Arts & Culture

5.3.13: Remembering Mick the Pirate

He was a beloved bartender, an unlikely hot sauce entrepreneur, a cancer survivor, and a retired stuntman.  When Mick Kipp, better known as “Mick the Pirate,” died from cardiac arrest on Sunday, April 28th, Baltimore lost a kind soul and a larger-than-life personality.



5.3.13: “Always Be Closing”

Think your workplace is stressful?  It might be worth remembering that it could be much worse.



Dramatizing the Ten Hours Following JFK's Death

The Lowenherz Collection of Kennedy Photographs, Friedheim Library, Archives and Special Collections, Peabody Institute of The Johns Hopkins University; Orlando Suero, photographer.

May 6, 2013

In this web extra, you can hear Caitlin Vincent and Joshua Bornfield discuss how the arts scene in Baltimore is a good place for opera. 



United Way's 2-1-1, Kal Book of Cartoons, Boeing Boeing Review, and Stephen Crane at Peabody Library

We all know that in case of an emergency, call 9-1-1. For information, press 4-1-1. But last year, more than 96,000 Maryland residents dialed 2-1-1. Sandy Monck, chief impact officer at United Way of Central Maryland tells us how UWCM's 2-1-1 Maryland is assisting residents in need.


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The Lines Between Us: Prisoner, Playwright

April 26, 2013

In the two web audio extras below, Mike Perry claims that the Department of Public Safety and Correctional Services unfairly banned the Friend of a Friend program from some Maryland prisons, and that the way the Department of Corrections deals with gangs inside prisons actually creates a disincentive for prisoners to leave gangs because they'll be seen as informants.

DPSCS spokesperson Rick Binetti did not address Perry's comments about gangs, but he did tell us in an e-mail that the program at Roxbury Correctional Institution is "still suspended and will be most likely into the foreseeable future." Binetti gave us this statement regarding Friend of a Friend:

The Friend of a Friend program, while temporarily suspended at the Roxbury Correctional Institution, is still ongoing at other institutions within the Department of Public Safety and Correctional Services.

Two individuals associated with Friend of a Friend program including violated entrance security procedures in the fall of 2012 when arriving at Roxbury for the program’s meeting. One of these individuals had materials with them which by institutional procedure needed to be cleared by the prison’s administration. The individuals involved did not previously ask for permission to bring this material inside the institution, so it was confiscated.

Another individual there for the same program meeting attempted to bring in two DVDs without prior authorization from RCI’s administration, another security violation. DVDs themselves are not necessarily a security violation. There are procedures in place to clear video material shown to inmates through volunteer programs, but again in this particular case, they were not followed.

Because of these two incidents, the program was suspended until it can be reviewed. The Friend of a Friend program has been in the DPSCS system for quite a long while now. All parties involved in the program have a full understanding of the security requirements inside our prisons. The Department has reached out to Ms. Stevenson to discuss the matter in an attempt to resolve the situation. To date, we have not heard back from her.

Another incident with the Friend of a Friend program happened earlier this year at a prison in Jessup. In this case we believe a visitor to the program - not those running the group - attempted to introduce contraband narcotics into the institution. The program was suspended while the incident was investigated. Once the investigation was complete, and the prison administration thought it was appropriate, the Friends of a Friend program was reinstated. It is currently meeting there on a regular basis.



Carnatic singer K.S. Resmi, Lee Boot’s “Who We Am,” and poet Shiori

There’s practice, and then there’s practice…  For much of her childhood, South Indian Carnatic singer K S Resmi woke up every day before dawn to begin singing – and she’d keep singing, until after dark.


4.26.13: The Girl who Loved Mothra

Shiori was born in Tokyo six years after the end of World War II.  She’s the daughter of an American father and a Japanese mother, and her family moved to the US when she was a toddler.  Shiori joins The Signal’s Aaron Henkin to share from her poetry collection, The Girl Who Loved Mothra

 



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