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  • Baltimore, Maryland - May 28, 2021: Alicia Merritt tends bar behind shower curtains at Birds of a Feather, the scotch bar she owns and operates in the Fells Point neighborhood of Baltimore Friday night May 28, 2021. Alicia is fully vaccinated, but because she is immunocompromised from an organ transplant, she still has no immunity. She is hoping the CDC will allow her and others like her to get a third COVID-19 booster shot.<br />
<br />
CREDIT: Matt Roth for The Wall Street Journal
    210528-Immunocompromised-105.jpg
  • Baltimore, Maryland - May 28, 2021: Alicia Merritt tends bar behind shower curtains at Birds of a Feather, the scotch bar she owns and operates in the Fells Point neighborhood of Baltimore Friday night May 28, 2021. Alicia is fully vaccinated, but because she is immunocompromised from an organ transplant, she still has no immunity. She is hoping the CDC will allow her and others like her to get a third COVID-19 booster shot.<br />
<br />
CREDIT: Matt Roth for The Wall Street Journal
    210528-Immunocompromised-072.jpg
  • Baltimore, Maryland - May 28, 2021: Alicia Merritt tends bar behind shower curtains at Birds of a Feather, the scotch bar she owns and operates in the Fells Point neighborhood of Baltimore Friday night May 28, 2021. Alicia is fully vaccinated, but because she is immunocompromised from an organ transplant, she still has no immunity. She is hoping the CDC will allow her and others like her to get a third COVID-19 booster shot.<br />
<br />
CREDIT: Matt Roth for The Wall Street Journal
    210528-Immunocompromised-048.jpg
  • Baltimore, Maryland - May 28, 2021: Alicia Merritt tends bar behind shower curtains at Birds of a Feather, the scotch bar she owns and operates in the Fells Point neighborhood of Baltimore Friday night May 28, 2021. Alicia is fully vaccinated, but because she is immunocompromised from an organ transplant, she still has no immunity. She is hoping the CDC will allow her and others like her to get a third COVID-19 booster shot.<br />
<br />
CREDIT: Matt Roth for The Wall Street Journal
    210528-Immunocompromised-043.jpg
  • Gambrills, Maryland - May 14, 2018: Dr. Kimberly Burroughs in her 1962 Corvette.<br />
<br />
Dr. Kimberly Burroughs is a dentist living in Gambrills, Maryland. In 1997, her dad, John Burroughs, from Sunderland, Maryland, bought a 1959 Corvette and she helped him restore it. He always said, "someday this car will be yours!" But that never happened. Her dad still owns it. In 2015, she came across a 1962 Corvette that had been completely taken apart and all the parts had been sitting in boxes in a garage since the 1970s. She bought it for super cheap and it took her a little over a year to rebuild this Corvette and get it painted. In 2017, it won a Top Flight award -- scoring a 96.4% -- from the National Corvette Restorers Society.<br />
<br />
<br />
CREDIT: Matt Roth for The Wall Street Journal
    180514_Classic_Corvettes_230.jpg
  • Gambrills, Maryland - May 14, 2018: Dr. Kimberly Burroughs in her 1962 Corvette.<br />
<br />
Dr. Kimberly Burroughs is a dentist living in Gambrills, Maryland. In 1997, her dad, John Burroughs, from Sunderland, Maryland, bought a 1959 Corvette and she helped him restore it. He always said, "someday this car will be yours!" But that never happened. Her dad still owns it. In 2015, she came across a 1962 Corvette that had been completely taken apart and all the parts had been sitting in boxes in a garage since the 1970s. She bought it for super cheap and it took her a little over a year to rebuild this Corvette and get it painted. In 2017, it won a Top Flight award -- scoring a 96.4% -- from the National Corvette Restorers Society.<br />
<br />
<br />
CREDIT: Matt Roth for The Wall Street Journal
    180514_Classic_Corvettes_217.jpg
  • Gambrills, Maryland - May 14, 2018: Dr. Kimberly Burroughs's 1962 Corvette.<br />
<br />
Dr. Kimberly Burroughs is a dentist living in Gambrills, Maryland. In 1997, her dad, John Burroughs, from Sunderland, Maryland, bought a 1959 Corvette and she helped him restore it. He always said, "someday this car will be yours!" But that never happened. Her dad still owns it. In 2015, she came across a 1962 Corvette that had been completely taken apart and all the parts had been sitting in boxes in a garage since the 1970s. She bought it for super cheap and it took her a little over a year to rebuild this Corvette and get it painted. In 2017, it won a Top Flight award -- scoring a 96.4% -- from the National Corvette Restorers Society.<br />
<br />
<br />
CREDIT: Matt Roth for The Wall Street Journal
    180514_Classic_Corvettes_139.jpg
  • Gambrills, Maryland - May 14, 2018: Dr. Kimberly Burroughs's 1962 Corvette.<br />
<br />
Dr. Kimberly Burroughs is a dentist living in Gambrills, Maryland. In 1997, her dad, John Burroughs, from Sunderland, Maryland, bought a 1959 Corvette and she helped him restore it. He always said, "someday this car will be yours!" But that never happened. Her dad still owns it. In 2015, she came across a 1962 Corvette that had been completely taken apart and all the parts had been sitting in boxes in a garage since the 1970s. She bought it for super cheap and it took her a little over a year to rebuild this Corvette and get it painted. In 2017, it won a Top Flight award -- scoring a 96.4% -- from the National Corvette Restorers Society.<br />
<br />
<br />
CREDIT: Matt Roth for The Wall Street Journal
    180514_Classic_Corvettes_117.jpg
  • Gambrills, Maryland - May 14, 2018: Dr. Kimberly Burroughs's 1962 Corvette.<br />
<br />
Dr. Kimberly Burroughs is a dentist living in Gambrills, Maryland. In 1997, her dad, John Burroughs, from Sunderland, Maryland, bought a 1959 Corvette and she helped him restore it. He always said, "someday this car will be yours!" But that never happened. Her dad still owns it. In 2015, she came across a 1962 Corvette that had been completely taken apart and all the parts had been sitting in boxes in a garage since the 1970s. She bought it for super cheap and it took her a little over a year to rebuild this Corvette and get it painted. In 2017, it won a Top Flight award -- scoring a 96.4% -- from the National Corvette Restorers Society.<br />
<br />
<br />
CREDIT: Matt Roth for The Wall Street Journal
    180514_Classic_Corvettes_106.jpg
  • Gambrills, Maryland - May 14, 2018: John Burroughs's 1959 Corvette.<br />
<br />
Dr. Kimberly Burroughs is a dentist living in Gambrills, Maryland. In 1997, her dad, John Burroughs, from Sunderland, Maryland, bought a 1959 Corvette and she helped him restore it. He always said, "someday this car will be yours!" But that never happened. Her dad still owns it. In 2015, she came across a 1962 Corvette that had been completely taken apart and all the parts had been sitting in boxes in a garage since the 1970s. She bought it for super cheap and it took her a little over a year to rebuild this Corvette and get it painted. In 2017, it won a Top Flight award -- scoring a 96.4% -- from the National Corvette Restorers Society.<br />
<br />
<br />
CREDIT: Matt Roth for The Wall Street Journal
    180514_Classic_Corvettes_066.jpg
  • Baltimore, Maryland - January 21, 2020:  Alexander Triantis is the new Dean at the Johns Hopkins University’s Carey Business School. <br />
<br />
Johns Hopkins opened its Carey School of Business in 2007, a year before recession rattled the U.S. -- and the business school market. Now, after several years of declining applications to MBA programs, the university is revamping its entire curriculum for a new class that will start in the fall. Gone are aging case studies and lectures focused on soft skills that have been in vogue at so many business schools. In is a healthcare speciality that dovetails with what Johns Hopkins is already known for, as well as hard-core quant and data courses that will give the program a special STEM designation and greater access to foreign students who may have visa issues.<br />
<br />
<br />
CREDIT: Matt Roth for The Wall Street Journal<br />
JOHNSHOPKINS
    200121_JHU_Carey_School_of_Business_...JPG
  • Baltimore, Maryland - January 21, 2020:  Alexander Triantis is the new Dean at the Johns Hopkins University’s Carey Business School. <br />
<br />
Johns Hopkins opened its Carey School of Business in 2007, a year before recession rattled the U.S. -- and the business school market. Now, after several years of declining applications to MBA programs, the university is revamping its entire curriculum for a new class that will start in the fall. Gone are aging case studies and lectures focused on soft skills that have been in vogue at so many business schools. In is a healthcare speciality that dovetails with what Johns Hopkins is already known for, as well as hard-core quant and data courses that will give the program a special STEM designation and greater access to foreign students who may have visa issues.<br />
<br />
<br />
CREDIT: Matt Roth for The Wall Street Journal<br />
JOHNSHOPKINS
    200121_JHU_Carey_School_of_Business_...JPG
  • Baltimore, Maryland - January 21, 2020: Johns Hopkins University Carey Business School MBA students (L-R) Meghna Vaidyanath, Sweenal Rangari, and Eric Masagara, socialize during a 10 minute class break in the program’s sky rise campus located in Baltimore's Harbor East neighborhood, Tuesday January 21, 2020. <br />
<br />
Johns Hopkins opened its Carey School of Business in 2007, a year before recession rattled the U.S. -- and the business school market. Now, after several years of declining applications to MBA programs, the university is revamping its entire curriculum for a new class that will start in the fall. Gone are aging case studies and lectures focused on soft skills that have been in vogue at so many business schools. In is a healthcare speciality that dovetails with what Johns Hopkins is already known for, as well as hard-core quant and data courses that will give the program a special STEM designation and greater access to foreign students who may have visa issues.<br />
<br />
<br />
CREDIT: Matt Roth for The Wall Street Journal<br />
JOHNSHOPKINS
    200121_JHU_Carey_School_of_Business_...JPG
  • Baltimore, Maryland - January 21, 2020: Associate Professor Brian Gunia lectures at the Johns Hopkins University’s Carey School of Business in Baltimore's Harbor East neighborhood, Tuesday January 21, 2020. <br />
<br />
Johns Hopkins opened its Carey School of Business in 2007, a year before recession rattled the U.S. -- and the business school market. Now, after several years of declining applications to MBA programs, the university is revamping its entire curriculum for a new class that will start in the fall. Gone are aging case studies and lectures focused on soft skills that have been in vogue at so many business schools. In is a healthcare speciality that dovetails with what Johns Hopkins is already known for, as well as hard-core quant and data courses that will give the program a special STEM designation and greater access to foreign students who may have visa issues.<br />
<br />
<br />
CREDIT: Matt Roth for The Wall Street Journal<br />
JOHNSHOPKINS
    200121_JHU_Carey_School_of_Business_...JPG
  • Washington, D.C. - June 15, 2019:  Wesley Luhn, 3, takes in one of the Kingbird’s ice cream sundaes.<br />
<br />
After participating in “The Scandal Scavenger Hunt” at the Watergate Hotel, the Kingbird offers free ice cream sundaes, reputed to have been the former president’s favorite dessert.<br />
<br />
The Watergate Hotel’s restaurant Kingbird offers patron’s children “The Scandal Scavenger Hunt,” in the famous Scandal Suite, where burglars hired by former president Nixon spied on the Democratic National Convention’s offices. The idea is to let the children play detective while their parents enjoy a few minutes of adult time at the hotel’s Kingbird restaurant. For desert, the whole family gets free ice cream sundaes, reputed to have been the former president’s favorite dessert.<br />
<br />
<br />
CREDIT: Matt Roth for The Wall Street Journal
    190615_Scandal_Scavenger_Hunt_Waterg...JPG
  • Washington, D.C. - June 15, 2019:  Isabella Luhn, 8, takes in one of the Kingbird’s ice cream sundaes.<br />
<br />
After participating in “The Scandal Scavenger Hunt” at the Watergate Hotel, the Kingbird offers free ice cream sundaes, reputed to have been the former president’s favorite dessert.<br />
<br />
The Watergate Hotel’s restaurant Kingbird offers patron’s children “The Scandal Scavenger Hunt,” in the famous Scandal Suite, where burglars hired by former president Nixon spied on the Democratic National Convention’s offices. The idea is to let the children play detective while their parents enjoy a few minutes of adult time at the hotel’s Kingbird restaurant. For desert, the whole family gets free ice cream sundaes, reputed to have been the former president’s favorite dessert.<br />
<br />
<br />
CREDIT: Matt Roth for The Wall Street Journal
    190615_Scandal_Scavenger_Hunt_Waterg...JPG
  • Washington, D.C. - June 15, 2019: Catherine and Isabella Luhn, 10 and 8, participate in the “Scandal Scavenger Hunt,” searching for clues in the Watergate Hotel’s infamous “Scandal suite,” Saturday June 15, 2019. The idea is to let the children play detective while their parents enjoy a few minutes of adult time at the hotel’s Kingbird restaurant. For desert, the whole family gets free ice cream sundaes, reputed to have been the former president’s favorite dessert.<br />
<br />
The Watergate Hotel’s restaurant Kingbird offers patron’s children “The Scandal Scavenger Hunt,” in the famous Scandal Suite, where burglars hired by former president Nixon spied on the Democratic National Convention’s offices.<br />
<br />
<br />
CREDIT: Matt Roth for The Wall Street Journal
    190615_Scandal_Scavenger_Hunt_Waterg...JPG
  • Washington, D.C. - June 15, 2019: Catherine and Isabella Luhn, 10 and 8, participate in the “Scandal Scavenger Hunt,” searching for clues in the Watergate Hotel’s infamous “Scandal suite,” Saturday June 15, 2019. The idea is to let the children play detective while their parents enjoy a few minutes of adult time at the hotel’s Kingbird restaurant. For desert, the whole family gets free ice cream sundaes, reputed to have been the former president’s favorite dessert.<br />
<br />
The Watergate Hotel’s restaurant Kingbird offers patron’s children “The Scandal Scavenger Hunt,” in the famous Scandal Suite, where burglars hired by former president Nixon spied on the Democratic National Convention’s offices.<br />
<br />
<br />
CREDIT: Matt Roth for The Wall Street Journal
    190615_Scandal_Scavenger_Hunt_Waterg...JPG
  • Washington, D.C. - June 15, 2019: Catherine and Isabella Luhn, 10 and 8, participate in the “Scandal Scavenger Hunt,” searching for clues in the Watergate Hotel’s infamous “Scandal suite,” Saturday June 15, 2019. The idea is to let the children play detective while their parents enjoy a few minutes of adult time at the hotel’s Kingbird restaurant. For desert, the whole family gets free ice cream sundaes, reputed to have been the former president’s favorite dessert.<br />
<br />
The Watergate Hotel’s restaurant Kingbird offers patron’s children “The Scandal Scavenger Hunt,” in the famous Scandal Suite, where burglars hired by former president Nixon spied on the Democratic National Convention’s offices.<br />
<br />
<br />
CREDIT: Matt Roth for The Wall Street Journal
    190615_Scandal_Scavenger_Hunt_Waterg...JPG
  • Washington, D.C. - June 15, 2019: Hasna Laraisse, the Kingbird’s assistant GM, leads Catherine and Isabella Luhn, 10 and 8, from the Watergate Hotel’s restaurant to the infamous “Scandal suite.” Once there The Luhn children participate in the “Scandal Scavenger Hunt” while their parents enjoy a few minutes of adult time at the Kingbird restaurant, Saturday June 15, 2019. For desert, the whole family gets free ice cream sundaes, reputed to have been the former president’s favorite dessert.<br />
<br />
The Watergate Hotel’s restaurant Kingbird offers patron’s children “The Scandal Scavenger Hunt,” in the famous Scandal Suite, where burglars hired by former president Nixon spied on the Democratic National Convention’s offices.<br />
<br />
<br />
CREDIT: Matt Roth for The Wall Street Journal
    190615_Scandal_Scavenger_Hunt_Waterg...JPG
  • Lancaster, Pennsylvania - June 09, 2019: Caroline Ecklin with “Sally” her 1980 Porsche 911 outside the Stevens School apartments in Lancaster, Pa., Sunday June 9, 2019. The 27-year-old car restoration garage manager names her cars, and this one is after the Disney Pixar Porsche character in the movie “Cars.”<br />
<br />
<br />
CREDIT: Matt Roth for The Wall Street Journal
    190609_Caroline_Ecklin_Porsche_414.JPG
  • Lancaster, Pennsylvania - June 09, 2019: Caroline Ecklin opens the 1980 Porsche 911’s trunk in the front. <br />
<br />
Caroline Ecklin with “Sally” her 1980 Porsche 911 outside the Stevens School apartments in Lancaster, Pa., Sunday June 9, 2019. The 27-year-old car restoration garage manager names her cars, and this one is after the Disney Pixar Porsche character in the movie “Cars.”<br />
<br />
<br />
CREDIT: Matt Roth for The Wall Street Journal
    190609_Caroline_Ecklin_Porsche_394.JPG
  • Lancaster, Pennsylvania - June 09, 2019: Caroline Ecklin opens the 1980 Porsche 911’s trunk in the front. <br />
<br />
Caroline Ecklin with “Sally” her 1980 Porsche 911 outside the Stevens School apartments in Lancaster, Pa., Sunday June 9, 2019. The 27-year-old car restoration garage manager names her cars, and this one is after the Disney Pixar Porsche character in the movie “Cars.”<br />
<br />
<br />
CREDIT: Matt Roth for The Wall Street Journal
    190609_Caroline_Ecklin_Porsche_368.JPG
  • Lancaster, Pennsylvania - June 09, 2019: Caroline Ecklin with “Sally” her 1980 Porsche 911 outside the Stevens School apartments in Lancaster, Pa., Sunday June 9, 2019. The 27-year-old car restoration garage manager names her cars, and this one is after the Disney Pixar Porsche character in the movie “Cars.”<br />
<br />
<br />
CREDIT: Matt Roth for The Wall Street Journal
    190609_Caroline_Ecklin_Porsche_347.JPG
  • Lancaster, Pennsylvania - June 09, 2019: Caroline Ecklin with “Sally” her 1980 Porsche 911 outside the Stevens School apartments in Lancaster, Pa., Sunday June 9, 2019. The 27-year-old car restoration garage manager names her cars, and this one is after the Disney Pixar Porsche character in the movie “Cars.”<br />
<br />
<br />
CREDIT: Matt Roth for The Wall Street Journal
    190609_Caroline_Ecklin_Porsche_307.JPG
  • Lancaster, Pennsylvania - June 09, 2019: Caroline Ecklin wears driving gloves given to her by her mother.<br />
<br />
Caroline Ecklin with “Sally” her 1980 Porsche 911 outside the Stevens School apartments in Lancaster, Pa., Sunday June 9, 2019. The 27-year-old car restoration garage manager names her cars, and this one is after the Disney Pixar Porsche character in the movie “Cars.”<br />
<br />
<br />
CREDIT: Matt Roth for The Wall Street Journal
    190609_Caroline_Ecklin_Porsche_273.JPG
  • Lancaster, Pennsylvania - June 09, 2019: The 1980 Porsche 911 rims.<br />
<br />
Caroline Ecklin with “Sally” her 1980 Porsche 911 outside the Stevens School apartments in Lancaster, Pa., Sunday June 9, 2019. The 27-year-old car restoration garage manager names her cars, and this one is after the Disney Pixar Porsche character in the movie “Cars.”<br />
<br />
<br />
CREDIT: Matt Roth for The Wall Street Journal
    190609_Caroline_Ecklin_Porsche_054.JPG
  • Lancaster, Pennsylvania - June 09, 2019: Caroline Ecklin with “Sally” her 1980 Porsche 911 outside the Stevens School apartments in Lancaster, Pa., Sunday June 9, 2019. The 27-year-old car restoration garage manager names her cars, and this one is after the Disney Pixar Porsche character in the movie “Cars.”<br />
<br />
<br />
CREDIT: Matt Roth for The Wall Street Journal
    190609_Caroline_Ecklin_Porsche_048.JPG
  • Baltimore, Maryland - May 07, 2019: <br />
Horses and riders train in the morning at Pimlico Race Track in Baltimore, Maryland Tuesday May 7th, 2019.<br />
<br />
As Baltimore prepares to host the 144th running of the Preakness Stakes on May 18, there is growing concern locally that the second jewel of horse racing’s Triple Crown will leave town after next year’s contest at dilapidated Pimlico. The track’s Canadian owner, the Stronach Group, wants to move the famous race to a different Maryland track it owns in Laurel, near D.C. In March the city sued Stronach, seeking power to gain control of the 149-year-old Pimlico through condemnation, though officials haven’t said where they’d find the estimated $425 million needed to rebuild Pimlico. This month Stronach said 6,670 grandstand seats at Pimlico would be closed for Preakness due to structural concerns -- a move city officials claimed was meant to create a bogus emergency that would justify moving the race, which typically draws more than 130,000 people. A decades-old state law says the Preakness can be moved to another track in the state “only as a result of a disaster or emergency.” Stronach has committed to keep Preakness at Pimlico only through 2020.<br />
<br />
CREDIT: Matt Roth for The Wall Street Journal
    190507_Pimlico_376.JPG
  • Baltimore, Maryland - May 07, 2019: <br />
Horses and riders train in the morning at Pimlico Race Track in Baltimore, Maryland Tuesday May 7th, 2019.<br />
<br />
As Baltimore prepares to host the 144th running of the Preakness Stakes on May 18, there is growing concern locally that the second jewel of horse racing’s Triple Crown will leave town after next year’s contest at dilapidated Pimlico. The track’s Canadian owner, the Stronach Group, wants to move the famous race to a different Maryland track it owns in Laurel, near D.C. In March the city sued Stronach, seeking power to gain control of the 149-year-old Pimlico through condemnation, though officials haven’t said where they’d find the estimated $425 million needed to rebuild Pimlico. This month Stronach said 6,670 grandstand seats at Pimlico would be closed for Preakness due to structural concerns -- a move city officials claimed was meant to create a bogus emergency that would justify moving the race, which typically draws more than 130,000 people. A decades-old state law says the Preakness can be moved to another track in the state “only as a result of a disaster or emergency.” Stronach has committed to keep Preakness at Pimlico only through 2020.<br />
<br />
CREDIT: Matt Roth for The Wall Street Journal
    190507_Pimlico_231.JPG
  • Rockville, Maryland - March 02, 2019: Sam Gaudry plays for the Montgomery Youth Hockey Association 6 and Under program in Rockville, Md.<br />
<br />
The total number of female hockey players ages 18 and under has increased 37% in the last decade while the number of male hockey players has increased only 15%, according to USA Hockey. Female coaches have also climbed 41 percent and the number of female officials has jumped 11 percent. At the same time, figure skating clubs say they are losing girls.<br />
<br />
CREDIT: Matt Roth for The Wall Street Journal
    190302_Hockey_Girls_1006.JPG
  • Rockville, Maryland - March 02, 2019: Sam Gaudry plays for the Montgomery Youth Hockey Association 6 and Under program in Rockville, Md.<br />
<br />
The total number of female hockey players ages 18 and under has increased 37% in the last decade while the number of male hockey players has increased only 15%, according to USA Hockey. Female coaches have also climbed 41 percent and the number of female officials has jumped 11 percent. At the same time, figure skating clubs say they are losing girls.<br />
<br />
CREDIT: Matt Roth for The Wall Street Journal
    190302_Hockey_Girls_1004.JPG
  • Rockville, Maryland - March 02, 2019: Sam Gaudry plays for the Montgomery Youth Hockey Association 6 and Under program in Rockville, Md.<br />
<br />
The total number of female hockey players ages 18 and under has increased 37% in the last decade while the number of male hockey players has increased only 15%, according to USA Hockey. Female coaches have also climbed 41 percent and the number of female officials has jumped 11 percent. At the same time, figure skating clubs say they are losing girls.<br />
<br />
CREDIT: Matt Roth for The Wall Street Journal
    190302_Hockey_Girls_0998.JPG
  • Rockville, Maryland - March 02, 2019: Emma Mills, 5 plays for the Montgomery Youth Hockey Association 6 and Under program in Rockville, Md.<br />
<br />
The total number of female hockey players ages 18 and under has increased 37% in the last decade while the number of male hockey players has increased only 15%, according to USA Hockey. Female coaches have also climbed 41 percent and the number of female officials has jumped 11 percent. At the same time, figure skating clubs say they are losing girls.<br />
<br />
CREDIT: Matt Roth for The Wall Street Journal
    190302_Hockey_Girls_0979.JPG
  • Rockville, Maryland - March 02, 2019: Margaret Bailey plays for the Montgomery Youth Hockey Association 8 and Under program in Rockville, Md.<br />
<br />
The total number of female hockey players ages 18 and under has increased 37% in the last decade while the number of male hockey players has increased only 15%, according to USA Hockey. Female coaches have also climbed 41 percent and the number of female officials has jumped 11 percent. At the same time, figure skating clubs say they are losing girls.<br />
<br />
CREDIT: Matt Roth for The Wall Street Journal
    190302_Hockey_Girls_0942.JPG
  • Rockville, Maryland - March 02, 2019: Sara Caldicott plays for the Montgomery Youth Hockey Association 8 and Under program in Rockville, Md.<br />
<br />
The total number of female hockey players ages 18 and under has increased 37% in the last decade while the number of male hockey players has increased only 15%, according to USA Hockey. Female coaches have also climbed 41 percent and the number of female officials has jumped 11 percent. At the same time, figure skating clubs say they are losing girls.<br />
<br />
CREDIT: Matt Roth for The Wall Street Journal
    190302_Hockey_Girls_0935.JPG
  • Rockville, Maryland - March 02, 2019: Madison McNeill practices drills at the Montgomery Youth Hockey Association facility in Rockville, Md., Saturday March 2, 2019.<br />
<br />
The total number of female hockey players ages 18 and under has increased 37% in the last decade while the number of male hockey players has increased only 15%, according to USA Hockey. Female coaches have also climbed 41 percent and the number of female officials has jumped 11 percent. At the same time, figure skating clubs say they are losing girls.<br />
<br />
CREDIT: Matt Roth for The Wall Street Journal
    190302_Hockey_Girls_0831.JPG
  • Rockville, Maryland - March 02, 2019: Sara Caldicott practices drills at the Montgomery Youth Hockey Association facility in Rockville, Md., Saturday March 2, 2019.<br />
<br />
The total number of female hockey players ages 18 and under has increased 37% in the last decade while the number of male hockey players has increased only 15%, according to USA Hockey. Female coaches have also climbed 41 percent and the number of female officials has jumped 11 percent. At the same time, figure skating clubs say they are losing girls.<br />
<br />
CREDIT: Matt Roth for The Wall Street Journal
    190302_Hockey_Girls_0804.JPG
  • Rockville, Maryland - March 02, 2019: Sara Caldicott practices goaltending at the Montgomery Youth Hockey Association facility in Rockville, Md., Saturday March 2, 2019.<br />
<br />
The total number of female hockey players ages 18 and under has increased 37% in the last decade while the number of male hockey players has increased only 15%, according to USA Hockey. Female coaches have also climbed 41 percent and the number of female officials has jumped 11 percent. At the same time, figure skating clubs say they are losing girls.<br />
<br />
CREDIT: Matt Roth for The Wall Street Journal
    190302_Hockey_Girls_0540.JPG
  • Rockville, Maryland - March 02, 2019: Marco Serra, left, and Katherine Petrich, right practice drills at the Montgomery Youth Hockey Association facility in Rockville, Md., Saturday March 2, 2019.<br />
<br />
The total number of female hockey players ages 18 and under has increased 37% in the last decade while the number of male hockey players has increased only 15%, according to USA Hockey. Female coaches have also climbed 41 percent and the number of female officials has jumped 11 percent. At the same time, figure skating clubs say they are losing girls.<br />
<br />
CREDIT: Matt Roth for The Wall Street Journal
    190302_Hockey_Girls_0475.JPG
  • Rockville, Maryland - March 02, 2019: Madison McNeill, left, and Katherine Petrich hang out during downtime at practice at the Montgomery Youth Hockey Association facility in Rockville, Md., Saturday March 2, 2019.<br />
<br />
The total number of female hockey players ages 18 and under has increased 37% in the last decade while the number of male hockey players has increased only 15%, according to USA Hockey. Female coaches have also climbed 41 percent and the number of female officials has jumped 11 percent. At the same time, figure skating clubs say they are losing girls.<br />
<br />
CREDIT: Matt Roth for The Wall Street Journal
    190302_Hockey_Girls_0422.JPG
  • Rockville, Maryland - March 02, 2019: Madison McNeill practices drills at the Montgomery Youth Hockey Association facility in Rockville, Md., Saturday March 2, 2019.<br />
<br />
The total number of female hockey players ages 18 and under has increased 37% in the last decade while the number of male hockey players has increased only 15%, according to USA Hockey. Female coaches have also climbed 41 percent and the number of female officials has jumped 11 percent. At the same time, figure skating clubs say they are losing girls.<br />
<br />
CREDIT: Matt Roth for The Wall Street Journal
    190302_Hockey_Girls_0410.JPG
  • Rockville, Maryland - March 02, 2019: Sara Caldicott is coached by Tom Best during the 8 and Under youth hockey program practice at the Montgomery Youth Hockey Association facility in Rockville, Md., Saturday March 2, 2019.<br />
<br />
The total number of female hockey players ages 18 and under has increased 37% in the last decade while the number of male hockey players has increased only 15%, according to USA Hockey. Female coaches have also climbed 41 percent and the number of female officials has jumped 11 percent. At the same time, figure skating clubs say they are losing girls.<br />
<br />
CREDIT: Matt Roth for The Wall Street Journal
    190302_Hockey_Girls_0405.JPG
  • Rockville, Maryland - March 02, 2019: Sara Caldicott is suited up in her goalie gear for practice at the Montgomery Youth Hockey Association facility in Rockville, Md., Saturday March 2, 2019.<br />
<br />
The total number of female hockey players ages 18 and under has increased 37% in the last decade while the number of male hockey players has increased only 15%, according to USA Hockey. Female coaches have also climbed 41 percent and the number of female officials has jumped 11 percent. At the same time, figure skating clubs say they are losing girls.<br />
<br />
CREDIT: Matt Roth for The Wall Street Journal
    190302_Hockey_Girls_0170.JPG
  • Rockville, Maryland - March 02, 2019: Sara Caldicott is suited up in her goalie gear for practice at the Montgomery Youth Hockey Association facility in Rockville, Md., Saturday March 2, 2019.<br />
<br />
The total number of female hockey players ages 18 and under has increased 37% in the last decade while the number of male hockey players has increased only 15%, according to USA Hockey. Female coaches have also climbed 41 percent and the number of female officials has jumped 11 percent. At the same time, figure skating clubs say they are losing girls.<br />
<br />
CREDIT: Matt Roth for The Wall Street Journal
    190302_Hockey_Girls_0167.JPG
  • Chestertown, Maryland - February 10, 2019: Phil Hoon with his 1955 Ford Thunderbird in his Chestertown, Md., backyard.<br />
<br />
Phil Hoon is an attorney from Chestertown, Md. His grandfather was a Ford dealer in rural Chestertown in the 1950s. When Ford released the Thunderbird in model year 1955, every dealer got one to sell. Phil Hoon's grandfather sold a Thunderbird to a local woman, who then sold it to Phil's mother. Now Phil has it, so it resides in the town where it was first sold.<br />
<br />
CREDIT: Matt Roth for The Wall Street Journal
    190210_Thunderbird_197.JPG
  • Chestertown, Maryland - February 10, 2019: Phil Hoon's 1955 Ford Thunderbird in the backyard of his Chestertown, Md., home.<br />
<br />
Phil Hoon is an attorney from Chestertown, Md. His grandfather was a Ford dealer in rural Chestertown in the 1950s. When Ford released the Thunderbird in model year 1955, every dealer got one to sell. Phil Hoon's grandfather sold a Thunderbird to a local woman, who then sold it to Phil's mother. Now Phil has it, so it resides in the town where it was first sold.<br />
<br />
CREDIT: Matt Roth for The Wall Street Journal
    190210_Thunderbird_167.JPG
  • Chestertown, Maryland - February 10, 2019: Phil Hoon's 1955 Ford Thunderbird in the backyard of his Chestertown, Md., home.<br />
<br />
Phil Hoon is an attorney from Chestertown, Md. His grandfather was a Ford dealer in rural Chestertown in the 1950s. When Ford released the Thunderbird in model year 1955, every dealer got one to sell. Phil Hoon's grandfather sold a Thunderbird to a local woman, who then sold it to Phil's mother. Now Phil has it, so it resides in the town where it was first sold.<br />
<br />
CREDIT: Matt Roth for The Wall Street Journal
    190210_Thunderbird_133.JPG
  • Chestertown, Maryland - February 10, 2019: Phil Hoon's 1955 Ford Thunderbird in the backyard of his Chestertown, Md., home.<br />
<br />
Phil Hoon is an attorney from Chestertown, Md. His grandfather was a Ford dealer in rural Chestertown in the 1950s. When Ford released the Thunderbird in model year 1955, every dealer got one to sell. Phil Hoon's grandfather sold a Thunderbird to a local woman, who then sold it to Phil's mother. Now Phil has it, so it resides in the town where it was first sold.<br />
<br />
CREDIT: Matt Roth for The Wall Street Journal
    190210_Thunderbird_124.JPG
  • Chestertown, Maryland - February 10, 2019: Phil Hoon's 1955 Ford Thunderbird in the backyard of his Chestertown, Md., home.<br />
<br />
Phil Hoon is an attorney from Chestertown, Md. His grandfather was a Ford dealer in rural Chestertown in the 1950s. When Ford released the Thunderbird in model year 1955, every dealer got one to sell. Phil Hoon's grandfather sold a Thunderbird to a local woman, who then sold it to Phil's mother. Now Phil has it, so it resides in the town where it was first sold.<br />
<br />
CREDIT: Matt Roth for The Wall Street Journal
    190210_Thunderbird_112.JPG
  • Chestertown, Maryland - February 10, 2019: Phil Hoon's 1955 Ford Thunderbird in the backyard of his Chestertown, Md., home.<br />
<br />
Phil Hoon is an attorney from Chestertown, Md. His grandfather was a Ford dealer in rural Chestertown in the 1950s. When Ford released the Thunderbird in model year 1955, every dealer got one to sell. Phil Hoon's grandfather sold a Thunderbird to a local woman, who then sold it to Phil's mother. Now Phil has it, so it resides in the town where it was first sold.<br />
<br />
CREDIT: Matt Roth for The Wall Street Journal
    190210_Thunderbird_083.JPG
  • Chestertown, Maryland - February 10, 2019: Phil Hoon's 1955 Ford Thunderbird in the backyard of his Chestertown, Md., home.<br />
<br />
Phil Hoon is an attorney from Chestertown, Md. His grandfather was a Ford dealer in rural Chestertown in the 1950s. When Ford released the Thunderbird in model year 1955, every dealer got one to sell. Phil Hoon's grandfather sold a Thunderbird to a local woman, who then sold it to Phil's mother. Now Phil has it, so it resides in the town where it was first sold.<br />
<br />
CREDIT: Matt Roth for The Wall Street Journal
    190210_Thunderbird_060.JPG
  • Chestertown, Maryland - February 10, 2019: Phil Hoon's 1955 Ford Thunderbird in the backyard of his Chestertown, Md., home.<br />
<br />
Phil Hoon is an attorney from Chestertown, Md. His grandfather was a Ford dealer in rural Chestertown in the 1950s. When Ford released the Thunderbird in model year 1955, every dealer got one to sell. Phil Hoon's grandfather sold a Thunderbird to a local woman, who then sold it to Phil's mother. Now Phil has it, so it resides in the town where it was first sold.<br />
<br />
CREDIT: Matt Roth for The Wall Street Journal
    190210_Thunderbird_056.JPG
  • Baltimore, Maryland - February 01, 2019: Sgt. Jason Cowger, left, and Lt. Rex Snider, right, of the Johns Hopkins University Campus Safety and Security Department, stand for a portrait at the Johns Hopkins Homewood Campus Friday February 1, 2019.<br />
<br />
Johns Hopkins University, Maryland's largest private employer, is pushing for state approval to create an armed police force with up to 100 officers, citing rising crime near its university and medical campuses in Baltimore. Hopkins notes many peer institutions in the U.S. have long had police departments, and it says the move would lighten the load for the overstretched Baltimore Police Department. The state legislature will consider the bid during its current session. The plan faces opposition from some community members and lawmakers who distrust police because of the Baltimore department's high-profile problems, exposed after the 2015 death of Freddie Gray.<br />
<br />
<br />
CREDIT: Matt Roth for The Wall Street Journal
    190201_JHU_Campus_Safety_Security_13...JPG
  • Baltimore, Maryland - February 01, 2019: Sgt. Jason Cowger, of the Johns Hopkins University Campus Safety and Security Department drives his patrol car during a ride along at the Johns Hopkins Homewood Campus Friday February 1, 2019.<br />
<br />
Johns Hopkins University, Maryland's largest private employer, is pushing for state approval to create an armed police force with up to 100 officers, citing rising crime near its university and medical campuses in Baltimore. Hopkins notes many peer institutions in the U.S. have long had police departments, and it says the move would lighten the load for the overstretched Baltimore Police Department. The state legislature will consider the bid during its current session. The plan faces opposition from some community members and lawmakers who distrust police because of the Baltimore department's high-profile problems, exposed after the 2015 death of Freddie Gray.<br />
<br />
<br />
CREDIT: Matt Roth for The Wall Street Journal
    190201_JHU_Campus_Safety_Security_11...JPG
  • Baltimore, Maryland - February 01, 2019: A training dummy inside the Johns Hopkins University Campus Safety and Security Department Homewood Campus headquarters Friday February 1, 2019.<br />
<br />
Johns Hopkins University, Maryland's largest private employer, is pushing for state approval to create an armed police force with up to 100 officers, citing rising crime near its university and medical campuses in Baltimore. Hopkins notes many peer institutions in the U.S. have long had police departments, and it says the move would lighten the load for the overstretched Baltimore Police Department. The state legislature will consider the bid during its current session. The plan faces opposition from some community members and lawmakers who distrust police because of the Baltimore department's high-profile problems, exposed after the 2015 death of Freddie Gray.<br />
<br />
<br />
CREDIT: Matt Roth for The Wall Street Journal
    190201_JHU_Campus_Safety_Security_07...JPG
  • Leesburg, Virginia - July 20, 2018:<br />
James Mizelle, from Leesburg, Va., at Shoe’s cafe in Leesburg, Va., Friday July 20th, 2018. He used the Pension Rights Center in DC to successfully sue AT&T who wanted the $32,000 they mistakenly paid Mr. Mizelle after he retired as an account services manager from Telcordia Technologies, a company formerly owned by AT&T.<br />
<br />
<br />
CREDIT: Matt Roth for The Wall Street Journal
    180720_James_Mizelle_055.JPG
  • Leesburg, Virginia - July 20, 2018:<br />
James Mizelle, from Leesburg, Va., at Shoe’s cafe in Leesburg, Va., Friday July 20th, 2018. He used the Pension Rights Center in DC to successfully sue AT&T who wanted the $32,000 they mistakenly paid Mr. Mizelle after he retired as an account services manager from Telcordia Technologies, a company formerly owned by AT&T.<br />
<br />
<br />
CREDIT: Matt Roth for The Wall Street Journal
    180720_James_Mizelle_070.JPG
  • Leesburg, Virginia - July 20, 2018:<br />
James Mizelle, from Leesburg, Va., at Shoe’s cafe in Leesburg, Va., Friday July 20th, 2018. He used the Pension Rights Center in DC to successfully sue AT&T who wanted the $32,000 they mistakenly paid Mr. Mizelle after he retired as an account services manager from Telcordia Technologies, a company formerly owned by AT&T.<br />
<br />
<br />
CREDIT: Matt Roth for The Wall Street Journal
    180720_James_Mizelle_069.JPG
  • Arnold, Maryland - June 20, 2018: Nila Serrano, 46, prepares dinner at her home in Arnold, Md., Wednesday June 20, 2018. Ms. Serrano has a Honduran half sister and nephew who are seeking domestic abuse asylum in the United States, but were separated at the U.S. border under the Trump Administration's Zero Tolerance immigration policy. Nila's half sister Delsy Guadalupe Serrano Torres, who goes by “Lupe,” is in a detention center in Texas, while Danny Cortes Serrano, Nila's eight-year-old nephew, is living with a foster family in Manhattan. Ms. Serrano, a citizen born in Michigan, and her husband, Elnar, a U.S. resident from Honduras, are planning to sponsor Danny. Lupe was awarded a $2500 bond the day Trump signed an executive order reversing the family separation at the border. The sponsorship process, says Nila, has been exhausting.<br />
<br />
CREDIT: Matt Roth for The Wall Street Journal
    180620_Immigrant_Family_Separation_3...JPG
  • Arnold, Maryland - June 20, 2018: Nila Serrano, 46, prepares dinner at her home in Arnold, Md., Wednesday June 20, 2018. Ms. Serrano has a Honduran half sister and nephew who are seeking domestic abuse asylum in the United States, but were separated at the U.S. border under the Trump Administration's Zero Tolerance immigration policy. Nila's half sister Delsy Guadalupe Serrano Torres, who goes by “Lupe,” is in a detention center in Texas, while Danny Cortes Serrano, Nila's eight-year-old nephew, is living with a foster family in Manhattan. Ms. Serrano, a citizen born in Michigan, and her husband, Elnar, a U.S. resident from Honduras, are planning to sponsor Danny. Lupe was awarded a $2500 bond the day Trump signed an executive order reversing the family separation at the border. The sponsorship process, says Nila, has been exhausting.<br />
<br />
CREDIT: Matt Roth for The Wall Street Journal
    180620_Immigrant_Family_Separation_1...JPG
  • Bethesda, Maryland - March 10, 2018: Steve Heitzner and his daughters Kendall Heitzner, 24, left and Jordan Heitzner, right, 28, pack up after practicing their tennis game against married couple Scott and Jill London at the Bethesda Country Club in Bethesda, Md., Saturday March 10, 2018.<br />
<br />
Steve Heitzner, Marriott's Chief Sales and Marketing Officer for the Americas, is a former NCAA Division 1 tennis player. He and his daughter Kendall have played in the Father/Daughter Open division and were ranked #2 in the country a few years ago.<br />
<br />
CREDIT: Matt Roth for The Wall Street Journal
    180310_Steve_Heitzner_Tennis_421.JPG
  • Bethesda, Maryland - March 10, 2018: Steve Heitzner and his daughter Jordan Heitzner, 28, practice against married couple Scott and Jill London at the Bethesda Country Club in Bethesda, Md., Saturday March 10, 2018.<br />
<br />
Steve Heitzner, Marriott's Chief Sales and Marketing Officer for the Americas, is a former NCAA Division 1 tennis player. He and his other daughter Kendall have played in the Father/Daughter Open division and were ranked #2 in the country a few years ago.<br />
<br />
CREDIT: Matt Roth for The Wall Street Journal
    180310_Steve_Heitzner_Tennis_365.JPG
  • Bethesda, Maryland - March 10, 2018: Steve Heitzner and his daughter Kendall Heitzner, 24, practice against married couple Scott and Jill London at the Bethesda Country Club in Bethesda, Md., Saturday March 10, 2018.<br />
<br />
Steve Heitzner, Marriott's Chief Sales and Marketing Officer for the Americas, is a former NCAA Division 1 tennis player. He and his daughter Kendall have played in the Father/Daughter Open division and were ranked #2 in the country a few years ago.<br />
<br />
CREDIT: Matt Roth for The Wall Street Journal
    180310_Steve_Heitzner_Tennis_290.JPG
  • Bethesda, Maryland - March 10, 2018: A cart of tennis balls in the corner of the inflatable indoor tennis courts at the Bethesda Country Club in Bethesda, Md., Saturday March 10, 2018.<br />
<br />
Steve Heitzner, Marriott's Chief Sales and Marketing Officer for the Americas, is a former NCAA Division 1 tennis player. He and his daughter Kendall have played in the Father/Daughter Open division and were ranked #2 in the country a few years ago.<br />
<br />
CREDIT: Matt Roth for The Wall Street Journal
    180310_Steve_Heitzner_Tennis_173.JPG
  • Bethesda, Maryland - March 10, 2018: Steve Heitzner and his daughter Jordan Heitzner, 28, at the Bethesda Country Club in Bethesda, Md., Saturday March 10, 2018.<br />
<br />
Steve Heitzner, Marriott's Chief Sales and Marketing Officer for the Americas, is a former NCAA Division 1 tennis player. He and his other daughter Kendall have played in the Father/Daughter Open division and were ranked #2 in the country a few years ago.<br />
<br />
CREDIT: Matt Roth for The Wall Street Journal
    180310_Steve_Heitzner_Tennis_036.JPG
  • Washington, D.C. - November 01, 2013:<br />
<br />
Dentons Elliott Portnoy, Global Chief Executive Officer and Joe Andrew, Global Chair are photographed in their Washington D.C. office suites. Dentons merged with Paris-based Salans and Canadian-based Fraser Milner Casgrain in March, and now the international law firm is looking to merge with McKenna Long & Aldridge.<br />
CREDIT: Matt Roth for The Wall Street Journal<br />
LAWJOURNAL
    131101_Dentons_102.JPG
  • Baltimore, Maryland - May 28, 2021: Alicia Merritt tends bar behind shower curtains at Birds of a Feather, the scotch bar she owns and operates in the Fells Point neighborhood of Baltimore Friday night May 28, 2021. Alicia is fully vaccinated, but because she is immunocompromised from an organ transplant, she still has no immunity. She is hoping the CDC will allow her and others like her to get a third COVID-19 booster shot.<br />
<br />
CREDIT: Matt Roth for The Wall Street Journal
    210528-Immunocompromised-212.jpg
  • Baltimore, Maryland - May 28, 2021: Alicia Merritt talks with regular Rahul Bakshi while she tends bar behind shower curtains at Birds of a Feather, the scotch bar she owns and operates in the Fells Point neighborhood of Baltimore Friday night May 28, 2021. Alicia is fully vaccinated, but because she is immunocompromised from an organ transplant, she still has no immunity. She is hoping the CDC will allow her and others like her to get a third COVID-19 booster shot.<br />
<br />
CREDIT: Matt Roth for The Wall Street Journal
    210528-Immunocompromised-211.jpg
  • Baltimore, Maryland - May 28, 2021: Alicia Merritt tends bar behind shower curtains at Birds of a Feather, the scotch bar she owns and operates in the Fells Point neighborhood of Baltimore Friday night May 28, 2021. Alicia is fully vaccinated, but because she is immunocompromised from an organ transplant, she still has no immunity. She is hoping the CDC will allow her and others like her to get a third COVID-19 booster shot.<br />
<br />
CREDIT: Matt Roth for The Wall Street Journal
    210528-Immunocompromised-206.jpg
  • Baltimore, Maryland - May 28, 2021: Alicia Merritt tends bar behind shower curtains at Birds of a Feather, the scotch bar she owns and operates in the Fells Point neighborhood of Baltimore Friday night May 28, 2021. Alicia is fully vaccinated, but because she is immunocompromised from an organ transplant, she still has no immunity. She is hoping the CDC will allow her and others like her to get a third COVID-19 booster shot.<br />
<br />
CREDIT: Matt Roth for The Wall Street Journal
    210528-Immunocompromised-188.jpg
  • Baltimore, Maryland - May 28, 2021: Alicia Merritt tends bar behind shower curtains at Birds of a Feather, the scotch bar she owns and operates in the Fells Point neighborhood of Baltimore Friday night May 28, 2021. Alicia is fully vaccinated, but because she is immunocompromised from an organ transplant, she still has no immunity. She is hoping the CDC will allow her and others like her to get a third COVID-19 booster shot.<br />
<br />
CREDIT: Matt Roth for The Wall Street Journal
    210528-Immunocompromised-170.jpg
  • Baltimore, Maryland - May 28, 2021: Alicia Merritt tends bar behind shower curtains at Birds of a Feather, the scotch bar she owns and operates in the Fells Point neighborhood of Baltimore Friday night May 28, 2021. Alicia is fully vaccinated, but because she is immunocompromised from an organ transplant, she still has no immunity. She is hoping the CDC will allow her and others like her to get a third COVID-19 booster shot.<br />
<br />
CREDIT: Matt Roth for The Wall Street Journal
    210528-Immunocompromised-156.jpg
  • Baltimore, Maryland - May 28, 2021: Alicia Merritt tends bar behind shower curtains at Birds of a Feather, the scotch bar she owns and operates in the Fells Point neighborhood of Baltimore Friday night May 28, 2021. Alicia is fully vaccinated, but because she is immunocompromised from an organ transplant, she still has no immunity. She is hoping the CDC will allow her and others like her to get a third COVID-19 booster shot.<br />
<br />
CREDIT: Matt Roth for The Wall Street Journal
    210528-Immunocompromised-162.jpg
  • Baltimore, Maryland - May 28, 2021: Alicia Merritt tends bar behind shower curtains at Birds of a Feather, the scotch bar she owns and operates in the Fells Point neighborhood of Baltimore Friday night May 28, 2021. Alicia is fully vaccinated, but because she is immunocompromised from an organ transplant, she still has no immunity. She is hoping the CDC will allow her and others like her to get a third COVID-19 booster shot.<br />
<br />
CREDIT: Matt Roth for The Wall Street Journal
    210528-Immunocompromised-144.jpg
  • Baltimore, Maryland - May 28, 2021: Alicia Merritt tends bar behind shower curtains at Birds of a Feather, the scotch bar she owns and operates in the Fells Point neighborhood of Baltimore Friday night May 28, 2021. Alicia is fully vaccinated, but because she is immunocompromised from an organ transplant, she still has no immunity. She is hoping the CDC will allow her and others like her to get a third COVID-19 booster shot.<br />
<br />
CREDIT: Matt Roth for The Wall Street Journal
    210528-Immunocompromised-137.jpg
  • Baltimore, Maryland - May 28, 2021: Alicia Merritt talks with regular Rahul Bakshi while she tends bar behind shower curtains at Birds of a Feather, the scotch bar she owns and operates in the Fells Point neighborhood of Baltimore Friday night May 28, 2021. Alicia is fully vaccinated, but because she is immunocompromised from an organ transplant, she still has no immunity. She is hoping the CDC will allow her and others like her to get a third COVID-19 booster shot.<br />
<br />
CREDIT: Matt Roth for The Wall Street Journal
    210528-Immunocompromised-132.jpg
  • Baltimore, Maryland - May 28, 2021: Alicia Merritt talks with regular Rahul Bakshi while she tends bar behind shower curtains at Birds of a Feather, the scotch bar she owns and operates in the Fells Point neighborhood of Baltimore Friday night May 28, 2021. Alicia is fully vaccinated, but because she is immunocompromised from an organ transplant, she still has no immunity. She is hoping the CDC will allow her and others like her to get a third COVID-19 booster shot.<br />
<br />
CREDIT: Matt Roth for The Wall Street Journal
    210528-Immunocompromised-128.jpg
  • Baltimore, Maryland - May 28, 2021: Alicia Merritt tends bar behind shower curtains at Birds of a Feather, the scotch bar she owns and operates in the Fells Point neighborhood of Baltimore Friday night May 28, 2021. Alicia is fully vaccinated, but because she is immunocompromised from an organ transplant, she still has no immunity. She is hoping the CDC will allow her and others like her to get a third COVID-19 booster shot.<br />
<br />
CREDIT: Matt Roth for The Wall Street Journal
    210528-Immunocompromised-126.jpg
  • Baltimore, Maryland - May 28, 2021: Alicia Merritt tends bar behind shower curtains at Birds of a Feather, the scotch bar she owns and operates in the Fells Point neighborhood of Baltimore Friday night May 28, 2021. Alicia is fully vaccinated, but because she is immunocompromised from an organ transplant, she still has no immunity. She is hoping the CDC will allow her and others like her to get a third COVID-19 booster shot.<br />
<br />
CREDIT: Matt Roth for The Wall Street Journal
    210528-Immunocompromised-108.jpg
  • Baltimore, Maryland - May 28, 2021: Alicia Merritt talks with regular Rahul Bakshi while she tends bar behind shower curtains at Birds of a Feather, the scotch bar she owns and operates in the Fells Point neighborhood of Baltimore Friday night May 28, 2021. Alicia is fully vaccinated, but because she is immunocompromised from an organ transplant, she still has no immunity. She is hoping the CDC will allow her and others like her to get a third COVID-19 booster shot.<br />
<br />
CREDIT: Matt Roth for The Wall Street Journal
    210528-Immunocompromised-098.jpg
  • Baltimore, Maryland - May 28, 2021: Alicia Merritt tends bar behind shower curtains at Birds of a Feather, the scotch bar she owns and operates in the Fells Point neighborhood of Baltimore Friday night May 28, 2021. Alicia is fully vaccinated, but because she is immunocompromised from an organ transplant, she still has no immunity. She is hoping the CDC will allow her and others like her to get a third COVID-19 booster shot.<br />
<br />
CREDIT: Matt Roth for The Wall Street Journal
    210528-Immunocompromised-081.jpg
  • Baltimore, Maryland - May 28, 2021: Alicia Merritt tends bar behind shower curtains at Birds of a Feather, the scotch bar she owns and operates in the Fells Point neighborhood of Baltimore Friday night May 28, 2021. Alicia is fully vaccinated, but because she is immunocompromised from an organ transplant, she still has no immunity. She is hoping the CDC will allow her and others like her to get a third COVID-19 booster shot.<br />
<br />
CREDIT: Matt Roth for The Wall Street Journal
    210528-Immunocompromised-059.jpg
  • Baltimore, Maryland - May 28, 2021: Alicia Merritt tends bar behind shower curtains at Birds of a Feather, the scotch bar she owns and operates in the Fells Point neighborhood of Baltimore Friday night May 28, 2021. Alicia is fully vaccinated, but because she is immunocompromised from an organ transplant, she still has no immunity. She is hoping the CDC will allow her and others like her to get a third COVID-19 booster shot.<br />
<br />
CREDIT: Matt Roth for The Wall Street Journal
    210528-Immunocompromised-046.jpg
  • Baltimore, Maryland - May 28, 2021: Alicia Merritt tends bar behind shower curtains at Birds of a Feather, the scotch bar she owns and operates in the Fells Point neighborhood of Baltimore Friday night May 28, 2021. Alicia is fully vaccinated, but because she is immunocompromised from an organ transplant, she still has no immunity. She is hoping the CDC will allow her and others like her to get a third COVID-19 booster shot.<br />
<br />
CREDIT: Matt Roth for The Wall Street Journal
    210528-Immunocompromised-033.jpg
  • Baltimore, Maryland - May 28, 2021: Alicia Merritt tends bar behind shower curtains at Birds of a Feather, the scotch bar she owns and operates in the Fells Point neighborhood of Baltimore Friday night May 28, 2021. Alicia is fully vaccinated, but because she is immunocompromised from an organ transplant, she still has no immunity. She is hoping the CDC will allow her and others like her to get a third COVID-19 booster shot.<br />
<br />
CREDIT: Matt Roth for The Wall Street Journal
    210528-Immunocompromised-038.jpg
  • Baltimore, Maryland - May 28, 2021: Alicia Merritt tends bar behind shower curtains at Birds of a Feather, the scotch bar she owns and operates in the Fells Point neighborhood of Baltimore Friday night May 28, 2021. Alicia is fully vaccinated, but because she is immunocompromised from an organ transplant, she still has no immunity. She is hoping the CDC will allow her and others like her to get a third COVID-19 booster shot.<br />
<br />
CREDIT: Matt Roth for The Wall Street Journal
    210528-Immunocompromised-025.jpg
  • Baltimore, Maryland - May 28, 2021: Alicia Merritt tends bar behind shower curtains at Birds of a Feather, the scotch bar she owns and operates in the Fells Point neighborhood of Baltimore Friday night May 28, 2021. Alicia is fully vaccinated, but because she is immunocompromised from an organ transplant, she still has no immunity. She is hoping the CDC will allow her and others like her to get a third COVID-19 booster shot.<br />
<br />
CREDIT: Matt Roth for The Wall Street Journal
    210528-Immunocompromised-008.jpg
  • Gambrills, Maryland - May 14, 2018: Dr. Kimberly Burroughs's 1962 Corvette.<br />
<br />
Dr. Kimberly Burroughs is a dentist living in Gambrills, Maryland. In 1997, her dad, John Burroughs, from Sunderland, Maryland, bought a 1959 Corvette and she helped him restore it. He always said, "someday this car will be yours!" But that never happened. Her dad still owns it. In 2015, she came across a 1962 Corvette that had been completely taken apart and all the parts had been sitting in boxes in a garage since the 1970s. She bought it for super cheap and it took her a little over a year to rebuild this Corvette and get it painted. In 2017, it won a Top Flight award -- scoring a 96.4% -- from the National Corvette Restorers Society.<br />
<br />
<br />
CREDIT: Matt Roth for The Wall Street Journal
    180514_Classic_Corvettes_284.jpg
  • Gambrills, Maryland - May 14, 2018: Dr. Kimberly Burroughs's 1962 Corvette.<br />
<br />
Dr. Kimberly Burroughs is a dentist living in Gambrills, Maryland. In 1997, her dad, John Burroughs, from Sunderland, Maryland, bought a 1959 Corvette and she helped him restore it. He always said, "someday this car will be yours!" But that never happened. Her dad still owns it. In 2015, she came across a 1962 Corvette that had been completely taken apart and all the parts had been sitting in boxes in a garage since the 1970s. She bought it for super cheap and it took her a little over a year to rebuild this Corvette and get it painted. In 2017, it won a Top Flight award -- scoring a 96.4% -- from the National Corvette Restorers Society.<br />
<br />
<br />
CREDIT: Matt Roth for The Wall Street Journal
    180514_Classic_Corvettes_276.jpg
  • Gambrills, Maryland - May 14, 2018: Dr. Kimberly Burroughs's 1962 Corvette.<br />
<br />
Dr. Kimberly Burroughs is a dentist living in Gambrills, Maryland. In 1997, her dad, John Burroughs, from Sunderland, Maryland, bought a 1959 Corvette and she helped him restore it. He always said, "someday this car will be yours!" But that never happened. Her dad still owns it. In 2015, she came across a 1962 Corvette that had been completely taken apart and all the parts had been sitting in boxes in a garage since the 1970s. She bought it for super cheap and it took her a little over a year to rebuild this Corvette and get it painted. In 2017, it won a Top Flight award -- scoring a 96.4% -- from the National Corvette Restorers Society.<br />
<br />
<br />
CREDIT: Matt Roth for The Wall Street Journal
    180514_Classic_Corvettes_281.jpg
  • Gambrills, Maryland - May 14, 2018: Dr. Kimberly Burroughs's 1962 Corvette.<br />
<br />
Dr. Kimberly Burroughs is a dentist living in Gambrills, Maryland. In 1997, her dad, John Burroughs, from Sunderland, Maryland, bought a 1959 Corvette and she helped him restore it. He always said, "someday this car will be yours!" But that never happened. Her dad still owns it. In 2015, she came across a 1962 Corvette that had been completely taken apart and all the parts had been sitting in boxes in a garage since the 1970s. She bought it for super cheap and it took her a little over a year to rebuild this Corvette and get it painted. In 2017, it won a Top Flight award -- scoring a 96.4% -- from the National Corvette Restorers Society.<br />
<br />
<br />
CREDIT: Matt Roth for The Wall Street Journal
    180514_Classic_Corvettes_268.jpg
  • Gambrills, Maryland - May 14, 2018: Dr. Kimberly Burroughs's 1962 Corvette.<br />
<br />
Dr. Kimberly Burroughs is a dentist living in Gambrills, Maryland. In 1997, her dad, John Burroughs, from Sunderland, Maryland, bought a 1959 Corvette and she helped him restore it. He always said, "someday this car will be yours!" But that never happened. Her dad still owns it. In 2015, she came across a 1962 Corvette that had been completely taken apart and all the parts had been sitting in boxes in a garage since the 1970s. She bought it for super cheap and it took her a little over a year to rebuild this Corvette and get it painted. In 2017, it won a Top Flight award -- scoring a 96.4% -- from the National Corvette Restorers Society.<br />
<br />
<br />
CREDIT: Matt Roth for The Wall Street Journal
    180514_Classic_Corvettes_260.jpg
  • Gambrills, Maryland - May 14, 2018: Dr. Kimberly Burroughs in her 1962 Corvette.<br />
<br />
Dr. Kimberly Burroughs is a dentist living in Gambrills, Maryland. In 1997, her dad, John Burroughs, from Sunderland, Maryland, bought a 1959 Corvette and she helped him restore it. He always said, "someday this car will be yours!" But that never happened. Her dad still owns it. In 2015, she came across a 1962 Corvette that had been completely taken apart and all the parts had been sitting in boxes in a garage since the 1970s. She bought it for super cheap and it took her a little over a year to rebuild this Corvette and get it painted. In 2017, it won a Top Flight award -- scoring a 96.4% -- from the National Corvette Restorers Society.<br />
<br />
<br />
CREDIT: Matt Roth for The Wall Street Journal
    180514_Classic_Corvettes_256.jpg
  • Gambrills, Maryland - May 14, 2018: Dr. Kimberly Burroughs in her 1962 Corvette.<br />
<br />
Dr. Kimberly Burroughs is a dentist living in Gambrills, Maryland. In 1997, her dad, John Burroughs, from Sunderland, Maryland, bought a 1959 Corvette and she helped him restore it. He always said, "someday this car will be yours!" But that never happened. Her dad still owns it. In 2015, she came across a 1962 Corvette that had been completely taken apart and all the parts had been sitting in boxes in a garage since the 1970s. She bought it for super cheap and it took her a little over a year to rebuild this Corvette and get it painted. In 2017, it won a Top Flight award -- scoring a 96.4% -- from the National Corvette Restorers Society.<br />
<br />
<br />
CREDIT: Matt Roth for The Wall Street Journal
    180514_Classic_Corvettes_255.jpg
  • Gambrills, Maryland - May 14, 2018: Dr. Kimberly Burroughs in her 1962 Corvette.<br />
<br />
Dr. Kimberly Burroughs is a dentist living in Gambrills, Maryland. In 1997, her dad, John Burroughs, from Sunderland, Maryland, bought a 1959 Corvette and she helped him restore it. He always said, "someday this car will be yours!" But that never happened. Her dad still owns it. In 2015, she came across a 1962 Corvette that had been completely taken apart and all the parts had been sitting in boxes in a garage since the 1970s. She bought it for super cheap and it took her a little over a year to rebuild this Corvette and get it painted. In 2017, it won a Top Flight award -- scoring a 96.4% -- from the National Corvette Restorers Society.<br />
<br />
<br />
CREDIT: Matt Roth for The Wall Street Journal
    180514_Classic_Corvettes_241.jpg
  • Gambrills, Maryland - May 14, 2018: Dr. Kimberly Burroughs in her 1962 Corvette.<br />
<br />
Dr. Kimberly Burroughs is a dentist living in Gambrills, Maryland. In 1997, her dad, John Burroughs, from Sunderland, Maryland, bought a 1959 Corvette and she helped him restore it. He always said, "someday this car will be yours!" But that never happened. Her dad still owns it. In 2015, she came across a 1962 Corvette that had been completely taken apart and all the parts had been sitting in boxes in a garage since the 1970s. She bought it for super cheap and it took her a little over a year to rebuild this Corvette and get it painted. In 2017, it won a Top Flight award -- scoring a 96.4% -- from the National Corvette Restorers Society.<br />
<br />
<br />
CREDIT: Matt Roth for The Wall Street Journal
    180514_Classic_Corvettes_227.jpg
  • Gambrills, Maryland - May 14, 2018: Dr. Kimberly Burroughs in her 1962 Corvette.<br />
<br />
Dr. Kimberly Burroughs is a dentist living in Gambrills, Maryland. In 1997, her dad, John Burroughs, from Sunderland, Maryland, bought a 1959 Corvette and she helped him restore it. He always said, "someday this car will be yours!" But that never happened. Her dad still owns it. In 2015, she came across a 1962 Corvette that had been completely taken apart and all the parts had been sitting in boxes in a garage since the 1970s. She bought it for super cheap and it took her a little over a year to rebuild this Corvette and get it painted. In 2017, it won a Top Flight award -- scoring a 96.4% -- from the National Corvette Restorers Society.<br />
<br />
<br />
CREDIT: Matt Roth for The Wall Street Journal
    180514_Classic_Corvettes_197.jpg
  • Gambrills, Maryland - May 14, 2018: Dr. Kimberly Burroughs in her 1962 Corvette.<br />
<br />
Dr. Kimberly Burroughs is a dentist living in Gambrills, Maryland. In 1997, her dad, John Burroughs, from Sunderland, Maryland, bought a 1959 Corvette and she helped him restore it. He always said, "someday this car will be yours!" But that never happened. Her dad still owns it. In 2015, she came across a 1962 Corvette that had been completely taken apart and all the parts had been sitting in boxes in a garage since the 1970s. She bought it for super cheap and it took her a little over a year to rebuild this Corvette and get it painted. In 2017, it won a Top Flight award -- scoring a 96.4% -- from the National Corvette Restorers Society.<br />
<br />
<br />
CREDIT: Matt Roth for The Wall Street Journal
    180514_Classic_Corvettes_182.jpg
  • Gambrills, Maryland - May 14, 2018: Dr. Kimberly Burroughs's 1962 Corvette.<br />
<br />
Dr. Kimberly Burroughs is a dentist living in Gambrills, Maryland. In 1997, her dad, John Burroughs, from Sunderland, Maryland, bought a 1959 Corvette and she helped him restore it. He always said, "someday this car will be yours!" But that never happened. Her dad still owns it. In 2015, she came across a 1962 Corvette that had been completely taken apart and all the parts had been sitting in boxes in a garage since the 1970s. She bought it for super cheap and it took her a little over a year to rebuild this Corvette and get it painted. In 2017, it won a Top Flight award -- scoring a 96.4% -- from the National Corvette Restorers Society.<br />
<br />
<br />
CREDIT: Matt Roth for The Wall Street Journal
    180514_Classic_Corvettes_169.jpg
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