Baltimore Guide - July, 24 2013

16
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 ADMIN- ISTRATION 323-325 S. Conkling Street 410-675-7900 SATURDAY, JULY 27 TH 11 AM -7 PM 5400-5500 BLOCKS OF HARFORD ROAD BMOREMAINSTREET.COM Serving East Baltimore since 1927 526 S. CONKLING STREET | 410-732-6600 | [email protected] | WWW.BALTIMOREGUIDE.COM WEDNESDAY, JULY 24-TUESDAY, JULY 30, 2013 News ............................... 1-5 Calendar ...................... 6 & 7 Features ...................... 8 & 9 Crime ................................. 10 Real Estate ........................ 15 INSIDE... IRON GIANT: What's underway in a Haven St. fabrication shop? page 8 FREE Brutal heat didn’t keep artist Kerry Cesen from finishing his mural in Fell’s Point last week. Maybe the underwater scene kept him cool. | Photo by Erik Zygmont Artist distills and bottles Fell’s Point essence BY ERIK ZYGMONT [email protected] CONTINUED ON PAGE 3 BY DANIELLE SWEENEY [email protected] Canton-based group wants to press pause on the Red Line Artist Kerry Cesen has spruced up the 400 block of S. Broadway with a mural depicting “the aesthetic of Fell’s Point.” Cesen said that the scene in the bottle is meant to show the unique architecture and the influence of the water in the harbor-side neighborhood. As with many murals, interesting details and “Easter eggs” are visible to those who take the time to look carefully. See the velocipede submerged in the water? “There are a lot of things people can read into [the mural],” says Cesen. “I was playing with scale and distortion.” The mural was fully initiated by Cesen himself, who approached the building owner, raised funds, and secured approval from the Commission for Historical and Architectural Preservation. A freelance artist and illustrator, Cesen, 26, lives in Baltimore’s Barre Circle neighborhood, but visits Fell’s Point often. “I love it there,” he says. “Sometimes I just like going and walking there, walking the streets and alleyways. I just love the atmosphere and the friendly people—the friendly, interesting people.” He completed the mural on Tuesday, July 16, possibly one of the hottest days of the summer. The mural is on the south side of Broadway Bicycle, facing a vacant lot and visible to motorists and pedestrians traveling north. As the Red Line system glides a little closer to becoming a reality, one East Baltimore group is calling for the process to halt. The Right Rail Coalition, a Canton- based group of transportation activists, would like the Red Line to be put on hold while the community considers whether the $2.6 billion-plus project is really the most efficient and cost-effective use of transportation resources, particularly for the east side. Ben Rosenberg, a RRC member and attorney who lives in Canton, says some of the RRC’s broad concerns are that the Red Line—the most expensive public project in Baltimore history—doesn’t take advantage of the public transportation that’s already here, and that the city needs a coherent

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Baltimore Guide - July, 24 2013

Transcript of Baltimore Guide - July, 24 2013

Page 1: Baltimore Guide - July, 24 2013

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 ADMIN-

ISTRATION

323-325 S. Conkling Street 410-675-7900

SATURDAY, JULY 27TH 11AM-7PM

5400-5500 BLOCKS OF HARFORD ROADBMOREMAINSTREET.COM

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East Baltimore since 1927

526 S . CONKLING STREET | 410 -732- 660 0 | INFO@BALT IMOREGUIDE.COM | W W W.BALT IMOREGUIDE.COM

WEDNESDAY, JULY 24-TUESDAY, JULY 30, 2013

News ............................... 1-5

Calendar ...................... 6 & 7

Features ...................... 8 & 9

Crime .................................10

Real Estate ........................15

INSIDE... IRON GIANT:What's underwayin aHaven St. fabrication shop?

page 8

FREE

Brutal heat didn’t keep artist Kerry Cesen from fi nishing his mural in Fell’s Point last week. Maybe the underwater scene kept him cool. | Photo by Erik Zygmont

Artist distills and bottles Fell’s Point essenceBY ERIK ZYGMONT [email protected]

CONTINUED ON PAGE 3

BY DANIELLE [email protected]

Canton-based group wants to press pause on the Red Line

Artist Kerry Cesen has spruced up the 400 block of S. Broadway with a mural depicting “the aesthetic of Fell’s Point.”

Cesen said that the scene in the bottle is meant to show the unique architecture and the influence of the water in the harbor-side neighborhood. As with many murals, interesting details and “Easter eggs” are visible to those who take the time to look carefully. See the velocipede submerged in the water?

“There are a lot of things people can read into [the mural],” says Cesen. “I was playing with scale and distortion.”

The mural was fully initiated by Cesen himself, who approached

the building owner, raised funds, and secured approval from the Commission for Historical and Architectural Preservation.

A freelance artist and illustrator, Cesen, 26, lives in Baltimore’s Barre Circle neighborhood, but visits Fell’s Point often.

“I love it there,” he says. “Sometimes I just like going and walking there, walking the streets and alleyways. I just love the atmosphere and the friendly people—the friendly, interesting people.”

He completed the mural on Tuesday, July 16, possibly one of the hottest days of the summer.

The mural is on the south side of Broadway Bicycle, facing a vacant lot and visible to motorists and pedestrians traveling north.

As the Red Line system glides a little closer to becoming a reality, one East Baltimore group is calling for the process to halt.

The Right Rail Coalition, a Canton-based group of transportation activists, would like the Red Line to be put on hold while the community considers whether the $2.6 billion-plus project is really the most efficient and cost-effective use of transportation resources, particularly for the east side.

Ben Rosenberg, a RRC member and attorney who lives in Canton, says some of the RRC’s broad concerns are that the Red Line—the most expensive public project in Baltimore history—doesn’t take advantage of the public transportation that’s already here, and that the city needs a coherent

Page 2: Baltimore Guide - July, 24 2013

2 BALTIMORE GUIDE WEDNESDAY, JULY 24, 2013 NEWS BRIEFS

The power outages in Fell’s Point, Upper Fell’s Point and Canton last week were caused by a “host” of factors, exacerbated by the increased demand on the system caused by the heat, according to Baltimore Gas and Electric Company spokesperson Rachael Lighty.

Lighty said that a high number of renovations to homes in the area was a factor.

“We’ve seen the load increase over the years, and that combined with the extreme heat has put a high demand on the system,” she said.

Lighty said that a piece of underground equipment failed, setting off a chain reaction.

The Baltimore Guide staff noticed that

traffic lights in Fell’s Point were out Tuesday afternoon, from Broadway east to roughly Washington St., and as far north as Eastern Ave.

Residents in the area had been complaining of power outages since Monday, July 15, while temperatures soared into the high 90s and above through last week.

Lighty confirmed that BGE was routing some of the power through overhead lines to relieve the primary underground system through the heat wave. A more permanent fix is in the works, she added.

“We are working to upgrade the equipment in the area so that next time we have a peak demand week, we will have new equipment to handle it,” Lighty said.

Power failure hits mid-heatwave

A WATER MAIN BREAK on Monday evening left many in Southeast Baltimore with either low pressure or no water whatsoever.

Department of Public Works spokesman Kurt Kocher said that a 36-inch, 80-year-old water main on Holabird Ave. near S. Clinton St. broke on Monday night, sometime around 8 p.m.

“We started getting calls about water outages, and low water pressure, in a wide ranging area including Canton,

Butchers Hill, Cherry Hill, Brooklyn and Curtis Bay,” he said. Kocher said that crews responded immediately, and by 1

a.m. Tuesday, “the break was isolated enough that water pressure began to return.”

The Curtis Bay water tank, however, had been drained by the break, so many in the area surrounding Curtis Bay still had water pressure issues on Tuesday, Kocher said.

The DPW advised water users to practice “conservation” on Tuesday. Kocher acknowledged that those with restored

water would have to run faucets to clear out brownish, sediment-stained water.

“But we’re asking that people not do laundry or anything like that yet,” he said.

The advisory was in effect on Tuesday for area codes 21224, 21225, 21226 and 21227. Kocher said that he expected it to be lifted by Wednesday.

“This is another reason why we’re accelerating main replacement,” Kocher added.

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“Late in the evening of July 15, Capone Chase lured Ramon Rodriguez to the 4600 block of Gough St. for the sole purpose of murdering him,” reads a police statement.

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Line stations. Before the RRC formed, Cohen had submitted a document titled “A Case for the Red Line on Eastern Ave.” to the MTA, Federal Transit Administration, and other organizations in 2012 as part of the Red Line environmental impact statement.

He suggested that two Red Line stops be on Eastern Ave. closer to Patterson Park, to better serve the needs of residents who live around and north of the park.

“People who live north and east of the park won’t be as well served by the Canton stops as the Canton residents are. They don’t live within a quarter- to a half-mile radius of the stops—a usability benchmark—to say nothing of the fact that some of the riders are older and a quarter or half-mile uphill might be too far for them to walk,” he said.

Who will be served by the Red Line, however, is just one of the group’s myriad concerns.

Another is the impact the construction will have on Canton residents and businesses.

“Canton is still wondering what the plans are for Boston St. and what their impact will be,” said Epstein. “There has not been a well publicized meeting about traffic mitigation since the meeting with MTA on Jan. 16.“

The Red Line Citizen’s Advisory Committee met two weeks ago. Members of RRC attended. On the agenda was a video that would show a third option for re-routing traffic during the prolonged construction of the Boston St. tunnel transition—the first two options have already been hotly debated by the Canton community—but the video was not shown because the group ran out of time.

The RRC was disappointed.St. Cyr says another meeting, where the

third option will be discussed, is in the process of being scheduled with the MTA, but she has no date yet.

In the meantime, the Right Rail Coalition can be reached at [email protected] or rightrailcoalition.org.

transportation system that will meet the needs of its diverse communities, not a one-size-fits-all approach.

“We should be planning a transportation system, not grabbing at whatever pot of money is available. If all the money is spent on the Red Line, we’re neglecting other parts of the system,” he said, referring to federal funds that are presumed to be covering much of the Red Line’s construction.

The RRC officially formed in April and has about ten members,” said Maris St. Cyr, a RRC member and Canton resident, who recently co-authored a June 26 op-ed in the Sun with RRC member Kathy Epstein, highlighting the group’s long list of concerns.

Fundamentally, the RRC is not anti-Red Line, it says, but it is calling for expanding the conversation on transportation options and Red Line alternatives.

They are especially concerned with the Red Line on the east side.

One alternative they see for the east side is surface street cars, which they believe would be better connected to the neighborhoods, be less costly, and wouldn’t take as long to build. Streetcars, they argue, would also more easily serve lower-income neighborhoods—which the RRC says are bypassed by the Red Line—dependent on public transportation.

As for funding the streetcars, federal money might be available, says Art Cohen a RRC member, attorney and public transportation advocate.

“The range of funding opportunitiesis beginning to open up a little more,”he said.

Cohen believes that federal Small Starts funds may be available for streetcar route construction, and that other cities are looking at similar concepts.

But streetcars are just one alternative to consider, he said. Another is different Red

CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1

Right Rail Coalition: Are stations too far south?WEDNESDAY, JULY 24, 2013 BALTIMORE GUIDE 3NEWS

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Page 4: Baltimore Guide - July, 24 2013

performances and, on Saturday and Sunday, morning and afternoon workshops. Workshops run the gamut from introductory and kids’ courses to seminars on musical improv, improving physical improv skills and more. Troupes from across the country will be putting on performances. See www.baltimoreimprovfestival.org for a full listing of festival activities.

Carlson came to improv from a theater background, but she says that anyone could enjoy learning the activity.

“I think improv can really be a way to bring people out of their shells,” she says. “It can be empowering to come up and say whatever you want.”

BIG member Katie Long calls improv “a thrill” and “very challenging” activity, though the premise is simple enough.

“A lot of improv is just allowing yourself to be a kid again,” she says, “to let go and get out of your head for some real organic fun.”

A mind-to-mouth filter, in fact, can be detrimental to improv, Carlson adds.

“The more improv you do, the more

4 BALTIMORE GUIDE WEDNESDAY, JULY 24, 2013

Improv Festival to celebrate spontaneity and creativityNEWS

“It’s very much like everyday life, except it’s completely made-up.”

Eve Carlson, a resident of the Patterson Park neighborhood and a member of the Baltimore Improv Group, has found a succinct way to describe her favorite activity.

Improv, technically called “improvisational theater,” is a form of performance art in which the actors make up the story—and the dialog and the action and maybe some invisible props—as they go along. Unlike a traditional play, there is no script or pre-determined cast of characters.

“The only rule is ‘yes,’” says Carlson. “That means that whatever the person coming on the scene with you says, you go with it.”

Sound intriguing? The Baltimore Improv Festival starts next Wednesday, July 31, and runs through Sunday, Aug. 4, at the Creative Alliance, 3134 Eastern Ave., at East Ave. The festival features evening

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Members of the Baltimore improv troupe Gus somehow found themselves in this situation. They are, from top, Bridget Cavaiola, Christina Enoch Kemmerer andHeather Moyer. | Photo by Megan Wills

confident you get, and the more you think your ideas will be good ones,” she says. “You need to learn to trust your gut and not filter yourself.”

When that filter shuts off, Carlson says, improv performers may find themselves totally present in the scene which they have invented with the other performers, or “scene partners,” acting smoothly and seamlessly as if the spontaneous events depicted were truly happening in real life.

This phenomenon, Carlson says, is known among improv enthusiasts as “group think.”

As a group, BIG currently has about 40 performing members, according to Bridget Cavaiola, who is director of this years’ festival. Cavaiola is also getting ready to be BIG’s second paid employee as education director.

“We’re a functioning nonprofit arts organization,” she says. “It’s really cool.”

With five nights of performances, Cavaiola said that the Baltimore Improv Festival is returning bigger and better this year, the seventh for the festival. There are workshops for folks brand new to improv on both Saturday, Aug. 3, 2 p.m., and Sunday, Aug. 4, 10 a.m.

Another highlight is a crash course in musical improv, taught by Travis Ploeger of iMusical, a Washington, D.C., troupe. If making up dialogue and action on the spot is difficult, then making up songs and musical accompaniments must be incredibly demanding. Ploeger’s workshop is Saturday, Aug. 3, at 10 a.m.

iMusical will perform on Friday, Aug. 2, at 8:30 p.m.

For something else completely different, the Baltimore troupe Tigerhead will be performing improv with puppets on Wednesday, July 31, at 7:30 p.m.

Generally, improv performances run from short-form styles—similar to the TV show “Whose Line Is It Anyway?”—to long form, with highly developed characters and storyline.

Carlson notes that watching a performance is an “active viewing” experience. The audience is often called upon to throw out suggestions to fuel the skits.

Though the Improv Festival brings out the bells and whistles, Cavaiola stresses that simplicity is at the core.

“What I like about teaching improv, and what I like about doing improv, is that it’s something that requires nothing,” she says.

BY ERIK [email protected]

Page 5: Baltimore Guide - July, 24 2013

WEDNESDAY, JULY 24, 2013 BALTIMORE GUIDE 5NEWS

Halcott Square: A model pocket park, off the beaten path by ERIK ZyGMONT [email protected]

The Duncan St. Park is the perfect place for neighbor Kearstin burger to release a stranded caterpillar. | Photo by Erik Zygmont

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Halcott Square, also known as the Duncan St. Park, is a tidy, tranquil and well-hidden spot.

Once the site of a stretch of seven row houses, the park, filled with well-grown vegetation in brick beds raised 2 to 3 feet off the ground, is a place for passive recreation.

“I think it’s always a degree or two cooler in here, but that might be psychological,” says Steven Young, a teacher of Russian and linguistics at the University of Maryland Baltimore City.

The park is not something that the average Baltimorean might drive by on the morning commute. It’s tucked away on the 100 block of S. Duncan St., a north-south alley street between S. Chester St. and S. Collington Ave. It has small, walk-in entrances, and there are so many plants it looks as much like an ornamental garden as a park.

Young’s home abuts the northwest corner of the park, and he has been one of its unofficial caretakers more or less since he moved in, in 1992.

The park was actually established in 1977, thanks to the efforts of the late Charles Halcott, for whom it is named, and his wife, Mary Halcott, who still lives a stone’s toss from the park and will turn 94 this year.

“They spearheaded this,” said Young. “They got the city to build this.”

The row houses that once stood on the site of the park had been abandoned for several years, and there were a few cases of arson, said Young. The Housing Authority took over and razed the properties, leaving an empty lot.

The location was just south of some elderly housing units managed by Jubilee Baltimore.

“The idea was they could just stroll down here and relax,” said Young, “which is why it was designed as a garden and not an active park.”

Today, Young notes, the park sees a lot of use from the young families that live on the 100

block of S. Duncan St. There is no playground equipment, but children ride up in their big-wheels and tricycles.

“As that has occurred, the more dysfunctional usage has disappeared, which is good,” Young said, noting that the park has, at times over the years, been a late-night haven for drunks and drug users.

The Butchers Hill Association also hosted its annual potluck supper in the park last Friday.

The lush vegetation includes a Yoshino cherry tree (purchased at half-price from Glyndon Gardens nursery by the Butchers Hill Association), a pyracantha shrub trimmed in topiary-style, hostas, and butterfly bushes. Much of the vegetation was donated by a retiring horticulturalist from Cylburn Arboretum. The retiree’s plot of plants, Young recalled, was in a “dicey part of West Baltimore.”

Young’s friend and fellow Duncan St. Park enthusiast, Toni Francfort, was undeterred.

“She said, ‘Steve, get your pitchfork, we’re going to West Baltimore,’” laughed Young.

He recalled that he and Francfort spent that whole summer in the late 1990s adding plants to the garden.

Later, Francfort and her husband dug up wild amaryllis bulbs on their rural New Jersey property and re-planted them at Duncan St.

Young said that the park has benefitted from from the help of various people over the years, from wood turner and Butchers Hill resident Mark Supik, who fashioned the Brazilian-hardwood benches, to the “neighborhood kid” who helped Young plant the Yoshino cherry tree several years ago.

Young noted that the city-owned park should soon be transferred to Baltimore Green Space, a land trust for community farms, gardens and green spaces.

“From what I understand, the city has agreed in principle to the transfer, and all that’s left is paperwork,” he said.

Page 6: Baltimore Guide - July, 24 2013

6 BALTIMORE GUIDE WEDNESDAY, JULY 24, 2013 WEDNESDAY, JULY 24, 2013

COMMUNITY CALENDAR

Wednesday, July 24Mother Goose Baby Steps: Wednesdays,11:30 a.m. Interactive nursery rhyming with music and movement. Patterson Park Branch, Pratt Library, 158 N. Linwood Ave. Info: 410-396-0983.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.Films on the Pier: Showing new releases at dusk at the end of Broadway in Fell’s Point on Wednesdays in July and August, starting at 8:45 p.m. Bring your own chair.Thursday, July 25Highlandtown Farmers’ Market: The market has moved inside the grass lot of the Abbott Memorial Church at Bank St. and Highland Ave. Thursday, July 4, 4-8 p.m., and all Thursdays through Oct. 31.Free Sale at Highlandtown Elementary: All are welcome, from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. All items free of cost, courtesy of Gallery Church. Info: Blanca at 443-531-9082.Can Company Music Series: Free live music, every Thursday through Aug. 29, at the

Can Company, 2400 Boston St. This week: Whiskey Tango Foxtrot Info: www.thecancompany.com.Block Party in Little Italy: Little Italy is expecting about 1,000 firefighters to join in a block party on July 25 along a portion of S. High St. (closed to traffic between Stiles and Fawn). Firefighters will be in Baltimore attending the Firehouse Expo at the Baltimore Convention Center. This event will raise money for the Midatlantic Children’s Burn Camp and is hosted by Central Maryland FOOLS (Fraternal Order of Leatherheads Society), an organization established in 1995 by a group of firefighters. Info:[email protected] Crafternoons at Thread-quarters: Drop-in fiber skills and crafts from 1-2:30 p.m. on July 25 for summertime fun. The cost is $8 per child, age six and over, or under six with a parent. 518 S. Conkling St. Free parking in rear. Info: (443) 759-9627.Friday, July 26Get Crunk For God: This youth rally event will feature games, free food and drinks, Christian rap and worship, and a guest speaker. July 26, 7-10 p.m., at Metropolitan Church of God, 4815 Eastern Ave.

Youth Bird Monitoring: More than 180 bird species have been to Patterson Park. Middle and high school students now have the opportunity to be citizen scientists, collecting data on bird species and sharing what they find with the greater scientific community.No experience necessary. 8-10 a.m. Registration is required: [email protected] or 410-558-2473.Little Italy Open Air Film Festival: Held at the corner of High and Stiles streets. “Marriage Italian Style” begins at 9 p.m. Info: littleitalymd.com/Cinema_al_FrescoSaturday, July 27Fell’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.Kerplunk! The Creative Alliance’s free family art drop-in is back, Saturdays through Aug. 10, noon-3 p.m. Kids accompanied by adults are invited to stop in for a quick visit or stay the entire afternoon to make a collage, drawing, or sculpture. No registration is required. 3134 Eastern Ave. Info: 410-276-1651.Farmstand at FutureCare: Farmstand Saturdays are held at FutureCare at 1300 S. Ellwood Ave. from 9 a.m.–noon.

Sunday, July 28Surf and Skate Film Fest: The Creative Alliance is hosting Baltimore’s first Surf and Skate Film Fest all weekend. Three surf/skate films will be shown on Sunday at 3134 Eastern Ave. Info: 410-276-1651 or www.creativealliance.org.Monday, July 29Councilman James Kraft is planning a Broadway Corridor Improvement Meeting for Monday, July 29 from 7- 9 p.m. at the Polish Home Club at 510 S. Broadway. The meeting will focus on the loitering, littering, drugs, and public drunkenness that take place on Broadway between Pratt and Eastern. Local businesses, neighbors, police, and other city agencies will be in attendance. Zumba: Mondays, 6:30-7:30 p.m., Virginia Baker Rec Center, Patterson Park. Seven dollars per class; all levels and drop-ins welcome. Children under 16 must be accompanied by an adult. Info:410-276-3676.Drop-in Crafternoons at Thread-quarters: Drop-in fiber skills and crafts from 1-2:30 p.m. on July 29 for summertime fun. The cost is $8 per child, age six and over, or under six with a parent. 518 S. Conkling St. Free parking in rear. Info: (443) 759-9627.

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Page 7: Baltimore Guide - July, 24 2013

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Tuesday, July 30Code Enforcement Meeting: The meeting, organized by Fell’s Point Main Street, will be held on July 30 at 8 a.m. in the 5th floor meeting room of the Admiral Fell Inn in Fell’s Point. The focus of the meeting will be on code enforcement. The guest speakers will include Eric Booker, Chief of Code Enforcement for the city. Please RSVP to [email protected] call 410-675-8900.Disaster Preparedness Meeting: The city is hosting a town hall event on July 30, 6-8 p.m. at the War Memorial Building in downtown Baltimore at 100 N. Gay St. An opportunity to provide feedback on the draft list of goals, strategies, and actions drafted by the Disaster Preparedness and Planning Project (DP3) Advisory Committee. There will also be presentations about the DP3 project, modeling of predicted worst case scenarios, and how to prepare for disaster events.Farmstand at FutureCare: Farmstand Tuesdays are held at FutureCare at 1300 S. Ellwood Ave. on Tuesdays from 2:30-6:30 Wednesday, July 31Bilingual Community Yoga: Wednesdays, 7:30-9 p.m. at the Virginia Baker Rec Center, Patterson Park. Info: 410-396-9156.

Save the DateAug 10, Hampstead Hill Association Dumpster Day: For Hampstead Hill residents. If you have questions and/or want to volunteer, please call Jean at 410-370-2644 or e-mail [email protected] NotebookFree Summer Camps: A weeklong summer camp will be held at the Patterson Park Youth Sports & Education Center from 9 a.m.-4 p.m. for rising 6th, 7th, and 8th graders. Space is limited. At Camp Creation, students will engage in activities to ignite their creative spirits. The camp runs July 29-Aug 3. Download an application at http://tinyurl.com/nfjhlf2 and email the application to [email protected] or drop it off at the center, located at 200 S. Linwood Ave. Info: 410-878-0563.St. Casimir School Openings: The school, at 1035 S. Kenwood Ave. in Canton, has a limited number of openings for the upcoming school year. St. Casimir serves students of all faiths in grades Pre-K3 through grade 8. All new students must be registered by Friday, August 23. To arrange a school tour, call 410-342-2681, or visit www.stcasimirschool.us.

Page 8: Baltimore Guide - July, 24 2013

8 BALTIMORE GUIDE WEDNESDAY, JULY 24, 2013 FEATURE

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"Birth of the American Flag" numbers:

Five: There are five major pieces or components to the work of art. Carroll employs five people. The project has taken five years.

56: The sculpture is 56 feet tall.

13: “Birth of the American Flag” incorporates 13 stripes, which represent the 13 colonies coming together to form the new country, the United States of America.

80,000: Carroll says he isn’t sure how much the stainless steel and copper-nickel sculpture weighs, but he offered a very rough estimate: “It’s got to be 80,000 pounds or so.”

80 percent: Carroll estimates that while working on the project at Kelco-Industrial, he has spent 80 percent of his time doing physical work, and 20 percent of his time directing his own employees and Kelco-Industrial employees.

63: Carroll is 63 years old.

A massive art project, well-hidden off industrial Haven StreetPigtown sculptor Rodney Carroll has been making something huge

at Kelco-Industrial Fabricators, a massive metal fabrication shop at

Haven and Baltimore streets in Highlandtown.

Carroll says that the finished product, a patriotic display with a

centerpiece entitled “Birth of the American Flag,” which will be

incorporated into the Washington Marriott Marquis Hotel in

Washington, D.C., is the biggest project he has done to date.

The average Baltimorean will recognize Carroll’s representation of William Donald Schaefer at Light and Conway streets in the Inner Harbor. It is a figurative—as opposed to abstract—work, meaning that Schaefer is presented in his recognizable, physical image. Carroll hopes that passers-by will also get a sense of “his life, his character, his achievements and his attitude” when viewing the statue.

Carroll’s sculpture “Firebird,” which represents the ballet of the same name by Igor Stravinsky, stands in the plaza in front of Meyerhoff Symphony Hall. The bold curves of bronze and stainless steel make for an abstract representation.

“That piece is very much to the architecture of the plaza, and the placement of the piece, with the armory behind it, and the roundness of the Meyerhoff,” Carroll said.

With regard to the Washington Marriott Marquis Hotel, set to open in the spring of 2014, Carroll said that a patriotic piece is perfect.

“This situation called for something that had to do with being American, and D.C. is the Capitol,” said Carroll. “It was a very appropriate place to do something symbolizing the country.”

The striped wings of metal forge a common direction in a manner that symbolizes scattered but similar inter-ests in the country uniting to become one force.

The sculpture’s interaction with its environment, Carroll stresses, is as critical as its symbolism.

“It’s really important, of course, to consider the physical surroundings, the landscape architecture, the clients, and the usage of the building,” he said. “There are ways you open up the artwork to help instill or open up conversations and dialogue. These are all the things that are involved, and I think they are

the responsibilities that go with doing public art.”

The Guide was unable to obtain a photograph of a model of the sculpture for this article.

“I don’t know where I am or what I’m doing, except hammering this thing down,” said Carroll last Friday.

He said that putting the massive sculpture together is a process “not unlike building a bridge.”

Then there’s transporting it.“We’re bringing [the pieces to D.C.]

at 3 or 4 in the morning, because a lotof this is wide load,” Carroll said.“We’ve got to get permits, sometimes street closures, police escorts, the whole nine yards.”

The huge, multi-faceted project has been a jump into the deep end of the pool, and Carroll enjoys it.

“You should have a lot of that all the time in your life,” he said. “Why shouldn’t you learn as you go along? That should be a mainstay of living, I would think.”

Carroll is a Baltimore mainstay; he chose to remain in the area after completing graduate school at the Rinehart School of Sculpture, part of the Maryland Institute College of Art.

“There were a lot of amenities when I came here,” he said. “The steel yard was still around; it was a blue-collar place. There were a lot of fabricators around, and real estate was cheap...I think Baltimore had a lot more to offer for what I was doing than any other place on the East Coast.”

Though based in Pigtown, Carroll is active in the Highlandtown arts scene. He hosts “Art To Dine For” dinners for the Creative Alliance, and holds crab feasts with his friend Scott Johnson. Carroll’s head assistant, Alex Zhikulin, has a studio on Gough St. in Highlandtown.

Page 9: Baltimore Guide - July, 24 2013

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Sculptor Rodney Carroll pauses at the bay door of Kelco-Industrial Fabricators. The shining steel behind him is a component to his latest effort, a 56-foot piece entitled “Birth of the American Flag.” | Photo by Erik Zygmont

Page 10: Baltimore Guide - July, 24 2013

RobbeRyO’Donnell St., 5600 block, July 14, 1:30

a.m. Officers responded to the location and found the female victim suffering from two black eyes and a bloody nose. She said she had been drinking at the nightclub with another female, who she knew only by name. The female suspect cursed at her and threatened to harm her, allegedly, and then started to punch her in the face. The victim got away, but the suspect took her purse and fled. The victim was transported to the hospital.

Baylis St., 1400 block, July 14, 5:35 p.m. A woman told police that she was walking when a silver minivan double parked. A male suspect got out, said something to her, and grabbed her purse and her phone. He ran back to the van, which drove off.

E. Pratt St., 1900 block, July 16, 4:15 p.m. The complainant was behind the counter working when the suspect entered the store. He walked around for a minute before leaving without buying anything. He then came back and asked if the store had deodorant or body spray. The clerk said no. The suspect then pulled out a gun and told her to “put them up.” The victim removed the cash from the register and threw it at the suspect.

S. Chester St., 400 block, July 16, 8:15 p.m. A man told police that he was walking the block with ear buds in and his phone in his hand, when three young males approached and demanded his phone. The man told the to “get the [expletive] out of here.” One of them pulled out a small knife, so the victim ran away and called the police. No property was taken.

S. Conkling St., 1200 block, July 16, 9:40 p.m. A man told police he was walking when five young males approached him from behind. One of them hit him in the back of the head, and they surrounded him. They demanded his property. The victim handed over $5 and a black phone. The suspects fled. During and area canvass with an officer, the suspects were found and identified on the 3500 block of Hudson St. All were arrested.

N. Central Ave., 100 block, July 17, 12 p.m. A woman told police that she was in her vehicle waiting for the light change when a man came and stuck a gun in her vehicle through her open window. It wasn’t pointed directly at her. He did not say anything, but he took her phone and went north, out of sight.

E. Fayette St., 1500 block, July 18, 7:49 a.m. A woman told police that she was

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N. Spring Ct., 200 block, July 14, 9:20 a.m. A woman left to walk her dogs, and returned home to see a man leaving her house by the front door. He had taken a red wallet containing IDs, cash, and a Social Security card. He fled on a bike. The victim became irate while in the patrol car helping an officer look for the victim. She left the car and also refused to wait for the crime lab.

S. Potomac St., 100 block, July 14, 12:05 p.m. A woman said that she was home when she saw someone slide open the unlocked basement window. The suspect saw the victim and fled on foot.

Eastern Ave., 3200 block, July 16, 2:35 a.m. Officers responded to the cafe and mart for a burglary report, and found the front door glass broken and a rock on the floor of the establishment. A store worker reviewed security footage and saw a man taking cigarettes and lottery tickets before fleeing.

Fleet St., 2000 block, July 16, 10 a.m. A woman returned to her two-days-per-week residence and found the door open and damage around the lock. She called the owner, who advised her to call the police. Stolen was a jar of change, three inoperable rifles, a DVD player, stereo system, video game system, laptop and smart TV.

Five arrested after allegedly attacking man and taking cell phone in Canton

For the complete police log visit our website at www.baltimoreguide.com

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N. Luzerne Ave., 100 block, July 16, 4 p.m. An unknown suspect broke the plywood that was covering the vacant property window and gained access. The suspect took 60 feet of copper pipe.

S. Oldham St., 400 block, July 16, 5 p.m. An unknown suspect forced the rear, second-story window and took the following from the complainant’s grandson’s room: a Playstation, XBox, games for both systems, and a laptop. The grandson said he had been hanging out with someone who said he “felt like breaking into a couple of houses.”

Dundalk Ave., 1600 block, July 16, 11 p.m. A man was home when heard a noise upstairs. Upon investigation, he found his nephew—who had been told to stay away from the house—hiding in the bathroom. The man went downstairs to call the police, and his nephew escaped. No property was taken.

N. Potomac St., unit block, July 17, 11 a.m. An unknown suspect broke the window of the basement door to gain entry, and took power tools from the vacant home.

Cassell Dr., 300 block, July 17, 2 p.m. A man told police that the suspect entered the business through the front office door, which is restricted to the public, and took a laptop before fleeing.

S. Regester St., 100 block, July 18, 6:25 a.m. A man said that he was in bed on the second floor when he saw a man on the second floor. The victim chased the suspect out of the house. A cellphone was taken; the victim had left a front window unsecured.

Page 11: Baltimore Guide - July, 24 2013

WEDNESDAY, JULY 24, 2013 BALTIMORE GUIDE 11

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Page 12: Baltimore Guide - July, 24 2013

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ROACHES, WATERBUGS, ANTS,FLEAS, BEDBUGS

ARNOLDSEXTERMINATING

410-282-5560

We Guarantee a Good Job at a Reasonable Price!

Lic# 589 Dept.of Agriculture

Serving Baltimorefor over 30 years

Page 13: Baltimore Guide - July, 24 2013

Sales Positions Available

We are seeking individuals to promote home deliveryof “THE BALTIMORE SUN” at Retail Stores,

Events & Trade Shows…

We Offer:• A Solid Income Opportunity.

• Flexible Schedules…25-35 Hours per Week.• Morning, Evening & Weekend Shifts Available

• Complete Field Training & Support.

If you have strong presentation skills& enjoy demonstrating money saving techniques

this just might be the perfect opportunity for you…

For More Information:Email: [email protected]

orCall: 800-573-6515

WEDNESDAY, JULY 24, 2013 THE BALTIMORE GUIDE 13

EMPLOYMENTEMPLOYMENTEMPLOYMENTEMPLOYMENTEMPLOYMENTEMPLOYMENTEMPLOYMENTEMPLOYMENTEMPLOYMENTEMPLOYMENTEMPLOYMENTEMPLOYMENT

MARKETPLACE

J.T.P. General CommercialContractor

Licensed & Insured 2608

443-621-7040call:

SUMMER SPECIAL Rain Gutters starting at $350/12 ft

• Gutters • Drywall• Painting • Masonary

Work • Brick Pointing

• Steps• Stucco• Concrete• Demolitions• Kitchens/ Bathrooms

SERVICESSERVICESSERVICESSERVICESSERVICESSERVICESSERVICESSERVICESSERVICESSERVICESSERVICESSERVICES EMPLOYMENTEMPLOYMENTEMPLOYMENTEMPLOYMENTEMPLOYMENTEMPLOYMENTEMPLOYMENTEMPLOYMENTEMPLOYMENTEMPLOYMENTEMPLOYMENTEMPLOYMENT

Get Social with the GuideLIKE US… FOLLOW US!

LOOKING TO HIRE NOW!!We are looking to hire both Entry Level and Veteran

High Energy/Goal Driven Sales Consultants! The job will consist of a 40-hour work week based on Commission. This is a very rewarding Career! You have a lot of advancement opportunity with our company. We are looking for team leads and managers as well. You can make anywhere from $500 to $1,500 weekly. VERY EASY, SO EASY, that it happens every week!!!

If you are interested in being on a winning team for a well established company call

410-494-1162

CAREGIVER LIC’D Caregiver seeks position providing se-nior care. Over 10 yrs exp. Outstanding refs. Own transp. FT. Call 614-806-7565

CHECK CASHIER Needed for nights and weekends, must speak Spanish. Apply in per-son. O’connor’s Liquors 4801 Eastern Avenue. Serious Apps Only. Ask for Kathy.

CHILD CARE Play Centers is seeking FUN and FRIENDLY staff Before and/or After School Child Care Centers - Baltimore County. Mon-Fri, 7 to 9 am and/or 3 to 6 pm. Flexible scheduling! Contact

CLEANERS/FLOOR TECHS/ WORKING SUPERVISORS Broadway Services, Inc.Es-sex area, day & evening shifts available, FT/PT, good pay, excellent benefi ts. experi-ence preferred. Apply online at www.broadwayservices.com or call 410-563-6979 to scheduleCLEANING TECHS residential Earn $300-$500/week. Mon-Fri. Own transportation req. Located in Timonium. 410-365-0349FACTORY WORKER Full time position available. Light fac-tory work. Must Have high school diploma or equivalent. Us citizen and drug free. Me-chanical apptitude preferred. Apply in person 7/25 & 7/26 only 9am to 4pm Perfect Parts Company. 1 North Ha-ven St. 21224 or Fax resume to 410-327-7443

FLAT ROOF MECH/HELPER NEEDED Flat Roof Mech/Help-er, Hot&Modifi ed Exp Pref P/T Wknds 410-675-5440

HOUSECLEANING - MAID Brigade. Paid vacations, holi-days, bonuses, heath ins. No nights/weekends. Transp req/mileage paid. FT/PT. 410-683-6243

HUMAN SERVICES Are you looking for a job near your home that is fun and reward-ing? Are you a dependable, trustworthy person? Rich-croft, Inc., a non-profi t agen-cy, is seeking to fi ll a part-time support services position in the BALTIMORE COUNTY -

Towson area working with a man with a disability. Pay is $12.36 an hour. You must be willing to assist with personal hygiene, grocery shopping, cooking, and helping the in-dividual keep his apartment clean. Knowledge of diabe-tes is a plus. Job will require medication administration certifi cation. Hours are Mon-day through Thursday 5pm until 10 pm, some Fridays 4pm until 6pm. This could be a really fun job. You must have reliable transportation and a valid driver’s license w/less than 3 pts. If interested, please complete an online ap-plication on the web at www.Richcroft.com . Richcroft is an equal opportunity employ-er. Ref # 600-647

Page 14: Baltimore Guide - July, 24 2013

RENTALS AND REAL ESTATERENTALS AND REAL ESTATERENTALS AND REAL ESTATERENTALS AND REAL ESTATERENTALS AND REAL ESTATERENTALS AND REAL ESTATERENTALS AND REAL ESTATERENTALS AND REAL ESTATERENTALS AND REAL ESTATERENTALS AND REAL ESTATERENTALS AND REAL ESTATERENTALS AND REAL ESTATE

the friendly people...

We’ll buy your housefor cash today!

No real estate agents, no commissions and no closing costs. We will buy any house, any condition, anywhere.

Visit us online at www.iitrust.com

For a FREE estimatecall (410) 625.2221

How it works:• Free estimate over the phone, or online.

• Immediate appointments to see your house.

• Immediate firm price commitment.

• Settle anytime you like.

• Settlement takes about 15-30 minutes.

• Leave with your check and peace of mind

14 THE BALTIMORE GUIDE WEDNESDAY, JULY 24, 2013REAL ESTATE

MERCHANDISEMERCHANDISEMERCHANDISEMERCHANDISEMERCHANDISEMERCHANDISEMERCHANDISEMERCHANDISEMERCHANDISEMERCHANDISEMERCHANDISEMERCHANDISE

THIS AD FOR SALE!

Press Service2000 Capital Drive, Annapolis, MD 21401

SPREAD YOUR MESSAGEto over 4 Million readers with an ad this size for

just $1,450! For a limited time, BUY 4 ADS,GET ONE FREE!*

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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

Owner Must sell!Nicely wooded lot in prime

recreational area. Crystal clearmountain lake, ski area and

brand new golf course.All within 1 mile of property.

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$79,900!Adjoining lot sold for $249,900

Bank will finance!

Call now: 877-888-7581 ext 63Brokerage services provided by: GLS Realty, LLC • Office: 301-387-8100 • Robert Orr, BIC

CROSSWORDGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGUIDEUIDEUIDEUIDEUIDEUIDEUIDEUIDEUIDEUIDEUIDEUIDEUIDEUIDEUIDEUIDEUIDEUIDEUIDEUIDEUIDEUIDEUIDEUIDEUIDEUIDEUIDEUIDEUIDEUIDEUIDEUIDEUIDEUIDEUIDEUIDEUIDEUIDEUIDEUIDEUIDEUIDEBBBBBBGGGBGGGBGGGBGGGGGGBGGGBGGGBGGGa lt i m o rea lt i m o rea lt i m o reBBBa lt i m o reBBBa lt i m o reBBBa lt i m o reBBB Across

1. Computer info5. Write a shared online journal9. Kind of approval12. Candidate’s concern14. Morocco’s capital16. Carbonium, e.g.17. Reminder of mortality (2

wds)19. “Baloney!”20. Smoke out21. Members of Parliament23. Bergman in “Casablanca”25. Flight data, briefl y26. Offi cers’ quarters on a

warship30. Moisture-absorbing body

powders32. A pint, maybe33. Representative35. Marine ___37. Bohemian, e.g.39. Victorian, for one40. Arid41. Ridge of land forced

upwards between two faults43. Go over46. Moray, e.g.47. Slap target, sometimes49. Exploded artillery shell

fragments51. Eastern pooh-bah52. Bolted

53. Manitoba’s capital57. Kind of seat61. Monopolize62. Expressing profound

respect64. Absorbed, as a cost65. Father, Son and Holy Ghost66. One of the Barbary States67. Bit68. Coaster69. Whimper

Down1. Kind of store2. Financial page heading3. Pack (down)4. Ancient (hyphenated)5. “My man!”6. Follower of Mary7. “O” in old radio lingo8. January’s birthstone9. Decorative, protective object

on a hearth (2 wds)10. It may get into a jamb11. Aardvark fare13. Check15. It’s always sold in mint

condition (2 wds)18. Join securely22. Meteorological effects24. White Cliffs of ___26. Cleanse with water27. Grant

28. Put into a new order29. Conventions31. Bender34. Marina sight36. Unload, as stock38. Gesture made with index

and middle fi ngers (2 wds)42. Casual top (2 wds)44. Ascended45. Bring up48. Slender candles50. Repressed (hyphenated)53. “Come again?”54. Bit55. “... there is no ___ angel

but Love”: Shakespeare56. Characteristic carrier58. Hokkaido native59. Detective, at times60. “... or ___!”63. Cabernet, e.g.

Answers. Don’t peek!

FREE BACKFILL Great for fi ll-ing holes, which may incl. concrete, slate, tile, plaster, rubble, brick & block. Please contact Kathy 888-896-3867

LOWERY HOLIDAY organ needs cleaning. Player Piano, player doesn’t work. Instru-ments in Parkville. Call 717-858-1970

DULANEY VALLEY mem gar-dens 941-349-1956 2 lots, Garden of the Holy Cross Sect 670A, 3&4 $3995/both

DULANEY VALLEY memorial gardens 2 side by side lots & 2 vaults. Garden of Peace. Value $7650. Sell $5200 for all. 443-682-0643

ESTATE/MOVING sale 508 Stevenson Ln, Towson, 10a-2p, 7/26 & 7/27 marble top chests, solid cherry bench made dining room suite, many other items. 410-336-9023GARAGE SALE Sat 7/27, 9-3. 122 Regester Ave - Rodgers Forge. No early birds. HH items, furniture & much moreHOWARD COUNTY Fairgrds Kids Nearly New Fall Sales booth info. KNNsale.comYARD SALE Sat 7/27, 7a-1p. Seasonal plants, clothing, HH items, jewelry. 715 Ridge-wood Rd, Bel Air. Rockspring to Moores Mill to Ridgewood

EXERCISE BOWFLEX Tread climber Like new. Model BFX-TC10. Floor mat incl. Pd $2K sell $1,000. 410-365-7887

GARAGES FOR RENT High-landtown Area. Safe, sturdy and dry. Storage . 410-391-9387

HIGHLANDTOWN near hospi-tal, 2br, club bsmnt, new win-dows and new wall to wall carpet, $1100 + utlt + SD refs rq 410- 633-7120

HIGHLANDTOWN GREAT AREA 2/3BR 1Ba, W/D, frig, stove, full bsmt, carpet, tile, nice neighborhood, fresh re-hab, Close to busline, food stores and shopping. $875 + util & SD. No Sec 8 No pets, Bienvenida A Los Hispanos 410-647-3086

KINGSVILLE FURNISHED room, 1st fl r. new w/w, share kit & laundry, male pref’d, $550/ mo+SD, NP, 410-592-5933

ROOM FOR RENT 2302 Ash-land Ave. Application & SD. $90 wk. 410.675.6553 Myrtle.

OC 2BR ocean front condo, Fountainhead, 116th St., ten-nis, pool. Senior citizen dis-count. Call 410-668-0680

OR TYPE INTOYOUR BROWSER

MARYLAND.BALTIMOREGUIDE.COM

POST ONE OR SCAN THOUSANDS AT

WWW.BALTIMOREGUIDE.COM

FREEONLINE CLASSIFIEDS

• Real Estate • For Rent • Jobs •Personals • Forums • Services

Page 15: Baltimore Guide - July, 24 2013

APRIL 10, 2013243 S. Bouldin St.; $259,000; MD Houses LLC to Mark Linehan3236 O’Donnell St.; $320,000; Douglas Glair to Gary Stapleton614 Ponca St.; $57,000; 614 Ponca Street LLC to 614 ST LLC.4107 Highland Ave.; $70,100; True North Asset Management LLC to Summit Holding Group Limited36 N. Ellwood Ave.; $130,000; ELizabeth Stiles to 2 S. Potomac Street LLC17 N. Bradford St.; $ 67,000; 2009 DRR-ETS LLC to Visions Built LLC2125 Orleans St.; $45,500; Skyline NH Res 3 LP to Atokpan Properties2013 Eastern Ave.; $131,250; L Bar W Management LLC to Matthew Luongo

310 S. East Ave.; $216,500; John Curry Jr. to Jonathan Kerr112 S. Ellwood Ave.; $205,500; Michael Kirby to Ervin Armstrong3139 Fait Ave.; $459,900; D Carey Development LLC to Robert Purcell Jr.1004 S. Potomac St.; $340,000; Tadeusz Para to Alexandria McPherson1217 Dockside Cir.; $475,500; Charles Parsons Jr. to Ira Gottlieb603 S. Glover St.; $224,900; Brett Carroll to Tara Ryan

APRIL 11, 2013137 N. Highland Ave.; $49,900; Lorne Ruppert to Sao Chan6919 E. Baltimore St.; $56,100; James Commander to US Bank National Association

Real Estate TransfersSource: Maryland Department of Assessments and Taxation

WEDNESDAY, JULY 24, 2013 BALTIMORE GUIDE 15

EQUAL HOUSING All Real Estate advertised herein is subject to the Federal Fair Housing Act which makes it illegal to indicate prefer-ence, limitation or discrimination based on race, color, religion, sex, handicap, familial status or national origin, or an intention to make any such preference, limitation or dis-crimination. We will not knowingly accept any advertising for Real Estate which is in violation of the law. All persons are hereby imformed that all dwellings advertised are available on an equal opportunity basis. If you believe that you may have been discrimi-nated against in connection with the sale, rental or financing of housing, call The United States Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD) at 1-800-669-9777.

BALTIMORE OFFICE

410-288-6700

PHILTIRABASSIOwner/Broker443-690-0552

ADVANCEREALTY DIRECT“Waterfront Specialist”

Full Service Discount ExpertsSM

OFFICE

Now Interviewing New & Experienced Agents.

www.AdvanceRealtyDirect.com410-288-6700

BALTIMORE CITY BA8047310Huge house with 5 BR and 2 Full BA. Sold as-is. Third party approval required. Sold subject to existing lease. Buyer responsible for verifying ground rent. If ground rent exists, seller will not redeem.

BALTIMORE BC7992547 Beautiful Cape Cod bungalow style home with 3 BR and 3 FULL BS, fi nished 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 BC8075188Move in ready. 3 BR. Finished basement. 1 & 1/2 Baths. Estate Sale. This is a must see.

BALTIMORE BC8083053Completely 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!

BALTIMORE BC80126123 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.

MIDDLE RIVER BC8036611End of group TSH, private setting. Awesome water views from LR, BR and patio. Updated kitchen, newer carpet, new a/c unit. Community

pier with 30’ premium boat slip that conveys. Converted to 2 BR but can easily be put back to 3.

CECIL COUNTY CC8050336Beautiful 4 BR, 2.5 BA detached in Beacons Point. Upgrades include hardwoods, 2 gas FP, master BR with huge walk-in, FP. soaking

tub + double sink, rough in LL, 2 FRs, close to 95, shopping and Hollywood Casino in Perryville.

BALTIMORE CITY BA7996582Huge single 5 BR Cape Cod on large corner lot in old town hamilton. Hardwood fl oors, charming, above ground pool, pool bar, deck. Sold

strictly as is, sellers will make no repairs.Close to schools, restaurants and shopping. Priced to sell.

CECIL CC8008743Cinnamon 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.

BALTIMORE BA80287893 BR, 2.5 BA, Lrg kitchen, new ss appliances, granite ctop, 42” maple cabinets. Freshly painted, new WW carpet, twin heat pumps, windows, roof, interior doors. 12X12 deck. Whirlpool tub, large yard.

BALTIMORE BA80552713 BR/1.5 BA, quiet cul de sac. Hwd fl rs, covered porches & carport. Finished LL wbar & 1/2 bath. Central air. Upgraded kitchen & BA, ceiling fans. CDA/FHLB grants may be available.

BALTIMORE BA8054179INVESTORS DREAM.This charming 2 bedroom home in desirable Fells Point is waiting for your personal touches.

BALTIMORE CITY BA81296153-4 BRs. Master Suite w/full BA& sitting area. Tray ceilings, upgraded moldings, hdw fl oors. Gourmet KITw/granite counters, ss appliances. Central VAC, tumbled marble BA! Roof deck.

BALTIMORE BC81308253 BR/ 2 full and 2 hafl BA! Large rooms. Roof only 6 mo., CAC 2 years old. Large deck, shed, backs up to woods. Lrg master BR with full bath and walk-in closet. Finished LL w/wood burning fp and sliders to deck.

OLIVER BEACH BC80399234 BR, 3 BA, HW fl oors, stain-less appliances, stone fp, rear deck, 2-car attached and 2-car detached garage, LL FR & BA w/

marble, enclosed patio, water access, large yard w/ playset, lg kitchen/dining w/breakfast bar & more!

BAYVIEW BA80542764 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.

Matthew Malczewski 410-303-9452

Nancy Mohr 443-527-7764 -6700

OUR FEEAS LOW AS

1.75%

REAL ESTATE

HOLABIRD MANOR

1708 Dundalk Ave.Near bus lines 10 & 20

Senior Apartments1 BR $640 plus utilities

1 BR w/Balcony $670 plus utilities

1 BR w/Den $700 plus utilities

410-284-2500E.H.O.

Nancy knows Baltimore!Why call anyone else?

Nancy Rachuba410-905-1417

DIVERSIFIED REALTY410-675-SOLD

FOR SALE600 S. Macon St. - 2 bd, 2 bath gorgeous rehab in Greektown500 S. Oldham St. - 4 bd, 2 bath shell set up as two apartments in Greektown350 Cornwall St. - 3 bd, 2.5 bath stunning rehab w/ 2 car parking in Bayview703 S. Grundy St - 2 bd, 2.5 bath rehab w/ 2 car parking, deck + in-law suite in Brewers Hill 208 S. Conking St - 2 bd, 1 bath classic townhome in Highlandtown7528 Rabon Ave. - 3 bd, 1.5 bath rehab w/2 car parking and above ground pool in Gray Manor4106 Marx Ave. - 4 bd, 2 bath detached home in Gardenville

FOR RENT 813 S. Robinson St. - 2 bd, 1.5 bath townhome in Canton

Page 16: Baltimore Guide - July, 24 2013

16 BALTIMORE GUIDE WEDNESDAY, JULY 24, 2013

Dynamic Physical Therapy In The Highlandtown Healthy Living Center

3700 Fleet St. - Suite 109443-438-7214

Mon-Thu 8 am-7 pm, Fri 8 am-4 pmPUBLIC PARKING GARAGE

LOCALLY OWNED & OPERATED

ASK ABOUTFREE PATIENT TRANSPORTATION

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

PHYSICAL THERAPY HIGHLANDTOWNNOW OPENFOR THE SEASONNot your average Snowball Stand!

VISIT OUR OTHER LOCATIONS:MIDDLESEX • MARTIN PLAZA CARROLL ISLAND • DUNDALK

ROSEDALE (Kenwood Shopping Center)

3930 FLEET STREET(Corner of Fleet & Grundy Sts.)Monday-Saturday 11-10

Closed Sundays to honor God,rest, and spend time with our families.

BUY ONE SNOWBALLGET ONE FREE

Of equal or lesser value. Valid Monday, July 29 only.Please present coupon at time of ordering.

St. Gabriele Festivalone of Baltimore’s oldest Italian festivals at

St. Leo’s Church in Little ItalyStiles and Exeter Sts.

Sat., Aug. 17 • 12-8 & Sun., Aug. 18 11-7

See long-time friends,

meet new ones!For more information, call 410-675-7275

Italian food – like mama always made!

Sausage Eating Contest

Old and New World

Procession through

the neighborhood!

Bocce TournementsAll Weekend • Cash Prizes

Games of Chance

Live Entertainment

Children’s Section

Baltimore is for CRABS as the U.S.A.is for PROUD TO BE AN AMERICAN!

16 1 1 B an k S tre etB a lt imo re , M a ry l a n d 2 123 1410-675-6040Ba lt imo re , M a ry l a n d 2 123 1410-675-6040Ba lt imo re , M a ry l a n d 2 123 1

Open 7 Days a Week 12pm-9pmAll Day Breakfast!

SeafoodScooters Famous Maryland Pride1lb. loaf of crab cake & shrimp ............$32.95Captain Jimmy’s Seafood Combo ...........Flounder, Scallops, Crab Balls, Shrimp.......$18.95Salmon over stir fried veggies .......................$12.95

Homemade SoupsMaryland Crab $3.50 cup $4.95 bowl

Cream of Crab $4.50 cup $6.50 bowl

Homemade SaladsLarge Greek .................................................. $9.95 with chicken................................$13.95Fresh Garden Salad ................................... $5.95Personal Garden Salad ............................ $3.95Blackened Chicken Salad ....................... $8.95

Submarines and SandwichesCheese Steak.............................................$6.95Italian Cold Cut ........................................$5.95Shrimp Salad Sandwich (Homemade)... $10.95