4 25 2012

Page 1

VOL. 61, No. 17

www.tristatedefender.com

April 19 - 25, 2012

75 Cents

State to parents: Get on your job! Special to the Tri-State Defender

by Tony Jones

Gov. Bill Haslam this week signed into law the first of two bills crafted to urge parents to get involved and stay engaged in their children’s school and education. Dubbed the “Parental Contract,” the new law encourages school districts to create contracts. The terms include the parents assuring that they are committed to getting their children to school on time, making

New center pitched to grow AfricanAmerican businesses

certain homework is done, attending parent-teacher conferences regularly and generally guiding their children in what it takes to obtain a real education. A second measure – “The Parental Report Card Bill” – is headed for legislative review. It would create a parental report card similar to a system used by many charter schools. The point is to link parents and their children in a mutually accountable process to further bolster family support for education. The new law calls for a process that has

been in place in Michigan since 2001. It is designed to inspire parents – and not scare them. Neither the new law nor the pending bill extends any right to state or local authorities to sanction, fine or penalize parents in any way, said the bill’s creator, Rep. Antonio Parkinson (D-98). “It’s simply to give the parents a basis to gauge their own behavior and realize what they need to do more of to help their kids do well in school,” said Parkinson. “It’s a voluntary effort, but I think it’s something

we need to create that ‘wraparound effect’ that too many kids are missing.” Statistics show that students who wind up in the pipeline to penal institutions or human services divisions tend to come from schools where parents are not involved enough, said Parkinson. “This is just one measure aimed at reversing that as much as we can.” If it becomes law, The Parental Report Card Bill would be for Frayser Elementary SEE PARENTS ON PAGE 8

“Trayvon is…saying, ‘Thank you’ ”

Rep. Antonio Parkinson

Special to the Tri-State Defender

by Tony Jones

Within the next two weeks, two people – one with the title of executive director and the other an administrative assistant – will begin walking in and out of a small-business incubator located downtown at 158 Madison. That’s where a Minority Business Development Agency center will be located when it comes online, which is projected to be by the middle of June. It will be the first such center that the U.S. Department of Commerce has authorized in the state. That future was shared with the public on Monday during a joint press conference structured by Congressman Steve Cohen and the locallybased Mid-South Minority Business Council Continuum (The MMBC Continuum), which operates the business incubator. Chosen to receive the Department of Commerce’s 2011 Advocate of the Year Award, MMBC will serve as a local clearinghouse, identifying potentially qualified businesses to access the federal process. One million dollars dispensed over four years will be funneled into the SEE BUSINESS ON PAGE 8

- INSIDE -

• Minister offers a spiritually based fitness program. See Business, page 6. • Aviation careers in sight for Wooddale’s ‘fly boys’ See Community, page 9. • Saxophonist Andrew Love had a positive spirit. See Entertainment, page 12.

Tracy Martin (left) and Sybrina Fulton, the parents of slain Florida teenager Trayvon Martin, address the media during the National Action Network Convention. (Photo by Freddie Allen)

‘Turn this moment into a movement’ NNPA Washington Correspondent

by Freddie Allen

WASHINGTON – It was a telephone call that Tracy Martin, father of the 17-year-old African American killed in Sanford, Fla. by neighborhood watch captain George Zimmerman, worried that he would never receive. Forty-five days after an unarmed Trayvon Martin had been killed while walking back to a home he was visit-

What a difference guns make. See page 3.

ing after purchasing a bag of Skittles and a can of Arizona iced tea, Special Prosecutor Angela Corey called to notify Trayvon’s parents that Zimmerman had finally been arrested and charged with second-degree murder. “I was very emotional when I got the call from Ms. Corey,” Tracy Martin recounted. “I feel like Trayvon is looking down on us and saying,

‘Thank you, dad.’” Martin reflected on that telephone call when he was interviewed earlier by Al Sharpton. The civil rights leader played that videotape Saturday (April 14), the last day of his National Action Network convention in the nation’s capital. Asked what she wants others to take away from the case, Trayvon’s mother, Sybrina Fulton, replied, “I hope that they remember that he was SEE TRAVON ON PAGE 2

Trayvon Martin

Farrakhan 101

Nation of Islam head keynotes LOCʼs Diversity Leadership Conference Special to the New Tri-State Defender,

by Kelvin Cowans Andrew Love

MEMPHIS WEEKEND

FRIDAY

SATURDAY

SUNDAY

H- 8 1o - L - 5 1o I so . T-St orms

H- 6 4o - L - 4 9o Sho wers

H- 6 9o - L - 4 9o Partl y Cl o udy

REGIONAL TEMPS LITTLE ROCK NASHVILLE JACKSON, MS

Friday H-77 L-48 H-80 L-55 H-81 L-55

Saturday H-66 L-49 H-71 L-50 H-66 L-53

Sunday H-74 L-51 H-69 L-43 H-69 L-50

Playoff form…

Defense-minded Tony Allen (9) and the Memphis Grizzlies rattled the New Orleans Hornets 103 to 91 at the FedExForum on Wednesday (April 18) night, clinching a return engagement with the NBA Playoffs. See Sports, page 15. (Photo by Warren Roseborough)

Wherever Minister Louis Farrakhan speaks, the setting itself offers lessons about differences in cultures and lifestyles. And so it was last Saturday (April 14) when the head of the Nation of Islam delivered a keynote address at Brownlee Hall/ Johnson Gymnasium, more commonly the venue of basketball games and graduation ceremonies for The LeMoyne-Owen College. His words bounced off the walls spilling out into the Memphis streets. “This is the first time that I have been invited to an all-black college and not only the Student Government Association welcome me in, but the president of the college actually welcomed me in also,” said Farrakhan. There was a line of at least ten Muslim men to pat you down upon entering the event. They asked that you hold all your valuables before

you as they searched for weapons. Upon entering the gym I noticed many guards with ear microphones communicating with each other for the safety of the head of the Nation of Islam. Minister Farrakhan has been to Memphis on numerous occasions. Early on, he referred to one of those times, thanking former Mayor Dr. Willie W. Herenton for once giving him the key to the city of Memphis. “Bro. Herenton told me that he was soon called to a meeting at The Peabody, where I’m staying with the other ducks, with some Jews of the Memphis community, who asked him to take the key back. Bro. Herenton told them no and I want you all to know that he is my friend and I will go to bat for him anywhere, including the jungles of East Asia to the ghettoes of America.” The crowd rose in applause, including local dignitaries such as City Councilwoman Wanda Halbert, County Commissioner Justin Ford and State Rep. G.A. Hardaway (DSEE FARRAKHAN ON PAGE 2


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