CHIVES B 1NOER ** CR *5? X I _ ton-isalem Chronicle SO cents "77ig Twin City's Award-Winning Weekly" VOL. XV, No. 51 lUbe Stars Came Out ? I Rhoto by Mike Cunningham Maya Angelou and Oprah Winfrey participate In a press conference pn Monday where an overview of the festival and the state of black theatre was given, f or more details on the festival, please see page A9 fend A10. Officials see no wrong in employee's actions By TONYA V. SMITH Chronicle Staff Writer A city employee allegedly told Com missioner Gerald H. Long's campaign finance manager that his job may be in jeopardy if he received a personal check for his political consulting work. Mr. Long said Dalton Ruffin gave a check for $5,726 to William R. Tatum for distributing campaign promotional materi al in East Winston s The vice chair of the Forsyth County Board of Commissioners said Mr. Tatum asked Mr. Ruffin to make the check payable to Associate Consul tants because he "couldn't take a check payable to himself because he would have trouble with his job." Mr. Tatum, a housing inspector for the city, has refused to comment on any work he may have done or monies received from Mr. Long. According to the city of Winston Salem's personnel policies, "it is improper for any employee of the city ... to file and/or campaign for a public elective office while actively serving as an employee of the city." However, while declining to comment on Mr. Tatum's situation, City Manager Bryce A. Stuart said he doesn't interpret the policy as meaning that a city employee could not campaign for someone else. "I suppose that it says that an employ ee could not campaign for someone else while on duty but if that person wanted to do it on weekends or evenings I don't see anything wrong with that,1' Mr. Stuart said. -- City employees wishing to run for public elective federal, state, county or city office would ask Mr. Stuart for an unpaid leave of absence during the cam paign. Engaging in any political activity while on duty, or using any city supplies or equipment for political purposes are violations of the city personnel code and may result in the loss of employment. Before city employees take a second job, they must "submit information regarding outside employment for Please see page A6 Turner gives update on plans for new plaza By TONYA V.8MITH Chronicle Staff Writer ? One tenant has signed and others have made commitments to locate in the New Walk ertown Shopping Center contingent upon the final decision of a grocery store which is six weeks away from committing, said Herman L. Turner, the project's developer. "At this point we are still negotiating with our anchor tenant and we have been told by the grocery store tenant that they will have a deci sion within the next 45 days," said Mr. Turner. "They are finalizing a feasibility analysis to determine the size of the store they wish 10 locate and how much they will pay as a lessee." Mr. Turner has not divulged the identity of the grocery store which will be the neighbor hood shopping center's anchor tenant nor that of a company which has committed to build a $500,000 facility and hire five people. The New Walkertown center will be built on 9.3 acres of land located off New Walkertown Road between Dellabrook Road and Gerald StreeL The $4 mil lion project will provide up to 150 new jobs, The facility the grocery store constructs will be a $1.1 million investment, Mr. Turner Please see page A6 Friende to assist Dr. Coble By TONYA V.SMITH Chronicle Staff Writer An Afro- America^ who was once passed over for the number one post in the city-county school system has been appointed as the interim executive assistant to Superintendent Larry D. Coble. Palmer G. Friende, who retired as associate superintendent of the ston-Salem/Forsyth ?oumy Schools in 19S4, was appointed by Dr.^Coble Tuesday. Mr. Friende, 61, will hold the position until a per manent appointment is made, or until June 30, 1990 - whichever comes first, according to a news release. The executive assistant position is a new one which blossomed out of Dr. Coble's reorganization plan, adopted last month. It is the number two spot in the system. According to a job descrip- _ . . . . Palmer tion, the executive assistant: ?reports directly to the superintendent and is a member of the executive staff, thus partici pating in major decision-making sessions that will affect the system's operation; ?advises the superintendent on human rela tions and culturally diverse issues, ?investigates and helps to settle complaints, ?advises the superintendent on Afro-Ameri can issues, ?convenes and facilitates regular Board of Education agenda planning meetings and staff management team meetings, ?coordinates the development of compre hensive/strategic planning for the system, ?plans and implements special projects as directed by the superinten dent, ?has overall manage ment responsibilities for the Community School Program, volunteers and Busines s/Education Partnerships. Mr. Friende, 1 who worked in the local system for 28 years and logged an additional four in education, admitted he had no intention of coming out of retirement until meeting earlier this week with Dr. Coble. "I just kind of felt he was very sincere in his approach and about his ideas and I felt if I could assist him with the installation of his initial program," said Mr. Friende, "I would gladly do so because it's a program I hope would lead to progress for all students, I think. Friende Please see page A6 NEWS ANALYSIS: The Darryl Hunt case: Is justice on trial? By ROOSEVELT WILSON Chronicle Staff Writer This is the final part of a series of articles examining the investiga tion , conviction and possible retrial of Darryl E. Hunt for the J 984 mur der of Deborah B. Sykes. The rape and brutal stabbing murder of newspaper copy editor Debo rah B. Sykes in 1984 cast the Winston-Salem Police Department into the spotlight like it had never been before. Concurrently, it created the perfect setting for Winston-Salem to demonstrate whether justice or a lynch-mob attitude would prevail because Ms. Sykes, who was white, was said to have been murdered by an Afro American man. American history is replete with similar cases and invariably some Afro- American male, guilty or not, pays for such crime. This case was so sensational that representatives of 12 media organiza tions were assigned to cover it, and it was virtually everyone's lead story for the greater part of a year. During the trial, cameras were allowed in the court room in Forsyth County for the first time. Ms. Sykes worked for the now-defunct Winston-Salem Sentinel , the afternoon partner to the Winston-Salem Journal , and the papers kept the case before the public. Dis^jct Attorney Donald K. Tisdale, who as an elected official was already on shaky ground, was under intense pressure to solve the case, and when Winston-Salem police charged Darryl Eugene Hunt with the murder, records show that a conviction, not justice, became the priority. Properly handled, it was a case that could have saved Mr. Tisdale's public career. But after the trial, records and newspaper accounts show that in the next primary voters - particularly those in the Afro-American com munity - did not vote for present D.A. Warren Sparrow as much as they voted against Mr. Tisdale. Mr. Hunt was convicted in 1985, but last May the North Carolina Supreme Court overturned the conviction, citing in one instance the use of testimony that should not have been allowed. But is Mr. Hunt guilty? Or, is he, like his supporters maintain, just a man of questionable character who happened to be the wrong color and got caught up in a white system bent on vengeance? That question remains unanswered, but the Supreme Court's ruling and the results of an investigation by the city into the way the case was handled by the WSPD offer strong evidence that Mr. Hunt, guilty or not, did not get a fair trial. A state medical examiner and a State Bureau of Investigation patholo gist both testified that there was no physical evidence that linked Mr. Hunt to Ms. Sykes. ' Without physical evidence the prosecution relied heavily on the testi Please see page A6 THE KING AND QUEEN OF BLACK THEATRE Two veterans discuss bl^ck theatre, past and present Photo by Mike Cunningham Ossie Davis By ROBIN BARKSDALE Chronicle Staff Writer. You simply can't talk black the ater and not talk Ruby Dee and Ossie Davis. Since Monday s high profile opening of the National Black Theatre Festival, conversa tions have pointed to the "old days" of black theater, to the struggles and to the actors that brought the institu tion to prominence. And it was rare to hear a conversation that did not include the names Ruby Dee and Ossie Davis. * Tuesday evening, Ms. Dee and Mr. Davis made their first appear ance at the festival as the special guests for the night's festivities. Greeted by a flood of camera flash es in a packed Stouffer's Hotel meeting room, the actors joined writer Micki Grant and artist Maya Angelou in a discussion of black theater, its past and its future. Mr. Davis credited the Afro American actors that preceded him in black theater with furnishing his love of the theater in general and black theater in particular. He said he is especially grateful for Afro American actors such as Paul Robe son because he originally had no intention of becoming an actor. MI always wanted to be a writer. I got into acting because it was said that if I \yanted to write, I should study all parts of the theater," said Mr. Davis, whose Broadway debut was in the play, "Jeb." "My inspira tions were the people performing at the time I was a youngster. There wa^a vibrant black theater during that time. I think all of us were affected by Robeson, his grandeur, his style." Mr. Davis pointed out, too, that the societal restrictions Afro- Amer icans faced in those days filtered over into the theater. But he said he feels that the special challenges pre sented by the country's racial cli mate, had the result of making the black theater innovative and cre ative in reaching their audiences. "In those days, we had an even Please see page A9 Photo by Mike Cunningham Ruby Dee