Newspapers / Philanthropy Journal of North … / March 1, 1994, edition 1 / Page 18
Part of Philanthropy Journal of North Carolina (Raleigh, N.C.) / About this page
This page has errors
The date, title, or page description is wrong
This page has harmful content
This page contains sensitive or offensive material
1 8 • Philanthropy Journal of North Carolina People and Organizations March 1994 ARTS & CULTUR Holly Hales Marion. Named Director of Regional and Annual Program, Office of Development, N.C. School of the Arts. Don Fishero. Named Executive Director, Arts Council of the Lower Cape Fear. The Cultural Olympiad of the Atlanta Committee for the Olympic Games awarded three 1994 Regional Designation Award in the Arts to Southeastern Center for Contemporary Arts, Winston-Salem; Spirit Square Center for the Arts and the Afro- American Cultural Center, both in Charlotte. Kenneth Royall, Durham. Named Chairman of the Board, N.C. Center for World Languages and Culture, Misenheimer. Tom Lam beth, Winston-Salem, named Vice Chairman. Jim Leutze, Wilmington. Appointed member. Board of Directors of the Center. BUSINESS William Bynum, N.C. Rural Economic Development Center. Member of Board of Directors, Association for Enterprise Opportunity. Lucius S. Jones. Named Chairman of the Board of Directors, N.C. ffousing Finance Agency. Lucius S. Jones Anna Neal Blanchard. Formed Anna Neal Blan chard, Raleigh, Consulting to Nonprofit Organizations. Ben Ross. Opened Ross & Associates, Raleigh, a man agement consulting, public relations firm helping associa tions, nonprofit organizations. EDUCATION Mary Ellen McGillan. Named Director of Develop ment, Belmont Abbey Col lege. McGillan was former Director of Annual Giving. Diane Sullivan. Named Director of Annual Giving, Belmont Abbey College. Sullivan was former Director of Alumni/Parent Relations. Lisa Brannock. Named Director of Alumni/Parent Relations, Belmont Abbey College. Brannock was for mer Annual Fund Coordina tor at UNC-Charlotte. John Seay. Named Wake County Coordinator for North Carolina Students Teach and Reach. ENVIRONMENT N.C. Big Sweep, Raleigh. Elected new members. Board of Directors: G. Greg Wojtowicz, Melvin M. Shepard, Jr., Rick Cove and Nancy Pritchett. FOUNDATIONS Winston-Salem Foun dation. Appointed Richard Janeway and Elizabeth L. Quick to the Winston-Salem Foundation Committee. Brenda B. Penney. Joined the Winston-Salem Foun dation, director of donor rela tions. Harold E. Mitchell. Named to the Advisory Board of the ffealth Care Division, Kate B. Reynolds Charitable Trust. Make-A-Wish Foundation of Eastern North Carolina, Raleigh. Elected new board of directors: Bobbie Gray, President; Jim Lawlor, Executive Vice-President; Paul Flock, Legal Counsel; Elizabeth R. Bailey, Trea surer, Vice-President Finance; Zelle Jackson, Secretary; Diane McIntyre, Vice- President Fund Raising; Sharon Morrison, Vice- President Wishgranting; Kimberly Ray, Vice-Pre sident Marketing; Karen Brown, Special Wishes Chairman; Joy Fisher, Volunteer Recruitment Chair man; Becky Lawlor, Volun teer/Membership Chairman; Sandy Ringenbach, Carni val of Caring Chairman; Suzanne Roller, Public Relations Chairman. Hugh G. Young. Named Executive Director, Gover nor's Commission on Reduction of Infant Mortality and North Carolina Fiealthy Start Foundation. Cumberland Community Foundation, Fayetteville. Appointed new officers: Robert G. Ray, President; Walter C. Moorman, First Vice-President; Iris M. Thornton, Second Vice- President; S. Lynn Legatski, Secretary; Ervin I. Baer, Treasurer. New members: Naoma W. Ellison, Richard L. Players, Jr. Fred Stang. Named Development Officer, Greater Triangle Community Foundation. Fred Stang FUNDRAISING Linda Wilkerson, Ashe ville. Elected NSFRE President for 1994, Asheville chapter. Wilkerson replaces Chuck Ambrose. C. Edward Pleasants, Winston-Salem. Selected area chairman. National Develop ment Council, a group of 200 top fundraising volun teers for UNC-Chapel Hill. Other selected members: J. Walter McDowell III, John L. Turner, Charles G. Duckett, Gary E. Carlton, all of Winston-Salem. SOCIAL SERVICES YWCA, Raleigh. Elected new board members: Gwendolyn Gillespie, Sherie Harper, Debbie Hoover, Linda Johnson, Beth McAlister, Eleanor Nunn, Diana Remillard, Alice S. Warren, Patricia Harriett Webster, Lynne Clark Worth. YWCA, Raleigh. Elected new board officers: Cynthia Langlykke, President; Waltye Rasulala, Vice President; Michelle Joyce, President-Elect; Gail Kiker, External Relations Chair; Priscilla Bullovk, Program Co-Chair; Carol Parker, Program Co-Chair; Jean Costa, Public Policy Chair; Carolyn Simmons, Personnel Chair. Meg Allred, Raleigh. Named Development Director, YMCA of Wake County. Linda Garrou. Named regional administrator for the N.C. Guardian ad Litem pro gram, offering legal help to abused children. PEOPLE AND OROANIZATIONS ITEMS ate due the fiii working iJoyqf „ the month. The Journo! vbH * print os many items os space permits. FAXto (919) 829-8919. Grants and Gifts BUSINESS Council for Entrepreneurial Development, Research Triangle Park. Received $1,000 each from Arthur Andersen & Co., Graham & James, Ernst & Young, Foirview Advisors, Branch Banking & Trust and Smith Helms Mulliss & Moore, Wakefield Group, Womble Carlyle Sandridge & Rice to support entre preneurship. Mitsubishi Semiconductor America, Inc., Durham. Employees donated $1,748.50 and the compa ny matched the donations for a total of $3,497. Money distributed among St. Phillips Episcopal Church and Community Kitchen, Oxford Orphanage, Agape Corner, The Central Children's Home of North Carolina, Genesis Home, The Durham Rescue Mission and Free Will Baptist Children's Home of North Carolina. Wal-Mart, Garner, Awarded a $1,000 college scholarship to high school senior in the store's market EDUCATION Salem Academy, Winston-Salem. $250,000 from Sara Lee Corp, for upgrading foreign language labs and developing global business courses. UNC-Wilmington. $10,330 from the Cooperative Institute for Fisheries Oceanography for studies by biology professors, Ileana Clavi|o,David Lindquist; $7,000 grant from the National Undersea Research Center for an ecology project; $186,700 to the Small Business and Technology Development Center, Marine Trades Special Emphasis Program; $3,548 from the N.C. Dept, of Environment, Health and Natural Resources to fund geological mapping and analy sis. Peace College, Raleigh. $75,000 from First Citizens Bank to establish First Citizens Business Scholars Endowment; $75,000 from NationsBank to establish NationsBank Business Scholarship; $23,000 from Centura Bank to add to its endowed scholarship fund. Duke University, Durham. $10,000 grant from F.M. Kirby Foundation to develop Asiatic Arboretum in the Sarah P. Duke Gardens. Louisburg College. $10,000 gift from Mildred Boney Matthis for endowed scholarship in memory of family members. Meredith College, Raleigh. $ 150,000 over five years from the Broyhill Family Foundation for the Broyhill Leadership Institute; $50,000 from Alice and Daniel Satisky for Alice Goodman Satisky and Daniel Satisky Scholarship Fund. St. Augustine's College, Raleigh. $1,400 from Wellspring Grocery for construction of Community Health & Wellness Center. Amount represents 5 percent of the store's Martin Luther King, Jr. holiday sales. Appalachian State University, Boone. $10,000 from Graham Savings Bank to the school's N.C. Alliance of Community Financial Institutions Chair and Endowment. Elon College, undisclosed amount for scholarships from the Belk Foundation and members of the Beck family. Scholarships for business majors with an interest in retail. Literacy South, Durham. $430,000 from The Lila Wallace- Reader's Digest Fund to improve quality of instruction and make it more available to greater numbers of people. Washington County, Craven County schools. From the Weyerhauser Company Foundation: $55,000 to Washington County; $65,000 to Craven County, ENVIRONMENT National Audubon Society, Wrightsville Beach. $600 from Take- da Chemical Products USA to sup port research on the Battery Island Sanctuary in lower Cape Fear River. The Nature Conservancy, Carrboro. Fifty-acres of Old Dock Savanna in Columbus County from Pauline Johnson of Goldsboro; More than 100 acres along the Chowan River from the Armstrong family; Conservation easement in Avery County from Mr. and Mrs. J.R. Todd Jr., William O. Bell, John Killian, Larry McDevitt; 6.5 acres in Buncombe County from Mr. and Mrs. M.M. Boniske of Asheville ; 1,766 acres in Avery and Caldwell counties from Grandfather Mountain Inc.; 905 acres in Pender County from the Holly Shelter Partnership. The Scrap Exchange, Durham. $2,000 grant from the Durham Arts Council for 5 monthly arts programs for low income children. FOUNDATIONS | Fund for Southern Communities, Atlanta. $1,500 to N.C. Lesbian and Gay Health Project, Durham, for pro grams on health needs of gays and lesbians; $1,000 to American Indian Heritage Council, Charlotte, for re search and networking among Na tive Americans; $2,000 to Black Workers for Justice, Rocky Mount, for improvements at Abner Berry Free dom Library and Workers Center; $3,000 to Leadership Project, Kittrell, tor leadership training programs among African-American youth. Wellspring Grocery President Don Moffitt (for left) and Matt Sackett, manager of the Raleigh store (far right) present checks from Wellspring's 5 percent day honoring Martin Luther King Jr. to Robert Sheperd of St. Augustine's College and Diane Pledger of Hayti Heritage Center. Photo courtesy of Welispring Grocery HEALTH Mecklenburg Count/ Health Dept., Charlotte, $20,000 grant from The Aetna Foundation for immunization programs. I SOCIAL SERVICES Autism Society of North Carolina, Raleigh. $1,000 from The Metropolitan Life Foundation to host 1995 Autism Society of America National Conference in Greens boro; $5,000 from the North Carolina State Council of the Knights of Columbus for summer camp pro grams. Durham Companions. $15,000 from Z. Smith Reynolds Foundation; $8,650 from Greater Triangle Community Foundation; $5,000 from Glaxo, Inc. for Durham Impact Program, for at-risk children. GROW, Wilmington. $9,104.40 in donations from a quilt exhibit at UNC'-Wilmington for direct care for people living with HIV/AIDS. Methodist Home for Children, Raleigh. $24,476 from The Duke Endowment for one half of the cost of a new Child Day Care Consultant position; $144,000 from the Kate B. Reynolds Charitable Trust to expand recruitment and training programs for foster parents. Special Olympics, statewide. $25,000 from Glaxo, Inc. to conduct training schools for athletes and coaches in Durham, Orange and Wake counties. eiMNTS, GIFTS AND DIM). UNES ore due the fifth wirb'ng day of the nionl. The Joumol wil ptint os many items (i space per mits. Faxformsto:(919)829 89)9.
Philanthropy Journal of North Carolina (Raleigh, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
March 1, 1994, edition 1
18
Click "Submit" to request a review of this page. NCDHC staff will check .
0 / 75