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SEWICKLEY ACADEMY UNDER FIRE PAGE A5
Pittsburgh Courier NEW
www.newpittsburghcourier.com Vol. 113 No. 10 Two Sections
MARCH 9-15, 2022
thenewpittsburghcourier Published Weekly $1.00
“Everybody’s looking for someone to blame. Look in the mirror, and if you want to change the game, change self.”
Unfiltered, Mayor Gainey addresses Pittsburgh’s Black-on-Black gun violence Nearly 20 homicides in Allegheny County already this year by Rob Taylor Jr. Courier Staff Writer
A 15-year-old just leaving school at Oliver Citywide Academy on the North Side, gunned down while in a school van in broad daylight. A 28-year-old just leaving work in Bellevue, gunned down in a domestic dispute minutes before she was to board a Port Authority bus. An 18-year-old, a 25-yearold, in a car in Homestead, when shots are fired, killing both. Unfortunately, as common as the sun rises and sets, there is gun violence in the Pittsburgh-area’s Black communities. It’s become so prevalent that oftentimes, the sound of a
gunshot fazes no one; it is merely part of the sounds of the outdoors, mixed in with the sound of traffic,
COURIER EXCLUSIVE construction work, emergency air horns or the chirps of a bird. In cities nationwide with African American mayors, that person alone cannot stop the violence in their cities, nor should the blame be placed solely on them. For the first time, Pittsburgh has a Black mayor, Ed Gainey, and while he should not be tasked with
stopping gun violence in the Steel City alone, either, he knows it’s a topic that must be addressed—by him. On Feb. 11, the South Pittsburgh Coalition For Peace held a citywide prayer vigil, where a variety of people spoke on the continuous gun violence plaguing the community. Mayor Gainey, for his part, outlined a three-part message addressing the shootings happening in the region, and he let it all hang out. “The first thing is that there’s nobody coming in our neighborhoods to stop the violence except for the ones who live in the neighSEE GUN VIOLENCE A3
MAYOR ED GAINEY
DR. MORRIS TURNER’S LEGACY IS EVERLASTING Famed OB-GYN honored with a portrait and plaque at UPMC Magee-Womens Hospital by Rob Taylor Jr. Courier Staff Writer
On June 30, 2014, Dr. Morris Turner was called home. But seemingly everybody still remembers how special he was to
DR. MORRIS TURNER his family, UPMC Magee-Womens Hospital, and the Pittsburgh community at-large. So much so that on Feb. 15, nearly eight years after his passing, hundreds
gathered at UPMC Magee-Womens Hospital in Oakland to celebrate the noted obstetrician-gynecologist with a portrait that will forever remain at the hospital. Those that knew him personally will look at the portrait and recall watching him in action. Those that didn’t know him will be introduced to him for the first time and can read the plaque dedicated to him which sits next to his portrait. The portrait and plaque are on the hospital’s second floor outside the Birth Center. “Brilliant clinician and outstanding surgeon,” the plaque, dedicated by the medical staff at the hospital in 2016, reads. “Articulate and thoughtful leader. Distinguished colleague, teacher and mentor. Tireless healer who was devoted to the medically underserved of Western Pennsylvania. Dynamic past president of the medical staff.” The portrait was completed by Pittsburgh-area SEE TURNER A4
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DR. MORRIS TURNER’S WIDOW, VERENA, sees the unveiling of the new portrait for her late husband, a highly regarded OB-GYN at UPMC Magee-Womens Hospital. The portrait unveiling was held, Feb. 15.