Rocky
Mount, N.C.— North Carolina Wesleyan
College’s 26th “Day for Wesleyan” fundraiser
is set for Tuesday, September 18. Each year
the annual event attracts more than 100
local volunteers who call on more than 500
area businesses and individuals to ask for
gifts and pledges of support for the
College.
Day for Wesleyan helps support ongoing needs
of the College, such as academic programs,
athletics, technology, teaching materials,
and especially scholarships for deserving
students who otherwise could not attend
Wesleyan.
This year’s community chair of the
fundraising event is W. Douglas Starr, of
Rocky Mount, senior vice president of
Wachovia Securities in Rocky Mount. Working
with Starr as chair of the alumni component
of the fundraiser is R. Bruce Sharer, a 1968
Wesleyan graduate, past president of
Wesleyan’s Alumni Association, and a retired
business executive from Raleigh. Sharer is
also the son of the late Wesleyan professor
emeritus of biology Dr. Arch W. Sharer.
On campus, Dorothy Grant, supervisor of
office services, heads the staff campaign.
Leading the faculty effort is husband-wife
team Carl R. and Jackie L. Lewis, both
Wesleyan graduates who are now instructors
of justice studies and accounting,
respectively.
Day for Wesleyan continues the tradition of
community support that originally helped
establish the College. Wesleyan was
chartered on October 25, 1956, with
financial assistance from the United
Methodist Church, and a great effort by many
citizens in the Rocky Mount area who
recognized a need for a four-year liberal
arts college in the region. As a result of
generous community support, North Carolina
Wesleyan College opened its doors to the
first class of students in the fall of 1960.
The first graduation was held four years
later.
Wesleyan’s financial effect on the community
continues to increase with growth of the
College. The economic impact of Wesleyan on
the Twin County area is estimated at $31.2
million in annual expenditures, with $47.5
million in annual expenditures to all of
Eastern North Carolina, and an estimated 665
jobs.
Most of Wesleyan’s approximately 800
students come from North Carolina and many
are from the Rocky Mount area. The average
high school grade point average (GPA) of
students entering Wesleyan this year is a
3.0 (“B”). Again this fall, Wesleyan has
continued its full-tuition scholarship
program for high school valedictorians,
which has attracted top students to the
College.
Wesleyan also
enrolls about 1,000 students in its Adult
Degree Program (ADP), which operates on the
Rocky Mount campus and at sites in Goldsboro
and the Raleigh area. The ADP makes it
possible for adults with responsibilities of
work and family to begin or complete a
bachelor’s degree through evening, weekend,
and accelerated courses. The College employs
174 full-time and 100 part-time employees.
Last year’s
Day for Wesleyan generated a record
$510,560. This year the College hopes to top
that figure. The day’s total gifts will be
revealed at a celebration for volunteers at
the president’s home.