Race

10-26-12: The Lines Between Us: Public Housing in Baltimore

Poe Homes, from baltimorehousing.orgToday on "The Lines Between Us", we're looking at public housing in the Baltimore region.

Below are two extra audio files. In the first, Michael Middleton discusses Cherry Hill's master plan. The second is the full 30-minute interview.



10-19-12: Maryland Morning with Sheilah Kast

This week on "The Lines Between Us,” we'll look at research that shows how the foreclosure crisis broke down along race and class lines, and what it means for children. We’ll hear what Northeast Baltimore’s Belair-Edison community is doing to stem the tide, and we'll meet a woman there who's trying to cope with being on the brink of foreclosure.

Then – Tom Hall talks with Joanne Martin, president of Great Blacks in Wax, about why she and her husband Elmer founded the museum--and why they decided to locate it on North Avenue.



10-19-12: The Lines Between Us: Foreclosed

BENI executive director Johnette Richardson and marketing director Mary BushelThis week, we'll look at research that shows how the foreclosure crisis broke down along race and class lines, and we’ll hear what Northeast Baltimore’s Belair-Edison community is doing to stem the tide.



10-12-12: The Lines Between Us: "A Radical Welcome"

In the last segment of this "Lines Between Us" episode, Tom Hall speaks with two church leaders about the role of religious institutions in bridging divides within communities.



Man Up: Wednesday October 10, 1-2 p.m.

Redefining what masculinity looks like in the 21st century, with Carlos Andres Gomez, author of “Man Up: Cracking the Code of Modern Manhood.



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9-28-12: The Lines Between Us: Segregation Takes Root

Before the break, we heard a story from 61-year-old Pikesville resident Sheldon Caplis, a Jew who grew up in Northwest Baltimore. He was 13 when his father died in 1964; it was only then that he discovered his father had co-signed home loans for two African-American men. How did those families come to that point? Why, in 1964, did a Jewish man need to co-sign a loan for a black man to buy a house?

Web extra: Listen to the entire 44-minute conversation between Sheilah Kast, Antero Pietila, and James Crockett.



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