(ict the latest tacts on infant mortality and alcohol use. See page C3 SportsWeek kKAs hold annual golf tournament •••• Basketball camp Caches art of game Community WSSU students stage day of fun ••• See >12 See C7 First Waughtown celebrates 100 cents Winston-Salem Greensboro High Point Vol.XXVI No. 39 12:. 0b 2 201 . : * K * * r. v 3 OHi?fUlv -1 iX :' CS #39.58 DAVIS LIBRARY UiNi^ onAr'.Ciij H-lj-iaj CRABCxi-t ^ o890 Chronicle The Choice for African American News THURSDAY, MAY II, 2 Boy walks out of local school unnoticed BY CHERIS HODGES THE CHRONICLE 'all and mother Randall Photo by Cheris Hodges Kristy Hairston color at their home, pulled them out of Petree Elementary left the school undetected. When Robin Wilborn dropped her two children off at Petree Elementary School last Tuesday, she did n’t think anything would happen to either child. But she got a startling shock when she went to pick her children up and found the police combing the neighborhood for her son, Randall. “Randall was missing for 15 minutes before any one noticed,” she said. And, Wilborn added, to make matters worse, when she arrived at the school no one was in the office to tell her what was going on. Wilborn said she found the person who was sup posed to be watching the office in the school’s gym. When she asked the woman about her son, Wilborn said the woman laughed at her. Wilborn said she asked the woman if she had any children and how would she feel in this situation. The woman apologized and said she only laughed because she was so shocked that Randall was missing. She said that she was frightened when she found out her son had walked away from the school on Old “I do not allow my children to walk across the street by themselves. ” ■ -Robin Wilborn Greensboro Road. Wilborn said that street has a lot of speeding cars and illegal activity. “I do not allow my children to walk across the street by themselves,” she said angrily. Randall had walked nearly a mile and a half to get to his grandmother’s house near the school. The boy was found unharmed. But Wilborn wanted to know why her son was allowed to walk out of the front door of the school in the first place. According to Petree principal Denny Rutledge, Randall was misbehaving in his music class. The teacher (whom the school would not name) called the office and told the principal that she was going to send Randall to the office. The teacher did not walk the little boy to the office, as the school policy says. Rutledge said he and the assistant principal had students in their offices and could not meet Randall in the hall. “This type of thing happens two or three times a year at a lot of schools in the system,” he said. “Peo ple make mistakes.” But Wilborn feels as if this is a mistake that could See Missing on A10 Community unites )baccoville residents take nostalgic ilk during weekend-long celebration KEVIN WALKER :hronicle he black men and women who toiled in relds of Tobaccoville during slavery t have much, material wise, to pass on eir children and grandchildren. '' Tiat they did pass down, according to idolyn “Jeanette” Norwood-Williams, ded “roots and wings.” orwood-Williams said the descendants lose who built the tiny community, ed in northwest Forsyth County, have '' their roots to keep them grounded and constant source of pride and connec- . She said they have used their wings to to heights that their ancestors couldn’t imagined. We have become ministers, educators, preneurs, realtors....,” Norwood- ams boasted. onnecting the past and present was one of the main objectives behind last weekend’s Tobaccoville Reunion. Nor wood-Williams was behind the weekend- long event, which brought together people with ties to Tobaccoville. Several years ago, she envisioned a cele bration of the community’s people and cul ture after learning that other small enclaves have had success with staging similar reunions. Norwood-Williams and the steer ing committee for the event sent out more than 300 invitations to people with Tobac coville ties. The reunion festivities, which included a gala banquet at the Ramada Inn Saturday night, drew people from as far away as Cal ifornia. The banquet brought out several hun dred people. Many of them still call Tobac coville home today. Others have since left County jail inmates earn GEDs BY CHERIS HODGES THE CHRONICLE See Tobaccoville on A10 Photo by Kevin Walker Ninety-year-old Eva Payne addresses the crowd at a banquet Satur day for the Tobaccoville Reunion. Payne and other elders of the com munity helped construct a video timeline for Tobaccoville. ostonians share experiences with locals LECIAR MCMILLAN flJNITY CORRESPONDENT ■ he Rev. Dr. Ray Hammond, pastor of Bethel AME ch in Boston, Mass., physician, and chairman. Ten Coalition, shared the successful crime reduction I gjes from the Boston Church Cluster Model with a je group of more than 50 community leaders, ling clergy, on Tuesday night at Emmanuel Baptist di. . tpm 1991 to 1998, Boston saw more than a 70 per- fecrease in juvenile and gun violence. This reduction ne is attributed to the collaboration of the Ten Point tion working along with probation officers, police rs, service providers and street workers in Boston. Ihey have done phenomenal work,” said Loretta land Biggs, executive assistant U.S. attorney. In October 1999, the U.S. attorney’s office sponsored a trip to Boston to observe this model. We were so energized by that visit that we wanted to bring some of the people we met there here. It was Rev. Hammond that our clergy asked us to bring down.” Several staff persons from the U. S. attorney’s office went on this mission. Biggs was joined by U. S. Attorney Walter C. Holton; SACSI project coordinator Sylvia Oberle; and Assistant U.S. Attorney Rob Lang. In that trip they took members from Winston-Salem and High Point who are involved in violence reduction strategies, including chiefs of police Louis Quias from High Point and Linda Davis from Winston-Salem; the head of Juvenile Services, Walter Byrd; clergy from Win ston-Salem and High Point, Rev. John Mendez, Rev. William Fails and Rev. Ellerbe; the city manager from High Point, Strib Boyton; and a variety of others. The purpose of this trip was to see first-hand how Boston had used successful strategies to stop juvenile violence. Mendez, pastor of Emmanuel Baptist Church and a leader in the SACSI Clergy Coalition, explained the pur pose of Tuesday night’s meeting. “We are a very diverse group from different locations in the country, especially the northeast part, but we have a common interest, a common sense .of destiny,” said Mendez. “We are all moving in the same direction, trying to build a communi ty that represents the best of all of us. We are pleased to have your different perspectives around the table.... “I feel good about the SACSI Initiative because we have our hands on real situations, real people, and we see that we can make a difference. We have continued in a path that has led us all around the table.” According to records at the Forsyth County Detention Center, inmates who complete their GED while incarcerated are less likely to return to jail or end up in prison. So when several inmates at the detention center earned their GED, their teachers from Forsyth Tech nical Community College took their celebration behind bars. “It inspires them not to come back,” said Officer Brenda Manley, the manager of the partnership with FTCC. “When they are released, they can get back into the community.” Manley said Forsyth County Sheriff Ron Barker and Maj. Wayne James, director of the jail, are very supportive of the program. FTCC provides the classroom books and the instructors for the classes. According to Ronnie Valenti, coordinator of the project, the inmates are offered classes in African American history, English as a second language and many others. She said the school plans to apply for a grant so that they can get video college classes to the inmates at the detention center. Currently, inmates cannot take college courses until they are transferred to a state corrections facil ity. “A lot of our GED graduates go on to take col lege classes,” Valenti said. Inmate Thomas Flanagan was presented with his GED. Valenti said the classes offer more than just edu cation to the inmates. The classes help to build their self-esteem and self-respect. “I have people say to me all the time, ‘If my teach ers in high school cared the way you guys do, I might not be here today,”’ she said. Valenti added that these classes give many See Bostonians on All See Jail on All K/^FU has first graduation for minorities T. KEVIN WALKER a CHRONICLE In an event filled with laughter 11 tears, the young men and women lo will make history at Wake Forest diversity’s upcoming commence- !nt, celebrated years of struggles achievements in less than two urs. t Wake Forest’s Office of Multicul- al Affairs held its first Multicul- al Graduation ceremony last week the university’s campus. Next jek, 93 minority undergraduate idents will receive their degrees at school’s graduation ceremony, d a record for Wake Forest, which is but 88 percent white. I Last week’s send-off was in part fcelebrate that record, but more * portant, said the director of Mul- nltural Affairs, it was a way to bring the school’s minority popula tion together for an evening of “reflection” and “encouragement.” “There is no kind of ceremony that allows the ethnic minority popu lation to have a special celebration,” said Barbee Oakes. “It was a way for them to have that special bonding.” Underclassmen and members of the university’s faculty and staff were also on hand to cheer on the gradu ates. Oakes provided words of encour agement to''seniors. She challenged them to embrace new challenges and dream new dreams. She said the class was filled with talent, energy and a slew of success stories. “I see writers, doctors, dentists, lawyers....You name it we have it in this class,” she said. It’s a class that Oakes admits she shares a special bond with. It’s the first class she recruited after taking over the reigns at the Office of Multi cultural Affairs. The office is no longer responsible for recruiting minority students. Some of the students and Oakes go back to the students’ senior year of high school. “When I accepted the position as director of Multicultural Affairs five years ago, my greatest challenge was to see both an increase in the number of minority students enrolled at the university and to see an improvement in the academic performance of those students,” Oakes said. The Class of 2000 made both of Oakes’ dreams a reality. The class has the highest five-year graduation rate, 78 percent, of any minority class in the history of the university; and Wake Forest’s total undergraduate population includes a record 470 minority students, 12 percent of the entire undergraduate population. Oakes juxtaposed those figures with the ones from 1976, when she was a freshman at Wake Forest. Then the school had just 130 minorities on its campus. And worst of all, Oakes said, only about half them graduated within a five-year period. The ceremony paid special atten tion to the diversity of the school’s multicultural makeup. Entertainment for the event was provided by an Indian student who danced in shim mering traditional Indian attire. One of the few Asian staffers of the cam pus thumbed a guitar and and sang the words to a poem she penned for the occasion, and an African Ameri- See Graduation on A10 Photo by Kevin Walker Vaishali Patel performs an Indian dance last week at the first annual Multicultural Graduation and Awards Ceremony at Wake Forest University. 5 Kir □ FOR SUBSCRIPTIONS CALL (336) 722-8624 • MASTSRCARD, VISA AND AMERICAN EXPRESS ACCEPTED •