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Feb 14, 2021
02/21
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he describes lincoln's train trip through baltimore. heading to gettysburg. and once again, it was pretty dicey that there were thugs climbing onto the side of the car trying to get at lincoln and only with bayonet. could the soldiers get those guys off the train. so baltimore stayed really tough and as you know it was it was violent when the massachusetts troops came through in april 1861. what's some of an inexplicable all of it a little bit frightening? so yeah, yeah, i see. jonathan white is on i'm going to sign off for a bit and come back. i thank you ted. thank you harold conversation. yeah, i really enjoy another couple of hours, but i know we have one and jonathan has i see a lot of questions stacked up here. so i'm going to turn it over to him. thank you harold. thank you ted. that was wonderful. what conversation great way to start off our forum today. we've got a lot of questions in the q&a. i'll start with one from brian steinbergen and he asked how many of the places along the route were you able to visit during the process of writing the book. a
he describes lincoln's train trip through baltimore. heading to gettysburg. and once again, it was pretty dicey that there were thugs climbing onto the side of the car trying to get at lincoln and only with bayonet. could the soldiers get those guys off the train. so baltimore stayed really tough and as you know it was it was violent when the massachusetts troops came through in april 1861. what's some of an inexplicable all of it a little bit frightening? so yeah, yeah, i see. jonathan white...
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Feb 14, 2021
02/21
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CSPAN2
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was a seven-time mayor of the city of baltimore. i think, we as baltimore residents, have a special allegiance to this creative genius. >> and since you brought up his family i wanted to ask you a little bit about his wife, mary elizabeth hazel hearst. her role in his career. >> she's was fantastic. one of the things that is so upsetting when one does a biography of a man is there are no pictures. i could never find images of mary latrobe. there are all of these wonderful portraits we have of latrobe but there is no image but my view of her because he writes really sexualized for that generation letters like i wish i could hold you and feel your bosom and it's amazing but he always complements her figure and how even though after six children she has gotten a little stout or but nonetheless she has the best figure of any of the women in washington but mary latrobe was willing to go wherever latrobe went in to make for him the best possible home. she is there at the end and she has left the east coast and traveled with her two young
was a seven-time mayor of the city of baltimore. i think, we as baltimore residents, have a special allegiance to this creative genius. >> and since you brought up his family i wanted to ask you a little bit about his wife, mary elizabeth hazel hearst. her role in his career. >> she's was fantastic. one of the things that is so upsetting when one does a biography of a man is there are no pictures. i could never find images of mary latrobe. there are all of these wonderful portraits...
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Feb 9, 2021
02/21
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baltimore, strike and sell out. the unions having a convention, nashville, tennessee. >> bashful, locals around new york, chicago, baltimore. that's the reason. they've got complaints into may be tough for us to get out. they're so why nashville? why not alaska? >> somehow scraped the money together for train fare. >> all out for nashville. >> rochester cincinnati, philadelphia, baltimore relinquishes -- and will not be stated. >> we are on strike but we have to pay dues. >> baltimore ellis still out on strike. >> [speaking french] [inaudible] >> delegates from chicago. >> listen, we're just came in from nashville. chicago walked out of the convention. yeah >> -- yeah and new york and baltimore. >> 75% of membership walked out. >> holding their own convention. ♪ ♪ ♪ ♪ ♪ ♪ [inaudible] suddenly you're out of your mind. >> they gathered at webster hall and they took the gamble. >> this was our dream to give security to our members. security within the framework of liberty, and individual freedom. lincoln said a nation,
baltimore, strike and sell out. the unions having a convention, nashville, tennessee. >> bashful, locals around new york, chicago, baltimore. that's the reason. they've got complaints into may be tough for us to get out. they're so why nashville? why not alaska? >> somehow scraped the money together for train fare. >> all out for nashville. >> rochester cincinnati, philadelphia, baltimore relinquishes -- and will not be stated. >> we are on strike but we have to...
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Feb 4, 2021
02/21
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BLOOMBERG
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it produced a lot of riots in baltimore. you are the governor. did you say to the mayor, "fix this problem, it's a baltimore problem," or did you get involved? was it controversial to get involved? gov. hogan: it was 90 days after i was sworn in. and so i was a new baby governor. then the worst violence in 97 -- 47 years broke out in the city of baltimore. the city was in flames. it was out of control and the mayor was not responding. the business owners, the city residents were scared, the city police force was overwhelmed. i immediately declared a state of emergency. i called up the national guard and we sent in 1000 extra police officers and 4000 members of the national guard. we brought peace and calm to the city. we allowed peaceful protesters to continue, safely, for a solid week, but no more violence took place. then i walked the streets of baltimore for a solid week. i went to freddie gray's neighborhood. went into the places with the burned out shop owners, and listen to the concerns of city residents. frankly, it was a prelude to what w
it produced a lot of riots in baltimore. you are the governor. did you say to the mayor, "fix this problem, it's a baltimore problem," or did you get involved? was it controversial to get involved? gov. hogan: it was 90 days after i was sworn in. and so i was a new baby governor. then the worst violence in 97 -- 47 years broke out in the city of baltimore. the city was in flames. it was out of control and the mayor was not responding. the business owners, the city residents were...
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Feb 21, 2021
02/21
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FOXNEWSW
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that track goes right past baltimore. so joe biden must have seen with his own eyes how the city of baltimore decayed. he had to see what happened to the city of baltimore the last several decades. what is the solution? it's sitting there right next to washington, d.c. what would president mike rowe do about this? >> funny you should ask. that's my hometown. i grew up in baltimore, i live not far from the amtrak station. my dad worked sat sparrow's point. there is a big muscular hard working town. i think it's a frog in boiling water. the temperature went up slow overral number of years and a lot of things have gone off the rails in that town. i'm not an economist. rent control, all these things that drip with unintended consequences. all these policies. it does strike me right now that people on the left on people on the trite, we by and large d people on the right, and we want to live in vibrant cities, the question is, are you i am patient or no. is it shortcut? minimum wage is a shortcut. rent control is a shortcut. m
that track goes right past baltimore. so joe biden must have seen with his own eyes how the city of baltimore decayed. he had to see what happened to the city of baltimore the last several decades. what is the solution? it's sitting there right next to washington, d.c. what would president mike rowe do about this? >> funny you should ask. that's my hometown. i grew up in baltimore, i live not far from the amtrak station. my dad worked sat sparrow's point. there is a big muscular hard...
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Feb 10, 2021
02/21
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CSPAN3
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wisconsin and new jersey, baltimore in boston.assistance. we had a little strike down here in philadelphia. our business agent got thrown in jail. i i haven't got to buy postage stamps, much less pay the fine. worst comes to worst, don't worry. >> >> listen, i'm a boss. tell you the gods truth, the union is the best thing that ever happened in this industry. we've got arbitration, we come together like human beings, set standards, set rates in a civilized manner, you know what i mean? since we worked union, we've never had a strike. 1915, special to michaels magazine, midway through the wilson administration, there are indications that the nation is seeing the beginnings of a new freedom. a weakening of the grip of monopolies by that passage of -- practices act, the anti trust act, workmen's compensation, child labor laws. ♪ ♪ ♪ immigrants and the sons of immigrants, fishermen from nantucket, factory and, farm boys from arkansas. ♪ ♪ ♪ >> goodbye paw ♪ ♪ ♪ a may not know with the wars about but i bet by gosh we'll find out what my
wisconsin and new jersey, baltimore in boston.assistance. we had a little strike down here in philadelphia. our business agent got thrown in jail. i i haven't got to buy postage stamps, much less pay the fine. worst comes to worst, don't worry. >> >> listen, i'm a boss. tell you the gods truth, the union is the best thing that ever happened in this industry. we've got arbitration, we come together like human beings, set standards, set rates in a civilized manner, you know what i...
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here we are in 2021, in baltimore city, we already had 31 murders.y're all of black individuals. so you know, i see billboards in baltimore right now by the fbi, by the local fbi asking about if we have any information on those that breached the capitol back on january 6th. there is not one billboard asking about a murder, somebody's family member here in baltimore, right? we don't have our cases being closed, about 30% rate we're closing cases. witnesses are not coming forward which we know is the biggest impediment in all of these cases. so when will we actually truly act if black lives matter? i just don't know. elizabeth: we had u.s. missouri senator josh hawley's wife filing a criminal complaint against the man who organized a protest outside of their home in virginia. erin hawley filed a criminal complaint. senator hawley and his wife had an infant inside of their house and their home vast vandalized. we have that happening. fight over reopening. kim, like your reaction to this. we had teachers unions, teachers union, they're not, they're sayin
here we are in 2021, in baltimore city, we already had 31 murders.y're all of black individuals. so you know, i see billboards in baltimore right now by the fbi, by the local fbi asking about if we have any information on those that breached the capitol back on january 6th. there is not one billboard asking about a murder, somebody's family member here in baltimore, right? we don't have our cases being closed, about 30% rate we're closing cases. witnesses are not coming forward which we know is...
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Feb 9, 2021
02/21
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KQED
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amna nawaz looks at plans being made for a bigger reopening in baltimore >> nawaz: judy, baltimore cityublic schools have reopened 27 that means that of the roughly 80,000 students who attend public schools there, 2,000 kids have returned to in person learning. the city recently delayed expanded reopening for its youngest students by two weeks, to march first. that will allow more time to address the concerns of teachers and educators. for a look at the challenges around this, i'm joined by dr. sonja santelises. she is the c.e.o. of baltimore city public schools. dr. santelises, welcome to the news hour and thank you for maybing the time. we mentioned delayed reopening now, that means thousands of students will be welcomed back into your school for the first time in nearly a year, k through 2-7bd great by march 1st, rolling in older students after that through april. based on what you have right now in terms of masking and distancing and space to distance in the school, do you have everytng you need to keep teachers and kids safe when they return? >> we believe we do amna, and i think a
amna nawaz looks at plans being made for a bigger reopening in baltimore >> nawaz: judy, baltimore cityublic schools have reopened 27 that means that of the roughly 80,000 students who attend public schools there, 2,000 kids have returned to in person learning. the city recently delayed expanded reopening for its youngest students by two weeks, to march first. that will allow more time to address the concerns of teachers and educators. for a look at the challenges around this, i'm joined...
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Feb 25, 2021
02/21
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CSPAN2
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it's a community development and institution in the heart of baltimore and we have support. [inaudible]. and target through innovative and flexible financial resources. we will talk about construction loans printed and small business lending and not require collateral pretty but that covid-19 any of our businesses and trouble to accessing things printed due to business race and gender and the inability to get the collateral party nick. [inaudible]. they any businesses have returned to other resources including high interest rates, credit cards and online things. any of whom are predators. there are concerning prior to the pandemic. and now they have worsened these lack of affordable conditions in our communities. that said, in my testimony today, i would like to address the major issues and concerns facing my area baltimore and one cycling around the country. it is african-american, their member of the african-american alliance of cdf i ceos for meeting the alliance is a nonprofit coalition comprised of any covering several states with the process of strengthening operationa
it's a community development and institution in the heart of baltimore and we have support. [inaudible]. and target through innovative and flexible financial resources. we will talk about construction loans printed and small business lending and not require collateral pretty but that covid-19 any of our businesses and trouble to accessing things printed due to business race and gender and the inability to get the collateral party nick. [inaudible]. they any businesses have returned to other...
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. >> it is dangerous and scary as we talked about before 2015 baltimore we had our riots and we stillt been varsity from 2015 and here we are in 2021. all these businesses are being hurt and you see across the country if you're a restaurant owner or employee in less you live in florida you're being hurt the most through this entire pandemic and we see a 1.9 trillion stimulus bill and it does not target small businesses or families especially restaurants. they're not even going to see the relief. we need more law and order and we need our elected officials to represent individuals that put them in office. elizabeth: kim you were out in front on this, you are in baltimore and you're right in 2014 president obama called in the national guard in baltimore after the freddie gray riot, he condemned the writers saying those who looted and started fire should be treated like terminals, thousands of troops were deployed to your city that was president obama saying stop it. what changed since then? >> i don't know, catering to those extreme leftist that want to push the black lives matter movem
. >> it is dangerous and scary as we talked about before 2015 baltimore we had our riots and we stillt been varsity from 2015 and here we are in 2021. all these businesses are being hurt and you see across the country if you're a restaurant owner or employee in less you live in florida you're being hurt the most through this entire pandemic and we see a 1.9 trillion stimulus bill and it does not target small businesses or families especially restaurants. they're not even going to see the...
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Feb 14, 2021
02/21
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CSPAN3
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i still got a defend baltimore washington and oh by the way if i'm defending baltimore and washington, i don't have that much leeway to be an army of operation. this is his. explicit tasks. he has some implied tests too. and we find him as he writes his wife. he says, i believe i have to rescue harrisburg. no union state capital has fallen to the south yet. he believes that he's got to keep his troops in close proximity. in fact when he gets command, he thinks they're too sparse spread out so he's got to provide protection for his force. and he needs to preserve options. both for the defensive role and as the army of operation problem is he doesn't actually know where the confederate army is. so here's how it's going to go. he's going to break his army up into three wings and he's gonna advance them very much keeping mutual support between those parallel columns napoleon would refer to the battalion curae always a day's march distance away from one another that they might support one another protection. and that's where they would be by the 30th he would put his calvary divisions his
i still got a defend baltimore washington and oh by the way if i'm defending baltimore and washington, i don't have that much leeway to be an army of operation. this is his. explicit tasks. he has some implied tests too. and we find him as he writes his wife. he says, i believe i have to rescue harrisburg. no union state capital has fallen to the south yet. he believes that he's got to keep his troops in close proximity. in fact when he gets command, he thinks they're too sparse spread out so...
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Feb 14, 2021
02/21
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CSPAN3
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i have sat on baltimore -- on the street in baltimore and i have seen men and women chained and put on ship to go to new orleans. i can still hear their cries. i'm just going through some old files and notes. >> they are not expecting you to make a formal speech. >> i will not be long, i just want to be repaired. i will not be long. >> a, b, c. >> very good. go on. >> d, h, i, j, k. >> what in gods name do you think you are doing? you get a nigger an inch, he will take a mile. there is no need for you to be reading, boy. noted at all. -- no need at all. >> i understand. >> there is nothing more needs saying. [whimpering] >> i have little hope. more than two centuries of slavery, beyond the reach. >> get up. >> the only point is fear of death. >> figure me to resist me? -- do you mean to resist me? >> i shall not marry you as a slave. >> that i reckon we should go up north. >> if i am caught this time, board knows what might happen. -- lord knows what might happen. >> you will learn yourself a trade in a shipyard. there is work for you up there, and freedom. i saved up some. [train whis
i have sat on baltimore -- on the street in baltimore and i have seen men and women chained and put on ship to go to new orleans. i can still hear their cries. i'm just going through some old files and notes. >> they are not expecting you to make a formal speech. >> i will not be long, i just want to be repaired. i will not be long. >> a, b, c. >> very good. go on. >> d, h, i, j, k. >> what in gods name do you think you are doing? you get a nigger an inch, he...
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Feb 27, 2021
02/21
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KNTV
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. >> reporter: in baltimore, they have been working around the clock for months making j&j's critical ingredients >> we purify out the factor which was the active part of the vaccine, it is filled in the vials. >> reporter: j&j says 4 million doses next week and 20 million doses by the end of nearly 65 and older received at least one vaccine dose president biden was at a fema vaccination site outside the stadium where the houston texans play >> this can be a great american achievement, being the only country in the world to reach 100 million shots in 100 days this could unite us as a country to vaccinate america >> tom joins us now from that lab in baltimore they're producing the astrazeneca vaccine there. that's not approved in the u.s., right? >> reporter: that's right, it is approved in the u.k. and the eu canada approved it today and they have been manufacturing it for when the fda does approve it could be several months from now. visit your plan your vaccine tool on our website. >>> president biden is warning in with the warning to iran after ordering air strikes on iran richard
. >> reporter: in baltimore, they have been working around the clock for months making j&j's critical ingredients >> we purify out the factor which was the active part of the vaccine, it is filled in the vials. >> reporter: j&j says 4 million doses next week and 20 million doses by the end of nearly 65 and older received at least one vaccine dose president biden was at a fema vaccination site outside the stadium where the houston texans play >> this can be a...
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Feb 21, 2021
02/21
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MSNBCW
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eye 93
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what will you be able b to do to pull baltimore out? live there. when you think about me being my age, i am the first mayor to actually experience directly all those negative things. it's different when you went to those schools with no heating or air conditioning. every day of the year i wasn't recognized as human by my own city government. i am not in this for myself. i am not in this to get re-elected. i am in this to build a structure and foundation of how baltimore can be its best self. we are not going to simply police our way through a violence problem that my city has had as long as i've been alive. we're going to violent as a disease. we're going to fight addiction not as something that's just crime to deal with. we've been losing more people from that than gun violence. it's about the total tay about doing the right thing over the popular one even if it means i don't get re-elected. >> chi, last question to you, and i only have about 30 seconds. you told "essence" magazine you don't agree with abolishing or defunding police bu
what will you be able b to do to pull baltimore out? live there. when you think about me being my age, i am the first mayor to actually experience directly all those negative things. it's different when you went to those schools with no heating or air conditioning. every day of the year i wasn't recognized as human by my own city government. i am not in this for myself. i am not in this to get re-elected. i am in this to build a structure and foundation of how baltimore can be its best self. we...
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Feb 24, 2021
02/21
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KNTV
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. >> reporter: like 1/5 of homes in baltimore sheila's doesn't have internet access.s no cell phone, no car, and no way to get the vaccine. >> so you're getting the moderna vaccine today. >> reporter: until this mobile clinic brought a shot to her. >> i don't drive so it would be difficult for me to get any other place. >> reporter: what started as a primary care van, then morphed into a mobile site, now travels across the city to get shots to the most vulnerable. >> so this is one of our exam rooms >> reporter: nurse-practitioner kelly mccallum helps run the program. >> i think in minority communities, especially in the black community in baltimore city, representation is really important >> reporter: those same communities can also be wary of government vaccine programs >> i think once people get vaccinated and they have positive outcomes then they'll tell their family. >> reporter: like baltimore, vernon, connecticut's vaccine rollout got off to a rocky start. how did you know it wasn't working >> when there were 50 people signed up for a clinic that we advertised
. >> reporter: like 1/5 of homes in baltimore sheila's doesn't have internet access.s no cell phone, no car, and no way to get the vaccine. >> so you're getting the moderna vaccine today. >> reporter: until this mobile clinic brought a shot to her. >> i don't drive so it would be difficult for me to get any other place. >> reporter: what started as a primary care van, then morphed into a mobile site, now travels across the city to get shots to the most vulnerable....
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Feb 27, 2021
02/21
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CNNW
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sonja brookings, ceo of baltimore city schools, thank you so much, all the best and best of luck to allt. >> thanks so much. >>> coming up next, johnson & johnson could receive emergency use authorization for its coronavirus vaccine at any moment now so what's next in the approval process? and when will distribution begin? we're carvana, the company who invented car vending machines and buying a car 100% online. now we've created a brand-new way for you to sell your car. whether it's a year old or a few years old. we wanna buy your car. so go to carvana and enter your license plate answer a few questions. and our techno wizardry calculates your car's value and gives you a real offer in seconds. when you're ready, we'll come to you, pay you on the spot and pick up your car, that's it. so ditch the old way of selling your car, and say hello to the new way at carvana. keeping your oysters business growing has you swamped. you need to hire. i need indeed indeed you do. the moment you sponsor a job on indeed you get a shortlist of quality candidates from a resume data base claim your seventy
sonja brookings, ceo of baltimore city schools, thank you so much, all the best and best of luck to allt. >> thanks so much. >>> coming up next, johnson & johnson could receive emergency use authorization for its coronavirus vaccine at any moment now so what's next in the approval process? and when will distribution begin? we're carvana, the company who invented car vending machines and buying a car 100% online. now we've created a brand-new way for you to sell your car....
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Feb 23, 2021
02/21
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KPIX
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in baltimore, maryland african-americans make up more than 62% of the population, but only about 32%f the vaccinations there have been administered to the black community. our national correspondent jericka duncan takes a look. >> thank you for wearing your mask. >> reporter: that's the voice of kobi little, he drives this truck through baltimore. educating vulnerable communities on the coronavirus, and now the vaccine rollout. little is president of the baltimore city naacp, he says pol policymakers and health care providers are overlooking the needs of the black community. >> i'll give you an example. in this phase rollout one phase is for seniors 75 and above. in baltimore city the life expectancy of an african-american man does not reach 75. >> this is not unique to baltimore. >> reporter: there are several factors contributing to vaccine inequities says mark martin, maryland's deputy director for the office of minority health and health disparities. >> i hear you say hesitancy and access are big issues when it comes to vaccinating the most vulnerable populations of people. but w
in baltimore, maryland african-americans make up more than 62% of the population, but only about 32%f the vaccinations there have been administered to the black community. our national correspondent jericka duncan takes a look. >> thank you for wearing your mask. >> reporter: that's the voice of kobi little, he drives this truck through baltimore. educating vulnerable communities on the coronavirus, and now the vaccine rollout. little is president of the baltimore city naacp, he...
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Feb 28, 2021
02/21
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CSPAN3
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eye 134
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how did they get to baltimore from? massachusetts francis established her homicide seminar at harvard medical school in boston in 1945, and she though his shoes based their the program that she established in in legal medicine at the medical school. that was all up in boston. she died in 1962 and boston harvard medical school lost interest and they didn't want to have anything to do with the department of legal medicine and they eventually pulled the plug on it. they just discontinued the whole department and they were really ready to get rid of the homicide seminar. the harvard did not like the idea of cops city cops being in the and the campus among the elites and all that. so they the the person who was the chief here at the time. i was russell fisher. he was chief from 1949 till his close to his death in 1982 and russell fischer had been through the harvard program. he was one of francis's favorites very promising young pathologist. and so he she recommended him for the job. here is the chief medical examiner for th
how did they get to baltimore from? massachusetts francis established her homicide seminar at harvard medical school in boston in 1945, and she though his shoes based their the program that she established in in legal medicine at the medical school. that was all up in boston. she died in 1962 and boston harvard medical school lost interest and they didn't want to have anything to do with the department of legal medicine and they eventually pulled the plug on it. they just discontinued the whole...
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Feb 2, 2021
02/21
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KRON
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>>in baltimore amanda lee reporting. and for more stories like this one you can head to the special black history month section on our website kron 4 dot com. still ahead a warning tonight for anybody posting photos of their vaccine card on social media don't do it how scammers are. >>using these to steal people's identities next in sports warriors will be without their prized rookie james wiseman at least for the immediate future. >>its first director jason dumas has steph curry's thoughts on what that does do to make up for the loss of to make up for the loss of this big man that's coming up. hi, i'm mike. jack hired me to tell you about his bagel breakfast sandwiches with bacon or sausage. jack i thought you hired me to be the spokesperson! why choose one when you can have two? my 2 for $5 bagel breakfast sandwiches. hi, i'm mark, here to tell you about jack's bagel breakfast sandwiches with bacon or sausage. whoa, mark. jack hired me! i got a contract. you mean like this one? why choose one when you can have two? my
>>in baltimore amanda lee reporting. and for more stories like this one you can head to the special black history month section on our website kron 4 dot com. still ahead a warning tonight for anybody posting photos of their vaccine card on social media don't do it how scammers are. >>using these to steal people's identities next in sports warriors will be without their prized rookie james wiseman at least for the immediate future. >>its first director jason dumas has steph...
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Feb 27, 2021
02/21
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CSPAN3
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eye 75
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i sat in baltimore, and i've seen many chained and put on a ship to go to new orleans. >> frederik?ill hear their cries. i'm just going through some old files and notes, some are interesting for the women's conference. >> we are not expecting you to make a formal speech. >> i won't belong, just want to be prepared. i won't be long. >> a, b, c. >> very good, fred. go on. >> g, h, i, j, k. >> but in god's name do you think you are doing? >> he didn't mean any harm. >> if you teach him how to read, it'll ruin him to be a slave. we carried you here to take care of thomas. there is no need for you to be reading, boy, none at all. >> i understand, sir, i will say to it -- >> nothing more needs seeing. >> i have a little hope for the freedom of a slave by peaceful means. more than two centuries of slavery, slave holders, all the immoral and inhumane consideration. >> get up! >> the only penetrable point is fear of death. >> yes, sir. >> or concedes nothing -- it never did, it never will. the limits of tyrants prescribed by endurance. >> i g, h, i, j, k shall not mary as a slave. >> i recko
i sat in baltimore, and i've seen many chained and put on a ship to go to new orleans. >> frederik?ill hear their cries. i'm just going through some old files and notes, some are interesting for the women's conference. >> we are not expecting you to make a formal speech. >> i won't belong, just want to be prepared. i won't be long. >> a, b, c. >> very good, fred. go on. >> g, h, i, j, k. >> but in god's name do you think you are doing? >> he...
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Feb 19, 2021
02/21
by
KGO
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. >> reporter: this pandemic has ravaged poverty-stricken cities like baltimore, hitting people of colormoms, the hardest. >> women of color are more likely to be holding an in-person job, especially in the service sector, that's been hit more severely by covid-19. i bristle at the idea that people say women are opting out of the labor market. they're not opting out, they're being pushed out. >> reporter: alicia lost her job when the pandemic hit. then the family lost their rental house. this hotel became their home. then when the money ran out -- >> you all lived in the car together? >> we were all in one seat, she was in the middle. >> how did you survive that? >> i really -- it hurt me more than them. as long as they were together, they were happy. >> reporter: for single mother angel marino, a certified medical assistant in detroit, she had no choice but to keep reporting to her job at a hospital. >> i can't afford not to work. >> reporter: we've been following her story since the pandemic began. in december, she talked with my colleague, rebecca jarvis. >> how have you been managing
. >> reporter: this pandemic has ravaged poverty-stricken cities like baltimore, hitting people of colormoms, the hardest. >> women of color are more likely to be holding an in-person job, especially in the service sector, that's been hit more severely by covid-19. i bristle at the idea that people say women are opting out of the labor market. they're not opting out, they're being pushed out. >> reporter: alicia lost her job when the pandemic hit. then the family lost their...
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Feb 18, 2021
02/21
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FOXNEWSW
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you think the honor system is going to work in baltimore?liticians in baltimore have proposed anything. they have watched their once proud rising industrial port city decay into a criminal carcass over the last 40 or so years. better than nothing. >> katie: dana. >> dana: did any of you watch "the wire?" season three, the police have this innovative idea: they are going to let the drug dealers deal drugs and do drugs in a certain area of town, and they will look away, which ended up falling apart. it incentivized people to deal more drugs and tumor drugs. it speaks to the need for more education, more economic opportunity, not necessarily more government involvement. >> juan: i live 40 miles away. i had never heard of this. the city council is not taking this seriously, but it does raise an interesting point about the connection between poverty and crime. it may be a strategic appeal for a universal basic income, that kind of thing saying "people get desperate, crime increases, they do horrible things." to me, it's nonsense. i wouldn't agree
you think the honor system is going to work in baltimore?liticians in baltimore have proposed anything. they have watched their once proud rising industrial port city decay into a criminal carcass over the last 40 or so years. better than nothing. >> katie: dana. >> dana: did any of you watch "the wire?" season three, the police have this innovative idea: they are going to let the drug dealers deal drugs and do drugs in a certain area of town, and they will look away,...
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Feb 28, 2021
02/21
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CSPAN3
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and and so we see his photographs in the collection in baltimore. we see another surgeon and he writes about the experience on the 14th the most eventful day event of my life occurred i drew 100 dollars less war tax 250 for medical services rendered to the us government my draft was in favor of assistant. surgeon rank first lieutenant, i read the i read the address several times and i liked it. i confess it read strange to me though it read strange to me. so reading that that he was paid. a certain amount of money even though he didn't like the experience of the war but he was there to take care of some of the wounded men and and and that experience of wearing his uniform another alexander augusta who also to president lincoln. i'm saying he's he wanted to tender intended to apply to apply for an appointment to become a surgeon for the freedman and he says i was compelled to leave he left his country to to live in canada to study medicine but come he was he returned to be a part of this experience of the war and here's his photograph and his letter.
and and so we see his photographs in the collection in baltimore. we see another surgeon and he writes about the experience on the 14th the most eventful day event of my life occurred i drew 100 dollars less war tax 250 for medical services rendered to the us government my draft was in favor of assistant. surgeon rank first lieutenant, i read the i read the address several times and i liked it. i confess it read strange to me though it read strange to me. so reading that that he was paid. a...
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Feb 8, 2021
02/21
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KPIX
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. >>> and now to baltimore where a man named paul o'sullivan knows a few people who share his name.aul o'sullivan please raise his hand? >> hi. >> beaut rr:t if you're four guys with the same name? of course you form a band. ♪ baltimore paul got it started. >> one night i was in a funny mood and i went on to facebook and i sent out i think nine or ten different friend requests to other paul o'sullivans of the world. >> reporter: as fate would have it, three were musicians from pennsylvania, manchester, england, and rotterdam, in the netherlands. naming the band was easy. the paul o'sullivan band. ♪ they released their debut single title the "namesake" last febru struck. but they didn't miss a note because making music from afar was nothing new. >> so what do you do now? form friendships and make music. let's do that. that's -- that was our secret sauce to happiness, and it still is. >> reporter: has this been a blessing for you during covid? >> it's an absolute blessing in my life. >> it's given me a lovely set of friendships. >> reporter: they successfully auditioned for "the kelly
. >>> and now to baltimore where a man named paul o'sullivan knows a few people who share his name.aul o'sullivan please raise his hand? >> hi. >> beaut rr:t if you're four guys with the same name? of course you form a band. ♪ baltimore paul got it started. >> one night i was in a funny mood and i went on to facebook and i sent out i think nine or ten different friend requests to other paul o'sullivans of the world. >> reporter: as fate would have it, three...
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Feb 28, 2021
02/21
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CSPAN3
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bob: on a regular basis, the baltimore club brings together businessmen who need jobs and jobs will needy have matured from service, but now have a service obligation behind them and can settle down and build a career without the likelihood of being interrupted by the draft. or a stateside example, let's go to my town, los angeles. this is a service club in port macarthur. but the essential ingredients, the music, and the refreshments, and the young ladies, are all courtesy of the los angeles uso. ♪ without music and refreshments and young ladies, what is left of the dance is not great morale booster. these gals are uso junior volunteers, typical of the thousands of across the country who make the dances and other activities of the uso the successful and popular events they are. the junior volunteers are volunteers unpaid except by the , satisfaction of helping and the appreciation the guys who know that as long as there is a uso around they're never totally , strangers wherever they go. we had a couple of days, i could try telling you about all the different ways the uso serves people i
bob: on a regular basis, the baltimore club brings together businessmen who need jobs and jobs will needy have matured from service, but now have a service obligation behind them and can settle down and build a career without the likelihood of being interrupted by the draft. or a stateside example, let's go to my town, los angeles. this is a service club in port macarthur. but the essential ingredients, the music, and the refreshments, and the young ladies, are all courtesy of the los angeles...
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Feb 24, 2021
02/21
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KNTV
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. >> i think in minority communities, especially in the black community in baltimore city, representation is really important >> reporter: those same communities can also be wary of government vaccine programs >> i think once people get vaccinated and they have positive outcomes then they'll tell their family. >> reporter: like baltimore, vernon, connecticut's vaccine rollout got off to a rocky start. how did you know it wasn't working >> when there were 50 people signed up for a clinic that we advertised 204 slots for. >> reporter: so vernon went old school. >> and where did you get that vaccine >> reporter: its call center for appointments a lifeline for 60-year-old mace >> i'm a dinosaur when it comes to the cell phone. >> reporter: vernon holds up to ten clinics a week targeting the elderly and low income at places like this community center's food pantry. neighbor cheryl galevich and luz nieto live two blocks away >> neither one of you have a car >> no. >> reporter: luz takes two buses to get to her grocery store cashier's job. >> how much do you worry about getting the virus? >> it'
. >> i think in minority communities, especially in the black community in baltimore city, representation is really important >> reporter: those same communities can also be wary of government vaccine programs >> i think once people get vaccinated and they have positive outcomes then they'll tell their family. >> reporter: like baltimore, vernon, connecticut's vaccine rollout got off to a rocky start. how did you know it wasn't working >> when there were 50 people...
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Feb 14, 2021
02/21
by
KPIX
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ways born in baltimore, maryland. i left baltimore in the very early years and went to mississippi. grew up in mississippi until about high school and fast forward through a few states and i ultimately settled down in california and here i am. >> you have been a police officer for how long? >> six years. >> what motivated you become a police officer? >> i was talking to a good friend of mine's mother and the opportunity came across the internet and she said you would make a good police officer. so i decided to apply and the rest is kind of history. >> when they said you would make a good police officer, what did they see in your character that lend to that? >> i love helping people. i love community. i would like to say i'm very kind hearted and i like to serve, so policing is a big -- everybodiing a big part of policing. >> right. >> but isn't it extremely stress nfl. >> it is stressful in a sense, but just day to day get through it. they have different things, you know, for officers. they have a lot of wellness -- you know, well sentence a big thing now, but they provide a lot of
ways born in baltimore, maryland. i left baltimore in the very early years and went to mississippi. grew up in mississippi until about high school and fast forward through a few states and i ultimately settled down in california and here i am. >> you have been a police officer for how long? >> six years. >> what motivated you become a police officer? >> i was talking to a good friend of mine's mother and the opportunity came across the internet and she said you would...
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Feb 28, 2021
02/21
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CSPAN3
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>> on a regular basis, the baltimore club brings together businessmen who need jobs and jobs will need but now have a service obligation behind them and can settle down to build a career without the likelihood of being interrupted by the draft. ♪ for a final stateside example, let's go to my town, los angeles. >> ♪ jeremiah was a bullfrog, was a good friend of mine, i never understood a single word he said, i helped him drink his wine? ♪ bob: this is a service club in port macarthur. but the essential ingredients, the music, and the refreshments, and the young ladies, are all courtesy of the los angeles uso. ♪ without music and refreshments and young ladies, what is left of the dance is not great morale booster. >> ♪ doit to the fishes in the deeply see, joy to you and me -- joy to the fishes in the deep blue sea, joy to you and me ♪ bob: these gals are uso junior volunteers, typical of the thousands of across the country who make the dances and other activities of the uso the successful and popular events they are. the junior volunteers are volunteers, unpaid except by the satisfactio
>> on a regular basis, the baltimore club brings together businessmen who need jobs and jobs will need but now have a service obligation behind them and can settle down to build a career without the likelihood of being interrupted by the draft. ♪ for a final stateside example, let's go to my town, los angeles. >> ♪ jeremiah was a bullfrog, was a good friend of mine, i never understood a single word he said, i helped him drink his wine? ♪ bob: this is a service club in port...
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Feb 22, 2021
02/21
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CSPAN2
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baltimore sun crime reporter per justen describes history of corruption within baltimore gun trace taskforce in the books we own this city. and in the ten year war huffing ton post senior national correspondent jonathon cone looks at debate over creation of the affordable care act. find these title this is coming week wherever books are sold and watch for many of the authors in the near future on booktv on c-span2. >> on afterwards, our weekly author interview program yale law professor john wit discuss how american law responds to pandemics. here's a portion of that discussion. >> viruses bring out, in fact, rugged individual esm is kind of suicide pact. and our history, i know that federalism of this country under that really quite powerfully. it is in the 1790s you know one in ten residents of philadelphia died of yellow fever. this was -- .1% of the u.s. population died of covid in last six months 10% of philadelphia do id i group in a neighborhood that was the federal government's evacuation place for philadelphia. in the 1790s during yellow fever so i grew up with this in some sen
baltimore sun crime reporter per justen describes history of corruption within baltimore gun trace taskforce in the books we own this city. and in the ten year war huffing ton post senior national correspondent jonathon cone looks at debate over creation of the affordable care act. find these title this is coming week wherever books are sold and watch for many of the authors in the near future on booktv on c-span2. >> on afterwards, our weekly author interview program yale law professor...
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Feb 6, 2021
02/21
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FOXNEWSW
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ten times the national murder rate in the entire country is right there in baltimore city.u know what? somebody has to chip away, and it's going to be me. >> trey: well, we are going to have tim scott on later on tonight. he is the only person of color in the republican side in the house and senate. how does the republican party appeal to the kim klaciks of the world, other constituencies that may not be giving the republican party a hard look based on past perceptions? >> yeah, well, i really appreciate your history lessons in the opening there because in 2008, you are right, we did not have control of the house or the senate, so i want people to still feel like, look, there's still light at the end of the tunnel. i believe in '22 we can switch the house, i believe we can flip the senate, i believe we can take back the white house in '24, but the g.o.p. has to be open to embracing minorities and embracing those i wouldn't necessarily run for office. you know, we have a lot of great fresh faces that came in with the freshman class. madison cawthorn, byron donalds and, a lot
ten times the national murder rate in the entire country is right there in baltimore city.u know what? somebody has to chip away, and it's going to be me. >> trey: well, we are going to have tim scott on later on tonight. he is the only person of color in the republican side in the house and senate. how does the republican party appeal to the kim klaciks of the world, other constituencies that may not be giving the republican party a hard look based on past perceptions? >> yeah,...
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is a regular on the jimmy door show as well as host of the political vigilante on you tube and in baltimore we have wayne you break he is host of the award winning wayne dupree pod cast all right cross couples in fact that means you can jump in anytime you want and i always appreciated ok let's go to came 1st in los angeles on this very early morning for her kim what is authorized and unauthorized speech in our environment here because there is a we have a progressive and we have a conservative on this panel and both of us are getting screwed by you to ok so what is authorized and unauthorized according to the powers that be. well we can only guess and my guess would be that the authorized speech just whatever fits the establishment's narrative at this point that's what it seems to be i mean people who are being to platform to end censored are the ones that are speaking out maybe critical of the government i mean i don't know what kind of world we're living in right now but this is not the america i was led to believe would be the america of my adulthood that's for sure same question to you
is a regular on the jimmy door show as well as host of the political vigilante on you tube and in baltimore we have wayne you break he is host of the award winning wayne dupree pod cast all right cross couples in fact that means you can jump in anytime you want and i always appreciated ok let's go to came 1st in los angeles on this very early morning for her kim what is authorized and unauthorized speech in our environment here because there is a we have a progressive and we have a conservative...
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Feb 21, 2021
02/21
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CNNW
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to buy the baltimore sun and preserve it as a nonprofit.ncialized by a hedge fund and get cut to the bone or become a nonprofit newspaper. are these the models. >> we should all hope that local news could have a thousand jeff bezos who have done wonderfully at "the washington post." but the washington times promised to standby it and this week there are reports it was going to sell. he denies that, but we'll see what happens. it depends on the local owner you have. some of them are better, and some of them are not. >> what about this idea that, you know, there should be some way to have facebook and google support the local news ecosystem, that it shouldn't just all be hedge funds or nonprofit status. i know you are going the rupert murdoch blackmail, but is there some model that would work? >> if you want to tax google and facebook straight out, fine. but who is to say that newspaper owners are the entitled recipients of that money. if you are going to tax the platforms more because they make a lot of money, fine. why wouldn't that go to e
to buy the baltimore sun and preserve it as a nonprofit.ncialized by a hedge fund and get cut to the bone or become a nonprofit newspaper. are these the models. >> we should all hope that local news could have a thousand jeff bezos who have done wonderfully at "the washington post." but the washington times promised to standby it and this week there are reports it was going to sell. he denies that, but we'll see what happens. it depends on the local owner you have. some of them...
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we got an inside look at emergent biosolutions in baltimore, where teams are >> since september, that's really when the manufacturing started, our engineering runs, and we've been in constant production since. >> reporter: and tonight, researchers are tracking an increase in confirmed cases in children, up 10% in the last two weeks. the family of makenzie gongora in san antonio is looking for answers. she was sick can covid and recovering at home. >> doctors told them kind of the standard thing that they told parents with kids with covid, especially with no respiratory issues, to keep an eye on her, keep her comfortable. >> reporter: but just three days after she tested positive, makenzie passed away. her cause of death still under review. >> and e have pilgrim is in baltimore where they are now working on that johnson & johnson vaccine, that single dose vaccine. and eva, president biden sticking to his timeline today, saying he would have 300 million americans vaccinated, he hopes, by the end of summer and that prediction doesn't take into account what the single shot could do for this
we got an inside look at emergent biosolutions in baltimore, where teams are >> since september, that's really when the manufacturing started, our engineering runs, and we've been in constant production since. >> reporter: and tonight, researchers are tracking an increase in confirmed cases in children, up 10% in the last two weeks. the family of makenzie gongora in san antonio is looking for answers. she was sick can covid and recovering at home. >> doctors told them kind of...
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Feb 6, 2021
02/21
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CSPAN2
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working on the front lines showing such amazing courage, compassion and strength like daisy from baltimore city a respiratory therapist at the university of maryland medical center who has been treating covid-19 patients throughout the pandemic, one of the first marylanders to be vaccinated. she received the vaccine in honor of her father who died from covid-19. she says the vaccine was a step forward, a healing for her family. all the small businesses you have had to make difficult changes to continue serving customers safely and to keep the workers employed struggling just to hold on. and then having to lay people off they are able to actually hire even more and to give back to donate masks to the healthcare workers. those who have adapted to the challenges those who work with autistic students and have the courage to have in person instruction since september so the students will fall behind. the superintendent says she does whatever it takes to support her students the essential workers in grocery stores and pharmacies in supply warehouses and transportation who work day in and day out
working on the front lines showing such amazing courage, compassion and strength like daisy from baltimore city a respiratory therapist at the university of maryland medical center who has been treating covid-19 patients throughout the pandemic, one of the first marylanders to be vaccinated. she received the vaccine in honor of her father who died from covid-19. she says the vaccine was a step forward, a healing for her family. all the small businesses you have had to make difficult changes to...
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Feb 9, 2021
02/21
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MSNBCW
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. >>> and camden yards, my beloved camden yards, will remain the home of the baltimore orioles for atanother two seasons. i'm not going to lie, i didn't realize it was a possibility that it wouldn't be. yesterday, the team agreed to extend its lease with the maryland stadium authority through 2023, while a deal is negotiated to keep the team in the city for the long term. again, what? the chairman of the maryland stadium authority, which is the landlord for the o's and for the nfl's ravens on behalf of the state, tells "the baltimore sun" that they are currently discussing terms of a new lease and capital reinvestment would keep the team playing in an upgraded camden yards that would involve increased economic benefits from both baseball and year-round non-baseball uses. they could also extend the current deal for an additional five years. i cannot imagine baltimore without the orioles. >>> and finally, now is your chance to ball like obama. sotheby's is going to sell a pair of nike basketball sneakers custom made for the former president back in 2009. in addition to the hallmarks of
. >>> and camden yards, my beloved camden yards, will remain the home of the baltimore orioles for atanother two seasons. i'm not going to lie, i didn't realize it was a possibility that it wouldn't be. yesterday, the team agreed to extend its lease with the maryland stadium authority through 2023, while a deal is negotiated to keep the team in the city for the long term. again, what? the chairman of the maryland stadium authority, which is the landlord for the o's and for the nfl's...
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Feb 24, 2021
02/21
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MSNBCW
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. >> i feel blessed because we don't have to go too far. >> reporter: like one fifth of homes in baltimorenet access, she has no cellphone, no car and no way to get the vaccine. >> so you're getting the moderna vaccine today. >> reporter: until this mobile clinic brought a shot to her. >> i don't drive so it would be difficult for me to get any other place. >> reporter: what started as a primary caravan then morphed into a mobile site now travels across the city to get shots to the most vulnerable. >> so this is one of our exam rooms. >> reporter: nurse practitioner kelly mccallum helps run the property. >> in minority communities, especially the black community, representation is important. >> reporter: those same communities can be wary of government vaccine programs. >> i think once people get vaccinated and they have positive outcomes then they will tell their family. >> reporter: like baltimore, vernon connecticut's vaccine rollout got off to a rocky start. >> how did you know it wasn't working? >> when there were 50 people signed up for a clinic that we advertised 204 slots for. >> r
. >> i feel blessed because we don't have to go too far. >> reporter: like one fifth of homes in baltimorenet access, she has no cellphone, no car and no way to get the vaccine. >> so you're getting the moderna vaccine today. >> reporter: until this mobile clinic brought a shot to her. >> i don't drive so it would be difficult for me to get any other place. >> reporter: what started as a primary caravan then morphed into a mobile site now travels across the...