Newspapers / Winston-Salem Chronicle (Winston-Salem, N.C.) / July 25, 2002, edition 1 / Page 33
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Community Calendar I July 28 Little Miss Livingstone Pageant will be held The Winston-Salem Chapter of the Livingstone College National Alumni Association invites alumni, friends and the Winston-Salem community to attend its first Little Miss Living stone Pageant, July 28 at 3 p.m. at Goler Metropolitan AME Zion Church. The guest mistress of ceremonies will be Rev. Conita Archie Hunt, pastor of Denny Grove AME Zion Church in Wilkesboro. and Dorothy K. Col son, National Alumni Associa tion president, will bring greet ings, Scrapbooks assembled by the contestants will be displayed at the reception after the pro gram. Other Sertoma 4-H Center Sertoma 4-H Center, border ing Hanging Rock State Park, invites youths in and around Stokes County aged 5-12 to attend day camp every week from June 10 to Aug, 2. Campers will enjoy traditional camp activ ities such as arts and crafts, dance lessons and swimming lessons, as well as new ones such as financial literacy, nutrition and creative writing. The tuition of $ 110 a week includes lunch and a c snack. Parents need to drop off their kids between 7:30 and 8 a.m. and pick them up from 5:30 to 6 p.m. Registration is available on a first-come, first-served basis by calling (336) 593-3210 or vis iting www.campsertoma.org. Search under way The 1971 Junior Class of Atkins Senior High School is planning an Atkins 1972 "Class That Never Was" Reunion for Aug. 2-4. All classmates are t asked to call (336) 767-8894 or t (336)764-8477. I t Volunteer assistance i If your group is seeking vol- I unteer assistance for a one-day, s nonprofit, community-related I event, requests may be made in i writing. Include organization's i name, address, contact person < and phone number, type of event, [ tiflie, date, expected number i attending and type of help need- t ed. Mail to: Sisters of Bivouac t Chapter 530, Order of the East- { em Star, PHA, Attn.: Program < Committee, P.O. Box 4652, t Winston-Salem, NC 27115- i 4652. < i Power wheelchairs < Miracle on Wheels makes e available power (electric) wheel- c chairs to nonambulatory senior t citizens (65 years old and up), t usually at no out-of-pocket t expense if they qualify. No r deposit is required. 1 The electric wheelchairs are | provided to those who cannot t walk and cannot self-propel man- f ual wheelchairs in their homes or I independent living quarters and i who meet the additional qualifi cations of the program. The serv- ! ice also may be available to the permanently disabled of any age. Call 1-800-749-8778 or visit the Web site at www.durablemedical.com for more information on the details of this program. Hospice Hospice welcomes volun teers. Opportunities are available to work with this agency in a number of ways, including: as patient-family volunteers, who run errands or stay with patients so care-givers can get away for a few hours; as bereavement vol jnteers, who offer their support o families whose loved ones tave died; as spiritual care volun eers - clergy or lay people - who visit with patients and their fami ies, providing a special support .ystem; as volunteers at the Kate 3. Reynolds Hospice Home, who ire there on a daily basis, provid ng a support system for parents rnd their families as well as Hos >ice staff; as office volunteers, vho help with day-to-day activi ies; as Carousel group volun eers. who help by working as ;rief group facilitators as well as issisting with monthly orienta ions, grief education workshops ind day-to-day activities; as ramp Carousel volunteers, who issist with a weekend camp for rhildren and adults who have :xperienced the dbflths of loved >nes; and as Hospice Hands vol mteers. who help by speaking to irea groups, baking special reats, helping with odd jobs and epair work, assisting with bingo, lelping with children's support trograms, coordinating special :vents and working with annual irograms such as Light Up a -ife, the Memorial Tree, Hospice iabbath and Hospice Hope Run. For more information, call Susan Hudson at 768-3972. WSSU announces first Bass Scholarship awards SPECIAL TO THE CHRONICLE Incoming freshman Chante McLean of St. Pauls. N.C., has been named one of the first Bass Scholars at Winston-Salem State University. She will be provided fu)lc tuition and fees, (ull room and board, and the purchase of books for all courses. In addi tion, she will receive full mem bership into WSSU's Honors Program, opportunity to travel abroad during the summer between her junior year and sen ior year, as well as summer internships. To qualify for the competi tive merit scholarship, the appli cant had to be an entering fresh man. a'resident of North Caroli na, have a 3.5 high school grade point average, score 1,100 or above on the SAT or 24 on the ACT, and be ranked in the top one-half of his/her high school graduating class. In May, the Bass Scholars Program was made possible through a $350,000 gift to WSSU from Marshall B. Bass, a retired RJR Nabisco Inc. execu tive and philanthropist. He is president of Marshall B. Bass & Associates, a management con sulting firm. He also chairs the board of director^ of Future Focus Inc., Wake Forest Univer sity, Marshall B. Bass Children's Fund, the Bass Best Choice Center's Endowment Fund of Winston-Salem, and the board of trustees at Vtx?rhees College in Denmark, S.C. He serves as a member of the boards of directors of the United Way of Forsyth County. N.C. Baptist Hospitals Inc., and Pied mont Federal Savings and Loan Association. Celebration to honor Annie Mae Moss' 104th birthday SPECIAL TO THE CHRONICLE A celebration and luncheon will be held today (July 25) in recognition of Annie Mae Moss' 104th birthday at the Wpyston Salem Rehabilitation and Health care Center. She was bom July 25. 1898, to the late Ike and Elntira Cilenn. and is the only child living of 11 siblings. She lives at the Winston Salem Rehabilitation and Health care Center. Site enjoys cooking and sewing. She has two living daughters. Anna Scott and Norma Tu 111 e ; and two deceased daugh ters, Willie Alberta Moss and E I m I ra Holiday. Annie iviae moss nas iwu living graiiu sons. Tommy Lee Moss and Willie McArthur Moss. Moss Monica Rene Allen -? participates in pageant SPECIAL TO THE CHRONICLE ... Monica Rene Allen of Lewisville was recently select ed to participate in the Nationals 2002 Miss Jr. Teen Greensboro pageant competition on July 21. She competed for her share of more than $20,000 in scholarships, orizes. and sDecialtv gifts that will be dis tributed to contest ants. Monica is 13 years old. She is the daughter of Michael and Pamela Allen. Monica enjoys play ing guitar, fashion design, performing arts, and swimming. Allen NCSA dance student wins gold medal at ballet international competition special to the Chronicle Joseph Phillips, a rising high school senior in the School of Dance at the N.C. School of the Arts, has won a gold medal at the 2002 USA International Ballet Competition. "The competition, which is held every four years, concluded recently in Jackson. Miss. Nearly 120 dancers - many of them already dancing with professional companies - from more than two dozen nations took part in the competition. Phillips took the gold and a $3,000 cash prize in the men's junior category, for dancers I 5 to 18 years of age. (Phillips is 16 but will turn 17 on July 25.) Com petitors in the IBC are not judged against each other, but against standards set by previous win ners. The gold is only awarded by the judges when merited, and only one other gold medal was awarded this year, in the women's senior category. The Clarion-Ledger of Mis sissippi called Phillips "the con sistent crowd pleaser" at the com petition. Phillips was bom in Mont gomery, Ala., but grew up in Columbia. S.C. He began his bal let studies with Anita Ashley at Columbia Ballet School. He stud ied with Wrenn Cook at Hand Middle School in Columbia as part of the Richland County School District One Arts Pro gram. From 1999 to 2001, he studied at the S.C. Governor's School for the Arts and Humani ties in Greenville, where his teachers were Stanislas Issaev, Andrea Pell and Sandra Neels. Phillips won the Youth Encour agement Award at the Helsinki International Ballet Competition 2001.a Last fall. Phillips enrolled as a high school junior at the N.C. School of the Arts, where he stud ies ballet. Triad audiences will remember him as the Sugar Plum Fairy's Cavalier in the school's 2001 production of "The Nut cracker." Audiences throughout North Carolina saw him in the same role in a special televised program of the school's "Nut cracker." produced by WRAL TV and UNC- TV. He is the son of Linda Phillips of Columbia. S.C., and Stephen Phillips of Charleston, S.C. With international ballet com petitions flourishing worldwide, the USA IBC in Jackson remains one of the oldest and most respected competitions in the world. It has been called "the most fiercely contested of them all" by The New York Times. It is also the official international bal let competition of the United States, designated by a joint reso lution of Congress. For more information, visit the competi tion's official Web site at www.usaibc.com. This is not the first time a N.C. School of the Arts student has won at IBC Jackson. The late Edward Stierle won gold in the junior division in 1986 before going on to a short but triumphant career with The Jofftey Ballet. Janie Parker, retired principal dancer with Houston Ballet, won gold in the senior division in 1982. An arts conservatory of inter national renown, the N.C. School of the Arts was the first state-sup ported. residential school of its kind in the nation. Established by the N.C. General Assembly in 1963, NCSA became part of the University of North Carolina in 1972. More than 1,000 students tjrom middle school through grad uate school train for careers in the arts in five professional schools: dance, design and production (including a visual arts program), . drama, filmmaking, and music. For more information, visit the school's Web site at www.ncar ts.edu. mi MB mmm mamw FOOD HON Prices in this ad good ?HOT; ; Bal . 25 2b - fs MTTBSJJJJM 28 29 30 / \ EXTRA LOW PRICES We reserve the right to limit quantities and correct typographical and photographic errors. ^ Jumbo Pac^^^ I Fresh Gradey^^ftmii.. - Boneless, Skinless J Lb. (Chicken Breast tegular $3.99 J e Loaf Cakes I'rti Twilhoul MVPCanf2/MJ^P Strawberries jr ,"d,D7~r^QT7i V^ Without MVP Card $2.99 Each J Valu^? 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Winston-Salem Chronicle (Winston-Salem, N.C.)
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July 25, 2002, edition 1
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