The registration link is here.
Virtually celebrate the Senator Barbara A. Mikulski Room in the Enoch Pratt's Central Library at 7 p.m. on Thursday, Nov. 19, with Sen. Mikulski and Ambassador Wendy Sherman in conversation, moderated by Meghan McCorkell. The conversation will focus on the lives and careers of both Mikulski and Sherman, both of whom grew up in Baltimore and became social workers before entering public life. The lessons both women have learned about claiming your power and working together to make change will be discussed along with anecdotes from their lives in Baltimore and beyond.
About the speakers:
The people of Maryland elected Barbara A. Mikulski to be their U.S. senator because she was a fighter, looking out for the day-to-day needs of Marylanders and the long-range needs of the nation. She was not only the senator from Maryland but also the senator for Maryland.
Determined to make a difference in her community, Mikulski became a social worker in Baltimore. Her work evolved into community activism when she worked with a diverse coalition of communities across Baltimore City to successfully organize against the building of a 16-lane highway through Baltimore's ethnic enclaves and predominantly Black-owned neighborhoods.
Mikulski's community organizing took her to Baltimore's City Council in 1971, the U.S. House of Representatives in 1976, and the U.S. Senate in 1986. Retiring in 2017, Mikulski has stated that it is not how long she served that matters but rather how well she served her state and nation.
A trailblazer, Mikulski was the first Democratic woman senator elected in her own right. As a senator, she focused on issues of science, technology, and the economic and health security of women, as well as jobs and justice. She was awarded the Presidential Medal of Freedom by President Obama in 2015. And a supernova was named in her honor in 2012 by Nobel Prize winner Adam Riess.
She is currently a Homewood Professor of Public Policy at Johns Hopkins University, where she is dedicated to preparing the next generation of change-makers and innovators.
Wendy R. Sherman is a professor of the practice of public leadership and director of the Center for Public Leadership at the Harvard Kennedy School. In addition, she is a senior fellow at the school's Belfer Center for Science and International Affairs. Sherman is senior counselor at Albright Stonebridge Group and former undersecretary of state for political affairs. She is currently an MSNBC global affairs contributor and on the USA TODAY Board of Contributors.
ASL interpretation will be available to attendees.
This program is part of 2020 Women's Vote Centennial Initiative conversations at the Pratt Library.