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Celebrity roast

APRIL 16—The Hilton Hotel & Towers, will host the 12th Annual Mel Blount Youth Home All-Star Celebrity Roast at 6:30 p.m. at 600 Commonwealth Place, Downtown. The roast is a tribute honoring Super Bowl XL MVP and wide receiver Hines Ward. Dinner will be at 7 p.m. and this is a black-tie affair. Tickets are $350 per person and proceeds will benefit the Mel Blount Youth Home. For more information, call 724-948-2311 or e-mail This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it. .

Last Updated on Monday, 03 December 2012 19:20

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New Pittsburgh Courier salutes Fab 40

Some of Pittsburgh’s most elite, young leaders were inducted into the New Pittsburgh Courier’s 2010 Fab 40 class on March 26. If it’s up to this group of honorees, the future looks extremely bright.

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DR. BARRETT WOODS, Lance Woods, Camille Davidson, Dr. Shailen Greene, Suzanne Woods, Elizabeth Greene, Tyrone Greene and Royce Woods.

Celebrating their success in areas such as social service, corporate, health care and education, each honoree brings a gift of having taken advantage of the doors opened by those who have gone before them. Not forgetting where they’ve come from, these leaders under the age of 40 have reached back to help others reach upward. They’ve become the change we’ve all waited for.

WTAE’s meteorologist, Demetrious Ivory, a 2009 Fab 40 honoree, emceed the event, held in the upper lobby of the U.S. Steel Tower. Ivory said this year’s group of honorees is a fresh crop from a wide range of career paths, who just don’t take ‘no’ for an answer.

Last Updated on Monday, 03 December 2012 19:20

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What’s in a name? Members: PCOC not ACORN

April 1 saw the official demise of the Association of Community Organizations for Reform Now and its remaining state affiliates. However, many local ACORN members jumped ship months before and had already begun creating a new organization, Pennsylvania Communities Organizing for Change.

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NEW BEGINNING—Lucille Prater-Holliday leads PCOC members in one of the new organization’s first rallies.

“There’s a lot of changes happening. It’s a completely new and different organization at this point,” said Mary Ellen Hayden, a former ACORN organizer. “They’ve created something that’s really going to work. We want to continue to do all of that community service that we always did.”

PCOC has already secured funding from the Tides Foundation, a nonprofit that promotes social justice, and has gained status as a 501 (c) (3) and 501 (c) (4). The mission of PCOC is to advocate on behalf of low to moderate-income families.

Last Updated on Monday, 03 December 2012 19:20

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United community walk for peace

In an effort to introduce themselves and show the Homewood-Brushton community they care, The House of Manna Faith Community Church held a Prayer Walk for Peace April 2, which included approximately 300 leaders and those from various churches of different denominations, races and community groups.

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UNITED—Participants at the Prayer Walk for Peace raise one finger to symbolize that they are one united community.

“We wanted to introduce ourselves to the community, give people hope and show them that we care about the community and what is going on in it,” said Dina Blackwell, mission ministry leader of House of Manna and the walk’s organizer. “I live in Homewood and the need is visually visible everyday. I was given this vision from God in January and went with it.”

Last Updated on Monday, 03 December 2012 19:20

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Specter says he fully supports Obama

U.S. Sen. Arlen Specter says African-Americans should vote for him in the Democratic primary because he fully supports President Obama and his opponent has less experience and cannot beat likely Republican candidate Pat Toomey.

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TOUTING EXPERIENCE —U.S. Sen. Arlen Specter tells the New Pittsburgh Courier editorial board that his history of support for civil rights and education gives him the edge over his primary election opponent, U.S. Rep. Joe Sestak.

“I beat him before and I’ll beat him again,” Specter told the Courier editorial board. “I’m running to help President Obama carry out his agenda.”

In 2004, Specter—then a Republican, narrowly defeated Pat Toomey in the Republican primary after President George W. Bush campaigned for him. Last year, Specter returned to the Democratic Party after polls showed he would not win a similar primary contest, especially after he voted for the $1 trillion stimulus package. Specter said he didn’t leave the Republicans, they left him.

Last Updated on Monday, 03 December 2012 19:20

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