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“Daughters of the Legacy”

Reene Evers-Everette and Dr. Ilyasah Shabazz Visit Medgar Evers College

Dr. Ilyasah Shabazz

Medgar Evers College recently honored the centennials of the 1925 births of Medgar Evers and El-Hajj Malik El-Shabazz (Malcolm X) through their respective heirs, Reene Evers-Everette and Dr. Ilyasah Shabazz.


“Daughters of the Legacy,” held April 10 at the campus n event that to a packed auditorium also acknowledged International Black Women’s History Month, with the discussion between Reena Evers-Everette, daughter of Medgar Evers, and Dr. Ilyasah Shabazz, daughter of El-Hajj Malik El-Shabazz, Malcolm X. It was facilitated by Lance Wheeler, Vice President of Learning & Engagement at the Charles H. Wright Museum of African American History.

Reene Evers-Everette


In attendance were Dr. Patricia Ramsey, President of Medgar Evers College, and Dr. Felix V. Matos Rodriques, Chancellor, CUNY.

The daughters discussed their experiences growing up as the daughters of freedom fighters, as well as their personal experiences with their fathers. In addition to Drs. Ramsey and Matos, the audience included educators, students, politicians, and community members.

A Packed Party for the Mayor …and Applause for the Host

NYC Mayor Adams recently announced his decision to run as an Independent in his bid to hold on to his seat.


While some immediately pondered whether or not he could get to first base, community leader Renee Collymore, Democratic liaison, 57th Assembly District, threw the native Brooklynite a party at the Sanders House Waverly in Brooklyn on Sunday, April 6, afternoon; it was standing room only.

NYC Politics.com described “powerhouse” Collymore’s soiree as a “packed house” with “hundreds of residents and local businesses” celebrating the Mayor’s follow-through on a promise to reduce the number of migrants housed in the neighborhood from 4,000 to under 400.


“We were dealt a tough hand, but we didn’t fold”, Adams said, to the upbeat, cheering crowd, NYC politics.com reported, as his message of “resilience and follow-through in the face of unprecedented challenges,” met with applause — an applause that included unwavering supporter Collymore for her leadership in the community. “Renee was in City Hall regularly,” Adams said. “She didn’t speak for this community — she fought for it!”

Playing With Pistons

By Eddie Castro
The playoffs are here. The 2024-25 NBA season wrapped up Last week, and the New York Knicks have locked up the No.3 seed in the Eastern Conference. The players, for sure, are battered and bruised at this point of the year but are meshing well together at the right time.

The good news is that New York recently got back Jalen Brunson, who was out for a month due to an ankle injury. Brunson played in the team’s last few games in hopes of getting into proper playing shape for what Knicks fans hope will be a lengthy postseason run. What could be the bad news is that the team has a very physical team waiting for them in the Detroit Pistons.


The match-up between the two teams in the playoffs will be the fourth meeting in NBA history and the first time since 1992. The two teams met four times during the regular season, in which the Pistons won three of the four meetings. Led by their star player Cade Cunningham, Detroit finished the regular season with an offensive rating of 114.5.

The number went up six points against the Knicks. New York’s defense has yet to solve the puzzle that is Cunningham, who averaged 30.8 points, five rebounds, and 8.3 assists on 56.3 percent shooting from the field to go along with a sizzling 52 percent shooting from the three-point line against them in the four meetings. The Knicks must throw different defensive matchups this series for the 6’8” guard who simply scored at will against them during the regular season.

Most of his buckets game while being defended against Karl Anthony Towns, Precious Achiuwa, and Ariel Hukporti. Cunningham will likely see another defender who will try to contain him in big man Mitchell Robinson. The 7-footer missed the first three games versus Detroit, recovering from off-season ankle surgery. Robinson is one of, if not the Knicks’ best defenders, and could very well be the deciding factor in this series with his defense and rebounding.


Despite losing three of four against Detroit, the playoffs as we know is a different stage, a stage this young Pistons team has yet to experience where as the Knicks starting five have playoffs experience including a few players with NBA Finals experience OG Anunoby (with Raptors in 2019), P.J. Tucker (with the Bucks in 2021), and Mikal Bridges (with the Suns in 2021).

Coach Tom Thibodeau hopes to get some quality minutes from his bench as well as get the same production from Anunoby and Bridges he was getting when Brunson was out. This Detroit team is playing with the same physical style the “bad boy” Piston teams
displayed in the late 80s and early 90s. This series could very well give fans that hard-nosed, nostalgic ’90s feeling.

The Knicks need timely scoring from players not named Brunson or Towns. The defensive coverages against Cade Cunningham need to include a much more physical approach towards him. Game 1 starts this Saturday night.


Sports Notes: (Baseball) As we go to press, on behalf of myself and everyone here at Our Time Press, we would like to acknowledge Jackie Robinson day! 78 years ago this past Tuesday Robinson broke Baseball’s color barrier. Every year Major League Baseball acknowledges him on April 15 with every active player and coach sporting No. 42 jersey.


The Yankees will head to George M. Steinbrenner Field, where the Tampa Bay Rays are using to play their home games this year, as they prepare to move into their new stadium next year. The Yanks begin a three-game with Tampa tomorrow. The Mets will begin a three-game set at Citi Field against the St. Louis Cardinals starting tomorrow.

Mayor Adams’s independent pivot, candidates seem unfazed

By Nayaba Arinde
Editor-at-Large

On a longer political runway now – a newly independent candidate Mayor Eric Adams feels that he is cleared to take off for the General Election next November.
Columbia Professor Basil Smikle told Our Time Press that Adams’s announcement “was widely expected.” But, “It will be incredibly difficult because he doesn’t have a major party behind him. But the one thing it does buy him is time to reframe the narrative and not have to deal with this crowded primary.”


There are at least 10 folks in the running in the Democratic Primary, including Adrienne Adams, Zohran Mamdani, Michael Blake, Andrew Cuomo, Jessica Ramos, Zellnor Myrie, Brad Lander, and Scott Stringer. None expressed surprise. The electorate, too, seemed relatively mute. Michael Blake told Our Time Press,“

New Yorkers deserve a mayor who fights for them, not just themselves.
“I’m running for mayor…because I still believe in public service rooted in people, not politics.”
“I’ve beaten Trump before as a DNC Vice Chair…. I’ve helped pass legislation in Albany, created jobs in the Obama White House, and fought to protect working families across NYC. I’m not running to make headlines—I’m running to make a difference.”


“There’s a heavy frustration with the Democratic Party,” Brooklyn activist Jemall Henderson told Our Time Press. “The common comment I am hearing is people saying that they are going to vote for Cuomo because he can take on Trump, and would.”
Meanwhile, a seemingly upbeat and revitalized Adams is doing the rounds with a campaign glad-handing spring in his step.


He has had a busy 7 days this past week, from his Clinton Hill birthday party, to his National Action Network appearance, to his endorsement meeting with Harlem electeds and community leaders and members at the Michelle Obama Democratic Club, to his Flatbush town hall meeting, the Inner Circle dinner, and press conferences and interviews.
Adams’s elevator pitch is something like, “Hey, you know me, I wore a bulletproof vest for the city, I was Brooklyn Borough President, State Senator, and I am the second Black mayor of the city, vote for me,”


A week ago, federal judge Dale Ho dismissed the five-count bribery and corruption indictment against Adams. It came in the wake of what was reported as an alleged quid pro quo arrangement with President Donald Trump to have the New York City mayor work in conjunction with his immigration deportation policy and his border czar Tom Holman, suspected to be in exchange for the DOJ dropping the charges last month. Adams denies it.
A week ago as the Democratic candidates turned in their signatures, Adams released a video announcing that he was now running for mayor as an Independent.


He was asked at the media availability at City Hall on Tuesday, “Since the charges have been dismissed, have you spoken to Tom Homan or any other high-ranking official over at ICE?”
“I haven’t spoken to anyone,” Adams replied. “I don’t even know the connection between the charges and ICE.”


The reporter continued, “Judge Ho felt differently. He said everything here smacks of a bargain in Immigration Enforcement Cooperation for dropping the charges.”
Adams said within a protracted response, “Eric is innocent until proven guilty and that is dismissed with prejudice. Lift that up.”


This, as it was just announced that he is allowing ICE agents to open an office on Rikers Island.
In the interim Adams said that his administration is fighting the Trump government to claw back $200 million in migrant-related funding, the mayor said, “We are going to fight and state that this $200 million belongs to us. But then let’s look at $7 //billion…we lost in the previous administration compar/ed to $200 million. We’re going to fight for every penny.”


Stating that Homeland Security and ICE have not vamped on community-heavy locations like schools or places of worship, Adams defended his relationship with Trump, asking the press gathered at City Hall, “If it’s all right for Governor Hochul to meet with the president, it’s not all right for me to meet with the president?… I’m the mayor of the largest city in America. Imagine me not having a relationship with the president of the most important country on the globe.”


He protested further, “Get over it. He’s the president now, he’s the president. Popular vote, electoral vote. We got to get over this. I got to deliver for our city.”
On a roll, he chided, “All those who are saying, ‘Oh, just fight and resist, resist, resist.’ I’m not part of resist movement. I’m part of the produce movement.”
Saying that he is still a Democrat–“I didn’t leave the Democratic Party–the Democratic Party left me,”– whilst currently running as an Independent, Adams determined, “I’m running for re-election – and I’m gonna win.”


Professor Smikle told Our Time Press, “Not sure how much money he will be able to raise running as an Independent, but it may be able to give him the opportunity to get a lot of support from moderate and conservative voters who see him more aligned to Trump somewhat. They may help him raise money.”


Smikle continued, “It would have been a very difficult primary. Cuomo has a lot of money. He has very high name recognition. He is doing very well in the polling. He seems to be peeling off some of his Black support, if not flat outright getting his Black support. While the mayor is running as a moderate, Cuomo is running with the same or similar ideological leaning, and it would be difficult for him–even as the sitting mayor, to pull away from him in terms of his messaging. So, choosing to run as an Independent gives him a longer runway or longer pathway to make a case to voters that he can occupy by himself until he meets the primary winner in June.”


While Cuomo is the “front runner,” according to the polls, Smikle said, “I don’t know that it is a one deal. It is still going to be a tough primary.”
As he door knocked in Brooklyn’s 41st District, as he runs for City Council, Jamell Henderson said, “It is like Cuomo has already been mayor during the Covid time. For 4 to 5 weeks, the media watched the then-governor go head-to-head with Mayor Bill de Blasio, holding dual press conference updates. The media turned on Trump because he was not paying attention to what was going on with the pandemic. But Cuomo was calm and confident; he gave assurances and made himself personable.


“The media turned to him for the daily reports, and the people treated him as if he were the mayor.”
Henderson determined that “People are focused on name recognition, but not what they do. They are afraid of voting for someone new to move forward in a new direction.”
Alternatively, Henderson considered, “I believe Speaker Adrienne Adams has the qualifications, but as the presidential election in 2024 showed nationally, is the city ready to elect a woman, especially a BLACK woman?”

“Adrienne is focused on restoring competence and integrity to City Hall without the drama, nonsense, or scandal,” said her spokesperson, Lupe Todd-Medina.

April in New York

People & Politics, Poetry & Jazz

NEW YORK. April 5, 2025: Public Advocate Jumaane Williams, center, joined the thousands who protested and marched against Trump Administration policies on a drizzly day along Fifth Avenue. According to police, more than 15,000 people marched from Bryant Park towards Madison Square Park.