Posted inHBCU

HBCU-led marketing firm ABCD & Company proves philanthropy is just as important as  earning a profit

By Megan Sayles, AFRO Business Writer, Report for America Corps Member, msayles@afro.com Fellow Howard University  alumni and best friends Brittanye Briscoe, Amber Dozier, Durecia Moorer and Corey Briscoe established full-service marketing and events firm ABCD & Company in Rockville, Maryland back in 2014.  Though all of them had personal motivations for becoming entrepreneurs, there was […]

Posted inWashington D.C. News

D.C. mayor and police chief announce new gun violence task force in the wake of a violent surge

By Deborah Bailey, AFRO D.C. News Editor Washington D.C. residents are still reeling after four separate shooting incidents during the week beginning on April 25 in a surge of violence spanning several sectors of the city, according to Metropolitan Police.  Four persons were hospitalized and one death occurred due to the spurt of violence that […]

Posted in!Front Page

5th Annual Dream Big Contest winners honored on stage at The Lyric Baltimore

By Special to the AFRO Winners of the 5th annual Dream Big Contest were recently announced and celebrated at the Lyric Baltimore, the historic live-entertainment venue in Baltimore, Md.  The Lyric Foundation, which operates and maintains the theater, announced both Dreamers (runners-up) and Visionaries (grand prize winners) on the Lyric stage.  “The Lyric Education team […]

Posted in!Front Page

Nation’s first Black-woman led community solar company forges partnership with University of Maryland Medical system to build Baltimore solar farm

By Megan Sayles, AFRO Business Writer, Report for America Corps Member msayles@afro.com WeSolar, Inc. (WeSolar) in collaboration with the University of Maryland Medical System (UMMS) announced a new partnership on Thursday to build a solar farm in Baltimore City that will provide power to UMMS facilities and city residents.  UMMS will pay $10,000 per month […]

Posted inWord In Black

#WordinBlack: Colleges are ditching the SAT, but should Black students still take it?

By Maya Pottiger, Word in Black Many of us can relate to the anxiety facing the latest group of high school seniors awaiting college acceptance letters, but there’s something unique to the class of 2022 — and no, it’s not navigating higher ed admissions through the ongoing pandemic. Less than half of college applicants submitted […]

Posted inBUSINESS

Criminal court judge invents The Hair Shield, helping Black women save money by protecting their extensions

By Megan Sayles, AFRO Business Writer, Report for America Corps Member msayles@afro.com Dallas County Criminal Court Judge Shequitta Kelly used to be a self-professed penny pincher. Being a single, teenage mother, she lived her life on a strict budget to be able to provide for her family while putting herself through law school.  Her lifelong […]

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