Dr. Robert Albright .Assists fund raiser Dr. Albright Joins Eastern Airlines’ Walk-A-Thon A Walk-A-Thon sponsored by the Equal Opportunity Committee of Eastern Airlines raised $2,000 for the McCrorey Branch YMCA. Escorted by two Charlotte police cars, about 70 participants walked" the five miles from Johnson C. Smith University to the YMCA on Satur day, September 28. The money raused from pledges based on the number of miles each participate walked and from cor porate donations. Local sponsors were Burger King (Beatties Ford Rd.), Krispy Kreme Doughnuts, Dr. Lester B. Wallace Jr., The Oc casion Florist, Dr. Wesley Clement, Jaren’s, Dr. Bobby Gibbs, Floyd Young (FDY Food Services), Pepsi Cola Bottling Co., A1 Kneeland (Adolph Coors), and Dr. Robert Albright. According to George Shinhol ster, director of the McCrorey YMCA, the donations will be used to benefit the Youth Development programs. Joining the Eastern employees and their families in the walk were Bob Davis, Spa ugh principal, walk ing on behalf of Mayor Harvey Gantt, who could not be present; City Council candidates Mike Sten house and Richard Vinroot; Dr. Albright, president of Johnson C. Smith University; Harry Brace, executive director of the YMCA, and his wife; and Joe Martin, direc tor of the Eastern Reservations Of fice in Charlotte. Eastern’s EEO committee is com prised of both management and non-management employees who are dedicated to helping the • Charlotte community through ser vice projects such as this. " Alma McCurry and Sandy Mur dock organized this second annual Walk-A-Thon. Alma McCurry serves as EEO chairperson. New Board Members The American Heart Association held its first meeting recently. New officers and board members were named. For the 1988 year, the new officers are: Felix Evangelist, pre sident; Charles M. Elliott, vice president; Linda Medlin, secretary; James Shaw, treasurer; Brooke N: Williams, chairman of the board; and Mary Ellen Black, chairman elect. The new board officers are Dr. George E. Battle Jr., Claudia Belk, Martin Brackett Jr., A. B. Clarke, Ronald Harper, Jenny Lee, Thomas Masters, Kenneth Miller, Donald Murfee, and Arthur Smith. YOU SHOULD READ THE CHARLOTTfe POST University ilHmCaC Program Board presents Jazz and Classical Trumpeter WYNTON MARSALIS as feature event of Jazzing III OCTOMR27 Two Big Show* 3 p.m. and 7 p.m. Mcknight Auditotfum TICKETS) 86— aMttvdontc $8—gonorol public (On taio at UNCCt Cano Cantor) OTH0R JAZZING III EVENTS , Oct. >4 ISJOpJK. ■ UowHMcOtotiai Ucturo 7 pOL loon* McOtaho* Trto Coneort Oats noon «tpt 10t Coneort 7pm- UNCCJoctlwmMt Coneort Ort.ip • - v ■ <■. . i, ■ "00" torboro Hwwi MnPm I pa. Cachin' Ok Contort (HwMo«MMtrmt»pMMc) mor» information, colit L _ N. C. Central Campaigns To Raise $16 Million Dr. LeRoy Walker .NCCL' Chancellor Special To The Post .. Durham - Fifteen years before the 21st century begins, North Caro lina Central University has launched a campaign to raise a total of more than $16 million in the next eight years. Chancellor LeRoy T. Walker an nounced the campaign in a convo cation last week which marked the end of the university’s Diamond Anniversary Year. North Carolina Central University was founded in 1910 as the National Religious Training School and Chautauqua. The first of two phases of the campaign has begun, and will end in 1968. Of the $5.4 million goal for the first phase of the drtye, Walker announced this morning, the univer sity has in hand $2.8 million In gifts 1 - - ■"■■■■ — and pledges. The second phase of the drive will be launched in 1968, with a goal of $10.8 million. The total goal for the campaign is thus $16.2 million. A substantial portion of the total will be invested for endowment pur poses, and the university expects to have an endowment fund of more than $15 million by its 100th birth day in 2010. During the first three-year phase of the campaign, NCCU will seek to achieve a total of $1,100,000 in Annual Giving, $1 million for speci fic support of new and existing university programs, and $3.3 mil lion for endowment. The second-phase campaign will seek, over five years, a total of $2,750,000 in Annual Giving, $1, 875,000 for program support, and $6,150,000 for endowment invest ment. The funds raised in Annual Giv ing campaigns will be used for unrestricted student scholarships, graduate fellowships, and teaching assistantships; to establish a stu dent loan fund; and for faculty and administrative operating budget support. Program support funds will be used to expand NCCU's honors pro gram, to establish a strong visit ing lecturer and artist series, to support the NCCU Museum of Art, to increase library holdings, en hance research ^programs, support faculty development and to im prove other university services Income from the endowment funds would also provide for pro gram support and scholarships, in addition to providing supplemental funding for faculty salaries. The campaign will be managed by the North Carolina Central Uni versity Foundation, Inc., the uni versity's principal fund raising arm. William E. Simon, former U S. Secretary of the Treasury, will serve as honorary chairman for the cam paign, and Dr. Francis A. Kornegay of Detroit will serve as campaign committee chairman. THE CHARLOTTE POST >tOur frame Says It IU" :*_ Celebrate New Beginnings At Presbyterian Hospital. Grand Opening Sunday, October 20 Dedication: 3:30 pm with N.C. Lt. Governor Bob Jordan Tours: 4 to 6 pm Location: Presbyterian Hospital’s front lawn, 200 Hawthorne Lane, Charlotte Date: Sunday, October 20 Hearts \K ' w•v-" •. MI Six hours. That’s the time a heart attack victim has before damage is irreversible. The generous gift from the Belk Family estab lishes the Belk Heart Center as a regional facility with some of the most sophisticated technology in the world for open heart surgery and the complex, delicate heart catheterization procedures. Minds Presbyterian’s spacious Psychiatric Center is the only one of its type in the Charlotte area that is i ,■a part of a full service hospital. It’s a place where shaping potter’s clay helps reshape troubled spirits. Where a rooftop green house nurtures new ideas about living in a complex world. A place where staff and patients form a living, working community that leads to recovery. Handsome new facilities—a basketball court and running track, a private dining room, a green house, a pottery-kiln area and generous areas for group therapy—support the programs designed bf individual physicians. ►abies Birthing rooms in soft dusty rose with a rocker for mom, a rediner for dad. an adjustable bed v\ ith a quilted spread and a brass quilt stand. State-of-the-art equipment in an attractive, home-like atmosphere, with staff who wants to accommodate our new moms' and dads' wishes. A series of programs that encourage participation. And down the hall, the Intensive Care Nursery for babies who need special care. Hearts MindsA at Presbyterian Hospital 200 Hawthorne I^ne Charlotte 704/371-4000 Grand Opening Sunday October 20th.