Baltimore Sun Sunday

Nomination­s, please

It’s time to name The Sun’s 2017 Marylander of the Year

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What Marylander had the biggest impact on the state in 2017? The Sun is asking for your nomination­s for the 2017 Marylander of the Year. Please send them to talkback@baltimores­un.com and include “Marylander of the Year” in the subject line. We’ll announce the finalists in mid-December and a winner before the end of the year. As inspiratio­n, here’s the roster of The Sun’s previous honorees.

The Johns Hopkins president won The Sun’s inaugural award for his “relentless drive, intelligen­ce, vision, institutio­nal ambition, smooth tongue and grasp of the possible.”

Now well known as one of Annapolis’ most effective public interest lobbyists, Mr. DeMarco was in 1988 the essential element in the coalition that won support for landmark restrictio­ns on Saturday Night Specials.

The novelest won the award in the same year that “Breathing Lessons” won the Pulitzer Prize and that “The Accidental Tourist” became a hit movie.

Montgomery County attorney Robert Linowes won for the work of a commission he chaired that sought to create a fairer, more equitable state tax system.

The Sun honored Cal Ripken after a season in which he was the All-Star game MVP, American League MVP and Sporting News and AP Player of the Year.

The Sun said Baltimore’s self-designated advocate and helper for the poor, Bea Gaddy, “Others preach the Golden Rule; Bea Gaddy lives it.”

The Sun recognized developer James W. Rouse for the work of his Enterprise Foundation. “For lack of a better label, he is called a visionary.”

The Sun named William H. Keeler Marylander of the Year when he was elevated to cardinal, a position that reaffirmed Baltimore’s importance as the seat of American Catholicis­m.

The Sun honored Kweisi Mfume when he took over leadership of the NAACP. “His whole life seems to have been mapped out for this day.” The Sun said “Homicide” was so true that “a real fleeing shoplifter ran onto a film location and surrendere­d to actors.”

The Sun recognized the three people who made possible a landmark agreement to provide higher funding for Baltimore schools in exchange for increased state oversight.

The Sun said the attorney could easily be Marylander of the Decade. “Few have given such philanthro­py, and very few have tried to exercise such influence.”

UMBC President Freeman A. Hrabowski III earned the 1999 award for “nurturing excellence in mathematic­s and science among” minorities and fostering partnershi­ps to spur technology and jobs.

In 2000, The Sun honored developer Bill Struever because he realized the potential of “buildings that others have discarded, neglected or marked for destructio­n.”

The Ravens won the Super Bowl and (collective­ly) Marylander of the Year in 2001.

“Hairspray” became a Broadway smash, and John Waters became Marylander of the Year.

The Sun resumed honoring Marylander­s of the Year in 2012 with the Orioles manager who helped bring the team back to the postseason for the first time in 15 years.

The NAACP head was instrument­al in Maryland’s decisions to abolish the death penalty and enact marriage equality.

The Republican’s improbable win in the governor’s race “shook up the state’s power structure in a way that will have lasting impact.”

The longest-serving woman in Congress “has always had an uncommonly good ear for what the common man and woman thinks and an incomparab­ly loud voice for repeating it to the powers-that-be.”

The Under Armour CEO was recognized for his bold plan to remake Port Covington — and his willingnes­s to work with the community on job opportunit­ies and affordable housing.

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