ROCK TOO AGED? Drive on to preserve traditional gospel music's place in the Atrican American church/Religion 4B A look back at Charlotte Literary Festival A&E1D Volume 31 No. 48 Also serving Cab Mortgage trap for minority borrowers Study shows lenders most likely to approve high-rate deals for people of color By Herbert L. White herb. wn(fe®)rtechartorfeposf com Subprime loans can be haz ardous to your mortgage. A study commissioned by the Association of Community Oi^anizations for Reform Now found that borrowers of color are at greater risk of losing their homes to a disproportionately high share of subprime loans. The higher interest rates, cou pled with limited income, is more likely to lead to foreclosure. “Rate shock could mean a sharp increase in foreclosures in some of the urban and minority communities that most need to build wealth throu^ homeown- ership,” said Maude Hurd, acorn’s national president. “Tbo many of our neighbors are being steered into ARMs with out beit^ given an option for a fixed rate and without being given an explanation of the risks.” ACORN officials want federal banking regulators to require lenders to underwrite risky loans, such as interest-only and 3 see BLACKS/3A LIGHT RAIL TAKES TOLL ON COMMUNITY PHOTO/CUFITIS WILSON Barricades and construction equipment used to build Charlotte’s light rail now dominate Dewitt Road where Anita Zarey lives. Construction derails neighborhood Eminent domain means loss of yard, quiet By Erica Singleton FOR THE CHARLOTTE POST Anita Zarey is losir^ 25 percent of her yard, to make way for Charlotte’s light rail systom Under eminent domain, gov ernment can force the sale of or s^e private property for public use. The dty of Charlotte hasn’t forced the sale of her property or seized it. Instead they’ve daimed a section of her yard, her peace, and her privacy She’s suing to stop construction. “I don’t want everyone looking at me, like I’m on parade,” said Zarey, whose street is being widened and extended to accom- ^ modate a light rail station and a parking facility Aftd* hving 32 years on Dewitt Road off South Boulevard, Zarey said, “They’re opening a road that has been dosed for 50 years or so.” The road is being opened enough for a turn lane, and bike lanes. A median will be put in across fiom Zarey’s driveway, making it impossible to turn finm her regu- Please see LIGHT/3A Tapping into internet booze Little regulation gives teens easy access to alcohol/Page 1B Updated ‘doll test’ produces similar result Study: Black children still identify white as superior „l,||„i,„l,l,„ll.ll,„l,l,„ll,ll tnTMttmnS-DIGIT 28216 S9 PI James B. Duke Library 100 Beatties Ford Pd Charlotte NC 28216-5302 A united stetein American AIDS fight Black organizations pledge cooperation at international conference By Loiinda M. Bullock NAF/ONAL NEWSPAPER PUBUSHERS ASSOCIATION TORONTO - Americans gathered here on Monday to redaim blade America’s fii’eedom fixim the grips of AIDS. Repres^tatives finm business, politics, dvd ri^ts, the black church and other groups came together the 16th International AIDS Conference and signed the “National Call to Action and Dedaration of Commitment to End the AIDS Epidemic in Black America. ” Leaders fix)m organizations such as the NAACP, National Urban League, National Council of Negro Women pieced their ^p- ' port and resources to reverse the devastation in black America by promoting more testing and education about prevention as well as protectii^ the ri^ts of the infected. “AIDS in America today is a black disease no matter how you look at it. By gender, by sexual orientation, by age, by sodo-economic class or education or region in Ihe coimtry in which you live, black people bear the brunt of this epidemic,” said PhiU Wlson, founder and executive director of the Los Angeles- based Black AIDS Institute. The Black AIDS Institute is a non-profit policy group leading ih.e way in HIV educa tion and advocacy of black people fighting the disease in the U.S. The group was also responsible for Monday’s gathering of dele gates tiiat also induded NAACP Board Chairman Julian Bond, actress/AIDS acti.'vist Sherji Lee Ralph, filmmaker Bill Duke, Pemessa Seele, president of the Babn in Gilead and U.S. Reps, Maxine Waters (D- Calif), Barbara Lee (D-Calif) and Donna M. Christensen (D-VI). Please see GRASSROOTS/2A By Hazel Trice Edney NATIONAL NEWSPAPER PUBUSHERS ASSOCIATION The reassuring female voice asks the child a question: “Can you show me the doll that looks bad?’ The child, a preschool-aged black girl, quiddy picks up and shows the black doU over a white one that is identical in every respect except complexion. “And why does that look bad?’ “Because she’s black,” the httle girl answers emphatically “And why is this the nice doh?’ the voice continues. “Because she’s white.” “And can you give me the doll that looks fike you?” The httle girl hesitate for a spht second .before handing over the black doU that she has just desig nated as the uglier one. This was not the 1954 doU test used by pioneerir^ psychologist Kenneth B. Clark to help make the case for desegregation in the Charlotte developer Anthony Williams creates jobs and work space for hair care professionals/6C landmark Brown v. Board of Education Supreme Court ded- sion outlawing segregated public schools. Rather, it was a doll test duplicated in Harlem, N, Y,, last year, more than a half-century after Brown. Tb the chagrin of par ents and psychologists across the nation, the results were unchanged. The test is again in the news because of an 8-minute documen tary piuduced by 17-year-old film student Kiri Davis of Manhattan’s Urban Academy who partidpates in the Reel Works 'Iteen Filmmaking program, a fi:^ after Please see 2006/2A NATIONAL NEWSPAPER PUBLISHERS ASSOCIATION PHOTO the box NEWS, NOTES & TRENDS Embattled La. congressman’s time near end? By Christopher Tidmore THE LOUISIANA WEEKLY NEW ORLEANS - When weU- financed opposition comes from both the left and the right, usually an incumbent Congressman should begin sending out resumes to DC-based lobbying firms. Of course, Bill Jefferson’s job prospects might be somewhat limited. Few advocacy retain ers come in the form of fix)zen cash. Jefferson Please see IS SUN/3A INSiBE Life IB Religion 4B Sports 1C Business 6C A&E1D Clarified 3D To subscribe, call (704) 376-0496 or FAX (704) 342-2160.© 2006 The Chartotte Post Publishing Co. Recycle o