HE’S THE BOMB J.C. Smith receiver JEREMY FRANKLIN catches on in setting a school record/1 B Volume 33 No. 2 motherland's VERY FINEST A capeiia group The Voice of the Black Community Transit tax lobbyists: It’s about the bus Coalition of political and civic leaders push grassroots effort By Herbert L. White herb.wh/te@fhechariotfeposf.conT African American community and political leaders have launched a cam paign to keep Mecklenburg’s half-cent transit tax on the books. The African American Coalition Against Transit Tax Repeal, co-chaired by former Charlotte mayor Harvey Gantt and former Charlotte City Council member Ron keeper, announced the campaign Monday at the Charlotte-Mecklenburg Government Center. The pro-tariff group maintains the sales tax that funds Charlotte Area Transit System benefits riders who depend on public transportation to get to work and shop. 'This discussion about the transit tax repeal has been one-sided for a while now," keeper said. "Most of this discussion has been on the light rail. We want to put a different face on this issue today. That face is a people face." In 2006, 71 percent of revenue from the sales tax - $77 million in 2006 according to CATS - went to buses, with 65 percent going to operation costs. Nearly three-quarters of public transit riders in Charlotte are African American, but black voters were instrumental in securing a referen dum on the tax. "If we remove this dedicated source of revenue, we will substantially hurt those who ride our buses today,” Gantt said. Tariff opponents contend there’s no guarantee CATS will ultimately shift funds to light rail, which is expected to debut in November with the South Corridor line. Another argument is that Charlotte can build more roads to relieve traffic congestion. Polls show that a majority of black residents favor repeal. '‘We have to let them know that vot ing against the repeal is only going to help us,” said Virginia Keogh, presi dent of the Southwest Charlotte Neighborhood Coalition and a com munity organizer for the pro-tax group. "If they vote for the repeal, they’re cutting off their nose, so to speak, to spite their face. This has to be explained to the community so they understand they actually need to vote against repeal or the bus service we have now is going to be cut.” Keogh pointed to curtailment of bus Please see COALmON/6A BOOK DRIVE; Natalie Lowe, principal at Highland Renaissance Academy and Crystal Agurs sort through donated books at a book fair orga nized by Agurs son, Arthur Hairston III, at the University YMCA. Harding High School s drum- line plays in the background. JO-fP"- '■ '-'ipo.'.riy CHARI Q:-i Also serving .Cab'' Lessons from Jena Protests in Louisiana spark a wave of activism among Charlotte’s young, churches JAMES B. DUKE LIBRARY 100 BEATTIES FORD RD CHARLOTTE NC 28216-5302 '^CAR-RT LOT-^^C-OOl Clyburn PHOTO/CALVIN FERGUSON Students at Johnson C. Smith University wore black and earned a symbolic hangman’s noose to protest treatment of the Jena 6. Students and churches - the backbone of cMI rights era activism in the 1950s and ‘60s-turned out in force to support the Jena 6 in Louisiana and Chariotte. nized trips to kouisiana. At Johnson C. Smith University, students clad in black marched on campus in a show of soli- By Cheris F. Hodges cheris./TOdges@ffiechoriotteposf.com Amesia Brewton missed the March on Washington in 1963. The Charlotte resident never had to desegregate a school or lunch counter, but knows injus tice when she sees it. That’s why she marched in Jena, ka., last week. The small kouisiana town was the scene of one of the largest marches for civil rights since the 1990s when an estimated 1 million black men rallied in Washington, D.C. People took to the streets of Jena to protest the treatment of six African American high school students, dubbed the Jena 6, who face criminal charges after a fight last year at Jena High School. "It was a lifetime experience," said Brewton, 27. “I didn’t know places still looked like that." The reverberations could be felt in Charlotte, where activism brought back memories of the 1960s civil rights era. Churches held prayer -vigils for the defendants and orga- darity. The Jena 6 case started with a tree at Jena High School. According to reports, a black student asked an administrator if he could sit under the tree. A day later, nooses were found and the boys accused of hang- See LESSONS/6A ‘ ‘ It was a lifetime experience. I didn’t know places still looked like that. ’ ’ Amesia Brewton, 27, of Charlotte on being part of a massive rally to support the Jena 6 in Louisiana. Caucus louts new power in Congress Black lawmakers at top of congressional hierarchy as conference kicks off NA7IONA1. NEWSPAPER PUBUSHEPS ASSOQATtON WASHINGTON - The Congressional Black Caucus Foundation’s Annual Legislative Conference this week, "Unleashing Our Power,” will unabashedly challenge legislators and cit izens to use their collective power to level the playing field for African-Americans and recognizes the historic number of CBC members leading congressional com mittees, organizers say. House Majority Whip, Rep. James Clybum (D-S.C.) will i join the four major commit tee leaders - Reps. Charles Rangel of New York, chair of Ways and Means, John Conyers (D-Mich), chair of Judiciary, Bennie Thompson (D-Miss.), chair of Homelcind Security, and Stephanie Tubbs-jones of Ohio, chair of Standards of Official Conduct, will kick off the glitzy D. C. con ference with a Welcome Ceremony. The stars will also come out this week. Please see CAUCUS/3A Sit-in veterans recall a scoop of justice By Sommer Brokaw THE tP/ANGlE IPtSUNE DURHAM - In 1957, blacks were not allowed to eat ice cream at the Royal Ice Cream Parlor. So Durham residents, led by the Rev. Douglas Moore, staged a sit-in. Last weekend, a 50th anniversary com memoration was held at the Durham County Library on Roxboro Street, near the former ice cream parlor. Other panelists included Virginia Williams, one of the participants in the demonstration, and R. Kelly Bryant, an authority on Durham’s history. The seven people involved in the sit-in, dubbed the Royal Seven, were: Mary Clybum, Moore, Claude Glenn, Jesse Gray, Vivian Jones, Melvin Willis and Willieuns. Durham District Court Judge William A. “Drew” Marsh HI sat in the audience along See A SCOOP/2A Rangel PHOTO/CALVIN FERGUSON Education, innovation at gala By Herbert L. White hefb.wh('fe@thechorfoffeposf.com Charlotte’s best and bright est were honored at The Charlotte Post Best awards dinner Saturday, Former Charlotte mayor Harvey Gantt earned the Luminary Award for profes sional, political and civic achievement, as well as a life time of firsts ranging from breaking the color barrier at Clemson University to design ing award-winning buildings in Charlotte and the region. With his wife Cindy at his Fuel Pizza launches food drive for Second Harvest Food Bank/1 C INSIDE Life 1C Religion 5C Sports 1B Business 5B Video from the gala is on www.Uiecharfottepost.com side at the Hilton Charlotte Center City, Gantt thanked friends and family who helped him rise from humble begin nings in Charleston, S.C., pub lic housing to elder statesman in Charlotte’s political and civic circles, "We stand on the shoulders of people who’ve been there for us, and I start with my par ents, who I like to call salt of the earth, good hard-working folk who gave us important values to hold on to that are A&E ID Classified 4D still with us today,” Gantt said. ...’’But I also stand on the shoulders of good friends all across this community." Gantt, who last year co chaired a committee that looked at re-making how Charlotte-Mecklenburg Schools delivers services, said society has a responsibility to help children - especially from disadvantaged backgrounds - find academic success. Charlotte, he said, has the resources and people to do better by all students. The See HONORS/2A Please To subscribe: (704) 376-0496 FAX (704) 342-2160.© 2007 The Chariotte Post Publishing Co. Recycle o