In honor of Walter S. Mills, an educator who advocated for Black teachers in Anne Arundel County, the Banneker-Douglass Museum in Annapolis will host an exhibition featuring documents, pictures and other artifacts from the Maryland native’s life. The exhibit, “Shaping History Through Service: The Walter S. Mills Story,” takes viewers back to 1939 when Mills, […]
Category: Baltimore News
Habitat for Humanity Turns Dreams into Reality
Habitat for Humanity, along with former President Jimmy Carter and his wife Rosalynn, have changed dreams into reality for Tymeerah Butts and Lisa Griffin. They are two of the 10 Baltimore families becoming homeowners through the organization. The overall mission of the Habitat for Humanity is to eliminate poverty and homelessness from the world and […]
Ehrlich, O’Malley and the Black Vote
I only caught the last half-hour of the first O’Malley-Ehrlich debate, televised on WJZ last week. I tuned in just as the former governor trashed the former mayor of Baltimore’s record on crime. Ehrlich blasted O’Malley on the issue of so-called illegal arrests – while he was Baltimore’s mayor – a subject that continues to […]
Baltimore Mayor Accused of Race Bias in Lawsuit
Baltimore Mayor Stephanie Rawlings-Blake is being sued for $5 million by a former employee that claims she was forced from her job because she refused to fire a White colleague. Jennifer Coates, who is Black, served as director of council services for three Baltimore City Council presidents including Rawlings-Blake. She says she was forced to […]
BGE’s Proposed Rate Hike Causes Concern Across Coverage Region
Baltimore City residents voiced their opinions on Baltimore Gas and Electric (BGE) Company’s plan to raise base rates for consumers at a forum hosted on Oct. 13 by the Maryland Public Service Commission. It was the third of five meetings the regulators scheduled around the state. The first two were held in Bel Air and […]
1st District in Name, First District in Spending
The money is flying in Maryland’s 1st Congressional District. With less than two weeks until the district’s contentious House race between incumbent Rep. Frank Kratovil, D-Stevensville, and Republican challenger Andy Harris, spending has far eclipsed any other House race in the state – nearly three-quarters of all spending for House candidates has happened in the […]
Black City Stakeholders Submit Platform
Black people have no permanent friends, no permanent enemies, just permanent interests. CBC motto Taking a lesson from the Congressional Black Caucus motto, a diverse group of African-American stakeholders of Baltimore City came together to discuss its needs on Oct. 13. This group – young and old, student and professional, from diverse areas of […]
New Psalmist Heralds New 4,000-Seat Facility
When the congregants of the New Psalmist Baptist Church attended services last Sunday, they had more to celebrate than faith and friendship. They are heralding a new era with the grand opening of The Holy City of Zion. Well over 3,000 worshipers packed the street in front of Marian Drive Saturday for the opening of […]
Ehrlich Speaks
With less than two weeks until Maryland’s voters decide who returns to the State House, former Gov. Bob Ehrlich is on the run. Announcements on Oct. 19 – an endorsement from the Fraternal Order of Police, the reporting of significant fundraising and the release of polling data showing him closing the gap with Democratic incumbent […]
AFRO mourns loss of former leader, John H. Murphy III
Click here to view a slideshow of John H. Murphy III. John H. Murphy III is being remembered this week as the steady hand that guided the Afro-American Newspapers through the turbulent waters of civil rights history and a perilous industry. The newspaper’s former president and CEO died Oct. 16 at the Stella Maris Nursing […]
Black Vote May Have Strong Impact on Maryland Gov. Race
Gregg Bernstein’s sweep over Pat Jessamy for state’s attorney in the Maryland primaries is a warning for Gov. Martin O’Malley not to take the Black vote for granted, say many Baltimore politicians and political strategists. They argue that Black voters will determine the outcome of the gubernatorial race, waving 2006 exit poll stats as proof. […]
Write-In Voting: What Are The Chances?
Frank Gagnon, 18, of Pawtucket, R.I., decided to run for mayor as a independent write-in candidate, while he waits to start college in January. Sen. Lisa Murkowski of Alaska, who lost the Republican nomination for her seat in September’s primary, informed the Republican Party leadership she is running as a write-in candidate in the general […]

