The New Tri-State Defender - September 7-13, 2023

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September 7 - 13, 2023

VOL. 72, No. 36

www.tsdmemphis.com

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U.S. Vice President Kamala Harris gestures as she speaks during an interview with the Associated Press on the sidelines of the Association of Southeast Asian Nations Summit in Jakarta, Indonesia on Wednesday (Sept. 6, 2023). (AP Photo: Dita Alangkara)

VP Harris says Trump shouldn’t be an exception for Jan. 6 accountability by Chris Megerian Fred Jones Jr., founder of the Southern Heritage Classic, acknowledged some “turbulence” in putting together this year’s cultural celebration. Memphis, he said, needs a successful event, adding, “That’s why I’m going at it as hard as I can.” (Courtesy photo)

This year’s ‘Classic’ yields another chapter about stepping up in crunch time

by Karanja A. Ajanaku kajanaku@tsdmemphis.com

An organization’s readiness for a much-anticipated event tends to show when crunch-time looms, especially when the unexpected pops up bearing its own deadlines. “With the Classic, you’ve got a whole bunch of those stories,” said Fred Jones Jr., founder of the Southern Heritage Classic Cultural Celebration, which will reverberate in Memphis for the 34th time on Sept. 7-9. “9-11, Katrina, weather-related stuff, the one we had to cancel because of the

lightening, then we had to cancel because of COVID,” said Jones. “I had to make a big decision two years ago to shut the Classic down. It wasn’t popular. Everybody was saying I was premature … that I had too much autonomy, that I needed to check with somebody. On the fourth day after it was over, they came back around because people around the world started shutting down. …” When it comes to such decisions, Jones is the trigger man. However, he does not operate in a vacuum. “You’ve got good, quality, dedicated

SEE CLASSIC ON PAGE 3

UAPB’s pride-seeking mission gets a ‘Classic’ opportunity. See Sports, Page 10. TSU’s Tigers ready to add a fresh win to their ‘Classic’ tradition. See Sports, Page 10. The Penny Hardaway Memphis District Golf Classic keeps growing. See Page 8.

The Associated Press

JAKARTA, Indonesia – Vice President Kamala Harris said Wednesday that those responsible for the effort to overturn the results of the 2020 presidential election and the ensuing violence at the U.S Capitol must be held accountable — even if that means Donald Trump. “Let the evidence, the facts, take it where it may,” Harris said in an interview with The Associated Press in Jakarta, Indonesia, where she was attending a regional summit, noting: “Everyone has their right to their day in court.” Federal prosecutors have indicted Trump, the front-runner for the 2024 Republican presidential nomination, for his efforts to cling to power in 2020. The former president also has been charged in Georgia in a scheme to subvert the will of voters who elected Democrat Joe Biden instead of giving Trump a second term. “I spent the majority of my career as a prosecutor,” said Harris, who served as California’s attorney general before moving to Washington as a U.S. senator. “I believe that people should be held accountable under the law. And when they break the law, there should be accountability.” The White House has been circumspect in addressing the issue of criminal charges against Trump, who has pleaded not guilty, to avoid any whiff of political meddling in the work of prosecutors, particularly as

SEE HARRIS ON PAGE 8

‘Tennessee Three’ Rep. Gloria Johnson launches 2024 Senate campaign by Kimberlee Kruesi and Jonathan Mattise Associated Press

Tennessee state Rep. Gloria Johnson, a Democrat who skyrocketed to national fame after surviving a Republican-led expulsion effort for participating in a gun control demonstration, on Tuesday formally announced that she’s running for U.S. Senate. Johnson, 61, is running for a seat currently held by Republican U.S. Sen. Marsha Blackburn, 71, who is seeking reelection in a state that has solely elected GOP statewide candidates for nearly two decades.

“Tennessee deserves better. Hardworking Tennessee families need someone who will fight for them and not just the billionaires and corporations and the wealthy and the well-connected,” Johnson said at a campaign stop in Nashville. She reiterated that stance during a campaign stop at the National Civil Rights Museum in Memphis on Tuesday evening. In April, just days after a school shooting that killed 6 people, Johnson joined fellow Democratic Reps. Justin Pearson (of Memphis) and Justin Jones (of Nashville) as they walked to the front of the state House floor with

SEE SENATE ON PAGE 2

Tennessee state Rep. Gloria Johnson (D-Knoxville) – one of the “Tennessee Three,” along with (l-r) Rep. Justin Pearson of Memphis and Rep. Justin Jones (D-Nashville), announced her candidacy for the U.S. Senate on Tuesday. In April, she joined Pearson and Jones at the National Civil Rights Museum in Memphis before the Shelby County County Commission sent Pearson back to Nashville to represent District 86 via an appointment pending a special election. On Tuesday evening, she was back in Memphis at the museum, one of several stops where she announced her Senate candidacy. (Photo: Gary S. Whitlow/GSW Enterprises/The New Tri-State Defender Archives)

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