The University Report 2011

2011 Universit y Report
2
Campbell University
C
ampbell University began in 1887 as a
small schoolhouse for 16 students living
in rural Harnett County. A young pastor,
J.A. Campbell was charged with creating a school
where students from all walks of life could come
to learn and have the opportunity to grow in
their faith.
Now its 125th year, Campbell University remains
an institution committed to living out our faith,
striving for academic excellence and serving our
community. Our undergraduate, graduate and
professional programs, have gained national
recognition. Campbell graduates are serving in
communities throughout the world.
Standing on the strong foundation of our past,
we now look to the future and how the mission
of Campbell University will impact our world for
years to come.
Join us in celebrating Campbell’s past, present and
future.
Jerry M. Wallace
President
Campbell College’s 1913 Senior Class Officers and Representatives.
2011 University Report
1
Campbell University
Milestones, 1887-2011
January 5, 1887
Buies Creek Academy is opened to
sixteen students by founder James
Archibald Campbell. (1)
O
n January 5, 1887, huddled inside a small
church in Harnett County, 16 students and
their 25-year-old teacher, James Archibald
Campbell, sang out the hymn “Jesus, Savior, Pilot
Me,” as they would every morning thereafter. Five
other students were building the nearby schoolhouse
that would become Buies Creek Academy – a place
where students from all walks of life could come to
learn and have the opportunity to grow in their faith.
December 20, 1900
All but one building is destroyed by fire.
January 8, 1901
Buies Creek Academy reopens.
November 2, 1903
Kivett Hall completed. (2)
(1)
1923
Today, Campbell University has become a lauded
institution of liberal arts, sciences and professions.
The University is comprised of six schools: The
College of Arts and Sciences, College of Pharmacy &
Health Sciences, Divinity School, Lundy-Fetterman
School of Business, Norman Adrian Wiggins School
of Law and School of Education. The University is
taking steps toward the establishment of a seventh
school: a School of Osteopathic Medicine, with a
proposed start date of 2013.
First dormitory (Treat Hall) opens
for female residents. (3)
November 17, 1926
Name changes to Campbell Junior
College.
(2)
2
Campbell University
Leslie Hartwell Campbell becomes
the second President. (4)
September 11, 1961
In addition to the main campus in Buies Creek,
Campbell also maintains additional campuses in
Research Triangle Park, Camp Lejeune and Fort
Bragg. The Norman Adrian Wiggins School of Law
relocated to downtown Raleigh in fall 2009.
Proud of its heritage, Campbell remains committed
to its mission of providing students with a Christian
worldview and a charge to be “the salt of the earth and
the light of the world.”
March 26, 1934
Name changes to Campbell College.
June 6, 1967
Norman Adrian Wiggins becomes the third
President. (5)
1975
(3)
Keith Hills Golf Course opened.
May 29, 2003
Jerry M. Wallace is elected as the fourth
president of Campbell University. (6)
February 1976
First classes at Fort Bragg.
August 2004
August 30, 1976
Establishment of the School of Law with
admission of a charter class of 97 students.
(4)
25-year master plan is launched.
(7)
October 2007
The new pharmacy teaching facility,
Ronald W. Maddox Hall is completed
and opens to students. (7)
1977
CU Athletics leaves the NAIA
Conference and joins the NCAA.
2008
June 6, 1979
With the graduation of the first law
class, the name is changed to
Campbell University.
Ribbon cutting is held for the official
opening of the John W. Pope, Jr.
Convocation Center. (8)
(8)
Board of Trustees approves the addition
of a master’s program in Physician
Assistant Studies.
October 11, 1979
Establishment of the Malaysia program
at Tunku Abdul Rahman College.
August 2009
October 11, 1983
Robert and Anna Gardner Butler
Chapel is completed. (9)
Establishment of the Lundy-Fetterman
School of Business.
(5)
December 2, 1985
(9)
Students begin classes in the School of
Law’s new Raleigh location. (10)
Establishment of the School of
Education.
2010
August 25, 1986
Board of Trustees launch a feasibility study
for a School of Osteopathic Medicine.
Admission of the charter class in the
School of Pharmacy.
August 19, 1996
Admission of the founding class in the
Divinity School.
September 2009
2011
Founding dean of the proposed
Osteopathic Medical School is named.
(10)
(6)
2011 University Report
3
4
Campbell University
Leading in health sciences
Campbell Plans School
Of Osteopathic
Medicine
O
ver the last 25 years, Campbell has made
significant strides in the field of health
care education – through undergraduate,
graduate and professional programs in the fields
of pharmacy, clinical research and pharmaceutical
sciences, and most recently, physician assistant
studies. With an increasing shortage of primary
care physicians in North Carolina, Campbell is
considering a bold step to address this problem.
In August 2010, the Campbell University Board
of Trustees voted to authorize a feasibility study
to consider the establishment of a School of
Osteopathic Medicine, with a charter class slated for
August 2013. In January, Dr. John Kauffman was
selected as dean to lead the proposed school.
The proposed Campbell University School of
Osteopathic Medicine will be the second largest
medical school in the state behind the University of
North Carolina at Chapel Hill and the only school of
osteopathic medicine in the state. By its fourth year,
the enrollment is projected to be about 600 students.
According to a recent economic impact study,
Campbell University’s proposed School of
Osteopathic Medicine will bring nearly $300 million and 1,150 jobs to Harnett County in its first 10 years.
Artist’s rendering of Campbell University’s School of Osteopathic Medicine, to open in fall 2013.
Physician Assistant Program
Gains Provisional Accreditation
School Of Pharmacy
Celebrates 25 Years
Campbell University’s Physician Assistant
program was granted provisional
accreditation this year and in the fall, 34
students became the program’s first class.
Campbell University’s College of
Pharmacy & Health Sciences kicked off
its 25th anniversary celebration during
the institution’s opening convocation in
August 2011.
The Accreditation Review Commission
on Education for the Physician
Assistant will schedule its next
comprehensive review of the program
no earlier than four months after
students have entered the clinical
phase of their education. The charter
class will participate in a 28-month
schedule, which is split into classroom
time and clinical experience.
Established in 1986, it was the first new
pharmacy program to open in the U.S. in
nearly 40 years when it was founded. Campbell was first to offer an entrylevel Doctor of Pharmacy degree in
North Carolina at a contentious time
when the future of the PharmD degree
was up in the air. It was also the first
school in the nation to offer a doctorate
degree with a required community
pharmacy rotation during fourth-year
training.
The program was launched at a time
when experts are predicting a shortage
of more than 150,000 physicians by
2025. As physician assistants, the
students will be trained and licensed
to practice medicine … different from
a career as a doctor in that they’ll be
required to practice under limited
supervision of a physician.
When the charter class graduated in 1990,
and posted 100 percent on its board
exams, any questions about the program
were answered. The School of Pharmacy
had made its mark and was here to stay.
2011 University Report
5
6
Campbell University
Leading in academic programs
Wiggins Memorial
Library Dedication
S
tudents returning to Campbell in the fall
of 2010 were treated to the sight of the
newly renovated Wiggins Memorial Library.
The facility, former home to the Norman Adrian
Wiggins School of Law, provided the library with
approximately 90 percent more square footage and
70 percent more shelving capacity. It doubled seating
capacity and includes 10 group study rooms and a
24-hour study area complete with student lounge.
The building also offers new technologies designed to
help students work smarter, not harder.
In addition to a vast inventory of digital research
material, the library’s first floor contains dozens of
research computers for students and faculty. Other
resources include iMac computers with design and
audio/visual software and interactive white boards
for student presentations. There are additional design
and multimedia teaching tools in the Curriculum
Materials/Media Center, including GPS.
“We are trying to help students in every possible
way to make their work the best that it can be,”
said Borree Kwok, Dean of the Library. “The iMac
computers are equipped with audio and visual
manipulation software which can lead to much
creativity on the part of students.”
The Wiggins Memorial Library, named in honor
of Norman and Mildred Wiggins, was dedicated in
April 2011.
Campbell, N.C. State
Partner For JD/MBA Degree
Special Education Certification
Program Launched
Campbell University’s Norman A.
Wiggins School of Law partnered
with North Carolina State University’s
Jenkins MBA program in May to
provide students with the opportunity
to obtain a dual Juris Doctor and
Master of Business Administration
degree — good news for students
seeking careers in business law.
According to the National Center for
Education Statistics in 2006-2007,
13.6 percent of all public school
students in the United States required
Special Education services under the
Individuals with Disabilities Education
Act. To respond to this need, Campbell
University’s School of Education
launched a Bachelor of Science degree in
Special Education in fall 2010.
The JD/MBA degree will allow students
to earn both degrees in four years of
full-time study, with the option to take
electives and specialization courses in
both business and law.
“We looked at what was best for the
School of Education and concluded
that there is a much greater need for a
Special Education program. The school
systems have practically required it
of us,” said Karen Nery, Dean of the
School of Education.
“Businesses need to have lawyers on
staff in order to accomplish their goals,
so by having a dual JD/MBA degree,
graduates will become even more
marketable,” said Melissa A. Essary,
dean and professor for Campbell Law
School.
Among the upgrades at Wiggins Memorial Library in 2010 were new computers and work stations.
Dr. David Dennis, assistant professor of
education at Campbell University, was
selected to lead the program.
2011 University Report
7
8
Campbell University
Leading in service
Campbell Joins
President’s Interfaith
Service Challenge
C
ampbell is one of approximately 200 colleges
and universities selected to participate in
the President’s Interfaith Service Campus
Challenge, committing to a year of community
service and interfaith programming. The goal is
not only to serve others, but to join people of other
religious denominations in order to learn more about
and respect other people’s beliefs.
As a part of Campbell’s 125th anniversary celebration,
faculty, staff, students and alumni have been
challenged to complete 125,000 collective hours of
service. The effort began in earnest over the Sept. 11,
2011 weekend with the 9/11 Day of Service and an
interfaith lecture on Sept. 12 about tolerance for other
religions 10 years after the terrorist attacks in 2001.
Another panel discussion is scheduled for October, and
the fall semester will also include an Amazing Faiths
Dinner and interfaith concert at Duke University.
“We embark on this 125,000-hour challenge not
to brag, but because it is who we are,” Campus
Minister Faithe Beam said. “The Campbell
community represents thousands of hours of time
spent with Sunday school classes, small groups, civic
organizations, nonprofit agencies, friends and family
serving our neighbors … we want to celebrate this.”
Divinity School Hosts First
Oasis Church Music Conference
Wakefield Installed As New
Divinity School Dean
The Campbell University Divinity
School held its first church music
conference, OASIS Renew for the Journey
in July, with more than 450 present
for the closing concert by the North
Carolina Baptist All-State Youth Choir. The youth choir concert was one of four
uplifting worship services in the two-day
conference, attended by leaders from
130 churches of various denominations
from the southeast.
The 2010-2011 school year began with
the installment of Dr. Andrew Wakefield
as Dean of Campbell University
Divinity School. Wakefield succeeded
the school’s founding dean, Dr. Michael
Cogdill.
Wakefield is a 1983 summa cum laude
graduate of Wake Forest University
who went on to earn the Master of
Divinity degree from Southern Baptist
Theological Seminary in Louisville, Ky.,
and his Ph.D. in New Testament from
Duke University in 2000.
The conference was designed to provide
renewal, replenishment and refreshment
for church worship leadership, paid and
volunteer. In addition to a sermon,
concert and communion service, the
conference included 38 breakout
sessions with special tracks for pastors,
worship leaders, worship technology,
spiritual formation, children’s choir
leaders, youth choir leaders and
accompanists.
Campbell University’s Operation Inasmuch included a Relay for Life with local elementary school children.
Wakefield had served on the Divinity
School faculty since 1997, most recently
as Associate Professor of New Testament
and Greek. In 2008, he was appointed
the holder of the Lewis Edward and
Martha Barnes Tyner Chair of Bible and
was recognized with the Dean’s Award
for Excellence in Teaching in 2003.
2011 University Report
9
10
Campbell University
Leading in life preparation
Freshman Seminar
Prepares Students
For College Life
C
ampbell knows college can be overwhelming
to incoming freshmen. If the academic
challenges aren’t menacing enough, there’s
the sudden responsibilities thrust upon these students,
many of whom are away from home for the first time
in their lives.
But a recently launched seminar aims to prepare
freshmen for those first-year challenges. The
Campbell University Freshman Seminar, known as
CUFS, is a one-credit class that teaches students to
develop good study habits, to build relationships with
faculty and peers and to manage their finances.
The elective seminar is managed through the recently
established First-Year Experience Office, led by Dr. Jennifer
Latino, who directed a similar nationally recognized firstyear seminar at the University of South Carolina.
“The course goals and learning outcomes are designed
to assist students through their transition to college,”
Latino said. “Students in this course will have the
opportunity to explore all that Campbell has to offer
while working closely with a small group of peers, a
caring instructor and an upper-class student mentor.”
The seminar was launched in August with a pilot
cohort of 200 freshman students. Enrollment in the
course is expected to grow by approximately 100
students each year.
Theatre, Music Students
Experience The Stage
Students Reach Out To Local
Elementary Schools
The arts are alive and well at Campbell,
if the recent school year is any
indication.
Service to the community plays a
big role in the university experience
for many students at Campbell. One
particular important focus is education
at the elementary, middle and high
school levels in Harnett County.
“You’re a Good Man, Charlie Brown,”
“Gaslight,” “My Children! My Africa!”
and the Paul Green One-Act Festival
in 2010-2011 were highlights of the
University’s Theatre Arts program,
which performs in the beautiful Ellis
Theatre at the Taylor Bott Rogers Fine
Arts Center.
Again this year, Campbell students
reached out to future Campbell students
through tutoring, mentoring, social
activities and programs like the Creepy
Crawlies event held in November at
Buies Creek Elementary School.
Campbell students introduced an
auditorium full of second-graders to
the fascinating world of spiders, lizards
and insects at the program organized by
biology major Marcus Ford.
The 52-member University Choir
performed its annual Fall Concert
and joined with the Children’s Choir
from Memorial Baptist Church and
the Handbells from the First Baptist
Church of Erwin for its annual
Christmas Music Celebration. And
Campbell’s Wind Ensemble and the
Wind Symphony enjoyed a successful
jazz-themed Pops Concert, in addition
to its annual fall concert.
Each year, Campbell’s incoming freshman are presented with medallions to symbolize their commitment and the University’s.
Ford and his classmates set up different
stations which allowed the children to
explore various insects and other displays.
The program’s success led to inquiries from
other elementary schools looking for a fun
yet educational event for their children.
2011 University Report
11
Big South Athletics Photo
12
Campbell University
Leading in athletics
Return to the
Big South
Conference
A
fter 17 years, Campbell University returned to
the Big South Conference over the summer,
realigning with a league of which it was a
charter member from 1983-94. The Fighting Camel
program’s return to the Big South pushes membership
to 11 institutions for the first time in league history.
Campbell sponsors 20 varsity sports at the
Division I level, 17 of which are sponsored by the
Big South. Campbell’s football (Pioneer League)
women’s swimming (Coastal Collegiate Swimming
Association) and wrestling (Southern) programs will
not compete in the Big South Conference.
“The Big South membership is located close to Buies
Creek giving our students, alumni and supporters
the opportunity to travel and support the Fighting
Camels,” said University President Jerry Wallace.
“We look forward to competing against excellent Big
South rival universities.”
The Big South is made up of the following schools:
Campbell University, Charleston Southern
University, Coastal Carolina University, Gardner-Webb University, High Point University,
Liberty University, Presbyterian College, Radford
University, UNC Asheville, Virginia Military
Institute and Winthrop University.
Bob Roller Named
New Athletic Director
Women’s Lacrosse Takes
The Field In 2012
Campbell recruited its next athletic
director in Bob Roller over the summer
and introduced him to the University
during a press conference on July 20 at the
John W. Pope Jr. Convocation Center.
One of the nation’s fastest-growing
sports will come to Campbell in 2012-13 when the University will field
a varsity women’s lacrosse program.
The Board of Trustees approved the
addition of the 21st sport in CU’s
Division I athletics program in 2011.
Campbell will be the sixth Big South
Conference member to field the sport
for the 2013 season, joining current
members High Point, Liberty and
Presbyterian, plus Coastal Carolina
and Winthrop – both of which have
announced 2013 starting dates.
President Jerry Wallace and Vice
President for Student Life Dennis
Bazemore introduced Roller, who
brings three decades of experience in
Division I athletics to his position.
Roller joins the Fighting Camel staff
after spending more than 11 years
as Director of Athletics at Samford
University. While at the Birmingham,
Ala., school, he oversaw one of the
most exciting periods of growth in the
history of Samford ­athletics.
Currently, 91 NCAA Division I schools
field women’s lacrosse teams, including
four in North Carolina – Davidson,
Duke, High Point and the University of
North Carolina at Chapel Hill.
In his 11 years at the helm at Samford,
Roller led a major facilities upgrade
while overseeing the department’s move
to the Southern Conference, one of the
nation’s oldest collegiate leagues.
Campbell’s men’s and women’s basketball squads will compete in the Big South Conference in 2011-2012.
2011 University Report
13
SECOND ROUNDABOUT
14
Campbell University
Leading in campus facilities
New Women’s Residence Hall
McLamb Environmental Sciences Lab
Irwin Belk Track
Wells Fountain
Campus Entrance
TV Studio
Campus
Transformations
T
he last year has brought significant changes
to Campbell’s Buies Creek campus through
landscaping and construction.
A second roundabout at the intersection of Main
Street and Leslie Campbell Avenue is one of the most
notable new additions to the campus landscape.
The North Carolina Department of Transportation
completed the paving work during the summer – and
Campbell crews put the finishing touches through
shrubbery and brick accents.
Physical upgrades were also made to the McLamb
Environmental Science Lab, men’s residence halls and
the Science Building, among others.
A new roundabout was completed in 2011 near the University’s John W. Pope Jr. Convocation Center.
2011 University Report
15
2010-2011 Annual Report
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.
Motto
Ad astra per aspera (To the stars through difficulty)
Historical Data
Founded – January 5, 1887
Academic Year – 124
General Information
• Founded on January 5, 1887, as Buies Creek
Academy by the Reverend James Archibald
Campbell.
• Campbell University is a private university affiliated
with the Baptist State Convention of North Carolina.
• Both in and out of the classroom, the University
endeavors to present Christian principles to students
and to foster their application to daily life.
• Students hail from all 100 N.C. counties, the 50
states and approximately 40 countries.
• Enrolls more in-state students than any other
private school in North Carolina.
• Undergraduate tuition (per semester) is $11,450,
room $2,000, meal plan $2,150.
• Generous merit scholarship and grant programs.
• Hosts a nationally recognized and award-winning
Army ROTC program.
• Offers extended campus programs in Research
Triangle Park (RTP), Raleigh, Fort Bragg/Pope
and Camp Lejeune and a degree program in Kuala
Lumpur, Malaysia.
• Participates in NCAA Division I Athletics: 10
male sports (Baseball, Basketball, Cross Country,
Football, Golf, Soccer, Tennis, Indoor Track &
Field, Outdoor Track & Field, Wrestling); and
11 female sports (Basketball, Cheerleading, Cross
Country, Golf, Soccer, Softball, Swimming, Tennis,
Indoor Track & Field, Outdoor Track & Field,
Volleyball).
• 2010 Affiliation – Atlantic Sun Conference; July 2011 – Big South Conference;
• Pioneer Football League, Coastal Collegiate
Swimming Association and Southern Conference
(Wrestling).
• Athletic Nickname – The Fighting Camels.
Accreditation
• Campbell University is accredited by the
Commission on Colleges of the Southern
Association of Colleges and Schools to award
Associate, Baccalaureate, Master’s, Education
Specialist, and Doctorate degrees. Contact the
Commission on Colleges at 1866 Southern Lane,
Decatur, Georgia 30033-4097 or call 404-6794500 for questions about the accreditation of
Campbell University. The Commission should be contacted only if
there is evidence that appears to support the
University’s significant non-compliance with an
accreditation requirement or standard. Normal
inquiries about Campbell University, such as
admission requirements, financial aid, educational
programs, etc., should be addressed directly to the
appropriate office of the University and not to the
Commission’s office.
• Campbell’s Professional Education programs
are accredited by the National Council for the
Accreditation of Teacher Education (NCATE) and
approved by the North Carolina.
• The Social Work program is accredited by the
Council on Social Work Education (CSWE).
• The School of Law is accredited by the American
Bar Association.
• The College of Pharmacy & Health Sciences
is accredited by the American Council on
Pharmaceutical Education.
• The Divinity School is accredited by the
Association of Theological Schools (ATS).
• The Professional Golf Management program is
accredited by the Professional Golf Association of America.
• The Athletic Training program is accredited by
the Commission on Accreditation of Athletic
Training Education (CAATE), the Athletic Training
Education Program (ATEP).
• The Accreditation Review Commission on
Education for the Physician Assistant (ARCPA) has granted provisional accreditation to
the Physician Assistant Program sponsored by
Campbell University.
• The School of Osteopathic Medicine has received
Pre-Accreditation (2011) from the Commission on
Osteopathic College Accreditation.
Memberships/Affiliations
Schools
• North Carolina Association of Colleges and
Universities
•
•
•
•
•
•
• North Carolina Association of Independent
Colleges and Universities
• National Association of Independent Colleges and
Universities
• Association of Baptist Colleges and Schools
• Council for Christian Colleges and Universities
• American Association of Colleges of Teacher
Education
Academic Information
• In addition to a range of bachelor’s and master’s
degrees, the University offers three professional
doctorates: Law (JD), Pharmacy (PharmD) and
Divinity (D.Min).
College of Arts and Sciences
Norman Adrian Wiggins School of Law
School of Education
Lundy-Fetterman School of Business
College of Pharmacy & Health Sciences
Divinity School
Enrollment
• Residence facilities capacity: 2,148
• Number of clubs: 36
• Honor Societies: 17
Alumni
Total graduates – more than 56,000
Undergraduate (FT): 3,063
Undergraduate (PT): 1,146
Graduate (FT): 1,148
Graduate (PT): 519
Library Assets
• In the fall of 2010, Campbell launched a feasibility
study to consider the addition of a School of
Osteopathic Medicine.
• Total Number of periodical subscriptions:
Main: 52,489
Law: 2,635
• Main Campus Full-time faculty: 215
• Total Number of Microforms
Main: 593,306 (volume equivalents)
Law: 88,293
• Joint degree partnerships with North Carolina
State University: JD (Campbell) with Master
of Public Administration or Master of Business
Administration (N.C. State)
• Number of Residence Halls: 17
•
•
•
•
• Master of Physician Assistant Practice program
launched Fall 2011.
• Ratio of students to faculty: 18:1
Student Life
Main & Extended Campuses
• Total Number of volumes:
Main: 344,208 (print and ebooks)
Law: 109,053 (print) 197,346 (total)
• Percent of Full-Time faculty with terminal
credentials: 90.3%
• Named “One of America’s 100 Best College Buys”
by Institutional Research & Evaluation, Inc.
Accolades
• Recognized by US News and World Report as one of
“America’s Best Colleges.”
• Consistently named one of the “Best Colleges in
the Southeast” by Princeton Review.
Service
• Consistently named to national President’s Higher
Education Community Service Honor Roll.
• A member of N.C. Campus Compact.
• Campbell hosts an AmeriCorp VISTA worker.
• Participating in the President’s Interfaith and
Community Service Campus Challenge.
University Assets
Endowment: $117,986,945
Acreage: 1,500+
Number of buildings: 110
Total Square footage of buildings: 1,276,483
Advancement
Gifts & Pledges – $13,358,550
2011 University Report
17
18
Campbell University
45m
35m
25m
15m
5m
‘90
‘95
‘00
‘05
‘10
Capital Expenditures
1990..............................$866,500
1991..............................$269,400
1992...........................$4,363,000
1993...........................$2,308,000
1994..............................$204,000
1995..............................$260,000
1996................................$80,000
1997..............................$473,000
1998..............................$254,000
1999..............................$279,000
2000.........................$18,173,000
2001...........................$5,655,000
2002..............................$503,000
2003...........................$9,464,000
2004...........................$1,576,000
2005...........................$6,898,000
2006.........................$20,004,000
2007...........................$3,369,000
2008.........................$19,725,000
2009.........................$45,311,000
2010.........................$44,079,000
2011.........................$21,506,326
The Robert and Anna Gardner Butler Chapel, dedicated in 2009, can seat more than 400.
Growth in Admissions Applications
2005.................................3,457
2006.................................3,509
2007.................................3,942
2008.................................5,000
2009.................................5,164
2010.................................6,191
2011 University Report
19
20
Campbell University
Fis
c
Foundations - 36%
Group
Donors
Amount
Alumni............................................2,191......................... $4,522,783.04
Presidential Board and Trustees........... 77.............................. $744,091.17
Employees........................................ 488............................. $192,048.53
Foundations....................................... 54........................... $4,780,936.85
Corporations.................................... 181.......................... $1,150,290.49
Religious Organizations..................... 56.............................. $520,898.20
Estates................................................ 5............................... $659,529.08
Friends and Parents........................... 749............................. $787,973.22
Totals 3,801
$13,358,550.58
Religious Organizations - 4%
ntributions
f Co
eo
Fiscal Year Report
R
rc
ou
-S
Corporations - 9%
Ye
ar
t
or
ep
Alumni - 34%
al
Estates - 5%
Presidential Board & Trustees - 6%
Friends & Parents - 6%
Employees - 1%
The century-old Kivett Hall is Campbell University’s oldest remaining structure.
2011 University Report
21
Campbell Alumni
Alumni by State/
Territories
Alaska........................................... 44
Alabama..................................... 234
Arkansas....................................... 56
Arizona....................................... 149
California................................... 509
Colorado.................................... 149
Connecticut................................. 87
District of Columbia..................... 46
Delaware...................................... 66
Florida.................................... 1,131
Georgia...................................... 903
Guam............................................. 2
Hawaii......................................... 80
Iowa............................................. 45
Indiana......................................... 22
Illinois........................................ 228
Indiana....................................... 138
Kansas.......................................... 67
Kentucky.................................... 154
Louisiana.................................... 111
Massachusetts............................. 115
Maryland................................... 542
Maine........................................... 33
Michigan.................................... 167
Minnesota.................................... 57
Missouri..................................... 138
Mississippi.................................... 87
Montana...................................... 22
North Carolina...................... 29,087
North Dakota................................ 7
22
Campbell University
Nebraska...................................... 22
New Hampshire........................... 52
New Jersey................................. 296
New Mexico................................. 48
Nevada......................................... 54
New York................................... 401
Ohio.......................................... 272
Oklahoma.................................... 87
Oregon......................................... 40
Pennsylvania............................... 393
Puerto Rico.................................. 20
Rhode Island................................ 24
South Carolina........................ 1,102
South Dakota............................... 11
Tennessee................................... 446
Texas.......................................... 741
Utah............................................. 27
Virginia................................... 2,585
Virgin Islands................................. 5
Vermont....................................... 22
Washington................................ 169
Wisconsin.................................... 71
West Virginia............................. 100
Wyoming..................................... 11
International
Alumni
Argentina....................................... 5
Aruba............................................. 3
Australia......................................... 5
Austria............................................ 1
Bahamas....................................... 28
Bahrain.......................................... 1
Bangladesh..................................... 1
Belarus........................................... 1
Brazil.............................................. 2
Bulgaria.......................................... 1
Canada......................................... 37
Cayman Islands.............................. 2
Central African Republic................ 1
Chile.............................................. 1
China............................................. 6
Columbia....................................... 7
Côte d’Ivoire.................................. 1
Czech Republic.............................. 1
Denmark........................................ 1
Dominican Republic...................... 1
Ecuador.......................................... 9
Egypt............................................. 2
Ethiopia......................................... 1
France............................................ 6
Germany........................................ 7
Ghana............................................ 3
Great Britain................................ 15
Greece............................................ 2
Haiti.............................................. 1
Honduras....................................... 5
Hong Kong.................................... 1
Hungary......................................... 2
India............................................ 27
Iran................................................ 1
Ireland............................................ 4
Italy................................................ 1
Jamaica........................................... 1
Japan............................................ 23
Jordan............................................ 1
Kenya........................................... 10
Korea Dem Peoples Republic......... 7
Korea Republic of South Korea....... 8
Kuwait......................................... 14
Lebanon......................................... 3
Macedonia..................................... 1
Malaysia................................ 12,432
Mexico........................................... 1
Moldova......................................... 1
Morocco......................................... 3
Netherlands.................................... 2
Nigeria......................................... 12
Norway.......................................... 3
Pakistan.......................................... 1
Panama.......................................... 1
Paraguay......................................... 1
Peru................................................ 2
Poland............................................ 1
Russian Federation......................... 2
Saint Kitts and Nevis...................... 1
Saudi Arabia................................... 6
Serbia............................................. 1
South Africa................................... 2
Spain.............................................. 9
Sweden......................................... 14
Switzerland..................................... 2
Taiwan........................................... 5
Thailand....................................... 39
Trinidad and Tobago...................... 3
Ukraine.......................................... 1
United Arab Emirates..................... 1
Uzbekistan..................................... 1
Venezuela....................................... 1
Vietnam......................................... 1
Zimbabwe...................................... 2
Campbell University Trustees
Daniel B. Andrews
Farm Owner
Fuquay-Varina, NC
Robert J. Barker, Sr. ‘65
Owner & President
Bob Barker Company, Inc.
Fuquay-Varina, NC
Jack “J.J.” Barnes
Businessman
Linden, NC
Guilford W. Bass ‘70
Owner & President
Holden Beach Fishing Pier, Inc.
Holden Beach, NC
R. Steve Bowden‘79 Law
Attorney
Steve Bowden & Associates
Greensboro, NC
Raymond A. Bryan, Jr.
Chairman of the Board
T. A. Loving Company
Goldsboro, NC
William E. “Ed” Byrd ‘03 Hon.LLD
Land Developer
Sanford, NC
Teddy James Byrd‘85
Owner
Teddy J. Byrd Agency, Inc.
Coats, NC
R. Henry Capps Jr., MD ‘95
Physician
Lakeside Family Physicians
Huntersville, NC
Charles D. Cato
Pharmacist (retired)
Durham, NC
David K. Clark
President
Clark Brothers, Inc./Han-Dee
Hugo’s/Sampson-Bladen Oil Co.
Elizabethtown, NC
Suzanne Cook
President
Benton Card Compnay
Benson, NC
David T. Courie, Sr. ‘93/‘97 Law
Attorney
Beaver Holt Sternlicht & Courie
Fayetteville, NC
Michael Cummings ‘74/‘01 Hon.DD
Director of Missions
Burnt Swamp Baptist Association
Pembroke, NC
Helen Currin
Farm Owner
Wilmington, NC
Patsy Drummond
Charlotte, NC
Kennieth Etheridge
Attorney (retired)
Laurinburg, NC
Annabelle Lundy Fetterman ‘87 Hon.LLD
Chairman & CEO (retired)
Lundy Packing Company
Clinton, NC
Glenn Infinger ‘74
Attorney
Mazursky Constantine, LLC
Atlanta, GA
Jimmy Jackson ‘07 Hon.ScD
Businessman
Garner, NC
Thomas J. Keith ‘64
Owner & President
Tom Keith and Associates, Inc.
Fayetteville, NC
Judith Folwell-White ‘61
Executive Assistant (retired)
Campbell University
Buies Creek, NC
Edward M. Gore, Sr. ‘52/‘07 Hon.LLD
Land Developer
Sunset Beach, NC
David J. Hailey ‘03
Senior Pastor
Hayes Barton Baptist Church
Raleigh, NC
Anna Drew Kirk ‘98
Wake Forest, NC
Carlton Martin
President & CEO
Martin’s Abattoir & Wholesale Meats, Inc.
Godwin, NC
Bernard F. McLeod, Jr. ‘46
Land Developer
Fuquay-Varina, NC
Joseph C. Hall, Jr.
Consultant
Food Lion
Salisbury, NC
Harry D. “Pete” Murphy ‘65
Executive Vice Chairman
Murphy Family Farms
Rose Hill, NC
Frank Holding ‘88 Hon.LLD
Executive Vice Chairman
First Citizens Bank
Smithfield, NC
Sadie Neel ‘42
Educator (retired)
Goldsboro, NC
Ester Howard ‘44
Educator (retired)
Lillington, NC
Sandy Greene Patterson
Attorney
Southern Pines, NC
2011 University Report
23
P. C. Purvis, DDS
Dentist (retired)
Raleigh, NC
Milford R. Quinn ‘43/‘99 Hon.LLD
Quinn Farms
Warsaw, NC
Henry L. Smith ‘67
Owner & President
Carolina Medical Products
Farmville, NC
Luther D. Starling, Jr. ‘87
Attorney
Daughtry, Woodard, Lawrence & Starling
Smithfield, NC
James R. Strickland, Jr.
Owner & President
Strickland Corporation
Wilmington, NC
Frederick H. Taylor ‘64
President
Troy Lumber Company
Troy, NC
Harry G. Womble
President
Goldston Beach Incorporated
White Lake, NC
Samuel Sue, MD ‘50
Orthopedic Surgeon (retired)
Greensboro Orthopedic Center
Greensboro, NC
Jack G. Watts, Sr.
Pharmacist (retired)
Burlington, NC
Thomas C. Womble ‘98 Hon.DD
Pastor
Fuquay-Varina, NC
Robert L. Whiteman, Jr.
Businessman (retired)
Raleigh, NC
Billy T. Woodard
Vice Chairman
The Fidelity Bank
Fuquay-Varina, NC
L. Stuart Surles ‘78
Owner & CEO
Surles Insurance Company
Angier, NC
B. Edward Wilson, Jr. ‘45
Businessman (retired)
Rocky Point, NC
University LEADERSHIP
Executive Administration
Jerry M. Wallace
President
Dennis N. Bazemore ‘77
Vice President for Student Life
Jack Britt
Senior Vice President for
Advancement & Assistant to the
President
Britt J. Davis
Vice President for Institutional
Advancement
24
Campbell University
Campus Leadership
M. Dwaine Greene ‘79
Vice President for Academic Affairs
and Provost
Melissa A. Essary
Dean, Norman Adrian Wiggins
School of Law
John M. Kauffman, Jr., DO
Dean, College of Osteopathic
Medicine (proposed)
Ronald W. Maddox
Vice President for Health Programs
Sherry Haehl
Dean of Students
Borree P. Kwok
Dean of the Library
John T. Roberson ‘80
Vice President for Enrollment
Management
Mark L. Hammond
Dean, College of Arts & Sciences
Ronald W. Maddox
Dean, College of Pharmacy &
Health Sciences
James O. Roberts
Vice President for Business and
Treasurer
Thomas Harris
Associate Dean, Extended Campuses/
Distance Education
Benjamin M. Hawkins
Dean, Lundy-Fetterman
School of Business
Robert Roller
Athletic Director
Andrew H. Wakefield
Dean, Divinity School
Campbell’s Monogram Club in 1949. The club’s purpose was and is today to maintain fellowship with former athletes.
2011 University Report
25
www.campbell.edu