3.30.22 NPC

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America’s best weekly Kathy W. Humphrey, Ph.D., inaugurated as 11th president of Carlow University Page A6

Pittsburgh Courier NEW

www.newpittsburghcourier.com Vol. 113 No. 13 Two Sections

MARCH 30-APRIL 5, 2022

thenewpittsburghcourier Published Weekly $1.00

‘A promise of a better tomorrow’

GAINEY SHOWS OFF HOMEWOOD’S BRIGHT SIDE Mayor leads community walk through the neighborhood by Rob Taylor Jr. Courier Staff Writer

Ed Gainey doesn’t have a convention center named after him, like former Pittsburgh mayor David L. Lawrence. Gainey doesn’t have his own statue standing proudly in front of City Hall, like former Pittsburgh mayor Richard Caliguiri. But no mayor in the history of Pittsburgh has enjoyed the support and backing of the city’s important African American contingent more than Gainey, and he’s just three months into the job. When Mayor Gainey announced he’d be walking the streets of Homewood on Tuesday, March 22, who knew it would turn into a near-Beatles-esque occasion, residents opening their doors to greet Pittsburgh’s first Black mayor, others yelling in admiration from their cars for the mayor, with Gainey returning the love. Aside from the rock-star status, there was a purpose to this party. Mayor

Gainey, who represented Homewood in Harrisburg during his previous years as a state representative, wanted to show the residents how invested he is in helping Homewood in all ways possible now that he leads Pittsburgh. “I understand that there are a lot of good people in Homewood, and I understand that people really care about Homewood,” Mayor Gainey told the New Pittsburgh Courier exclusively as he walked on Kelly Street, March 22. “But sometimes you need leaders to come out and say, ‘I’m with you, how do we work together to save lives.’ And this is what I’ve done my whole career. That’s never going to stop. That’s not politics for me, that’s life for me.” Previous Pittsburgh mayors have made stops in Homewood before. But this event was different. Mayor Gainey’s closest members in his cabinet joined him for the Homewood walk, inSEE GAINEY A5

A NEW DAY—Pittsburgh Mayor Ed Gainey speaks with Homewood residents as he walked the streets of the neighborhood on March 22. A community meeting was held later that evening at Community Empowerment Association. (Photo by Rob Taylor Jr.)

A PIECE OF BLACK HISTORY SELDOM DISCUSSED

First Black quarterback in NFL history was from New Kensington Willie Thrower’s legendary achievement came in 1953 by Bill Neal For New Pittsburgh Courier

History, especially Black history, has shown us a lot of things that we weren’t taught, that were overlooked, that were hidden, that may have been forgotten or that we flat out just didn’t know. For example, how many of us didn’t know that even though Jesse Owens dominated the 1936 Berlin Olympics to the tune of four Gold medals against the so-called Aryan “master race” among

others, Adolf Hitler refused to meet or shake the hand of Owens? Sorry, Adolf, you guessed wrong on that one. Or did you know the great Nat “King” Cole was not only Natalie Cole’s father and the magnificent voice of so many classic songs like “The Christmas Song,” “Mona Lisa” and “Frosty the Snowman,” but he also hosted “The Nat ‘King’ Cole Show” on NBC in 1956? C’mon man, 1956?!?! Can SEE QUARTERBACK A7

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WILLIE THROWER, FROM NEW KENSINGTON, was the NFL’s first Black quarterback.


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