Community Appreciation Day/Business Fair
(RANDALLSTOWN – May 9, 2008) - The Liberty Road Business Association (LRBA) is excited to present its 3rd Annual Business Fair! The event will take place at Windsor Mill Middle School, on Saturday, June 28th from 10 am to 2 pm. We would like to show our appreciation to the community members this year by providing entertainment, activities and food for children and adults.
We are extending an invitation for you to grow your business and increase awareness about your products and services by being one of our exhibitors at the Community Appreciation Day/Business Fair. If you are a vendor, we invite you to come and sell your goods, and if you have a new or even an old business, please come out and meet your community members within the Liberty Road Corridor to make them aware of your business. Please call our LRBA office if you are interested in this exciting opportunity at 410.655.7766.
Thank you in advance for your continued support of the LRBA!
Read more from BMORENEWS.COM
Op/Ed: Journalist Extraordinaire McCarthy Still Fasting for I Can't We Can:
I opened my hand and he poured $4 in quarters into my palm. "That's all I got right now," he said.
I stood there in amazement. So many people are struggling and having such a hard time. But they get it. They seem to understand that some things are worth giving all you have.
Read in Full >>The Glover Report: Family, Schools and Churches:
Even more, his presentation before Associated Black Charities of Maryland at the Reginald F. Lewis Museum on Wednesday afternoon went into what he believes are the three major anchors of the black community that must be re-engaged such that black America can be all that it is supposed to be. After all, with the election of President-elect Barack Obama, this is supposed to represent a new beginning. Read in Full >>
Meeting Morehouse College President Franklin Was An Inspirational Experience:
He, in fact, is a reminder – with all due respect to all of the black schools out there – why I first chose – at the urging of my high school counselors - to attend Morehouse. It was a vivid reminder of the three semesters I was blessed to be at – in my mind – the greatest institution on the planet with some of the greatest minds I have ever known. Morehouse students like Adam Scott, Leo Hyman and Robbie Scott from Baltimore and Steven Tolbert, the son of a Liberian president, come to mind. Read in Full >>
Op/Ed: Give Thanks and Praise: Reframing Recession into Abundance:
As we gain perspective and reaffirm our faith, obstacles in our path start to seem less obstructive and more instructive. Instead of complaining about our empty gas tanks, we begin to appreciate the benefits of walking, biking or taking the bus to work. After all, most of us could stand to become a bit more physically fit. Walking to work provides us with such an opportunity. Similarly, taking the bus may relieve the stress of navigating morning traffic jams, and give us time to plan our day more effectively. Read in Full >>
Op/Ed: The Reckoning of the Uninvited:
Where had these people been before? Looking at those now around me, I thought how much past voting had been a closed affair. How much had we come to expect that certain people would just not show up on Election Day – to the point that some politicians even counted on it? Had our democracy really offered an “open” invitation some people simply weren’t supposed to accept? Read in Full >>



