here in the middle, who ran it for 56 years, is rather pleased her little shop will live on in a museum. well, i started. i came here in 1959, aged 29. and you retired aged. 85. wolverhampton street was an extremely busy area, where the trolley bus used to come along from wolverhampton into dudley. and there was lots of shops. i m sorry i m the last one, but i knew these small shops, no, they wouldn t. .. we couldn t carry on. and now? there is nothing. and while these are all shops from dudley and its neighbours, this is also a story of hundreds of similar places. the chit chat and charm the chit chat and charm of the high street, of the high street, now a museum exhibit. now a museum exhibit. david sillitoe, bbc news, dudley. david sillitoe, bbc news, dudley.
there s only one mass general brigham. i realize that if i died and everyone else around me died, i wanted to have our voices heard. if we couldn t carry on through our time, our voices would echo through those videos that i recorded. i wanted that to be by the people, people get used to what to going on. and that s not okay. we re habituate-ing to this. what happens when you do that is children are dying and they will continue to die unless we stop it, standup, and take action. so, you know him. that was david hogg, a parkland shooting survivor speaking on msnbc just one day after that tragedy in 2018. in the wake of the shooting, it became clear that something was very different. the students of marjory stoneman douglas, as well as the young people around the