Baltimore Afro-American Newspaper 300 3 22 2013

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Volume 122 No. 33

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March 22, 2014 - March 22, 2014, The Afro-American

MARCH 22, 2014 - MARCH 28, 2014

HBCU Duplication Bill Doomed…Again By Sean Yoes Special to the AFRO Despite some raucous Senate hearings and tough votes during the 2014 legislative session, Sen. Joan Carter Conway (D- Baltimore City ) believes her bill aimed at preventing duplication of state university programs could make it out of the Senate this year. Unfortunately, however, Conway also believes the bill would meet the fate of other

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similar pieces of legislation she has crafted over the years—certain death in the House of Delegates. “I can get it passed out of the Senate, but there’s no need for me to expend all that energy…for the bill to die in the House,” Conway said during a phone interview this week. She said her colleagues in the House have made it clear the measure would never make it out of the House Appropriations Committee chaired by Del. Norman Conway (D-Wicomico and Worcester counties). “He has never let that bill go since I’ve had it,” Joan Carter Conway said. The venerable senator seems resigned to the fact that SB 169 will sit in the Senate’s Education, Health and Environmental Affairs Committee, which she chairs. For about a decade she has been introducing

essentially the same bill in the Senate. If it becomes law, the measure would allow for judicial review of the Maryland Higher Education Commission (MHEC). She initially crafted the legislation following the 2005 decision of MHEC Secretary Calvin Burnett to allow the creation of a joint MBA program at the University of Baltimore and Towson University, despite the existence of MBA programs at Morgan State University and other Baltimore area schools. However, this year the duplication bill was introduced against the backdrop of the October 2013 ruling of U.S. District Court Judge Catherine Blake, who declared Maryland’s treatment of HBCU’s—specifically in reference to duplication and its segregative effects—is a Continued on A3

BWI Workers Arrested While Demanding Equal Pay By AFRO Staff Several concession workers at BWI Thurgood Marshall Airport and some of their supporters were arrested March 13 while protesting for a pay hike on the steps of the Maryland State House in Annapolis. The workers went to Annapolis to ask for support in their effort to get BWI Thurgood Marshall concessions developer, AirMall USA, to ensure that the 800 plus men and

women – many of them African American – who work in the airport’s food and retail outlets receive a pay upgrade. They want their wages to equal those of the lowest paid state employees who work at the airport. “For over a year, my co-workers at the airport and I have been sharing our stories with our elected officials here in Annapolis,” said Evelyne Diadhiou, a server at BWI Thurgood Marshall’s Silver Diner. “We’ve Continued on A3

BWI Marshall protesters from left: Elder C.D. Witherspoon, Faith Church Baltimore; the Rev. Carletta Allen, Asbury UMC, Annapolis; Mike Hachey, UNITE HERE Local 7 and Kevin Wheeler (being arrested), bartender at Sam Adams Brewhouse at BWI.

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The Sojourner Douglass College Struggle Continues By Zenitha Prince AFRO Senior Correspondent

Sojourner-Douglass College’s very existence hangs in the balance as the school faces a “historic” challenge that can only be weathered with the community’s support, officials say. “My appeal is to the public, we need their support—both financial and spiritual,” said founder and president, Charles Simmons. Birthed during the Civil Rights Movement and based on the Freedom School model of Black self-

determination, the community-based college has always faced an upward battle in carrying out its mission. “We’ve been through struggle before,” Simmons, a former civil rights activist, said. “We’re not the school that has all the state money and corporate money and rich donor money. We started as a grassroots movement to educate and empower our community.” But the school’s current financial

troubles, which has endangered its accreditation, is unlike any other challenge he has seen in his 41-year tenure, the 75-year-old said. On March 6, the Middle States Commission on Higher Education, the accrediting body for colleges in states such as Maryland, told the institution it had to “show cause” by Sept. 1, why its accreditation should not be revoked. The college would need to show

how it planned to fix its dismal finances, which was brought about by a “perfect storm” of circumstances, Simmons said. Two years ago, the Department of Education reduced the Pell Grant disbursement to two semesters annually—Sojourner-Douglass offers three semesters a year to help its adult student population graduate faster— resulting in decreased enrollment and a loss of about $2 million. The next year, the department put a lifetime cap on Pell Grants, which further negatively Continued on A3

Sgt. McNeil continues to fight Ministerial Alliance Endorses Gansler-Ivey Police Arrest Suspect Ticket in Md. Gov. Race in Officer Shooting By Blair Adams AFRO Staff Writer

By Roberto Alejandro Special to the AFRO On March 13, the Maryland Interdenominational Ministerial Alliance (IMA) endorsed Democratic gubernatorial candidate Attorney General Doug Gansler and Del. Jolene Ivey, candidate for lieutenant governor, in the Democratic primary. The IMA is a religious and civil rights organization whose membership includes dozens of churches that represent more than 20,000 congregants in the Baltimore area. According to a statement from the Rev. Alvin Gwynn Sr., president of IMA and pastor of Friendship Baptist Church in Baltimore, the group endorsed a full slate of candidates, led by Gansler and Ivey. “The IMA proudly endorses Doug because of his long career serving Maryland and his commitment to fighting for the people of Maryland, particularly those who are struggling or disenfranchised. Doug and Jolene

Attorney General Doug Gansler are deeply sensitive to the needs of minority Marylanders across the state and the challenges they often face. The IMA believes the GanslerIvey ticket will get the job done in Maryland.” Continued on A4

Running an errand turned bad for a Baltimore City Police officer on March 14. According to authorities, Sgt. Keith McNeil was sitting in his black Toyota Tundra on the 1900 block of Belair Rd., outside a friend’s garage. Before he was able to exit his vehicle, a gunman approached, raised a handgun, and fired several times. Several bullets pieced the car, striking McNeil in the chest. McNeil, a 19-year veteran, was transported to Shock Trauma. While doctors worked, Police Commissioner Anthony Batts amassed a team to search for the suspect who had attacked the officer. Within hours, a suspect was identified: Gregg Thomas, 34, an ex-convict released from prison in January 2013. Police tagged Thomas “Public Enemy No. 1” at a March 15 news conference. Batts showed Thomas’ picture and called him a “coward,”

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Continued on A4

Sgt. Keith McNeil

Gregg Thomas, shooting suspect


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