Texas Metro News 3-31-22

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T E X A S

MetroNews DELIVERING NEWS YOU NEED

• Vol. 10 • March 31 - April 6, 2022

MY TRUTH By Cheryl Smith PUBLISHER

About those Academy Awards I’m trying to walk right. I’m trying to do the right thing, all the time and sometimes I miss the mark! I also try not to let diversions take me off my game. Weapons of mass distraction are all around us.

Will Packer

Sure attention is focused on drama and the Social Media College of Psychology experts but so much is going on that needs our attention; including Judge Ketanji Brown Jackson, homelessness, health disparities, maternal morbidity rates, redlining, gentrification, food deserts, racism, crime, COVID and more. Those issues are going to still be with us, after all the rhetoric has subsided. It may be hard to remain focused, but you have to keep your eyes on the prize. Which brings me to my truth! There were several recipients of prizes during the recent Academy Awards. It was important for me to watch the program Sunday evening because Will Packer, a graduate of the Florida A&M University, was the producer, following in the footsteps of the indomitable Quincy Jones, the first Black board member of the National Association of Television Program Executives; who was the musical director and conductor of the Award ceremony in 1971. See MY TRUTH, Page 6

WWW.TEXASMETRONEWS.COM

AND THE WINNER IS…

Skyline High School’s Donnie F. Wilson wins Oscar Story of Legendary Basketball Hall of Famer Lusia Harris receives rave reviews By Dorothy J. Gentry and Cheryl Smith Texas Metro News

Donnie F. Wilson won an Academy Award on Sunday night, but the Dallas artist and writer wasn’t there to accept it. Wilson, an executive producer of the documentary “The Queen of Basketball,” had given his tickets to the family of the film’s subject, Lusia “Lucy” Harris. “I felt excited with just the thought of where this could lead,” Wilson said about the nomination. “Her story is a great one and we’d hoped that she

would be able to attend the ceremony.” Harris, 66, died unexpectedly in January in Mississippi, just as plans were underway for her to hit the media circuit. After decades of relative anonymity, Harris was finally getting the recognition she deserved for her pioneering efforts in basketball thanks to the documentary. She was the first and only woman to be officially drafted by an NBA team, the New Orleans Jazz in 1977, and she became the first Black woman inducted into the Naismith Memorial Basketball Hall of Fame in 1992. See DONNIE F. WILSON, page 12

Donnie Wilson with director Ben Proudfoot and the Oscar

In Support of Jackson: YBLOC, Legal Partners, The Glass Ceiling went Sideways Launch “Pass Her the Gavel” Campaign By Dr. Brenda Wall

By Cheryl Smith Texas Metro News

Legal scholars and judges, community organization and women’s group heads, along with concerned citizens have raised their voices calling for fair treatment of Supreme Court Nominee Ketanji Brown Jackson and the Young Black Lawyers’ Organizing Coalition (YBLOC)

Abdul Dosunmu Cong. Eddie YBLOC Founder Bernice Johnson

along with a coalition of organizations representing the Black legal community recently launched “Pass Her the Gavel,” a letter-writing

Atty. Cheryl Wattley

Judge Tammy Kemp

and public engagement campaign calling for a fair, equitable and timely confirmation process. The Harvard graduate is poised to become

Jessica Paige

only the 116 Associate Justice with the retirement of Justice Stephen Breyer. If confirmed, she will be the first African See PASS HER GAVEL, Page 15

HUMANIZATION: The Artistic Eye Of Arthello Beck Jr. The Opening Exhibit and Reception was held Thursday Night at the African American Museum as dignitaries paid tribute to artist and Dallas native, the late Arthello Beck, Jr. Ella Goode Johnson, Chair of the City of Dallas Arts and Culture Advisory Commission, Dallas County Commissioner John Wiley Price, Dallas City Councilwoman Carolyn King Arnold, Dallas Office of Arts and Culture Director Jennifer Scripps and Williams Chicken Founder and CEO Hiawatha Williams were program participants with Mr. Beck’s widow, Mae Beck, Dr. Harry Robinson and Curator/Artist Jennifer Cowley. The event was sponsored by

Commissioner Ella Goode Johnson

Williams Chicken and City of Dallas Office of Arts & Culture.

The glass ceiling was still intact, but it went sideways at the Senate Judiciary Committee confirmation hearings for Supreme Court nominee Judge Ketanji Brown Jackson. On one side sat a new, emerging symbol for justice in the land. It was a new look. Not blind, that hadn’t worked, but she was female and she was Black, this time with glasses to get a better look at judgment. She was of the generation who had paid dues and she deDr. Brenda Wall scribed such an incident on Harvard yard, where the challenges seemed overwhelming for a sheltered college freshman from the South. The perseverance she would practice brought her to this pinnacle of jurisprudence. The ancestors smiled on her and her parents lived to see the day that they dared hope was being realSee THE GLASS CEILING, Page 6


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Texas Metro News 3-31-22 by Cheryl Smith - Issuu