The New Tri-State Defender (October 15-21, 2020)

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VOL. 69, No. 42

October 15 - 21, 2020

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Waiting was a part of the process on Wednesday morning for those lined up to cast early-voting ballots at the precinct at Anointed Temple of Praise, 3939 Riverdale Rd. (Photo: Gary S. Whitlow/GSW Enterprises)

The lines tell the story: Early voting is here!

by Dr. Sybil C. Mitchell

Special to The New Tri-State Defender

As the early-voting period opened on Wednesday, Barbara Hampton was among the many who chose to exercise their civic duty and pushed forward to do so despite pandemic-singed circumstances. “It is my duty to vote. I came up here to Glenview earlier and the line was so long,” said Hampton. “I thought about a mail-in ballot, but

Meharry’s drug research, rising numbers and a testing appeal

Don’t get tricked – or intimidated – into giving away your vote PAGE 4

(President) Trump is trying to throw them out, and we’re trying to throw him out. “So, I thought I would try again this afternoon. The line was much shorter. I voted already, left, and brought my mom back. She’s inside voting now.” Long lines and packed parking lots in mul-

tiple locations pointed toward more than business as usual for a first day of early voting. According to Suzanne Thompson, spokesperson for the Election Commission, a poll worker at Anointed Temple of Praise (ATOP) in the Hickory Hill community reported that one of the first voters at the precinct declared that she had arrived at 3 a.m. to secure a place at the front of the line. “This morning, we also received word that a 90-year-old, first-time voter was so happy

COVID-19 UPDATE:

SEE VOTE ON PAGE 9

Push intensifies to free Pervis Payne as execution looms by Dr. Sybil C. Mitchell

Special to The New Tri-State Defender

by Dr. Sybil C. Mitchell

Special to The New Tri-State Defender

Meharry Medical College is on the verge of producing innovative, game-changing therapeutic drugs that could stem the tide of COVID-19’s rampant spread, according to the college’s researcher-in-chief. Dr. James E. K. Hildreth, president and CEO of the largest private, historically black healthcare institution, said Meharry is among those research colleges and universities leading in the race to discover medical breakthroughs to fight COVID-19. “We are developing therapeutic drugs which will block the replication of the virus,” said Hildreth. “Also, one of our surgeons is developing a novel ventilator to deal with the shortage of ventilators.” With a national COVID-19 death toll exceeding 219,000, Meharry’s developments is welcome news as a second wave of infections surges across the nation. Although Hildreth declined to say when exactly the treatments would be available for public use, they are expected to be accessible before a safe and effective virus vaccine is ready. In a COVID-19 update for the Nashville-Davidson County metro area, Hildreth warned that a study conducted by the University of

about getting the opportunity to vote that she was dancing right there inside that voting location,” Thompson said. Another voter, according to Thompson, “happily shared” that he had waited in line for three hours. Twenty-six locations were open throughout the county and wait times were much shorter at many of them, officials reported.

Dr. James E. K. Hildreth, president/CEO of Meharry Medical College, talks with workers engaged in testing for COVID-19. (Courtesy photo) Florida proves that the coronavirus is not only airborne, but particles of the virus can remain on a surface over the course of an entire day. “Four out of five infected people are infected by those who have no symptoms, and the virus can stay on a surface for a day,” Hildreth said. “That is why wearing masks in public, washing hands frequently and social distancing are so important.” Shelby County Health Department Medical Director Dr. Bruce Randolph again touted the same measures to combat the rising numbers of new COVID-19 cases in Shelby County. Monday’s positives totaled 347 reported from tests administered from Oct. 7-10. The Health Department Wednesday (Oct. 14) morning reported 144 new cases of the

novel coronavirus. That brings the cumulative total of COVID-19 cases in the county to 33,625. Also Wednesday, the Health Department reported two new COVID-19 related deaths; 539 people in Shelby County have died from complications caused by the virus. “We’re getting calls all the time that limited-service restaurants and other establishments are not complying with the directives for everyone to wear masks in public and social distance six feet,” Randolph said. “It is little wonder that new cases are rising.” Meharry’s Hildreth warned that moving into this winter’s surge of new cases, it is unsafe to send children back to school at this time as dis-

SEE COVID-19 ON PAGE 2

Pervis Payne, 53, has been housed on Tennessee’s death row for 33 years. Execution is set for Thursday, Dec. 3, 2020. But a growing coalition of legal allies and organizations are pushing for Gov. Bill Lee to free Payne, who has professed his innocence from the first. And the prospects of full exoneration have supporters feeling “very optimistic.” Federal defense attorney Kelley Henry recently got approval to have evidence tested for DNA. She has teamed up with the Innocence Project in Nashville. “Mr. Payne’s case is tailor-made for the governor’s intervention,” said Henry. “You have an Pervis intellectually disabled man Payne who is unable to assist in his own defense. There are openly racial overtones in the case, and systemic racial aspects imposed and perpetuated by the attorney general’s office.” Payne’s younger sister, Rolanda Holman, was 13 when Pervis “went away.” Her mother, Bernice Payne, who lost her battle with cancer

SEE PAYNE ON PAGE 2


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