orate Giving M i 12 Philanthropy Journal of North Carolina Consumers let consciences count A new survey found that 78 percent of consumers are more likely to buy cause-related products. February 1994 Investing in schools Education secretary to speak in Charlotte Richard Riley will speak this month at the annual meeting of the Charlotte-Mecklenhurg Foundation. The Foundation has a new strategy that aims to focus community resources on improving the public schools. By Todd Cohen “1“ he role of private philan- I thropy in public education I will be the topic of a speech Feb. 17 in Charlotte by U.S. Education Secretary Richard Riley. Riley, former governor of South Carolina and a former trustee of the Duke Endowment in Charlotte, will address the annual meeting of the Charlotte-Mecklenhurg Education Foundation. The topic of Riley’s speech ties in with a strategy that has been developed by the Education Foundation. The Foun dation recently completed a strategic plan. Based on that Richard Riley plan, a possible emphasis of the Foundation will be to focus its investments on the professional development of educators. “The quick-fix things aren’t working,” says Corinne Allen, execu tive director. “We need to strategi cally invest our funds so they have the longest-lasting influence on the quality of public education.” The Foundation, which last year handed out $110,000 in grants to ini tiatives in the Charlotte school dis trict, is preparing to establish an endowment. It hopes to raise $100,000 in seed money this year and build the endowment to $6 mil lion by 1997. The strategic plan also calls for building community support for sys temic change in education; tapping private funds to foster excellence in the schools.. Allen says those goals are intend ed to put limited community re sources to their most effective use in improving the schools. The strategic planning effort was headed by Ann D. Thomas, vice pres ident for corporate contributions of First Union National Bank. BRIEFIY New rules for donors The Alliance of Nonprofit Mailers in Washington, DC reminds its members that charitable donations of $250 or more are now tax deductible only if the donor keeps written documentation of the donation from the receiving charity. A can celled check is no longer considered adequate. High-tech training Greensboro firm establishes center to study ethics, technology DataMasters, a Greensboro- based professional services firm for high-tech companies, has teamed up with Greensboro College in establishing a new Center for the Study of Ethics and Technology. The center will offer executive seminars on business, technology and ethics to individuals and corporations. By Barbara Solow he rapid strides made in I the field of computer I technology in the 1980s I were not matched by advances in ethics. That’s the view of Paula White, president of DataMasters, a Greensboro-based professional ser vices company for high-tech and telecommunications firms. To address the growing need for business training that has an ethical side, DataMasters last month opened a new Center for the Study of Ethics and Technology at Greensboro College. “Our mission is to be responsive to the business community for deliv ering advanced technology train ing and educa tion,” White says. “Because of new technology, there will he more ethi cal issues to be addressed. That’s a very basic element that business needs to revisit.” White says she looked at a num ber of colleges before deciding that Greensboro was the best place for the new center. “We needed a school that was small enough and could be flexible enough to do this.” Although parts of the curriculum are still being designed, the new cen ter is set to begin offering training sessions to interested businesses and individuals. G. Tom MUazzo, assistant to the vice president for academic affairs for educational technology at Greensboro College, has been named center director. He is a former com puter company president, consultant to AT&T’s Bell Labs and holds a Ph.D. in Biblical Theology. “Technology is raising ethical issues all the time and we’re just not dealing with them,” Milazzo says. “The prime responsibility of the cen- ETHICS ter is to make sure we understand the impact of technolo gy on human culture.” For example, new information technology codd replace many cleri cal jobs in the next centuiy, Milazzo says. Companies need to look at the ethical implications of using comput ers in the workplace. The center also plans to conduct research in neimal network technolo gy, which involves teaching comput ers to mimic the operations of the human brain. So far, DataMasters has spent about $100,000 to set up the new cen ter. White and Milazzo are applying for foundation grants to support expanded training and research. Rachel Hollander, program direc tor of Ethics and Values Studies at the National Science Foundation in Arlington, Va., says a number of U.S. colleges and universities have estab- Mshed ethics centers - many of which focus on technology. Among the newer programs is an association for ethics center direc tors at Indiana University and a national clearin^ouse on computing and human values at Southern Tom Milazzo Connec-ticut State Univer sity. Aarne Ves- ilind, a profes sor of civil engineering at Duke Univer sity, recently established a Center for Applied Ethics designed to promote the study of ethics across departmental lines. Where the DataMasters center is unique, its founders say, is in form ing a direct partnership between business and academia. “1 have learned that there are not vehicles out there for the business community that are flexible or fast or advanced enou^ to support mar ket demands,” White says. “We real ly need a lot of support — whether time or donations — to be able to go much further with this idea.” For information about classes at the new center, call DataMasters at (910) 373-1461 or 800-DATAMAS- TERS. Kicking off Children’s Museum prepares for campaign "r he Children’s Museum I About the World has named / a president and the chair man of its capital campaign, and is putting the final touches on its fundraising strategy. Anne Bryan, former chief of ele mentary education for the state Department of Public Instruction, is president of the Children’s Museum. Named to head the capital campaign is Charles Sanders, chairman and chief executive officer of pharmaceu tical maker Glaxo Inc. in Research Trian^e Park. The Children’s Museum is about to launch a campaign to raise $8 mil lion tor its building in downt own Raleigh plus $2 million to $4 million more for pro gram and staff costs. That money will he in addition to Anne Bryan Charles Sanders $12 million earmarked for the project from an agree ment between Wake County and the city of Raleigh. Sanders, whose compa ny has a Bri tish parent, says the fund raising effort will have state-wide, national and international components. And at least half the dollars will be solicited from businesses. The rest of the campaign cabinet will be named soon, says Gordon Smith, chairman of the Children Museum’s board. In addition, he says, ah international advisory board will be named. That group will provide advice on fundraising, pro grams and other issues. The 85,000-square-foot Museum is scheduled to open in 1998. Its first phase, scheduled to open next year, will he housed in a renovated ware- This rendering shows what the inside of the new Children's Museum Around the World will look like. File photo house donated by the state. Smith says that Bryan’s most recent job, overseeing elementary education for the state, will help the musemn plug into school instruction. Bryan previously headed the dropout prevention program tor the Depart ment of Public Instruction. Sanders was active in a $150 mil lion campaign at Massachusetts General Hospital in the late 1970s when he was the hospital’s director. Todd Cohen First Union supports awards First Union National Bank was a major corporate spon sor of the annual Rosa Parks Awards given by The Women's Center in Raleigh. This year's award went to Lucille Webb, a member of the Wake County Board of Health and a founding member of Strengthening the Black Family, Inc. Lucille Webb accepts the Rosa Parks Award in Raleigh. Rex Hospital sponsors students Rex Hospital in Raleigh will sponsor a Tar Heel medical student this summer as part of the Family Medicine Externship Program of the N.C. Academy of Family Physicians Foundation. The student will serve a four- week externship with a family physician in the Triangle. Wake United Arts sets $600,000 goal United Arts of Raleigh and Wake County has set a $600,000 goal for its annu al fundraising campaign. Will B. Spence, regional vice president of Wachovia Bank of North Carolina, heads the campaign. United Arts, which will campaign in 42 workplaces, funds 50 agen cies and programs.