MiiiiiiiMiillllllllllllllllliaiH Valley of the dolls, Spurred by shifting U.S. demographics, KAAART CORP. expands coior of its toy iineup/6C Screen gem indie fiimmaker CHARLES BURNETT to tdk cinema at The Light Factory A&E/ID Gantt earns lifetime honor Post Best gala to salute political, civic leadership By Erllison Clary FOR THE CHARLOTTE POST The Charlotte Post Foundation will honor Charlotte architect and for mer mayor Harvey B. Gantt with its 'luminary - Lifetime Achievement” award at the Charlotte Post Best banquet Sept. 22. Still an active civic leader. Gantt is a principal at Gantt Huberman Architects. "We are thrilled to honor Harvey^ Gantt, a per son who has given so much to this community and asked so little in return,” said Post Publisher Gerald Johnson. For 10 years, the Charlotte Gantt African- American Clark students in the Charlotte area with proceeds from the Best banquet. The foundation is expand ing its focus to concentrate on systematic problems that impede educational progress for African- American students, Johnson said. It will become “active ly involved with funding solutions to problems plaguing a generation of African-American children,” he added. The 11th annual banquet will be held at the Hilton Charlotte Center City on East Third Street. About 600 are expected to attend. The honorary chair is Cynthia Marshall, AT&T’s North Carolina president for external affairs. An Afterglow reception will fol low dinner. Stacey Clark, an English and creative writing teacher at West Charlotte High School, will be honored as Communities resist neighborhood panel PHOTO/CALVIN FERGUSON Dorothy Waddy, an organizer with the West Boulevard Neighborhood Coalition, says a pro posed Neighbcwhood Council duplicates the role of community organizations. Association leaders yank welcome mat on council proposal By Herbert L. White herb.whife@fhechaftoffepost.com Charlotte’s proposed Neighborhood Council is bringing communities togeth er - in opposition to the idea. City Council is considering formation of a Neighborhood Council under the city’s Neighborhood Development department to act as a liaison between city government and communities. Community leaders - especially near the urban core - contend the council would duplicate the role of neighborhood organi zations and stifle efforts to resolve problems in their own backyards. “I don’t think it’s necessary,” said Dorothy Waddy, an orga nizer with the West Boulevard Neighborhood Coalition that represents 18 neighborhoods. “If I want to call (another neighborhood association leader) all I’ve got to do is pick up the phone.” “It appears like we are going to not only oppose it, we won’t join it,” said Vincent Frisina, president of the Windsor Neighbors Association. “We’ve seen so many things where Neighborhood Development has gotten hold of it and screwed it up.” City Council member Anthony Foxx. said the benefit of a neighborhood council - direct community input in a single forum - will be weighed against overlapping autono my. "If it’s not perceived as help ful by neighbors in the com munity, I don’t see the value in it,” he said. Neighborhood councils vary Please see COIVIMUNITY/8A Ihe bus slops here for support Activists urge support of transit tax as means of affordable transportation By Herbert L. White fiefb.wh/fe@fhechQrtoffeposf.com Bus transportation has allies in Charlotte’s transit tax debate. Last week, a group of activists kicked off the "Save the Bus!" campaign at the Rosa Parks Transit Center on Beatties Ford Road. The activists support Charlotte’s half-cent tax, which is up for referendum in November. The tax pumps about $77 million into Charlotte Area Transit System, with two- thirds going to bus service. The rest would go to light rail - the lightning rod for tax oppo nents. “The debate shouldn’t be framed by our positions on light rail, since the facts are sim ple,” said Sam Spencer, co-chair of Grassroots Activists for Charlotte Transit. "We want to make it clear that the half-cent sales tax helps make bus service at its current levels possi ble." The first leg of the light rail system into south Charlotte is scheduled to open in November after the referendum. .Future plans call for rail to extend into north Mecklenburg County. Since the transit tax was approved by vot ers in 1998, CATS officials say the authority has added 31 new bus routes, increased ser vice and added service in Davidson, Please see BUS SERVICE/3A appreciation: OUVER hill, noted civil rights AnORNEY Paper, (digital changes coming He urged whites to ‘love thy neighbor’ Please see GANTT/2A By Dionne Walker THE ASSOCIATED PRESS RICHMOND, Va. - Hundreds remembered famed civil rights lawyer Oliver Hill Sunday as a man of boundless vision, who called on old-fashioned values of brotherhood as he challenged America to fulfiD the promises of equality made by its founders. Hill, who died Aug. 5 at age 100, didn’t invent anything new - he simply challenged the nation to live up to the ideal of loving thy neighbor, said Gov. Timothy M. Kaine, who eulogized the Richmond native at a memorial service held in the city's conven tion center. "His life is a challenge. Are we up to it?" Kaine asked the crowd, which included several previous governors, among them, L. Douglas Wilder, the nation's first elected black governor and Richmond’s current mayor. Also attending were Democratic U.S. Sen. Jim Webb and Virginia Secretary of Public Safety John Marshall, the son of U.S. Supreme Court Justice Thurgood Marshall, a close Hill friend. Speaking before an audience speckled black and white, Kaine likened the man who helped inte grate American schools to the biblical good Samaritan, reaching out to help those in need. In Hill’s day, those were black Americans in need of equal edu cation. "Mr. Hill changed his time, he changed our times,” Kaine said. “No Virginian in the past hundred years has had as much impact.” Bom in 1907, Hill entered a world where the U.S. Supreme Court recently had upheld laws ban ning a black man from sitting in a white train car, and Virginia lawmakers had rewritten the state Constitution to firm up restrictions on blacks. By the time Hill graduated from See CIVIL RIGHTS/6A By Herbert L. White fferb.wffifeSffTecffortoffeposf.co/ri You’re reading a copy of The Post that feels and looks different. It’s part of the continuing evolution of the publication and a long-term strengthening of our growth as a communications company. For the next month, The Post will be pub lished on standard newsprint as we convert to a new printer. Today’s paper is thinner and thinner, but should retain most of the repro duction characteristics you expect from The Post. The changes aren’t limited to paper. The Post's revamped website, www.thecharlot- tepost.com, includes new interactive features including blogs and the Auto Network, a cut- ting-edge video portal highlighting every thing related to vehicles from buying a car to picking an insurance policy. On the horizon is videocasting of local news and events that will be introduced next month and creates stronger interactive digi tal links between The Post and the Internet. Let us know what you think. RACIAL UNREST IN JENA SIX CASE Convictions open old wounds By Tuala Williams THE DAUAS EXAMINER DALLAS EXAMINER PHOTO The ‘White Tree” at Jena High School In Louisiana was the flash point for wolence that resutted In six black students being charged with attempted murder. The tree has since been cut down, but the tensions endure. DALLAS, Texas - Hundreds of people gath ered in a little central Louisiana town on last Tuesday to protest the conviction of 16-year- old football star, Mychal Bell, a black student, and the indictments of five other black youth following an attack on white schoolmate Justin Barker. It ail started with a tree One day, almost a year ago, at a high school in a small town nestled in the seat of La Salle Parish,' La., three black boys made a simple request. They wanted to sit under a tree and eat their lunch as numerous other students were doing. The school official overseeing the lunch crowd willingly obliged, stating the stu dents could eat anywhere they chose. This is the day that changed everything for the less than 3,000 residents of Jena, La., and especially for six black boys. The next day, three nooses hung where the boys had previously stood. When the school superintendent failed to take appropriate action, dismissing it as an adolescent prank, racial unrest ensued. "To us, those nooses meant the KKK, they meant, ‘Niggers, we’re going to kill you, we’re going to hang you ‘til you die’,” Caseptla See CONVICTIONS/2A MSS' Mechanics & Farmers Bank closes the deal to merge wifri Mutual Community Savings/6C LifelB Religion 5B Sports 1C Business 6C A&E1D Classified 3D Recycle 0©0[ To subscribe: (704) 376-0496 FAX (704) 342-2160.© 2007 The Charlotte Post Publishing Co. o