Durham County Women’s Commission

Remembering Jeanne Hopkins Lucas

May 2, 2007 · Comments Off

Remembering Jeanne Hopkins Lucas

If we’re lucky during our growing years, there may be someone or something that impacts our lives profoundly that like me, at age 54, you might remember them or it, as though it were yesterday.

There are many of us now who were touched in some way, large or small, by Jeanne Hopkins Lucas – even from way back in the late 60’s. Just like my friend, Calvin Mitchell.

Calvin and I were looking through his Hillside High School Yearbook (1974) and couldn’t help traveling down memory lane. (This was some time before Jeanne left us.) Calvin almost started to preach about his love for Jeanne Lucas, and how she saved his life with her kind talks about learning, just being himself and not worrying about trying to fit in, but more importantly, helping him to develop an understanding about what life would require later on. That’s pretty much how I remember the young and vivacious fresh-out-of-college Spanish teacher who seemed to fit with the young, but also command the respect that the older teachers got. Maybe it was just the times when respect for your teachers was a requirement. Step aside from showing respect for those in positions of authority, and your backside would know it for days on end!

My earlier memories of Jeanne seem to stick even more than those, which are more recent. Even though she was Mrs. Lucas, our Spanish teacher, there was always a way that she was reaching the entire classroom on an even more personal level. Like the day, she told us how she made her Kool-aid with juice and fruit. Now everybody – and I mean everybody! – made and drank that cheap five-cent powdered drink. We’ve graduated to tea now. But once in a while, I still make mine that way on those occasions when I want to rekindle some memories from the good ole days.

Times in her Spanish classroom at Hillside High School on Concord Street could be special. As young and impressionable teenagers, we got from Jeanne Lucas what we needed – a cool teacher, who could reach you on so many levels.

Remembering her as an adult was special too. Once you pass that magic age and enter into the time period where you get labeled a senior citizen, you get excused for some of the things you might say, or may even believe you’ve earned the right to say them. Jeanne could be hilarious sometimes, and you couldn’t tell if she said some things for the effect or if she was serious. Anyway, she never changed. From Spanish teacher to elegant and very sophisticated African-American woman to State Senator, she was still visible in community sessions where fighting for the rights of her school age youth or people within her community came real close behind her adoration for her family.

And so I, like many of us will never forget Jeanne Hopkins Lucas, a woman of class with a smile so large it could capture an entire room, a woman who could scold with that smile and leave you wondering what just happened, a woman of dignity and grace.

Rest In Peace, Senator and Friend, Mrs. Jeanne Hopkins Lucas.

Yvonne Sanford Dunlap

DCWC
Additional information about Senator Jeanne Lucas.

Comments OffCategories: Uncategorized

April 28: “Cancer in the Black Community” Seminar

April 24, 2007 · Comments Off

 

Today’s Woman Organization will host its Annual Spring Seminar, Saturday, April 28, 2007 at Rogers Herr Middle School, Cornwallis Road, Durham beginning with a continental breakfast (8:30 a.m.)  and forum at 9:00.  Its focus is “Cancer in the Black Community”.  Oncology Presenters from Duke, Durham Regional and UNC-Chapel Hill.  Four breast cancer survivors will be honored, Ms. Hedy Hunt Echard,  Ms. Julia Williams-Davis, Ms. Rosalind Fuse-Hall and the founder of the Durham Chapter of the National Organization, Sisters Network, Ms. Valerie Worthy.  Luncheon follows at 12noon.

Comments OffCategories: Uncategorized

Next Meeting: April 23

April 19, 2007 · Comments Off

The next meeting of the Durham County Women’s Commission will be held April 23, immediately following the Boards and Commissions Reception hosted by the County.

Comments OffCategories: Posts

Message from Million Mom March

April 19, 2007 · Comments Off

Million Mom March message
It is with heavy hearts that we write to you regarding the senseless gun violence perpetrated by one individual that has led to the death of dozens and the injury of many more on the campus of Virginia Tech in Blacksburg, Virginia.  We are deeply saddened by the loss of life, the suffering of the injured, the horror of the victims and the sorrow of family and friends.

We steadfastly remain in support of sensible gun laws to keep our children safe in their communities, in their schools, on their campuses, where they play and where they learn.

We continue our work to educate the community on the magnitude of gun violence regardless of where it occurs and what can be done both collectively and individually to abate it.  We invite you to join us in our outreach efforts.

Please respond to this message to learn more about volunteer
opportunities with the Million Mom March.

Steering Committee
Triangle Chapter
Million Mom March
PO Box 16384
Chapel Hill, NC  27516

Comments OffCategories: Posts

Durham County Women’s Commission

April 15, 2007 · Leave a Comment

Welcome to our beta-site.  We are in the process of updating our web information.  Please check back later.

→ Leave a CommentCategories: Posts