VOL. 62, No. 37
September 12 - 18, 2013
Half-cent sales tax proposal gearing up
kajanaku@tri-statedefender
by Karanja A. Ajanaku
kajanaku@tri-statedefender.com
by Karanja A. Ajanaku
SEE TAX ON PAGE 2
- INSIDE -
• Jobs crisis: Could the GOP do better? See Opinion, page 4. • Stop worrying & walk fearlessly into your desire. See Religion, page 7. • Renaissance Business Center is a good bet. See Business, page 10.
Tyra Banks
• Tyra Banks dons whiteface for photo exhibition. See Entertainment, page 8.
MEMPHIS WEEKEND
FRIDAY
SATURDAY
SUNDAY
H- 8 5o - L - 5 4o P a r tl y C l oud y
H- 8 0o - L - 5 4o S unn y
H- 8 8o - L - 6 2o Mo stl y Sun ny
REGIONAL TEMPS LITTLE ROCK NASHVILLE JACKSON, MS
Friday H-90 L-60 H-82 L-49 H-92 L-62
Saturday H-85 L-59 H-78 L-55 H-90 L-61
Sunday H-91 L-66 H-86 L-62 H-92 L-66
75 Cents
Gift-bearing TSU president right at home in Memphis
NAACP backs pre-K funding
It’s a no-brainer that educating Memphis’ children should be one of the city’s greatest priorities, but some scratch their heads in doubt when talk turns to raising taxes to get that done. With that sentiment as a backdrop, supporters of a proposed half-cent sales tax increase to fund pre-kindergarten education are getting busy trying to drum up support. On Tuesday, the Rev. Keith Norman, president of the local NAACP, announced that the Memphis Branch backs the proposal. The announcement via a media release simply spread a position that Norman had made known in late August at the Children’s Museum of Memphis during a local group’s kickoff of what is being dubbed The Memphis Pre-K Initiative. Norman’s wife is a pre-k educator. “Early childhood education is an important civil rights issue and one of the NAACP’s “5 Game Changers for the 21st Century,” Norman said in the released statement. The pre-K Initiative is designed to be a citywide grassroots campaign. The goal is to “persuade every citizen that the proper funding of pre-kindergarten classes is critical, not only for each child’s academic success but also for the future success of the Memphis as it competes in a global economy.” Norman, senior pastor of First Baptist Church – Broad, is serving as a co-chair, with Kathy Buckman Gibson, chairman of Buckman Laboratories. If voters approve the proposed halfcent sales tax increase, which will be on the ballot this fall, it has been projected to generate about $47 million annually. About $30 million of that is being looked to as funding for prekindergarten classes for about 5,000 Memphis children 4 years of age who
www.tsdmemphis.com
TSU President Dr. Glenda Baskin Glover learned as a child the value of an expanded knowledge base. (Courtesy photo)
An achievement incentive to the tune of $3 million in scholarships was delivered to Memphis-area high school seniors on Wednesday courtesy of Tennessee State University and its first female president, Dr. Glenda Baskin Glover. A Memphis native, Dr. Glover unveiled the scholarships news during a special Presidential Scholarship reception at the Downtown Sheraton. “We look forward to providing access to college for prospective students that are committed to achievement in the classroom as evi-
denced by their academic credentials,” said Dr. Glover. Students receiving the scholarships will have a direct pipeline to the University, with funding for four years of their education. TSU’s Office of Admissions and Recruitment worked closely with high school counselors to identify high-achieving students to receive the scholarships based on grade point average and ACT/SAT test scores. Dr. Glover has a full slate of activities in Memphis this week associated with the 24th Annual Southern Heritage Classic football game between TSU and Jackson State University on Saturday. She took over as the eighth president of TSU earlier this year,
with inauguration activities scheduled for Oct 23-25. On Tuesday evening, Dr. Glover spoke with The New Tri-State Defender Executive Editor Karanja A. Ajanaku.
Karanja A. Ajanaku: Dr. Glover, please paint a picture of your childhood in Memphis and share how that picture affected your journey to becoming the eighth president of Tennessee State University. Dr. Glenda Baskin Glover: I started in South Memphis in the Weaver Rd. area … near Mitchell High School between Walker Homes and Boxtown. I SEE TSU ON PAGE 3
Ready, set, dominate! Keith Ellis Lee, a 2013 JSU Hall of Fame inductee
Special to The New Tri-State Defender from Jackson State University
Ron Cobbs, International Space Station Avionics Chief Engineer and TSU graduate, helped NASA engineers identify the cause of a serial interface issue with a spacesuit that malfunctioned during a spacewalk on July 16. (Courtesy photo)
NASA, we’ve got ‘ambiguities’ TSU-trained engineer helps solve spacesuit mystery TSU News Service
NASHVILLE – Teamwork does pay, even if you are not part of the team. Just be good at what you do. Ask Ron Cobbs, a NASA avionics chief engineer assigned to the International Space Station operations. His input has helped investigators trying to unravel the cause of a spacesuit malfunction during a recent spacewalk. “I personally am not part of the official Extravehicular Mobility Unit (space suit) investigation team that is looking into the suit anomaly,” said Cobb, a 1989 TSU graduate with a B.S. in Electrical Engineering. “ However, Cobbs said, since the problem appeared to
be electrical, he was asked to “look into” the situation. “I discovered that the problem was a systems problem relative to operational use of the serial port on the laptop side of the suit,” said Cobbs As a result, the procedures for the astronauts were rewritten and retested, and subsequently led to identifying the problem. “It worked,” Cobbs exclaimed to the excitement of his fellow engineers. It all started on July 16 when astronaut Luca Parmitano was doing a spacewalk outside the ISS when his suit malfunctioned, cutting short the spacewalk or extravehicular activity. Water used to cool the suit started to leak into his air ventilation system, causing the astronaut’s helmet to start filling with water. Crewmembers sent a short video describing the incident to ground SEE NASA ON PAGE 2
Keith Ellis Lee was a prominent member of the dominant Jackson State University men’s track and field team. From 1973 to 1978, Lee and his teammates all but ruled the track and field landscape in the Southwestern Athletic Conference. Next month, Lee, who later became a celebrated Air Force veteran, will be among 13 people inducted in the JSU Hall of Fame. From the moment he stepped onto the JSU campus, Lee was a fierce competitor and a winner. As a freshman, he advanced to the NAIA finals in the 880-yard dash, where he lowered his personal best time to 1:50.8. As a sophomore, he started running cross country, which helped him in track and field as he again lowered his 880 time (1:50.2). During his junior year, Lee was absolutely on fire. He went undefeated during the cross-country regular season, before winning the conference meet. When the indoor track season came around, he posted a time of 2:07.7 in the 1,000 yards – only 2 seconds off the then indoor record. Once again, he lowered his 880 time in outdoor track and field (1:49.4). He also set a Jackson State and SWAC record as he ran a 6.5-mile course in 33:33. The next year, Lee again went undefeated during the cross-country regular season. The 1978 season – his senior campaign – was the year of the “Big Seven” for JSU track and field. The Tigers won seven major meets, including indoor and outdoor nationals. Lee recorded another personal best in the 800 meters, posting a 1:47.2. He also recorded a time SEE JSU ON PAGE 2
‘Knowing…when to step down’ Ben Jealous resigns as NAACP president NNPA News Service
by Freddie Allen WASHINGTON– Five years ago, Benjamin Todd Jealous, president and CEO of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People, made two promises. The first was to the NAACP to help the organization get to the next level, revitalizing the mission and the relevancy of the storied civil rights group for the 21st century and old and new battles ahead. The second promise was to his then 3-year-old daughter that he would return to being a full-time daddy in five years. He says now is the time to keep that second promise. “Leadership involves knowing when to step up, and when to step down,” Jealous said Monday on a
telephone call with reporters. Looking back at his accomplishments, he mentioned how the annual revenue of the NAACP doubled from $23 million in 2007 to $46 million in 2012. Donors also increased from 16,000 to 132,000 over the same period. According to Jealous, the NAACP has more activists online (1.3 million) and on mobile devices (more than 430,000) than any other civil rights organization. “We’re not just more powerful and more effective and larger, we are also financially solvent and more sustainable,” Jealous said with pride. And many activists agree. Ron Daniels, president of the Institute of the Black World 21st Century, a group that works to build economic social and political power in black communities, said Jealous energized the NAACP by bringing a lot of young talented and gifted people on board. He also said Jealous highlighted
Benjamin Jealous, president and CEO of the NAACP, talks to young people during the 50th Anniversary “Let Freedom Ring” Commemoration Ceremony on August 28 in Washington, D.C. (Photo: Freddie Allen/NNPA) the issues of environmental justice, mass incarceration and the war on drugs. “(Jealous) uplifted these issues as being vitally important to healing and revitalizing sectors of Black America
moving forward,” said Daniels. “There is a way that people tend to stay in these positions for a very long time, five years is not a long time. SEE NAACP ON PAGE 2