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The ladies of Sisters Academy of Baltimore in Lansdowne give history of their school and mission to Bill Cole and Nestor at State Fare in Catonsville on “A Cup Of Soup Or Bowl Week” for Maryland Food Bank.

SUMMARY KEYWORDS

girls, years, school, students, baltimore, sisters, coach, great, keo, educated, kid, dana, people, play, academy, today, give, coco, lansdowne, trish

SPEAKERS

Bill Cole, Kaliq Hunter Simms, Nestor J. Aparicio, Samina Clark

Nestor J. Aparicio  00:02

Welcome back. We are in Catonsville weird state fair, Frederick road right across from El Guapo in the basement as well as right around the corner from the Beaumont. My wife’s gonna want something from one of these places on the way home so I could stuffed it in the refrigerator and have food all weekend. We’re gonna be Hollywood casino on Sunday night watching the big game. And I’ll also have Maryland lottery scratch offs to give away whatever I’ve left over from Pappas on Friday goes with me to Hollywood Casino. So you can be a winner on a handful of these left. I feel like Oprah you get a ticket, you get a ticket. She gets ticket, everybody’s got to take it. Sister’s Academy of Baltimore’s here. We’re all supporting the Maryland Food Bank, our friends and window nation, the Maryland lottery Jiffy Lube, we have a bunch of cans over here. We have nice folks. We have Junior Junior visionaries of the year in waiting over, you’re going to try to make me cry. But LLS and Bilko has written Shaco on here for the last couple of hours. I’m running out of my voice doo doo exhausted

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Bill Cole  01:03

and I only been here like 1/20 of the amount of time you’ve put in this week. So I’ve gone off the air you are my heroes. You are my hero

Nestor J. Aparicio  01:10

you are them are my fault. My wife knocked me off the air once our engineer knocked us off the air once I’ve had double talk in my ear, I’ve cried. Eight and a half times I’m being generous. I’m gonna give myself two halves today. I haven’t shaved since Monday, although if I knew this, but he pretty women were coming out to shave today, right look like I told Evan I mean, I stood to gain the shirt in 2017. He’s like, it’s vintage. You know, and I’m like, I don’t want a vintage shirt. I love coffee today. But I let you know, I want you expected 3031 hours into the 30, almost 32 hours into this.

Bill Cole  01:48

I think it’s one of the best ideas you’ve ever had. So like this is the this is the ideas that you have. You have it and your your stick to itiveness like, that’s one thing, Joe Enoch and I say all the time like the imprint. If you say you’re gonna help yourself, I will give you credit you do do I give you that credit.

Nestor J. Aparicio  02:13

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ain’t gonna be no rematch till next year. Right?

02:16

I’ll do this again. Do the first annual

Nestor J. Aparicio  02:19

the ladies in here but you and I haven’t had it. All right, give me a minute when I went and bought this hockey puck over here that gets all the cables to work, right? I mean, because it’s a 5g device, right? Really, I was gonna put the $50 like restock fee because that it’s easy to borrow it for a couple days. Oh, you’re one of those people I’ve never done in my life. I don’t need the thing again next week. Because I don’t want to go live again. Just to stress that I am I’m nicer than these people. Until I get live. And I said to my wife, it brings out the worst in me live radio, we pee and drink and meet and greet and PR and you book acts on the show and I don’t know who they are. I don’t have their notes cuz you’re not like a real handler.

Bill Cole  03:01

But that but it’s all gone swimmingly? Well, so what we

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Nestor J. Aparicio  03:06

have here today, and what do you complain about? It doesn’t happen right now. Gosh, it’s not gonna happen. It’s

Bill Cole  03:14

better than this. Like you nailed it on my job.

Nestor J. Aparicio  03:17

But all I’m saying is the technology part of doing this the live part. All of it doesn’t hinge on anything that I’m in control, right? Like I know how to work the buttons. I don’t know this light bright thing. This thing. I bought myself a toy. It is I fancy. I’ve not missed off off. But someone knocked us off the air twice this week. And it was a user error. But I was the user. Okay, so and this is the device. So things are gone. But things are going well. And this is your final guest and you saved the best for last. Don’t tell anybody don’t tell Kirby. Don’t you didn’t hear that on the way home? This is a pet bra. You love this project and I knew you want to talk

Bill Cole  03:55

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I do. But it’s not even mine. It’s more Doug groves. Who’s watch. He’s one of our fans in the studio here. Doug introduced me to sisters. I don’t even know how many years ago and I won’t do it justice to explain it. So I’m going to leave that here. Right. But again, one of these you’re under the radar. Radar. under the radar gems. If there’s some mystery here NASS don’t take away the mystery. That’s what keeps people listen. Hi, I’m

Nestor J. Aparicio  04:26

NES What’s your name? Samina Clark, Samina how are you? Colleague, Sam Gleek, Samina colleague. Now I gotta go Monica. And they’re not even like,

Bill Cole  04:36

if you’re gonna ruin this. Come on. I believe in you. You got it.

Nestor J. Aparicio  04:40

He brought you here to mess me. Tell me about yourselves what you do because he has told me a million times. He said I’m bringing these girls. It’s gonna be great. And here we are. It’s an all girl school. Yeah. And we’re doing good things, which is what Baltimore Paz is all

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Kaliq Hunter Simms  04:54

about. We’re doing phenomenal things and we want to thank you for inviting us to the show today. Next He’s wearing a great hat well thank you this this hat says bolt and it is our big He’s looking at you and everybody is

Nestor J. Aparicio  05:10

staring Biggie staring at you but even know it. Can you think?

Kaliq Hunter Simms  05:14

Well he’s he’s now from Baltimore but today ancestors Academy of Baltimore, we are repping our city so all of our students are wearing something Baltimore related Samina is wearing her sisters of cat. And I’m wearing my hat and all of our students, if you went to school today would see kittens, you would see Oreos gear, you will see ravens again. But that’s not only do we look great this week, because it’s spirit week, but we also honor week, spirit week assessors Academy

Nestor J. Aparicio  05:45

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and it’s called the Super Bowl weekend. And it’s

Kaliq Hunter Simms  05:47

Super Bowl week. So we’re leading in the Super Bowl at our all girls fifth through eighth school and Lansdowne. We are tuition free, independent school for girls, all of our students get full scholarships for four years.

Nestor J. Aparicio  06:00

No wonder you like this project bill?

Bill Cole  06:03

Yes. What is it this project?

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Nestor J. Aparicio  06:05

How did this start? Who started it? Let’s go. All right.

Kaliq Hunter Simms  06:08

So this school started in 2004, when four orders of Catholic nuns came together and said, We’re going to start a school for girls and Southwest Baltimore. They did a feasibility study. They looked at the area, they looked at the availability of high quality education, particularly Independent School, private school education in the area where we’re located and they said, We’re gonna establish a school here, we’re going to plant the seed and that’s what they did. It was the Sisters of Notre DOM Dana Moore, the Sisters of Mercy, the sisters of bonds, the Corps and the Sisters of Notre DOM School Sisters of Notre DOM, and since 2004, we have graduated. Wait for it. Go ahead. 199 students. That’s beautiful. And that lover, you know, I

Nestor J. Aparicio  06:54

think yourself was born. Well, I’m from the East Side from Dundalk. Right. And I covered high school basketball in the 80s and 90s. When as a kid, there was there was Seaton and there was Keo and there were Seaton Keo. There was Mount sales and there’s a lot of these schools were girls schools. Girls, I dated girls, I knew I covered their basketball team. And I think to myself, Twister gone, like a lot of those places were gone. They were underfunded things. Kids didn’t go. I talked to Chris pike about this at length about about a Mount St. Joe because he’s a West Side guy. He grew up in like Scott street over by the being a warehouse. And he went to the west side, but I don’t know a lot about the schooling over here. But I did see that girls would have less options. Just in a general sense. In this century. There were less options for girls to go to school.

Kaliq Hunter Simms  07:43

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That’s right. And you know what happened to those seat and Keo graduates after our school closed and we went on we became presidents of girls schools. You’re smashing. I’m a seat and key Oh, graduate year 1990. M. to the basketball team was one of our basketball players. I was hurt. I was a former Panther. Okay. And you could check out some of my some of my tape. I didn’t I didn’t go to the WNBA on a circuit.

Nestor J. Aparicio  08:18

Like Dana Johnson arrow,

Kaliq Hunter Simms  08:19

Danna Johnson. I will say I was in her air, but I was not in her strength. She smelled. She knocked the wind out of me at the Metro classics. You can look back in the bottle. That footage and you

Nestor J. Aparicio  08:33

know what if Dana? I did a TV show with Dana. I did a bottom line question from a show. Yeah, did a show about Title Nine like 20 years ago, right. And Dana was just like getting out at that point. She was, you know, probably a year or two out of college. But she was I think she would go into coaching track at that point. But you know, she came on the show, and I had never really met her or anything like that. But I would think like, if you got posted up by Danny Johnson, you just remember it. I

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Kaliq Hunter Simms  09:00

just remembered I struck up a Richie pass.

Nestor J. Aparicio  09:02

And I talked about it yesterday. That’s

Kaliq Hunter Simms  09:04

our story. That’s our story. I mean, when somebody may not be the great, but you were with the greats, I tried to tackle Tommy probably

Nestor J. Aparicio  09:12

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tried to tackle Tommy Paul, you remember that hurt? Yeah, but I did know.

Kaliq Hunter Simms  09:17

And speaking of So, I look at him. He also has a basketball team that is putting up some or you know, aggressive numbers. I’m not the coach. I’m the president of the school but we have an outstanding staff have coaches for our basketball or volleyball and our track business business. Because we want people to supply you know, I don’t know if my high school basketball coach was around. I need to find out where she is.

Nestor J. Aparicio  09:46

Can I tell it your story? You can? Trisha Trisha fiery red hair. All right. And Trish, coach. I believe she coached a different school I am at your mercy before Are Mariela was the coaching Mariela Marian was the coach at Mercy. So I could I cover girls basketball from 87 to 9293 in that range so Rosemary historic growth at Malin I mean really good before Dana, but breezy Bishop. That was it Western was was unbelievably good. But Trish had a friendship relationship with my sports editor who was the generation before me and he he knew her and he put me on the beat. And he’s like, I go see Trish Trish is my girl. And I had Trish new Mike Marlo and it put me in with Trish. I mean, I’m 19 and 18. I mean, I’m old enough that you know, I did date one of the girls during the time you know, I was 18 I was 19 It was fun. Actually two girls are very pretty as it was a long time ago. So Trish was like the adult in the room and the coach at Seton Keo and got a great team. And she just, I hit it off with her. She’s just a special person. I remember my times with her and I covered a lot of high school coaches, but my time is Seaton Keo, you must have great memories. Great.

Kaliq Hunter Simms  11:17

I have great memories of Trish I have great memories of my, my experience at Kent field elementary school, playing rec ball under another coach you may know Charles McLeod, the late Charles MacLeod, and on that team, which is called Liberty Road basketball. We had Sonya Chase.

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Nestor J. Aparicio  11:37

club team. Yeah.

Kaliq Hunter Simms  11:40

It wasn’t a you it was it was it was directly we play project survival. We played all the summer leagues all around Baltimore. And we had this at Camp Phil elementary shout out to the late Charles McLeod, who brought up so many girls basketball players through that program, including Sonya Chase, who did play for the WNBA.

Nestor J. Aparicio  11:59

Well, there was no WNBA in the very beginning. Now, a lot of reasons girls could play,

Kaliq Hunter Simms  12:05

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right? But eventually, what do you learn

Nestor J. Aparicio  12:06

from all this that makes you

Kaliq Hunter Simms  12:11

is that it takes a village to raise a girl. It takes a village. So basketball teams and and churches and community organizations and gray schools like sisters Academy are the services and support systems that take girls who wouldn’t ordinarily have these opportunities and help them to reach their fullest potential. So that’s what we do. And that’s what it takes. It takes a whole community. Right. And so, at Sisters, you know, we’re leveraging all that we have, you know, talented people like Samina Clark here with me, who is our communications and our recruitment manager, and she’s the person that goes out into the community and find students for us.

Nestor J. Aparicio  12:54

They’re currently 63 students, 63 students, and they are ages and ranges. We

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Samina Clark  13:00

post grades five through eight, so nine to about 14, which

Bill Cole  13:07

ages we really need to emphasise that because fifth to eighth, holy cow, I got two of them. That is like God’s word right there. I mean, that is,

Nestor J. Aparicio  13:23

so we’re talking 10? Through 14? Yes,

Kaliq Hunter Simms  13:25

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pretty much. Yeah, so we’re a middle school, but we start in fifth grade. And we only admit in the fifth grade so that we can have the girls for all four years and really have them at this crucial time in our lives, the adolescent years, the hard years, the middle school years, the puberty years. For we have this community that is family oriented, that is small, we have our student teacher ratio does not exceed 10 students to every one teacher, and normally it’s a little smaller than that. So one on one attention for our girls at this tender age.

Nestor J. Aparicio  14:01

How do students wind up isn’t an application process qualification process? And you know, I like to not turn people away, right? I mean, but I I would think that not everybody gets to go.

Samina Clark  14:15

That’s right. Right. So our mission is to educate, empower and inform our community so we have an application process it’s pretty simple you can just go to our website you have you have to be a current fourth grader going into the fifth grade

Nestor J. Aparicio  14:33

so that’s the time that’s the okay so forth where your kids are barely in fifth and eighth fifth today. I tell you, I’d send my kid Hanahan combat pan fix my kid all right, you know that Barry Don’t get any ideas. I don’t have any great kids right now. You know, but if that were to happen, but if I had a boy you know wouldn’t be able to go there. I wouldn’t. I was gonna call up Barry stitch and make a curly joke but I won’t you No more, you know, I’m happy doing that all we’ve done all the tabs go all

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Bill Cole  15:05

school in a minute, but let her finish talking about like the community. I’m gonna let her finish. I would like to let her finish explaining how we find these wonderful young women along

Samina Clark  15:16

the way. Okay, well, thank you. I appreciate it. So yes, we’re looking for current fourth graders who are coming into the fifth grade. You know, we’re just searching for motivated young ladies, young ladies who could really benefit from the education that we’re providing our Excel programs, all of our extracurriculars, our academics and everything like that. You can just go on our website, we have an inquiry form to capture all of your information, your contact information, if you come in to tour the school.

Nestor J. Aparicio  15:47

Get the What’s it near where we’re located.

Samina Clark  15:51

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139 First Avenue, Baltimore, Maryland to one two to seven. Hill for

Nestor J. Aparicio  15:59

Lansdowne Hill for our beauteous Catonsville, they all fight right around the wrong, huge hill. And then there’s Paradise which is where I’ve always wanted to live.

Kaliq Hunter Simms  16:11

Well, a lot of our students also come from Cherry Hill. So we have a bus that picks up and Cherry Hill right

Nestor J. Aparicio  16:17

ask you about Danny Rolla when I got it today about me going to McDonough from Dundalk, like, I went out there one time he went up live in there and we talked we talked about his education today and a private school education for kids from Dundalk and being bored, troubled Kena Trump, he went trouble but he found Trump was he would say, but but like, there is a barrier of distance. Yeah, this isn’t for a kid in Bel Air, right.

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Kaliq Hunter Simms  16:40

I mean, we definitely focus on the Southwest Baltimore area, but it’s extending and we have a bus that picks up at three locations. Because we have determined based on you know, where our kids are coming from, what would be optimal for them and their families to be accessible. So Cherry Hill is one of our bus stops right at St. Veronica’s church and Cherry Hill. We also have a stop on the corner of Hollins and Poppleton Street. And then we have a new bus stop this year at Irvington, so more you know, closer towards St. Joe, St. Joseph’s monastery. Alright, so those are our three stops. And, you know, the majority of our students take advantage of our bus service. So we have a lot of students who you know, get rides from home and parents and so forth who bring them in every day. We have an extended school day. That’s important. So this is part of our magic part of our Magic Leap. We never let him go. We never let him be away for too long. So we have a school day they go.

Nestor J. Aparicio  17:38

That’s right, you were telling you know what trouble you guys

Kaliq Hunter Simms  17:42

are idled. I don’t mind, right. So we try not to let them be idle. So they’re at school until 5pm every day. And we have a host of enrichment activities. So school ends technically at 345, the core of the school day, but then they stay for our Excel program, which is a host of enrichment programs, academic support, as well as dance and art and coding and sewing fashion. You name it here until five o’clock every day, and then the bus can take up just talking about it.

Nestor J. Aparicio  18:16

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Kind of like the show. It was just build here.

Bill Cole  18:19

And then let’s talk about once we craft these young women and we launch them into high school, we don’t say goodbye.

Kaliq Hunter Simms  18:28

No, no, no, we

Nestor J. Aparicio  18:30

do not say that loves everywhere, right? We’re doing this for 20 years. But

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Bill Cole  18:34

it’s not. It’s not being grateful to have alums, because we’re still wrapping our village hugs around these children back because there’s still lots of work to do.

Kaliq Hunter Simms  18:45

Exactly. So after the four years, we have a graduate support program that kicks in and our graduate support team helps students to apply and be accepted into private and public schools all over the area, as well as a boarding school this year, we applied to a boarding school in New York. We master school in New York, we have an applicant there this year. And we try to make sure that we match students with their schools of their choice and help them in their families with that process. And then we visit with them while they’re in high school to make sure they’re moving along well that they’re adjusting well to high school, whether it’s a private school like McDonough, as you mentioned, or whether it’s a public school like a city or a poly we have graduates who attend those schools as well right here. And then we follow them to college and to their first careers. And the goal is that one day right they’ll come full circle and they’ll become donors and supporters. At the very least if not employees of sisters Academy.

Nestor J. Aparicio  19:43

High School I would want to know to coach you. I

Samina Clark  19:46

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went to Chesapeake High School in Essex

Nestor J. Aparicio  19:49

river girl.

Bill Cole  19:53

We probably should have probably should have talked about that. It’s a false answer I’ve ever had It’s not true. Come on. Course. Come

Nestor J. Aparicio  20:06

back. Remember that? You know, I did talk on Tuesday, St. John’s parish over there in Essex and Middle River. We did a whole food bank thing in the terminal on my side of town, man, come on, you know, the east side? I would think for you and just talking 15 minutes. This is the kind of school you wish you would have gone to.

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Kaliq Hunter Simms  20:29

Oh, 100%, right. I mean, it feels like oh, yeah, I mean, they built

Nestor J. Aparicio  20:34

a radio show that I always wanted to listen to. I never listened to it. But

Kaliq Hunter Simms  20:38

like I said, right, we were founded by religious sisters. So our name is sisters Academy, because we are named for the congregation. But we are a sisterhood. So yes, I would have loved to have attended a school like this because our students are sisters, and the relationships that they build there. So outside of the great academic program, they have a social experience in which they are with girls who become sisters, your way into the school, you cannot write literally no, you have to earn your way into sisters Academy by being a student of great promise. And by being a student who’s come who comes from this general region of Southwest Baltimore, and by being a student who could benefit from the opportunity because there’s no access to quality education, you know, in certain areas, and in certain families. So we want to provide that access. I want to read from your thing. All right. All right, read from it.

Nestor J. Aparicio  21:32

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They asked me to do this. The purpose of our tuition free schools to educate young girls with an engaging and challenging middle school education primarily in Southwest Baltimore. We offer holistic academic program that encourages each student’s intellectual social, physical, spiritual development our school was founded is supported by for congregations of religious women, and a host of generous donors 100% tuition free and sponsored by people like that guy, right? That’s

Kaliq Hunter Simms  22:02

perfect. So we thank Bill for your support. You’re very welcome over the years can

Bill Cole  22:06

we you want to get controversial now?

Nestor J. Aparicio  22:10

They’re patriots I see that already go.

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Bill Cole  22:14

Vote for they can pretend like they’re not in the discussion if they would rather too. But how big do you think the disparity is in Baltimore? In the dollars of giving that go to all boys schools versus all girls schools?

Nestor J. Aparicio  22:34

Well, I mean, Calvert Hall Loyola money you know, it’s funny we would bring this up because John Rollo came over on a whim today we grew up together East Side MMA show your soft side, Mr. muscles, we grew up together. And he ran off to McDonough and we were taught I almost want to make done I did like a test over there. It was a boys school then, like, you know, I don’t think girls going to McDonough because like when I was a kid girls can go to McDonough to even like the highest end schools or boys schools and the dudes play golf or they have contract, you know, they would be much more inclined to give the old boy old or give the old Calvin hall right then they want so I I would probably say it’s eight to 1am I wrong and say eight to one.

Bill Cole  23:17

No, you know, as I normally do when I challenge you, I absolutely don’t have the facts to give you the answer to the question to have CI

Nestor J. Aparicio  23:24

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N dS out of business right. I mean, seeing Keo Galway, it’s where this conference has been

Bill Cole  23:32

the charts I like I just don’t have the number. But like the one bar graph is like shear the

Nestor J. Aparicio  23:39

girls and I agree with that. Right? And the groom that right?

Kaliq Hunter Simms  23:42

Yes, I agree with it. Because it’s true. It’s true. It is

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Bill Cole  23:46

true. And maybe, maybe that’s like make sense, right? Just with the number of schools or the number of students, the number of alumni in the years and all that you

Nestor J. Aparicio  23:57

make when they play football.

Bill Cole  24:00

The disparity is what doesn’t make sense. Right? Like, like we would all acknowledge Yeah, wow, there’s more graduates or whatever, blah, blah, blah.

Nestor J. Aparicio  24:07

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I don’t have a daughter but if I had one, I’d love her as much as I love my son

Bill Cole  24:11

Delta. Right. But there’s a historical piece Miss

Nestor J. Aparicio  24:16

principle president’s googling it, she’s gonna

Bill Cole  24:20

I’m just wasting time till we get. Here, here’s the challenge that I that has entered my orbit, which is part of like, my understanding of what’s going on is like, how can we rationally not support the mothers and the sisters and the wives? Like, what? Like, how does how can we invest in all the guys and have helped get them educated, but not think it’s important to have, you know, a wife who’s educated or a sister who gets educated? or a mother who’s educated? Because Don’t you think that an educated mother is likely to produce and support and encourage an educated son or daughter from there? Like, isn’t that just fundamentally how this works,

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Kaliq Hunter Simms  25:14

that is how it works. And I’m still looking for the number. But I will say that we have a student sponsorship program as such as Academy of Baltimore. Our fundraising model hinges on the student sponsorship, and we know that it costs $17,000 A year roughly, to educate a girl at our school, yet, we ask our students sponsors, who generously give $7,500 per year for four years to underwrite that expense. And then we raise funds to make up the difference. But similar schools and I won’t name names, but similar schools for boys who have a model that is similar to ours in which they have a student sponsorship, they ask 13 to $14,000 a year, we asked $7,000 a year for our sponsors for our girls, but the education costs the same. So they’re asking for twice as much money to educate a boy for their sponsorship as we get paid. So I know that same job, right, exactly, I tell we, so we, you know, we

Bill Cole  26:23

blame that on women not being willing to advocate for themselves. And this is exactly and that’s how we blame. That’s how we explain that away. Here’s a case where you we literally have the ability, right? To help educate the future mothers of the children who are going to populate the earth and hopefully continue on our, you know, our whatever, and we just sort of not even thinking in that regard because it’s the numbers are so the delta is so big that it’s just so big.

Kaliq Hunter Simms  26:55

The Delta is huge sisters

Nestor J. Aparicio  26:56

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Academy of Baltimore and sisters academy.org If you want to help these ladies and you should. Bill Cole is going to get out of here. So I was at Coco’s yesterday and I finally found out how you women have gotten in there. Coco’s real narrow and small. You happen to Coco’s crab cakes. Yeah. I was here Yeah. I got a crab Okay, Coco is crabcakes sitting at home right now. I’m gonna probably five later on. Because Marcelo, she’s Droz Fuji taken his Oh, it’s down the street. It’s right next to mortgage that’s your girl. Oh, yeah, that’s my mom.

Kaliq Hunter Simms  27:27

And my mother’s and my father’s and my husband’s Yeah, I

Nestor J. Aparicio  27:30

got on the wrong side. I got on the low side, everybody with you? Because I’m kaput. Steve. Oh, okay. Well, but we’re their flagship forever. So I’m like, Am I allowed to say good things about Morgan? It’s like being Dundalk and saying good things about

Kaliq Hunter Simms  27:43

you can you can definitely say you can’t I mean, how can you not say good things about Morgan. There’s so many great things happen. We support carpet too. So

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Nestor J. Aparicio  27:53

Coco’s if you’re familiar, they had a little crabcakes station a little wastage. And they have two little bathroom areas in the back in one says you know non binary gender nude you wouldn’t be you know, for anybody anybody can use it. It’s really the men’s room like it is but like anybody can use it. And she said we have people that see that they’re weird politically this that like where’s the real men’s room like that? You know, just go get their pee wash your hands get back at each crabcake right. But the ladies room is dedicated to the ladies and and so I come out and I said the Marcel I’m like and the door was locked. I had to pee and I’m gonna break and I told you express this puts me under his live radio makes me crazy. So I come out and the doors locked and I gotta pee and I’m in a break in and I came out I’m like, girls get all the breaks man. You got your own bathroom. Men have to wait and she’s like you know you do she got every break in the world you know every break in the world. She’s like there’s two stalls in the ladies room that makes you feel any better

Kaliq Hunter Simms  28:56

so there There you go. She’s got two stores

Nestor J. Aparicio  28:58

for the ladies and a lady could go in the men’s room and I’m out here waiting through the break. So you guys get that level playing

Kaliq Hunter Simms  29:05

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field that balance

Nestor J. Aparicio  29:09

equity no one loves women more than

Bill Cole  29:13

we should probably stop this

Nestor J. Aparicio  29:18

cheers here she’s here to make me cry the LLS people are here to make me run for Man of the Year. Do I look Man of the Year worthy? No. I mean, come on. Man, the man of the hour. I got Bill Cole here for that. Sister society Baltimore. This is the future Mike’s watch. And we you know tell Trisha love her. She was awesome, man.

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Kaliq Hunter Simms  29:40

Please first if you’re listening, please reach out and

Nestor J. Aparicio  29:43

Dana’s you’re here. I’m waiting for you one on one. What are you waiting for? Like a bad knees? I can’t. Yeah, I

Kaliq Hunter Simms  29:48

don’t think I would still.

Nestor J. Aparicio  29:51

I don’t think so. All right. We’re advocates will never be confused with Paradise or hell, torpor Lansdowne or, you know, God forbid, you know Ellicott City you know that’s over the over the line. Although Evan did a few places and elegancy where it’s a fair guapo scrub Street, the basement Beaumont where I’m probably getting scary out for later. We’re entering it final hour of day four of my hostage situation in this crab cake row thing with a cup of Super Bowl. We have cups, we have soup, we have bowls. We have great great gifts here for the folks at the Maryland Food Bank and I want to get this right Catonsville emergency assistance is going to be the Benefactor that we’re gonna have a third Kirby of the day. But first up, the junior visionary LLS here will be half for mom and saving lives doing cool stuff that’s happening next back for more in Kingsville State Fair stay with us.

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