VOL. 62, No. 35
August 29 - September 4, 2013
www.tsdmemphis.com
75 Cents
‘Because they marched…
March event gives TSD freelancer shot at history Special to The New Tri-State Defender
by George Tillman Jr.
TSD launches 2013 Best in Black Awards Year two of the online poll and awards event
It’s that time. The questions are once again being asked. Who has the best hot wings in Memphis? What about soul food? What is the best barbershop in Memphis? Who’s the best hip-hop artist? Best choir? Youth entrepreneur? How about beauty salon? What nail salon tops all others? The second annual Best In Black Awards hosted by The New Tri-State Defender will shine a light upon some of the best African-American businesses, community organizations and entrepreneurs in the Mid-South. TSD Publisher and President Bernal E. Smith II said the BIB Awards celebrate African-American owned and supported businesses in the Mid-South, serving as a marketing and recognition platform for those same companies while ultimately encouraging the community’s next generation of business leaders. The BIB Awards will also give the community a true voice in identifying and elevating those businesses most deserving of the community’s support. “It’s a creative way to poll the community about the individuals businesses and organizations that they most support while identifying those with the best brands and reputations,” said Smith. The www.bestinblackawards.com
President Barack Obama and first lady Michelle Obama wave to the large crowd on the National Mall on the 50th anniversary of the March on Washington on Wednesday (Aug. 28). (Pete Souza/The White House)
…America changed’ CNN
by Kevin Liptak WASHINGTON – Heralding the long fight toward racial equality that many say hasn’t ended, President Barack Obama commemorated the 50th anniversary of the Rev. Martin Luther King Jr.’s “I Have a Dream” speech Wednesday on the same steps the civil rights leader spoke from half a century ago. “His words belong to the ages, possessing a power and prophecy unmatched in our time,” Obama told a diverse crowd that gathered under gray skies and intermittent drizzle to attend the hours-long ceremony. Dr. King, Obama said, “gave mighty voice to the quiet hopes of millions,” hailing leaders who braved intimidation and violence in their fight for equal rights. On that August day in 1963, when King and his fellow marchers attended what he labeled “the greatest demonstration for freedom in the history of our nation,” few in that crowd
• ‘Let Freedom Ring’ celebration sounds at City Hall. See page 2. • WLOK plans ‘Memphis Children’s March.’ See page 2. • 50 years later: What do we do NOW? See Opinion, page 4. • How will history judge the 2013 March on Washington? See page 4. • GOP critic should take a history lesson from Malcolm and Martin. See page 4. could have imagined that half a century later, an African-American president of the United States would mark the occasion with a speech in the same location. And during his remarks from the steps of the Lincoln Memorial, Obama cast his own election to the Oval Office as a consequence of persistence and courage from leaders
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SEE OBAMA ON PAGE 3
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Wharton visits White House for gun violence talks with Obama
SEE BEST ON PAGE 11
FRIDAY
such as King. “Because they kept marching, America changed,” Obama said. “Because they marched, city councils changed and state legislatures changed and Congress changed and, yes, eventually, the White House changed.” While other, negative changes have forestalled the push toward racial harmony, Obama stressed Wednesday that the work of civil rights leaders had permanently changed the discourse between races in America. “To dismiss the magnitude of this process, to suggest, as some sometimes do, that little has changed, that dishonors the courage and the sacrifice of those who paid the price to march in those years,” Obama said. Adopting words from another of King’s speeches, Obama declared that “The arc of the moral universe may bend toward justice, but it doesn’t bend on its own.” Leaders speaking at Wednesday’s
I boarded a flight early Friday morning (Aug. 23) headed to Washington, D.C. for the 50th Anniversary March on Washington. On the plane was Congressman Steve Cohen, the Rev. Samuel “Billy” Kyles, who knew Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. well, and Tonja Sesley Baymon, the programs director of the Memphis Urban League. Realizing that the March on Washington anniversary included the journey there, I went to work capturing images. We landed at Reagan National Airport about 11 a.m. (ET) and headed to baggage claim. I turned around and there was John Conyers, the Congressman from Michigan. I introduced myself and asked if I could get a photograph of him, along with an interview. He said, “Yes.” Now I was two for two. I jumped in my brother Joseph’s taxi and we went to Howard University to meet with Jefferi Lee, the head of the television station at the university. We talked about a future showing of the documentary, “Million Woman March: the March, the Impact, the Progress from 1997-2013.) The documentary, which I am making, will include footage and shots of the 50th Anniversary of the March on Washington. I left Howard University and went to scout the Lincoln Memorial. Crews were setting up last minute works and performing sound checks. I was thinking and seeing how I was going to get in and get the shots that I needed to get back to Memphis for the weekly news. That night before bed, I checked my equipment, film, SD cards, batteries, etc. About 5 Saturday morning, I headed into D.C. My brother dropped me off at the gate on Constitution Ave. All media had to report to the sign-in desk, where I picked up my yellow media badge, which gave me access to the media risers. That would be my jumping off point for even bet-
Special to The New Tri-State Defender
by Aisling Maki
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“He was just really engaged,” said Mayor A C Wharton Jr., speaking of President Obama, who presided over a gun violence discussion with various mayors at the White House on Tuesday. (White House photo)
Mayor A C Wharton Jr. was part of a select group of mayors invited to join President Barack Obama at the White House this week to discuss curbing youth violence. Wharton’s visit coincided with the 50th Anniversary of the historic 1963 March on Washington, where civil rights icon Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. delivered his “I Have a Dream” speech. Speaking about gun violence, Wharton said, “It’s really perplexing because Dr. King did not die for that; that was not the dream he had.” Wharton added that there’s much work to be done, “particularly when it comes to our youth, who are needlessly having their futures destroyed
before they have a chance to realize the American dream that Dr. King spoke of so eloquently.” Wharton has said his top priority is to end the cycle of violence and create safe and vibrant neighborhoods throughout Memphis. President Obama, he said, encouraged him to speak frankly and from the heart about his concerns surrounding youth violence during the hour-long Tuesday (Aug. 27) meeting, over which the president personally presided. “He was just really engaged – not from reading some position paper, but you could just see him speaking as a parent, as someone who lived in a large city, speaking of the troubles he’s had in life,” Wharton said. “It SEE VIOLENCE ON PAGE 11