C OMMUNITY Section B Also Sports, Religion and Classifieds October 30, 201 4 Community R Calendar Fall Festival Carl H. Russell Sr. Community Center, 3521 Carver School Rd., will present a free Fall Festival on Friday, Oct. 31 from 6 - 8 p.m. for ages 4-12. Toys, prizes and candies will be given away. For more infor mation, call Ben Piggott or Beverly Ligons at 336-727 2580. Mammograms A mobile mammography screening vehicle will be at Mt. Zion Baptist Church, 950 File St., on Saturday, Nov. 15 from 9 a.m. - noon. Medicare, Medicaid and pri vate insurance will be accepted and some scholar ships will be available for those with no health cover age. Appointments are required. Call the church office at 336-722-2325 to make an appointment or for more information. Senior Services needs volunteers Senior Services currently needs volunteers for its Telephone Reassurance pro gram. Volunteers call home bound, isolated older adults on a regular basis to verify their well-being and to pro vide socialization and sup port. Call 721-6965 for additional information or to sign up. C2C Union Baptist Church will hold its annual Comer 2 Corner Drug Dealers and Street Life Conference (C2C) from Nov. 20-23. The C2C conference is open to persons involved in all forms of street life. Registration is free and open to organizations and individ uals involved with drugs and substance abuse and rehabil itation programs. For more information, call the church office at 336-724-9305. B-ball and cheerleading league The Carl H. Russell Sr. Community Center, 3521 Carver School Rd., will hold sign-ups for its basketball and cheerleading league for boys and girls between the ages of four and 14. Parents can sign their kids up through Dec. 28. The fee is $30. The league will start the third Saturday in Jan. at 9 a.m. For more informa tion, call Ben Piggott at 336-727-2580. WSSU game trips A. H. Anderson High School Alumni will sponsor turn-around trips to the fol lowing WSSU away games: Nov. 1 at Shaw University and Nov. 8 at Fayetteville State University. For more information about these fundraisers, contact Theodis See Community on B2 Photos by Chanel Davis Above: Harlem Globetrotter Jonathan "Hawk" Thomas speaks to students at South Fork Elementary School. Left: Thomas shows Kindergarten teacher Barry Hill how to exe cute a trick as First grade teacher Becca Oliver and students Kalonji Patterson and Mackenzy Poli look on. Globetrotter tells students to stand against bullying I 1 ?? BY CHANEL DAVIS THE CHRONICLE South Fork Elementary students received a les son on how to combat bullying from Harlem Globetrotter Jonathan "Hawk" Thomas on Tuesday, Oct. 21 as part of Winston Salem/Forsyth County Schools' slate of bullying awareness programs this month. "I, myself, was bullied at a young age. So to have the opportunity to give back to those who may be going through the same situation and showing them how to deal with it and stop it in a I ? ? ' Williams positive way is great," Thomas said. He stressed the ABC's of bullying prevention: Action, Bravery and Compassion. The first step encourages students to report acts of bullying. Thomas told students they should be brave enough to step in to make sure the bully understands that See Bullying on B9 Above: Kindergarten teacher Barry Hill shows off his moves. Left: Kalonji Patterson, 7, displays his talents. ^