America’s best weekly ‘Black Therapy 101’ event promotes continuous care of one’s mental health See Page A6
Pittsburgh Courier NEW
www.newpittsburghcourier.com Vol. 114 No. 44 Two Sections
NOVEMBER 1-7, 2023
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WESTINGHOUSE CONTINUES ITS DOMINANCE Bulldogs take home another City League football title by Rob Taylor Jr. Courier Staff Writer
Westinghouse High School star running back Ty Abram, following his team’s convincing City League championship victory over USO (University Prep), with microphones and camera phones rolling, said the “F” word. Family. “We’re not just a team, we’re a family,” Abram, proudly wearing No. 24 in Westinghouse blue, said on the field after his team’s 42-14 win at Cupples Stadium, Oct. 28. “Families stick together. We have our rough patches, like in the first half, you can say that was a rough patch, but in the second half we got it together as a family. We brought it in and got the win.” The undefeated Westinghouse Bulldogs, who were favored in the game over the USO Wildcats, saw USO take the game’s first drive for a touchdown. USO missed the two-point conversion, making the score, 6-0, and the first time Westinghouse was behind in the City League all season.
Westinghouse was able to score a touchdown and two-point conversion before the first half ended, and the score was 8-6 heading into halftime. “Our guys never tanked,” Westinghouse head coach Donta Green said. “We went into halftime, made some adjustments, figured it out, we came back out and we started firing on all cylinders. So I think just the resilience of the team and especially with the team being so young, it was really good to see.” Westinghouse came out in the second half and re-affirmed their stronghold as a high school football powerhouse in Western Pennsylvania. Quarterback Khalil Green rushed for three touchdowns, to go with one he scored in the opening half. Westinghouse’s Jordan Reid took the opening second half kick to the house, 89 yards to be exact. And Abram just wore down the USO defense, rushing for 117 yards. He was named City League championship player of the game. SEE WESTINGHOUSE A8
WESTINGHOUSE PLAYERS SUCH AS LLOYD PENN CELEBRATE THEIR SECOND CONSECUTIVE CITY LEAGUE FOOTBALL CHAMPIONSHIP. (PHOTO BY BEN TENUTA)
Historic church deal results in apartment plans for Lower Hill Bethel AME Church says 128-unit complex coming to its former site Eric Jankiewicz PublicSource
Pittsburgh’s oldest Black church in October revealed plans for an apartment building on its historic site, with hopes to revitalize a once-thriving congregation through housing and social activism. In April, the Pittsburgh Penguins agreed to give 1.5 acres of Lower Hill District land along Crawford and Colwell streets to the Bethel AME Church. The neighborhood was home to the church from the early 1800s until the 1950s, when it was taken using eminent domain and demolished to make room for the Civic Arena. The church is currently located in the Middle Hill
District on Webster Avenue. Bethel AME Pastor Dale Snyder told PublicSource that the congregation settled on plans to keep the church at its current location and instead build a 128-unit apartment complex with the intention of finding a daycare provider for the ground level. “We want this place to be a citadel of hope again to give people the tools needed to go forward,” Snyder said. “I have congregants who can’t afford to come back [to the Hill District] and this will let them come home. They want to come home.” Church leaders and the Penguins initially reached a tentative deal in SepSEE BETHEL A4
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THE REV. DALE SNYDER, left, pastor of Bethel AME Church, talks with Pittsburgh Mayor Ed Gainey at the Restorative Justice Rededication Ceremony on April 14, at the former location of the legendary Lower Hill District church. (Photo by Stephanie Strasburg/PublicSource)