Texas Metro News 7-29-21

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T E X A S

MetroNews DELIVERING NEWS YOU NEED

• Vol. 9 • July 29 - Aug. 4, 2021

MY TRUTH By Cheryl Smith PUBLISHER

Feel good times I am so glad I had a few feel good moments and wanted to share them with you. June, which is always an exciting month, was especially exciting but challenging for me in 2021. My sorority sister (bka line sister), who pledged with me on the campus of Florida A&M University 43 years ago, got married. It was a joyous occasion as sisters from Florida, Georgia, Tennessee and Chicago gathered in Houston for the celebration. We even had Karaoke Night and you should have seen me as I did Al Green proud with “Let’s Stay Together!”

WWW.TEXASMETRONEWS.COM

The Celebration of Life Public Viewing: 9 a.m., July 31, followed by a family hour at 11 a.m. and the service at noon

The Vashti Murphy McKenzie Sanctuary of the Richard Allen Chapel at Paul Quinn College, 3837 Simpson Stuart Road, Dallas, Texas, 75241.

Dr. Stan McKenzie

GYM DREAMS

Grambling studies adding women's gymnastics team By Valerie Fields Hill News Editor

Grambling State University, the powerhouse historically Black college that once created the nation’s preeminent pipeline for African American male athletes from college to the NFL, has set its sights on a new goal: sending Black female gymnasts to elite competition, including the Olympics. Grambling athletic officials said Black women are woefully under-represented at all levels of gymnastics competition - high school, collegiate and Olympics levels. They aim to change that narrative.

Administrators at the 120-year-old public HBCU in rural North Louisiana said they will begin a feasibility study in September to create the nation’s first women’s gymnastics team at a historically Black college or university. “We’re going to study it aggressively,” said Dr. Trayveon Scott, Grambling’s incoming vice president for intercollegiate athletics. “We’re 100 percent committed to studying the possibility of it.” Dr. Scott made the statements this weekend as more than 200 Black girls and their parents, dozens of coaches and other clinicians flew See GYM DREAMS , page 10

Angela and Larry Pope

Congrats to Larry and Angela! There was also a meeting of the Black Press, Black Texas Legislators and the NAACP to discuss the 87th Legislative session that had just ended. The candid comments from legislators gave us food for thought and should have fueled many of us to move to action.

More than 200 gymnasts and parents gathered at Grambling State last weekend for the 5th Annual Brown Girls Do Gymnastics conference Credit: Carlton Hamlin, GSU

Staff Writer Cheryl with State Rep. Carl Sherman, Sr. in Houston

I then went to a wonderful Blackowned restaurant, Turkey Leg Hut, after visiting the impressive offices of the Houston Forward-Times. See MY TRUTH, page 6

By Sriya Reddy

Special to Texas Metro News

Jayla Ned was 18 years old when she found herself pregnant and sleeping on park benches. After two weeks of searching on library computers for a place to go, she stumbled upon Viola’s House, which took

her in that same day. Now, at 20 years old, she has a job and her own place where she can support her two children. She attributes her success to the time she spent at Viola’s House. In a dark grey dwelling situated behind Cornerstone Baptist Church, VioSee VIOLA’S HOUSE, page 7

Highly regarded businessman transitions By Amore

When there were discussions about business and the Black communities of Tarrant County, Devoyd Jennings, President and CEO of the Fort Worth Metropolitan

Visitation Friday, July 30 6-8p.m. Emerald Hills Funeral Home 500 Kennedale Sublett Rd. Kennedale, TX 76060

Black Chamber of Commerce (FWMBCC), was at the center of those conversations

By Norma Adams-Wade

In part II here, we discuss what happened concerning desegregation at SMU after the first five Black Perkins School of Theology students integrated the campus in 1952 then graduated in 1955?

This story, originally published in The Dallas Morning News, is reprinted as part of a collaborative partnership between The Dallas Morning News and Texas Metro News. The partnership seeks to boost coverage of Dallas’ communities of color, particularly in southern Dallas.

Credit: Brandon Wade / Special Contributor

I WAS JUST THINKING...

SMU Perkins five Black trailblazers changed face of campus

Viola’s House, ‘a sanctuary for young moms’ grew out of one woman’s experience Founder and executive director of Viola’s House, Thana Simmons, poses for a photo at the maternity home in Dallas.

more on www.texasmetronews.com

Homegoing Service Saturday, July 31 10a St. Vincent's De Paul Catholic Church 5819 W. Pleasant Ridge Rd., Arlington, TX 76016

for decades. He died early Saturday. See BUSINESSMAN, page 2

Devoyd Jennings

Anga Sanders Credit: Twitter

In 2013, Scott Alan Cashion was a candidate for the Doctor of Philosophy degree in History at the University of Arkansas at Fayetteville. His doctoral research gives a fairly clear view of how SMU’s “lily-white” walls came down during the 1950s to 1970s when the school began to be more visibly integrated. Here are some highlights of subsequent years gleaned from Cashion’s research: • 1955. The year that the first five Black students graduated from Perkins. They were John Elliot, James Hawkins, James Lyles, Negail Riley, and A. Cecil Williams as chronicled in Part I. That same year, trustees agreed to admit “qualified” Black students to evening classes at SMU’s Dedman School of Law. Ruby Braden Curl, who was about age 30-ish and had been a Dallas public elementary school teacher for about nine See THINKING, page 13


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