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Give me some ‘Wiggle Room!’ Damon Carr, Page B1
Pittsburgh Courier NEW
www.newpittsburghcourier.com Vol. 113 No. 28 Two Sections
JULY 13-19, 2022
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‘Teens today are killing each other left and right; it has to come to an end.’ -Jaia Harrison
Local students’ essays on gun violence win awards, trip to D.C. by Rob Taylor Jr. Courier Staff Writer
“Sometimes a simple conversation can go a long way.” Those are the words of Jaia Harrison, an eighthgrade student at Manchester Academic Charter School. Those words, that simple conversation, she said, can oftentimes be the difference between peace and
violence, between life...or death. Harrison was one of the two winners in the 2022 Pittsburgh “Do the Write Thing Challenge,” an annual essay competition for middle school students. Each student submitted an essay about the impact of violence on their lives, and the essays were judged first by Duquesne University Law School students, and later by
Pittsburgh notables such as Steelers head coach Mike Tomlin, Allegheny County Executive Rich Fitzgerald, retired Urban League of Greater Pittsburgh President and CEO Esther Bush and Highmark Wholecare Vice President Marcia Martin. The “Do the Write Thing” initiative is a sanctioned program of the Allegheny PITTSBURGH EIGHTH-GRADE STUDENTS JAIA HARRISON AND DEAHMI MOBLEY were named Pittsburgh’s “Do the Write Thing Ambassadors” for 2022, after their essays on the impact of gun violence for young people SEE ESSAYS A4 won top honors. They’re headed to Washington, D.C. this weekend as part of National Recognition Week.
A COURIER SPECIAL REPORT
The quest to get more Black attorneys in Pittsburgh Blacks account for less than 5 percent of all attorneys in the region, ACBA says by Rob Taylor Jr. Courier Staff Writer
Jamilah Wesley was too excited for the start of law school. The Richmond, Virginia, native, who just graduated from Old Dominion University (in Norfolk), paraded into the auditorium at Duquesne University, as did the 150 or so other
first-year law students. When the big doors closed, she looked around, and realized that, by her count, there were only three other African Americans in the auditorium. “It was just mind-blowing,” Wesley told the New Pittsburgh Courier in an exclusive interview, July 11. “Coming from where I come from, coming here it
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was drastically different. I’ve never seen anything like this.” It’s no secret that Pittsburgh isn’t Philadelphia, or Richmond, or Cleveland, in terms of its African American population. The city proper continues to lose African American residents; a 27 percent Black population in 2000 has dwindled to about 22 percent today, according to the U.S. Census Bureau. A Gender Equity Commission report in 2019 revealed that Pittsburgh was one of the worst places in SEE BLACK ATTORNEYS A3
FIRST-YEAR LAW SCHOOL STUDENT JAMILAH WESLEY, left, with Common Pleas Judge Nicola Henry-Taylor. Judge Henry-Taylor is both a mentor to Black law school students in Pittsburgh and an employer in the Allegheny County Bar Association’s “Summer Clerkship” program.