6 20 2012

Page 1

VOL. 61, No. 24

June 14 - 20, 2012

www.tsdmemphis.com

75 Cents

Grizz sale no reason for alarm, says mayor

Get healthy...

Wharton reaches out to would-be new owner

The 2012 Community Health Fair and Family Fun Day sponsored by The New Tri-State Defender will take place Saturday, June 16, at the Juneteenth Festival in Douglass Park. See the Health Wise section for details on the health fair and more.

Special to The New Tri-State Defender

by Kelley Evans

History-making Tennessee state trooper dies

James A. Hall, 73, the first black ever selected to serve as a Tennessee State Trooper, passed away on June 9. Hall was hired on August 1, 1964 and sent to the Driver’s License Division, partly because it could not be determined how or when he would be assigned to duties as a road trooper. It was not until Oct. 1, 1965 that Commissioner Greg O’Rear made the monumental step toward diversity. Three black males, James Hall, Claude Johnson and John Grady were commissioned as state troopers. Because Johnson was processed first, he was long regarded as the first Black State Trooper. However, James Hall had been hired 14 months earlier and was forced to wait until “the time was right”. At the height of the civil rights movement, the three became not only the first black troopers in Tennessee, but the first in the South. Trooper Hall was assigned to the Nashville District and served with distinction before retiring in 1972. Grizzlies banners hang outside the FedExForum. Mayor A C Wharton Jr. said he sees no evidence the sale of the Grizzlies will move the team. (Photo by Brian Ramoly)

As elevator speeches go, Mayor A C Wharton Jr. has one ready and well-tested for the myriad Memphis Grizzlies fans who want to know his perspective on whether the team they have grown to love will stick around. The uneasiness about the future ratcheted up on Monday morning when fans woke up to news that Memphis Grizzlies owner Michael Heisley had reached a deal to sell the team to tech-business owner and “billionaire” Robert Pera for a reported $350 million. “We have every reason to believe and every confidence that they are going to stay here,” Wharton told The New Tri-State Defender on Wednesday afternoon. The transaction is pending approval by the NBA AC Board of Governors, antitrust clearance and other Wharton Jr. conditions. Across from the FedExForum, where the Grizz have established a formidable home-court presence, Wharton fielded more of the questions that have been directed his way since news of the pending sale surfaced. First he noted that the mindset of the Memphis populace as a whole has changed, with people generally tending to focus on “what’s possible, what we can do.” So with that context, Wharton said, “Everyone I have spoken with has said we can keep them (the Grizzlies) here. And they are taking so much heart out of the Oklahoma City Thunder. That’s a new team, that’s a small market area. So they are saying, ‘Gee whiz, look what’s happening with that young franchise. We’re older than them. So hey, we can keep them here.’” Wharton said he had reached out to the new prospective owner, with the expectation of talkSEE GRIZZ ON PAGE 2

Sexual health education – is MCS doing enough? The New Tri-State Defender

Fashion for less...

Money may be tight, but you can still look good if you shop economically smart – and with style. See page 8.

MEMPHIS WEEKEND

FRIDAY

SATURDAY

SUNDAY

H- 9 3o - L - 7 2o Su nny

H- 8 8o - L - 7 0o Mo st l y Sun ny

H- 8 8o - L - 6 9o S unn y

REGIONAL TEMPS LITTLE ROCK NASHVILLE JACKSON, MS

Friday H-93 L-72 H-91 L-69 H-89 L-69

Saturday H-88 L-69 H-89 L-67 H-87 L-66

Sunday H-89 L-70 H-89 L-67 H-89 L-66

The results of the 2011 Youth Risk Behavior Survey show that Memphis City Schools high school students are more likely to have had sexual experience, more likely to have had intercourse with four or more persons and less likely to have used birth control since the survey was last conducted in 2009. The survey – released this week – is a national school-based tool developed by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention and conducted by local education and health agencies. The 2011 survey information was gathered from students in grades 9-12 during October 2010 to December 2011. Shelby County Schools are not required to conduct the survey. The 2011 survey shows: 62.2 percent of Memphis City Schools students who completed the survey reported having had sexual intercourse, up slightly from 61.6 percent who reported ever having had sexual intercourse in 2009. A significant increase in the number of students who report having had sexual intercourse for the first time before age 13; 15.6 percent in 2011 over 12.1 percent in 2009; More students report never being taught about AIDS or HIV infection in school – 22.8 percent in 2011, over 20.6 percent in 2009;

Teen pregnancies, dangers on the rise. See Special Report, page 4.

Students are less likely to have used a condom during their last sexual intercourse – 27.9 percent in 2011, up from 27.6 in 2009. In a release about the survey, Planned Parenthood officials said results in Memphis essentially have been unchanged since 2003, meaning that “two entire classes of students have completed their high school years and graduated without any significant improvement in these sexual behaviors that put young people at risk of unplanned pregnancy and sexually transmitted infections.” Martavius Jones, a member of the Unified School Board and the Transition Planning Commission, called the statistics alarming. “We are concerned that many of our children do not get involved in the kinds of pursuits and extra-curricular activities – such as sports, music, drama and the creative arts – which channel their talent and energy into more productive endeavors,” said Jones. “As leaders of our school system, it is not lost on any of us that more effort to get our youngsters involved in such must be made. And clearly, SEE SEX ON PAGE 2

- INSIDE -

• Barack Obama is not the first ‘Black President.’ See Opinion, page 4.

• Lucy Shaw: ‘Stupid is what takes us into learning.’ See Religion, page 6.

• Bust A Move Monday – ‘We just keep doing what we’re doing!’ See Business, page 5.

• Boxing world stunned by Bradley-Pacquiao decision. See Sports, page 10.

Heritage Day…

The Rev. Samuel B. Kyles and Monumental Baptist Church celebrated Heritage Day on Sunday (June 10), with an eye toward getting more young people to learn and honor African-American history. See related photo on Religion, page 6. (Photo by Tyrone P. Easley)

Warning to churches: Change the way you do business Trice Edney News Wire

The head of a national AfricanAmerican bankers organization is warning that growing foreclosures upon churches across America indicate that houses of worship must quickly change the way they do business or possibly face a national crisis. “A trend in church foreclosures is causing national leaders representing African-American communities all over America to focus their attention on potential solutions to avert an impending crisis,” writes Michael Grant, president of the National Bankers Association in a three-page report, released exclusively to the Trice Edney News Wire. “With the advent of the megachurch as a phenomenon, church leaders are being forced to rethink

their growth strategies.” At least 138 church properties were sold by banks last year and about 270 around the nation since 2010, according to CoStar, a Washington, D.C.-based real estate information company. Ninety percent of the sales reportedly result from foreclosure. On March 6, Reuters reported, “Banks are foreclosing on America’s churches in record numbers as lenders increasingly lose patience with religious facilities that have defaulted on their mortgages, according to new data…The surge in church foreclosures represents a new wave of distressed property seizures triggered by the 2008 financial crash, analysts say, with SEE CHURCH ON PAGE 2


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