Campbell Magazine Winter 2014-15

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Winter 2014-15

THE MADDOX

LEGACY A new pharmacy school and its young dean proved the critics wrong 30 years ago


FALL 2014

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FEATURES

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Forgotten First

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Cordell Wise, Campbell’s first black student in 1968 and a star on the Camels’ basketball team from '68-'70, is a significant figure in the University’s history, whether he believes it or not.

The ISIS Crisis

Campbell homeland security students are doing far more than discussing threats to the United States like ISIS and other terrorist organizations. They’re writing, analyzing and offering national security suggestions — all to better prepare them for careers in the field.

COVER STORY

The Maddox Legacy Proving Them Wrong

One man has led the College of Pharmacy & Health Sciences from its inception, a man with a tireless work ethic and a vision to provide proper health care to rural, medically underserved areas of the state and region — Ronald W. Maddox.

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Immersed in the Whedonverse

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Still the Best

Campbell English professor Elizabeth Rambo has become a world-renowned expert in all things “Buffy the Vampire Slayer,” “Firefly” and other fictional works from the mastermind of Joss Whedon.

Cary Kolat ruled the wrestling world in the 1990s before a disappointing end to his career at the Olympics in 2000. At Campbell, he’s out to prove he can lead another small program to an All-American level.

<< A group of first-year students in the Jerry M. Wallace School of Osteopathic Medicine have a discussion outside of the school's manipulative medicine lab. The students are among the 162 who make up the school's second class, set to graduate as doctors in 2018. | Photo by Bill Parish

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FROM THE EDITOR WINTER 2014-15 | VOLUME 9 | ISSUE 3 __________________________________ PRESIDENT

Jerry Wallace VICE PRESIDENT FOR INSTITUTIONAL ADVANCEMENT AND ASSISTANT TO THE PRESIDENT

Britt Davis

ASSISTANT VICE PRESIDENT FOR COMMUNICATIONS & MARKETING

Haven Hottel ('00)

DIRECTOR OF PUBLICATIONS & SENIOR STAFF WRITER

Billy Liggett

DIRECTOR OF DIGITAL MEDIA & SENIOR STAFF WRITER

Cherry Crayton

DIRECTOR OF VISUAL IDENTITY

Jonathan Bronsink ('05) CONTRIBUTOR

Leah Whitt PHOTOGRAPHERS

Travis Jack Rebecca Mill Bill Parish Bennett Scarborough WEB DESIGN TEAM

Bob Dry

Web & Online Strategy Director

Carlos Cano

Web Designer / Developer __________________________________ ACCOLADES

2014 CASE III Grand Award Most Improved

2013 CASE III Grand Awards Best Magazine, Most Improved

__________________________________

Founded in 1887, Campbell University is a private, coeducational institution where faith and learning excel. Campbell offers programs in the liberal arts, sciences and professions with undergraduate, graduate and doctoral degrees. The University is comprised of the College of Arts and Sciences, the Norman Adrian Wiggins School of Law, the Lundy-Fetterman School of Business, the School of Education, the College of Pharmacy & Health Sciences, the Divinity School and the Jerry M. Wallace School of Osteopathic Medicine. Campbell University was ranked among the Best Regional Universities in the South by U.S. News & World Report in its America’s Best Colleges 2014 edition and named one of the “100 Best College Buys” in the nation by Institutional Research & Evaluation, Inc.

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Campbell University is an equal opportunity employer. www.campbell.edu/employment WINTER 2014-15

FORGOTTEN FIRST

CORDELL WISE IS A SIGNIFICANT FIGURE IN CAMPBELL’S HISTORY, WHETHER HE BELIEVES IT OR NOT

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’ve been writing for newspapers and magazines for about 15 years now. Often, once a feature idea comes or is pitched to me, I have a pretty good idea of where I want to go with it and what the story will look like before the first interview question is ever asked. When I first learned about Cordell Wise, I knew I wanted that story for this magazine. Wise was Campbell University’s first black student — arriving in Buies Creek in 1967 on a basketball scholarship. By 1970, Wise would lead Campbell to its first NAIA conference championship, scoring well over 20 points a game as the Camels’ team captain. Based on those few facts, I knew where this story was going — young man moves south from New Jersey, comes face to face with a whole new culture and a student body unsure of how to handle the sudden diversity. There would be struggles, obviously; but in the end, a winning basketball team would trump the racial bigotry, and everyone would live happily ever after. It’s the story Disney movies are made of. Literally. Turns out, however, the story of Cordell Wise and Campbell University didn’t follow my pre-

determined script. Despite his place in Campbell history, very few people from the University kept in touch with Wise after his graduation in ’70. Bill Silvester (’68) — a classmate and friend of Wise’s and the man who pitched the story idea to me — said he lost contact with him shortly after graduation and only recently found out he was living in New Jersey again as a recently retired teacher and coach (information available from a Facebook search). “Cordell’s warm, outgoing personality made him a friend of just about all that knew him, and trust me, this was not easy during those times and in that place,” Silvester told me in his story pitch. “I cherished my friendship with him.” Wise was a hard man to track down. A public but little-used Facebook page provided his city, but Campbell’s alumni directory listed a wrong phone number. When I finally tracked down a working number, I left Wise a message telling him who I was and why I was interested in writing a story about him. A week later, my call was returned. The man on the other line didn’t seem thrilled to share his story — the opposite of what I had assumed — and instead lobbed the questions in my direction about my intentions and why I wanted this story.


Cordell Wise, it turns out, doesn’t have a fond opinion of his alma mater. And this opinion was in no way formed by how he was treated by an entirely white student body or a rural North Carolina town whose “welcome” sign in 1968 included a hooded knight on a horse and the words “Join & Support The United Klans of America, Inc. Welcome to Lillington.” The truth is, Wise was loved here. “There were no real racial incidents when I was there,” Wise said. “Campbell at the time was a suitcase campus, and there were a lot of us students from the North going there. Most students would go home on the weekends; we stayed because where were we going to go? I doubt most people saw my coming as a meaningful event.”

gravitate toward him. It wasn’t long before he was very popular throughout campus.”

Conway. Conway arrived in 1968, and her Campbell experience was far less enjoyable.

Silvester, who knew Wise because his roommate was also from New Jersey, disagrees about Wise’s presence not being “meaningful.”

Silvester recalled one incident that could have gotten “out of hand,” but instead solidified Wise’s standing among his classmates.

“I grew up in northeastern North Carolina, and Cordell was the first black person I ever went to school with,” Silvester said. “Buies Creek at the time was one of the most segregated places around … I’m not sure there was a black family in the town limits. When I heard he was coming, I couldn’t believe it. But Cordell surrounded himself with some great guys from the team when he got here. Later, other students began to

“There was a grill near where the fire department near campus is now,” he said. “The first time he went over there, he was refused service. A group of students went over there later and told the guy who ran it that if he couldn’t eat there, they wouldn’t either. Very soon, that grill was integrated.”

“Aside from being disrespected, some people treated me as if I was less than,” said Conway, who left Campbell a year after she enrolled. “The air of segregation at the time was such that I did not want to return.”

A March 21, 1967, article in the Creek Pebbles about Wise’s arrival never mentioned his race, only his basketball ability and acumen. A Nov. 17 article that same year about his first game with Campbell only mentioned race briefly and included the quote, “The people here at Campbell have been good to me.” So why the resentment? Why isn’t Wise’s enrollment more of a milestone in Campbell’s history books? Why didn’t his time in Buies Creek have a happy ending? The answer, according to Wise, isn't race-related. Instead, it has to do with a dispute Wise had with legendary Campbell basketball coach Fred McCall at the end of his junior year. Wise didn’t go into details of the dispute, only to say, “It was something that may or may not have significantly changed my life,” he said. “I don’t give it a lot of thought anymore.” You can’t change history, but I wish the ending to the Cordell Wise and Campbell University story had been a better one. This fall, the Campbell Times — the University’s student-run newspaper — featured one of the few black students who enrolled here a year after Wise, Patricia Oates

W W W. C A M P B E L L . E D U / M A G A Z I N E

But she did return. Very recently, in fact. Conway is currently a sophomore in Campbell’s Communication Studies department. Her return was sparked by the death of her son, Gary, who suffered a brain aneurysm a month before her decision to return to school. “My first year back was very nostalgic, and grief stricken,” she said. “Now that I am in my second year, I feel like my feet are on the ground and my head to the sky as I came back to get my degree for Gary." I hope for a similar “mending of fences” for Wise and Campbell. He belongs in Campbell’s Sports Hall of Fame (his teammate during Campbell’s late-60s run, Ken Faulkner, is a member). His arrival and his story deserve to be told (and much better than what I’m doing here). “My father was a janitor with a second-grade education, and my mother didn’t work,” Wise told me in our brief phone exchange. “My life back then was all about survival. That’s why I didn’t view my coming to Campbell as anything monumental.”

Billy Liggett Editor, Campbell Magazine

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DOUBLE CAMELS

First-year Campbell Law students and “Double Camels” (from left) Holly Jones, Justin Bradley, Claudia Mundy and Brittany Bridges. | Photo by Jimmy Allen

DOUBLE CAMELS

In this academic year alone, nearly 100 of the new graduate and professional students at Campbell received their undergraduate degrees from the University. We talked to a few of the first-year students in doctorate and professional programs about why they chose to continue their education at Campbell.

CLAUDIA MUNDY (’14) FIRST-YEAR LAW STUDENT

LAW There are 20 first-year students in the law school who received their undergraduate degrees from Campbell this academic year. As these students trade the quaint Buies Creek for the legal learning laboratory of downtown Raleigh, they bring with them the Campbell undergraduate experience and familial atmosphere, bridging the nearly 30mile gap that separates the campuses. “Something of great value to me, and probably my parents as well, is the merit scholarship given to Campbell Law students by virtue of their alma mater," says first-year law student Claudia Mundy. "However, decisions aren't based solely on the aspect of tuition. I chose Campbell Law for what it offers as a whole — persons, places and perspective.”

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RACHEL BARTS (’14)

MELISSA WYCHE (’14)

PHARMACY

MEDICINE

Campbell University President Jerry Wallace refers to those who pursue both their undergraduate and graduate studies at Campbell “Double Camels.” The College of Pharmacy & Health Sciences labels its 48 Double Camels as “CU Heritage” students.

Melissa Wyche (’14) said she found Campbell to be less like an institution and more like a family. That’s why she began researching osteopathic medicine once she learned Campbell was starting an osteopathic medical school.

One of them is Rachel Barts (’14). She finished her Bachelor of Science in Clinical Research at Campbell in May and returned to Buies Creek this fall to start the PharmD program. A Reidsville native, she never thought about looking anywhere else for either her undergraduate or graduate studies.

A pre-professional biology/medicine major at Campbell and native of Henderson, Wyche said she was drawn to the medical school's commitment to train physicians who serve in medically-underserved areas in the state.

FIRST-YEAR PHARMACY STUDENT

“Coming here was the best thing I’ve ever done, and I wouldn’t trade it for anything,” she says. “It’s understandable why so many stay here to continue their education. I love how I feel like I’m part of a family.”

A FIRST-YEAR MEDICAL STUDENT

“I knew that I was entering an environment where much would be expected of me academically, but I also knew that the faculty and administration would do everything it could to help me and my fellow students succeed and become the best physicians we can be.”


BY THE NUMBERS

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The number of new electric car charging "pumps" — the first at Campbell University — installed this semester. Located in the parking lot behind the Pope Convocation Center, the outlets were added to accommodate the new demand from those who commute or drive to work in electric vehicles or hybrids. It’s not only the first charging station at Campbell; it’s the first one installed in Harnett County and among the first installed on any private college or university campus in North Carolina.

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The amount of months it will take to earn a Master of Physician Assistant degree, down from the initial 28-month curriculum the program started with when it launched in fall 2011. The program’s fifth class — to begin in August 2015 — will have three months dropped from its clinical rotations, but there will be no change to the 12-month didactic phase of the program.

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The percentage of visitors to Campbell University’s main web site, campbell.edu, who visit using a cell phone, tab or other mobile device. In the fall of 2010, mobile devices made up only 2 percent of the site’s views. This fall, the University launched its first mobile-friendly site upgrade and included a few other new features such as a social hub and a new Campbell Giving page.

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Average home attendance through the first four Campbell football games at Barker-Lane Stadium this season. That figure ranks Campbell 78th in the nation out of 124 FCS schools, and second in the Pioneer Football League behind Morehead State. The figure is a big jump from 2013, when Campbell average 4,366 fans per game. It’s also double the average attendance of four other PFL teams. Travis and Megan Boyd Jack ('03) of Flyboy Aerial Photography of Raleigh flew their drones over the Buies Creek campus and Barker-Lane Stadium on Homecoming Saturday to capture the festivities from a birds-eye view. The resulting photos and videos were among the most-shared images on Campbell’s social media platforms this fall. W W W. C A M P B E L L . E D U / M A G A Z I N E

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AROUND CAMPUS Laura Scott, a biochemistry and math double major from Michigan, models for Professor Breck Smith’s drawing class in the College of Arts & Sciences. | Photo by Bill Parish 6

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AROUND CAMPUS FEASIBILITY STUDY UNDER WAY ON NEW SCHOOL OF ENGINEERING The Campbell University Board of Trustees approved a feasibility study in October recommending the establishment of the university’s eighth school: the School of Engineering. With the vote, Campbell will move forward with plans to establish a School of Engineering and begin offering a Bachelor of Science in Engineering degree in the fall of 2016, pending approval by accrediting agencies.

Between 50 to 80 percent of job growth in the United States is dependent on scientists and engineers, according to a 2010 National Academy of Sciences report. But North Carolina, the 10th largest state in the nation, is home to only 2.7 percent of all the engineers who live in the U.S.

COMMITTEE APPROVES DOCTOR OF OCCUPATIONAL THERAPY PROGRAM Campbell University Board of Trustees’ Executive Committee approved a proposal in September to establish a Doctor of Occupational Therapy program. This approval grants the university permission to move forward with the accreditation process. Currently, there are six fully-accredited doctoral occupational programs and eight programs progressing through the accreditation process in the United States.

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Photo by Jimmy Allen

“Our decades-long tradition of program excellence in science, math and health care has provided a solid foundation upon which we will expand and educate a new generation of problemsolving engineers for North Carolina and our country,” said Vice President for Academic Affairs and Provost Mark Hammond.

SEAL OF APPROVAL

UNIVERSITY DEDICATES NEW SEAL AT RENOVATED D.RICH COMMONS DURING HOMECOMING FESTIVITIES After Campbell University completed constructing the Anna Gardner and Robert B. Butler Chapel in 2009, the University challenged planners and landscape architects to re-imagine the look of the Academic Circle. Five years later, during a brief ceremony on the morning of Homecoming Day (Oct. 18), the university formally dedicated the results of that challenge: D. Rich Commons. This new campus landmark provides Campbell “with a memorable sense of place,” said Jim Roberts, the university’s vice president for business and treasurer. “It’s a place that provides us with a sense of pride and with an opportunity to continue new Campbell traditions.” Over the summer, the University transformed the Academic Circle near the entrances to Taylor Hall and D. Rich Memorial Hall — one of the most trafficked areas on campus. New seating walls were installed; areas were leveled and

smoothed; new shrubs were planted; bricks were replaced; the entrance to D. Rich Memorial Hall was extended; and a blue stone area was added to serve as host for a new bronzed university seal. Measuring eight feet across, the seal is the largest medallion that Gemini, Inc. has casted since its founding in 1947, Roberts said. It features Campbell’s motto “Ad Astra Per Aspera,” or “to the stars through difficulties,” which “expresses the dreams and determination that Campbell friends hold for all those who pass their way,” Roberts said. It also includes an open Bible with a cross rising above it. This symbolizes “the source of all truth” and “the great sacrifice of Jesus who saves us and a way of life that we hope attracts all students,” Roberts said In all, 67,000 pavers were used to rebuild the 16,750-square-foot area that’s home to the seal and that’s named for D. Rich. A former secretary and director of the J.R. Reynolds


When he died in 1924, Rich left what was then Buies Creek Academy one-eighth of his estate — nearly $160,000. That money was used to build D. Rich Memorial Hall, completed in 1926. In today’s dollars, that building would cost between $18 million to $20 million, making Rich’s estate gift the largest in Campbell’s history, equivalently. “This is a beautiful day where significant things happened 90 years ago in the life of the university,” Campbell President Jerry Wallace said. “[D. Rich Memorial Hall] was built because a man who had means came to Buies Creek Academy and . . . felt compelled to help it. . . . Thank you D. Rich for what you did here.” The blue stones and the university seal, Wallace said, were chosen to pay respect to Rich and to represent the university’s common values across its past, present and future. Drawing from Joshua 4:20-22, Wallace said: “The blue stones of the past and of the present mean we have a hallowed past that continues to anchor us in a very different century than when this school was born. “The beautiful blue stone and the beautiful, beautiful Campbell seal,” he added, “is something that will be here for another 100 years or however long the Lord would want the school to exist.”

CAMPBELL ROTC CADET RANKED 6TH IN NATION In his early 30s, Matthew Gooch thought he was too old and too qualified to go back to school and enter a university ROTC program. He’s been a salvage diver, a military freefall instructor, a Ranger, a Sapper and a medical sergeant. He’s been deployed three times to Iraq, the last two as a Green Beret. Not only is he a student and a cadet in Campbell University’s ROTC program today, Gooch, now 34, is one of the top cadets in the nation. He is ranked sixth in the nation among 5,617 Army ROTC seniors in the national Order of Merit List, which takes into account grade point average, performance in the Army physical fitness test, leadership roles in the cadet’s program, and his or her performance at the Leader Development and Assessment Course.

Photo by Lissa Gotwals

Tobacco Company, Rich was one of the earliest benefactors to Campbell. He gave the school $60,000 to construct its original library, Carrie Rich Memorial Hall, which was named for his first wife, who died in 1916.

A native of Oklahoma, Gooch is majoring in biological sciences and is looking to pursue graduate studies and a career in medicine upon graduation and commissioning. His military experience has made him a natural mentor for the younger cadets in the program, many of whom are fresh out of high school. He said he embraces the role, but has also benefited from his time with the young cadets who have re-taught him how to perform academically. “Ranking well in the program was not just my doing,” Gooch says. “Forty percent of the accession is based on academics, and the professors I have worked with have been incredibly supportive. Being a fulltime student, dad and husband cannot be accomplished alone.”

— Cherry Crayton

Photo by Lissa Gotwals

CAMPBELL RANKED IN ANNUAL ‘MILITARY FRIENDLY’ LIST FOR FIFTH TIME

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For the fifth time, Victory Media has named Campbell University to its coveted Military Friendly Schools list, which honors the top 15 percent of colleges, universities and trade schools in the United States that are doing the most to embrace U.S. military service members, veterans and spouses and ensure their success on campus.

“Campbell University personnel truly enjoy working with our veterans and their family members to ensure they receive a quality education with as little debt as possible, no matter which campus they attend," said Joy Cox, Campbell’s director of veteran affairs. "We enjoy our military-friendly reputation and the word of mouth referrals we get for admissions.”

The 1,600 schools named to the list, including Campbell, will be featured in the 2015 “G.I. Jobs Guide to Military Friendly Schools” and other Victory Media publications.

Campbell enrolls more than 800 students who receive veteran benefits.

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NOW THEY'RE LEGAL Fifty graduates from the Campbell Law Class of 2014 participated in a swearing-in ceremony at the law school on Oct. 10. The Honorable Paul Gessner (L ’91), the Honorable Kendra Hill and the Honorable Paul Ridgeway (L ’86), all North Carolina Superior Court Judges, administered the oath of office and led the swearing-in of Campbell Law alums who recently passed the July 2014 North Carolina Bar Examination. Campbell Law graduates ranked second in the state for first-time bar passage on the July 2014 North Carolina Bar Exam, posting a 85.61 percent passage rate. | Photo by Karl DeBlaker

STARBUCKS OPENS IN WIGGINS LIBRARY Just in time for pumpkin spice lattes, Starbucks opened a full-service café in Wiggins Memorial Library during Homecoming Weekend in October. The library moved its 24-hour study area to the second floor to make room for the new coffee shop, which includes sandwiches, pastries and desserts. One of the first customers on Day 1 was Jennifer Sexton, a freshman biology pre-professional major. “This is great for Campbell,” said Sexton, who opted for the pumpkin spice. “It’s nice to have a coffee place on campus.”

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Photo by Billy Liggett

AROUND CAMPUS

HELP FOR LIBERIA

DIVINITY SCHOOL TEAMS WITH LIBERIAN BAPTIST LEADER TO PROVIDE AID TO EBOLA-STRICKEN NATION Oju Menjay and his family won’t be returning to their home country of Liberia — ground zero for the Ebola virus — any time in the foreseeable future. So the president of the Liberian Baptist Missionary and Education Convention has made the best of his time in the United States heading relief efforts to send food and supplies in the areas hardest hit by the deadly epidemic that’s already killed thousands. Menjay visited Campbell University in October to speak to the Divinity School’s Student Advisory Leadership Team and advise them on the appropriate steps to send aid to the western African nation. He also shared his experiences, having seen firsthand his friends and fellow pastors contract the virus from those they were ministering or providing medical care for. “Just last week, we lost four pastors,” Menjay told members of SALT during a lunch meeting following the sermon he delivered in Butler Chapel for that week’s Thursday service. “Just this morning, I received news that two members of another pastor’s household were sick as well. This is something I don’t think anybody can prepare for. It’s even worse in Liberia, a nation with a very poor health care system that’s been through 40 years of civil war and rebuilding." Through November the Ebola virus had killed more than 3,100 people in Liberia and roughly 5,600 people worldwide. One of those deaths occurred in the United States after a Liberian contracted the disease before flying to visit family in Dallas. Two health care workers also contracted the virus while carrying for him before his death.

While Menjay is confident the U.S. will prevent an outbreak within its borders — “Ebola doesn’t like your health care system,” he said confidently before describing current conditions of hospitals in Liberia — he is very concerned about the future of his country. The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention worries the number of cases could rise to between 550,000 and 1.4 million in 2015 without additional interventions by foreign countries or changes in behavior by the hardest-hit communities. Changing behaviors hasn’t been easy, Menjay said, because that involves changing the culture, too. He’s told ministers in Liberia to worry about themselves first and their congregation second. He’s told people with infected family members to avoid contact at all costs. Marvin Ownley, a Campbell graduate and second-year Master of Divinity student, said SALT chose to work with Menjay because the group wanted its foreign mission project this year to have an immediate impact during a time of crisis. As the U.S. government works with other nations to battle the disease itself, the best thing a group like SALT can do is send money or food. “The funds we raise will go directly toward supporting the cause to fight Ebola and provide food that will be distributed by the outbreak mission teams in Liberia,” Ownley said. Donations for the effort can be made through any SALT member or by contacting Lynn Brinkley at (910) 894-4319 or brinkleyc@campbell.edu.


A NEW DIMENSION

LaKeshia Darden, director of curriculum materials and media librarian, prints out an orange camel on the new 3D printer at Wiggins Memorial Library. The MakerBot Replicator 5th Generation printer has medical and engineering uses, can replicate prosthetic design and do more. “I added the 3D printer to foster a creative atmosphere among students and faculty, and I think it’s working,” Darden said. “Students and faculty are excited about having the opportunity to bring a design concept to life.” | Photo by Gaylor Photography

PGA PROGRAM WINS 4TH JONES CUP TITLE Campbell University came to the 13th PGA Jones Cup in Port St. Lucie, Fla. with a mission to become the first team to capture four titles. The Camels led wire-to-wire in the 36-hole event, which features players from the 19 colleges and universities accredited by the PGA of America for aspiring PGA professionals. Campbell built off of its four-stroke lead entering the final round, to win by 11 strokes over runner-up Florida State University. Campbell also won titles in 2007, 2009 and 2012. “When you come to Campbell, we expect you to be a good player — it’s part of the Campbell pride and PGA pride,” said Ken Jones, director of Campbell’s PGA Golf Management University Program. “We came down with a team that was set up to do this. We thought it was great that we were paired together with Mississippi State and Coastal Carolina [in addition to FSU], as we had won eight PGA Jones Cups between the three of us going in. It feels really good to win.”

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SCHOLARSHIP ANNOUNCEMENT CAPS ‘CAMPBELL DAY’ Wells Fargo Private Bank announced the donation of another $50,000 in September to its trust scholarship at Campbell University during the annual “Campbell Day” at the N.C. Trust Center in Winston-Salem. Wells Fargo initially established the Wells Fargo Trust Scholarship in 2012 to help women and minority students become trust majors at Campbell’s Lundy-Fetterman School of Business Trust & Wealth Management Program. The 2014-2015 Wells Fargo Trust Scholarship went to

Danielle Barnes, the second Campbell student to receive the award. “We are very proud of the talented students that we have hired from Campbell’s Trust & Wealth Management Program,” said John Elliott, manager of the N.C. Trust Center in Winston-Salem for Wells Fargo Private Bank. “These students have chosen an exciting career and have received exceptional training that will set them on a course to be successful in the trust and wealth management profession.

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Photo by Bennett Scarborough

TAG DAY

Hundreds of students, faculty and staff showed their appreciation for donors who support Campbell University Thursday, Oct. 16 as part of the university’s first #CampbellTAGDay, or Thank A Giver Day. They wrote thank-you notes to donors and took to social media with selfies in front of the many orange gift tags placed on more than 400 buildings and items around the campus. The tags signified that a part of campus that wouldn't be here without donor support.


“TAG Day symbolizes the generosity of Campbell donors. To see the excitement and appreciation from our students was amazing. Campbell is a blessing to us all and without our family of donors, this school wouldn’t be the wonderful place we call home.” — Sarah Swain, Director of Annual Giving


Photo by Bennett Scarborough

PROUD

AROUND CAMPUS

RING OF HIS OWN

PRESIDENT SURPRISED WITH GIFT DURING CEREMONY During the University’s second annual Ring Ceremony at Butler Chapel on Oct. 18, Campbell President Jerry Wallace presented 40 students with their official class ring. Afterward, Student Government Executive President Sue Ann Forrest and Vice President for Student Life Dennis Bazemore surprised Wallace by presenting him with his own official class ring. Wallace announced this past spring that he will step down from the presidency in June 2015. Presenting him a ring, Bazemore said, was one

tribute and token of appreciation for Wallace’s 45 years of service to Campbell, including his service as president for the past 11 years. “One of the deepest regrets of my life is that I am not a Campbell alumnus,” Wallace told the nearly packed crowd after receiving the ring. “This ring is a symbol of all that Campbell has done for me, and I will wear this ring with great pride. I thank the student body and all of you for making this possible.”

Help us say #thanksdrwallace Campbell University President Jerry M. Wallace announced last April that he will step down from the presidency on June 30, 2015, after serving in the role for 12 years and after working at Campbell for 45 years. We are posting a series of interviews with Dr. Wallace at campbell. edu throughout the academic year, and he will be front and center in our Spring 2015 edition of Campbell Magazine.

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For that edition, we would love to hear your stories, your comments or your words of thanks for everything Dr. Wallace has done — from his teaching days to the monumental tasks he's performed since being named president in 2002. Email Campbell Magazine Editor Billy Liggett at liggettb@campbell.edu to share your stories, or use the hashtag #thanksdrwallace on social media to be included in the upcoming issue.


PROUD

SUE ANN FORREST

GREEK LIFE ADVOCATE, SGA PRESIDENT Campbell University senior Sue Ann Forrest was working the Student Government Association’s booth during an orientation this summer when an incoming student approached her. “Are you interested in student government?” Forrest asked her. “No, not really,” the incoming student answered. “But aren’t you in Greek life?” “Yes,” Forrest said. “I’m in Delta Phi Epsilon.” “Oh my goodness! That’s the sorority I want to join.” The incoming student went on to tell Forrest that she almost didn’t come to Campbell because when she started looking at the university, it didn’t have Greek life. But when a family member told her Campbell was adding social sororities and fraternities, “I sent in my deposit that same day,” the student said. The conversation warmed Forrest's heart, she said. She, too, had thought about not coming to Campbell because it didn’t have social sororities and fraternities. But she chose to attend Campbell anyway because of its family atmosphere, and she entered with the goal to help start the conversation of adding Greek life to campus. Her sophomore year she served as secretary of Campbell’s SGA. During an executive council meeting with Vice President for Student Life Dennis Bazemore, she mentioned she thought Greek life could help improve Campbell. “You want to increase more students being involved on campus. You want to increase student participation in coming to games. You want to increase school spirit. Greek life can help.” Not even a year-old now, Campbell’s Greek life is up to five social organizations with the addition of the Kappa Alpha Order National Fraternity this fall. “I can’t believe it has grown the way it has,” said Forrest, a double major in English and communication studies on a pre-law track. “I didn’t think it would happen while I was here; I just thought I would help start the conversation. I’m still jumping up and down for joy that Greek life is here.” In addition to her involvement with Greek life, including serving as a member of the Greek Life Council, she's the executive president of the SGA, a member of the Annual Giving's student call team, and a member of the 13-person presidential search committee tasked with helping identify and recommend to the Board of Trustees’ candidates to succeed Jerry M. Wallace as Campbell’s president. W W W. C A M P B E L L . E D U / M A G A Z I N E

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— Cherry Crayton


THE ISIS

CRISIS

As the director of Campbell's Homeland Security program, a former CIA officer offers students expert analysis on ISIS, terrorist groups

BY BILLY LIGGETT

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hen David Gray discusses and analyzes with his students the recent rise of ISIS — a former Al Qaeda splinter group whose aim is to create an Islamic state across Sunni areas of Iraq and Syria — those students know they’re getting much better insight than most of what they see or read on the news or in the papers. “Terrorism is theater. It’s propaganda by deed,” says Gray, a retired U.S. Air Force officer and former CIA foreign service officer known globally for his expertise in U.S. and international security and strategic studies.

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“When terrorists hit a target, there’s a broader target they’re trying to reach.” Current events play a big role in homeland security courses at Campbell, which became the first university in North Carolina to offer a four-year bachelor’s degree in the field in 2013. When the program made the jump from concentration to major that spring, the Boston Marathon bombing was the hot topic in Gray’s courses on terrorism and intelligence. This fall, a lot of time has been spent on ISIS, the media savvy terrorist group best known in the West for its mass killings, public executions

and most recently, videos of American and British hostages before and after their death by beheading. ISIS currently controls hundreds of square miles throughout Syria and Iraq, ignoring borders and laws. The group, born following the fall of Saddam Hussein and currently numbering in the tens of thousands, has wreaked havoc on the U.S.trained Iraqi Army. The U.S. has countered with air strikes while sticking to President Obama’s plan to reduce the number of ground troops in Iraq and Afghanistan after years of fighting in the Middle East.


David Gray, director of Campbell University's Homeland Security program, listens to students give oral reports on domestic and international terrorism in November. | Photo by Billy Liggett

Gray’s courses go beyond the facts about ISIS and other terrorist groups, both international and domestic — and call on students to analyze the groups’ agendas, their ultimate goals and the United States’ response to their existence. “The question that is at the heart of the issue when analyzing any terrorist group is ‘Why?’” says Gray. “Why do they exist? Almost always, it’s political. Terrorists are rarely after a religious objective or anti-U.S. agenda. Look at ISIS. They want an independent state. That’s what the IRA wanted in Northern Ireland. If people don’t understand that, they’re missing the point of these organizations.” The beheadings, he adds, are ISIS’ attempt to stop U.S. air strikes. The way they’re presented — hostages on their knees in orange jump suits (reminiscent of the outfits worn by prisoners at Guantanamo Bay), a masked terrorist with a British accent, the actual beheadings being cut from the video (showing only an “after” image in most cases) — the videos are produced with U.S. and British audiences in mind. By not showing the murder itself, the chances of the video getting wide circulation increase.

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“If they do enough of these, they think it will drive the public in these Western countries to put pressure on their leadership to stop the air attacks,” Gray says. “Stopping these air strikes is their only chance. If the U.S. sends ground troops, ISIS then has human targets, and they know they have a chance to manipulate public perception with each troop killed.” For homeland security majors at Campbell, ISIS and terrorism are more than mere classroom discussions and test material. Many are being trained for careers in national security, intelligence and corporate security fields. Others will pursue careers in local, state or national governmental organizations and law enforcement. During their four years, they’ll travel to places like the North Carolina Justice Academy, State Bureau of Investigations and Fort Bragg and will attend Model United Nations events and be asked to publish original work via online journals. In other words, knowing the behaviors and history of those perceived to be a threat to the United States could get their foot into the door of a hiring agency after college and could very well one day save lives.

“What we’re studying today in class may be what we have to deal with in uniform four years from now,” says Josh Duke, a Camp Lejeune freshman homeland security major and first-year cadet in Campbell’s nationally renowned Army ROTC program. “You read about ISIS and what’s happening in North Korea in the news, and right now it’s simply a classroom discussion. Four years from now, when I’m in uniform, [ISIS] could be the enemy. [The major] has huge value for me.” And learning from professors like Gray; Amanda Parker, an expert in transnational terrorism trends and cyberterrorism; Salvatore Mercogliano, who has a Ph.D. in military and naval history; John Mero, an expert in American governmental institutions and public administration; and John Combs, who has over 26 years of law enforcement experience; Duke says the faculty’s experience goes a long way in helping students better understand the subject matter. “Turkey is attacking the Kurds, and we ask what it’s all about. Why is something like that happening? Someone like Professor Gray who is experienced and has been to these places and experienced these cultures — it adds concrete value to the class,” Duke says.

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“I expect my students to think critically about what’s discussed in our class,” Gray says. “The key is having them write. There’s a big difference between just talking, memorizing and writing down your thoughts. It encourages good thinking. I ran into one of my students and her family at a recent football game, and her parents were happy she was watching the 6 o’clock news. I think that’s great … that’s the point of what we’re trying to teach.”

TOOLS OF THE TRADE Homeland students at Campbell aren’t just learning from experienced faculty; they’re using many of the same tools government agencies use on a daily basis. One software program Gray is particularly excited about is called the Analyst’s Notebook, which can take in massive amounts of information collected by government agencies and quickly turn that data into a single, cohesive picture to help identify, predict, prevent or disrupt criminal, terrorist or fraudulent behaviors. Gray shows its effectiveness by flowing in Excel sheets with hundreds of drug arrests and immediately producing heirarchy maps showing high- and low-level dealers, their locations and the methods based on arrest records. “The CIA, FBI, SBI are all using this program,” Gray says. “Our students will enter the workforce with important experience on software like this.” They’re also flying drones throughout the campus, and not for recreation. For a recent assignment, students recorded drone footage of the entire campus to analyze what upgrades in campus security would benefit the University most.

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Photo by Bill Parish

A lot of writing and public speaking is expected in Gray’s classes. Instead of just learning facts and history on terrorist groups, Gray’s students are asked to write papers about their thoughts on their country’s actions pertaining to those groups. They’re analyzing the effectiveness of a group like ISIS, which has taken to social media for recruitment and fear-mongering like no other terrorist organization before it. Case in point — ISIS draws in unexpecting eyes with Twitter hashtags, using #worldcup earlier this year to post the aftermath of a beheading (with the words, “This is our football. It’s made of skin.”)

“What we’re studying today in class may be what we have to deal with in uniform four years from now.” — Josh Duke, a Camp Lejeune freshman homeland security major and first-year cadet in Campbell’s nationally renowned Army ROTC program. “From the video and photos, we see some areas that could use increased lighting, possibly a fence or gate or another security guard,” Gray says. “We were recently shooting footage at a football game, and we had state troopers and Harnett County deputies come over to check out what we were doing. They thought it was great … very useful. We asked them to come by anytime to show them more.” Gray is eager to get the word out on the program, its faculty and all the “toys” being used by high-level government agencies. About 50 students declared homeland security their major when the four-year degree program launched in spring 2013, and enrollment continues to rise. To earn their degree, homeland students must complete seven courses — National and International Security, Homeland Security,

Emergency Preparedness and Response, Critical Infrastructure Protection, Terrorism, Intelligence and National Security, and Interagency Operations — plus an internship and a senior seminar in homeland security, two courses in their concentration (terrorism or intelligence), basic courses and a foreign language through the 201 level. The curriculum is based on the national strategy for homeland security and the Homeland Security and Defense Education Consortium Association. “The courses we offer aren’t the result of someone just falling out of bed and saying they want to teach a class on terrorism,” Gray joked. “They’re benchmarked on national and homeland security standards. This is not a high school civics program.”


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COVER STORY

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THE MADDOX

LEGACY

Campbell’s growing reputation as a leader in health science education began 30 years ago with young dean whose passion was (and still is) in teaching BY LEAH WHITT

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n its Jan. 28, 1985, editorial on Campbell University’s decision to start a pharmacy school, the Dunn Daily Record issued a vast understatement: “The new School of Pharmacy will bring to Harnett hundreds of new students each year, along with thousands of visitors. Not only that, it will give both Campbell and Harnett added prestige as an educational center of the state. … The new Campbell School of Pharmacy is going to mean a great deal to Harnett County.” That school — now the College of Pharmacy & Health Sciences — will enter its 30th year in 2015 as a nationally acclaimed, prestigious institution that has far exceeded the projected maximum enrollment back in 1985 of 200 students (the school’s current undergrad and graduate enrollment is just under 1,500 today).

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One man has led the school from its inception, a man with a tireless work ethic and a vision to provide proper health care to rural, medically underserved areas of the state and region — Ronald W. Maddox.

A Change of Heart Ron Maddox arrived at Campbell in 1985 as a consultant at the invitation of then-provost, now-President Jerry Wallace. His job in the beginning was simply to assess whether a pharmacy program could flourish in Buies Creek and whether Campbell was right for the nation’s first new pharmacy school since the late 1940s. When it was determined that a Campbell pharmacy program was feasible, Maddox was offered the position of founding dean. Campbell administration waited on pins and

needles for his response, as this was not the first time Maddox had been offered a position to lead a pharmacy program. Prior to arriving in the heart of North Carolina, Maddox spent five years serving as administrative faculty for Mercer University’s Southern School of Pharmacy. The Atlantabased pharmacy program was also searching for a new dean and offered it to Maddox, who, after much consideration, declined. “I turned down the offer because my passion was in teaching,” Maddox says. “It was always about the students for me, not the titles.” Who changed his mind about a new job title at Campbell? Norman A. Wiggins, president of the University from 1967 to 2003.

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Painting of Maddox Hall, home to the College of Pharmacy & Health Sciences, by Dori Roberts of Sunset Beach

“I will always remember a conversation I had with Dr. Wiggins during my interview process,” recalls Maddox. “His background was in law, so I understood why he wanted to create a law school at Campbell in the 1970s. When I asked him what the driving force behind creating a pharmacy program was, his answer motivated me to become the founding dean of Campbell University’s School of Pharmacy.” Wiggins, Maddox says, shared a story with

JANUARY 1985

him about his mother taking him and his family to the local pharmacy when everyone was sick. Wiggins grew up during the Great Depression, and his family rarely had money to visit an actual doctor’s office. “He went on to tell me that he would never forget the way that pharmacists helped his family, and that was what drove his passion to create a pharmacy program at Campbell,” Maddox says. “He wanted to educate students in a Christian environment to better

President Norman A. Wiggins announces the decision to establish a School of Pharmacy at a meeting of the Council of Christian Higher Education at the N.C. Baptist Convention in Raleigh.

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SPRING 1985

Ronald Maddox leaves Mercer to become the founding dean of the School of Pharmacy at Campbell University and develops N.C.'s first Doctor of Pharmacy degree.

serve the health care needs of patient. After hearing that story, I knew Campbell was where I was meant to be.” After signing the appropriate paperwork, double checking that teaching was in his job description as dean and moving his wife and children from Atlanta to Buies Creek, Maddox hit the ground running. Not only was Campbell opening the first pharmacy school in the United States in over 35 years, it was opening a pharmacy school that would

AUGUST 1986

Campbell admits its first class of pharmacy students to kickoff the University’s year-long centennial celebration. Wiggins is invited to the White House to meet President Ronald Reagan that fall.


30 YEARS LATER offer an entry-level Doctor of Pharmacy Degree. While commonplace now, the entrylevel doctorate was controversial at the time and unheard of in North Carolina. Other schools in the area only offered a bachelor's degree in pharmacy.

for a personal interview.

The Campbell administration, original team of four faculty members in the School of Pharmacy and Maddox were not satisfied with just blazing the academic trails. They wanted to make sure their students made a difference in the community. As a result, the School of Pharmacy would also require a community pharmacy rotation during the experiential learning portion of the curriculum, guaranteeing that all Campbell pharmacists would have a background in educating and serving the community. By ignoring the critics and controversy, Maddox led the School of Pharmacy in the right direction. Today, academic accrediting bodies require all schools to offer Doctor of Pharmacy degrees and to follow the community pharmacy rotation procedure. After creating a strong curriculum and making a statement by offering the only pharmacy doctorate in the state, there wasn’t much left for Maddox to do — except to recruit and enroll approximately 50 students in the charter class. An applicant to the charter class had to have a minimum 2.5 overall grade point average for his or her college coursework. The exception to this requirement was earning a bachelor’s degree prior to applying or maintaining a 3.0 grade point average in the last 32 hours of college coursework. Not only did the applicant have to be a stellar student, he or she also had to make the journey to Buies Creek

Maddox found 55 students who fit the bill. All 55 members of the charter class went on graduate in May 1990 and achieved a perfect first-time passage rate on the national and state board exams, extinguishing all doubts of whether Campbell’s School of Pharmacy would make it. “Looking at the past 29 years, one of my most significant memories is when the charter class posted perfect board results,” says Maddox. “I was proud of our graduates, and these results proved that we laid a strong foundation for our program.” The legacy established by the charter class has continued through the years as 10 more classes of pharmacy graduates achieved a 100-percent first-time passage rate and have maintained a 98.6-percent passage rate overall. Driven by the leadership of Maddox and the success of the first four years, the School of Pharmacy received full accreditation in 1991. It was the first program to receive full accreditation by the Accreditation Council on Pharmacy Education after going through precandidacy status.

A Better Place Since the early 1990s, Campbell’s health sciences programs have not stopped growing. Shortly after the doctor of pharmacy program was established, the school began offering undergraduate and graduate degrees in clinical research and pharmaceutical sciences. These degrees afforded students the opportunities to coordinate clinical drug trials and work in the pharmaceutical industry.

The College of Pharmacy & Health Sciences offers three professional degrees, three graduate degrees and three undergraduate programs, training students for a variety of rewarding careers in the health professions. Each degree program combines in-depth knowledge with handson practice, ultimately teaching students how to improve patient care. Students have access to interdisciplinary training and advanced technology, which opens the door to engaging practical experiences. Students frequently win accolades and awards from such prestigious organizations as the Student National Pharmaceutical Association, American College of Clinical Pharmacy, the American Pharmacists Association and the American Society of Health-System Pharmacists. UNDERGRADUATE MAJORS • • • •

Clinical Research (BS) Pharmaceutical Sciences (BS) Nursing (BS) Pre-Pharmacy Program

HEALTH SCIENCES CONCENTRATIONS • • • • • • • • •

Biology, Pre-Professional Pre-Dentistry Pre-Law Pre-Medicine Pre-Optometry Pre-Pharmacy Pre-Physical Therapy Pre-Physician Assistant Pre-Veterinary

GRADUATE DEGREES

• Master of Science in Clinical Research • Master of Science in Pharmaceutical Sciences • Master of Science in Public Health

DUAL DEGREES • • • • • •

MPAP/MSPH MSPH/JD PharmD/MBA PharmD/MSCR PharmD/MSPH PharmD/MSPS

PROFESSIONAL DEGREES

MAY 1990

The School of Pharmacy’s first graduating class celebrates a perfect score on the North American Pharmacist Licensure Examination.

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SEPTEMBER 1996

The School establishes a bachelor’s degree in pharmaceutical sciences to meet the need for applied scientists in the pharmaceutical and biotechnology fields. The first class has 55 students.

• Doctor of Pharmacy (PharmD) • Doctor of Physical Therapy (DPT) • Master of Physician Assistant Practice (MPAP)

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The Campbell University School of Pharmacy expanded again in 2009. After reassessing the needs of the community and beyond, the University Board of Trustees approved the offering of a Master of Physician Assistant Practice degree, which would fall under the health sciences umbrella. This offering initiated the transition of the School of Pharmacy into the College of Pharmacy & Health Sciences. Since this transition, the College has been able to expand academically in ways Wiggins would never have thought possible when he first enlisted the help of Maddox.

pharmacy program, the Jerry M. Wallace School of Osteopathic Medicine would still be but a dream for Harnett County.

are appointed by the governor, the speaker of the house and the president pro tempore of the Senate.

The College’s achievements over the past 29 years are an accurate reflection of Maddox,

To speak to his well-roundedness, Maddox has been appointed by both Democratic and Republican representatives. He is the only pharmacist to be appointed to the NCIOM Board in the organization’s history.

“One issue I noticed early in my tenure was that Harnett County needed more private care physicians. When Campbell University ordered a feasibility study of a new medical school, I was one of its biggest advocates. The best way to get physicians in our area is to train them here, and they’ll stay here.”

Since the transition, the College of Pharmacy & Health Sciences has graduated its first cohort of Campbell PAs, its first cohort of Master of Science in Public Health students, and enrolled its charter class in the Doctor of — Ronald Maddox, December 2011 Physical Therapy program. The growth doesn’t stop groundbreaking ceremony for School of there. Campbell welcomed Osteopathic Medicine its first Bachelor of Science in Nursing students in fall 2014 and has begun applying for accreditation for its newly proposed Doctor who was appointed to the Campbell of Occupational Therapy program. University Executive Cabinet as vice president for health programs. In addition While the seven academic programs offered at to the impressive accomplishments on the College of Pharmacy & Health Sciences campus, Maddox has been appointed to the are impressive, one of the most impressive North Carolina Institute of Medicine Board accolades for the school is laying a solid of Directors twice in the past five years. foundation for Campbell to grow upon. Members of the NCIOM Board of Directors Without the remarkable track record of the

SEPTEMBER 1999

The School’s curriculum expands with the addition of a bachelor’s and master’s degree in clinical research. Two years later, a master’s degree is pharmaceutical sciences is established. 24

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MAY 2003

Jerry Wallace is elected Campbell’s fourth president, and in his strategic master plan, Wallace announces future health science programs that will extend the school’s mission and meet the needs of North Carolina.

“I had real doubts about being involved in things outside of Campbell,” says Maddox. “But the more I thought about it, the more I realized it wasn’t about me. It’s about what I can do to further advance the pharmacy profession and better health care in general. It’s about being there for the community and making it a better place.”

In addition to his executive appointments at Campbell and the NCIOM, Maddox has received the North Carolina Pharmaceutical Association’s Award for Outstanding Service to the Profession of Pharmacy, and the American College of Apothecaries’ Dean’s Recognition Award for outstanding service to independent pharmacy. He served as president of the Board of Trustees of the Fayetteville Regional Area Health Education Center, chair of the Cape Fear Christian Academy and currently serves as chair of the Board of Directors of the Harnett Health Systems. “I didn’t go into the pharmacy profession to

MAY 2005

Campbell breaks ground on a $9.9 million, 42,000-square-foot facility that will double the space of the previous pharmacy school building. The new building opens in 2007 and adopts the name Maddox Hall.


MEET THE DEAN make money or win awards. I just wanted to make a difference and I wanted to help as many people as I could,” Maddox says. Growing up in a small community that had very little access to health care, the first interaction Maddox had with a health care professional was at the local health department. This is where he and his brother received their required vaccinations to enroll in elementary school. The spark to help others through health care was not sparked until Maddox witnessed an unfortunate medication miscommunication resulting in the death of his aunt. “My diabetic aunt slipped into a coma and died after she was told she didn’t need to take insulin,” Maddox recalls. “It was then that I realized that we could improve so many lives by educating people and giving them access to information pertaining to health that diseases could be prevented and lives would be improved. “It is really important to me for our students, graduates and health care professionals in general to take a more active role in educating patients and help them take better care of themselves. If we can better educate individuals about disease prevention and management, we can change their lives.” Maddox received his Bachelor of Science degree in pharmacy and Army ROTC commission from Auburn University. Cpt. Maddox served as pharmacy officer at Ft. Sam Houston and director of pharmacy at Ft. Rucker. Upon completion of his military service, he earned his Doctor of Pharmacy degree at the University

SEPTEMBER 2009

The School of Pharmacy officially becomes the College of Pharmacy & Health Sciences, a name that “better represents the true offerings of the school,” according to Maddox.

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of Tennessee. After graduation, he was appointed assistant professor of pharmacy practice at Mercer University School of Pharmacy in Atlanta. During his tenure at Mercer University, Maddox served as an associate dean and professor, clinical pharmacist at the Georgia Baptist Medical Center, chairman of the Department of Pharmacy Practice and relief pharmacist for a local chain drugstore. Maddox will retire from his post as dean of the College of Pharmacy & Health Sciences at Campbell University effective Dec. 31, and will be replaced by his former student, Michael L. Adams, who graduated from Campbell University’s School of Pharmacy in 1996. “Ron Maddox’s leadership in founding the pharmacy school turned a big corner in ensuring Campbell’s survival and growth as a university,” President Wallace says. “He and [his wife] Suzan gave their all to birthing the nation’s newest pharmacy school, and their hard work and contagious spirit inspired trustees, alumni and other state leaders to join our effort. He also stepped up to assume vice president for health programs responsibilities and was instrumental in launching the medical school, physician assistant program, public health program, Doctor of Physical Therapy program, nursing program and the soonto-be-announced Doctor of Occupational Therapy program. “The Maddox legacy at Campbell is huge.”

Michael L. Adams will become the next dean of Campbell’s College of Pharmacy & Health Sciences, effective Jan. 1. A 1996 Doctor of Pharmacy summa cum laude graduate of Campbell, Adams returned to the pharmacy school as an assistant professor of pharmaceutical sciences in 2005. In 2009, he became the college’s director of Science Education Outreach and served in that position through 2012, when he was named assistant dean for graduate and interprofessional education. In addition to academic and administrative accomplishments, Adams has been named Professor of the Year by second-year student pharmacists every year since he joined the faculty. As dean of the College of Pharmacy & Health Sciences, Adams will be responsible for the oversight and administration of Campbell’s pharmacy, physician assistant, physical therapy, nursing, clinical research and pharmaceutical sciences program.

SEPTEMBER 2011

The College welcomes its 34-member charter class of physician assistants. The entire class will go on to graduate in December 2013 after successfully completing the Master of Physician Assistant Practice program.

After earning his pharmacy degree from Campbell, Adams completed his doctor of philosophy in medicinal chemistry in 2003 from the University of Washington School of Pharmacy in Seattle, Washington. He then went on to complete a post-doctoral fellowship with the National Heart, Lung and Blood Institute, part of the National Institutes of Health in Bethesda, Maryland.

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Many doubted Campbell's ability to build a pharmacy program of 'high quality and unique purpose' in 1985. Those first few years laid the foundation and proved the critics wrong. BY CHERRY CRAYTON

When Campbell University announced in January 1985 its plan to start a pharmacy school, the news was met with “a few sounds of protests” and was “not received warmly” by all in North Carolina, The Campbell Times and The (Raleigh) News & Observer reported, respectively. At the time, the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill was home to the only pharmacy degree program in North Carolina. Tom Miya, the dean of the UNC School of Pharmacy,

JANUARY 2013

Maddox is appointed to serve on the N.C. Institute of Medicine's Board of Directors with 17 others from leading companies in government, higher education, business and health care. 28

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told The N&O that the state couldn’t support another pharmacy school. One, he said, there were not enough qualified students to fill even UNC’s enrollment slots. Enrollment there had declined 2.7 percent from 1982-83 to 1983-84. Second, he told The N&O, there were not enough pharmacy scholars to fill UNC’s open faculty positions. “We have several unfilled vacancies we’ve been trying to fill almost all year.”

APRIL 2013

The Board of Trustees approves the development of a Bachelor of Science in Nursing degree and decides to begin the program in fall 2014.

Given the data, Miya asked, was there really a need for a second pharmacy school in North Carolina? That was the question that Jerry Wallace had been asking and preparing to answer for several years. Soon after becoming the dean of Campbell’s College of Arts & Sciences and director of Graduate Programs in 1981, Wallace traveled to the Southern School of Pharmacy at Mercer University in Atlanta to meet with its dean, Dr. Oliver M. Littlejohn. At that point in time,

JULY 2013

Campbell’s Health Center opens its doors to the public. Once known as Campbell’s Student Infirmary, the Health Center boasts a full medical staff and an in-house pharmacy.


CHARTER CLASS CAMPBELL PHARMACISTS BY STATE There are approximately 2,075 Campbell University pharmacists practicing in the United States. States like Iowa, Nebraska, Oregon and even Hawaii only have 1. And you won’t find any in Idaho. But here are the states where your chances of being greeted by a friendly former Camel are the highest: North Carolina........1,641 Virginia......................101 Tennessee...................74 Florida.........................40

South Carolina �����������37 Georgia........................30 Texas...........................28 California.....................21

there had not been a new pharmacy school to open in the United States in 35 years. Wallace asked Littlejohn if it was time to open another pharmacy school. “Definitely, yes,” Wallace recalled Littlejohn telling him. “But they’ll all tell you no.” When Wallace became Campbell’s vice president for academic affairs and provost in 1984, he set out to lead a feasibility study for a pharmacy school that would head off the “Nos.” He started by traveling to Mercer again to retain Littlejohn as a consultant. Littlejohn introduced Wallace and Campbell President Norman Wiggins to Ronald Maddox, then an associate dean and professor of pharmacy at Mercer. Maddox started to work on the feasibility study, too. He asked Mercer’s pharmacy admissions coordinator if a private Christian

Maryland.....................16 Pennsylvania...............14

university in North Carolina could support a second pharmacy school in the state. Yes, the admissions coordinator said. At the time, there were only two Southern Baptist colleges in the U.S. offering pharmacy education, and many students from North Carolina frequently chose to attend Mercer because they preferred studying at a private Christian university. Also, about 30 percent of Mercer students hailed from East Tennessee. “There was fertile ground to draw pharmacy students from in North Carolina,” Maddox told Campbell Magazine in 2013. When Maddox traveled to North Carolina as part of the feasibility study, he found numerous hospitals and clinical sites, such as Duke Health, Wake Forest Medical Center and Cape Fear Valley Health, that could provide training and hands-on experiences for pharmacy students.

Connie Barnes’ father went to Campbell, and her brother graduated from Campbell. So when an article appeared in the Dunn Daily Record in 1985 that Campbell was set to launch the nation’s first pharmacy school since 1950, Barnes — at the time a UNC student studying pre-pharmacy — found the article clipping in her mailbox a few days later. My father wrote, “You know, Campbell’s a good school,” recalls Barnes, today the executive vice chair of Campbell’s pharmacy practice and co-director for the University’s Drug Information Center. Barnes fell in love with Campbell, transferring from UNC during her final year as an undergrad, and she says she’ll never forget the December 1985 meeting where she first met Ronald Maddox, then the young new dean who interviewed every member of that Class of 1990 charter group. “It was a one-on-one interview, and when it was over, Dr. Maddox stood up, shook my hand and said, ‘Congratulations, you’re No. 8,’” Barnes says. “It was the best day of my life and the best decision I’ve ever made.” Barnes got to relive her Maddox meeting from 1985 when her daughter Morgan — a recent Campbell graduate — announced she had been accepted into East Carolina University’s dental school.

AUGUST 2013

Campbell officially opens North Carolina’s first new medical school in over 35 years, the Jerry M. Wallace School of Osteopathic Medicine, with an inaugural class of 160 students.

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AUGUST 2013

More than 300 osteopathic medicine, physician assistant, pharmacy and public health programs take part in Campbell’s first interprofessional education program.

“Having a daughter graduate from Campbell and continue the legacy my father started, I can’t find the words to say how proud I am,” Barnes says. “I’m excited for her and excited for Campbell. To me, it speaks volumes for how Campbell prepares its undergrads.”

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North Carolina had also become a hotbed for the pharmaceutical industry. In 1984, 75 pharmaceutical and medical device manufacturers were either planning or already operating facilities in North Carolina, including eight of the nation’s 10 largest pharmaceutical and medical device firms. As these companies flooded to North Carolina, the state’s employment outlook for pharmaceutical and related jobs jumped 350 percent between 1972 and 1984, according to a N.C. Pharmaceutical Association (NCPA) study. The state’s population was surging, too, leading to a shortage of pharmacists. At any given time, the NCPA reported, there were about 50 pharmacy jobs open in the state. Just to meet the national average of pharmacists per state, North Carolina needed more than 600 additional ones. It was such facts that Wallace took with him

in late 1984 and early 1985 as he met with numerous leaders in the pharmaceutical industry to provide them with updates on Campbell’s feasibility study and to garner support. In those meetings, Wallace told the leaders of organizations such as the N.C. Board of Pharmacy and the American Council on Pharmaceutical Education that Campbell’s pharmacy school “would meet the need for more pharmacists and expand opportunities for more academically-sound students to study pharmacy.” “Our intention is to build a program of high quality and unique purpose,” he assured them. Pharmacy leaders responded in kind. In January 1985, the NCPA executive director told his colleagues: “If permitted to move forward with the establishment of a school of pharmacy, I can assure you that every necessary step will be taken that will ensure that the school will be a credit to pharmaceutical education, to the council, to Campbell University, and to her

sponsors and friends.” On Jan. 28, 1985, Campbell officially announced its plan to start a pharmacy school. In response to the concerns UNC expressed after the announcement, Wiggins told reporters there was “no competition of an unwholesome type with UNC.” Campbell opened its pharmacy school in August 1986 with 55 students with Maddox as founding dean. It distinguished itself from UNC in ways that went beyond the differences between a private Christian university and a public university. At the time, UNC offered a five-year degree that led to a bachelor’s in pharmacy. Campbell developed a four-year program that led to a Doctor of Pharmacy degree. (It wasn’t until 2000 when the national accreditation body required pharmacy programs to transition from the bachelor’s to PharmD degrees.) Also, Campbell was the first university in the

NORTH CAROLINA’S RISING HEALTH CARE NEED

POPULATION

North Carolina will see a significant increase in the need of health care professionals in the coming years. Some statistics that support this: • In 2009, the N.C. Institute of Medicine reported that persons 65 and older will increase by 33.7 by 2020. • The National Institute for Medicine has projected a 28-percent increase in the need for degreed nurses over the next decade.

HEALTH CARE

JANUARY 2014

The Doctor of Physical Therapy program formally acknowledges the start of its inaugural semester with a convocation ceremony.

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• According to the 2010 U.S. Census, North Carolina’s population has grown 18.5 percent since 2000.

MAY 2014

Michael Adams, assistant dean and associate professor of pharmaceutical sciences, is named the next dean for CPHS, effective Jan. 1, 2015.

• The N.C. Division of Aging and Adult Services reported that 19.6% of North Carolina’s population will be 65 or older by 2031. • The U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics states that physical therapy employment is expected to grow by 39 percent through 2020.

MAY 2014

The College of Pharmacy & Health Sciences holds its 25th graduation ceremony, the final ceremony to be presided by Maddox as dean.


SUCCESS STORY

Photo by Bennett Scarborough

“Over the past 100 years, Campbell University has had a tremendous impact on the people of North Carolina in the areas of religion, business, liberal arts, education and law. In the next century, Campbell will also be recognized for the effect it has on health care of the people of North Carolina through its School of Pharmacy.” — Ronald Maddox, shortly after arriving at Campbell in 1985 to become dean of its new School of Pharmacy

nation to require a community-pharmacy rotation. It also added a geriatrics rotation, which has since become a norm across pharmacy schools. In all, Campbell pharmacy students completed 1,500 internship or clinical hours before taking board exams, like all pharmacy students in the U.S. But unlike UNC and other programs, Campbell incorporated the 1,500 hours into the nine-month clinical rotations during their fourth year, reducing the gap between finishing coursework and taking board exams. This approach paid off. When Campbell’s inaugural class graduated in 1990, they had a 100 percent passage rate on the national boards. Since then, Campbell’s students have maintained a 98 percent passage rate, one of the best in the nation. The pharmacy school’s legacy doesn’t end there. In 2009, Campbell renamed the pharmacy school the College of Pharmacy & Health Sciences to reflect its expansion into other health programs. The first physician assistant

students arrived in 2011, followed by public health students in 2012 and Doctor of Physical Therapy students in January 2014. CPHS also enrolled in August 2014 85 students in its first seminar for its new Bachelor of Science in Nursing program. CPHS’ success, too, paved the way for the Jerry M. Wallace School of Osteopathic Medicine, which Campbell opened with 162 students in August 2013, during Wallace’s ninth year as Campbell’s president. “My proudest achievement thus far is having a major part in the establishment of the Campbell University School of Pharmacy,” Wallace said today. “That might surprise some people, but that’s what it is because everything grew out of that.” Editor’s notes: Portions of this article originally appeared in a brief history of the pharmacy school published in the Campbell Magazine Summer 2013 issue.

Lauren McClamb (‘10 PharmD) always knew she wanted a career in medicine. She always knew she wanted a position with some sort of prescriptive authority. She always knew she wanted a career that allowed her to work one-on-one with patients with chronic conditions. She followed in the footsteps of an older cousin by choosing Campbell University for her education and training in ambulatory pharmacy care. It’s a decision she’s thankful she made. “I was able to get the residency I wanted and eventually the job I wanted because I was so well prepared by the faculty at Campbell,” says McLamb, today an ambulatory care clinical pharmacy specialist for a VA community-based outpatient clinic in Spartanburg, Va. “I attribute any success I’ve had to Campbell and its faculty.” And she credits Dean Ronald Maddox and his vision for health science education at Campbell for shaping the school’s faculty and curriculum that served her so well.

SEPTEMBER 2014

Nearly 90 students show up for the new nursing program’s pre-nursing seminar. In its first semester, nursing becomes the third-most popular intended major for Campbell’s incoming freshmen.

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OCTOBER 2014

The North Carolina Association of Pharmacists awards Maddox with the 2014 Bowl of Hygeia Award, the highest honor bestowed by NCAP.

“Dean Maddox has done such an excellent job in recruiting good clinical faculty,” she says. “They do an excellent job. When I was looking at schools, Campbell wasn’t the cheapest option I had. But it was worth every dime. I was able to score my top residency choice and land my dream job out of residency.”

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PERFECT MATCH SOPHOMORE HONORS HIS GRANDMOTHER BY DONATING STEM CELLS TO A STRANGER BATTLING LEUKEMIA BY BILLY LIGGETT

J

esse Lockamy was 11 when his grandmother died from leukemia in 2006. The two were very close — she lived just down the road from Jesse’s home in Willow Springs and made time for lunch every Sunday with her grandson. In the final years of his grandmother’s life, many of those Sundays were spent in the hospital. Her leukemia diagnosis came just three years after a lengthy and successful battle with breast cancer. The second fight lasted just a few months. “Cancer is a terrible thing,” says Jesse, today a sophomore at Campbell University. “As a kid, I couldn’t fathom the idea of my grandmother passing away and never seeing her again. But I remember a lot from the experience — the doctors were not only there for her, they were there for me and my family. They talked us through everything, and I was always grateful for that. I decided back then that I wanted to be able to do something like that for someone else one day. I wanted to give back.” His first step came after high school when he enrolled at Campbell and chose pre-professional biology as a major. His immediate goal after graduation in 2017 is acceptance into Campbell’s School of Osteopathic Medicine — a career choice born from his experience with the physicians who cared for his grandmother. The “giving back” continued last spring when Jesse signed up to become a bone marrow or a peripheral blood stem cell donor. Bone marrow or cord blood transplants are considered the best treatment option (or the only potential cure) for people with leukemia, lymphoma and several other diseases. He knew going in his chances of actually donating were low — only 8 percent of

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those who are called back for being a potential match are actually called on to donate. “It was a co-worker who signed me up,” Jesse says, “and he had been on the registry for 15 years. He told me I would probably never get a call, but it was good to sign up and at least be on the list.” Jesse got a call three months later. Not long after, he was chosen as the donor for an anonymous leukemia patient a few states away. With final exams approaching that spring, Jesse began the preparation process to be a donor — a process that requires many tests, several shots and a slough of side effects, including flu-like symptoms. Those symptoms coincided with his final exams that spring. He managed mostly A’s despite the fever, sweats and nausea. “It was tough, but the whole time I remembered my grandmother and the pain she went through,” Jesse says. “Enduring [the flu], getting a few shots and sitting there for a couple of hours [during the donation] is no comparison to the pain she went through.” As Jesse learned after being chosen, there are two methods of donation — peripheral blood stem cells and bone marrow. A bone marrow donation is a more invasive surgery where doctors extract liquid marrow from a pelvic bone. Jesse’s nonsurgical PBSC donation required him to take injections of filgrastim (which increases the number of blood-forming cells in the blood stream) for five days before the donation. On donation day, the blood is removed through a needle in one arm, passed through a machine that separates the blood-forming cells, and is returned through a needle in the other arm.


In all, doctors circulated 26 liters of his blood, the equivalent of three complete blood transfusions. “It wasn’t as bad as you’d think it would be,” he recalls. “I slept through most of it … you’re heavily medicated at the time.”

Jesse says he is looking into speaking for student groups at Campbell about his experience and the importance of signing up to be a donor. He’s also hoping to orchestrate drives through campus medical and health science clubs in the coming semesters.

“So few of the people who need these Because of patient privacy laws, Jesse doesn’t transfusions are getting them,” he says. “And know the recipient of his not many people know donation and won’t unless about donating. In Europe, the recipient decides to the blood drives are reach out to him a year much more common. In Every four minutes, a after the procedure. While Germany, everyone is on person in the United he would like to meet the the registry. I want that States is diagnosed person one day, he says it’s involvement over here.” not something he’ll think a with blood cancer. Jesse’s mother, Pam lot about unless it happens. Lockamy, says she is proud Regardless, he’s happy he of her son’s unselfishness more than anything. was chosen, and the experience has been a positive one for both him and his family. “I remember when he first found out he was going to donate, it was spring break and he “It’s one of the best experiences I’ve ever was leaving for a trip to the beach with his had,” he says. “Knowing that I potentially friends and their families,” she says. “I gave him saved someone’s life and was able to give to the ‘Don’t do anything wrong while you are someone something that wasn’t available to my away’ talk, and he told me that I did not have grandmother — it’s a really good feeling.” anything to worry about. He said he definitely It’s not only strengthened his desire to become would not do anything to jeopardize [the a doctor, it’s also motivated him to get the word patient’s] chance at receiving a transplant. I was out about bone marrow and stem cell donation. so touched by that statement, because I had not thought of it that way.”

DID YOU KNOW?

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70% For patients diagnosed with leukemia, lymphoma and other life-threatening diseases, a bone marrow or cord blood transplant may be their best or only hope for a cure. Yet 70 percent of patients who need a transplant to do not have a matching donor in their family. Learn more about bone marrow donation at bethematch.org.

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themarysue.com

IMMERSED IN THE Campbell English professor has become a world-renowned expert in all things ‘Whedon’ BY BILLY LIGGETT

B

ack in 1997, Elizabeth Rambo came across a “fun little TV show” about a teenage girl who answered her calling to become a killer of vampires, demons and other forces of darkness.

metaphors to portray the conflicts of teenage life, growth, power and transgression. The show went off the air in 2003; and over a decade later, it’s still a much talked about and much debated slice of American popular culture.

"Buffy the Vampire Slayer" would go on to become a hit, and the young girl who portrayed the brave heroine, Sarah Michelle Gellar, a star. But while many tuned in each week for the monsters and the mayhem, Rambo was picking up on a much deeper meaning to the show.

It doesn’t hurt that the show’s creator, Joss Whedon, has gone on to bigger and (some will argue) better things since the show, creating TV dramas like “Firefly,” “Angel” and “Dollhouse;” co-writing and writing movies like “Toy Story” and “The Cabin in the Woods;” and directing the third-highest grossing movie of all time, “The Avengers.” Study of the “Buffyverse” has morphed into study of the “Whedonverse,” and Rambo is considered one of the top scholars in the field these days.

And she wasn’t alone. Before long, “Buffy” was the topic of college lectures and national conferences. Entire books have been written (many of them) that explore the show’s use of

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It’s a title she never would have imagined back in ’97 when she first became a fan of a show about teenagers and vampires. “At first, I just thought it was a lot of fun,” said Rambo, a professor of English in Campbell’s College of Arts & Sciences. “I’ve never been a fan of horror movies, but I liked this show because it made fun of the horror genre, and it starred a young girl who didn’t look like your typical hero.” She attended a conference for the Popular Culture Association to present a paper on a historical novel a few years later and was pleased to find “serious people talking in a serious way” about “Buffy” and movies like Star Trek and Star Wars. “I said to myself,


FACULTY SPOTLIGHT

Photo by Billy Liggett

ENGLISH PROFESSOR PENS COMPANION BOOK TO AUSTEN’S ‘EMMA’

‘Maybe if I take a closer look at this show, I can have some academic fun with it.’” In 2002, Rambo attended her first international conference completely focused on “Buffy” — a planned one-day event at the University of East Anglia in Norwich, England, that became a two-day conference because of the number of speakers and presenters who signed up. The paper she presented — which likened the sixth and penultimate season of the show with W.B. Yeats’ famous poem, “The Second Coming” — became a chapter in the 222-page book, “Buffy Goes Dark,” in 2009. “The whole show is really based on the simple metaphor that high school is hell,” Rambo said. “And in ‘Buffy,’ her high school is literally built over the gates of hell.” Then there’s the different problems teenagers face, Rambo said. In “Buffy,” a mother swaps bodies with her daughter to become a cheerleader — a metaphor of the parents who live their lives unhealthily through their child. High school bullies are possessed by hyenas and eat the principal. A girl’s nice boyfriend becomes a real monster as their relationship gets more serious. “Whedon’s writing style is very clever,” Rambo said. “There’s a whole book about the linguistics of ‘Buffy,’ new words were invented … new slang that has become the part of the way we all speak now.” The Whedonverse has grown by leaps and bounds since Buffy went off the air. “Firefly,” which lasted only a season on Fox, has developed a cult following since its release on DVD and Netflix. “The Avengers” all but cemented his iconic status in pop culture,

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grossing $1.51 billion worldwide (Whedon’s sequel, “The Age of Ultron,” is due in theaters next year). A 450-page book, “Reading Joss Whedon,” hit the shelves earlier this year, and in it Rambo pens a chapter on the final unaired episodes of “Firefly” and their themes of alienated human nature, communication, family and death. “There’s now a massive audience of people who may only know Joss Whedon from "The Avengers," but many may look to his other works and discover these other shows and movies on Netflix or other services,” said Rambo, who uses an episode of “Buffy” and “Firefly” in her English classes at Campbell to demonstrate drama and metaphors. “It seems like every day on Twitter or Facebook, I’ll come across someone who’s seeing his earlier work for the first time.” Rambo presented her most recent paper at the 6th biennial Slayage Conference on the Whedonverse at California State University this summer. As long as there are other professors and fans who want to dive deeper into these shows and movies, Rambo doesn’t see these gatherings going away any time soon. “There are numerous testimonies from people who say ‘Buffy’ made a difference in their lives,” she said. “It helped them get through hard times. The show’s message empowered them.” As to why Rambo became such a big fan? “I was just happy to see a good show,” she said with a laugh. “A good, smart show with a positive message where the good guys won in the end.”

As an associate professor of English at Campbell University, Kenneth Morefield emphasizes to students he teaches in his British and American literature, academic writing and film classes the value and practice of “close reading.” “Close reading” occurs when readers set aside the historical context, biography, political science or psychology of a text and read the text itself critically to glean insights. “It’s just you and the book and nothing else,” Morefield said. “What can you glean just by reading and thinking?’” Wanting to teach this practice by modeling it, Morefield underwent his own “close reading” of a book his students often read: Jane Austen’s “Emma.” The product of that modeling is his own book, “Jane Austen’s ‘Emma’: A Close Reading Companion.” Volume I will be published by Cambridge Scholars Publishing this December. “Part of what I’m trying to do with the book is swing the pendulum back toward some of the traditional notions of what a good liberal arts education is and why it’s important,” Morefield said. Morefield compares his book to Biblical commentaries — or works which accompany the selected text with an in depth reading and analysis of each individual section. “The purpose of the commentary would be reading the book of the Bible [and running] into a passage where you say, ‘I don’t get that,’ so you look it up by the chapter or the verse,” he said.

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STILL THE

BEST

Cary Kolat ruled the wrestling world in the 1990s before a disappointing end to his career at the Olympics in 2000. At Campbell, he’s out to prove he can lead another small program to an All-American level. BY BILLY LIGGETT | PHOTOS BY JORDYN GUM

I

n a 10-year span from 1990 to 2000, Cary Kolat went from being the biggest name in American wrestling to the most cursed.

A 1992 feature on a then 18-year-old Kolat in Sports Illustrated deemed him “The Best There Ever Was” after he tore through Pennsylvania high school wrestling with a perfect 137-0 record. He won two national titles for Lock Haven University after going a combined 50-1 in 1996-97 and won silver and bronze medals at the 1997 and 1998 world championships in Russia and Iran and three gold medals in the World Cup from ’98 to 2000. But Kolat’s goal from the beginning — from the moment he first strapped on his Dan Gable wrestling shoes as a 7-year-old kid — was an Olympic gold medal. That dream died in his first match in Sydney, Australia in 2000, after his victory was protested and overturned, and Kolat lost the subsequent rematch. It was the third time in four years that one of his wins in a world-level championship was stripped by a protest from his opponent.

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The string of bad luck led U.S. coach Bruce Barnett to tell reporters in Sydney, “When I get to Heaven, one of the first things I'm going to ask is: Why does this keep happening to Cary Kolat?” Kolat finished ninth in his only Olympics at the age of 27. But while it may have felt like it at the time, his journey didn’t end in Australia. After leaving wrestling entirely to try his hand at event marketing and public relations, Kolat returned to the sport as a coach and eventually landed at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill in 2010 as the school’s associate head coach. Today, he is the head coach of Campbell University’s wrestling program, a program that reminds him a lot of his days at Lock Haven, a small, rural school where wrestling tops football and basketball as the “high profile sport.” He’s been tasked with turning around a program currently serving a one-year postseason suspension due to low Academic Progress Rate of its student-athletes.


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Sitting in his still mostly bare office a few steps from a Gore Arena he says is much nicer than his facilities back at Lock Haven, Kolat is both relaxed and confident about his program’s future and seemingly content about his accomplishments and where his roller coaster of a career has landed him. “When I left wrestling, I learned a lot about myself,” says Kolat. “And now, I’m exactly where I want to be at Campbell. The smaller setting is more comfortable to me. I can get the same results here that others get at a larger school. I understand the type of kid who wants to come a program like this and compete at a high level. Some might see barriers here. I see a great challenge.”

Kolat lived up to his “Son of Gable” moniker when Sports Illustrated writer Merrell Moden traveled to southwestern Pennsylvania to write about the sport’s next big thing. Moden’s feature told of a Saturday night in January when 2,000 people packed a small high school gym in Trinity “to get a look at this prodigy.” Trinity’s coach opted to forfeit against Kolat, and he was booed by his home crowd for the decision. The magazine article went into great detail about Kolat’s childhood, which consisted of constant training and wrestling meets. One year, Kolat and his parents spent 32 weekends in motels. The article also suggested the regimen wore on young Cary, whose father asked him to purposely fail the eighth grade so he could

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“The people of Greene County, deep in the coal country of southwest Pennsylvania, have seen it all — times when a man could work double shifts every day until his strength gave out, and times when the mines closed down and it was a struggle to find any work at all. But they have never seen a wrestler like Cary Kolat.”

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A

When he was a freshman at JeffersonMorgan High School in Jefferson, Pennsylvania, his teammates called him “Son of Gable,” after Kolat’s hero, the 1972 Olympic gold medalist and first and only amateur wrestler to ever grace the cover of Sports Illustrated. Four times, he was named Outstanding Wrestler at the state finals (no other Pennsylvania wrestler had ever won it twice); and in his 137 matches, Kolat was only reversed (when a wrestler comes out from below his opponent and gains control) five times and not once ever had his back exposed to the mat.

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He chose Penn State straight out of high school, and after a prep career, Kolat suffered his first collegiate loss two weeks into his first season. The setback was a much-needed wake-up call. Kolat says it taught him how to deal with defeat and adversity. “You’re only beaten when you give up,” he says. He went 22-5 overall his freshman year, falling in the NCAA title bout to a UNC-Chapel Hill wrestler. His sophomore year in 1994, he was named Big Ten Wrestler of the Year and ended his season 39-1, his loss coming in the NCAA semifinals. He was an All-American both years. He also wrestled against a University of Iowa team coached by none other than his hero, Dan Gable. Kolat transferred to Lock Haven for his junior year after a disagreement with his coach at Penn State — Kolat wanted to redshirt for a year to focus on international style wrestling, to which his coach objected. At Lock Haven, he won his first national championship in 1996 and his second the following year, finishing his two years with a record of 50-1. He ended his college wrestling career with an impressive .941 winning percentage (111-7) and 53 career falls.

— Merrell Moden, Sports Illustrated, April 16, 1992 perfect 137-0. And very few of those matches were even competitive.

think you know everything at that age. All the attention and I got or any so-called ‘celebrity’ around me, I didn’t notice it back then. My parents were good about keeping me humble, and I think I handled it as well as anyone.”

have another year of maturation before high school. When he was a sophomore, he once told a newspaper (when asked about his advice to younger wrestlers) to have fun with it and don’t make it a job. “If it becomes too much like a job, get out of it,” he said. “It's like a job to me, but I plan on making my living out of my wrestling.” When asked today about what being featured in Sports Illustrated does to an 18-year-old kid ready to make the leap to college, Kolat leans back in his chair, looks up and laughs. “My wife makes fun of me when she finds old articles or TV interviews,” he says. “You

Everything up to that point, however, was merely preparation for the Olympics in Kolat’s mind. In 2000, Kolat and the U.S. Wrestling Team competed in Sydney — and the 138-pound star faced defending world champion Mohammad Talaei of Iran in the first round. Kolat defeated Talaei, 3-1 in overtime, but Talaei protested a two-point scoring move Kolat initiated off a scramble. The Iranian won the protest, and he defeated Kolat 5-4 in the rematch. The loss made Kolat’s road to gold nearly impossible, and he finished his only Olympics competition ninth overall. Devastated, Kolat didn’t speak to the media after his loss. Fourteen years later, he’s still disappointed. But there’s a level of acceptance and “moving on” in his words when talking about it today. “I struggled with it for a long time,” he says. “People would come up to me and ask me about being an Olympian and ask about how great the experience was, but at the


time, anything less than a gold medal was devastating. If I can redo things, I would have soaked up the experience more. At the time, the Opening Ceremony was just getting in the way of my focus on the event. I was so focused, I didn’t enjoy any of it.” There was one part he remembers fondly. “My wife [Erin] and I did find out we were pregnant there,” he says, smiling. “So it wasn’t all bad.” ����������������

“Actually, I'll be happy when I can do a regular job or something, whether I use my degree or not. I see people working in grocery stores and stuff, and they don't realize, I envy them. I've never had a part-time job. My wife says, 'Oh, yeah, I worked at a store in the mall.' I think that would have been so fun.” — Cary Kolat, Pittsburgh PostGazette, Sept. 10, 2000 ����������������

W

ith Sydney behind him, his first child on the way and the rest of his life uncertain career-wise, Kolat defaulted to what he knew best. He became a wrestling coach at Lock Haven in 2001. He moved to North Carolina in 2003 to join the coaching staff at UNC. While in Chapel Hill, Kolat looked to expand his horizons. He began working part time for Newell Rubbermaid, and in 2005 the company announced Kolat would spearhead a grassroots marketing effort for Sharpie and Papermate products, managing advertising and event marketing to target fans of youth, high school and college wrestling. He also worked several NASCAR events, attending 22 races one year (a lot for a guy who was never a racing fan to begin with). While he was still involved in wrestling and athletics, Kolat embraced his new role as a PR guy, which allowed him to develop his skills

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speaking in public and meeting new people. “When you’re young and a competitor, you don’t really want to deal with people at times,” he says. “You just want to run through them. My few years in marketing helped me a lot — it shaped me for this job as much as anything else I did before this.” In 2008, Kolat put his PR skills to good use and launched kolat.com, a popular wrestling site full of videos and articles on wrestling techniques and a site Amateur Wrestling News recently dubbed “the library of congress of wrestling.” He returned to UNC in 2010 and became the associate head coach (and the “head coach in waiting” some believed). When he saw the opening at Campbell in 2013, he was intrigued, having visited the campus before and seeing the facilities. Campbell reminded Kolat a lot of Lock Haven. And this was a very good thing. “I know what it’s like to be at a small school,” he says. “I believe Campbell can develop a pretty good niche. I like where we’re located — the eastern region of the U.S. is catching up with the North and getting much better. A lot of those kids are heading south for the weather, and the programs are finally attracting them.”

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He also liked what Campbell offered academically. Despite the APR setback, Kolat saw a school where academics came first.

about Kolat growing up in Pittsburgh. “I’ve read about him, watched videos of him. My high school coach was even coached by him.”

“I’m looking for guys who want to succeed in everything they do, and that starts in the classroom,” he says. “If their teammate gets a 95, he wants a 96 or a perfect score. If his teammate is playing frisbee football, he wants to beat him at that, too. College is such a grind mentally that if you’re just here to wrestle and you don’t have that balance, you’ll struggle and you just won’t smile as much. Struggle academically, and you can’t train the way you want to train.”

Freshman Luke Stewart of Lynchburg, Virginia, says Kolat made an impact on him on Day 1. A talented wrestler who admits his flaw is giving up too easily when things get tough, Stewart says he’s getting mentally and physically stronger each day in the program.

Wrestling workouts began in October, and days into the new season, Kolat’s student-athletes were already sold on Kolat’s vision for the program. “Our first impression of him wasn’t intimidation, but rather here’s a hard-nosed guy who’s ready to get started,” says Drew Walker, 20, who is teammates with his twin brother, Tyler. “The first time we met him was the first practice, in the locker room, and he gave us this big speech. He was excited, and we got excited as well.” “I was excited when I heard he was coming,” says Tyler, adding that he and Drew knew a lot

“In high school, I always said to myself I’d go to a program coached by the best, and one day I’d become an All-American,” Stewart says. “I think that can happen at Campbell. When I first met him, I knew he wasn’t playing any games. He wants champions here. That’s all there is to it.” Kolat says the program will crawl before it can run. His late hiring put the program behind the eight ball in terms of recruiting, and also contributed to a lighter schedule that will include no post-season. “We’re rebuilding,” he says. “But I see us improving this year and having a great team in 2015-16. Campbell’s never had an AllAmerican before. We’re going to change that.”


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Grant Wood, American Gothic, 1930, Oil on Beaver Board, Friends of the American Art Collection, 1930.934, The Art Institute of Chicago. Illustration: Jonathan Bronsink

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ATHELETIC NOTES Campbell University improved by two wins in 2014, finishing the season with a 5-7 overall record and 4-4 mark in the Pioneer Football League. The Camels set several team records in 2014, including new highs in total yards and points in their 66-7 win against Missouri Baptist at Barker-Lane Stadium on Nov. 8. | Photo by Bennett Scarborough 42

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Photo by Billy Liggett

ATHELETIC NOTES

CONSTRUCTION BEGINS ON NEW STRENGTH FACILITY Campbell began construction on a new, state-of-the-art strength and conditioning facility addition at BarkerLane Stadium this fall. The nearly 6,000-square-foot facility, located in the southeast corner of Barker-Lane Stadium, home of the Camels' football and women's lacrosse programs, will feature 900 square feet of sport turf, 12 state-of-the-art custom Hammer Strength combo racks with inlaid Olympic lifting platforms, six glute hamstring developers and four Hammer Strength plate loaded machines. The training facility will also include two Pit Shark belt squat machines, custom iron grip dumbbells, custom plyometric jumping boxes and a comprehensive nutrition and hydration station. The new strength and conditioning center will house both Campbell's football and women's lacrosse programs. Construction is expected to conclude in January. “Anytime you're building a football program, the heart of what you are doing is strength and conditioning,” said Campbell head football coach Mike Minter. “In order to do it right, you have to have the space for it. Campbell, its alumni and donors stepped up and gave us a weight room that we can be proud of. It will be the best in the Pioneer Football League."

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FROM THE START

ASSISTANT COACH WAS A PLAYER DURING CAMPBELL'S RETURN TO THE GRIDIRON IN 2008 BY BILLY LIGGETT

Campbell University’s football program is trending upward. The Camels improved their win total by two games in 2014 and went a respectable 4-4 in the Pioneer Football League. The team set several records, including most yards and most points scored in a 66-7 win over Missouri Baptist in November. Attendance and excitement for the program is at an all-time high.

Campbell went 1-10 in its first season back and 3-8 in both 2009 and 2010, Phillippi’s senior year. The program’s only winning season came in 2011, a 6-5 campaign under head coach Dale Steele during Phillippi’s first year as a grad assistant. The program regressed with another 1-10 season in 2012, leading to not only Steele’s departure, but just about the entire coaching staff.

Former Camel linebacker and current recruiting coordinator and safeties coach Will Phillippi (’11) has a unique appreciation of the program’s rising success. The Charlotte native was a freshman here in 2007 when Campbell football returned after a 50-year hiatus. He remembers that first year (the program launched in 2007 but didn’t start playing games until 2008) before Campbell had the locker rooms, weight room, training facilities or even the football field it has today. He remembers getting ready for practice in a laundry room with no air conditioning, hanging his shoulder pads on pipes and walking out to a cow pasture in the brutal August heat for two-a-days.

Phillippi remained in his recruiting role when the University hired former Carolina Panthers great Mike Minter in December 2012. He says Minter’s hiring provided a much-needed spark not just for Campbell football, but for his career as well.

“Every day we practiced there was literally a line of people at the end of the day asking to quit,” Phillippi recalls. “There were about 110 kids in that original signing class, and I know of about 15 of them who made it all four years and graduated from Campbell playing football. Those were tough times.”

Minter asked Phillippi to coach the secondary, an important task considering Minter’s NFL career. Phillippi says that while Minter does take a special interest in his corners and safeties, he gives his young coach complete autonomy.

“I appreciate everything Coach Steele did for this program, but it was time for a change … time for a new personality,” Phillippi says. “I grew up in Charlotte, so of course I was a big Mike Minter fan when he was with the Panthers. I remember the first day he came here,” Phillip adds with a laugh. “It was like Simba returning to defeat Scar in 'The Lion King.'"

“He’ll give tips, suggestions and little nuggets of advice on technique,” Phillippi says. “But he lets


me coach. He’s a high energy guy who shows a lot of passion, and we all feed off of that.”

LIVING HIS DREAM Phillippi’s toughest moment as a freshman didn’t come on the football field. It was still early in the fall 2007 semester, and Buies Creek was in the middle of both a heat wave and a drought. One night, the air conditioning in his dorm went out. Desperate for some kind of breeze, Phillippi tossed his mattress outside and slept under the stars. Photo by Bennett Scarborough

“Football was my passion,” he says. “That first year was tough, and our team lacked senior, junior and even sophomore leadership. We were a bunch of freshmen trying to feel things out. It was hard, but it was a learning experience.” Phillippi decided he wanted to be a football coach during his senior year at Providence High School in Charlotte. He was recruited by smaller Division II schools in addition to Campbell, and chose the new program because he felt it offered a better path educationally and a better chance at becoming a coach. Seven years after that decision, he’s coaching alongside a former NFL star, and at age 25 is the youngest Division I football recruiting coordinator in the nation.

LADY CAMELS FINISH STRONG

It appears he made the right choice. Recruiting at Campbell is much different than 2007. Phillippi says the biggest challenge is getting kids to come to Buies Creek for that initial visit. Once they’re here, he says, they’re hooked.

Redshirt junior forward Ashley Clark, senior forward Kellsey Costello-Mays and sophomore midfielder Nicole Connolly were named to College Sports Madness' Big South All-Conference teams. Senior midfielder Alexis Prada and Connolly were named to the Big South Tournament All-Conference Team.

Former Campbell relief pitcher Ryan Thompson (’14) wrapped up his first professional season with the Tri-City ValleyCats (Class A Short Season affiliate of the Houston Astros) this fall with a 2-1 record, 2.96 ERA and 12 saves in 23 appearances.

Photo by Bennett Scarborough

“We’re bringing in the right kids,” he says. “Our seniors and juniors, they’ve built a culture here. They feel important on this campus. It’s good for the program.”

W W W. C A M P B E L L . E D U / M A G A Z I N E

Campbell’s season ended with a 2-1 loss to Liberty, ending the Lady Camels’ season with an 8-8-3 overall record and a 5-3-2 record in the Big South.

THOMPSON EARNS 12 SAVES IN FIRST SEASON IN THE MINORS

Including something Phillippi didn’t have back in 2007 — upperclass leaders.

“There’s a million different ways to get there,” he says. “So far, I’m on the right path.”

Stuart Horne said. “Where we were anticipated to finish, and what the outside people were telling us, every game we just got better."

"Losing like that isn't fun, but if you step back and look at the whole picture we really had a great year,” head coach

“Campbell doesn’t yet have the big name or the tradition that other schools we’re competing against have,” he says. “But when we do get the kids out here, they see the new stadium, the record crowds, the facilities and all of that, and they decide then they want to come here. We treat recruiting like it’s a marketing pitch. We have a lot to offer now.”

Phillippi’s goal is to become a Division I or II collegiate head coach. He knows it’s not going to happen terribly soon (he’d be the youngest in Division I by far if he took over tomorrow), but he’s confident it’s going to happen.

Campbell University’s women’s soccer had its best conference mark since 2011 and advanced to the Big South semifinals before falling to the top-seeded team.

The right-handed sidewinder pitched 24 1/3 innings, helping Tri-City go 48-28 overall, falling one game short of the New York-Penn League Championship. He was named to the New York-Penn League North Division AllStar Team in his first year. The two-time collegiate All-American was selected by the Houston Astros in the 23rd round of the 2014 MLB Draft.

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ATHELETIC NOTES

Photo by Bennett Scarborough

Freshman Bradley Farias (19) of Indiantown, Fla., fights for possession during an October home game against High Point. Campbell’s season ended on Nov. 11 after a 2-0 loss to the Big South’s top-seeded Radford in the conference quarterfinals. | Photo by Bennett Scarborough

CAMPBELL WINS SEVENTH-STRAIGHT CAMEL CLASSIC

Photo by Bennett Scarborough

For the seventh-straight time, 30thranked Campbell won its Fighting Camel Fall Classic intercollegiate women's golf tournament in October with three players among the top five individuals. Campbell topped secondplace High Point by 13 strokes. Lisbeth Brooks and Nadine White tied for second place individually and Tahnia Ravnjak was fifth as Campbell won its first title of the 2014-15 campaign. Campbell has won at least one tournament crown in 23 of the 24 years John Crooks has served as head coach of the women's program. Campbell's 54-hole total was the second-lowest in the tournament's history, bettered only by last year's 887 winning score. Losing just one player from last year’s NCAA Championship-qualifying squad, Campbell has high hopes for the 2015 campaign, which begins in February. This fall, the Lady Camels were ranked first in the nation in “greens in regulation” percentage, with Brooke Bellomy leading the country with an 86.1 percentage. Campbell opened its 2014 fall season with a runner-up showing at the Golfweek Program Challenge at Pawley’s Island, S.C.

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The 2014 Campbell University baseball team received their 2014 Big South Championship rings at halftime of the home football finale at Barker-Lane Stadium on Nov. 8. Campbell finished the 2014 season with a 41-21 overall record, tying for the second-most wins in school history. The Camels claimed the Big South Tournament Championship in Rock Hill, S.C., earning the school's second NCAA Regional berth.


SCHEDULES MEN’S BASKETBALL Nov. 14 Barber Scotia Nov. 18 at Davidson TWC Nov. 22 at Colgate

(Buckeye Classic, Ohio)

(Buckeye Classic, Ohio)

(Buckeye Classic, Ohio)

7:30 p.m. 7 p.m. 2 p.m.

Nov. 26 at Ohio State 7 p.m. BTN (Buckeye Classic, Ohio) Nov. 30 at Sacred Heart 3:30 p.m.

Photo by Bennett Scarborough

Dec. 2

ORANGE AIRWAVES

CAMPBELL MEN'S BASKETBALL HAS MULTIPLE APPEARANCES ON NATIONAL, REGIONAL TV THIS YEAR The Fighting Camels’ men’s basketball team will enjoy its widest-ranging regular season telecast schedule in the program's history. In addition to a pair of appearances on ESPN3, the Camels will be televised in three of the Big South Conference's seven telecasts on the new American Sports Network, which will televise a Big South game on five Mondays and two Tuesdays this season. The first Big South matchup on ASN will air Jan. 12 with defending Big South champion Coastal Carolina traveling to Buies Creek to meet the Camels. Campbell’s Jan. 17 home game against UNCAsheville and its Feb. 21 home game against

Charleston Southern will be televised on ESPN3. ESPNU will also carry additional “Big South Game of the Week” games throughout the season, choosing those games days in advance. "We are excited about the opportunity to play so many TV games this year," said second-year Fighting Camel head coach Kevin McGeehan. "For us to have eight TV games, complimented with the Big South Network games, an out of town parent or recruit will have the opportunity to see us play more than 20 times during the season. That's great for our visibility.”

"WHEN IT WAS HUMPIN', IT WAS LOUD." — Andy Shell, Campbell's director of campus recreation, in an October feature in the Fayetteville Observer on Carter Gymnasium, the secondsmallest Division I basketball gym (961 capacity) and the Fighting Camels’ home before the Pope Convocation Center opened in 2007.

W W W. C A M P B E L L . E D U / M A G A Z I N E

at James Madison

Dec. 8 Dec. 10 Dec. 14 Dec. 17 Dec. 20 Dec. 23 Dec. 28 Dec. 31 Jan. 5 Jan. 10 Jan. 12 Jan. 15 Jan. 17 Jan. 22 Jan. 24 Jan. 26 Jan. 31 Feb. 3 Feb. 6 Feb. 10 Feb. 14 Feb. 19 Feb. 21 Feb. 26 Feb. 28 March 6 March 7 March 8

7 p.m.

Johnson & Wales 7 p.m. at Delaware State 7 p.m. at College of Charleston 2 p.m. MyTV Charleston

SIUE 7 p.m. Montreat College 2 p.m. UNC Wilmington 2 p.m. at Samford 2 p.m. Liberty* 2 p.m. at Charleston Southern* 7:30 p.m. at High Point* 7 p.m. Coastal Carolina* 8 p.m. ASN Radford* UNC-Asheville* ESPN3

7 p.m. 4 p.m.

at Wintrhop* Gardner-Webb* ASN

4 p.m. 8 p.m.

at Liberty* ASN/LFSN

8 p.m.

Winthrop* ESPNU**

7 p.m.

at Presbyterian* ESPNU**

7 p.m.

at UNC-Asheville* 4:30 p.m. Presbyterian* 7 p.m. at Gardner-Webb* 7 p.m. ESPNU**

High Point* 4 p.m. at Coastal Carolina* 7 p.m. Charleston Southern* 4 p.m. ESPN3

at Longwood* 2 p.m. Big S. Quarterfinals All Day ESPN3**

Big S. Semifinals Noon, 2 p.m. ESPN3**

Big S. Championship 1 p.m. ESPN2**

* Big South Conference game ** Game could potentially feature Campbell

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ATHELETIC NOTES

SCHEDULES WOMEN’S BASKETBALL Nov. 14 Nov. 17 Nov. 19 Nov. 21 Nov. 24 Dec. 2 Dec. 13 Dec. 15 Dec. 17 Dec. 19

Pfeiffer N.C. Central at UNC Wilmington Mount St. Mary’s at Western Carolina at Winthrop* at Charleston Southern* Brevard Elon at Stetson (Hatter Classic, DeLand, Fla.)

5 p.m. 7 p.m. 7 p.m. 7 p.m. 7 p.m. 6 p.m. 2 p.m. 7 p.m. 3 p.m. 1 p.m.

Dec. 20 at Bethune-Cookman 3 p.m.

(Hatter Classic)

Campbell University Athletics launched a new program in the fall to bring the latest sports news and interviews to all Fighting Camel fans.

Yiznitsky set up shots, worked sound, editing video and even hosted shows on occasion during the fall.

“Camel Cam” gives students and fans a weekly behind-the-scenes look at all Campbell sports. Each episode includes recaps, scores and the “Candid Camel” interview.

“I love how I’m not just a figurehead or host for the show. I get to take part in every aspect,” said junior Lisa Sacaccio. “Students who work on Camel Cam need to be well rounded and educated in various aspects of broadcasting.”

Dec. 30 Jan. 3 Jan. 5 Jan. 10 Jan. 13 Jan. 17 Jan. 20 Jan. 24 Jan. 27 Jan. 31 Feb. 2 Feb. 5 Feb. 10 Feb. 14 Feb. 17 Feb. 21 Feb. 24 Feb. 28

Camel Cam’s first episode surpassed 500 views, which Heymeyer said topped the average of his weekly online sports show.

WRESTLING

Senior Carly Eibel films while junior Lisa Sacaccio hosts a segment of the new student-run sports show, “Camel Cam.” | Photo by Jordyn Gum

CAMEL CAM

COMMUNICATION STUDIES STUDENTS LAUNCH ATHLETIC-THEMED, BEHIND-THE-SCENES ONLINE SHOW

“We wanted it to be a short, fun, quick look at Campbell Athletics,” said Chris Hemeyer, the department’s director of broadcasting and digital media and the creative force behind the show. “We have a lot of great, smart, talented students that I wanted to give a chance to get some more experience both in front of and behind the camera.” Students like senior George Yiznitsky get involved by taking on several responsibilities.

“I enjoy interviewing the athletes and letting the rest of the school get to know them a little better,” said senior Carley Eibel. “We’re always brainstorming for ideas for future shows.” — by Rachel Rock

Q&A: CHRIS HEMEYER

VOICE OF CAMPBELL ATHLETICS

Q: As the voice of Campbell, what are you trying to convey to listeners about the university? Photo by Bennett Scarborough

A: Excitement. This is a great place full of people with a lot of passion for it, and it’s a place that is growing and expanding. I’ve been here for only four years, but there’s a different look to the facilities and a different attitude now than there was even a few years ago. So I hope I bring energy to the broadcasts, because there’s a lot of energy at this place. I hope I do this place justice.

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Nov. 16 Nov. 23 Dec. 13 Dec. 20 Jan. 1-2 Jan. 11 Jan. 16 Jan. 18 Jan. 22 Jan. 25 Feb. 15 Feb. 15

Presbyterian* 7 p.m. at Longwood* 2 p.m. at High Point* 7 p.m. UNC Asheville* 1 p.m. Gardner-Webb* 11:45 a.m. Radford* 1 p.m. at Coastal Carolina* 7 p.m. at Liberty* 2 p.m. at Presbyterian* 7 p.m. Longwood* 1 p.m. Winthrop* 7 p.m. Charleston Southern* 7 p.m. at UNC Asheville* 7 p.m. High Point* 1 p.m. at Gardner-Webb* 7 p.m. at Radford* 2 p.m. Coastal Carolina* 7 p.m. Liberty* 1 p.m.

Wolfpack Open in Raleigh All day Keystone Classic in Pennsylvania All day at Cleveland State Open in Ohio All day at The Citadel* 2 p.m. at Southern Scuffle in Tennessee All day at Appalachian St.* 2 p.m. VMI* 7 p.m. at Chattanooga* 2 p.m. Gardner-Webb* 6 p.m. at SIU-Edwardsville* (The Citadel) 1 p.m. at Davidson* 1 p.m. vs. Coker 2:30 p.m.


W W W. C A M P B E L L . E D U / M A G A Z I N E

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HOMECOMING '14

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W W W. C A M P B E L L . E D U / M A G A Z I N E

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’65

George Towery (’65 BS) has written a book about his career as an educator. “Touched by a Child” is a collection of stories and experiences about his 40 years as principal of two modest-income elementary schools in Washington, D.C. The book is currently available at Amazon, Barnes & Noble and other similar websites.

’93

Timothy R. Brown (’93 PH) was elected as a member of the American Society of Health System Pharmacists Board of Directors. Brown is director of clinical pharmacotherapy in family medicine at Akron General Medical Center for family medicine in Akron, Ohio. He will begin his three-year term in June 2015.

___________________

’80

Mikeal C. Parsons (’80 BA) published a new book with Baylor University Press, “Beyond Bultmann: Reckoning a New Testament Theology.” The book is currently available at Baylor Press, Amazon and other similar websites.

___________________

’86

Judge Paul Ridgeway (’86 JD) received the 2014 Leaders in the Law Award from North Carolina Lawyers Weekly.

___________________

’97

Andy Ellen (’97 JD) received a 2014 Corporate Counsel of the Year Award from the Triangle Business Journal.

___________________

’98

Todd Jones (’98 JD) was named at-large director of the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill Gillings School of Global Public Health Alumni Association Governing Board.

___________________

___________________

’87

G. Edward Story (’87 JD) received a 2014 Corporate Counsel of the Year Award from the Triangle Business Journal.

___________________

’90

Robin H. Terry (’90 JD) was appointed to the management team at Cranfill Sumner & Hartzog.

’99

___________________

’92

Attorney Rebecca J. Britton (’92 JD) of Britton Law, P.A., was selected by her peers for inclusion in the 21st edition of The Best Lawyers in America 2015 in the practice area of personal injury litigation.

___________________

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Matt Barton (’99 BBA) and his wife Arica, along with their two daughters Beri Ann and June, welcomed the birth of their third child, Clara Celeste on June 17. The Barton family resides in Evanston, Ill. Aaron Bailey (’99 JD) was elected North Carolina Creditors Rights Bar association president.

___________________

PROUD

CLASS NOTES


PROUD

PAT BAZEMORE CARY PD’S FIRST FEMALE POLICE CHIEF

Before there was the TV’s “CSI,” Pat Bazemore (’96) wanted to be a crime scene investigator. She graduated from Wake Technical Community College with an associate’s degree in criminal justice; but before she could become a crime scene investigator, she had to work for at least two years as a police officer. So she joined the Town of Cary Police Department in 1986 as a patrol officer and became the first woman with the town to finish at the top of her academy. Her intention? “Work two years as an officer and then move on to my dream job,” she says. She had more DUI arrests than anyone else in the Cary Police Department her first year. Her third year, she helped pilot the DARE (Drug Abuse Resistance Education) program in Wake County. She went on to become the first woman with the Cary Police Department to be promoted to sergeant, and then to lieutenant, and then to captain and major. She became the town’s first deputy police chief in 2003. Five years later, she was named the town’s police chief, becoming the first woman to hold the position. “I don’t know if I ever made that decision to not become a crime scene investigator and to stay with law enforcement,” she says. “I just never made the decision to leave.” Law enforcement was not what she imagined, she says. Yes, it’s about enforcing laws, making arrests, writing traffic tickets, and fighting crime. But more than that, “Law enforcement is truly about serving others,” she says. “You take an oath to serve and to protect; about 20 percent of the job is protecting and enforcing and about 80 percent of the job is serving." Bazemore, who completed her Bachelor of Applied Science in Criminal Justice through Campbell University’s Research Triangle Park campus in 1996, says she never imagined her career path would lead to becoming a police chief. “When I came to Cary in 1986, there were two other female officers,” she says. “At that time, the average length of career for women in the field was five years. So by the time women reached a point in their career where they would start to get promoted, women were leaving. The changing times were advantageous to me, and I’ve been incredibly blessed to have had the opportunities I’ve had to work at Cary.” — Cherry Crayton W W W. C A M P B E L L . E D U / M A G A Z I N E

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CLASS NOTES

’02 Photo by Bennett Scarborough

Samuel Forehand (’02 BBA/MBA) and his wife Yasmin welcomed the birth of their second child, Ella Anne Forehand, on July 4. Ella’s brother,William Marshburn Forehand, was born on April 15, 2013. Forehand also received the Young Lawyer of the Year Award from the N.C. Bar Association’s Young Lawyers Division during the association’s annual meeting over the summer.

AYSCUE, MARSHALL NAMED DISTINGUISHED ALUMNI

The Campbell University National Alumni Association honored Charles Franklin Ayscue and Elaine Marshall as the university’s 2014 Distinguished Alumni Oct. 17, during the annual Distinguished Alumni Dinner in Marshbanks Dining Hall. Ayscue is the chief financial officer of the Mission Health System, and Marshall is North Carolina's secretary of state.

CHARLES AYSCUE

ELAINE MARSHALL

A 1973 graduate of Campbell, Ayscue has served as senior vice president and chief financial officer of the Mission Health System since 2007. Located in Asheville, North Carolina, MHS is the sixth largest health system in North Carolina. Before that, he was the CFO of the University of North Carolina Health Care System for 20 years.

A 1981 Campbell Law graduate, Marshall was the first woman elected to a state-wide executive branch office in North Carolina. She has been the North Carolina Secretary of State since 1997.

For the past several years, Becker’s Hospital Review has named Ayscue to its list of the nation’s top “125 Hospital and Health System CFOs to Know.” He has also served on several boards, volunteered with many charitable organizations, and received numerous honors, including North Carolina’s coveted “Order of the Long Leaf Pine” in 2013. He and his wife, Dr. Lanier Hasty Ayscue, a pathologist and emergency medicine physician, have two adult children: Franklin M. Ayscue II and Brandon L. Ayscue.

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Before being elected to the position, she was a state senator, representing N.C. District 15 (1993-94); chair of the Harnett County Democratic Party; and president of the Democratic Women of Harnett County. In the 1970s, she was the national secretary of the Young Democrats of America.

Matt Doyle (’02 BA) joined the administrative team of High Point Christian Academy as the new high school principal. Doyle previously worked as head of school for Hayworth Christian School and most recently taught English at Guilford Technical Community College. His role at HPCA began on July 14.

___________________

’03

Skinner, P.A.

Robert Ange (’03 JD) joined Manning Fulton &

Ulmer Zack “Zeke” Bridges, III (’03 JD) received an AV Preeminent 5-out-of-5 rating in Martindale-Hubbell’s peer review ratings.

Chip Campbell (’03 JD) was selected for the 30th class of Leadership Raleigh.

___________________

Marshall has received numerous awards during her career, including the 4-H Foundation's Lifetime Achievement Award, the N.C. Association of Educators' Women’s Equality Award, and the Triangle Business Journal’s 2006 Lifetime Achievement Award for Women in Business. She received an honorary Doctor of Law degree from Campbell in 2008. She’ll deliver Campbell Law’s commencement address during its spring graduation on May 8, 2015.

’04

Kelly Klimczak Hite ('04 PH) and Shawn Hite announced the birth of twins. Jacob Nicholas weighed 6 pounds, and Lucas Patrick weighed 5 pounds, 12 ounces. They were born on Aug. 19.


FRIENDS WE WILL MISS

’05

Jesse C. Neighbors III (’05 BAS) and Dawn S. Phillips (’13 BA) were married on July 5, in Erwin. Jesse is retired from law enforcement with the Harnett County Sheriff’s Office. Dawn is employed by Campbell University as assistant vice president for corporate and foundation relations and grants management.

’07

Leigh Byrd (’07 BS) and Adam Byrd proudly announced the birth of their son, Brantley Thomas Byrd, born on Sept. 5.

Sarah H. Bowman (’07 JD) was named director of marketing and communications at Campbell University’s Jerry M. Wallace School of Osteopathic Medicine.

When S. Truett Cathy spoke at the Aug. 27, 1991, summer convocation ceremony at Campbell University, his restaurant chain had 445 locations in 31 states.

CHICK-FIL-A FOUNDER RECEIVED HONORARY DEGREE FROM CAMPBELL IN 1991

Today, there are more than 1,800 Chick-fil-A restaurants in 40 states and the District of Columbia. The company takes in more than $5 billion in annual sales and has plans for future growth in the Midwest, California, Canada and countries outside of the U.S. Jonathan Bronsink (’05 BA), Campbell University's director of visual identity, and his wife, Brandi, announced the birth of their daughter Charlotte Anne Bronsink on July 27, weighing 7lbs, 6 ounces.

Mariusz Stanczyk (’07 PH) and Heather Vick Stanczyk (’09 PH) announced the birth of Alex Logan Stanczyk, born July 15.

___________________

___________________

’06

Kevin Ceglowski (’06 JD) was elected to serve a three-year term on the Raleigh: SAFEchild board of directors.

Dr. Michael B. Priest (’06 BS) is now practicing family medicine with the Carilion Clinic in Hardy, Virginia, on Smith Mountain Lake. Priest is a graduate of St. George’s University School of Medicine, and he completed his residency in family medicine at the Carilion Medical Center in Roanoke in June.

’08

Brandon York (’08 BA) and Jennifer York (’08 BS) joyfully announced the birth of their son, Houston Todd York. Houston was born on March 26.

___________________ W W W. C A M P B E L L . E D U / M A G A Z I N E

Cathy died on Sept. 8 at the age of 93. The Atlanta businessman held nearly 20 honorary degrees, but his first came in 1991 when the late Campbell President Norman A. Wiggins presented him with the College of Arts & Science’s Doctorate of Laws degree. In 1946, Cathy relied on a keen business sense, a strong work ethic and a deep Christian faith to build a tiny diner in the Atlanta suburb of Hapeville, Georgia. He developed it into Chick-fil-A, today the nation’s largest quick-service chicken restaurant chain based on annual system-wide sales. It was at the original restaurant that Cathy created the sandwich that became the company’s signature item.

Rev. B. Fulton Thomas (’52), Jan. 5 Dallas M. Pounds (’88 Law), Jan. 6 Luby H. Byrd (’58), Feb. 9 Jo Ann S. Blaschke (’76), May 24 William Russell Roebuck (’42), June 28 Kaye Lynch Bradsher (’84), July 1 Dorothy Dove Kirkpatrick (’37), July 1 Donald Michael Sanders (’69), July 2 Burton Ed Walkup (’71), July 2 Donna Lynn Peterson (’71), July 4 Bobby L. Dickerson (’84), July 5 Charles David Warner(’68), July 9 Florence Powers Williamson (’52), July 10 Dr. Edward M. Gore (’52, ’07), July 16 Vaughn Travis Autry (’89), July 18

Ollie Cecil Harrell (’54), July 20 C Reid Andrews (’42), July 26 Merle W. Sanders (’63), Aug. 5 Rev. Calvin Stinson Knight (’43), Aug. 6 Dr. Robert W. Roberson (’53), Aug. 7 Jack Aaron Sneeden (’75), Aug. 11 Virginia Riddle Moore (’40), Aug. 19 Mary Lanier McKnight (’40), Aug. 28 Arthur Glen Smith (’62), Sept. 2 Dr. Jesse C. Alphin (’97), Sept. 4 Stanley M. Todd (’88 Law), Sept. 4 Amy Leigh Asbell (’85), Sept. 7 Henry Forest Britt (’62), Sept. 8 S. Truett Cathy (’91), Sept. 8

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CLASS NOTES

Fighting Camels play in a chapter’s area. “For me, as strange as it may seem, the draw to stay involved with Campbell has been the decision to institute the football program a few years back,” says Ervin Barham, treasurer of the Charlotte Metro Chapter. “When you go to a visiting team’s stadium and there’s more orange in the stands than the home team’s colors, then that makes you proud as an alumnus.”

CHAPTERS GROWING

NEW CAMPBELL ALUMNI CHAPTERS ARE APPEARING THROUGHOUT THE STATE AND REGION BY JONATHAN Q. BRIDGES

Whether you graduated a year or over 50 years ago, your memories of Campbell may seem like it all happened yesterday. Although you no longer sit in the halls of Kivett or D. Rich, you are part of a 127-yearold family that thrives on the involvement of alumni. For alumnus David Warnick, staying involved with Campbell provides a way of networking. “In Wake County we are blessed with alumni in many industries,” he says. “You can connect with previous grads who might become important contacts for jobs or for other networking [purposes].” Warnick, who is an at-large member of the Wake County Alumni Chapter, said chapters like his provide a way for graduates who move into a new area to make social connections. The Wake chapter is one of eight new chapters that have been formed in the past year and was the first chapter under the auspices of the Campbell University Alumni Association. The

chapter kicked off a new era of chapters by holding its inaugural event at the North Carolina Governor’s Executive Mansion in downtown Raleigh. This signature event, held in the spring of 2013, hosted almost 200 Campbell graduates from the area along with special guests Gov. Pat McCrory and University President Jerry Wallace. Since that inaugural kickoff, Campbell has formed seven other alumni chapters, including Cape Fear (Brunswick, New Hanover, and Pender Counties), Cumberland, Foothills (Davie, Forsyth, Stokes, Surry, and Yadkin Counties), Washington, D.C. Metro, Central Virginia, and Lee County. The goal of these chapters is to be a regional representation of Campbell. Among the networking possibilities during chapter events, graduates have the opportunity to hear campus updates from administration and/or school deans. Typically, chapter events are focused around a football or basketball game when the

One of the key events for the Charlotte Metro Chapter was the Campbell football season opener against the UNC-Charlotte 49ers. The chapter had a reception the evening before the game, which featured campus updates and Campbell head football coach Mike Minter. The following day, Campbell alumni from the Charlotte area joined Campbell students and staff to cheer on the Camels. If there is one commonality that can join Campbell alumni together, it is to be part of the orange and black among a sea of UNC-C green. Some of our chapters have built upon professional networks, which is one of the reasons why Angela Rogers joined the Foothills Chapter, which includes Winston-Salem. “It allows you to stay connected, maintain personal and professional relationships and is a great networking opportunity,” says Rogers, who serves as the Foothills Chapter president. Rogers believes the chapters serve as a “central point of contact” for getting information about Campbell. Also, chapters let you “relive the glory days with other alumni who understand how unique Campbell is,” she says. The Central Virginia Chapter hosted its first event at the Lewis-Ginter Botanical Gardens. The attendees represented a plethora of careers and age groups. Fitch hopes that the chapter can plan local game watch parties and assist Campbell admissions with recruiting fairs. If you are interested in joining a alumni chapter or if there is not a chapter in your area, contact alumni@campbell.edu, visit online at alumni.campbell.edu or call (910) 893-1322.

ALUMNI EVENTS FOOTHILLS CHAPTER

CAPE FEAR CHAPTER

Jan. 10 — Group event to attend the Campbell vs. High Point basketball game at High Point.

WAKE COUNTY CHAPTER

Dec. 6 — Volunteering at the Samaritan Kitchen; cleaning and other activities to help them get ready to move into their new larger facility.

Feb. 21 — Group event for the home basketball game against Charleston Southern.

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Jan. 17 — Basketball game watch for Campbell University vs. UNC-Asheville, 4 p.m. in the Gore Arena/Pope Convocation Center. Tickets are $10. April 14 — Wake County reception at the Governor’s Executive Mansion in Raleigh. More details will be sent at a later date.


’11

Jennie Hewitt (’10 PH) and Trey Hewitt (’08 BS) announced the birth of twins. Rylee Brooke Hewitt weighed 3 lbs. and 3 oz. and Raelynn Marie Hewitt weighed 2 lbs. 15 oz. They were born on July 9, 2014.

___________________

’09

Justin Tilghman (’09 BA) was named director of public safety education programs at Lenoir Community College. Justin also published a book, “Grace,” in 2014. The book is now available online at Amazon and Barnes & Noble.

Kelly Carter Austin (’11 PH) and Jonathan Austin proudly announced the birth of Dillon Charles Austin, born on June 9. Paul Griffin (’11 JD/MBA) received a 2014 Corporate Counsel of the Year Award from the Triangle Business Journal.

‘MILLIE’ WIGGINS TURNS 94 Mildred “Millie” Harmon Wiggins, wife of the late Campbell University President Norman A. Wiggins, celebrated her 94th birthday on campus with friends in September. A native of Coats, Wiggins graduated from Campbell College in 1948 and earned a bachelor’s degree from Wake Forest and master’s degree from Columbia. She worked as a teacher in the Rocky Mount and Winston-Salem school districts before becoming Campbell’s “first lady” in 1967. Wiggins had lunch with Campbell President Jerry Wallace, longtime family friend Prince Ajiboye, and Campbell Senior Vice President Jack Britt at Marshbanks Hall on the big day.

Alka Srivastava (’11 JD) received the 2014 Leaders in Diver­ sity Award from the Triangle Business Journal. Bethany Christine Starnes (’11 BS) of Granite Falls is engaged to Derrick Adam Lingle of Hudson. Bethany is currently employed by Marlin Company, Inc. in Lenoir as a quality control chemist. A January 2015 wedding is planned in Lenoir.

___________________

Charles Thomas Shaw (’09 BS/’13 PH) and Sarah Katherine McCain (’13 BBA) were united in marriage on April 26, in Robert B. and Anna Gardner Butler Chapel.

Marlena Abernethy (’09 PH) proudly announce the birth of her daughter, Providence Grace. The beautiful baby girl was born on March 11, in Hickory.

’13

Mindy Woodie (’13 PH) and Joshua Woodie announced the birth of their daughter Mackenzie Peyton Woodie on June 6 at 9:48 a.m. Mackenzie weighed 8 pounds.

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’10

Megan West (’10 JD) was selected for the 30th class of Leadership Raleigh.

Christine E. Benedict (’13 MPAP) and Nicholas Paul Larame (’14 BS) were united in marriage on May 25. Christine is a physician assistant with N.C. Heart and Vascular in Raleigh, and Nick is a second lieutenant in the U.S. Army. Laura Brittany Steedly (’13 PH) and Thomas Carter Bridges were united in marriage on June 21, in Robert B. and Anna Gardner Butler Chapel. Jennifer Clark (’13 PH) and CPT Matthew Clark proudly announced the birth of their son, Thomas Charles Clark, born on July 29.

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___________________

Beth Migliaccio (’13 PH) and Benton Sawrey were united in marriage on Aug. 2, at Church of the Good Shepherd in Raleigh. The reception was held at Vaughn Towers at Carter-Finley Stadium.

W W W. C A M P B E L L . E D U / M A G A Z I N E

Tyler Bradshaw Patterson (’14 PH) and her husband Kevin announced the birth of Jackson Thomas Patterson on June 22. Baby Patterson was 9 pounds, 3 ounces. Olivia Janine Gregory (’14 BS) and David Keel were united in marriage on July 19, in Robert B. and Anna Gardner Butler Chapel. They currently reside in Clayton.

’14

Jessica Rinette Shaver (Hostetter) (’14 PH) and Skip Shaver announced the birth of Liam Issac Shaver, born on Sept. 4 and weighing 7 pounds, 2 ounces.

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DONOR HONOR ROLL Campbell University students, faculty, staff & trustees acknowledge the generous donations of alumni, friends, foundations, parents, churches & estates. Without you the University would not flourish. Listed are names of the donors during the University’s recently completed fiscal year June 1, 2013 — May 31, 2014. Thank you for your outstanding support. Names in italics are deceased.

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PRESIDENT’S CLUB The President’s Club recognizes donors who have given $3,000 or more between June 1, 2013 & May 31, 2014.

————————————————————————————————————— 10th Judicial District Bar Mr. Emmett C. Aldredge, Jr. '68 Algernon Sydney Sullivan Foundation Mr. Ernest J. Alphin and Mrs. Teresa M. Alphin '78 Mr. Eugene G. Anderson Mr. B. R. Angel and Mrs. Russellene J. Angel Armat Foundation Mr. Fred Atkinson '69 and Mrs. Edna G. Atkinson '68 Mr. Terrence M. Bagley '82 and Mrs. Cynthia W. Bagley Bank of America Charitable Foundation Baptist State Convention of NC Dr. Bob Barker, Sr. '65, '12 and Dr. Patricia Barker '12 Mr. Robert Barker, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. J. J. Barnes, Jr. Mr. Guilford W. Bass, Jr. '91 and Mrs. Stephanie Bass Mr. Guilford W. Bass, Sr. '70 Dr. James E. Beaty '98 and Dr. Anne Marie P. Beaty '00 Dr. and Mrs. Billy Kim Dr. Bruce B. Blackmon '40 and Mrs. Lelia Blackmon Bob Barker Company, Inc. Mr. and Mrs. Michael Bourland Branch Banking & Trust Dr. George W. Braswell, Jr. '06 and Mrs. Joan O. Braswell Mr. Henry F. Britt '62 and Mrs. Betty R. Britt Dr. and Mrs. Jack Britt Mr. Charles Broadwell Mr. David Bryan Bryan Foundation, Inc. Bryan Honda Buddyco, Inc. Rev. Christie A. Burley '09 Mr. and Mrs. Travis Burt Mr. and Mrs. Harold Butts, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. Bobby Byrd Mr. Hubert G. Byrd, Sr. '59 and Mrs. Gloria Byrd Mr. Martin D. Byrd '53 and Mrs. Edna R. Byrd Dr. William E. Byrd '03 and Mrs. Sadie Byrd Dr. James C. Cammack, Jr. '70 and Mrs. Judy Cammack Camp Clearwater The Cannon Foundation, Inc. Capital Community Foundation Dr. Richard H. Capps, Jr. '95 and Mrs. Jennifer W. Capps '96 Carlie C. McLamb Trust Carlie C's IGA Mr. and Mrs. Charles Carpenter Mr. James O. Carter Carter & Carter, P.A. Mr. and Mrs. Robert B. Cashion Cashion Family Foundation, Inc. Dr. S. T. Cathy '91 Mr. and Mrs. Charles D. Cato CBF of North Carolina, Inc. Cedar Falls Baptist Church Charles and Irene Nanney Foundation Dr. Melinda C. Childress '05 and Mr. John A. Childress Cigna Foundation Cigna Health and Life Insurance Mr. David K. Clark and Mrs. Miriam Clark '52 Mr. Rogers Clark Clark Brothers Coats & Bennett, LLP Dr. Henry C. Cobb '92 and Dr. Allison C. Cobb '92

College Park Baptist Church of Winston-Salem Dr. and Mrs. Daniel G. Colley Mr. Lacy Collier and Mrs. Mary E. Collier Comfort Engineers Mr. and Mrs. Stephen Cook Cooperative Baptist Fellowship Mr. and Mrs. William Cottingham County of Harnett Mr. David T. Courie '93, '97 and Mrs. Michelle Courie Mr. and Mrs. Gene L. Crow Mr. and Mrs. Glenn Currin Mrs. Helen Currin and Mr. James M. Currin, Sr. '41 CVS Corporation Dr. Pratik V. Desai Drs. Leah and Joseph Devlin Devlin Properties, LLC The Dickson Foundation, Inc. Dr. Joan B. DiNapoli Donald and Elizabeth Cooke Foundation Donald Smith and Manila G. Shaver Foundation Donnie M. Royal Foundation Dunn Area Tourism Authority Mr. and Mrs. Ricky Earnhardt Eastern Carolina Medical Center Mr. H. Hendricks Edgerton Mr. Thomas L. Edwards '69 Edwards Foundation, Inc. Eli Lilly and Company Mr. and Mrs. Kennieth Etheridge Mr. Donald C. Evans '71 and Mrs. Judy T. Evans Mr. Donald S. Evans '88 and Mrs. Sharon Evans Dr. and Mrs. Steven H. Everhart Mr. B. Keith Faulkner '01 and Mrs. Patricia Faulkner Fayetteville Observer Mrs. Mary S. Fearing Dr. Annabelle L. Fetterman '87 and Dr. Lewis M. Fetterman, Sr. '87 Fidelity Bank Fidelity Charitable Gift Fund First Baptist Church of Burlington First Baptist Church of Greensboro First Baptist Church of Wilmington A. J. Fletcher Foundation Mr. and Mrs. Dexter E. Floyd Dr. Corey D. Furman '95 and Dr. Ashley R. Furman '96 Mr. Stephen W. Gaskins '81 and Mrs. Karen Gaskins Mr. Joseph D. Gilliam, Jr. '00 Glenn and Joyce White Trust Golden Leaf Foundation Mr. Jimmy W. Goldston '50 Mr. and Mrs. R. W. Grabarek Robert and Diane Greenwood Mr. Steven C. Gregory '73 and Mrs. Cecilia W. Gregory '70, '82 Ms. Gloria J. Gulledge '67, '79 Mr. Tommy L. Haddock Mrs. Catherine Hall '36 Mr. and Mrs. Joseph C. Hall, Jr. Hon. Oscar N. Harris '65 and Mrs. Jean Harris Harris Teeter Dan and Alisa Hayes Ms. Molly F. Held '82 Dr. James E. Herring, Jr. '95 and Mrs. Carla Herring Dr. Daniel W. Hester '79 Mr. Ronald J. Hill '10 and Mrs. Elizabeth A. Hill Hog Slat, Inc.

W W W. C A M P B E L L . E D U / M A G A Z I N E

Dr. Ronnie S. Holuby '03 Mrs. Ester Holder Howard '44 Mr. Henry B. Howard '57 and Mrs. June Howard Mr. John C. Howard, Jr. '60 and Mrs. Scarlett H. Howard '60 Hutchens Law Firm Independent College Fund of NC Mr. Glenn T. Infinger '74 and Mrs. Anne S. Infinger J. C. Hall Irrevocable Family Trust J. Richard and Sybel F. Hayworth Foundation Dr. Colon S. Jackson and Mrs. Johnnie L. Jackson '06 James and Mildred Wilkinson Charitable Trust J. C. Howard Farms, LLC John William Pope Foundation Mrs. Nancy Johns Mr. D. Kim Johnson '75, '80 Dr. David N. Johnson '79 and Mrs. Betty L. Johnson '79, '86 Mr. Jimmy Johnson and Mrs. Connie A. Johnson '90 Johnson Properties Mrs. Lorrine T. Jones '54 KAPLAN Kate B. Reynolds Charitable Trust Mr. Thomas J. Keith '64 and Mrs. Anne Keith Mr. and Mrs. Paul F. Kelly Kenelm Foundation Mr. William A. Kimbrough '67 Lafayette Baptist Church Mr. and Mrs. Beau Lane Mrs. Cheryl M. Lanier Judge Franklin F. Lanier '72, '82 and Mrs. Kay Lanier Mr. Thomas T. Lanier, Jr. '70 and Mrs. Joan S. Lanier '70, '80 Law School Alumni and Friends Mr. Lewis R. Ledford and Mrs. Susan P. Ledford '83 Lee Brick & Tile Co., Inc. The Leon Levine Foundation Lettie Pate Whitehead Foundation LFSOB Faculty and Staff Little & Associates Architects Mr. Richard A. Lord Ms. Tiffanie K. Lubbers Machine & Welding Supply Company Magee Christian Education Foundation Mr. Eli F. Maness, III '84, '86 and Mrs. Shelia H. Maness '87 Mariam and Robert Hayes Charitable Trust Mr. James M. Marshburn Mrs. Susan B. Marshburn Dr. Marie Mason '41 Mr. and Mrs. James C. Matthews Mr. Hugh G. Maxwell, III '57 and Mrs. Charlotte Maxwell Dr. D. Byron May and Dr. Diana M. Maravich-May '86, '90 Mr. and Mrs. Carlie C. McLamb Mr. Michael S. McLamb '73 and Mrs. Beverly G. McLamb Mr. Bernard F. McLeod, Jr. '46 and Mrs. Virginia C. McLeod McLeod Foundation McMichael Family Foundation Mr. and Mrs. John McNeill, Jr. Mr. Neil McPhail and Mrs. Cynthia L. McPhail '79 McPhail's Pharmacy, Inc. Dr. and Mrs. Stanley McQuade Medical Village Pharmacy Mr. and Mrs. Clement E. Medley Mr. Jerry Milton and Mrs. Elizabeth C. Milton '92

Modern Woodmen of America Morgan Stanley Smith Barney Global Impact Funding Trust Fred and Carolyn Morrison Dr. Shahriar Mostashari Mt. Pisgah Baptist Church National Jets, Inc. NC Baptist Foundation NC Community Foundation, Inc. NC State Bar Continuing Legal Education Mr. Vance B. Neal '63 and Mrs. Dolores Neal Mrs. Sadie O. Neel '42 New Century Bank North Carolina Medical Society North State Bank Mr. and Mrs. Norwood Bryan Ogletree, Deakins, Nash, Smoak & Stewart, P.A. Mr. Christopher L. Oliver '84 and Mrs. Scarlett Oliver Mr. John Orcutt Richard F. Paschal, Jr. Estate Mr. Paul Perry '50 and Mrs. Teeny Perry Pharmacy Network Foundation, Inc. Phi Delta Chi Fraternity Dr. and Mrs. W. C. Powers Powers Swain Chevrolet Mr. Timothy J. Prentice '04 and Mrs. Melissa D. Prentice '04 Providence Baptist Church Mr. Milford C. Quinn '74 and Mrs. Susan Quinn Mrs. Reba Quinn and Dr. Milford R. Quinn '43, '99 R. A. Bryan Foundation, Inc. Mr. and Mrs. Robert L. Ransdell, Sr. Raymond James Charitable Endowment Fund Mr. and Mrs. Keith Rea Mr. and Mrs. Riddick Revelle '49 Rite Aid Corporation Robins Foundation Ross Angel Foundation Mr. and Mrs. John L. Rouse Mr. David P. Russ, III '69 and Mrs. Linda P. Russ Sampson-Bladen Oil Company, Inc. Mr. Caton A. Shermer '66 and Mrs. Linda Shermer Mr. William K. Shires and Mrs. Janet L. Shires '84, '88 Mr. Billy A. Small '55 and Mrs. Hilda M. Small '55 Mr. Willard D. Small and Mrs. Ruth Small Mr. Henry L. Smith '67 and Mrs. Tracey Smith Mr. William C. Smith '65 and Mrs. Priscilla Smith Mr. Andrew B. Snellings Mr. John D. Snipes, II '97 and Mrs. Ashley Snipes Snyder Memorial Baptist Church Southeastern Interiors Southern Bank Foundation Mr. Freddie L. Stancil Mr. and Mrs. Luther D. Starling, Jr. '87 State Farm Co. Foundation STC Property Company Stedman Drug Center L. Harold Stephens Estate Mr. and Mrs. Fred Stoot Strickland Insurance Group, Inc. Ms. Alice C. Stubbs Mr. John D. Stubbs '08 Mr. Trawick H. Stubbs, Jr.

Dr. Samuel A. Sue, Jr. '50 and Mrs. Cecelia J. Sue Sunset Forest, LLC Mr. L. Stuart Surles '77 Dr. William T. Symonds, III '91 and Dr. Melissa L. Symonds '91 Symonds Family Foundation T.A. Loving Company CPT David R. Talbott and Mrs. Danielle C. Talbott '06 Justeen B. Tarbet Estate Mr. Russell J. Tate, Jr. '90, '92 and Mrs. Anne Tate Tawani Foundation Mr. Frederick H. Taylor '64 and Mrs. Myra Taylor Mr. Frederick L. Taylor, II '92 and Mrs. Melissa Taylor Mr. Robert T. Taylor, Sr. '66 and Mrs. Margo Taylor The Taylor Foundation Mr. James R. Thomas '67 and Mrs. Carol Thomas Mr. Benjamin N. Thompson '76, '79 and Mrs. Karin Patrice Thompson '75 Thomson Reuters-West Mr. Tom Thutt Thutt Enterprises, Inc. Triangle Community Foundation Tri-Arc Food Systems, Inc. Troy Lumber Company Trust Education Foundation, Inc. Drs. Ray and Tina Tseng United Energy, Inc. Margaret B. Vann Estate Mrs. Lisa F. Vaughn '84, '87 Dr. Pankaj K. Vyas Waccamaw Transport, Inc. Walgreens Dr. Jerry M. Wallace and Mrs. Betty B. Wallace '72 Walmart Mr. and Mrs. Buddy Ward Mr. and Dr. Irvin Warren Dr. and Mrs. Jack G. Watts Mr. and Mrs. Robert P. Wellons Mr. Harold B. Wells, Jr. '88 and Mrs. Frances Wells Wells Property, LLC Westwood Baptist Church Mr. David W. Wharton '89 and Mrs. Krista Wharton Mr. E. M. White and Mrs. Judith Folwell-White '61 Mr. and Mrs. Robert Whiteman, Jr. Widgeon Foundation, Inc. Dr. Norman A. Wiggins '48, '07 and Dr. Mildred H. Wiggins '48, '07 Mrs. Melba L. Williams '71 Mr. George E. Womble Mr. and Mrs. Harry G. Womble Mr. and Mrs. Ray Womble, Jr. Mr. Ray H. Womble, Sr. and Mrs. Sarah T. Womble '47 Mr. Robert D. Womble Mr. Robert J. Womble '68 and Mrs. Martha Womble Womble Carlyle Sandridge & Rice, LLP Womble Rental Management Mr. and Mrs. Luby Wood Mr. Benjamin L. Wright '77, '80 and Mrs. Tonya Wright Wyrick, Robbins, Yates, & Ponton, LLC Mr. Jeffrey L. Zimmer '80 Ms. Roberta G. Zimmer

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DONOR HONOR ROLL

CAMPBELL CLUB The Campbell Club recognizes donors who have given from $1,250 to $2,999 between June 1, 2013 & May 31, 2014.

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Abbott Laboratories Fund Dr. Michael L. Adams '96 and Dr. Dina H. Adams '96 Mr. and Mrs. Christopher Aldredge Mrs. Lorraine B. Allen '46 Alpha Rho Chapter of Kappa Epsilon Angier Baptist Church Mr. Christopher J. Anglin Ardmore Baptist Church Mr. Kirby G. Atkinson '65 and Mrs. Martha Atkinson Mr. Andy T. Barbee Mrs. Beverly Barnett Dr. Dennis N. Bazemore '77 and Mrs. Linda C. Bazemore '77, '82 Rev. Faithe C. Beam '03 Mr. and Mrs. Gregory Biggs Hon. W. E. Britt '52 and Mrs. Judy Britt Mr. Hewitt A. Brown, Jr. '66 and Mrs. Brenda P. Brown '67 Mr. William H. Bryan Mr. Robert Calabria and Judge Ann M. Calabria '83 Dr. Rhonda F. Caldwell '91 and Mr. Chuck Caldwell Dr. Alan J. Carroll '05 Mr. and Mrs. E. M. Carroll, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. Reg Christopher Dr. Robert M. Cisneros, Jr. Community Foundation of Western NC Mr. Mark A. Conway and Mrs. Lisa A. Conway '91 CPHS PharmD Class of 2014

Mr. Sam Currin and Mrs. Margaret P. Currin '79 Mr. and Mrs. F. Hampton Davis CDR Timothy H. Dickens '64 Mr. and Mrs. Jere A. Drummond Mr. Emmett C. Edgerton, III '69 Dr. Samuel L. Engel Mr. and Mrs. Larry E. Essary Mr. J. Harold Falls '65 and Mrs. Lynda Falls Mr. and Mrs. Richard Ferris First Baptist Church of Dunn Mr. Robert F. Floyd, Jr. '76, '79 and Mrs. June L. Floyd '75 Mr. Samuel A. Floyd '84 and Mrs. Elizabeth Floyd Mr. Charles L. Frederick '80 and Mrs. Sandy Frederick GFWC of North Carolina, Inc. Mr. Larry W. Godwin, Sr. '70 and Mrs. Jeannette H. Godwin '91 Godwin Real Estate Development Mr. Robert E. Gresham, Jr. '64 and Mrs. Carolyn J. Gresham '64 Dr. Mark L. Hammond and Mrs. Jill C. Hammond '05 Harnett Health System Dr. Anthony R. Harrington '85, '88 Hayes Barton Baptist Church Dr. Ted S. Henson '69, '80 Dr. and Mrs. Patrick K. Hetrick Mr. William K. Hobbs, Jr. '63 and Mrs. Gloria B. Hobbs '63 Mr. Thomas P. Host, III '76 and Mrs. Patti Host

Hon. Stephani Humrickhouse and Mr. Scott Humrickhouse Mr. and Mrs. Glynn Jernigan Mr. Lynn Jernigan '68 and Mrs. Lynn Jernigan Jernigan Brothers, Inc. Mr. Bruce F. Jobe '80 and Mrs. Elizabeth Jobe Dr. G. Lloyd Johnson, Jr. '77 Mr. Frederick R. Kinder '54 and Mrs. Doris S. Kinder Dr. I. B. Lake, Jr. '96 Ms. Carolyn J. Lambert-Ghith '86, '95 Dr. Ronald W. Maddox and Mrs. Suzan R. Maddox '01 Mrs. Anne G. Mason '49 and Mr. Billy L. Mason '49 Dr. Jeremy Massengill '00 and Dr. Heather S. Massengill '99, '00 Mr. John M. McCabe '94 McGuireWoods Mr. Howard A. McKinnon '54 and Mrs. Ann R. McKinnon Meridian Investors Trust Mr. Frank Moody Mt. Olive Pickle Company, Inc. Mr. Alton W. Myrick '71 and Mrs. Carolyn Myrick National Automobile Dealers Charitable Foundation NC Mutual Wholesale Drug NC Pharmaceutical Association Dr. Karen P. Nery Dr. Frank E. Neville '52 and Mrs. Gail Y. Neville

Mr. Charles Nobles and Mrs. Patsy H. Nobles '76 Oxford Baptist Church Parker Poe Adams & Bernstein, LLP PGA Golf Management Student Association Pharmfusion Consulting, LLC COL William W. Pickard Mr. Mike Pleasant '69 and Mrs. Donna Pleasant Mr. Joseph W. Powell, Jr. '82 and Mrs. Joella Powell Dr. James T. Purvis '09 Riley's Creek Baptist Church Dr. John T. Roberson '80 and Mrs. Wendy B. Roberson '84 Mr. and Mrs. James O. Roberts Mr. and Mrs. Robert L. Roller Judge Morris Rozar '50 Mr. Murray H. Scripture '60 and Mrs. Joan Scripture Mr. Samuel A. Scudder '90 and Mrs. Sharon G. Scudder '07 Shipman & Wright, LLP Mr. Mack S. Skipper '69 and Mrs. Beth Skipper Dr. Ashley N. Smith '95, '07 and Mrs. Vickie M. Carson-Smith '99 Smith Moore Leatherwood, LLP Mr. Kemp Stewart and Mrs. Sylvia G. Stewart '59 Mr. and Mrs. J. R. Strickland, Jr. Dr. James R. Sugg, Jr. '91 and Mrs. Pamela K. Sugg

Dr. Gary Taylor and Mrs. Ann Taylor '79, '83 Mr. David Teddy '88 and Mrs. Sally Teddy Terracon Consultants, Inc. Mrs. Catherine B. Thomas Mrs. Cynthia L. Thomas Mr. Linwood C. Thornton, II '85 and Mrs. Denise S. Thornton '88 Mr. Ryan M. Thrower '06 and Mrs. Makayla B. Thrower '06 Toshiba Global Commerce Solutions, Inc. Trinity Baptist Church of Raleigh Dr. Alexander E. Tunnell '03 and Dr. Dana L. Tunnell LTC George F. Vickers '71 and Mrs. Patricia S. Vickers Dr. and Mrs. Andrew H. Wakefield Mr. Harold K. Warren '48 and Mrs. Annie Warren Mr. H. H. Weaver '68 and Mrs. Charlotte Weaver Wells Fargo Foundation Mr. Lennie I. Whittemore, Jr. '65 Mr. Barry L. Wilson '89 and Mrs. Marilyn B. Wilson '89 Ms. Brenda C. Wilson Dr. Thomas C. Womble '98 and Mrs. Jo M. Womble Mr. and Mrs. Billy T. Woodard Mr. Jerry L. Yarbrough '71 and Mrs. Gloria M. Yarbrough '70 Mr. Smedes York

PINE BURR CLUB The Pine Burr Club recognizes donors who have given from $750 to $1,249 between June 1, 2013 & May 31, 2014.

————————————————————————————————————— Mr. Randolph D. Abbitt '74 and Mrs. Carol Abbitt Mr. Merle T. Adkins, III '64 and Mrs. Thelma Adkins Rev. J. Charles Allard and Mrs. Gloria L. Allard '82 Mr. Thomas P. Anderson Dr. David L. Arnold '01 and Dr. Rebecca M. Arnold '01 Mrs. Lorena M. Arnold '09 Dr. Samantha T. Arrington '08 and Mr. Lerone Arrington Mr. Edward G. Arthur, Jr. '72 and Mrs. Kathy Arthur Atlantic Tire & Service Mr. Vann J. Bass '56 Mrs. Iris W. Bazemore Bemco Sleep Products Ms. Sylvia J. Bjorkman Mr. Keith N. Blaylock '93 and Mrs. Cindy Blaylock Dr. J. Andrew Bowman '93 and Mrs. Sarah H. Bowman '07 Mr. Richard T. Bowser '91 and Mrs. Marta Bowser Breakers Inn Resort Dr. Christopher M. Brennick '10 Dr. and Mrs. Carl R. Broadhurst Mr. Harry C. Brown '94, '96 and Mrs. Lisa Brown Ms. Lisa R. Brown Ms. Trudi A. Brown Mr. Robert E. Bryan, Jr. Mr. George Buchanan and Mrs. Judy Buchanan '96 Mr. and Mrs. Amos Bullard, Jr. Mr. John S. Byrd '57 Mr. Waymon W. Byrd, Jr. '46 and Mrs. Elizabeth T. Byrd '47 C. Munroe Best, Jr. Foundation Dr. Pauline F. Calloway

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Mr. James H. Capps '67 and Mrs. Clara E. Capps '69 Mr. Robert C. Carlyle '57 and Mrs. Jane Carlyle Mr. W. H. Carter and Mrs. Linda Carter Rev. Lionel E. Cartwright '10 Mrs. Imogene D. Clegg '51 Dr. Jennifer N. Clements '06 and Mr. Matthew Clements Mr. Kerry W. Clippard, Sr. and Mrs. Jean Clippard Mr. Thomas A. Colley Ms. Rose A. Cotton Mrs. Carol H. Cowen '68 Cranfill Sumner & Hartzog, LLP Dr. Tracy A. Crews '93, '96 Mr. William Crocker and Mrs. George-Ann W. Crocker '01 Mrs. Edna E. Cummings '08 Mr. Wayne Dale '82 and Mrs. Terry Dale Mr. F. Leary Davis, Jr. and Mrs. Joy B. Davis '81 Dr. Richard A. Debenedetto '12 Dr. Gregory S. Dedrick Mr. John C. Delamater '73 Delta Air Lines Foundation Delta Theta Phi Foundation, Inc. Dr. Robert A. Deutsch Mr. and Mrs. Victor Dillon Dr. Charles T. Dorman '05 and Mrs. Sue J. Dorman Dr. Nancy D. Duffy Ms. Patricia Pearce Dutton Hon. and Mrs. Sidney Eagles, Jr. Mr. Boyd M. Ellington '56 Mr. Charles Ellis '83 and Mrs. Laura A. Ellis Mrs. Kimberly A. Elniff '97 and Mr. Christian Elniff

Mr. and Mrs. Martin Dale Ennis Everett Gaskins Hancock, LLC Mrs. Joni F. Fetterman Glenn Jernigan & Associates Mr. Franklin E. Golden '75 and Mrs. Kathy J. Golden Ms. Charlotte R. Gonella '00 Mr. and Mrs. Dan L. Gray Mr. Eldon L. Green '59 and Mrs. Virginia Green Dr. M. Dwaine Greene '79 and Mrs. Carolyn M. Greene Dr. James B. Groce, III '93 and Mrs. Sarah Groce Hall-Wynne Funeral Service Mr. Kenneth B. Hammer Mr. Charles E. Hammond, Sr. '60 and Mrs. Linda B. Hammond Mr. Charles R. Hardee '81 and Mrs. Tena Hardee Mr. Milton V. Harris '68 and Mrs. Donna M. Harris Dr. Alvin H. Hartness Mr. Dan M. Hartzog Dr. Clark Hatcher '14 Mr. Ronald P. Hawley '72 and Mrs. Suzanne Hawley Mr. and Mrs. Terry W. Hill '68 Rev. Ray K. Hodge Dr. Byron J. Hoffman, Jr. Mr. William C. Holt Mr. B. Davis Horne, Jr. '84 Richard M. Hutson, II Hutson Law Office, P.A. Mr. and Mrs. Carl W. Isbrandtsen Island Creek Baptist Church Dr. David Jackson '66 and Mrs. Rebecca S. Jackson '93 Mr. Larry Jacobs Jacobs Glass Company, Inc.

Mr. and Mrs. Gene Jernigan Mr. Glenn R. Jernigan '59 Mr. and Mrs. Jeb Jeutter John Hiester Chrysler, Dodge, Jeep Mr. Russell P. Jones and Mrs. Mary E. Jones '77 Mr. Lin Jordan '68 and Mrs. Mary E. Jordan Dr. Brian A. Kessler Mr. David Kranstuber and Mrs. Elizabeth B. Kranstuber '66 Dr. Michael R. Lacher '08 Dr. Herbert K. Land, DDS Lillington Baptist Church Dr. Qinfeng Liu Dr. Elton W. Long, Jr. '90 and Mrs. Tonette M. Long Mr. William C. Mann and Mrs. Kimberly A. Mann '85 Mr. E. Lazelle Marks '62 and Mrs. Judy R. Marks Dr. Bradford L. Marshburn '99 and Mrs. Laura Marshburn Dr. James and Mrs. Linda Martin Mr. Lauchie H. Martin, III '65 Mast Operations, LLC Mr. Terry R. Mayhew '72 and Mrs. Ann L. Mayhew '73 Mr. J. David McGirt '67 and Mrs. Nancy C. McGirt '84 Mr. Kerry K. McKenzie '85 and Pamela W. McKenzie Mr. Thomas L. Medlin '64 and Mrs. Sally H. Medlin Mr. Phillip L. Melvin and Mrs. June J. Melvin '55 Middle District Bankruptcy Seminar, Inc. Mr. Lance M. Middleton '67 Mr. George N. Miller '86 and Mrs. Elaine Miller '84

Mr. Kenneth E. Milton '89 and Mrs. Sharon L. Milton '89 Mr. Marshall M. Milton Milton Rhyne Family Charitable Fund Mr. Michael C. Minter Dr. David S. Moody, Jr. '10 and Mrs. Dianne Moody Dr. W. Whitaker Moose, Sr. '99 and Mrs. Dorothy Moose Mr. John G. Morris, Jr. '68 and Mrs. Judith W. Morris '68 Murray, Craven & Inman, LLP National Community Pharmacists Association National Dodge-Chrysler-Jeep Neills Creek Baptist Church Nobles Chapel Baptist Church Nodell, Glass & Haskell, LLP North Carolina Osteopathic Medical Association Novant Health Olyphic Baptist Church Mrs. Jane C. Pan Mr. and Mrs. DeLeon Parker, Sr. Mr. William E. Pauley and Mrs. Betty M. Pauley '74 Mr. Michael Payne Mr. Douglas Y. Perry '57 and Mrs. Patsy Perry Mr. James E. Perry, Jr. '59 and Mrs. Daphne S. Perry '60 Pharmacists Mutual Ins., Co. Ms. Teia M. Poulin Mrs. Faye Powell Mrs. Janet Powell Mr. William C. Powell '64 Dr. and Mrs. Bruce P. Powers Mr. Joseph A. Priest '95, '97 and Mrs. Tiffany Priest Mr. David J. Ramsaur '87 and Mrs. Pattie Ramsaur


Mr. and Mrs. Steven R. Rector Red Springs First Baptist Church Regions Bank Mrs. Mary D. Renegar Dr. Janelle A. Rhyne Mrs. Edith Rich Mr. Glenn Riddle '69 and Mrs. Gail Riddle Robert E. Bryan, Jr. Foundation Ms. Denise R. Roberts '77 Rolesville Baptist Church Mrs. Miriam Rose Mr. E. Travis Ross, Jr. '54 and Mrs. Diana A. Ross

Rev. William L. Ross '78 and Mrs. Mary L. Morrison-Ross Rev. Charles K. Royal, Jr. '99 and Mrs. Suzanne C. Royal Dr. Tanya C. Salter '07 Mr. Sandy E. Sanders '69 Mr. Earl L. Savage Scana Corporation Mr. Charles L. Sears '69 Service Roofing & Sheet Metal, Inc. Mr. and Mrs. Steven Sheinfeld Mr. William H. Shepard, III '78, '82 Mr. Terry R. Shinholser and Mrs. Joy G. Shinholser '68

Mr. Scott R. Shipman and Mrs. Annie L. Shipman '01 Mrs. Shirley B. Slaughter '48 Mr. Charles E. Spahr and Mrs. Lee Ann Spahr '77 Special Forces Association Rev. William E. Spencer, Jr. '12 Mr. Robert Oberton Spicer, Jr. '83 and Mrs. Rory B. Spicer Mr. Joseph Stallings Dr. Marcus D. Stanaland '11, '14 Mrs. Patricia Stengel Mr. and Mrs. Michael C. Stevens Mrs. Rebecca L. Stevens '83 Dr. and Mrs. William R. Stevens

Mr. and Mrs. William E. Stevens Mr. and Mrs. Bobby Strickland Mr. and Mrs. Ronald Strickland Mr. and Mrs. Larry D. Swart Mr. Charles S. Swenson Ms. Louise T. Taylor Dr. and Mrs. William J. Taylor Mr. Randolph Thompson, Jr. '67 Mr. Agnor L. Upshaw '85 Mr. Evan Uwakwe and Dr. Ijeoma A. Uwakwe '09 VIP Computer Systems, Inc. Mr. Thomas D. Ward '63 Mr. David M. Warren

Mr. Danny O. Watkins '77 and Mrs. Karen W. Watkins '86 Wells Fargo Advisors, LLC Justice Willis P. Whichard Rev. Roger A. White '64 and Mrs. Mildred P. White '63 Mr. David Williams and Mrs. Shelly K. Williams '02 Mr. Edward B. Williams, Jr. '71 Mr. and Mrs. Clarence Willoughby Yates Baptist Church, Inc. Zebulon Baptist Church Mr. Timothy R. Zinnecker

NEW CENTURY CLUB The New Century Club recognizes donors who have given from $250 to $749 between June 1, 2013 & May 31, 2014.

————————————————————————————————————— Mr. Eric A. Adams '83 and Mrs. Terri H. Adams '83 AEGON Transamerica Foundation Dr. Dennis Agostini Dr. Grishma N. Ajmera '08, '14 Dr. Gillian M. Akiwumi '14 Dr. Kenneth A. Alexander '14 Mr. Gerald R. Alford Mr. H. Frank Allen Mr. Bart Alligood and Mrs. Krystal J. Alligood '88 Mr. and Mrs. Mike Allsbrook Ms. Patricia G. Alston AMJNC Enterprises, LLC Mr. Mark A. Anderson '01 and Dr. Siriprawn A. Anderson '01 Mr. Anibal S. Armas Mr. Marvin F. Asbill '72 and Mrs. Celeste H. Asbill Mr. Juan Austin '86 Mrs. Cynthia B. Autry '86 Mr. Ronald F. Avery '66 and Mrs. Frances G. Avery Dr. Theodore C. Awa '14 Dr. Alison L. Baker '05 Mr. David D. Barefoot '87 and Mrs. Angela Barefoot Mr. Justin N. Barfield and Dr. Donna L. Barfield '14 Mr. Ervin Barham '78 and Mrs. Tabitha Barham Mr. Maynard S. Barnes and Dr. Connie L. Barnes '90 Dr. Suzanne M. Barnes Ms. Norma L. Barnes-Euresti '92 Dr. Patsy B. Barnhill '97, '99 and Mr. William K. Barnhill Mr. Jeremy S. Bass '96 and Dr. Melissa P. Bass '99 COL Jonathan R. Battle '89 and Mrs. Rani Battle Dr. Janna C. Beavers '13 Mr. Harvey L. Bedsole Mr. and Mrs. Albert R. Bell, Jr. '66 Mr. Keys Benston, Jr. '80 and Mrs. Brenda Benston Mr. Lamar B. Bigham '72 Mr. K. Bain Black '73 Mrs. Brenda F. Blackman Mr. James C. Blaylock and Mrs. Cindy K. Blaylock '79 Dr. Timothy Bloom Mr. Zachary C. Bolitho Mr. Stuart F. Bondurant and Mrs. Elizabeth J. Bondurant '84 Mr. and Mrs. Franklin Borders Mr. Robert J. Bowers, Jr. Mr. Murray W. Bowman '69 and Mrs. Scarlett Bowman '70 Dr. Emily A. Bradham '14 Mr. David J. Bradley Mrs. Elizabeth Bradshaw

Mr. and Mrs. John E. Brady Mr. Vernon P. Brake '51 Mr. W. C. Branch, Jr. '68 and Mrs. Vivian J. Branch Mr. Robert J. Braxton '07 Dr. Christopher S. Breivogel Dr. H. Scott Brewer '95 and Dr. Tanya B. Brewer '97 Ms. Robin Brewster Mr. Jonathan Q. Bridges '12, '14 Dr. Laura Steedly Bridges '13 Ms. Anna Jane Brinkley '13 Dr. Maggie S. Brintle '13 Mr. Austin H. Britt Dr. Rachel B. Britt '09, '13 Mr. Jimmy C. Brooks '54 and Mrs. Barbara E. Brooks '54 Mrs. Anita M. Brown and Mr. James H. Brown '09, '14 Chaplain Don B. Brown '64, '70 and Mrs. Jacqueline K. Brown '64 Dr. Jamie N. Brown '06 Dr. Jay Brown '08 and Mrs. Annie V. Brown Dr. Wade H. Brown '07 and Dr. Paige Brown '06 Mr. William E. Bruton Mr. Derek R. Bryan '92 and Dr. Gianna F. Bryan '94 Mr. J. S. Bryan, Jr. '40 and Mrs. Mary A. Bryan Mr. John H. Bryson, III '89 and Mrs. Sally Bryson Dr. Samantha A. Bullard '13 Mr. D. L. Bunce, II '75, '79 and Mrs. Daryn J. Bunce '80 Dr. Amity J. Bunkofske '13 Mr. Jerry A. Burkot '63 Mr. James W. Burns, Jr. '69 Mr. Gordon W. Burt Mr. Robie S. Butler, CPA '72, '89 and Mrs. Lynda D. Butler '73, '95 Butler & Butler, LLP Mr. Charles G. Butts, Jr. '80 and Mrs. Ann Butts Mr. G. C. Byrd and Mrs. Peggy L. Byrd '59 Mr. Jesse H. Byrd, Jr. '53 Ms. Karen M. Byrd '76 Mr. Teddy J. Byrd '85 and Mrs. Sheila M. Byrd Dr. Michael F. Cabaj '11 Mr. D. Stuart Caffrey, Jr. '75 Mr. Bryan L. Campbell Dr. Phillip S. Carlisle '14 Dr. Ross Carlisle '14 Dr. Bobby E. Carroll '14 Dr. Brittany B. Carswel '13 Mr. L. Cameron Caudle, Jr. '68, '87 and Mrs. Cindy Caudle Rev. Ronald Cava '87 and Mrs. Shirley A. Cava '06 Dr. Joshua M. Caviness '13

W W W. C A M P B E L L . E D U / M A G A Z I N E

Dr. James M. Chamberlain '13 Dr. Nicole C. Chanas '13 Mr. Gregory P. Chocklett Mr. Johnny C. Chriscoe, Jr. '90 and Mrs. Susan W. Chriscoe '80 Mr. and Mrs. Anthony Cimaglia Dr. Jennifer L. Clark '13 Mr. Paul N. Clark '86 and Mrs. Shannon H. Clark Mr. and Mrs. Robert Cogswell, Jr. Dr. William L. Coker, III and Mrs. Brandy G. Coker '06 Mr. Thomas P. Colletti Mr. Colon R. Collins and Mrs. Allene B. Collins '59 Mr. David L. Cope '57 and Mrs. Robin M. Cope '84 Dr. Morgan S. Costner '14 Mr. Gregory S. Cox '91 Dr. William N. Criswell, II '14 Mr. John T. Crooks and Mrs. Susan D. Crooks '87 Dr. Earl Danieley '74 Mr. Brian Darer Mr. Andrew T. Darkow Dr. Julie C. Dattero '14 Dr. Rosana Datti '14 Dr. Erin A. Daves '14 David. F. Mills, P.A. Dr. Alyssa N. Davis '14 Dr. and Mrs. Britt Davis Dr. Richard P. D'Elia Dr. Erica N. Dellinger '13 Dr. Matthew D. Desmarais '14 Dr. Harold P. Dew, Jr. '04 and Mrs. Sharon F. Dew Dr. Larry G. Dickens '75 and Mrs. Gail B. Dickens '78 Dr. Girish M. Dighe '14 Mr. Jim L. Duke and Mrs. Irma C. Duke '02 Dunn School of Music Mr. Martin J. Duzor '98 Mr. Ryan Dyson Earnhardt Business Center, LLC Mr. John J. Edwards and COL Susan M. Edwards '95 Mr. Harvey A. Eldridge, Jr. '55 Elizabethtown Baptist Church CPT Max Eller Ms. Kimberly A. Elmore '06 Mr. George L. Emerick '73 and Mrs. Elizabeth A. Emerick Mrs. Jeanine C. Evans '95 Dr. Crystal N. Everett '10, '11 Dr. Ashley N. Everette '13 Mr. Melvin J. Ezell Mr. Paul A. Fanning Dr. J. D. Farmer, II Mr. Jeffrey R. Faucette '85 Fellowship of United Methodists in Music Worship Arts

Mr. Lewis M. Fetterman, III Ms. Anna M. Finnigan First Baptist Church of Clayton First Baptist Church of Fairmont First Baptist Church of Fayetteville First Baptist Church of Laurinburg First Baptist Church of Morganton First Baptist Church of Whiteville Mr. Robert L. Fitch '69 and Mrs. Susan Fitch Dr. Mary G. Fitts '13 Mr. Conrey D. Flowers '70 and Mrs. Sarah Flowers Dr. John P. Fontenelle '13 Four Oaks Bank & Trust Dr. Jaime L. Frahm '10, '14 Mr. Clenon E. Freeman '89 and Mrs. Dorothy K. Freeman '92 Dr. Frank B. Fuller, III '13 Dr. Stephen H. Fuller Mr. Homer E. Gaines '65 and Mrs. Toni M. Gaines '67 Dr. Ginger Price Gamble '13 Mr. and Mrs. John Gardner Dr. Kimberly M. Garland '13 Mr. John U. Garner, Jr. '69 and Mrs. Susie Garner Dr. Brian T. Garris '14 and Dr. Rebekah A. Garris '14 Dr. Mark E. Gaskins '84 and Mrs. JoAnn D. Gaskins '88 Mr. Warren L. Gay '67 Mr. Richard F. Gays '66 and Mrs. Susan Gays Mr. Robert Gerstmyer and Mrs. Karen A. Gerstmyer '69 Mrs. Lauren M. Golden '11 GolfTEC Enterprises, LLC Mr. Garrett G. Gooch, IV '66 Mr. Jimmy C. Goodman '71 and Mrs. Gail R. Goodman '66 Dr. Don Y. Gordon '83 and Mrs. Elizabeth Gordon Dr. Andrew G. Gosnell '14 Dr. Justin C. Greene '14 Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Greeson Mr. Randy S. Gregory '69 and Mrs. Anne Gregory Mr. John F. Griffis Guardian Life Insurance Company Guilford County Society of Pharmacists Dr. and Mrs. Mali Ram Gupta Mr. William B. Gwyn, Jr. Dr. Sheryl L. Haehl Dr. Jill P. Hagwood '14 Dr. Amber R. Haislip '14 Mr. Claude T. Haley, Jr. '69 and Mrs. Ann J. Haley '72 Mr. Jason D. Hall '98 and Dr. Bobbie H. Hall '00 Mr. Harold C. Hamilton Mr. Stanley F. Hammer '84

Mr. and Mrs. Crawford Harb Mr. Alton W. Hardison, Jr. '74, '82 and Mrs. Wanda J. Hardison Mr. Pat B. Harmon and Mrs. Joyce Harmon '58 Mrs. Diane S. Harrell '79 Mrs. Jacquelyn Harrell Mr. Ollie C. Harrell '54 Mr. and Mrs. Robert S. Harris Mrs. Ruth C. Harris '40 Dr. Jonathan L. Harward '13 Mr. David D. Hawkins '68 Mr. William L. Hawkins, Jr. '59 and Mrs. Debra Hawkins Mr. John S. Henderson '71 and Mrs. Jerry Henderson Mr. Jerry C. Hendrix, Jr. '92 Rev. Alden L. Hicks '53 and Mrs. Anne Hicks Dr. Reginald L. High '08 Mr. Johnny C. Hill '94 and Mrs. Cindy D. Hill '96 Ms. Sha Hinds-Glick Dr. Timothy M. Hinson '92 Mrs. Kathryn A. Hix-Boyette '86 and Mr. Tom Boyette Mr. Robert B. Hobbs, Jr. '86 and Mrs. Laura Hobbs Dr. Hunter T. Hobgood '13 Dr. Scott M. Hockaday '14 Dr. and Mrs. Derek Hogan Mrs. Helen Holland Mr. and Mrs. Harold Hollingsworth Dr. Christopher B. Holloman '05 and Mrs. Shana L. Holloman Dr. and Mrs. Thomas J. Holmes, Jr. Dr. Erin T. Horne '04 and Mr. Daren R. Horne '01 Hospitality Ventures Management Mr. Hugh H. Howard and Mrs. June Woodard Howard '51, '53 Dr. Mallory L. Howard '14 Dr. Caroline A. Huff '14 Dr. John B. Hughes '13 Mr. Carl G. Ivarsson, Jr. '82, '85 and Mrs. Sandra H. Ivarsson '92 Ms. Amy M. Jackson '04 Mr. James R. Jackson '67 and Mrs. Carolyn Jackson Mr. John R. Jernigan '72 and Mrs. Laura Jernigan Jersey Baptist Church Jobson Publishing, LLC Dr. Brittany N. Johnson '13 Dr. Melissa A. Johnson '01 Mr. Randall A. Johnson Dr. William G. Jonas, Jr. Dr. Barry A. Jones '85 and Mrs. Beth L. Jones '85, '88 Rev. Douglas C. Jones '83 and Mrs. Debbie K. Jones Mr. Kenneth E. Jones '01 Mr. Robert B. Jones, Jr. '97

CAMPBELL MAGAZINE

61


DONOR HONOR ROLL Dr. Travis M. Jones '14 Jonesboro Heights Baptist Church Dr. Kari A. Kabot '14 Mr. Jeffrey C. Karver '80 Dr. and Mrs. John Kauffman Mr. William B. Kay, Jr. and Mrs. Lottie S. Kay '75 Dr. Stephen E. Kearney, Jr. '94 and Mrs. Lori U. Kearney Mr. Harold T. Keen '67, '71 and Mrs. Barbara A. Keen '77 Mr. Fred L. Kelly, Jr. '55 Mr. Gary W. Kennedy '91 and Dr. LeAnne D. Kennedy '93 Dr. Andrew C. Kessell '07 and Dr. Laura O. Kessell '06 Mr. and Mrs. Mickey W. Kiger Mrs. Catherine C. King '46 Mr. Samuel E. King '70, '71 and Mrs. Janice King MAJ Bryan G. Kirk '97 and Mrs. Kristen O. Kirk '97 Dr. Lori E. Kiser '06 Dr. Melissa J. Kiser '08, '10, '14 Mr. Gordon G. Knowles, Jr. '67 and Mrs. Barbara Knowles Dr. Andrea L. Konieczki '10 Mr. Charles E. Koonce '64 and Mrs. Connie Koonce Mr. Arthur Kornegay, Jr. and Mrs. Marjorie M. Kornegay '13 Dr. Janine M. Kushner '00 Ms. Borree P. Kwok Franklin and Ronda Lacher Dr. Sonie M. Lama '14 Mr. Tony A. Lamboy '10 Dr. and Mrs. L. Michael Larsen Dr. Jennifer A. Latino Law Office of Bruce F. Jobe, P.A. Dr. Lan T Le '13 CPT Richard S. Leblanc '75 Mr. Joe Ledford and Rev. Julia S. Ledford '95, '00 Mr. Brian LeDuc Mr. and Mrs. Ayden Lee, Jr. Mr. James C. Lee '70 and Mrs. Sharon P. Lee '70 Mrs. Janet B. Lee Mr. Jonathan R. Lee '00 and Mrs. Rene R. Lee Ms. June H. Lee Dr. Lauren M. Lee '14 Mrs. Soo Mi Lee '13 Honorable J. Rich Leonard Mr. Alvin D. Lewis, III '71 and Mrs. Carole Lewis Dr. Debbie D. Liang '14 Liberty Mutual Group, Inc. Dr. Desirae E. Lindquist '14 Little River Baptist Association Miss Benita A. Lloyd '87 Mr. Tony M. Lockerman '66, '95 and Mrs. Mary Lockerman Mr. Robert O. Loftis, Jr. Dr. Brent M. Longmire '14 Dr. Jamie Kegley Longmire '13 Lottie M. Lane Trust Mrs. Dorothy B. Love '40 Ms. Jenny P. Lucas Mr. and Mrs. Brent Lutz Mr. Charles L. Mace '58 and Mrs. Patricia Mace

62

WINTER 2014-15

Ms. Ashley P. Maddox '98, '01 Dr. Michael P. Mahalik Ms. Maria G. Maldonado '96, '98 Mr. John P. Marshall '84, '89 and Mrs. Kelley H. Marshall Dr. Andrew T. Martin, DO Mr. and Mrs. Robert S. Matheny Ms. Pamela W. McAfee Mr. Brett D. McCreight '97 and Mrs. Amy A. McCreight '96 Hon. John D. McCullough Wilma L. McCurdy Estate Mr. Nicholas R. McKinley, Sr. '64 and Mrs. Geraldine McKinley Mr. and Mrs. James D. McNeill Memorial Baptist Church Merck Partnership for Giving Dr. Mark Merry Dr. Keeli S. Michael '14 Microsoft Matching Gifts Program Dr. Elizabeth L. Migliaccio '13 Dr.. Brooke M. Miller '14 Mr. David F. Mills '88, '91 and Mrs. Martha Mills Mr. Christopher L. Mitta '88 and Mrs. Jill L. Mitta Dr. Meghan S. Mohe '13 Dr. Danya S. Moore '14 Mr. Roger A. Moore Mr. James W. Morgan '82 and Mrs. Page D. Morgan '84 Morgan Stanley Dr. William F. Morris Morris, Russell, Eagle & Worley, PLLC Dr. Sean P. Morrow '14 Ms. Janet L. Moseley '78 Dr. Jami L. Moss '09, '14 MRP Interiors Mr. Herbert T. Mullen, Jr. '64 and Mrs. Carolyn S. Mullen '64 Dr. Andrea H. Murray '13 Ms. Christine Myatt Mylan Inc. National Christian Foundation-Kentucky Dr. Hazel D. Neal '14 Mr. and Mrs. Edward Needham Neil Medical Group New Bethel A. M. E. Zion Church Ms. Laura E. Newkirk Nexsen Pruet, LLC Mr. George E. Ngando '91 Mrs. Suzy I. Nisbet '86 and Mr. Stuart A. Nisbet Dr. Ashley G. Nordan '13 Mr. John Northen Mrs. Helen Odom Dr. Dean A. Olah '06 and Mrs. Mary E. Olah '08 Mr. Jeffrey E. Oleynik Mr. George J. Oliver '66 and Mrs. Jeanette Oliver Omega Phi Alpha Mr. and Mrs. Ronald O'Neill Mr. and Mrs. Clifton Osborne Mr. Mark C. Osterhout '88 and Mrs. Anna B. Osterhout '93 Mr. W. S. Overton Mr. W. Jeffrey Overton '86 and Mrs. Jacqueline Overton Dr. Johnathan A. Owen '14 Mr. Norman L. Page '73

Pam Blondin/Deco Dr. Charles C. Park '14 Ms. Ann J. Parker Mr. Robert Parker, Jr. and Mrs. Lennie E. Parker '65 Reverend Del Parkerson '91 and Mrs. Jessie L. Parkerson Dr. Ami D. Patel '14 Dr. Jagruti H. Patel '14 Dr. Kunal L. Patel '10, '14 Dr. Rishit D. Patel '14 Dr. Veena Patel '10, '14 Dr. Tyler B. Patterson '10, '14 Ms. Doris Pearce Mr. Larry W. Pearman '80 and Mrs. Susan Pearman Mrs. Joanne H. Pereira '93 and Mr. Paul Pereira Mr. Melvin Perry and Mrs. Wilma M. Perry '79 Mr. Clark Petschek and Mrs. Michelle A. Petschek '99 Mr. Charles Phillips and Mrs. Judy G. Phillips '66 Mr. J. Scot Phillips Physicians Pharmacy Alliance Mr. Timothy B. Pope '84 Dr. Megan K. Poston '13 Mr. David M. Pound '91, '93 and Dr. Melanie W. Pound '01 Mrs. Mary R. Powell '52 Dr. and Mrs. David P. Price Dr. Roger I. Pritchard '14 Dr. Emily M. Proctor '14 Mr. Win M. Quakenbush '94 and Mrs. Mary A. Quakenbush '75 Dr. Elizabeth L. Rambo Dr. Robert S. Rawls '02 and Dr. Brooke K. Rawls '02 Mr. Richard M. Ray '71 Realo Discount Drug Stores of Eastern NC Ms. Bobbie N. Redding '85 Mr. and Mrs. Wade Reece Mr. Ramsey G. Reed '93 and Mrs. Elizabeth K. Reed '82 Mr. and Mrs. Nick C. Reeves Ms. Deborah A. Richardson Ridge Road Baptist Church Mr. Buddy Ritch 1LT Jessica L. Robbins '13 Mr. William J. Roberts Ms. Beverly B. Robinson Dr. Matthew R. Robinson '14 Mr. David M. Rose '71 and Mrs. Terry V. Rose Mr. Thomas F. Rose '81 Roseboro First Baptist Church Mr. and Mrs. Erik M. Ross Dr. Marsha Y. Russell Ryan Dyson, PLLC Safran Law Offices Mr. Christopher A. Samples '97 and Mrs. Rayna L. Samples Dr. Chelsie L. Sanders '13 Mr. Cory Satterfield '88 and Mrs. Pamela D. Satterfield '87 Dr. Courtney Schammel '10, '14 Dr. Skyler W. Semmes '14 Dr. Charles T. Shaw '09, '13 Rev. James H. Shaw '84, '99 and Mrs. Mary J. Shaw

Dr. William A. Shearin, Sr. '48 and Mrs. Dorothy B. Shearin Sherry's Bakery Dr. I. Daniel Shin Mrs. Wendy D. Shoffner '04, '14 Rev. and Mrs. James Sides Mr. Clarence M. Sidlo and Mrs. Jean A. Sidlo '06 Mr. Joseph F. Silek, Jr. '85 Dr. Michele H. Simmons '13 Mrs. Lynda L. Sinclair '62 Mr. Billie B. Smith '53 and Mrs. Betsy Smith Mr. Dexter A. Smith Mr. Jay R. Smith '01 and Mrs. Melissa H. Smith Mr. Michael A. Smith '64 and Mrs. Sondra E. Smith '68 Dr. Peggy D. Smith Mr. Victor A. Smith '71 Mr. David N. Snyder '76, '94 and Mrs. Elizabeth H. Snyder '76 Mr. Michael B. Sosna Sosna Law Offices Mr. Michael S. Spahr '98 and Mrs. Kelley P. Spahr '95 Dr. Ashley B. Spell '08, '13 Dr. William C. Stagner Tom Stanley and Julianne Hall Dr. Casey J Staton '13 Mr. Jeffrey S. Staton Dr. Mark A. Steckbeck Dr. David Steegar Dr. Gilbert A. Steiner Dr. Christopher W. Stewart Mr. Douglas F. Stewart, III '03, '95 Mr. Ashley H. Story '82 Mr. Johnnie D. Strickland '57 and Mrs. Danielle L. Strickland Dr. Jeremy M. Stultz '08, '13 Dr. and Mrs. Eugene M. Sumner Dr. Brittany R. Sykes '10, '13 Mr. Marion P. Sykes, Jr. '63 and Mrs. Gwen C. Sykes '62 Tanger Outlets-Mebane Mr. David S. Tarbox and Mrs. Elizabeth W. Tarbox '60 Ms. Angela L. Taylor Mr. Thomas F. Taylor TE Connectivity Dr. Roderick D. Teat '98 and Dr. Cathy A. Teat '99 Temple Baptist Church Mr. William H. Templeton '57, '62, '64 and Mrs. Mary Templeton Mr. and Mrs. William E. Tew, Jr. Mr. Neil A. Thaggard Mr. Caleb Thomas Mr. Charles A. Thomas '00 Mr. Edgar A. Thomas, Jr. '71 and Mrs. Belinda Thomas Mr. Edward S. Thomas Dr. James L. Thomas '14 Mr. Samuel L. Thomason Mr. and Mrs. Edwin Thompson Mr. and Mrs. Marshall E. Thompson Mr. James R. Thomson '14 Mr. Barry W. Thornhill and Dr. Tina H. Thornhill '91 Mr. and Mrs. Roy Trest Rev. Daryl W. Trexler '94 and Mrs. Kimberly D. Trexler '95

Triangle Orthopaedic Associates, P.A. Troutman Sanders, LLP Dr. Lani S. True '13 Truist Mr. and Mrs. George Tucker, Jr. Dr. Jeremy G. Tucker '14 Dr. Melissa B. Turner '13 Mr. James L. Tyndall '69 and Mrs. Darlene Tyndall Mr. Herman F. Tyson UHF Development Group, LLC U.S. Charitable Gift Trust Mr. Zachary T. Vaskalis Verizon Foundation Mr. James L. Wade '68 and Mrs. Joyce W. Wade '71 Wake Forest Baptist Church Dr. Matthew W. Walker '14 Mr. and Mrs. E. Gregory Wallace Mr. Benjamin Waller Dr. Bobbi Jo Walston '13 Mrs. Joyce D. Ward '61 and Mr. Wilbur C. Ward Ward Farms Mr. Wake L. Warthen '74 and Mrs. Emily Warthen Mr. Andy D. Waters '87 Mr. George M. Waters '70 and Mrs. Joyce Waters Mr. Larry F. Watkins '88 Miss Wanda E. Watkins '79 Mr. Freddie R. Watson Mr. and Mrs. Don W. Webb Mr. David L. Webb '81 Mrs. Lola G. Weikel '67 Mr. William B. Wellons, Jr. '72 and Mrs. Clara Wellons Ms. Megan G. West '10 Ms. Margaret Westbrook and Mr. Philip A. Baddour, III '96 Dr. Kayla P. Westra '13 Dr. Jeremy L. Whidbee '14 Mr. Barry W. Whitaker '61 Rev. and Mrs. Denton White Mr. Wherry L. White Dr. and Mrs. H. Moran Whitley Dr. Susan A. Wiggins '14 Mr. Ben Williams and Mrs. Frances B. Williams '78 Mr. Mario Williams Mrs. Rita M. Williams '59 Dr. Mallorie S. Willis '08, '13 Mrs. Heather R. Wilson '01 and Dr. Christopher N. Wilson Mr. Robert L. Winston '64 and Mrs. Lynda L. Winston '65 Winston-Salem Foundation Dr. Kristen A. Womble '14 Mr. Michael P. Womble '67 and Mrs. Joan Womble Mr. Siu-Ki Wong Mr. and Mrs. Jerry Wood, Sr. Mr. Alan D. Woodlief, Jr. '94 and Mrs. Wendy B. Woodlief Ms. Victoria Wright Mrs. Joan J. Wynn '71 Drs. C. C.Yang and Yu M. Hsiao Mr. Albert B. Yopp Dr. Taek H. You Ms. Catherine Zachary


FRIENDS CLUB The Friends Club recognizes donors who have given up to $249 between June 1, 2013 & May 31, 2014.

————————————————————————————————————— 42nd Street Oyster Bar 518 West Italian Cafe leah Dr. Marlena L. Abernethy '09 Dr. Sonny T. Abraham Mr. Michael T. Abramo '95 and Dr. Kimberly H. Abramo '94 Mrs. Beverly B. Adams '96, '98 Mr. Christopher Adams and Mrs. Heather Thomas Adams '97 Ms. Cindy A. Adams Mr. Damien J. Adams Mrs. Drucilla M. Adams '71 Mr. Robbie D. Adams Mr. William J. Adams '65 and Mrs. Judy H. Adams '61 Mr. Ronald T. Adcock '70 and Mrs. Margarie Adcock Mrs. Rebecca T. Aikens '14 Dr. Antoine J. Al-Achi and Mrs. Pam C. Al-Achi '91 Mr. and Mrs. Kevin Albertson Dr. Oleg Alekseev Ms. Latashia C. Alexander '02 Mr. Steven L. Alexander '03 Mr. Johnny H. Alford '50 and Mrs. Judith Alford Mr. Chris Algiere and Mrs. Mary Ann H. Algiere '87, '89 Ms. Amy E. Allen Mr. Ellie R. Allen Ms. Janet H. Allen Ms. Linda C. Allen Mr. Richard L. Allen '71 and Mrs. Sandy Allen Mr. Stanley L. Allen '83 Dr. Thomas W. Allen '81 and Mrs. Beverly Allen Mr. Wallace Allen and Mrs. Marie C. Allen '68 Allen & Associates Mr. Luis J. Alvarado Mr. Steven E. Aman '91 and Mrs. Tonya Aman Mr. William E. Amass '11 Ms. Lula F. Amburn Dr. Shelley A. Amen '00 and Mr. David S. Canevit Mr. Owen J. Anders '96 Mr. David R. Anderson and Mrs. Mary C. Anderson '81 Mr. Maurice Anderson and Mrs. Li-Mei C. Anderson '73 Mrs. Annie L. Andrews '53 and Mr. Joe F. Andrews, Jr. '52, '53 Mr. Dan Andrews and Mrs. Willie P. Andrews '61, '64 Mr. Joe F. Andrews, Jr. '52, '53 and Mrs. Annie L. Andrews '53 Mr. Richard G. Andrews '75 Mr. Jim Angell Ms. Miriam C. Appleton Mr. Jimmy L. Arrington Mr. and Mrs. S. Thomas Arrington Arrowhead International, LLC Art Source Mrs. Doris R. Arzonico '46 Mr. and Mrs.Trey Asbury Mr. Craig C. Ashton '70 and Mrs. Faith Ashton Mrs. Kelly K. Ashworth Mrs. Mary S. Atkins '49 Mr. Edward W. Atkinson, Jr. '69 and Mrs. Sally A. Atkinson '07 Mr. Perry E. Atkinson '73 and Mrs. Cynthia Atkinson Ms. Linsy W. Aul '10 Mrs. Patricia N. Austin '61 Mr. Thom S. Austin '72 and Mrs. Nancy Austin Mr. Clyde O. Autry '85 Mrs. Lou W. Autry '69

Mrs. Melinda K. Autry '13 Mrs. Susan G. Autry Ms. Arselia V. Avalos Mr. D. Paul Aycock '02 Mr. Edward G. Aycock '61 Mr. and Mrs.Ronald Aydlotte Mr. and Mrs.Spurgeon Ayers, Jr. B & S Air Conditioning Co., Inc. Dr. Michael L. Babuin '80 Mr. William M. Bacon, III Mr. David R. Badger, PA Mr. Steve Bahnaman Dr. Heather L. Bailey '12 Mr. James C. Bailey '64 and Mrs. Suzanne S. Bailey Mrs. Judy W. Bailey '70 and Mr. James Bailey Mrs. Lola T. Bailey '55 Mr. William G. Bailey '55 Ms. Crystal M. Baker Mr. Gene S. Baker '67 and Mrs. Nancy B. Baker Mr. Paul T. Baker Mr. Robert W. Baker '71, '94 Mr. Kenneth W. Baldwin Ms. Kimberly D. Ballard Mrs. Revonda D. Ballard and Mr. Billy F. Ballard, Jr. Baptist Fellowship of Angier Mr. David M. Barber '83 and Mrs. Sherrie Barber Mr. and Mrs.James Barbour, Jr. Mr. Joseph B. Barbour, Jr. Mrs. Sallie H. Barefoot '65 Mr. Torrey F. Barefoot '90 and Mrs. Julie Barefoot Barefoot & Associates, Inc. The Bargain Barn Mrs. Sarah Barge Mr. Brandon O. Barker '04 and Mrs. Johanna B. Barker '06, '10 Mr. Edwin T. Barnes and Mrs. Bruce G. L. Barnes '50 Mr. Joshua M. Barnes '10 Ms. Julie Barnes Ms. Patricia G. Barnes '06 Barnes Lube Express Mr. Kincy L. Barrow '93 and Mrs. Lori B. Barrow Ms. Linda Belch Barrow '68 Dr. John G. Bartlett Mr. Bobby R. Bass '64 and Mrs. Lois T. Bass Mr. Chris Bass and Dr. Elizabeth M. Bass '99 Mr. Gary S. Bass and Mrs. Yvonne S. Bass '71 Mr. Verlon H. Bass and Mrs. Margaret Y. Bass '64 Mr. William B. Bass '04 and Mrs. Patricia B. Bass '88 Mr. Benjamin W. Bassett '03 Mrs. Somer L. Batres Mr. Jimmy P. Batten, Jr. '63 Mr. Kywon Battle Mrs. Ashley R. Baugham '13 Mr. Curt Bawden, Sr. and Mrs. Mildred H. Bawden '57 Ms. Hannah R. Bazemore '07 Mr. John H. Bazemore '58 and Mrs. Merle Bazemore Mr. David B. Beach '69 and Mrs. Susan Beach Mr. James A. Beall '69 and Mrs. Helen J. Beall '70 Dr. Allison M. Beam '09, '13 and Dr. Jonathan M. Beam '13 Mrs. Alicia T. Beard '09, '14 Mrs. Barbara D. Beasley '78 Mrs. Becky H. Beasley '96 Ms. Catonya N. Beasley '99

W W W. C A M P B E L L . E D U / M A G A Z I N E

Mrs. Dovie D. Beasley '65 Mrs. Sharon S. Beasley Ms. Julie D. Beavers Ms. Judith G. Beckler '64 Ms. Tara B. Bell Mr. Thomas M. Bell, Jr. '66 and Mrs. Mary K. Bell '68 Mr. Dennis I. Bellefeuille '72 and Mrs. Elizabeth K. Bellefeuille '65 Mrs. Elizabeth E. Belton '52 and Mr. Calvin Belton Mallt Bendall Dr. Christine E. Benedict '13 Dr. Claudia D. Beneville '13 Mr. Gordon Bennett and Mrs. Selena J. Bennett '85 Mr. Jason D. Bennett '05 Mr. Jimmy D. Bennett '66 and Mrs. Jennifer Bennett Mr. Randall W. Bennett '86 Mr. W. Legrand Bennett, Jr. Ms. Jennifer K. Bennington Ms. Ann C. Benson Mrs. Barbara M. Benson '69 Mr. Clifton L. Benson, Jr. Benson Baptist Church Mr. Dempsey Benton and Mrs. Barbara T. Benton '66 Mr. Ray D. Berkley and Mrs. Nina J. Berkley '54 Mr. and Mrs.Jerry C. Bernstein Mr. Richard E. Berrier '91 and Mrs. Kerry M. Berrier '91 Mr. Joseph W. Berry Ms. Marie S. Berry Mrs. Fannie M. Bettis Mr. and Mrs.Gaston Bettis Mr. David A. Betts '01 and Mrs. Jacqueline M. Betts Mr. William G. Bickel Mr. William F. Bishop '64 and Mrs. Marilyn Bishop Mr. David E. Bissette, Jr. and Mrs. Kay A. Bissette '79 Mr. Glenn R. Bittner '68 Mr. and Mrs.Jeffrey E. Black Mrs. Marty C. Blackmon Mr. William S. Blackwell, Jr. '68 Mrs. Jennifer M. Blair '14 Dr. Laura D. Blanchard '13 Mr. John H. Bland, Jr. '63 and Mrs. Anne Bland Ms. Tanya W. Blanton '92 Rev. Lloyd Blevins, III '10 Ms. Deborah J. Blue Dr. Elizabeth D. Blue Dr. Jeri F. Board '68, '81 and Dr. Warren Board Mr. Joseph H. Boardwine Mr. and Mrs.Rick Bodenschatz Ms. Glenda D. Bohannon '14 Rev. Cynthia L. Bolden '11 Mr. and Mrs.Leonard Bolick Ms. Jenna C. Bond Dr. Edgar J. Boone '09 Mr. and Mrs.Bruce Borchers Mrs. Amanda Crump Borchik '14 Mr. Sidney O. Borkey '68 and Mrs. Dorothy Borkey Dr. Glenn Boseman '66 Mr. Joey Bowen and Mrs. Megan D. Bowen '00 Dr. Heather S. Bowers '09 Mrs. Mary L. Bowie '14 Ms. Barbara J. Bowman Mr. Stephen L. Bowman '76 Mrs. Bobbi J. Boyd Dr. James A. Boyd Dr. Jennifer M. Boyd '08 Mr. Jerry B. Boyd '01 and Mrs. Laura B. Boyd

Mr. Blake Boyette Mr. Benjamin L. Bradley, Jr. '68 Mr. Todd A. Bradley Mr. Ralph M. Bradner, Jr. '65 and Mrs. Anne H. Bradner Mr. L. E. Bradshaw Mr. John W. Bradway, Jr. Mr. and Mrs.Causey Brady, III Mrs. Nancy M. Brady '58 Mr. Michael H. Brafford '89 Ms. Sally B. Bragg Mr. Thomas W. Brake '53 and Mrs. Carole Brake Ms. Beverly A. Branch Mr. George Brannon and Mrs. Linda L. Brannon '57 Ms. Marian L. Brantley Mr. William S. Bratton '11 LTC James L. Brazell '74 and Mrs. Gail Brazell Mr. and Mrs.John Brening Dr. Bonnie Brenseke Ms. Cheryl Brewer Mr. Samuel W. Brewer, III '70 and Mrs. Stanford A. Brewer Mr. Randolph Brewington Mrs. Dorothy A. Bridgers '99 Mr. Ather Bridges and Mrs. Lashon B. Bridges '09 Mr. Dennis Bridgett and Dr. Rebecca B. Bridgett '85 Mr. Charles Briggs, Jr. Mr. Charles N. Briggs, Sr. '58 and Mrs. Peggy Briggs Mr. Joseph J. Briggs '97, '12 Mrs. Virginia R. Brigman '49, '69 Dr. Brantley Briley and Mrs. Eugenia C. Briley '73 Dr. Carol L. Brinkley '08 Mr. James G. Britt '78, '82 and Mrs. Anna T. Britt '82 Mr. Lloyd A. Britt, Jr. '74, '75 and Mrs. Denise L. Britt '74, '79 Mr. Jonathan A. Bronsink '05 and Mrs. Brandi Bronsink Mr. Harry E. Brooks, Jr. '50 and Mrs. Raedelle P. Brooks Mr. Michael A. Brooks '06 Mr. Bryan Brown and Mrs. Connie C. Brown '69 Mr. Douglas S. Brown '70 and Mrs. Susie Brown Mr. Edgar T. Brown and Dr. Lindsey T. Brown '10 Mr. Henry A. Brown and Mrs. Nancy M. Brown '63 Mr. Kirby B. Brown '64 and Mrs. Sara O. Brown Mr. Melvin A. Brown '03 and Mrs. Jennifer P. Brown '08 Mr. and Mrs.Nicholas Brown Dr. Raymond R. Brown '71 and Mrs. Donice Brown Mr. Samuel Brown and Mrs. Beverly M. Brown '71 Mr. Dan R. Bruffey '65 Dr. Joseph Brum, Jr. '80 Ms. Ilka I. Bryant '13 Mr. James R. Bryant, Jr. '86 and Mrs. Billie Bryant '06 Mr. John H. Bryson, Jr. '71 and Mrs. Carol W. Bryson '64 Mr. Gary W. Buck '78 and Mrs. Toni C. Buck '78 Mr. Joseph F. Buck '98, '02 and Mrs. Cindy Buck Mr. Christopher E. Buckley Ms. Michele L. Budden Mr. Charles D. Bueker and Mrs. Virginia B. Bueker '70 Ms. Beverly A. Buell Ms. Marilyn S. Buie Buies Creek Graduate Kappa Psi

Mr. Benjamin C. Bullock '09 Ms. Brenda F. Bullock '73 Mr. James W. Bullock, II '85 and Mrs. Beverly Bullock Mrs. Mary C. Bullock '59 Dr. Tammy S. Bullock '96 Mr. Tom J. Bumgarner Dr. Kelley A. Bump '13 Mr. and Mrs.Keith Bundy Dr. Phyllis C. Bunn '63, '66 Mrs. Laura M. Burdette Mr. Robert J. Burke '69 and Mrs. Jane B. Burke '68 Mr. John Burkhardt, III '61 Mr. Frank Burnham and Mrs. Anna M. Burnham '60 Mr. William J. Burns '69, '71 and Mrs. Jane Burns Busy Bee/Trophy Dr. David D. Butler '05 Mr. Fredrique L. Butler '96 and Mrs. Vertina S. Butler '95 Mr. Lee Butler and Mrs. Doris B. Butler '73 Mr. and Mrs.Wesley Butler Mr. Larry Butts '75 Mr. and Mrs.Lynn Buzzard Dr. Susan L. Byerly '78 Mrs. Leigh M. Byrd '07 Mr. Samuel M. Byrd '57 and Mrs. Judith P. Byrd '67 Ms. Patricia A. Byrne Mr. Walter G. Byrum '79 and Mrs. Teresa B. Byrum '82 Mr. Jose Cabrera and Mrs. Catherine A. Cabrera '92 Mrs. Gloria H. Caddell '56 Mr. James W. Cagle '76 Mr. Glenn Cain and Mrs. Betty V. Cain '61 Mr. Richard E. Cain '69 Mr. Leslie H. Caison, Jr. '69 and Mrs. Amelia Caison Mrs. Lynette C. Caison '74, '79 Ms. Crystal L. Callahan '08 Cameron Spa Nails Mr. and Mrs.Todd Cammack Mr. Charles L. Campbell, Jr. '56 and Mrs. Goldie E. Campbell Mr. Michael R. Campbell '92 Mr. Ronnie J. Campbell Mr. James H. Cannady '69 Mr. Carlos S. Cano Mr. Derrick W. Cantrell Mr. J. C. Capps '41 and Mrs. Peggy V. Capps Carey Roberts Design Co., LLC Mr. Gary T. Carlson '06 Carolina Center for Civic Education Carolina Human Resources, Inc. Mrs. Ruth M. Carr '89 and Mr. Richard B. Carr '87 Mr. T. M. Carr, Jr. and Mrs. Donna B. Carr '65, '83 Mrs. Dawn W. Carroll '01 Ms. Linda G. Carroll '69 Mrs. Melissa L. Carroll '92 Mr. Andrew B. Carter Mr. James P. Carter, II '73 and Mrs. Susan Carter Mrs. Jody B. Carter '92 Mr. and Mrs.John T. Carter, Jr. Ms. Patricia M. Carter Mr. Robert Carter and Mrs. Patricia L. Carter '67 Mr. William E. Carter '60 and Mrs. Eloise Carter Mr. Winslow L. Carter '73, '84 and Mrs. Harriet R. Carter '73 Dr. Tony W. Cartledge '04 Mrs. Jean M. Cary

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DONOR HONOR ROLL Cary Dermatology Center, P.A. Mr. Dennis Casey and Mrs. Margaret M. Casey '70 Mrs. Jennifer C. Casey '76 Mr. Michael T. Cash '87 and Mrs. Deborah G. Cash '88 Mr. Bobby C. Casper '78, '98 and Mrs. Vicky W. Casper '76 Mr. Raleigh R. Castelloe, Jr. '59 and Mrs. Phyllis Castelloe Cato Research Ltd. Mr. Gerald A. Caudill '70 and Mrs. Joyce Caudill Dr. W. Robert Caviness '58 Mr. Stephen S. Chan Ms. Anna L. Chao '63 Dr. Ronnie Chapman Mr. Richard K. Chase Mr. Ronnie Chavis '83 and Mrs. Sherry L. Chavis Ms. Samantha Chavis Dr. Brad N. Chazotte Mr. Ronald L. Cheek '72 and Mrs. Jan Cheek Dr. Donald W. Cherry '65 and Mrs. Rosaleen Cherry Dr. Connie H. Chester Mr. Evan R. Chesterman, III '69 Rev. Kenneth G. Childers '70 and Rev. Sarah L. Childers '72, '02 Mr. Bradley C. Childress '90 and Mrs. Anna W. Childress Ms. Rhonda J. Childress '04 and Jesse W. Williams '94 Ms. Tuneen Chisolm Dr. Christine Cho '11 Dr. Gregory M. Christiansen Mrs. Nga Phuong Chung-Nguyen '96 Mr. Joel D. Churchwell Mr. Eric P. Clairmont '96 and Mrs. Linda Clairmont Ms. Jacqueline R. Clare Mrs. Angela L. Clark Mrs. Annette W. Clark '59 Mr. Christopher R. Clark Mr. Ernest Clark and Mrs. Beverly D. Clark '96 Mr. Christopher Clark '89 Mrs. Kayla R. Clark '12 Mr. Kenneth W. Clark '86 and Mrs. Sandra M. Clark '85, '94 Mr. Lanny Clark and Mrs. Theresa S. Clark '87 Ms. Lisa S. Clark Mr. and Mrs.Jerry Clark Miss Betty J. Clary Mr. Dudley V. Clayton '67 Rev. Grover S. Clayton '08 Mrs. Jean O. Clayton '71 Mr. Gary H. Clemmons '81 and Mrs. Nan Clemmons Mrs. Cathey T. Clifton '74 and Mr. Donald Clifton Mr. James A. Clifton '63 and Mrs. Lynda Clifton Dr. Valerie B. Clinard Ms. Samantha Clinton Mr. Otto J. Clontz, III '89, '06 and Mrs. Lucia Clontz Mr. Christopher J. Coats Mr. Richard A. Cochran '84 and Mrs. Debra M. Cochran '85 Ms. Amanda S. Coffer '11 Mr. Kenneth E. Coffey, Jr. '70 and Mrs. Pamela H. Coffey '70 Dr. and Mrs. Michael G. Cogdill Ms. Doris Coggin '91 Mr. Thomas E. Coggin '60 and Mrs. Frances Coggin Mr. David Cohen Mr. Robert Cole and Mrs. Ann T. Cole '66 Mr. Stanley R. Cole '87 and Mrs. Claudia C. Cole '93 Mr. Walter Coley and Mrs. Carroll M. Coley '53 Mr. Jared M. Collier '04, '12 and

64

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Mrs. Allison R. Collier '05, '08 Mr. Michael Collier and Mrs. Angela C. Collier '93 Mr. Donald V. Collins '94 and Mrs. April S. Collins '92 Mr. Mike S. Collins Mr. Neil C. Collins, III '70 and Dr. Anne B. Collins Mr. Tommy Combs and Mrs. Linda R. Combs '93 Mr. Clyde W. Connell '67 and Mrs. Patricia T. Connell '67 Mrs. Tracie K. Connor Ms. Patsy A. Conoley '68 Conservators' Center Mr. Edward J. Conti Mr. Ryan A. Conway Mrs. Helen C. Cook '46 Ms. Shelly A. Cook '94 Mr. Garey R. Cooke '73 and Mrs. Rebecca Cooke Mrs. Rebecca C. Cooke '68 Dr. April A. Cooper Mr. John W. Cooper '65 Mr. and Mrs.Willie Cooper Ms. Martha G. Copeland Mr. Charles G. Corbett '70 and Mrs. Anna L. Corbett Dr. Jerry D. Corbett '09 Mr. Christian D. Cordova '12 Ms. Malissa A. Core '04 Mr. and Mrs.Bradford Cornwell Mr. James Cotten and Mrs. Joyce J. Cotten '62, '63, '65 Mr. Andrea J. Council Mr. C. Thomas Council, III '72 Mr. George T. Courtney '72 and Mrs. Helen Courtney Mr. William A. Cowdrey '87 Mr. Craig A. Cox Mr. Rick Cox and Mrs. Joy D. Cox '02 Mr. and Mrs.Donald P. Cozine Mr. Kevin P. Cozine Mr. Charles D. Crabtree '69 and Mrs. Pam Crabtree Ms. Leslie L. Craft '85 and Mr. Blount Craft Mr. William T. Cravens '67 and Mrs. Janet Cravens Mr. and Mrs.James Crawford, Jr. Mr. Clifton M. Credle, Jr. '69 and Mrs. Larue S. Credle '67 Mrs. Esther Marlene M. Creech '58 Mr. Harvey T. Creech, Jr. '70 and Mrs. Millie Creech Mr. Joseph W. Creech '57 and Mrs. Mary E. Creech Mrs. Phyllis T. Creech '64 Mr. Franklin U. Creech, II Mr. and Mrs.Lynn Crenshaw Dr. and Mrs. Michael Crocetti Mrs. Elaine C. Cromartie Mr. Richard S. Cromartie '70 and Mrs. Patricia M. Cromartie '73 Mr. John S. Cromlish '69 Mr. Lane Crooks and Mrs. Amanda H. Crooks '01 Mr. Timothy D. Crooks '99 and Mrs. Joellyn P. Crooks Rev. Harley A. Crosby '78 and Mrs. Doris Crosby Ms. Nancy W. Crowe Mr. and Mrs.Thomas S. Crowe Mr. Jack B. Crutchfield '57 Mr. Scott Culbreth and Mrs. Sherrie H. Culbreth '83 Mr. Archie D. Cumbee '70 and Mrs. Brenda Cumbee Ms. Sandra B. Cummings '69 Dr. Larry Cummins and Mrs. Cynthia L. McNeill-Cummins '83 Mr. William W. Cunningham, III '73 and Mrs. Barbara Cunningham Mr. David B. Currin and Mrs. Allison L. Currin '00

Dr. and Mrs. James Currin, Jr. Rev. Michael O. Currin '77 Mr. and Mrs.Sam B. Currin, III Currin Associates Mr. Xavier D. Curry Mr. Ryan T. Dailey '04 Mr. Linton Daniel and Mrs. Carolyn T. Daniel '65 Mrs. Cathy S. Daniels '14 Mr. Jerry R. Daniels '60 Mr. Melvin R. Daniels, III '74 and Mrs. Rosemary B. Daniels '76 Ms. Ramona T. Daniels Mr. William C. Daniels and Mrs. Sandra B. Daniels '70 Mr. Clement Danish, Jr. '69 and Mrs. Carol W. Danish '70 Mr. Thomas W. Danner, Jr. '70 and Mrs. Vicki Danner Mr. John J. Darnell, Jr. '63 and Mrs. Helen H. Darnell Ms. Glenda B. Darrell Mr. Douglas M. Daughtry '71 and Mrs. Brenda P. Daughtry Mr. James A. Daughtry '62 and Mrs. Brenda M. Daughtry Mrs. Mary C. Daughtry '84, '88 and Mr. Billy Daughtry Mr. Raeford V. Daughtry '99 and Mrs. Willa P. Daughtry '65 Mr. Robert L. Daughtry '58 and Mrs. Joyce Daughtry Mr. Larry W. Davenport '84 and Mrs. Debbie H. Davenport '86 Ms. Linda Davenport Rev. William L. Davenport '53 Mr. Allen D. Davis and Mrs. Twyla T. Davis '89 Mr. Brian A. Davis '97 Mr. Dwight E. Davis '83 Mr. Elwood D. Davis '49 and Mrs. Luella N. Davis '49 LCDR Lamont Davis '65 and Mrs. Georgann L. Davis Ms. Evelyn M. Davis Mr. George S. Davis, Jr. '67 and Mrs. Linda B. Davis Mr. Jason K. Davis '00 Mr. John Z. Davis Ms. Meggan A. Davis '10 Dr. Melissa C. Davis '13 Ms. Patricia C. Davis Mr. Richard V. Davis '70 Ms. Sandra B. Davis '69 Mr. Stephen J. Davis Dr. Steven M. Davis Dr. George A. Davy Mr. Darren M. Dawson '89, '92 and Mrs. Jennifer S. Dawson '89 Mr. James E. Dawson '67 Mr. and Mrs.Lee Dawson Mr. Paul L. Dawson Mr. and Mrs.Richard Dawson Mr. Damon V. Dean Mr. Roger L. Dean '64 Mrs. Denise N. Degraw '79 Mr. Peter Delamater Mr. Thomas E. Delaney '92 and Mrs. Janice S. Delaney '87 Mr. Tony C. Delp Mr. and Mrs.Claude Delucia Mrs. Janis S. Dempster '61 Mr. Ralph L. Denning '67 and Mrs. Lorena T. Denning '69 Dr. Christopher R. Dennis '08 Dr. R. David Dennis '93 and Mrs. Joann Dennis Rev. William H. Dennis, III '88 and Mrs. Sandy Dennis Mr. Donald B. Denny Mrs. Laurie D. Depew '09 Mr. H. Ray Derrick Design-A-Plan, LLC Mrs. Virginia D. Detrie '69 Mrs. Nora R. Dickens Ms. Michelle D. Dickerson

Mr. Wayne Dickinson '73 and Mrs. Sue Dickinson Drs. Emanuel and Pamela Diliberto Dr. Vincent P. Dimondi '11 Mr. Brian K. Dimsdale '91 and Mrs. Angela Dimsdale Dr. Robert H. Dixon Mr. Fernando Dizol and Mrs. Francine L. Dizol '92 Ms. Nhung L. Do '05 Ms. Elizabeth J. Dobbins Mr. David Y. Dodd '69 and Mrs. Sue F. Dodd '70 Ms. Christine C. Dodson '03 Domino's Pizza Mr. Graham Donaldson and Mrs. Kelly H. Donaldson '85 Mr. Robert L. Donnelly '72 Mr. David Dorsey and Mrs. A. Celeste Dorsey '68 Mr. and Mrs.Randy Doub Mr. Early Douglas and Mrs. Grace W. Dickerson-Douglas '57 Mr. George F. Douglas, Jr. '71 Mr. Roderick Q. Douglas Ms. Corina F. Dowd Mr. Jeffrey B. Dowdy '85 Dr. Richard H. Drew Mrs. Linda T. Drummond '69 Mr. Bo G. Duell '03 Mrs. Mary M. Duke '66 Mr. Earl G. Dulaney and Mrs. Judy W. Dulaney '62 Mr. Gene D. Dunaway '66 Mr. Isaac H. Dunlap '88 and Mrs. Jill Dunlap Mr. Jimmy C. Dunn and Mrs. Culaye H. Dunn '55 Ms. Kimberly F. Dunn Mrs. Peggy Dunn and Rev. H. Wayne Dunn '76 Dr. Eric M. Dunnum Mrs. Betsy Williams Ms. Kimberly Dupree '07 Mr. Thomas L. Dupree '62 and Mrs. Janice O. Dupree '63, '67 Dr. Mary E. Durham Mr. Donald M. Dwiggins and Mrs. Audrey S. Dwiggins '69 Ms. Deborah A. Dye Mrs. Shelby C. Eakins '68 Mr. and Mrs.K. Bradford Earle Mr. Joseph W. Earnshaw, Jr. '57 Mrs. Dawn Easley Mrs. Nicole Eason '07 Mr. Walter L. Eason Mr. Joseph K. East, Jr. '67 and Mrs. Linda East Mrs. Kimberly J. East Ms. Patricia K. Easter '03 Ms. Mary K. Eberle Mr. Henry T. Eddins, Jr. '60 and Mrs. Elizabeth T. Eddins '60 Mr. Brad Edwards and Mrs. Susan R. Edwards '01 Mr. Charles C. Edwards, Jr. '69 and Mrs. Judy Edwards Mr. Charles R. Edwards Mr. and Mrs.James Edwards Mr. Joseph E. Edwards, Jr. '71 and Mrs. Phyllis H. Edwards '73, '88 Mr. Mickey W. Edwards '80, '78 and Mrs. Mary J. Edwards '80 Mr. Charles W. Eichhorn '63 and Mrs. Loretta M. Eichhorn '60 Mr. Dan Elks and Mrs. Barbara W. Elks '68 Mrs. Jo Mae Ellington Mr. Richard K. Ellington '67 and Mrs. Alice Ellington Mr. and Mrs.Ron Ellington, Jr. Mr. Fred A. Elliott '59 Mrs. Julia H. Elliott Ms. Martene F. Elliott Mr. Jerry M. Ellis and Mrs. Gail R. Ellis '57

Mr. Ted K. Ellis '69 and Mrs. Sara H. Ellis '70 Mrs. Tamara J. Ellison Mrs. Maggie H. Emma '12 Mr. Scott Emory '85 and Mrs. Julie W. Emory '85 Empire Eats Mr. and Mrs.Adam C. English Mr. Donald R. Ennis '73 Mr. Jerry R. Ennis '57 and Mrs. Rhonda H. Ennis '65, '81 Ms. Joyce A. Ennis Ms. Kathryn H. Ennis Ms. Mary C. Ennis Mrs. Rachel F. Ennis Mr. William C. Ennis, Jr. '73 and Mrs. Deborah T. Ennis '72 Dr. Floyd I. Enzor '63 Ms. Harriett Epps '91 Mr. William R. Epps Mr. J. C. Epting, Jr. Ms. Kendra N. Erickson '09 Eschelon Experiences Mrs. Mary Ann J. Eskridge '53 Mr. Jeff D. Etheridge, Jr. '71 and Mrs. Karen Etheridge Mr. Billie R. Evans '71 Mr. Douglas L. Evans, Jr. '76 and Mrs. Debbie D. Evans Mrs. Linda T. Evans '91 Mr. Steven T. Eveker '86 and Mrs. Julia Eveker Rev. and Mrs. James Everette, III Mrs. Nancy K. Ezzell Ms. Barbara D. Faircloth Mrs. Mary B. Faircloth Rev. Worth H. Faircloth, Jr. '84 and Mrs. Clea T. Faircloth '84 Mr. Marshall Falatovich and Mrs. Cynthia P. Falatovich '76 Mr. Jack H. Fallin '80 Mr. Benjamin W. Fann '41 and Mrs. Kathryn Fann Mr. Wayne O. Farrah, III '14 Dr. Dana R. Fasanella '10 Dr. Tiffany B. Fassnacht '09 Ms. Barbara L. Faulkner Mrs. Shelby R. Faulkner Mr. James M. Featherston, Jr. Mr. Jack Felk and Mrs. Janet E. Felk '46 Mr. Charles R. Felmlee '66 Mr. James Ferguson and Mrs. Brookie B. Ferguson '89 Dr. Kira N. Ferguson '06, '11 Mrs. Dorothy G. Ferrell '47 Mrs. Rosalie S. Ferrell '48 Mr. Daniel J. Fetzer Mr. and Mrs.Jerry Fickes Fidelity Foundation Mr. Robbie L. Fielder '70 and Mrs. Cynthia W. Fielder Mr. J. Michael Fields Mr. Lewis P. Fields '72 and Mrs. Marie S. Fields '73 Mrs. Brenda F. Figueroa-Haywood '04 First Baptist Church of Clinton First Baptist Church of Mocksville First Federal Bank Mrs. Paula H. Fish '71 Mr. Thomas J. Fish, III and Mrs. Gloria W. Fish '68 Mr. Kyle M. Fishbaugh '14 Mr. Billy R. Fisher '59, '60 Mrs. Brenda S. Fisher '96, '99 and Mr. Paul Fisher Mr. Edmond W. Fisher '68 and Mrs. Linda Fisher Mr. Steven R. Fisher '13 Five Star Ms. Amy S. Flanary-Smith Mr. Glenn A. Flinchum '42 and Mrs. Pattie Flinchum Mr. Jack Flinchum and


Mrs. Callie G. Flinchum '57 Mr. Louis M. Florimonte '10 and Mrs. Septina Florimonte Mr. Larry Flowers and Mrs. Linda P. Flowers '69 Mr. Austin E. Floyd '65 and Mrs. Sarah D. Floyd '63 Mr. Tony Floyd '88 and Ms. Terry L. Springle Rev. Andy Foley '10 For Your Convenience Mr. Richard A. Forbes Forest Hills Baptist Church Mrs. Maude S. Forlaw '47 Mr. Bryant D. Foster Gloria W. Foster '66 and Murray Foster Ms. Meredith R. Foster '05 Mr. Merritt W. Foster, III '73 Mr. Robert J. Foster '73 and Mrs. Kathryn Foster Mr. Scott M. Foster Dr. Leigh L. Foushee '00 and Mr. Eugene E. Foushee Rev. Howard W. Fowler '66 and Mrs. Mary Fowler Mr. Gene Franklin '57 Mr. William P. Franklin, Jr. '96 and Mrs. Karen Franklin Mr. and Mrs.William Frederick Mrs. Jodie Ruth Hurley Freeman '01 Dr. Larry W. Freeman '69 and Mrs. Janice C. Freeman '68 Rev. Dr. Patricia L. Freeman '04 Rev. Woodrow W. Freeze, III '11 Mr. James R. Fricke, Sr. '87 and Mrs. Jeannette O. Fricke Ms. Elizabeth A. Froehling Ms. Doris G. Frye Dr. Edward I. Fubara Ms. Isabel C. Fulghum '75 Mr. Clint E. Fuller '05, '07 Mr. Howard L. Fuller, Jr. '05 and Mrs. Claudette R. Fuller '03 Fuquay-Varina Summer Baseball Dr. Ted Fuson and Mrs. Margaret B. Fuson '69 Mrs. Catherine T. Fussell '69 Mr. and Mrs.Walter B. Futch Mrs. Annie S. Gainey '67 Mr. Michael A. Gallagher Mr. Gerald L. Galloway '75 Mr. Kenneth R. Garber '81 and Mrs. Elizabeth L. Garber '83 Ms. Kaitlyn T. Gardenhire '13 Mr. Norfleet B. Gardner '54 and Mrs. Barbara Gardner Ms. Sandra R. Gareton Mr. Philip W. Garland '84 Mrs. Martha S. Garner '57 Mr. Rufus D. Garrell '63 Dr. and Mrs. Robert L. Garrett Mr. Carl W. Garrison Mr. Edgar P. Garrison, Jr. '65 and Mrs. Beth Garrison Mrs. Mary Gatton Mr. Aaron D. Gauger Rev. William I. Gay, Jr. '78 Mr. Charles P. Gaylor, IV '10 Mr. and Mrs.Robert Gazak Dr. Ethan A. Gearhart, Jr. '51 and Mrs. Peggy Gearhart Mr. Joseph A. Geer '96 Mr. and Mrs.Edward Gehrke Genetic Counseling Graduate Program Ms. Ruthann Gentry Mr. Daniel R. Geriot Mrs. Laura R. Gerstner Ms. Laura Gianfrancesco Ms. Deborah G. Gibbs Mr. Raymond L. Gibbs Mr. William P. Gibson and Mrs. Jinger T. Gibson '90 Mrs. Christine Gilbert Mrs. Dorothea Stewart Gilbert '46 Ms. Jeanette Gilbert

Ms. Rosalin A. Gilbert '69 Mr. Ernest R. Gilchrist '80 and Mrs. Synetha Gilchrist Ms. Janice M. Gilchrist Ms. Priscilla C. Gill '10 Gillespie & Murphy, P.A. Mr. William R. Gilliland '61 and Mrs. Carolyn J. Gilliland '61 Mr. Jason M. Gipe Ms. Deanna M. Girard '05 Mr. Thomas J. Giroux '93 and Mrs. Kathleen Giroux Dr. David Gittelman Mr. Mark A. Giulietti '75 Miss Sue J. Glasby '55 Mr. Jack R. Glaser '71 and Mrs. Deborah Glaser Rev. Jack Glasgow, Jr. and Mrs. Barbara D. Glasgow '81 GlaxoSmithKline Mr. Jeffrey D. Glendening '81 Mr. and Mrs.Thomas Glenn, IV Mr. Berry F. Godwin '74 and Mrs. Denise Godwin Mrs. Carolyn S. Godwin '47 Mr. James C. Godwin Mrs. Minnie P. Godwin '58 Dr. Sonya C. Godwin '98, '94 and Mr. John C. Godwin '93 Mr. Gregory A. Goff Mr. Thomas A. Goforth and Mrs. Katie L. Goforth '02 Ms. Yvonne T. Gold Rev. Spencer A. Good '03 and Mrs. Krystal Good Mr. Jimmy Goodman and Mrs. Sue B. Goodman '71 Mr. Marshall J. Goodman, Jr. '63 and Mrs. Louise Goodman Mr. Harry L. Goodwin '66 Goolsby Law Firm Mr. Greg Goral Mrs. Stephanie J. Goral Ms. Patsy J. Gordon '85 Mr. Adam M. Gottsegen Mr. David T. Gough '80 Ms. Audrey A. Gould Mr. Emerson F. Gower, Jr. '70 and Mrs. Jane Gower Mr. Michael E. Grace '67 and Mrs. Brenda Grace Mr. Donald K. Graham Mr. Hoyt Graham and Mrs. Deidre S. Graham '70 Mr. John W. Graham, III, CPA '76 and Mrs. Peggy B. Graham Rev. Chip Grammer '07 Mr. and Mrs.William A. Gravely Dr. David H. Gray Mrs. Melva C. Green '14 Mrs. Michelle D. Green Dr. Benjamin F. Greene Mrs. Carolyn F. Greene '59 Mr. Dewey Greene and Mrs. Kathryn S. Greene '49 Mrs. Liza M. Greene '03 and Mr. Billy M. Greene '00 CDR Bruce E. Greenland '95 Greg Goff Baseball Camps, LLC Ms. Michelle J. Gregory Ms. Sophia S. Gregory Mr. Tom Gregory and Mrs. Tammy H. Gregory '80 Mr. George W. Griffin and Mrs. Dianne D. Griffin '72 Mr. Gregory T. Griffin '79 and Mrs. Pam Griffin Mr. Michael L. Griffin '13 Mr. John R. Griffith '60 Ms. Nancy H. Grigg Mr. Branton Grimes and Mrs. Amy A. Grimes '90 Mr. Bryan Grimes, III and Mrs. Windy L. Grimes '84 Mr. Jerry G. Grimes '65 and Mrs. Gloria Grimes

W W W. C A M P B E L L . E D U / M A G A Z I N E

Mr. Duwayne A. Grimm '04 and Mrs. Nell S. Grimm '05, '10 Rev. Hugh R. Grimmer '68 and Mrs. Kay Grimmer Mr. Ryan Grinnell Mrs. Lisa S. Grissom '14 Ms. Gloria L. Grogan '67 Mr. Jason M. Guinn Mr. Earl Gulledge and Mrs. Emily C. Gulledge '68 Mr. Phillip Gurkin and Mrs. Marie K. Gurkin '73 Mr. Frederic B. Gustafson, Jr. '62 Dr. and Mrs. John Guyton Mr. Michael Guzek Dr. Karen Guzman Mr. and Mrs.Harold L. Hacker Dr. Veronica C. Hager '01 and Mr. James M. Hager, Jr. '94 Mr. Justin P. Haire Ms. Lindsey Haire Mr. Joe E. Hairr '91 Mrs. Melba S. Hales '43 Mrs. Alberta H. Hall '73 Mr. Ayden W. Hall '64 Mr. Marshall D. Hall '74 Ms. Megan K. Hall '07 Mr. Robert A. Hall '60 Rev. Robert N. Hall '83 Mr. Willis H. Hall '55 Miss Michelle L. Hallman '78 Mr. Thomas B. Ham '93 and Mrs. Penelope T. Ham '94 Mr. James E. Hamilton, Jr. '72 Mrs. Jane C. Hamilton '65 Ms. Nancy L. Hammersley Mr. Paul R. Hammersley '11 Mrs. Peggy G. Hammond '85 Ms. Gwen Hammonds '89 Mr. Tobias S. Hampson '02 Hampton Inn-Dunn Mr. Alger V. Hamrick, IV Drs. George and Terri Hamrick Ms. Kendra L. Hancock Dr. Ted E. Hancock Mr. Ellis Hankins Mr. Carl Hann, Sr. and Mrs. Ann W. Hann '69 Ms. Nan E. Hannah Mr. Teddy A. Hansard '70 and Mrs. Marion R. Hansard '70 Mrs. Nancy E. Hardee '59 Mr. James C. Harden '69 Mr. James E. Harden '75 Dr. Jamie C. Harding '13 Mr. and Mrs.Douglas Hargrave Mr. Louis R. Harmati '75 Ms. Wendy W. Harmon Mr. Mark O. Harrell and Dr. Charlotte F. Harrell '10 Mr. and Mrs.Charles Harrill Mr. W. Bruce Harrington '57 Father Leonard H. Harris and Mrs. Kathryn M. Harris '63 Mr. Morgan H. Harris '60 and Mrs. Margaret C. Harris Mrs. Nancy H. Harris '68 Mr. Thomas G. Harris Dr. William B. Harris '66 and Mrs. Sharon J. Harris '62 Mr. W. S. Harris, Jr. '65 and Mrs. Martha Harris Mr. Gordon M. Harrison '59 Mr. Gregory A. Harrison '06 Dr. James D. Harriss Mr. Blanton A. Hartness, II '83 Mr. James T. Hasty, Jr. '72 and Mrs. Patricia W. Hasty Ms. Jessica L. Hatcher '11 Mr. Steven M. Hauge '81 Mr. Thomas F. Hauser '66 Dr. Rahul V. Haware Mrs. Joyce T. Hawkins '58 Mrs. Lori T. Hawkins '83

Ms. Teresa D. Hayes Rev. Garrett A. Hays, Jr. '78 and Mrs. Laura S. Hays Mr. Wistar M. Heald, III '72 Mr. Richard V. Heath '52 Mr. Mark A. Heiliger and Mrs. Karen F. Heiliger '85 Mr. Robert D. Helms '72 and Mrs. Barbara Helms Mr. Christopher D. Hemeyer Mr. Earl Hemminger and Mrs. Donna B. Hemminger '78 Mr. Gerald F. Hemphill '89 and Mrs. Lori B. Hemphill '88 Ms. Bobby K. Henderson '60 Mr. Walter G. Henderson and Mrs. Lillian H. Henderson '43 Rev. Luther F. Hensley, Jr. '69, '01 and Mrs. Linda Hensley Mr. Larry D. Henson, Jr. '86 and Dr. Lynn G. Henson '86, '90 Mr. Steven J. Herman '03 Mr. Juan J. Hernaez and Mrs. Stephanie J. Burch-Hernaez '84 Mr. Javier Hernandez '84 Mr. Alphus S. Herndon, Jr. '60 and Mrs. Sherri Herndon Mrs. Ashley D. Herring '94 Dr. Charles Herring Mrs. Eva T. Herring '52 Mr. Bryant Herring '66 and Mrs. Wanda B. Herring '68 Rev. Henry B. Herring '64 and Mrs. Mary L. Herring '64 Mr. Richard C. Herring '82 Mrs. Thelma C. Herring '70 and Mr. Simon R. Herring Rev. Bruce T. Herrmann '81 and Mrs. Becky J. Herrmann '81 Ms. Maren N. Hess Mr. and Mrs.David C. Hester Mr. Horace R. Hester '68 and Mrs. Rebecca N. Hester '68 Mr. Thomas S. Hester, Jr. '71 Mrs. Sally S. Hewett '72 Mrs. Janet P. Hicks Mr. John H. High '57 and Mrs. Gayle H. High High Cotton Mr. James D. Highsmith '65 and Mrs. Faye Highsmith Mr. Benji Hight and Mrs. Tracey D. Hight '03 Mr. William J. Hilburn, Jr. '66 and Mrs. Becky Hilburn Mr. and Mrs.Andrew Hill Rev. Andrew J. Hill '58 and Mrs. Geraldine Hill Ms. Jane G. Hill Mrs. Virginia D. Hill Mr. Gabel G. Himmelwright, III '65 and Mrs. Linda Himmelwright Mr. Richard E. Hines '04 and Mrs. Loree F. Hines '10 Mr. L. L. Hinson, Jr. '65 Dr. Alicia M. Ho '10 Mrs. Shelley F. Hobbs '09 Henry Clay Hockaday Estate Mr. Jerry E. Hockaday '61 and Mrs. Brenda Hockaday CMS Harold L. Hockenberry '72 and Mrs. Barbara Hockenberry Ms. Kimberly A. Hocking Rev. Charles F. Hodges '56 and Mrs. Rose M. Hodges Mr. Jack Hodges and Mrs. Bonnie B. Hodges '52 Mr. Joel Hodges '02 Mr. Jonathan W. Hodges Mr. Lester Hodges Mr. Jacob A. Hoff '60 Miss Soudabeh Hojjatzadeh '81 Mr. George S. Holcomb '88 and Mrs. Patricia Holcomb Mr. Robert G. Holcomb '49 and Mrs. Patricia H. Holcomb Mr. Edward L. Holder Mr. John C. Holderfield '94 and

Mrs. Lorena H. Holderfield Mr. Larry O. Holland '75 Dr. Melissa A. Holland '07 Mr. Burt Holland '95 Mr. William E. Holland '77 and Mrs. Nancy Holland Mr. and Mrs.Damon Holliday Ms. Emily F. Holliday '09 Ms. Carolyn J. Holloway Holly Springs Baptist Church Mrs. Virginia L. Holquist Mr. Edmund W. Holt Mrs. Brenda T. Honeycutt '69 Mrs. Debra D. Honeycutt '75, '87 Mr. Kyle B. Honeycutt '94 Mr. Arthur C. Hood and Mrs. Kitty M. Hood '69 Mrs. Betsy R. Hood '63 Mr. Michael G. Hood '70 and Mrs. Ann L. Hood '71 Mrs. Sara G. Hood '39 Mr. Dwight F. Hooker '66 Mr. Andrew S. Hoots '10, '14 Rev. Donald K. Horn '66 and Mrs. Shirley Horn Dr. Barry L. Hornberger '65 and Mrs. Jean U. Hornberger Mr. Dwight Horne Mr. James Stuart Horne Mr. Barry N. Horton '68 and Mrs. Mary A. Horton '68 Mr. Ernest L. Hoskins '76 and Mrs. Robin M. Hoskins '80 Mr. Charles A. Hough, Jr. '68 and Mrs. Linda R. Hough '70 Mrs. Beverley W. Howard Ms. Gayle M. Howard '57 Ms. Sandra K. Howard '78, '81 Howard, Stallings, From & Huts, P.A. Mrs. Alicia B. Howell Mr. Daniel W. Howell '70 and Mrs. May Howell Mr. Durwood P. Howell '84 and Mrs. Joni Howell Rev. Timothy A. Howell '86, '98 and Mrs. Jeanne Howell Mr. William A. Howie Mrs. Elina R. Hoyle Drs. Rick and Lydia Hoyle Ms. Patricia Hoyt Mrs. Fern B. Huband '86 Ms. Carolyn J. Hubbard Mr. Willie F. Hucks '87 Mr. William S. Hudgins '63 Ms. Barbara D. Hudson Mr. Dwayne W. Hudson '70 Mr. Robert G. Hudson '66 and Mrs. Linda F. Hudson '69 Ms. Katelyn Huffman '13 Mr. Byron L. Hughes Mr. Norman L. Hulen '80 and Mrs. Patsy Hulen Ms. Teresa W. Humbert Dr. John C. Humphrey, Jr. '56 Mr. Jim S. Humphreys '85 Mr. Dennis R. Hunt '61 and Mrs. Jeannette A. Hunt Mr. John W. Hunt Mr. Warren C. Hunt, III '67 Ms. Caitlin R. Hunter Mr. Haywood Huntley Ms. Lois J. Hupfeld Mr. and Mrs.Mark Hutchins Mr. Brian J. Hutchinson '08 Mr. John S. Hutchison, Jr. '66 Miss Geraldine Hyatt '82 Dr. Venancio R. Ibarra Indigo Hot Yoga Mr. Decauris Ingram '98 J M Smith Corporation Ms. Melissa R. Jacks Mr. and Mrs.Alan N. Jackson Mr. Billy R. Jackson '60 and Mrs. Rebecca Jackson

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DONOR HONOR ROLL Mr. Edward J. Jackson '82 and Mrs. Eleanor Jackson Ms. Freda D. Jackson '04 Mr. Graham D. Jackson Mr. Joe A. Jackson '14 Mr. Joe W. Jackson '59 and Mrs. Sylvia Jackson Mr. Roy E. Jackson, Jr. '64 and Mrs. Elizabeth R. Jackson '64 Mr. William J. Jackson, Jr. '68 and Mrs. Donna H. Jackson '68 Mr. Charles James and Mrs. Jo K. James '75 Mr. David James '87 Mrs. Jeanette S. James '69 Mrs. Jo K. James '75 and Mr. Charles James Mr. Chadwick C. Jefferds '12 Ms. Shirley M. Jefferds Mr. Robert H. Jenkins '59 and Mrs. Patricia M. Jenkins Ms. Sara S. Jenkins '00 Mr. William D. Jenkins '69 and Mrs. Ruth Jenkins Mr. Wesley C. Jernigan '86 and Mrs. Agnes M. Jernigan '89 Mrs. Shelia J. Jewell '70 Jillian, Inc. John H. High Co., Inc. Ms. Anna M. Johnson Mr. Carl Johnson and Mrs. Brenda F. Johnson '70 Ms. Conchita B. Johnson Dr. Cynthia A. Johnson Mr. D. Elvin Johnson, Jr. '57 and Mrs. Christine Johnson Mr. David L. Johnson '97 Mr. David M. Johnson Mr. Dwight W. Johnson Dr. and Mrs. E. Keith Johnson Rev. H. Michael Johnson '70 and Mrs. Brenda Johnson Mr. Jack H. Johnson, Jr. '64, '65 and Mrs. Ann V. Johnson Ms. Janie T. Johnson Ms. Joeann M. Johnson Dr. Joel L. Johnson '95 CPT John P. Johnson '76 and Mrs. Anita Johnson Mr. John L. Johnson, Jr. '64 and Mrs. Georgianna Johnson Mr. John M. Johnson, Jr. Mrs. Leigh Johnson Ms. Lorraine D. Johnson '84 Mr. Max O. Johnson '60 and Mrs. Elizabeth Johnson Dr. Melissa D. Johnson '97 and Mr. Mark A. Johnson Mr. Nathan M. Johnson, III '73 Mr. Paul R. Johnson Mr. R. Timothy Johnson '61 Mr. Robert L. Johnson '55 and Mrs. Anne Johnson Ms. Shannon H. Johnson Dr. Steven W. Johnson Ms. Sue A. Johnson '86 Mr. Timothy R. Johnson Mr. Walton Johnson and Mrs. Hesta T. Johnson '54 Mr. Warren F. Johnson, Jr. '68 Mr. Christian B. Johnston '79 Mr. Harry B. Johnstone '63 and Mrs. Lynne Johnstone Mr. Amos N. Jones Mr. Anthony C. Jones COL Charles V. Jones '54 and Mrs. Margaret Jones Mr. Donald D. Jones '74 and Mrs. Debbie Jones Mrs. Eleanor H. Jones '55 MAJ Everett A. Jones, III '70 and Mrs. Marian A Jones Mrs. Frances P. Jones '68 Dr. Haydn T. Jones

66

WINTER 2014-15

Mr. James R. Jones '65 and Mrs. Audrey Jones Mr. James W. Jones '65 Miss Jennie L. Jones '85 Mr. John T. Jones '68 and Mrs. Betsy D. Jones '68 Rev. Letaz S. Jones, Sr. '00 Mr. Michael A. Jones '06 Ms. Peggy N. Jones Mr. Robert L. Jones '55 Mr. Walter E. Jones, Jr. '74 and Mrs. Jeannie Jones Ms. Christy R. Jordan Dr. Cameron Jorgenson and Mrs. Kelly Marie Jones Jorgenson '06 Mr. and Mrs.Thomas Joyner Mr. William E. Julian '49 and Mrs. Catherine T. Julian Dr. James M. Jung and Mrs. Patty L. Jung '90 Mr. Billy G. Justice '51 Dr. Victoria S. Kaprielian Dr. Parminder Kaur '05 Mr. Robert R. Kautzman '68 and Mrs. Harriet Kautzman Mr. Richard A. Kavanaugh '73 Ms. Brittany L. Keim '13 Mr. David F. Keith '11 Ms. Patricia A. Raube '03 LTC Edward J. Kelly '90 and Mrs. Phyllis Kelly Mr. James K. Kelly '71 and Mrs. Deborah Kelly Dr. Kimberly E. Kelly Mr. Leo C. Kelly, Jr. '61 and Mrs. Sherry Kelly Mr. Michael C. Kelly Dr. Ronald E. Kendrick Ms. Ma Concepcion Kennard Mr. John D. Kennedy and Mrs. Mary G. Kennedy '58 Mr. Troy W. Kennedy '60 and Mrs. Syble Kennedy Mr. William T. Kennedy '64 and Mrs. Kay Kennedy Mr. Peter T. Kenny Mr. Michael B. Kent, Jr. Mr. Dale L. Kern Mr. Robert J. Kerstetter '91 and Mrs. Roberta Kerstetter Dr. Brian D. Kesling Mr. Dudley F. King, Jr. '51 and Mrs. Iris E. King '52 Ms. Holly J. King '04 Mrs. Joline B. Kinlaw '62 Mr. Richard Z. Kinn '71 and Mrs. Pamela Kinn Mr. Dennis L. Kirby '74 Miss Rachel D. Kirkpatrick Mr. Roger H. Kishman Dr. Sun W. Kiu Mr. Andrew J. Klish Rev. Calvin S. Knight '43 Mr. John C. Knight, Jr. '70 and Mrs. Kristine Knight Mr. John R. Knight Mrs. Mary E. Knight Ms. Stephanie W. Knight Mrs. Teresa B. Knox Mr. Richard K. Koepcke Mr. Gregory R. Koonce Koonce, Wooten & Haywood, LLP Mr. and Mrs.Brian Koopman Mrs. Donnie H. Kopp '65 Mr. George R. Kornegay, Jr. '57 and Mrs. Barbara Kornegay Mr. Warren Kramer and Mrs. Betty O. Kramer '94 Mr. and Mrs.Brian F. Kraus Ms. Melanie L. Krichko Mr. Alexander L. Kristof '68 Dr. Yen-Ping Kuo Dr. Jeffrey A. Kushner Ms. Josephine G. Lackey

Mrs. Susan R. Lackey '14 Mr. Harold Lail and Mrs. Rebecca J. Lail '63 Mrs. Anne B. Lamb '93 and Mr. William D. Lamb LTC Philip W. Lambert '83 Mrs. Martha Lancaster Mr. Rickey B. Lancaster '81 and Mrs. Betty Lancaster Mr. Jefferson T. Landen '69 Dr. Michelle Langaker Mr. James Langdon and Mrs. Lena B. Langdon '70 Dr. Elizabeth H. Lange Mr. Harold Langsam and Mrs. Marcia R. Langsam '92 Ms. Frances L. Langstaff Mr. Andrew M. Langston and Mrs. Elizabeth L. Langston '00, '03 Mr. Billy W. Lanier '54 and Mrs. Diane R. Lanier Mrs. Mary E. Lanier Ms. Stephanie Lanier Mr. John J. Larew, Jr. '71 Dr. Robert Larson Mr. Seth T. Larue Mr. Marlin W. Lasater '79 Mr. Isaac S. Lassiter '70 and Mrs. Elsie B. Lassiter '70 Mr. Joseph P. Latino '11 Mr. Paul G. Lausier '72 and Mrs. Dorothy Lausier Mr. Joseph T. Lawrence '53 and Mrs. Betty S. Lawrence '61 Dr. Katherine E. Lawrence Mr. Lewis B. Lawrence '69 Ms. Nancy B. Lawrence '14 Dr. Tyler J. Laws '09 Ms. Kathy A. Lawton Mrs. Carolyn M. Leach '56 Mr. and Mrs.Jack G. Leader Dr. and Mrs. William Leathers Mr. Edgardo Lebron '93 Mr. Philip M. Ledford Mr. Bill C. Lee Mr. Ernest R. Lee '85 Mr. Erwin W. Lee and Mrs. Edith F. Lee '46 Mr. James E. Lee '09 and Mrs. Brittany Stanley Lee '10, '12 Mr. Jonathan A. Lee '13 Professor and Mrs. Kevin P. Lee Mr. Timothy Lee '69 Mr. Wilson Lee and Mrs. Janet E. Lee '77 Mr. and Mrs.Kerry O. Leeburn Lee's Automotive, Inc. Ms. Nancy I. LeHardy '96 Ms. Mary J. Leonard Leonard Taylor Appraisals, Inc. Mr. Anthony L. Lewis '72 and Mrs. Norma Lewis Mr. and Mrs.Brian D. Lewis Dr. Catherine D. Lewis Mr. Glynn Lewis and Mrs. Carol B. Lewis '68 Dr. Jane T. Lewis '80 Dr. Kimberly P. Lewis Mrs. Kimberly Y. Lewis '13 Mr. Tommy G. Lewis, II Lexis Nexis Mr. Billy J. Liggett Lillington Sports Zone, LLC Mr. and Mrs.Terry Linthicum Mr. Jarred S. Lisec Mr. Matthew R. Little '07 Mr. Michael V. Little '06 Mr. Robert V. Little and Mrs. Robin Little '80 Mrs. Susan K. Litton '87 Mrs. Donna S. Livingston '79 Mrs. Frances L. Lloyd '47 Mrs. Marlene P. Lloyd '71

Mr. Timothy H. Lloyd Dr. Charlotte J. Locklear '10 Ms. Selena S. Long '94 Mr. Thomas H. Long '68 and Mrs. Leslie Long Mr. Thomas L. Long '72 and Mrs. Carolyn H. Long Mr. Josue E. Lopez '09 Allen and Kathryn Lopez Mr. Charles E. Lowe '93 Mrs. Debbie N. Lucas Ms. Sarah Ludington Dr. Andrea L. Luebchow '09 Mr. Donald L. Luquire '96 and Mrs. Sharon Luquire Ms. Anastasia L. Lynch Mr. James W. Lynch '70 and Mrs. Deborah Lynch Dr. Kevin E. Lynch '00 Mr. Timothy J. MacCartney Mr. William J. Macek, Jr. '76 and Mrs. Sandy Macek Dr. Charmeen E. Mack '10, '13 Ms. Jewel R. Madsen Dr. Carolyn H. Maidon Mr. and Mrs.Patrick Maidon Mr. Steven C. Malbon '87 Dr. Elizabeth A. Malcolm '11 Mr. Travis C. Maloy '94, '97 and Mrs. Susan A. Maloy '92 Mr. and Mrs.Shelton E. Malpass Mr. Earl L. Mangum, Jr. and Mrs. Rita C. Mangum '06 Mrs. Emily W. Manhart '03 Mr. Gary T. Mann '72 and Mrs. Elizabeth Mann Mr. and Mrs.Noah Manning Rev. and Mrs. R. D. Manning Mr. Roger T. Manus Mr. and Mrs.James Marek Mr. Thomas L. Mariani Mr. Sidney M. Marion '92 Mr. Frederick G. Marks '66 and Mrs. Sue Marks Mr. Timothy J. Marks Mrs. Ilknur Marlowe '00 Dr. John M. Marr '59 and Mrs. Anna G. Marr '59 Mr. Saul Marroquin '06 Mr. Bradley R. Marshall Mrs. Bonnie A. Marshburn '73 Ms. Rebbecca S. Martel Mr. David J. Martin Ms. Georgia E. Martin Mrs. Teresa W. Martin '74 Mr. William E. Martin '68 Mrs. Veronica Martinez-Gallegos '14 Mary Kay/Bridgett Mazer Mr. and Mrs.Herbert Mashtare Mr. Wilbur T. Massengill '55 and Mrs. Betsy B. Massengill '59 Mr. Robert C. Massie '53 Dr. Tracy L. Mathena '08 Mr. and Mrs.Robert Matheny, Jr. Mr. Howard B. Mathews, Jr. '63 and Mrs. Helen C. Mathews '64 Ms. Meredith Mathis Mr. Craig T. Matthews '76 and Mrs. Denise C. Matthews '75 Mr. David C. Matthews '72 and Mrs. Beth Matthews Ms. Diane P. Matthews Mr. James N. Matthews '66 and Mrs. Billie S. Matthews '65 Mr. William E. Matthews '70 and Mrs. Brenda B. Matthews '69 Ms. Rebecca J. Mattingly Mr. and Mrs.Bob Mattocks Mr. H. Jack Mattox '51 and Mrs. Nina Mattox Mrs. Celeste W. Maus '83 and Mr. Ken Maus Ms. Mary B. May Mr. and Mrs.Daniel P. Maynard

Mrs. Donnicia H. Maynard '73 Mr. Harold W. Maynard '71 and Mrs. Judith H. Maynard Mrs. Christina B. McAteer '97 Mr. and Mrs.Larry McBennett Mr. David L. McCain '88 and Mrs. Pamela W. McCain '89 Mr. and Mrs.Thomas McCarthy Mr. Ricky L. McCarty, Jr. Mr. Bryan H. McChesney, Jr. '73 and Mrs. Mary P. McChesney '68 Ms. Diane E. McClary '09 Mrs. Shelley C. McCray Ms. Jodie K. McDaniel '99 Mrs. Shirley W. McDaniel '54 Mrs. Mary D. McDonald Mr. Ralph E. McElderry '73 Mr. Charles V. McFadden '68 and Mrs. Theresa McFadden Ms. Kathryn W. McGaw Mr. Kevin C. McGeehan Mrs. Janet C. McGrant '81 Mr. Bardrick L. McGuire '08 Rev. Archie G. McKay '73 and Mrs. Frances McKay Ms. Patricia A. McKee '89 Dr. Richard M. McKee Mr. and Mrs.Scott McKellar Mr. Mac McKinney and Mrs. Donna B. McKinney '80 Ms. Thelma McKoy Ms. Jessie L. McLam '66 Ms. Andrea C. McLamb '12 Mr. Brett T. McLamb Mrs. Christy L. McLamb Mr. Johnny S. McLamb '55 and Mrs. Mary Joe G. McLamb '63, '86 Ms. Melissa A. McLamb Mr. William D. McLamb '71 and Mrs. Elaine McLamb Mr. James B. McLaughlin, Jr. Ms. Charlotte M. McLaurin '87 Mr. David D. McLaurin '14 Dr. David McLawhorn '69 Ms. Eva L. McLean Ms. Markita S. McLean Mr. Neil R. McLean '85 Mr. and Mrs.Thad McLean Mr. and Mrs.Mike McLeary Dr. Amber McLendon Mrs. Brenda S. McLeod Mr. Brooks McLeod '03 and Mrs. Mary E. McLeod '02 Mr. Mack E. McLeod Mrs. Margaret D. McLeod '46 Ms. Margaret J. McLeod Mr. William E. McMann, Jr. '66 and Mrs. Jeanne McMann MGYSGT Joseph L. McMillan '97, '99 Mr. Terry L. McMillian '97 Dr. Bruce McNair Mrs. Janice L. McNair Mr. Leon McNair Mr. and Mrs.Thomas McNamara Mrs. Kathleen W. McNeill '10 Rev. Amy M. McPherson '14 Ms. Jodie H. McQuillan '09 Ms. Amanda M. McRae '11 Mr. David W. Meadows, Jr. '71 Mrs. Sarah Mears '14 COL Jere S. Medaris USA '83 and Mrs. Elizabeth Medaris Ms. Anne Meddings Mrs. Catherine C. Meddings Mr. J. William Medford, Jr. Mr. Jerry M. Medlin '57 and Mrs. Libbie Medlin Mr. Samuel W. Meekins, Jr. '80 and Mrs. Robin Meekins Mellow Mushroom Melting Pot Mr. Joe Melvin, Jr. and Mrs. Irene B. Melvin '98


Mr. Dennis J. Mennella and Ms. Mary A. Smith '01 Mennonite Foundation, Inc. Dr. John C. Mero Miss Kaye E. Merrell '69 Dr. Timothy D. Metz and Mrs. Tracie J. Metz '97 Mr. David A. Michael, Jr. '72 and Mrs. Elizabeth Michael Mr. Steven B. Middleton '76 Mr. Bradley S. Miller '97 Mr. Brian A. Miller '96 Mr. Dan Miller and Dr. Julia S. Miller '66 Mr. Jerry H. Miller '71 and Mrs. Deborah F. Miller '73 Ms. Jianfeng W. Miller Mr. Jonathan M. Miller '86 and Mrs. Angela H. Miller '88 Mr. Robert C. Miller '74 Mr. Telford A. Miller Mr. William J. Miller '53 and Mrs. Rudine Miller Dr. Elizabeth P. Mills '98 and Mr. Howard A. Mills Mr. F. Fetzer Mills Mr. Richard D. Mills '02 Mrs. Susan Y. Mills '69 Mrs. Judy P. Milton Mr. Terrance L. Minnick '69 and Mrs. Connie B. Minnick '70 Mr. Dan P. Minnis '71 and Mrs. Marie Minnis Mrs. Kristin R. Minor Mr. Robert F. Mishoe, Jr. '73 and Mrs. Ann Mishoe Mrs. Marshale M. Mitchell '50 and Mr. Wiley F. Mitchell, Jr. Mr. Pascal A. Molinard Ms. Louisa Monroe '14 Dr. Ronald L. Montgomery '71 Rev. Jesse W. Mooney, Jr. '91 and Mrs. Peggy Mooney Mr. John R. Mooney '73 and Mrs. Cecile L. Mooney '73, '86 Col. Alan J. Moore '78 Dr. Alan D. Moore, Jr. '80 and Mrs. Mila J. Moore '80 Mr. Alan T. Moore '04 Dr. and Mrs. David G. Moore Mrs. Gene J. Moore '80 Mr. James M. Moore, Jr. '75 Miss Katlyn Moore Mr. Scott R. Moore Mr. Thomas W. Moore Mr. Wallis S. Moore '68 and Mrs. Marilyn L. Moore Mr. William Moore and Mrs. Lydia M. Moore '02, '14 Mrs. Doris A. Moore-Russell '14 Mr. Mark Moraitakis and Mrs. Dimitra Z. Moraitakis '93 Mr. Hernan Morales, Jr. '94 and Mrs. Maritza Morales Mr. Michael A. Moran, Jr. '58 Mr. Robert P. Morehead, III '72 Ms. Doris R. Morgan '43 Mr. John M. Morgan, III '72 Mr. Lee E. Morgan and Mrs. Gabrielle F. Morgan '01, '12 Mr. Lee Morgan and Mrs. Janet L. Morgan '82 Mr. William J. Morgan '10 Mr. Billy Morris Mr. Charles E. Morris '73 and Mrs. Catherine J. Morris Mr. Eugene Morris '65 Mr. Marvin E. Morris, Jr. '71 and Mrs. Elizabeth Morris Mr. Randall Morris and Mrs. Tracie L. Morris '94 Mr. and Mrs.Perry Morrison, Jr. Morrison Law Firm, PLLC Mr. James P. Morrow '71 and Mrs. Sandy Morrow

Dr. Phillip J. Morrow and Mrs. Susan L. Morrow '00, '07 Dr. Jason M. Moss Mr. Kenneth A. Moss '75 and Mrs. Cynthia B. Moss '77 Mr. Robert G. Moss '64 and Mrs. Carol Moss Ms. Jessica D. Moulton Ms. Traci P. Moxley Mr. and Mrs.Laurence Moyer Mr. and Mrs.Greg Muckler Dr. Mary M. Muhlig '73 Mr. Hugh G. Mumford '65 and Mrs. Agnes S. Mumford '66 Mrs. Angela L. Murphy '84, '96 Ms. Joy T. Murphy Ms. Cynthia J. Murray Dr. Andrew J. Muzyk Ms. Melanie F. Myers Mr. Woodrow H. Myers '67 Mr. and Mrs.Shirley A. Myrick Mr. Thurman D. Nance and Mrs. Mary Ann L. Nance '68 National Christian Foundation-North Carolina Ms. Lou Naylor '82 NC Aquariums NC Retired Governmental Employees Association NCSU Center Stage/Arts NCSU TRIO Programs Mr. C. Edward Neal '68 Rev. P. Dudley Neal '70 and Mrs. Diane G. Neal '72 Rev. J. Marshall Neathery '65 and Mrs. Kay C. Neathery Mr. Keith Neighbors '59 and Mrs. Faye Neighbors Ms. Dawn S. Neighbors '13 and Mr. Jesse C. Neighbors '05 Mr. Marvin E. Nells '07 Mr. and Mrs.Benjamin E. Nelms Mr. Frank L. Nelson '69 and Mrs. Ellen Nelson Dr. George Nemecz New Beginnings Behavioral Health Services, PLLC Mr. Robert T. Newman '85, '93 and Mrs. Joyce Newman Mr. Robert E. Newnam '64 Ms. Penny M. Nicholes '77 Mr. Donald J. Nichols '91 Ms. Carrie A. Nitz Mr. Claude D. Nix, Jr. '66 and Mrs. Toni Nix Mrs. Susan B. Nixon '89 and Mr. Keith W. Nixon Mr. Billy Noble and Mrs. Peggy N. Noble '58 Dr. W. Matthew Nolin '10 Norfolk Southern Foundation Mr. James D. Nowell Mrs. Julia L. Nugen '07 Ms. Christine T. Nunn Mr. Robert H. Nunnenkamp '02 Sidonie Nupa Dr. Ann M. Nye Oak Dale Baptist Church Rev. M. Wayne Oakes '67 and Mrs. Nancy H. Oakes '70 Mr. Alton A. Oakley '61 and Mrs. Loretta B. Oakley Mr. Grayson D. Oakley '12 Mr. David C. Oates Ms. Kristen Oberg Mr. Christopher O'Connor LTC Charles R. Odom '62, '64 and Mrs. Carla L. Odom '62 Mr. John D. Odom, III '71 and Mrs. Angela T. Odom '74 Ms. Mildred C. O'Kelley '55 Mr. Charles B. Opel Mr. David H. Orr Mrs. Elizabeth Orr '61 Ms. Lisa L. Orr '88

W W W. C A M P B E L L . E D U / M A G A Z I N E

Mrs. Deborah S. Orrell '70 and Mr. Robert H. Orrell, III Dr. Ann M. Ortiz Mrs. Annette N. Osborne '86, '89 Mrs. Dora W. Osborne '63 Osborne Revocable Trust Ms. Jessica L. Osnoe '07 Mr. Chester Outland, Jr. '66 Mr. Christopher C. Overman '94 and Mrs. Dawn D. Overman '99 Mr. Ray C. Overstreet '69 Mr. George E. Owen '60 and Mrs. Patricia Owen Mr. Stephen C. Owen '98 Ms. Alilah F. Owens '99 Mr. Jack Owens and Mrs. Margaret D. Owens '68 Dr. John M. Owens '66 and Mrs. Deloris B. Owens '67 Rev. Joshua K. Owens '11, '14 Mr. and Mrs.Kevin Owens Dr. Monica Sandoval '08 and Mr. Christopher L. Oxendine Mr. Kevin M. Ozee P & D Sales, Inc./Rainbow Mr. and Mrs.Jerry H. Padgett Mr. John T. Page, Jr. '42 and Mrs. Eleanor Page Mr. John W. Page, Jr. '94 and Mrs. Rhonda D. Page '09 Mr. Richmond H. Page, Sr. '70 and Mrs. Cheryl Page Pairs & Spares Sunday School Class Ms. Janice J. Panza Dr. Charlotte Paolini Papa Murphy's Ms. Lisa R. Pappas Mr. Clay Parikh and Mrs. Kathryn J. Parikh '93 Mr. and Mrs.Bill Parish PARISH GROUP Mr. W. M. Park '52 and Mrs. Mary Park Mrs. Amanda M. Parker Mrs. Katheryn K. Parker Ms. Carolyn O. Parker '87 Mr. David V. Parker '69 and Mrs. Phyllis C. Parker Mr. Donald R. Parker '68 Mr. Douglas Parker and Mrs. Debra M. Parker '78 Mr. Earl R. Parker '50 Mrs. Janet R. Parker '83 Mr. Jim Parker and Mrs. Susan W. Parker '70 Dr. Johnny R. Parker '49 and Mrs. Lucinda S. Parker '50 Ms. Tina Marie Parker Mr. and Mrs.Wilbur Parker Parker Grain Co., Inc. Dr. Courtney Parker-Long '03 Ms. Karen L. Parkes '05, '11 Parkland Farm Miss Kelli B. Hall Mr. Charles W. Parrish '60 Ms. Pamela Parrish Mr. William W. Parrish Mr. Glenn T. Parrott '72 and Mrs. Jane L. Parrott '72 Ms. Jean B. Parrott Mrs. Rosemary M. Parten '76 and Mr. Billy F. Parten Mrs. Pat K. Paschal '53 Ms. Vita P. Paschal Mr. Jeffrey C. Paszkiewicz '03, '07 and Mrs. April M. Paszkiewicz '09 Mr. Kenneth G. Patterson '03, '04 Paws in the City Ms. Margaret T. Payne Ms. Hazel J. Pearson Mr. Johnny R. Pearson '14 Ms. Jane A. Peele CPT Jerry W. Peele '72

Mr. Willis M. Peele '69 and Mrs. Sharmaine Peele Mrs. Teresa D. Penegar '97 Dr. Nicholas Pennings Mr. and Mrs.David H. Penny Dr. Donald N. Penny '70 and Mrs. Joanne S. Penny '71 Ms. Sarah J. Penny '86 and Mr. Connie Jordan Mr. Clay Perdue '70 and Mrs. Carol Perdue Perferred Construction Service Rev. Danita M. Perkins '01 Dr. Scott L. Perkins Mr. Ronald A. Perry '68 and Mrs. Diane Perry Dr. Gina D. Peterman Mr. and Mrs.Drew Peterson Mr. Wayne Peterson and Mrs. Venita C. Peterson '67 Mr. Allen Petrie '66 Pfizer Foundation, Inc. Mr. Michael W. Phelps and Mrs. Susan M. Phelps '71 Mr. William P. Phillippi '11, '13 Mr. and Mrs.Burt Phillips Mr. Jeffrey S. Phillips Ms. Joanne H. Phillips Mrs. Margaret W. Phillips '67 Mr. Robert Phillips and Mrs. Nancy M. Phillips '72 Mr. James M. Pierce, Jr. '65 and Mrs. Betsy S. Pierce Mr. Judge A. Pierce '60 Mr. and Mrs.Mark S. Pierce Mrs. Patricia P. Pierce '64 and Mr. Robert Pierce Mr. Steven M. Pierce '01 and Mrs. Traci T. Pierce '97 Mr. William L. Pierce, Jr. '80 and Mrs. Rebecca B. Pierce '81 Mr. Eric R. Pierson '97 and Mrs. Jennifer H. Pierson '96 Mrs. Mary U. Pike Mr. Carson H. Pittman, Jr. and Mrs. Betty M. Pittman '70 Mr. Thomas A. Pittman '68, '79 and Mrs. Jeanne M. Pittman '68 Mr. Jimmy R. Plater '01 and Mrs. Geralline E. Plater Ms. Callie L. Pleasant Mrs. Susan B. Plesha '75 Plow and Hearth Mr. and Mrs.William W. Plyler Mr. and Mrs.David Poe Rev. Edwin L. Poindexter '78 and Mrs. Betsy Poindexter Mr. Benjamin L. Polland '13 Ms. Karla R. Pomilio-Hancock '06 Mr. Ronald Ponzar '69 and Mrs. Kathryn G. Ponzar Dr. Lejon Poole Mr. Melvin Poole '89 and Mrs. Brenda Poole Pooly, Inc. Mr. Alan K. Pope '97 and Mrs. Dawn N. Pope '97 Mr. Bobby W. Pope '64 and Mrs. Margaret W. Pope '69 Mr. Christian D. Pope Ms. Lorrie Pope Mr. William P. Pope, III '93 and Mrs. Kaye Pope Mr. William R. Pope '55 and Mrs. Sybil Pope Mr. Daniel W. Potter Mr. Albert Potthoff Mrs. Alice Potthoff Mr. William B. Potts '65 and Mrs. JoAnne Potts Dr. Jonathon D. Pouliot '10 Ms. Anne E. Powell Dr. Douglas W. Powell Ms. Iris Powell Dr. Janet L. Powell

Mr. Jon S. Powell '98 and Mrs. Lisa L. Powell Mr. Frank P. Powers, Jr. '72 and Mrs. Nancy Powers Ms. Andrea J. Pratt '05 Mr. James B. Preston '71 Mr. and Mrs.Scott Preston Mr. Foster F. Prevatt, III '63 and Mrs. Margie Prevatt Rev. Baxter Prevatte, Jr. '66 and Mrs. Shelby J. Prevatte Mr. Charles L. Price '87 and Mrs. Betty W. Price '86 Mrs. Frances H. Price Mr. Gordon L. Price, Jr. and Mrs. Anne N. Price '66 Rev. David W. Priddy '10, '14 Ms. Mikaela A Priddy '11 Ms. Meghan Pridemore Mr. James Priest Mr. William M. Priestley '12 Mr. Frank Prince and Mrs. Wilda Y. Prince '56 Mr. Robert Pringle '73 and Mrs. Myrtle Pringle Mr. Jimmy A. Privette '71 Mr. Julian B. Prosser Ms. Kimberly E. Pruett '10 Ms. Joyce G. Pulliam '51 Mr. William G. Pulliam '71 and Mrs. Anne Pulliam QROS, LLC Mr. Charles R. Rackley '65 and Mrs. Patricia Rackley Dr. William H. Radford '76 and Mrs. Rebecca A. Radford '78 Mr. Harvey Ragan and Mrs. Sarah E. Ragan '65 Mr. Hector N. Ray '01 Mrs. Jerri I. Ray '60 Mr. James T. Ray '70 and Mrs. Martha Ray Mr. William E. Ray and Mrs. Beth J. Ray '76, '81 Ray Price Harley-Davidson Mr. James A. Raye, Sr. and Mrs. Tisher L. Raye '02 Mr. James Raynor and Mrs. Nancy L. Raynor '80 Dr. Kayla B. Raynor '11, '13 Ms. Lesia C. Raynor Mr. Robert A. Raynor, Jr. '92 and Mrs. Smith R. Raynor Mrs. Linda G. Read '67 Ms. Denise T. Reardon '07 Mr. and Mrs.Steven F. Rector Mr. and Mrs.Hershell Reddeck Mr. William H. Redmond '71 Ms. Darla E. Reed Mr. Danny Reeves '65 and Mrs. Barbara D. Reeves '68 Ms. Maynette Regan '81 Jarett D. Reid '10 Mr. Robert O. Reid '49 Ms. Rhonda Reimann Dr. and Mrs. Howard Reisner Ms. Gloria L. Rendon '13 Rev. Bobby J. Revels '59 and Mrs. Ruby Revels Mr. Charles A. Revels '06 Revolver Boutique Mr. Evan J. Rey Mr. Gerald B. Rhodes '79 and Mrs. Teresa Rhodes Ms. Susan S. Rhodes Mr. Randall B. Rhyne '08 and Mrs. Robyn Rhyne Mrs. Sarah P. Ribeiro '65 and Joaquim S. Ribeiro Ms. Irene A. Rice Mr. James N. Rice '07 Dr. Wesley D. Rich '01 and Mrs. Laura T. Rich '02 Richard D. Sparkman & Associates, P.A.

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DONOR HONOR ROLL Ms. Bonita H. Richie '94 and SGT Scott Leber Mr. Richard Ricks and Mrs. Linda R. Ricks '76 Mr. William N. Rigsbee, Jr. '64 and Mrs. Audrey Rigsbee SMSGT Sandy G. Riley '68 Mr. Ronnie Ring and Mrs. Miriam P. Ring '80 Mr. Javier A. Rivera '07, '13 Riverside Baptist Church Inc. Mrs. Erin W. Robbins Mr. Gregory M. Robbins Mr. John W. Robbins '51 Mrs. Judith L. Robbins Mr. S. A. Robbins '49 and Mrs. Anne B. Robbins '49 Robert L. Donnelly Trust Miss Ann W. Roberts '67 Mrs. Carey L. Roberts '99 and Mr. Timothy F. Roberts Dr. Jan W. Roberts '64 Mr. John E. Roberts '79 Mrs. Pamela S. Roberts Mr. and Mrs.Paul Roberts Dr. W. Mack Roberts '66, '92 and Mrs. Ella R. Roberts Ms. Mary C. Robertson Mr. Albert C. Robinson '03 Dr. Heather A. Robinson '13 Mrs. Jo N. Robinson '76 Mr. Robert E. Robinson, III '84 and Mrs. Lisa Robinson Mr. Wayne Robinson and Mrs. Nancy K. Robinson '85 Ms. Stephanie M. Robles Mr. John D. Rock '66 and Mrs. Shan P. Rock Mr. and Mrs.Daniel M. Rodgers Mr. Clayton Rodgers, Jr. '68 and Mrs. Susan H. Rodgers Mr. Thomas B. Rodman and Mrs. Joyce G. Rodman '74 Mrs. Betty W. Rogers '64 and Mr. Ruben C. Rogers Dr. John S. Rogers '70 and Mrs. Joyce T. Rogers '66, '68 Mr. Leonard O. Rogers, Jr. '71 and Mrs. Deborah H. Rogers Mr. Noel B. Rogers, Jr. '97 Mrs. Robyn W. Rogers Mrs. Barbara G. Rogerson '60 Mrs. Louise B. Rollins '40 Ms. Betty P. Rose Mrs. Ellen W. Rose '07 Mr. G. Harold Rose '66 and Mrs. Gladys C. Rose Mr. Larry P. Rose '67 and Mrs. Mary R. Rose '69 Mr. Stephen M. Rose '76 and Mrs. Valerie Rose Mr. Johnny E. Ross Dr. Richard L. Ross '68 and Mrs. Minnie B. Ross '69 Mr. Ronnie L. Ross '80 and Mrs. Elizabeth B. Ross '83 Mr. William L. Ross, III '70 Mrs. Donna L. Rosser-Sovereign '70 and Mr. Gerald Sovereign Ms. Alicia E. Roth Dr. Lorae T. Roukema Miss Sadie E. Rountree '66 Mr. Arthur T. Rouse, III '70 Mr. Hugh E. Rouse '69 and Mrs. Stella Rouse Mr. and Mrs.Dale Routh Ms. Whitney R. Routh '13 Ms. Julianne D. Rowland Mr. Michael J. Roy Ms. Tina I. Royal Ms. Rhonda G. Royster Mr. Paul R. Ruddock '75 and Mrs. Jo Ruddock Mr. and Mrs.Jim Rudisill, Jr. Ms. Cynthia L. Ruester '97 Dr. Kathey F. Rumley '94

68

WINTER 2014-15

Mr. and Mrs.Stephen P. Rush Mr. and Mrs.Mark R. Russell Ms. Jessie L. Ryals Mr. Douglas J. Sackett '11 Saddletree Stables, Inc. Mrs. Violeta Saenz and Mr. Alberto A. Saenz '75 Ms. April J. Sahly Mr. Carl H. Salmon '65 Mr. Raymond D. Salmon '70 Mr. Nathan Salsbury Mrs. Betty J. Sanders Mr. Bradford H. Sanders '02 Mr. Donald M. Sanders '69 Mr. Paul R. Sanders '95 and Mrs. Pam Sanders Ms. Chacy R. Sanfilippo Miss Adelaide Sanford '62 Mr. Steven W. Sargent and Mrs. Nikki K. Sargent '96 Ms. Banu K. Sarigol Mr. Kursat Sarigol '63 and Mrs. Linda S. Sarigol Ms. Susan J. Sauer '83 Mr. John R. Saunders, Jr. '66 Mr. Matthew W. Sawchak Mr. David Sawicki Mr. Charles E. Saylor, Jr. '93 and Mrs. Myra Saylor Mr. Jeff M. Scace '04 Mr. Scott L. Scales '86 and Mrs. Lori K. Scales Mrs. Elva Scarborough Mr. and Mrs.Aaron Schapker Ms. Rebecca C. Schlichter Dr. Kaitlyn A. Schmid '13 Mr. Robert J. Schmid '04 School of Education Faculty and Staff Mr. Michael S. Schriver '98 Dr. Donald N. Schroeder Mrs. Deborah F. Schronce '72 Mr. Steven D. Schuster Schwab Fund for Charitable Giving Ms. Darlene Sconce Mrs. Ellen G. Scott '70 Mr. Jesse B. Scott, Jr. '88 Mr. John E. Scott '94 Mrs. Rachel C. Scott '68 Mr. George C. Scruggs and Mrs. Betty K. Scruggs '71 Ms. Ellen T. Sears Mr. Gregory P. Sears '80 and Mrs. Janet Sears Mr. Robert A. Seefeldt '91 Mr. Bertis H. Sellers '50 and Mrs. Carol Sellers Hon. James L. Senter '66 Mr. and Mrs.Wesley B. Senti Mr. Vincent R. Sepulveda '05 Mr. Anthony C. Sessoms '82 and Mrs. Cheryl Sessoms Mr. William R. Seymour '78 and Mrs. Cynthia Seymour Mr. Bailis Y. Shamun '68 and Mrs. Sylvia Shamun Dr. Heidi Shearin Mr. Gary B. Sheetz '79 Mrs. Sharon Shehdan '84 Mr. Andrew A. Shell '97 and Mrs. Allison B. Shell '00 Mr. H. Grady Shelley '59 and Mrs. Rebecca W. Shelley '59 Mrs. Rubelle H. Shelley '57 Dr. Anthony C. Shelton '12 Dr. Pamela S. Shelton '91 Ms. Shirley Sherman Mr. James S. Shew and Mrs. Vivian P. Shew '68 Mr. Benjamin L. Shoemaker and Mrs. Adelaide T. Shoemaker '64 Rev. Michael Shook Mr. Philip M. Shope '64 and Mrs. Faye Shope Mrs. Mary Lea Shreve '46 Mr. and Mrs.Michael Shrieves

Mr. Donald Shropshire and Mrs. Mary R. Shropshire '46 Mr. Charles A. Sidawi '58 Dr. Caroline Preas Siemer '12 Mrs. Ginger A. Sikes Mr. James W. Silvester '68 Ms. Connie R. Simmons '03 Ms. Catherine A. Simonson Ms. Barbara Simpson Ms. Courtney N. Simpson Mr. John P. Simpson Ms. Sarah R. Simpson '99 Dr. Prabha Singh '10 Mrs. Alice B. Sink '70 Mr. Jason W. Skaggs '03 and Mrs. Karie R. Skaggs '02 Mr. Charles A. Skinner, Jr. '66 Mr. James W. Slappey '70 and Mrs. Sylvia Y. Slappey '70 Mr. Randy Slate and Mrs. Roslyne T. Slate '70 Mr. and Mrs.Jonathan Slaton Mr. Michael G. Slattery Ms. Patricia C. Slaughter Ms. Jean-Anne Slaughterbeck Mr. and Mrs.Tom Small Ms. Angelyn P. Smith Mr. and Mrs.Breck Smith Mr. Carl D. Smith and Mrs. Elaine D. Smith '71 Ms. Caroline D. Smith Mr. Clifton H. Smith '04 and Mrs. Amy T. Smith '00 Mr. David R. Smith Mr. David R. Smith and Mrs. Betty Jo M. Smith '00 Mr. Dennis R. Smith '84 and Mrs. Martha L. Smith Mr. Don A. Smith '86 Dr. Grover A. Smith '51 Mr. Harold R. Smith, II '86 and Mrs. Gina L. Smith '91 Mr. James E. Smith '89 and Mrs. Rebecca D. Smith '89 Dr. Jennifer D. Smith '02 and Mr. Matthew Smith Mrs. Joyce C. Smith '59 and Mr. Chris Smith Ms. Judith E. Smith '64 Mrs. Judy C. Smith Mr. Lance D. Smith Mr. Larry C. Smith '88 and Mrs. Tammy B. Smith Mrs. Lisa G. Smith '07 Dr. and Mrs. Michael R. Smith Mr. Mickey Smith and Mrs. Margaret P. Smith '67 Mr. Phillip Smith and Mrs. Wanda B. Smith '59 Mr. Rayshawn Smith and Mrs. Alisha L. Smith '13 Mr. Robert Smith and Mrs. Carol V. Smith '66 Ms. Sherry L. Smith Mr. and Mrs.Stephen Smith Mr. Thomas W. Smith '42 and Mrs. Ann H. Smith Mr. William G. Smith '64 and Mrs. Linda A. Smith Mrs. Julie E. Smith-Hamilton '96 and Mr. Ernest D. Hamilton '10, '11 Mr. Ed Smoot and Mrs. Julia L. Smoot '77 Mr. John G. Snuggs Mr. Richard W. Snyder '73 and Mrs. Ruth Snyder Mr. Vernon G. Snyder, III '80 and Mrs. Jessica F. Snyder Ms. Wilda A. Snyder Mr. Ibrahim M. Sobeih '78 Mr. Troyce J. Solley Mr. H. L. Sorrell, Jr. and Mrs. Madeline G. Sorrell '64 Mrs. Yvonne T. South '65 Mr. Richard D. Sparkman Mr. C. J. Spears, Jr. '68 Mr. Randy T. Spears

Mr. Charles Speegle and Mrs. Bonnie B. Speegle '61 Mrs. Catherine H. Speight '59 and Mr. James A. Speight Mr. Jesse A. Spell '80 and Mrs. Renee F. Spell '79 Ms. Laura C. Spell Mr. Johnny B. Spence, Jr. '70 and Mrs. Carol R. Spence '80, '84 Mr. Timothy A. Spence '62, '64 and Mrs. Betty S. Spence '62 Ms. Gloria A. Spivey Mrs. Margaret C. Spivey '55 Mr. Martin R. Spivey Mr. Marvin M. Spivey and Mrs. Treva O. Spivey '70 Mr. Orin R. Spivey '59 Mr. Roger C. Spivey '57 and Mrs. Mae B. Spivey Mr. Seth C. Spradley '13 and Mrs. Katherine C. Spradley '03 Mr. Brian L. Spradling '95 and Mrs. Heather G. Spradling '94 Mr. Charles G. Springle '71 and Mrs. Donna Springle Mrs. Margaret C. Springston '58 and Mr. Rex Springston Mr. and Mrs.John N. Stacy Dr. W. R. Stafford, Jr., MD Mr. Stanley R. Stager, III Mr. Robert Stahl and Mrs. Angela L. Stahl '87 Mr. H. Craige Stallings '69 and Mrs. Mary N. Stallings '70, '71 Mr. James V. Stancil and Mrs. Jennie P. Stancil '74 Dr. Jaclyn Stanke Mr. Connell Staton Mr. Phillip D. Staton Mr. Thomas W. Steed, III '83 Ms. Annette J. Steele '05 Ms. Pamela Steele Mr. Wayne D. Steffen '74 and Mrs. Cynthia Steffen Mr. Dewey L. Stephens '71 Mrs. Ann R. Stephenson '70, '90 Mr. and Mrs.Daniel Stephenson Mr. Grady O. Stephenson, Jr. '83 Mr. Harry D. Stephenson '54 and Mrs. Bobbi H. Stephenson Mr. Jackie H. Stephenson '60 Mr. Randy L. Stephenson '76 and Mrs. Rhonda Stephenson Mr. Timothy D. Stephenson Mr. Allen Stewart and Mrs. Sandra M. Stewart '70 Mr. Elmer W. Stewart '86 and Mrs. Julia Carol W. Stewart '95 Mr. Tommy Stewart '68 and Mrs. Linda W. Stewart '81 Mr. Kenneth A. Stewart '66 and Mrs. Veronica F. Stewart Mrs. Mary J. Stewart '63 Marshall and Jan Stewart Ms. Wanda F. Stewart Mr. William W. Stewart, Jr. '06 Stewart's Tire Service Sandra Stillman-Alvin '14 Mrs. Kristen A. Stiltner Mrs. Patricia P. Stitt '73 Ms. Brittney A. Stoll '10 Mr. Foy C. Stone '69 Stoney's Produce, Inc. Mr. George B. Strattner '72 Dr. Jutta M. Street Mr. Deloit Strickland '63 Ms. Donna R. Strickland Mr. Edward G. Strickland '91, '94 and Mrs. JoAnn F. Strickland Mr. and Mrs.Gary Strickland Mr. Kent Strickland and Mrs. Judy S. Strickland '63 Mr. John L. Strickland Mr. Jon D. Strickland '99 Mr. Norman S. Strickland and Mrs. Betty Ruth J. Anderson-Strickland '60 Ms. Sandra D. Strickland '73

Mr. Philip K. Strobel '71 Mr. Donald C. Strother '10 and Mrs. Jane B. Strother '73 Mr. Cecil E. Stroud '63 and Mrs. Catherine S. Stroud '63 Ms. Ashley E. Stryffeler '10, '12 Mr. Michael T. Stryffeler '10 Mr. and Mrs.David Stutts Mr. Derrick J. Summers SunTrust Bank-New Jersey Mrs. Karyn Suppes Dr. Charles W. Surles, Jr. '55 Mr. Donnie R. Surles '69 and Mrs. Karen E. Surles '66 Dr. Beth S. Sutton Mrs. Kimberly H. Sutton '88 Ms. Martha S. Sutton '96 Mr. Jayson Swain and Mrs. Sarah Q. Swain '05 Mr. Ned D. Swanner, Jr. '91 Mr. Kenneth W. Swayze, Jr. '71 and Mrs. Susan Swayze Mr. Charles A. Swindell '65 and Mrs. Ronda Swindell Ms. Karen L. Swing '09 Sylvan Learning Center Ace It Mr. Rick Symonds and Mrs. Kimberly G. Symonds '96 Mr. Kenneth L. Tabor and Mrs. Sandra H. Tabor '71 Ms. Shonta L. Tabourn '93, '95 Mr. Shintaro Tahara Ms. Mary Talley '85 Mrs. Charity L. Tart Mr. Joseph L. Tart '69, '82 and Mrs. Hannah C. Tart '69 Mr. Joshua M. Tate '12 Ms. Brooke J. Taxakis Mr. Bruce E. Taylor '70 and Mrs. Cynthia S. Taylor Mr. Leonard W. Taylor '70 and Mrs. Luanne Taylor CPT Max E. Taylor USA (Ret.) '73 and Mrs. Bobbie Taylor Ms. Olga M. Taylor '13, '14 Ms. Rachel L. Taylor '12 Mr. and Mrs.Robert Taylor COL and Mrs. William H. Taylor Mrs. Terri Taylor-Carpenter '79 Mr. Joe W. Teague '55 Ms. Teresa R. Teague Ms. Deborah G. Temple Mr. Jackson H. Temple, Sr. and Mrs. Janie P. Temple '89 Mr. William N. Terrill '70 Mr. Edward J. Tew '71 and Mrs. Jacqueline M. Tew '72 Mr. Thomas W. Tew and Mrs. Barbara D. Tew '70 Mr. Charles L. Thaggard Jr. '76, '85 Mr. Harold W. Tharrington '58 and Mrs. Carolyn M. Tharrington '58 Virginia Tharrington Mr. Patrick Thatcher and Mrs. Caroline M. Thatcher '96 Mr. William F. Thetford '00 Mr. Robert N. Thigpen '96, '00 Mr. Carl Thomas and Mrs. Jennifer S. Thomas '03 Mr. Christopher P. Thomas and Dr. Michelle L. Suhan-Thomas Mr. James Thomas Mr. Jeffery K. Thomas Ms. Jessica K. Thomas Ms. Lachante Thomas '13 Mr. Mack J. Thomas, II and Mrs. Renee D. Thomas '88 Mrs. Mary Jewel A. Thomas '52 Mrs. Peggy S. Thomas Mr. Peter O. Thomas Dr. Sarah Z. Thomas Dr. John A. Thomason Mr. Don M. Thompson '67 Mr. Eric L. Thompson '94 and Mrs. Faye E. Thompson '02 Mr. Gary N. Thompson


Mr. and Mrs.Justin Thompson Mr. Kevin Thompson Mr. Lester H. Thompson and Mrs. Annie N. Thompson '73 Mr. Zack Thompson and Mrs. Eugenia B. Thompson '47 Dr. David W. Thornton '79, '86 Mr. Elmer H. Thursby '73 and Mrs. Melody Thursby Mr. Granville M. Tilghman '67 and Mrs. Dianne C. Tilghman '71 Ms. Julie K. Till Mrs. Blythe B. Tillett '66 Mr. Daniel R. Tilly Mr. Stephen D. Timberlake, V '72 Mr. Walter L. Tippett, Sr. '61 Tir Na Nog Ms. Janis K. Todd Mr. and Mrs.Urs Tolotti Mr. Gregory Tompkins '12 Mr. and Mrs.Philip Tonnesen Mr. George F. Towery '65 and Mrs. Dorann L. Towery '65 Dr. Mary L. Townsend Mr. and Mrs.Mark Trail Ms. Elizabeth Tramm Mr. Peter Trencansky and Mrs. Julie A. Trencansky '05 Mr. Charles T. Trent, Sr. '63 Triangle Book Club Triangle Compounding Pharmacy Ms. Alison Trinkle Mr. Gilbert A. Tripp, Jr. '62, '64 and Mrs. Linda E. Tripp '62 Tri-State Distribution, Inc. Ms. Katherine R. Trotter Ms. Anita Jo K. Troxler Dr. Sherry R. Truffin Mr. William Tuck Dr. John A. Tumblin, Jr. '42 and Mrs. Alice P. Tumblin Mr.Tommy Tunstall '62 and Mrs. Jean C. Tunstall '05 Mrs. Judy S. Tunstall Mrs. Donna E. Turlington Mr. Joseph L. Turlington '69 and Mrs. Lalia Turlington Mr. Kenneth J. Turnage and Mrs. Ada L. Turnage '88 Mr. Zachary Turnage '13 Rev. Alphonse Turner, Jr. '11 and Mrs. Roberta I. Turner Mr. David J. Turner '65 Mrs. Dora H. Turner '67 Mr. Jarrad Turner Mr. Joseph V. Turner, III '63 Mrs. Martha B. Turner '71 Rev. William C. Turner '10 Mr. Jimmie E. Tutor '65 Mr. Louis B. Twiford '59 Mr. John C. Tyler '72 Ms. Jacqueline D. Tylka Mr. Leamon W. Tyndall '64 and Mrs. Patricia Tyndall Mrs. Patti N. Tyndall Mr. and Mrs.William D. Tyrl Ms. Janet K. Tysor '04 Mr. Larkin N. Tysor

Mr. Charles B. Upshaw, III Mr. Jesse L. Uzzell '75 Ms. Dara T. Van Deusen Mr. James M. Van Dorn Dr. Kenneth L. Vandergriff Ms. Eloisa Vargas-Ruiz Mr. Umesh C. Varma Mr. Charles F. Vaughan, Jr. '71, '04 and Mrs. Jo Ann D Vaughan Mr. Raymond L. Vaughn, Jr. '66 and Mrs. Thetis Vaughn Mr. Robert L. Vaughn '59 and Mrs. Marie C. Vaughn '59 CPT Richard Velazquez '93, '96 and Mrs. Annette Velazquez Ms. Rosa G. Velazquez Mr. John H. Verrill '69 Mr. Milton F. Vick, Jr. '73 and Mrs. Sarah W. Vick '73 Mr. Paul Vilandre and Mrs. Jo Anne R. Vilandre '59 Mr. Alton G. Vincent '68 and Mrs. Charlotte R. Vincent Ms. Meagan L. Vizard '14 Mr. and Mrs.Timothy Vogt Mr. and Mrs.Edward J. Vosnock Waccamaw Pearls Mr. William C. Wade LTC Alvin P. Wadsworth, Jr. '89, '92 and Mrs. Sherri R. Wadsworth '90 Mr. John M. Waff '68 Rev. and Mrs. Bill Wakefield Ms. Janice L. Wakefield Mr. Harvey W. Walden Mr. Ricky O. Walden Dr. Donna E. Waldron Mrs. Beverly J. Walker '69 Mr. Holt Walker and Dr. Suzanne T. Walker '00 Ms. Kimberly P. Walker '14 Dr. Sandra M. Walker '66 Miss Sarah J. Walker '78, '84 Ms. Wilma Walker Mrs. Ann J. Wall '70 Mr. James D. Wall '74 Mr. William M. Wall '47 Mrs. Dawn S. Wallace '74 Mr. Edward B. Wallace COL John W. Wallace, Jr. '71 and Mrs. Ann Wallace Dr. Mindy D. Wallace '06, '11 Mr. Richard B. Wallace '60 Mrs. Sue C. Wallace '88 Mr. Franklin C. Walters '65 and Mrs. Sylvia Walters Mr. Jerry H. Walters, Jr. '96 and Mrs. Kristi Walters Ms. Jill C. Walters Mr. Larry Walters and Mrs. Jeanette W. Walters '75 Ms. Kimberly B. Ward Mr. Austin W. Warner '11 Mrs. Alice S. Warren Mrs. Debra L. Warren '76 Mrs. Marjorie H. Warren '99 Mr. Marshall A. Warren '61 and Mrs. Sue T. Warren '66

W W W. C A M P B E L L . E D U / M A G A Z I N E

Mr. R. Gerald Warren and Mrs. Brenda S. Warren '72, '90 Mrs. Marjorie B. Washburn '53 Mrs. Sharon A. Washington Mr. James D. Watlington '85 Mr. M. Wayne Watson and Mrs. Kathryn H. Watson '62 Mrs. Marietta G. Watson '51 Dr. Kathryn T. Wear '06 and Mr. Damon Wear Mr. Jerry D. Weathers '64 Dr. Debora J. Weaver Ms. Ursula Weaver '97 Ms. Alice M. Webb Mr. James W. Webb '61 Mr. Christopher J. Weber '12 Mr. David M. Webster and Mrs. Tammy L. Webster '87 Mr. William K. Weddington '90 Mr. Walter T. Weeks '81 Mr. and Mrs.Bernard Weiner Miss Mary A. Weiss '85 Mrs. Hazel H. Welch '70 Mrs. Linda B. Wells '68 Mr. Melvin Wells and Mrs. Marjorie S. Wells '54 Mr. David I. Werner '12 Dr. Brittany L. West '13 Ms. Lisa T. West Mr. Mark D. West Mrs. Susan E. West Ms. Pamela B. Westbrook '85 Mr. Timothy A. Westbrook and Mrs. Debra B. Westbrook '77 Ms. Angela L. Westmoreland '05, '13 Mr. Brandon L. Weyand '03 Mr. James E. Wharton '65 and Mrs. Karen K. Wharton Mr. and Mrs.Doug Wheeler Mr. Dale Wheeler Ms. Trisha Whelan Mr. Benjamin L. White '99 and Mrs. Melissa E. White '98 Mr. Ronald H. White '70 Dr. Saundra S. White '93 Mr. Stephen M. White and Mrs. Elaine S. White '70 Mrs. Sue M. White '65 Mr. George F. Whitfield Mr. David D. Whitley '70 and Mrs. Debbie Whitley Ms. Leah B. Whitt '11, '14 Mrs. Patricia W. Whitt '69 Rev. Kimberly A. Whitted '14 Whitten, Bolling & Associates, CPA Mr. Eric R. Whritenour '07 Mr. John G. Wickham '74 Mr. and Mrs.Owen Widman Mr. John R. Wiggins and Mrs. Jennifer J. Wiggins '74 Mr. and Mrs.Norman J. Wiggins Ms. Peggy W. Wiggins Mr. Bill Wiggins '57 and Mrs. Shirley Wiggins Mr. Charles W. Wiggs and Mrs. Bonnie J. Wiggs '80 Mr. G. R. Wilborn '57 Ms. Maudie M. Wilcoxen '09

Ms. Chelsea L. Wilde '10 LTC James E. Wilde '73 Mr. Thomas M. Wilder and Mrs. Pamela P. Wilder '77 Mr. and Mrs.M. Scott Wilhoit Mr. Richard C. Wilkins Hon. Charles W. Wilkinson, Jr. '61 Mr. Mark L. Willey '84 Mrs. Virginia E. Willey '70 Mr. and Mrs.Bill Williams Mrs. Carolyn W. Williams '65 Dr. Christopher L. Williams '12 Ms. Cornelia L. Williams Mr. Douglas C. Williams '81 Rev. Douglas G. Williams '71 Mr. Edward K. Williams and Mrs. Cherilyn E. Williams '08 Mr. Gaston Williams Ms. Janet S. Williams Mr. Jason M. Williams Mrs. Jean Williams '14 Ms. Lisa P. Williams Mr. Lonnie B. Williams, Jr. and Mrs. Catherine L. Williams '81 Mrs. Mary C. Williams '99 Dr. Meredith T. Williams Mrs. Nancy P. Williams '51 Mr. Richard Williams Mr. Robert W. Williams, Jr. '73 and Mrs. Rebecca B. Williams '76 Mr. Thomas D. Williams '74 and Mrs. Jackie Williams Mr. and Mrs.Victor Williams, Jr. Dr. William K. Williams '73 and Mrs. Brenda P. Williams '73 Mr. William D. Williams '71 Mrs. Winifred J. Williams '72 Ms. Betty S. Williamson Mr. Harry Williamson, Jr. '69 and Mrs. Martha L. Williamson Mr. F. Michael Williard '71 Ms. Meagan L. Williford Mr. and Mrs.Ronnie Willis Mr. John A. Willoughby, Jr. '85 and Mrs. Ismae L. Willoughby '86 Mr. John A. Willoughby, Sr. '66 Mrs. Mary M. Wills '85, '88 Mr. and Mrs.Billy G. Wilson Dr. Dustin T. Wilson '07 Ms. Lisa M. Wilson '89 MGYSGT Marion Wilson, III '07 Mrs. Marylin C. Wilson Ms. Mazie C. Wilson '87 Mr. Robert A. Wilson Col. Walter J. Wilson, Jr. '95 Mr. William J. Wilson '57 and Mrs. Rebecca S. Wilson Ms. Patricia B. Winecoff '92 LTC John I. Winn '84 Ms. Elise M. Winner '13 Mr. Lacy W. Winstead '64 Mr. Allan W. Winter Dr. Peter Wish '67 and Mrs. Judith L. Wish '66 Mr. James E. Witherspoon, Jr. '80 Mrs. Elizabeth A. Womack '13 Mr. Bobby Womble

Mr. Jay Wood, Jr. '84 and Mrs. Tammy L. Wood Dr. R. Craig Wood '70 and Mrs. Judith Wood Mr. and Mrs.Thomas L. Wood Mr. Tyler G. Wood '09, '14 Mr. E. M. Woodall and Mrs. Gladys J. Woodall '57 Ms. Meghan-Joy D. Woodall '11 LTC John W. Woodard '83 and Mrs. Elizabeth N. Woodard '84 Mr. Matthew M. Woodard '94, '99 and Mrs. Kimberly E. Woodard Mr. Roy L. Woodard '68 and Mrs. Becky Woodard Mrs. Jeane W. Woodley '62 Mr. Matthew C. Woodlief Woodmont Baptist Church Dr. Donna L. Woolard Ms. Donna S. Woolard Mr. James M. Woolf, Jr. '70 Mr. Paul C. Worley '88 and Dr. Tonya L. Worley '92 Mr. Sidney E. Worley '70 Mr. O'Neil Wright Mr. Robert A. Wright '63 Ms. Shirley I. Wright Rev. Christopher A. Wroten '82 and Mrs. Rebecca J. Wroten '84 Miss Karen E. Wyatt '84, '85 Mr. N. Hunter Wyche, Jr. '76, '80 Dr. Sarah D. Wylie '09 Mr. David B. Wynns '04 and Mrs. Jessica C. Wynns '03 Xerox Foundation Mr. Benjamin A. Yates '13 Mr. and Mrs.David B. Yeager Ms. Julia A. Yiznitsky '12 Mr. James W. Yost '10 and Mrs. Jessica L. Yost '11 Mr. Richard L. Yost Mrs. Joyce D. Young '47 Mr. Robert L. Young '71 and Mrs. Janice J. Young '71 Mr. Timothy M. Young '00 Mr. and Mrs.Charles R. Younts Mr. Eugene Yuen '94 Mr. Richard W. Zeitz '71 Ms. Mary L. Zellers Mr. Earl D. Zerbach '67 Mr. Sidong Zhang Dr. Hong Zhu Zoe's Kitchen

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DONOR HONOR ROLL

INDEPENDENT COLLEGE FUND OF NORTH CAROLINA The following are contributors to the Independent College Fund of North Carolina, which benefits Campbell University & 35 other private colleges & universities within the state.

————————————————————————————————————— The A. B. Carter, Inc. Fund AC Corporation ADAVICO Alwinell Foundation ARAMARK B. C. Moore Foundation BB&T Charitable Foundation Best Commercial Development Biltmore Farms, LLC Blumenthal Foundation The Bolick Foundation The Borden Fund, Inc. Brady Services Mr. James E. Brown, Jr. BSN Central The Cannon Foundation, Inc. Carolina Foods, Inc. Cassels, Caywood, & Love, Inc. Chartwells

Cherry Bekaert, LLP Coca-Cola Bottling Co. Consolidated CommScope, Inc. Corporate Risk Management, Inc. The Council of Independent Colleges The Dickson Foundation, Inc. Dover Foundation, Inc. Duke Energy Foundation The Lundy Fetterman Family Foundation First American Equipment Finance Ms. Frances G. Fontaine Garris Evans Lumber Co., Inc. George Foundation Golden Corral Corporation The Golden LEAF Foundation Grady-White Boats, Inc. Ms. Gwenn H. Hobbs Honeywell Hornwood, Inc.

Mr. John W. Hunt Joseph Dave Foundation Glenn E. and Addie G. Ketner Family Foundation Koonce, Wooten, and Haywood, LLP Kulynych Family Foundation I, Inc. Mr. and Mrs. Harold G. Livingston Mr. Anthony Locklear M&F Bank M&J Foundation Martin Marietta Materials Ms. Colleen R. Mazza Mr. Timothy H. McDowell Metz Culinary Management Millennium Advisory Services, Inc. Mount Olive Pickle Company, Inc. NCFI Polyurethanes Norfolk Southern Foundation NC Electric Membership Corporation

Pfizer Philip L. Van Every Foundation PNC Financial Poyner & Spruill, LLP Progressive Benefit Solutions PSNC Energy - A SCANA Co. R. A. Bryan Foundation, Inc. Mr. and Mrs. W. Trent Ragland, Jr. Mr. Brooks T. Raiford Renfro Corporation Rock-Tenn Merchandising Displays E.T. Rollins, Jr. and Frances P. Rollins Foundation SAS Institute Sherrod and Margaret Salsbury Foundation Smart Source The Eddie and Jo Allison Smith Family Foundation, Inc. Southco Distributing Company

Stephenson Millwork Company, Inc. Stonecutter Foundation, Inc. SunTrust Banks, Inc. Mr. Charles E. Taylor Mr. John A. Taylor The Universal Leaf Foundation Time Warner Cable UPS Educational Endowment Fund U. S. Department of Education Grant VisionPoint Marketing Wells Fargo Foundation Dr. A. Hope Williams Womble Carlyle Sandridge & Rice Wren Foundation, Inc. Wyatt-Quarles Seed Company

WIGGINS SOCIETY MEMBERS The Wiggins Society, established in 2002, serves as the official planned giving association of Campbell University. Membership

includes individuals who have named Campbell University as a beneficiary through a will or trust bequest, life insurance or retirement plan designation, etc.

————————————————————————————————————— Mrs. Frances Aaroe Mrs. Linda Alderman Mrs. Lorraine B. Allen Mr. and Mrs. Robert J. Barker Mr. and Mrs. J. J. Barnes Mrs. Elizabeth Belton Mrs. Kay Bissette Ms. Susan Blakely Mr. and Mrs. Lewis Boroughs Rev. and Mrs. J. R. Bouldin, Sr. Mr. and Mrs. H. F. Britt Dr. and Mrs. Jack Britt Mr. William L. Burns Dr. and Mrs. Ed Byrd Dr. and Mrs. James Cammack Mr. and Mrs. Horace Carter Dr. and Mrs. T. L. Cashwell, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. Kerry Clippard Mr. Eric Coates Mr. George Collins Mrs. Isabelle Rich Collins Mr. Royce Crumpler

Rev. and Mrs. Daniel Deaton Mr. and Mrs. Rober Dixon Mr. Cecil Edgerton Mr. and Mrs. J. Harold Falls Dr. Ronnie Faulkner Drs. Lewis and Annabelle Fetterman, Sr. Mr. Carl Garrison Mr. and Mrs. Steve Gaskins Mrs. Mary Gatton Mrs. Dorothea S. Gilbert Rev. and Mrs. Colon Godwin Drs. Ed and Dinah Gore Mr. and Mrs. Dan Gray Mrs. Ruth Arden Green Mr. and Mrs. Jason Hall Mr. and Mrs. Crawford Harb Mr. and Mrs. Robert Harris Mr. and Mrs. Willard Harris Mr. John Henley Dr. Scott Henson Mr. and Mrs. Alden Hicks Mrs. Juanita Stewart Hight

Mrs. Ester Holder Howard Mr. Stephen Howell Mr. and Mrs. Lewis Hubbard Dr. Colon Jackson, Jr. Reverend and Mr. Allen Johnson Mr. Lloyd Johnson, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. Bonner Jones Rev. and Mrs. Arthur Kirk Mrs. Clara Langston Mr. J. Horace Lanier Ms. Stephanie Lanier Dr. Jane T. Lewis Mr. and Mrs. Fred McCall Mr. Dan McCormick Mrs. Mildred McIntosh Dr. and Mrs. Hugh McKinney Dr. Carlton T. Mitchell Mr. and Mrs. Bobby Montague Ms. Patricia R. Moss Dr. Shahriar Mostashari Mrs. Sadie Neel Dr. and Mrs. Jim Nisbet

Mr. and Mrs. Shane Nixon Mr. and Mrs. Keith Oakley Mr. Michael Patterson Ms. Doris Pearce Mrs. Marie T. Phelps Mr. and Mrs. Robert Poole Mr. and Mrs. William R. Pope Mr. Eric C. Radford Mr. Ralph E. Reardon Mrs. Verna B. Respass Dr. and Mrs. Clyde Rhyne Mr. A Stephen Richards, III Mrs. Gray Maynard Roth Dr. Leon Rumley Mr. David Henry Senter, II Mrs. Grace C. Senter Mrs. Vivian Simpson Mr. and Mrs. Henry Smith Mr. and Mrs. Ivey Smith Ms. Ruth Smith Mr. Andrew B. Snellings Mr. and Mrs. Johnny Spence

Dr. and Mrs. Louis Spilman Mrs. Caron Stewart Mr. and Mrs. Linwood Story David S. Tarbox and Elizabeth W. Tarbox Mr. Robert K. Taylor, III Mr. and Mrs. Rex Thomas Dr. and Mrs. Jerry M. Wallace Dr. D. E. Ward Mr. Thomas D. Ward Mr. and Mrs. Danny Watkins Mr. and Mrs. Glenn White Drs. Norman and Mildred Wiggins Mr. and Mrs. Charles Wiggs Mrs. Melba Williams Mr. and Mrs. Jerry C. Wood Mr. and Mrs. Luby Wood Mr. Van Wood Mrs. H. Algene Yeatman Mr. and Mrs. Lawrence Zachary Mr. and Mrs. Richard Zeitz Mr. Ronald C. Zellar

THE HERITAGE CLUB (Life Giving Club) The Heritage Club recognizes life giving of $100,000 to $499,999 prior to June 1, 2014.

—————————————————————————————————————

A. E. Finley Foundation Annie Laurie Brown Estate Blue Cross & Blue Shield of NC Booth Ferris Foundation Burlington Industries Foundation Burroughs Wellcome Company C. Ray Pruette Estate Calvin M. Little Estate Camp Clearwater Capital Community Foundation Cardinal Health Carl Eugene Langston Estate Carlton and Lynell Martin Family Foundation Carolina Medical Products Carter Foundation, Inc. Charles and Irene Nanney Foundation Clark Brothers Coats & Bennett, LLP Community Foundation of Gaston County

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Compaz Land Corporation CVS Corporation Donald Smith and Manila G. Shaver Foundation Donnie M. Royal Foundation Dr. and Mrs. Billy Kim Dr. and Mrs. Donald B. Russ Dr. and Mrs. Jack Britt Dr. and Mrs. Jack G. Watts Dr. Anthony and Mrs. Julie Oley Dr. Blanton A. Hartness, Sr. '28, '91 Dr. Bruce B. Blackmon '40 and Mrs. Lelia Blackmon Dr. Burrows T. Lundy '77 and Mrs. Mabel Lundy Dr. C. R. Byrd, Jr. '36, '98 and Mrs. C. R. Byrd Dr. Carlton T. Mitchell '41, '96 and Mrs. Miriam Mitchell '41 Dr. Charles B. Howard '69 Dr. Clarence E. Roberts

Dr. Clyde J. Rhyne '99 Dr. Colon S. Jackson and Mrs. Johnnie L. Jackson '06 Dr. Frank A. Daniels '86 Dr. Fred R. Keith, Sr. '18, '77 Dr. Gale D. Johnson Dr. Gordon L. Townsend, Sr. and Mrs. Mary Townsend Dr. Harold B. Wells, Sr. '00 Dr. Irwin Belk '11 and Mrs. Carol Belk Dr. J. Leon Rumley '97 and Mrs. Kathryn Rumley Dr. Jerry M. Wallace and Mrs. Betty B. Wallace '72 Dr. Jesse C. Alphin, Sr. '97 and Mrs. Allene Alphin Dr. Joseph W. Baggett '38 and Mrs. Hannah Baggett Dr. Louis Spilman Jr. and Mrs. Mary Spilman Dr. P. C. Purvis and Mrs. Peggy Purvis

Dr. Perry Q. Langston and Mrs. Clara Langston Dr. S. T. Cathy '91 Dr. Samuel A. Sue, Jr. '50 and Mrs. Cecelia J. Sue Dr. Shahriar Mostashari Dr. Wesley V. Waters, III '02 Dr. William M. Womble, Sr. '96 Duke Energy Progress E. J. Prevatte Estate Edwards Foundation, Inc. Evelyn M. Snider Estate Family Care Pharmacy, Inc. First Baptist Church of Greensboro First Federal Bank Florence M. Lee Estate Florence Rogers Charitable Trust Foundation for the Carolinas Frank H. Upchurch Estate G. Fred Hale Estate

Goldsboro Milling Company Gordon K. Ogburn Estate Harris Teeter Inez C. Teague Estate James M. Johnston Trust Jefferson Pilot Corporation John C. Sutton Estate John G. Cashwell Estate John M. Cansler Estate Joseph W. Gawthrop Estate Joyce M. McLamb Trust Judge Franklin F. Lanier '72, '82 and Mrs. Kay Lanier Justeen B. Tarbet Estate Kenelm Foundation Lanie H. Bryan Estate '16 Lollie B. Frazier Estate Lonnie D. Small Estate Luddy Charitable Foundation Mabel C. Hayden Estate


Mabel Strickland Estate MAJ Sam Byrd Margaret B. Vann Estate Mary Alice Ward Estate Merrill Lynch Mr. A. L. Royal Mr. and Mrs. Billy T. Woodard Mr. and Mrs. Bobby L. Montague Mr. and Mrs. Carlton C. Martin Mr. and Mrs. Dexter E. Floyd Mr. and Mrs. Gene L. Crow Mr. and Mrs. Henry P. Norris Mr. and Mrs. J. J. Barnes, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. James C. Furman Mr. and Mrs. John C. Bruffey, Jr. '84 Mr. and Mrs. John McNeill, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. Joseph C. Hall, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. Kennieth Etheridge Mr. and Mrs. Peter Moore, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. R. W. Grabarek Mr. and Mrs. Ray Womble, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. Robert P. Wellons Mr. and Mrs. Travis Burt Mr. Benjamin N. Thompson '76, '79 and Mrs. Karin Patrice Thompson '75 Mr. Bobby L. Murray, Sr. Mr. Bobby R. Hall, Sr. '55 and Mrs. Janet H. Hall '59 Mr. Boney E. Wilson, Jr. '45 and Mrs. Glenn L. Wilson '44 Mr. Bonner H. Jones Mr. David K. Clark and Mrs. Miriam Clark '52 Mr. David P. Russ, III '69 and Mrs. Linda P. Russ Mr. David T. Courie '93, '97 and Mrs. Michelle Courie Mr. David W. Wharton '89 and Mrs. Krista Wharton

Mr. Donald C. Evans '71 and Mrs. Judy T. Evans Mr. Donald W. Sneeden, Sr. Mr. E. Landon Kirk and Mrs. Anna D. Kirk '98 Mr. Earl T. Jones Mr. Edward L. Berry Mr. F. R. Page, Jr. Mr. Fred C. MacDonald Mr. Fred McCall, Jr. and Mrs. Pearle McCall Mr. Frederick L. Taylor and Mrs. Alliene F. Taylor Mr. George E. Womble Mr. George McLaney, Jr. and Mrs. Dot McLaney Mr. Glenn T. Infinger '74 and Mrs. Anne S. Infinger Mr. Guilford W. Bass, Sr. '70 Mr. Harold B. Wells, Jr. '88 and Mrs. Frances Wells Mr. Harvey G. Hart Mr. Houston N. Brisson, Sr. and Mrs. Irene Brisson Mr. Howard M. Cooper and Mrs. Eva Cooper Mr. James B. Creech '44 Mr. James E. Perry, Jr. '59 and Mrs. Daphne S. Perry '60 Mr. Jerry Milton and Mrs. Elizabeth C. Milton '92 Mr. John C. Howard, Jr. '60 and Mrs. Scarlett H. Howard '60 Mr. John H. Lanier '35 Mr. John T. Henley, Sr. and Mrs. Rebecca Henley Mr. John W. Pope, Sr. '05 and Mrs. Joy Pope Mr. Joseph T. Vail '47 and Mrs. Bradeene B. Vail '43 Mr. L. Stuart Surles '77

Mr. Lewis E. Boroughs '41 and Mrs. Gladys B. Boroughs Mr. Marion L. Eakes Mr. Michael S. McLamb '73 and Mrs. Beverly G. McLamb Mr. Paul Perry '50 and Mrs. Teeny Perry Mr. R. B. Butler and Mrs. Anna Butler Mr. Ray H. Womble, Sr. and Mrs. Sarah T. Womble '47 Mr. Robert A. Harris '37 Mr. Robert B. Hall, Sr. Mr. Robert D. Womble Mr. Robert G. Poole, Jr. '48, '65 and Mrs. Barbara B. Poole Mr. Robert J. Chaffin '47 Mr. Robert J. Womble '68 and Mrs. Martha Womble Mr. Robert L. Luddy Mr. Robert T. Taylor, Sr. '66 and Mrs. Margo Taylor Mr. Rogers Clark Mr. Stephen W. Gaskins '81 and Mrs. Karen Gaskins Mr. T. G. Proctor Mr. Thomas J. Keith '64 and Mrs. Anne Keith Mr. Thomas L. Edwards '69 Mr. Vance B. Neal '63 and Mrs. Dolores Neal Mr. W. H. Carter and Mrs. Linda Carter Mr. Willard B. Harris '49 and Mrs. Olema Harris Mr. Willard D. Small and Mrs. Ruth Small Mr. William A. Kimbrough '67 Mr. William Carl Coleman '38 and Mrs. Jewell Coleman Mr. William R. Hartness, Jr. Mr. Willis D. Brown '49 and Mrs. Ann Brown

Mr. Woodrow Bass and Mrs. Barbara D. Bass Mrs. Algene Yeatman Mrs. Barbara R. Meredith Mrs. Catherine Hall '36 Mrs. Dorothea Stewart Gilbert '46 Mrs. Helen Currin and Mr. James M. Currin, Sr. '41 Mrs. Hope F. Hall '44 Mrs. Juanita S. Hight '33 Mrs. Leona J. Doffermyre Mrs. Loreen M. Smith Mrs. Lottie Weeks Mrs. March F. Riddle and Mr. J. P. Riddle Mrs. Mary Gatton Mrs. Melba L. Williams '71 Mrs. Mescal Ferguson Mrs. Minnie D. Lamm '97 Mrs. Reba Quinn and Dr. Milford R. Quinn '43, '99 Mrs. Ruth C. Maynard Mrs. Sadie O. Neel '42 Mrs. Siddie Sauls Mrs. Venna Anderson Mrs. Verna B. Respass '48 Ms. Lucille L. Ellis '97 Mt. Pisgah Baptist Church NC Baptist Foundation Ned B. Ball Estate '27 Norman A. Wiggins Living Trust North Carolina GlaxoSmithKline North Rocky Mount Baptist Church Ora C. Cansler Estate Provantage Corporate Solutions Raymond F. Shearin Estate Rev. Aubrey T. Quakenbush and Mrs. Sally Quakenbush Richard F. Paschal, Jr. Estate

Rite Aid Corporation Ruth B. Johnson Estate Sampson-Bladen Oil Company, Inc. Seby B. Jones Family Foundation Seven Lakes Prescription Shoppe, Inc. Short Stop Food Marts Smith Family Trust Society Advancement Management Southeastern Interiors Southeastern Trust School Southern Bank Foundation Sprint Mid-Atlantic Telecom STC Property Company Stephen Ross Angel Charitable Foundation SunTrust Bank-North Carolina Suwon Central Baptist Church Systel The Dickson Foundation, Inc. The News & Observer The Taylor Foundation Thelma Roberts Hall Estate Triangle Community Foundation Trust Education Foundation, Inc. United Energy, Inc. Victor Small Estate Wachovia Bank of NC Walgreens Wanna S. Lewis Estate Wells Property, LLC Westwood Baptist Church William R. Hartness, Jr. Estate Wilma L. McCurdy Estate Womble Rental Management Woodmen of the World Omaha Life Insurance

THE FOUNDER’S CLUB (Life Giving Club) The Founder’s Club recognizes life giving of $500,000 to $999,999 prior to June 1, 2014.

—————————————————————————————————————

Algernon Sydney Sullivan Foundation Brookhill Village, Inc. Bryan Foundation, Inc. Carlie C's IGA CBF of North Carolina, Inc. Charlie Tillman Freeman Estate Dr. Edward B. Titmus '59 and Mrs. Carol Titmus Dr. Ernest L. Hogan '98

Dr. Fred O. Dennis '79 Dr. James E. Herring, Jr. '95 and Mrs. Carla Herring Dr. James H. Crossingham, Jr. '02 Dr. William L. Burns, Jr. '97 and Mrs. Dottie Burns Fidelity Bank GlaxoSmithKline James R. Coates Estate Jefferson Pilot Foundation

L. Harold Stephens Estate Lundy-Fetterman Family Foundation McMichael Family Foundation Mildred B. McIntosh Estate Miss Elsie L. Seymore Miss Narnie D. Seymore Mr. and Mrs. Raymond Bryan, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. Robert Whiteman, Jr.

Mr. Bernard F. McLeod, Jr. '46 and Mrs. Virginia C. McLeod Mr. Daniel E. Stewart '17, '90 Mr. Everett Kivette '46 Mr. Frederick H. Taylor '64 and Mrs. Myra Taylor Mr. Hugh G. Maxwell, III '57 and Mrs. Charlotte Maxwell Mr. James B. Wilkinson Mr. L. Kimsey Mann, Sr. '98

Mr. Lacy Collier and Mrs. Mary E. Collier Mr. Lewis E. Hubbard Mrs. Chloe A. Scott Mrs. Gladys B. Campbell '24 Mrs. Ruth A. Green Ms. R. Ruth Smith Roy L. Marshall Estate Titmus Foundation, Inc.

THE LEGACY CLUB (Life Giving Club) The Legacy Club recognizes life giving of $1,000,000 and up prior to June 1, 2014.

—————————————————————————————————————

A. J. Fletcher Foundation Baptist State Convention of NC Branch Banking & Trust Cooperative Baptist Fellowship County of Harnett Donald and Elizabeth Cooke Foundation Dr. and Mrs. Don G. Lane Dr. Annabelle L. Fetterman '87 and Dr. Lewis M. Fetterman, Sr. '87 Dr. Bob Barker, Sr. '65, '12 and Dr. Patricia Barker '12

Dr. Ed Gore, Sr. '52, '07 and Dr. Dinah Gore '07 Dr. James R. Nisbet '97 and Mrs. Betty Nisbet Dr. Norman A. Wiggins '48, '07 and Dr. Mildred H. Wiggins '48, '07 Dr. Pankaj K. Vyas Dr. William E. Byrd '03 and Mrs. Sadie Byrd Felburn Foundation Golden Leaf Foundation Hon. Oscar N. Harris '65 and

W W W. C A M P B E L L . E D U / M A G A Z I N E

Mrs. Jean Harris Hubert F. Ledford Estate Independent College Fund of NC J. H. Strickland Estate John William Pope Foundation Kate B. Reynolds Charitable Trust Kresge Foundation Lettie Pate Whitehead Foundation Mr. and Dr. Irvin Warren Mr. and Mrs. Carlie C. McLamb Mr. and Mrs. Luby Wood

Mr. and Mrs. Mark Saunders Mr. and Mrs. Robert L. Ransdell, Sr. Mr. Andrew B. Snellings Mr. B. R. Angel and Mrs. Russellene J. Angel Mr. E. P. Sauls '89 Mr. Henry L. Smith '67 and Mrs. Tracey Smith Mrs. Edna R. Coates Mrs. Ester Holder Howard '44 Mrs. Taylor B. Rogers Estate

Ms. Molly F. Held '82 NC Community Foundation, Inc. NC Foundation of Church Related Colleges, Inc. Pharmacy Network Foundation, Inc. R. A. Bryan Foundation, Inc. The Cannon Foundation, Inc. The Leon Levine Foundation Thomas J. Lynch Estate Troy Lumber Company

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FROM THE VAULT

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1902

Buies Creek Academy students, faculty, staff and friends pose for a photo in front of (and on) a still-under-construction Kivett Hall in 1902. The hall, today Campbell University's oldest building, was named for Z.T. Kivett, who pledged to school founder J.A. Campbell to "rebuild in brick a more suitable school" after a fire destroyed much of the campus in December 1900. The campus icon was completed in 478 days in 1903.

W W W. C A M P B E L L . E D U / M A G A Z I N E

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Nonprofit Orginaization U.S. Postage PAID PPCO Post Office Box 567 Buies Creek, NC 27506

www.campbell.edu


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