2013 Edition

Chronicle of Scholarly Activity 2013
Finding
Father
Christmas
Campbell Accolades - 1
Inside: Dean’s Excellence & Alumni Award Winners
2 - Chronicle of Scholarly Activity 2012
From the President
For 126 years, Campbell University’s legacy has been defined
by our students and their accomplishments and contribution
to society. Our legacy is also carried by our faculty, who have
not only molded the young minds who’ve gone on to great
things but have also contributed to their fields of study through
dedicated research and work outside of the classroom.
The 2013 edition of Accolades celebrates the many published
works, presentations, earned grants and research and teaching
excellence by our distinguished faculty.
We are again justifiably proud of the scholarly attainments of
our faculty. In addition to the hundreds of accolades from our
professors and administration listed in this publication, we also
highlight the recipients of our annual Dean’s Excellence Award
winners and our two recipients of the D.P. Russ Jr. and Walter
S. Jones Sr. Alumni Awards for research and teaching excellence.
Our faculty made waves nationally and beyond during the 2012-2013 academic year.
Religion professor Adam English’s book, “The Saint Who Would Be Santa Claus,”
launched him on a national media tour during the holiday season. Divinity professor
David Moffitt penned a book that earned him a national honor for best doctoral or first
post-doctoral work on God and Spirituality for scholars 35 and younger.
Both men are featured prominently in this publication.
Once again, I invite you to explore this annual report and discover for yourself
the talented men and women who make up the distinguished faculty of Campbell
University. You’ll find that their scholarly achievements are in direct correlation to their
performance in the classroom. That combination creates a strong and vibrant academic
community at Campbell University — where faith and learning excel.
Jerry M. Wallace
President
Campbell Accolades - 3
4 - Chronicle of Scholarly Activity 2012
The D.P. Russ Jr. and Walter S. Jones Sr.
Alumni Award for Research Excellence
Dr. Christopher Havran
Professor known worldwide for his research of Hawaiian plants
By Billy Liggett
A
ssistant professor of biology
Christopher Havran is not only
considered a top research professor
at Campbell University … he’s
producing top research students as
well.
Havran was honored for not only his
continued work on plant physiology
and biogeography, but for his
extensive research on the ecology and
evolution of native Hawaiian plant
species.
For two years in a row, a Campbell
University student has been named
one of only 25 students nationwide to
receive a Young Botanist Award from
the Botanical Society of America. The
2012 winner was Lauren Stutts, now a
graduate student at UNC Wilmington
seeking her masters in biology. This
year’s winner was K.T. Payne, who
graduated from Campbell this spring
after assisting Havran on three
research projects, several presentations
and a publication in a scientific
journal.
He’s known in Hawaii particularly
for his work on violets, having been
published in journals and traveled to
present his work around the world.
Payne, too, will work toward her
masters this year — she’ll be attending
UNC Wilmington to continue
studying plant biology.
“It feels amazing,” Havran said of his
students’ success. “I have felt honored
that each of my research students —
not just [Stutts and Payne] — have
chosen to study plant biology with
me.”
His students aren’t the only ones
receiving high honors these days.
This spring, Havran was named the
recipient of Campbell University’s
D.P. Russ Jr. and Walter S. Jones
Sr. Alumni Award for Research
Excellence, now in its second year
(Dr. Richard Drew of the College
of Pharmacy & Health Sciences
was the inaugural winner in 2012).
“I am particularly interested in
studying how plants have dispersed
to the Hawaiian Islands and how
they have evolved after their
establishment,” Havran said. “I like
to try to apply what I’ve learned
about a plant’s evolutionary history to
conservation efforts.”
Through Campbell’s Study Abroad
program, Havran and his students
have been able to travel to Hawaii to
study plants in their natural habitat
and bring materials back to Buies
Creek for analysis. This past year, the
group surveyed an endemic Hawaiian
tree, Planchonella sandwicensis, to
study its variables in morphology.
They studied the variation of its fruits,
leaves and leaf anatomy and presented
their findings at the annual meeting
of the Association of Southeastern
Biologists in Charleston, W.Va.
Havran and his students also recently
collaborated with students from Fort
Lewis College in Durango, Colo., on
another project.
Last fall, Havran was contacted by a
colleague from the Hawaiian Plant
Extinction Prevention Program to
determine the taxonomy of a small
population of violets on the island of
Oahu. With help from Campbell’s
Faculty Summer Research Grant,
Havran spent 10 days in Oahu
studying the violets in remote areas of
the Koolau Mountains. He’s currently
working to analyze the data from that
trip.
“He is definitely my greatest
inspiration,” said Payne, who credits
Havran for her national honor. “You
have to have a good research mentor,
and I have to give props to Dr.
Havran. Campbell may not be not
known as a research school; but, at the
same time, it is a research school if you
talk to the right people.”
Adam English, who presented
Havran’s award during a ceremony in
April, said what put Havran at the top
of the research class was his willingness
to involve his students in his work,
“requiring them to present their
research at regional meetings as well as
co-authoring papers with them.”
Havran said he was honored to receive
the award, also crediting his students
for his success.
“I love working with students
to investigate plant biology,” he
said, “and am honored to receive
recognition for my work at Campbell.”
The D. P. Russ Jr. and Walter S. Jones
Sr. Alumni Awards for Teaching
Excellence and Research Excellence are
university-wide awards, not limited
to any one school or department. The
recipients were nominated by faculty
colleagues from across the university.
Campbell Accolades - 5
6 - Chronicle of Scholarly Activity 2012
The D.P. Russ Jr. and Walter S. Jones Sr.
Alumni Award for Research Excellence
Salvatore Mercogliano
Former Merchant Marine known for his innovative approach to history
By Billy Liggett
I
n 2012, Campbell University
history professor Salvatore
Mercogliano was chosen by the
student body as “professor of the year.”
In 2013, his colleagues followed suit.
Mercogliano — who teaches on
Campbell’s main campus in addition
to extended campuses at Fort Bragg
and Camp Lejeune — was the
recipient of the second annual D.P.
Russ Jr. and Walter S. Jones Sr.
Alumni Award for Teaching Excellence
in the spring. Known for his engaging
style and success in getting history
majors and non-majors interested
in their studies and as an innovator
using technology in his classrooms,
Mercogliano said he was “shocked”
when he heard news of the honor.
“After winning the SGA award
last year, I wasn’t sure that could
be topped,” he said. “It’s especially
important to me to be acknowledged
by both students and faculty. I run
a class that isn’t an easy class by
any measure ... in fact, it’s pretty
tough and my students are usually
challenged. But these honors vindicate
[that approach] ... it tells me what
I’m doing is helping students and
influencing them in their careers.”
A native of Massapequa, N.Y.,
Mercogliano studied marine history
at the State University of New York
Maritime College, graduating in 1989.
In 1997, he earned his Master of
Arts in maritime history and nautical
archeology from East Carolina
University, and in 2004 (two years
after joining Campbell as a part-time
professor), he received his Ph.D. in
military and naval history from the
University of Alabama.
Along the way, Mercogliano was a
U.S. Merchant Marine (men and
women who operate civilian-owned
ships to deliver good and services
in and out of the U.S.) and a fulltime firefighter. After sailing every
ocean and stepping foot on six of the
world’s seven continents, he decided
he wanted to share his love of the sea
and his love of history by becoming a
teacher.
He became an adjunct professor of
history and engineering at the U.S.
Merchant Marine Academy in New
York in 2008, and joined the faculty
at Campbell University full time in
2010.
“I consider myself a maritime
historian, and I love linking history
to the sea and the interconnectivity of
the oceans,” said Mercogliano, who
has taught courses at the West Point
Academy. “The seas have served as a
bridge for technology, language and
culture.”
His favorite era of American history
is the American Revolution, a time he
said set the traditions and roles of the
United States that still stand today. As
for world history ... Mercogliano has
many favorites — namely whichever
period he’s enamored with at the time.
He’s been called “innovative” in his
approach because of his common use
of non-traditional methods of teaching
history. Mercogliano will incorporate
YouTube in his assignments to mix
things up with the litany of reading
and writing assignments his students
are expected to produce. Studying
Ancient Greece, his students were
asked to watch the over-the-top
Hollywood film “300” and find
elements of the film that are true to
history (and the many that are not).
“I’m not someone who is big on the
who, what, when and how of history,”
he said. “I’m big on the ‘why’ of
history. Why did these events happen?
We do a lot of analyzing ... and
sometimes watching a video makes
this easier.”
As proven by the accolades from both
his colleagues and his students the past
two years, Mercogliano has made an
impact at Campbell. Mark Steckbeck,
associate professor of business and
a member of selection committee
responsible for this year’s awards,
said Mercogliano’s experience, his
outside-of-the-box approach and his
personality have made him a valuable
member of the faculty.
“We are indeed glad and proud
to have him here at Campbell
University.”
Campbell Accolades - 7
8 - Chronicle of Scholarly Activity 2012
Editorial Work
Dr. Michael L. Adams
Newsletter Review
Textbook Review
Book Proposal Review
Associate Professor of Pharmaceutical Sciences
College of Pharmacy & Health Sciences
Basic Concepts in Medicinal Chemistry, by Marc W.
Harrold and Robin M. Zavod (American Society
of Health-System Pharmacists).
“Medication Safety Alert,” Institute for Safe
Medication Practices, 2012-2013.
Book proposal for Pharmacy Operations Resource
Book (Jones & Bartlett Publishing), October
2012.
Dr. Connie L. Barnes
Abstract Review
Manuscript Review
Dr. James B. Groce III
Professor of Pharmacy Practice
College of Pharmacy & Health Sciences
“Do Patients with a Rare Disease Use Pharmacists
for Medications,” Journal of the American
Pharmacists Association.
Dr. Elizabeth D. Blue
Assistant Professor of Chemistry
College of Arts & Sciences
Manuscript Review
Research article, Journal of Chemical Education,
January 2013.
Dr. Brad Chazotte
Research Associate Professor of Pharmaceutical Sciences
College of Pharmacy & Health Sciences
Textbook Review
“Chapter 18: Electron Transport and Oxidative
Phosphorylation,” Fundamentals of Biochemistry:
Life at the Molecular Level, 2013, 4th ed., by
Donald Voet, Judith Voet and Charlotte Pratt (J.
Wiley & Sons).
Dr. Robert M. Cisneros Jr.
Associate Professor of Pharmacy Practice
College of Pharmacy & Health Sciences
Article Review
“Online Debates to Enhance Critical Thinking
in Pharmacotherapy,” American Journal of
Pharmaceutical Education, November 2012.
Article Review
“Prospective Measurement of a Problem Based
Learning Course Sequence,” American Journal of
Pharmaceutical Education, June 2012.
American Public Health Association, March
2013.
Professor of Pharmacy Practice
College of Pharmacy & Health Sciences
Board
Editorial Board, Clotcare Online Resource.
Board
Board of Directors, the National Certification
Board for Anticoagulation Providers (NCBAP).
Article Review
“Evaluation of Differences in Percentage of INRs
in Range Between Pharmacist-led and Physicianled Anticoagulation Management Service (AMS),”
Journal of the American Pharmacists Association,
March 5, 2013.
Dr. Karen Guzman
Associate Professor of Biology
College of Arts & Sciences
Textbook Review
Cell: A Molecular Approach, 6th ed., by Geoffrey
M. Cooper and Robert E. Hausman (Sinauer
Publishing), 2013.
Textbook Review
Chapter 20, Campbell Biology, 9th ed., by Jane B.
Reece, Lisa A. Urry, Michael L. Cain, Steven A.
Wasserman, Peter V. Minorsky, Robert B. Jackson
(Pearson Publishing), 2012.
Committee
Newsletter Editor and Chair of Publications
Committee, N.C. Academy of Science, 20122013.
Campbell Accolades - 9
Dr. J. Christopher Havran
Workshop Review
Article Review
Committee
Assistant Professor of Biology
College of Arts & Sciences
Research article, PLOS ONE.
Article Review
Research article, Journal of Plant Research.
Dr. W. Glenn Jonas Jr.
Charles B. Howard Professor of Religion
Chair of the Department of Religion and Philosophy
College of Arts & Sciences
Board
Editorial Board, Baptist History and Heritage.
Dr. Barry A. Jones
Associate Professor of Old Testament and Hebrew
Campbell Divinity School
Translation
Translated A Hora Branca, by Maria Helena
Azevedo (Chiado Editora), 2010.
Dr. Cameron H. J. Jorgenson
Assistant Professor of Christian Theology and Ethics
Campbell Divinity School
Board
Editorial Board, Review & Expositor.
Dr. Victoria Kaprielian
Associate Dean for Faculty Development and
Medical Education
Campbell University School of Osteopathic Medicine
Peer Review
Received Outstanding Reviewer Award from
MedEdPORTAL Publications, Association of
American Medical Colleges, November 2012.
Dr. Elizabeth H. Lange
Associate Professor of Exercise Science
College of Arts & Sciences
Manuscript Review
Quest Journal, Fall 2012.
Manuscript Review
Journal of Experiential Education, Fall 2012/Spring
2013.
10 - Chronicle of Scholarly Activity 2012
International Conference, Association for
Experiential Education, November 2013.
Research Advisory Committee, Association for
Challenge Course Technology, 2012-13.
Dr. D. Byron May
Professor of Pharmacy Practice
Chair of Pharmacy Practice
College of Pharmacy & Health Sciences
Manuscript Review
Annals of Pharmacotherapy
Manuscript Review
American Journal of Pharmaceutical Education
Dr. Salvatore R. Mercogliano
Assistant Professor of History
College of Arts & Sciences
Judge
History panel, Big South Undergraduate Research
Symposium, High Point University, April 6,
2013.
Dr. Ann Marie Nye
Associate Professor of Pharmacy Practice
College of Pharmacy & Health Sciences
Board
Editorial Review Board, The Consultant
Pharmacist.
Dr. Ann M. Ortiz
Associate Professor of Spanish
College of Arts & Sciences
Peer Review
Reviewed and proofread translation of handbook
for Harnett County Parents as Teachers.
Dr. Melanie W. Pound
Associate Professor of Pharmacy Practice
College of Pharmacy & Health Sciences
Article Review
Journal of the European Academy of Dermatology
and Venereology.
Dr. Michael Ray Smith
Professor of Communication Studies
College of Arts & Sciences
Guest Editor
Teaching Journalism and Mass Communication:
A Journal, published by Small Programs Interest
Group of the Association for Education in
Journalism and Mass Communication, 2013.
Judge
Better Newspaper Contest, Michigan Newspaper
Association, 2012.
Dr. William C. Stagner
Professor of Pharmaceutical Sciences
Director of Campbell Center for Analysis of
Pharmaceutical Biomaterial
College of Pharmacy & Health Sciences
Manuscript Review
European Journal of Pharmaceutics and
Biopharmaceutics.
Claudia M. Williams
Assistant Professor of Biological Sciences
College of Arts & Sciences
Textbook Review
Five chapters of Essentials of Anatomy and
Physiology, by Kenneth S. Saladin and Robin K.
McFarland (McGraw-Hill), 2013.
Dr. Yu-Mong H. Yang
Professor of Business and Economics
Lundy-Fetterman School of Business
Textbook Review
Principles of Economics, by Dirk Mateer and
Lee Coppock (W.W. Norton & Company),
forthcoming.
Dr. Taek H. You
Assistant Professor of Biology
College of Arts & Sciences
Peer Review
Scientific articles, undergraduate journal
Exploration.
Judge
Poster presentations, Big South Undergraduate
Research Symposium, High Point University,
April 6, 2013.
Textbook Review
Law and Ethics for the Health Professions, 6th ed.,
by Karen Judson and Carlene Harrison (McGrawHill), 2012.
Campbell Accolades - 11
The
Authority
on Saint
Nicholas
Religion professor Adam English made
national waves with his book on the history
of the man who inspired today’s Santa Claus
By Cherry Crayton
Photos By Bennett Scarborough
12 - Chronicle of Scholarly Activity 2012
Campbell Accolades - 13
English’s book on the historical figure who inspired Santa Claus
has provided a ‘historical bridge linking St. Nicholas and Jesus’
L
ast December was a blur to Adam
English.
The associate professor of theology and
philosophy at Campbell University
spent the month on a whirlwind of
newspaper and magazine interviews
and radio and television appearances,
as media outlets around the world
sought his expert insight on one of the
popular and positive symbols of the
Christmas season — Santa Claus.
English had long been interested in the
myth of Santa Claus and the history
behind St. Nicholas.
His curiosity led him to travel to Bari,
Italy, several years ago, when he visited
the tomb of St. Nicholas of Myra, as
well as an archival library maintained by
Dominican friars.
English spent hours in that library
looking at historical documents,
ultimately discovering a gold mine of
information about St. Nicholas of Myra.
“We oftentimes get the impression that
St. Nicholas didn’t exist, or if he did, we
don’t know much about him. He’s sort
of a shadowy quasi-historical person,”
English said. “But looking at these
documents, I instantly realized that there
14 - Chronicle of Scholarly Activity 2012
One month prior, English released
a book, “The Saint Who Would Be
Santa Claus,” a historical account
on the life and trials of St. Nicholas
of Myra — whom many peg as the
original St. Nicholas. His book was
an immediate hit, garnering positive
reviews from the Wall Street Journal
and Publisher’s Weekly and earning him
guest spots on CNN, Fox News and
many other programs.
“The Saint Who Would Be Santa Claus
is the best of hagiography combined
with the best of secular history, all
liberally spiced with the passion
and verve of a good biographer in
thrall to his subject,” wrote Phyllis
Tickle, bestselling author of The
Great Emergence: How Christianity
is Changing and Why. “Thanks to
English, we have tantalizing glimpses
of what actually shaped the man into
the saint, and both into an icon.”
is this huge story that hasn’t been told.”
English shared four overarching things
he learned about St. Nicholas during the
researching and writing of his book —
and how the fourth-century saint is still
relevant today.
Over the next four years, English pored
through archival materials, traveled
widely to interview other scholars and
immersed himself in the life and times of
St. Nicholas.
The result was “The Saint Who Would
Be Santa Claus,” which was published by
Baylor University Press last November.
“In most books or resources, the story
of St. Nicholas is an introduction to
the story of Santa Claus,” English said.
“I wanted to reverse the flow of the
ordinary pattern of how historians have
told the story.
“I wanted to make St. Nicholas the real
story.”
Yes, there really was
a St. Nicholas.
English said there were two things
working against him when he started
the “pain-staking labor” that went
into researching his book. One, the
prominent scholars of the 20th century
cast doubt on the very existence of St.
Nicholas; and if he did exist, the scholars
said he wasn’t much of a “saint,” English
said.
And two, the more popular and
mainstream accounts perpetuated an
erroneous view of him. Specifically, the
popular tale merged the stories of two
men named Nicholas who lived 200
years apart into one narrative.
English set out to find out the truth
about St. Nicholas. With the help
of travel and research stipends from
Campbell, as well as a sabbatical, English
spent large portions of four years working
on the project. Though St. Nicholas left
no writings behind, English found clues,
scraps of stories and small anecdotes in
the documents and biographies written
thousands of years ago that suggested
there was a St. Nicholas who lived in the
fourth century in Myra, a city along the
southern coast of what is now Turkey.
“There’s no single piece of evidence, but
a lot of little things cobbled together,”
English said. “You’re looking for needles
in a haystack.”
One such needle to support the existence
of St. Nicholas, English said, was that
the name Nicholas didn’t appear in
the historical record before the fourth
century. But after the fourth century, the
name popped up in a slew of documents
that referenced or were connected to the
Myra area.
“Parents were now, in the 300s A.D.,
naming their kids Nicholas right in the
area where St. Nicholas of Myra lived,”
English said. “That’s a very indirect
reference, but it clearly indicates that
there was a Nicholas there and that
people were picking up on his story and
naming their kids after him.”
Based on the primary sources, English
reported that St. Nicholas of Myra was
born sometime after the year 260 A.D.
and died around the year 335.
St. Nicholas was a
man of charity.
St. Nicholas is often depicted in art
carrying three bags of gold. That’s because
he was generous with the sizable amount
of money he inherited when his parents
died. One night, specifically, St. Nicholas
filled three bags full of gold and tossed
each one into a home where three young,
impoverished women lived. The young
women, on the brink of starvation, used
the gold as dowries to get married and
escape the door of destitution, English
said.
“This act stands out as a unique instance
of charity,” English said, because such acts
of charity were not found in the historical
record before St. Nicholas of Myra
and because most of the stories about
saints at the time revolved around saints
performing miraculous wonders or dying
as martyrs.
The act propelled St. Nicholas into the
imagination of the people, English said,
and his story began to be passed from
generation to generation. Over time,
St. Nicholas’ story and name continued
to gradually grow, so much so that by
the 1100s, nuns in France were making
handcrafted toys, signing them from St.
Nicholas, and leaving them at the homes
where children lived.
Think of how that legacy has played out
today in many parts of the world, English
said. In Europe, St. Nicholas is celebrated
each year on Dec. 6, St. Nicholas Day.
On the eve of St. Nicholas Day, the
legend goes, St. Nicholas, who looks like a
Catholic bishop, places small gifts such as
fruit, cookies and candies in the shoes or
stockings of children, who are encouraged
to share their treats with others.
And in the U.S., St. Nicholas’ name is
in the vernacular of popular culture;
Christmas is a time of giving and
receiving gifts; and the modernized Santa
Claus draws from St. Nicholas. “Santa,”
for example, loosely derives from “saint,”
and popular renderings of Santa include
him with a bag to carry goodies for
children.
St. Nicholas had a strong
sense of justice.
St. Nicholas was not only known for his
acts of charity, he also was a businessman,
a patron of the city, a judge and a lawyer
who stood up for justice and who
considered himself a public servant. There
are numerous stories of him coming to
the assistance of fellow citizens, including
accounts of him saving innocent men
from beheadings and intervening in the
court of law on behalf of other people,
English said.
Also, he once bartered with a ship from
Egypt to supply grains for the city of
Myra, which prevented a famine. Another
time, residences in Myra asked him to
plead with legislators to lower taxes. He
What They’re Saying
A rundown of some of the reviews of Adam
English’s book, “The Saint Who Would Be
Santa Claus”
“English convinces us that the St.
Nicholas we know is a cultural icon, as
much Coca-Cola as Christian saint. But
his real gift is in resurrecting through
his painstaking historical detective work
a flesh and blood St. Nicholas, whose
courage and Christian generosity are
worthy of emulation.”
— Greg Garrett, author of
“One Fine Potion”
“A sensitive, erudite and accessibly written
introduction to the life and times of St.
Nicholas... Having devoted his life to
serving Jesus Christ, the real St. Nicholas
invites us to a truer and more joyful
celebration of Christmas.”
— Matthew Levering, professor of theology,
University of Dayton
“English … gives parents a historical
bridge linking St. Nicholas and Jesus —
something many of us have hoped for.”
— Mark Kennedy,
Chattanooga Times Free Press
“Though some of the legends
surrounding Nicholas are a little
unbelievable, the book lays out a genuine
story of a man committed to Christ and
his desires for the world. English’s research
is impeccable, making this surely the best
book on the subject.”
— Tom Farr, Tom Farr Reviews
“English is a capable storyteller, weaving
biographical information about his
subject … with rich historical details
about his religious and sociological
milieu. Most enjoyable are his forays
into literary history, as he traces the
development of popular legends to show
how, centuries before the modern figure
of Santa Claus emerged in 20th-century
Coca-Cola ads, the saint’s generosity and
wonderworking were fabled throughout
the Christian world.”
— Dawn Eden, The Weekly Standard
“English doesn’t spend much time
exploring the various practices and
traditions associated with this festive
figure. Rather, Mr. English is in search of
the man himself.”
— Charlotte Allen, Wall Street Journal
Campbell Accolades - 15
Dean’s Excellence In Research Award
College of Arts & Sciences
“The epitome of a teacher-scholar, Adam excels in both teaching excellence and scholarly productivity. During a proliferative
first decade at Campbell, he authored three books, co-authored another two books and published dozens of peer-reviewed
articles, book reviews and essays. But the publication of his third solo book-length publication is nothing short of amazing.
In the last ten years, Dr. Adam English has accomplished an impressive feat of producing scholarly work that enriches his
teaching, thereby enriching our students. He is a shining example of excellence for both new and veteran faculty members.”
— Mark Hammond, Dean of the College of Arts & Sciences
“Christmas should be a time to step
outside our comfort zone,” English
said. “That’s the lesson of St. Nicholas:
He challenges us to move beyond our
fireplace and to reach out to the world.”
And, for the day-to-day living, St.
Nicholas is “inspiring even today because
he was an ordinary man doing things that
were remarkably ordinary,” English said.
traveled 300 miles to the capital, where
he petitioned for lower taxes on behalf of
the people.
“He’s not a one-dimensional character,”
English said.
Consider that St. Nicholas is depicted
in art not only by carrying three bags of
gold but also by carrying a whip. Many
medieval legends include references to
whips that are used to enforce order and
justice. St. Nicholas’ whip represents how
he “was not only jolly, but he had a strong
sense of justice — of weighing out deeds,
both good and bad,” English said.
To this day, English added, “there is
evidence of this concern.”
Think of the naughty or nice list our
popularized version of Santa Claus keeps.
St. Nicholas modeled the
Christian life.
St. Nicholas was a Christian pastor
and bishop. At the time of his birth,
Christianity was a persecuted minority
religion; and by the time of his death,
Christianity had become a legalized
religion favored by the emperor. But
St. Nicholas wasn’t much of a scholar
16 - Chronicle of Scholarly Activity 2012
or a thinker. Still, he helped shape the
Christian faith.
“And that was what was so exciting
and interesting about him,” English
said. “There are many saints who were
intellectuals and scholars who influenced
Christian thought, but here is a saint who
influenced faith by his actions, by his life.
“His influence is his testimony of charity.”
St. Nicholas’ influence directly affected
English, too. You can’t spend four years
researching the life of a man who was
passionate about faith, justice and charity
without being transformed in some way,
English said.
For starters, English can’t look at
Christmas the same way. Until he started
researching and writing about the life
of St. Nicholas, English always viewed
Christmas as a domestic family affair.
Now, he sees the holiday as a community
activity that shouldn’t involve just his own
family but also neighbors, strangers and
people in need; and that it shouldn’t just
involve the exchanging of Christmas gifts
but also a time to carry out acts of charity
and justice, like St. Nicholas did, and to
extend hospitality to others.
“We may not become a missionary in
China or do some kind of remarkable feat
for the Lord, but we can bag up groceries
and leave them on the doors of someone
in need,” he adds. “That is the spirit of St.
Nicholas.
“He is a Christian man who gives us an
example of how to live a charitable, just
and righteous life.”
Celebrate the man, not
just the myth.
What does Adam English hope people
will take away from his book? That
“people will be inspired by a life well
lived,” English said. He also hopes that
people will bring St. Nicholas into their
Christmas traditions.
People can do that by not only
celebrating Christmas on Dec. 25 but
also by celebrating St. Nicholas Day,
which falls on Dec. 6 each year. Spend
Christmas Day with your family, English
suggested, and spend St. Nicholas Day
carrying out a service project in your
community.
Among English’s ideas for a service
project: Prepare and eat a meal with a
house-bound senior citizen. Write notes
of encouragements to soldiers overseas.
Visit people in the hospital. Rake the
leaves up at a neighbor’s home. Watch a
single mother’s children for a few hours.
Read a story to a sight-impaired person.
Or bake goodies for first responders.
Grants
Dr. Elizabeth D. Blue
Dr. James B. Groce III
Grant Review
Funded Grant
Assistant Professor of Chemistry
College of Arts & Sciences
Served on the American Association of University
Women’s 2013 Career Development Grant Panel.
Grant Review
Reviewed an education grant proposal for the
N.C. Biotechnology Center, October 2012.
Dr. Robert M. Cisneros Jr.
Associate Professor of Pharmacy Practice
College of Pharmacy & Health Sciences
Grant Review
Reviewed New Investigator Grant Awards for
American Association of Colleges of Pharmacy,
October 2012.
Dr. W. Lin Coker III
Assistant Professor of Chemistry
College of Arts & Sciences
Funded Grant
Professor of Pharmacy Practice
College of Pharmacy & Health Sciences
Awarded $200,000 grant from Diagnostica
Stago Inc., as the primary investigator of STA®
- Liatest® D-Dimer – Exclusion of Venous
Thromboembolism (VTE), a prospective, nonrandomized, non-interventional, multicenter
diagnostic accuracy study in a standard of care
setting, April 10, 2013.
Dr. Jennifer A. Latino
Director of First-Year Experience
Student Life
Funded Grant
Received $16,500 grant from the N.C.
Independent Colleges and Universities through
the Independent College Access to establish SLIF
101: Academic Recovery Seminary, a course
designed to assistant students who have academic
difficulty in their first semester of college.
Advised and mentored student Marvin Ownley,
who received $750 grant from the N.C.
Independent Colleges and Universities.
Campbell Accolades - 17
David M. Moffitt
Assistant Professor of New Testament and Greek
Campbell Divinity School
Cash Prize
Awarded $10,000 as one of 10 young scholars
from around the world who received the Manfred
Lautenschl äger Award for Theological Promise,
2013.
Dr. Ann M. Ortiz
Associate Professor of Spanish
College of Arts & Sciences
Funded Grant
Helped secure Agnes Haury Tuition grant
for students who spent two days in intensive
medical interpreting workshops at the Medical
Interpretation and Translation Institute at the
University of Arizona in Tucson.
Breck H. Smith
Associate Professor of Art
College of Arts & Sciences
Funded Grant
Received 2013 United Arts Council of Raleigh
& Wake County Regional Artist Project Grant to
help defray the cost of framing for a two-person
art exhibition at the Horace Williams House in
Chapel Hill, N.C., in July 2013.
Dr. Michael Ray Smith
Professor of Communication Studies
College of Arts & Sciences
Cash Prize
Received $500 for Phi Kapa Phi’s Love of
Learning Award, which helps fund postbaccalaureate studies and/or career development for
members of the collegiate honor society
Funded Grant
Received summer research grant from Campbell
University.
Dr. Sally Thomas
Associate Professor of Music/Director of Vocal Studies
College of Arts & Sciences
Professional Development Grant
Received a Summer Research Grant from
Campbell University that supported four projects
during the summer of 2012: editing manuscripts
from the Moravian Music Foundation; vocal
18 - Chronicle of Scholarly Activity 2012
coaching for a faculty recital to be presented
during the 2013-14 academic year; attending
the 2012 National Conference of the National
Association of Teachers of Singing, Inc.; and
attending the Carol Krueger muscianship
workshop at Meredith College.
Dr. Ran Whitley
Professor of Music
College of Arts & Sciences
Grant Review
Reviewed N.C. Arts Council Grassroots Grant
that funded a performance of “The True Story
of the Three Pigs: A Children’s Musical,” which
the Children’s Theatre of Charlotte presented at
Campbell University on March 26, 2012.
Kristina L. Wolfe
Community Engagement Coordinator, Campus
Ministry
Master of Public Health student, College of
Pharmacy & Health Sciences
Funded Grant
Helped secure a 2013 Harnett County Voices into
Action Mini-Grant that will be used to purchase
soil and seeds for the expansion of Campbell
University’s Mustard Seed Community Garden,
which provides fresh produce to the Harnett
Food Pantry. The mini-grant was made possible
by Voices into Action: The Families, Food and
Health Project, funded by a U.S. Department of
Agriculture AFRI Grant.
Dr. Derek K. Yonai
Associate Professor of Business
Lundy Chair of the Philosophy of Business
Lundy-Fetterman School of Business
Funded Grant
Received $24,000 Koch Charitable Foundation
Grant for 2012-13.
Funded Grant
Received a Summer Research Grant from
Campbell University in 2012.
Dr. Taek H. You
Assistant Professor of Biology
College of Arts & Sciences
Funded Grant
Received a Summer Research Grant from
Campbell University.
Campbell Accolades - 19
20 - Chronicle of Scholarly Activity 2012
The New Testament scholar
David Moffitt was one of just 10 scholars from around the world to
receive the prestigious Manfred Lautenschläger Award for Theological
Promise in 2013.
By Cherry Crayton
A
s David Moffitt, assistant professor
of New Testament and Greek in
the Campbell Divinity School, worked
through the application process for
the Manfred Lautenschläger Award
for Theological Promise 2013, he
thought, “Why am I putting so much
time into this?”
The application process included
writing essays that summarized his
book, “Atonement and the Logic of
Resurrection in the Epistle to the
Hebrews,” and addressed the ways
it has contributed to the current
theological conversation. He also had
to ask several other Christian scholars
to write letters of recommendations
on his behalf. “Why am I doing this?”
Moffitt thought. “I’m not going to
win.”
So, he says, he was in “a bit of a shock”
when he learned he was one of just
10 scholars from around the world to
be named a recipient of the Manfred
Lautenschläger Award for Theological
Promise 2013. The award, formerly
known as the John Templeton Award
for Theological Promise, honors the
best doctoral or first post-doctoral
work on the topic of “God and
Spirituality” by scholars who are
typically 35 or younger. Moffitt’s
book grew out of the dissertation he
completed for his Ph.D. in religion at
Duke University, and was published
by Brill in 2011.
He officially accepted the award and a
$10,000 cash prize during a ceremony
at the University of Heidelberg in
Germany on May 31.
“The book is a getting a lot of
attention based on the award, and
to have it considered at such a high
level and among such company is a
tremendous honor,” he said in June.
The following is a Q&A with Moffitt
about his book, why he became a
New Testament scholar, and how his
research has affected his faith.
Q: What led you to write “Atonement
and the Logic of Resurrection in the
Epistle to the Hebrews”?
The consensus in modern scholarship
on the book of Hebrews is that Jesus’s
resurrection is not a significant element
in the author’s argument in Hebrews.
My book begins with the question of
whether or not that is the case.
Q: What did you discover?
That Jesus’s bodily resurrection
is central to his atoning offering
in Hebrews. In modern western
Christianity, we view the cross as the
location of Jesus’s offering, and the
crucifixion as the event that redeems
humanity and brings us back into
relationship with God.
But if you go back and look, Hebrews
consistently puts the presentation of
this offering in heaven and not on
the cross. This made me go back and
re-read Leviticus and rediscover that
the slaughter of a sacrificial victim is
never associated with atonement. If
you just kill an animal, there is no
atonement. You have to do something
with the blood, and Leviticus 17:11
says very clearly that blood is life. It is
the blood/life that makes atonement.
Jesus offers his blood, his life, to God
in heaven. This makes atonement.
The challenge of these findings was
to understand how could this all fit
together.
Campbell Accolades - 21
DEAN’S EXCELLENCE IN RESEARCH AWARD
Divinity School
“In just two years, Dr. Moffitt has made an extensive impact not only on the Divinity School, but also on the academy and
the church. Moffitt has been popular with students, inspiring in them a love of knowledge and appreciation for research and
study of the New Testament. He has earned the respect of the faculty and staff for his collegiality and his commitment to the
mission of the Divinity School.
“He has delivered powerful sermons and led in studies and conferences at Campbell, at his own and other churches, and at
sister institutions. Above all, his dedication to and excellence in research and publication is a testimony to his skill and his
passion for the study of the New Testament.”
— Andrew H. Wakefield, dean and professor, Campbell University Divinity School
Q: How does it all fit?
If the author of Hebrews knows that
Jesus rose bodily, as I argue in the
book, then what does he have to offer
to God in heaven? The answer is that
he presents himself, his resurrected
body, alive to God in heaven. It is the
power of Jesus’ resurrected life which
God accepts as the force that makes
atonement.
So the resurrection isn’t just there in
Hebrews; it’s central to Hebrews. This
doesn’t mean that the cross doesn’t
matter. What it means is that we need
to re-think sacrifice along biblical
lines. In Leviticus, sacrifice is not a
momentary event of slaughter; it is a
process culminating in the offering of
blood/life to God.
Hebrews shows how the whole
narrative about Jesus is a sacrifice that
culminates in his entry into heaven to
present himself there before the Father
as something that pleases the Father.
Recognizing this was a watershed
moment for me.
Q: In what ways was this discovery a
watershed moment?
I began to see that the Gospel is
not just that Jesus died for my sins,
but that Jesus died for my sins and
rose again on the third day. In my
experience, there is a tendency,
especially in Baptist churches today,
to think that the crucifixion is the
pinnacle of Christ’s redeeming work.
But when we’re talking about
what Jesus did to redeem us, the
resurrection is as important as
22 - Chronicle of Scholarly Activity 2012
the crucifixion. It helped me to
understand that we need to return
to the resurrection as an element of
the Gospel that’s proclaimed and as
element of our preaching.
Q: What led you to become a New
Testament scholar?
As many people who grow up in the
church do, I grew up with a tepid
faith. I believed, I didn’t doubt; but it
was hard for me to think about how
it really made a difference. I went to
college vowing that the one place I
would never go was seminary.
There were a lot of reasons for that,
but there was a real moment of
renewal for me in college when I
found myself outside the bounds
of family and church, and I had to
suddenly start making decisions.
Along with that I read an essay that
Sinclair Ferguson wrote, “Consider
Your Calling.” He argues that a
calling is not a feeling as much as
a recognition of vocation based on
which God has created and prepared
you -- that God creates us with certain
proclivities and with gifts, and that
these gifts can be developed even
further by being part of a church,
where the spirit can distribute gifts.
I looked at what I was interested in
and realized that it wasn’t an accident
that I liked theology, and it wasn’t
an accident that people said I should
go into theology. At that moment,
the middle of my freshman year, in
my dorm room, alone at the time,
I got down on my knees and said
“OK, God, I’ll go to seminary.” In
that moment, my passion and my
personality came together with that
vocation.
Read Cherry Crayton’s full interview
with David Moffitt at campbell.edu/
features/campbell-proud-david-moffitt
Presentations
Dr. Connie L. Barnes
Professor of Pharmacy Practice
Executive Vice Chair of Pharmacy Practice
Co-Director of Drug Information Center
College of Pharmacy & Health Sciences
Poster Presentation
“Utilization of the Vaccine Adverse Events
Reporting System by North Carolina
Immunization-Certified Pharmacists,” with R.
DeBenedetto, CL. Barnes, and D. Catalano,
American Pharmacists Association’s Annual
Meeting & Exposition ( Los Angeles, Calif.), 2013.
Dr. Elizabeth D. Blue
Assistant Professor of Chemistry
College of Arts & Sciences
Poster Presentation
Dr. James A. Boyd
Associate Professor, Pharmacy Practice
College of Pharmacy & Health Sciences
Facilitator and Speaker
Pharmacy Owners’ Workshop and Meeting
(Bethlehem, Pa.), May 2-5, 2012.
Facilitator and Speaker
Pharmacy Owners’ Workshop and Meeting
(Harbor Beach, Mich.), Sept. 28-31, 2012.
Oral Presentation
“Pharmacy Law Update,” Cape Fear Pharmacists
Association (Fayetteville), Dec. 20, 2012.
Continuing Education Presenter
“2012-2013 Law Update and Review,” web-based
continuing education program (Buies Creek), Nov.
10, 2012.
“Microwave-Assisted Transesterification of (±)
Menthol and Methyl-2-chloropropionate,” with W.J.
Lloyd, 110th Annual Meeting of the N.C. Academy
of Science (Pembroke, N.C.), April 5-6, 2013.
Campbell Accolades - 23
Dr. Tony W. Cartledge
Professor of Old Testament
Divinity School
Oral Presentation
“Samuel Cartledge and the Long Legacy of Daniel
and Martha Stearns Marshall,” Fellowship of
Baptist Historians (Raleigh), June 8, 2012.
Oral Presentation
“Leadership Lessons from King David,”
Theological Education and Leadership formation
workgroup of the Baptist World Alliance (Santiago,
Chile), July 5, 2012.
Dr. Robert M. Cisneros Jr.
Associate Professor of Pharmacy Practice
Social and Pharmacy Administration
College of Pharmacy & Health Sciences
Oral Presentation
“International Education in Pharmacy Schools:
Challenges, Benefits and Future Directions,” with
S. Jawaid, C. McPherson, D. Kendall, K. Mu, G.
Weston and K. Roberts. AACP Annual Meeting
(Kissimmee, Fla.), July 17, 2012.
Oral Presentation
“Medication Errors: What is flagged by pharmacy
computer systems?” with M. Sadler. Campbell
University Student Research Symposium (Carrie
Rich Library), March 15, 2012.
Oral Presentation
“N.C. Board of Pharmacy Disciplinary Actions
Review: 2003-Present,” with J. Frahm. Campbell
University Student Symposium, March 19, 2013.
Poster Presentation
“Evaluation of Two Community Pharmacy
Computer Systems,” with M. Sadler. ASHP Midyear (Las Vegas), 2012.
Poster Presentation
“Impact of a pharmacist-managed medication
therapy management program on adherence to
inhaled chronic maintenance therapy in patients
with chronic obstructive pulmonary disease,” with
J. Vora and B. Lingerfeldt. American Pharmacist
Association Annual Meeting.
Oral Presentation
“Immunization Update. Continuing Education
(ACPE 3 hours),” Fall Back on CU for CE (Buies
Creek), 2012.
Dr. W. Lin Coker III
Associate Professor of Chemistry
College of Arts & Sciences
Panel Discussion
“Preparing Students for College Chemistry,”
organizer and moderator. SouthEastern Regional
Meeting of the American Chemical Society, 2012.
Panel Discussion
“Preparing Students for College Science,”
organizer and panel discussion moderator. 110th
Annual Meeting of the N.C. Academy of Science
(Pembroke), April 2013
Oral Presentation
“Using students’ historical data as a predictor of
success,” with Fisher, J. Tamra, W. Lin Coker and
M.T. Williams. 110th Annual Meeting of the N.C.
Academy of Science (Pembroke), April 2013.
Thomas P. Colletti
Chairman and Director, Physician Assistant Program
College of Pharmacy & Health Sciences
Oral Presentation
“Diagnosis and Treatment of Upper Extremity
Disorders,” AAPA 40th Annual Conference, 2012.
Oral Presentation
Dr. Valerie B. Clinard
Co-Director, Drug Information Center
Associate Professor of Pharmacy Practice
College of Pharmacy & Health Sciences
Poster Presentation
“Utilization of the vaccine adverse events reporting
system by North Carolina immunization-certified
pharmacists,” with R. DeBenedetto, D. Catalano
and C. Barnes. American Pharmacist Association
Annual Meeting and Exposition (Los Angeles),
March 2013.
24 - Chronicle of Scholarly Activity 2012
“Soft Tissue and Joint Injections,” AAPA 40th
Annual Conference, 2012.
David M. Coniglio
Associate Professor of Health Professional Studies
College of Pharmacy & Health Sciences
Oral Presentation
“Comparing urban and rural physician assistants in
hospital outpatient departments 2005-2009,” with
C. Abell, W. Rich W, D. Tillman, T. Colletti and
T. Tseng. American Public Health Association (San
Francisco) Oct. 31, 2012.
Dr. Richard Drew
Professor of Pharmacy Practice
Internal Medicine/Infectious Disease
College of Pharmacy & Health Sciences
Oral Presentation
“Tracking and Evaluating Stewardship Metrics
Without an Electronic Data Capture System,” 15th
Annual Make a Difference in Infectious Diseases
(MAD-ID) Conference (Orlando, Fla.) May 10,
2012.
Oral Presentation
“C.difficile Infection: New and Emerging
Therapies,” 15th Annual Make a Difference
in Infectious Diseases (MAD-ID) Conference
(Orlando, Fla.) May 10, 2012.
Oral Presentation
“Implementation of IDSA Stewardship
Guidelines,” Workshop on Implementation of
Antibiotic Stewardship Programs at the 52st
Interscience Conference on Antimicrobial Agents
and Chemotherapy (San Francisco) Sept. 8, 2012.
Oral Presentation
“Case Studies in Establishing Antibiotic
Stewardship Programs,” Workshop on
Implementation of Antibiotic Stewardship
Programs at the 52st Interscience Conference on
Antimicrobial Agents and Chemotherapy (San
Francisco) Sept. 8, 2012.
Oral Presentation
“Changing Epidemiology of Invasive Fungal
Infections,” IDWeek, Infectious Diseases Society of
America (San Diego), Oct. 19, 2012.
Oral Presentation
“Problems in Infectious Diseases Pharmacotherapy:
Case Discussions,” 14h Annual North Carolina Antiinfective Workshop (Greensboro), Nov. 3, 2012.
Dr. J. Dean Farmer
Chairman and Assistant Professor of
Communication Studies
College of Arts & Sciences
Mentor
“Service Learning Through the Process of Feeding
the Hungry: Reflections on Efforts Made,” mentor
of Marisa Linton. Big South Undergraduate
Research Symposium (High Point University),
April 2013.
Mentor
“Organized for Good: A Qualitative Look at a
Non-Traditional Housechurch Organization,”
mentor of Kena Hawkins and Emily McIntosh. Big
South Undergraduate Research Symposium, (High
Point University), April 2013.
Laura R. Gerstner
Assistant Professor, Clinical Coordinator of Physician
Assistant Program
College of Pharmacy & Health Sciences
Oral Presentation
“See One, Do One, Teach One,” integrating parttask simulation training and student-generated
videos to teach and assess clinical procedures.
Physician Assistant Education Association Annual
Meeting (Seattle), November 2012.
Dr. James B. Groce III
Professor of Pharmacy Practice
College of Pharmacy & Health Sciences
Oral Presentation
“CAPs: Creating Anticoagulation Plans to Prevent
Stroke in Patients with Atrial Fibrillation,” a CME/
CNE/CPE-certified in-hospital grand rounds
initiative. Richmond University Medical Center,
May 20, 2013.
Oral Presentation
“The Changing Landscape in Anticoagulation
Therapy,” invited lecture. 2013 Spring Family
Physicians Weekend Continuing Medical
Education Event (Greensboro), April 6, 2013.
Oral Presentation
“CAPs: Creating Anticoagulation Plans to Prevent
Stroke in Patients with Atrial Fibrillation,” a CME/
CNE/CPE-certified in-hospital grand rounds
initiative. Medical Center of Central Georgia
(Macon, Ga.), March 27, 2013.
Oral Presentation
“The Changing Landscape of Anticoagulation
Therapy,” invited lecture. ACPE
#:0202-0000-13-072-L01-P•0.2 CEUs.American
Pharmaceutical Association 2013 Annual Meeting
& Exposition (Los Angeles), March 1, 2013.
Oral Presentation
“3M-Monitoring, Measuring, Management of
New Oral Anticoagulants,” Stago-Diagnostica
Northeast Laboratory Medicine Meeting (Boston),
Dec. 13, 2012.
Campbell Accolades - 25
26 - Chronicle of Scholarly Activity 2012
Oral Presentation
“Debates in Therapeutics 2012: aPTT v. Anti-Xa
Monitoring of Unfractionated Heparin-’pro’- AntiXa,” ACPE No. 204-000-12-219-L01P. American
Society of Health System Pharmacists Mid-Year
Clinical Meeting (Las Vegas), Dec. 3, 2012.
Oral Presentation
“New Oral Anticoagulants: A Balancing Act
Between Safety and Efficacy — Comparing
Anticoagulation Reversibility Practices Between
Warfarin, Dabigatran and Rivaroxaban,” ACPE
No. 204-000-12-309—L01P. American Society
of Health System Pharmacists Mid-Year Clinical
Meeting (Las Vegas), Dec. 3, 2012.
Oral Presentation
Live lecture and skills lab in support of 2012
Anticoagulation Certificate Program — lectures on
physiology of hemostasis and thrombosis; etiology,
risk-factors, clinical presentation and diagnosis of
common hypercoagulable states; antithrombotic
therapy. ACPE No. 204-000-12-309—L01P.
American Society of Health System Pharmacists MidYear Clinical Meeting (Las Vegas), Dec. 3, 2012.
Oral Presentation
“Venous Thrombosis Overview and Management,”
Critical Care Lecture Series — Internal Medicine
Teaching Program. The Moses Cone Health
System/Cone Health, Department of Internal
Medicine (Greensboro), July 18, 2012.
Oral Presentation
Provided three audio-taped lectures on overview of
LMWHs, LMWHs in special patient populations
and perioperative. Wake Forest University Baptist
Medical Center/Northwest Area Health Education
Center. Anticoagulation Management Certificate
Program.
Oral Presentation
“To use or not use recombinant Factor VIIa — A
Debate,” with J. Granfortuna, MD and James
Groce, PharmD, CACP. 7th Annual Acute Stroke
Treatment Update, Greensboro Area Health
Education Center (Greensboro).
Oral Presentation
“Controlling the Clots: Current Challenges and
Emerging Champions in Anticoagulation,” ACPE
#202-000-12-026-L01-P. American Pharmaceutical
Association 2012 Annual Meeting (New Orleans),
March 12, 2012.
Dr. Ted Hancock
Assistant Professor of Pharmacy Practice
College of Pharmacy & Health Sciences
Oral Presentation
“Diabetic Injectables: When oral medications are
not enough,” presented a detailed review of both
insulin and non-insulin injectable medications.
Coastal Carolina Diabetes Symposium, April 2013.
Oral Presentation
“Diabetic Injectables: When oral medications are not
enough,” presented a detailed review of both insulin
and non-insulin injectable medications. SEAHEC/
Wilmington health instructor, April 2013.
Oral Presentation
“Not Your Daughter’s IBS,” one-hour ACPE
diiscussion on irritable bowel syndrome with
emphasis on the geriatric population. North
Carolina Association of Pharmacists Chronic Care
Forum, March 2013.
Oral Presentation
“Myopathy: The Dark Side of Statins,” one-hour
CNE reviewed the important role of the statin class
of cholesterol-lowering medications and discussed
adverse events with an emphasis on muscle pain.
SEAHEC/Wilmington health instructor, August
2012.
Oral Presentation
“Dementia Update for Pharmacists,” reviewed
known causes of dementia and its impact
on society. Discussed non-pharmacologic,
pharmacological and pipeline treatments. EAHEC
instructor, April 2012.
Oral Presentation
“Mental Health versus Dental Health,” discussed
the impact of medication on the mouth and teeth
with dentists, nurse practitioners, hygienists and
pharmacists. SEAHEC instructor, April 2012.
Dr. J. Christopher Havran
Assistant Professor
College of Arts & Sciences
Oral Presentation
“Geographic and ecological patterns of morphological
variation in the Hawaiian endemic Planchonella
sandwicensis (A. Gray) Pierre,” with Lauren Stutts.
Annual Meeting of the Botanical Society of America
(Columbus, Ohio), August 2012.
Campbell Accolades - 27
Oral Presentation
“A preliminary phylogeny of the endemic
Hawaiian genus Nototrichium (Amaranthaceae),”
with Krystal Payne and Ross McCauley. Annual
Meeting of the North Carolina Academy of Science
(Pembroke), April 2013.
Poster Presentation
“Preliminary analyses of fruit and seed variation
of Planchonella sandwicensis across the Hawaiian
Islands,” with Cynthia Blankenship. Annual
Meeting of the Association of Southeastern
Biologists (Charleston, W.Va.), April, 2013.
Poster Presentation
“Interisland variation in leaf shape of Planchonella
sandwicensis (Sapotaceae) an endemic Hawaiian
tree,” with Sandra Westergaard and Joseph
Vaughan. Annual Meeting of the Association of
Southeastern Biologists (Charleston, W.Va.), April,
2013.
Poster Presentation
“ A preliminary phylogeny of the endemic
Hawaiian genus Nototrichium (Amaranthaceae),”
with Krystal Payne and Ross McCauley. Annual
Meeting of the Association of Southeastern
Biologists (Charleston, W.Va.), April, 2013.
Poster Presentation
“Functional trait diversity of Planchonella
sandwicensis (Sapotaceae), a Hawaiian endemic
tree,” with Rachel Craven and Morgan Fonvielle.
Annual Meeting of the Association of Southeastern
Biologists (Charleston, W.Va.), April, 2013.
Dr. Venancio Rene Ibarra
Assistant Professor of Spanish
College of Arts & Sciences
Oral Presentation
“Las fotografías como herramientas de memoria
e identidad en La imagen de Héctor y La familia
vino del norte de Silvia Molina,” 66th Annual
KFLC: The Language, Literatures, and Cultures
Conference at the University of Kentucky
(Lexington, Ky.), April 2012
Dr. W. Glenn Jonas
Professor of Religion
Chair of the Department of Religion
Divinity School
Oral Presentation
“Nurturing the Vision: Highlights from a
200-Year-Old Baptist Church in Raleigh, North
Carolina,” annual meeting of the Baptist History
and Heritage Society, June 7, 2012.
Oral Presentation
“Keepers of the Vision,” presented to the faculty of
Campbell University, Aug. 17, 2012.
Amos N. Jones
Assistant Professor of Law
Norman Adrian Wiggins School of Law
Oral Presentation
“Reforming the D.C. Office of Human Rights,”
expert testimony at Council of the District
of Columbia Budget Oversight Hearing for
jurisdiction’s Office and Commission on Human
Rights (Washington, D.C.), April 20, 2012.
Oral Presentation
“The Dismantling of De Jure Segregation in
Kentucky: How Slave Religion, Strategic Voting
and Creative Lawyering Broke Barriers in a Socially
Advanced Border State,” keynote Black history
lecturer at the University of Kentucky.
Oral Presentation
“The U.S. Presidential Election in Context: The
Constitution, Racial Politics and the Future of
Civil Rights Lawyering,” invited lecture before
International Law Society, University of the Andes
Law School (Bogota, Colombia), Nov. 22, 2012.
Oral Presentation
“Fisher v. University of Texas at Austin: How
Far can UT Go in Mimicking Racial Makeup
of Texas?” radio-show appearance debating
constitutionality of certain affirmative-action
practices in college admissions.
Dr. Barry A. Jones
Associate professor of Old Testament and Hebrew
Divinity School
Oral Presentation
“A Faithful Witness in Trying Times: Studies in the
Book of Daniel,” The James C. Prevatte Endowed
Biblical Studies Lectures. Campbell University
Divinity School (Buies Creek), Nov. 5, 2012.
28 - Chronicle of Scholarly Activity 2012
Dr. Haydn T. Jones
Associate Professor of Romance Languages
Chairman, Foreign Language Department
College of Arts & Sciences
Oral Presentation
“Immigration and Internal Study Abroad,” Annual
Conference of the Association of Academic Programs
in Latin America & the Caribbean (AAPLAC),
Meredith College (Raleigh), Feb. 20-22, 2013.
Dr. Cameron H. J. Jorgenson
Professor of Theology and Ethics
Divinity School
Presidential Address
“With Saints and Angels We Sing: A Baptist
Participatory Theology of Worship,” presidential
address, National Association of Baptist Professors
of Religion, Region-At-Large, meeting in
conjunction with the College Theology Society.
Dr. Elizabeth H. Lange
Assistant Professor of Exercise Science
College of Arts & Sciences
Oral Presentation
“Cultural Competence in Coaching and Physical
Education,” four-hour workshop presentation with
D. Brooks. American Alliance for Health, Physical
Education, Recreation and Dance (Charlotte),
April 2013.
Oral Presentation
“Cultural Competence in Coaching and Physical
Education,” four-hour workshop presentation with
J. Jens. American Alliance for Health, Physical
Education, Recreation and Dance (Charlotte),
April 2012.
Dr. Jennifer A Latino
Director, First-Year Experience
Student Life
Workshop Presenter
“Kick Start the Connection: Service in the First
Year,” 32nd Annual Conference on the First-Year
Experience Facilitator for Round table Discussion.
Workshop Presenter
“Creating Solid Foundations for First-Year
Seminars: Fundamentals of Faculty Development,”
pre-conference workshop at the 32nd Annual
Conference on the First-Year Experience.
Workshop Presenter
“Directing Your Assessment Efforts: Understanding
the Value and Development of Direct Assessment
Methods,” concurrent session at the 32nd Annual
Conference on the First-Year Experience.
Dr. Richard M McKee
Associate Professor of Music
College of Arts & Sciences
Fine Arts Exhibition
Performed a concert of duo-piano music with wife,
Renee McKee, at Meredith College (Raleigh) on
Sept. 7, 2012; and at North Greenville University
(Greenville, S.C.), Sept. 17, 2012.
Dr. Salvatore R. Mercogliano
Assistant Professor of History
College of Arts & Sciences
Staff Ride
Assisted with Campbell ROTC unit staff ride
to Fredericksburg National Battlefield. Provided
historical background and assisted cadets in the
briefing, overview, and lessons learned from the
battle, March 27, 2013.
Oral Presentation
“From New Providence to Port Mahon —
Americas Navies: The First 50 Years, An Emerging
Global Force for Good,” North American Society
for Oceanic History at the National Oceanic
and Atmospheric Administration’s Thunder Bay
National Marine Sanctuary.
David M. Moffitt
Assistant Professor of New Testament and Greek
Divinity School
Oral Presentation
Co-chaired the Hebrews Consultation at the
International Society of Biblical Literature
conference in Amsterdam.
Oral Presentation
“Atonement at the Right Hand: Jesus’ Exaltation
and the Forgiveness of Sins in Acts 5:31,” New
Testament Section of the Annual National
Association of Baptist Professors in Religion
Conference (Nashville), May 2012.
Oral Presentation
“Hebrews 1–2 in Contemporary Conversation:
New Insights on Old Questions,” Hebrews
Consultation of the International Society of
Biblical Literature conference, Amsterdam.
Campbell Accolades - 29
Oral Presentation
“Hebrews 8:4 and the Authority of the Law:
Reassessing Supersessionism in Hebrews,” New
Testament Colloquia at Oxford University,
University of Edinburgh and Trinity College
(Dublin).
Oral Presentation
“Serving in Heaven’s Temple: Sacred Space, Yom
Kippur and Jesus’ Superior Offering in Hebrews,”
Hebrews program unit, Annual Meeting of the
Society of Biblical Literature (Chicago).
Dr. George Nemecz
Assistant Professor of Biochemistry
College of Pharmacy & Health Sciences
Oral Presentation
Invited Speaker at Duke Integrative Medicine
Capstone Workshop.
Dr. Karen P. Nery
Dean
School of Education
Presided over NC-ACTE spring and
fall forum.
President of North Carolina Association of
Colleges Teacher Educators (NC-ACTE).
Dr. Ann Marie Nye
Associate Professor of Pharmacy Practice
College of Pharmacy & Health Sciences
Oral Presentation
“Polypharmacy: Multiple Meds in Geriatrics,”
Martin General Hospital (Williamston), Feb. 6,
2013.
Oral Presentation
“Potentially Inappropriate Medications in the
Elderly,” Everyday Emergencies Conference
(Greenville), Jan. 25, 2013.
Oral Presentation
“Renewed Concerns about Medication Use in the
Elderly,” Geriatric Symposium (Greenville), Oct.
26, 2012; and Pamlico Albemarle Medical Society
(Washington, D.C.), Jan. 3, 2013.
Oral Presentation
“Reducing Medication-Related Falls,” ECU Family
Medicine Grand Rounds, Sept. 20, 2012.
30 - Chronicle of Scholarly Activity 2012
Poster Presentation
“Comparison of Risk Factors for QTc Interval
Prolongation in Hospitalized Patients 60 years of
Age Pre- and Post-FDA Warning for Citalopram,”
with K. Fabo, A. Musyck and C. Dennis. American
Society of Health-System Pharmacists’ Midyear
Clinical Meeting.
Poster Presentation
“Interventions of a Pharmacist on a Teaching
Nursing Home Team,” American Society of
Consultant Pharmacists meeting (Washington,
D.C.), Nov. 2012.
Clinician
Fellow of American Geriatric Society. Certified
Geriatric Pharmacist. Fellow of the American
Society of Consultant Pharmacists.
Joint Appointment
Affiliate Associate Professor: East Carolina
University Brody School of Medicine, Department
of Family Medicine.
Dr. Ann M. Ortiz
Associate Professor of Spanish
Co-Director of Honors Program
College of Arts & Sciences
Oral Presentation
“Epistolar Representation of Fray Junípero Serra in
Francisco de Palóu’s Relacion Historica de la Vida y
Apostolicas Tareas del Venerable Padre Fray Junipero
Serra (1787),” Society for the History of Discoveries.
Oral Presentation
Lecture on “Creation Stories of the Americas” for
Honors 101 class.
Fine Arts Exhibition
Musical performances accompanied by period
dances with the Cape Fear Living History Society
group, the Huckleberry Brothers (Tryon Palace, Ft.
Macon, Ft. Branch, Ft. Fisher, Liberty Hall and
Bennett Place).
Lucas S. Osborn
Assistant Professor of Law
Norman A. Wiggins School of Law
Workshop Presenter
“The Broadening Concept of an Infringing Offer to
Sell,” PatCon Patent Conference, Boston College
Law School, May 11, 2012.
Campbell Accolades - 31
Oral Presentation
“Suing for Patent Infringement Based on an ‘Offer to
Sell,’” CLE Presentation to the Triangle Intellectual
Property Law Association, May 24, 2012.
Workshop Presenter
“The Leaky Common Law: An ‘Offer to Sell’
as a Policy Tool in Patent Law and Beyond,”
International Contracts Conference, Texas
Wesleyan School of Law, Feb. 22, 2013.
Workshop Presenter
“The Third Industrial Revolution: How 3D
Printing Will Disrupt Intellectual Property Laws,”
Intellectual Property Scholars Roundtable, Drake
University School of Law, April 12, 2013.
Dr. Melanie W. Pound
Associate Professor of Pharmacy Practice
Internal Medicine
College of Pharmacy & Health Sciences
Poster Presentation
“Comparison between point-of-care random
plasma glucose and point-of-care hemoglobin A1C
for diabetes screening in migrant North Carolina
farmworkers,” with A.M. Wensil, C.H. Herring, et.
al. American Pharmaceutical Association Annual
Meeting (Poster 42),
Oral Presentation
“Intraabdominal Infection Guidelines and
Controversies to medical residents,” conference
at New Hanover Regional Medical Center —
SEAHEC, Dec 4, 2012.
Catherine A Simonson
Athletic Training Program Director
Instructor of Exercise Science
College of Arts & Sciences
Oral Presentation
“Cardiac Assessment and EKG for the Athletic
Trainer,” North Carolina Athletic Trainers’
Association Annual Meeting and Symposium
(Concord), March 2013.
Fine Arts Exhibition
Greenville Museum of Art Juried Exhibition
(Greenville). Juror: Adam Cave, co-owner of Adam
Cave Fine Art in Raleigh.
Dr. Michael Ray Smith
Professor of Communication Studies
College of Arts & Sciences
Oral Presentation
“Perspectives on Religion in Instruction and
Student Media,” Elon University Media and
Religion Conference (Elon), April 13, 2013.
Workshop Presenter
“Same dragons, different tattoos: Stories unique
to the faith-based campus,” College Media
Association (New York City), March 12, 2013.
Workshop Presenter
New advisers Roundtable, College Media
Association (New York City), March 11, 2013.
Workshop Presenter
“Bleeding and Leading: Tough Stories That Dodge
Administrative Bullets,” College Media Association
(New York City) March 12, 2013.
Workshop Presenter
“Effective Photography,” North Carolina College
Press Association (Greensboro), Feb. 16, 2013.
Moderator
Morning panel, American Journalism Historians
Association’s annual convention (Raleigh), Oct.
13, 2012.
Oral Presentation
“Teaching students with disabilities,” Association
for Education in Journalism and Mass
Communication’s annual convention (Chicago),
Aug. 11, 2012.
Workshop Presenter
“Managing Conflict,” with E. Fubara. Harnett
Health Systems (Dunn), Oct. 2, 2012.
Breck H. Smith
Workshop Presenter
Fine Arts Exhibition
Workshop Presenter
Associate Professor of Art
College of Arts & Sciences
Durham Art Guild 58th Annual Juried Art
Exhibition, Sun Trust Gallery, Durham Art Guild
(Durham). Juror: Sarah Powers, director of Visual
Art Exchange in Raleigh.
32 - Chronicle of Scholarly Activity 2012
“Motivation and Attitude,” with E. Fubara.
Leadership Harnett (Lillington), Sept. 26, 2012.
“Coaching and Mentoring,” with E. Fubara.
Harnett Health Systems (Dunn), Sept. 4, 2012.
Dr. William C. Stagner
Dr. Sherry R. Truffin
Poster Presentation
Oral Presentation
Professor of Pharmaceutical Sciences
College of Pharmacy & Health Sciences
“Physical–Chemical Characterization of 1,
2-Dihexadecanoyl-sn-glycero-3-phosphocholine
(DPPC-dipalmitoyl phosphatidylcholine), Palmitic
Acid, Palmityl Alcohol and Methyl Palmitate,” with
B.K. Gowdampally and A. Bharadwaj. American
Association of Pharmaceutical Scientists Annual
Meeting, October 2012.
Poster Presentation
“Determination of Required Hydrophile-Lipophile
Balance (rHLB) for Optimized Water-Oil-Water
Multiple Emulsion,” with S. Sayyaparaju and K.
Atluri. American Association of Pharmaceutical
Scientists Annual Meeting, October 2012.
Poster Presentation
“Physical–Chemical Characterization of the
Phospholipid 1,2- Dimyristoyl-sn-glycero-3phosphatidylcholine (DMPC), Myristic Acid,
Methyl Myristate and Myristoyl Alcohol,” with
R. Yadavalli and D. Devarampally. American
Association of Pharmaceutical Scientists Annual
Meeting, October 2012.
Poster Presentation
“Effect of Tapped Density, Compacted Density
and Fluorescent Granule Concentration of
Light-induced Fluorescence (LIF) Signal,” with
I. Shah and K.J. Ely. American Association of
Pharmaceutical Scientists Annual Meeting,
October 2012.
Dr. Sally Thomas
Assistant Professor of Music
Director of Vocal Studies
College of Arts & Sciences
Fine Arts Exhibition
Featured soprano soloist for the annual “MESSIAH
Sing-In,” a benefit for the Food Bank of Central
and Eastern North Carolina sponsored by Edenton
Street United Methodist Church in Raleigh.
Adjudication
Judge for the 2013 Governor’s School Auditions
held at Meredith College in February and
sponsored by NCDPI. Judge for the Mid-Atlantic
Regional NATS Student Auditions (Charleston,
S.C.), April, 2013.
Associate Professor of English
College of Arts & Sciences
“Creation Anxiety in Gothic Metafiction,” College
English Association Conference (Savannah, Ga.)
April 2013.
Oral Presentation
“The Nature of Authorship: Creation Anxiety
in Gothic Metafiction,” presented at the College
English Association Conference (Savannah, Ga.),
April 2013.
Dr. Donna E. Waldron
Assistant Professor of English
Study Abroad Director
College of Arts & Sciences
Oral Presentation
“Periodical Theatre Reviews: Gender and the LateCentury Professional Dramatist,” American Society
for Eighteenth Century Studies, April 6, 2013.
Poster Presentation
“Cooperative Service Learning,” with Drs.
Michelle Thomas and Debora Weaver. NAFSA:
Association of International Educators, May 2013.
Dr. Debora J. Weaver
Associate Professor
College of Arts & Sciences
Poster Presentation
“Cooperative Service Learning in Tanzanian
Health Care,” with Drs. Michelle Thomas
and Donna Waldron. NAFSA (Association
of International Educators) 2013 Annual
Conference, May 26-31, 2013.
Dr. Ran Whitley
Chairman, Department of Fine Arts
Associate Professor of Church Music
Alma Dark Howard Professor of Church Music
Divinity School
Workshop Presenter
“Orchestrations for Recorders and Barred
Instruments,” Nebraska Music Educators
Association (NMEA) State Convention, University
of Nebraska, Nov. 16, 2012.
Campbell Accolades - 33
Workshop Presenter
“Energizing Your Recorder Program,” Nebraska
Music Educators Association (NMEA) State
Convention, University of Nebraska, Nov. 16, 2012.
Workshop Presenter
“Energizing Your Recorder Program,” Music
Educators Association of New York City
(MEANYC) (New York City), Jan. 5, 2013.
Workshop Presenter
“Energizing Your Recorder Program,” Texas Music
Educators Association (TMEA) State Convention
(San Antonio), Feb. 15, 2013.
Workshop Presenter
“Using Music to Teach Listening Skills and
Pre-reading Concepts,” Harnett County Smart
Solutions Annual Conference, Campbell
University, March 3, 2013.
Workshop Presenter
“Programmatic Uses or the Rochut Studies for
Concert Performance,” North Carolina Trombone
Festival Annual Meeting, University of North
Carolina at Greensboro (Greensboro), April 13,
2013.
Workshop Presenter
“Using Music to Teach Listening Skills and Prereading Concepts,” Chatham County Partnership
for Children Annual Conference (Pittsboro), May
4, 2013.
Workshop Presenter
“The Orff Process in Children’s Ministry,” OASIS:
Renew the Journey, Campbell University Divinity
School, July 18, 2012.
Workshop Presenter
“Syllabic Techniques for Children’s Choir Chimes,”
OASIS: Renew the Journey, Campbell University
Divinity School, July 18, 2012.
Workshop Presenter
“Orchestrations for Recorders and Barred
Instruments,” Nebraska Music Educators
Association (NMEA) State Convention, University
of Nebraska, Nov. 16, 2012.
Workshop Presenter
“Energizing Your Recorder Program,” Nebraska
Music Educators Association (NMEA) State
Convention, University of Nebraska, Nov. 16, 2012:
34 - Chronicle of Scholarly Activity 2012
Dr. Charles Dwayne Wilson
Associate Professor of Music
Director of Bands and Instrumental Studies
College of Arts & Sciences
Oral Presentation
“Implementation of The North Carolina
Bandmaster Mentoring Program: A Roundtable
Discussion,” Annual Mentoring Meeting at the
North Carolina Music Educators Convention,
November 2012.
Betty R. Wishart
Adjunct Professor of Piano
College of Arts & Sciences
Fine Arts Exhibition
Sonata I selected as one of five piano works to
represent “American Men and Women of the 20th21st Centuries,” Campbell University, March 19,
2013.
Music
Presentation at Festival of Contemporary Piano
Music, Morehead State University, March 2, 2013.
Composer
Sonata I selected as one of four pieces to represent
American Women Composers (20th-21st
centuries). Margaret Mills, Campbell University,
March 20, 2013.
Composer
Sonata II performed on “Living American
Composers” concert, Campbell University, March
21, 2013.
Composer
Sonata II one of four pieces selected for
performance (Jesse Davis, pianist) at New Music of
the Cape Fear Symposium, Methodist University,
April 6, 2013.
Composer
Commissioned to write a work for alto recorder
by Dr. James Chaudoir. “Suite of Miniatures”
premiered at Clarke University (Dubuque, Iowa),
April 13, 2013.
Dr. Brock Woodis
Assistant Professor of Pharmacy Practice
Ambulatory Care
College of Pharmacy & Health Sciences
Workshop Presenter
Panel Discussion-Career Planning, American
Pharmacists Association Academy of Student
Pharmacists (APhA-ASP) Region 3 Midyear
Regional Meeting (Raleigh), Nov. 6, 2012.
Oral Presentation
“Exploring the Role of the Pharmacist as a
Provider: Q & A,” with D.W. Kemp. North
Carolina Association of Pharmacists Annual
Convention (Raleigh), Oct. 29, 2012.
Oral Presentation
“Treatment of Comorbidities in COPD — A
Focus on Cardiovascular Disease, Osteoporosis and
Depression,” Adult Medicine Practice and Research
Network Programming. American College of
Clinical Pharmacy Annual Meeting, Oct 22, 2012.
Oral Presentation
“ASHP Core Therapeutic Module: Women’s
Health, online presentation,” part of ASHP’s
collection of on-demand programs to assist
practitioners in preparing for a Board of Pharmacy
Specialties (BPS) examination. July 2012.
Poster Presentation
“Use of pre- and post-tests to assess student
pharmacist effectiveness when presenting inservices to other healthcare professionals,” with
A.M. McLendon. American College of Clinical
Pharmacy 2012 Annual Meeting (Hollywood,
Fla.), Oct. 24, 2012.
William Woodruff
Professor of Law
Norman A. Wiggins School of Law
Oral Presentation
“Conceptions of Property and Economic
Development,” Western Economic Association
International Meeting (San Francisco), July 2012.
Oral Presentation
“Economics and Communicating the Cultural
Mandate,” Association of Private Enterprise
Education (Las Vegas), April 2012.
Colloquium
“Economic Crisis and Freedom,” sponsored by
Liberty Fund and the Federalist Society, June 2012.
Dr. Taek H. You
Assistant Professor of Biology
College of Arts & Sciences
Poster Presentation
“Isolation Of Microorganisms For
Bioremediation,” Big South Undergraduate
Research Symposium, High Point University, April
5, 2013.
Poster Presentation
“Isolation Of Food Microorganisms Of
Importance,” with Colleen Calliham. Big South
Undergraduate Research Symposium, High Point
University, April 5, 2013.
Oral Presentation
“Building and Analyzing SNP Microarrys of
Clinically Important Diseases Using Simulation
Software,” mentor of Colleen Calliham. State
of North Carolina Undergraduate Research and
Creativity Symposium, Duke University.
Oral Presentation
Character Evidence, Federal Criminal Practice
Seminar, May 2012
Dr. Derek K. Yonai
Lundy Chair of the Philosophy of Business
Associate Professor of Economics
Lundy-Fetterman School of Business
Oral Presentation
“A Rational Choice Analysis of Two Gospel
Dominance,” Southern Economic Association
Meeting (New Orleans), November 2012.
Campbell Accolades - 35
36 - Chronicle of Scholarly Activity 2012
Publications
Dr. Connie L. Barnes
Dr. Tony W. Cartledge
Book Chapter
Book
Professor of Pharmacy Practice
College of Pharmacy & Health Sciences
J.D. Smith and C.L. Barnes, “OTC Otic,
Dental, and Ophthalmic Agents,” Comprehensive
Pharmacy Review, 8th ed., edited by L. Shargel,
A.H. Mutnick, P.F. Souney, and L.N. Swanson
(Philadelphia, Pa.: Wolters Kluwer/Lippincott
Williams & Wilkins), 2013.
Book Chapter
P.F. Souney, C.L. Barnes, and V.B. Clinard,
“Drug Information Resources,” Comprehensive
Pharmacy Review, 8th ed., edited by L. Shargel,
A.H. Mutnick, P.F. Souney, and L.N. Swanson,
(Philadelphia, Pa.: Wolters Kluwer/Lippincott
Williams & Wilkins), 2013.
Dr. James A. Boyd
Associate Professor of Pharmacy Practice
College of Pharmacy & Health Sciences
Online Contributor
Web-based Financial Benchmarking, Analysis and
Reports, on RXtraProfit.com, July 2012-June 2013.
Book Chapter
“North Carolina Pharmacy Law,” MPJE Review
Guide, 1st ed. (McGraw-Hill), submitted Fall 2012.
Dr. Bonnie Brenseke
Assistant Professor of Pathology
Interim Chair of Pathology
School of Osteopathic Medicine
Journal Article
Bonnie Brenseke, M. Renee Prater, Javiera
Bahamonde, and J. Claudio Gutierrez, “Current
Thoughts on Maternal Nutrition and Fetal
Programming of the Metabolic Syndrom,” Journal
of Pregnancy, 2013.
Professor of Old Testament
Campbell Divinity School
B. Barker and T. Cartledge, I’m in Cells: The
Captivating Story of Bob Barker and the Bob Barker
Company (Bob Barker Company), 2012.
Book
Sessions with Samuel (Macon, Ga.: Smyth &
Helwys), 2012.
Book Chapter
“Walk About Jerusalem: Protestant Pilgrims and
the Holy Land,” Archaeology, Bible, Politics, and
the Media, edited by Eric M. Meyers and Carol
Meyers (Eisenbrauns), 2012.
Dr. Brad Chazotte
Research Associate Professor of Pharmaceutical Sciences
College of Pharmacy & Health Sciences
Online Publication
“Labeling Golgi with fluorescent ceramides,” Cold
Spring Harbor Protocols, Aug. 1, 2012.
Dr. Robert M. Cisneros Jr.
Associate Professor of Pharmacy Practice
College of Pharmacy & Health Sciences
Book Chapter
“Medication Errors,” Comprehensive Pharmacy
Review, 8th ed., edited by L. Shargel, A. Mtunick,
Souney, and L. Swanson (Philadelphia, Pa.:
Lippincott Williams & Wilkins), 2013.
Dr. Valerie B. Clinard
Associate Professor of Pharmacy Practice
College of Pharmacy & Health Sciences
Manuscript
J.D. Smith and V.B. Clinard, “Diabetes and
sudden cardiac death,” U.S. Pharmacist [38(2):3842], 2013.
Campbell Accolades - 37
Book Chapter
P.F. Souney, C.L. Barnes, and V.B. Clinard, “Drug
Information Resources,” Comprehensive Pharmacy
Review for NAPLEX, 8th ed. , edited Leon Shargel,
Alan H. Mutnick, Larry N. Swanson and Paul
F. Souney (Philadelphia, Pa.: Wolters Kluwer/
Lippincott Williams & Wilkins), 2013.
Manuscript
V.B. Clinard and J.D. Smith, “Drug-induced skin
disorders,” U.S. Pharmacist [37(4):HS11-HS18],
2013.
Dr. Britt J. Davis
Vice President of Institutional Advancement
Book Chapter
T.M. Beinhart, R.A. Buckley, T.E. Burney, A.P.
Collie, B.J. Davis, et al, “Chapter 2: North
Carolina Wind Energy: Major Potential or Major
Hype,” Current Cases in Environmental Policy
(Valdosta State University), in press.
Dissertation
“Using Social Media to Connect with University
Constituents During a Campus Crisis:
Application Among North Carolina Public and
Private Colleges and Universities,” Valdosta State
University, 2013.
Dr. Richard Drew
Associate Professor of Pharmacy Practice
College of Pharmacy & Health Sciences
Journal Article
M. Davis, D. Anderson, M. Sharpe, L. Chen,
and R. Drew, “Constructing unit-specific empiric
treatment guidelines for catheter-related and
primary bacteremia by determining the likelihood of
inadequate antimicrobial therapy,” Infection Control
and Hospital Epidemiology, (33:416-420), 2012.
Journal Article
D.J. Anderson, B. Miller, R. Marfatia, and R.
Drew,“Ability of an antibiogram to predict
Pseudomonas aeruginosa susceptibility to targeted
antimicrobials based on hospital day of isolation,”
Infection Control and Hospital Epidemiology,
(33:589-593), 2012.
Journal Article
N. Panosh, M. Sharpe, and R. Drew, “Effect of
closed-loop order processing on time to initial
antimicrobial therapy,” American Journal of
Health-System Pharmacy, (69:1423-6), 2012.
38 - Chronicle of Scholarly Activity 2012
Journal Article
E.D. Ashley, R. Drew, M. Johnson, et al,
“Institutional cost of managing invasive fungal
infections in the era of new diagnostics and
expanded treatment options,” Pharmacotherapy
(32:890–901), 2012.
Abstract
S. Johnson, R. Drew, D.B. May, and D.
Anderson, “Utility of a clinical risk-factor scoring
system in predicting select multidrug-resistant
organisms,” Infection Control and Hospital
Epidemiology, in press.
Journal Article
S. Johnson, R. Drew, and D.B. May “How Long
to Treat With Antibiotics Following Amputation
Due to Diabetic Foot Infections? Are the 2012
IDSA DFI Guidelines Reasonable?,” Journal of
Clinical Pharmacy and Therapeutics, 2012
Book Chapter
R. Drew, M. Townsend, and M. Pound,
“Antifungal Use In Transplant Recipients:
Selection, Administration and Monitoring,”
Principles and Practice of Transplant Infectious
Diseases, edited by A. Safdar (New York:
Springer), in press.
Abstract
C. Kung, M. Johnson, R. Drew, and J. Perfect,
“Effectiveness of posaconazole vs fluconazole as
antifungal prophylaxis in hematology-oncology
patients at Duke University Hospital (DUH)
2004-2010,” 52nd Interscience Conference on
Antmicrobial Agents and Chemotherapy, in San
Francisco, Calif., Sept. 9-12, 2012.
Abstract
S. Johnson, R. Drew, D.B. May, and D.
Anderson, “Utility of a clinical risk-factor scoring
system in predicting select multidrug-resistant
organisms,” 52nd Interscience Conference on
Antmicrobial Agents and Chemotherapy, in San
Francisco, Calif., Sept. 9-12, 2012.
Abstract
R. Waterson and R. Drew, “Incidence of
invasive fungal infections following aerosolized
amphotericin B lipid complex as sole prophylaxis
in adult lung transplant recipients,” 2012
American College of Clinical Pharmacy Annual
Meeting, in Hollywood, Fla., Oct. 21-24, 2012.
Abstract
D. Anderson, E. Cain, and R. Drew, “Predictors
of unfavorable treatment outcomes in hospitalized
patients with methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus
aureus (MRSA) complicated skin and skin
structure infections (abstract),” IDWeek 2012, in
San Diego, Calif., Oct. 17-21, 2012.
Dr. Adam C. English
Associate Professor of Religion
College of Arts & Sciences
Book
The Saint Who Would be Santa Claus: The True Life
and Trials of St. Nicholas of Myra (Waco, Texas:
Baylor University Press), 2012.
Newspaper Article
“The Saint Who Would be Santa,” The Chronicle
of Higher Education (B10-B11), Dec. 14, 2012.
Commentary/Editorial
“My Take: The Christmas Message of St.
Nicholas,” CNN Belief Blog, Dec. 22, 2012.
Peer-Reviewed Research Article
“The Cyrilian Solution: Cyril of Jerusalem and
Saul Kripke on Naming God,” New Blackfriars
(1-14), July 9, 2012.
Journal Article
“Dolls, Divers and the Existence of God,”
Immerse: A Journal of Faith, Life and Youth
Ministry (2.6: 34-38), March/April 2012.
Book Review
What Shall We Say? Evil, Suffering, and The
Crisis of Faith, by Thomas Long, in Review and
Expositor ( 109.2: 313-2), Spring 2012.
Dr. James B. Groce III
Professor of Pharmacy
College of Pharmacy & Health Sciences
Book Chapter
“Chapter 35: Thromboembolic Disease,”
Comprehensive Pharmacy Review, 5th ed., edited by
L. Shargel, A.H. Mutnick, P.F. Souney, and L.N.
Swanson (Philadelphia, Pa.: Lippincott Williams
& Wilkins Publisher), 2013.
Abstract
“New oral anticoagulants: A balancing act between
safety and efficacy.Comparing anticoagulation
reversibility practices between warfarin, dabigatran,
and rivaroxaban,” American Society of HealthSystem Pharmacists Midyear Clinical Meeting (Las
Vegas, Nev.), December 2012.
Abstract
“aPTT versus anti-Xa monitoring of
unfractionated heparin--pro anti-Xa heparin level
monitoring,” American Society of Health-System
Pharmacists Midyear Clinical Meeting (Las Vegas,
Nev.), December 2012.
Dr. Karen Guzman
Associate Professor of Biological Sciences
College of Arts & Sciences
Peer-Reviewed Research Article
K. Guzman and J. Bartlett, “Using
Simple Manipulatives to Improve Student
Comprehension of a Complex Biological Process:
Protein Synthesis,” Biochemistry and Molecular
Biology Education, [40 (5): 320-327], 2012.
Dr. W. Glenn Jonas
Charles B. Howard Professor of Religion
Chair of Department of Religion and Philosophy
College of Arts & Sciences
Magazine Article
“Vision Springs,” Faith &Leadership, March 12,
2013.
Journal Article
“Nurturing the Vision: Highlights from a
200-Year-Old Baptist Church in Raleigh, North
Carolina,” Baptist History and Heritage 47 (2639), Summer 2012.
Book Review
Mainline Christianity: The Past and Future of
America’s Majority Faith, by Jason S. Lantzer, in
Choice, 2012.
Amos N. Jones
Assistant Professor of Law
Norman Adrian Wiggins School of Law
Book Review
Jury Discrimination: The Supreme Court, Public
Opinion, and a Grassroots Fight for Racial Equality
in Mississippi, by Christopher Waldrep, in Journal
of African American History (97:184), Winter/
Spring 2012.
Book Review
The Henry Louis Gates, Jr. Reader, by Henry Louis
Gates Jr., in Books & Culture, April 2013.
Campbell Accolades - 39
Dr. Barry A. Jones
Associate Professor of Old Testament and Hebrew
Divinity School
Journal Article
“Resisting the Power of Empire: The Theme of
Resistance in the Book of Daniel,” Review &
Expositor (109: 541-56), Fall 2012.
Chapter Reviews
“The Book of the Twelve: Hosea-Jonah” and “The
Book of the Twelve: Micah-Malachi,” Smyth &
Helwys Bible Commentary Vols. 18a and 18b, by
James D. Nogalski, in Perspectives in Religious
Studies, forthcoming.
Dr. Haydn T. Jones
Associate Professor of Foreign Language
Chair of Department of Foreign Language
College of Arts & Sciences
Journal Article
“Immigration and Internal Study Abroad,”
Association of Academics Programs in Latin
American and the Caribbean Journal, from 24th
Annual Conference of Association of Academic
40 - Chronicle of Scholarly Activity 2012
Programs in Latin America and the Caribbean—
Cross Imaginary and Physical Boundaries:
Redining Study Abroad in an Increasingly Diverse
World, in Raleigh, N.C., Feb. 20-22, 2013.
Dr. Cameron H. J. Jorgenson
Assistant Professor of Christian Theology
Divinity School
Book Chapter
“The Missional Shape of Liturgy,” Gathering
Together: Baptists at Work in Worship, edited by
Derek C. Hatch and Rodney W. Kennedy (
Eugene, Ore.: Cascade Books), forthcoming.
Dr. Victoria Kaprielian
Associate Dean for Faculty Development and
Medical Education
School of Osteopathic Medicine
Peer-Reviewed Research Article
V.S. Kaprielian, M. Silberberg, and M.A.
McDonald, et al, “Teaching Population Health:
A Competency Map Approach to Education,”
Academic Medicine (88:626–637), 2013
Dr. Elizabeth H. Lange
Dr. Bruce G McNair
Journal Article
Book Review
Assistant Professor of Exercise Science
College of Arts & Sciences
D.L. Gill, C.C. Hammond, E.J. Reifsteck, C.M.
Jehu, R.A. Williams, M.M. Adams, E.H. Lange,
K. Becofsky, E.A. Rodriguez, and Y-T. Shang, Y-T,
“Physical activity and quality of life,” Journal of
Preventive Medicine and Public Health (45:1-7),
2012.
Journal Article
E.H. Lange and D.L. Gill, “Multicultural
awareness, knowledge, & skills among challenge
course facilitators,” Journal of Experiential
Education, submitted January 2013.
Dr. Jennifer A Latino
Director of First-Year Experience
Student Life
Book
J.A. Latino and M.A. Ashcraft, The FirstYear Seminar: Designing, Implementing, and
Assessing Courses to Support Student Learning and
Success, Volume IV: Using Peers in the Classroom
(Columbia, S.C.: University of South Carolina’s
National Resource Center for the First-Year
Experience and Students in Transition), 2012.
Book Chapter
J.A. Latino and C.M. Unite, “Providing Academic
Support Through Peer Education,” Peer Leadership
in Higher Education: New Directions in Higher
Education, Number 157, edited by J.R. Keup (San
Francisco, Calif.: Jossey-Bass), 2012
Dr. D. Byron May
Professor of Pharmacy Practice
Chair of Pharmacy Practice
College of Pharmacy & Health Sciences
Manuscript
S.W. Johnson, R.H. Drew, and D.B. May,
“How Long to Treat with Antibiotics Following
Amputation in Patients with Diabetic Foot
Infections? Are the 2012 IDSA DFI Guidelines
Reasonable?” Journal of Clinical Pharmacy and
Therapeutics, [38(2):85-8], 2013.
Associate Professor of History
College of Arts & Sciences
Petrarch and St. Augustine: Classical Scholarship,
Christian Theology and the Origins of the
Renaissance in Italy, by Alexander Lee, in NeoLatin News, forthcoming.
Dr. Salvatore R. Mercogliano
Assistant Professor of History
College of Arts & Sciences
Magazine Article
“A Forest of Assassins: The US Merchant Marine
Under Fire During the Vietnam War,” Sea History,
Autumn 2012.
Book Review
A Man and His Ship: America’s Greatest Naval
Architect and His Quest to Build the SS United
States, by Steven Ujifusa, in Sea History, Winter
2012-13.
Book Review
Pacific Crucible: War at Sea in the Pacific, 19411942, by Ian Toll, in Sea History, Summer 2013.
Book Review
War on the Waters: The Union and Confederate
Navies, 1861 - 1865, by James McPherson, in Sea
History, Summer 2013.
Commentary/Editorial
Interviewed on subject of maritime history and
the sinking of the HMS Bounty off the coast
of North Carolina during Hurricane Sandy
by WRAL-TV 5, WRAL-FM 101.5, News 14
Carolina, The Christian Science Monitor, and
Canadian Broadcasting Company.
David M. Moffitt
Assistant Professor of New Testament
Divinity School
Peer-Reviewed Research Article
C. J. Butera and D.M. Moffitt, “P.Duk. inv. 727r:
New Evidence for the Meaning and Provenance
of the Word Προσήλυτος,” Journal of Biblical
Literature (132: 159–78), 2013.
Campbell Accolades - 41
Book Chapter
“A Note on Some Προσήλυτοι in P.Duk.inv.
727R,” XIV Congress of the IOSCS, Helsinki, 2010,
edited by Melvin K. H. Peters (Atlanta, Ga.:
Society of Biblical Literature), 2013.
Book Reviews
A Spirituality of Perfection: Faith in Action in the
Letter of James, by Patrick J. Hartin; Brother of
Jesus, Friend of God: Studies in the Letter of James,
by Luke Timothy Johnson; and New Testament
Readings: James, by Richard Bauckham, in
Christian Reflection: A Series in Faith and Ethics,
2012
Dr. Shahriar Mostashari
Associate Dean of External Affairs
Professor of Business
Lundy-Fetterman School of Business
Case Report
Provided market feedback on the effectiveness of
MyEconLab’s Study Plan at Pearson Economics
Knewton Adaptive Learning Market Research
Program II, Spring 2013.
Dr. Ann Marie Nye
Associate Professor of Pharmacy Practice
College of Pharmacy & Health Sciences
Peer-Reviewed Research Article
A. Nye, I. Hamrick, A. Rauch, M. Pound,
and P. Shelton, “Calcium Supplementation
Documentation in Conjunction with Oral
Bisphosphonate Use,” The Consultant Pharmacist,
[28(1): 31-8), 2013.
Dr. Ann M. Ortiz
Associate Professor of Spanish
College of Arts & Sciences
External Program Evaluation
Conducted peer program review for the Honors
Program at Meredith College, Fall 2012.
Lucas S. Osborn
Assistant Professor of Law
Norman Adrian Wiggins School of Law
Journal Article
“The Leaky Common Law: An ‘Offer to Sell’ As
a Policy Tool in Patent Law and Beyond,” Santa
Clara Law Review, Spring 2013.
42 - Chronicle of Scholarly Activity 2012
Journal Article
“Ripple Effects in the Law: The Broadening
Meaning of an ‘Offer to Sell’ in Patent Law,”
Stanford Technology Law Review, forthcoming
2014.
Guest Blog Post
“Transocean v. Maersk, Part II: Secondary Indicia
of Nonobviousness Outweigh Prima Facie Case of
Obviousness,” PatentlyO.com, Nov. 18, 2012.
Dr. Melanie W. Pound
Associate Professor of Pharmacy Practice
College of Pharmacy & Health Sciences
Journal Article
A.M. Wensil, M.W. Pound, C. Herring, and
J.D. Smith, “Comparison between point-ofcare random plasma glucose and point-of-care
hemoglobin A1C for diabetes screening in migrant
North Carolina farmworkers,” Journal of the
American Pharmacists Association, forthcoming.
Journal Article
M.W. Pound and J.E. Reel, “Daptomycinnonsusceptible VRE bacteremia: a case report
and review of the literature,” Infectious Diseases in
Clinical Practice [21(2):79-84], 2013.
Journal Article
A.M. Nype, I. Hamrick, A. Rouch, M.W. Pound,
and P.S. Shelton, “Calcium supplementation
documentation in conjunction with oral
bisphosphonate use,” Consult Pharm (28:31-8),
2013.
Book Chapter
R.D. Drew, M.L. Townsend, and M.W. Pound,
“Chapter 77: PK/PD in special populations,
drug-drug interactions, drug dosing, standard
aerosol and novel routes of drug administration,”
edited by A. Safdar et al, Principles and Practices of
Transplant Infectious Diseases, edited by A. Safdar
et al (New York: Springer), forthcoming.
Chapter Questions
Contributed questions for two chapters,
“Infectious Diarrhea” and “Intraabdominal
Infections,”
Applied Therapeutics: The Clinical Use of Drugs,
10th edition, by A.M. Koda-Kimble, L.Y. Young,
W.A. Kradjan, et al. (Philadelpha, Pa.: Lippincott,
Williams & Wilkins), 2012.
Dr. Elizabeth L. Rambo
Dr. Larry N. Swanson
Peer-Reviewed Research Article
Book
Associate Professor of English
College of Arts & Sciences
AmiJo Comeford, Ian Klein, and Elizabeth L.
Rambo, “Academics Assemble: A Report on New
Scholarship at SC5,” Slayage: The Journal of the
Whedon Studies Association (9.2:34), Fall 2012.
Dr. Michael Ray Smith
Professor of Communication Studies
College of Arts &Sciences
Book Chapter
“Charles M. Sheldon’s Jesus Newspaper and the
Reformist Impulse in Evangelical Publications,”
Evangelicals and Popular Culture, edited by Robert
H. Woods Jr. (Santa Barbara, Calif.: ABC-CLIO
Books), 2013.
Dr. William C. Stagner
Professor of Pharmaceutical Sciences
Director of Campbell Center for Analaysis of
Pharmaceutical Biomaterials
College of Pharmacy & Health Sciences
Peer-Reviewed Research Article
M.G. Papich, D.N. LeVine, J.L. Gookin, G.S.
Davidson, W.C. Stagner, and R.B. Hayes,
“Ronidazole Pharmacokinetics in Cats Following
Delivery of a Delayed Release Guar Gum
Formulation,” Journal of Veterinary Pharmacology
and Therapeutics, Oct. 30, 2012.
Peer-Reviewed Research Article
V. Kumar, M.K. Taylor, A. Mehrota, and W.C.
Stagner, “Real-Time Particle Size Analysis
Using Focused Beam Reflectance Measurement
as a Process Analytical Tool for a Continuous
Granulation-Drying-Milling Process,” AAPS
PharmSciTech, February 2013.
Book
A. Al-Achi, M.R. Gupta, and W.C. Stagner,
Integrated Pharmaceutics: Applied Preformulation,
Product Design, and Regulatory Science, (Hoboken,
N.J.: Wiley), 2013.
Emeritus Professor of Pharmacy Practice
College of Pharmacy & Health Sciences
Leon Shargel, Alan H. Mutnick, Paul F. Souney,
and Larry N. Swanson, Comprehensive Pharmacy
Review for NAPLEX, 8th ed. (Baltimore Md.:
Wolters Kluwer/Lippincott Williams & Wilkins),
2013.
Book
Alan H. Mutnick, Paul F. Souney, Larry N.
Swanson, and Leon Shargel, Comprehensive
Pharmacy Review for NAPLEX: Practice Exams,
Cases, and Test Prep, 8th ed. (Baltimore, Md.:
Wolters Kluwer/Lippincott Williams & Wilkins),
2013.
Book Chapter
“Hyperuricemia and Gout,” Comprehensive
Pharmacy Review for NAPLEX, 8th ed, edited by
Leon Shargel, Alan H. Mutnick, Paul F. Souney,
and Larry N. Swanson, (Baltimore, Md.: Wolters
Kluwer/Lippincott Williams & Wilkins), 2013.
Book Chapter
L. N. Swanson and R.S. Swanson, “Over-theCounter Dermatological Agents,” Comprehensive
Pharmacy Review for NAPLEX, 8th ed.
(Baltimore, Md.: Wolters Kluwer/Lippincott
Williams & Wilkins), 2013.
Dr. Sherry R. Truffin
Associate Professor of English
College of Arts & Sciences
Peer-Reviewed Research Article
“Creation Anxiety in Gothic Metafiction:
The Dark Half and Lunar Park,” Companion
to American Gothic, edited by Charles Crow
(Hoboken, N.J.: Wiley-Blackwell), forthcoming.
Book Chapter
“‘Gigantic Paradox, Too. . . Monstrous for
Solution’: Nightmarish Democracy and the
Schoolhouse Gothic in ‘William Wilson’ and The
Secret History,” Companion to American Gothic,
edited by Charles Crow (Hoboken, N.J.: WileyBlackwell), forthcoming.
Campbell Accolades - 43
Dr. Ran Whitley
Professor of Music
College of Arts & Sciences
Journal Article
“The Orff Process in the ESL Classroom: Teaching
Supra-segmental Pronunciation,” The Orff Echo
(45.3), 2013.
Betty R. Wishart
Adjunct Professor of Piano
College of Arts & Sciences
Music
Serenade piano solo, Conners Publications,
February 2013.
Dr. Derek K. Yonai
Associate Professor of Business
Lundy Chair of the Philosophy of Business
Lundy-Fetterman School of Business
Book Review
The Free Market: Coercion or True Freedom? Review
of Defending the Free Market, by the Rev. Robert
Sirico, in CatholicismUSA, June 24, 2012.
Commentary/Editorial
“Economic Freedom? – US falls from 2nd to 18th
in twelve years. . .” CatholicismUSA, Oct. 6, 2012.
Commentary/Editorial
“QE3 Shows the Fed Worshipping Animal Spirits.
. .” CatholicismUSA, Sept. 20, 2012.
Dr. Brock Woodis
Commentary/Editorial
Case Report
Commentary/Editorial
Assistant Professor of Pharmacy Practice
College of Pharmacy & Health Sciences
C. B. Woodis, D. Fuentes, and L. Sease, “Deescalation of antipsychotic medications in an
elderly patient with alzheimer’s dementia residing
in an assisted living facility,” The Mental Health
Clinician, November 2012.
Journal Article
C.B. Woodis, A.N. McLendon, and A.J. Muzyk,
“Testosterone supplementation for hypoactive
sexual desire disorder (HSDD) in women,”
Pharmacotherapy (32:38–53), 2012
William Woodruff
Professor of Law
Norman Adrian Wiggins School of Law
Journal Article
“Admissibility of Prior Bad Acts Under
N.C.R.Evid 404(b): Alchemy or Analysis,”
Campbell Law Observer, December 2012.
Journal Article
“Cross-examination by the Numbers,” Campbell
Law Observer, Febuary 2013.
Abstract
“Corroborate This!,” Campbell Law Observer,
March 2013.
44 - Chronicle of Scholarly Activity 2012
“False Saviors Use Reactionary Monetary Policies.
. .” CatholicismUSA, Aug. 5, 2012.
“Free Nevada and Unleash the Entrepreneur,” The
Las Vegas Review-Journal, May 27, 2012.
Dr. Taek H. You
Assistant Professor of Biology
College of Arts & Sciences
Peer-Reviewed Research Article
Jinsoo Kim, Sathiyaraj Srinivasan, Taek
You, John J. Bang, Sujeong Park and SangSeob Lee, “Brevibacterium ammoniilyticum
sp. nov., an ammonia-degrading bacterium
isolated from sludge of a wastewater treatment
plant,” International Journal of Systematic and
Evolutionary Microbiology (63: 1111–1118), 2013.
Peer-Reviewed Research Article
Jinsoo Kim, Yong-Kju Yu, Fei Yan, John Bang,
Taek You, and Sang-Seob Lee, “A New Strain of
Bacteria Degrading TNT and 2,4/2,6-DNT From
Explosives - Contaminated Soil,” Atlas Journal of
Biology [2(2): 116–124], 2012.
Dean’s Excellence in Teaching Award
College of Pharmacy & Health Sciences
Dr. Wesley D. Rich
Dr. Wesley
Rich is a man
of many talents
in Campbell
University’s
College of
Pharmacy &
Health Sciences.
In addition
to his role as
assistant dean for administration, he
has served as an assistant professor
teaching statistics for the past three
years in the college’s clinical research
program and now in the new public
health program.
and promotion. This past spring,
he taught the first health education
and promotion classes ever held at
Campbell.
He’s also the co-founder of the public
health program and has led in its
development of health education
He has developed a progressive
approach to teaching statistics
breaking down difficult concepts
and giving practical applications.
Rich joined Campbell University
in 2007 as the college’s director of
assessment for the College of Pharmacy
and Health Sciences and was later
appointed assistant professor in 2009.
He received both his B.S. in Biology
in 2001 and M.Ed. in 2005 from
Campbell University then later earned
his Ph.D. in Educational Research and
Policy Analysis from North Carolina
State University in 2009.
Rich’s lectures are engaging and
developmentally appropriate;
moreover, he uses a variety of
assessment strategies to monitor and
evaluate student learning.
“Dr. Rich is very compassionate and
truly cares about his all students,”
said Dr. Ronald Maddox, dean of
the College of Pharmacy & Health
Sciences and vice president for health
programs at Campbell University. “No
matter how busy he is, he always sets
aside time to meet with students. He
inspires his students to achieve and
succeed in their chosen profession. Dr.
Rich sets the example of what we hope
for our students, as Campbell alumni,
to return to education and succeed.
He makes us Campbell Proud.”
Dean’s Excellence in Research Award
Norman Adrian Wiggins School of Law
J. Bryan Boyd
J. Bryan Boyd
is an engaging
teacher and an
encouraging
counselor to
students both
inside and
outside the
classroom since
his arrival at
Campbell University’s School of Law
in 2003.
Most recently, Professor Boyd
completed a term as the associate
dean for academic affairs. He has also
served as an assistant professor of
legal writing and as the director of the
Professional Skills Program at the law
school.
Law. Boyd has taught a variety of
courses on the topics of legal research
and writing and appellate and trial
advocacy.
Prior to coming to Campbell, Boyd
served as a judicial law clerk to the
Hon. Robert H. Edmunds Jr. at the
North Carolina Supreme Court.
He currently teaches in the area
of criminal law and procedure. In
addition, he continues to teach a
seminar on the North Carolina
Supreme Court.
Boyd has a passion for teaching law
students. In addition to this year’s
Dean’s Excellence in Teaching Award,
the student body has recognized him
three times as the most outstanding
professor of the year, including his
very first year teaching at Campbell
Boyd is a graduate of Mars Hill
College and Campbell Law School.He
has served as a coach to both national
and regional champion moot court
and trial teams.
Campbell Accolades - 45
Dean’s Excellence in Teaching Award
School of Education
Dr. Oney Graham
Oney Graham
joined the
faculty at
Campbell
University in
2007 following
a distinguished
career as
a military
intelligence
officer — a retired lieutenant colonel
— and as an educator in the public
schools of Florida.
Having served as both a classroom
teacher and a school administrator,
Graham has firsthand knowledge of
what is required to be a successful
teacher. Her curriculum expertise,
engaging classroom environment, and
warm personality, make her a favorite
among students.
Graham currently serves as assistant
professor of education in Campbell’s
School of Education and is the
coordinator of the elementary
education and interdisciplinary studies
graduate programs.
“With the current emphasis on
literacy in the public schools, we are
fortunate to have Dr. Graham teach
reading methods courses at both the
undergraduate and graduate levels,”
said Karen Nery, dean of the School of
Education.
Graham holds the Ed.D and
educational specialist degree in
educational leadership from NOVA
Southeastern University in Mississippi
and in operations management from
the University of Arkansas and a
B.S in elementary education and
library science from Old Dominion
University.
“Her warm personality and delightful
sense of humor make her a favorite
among students,” said Nery. “Although
small in stature, she demands respect
from her students and provides them
with excellent learning opportunities.
Students have come to appreciate Dr.
Graham’s high standards and sense of
fairness as well as her conscientious
advising.”
Dean’s Excellence in Teaching Award
Lundy-Fetterman School of Business
David Butler
During the
early days of
Campbell
University’s
Trust Program,
David Butler
was a student of
trust and wealth
management,
studying
alongside the man who is now
the program’s director, Jimmy
Witherspoon.
After graduating in 1978, Butler
attended the American Bankers
Association National Graduate Trust
46 - Chronicle of Scholarly Activity 2012
School in 1987 and earned his masters
in trust and wealth management
at Campbell in 2005. Today, he is
a professor of trust for Campbell’s
business school, a certified trust
auditor and a member of the Fiduciary
& Investment Risk Management
Association.
He’s also the recipient of this year’s
Dean’s Excellence in Teaching Award,
presented during the spring.
“David Butler is everything a teacher
should be,” said his former classmate
and current colleague, Witherspoon.
“He is very knowledgeable in his field
of study and does an amazing job
teaching and motivating his students.
More importantly, the students can
see how much passion David has for
Campbell, for the trust business and
how much he cares about helping
them to succeed at Campbell and
beyond.”
In addition to his role as professor,
Butler has served as the chairman
of the Board of the Trust Education
Foundation Inc. for three years. He
came to Campbell to teach after
almost 30 years as a senior manager
in the trust departments of various
financial institutions.
Campbell University
Mission Statement
Mission
The mission of Campbell University is to graduate students with exemplary academic and professional
skills who are prepared for purposeful lives and meaningful service. The University is informed and
inspired by its Baptist heritage and three basic theological and biblical presuppositions: learning is
appointed and conserved by God as essential to the fulfillment of human destiny; in Christ all things
consist and find ultimate unity; and the Kingdom of God in this world is rooted and grounded in
Christian community. The University embraces the conviction that there is no conflict between the life
of faith and the life of inquiry.
To fulfill its mission, the University:
I.
presents a worldview informed by Christian principles and perspectives;
II.
affirms that truth is revelatory and transcendent as well as empirical and rational, and that all
truth finds its unity in Jesus Christ;
III. influences development of moral courage, social sensitivity, and ethical responsibility;
IV. gathers a diverse community of learners;
V.
delivers academic instruction in the liberal arts and sciences and professional preparation at both
undergraduate and graduate levels;
VI. transfers to students the vast body of knowledge and values accumulated over the ages;
VII. encourages students to think critically and creatively;
VIII.fosters the development of intellectual vitality, physical wellness, and aesthetic sensibility;
IX. forges a community of learning that is committed to the pursuit, discovery, and dissemination of
knowledge;
X.
provides students with servant leadership opportunities;
XI. cooperates with other educational institutions to expand learning opportunities for students;
XII. offers service and other opportunities to the greater community through athletics, continuing
education, cultural enrichment programming, and extended-campus education.
Campbell Accolades - 47
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