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VOL. 69, No. 23
June 4 - 10, 2020
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Fed up in Memphis Dr. Ivy Taylor has taken the as president of Rust College, where she says upgrades to campus and technology are needed in midst of pandemic, social unrest. (Photo: Lee Eric Smith)
Rust College new president settles in amid uncertainty by Lee Eric Smith lesmith@tsdmemphis.com
Memphis-area protesters with varied backgrounds and interests have found common ground pushing for an end to police brutality wherever its ugliness surfaces. (Photo: Gary S. Whitlow/GSW Enterprises.)
‘Devastating to see it happen again’ George Floyd’s killing echoes in Memphis; fuels protests by Terrisa C. Mark Special to The New Tri-State Defender
After protesters had moved on, one family – the Webber family – remained at the courtyard of the National Civil Rights Museum last Saturday night. Their lingering was tethered to death of a family member killed in Memphis by U.S. Marshals a year ago. Brandon Webber was shot 16 times last June by Marshals, who said Webber posed a threat
when they tried serving him with a warrant. His father, Sonny Webber, said the police killing of George Floyd in Minneapolis had him reliving his own family nightmare. “Devastating to see it happen again in the way that it happened,” said Brandon Webber. Webber Although suffering, Webber felt compelled to show solidarity with protesters who have taken to the streets in protest as has been the case
in multiple cities throughout the country. “I can feel their family’s pain from losing a family member to people that are supposed to protect and serve,” he said. Sonny Webber was part of a Webber protest that began and ended at the site where Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. was assassinated in 1968, a year many are looking back to as a point of reference for the massive and ongoing demonstrations in re-
SEE UNREST ON PAGE 2
TSD EDITORIAL
Time to accelerate toward change! American Citizen George Floyd was killed 828 miles and about 13 hours from the historical marker in Memphis that notes Ida B. Wells’ passion to expose and eliminate lynching. The extreme, reckless disregard for his life warrants consideration of murder at the highest degree possible. Since Mr. Floyd was restrained to death by a Minneapolis, MN. police officer supported by silent partners, people have marched by, past and/or near the Wells marker at the intersection of Beale St. and Rufus Thomas Blvd. The offices of The New Tri-State Defender are within the block. Starting from where the horror of Mr. Floyd’s videotaped last moments of suffering found them, individuals – amid a viral pandemic – have chosen to take to the streets, registering righteous, yet-controlled indignation about that homicide and demanding systemic changes. Rightly so! People have a right to live free of the fear that enforcement of the law will be carried out by people who don’t know how to do – or won’t do – their jobs. No such bad apples are to be tolerated. The volume of violence and destruction
Ida B. Wells’ dogged pursuit of an end to lynching is sketched on both sides of this marker, which notes, in part, that she went about an aspect of her newspaper business in and around what now is the Beale St. Entertainment District. (Photo: Karanja A. Ajanaku) scarring a number of cities across America puts in context those far fewer instances of violence and destruction that have happened here. For those who have found themselves in
harm’s way, haunting experiences may linger. Going forward includes funneling to them any
SEE CHANGE ON PAGE 2
How does one go from being mayor of a major city to being president of a small HBCU in rural Mississippi? It’s a question Dr. Ivy Taylor has answered frequently since being tapped as the new president of Rust College in Holly Springs. Connecting the dots gets a lot simpler as the former mayor of San Antonio explains that a career in politics was never the endgame in the first place. “Once you run for office, once you get labeled a politician, people think that’s all you want to to do,” Taylor said in a TSD interview on her second day on the job. “I never aspired to actually serve in office. “I am an urban planner,” she continued. “My background is in city planning and community development. For many years, I was focused on making places better – how do we connect institutions to create places where people thrive? At a certain point, I realized it would be more effective to focus on people – and education is a way to do that.” At a glance, her resumé seems eclectic. But in many ways, it also seems tailored for her new role at Rust. Her work in planning should help the school upgrade and improve student housing. As mayor, Taylor developed executive experience and important relationships. And her doctoral work centered on how HBCUs and their boards navigate accreditation and the fiscal challenges so many black colleges face these days. “We believe the abilities she gained in nonprofit management and political leadership will be readily transferable to an academic setting,” said David Swinton, chair of Rust’s board of trustees, in a May statement. A native of Queens, N.Y., Taylor earned a degree in American Studies from Yale University in 1992, fol-
SEE TAYLOR ON PAGE 10