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Higher education

    Morgan State U. demolishes historical ‘spite wall’ built to segregate campus from the city
    As of Tuesday morning, the wall — built on hate and oppression, according to the university president — was reduced to rubble.
    Decades ago, a wall built to seperate black students from it's white community was torn down at Morgan State University, on April 11, 2023. .
    Letters: Mayor urged to again remove homes from tax sale auction
    Mayor Brandon Scott should remove Baltimore homeowner properties from the tax sale auction, as he did last year, Allison Harris, director of the Home Preservation Project at the Pro Bono Resource Center of Maryland, says. Campuses of historically Black colleges in Maryland are among those urgently in need of modernization, Paul Clary, co-founder of MD Energy Advisors, says; the work of the state Attorney General's Office in the Baltimore Archdiocese sex abuse investigation merits praise, a city resident says.
    Photo collage of property tax bill with warning about tax lien being sold at auction, seal of city of Baltimore, and blurry top of a row house.
    Commentary: Baltimore must rightfully honor Frances Ellen Watkins Harper
    Baltimore must find ways to rightfully honor writer, orator and abolitionist Frances Ellen Watkins Harper and the power of her legacy, author and Johns Hopkins History Professor Martha S. Jones says.
    Frances Ellen Watkins Harper, 1825-1911
    Aruna Miller: State policy guidance reflects diverse views, interests
    The Moore-Miller transition team gathered input from more than 5,000 Marylanders to identify the state’s biggest challenges, develop solutions and help set priorities, says Lt. Gov. Aruna Miller, who chaired the transition team.
    Lieutenant governor-elect, Aruna Miller poses for a few candid photo during an interview at the Baltimore Banner.  Miller, a Democrat from Montgomery County, is a transportation engineer by training, served in the Maryland House of Delegates, immigrated to the U.S. from India as a child, will be the first woman of color as Maryland lieutenant governor.
    Parents fuming over Maryland 529 earnings ‘miscalculation’ beg state lawmakers for relief
    Legislation sponsored by state Sen. Joanne Benson to overhaul Maryland 529 would dissolve its independent board and phase out the prepaid trust it manages.
    Eric Marshall, sits at his dinner table reviewing his 529 program folder to find documentation supporting his claim of the money he is owed after almost 2 decades of saving for his kids college tuition from Clarksburg, MD, on March 11, 2023.
    MICA’s financial woes aren’t unique, but they could be tough to fix
    The Baltimore arts college is among a number of small institutions finding themselves at a painful crossroads as the dust from the pandemic settles.
    Photo collage showing Maryland Institute College of Art building cut into four segments, with rightmost piece falling to the right, layered over background of drawing marks and paint spatters.
    Data, dots and devotees made the Johns Hopkins COVID-19 map huge. Now it’s done.
    Excluding NORAD’s Christmas Eve Santa tracker, there may not be a world map viewed so many times as the one Johns Hopkins University engineers created to keep tabs on COVID-19.
    BALTIMORE, MARYLAND - MARCH 28: A general view of The Johns Hopkins University on March 28, 2020 in Baltimore, Maryland. The school is shut down due to the coronavirus (COVID-19) outbreak.
    ‘Caught in the riptide’: a Baltimore college student brought here at age 1 could be deported
    Adolfo Martinez is a junior at Loyola poses for a portrait on campus, in Baltimore, Monday, March 6, 2023.
    Sexual assault reports increase at Naval Academy, other military colleges
    Of 155 students reporting assaults during the 2022 school year, students at the U.S. Naval Academy reported 61 — nearly double the school’s total for the previous year.
    FILE - An entrance to the U.S. Naval Academy campus in Annapolis, Md., is seen Jan. 9, 2014. Reported sexual assaults at the U.S. military academies shot up during the 2021-22 school year, and one in five female students surveyed said they experienced unwanted sexual contact, the Associated Press has learned.
    Commentary: College Board’s rotted roots reflected in decision on AP African American Studies
    The College Board stripped down its AP African American Studies curriculum, failing to create a curriculum that centers Black scholars, two University of Maryland College of Education professors say.
    African American Studies Program can prepare students for careers in culture, diversity.  (Clockwise from top left) Nelson Mandela, Gordon Parks, Chirley Chisholm, Martin Luthur King Jr., Barack Obama, Maya Angelou, Stokely Charmichael and Rosa Parks.
    More layoffs expected at MICA as financial pressure builds
    More job layoffs are expected at the Maryland Institute College of Art in Baltimore, where administrators say plunging undergraduate enrollment has effectively made the historic city arts institution a smaller college.
    Fred Lazarus IV Center, 131 W North Ave, Baltimore, MD 21201
    Do HBCUs still matter? Black Marylanders say yes.
    HBCU grads in Maryland tout their college experience and say it has helped them excel in society.
    Azikiwe Deveaux, 47, founder of Events 4 Good People (E4GP) is planning to entertain hundreds of Morgan State students, Alumni, and faculty this weekend.  He has been throwing homecoming related events since he graduated from Morgan State in 1999.
    Maryland parents thought the state was helping them save for college. Then some of the money vanished.
    One expert in state-backed college savings plans said she has never seen anything like what’s unfolding now in Maryland.
    Parents are upset at recent issues accessing funds in their children's Maryland 529 accounts.
    Naval Academy renames building after Jimmy Carter
    The building that had been called Maury Hall was built and named in the early 1900s after Matthew Fontaine Maury, a naval officer and scientist who joined the Confederates.
    Former President Jimmy Carter.
    Opinion: The case for Edward Draper’s admission to the Maryland bar
    Draper was eminently qualified to practice law in Maryland when he applied for admission to the Maryland Bar in 1857 but was denied admission because he was Black. Attorney John G. Browning says admitting Draper to the Maryland Bar posthumously is a step toward reckoning with the history of discrimination in the legal profession.
    Edwin Grayson Draper, First Black College-Educated Lawyer for Liberia,
    Morgan State University adds metal detectors in dorms
    Several students questioned the effectiveness of the metal detectors and said the devices made them feel criminalized.
    A student walks through metal detectors that were installed in the dorms at Morgan State.
    Warren Hayman has spent decades educating Black students. Along the way, he’s touched generations
    Warren C. Hayman, who recently retired for a third time, has influenced countless Black students to pursue higher educational opportunities.
    Dr. Warren C. Hayman has influenced countless Black students pursue higher education opportunities. He retired from his position of Assistant Dean of Education at Morgan State University in 2004 after 42 years in public education, which included starting the The Hopkins Dunbar Health Partnership, where dozens of Black people went onto professional medical careers. He is pictured here in front of dedicated bricks at Morgan State.
    First Latina to be crowned Miss Coppin State University faces backlash
    A playful TikTok video led to cyberbullying against Keylin Perez, the first Latina to be crowned Miss Coppin State University at the historically Black college.
    Keylin Perez, Miss Coppin State University. The 22-year-old is the first Latina to hold the crown in the school’s history.
    Muslim civil rights group applauds Johns Hopkins’ response to student complaints
    Things turned around for the students after the Maryland office of the Council on American Islamic Relations got involved.
    BALTIMORE, MARYLAND - MARCH 28: A general view of The Johns Hopkins University on March 28, 2020 in Baltimore, Maryland. The school is shut down due to the coronavirus (COVID-19) outbreak.
    ‘Who better’? Georgetown hires famous exoneree Adnan Syed to help college students investigate wrongful convictions
    In his new job, Syed will help Georgetown students investigate wrongful convictions, exonerate men and women and create documentary films about the cases.
    Baltimore judge Melissa Phinn threw out Adnan Syed's murder conviction in light of new evidence that someone else could have strangled Hae Min Lee, ordered the release of  Syed.
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