The New Tri-State Defender - July 27-August 2, 2023

Page 1

Get TSD news, online anytime at TSDMemphis.com

July 27 - August 2, 2023

VOL. 72, No. 30

www.tsdmemphis.com

$1.00

Lasell University’s 10th president – Eric Turner – has deep Memphis roots By Jerome Wright jwright@tsdmemphis.com

New Lasell University President Eric Turner Eric Turner’s is the son of the late Jesse H. Turner Sr., the first African-American CPA in Tennessee, a former Shelby County Commissioner and the longtime president of the National NAACP. Jesse H. Turner Jr. succeeded his father as bank Tri-State Bank president in 1990 and served in that position until 2016. (Courtesy photo)

For years, former Memphian Eric Turner excelled in the world of finance, following a career choice that made his father, Jesse H. Turner Sr., and older brother, Jesse H. Turner Jr., household names among a host of Memphians. Now, Eric Turner finds himself on another career path – in academia. On April 10, he as elected as the 10th president of Lasell University in Newton, Massachusetts, a Boston suburb. He took office July 1. During a recent telephone interview while things still were being delivered to his new

office, Turner said he “was stepping into the shoes of 35 years of history,” a reference to the university’s previous two presidents: Thomas de Witt, who transformed Lasell from a two-year women’s institution with 200 to 300 students, which was close to closing, into a co-ed four-year university with 1,200 undergraduate students and 700 graduate students. And, Michael Alexander, who kept Lasell on the institution’s growth surge over his 16-year leadership tenure. Eric Turner’s father is the late Jesse H. Turner Sr., the first African-American CPA in Tennessee. The elder Turner, who died in 1989, was a long-time Shelby County Commissioner, and also served as the commission’s first Black

chairman. Turner Sr. served as treasurer of the National NAACP for years and was the long serving president of the historic Tri-State Bank, which provided crucial financial resources to help African-American churches, organizations and HBCU’s. Jesse H. Turner Jr. succeeded his father as bank president in 1990 and served in that position until 2016. Eric Turner graduated from Christian Brothers High School, which Jesse Jr. integrated in 1963 when the high school still was part of the then-Christian Brothers College campus.

SEE TURNER ON PAGE 2

City Council’s infrastructure spending brings scrutiny in the latest storm’s aftermath by James Coleman

Special to The New Tri-State Defender

On Monday the Memphis Veterans Affairs Medical Center was named the Lieutenant Colonel Luke Weathers Jr. VA Medical Center in honor of Tuskegee Airman Lieutenant Colonel Luke Weathers Jr. (Photos: Gary W. Whitlow/ GSW Enterprises/The New Tri-State Defender)

A son remembers his father’s Tuskegee Airmen legacy

by Karanja A. Ajanaku The New Tri-State Defender

Luke J. Weathers III is – for the record – the son of Lt. Col. Luke J. Weathers Jr., one of the famed Tuskegee Airman KP. He’s long been proud of his father and an event held in Downtown Memphis on Monday “means a lot to the family and to the community itself,” said Weathers. Last year, Congressman Steve Cohen (TN-9) introduced a bill to name the Memphis Veterans Affairs Medical Center for Lieutenant Colonel Luke Weathers Jr. “I think it’s something, looking back, if Dad were here, he would be very humble and probably overwhelmed that all this recognition’s being given to him and placed on him at this time,” said Weathers

Luke J. Weathers III of his late father “You got to remember when he was a Tuskegee Airman and the other airman that fought in World War II, they just wanted to serve the country. They want felt that they

were men just like the Caucasian soldiers were, and they had more to give than just cleaning little trains and being cooks and polishing boots.” Luke Joseph Weathers Jr. was born December 16, 1922, in Grenada, Miss.. At age five, he moved to Memphis, where he graduated from Booker T. Washington High School and later became an alumnus of Xavier University in New Orleans, La. Upon graduating, Weathers enlisted in one of the first training programs for African-American pilots, beginning his journey as a Tuskegee Airman. He flew the plane with the celebrated “Red Tails.” During World War II, Weathers Jr. was credited with shooting down German

SEE TUSKEGEE ON PAGE 2

With recent severe storms and long-term power outages as a backdrop, Memphis Memphis City Council members Tuesday (July 25) approved spending $22.6 million to fund numerous repairs and improvements to the city’s sewer and water drainage infrastructure. “Purely from a master planning perspective, these projects are coming to us to address mostly repetitive flooding issues, or just failing infrastructure. We have a large number of projects we need to move forward with, in regard to flooding,” said Robert Knecht, city of Memphis public works director. The repairs and upgrades include $8.7 million to refurbish failing sewer lines. Another $2.7 million will pay for the relocation of an existing drainage line under the Memphis Fire Department firehouse at Washington Avenue and Danny Thomas Boulevard. However, most of the investments will go towards easing flooding along roadways, which was a common complaint among council members. The expenses include citywide drainage repairs and for a new Bartlett Road bridge over Fletcher Creek, which both received $2 million. Memphis Area Transit Authority’s Innovation Corridor netted a $1.7 million investment for stormwater infrastructure. While another $1.45 million will fund pipe installation along flood-prone South Germantown Road. Other flood prone areas, such as those near railroad easements, are more challenging, Knecht said. Public works’ scope of improvement also is limited by the standard set by the drainage handled during “average storm.” The investments are mainly to allay longstanding problems. Yet, with the specter of climate change hovering over a spate of inclement weather – such as the July 19 storm that left

SEE COUNCIL ON PAGE 2

Get TSD News, announcements and special promotions in your email! visit TSDMemphis.com to sign up, or scan the code at right!


Turn static files into dynamic content formats.

Create a flipbook
Issuu converts static files into: digital portfolios, online yearbooks, online catalogs, digital photo albums and more. Sign up and create your flipbook.