Published: November 1, 2000
I'll just pull up here and
start walking." It's a steamy Saturday morning in Little Rock, and
Joyce Elliott, a 49-year-old high school English teacher making a run
for the Arkansas state legislature, is ready to knock on some doors.
She has chosen to canvass a slightly shabby neighborhood of small brick
and clapboard houses several miles from downtown. "I would guess these
people are middle- to lower middle-class," she says as she parks her
Mazda 626, with its "Building Better Schools: It's Union Work!" bumper
sticker, under a large magnolia tree. "They're mostly white, except for
certain streets," she says. "I wanted to come here because these people
have a history of being ignored."
Elliott, who is dressed comfortably in running shoes, black shorts, and a white tank top, grabs a handful of pamphlets ("Joyce Elliott for State Representative, District 56") and gets to work. Careful not to step on the grass, she walks up the driveway to a beige brick house and rings the doorbell. An elderly woman opens the door a crack.
"Good morning! I'm Joyce Elliott, and I'm running for the Arkansas legislature. It's the position...
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