Nacogdoches COVID-19 Call Center recognized as âDo-Gooderâ
Nacogdoches COVID-19 Call Center recognized as âDo-Gooderâ By Donna McCollum | January 25, 2021 at 2:46 PM CST - Updated January 26 at 12:59 AM
NACOGDOCHES, Texas (KTRE) - Collaborators of the Nacogdoches County COVID-19 Call Center gathered Monday at the Stephen F. Austin State University School of Nursing for an award presentation by the Texas Forest Country Partnership.
The reunion marks ten months to the day when the first COVID-19 question was answered. In two months, volunteers logged more than 2,700 calls.
âWe were trying to put together a response for testing for COVID-19,â explained Ian Gibson, the director of strategy at Nacogdoches Medical Center.
Here is this week’s news of grants or gifts to historically Black colleges and universities or for programs of particular interest to African Americans in higher education.
Wayne State University School of Social Work received a $250,000 donation from William F. Pickard an entrepreneur, philanthropist, civic leader, and former faculty member. An initial gift of $150,000 will create five scholarships, and a future gift of $100,000 will endow the scholarships and make them permanent. To be eligible for the scholarships, students must be active members of the Association of Black Social Workers Detroit chapter or the Wayne State chapter.
Historically Black
Tuskegee University in Alabama has received a $5 million gift from the charitable foundation established by philanthropist Stephen Feinberg, the co-founder and co-chief executive officer of Cerberus Capital Management, a global private equity firm. The donation will be used to establish the Stephen Feinberg Scholarship Program,