The New Tri-State Defender - August 18-24, 2022

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August 18 - 24, 2022

VOL. 71, No. 33

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Whitehaven loses ‘a wonderful friend’ with the killing of Dr. Yvonne D. Nelson by Dr. Sybil C. Mitchell

Special to The New Tri-State Defender

Immaculate Conception Cathedral School Principal Kadesha Gordon is excited to welcome the Wildcats back to the Pre-K–8th grade campus. (Photos: Gary S. Whitlow/GSW Enterprises/The New Tri-State Defender)

Immaculate Conception makes HERstory with Kadesha Gordon, first African-American principal

Memphis Police on Wednesday issued a second-degree murder warrant for Tifanee Wright, 32, who is a suspect in the fatal shooting of staunch Whitehaven neighborhood activist Dr. Yvonne D. Nelson. There had been speculation that Nelson may have been a carjacking victim. Police said, however, Dr. Nelson was shot during an argument about money. Officers were called to a shooting in the 5100 block of Yale Road just east of Covington Pike in Raleigh about 11 p.m. Aug. 13. Nelson was found dead, the result of multiple gunshot wounds. Dr. Yvonne Multiple witnesses told D. Nelson police a woman drove off in a late-model Infiniti, possibly belonging to Nelson. Photos of the suspect were immediately released from surveillance camera footage, which caught the altercation before Nelson was shot. Police said the assailant took the victim’s car. Nelson knew her assailant, police said.

SEE NELSON ON PAGE 2

by Candace Gray

Special to The New Tri-State Defender

This moment was 100 years in the making. Kadesha Gordon, an African-American woman and life-long Catholic, reared in the faith at St. Augustine Catholic Church in South Memphis, has found her way to Midtown. She is the new principal, and the first American American to hold the position, of Immaculate Conception Cathedral School (ICCS), a pre-K through eighth grade school. The school is on the campus of the Cathedral of the Immaculate Conception, the mother church of the Catholic Diocese of Memphis. “I have an immense sense of pride and responsibility…to my entire community,” said Gordon. “I don’t just need to be good at my job, but I need to GREAT. For those who are looking at me. The parents, children, culture. There is pressure but I welcome it! I’m ready to come to work and kill it every day.” Early on, Gordon showed educational aptitude through her work with children as a teen catechist at St. Augustine and believes it was always God’s will for her to be in this space. Bill Pettit, board chair for ICCS and IC deacon, agreed that Gordon is great for ICCS. “On behalf of the board, we gladly welcome Ms. Gordon as our new principal,” said Pettit. “She brings a strong sense of achievement, a great can-do attitude, and a love of children to ICCS. She will help our students become the great thinkers of tomorrow. We look forward to great years ahead with Ms. Gordon and her staff.” Having taught for 12 years in public, private and charter schools, and entering her 13th year as a first-time principal, Gordon couldn’t pinpoint just one person or experience that prepared her for this significant role. “I gained so much wisdom from my years in the classroom and learned how to treat people – the most important piece,” said Gordon. “My mentors, students, my own children, faith, morals, my

SEE GORDON ON PAGE 2

Tackling blight to ‘build a better Memphis’ by Erica R. Williams

Special to The New Tri-State Defender

Gordon reflects on how her faith, her love for educating children and her Catholic upbringing shaped her for this moment.

Michael O. Harris, the new executive director of Blight Authority of Memphis has a vision to transform communities through redevelopment. Since announcing his new role on Aug. 3, Harris has spent much of his time strategizing how to conduct an audacious vision to “build a better Memphis.” By tackling the city’s decades-old blight issue, he hopes that more communities thrive. Blight Authority of Memphis (BAM), a quasi-governmental agency, was formed in 2015 by Memphis City Council to operate a local land bank Michael and “provide a tool to supO. Harris port economic revitalization through returning vacant, abandoned, and tax-delinquent properties to productive use,” according to the organization’s website. Harris wants to elevate BAM’s efforts by ac-

SEE BLIGHT ON PAGE 2

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