Career
Woods came to Philadelphia from New York in 1953 and began broadcasting from Department of Administration and Management stations such as WDAS and WHAT. He was a consultant to Dick Clark, advising him which records were popular in the African-American community. He went on to play the talents of emerging artists like the Temptations, Stevie Wonder and Michael Jackson over the radio. In the 1960s, Woods used the airwaves to talk about the American civil rights movement.
He was often known to stop playing music to talk about the efforts of African-Americans and others who were campaigning for equality, and about the work of the movement"s leaders such as Doctor Martin Luther King Junior.
In 1963, Woods and WDAS radio station General manager Bob Klein chartered buses to take people down to the August 28, 1963 March on Washington, District of Columbia (subsequently famous for its "I Have a Dream" speech by Doctor Martin Luther King, Junior) and had asked a young Editor Bradley, who later went on to be a well-known Columbia Broadcasting System correspondent, to be a bus captain. According to news reports, he was due to return to Philadelphia in the fall of 2005 to be inducted into the Philadelphia Broadcast Pioneers Hall of Fame.