May 28 - June 3, 2015
VOL. 64, No. 20
www.tsdmemphis.com
75 Cents
Ready to serve Southwest Board of Regents names Dr. Tracy D. Hall president by Karanja A. Ajanaku Kajanaku@tsdmemphis.com
Dr. Tracy D. Hall
Dr. Tracy D. Hall now has the best opportunity she has experienced up to this point to act on her strongly held belief about the value of “quality, affordable education” to a community. On Wednesday, the Tennessee Board of Regents approved TBR Chancellor John Morgan’s recommendation that Hall succeed Nate Essex as president of Southwest Ten-
nessee Community College, the largest community college in the state. Essex’s retirement is effective June 30. “I believe that access to a quality, affordable education is critical to the economic survival and development of communities,” said Hall in her application seeking the Southwest presidency. “As such, I have dedicated my career to working exclusively at urban colleges and believe fervently in the potential of all people.” Hall earned a doctorate from the
University of Missouri-Columbia in educational leadership and policy analysis, a master’s degree from Wichita State University and a bachelor’s degree from the University of Missouri-St. Louis. She emerged from a field of 65 applicants and four finalists who visited Southwest late last month. Her first day as Southwest president will be July 13. “We are fortunate to have Dr. Hall join the Tennessee Board of Regents,” said Morgan. “We expect she will be the right leader at the
right time to help address the unique opportunities at Southwest. Her credentials are excellent, and her experience in engaging all constituents and building a strong, successful and collaborative team while recognizing unique strengths and opportunities is the right fit.” Hall has served as vice president for academic affairs at St. Louis Community College-Forest Park since 2011. Her responsibilities SEE HALL ON PAGE 3
Exploring hip-hop culture ‘Pedagogy, community action and identity’ by Brittney Gathen
Special to The New Tri-State Defender
From being associated with criminality to being blamed for the decline of Christianity in America, hip-hop has gotten a bad rap. The desire to get at the truth of the genre was in full effect recently at Hattiloo Theatre. Hip-hop’s influence was probed during a panel discussion titled “Exploring Hip-Hop Culture: pedagogy, community acProbing panel tion and identidiscussion at ty.” The event was part of HipHattiloo Hop Appreciation Week, an annual celebration. Co-organizer Giovanni Dortch said the purpose was to showcase hip-hop as an art form. “We wanted to do something in Memphis because Memphis has a definite hip-hop community that is very vibrant and active and we wanted to honor that, as well as celebrate the music and the community,” Dortch said. “A lot of people are critical of hip-hop (and) a lot of people look at hip-hop as problematic. So what we wanted to do was show how throughout American culture, Memphis culture and African-American culture that hip-hop is an art form and it’s an actual culture; not just music.” Hip-Hop and criminality The panelists for the May 19 probe were: Dr. Zandria Robinson, assistant sociology professor at the University of Memphis; Alex Turley, vice president of real estate at the Henry Turley Company, vice president of retail services at CBRE and a local deejay; Andria Lisle, public relations manager for the Memphis Brooks Museum of Art and volunteer DJ for 89.9 WEVL FM; and C’beyohn, a local hip-hop artist and member of the Memphis and Shelby County Music commission. With local educator Jason “Da Hater” Harris as the moderator, the panel dove into hip-hop’s often asserted association with criminality. SEE HIP-HOP ON PAGE 3
MEMPHIS WEEKEND
FRIDAY
SATURDAY
SUNDAY
H-86o - L-70o
H-83o - L-69o
H-81o - L-67o
Thunderstorms Thunderstorms Thunderstorms
REGIONAL TEMPS LITTLE ROCK NASHVILLE JACKSON, MS
Friday Saturday Sunday H-86 L-70 H-83 L-68 H-81 L-65 H-86 L-65 H-85 L-67 H-83 L-66 H-87 L-67 H-87 L-67 H-87 L-68
A graceful exit for B.B. In the fitness of its form, the Beale Street farewell to Riley B. King, the “Beale Street Blues Boy” known as B.B., showed grace in its simplicity and sincerity. Those who knew him as family shared his last Beale Street ride with some who knew him as a friend and a mentor and a throng that thrilled to a talent-ladened career lived out in dignity. For a photographic tribute keepsake, see page 6. (Photo: Shirley Jackson)
‘I felt like nobody really recognized what we did’
Remembering the Memphis 13: Part 1 Special to The New Tri-State Defender
Historical markers taking note of the integration of elementary schools in Memphis will be dedicated at four sites on Oct. 3. The Shelby County Schools (SCS) board approved the dedications on Tuesday evening, clearing the way for a well-deserved honor for the Memphis 13, the group of students that stepped into the schools and ushered in change. On Oct. 3, it will be exactly half a century since the little warriors were sent to all-white Bruce, Gordon, Rozelle and Springdale elementary schools Four members of the Memphis 13 were given a standing ovation at Tuesday’s school board session, where a resolution approving the four markers was approved on the consent agenda after being read at the May 19 meeting. On dedication day, a ceremony will be held at each school site, with an escorted procession between ceremonies. The next step is to complete the text for the four markers. The Markers Committee will meet at 4:30 p.m. on Tuesday (June 2) at the Holiday Inn, 3700 Central Avenue. Daniel Kiel, producer of the “Memphis 13” documentary, will be in attendance. Shepherding the markers push through the SCS was the Rev. Dr. L. LaSimba Gray, the consistent force behind a text that puts the story of the Memphis 13 in context. Here are excerpts: “There was no collective agreement among the Memphis 13 to keep silent. “Still, the first-graders who were
(The New Tri-State Defender has partnered with The Urban Child Institute to make sure every child has the best chance for optimal brain development during the critical first three years of each child’s life. This is one in a series of stories and columns.)
WORDS MATTER: How speaking to babies affects development by Tarrin McGhee
Special to The New Tri-State Defender
Three members of the Memphis 13 and the mother of a fourth are framed in this photo taken after the passage Tuesday of a resolution granting permission to place historical markers at four Memphis elementary schools integrated in 1961. Pictured: front row (left to right): Romanita Morris, mother of Harry Williams, Jacquelyn Moore, Sheila Malone and Sharon Malone; second row (left to right): Daniel Kiel, Alvin Freeman, Supt. Dorsey Hopson, (Shelby County Historian) Jimmy Ogle and Dr. L. LaSimba Gray. (Courtesy photo) the first African-American students to be enrolled in all-white Memphis City Schools in 1961 grew up rarely, if ever, discussing the experience. “Not with their parents, their siblings, their spouses or children. They continued through school, never tell-
ing classmates or, later, colleagues at work about their sometimes painful memories. “Some say now they wish someone had asked them to talk about that SEE MEMPHIS 13 ON PAGE 2
This week I have the wonderful and rare opportunity of spending quality time with my newborn niece, Tyne. At only 9 days old and counting, we have already engaged in a significant amount of girl talk, with our conversations centering mainly on how beautiful, special and precious she is. With Tyne living in Texas and me in Tennessee, soon our faceto-face interactions will be few and far between. So during this time together I want to ensure that we talk often. Not only because I am simply ecstatic about her arrival, but also because I recognize that hearing language is valuable to her mental development. For babies and infants, the speech of their parents and caregivers is important. Even before a baby can talk back, the amount and type of words that she hears SEE WORDS ON PAGE 2