church
retreat.
“The Lutheran Church being Germanbased, and Martin Luther being German
himself, it all kind of just fit together—a
home run,” he said.
The homebrew sampling Koenig added is
“kind of a neat element to draw some
different people over there.”
“Somebody stepped in and said, ‘I think
we can get some homebrewers,’” he said.
On top of that, Heidi und Heimat Echo, the
cultural band of choice for most Germanthemed events in the Mid Atlantic, will be
playing.
The event is already attracting a large buzz
on Facebook, with many in the Highlandtown
community signaling their intent to attend.
All proceeds from the day go toward
building renovations and other start-up costs
for a mixed-income, neighborhood preschool
at Breath of God. Koenig said that he hopes
the school, slated to open in the fall of 2014,
will help keep families in the neighborhood.
“Everything revolves around school
options for kids,” he said. “People have kids,
and they move out to the county.”
The suggested donation for the event is
$25. For more information and for tickets,
visit breathofgodlc.org/howtohelp.
Oktoberfest at the United
Evangelical Church of Canton
Sunday, Oct. 27, 12-5 p.m., Dillon St.,
3200 block
If you miss the Breath of God Oktoberfest,
an equally fun and family-oriented festival
will be held two weeks later and 0.7 miles
due south. The 3200 block of Dillon St.—
from Bouldin St. to East Ave.—is closed to
traffic, and to accommodate a stage at one
end of the street and a beer garden at the
other.
The beer garden will feature Beck’s
Oktoberfest beer (of course), as well as
Budweiser and Bud Lite. A full German
spread—sour beef and dumplings, bratwurst,
German potato salad, hot dogs, hamburgers
and desserts—will ensure that non-drinkers
get the full Deutsch experience as well.
A smattering of perennial festival
activities—face painting, crafts tables, etc.—
will keep all well occupied.
Heidi und Heimat Echo are providing
musical entertainment.
Sissy Funk, council president at United
Evangelical Church, said that the church’s
first Oktoberfest celebration was meant to be
a one-off party.
“Everybody was saying, ‘Are we going to
do this next year?’” she said. “Now this is
our sixth year.”
It’s also the church’s 140th anniversary.
The United Evangelical Church, which was
founded as Zion Evangelical Church in
September 1873 and received the name the
German United Evangelical Church later
that year, is also doing 140 good deeds this
year to celebrate the milestone.
Although the church dropped the word
“German” from its name in the 1930s, there
are still many members of the congregation
who are German, Funk said, including
herself.
She added that the celebration is an event
for the entire community, not just the
church.
“It’s not about the church, but it is about
the church,” she explained.
For more information, please call 410276-0393.
Eichenkranz Restaurant
611 S. Fagley St.
No mention of German food and beer can
leave out the Eichenkranz, a sought-after
establishment since 1939.
“We have people that come into town—
they were looking for German food on the
Internet and we popped up,” said Betty, a
longtime server.
The sour beef and dumplings, cooked in a
ginger-vinegar sauce, is a perennial favorite
that has won the Guide’s Readers Choice
award several times. The menu also features
schnitzel, duck, rouladen (rolled beef), and a
large selection of wurst (German sausage).
The bar includes brews served in Germany,
such as Bitburger, Franziskaner, Erdinger,
Hofbrau and Beck’s.
For those who enjoy German food on a
tight budget, Eichenkranz offers a free fourth
entree for dining at the restaurant three
nights in the same week.
For more information, visit eichenkranz.
com.
Baltimore Guide editor, Erik Zygmont,
will tell you every day is Oktoberfest at
Eichenkranz Restaurant. | Courtesy photo
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12 BALTIMORE GUIDE
WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 9, 2013
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BALTIMORE GUIDE 13
WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 9, 2013
BIRDS HOUSE
If we had hit as well as
we fielded...
Despite missing the playoffs in 2013, the
Baltimore Orioles have plenty to be proud of;
one of their most impressive accomplishments
was being the best defensive team.
Before I look at their 2013 season, let’s look
back to the 2012 season. Baltimore started off
the year horribly in the field, third baseman
Mark Reynolds being a big culprit. In 15
games at third base, Reynolds made six errors
before being switched to first base where he
seemed a bit more comfortable.
For the 2012 season, Baltimore made 106
errors (11th most) for a .983 fielding percentage. How would they fare in 2013?
The phrase “much better” would not
describe how well they played in the field this
year. The O’s made only 54 errors—a Major
League low—and their .991 fielding percentage was best in the Bigs. The previous record
low for errors in a season was set back in 2003
when the Seattle Mariners committed only 65
errors. Baltimore destroyed that mark.
The O’s already boast Gold Glove winners
J.J. Hardy, Nick Markakis, Adam Jones, and
Matt Wieters, and the way Manny Machado
was playing at third base, he might be joining
them.
Hardy has been an absolute machine at
short for the O’s. Since coming over before the
2011 season, Hardy has made 24 errors.
That’s 24 errors in three full seasons at
shortstop, one of the most difficult positions
to play.
Machado did make 13 errors this year, but
he made many plays that most other third
basemen wouldn’t even have a shot at. Adam
Jones had a great year in center for the O’s and
Nick Markakis didn’t make one error all season. Pretty impressive considering he had 319
chances as he made 312 put outs and had
seven assists.
Matt Wieters had yet another great year
behind the plate for Baltimore. Wieters has
won the last two Gold Gloves for the AL and
this year might be his third in a row after
making only three errors. Wieters also threw
out 35 percent of would-be base stealers.
The O’s certainly have a great foundation to
build on with their defense. If they can make
a few improvements on the mound this winter,
the defense will be there waiting to help get
them back to the playoffs for 2014.
B A LT I M O R E G U I D E ’ S 2 0 1 3
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14 BALTIMORE GUIDE
WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 9, 2013
Man suffers multiple stab wounds; security guard assaulted
Robbery
There were no robbery incidents for the
week of Sept. 29 through Oct. 5 reported in
the police blotter provided by the Southeast
District.
Aggravated Assault
E. Lombard St., 4000 block, Sept. 29,
1:45 a.m. The victim was leaving the bar when
he was attacked by a male suspect, who used
a belt to repeatedly hit him in the face. The
victim needed stitches near his eye. The
suspect had been with another male who fled
the scene, but the suspect remained at the bar
and was arrested.
Mason Ct., 200 block, Sept. 30, 9 p.m.
The victim responded to his girlfriend’s house
to retrieve clothes and paperwork. He reported
that as he went into the kitchen to get a trash
bag for his things, she came in and grabbed a
steak knife with a broken handle, told him he
couldn’t have his belongings, and raised the
knife over his head. He ran to the store and
called police. When they responded to the
location, there was no answer. A warrant was
obtained.
N. Rose St., 100 block, Oct. 2, 8:08 p.m.
Officers responded and found the victim
laying in the street surrounded by blood and
suffering from multiple stab wounds. A
witness who had been driving by reported that
he had been stabbed repeatedly by another
male. An area canvass involving the victim’s
brother in law, who was also a witness, and the
Foxtrot helicopter turned up no leads. The
victim was taken to the hospital for treatment
of multiple stab wounds.
E. Lombard St., 4000 block, Oct. 5,
12:25 a.m. Officers responded to a call for an
attempted assault. A man told them that he
had had words with the suspect at the bar, and
that when he tried to leave, the suspect came
at him with a knife. The victim ran, and the
suspect went back into the bar. Officers posted
themselves at the side entrance in case the
suspect tried to flee that way. The suspect was
stop, identified and arrested at the scene. The
knife, which according to the victim was
tucked in the suspect’s waistband, was not
recovered.
Boston St., 3500 block, Oct. 5, 1:28 a.m.
The victim, a security guard at the construction
site for the new shopping complex, said that he
went to use the porta potty on the premises,
and when he came out he was confronted by
two male suspects. One of them told him,
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Burglary
Specialized mountain bike which was chained
to the wall was taken. The suspect cut the
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Rappolla St., 800 block, Sept. 30, 10 p.m.
An unknown suspect pried open the shed door
and stole some tools.
S. Ann St., 600 block, Sept. 30, 10:45 p.m.
The reporting person went to work and
discovered that two interior office doors were
open but no property was missing. A review of
the security footage revealed that a man
known to the employee had pried open the
windows, entered, taken nothing and left. The
person was hired to do minor janitorial work
for the company.
N. Curley St., unit block, Sept. 30, 11 p.m.
The suspect broke out the front window to the
bar and stole six bottles of alcohol. He then
broke the cigarette machine and took cigarettes.
He was observed by a neighbor removing the
property, and was known to the witness, the
report states. A warrant was issued, and the
man, who is homeless but was using a vacant,
was arrested. The property was recovered.
S. High St., 300 block, Oct. 1, 4 a.m. An
unknown suspect gained access to a side
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“How you like this amigo?” and punched him
in the face and stomach. The victim took out
his baton, but the suspects took it from him
and hit him in the back of the neck and the
shin. The victim then got his mace, but was hit
by the fumes. The suspects fled; the victim
was treated and released at Johns Hopkins
Bayview.
N. Milton Ave., 100 block, Oct. 5, 9 p.m.
The victim walked by a group of juveniles
who asked him for a cigarette. He replied that
he had none, and then they offered to sell him
a phone. Thinking he might be about to be
robbed, the victim went into the nearby store
and called his brother in law. His brother in
law came, and he went to check out the phone.
The juveniles told him not to touch it, and one
of them put a BB gun to his head. A struggle
ensued; the gun fell to the ground and the
suspects fled. The gun turned out to be a BB
gun; an area canvass did not turn up the
suspects.
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CONTINUED ON PAGE 11
BALTIMORE GUIDE 15
WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 9, 2013
CONTINUED FROM PAGE 10
unknown tool to pry it open. The suspect was
in the process of crawling inside when the
complainant came downstairs and he or she
was scared off.
S. Wolfe St., 900 block, Oct. 1, 6:45 p.m.
An unknown man was seen in security
footage breaking into the business. He entered
when the last employee went home for the
day, and took three pairs of pants and pried
open a vending machine.
O’Donnell St., 3400 block, Oct. 1, 10:30
p.m. Someone entered the residence via a side
window and took two laptops and a set of car
keys. The suspect then removed a bass speaker
from the victim’s car.
O’Donnell St., 3000 block, Oct. 1, 11 p.m.
An unknown suspect entered the house via the
rear window while the resident was sleeping
and took a flat-screen TV, video game system,
gym bag, iPod, car keys, and Swiss Army bag
with a laptop and monitor inside. The victim
believes he secured the house before he went to
sleep; no signs of forced entry.
Harmony Ct., 3400 block, Oct. 2, 12:05
a.m. The victim woke up to find her rear
window opened. Missing was a TV. The
window had been unlocked but closed.
S. Bouldin St., 1100 block, Oct., 2, 5 a.m.
The victim came downstairs and saw the
suspect fleeing out the rear. He had cut the
screen to a rear window to gain entry. A laptop
was stolen.
O’Donnell St., 5600 block, Oct. 2, 3 p.m.
An unknown suspect cut the lock on the
property and took an electronic drain snake.
S. Potomac St., 800 block, Oct. 4, 11
a.m. An unknown suspect kicked in the rear
door to the dwelling and took a wallet with
$300, a tablet computer and three jewelry
boxes with a large amount of jewelry.
Larceny from Auto
The Southeast District reported seven thefts
from cars during the week of Sept. 29 through
Oct. 5. Stolen were two GPS units, sunglasses,
an iPod, two suitcases, a drill, a toolbag, a
briefcase, a vehicle title, and “glass cats.” The
majority of the vehicles were located in
Canton.
FOR THE FULL POLICE LOG, PLEASE VISIT
WWW.BALTIMOREGUIDE.COM
Johns Hopkins Breast Center
A woman’s health journey is personal.
When it comes to your breast care, we
make it our most important priority.
From scheduling an appointment to
having a procedure and communicating
your results, our Center on the Johns
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Call 410-550-8282 to schedule
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Our Breast Center team includes, left to right,
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16 BALTIMORE GUIDE
WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 9, 2013
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BALTIMORE GUIDE 17
WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 9, 2013
House Tour: Artists take over for-sale home
CONTINUED FROM PAGE 5
pedestrian access to the front door; the home
is too narrow to accommodate a door adjacent
to the garage.
Another renovation challenge was light.
Other than the front, second-story windows,
there were no openings for natural light for 40
feet deep into the 63-foot structure, as it is not
an end unit. Jennings cut a skylight into the
roof to solve the light problem. The skylight is
a the top of a stairwell toward the middle of
the carriage house, so the natural light shines
into both the second and ground floors.
“I had a much bigger house, but was
looking to downsize,” said Fraser. “Deb’s
carriage house was perfect because it had two
bedrooms, two-and-a-half baths, and
parking—those things were essential to me.
And she finished it beautifully.”
To round out the tour, realtor Laurie Karll
of Prudential PenFed Realty is opening up the
for-sale home at 2200 Baltimore St. as a popup art gallery, featuring local artists Megin
Diamond, Maxine Taylor, Roxanne Rehack,
Athba Hammed, Halsey Frost, Alice Dvoskin,
Danielle Oed, and more.
On the third floor, NFL linebacker Aaron
Maybin, a Butchers Hill resident, will be
showing his own paintings and those of a
couple friends. Maybin, a Baltimore native,
was released from the Cincinnati Bengals in
August and is currently a free agent.
The for-sale home at 2200 Baltimore St. is
a former apothecary shop, and features some
built-in, marble-columned furniture, as well
as the original apothecary labels on the
cabinets.
“It’s a quirky house, but a very cool house,”
said Karll. “I want this really cool house to be
on somebody’s radar.”
Tickets for the House Tour may be purchased
in advance at www.butchershill.org for $12, or
on the day of the tour—at the Patterson Park
“white house,” near the Lombard St.
entrance—for $15. The tour benefits local
nonprofits and two local K-8 schools.
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Long-Filler Churchill Sampler.
Limited Time Offer through
11-30-13
WWW.cigarsintl.
com -Mention ad code SAZ249
SERVICES
item number SP-CA16. One
per customer. If you are not
legal age to purchase tobacco
products please DO NOT enter
our site! For more information
OLD FASHIONED house clean- on how we verify age please
ing Residential or commercial. see WWW.cigarsinternational.
Reasonable rates. Mon-Sat. com/ageverify.
443-831-5254
SERVICES
BOB’S GUTTER service! Expert cleaning and repairs.
Loose gutters fixed! Gutter
guards save $$! Handyman.
Gen. repairs! 410-750-1605 AVERSA BROTHERS inc.
Driveways, sidewalks, patios,
all types of concrete construction. MHIC#50286. Call now:
1AAA ABC Attics, Bsmt, Ga- 410-933-9633/ 868-9643
rage, Yards. 20 yrs of honest
hauling. Same Day. Call Mike:
410-446-1163
ABM’S
HAULING
Clean
Houses Basements, Yards
& Attics Haul free unwanted
cars Match Any Price!!!! 443250-6703
MIKE’S HAULING services
ALL TYPES trash removed
From your home. No job too
big or small. Reas. rates, free
est. Call Mike 410-294-8404
BUY IT,
SELL IT
LOSE IT,
FIND IT
ADVERTISE
IN THE GUIDE
410.732.6600
GUTTERS-ROOFING
SIDING-WINDOWS
DECKING-SUNROOMS
35 years Experience
Free Estimates
Licensed and Insured
Featured Nationally on NBC’s The Today Show
#50888-1
#50888
410-321-0330
www.alliedremodelingtowson.com
www.alliedofcentralmd.com
SPARR CONSTRUCTION SERVICES, INC
3 generations of home building
New Homes
Additions
Concrete Work
Foundations
Driveways
Excavation
410-592-9991
[email protected]
mhic # 26066
SANFORD & SON
hAuliNg & RecycliNg
Trash Removal
House & Estate Clean Outs
Demolition
Shed, Deck & Fence Removal
Tree Trimming & Removal
Yard Work & Landscaping
410-746-5090
Open 7 Days A Week 7-7
FRee eSTiMATeS
Licensed & Insured
Specializing in Concrete &
Masonry Construction Since 1977
Driveways
Brick
Sidewalks
Stone
Patios
Stucco
Steps
Chimneys
Custom Design
Basements
(o) 410.663.1224
(c) 443.562.7589
MHIC #3802
WWW.LSCMD.COM
CUSTOM CONTRACTOR
UNLIMITED
Fully Licensed & Insured
Specializing in:
Brick & Stone Repair
Sidewalks, Porches & Steps
Chimney/Fireplace Repair
Brick Re-pointing
Small Home Improvements
• 2-story Foyers/Vaulted Ceilings
• Military Discounts
• Drywall/Water Damage Repair • Senior Citizen Discounts
• Power Washing/Decks/Homes
• Licensed & Insured
• Handyman/Carpentry
• MHIC#70338
• Wallpaper Removal
www.custom-contractor.com
MHIC#79665
410.356.6202
www.handsonpainters.com 410-242-1737
EASTWOOD ROOFERS
All Types of Rubber Roofs
New Hot Asphalt Roofs
Hot Tar Coatings
ALL TYPES OF ROOFING
GUTTERS, SKYLIGHTS & ROOF CERTS.
ALUMINUM COATINGS & MORE
FREE ESTIMATES In Business 42 years
Senior Discount • Emer. Repairs
410-633-4552 License #1595
Eastwood Stop-Leak
EVERD ROOFING INC.
Free Estimates/FHA Certs/Senior Discounts/ Emergency Service
General Home Improvements
Skylites/Gutters/Siding
3141 Elliott Street
Baltimore, Maryland 21224
MHIC# 32741
We Now Accept
410-522-0177
Serving Canton, Fell’s Point, Federal Hill & Highlandtown for over 30 years
TO PLACE A CLASSIFIED AD CALL 410.732.6600
ADOPTIONS
BALTIMORE GUIDE 19
20 BALTIMORE GUIDE
SERVICE DIRECTORY
AUTOMOTIVE REPAIR
EXTERMINATOR
NICHOLAS
FLEET STREET SHELL
601 S. Luzerne Ave, Baltimore, MD 21224
410-675-4338
• MD State Inspections
$
• MD Emissions Test Repairs
5.00 off
• Factory Scheduled Maintenance Premium 3000 Mile
Maintenance
• Foreign and Domestic Vehicles
Service
• Computer Diagnostic Specialist
with this coupon
• Road Service & Towing Available
HOME IMPROVEMENT
EXTERMINATING
Termite & Pest Control
MDA#26036
Serving Baltimore
City & County
410-282-5560
410-558-0315
ROACHES, WATERBUGS, ANTS,
FLEAS, BEDBUGS
www.allpest.com
HOUSE CLEANING
Residential & CommeRCial
Cleaning
Insured & Bonded • Established 1995
FRee estimates
410-522-4928 Raylene
or 410-916-2971 Dot
$20
off
Second cleanIng
Moppin Mommas • 410-522-4928
ROOFING
3727 E. Pratt St.
410-285-5556
P easant
ROOFERS
Serving Baltimore since the 1930’s!
• Roofing of all types
• Skylights • Spouting
FREE ESTIMATES
Residential & Commercial
License #405
We Guarantee a Good Job
at a Reasonable Price!
Bed Bug Control
Moppin
Momma’s
Inc.
PLUMBING
HOME IMPROVEMENT
ARNOLDS
SERVICING THE CANTON AREA FOR OVER 20 YEARS
443-710-5002
Serving Baltimore
for over 30 years
Lic# 589 Dept.
of Agriculture
$$$$$$$$$$$$$
Senior Discount
Visa, Mastercard
& Discover Accepted
Stilwell Plumbing
10% OFF with this ad!
Plumbing & Drain Cleaning Specialist
Reasonable Rates
Fast Service
24 Hour
Emergency Service
Free Phone Estimates
Residential and Commercial
410-285-5351
Master Plumber: Carl Stilwell, Lic #18002
$$$$$$$$$$$$$
Herman Rossmark
ALWAYS
WATERPROOFING
Residential & Commercial
1-888-339-0660
• Roofing • Spouting
• Skylights • Chimneys
• Siding • Painting
• Glass Block Windows
• Deck Tops • Railings
FREE ESTIMATES
410-675-5440
MHIC# 1448
MIKE’S
CARPENtRY
ALL HOME REPAIRS
Repair & Install New Doors
Windows • Locks • Siding • Gutters
Drywall • Painting • Plumbing
GeneraL
HOME IMPROvEMENtS & REPAIRS
FREE EStIMAtES
SENIOR
CITIZEN
DISCOUNT
20 Years Experience
Insured & Bonded
Call Mike
443-604-3931
MHIC #43637
PLUMBING
WATERPROOFING
ROOFING INC
WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 9, 2013
We Will Beat Any
Professional Written Estimate!
Sump Pumps • Drainage Lines
Water Removal • Window Well Drains
Structural Repairs
Downspout Lead Offs
Rubber Membrane Walls
Concrete/ Crawlspace
Basement Digouts
Mold Remediation
MHIC #94024
FREE ESTIMATE
Tom
Allen
Home Services
efficient,
reliable,
honest
General
Household Repairs
410-344-7762
www.tomallenhomeservices.com
licensed and insured
mHIC#125297
Thank You Baltimore!
For voting us your
Favorite Handyman 2 years in a row
AQUA
Jim BuSH
PlumBing
Drain Cleaning &
Sewer Line Replacement
EmErgEncy SErvicE
PLUMBING & HEATING
Boiler Installation & Repair
Don Peyton • Lic #7107
Credit Cards Accepted
410-563-0300
In Business for 32 Years
Senior Discounts
24 Hour
• Plumbing • Heating
• Bathroom & Kitchen
Remodeling
• Waterproofing
• Drain Cleaning
410-644-1399
Let’s build a
BRIGHTER
Baltimore.
We can build a stronger local economy and create more
opportunities for growth and change in our community by
supporting our local Home Improvement Businesses and Services.
When you patronize a local business, you are investing in a
brighter environment and future for the community you live in,
and that’s something we all can believe in!
QUALITY, LOCAL BUSINESSES DEDICATED TO IMPROVING OUR COMMUNITY
Reach Baltimore’s Best Service Professionals
Advertise your business in the Baltimore Guide’s Service Directory
Call JESS CHANEY today!
410.732.6618 • [email protected]
A
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WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 9, 2013
BALTIMORE GUIDE 21
EMPLOYMENT
J.T.P.
General Commercial
Contractor
• Gutters
• Drywall
• Painting
• Masonary
Work
• Brick Pointing
• Steps
• Stucco
• Concrete
• Demolitions
• Kitchens/
Bathrooms
call: 443-621-7040
Licensed & Insured 2608
FALL SPECIAL
Rain Gutters starting at $350/12 ft
SEEKING DEDICATED ADVERTISING
SALES PROFESSIONALS
Unlimited Earning Potential
Immediate Openings!
is looking for career-minded individuals.
Duties include:
• building a client base
• reaching targeted revenue goals
• understanding the client’s needs and making
appropriate advertising recommendations.
Familiarity with Canton, Fell’s Point, Butcher’s Hill,
Little Italy, Highlandtown, Brewer’s Hill, Greektown
and Dundalk a plus.
Skills needed:
Time Management
Self-motivated
Organizational
Highly Dynamic
Detail-oriented
Customer Service Driven
Work for a company that is growing
and committed to your success!
Email resume to
Green Thumb
Leaf
& Snow
Removal
1 Cut FREE
- Will Beat
any Price!
Mowing, Mulching, Patios!!!
For every 6 yards of mulch receive one
for FREE. 443-895-1176
Mhic#64323
FREE
ONLINE
CLASSIFIEDS
MERCHANDISE
ANTIQUE SHOW Admission
free. Maryland Antiques Show.
Oct 19th & 20th 2013. Sat.
9am-5pm, Sun 10am-4pm.
Timonium Fair Grounds. Items
for the home and collector.
Reference book sale. Free appraisals Sun. Free ADM both
days
NEED A JOB?
POST ONE OR SCAN THOUSANDS AT
RIDERWOOD SAT 10/12, 8a1p. 1717 Thornton Ridge Rd.
Multi family. Proceeds to children’s charity, Kids4Kenya.
Huge selection, new & used
furn & fixtures, antiques, electronics, sports equip, books,
Halloween & Xmas items
WWW.BALTIMOREGUIDE.COM
A-1 firewood seasoned oak.
$130 1/2 cord, $190 full cord.
$60 extra to stack. Call 443DULANEY VALLEY mem gar- 686-1567
dens side by side graves 2
caskets/vaults. Cost $14,000
sell $9500 obo 410-340-5085
PARKVIEW CEMETARY LOTS
Side by Side burial lots in
parkville. New section- Garden of Peace. asking $2000
call 410-569-5686
COMMUNITY YARD sale Towson. Naturo, Mussula, & Yakona Rds. (Corner Loch Raven
& Joppa) Sat 10/12, 8-1
GRAND OPENING oct 12th
Salvation Army Family Store
in Cockeysville 10912 York Rd
at 9am. Clothes, jewelry, tools
music, furniture & appliances
for sale
WAR MEMORABILIA Wtd, I
Buy Uniforms, Weapons Medals, Scrapbooks etc. Call 410241-8171
OR TYPE INTO YOUR BROWSER
WWW.MARYLAND.
BALTIMOREGUIDE.COM
• Real Estate • For Rent • Jobs •
• Personals • Forums • Services •
[email protected]
No phone calls please. EOE
TELE
AGENTS
NEEDED
Calling for a well known charity.
Bilingual welcome & encouraged.
If you are reliable and dedicated
we need you. Only part time,
PM shift available. Saturdays are
mandatory.
For more information call
410.327.5900
or apply at
Central Donation
Services
3702 Bank Street
Baltimore, MD 21224
Monday-Friday 2-4 PM only.
To work from home call
410.522.2221
41 PRODUCTION Workers
needed 41 Trabajadores de
producción necesita Seeking
production workers including
machine operators and hand
workers to start immediately.
History of solid work ethic and
excellent reliability a must.
This fast paced production facility needs career driven individuals to assist with production lines, start and stop
equipment, load and unload
items, lift materials, pack
items, maintain work areas,
feed items onto equipment for
processing. EOE. CALL 410
761-9640 or 410 663-8933
CUSTOMER RELATIONS ATTENTION NEED WORK? Earn
$1200/wk Seeking reliable,
motivated individuals with
good personality for F/T work.
We offer training and support.
No EXPERIENCE NEEDED.
CALL 410-616-0615
HUMAN SERVICES Are you
looking for a job near your
home that is fun and rewarding? Are you personable,
dependable, trustworthy, and
do you have good communication skills? Do you have any
experience with persons with
disabilities? Richcroft, Inc., a
non-profit agency, is seeking
to fill two part time positions
in the Baltimore County -
Parkville area working with a
young woman. Pay is $12.36
an hour, Wednesday through
Monday, 1p-6p. This young
lady needs help finding local
fun activities and increasing
her physical activity level.
You must have reliable transportation and a valid driver’s
license w/less than 3 pts. If
interested, please complete
an application on-line at www.
Richcroft.com Richcroft is an
equal opportunity employer.
Ref #600-693
MAINTENANCE
SUPERVISORS TECHNICIANS Management company is seeking
Maintenance Technicians with
at least 3 years experience
in apartment maintenance.
HVAC Cert. preferred but ability to repair HVAC mandatory.
Must have tools, transportation & a valid driver’s license.
Pre-employment background
screening is required. Excellent salary and full benefits.
Call 410-683-1100 between
8AM & 3PM only or fax resume to 410-683-1400
MEDICAL BILLERS Well established White Marsh company, seeks exp’d, competent,
Medical Billers. Exc. packages.
Fax resume to: 410-335-3113
SU_Press AssoAD_Pass_2013_Layout 1 9/10/13 10:25 AM Page 1
Come see how SU is as distinctive as you!
The Princeton Review’s
Best 378 Colleges
U.S. News & World Report’s
Best Colleges
Kiplinger’s
Personal Finance
“100 Best Values
in Public Colleges”
To register for campus tours, information sessions
and open houses visit www.salisbury.edu/admissions
or call 410-543-6161.
JOURNALISM STUDENT?
— PAID SUMMER INTERNSHIPS —
The Reese Cleghorn Internship program offers paid interships at MDDC
newspapers in Maryland, Delaware and the District of Columbia.
• Newsreporting
• Copyediting
• Photojournalism
APPLICATION DEADLINE:
Wednesday, November 20, 2013
Visit www.MDDCPress.com for information & applications.
TO PLACE A CLASSIFIED AD CALL 410.732.6600
SERVICES
22 BALTIMORE GUIDE
WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 9, 2013
TO PLACE A CLASSIFIED AD CALL 410.732.6600
RENTALS AND REAL ESTATE
Outer Banks 2013 Parade of Homes
TOUR 22 New Homes
From Corolla to
Manteo, NC
a l t i m o re
BG
UIDE
CROSSWORD
October 10-13
Tickets $10-Good all 4 days
252-449-8232
the friendly people...
We’ll buy your house
for cash today!
We will buy your home today, no hassles, no real
estate agents, no commissions, no closing costs.
We will buy any house, in any condition, anywhere.
How it works:
1
It’s simple. Call us right now for a free confidential
estimate, right over the phone!
2
If you like our estimate, we’ll schedule an
immediate appointment to see your house. We’ll
give you a firm price commitment that day. We can
settle any time you like.
3
Settlement only takes about 15-30 minutes in our
office. You will leave with your check knowing that
you made the right decision to sell your house to
iiTrust, the friendly people.
For a FREE estimate
call (410) 625.2221
Visit us online at www.iitrust.com
Preview tour at www.obhomebuilders.org
Live Here. Play Here.
The Quiet Resorts
Visit Fairway Village by LC Homes
Ocean View, Delaware
Luxury Townhomes with First Floor Owner’s Suite
Affordably priced from $229,900*
3 Bedrooms • 2 1/2 Baths • Community Pool, Clubhouse & Tennis Courts
Just 2 Miles from Bethany Beach & Boardwalk, Restaurants,
Tax-Free Shopping and much more!
Call for Your Private Tour
302.541.8434
www.LCHomesDE.com
*Information subject to change without notice. See a community sales associate for full details.
PREMIUM LAND AUCTION
Loudoun County 532± Acres (7 Tracts)
20598 Watermill Rd • Purcellville, VA
In area of wineries, estates, and suburban farms just west of D.C.
Practical commute to the D.C. • Open and wooded land with seclusion & privacy
Tracts ranging from 44± to 123± acres • 49 wells drilled on the property
Property Previews: October 6, 10, 13, 17, 20 (1-3pm)
Saturday, October 26th at 10am On-Site
Terms: 10% buyers premium. Closing to occur in 30 days. Full terms online. VAAF93
Employees, directors and officers of Farm Credit of the Virginias, ACA, and their immediate family and companies in
which they have an interest are not eligible under federal regulations to purchase this property for their own account
The Counts Realty & Auction Group
1ST FLOOR APARTMENT FOR
RENT 1st Floor Apartment.
Grundy Street. Job verification a must. Call 410-2845805
OC 2BR ocean front condo,
Fountainhead, 116th St., tennis, pool. Senior citizen discount. Call 410-668-0680
CARNEY4BR 2.5BA SFH, CAC,
bsmt w/family room, fenced
yard, new kitchen. $219,500.
Call 410-668-0680
Holabird
Manor
1708 Dundalk Ave.
Near bus lines 10 & 20
w/w carpet • A/C
Senior Apartments
1 BR $640 plus utilities
1 BR w/Balcony $670 plus utilities
1 BR w/Den $700 plus utilities
410-284-2500
E.H.O.
www.countsauction.com
THIS AD!
FOR SALE
Press Service
2000 Capital Drive, Annapolis, MD 21401
800-780-2991
SPREAD YOUR MESSAGE
to over 4 Million readers
with an ad this size for
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Pick a state! ,
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MDDC Press works with fellow press associations across the country to give
you the best possible buys on advertising wherever you need it. We take care
of scheduling and placement at no extra cost to you, and you save time and
money. Call Wanda Smith at ext. 6 today.
Press Service
2000 Capital Drive, Annapolis, MD 21401
1-855-721-6332
www.mddcpress.com
SOCIAL MEDIA
LIKE US… FOLLOW US!
ACROSS
1. Most favorables
7. 23rd Greek letter
10. Rated higher
12. Immature
herring
13. Malignant skin
neoplasm
14. Orange-red
spinel
15. Hunted beings
16. Be obedient to
17. Excavate with a
shovel
18. = to 100 cauris
19. Lose hold of
21. Highest card
22. Western Union
message
27. The “Show Me”
state
28. Early photo
process
33. A public
promotion
34. A group of
statues
36. A single thing
37. Ireland
38. A raised
speaking platform
39. Leavened bread
40. Farm animal
shelter
41. Oral polio
vaccine
44. Chinese fine
silk silver
45. Chocolate-
colored acidic
pulp pod
48. ____ off
49. Hagiographa
50. Manuscripts,
abbr.
51. Over the sea
DOWN
1. Stare
impertinently
2. Address a deity
3. Converts hide
into leather
4. Matrimonial
response
5. 13th Hebrew
letter
6. Dentist’s
organization
7. Fleshy fungus
caps
8. Kill violently
9. License &
passport
10. Refereed
11. Arbor
framework
12. Luxuriant dark
brown fur
14. Group
purchasing
protest
17. Insecticide
18. An island group
of the S Pacific
20. A wooden hole
plug
23. A purine base
found in DNA
and RNA
24. Spanish park
25. Atomic #18
26. Married woman
29. And, Latin
30. Cantonese
dialect
31. Causing
physical hurt
32. Short trips or
tasks
35. Small craving
36. Paddled
38. Leuciscus
leuciscus’
40. Parting phrases:
good-____
41. Figure skater
Yuka
42. Opera song
43. Create social or
emotional ties
44. Opposite of
LTM
45. Icahn’s airline
46. Air Reserve
base (abbr.)
47. Russian manned
space station
Answers. Don’t peek!
BALTIMORE GUIDE 23
WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 9, 2013
Mexican restaurant to fill Shuckers
restrictions including “no defined dance
floor,” “no outdoor speakers,” “all music must
be turned off at last call,” and “the restaurant
must become a member of the Fell’s Point
Medallion Program.”
In the Medallion Program, administered by
Fell’s Point Main Street, businesses contribute
a portion of income to help pay for Waterfront
Partnership services—trash pick-up, basic
maintenance, and Segway patrols—along the
1600 and 1700 blocks of Thames St. and
along Broadway north to the 700 block.
by DANIELLE SWEENEY
[email protected]
Two weeks ago, the Baltimore City Board
of Liquor License Commissioners approved a
new class “B” restaurant liquor license for
John Durkin, Michael Mastellone and Derek
Blazer, of Thames Street Baltimore, LLC.
The three plan to reopen 1629 Thames
Street—the location of Shuckers, which closed
this summer—as an upscale, Mexican-inspired
restaurant.
Durkin and Mastellone hold a liquor license
for both Mad River Bar and
Grill in Federal Hill and Bond
Street Social in Fells Point.
Blazer holds a liquor license for
Bond Street Social.
The three signed an memorandum of understanding (with
the two local neighborhood
associations, Fell’s Point
Residents’ Association and
Fell’s Point Community
Organization. The MOU was
read into the record at the Liquor
Board.
According to Fogleman, the The now defunct Shucker’s Restaurant in Fell’s Point.
MOU detailed voluntary license | Photo by Erik Zygmont
Settling Foundation?
Damp Crawl Space or Wet Basement?
Tilting Chimney?
Cracked Bricks?
Cracked Drywall?
Doors, Windows
Hard to
Open & Close?
Owner/Broker
443-690-0552
ADVANCE
REALTY DIRECT
Rebecca Bossalina
410-491-9570
410-288-6700
-6700
BALTIMORE BA7951010
Lovely 3 bedroom, 1 full 2-1/2 bath
home with finished lower level.
End of group home with beautifully
landscaped yard. This home is a
must see.
BALTIMORE BA7962227
Huge 5 BR/2BA house w/den. Needs
some work but has great potential.
As-is. Buyer to verify ground rent.
If ground rent exists, seller will
not redeem. Subject to third party
approval.
BALTIMORE BA7962220
Nice 4 BR, 1.5 BA townhouse. As-is.
Seller will make no repairs. Needs
a little work, but shows well. Buyer
responsible for verifying ground rent.
If ground rent exists, seller will not
redeem. Subject to third party approval.
BALTIMORE BC7973131
Updated 4 BR/3 BA Cape Cod. Large
yard, off street parking. Shows well
but sold strictly as is. Subject to 3rd
party approval. Buyer is responsible
for verifying ground rent. If ground rent exists, seller
will not redeem. Subject to existing lease.
BALTIMORE BC7992547
Beautiful Cape Cod bungalow
style home with 3 BR and 3 FULL
BS, finished LL, deck, spacious
kitchen, mud room. Being sold
strictly as-is, seller will make no repairs but shows very
well. Sold subject to existing lease, exp. 9/30.
BALTIMORE BC8012612
3 BR, 3 BA Cape Cod with nice lot.
Currently tenant occupied. Subject
to third party approval. Sold as
is. Buyer reponsible for verifying
ground rent. If ground rent exists,
seller will not redeem. Sold subject to existing lease.
BAYVIEW BA8054276
4 BR, 3 BA, approx. 2,800 sq.
ft., including master suite w/
balcony, multi decks, spiral
staircases, garage & driveway.
Large main level FR. Master BA
has whirlpool tub & separate shower.
www.jeswork.com
$AVE $500
*
Any Job Over $3000
888-904-1760
Kristi Booth
443-690-1185
CECIL CC8008743
Cinnamon Woods modular 55 +
Community. 2 BR, 2 BA w/den or
3rd BR. Vaulted ceilings, gas FP,
sidewalk, shed. Breakfast nook &
buffet, ww carpet. Master BR w/walk in closet, huge BA
w/double sinks, dressing table & built ins.
Wet Basement?
Financing Available!
*Must show coupon upon inspection appointment. Not to be combined with
any other offer. Offer expires 10 days after FREE inspection.
1.75%
BALTIMORE OFFICE
BALTIMORE BC7992279
3 bedroom 1.5 bath, roof 1 year old
with 30 year shingle, water heater is
2 yr old. Home comes complete with
jungle gym in back yard.
Cracked Slab?
FREE Inspection & Estimate
OUR FEE
AS LOW AS
“Waterfront Specialist”
Damp Crawl Space?
Bowing Walls?
Full Service Discount ExpertsSM
BALTIMORE BC8083053
Completely remodeled. Updated
window, doors, carpet and more!
Granite counters, stainless appl,
ceramic tile. Parking and water
views! Great deck in rear with
fenced yard for hours of entertaining!
Uneven Floors?
Cracked Blocks?
PHIL
TIRABASSI
Thank you for voting us one of
East Baltimore’s Best Realtors!
OFFICE
BALTIMORE BC8075188
Move in ready. 3 BR. Finished
basement. 1 & 1/2 Baths. Estate Sale.
This is a must see.
BALTIMORE BC8168872
This is a lovely home with some
tender love and care it can be your
dream home. Parking pad in rear.
BALTIMORE BA8175955
This is a lovely 3 bedroom home
with a finished lower level.1.5 bath.
Close Bayview, shopping , schools
and belt way.
BALTIMORE CITY
BA8178935
This is a beautiful home.
It is close to bus line
and shopping. Vouchers
welcome!
BALTIMORE CITY BA8184224
This is a lovely 3 bedroom home
with large living room and 1/2 bath
on main level with large yard. This
home is a must see.
BALTIMORE BC8192305
This is a beautiful 3 bedroom 1
full 2 half bath home with finished
lower level with fire place. 2 great
decks overlooking the woods, eat
in kitchen with formal dining room.
This is a true must see.
410-288-6700
www.AdvanceRealtyDirect.com
Now Interviewing New & Experienced Agents.
24 BALTIMORE GUIDE
WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 9, 2013
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PHYSICAL THERAPY
Giovanni’s
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Dynamic Physical Therapy
In The Highlandtown
Healthy Living Center
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Try Our Gourmet Pizza
It’s the Best!
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MON. TO THURS.:11AM - 10PM
FRIDAY & SAT.: 11AM - 11PM
SUNDAY: 12 NOON - 10PM
FREE PATIENT
TRANSPORTATION
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3700 Fleet St. - Suite 109
443-438-7214
Mon-Thu 8 am-7 pm, Fri 8 am-4 pm
PUBLIC PARKING GARAGE
LOCALLY OWNED & OPERATED
We are a community-based, full-service rehabilitation provider.
Est. in DE and PA in 1995, this is the first center in MD.
Accepting most insurances. Call to confirm.
Personal, Medicare, Medicaid, Workers Comp, Motor Vehicle
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410-534-4040
Fax: 410-534-8801
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