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	<title>Leadership &#8211; Baltimore Magazine</title>
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	<title>Leadership &#8211; Baltimore Magazine</title>
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		<title>University of Maryland, Baltimore President Jarrell Outlines His Commitment to Maryland</title>
		<link>https://www.baltimoremagazine.com/special/university-of-maryland-baltimore-president-jarrell-outlines-his-commitment-to-maryland/</link>
		
		<dc:creator><![CDATA[Megan McGaha]]></dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Tue, 18 Jan 2022 20:35:15 +0000</pubDate>
				<category><![CDATA[academic health center]]></category>
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			<p>In November 2021, the University of Maryland, Baltimore (UMB) community and guests gathered for the inauguration of Bruce E. Jarrell, MD, FACS, as the seventh president of UMB. Dr. Jarrell stepped into this role in 2020 amidst the COVID-19 pandemic, guiding critical efforts to address this global health crisis with world-changing vaccine research, treatments, community service and outreach, and leadership across the state and beyond.</p>
<p>Under Jarrell’s leadership, UMB remains one of Baltimore’s most powerful anchor institutions and continues to effect real and lasting change by improving health, creating wealth, and advancing social justice in the city, the state, and around the world. This is particularly true in today’s COVID-19 climate.</p>
<figure id="attachment_116007" aria-describedby="caption-attachment-116007" style="width: 600px" class="wp-caption alignnone"><img fetchpriority="high" decoding="async" class="size-medium wp-image-116007" src="https://www.baltimoremagazine.com/wp-content/uploads/2022/01/SOM_CVD_baraj-1-800x600-1-600x300.jpg" alt="University of Maryland School of Medicine" width="600" height="300" /><figcaption id="caption-attachment-116007" class="wp-caption-text">The University of Maryland School of Medicine is at the forefront of vaccine research and development.</figcaption></figure>
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<p>&nbsp;</p>
<p>Central to President Jarrell’s vision is that UMB expand on its success by motivating students, faculty, and staff to embrace the university’s core values, which are rooted in service, a commitment to Maryland, and ultimately improving the world. UMB inspires passionate people to apply solutions to the pressing problems facing humankind, and its health care, human services, and law professionals create innovative solutions where others see only problems.</p>
<p>“When I look at UMB, I see an environment that encourages innovation and creativity,” Jarrell says. “I’m surrounded by students and employees who are committed to improving the health and well-being of the people in our community and around the state. That is the magic of UMB, and it’s the secret to our great success.”</p>
<figure id="attachment_116005" aria-describedby="caption-attachment-116005" style="width: 600px" class="wp-caption alignnone"><img decoding="async" class="wp-image-116005 size-medium" src="https://www.baltimoremagazine.com/wp-content/uploads/2022/01/20200827_SOP_0026-800x600-1-600x300.jpg" alt="University of Maryland School of Pharmacy" width="600" height="300" /><figcaption id="caption-attachment-116005" class="wp-caption-text">The University of Maryland School of Pharmacy is dedicated to improving pharmaceutical research, practice, and education in Maryland and beyond.</figcaption></figure>
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<p>&nbsp;</p>
<p>To maintain UMB’s standing as Maryland’s premier human services institution, these are President Jarrell’s priorities:</p>
<ul>
<li><strong>Commitment to excellence in education. </strong>UMB works to attract, retain, and educate the best and brightest scholars, staff, and faculty through efforts such as the President’s Initiative on Education, scholarship programs that create opportunities for more students, and by remaining an employer of choice.</li>
</ul>
<ul>
<li><strong>Commitment to working for equity and justice.</strong> UMB accepts the responsibility to help improve the health and well-being of underserved populations in Maryland by expanding access in areas of need across the state, supporting our Community Engagement Center, and fostering educational programs to support opportunity and advancement for disadvantaged communities.</li>
</ul>
<ul>
<li><strong>Commitment to statewide collaborations. </strong>UMB is maintaining and growing its strong partnership with the University of Maryland Medical System, sustaining and propelling innovation through its collaboration with the University of Maryland, College Park under the <em>MPowering the State</em> initiative, and expanding relationships with other key institutions across Maryland.</li>
</ul>
<ul>
<li><strong>Commitment to innovation and discovery.</strong> UMB is preparing for the future with a strong focus on innovation and discovery. The university is expanding its $682 million research enterprise, strengthening its community-based research activities, and developing more interdisciplinary research programs and projects.</li>
</ul>
<p>Through these efforts, UMB achieves its mission to improve the human condition and serve the public good of Maryland and society at large through education, research, clinical care, and service. Amidst unprecedented challenges in today’s world, UMB is evolving and developing critical innovations toward changing the future today.</p>
<figure id="attachment_116006" aria-describedby="caption-attachment-116006" style="width: 600px" class="wp-caption alignnone"><img decoding="async" class="size-medium wp-image-116006" src="https://www.baltimoremagazine.com/wp-content/uploads/2022/01/20201102_SOD_0240-800x600-1-600x300.jpg" alt="University of Maryland School of Dentistry " width="600" height="300" /><figcaption id="caption-attachment-116006" class="wp-caption-text">Students at the University of Maryland School of Dentistry gain hands-on experience in the school&#8217;s dental clinics.</figcaption></figure>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<p>UMB is Maryland’s public health, law, and human services university, a leading U.S. institution for graduate and professional education, and a prominent academic health center that combines cutting-edge biomedical research and exceptional clinical care.</p>
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<p>The university enrolls more than 7,200 students in six nationally ranked professional schools and its interdisciplinary Graduate School, conferring most of the professional practice doctoral degrees awarded in Maryland each year. Serving as a powerhouse economic engine for Maryland, UMB delivers care and services that spur growth, and, in partnership with the University of Maryland Medical Center and affiliated physician practices, the university stimulates nearly $8 billion in economic activity each year, generating 17,000 jobs and yielding $13 in economic activity for each $1 of state general fund appropriation.</p>

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			<div class="wpb_video_wrapper"><a href="https://youtu.be/DGSHErpLNRA">https://youtu.be/DGSHErpLNRA</a></div>
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</div></div></div></div><div class="vc_row wpb_row vc_row-fluid"><div class="wpb_column vc_column_container vc_col-sm-12"><div class="vc_column-inner"><div class="wpb_wrapper">
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			<p>UMB provides direct health, employment, legal, educational, and social services to underserved communities and impacts the future by addressing the needs of the most vulnerable populations and fostering the next generation of leaders in innovation, discovery, outreach, and economic impact.</p>
<p>To learn more about UMB, visit <a href="https://www.umaryland.edu/"><em>www.umaryland.edu</em></a>.</p>

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<p><a href="https://www.baltimoremagazine.com/special/university-of-maryland-baltimore-president-jarrell-outlines-his-commitment-to-maryland/" rel="nofollow">Source</a></p>]]></content:encoded>
					
		
		
			</item>
		<item>
		<title>She&#8217;s Got Next</title>
		<link>https://www.baltimoremagazine.com/section/community/meet-30-women-shaping-baltimores-future/</link>
		
		<dc:creator><![CDATA[Aaron Hope]]></dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Tue, 09 Feb 2021 13:00:49 +0000</pubDate>
				<category><![CDATA[News & Community]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Baltimore's future]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[entrepreneurship]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[female]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Leadership]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[women]]></category>
		<guid isPermaLink="false">https://www.baltimoremagazine.com/?post_type=article&#038;p=103516</guid>

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<span class="clan editors uppers"><p style="font-size:1.25rem;"><strong>EDITED BY MAX WEISS</strong> 
<br/>Written by Ron Cassie, Lauren Cohen,
Janelle Erlichman Diamond, Ken Iglehart,
Christine Jackson, Jane Marion,
Max Weiss, and Lydia Woolever</p></span>
<p>PHOTOGRAPHY BY CHRISTOPHER MYERS</p>

<br>
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<h6 class="thin tealtext uppers text-center">News & Community</h6>
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<h4 class="deck" style="padding-top:1rem;">
MEET 30 WOMEN WHO ARE
SHAPING BALTIMORE’S FUTURE
</h4>
<p class="byline"><strong>EDITED BY MAX WEISS</strong> 

<br/>Written by Ron Cassie, Lauren Cohen,
Janelle Erlichman Diamond, Ken Iglehart,
Christine Jackson, Jane Marion,
Max Weiss, and Lydia Woolever

</br>Photography by Christopher Myers</p>

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<h3 class="uppers clan text-center" style="margin-bottom:0.0125em; line-height:2.25rem;">
“THERE ARE SO MANY AMAZING WOMEN IN BALTIMORE
</h3>

<p>
who are doing great things and working together for a cause,” says our cover model, Black Girls Vote founder and CEO Nykidra “Nyki” Robinson. Baltimore has always been a
town that honors and elevates women. They are our politicians and business
leaders, our artists and activists. The 30 emerging leaders featured
in this story are simply following in that long, great tradition. They are
moving Baltimore forward, shaping the future of the region in terms of
its priorities, policies, and passions—and inspiring others with their compassion
and empathy. “Women approach leadership differently,” says
Spoken Word artist Lady Brion. “They don’t embrace the divisiveness of
the hierarchy. They are more communicative. More affirming.” But no less
powerful. “My mom was my first mentor and still is,” says incoming Baltimore
County Public Library director Sonia Alcántara-Antoine, echoing a
sentiment voiced by many of our subjects. “She’s strong, tough as nails,
and resilient.” Sounds like a city we all know and love.
</p>



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<h5 class="captionVideo thin">On Thursday, February 25, we hosted a virtual panel discussion with some of the many leaders featured in this story. They spoke about the inherent greatness of women, the strength and power of voice, and the importance of elevating other women through mentorship.<center>
</center></h5>
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<h2 class="uppers clan" style="margin-bottom:0.0125em; line-height:1.25rem;">
JULIA FLEISCHAKER</h2>
<h5>OWNER OF <span style="color:#ee184b;">GREEDY READS</span>, 45</h5>




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<h3 class="clan thin"><span class="firstcharacter" style="color:darkgray">“</span>AS MORE PEOPLE CRAVE
PERSONAL AND MEANINGFUL
EXPERIENCES, I THINK SMALL
BUSINESSES ARE GOING TO THRIVE.”
</h3>


<p>
“I think it’s incredibly important for neighborhoods to have spaces where everyone feels welcome,” says Julia Fleischaker. And she should know. The owner of Greedy Reads bookstores—her first one in Fells Point, and her latest, in Remington—has created two such spaces. After 20 years on the marketing and publicity end of publishing, the devoted bibliophile says she was craving “actual human connection.” Her bookstores are beautifully curated, welcoming places that encourage browsing, lingering, and lively conversation. (Fleischaker even spotted a marriage proposal at one of her shops!) While in-person book signings and readings are on hold due to the pandemic, she still hosts virtual book clubs, and she recently spearheaded “A Virtual Variety Show” to benefit Writers in Baltimore Schools, which provides creative writing workshops to Baltimore City students. Like all small-business owners, Fleischaker has had her ups and downs lately, but she believes
that COVID-19 will ultimately be a boon for her business. “Even before COVID hit, there was a reevaluation happening in what people consider important and what brings value to their lives,” she says. Now, that value is intensified. “As more people crave personal and meaningful experiences, I think small businesses are going to thrive.”
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<h3 class="uppers text-center" style="margin-bottom:0.0125em; line-height:1.25rem;">
SONIA ALCÁNTARA-ANTOINE
</h3>
<h5 class="text-center" style="padding-bottom:1rem;">Incoming Director of the <span style="color:#ee184b;">Baltimore County Public Library</span>, 42</h5>
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<h6 class="clan thin" style="padding-bottom:1rem;"><center>Courtesy of Sonia Alcántara-Antoine</center></h6>

</div>

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<h3 class="show-for-medium-up uppers" style="margin-bottom:0.0125em; line-height:1.25rem;">
SONIA ALCÁNTARA-ANTOINE
</h3>
<h5 class="show-for-medium-up" style="padding-bottom:1rem;">Incoming Director of the <span style="color:#ee184b;">Baltimore County Public Library</span>, 42</h5>

<p>
“Every great community needs a great library system in order to truly thrive,” says Sonia Alcántara-Antoine, the incoming director of the Baltimore County Public Library’s 19 branches. Although she’s originally from New York, and currently working as the director of the Newport News Public Library in Virginia, her roots in Baltimore are strong. She worked for seven years in various roles at the Enoch Pratt Public Library, including a stint as assistant to former Pratt director (and now Librarian of Congress) Carla Hayden. Alcántara-Antoine, a first-generation American whose parents emigrated from the Dominican Republic, believes that libraries are great places to break down systemic barriers to learning and technology. “Public libraries are at the forefront of bridging divides and meeting with people where they are,” she says. “Knowing that through my work I have the ability to alter the trajectory of someone’s life for the better is what gets me out of bed in the morning.”
</p>

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<h3 class="uppers text-center" style="margin-bottom:0.0125em; line-height:1.25rem;">
ERRICKA BRIDGEFORD
</h3>
<h5 class="text-center" style="padding-bottom:1rem;">Anti-violence <span style="color:#ee184b;">Activist</span>, 48</h5>
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<h6 class="clan thin" style="padding-bottom:1rem;"><center>Courtesy of Erricka Bridgeford</center></h6>

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<div class="medium-8 columns">

<h3 class="show-for-medium-up uppers" style="margin-bottom:0.0125em; line-height:1.25rem;">
ERRICKA BRIDGEFORD
</h3>
<h5 class="show-for-medium-up" style="padding-bottom:1rem;">Anti-violence <span style="color:#ee184b;">Activist</span>, 48</h5>

<p>
The executive director of the Baltimore Community Mediation Center, Erricka Bridgeford is also, of course, one of the city’s leading anti-violence advocates and co-founder of the Baltimore Ceasefire movement, which now enters its fourth year. Her own brother, David, was murdered in 2007. Beyond her professional work and activism as a social reformer, Bridgeford has become a spiritual leader and healing presence in a city all too often in need of both. “I was born with one hand, so society treats me like I’m broken, and I’ve watched people treat Baltimore like it’s broken,” she told <i>Baltimore</i> last year. “These different things are identity markers for me: Having one hand, being Black, being a woman, growing up in poverty, having to face murder so much. These are my experiences,
and they give me this wide-ranging emotional and spiritual wherewithal to navigate and
engage with murder.”
</p>

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<h2 class="uppers clan" style="margin-bottom:0.0125em; line-height:1.25rem;">
LYDIA WALTHER-RODRIGUEZ</h2>
<h5>BALTIMORE AND CENTRAL MARYLAND REGIONAL DIRECTOR AT <span style="color:#ee184b;">CASA</span>, 30</h5>




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<h3 class="clan thin"><span class="firstcharacter" style="color:darkgray">“</span>TOGETHER, BLACK AND BROWN COMMUNITIES ARE
BUILDING OUR CITY AND FIGHTING BACK AGAINST HISTORIC
AND CURRENT OPPRESSIONS.”
</h3>


<p>
There’s no question that the federal crackdowns on undocumented immigrants in the
past four years have complicated Lydia Walther-Rodriguez’s life’s work. But she remains
undaunted. As regional director of the immigrant advocate group CASA, Walther-Rodriguez
just made her focus local, working, for instance, for Black and Latinx coalition building
in Baltimore City and helping to secure new mayor Brandon Scott’s support
for municipal IDs for immigrant communities. After immigrating from Panama, the
Afro-Latina Walther-Rodriguez first got involved in immigrant rights as a student activist
at Morgan State University, arguing for the Maryland DREAM Act in 2010. Since joining
CASA three years later, her agenda has included everything from employment, literacy
training, and police reform to citizenship and legal services. And now she sees new hope
toward achieving all of the group’s goals.“Together, Black and Brown communities are
building our city and fighting back against historic and current oppressions,” she says.
“In a Biden/Harris administration, we must urge the legislative changes that can bring
our families the dignity they deserve, while demanding local policy solutions that respect
our peoples’ contributions and improve the quality of life in the Baltimore region.”
</p>

</div>
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<h3 class="uppers text-center" style="margin-bottom:0.0125em; line-height:1.25rem;">
SHASHAWNDA CAMPBELL
</h3>
<h5 class="text-center" style="padding-bottom:1rem;">Community Organizer, <span style="color:#ee184b;">Free Your Voice and South Baltimore Community Land Trust</span>, 23</h5>

</div>

<div class="medium-4 columns">

<img decoding="async" style="padding-bottom:1rem;" class="singlePic" src="https://www.baltimoremagazine.com/wp-content/uploads/2021/02/Females_Cambell2.jpg"/>

<h6 class="clan thin" style="padding-bottom:1rem;"><center>Courtesy of Shashawnda Campbell</center></h6>

</div>

<div class="medium-8 columns">

<h3 class="show-for-medium-up uppers" style="margin-bottom:0.0125em; line-height:1.25rem;">
SHASHAWNDA CAMPBELL
</h3>
<h5 class="show-for-medium-up" style="padding-bottom:1rem;">Community Organizer, <span style="color:#ee184b;">Free Your Voice and South Baltimore Community Land Trust</span>, 23</h5>

<p>
Shashawnda Campbell was a student at Benjamin
Franklin High School in South Baltimore
when she began asking a crucial question: Why
did so many of her classmates have asthma?
So, she and her friends did some research.
They found out that a large incinerator and a
landfill were in her neighborhood, right near the
school—and that an even larger incinerator was
about to be built. In 2012, Campbell co-founded
Free Your Voice with some classmates, and
through research, marches, petitions, and direct
appeals to legislators, they stopped the building
of that incinerator. She now continues her
environmental work with Free Your Voice and
the South Baltimore Community Land Trust, a
nonprofit committed to Zero Waste. “I am a community
organizer because I have hope,” Campbell
says. “I have hope that one day we will live
in a world that does not jeopardize the lives of
some people because of how much money they
have, the color of their skin, or simply because
of where they are born.”
</p>

</div>

</div>
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<div class="medium-10 push-1 columns">

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<h3 class="uppers text-center" style="margin-bottom:0.0125em; line-height:1.25rem;">
CHRISTINE MICHEL CARTER
</h3>
<h5 class="text-center" style="padding-bottom:1rem;"><span style="color:#ee184b;">Global Voice</span> for Working Moms, 35</h5>

</div>


<div class="medium-4 columns">

<img decoding="async" style="padding-bottom:1rem;" class="singlePic" src="https://www.baltimoremagazine.com/wp-content/uploads/2021/02/Females_Carter.jpg"/>

<h6 class="clan thin" style="padding-bottom:1rem;"><center>Headshot by Tatiana Mullin</center></h6>

</div>

<div class="medium-8 columns">

<h3 class="show-for-medium-up uppers" style="margin-bottom:0.0125em; line-height:1.25rem;">
CHRISTINE MICHEL CARTER
</h3>
<h5 class="show-for-medium-up" style="padding-bottom:1rem;"><span style="color:#ee184b;">Global Voice</span> for Working Moms, 35</h5>


<p>
The conditions of teleworking combined with increased child-care demands are a perfect
storm for bias against working moms—especially Black women. Enter Christine Michel Carter—herself a mom of two—who has long advocated for the working mom, pandemic or not. Carter has not only penned two books on the topic—<i>MOM AF</i> and <i>Can Mommy Go to Work?</i> (aimed at kids)—but consults with companies, clarifying misconceptions about working moms. Believing that knowledge is power, Carter also pens a bimonthly column for <i>ForbesWomen</i> on topics ranging from revisiting the Family and Medical Leave Act to “ditching the act and bringing our authentic selves to work.” Says Carter, “I believe women should be defined by motherhood, even at work.” There’s no shame in having both as our identities, she insists. “Women are multifaceted, and that doesn’t change once we become mothers.”
</p>

</div>

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<div class="medium-8 push-2 columns text-center" >

<h2 class="uppers clan" style="margin-bottom:0.0125em; line-height:1.25rem;">
MARISA DOBSON</h2>
<h5>FOUNDER OF <span style="color:#ee184b;">SCINTILLATE</span>, 34</h5>




</div>
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<div class="medium-8 push-2 columns" >

<img decoding="async" class="singlePic" src="https://www.baltimoremagazine.com/wp-content/uploads/2021/02/Females_Dobson.jpg"/>




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<h3 class="clan thin"><span class="firstcharacter" style="color:darkgray">“</span>A LOT OF FOLKS LIKE TO USE MY MENTAL ROLODEX. I DO A LOT
BEHIND THE SCENES TO CONNECT COLLEAGUES AND KEEP MONEY FLOWING TO GOOD PEOPLE WHO DO GOOD WORK.”
</h3>


<p>
As the founder of Scintillate, a food and lifestyle public relations firm, Marisa Dobson has always loved sharing other people’s stories, including those of clients such as Ida B’s Table and True Chesapeake Oyster Co. Dobson is also one of the driving forces behind community events such as Charm City Night Market, B-More Kitchen’s Battle of the Brands, and Baltimore Creatives Acceleration Network (BCAN). Even off the clock, she’s the consummate connector (“a professional matchmaker” is what she calls herself). Case in point: She introduced designer Tiffanni Reidy to Brittany Wight of Wight Tea Co. and Amanda Mack of Crust by Mack. Reidy ended up designing both of their Whitehall Mill stalls. She also introduced restaurateurs Dave and Tonya Thomas to culinary historian Jessica B. Harris, whom the couple now counts as a close friend. “A lot of folks like to use my mental Rolodex,” says Dobson. “I do a lot behind the scenes to connect colleagues and keep money flowing to good people who do good work.”
</p>

</div>
</div>

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<div class="medium-10 push-1 columns">

<div class="show-for-small">

<h3 class="uppers text-center" style="margin-bottom:0.0125em; line-height:1.25rem;">
IYA DAMMONS
</h3>
<h5 class="text-center" style="padding-bottom:1rem;">Executive director, <span style="color:#ee184b;">Baltimore Safe Haven</span>, 28</h5>

</div>

<div class="medium-4 columns">

<img decoding="async" style="padding-bottom:1rem;" class="singlePic" src="https://www.baltimoremagazine.com/wp-content/uploads/2021/02/Females_Dammons2.jpg"/>

<h6 class="clan thin" style="padding-bottom:1rem;"><center>Courtesy of Iya Dammons</center></h6>


</div>

<div class="medium-8 columns">

<h3 class="show-for-medium-up uppers" style="margin-bottom:0.0125em; line-height:1.25rem;">
IYA DAMMONS
</h3>
<h5 class="show-for-medium-up" style="padding-bottom:1rem;">Executive director, <span style="color:#ee184b;">Baltimore Safe Haven</span>, 28</h5>

<p>
In mid-July, four bold, pastel-colored words were painted across both lanes of North
Charles Street in Charles Village: Black Trans Lives Matter. With the help of artist Jamie
Grace Alexander, the effort was organized by Baltimore Safe Haven, a neighborhood nonprofit that serves the transgender community founded by Iya Dammons in 2019. Just weeks
earlier, Dammons helped organize the city’s first large-scale Black trans protest, with a
march and rally that gathered some 200 supporters and graced, via a photograph by Devin
Allen, the cover of <i>Time</i> magazine. But it’s the daily, frontline work that matters most to Dammons, from BSH’s drop-in center and transitional housing services to mobile outreach efforts and civic engagement, all the way up to City Hall. “This is the fight of all fights that I’m in,” she told us last summer, as she works to combat homelessness, provide harm reduction, and foster upward mobility for her community. “The highest achievement for me is just being able to help my sisters—to see them smile, and know that they have somebody.”
</p>

</div>

</div>
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<h3 class="uppers text-center" style="margin-bottom:0.0125em; line-height:1.25rem;">
CORI DIOQUINO
</h3>
<h5 class="text-center" style="padding-bottom:1rem;">Founder and Co-Executive Director, <span style="color:#ee184b;">Asian Pasifika Arts Collective</span>, 36</h5>

</div>


<div class="medium-4 columns">

<img decoding="async" style="padding-bottom:1rem;" class="singlePic" src="https://www.baltimoremagazine.com/wp-content/uploads/2021/02/Females_Dioquino.jpg"/>

<h6 class="clan thin" style="padding-bottom:1rem;"><center>Headshot by Catrece Ann Tipton</center></h6>

</div>

<div class="medium-8 columns">

<h3 class="show-for-medium-up uppers" style="margin-bottom:0.0125em; line-height:1.25rem;">
CORI DIOQUINO
</h3>
<h5 class="show-for-medium-up" style="padding-bottom:1rem;">Founder and Co-Executive Director, <span style="color:#ee184b;">Asian Pasifika Arts Collective</span>, 36</h5>

<p>
Under the leadership of Cori Dioquino, along with co-executive director Catrece Ann Tipon,
Asian Pasifika Arts Collective has become an advocate for Asian-American and Pacific Indigenous American (AAPI) voices in the arts and beyond. “In order for our stories to be heard and considered . . . we have to be loud about it,” says Dioquino. “Especially considering the fact that Asian Americans have been pegged as the ‘model minority’ who are very quiet and keep their head down and don’t speak up, I think being a loud Asian and empowering people around you to be as well, it’s surprising how much of a statement that can be.” To that end, this past year the collective produced a virtual version of their AAPI Voices storytelling series, hosted online workshops, and partnered with #RacismIsAVirus to launch #UnapologeticallyAsian, a campaign to empower all Asians and “change the conversation about belonging in America.” The group’s 2021 theme, “Crossing Borders,” will help guide its events throughout the year.
</p>

</div>

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<h3 class="uppers text-center" style="margin-bottom:0.0125em; line-height:1.25rem;">
RABBI JESSY DRESSIN
</h3>
<h5 class="text-center" style="padding-bottom:1rem;">Executive Director, <span style="color:#ee184b;">Baltimore, Repair the World</span>, 40</h5>

</div>

<div class="medium-4 columns">

<img decoding="async" style="padding-bottom:1rem;" class="singlePic" src="https://www.baltimoremagazine.com/wp-content/uploads/2021/02/Females_Dressin.jpg"/>

<h6 class="clan thin" style="padding-bottom:1rem;"><center>Courtesy of Rabbi Dressin </center></h6>


</div>

<div class="medium-8 columns">

<h3 class="show-for-medium-up uppers" style="margin-bottom:0.0125em; line-height:1.25rem;">
RABBI JESSY DRESSIN
</h3>
<h5 class="show-for-medium-up" style="padding-bottom:1rem;">Executive Director, <span style="color:#ee184b;">Baltimore, Repair the World</span>, 40</h5>

<p>
You sometimes forget Jessy Dressin is a rabbi. And that’s part of her power. She’s young, she likes to wear ripped jean shorts with leggings, bright sunglasses, and a Ravens jersey, and she sermonizes not from the bema of a temple, but from her position at a Jewish nonprofit that connects community members to volunteer opportunities. The idea of <i>tikkunolam</i>—repairing the world—has been Dressin’s message ever since she became an ordained rabbi nine years ago. First, as founder and director of Charm City Tribe, an initiative to engage young adults interested in Jewish culture, and now through her work at Repair the World Baltimore, which mobilizes Jews to take action to pursue a just world. “Jewish tradition teaches . . . that there are things we can accomplish together we could not possibly accomplish on our own,” Dressin says. Building relationships that are substantive and not just transactional is so important in a hyper-segregated city like Baltimore, she says. “The particular callings and imperatives of Judaism require me to work closely with those who are not like me—who don’t share the same faith, or the same skin color, or the same history—but who share in the work to build a more whole and just world for all people.”
</p>

</div>

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<h2 class="uppers clan" style="margin-bottom:0.0125em; line-height:1.25rem;">
NYKIDRA “NYKI” ROBINSON</h2>
<h5>FOUNDER AND CEO OF <span style="color:#ee184b;">BLACK GIRLS VOTE</span>, 37</h5>




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<img decoding="async" class="singlePic" src="https://www.baltimoremagazine.com/wp-content/uploads/2021/02/Females_Robinson.jpg"/>




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<h3 class="clan thin"><span class="firstcharacter" style="color:darkgray">“</span>. . . IT’S OKAY TO BE UNAPOLOGETIC ABOUT WHAT WE WANT. WE WANT A RETURN ON OUR INVESTMENT.”
</h3>


<p>
In the wake of the Baltimore Uprising in 2015, Nykidra “Nyki” Robinson launched Black Girls Vote, a nonpartisan organization that encourages Black women to vote and then harness their collective power in concrete ways. That year, more than 300 people were killed in Baltimore, mostly Black men. “There are a lot of Black women that are hurting,” she says. “Those are our fathers and our husbands and sons.” Black women are the most consistent voting block for the Democratic party, she explains. But they rarely ask for anything in return. “It’s okay to be unapologetic about what we want,” Robinson says. Through Black Girls Vote, she “engages, educates, and empowers” Black women across the country about the voting process, in any way possible. (“We go where the voters are,” she says, including a “From the Poles to the Polls” campaign that registered exotic dancers.)
But she also teaches them to wield that power, making demands about access, policy, and personnel. “We want a return on our investment,” she says. Speaking of personnel, Vice President Kamala Harris is a great first step. Next, says Robinson, they’re looking for a Black woman on the Supreme Court.
</p>

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<h3 class="uppers text-center" style="margin-bottom:0.0125em; line-height:1.25rem;">
DIANE FINK
</h3>
<h5 class="text-center" style="padding-bottom:1rem;">Executive Director, <span style="color:#ee184b;">Emerge Maryland</span>, 60</h5>

</div>

<div class="medium-4 columns">

<img decoding="async" style="padding-bottom:1rem;" class="singlePic" src="https://www.baltimoremagazine.com/wp-content/uploads/2021/02/Females_Fink.jpg"/>

<h6 class="clan thin" style="padding-bottom:1rem;"><center>Courtesy of Diane Fink </center></h6>

</div>

<div class="medium-8 columns">

<h3 class="show-for-medium-up uppers" style="margin-bottom:0.0125em; line-height:1.25rem;">
DIANE FINK
</h3>
<h5 class="show-for-medium-up" style="padding-bottom:1rem;">Executive Director, <span style="color:#ee184b;">Emerge Maryland</span>, 60</h5>

<p>
Since its first class in 2013, Emerge Maryland, which recruits, trains, and provides Democratic women with a network to run for office, has assisted more than 100 candidates. Website <i>Maryland Matters</i> describes the organization, which is overseen by executive director Diane Fink, as “a major powerhouse” on the political scene, with alumnae now holding offices across the state, including school board members, city and county council legislators, and state delegates and senators. “We are now electing people who have not had a seat at the table and have not had their voices heard in the past,” Fink, who previously served as legislative staff in the General Assembly, told <i>Baltimore</i> in 2019. “The issues they raise, about child care, increasing the minimum wage, domestic violence, for example, are not heard, not in the same way, when women bring their voices to the table. Fifty-two percent of the population is female, and our representation should reflect that.”
</p>
</div>

</div>
</div>



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<h3 class="uppers text-center" style="margin-bottom:0.0125em; line-height:1.25rem;">
LAUREN GARDNER
</h3>
<h5 class="text-center" style="padding-bottom:1rem;">Creator, <span style="color:#ee184b;">JHU COVID-19 Dashboard</span>, 36</h5>

</div>

<div class="medium-4 columns">

<img decoding="async" style="padding-bottom:1rem;" class="singlePic" src="https://www.baltimoremagazine.com/wp-content/uploads/2021/02/Females_Gardner.jpg"/>

<h6 class="clan thin" style="padding-bottom:1rem;"><center>Headshot by Will Kirk (Johns Hopkins University)</center></h6>

</div>

<div class="medium-8 columns">

<h3 class="show-for-medium-up uppers" style="margin-bottom:0.0125em; line-height:1.25rem;">
LAUREN GARDNER
</h3>
<h5 class="show-for-medium-up" style="padding-bottom:1rem;">Creator, <span style="color:#ee184b;">JHU COVID-19 Dashboard</span>, 36</h5>

<p>
It’s not every day that an engineer creates something that will be used by the entire world. But Lauren Gardner, an infectious disease specialist and co-director of the Johns Hopkins University’s Center for Systems Science and Engineering, made history last January when she and her graduate student built the COVID-19 Dashboard that would track the novel
coronavirus pandemic’s rapid spread around the globe. The online data tracker would eventually garner more than 4.5 billion views a day from public health authorities, researchers, and the general public. It also landed Gardner a spot on <i>Time</i> magazine’s list of “The 100 Most Influential People of 2020,” where Baltimore’s own former health commissioner Dr. Leana Wen declared the professor a leader among us. “It’s important for
people to recognize that engineers can contribute to society in lots of different ways,” Gardner told us last spring, “including public health.”
</p>

</div>

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<div class="medium-10 push-1 columns">

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<h3 class="uppers text-center" style="margin-bottom:0.0125em; line-height:1.25rem;">
NICOLE HANSON-MUNDELL
</h3>
<h5 class="text-center" style="padding-bottom:1rem;">Executive Director, <span style="color:#ee184b;">Out for Justice</span>, 38</h5>

</div>

<div class="medium-4 columns">

<img decoding="async" style="padding-bottom:1rem;" class="singlePic" src="https://www.baltimoremagazine.com/wp-content/uploads/2021/02/Females_Mundell.jpg"/>

<h6 class="clan thin" style="padding-bottom:1rem;"><center>Courtesy of Nicole Hanson-Mundell</center></h6>


</div>

<div class="medium-8 columns">

<h3 class="show-for-medium-up uppers" style="margin-bottom:0.0125em; line-height:1.25rem;">
NICOLE HANSON-MUNDELL
</h3>
<h5 class="show-for-medium-up" style="padding-bottom:1rem;">Executive Director, <span style="color:#ee184b;">Out for Justice</span>, 38</h5>

<p>
Throughout her life, Nicole Hanson-Mundell has felt strongly about the right to vote. “I took a lot of honor in walking into an elementary school or church to cast my ballot,” she says. But after spending a year in jail, she lost that power. This past year’s <i>Free the Vote</i> documentary from the ACLU of Maryland made it clear that denying the right to vote for those incarcerated is rooted in a deeply racist system. The documentary shared Hanson-Mundell’s story, highlighting her advocacy work as someone “leading the fight” to expand voting access. It’s just one of several battles Hanson-Mundell has taken up on behalf of Out for Justice, a grassroots organization led by former and currently incarcerated individuals working toward reform for local and statewide reentry policies. Hanson-Mundell, an expert on criminal justice policy, is also the only formerly imprisoned woman on Governor Hogan’s Task Force to Study Maryland’s Criminal Gang Statutes. “When people return home from prison or jail, they have every intent to reform their lives,” Hanson-Mundell told us. “The difference between the ones who recidivate and the ones that don’t is simply who has access.”
</p>
</div>

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<h2 class="uppers clan" style="margin-bottom:0.0125em; line-height:1.25rem;">
SHAN WALLACE</h2>
<h5 class="text-center" style="padding-bottom:1rem;"><span style="color:#ee184b;">ARTIST</span>, 29</h5>




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<img decoding="async" class="singlePic" src="https://www.baltimoremagazine.com/wp-content/uploads/2021/02/Females_Wsllsce.jpg"/>




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<h3 class="clan thin"><span class="firstcharacter" style="color:darkgray">“</span>I CARE SO MUCH ABOUT THIS
CITY. I CARE SO MUCH ABOUT US
BEING A PART OF THIS HISTORY.”
</h3>


<p>
You may not know artist, activist, and educator SHAN Wallace’s face, but you’ve probably
had the good fortune to see the world the way she sees it. Her work—vivid photographs and
collages that showcase the Black experience in all its vibrancy, humanity, and beauty—has
been seen in the <i>Sun</i>, <i>Washington Post</i>, <i>The New York Times</i>, <i>Vanity Fair</i>, <i>The Atavist</i>, and, on occasion, this magazine. And her installations exploring the nature of archives, how they develop and what exactly they preserve and perpetuate, not only documents Black life and stories, but ensures they persist for the future. “I care so much about the city,” Wallace told <i>Black Is</i> magazine. “I care so much about us being a part of this history and having our lives and experiences, our voices, our narratives solidified in a larger archive but also in a Baltimore archive as well.”
</p>

</div>
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<div class="medium-10 push-1 columns">

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<h3 class="uppers text-center" style="margin-bottom:0.0125em; line-height:1.25rem;">
LANE HARLAN
</h3>
<h5 class="text-center" style="padding-bottom:1rem;">Owner, <span style="color:#ee184b;">Clavel, W.C. Harlan, Fadensonnen,
Angels Ate Lemons</span>, 34</h5>

</div>

<div class="medium-4 columns">

<img decoding="async" style="padding-bottom:1rem;" class="singlePic" src="https://www.baltimoremagazine.com/wp-content/uploads/2021/02/Females_Harlan2.jpg"/>

<h6 class="clan thin" style="padding-bottom:1rem;"><center>Headshot by Landon Mckinley</center></h6>

</div>

<div class="medium-8 columns">

<h3 class="show-for-medium-up uppers" style="margin-bottom:0.0125em; line-height:1.25rem;">
LANE HARLAN
</h3>
<h5 class="show-for-medium-up" style="padding-bottom:1rem;">Owner, <span style="color:#ee184b;">Clavel, W.C. Harlan, Fadensonnen,
Angels Ate Lemons</span>, 34</h5>

<p>
Just a few months back, foodie industry bible <i>Saveur</i> called Lane Harlan “the most interesting woman in the restaurant business.” But that’s hardly news to those of us who live in Baltimore and have become regulars at her restaurants, including the James Beard-nominated taqueria Clavel, the charming W.C. Harlan speakeasy, and Fadensonnen, Baltimore’s first biergarten/ sake bar (not to mention Angels Ate Lemons, a new natural wine bottle shop). Yes, through the years, cool kids like filmmaker John Waters, former Maryland Governor Martin O’Malley, and the cast of <i>Veep</i> have hung out at her haunts,
but pretty much everyone else flocks to them, too. And even the pandemic has not slowed her down: Harlan took that time to launch the Pisa Y Corre carryout concept at Clavel along with her business partner, Sinaloan chef Carlos Raba. No matter how challenging this year has been for the business, Harlan continues to strive. “I’ve spent the last year transforming everything I thought I knew about my current businesses,” says Harlan. “It’s crushing and beautiful to deconstruct. I will continue to create in Baltimore.”
</p>
</div>

</div>
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<div class="medium-10 push-1 columns">

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<h3 class="uppers text-center" style="margin-bottom:0.0125em; line-height:1.25rem;">
MELISSA HYATT
</h3>
<h5 class="text-center" style="padding-bottom:1rem;">Baltimore County <span style="color:#ee184b;">Police Chief</span>, 45</h5>

</div>

<div class="medium-4 columns">

<img decoding="async" style="padding-bottom:1rem;" class="singlePic" src="https://www.baltimoremagazine.com/wp-content/uploads/2021/02/Females_Hyatt.jpg"/>

<h6 class="clan thin" style="padding-bottom:1rem;"><center>Courtesy of Chief Melissa Hyatt</center></h6>

</div>

<div class="medium-8 columns">

<h3 class="show-for-medium-up uppers" style="margin-bottom:0.0125em; line-height:1.25rem;">
MELISSA HYATT
</h3>
<h5 class="show-for-medium-up" style="padding-bottom:1rem;">Baltimore County <span style="color:#ee184b;">Police Chief</span>, 45</h5>

<p>
Melissa Hyatt’s rapid rise through the male bastion of police work has its roots in her childhood, where she soaked up information from her father, a retired Baltimore City police major. Now she’s a year into serving as the first female chief of the more than 1,900-person Baltimore County police department, after two decades of police work in the city. During that time, she rose to the rank of colonel, overseeing all nine districts. Among her goals is recruiting more female officers—studies have shown they’re better at defusing potentially violent confrontations before they become deadly. And, no, she hasn’t
tired of the work. “I always loved the camaraderie that builds between officers from constantly not knowing what comes next,” says Hyatt. “I loved the adventure of it, I loved being out on the street; it made me happy.”
</p>

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<h3 class="uppers text-center" style="margin-bottom:0.0125em; line-height:1.25rem;">
LYNNE B. KAHN
</h3>
<h5 class="text-center" style="padding-bottom:1rem;">Founder and Executive Director,<span style="color:#ee184b;">Baltimore Hunger Project</span>, 51</h5>

</div>

<div class="medium-4 columns">

<img decoding="async" style="padding-bottom:1rem;" class="singlePic" src="https://www.baltimoremagazine.com/wp-content/uploads/2021/02/Females_Kahn.jpg"/>

<h6 class="clan thin" style="padding-bottom:1rem;"><center>Courtesy of Lynn B. Kahn</center></h6>

</div>

<div class="medium-8 columns">

<h3 class="show-for-medium-up uppers" style="margin-bottom:0.0125em; line-height:1.25rem;">
LYNNE B. KAHN
</h3>
<h5 class="show-for-medium-up" style="padding-bottom:1rem;">Founder and Executive Director, <span style="color:#ee184b;">Baltimore Hunger Project</span>, 51</h5>

<p>
School systems place a lot of emphasis on making sure students are fed throughout the week, but what happens to food-insecure families on Saturdays and Sundays? That was the principle that led Lynne B. Kahn to start Baltimore Hunger Project in 2014. What began as a lunch distribution operation out of her garage has grown into a volunteer-based nonprofit that supports more than 600 kids in 23 local schools. And when COVID-19 hit, that output ramped up to provide groceries—complete with handwritten notes
of encouragement, books, and art supplies—to 2,300 families per week. “It’s about so much
more than just the food,” says Kahn, a mom of two and full-time CPA. “I want to hear how my kids are feeling and check in on their mental health. I see us expanding the number of kids we serve, but also figuring out how we can strengthen the bodies and the minds.”
</p>

</div>

</div>
</div>

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<div class="medium-10 push-1 columns">

<div class="show-for-small">

<h3 class="uppers text-center" style="margin-bottom:0.0125em; line-height:1.25rem;">
LADY BRION
</h3>
<h5 class="text-center" style="padding-bottom:1rem;">Spoken Word Artist; Founder and
Executive Director, <span style="color:#ee184b;">Black Arts District</span>, 30</h5>

</div>

<div class="medium-4 columns">

<img decoding="async" style="padding-bottom:1rem;" class="singlePic" src="https://www.baltimoremagazine.com/wp-content/uploads/2021/02/Females_Brion.jpg"/>

<h6 class="clan thin" style="padding-bottom:1rem;"><center>Courtesy of Lady Brion</center></h6>


</div>

<div class="medium-8 columns">

<h3 class="show-for-medium-up uppers" style="margin-bottom:0.0125em; line-height:1.25rem;">
LADY BRION
</h3>
<h5 class="show-for-medium-up" style="padding-bottom:1rem;">Spoken Word Artist; Founder and
Executive Director, <span style="color:#ee184b;">Black Arts District</span>, 30</h5>

<p>
As a spoken word artist, teacher, and activist, Lady Brion believes in the transformative power of art. “We all walk around with our own baggage—these backpacks that are full of all kinds of stress—and we need a way to unpack,” she says. “Art becomes a safe space to unpack our stuff.” To that end, she is the cultural curator for Leaders of a Beautiful Struggle, the think tank devoted to improving the lives of Black people in Baltimore. In 2018, she proposed the idea of turning the historic area around Pennsylvania Avenue into a designated Black arts district. It wasn’t a new idea—but she was the first to have the network, policy background, skills, and “fire” to make it happen. A year later, the Black Arts District (BAD) was officially designated. Her ultimate vision is to make BAD the choice destination for Black food, arts, retail, and culture. It’s a lot of work, she says, but she’ll always find time for writing. “Poetry is my lifeblood,” she says. “It’s what feeds me.”
</p>

</div>

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<div class="medium-8 push-2 columns text-center" >

<h2 class="uppers clan" style="margin-bottom:0.0125em; line-height:1.25rem;">
SUSIE CREAMER</h2>
<h5>DIRECTOR OF <span style="color:#ee184b;">PATTERSON PARK
AUDUBON CENTER</span>, 44</h5>




</div>
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<div class="medium-10 push-1 columns" >

<img decoding="async" class="singlePic" src="https://www.baltimoremagazine.com/wp-content/uploads/2021/02/Females_Creamer.jpg"/>




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<h3 class="clan thin"><span class="firstcharacter" style="color:darkgray">“</span>I WOULD LOVE TO HAVE A BIRD-FRIENDLY GARDEN AT CITY HALL. WOULDN’T THAT BE AWESOME?”
</h3>


<p>
When it comes to protecting the environment, Baltimore has a fearless champion in Susie Creamer. The Patterson Park Audubon Center director has helped Birdland maintain its reputation, with her organization’s inventive programming—from the first Baltimore Birding Weekend to a “green pipeline” for public school students—engaging the local community to protect wildlife, including orioles and ravens. Slowly but surely, Creamer is turning Baltimore into an urban oasis, promoting additional greenspace, and thus habitat, around
the city. And now she even has a partnership with the Department of Housing & Community Development to educate inspectors on native plants. “I would love to have a bird-friendly garden at City Hall,” she says. “Wouldn’t that be awesome?”
</p>

</div>
</div>


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<h3 class="uppers text-center" style="margin-bottom:0.0125em; line-height:1.25rem;">
GINNY LAWHORN
</h3>
<h5 class="text-center" style="padding-bottom:1rem;">Restaurant Owner and <span style="color:#ee184b;">Hospitality Industry Advocate</span>, 38</h5>

</div>

<div class="medium-4 columns">

<img decoding="async" style="padding-bottom:1rem;" class="singlePic" src="https://www.baltimoremagazine.com/wp-content/uploads/2021/02/Females_Lawhorn.jpg"/>



<h6 class="clan thin" style="padding-bottom:1rem;"><center>Courtesy of Ginny Lawhorn</center></h6>


</div>

<div class="medium-8 columns">

<h3 class="show-for-medium-up uppers" style="margin-bottom:0.0125em; line-height:1.25rem;">
GINNY LAWHORN
</h3>
<h5 class="show-for-medium-up" style="padding-bottom:1rem;">Restaurant Owner and <span style="color:#ee184b;">Hospitality Industry Advocate</span>, 38</h5>

<p>
Throughout her nearly 20-year career in the hospitality industry, Ginny Lawhorn has always
considered her fellow bartenders and servers her alternative family. As such, she has seized every opportunity to step up and support them—whether that means assisting the team at her aptly named Fells Point restaurant, Friends and Family, with insurance enrollment and ensuring income stability, or organizing programs to help the greater restaurant community protect their mental and physical well-being. When it comes to the next generation of female leadership, her highest hope is that, once post-pandemic rehiring happens, it starts with minority women. “Every piece of representation matters,”
she says. “Especially in a city where the scene can feel small, diversification can show
that you can do it—you have the idea, you have value, you can advocate for yourself.
My next hope is that you see the leaders, and then you see the leaders become owners.”
</p>

</div>

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<h3 class="uppers text-center" style="margin-bottom:0.0125em; line-height:1.25rem;">
DEL. BROOKE LIERMAN
</h3>
<h5 class="text-center" style="padding-bottom:1rem;">State Delegate, <span style="color:#ee184b;">46th District</span>, 41</h5>

</div>

<div class="medium-4 columns">

<img decoding="async" style="padding-bottom:1rem;" class="singlePic" src="https://www.baltimoremagazine.com/wp-content/uploads/2021/02/Females_Lierman.jpg"/>

<h6 class="clan thin" style="padding-bottom:1rem;"><center>Courtesy of Brooke Lierman</center></h6>


</div>

<div class="medium-8 columns">

<h3 class="show-for-medium-up uppers" style="margin-bottom:0.0125em; line-height:1.25rem;">
DEL. BROOKE LIERMAN
</h3>
<h5 class="show-for-medium-up" style="padding-bottom:1rem;">State Delegate, <span style="color:#ee184b;">46th District</span>, 41</h5>

<p>
Sworn into the House of Delegates in 2015, Brooke Lierman quickly made a mark. Representing Baltimore City’s 46th District, she has established herself as one of the state’s leading voices on environmental and smartgrowth issues. In 2019, she was named Legislator of the Year by the Maryland League of Conservation Workers. “The question is not whether we will grow, but how we will grow,” Lierman says. She was also named Legislator of the Year by Maryland Hunger Solutions in 2017 for her work on food deprivation issues and remains a progressive legislator for Baltimore City in Annapolis, advocating for greater investment in public transit and equitable public-school funding. Two years ago, she championed the state’s first comprehensive gun violence initiative, the Maryland Violence Intervention and Prevention Program, continuing to push for its full funding. In December, she announced she’s running for state comptroller in 2022—if she wins, she will be the first woman to hold the office.
</p>

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<h3 class="uppers text-center" style="margin-bottom:0.0125em; line-height:1.25rem;">
KRYSTAL MACK
</h3>
<h5 class="text-center" style="padding-bottom:1rem;">Founder, <span style="color:#ee184b;">In Absence Of Studio</span>, 35</h5>

</div>

<div class="medium-4 columns">

<img decoding="async" style="padding-bottom:1rem;" class="singlePic" src="https://www.baltimoremagazine.com/wp-content/uploads/2021/02/Females_Mack-e1612497053870.jpg"/>

<h6 class="clan thin" style="padding-bottom:1rem;"><center>Headshot by Matthew Freire</center></h6>


</div>

<div class="medium-8 columns">

<h3 class="show-for-medium-up uppers" style="margin-bottom:0.0125em; line-height:1.25rem;">
KRYSTAL MACK
</h3>
<h5 class="show-for-medium-up" style="padding-bottom:1rem;">Founder, <span style="color:#ee184b;">In Absence Of Studio</span>, 35</h5>

<p>
Many know Krystal Mack as the multitalented culinary creative behind beloved businesses BLK//SUGAR, PieCycle, and Karma-Pop. But in recent years, the Baltimore native has emerged as a clear leader in an evolving food world, using her In Absence Of Studio to reimagine our relationship with food as more than just Instagram fodder but a tool
for social change. “I realized that there are so many more ways that I could be engaging
with food,” says Mack. “Food is a vehicle for storytelling. It’s a time capsule. It holds memories and emotions. It can be powerful in the way it shapes how we view our relationship to one another.” From art installations to community offerings, her innovative work speaks to topics such as race, gender, and trauma, and it has landed her on Cherry Bombe’s list of 100 influential women, in <i>The New York Times</i>, and as a presenter at both The Walters Art Museum and Baltimore Museum of Art. In the midst of COVID, her <i>How To Take Care</i> online cookbook helped raise more than $10,000 for victims of domestic violence. Her debut print publication, <i>PalatePALETTE</i>, launches soon.
</p>

</div>

</div>
</div>



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<h3 class="uppers text-center" style="margin-bottom:0.0125em; line-height:1.25rem;">
CARA OBER
</h3>
<h5 class="text-center" style="padding-bottom:1rem;">Editor in Chief, <span style="color:#ee184b;">BmoreArt</span>, 45</h5>

</div>

<div class="medium-4 columns">

<img decoding="async" style="padding-bottom:1rem;" class="singlePic" src="https://www.baltimoremagazine.com/wp-content/uploads/2021/02/Females_Ober.jpg"/>

<h6 class="clan thin" style="padding-bottom:1rem;"><center>Headshot by Jill Fannon</center></h6>

</div>

<div class="medium-8 columns">

<h3 class="show-for-medium-up uppers" style="margin-bottom:0.0125em; line-height:1.25rem;">
CARA OBER
</h3>
<h5 class="show-for-medium-up" style="padding-bottom:1rem;">Editor in Chief, <span style="color:#ee184b;">BmoreArt</span>, 45</h5>

<p>
Since 2007, <i>BmoreArt</i> editor-in-chief Cara
Ober has done the seemingly impossible:
created a dedicated arts publication that has
not only survived, but thrived and grown
from a fledgling blog to a gorgeous print and
online product with a dedicated staff and
contributors who deeply understand and
chronicle Baltimore’s arts community. Ober’s
role as curator and champion for both the
city’s artists and a next generation of writers
in the space is an invaluable one, and one not
replicated elsewhere in the city. In a virtual
commencement address written by Ober for
the Class of 2020, she offered this advice:
“Realize that you have power and learn to
use it wisely. Be kind. Be generous. Believe
in yourself and your goals for the future, but
figure out how to craft a vision that benefits
everyone around you.” We’re grateful she has
been following it herself.
</p>

</div>

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<h2 class="uppers clan" style="margin-bottom:0.0125em; line-height:1.25rem;">
DEL. ADRIENNE JONES</h2>
<h5>SPEAKER AT <span style="color:#ee184b;">MARYLAND HOUSE OF DELEGATES</span>, 66</h5>




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<h3 class="clan thin"><span class="firstcharacter" style="color:darkgray">“</span>WE SHOULD ALL HAVE THE SAME GOALS OF
FIXING THE PROBLEMS THAT CITIZENS FACE.”
</h3>


<p>
Born in Cowdensville, a historic African-American community in Southwest Baltimore
County, Adrienne Jones is the first Black woman to serve as a presiding officer
in Maryland’s General Assembly. Serving as former Speaker Michael Busch’s secondin-
command for 17 years until his death in 2019, Jones emerged as the Democrats’
compromise—and surprise—replacement. She quickly put civil rights at the top of
the state’s agenda. In last year’s abbreviated session, she successfully advocated
for the removal of a Confederate plaque at the State House and shepherded a bill
that ended the decade-plus court battle between the state and Maryland’s historically
Black universities. This summer, following the death of George Floyd, Jones
charged a legislative working group with addressing the way police are trained, and
how they are investigated and disciplined. She has said she will push for the repeal
of Maryland’s powerful Law Enforcement Officers’ Bill of Rights this session. “My
leadership style—I just want you to be honest,” Jones told <i>Maryland Matters</i> last
year. “We should all have the same goals of fixing the problems that citizens face.”
</p>

</div>
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<div class="medium-10 push-1 columns">

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<h3 class="uppers text-center" style="margin-bottom:0.0125em; line-height:1.25rem;">
TIFFANNI REIDY
</h3>
<h5 class="text-center" style="padding-bottom:1rem;">Founder, <span style="color:#ee184b;">Reidy Creative</span>, 38</h5>

</div>

<div class="medium-4 columns">

<img decoding="async" style="padding-bottom:1rem;" class="singlePic" src="https://www.baltimoremagazine.com/wp-content/uploads/2021/02/Females_Reidy_3.jpg"/>

<h6 class="clan thin" style="padding-bottom:1rem;"><center>Headshot by Becky Stavely of Our Endless Adventure</center></h6>

</div>

<div class="medium-8 columns">

<h3 class="show-for-medium-up uppers" style="margin-bottom:0.0125em; line-height:1.25rem;">
TIFFANNI REIDY
</h3>
<h5 class="show-for-medium-up" style="padding-bottom:1rem;">Founder, <span style="color:#ee184b;">Reidy Creative</span>, 38</h5>

<p>
Think about some of the most beautiful new restaurant spaces in Baltimore and chances are that interior designer Tiffanni Reidy has created them. To wit, Wight Tea Co. and Crust by Mack, both in Whitehall Mill, with their vintage modern aesthetic, clean lines, and bold color palettes. Reidy, who founded her firm in 2018, has worked all over the D.C. metro and southern Maryland region. But locally, she’s just beginning to make her mark with projects including Layers, a new event space for Amanda Mack’s Crust by Mack, and Vegan Juiceology, a cold-pressed juice bar in Howard Row. Both are scheduled to open in early 2021. (There’s also a multi-use project and another food space for a local chef currently in the works.) Reidy, who has a background in both photography and graphic design, draws inspiration from historical residential architecture, adaptive reuse building, and nature, and likes to incorporate the work of local craftspeople in her design. “When I approach a project, I know the client is drawn to my aesthetic,” says Reidy, “but it really is about them and using my strengths to create their vision and tell their story.”
</p>

</div>

</div>
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<div class="medium-10 push-1 columns">

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<h3 class="uppers text-center" style="margin-bottom:0.0125em; line-height:1.25rem;">
MELANIE SHIMANO
</h3>
<h5 class="text-center" style="padding-bottom:1rem;">Director, <span style="color:#ee184b;">Food Computer Program</span>, 30</h5>

</div>

<div class="medium-4 columns">

<img decoding="async" style="padding-bottom:1rem;" class="singlePic" src="https://www.baltimoremagazine.com/wp-content/uploads/2021/02/Females_Shimano.jpg"/>

<h6 class="clan thin" style="padding-bottom:1rem;"><center>Courtesy of Melanie Shimano</center></h6>

</div>

<div class="medium-8 columns">

<h3 class="show-for-medium-up uppers" style="margin-bottom:0.0125em; line-height:1.25rem;">
MELANIE SHIMANO
</h3>
<h5 class="show-for-medium-up" style="padding-bottom:1rem;">Director, <span style="color:#ee184b;">Food Computer Program</span>, 30</h5>

<p>
Melanie Shimano’s Food Computer Program, like the herbs and lettuces its students produce, has quickly grown and enriched those who encounter it. The <i>Forbes</i> “30 Under 30” honoree and Hopkins lecturer turns code into crops for Baltimore schoolchildren with a STEM curriculum that teaches students to build and program tabletop greenhouses. Through her work with primary and secondary schools, Shimano has helped expand STEM opportunities in city schools and engage hundreds of students with citizen science and experiential learning, guiding them into careers that could benefit all our futures. “A lot of these problems that we’re facing, like climate change, are huge problems that one person or even
one large organization cannot solve, even if they put all their resources into it,” she
says. “We need a set of diverse minds, diverse backgrounds, diverse people to think collectively about doing better.”
</p>

</div>

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<h3 class="uppers text-center" style="margin-bottom:0.0125em; line-height:1.25rem;">
SHELONDA STOKES
</h3>
<h5 class="text-center" style="padding-bottom:1rem;">President, <span style="color:#ee184b;">Downtown Partnership</span>, 48</h5>

</div>

<div class="medium-4 columns">

<img decoding="async" style="padding-bottom:1rem;" class="singlePic" src="https://www.baltimoremagazine.com/wp-content/uploads/2021/02/Females_Stokes.jpg"/>

<h6 class="clan thin" style="padding-bottom:1rem;"><center>Headshot courtesy of Shelonda Stokes</center></h6>

</div>

<div class="medium-8 columns">

<h3 class="show-for-medium-up uppers" style="margin-bottom:0.0125em; line-height:1.25rem;">
SHELONDA STOKES
</h3>
<h5 class="show-for-medium-up" style="padding-bottom:1rem;">President, <span style="color:#ee184b;">Downtown Partnership</span>, 48</h5>

<p>
With each COVID-19 surge over the past year, and the restrictions that followed, Shelonda
Stokes’ job got a little more challenging. After all, as the president of the economic development agency Downtown Partnership, her mission is to get people downtown again for shopping, dining, and events; help businesses reopen and rehire; and keep commercial office and retail space filled.“Many people have learned to work from home, they’re saving gas, and they don’t have to dress up in the morning—that’s a reality,” says Stokes, “so we have to give them a reason to leave that and come back downtown and spend money.” But she’s not throwing in the towel. “The city has to find a balance between people’s health and the economy. It’s going to be a while, but we’ll see incremental progress.”
</p>

</div>

</div>
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<h3 class="uppers text-center" style="margin-bottom:0.0125em; line-height:1.25rem;">
STEPHANIE YBARRA
</h3>
<h5 class="text-center" style="padding-bottom:1rem;">Artistic Director, <span style="color:#ee184b;">Baltimore Center Stage</span>, 44</h5>

</div>

<div class="medium-4 columns">

<img decoding="async" style="padding-bottom:1rem;" class="singlePic" src="https://www.baltimoremagazine.com/wp-content/uploads/2021/02/Females_Ybarra.jpg"/>

<h6 class="clan thin" style="padding-bottom:1rem;"><center>Headshot by Jess McGowan</center></h6>

</div>

<div class="medium-8 columns">

<h3 class="show-for-medium-up uppers" style="margin-bottom:0.0125em; line-height:1.25rem;">
STEPHANIE YBARRA
</h3>
<h5 class="show-for-medium-up" style="padding-bottom:1rem;">Artistic Director, <span style="color:#ee184b;">Baltimore Center Stage</span>, 44</h5>

<p>
Since taking the reins at Baltimore Center Stage three years ago, Stephanie Ybarra has
put the city and its people at the forefront of the downtown theater’s mission, expanding
community-focused programming, diversifying the works presented, and even extending a
rolling invitation (emblazoned on the side of a truck) to a horde of GOP leaders in Harbor East to see a performance of <i>Miss You Like Hell</i>, a musical about an undocumented mother and her daughter. Ybarra doesn’t shy away from mixing art and activism, and instead actively encourages engagement and conversation through her programming choices. In announcing the 2021 Center Stage season, Ybarra reaffirmed her commitment to access, inclusion, and community at the theater. “The compounding effects of a global pandemic and ongoing racial injustice have forced a long-overdue reckoning, inspiring a renewed commitment to what we say we value,” Ybarra said. “And, in order to move toward our highest ideals, come what may, we can never go back.”
</p>

</div>

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<h2 class="uppers clan" style="margin-bottom:0.0125em; line-height:1.25rem;">
ALICIA WILSON</h2>
<h5>VICE PRESIDENT FOR ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT AT <span style="color:#ee184b;">JOHNS HOPKINS</span>, 38</h5>




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<h3 class="clan thin"><span class="firstcharacter" style="color:darkgray">“</span>THIS IS AN INCREDIBLE OPPORTUNITY TO HELP DRIVE WHAT
HAS LONG BEEN A SIGNATURE PRIORITY FOR JOHNS HOPKINS AND
ITS LEADERSHIP AND TAKE IT EVEN FURTHER.”
</h3>


<p>
When she was appointed vice president for economic development for Johns Hopkins
University and Johns Hopkins Health System 18 months ago, Alicia Wilson referred to the
university and health system as “the most significant institution in our city and region
dedicated to economic development.” That’s probably not an exaggeration: Hopkins has
reshaped once-blighted parts of the city, especially in East Baltimore, but is also extending its redevelopment reach into places like Charles Village, near the Homewood campus. A Baltimore native, attorney, and long-time civic leader, she leads Hopkins’ recently created Office of Economic Development, expanding the institution’s commitment to the city through investments in economic and neighborhood development, health care, and education. Says Wilson, “This is an incredible opportunity to help drive what has long been a signature priority for Johns Hopkins and its leadership and take it even further.”
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		<title>Hillary Clinton Speaks at Fundraiser in Fells Point</title>
		<link>https://www.baltimoremagazine.com/section/community/hillary-clinton-speaks-at-fundraiser-in-fells-point/</link>
		
		<dc:creator><![CDATA[Michelle Evans]]></dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Tue, 06 Jun 2017 11:32:00 +0000</pubDate>
				<category><![CDATA[News & Community]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Baltimore Jewish Council]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[ECYP]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Elijah Cummings]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Fells Point]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Frederick Douglass-Isaac Myers Maritime Park]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Hillary Clinton]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Israel]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Leadership]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[youth programs]]></category>
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			<p>Former Secretary of State and presidential candidate Hillary Clinton spoke at a fundraising event for a leadership training program in Baltimore, saying that the world needs to “reach out to one another, to lift each other up” in response to the most recent terror attacks in London and Manchester.</p>
<p>Clinton, who didn’t mention President Donald Trump by name, openly criticized his policies to a packed crowd at the Frederick Douglass-Isaac Myers Maritime Park in Fells Point on Monday, June 5.</p>
<p>“It’s a time for steady, determined leadership, like we are seeing from local authorities in London, including the mayor of London,” Clinton said. “It’s even more important that we work with our allies and partners. Yes, to keep us safe, but also to expand our understanding of what we can achieve together.”</p>
<p>Clinton’s speech was less focused on politics and more on the youth program that Congressman Elijah Cummings created in 1998, calling it “a labor of love,” and stressing the importance of citizenship.</p>
<p>“It has never been more important for young Americans to see themselves as part of a global community,” she said. “One that works together to confront challenges, and promote peace and understanding across all the lines that divide us.”</p>
<p>The purpose of <a href="https://www.ecyp.org" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener">Elijah Cummings Youth Program in Israel (ECYP)</a> is to build and strengthen the ties between the Jewish and African American communities. In conjunction with the <a href="https://www.baltjc.org" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener">Baltimore Jewish Council</a>, the program provides leadership and community service training—as well as a three-week trip to Israel—for 12 high school students within Cummings’ 7th district of Maryland.</p>
<p>Since its inception, ECYP has worked with more than 200 students in Baltimore, exposing them to life management skills, leadership workshops, community service, and social and political activism. The participants of the two-year fellowship have had a 100-percent high school graduation rate, with 98 percent graduating from college.</p>
<p>Clinton and other leaders spoke on Monday night in front of a sold-out crowd of public officials, board members, donors, and students and the event raised more than $200,000 for the program.</p>
<p>Victor Blackwell—Baltimore native, CNN anchor, and ECYP class of 1998 alum—attributes his success to Cummings and encourages the current fellows to make the most of the experiences.</p>
<p>“Go with your eyes, and your mind, and your heart wide open,” he urged while emceeing Monday night’s event. “It made me a better man. It made me a better journalist.”</p>
<p>Howard Libit, executive director of the Baltimore Jewish Council, said he has seen positive results of the partnership and is proud to have a role in it.</p>
<p>“When I see the alumni of the program, they have become leaders in the community,” he said. “They are just remarkable.”</p>
<p>Congressman Cummings, who underwent minimally invasive heart surgery on May 24, was not in attendance but appeared in a pre-recorded video message instead.</p>
<p>“I’m here at Johns Hopkins Hospital. I had to get a tune-up,” he joked. “This is a time where we need to come together to celebrate the lives of our children. Our children are the living messages that we send to a future we will never see.”</p>
<p>Cummings, who personally interviews every applicant for the program, delivered a special message for the incoming fellows, who leave for Israel on July 2.</p>
<p>“I want you all to know that you have a future. We see you all on your way to a great level of destiny,” he said. “We want your development and your destiny to come together for you to become the person you want to be.”</p>
<p>Current fellow and Baltimore City College junior MiKayla Young listened to the message from Cummings with admiration. She was initially hesitant to apply to the program, but now says it’s the best thing she’s ever done.</p>
<p>“Being here, and listening to Congressman Cummings and Secretary Clinton speak to <em>me</em> is unreal,” she said. “I’m so inspired by them to go out and make a change in the world, and that’s what I’m going to do.”</p>
<p>Clinton wasn’t the only fiery, female politician speaking at the event—Senator Barbara Mikulski addressed the crowd in typical “Babs” fashion. She began by mentioning Congressman Cummings’ absence, insisting “there’s nothing wrong with Elijah’s heart.”</p>
<p>“If you know him like I do, he has one of the biggest hearts in Maryland, and one of the strongest hearts in America,” she continued.</p>
<p>Clinton expressed appreciation for Mikulski and thanked local constituents for continuously sending the senator back to Washington D.C. Likewise, Mikulski echoed Clinton’s sentiments and also took a few jabs at President Trump without mentioning him directly by name.</p>
<p>“The theme for this fundraiser is building bridges and building leaders,” she said. “Boy, don’t we need that now.”</p>
<p>The current fellows, who are now finishing their junior year of high school, will travel to Israel in less than a month to experience a new culture with children of similar ages. Director of ECYP Kathleen St. Villier explained that the selected students are a unique group that will become “global ambassadors” upon their return.</p>
<p>“They are tasked to go out in the community and share their stories,” she said. “They will continue to do community service and grow as leaders.”</p>
<p>Clinton concluded the event by praising Cummings for his dedication to the youth of Baltimore and a call to action for all in attendance.</p>
<p>“This is the kind of commitment that really represents America best. And we need to do so much more,” she said. “We need find ways to serve, and to be the best citizens we can be to support the next generation.”</p>

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		<title>Women Have Risen to the Top in Baltimore</title>
		<link>https://www.baltimoremagazine.com/section/community/women-have-risen-to-the-top-in-baltimore/</link>
		
		<dc:creator><![CDATA[Jess Mayhugh]]></dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Mon, 05 May 2014 08:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
				<category><![CDATA[News & Community]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Leadership]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Women in Business]]></category>
		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://server2.local/BIT-SPRING/baltimoremagazine.com/html/?post_type=article&#038;p=8662</guid>

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			<p>Although we appreciate our old-school values, Baltimore is nonetheless remarkably progressive. And in one area, surprisingly (and, perhaps, disappointingly) unique.</p>
<p>To wit: only a handful of other large U.S. cities have been led by female mayors. Our city comptroller is also a woman; so was the city state’s attorney for 16 years. A Baltimore woman leads our state’s highest court, which also, for the first time, has a female majority—another rarity among top state benches. Of course, the dean of the growing U.S. Senate women’s caucus is a former East Baltimore social worker. (Not to mention, the first-ever female Speaker of the U.S. House of Representative hails from Charm City, even if she doesn’t live here anymore.)</p>
<p>But it’s not just in elected positions or appointed offices that women have risen to the top. All around Baltimore, women are leading prominent institutions, including The Baltimore Museum of Art, The Walters Art Museum, the Baltimore Symphony Orchestra, and the Enoch Pratt Free Library, as well as Towson University, Sinai Hospital, Catholic Relief Services, and the Baltimore Development Corporation. In fact, last fall, the Center for American Progress, measuring three-dozen factors, named Maryland the best state for women.</p>
<p>Here at <em>Baltimore</em> magazine, we think this is welcome news—and that it’s interesting to contemplate how women govern, mentor, and lead differently than their male counterparts. We also wondered if there was something specifically about Baltimore that made this a unique place for female leaders.</p>
<p>In March—Women’s History Month—managing editor Max Weiss (a female) hosted an exclusive panel, including nearly all of the women leading the above institutions, and others, on the subject of women and leadership at the Four Seasons Hotel Baltimore. What follows is the edited version of that freewheeling, enlightening, and refreshingly candid conversation:</p>
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			<p><strong>Max Weiss</strong>: We can start to my right, which is fitting. The question is: What was your first leadership role? Were you class president? Head of your yearbook? <strong>Mayor Stephanie Rawlings-Blake: </strong>The first time I sought office, ‘public office,’ was in middle school, seventh grade. I put my best effort forward and lost to Anthony Watson [laughter]. Weiss: She knows his name. Rawlings-Blake: He’s a Ph.D. now, moved back to Baltimore, came back with his family. I think he came back to rub it in my face. But I did student government all throughout middle school, high school, college, and then joined the Young Dems and did things even when I was in law school. <strong>Chickie Grayson, Enterprise Homes, president &amp; CEO: </strong>I never thought of myself as a leader. I just felt like I did what came naturally to me. So, I think what comes naturally to me, is that I have an opinion [laughter]. <strong>Doreen Bolger, The Baltimore Museum of Art director:</strong> The first moment I was aware of how painful it was to be a leader was when I was mysteriously elected to be head of [The Metropolitan Museum of Art’s] curatorial forum. We decided to tell [director] Philippe de Montebello that we would have to take a vote of no confidence if he didn’t make a certain decision about a key staff person who was being abusive to his staff. And I went up to his office to deliver this message at the age of 34. <strong>Julia Marciari-Alexander, The Walters Art Museum, executive director: </strong>And did he do it? <strong>Bolger: </strong>Yes! <strong>Weiss to Cindy Wolf, Foreman Wolf restaurants:</strong> Cindy, I know you run a tight ship in that kitchen. <strong>Wolf: </strong>I started working when I was 19. And the reason that I’m a leader is that I hated it when my mother told me what to do when I was a kid. It was Chickie who said she has opinions? I have a whole lot of opinions.<strong> Maravene Loeschke, Towson University, president:</strong> My goal was to be an actress—I was a theater major—until I came back to teach. Acting as preparation for being president, that’s another story. <strong>Carla Hayden, Enoch Pratt Free Library CEO: </strong>My first story time, about 25 3- and 4-year-olds, looking at me, basically saying, ‘So what are we going to do for the next 45 minutes?’ Then you have Johnny, who’s obviously got some issues; you’ve got Suzie standing right here [tugging your arm]. That experience has helped me through the rest of my career because when I think about people, I think, yeah, I bet when he was five. . . . [laughter].</p>

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			<p><strong>Y. Maria Martinez, Respira Medical, founder and CEO:</strong> I accidentally bumped into leadership because I was bilingual. [In Cartagena, Colombia], the largest hotel asked if I would work for them. Of course, back in that time, I had to ask my husband for permission, who then had to ask my father for permission. And, my husband went with me to the job interview, which is interesting, looking back. Two months later, I became director of reservations. Being Latina, in this emerging community, I also, accidentally, became a leader. You lift as you climb. <strong>Marciari-Alexander:</strong> I was one of 34 girls who ‘opted in’ to found a new, day girls’ school on the campus of a six-year-old boarding and day boys’ school. I was in the first four-year graduating class. I will tell you [it wasn’t easy] walking into that dining room with 200 boys when you are 14, and 5-foot-10, with braces and glasses, and having every single one of those boys with their trays looking at you like, ‘What are you doing here?’</p>
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			<p><b>Max Weiss</b>: What gave you the courage to say, ‘I deserve not just a seat at the table, but a seat at the head of the table?’ <strong>Amy Perry, Sinai Hospital of Baltimore, president:</strong> Probably a lot of us, the way we grew up, were not expected to be leaders. We look at things a little bit differently and that becomes part of our skill set. We’re planners because we have to look at the big picture. People assume, ‘Oh, that man will be the leader.’ But we are in back, figuring out the endgame . . . how this could be better. How are we going to navigate through this? How are we going to bring everyone with us? I think that extra thought process probably makes us a bit better [prepared]. <strong>Rawlings-Blake: </strong>I agree. As women we see how to get to that endgame a lot differently than men. We also think through, ‘How am I going to navigate the minefield’ that is sometimes around us because of all the ‘isms.’<strong> Weiss:</strong> Do younger women face the same obstacles? <strong>Bolger:</strong> I hear sometimes: ‘I’m not a feminist’ among younger women. It’s hard for me, coming all the way from the ’60s and participating in the early feminist stuff, to understand that. What’s interesting is that it [equality] keeps changing and reshaping itself. <strong>Grayson:</strong> When I started at Enterprise, I was overseeing the construction and development of several jobs. There was a job foreman at one of them and he gave me a gift one day that was a dictionary of construction vocabulary. <strong>Bolger:</strong> Did you throw it at him? <strong>Grayson: </strong>What it made me feel like was, ‘Well, he’s just a jerk.’ It told me more about him than anything else. [But] I’ve always felt like being in a [leadership] position in a male-dominated world, most people really want to help you. <strong>Loeschke: </strong>One of the strongest things I remember from my entire childhood was my mother, who was a secretary—and I love my mother dearly—telling me we need to get started teaching you typing because you’re going to have to be a secretary. The nurturing came from wonderful mentors. Every one of them right up on through college were men.</p>

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			<p><strong>Max Weiss</strong>: What, if anything, about your leadership style can be attributed to being a woman? <strong>Brenda McKenzie, Baltimore Development Corporation, president &amp; CEO: </strong>When I was in business school, ladies wore the suit with the bowties, ‘the poofs.’ I thought I’d have to get the Ferragamo flats and the ‘uniform.’ You guys know what I’m talking about [laughter].<strong> Perry:</strong> I’m still wearing the uniform. <strong>McKenzie: </strong>But I worked for a woman who kind of broke the mold and totally owned her femininity. And it wasn’t that she wasn’t decisive, it wasn’t that she wasn’t knowledgeable—but she was a woman. It was her style, and it really showed me at a very early stage that you could be authentic. You could be who you are. I’m analytical by nature. I’m going to gather information. I’m going to look at the facts. But that part told me I could still wear a dress. <strong>Hayden: </strong>One of the quotations I have about women in leadership says, ‘Men seek power for power and women seek power to do things.’ And that’s a theme—women are looking at the solution. <strong>Rebecca Hoffberger, American Visionary Art Museum, founder:</strong> I’d like to disagree with you right away. There are men who seek power for shallow reasons, and there are men who seek power for very noble reasons. <strong>Hayden:</strong> Well, that’s true. There are also some women who feel like they have to be more like what they think a man would be like in leadership, and so they will try to be tough and say, ‘I don’t care if your child is sick or [that] you can’t come in if school is closed,’ and things like that. <strong>Grayson: </strong>One of the things as a leader I tend to think about is, what is happening with somebody in my office? From a psychological perspective, what’s going on with them? Why are they acting this way? Always with the idea that I can change it—which I never can [laughter]. I don’t know that men do that. <strong>Weiss:</strong> I do think ambition tends to be encouraged more with men. M<strong>arciari-Alexander: </strong>I think that is going to change. I have twins, 7-year-olds, one each. And the way that the little girls are challenged to be ambitious, to be leaders, to succeed, is very clear. It is going to be really interesting to see when the 10-year-olds today are 30.</p>
<p><b>Max Weiss</b>: Are you more empathic or compassionate than a male might be? <strong>Grayson:</strong> Not necessarily. <strong>Weiss: </strong>You see weakness and you pounce? [Laughter.] <strong>Marciari-Alexander:</strong> It is interesting that there are three books [courtesy of Hayden and the Pratt Library] about Elizabeth I on the table. She said that she had to have the heart and stomach of a king, right? So that was how she led. In fact, one of the first books I read about her as a child was called, <em>She was Nice to Mice</em>, written by Ally Sheedy, the actress, for little girls. . . . We are still fascinated with that dichotomy. <strong>Wolf:</strong> My employees are like my family. If they need me, I’m there for them. Also, getting back to leadership, one of the first things I tell a manager is, ‘You treat everyone as an individual. You figure out how to make each one of these people successful,’ plus a healthy, happy environment because I don’t believe in people yelling and screaming. Nah-ah. There’s enough pressure. <strong>Loeschke:</strong> People ask me how many children I have—and I tell them 22,500. I doubt that a whole lot of male presidents would define [their role that way]. Students will oftentimes call me, ‘Mom.’ Or ‘Mama Prez.’ <strong>Marciari-Alexander:</strong> Going back to the question, maybe it’s, ‘Do we view professionalism in a different way?’ Because I don’t feel that I am more ‘compassionate,’ but I feel that my vision of professionalism includes words like being joyful. <strong>McKenzie:</strong> There has been a change in the workplace, too. It’s not a 9-5 or 9-7. With these phones, you are basically on call, connected constantly, and, consequently, your work life is more your family. It’s more integrated. <strong>Perry:</strong> I was hoping we would get to that. The most challenging part of my journey was not any challenge I had at work, it was dealing with being ‘the mom.’ [And] my husband is very much a 50-50 kind of guy. But that extra pull is an extraordinary piece of this puzzle, in terms of moving women forward. Sheryl [Sandberg] talks about it a little bit in <em>Lean In</em>, you know, ‘Don’t leave before you leave.’ But it’s also unrealistic. There are the three Sheryl Sandberg jobs in this world where you can leave at 5. <strong>Weiss [to Perry]: </strong>How did you, personally, overcome that in your own life? <strong>Bolger: </strong>She had to be twice as good as the men. She had to do all that and be twice as good as the men to get to where she got.</p>

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			<p><strong>Hoffberger:</strong> I don’t want to go away from the conversation, but what’s emerging for me, is that I don’t really think so much about what is distinctive to be a woman [leader]. I see the attributes that I’d admire in women, I’d admire in men. Jim Rouse was the most ‘pro-young person’ I can ever imagine. [UMBC president] Freeman Hrabowski walks that campus, and just like I admire in you Maravene—you’re shaking your head, ‘yes,’ because you know—he knows those students. <strong>Perry:</strong> Are you trying to make the point that there are no differences? Drawing parallels, ‘Look at all these men who also have nurturing traits?’ <strong>Hoffberger: </strong>I think that if you analyze what makes people really, truly leaders, whatever their genitalia may be, it’s very similar traits. And even styles. They don’t have to be effeminate or shoulder-pad masculine. <strong>Grayson:</strong> With all the successes, I do feel like women are still at the bottom here. It’s not until we have a woman President am I going to feel like that has changed. <strong>Weiss: </strong>Our culture also puts women in these positions where it’s assumed they are fighting against each other. <strong>Martinez: </strong>I always welcome competition. You should see my industry. But it’s doing it fairly. It’s like what my mother used to say, ‘Why do we always have to go up and pull someone else down?’ <strong>Rawlings-Blake:</strong> Welcome to my world.<strong> Martinez:</strong> I’ve been hurt deeply by other women, and by some women I thought were my friends. I’m like, ‘What just happened here?’ But competition is healthy and wonderful. It is. <strong>Rawlings-Blake:</strong> So is support. <strong>Martinez: </strong>Absolutely, we have to do that. <strong>Rawlings-Blake [to Martinez]: </strong>But the thing is—and I don’t know if you feel this—it’s not that we don’t have to be as fiery, but if we let that show in some positions, it just doesn’t work. <strong>Wolf: </strong> You’re ‘emotional.’ <strong>Perry:</strong> We do what works, right? We temper ourselves in certain situations.</p>
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			<p><strong>Max Weiss</strong>: Mentorship is built into the structure for men, but it’s taken a while for women to realize that female-to-female mentorship is equally as important. <strong>Rawlings-Blake:</strong> It’s not even considered being supportive. That is expected. If you are a man and you hire another man, it is because he is the most qualified person. If you are a woman and you mentor or you support a woman, everyone’s looking for, you know, what is the catch? [Playfully smiling] Is that her cousin? <strong>Wolf:</strong> So how do we change this negative part of our female culture? <strong>Loeschke:</strong> I had found that women were just in a very serious stage of negativity about other women during my growing up period. The competitiveness way overtook the mentorship. I think any woman that gets into any position of authority has an immediate social responsibility to mentor women the next day.</p>
<p><b>Max Weiss</b>: Are you mindful of the negative stereotypes of women? The fear of being seen as ‘the b-word?’ <strong>Grayson:</strong> I remember when a man would typically refer to someone as a girl. I’d be ‘the girl.’ And ‘the girl’ is 35 years old, and I’d love correcting them. And then, eventually, when I was in my 50s or 60s, I’d think, ‘Girl? That’s a good thing.’ But you’re not going to change anyone’s mind if you don’t change what comes out of their mouth. <strong>Rawlings-Blake:</strong> I don’t know if you correct that, or if you just use it because it’s instructive about how they perceive you. And also, about how you can get what you need through that person. <strong>Marciari-Alexander: </strong>The girl/gal thing—people my age are very cautious about that. But they will say, ‘Oh, but you’re so young.’ <strong>Martinez: </strong>Latino men, in particular, some, not all—the majority—they really do see women as inferior. But my father told me always to be myself. If you want to cry, cry. If you are angry, show it. But do it, he said, in a way that does not take people aback and that they understand that you are upset. He was really wonderful.<strong> Weiss: </strong>So you’ve been emotional in front of staff and colleagues? <strong>Martinez:</strong> Oh Lord have mercy. I will cry. People know me, what you see is what you get. <strong>Rawlings-Blake: </strong>You’re just blessed to be in a profession where that is acceptable. There’s absolutely no way I can do that. <strong>Weiss:</strong> But John Boehner can cry. <strong>Hayden:</strong> And Hillary better watch every little thing. And with women, especially, it’s the forceful part.</p>

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			<p><b>Max Weiss</b>: Is there something particular to Baltimore that allows you, as women, to thrive in leadership roles? <strong>Loeschke:</strong> Yes. The quality of its neighborhoods. When you have a community where its neighborhoods are as strong as ours are, people are a little more used to a family feeling that is bigger than your house [and] that can translate to the institutions that we are running. <strong>Grayson:</strong> I agree with that. Maybe it starts with your neighborhood. But Baltimore is also is a very accessible city. <strong>Weiss: </strong>How does that translate into leadership roles for women? <strong>Grayson:</strong> Access to power and knowing people. It’s a city where, if you want to pitch in and do something, you can do it. You’re going to get help doing it, and you’re going to get recognized for doing it. <strong>Rawlings-Blake:</strong> Baltimore has a history of having a good ol’ boys network, but I also think we have a history of having strong women in leadership positions, whose leadership was undeniable. Each generation has been able to build on that. <strong>Weiss: </strong>A couple of you have said one of the reasons that you came to Baltimore was that you saw other women in leadership positions here. So, were like this little microcosm that proves that women in leadership begets more women in leadership?<strong> Loeschke:</strong> There’s a remarkable Baltimore phenomenon that people might not be aware of. I wrote a book a couple of years ago called <em>Lives in Art: Sixteen Women Who Changed Theatre in Baltimore</em>. Over the last century, 16 different theaters were run by women. There was nowhere else in the country, or the world, where that was the case. That is an incredible legacy. And little girls did grow up knowing that, when they went to the theater, the person in charge was a woman.<strong> Hayden:</strong> There is work to do here and you feel like you can make a difference. <strong>Marciari-Alexander: </strong>There’s also diversity. Coming to Baltimore, you do see lots of different people from lots of different economic strata, all have different cultural paths, ethnic paths, socio-economic paths. It creates a feeling as a woman, a black woman, a Latina, a sense of hope—that it is possible here [to become a leader].</p>

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			<p><b>Max Weiss</b>: When one of my sales reps found out I was doing this panel, she came up to me and said, ‘Ask them all where they shop.’ <strong>Grayson:</strong> I was wondering when you were going to get to that [laughter]. <strong>Weiss</strong>: I’m glad you said that because my reaction was, ‘I wouldn’t ask a bunch of men where they shop.’ <strong>Rawlings-Blake: </strong>There’s probably a good reason. You probably wouldn’t ask because they wouldn’t be stylish [laughter]. <strong>Weiss:</strong> So, is it an appropriate question in this format? <strong>Marciari-Alexander: </strong>[Raising her hand] I hate shopping. <strong>Grayson:</strong> Love it. Love it. Who got up this morning and did not think about what they were going to wear? <strong>Bolger: </strong>I had to be instructed on what to wear [laughter]. <strong>Loeschke: </strong>Coming from theater, one of the lessons I’ve learned is the importance of dressing for what you are going to do that day. If I’m going to be talking to bullies, and you do that as a university president, if I’m going to the Fine Arts building or to a basketball game, I think about the height of my heels. Not just where I’m going to walk, but to whom I am speaking. Now, I hope this doesn’t make the magazine—because then everybody at the office will be talking about, ‘What size heel is she wearing?’<strong> Weiss: </strong>But this is going to make the magazine because these are things women have to think about. <strong>Loeschke:</strong> [Throwing down a pen in mock anger] Oh, great! <strong>Rawlings-Blake: </strong>Men say, ‘Oh, I’m putting on my power tie today,’ but it looks just like the tie they put on yesterday. For me, I do feel like it’s one thing I can do to bring in a little creativity. Depending on what you are doing, you are projecting. One thing as a woman, we have more tools in our tool box to convey messages than men have. And I take advantage of it. <strong>Weiss:</strong> Do women have to worry about being perceived as being shallow? <strong>Grayson:</strong> I don’t think so anymore. <strong>Rawlings-Blake:</strong> Oh, come on. I did a crime walk, and I had on heels because I walk in heels, and they work for me. I was at the front of the walk the whole time, I didn’t lag behind, I didn’t trip, I didn’t cause any trouble. The first line in the article [about it was], ‘In gold stilettos.’ How ridiculous. By a woman writer. <strong>Hayden:</strong> Well, that’s a way to undermine women. <strong>Rawlings-Blake: </strong>Don’t get me wrong, it’s not that I didn’t want people to notice the shoes. But it doesn’t have anything to do with the article. <strong>McKenzie: </strong>Because I do work on business development and promoting business activity, I take it slightly differently. I try to shop local and that was your question, ‘Where do you shop?’ So, I’m wearing Jody Davis, a local designer.</p>

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			<p><b>Max Weiss</b>: Love the dress. Final question. What advice would you give to young women who aspire to leadership? <strong>Grayson:</strong> I would say, ‘Follow your passion. And good luck finding it out. The minute you do, stay with it. That’s what going to move you.’ <strong>Wolf:</strong> Find someone that’s very good at what they do and go work for them. <strong>Marciari-Alexander:</strong> Don’t let things happen to you; make choices. <strong>Perry: </strong>Use your unique voice. Women bring a different perspective to everything they do. I bring a perspective to the hospital, it’s not just cardiology, it’s, ‘What are the symptoms of a heart attack for a woman? How are they different than a man? And how are we providing that education?’ I am bringing a different voice, with a different priority set. I would tell young people, including my daughters, ‘Bring your voice.’ Look at things with your perspective. That makes a balanced world.</p>

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<h2>Women in Leadership Roundtable Reading List</h2>
<p><em><a href="http://www.abebooks.com/Impulse-Soar-Quotsations-Women-Leadership-Rosalie/11361691009/bd">An Impulse to Soar: Quotsations for Women on Leadership </a></em><br />
by Rosalie Maggio and Maggio</p>
<p><em><a href="http://www.amazon.com/The-Little-Black-Book-Success/dp/0345518489">The Little Black Book of Success: Laws of Leadership for Black Women </a></em><br />
by Elaine Meryl Brown, Marsha Haygood, Rhonda Joy McLean and Angela Burt-Murray<em><br />
</em></p>
<p><em><a href="http://www.amazon.com/Knowing-Your-Value-Women-Getting/dp/1602861609/ref=sr_1_1?s=books&amp;ie=UTF8&amp;qid=1399061955&amp;sr=1-1&amp;keywords=Knowing+Your+Value%3A+Women%2C+Money%2C+and+Getting+What+You%27re+Worth">Knowing Your Value: Women, Money, and Getting What You&#8217;re Worth </a></em><br />
by Mika Brzezinski</p>
<p><em><a href="http://www.amazon.com/Elizabeth-CEO-Strategic-Lessons-Leader/dp/0735203571/ref=tmm_pap_swatch_0?_encoding=UTF8&amp;sr=1-1&amp;qid=1399061977">Elizabeth I CEO: Strategic Lessons from the Leader Who Built an Empire </a></em><br />
by Alan Axelrod Ph.D.</p>
<p><em><a href="http://www.amazon.com/Nice-Girls-Dont-Corner-Office/dp/0446693316/ref=sr_1_1?s=books&amp;ie=UTF8&amp;qid=1399061997&amp;sr=1-1&amp;keywords=Nice+Girls+Don%27t+Get+the+Corner+Office%3A+101+Unconscious+Mistakes+Women+Make+That+Sabotage+Their+Careers">Nice Girls Don&#8217;t Get the Corner Office: 101 Unconscious Mistakes Women Make That Sabotage Their Careers </a></em><br />
by Lois P. Frankel</p>
<p><em><a href="http://www.amazon.com/How-Remarkable-Women-Lead-Breakthrough/dp/030746170X/ref=sr_1_1?s=books&amp;ie=UTF8&amp;qid=1399062025&amp;sr=1-1&amp;keywords=How+Remarkable+Women+Lead%3A+The+Breakthrough+Model+for+Work+and+Life">How Remarkable Women Lead: The Breakthrough Model for Work and Life </a></em><br />
by Joanna Barsh, Susie Cranston and Geoffrey Lewis</p>
<p><em><a href="http://www.amazon.com/Lean-Women-Work-Will-Lead/dp/0385349947/ref=sr_1_1?s=books&amp;ie=UTF8&amp;qid=1399062046&amp;sr=1-1&amp;keywords=Lean+In%3A+Women%2C+Work%2C+and+the+Will+to+Lead">Lean In: Women, Work, and the Will to Lead</a></em><br />
<em>by Sheryl Sandberg</em></p>
<p><em><a href="https://tickets.tuboxoffice.com/orderticketsarea.asp?p=77&amp;a=66&amp;backurl=%2FDefault.asp%3FSearchMonth%3D%26monthsubmit%3D%26SearchText%3D%26Go.x%3D%26Go.y%3D%26pg%3D1%23abc">Lives in Art: Sixteen Women Who Changed Theatre in Baltimore</a></em><br />
by Maravene Loeschke</p>

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<h2>Outtakes: Women in Leadership Roundtable</h2>

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<p><a href="https://www.baltimoremagazine.com/section/community/women-have-risen-to-the-top-in-baltimore/" rel="nofollow">Source</a></p>]]></content:encoded>
					
		
		
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		<title>Video: Women in Leadership Roundtable</title>
		<link>https://www.baltimoremagazine.com/section/community/video-women-in-leadership-roundtable/</link>
		
		<dc:creator><![CDATA[Jess Mayhugh]]></dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Wed, 23 Apr 2014 13:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
				<category><![CDATA[News & Community]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Leadership]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Women in Business]]></category>
		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://server2.local/BIT-SPRING/baltimoremagazine.com/html/?post_type=article&#038;p=8767</guid>

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<p>	(from left to right) Carla Hayden, Doreen Bolger, Rebecca Hoffberger, Julie Marciari-Alexander, Cindy Wolf, Mayor Stephanie Rawlings-Blake, Max Weiss, Chickie Grayson, Brenda McKenzie, Maravene Loeschke, Amy Perry, and Y. Maria Martinez. <em>-Photo by Christopher Myers</em></p>

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			<h2>Leadership Styles</h2>

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<h2>Work-Life Balance</h2>

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			<hr>
<h2>Leadership in Baltimore</h2>

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	</div>
</div></div></div></div><div class="vc_row wpb_row vc_row-fluid"><div class="wpb_column vc_column_container vc_col-sm-12"><div class="vc_column-inner"><div class="wpb_wrapper">
	<div class="wpb_video_widget wpb_content_element vc_clearfix   vc_video-aspect-ratio-169 vc_video-el-width-100 vc_video-align-left" >
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			<div class="wpb_video_wrapper"><iframe loading="lazy" title="Women in Business Roundtable: Leadership in Baltimore" width="500" height="281" src="https://www.youtube.com/embed/ehk9j3IWmrA?feature=oembed" frameborder="0" allow="accelerometer; autoplay; clipboard-write; encrypted-media; gyroscope; picture-in-picture; web-share" allowfullscreen></iframe></div>
		</div>
	</div>
</div></div></div></div><div class="vc_row wpb_row vc_row-fluid"><div class="wpb_column vc_column_container vc_col-sm-12"><div class="vc_column-inner"><div class="wpb_wrapper">
	<div class="wpb_text_column wpb_content_element" >
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			<hr>
<h2>Mentorship</h2>

		</div>
	</div>
</div></div></div></div><div class="vc_row wpb_row vc_row-fluid"><div class="wpb_column vc_column_container vc_col-sm-12"><div class="vc_column-inner"><div class="wpb_wrapper">
	<div class="wpb_video_widget wpb_content_element vc_clearfix   vc_video-aspect-ratio-169 vc_video-el-width-100 vc_video-align-left" >
		<div class="wpb_wrapper">
			
			<div class="wpb_video_wrapper"><iframe loading="lazy" title="Women in Business Roundtable: Mentorship" width="500" height="281" src="https://www.youtube.com/embed/InwgyhRlwPc?feature=oembed" frameborder="0" allow="accelerometer; autoplay; clipboard-write; encrypted-media; gyroscope; picture-in-picture; web-share" allowfullscreen></iframe></div>
		</div>
	</div>
</div></div></div></div><div class="vc_row wpb_row vc_row-fluid"><div class="wpb_column vc_column_container vc_col-sm-12"><div class="vc_column-inner"><div class="wpb_wrapper">
	<div class="wpb_text_column wpb_content_element" >
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			<hr>
<h2>Fashion</h2>

		</div>
	</div>
</div></div></div></div><div class="vc_row wpb_row vc_row-fluid"><div class="wpb_column vc_column_container vc_col-sm-12"><div class="vc_column-inner"><div class="wpb_wrapper">
	<div class="wpb_video_widget wpb_content_element vc_clearfix   vc_video-aspect-ratio-169 vc_video-el-width-100 vc_video-align-left" >
		<div class="wpb_wrapper">
			
			<div class="wpb_video_wrapper"><iframe loading="lazy" title="Women in Business Roundtable: Fashion" width="500" height="281" src="https://www.youtube.com/embed/FkIblmFejnU?feature=oembed" frameborder="0" allow="accelerometer; autoplay; clipboard-write; encrypted-media; gyroscope; picture-in-picture; web-share" allowfullscreen></iframe></div>
		</div>
	</div>
</div></div></div></div><div class="vc_row wpb_row vc_row-fluid"><div class="wpb_column vc_column_container vc_col-sm-12"><div class="vc_column-inner"><div class="wpb_wrapper">
	<div class="wpb_text_column wpb_content_element" >
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			<hr>
<h2>Advice</h2>

		</div>
	</div>
</div></div></div></div><div class="vc_row wpb_row vc_row-fluid"><div class="wpb_column vc_column_container vc_col-sm-12"><div class="vc_column-inner"><div class="wpb_wrapper">
	<div class="wpb_video_widget wpb_content_element vc_clearfix   vc_video-aspect-ratio-169 vc_video-el-width-100 vc_video-align-left" >
		<div class="wpb_wrapper">
			
			<div class="wpb_video_wrapper"><iframe loading="lazy" title="Women in Business Roundtable: Advice" width="500" height="281" src="https://www.youtube.com/embed/Lb3F4oLHRX4?feature=oembed" frameborder="0" allow="accelerometer; autoplay; clipboard-write; encrypted-media; gyroscope; picture-in-picture; web-share" allowfullscreen></iframe></div>
		</div>
	</div>
</div></div></div></div>
</div>
<p><a href="https://www.baltimoremagazine.com/section/community/video-women-in-leadership-roundtable/" rel="nofollow">Source</a></p>]]></content:encoded>
					
		
		
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