16 Philanthropy Journal of North Carolina January i996 In Januaiy EVINTS TRIANGLE Grantsmanship training Raleigh Jan. 22-26. Pines of Carolina Girl Scout Council center. Five-day pro gram by Grantsmanship Center in Los Angeles covers researching grants, writing grant proposals, negotiating with funding sources. . $595. Call Nicole Trail (919) 782- 3021. STATEWIDE Jan. 15 is deadline for artists/arts groups making applications for N.C. Arts Council's 1996 N.C. Touring and Residency Artist Directory. ELSEWHERE United Way conference Southern Pines Jan 21 &22. MidPines Inn 1996 volunteer leaders conference & annual meeting. Agriculture conference Lexington, Kentucky Jan. 19-21.5th annual Southern Sustainable Agriculture Working Group conference and trade show. January 1996 $ ‘ M T W TH MB SA IIM IHII 3 Ml 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 (501)292-3714. fimilMISIIIG iVElifS CHARLOTTE Tom Chapin concert Jan, 7, 3 p.m. Spirit Square. Sponsor: Jewish Community Center. $13. (704) 366-5007. WBTV blood give-in Jan. 11,9 a.m.-9 p.m. WBTV stu dios, Sponsor: WBTV/American Red Cross. (704)527-0313. Wine, line & dine Jan. 13,6 p.m. Hyatt SouthPark. Line dancing. Sponsor: American Heart Asso. $150. (704) 374-0632. Martin Luther King breakfast Jan. 15, 8 a.m. First Union Atrium. Sponsor: McCorey YMCA. (704) 342-9362. Taste of chocolate Jan. 20, 11 a.m,-6 p.m. SouthPark Suites. Sponsor: National Kidney Foundation, $8. (704) 552-1351. Great escape gala Jan, 20, 7 p.m. Mint Museum. Sponsor: Theatre Charlotte. $125. Charlotte's largest office party Jan. 26, 5-11 p.m. Convention Center/Hall A. Sponsor: Shelter Medical Clinic, (704) 372-8609. Dinner-dance Jan. 27. "Nicht Wi'Burns" Embassy Suites Hotel. Sponsor: Robert Burns Society. (704) 375- 4516. Symphony concert Jan. 27, 8 p.m. "Night with the Divas." Ovens Auditorium. Sponsor: Symphony and Delta's of Charlotte. $25-$50. (704) 392-4753. TRIANGLE Twelfth night party Raleigh Jan. 5, 5:30 p.m.. Bishop's House on St. Mary's College campus. Sponsor: Preservation North Carolina. Honoring Banb Talley. Free. (919) 832-3652. Comedy dinner Raleigh Jan. 6, 7 p.m,, Crabtree Marriott. Sponsor: Jewish Community Services. $45. (919) 781-5459. Benefit concert Durham Jan. 12, 8 p.m.. Nelson Music Room on Duke University East cam pus. Sponsor: Durham Symphony. $12.(919)560-2736. Crystal ball Chapel Hill Jan. 13, 7:30 p.m,, Carolina inn. Sponsor: Ackland Art Museum. $125. (919) 967-9111 or 966- 5736. Mystery Night Raleigh Jan. 19, 7:30 p.m., Longview Estate. Sponsor: Family Services Center. $50. (919) 821-0790. Masked ball Hillsborough Jan. 20, 8 p.m., "Unmasking the Violence," Hillsborough, Colonial Inn. Sponsor: Orange/Durham Coalition for Battered Women. $30. (919) 688-4015, ext. #9. Ball and art auction Raleigh Jan, 27, 7 p.m.. Woman's Club, Sponsor: Wake Visual Arts Association. $80. (919) 828-7834. CALENDAR (meetings, seminars, workshops and fundroisets] items ore due the fifth working doy of the month. For exomple, if your event is in June, we need information the first five days of May. The Journal will print os many items os space permits Cal! (91 9) 899-3740 for forms. Grants and Gifts ARTS Carolina Ballet Theater received $ 100,000 from the N.C. Dept, of Cultural Resources. IRIICATICIN AT&T, donated 50 acres adja cent to its complex in Greensboro, along with labor and materials, to build the state's first Project WILD site, where teachers can learn inspir ing ways to teach kids about the environment. Theodore and Jacquie Leonard of Lexington established the Briggs-Green-Price Endowed Scholarship Fund tor student-ath letes in the football program at Catawba College, Salisbury. The Chatham Education Foundation awarded $10,000 in Creative Teaching Grants to nine Chatham County schools: Bonlee, Chatham Middle, Horton Middle, J.S. Waters, Moncure, Silk Hope, North Chatham Elem., Pittsboro Elem. and Siler City Elem. Foundation for Good Business, Extra Special Super Kids Scholarship Program, two col lege scholarships in honor of the late Giles Crowell of Raleigh, from members of North Carolina Petroleum Marketers Assn. North Carolina Partnership for Accelerated Schools, $200,000 for a new middle school teacher preparation program at N.C. State University, from Philip Morris Companies Inc. Triangle Radio Reading Service, Raleigh, $3,500, from the Glaxo Wellcome Inc. Special Projects Fund of the Triangle Comrnunity Foundation. Wake Summerbridge, Raleigh, new funding from The John Wesley and Anna Hodgin Hanes Foundation, Exide Electronics, Caterpillar, Inc. and Carolina Builders, Inc. for year-round, tuition-free educational program for diverse middle school stu dents. FOUilllATIGNS Foundation for the Carolinas, Charlotte, awarded $17,500 in seed grants to the following: Alexander Children's Center, $5,000 for home-based pro gram for emotionally disturbed children; Catawba Lands Conservancy, $5,000 for land trust organiza tional development and increase in donor base; Society of St. Andrew, $5,000 for Gleaning Network and Potato Project, both hunger relief programs; Children's Services Network, $2,500 to establish integrated . research database of children's senrices in Charlotte- Mecklenburg. Cherokee County (S.C.) Community Foundation received $ 100,000 from the Timken Foundation. Cleveland County Community Foundation awarded $5,000 to the following: Cleveland County Arts Council, $750 for Passport to the Arts program for 4th- groders; Cleveland County Girls' Club, $1,100 for moth and reading tutors; Living Independently Through Volunteers for the Elderly of Cleveland County, $850 for public-oworeness campaign; Mental Health Assn, in Cleveland County, $800 for depression support group; Pioneer Girl Scout Council, $1,500 for membership materi als for low-income neighbor hoods. Winston-Salem Foundation awarded following grants in Winston-Salem: Piedmont Opera Theatre, Inc., $9,500 to commission opera of Ordinary People; The Adoptobles, Inc., $7,000 for wheelchair sports program; Salem Academy and College, $16,500, for Early Education & Leadership Program; SECCA, $ 15,000, for exhibit about history of Africon- Americcn residents of Old Salem; Southeast Gateway Council, $30,000, for land acquisition and pork development Tri-City Relays Track Club/Acodemics and Athletics, Inc,, $5,000; Moravian Music Foundation, $25,000 to microfilm music archives; Winston-Salem Delta Fine Arts, Inc., $4,000 to heighten aware ness of John Biggers murals at Winston-Salem State University; Winston-Salem Piedmont Triad Symphony, $25,000 to prepare for symphony's 1997 endow ment campaign; Winston-Salem State University, Another Chance program, $35,400, to give high school graduates access to post-sec ondary education; Medical Center/Bowmon Groy/Boptist Hospital, $22,500 to start children's cancer support program; Forsyth Jail and Prison Ministries, Youth Focus 2000 program, $12,500 to help young inmates re-enter commu nity; Winston-Solem/Forsyth County Host Committee, Inc., $12,500 for community activities in con junction with Italian 1996 Olympic teams training in Winston-Salem; Agency Executives Assn., $25,000 for diversity training; CONTACT: Winston-Salem, $25,000; Habitat for Humanity of Forsyth County, Inc., $14,000 for fundraising activities; Historic Bethoboro Pork, $24,000 for outreach programs for neighboring communities; Juvenile Justice Council, $12,000 to create community wide agendo for children, youth and families; Rufus Dalton Award, $4,880 to honor three police officers injured in line of duty; Southeast Winston Rescue Squad, Inc., $35,000 for pur chase of new facility; Stop Child Abuse Now, $30,000 for capital campaign; Bethesdo Center for the Homeless, $11,547 for person al development plans for home less clients; Community Services Research Group, $10,000 for 1995 oper ating budget; Eostgote Village Resident Council, $1,700 for recreation projects; Fairchild Hills Community Tenants Asso., $3,180 for play ground equipment and supplies; Association for the Benefit of Child Development, Inc., $20,000 for Best Start peer counseling program; SECCA, $1,000 for perfor mance of "Presenting Mr. Frederick Douglass;" Winston-Solem/Forsyth County Schools, $80,600 for race rela tions training in schools; Reynoldo House Museum of American Art, $10,000 for school program "Examining Our Prejudices By Looking at American Art;" YWCA of Winston- Solem/Forsyth County, $46,100 for Empowering Families Center; Support Our Students/YMCA, $30,000 for after-school pro gram for at-risk middle students; Greater Winston-Salem Chamber of Commerce, $75,000 for Minority Business Development program; Winston-Salem Foundation grants elsewhere: North Carolina Lions Foundation, Inc., Sherrills Ford, $20,000 tor maintenance of Comp Dogwood tor visually impaired; North Carolina Public Television Foundation, Inc., Research Triangle Pork, $2,500 to recognize Forsyth County youth who has worked to prevent violence; Shepherd's Center of • Kernersville, $20,000 for admin istrative assistant. Union County Community Foundation received $2,500 Boy Scouts moke luminorio kits for o Ronald McDonald House fundraiser in Greenville. from United Carolina Bonk. Partnerships in Assistive Technology, Rolteigh, two grants to make telecommunications more accessible to North . Carolinians with disabilities: $50,000 from the Dole Foundation's Telecommunication Funding Partnership and $24,000 from U.S. Dept, of Commerce's Notional Technology Information Assistance Program. Project partners ore United Cerebral Palsy Assn., The News & Observer and BTI Telecommunications. Orange-Person-Chothom Foundation for Mental Health, $25,000 from Maiy Whiting Ewing Foundation in Chapel Hill, $1,750 from Village Companies Foundation and $2,500 from Mary Norris Preyer Foundation tor Send A Kid To Therapeutic Summer Comp scholarship. Planned Parenthood of the Capitol & Coast, in Raleigh and Wilmington, $1,970 for mid-life services to under-served women, from Planned Parenthood Federation of America. S0CIM lIRVICiS Boy Scouts of America, Urban Emphasis Program, High Point, $30,000 for camping equipment to introduce boys in public hous ing and low income communites to scouting, from Zenon C.R. Hansen Foundation. Building Together Ministries, Halifax Court Public Housing Community, Raleigh, $10,300 tor computer learning center, from American Airlines Kids Are Something Special Fund, Michael and Cynthia Fronken Fund, and John 3:16 Fund of Triangle Community Foundation. Food Bonk of North Carolina will receive donations collected during Food Lion's 1995 Consumer Sharing Checkout Donation program. Speedway Children's Charities distributed more than $250,000 during annual Christmas tree lighting ceremony at Charlotte Motor Speedway, Dec. 6. Raleigh Rescue Mission, $1,086, from St. Timothy's Lower School and St. Timothy's Middle/Hole High School, Raleigh for Thanksgiving meals for the homeless. February 15 is the deadline for applications to the Fund for Southern Communities' Helen's Fund, which supports social- change organizations working with young people in Georgia and fhe Carolinas. The Fund's general application deadline is March 1. Contact John Bell at (919) 682-3702.