Campbell Magazine | Summer 2017

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SUMMER 2017

The Buies of Summer Professional baseball in its purest form


2 SUMMER 2017


LEADING WITH PURPOSE

North Carolina First Lady Kristin Cooper ('82 Law) gave Campbell Magazine a tour of her new home — the North Carolina Executive Mansion in downtown Raleigh — just weeks after getting settled in with her husband, Gov. Roy Cooper. Read more about her journey from law school to First Lady, and about the issues she's advocating for in her new role on Page 26. | Photo by Lissa Gotwals M AG AZIN E .CAMP BE LL.EDU

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FEATURES

SUMMER 2017 | VOLUME 12 | ISSUE 2

32 ____________________________________ PRESIDENT

J. Bradley Creed VICE PRESIDENT FOR INSTITUTIONAL ADVANCEMENT & SENIOR ADVISOR TO THE PRESIDENT

Britt Davis

ASSISTANT VICE PRESIDENT FOR COMMUNICATIONS & MARKETING

Haven Hottel ’00 ____________________________________ DIRECTOR OF PUBLICATIONS & MAGAZINE EDITOR

Billy Liggett

DIRECTOR OF VISUAL IDENTITY & MAGAZINE ART DIRECTOR

Jonathan Bronsink ’05

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COVER STORY

32 The Buies of Summer

Campbell University is home to professional baseball through 2018 with the Buies Creek Astros — the Advanced-A affiliate of the Houston Astros — sharing the campus until their new multi-million dollar home in Fayetteville is built. Our Summer 2017 cover story looks at how the community — one of the smallest in the nation to host a Minor League team — has embraced the team, and how the Astros have embraced life in "The Creek." ���������������������������������������������

26 The First Lady

Kristin Cooper ('82 Law) is using her new role as North Carolina First Lady to advocate for issues like childhood hunger, literacy, foster care, the arts and more. Read about her journey from law school to the Executive Mansion.

48 The Natural

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Jacob Morse ended his Campbell Law School career with a bang — winning the Top Gun Mock Trial Competition to become the top advocacy law student in the nation.

54 What's up, Docs?

Campbell graduated its first class of osteopathic physicians — the first medical doctors to earn their degrees from Campbell University — in the spring. Members of the charter class interviewed by Campbell Magazine when the school launched returned to tell us about their experiences.

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ON THE COVER

Dexture McCall is one of the many young stars in the Houston Astros' stocked farm system who have played — and played well — in Buies Creek this year. McCall earned a call-up to Double-A Corpus Christi after 54 games with Buies Creek this year, but not before taking time for a photo shoot at Jim Perry Stadium this summer. | Photo by Bennett Scarborough 2 SUMMER 2017

DIRECTOR OF WEB DESIGN

Nikki Zawol

DIRECTOR OF MARKETING

Sarah Hardin

CONTRIBUTORS

Rachel Davis, Angela Farrior, Gerardo Gonzalez, Lissa Gotwals, Lydia Huth, Bill Parish, Abigail Pore, Bennett Scarborough, Leah Whitt ’11 ’14 ____________________________________ ACCOLADES

CASE International Circle of Excellence Feature Writing: 2017 (Bronze) CASE III Grand Award Best Magazine: 2013 Most Improved: 2013, 2014, 2015, 2016 Feature Writing: 2017 Photography Series: 2017 CASE III Award of Excellence Best Magazine: 2017 Editorial Design: 2017 Publications Writing: 2014 Illustrations: 2016 ____________________________________ Founded in 1887, Campbell University is a private, coeducational institution where faith, learning and service 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 & 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, the Catherine W. Wood School of Nursing, the School of Engineering 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 2017 edition and named one of the “100 Best College Buys” in the nation by Institutional Research & Evaluation, Inc. EEO/AA/Minorities/Females/Disabled/Protected Veterans www.campbell.edu/employment


FROM THE PRESIDENT

Faith and learning should interact, by all means

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his year marks the 500th anniversary of the Protestant Reformation, and this past June, faculty from several schools across the university met to read and discuss the seminal writings of Martin Luther. The Reformation of the 16th Century was a religious movement with social, political, and cultural consequences remaining to the present. It was a complex and multifaceted historical era that witnessed the splintering of Catholic Europe and set in place the structures and beliefs that set the stage for the modern era. Reformers such as Luther directed their concerns towards the church, but the Reformation was born in the university. Luther’s first teaching post was at the University of Erfurt as professor of theology where he had completed his doctoral studies, but in 1508, his superior in the Augustinian monastery dispatched him to a relatively new, fledging university in Wittenberg. Wittenberg was one of about a dozen German universities developed between the latter part of the 15th and early 16th centuries. These advanced institutions of higher education providing training in theology, law, medicine and the liberal arts, and were impacted by the intellectual and cultural developments of Renaissance humanism in northern Europe.

improve society. For all the dust he stirred up, Luther didn’t want to change society; he only wanted to make it better. Properly ordered, universities would aid in the moral development of leaders who would influence the people and institutions they served. Luther emphasized the importance of the liberal arts in the curriculum without compromising the cardinal evangelical teachings on faith and grace. His hope was that students receiving this kind of education would become skilled professionals with the competencies and capacities for serving the public, contributing to the common good, and fulfilling their calling from God.

treated like outer garments one hangs on a peg outside the classroom before entering. This is where Campbell is different. Our mission statement affirms that “learning is appointed and conserved by God as essential to the fulfillment of human destiny,” and that Campbell “embraces the conviction that there is no conflict between the life of faith and the life of inquiry.” The two domains of faith and learning are distinct, yet when the two interact through creative connections and an earnest search for truth, there is an enormous capacity for educational development and personal growth within the dynamic tension.

Luther called for reform of the universities in his earliest manifestos. In his 1520 “Address to the German Nobility,” he appealed to the leaders of the country to change the universities, and in a letter written in 1524, he made a similar appeal to the councilmen of all the cities in Germany. In “The Freedom of the Christian,” Luther expounded the doctrine of the priesthood of all believers, the authority of Scripture, and divine calling of all people to vocations of service, not just priests and members of religious orders, and probed the implications of these teachings for education. The growing availability of Scripture, due to the new information technology created by the Gutenberg printing press, required a literate populace who could not only read but also thoroughly study the Bible. Churches needed educated pastors, and schools needed trained teachers. Magistrates needed jurists, lawyers, clerks, and counselors to staff civil agencies and replace canon lawyers. Universities like Wittenberg rose to meet these challenges.

Isn’t this what we hope for our students? Our aim, indicated by our mission statement, is to graduate students “with exemplary academic and professional skills who are prepared for purposeful lives and meaningful service.” We want them to live good lives, become good people, and add to and not subtract from the common good. We want them to make a life, make a living, and make a difference, and in whatever field or profession they choose, to lead with purpose with a conviction that what they are called to do is beneficial to their neighbor and pleasing to God — not so different from what Luther desired for his students.

Martin Luther believed that each person, no matter the background or station in life, is accountable to God and gifted by God for a unique destiny. Education is a means for cultivating and calling out this destiny. The students under our charge are traveling one of the most formative and significant segments of their journey of life while in college. We are guides to help them hear the call by teaching them habits of mind and heart along with skills and competencies needed to pursue their calling.

Luther envisioned universities as engines of personal and social reform which would M AG AZIN E .CAMP BE LL.EDU

Though Wittenberg and Campbell universities are half a world apart in distance and separated by half a millennium of time, they share the same institutional mission of faith interacting with learning so that faith informs the educational process and critical thinking develops faith. Faith should never impede learning, and learning should not foil faith. In some sectors of the modern academy, faith is seen as inimical to learning. Religious convictions and faith commitments are

I believe a Campbell education offers our students an opportunity to make a living, to make a life and to make a difference, now and evermore, until God’s will is done on earth as it is in heaven.

J. Bradley Creed President

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EDITOR’S INBOX

HOPES & DREAMS We asked more than a dozen incoming freshmen — the Class of 2021 — during their summer orientation what they hoped to get out of the next four years at Campbell University and what their hopes and dreams are for the future. Below is just a sample of their answers: Brianna Pazcko: “What I want from Campbell more than anything is a well-rounded experience, touching all aspects of life. I want to join different clubs and meet people from all over the world. My dream is to help people. I want to get into physical therapy eventually, bringing people to a place they never thought they'd be able to get back to. To rehabilitate people and help them become happy with their lives again.” Sierra Fuller: “I hope to build relationships during my four years at Campbell and just feel comfortable while finding out who I am as a person. My dream is to travel to other countries and provide people with the medicine and medical care they need and don't have access to.” Marcus Corry: “My goal at Campbell is to just gather wisdom and prepare myself for the real world. To just enjoy college life. As for my dream, I want to make it to the NFL. But I just want to be successful in whatever I do.” Samuel Brown: “I hope to venture out on my own, meet new people and find out how the world works. My dream is to travel the world, meet people from other cultures and see a variety of people and places that make up God's great creation." Skyler Ferrell: "As I enter this new chapter, I just want to make it the best I can. I want to meet new people, explore things and figure out about myself and the world. My dream is to find an occupation where I can help others and give back to the community."

4 SUMMER 2017

SPRING 2017

As North Carolina joins other states in the battle against opioid addiction, Campbell health sciences students are learning about the dangers of addictive prescription drugs and alternative ways to treat pain. Dr. Nicholas Pennings [pictured above], assistant professor of family medicine at Campbell Med, believes motivational interviewing can go a long way in educating patients on proper pain management.

THE OPIOI D EPIDEMIC MAGAZIN

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Opioid epidemic fight starts with doctors To the Editor: I’m responding to your Campbell Magazine [Spring 2017] cover story on the opioid crisis. I have a chronic health condition that causes severe migraines and lots of pain all over. It began about eight years ago. I won't bore you with unnecessary details of it all, but I can tell you that if I had not been my own advocate in researching, I would be one of those sucked into “just staying drugged up on pain meds.” It has been a hard fight to find doctors that really want to find the root cause of my problems instead of just treating symptoms. I've had almost every doctor try multiple times to push antidepressants, which I refuse. I've had a few try to send me to “pain management clinics,” and after going to one, I never returned and will never go again. It is very scary how easy these potent addictive drugs were being pushed to me. I have had doctors recommend taking hyrdrocodone on a regular basis for pain management, along with nerve-blocking injections. When I’ve said I can't do that because of the many side effects, they look at me weird and basically say there is nothing more they can do for me. I was once prescribed fentanyl, and I was shocked when I read the information my pharmacist gave me.

Finding the source of all my pain has been the fight for me. I've been the “mystery diagnosis” patient that some doctors are intrigued by, but I find most are intimidated by. I am thankful for the few doctors that have fought with me to help me find answers. Patients need to be their own advocate, but it’s reassuring that future doctors [like those taking opioid courses at Campbell] are learning there are other ways to treat chronic pain. Thank you for your article. EVA Last name held by request

SEND YOUR LETTERS

Comment on our stories or send us your Campbell experiences by emailing Billy Liggett at liggettb@campbell.edu. Mail us at Campbell Magazine | PO Box 567 | Buies Creek, NC 27506.

CORRECTION

As pointed out by more than one eagle-eyed Campbell Magazine reader, the classic car parked in front of Carter Gymnasium in our "From the Vault" photo in the Spring edition was not a 1956 Ford Galaxie, as the Galaxie wasn't produced until 1959. While we haven't been able to produce a definitive date to the photo, it appears it was taken in the early 1960s. We regret the error and our terrible knowledge of car history.


An Evening with J. Bradley Creed A Vision for the Future

You’re invited

Attend any (or all) of these locations

Campbell University President Dr. J. Bradley Creed cordially invites you to an evening of fellowship as he shares his vision for the future.

Sept. 12, 2017 The Regency Banquet & Conference Center Dunn, N.C.

Oct. 19, 2017 University Club of Washington, D.C. Washington, D.C.

Sept. 26, 2017 Highland Country Club Fayetteville, N.C.

Nov. 2, 2017 Milton Rhodes Art Center Nov. 30, 2017 Winston Salem, N.C. Brook Valley Country Club Greenville, N.C. Nov. 8, 2017 Cape Fear Country Club Jan. 25, 2018 Wilmington, N.C. Country Club of Virginia Richmond, Va.

Explore how the new Campbell student union will build a strong community of engaged learners and how scholarships are empowering students to lead with purpose.

Oct. 10, 2017 Downtown Art Studio Sanford, N.C.

To register and learn more about this event, please visit M AG AZIN E .CAMP BE LL.EDU

www.campbell.edu/presidentialtour

Nov. 28, 2017 Campbell University Norman Adrian Wiggins School of Law Raleigh, N.C.

C A MP B E L L M AG AZ I N E #CampbellLeads

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AROUND CAMPUS

6 SUMMER 2017


THE CLASS OF 2021

For a second year in a row, the incoming class of Campbell freshmen has raised the academic bar with the highest cumulative weighted grade point average in University history. The Class of 2021 comes in with an average GPA of 3.943, and with a revised SAT score average of 1092. The class (some of them shown here during the first freshman orientation in June) is made up of 1,052 students hailing from 34 states. | Photo by Bill Parish

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AROUND CAMPUS

SUMMER FOLIAGE

The arrival of summer weather also marked the arrival of new plants and flowers throughout the main campus this year. Tropical plants, anemones, buttercups, hydrangeas, marigolds, sunflowers — even corn stalks — can be found in front of Kivett Hall, Butler Chapel and the Pope Convocation Center (pictured). The additions have become a home to butterflies and honeybees and have added splashes of color to Campbell's growing campus. | Photo by Bill Parish 8 SUMMER 2017


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RENDERING COURTESY OF LITTLE DIVERSIFIED ARCHITECTURE

AROUND CAMPUS

A New Epicenter

Construction will begin next year on a new student center in the heart of Campbell's main campus AMENITIES

• Movie theater: The only one in Harnett County • Four dining locations: To meet the needs of our campus community’s schedules • A juice bar and deli shop: To add to the revamped main residential dining facility that will move into the union • Camel gear shop: Featuring exclusive Fighting Camels apparel and collegiate memorabilia • Two-story fitness center • Banquet hall: To seat an estimated 800 people, break out into five separate meeting rooms and offer much-needed multi-purpose event space • Private and group study space: Students will be able to settle in for individual studying overlooking Academic Circle or reserve study rooms for group meetings • Office space: Student life, student services and student organizations will have a home here — the Campbell Times and Pine Burr Yearbook offices will be moved here as well 10 SUMMER 2017

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y the fall of 2019, the heart of Campbell University’s campus will have an entirely new look and feel. The centerpiece of President J. Bradley Creed’s Campbell Leads fundraising campaign will be a 100,000-square-foot student union that will enhance both the educational and social lives of students. According to Creed, the student union — to be built where Baldwin and Kitchin halls currently stand in the Academic Circle — will provide academic support and promote student involvement, foster engagement with university employees and guests, offer amenities that enhance campus life and support campus partners like the Office of Student Life and the Campbell Times. “We envision the student union to be a dynamic space for building the Campbell community,” says Creed, who has promoted the idea for a center since Day 1 as president. Construction on the new facility will begin with the fall demolition of Baldwin and Kitchin, dormitories that have served main campus since the 1950s. According to Jim Roberts, vice president for business and

For more information about supporting the Student Union campaign at Campbell, contact University Advancement at (910) 893-1215 or leadscampaign@campbell.edu treasurer, bids for the building will be taken in January, with construction expected to be completed mid- to late-2019. Amenities in the new facility will include four dining locations, including a main cafeteria to replace Marshbanks Hall, plus a juice bar and deli shop. An apparel and collegiate memorabilia store will also be part of the first floor, set near a two-story fitness center. The second floor will include a banquet hall that will seat up to 800 people and a movie theater that will double as an instruction area for larger classes. The building will feature a glass tower that can change lighting colors, and the walls facing the Academic Circle will be made


BY THE NUMBERS A closer look at the new student union coming to Campbell University's main campus, expected in fall 2019:

1

The movie theater inside the new student union will become the first and only movie theater in Harnett County. Currently, Campbell students have to drive 20 to 25 miles for theaters in Apex or Garner.

2

The student union will be one of two new buildings coming to the Academic Circle in the next few years. Before it, a new admissions building will be built in the bare section of land between the proposed union and Butler Chapel. Like the union, the admissions building will have glass walls providing prospective students a scenic view of the campus and the iconic Kivett Hall.

RENDERINGS COURTESY OF LITTLE DIVERSIFIED ARCHITECTURE

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The student union is the centerpiece of President J. Bradley Creed's $75 million Campbell Leads fundraising campaign, to kick off this fall. About $35 million of the campaign will go toward the new facility.

800 almost entirely of glass, providing a unique view of main campus’ historic buildings. Campbell’s current student center, named for former President Jerry Wallace, was built in 1978 and is nearly 10-times smaller than the future facility (11,000 square feet). CAMPBELL LEADS

The student union is one of the focal points of the Campbell Leads campaign, which has a total fundraising goal of $75 million — $35 million for the student union, $30 million to support student scholarships and $10 million for other projects. President Creed will embark on a 13-city speaking tour this fall — similar to his “An Evening with J. Bradley Creed” introductory M AG AZIN E .CAMP BE LL.EDU

tour during his first year in 2015 — to offer a sneak peek of the new facility and provide more details of the campaign, which will also go toward funding the more than 900 scholarships Campbell provides each year. “Through the Campbell Leads campaign, we seek support to provide opportunities for students to continue to develop quality leadership skills and experiences during their time on campus,” says Creed. “The student union will enhance our campus with amenities to empower our students to continue to develop their leadership and social skills.” Creed’s second speaking tour will begin on Sept. 12 in Dunn, followed by a Sept. 26 appearance in Fayetteville. The full schedule can be found at campbell.edu/president.

The banquet hall on the second floor of the new facility will seat up to 800 people for formal events, conferences, academic gatherings and more. The hall can be split into smaller rooms with partitions and will feature a catering kitchen. The entire second floor will have higher ceilings and glass walls to allow in more natural light.

100,000

The 100,000 square feet of space provided by the student union will be a tremendous upgrade from the current 11,000-squarefoot Wallace Student Center built in 1978. In addition to dining, fitness, merchandising and social areas for students, the facility will provide much-needed office and meeting space for Student Life, Greek Life and other student organizations, such as the Campbell Times newspaper and Pine Burr yearbook. Several rooms and areas will be designated study areas.

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AROUND CAMPUS AROUND CAMPUS

LEADING WITH PURPOSE

"This is an opportunity for me to serve. If we can embrace the opportunity to serve each other, we can embrace the opportunity to serve the student body as a whole. To be able to take this heart of service and apply it to this organization, is something that I’m really excited about." — Katie Bradley on taking on the role as president of the Student Government Association in 2017 | Photo by Lydia Huth 12 SUMMER 2017


PHOTO BY LYDIA HUTH

The Dream

Patricia Oates Conway returned to finish an important chapter in Campbell's history

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atricia Oates Conway’s first college experience will remain with her always — positive memories of choir trips and friendships mixed with the scars of prejudice and isolation. She enrolled at then-Campbell College in the fall of 1968 to study music, among the first three black students to desegregate the school in the late 60s (basketball star Cordell Wise was the first, coming to Campbell the previous year). However, she left Buies Creek for the bright lights of Baltimore in 1970 to, as she put it, find herself and start her life. Forty-seven years later, Conway finished what she started. In May, she walked with a hop in her step across the stage at Campbell’s spring commencement ceremony to receive her long-awaited degree in communication studies. Her graduation closed an important chapter in Campbell's history, providing a happy ending to a story that didn't always have the happiest of moments. Her first Campbell memory was in the summer of ’68, sitting outside of President Norman A. Wiggins’ office while her counselor from Sampson High School in Clinton, the Rev. Roger A. White (a Campbell grad), spoke to him about her enrollment. White walked out

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into the lobby where Conway sat, looked her in the eyes and said, “You’re a Campbell student.” “Dr. Wiggins asked Rev. White what I had to offer Campbell, and his response was, ‘What can Campbell do for her?’” Conway recalls. She did have something to offer Campbell — her voice. As a freshman, she joined the travelling choir and built strong friendships in the previously all-white group. Others on campus, however, weren’t as accepting. Conway recalls the first sting of the n-word from a fellow student as she walked to Marshbanks from her dorm to practice piano one afternoon. There was also the choir trip where she and a white male student were refused service at a restaurant in Raleigh because the waitress thought they were a couple. “Those experiences … they changed my whole scope on things,” she says. “It happens enough times, it does something to you.” The stress and the workload — difficult classes and a busy choir schedule — eventually became too much, and Conway left Campbell midway through her third year to move to Baltimore with her aunt and uncle. Work, marriage, children and a separation marked her 20 years in the city, and in the late 1980s, she returned home to be near family. All three

White — to seal the deal.

of her children went to college, and as adults, they began to encourage their mother to return. But it took a chance meeting with the man who introduced her to Campbell the first time — the Rev.

“I was working at Walmart at the time, and I felt a presence behind me. It was the Rev. Roger White,” she says. “We hadn’t seen each other in years, and not long after we exchanged pleasantries, he came out with, ‘When are you going back to Campbell?’ I answered, ‘Why? Am I supposed to?’ He said I needed to do it. ‘They owe you an education,’ he said.” Earlier that year, Conway lost her oldest son, Gary, who was 35. Before his death, Gary had also encouraged her to return to school, saying she was going to write a book one day. “I was standing at the edge of a cliff, looking over it, and there was no bottom,” Conway says. “I knew I had to take the leap, though. So I leapt. Four years later, I’m ready to run.” BILLY LIGGETT C A MP B E L L M AG AZ I N E 13


“They're good dogs, Brent.”

NETFLIX.COM

— Campbell student Matt Nelson, creator of the highly popular We Rate Dogs (@dog_rates) Twitter account that now has more than 2.88 million followers. This summer, Nelson was featured in numerous publications and sites such as Esquire, The Washington Post and CNBC. "They're good dogs, Brent" has become one of the Internet's hottest memes; the quote a response to a follower who questioned Matt on why all of his dog ratings are 10 and higher. The phrase has been sold on thousands of T-shirts worldwide.

ALUMNI COUPLE BACK WITH ROLES IN NETFLIX HIT 'OZARK' All apologies if Campbell Magazine is becoming the official update publication for actors Bethany Anne Lind ('04) and Eric Mendenhall ('04), but the married Campbell duo has again found themselves in a hit television series. The two appear in the new Netflix drama, "Ozark," about a financial advisor (Jason Bateman) and his wife (Laura Linney) who turn dark as money launderers for a South American drug cartel. Mendenhall (spoiler alert) comes and goes in the first episode, but Lind has a significant role as the wife of a Missouri preacher. It's the second popular Netflix show in a year for Lind, who appeared in "Stranger Things" last fall.

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DIVINITY

From tourists to pilgrims: Divinity students, alumni journey to Holy Land

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or Anna Moxley, the emotion hit hardest in the West Bank at Wadi Qelt, which calls to mind the “valley of the shadow of death” in Psalm 23, a passage that has played a huge part of her faith journey. She recently lost her grandmother to ovarian cancer, and during the year she fought it, Psalm 23 was a source of comfort for not only Moxley, but her family as well. “Seeing a visual representation of that valley overwhelmed me,” says the Divinity School student. “I was reminded and reassured that we have hope beyond the pain of this life. But even in the midst of our pain, God is right there beside us.”

It was a graduation trip for Virginia Taylor (’17), who walked the stage the day before the flight from Raleigh-Durham International Airport to Tel-Aviv, Israel. Taylor says a friend gave her a book about the Holy Land after she signed up, and one quote from the book spoke to her: Traveling through the Holy Land is like visiting the family home of a good friend. No matter how well you know the person, you’ll understand your friend better afterward. “I can say that is certainly true,” Taylor says. “Not only did the trip shape my understanding of Jesus, but also scripture. The Bible has really come to life for me.”

Moxley and 50 other students, faculty and alumni from Campbell embarked on a 12day journey to the Holy Land in May, taking in historic sites like the Sea of Galilee, the Mount of Beatitudes, the stone city of Petra, the Dead Sea and the Mount of Olives. Their trip ended with a visit to the Garden Tomb, considered by any to be the site of the burial and resurrection of Jesus Christ.

For student Corey Mitchell, it was hard to appreciate some aspects of the Holy Land because of the amount of debris and “lack of care” to some important parts of the Biblical landscape. But that did little to curb his enthusiasm upon his return — his favorite spot was the Dan spring, which flows into the Jordan River. It was there his experience shifted from “tourist” to “pilgrim.”

The trip was led by Tony Cartledge, professor of Old Testament and writer of the Nurturing Faith Bible Studies (Nurturing Faith Experiences partnered for the trip) and Peter Donlon, director of church relations and development for Campbell Divinity. In Israel, the group was led by veteran tour guide Doron Heiliger. “It was a phenomenal journey,” says Donlon. “It was, without a doubt, a life-changing experience for everybody.”

“It was at this point that I truly connected with God,” Mitchell says. “Not only did I feel his presence, but I felt as if I was one with nature. As I walked along the nature trail the sound of the flowing water reminded me of the scripture, ‘Whoever believes in me, as Scripture has said, rivers of living water will flow from within them.’ The sights and sounds were the ultimate experience for me.” BILLY LIGGETT


AROUND CAMPUS THE STONE CITY

One of the most memorable stops for the group of Campbell Divinity students, faculty and alumni on their trip to the Holy Land was the stone city of Petra, Jordan's most famous attraction. Known for its rock-cut architecture and water conduit system, Petra is considered one of the New7Wonders of the World. | Photo courtesy of Peter Donlon

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ASSOCIATED PRESS PHOTO

AROUND CAMPUS

Resilience

Professor honors his father — one of 52 U.S. citizens held hostage for 444 days by Iranian militants in 1979 — with memorial scholarship in his name

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t had been a few weeks, maybe months, after U.S. diplomat Richard Morefield returned home after 444 hellacious days as one of 52 Americans held captive by Iranian militants from November 1979 to January 1981. Morefield was approached by an older couple in a restaurant who thanked him for being “a hero.” That “thank you” has stuck with Kenneth Morefield, who was 14 when his father was taken captive. “The encounter made my father a little uncomfortable,” he says. “He felt he didn’t do anything ‘heroic’ except survive. But he was gracious, and when the couple reached out to shake his hand, he saw the tattoos on their wrists. Marks from the concentration camps.” Kenneth Morefield is now 51, an important age for the Campbell English professor, because it's the same age his father was when his embassy in Tehran was stormed by students who supported the Iranian Revolution, which marked the beginning of 16 SUMMER 2017

what would come to be known as the Iran Hostage Crisis. In thinking back to what those 444 days were like for his father, his mother and his siblings, several high points and low points come to mind for Kenneth. The older he gets, the more those positive moments — outreach or kindness from complete strangers during the whole ordeal — jump to the forefront of his thoughts. And that fleeting moment with two Holocaust survivors —they, of all people, were impressed with his father’s courage and perseverance — will never be forgotten by the Morefield family. “I’ve thought about that story a lot,” says Kenneth. “My take from it is this: Suffering isn’t a contest. I think anyone who has that mindset gets locked into a victim mentality. It becomes what defines them. What I think my father wanted us to get from it was this — those who come to grips with their own suffering are the ones who are able to translate their experience into empathy and sympathy for others. It was a powerful moment for my father, for reasons he wasn’t able to articulate for some time.”

Richard Morefield died in 2010 after a lengthy battle with pneumonia. He was 81. In the spring, Kenneth, the youngest of Richard’s six children, announced through Campbell’s Office of Advancement that he will fund a memorial scholarship in his father’s name to honor his legacy and award students who meet certain criteria and represent that legacy. The Richard Morefield Memorial Scholarship will be made possible by money Kenneth has received from the United States Victims of State-Sponsored Terrorism Fund, established in 2015 to compensate thousands of victims of international acts of state-sponsored terrorism. In April, the U.S. Government announced it had made payments totaling more than $800 million to families, with the money administered by the Justice Department’s Money Laundering and Asset Recovery Section (none of the fund is made up of taxpayer money). “I think it’s important, as a Christian and a representative of a Christian institution, when you get a cash windfall or gift like this, part of your response is giving back to the community


in ways that are meaningful,” Kenneth says. “This scholarship represents his values. It helps a cause that was important to him while he was alive.”

‘You can’t hold your breath’ Richard Morefield was sent to Iran because he had experience working calmly in war-torn countries. Iran in the late 1970s was in the midst of a revolution — the Pahlavi Dynasty, supported by the U.S., was eventually replaced by the Islamic Republic, led by the Ayatollah Khomeini. After the Embassy siege and the captivity of 52 Americans, an international crisis ensued. Morefield was held in a cramped cell lit only by small window slits above him for those 444 days. His experience was frightening. From his obituary in the Washington Post on Oct. 14, 2010: “Following lessons he learned in training, he made no attempt to befriend guards and ate all food offered to him. He spoke of surviving mentally by doing light exercise — push-ups, sit-ups, pacing his cell — and trying to create crossword puzzle games in his head and recall math problems from his childhood. He said the Iranians tried to play with his head by allowing him cards and books, only to take them away without warning.” Three times he was taken to a basement by his captors, blindfolded and told to kneel before them. Three times, the Iranians would place a pistol to his head and pull the trigger. Three times, the chamber was empty. Back in San Diego, California — 7,648 miles away — Kenneth had just started high school. His interests included drama and theater … the following year he’d perform in Serra High School’s production of M*A*S*H. That year and 79 days were a roller coaster ride of emotions for the Morefield family — highs on the 12 days they received a letter from dad, and lows such as the day an attempted rescue led to two helicopters colliding near the embassy, killing eight U.S. servicemen. “I think it was Christmas during that first year when we realized that whatever solution was coming, it was going to be a long-term solution,” Kenneth says. “Our mother wanted us to go back to school, telling us we couldn’t put our lives on hold. It could be three weeks, a month or 10 years. The longer you put your life on hold, the harder it becomes to re-adjust when it ends. You no longer have a sense of routine in life. There was a lot of wisdom in that. You can’t hold your breath for an entire year.” M AG AZIN E .CAMP BE LL.EDU

Dorothea Morefield became somewhat of a national spokesperson for the hostage families — she was the go-to interview on the West Coast when the news outlets had updates. Kenneth says his mother was both intelligent and articulate and most importantly, willing to talk. The resolve of Richard Morefield and his family was a product of tragedy from three years earlier. In 1976, the Morefields’ oldest child, Rick Jr., a college freshman, was one of four people murdered during an armed holdup at a Roy Rogers Restaurant in Alexandria, Virginia. Richard Morefield would later say in a news conference that losing his son “forced me to make the decision that I was going to cope. There was nothing more they could do emotionally to me.” Ronald Reagan was inaugurated as the 40th president on Jan. 20, 1981. The following day, the hostages were released, and Richard Morefield was sent home. While the ordeal ripped some families apart and led to years of psychiatric care for others, the Morefields were able to achieve as much normalcy as they could have hoped for over the next 29 years. “My brother Dan once surprised a lot of people by saying Iran was neither the highest nor the lowest points of his life,” Kenneth says. “I think my dad felt that way, too. Yes, there were some scars — physical and psychological — that never healed. A psychologist once told my mom that my father had the profile of a person best equipped to deal with that situation.” The first was his age: 51. Kenneth’s age today. That number allows Kenneth to better understand his father’s mindset in 1979. “[Fifty-one] means you’ve lived your life. You’ve had some achievements,” he says. “He was educated. Capable of understanding the big picture. He’d had some professional success, and he’d been through tragedy before.” A reporter once asked his father if given the choice, knowing what he knew, would he still have gone to Tehran? “Who’d say ‘yes’ to that, right?” Kenneth says. “But my father said something surprising: ‘There’s not enough money in the world to pay me to do it again. But having been through it and survived, I wouldn’t trade it. I wouldn’t give it up.’ “I later asked him what he meant by that, and I processed it as it’s important to look forward. It’s another big lesson I was able to take from all of this.” BILLY LIGGETT

cu_biology | Ambulances and a helicopter on the front lawn of the Health Sciences Campus attracted a lot of attention! Biology alumni Kayla ('17), Morgan ('17) and biochem senior Taylor participated as victims in Campbell PA school's mock mass casualty event. Everyone made it out "alive" ... well, mostly. #cambpelledu #campbellPA

Grant to fund national study to improve health in rural communities The health of rural America is at the heart of a Campbell study sponsored by the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation, the nation’s largest public health funder. The foundation awarded Campbell a grant to fund an 18-month national exploration — the Rural Philanthropic Analysis — designed to create, identify and enhance ideas and insights to improve the impact of charitable organizations when it comes to supporting healthy, equitable rural communities. The lead project director is Allen Smart, former senior vice president and interim president of the North Carolina-based Kate B. Reynolds Trust. “My experience says that philanthropy can be a critical part of helping communities support better health for their residents,” Smart said. “This project will help advance the knowledge base around effective rural philanthropy and help inform better and more effective investments going forward.” The $730,248 grant allows the project to run through December 2018. RWJF generates roughly $400 million in grants nationally each year to “build a national culture of health, enabling everyone in America to live longer, healthier lives." C A MP B E L L M AG AZ I N E 17


AROUND CAMPUS

@campbelledu Trust & Wealth Management majors are taking care of business all across the country like these three at their summer internships with Wells Fargo.

Poet Laureate

You haunt coffee shops, sitting near the front for the reading. When the mic opens for you, the espresso machine howls, and you deliver a last line no one recognizes. The blue glow of cell phones ghost the audience, bleaching them down to skeletons. At home, you slump a shoulder against the language, push hard, and climb again. Like Dickinson. Your dirty clothes lump like burial mounds, and scraps fossilize on the dishes. The only warmth is the cat who slips through the shadows, never allowing you to touch her. — “Poet Laureate” by Campbell Online adjunct literature professor Ty Stumpf, who published his first book of poems, Suburban Burn, in March. The book, named a finalist in the national Cathy Smith Bowers Chapbook competition, can be purchased online at TyStumpf.com.

18 SUMMER 2017

PHOTO COURTESY OF DANIEL TAYLOR

Crumbs punctuate your notebook. The dry sandwich smashed in your left hand, and the fading black ballpoint pen in your right. These words must see, be seen. They must be bearded and wear a hat cocked to one side. Shirt open to the fingers of wind that slide across. Like Whitman, you think. The lunch hour closes its yellow eyes, and you’re back doing faceless work.

ENGINEERING

A summer spent tracking elephants, providing solar power in South Africa

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aniel Taylor wins the “What I Did This Summer” contest. And it’s not even close. Taylor, a sophomore mechanical engineering student at Campbell, spent much of his summer in South Africa developing, measuring and tracking systems on elephants in the savannah and creating a solar-powered lighting system for a poor community. In his work with the elephants, Taylor was in charge of developing a method of recording and evaluating elephants in the African bush. The GPS systems are being used to analyze the learning progress of elephants and the impact of different conditions such as terrain, wind and humidity. Working up close with the mammoth creatures was exciting, Taylor says, but his work providing solar power to the people of Vingerkraal, a poor community north of Johannesburg and home to Namibian

war refugees, proved more rewarding. “I am partnering with a Duke student to teach the locals the basics of electricity and soldering while also meeting the lighting need,” Taylor told Campbell Magazine in an email from South Africa. In addition to teaching community leaders electricity basics and how to solder, they handed out 250 solar-powered light systems that will allow homes to have a focused light for children to study by and two other lights for general use. “We are looking to teach the community a new skill,” Taylor adds, “while also giving them something they need — light. After learning how electricity works, they understand the need for soldering, which allows them to better comprehend the process. We are providing a platform for these young people to accept responsibility and lead.”


JAZZ HANDS

Allie Miller performs front and center during Campbell Opera Theater's spring performance — featuring music from “Pippin,” “West Side Story,” “Rent” and more — at Scott Concert Hall. | Photo by Bennett Scarborough M AG AZIN E .CAMP BE LL.EDU

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AROUND CAMPUS FACILITIES

Construction begins on new admissions, financial aid center

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Wendy B. Scott, former dean and current professor of law at Mississippi College, joined the Campbell Law faculty as a distinguished visiting professor for the fall academic semester. Scott teaches two sections of Civil Procedure I and a seminar on Native American Law. She served as the eighth dean of Mississippi College School of Law from 2014-16, standing as the first African-American to hold that role. • Campbell was named North Carolina’s safest college or university campus in a report released this year by Your Local Security, an ADT affiliate. The rankings were based on low crime rates and programs designed to provide on-campus protection and relied on data and statistics provided by the U.S. Department of Education and the FBI. • Campbell and Harnett County celebrated the opening of the new Campbell Convenience Site in the spring. The site offers household trash collection and commingled recycling, as well as book and textile recycling at its location less than a quarter-mile from campus. The new site features self-contained compactors for trash and recycling, which are more sanitary than traditional containers. • The School of Osteopathic Medicine had the highest percentage of recent graduates match into family medicine residencies in the state this year, according to the North Carolina Academy of Family Physicians. Of the 150 inaugural graduates of the School of Medicine who participated in the 2017 National Resident Matching Program, 20 percent of those new physicians matched into family medicine residency programs. • The School of Engineering has established its first two national engineering student organizations since launching last fall. The Society of Women Engineers and the National Society of Professional Engineers/Professional Engineers of North Carolina respectively formally approved Campbell’s chapters, providing students access to a community of professionals. 20 SUMMER 2017

n the early 1900s, Buies Creek Academy founder J.A. Campbell recruited Bernard F. McLeod Sr. and his family to move to the small, rural community to work and provide food and support for the school’s students, faculty and staff. Part of the “deal” was an education for Bernard and his future children.

office on the first floor, and the second floor will house financial aid and the business office. Currently, those three offices are separated into two buildings on campus. Meeting rooms and interview rooms in the center will look out over the Academic Circle, facing Campbell’s iconic Kivett Hall and D. Rich Buildings.

Over a century later, the McLeod name is now synonymous with recruitment at Campbell University. This summer, the University celebrated the start of construction on the Bernard F. McLeod Sr. Admissions & Financial Aid Center with generations of the McLeod family — including Bernard Jr., a 1948 Campbell College graduate — on hand.

“We wanted a place that would be welcoming … a real family-centered location,” said Vice President for Business and Treasurer Jim Roberts. “It had to be a place that was professional as we bring people in, and it had to be a place that was spirited and steeped in Campbell tradition. Those were the basic tenets we wanted as we began planning this building.”

“The McLeod family’s service to Campbell has been exceptional and will be remembered for years to come,” said Thomas J. Keith, chairman of the Board of Trustees whose family has also supported Campbell for generations (Keith Hills bears his family’s name). “This building will be an iconic structure and a one-stop shop for the enrollment process at Campbell. It will be the first impression for most students here and a wonderful one, to be sure.” Construction on the new center is set to begin Sept. 18, and the building is expected to be ready for use by the fall 2018 semester. It will be located in Campbell’s Academic Circle, between Butler Chapel and the future spot for the 100,000-plus square-foot student union. The building will be home to the admissions

Speakers stood under a tent where the center’s visitor parking lot will soon sit. Behind them, the grass was marked in orange and white outlines showing where offices and waiting rooms on the first floor would sit. Admissions employees posed for photos in their future offices after the ceremony. “The Campbell experience, it all begins with admissions,” said Assistant Vice President for Admissions Jason Hall. “When interviewing potential members of our team, I tell them we’re continually selling Campbell, and the most important part of the student experience begins in our office. It’s the first impression. The atmosphere of hospitality and love for the University sets the tone for their visit.” BILLY LIGGETT


PHOTO BY BENNETT SCARBOROUGH

“I'm one of you. Someone trying to navigate this adventure called life.” — Dr. Erasmo Espino, a charter class graduate of the Jerry M. Wallace School of Osteopathic Medicine, speaking to Adult & Online Education graduates at Campbell in May. Espino first enrolled at Campbell's Fort Bragg campus in 2002. He successfully completed Special Forces Selection in 2002 and earned his Green Beret in 2004.

MUSIC

'Sound of the Sandhills' slated to receive marching orders by 2018

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oon the familiar rumble from the Sound of the Sandhills won’t be limited to its dedicated section of bleachers at Barker-Lane Stadium. The Fighting Camels stadium and pep bands are slated to hit the field as a full fledged marching band in next year. "When football returned to Campbell, we had the opportunity to start the Sound of the Sandhills Stadium Band adding to the Campbell Bands program, while dreaming of the day that the Stadium Band might become a marching band,” said Director of Bands and Instrumental Studies Charles Dwayne Wilson. “In fall 2018, under the direction of Director of Athletic Bands Andy Smith, that dream is becoming a reality.” The band will work on laying its foundation during football season this fall with auditions, rehearsals and show design. The marching band will officially launch when football moves to scholarship play and the Big South Conference in August 2018. Wilson says the marching band will expand opportunities for member recruitment, university service and community service.

is palpable. Several members of the band returned home from an international concert series over the summer expanding the reach of the program before marching gets underway. The Wind Symphony performed by invitation at the Mittelrhein Musik Festival in St. Goar, Germany, and the Beethoven House in Bonn, Germany. Campbell’s Jazz Ensemble performed in Cologne, Germany, after a stint in Washington, D.C., in June. Over the past 18 years, the program has grown from 27 members scattered across concert performances and basketball games to 160 members playing in 10 groups. Not a bad return on investment for the small leadership team that oversees it. Now that Wilson's band is back home, its eyes are set on the future and the founding of the Sound of the Sandhills Marching Band. “Next fall, you will hear us coming,” he says. “We’ll start at the Fine Arts building and march across campus energizing the crowd. It’ll be a great addition to the Game Day experience in Buies Creek.”’ LEAH WHITT

His energy for the current success of the music program and future marching band @CampbellUBands Now that the band members know, we are proud to officially announce the Sound of the Sandhills Marching Band, coming in 2018! We are so excited to add this ensemble to all of the great programs at Campbell #TheCreekisMarching #MarchingCamels M AG AZIN E .CAMP BE LL.EDU

• The American Osteopathic Association’s Commission on Osteopathic College Accreditation voted to grant Campbell's School of Osteopathic Medicine full accreditation status in April. Accreditation status is the highest level of accreditation awarded, and confers all rights and privileges of accreditation. “Achieving full accreditation of our medical school is the glowing result of more than five years of tremendous work,” said Dr. Mark Hammond, vice president for academic affairs and provost at Campbell. “We celebrate this pinnacle achievement and are extremely grateful for all who made it possible." • The Council for the Accreditation of Educator Preparation announced in June that Campbell is one of 16 providers from 10 states and the District of Columbia to receive accreditation for their educator preparation programs. The spring 2017 review by the CAEP Accreditation Council increased to 50 the total number of providers approved under the CAEP teacher preparation standards — rigorous, nationally recognized standards that were developed to ensure excellence in educator preparation programs. • Campbell Law Assistant Professor Zachary Bolitho was appointed to a position in the U.S. Department of Justice in June. Bolitho took leave from the Campbell Law faculty this summer to serve as counsel to Deputy Attorney General Rod Rosenstein. The Deputy Attorney General is second in command at the U.S. Department of Justice behind Attorney General Jeff Sessions. Bolitho will advise Rosenstein on a number of legal and policy issues. C A MP B E L L M AG AZ I N E 21


22 SUMMER 2017


It's always Sunni

Sunni Sky's a tradition now spanning a generation

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unni Sky’s was still a relatively new business in 2006 when owner Scott Wilson decided to try something unique to appeal to his “hot sauce crazy” friends. The result was Cold Sweat — a fiery three-pepper concoction so hot it required a legal waiver from anyone wanting to try it.

during their four years in Buies Creek, but an essential part of their Campbell experience as well. Incoming freshmen get their first taste during their summer orientations or during Welcome Week, where Wilson’s crew sets up a tent or truck on campus as they’ve done for well over a decade now.

A feature on Cold Sweat soon appeared in the Raleigh News & Observer, and business got a nice boost from the exposure. But when the Associated Press picked up the N&O story and sent it to every newspaper and radio and TV station in the world, Sunni Sky’s went viral (before “viral” was cool).

“I remember our first orientation, and it was just me and my daughter with nothing but a cooler and a few scoops, serving 200 people,” Wilson recalls. “We’ve refined the science of handling large events a little more by now.”

“I got a lot of attention for horrible ice cream,” says Wilson, who named his business after his children Sunni and Skylar back when they were 7 and 9 years old (they’re 21 and 24 now). “It was insane. We were known in Australia and China, and business just got out of control. I couldn’t wait to get rid of the Cold Sweat tub, to be honest.” Cold Sweat put Wilson and his business on the map, but it’s been the other 130plus flavors over the years that have made the small business just north of Angier on N.C. 55 the go-to place for ice cream and milkshakes when the weather calls for something cool. And they’re what’s made Sunni Sky’s not only a popular stop for Campbell students

The essential flavors — vanilla, chocolate, butter pecan, cookies and cream — are all there, but Sunni Sky’s distinguishes itself with the unique offerings. A hot day in June this year offered lemongrass, bacon and black licorice, among others you won’t find in a Baskin-Robbins. Wilson says “word of mouth” is his biggest marketing tool (he doesn’t do much advertising), and he thinks that plays a big part in why his product has become a “must” for Campbell students. “We’re a family business. We’ve had proposals in here, and we’ve even had a few employees who are now married,” Wilson says. “There’s a big father who comes in all the time and sits down at the kiddie table with is little girl. Those moments, that’s what’s really important to me.” BILLY LIGGETT

School of Engineering a leader when it comes female faculty ratio

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t 83 percent, Campbell's School of Engineering has one of the nation's highest percentages of female engineering faculty in the nation, the school reported this summer. “We have taken advantage of national networks to recruit top faculty, including those that are likely to reach out to large numbers of women and other underrepresented groups,” says founding Dean Jenna Carpenter, a national voice for women in STEM fields and the need for better diversity in engineering. Adds student Kristen Powell, president of the student Society of Women Engineers chapter: “This will show potential students and people that Campbell has a unique program in that we are leading the way in diversity. Some places say they want more diversity in STEM, but in reality, they are stuck in their ways. Campbell is leading the way.”

New Luby Wood Hall packed with amenities The new dorm that has altered the landscape of Campbell University opens this fall, and its residents are in for a treat. Luby Wood Hall is Campbell's newest residence hall, a four-story facility made up of two sections connected by a glass-enclosed walkway. The hall features single and double occupancy dorm rooms, three full kitchens, a covered bike garage, laundry facilities, study rooms, lounging areas and a first-floor Provisions on Demand (POD) store. "This building is the result of a lot of surveys and comments from students telling us what they want and need most from their on-campus living experience," said Scott Phillips, director of Facilities Management at Campbell. | Photo by Bennett Scarborough

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#CAMPBELL21 A PROPER INTRODUCTION

PHOTOS BY BILL PARISH

The Campbell University Class of 2021 got its first peek of college life during two separate orientations over the summer. Students met their classmates, got a taste of dorm living and took part in the annual service project, which this year included stuffing Teddy bears for the nonprofit organization, Phillip's Love Bears. | Photos by Bill Parish

a_t_dalton Hannah's future room. #caravan2campbell2017 #campbellorientation #campbell21

24 SUMMER 2017

chichigirl1 Orientation √ Moved in dorm √ Stock room w/ amenities √ Had Mom/son talks √ Mom cries all the way back √ #campbell21 #iwillmisshimsomuch

@Bri_lash Campbell ready! #Campbell21

@mmatthews61 Makes Education Dad feel good when daughter comes home from @campbelledu orientation with this. :)


brent_dawson2 This group right here was AMAZING! Thanks for making my first experience as an OL so wonderful. I'm so excited for your first year here. M AG AZIN E .CAMP BE LL.EDU

dylan.gray.421 Can't wait to see what the next four years has in store for me. And can't wait to do it with one of my best friends. #campbell21

emilyphipps13 What a wonderful sneak peek of the upcoming year with great friends! Cannot wait to see God's plan unfold.

@tyresa_chenelle I think I'm going to like it here! #Campbell21

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26 SUMMER 2017


The First Lady Kristin Cooper (’82 Law) enters her new role in the Governor’s Mansion with a fresh spirit, advocacy in mind BY LEAH WHITT | PHOTOS BY LISSA GOTWALS

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he North Carolina Executive Mansion sits northeast of the hustle of downtown Raleigh in Burke Square, one of five green spaces included in the capital city’s original plans. Drawn up by William Christmas, the surveyor envisioned a city landscape much like Savannah, Georgia, that included multi-acre public plots dotted throughout the city for residents to enjoy nature. Since then, Union Square became the state’s capitol building, Cashwell Square became the School for the Deaf and Blind and Burke Square became home to the governor at the insistence of Gov. Thomas Jordan Jarvis in 1883. This lesson in state history is one of the first things we receive upon entering the mansion from their tour guides. However, on an unseasonably warm morning in May, North Carolina’s First Lady Kristin Cooper is the tour guide revealing the history of her new home. And she’s a bold, fun tour guide. On the way in, she jumps onto the rope swing hanging from the large magnolia tree out front, much to her chief of staff’s chagrin. Standing on the low swing in her wedges, throwing her whole self into building momentum, she laughs. “Honey, I can do whatever I want,” she yells, but looks over at the State Trooper keeping an eye on the group and quickly returns to solid ground.

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Childhood hunger. Literacy. Foster care. The arts. Child abuse and neglect. She wants to bring to light how these difficult issues are connected and affect the social and emotional health of children in North Carolina. And she’s hitting the ground running.

She’s a blend of the proper Southern hostess and a rebel. She offers refreshments to her guests, but not before ushering us through a door to a closed-off, official-looking area that houses the kitchen and security offices. Half-sweet, half-unsweet tea in hand, she continues rattling off facts about the massive home and pointing out details in the front parlors. She shares the upper floors with her husband, Gov. Roy Cooper, two cats and until the night before, their dog Chloe. In the Gentlemen’s Parlor, which is a striking contrast to the Ladies’ Parlor across the foyer, she points out the rug. It honors the history of North Carolina with depictions of the state’s pivotal moments in each of its corners. 28 SUMMER 2017

There’s Desoto from his 1540 exploration of the Appalachians in the far left corner, the beloved Old Well from the opening of the state’s first public university in 1795 to the right, the Wright brothers’ biplane in the far right corner, and the ship sent by Sir Walter Raleigh himself to establish the first colony on Roanoke Island to the left. She says she’s grateful for the snow in January because that gave her time to dig up old notes about the home and learn its history. And she continues with the tour as if we came to see the house and not her, pausing briefly in the gilded ballroom. “The school groups always love this room because it’s covered in gold,” she says in a

way that sounds like she didn’t quite buy into the extravagance of the decorator who refashioned the home in the 1970s — the same designer Jacqueline Kennedy used during her stay in the White House. And it’s true. Kristin Cooper is not extravagant. She’s a mother, a wife, a friend and a lawyer. She has hopes and dreams. She suffers through loss and disappointments. She climbs trees and plants herbs in her yard. She works hard and likes to have fun. To put it simply, she is normal. And in today’s tumultuous political landscape, being normal is refreshing. Born to a physician and an artist, Cooper grew


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Hangin’ with Mrs. Cooper Observations on an afternoon with North Carolina First Lady Kristin Cooper — by Leah Whitt • Details Matter | Kristin Cooper is all about the little details. When she attended an event at NC State earlier this year, she wore red. When she walked in for our interview, she had on an orange sweater with a tiny wooden camel pinned to the collar. • One Stitch at a Time | The aforementioned sweater wasn’t just any orange sweater, either. When I mentioned it, she said she couldn’t find the right color orange, so she made one herself. An avid knitter, she hosts a regular knitting circle for her friends and even held an event for World Wide Knit in Public Day on June 10. • Experiences Over Things | The firstfloor library in the Executive Mansion is the one room, besides the dining room, that is often used by the First Family and staff who work there. It’s a manly room with dark woodwork and rich, warm leather furniture. Among all the grandeur are Cooper family photos in simple black frames. Photos of pets, family adventures, and the Cooper women at the Governor’s Inauguration Ball. Signaling that a fancy frame doesn’t compare to what’s inside it. • First Pets of North Carolina | The First Family’s pets joined Facebook earlier this year. Adelaide and Alexei rule the roost as most cats do, but the pets of the Cooper daughters make appearances too. First Dog Ben belongs to Hillary and likes to photobomb family photo sessions, and Natalie cares for an orchid mantis named Daisy. • Fitness Protection Program | She’s dedicated to her Fitbit. While she can’t ditch her security detail, she hits her daily 10,000 step goal by donning a disguise and going for a walk around town. Ninety percent of the time no one recognizes her. • Fish and Feathers | After our tour through the gardens, she walked over to the koi fish pond and greeted them as friends. Noting that they used to have six fish but a hawk snatched one. An added benefit of top-notch security, knowing what happens to the koi fish. • By Any Other Name | The grounds crew at the mansion insisted on planting two types of roses this spring when they were working on updating the landscape: the Oklahoma rose, an homage to Kristin’s home state, and the Kristin rose.

30 SUMMER 2017

up in Oklahoma City with her three sisters. After earning her undergraduate degree from the University of Oklahoma, she enrolled in law school because it was the one thing that blended her interests of history, writing and reading together that didn’t require her to become a professor. “My first day of law school, I remember the dean saying that a law degree was the last refuge of the generalist,” she recalls. “I think that’s true in some ways. In law school, you get the closest thing to a classical education.” After graduating Campbell Law School in 1982 with her Juris Doctor, she worked as a staff attorney for the legislature in North Carolina. That’s how she met her husband, a legislator from Nash County who would go on to become the state’s 75th governor.

Doing the Right Thing The role of First Lady at any political level is a strange one. There is no job description or hiring process. The only way to apply for it is by showing unwavering support of a significant other. The only how-to guide available is the example others have left in their wake. Ferrel Guillory, a political analyst and director of UNC-Chapel Hill’s Program on Public Life, puts it simply as a role without a script. “North Carolinians, in general, like their governors to put on a blue suit and a tie and get to work,” he said. “That’s the way [Roy Cooper] is. “The early indications are that his family are political assets. And Kristin is positioning herself to enhance the issues he believes in.” But Kristin Cooper is doing more than standing by her man. Cooper stepped back from the courtroom years ago to focus her attention on raising their three daughters, and there hasn’t been a true administrative Office of the First Lady of North Carolina in years. So she’s embracing the unique opportunity to create a new standard in her time at the mansion. Childhood hunger. Literacy. Foster care. The arts. Child abuse and neglect. This is what she wants to advocate for in her new position. She wants to bring to light how these difficult issues are connected and affect the

social and emotional health of children in North Carolina. And she’s hitting the ground running. In May, she partnered with the Food Bank of Central and Eastern North Carolina to kick off “Stop Summer Hunger,” a program designed to prevent nearly 300,000 students from going hungry while school is out for the summer. She also spoke to the graduating class at St. Mary’s in Raleigh, where her eldest daughter completed high school in 2011. “This troubled world needs your light, your voice, your spirit,” she said to the 77 young women graduating that day. Urging them to resist the trappings of comparison in today’s social media-driven world, she joked that even she wanted the life she portrayed on social media. In June, she visited the Chapel Hill Public Library to announce a federal grant totaling $120,000. To say she’s keeping busy is an understatement. While most of her appearances fall in line with her husband’s political stances, she genuinely cares about the issues at hand. For instance, her dedication to North Carolina’s Guardian ad Litem program spans over a decade — using her law degree to advocate for at-risk foster children in the court system, so they don’t become abandoned or neglected. As she walks through the gardens at the Governor’s Mansion, she talks with passion about how farm-to-table restaurants impact health and the economy and how important it is to provide healthy meals to those in need. Back inside the mansion, she sits down in the naturally-lit Morning Room and shares her love for reading and memories of reading books like Four on the Shore and Dr. Seuss’s classics with her girls as they grew up. The memories of her daughters asking her to read with them is why reducing illiteracy in young children is so important to her. She says a study from the University of Chicago recently stated that poor children enter school having heard 30 million fewer words than children in middle to upper-class homes. “One organization we’ve really gotten involved with is Reach Out and Read and battling this cultural notion that children


ASSOCIATED PRESS PHOTO BY GERRY BROOME

“My first day of law school, I remember the dean saying that a law degree was the last refuge of the generalist. I think that’s true in some ways. In law school, you get the closest thing to a classical education.” — Kristin Cooper

don’t need books until they can actually read.” Reach Out and Read partners with doctors to “prescribe” books to encourage families to read together and educate parents on the developmental importance of reading aloud. This is something the Cooper family incorporated with their own children 20 years ago. The impact was brought to attention as recently as this past Mother’s Day when her daughter Natalie mentioned reading aloud every night. Two pages for her mom and one page for her. Along with reading comes a passion for the arts for the Coopers. Her daughters have joined her on the stage of community theaters in North Carolina in productions of “Camelot” and “The Diary of Anne Frank.”

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Kristin also spends hours behind the scenes making costumes and serving on the Board of Directors at the Raleigh Little Theatre. On the way out of the mansion, she stops in the threshold of the dining room. Some staff members are just sitting down to eat lunch, checking their phones and planning a joint baby shower for three troopers who will be fathers soon. Pointing out the impressive crystal chandelier, she says it was delivered in a nondescript box unassembled with no instructions in the 1950s. It was a gift from the Horowitz family who fled Nazi Germany in World War II and landed in Asheville, North Carolina.

According to the house notes, the chandelier was one of the few family heirlooms the Horowitz’s were able to recover after the war. They gifted it to the state for its kindness to them as refugees. She pauses. Her story is not a political statement on immigration, but more of a comment on doing the right thing. At the end of the day, that’s who Kristin Cooper is. She’s a mother, a wife and a friend who focuses on doing the right thing.

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PHOTO BY LYDIA HUTH

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TAKE IT IN.

SMELL THE PEANUTS. THERE WILL NEVER BE

ANOTHER SUMMER

LIKE THESE TWO.

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FOR THE NEXT TWO YEARS, CAMPBELL UNIVERSITY IS HOME TO A PROFESSIONAL BASEBALL TEAM. STRANGE AS IT SOUNDS, THE ASTROS HAVE FOUND A PERFECT (TEMPORARY) HOME IN BUIES CREEK. BY BILLY LIGGETT

A

lot happens in the on-deck circle. It’s where a hitter takes practice swings before his turn at the plate. It’s where he eyes the pitcher’s mechanics and speed up close — a short window to get his timing down pat. Waiting in the wings before stepping on the main stage, the circle allows him a chance to take in his surroundings and mentally prepare for the spotlight. The Buies Creek Astros are in the on-deck circle. And when they take the field in April 2019 in their brand new, $33 million-dollar stadium in front of 5,000-plus fans, they’ll no longer have Creek in their name. They'll be the Fayetteville Fatbacks. Or the Fly Traps. Or the Jumpers or Wood Dogs or Woodpeckers. Whatever the name and the accompanying mascot, the team will be the hottest ticket in the Carolina League. They will have stepped up to the plate. By then, the Buies Creek Astros will be a memory. A Wikipedia entry. The answer to a tough baseball trivia question. A rare collectible hat or jersey on Ebay. But that’s 20 months away. For now, these are an important two years for the Houston Astros, an organization that has climbed from the cellar of the American League to the top of the standings. And thanks to its farm system, they look like a team built to stay at the top. These two years are important to this community, too.

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When it is all said and done, Buies Creek, Campbell University and Jim Perry Stadium will have hosted roughly 130 days and nights of pro baseball in its purest form. Families eating hot dogs and groups of local Little Leaguers chasing foul balls on warm summer evenings. Fans getting an up-close (really up-close) look at future stars like Kyle Tucker, Jason Martin, Forrest Whitley and Franklin Perez. Take it in. Smell the peanuts. There will never be another summer like these two.

The right fit. Even in the world of Minor League Baseball — where rural America, ballparks built near cornfields and intimate, familiar crowds are attributes woven into the fibers of the game — Buies Creek is small. It’s not technically the smallest — it’s actually 12 times larger than Sauget, Illinois (population 250), home of the Gateway Grizzlies of the independent Frontier League. But Sauget is 10 miles from the thriving metropolis of St. Louis, Missouri. The Gateway Arch can be seen from its ballpark. In other words, Buies Creek is no Sauget. The tallest structure seen from its ballpark is Kivett Hall, the centerpiece of Campbell University. You have to drive 40 miles north or south to find anything resembling a city. Buies Creek doesn’t have a stoplight. It’s not even technically a town (it’s a “census-designated place,” by definition). Yet there it was on Nov. 17, 2016, site for the kind of announcement many towns and cities would give their Main Streets for. There stood Reid Ryan — son of Hall of Fame pitching legend Nolan Ryan and president of the Houston Astros — announcing the arrival of professional baseball. The Buies Creek Astros.


CAROLINA LEAGUE The Buies Creek Astros belong to the Carolina League, an Advanced-A Minor League Baseball affiliation formed in 1945, just after World War II. Many famous Major Leaguers have started their careers in the league, including Johnny Bench, Wade Boggs, Barry Bonds, Rod Carew, Dwight Gooden, Chipper Jones, Joe Morgan, Zack Greinke, Andruw Jones, Darryl Strawberry, Bernie Williams and Carl Yastrzemski. The 1988 film “Bull Durham” — starring Kevin Costner, Susan Sarandon and Tim Robbins — featured the Durham Bulls, who were at the time members of the Carolina League. The current league consists of 10 teams (Major League affiliate in parenthesis):

NORTHERN DIVISION • Frederick Keys (Baltimore) • Lynchburg Hillcats (Cleveland) • Potomac Nationals (Washington) • Salem Red Sox (Boston) • Wilmington Blue Rocks (Kansas City)

SOUTHERN DIVISION • Buies Creek Astros (Houston) • Carolina Mudcats (Milwaukee) • Down East Wood Ducks (Texas) • Myrtle Beach Pelicans (Chi Cubs) • Winston-Salem Dash (Chi Sox)

« Myles Straw has been one of the rising stars for the Buies Creek Astros this year. The Carolina League All Star drove in 41 runs and stole 36 bases in 114 games before being called up to Double-A Corpus Christi. | Photo courtesy of the Buies Creek Astros M AG AZIN E .CAMP BE LL.EDU

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PHOTOS COURTESY OF THE BUIES CREEK ASTROS

SMALL-TOWN BASEBALL Buies Creek isn’t the smallest town in America with a professional baseball team, but they’re close. Sauget and Loch Sheldrake are both home to independent teams, making Buies Creek currently the smallest town to host a team associated with a Major League affiliate: • Sauget, Illinois: 159 • Loch Sheldrake, N.Y. 1,910 • Buies Creek, North Carolina: 2,942 • Zebulon, North Carolina: 4,433 • Bisbee, Arizona: 5,308 • Bluefield, Virginia: 5,444 • Wappingers Falls, N.Y.: 5,522 • Moosic, Pennsylvania: 5,719 • Alpine, Texas: 5,905 • Princeton, West Virginia: 6,432 • Old Orchard Beach, Maine: 8,624 • Trinidad, Colorado: 8,771 • Pulaski, Virginia: 8,909 • Kodak, Tennessee: 9,273

A team named for the nation’s prominent space program located in a “place” that covers roughly 2.2 square miles of mostly tobacco fields (and, of course, a university). The scene that November was surreal. Astros executives, local elected officials and Campbell administration donned blue and orange ballcaps and shook hands at home plate in Jim Perry Stadium. Camel cheerleaders unveiled a very Astros-looking logo with “BC” where the big “H” should be. As strange as it looked, it all somehow felt right. Even the weather on that mid-November afternoon felt more like a warm early-season game in May. For an organization that had spent the previous eight seasons in Lancaster, California — a city on the western edge of the Mojave Desert where average highs in the summer range from 95 to 100 degrees — North Carolina was an oasis. Last October, the Astros officially announced it was buying a Minor League franchise in Fayetteville — a move made to help streamline its farm system to control player movement more efficiently (the organization runs Rookie League and Short Season A teams in the east and its Class-A squad in Iowa). Before the purchase, Ryan and David Lane, Buies Creek’s general manager, were scouting cities and towns near Fayetteville to host the team while the new ballpark was being built. Campbell University’s recently renovated Jim

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Perry Stadium stood out immediately. “When we first came to Campbell, we just fell in love with it,” said Ryan, whose father pitched one of his record-setting seven no-hitters against Jim Perry in 1973. “This is a world-class facility, and so we targeted it as the spot we wanted to be at. Luckily for us, we found an administration and an athletics director happy and willing to work with us.” Ryan said part of the negotiating was “finding the best interests Campbell and the Astros.” When the deal was made, Campbell was in the process of adding to its stadium more seating, in-ground dugouts, a viewing deck, new locker rooms and coaches’ offices, and a state-of-the-art scoreboard. What it lacked was a professional-grade playing surface. The Astros fixed that by providing new synthetic turf — a surface that “replicates a natural baseball field’s look and playability” — installed in January. After some creative scheduling to allow for two teams to share one stadium from April to mid-May, the inaugural season of the Buies Creek Astros was set. The excitement from Campbell’s side was palpable. “Just the entire relationship with Houston and what this team can mean for our program is immeasurable,” Athletics Director Bob Roller said on Opening Day in April. “Every day in the New York Times, the USA Today and across the nation, ‘Buies Creek’ will appear in


the standings. And the games themselves will introduce a lot of people to Campbell’s campus. It’s great exposure.” For Campbell President J. Bradley Creed, having the Astros so close was extra special. He grew up a few hours from Houston and attended his first Major League game in the Astrodome as a kid in the 1960s.

— Reid Ryan, president of the Houston Astros and son of Hall of Fame pitching legend Nolan Ryan

Love of the game. It’s a 350-step walk from their cramped locker rooms on the lower level of the Pope Convocation Center to the outfield gate at Jim Perry Stadium. The new rubber and artificial grass turf — though ideal when it comes to ground balls, diving and base running — traps heat so that 90-degree day games in June feel about 10 degrees hotter. And there’s only so much Moe’s, Chick-fil-A and Subway a player or coach can eat before they’re longing for more dining-out options. But it could be worse. It could always be worse. Catcher Anthony Hermelyn played Single-A ball last year in Davenport, Iowa, infamous for the smells emanating from the nearby Purina dog food and Oscar Mayer meat production plants both within a mile of the ballpark there.

PHOTO BY BILLY LIGGETT

“It makes this native Texan proud,” Creed said. “You’ll have local folks introduced to this organization, and you’ll have Astros fans around the world learning about this community and this University by following their team. I couldn’t be any happier with this partnership.”

" WHEN WE FIRST CAME TO CAMPBELL, WE JUST FELL IN LOVE WITH IT."

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Lancaster, California, where many on the Astros roster played a season ago before the team left for North Carolina, is a desert town. Had the team stayed, they would have experienced a record-breaking 110-degree day in June this year. And for pitchers, Lancaster was a nightmare.

GOING FAST Campbell junior Noelle Beattie has worked the small merchandise booth at every home game this season, and she’s noticed one thing in her time spent in the small trailer: “Whatever they’re buying, everybody wants the name ‘Buies Creek’ on it.” Because the Astros’ stay in the Creek will only last two years, merchandise for the team will become a rarity. The team’s media and event coordinator Ricky Ray says he’s shipped hats and uniforms to New York, California and Texas, among other states. “I’m sure they’ll pop up on eBay one day,” he says. “But I can see why people want it. It’ll be a collector’s item, and you have to admit it’s a clean and classy look.”

“The wind always blew out, and the air was super thin,” recalled pitcher Riley Ferrell. “From a pitching standpoint, we love being here.” When the Lancaster roster learned last year it was heading east, they had a tool better than Google to learn about their new home. They had former Campbell standout pitcher Ryan Thompson, who pitched 20 games for Lancaster in 2016 before being called up to AA Corpus Christi this season. “Ryan loved it here, and he was excited for us,” says pitcher Justin Ferrell. “He told us it was a nice, relaxed little town and that we’d have fun.” Though it’s small — both the community and the locker rooms — and short on nightlife, Buies Creek has been a welcome change for many on the Astros’ roster. While some on the team have rented apartments closer to Raleigh in towns like Fuquay-Varina or Garner, the majority live a baseball’s throw from the stadium or a few miles out in Lillington. Off days in the middle of a homestand are few and far between in a 140-game schedule, but on those rare occasions, the players have played golf at Keith Hills, tried out tubing on the Cape Fear and have made short group trips to Sunni Sky’s Ice Cream in Angier. “No, it’s not been terribly exciting,” Hermelyn says with a grin. “At the same time, when there’s not much to do around here, you become closer as friends and as a team.” It’s the ideal situation for head coach Omar Lopez, a former Minor League player and scout who’s been a manager in the Astros’ farm system since 2008.

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“I love it, because as a manager, a quiet town is exactly what I’m looking for,” he says. “The players stay out of trouble, and they focus on baseball.” And focus they do. When they reach the Minor Leagues, players eat, breathe and sleep baseball. From April 6 to Sept. 4 of this year, the team had exactly 12 scheduled off days, three of those in a row for the All-Star break in late June. Because of scheduling conflicts with the Camels in the spring, Buies Creek agreed to play only 62 home games (instead of 70) and 78 on the road. That meant a few more bus trips and hotel stays. But even when they’re home, there’s little time to relax. Players arrive at the convocation center around 1 p.m. on most days, earlier if they need time in the trainer’s room. At 1:30, they’re meeting with specialty coaches (pitchers and catchers in one room, infielders in another, outfielders in another), and around 2:30, they’re heading to the field for about two hours of practice — speedsters practicing their bunts, catchers running down popups and pitchers working on their windups. At 4, batting practice. By 4:15, the visiting team starts entering through the outside gate (after a similar 350-step jaunt from the arena), and at 5, the Astros head to their lockers to get in their game uniforms and grab a quick bite before heading back to the field before first pitch at 7. The average Minor League game runs three hours — so it’s usually 10 p.m. when the team heads back to the lockers and maybe 10:30 or 11 before they’re heading to their apartments (some shared with four other guys) for food, sleep and no time for anything else. “It’s not easy,” says Lopez, who’s given up his own private office during this transition and instead has a small desk in the locker room he shares with six other coaches. “But baseball is a game of adjustments, and for these players, life in professional baseball is a big adjustment. If you choose to play this game at this level, then baseball becomes your life. If you choose


ÂŤ Hector Perez was called up to Buies Creek in the spring after just four games in Class-A ball. A native of the Dominican Republic, Perez is one of more than a dozen foreign-born players on the team. | Photo by Lydia Huth M AG AZIN E .CAMP BE LL.EDU

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to do this, then you choose to do everything you can to be your best. Not everyone here is going to play in the Major Leagues, but if they can survive this, when they go to the outside world, they’ll be mentally tough. They can do anything they want.” Hermelyn has made several adjustments in his short time in the Carolina League, including learning to share time with third-round pick and prospect Jake Rogers, who was called up to the team in mid-May. Eating habits change, he says, and it gets harder to maintain relationships with family and friends in his native Oklahoma. “But if you love baseball, it’s what you do,” he says. “If my Minor League experience has shown me anything, it’s how much I really love this game.”

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" A QUIET TOWN IS EXACTLY WHAT I'M LOOKING FOR. THE PLAYERS STAY OUT OF TROUBLE AND FOCUS ON BASEBALL." — Buies Creek Astros Manager Omar Lopez

beisbol y vida. For players like Franklin Perez, Carlos Sierra, Hector Perez and Yoanys Quiala, Minor League Baseball is as much about adapting to the United States and American culture as it is working on a split seam fastball or learning to hit a slider. Latino players make up about 27 to 30 percent of today’s professional baseball rosters, and many arrive in the rookie or Single-A leagues knowing very little to no English. Fourteen of the 32 players who make up the current Buies Creek roster are foreign-born young Latino men representing the Dominican Republic, Venezuela, Cuba, Panama and Mexico. The Astros organization is one of a handful in Major League Baseball to offer programs to help players learn English and adapt to their


new environment. And on days when the Buies Creek club is in town for evening home games, its Latino players sit in a small classroom in D. Rich Hall with Campbell University foreign language adjunct professor Brian Thomas to not only learn the language, but American culture and important things like money management and social skills. On this day, Thomas is joined by Doris Gonzalez, the organization’s coordinator of player acculturation and language development who has helped current Major League All-Stars like Houston Astros second baseman Jose Altuve of Venezuela and shortstop Carlos Correa of Puerto Rico during her career. Gonzalez routinely checks in on the programs at all levels of the Astros organization and has developed a close bond with many of her players, some of whom greet her with hugs and treat her like their mother. “I myself was an English language learner and an immigrant, so I know how hard it is for them,” says Gonzalez. “They work twice as hard as others on the team, because not only are they working on the field, they’re taking these classes, studying and constantly learning and adapting. It can be tough. So I’m heavily invested in them, and I care about their futures.” One particular class focuses on house problems — who to call when the electricity goes out, the toilet is clogged or the roof is leaking. Gonzalez and Thomas go over the English names for these repairmen — electrician, plumber and roofer — and get the players to stand in front of the class and perform mock phone calls in their best English. Some of the players zone out, no doubt the result of fatigue from the previous night’s game, a loss to the Salem Red Sox that went well beyond the typical 10 p.m. finish time. But most are happy to be doing this. Laughing as they learn. Taking notes. Three days earlier, they spent time at nearby Buies Creek Elementary School reading to kindergarteners and first

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graders, simultaneously sharpening their own skills and contributing to the community. Gonzalez says the biggest struggle for most incoming Latino players isn’t the language, but things like nutrition and housing. “We’ve found that a lot of players really struggle with not having the foods they grew up with,” she says. “Many simply don’t enjoy eating American food. So a lot of them lose weight or don’t eat healthy enough to keep up with the demands of the sport. They miss their momma’s Dominican cooking.” To assist with housing, Gonzalez helps find host families in the areas surrounding the Astros’ Minor League teams across the country. She says the team in Buies Creek benefits from having a manager from Venezuela who speaks their language and understands their struggles. “Omar Lopez is one of my favorite coaches,” she says. “He’s just so committed to their wellbeing. I truly admire him.”

COMING TO AMERICA Latino players make up about 27 to 30 percent of today’s professional baseball rosters, and many arrive in the rookie or Single-A leagues knowing very little to no English. Fourteen of the 32 players who make up the current Buies Creek roster are foreign-born young Latino men representing the Dominican Republic, Venezuela, Cuba, Panama and Mexico. The Houston Astros today feature two of the top Latin-born players in Major League Baseball in second baseman Jose Altuve (Venezuela) and shortstop Carlos Correa (Puerto Rico). Altuve played in his fifth All-Star game in 2017, and Correa became the first shortstop in Astros history to start in the Mid-Summer Classic.

Thomas brings an acoustic guitar to this particular class, and up until about 10 minutes before it let out, he never reveals why. Finally, he straps on the guitar and sits in front of the class, striking the first familiar chords of the folk blues song made famous by The Animals in 1964, “House of the Rising Sun.” There is a house in New Orleans, They call the Rising Sun ... By the second verse, the players — each with a lyric sheet in both English and Spanish in front of them — are singing along. By the end, the song is echoing throughout the halls of the mostly empty D. Rich building, and Thomas is singing like the solo act in a concert hall. The end of the class, however, is bittersweet, as Gonzalez is heading to Florida the next day. She catches a few players at the door to congratulate them on their progress and assures them she’ll be checking in on them.

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THE FARM Major League Baseball has an extensive system of Minor League affiliates, which each team having up to seven levels of development before players are called up to the “show.” The Houston Astros’ farm system looks like this: • Dominican Summer League: Astros Orange • Dominican Summer League: Astros Blue • Rookie League: Greeneville (Tenn.) Astros • Rookie League: Gulf Coast League (Fla.) Astros • Short Season A: Tri-City (N.Y.) ValleyCats • Single-A: Quad Cities (Iowa) River Bandits • Advanced-A: Buies Creek Astros • Double-A: Corpus Christi (Texas) Hooks • Triple-A: Fresno (Calif.) Grizzlies

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“Not all of these guys will make this their career, so when baseball’s done for them, they’ll at least have these skills to fall back on,” she says. “I tell them that whatever happens next, English is going to help them. I had one student write me from Panama telling me they got a job because they were bilingual. As a teacher, hearing things like that means everything to me.”

road to stardom. It’s Media Day at Jim Perry Stadium just before the season opener, and Kyle Tucker — a 20-year-old power-hitting lefty picked fifth overall by the Astros in the 2015 draft — is approached by a television reporter and cameraman from Raleigh. Already a millionaire (he received a $4 million signing bonus when drafted) and the No. 11 top prospect in the entire game according to Baseball America, Tucker is asked by the somewhat oblivious reporter if he’s excited to be playing in Fayetteville when the stadium opens in 2019. Tucker won’t be in Fayetteville in 2019. In fact, his time in Buies Creek only lasted eight weeks after he tore up Carolina League pitchers with a .554 slugging percentage, 9 home runs, 43 RBI and 13 stolen bases in just 177 at-bats. In late May, Tucker was called up to Double-A Corpus Christi, where he has 8 home runs and 20 RBI in his first 32 games. If all goes as planned, he’ll be in Houston in 2019, joining what’s currently the best team in baseball. Or, as happens with many top prospects in a winning organization, he may be trade bait for a team in need of a solid bat down the line.

« Justin Ferrell broke into the minors as a 36th-round draft pick in 2014 out of Connors State (Oklahoma) Community College. In 26 games with Buies Creek, Ferrell has a 7-5 record and three saves, striking out 84 in 79 innings pitched. | Photo by Lydia Huth

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Tucker smiles when asked about Fayetteville in two years. Then — like a professional — he gives the soundbite he knows the reporter is looking for: “Yeah, I’m anxious to see how that stadium turns out. I’m sure it’ll look awesome.” If Astros fans can claim anything when the team’s two years are up in Buies Creek, it’s that they saw good baseball played by some of the league’s top rising stars. Outfielder Jason Martin joined Tucker in Corpus Christi in May, but not before hitting three home runs in one game in a 12-6 win at Myrtle Beach on May 7. Opening Day starting pitcher Akeem Bostick needed just three starts in Buies Creek before getting the call to Double-A after going 2-1 with a 1.86 ERA. Yoanys Quiala went 5-1 with a 2.31 ERA in Buies Creek before his promotion, and Nick Hernandez pitched in 24 games as a reliever, earning 9 saves and 1.59 ERA. None remain. As it typically happens to organizations with a strong farm system, Buies Creek hasn’t suffered too much from the losses. Hernandez, Franklin Perez and outfielder Myles Straw represented Buies Creek in the Carolina League All-Star game in June. And for each Corpus call-up, it seems another prospect is waiting in the wings. Catcher Jake Rogers, the Astros’ third-round pick in the 2016 draft, was promoted to Buies Creek on June 1 and hit 8 home runs in his first 40 games after the promotion. And then there’s 2016 first-round pick Forrest Whitley, a 19-year-old kid from San Antonio who received a $3 million signing bonus before ever suiting up. After striking out 67 batters in 46 innings in Iowa, Whitley threw five innings of no-hit, shutout ball in his Buies Creek debut, a 6-0 win over the Potomac Nationals. Buies Creek went 37-33 in the first half of the season, finishing six games behind Myrtle Beach in the Carolina League’s South Division. They faired much better in the second half of the season, but still finished a half game behind

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the Down East Wood Ducks to miss out on the postseason (despite finishing the year with the best overall record in the Carolina League's South Division, 74-65). It was a disappointing end to an otherwise successful year in Buies Creek. But for Omar Lopez — as is the case for most Minor League managers —winning is only a small part of his job. More than anything, Lopez and his coaching staff are here to develop talent. “Obviously, as a manager, you want to win as much as you can,” he says. “But as an organization, you have to have a philosophy, and player development at this level is part of it. And we have to follow that. There will be situations come up where development is more important than winning, whether it’s pitch counts or situations a hitter faces. We’re here to make these players better for down the road.”

RISING STARS Those who have attended a Buies Creek Astros game this season have witnessed future Major Leaguers. The first half of the season was dominated by top prospect Kyle Tucker, and pitching phenom Forrest Whitley joined the squad after being called up from Single-A in the summer. Below are the top three prospects who have played or are currently playing for the local squad, ordered by their Baseball America prospect rankings:

That doesn’t mean Lopez disregards winning entirely. He just has a different way of phrasing it to his players.

11. Kyle Tucker, OF: Rated the No. 11 top prospect in all of baseball, the fifthoverall pick in the 2015 draft only lasted eight weeks before being called up to Double-A. His time in Buies Creek was memorable, though. Tucker hit 9 home runs and 43 RBI in just 46 games.

“Do we have to go out and win this game tonight? No,” he says. “But we have to go out and be winners. We have to fight for everything. Do our best every single day. You do that and you put everything together, and the wins will come. And when you create a good atmosphere like that, it gets contagious. And you start picking up your teammates who aren’t doing as well, and that becomes teamwork.

32. Franklin Perez, P: Perez threw five innings of one-hit baseball in his Buies Creek debut in April. As of this publication, he’s still in North Carolina, enjoying a solid season with an ERA under 3.00, a complete game, 53 strikeouts in 54 innings and just 16 walks.

“We develop all that here and now, because at the Big League level, bottom line, it’s all about winning.”

pure baseball. The first thing you notice at a Buies Creek Astros game is the lack of things to notice. This is a line from an April 7 article on baseball in Buies Creek published by Baseball America, which sent a writer to the season opener the

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58. Forrest Whitley, P: The No. 1 pick in 2016, Whitley doesn’t turn 20 until September. In his first two starts with Buies Creek, the Texas native gave up just one earned run and struck out 14 in 10 innings.

night before. And it’s true. In addition to being the smallest stadium capacity-wise in Minor League Baseball, Jim Perry Stadium is also free of the mascots and between-inning gimmicks popular in most ballparks across the nation. For some, that’s part of the charm. “For what it is, it’s excellent,” says Rick Hunt, a lifelong baseball fan who’s attended every Buies Creek Astros home game this season keeping statistics and tracking analysis for a company that sells this data to professional teams. “I’ve attended several [Carolina] Mudcats games in recent years, and in many ways, it’s better than a Mudcats game. The field’s nice, it’s a nice atmosphere, and here, unlike some ballparks, the entertainment is the ballgame. As a fan of the game, I appreciate that. Some teams go overboard with the gimmicks.” Luke Erickson of Virginia attended his first Buies Creek game in May while vacationing in Emerald Isle (a good two hours away). Erickson says he’s been to 45 to 50 Minor League parks in his lifetime, and the surface at Jim Perry Stadium — artificial turf covering everything except the pitcher’s mound — was the first of its kind he’d ever seen. “It’s definitely unique, and it’s part of what’s made this experience a good one for me so far,” says Erickson, a Potomac Nationals fan. “I think overall, they’ve got a good thing here. Where else can you pay a [$5] and sit this close to the field and see professional ballplayers? It’s a great deal.” The Astros drew a crowd of 1,117 on Opening Day, but on some nights, there are as few as 200 people in the stands. Officially, the team has drew an average crowd of 517 at home games this year. That was worst in the Carolina League by a good margin (next was Lynchburg, draws an average of 1,899 fans) and worst in all of Minor League Baseball (next was the Dunedin Blue Jays in Florida, who average 611 fans).


ÂŤ The top prospect in the Houston Astros farm system and the 11th top prospect in all of Major League Baseball, Kyle Tucker, lasted just 46 games in Buies Creek before his call-up to Double-A. Tucker hit 9 home runs and drove in 43 runs during his short stint. | Photo by Bennett Scarborough

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FAYETTEVILLE ?'S In June, the future Astros’ Fayetteville affiliate announced the Top 5 finalists for the team’s new name and mascot when it takes the field in 2019 (it will be the Buies Creek Astros until then). The Top 5 names each have a Fayetteville connection: • Fatbacks: Derived from the fat of pigs that is prevalent in Southern and French cuisine. Fatback is one of the delicious, delectable pork products that is the result of a hog roast that brings the community together, the release says. • Fly Traps: Refers to the flytrap plant native to the wetlands of the Carolinas. It’s also a baseball term — the proper way to catch fly balls. • Jumpers: A tribute to the 82nd Airborne, based at nearby Fort Bragg.

But that’s OK with the Houston Astros and Buies Creek Astros GM David Lane. The low attendance was expected. “It’s more about baseball, putting the guys in the best situation with the best facilities so they can develop and not be hindered,” Lane told the Fayetteville Observer in May. “That’s what it has been and we’re happy. Everybody’s happy about it. Drawing 1,200 a night would have been overwhelming. It would have been tough. We’d love to have it, but it’s more about the baseball.” Five-hundred people in a small stadium feels different than 500 people in a park built for 5,000. Crowds at Buies Creek games are small and intimate, but they’re also loud at the right times and supportive. According to pitcher Justin Ferrell, small crowds have their benefits. “You hear everything on the field. Everything,” Ferrell says with a laugh. “As a pitcher though, I communicate better in our ballpark. We focus more on the game. And when the fans do get loud, it seems to echo

here. The small crowds aren’t that bad.” One of the few people not in a uniform to attend every Buies Creek home game is Ricky Ray, Campbell University’s associate athletics director for external affairs and the community and media liaison for the club during its stay locally. Ray, who worked in a similar role for the Carolina Mudcats before coming to Campbell, says the attendance figures don’t tell the whole story when it comes to the community and its relationship with the team. “The community has really enjoyed having this team here,” Ray says. “Many in the area have opened their home to players and support the team at all times. The campus here has worked hard to integrate pro baseball as seamlessly as possible. And I think there will be a shared sense of pride as some of these players begin to make their way to the Majors in a couple of years. “Buies Creek will have played an important part in their journey.”

• Woodpeckers: A tribute to the endangered red cockaded woodpecker, which calls the longleaf pine in the area home. — courtesy MILB.com

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PHOTO COURTESY OF THE BUIES CREEK ASTROS

• Wood Dogs: A nod to the dogwood tree that dominates the city’s landscape and is the name of its largest festival. The mascot would be a dog, which “resonates with the city’s and military’s characteristics of loyalty, compassion and protection.”


2017 Campbell Homecoming Schedule Thursday, October 26 Thank a Giver Day Students Celebrating the generosity of Alumni, Friends, Faculty, Staff, Foundations & Corporations #campbelltagday

Friday, October 27 School of Business Alumni Recognition Day Lundy-Fetterman School of Business 9:00 a.m. – 2:00 p.m.

Homecoming Hoopla Gore Arena 7:00 p.m.

Meet the men’s and women’s basketball, and wrestling teams. See performances by the Campbell band, cheerleaders and dance team. Threepoint shootout, dunk contest and more! (Sponsored by Zaxby’s)

Saturday, October 28 College of Arts & Sciences Walter S. Barge Scholarship 5K 9:00 a.m.

(Free; See link below for registration details)

Alumni are invited to speak to Business Classes. –– 10:00 a.m. - Alumni Recognition Ceremony honoring our Outstanding and Young Alumni Recipients –– 2:00 p.m. - Alumni/Student Networking Reception

28th Annual History, Criminal Justice, and Political Science Alumni Brunch

(Free; See link below for registration details)

Alumni Village Opens

Campbell Law School Alumni Campbell Law School, 225 Hillsborough St., Raleigh

–– 8:00 a.m - 5:00 p.m. - Campbell Law Alumni Association CLE –– 6:30 p.m. - Campbell Law School Reception North Carolina Museum of Natural Science, 11 W Jones St., Raleigh

(Free; See link below for registration details)

D. Rich Hall, Room 119 9:00 a.m.

(Free; Register Oct. 20, see link below for registration details)

Located outside Barker Lane Stadium’s main ticket box. Immediately following the parade:

Homecoming Parade Main Street 11:00 a.m.

Watch alumni, students and groups as they parade through Buies Creek displaying their “Campbell Pride.”

Study Abroad Alumni Reunion Alumni Village 11:15 a.m. – 1:30 p.m.

Join us at our tailgating tent for food trucks & to reunite with study abroad students and faculty! (Free; See link below for registration details)

Kids Zone – Inflatable Entertainment Inside Barker Lane Stadium (Free) 2:30 p.m. – 3:30 p.m.

Camel Rides Near the Football Stadium (Free) 2:30 p.m.

Campbell Football vs. Jacksonville Barker-Lane Stadium 2:00 p.m.

–– Food trucks open and VIP Class Reunion Celebration Tent opens for the classes of 1977, 1992, 2007 and the Golden Club –– 11:15 a.m. - Bantum Rooster takes the stage

For additional details, contact information, and registrations, visit alumni.campbell.edu/homecoming

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PHOTOS COURTESY OF NICK TEIXEIRA, BAYLOR LAW SCHOOL

48 SUMMER 2017


The Natural

Jacob Morse ends ‘amazing’ Campbell law career with Top Gun national mock trial championship, thanks to natural ability and hours upon hours of preparation BY BILLY LIGGETT

J

acob Morse could see the finish line.

He’d endured four days of rigorous competition against the nation’s best and brightest future attorneys in Waco, Texas, and all that laid before him was his closing argument in the championship round of the Top Gun National Mock Trial Competition. But before his grand finale, Morse was sent to his usual break room for one last opportunity to strategize with his coach and co-counsel. Only, something was different about the room this time. In the corner, sitting on a thin, metal stand usually used for poster presentations was a giant check. Dollar amount: $10,000. In the memo line: “No points for second place.” The “pay to the order of” part was blank. “I’m trying to think about what to say to the jury, and I’m face-to-face with this giant check,” Morse says. “It was a very tangible moment. I told myself, ‘I’m here. I’ve got nothing to lose.’” Morse is smiling as he tells this story. He

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won, of course, ending his three years at Campbell Law School as the top student advocate attorney in the country. Recent Top Gun national champions have hailed from New York University (2015) and Yale Law School (2016). Campbell University joined that list in June, adding another notch in its belt as one of the top advocacy law programs in the nation. And for Morse, the title culminates a three-year stint at Campbell Law that even the school called “nothing short of amazing.” As a second-year law student in 2016, Morse was a member of the South Texas Mock Trial Challenge championship team, himself earning the “outstanding advocate” award. At Baylor University’s Academy of the Advocate program, he earned “best closing argument” and “best storytelling awards” from his colleagues in Scotland. And in his third year, prior to Top Gun, his team finished as runners-up in the National Civil Trial Competition in California, and he earned more solo advocate awards at the challenge in Texas.

“Jacob is just a remarkably bright individual,” says his coach, Dan Tilly, the director of advocacy and assistant law professor at Campbell Law. “And he’s just so nimble … able to adapt. You have to be extremely smart and have great courtroom savvy to succeed in these competitions, and not many students have that. And when you take someone who’s naturally talented and has the kind of work ethic he has — he puts in hundreds upon hundreds of hours of preparation — that makes him or her a very difficult person to beat.”

—— Top Gun is different from your typical “mock trial” competition. First, it’s invitation only. The 16 competitors come in with reputations of success or come from programs known for nationally for their advocacy programs. And unlike the team competitions, where students usually receive their case files weeks in advance to allow for tons of preparation and script-writing, Top Gun competitors don’t receive their cases until they arrive in Waco, 24 hours before the

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first round begins. The judges at Top Gun are real current or retired judges. The juries are distinguished trial lawyers. This competition isn’t for the weak. When you meet Jacob Morse or hear him speak, you quickly realize why he’s a natural. He speaks with confidence, pausing only momentarily at times to see the words before he says them. He speaks with his hands. He invites eye contact.

A top advocacy program Jacob Morse’s title in the 2017 Top Gun Mock Trial competition only added to Campbell Law School’s growing reputation as a leading advocacy program. His win comes on the heels of a major announcement last spring that Campbell law had cracked U.S. News & World Report’s ranking list as the 21st-best advocacy program in the nation. Not only was Campbell Law the lone North Carolina law school on the list, it was the only law school located in the mid-South region. “Advocacy is our hallmark, and I am delighted to have our accomplishments finally recognized,” said Campbell Law Dean J. Rich Leonard. Advocacy training begins in the first year at Campbell Law and continues throughout each of the three successive semesters in which students are enrolled. Advocacy training continues in the second and third years with required offerings in evidence and trial advocacy, and an array of upperlevel electives tailored to civil, criminal and alternative dispute practices. Outside of the classroom, Campbell Law’s historically strong competitive advocacy program has particularly blossomed in recent years. Since 2012 Campbell Law student advocates have collected four national championships, five national runners up, seven national semifinalists, four regional championships and 12 national individual best advocate awards. Aside from competitive success, the G. Eugene Boyce Center of Advocacy was established in September 2015 with an $8 million dollar gift. The center comprises three competitive courtrooms, conference rooms and a suite of adjoining offices. More than $450,000 in start-of-the-art technology upgrades has been recently added to the center.

Even these mannerisms are a result of experience. Morse says when he first arrived at Campbell Law after earning his undergraduate degree from UNC-Chapel Hill and interning for U.S. Rep. David Price in Washington, D.C., he was green. He recalls sweating and trembling in his first mock trial competitions. “A lot of it is confidence, which some may confuse with arrogance,” he says. “Whatever you call it, you can’t enter a competition like this and believe that because someone is from Harvard, they’re going to whip your [tail]. You have to believe in yourself, and that comes with experience. It also comes with having a team that’s confident in you. I still doubt myself at times, but I’ve never had doubts that my teammates or my coach’s believed in me and thought I couldn’t win this tournament.” That coach, Tilly, and that teammate in Waco, co-counsel and classmate Casey Peaden, were “vital” in Morse’s success in the Top Gun competition. Because the packets arrive only 24 hours before the trials, and because competitors like Morse need a good six or seven hours of sleep in order to properly function the next day, Tilly and Peaden swapped pulling allnighters during those four days to pore over the files and law books and take extensive notes. “In those four days, I’d say we each put in 65 to 70 hours total,” Tilly says. “You start at 7, you compete, and if you move on, you work well into the night to prepare of the next day. You need every advantage you can get in a competition like this. Those who are willing to grind it out succeed in Top Gun.”

—— Morse joined his first mock trial teams in high school and as an undergrad at UNC, and in Chapel Hill, he even joined a pre-law 50 SUMMER 2017

group. He wasn’t exceptionally good (yet), but he did discover one thing — he loved it. The traveling with his team. The studying. Reading the “rules of evidence.” The competitions themselves. “I played football in high school, and I had to quit because of an injury,” he says. “Also, I really wasn’t that good. But my best friend’s dad owned a law firm in [his hometown of Mooresville], and that friend invited me to join the mock trial team. All I knew is it involved public speaking, but later I found that it was about tackling problems and arguing your ideas. It was fun. I fell in love with it.” Morse knew he wanted to attend law school and have a career as a litigator. Campbell Law, he says, was a no-brainer, because of its reputation and its growing advocacy program. He received a full ride as a recipient of Campbell’s first Leadership Scholar Award. First-year law students at Campbell aren’t eligible to compete in the mock trial teams, so Morse went head first in his second year and became one of the few Year 2 students to compete at Top Gun in 2016. Prior graduates Andrew Shores (’13) and Kaitlin Rothecker (’15) had both placed in the Top 4 in Waco after graduating. No Campbell student had ever won it. One of the things Morse learned over the last two years heading into his final collegiate competition was to go with his gut on things. Whether a student gets to be prosecution or defense is their choice, and that choice is determined by a coin toss. In his final round, Morse won the coin toss, but went against the norm when it comes to choosing sides. Most competitors, he says, prefer to represent the plaintiff’s side because that side tends be more “likeable” and gets to dictate how the case is being tried. Morse, however, chose defense. He almost always chooses defense. “You hear ‘defense lawyer,’ and sometimes that has a negative connotation,” he says. “But I prefer the defense side, and in the finals [at Top Gun], we really liked the evidence for the defense. My only loss in the tournament was on the plaintiff’s side. So when I won the coin toss, I felt like I had the wind at my back. I was comfortable.”


Jacob Morse (center) with co-counsel Casey Peaden and coach Dan Tilly, the director of advocacy and assistant law professor at Campbell Law, after winning the Top Gun National Mock Trial Competition at Baylor University in May. | Photo courtesy of Nick Teixeira, Baylor Law School

Advocacy law, in Jacob Morse’s words:

“Advocacy Law is the ability to empathize with a client’s position. It’s not necessarily about presenting that position, but arguing and advancing the best interest of someone without judging them. It’s using the best of your abilities to benefit your client.” Morse says his ability to read people and sense the atmosphere of a courtroom helped him more in that final round than which side he chose. He could tell early on the judge — a distinguished senior federal district court judge — was growing impatient and frustrated with his opponent’s numerous objections. “He was tired of hearing them, so I adapted my strategy more to getting on his good side,” he says. “At the end of the day, being likeable is such a big part of being a trial attorney.” That evening, Morse held the $10,000 check for the cameras at Baylor Law School with Tilly and Peaden at his side. It was a M AG AZIN E .CAMP BE LL.EDU

particularly proud moment for Tilly, who earned his law degree from Baylor and served as the senior executive editor of the Baylor Law Review as a student. “When I first met Jacob three years ago, I could quickly tell he was a very special individual,” he says. “Just endowed with confidence and a remarkably intelligent human being. Very personable. And when you’re a genuinely good person and you interact well with people, that comes across so well in the courtroom. As director of advocacy at Campbell, I was impressed with him from Day 1. I knew this guy was special.”

What’s next? Jacob Morse graduated cum laude from Campbell Law School in May and took his North Carolina Bar Exam in July. He plans to join the Raleigh-based law firm Wyrick Robbins — the chairman of the firm’s litigation section is Campbell University Board of Trustees Chairman Ben Thompson — and will start out assisting in litigation projects. He also hopes to help coach and mentor mock trial competitors at Campbell Law School in the near future.

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Our Doctors

On a milestone day for Campbell University, 150 members of the med school’s inaugural class became medical doctors — the first Campbell-produced medical doctors and the first osteopathic physicians educated in North Carolina.

52 SUMMER 2017


T

BY BILLY LIGGETT

he idea first hit Jerry M. Wallace in 2009, standing on the campus of a small private university in Mississippi as part of a team tasked to review that school’s ability to launch a school of osteopathic medicine. Wallace came away believing that school could do it. More importantly, he came away knowing his school could do it bigger. On May 20, 2017, a mere eight years later, Wallace looked out at a sea of 150 robed and tasseled members of the charter class of the school of osteopathic medicine that bears his name. And he beamed. “I will forever remember this day,” said the former Campbell president and current chancellor. “You’re making history, and when I’m done talking, you’ll be able to proudly place DO behind your names. I’ve been delighted seeing you wearing the Campbell orange and black and the Campbell crest on your coats during your rotations. Your preceptors told me your work was superb. One hundred percent of you passed your national examinations. You did so well, and you showed up so well.” The 150-member charter class of the Jerry M. Wallace School of Osteopathic Medicine began their residencies in 32 states across the nation this summer. Thirty-five percent of the class now practices in the Southeastern portion of the United States in medically underserved regions or regions currently facing a physician shortage. Campbell Magazine interviewed and featured several members of that charter class during their four years in Buies Creek. Days before they officially became doctors, seven of them took the time to reflect on their Campbell experience. We compare their remarks today with what they told us during Year 1 or during their first weeks of rotations in Week 3.

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Erica Brotzman The Virginia native was one of five thirdyear students followed by Campbell Magazine during their first week of rotations at Southeastern Regional Health Center in Lumberton in 2015. Then, Brotzman was interested in a career in pediatrics, but through her rotations, she found a passion in dermatology. One of only two charter class members to graduate summa cum laude, Brotzman began work in the field at Case Western University in Cleveland, Ohio, this summer.

THEN

“You can have 50 people sit and tell you, ‘Oh yeah, med school is going to be tough. I hope you’re ready.’ But you really don’t understand what they mean until you go through it yourself. It’s emotionally challenging having to put your life on hold to go to class and study constantly. It’s physically challenging, too. I remember we’d have to treat each other in the OMM labs because our backs were hurting from sitting in the same position to study for hours and hours. It’s a challenge in every sense of the word. But it’s worth it. It’s worth it. All that we’re going to be doing to help people; it’s worth it.” “These four years have been challenging for sure, but I felt supported by my amazing classmates and faculty every step of the way. The feeling that I always use to describe Campbell is that we truly are a family. I felt it on my interview day here and every day since. We have accomplished this together.” 54 SUMMER 2017


Tom Soker Tom Soker was one of five students featured by Campbell Magazine for its Winter 2016 cover story, “In the Field: A Day in the Life of a Third-Year Medical Student.” During his rotations in Lumberton that previous fall, Soker said he was considering a career in cardiology. In 2018, he’ll join classmate Erica Brotzman in at Case Western in Cleveland to begin his residency in radiology. Before then, he’ll spend a year at Virginia Commonwealth University studying internal medicine.

THEN

“There’s so much about medicine I don’t know, but I understand it all comes with experience. I recognize that. But just seeing where I’m at [starting my third year], my progression of knowledge and ability to recognize things compared to where I was a few years ago is just incredible. It’s a testament to the great teaching at Campbell. Without a doubt.”

NOW

“I had a great experience during my four years of medical school. I couldn't have asked for a better group of classmates, many of them will be lifelong friends of mine. It was definitely a rigorous [experience], but I feel like I grew and achieved more than I ever thought possible.”

Jeffrey Pennings Jeffrey Pennings’ Campbell experience was one he shared with his father. The two arrived in Buies Creek at the same time — Jeffrey a member of the medical school’s charter class and Dr. Nicholas Pennings a member of its faculty. In 2013, Jeffrey told Campbell Magazine he wanted to follow in his father’s footsteps and go into family medicine. Four years later, his residency in family medicine begins in Boise, Idaho.

“Growing up, I loved the stories about my dad’s experiences. When I would hang around his office, I always liked the way he interacted with his patients. That personable approach and the relationships he built over the years … that’s the same thing I desire when I practice medicine.” “I had a great experience at Campbell — both during my first two years in the classrooms and during my clinical studies in rural parts of North Carolina. Working in those clinics and hospitals and meeting a ton of people in North Carolina — people with different health care needs and different disadvantages — was valuable. And it was a tremendous experience going through this with my dad. I got to learn medicine with him … it was pretty special for both of us.” M AG AZIN E .CAMP BE LL.EDU

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Katy Brewer Key Katy Brewer Key is a descendant (the great-great niece) of Harnett County’s first physician in the late 1800s, Dr. James H. Withers. She’ll continue his legacy by beginning her residency in North Carolina at Cabarrus Family Medicine’s residency program in Concord. Key was interviewed by Campbell Magazine in 2014 after her first year as part of a book chronicling the med school’s inaugural academic year.

THEN

“My intent all along was to stay in North Carolina for my training, and I fell in love with Campbell because of the school’s mission to serve rural communities. It struck a heart chord with me. I love helping people, and I love science and learning why things happen to our minds and bodies.”

Melissa Davies Melissa Stout Davies started medical school in 2013 just six weeks after giving birth to her first child. Davies had her second child — a daughter — during her final year … her children were 4 years and 4 months old at her commencement ceremony on May 20. Motherhood has prepared her well for her future — she started her OB/GYN residency at East Carolina University’s Vidant Medical Center in Greenville this summer.

“When I told family and friends about med school, they told me it would be a huge transition and the work would be intensive. With a newborn on the way, they questioned the decision. But becoming a doctor is my dream. So I’m going to go with it. And it’s going to be worth it.” “I’ll never forget how overwhelmed I was on that very first day four years ago. But I realized later that if I paced myself week by week, I would make it. I’ve made long-lasting friendships and long-lasting relationships. I’ve met professors I will never forget. It's amazing how quickly four years have flown by, and I am so grateful to have been able to call Campbell home.”

56 SUMMER 2017

NOW

“[My great-great uncle] was willing to visit homes and stay for hours if needed until he felt his patient was stable. Where science drifted, the desire to heal persisted. I am sure he understood with great profundity the interaction of mind, body and spirit when taking care of an individual. It is through his legacy and my experiences that I have chosen to follow in his footsteps to obtain my training in family medicine in North Carolina.”


Rosemarie Dizon You’d think Buies Creek, North Carolina, would have been a culture shock for Rosemarie Dizon, a graduate of Rutgers University in New Jersey. But Dizon fell in love with Southern hospitality (and sweet tea) and transitioned seamlessly to her new settings. Dizon was interviewed by Campbell Magazine in 2014 after her first year as part of a book chronicling the med school’s inaugural academic year. Three years later, she’s entered her intern year at the Naval Hospital Camp Pendleton Family Medicine Residency Program in southern California.

“What interested me from the start was Campbell’s emphasis on global health and medical missions. I liked that the school had a Christian background. And the fact that the school was new was enticing, because it meant there was potential for change.” “‘Four years’ … I have to let that sink in for a minute because it only feels like a year has gone by since this all began. My experience has been colored with difficulties, triumphs and an overall appreciation of the human experience when people are at their most vulnerable states. When I reflect on that, I am humbled by how resilient the human mind and spirit are in the most difficult conditions. This sentiment aligns perfectly with the tenets of osteopathic medicine, furthering my desire to practice truly holistic medicine.” M AG AZIN E .CAMP BE LL.EDU

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Erasmo Espino Erasmo Espino was a U.S. Army veteran of wars in Iraq and Afghanistan before joining Campbell’s charter med school class. His experiences prepared him well — Espino became a leader in his class and was named a Pat Tillman Military Scholar during his second year, one of only 57 students nationwide to achieve that status. This summer, Espino entered his emergency medicine residency at Emory University School of Medicine in Atlanta.

“A lot of my decisions in life have come from instinct, and I have no doubt this was the right decision for me. I’m excited about my future. I’m excited to be a part of something new.” “The past four years at Campbell have been an affirmation that I chose the right path after my military service. I wanted to dedicate the rest of my life to something that would have a profound effect in people's lives. Each patient and each encounter was an opportunity for me to make a unique connection and, at the same time, reinforce important medical knowledge.”

58 SUMMER 2017


Join us in New England

Portland - Plymouth - Martha's Vineyard - Boston

October 8 - 13, 2018 This six-day tour will be a true living history experience filled with quaint harbor towns and breathtaking views of the Atlantic.

Cost of the trip is $2,199 per person. Six-Day Tour Includes:

- Roundtrip Airfare - Five Nights Accommodations - Luxury Motor Coach Throughout - Professional Tour Manager - Professor-Led Enrichment

- Breakfast Daily - Two (2) Dinners - Sightseeing per Itinerary - Gratuities

For more information visit alumni.campbell.edu/alumnitravel M AG AZIN E .CAMP BE LL.EDU

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#CAMPBELL17

PHOTOS BY LYDIA HUTH

SPRING COMMENCEMENT

Campbell awarded more than 1,100 undergraduate and graduate degrees over five spring commencement ceremonies on May 12-13. A sixth ceremony was held a week later for the charter class of the School of Osteopathic Medicine.

@jiwright_95 I'm so grateful to be a Camel. Can't wait to work for you in the upcoming year. #Campbell17 #GoCamels

60 SUMMER 2017

lashoutnc My beautiful niece just took this photo #campbellgraduation #campbell17

diegorivera1280 TĂ­tulo profesional de AdministraciĂłn de Empresas #Campbell17 #gocamels #graduationday

alicerigback This place feels like home now and I can't even begin to explain how difficult it is to leave. I don't like good byes, so, I'll CU later! #Campbell17


campbelledu Giving credit where credit's due. Congratulations #Campbell17 @kackalackey @ryan_holloman MAGAZINE.CAMPBELL.EDU

oliviadwyer "There's a last time for everything." So much love for this place and all it has given me #Campbell17

@GoCamelsTennis Nico is a college graduate! We're all so proud of your accomplishments and can't wait to see where life takes you next! #Campbell17

commstudiescu Congrats to @alvie22_lilred on her graduation AND engagement today!!! #Campbell17 C A MP B E L L M AG AZ I N E 61


ALUMNI NOTES 1960’s ROBERT “BOB” FITCH (’69)

stepped down as the president/CEO of James River Wealth Management in Richmond, Virginia, and is serving as chairman of the board. He enjoys using some of his additional time serving as the president of the Central Virginia Alumni Association Chapter. Fitch is proud to have a granddaughter who is a Campbell University sophomore pursuing a degree in nursing/medical sciences and participates on the cross country and track teams. ��������������������������

1970’s STEVE BLANKENSHIP (’73)

earned an MLA degree from Winthrop University in December 2016. THE REV. W. KENNETH (KEN) WILLIAMS (’76) was called out

of retirement to become the interim executive minister for the American Baptist Churches of Connecticut. Williams and his wife, the Rev. Peg Williams, are permanent residents of Durham. They will live in West Hartford, Connecticut, during this interim call. Now in his 40th year of Christian ministry, Williams will provide mission promotion consultation and pastoral placement support for the 119 American Baptist congregations in Connecticut.

LEE ANN ELDRIDGE SPAHR (’77) and her husband, Charlie,

visited with David Madsen, Lee Ann’s French professor at Campbell from 1975 through 1977. Madsen instilled in her a continuing love of France and all things French. The two had not seen each other in approximately 40 years until Lee Ann reconnected with her professor through the French department at Duke University, where Madsen earned his Ph.D.

62 SUMMER 2017

Goodbye, Kitchin & Baldwin

Kitchin and Baldwin Halls, built in 1955 and 1958 respectively, will be no more this fall when they’re torn down to make way for the 110,000-square-foot student union, expected to open in 2019. In the spring, we asked former residents of the dorms to share their memories, and they didn’t disappoint. Pictured right is the first Kitchin Hall Men's House Council in the 1956-57 school year. Below are some of our favorite memories:

Go Deep

I threw a football out front of Kitchin one afternoon and the pass never made it. It hit a power line, which wrapped around another power line and exploded. Two of the lines were now live and snapping on the ground, creating a small fire in the grass. One of them was snapping back and forth, which made a mark on this guy's sports car.

Needless to say he was not happy, but first we had to deal with the authorities. The Buies Creek Fire Department, ambulance service and various volunteers had to assess the situation. As the firetruck screamed up the road for the one-block journey to the site of the grass fire, a crowd gathered. There were four or five authoritative Student Government Association folks taking charge until the authorities took over. The fireman got off the back of the truck with full gear, including air tanks. They just sort of stood around until the power was cut. Meanwhile, the grass was burning

slowly. This was irritating the owner of the sports car as the fire was creeping slowly towards his car. The firemen had portable tanks of fluid, one fire hose hooked to a hydrant and various implements of destruction at the ready. Still, nothing was being done. So the owner, Randy, walked over and stomped the fire out with his foot. The fire department, ambulance and SGA folks all packed up and left. A report was done before they left, and I explained to the best of my ability how I should have thrown a shorter pass instead of having the guy go out for a bomb.


It turns out that the electrical line only left smudge marks and did not damage the car. I got a summons to appear in Student Court, up for a charge of throwing a football in an undesignated area (seriously). It would have brought five points against me out of a 20-point system. My friends dressed me in a T-shirt with a prison number on the back, a chain and one of those plastic bowling balls attached. When I made it to the second floor where court was being held, most of them were laughing so hard that I think it helped me get out of it. I received the five points for this dastardly charge with a prayer for judgement and it was removed after one semester. As for the owner of the burning car, Randy and I turned out to be roommates, and to this day, 36 years later, friends. Honestly, if we couldn't tear that dorm down in four years, I don't know how they're going to do it. Lee McGraw (’85)

The Spahrs travelled to Salt Lake City, where the three talked for hours, reminiscing about Madsen’s students and his years in Buies Creek. Madsen was presented with a little statuette of Gaylord dressed as J.A. Campbell as a memento of his time at Campbell. ��������������������������

You can’t handle the truth

In 1984, Don Macari (whom “A Few Good Men” is about) was our residence director in Kitchin while he was attending Campbell Law. I think I hold the honorable distinction of the first to be “taken down” for “conduct unbecoming a Camel” when Don grilled us for breaking into the snack machine. Vance Campbell (’90)

Baldwinners

I lived in Baldwin from 20022004 when I was a freshman and then an RA. Our intramural team was called the BaldWINNERS. I remember going all out for Homecoming both years, especially the "Walk like a Camel" year where we made giant hieroglyphic banners that said “Baldwin Rocks” and hung them from the third floor windows. Jennifer Zema Pittman (’06)

The kitchen in Kitchin

I moved into Kitchin in January 2000 all the way from the Bahamas. Dorm life overflowed with great memories. We fully utilized the kitchen in Kitchin, and I remember my friends from the third floor gathering there to cook, especially on those cold winter nights. Most importantly, I met some of the best people in the world and some of my closest friends in Kitchin. Nikki Bethell

Will you?

My now-husband Chuck Wade planned a surprise proposal party for me in the lobby of Kitchin in March 2003. He had a ton of my friends gather and wait while he walked me back to my dorm. I remember thinking it was odd that we kept looping the Academic Circle, but later I found out he was getting up his nerve. Once we got inside, everyone threw open the glass doors and yelled “Congratulations!” I had no idea what was happening, but he was down on one knee behind me. Andie Lucas Wade

MAGAZINE.CAMPBELL.EDU

1980’s MIKEAL C. PARSONS (’80) is co-

author of the book “Country Ham,” a “unique coming-ofage story [that] exposes, and expounds upon, some of the most significant issues facing 1970s America — racism, religion and sexuality — through the lens of America’s favorite pastime, baseball.” Parsons is a professor and Macon Chair in religion at Baylor University, where he has taught for over 30 years, specializing in New Testament studies.

GREG TAYLOR (’81), business development officer for the Carolina Small Business Development Fund, was appointed to the Board of Directors of the Better Business Bureau of Coastal Carolina. Taylor, who previously served 12 years as a Bladen County commissioner, has served as the regional director of the Cape Fear Regional Small Business and Technology Development Center, development director at Fayetteville State University and executive director of the Fort Bragg Regional Alliance. SHIRLEY DISSELER (’83), associate professor of education at High Point University, received the Meredith Clark Slane Distinguished TeachingService Award for excellence in teaching. Disseler teaches a variety of undergraduate and graduate courses at High Point, preparing students to teach science, technology, engineering and math in schools. Affectionately known as the “Lego Lady,” she has hosted more than 10,000 school children and numerous educators for Lego Education events. C A MP B E L L M AG AZ I N E 63


ALUMNI NOTES 1990’s In June, AMY BAKER BYNUM (’92 PHARMD) celebrated

25 years of employment with WalMart Pharmacy. She began work at store #1372 in Raleigh after graduation from Campbell and remained there until transferring to store #5743 in Garner in 2015. Her daughter, Libby, will attend Campbell in the fall of 2017 to major in biology/pre-med.

REBECCA J. BRITTON (’92 LAW),

co-founder and managing partner at Britton Law, P.A., joined The Expert Network, an invitation-only service for distinguished professionals. Britton was chosen as a Distinguished Lawyer based on peer reviews and ratings, dozens of recognitions and accomplishments achieved throughout her career. Britton is a distinguished personal injury lawyer based in Fayetteville, recognized by Martindale-Hubbell, Best Lawyers and numerous other organizations as a top attorney in North Carolina.

BRAD BANNON (’97 LAW)

was elected president of the North Carolina Advocates for Justice, a statewide association of attorneys and other legal professionals who protect the rights of all North Carolinians in civil and criminal matters. Bannon practices criminal defense and civil rights law at Patterson Harkavy LLP in Raleigh. DAVID RICHARDSON (’98, ’06 MBA, ’06 LAW) was named

the executive director of the Lumber River Council of Governments in July. He is responsible for the overall supervision and management of the council, while meeting objectives established by the board of directors. A native of Richmond County, Richardson has spent almost a decade working with Legal Aid of North Carolina Inc., where he served as a Judge Samuel Ervin Fellow, staff attorney, supervising attorney and a managing attorney.

64 SUMMER 2017

A GIANT LEAP

In the five years since his playing days at Campbell University, Eric Griffin has bounced around various international pro basketball leagues and NBA developmental teams, but never latching on to an NBA franchise. That looks like it will change this fall after Griffin signed a two-way contract with the Utah Jazz this summer. The contract (a new feature in the league) allows teams to carry two "two-way" players on their roster, in addition to their 15-man regular season roster. Griffin will play for the team’s exclusively owned and operated NBA G League team, the Salt Lake City Stars, as well as the Jazz. Griffin became the first Jazz player to sign a two-way contract. | Photo by David Dow, Getty Images


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C A MP B E L L M AG AZ I N E 65


ALUMNI NOTES 2000’s JOHN DEAN (’00) was named

city manager in Ovilla, Texas. Prior to his appointment in June, Dean served as the city manager for Pilot Point, Texas and had served in municipal governments in Texas and Oklahoma for 10 years.

JONATHAN AMOS (’01) was named assistant principal at Pilot Mountain Middle School in Mount Airy. Amos has 10 years of experience in education, his most recent position as high school social studies teacher and assistant principal at the Surry Early College. Prior to and during college, Amos served in the U.S. Army as a veterinary food inspection specialist from 1998-05, where he was awarded the Soldier of the Year District Command in 1999 and 2000. STEPHAN MOORE (’02)

became the first vice chancellor for student engagement at Louisiana State University-Alexandria. Moore had worked in leadership roles at Georgia Perimeter College, The Art Institute of Atlanta, North Carolina Central University and Campbell over the past 15 years.

Incoming freshmen stuffed hundreds of Teddy bears for Phillip's Love Bears, a ministry started by Campbell alumnus Phil Fusco in honor of his son, Phillip, who was born with a rare disorder known as Prader-Willi Syndrome. The bears have been sent to children in hospitals, orphanages and missionaries all over the world.

Stuffed joy

Alumnus, son spread happiness in the form of Teddy bears

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ooking back, two-time Campbell University alumnus PHIL FUSCO ('82, '85 LAW) says Campbell will always be near and dear to his heart. Coming out of a rough neighborhood in Lowell, Massachusetts, that offered few alternative options, Fusco says God had a plan that included Campbell.

BRENDA ROBERTS DEAN (’03)

"Campbell reflected the love of Christ by having faith in me when I did not have faith in myself," he says. "Campbell played such an intricate role in God's plan for my life."

CAROLINE S. BURNETTE (’04 LAW) was elected as District

Fusco excelled enough to be admitted to the Norman A. Wiggins School of Law and is now a practicing attorney specializing in death penalty cases. Only recently have Teddy bears played an important role in his life.

and her husband, William Dean, celebrated their 40th wedding anniversary on June 25.

Court Judge for the 9th Judicial District (Warren, Vance, Granville and Franklin) in November. SHON COWAN BAKER (’04)

was appointed as chief development officer for the Foundation for Woman’s, the philanthropic arm of Woman’s Hospital in Baton Rouge, Louisiana. Baker was previously Xavier University’s associate vice president of development. 66 SUMMER 2017

Fusco's son, Phillip, was diagnosed soon after his birth with a rare genetic disorder known as PraderWilli Syndrome, a partial deletion of the 15th chromosome. After several serious surgeries and a tremendous amount of time in hospitals over the years, Fusco says his son wanted to do something to "help other children who were hurting." Out of this desire was born Phillip's Love Bears. In the last four years, this ministry has sent handstuffed bears to churches, missionaries, hospitals and orphanages at home and all over the world. In this time, approximately 5,000 of Phillip's Love

Bears have been sent throughout the U.S., South Korea, Israel, India, the Middle East, Belize, Kenya, Uganda, Costa Rica, Panama and many more places. Phillip assists in stuffing the bears and finishes each bear with a hug. As the ministry has grown, Phillip's Love Bears has partnered with organizations such as Joni and Friends, the Tim Tebow Foundation, American Heritage Girls and Trail Life, One Fair Chance (India), Aikwangwon (South Korea) and other organizations. "God used [my experiences at] Campbell and my son to allow me to make this little impact," Fusco says. "Through Phillip and through this ministry, we are able to share the love of Christ with young children and disabled adults all over the world." The ministry hopes to begin a "Teddy Bear Squad" at Campbell University for students who would like to get involved with world missions and have fun hand-stuffing Teddy Bears at the same time. In the coming months, Phillip's Love Bears will be adding an antimicrobial bear that can be sent to cancer patients, as well as therapy bears that can be sent to cancer patients. Other bears will be used in physical therapy to reduce atrophy, and weighted bears will be made for individuals who suffer with sensory issues. To learn more about Phillip's Love Bears, visit PhillipsLoveBears.com


DAWN HENDERSON BROWN (’05)

was elected to serve as chairelect of the UNC Staff Assembly in 2016. She will assume the chair position in October for a two-year term. Brown has worked at UNC-Wilmington for 10 years and will be the first UNC-W staff member to lead the assembly.

SARAH DICKENS SWAIN (’05) and

her husband, Jayson, welcomed their daughter Ellyson Quinn on Dec. 21. Their son, Truett, is a very proud big brother.

KEITH BISSETTE (’13) and LeAnne Elizabeth Ray married on May 20, at

Trinity Baptist Church. The couple now lives in Raleigh.

ASTRID RIVERA (’08) with former Vice President Al Gore before his

interview on Univision's Despierta America promoting "An Inconvenient Sequel," the follow-up to his acclaimed documentary. Rivera is a producer and journalist for the popular program. | Facebook

FNB Wealth Management, an affiliate of First National Bank and a subsidiary of FNB Corp., announced the expansion of its regional wealth management team, with MICHAEL EDWARDS (’07 TRUST) serving as vice president and senior wealth planning specialist. In his role, Edwards helps clients understand, develop and achieve their financial goals by providing relevant discussion, analysis and recommendations. This includes developing tax-efficient strategies for the accumulation, management and transfer of assets, as well as retirement, estate and business succession planning. JASON HORRELL (’08, ’12 LAW)

was named a Kathryn Davis Fellow for Peace to study Spanish during summer at Middlebury Language Schools in Middlebury, Vermont. CHRISTOPHER MARK BATTEN (’08) was named

KAYLIN YOST (’14) became the first gold medal winner in golf at the

Deaflympic, an Olympics-style international competition for hearingimpaired athletes. Competing in Turkey, Yost defeated India’s Diksha Dagar in the championship match, rallying from a 3-down deficit after six holes to take the title in a playoff hole.

MAGAZINE.CAMPBELL.EDU

assistant dean of admissions and strategic communications at the Wake Forest University School of Divinity. Since 2011, Batten has led the communications and positioning strategy for the School of Divinity, leveraging social, print and digital technologies to connect a variety of populations to the school in creative, new, and compelling ways. He has also streamlined the school’s admissions processes to enhance how prospective students move through the

school’s recruitment funnel while also strengthening the application and admissions technology the office uses. Prior to Wake Forest, Batten served as the admissions analyst and manager of admissions programming at Emory University’s Candler School of Theology. He also taught introductory religion courses at Campbell and regularly preaches at congregations across North Carolina. Mia Elizabeth Smith was born Aug. 5, 2016, in Lexington, Kentucky, to MEGAN MARLER SMITH (’09) and her husband Jeremy. ����������������������������

2010’s JORDAN NARRON ASHLEY (’11)

and EMERY ASHLEY, JR. (’11 BBA/MBA) announced the birth of their daughter, Ellington McCray Ashley, born on April 15. JESSICA MARILYN BULLOCK (’11) and HANK RAPER (’11, ’15 LAW)

announced their engagement in June. Their wedding will take place on Sept. 3, at Magnolia Manor Plantation in Warrenton. AUSTIN GRAY TART (’12) and EMMA RUTH JOHNSON (’15)

announced their engagement in May. Johnson is a counselor at Anderson Creek Primary and South Harnett Elementary Schools, and Tart is a teacher and coach at Midway High School in Sampson County. The summer wedding was held in Wilmington. COREY HILL (’12) and his wife

welcomed their first child, a son, into the world on March 20.

KEITH BISSETTE (’13) and LeAnne Elizabeth Ray married on May 20, at Trinity Baptist Church. The couple will reside in Raleigh. BOBBY “TRIPP” PRUITT (’13 PHARMD) and JULIE DATTERO (’14 PHARMD) announced

their engagement, with their wedding planned for October. Tripp is the pharmacy manager of Belmont Pharmacy in Reidsville.

C A MP B E L L M AG AZ I N E 67


ALUMNI NOTES AMANDA GOODMAN (’16) and KERRY NORMAN (’13)

Former Campbell soccer standout MITCHELL CARDENAS (’13) earned a spot with the Brazos Valley Cavalry Football Club of the USL Premier Development League for its inaugural season. Cardenas was taken in the 2013 MLS Supplemental Draft in the second round by Sporting Kansas City. He went on to play for the Atletico Coatzacoalcos of the Mexican Segunda Division. At Campbell, Cardenas was named to the All-Conference team in all four years, leading the nation with 14 assists in 2012. BRETT A. CARPENTER (’14 LAW)

joined Poyner Spruill’s Raleigh office as an associate, focused on helping clients with labor and employment law matters. In addition to working as a contract attorney and summer associate, Carpenter has also clerked for a United States magistrate judge in the Middle District of North Carolina and a superior court judge in the North Carolina Business Court. Before law school, Carpenter worked in Hawaii, Alaska and Australia and traveled extensively, visiting 45 countries.

Taylor Faircloth and JONATHAN BAREFOOT (’14) were married on June 17, at the Robert B. and Anna Gardner Butler Chapel on the Campbell University campus.

Professional golfer KAYLIN YOST (’14) became the first gold medal winner in golf at the Deaflympic, an Olympicsstyle international competition for hearing-impaired athletes. She was one of two American golfers selected to represent Team USA at the 2017 Deaflympics Summer Games, an International Olympics Committee (IOC)-sanctioned event where deaf and hard-ofhearing athletes compete at an elite level. Yost also works as an Ambassador for Phonak, the leading global provider of pediatric hearing aids. 68 SUMMER 2017

PHOTO COURTESTY OF LEVON BARNES

were married on April 7, 2017 at the Robert B. and Anna Gardner Butler Chapel on the Campbell University campus.

Leader of young men

Alumnus returns to North Carolina to expand his youth program

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EVON BARNES ('04) is impacting the East Coast — from New York City to Durham — with his program giving at-risk young men a chance to prove themselves and rise above adversity.

coaching. After serveral assistant coaching positions after college, Barnes was named the head men's basketball coach and associate dean of student at Lackawanna College in Pennsylvania in 2013.

Barnes' Young Male Achievers (YMA) program was born in 2005 in Washington, D.C., focused then more on offering a new way of life for teens and young men involved or living around gang activity in the area. A native of New York City, Barnes himself encountered gang activity throughout his childhood and relied on his community and family to support and steer him into a direction he and they could be proud of.

He moved to Durham and returned to coaching at the high school level. He soon became inspired to expand the YMA program.

His father was his earliest positive male role model, and both parents raised him early on to serve others and give back to his community. That started with volunteering during Thanksgiving — an act Barnes has implemented in the YMA program — something he learned from his father before he passed away when Barnes was only 9. “My memories of [my father] were ones where he gave people opportunities that most overlooked," he said. “During the holidays, he would make sure every kid in the neighborhood had a gift and would provide turkeys during Thanksgiving.” While his father taught him service, Barnes learned humility and gratefulness from his mother. All of these attributes served Barnes well throughout high school and into college at Campbell, where he earned his degree in physical education teaching and

“It is now less about gangs and more about empowerment, academics and civic duties," Barnes said. “For YMA to have more than 70 members at this point and more than 8,000 hours of community service — virtually eliminating in-school suspension for minority sixth- through 12th-graders —is a testament to a group that believes in a shared vision.” Students in YMA have opportunities to attend youth leadership conferences and learn valuable skills. They have also served 7,000 collective volunteer hours and blessed 60 families with a meal on Thanksgiving since 2014. Barnes said he is looking to expand YMA into other schools in the state and eventually make it into a nonprofit. But his vision doesn’t stop there. Barnes has entered the political realm in Durham, saying he wants to “bring economic growth and prosperity to all of it's citizens regardless of the zip code they reside.” As a teacher, he says he “encounters our future in the form of students who deserve to dream and deserve a better world that can be given.” ABIGAIL PORE


From recent graduates ALEXANDRA DAHL ('17) and her fiancé, BRANDON TUTTLE ('17): “My fiancé and I would like to thank Campbell for bringing us together. Because of Campbell, we were able to meet on our freshman move-in day — Aug. 17, 2013 ­— in front of the fountain at Day Hall. Now four years later, we are engaged to be married. We got engaged on May 13, exactly where we met four years ago in front of the fountain. Not only did we celebrate our engagement, but we celebrated our success of our college graduation. We are so blessed with the adventure that awaits for us and we are forever grateful for Campbell University for bringing us together. We are forever Camels. Jeremiah 29:11 For I know the plans I have for you, declares the Lord, plans to prosper you and not to harm you, plans to give you a hope and a future.”

HANNAH GRANTHAM LANE (’15) and TRAVIS LANE (’15 TRUST) welcomed Samuel

Harrison Lane to their Campbell family on March 10.

LINDSAY RUSHE (’15) and

Matthew Creech were married on April 21, at the Robert B. and Anna Gardner Butler Chapel on the Campbell University campus.

SHELBY WOOD (’15) and RICKY WHITMAN (’13) were married

on May 20, at the Robert B. and Anna Gardner Butler Chapel on the Campbell University campus.

ELIZABETH OLIVIER (’15 LAW)

PHOTO COURTESTY OF ALEXANDRA DAHL

was sworn in as the newest prosecutor in the Alamance County District Attorney’s Office in July. She and husband Philip were married on April 22. LEAH CASHWELL (’16) and HOUSTON MAIN (’16) were

married on March 3, at the Robert B. and Anna Gardner Butler Chapel on the Campbell University campus. EARL M. EVANS (’16) graduated

from the 125th Basic Session of the Virginia State Police. He has assumed his duties as a trooper in Northern Virginia.

GENETTA WILLIAMS (’17 MDIV)

was recipient of the Addie Davis Award for Outstanding Leadership in Pastoral Ministry in July. Established in 1995 to honor the first Southern Baptist woman ordained to the ministry, the Addie Davis Award gives public recognition to gifted women seminarians. VICTORIA LEE (’17) and Hunter Johnston were married on June 2, at the Robert B. and Anna Gardner Butler Chapel on the Campbell University campus. SAMANTHA TAYLOR (’17) and DUSTIN HUDSON (’11, ’17)

The parents of KELSEY KOMYATHY ('17) had a complex problem to solve – how to be at her graduation from Campbell University’s pharmacy program and also be at her sister’s graduation from dental school in Michigan on the same day. With a lot of planning, they made it happen. Her sister, Jordan, was set to graduate from the University of Detroit Mercy on May 12 at 9 a.m., and Kelsey's commencement was set for 3 (five hours later when the time zone difference is factored in). After a lot of planning, parents Greg and Angie, grandfather Richard LeBlanc and Jordan’s husband Shane attended Jordan’s graduation in Michigan and then took a private plane to the Harnett County Jetport to attend Kelsey’s graduation. “It was a whirl-wind day for my family, but it all worked out,” said Kelsey. “Jordan brought her cap and gown, so we could take pictures together in our regalia [that's them pictured, Kelsey on the left, with pharmacy Dean Michael Adams]. It was such a special day.” MAGAZINE.CAMPBELL.EDU

were married on April 29, at the Robert B. and Anna Gardner Butler Chapel on the Campbell University campus.

C A MP B E L L M AG AZ I N E 69


ALUMNI NOTES

JOIN AN ALUMNI CHAPTER Once a Camel, always a Camel! Campbell University has alumni chapters representing North Carolina, Virginia and places beyond: • Cape Fear: Brunswick, New Hanover & Pender • Central Virginia: Richmond & surrounding areas • Charlotte Metro: Anson; Cabarrus; Gaston;

Lancaster, S.C.; Lincoln; Mecklenburg; Stanley; Union, S.C. & York, S.C.

• • • • • •

Eastern NC: Beaufort, Greene, Lenoir, Martin & Pitt Foothills: Davie, Forsyth, Stokes, Surry & Yadkin Lee County: Includes Lee & surrounding areas Triangle: Durham, Orange & Wake Harnett County: Includes Harnett & Johnston Sandhills: Cumberland & surrounding areas

For more information, contact the Office of Alumni Engagement at alumni@campbell.edu or (910) 893-1235

70 SUMMER 2017


FRIENDS WE WILL MISS

A TRIBUTE TO LEARY DAVIS (1941-2017) BY BILLY RICHARDSON

I

had often heard it said, we are the choices we make. This was certainly brought home to me this past graduation of Campbell University's 39th law school class. My youngest son, Zack, is a member and graduate of that class. As he walked down the aisle to the stage where he was to receive his degree and was hooded by Professor Woodruff, a distinguished professor of the school of law who retired after graduation, I could hardly hold back the tears and years. Zack, like my oldest son Matt, who had graduated in 2009, was officially a "Campbell Lawyer." Both in so doing, had proven a lot to me and to themselves. They were indeed second-generation lawyers from what is now a growing, very prestigious law school. Both of my sons and I had other choices we could have made. Yet, we chose Campbell — to say this path is hard is doing it an injustice. Campbell's tradition, made so by its founding dean Leary Davis, is rigorous, intent and almost brutal. Davis had the audacity to look at the true measure of a person — not just grades or numbers on a standardized test — and he demanded the admissions dean and committee to look at the heart, commitment and character of each student with each selection. At both of my sons' graduations, I remember flashing back to my choice of over 40 years ago when Dean Davis personally came to the University of North Carolina to recruit students and sell his dream of the law school at Campbell. He was a transcendent force of nature and would not take "no" for an answer. Of the many gifts I received from him, one certainly is the importance of "embracing the dream," of not always taking the obvious path. I first met the dean when he barged into my office in the Student Union at UNC. At the time, I was student body president and as such was set on a different course. Being SGA President meant you went to the UNC School of Law followed by internships and clerkships with Court of Appeals Judges, North Carolina Supreme Court Judges and offers from big law firms. This was a no-brainer. Davis thought his dream was worth more. At Campbell, I would go to an unaccredited law school with incomplete classrooms and no alumni and forgo giving up an opportunity to go to a Top 15 law school with a huge alumnus base, and a tradition of law school excellence. Davis' dream was the embodiment of the famous saying, "There's nothing

M AG AZIN E .CAMP BE LL.EDU

Founding Campbell Law Dean F. Leary Davis (left) with former Campbell President and law school namesake Norman Adrian Wiggins at the site of the future school (now Wiggins Memorial Library) in 1975.

more compelling as an idea whose time had come." He envisioned an intense study of law, coupled with a love of North Carolina and a school of law transforming our system of justice. Davis knew with no alumni, "each other" was all we had. He recruited professors who instilled the dream into us. They made us disciplined attorneys by giving us exams after Christmas, adhering to strict classroom attendance and participation policies and providing rigorous supervision. The result of Dean Davis' dream can be measured in 38 successful classes, a bar rate second to none, and a beautiful law school in the center of North Carolina's capital, but it should not be measured in those terms. Rather, it should be celebrated because it is the rarest of gifts — the real deal. It is what our founding dean intended it to be — a tradition of intense study committed to producing lawyers who would zealously defend their clients and be apologetic for the law. They would cherish this call because the school made them earn it with rigorous study, and in doing so, forever change them. It would put in them an inner strength few will ever know. We have had many great deans, but Dean J. Rich Leonard “gets” Davis' true call and we are blessed to have him. Davis' spirit lives on in him and he constantly reminds us of the “Campbell Contract” we chose to sign. A 1980 graduate of Campbell Law School, William O. "Billy" Richardson represents District 44 in the N.C. House of Representatives. He is the founding partner of The Richardson Firm in Fayetteville.

FRIENDS WE WILL MISS Larry D. Shelton ('95) Michelle E. King ('94) Jean P. Powell ('65) H. Jack Mattox ('51) Raymond E. Martin ('83) Nancy C. McGirt ('84 Law) Carolyn J. Holmes ('01) Nina J. Berkley ('54) Hazel H. Welch ('70) Robert C. McVicker ('11) John E. McLin Jr. ('64) Miriam Clark ('52) Vada B. Tingen ('48) Rodney C. Hobbs ('59) C. L. Gwaltney ('87 Law) Lonnie M. Cayton ('71) Joseph G. Taylor ('59) Carl H. Peay Jr. ('65) Eugenia B. Thompson ('47) Nell J. Johnston ('71) Ayden W. Hall ('64) Ellen P. Mincey ('50) James C. Stevens ('68) Martha B. Kirkman ('67) Frankie M. Warren ('78) John T. Jones ('68) Bonnie P. Byrd ('75) Elizabeth R. Bissette ('78) Jo Ann D. Baldwin ('60) Dr. Malbert Smith Jr. ('86) Capt. Henry G. Campbell Jr. ('63, '64) William R. Gilliland ('61) Maj. John D. Musick ('65) Mary H. Freeman ('37) Claude E. Raiford Jr. ('55) Thomas J. Hanner ('69) Henry Whitesides Jr. ('84 Law) Robert E. Hayes ('82) Ruth M. Grady ('37) Marvella D. Dorman ('73) Corey M. Godwin ('13)

May 11 March 21 May 16 June 6 March 22 May 1 March 19 April 9 April 22 Feb. 25 April 13 June 18 March 17 Feb. 5 March 10 May 1 May 19 April 8 March 28 May 9 June 4 Feb. 9 May 13 June 13 Feb. 8 Feb. 16 April 14 May 9 March 27 Feb. 4 Feb. 14 March 19 April 15 May 3 April 1 Feb. 17 April 11 May 3 May 8 April 2 May 2

C A MP B E L L M AG AZ I N E 71


DONOR HONOR ROLL

Campbell University students, faculty, staff and trustees acknowledge the generous donations of alumni, friends, foundations, parents, churches and estates. Without you, the University would not flourish. Listed are names of the donors during the University’s recently completed fiscal year June 1, 2016 — May 31, 2017. Thank you for your outstanding support.

72 SUMMER 2017


The J.A. Campbell Society

The J.A. Campbell Society recognizes life giving of $100,000 or more prior to June, 1 2017.

$1,000,000 + A. J. Fletcher Foundation Mrs. Russellene J. Angel and Mr. B. R. Angel* Baptist State Convention of NC Dr. Bob Barker, Sr. '65, '12 and Dr. Patricia Barker '12 Mr. Eugene Boyce Branch Banking & Trust Dr. William L. Burns, Jr. '97* and Mrs. Dottie Burns* Dr. William E. Byrd '03 and Mrs. Sadie Byrd CBF of North Carolina, Inc. Mrs. Edna R. Coates Cooperative Baptist Fellowship

County of Harnett Donald & Elizabeth Cooke Foundation Dr. Charles H. DuVal '48 and Mrs. Elinor DuVal Erma B. Taylor Estate Felburn Foundation Drs. Annabelle L. Fetterman '87 and Lewis M. Fetterman, Sr. '87* Golden Leaf Foundation Drs. Dinah Gore '07 and Ed Gore, Sr. '52, '07* Hon. Oscar N. Harris '65 and Mrs. Jean Harris* Ms. Molly F. Held '82 Mrs. Ester Holder Howard '44

Hubert F. Ledford Estate Independent College Fund of NC J. H. Strickland Estate John William Pope Foundation Kate B. Reynolds Charitable Trust Kresge Foundation Dr. and Mrs. Don G. Lane Lettie Pate Whitehead Foundation Lundy-Fetterman Family Foundation Mrs. Lynell A. Martin and Mr. Carlton C. Martin* Mrs. Joyce McLamb and Mr. Carlie C. McLamb* Mr. Bernard F. McLeod, Jr. '46 and Mrs. Virginia C. McLeod*

McMichael Family Foundation Mr. and Mrs. John McNeill, Jr. NC Community Foundation, Inc. NC Foundation of Church Related Colleges, Inc. Dr. James R. Nisbet '97* and Mrs. Betty Nisbet* Pharmacy Network Foundation, Inc. Mrs. Reba Quinn and Dr. Milford R. Quinn '43, '99* R.A. Bryan Foundation, Inc. Mr. Robert L. Ransdell, Sr. Robert B. Butler Estate Mr. E. P. Sauls '89 Mr. and Mrs. Mark Saunders

Mr. Henry L. Smith '67 and Mrs. Tracey Smith Mr. Andrew B. Snellings* The Cannon Foundation, Inc. The Leon Levine Foundation Thomas J. Lynch Estate Dr. Edward B. Titmus '59 and Mrs. Carol Titmus Troy Lumber Company Dr. Pankaj K. Vyas Mr. Irvin and Dr. Michelle Warren Mr. and Mrs. Robert Whiteman, Jr. Drs. Mildred H. Wiggins '48, '07 and Norman A. Wiggins '48, '07* Mr. and Mrs. Luby Wood

Mr. and Mrs. Beau Lane Lilly Endowment Incorporated Mr. L. Kimsey Mann, Sr. '98 Mr. Hugh G. Maxwell III '57 and Mrs. Charlotte Maxwell Mr. Dalton L. McMichael Mildred B. McIntosh Estate Mr. Jerry Milton and Mrs. Elizabeth C. Milton '92 NC Baptist Foundation Mr. James E. Perry, Jr. '59 and Mrs. Daphne S. Perry '60 Powers Swain Chevrolet Mr. Gerald H. Quinn '56 and Mrs. Rita Quinn

Mr. Kim Quinn Richard Ruth Smith Estate Mrs. Taylor B. Rogers '77 Ms. Carla Rouse Roy L. Marshall Estate Mrs. Katherine Furches Rumley and Dr. J. Leon Rumley '97* Mrs. Chloe A. Scott* Miss Elsie L. Seymore* Miss Narnie D. Seymore Southeastern Interiors Mr. L. Harold Stephens* Mr. Daniel E. Stewart '17, '90*

Mr. Frederick H. Taylor '64 and Mrs. Myra Taylor Mr. Benjamin N. Thompson '76, '79 and Mrs. Patrice Thompson '75 Titmus Foundation, Inc. Trust Education Foundation, Inc. Mr. Harold B. Wells, Jr. '88 and Mrs. Frances Wells Mr. James B. Wilkinson*

Mr. Marion L. Eakes* Mr. Thomas L. Edwards '69 Edwards Foundation, Inc. Ms. Lucille L. Ellis '97* Mr. and Mrs. Kennieth Etheridge Mr. Donald C. Evans '71 and Mrs. Judy T. Evans Mr. Scott Evans '88 and Mrs. Sharon Evans Evelyn M. Snider Estate Family Care Pharmacy, Inc. Mrs. Mescal Ferguson* First Baptist Church of Greensboro First Federal Bank Florence M. Lee Estate Florence Rogers Charitable Trust Mr. and Mrs. Dexter E. Floyd Foundation for the Carolinas Frank H. Upchurch Estate Mr. and Mrs. James C. Furman G. Fred Hale Estate Mr. Stephen W. Gaskins '81 and Mrs. Karen Gaskins Mrs. Mary Gatton Mrs. Dorothea Stewart Gilbert '46 Goldsboro Milling Company Gordon K. Ogburn Estate Mr. and Mrs. R. Wensell Grabarek Mr. Bobby R. Hall, Sr. '55 and Mrs. Janet H. Hall '59 Mrs. Catherine Hall '36* Mr. and Mrs. Joseph C. Hall, Jr. Mrs. Hope F. Hall '44 and Mr. Robert B. Hall, Sr.* Mr. Robert A. Harris '37* Mr. Willard B. Harris '49 Harris Teeter Mr. Harvey G. Hart* Dr. Blanton A. Hartness, Sr. '28, '91* Mr. William R. Hartness, Jr. Mr. John T. Henley, Sr.*

Mrs. Juanita S. Hight '33* Dr. Charles B. Howard '69* Mr. John C. Howard, Jr. '60 and Mrs. Scarlett H. Howard '60 Inez C. Teague Estate Mr. Glenn T. Infinger '74 and Mrs. Anne S. Infinger Dr. Colon S. Jackson and Mrs. Johnnie L. Jackson '06 James M. Johnston Trust James R. Nisbet Estate Jane T. Lewis Estate Jefferson Pilot Corporation John C. Sutton Estate John G. Cashwell Estate John M. Cansler Estate Dr. Gale D. Johnson* Mr. Bonner H. Jones* Mr. Earl T. Jones Joseph W. Gawthrop Estate Justeen B. Tarbet Estate Dr. Fred R. Keith, Sr. '18, '77* Mr. Thomas J. Keith '64 and Mrs. Anne Keith Kenelm Foundation Mr. William A. Kimbrough '67 Mr. E. Landon Kirk and Mrs. Anna D. Kirk '98 L. Harold Stephens Estate L. Kimsey Mann, Sr. Estate Mr. Michael S. McLamb '73 and Mrs. Beverly G. McLamb Mrs. Minnie D. Lamm '97* Dr. Perry Q. Langston* and Mrs. Clara Langston* Lanie H. Bryan Estate Judge Franklin F. Lanier '72, '82 and Mrs. Kay Lanier Mr. John H. Lanier '35* Mr. Hubert F. Ledford* Lee Brick & Tile Co., Inc.

LifeTrust3D, LLC Lollie B. Frazier Estate Lonnie D. Small Estate Mr. Richard A. Lord Mr. Robert L. Luddy Luddy Charitable Foundation Dr. Burrows T. Lundy '77* Dr. Thomas J. Lynch '95* Mabel C. Hayden Estate Mabel Strickland Estate Mr. Fred C. MacDonald* MAJ Sam Byrd Margaret B. Vann Estate Mary Alice Ward Estate Mary E. Collier Estate Mrs. Ruth C. Maynard* Mr. George McLaney, Jr.* McLeod Foundation Mrs. Barbara R. Meredith Merrill Lynch Mescal Ferguson Estate Milford & Reba Quinn Family Foundation Minnie D. Lamm Estate Dr. Carlton T. Mitchell '41, '96* Mr. Bobby L. Montague Mr. Danny Moody Mr. and Mrs. Peter Moore, Jr. Morgan Stanley Smith Barney Global Impact Funding Trust Ms. Christine C. Moss Dr. Shahriar Mostashari Mt. Pisgah Baptist Church Mr. Bobby L. Murray, Jr. '93 and Mrs. Christine B. Murray '93 Mr. Bobby L. Murray, Sr.* and Mrs. Jackie Murray* NC Mutual Wholesale Drug Dr. Walton P. O'Neal III '96 and Mrs. Helene M. O'Neal

$500,000 - $999,999 Algernon Sydney Sullivan Foundation Dr. Joseph W. Baggett '38* and Mrs. Hannah Baggett* Brookhill Village, Inc. Mr. Raymond A. Bryan, Jr.* Bryan Foundation, Inc. Mrs. Gladys B. Campbell '24* Carlie C's IGA Carlton and Lynell Martin Family Foundation Charles and Irene Nanney Foundation Charlie Tillman Freeman Estate Mr. D. Eric Coates '86 and Mrs. Barbara Coates

Dr. James H. Crossingham, Jr. '02 Dr. Fred O. Dennis '79 E. P. Sauls Estate Fidelity Bank GlaxoSmithKline Ms. Flavel M. Godfrey Mrs. Ruth A. Green* Dr. James E. Herring, Jr. '95 and Mrs. Carla Herring Dr. Ernest L. Hogan '98* Mr. Lewis E. Hubbard* James R. Coates Estate Jefferson Pilot Foundation Mr. Everett Kivette '46

$100,000 - $499,999 A. E. Finley Foundation Dr. Jesse C. Alphin, Sr. '97* and Mrs. Allene Alphin* Mrs. Venna Anderson* Annie Laurie Brown Estate Mrs. Doris Barnes and Mr. J. J. Barnes, Jr.* Barnes & Noble College Booksellers, LLC Mr. Guilford W. Bass, Sr. '70 Mrs. Barbara D. Bass BB&T Charitable Fund Dr. Irwin Belk '11 and Mrs. Carol Belk Mr. Edward L. Berry* Dr. Bruce B. Blackmon '40* Blue Cross & Blue Shield of North Carolina Bob Barker Company Foundation, Inc. Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Boone Booth Ferris Foundation Mrs. Gladys B. Boroughs and Mr. Lewis E. Boroughs '41* Mr. Houston N. Brisson, Sr.* and Mrs. Irene Brisson* Dr. and Mrs. Jack Britt Mr. Willis D. Brown '49 and Mrs. Ann Brown Mr. John C. Bruffey, Jr. '84 Ms. Lanie H. Bryan '16 Burlington Industries Foundation Burroughs Wellcome Company Mr. and Mrs. Travis Burt Mr. R. B. Butler* Dr. C. R. Byrd, Jr. '36, '98* C. Ray Pruette Estate Mr. Fred McCall, Jr.* and Mrs. Pearle McCall* Calvin M. Little Estate Mrs. Judy Cammack and Dr. James C. Cammack, Jr. '70*

MAGAZINE.CAMPBELL.EDU

Camp Clearwater Capital Community Foundation Cardinal Health Carl Eugene Langston Estate Carolina Medical Products Mr. W. H. Carter* Carter Foundation, Inc. Mr. and Mrs. Robert B. Cashion Dr. S. T. Cathy '91* Mr. Robert J. Chaffin '47 Charles B. Keesee Educational Fund, Inc. Circle Q Farms, Inc./Quinn Farms Clarence E. Roberts Estate Mr. David K. Clark and Mrs. Miriam Clark '52* Mr. Rogers Clark* Clark Brothers Coats & Bennett, LLP Mr. Scott H. Colclough '71 Mrs. Mary E. Collier* Community Foundation of Gaston County Compaz Land Corporation Mr. Howard M. Cooper* and Mrs. Eva Cooper* Mr. David T. Courie '93, '97 and Mrs. Michelle Courie Mr. James B. Creech '44 Mr. and Mrs. Gene L. Crow Mrs. Helen Currin and Mr. James M. Currin, Sr. '41* CVS Corporation Daniel E. Stewart Estate Dr. Frank A. Daniels '86 Drs. Leah and Joseph Devlin Mrs. Leona J. Doffermyre* Donald Smith & Manila G. Shaver Foundation Donnie M. Royal Foundation Duke Energy Progress

C A MP B E L L M AG AZ I N E 73


Mr. Vance B. Neal '63 and Mrs. Dolores Neal Ned B. Ball Estate '27 Mrs. Sadie O. Neel '42 Norman A. Wiggins Living Trust Mrs. Henry P. Norris North Carolina Biotechnology Center North Carolina GlaxoSmithKline North Rocky Mount Baptist Church Dr. Anthony and Mrs. Julie Oley Ora C. Cansler Estate Mr. F. R. Page, Jr.* Mr. and Mrs. DeLeon Parker, Sr. Mr. Paul Perry '50 and Mrs. Teeny Perry Mr. Robert G. Poole, Jr. '48, '65 and Mrs. Barbara B. Poole Mr. John W. Pope, Sr. '05* and Mrs. Joy Pope* Mr. E. J. Prevatte* Mr. T. G. Proctor Provantage Corporate Solutions Dr. P. C. Purvis* and Mrs. Peggy Purvis*

Rev. Aubrey T. Quakenbush* Raymond F. Shearin Estate Mrs. Verna B. Respass '48 Dr. Clyde J. Rhyne '99* Richard F. Paschal, Jr. Estate Mrs. March F. Riddle* Rite Aid Corporation Dr. Clarence E. Roberts* Mr. A. L. Royal Mr. David P. Russ III '69 and Mrs. Linda P. Russ Dr. and Mrs. Donald B. Russ Ruth B. Johnson Estate Sampson-Bladen Oil Company, Inc. Mrs. Siddie Sauls Seby B. Jones Family Foundation Seven Lakes Prescription Shoppe, Inc. Short Stop Food Marts Mr. Willard D. Small Ms. R. Ruth Smith* Smith Family Trust Mr. Donald W. Sneeden, Sr.* Snyder Memorial Baptist Church

Society Advancement Management Mr. William R. Soles, Jr. Southeastern Trust School Southern Bank Foundation Dr. Louis Spilman, Jr.* and Mrs. Mary Spilman Sprint Mid-Atlantic Telecom STC Property Company Stephen Ross Angel Charitable Foundation Mrs. Cecelia J. Sue and Dr. Samuel A. Sue, Jr. '50* Suntrust Bank Mr. L. Stuart Surles '77 Suwon Central Baptist Church Systel Mrs. Alliene F. Taylor* Mrs. Margo Taylor and Mr. Robert T. Taylor, Sr. '66* The Dickson Foundation, Inc. The News & Observer The Taylor Foundation Thelma Roberts Hall Estate Thomas D. Ward Estate

TOLI Vault Dr. Gordon L. Townsend, Sr.* Triangle Community Foundation United Energy, Inc. Mr. Joseph T. Vail '47* Mrs. Bradeene B. Vail '43* Victor Small Estate Wachovia Bank of N. C. Walgreens Dr. Jerry M. Wallace and Mrs. Betty B. Wallace '72 Wanna S. Lewis Estate Ms. Donna G. Ward Dr. Trey Waters '02 Dr. Jack G. Watts, Sr.* and Mrs. Eloise Watts Weeks Flower Garden Mr. and Mrs. Robert P. Wellons Wellons Construction, Inc. Dr. Harold B. Wells, Sr. '00* and Mrs. Elizabeth F. Wells* Wells Fargo Bank, N.A. Wells Holdings Limited, LLC Wells Property LLC

Westwood Baptist Church Mr. David W. Wharton '89 and Mrs. Krista Wharton William C. Coleman Estate William R. Hartness, Jr. Estate Mrs. Melba L. Williams '71 Wilma L. McCurdy Estate Mr. Boney E. Wilson, Jr. '45* and Mrs. Glenn L. Wilson '44* Winston-Salem Foundation Mr. and Mrs. Ray Womble, Jr. Mr. Ray H. Womble, Sr. and Mrs. Sarah T. Womble '47 Mr. George E. Womble Mr. Robert D. Womble* Mr. Robert J. Womble '68 and Mrs. Martha Womble Dr. William M. Womble, Sr. '96* Womble Rental Management Mrs. Mary S. Woodard and Mr. Billy T. Woodard* Woodmen of the World Omaha Life Insurance Mrs. Algene Yeatman* Z. Smith Reynolds Foundation

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 Drs. Bob and Pat Barker Mr.* and Mrs. J. J. Barnes Mrs. Elizabeth Early Belton Mrs. Kay Bissette Ms. Susan Blakely Mr.* and Mrs. Lewis Boroughs Rev. and Mrs. J. R. Bouldin, Sr.* Mr. Gene Boyce Mr.* and Mrs. H. F. Britt Dr. and Mrs. Jack Britt Mr. William L. Burns* Dr. and Mrs. Ed Byrd Dr.* and Mrs. James C. Cammack Mr. and Mrs. William V. Campbell, Sr. 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 Richardson Collins Mr. Royce Crumpler*

74 SUMMER 2017

Rev. and Mrs. Daniel Deaton Mr. and Mrs. Robert Dixon Dr. and Mrs. Charles DuVal Mr. Cecil Edgerton Mr. and Mrs. James Harold Falls Dr. Ronnie Faulkner Drs. Lewis* and Annabelle Fetterman Mr. Carl Garrison Mr. and Mrs. Steve Gaskins Mrs. Mary Gatton Mrs. Dorothea Gilbert Mrs. Carolyn Smith Godwin Drs. Ed* and Dinah Gore Mr. and Mrs. Dan Gray Mrs. Ruth Arden Green* Mr. and Dr. 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 Howard

Mr. Stephen Howell Mr. and Mrs. Lewis Hubbard* Dr. Colon Jackson, Jr. Mr. Lloyd Johnson, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. Bonner Jones* Rev. and Mrs. Allen Johnson Rev. and Mrs. Arthur Kirk Mrs. Clara Langston* Mr. J. Horace Lanier* Ms. Stephanie Lanier Ms. Susan Ledford Dr. Jane T. Lewis* Dr. Marie Mason Mr. and Mrs. Fred McCall* Mr. Dan McCormick Mrs. Mildred McIntosh* Dr. and Mrs. Hugh H. McKinney* Mr. Mac McLeod Dr. Carlton T. Mitchell* Mr. and Mrs. Bobby Montague Mrs. Christine Moss 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. Skip Oxford 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 Clifton Senter* Mrs. Vivian Simpson* Mr. and Mrs. Elwynne H. Smith* Mr. and Mrs. Henry Smith Ms. Ruth Smith* Mr. Andrew Snellings* Mr. and Mrs. Johnny Spence

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


The 1887 Society

The 1887 Society recognizes donors who have given $1,000 or more between June 1, 2016 & May 31, 2017.

PRESIDENT’S CIRCLE

The President’s Circle recognizes donors who have given $25,000 or more between June 1, 2016 & May 31, 2017 Aramark Global Business Services Dr. Bob Barker, Sr. '65, '12 and Dr. Patricia Barker '12 Barnes & Nobles College Booksellers, LLC BB&T Charitable Fund Dr. James E. Beaty '98 and Dr. Anne Marie P. Beaty '00 Mr. John and Mrs. Emmagene Bowman Bryan Foundation, Inc. Capital Community Foundation Carlie C's IGA CBF of North Carolina, Inc. Circle Q Farms, Inc./Quinn Farms Mr. D. Eric Coates '86 and Mrs. Barbara Coates Coca-Cola Bottling Co. Mr. Scott H. Colclough '71 Cooperative Baptist Fellowship County of Harnett Donald & Elizabeth Cooke Foundation Donald Smith & Manila G. Shaver Foundation Donnie M. Royal Foundation

Dr. Charles H. DuVal '48 and Mrs. Elinor DuVal Mr. and Mrs. Ricky Earnhardt Mr. Donald C. Evans '71 and Mrs. Judy T. Evans Drs. Annabelle L. Fetterman '87 and Lewis M. Fetterman, Sr. '87* Mr. Stephen W. Gaskins '81 and Mrs. Karen Gaskins Ms. Flavel M. Godfrey Mr. Bobby R. Hall, Sr. '55 and Mrs. Janet H. Hall '59 Hon. Oscar N. Harris '65 and Mrs. Jean Harris* Ms. Molly F. Held '82 Mrs. Ester Holder Howard '44 Independent College Fund of NC Mr. Glenn T. Infinger '74 and Mrs. Anne S. Infinger James A. D. Wilson Trust James E. Perry Trust Jane T. Lewis Estate Mrs. Nancy Johns and Mr. Daniel C. Johns '08 Mr. and Mrs. Beau Lane Lettie Pate Whitehead Foundation Mr. Andrew Lipetzky

and Dr. Juliana E. Lipetzky '15 Lundy-Fetterman Family Foundation Macon Investments, LLC Mariam & Robert Hayes Charitable Trust Mrs. Joyce McLamb and Mr. Carlie C. McLamb* Mr. Bernard F. McLeod, Jr. '46 and Mrs. Virginia C. McLeod* Mr. Dalton L. McMichael McMichael Family Foundation Mr. and Mrs. John McNeill, Jr. Mr. Jerry Milton and Mrs. Elizabeth C. Milton '92 Morgan Stanley Smith Barney Global Impact Funding Trust Ms. Christine C. Moss Dr. Shahriar Mostashari Mr. Bobby L. Murray, Jr. '93 and Mrs. Christine B. Murray '93 National Finance Company NC Baptist Foundation NC Community Foundation, Inc. Mr. Tony Nitz Mr. James E. Perry, Jr. '59 and Mrs. Daphne S. Perry '60 Pharmacy Network Foundation, Inc.

Powers Swain Chevrolet Mr. William A. Pully '79, '15 and Mrs. Dale Pully Mr. Gerald H. Quinn '56 and Mrs. Rita Quinn Mr. Kim Quinn Mrs. Reba Quinn and Dr. Milford R. Quinn '43, '99* R.A. Bryan Foundation, Inc. Mr. Robert L. Ransdell, Sr. Ms. Carla Rouse Dr. I. Daniel Shin Dr. Darrin R. Sismour '08 Mr. Willard D. Small Mr. Henry L. Smith '67 and Mrs. Tracey Smith Mr. William R. Soles, Jr. Southeastern Interiors Southeastern Trust School Mr. Frederick H. Taylor '64 and Mrs. Myra Taylor The Leon Levine Foundation Think Title, LLC Thomas D. Ward Estate Mr. Benjamin N. Thompson '76, '79 and Mrs. Patrice Thompson '75

Dr. Edward B. Titmus '59 and Mrs. Carol Titmus Titmus Foundation, Inc. Troy Lumber Company Trust Education Foundation, Inc. Dr. Andrew Wakefield and Mrs. Olivia W. Wakefield '12 Ms. Donna G. Ward Mr. Irvin and Dr. Michelle Warren Mr. and Mrs. Robert P. Wellons Wellons Construction, Inc. Mr. Harold B. Wells, Jr. '88 and Mrs. Frances Wells Wells Fargo Bank, N.A. Wells Holdings Limited, LLC Wells Property LLC Mr. David W. Wharton '89 and Mrs. Krista Wharton Mr. and Mrs. Robert Whiteman, Jr. Mr. Fred A. Whitfield '80, '83 Drs. Mildred H. Wiggins '48, '07 and Norman A. Wiggins '48, '07* Ms. Janet L. Wilson Winston-Salem Foundation Mr. and Mrs. Luby Wood

BURKOT CIRCLE

The Burkot Circle recognizes donors who have given from $10,000 to $24,999 between June 1, 2016 & May 31, 2017. 10th Judicial District Bar Algernon Sydney Sullivan Foundation Alphin Family Foundation American Endowment Foundation Mr. Danny F. Anderson Mrs. Russellene J. Angel and Mr. B. R. Angel* AXA Equitable Life Insurance Mr. Robert Barker, Jr. BDO USA, LLP Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Boone Mr. Eugene Boyce Dr. and Mrs. Jack Britt Mr. and Mrs. Travis Burt

Dr. Richard H. Capps, Jr. '95 and Mrs. Jennifer W. Capps '96 Carlton and Lynell Martin Family Foundation Charles and Irene Nanney Foundation Mr. and Mrs. Stephen Cook Dr. and Mrs. J. Bradley Creed Mr. Scott Evans '88 and Mrs. Sharon Evans First Federal Bank Mr. and Mrs. Dexter E. Floyd Floyd Foundation, Inc. Mr. Tommy L. Haddock Mr. David Haire

Mr. and Mrs. Joseph C. Hall, Jr. Hilda Wilson Trust Hotline Delivery Systems John William Pope Foundation Law Offices of John T. Orcutt, PC Mr. Richard A. Lord Mr. Hugh G. Maxwell III '57 and Mrs. Charlotte Maxwell McLeod Foundation Milford & Reba Quinn Family Foundation Mr. Eric J. Morgan '60 and Mrs. Linda V. Morgan NCBA Foundation

Mr. Vance B. Neal '63 and Mrs. Dolores Neal Mr. John Orcutt Pas Real Properties, LLC Dr. and Mrs. Nicholas Pennings Mr. James A. Penry Mr. and Mrs. David Poe Provantage Corporate Solutions Mr. Clarence M. Sidlo Mr. William C. Smith '65 and Mrs. Priscilla Smith Southern Bank Foundation SunTrust Foundation Suwon Central Baptist Church

The David B. Haire Revocable Trust Thomson Reuters-West Tri-Arc Food Systems, Inc. Mrs. Melba L. Williams '71 Mr. George E. Womble Mr. and Mrs. Ray Womble, Jr. Mr. Robert D. Womble* Mr. Ray H. Womble, Sr. and Mrs. Sarah T. Womble '47 Mr. Robert J. Womble '68 and Mrs. Martha Womble Womble Rental Management Ms. Catherine Zachary

MCCALL CIRCLE

The McCall Circle recognizes donors who have given from $3,000 to $9,999 between June 1, 2016 & May 31, 2017. 23rd Street Wash and Dry Accord Healthcare Inc. Dr. Michael L. Adams '96 and Dr. Dina H. Adams '96 Mr. S. Todd Adams '98 and Mrs. Whitney Adams Dr. Lynn A. Albers Anderson Jones, PLLC Arc3 Gases Ardmore Baptist Church Mr. Fred Atkinson '69 and Mrs. Edna G. Atkinson '68 Baptist State Convention of NC Mrs. Doris Barnes and Mr. J. J. Barnes, Jr.* Ms. Beverly Barnett Mr. Guilford W. Bass, Jr. '91 and Mrs. Stephanie Bass Mr. Guilford W. Bass, Sr. '70 Mr. Vann J. Bass '56 Mr. Jeffrey A. Batts Mr. Michael S. Batts Batts, Batts & Bell, LLP Mr. Joseph L. Bell, Jr. Bob Barker Company Foundation, Inc. Mr. and Mrs. Michael Bourland

MAGAZINE.CAMPBELL.EDU

Mr. Todd A. Bradley Mr. and Mrs. E. Clayton Brock Mr. and Mrs. Harold Butts, Jr. Dr. Pauline F. Calloway Mrs. Judy Cammack and Dr. James C. Cammack, Jr. '70* Campus Kitchens Project, Inc. Mrs. Norma Carlson Dr. Alan J. Carroll '05 and Mrs. Carolyn S. Carroll Mr. and Mrs. E. M. Carroll, Jr. Carroll Pharmacy, Inc. Mr. and Mrs. Robert B. Cashion Cashion Family Foundation, Inc. CDR Timothy H. Dickens '64 Cedar Falls Baptist Church Dr. Melinda C. Childress '05 and Mr. John A. Childress Mr. William G. Clark IV and Mrs. Tiffany M. Clark College Park Baptist Church of Winston-Salem Community Foundation of Greater Greensboro Community Foundation of Western NC Mr. Mark A. Conway and Mrs. Lisa A. Conway '91

Council of Independent Colleges Mr. David T. Courie '93, '97 and Mrs. Michelle Courie Mr. Joseph Cox Mr. John C. Delamater '73 and Mrs. Frances Delamater Mrs. Shirley B. Dilthey DPT Class of 2016 Dr. Nancy D. Duffy Duke Energy Foundation Dunn Area Tourism Authority Earnhardt Accounting & Payroll Edward Jones Everett Gaskins Hancock, LLP Dr. and Mrs. Steven H. Everhart Mr. B. Keith Faulkner '01 and Mrs. Patricia Faulkner Mrs. Mary S. Fearing Fidelity Charitable Gift Fund First First Baptist Church of Wilmington Florence Rogers Charitable Trust Fred and Carolyn Morrison Mr. Charles L. Frederick '80 and Mrs. Sandy Frederick Mr. and Mrs. R. Wensell Grabarek

Green South Landscaping Co. Ms. Gloria J. Gulledge '67, '79 H. Manly & Mary Robertson Clark Family Foundation, Inc. Mr. Anthony C. Hardee '78 and Mrs. Deborah W. Hardee '79 Hardison & Cochran Dr. James E. Herring, Jr. '95 and Mrs. Carla Herring Dr. Daniel W. Hester '79 Hutchens Law Firm Island Creek Baptist Church Dr. Colon S. Jackson and Mrs. Johnnie L. Jackson '06 James & Mildred Wilkinson Charitable Foundation, Inc. Mr. Bruce F. Jobe '80 and Mrs. Elizabeth Jobe Dr. David N. Johnson '79 Mr. D. Kim Johnson '75, '80 Mr. Jimmy Johnson and Mrs. Connie A. Johnson '90 Johnson Properties Mr. and Mrs. James E. Jones Mr. Todd A. Jones '98 and Mrs. Kimberly Jones Joseph Cox PLLC

Joseph M. Wright Charitable Foundation KAPLAN Mr. and Mrs. John Kasberger Kenelm Foundation Lafayette Baptist Church Lee Brick & Tile Co., Inc. Hon. J. Rich Leonard Mr. Andrew H. Schaffernoth '87 and Ms. Irina Libon Margaret B. Vann Estate Mr. and Mrs. James C. Matthews Mr. Terry R. Mayhew '72 and Mrs. Ann L. Mayhew '73 Mr. Michael S. McLamb '73 and Mrs. Beverly G. McLamb Mr. Neil McPhail and Mrs. Cynthia L. McPhail '79 McPhail's Pharmacy, Inc. Medical Village Pharmacy Mr. W. Stacy Miller II '94 and Mrs. Blannie C. Miller Miller Law Firm PLLC Mitchell W. Watts Family Foundation Mr. and Mrs. Jim Moody Mr. Richard H. Moore

C A MP B E L L M AG AZ I N E 75


DONOR HONOR ROLL Mr. Daniel Morefield Mr. Robert E. Murtagh Mr. Alton W. Myrick '71 and Mrs. Carolyn Myrick NC Mutual Wholesale Drug NC State Bar Board of Continuing Legal Education Mrs. Sadie O. Neel '42 North State Bank Ogletree, Deakins, Nash Mr. Christopher L. Oliver '84 and Mrs. Scarlett Oliver Dr. Walton P. O'Neal III '96 and Mrs. Helene M. O'Neal Dr. Norman Pandorf Mr. William G. Pappas

Publishing Concepts, L.P. Dr. James T. Purvis '09 and Mrs. Veronica Purvis Mrs. Susan Quinn and Mr. Craig Quinn* Raymond James Charitable Endowment Fund Renaissance Charitable Foundation Riddle & Brantley, LLP Robert and Diane Greenwood Robert D. Womble Revocable Trust Robins Foundation Mr. and Mrs. John L. Rouse Mr. David P. Russ III '69 and Mrs. Linda P. Russ Sanford Steel Corporation

Mr. Caton A. Shermer '66 Mr. Billy A. Small '55 and Mrs. Hilda M. Small '55 Snyder Memorial Baptist Church Mr. Michael C. Sousa '91 and Mrs. Angela Sousa Mr. Luther D. Starling, Jr. '87 State Farm Co. Foundation Steel Technology, Inc. Mr. Bret Strickland '97 and Mrs. Brandi R. Strickland Mr. and Mrs. J. R. Strickland, Jr. Strickland Insurance Brokers, Inc. Mrs. Catherine R. Stuart Mr. Trawick H. Stubbs, Jr. Mr. L. Stuart Surles '77

Mrs. Margo Taylor and Mr. Robert T. Taylor, Sr. '66* Mr. Hoyt G. Tessener '88 and Mrs. Gina Tessener The Taylor Foundation Dr. Alford M. Thomas '64 and Mrs. Betsy Thomas Mr. Edgar A. Thomas, Jr. '71 and Mrs. Belinda Thomas Mr. James R. Thomas '67 and Mrs. Carol Thomas Mrs. Mildred D. Thomas Mr. Tom Thutt Todd Bradley Softball Camps, LLC Transportation Impact Verizon Foundation

Walgreens Mr. Edwin C. Walker Dr. Jerry M. Wallace and Mrs. Betty B. Wallace '72 Wells Fargo Foundation Westwood Baptist Church Mr. E. M. White and Mrs. Judith Folwell-White '61 Hon. Dennis A. Wicker Womble Carlyle Sandridge & Rice, LLP Mr. Benjamin L. Wright '77, '80 and Mrs. Tonya Wright Wyrick Robbins Yates & Ponton Mr. Smedes York

D. RICH CIRCLE

The D. Rich Circle recognizes donors who have given from $1,000 to $2,999 between June 1, 2016 & May 31, 2017. Mr. John D. Adams Ms. Patricia G. Alston Angier Baptist Church Mr. Joel W. Arends Mr. Kirby G. Atkinson '65 and Mrs. Martha Atkinson Ms. Melissa A. Atkinson '11 Mr. David C. Aycock '85 and Mrs. Maureen D. Aycock '83 Mr. Oscar R. Aylor Mr. Terrence M. Bagley '82 and Mrs. Cynthia W. Bagley Bank of America Charitable Foundation Banks F. Woodruff '12 Mr. Ervin Barham '78 and Mrs. Tabitha Barham Ms. Norma L. Barnes-Euresti '92 Rev. Faithe C. Beam '03 Ms. Wanda Beaty Mr. Albert R. Bell, Jr. '66 Bemco Sleep Products Betty Reames Britt Revocable Trust Mr. Jarrod Biebel Ms. Sylvia J. Bjorkman Mr. J. Michael Booe Mr. Dan Boyce Mr. Vernon P. Brake '51 Hon. W. Earl Britt '52 and Mrs. Judy Britt Mrs. Betty R. Britt Mr. Derek K. Brown '96 Mr. and Mrs. Gordon Brown Mr. Harry C. Brown '94, '96 and Mrs. Lisa Brown Mr. Christopher Browning Brownstein Family Foundation Mr. William E. Bruton Mr. Robert E. Bryan, Jr. Mr. Jeffrey E. Bullard '89 and Mrs. Michelle Bullard Dr. Brandon R. Burkley Mr. John D. Burns Mr. Charles G. Butts, Jr. '80 and Mrs. Ann Butts Mr. and Mrs. Bobby Byrd Mr. Hubert G. Byrd, Sr. '59 and Mrs. Gloria Byrd Mr. John S. Byrd '57 Mr. John W. Byrne C. Franklin Jones, Jr. Estate C. Munroe Best, Jr. Foundation Ms. Alexa L. Carda '15 Dr. Charles A. Carter Dr. Lionel E. Cartwright '10, '15 and Mrs. Gladys Cartwright Mr. Anthony D. Cassano and Dr. Angela T. Cassano '99 Mr. and Mrs. Charles D. Cato Mr. Ronald Causey Chaplain Don B. Brown '64, '70 and Mrs. Jacqueline K. Brown '64 Mr. L. McNeil Chestnut '70, '81 and Mrs. Sandra F. Chestnut '69 Mrs. Renee F. Enterline '89, '96 and Mr. Christopher F. Enterline Dr. Robert M. Cisneros, Jr.

76 SUMMER 2017

Mr. and Mrs. John M. Clark Mr. Kerry W. Clippard, Sr. Mr. Jason M. Cogdill COL William W. Pickard Dr. and Mrs. Daniel G. Colley Mr. and Mrs. William Cottingham III Ms. Rose A. Cotton CPHS Pre-Pharmacy Club CPT Richard S. LeBlanc '75 Cranfill Sumner & Hartzog, LLP Mr. John T. Crooks and Mrs. Susan D. Crooks '87 Mr. William L. Crowley, Jr. '91 and COL Tonia M. Crowley '91 Mr. George B. Currin '87 and Mrs. Sylvia Currin Dr. and Mrs. James Currin, Jr. Ms. Robin T. Currin Mrs. Beverly J. Davis Dr. and Mrs. Britt Davis Mr. and Mrs. E. L. Davis III Mr. F. Leary Davis, Jr. and Mrs. Joy B. Davis '81 Dr. John D. Day Dr. Gregory S. Dedrick Deep Run Free Will Baptist Church Women's Auxillary Mr. Mahlon W. Deloatch, Jr. Delta Air Lines Foundation Mrs. Claudia J. Dickens '75 and Mr. Thomas L. Dickens '72 Dr. Joan B. DiNapoli Mr. J. Ashley Dixon Mr. Alan L. Dossenbach '70 and Mrs. Janice L. Dossenbach Mr. and Mrs. Jere A. Drummond Mr. W. Russell Duke Mr. Jerry L. Durmire Ms. Patricia Pearce Dutton E. Lazelle Marks Revocable Trust Hon. and Mrs. Sidney Eagles, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. Hendricks Edgerton Dr. James H. Ellerbe Mr. Boyd M. Ellington '56 Mr. and Mrs. Larry E. Essary Mrs. Joni F. Fetterman First Baptist Church of Greensboro Mr. Samuel A. Floyd '84 and Mrs. Elizabeth Floyd Mr. Jay G. Foonberg Mr. and Mrs. Russell Furtick Mr. James L. Gale Mr. and Mrs. Carl W. Garrison Mr. Warren L. Gay '67 GFWC of North Carolina, Inc. Mr. Jason M. Gipe Mr. Larry W. Godwin, Sr. '70 and Mrs. Jeannette H. Godwin '91 Godwin Real Estate Development Dr. Sandra L. Goins Dr. Don Y. Gordon '83 and Mrs. Elizabeth Gordon Drs. Dinah Gore '07 and Ed Gore, Sr. '52, '07* Mr. R. Frank Gray and Hon. Jane P. Gray '79

Greater Cincinnati Foundation Mr. Steven C. Gregory '73 and Mrs. Cecilia W. Gregory '70, '82 Mr. Robert E. Gresham, Jr. '64 and Mrs. Carolyn J. Gresham '64 Mr. John F. Griffis Mr. and Mrs. Gordon Grimes Dr. Mark L. Hammond and Mrs. Jill C. Hammond '05 Mr. and Mrs. Crawford Harb Mr. Charles R. Hardee '81 and Mrs. Tena Hardee Mr. G. Wayne Hardee '82 and Mrs. Donna Hardee Harris Steel Erectors, Inc. Harris Teeter Mr. Dan M. Hartzog Hayes Barton Baptist Church Ms. Rebecca S. Henderson Ms. Wendy Hensley Dr. Ted S. Henson '69, '80 Mr. James Herring, Jr. '84 and Mrs. Janice Herring Mr. Terry W. Hill '68 and Mrs. Julie E. Hill Mr. William K. Hobbs, Jr. '63 and Mrs. Maxine B. Hobbs '63 Mr. James Stuart Horne Mr. Thomas P. Host III '76 and Mrs. Patti Host J M Smith Corporation Mr. Andrew M. Jackson '02 and Mrs. Jinges Jackson James L. and Darlene F. Gale Charitable Fund Mr. Wayland L. Jenkins, Jr. Mr. Gene Jernigan John D. Adams & Company, CPAs, PLLC Dr. G. Lloyd Johnson, Jr. '77 Mr. Randall A. Johnson Mrs. Dickey Jones Rev. Douglas C. Jones '83 and Mrs. Debbie K. Jones Mr. Russell P. Jones and Mrs. Mary E. Jones '77 Joyce S. McLamb Revocable Trust Judge Ann M. Calabria '83 and Mr. Robert Calabria Judge Morris Rozar '50 Mr. Jeffrey C. Karver '80 Dr. and Mrs. John Kauffman Mr. Alexander T. Keith '14 Mr. Norman B. Kellum Mr. Frederick R. Kinder '54 and Mrs. Doris S. Kinder Dr. I. B. Lake, Jr. '96 Mr. Haywood A. Lane, Jr. '63 Ms. Frances L. Langstaff Mr. Thomas T. Lanier, Jr. '70 and Mrs. Joan S. Lanier '70, '80 Lawyers Mutual Liability Insurance Mr. Lewis R. Ledford and Mrs. Susan P. Ledford '83 Lee-Moore Capital Company Lester Stancil & Associates Lincoln Financial Group Little River Baptist Association

Mr. David W. Long Mr. Ronald P. Maddox Dr. Michael P. Mahalik Mr. E. Lazelle Marks, Jr. '62 and Mrs. Judy R. Marks Dr. James and Mrs. Linda Martin Mary D. Renegar Revocable Trust Mrs. Anne G. Mason '49 Dr. Jeremy Massengill '00 and Dr. Heather S. Massengill '99, '00 Mr. George B. Mast, PA Mast Drug Co. Mr. Christopher M. Mazzatta '10 McGuireWoods Mr. Jeffrey L. McKay '86 and Mrs. Leigh-Ann P. McKay '86 Mr. Kerry K. McKenzie '85 and Mrs. Pamela W. McKenzie Ms. Sheila K. McLamb '83 Mr. Daniell L. McNeill Mr. and Mrs. Clement Medley, Jr. Mr. Thomas L. Medlin '64 and Mrs. Sally H. Medlin Mrs. Ellen G. Lebo '83, '86 and Mr. Michael W. Lebo Ms. Elaine Miller '10 Mr. Jason A. Miller Ms. Nan D. Miller Mr. John F. Mitchell Mr. Christopher L. Mitta '88 and Mrs. Jill L. Mitta Dr. W. Whitaker Moose, Sr. '99 and Mrs. Dorothy Moose Mrs. Judith W. Morris '68 Mr. Philip S. Morrow '78 and Mrs. Lynn C. Morrow '80 Dr. Shahriar Mostashari Mrs. Katherine Moye National Center for Women & Information Technology National Dodge-Chrysler-Jeep NC Pharmaceutical Association Mrs. Ruby B. Neal '51 Neills Creek Baptist Church Nelson Mullins Riley & Scarborough, L.L.P. Dr. Karen P. Nery Mr. Bradley J. Newkirk '75 and Mrs. Karen M. Newkirk '75 Mrs. Suzy I. Nisbet '86 and Mr. Stuart A. Nisbet Mrs. Patsy H. Nobles '76 Nobles Chapel Baptist Church Ms. Stacie M. Noe '11, '15 North Carolina Chapter AFCEA North Carolina Humanities Council Northwestern Mutual Foundation Mrs. Anna M. Oliver '14 Dr. M. O. Owens, Jr. Mr. Tyler B. Owens '67 and Mrs. Anne Owens Oxford Baptist Church Mr. Norman L. Page '73 Dr. James R. Sugg, Jr. '91 and Mrs. Pamela K. Sugg PattersonDilthey, LLP Ms. Doris Pearce

PGA Golf Management Student Association Mr. and Mrs. Gerald Placek Mr. Jason R. Price and Mrs. Natalie R. Price '04 Proven Professional Construction Services, LLC Mr. Milford T. Quinn '01 Ms. Bobbie N. Redding '85 Mrs. Mary D. Renegar Mrs. Edith Rich Richard J. Pennings Memorial Scholarship Fund Mr. William O. Richardson '80 and Mrs. Barbara Richardson Rite Aid Corporation Mr. Larry E. Robbins Robert E. Bryan, Jr. Foundation Mr. and Mrs. James O. Roberts Dr. John T. Roberson '80 and Mrs. Wendy B. Roberson '84 Mr. Robert L. Roller Mr. Warren A. Romaine, Jr. Mr. Stephen P. Safran '03, '08 Mr. Christopher A. Samples '97 and Mrs. Rayna L. Samples Mr. Sandy E. Sanders '69 Mr. Robert A. Sar '95 and Mrs. Alexandra Sar Mr. Earl L. Savage Schwab Charitable Mr. Kieran Shanahan Mr. Terry R. Shinholser and Mrs. Joy G. Shinholser '68 Mr. William K. Shires and Mrs. Janet L. Shires '84, '88 Mrs. Shirley B. Slaughter '48 Dr. Roy J. Smith '81 and Mrs. Charlotte C. Smith Smith Anderson Blount Dorsett Mr. Charles E. Spahr and Mrs. Lee Ann E. Spahr '77 St. Matthew's Episcopal Church Mr. Lester Stancil Dr. Mark A. Steckbeck Mrs. Patricia Stengel Mr. Neil W. Stephenson, Jr. '81, '84 and Mrs. Carol Stephenson '81 Mr. Kemp Stewart and Mrs. Sylvia G. Stewart '59 Mr. and Mrs. Fred Stoot Storr Office Environments, Inc. Mr. and Mrs. Ronald Strickland Mr. E. Stephen Stroud Dr. and Mrs. Russell J. Tate Mr. Russell J. Tate, Jr. '90, '92 and Mrs. Anne Tate Ms. Louise T. Taylor Dr. and Mrs. William J. Taylor Mr. William H. Templeton '57, '62, '64 and Mrs. Mary Templeton Dr. John M. Tew, Jr. '55, '85 and Mrs. Susan Tew The Chief Justice's Commission The Church of the Good Shepherd The Dickson Foundation, Inc. Themis Bar Review

*Deceased


Mrs. Cynthia L. Thomas Mr. Ryan M. Thrower '06 and Mrs. Makayla B. Thrower '06 TIAA Mr. Nathan J. Tilghman '67 and Mrs. Elaine H. Tilghman '67 Mr. Ronnie L. Trimyer '06 and Ryan Trimyer

Trinity Baptist Church of Raleigh Trinity Health Truist Mr. and Mrs. Steven L. Turner Mr. and Mrs. Walter Tyson, Jr. UBS FINANCIAL SERVICES INC. Mrs. Susan M. Umstead '80

Vanguard Charitable Mr. Herbert A. Walker and Dr. Barbara E. Walker '11 Mr. Frank M. Wall '99 and Mrs. Carolina Wall Mr. David L. Ward, Jr. Dr. and Mrs. D. E. Ward, Jr.

Mr. Dewey W. Wells Mr. Barry W. Whitaker '61 Mr. Brian L. White '06 Mr. Joseph R. White, Jr. '68 and Mrs. Barbara J. White '68 Mr. Charles P. Wilkins Winston 104 Group LLC

Dr. Thomas C. Womble '98 and Mrs. Jo M. Womble Mr. Robert E. Zaytoun Zaytoun Law Firm PLLC Mr. Timothy R. Zinnecker

Friends of Campbell

The Friends of Campbell recognizes donors who have given up to $999 between June 1, 2016 & May 31, 2017. 1010 Pizza, Inc. 3 M & N Inc. A&G Ryan Family Revocable Trust 2006 Mr. Boris S. Abbey '07 Mr. and Mrs. William Abel Dr. Sonny T. Abraham* Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Abruzzo Academie De Golf Fred Colgan Dr. Rina L. Ackerman '02 and Mr. Al Ackerman Mr. Jackson N. Adamah '17 Dr. Justin E. Adams '09 and Mrs. Bliss B. Adams Mr. Christopher Adams and Mrs. Heather Thomas Adams '97 Mr. William J. Adams '65 and Mrs. Judy H. Adams '61 Mr. Jeffrey L. Adams '60 and Mrs. Miriam Adams Mr. Damien J. Adams Ms. Drucilla M. Adams '71 Mr. Robbie D. Adams Mrs. Virginia S. Adams '08 and Mr. Andrew King Ms. Cindy A. Adams Mr. Edwin J. Adams Ms. Emilee C. Adamson Mr. D. Watson Adcock '52 and Mrs. Willa A. Adcock Mr. Ronald T. Adcock '70 and Mrs. Margarie Adcock Mr. Merle T. Adkins III '64 and Mrs. Thelma Adkins Mr. Neil Adleberg AEGON Transamerica Foundation Mr. and Mrs. Bill A. Agans Dr. Robert N. Agnello Mr. Devon Ainsworth Ms. Desiree V. Akuchie '10 Dr. Antoine J. Al-Achi and Mrs. Pam C. Al-Achi '91 Ms. Maria Alcantar Ramirez Mr. Padowithz Alce '10 and Mrs. Shonda Alce Dr. Oleg Alekseev Mr. Luis Alers-Dejesus '09 and Mrs. Jo A. Alers-Dejesus Hon. Karen A. Alexander '90 and Mr. Harold Dombrowsky III Mr. Steven L. Alexander '03 Mr. Gerald R. Alford Mr. James W. Alford '74 and Mrs. Tamara Alford Mr. Chris Algiere and Mrs. Mary Ann H. Algiere '87, '89 Mr. Terek B. Ali '99 and Mrs. Halima Ali Dr. Asima N. Ali All About You Hair & Tanning Salon Rev. J. Charles Allard and Mrs. Gloria L. Allard '82 Mr. Duane Allen Ms. Amy E. Allen Ms. Joyce V. Allen Dr. Thomas W. Allen '81 and Mrs. Beverly Allen Ms. Janet H. Allen Mr. Richard L. Allen '71 and Mrs. Sandy Allen Mr. Stanley L. Allen '83 Dr. and Mrs. Charles Allen, Jr. Ms. Linda C. Allen Ms. Caroline Allen '16 MAGAZINE.CAMPBELL.EDU

Mr. Jeffrey S. Allen '00 Ms. Keyonna S. Allen Mr. Ronald R. Alligood II '86 Dr. David Allison Alloy Fabricators, Inc. Mr. David T. Allsbrook and Dr. Julie Y. Allsbrook '01, '17 Alpha Delta Pi Foundation Mr. Duran A. Alvarado Mr. Luis J. Alvarado Mr. Steven E. Aman '91 and Mrs. Tonya Aman Mr. Nicolaus S. Amato AmazonSmile Foundation Mr. Paul C. Ambrose Dr. Shelley L. Amen '00 American Bar Endowment American College of Physicians Mr. Henry C. Ammons '68 Mr. Jared T. Amos '07 Mr. Scott A. Amundsen '91 and Mrs. Michelle J. Amundsen '91 Mr. Jonathan C. Anders '96 and Mrs. Robin R. Anders Ms. Tricia G. Anderson Ms. Hannah C. Anderson Mr. David R. Anderson and Mrs. Mary C. Anderson '81 Ms. Nellie P. Anderson '02 Ms. R. E. Anderson Mrs. Betty Ruth J. AndersonStrickland '60 Mr. and Mrs. Peter K. Andreou Mr. Dan Andrews and Mrs. Willie P. Andrews '61, '64 Mr. and Mrs. Charles W. Andrews Mr. Jerry F. Andrews '96 and Mrs. Kimberly Andrews Mr. Joseph M. Andricosky The Anna L. Chao Trust Mrs. Traci M. Anter Ms. Cheryl A. Appel '73 Mrs. Frances E. Apple '52 Mr. Jim Apple Ms. Miriam C. Appleton Rev. David L. Archer '12 Mr. Rafael A. Arevalo '97 and Mrs. Judith R. Lowery-Arevalo '97 Argos Ready Mix Ms. Cortney N. Armitano '10 Mrs. Sherri N. Armstrong Mr. Edgar D. Arthur '71 and Mrs. Virginia W. Arthur Mrs. Doris R. Arzonico '46 and Mr. John Arzonico Mr. Marvin F. Asbill '72 and Mrs. Celeste H. Asbill Mr. and Mrs. Trey Asbury Mr. Carlton S. Ashby III '98 and Mrs. Shelley Ashby Mr. Emery D. Ashley '84, '89 and Mrs. Kim Ashley Mrs. Jennifer D. Ashley '06 Mr. Craig C. Ashton '70 and Mrs. Faith Ashton Mrs. Kelly K. Ashworth Mr. P. Edward Atkinson '73 and Mrs. Cynthia Atkinson Mr. Ronald R. Atkinson '59 and Mrs. Darlene Atkinson Mr. Freddie T. Aughtry-Lindsay Mr. Juan Austin '86 and Mrs. Iris Austin Ms. Lucy T. Austin '08

Mrs. Susan G. Autry Mrs. Melinda K. Autry '13 and Dr. Clyde O. Autry '85 Mrs. Lou W. Autry '69 Mr. Ronald F. Avery '66 and Mrs. Frances G. Avery Mr. Keith W. Avery Mr. Ronald F. Avery, Jr. '92 and Mrs. Debbie P. Avery Mr. Frederick P. Avis, Jr. '85 Mr. David P. Aycock '02 Mr. Edward G. Aycock '61 B & B Exterminating Company, Inc. Ms. Lori K. Babb Dr. Michael L. Babuin '80 Ms. Darlene L. Baehr Mr. Daniel R. Baer, Jr. '08 Mr. Francis Bagbey Mr. Steve Bahnaman Mr. and Mrs. Maxfield Bahner Mr. Desmond P. Bailey Mrs. Debra H. Bailey '01 Mr. James C. Bailey '64 Ms. Mary R. Bailey Mr. Thomas H. Baker '74 Ms. Crystal M. Baker Ms. Annah B. Baker '17 Ms. Melissa J. Baker Mr. Gene S. Baker '67 and Mrs. Nancy B. Baker Baker Technologies Inc. Mr. Carl J. Balckmann '53, '66 and Mrs. Elizabeth Balckmann Mr. Kenneth W. Baldwin Mr. David B. Ball '11 Ball & Minor, CPA, PA Mr. Samuel C. Ballance '98 Mr. and Mrs. Billy Ballard, Jr. Dr. Kimberly D. Ballard Dr. Jordan M. Ballou '15 Mr. Norman H. Bannerman, Jr. '96, '97 Baptist Fellowship of Angier Mr. Bobby Barbee and Mrs. Jennifer R. Barbee '92 Mr. David M. Barber '83 and Mrs. Sherrie Barber Mr. and Mrs. James Barbour, Jr. Mr. Dusty J. Barbour Mr. Joseph B. Barbour, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. Wesley Barefoot Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Barefoot Mrs. Sallie H. Barefoot '65 and Mr. Eldridge Barefoot Mr. Darrell Barefoot and Mrs. Shannalei C. Barefoot '84 Ms. Lori G. Barefoot Ms. Sarah Barge Mr. Brandon O. Barker '04 and Mrs. Johanna B. Barker '06, '10 Mr. Jeffrey W. Barker Mr. Christopher J. Barker Mr. Michael G. Barker Mr. Robert W. Barker Mrs. Jane Barker Ms. Devin W. Barlowe Dr. Suzanne M. Barnes Mr. Ned M. Barnes '81 and Mrs. Amy J. Barnes Mr. Maynard S. Barnes and Dr. Connie L. Barnes '90 Mrs. Jamie M. Barnett '09, '12 and Dr. Jarrett L. Barnett '11

Mr. Robert E. Barone and Mrs. Patricia B. Barone '52 Mr. Bruce T. Barrett, Jr. '70 Mr. and Mrs. Kevin Barron Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Barron Ms. Joan P. Barron Ms. Linda Belch Barrow '68 Mr. and Mrs. Ben Barry Dr. John G. Bartlett Mr. Warren H. Basket '76 Mr. Jeremy S. Bass '96 and Dr. Melissa P. Bass '99 Mr. Gary S. Bass and Mrs. Yvonne S. Bass '71 Mr. John B. Bass '66 Dr. Erin S. Bastidas '00 and Mr. Anthony J. Bastidas Dr. Candi W. Batchelor '06 and Johnny R. Batchelor, Jr. Mrs. Somer L. Batres Mr. Jimmy P. Batten, Jr. '63 and Mrs. Virginia L. Batten COL Jonathan R. Battle '89 and Mrs. Rani Battle Dr. Ashlee H. Baucom '14, '17 Mr. Eric W. Baumann '15 Mr. Curt Bawden, Sr. and Mrs. M. Jean Bawden '57 Dr. Dennis N. Bazemore '77 and Mrs. Linda C. Bazemore '77, '82 Mr. John H. Bazemore '58 and Mrs. Merle Bazemore Ms. Hannah R. Bazemore '07 Mr. David B. Beach '69 and Mrs. Susan Beach Mr. Winfred M. Beale Mr. Jon Beale and Mrs. Nancy A. Beale '99 Ms. Cynthia W. Beard Mr. Jerry W. Beasley Miss Catonya N. Beasley '99 Mrs. Barbara D. Beasley '78 Beaver Courie Sternlicht Hearp Ms. Julie D. Beavers Ms. Lisa L. Beck Ms. Emily M. Beck '13, '17 Ms. Ann R. Beck '15 Ms. Lyona K. Beck Ms. Judith G. Beckler '64 Rev. and Mrs. Ed Beddingfield Mrs. Amy H. Bee '90 and Mr. Forest D. Bee, Jr. Mr. Dalton L. Bee Ms. Jessie R. Bee Dr. Whitney W. Behrend '15 Ms. Kristen L. Beightol '01 Dr. William M. Bell III Rev. Barbara Bell Ms. Tara B. Bell Mrs. Christen D. Bell Mrs. Elizabeth E. Belton '52 Mr. James A. Belvin, Jr. '69 and Mrs. Bertie S. Belvin Benchmark Tool & Supply, Inc. Mr. Randall W. Bennett '86 Dr. Bobby L. Bennett '55 and Mrs. Sandra Bennett Mr. Jimmy D. Bennett '66 and Mrs. Jennifer Bennett Mr. Michael G. Bennett and Mrs. Betty W. Bennett '70, '98 Mr. Jason D. Bennett '05 Benson Baptist Church

Mr. Aaron Benton Mr. Dempsey Benton and Mrs. Barbara T. Benton '66 Ms. Elizabeth E. Berenguer Mr. and Mrs. Dennis Berg Mrs. Nina J. Berkley '54* Mr. Van L. Bernhardt '93 and Mrs. Wendi Bernhardt Mr. Joseph W. Berry Ms. Marie S. Berry Mr. Thomas C. Berry Mr. Dennis Best and Mrs. Beverly U. Best '81 Ms. Terrie A. Bethea-Hampton Dr. John J. Bethune '79 Mrs. Charlotte Betts Ms. Windsor Betts Mrs. Marie Bey Mr. and Mrs. Dave Bias Mr. Lamar B. Bigham '72 Mr. Anthony J. Biller '97 and Mrs. Lesley Biller Mr. Ediben R. Bilog '97, '98 and Mrs. Adorada Bilog Mr. John C. Bircher III '97 and Mrs. Georgiana Bircher MAJ Norman N. Bircher '92 and Mrs. Mary E. Bircher Mr. William F. Bishop '64 and Mrs. Marilyn Bishop Mr. David M. Bishop Mr. James C. Bissell and Mrs. Deborah D. Bissell '78 Mr. David E. Bissette, Jr. and Mrs. Kay A. Bissette '79 Mr. Glenn R. Bittner '68 Ms. Avis B. Bivens Mr. K. Bain Black '73 Mr. and Mrs. Hector A. Black Mr. Ray N. Black, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. Jeffrey E. Black Mrs. Brenda F. Blackman Ms. Juanita H. Blackmon '78, '82 and Mr. Matthew A. Loyko Mrs. Marty C. Blackmon Mr. Andrew Blair '13 and Mrs. Sarah E. Blair '04 Ms. Brandi S. Blair Ms. Jeannie L. Blake '10 Ms. Camelia V. Blake Mrs. Meredith L. Blalock '00 Mr. and Mrs. Steven K. Blanchard Dr. and Mrs. Thomas Bland, Jr. Mr. John H. Bland, Jr. '63 and Mrs. Anne Bland Ms. Tanya W. Blanton '92 Mr. Robert E. Blauser '07 Mr. Keith N. Blaylock '93 and Mrs. Cindy Blaylock Mrs. Cindy K. Blaylock '79 LTC Dennis Bleckley and Mrs. Lori L. Bleckley '96 Bleecker Buick-GMC, Inc. Bleecker Chevrolet, Pontiac, Buick Bleecker Chrysler Dodge Jeep, Inc. Mr. Gary L. Blevins and Mrs. Robin B. Blevins '87 Block, Crouch, Keeter, Behm & Sayed, LLC Dr. Timothy Bloom Ms. Anne L. Bloom '16 Mr. Rodney E. Blount '72 Dr. Elizabeth D. Blue C A MP B E L L M AG AZ I N E 77


DONOR HONOR ROLL Mr. Kenneth D. Blue '99 Ms. Deborah J. Blue Mrs. Betty T. Blue '69 Mr. David A. Bohm Mr. Zachary C. Bolitho Mr. and Mrs. Gary A. Boneno Dr. Rock A. Boney '96 Ms. Tiffany L. Bonner '10 Ms. Nancy B. Bonomo Mrs. Laverne D. Booker '04, '14 Mr. Andrew V. Boone Mr. and Mrs. Bruce Borchers Mrs. Amanda Crump Borchik '14 Mr. Sidney O. Borkey '68 and Mrs. Dorothy Borkey Ms. Anna Bose Dr. Glenn Boseman '66 Mr. Timothy P. Bosson '06 Mrs. Carol C. Bost Bottega Hair Studio Mr. Daniel J. Botzenhart '17 Mr. Millard F. Bounds '88 Ms. Lindsay N. Bowen Ms. Joan S. Bowen Mr. and Mrs. Robert Bowers, Jr. Mr. Murray W. Bowman '69 and Mrs. Scarlett Bowman '70 Mr. Philip Bowman Mr. John A. Bowman '84 and Mrs. Ginny Bowman Dr. J. Andrew Bowman '93 and Mrs. Sarah H. Bowman '07 Mr. and Mrs. Cordell Bowman Mr. Nicholas Bowman Mr. Robert C. Bowman Mr. Robert B. Bowman Mr. Kevin Bowman Mr. Stephen L. Bowman '76 Mr. Richard T. Bowser '91 and Mrs. Marta Bowser Mr. and Mrs. Matt Boxrucker Dr. James A. Boyd Mr. and Mrs. James S. Boyd Mrs. Bobbi J. Boyd Mr. Bryan Boyd '01 and Mrs. Laura B. Boyd Ms. Ruby M. Boyer Mr. Tom Boyette and Mrs. Kathryn A. Hix-Boyette '86 Mr. Gene C. Boyette '74 and Mrs. Kaye G. Boyette '74, '87 Mr. Charles H. Bradham '96 and Mrs. Lisa G. Bradham Hon. Roy D. Bradley '84 Ms. Martha S. Bradley '12 Mr. Jerry Bradley and Mrs. Deborah H. Bradley '89 Ms. Juliana M. Bradley Ms. Orna T. Bradley-Swanson '06 Mr. John W. Bradway, Jr. Mrs. Nancy M. Brady '58 Mr. Thomas W. Brake '53 and Mrs. Carole Brake Mrs. Amanda G. Bramble '05 and Mr. John Bramble Mr. W. C. Branch, Jr. '68 and Mrs. Vivian J. Branch Ms. Beverly A. Branch Brand Ideas, LLC Mr. Edwin G. Brandle Mr. James M. Brannan and Mrs. Linda H. Brannan '79 Dr. Grace D. Brannan Mr. George Brannon and Mrs. Linda L. Brannon '57 Mr. Casey Brannon '16 Mr. Michael L. Brantley Mr. Brent E. Braswell Ms. Sara D. Bratton '17 Mr. William S. Bratton '11 Ms. Emily V. Bratton '15 Mr. and Mrs. Johnnie Braxton Mr. Robert J. Braxton '07 Mr. Phillip M. Bray '84 and Mrs. Sandra Bray LTC James L. Brazell '74 and Mrs. Gail Brazell

78 SUMMER 2017

MAJ William L. Breeden '79 and Mrs. Lucy A. Breeden Ms. Geraldine Brehm Brehm L. Trust Dr. Christopher S. Breivogel Dr. Bonnie Brenseke Mr. Richard P. Brewer '78 Mr. Randolph Brewington Mr. Ulmer Z. Bridges III '03 and Mrs. Grace B. Bridges Mr. Jonathan Q. Bridges '12, '14 Mr. Ather Bridges and Mrs. LaShon B. Bridges '09 Mr. Charles N. Briggs, Sr. '58 and Mrs. Peggy Briggs Dr. Carol L. Brinkley '08 Mr. Joseph T. Brinson '68 Brisson Drugs, Inc. Ms. Esteree Bristol Mr. Austin H. Britt Mr. Donald E. Britt, Jr. Mr. Lloyd A. Britt, Jr. '74, '75 and Mrs. Denise L. Britt '74, '79 Mr. James G. Britt '78, '82 and Mrs. Anna T. Britt '82 Ms. Katherine L. Britt Britt Law Firm Mr. Joseph T. Britton '11, '16 Mr. Murrell R. Broadway '60 and Mrs. Joan Broadway Mr. Richard Broadwell and Mrs. Ava D. Broadwell '76 Mr. and Mrs. Greg Brock Mr. David P. Brock and Mrs. Rebecca W. Brock '97, '01 Ms. Cawley M. Bromley Mr. Jonathan A. Bronsink '05 and Mrs. Brandi Bronsink Ms. Verga C. Brooks '12 Ms. Callie G. Brooks '12 Mr. Jimmy C. Brooks '54 and Mrs. Barbara E. Brooks '54 Mr. Harry E. Brooks, Jr. '50 and Mrs. Raedelle P. Brooks Mr. Michael A. Brooks '06 and Mrs. Sarah A. Brooks Ms. Vickie M. Brooks '71 Mr. Joseph E. Brooks '63 Mr. Hewitt A. Brown, Jr. '66 and Mrs. Brenda P. Brown '67 Dr. Wade H. Brown '07 and Dr. Paige Brown '06 Mr. Melvin A. Brown '03 and Mrs. Jennifer P. Brown '08 Ms. Alfreda S. Brown Rev. Frances C. Brown '65 Mr. Kirby B. Brown '64 and Mrs. Sara O. Brown Mr. Leonard G. Brown III, Esq. '98 and Mrs. Amy Brown Ms. Anitra K. Brown '14 Mrs. Ann D. Brown Mrs. Stacy P. Brown '04 Ms. April L. Brown '17 Mr. Brandon R. Brown '97, '98 Mr. Dan R. Bruffey '65 Dr. Joseph Brum, Jr. '80 Ms. Catherine R. Brusie '16 Mr. J. Shepard Bryan, Jr. '40 and Mrs. Mary A. Bryan Mr. Callan H. Bryan '99 and Mrs. Jacalyn N. Bryan '99 Ms. Nancy J. Bryan '08, '09 and Dr. Dustin E. Bryan '12 Mr. Rafael T. Bryan '05 Mr. James R. Bryant, Jr. '86 and Mrs. Billie Bryant '06 Mr. William A. Bryant '72 and Mrs. Elizabeth M. Bryant '73 Dr. Joe R. Bryant '66 Mr. John H. Bryson III '89 and Mrs. Sally Bryson Mr. John H. Bryson, Jr. '71 and Mrs. Carol W. Bryson '64 Dr. Melissa Buchanan '12 Mr. Gary W. Buck '78 and Mrs. Toni C. Buck '78 Mr. Evan A. Budrovich Mrs. Virginia B. Bueker '70 and Mr. Charles D. Bueker

Buffalo Wild Wings Mr. Frederick D. Buie Ms. Marilyn S. Buie Mrs. Lorraine M. Bullard '56 Ms. Brenda F. Bullock '73 Mr. Gerald Bullock and Dr. Tammy S. Bullock '96 Mrs. Mary C. Bullock '59 Mr. D. L. Bunce II '75, '79 and Mrs. Anita J. Bunce '80 Dr. Dearl L. Bunce '67 Dr. Phyllis C. Bunn '63, '66 Mr. Robert W. Bunn '67 and Mrs. Ann Bunn Ms. Shannon H. Burch Mrs. Laura M. Burdette Ms. Donna S. Burgan Mr. Robert B. Burger, Jr. '72 and Mrs. Linda Burger Mr. Zechariah D. Burger '06 Ms. Jacqueline K. Burgher Dr. Ashley Burkhammer '15 Mr. John Burkhardt III '61 Ms. Susan K. Burkhart Mr. Ernest G. Burklow '65 and Mrs. Mary Burklow Mr. Jerry A. Burkot '63 Mrs. Reba H. Burleson '71 and Mr. Phil Burleson Rev. Christie A. Burley '09 Mr. George M. Burnette, Jr. '13 Mrs. Caroline S. Burnette '04 and Mr. Scott Burnette Mr. Richard M. Burnette '70 and Mrs. Joyce Burnette Mr. Frank Burnham and Mrs. Anna M. Burnham '60 Mr. James W. Burns, Jr. '69 Mr. William J. Burns '69, '71 and Mrs. Jane Burns Mrs. Hannah J. Burrows '43 Mr. Gordon W. Burt Mr. and Mrs. John Burt Mr. James C. Burton Mr. and Mrs. James Burton Dr. David D. Butler '05 Mr. Robie S. Butler, CPA '72, '89 and Mrs. Lynda D. Butler '73, '95 Mr. Jerry Butler and Mrs. Willia D. Butler '68 Mr. Jim Butler and Mrs. Elaine G. Butler '89 Mr. Bryan P. Butterworth Mrs. Hilda B. Butts '69 Mr. Richard L. Buyrn '83 and Mrs. Margaret R. Buyrn Dr. Susan L. Byerly '78 Mr. B. R. Byers and Mrs. Julia R. Byers '94, '95 Mr. Jerry L. Bynum and Mrs. Stephanie F. Bynum '80 Dr. William E. Byrd '03 and Mrs. Sadie Byrd Mr. Teddy J. Byrd '85 and Mrs. Shelia M. Byrd Mr. G. C. Byrd and Mrs. Peggy L. Byrd '59 Ms. Julie A. Byrd '80 Dr. Lori H. Byrd Mr. Samuel M. Byrd '57 and Mrs. Judith P. Byrd '67 Mrs. Leigh M. Byrd '07 Mr. Roy W. Byrd '72 Mr. Randy K. Byrd '84 Mr. and Mrs. Wayne F. Byrd Rev. James R. Byrd '66 and Mrs. Iva Byrd Ms. Patricia A. Byrne Mrs. Teresa B. Byrum '82 Dr. Walter G. Byrum, Sr. '79, '15* Dr. Joseph D. Cacioppo Cafe Carolina and Bakery Mr. D. Stuart Caffrey, Jr. '75 Mr. Richard E. Cain '69 Mr. Jason E. Cain '09 Mr. Leslie H. Caison, Jr. '69 and Mrs. Amelia Caison Mrs. Lynette C. Caison '74, '79

Ms. Carole L. Calder '84 and Mr. Sonke Johnsen Dr. Rhonda K. Caldwell '91 and Mr. Chuck Caldwell Mr. Edmond W. Caldwell, Jr. '81 and Mrs. Julia Caldwell Mrs. Kathaleen T. Caldwell '62 Mr. Thurston Callahan Ms. Crystal L. Callahan '08 Mr. and Mrs. David Callahan Ms. Penny Callard Ms. Debra L. Calloway '02 Mr. and Mrs. John Calvano Mrs. Kenneith H. Calvert Mr. David J. Calvert '06 and Mrs. Sarah J. Calvert '09 Mr. Morris M. Cameron '69 and Mrs. Alice Cameron Ms. Mary E. Cameron Mr. R. Stephen Camp Ms. Jonette L. Camp '14, '17 Mr. Gerardo D. Campanucci '98 and Mrs. Eleonora V. Campanucci '98 Mr. Charles L. Campbell, Jr. '56 and Mrs. Goldie E. Campbell Mr. Michael R. Campbell '92 Mr. Kenneth R. Campbell '84 and Mrs. Mary F. Campbell '83 Mr. Walter J. Campbell '79 and Mrs. Mary Campbell Mrs. Carolyn E. Campbell '06 and Mr. Larry A. Campbell Mr. Ronnie J. Campbell Mr. David C. Camps, Sr. Mr. Larry B. Camras '73 and Mrs. Sherry Camras Mr. Benjamin M. Cantrell '15 Mr. Derrick W. Cantrell Ms. Kanika B. Capel Mr. Daniel R. Capozzi '06 Mr. Maurice Capps and Mrs. Eloise B. Capps '41 Care Counseling Mr. Nicholas C. Carel '00 and Mrs. Christi A. Carel '01 Ms. Alyssa Caren '17 Mr. James Carfagna Ms. Kimberley L. Carlile Mr. Robert C. Carlyle '57 and Mrs. Jane Carlyle Mrs. Jenny L. Carmichael-Minnick '84 and Mr. Stephen Minnick Mr. John M. Carmody Mr. Alexander M. Carnall Carolina Center for Civic Education Carolina Farming Company, LLC The Carolina Mudcats Carolina Therapy Services, Inc. Mr. and Mrs. James Carpenter Dr. Jenna P. Carpenter Mr. Charles T. Carpenter Mr. T. M. Carr, Jr. and Mrs. Donna B. Carr '65, '83 Mr. Pedro Palma Mr. Michael T. Carrigan and Mrs. Connie E. Carrigan '89 Mrs. Dawn W. Carroll '01 Ms. Linda G. Carroll '69 Mr. Thomas D. Carruthers '86 and Mrs. Elizabeth Carruthers Dr. Marshal D. Carter '13 Dr. Eric P Carter '11, '15 Mr. Robert Carter and Mrs. Patricia L. Carter '67 Dr. Randall D. Carter '11 Mr. David Carter Mr. Andrew B. Carter Ms. Jessica C. Carter Ms. Kelsey J. Carter '17 Dr. Tony W. Cartledge '04 Mr. Baccuhus H. Carver '91, '97 Mr. Kenneth E. Carver, Jr. Mr. Dennis Casey and Mrs. Margaret M. Casey '70 Mr. Brian Cash '79 and Mrs. Marie A. Cash Mr. Michael T. Cash '87 and Mrs. Deborah G. Cash '88

Mr. Raleigh R. Castelloe, Jr. '59 and Mrs. Phyllis Castelloe Ms. Abbey K. Cates Mr. Christopher T. Catron Mr. Gerald A. Caudill '70 and Mrs. Joyce Caudill Mr. L. Cameron Caudle, Jr. '68, '87 and Mrs. Cindy Caudle Mr. James P. Cauley III '87 and Mrs. Lisa Cauley Cauley Pridgen Lawyers Dr. Kymberly L. Causby '15 Ms. Shelley E. Cavenaugh '04 Mrs. Nicole A Caveny '05 and Mr. Dan M. Caveny Dr. W. Robert Caviness '58 and Mrs. Betty J. Caviness Mr. Harvey D. Cayton '01 and Mrs. Gigi Cayton Mr. and Mrs. Rich Cerrillo Ms. Virginia A. Chaffin Ms. Shannon A. Chambers '05 Mr. John S. Chamblee, Jr. '60 and Mrs. Jenny Chamblee Mr. and Mrs. James Chamblin, Sr. Mr. and Mrs. Keith Chandler Ms. Anna L. Chao '63 Dr. Mark E. Chaparro '96 and Mrs. Kim Chaparro Charlene Edwards Law Office Charles and Bonnie Wiggs Living Trust Mrs. Melanie Chase Ms. Kathy Chavis Ms. Samantha Chavis Mr. Ronnie Chavis '83 and Mrs. Sherry L. Chavis Dr. Brad N. Chazotte Mr. Woodrow W. Cheeley, Jr. '66 Dr. Lynderia S. Cheevers Mr. Kevin S. Chene Mr. Joshua G. Cheney '09 and Mrs. Rebekah B. Cheney '13 Mr. Heng C. Cheong '98 Mr. William S. Cherry '05 Ms. Lisa Cherry Cheshire Cat Gallery Dr. Connie H. Chester Mr. Evan R. Chesterman III '69 Ms. Shiau Y. Chin-Dennis '05, '07 Mrs. Anna K. Choi '94 and Mr. Hunt K. Choi Mr. Johnny C. Chriscoe, Jr. '90 and Mrs. Susan W. Chriscoe '80 Ms. Amy D. Chrismon '12 Mrs. Catherine R. Chrismon '92 Dr. John R. Christian '01 Ms. Sarah M. Christie Dr. Lisa R. Chun Mr. and Mrs. Anthony Cimaglia Mrs. Lisa J. Clairemont '03 and Mr. Gary Clairemont Mr. Eric P. Clairmont '96 and Mrs. Linda Clairmont Mr. and Mrs. John A. Clapp Mr. David P Clapsadl and Mrs. Elizabeth M. Clapsadl '06 Ms. Jacqueline R. Clare Mr. Kenneth W. Clark '86 and Mrs. Sandra M. Clark '85, '94 Mrs. Kayla R. Clark '12 and Mr. Steven Clark Mrs. Kathy H. Clark Mr. Paul N. Clark '86 and Mrs. Shannon H. Clark Mr. Mark Clark Mrs. Angela L. Clark Mrs. Annette W. Clark '59 Mr. Christopher Clark '89 Mr. Mark Clark and Mrs. Gail H. Clark '74 Ms. Lisa S. Clark Ms. Margaret A. Clark Ms. Linda Clarke Rev. Alice C. Clarke '02 and Mr. Daniel Clarke Dr. Melva W. Cleary '95 and Mr. Sean J. Cleary Mrs. Imogene D. Clegg '51

*Deceased


Mr. and Mrs. Paul B. Clements Mr. Gary H. Clemmons '81 and Mrs. Nan Clemmons Mr. Donald Clifton and Mrs. Cathey T. Clifton '74 Mr. John E. Cline '74 Mr. Marc A. Cloutier '01 and Mrs. Margaret Cloutier '93 BRIG GEN William R. Coats '86 and Mrs. Toni Coats Coats & Bennett, LLP Dr. Henry C. Cobb '92 and Dr. Allison C. Cobb '92 Dr. Jack F. Coffey '93 Dr. and Mrs. Michael G. Cogdill Mr. Thomas E. Coggin '60 and Mrs. Frances Coggin Mr. Stephen D. Coggins Mr. and Mrs. Robert Cogswell, Jr. Dr. William L. Coker III and Mrs. Brandy G. Coker '06 Rev. Suzanne M. Colandro '08 Mr. Stanley R. Cole '87 and Mrs. Claudia C. Cole '93 Mr. James P. Cole '78 Mr. Richard L. Cole '72 Mr. Robert Cole Mr. Robert Cole and Mrs. Ann T. Cole '66 Mr. Dionquai R. Coleman '14 Coleman & Associates NC LLC Mr. Walter Coley and Mrs. Carroll M. Coley '53 Mr. Frederick L. Colgan Dr. Thomas P. Colletti Mrs. Katherine A. Colley '60 Mr. Trey Collier '08 Mr. Jared M. Collier '04, '12 and Rev. Allison R. Collier '05, '08 Collier Law, PLLC Ms. Allegra K. Collins '06 Mr. Arvil L. Collins '82 and Mrs. Rene Collins Mr. Colon R. Collins and Mrs. Allene B. Collins '59 Mr. Neil C. Collins III '70 and Dr. Anne B. Collins Mr. Mike S. Collins Mr. Donald V. Collins '94 and Mrs. April S. Collins '92 Colombo Kitchin Attorneys Mrs. Shayne Combs '84 Mr. Tommy Combs and Mrs. Linda R. Combs '93 Comfort Mechanical Contractors Ms. Cathleen Condon Mr. Steven C. Conley Mr. Clyde W. Connell '67 and Mrs. Patricia T. Connell '67 Mr. Henry L. Conner '09 and Mrs. Dawn L .Conner '10 CPT William D. Conner '92 and Mrs. Elizabeth S. Conner '92 Mr. and Mrs. Anthony Connochie Mrs. Tracie K. Connor Mr. Douglas P. Connor Mr. David B. Connor '84 and Mrs. Rebecca B. Connor '82 Ms. Patsy A. Conoley '68 Ms. Marissa Conti Mr. Edward J. Conti III Mrs. Helen C. Cook '46 Dr. Maurice G. Cook Mrs. Allyson H. Cook '17 Ms. Shelly A. Cook '94 Mrs. Diane E. Cook '09 Mrs. Rebecca C. Cooke '68 Mrs. Margaret B. Cooke '54 and Mr. Curtis Cooke Mrs. Laura Cooper Mr. and Mrs. James L. Cooper Mr. James Cooper Mr. Russell E. Cooper CPT Scott P. Cooper '70 Mr. William A. Cooper, Jr. Mr. John W. Cooper '65 and Mrs. Shirley Cooper Ms. Sandra L. Cooper '00 Dr. April A. Cooper

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Ms. Joanne B. Copeland Mr. Daniel P. Copher Mr. Charles G. Corbett '70 and Mrs. Anna L. Corbett Mr. Dalma Core and Mrs. Peggy H. Core '75 Ms. Malissa A. Core '04 Ms. Audrey W. Cornelius '94 Cornerstone Cafe & Coffee Mr. James L. Corpening, Jr. Ms. Jamie L. Corti Mrs. Julie Cota Mrs. Nancy Cota Mr. Michael Cotten and Mrs. Barbara K. Cotten '72 Morgan E. Cotton '17 Ms. Linda S. Coulter Mr. C. Thomas Council III '72 and Mrs. Carol Council Mrs. Sharon B. Council '94 and Mr. Darren F. Council Mr. and Mrs. Mark Cowan Mr. Gregory S. Cox '91 and Mrs. My-Linh Cox Mr. John S. Cox '76 and Mrs. Dianne V. Cox Mr. Phillip B. Cox '72 and Mrs. Wanda Cox Mr. Rick Cox and Mrs. Joy D. Cox '02 Ms. Charlotte R. Cox CPHS PharmD Class of 2018 Mr. Charles D. Crabtree '69 and Mrs. Pam Crabtree Mr. Michael A. Crane Mr. Bruce Craven II Mr. Clifton M. Credle, Jr. '69 and Mrs. Larue S. Credle '67 Creek Coffee LLC Mr. and Mrs. Lynn Crenshaw Mr. G. S. Crihfield Ms. Thelma D. Crisp '03, '14 Mrs. Misty D. Crissman '04 and Mr. Daniel Crissman Ms. Teresa Crocker '88 Ms. Hilda G. Crocker Mr. John S. Cromlish '69 Mr. Lane Crooks and Mrs. Amanda H. Crooks '01 Mr. Donald R. Croom '70 and Mrs. Cleo Croom Mr. Carson E. Crooms '13 Rev. Harley A. Crosby '78 and Mrs. Doris Crosby Ms. Meredith L. Cross '08 Ms. Rebecca H. Crouch Ms. Nancy W. Crowe Mrs. Taylor Crumley '13, '17 CU Physician Assistant Class of 2017 CU Wallace Student Society 2018 Mr. Scott Culbreth and Mrs. Sherrie H. Culbreth '83 Mr. W. Mark Cumalander '88 and Mrs. Tonya Cumalander '88 Cumberland Community Foundation, Inc. Mrs. Edna E. Cummings '08 Mr. Jasper L. Cummings, Jr. Mr. Harry H. Cummings III '03 and Mrs. Kristen T. Cummings '03 Ms. Sandra B. Cummings '69 Ms. Jacqueline N. M. Cuneo '14, '15 Mr. William E. Curle '59 and Mrs. Nancy S. Curle Mr. Sam Currin and Mrs. Margaret P. Currin '79 Mr. Samuel Thomas Currin II '10 Mr. Andrew I. Currin '14, '16 Ms. Lauren B. Currin Mr. Michael F. Currin Rev. Michael O. Currin '77 MSGT Thomas G. Curry, USA (Ret.) '97, '04 Ms. Anna M. Cushman '12 Ms. Morgan C. Cutright CVS Corporation D. Evans Contracting Inc. MGYSGT Aston G. Dacosta, USMC (Ret.) '95, '98 and Mrs. Mary Lockett-Dacosta

Dr. Samuel J. Dail '10 and Mrs. Jane Dail Ms. Sheri M. Dailey '16 Mr. Wayne Dale '82 and Mrs. Terry Dale Mr. Tommy E. Dalton '08 Mr. Luke A. Dalton '10 Dr. Igor Danelisen Dr. Amber Haislip Daniel '14 and Mr. Andrew S. Daniel Ms. Carolyn T. Daniel '65 Mrs. Linda C. Daniel Ms. Ramona T. Daniels Mrs. Cathy H. Daniels Mr. Melvin R. Daniels III '74 and Mrs. Rosemary B. Daniels '76 Mr. and Mrs. Alvin E. Daniels Mr. William A. Daniels '06 Mr. William C. Daniels and Mrs. Sandra B. Daniels '70 Mr. Clement Danish, Jr. '69 and Mrs. Carol W. Danish '70 Mr. and Mrs. S. David Dantzler Dr. Andrew T. Darkow '17 LTC Gregory S. Darling, USA '00 and Mrs. Faith Darling Mr. John J. Darnell, Jr. '63 and Mrs. Helen H. Darnell Ms. Glenda B. Darrell Dr. Rosana Datti '14 Mr. and Mrs. Anthony Daughtry Mr. Douglas M. Daughtry '71 and Mrs. Brenda P. Daughtry Mr. Robert L. Daughtry '58 and Mrs. Joyce Daughtry Mr. Raeford V. Daughtry '99 and Mrs. Willa P. Daughtry '65 Mr. Mike Daurity and Mrs. Debbie J. Daurity '92 Ms. Linda Davenport Rev. William L. Davenport '53 David Carter Construction Co. David M. Rose and Terry V. Rose Mr. James P. Davidson '88 and Mrs. Rebecca J. Davidson Mr. James J. Davidson Mr. Jonathan W. Davidson '12 Ms. Kathy Davis Mr. and Mrs. Gene Davis Mr. and Mrs. Kearns Davis Ms. Sandra B. Davis '69 Mr. Charles Davis Mr. George S. Davis, Jr. '67 and Mrs. Linda B. Davis Ms. Patricia C. Davis Dr. Steven M. Davis Dr. Charli L. Davis '12 Mrs. Melissa C. Davis '13 Mr. and Mrs. Ronald L. Davis Mr. Vincent D. Davis '08 Ms. Rachel J. Davis Mr. Richard R. Davis '09 Mr. Stephen J. Davis Ms. Sarah E. Davis Mr. Christopher N. Davis Mr. Jeffrey H. Davison '90 and Mrs. Vanessa Davison Dr. George A. Davy Mr. Zacheus H. Daw III '81 and Mrs. Nancy F. Daw Mr. and Mrs. Lee Dawson Mr. James E. Dawson '67 Mr. Darren M. Dawson '89, '92 and Mrs. Jennifer S. Dawson '89 Mr. James R. Deal '84 and Mrs. Amy Deal Mr. and Mrs. Max E. Deal Ms. Christine W. Dean Mr. Roger L. Dean '64 Mr. Damon V. Dean Mr. Jason J. Deans '09, '11 Ms. Allison R. Deaton '16 Ms. Tracy D. Debellis Dr. Frank K. Debrah '12 Ms. Becky Dees Ms. Beth O. Dees Mrs. Denise N. Degraw '79

Rev. Nicholas R. Dejesus '08, '10 and Mrs. Angie P. Dejesus '10 Mrs. Marci K. Delaney '97 and Mr. Paul Delaney Ms. Jolynn C. Dellinger Mr. Tony C. Delp Mr. Michael A. Delucia '13 Mrs. Cheriesse C. Demitraszek '14 Dr. Timothy B. Dempsey '03 and Mrs. Marisa Dempsey Mrs. Janis S. Dempster '61 Mr. Steven Denning and Mrs. Karla P. Denning '98, '02 Mr. and Mrs. Danny F. Denning Mr. Ralph L. Denning '67 and Mrs. Lorena T. Denning '69 Mr. and Mrs. Mark Dennis Rev. William H. Dennis III '88 and Mrs. Sandy Dennis Mr. Donald B. Denny Ms. Stephanie C. Denton '05 and Mr. Chris Denton Mr. Lloyd W. DeRamus Mr. and Mrs. Charles DeRenzis Mr. and Mrs. Dailey Derr Ms. Dorothy DesBrisay Mrs. Virginia D. Detrie '69 Dr. Robert A. Deutsch Mr. Stephen M. Devane '84 and Mrs. Cherry L. Devane '85 Ms. Manisha Devasthali '15 Ms. Donnie B. Devault '04 Mr. Phillip J. Devillier '14, '17 Rev. Delores W. Devone-Harvey '90 and Mr. Tommy Harvey, Jr. Ms. Brigid L. Devries Dr. H. Powell Dew, Jr. '04 and Mrs. Sharon F. Dew Ms. Hannah M. Dewberry Ms. Sherri Di Lorenzo Dr. Larry G. Dickens '75 and Mrs. Gail B. Dickens '78 Ms. Michelle D. Dickerson Drs. Emanuel and Pamela Diliberto Mr. Brian K. Dimsdale '91, '08 and Mrs. Angela Dimsdale Mr. and Mrs. James Dinette Mr. and Mrs. James Dinwiddie Dr. John M. Dischert '08 and Mrs. Lana T. Dischert Mr. John L. Diven Dr. Dave L. Dixon '06 and Mrs. Lisa G. Dixon Ms. Elizabeth J. Dobbins Mrs. Jeannette M. Dodd '80 Mr. David Y. Dodd '69 and Mrs. Sue F. Dodd '70 Ms. Christine C. Dodson '03 Ms. Janet J. Doffermyre '06 Dogleg Cafe LLC Mr. Jon M. Dohrmann and Rev. Kristine M. Dohrmann '11 Mr. and Mrs. Mark S. Dold Mr. David L. Dominguez Dominos Pizza Mr. Graham Donaldson and Mrs. Kelly H. Donaldson '85 Mr. Charles R. Donau '80 and Mrs. Sara Donau Mr. Peter J. Donlon '06 Mr. Robert L. Donnelly '72 Mr. and Mrs. Daniel Doogan Mr. David Dorsey and Mrs. A. Celeste Dorsey '68 Mr. Robert C. Dortch, Jr. '83 and Mrs. Barbara Dortch Mr. George F. Douglas, Jr. '71 Mr. Roderick Q. Douglas Ms. Wendy Dove Mrs. Ann R. Dowd '57 and Mr. David Dowd Ms. Corina F. Dowd Mr. Jeffrey B. Dowdy '85 Mr. Christopher J. Downey Mr. C. V. Downing, Jr. '48 and Mrs. Joy Downing Mr. Gregory D. Downs '96 and Mrs. Donna Downs Mr. James S. Downs

Mr. Sanford Doxey III Mr. Thomas A. Drasal '05 and Mrs. Peggy H. Drasal Mr. and Mrs. Michael Drew Dr. Richard H. Drew Mr. Paul F. Duggan '16 Mr. Earl G. Dulaney and Mrs. Judy W. Dulaney '62 Mr. Gene D. Dunaway '66 Mr. John W. Duncan '73 and Mrs. Cathy Duncan Mr. Isaac H. Dunlap '88 and Mrs. Jill Dunlap Ms. Kimberly F. Dunn Mr. Jimmy C. Dunn and Mrs. Culaye H. Dunn '55 Mrs. Peggy Dunn and Rev. H. Wayne Dunn '76 Dunn School of Music Dr. Eric M. Dunnum Mrs. Betsy Williams Mr. Jared M. Dupree Mr. Thomas L. Dupree and Mrs. Janice O. Dupree '63, '67 Dr. David M. Durham '04, '15 and Mrs. Jennifer Durham Dr. Mary E. Durham Durham Insulation, Inc. Mr. Martin J. Duzor '98 DWC LLC Mr. Donald M. Dwiggins and Mrs. Audrey S. Dwiggins '69 Mr. Gerard W. Dyckman Ms. Deborah A. Dye '15 E & J Trucking Inc. Ms. Margaret P. Eagles '00 Mrs. Dawn Easley Mr. Donovan E. Eason Mr. Walter L. Eason Mr. Joseph K. East, Jr. '67 and Mrs. Linda East Mrs. Kimberly J. East Mr. James Easterling '88 and Mrs. Cynthia Jones-Easterling Ms. Mary K. Eberle Dr. Sharon Eck-Birmingham Mr. Henry T. Eddins, Jr. '60 and Mrs. Elizabeth T. Eddins '60 Ms. Gaylyn E. Eddy Mr. Steven R. Edelstein Mr. Emmett C. Edgerton III '69 Mr. John J. Edwards and Mrs. Susan M. Edwards '95 Ms. Charlene V. Edwards '90, '93 Rev. Charles D. Edwards Mr. Joseph E. Edwards, Jr. '71 and Mrs. Phyllis H. Edwards '73, '88 Mr. Eric D. Edwards '08 Mr. and Mrs. James Edwards Ms. Carly Edwards Mr. and Mrs. Walter R. Edwards Mr. Timothy D. Edwards '95 Dr. Sarah L. Eggers '14, '17 Mr. Paul E. Eggie '71 Ms. Shannon M. Eidsness '17 Ms. Ashleigh T. Eisch '05, '07 Mr. Benjamin R. Eisner '10 Dr. Khalil M. Eldeeb Mr. Harvey A. Eldridge, Jr. '55 Ms. Andrea Eley Mrs. Patsy W. Ellen '55 CPT Max Eller Mr. Richard K. Ellington '67 and Mrs. Alice Ellington Mr. Paul Elliott Mr. Jerry L. Elliott, Jr. '01 Ms. Martene F. Elliott Elliott Davis, LLC Mr. Marshall H. Ellis '14 Mr. Donald B. Ellis '64 Mr. Jerry M. Ellis Ms. Taylor L. Ellis Elm City Missionary Baptist Church, Inc. Ms. Kimberly A. Elmore '06 Mr. Trent K. Elmore '92 and Mrs. Jennifer G. Elmore '93 Mr. Ed Embree C A MP B E L L M AG AZ I N E 79


DONOR HONOR ROLL Mr. George L. Emerick '73 and Mrs. Elizabeth A. Emerick Emery D. Ashley Atty At Law Mr. Scott Emory '85 and Mrs. Julie W. Emory '85 Ms. Mary Emrich Dr. Nicole B. Emswiler '05 and Mr. David R. Emswiler '01 Dr. Samuel L. Engel Dr. and Mrs. Adam C. English Mrs. Rachel F. Ennis Mr. William C. Ennis, Jr. '73 and Mrs. Deborah T. Ennis '72 Mr. and Mrs. Martin Dale Ennis Ms. Mary C. Ennis Mrs. Jennifer E. Ennis '76 and Mr. Craig Ennis Ms. Joyce A. Ennis Ms. Kathryn H. Ennis Enpuricon, Inc. Enterprise Holdings Foundation Dr. Harriett L. Enzor '72 Mr. William R. Epps Mr. Steven Epstein Ms. Donna D. Escandon '10 Mrs. Mary Ann J. Eskridge '53 Ms. Martha A. Estep Dr. Bobby R. Etheridge '65 and Mrs. Faye C. Etheridge '67 Mr. Billie R. Evans '71, '80 Mr. James S. Evans III Mr. Henry L. Evans '95 Mr. Gabriel N. Evans Mr. Steven T. Eveker '86 and Mrs. Julia Eveker Dr. Richard A. Everette '15 ExxonMobil Foundation Mr. Melvin J. Ezell Mr. Robert L. Ezzell '63 and Mrs. Rosanna Ezzell Mr. Matthew N. Failor '12 Rev. Worth H. Faircloth, Jr. '84 and Mrs. Clea T. Faircloth '84 Mr. and Mrs. Gerald F. Faircloth Mr. Paris A. Faison Mr. J. Harold Falls '65 Dr. J. D. Farmer II Ms. Linda Farmer Mr. Loren E. Farnam '08 Ms. Colleen E. Farrell Ms. Angela D. Farrior Mr. Jeffrey R. Faucette '85 and Mrs. Christy Faucette Mr. and Mrs. Mickey Faulk Dr. William R. Faulkner '95 and Mrs. Wendy S. Faulkner '93 Ms. Barbara L. Faulkner Ms. Linda C. Faulkner '63 Mr. Phillip R. Feagan '80 and Mrs. Joan S. Feagan Mr. Phil Feagan Mr. Scott A. Fedorchak Mr. Charles R. Felmlee '66 Dr. Kira N. Ferguson '06, '11 Ms. Nancy L. Ferguson '96 Mr. L. Thomas Ferguson Ms. Judy Fernandez '07, '13 Mrs. Dorothy G. Ferrell '47 Mr. and Mrs. Richard Ferris Mr. John S. Ferris '01 Mr. Lewis M. Fetterman III Fidelity Bank Deposit Operations Department Mr. Robbie L. Fielder '70 and Mrs. Cynthia W. Fielder Mr. Jimmy Fields Ms. Anita M. Fields '99 Ms. Dene Finerty Mr. Harold A. Fink '89 and Mrs. Amber Fink Mr. Edward S. Finley, Jr. Mrs. Karen K. Finn '06 and Mr. Reese Finn First Baptist Church of Asheville First Baptist Church of Fayetteville First Baptist Church of Laurinburg First Baptist Church of Mocksville First Baptist Church of Whiteville, Inc. 80 SUMMER 2017

Mr. Thomas J. Fish III and Mrs. Gloria W. Fish '68 Mr. Ronald R. Fisher Mr. and Mrs. Carlton Fisher Mr. Robert L. Fitch '69 and Mrs. Susan Fitch Mr. George M. Flanagan '86 and Mrs. Jo Ann Flanagan Mr. Samuel D. Fleder '09 Mr. Gilbert F. Fleming Mr. Tim A. Fleming Ms. Jean D. Fletcher Mr. Glenn A. Flinchum '42 Mrs. Pattie Flinchum Mr. and Mrs. Roger E. Flora Mr. Conrey D. Flowers '70 and Mrs. Sarah Flowers Mr. Donald Flowers Ms. Paradise I. Flowers '15 Mrs. Linda P. Flowers '69 Mr. Robert F. Floyd, Jr. '76, '79 and Mrs. June L. Floyd '75 Mr. Austin E. Floyd '65 and Mrs. Sarah D. Floyd '63 Mr. Benjamin Fodorean '00 Rev. Andy Foley '10 Mr. Dustin D. Fonder Mr. Richard A. Forbes Ms. Marilyn Forbes-Phillips Ms. Samonia M. Ford '10 Dr. Paula Parker Mr. Brian K. Foreman '93 and Mrs. Denise D. Foreman '93 Ms. Sue Ann Forrest '16 Mr. Merritt W. Foster III '73 Mr. Jeffery B. Foster '90 and Mrs. Jean Foster Ms. Brittany S. Foster '11 Mr. Edwin R. Foster II '93, '98 and Mrs. Kayla Foster Mr. Murray Foster and Mrs. Gloria W. Foster '66 Mr. Robert J. Foster '73 and Mrs. Kathryn Foster Dr. Adam D. Foster Four Oaks Bank & Trust Dr. Leigh L. Foushee '00 and Mr. Eugene E. Foushee Rev. Howard W. Fowler '66 and Mrs. Mary Fowler Dr. W. Craig Fowler, MD COL John D. Fox '78 Mr. Louis F. Foy III '00 Mr. William P. Franklin, Jr. '96 and Mrs. Karen Franklin Mr. Gene Franklin '57 and Mrs. Hilda Franklin Mr. Clayton G. Frazier II '14 Mr. and Mrs. William Frederick Rev. Rebecca L. Frederick '04 Rev. Jamee P. Free '06 and Mr. Mark Free Mr. Clenon E. Freeman '89 and Mrs. Dorothy K. Freeman '92 Dr. Larry W. Freeman '69 and Mrs. Janice C. Freeman '68 Mr. Stephen A. Freeman '72 Mr. Johnny Freeman Mr. Robert E. Freeman, Jr. '68 and Mrs. Jean Freeman Mr. James R. Fricke, Sr. '87 and Mrs. Jeannette O. Fricke Mr. Jared R. Fries '04 and Mrs. Tammi B. Fries '04 Mr. Thomas G. Frith '90, '94, '95 and Mrs. Nenita M. Frith Mr. Charles D. Fritz '85 Ms. Elizabeth A. Froehling Mrs. Katherine A. Frye '01 and Mr. Kevin Smith Frye Law Offices, P.A. Dr. Edward I. Fubara Mr. Robert K. Fujimura Mrs. Ericca S. Fulghum '11 Mr. Robert M. Fullerton '07 Ms. Michayla K. Fullwood '17 Mrs. Catherine T. Fussell '69 Ms. Nikki E. Gagliardi Mr. Alexander B. Galfsky

Mr. Gerald L. Galloway '75 and Mrs. June Galloway Mr. Michael S. Gallup Mr. John A. Gambill '69 and Mrs. Kelle Gambill Mr. Kenneth R. Garber '81 and Mrs. Elizabeth L. Garber '83 Dr. Robert J. Garbett '90 and Mrs. Eileen Garbett Ms. Ruth A. Gardner Mr. William K. Gardner, Jr. and Dr. Kimberly S. Gardner '03 Miss Georgia A. Gardner '69 and Mr. Donald F. Arrington Mr. John U. Garner, Jr. '69 and Mrs. Susie Garner Mr. Alton L. Garner Mrs. Martha S. Garner '57 Mr. Fred H. Garner, Jr. '96 and Mrs. Dorline R Garner Ms. Bess S. Garrett Dr. Robert L. Garrett, Jr.* Mr. Kyle B. Garrett '04 Ms. Christine M. Garris Garry Richardson Farms Mr. Lavern E. Gaskin '66 and Mrs. Donna Gaskin Dr. Mark E. Gaskins '84 and Mrs. JoAnn D. Gaskins '88 CSM Stephen C. Gasper '95 and Mrs. Nancy M Gasper Ms. Lacey J. Gatrell '15 Mr. Charles P. Gaylor, IV '10 and Mrs. Sarah Gaylor Mr. Richard F. Gays '66 and Mrs. Susan Gays Dr. Ethan A. Gearhart, Jr. '51 and Mrs. Peggy Gearhart Mr. Leo W. Geisler Ms. Elizabeth A. Geisler Gemini Heating & Air Conditioning, LLC Ms. Ruthann Gentry Mr. Robert Gerstmyer and Mrs. Karen A. Gerstmyer '69 Mrs. Laura R. Gerstner Ms. Valerie A. Giannavola Mr. and Mrs. Michael Gibbons Mrs. Linda B. Gibbons '95 and Mr. Sherman Gibbons Ms. Deborah G. Gibbs Mr. and Mrs. Rudolph Gibiser Mr. Ronald J. Gibson '80 and Mrs. Sheree Gibson Mr. Knox R. Gibson '17 Dr. Kevin H. Gifford '15 Ms. Rosalin A. Gilbert '69 Mrs. Christine Gilbert Dr. and Mrs. Roger Gilbert Mrs. Dorothea Stewart Gilbert '46 Ms. Gwendolyn A. Gilbert '91 Mr. Ernest R. Gilchrist '80 and Mrs. Synetha Gilchrist Ms. Laura Giles Mr. Horace T. Gill, Sr. '59 and Mrs. Edith S. Gill Mrs. Carolyn J. Gilliland '61 Mr. William R. Gilliland '61* Mr. Tyler R. Gillis '11 Ms. Deanna M. Girard '05 GKN Foundation Miss Sue J. Glasby '55 Mr. and Mrs. Gale E. Glascock Rev. Jack Glasgow, Jr. and Mrs. Barbara D. Glasgow '81 Ms. Heather S. Glass '06 GlaxoSmithKline Ms. Danielle D. Glaze '17 Glo De Vie Med Spa Mr. Bradley Glos Mrs. Vicky H. Glover '00 and Mr. Barry Glover Dr. William Gluck Mr. Berry F. Godwin '74 and Mrs. Denise Godwin Mr. Ebe W. Godwin, Sr. Mr. John C. Godwin '93 and Dr. Sonya C. Godwin '94, '98 Mrs. Verlene Godwin '81 and Mr. Glenwood Godwin

Mr. James C. Godwin Dr. Sarah K. Goforth Mr. Jon R. Goforth '13 Mr. Jimmy W. Goldston '50 Rev. Spencer A. Good '03 and Mrs. Krystal Good Rev. William J. Goodale '09 and Mrs. Jean Goodale Goodberry's Creamery, Inc. Mr. Jimmy C. Goodman '71 and Mrs. Gail R. Goodman '66 Mrs. Sue B. Goodman '71 Mr. Harry L. Goodwin '66 Mr. Robert M. Goolsby '14 Ms. Krystal M. Goolsby Mr. Greg Goral Mrs. Stephanie J. Goral Mr. Dennis Gordon '02 and Mrs. Isabella Gordon Ms. Carolyn A. Gore '12 Mr. Kappy Govjian Ms. Jenna E. Grago Mr. John W. Graham III, CPA '76 and Mrs. Peggy B. Graham Mr. Chad A. Graham Mr. Donald M. Grambusch '08 Mrs. Kendra N. Granger '09 Mrs. Kris Grant Mr. Evin L. Grant '16 Mr. Christopher R. Grant '09 and Mrs. Denee Grant Ms. Danyelle R. Grant '11 and Mr. Lester Grant Mr. Sanders L. Grantham '57 and Mrs. Elizabeth Grantham COL Arthur B. Gravatt III '67 and Mrs. Diane Gravatt Mr. Aric C. Gray '10 Ms. Marie W. Gray Mr. Samuel M. Gray III '93 and Dr. Anita C. Gray '93 Mr. William D. Gray '10 Mr. Joshua L. Greene '17 Ms. Lora B. Greene '89 Dr. Benjamin F. Greene Mr. Kyle Greene and Mrs. Shelley A. Greene '01 Mr. Samuel M. Greene '00 and Mrs. Jennifer Greene Mr. Dewey Greene and Mrs. Kathryn S. Greene '49 CDR Bruce E. Greenland '95 Mr. Michael A. Greer Ms. Lori A. Gregg Ms. Michelle J. Gregory Dr. Mathew J. Gregoski Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Gresalfi Mr. Gregory T. Griffin '79 and Mrs. Pam Griffin Dr. Sarah M Griffin '17 Ms. Giovanni N. Griffin '10 Mr. George W. Griffin and Mrs. Dianne D. Griffin '72 Mr. John R. Griffith '60 MAJ John E. Griffith II '72 and Mrs. Catherine Griffith Mr. Yuri S. Grigoryev '10 Mr. Branton Grimes and Mrs. Amy A. Grimes '90 Mr. Jerry G. Grimes '65 and Mrs. Gloria Grimes Mr. Duwayne A. Grimm '04 and Mrs. Nell S. Grimm '05, '10 Rev. Lisa S. Grissom '14 Dr. James B. Groce III '93 and Mrs. Sarah Groce Ms. E. Katherine Gross Mr. Dave Grossman Ms. Jean M. Grotgen Mrs. Roseanne C. Gudzan '83 Mr. Darryl T. Guerin Ms. Sheila A. Guion '00 Mr. Earl Gulledge and Mrs. Emily C. Gulledge '68 Dr. and Mrs. Mali Ram Gupta Mr. Phillip Gurkin and Mrs. Marie K. Gurkin '73 Mr. Frederic B. Gustafson, Jr. '62 Mrs. Nancy D. Guy

Mr. Stephen K. Guyton, Sr. '02 Dr. Karen Guzman Mr. William B. Gwyn, Jr. H & K Rentals, Inc. Dr. Rola J. Habib '14, '17 Mr. and Mrs. David R. Hadley Rev. and Mrs. Don Hadley Mr. James M. Hager, Jr. '94 and Dr. Veronica C. Hager '01 Mr. David J. Hailey, Jr. '09, '17 Mr. John M. Hair Mr. Kendall J. Hair Mr. Justin P. Haire Mr. Joe E. Hairr '91 Ms. June Hairr '82 and Mr. James T. Hairr Ms. Taylor L. Hale Mr. Greg Halford and Mrs. Tiffany B. Halford '94, '96 Mr. Jason D. Hall '98 and Dr. Bobbie H. Hall '00 Mr. J. Timothy Hall and Mrs. Rebecca B. Hall '10 Mr. Ayden W. Hall '64* Dr. Natasha N. Hall Rev. Keith S. Hall '85 Ms. Megan K. Hall '07 Ms. Peggy R. Hall '64 Rev. Robert N. Hall '83 Mr. Ronnie Hall and Mrs. Tammy H. Hall '81 Mrs. Nicole M. Hall Mrs. Alberta H. Hall '73 Ms. Avis R. Hall Miss Michelle L. Hallman '78 Dr. and Mrs. Steven Halm Mrs. Shannon P. Halterman '00 and Mr. Timothy Halterman Hamburger Joe's Mr. James E. Hamilton, Jr. '72 Mr. Stanley F. Hammer '84 Ms. Nancy L Hammersley Mr. Charles E. Hammond, Sr. '60 and Mrs. Linda Hammond Mrs. Kristin M. Hampson '03 Mr. Tobias S. Hampson '02 Mrs. Julie W. Hampton '02 and Mr. Billy Hampton Hampton Inn Dunn Drs. George and Terri Hamrick Ms. Risa Hanau Ms. Kendra L. Hancock Dr. Ted E. Hancock Mr. Bobby C. Hancock and Mrs. Diane W. Hancock '69 Hanes Lineberry Funeral Home Mr. and Mrs. R. Todd Hannah Mr. and Mrs. Wayne D. Hannah Dr. Brittany L. Hansen Mrs. Nancy E. Hardee '59 Mr. James E. Harden '75 Mr. Alton W. Hardison, Jr. '74, '82 and Mrs. Wanda J. Hardison Mr. Michael B. Hardison '85 Mrs. Mary W. Hardison '56 and Mr. Aubrey J. Hardison Mr. Marion D. Hargrove, Sr. '56 and Mrs. Bobbie R. Hargrove Mr. Pat B. Harmon and Mrs. Joyce Harmon '58 Harnett Health Foundation Mrs. Diane S. Harrell '79 Mr. Mark O. Harrell and Dr. Charlotte F. Harrell '10 Dr. Matthew B. Harrell '15 Dr. Scott Harrell '15 Mr. Brandon E. Harrell '10 Mr. and Mrs. Charles Harrill Mr. Matthew R. Harrington '09 and Mrs. Brittney C. Harrington Mr. W. S. Harris, Jr. '65 and Mrs. Martha Harris Mr. Milton V. Harris '68 and Mrs. Donna M. Harris Mr. and Mrs. Robert S. Harris Mr. Larry C. Harris, Jr. '83 and Mrs. Luann Harris '83 Mrs. Ruth C. Harris '40

*Deceased


Dr. William B. Harris '66 and Mrs. Sharon J. Harris '62 Mr. Morgan H. Harris '60 and Mrs. Margaret C. Harris Mr. Thomas G. Harris Mr. Cameron M. Harris Mr. Malcolm E. Harris Mr. Robert C. Harris '86 and Dr. Lisa P. Harris '92 Father Leonard H. Harris and Mrs. Kathryn M. Harris '63 Mr. Roland T. Harris Jr. '64 and Mrs. Ruth G. Harris Mr. Ira V. Harris '74 and Mrs. Faye Harris Ms. Pamela M. Harris '10 Mr. Tyrin J. Harris Ms. Briana N. Harris '15 Mr. Cecil W. Harrison, Jr. Dr. James D. Harriss Mr. Earl D. Hart, Jr. '77 Dr. Alvin H. Hartness Ms. Cynthia F. Hartnett Hartsell & Williams P.A. Mr. Jerry Hartzell Mr. Steven B. Harvey '92, '94 Mr. Jon Harvison and Mrs. Lu A. Harvison '06 Mr. Steve C. Hasselberg Ms. Jennifer K. Hastings Mr. James T. Hasty, Jr. '72 and Mrs. Patricia W. Hasty Dr. Clark Hatcher '14 Mr. Steven M. Hauge '81 Mr. Adam Hauser II '14 Dr. J. C . Havran Mr. Maurice C. Hawes '64 and Mrs. Delores Hawes Dr. Shannon Hawkes '11 Mr. William L. Hawkins, Jr. '59 and Mrs. Debra Hawkins Dr. and Mrs. Benjamin M. Hawkins Mr. David D. Hawkins '68 Dr. Cleveland M. Hawkins '94 and Mrs. Doris S. Hawkins Mrs. Joyce T. Hawkins '58 Mr. Daniel L. Hawkins '82 Mr. Ronald P. Hawley '72 and Mrs. Suzanne Hawley Mr. and Mrs. Bob Hawthorne Mrs. Lee C. Hayden Mr. D. Cole Hayes '12 Mr. Robert Hayes and Mrs. Joyce C. Hayes '46 Ms. Teresa D. Hayes Haywood, Denny & Miller, LLP HEAT Mr. Gregory W. Heath '87 Ms. Adrienne S. Heath Rev. Dr. Joy L. Heaton '00 and Mr. Tom Heaton Mr. John E. Heckstall '79 and Mrs. Dianne Heckstall Mrs. Michelle E. Hefner CPA '00 and Mr. Greg Hefner Mr. Andre M. Heggie Ms. Karyn D. Hegler Michael A. Heil Mr. and Mrs. Edward Heintzman Mr. Christopher D. Hemeyer Ms. Tiffany M. Hemphill '10 Mr. and Mrs. John Henderson, Jr. Mr. Terry D. Henderson '08 and Mrs. Deanna Henderson Ms. Allison C. Henderson Ms. Joy P. Henderson Ms. Mary Jo D. Hendricks Mr. Avery H. Henline, Jr. '92 and Mrs. Mary A. Henline '83 Ms. Sherry L. Henline '90 Mrs. Katelynn T. Hensley '16 Mr. Steven J. Herman '03 Ms. Barbara J. Hermann Mr. Juan J. Hernaez and Mrs. Stephanie J. Burch-Hernaez '84 Mr. Javier Hernandez '84 Mr. Jaciel V. Hernandez Mr. Howard L. Herring '91, '17 Mrs. Eva T. Herring '52 MAGAZINE.CAMPBELL.EDU

Mr. Bryant Herring '66 and Mrs. Wanda B. Herring '68 Rev. Henry B. Herring '64 and Mrs. Mary L. Herring '64 Mr. Ken Herring and Mrs. Sharmon S. Herring '87 Dr. Charles Herring Mrs. Ashley D. Herring '94 and Scotty E. Herring Mrs. Amy E. Herring '17 Mr. David A. Hesselmeyer '02 and Mrs. Amanda L. Hesselmeyer '02 Mr. Horace R. Hester '68 and Mrs. Rebecca N. Hester '68 Mr. Thomas S. Hester Jr. '71 and Mrs. Jennifer Hester Mr. James Hewitt Hibachi and Company Hibernian Glenwood South Mr. David Hicks and Mrs. Jane M. Hicks '73 Dr. Reginald L. High '08 Mr. William H. High, Jr. '90 and Mrs. Martha High Mr. James D. Highsmith '65 and Mrs. Faye Highsmith Mr. Michael W. Hildebrand '70 and Mrs. Julie Hildebrand Mr. Gary M. Hile '87 and Mrs. Geana Hile Mr. Myron T. Hill Mr. D. B. Hilliard, Jr. '62 Mr. Herbert E. Hinds '14 Ms. Sha Hinds-Glick Mr. Richard E. Hines '04 and Mrs. Loree F. Hines '10 Dr. Timothy M. Hinson '92 and Mrs. Laura Hinson Mr. J. Ben Hinson Mr. Mark R. Hinson '08 Mr. Wesley S. Hinson '99 and Mrs. Shannon Hinson Mr. L. Liston Hinson, Jr. '65 and Mrs. Elizabeth Hinson Mr. Terry W. Hinson '78 and Mrs. Lisa Hinson Hinson Faulk, P.A. Mr. James C. Hinton '04 and Mrs. Alicia Hinton Mrs. Mavoreen S. Hinton '54 and Mr. Bobby R. Hinton Mr. James H. Hix '72 Mrs. Ellouise C. Hoback Mr. Robert B. Hobbs, Jr. '86 and Mrs. Laura Hobbs Rev. Ronnie V. Hobgood '13 and Mrs. Mitizi Hobgood Mr. Jerry E. Hockaday '61 and Mrs. Brenda Hockaday Mr. and Mrs. Shepard Hockaday Mrs. Barbara Hockenberry CMS Harold L. Hockenberry '72* Ms. Kimberly A. Hocking Ms. Jennifer J. Hockmuth '04 Rev. Ray K. Hodge Mr. Jack Hodges and Mrs. Bonnie B. Hodges '52 Rev. Charles F. Hodges '56 Mr. Lester Hodges Mr. Jacob A. Hoff '60 Mr. Gabriel C. Hoffman '13 and Mrs. Deidra H. Hoffman '13 Dr. and Mrs. Derek Hogan Mr. William R. Hogan '66 Hogan's Pharmacy, Inc. Mr. Arthur T. Hohnsbehn '16 Mr. Edward L. Holder Dr. Burke E. Holland Ms. Patricia L. Holland Ms. Diane Holland Mr. Larry O. Holland '75 Mr. Burt Holland '95 Ms. Morgan N. Holland '17 Mr. William E. Holland '77 and Mrs. Nancy Holland Dr. Melissa A. Holland '07 Mr. Jackie O. Holland '65 and Mrs. Jane E. Holland '67 Mr. Raymond M. Holleman Mr. and Mrs. Damon Holliday

Dr. Brian Holloman '05 and Mrs. Shana L. Holloman Holly Springs Baptist Church Holly Springs Pharmacy LLC Dr. and Mrs. Thomas Holmes, Jr. Mr. David M. Holmes '03 and Mrs. Elizabeth L. Holmes '01, '04 Ms. Brianne L. Holmes Mrs. Virginia L. Holquist Mr. William C. Holt Mr. Michael W. Holt '75 and Mrs. Martha J. Holt Mr. Ronald W. Holz Mr. Clifton W. Homesley '86 and Mrs. Fariba Homesley Homesley & Wingo Law Group PLLC Mrs. Brenda T. Honeycutt '69 and Mr. George Honeycutt Mr. Kyle B. Honeycutt '94 Mrs. Debra D. Honeycutt '75, '87 Mr. Arvin M. Honeycutt Mrs. Betsy R. Hood '63 Mr. Arthur C. Hood and Mrs. Kitty M. Hood '69 Mr. Dwight F. Hooker '66 Rev. Donald K. Horn '66 and Mrs. Shirley Horn Dr. Barry L. Hornberger '65 and Mrs. Jean U. Hornberger Dr. Erin T. Horne '04 and Mr. Daren R. Horne '01 Mr. Edward K. Horne '64 and Mrs. Sharon Horne Mr. Stephen Horne Mr. Louis P. Hornthal III '93 and Mrs. Kristy W. Hornthal Mr. and Mrs. David Horrell Mr. Patrick G. Horst '09 Mr. William A. Horton Mr. Evan B. Horwitz '01 Mrs. June Woodard Howard '51, '53 Mr. Henry B. Howard II '57 and Mrs. June Howard Ms. Sandra K. Howard '78, '81 Mrs. Bonnie G. Howard '72 Mr. and Mrs. Derrell Howard Mrs. Beverley W. Howard '89 Dr. Mallory L. Howard '14 Mr. Thomas H. Howard II and Mrs. Velena B. Howard '79 Howard's Barbecue Rev. Timothy A. Howell '86, '98 and Mrs. Jeanne Howell Mr. Gerald Howell* Mrs. Phyllis S. Howell '66 Mr. Durwood P. Howell '84 and Mrs. Joni Howell Mrs. Pamela K. Howie '01 and Mr. Steven Howie Drs. Rick and Lydia Hoyle Mr. Milo Hruby Mrs. Fern B. Huband '86 Mr. Robert Hubbard and Mrs. Jacquelynn Y. Hubbard '58 Ms. Martha Hudgins '64 Mr. Brandon K. Hudson '14 and Mrs. Rebecca B. Hudson '16 Ms. Barbara D. Hudson Dr. Robert G. Hudson, Ph.D '66 and Mrs. Linda F. Hudson '69 Mr. Stanley Hudson '81 and Mrs. Denise Hudson Mr. John T. Hudson '85 Mr. Robert A. Hudson II '00, '02 Mr. Matthew S. Huff Mr. John Huggard Mr. William K. Huggins '75 and Mrs. Barbara Huggins Ms. Doris E. Huggins '71 Mr. Jimmie D. Huggins '82 Ms. Brenda Hughes Mr. Francis J. Hughes and Mrs. Mary A. Hughes Ms. Jennifer L. Hughes '14 Mr. Thomas M. Hull Ms. Teresa W. Humbert Dr. John C. Humphrey, Jr. '56 Mr. James S. Humphreys '85 and Mrs. Joy R. Humphreys Ms. Jessica S. Humphries '12

Mr. Justin K. Humphries '07 Humphries Law Firm Hon. Stephani Humrickhouse and Mr. Scott Humrickhouse Mr. Clarence C. Hundley, Jr. '74 Mr. William T. Hunt '63 Mr. Warren C. Hunt III '67 Mr. Peter J. Hunt '98 Mr. Colin H. Hunt '07 Mrs. Deborah L. Hunter '90 and Mr. Jeffrey D. Hunter Ms. Jodie Ruth Hurley '01 Mrs. Kerri Hurley Mr. Hilton T. Hutchens, Jr. '05 and Mrs. Harper D. Hutchens Mr. Brian J. Hutchinson, USA (Ret.) '08 and Mrs. Melanie D. Hutchinson Mr. Fred Hutchison Mr. John S. Hutchison, Jr. '66 and Mrs. Phyllis Hutchinson Hutchison PLLC Richard M. Hutson II Hutson Law Office PA Miss Geraldine Hyatt '82 Ms. Victoria Hyman Mr. Jack W. Hyman, Jr. '06 and Mrs. Cynthia Hyman Dr. Venancio R. Ibarra IBM International Foundation Mr. and Mrs. Marcus L Ingram Ms. Barbara S. Inscore Rev. Israel C. Irizarri '62 and Mrs. Joan L. Irizarri Mr. Ben G. Irons II Mr. David Irwin Ms. Colleen C. Israel '14 Mr. Carl G. Ivarsson, Jr. '82, '85 and Mrs. Sandra H. Ivarsson '92 Mr. Charles C. Ivey J. Spell Enterprises Mr. James R. Jackson '67 and Mrs. Carolyn Jackson Mr. Billy R. Jackson '60 and Mrs. Rebecca Jackson Ms. Amy M. Jackson '04 Mr. Luther S. Jackson '63 Mrs. Nina F. Jackson '91 and Mr. Keith A. Jackson Mr. Ernest A. Jackson '00 and Mrs. Daphne Jackson Mrs. Judy B. Jackson '88 Ms. Tydal M. Jackson Ms. Brittney E. Jackson '14 Mrs. Hiza B. Jackson-Price '04 Mr. David W. Jacobs Mr. Patrick G. Jacobs Mr. Wayne Jacobs Jake A. Parrott Insurance Agency, Inc. Mr. Mike James Mrs. Jeanette S. James '69 Mr. Bruce L. James '86 and Mrs. Stephanie James Ms. Diane S. James James P. Davidson, Atty At Law Jane Mjolsness Illustrator Ms. Joani Jarrad Hon. H. T. Jarrell, Jr. '91 and Mrs. Cynthia R. Jarrell '87 JB's Pizzeria LLC J. E. Womble & Sons, Inc. Jean D. Fletcher Trust Mr. Chadwick C. Jefferds '12 Ms. Shirley M. Jefferds Ms. Shirley T. Jenkins Mr. and Mrs. Richard Jenkins Mr. John R. Jernigan '72 and Mrs. Laura Jernigan Mr. and Mrs. Glynn Jernigan Mr. Lynn Jernigan '68 and Mrs. Lynn Jernigan Mr. Glenn R. Jernigan '59 Mr. Kenneth J. Jernigan, Sr. '82 and Mrs. Shirley J. Jernigan Mr. Leonard Jernigan, Jr. Miss Beth A. Jernigan '75 Mrs. Callie L. Jernigan Jernigan Brothers, Inc. Jernigan Law Firm

Jessica's Piano Studio Jim Teachey Realtor SFC Rosalie R. Jimenez '97 and Mr. Rafael G. Jimenez Mr. William A. Jinnette, Jr. '68 Mr. Kaj H. Johansen John Henry Viehe Revocable Trust Ms. Sandra L. Johnson Mrs. Somer M. Johnson '16 Rev. H. Michael Johnson '70 and Mrs. Brenda Johnson Mr. and Mrs. Daniel B. Johnson Rev. Libby L. Johnson '16 and Mr. Kenny Johnson Mr. R. Timothy Johnson '61 Mr. Robert L. Johnson '55 and Mrs. Anne Johnson Mr. Timothy R. Johnson Mr. Walton Johnson and Mrs. Hesta T. Johnson '54 Mr. William E. Johnson '97 and Mrs. Leanne T. Johnson '95 Rev. Dr. Laura M. Johnson '03, '13 and Mr. James A. Johnson '96 Mr. Nathan M. Johnson III '73 and Mrs. Marilyn Johnson Mr. Paul R. Johnson Mr. Frankie Johnson Ms. Hailey L. Johnson '13 Mr. and Mrs. Joe T. Johnson Mr. and Mrs. Kerry L. Johnson Mr. Warren F. Johnson, Jr. '68 Mrs. Jewel P. Johnson '63 Ms. Ann L. Johnson '98 Rev. Bruce W. Johnson '79 and Mrs. Viki Johnson Mr. Dale P. Johnson and Mrs. Dianne B. Johnson '74 Ms. Helen D. Johnson '06 Mrs. Amy M. Johnson '09 Mr. David M. Johnson Ms. Fannie N. Johnson '16 Mr. Bennett J. Johnson '17 Dr. Wendy A. Johnson '96, '98 and Mr. Darrell Johnson Ms. Colleen J. Johnson Ms. Shannon H. Johnson Dr. Emily Johnson Ms. April D. Johnson '13, '17 Ms. Ashlyn T. Johnson Dr. Steven W. Johnson Ms. Destiny A. Johnson Mr. Dwight W. Johnson Ms. Natasha Johnson Dr. Nita F. Johnston '98 Mr. Isaac A. Johnston '12 Mrs. Betsy W. Johnston '73 and Mr. William S. Johnston, Jr. Mr. Harry B. Johnstone '63 and Mrs. Lynne Johnstone Dr. William G. Jonas, Jr. Dr. Barry A. Jones Ph.D. '85 and Mrs. Beth L. Jones J.D. '85, '88 Mr. James W. Jones '65 Mr. Kenneth E. Jones '01 Mr. Jesse R. Jones, Jr. '88 and Mrs. Lisa Jones Ms. Dawn M. Jones Mr. Fitzhugh C. Jones '68 Mr. Kenneth G. Jones '74 and Mrs. Joan B. Jones '91, '04 Mr. Michael A. Jones '06 Mr. Robert B. Jones, Jr. '97 Dr. Haydn T. Jones COL Charles V. Jones, USA (Ret.) '54 and Mrs. Margaret Jones Mr. Bennie D. Jones, Jr. '11, '12, '17 and Mrs. Millicent Jones Mr. Cecil B. Jones '90 and Mrs. Angela Jones Mr. Timothy E. Jones '14 Mr. Anthony S. Jones '08 Mr. Donald D. Jones '74 and Mrs. Debbie Jones Mr. Jonathan D. Jones '12, '14 Mr. Wayne A. Jones '71 and Mrs. Karen Jones Mrs. Carrie O. Jones '83 and Dr. Randy G. Jones

C A MP B E L L M AG AZ I N E 81


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C A MP B E L L M AG AZ I N E 83


DONOR HONOR ROLL Mr. William H. Perry '48 and Mrs. Vertie M. Perry '49 Mr. H. M. Persinger, Jr. Mr. Juan M. Pesina-Avila and Mrs. Bonnie S. Pesina-Avila '98 Dr. Gina D. Peterman Ms. Dawn M. Peters '91 and Mr. Robert M. Finke Mr. Clark Petschek and Mrs. Michelle A. Petschek '99 Mr. Michael S. Petty '95 and Mrs. Amy C. Petty '94 Mr. Clarence C. Pharr III '65 and Mrs. Carrie D. Pharr '65 Mr. Michael W. Phelps and Mrs. Susan M. Phelps '71 Mr. John D. Philippas '04 Mr. Jeffrey S. Phillips Mr. Charles Phillips and Mrs. Judy G. Phillips '66 Hon. Nancy C. Phillips '90 and Mr. Bruce Phillips Mrs. Margaret W. Phillips '67 and Mr. Thomas Phillips Ms. Sylvia A. Phillips Ms. Joanne H. Phillips Rev. Drew S. Phillips '06 and Mrs. Danielle Phillips Mr. Clifford R. Phillips '01 Mr. Charles R. Phillips III Mr. James M. Pierce, Jr. '65 and Mrs. Betsy S. Pierce Mrs. Patricia P. Pierce '64 and Mr. Robert Pierce Mr. William L. Pierce, Jr. '80 and Mrs. Rebecca S. Pierce '81 Mr. William H. Pierce '66 Mr. Judge A. Pierce '60 Mr. Albert A. Pierro, Jr. Pierro Development Inc. Ms. Amanda K. Pilkington '17 Mr. Paul Pine Mr. Miguel A. Pineiro Mr. Gregory W. Pittman and Mrs. Tara Wilson '89 Mrs. Betty M. Pittman '70 and Mr. Carson H. Pittman, Jr. Mr. Dennis R. Pittman and Mrs. Rosemary G. Pittman '73 Mr. Thomas A. Pittman '68, '79 and Mrs. Jeanne M. Pittman '68 Mr. Mike Pleasant '69 and Mrs. Donna Pleasant Mrs. Mary Jo Plemmons '64 and Mr. Robert Plemmons Ms. Susan B. Plesha Ms. Lcas. '75 Rev. Edwin L. Poindexter '78 and Mrs. Betsy Poindexter Ms. Stephanie G. Poley '03 Mr. Daniel D. Polk '10 Mr. and Mrs. David M. Pollard Ms. Christiana N. Pomaville Mr. Ronald Ponzar '69 and Mrs. Kathryn G. Ponzar Mr. Thomas F. Pool Dr. Lejon Poole Mr. Ranjit A. Poonnen '17 Ms. April G. Pope '93 Mrs. Shelia S. Pope '95 and Mr. William Pope Mr. William M. Pope '95 Ms. Lorrie Pope Mr. Christian D. Pope MAJ Jeffrey L. Pope '79 Mr. Alan K. Pope '97 and Mrs. Dawn N. Pope '97 Pope & Pope Attorney's At Law, P.A. Ms. Karen S. Pore Mr. Paul R. Porter '98 and Mrs. Marlene Porter '95 Mr. William B. Potts '65 Mr. David M. Pound '91, '04 and Dr. Melanie W. Pound '01 Mr. and Mrs. George Pounds Mr. Jon S. Powell '98 and Mrs. Lisa L. Powell Mrs. Mary R. Powell '52 Mr. Vincent C. Powell '16 Mr. and Mrs. Michael Powell Ms. Anne E. Powell Ms. Ethalee G. Powell '12 84 SUMMER 2017

Mr. and Mrs. Walter H. Powell Ms. Amanda N. Powell Dr. and Mrs. Bruce P. Powers Rev. Lawrence B. Powers '09, '13 and Mrs. Heather J. Powers ATC, LAT '07 Dr. James E. Powers, D.O. Mr. Timothy J. Prentice '04 and Mrs. Melissa D. Prentice '04 Mr. Vincent O. Pressley '06 Ms. Emily G. Price '12 Mr. Gordon L. Price, Jr. and Mrs. Anne N. Price '66 Mr. Charles L. Price '87 and Mrs. Betty W. Price '86 Mr. and Mrs. Joshua L. Price Mr. Coley B. Price and Mrs. Rachel M. Price '93 Mrs. Rhonda L. Price '88 and Mr. Foster Price Mr. Richard W. Pridgen '77 and Mrs. Allison Pridgen Mr. James Priest Mr. William M. Priestley '12 Dr. Roger I. Pritchard '14 Mr. and Mrs. G. Bryan Prosser Providence Baptist Church CPT James Prudhomme, Jr. '92 and Mrs. Barbara Prudhomme Ms. Kimberly E. Pruett '10 Mr. Maurice C. Pruitt '72 and Mrs. Gini Pruitt Mr. Edward F. Pugh '65 and Mrs. Nancy Pugh Mr. William G. Pulliam '71 and Mrs. Anne Pulliam Ms. Samantha G. Pursell '17 Mr. Benjamin F. Puryear Ms. Derique M. Pusey '11 Mr. Win M. Quakenbush '94 and Mrs. Mary A. Quakenbush '75 Mr. and Mrs. James Qualls Mr. Robert P. Quarles Rev. and Mrs. Michael G. Queen Mr. Robert R. Query, Jr. '68 and Mrs. Carolyn Query Ms. Denise M. Quinn Mr. Alan L. Quinn Dr. Brianne Raccor Rev. Charles R. Rackley '65 and Mrs. Patricia Rackley Hon. Robert B. Rader '85 and Mrs. Margaret P. Rader '87 Dr. William H. Radford '76 and Mrs. Rebecca A. Radford '78 Ms. Anne K. Radnothy Mr. Harvey Ragan and Mrs. Sarah E. Ragan '65 Rev. Sheral L. Raines '06 and Mrs. Brittany B. Raines '08, '12 Raleigh Emergency Medicine Associates, Inc. The Raleigh Wine Shop Dr. Elizabeth L. Rambo Mr. David J. Ramsaur '87 and Mrs. Pattie Ramsaur Ms. Elizabeth R. Ramsaur '17 Mr. James J. Ranieri Mr. Ingo N. Rasch '04 Mrs. Deborah L. Rascoe '09 and Mr. Charlie Rascoe Mr. Donald R. Rash '76 Ms. Heather L. Ratchford '06 Mr. R. Lee Ratcliffe, Jr. '96 and Mrs. Judy Ratcliffe Mr. Warren C. Ratley '86, '88 Miss Tahnia Ravnjak '16 Dr. Robert S. Rawls '02 and Dr. Brooke K. Rawls '02 Mr. Charles R. Rawls '82 Mr. Keith Rawls and Mrs. Deborah N. Rawls Mr. Ricky L. Ray II '01 Mr. Richard M. Ray '71 Mr. James T. Ray '70 and Mrs. Martha Ray Mrs. Benita F. Rayner '06 Mr. William R. Raynor '72 and Mrs. Virginia Raynor Realo Discount Drug Stores of Eastern NC Mr. and Mrs. Vince Reap

Ms. Denise T. Reardon '07 Red Springs First Baptist Church Mr. William H. Redmond '71 Mr. John Reece '09 and Mrs. Doni Reece Mr. Ramsey G. Reed '93 and Mrs. Elizabeth K. Reed '82 Ms. Darla E. Reed Mr. Ramsey T. Reed '11 and Mrs. Lindsey Reed Mr. and Mrs. Nick C. Reeves Mr. Richard I. Reeves '75 and Mrs. Judy Reeves Mr. and Mrs. Neil Regan Ms. Maynette Regan '81 Mr. Conor P. Regan '11 Mr. Sean G. Regan '05 Rehoboth United Methodist Church Mr. Robert O. Reid '49 Mrs. Norma A. Reid Dr. Michael P. Reidy '64 and Mrs. Bonnie P. Reidy '65 Mrs. Shayna H. Reilly '10, '12 Dr. and Mrs. Howard Reisner Mr. Marc P. Renaud '92 and Mrs. Nicole Renaud Ms. Gloria L. Rendon '13 Mr. Stephen F. Renfrow, Jr. '03 and Mrs. Tracie J. Renfrow '02 Mr. Edward Renfrow and Mrs. Rebecca S. Renfrow '60 Rev. Bobby J. Revels '59 and Mrs. Ruby Revels Mr. Wohali W. Revels Ms. Katherine B. Reynolds Mr. Chad E. Rhoades '14 Mr. Gerald B. Rhodes '79 and Mrs. Teresa Rhodes Ms. Susan S. Rhodes Ms. Sonia A. Rhodes Mr. Nathan Rice '07 and Mrs. Kristin A. Rice Esq. '08 Ms. Natalie M. Rice '11 Ms. Irene A. Rice Mr. Richard N. Rice USA (Ret.) '02, '04 Dr. Wesley D. Rich '01 and Mrs. Laura T. Rich '02 Richard L. Buyrn, P.C. Mr. A. Stephen Richards III '74 Mr. Walter D. Richardson '02, '06 Mr. Garry Richardson Mr. Matthew H. Richardson '09 Mr. Glenn Riddle '69 and Mrs. Gail Riddle Ridge Road Baptist Church Mr. Paul C. Ridgeway '86 and Mrs. Laura Ridgeway Mr. Tom Riel and Mrs. Irene P. Riel '92 Mr. William N. Rigsbee, Jr. '64 and Mrs. Audrey Rigsbee SMSGT Sandy G. Riley '68 Ms. Callen J. Ring '14 Mr. Ronnie Ring and Mrs. Miriam P. Ring '80 Mr. Buddy Ritch Mr. John W. Robbins '51 Dr. Jack W. Robbins '62 and Mrs. Virginia P. Robbins '65 Mr. Joseph M. Robbins '10 Mrs. Judith L. Robbins Robert L. Donnelly Trust Dr. Jan W. Roberts '64 Mr. William J. Roberts Mr. John E. Roberts '72 Miss Ann W. Roberts '67 Ms. Denise R. Roberts '77 Mr. John W. Roberts and Rev. Beth H. Roberts '10 Mr. Matthew D. Roberts '11 Mrs. Pamela S. Roberts Dr. W. Mack Roberts '66, '92 and Mrs. Ella R. Roberts Mr. Gary D. Roberts '70, '72 and Mrs. Barbara Roberts Mr. Marc D. Robertson Mr. and Mrs. Carey W. Robinson Mr. Robert E. Robinson III '84 and Mrs. Lisa Robinson

Mr. Wayne Robinson and Mrs. Nancy K. Robinson '85 Mrs. Patricia C. Robinson '04 Ms. Stephanie M. Robles Mr. John D. Rock '66 and Mrs. Shan P. Rock Mr. James Rock '10, '13 Rockbrook Properties LLC Ms. Melanie R. Roderick Mr. Kevin D. Rodgers '84 and Mrs. Deborah Rodgers Mr. and Mrs. Wayne Rogers Mrs. Angela R. Rogers '98 and Mr. Vernon F. Wilson Dr. John S. Rogers '70 and Mrs. Joyce T. Rogers '66, '68 Mr. Ruben C. Rogers and Mrs. Betty W. Rogers '64 Dr. Jessica Britt Rogers '15 Rolesville Baptist Church Dr. Heather L. Rosati '10 Mr. Timothy A. Rose '77 Mr. David M. Rose '71 and Mrs. Terry V. Rose Mr. G. Harold Rose '66 and Mrs. Gladys C. Rose Mr. Stephen M. Rose '76 and Mrs. Valerie Rose Dr. Richard L. Ross '68 and Mrs. Minnie B. Ross '69 Mr. William L. Ross III '70 Mr. Johnny E. Ross Mrs. Peggy P. Ross '58 Ms. Mary H. Ross '17 Mrs. Joyce M. Rosser '74 Mr. Peter Rothacker and Mrs. Laura K. Rothacker '03 Dr. Lorae T. Roukema Miss Betsy Rountree M.A. '66 Mr. Arthur T. Rouse III '70 Ms. Diane C. Rouse Mr. Walter D. Rouse Mr. Keith D. Rouse '02 Mr. and Mrs. Tim Rowland Ms. Julianne D. Rowland Mrs. Tonya L. Roy '92 and Mr. Hayley Young Rev. Charles K. Royal, Jr. '99, '17 and Mrs. Suzanne C. Royal Ms. Rhonda G. Royster Mr. Richard Rubin Mr. Richard P. Ruddock '75 and Mrs. Jo Ruddock Ms. Cynthia L. Ruester '97 Mr. Timothy S. Ruggles Dr. Kathey F. Rumley '94 Ms. Kathy K. Runnels Dr. Nicole C. Rushing Mr. Kenneth B. Russell '07 Mrs. Nancy L. Russell '80 Ms. Karen L. Rust '14 Ms. Jessie L. Ryals Mr. Daniel Ryan Mr. Cody L. Ryba '15 Mr. David Ryder Mr. Frank Ryder Dr. Lee K. Rynearson Mrs. Nicholas Sabatini '85 Ms. Megan E. Sabatino Mr. Dwight D. Safer '98 and Mrs. Tawnya Safer Mr. Perry R. Safran '81 and Mrs. Susan M. Safran Mr. Carl H. Salmon '65 Mr. Jessie G. Sambrano '04 Mr. Michael T. Samperton '96, '98 and Mrs. Amy R. Samperton '99 Mr. and Mrs. Terry Samperton Ms. Rita Sampson Ms. Ameriah L. Sanchez '14, '17 Mr. Jonathan O. Sanderlin '04 and Mrs. Cayla J. Sanderlin '04 Rev. and Mrs. J. Dupre Sanders Mr. Frank C. Sanders and Mrs. Ruby C. Sanders '68 Mr. Michael P. Sanders '90 and Mrs. Ginger Sanders Mr. Victor Santana '98 John Sarratt and Cindy Wittmer

Mr. Emmerson W. Sartor, Jr. '01 Mr. Carl Sarvis and Mrs. Jewell P. Sarvis '71 Mr. Cory Satterfield '88 and Mrs. Pamela D. Satterfield '87 Mr. Robert Sauer Ms. Susan J. Sauer '83 Mr. John R. Saunders, Jr. '66 Mr. Matthew W. Sawchak Mr. David Sawicki Dr. and Mrs. Emerson Scarborough Mrs. Elva Scarborough Mr. and Mrs. Stephen Scattaregia Ms. Amy C. Schaefer '04 Mrs. Allison and Mr. John Schafer Mr. and Mrs. Curtis Schaubel Mr. Daniel J. Schlesing '02 and Ms. Laura L. Glazier '01 Mr. Robert J. Schmid '04 Dr. Donald N. Schroeder Mr. David H. Schroeder Mrs. J. Grace Schupp '11 Mrs. Rachel C. Scott '68 Mr. John H. Scovil '75 Mr. Murray H. Scripture '60 and Mrs. Joan Scripture Mr. Mark A. Scruggs '86 and Mrs. V K. Scruggs '86 Mr. George C. Scruggs and Mrs. Betty A. Scruggs '71 Mrs. Shirley V. Searight Ms. Ellen T. Sears Mr. David T. Sears Mr. Verne Seaton and Mrs. Sarah C. Seaton '85 Mr. William P. Seifert, Jr. '10 SELA Building Corporation Mr. Steve D. Sellers '85 and Mrs. Kimberly S. Sellers '87 Mr. Bertis H. Sellers '50 and Mrs. Carol Sellers Hon. James L. Senter '66 Mr. Scotti J. Sentes Mr. Gary A. Serago Mr. Benjamin M. Severin '14 Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth Sexton Mr. William R. Seymour '78 and Mrs. Cynthia Seymour Mr. Joseph F. Shackelford, Jr. '81 and Mrs. Cheryl Shackelford Mr. and Mrs. Ronald C. Shaffer Mr. Bailis Y. Shamun '68 and Mrs. Sylvia Shamun Mr. Mark Z. Shaw '98 Mr. Jeremy Shaw Dr. Heidi Shearin Dr. William A. Shearin, Sr. '48 and Mrs. Dorothy B. Shearin Mr. Gary B. Sheetz '79 Mr. Andrew A. Shell '97 and Mrs. Allison L. Shell '00 Mr. H. Grady Shelley '59 and Mrs. Rebecca W. Shelley '59 Rev. James C. Shelley, Jr. '64, '62 and Mrs. Doris S. Shelley '61 Mrs. Megan W. Sherron '10 Sherry's Bakery, Inc. Mr. James S. Shew and Mrs. Vivian P. Shew '68 Dr. Connie R. Shipman Mr. James Shipp and Mrs. Jennifer Palancia-Shipp '01 Mr. Benjamin L. Shoemaker and Mrs. Adelaide T. Shoemaker '64 Ms. Ashley C. Sholar '05 Rev. Michael Shook Mr. Pierre L. Short '13 Mr. and Mrs. Michael Shrieves Ms. Victoria O. Sibelu '08 Dr. Adnan Siddiqui Ms. Crystal Silcox Mr. Joseph F. Silek, Jr. '85 Ms. Connie R. Simmons '03 Dr. James M. Simmons and Mrs. Sandra J. Simmons '69 Mr. Clifford Simmons Mrs. Lynda L. Sinclair '62 and Mr. Jerry Sinclair Mr. and Mrs. John D. Singletary

*Deceased


Mr. Nicholas C. Sisk '99 Mr. and Mrs. Darrell Skinner Mr. Michael R. Skinner Mr. and Mrs. Bill Skinner III Ms. Sarah Skinner Mr. Todd Skinner Mr. Mack S. Skipper '69 and Mrs. Beth Skipper Rev. William Slater Ms. Mattie J. Slaughter '56 Mr. and Mrs. Donald R. Slawter Dr. Pascale N. Sleiman '08 Ms. Emily Sloan Mr. Scott T. Slusser '97 and Mrs. Jennifer J. Slusser '98 Mr. David G. Smedberg Dr. Peggy D. Smith Dr. Ronald E. Smith II '98 and Dr. Lora Beth Shelton-Smith '98 Mr. Michael A. Smith '64 and Mrs. Sondra E. Smith '68 Mr. Jay R. Smith '01 and Mrs. Melissa H. Smith Mr. Raymond A. Smith Dr. Ashley N. Smith '95, '07 and Mrs. Vickie C. Smith '99 Mr. Carl D. Smith and Mrs. Elaine D. Smith '71 Mr. Gene A. Smith Mr. Michael D. Smith Dr. and Mrs. Stephen B. Smith Mr. Paul J. Smith Mr. David R. Smith and Mrs. Betty Jo M. Smith '00 Mr. Dennis R. Smith '84 and Mrs. Martha L. Smith Mr. Dexter A. Smith Mr. Dwight W. Smith '10, '11 Mrs. Joyce C. Smith '59 and Mr. Chris Smith Mr. Roger W. Smith, Jr. '99 and Mrs. Leigh Ann G. Smith '95 Mr. Victor A. Smith '71 Mr. and Mrs. Breck Smith Rev. Alex B. Smith '11 Mr. Ronald L. Smith '71 and Mrs. Patricia Smith Mr. William G. Smith '64 and Mrs. Linda A. Smith Ms. Sherry L. Smith Mrs. Brenda R. Smith '09 Mr. Frank A. Smith, Jr. '68 Mr. James L. Smith, Jr. '88 and Mrs. Kimberly M. Smith '89 Ms. Janet L. Smith Mr. Rayshawn Smith and Mrs. Alisha L. Smith '13 Mr. Robert A. Smith '15 Mr. Harold R. Smith II '86 and Mrs. Gina L. Smith '91 Mr. Howard L. Smith '70 and Mrs. Martha C. Smith '70 Ms. Judith E. Smith '64 Mr. Kevin D. Smith Mr. Phillip Smith and Mrs. Wanda B. Smith '59 Mr. William F. Smith '68 and Mrs. Emma K. Smith Mr. Eliot F. Smith '65, '93 and Mrs. Marie P. Smith '92 Mr. James E. Smith '89 and Mrs. Rebecca D. Smith '89 Mr. Marvin T. Smith '74 and Mrs. Joyce Smith Mr. Michael R. Smith C.F.P. '02 Mr. Patrick B. Smith '10 Mrs. Rosa Maria A. Smith '97 and Mr. Kevin Smith Dr. Andrew M. Smith Mr. Larry P. Smith '61 and Mrs. Sheila Smith Mr. Taylor D. Smith Smith Debnam Narron Drake Sain Smith Family Charitable Lead Annuity Trust Mrs. Julie E. Smith-Hamilton '96 and Mr. Ernest D. Hamilton '10, '11 Dr. Charles J. Smutny III Mr. Moses L. Snipes '72 Mr. David N. Snyder '76, '94 and Mrs. Elizabeth H. Snyder '76 MAGAZINE.CAMPBELL.EDU

Mr. Richard W. Snyder '73 and Mrs. Ruth Snyder Mr. Vernon G. Snyder III '80 and Mrs. Jessica F. Snyder Mr. and Mrs. Sherman D. Snyder Mr. Kamal K. Soan '10 Mr. Ibrahim M. Sobeih '78 Mr. Troyce J. Solley Ms. Shekanah E. Solomon '12, '17 Sonic Automotive Inc. Ms. Whitney B. Sorrell '11 Mr. H. L. Sorrell, Jr. and Mrs. Madeline G. Sorrell '64 Mr. Robert W. Sottile '88 and Mrs. Deborah Sottile Dr. Michelle H. Spain '08 Mr. Tim Sparks '95 Mr. Larry O. Spears '87 and Mrs. Pat Spears Spears Pharmacy Inc. Mr. Brian Speck and Mrs. Ann M. Speck '85 Mr. Charles Speegle and Mrs. Bonnie B. Speegle '61 Mr. Jesse A. Spell '80 and Mrs. Renee F. Spell '79 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 Hon. Cheryl L. Spencer '84, '87 Mr. Robert Oberton Spicer, Jr. '83 and Mrs. Rory B. Spicer Ms. Kimberely E. Spikes Mr. Sam Spilman and Mrs. Karen E. Spilman '82 Ms. Anthea E. Spires '14 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. and Mrs. Spivey Mr. Charles G. Springle '71 and Mrs. Donna Springle Mrs. Margaret C. Springston '58 Ms. Thitinan Sraubol '17 Mr. Hector A. St. Denis and Mrs. Margie St. Denis Stacy & H. J. Brody Foundation Mr. Michael J. Stading '06 Mrs. Alyssa M. Stafford '13 Mr. Stanley R. Stager III Dr. William C. Stagner Ms. Christina M. Stalder Ms. Addison Staley Mr. Donald Stallings and Mrs. Billie J. Stallings '60 Mr. Seth K. Stallings '06 and Mrs. Myra Stallings Ms. Jodi Y. Stamey '05 and Mr. Jonathan Peeler Dr. Marcus D. Stanaland '11, '14 Mrs. Shelby J. Stancil '68 Mrs. Monica R. Stanford '02 Mr. Michael G. Stanford '67 and Mrs. Janice Stanford Ms. Stephanie S. Stang Dr. Jaclyn Stanke Mr. Andrew P. Stanley Ms. Margaret F. Stanton Mr. Brandon Starkey Mr. Stephen C. Statham '70 and Mrs. Shelia Statham Mr. Jeffrey S. Staton Mr. Thomas W. Steed III '83 Ms. Annette J. Steele '05 Mr. Jeffrey J. Steele Mr. Richard E. Steele, Jr. '01 and Mrs. Maliwan Steele Dr. Gus Stefanadis '15 Mr. Wayne D. Steffen '74 and Mrs. Cynthia Steffen Mr. Dewey L. Stephens '71 Mr. Brent W. Stephens '96 and Mrs. Susan Stephens Mr. Timothy D. Stephenson Ms. Dianne Stephenson Mr. Thomas R. Stephenson '01 Ms. Ann R. Stephenson '70, '90

Mrs. Rebecca L. Stevens '83 Mr. Edwin Stevens and Mrs. Sarah S. Stevens '86 Mr. Timothy D. Stevens '87 and Mrs. Donna Stevens Ms. Lachelle D. Stevenson '97 Ms. Lindsey M. Stever '13, '17 Mr. and Mrs. William Stewart, Jr. Dr. Christopher W. Stewart Mr. and Mrs. Gray Stewart Mr. Tommy Stewart '68 and Mrs. Linda W. Stewart '81 Marshall and Jan Stewart Mr. and Mrs. Craig Stewart Mr. Kenneth A. Stewart '66 and Mrs. Veronica F. Stewart Mrs. Mary J. Stewart '63 Ms. Wanda F. Stewart Mrs. Lois S. Stewart-Lucas Dr. Candida R. Stilley '00 and Mr. Patrick Stilley Mrs. Kristen A. Stiltner Ms. Brittany N. Stiltner '16 Mrs. Patricia P. Stitt '73 Ms. Myrah R. Stockdale Mr. and Mrs. Jacky R. Stokes Dr. Terri Storms-Starling '97 and Mr. Curtis Starling Mr. Stephen N. Stout, Esq. '91 and Mrs. Holly Stout Mr. George B. Strattner '72 Mr. Gregory Street and Mrs. Lora W. Street '90 Dr. Jutta M. Street Mr. David Stricker Mr. Deloit Strickland '63 Mr. Michael G. Strickland '71 and Mrs. Joan Strickland Mr. and Mrs. Samuel Strickland Mr. John L. Strickland Ms. Donna R. Strickland Mr. Kent Strickland and Mrs. Judy S. Strickland '63 Ms. Stacy E. Strickland '15 Ms. Polly M. Strickland Ms. Lori M. Strickland '14 Mr. William S. Strickland, Jr. Mr. Philip K. Strobel '71 and Mrs. Joy U. Strobel Mr. Jesse W. Stroud and Hon. Donna S. Stroud '85, '88 Mr. Cecil E. Stroud '63 and Mrs. Catherine S. Stroud '63 Dr. Paul D. Stroud '92 and Mrs. Beth Stroud Mr. Stuart L. Stroud '92 and Mrs. Kelli B. Stroud '90 Ms. Kennedy P. Stroud Ms. Corrie Struble Mrs. Ashley E. Stryffeler '10, '12 Mr. Michael T. Stryffeler '10 Dr. Jeremy M. Stultz '08, '13 Mrs. Beverly B. Sturdivant '84 and Mr. Keith G. Sturdivant Ms. Deborah E. Styron '04 and Mr. Alton G. Styron '02 Mr. Abner Suarez '01 Mr. Donald R. Suddarth '66 and Mrs. Joan E. Suddarth '64 Ms. Ashley E. Sugg '17 Mr. Derrick J. Summers Dr. and Mrs. Eugene M. Sumner Mr. Adam J. Surguine Dr. Charles W. Surles, Jr. '55 Mr. Donnie R. Surles '69 and Mrs. Karen E. Surles '66 Mr. Chason T. Surles '10, '13 Sushi Blues Cafe Ms. Gailetta M. Suttles-Battle Mr. and Mrs. M. Timothy Sutton Mr. William B. Sutton, Jr. '81 Ms. Frankie L. Sutton Mrs. Kimberly H. Sutton '88 Ms. Martha S. Sutton '96 Dr. Beth S. Sutton Mr. Colton L. Swaim Mr. Jayson Swain and Mrs. Sarah Q. Swain '05 Mr. Kevin D. Swallow '06

Mr. Edwin Swann MD, MS '07 Mr. Ned D. Swanner, Jr. '91 Mr. D. Franklin Swayne, Jr. '90 and Dr. Susan Swayne Mr. Kenneth W. Swayze, Jr. '71 and Mrs. Susan Swayze Mrs. Sylvia C. Sweeley '68 and Mr. John Sweeley Mrs. Shirley S. Sweeney Ms. Laura M. Sweet Mr. Donald W. Sweitzer '76 Mr. Richard A. Swickard '99 and Mrs. Laurel Swickard Mr. Charles A. Swindell '65 and Mrs. Ronda Swindell Ms. Moriah J. Swindell '14 Mr. and Mrs. Linwood Sykes III Mr. Marion P. Sykes, Jr. '63 and Mrs. Gwen C. Sykes '62 Mr. Charles R. Sykes '15 T.A. Loving Company Mr. Kenneth L. Tabor and Mrs. Sandra H. Tabor '71 Mr. Shintaro Tahara Mr. Stephen G. Takacs and Mrs. Ann M. Takacs '70 Mr. Daniel R. Talbert '01 Mr. Dennis J. Tally '86 and Mrs. Angela Tally Mr. William E. Tant '49 Mrs. Elizabeth W. Tarbox '60 and Mr. David S. Tarbox Ms. Judith M. Tarlecki Mr. Brian C. Tarr '05 Ms. Elizabeth L. Tart '16 Mrs. Charity L. Tart Ms. Kendall Y. Tart '15 Mr. Whitfield R. Tart '78 and Mrs. Jan Tart Mr. Richard Tart and Mrs. Joan J. Tart '78 Ms. Jami L. Tart Mr. William J. Tate Mr. Joshua M. Tate '12 Mr. Eteuati Taula '97 and Mrs. Sandra Taula Ms. Brooke J. Taxakis Dr. Gary Taylor and Mrs. Ann Taylor '79, '83 Mr. Brian Z. Taylor '91 and Mrs. Melissa Taylor Mr. Harry G. Taylor, Sr. Ms. Mollie P. Taylor Mr. Bruce E. Taylor '70 and Mrs. Cynthia S. Taylor Mr. Leonard W. Taylor '70 and Mrs. Luanne Taylor Ms. Louisa A. Taylor '89 CPT Max E. Taylor USA (Ret.) '73 COL and Mrs. William H. Taylor Mr. William J. Taylor Ms. Patricia P. Taylor '89 Mr. Thomas F. Taylor Ms. Kala C. Taylor Mr. Joshua D. Taylor '96 Mr. Doug Taylor and Mrs. Mary E. Taylor '96 Mr. and Mrs. Edward Taylor II Mrs. Janice E. Taylor Ms. Lauren A. Taylor Ms. Kennedy M. Taylor Mrs. Terri Taylor-Carpenter '79 TE Connectivity Mr. James F. Teachey '64 and Mrs. Elizabeth M. Teachey '64 Mr. and Mrs. John Teague Mr. Joe W. Teague '55 Ms. Teresa R. Teague Mr. Truman T. Teal '87 and Mrs. Pat Teal Ms. Monica Teasley Ms. Deborah G. Temple Mr. Jackson H. Temple, Sr. and Mrs. Janie P. Temple '89 Mrs. Linda C. Temple '69 and Mr. Bobby M. Temple Temple Baptist Church Dr. Robert Terreberry Mr. Donny Terrell

SGTM. Adam C. Terry USMC (ret.) '08 Mr. and Mrs. William E. Tew, Jr. Mr. Allen R. Tew, PA Mr. Thomas W. Tew and Mrs. Barbara D. Tew '70 Mr. Neil A. Thaggard Mr. Robert N. Thigpen '96, '00 Mr. George D. Thigpen '70, '92 and Mrs. Linda B. Thigpen '71 Mr. Kurt A. Thoma Dr. Sarah Z. Thomas Ms. Carol Thomas Mr. Mack J. Thomas II and Mrs. Renee D. Thomas '88 Mr. Ray Thomas and Mrs. Patricia T. Thomas '64 Michelle and Christopher Thomas Mr. and Mrs. Chad M. Thomas Mr. Peter O. Thomas Mr. Raymond Thomas and Mrs. Karen H. Thomas '96 Mrs. Sara H. Thomas '60 Mr. Jeffery K. Thomas Mr. Bobby J. Thomas '74 Mrs. Cassandra H. Thomas Mr. Samuel L. Thomason Dr. John A. Thomason Mr. Steven M. Thomason '15 Mr. and Mrs. Marshall E. Thompson Mr. Tommy Thompson and Rev. Elizabeth M. Thompson '79 Mr. Gary N. Thompson Mrs. Sheila R. Thompson '78 Ms. Elizabeth D. Thompson '10 Mrs. Kelly E. Thompson '07 and Mr. Robert S. Thompson Mr. Marcus R. Thompson '15 Mrs. Faye E. Thompson '02 Rev. Michael V. Thompson D.Min '74, '75 and Mrs. Rebecca P. Thompson '78 Dr. Dorothea K. Thompson Dr. Tyler R. Thompson '15 Mr. Lester H. Thompson and Mrs. Annie N. Thompson '73 Ms. Sharon L. Thompson '17 Mr. Barry W. Thornhill and Dr. Tina H. Thornhill '91 Dr. David W. Thornton Mrs. Lark T. Thornton '79 Hon. Pennie M. Thrower '96 Ms. Susan E. Thrower Mrs. Blythe B. Tillett '66 Mr. N. Carlton Tilley, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. Brian Tillman Mrs. Stephanie M. Tillotson '93 Mr. Daniel R. Tilly Mr. Steve C. Timberlake '74 and Mrs. Ann J. Timberlake '73 Mr. Stephen D. Timberlake '72 Mrs. Caroline M. Timiney '13 Mr. Walter L. Tippett, Sr. '61 Ms. Janis K. Todd Dr. David Tolentino, D.O. Mr. Maxx C. Toler Mr. Earls W. Tolin '55 and Mrs. Mary A. Tolin Mr. Gregory Tompkins '12 Dr. Tara M. Torrence '98 Mr. D. James Toth II Mr. Daniel C. Toton '13 Ms. JuliAnne Towers Mr. George F. Towery '65 and Mrs. Dorann L. Towery '65 Dr. Gordon L. Townsend, Jr. '74 Ms. Rochelle J. Townsend '02 Mr. Jeremy L. Trader '08, '14 Dr. Kassim Traore Mrs. Lynsey N. Trembly Mr. and Mrs. Roy Trest Rev. Daryl W. Trexler '94 and Mrs. Kimberly D. Trexler '95 Mr. and Mrs. George Trimble Ms. Alison Trinkle Rev. Jordan D. Tripp '13, '17 Mr. Gilbert A. Tripp, Jr. '64, '62 and Mrs. Linda E. Tripp '62 Rev. Tommy C. Tripp '78 and Mrs. Sue Tripp C A MP B E L L M AG AZ I N E 85


DONOR HONOR ROLL Mr. John D. Tripp Tri-State Distribution, Inc. Triton High School Mr. Robert L. Troutman '72 and Mrs. Carolyn H. Troutman '72 Dr. Lani True '13 Mr. Nicholas True '06 Dr. Sherry R. Truffin Miss Mary H. Trull '83 Mr. William Tuck Mr. Fred J. Tucker, Jr. '74 Mr. Matthew E. Tucker '76 and Mrs. Suzannah Tucker Dr. Jeremy G. Tucker '14 Mr. David Tucker and Mrs. Cheryl L. Tucker '82 Mr. Quinton B. Tucker '99 and Mrs. Denise Tucker Mr. John W. Tudor '07 Dr. John A. Tumblin, Jr. Ph.D '42 and Mrs. Alice P. Tumblin Dr. Alexander E. Tunnell '03 and Dr. Dana L. Tunnell Mr. Robert Tunney Mr. and Mrs. Marc Tunstall Mr. Tommy Tunstall '62 and Mrs. Jean C. Tunstall '05 Ms. Connie D. Turlington Mr. Joseph L. Turlington '69 and Mrs. Lalia Turlington Mr. Alexander K. Turlington Mr. Jonathan S. Turlington Mr. Kenneth J. Turnage and Mrs. Ada L. Turnage '88 Rev. Alphonse Turner, Jr. '11 and Mrs. Roberta I. Turner Mrs. Martha B. Turner '71 Ms. Lindsey M. Turner '17 Rev. William C. Turner '10, '17 and Dr. Melissa B. Turner '13 Ms. Michelle Turner '03 Dr. Emily A. Turner Dr. Jennifer L. Turner '15 Turquoise Consulting, Inc. Tuscan Blu Italian Restaurant Mr. Jimmie E. Tutor '65 Mr. Steven R. Tygart '95 and Mrs. Terri L. Tygart '96 Mr. John C. Tyler '72 Ms. Jacqueline D. Tylka Mrs. Patti N. Tyndall Mr. Wesley R. Tyndall Mr. Herman F. Tyson Hon. John M. Tyson '79 and Mrs. Kirby T. Tyson Mrs. Beverly Tyson '87 Mr. Larkin N. Tysor Underwood Building Group Unleashed, the Dog & Cat Store Dr. Larry V. Upchurch '90 and Mrs. Nina Upchurch Ms. Jewel G. Upchurch Madsen Mr. Agnor L. Upshaw '85 Mrs. Amber L. Upton U.S. Charitable Gift Trust Mrs. Linda T. Utz '61 Mr. Evan Uwakwe and Dr. Ijeoma A. Uwakwe '09 Mr. Jesse L. Uzzell '75 and Mrs. Ernestine Uzzell Ms. Anna Marie Vagnozzi '16 Ms. Shelly R. Vahue Mrs. Philomina P. Vaidya Dr. Prabhakar N. Vaidya The Vaidya Living Trust Mr. Robert C. Valdillez Esq. '07, '10 Mr. John D. Valdina Mrs. Ashley L. Valley '07 Dr. Maria A. Van Tilburg Mr. and Mrs. Joe Vanasdale Ms. Robena J. Vance Ms. Michaela V. Vance '98 Ms. Marion T. Vandergrift Mr. and Mrs. Steven Vanderwolf Ms. Shannon L. Vandiver '00 Mr. and Mrs. Richard Vannoy Ms. Briana J. Vargas-Gonzalez Ms. Eloisa Vargas-Ruiz 86 SUMMER 2017

Mr. Umesh C. Varma Dr. Richard A. Varriale, Jr. '00 Mr. and Mrs. Varvolis Mr. Zachary T. Vaskalis Mr. Raymond L. Vaughn, Jr. '66 and Mrs. Thetis Vaughn Ms. Mary Veit Ms. Rosa G. Velazquez Mr. and Mrs. Daniel M. Venese Dr. John H. Viehe Miss Juanita B. Villa '81 Village Draft House Village Pharmacy, LLC Mr. Alton G. Vincent '68 and Mrs. Charlotte R. Vincent Dr. Guy D. Vitaglione Mr. and Mrs. Karl Vonderohe Mr. Lance A. Vosburgh Mr. and Mrs. Ward Vosburgh Mrs. Susan S. Vuncannon '68 W. Mark Cumalander, P.A. Ms. Sarah R. Wade Mr. John M. Waff '68 Mr. Jonathan W. Waggett '14 Mr. Michael Wainscott and Mrs. Kelly G. Wainscott '94 Mr. William H. Waits '69 Wake Forest Baptist Church Rev. and Mrs. Bill Wakefield Mr. William D. Wakefield Ms. Janice L. Wakefield Ms. Brenda J. Walden Mr. Harvey W. Walden Mr. Ricky O. Walden Dr. Donna E. Waldron Dr. Sandra M. Walker '66 Mrs. Beverly J. Walker '69 Ms. Cheryl K. Walker Mr. Graham M. Walker '15 Ms. Jordan E. Walker '17 Mr. and Mrs. Mitford Walker Miss Sarah J. Walker '78, '84 Mr. John B. Walker '06 and Mrs. Patricia S. Walker '07 Mr. and Mrs. Edwin L. Walker Ms. Wilma Walker Mr. William M. Wall '47 Mr. and Mrs. Charles L. Wallace Mr. Robert L. Wallace Mr. and Mrs. McLain Wallace, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. E. Gregory Wallace Mrs. Sue C. Wallace '88 and Mr. John Wallace Mr. Richard B. Wallace '60 and Mrs. Becky B. Wallace Mr. Richard D. Wallace '92 and Mrs. Fredda Wallace Mr. Edward B. Wallace COL John W. Wallace, Jr. '71 and Mrs. Ann Wallace Walmart Ms. Amanda D. Walsh Mr. and Mrs. Donald D. Walter Mr. Jerry H. Walters, Jr. '96 and Mrs. Kristi Walters Mr. Larry Walters and Mrs. Jeanette W. Walters '75 Mrs. Stephanie B. Walters '05 Mr. Richard D. Walters '70 and Mrs. Cheryl H. Walters '72 Mr. Jason S. Wangelin and Mrs. Bridgette J. Wangelin '02 Mr. Wilbur C. Ward and Mrs. Joyce D. Ward '61 Ms. Kimberly B. Ward Mr. William Ward Mr. Tucker Ward and Mrs. Jimmie M. Ward '51 Mr. William E. Ward Ward Farms Mr. and Mrs. Christopher Warner Mr. Alex Warner '65 Mr. Robert Warner and Mrs. Marilyn R. Warner '99 Mr. Austin W. Warner '11 Hon. David M. Warren Mr. Kimrel B. Warren and Mrs. Alice S. Warren '74

Mr. Marshall A. Warren '61 and Mrs. Sue T. Warren '66 Warrenton Baptist Church Mr. Wake L. Warthen '74 and Mrs. Emily Warthen Mrs. Marjorie B. Washburn '53 and Mr. Thomas Washburn Mrs. Sharon A. Washington Mr. George M. Waters '70 and Mrs. Joyce Waters Mr. Andy D. Waters '87 Miss Wanda E. Watkins '79 Mr. Kenneth M. Watkins '08 Ms. Lacey P. Watkins Mr. James D. Watlington '85 Mr. Freddie R. Watson Mrs. Kathryn H. Watson '62 Mrs. Marietta G. Watson '51 Rev. Mitchell B. Watson '89 and Mrs. Donna Watson Ms. Judith U. Watts/Maness '70 Dr. Kathryn T. Wear '06 and Mr. Damon Wear Mr. Jerry D. Weathers '64 and Mrs. Anna K. Weathers Mr. H. H. Weaver '68 and Mrs. Charlotte Weaver Mr. Jason G. Weaver '93 and Mrs. Dana M. Weaver '94 Dr. Debora J. Weaver Mrs. Victoria K. Weaver Mr. and Mrs. Don W. Webb Mr. Van Wyck Webb, Jr. Mrs. Barbara B. Webb '61 Mr. James W. Webb '61 Ms. Alice M. Webb Mr. Christopher J. Weber '12 Mr. David M. Webster and Mrs. Tammy L. Webster '87 Mrs. Jeanette W. Webster '84 Mr. Michael E. Weddington Mr. and Mrs. Daniel Weddington Mrs. Judy K. Weddington and Mr. William K. Weddington '90 Mr. William K. Weddington '90 and Mrs. Judy K. Weddington Mr. Ray A. Weeks '66 and Mrs. Joy L. Weeks Mrs. Mary A. Weeks Mr. Walter T. Weeks '81 Mrs. Lola G. Weikel '67 Mrs. Meredith E. Weipert '01 and Mr. James T. Weipert '01 Miss Mary A. Weiss '85 Mr. and Mrs. Matthew Weiss Mr. and Mrs. Chris Weiss Dr. Matthew R. Weist '94 and Mrs. Christy Weist Mr. Judson A. Welborn '98 Mr. and Mrs. Arnold Welch, Sr. Mrs. Hazel H. Welch '70* Ms. Pamela Welker Mr. William B. Wellons, Jr. '72 and Mrs. Clara Wellons Mrs. Linda B. Wells '68 Wells Class Dr. Catherine L. Wente Mr. David I. Werner '12 Mr. James D. West Mr. and Mrs. Thomas West, Jr. Mrs. Susan E. West Ms. Veronica L. West '17 Mr. Jonathan L. West Mr. Mark D. West and Mrs. Janet H. West '90 Mrs. Pamela B. Westbrook '85 and Mr. Dennis Westbrook Mr. Timothy A. Westbrook and Mrs. Debra B. Westbrook '77 Mr. James E. Wharton '65 and Mrs. Karen K. Wharton Mr. Marshall G. Wheeler '94 and Mrs. Kimberly D. Wheeler Justice Willis P. Whichard Dr. Andrew L. White '11 Mr. Wherry L. White Rev. and Mrs. Denton White Mr. Herbert J. White '91 and Mrs. Darci J. White '91

Mr. James M. White III '82, '87 and Mrs. Deneen White Dr. and Mrs. Mark T. White Mr. and Mrs. Ronald B. White Mr. Stephen M. White and Mrs. Elaine S. White '70 Mrs. Mildred P. White '63 Rev. Roger A. White '64* Mr. Christopher B. White '09 Mrs. Debra D. White '80 Ms. Sharon G. White Mr. George F. Whitfield Dr. and Mrs. H. Moran Whitley Ms. Lois G. Whitley Ms. Brooke A. Whitley '11 Mr. Travis R. Whitley '64 and Mrs. Jackie Whitley Mr. and Mrs. Gary Whitman Ms. Kelly C. Whitman '07 Ms. Leah B. Whitt '11, '14 Rev. Alta E. Whitt '04 Mrs. Patricia W. Whitt '69 Rev. Kimberly A. Whitted '14 Ms. Hannah M. Whitten '14 Mr. Steven P. Wicker '71 Mrs. Phyllis B. Wicker '71 Mrs. Heather M. Wicker '99 and Mr. David P. Wicker Ms. Elizabeth E. Wickham '05 Mr. John G. Wickham '74 and Mrs. Linda Wickham Mr. Gordon Widenhouse Mr. John R. Wiggins and Mrs. Jennifer J. Wiggins '74 Mrs. Bonnie J. Wiggs '80 Mr. G. Reynolds Wilborn '57 and Mrs. Terry Wilborn Dr. and Mrs. Aldridge Wilder, Jr. Wildwood Garden Club Ms. Christy E. Wilhelm '02 Mr. Robert E. Wilhoit '79 Mr. and Mrs. M. Scott Wilhoit Mr. Richard C. Wilkins Hon. Charles W. Wilkinson, Jr. '61 Mr. Ray E. Willard Ms. Holly B. Willenbrock '17 Mr. David Williams and Mrs. Shelly K. Williams '02 Mr. Rickey K. Williams '81 Mr. and Mrs. Victor Williams, Jr. Mr. Edward B. Williams, Jr. '71 and Mrs. Thelma Williams Mr. Lonnie B. Williams, Jr. and Mrs. Catherine L. Williams '81 Dr. Meredith T. Williams Mr. David Williams and Dr. Luanne K. Williams '90 Mr. Cecil H. Williams, Jr. '53 and Mrs. Mary Williams Mr. and Mrs. Harry K. Williams Mrs. Winifred J. Williams '72 Mr. Jason M. Williams Mr. Douglas C. Williams '81 Mr. and Mrs. Mac Williams Ms. Lisa P. Williams Mrs. Michelle R. Williams '87 Ms. Cornelia L. Williams Rev. Peg N. Williams and Dr. William K. Williams '73 Dr. William K. Williams '73 and Rev. Peg N. Williams Mrs. Carolyn W. Williams '65 and Mr. Richard Williams Rev. Douglas G. Williams '71 and Mrs. Jenny Willilams Mr. Gary S. Williams '71 Mr. Joseph L. Williams '11, '13 Ms. Mattea J. Williams '17 Mrs. Nancy P. Williams '51 and Mr. George Williams Rev. Nicky R. Williams '05 Dr. Kenneth L. Williams '88 and Mrs. Colleen Williams Ms. Shana M. Williams Ms. Shaquasha K. Williams '17 Mr. Simone T. Williams Mr. Harry Williamson, Jr. '69 and Mrs. Martha L. Williamson

Mr. F. Michael Williard '71 Mr. Freddie Williford Ms. Tonya L. Willingham Mr. Owen H. Willis '71 Mr. Colon Willoughby, Jr. '79 Mr. John A. Willoughby, Jr. '85 and Mrs. Ismae L. Willoughby '86 Mr. John A. Willoughby, Sr. '66 LTC Stephen T. Wills '99 Dr. Dustin T. Wilson '07 Mr. William J. Wilson '57 and Mrs. Rebecca S. Wilson Mr. Gray Wilson Ms. Margaret F. Wilson Ms. Logan D. Wilson '15 Mr. Lee O. Wilson '64 Dr. Michelle R. Wilson '95 and Mr. Gary Wilson Ms. Shannon M. Wilson '16 Mrs. Mary H. Wilson '84 Mr. Nathaniel Wilson III '98 Mr. Robert A. Wilson Ms. Patricia B. Winecoff '92 Mrs. Eva L. Winesett Ms. Nicole M. Winget Mr. Andrew J. Wingo '98 Mr. Lacy W. Winstead, Jr. '64 Mr. Robert L. Winston '64 and Mrs. Lynda L. Winston '65 Mr. Allan W. Winter Mr. Jeremy J. Wisdo Dr. Peter Wish '67 and Mrs. Judith L. Wish '66 Mr. James E. Witherspoon, Jr. '80 Mr. Patrick J. Wittekind Mr. and Mrs. Joel R. Wohlfeil Mr. and Mrs. Lee Wollett Mr. and Mrs. Howard Womack Ms. Felicia D. Womack '03 Mr. Bobby Womble Mr. Michael P. Womble '67 and Mrs. Joan Womble Mrs. Judith Womble Mr. Siu-Ki Wong Mr. and Mrs. Jerry Wood, Sr. Mr. Jay Wood, Jr. '84 and Mrs. Tammy L. Wood Dr. R. Craig Wood '70 and Mrs. Judith Wood Dr. William H. Wood, Jr. '93 and Mrs. Rhonda Wood Mr. Michael C. Wood '65 and Mrs. Marilyn Wood Ms. Stacey S. Wood '93 Mrs. Vara M. Wood '55 and Mr. Dyrl Wood LTC John W. Woodard '83 and Mrs. Elizabeth N. Woodard '84 Mr. Roy L. Woodard '68 and Mrs. Becky Woodard Miss Luann R. Woodard '77 Ms. Jessica G. Woodburn Mr. Brad A. Woodbury Mr. Edmeston A. Woodley '13 Mrs. Jeane W. Woodley '62 Mr. Alan D. Woodlief, Jr. '94 and Mrs. Wendy B. Woodlief Mr. Nicholas E. Woods '11 and Mrs. Chelsea W. Woods '10 Ms. Camille C. Woodson Mr. Cleveland C. Woodson Dr. Donna L. Woolard Mr. James M. Woolf, Jr. '70 Mr. Adonis Wooten '93 Mr. and Mrs. Samuel Wornom III Mr. Hubert T. Worthington, Jr. '73 Ms. Helen Wrenn Ms. Jessica K. Wrenn Mr. William G. Wright '99 Mrs. Ann S. Wright '53 Ms. Caitlin H. Wright '14 Mr. Tyler J. Wright Mr. Travis A. Wright '96 Mr. Manuel L. Wright Ms. Shirley I. Wright Rev. Christopher A. Wroten '82 and Mrs. Rebecca J. Wroten '84 Mr. Scott F. Wyatt

*Deceased


Miss Karen E. Wyatt '84, '85 Ms. Joan J. Wynn '71 Xerox Foundation Mr. Stan Yancey '81 and Mrs. Elaine Rohlik Drs. C.C.Yang and Yu M. Hsiao Dr. Jin-Kyung L. Yang '09, '10 Ms. Nouchee Yang

Ms. Carola Yarborough Mr. Robert P. Yoder '09 Mr. Albert B. Yopp '16 Ms. Portia M. York Mrs. Jessica L. Yost '11 and Mr. James W. Yost '10 Dr. Taek H. You Mr. Timothy M. Young '00

Mr. Christopher J. Young '00 Mr. Robert L. Young '71 and Mrs. Janice J. Young '71 Mrs. Joyce D. Young '47 Ms. Audrey T. Young '05 Mr. and Mrs. Jon A. Yusko Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Yusko Mrs. Gail L. Zadell '83

Dr. Brenda R. Zagar Ms. Nicole L. Zawol Ms. Malia M. Zaytoun '11 Zebulon Baptist Church Ms. Mary J. Zellner Mr. Sidong Zhang Mr. Wei Zhou '00, '97 and Mrs. Iris Zhou

Dr. Hong Zhu Rev. Steve Zimmerman Mr. Joshua M. Zivalich Mr. Abel L. Zuniga '96 and Mrs. Maria Zuniga

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 and universities within the state. A. Hope Williams AC Corporation Adirondack Solutions, Inc. Ads Infinitum Alwinell Foundation Amanda and Harold Livingston Anne Lloyd Apogee Telecom, Inc. AT&T Foundation BB&T Charitable Foundation BCWH Architecture BDO, USA, LLP Bernhardt Furniture Company Best Commercial Development Biltmore Farms, LLC BlackBoard Transact Blue Cross Blue Shield of NC Blumenthal Foundation Brady Services Brooks T. Raiford Brown, Edwards & Company, LLP Carlos Sanchez Carolina Foods, Inc. Carolinas IT Casino Sander Catering Works CBIZ Retirement Plan Services Cenergistic, Inc.

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Cherry Bekaert, LLP Christine Motherwell Coca-Cola Bottling Co. Consolidated College Foundation, Inc. CommScope, Inc. Corporate Risk Management, Inc. CORT CRI CPAs Deloitte Services, LP Delores Sides Direct Energy Dominion Power NC Donald McNeill Duke Energy Foundation Durwood S. Laughinghouse Dynamic Campus E.T. Rollins, Jr. and Frances P. Rollins Foundation Elizabeth L. Riley Emily Baranello Enterprise Holdings Foundation Fidelity Investments First American Equipment Finance Frances G. Fontaine Garris Evans Lumber Co., Inc. George Foundation George Ratchford Glenn E. and Addie G. Ketner Family

Foundation Grady-White Boats, Inc. Gwenn H. Hobbs Harvard Smith Honeywell Hornwood, Inc. HRP Associates International Textile Group, Inc. Jack Frost James E. and Mary Z. Bryan Foundation James E. Brown, Jr. James E. Ratchford Jeff and Jan Stoddard John M. Shubert Joseph Dave Foundation Karen Calhoun Koonce, Wooten, and Haywood, LLP Leslie Hayes M&J Foundation Margaret Wren de St. Aubin Marsh & McLennan Agency- Mid Atlantic Martin Marietta Materials Mary Thornton McGuireWoods, LLP McMillan Pazdan Smith, LLC MetLife Foundation

Metz Culinary Management Millennium Advisory Services, Inc. Mitchell W. Perry Mount Olive Pickle Company, Inc. N.C. Electric Membership Corporation NCFI Polyurethanes Nichole A. Labott Nicole Alexander Norfolk Southern Foundation Pamla H. Pekrun Patti Gillenwater Pfizer Philip L. Van Every Foundation PNC Financial Services Group, Inc. PricewaterhouseCoopers, LLP Protus3 PSNC Energy - A SCANA Co. R.A. Bryan Foundation, Inc. Rafter, Inc. Rebecca Leggett Sageview SAS Institute Sherrod and Margaret Salsbury Foundation Southco Distributing Company Spectrum Enterprises Stephenson Millwork Company, Inc.

Stonecutter Foundation, Inc. SunTrust Banks, Inc. Tammy Thurman The A.B. Carter, Inc. Fund The Bolick Foundation The Borden Fund, Inc. The C.F. Sauer Company The Council of Independent Colleges The Dickson Foundation The Eddie and Jo Allison Smith Family Foundation, Inc. The Universal Leaf Foundation Theo Davis Printing Thomas R. West TIAA UPS Educational Endowment Fund Verity Asset Management W. Trent Ragland, Jr. Foundation Wells Fargo Foundation WestRock William H. Bryan William Salmon Womble Carlyle Sandridge & Rice Wren Foundation, Inc. Wyatt-Quarles Seed Company

C A MP B E L L M AG AZ I N E 87


FROM THE EDITOR

It was 50 years ago today ...

M

y dad introduced me to The Beatles. He’d play their “lighter” stuff for me when I was barely walking — kidfriendly songs like “Yellow Submarine,” “Lucy in the Sky with Diamonds” and “Octopus’ Garden” that were as full of colorful imagery as they were musical innovation.

The culture on campus echoed in some of the writing for Campbell’s campus newspaper at the time, Creek Pebbles, which published an editorial in May 1968, “What was a hippie?” It read: “The flowers of power have wilted, the drug turned to transcendental meditation, and a lot of hippies have gone back to the straight world.”

Those songs always stuck with me, even when my musical tastes became as weird as my hormones in my early teens. I was in college when I rediscovered them — Sgt. Pepper’s Lonely Hearts Club Band and Magical Mystery Tour CDs I “borrowed” from my dad to help the drive back to campus seem not so long one weekend. I’ve been hooked ever since, well aware that there’s nothing unique about being a Beatles fan, but also very aware of the important role I have in sharing this music with future generations.

Ferguson, a writer and editor for Creek Pebbles in ’67 and ’68, stood out. He focused solely on music and entertainment, offering surprisingly mature insight on that era of music and interviewing big names in the industry as they toured the state or played on campus. His writing also “countered the culture” at Campbell, whether it was a line about the “sexual image” of the late James Dean or the rebellious songwriting of Bob Dylan.

This year marked the 50th anniversary of Sgt. Pepper’s, arguably The Beatles’ most influential album and the topper to many a “best albums ever” list (I’ll take Abbey Road, but that’s not important). I missed out on this era of music —which included Jimi Hendrix, The Rolling Stones at their best, Motown and much, much more — born roughly 10 years later in time for disco and the 80s.But I’m no less fascinated by it. And as someone who regularly dives into Campbell University history — whether it’s for stories on a legendary basketball camp or the mysterious origin of a mascot — it was inevitable that I’d one day see how The Beatles fit into Campbell’s story. This is where I say, “Thank you, Michael Ferguson.” But first, allow me to set the scene. There were 490,000 American troops fighting in South Vietnam in 1967, and the anti-war movement back home was reaching its peak. College campuses across the nation provided some of the largest protest gatherings of the time. The growing Campbell College campus in Buies Creek, however, remained mostly quiet that year. That fall, the campus rolled out the welcome mat for the school’s third president in 80 years, Norman A. Wiggins, the last man you’d ever associate with long hair, fringe vests and flower power. He was conservative, in other words, and wasn’t what you’d call tolerant of rebellion — instead believing students and faculty should join in “mutual respect and join responsibilities … to get on with the true business of education.” Wiggins even doubled down on the nation’s growing antiwar sentiment by establishing Campbell’s now nationally renowned ROTC program in 1971. 88 SUMMER 2017

As you can imagine, Ferguson invoked the Beatles a lot in his writing. They had changed the world only a few years earlier and had just entered their “stop touring and focus on the art” phase of their pop culture reign. Ferguson interviewed Paul Anka, the crooner known for hits like “Diana” and “Put Your Head on My Shoulder,” before his concert at Campbell in October 1968. Sporting a pin-striped suit, thick sideburns and John Lennon-inspired granny sunglasses, Ferguson asked Anka about the Beatles and their impact on pop music. Anka was surprisingly open: “They write great songs… unfortunately, they may let their personal lives get in the way.” Anka criticized Lennon’s inability to handle fame, but praised Paul McCartney, saying, “He seems to stabilize the group.” A few months later, Ferguson reviewed the animated Beatles film, “Yellow Submarine,” writing, “While its story is predictable, the pure sensory delight of the film makes it a remarkable achievement. It’s a happy film that transports you back to the joys of childhood.” I’ve tried to find Michael Ferguson, hoping for a larger article on his time at Campbell. As someone who has taken pride in his ability to track down even the hardest-to-find alumni, I’m embarrassed to say I have failed. And it’s a shame, too. In my research, I became a big fan of Ferguson’s writing. If he’s out there, I hope to tell him that. And further tell his story.

Billy Liggett is Director of News & Publications at Campbell University and editor of Campbell Magazine.


FROM THE VAULT

In his first Homecoming as Campbell College president, Norman A. Wiggins donned a freshman beanie as he spoke to Camel Soccer fans from the back of a flatbed trailer for the 1967 bonfire. Wiggins served Campbell for 36 years as president before retiring in 2003. This fall marks the 50th anniversary of his inauguration.

M AG AZIN E .CAMP BE LL.EDU

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90 SUMMER 2017

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