SPENDING SPREE Poll: U S. teens know way too little about money and how it works/1 B TAKE A NUMBER Business considerations force romance to back burner for young adults/7C LONG ROAD BACK Iraq experience fuels Charlotte 49ers track standout /1C Brandon Wyatt was wounded in an ambush.. Volume 31 No. 30 $1.00 mte ci)arla% Boit The Voice of the Black Community iSSlBB 28216 510 PI B. Duke Library ig Beatties Ford fid l^'kr^./hiHotte NC 28216-530: if; Memo to CMS: Don’t ignore inner city By Herbert L. White herb.\vhite&thecharlonepost com Before Peter Gorman takes over as superintendent of Charlotte-Mecklenburg Schools, inner city advocates have a message; Don’t forget us. Gorman, who was picked Tuesday to lead the state’s biggest school .district, is super intendent in Tustin, Calif, which has an enrollment of 20,000 - one-sixth of CMS. “I ready don’t know” much about Gorman, said Richard .McElrath, a longtime sup porter of inner-city schools. ‘Tm going to hope and pray (for his success) because he’s got it. It was encouraging they did vote 8-0, but no mat ter how they did it, they unit ed behind him.” That’s the first of many hur dles Gorman, 42, faces in Charlotte-Mecklenburg. Saggii^ confidence in public school administration, ner vousness about overcrowding and leadership on a fi’actious Please See INNER/6A Lawmaker urged to chill on the rhetoric Capitol incident latest controversy for McKinney By Hazel Trice Edney NATIONAL SE\\'SPAPER PUBUSHERS ASSOCIAVON WASHINGTON - U.S. Rep. Cynthia McKinney (D-Ga.) is being advised to tone down her language by someone who knows her best - her fatiier. “After ad of this, I would probably give her the same advice that I gave her in the beginning,” say^ Bdly McKinney the Congresswoman’s father, a former police officer. “lb get aloi^ in America, in this society it might be better to go along and get along,” he said, repeating advice he’d given her when she first won election to the CJeorgia General Assembly in 1988. “I’m talking about not puttir^ yourself out because you won’t find that a whole lot of black people wid back you when you get out there,” McKinney says in an intei’view with the NNPA News Service. “I don’t think she’d ever be under stood by a segment of this coun try” And perhaps nor wid he. When she was defeated, he aeated a stir when he blamed Jews for her downfad. Controversy seems to be a dfe- stjde for McKinney In 2002, then five-term McKinney lost her seat after a string of controversies that included her accusation that the See MCKINNEY/3A McKinney LEGISLATIVE BLACK CAUCUS ASSOCIATED PRESS PHOTOA3ERRY BROOME N.C. Rep. Pete Cunningham (left) of Charlotte and House of Representatives Speaker Jim Black of Matthews answerquestions after approving astate budget last year. House members in the Legislative Black Caucus are supporting Black, who has been accused of breaking state campaign laws. Standing up for House speaker African American lawmakers solidly behind embattled ally By Herbert L. White herb.whi!e&ihechariottepostcom N.C- House Speaker Jim Black stdl has fiiends among Afiican American lawmakers. Black, who is under inves tigation for adeged violation of state campaign laws and is imder increasing pressure to resign, has the support of the N.C. Legislative Black Caucus. The caucus has 26 members - ad Democrats — including 19 in the House. “I don’t have any insight on Ihe future of things in the court, but in the caucus, we are solidly behind him,” said Rep. Beverly Earle of Charlotte, the caucus’ chair. Black, a Matthews optometrist, has drawn increasing criticism for dol ing out money for political adies, and fund raising tac tics. Four Democrats have publicly asked for his r^ig- nation., but none fi-om Mecklenburg. “Prom what I’m hearing, the (Democratic) caucus, with the exception of the ones who’ve been in the press, are behind him,” Earle said. Black’s relationship with Afiican American lawmak ers has been fiuitful during his tenure. Several hold high-ranking leadership See CAUCUS/2A Earle N.C. Rep Beverly Earle.backs House speaker. N.C.’s top principal leaves no child behind on her campus ml South meck HIGH SCI PHOTOAOURTIS WILSON South Mecklenburg High School principal Marian Yates is 2006 Wachovia princi pal of the year. Yates has been an educator for 37 years. By Eric Bozeman FOR THE CHARLOTTE POST South Mecklenburg High School principal Marian Yates is a nurturer. Growir^ up during an era of racial segregation, adults in Yates’ neighborhood looked after young people and encour aged them to excel. Yates, who was named Wachovia N.C. principal of tiie year last week, takes the same approach at South Mecklenburg, where she’s been principal for six years. “In the neighborhood I came up in everybody looked out for everybody it was truly a vidage, NFL Europe puts HBCU standouts’ pro football dreams on track/IC Jobs goneP Native-born blacks struggle to work as immigrants move in By M.L; Ingram THEPHILADIUJ^HIA TRIBUNE PHILADELPHIA - For blacks and Latinos, destinies in securing a place in America have been, in many ways, intertwined. But that view may unravel, as ciUTent trends show a wave of idegal immigration has helped push blacks down the hole, instead of out of it. In spite of pubHshed reports indicat ing increases in jobs and decreases in unemployment levds, blacks are stid struggling. With the nationwide unemployment rate dropping fium February’s rating of 4.8 percent, the number for black unemployment, skided or unskdled, remained at a cumulative 9.3 percent. Bernard Anderson, professor of eco nomics at the University of Pennsylvania, said numbers such as these should sound an alarm. “In the midst of a very conservative trend, jobs are up, but opportunities for blacks are diminishing,” said Please see BLACKS/3A and I think that’s one thing we’ve, truly lost as African Americans,” she said. “Our teachers always pushed us to be successful, they would ted us you’re goii^ to have to learn to work in two worlds, the one you were bom in and the one you’re going to have to work in.” “I felt it was my duty to give back, be the best and give back to help kids. I never want to for get fixDm whence I came and I share that with the students, because they think you became a teacher, you became a princi pal, you drive the car, tirey don’t think you had a life before See NC. PRINCIPAL^A the box NEWS, NOTES & TRENDS Tardy on taxes? Don’t sweat it By Eric Bozeman FOR THE CHARLOTTE POST Time wdl come and go for some at midnight on April 17, the dead line to file federal and state income taxes. Then what? Those who are late to file income taxes need not panic, just understand it’s something the government can work with them on. (jeorge Norwood of Web Tax in Charlotte stresses that late filers should be aware that creating a good paper trail is key “Wed of course accurate records wid always help because the state and the federal government can reach way back. The state is going back five year^ or more,” Norwood said. ‘Tf filers are gettii^ a refund, no problem, because you in effect have loaned the government money and they wdl in fact pay you some interest but it’s best to get everything done during the fil ing time so you don’t get caught short.” Along with arranging personal records, Norwood recommei^ to Please see LATE /8A 0®OEE INSIOi Life 1B Religion 5B Sports 1C Business 7C A&E ID Happenings 6C To subscribe, call (704) 376-0496 or FAX (704) 342-2160.© 2006 The Charlotte Post Publishing Co. Recycle o