1h Kinder Camp: A By AUDREY L. WILLIAMS Chronicle Staff Writer There aren't too many children who would say no to a good old-fashioned water fight. Claydell Shields, the Patterson Avenue YMCA's Kinder Camn director for th#? na?r fiw#? r ?- . . w . -W? ? * I v ys MO % I ? ? V J V U1 <9 | always says yes to the water-balloon fights the children have annually. It has become tradition. 4tl look forward to the balloon bashes,'\says Slue Ids..,4 4 It's something,.you can't rla ai ' This year, Kinder Camp registered 72 children. Fourteen counselors assist Shields in the all-day task, which begins as early as 7 a.m. and ends when the last child is checked out by a parent or guardian at 6 p.m. The camp, now in its fifth week, runs through Aug. 3 for chiTClren-3-7 years of age. A weekly fee of $35 is charged to non-members and members pay $25 per week. Camperships are available to the ma-, jority of parents, reducing costs from SI5 to $20. The children are taken on outings almost daily. They tour local parks, museums and historical sights to heighten their curiosity, says Shields. Kinder Camp consists of a full day of activity for the youngsters and all of them participate in instructional swimming. Two certified lifeguards /Miav ?U? Vf ? ?' ?" 1 1 * * * Tvaivn kjYti me raucisuii i pooi, wnicn is locatec in the building's basement. Brian Pitts: He \ mLl I ?*? HL^jjjfl i|g Dedicated t Brian Pitts will defend his love for ballet even if it comes down to a brawl (photo by James Parker). Newcomer r h or Davis, W ins By AUDREY L. WILLIAMS Chrgnic'e Staff Writer "HfTIrT imwinniimn i nnnwi i i iiamnnnai .mnnniii n>? ml m II? iiikh mmm i ? U/h"" rira>Q Hie University of No^fh Carolina at Chapel Hill, a whole n ed up for him, he says, when he entered law schoc Carolina Central University. Adapting to the atmosphere of a predominantly I and the appealing ratio of women to men had Davis th extend his three-year stay, he says. But as fate would have it for the now-settled 34-yc with the law firm of Henderson & Summers, he mov Salem at the end of April from his home in Sanford again. He gave up his seven-and-a-half-year partnership at in order that his wife, Stephonia, a contract negotiate Electric, could put an an end to her daily 90-minute ( ford to Greensboro. Now she commutes 45 minutes wun oiner company employees. In Sanford, Davis was an outspoken member of the holds the distinction of having been the first black el< Lee County, where he served on the board of educatic a half years. "I didn't resign until May," says Davis, "because I < sure the right person took my place." Lee County is small. The town of Sanford has a 16,ouu, and tne county nas J3,uuu people. He says he enjoyed being among his peers an< establishing himself as an attorney and a politician, fc much room left for advancement. "Winston-Salem offers me the opportunity fc growth," says Davis. "... I'm not normally a big city c but in some respects Winston-Salem is a big city, with i mosphere, and it offers a lot more to do socially." e^Maga. full day of fun 44A lot of parents have told me that when they pick up the kids take them home and feed them, they're asking to go to bed, says Shields. 14It's unbelievable," she says, "but you're wearing them out all day long." Instead of dropping the kids off at the babysitters each day, Shields says she believes the children have the opportunity for educational and recreational enrichment through Kinder Camo. which also in eludes trips to the North Carolina Zoo in Asheboro, * the movies^ trips to locaf fire stations, fast-food restaurants and factory tours. Meals are sponsored by the city's free lunch program. The children are fed hot meals furnished by Atkins High School at 11:30 a.m. At 4:30 p.m., they each receive a snack to tide them over until their parents arrive. i Though any large group of youngsters carries the potential for mishaps, Shields says she's happy to report that accidents have been scarce so farr~ "That's the reason we have so many counselors," she says, "to avoid as many accidents as possible. "I'm thankful that we've had only one accident this summer where I had to take a child to the hospital," she says. For children whose parents don't have cars, two Please see page B13 U defend his ball By AUDREY L. WILLIAMS . Chronicle Staff Writer Say mostly what you want to 14-year-old Briar Pitts, but try and put down ballet, and you're in fot a fight. 4 'Thprp hai/o K?on timpc vi/horo I Kn/o 1 IIVI V 1IU < V L/VVI 1 VIII I VO " IIVI V. 1 1 a v v gw VICII 1111V. fist fights," says Brian. 441 was out to prove thai anyone who danced ballet wasn't funny or that yoi didn't have to be a girl to be a ballet dancer." Brian will enter the eighth grade at the Nortl Carolina School of the Arts in the fall. This will b his second year at the school, after being recruiter from Easton Elementary when he was a sixth grader. At first, he says, his stepfather, Wardell Mc Clamb, was skeptical about ballet, but his mother Marcella, was excited the first time his counselo called. During his sixth-grade year, Brian attendee afternoon dance sessions with other youngsters wh< showed promise of becoming dancers. "My father began to support me about midwaj through my first year," says Brian. 44He wanted tc see me play football and basketball." For a second-year student, Brian has advancec beyond other students in his age group,, but in c iway, it*s all to be expected. One of the reason's th< School of the Arts recruited him was that h( couldn't resist jumping to the ceiling in the hallway; during class changes, and he proved in his physica education classes that he was more limber thar most. ton-Salem is the ; r ' f Basically, says Davis, he had no ______ behind, but this is the last time he "Winston-Salem will bevhome, " ' " F^y weTTset^ degree, a/ Jb* iew world open- member of the East Central Con )1 at the North directors, the Sanford Golf Comrr volunteered his time with the lo< )lack university United Way. inking he could "This climate in Winston-Salen "but I have to get settled before I :ar-old attorney "I'm a very political person and ed to Winston- fice, but I will be involved," says C to start all over my blood." And he says his only regret he ha Davis & Wilson ing politics behind him ? at least f >r with Western Like Sanford, Davis has also fou irive from San- appears. Cecil Summers, a partner a day on a van law clerk in Davis' office while a 1< in Buies Creek, community. He "He's (Summers) been talking ccted official in years about coming to Winston-Sa m for three and perfectly. I got my wife off the ro; "I don't have anv eco nrohlem ^ - r - wanted to make money and serve my clients. If I c out front, that's fine." \ population of The world also got smaller whe: school guidance counselor, Clarenc i family while ty school administrator, had taken >ut there wasn't was white Davis was watching th recognized Walter Marshall, vice >r professional former physical education teacher >riented person, school. a small town at- "That's the one thing I like ab "The black community seems to b zine Sect 9 J i^^Hpp V >*fw?Pi^^li^MRBB' ?9i Revving Up Six-year-old Thomas Amos takes over the driver's seat during the Patterson Avenue YMCA's Kinder Camp's recent tour of the et even if it mean His narrow and slender frame can send him fly ing through the air with just a feather light trot and i lift of his body. "I don't know why I've caught on so fast," says Brian. "I guess I just like to dance. > "I really like ballet," he says. "It looks so t beautiful, so acrobatic." 1 Placed above average academically, the 5-5, softspoken Winston native says it was an adjustment i changing from a regular, public school to a school e exclusively for the arts. d "I didn't feel very comfortable when I first cam< '7 thought about going into other things, but God meant for me to be a dancer ana r that's what I'll be. " i ? Brian Pitts ) here," Brian says. "In (regular) public schools yoi / don't have responsibilites placed on you. Hen ) you're responsible. It's a big difference." All Brian ever knew about ballet was what he hac i seen on television, he says. Other than the fact that t he enjoyed watching it and that he liked to dance, ; he says, he had no idea what type of dance he would i be involved in. > "At first all I knew was that I was going to be I Ji ' i uancing, ne says. "But, the more I studied, the 1 more I began to understand and like ballet. "I thought about going intd other things," says place to be j^H problems with leaving everything plans to pick up and move. I think," he says. "We're getting I I I I nmunity Legal Services board of lission board of directors, and he I cal Heart Fund Assnriatinn and wBtMM (for he jump in. I'm not saying I may run for of- IBM >avis. "I can't help it; politics is in m^rn m id about leaving Sanford was leav- mk'm or a while. BI9 nd that the world is not as big as it of Henderson & Summers, was a IjpB iw student at Campbell University to me for the last two-and-a-half lem," says Davis. "It worked out ^ " hp 4iV1v aim it tr\ mak? an make money without my name I n he realized that his former high I :e McKee, who is now a city/counup residence in Winston-Salem. It le nightly news, he says, that he president of the local NAACP, a jifiHIInri and track coach at his old high Attorney Grej out Winston-Salem," says Davis. Salem*s blacl >e more involved politically." (photo by Jan The Chronicle, Thursday, July 19, 1984-Page B1 ion m :^^mi ^r '^^B Jm ? v VI IB? Marshall Street Fire Station (photo by James Parker). s a fist fight Brian, who would like to become a member of the North Carolina Dance Theater, "but God meant for me to be a dancer, and that's what I'll be." Another reason he says his mother was eager for him to enter the School of the Arts was her constant fear of not knowing where he was after school. "I'm here from 8:30 (in the morning) to 6:30 in [ the evening," Brian says. "My mother feels that I'm safe h^re. She didn't feel very secure about e public schools." Dance is something Brian says he's always been f fascinated with. It was the constant movement of it, he says, that attracted him initially."During the interview, his fingers are constantly tapping on the wrought iron table in the commons area in front of . the student union. His finger nails are practically j null. He bites them to ease his nervous tension, he ? says. I "I can't keep still. I have to use my energy," says t Brian. I The world of classical dance is competitive and Brian realizes that fact but is ready for the : challenge, he says. "I'll make room for Brian Pitts," he says. "I just know that I'm going to be a professional dancer. |^|||||||||||||||||||^^^ I | W -/1* BP1 W >^A BMVI^BfiBMkif^fe j/tt^t^.' vk. yj&j Ml ^U? HPpjJQjHfcjflj KaH BJj^^Ha ^3 ^E ^K^1 -291 ^ MESHM*- ? Ei ifl ! I' SrV^ ^K ? ** iJJ? Down I Davis says one thing he likes about Winstonc community is that it's politically involved les Parker).