VOL. 61, No. 12
One Section/Inserts
March 15 - 21, 2012
www.tristatedefender.com
75 Cents
Voter ID law: To repeal or not to repeal Special to the Tri-State Defender
by Tony Jones
State Democratic Party leaders bent on reversing Tennessee’s three and one half month old Voter Photo ID law see more than a glimmer of hope for its repeal but say the public needs to get involved to reel in success. The Tennessee State House version of a repeal bill made it out of the State
and Local Government subcommittee on a 5-3 vote on Wednesday (March 14), setting up a likely date with the full committee next week. State Rep. Mike Turner (D-Nashville), the bill’s House sponsor, told The New TriState Defender that there is a real chance the Republican-dominated legislature could reverse itself. “There is significant bipartisan support building in the direction to reverse the law as it stands,” said
Turner. “What we are learning is that senior citizens, poor people, people in rural areas, handicapped people and more are being hurt and are going to be hurt in their attempts to exercise their rights, and I think the Republicans are beginning to hear the outcry. I think people are beginning to vote their conscious on the bill.” Still, Turner advises caution. “That does not mean it’s a done deal, but I do believe we have a real strong, sin-
Why every vote doesn’t count. See opinion, page 4.
cere chance and we are going to be working hard day and night try to reverse this law.” Even more caution is advanced by others who – although supportive of the law’s repeal – are concerned that those who need to get government-issued photo identification to be eligi-
ble to vote may delay, thinking the law will be stricken. Voter photo ID legislation and laws are fueling battles on multiple fronts. The U.S. Justice Department this week blocked a new law in Texas requiring voters to show a photo ID. The move was anchored in the Justice Department’s contention that the law SEE ID ON PAGE 2
Tyler Perry
Madea man Tyler Perry gets Orpheum starring role Special to the Tri-State Defender
by Tony Jones
You can just hear Madea now: “Go ‘head boy!” Tyler Perry – an international success as an actor, director, screen and playwright, producer, author, and songwriter – will be given a star on the Orpheum Theatre’s Sidewalk of Stars in front of the Orpheum Thursday (March 15) at 2 p.m. And unless you’ve been frozen in time for the last 10-plus years, you know that much of Perry’s success is linked to his signature character “Madea,” a wise-cracking, gun-toting grandmother. Madea is center stage in a series of plays – “Madea’s Family Reunion” (2002), “Madea’s Class Reunion” (2003) and “Madea Goes To Jail” (2005) – and set the stage for Perry’s jump to the big screen. The star unveiling is a promotion (As if any of Perry’s shows need additional promotion) for his latest play, “Madea Gets a Job,” running March 15-18. Madea couldn’t be boring if she was asleep. Yes, that’s my opinion. While Perry has his critics (Read: Spike Lee will not attend the star unveiling), there are many others of us who see in Perry’s work a mastery of common black folks’ thoughts, perceptions, hopes, dreams, fears, eccentricities, talents, stupidities, beauties, faith and joys – all wrapped up in characters like Madea and her cohorts. I dare anybody not to laugh while watching the scene in “Madea’s Family Reunion” when Jackie (D’Atra Hicks) and her husband Kevin (Terrell Philips) break it down! And there are dozens more Madea moments like that one that are cherished over and over in homes throughout the world. Perry’s name will be joining Broadway greats such as Yul Brynner, Carol Channing, Robert Goulet and Cary Grant on the sidewalk in front of the Orpheum.
MEMPHIS WEEKEND
FRIDAY
SATURDAY
SUNDAY
H- 8 2o - L - 6 2o I so . T-St orms
H- 7 9o - L - 6 2o P a r tl y C l ou dy
H- 8 0o - L - 6 3o Mo stl y Sun ny
REGIONAL TEMPS LITTLE ROCK NASHVILLE JACKSON, MS
Friday H-82 L-62 H-79 L-57 H-85 L-60
Saturday H-81 L-61 H-79 L-58 H-81 L-60
Sunday H-79 L-61 H-81 L-59 H-82 L-59
Beverly Barbee is treated to a shampoo at Kingdom Kreations Exclusive Day Spa and Salon. (Photo by Shirley Jackson)
Beauty reaches Beale Street ʻWe are the first hair salon to be on Beale Street.ʼ Special to the Tri-State Defender
by Carlee McCullough As a small child, hair infatuated Stephanie Chatman, owner and CEO of Kingdom Kreations Exclusive Day Spa and Salon, also known as KKSpalons. She long has had a passion to make everyone beautiful. So it was not surprising that when her tenth grade year approached, she enrolled in a
Masked misery…
The Grizz had the Lakers in a deep hole at the FedExForum on Tuesday night, but Kobe Bryant and L.A. dug their way out in a doubleovertime thriller. See Sports, page 16. (Photo by Warren Roseborough)
Memphis City Schools-sponsored technical program geared toward cosmetology. Licensed in 1992, Chatman began her climb up the entrepreneurial mountain in the beauty arena. After years of preparing herself to achieve her dream, she now is poised to create as many as 13 new jobs downtown. But as is often the case on the path to success, a curve ball entered the picture. On the eve of completing the paperwork for a loan, Chatman was informed that due to cutbacks in staffing at a governmental agency there was no one who could continue to assist her with the paperwork. Faced with the hurdles
that most entrepreneurs experience at least once or twice in their businesses, she is undeterred and absolutely determined to come up with the remaining capital. All business start-ups need some initial source of financing. Kingdom Kreations Exclusive Day Spa and Salon is no different. Chatman and her staff are reaching out to the Memphis community that they have been a part of since birth, asking others to invest back into local business. In the quest to fulfill the long-held dream of SEE SPA ON PAGE 2
WOMEN’S HISTORY MONTH
Living life with a whole heart Special to the Tri-State Defender
by Dr. Sybil C. Mitchell “I was in high school that day my mother went under the knife for open-heart surgery. I remember praying so hard for the Lord to keep my mother through the procedure. I knew she was not well, but it was only after the surgery when I saw the staples in her chest and tubes down her throat that I realized how close we had actually come to losing her. It was sobering, but God blessed her, and she is with us today. We are so grateful…” – Pastor Quinton Barlow – Faith Covenant Church Nov. 18, 1998, was a day, pretty much like any other day in the life of Linda Chism, a registered nurse at The Regional Medical Center at
Memphis. She was a 41-year-old medical professional working on her doctorate – ambitious, filled with vision, and seemingly a picture of health. She had been given a clean bill of health after a thorough physical exam four weeks prior. Nothing could have been further from the truth. “After arriving home from work, I began to feel sick, extremely sick to my stomach,” said Dr. Chism. “As the night wore on I got progressively worse. I was there at home with my son, Quinton, and one single symptom may have saved my life that night – I was vomiting violently, and there was just no relief from that sickness in my stomach. I knew something was very wrong. What, exactly, I had no idea. Emergency
- INSIDE -
SEE HEART ON PAGE 2
• Wrap your mind around this – Brain Awareness Night. See page 3.
• Don’t hate on the weight-loss pitchmen. See Religion, page 10.
• Oprah nets the Houstonfamily scoop. See Nation, page 6.
• For a fountain of youth, eat more fruit and vegetables. See Health, page 14.