Skip to Content
My MSU

SGJC News



Results 55-60 out of 82

April 17, 2023

Morgan’s School of Global Journalism and Communication Honors 2022 Vernon Jarrett Medal for Journalistic Excellence Award Recipients at The National Press Club

Morgan State University's School of Global Journalism and Communication (SGJC) has awarded the 2022 Vernon Jarrett Medal for Journalistic Excellence to Wesley Lowery...

Commentary | April 14, 2023

OPINION: Let’s Address the Epidemic of Erasing Black Existence

SGJC Professor Wayne Dawkins provides commentary on the macro-aggressive assaults on broadening Black history, literature and culture, and the erasing or marginalizing of Black history and literature.

Commentary | March 03, 2023

OPINION: ‘Dilbert’ Racism Fiasco Illustrates Need for Black History Education

Morgan State University associate professor, Wayne Dawkins offers commentary on recent racial rantings of disgraced 'Dilbert' cartoonist Scott Adams.

March 01, 2023

Small and Private Companies Can Offer Key Support to Historically Black Colleges and Universities

Between spring 2020 and August 2021, corporations and individuals committed over $600 million to HBCUs, and some companies -- including Google and IBM -- have also established formal partnerships with HBCUs. Minneapolis-based ad agency Solve, was inspired to act and noticed a dearth of advertising programs at HBCUs and created a 12-week curriculum and instructed students at Morgan State University, an HBCU in Baltimore.

Commentary | February 22, 2023

Why We Need a 4-day Workweek

Morgan State University associate professor, veteran journalist and Pulitzer Prize-winning columnist E.R. Shipp offers commentary on a proposal introduced in the House of Delegates to experiment with reducing that 40-hours-a-week norm to 32 hours.

October 31, 2022

Meet Morgan Alum Baldwin Williams, Who Speaks for the Cats—Hilariously—In Videos

Growing up, Baldwin Williams Jr. loved cartoons—he initially wanted to be an animator, but when he was 10, he discovered the world of voiceover. When he went to college at Baltimore's Morgan State University, he interned at the school's radio station, WEAA-FM, not just doing voice work, but also learning how to produce and edit his own material—ultimately parlaying those skills.