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Ceres Relay for Life this weekend
Teams to walk, sell, have fun, educate at CHS event
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The American Cancer Society puts on the Relay for Life in Ceres each year.

Rain or shine, the Ceres High School football stadium will be the site of this weekend's 8th annual Ceres Relay for Life to raise dollars and awareness to help fight cancer.

The American Cancer Society event is determined to raise $60,000 for its goal. So far a total of 30 teams -- numbering between 12 and 24 team members -- have signed up and have been actively engaged in fundraising.

"I tell the community to come to our relay and see what we've got going on," said Ceres Relay for Life co-chair Terri Jacobs. "It's a lot of fun."

There is still time for anyone to join a team, said Jacobs. Anyone interested in joining the Ceres Relay may call the American Cancer Society office in Modesto at 544-9279.

To drum up awareness of the Relay, purple ribbons were tied to poles in the area of Ceres High School on Sunday.

The Relay itself gets off to an early start on Saturday, April 20 when members of the Ceres Lions Club serve up breakfast to cancer survivors between 7 a.m. to 8 a.m. west of the football stadium. Survivors are also given a free gift package and invited to walk the first lap.

During the opening ceremony at 8:30 a.m., a local cancer survivor will be speaking. The touching ceremony will include the release of white doves to symbolize those who have survived cancer.

For the following 24 hours, team members will take turns around the track, either running, walking, wheeling or being pulled. Each team is supposed to have a member on the track during the 24 hours. Certain laps will carry a specific theme, some to draw attention to ways to fight types of cancer.

The public is invited to come down and cheer on the walkers and enjoy the entertainment that will be provided. There will be ample opportunities to play games or purchase items being sold at each team's station. All proceeds will benefit the ACS. Some teams will sell food and homemade crafts, and offer raffle baskets. Each booth will highlight a specific cancer and will offer literature on that cancer.

The American Cancer Society will be manning a "Fight Back" booth that will dispense information on how the ACS disperses money, and cancer awareness to reduce the likelihood of getting cancer.

At 9 p.m. on Saturday comes the heart rendering Luminaria event, which allows anyone to decorate or write on a bag in memory of a loved one in which later a candle will be placed and set around the darkened track. The name of each person being remembered is read over the loudspeaker. Luminarias may be purchased for $10 on Saturday morning and afternoon.

The event goes all night and closes with a Sunday ceremony at 8:30 a.m. with an announcement of the final fundraising announcement. Sunday morning's "Fight Back" session speaker will be Lisa Vorst.

Jacobs got involved with the American Cancer Society fundraiser after her children's father died of leukemia and she thought, "we have to do more."

Funds raised in Ceres will be used to support the myriads of services and research by the ACS. Besides the medical research, the ACS offers emotional support to cancer patients and families, and volunteers provide rides for patients to chemotherapy treatments.