VOL. 63, No. 9
February 27 - March 5, 2014
President moves forward with My Brother’s Keeper initiative
Designed to help boys, young men of color kajanaku@tri-statedefender.com
by Karanja A. Ajanaku
President Barack Obama is taking action to launch My Brother’s Keeper – an initiative to help every boy and young man of color who is willing to do the hard work to get ahead. The White House announced late Wednesday that the President would unveil the initiative during an event in the East Room of the White House on Thursday (Feb. 27th) afternoon. It involves a partnership with foundations, businesses and others to make sure “that every young man of color who is willing to work hard and lift himself up has an opportunity to get ahead and reach his full potential.” Building on his Year of Action, the new initiative is pitched as another way the President will use his pen and his phone, involving both the private and public sectors, to expand opportunity for Americans. A fact sheet promoting the initiative notes that opportunity has lagged behind for boys and young men of color for decades. The President wants to build on work being done across the country as communities adopt approaches to help “put these boys and young men on the path to success. “We can learn from communities that are partnering with local businesses and foundations to connect these boys and young men to mentoring, support networks, and skills they need to find a good job or go to college and work their way up into the middle class,” the Obama Administration asserts in the release. The Administration pledges to do its part by helping to identify and promote programs that work. According to the White House, The President believes it is essential to ensure access to basic health, nutrition, and to high-quality early education to “get these kids reading and ready for school at the youngest age. But that’s not enough. “We need to partner with communities and police to reduce violence and make our classrooms and streets safer. And we need to help these young men stay in school and find a good job – so they have SEE BROTHERS ON PAGE 3
- INSIDE -
• Babies raising babies. See Opinion, page 4. • Children doing right at Black History Knowledge Bowl. See Community, page 11. • Grizz almost blow big lead against Lakers. See Sports, page 13.
James Johnson slams
MEMPHIS WEEKEND
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75 Cents
The MED evolves into Regional One Health Special to the New Tri-State Defender
by Dr. Sybil C. Mitchell The Regional Medical Center at Memphis, known for 30 years as The MED, passed quietly into the annals of Memphis history Wednesday with the unveiling of a new name – Regional One Health. CEO and President Reginald W. Coopwood took the wraps off the facility’s new logo and name change, already posted where The MED used to be. “When the Shelby County Health Care Corporation adopted the name Regional Medical Center in 1983, the organization was a stand-alone acute care hospital. Over the years, a broader reach of inpatient and outpatient services have been added, but we continued to be identified under the hospital name,” explained Coopwood, who is also an MD. “Creating the name Regional One Health allows us to unify all of our services under one brand to reflect the work we have done to grow our system and better serve this community.” Director of Communications Angie Golding said the move is a high-water mark in the life of the medical center. “We are all very excited about the name change and the forwardmoving direction of Regional One Health. We continue to strive for the highest standards of excellence in serving the medical needs of Shelby County and surrounding communities,” said Golding. “Our website has already been changed as well. It’s just a great time to be a part of the Greater Memphis area.” One of the newest innovations of Regional One Health opened its doors last October under the direction of Robert Farmer, clinical director of
New name reflects ʻmore than just a hospitalʼ
CEO and President Reginald W. Coopwood, MD, who has overseen The MEDʼs transition to fiscal stability, is the man in charge as it evolves into Regional One Health. (Courtesy photos)
A brief history...
The wrap was taken off of The MEDʼs new name Wednesday, revealing Regional One Health.
SEE HEALTH ON PAGE 2
LEGACY: THOMAS MAURICE SENGSTACKE PICOU
Black Press giant once owned the Tri-State Defender Special to the New Tri-State Defender
by Wiley Henry
One family name is synonymous with the Black Press in the United States: Sengstacke. Thomas Maurice Sengstacke Picou, the nephew of John H. Sengstacke, played an integral part in helping his uncle build a family of newspapers that included The Chicago Defender, the Michigan Chronicle in Detroit, the New Pittsburgh Courier, and the TriState Defender in Memphis. After Sengstacke’s death in 1997, Picou acquired the funding to purchase Sengstacke Enterprises. He gained control in 2003 and created Real Times, Inc., a holding company that owned the newspapers. He served as Real Times’ president, CEO and chairman and began rebuilding the brand to reflect the times. On Feb. 8th, Picou died following a medical procedure at Centennial Hospital Medical Center in Inglewood, Calif. He was 76. Picou learned the rudiments of journalism from Sengstacke. He took what he’d learned and added a personal touch to news reporting from a modern-day perspective. Those who knew Picou touted his skills in the newsroom, his keen knowledge of the industry, his commitment to the African-American community, his professionalism, and his business savvy. Robert A. Sengstacke, one of Sengstacke’s three sons, added “great” to describe his cousin’s skill set. “He was family,” said
Sengstacke, who’d served as TSD’s executive editor and regarded Picou as a brother. “He knew the business because we grew up in it. He was one of the best.” Picou was born in Los Angeles on Oct. 25, 1937, to Inez and Maurice Picou, who moved there from Louisiana. After the death of his mother, his aunt and uncle, Myrtle and John H. Sengstacke, sent for the teenage Picou to come live with them in Chicago. “Tommy made a difference in my life. My parents were his guardians. My dad loved him,” said Sengstacke, who recalls Picou working at a young age for The Chicago Defender, founded by Robert Sengstacke Abbott in 1905 and bequeathed to Abbott’s nephew, John Sengstacke. Robert Sengstacke achieved international acclaim as a photojournalist and documentary photographer, while Picou would eventually rise through the ranks to engineer the sale of Sengstacke Enterprises. Linda Dickson Sengstacke, who served as editor of the TSD in the 1970s and 80s, refers to Picou as her mentor. “Tommy taught me everything I know about the newspaper business,” she said. “He was a very dedicated newsman who could write a news story and people would really want to read it.” One of the lessons she’d learned from Picou manifested after he’d assigned her to write a story about police brutality in Memphis, she said.
1829 – Tennessee legislators appropriate $3,300 to open The Memphis Hospital. 1830 – Doors open primarily to sick travelers coming to town via the Mississippi River. 1832-35 – Extensive treatment of cholera epidemics throughout the city and state; A new medical education component was added. 1862 – Seized by federal troops as a Civil War hospital for wounded soldiers. 1866 – City of Memphis takes over operation of hospital 1936 – Theresa Gaston Mann donates $300,000, along with other SEE HISTORY ON PAGE 2
Trayvon Martin’s family attorney will speak at Memphis COGIC conference Special to The New Tri-State Defender
by Carlissa Shaw, ESQ.
“They were using flashlights to beat people,” said Sengstacke, the wife of Picou’s cousin, Herman Frederick Sengstacke. “He taught me how to write the story. As a result, the flashlights were taken away from the police officers following an investigation by the U.S. Justice Department.” Ethel Sengstacke also worked with Picou at the TSD, including her father, Whittier Sengstacke Sr., John Sengstacke’s brother and former TSD publisher. She learned a lot from Picou, even in her role as a photographer. “He took all of us under his wings and challenged us,” she said, recalling an assignment that her cousin sent her on with Linda Sengstacke to an eerie compound in the South Memphis community that was being bandied about as “Voodoo Village.” “A lot of people were talking about Voodoo Village and people were afraid. So he challenged us to go find out what Voodoo Village was all about,” said Sengstacke, assignment editor for News Channel 3 WREG-TV. “He was a gentle giant, but stern at the same time.” Picou would spend considerable time later on rebranding TSD, inSEE PICOU ON PAGE 3
Benjamin Crump, known to many as the attorney that represented the family of Trayvon Martin as they sought justice for his fatal shooting at the hands of George Zimmerman, will keynote The ConBenjamin ference on Family Crump 2014 in Memphis on Friday (Feb. 28th). Temple Church of God in Christ is hosting the three-day conference that will stretch through Sunday (March 2nd) at the church at 672 South Lauderdale. Attorney Crump will speak at 7 p.m. The goal of the conference is to bring people together in a common forum to discuss today’s problems and challenges of families, including how to deal with juvenile delinquency, aging parents, unwed mothers, and the social and emotional stresses of poverty. “The family is important to society at every level,” said Bishop David Hall Sr., pastor of Temple COGIC. “In the black community, family is under attack. Black people are having more and more babies out of wedlock and are burdened by other social problems and we as a church have to do something about this.” Crump, who is known for taking on cases with civil rights implications, will address the audience on violence in the African-American community and the effects of violence on the family. “We are killing the family with SEE TRAYVON ON PAGE 2