Politics all in the family for student
11/13/06
Towson senior recounts Anne Arundel campaign experiences
Miller's initial lead fails to capture seat
11/13/06
From the Editor's Desk: Will O'Malley lower the costs of college?
11/9/06
Ehrlich concedes the governorship
11/9/06
"You must be so tired!" a voter exclaimed to Md. first lady Kendel Ehrlich Tuesday morning, as she campaigned with her husband, Gov. Robert L. Ehrlich, at Stoneleigh Elementary School in Towson.
Ehrlich smiled and shrugged off her lack of sleep.
"We're so energized," she said, putting on her best campaign face.
But by the time supporters gathered in a ballroom at the Hyatt in Baltimore's Inner Harbor on Election Night, both Ehrlichs must have been exhausted. They had spent days crisscrossing the state of Maryland, and they were about to find out whether it had resulted in re-election.
Getting out the vote, one door at a time
11/6/06
She has her door-to-door sales pitch perfected.
Ring the doorbell. Wait about 15 seconds. If the door doesn't open, attach a flier to the doorknob. If it does: "Hi, I'm Tracy Miller. I'm a Democrat running for the House of Delegates."
Miller, an academic advisor at Towson, is hoping District 42 voters will elect her on Tuesday.
In the final days before the election, the first-time candidate is concentrating on get-out-the-vote efforts - or more specifically, on get-out-the-Democratic-vote efforts.
Her message at the end of every conversation is a variation on the same theme: "Please vote!"
"And vote for me," she sometimes adds.
Analysis: Outcomes could affect Md. higher education
11/6/06
Towson administrators will be paying close attention to the results of Tuesday's midterm election. It could dramatically change the University's fortunes for the next four years.
Few would disagree that Robert L. Ehrlich's gubernatorial tenure has been good for the University.
Delegate candidates debate Towson topics
10/26/06
Six candidates address education, environment, University growth
Primary win places Miller in November election
9/14/06
TU advisor, alums succeed in race; Towson booster Rasmussen loses in Senate bid
Mayor outlines Md. Vision
9/29/05
O'Malley speaks at TU before announcing run for governor
Miller vies for '06 delegate seat
9/19/05
Mikulski presents tuition tax credit proposal
2/24/05
Cardin to host Iraq town hall meeting
2/14/05
Bush: 'America has spoken'
11/4/04
Towson students cast ballots in pivotal election; Kerry wins Maryland vote, falls short nationally
Campus votes Kerry in poll
11/1/04
Towerlight election survey reveals solid lead for Democrats
Professor observes campaign press
11/1/04
For reporters on the campaign trail, it’s hard to tell when one day ends and another begins.
As a temporary member of President Bush’s traveling press corps, Towson professor Martha Joynt Kumar slept four hours Friday night before boarding a bus to the airport at 4:30 a.m. By sunrise Saturday morning, the press plane was en route to Grand Rapids, Michigan.
Presidential race takes shape
3/4/04
Maryland voters turned out Tuesday for the state's primary elections, helping Massachusetts Sen. John Kerry secure a place as the likely Democratic nominee.
Kerry took nine of the 10 states holding primaries during Super Tuesday after a round of campaigning that brought him to Baltimore Monday. Backed by Maryland Democrats, the senator addressed a crowd of supporters at Morgan State University in the morning before flying to Ohio for another rally.
Voters to cast ballots Super Tuesday
3/1/04
Students take views to capital
2/26/04
ANNAPOLIS — In an effort to make it clear that this is "Towson's year," student leaders took their message to the state capital on Monday.