Summary

William Donald Schaefer is a Democratic politician who served in public office for 50 years at both the state and local level in Maryland. He was mayor of Baltimore from 1971 to 1987, the 58th governor of Maryland from 1987 to 1995, and the comptroller of Maryland from 1999 to 2007. Schaefer was defeated in his reelection bid for comptroller by Peter Franchot, a state delegate, in the Democratic primary on Sept. 12, 2006. During his tenure, Schaefer won praise for his "do-it-now" approach. He tended to details such as fixing potholes and launched major development initiatives, including the transformation of Baltimore's Inner Harbor and the construction of Oriole Park at Camden Yards and M&T Bank Stadium....
William Donald Schaefer is a Democratic politician who served in public office for 50 years at both the state and local level in Maryland. He was mayor of Baltimore from 1971 to 1987, the 58th governor of Maryland from 1987 to 1995, and the comptroller of Maryland from 1999 to 2007. Schaefer was defeated in his reelection bid for comptroller by Peter Franchot, a state delegate, in the Democratic primary on Sept. 12, 2006. During his tenure, Schaefer won praise for his "do-it-now" approach. He tended to details such as fixing potholes and launched major development initiatives, including the transformation of Baltimore's Inner Harbor and the construction of Oriole Park at Camden Yards and M&T Bank Stadium. Schaefer's other notable achievements include reform of the state's higher education system and construction of a light rail line through Baltimore. Schaefer received his early education in Baltimore's public schools, and later graduated from Baltimore City College in 1939. Schaefer received a J.D. degree from the University of Baltimore School of Law in 1942. Schaefer won a seat on the Baltimore City Council in 1955 campaigning on his concern for city planning and housing issues. He represented the 5th District. Schaefer had a long-time companion in Hilda Mae Snoops, who was his official hostess in the governor's mansion. Snoops died in 1999 at age 74.
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Letters to the editor
Thanks so much for the editorial on Sen. John McCain's indifference toward the Internet ("Net deficit," editorial, June 29). It's chilling to think we might have a president who lacks the capacity to perform vital Web-related duties such as chatting up...Tags: Conservation, Bob Barr, George Washington, Scarlett Johansson, National Government
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Scandal distracts from Dixon's work
Finally we have a mayor who loves the city and her job as much as former Mayor Clarence "Du" Burns did and, before him, William Donald Schaefer once did - one who gets things done and is out there involving herself in the city. Then what happens? A...Tags: Sheila Dixon, Regional Authority
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Inquiry threatens Dixon's momentum
Sun reportersSix months into her historic term as Baltimore's first female mayor, Sheila Dixon has been riding high - the homicide rate is at a two-decade low, the City Council passed her budget almost untouched, and she has won praise for her work on gun control...Tags: Federal Bureau of Investigation, Local Elections, Trials, Ulysses Currie, Gun Control
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Inquiry threatens Dixon's momentum
Sun reportersSix months into her historic term as Baltimore's first female mayor, Sheila Dixon has been riding high -- the homicide rate is at a two-decade low, the City Council passed her budget almost untouched, and she has won praise for her work on gun control and...Tags: Federal Bureau of Investigation, Local Elections, Trials, Ulysses Currie, Gun Control
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Hospitals' acreage is lure for developers
Sun reporterChicken coops and cornfields surrounded the state asylum in Owings Mills when it opened almost 120 years ago. The quiet countryside was considered by 19th-century health experts as the best place to care for the developmentally disabled, and over the...Tags: Prisons, Executive Branch, Health and Safety at School, Disability, Colleges and Universities
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Documentary explores redevelopment of Baltimore's waterfront
Sun reporterFor Baltimoreans accustomed to seeing their hometown depicted in less than glowing terms on television series such as The Wire and Homicide: Life on the Street, a new production takes a rosier point of view. Global Harbors: A Waterfront Renaissance is an...Tags: Harbor East, James Rouse, Fashion Trends, Long Beach (California), National Aquarium Baltimore
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Wayne Cawley Jr.
Sun ReporterWayne Archie Cawley Jr., who advised Maryland farmers to sell their produce to local consumers while he was the state's agriculture secretary, died of a stroke Monday at his Denton home. He was 84. "Don't sell wholesale when you can get the retail price,...Tags: Dwight David Eisenhower, Death and Dying, Consumers, Agricultural Research and Technology, Executive Branch
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Visionary leader merits more respect
It is disgraceful that The Sun invaded former Gov. William Donald Schaefer's privacy by revealing the vulnerabilities of his advancing age, with a picture of him that again shows him at less than his usual dapper self ("The object of their affections,"... -
Schaefer's friends right to intervene
In October 2007, I saw former Gov. William Donald Schaefer give a talk about his career at the Pikesville library. He was in good form, but it was also clear that his age was showing. He was far from the "do it now" mayor I knew from his days at City Hall...Tags: Pikesville
Jul 4, 2008
|Story| Baltimore Sun
Jun 27, 2008
|Resource Link| Baltimoresun.com
Jun 22, 2008
|Story| Baltimore Sun
Jun 18, 2008
|Story| Baltimore Sun
Jun 17, 2008
|Story| Baltimore Sun
Jun 15, 2008
|Story| Baltimore Sun
Jun 9, 2008
|Story| Baltimore Sun
Jun 12, 2008
|Story| Baltimore Sun
May 12, 2008
|Story| Baltimore Sun
May 8, 2008
|Story| Baltimore Sun

