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September 22 - 28, 2022
VOL. 71, No. 38
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‘Swerve the Purge’ powers voterregistration push by Dr. Sybil C. Mitchell
Special to The New Tri-State Defender
The narrative that student athletes (or for that matter, just students) shouldn’t overlook LeMoyne-Owen as a place where they can excel has helped the tiny college in South Memphis attract some big names as coaches. (Photo: Gary S. Whitlow/GSW Enterprises/The New Tri-State Defender)
At LeMoyne-Owen, coaches sport outreach to extend Magicians’ brand
by Lee Eric Smith lesmith@tsdmemphis.com
As a track star at Melrose High School in the 1980s, Rochelle Stevens had athletic scholarship offers from multiple big-name colleges and universities. Given her talent, she may well have won Olympic Gold anywhere she laced up her cleats. But Stevens chose to lace ‘em up at Morgan State University, an HBCU. And now, as head coach of LeMoyne-Owen College’s
rebooted track and field team, she’s asking a new generation of track stars to make the same choice she did: Choose an HBCU — specifically, of course, LeMoyne-Owen. “I am so excited to be able to give back to the community on a larger scale,” Stevens said at her introductory press conference in October 2021. “I am looking for the diamond in the rough for LeMoyne-Owen College.” It’s a full-circle metaphor that’s not lost on LOC Athletic Director William Anderson. “Being a former HBCU athlete, a lot of people don’t tell that part of her story,” An-
derson said. “She did what a lot of kids are talking about doing now (in choosing an HBCU). She did that when it was unpopular, and still was able to be one of the best at her sport.” That narrative — that student athletes (or for that matter, just students) shouldn’t overlook LeMoyne-Owen as a place where they can excel — has helped the tiny college in South Memphis attract some big names as coaches.
SEE LOC ON PAGE 2
Catching up with Sable Otey
Bobsledder, businesswoman, mom, wife… by Candace A. Gray
Special to The New Tri-State Defender
You might recall a story a few years back about the first African-American woman and mother from Memphis who was on the USA Bob-sledding team. Sable Otey was and still is a real American Hero(ine). Only now she’s on a different team, playing a different game but the strategy and mindset are the same: Work hard and push your way to greatness. The wife, mother of three, and entrepreneur hung up her bobsled suit after a not-so-great finish at the 2018 Winter Olympic games and returned to Memphis to finish out the school year as a physical education (PE) teacher at Lowrance Elementary.
“She was an amazing teacher,” said Kelvin Bates, Lowrance principal. “We were so sad to see her go, but it was clear she had a purpose to fulfill beyond our four walls and so we let her go knowing she’d do amazing work in our community.” Otey said Bates was extremely supportive of her and her Olympic career, even saving her spot when she returned and providing space for her to conduct community workshops, even after she transitioned from teaching back into her family business. Otey and her husband of 17 years, Rueben, had started a business, Making Multi-Millionaires, or the Triple M Agency, in 2016 that she was remotely involved in until after her
SEE OTEY ON PAGE 2
Once a member of the USA Olympic Bobsled team, Otey is now using her “superpowers” to help people gain financial stability and wealth. (Courtesy phots)
The race to November kicked into overdrive Tuesday (Sept. 20) as the Shelby County Voter Alliance (SCVA) staged a massive voter registration event in South Memphis. Tuesday was National Voter Registration Day, and SCVA swept through the community surrounding Jesse Turner Park with canvassing teams and voter registration forms. Hundreds of contacts were made as Memphis Artists For Change teams educated voters about the electoral process. “Memphis Artists For Change is a part of the Shelby County Voter Shelby County voters who are not registered. Some have been purged and don’t know they are no longer on the rolls. There are expungement issues, and we have a process in place. We want everyone to exercise their voting power,” said Ian Randolph, a SCVA representative. As canvassing teams returned to their 1310 S. Bellevue Blvd., headquarters, the park filled with families from the neighborhood. A raised DJ’s platform blared out familiar old school hits and rap favorites. Young men showcased their best moves on the basketball court, and there was food enough to feed an army. “The reason it looks like a family reunion, or a block party of neighbors is because that’s exactly what it is,” said Tameka Green, executive director of Memphis Artists For Change. “We are a community, and we like to commune. You just can’t go into a place and talk about voter registration or anything else without communing with people first.” Tuesday’s “Swerve the Purge” event was a part of a week-long schedule of events by Memphis Artists for Change, from Monday, Sept. 19, to Saturday, Sept. 24. “We wanted to get more involved in helping people register to vote,” said Green. “More than 100,000 people have been purged from the voting rolls, and many of them don’t even know. So, we are encouraging everyone to check their voting status online and make sure it’s still active.” As of July 1, there were 583,829 total voters in Shelby County; 547,829 were listed as active, according to Shelby County Election Commission data. Some 28 percent are Black, and some 19 percent are white, according to the information on voter registration forms. Voters in Tennessee are not required to identify their race. Green said canvassers found residents in South Memphis who want to vote, but said their criminal record made them ineligible to vote. “That’s where voter education
SEE VOTE ON PAGE 2
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