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Pittsburgh Courier NEW
VOL. 108, NO. 1
Two Sections
Top stories of 2016 83 of 105 Published Weekly
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JANUARY 4-10, 2017
INSIDE
taken Florida and Ohio. When Wisconsin came in for him a short time later, its 10 electoral votes put him over the 270-vote threshold.
Chief McLay steps down
Women Of Excellence 2016 Special Section
With several holding back tears, about 75 residents joined Black community leaders and police personnel from across the city at the Kingsley Center in East Liberty to say goodbye and thank you to outgoing Pittsburgh Police Chief Cameron McLay, who announced his resignation three days earlier. When he came out of retirement to take the job at Peduto’s behest in 2014—becoming the first chief ever hired from outside the bureau—McLay had three main goals: to implement data-driven, community-oriented policing; to restore public trust through creating sound accountability systems; and to improve morale by restoring the integrity of police leadership systems. He said it’s amazing that it shows how little it takes for us to develop real human relations. “All we have to do is listen each
DONALD TRUMP
Trump wins When the forces of the mighty British Empire surrendered to upstart American revolutionaries at Yorktown in 1781, the band played the song, “The World Turned Upside Down.” Democrats may want to learn that song now that political upstart Donald Trump has defeated Hillary Clinton in the race for the U.S. Presidency. He won Pennsylvania by more than 64,000 votes, which, at the time, put him at 264 electoral votes, having already
CHIEF CAMERON McLAY
Hamlet, a one-time NFL and CFL defensive lineman, most recently served as director of accountability transformation for the Palm Beach County (Florida) School District, which with 183,000 students and almost 13,000 teachers, is the 11th largest district in the country. “I’m looking for somebody who will do good for the kids, who can turn around some schools, and someone who knows education and how to do it from Kindergarten all the way to 12th grade,” said board member Thomas Sumpter. “The fact that he’s an African American male had nothing to do with it. We didn’t even see the candidates until the final interviews. Everything was based on the information they provided and responses to our questions.” Hamlet said his priorities in Pittsburgh will be closing the achievement gap for Black students, increasing the graduation rate, investing more in early education, and lure students back to the district from private and charter schools.
other and be genuine and respectful. This community gets it; we don’t want to go back. My officers get it and they don’t want to go back either,” McLay said. Tim Stevens said he never expected to get teary-eyed over a policeman. “I was profoundly sad when I heard he had resigned because I’ve been doing this four and half decades, and we finally got someone we can trust and he has to leave us,” said Stevens.
SUPERINTENDENT ANTHONY HAMLET
City pays Jordan School board Miles $125,000 introduces new superintendent After completing an eightmonth search that cut a pool of 24 candidates from 14 states down to 12, then six, then three, the Pittsburgh Board of Education has named 46-year-old Anthony Hamlet as its new superintendent of schools. The board, joined by retiring Superintendent Linda Lane, introduced Hamlet to the city at a May 18 press conference, and formally voted him in at a special meeting that evening, extending him a fiveyear contract with a $210,000 salary. He will officially start July 1.
homicides Black lives
2016 had a slight decrease from 2015 by Ulish Carter and Christian Morrow Courier Staff Writers
With seven total homicides for the month of December, six of them Black lives, the total number of homicides in Allegheny County for the year of 2016 is 105. There were nine fewer homicides in 2016 than 2015, 105 compared to 114, and eight fewer Black lives lost, 83 compared to 91.
Rather than continue the slog through the federal appeals court system, Jordan Miles and his attorneys have accepted a $125,000 settlement offer from the City of Pittsburgh. “We have accepted the city’s offer to settle,” said attorney Joel Sansone. “It is time for Jordan to move on to the next phase of his JORDAN MILES life.” Miles, now
Even though this is a slight difference, every life matters and even eight lives lost to senseless violence is too much. The Black lives that continue to be lost are young; all six of the Black lives lost in December were age 30 or younger. Breaking them down––two were 17 years old, one was 19, two were 27 and one was 30. The lone White person killed was a 63-year-old woman. Law enforcement has already located the suspected killer. All murders are horrible, but
SEE TOP A5
SEE HOMICIDES A4
Key local figures who passed in 2016 Cathy Milton Broadcast news pioneer Cathy Milton, best known for her 27-year career as a reporter and host on WTAE-TV, died peacefully in her Monroeville home Dec. 30. Milton began her broadcasting career in 1956 with WLOA, Braddock, and WEDO, McKeesport. In 1957 she joined WMCK, McKeesport as host of the “The Date with Cathy Show”. In 1967, Cathy moved to WJAS Radio where she was a general assignment reporter until her move to WTAE-TV in 1969 where, in addition to reporting major news stories, she hosted “Black Chronicle” and co-hosted “Pittsburgh Dialogue” and “AM Pittsburgh.” Rip Nixon Musician, basketball star, NAACP planning director and born salesman Lemuel O. “Rip” Nixon, who was a pioneering Black executive with Pittsburgh Brewing and IBM died Dec. 1 after suffering a stroke. He was 83. After a tour with the U.S. Army, he returned to Pittsburgh and sold Iron City Beer for Pittsburgh Brewing until 1965 when he landed a job with IBM, where he assisted European marketing teams. In 1997, he joined Ralph Proctor, and then city council members Valerie McDonald and Sala Udin in formulating the plan that eventually led to building of the August Wilson Center for African American Culture. Regis Bobonis News icon, Tuskegee Airmen champion Regis Bobonis Sr., who said he had a ‘front
Gone but not forgotten…
CATHY MILTON
RIP NIXON
REGIS BOBONIS
REV. SAMPSON COOPER
BOB PITTS
MILT WASHINGTON
BILL NUNN III
REV. JASON BARR JR.
row seat to history” while working at the Pittsburgh Courier in the 1930s and spent the last 20 years championing the recognition of local Tuskegee Airmen, passed away
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Nov. 25 of natural causes. After World War II, he become the first African American reporter for the Pittsburgh Post-Gazette, and later the first
Black television reporter in Pittsburgh by joining WIIC (now WPXI). He later learned, not only that five Tuskegee Airmen hailed from Sewickley, but also that eight came from within three miles, and that there were more Tuskegee Airman from Western Pennsylvania than any other state in the union. Rev. Samson M. Cooer Rev. Samson M. Cooper, who delivered his first sermon at age 5, passed away 80 years later on Nov. 8. Cooper, who pastored in AME Churches in the West Virginia, Pennsylvania and Ohio Conferences of the Third Episcopal District, and retired as a presiding elder of the Pittsburgh District Annual Conference, passed away at the age of 85. Cooper graduated from Wilberforce University, in Ohio, and received a master’s of divinity from the university’s Payne Theological Seminary. He also participated in the 1963 civil rights March on Washington and was also involved with the NAACP and the Black Political Empowerment Project. Bob Pitts Former Wilkinsburg mayor and long time NAACP activist Bob Pitts passed Nov. 2 in Cleveland at the age of 90. Pitts was the Pittsburgh NAACP vice president during the Harvey Adams reign as president. He was also head of the noted Labor and Industry Committee that led SEE LOCAL A5
Rev. Jesse Jackson says
As Obama departs, we owe him our thanks Forum B4