Made in Owings Mills

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

Made in Owings Mills MADE IN OWINGS MILLS FIFTY YEARS OF REMARKABLE PRODUCTIONS Assembled for the first time ever, the following lists represent programs made by personnel at the Maryland Center for Public Broadcasting, Maryland Public Television, and Maryland Instructional Television (MITV) or by College of the Air (COA) and International University Consortium (IUC) teams over the years. The information below, arranged in alphabetical order by what we believe to be the full, official titles of productions, has been compiled from various lists, materials in the MPT Archives, Program Guides, and other sources by alumni volunteers, MPT staffers, and other resource people. Because of space limitations, not included are short-form interstitials or public service announcements. We regret any inaccuracies or omissions. Please email corrections to: [email protected]. Notes to readers: • The article “the” has been omitted from the start of many titles below. • Productions that earned regional Emmy®Awards from the National Capital Chesapeake Bay Chapter of the National Association of Television Arts & Sciences are shown in bold face. Productions that earned national Emmys® are shown in BOLD UPPERCASE letters. SECTION 1: MARYLAND CENTER FOR PUBLIC BROADCASTING & American Stakes in the Mid-East (1970) MARYLAND PUBLIC TELEVISION PRODUCTIONS An Apple, An Orange (1977) An Interview with Arthur Ashe (1970) 3 Mo’ Divas: A New Concert Smashing Musical Barriers (2008) And Baby Makes Two (1982) A City Celebrates: Opening of Harborplace (1980) And Justice for All? (1992) A Day in the Life of the Mayor (1974) Anna Russell Farewell Special (1985) A Day to Remember (1988) Annapolis 300: A Capital Celebration (2008) A Day With Conrad Green (1980) Anna’s Story (1976) A Festival of Carols (1978) Anne Arundel’s Legacy (1999) A Journey of Faith: The Creation of the Reginald F. Lewis Antarctica: A Presence on the Ice (1990) Museum (2005) Antiques Roadshow Baltimore (2008) A Jury of His Peers (1990) Anuna Celtic Origins (2007) A Personal Story (1972) Anúna: Christmas Memories (2008) A Raisin in the Sun Revisited (2013) Apple Harvest Festival (1999) A Spoonful of Ginger: Food as Medicine (2000) A-rab Summer (1972) A View from the Gulf (1991) Art Off the Wall (1990) A Woman’s Place (1998) Artist at War (1986) A.M. Weather (1978-1995) Artist of Savitria (1971) Adoption in Maryland (1980) Artists of the Chesapeake (2006) After the Warming with James Burke (1990) Artworks (2013-present) After the Warming Panel Discussion (2007) ArtWorks This Week (2002-2013) Afternoon Tea (2005-present) Artworks: John Waters Special (2018) AIDS: A Regional Report (1987) Artworks: The Baker Artist Awards (2009 - present) Alcoholic Driver Safety Project (circa 1970s) Ask Governor O’Malley (2008-2011) Alzheimer’s: An MPT Follow-up (1990) Ask Governor Schaefer (1987-1988) America’s Veterans: A Musical Tribute (2008-2016) Ask Senator Mikulski (1987) America Addicted (2018) Ask the Mayors (1988) Atlantic City: Winners & Losers (1980) Auction-On-The-Air (1970-1973) Autumn Glory Festival (1979) Annual 5-String Banjo Competition (1979) Annual Fiddler’s Competition (1979) Aviation Weather (1972-1976) Baby Phases Quiz (1991) BAKING WITH JULIA (1996-1999) HISTORY EXTRAS | 73 Baltimore Blast Soccer (2008) Bob the Vid Tech: Blast Into Space! (2000) Baltimore Chamber Orchestra: Colors of the World (1996) Bob the Vid Tech: Message in a Bottle (2004) Baltimore City Fair (1971) Bob the Vid Tech: Music to My Ears (2001) Baltimore Clipper: The Ship That Launched a Port (1977) Bob the Vid Tech: Planes, Trains and Automobiles (2006) Baltimore International Film Festival (1980-1982) Bob the Vid Tech: The Mystery of the Missing Pizza (2008) Baltimore Mayoral Debates (1995, 2007, 2011, 2016) Bob the Vid Tech: Water Water Everywhere (2002) Baltimore Sun: 150 Years (1987) Bob the Vid Tech’s Big City Adventure (2009) Baltimore Symphony Orchestra Vid Kid Fable (1996) Baltimore Symphony and Leon Fleisher in Concert (1982) Vid Kid Field Trip: National Aquarium (1995) Baltimore Symphony Chamber Orchestra (1972) Vid Kid Holiday Special (1993) Baltimore Symphony Orchestra Chorus (1972) Vid Kid: Lost in Maryland History (1997) BSO in Japan (1995) Vid Kid: Meeting the Challenge! (1998) BSO Salutes Maryland Day: Children’s Concert (1993) Bond Issue Evaluation (1972) BSO: Dreams, Mirrors & Reflections (1994) Brain Blasters (1999) BSO: Tokyo Concert (1994) Branded: DUI (2005) Barbecue University Marathon (2005) Breaking Heroin’s Grip: Road to Recovery (2017) Barbecue University with Steven Raichlen (2003—2006) Breast Cancer: Stories of Survival (2000) Bartleby, the Scrivener (1977) Brewed on the Bay: Craft Beers of Maryland (2011) Baseball: Birds on 33rd (1991) Bridge to Reading: What Families Need to Know (2002) Basically Baseball (1973) Buddy Deane Scrapbook: Shake, Rattle & Roll (2003) Battered Woman (1973) Budget Crisis: Maryland Public Hearings (1991) Battle of Antietam (1971) Bugeye: A Chesapeake Legacy (2009) Bean Sprouts (1980) Burglar Proofing (1974) Bees & Honey (1980) Business Connection (2003-2007) Best of Chesapeake Bay Cooking (2005) BWI: The New Air City (1977) Between Couples (1988) By A Jury of His Peers (1973) Beyond the Bright Lights: The Power & Passion of By The People (2004-2006) Clarisse Mechanic (2006) Big Band Battle (1989) Calvert County: Once Upon a Time (2004) Biography of a President (1971) Camp David (1987) Birth of a Bugeye (1979) Campaign 2002 Election Special (2002) Black Is … (1969-1973) Car Care for Everyone with Pat Goss (2010) Black Men: Uncertain Futures — A Follow-Up (1991) Caring for Kids (1991) Black Men: Uncertain Futures (1991) Caucus (1969-1970) Blind Spots: Threats to the Chesapeake (2006) Caught in the Crossfire (1992) Bloomberg Business News (1994- 1997) Changing Times! Changing Schools? (1986) Bloomberg Information Television (1995-1999) Chanukah: A Celebration of Freedom (1990) Bloomberg Money (2000) Charm City Comedy (1984) Bloomberg Morning News (1997-2000) Chesapeake Bay Bridge: Spanning the Bay (2011) Blue Revolution (1989) Chesapeake Bay By Air (2010) Boatworks (1997) Chesapeake Bay Cooking Marathon (1998) Bob the Vid Kid/Tech (1993-2010) Chesapeake Bay Cooking with John Shields (1998) Specials: Chesapeake Bay Summit (2015-present) A Vid Kid Fable: The Day the World Chesapeake Bay Week® Volunteer-a-thon (2007-2011) Stayed in Bed: (1996) 74 | THE HISTORY OF MARYLAND PUBLIC TELEVISION 1969-2019 Chesapeake Collectibles (2011 -present) Crosstalk: Stan Kenton (1976) Chesapeake Crossroads (2005) Cuisine Rapide (1989-1990) Chesapeake Planter: A Dialogue on Early American Farming (1977) Chesapeake and Delaware Canal (2019) Dateline USSR/USA (1984) Chesapeake Stories I (2010) Daycare Child Development (1974) Chesapeake Stories II (2011) Day Care (1977) Chesapeake Wine Country (2009) D-Day at 70: A Salute to the Greatest Generation (2014) Chesapeake: A Bay Trippers Adventure (2000) Democracy on the Wire (1995) Chez Pepin (2000) Democratic Presidential Primary Forum (1992) Child Abuse in Maryland (1979) Designing Women (1970) Child Care Crisis: A Maryland Report (1988) Desperately Seeking Parents (1991) Christmas 1783 (1972) Dessert Circus with Jacques Torres (1997-1999) Christmas with the Annapolis Brass Quintet (1981) Developing Stories (1992-1993) Chrome Dreams: A MotorWeek Special with John Davis (1995) Developing Writers: Workshop for High School Teachers (2005) Citizen Schaefer (2009) Diabetes: What You Need to Know (1997) Citizens, Soldiers, Marylanders (1999) Dialogue of the Western World (1972) Civil War: A Region Divided (1990) Dilemmas of Power: U.S./Soviet Relations (1971) Clarisse Mechanic Tribute (2009) Dimes (1987) Class of 2000 (1987) Direct Connection with Jeff Salkin (2001-present) Clickety-Clack Christmas Trains (1998) Distinctive Homes of the Chesapeake (2013) Clipper City: Sail to Liberty (1986) Dollars & Sense (2002) Coastal Cooking with John Shields (2005) Dolly Sods (circa 1970s) Collegiate Lacrosse (1972-1973) Down in the Dumps: America’s Garbage Crisis (1993) Color at The Bar (2001) Downee Ocean, Hon! (2014) Columbia’s Promise (2019) Dr. Hammond’s Pet Line (circa 1980s) Coming of a Comet (1973) Dr. Wayne Dyer: Power of Intention (2005) Concert for the Chesapeake Bay (2012-2017) Drop-out Dilemma (1987) Conowingo Dam: Power on the Susquehanna (2016) Drug Decriminalization Hearings (1988) Constitutional Question (1970) Duck Carvers (1973) Consumer Survival Kit (1973-1979) Dundalk: World War II at Home (1986) Contraception: The Stalled Revolution (1992) Country Inn Cooking with Gail Greco (1995-1998) Eastern European Freedom Celebration (1990) Couples Arguing (1988) Eatin’ Crabcakes: The Best I Ever Had (2009) Couples in Crisis (1989) Eatin’ Crabs: Chesapeake Style (2007) Covered Bridges: Spanning Time (2008) Eatin’ Oysters: Chesapeake Style! (2017) Crabs (1984-1991) Eatin the Chesapeake: The Five Feasts (2018) Crime in Maryland Edgar Allan Poe 200th Birthday Direct Connection Special (2009) The Revolving Prison Door (1982) Eisenhower Symposium (1973) When the Bough Breaks (1982) Electric Road Trip (2014) Out on the Street (1982) Enterprise: Gulliver’s New Travels (1981) Who Gets Punished? (1982) EnviroMysteries (1997) Critics’ Place (1974-1986) EnviroMysteries II: Breaking the Mold (2003) Crossings (2001) Envisioning Literature: Conversations In Literature (2002) Crosstalk (1971-1972) Ethics on Trial with Fred Graham (1987) Expressions of Freedom (2000) F.S. Key After the Song (2017) F.S. Key and the Song That Built America (2014) Family Day Care (1980) Family
Recommended publications
  • Nanjemoy and Mattawoman Creek Watersheds
    Defining the Indigenous Cultural Landscape for The Nanjemoy and Mattawoman Creek Watersheds Prepared By: Scott M. Strickland Virginia R. Busby Julia A. King With Contributions From: Francis Gray • Diana Harley • Mervin Savoy • Piscataway Conoy Tribe of Maryland Mark Tayac • Piscataway Indian Nation Joan Watson • Piscataway Conoy Confederacy and Subtribes Rico Newman • Barry Wilson • Choptico Band of Piscataway Indians Hope Butler • Cedarville Band of Piscataway Indians Prepared For: The National Park Service Chesapeake Bay Annapolis, Maryland St. Mary’s College of Maryland St. Mary’s City, Maryland November 2015 ii EXECUTIVE SUMMARY The purpose of this project was to identify and represent the Indigenous Cultural Landscape for the Nanjemoy and Mattawoman creek watersheds on the north shore of the Potomac River in Charles and Prince George’s counties, Maryland. The project was undertaken as an initiative of the National Park Service Chesapeake Bay office, which supports and manages the Captain John Smith Chesapeake National Historic Trail. One of the goals of the Captain John Smith Trail is to interpret Native life in the Middle Atlantic in the early years of colonization by Europeans. The Indigenous Cultural Landscape (ICL) concept, developed as an important tool for identifying Native landscapes, has been incorporated into the Smith Trail’s Comprehensive Management Plan in an effort to identify Native communities along the trail as they existed in the early17th century and as they exist today. Identifying ICLs along the Smith Trail serves land and cultural conservation, education, historic preservation, and economic development goals. Identifying ICLs empowers descendant indigenous communities to participate fully in achieving these goals.
    [Show full text]
  • Women and the Law in Colonial Maryland, 1648-1715 Monica C
    Marquette University e-Publications@Marquette Dissertations (2009 -) Dissertations, Theses, and Professional Projects "Justice Without Partiality": Women and the Law in Colonial Maryland, 1648-1715 Monica C. Witkowski Marquette University Recommended Citation Witkowski, Monica C., ""Justice Without Partiality": Women and the Law in Colonial Maryland, 1648-1715" (2010). Dissertations (2009 -). Paper 27. http://epublications.marquette.edu/dissertations_mu/27 “JUSTICE WITHOUT PARTIALITY”: WOMEN AND THE LAW IN COLONIAL MARYLAND, 1648-1715 by Monica C. Witkowski A Dissertation submitted to the Faculty of the Graduate School, Marquette University in Partial Fulfillment of the Requirements for the Degree of Doctor of Philosophy Milwaukee, Wisconsin May 2010 ABSTRACT “JUSTICE WITHOUT PARTIALITY”: WOMEN AND THE LAW IN COLONIAL MARYLAND, 1648-1715 Monica C. Witkowski Marquette University, 2010 What was the legal status of women in early colonial Maryland? This is the central question answered by this dissertation. Women, as exemplified through a series of case studies, understood the law and interacted with the nascent Maryland legal system. Each of the cases in the following chapters is slightly different. Each case examined in this dissertation illustrates how much independent legal agency women in the colony demonstrated. Throughout the seventeenth century, Maryland women appeared before the colony’s Provincial and county courts as witnesses, plaintiffs, defendants, and attorneys in criminal and civil trials. Women further entered their personal cattle marks, claimed land, and sued other colonists. This study asserts that they improved their social standing through these interactions with the courts. By exerting this much legal knowledge, they created an important place for themselves in Maryland society. Historians have begun to question the interpretation that Southern women were restricted to the home as housewives and mothers.
    [Show full text]
  • THE VILLAGE at FALLSWAY MULTIFAMILY DEVELOPMENT in an OPPORTUNITY ZONE BALTIMORE, MARYLAND the Village at Fallsway
    THE VILLAGE AT FALLSWAY MULTIFAMILY DEVELOPMENT IN AN OPPORTUNITY ZONE BALTIMORE, MARYLAND The Village at Fallsway THIS CONFIDENTIAL OFFERING MEMORANDUM (“Offering Memorandum”) is being furnished to the recipient (the “Recipient”) solely for the Recipient’s own limited use in considering whether to provide financing for The Village at Fallsway located at 300-320 North Front Street, 300-312 North High Street, and 300 Fallsway, Baltimore, MD (the “Property”), on behalf of Airo Capital Management (the “Sponsor”). This confidential information does not purport to be all-inclusive nor does it purport to contain all the information that a prospective investor may desire. Neither Avison Young, the Sponsor nor any of their respective partners, managers, officers, employees or agents makes any representation, guarantee or warranty, expressed or implied, as to the accuracy or completeness of this Offering Memorandum or any of its contents and no legal liability is assumed or shall be implied with respect thereto. The Recipient agrees that: (a) the Offering Memorandum and its contents are confidential information, except for such information contained in the Offering Memorandum that is a matter of public record; (b) the Recipient and the Recipient’s employees, agents, and consultants (collectively, the “need to know parties”) will hold and treat the Offering Memorandum in the strictest of confidence, and the Recipient and the need to know parties will not, directly or indirectly, disclose or permit anyone else to disclose its contents to any other person, firm, or entity without the prior written authorization of the Sponsor; and, (c) the Recipient and the need to know parties will not use, or permit to be used, this Offering Memorandum or its contents in any fashion or manner detrimental to the interest of the Sponsor or for any purpose other than use in considering whether to invest into the Property.
    [Show full text]
  • Amazon + Baltimore: Building the American City of Tomorrow
    HQ2 @ Amazon + Baltimore: Building the American City of Tomorrow Page 02 Location, location, Let’s talk Building Port location talent Covington Maryland is your It’s ranked in the top The first master- gateway to everywhere five most educated planned smart city regions in the U.S., and is here Page 07 Baltimore businesses Page 25 couldn’t be happier Page 10 /01 A Letter from our Mayor CATHERINE E. PUGH MAYOR OF BALTIMORE Baltimore. This Must Be the Place. Amazon will have a great impact on the city chosen for Amazon HQ2, but that city will have a great impact on Amazon. The right city must have a talented workforce, a passion for innovation, a commitment to diversity and inclusion, and environmentally-friendly and sustainable design. The city you choose will share Amazon’s culture and values; Amazon and its HQ2 city will share in each other’s momentum. Baltimore, as you will see, is a city on the rise like no other. When it comes to Amazon HQ2, I am confident you will agree ‘This Must Be the Place.’ Baltimore is located at the epicenter of talent, education and innovation, borne out of its strategic, central location in the heart of the Northeast Corridor of the United States, and decades of collaboration between government, private enterprise, academia, the military and venture capital. As port and rail traffic blends with fiber-optic connections, makerspaces and tech start- ups, Baltimore is the only city with the grit, history and innovative spirit to lead the synergistic union of American commerce and technology for the 21st century.
    [Show full text]
  • The Gallery / Harborplace 200 E
    THE GALLERY / HARBORPLACE 200 E. Pratt Street / 111 S. Calvert Street Baltimore, Maryland AREA AMENITIES FLEXIBLE OFFICE SPACE PROPERTY HIGHLIGHTS Outstanding views overlooking Baltimore’s THE GALLERY / famed Inner Harbor Parking garage (1,190 cars) with 24/7 access HARBORPLACE New fitness center FREE to all tenants 200 E. Pratt Street 600-room Renaissance Harborplace Hotel interconnected 111 S. Calvert Street Lobby guard on duty and fully automated New 30,000 square foot high-end “Spaces” co-working facility Baltimore, Maryland Retail amenities including new full-service restaurant COMING SOON! -- Dunkin'® HARBOR VIEW MATTHEW SEWARD BRONWYN LEGETTE Senior Director Director +1 410 347 7549 +1 410 347 7565 [email protected] [email protected] One East Pratt Street, Suite 700 | Baltimore, MD 21202 Main +1 410 752 4285 | Fax +1 576 9031 cushmanwakefield.com ©2019 Cushman & Wakefield. All rights reserved. The information contained in this communication is strictly confidential. This information has been obtained from sources believed to be reliable but has not been verified. No warranty or representation, express or implied, is made as to the condition of the property (or properties) referenced herein or as to the accuracy or completeness of the information contained herein, and same is submitted subject to errors, omissions, change of price, rental or other conditions, withdraw- al without notice, and to any special listing conditions imposed by the property owner(s). Any projections, opinions or estimates are subject
    [Show full text]
  • Poe's Baltimore
    http://knowingpoe.thinkport.org/ Poe’s Baltimore Content Overview This is an outline of the information found on each location on the interactive map. As students explore the map online, you will note the following color coding system: ü Modern Sites are yellow ü Sites Then and Now are green ü Poe-era sites are red In addition, all locations include images. Modern Sites Modern Inner Harbor (Harborplace) NOW: Harborplace is a fairly recent addition to Baltimore’s landscape. Completed in 1980, Harborplace and its close relatives, the Maryland Science Center and the National Aquarium at Baltimore, have attracted millions of visitors to the city each year. If you were wondering why Harborplace appears to be out in the harbor on the 1838 map…it’s because it was! As late as 1950, the Inner Harbor was just that – the innermost dock in Baltimore Harbor for passenger, freight, and government ships. But the docks were old and rotting, so around 1970 the city tore them down. The plans for developing the shopping pavilions at Harborplace called for more space. The city did just that—using concrete and pylons to add almost 100 feet of shoreline where the rotting docks had been. The result was the Inner Harbor area – complete with shops and large pathways – that you can walk around today. THEN: In Poe’s day, the Inner Harbor area was a thriving seaport. Ships were being built in nearby Fells Point. A new, lively form of transportation— called a “steamer” (a steam-powered boat)—was becoming a more and more common sight.
    [Show full text]
  • 04/30/2018 Daily Program Listing II 03/04/2018 Page 1 of 120
    Daily Program Listing II 43.1 Date: 03/04/2018 04/01/2018 - 04/30/2018 Page 1 of 120 Sun, Apr 01, 2018 Title Start Subtitle Distrib Stereo Cap AS2 Episode 00:00:01 Closer to Truth EPS (S) (CC) N/A #1613H Marvin Minsky: Like No Other One of artificial intelligence's legendary pioneers, Marvin Minsky, recently died. With this tribute, we celebrate his penetrating analysis of brains, minds, AI, religion and God. 00:30:00 American Forum NETA (S) (CC) N/A #318H Crossing President Trump Former Acting U.S. Attorney General SALLY YATES on her clash with President Donald J. Trump, the Russia investigation, and the risks of rolling back criminal justice reform. 01:00:00 Speakeasy APTEX (S) (CC) N/A #301H Jimmie Vaughan and Gary Clark Jr. Grammy Award winner Gary Clark Jr. is joined by four-time Grammy Award winner Jimmie Vaughan at New York City's Iridium for a taping of the intimate conversation series "Speakeasy." Clark has been called "The Chosen One" by Rolling Stone and has been hailed as a major talent by icons including the Rolling Stones, Sheryl Crow, and Paul McCartney. He has leant his unique blend of rock, R&B, blues, soul, and pop to multiple soundtracks including the acclaimed movie "12 Years a Slave." Vaughan has been regarded by Guitar Player magazine as "a living legend" and is one of the most respected guitarists in the world of popular music. With the Famous Thunderbirds, he spearheaded the current blues revival and has earned the admiration of B.B.
    [Show full text]
  • Public Safety
    PUBLIC SAFETY 010 In Review 2 Part I crime in Greenbelt decreased 6.8% in 2010, from 1,396 reported incidents in 2009 to 1,300. Part I crimes are defined as murder, rape, robbery, assault, burglary, theft and auto theft. By comparison, the Washington Metropolitan region of Montgomery and Prince George’s counties, known as UCR Region IV, experienced a 10.5% decrease in 2009, according to the latest published Maryland State Police Uniform Crime Report (May 10, 2010). Violent crimes of murder, rape, robbery and aggravated assault involve the element of personal confrontation between the perpetrator and the victim; consequently they are considered more serious crimes than property crimes because of their very nature. These offenses accounted for 16% of all crime in Maryland. For Greenbelt, violent crime comprised 14% of all Part I crimes indicating that Greenbelt falls in line with statewide violent crime trends. Crimes against persons, at 185, were the lowest since 2004, driven by a 17% decline in robbery, 106 reported incidents. Robbery remains the most prevalent violent crime in our community, accounting for 57% of all personal crime. Sixty- six (66) robberies occurred in Greenbelt West (62.2%), twenty-nine (29) in Greenbelt East (27.3%) and eleven (11) in historic Greenbelt (10.3%). The number of property crimes reported during 2010 (1,115) was over six times greater than the number of violent crimes. As a group, property crime made up 86% of the total crimes in 2010. Property crimes decreased 7% overall. Notably, motor vehicle theft (133) declined 25%. Geographically, 51% of crime occurred in Greenbelt West, 35% in Greenbelt East and 14% in historic Greenbelt.
    [Show full text]
  • Artists Are a Tool for Gentrification’: Maintaining Artists and Creative Production in Arts Districts
    International Journal of Cultural Policy ISSN: 1028-6632 (Print) 1477-2833 (Online) Journal homepage: http://www.tandfonline.com/loi/gcul20 ‘Artists are a tool for gentrification’: maintaining artists and creative production in arts districts Meghan Ashlin Rich To cite this article: Meghan Ashlin Rich (2017): ‘Artists are a tool for gentrification’: maintaining artists and creative production in arts districts, International Journal of Cultural Policy, DOI: 10.1080/10286632.2017.1372754 To link to this article: https://doi.org/10.1080/10286632.2017.1372754 Published online: 06 Sep 2017. Submit your article to this journal Article views: 263 View related articles View Crossmark data Full Terms & Conditions of access and use can be found at http://www.tandfonline.com/action/journalInformation?journalCode=gcul20 INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF CULTURAL POLICY, 2017 https://doi.org/10.1080/10286632.2017.1372754 ‘Artists are a tool for gentrification’: maintaining artists and creative production in arts districts Meghan Ashlin Rich Department of Sociology/Criminal Justice, University of Scranton, Scranton, PA, USA ABSTRACT ARTICLE HISTORY This study investigates the relationship between arts-themed development Received 7 June 2017 and the strategies used by neighborhood stakeholders, including artists Accepted 16 August 2017 and other marginalized populations, to maintain their place in gentrifying KEYWORDS arts and cultural districts. Using a case study of a state-sanctioned Arts & Artist communities; creative Entertainment District in Baltimore, MD (U.S.A.), I find that the organizations placemaking; gentrification; that are ‘thoughtful’ in their development actively seek to maintain the urban planning and policy production of arts and the residency of artists in the neighborhood into perpetuity.
    [Show full text]
  • Charm of the Baltimore Region HOST COMMITTEE’S GUIDE
    DISCOVER THE Charm of the Baltimore Region HOST COMMITTEE’S GUIDE The Maryland City/County Management Association and ICMA’s 2018 Conference Host Committee are excited to welcome you to Baltimore for ICMA’s 104th Annual Conference. From the bustling Inner Harbor, where the Baltimore Convention Center is located, to the city’s many historical sites, renowned museums, inspiring architecture, and diverse neighborhoods, Baltimore has something for everyone. So get out and discover the many reasons why Baltimore is known as Charm City! wrote some of the early stories that would make him the father of the modern short story, creating and Historical Sites defining the modern genres of mystery, horror, and History abounds in Baltimore. A must-see stop while science fiction. you’re in town is Fort McHenry. During the War of 1812, Westminster Hall is a beautiful building troops at Fort McHenry stopped a British advance into located at the intersection of Fayette and the city, inspiring Francis Scott Key to pen our national Greene Streets in downtown Baltimore. anthem. Administered by the National Park Service since This restored historic church features 1933, Fort McHenry is the only area of the National Park stained glass windows, an 1882 pipe System to be designated as both a national monument organ, cathedral ceilings, and raised and a historic shrine. balconies. The Westminster Burying History enthusiasts may also want to visit the Star-Spangled Grounds, one of Baltimore’s Banner Flag House, Mary Pickersgill’s 1793 home where oldest cemeteries, features the she made the 30-by-42-foot flag that flew over Fort gravesite of Edgar Allan Poe.
    [Show full text]
  • Recent Trends in Certified Organic Tree Fruit in Washington State: 2016
    Recent Trends in Certified Organic Tree Fruit in Washington State: 2016 Document date June 8, 2017 Elizabeth Kirby and David Granatstein WSU-Center for Sustaining Agriculture and Natural Resources In cooperation with Washington State Department of Agriculture Organic Program, Oregon Tilth, and CCOF Document Outline Slides • Introduction 3 • Demand Trends 3 - 9 • Global and National Area 10-19 • Washington State Trends 21-25 • Organic Apples 26-55 • Organic Pears 56-64 • Organic Cherries 65-71 • Soft Fruit 72 • Exports 73-77 • Additional U.S. Data 79-82 Abbreviations used: CSANR WSU Center for Sustaining Agriculture & Natural Resources CSA Community Supported Agriculture operation AMS USDA Agricultural Marketing Service ERS USDA Economic Research Service NOP USDA National Organic Program 2 NASS USDA National Agricultural Statistics Service WSDA Washington State Dept. of Agriculture The following set of slides presents the current data on organic tree fruit area and production for Washington State, with some associated global and national data. Data come from various sources including certifiers [e.g., Washington St. Dept. of Agriculture (WSDA) Organic Program; Oregon Tilth Certified Organic (OTCO), California Certified Organic Farmers (CCOF)], The World of Organic Agriculture annual publication http://www.organic-world.net/index.html, USDA, Calif. Dept. Food and Agric. (CDFA), and industry sources [Washington State Tree Fruit Association (WSTFA), Wenatchee Valley Traffic Association (WVTA), Washington Growers Clearinghouse (WGCH), Pear Bureau Northwest (PBNW)]. Data from WSDA were extracted on March 27, 2017. Organic agriculture continues to be consumer driven. Globally, retail sales of organic food were $81.6 billion in 2015. The U.S. was the largest single country market (35.8 billion €), followed by Germany (8.6 billion €), France (5.5 billion €), and China (4.7 billion €).
    [Show full text]
  • TITLE Now Is the Time: an Action Agenda for Improvi% G Black and Minority Health in Maryland. the Final Report of the Maryland Governor's Commission on Black and Minority Health
    DOCUMENT RESUME ED 326 585 UD 026 889 TITLE Now Is the Time: An Action Agenda for Improvi%g Black and Minority Health in Maryland. The Final Report of the Maryland Governor's Commission on Black and Minority Health. INSTITUTION Maryland Governor's Commission on Black and Minority Health, Baltimore.; Maryland State Dept. of Health and Mental Hygiene, Baltimore. PUB DATE Nov 87 NOTE 228p. AVAILABLE FROMMaryland Dept. of Health and Mental Hygiene, Policy and Health Statistics Administration, Division of Policy Analysis, 201 West Preston Street, Baltimore, MD 21201. PUB TYPE Reports - Research/Technical (243) EDRS PRICE MF01/PC10 Plus Postage. DESCRIPTORS *Blacks; Demography; *Health Needs; *Health Promotion; Health Services; Hearinas; Migrant Workers; *Minority Groups; Mortality Rate; Public Health; *Racial Differences; Refugees; State Surveys; Whites IDENTIFIERS *Access to Health Care; *Maryland ABSTRACT This document comprises a report on the disparity between the health status of Maryland's blacks and minorities and the white population. Information was gathered from statewide public hearings at which over 50 individuals and groups representing the general public and health care providers testified. The major finding was that a disproportionate number of black and minority Marylanders died needlessly between 1983 and 1985 from diseases, homicide, or accidents that were either preventable or controllable. Although Maryland has one of the best health care delivery systems in the nation, major improvements are needed if the health status
    [Show full text]