4 TOE CAROLINA TIMES-SATURDAY, DECEMBER 18, 1982 Deltas Hbld ChristmasrParty For Senior Citizens ' i . i V. 6 jf - K r 1 I z 1 5 IP DELTA HOSTESSES FOR PARTY SENIOR CITIZENS WATCH PROGRAM Durham Alumnae Chapter, Delta Sigma Theta Sorority, Inc., held its annual Christmas party for senior citizens at W.D. Hill Recreation Center, Sunday afternoon, December 12. Members of Alpha Lambda Chapter, DST, from NCCU joined Durham Alumnae in providing entertainment. Apprximately fifty senior citizens were in attendance. ' '. A delightful program was presented which included gymnastics and modern dances set to Chrisfmas carols performed by Ms. Nancy Pinckney. Traditional guessing games, tall tales and Christmas caroling were also featured. In addition to several door prizes which were given away, each senior citizen received a gift. Mrs. Millie Snider served as chairman of the affair. If.. W'l It, 'v:,' ..; I I w..,.;... , ii linn ml" ii -- fefc4t&-X n'JtW in -in THE NORTH CAROLINA CENTRAL UNIVERSITY SECRETARIAL-CLERICAL CLUB recognized the contributtoM of a group of Charter Members at the annual meeting held last week. Mrs. Mary Scott, president o! the club pa d tribute to the leadership and Inspiration of the honorees. They are (l-r): Mrs. Edna Harrington, Dr. Davesene Spellman, Mrs. Aletha Rease, Mrs. Grace Cooke and Mrs. Velma Wilson. to walk the streets of th demonstrate against Charleston, he served as for Charleston is that Clty without fear of MnrLANc 11-7:00 1 30 W8itliltSIwmld 1 niMD "InttrtudttlUnfXXX fW 1 ... P"' U. DOOR PRIZE - Mrs. Mudv Stone Heft), orssldent of Durham Alumnae Chapter, presents a door prize to Mrs. pennies to Kenneth Smith who made the closest guess of irons Long aunng me pany. me total number ot pennies in the jar Barry Goldwater's anti. Chief Deputy in the everyone should be able criminal attack wiiiiigmspuaiuun, iwu vjrange v-ouniy vriunua; police officers saw to it sheriff's department; as that Greenberg and his police chief in Opalocka,, 1 group were permitted to Fla.; and as a police ma conduct their protest in a jdr in Savannah, Ga. I .vt teacetu! 'manner - rharltnns nolice CLOSEST GUESS Mrs. Ruth Thomas presents jar of without getting arrested, cnjef is quickly gaining a nis inciaeni won reputation tor being Greenberg's respect for tough on crime and the police profession and strongly opposed to pro sparked his interest in bation procedures. He carving out a police believes that criminals career for himself, should serve their full Before coming to sentences, without any IEXANDER & Associates EALTORS Office Hours Monday-Friday 9:00-5:00 Sunday 2:00-5:00 511 Grant Street 683-8711 3615 Shrewsbury (Hope Valley North) 2,000 sq. ft , plus 4 BR, 21z bath, fireplace, den, formal DR & LR. Excellent condition. Call for more info. 3633 Shrewsbury (Hope Valley North) Beautiful contemporary on a nice corner lot in the Durham County School District. Formal LR & DR.-3 BRs, 2 BAs, den, deck. $15,000.00 and assume FHA 245 loan with payments $539.23. A great buy! $65,000. 815 Yosemite ContemporaryHSouthern ham County). This lovely contem porary is nested among nature on h?'?iot. Custom-built 3 BR, 3 bath, DR & great room wfireplacq. $68,000 SoutneVn DuVnam County (Erwinwood)Yos acre lot. Brick rancher with 3 bedroo-xSdihs , den wfireplace, formal LR & DR, with eat-in kitchen. 4100 Five Oaks-Condominium. New Listing 3 BR, LR, DR, kitchen wbreakfast area, 2V2,baths, and rock garden. Call for appointment. $74,500. "902 Cook Rd-This'home offers you 3 nice bedrooms, 1 bath, nice hardwood floors. Very large lot. If this is your first buy; this is the one! $32,000. ..ft I 1404 Rosewood Ave. 4 BR, 2 baUjtHW jhen, loan assumption wlow monthly payments. $46,900. 401 Pekoe-Lovely older home, sculptured plaster walls, LR wfireplace, DR, den, . 4 BR, 1 V? bath, enclosed back porch apd garage. $45,000. , NCCU Area-820 Ridgeway-2 BR frame rancher. $26,500. Huntersville Rd. (Massey Chapel Rd.)S. Durham. Only a few minutes from Chapel Hill & RTP. 3 BR, den. $45,500. 306 Omega Rd. (River Forest) Recently redocorated brick rancher in quiet neighborhood. 3 BR, 112 bath. Must see to appreciate. $41,900. ' 105 Prince St. (Chapel Hill, NC)-5w-..f "neighborhood. Spacious' fenced-in yard, lots of trees, 3 BR. central 39,500. 1725 S. Alston Ave. Brick rancher. 6 BR, 3 baths, den wfireplace, carport, cen tral air. Excellent home with several usages. $65,000. HZ Burgess Lane (Burgess Hilts) 3 BR. 2 bath.' LR. DR, new. split foyer. Cash & .conventional loans. $69,900: r 2 Fleldstone Place (Old Farm). An immaculate 3 BR rancher, on corner lot. with over 1100 sq ft. Large kitchen, LR. 1 baths. Ready to moved into. Call today. $44,800. . Open House in Burgess Hills, Off CornwallisRd., each . Sunday from 2 -5 p.m. NEW CONSTRUCTION ON DUTY: Reddit Alexander Office: 683-8711 Home:-682-8640 South's First Black Jewish Police Chief . jet KottofaM CHARLESTON, S.C. , Reuben Morris Greenberg, 39, is causing no little tumult in this . southern city of 70,000. Greenberg, a 15-year police veteran, is Charleston's first black Jewish police chief, ap- ' pointed earlier this yer ' by a 12-0 vote off Charleston's City Coun cil. Chief Greenberg , traces his ethnic identity to his Russian Jewish ' great-graridfather, who immigrated to Texas, established himself as a wheat farmer and lived in a common-law mar riage with a black woman. While attending San Francisco State Col lege, Reuben Greenberg , sought to discover his Jewish roots when he realized that most of his fellow civil rights- ac tivists were also Jewish. This led to formal Jewish religious instruction. 1$ is not easy to be a Mack Jew in a southern , city, especially if you are the chief of police. Greenberg's Jewishness, and the fact that he is also black, has become, the subject pf some tasteless jokes. Shortly ; after he won appoint- ' ment to his post, the favorite question among some of Charleston's citizens was, "What is chief's favorite food?" ; Answer: "Fried chicken ; soup.". .. .y . ' ; The local Ku Klux j Klan was less subtle, call-. ing ; Greenberg "nigger Jew". , Greenberg is philosophical about it. . "These people were op posed to me before I was born," he says, Greenberg's desire to join the ranks of police stemmed from his early days as a civil rights ac tivist in 1964, when he and some classmates at dan rrancisco oiaicwciu to the Republican Na tional Convention to U IHSl C Xn QJOflAH fe$J 1 t " " 1 aS ' ' -i V ..iv i WrffcsH 1 t M ! r 1

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