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                                                                   A 
      Home Away From Home  
       
                Eastern North 
      Carolina is a region in which families are still the center of life for 
      many people. This becomes especially evident when someone has to spend time 
      in a hospital. Relatives, from a second cousin twice removed to half sisters 
      and great-great aunts, feel bound to visit the patient. One time a visit 
      to the hospital is truly mandatory is when the sick person is a child. Family 
      members visit even more frequently than with adult patients, and often come 
      in daily for several days.As PCMHs service area grew, the distances 
      traveled by these visitors became difficult to manage. It was necessary 
      to provide low-cost, comfortable accommodations for these people from outside 
      Greenville. A Ronald McDonald House appeared to be the solution. 
       
       There was 
      a public groundbreaking on July 25, 1985, for a Ronald McDonald housea 
      home-away-from- homefor parents of infants in the neonatal intensive 
      care unit at PCMH, and for children who were being treated for cancer in 
      the pediatric hematology-oncology unit, and their families. The house was 
      located directly across Moye Boulevard from the hospital and medical school, 
      on a two-acre plot donated by Pitt County. The site was chosen for the convenience 
      of families visiting at the Childrens Hospital. 
       
       Children 
      who had been patients at the medical centers intensive care and hematology-oncology 
      units carried out the groundbreaking. There was a continuing campaign to 
      raise funds, with a goal of $1 million by the end of 1985. More than $500,000 
      had already been raised. 
       
       Fathers 
      Day came on June 21 in 1987. On that day the Ronald McDonald House of Eastern 
      North Carolina opened to receive its first guests. These were parents and 
      families of children being treated for chronic diseases such as cancer, 
      renal failure and cystic fibrosis; or heart disease, serious infection, 
      premature birth, and other conditions requiring critical care.  
       
       The public 
      dedication ceremony was held in the Brody Auditorium of the ECU School of 
      Medicine. From 3:00 to 5:00 p.m. there was a ribbon-cutting ceremony at 
      the house itself. 
       
       Dr. C. Tate 
      Holbrook, director of pediatric hematology and oncology at the hospital 
      and medical school, said, I hope everyone will come out and see for 
      themselves what a vital asset the house will be to our region. He 
      also remarked, We began this campaign over four years ago, and its 
      just so gratifying to be able to share this moment with all the people of 
      eastern North Carolina whom this Ronald McDonald House will serve. 
      Nearly three-fourths of the capital campaign goal of $1.2 million for the 
      facility was already in hand. 
       
       John A. Allison 
      IV, president of Branch Banking and Trust, who was chairman of the campaign, 
      said, We are pleased with the financial support we have received from 
      school children, civic and church organizations, individuals and businesses 
      large and small. There was still a major job to be done to raise another 
      $300,000 to meet the cost of building and furnishing the house. Pitt County 
      had provided the two-acre plot on which the house was located. McDonalds 
      restaurants gave $225,000; $100,000 came from the Kate B. Reynolds Health 
      Care Trust of Winston-Salem, BB&T donated $50,000, and Belk-Tyler Stores 
      $15,000. The Pitt-Greenville School System sponsored a Buy-A-Mini-Brick 
      campaign that raised $18,000. Residents of Kenansville had donated $25,000 
      from a trust for Ashley Quinn, a child who died while waiting for a liver 
      transplant. Bill and Sally Freelove, owner-operators of a number of McDonalds 
      franchises in the east, were quiet but effective fund-raisers and donors 
      to the house. 
       
       Cherokee 
      Sanford Group had provided bricks, and carpeting had come from DuPont and 
      Fieldcrest Mills. The bedrooms in the house had been furnished and decorated 
      by sponsors, each of whom donated around $5,000. A wall in the foyer designed 
      by Susan Clellan, a sculptor from Winston-Salem, honored major contributors. 
      I wish it were possible to list the source of every dollar raised 
      and every moment of the volunteer effort directed toward this cause, 
      said Sue Moffitt, president of the Ronald McDonald House. 
       
       The house, 
      whose construction had begun in June 1986, had 20 bedrooms in its 15,000 
      square feet. There were also a great room, a dining room, a double kitchen, 
      a quiet room, a playroom, a teen game room, a laundry room, and an office. 
      Four bedrooms were designed to accommodate handicapped guests. There was 
      a downstairs apartment for the resident house manager, whose job was making 
      sure everything ran smoothly, 24 hours a day.  
      The house was planned to have a home-like atmosphere. A number of different 
      pastimes were provided for the guests. There was an entertainment center 
      in the great room where residents could listen to music or watch videotapes. 
      A book collection donated by Waldenbooks included both best sellers and 
      classics.  
      The 
        Celebrity Golf Classic 
       In September 1984, 
        the Eastern Carolina Celebrity Golf Classic had been started to raise 
        money for the house, and future Golf Classic proceeds would be used for 
        house operating expenses. In 1987, the Classic had already raised $100,000. 
        On July 20, Joe Clark, 1988 chairman of the event, announced that it would 
        have a new honorary chairman, Michael Jordan, and would move from September 
        to June. Clark anticipated that with the changes the Classic, then in 
        its fourth year, could continue its growth and benefit to the Ronald McDonald 
        House.  
         
         In the 
        spring there was less competition for recruiting celebrities. Holding 
        the tournament in June would make attendance possible for football players, 
        baseball players and basketball players who would begin practice in the 
        fall. By avoiding conflicts with other sporting events, it should also 
        increase the number of spectators, as well as be more accessible to media 
        representatives. Clark also felt that a better turnout of players would 
        make more people want to attend. His prediction was completely accurate. 
         
         He expected 
        Michael Jordan to be a major asset, as a native of the region, being from 
        Wilmington, and an enthusiastic golfer. His fame as a basketball player 
        at UNC and with the Chicago Bulls, a National Basketball Association team, 
        were strong advantages. Jordans influence served to attract a broad 
        array of celebrities as well as local golfers. In 1989, the tournament 
        was renamed the Michael Jordan Celebrity Golf Classic. 
         
         The Classic 
        grew steadily, and became more and more successful. In its 16th year, 
        1999, it had grown from a one-celebrity tournament with a $100 entry fee 
        to one with more than 40 celebrities and top sponsorship levels over $30,000. 
        More than 1,000 volunteers were working for the Celebrity Golf Classic 
        each year. In 1999 it brought in over $250,000, making the total to date 
        raised for the Ronald McDonald Houses of North Carolina more than $1.8 
        million. 
         
                                                                               Summer 
        Camps 
       The hospital and 
        medical school provide other benefits to sick children. Among these are 
        three summer camps that were set up for cancer patients, for juvenile 
        onset diabetics, and for patients with sickle cell anemia. 
         
         Camp Rainbow, 
        sponsored by the medical schools pediatrics department, the therapeutic 
        recreation department at PCMH, Pitt County United Way, and private donations, 
        provides an annual summer retreat for young patients of the hematology-oncology 
        unit of the hospital. The camp is open to patients between 6 and 18 years 
        old who are being treated or have been treated in the unit, and their 
        brothers, sisters, cousins and friends. The fee to attend the camp is 
        based on the familys ability to pay. A portion of the funds for 
        the camp comes from a Walk-Jog-A-Thon held each spring by medical students, 
        with paying sponsors for each runner or walker.  
         
         The four-day 
        Camp Rainbow summer retreat has been held from its inception on the shore 
        of the Neuse River in Pamlico County near Arapahoe. Camp Don-Lee provided 
        the site for it during a time when it was not running its own regular 
        summer sessions. Some of the counselors from the regular sessions stay 
        on for Camp Rainbow, to assist with the childrens activities. In 
        the camps first year, 1985, there were 29 counselors for 40 children. 
         
         Dr. Holbrook, 
        head of the section on pediatric hematology-oncology in the Department 
        of Pediatrics, organized Camp Rainbow. From the first, he has stayed during 
        the entire retreat, playing with his patients or relaxing on a screened 
        porch where he could watch them at play. It is a special pleasure for 
        the children and their camp counselors, who were mostly teenaged, to fling 
        Holbrook, fully clothed, into the pond. 
         
         Holbrook 
        remarked that he felt the camp benefittted his staff as much as it did 
        the children. Physicians and nurses from the hospital attend to counsel 
        and to give some of the children their daily chemotherapy treatments. 
        It makes it possible for the patients to see a different, more human side 
        of the people who regularly give them spinal taps and painful injections. 
         
         Pediatrician 
        Dr. James Gutai, Holbrooks friendly rival, established Camp Needles 
        in the Pines, with the cooperation of PCMH nurse Betty Goodson and the 
        Careteret County Diabetes Support Group. The first four-day session was 
        held over July 4, 1984, at Camp Albemarle, a Presbyterian summer camp. 
        The sessions were later moved to the 4-Hs Camp Mitchell, and in 
        1991 they began meeting at Camp Bonner, the Boy Scout camp near Chocowinity. 
         
         
         Camp Needles 
        in the Pines, attended by juvenile-onset diabetics from eight to fourteen 
        years old, gives the children an opportunity for safe fun with appropriate 
        healthcare personnel to ensure they receive their medication and proper 
        diet. With almost one-on-one counselingcounselors are usually diabetics 
        themselvesthey learn about managing their condition. Counselors 
        come from all over North Carolina, and there is even one regularly-attending 
        counselor, a nurse at Walter Reed Hospital in Washington, DC, who is the 
        mother of a diabetic child. 
         
         Camp Hope 
        was set up in 1985 for patients with sickle cell anemia from five to 18 
        years old. Dr. Holbrook started it, with child life specialist Jackie 
        Sauls, nurse-clinician Diana Gordon, and data coordinator Cynthia Brown. 
        The camp, held also at Camp DonLee, began with about 50 children, and 
        in 1999 had 84 attendees. The patients spend two weeks at the camp, enjoying 
        water sports, crafts, music, and dramatic arts, along with education and 
        support sessions with volunteer counselors. These include physicians, 
        nurses, social workers, and child life specialists. Attendees are encouraged 
        when they reach age 18 to become counselors themselves, and many return 
        each year to assist with the children. 
        
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