Newspapers / Winston-Salem Chronicle (Winston-Salem, N.C.) / Aug. 21, 1997, edition 1 / Page 7
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? * IHIHBBHHK332XZZX33EOQ3B3nZZ33HHHIHHIl Annual Fellowship Banquet to be presented at Anderson Center The Mary Sloan Jones Annual Fellowship Banquet for persons with disabilities will be held Aug. 21 at 6 p.m. at the Anderson Center on the campus of Winston-Salem State University. The banquet will feature a guest speaker, entertainment, door prizes and more. The cost is $10 for persons Without disabilities, $5 for senior adults SS and older, and there is nq cost for persons with disabili ties. Sponsors are needed to assist with the costs-Transportation will be provided for persons who qual ify. All requests for transportation ipust be in by Aug. IS. , For further details, call 727 2505. Recreation Registration The Brown Douglas Recreation Center, 4725 Indiana Ave., will be registering partici pants for youth sports, classes and fall trips through Sept. 30. Classes will include after-school tutorial for grades 1-12 in arts and crafts, African-American history and other youth programing. Parental support and volun teers are needed. Those interested should contact Bryant McCorkle at 767-9496. Adult programs are also being oflered in weight management, ceramics, GED classes, basket and crafts, fitness classes, senior meals and activities and a par course. Friday at Five The Downtowners and Old Greensborough Preservation Society will present Friday at Five: 360 Communications Night, an after-work event in downtown Greensboro Aug. 22 from 5 to 8:30 p.m. The event will take place at the Depot,. 300 E. Washington St. The band Been Caught Steelin' will perform. Domino's Pizza, Subway subs, hot dogs, beer and soft drinks will be available. Admission is $3. The public is invited. Neighborhood Reunion A UNITY neighborhood reunion will take place Aug. 23, from 11 a.m. to 4 p.m. at the Bowen Park Par Course. Winston Salem State University band, cheerleaders and football team are expected to visit as a part of the university's commitment to being actively involved in East Winston. Fulp Family Reunion The Fulp family reunion will be held Aug. 24 at the Winston Salem Recreation Department's North Hampton Center, 4213 Whitfield Rd. from noon to 5 p.m. Family and friends are invited to "pack picnic baskets and come out to enjoy the fun, fellowship, good food and renewed acquain tances." For more information, call Ann Sprinkle at 767-7626. Moot the Team Kennedy Middle School PTSA and teachers will host a Meet the Team hot dog supper 6:15 to 7 p.m. Aug. 25 in the cafeteria. Meetings will follow in the team rooms. Parents will meet with team teachers to learn about cur riculum and team philosophy. Job Expo '97 The ninth annual Job Expo will be held Aug. 27 at the Four Seasons Town Centre from noon to 7 p.m. Jane Walter from Career Development Consultants, will be our speaker for the noon seminar, and ABC Medias-Resume Pros, will have a booth to review the resumes of attendees. More than 70 employers will be exhibiting, and over 1,S00 potential employees are expected. A wide range of industries will be represented, such as insurance, restaurants, health care, telemar keting, employment services, edu cation, government, military, and more. Fashion Fair The Winston-Salem Urban League Guild will sponsor its 40th Ebony Fashion Fair and Scholarship Competition Oct. 31 at 8 p.m. in the M.C. Benton Convention Center. Guild members are seeking teenagers age 15-19 who are inter ested in participating in the schol arship contest. An interest/orientation meet ing for contestants and their par ents will be held Aug. 27 at the Urban League, 201 W. Fifth St. at 5 p.m. For additional information, call 725-5614. Please respond by Aug. 25. " Gallery Hop Fourteen galleries will open their doors Sept. 5 from 7 to 10 p.m. for the 10th anniversary of the fall Gallery Hop. Shops in the Sixth and Trade Art District, on Fourth Street and on Reynolda Road will form a city-wide open house featuring a vast array of art, from iron work to antiques, African-American art to North Carolina handmade pottery. In addition to art, the event promises food, fun, and at Sixth and Trade, live entertainment Chorale Auditions The Winston-Salem Symphony Chorale will hold auditions for new members at open rehearsals Sept. 8 and Monday, Sept 15 at College Park Baptist Church, 1701 Polo Rd., just off Reynolda Road. Prospective members should arrive at 7 p.m., returning singers at 7:30. The chorale, conducted by James Allbritten of the N.C. School of the Arts faculty, will perform the Mozart Requiem with the symphony at the Stevens Center in February and present a Christmas concert and a spring concert. For more information, call the symphony office at 725-1035. Career Conference The Winston-Salem Chapter of Professional Secretaries International, the Association for Office Professionals, will sponsor a career development conference "Communication: Key to Personal and Professional Success," S?pt. 9 from 4 to 7 p.m. at the Adafti's Mark West Tower (formerly the Radisson Marque), 460 Cherry St. in Winston-Salem. The guest speaker will be Dr. Paul R. Berrier of Gaston College in Dallas, N.C. The cost is $35. To register call Mae Jackson, CPS, at 650-7538 or Jo A. Peay at 741 - 5865. Finifa '97 The Hispanic League of the Piedmont Triad is sponsoring the sixth annual Downtown Street Festival Sept. 13 from 11 a.m. to 7 p.m. in a new location, on the cor ner of First and Church streets in Winston-Salem. The afternoon will be filled with live Hispanic music, dancers, children's activi ties, arts, crafts and kiosks of international foods. For more information, call 744-5006. 25-year Reunion North Forsyth High School class of 1972 is planning their 25 year reunion for Sept. 13. For more information, call Debbie Smith Ruark at 724-2080 or Selwyn Matthews at 969-5480, or write North Forsyth Class of '72, P.O. Box 365, Germanton, N.C. 27019. Alive After Five Central Winston-Salem Association and others will pre sent Alive After Five, an after work party with great music, in downtown Winston-Salem Sept. 18 from 5:30 to 7:30 p.m. at Corpening Plaza. The jazz band Nightbreeze will perform. Admission is $1 for adults; children are admitted free. Parking will be free at lots at First and Main, First and Cherry and on the street. Food and beverages will be available for purchase. Paisloy Reunion Paisley High School class of 1967 is planning their 30th-year reunion for Oct. 17-19. For more information, call John Polite at 721-5147 (pager) or Deborah Ford Sims at 722-0573, or write at P.O. Box 16166, Winston-Salem. NC 27115-6166. C.P. Booker C.P. Booker appoint ed to Forsyth County Jury Commission Senior Resident Superior' Court Judge Judson D. DeRamus Jr. recently appointed C P. Booker to a fifth two-year term as a mem ber of the Forsyth County Jury Commission. Booker's term on the three member Jury Commission began July I. The remaining two mem bers are appointed by the Clerk of Superior Court and the Forsyth County Commissioners. A native of Madison. N.C., Booker served two years in the United States Army, after which he returned to the Triad Booker began working with the North Carolina Mutual Life Insurance Company as an agent in 1949 and retired from its management in 1988. Booker's present activities include service on the board of the the Literacy Initiative program. He serves on the Board of Leadership Winston-Salem and works with the Leadership Winston-Salem Alumni. He is chairman of the Winston-Salem Revolving Loan Committee. Me serves as second vice chairman of the board of directors of Experiment in Self-Reliance Me is also on the advisory board of Project Blueprint. He and his wife, Margaret Brown Booker, have lived in Winston-Salem since I960. Me is a member of Mt. Zion Baptist Church and serves on the Trustee Committee. Mo?4 Mfon-lrown Mose Belton-Brown named to Top Ten for second year Award winning Allstate agency owner Mose Belton Brown, LUTCF, was recently named among the Top Ten Women of the Year by the Forsyth County Chapter of the American Business Women's Association. Each local chapter selects a Top Ten woman who has exemplified outstanding business leadership and entrepreneurship in the community. Belton-Brown was also recognized in 1996 as the chapter's Top Ten woman. Belton-Brown has been an Allstate agency since 1986. She was the first minority woman in Winston-Salem to receive a neighborhood office agency. The Mose Belton-Brown Allstate Insurance agency spe cializes in life, business, auto and homeowners insurance. Prior to coming to Allstate, she taught for 12 years in the local school system. At Your Service i A i Most Belton-Brown LUTCF Senior Account Agent Agtney Mission It Is our goal at this agency to treat you as you would like to be treated. We will listen to you and provide reliable advice and service. We will operate our agency with an open door policy and invite you to request our assistance at any time. Home ? Auto* Life Insurance Mos6 Belton-Brown Allstate Insurance 3911-A University Parkway 910-759-3911 The Triad Singles Line Where Singles Become Couples Every Day! 727-1166 | ? FREE Local Call ? FREE Voice Mail Box ? lor FREE J Serving Winston-Salem.GnH'nsboro, High Point Arc.) 1001 S. Marshall St.. Suite 43. WS, NC 27101 yuw H'ave you discovered that running your own business is more than a full-time job? Are you CEO, coffee maker, . receptionist, CFO, and sales force? We are here. To make sure you have the tools you need to keep your focus oh the business at hand. To help you customize those tools to the needs of your unique business To make things like paying federal and some of your state taxes over the phone a convenient reality. If your board meetings take place around the kitchen table, give us a call. Because in our view, every business has a personality all its own. WACHOVIA LeMhed.
Winston-Salem Chronicle (Winston-Salem, N.C.)
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Aug. 21, 1997, edition 1
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