C^\ \^9r 1
The Chronicle
Community Calendar
Community
Briefs
TODAY, Oct. 18-21
- Stage Productions
UNCSA will stage
three productions during
the upcoming 2018-19
season in Hanesbrands
Theatre in downtown
Contemporary
(SECCA) at
Marguerite Drive
Winston-Salem.
Art
750
in
For
the Winston-Salem Girls’ www.kaleideum.org.
Winston-Salem,
more information,
www.uncsa.edu.
For
visit
more information about
the screening, please visit
rhodesartscenter.org/we-
are-the-change.
Chorus. For more infor
mation, call (336) 722-
4022 or visit www.pied-
montchambersingers.org.
Oct. 20 - Youth Art
Show
Oct. 21 - Monster
Dash and Goblin Hop
The Village of
Clemmons will host its
fourth annual Monster
Dash and Goblin Hop
SECCA is located at 750 be held on Oct. 23, from
Marguerite Drive.
Oct. 23
Accessibility Forum
Oct. 19 - Discussion
@ WFU
The Wake Forest
Journal of Law & Policy
will provide a day of non-
partisan and intellectual
discussion on the future
of Roe v. Wade on Friday,
Oct. 19 from 9 a.m. to 4
p.m. in the Worrell
Professional Center,
courtroom 1312.
Oct. 19 - “Trail of
Treats”
The Winston-Salem
Recreation & Parks
Department is holding its
third annual “Trail of
Treats” and a free screen
ing of “Hocus Pocus” on
Friday, Oct. 19, at Bolton
Park, 1590 Bolton St.
Admission is free. The
community resource fair
will be from 5:30 -7:30
p.m., the movie starts at
7:45 p.m. Food trucks
will be set up around the
park. For more informa
tion contact Jessica
Garrett at (336) 650-7694
o r
jessicag@cityofws.org.
Oct. 19
Registration deadline
Grandparents, great-
grandparents and even
great-great-grandparents
are invited to participate
with their grandchildren
in the Fall Grand Games,
to be held at 10 a.m.
Saturday, Oct. 20, at
Miller Park Community
Center, 400 Leisure Lane.
There’s no charge, but
teams must register by 5
p.m. Friday, Oct. 19. To
register or for more infor
mation call Chuck Vestal
at (336) 727-2325 or send
an email to chuckv@city-
ofws.org.
Oct.
Frankenstein
ance
Piedmont
19
perform ¬
Wind
On Saturday, Oct. 20, from2-4p.nl. at Village
The Youth Art Show of
Winston-Salem will fea
ture local, talented youth
artists, ages 8-18. The
show will begin at 11
a.m. and run until 2 p.m.
at MIXXER, 1375 N
Martin Luther King Jr.
Drive in Winston-Salem.
The event is outdoors,
free and open to the pub
lic. For more informa
tion, log onto The Youth
Art Show of Winston-
Salem’s website at
www.youthartshowofws.
com or email Leslie at
youthartshowofws @ gmai
l.com.
Point Greenway, 3210
Village Point Drive. This
will be a free event for
our community.
Free parking is avail
able at Morgan
Elementary School.
Shuttle parking is avail
able at Jerry Long
YMCA. Please call (336)
766-7511 with any ques
tions.
Oct. 22-
prostate exams
Cone Health
Free
offers
Oct. 20 - Grand
Reopening
Forsyth County Parks
Oct. 19
screening
The
International
Film
RiverRun
Film
Festival welcomes stu
dents and teachers from
Marjory
Stoneman
Douglas High School in
Parkland, Florida, for a
special screening of the
documentary “We Are
The Change” on Oct. 19
at 7 p.m. at the
Southeastern Center for
Symphony (PWS) will
present “Frankenstein”
on Friday, Oct. 19 at 7:30
p.m. at Reynolds
Auditorium, 301 N
Hawthorne Road. Tickets
start at $15 and can be
purchased online at
www.piedmontwindsym-
phony.com, by phone at
(336) 721-1945, or at the
Stevens Center box
office. Tickets will also
be available at the door.
Oct. 20 - Season
opener
Piedmont Chamber
Singers begins its 41st
concert season on
Saturday, Oct. 20, 7:30
p.m., at
United
Church,
Rutter’s
Maple Springs
Methodist
with John
Mass of the
Children, performed with
and Recreation
Tanglewood
announce that
and
Park
the
Championship Course’s
Grand Reopening will be
Oct. 20. Activities and
demonstrations start at 9
a.m. and the ribbon cut
ting ceremony will be
held at 9:50 a.m. For
more information, please
contact Mike Wilcox,
Director of Golf, at (336)
703.6423 or
wilcoxma@forsyth.ee.
free prostate screenings
for men ages 45 to 69 in
Oct. To qualify for
screening, men must not
have received a prostate
exam in the past 12
months. Screening dates,
times and locations are as
follows:
*Oct. 22, MedCenter
Kernersville, 5:15 - 6:15
p.m.
The city will hold a
forum Tuesday, Oct. 23,
to hear from citizens with
disabilities, their advo
cates, and service
providers about the acces
sibility of city services,
programs and activities.
The forum will be held at
5:30 p.m. in the City Hall
Council Chamber, 101 N.
Main St. Transportation
will be provided for resi
dents who are eligible for
Trans-AID services and
live within three-fourths
of a mile of WSTA’s fixed
routes. To arrange for
transportation, call (336)
727-2000.
6:30 - 8:30 p.m. at the
Enterprise Center, 1922 S
- Martin Luther King Jr.
Drive.
Oct. 24
Homeowner’s work
shop
There will be a home-
owner’s workshop on
Oct. 24 at Forsyth
SeaFood, 108 N. Martin
Luther King Jr. Dr. The
event will be from 6-7:30
p.m. RSVP at sgatkin-
scdc4@gmail.com
(336) 684-8618.
or
Johnson
Oct. 22
Conversation with
Leslie Morgan Steiner
For
Domestic
Johnson hired as
assistant county
attorney
The Forsyth County
Attorney’s Office has
hired Frederick L.
Johnson as an Assistant
County Attorney. He
will serve as the legal
adviser
to several
County Departments,
Oct. 21 - Truck &
Treat
Truck & Treat,
Kaleideum’s annual
Halloween blockbuster
bash, will be held on Oct.
21 from 1-5 p.m. at
Kaleideum North cam
pus, 400 W Hanes Mill
Road. Admission is $5
per person. For more
information, visit
Violence Month, Solarte
Collections of Winston-
Salem, NC, makers of
luxury French skin care
products, presents an
evening of conversation
with New York Times
best-selling Author,
Leslie Morgan Steiner, on
Oct 22, from 5-8 p.m. at
the Southeastern Center
for Contemporary Art
(SECCA). Steiner will
sign books at the event.
Tickets ($35) and books
($16) can be purchased
Oct. 23 - Bread for
the World
Racial Wealth Gap
Learning Simulation -
Bread for the World will
be held on Oct. 23 from
6-9 p.m. The simulation
is an interactive tool that
helps people understand
the connections among
racial equity, hunger,
poverty, and wealth. The
event will be at Wingate
Hall, Lower Auditorium
1834 Wake Forest Road
Winston-Salem. To reg
ister, visit
https://docs .google .c
om/forms/d/e/1 FAIpQLS
cPyP8ncfy7ctg_010Rc 1 w
4HpaMuvllfYImVvFCX
Cjghsve6g/viewform.
Oct. 24-27 - Pink
Crawl
In honor of breast
cancer awareness, the
second annual Pink
Crawl events will be held
throughout Downtown
Winston-Salem on Oct.
24- 27. To see a listing of
events or to purchase a
including
the Tax
f r
o
m
SolarteCollections.com.
Oct. 23 - Black
Chamber of Commerce
meeting
Winston-Salem
Black Chamber of
Commerce meeting will
ticket,
visit
https://www.eventbrite.co
m/e/pink-crawl-winston-
salem-paint-the-town-
pink-tickets-
48428326428.
Oct. 25 - Fundraiser
Spirit Gum Theatre
Company has officially
achieved their 501(c)(3)
nonprofit status and is
celebrating by kicking off
their sixth Season with
BeneFright, a fundraising
Department, Emergency
Services, and General
Services. Johnson, a
native of Wake County,
graduated magna cum
laude from North
Carolina State in 2010.
He earned a law degree
from University of North
Carolina School of Law
in 2013 and served as
Managing Editor of the
North Carolina Law
Review. Johnson previ
ously was Assistant City
Attorney in Concord,
North Carolina, from
2015-2018.
Medicare annual
enrollment sessions
The
Medicare
event at 7 p.m.
on
Thursday, Oct. 25 at
Ardmore
Barbershop,
1311 S. Hawthorne Road
in
Winston-Salem.
Tickets are available for
advance purchase online
and during the event at
the door, availability per
mitting. Advance tickets
can be purchased at
https://spiritgumtheatre-
beneFRIGHT.bpt.me.
Annual Enrollment peri
od will be through Dec.
7. In order to assist
Medicare beneficiaries,
enrollment sessions are
being offered from Oct.
19 through Dec. 7, by the
Shepherd’s Center of
Greater Winston-Salem.
One-hour appointments
will be offered from
noon-5 p.m. Space is
limited. Appointments
must be made by calling
the Shepherd’s Center at
(336)748-0217.
COMMUNITY BUSINESS OF THE MONTH
LE'CHATEAU BAKERY
Le’Chateau
Bakery
www.lechateaubakery.com
1200 East Clemmonsville Rd.
Winston-Salem, North Carolina
(336) 986-1443
#wsbiz
wing opportunity i
ston-Salem means supporting local businesses. That support is especially important
DO
very month we highlight a community business and urge everyone to join us in
supporting their success. Patronize the business of the month and follow the effort at #wsbiz
The Chronicle
TRAC WK0RH
BUSINESS
^ Sponsored by
WS
WINSTON SALEM
Winston-Salem
Urban League