Las Vegas Review-Journal

No rush to replace UNLV president

Chancellor says temporary leader will be chosen, COO hired

- By Natalie Bruzda and Meghin Delaney Las Vegas Review-journal

After the May commenceme­nt ceremonies end, and summer break comes and goes, UNLV students will probably return to campus in the fall without a president — temporary, or permanent.

There will at least be an officer-in-charge, said Thom Reilly, chancellor of the Nevada System of Higher Education, and possibly a chief operating officer in place by August, but he doesn’t want to rush the search for Len Jessup’s replacemen­t.

“I wouldn’t want to make a decision in the summer,” Reilly said. “I don’t want to have meetings without students there.”

But no matter who steps into the role, or other vacant educationa­l posts across the state, student success, big ideas and a broader vision are needed to move forward, education officials and community members say.

Vacant leadership posts

With Jessup’s announceme­nt, UNLV will join two other institutio­ns in NSHE — the College of Southern Nevada and Western Nevada College — that are without permanent leaders.

The news also comes at a time when CCSD is working to replace retiring Superinten­dent Pat Skorkowsky, who has battled with members of the district’s governing body. Trustees expect to name a new superinten­dent this month after a nationwide search.

The number of new faces at all levels of education in Nevada is one potential problem to add to a host of other woes in a state that lags behind a majority of the country in educationa­l rankings.

“I have valued the leadership provided by both Pat Skorkowsky and Len Jessup in leading the Clark County School District and UNLV, respective­ly,” Gov. Brian Sandoval said in a statement. “Pat and Len have been strong partners in moving public education in Southern Nevada forward, and I am confident that their successors will continue to build on the framework that is in place.”

Bridging the gap between K-12 and

JESSUP

and to remember that black Americans deserve a seat at the table in a country they helped build. And, of course, her faith.

“Not so much because he was a preacher, but because he lived it,” Bennett-haron said, “and he didn’t mind making the sacrifices for it.”

Now, 50 years after Martin Luther King Jr.’s assassinat­ion, Bennett-haron offered insight into her father’s role in helping bring King to Las Vegas and in civil rights in Southern Nevada.

During an interview inside the judge’s chambers in late March, Bennett-haron sat behind her desk, where a framed picture of her smiling father faced her.

“He’s a guy that I’m pretty proud of,” she said.

Bennett led the congregati­on at what is now Zion United Methodist Church for more than 40 years, turning it into a west Las Vegas institutio­n through his work as a pastor, assemblyma­n and chair of the local NAACP chapter.

Before coming to Las Vegas, Bennett joined the civil rights movement while a college student in Atlanta. His time in the movement helped ingrain his devotion to public service, which he practiced in the Las Vegas Valley when he became Zion’s preacher in 1960, Bennett-haron said.

Her father, a follower of King and his colleagues fighting for civil rights, worked to amplify the message that black people are worthy of participat­ing in the greater good of society.

In those days, individual­s involved in the movement often stayed at her house, she said.

“Our house was a revolving door for a whole lot of folks,” including civil rights leader Julian Bond, Bennett-haron said.

Her father’s devotion to King and the civil rights movement showed through his dedication to bettering the lives of Las Vegas’ black residents within and outside the confines of Zion, Bennett-haron said.

King’s speech

Many still revere Zion for its role, especially during the civil rights movement.

“That church was a great beacon of hope and light in the community,” said Ida Gaines, a former member of the congregati­on.

Gaines recalled singing as part of Zion’s choir during King’s speech at an NAACP banquet, one of two speeches he gave in Las Vegas.

Bennett helped influence King’s lone visit to Las Vegas and welcomed him upon his arrival, Bennett-haron said. He reached out to King, with whom he marched in the

1960s, through some prior relationsh­ips in Atlanta, she said.

Many white residents and those looking to preserve the status quo feared the civil rights leader’s visit, she said, as segregatio­n still permeated the city, limiting opportunit­ies for black residents.

“There was a lot of backlash, from what I understand,” Bennett-haron said.

But the sold-out banquet speech was largely uncontrove­rsial, she said. The visit raised the NAACP chapter’s profile in the community, which the chapter parlayed into more opportunit­ies to improve the lives of those within the black community, Bennett-haron said.

Her father, who died in July 2013, continued to strive to strengthen opportunit­ies for black residents, including pushing for the recruitmen­t of black educators and for investment in local black businesses.

‘The church is in your heart’

Last summer, Zion suffered a dramatic setback when a fire burned for nearly five hours at its location at 2108 Revere St.

The congregati­on has been working to create a new home since the June 6 fire gutted much of the church. Not all of the building was destroyed, but leaders are planning for a new building at the site, trustee chairman Charlie Blake said.

Church leaders hope to break ground on a “new Zion” for future generation­s by the summer’s end, Blake said.

“The building is a building. The church is in your heart,” he said.

Zion celebrated its 100th anniversar­y in November. But it didn’t move to the Revere Street location until the 1960s.

The church was founded in 1917 near Casino Center Boulevard and Ogden Avenue, where it hosted the city’s first black congregati­on and remained until 1945. In 1960, Bennett, who was 27 at the time, was recruited to be the pastor for Zion, then located near G Street and Washington Avenue.

Upon arrival, Bennett decided the congregati­on needed a larger building and to work toward financial self-sufficienc­y as a church and as individual­s, church historian Lucille Bryant said.

“We didn’t know God had sent us somebody,” Bryant said. “A man with a vision. A vision for the future.”

The congregati­on worked hard to raise money to buy land for the new Revere Street church, where the first service was held on Palm Sunday 1967, Bryant said. The new church included an educationa­l facility, a low-cost day care facility and a kitchen.

“He wanted Zion to serve the community, to be the community church,” Bennett-haron said of her father.

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Len Jessup

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