'TrORIALS )arryl Hunt’s ew arrest. PAGE A4. PEOPLE SPORTSWEEK *«caab m TU prof discusses Baseball gets a facelift. black dancing. fundamentalists. PAGE M. PAGE A7. PAGE B1. .^n-Salem Chronicle The Twin City’s Award-Winning Weekly No. 38 U.S.P.S. No. 067910 Winston-Salem, N.C. Thursday, May 15,1986 50 cents 32 Pages This Week '1 was never a teammate of John Holleman. at would have been stupid of me to team up with my opponent. Oldham was not even In the commissioners’ race. If I was going to be used as a sacrificial lamb, why didn’t anyone tell me?” - Mazie Woodruff imary’s aftermath: id coalition hurt? HN HINTON cle Staff Writer 1NE LOSERS CUMBENT Mazie S. uff, the lone black county issioner, did not expect to ilyzing a primary loss this ■ Woodruff, whom some redicted to be the front- failed to win one of the lemocratic nominations in ommissioners’ race last ay. Woodruff, the second and only black to serve as ty commissioner, finished with 10,968 votes, behind , Holleman Jr., who led ket with 12,397 votes, and G. Willard, who totaled votes. Mrs. Woodruff said in an inter view Monday. “If we had a bet ter turnout, I think I could have done better.” Mrs. Woodruff, who is a retired medical-supply salesman, had said last Tuesday night that the low voter turnout, especially in predominantly black precincts, hurt her campaign. “If people don’t vote, they have no reason to gripe,” she said. Black farmer: A legacy ends By JOHN D. HOFHEIMER Pine Bluff Commercial HOOKER, Ark. (AP) - Leonard Nelson, a 64-year-old black farmer from Hooker, lean ed forward in his bentwood rocker and confided that he had tried to get his youngest son to “study agriculture.” “But you just said you didn’t want your son to go into farming,” said a confused visitor. “I wanted him to go into agriculture, not into farming,” Nelson said, explaining that his son could have gotten a job with the cooperative extension service or some similar governmental outfit. ‘No Future In It’ ‘Playing Both Ends’ itterness m not bitter at anyone,” Mrs. Woodruff said Holleman received 2,000 black votes from the East Winston precincts, but that she didn’t get similar results in the predominantly white coun ty precincts. Deposed incumbent Mazie Woodruff: By politically embracing Sheriff Preston Oldham and fellow commissioner candidate John Holleman, did she hurt her chances? (photo by James Parker) “He was playing both ends,” Mrs. Woodruff said of Holleman. “He was campaigning in the black community and the :white community. ’ ’ Holleman and E. Preston Oldham campaigned together. ‘A Sacrificial Lamb’ Mrs. Woodruff denied reports that she and white candidates Oldham, an incumbent, won the korsyth County sheriff’s race against two Democratic op ponents. He polled 3,588 votes in black precincts. “I was never a teammate of JohaHolleman. That would have bem stapid of me to team up with my opponent,” Mrs. Woodruff said. “Oldham was Please see page A2 iley: His key is broad support ■ IHE WINNERS HN HINTON lie Staff Writer ifort 0. Bailey topped the igain in the Democratic fy for school board, iy, the only black can- ever to be elected to the led a crowded field of 14 Tuesday’s primary, receiv- Port from both black and oters. iut it mildly, Bailey routed PPosition, beating his challenger, fellow incum- incy L. Wooten, by nearly otes.. sve tried to run my cam- [ith an open mind,” said * totaled 11,320 votes Wooten’s 10,352. “Peo- 1* 1 have worked hard to hive with all my decisions |ool board member.” T’ 52, led the ticket in "'cll. He ran strong in several county precincts and throughout Winston-Salem. “He (Bailey) is a very credible public official,” said R. Michael Wells, chairman of the Forsyth County Democratic Party. “He is recognized as a capable and good person.” The five Democratic school board candidates should work as a team to defeat the five Republicans in November, Bailey said. “Politics is a funny game,” said Bailey, the director of the media center at Winston-Salem State University. “Things can change dramatically between now and November.” The proposed redrawing of school attendance lines and the racial imbalance at some schools will be campaign issues, Bailey said. “I don’t want them to become racial issues,” he said. “Race should not figure into the picture.” Bailey said he favors a review of school attendance lines throughout the system. The other black Board of Education candidate to survive the primary, Evelyn A. Terry, placed fifth in the Democratic primary with 7,194 votes. “1 am pleased with the vote of con fidence that I received,” she said. Mrs. Terry said she received support from black and white voters. “My support was broad- based,” she said. “Many people know I am a qualified and viable candidate.” Mrs. Terry, director of institu tional research at WSSU, said she is going to “work like crazy to in sure victory in November.” Please see page A2 In a note of finality and with massive forearms crossed over his barrel chest. Nelson said of farm ing, “It’s no future in it.” It’s a moot point anyway, since Eric DeWayne Nelson, 20, the last of Nelson’s four sons, is stu dying computer science at the University of Arkansas at Pine Bluff. Nelson and Andrew Walker Sr., a 78-year-old black farmer from Gethsemane, think they may make their last full crop this year. Large farm surpluses, shrink ing foreign markets, low prices and supports, falling land values and declining credit opportunities have left many American farmers in a jam. During some recent years, black farmers were four times as likely as white farmers to leave the land. Many black farmers have small, marginal operations and are thus, some say, in a group hardest hit by hard economic times. Moving On Above, front-runners Bailey and Burke; below, Tatum, left, and campaign chairman Earline Parmon, far right, lament his loss (photos by James Parker). Nelson and Walker have stayed on to work the land as nearly all their many brothers, sisters, sons and daughters have left the farm. “Most young people in the last 20 years went to college and mov ed on to better jobs,” Nelson said. Why does he farm? “I like to turn the soil and see crops grow,” he said. Please see page A15 cus on illiteracy I session to address national problem BARKSDALE ^itaffWriter thousands of North ® adults rely on their “ read to cross the street. have guys walking , ttt three-piece suits ■^n’t read. People ^od road signs, and f*'* i shop for their oceries. ” Velma Jackson 'series for their families. ^mselves I to and from perform other everyday for "early 40,000 Forsyth County residents, simple tasks become major challenges because they can’t read. The problem of adult illiteracy has escalated both nationwide and in the state. The 1980 Census Bureau report shows that more than 1.5 million adults in North Carolina never completed high school and that 835,620 of those residents lack basic reading and writing skills. Dr. Velma Jackson, a counselor at Forsyth Technical College and an active member of the campaign against adult il literacy, teaches reading classes for adults who want to learn to read. Illiteracy, she says, cuts across social, economic and Please see page A3 ‘She was the League’ By CHERYL WILLIAMS Chronicle Staff Writer Dr. Velma Jackson on illiteracy: It knows no class or racial distinctions (photo by Jatnes Parker). When Hazel E. Brown came to the Winston-Salem Urban League in 1961, she was fresh out of business school and ready to work. Twenty-five years later, with two more degrees under her belt, she’s still eager and working at the Urban League. On May 1 Ms. Brown marked her 25th year with the local Ur ban League. She boasts the most seniority of any employee there. “She was the Urban League when I came to town,” Urban League President Thomas J. Eli jah Jr. said. “She really is an in stitution.” During those 25 years, Ms. Brown, an Eden native, has worn many hats. Her positions have ranged from secretary-bookkeeper to ad ministrative assistant to person nel assistant to intake assessment specialist to her present post as Older Worker Program coor dinator. She said that she even assumed the responsibilities of the ex ecutive director during the in terim in the ’70s when the league was searching for former Direc tor Sam Harvey’s replacement. “I’ve had a little bit of ex perience doing just about everything,” she said. The years have brought numerous changes for both the Urban League and Ms. Brown. When Ms. Brown started at the league, it consisted of only two offices and was located in the Hanes Community Center. She Please see page A3 ■5 t;