America’s best weekly Iconic Singer Johnny Mathis performs at Heinz Hall July 22
Automotive Hall of Fame to induct former GM VP of Global Design Edward Welburn
Pittsburgh Northeasterners host National Convention
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Pittsburgh Courier www.newpittsburghcourier.com
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Vol. 108 No. 29
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JULY 19-25, 2017
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What was it like to be URA moves to fund multiple affordable Black in the South in 1948? housing projects
New book recounts Pittsburgh White reporter’s Southern Odyssey as a Black man
Plan would yield 375 new units, 90 percent of them affordable by Christian Morrow
by Christian Morrow
Courier Staff Writer
Courier Staff Writer
Six years before the U.S. Supreme Court ruled racially-segregated schools were unconstitutional; Seven years before the murder of Emmett Till, and 13 years before John Howard Griffin more famously wrote of a similar journey in the book, “Black Like Me,” Ray Sprigle, a Pulitzer Prize-winning writer and editor for the Pittsburgh Post-Gazette, spent a month traveling through Mississippi, Georgia, Tennessee and Alabama disguised as a Black man. Accompanied by Atlanta civil rights icon John Wesley Dobbs, Sprigle, who was White, met and stayed at the homes of Black farmers, dentists, doctors; visited hardscrabble sharec r o p pers and Black schools t h a t w e r e b a r e - BILL STEIGERWALD, with his new book, “30 Days A Black Man.” ly more their hospitals. Black folks than shacks. do not even ask for admisWhen he sion. They just die.” returned to Sprigle also wrote of forPittsburgh, mer U.S. Army Private he wrote a Macy Yoast Snipes, who did 21-part seRAY SPRIGLE fight the pattern, ries called, and who paid the price— “I was a Nefor trying to vote in a local gro in the South for 30 days,” which apGeorgia election: peared on the front page of every big city “Death missed him on a paper across the country—except in the dozen bloody battlefields South—every day for three weeks. By speoverseas, where he served cial arrangement, the Pittsburgh Courier his country well. He came condensed the series and ran it for seven home to die in the littered consecutive weeks. dooryard of his boyhood Some of the incidents he recounted were home because he thought horrifying. Among them was the story of that freedom was for all dentist P.W. Hill, whose wife and child died Americans, and tried to following complications that arose late prove it.” during her delivery requiring a Caesarean Yoast’s family told Sprigle section. The White hospital in Clarksdale, they had to flee the county Miss. didn’t take Blacks, necessitating a after his murder, lest they 76-mile drive to the closest hospital that join him. Sprigle’s work would—in Memphis Tenn.: shocked northern Whites, “In the South, (Dobbs and Hill told Spriwho—unless they read gle) “when you’re Black, you don’t fight the pattern. Hospitals are for White people. SEE BOOK A4 White people do not admit Black folks to PITTSBURGH COURIER FRONT PAGE FROM 1948
Regardless of how Pittsburgh City Council eventually votes on financing the city’s Housing Trust Fund, the Urban Redevelopment Authority is conducting its final review of tax-credit funding requests for a slate of projects across the city that would result in the creation of 375 new housing units, 336 of which would be designated for renters making less than 60 percent of the Area Median Income. Of these, 105 would be created by three Hill District projects: the New Granada Square Apartments, which would build 47 affordable units in two buildings adjacent to the theatre, plus 9,000 squarefeet of retail space and 85 parking slots; the Gaudenzia Centre Avenue mixed-used development, SEE URA A4
CARL REDWOOD
MARIMBA MILLIONES
Theme for music conference in Garfield: ‘Transformation’ by Tené Croom For New Pittsburgh Courier
The heavy downpours pounding Pittsburgh for much of Saturday, July 8 didn’t keep away scores of entrepreneurs, policymakers, and musicians from attending the “Each One Teach One” Music and Radio Conference in Garfield. They were among those eager to get valuable information from veterans in the broadcast, public relations and music industries who spoke at the daylong event at the Bloomfield-Garfield Corporation Activities Center. About 50 adults attend-
ed the event. “I know a lot of people with knowledge in music, broadcasting, technology and things like that—so I just wanted to bring them together to share their information with people,” said longtime WRCT-FM jazz DJ Kevin Amos, the organizer of the free conference. Tanisha Jackson, founder of Tanisha Jackson Entertainment Management, spoke at the event about a glaring issue facing African American entrepreneurs. “We tend to hold Black entrepreneurs to a differSEE THEME A4
Foundations award $170k in grants to Pittsburgh Black artists
by Christian Morrow Courier Staff Writer
By this time next year, photographer Njaimeh Njie hopes to debut a new interactive multimedia exhibit that explores “the intersection of art and activism in Pittsburgh’s contemporary Black community.” Though she says she still has much preparation work to do, she has the luxury of time, as she was awarded $10,000 as one of the selectees in the latest round of Advancing Black Arts in Pittsburgh grants. In all, 12 artists and organizations received $170,000 in grant support from the partnership between the Pittsburgh Foundation and the Heinz Endowments. Since 2010, the Advancing Black Arts in Pittsburgh partnership has awarded more than $4 million in grants to help build the careers of individual artists, to increase the sustainability of cultural organizations that focus on Black arts, to build community awareness of the Black arts sector, and to support efforts toward greater collaboration and the elimination of racial disparities within the larger arts sector. This is the second time Njie has received an award. And she’s honored to receive it,
especially since this project is so different. “Oftentimes because artists and activists lead such public lives, it’s not always clear they even have these private lives. So, I’m looking at peeling back the layers on their work, of who they are as people and how that shapes the way they see the world and their work,” Njie told the New Pittsburgh Courier. “As for a venue, because it’s an immersive experience, I’ll have to be more methodical about how people interact with space and how I tell a story than I would usually do with a still exhibition. But it’s so fresh and new that I have to take a step back and brainstorm who I’d like to do, reaching out to them, research...I plan on dedicating several months to it.” In addition to Njie, five other artists received individual awards to further their work. They are: •Anthony B. Mitchell Jr.—$10,000 to create and coordinate the new “El Viaje: The Journey” series of performances that include Afro-Diasporic music, song and dance; •Jessica Lanay Moore—$10,000 to support research and travel for the development of a poetry manuscript exploring the histories of Key West, the Sea Island and
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Pittsburgh; •Melanie Carter—$10,000 to support the development of “Her Time to Shyne,” a documentary film exploring the evolution of contemporary Black feminism through artistic resistance; •Yvonne McBride—$10,000 to complete a final manuscript of the historical fiction novel, “Cozy Lee Luke at the Crossroads of the World,” and; •Idrissou Mora-Kpai—$10,000 to support post-production for the documentary film, “Joe’s Corner Store.” Mora-Kpai’s documentaries have been honored across the globe, and though he’s lived in Pittsburgh for several years, “Joe’s Corner Store” is his first American film. On his website, he describes it as the story of family corner store owner Joe Watson, who struggles against poverty and despair on Charleston, South Carolina’s East Side. A look “into Black life in a Southern town whose legacy of segregation and racism is finally up for debate.” Also receiving grants for artist-in-residence programs were: •Hill House Association, $15,000 to supNJAIMEH NJIE
Ulish Carter says
SEE ARTISTS A4
City’s latest police class is 31% Black, progress must continue Opinion B3