MORE THAN N.C.’S BBQ CAPFTAL Order a juicy helping of culture in Lexington/1 B MISSION TO HELP AFRICA’S CHILDREN Charlotte Eagles benefit kids in Uganda/1 C Patrick Daka and mates play Saturday Romance novelists spark in growing industry Charlotte author a o c ^ rt AITonya Washington A&E 1D Volume 31 No. 43 ^ ^ Mr l.il.ll..l,„l,l,„ll,ll,nl,l,„ll,ii |,|||,„|| Ill $1.00 The Voice of the Black Community Also serving Ca 28216 S8 PI James B. Duke Library 100 Beatties Ford fid Charlotte NC 28216-5302 Will Merchandise Mart deal close? Spies working overtime on rumored deals that haven’t gone down - yet. Page 3A No easy answers for unruly behavior Parents, young adults agree knowledge key to curbing violeme By Cheris F. Hodges chens.hodgej®fhecrior;oheposf.com For the second year in a row, there were more ejqjlosions after Charlotte’s July 4 - uptown fire works display than dialing it. Accordin.g to pohce, 24 people were arrested following the mdee after the Red, White and Boom! cel ebration at Central Piedmont Community College. The violence along TVyon Street left one person shot in the face. But vAiat’s at the root of the melee and how can a community reach kids? Nineteen-year-old Randall Henry said that once people reach a cer tain age, they’re lost. “They’re going to do what they do. Charlotte is crazy right now,” he said. Although Hemy didn’t go uptown for the fireworks, he looks like the images plastered on the news: a yoimg black man, twisted hair, dressed in a white tee shirt and oversized pants. That look, Henry said, causes him to get pulled over lay police and stared at as he walks through shoppir^ malls. But he insists he-- isn’t part of the problem. “They need to reach them at a younger age and the police are not going to help by throwing them in jail,” he said. Reachir^ kids before they’re on Tryon Street dashing with police or each other is what people who work with disadvantaged youth say is the only way to curb the tide of violaice. Lamont Goings, who works at the One Love Development group home in Gastonia said problems often start at home. ‘Lack of home training,” he said. “If ^u look back at some of these Idds’ homes, they probably don’t have their daddy involved and they’re just bdng raised by mom^v Parents, like Stephai Roj^t^, See PARENTS/2A PHOTOS/CUFUIS WILSON Operation Understanding participants Sam Aleinikoff, Marcus McNair, Melissa Fuller and Deborah Krat had a hands-on experience with exhibits at Levine Museum of the New South Tuesday. Black and Jewish students from Washington, D.C., are touring the Soutii to gain an understanding of relationships the civil rights era forged between the two groups. Let freedom ride Students find road to justice winds through the Carolinas By Erica Singleton FOR THE CHARLOTTE POST Valuable history lessons were taught in. Charlotte Tuesday A delegation of 32 black and Jewish high school students fibm Washington, D.C., on a month-long journey called Operation . Understandir^ D.C. The students, 16 Afiican- American and 16 Jews, and-four group leaders arrived in Charlotte after visiting New York City and Greensboro. They are on a civil rights sojourn that includes site visits to places of important to blacks and Jews and continuing the legacy of the Freedom Riders, young people who risked thdr lives to B.B. DeLaine, whose parents sued to deseg regate Clarendon County, S.C., schools in the 1950s, encouraged parficpants to challenge the status quo. desegregate interstate transportation in tlje 1960s. ' ■ * “I had heard of the Freedom Rides in school,, when we watched (the documentary) Lyes on the Prize,”’ said Sam Aleirukoff “I |on’t think the compar^n to them has i^te hit me yet. I know we jire creating change. We are trying make history” An understanding of Carolinas history -was ' Please see ROAD/7 A*. Economic gap widens by ethnicity By Lorinda M. Bullock NATIONAL NEWSPAPER PUBLISHERS ASSOCIATION WASHINGTON -AweakU.S. economy and a low unemploy ment rate over the last couple of years 'has started to erode the progress Black Americans have gained in income, and has further widened the income gap betwfeen Blacks and Whites, says a new report fium a Washington, D.C. think tank. The Economic Policy Institute’s “The State of Working America 2006/2007” says that in 2000, a Black family’s median income was ^3.5 percent of the earnings of their White counterparts. Panel focuses oh Flosenwald schools By Herbert L. White riert).vvH/te®(hecHar1offeposf.com The impact of Rosenwald sdiools on Carolinas educa tion will be the focus of a pand discussion Sunday The Levine Museeum of the New South will host author Peter Ascoli, author of “Julius Rosenwald” Sunday at 4 p.m. Ascoli, Rosenwald’s grandson, is a faculty member af Spertus Institute of Jewish Studies in Chicago. Panelsists indude Clover, S.C.., novelist dori Sanders, who was educated at a Rosenwald School near Rock Hill where her father was prindpal and George Wallace and Herm Zeigler, who partnered to.renovate a Rosenwald campus in Charlotte’s Billingsville nei^iborhood-; The collaboration between BiUmgsviUe’s all-bljick neighborhood organization and Zeigler’s synagogue is considered a national moM for preservation of Rosenwald schools. In the early 20th century more than 5,000 Rosenwald schools were built thiuugh- out the segregated South to educate black children who were barred by law fixim attending school with whites while some states didn’t provide public educa tion for blacksr Rosenwald, a Jewish philan thropist ’ and founder of the Sears Roebuck retail. empire, ofier^ grants to black neighbor hoods th^ could match his funds for construction. Admission is $4’ for museum mej^ bers, $6 for noh- members. For information and reservations, call (704) 333- 1887, extension 501. county reach accoid Gorman, Jones agree^on formula for school building By Erica Singleton FOR THE CHARLOTTE PbST . - Charlotte-Mecklenburg Schools Superintendent Peter (^rman ’ and Mecklenburg Coionty , Manager Harry Jones met I members of the media I Wednesday to answer any I questions regarding the I Building Solutions I Committee’s final report and I announced an operational ' covenant. On Thesday the school board voted to approve the BSC plan, which calls for using up to $172 million ia certificates of participation to address the district’s most critical needs. I “It wasn’t my plan, it wasn’t I my program that the board Gorpian approved last niglit,” Gorman said. “Thatnvas a program for the childr^. Figures show that the number dropped to 62 percent in 2004. Jared Bernstein, an economist, and author of the report, said, “That’s basically $37,000 versus $58,000, so it’s a significant gap.” Bemstoin said the late 1990s, with its robust job market, was an economically promising time Please see U.S./2A families and c6mmunity of .Charlotte-. Mecklenbyrg County’ Gorman, Jones, and Assistant’ Superint^dent Guy Chamberlain'said the plan will help the county keep up with grow ing enrollment. ‘You have to make sure you don’t let any one school decay or fall behind while you’re keeping up with growth,” Gorman said. ‘You have to h^ve a two-pronged attack.” The plan cSHs for a one-third/two-thirds mix: one-third renovations and two-thirds Please see COVENANT/3A •. ' ! h eb O X .NEWS, NOTES & TRENDS Heart-healthy solutions sought in Charlotte By Herbert L. White , herb.wH/feS’friechadQffeposf.com Is your heart in good hands? Physicians, cleigy and community leaders will meet Friday in Charlotte at a forum on cardiovascular disease among Afiican Americans. The meet ing will be held at the Marriott SoutiiPark at 6:30 p.m. as a joint effort .with the Association of Black Cardiologists. The focus will be on eliminating the risks of heart disease and stroke in Charlotte. ‘We are aU of one accord and in com plete support of each othea* in helping Please see HEARTI/6A Charlotte Black Gay Pride celebration reaches out, to - entire community in second year/ID Life IB Religion 4B Sports 1C Business 6C A&E ID . Classified 4D MSiDi To subscribe, call (704) 376-0496 or FAX (704) 342-2,160.® 2006 The Charlotte Post Publishing Co. Please Recycle o ©•Oi