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Where are the food trucks on this beautiful Monday?
The Baltimore SunWe're making a few tweaks to the Baltimore Sun Food Truck Finder. Here's where your Baltimore food trucks are today: The Gypsy Queen will be at President and Pratt streets. Philly Mignon will be at Commerce and Pratt streets. Kooper's Chowhound will...Tags: Canton (Baltimore, Maryland)
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Renaissance for North Avenue as arts district
When Christa Daring was a student, she rode a bus from her Waverly home and crossed North Avenue on her way to classes at the Baltimore School for the Arts. "This was always oh-so no-man's land," she said of the commercial crosstown street that is...
Tags: Vegetarian Diet, Arts, Lifestyle and Leisure, Baltimore School for the Arts, Restaurants
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Can a supplement reverse graying hair?
During her post-divorce reinvention, Judy Allor decided to do something about the gray hair that had been coming in at her temples and around her ears since her early 50s. Highlights didn't seem to take — so when Allor saw an advertisement in...
Tags: Drugs and Medicines, Dietary Supplements, Real Estate Buyers, Services and Shopping, Real Estate
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William H. Hoffman, engineer
William H. Hoffman, a retired U.S. Food and Drug Administration official, died Monday from septic shock after kidney transplant surgery at the University of Maryland Medical Center. The longtime Ellicott City resident was 81. William Harry Hoffman was...
Tags: Washington, DC, National Institutes of Health, U.S. Army, Food and Drug Administration, Bethlehem Steel Corp.
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Seagirt Marine Terminal's super cranes celebrated
He didn't get down on one knee, but Christopher Lee wooed his wife with a skyscraping crane she literally could call her own at the dedication of the port of Baltimore's berth capable of handling the world's largest cargo ships. As founder of Highstar...
Tags: Culture, Inner Harbor, Fort McHenry, Stephanie Rawlings-Blake, Politics
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Posting calories: 'So yesterday' already?
At chain restaurants across the country, the ink is scarcely dry on new menus posting the calorie counts of food and beverage options. But already, public health experts are debating whether there might be better ways to influence Americans' nutritional...Tags: Physical Fitness and Exercise, Local Government, Weight, Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act, Lifestyle and Leisure
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Peabody director Sharkey to step down
After seven years as director of the Peabody Institute of the Johns Hopkins University, Jeffrey Sharkey is stepping down. He will remain with the conservatory until a successor is named. "So much of what I hoped to accomplish I feel I have accomplished,...
Tags: Culture, Education, Baltimore Symphony Orchestra, Music, Arts and Culture
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Jean-Pierre G. Meyer, Hopkins professor
Jean-Pierre G. Meyer, former professor and chairman of the Johns Hopkins University mathematics department whose escape from Nazi-occupied France became the subject of a children's book, died April 24 of heart failure at his Guilford residence. He was 83....
Tags: Japan, Homewood, U.S. Army, Brown University, Teaching and Learning
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Action in Maturity to mark 40th anniversary
Esther Bonnet, 100, is always thinking about new plans for Action in Maturity — as she has since she co-founded the transportation service for seniors more than 40 years ago. During a recent visit from Elizabeth Briscoe, AIM's executive director,...
Tags: Govans, Harford Road, Human Interest, Baltimore Museum of Art, Hampden
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Aramark says it will lay off 202 dining workers
Aramark warned state regulators that it will lay off about 200 dining-service workers in Baltimore as a result of a lost contract, the Maryland Department of Labor, Licensing and Regulation said Tuesday. The 202-job cut will come when Aramark's...
Tags: Employees, Career and Workplace, Unemployment, Lifestyle and Leisure, Labor Legislation
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Toxic waste in Severn wells investigated
Groundwater contamination from toxic waste dumped decades ago at a nearby factory in the Severn area has prompted widespread testing of residential wells and put eight homes on bottled water, state officials said. The eight households have been...
Tags: Environmental Issues, Environmental Politics, Water Supply, Health and Safety at Work, Medical Procedures and Tests
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Uncovered: Ritual public drunkenness and sex in ancient Egypt
I'll bet you that archaeologist Betsy Bryan's perspective on reality-show behavior is a little longer than most. Since 2001, Bryan has led the excavation of the temple complex of the Egyptian goddess Mut in modern-day Luxor, the site of the city of Thebes...
Tags: Health and Safety at School, Obstetrics, Medical Specialization, Arts, Religion and Belief
May 13, 2013
|Story| Baltimore Sun
May 10, 2013
|Column| Baltimore Sun
May 8, 2013
|Story| Chicago Tribune
May 8, 2013
|Story| Baltimore Sun
May 8, 2013
|Story| Baltimore Sun
May 8, 2013
|Story| Los Angeles Times
May 10, 2013
|Story| Baltimore Sun
May 11, 2013
|Story| Baltimore Sun
May 1, 2013
|Story| Baltimore Sun
Apr 30, 2013
|Story| Baltimore Sun
Apr 30, 2013
|Story| Baltimore Sun
Apr 29, 2013
|Story| Los Angeles Times
Original site for Johns Hopkins University topic gallery.