PRESORTED STANDARD U.S. POSTAGE
60
th
PAID
Anniversary
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PERMIT NO 585 SAN DIEGO, CA
@VoiceViewpoint
¢ 50 Plus Tax “People Without a Voice
ThursdayJuly Vol. Vol. 57 60No. No.35 31 || Thursday, August 30, 2020 31, 2017
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Cannot be Heard”
Serving Serving San Diego SanCounty’s Diego County’s African & African AfricanAmerican & African Communities American57Communities Years 60 Years
Standing on the
Shoulders of a
Giant
Remembering Civil Rights Icon C.T. Vivian
HAPPY BIRTHDAY LEON WILLIAMS!
CONGRATS TO PASTOR EDWARDS – see page 8
– see page 9
John Lewis Crosses
McDonald’s
Charged With
Edmund Pettus Bridge for Final Super-sized Time, Viewed in U. S. Capitol
Racism
By Hamil R. Harris Courtesy of Trice Edney
In this Jan. 4, 2012 photo, civil rights activist Rev. C.T. Vivian poses in his home in Atlanta. Vivian was a close friend of Dr. Martin Luther King Jr., and was awarded the Presidential Medal of Freedom by President Barack Obama in 2013. (AP Photo/David Goldman)
By Tonja Daniels “Everyone has a C.T. Vivian story,” expressed Reverend Gerald Durley for the homegoing celebration of one of the last of the civil rights icons. This sentiment was especially felt in the hometown of where Dr. Vivian and my family grew up in Macomb, Illinois. To us the loss was personal as he was the last lifeline and connection to both sides of my paternal family, the Daniels’ and McGruders’ that he frequently broke bread among as a guest in the homes of my 21 great-aunts and uncles that he grew up with. Macomb native/family member Tamarah Owens remembers, “Our elders made such a big fuss whenever he came to visit. He was more like family to all of us than anything. When-
Rep. John Robert Lewis has crossed the Edmund Pettus Bridge a final time. He made the last trip along Highway 80 from Selma to Montgomery Sunday, where he lay in repose in the Alabama State Capitol. Then, members of Congress received the flag-draped casket of Rep. Lewis at US Capitol Monday afternoon. After tributes from Democratic and Republican leaders, that was then placed at the top of the East Front of the Capitol for two days of public viewing. Lewis will always be known as that college student in the buttoned-up trench coat and a backpack who was beaten and bloodied by the Alabama State Police as protesters crossed the Edmund Pettus Bridge in Selma on March 7, 1965. From early Saturday in his hometown of Troy, Ala. to his final celebration and burial Thursday, July 30, in Atlanta, in death Lewis legacy will have sparked moments of racial reconciliation and thoughts among Blacks and Whites across the nation.
U. S. Rep. John Lewis, lying in state at the U. S. Capitol this week. Photo courtesy of Trice Edney
The Alabama trek of his final journey began in the Trojan Arena of Troy University and during an hour-long service where his brothers and sisters know Lewis only as “Robert,” who loved his family, and they loved him.
tions as a singer performed Bette Middler’s “ Wind Beneath My Wings.” In Selma, an Alabama State Police Officer bashed his head in as he led a match across the Edmund Pettus Bridge. Yet, for two days during his memorial, Alabama’s local, state, and federal leaders talked about Lewis as a son of the country who spent his life beyond Alabama bringing people of all races together. And his home state is better for it.
As a teen, Lewis couldn’t go to the library or attend Troy State because of his color. But on Saturday, people nodded their heads felt emo-
Alabama US Senator Doug Jones, Martin Luther King III, and Rep. Terry Sewell spoke during the service at Brown Chapel as well as
See VIVIAN page 9
LOCAL COVID-19
RESOURCES AND INFORMATION
See LEWIS page 2
CALIFORNIA STATE UNIVERSITY
sets ethnic studies requirement
– see pages 9 & 11
The change made amid the national reckoning over racism and police brutality will take effect in three years and represent the first change to the school’s general education curriculum in over 40 years.
COVID-19 CASES IN SOUTHEAST
Meanwhile, the state Legislature is considering a bill to require ethnic studies, a more narrowly focused proposal that wouldn’t count social justice classes. If passed and signed by the governor, the measure would overrule the action by California State University, a possible scenario denounced by school leaders as an intrusion into academia. The Assembly has to review minor amendments before the bill could be sent to Gov. Gavin Newsom.
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Source: County of San Diego a/o 7/28/20
By Cuneyt Dil Associated Press
Ethnic and social justice studies will join English and science courses as graduation requirements at California State University, after the Board of Trustees at the nation’s largest four-year public university system approved the idea Wednesday.
The plan approved by California State University trustees allows students to choose from a wider array of ethnic studies topics to fulfill the course requirement than the Legislature’s bill. It lets students take courses on social justice that explore issues such as the criminal justice system and public health disparities. “It’s grounded in ethnic studies, but it is broader, more inclusive, gives students choice,’’ Chancellor Timothy White said before voting in favor of the change. Assemblywoman Shirley Weber, a San Diego Democrat and former professor, authored the Legislature’s bill. While trustees and legisSee CSU page 2
STAY TUNED:
See our next issue for Part 2 By Trevor Coleman and Trevor W. Coleman II Michigan Chronicle
For more than 50 years the McDonald’s Corporation took pride in branding itself as a socially conscious corporation particularly interested in doing business in abandoned and long-ignored Black communities while embracing racial diversity as a critical component of its corporate ethos. It is a philosophy that helped create a popular narrative and also focus on story that the Chicago-based company was a progressive business and a place where African Americans could grow, find mentors, promotions, and economic opportunity. However, that image was shattered this year in an explosive lawsuit brought by two African American female executives who claim that under new leadership the company not only deliberately divested from the Black community and businesses, but hurled racist, sexists insults at them including referring to the employees at “niggers” and “angry Black women.” Adding further injury to the grotesque insults, the women also claimed when they spoke up about such treatment they were demoted and the perpetrators were promoted. The shocking accusations have rocked the fast-food industry especially since McDonald’s has long projected itself as a leader in diversity initiatives and as an aggressive recruiter and developer of African American talent and entrepreneurs. See MCDONALD’S page 2