Newspapers / Winston-Salem Chronicle (Winston-Salem, N.C.) / May 3, 2012, edition 1 / Page 13
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Community Section B Also Sports, Religion and Classifieds MAY 3 2Q12 Community Calendar Young Yluslimahs Conference The Department of Women's Affairs of the Community Mosque of Winston-Salem, 1419 Waughtown St., will hold its 5th Annual Dr. Mary am Funches Young Muslimahs Conference, 'Teens and Matrimony Part 2," on Saturday, May 5 from 9 ajn. - 4 pjn. The conference is for males and females ages 12-21. Attendees will participate in workshops and discussions. The registration fee is $10 and includes materials, breakfast snack and lunch. Anderson Class of '69 event The AH. Anderson Class of 1969 will have a Classmates Meet & Greet and Raffle on Saturday , May 5 from 10 a.m. - 6 p.m. at A Better World Daycare, 317 E. 33rd St. There will be free food and refresh ments and raffle drawings all day. For more information, call Amanda Ingram Donaldson at 345-2021 or San tana Acker at 972-6091. Oddfellows Cemetery tours The Friends of the Oddfellows Inc. will begin sum mer on-site tours of the historic Oddfellows Cemetery for family reunions. The site is located on Shorefair Drive, across from the Dixie Classic Fairgrounds. Reservations are required so that tour guides will be available to lead tours. For reservations, visit the Facebook page "Friends of Oddfellows Cemetery Winston Salem." Post a request, includ ing estimated dates, and you will be contacted. Tiny Indians registration Registration for W-S Tiny Indians football and cheerlead ing squads will be held from 10 am. - 2 pm. on May 19 and June 16 at the Indians Field on Waterworks Road. Contact Wendy Durant at 336-775-6035 or durantwendy@ymail.com about cheering and Carletta Rice at 336-918-4826 about football. i Zumbathon Carolina Tide AAU Basketball, a non-profit organi zation, will host a Zumbathon on Friday, May 4 from 7:30 - 9:30 p.m. at Fulton YMCA, 385 Hanes Mill Road. All proceeds benefit the Carolina Tide oigani zation. NAUW meeting The National Association of University Women will meet on Monday, May 7 at 6:30 pjn. at the Alumni Building on the cam pus of Winston-Salem State University. Meet & Greet The Exquisite Ladies, a social networking and service group, will host a Meet & Greet on Sunday, May 6 from 1- 3 pm. at the WSSU Enterprise Center (the old Boys & Girls Club), 1922 S. Martin Luther King Jr. Drive. There will be light refreshments and the opportunity to win prizes by playing games. Go to http://www.facebook eom/exqui .siteladies 1 for more informa tion. Carver Alumni fish fry The Carver High School Class of 1962 will sponsor a fish fiy on Saturday, May 5 from 11 am. - 5 pm. at Carver, 3545 Carver School Rd. Fish plates, sandwiches, hot dog plates and other sandwiches will be sold. Proceeds will benefit the Carver School Alumni Scholarship Fund. Courtney Legins and Stephen Norris dance the swing. Photos by Todd Luck Derwin Mongomery foxtrots with Jessica Notine. Mayor Allen Joints gets down with Jenny Clark. Evette Clemons dances with Chris Engle. local Stars Shine on Dance Floor BY TODD LUCK THE CHRONICLE Local notables shook a leg for a worthy cause last Thursday evening. - Communities in Schools of Forsyth County (CISFC) held its third annual Dancing with the Forsyth County Stars at Winston-Salem State University's Anderson Center. The "stars" were all novice dancers who were paired with profes sionals - instructors from Fred Astaire Dance Studios - for the competition. The pairs held weekly practices ahead of last week's competition. Like the popular television program "Dancing with the Stars," the local pairs were judged by an expert panel made up of Fred Astaire Studios' Jamie Lee Brewer and Laura Stainback and Positive Image Performing Arts' Courtney Taylor. Weeks before last week's finale, the public was encouraged to cast online votes - at $10 a pop - for their favorite pairs. Money was also generated for CISFC through ticket sales for last Thursday's event. CISFC, which serves both Forsyth and Stokes counties, works to prevent students from j : * I- i ai i_ Michael Krawiec dances with Fox 8 Reporter Nicole Ferguson (above) and W-S Journal Relish editor Susan Gilmor (left). uroppuig oui 01 scnooi uiruugii ini tiatives like one-on-one mentorships and after school enrich ment programs. Nationally, students in the program have a 98 percent graduation rate. "That's our major focus: to keep our kids in school and make sure they graduate and live a successful life," said CISFC's NeSheila Washington, who organized the fundrais er. Mayor Allen Joines was among the most recognizable of the competitors. He has been dancing a lot lately. Last month, Joines also danced in Take the Lead, a similar fundraiser for the Bethesda Center for the Homeless. In fact, he was learning routines for both events at the same time. Joines said he's always glad to use his notoriety for charity. "I try to use the Mayor's Office in ways to bring attention See Stars on B2 Contestants and attendees take to the dance floor at the Anderson Center last Thursday for some line dancing. Terri Bost does a mambo with Chris Engle. Washington
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