Annual report of the University of North Carolina Eshelman School of Pharmacy |
Previous | 2 of 4 | Next |
|
small (250x250 max)
medium (500x500 max)
Large
Extra Large
large ( > 500x500)
Full Resolution
|
This page
All
|
-
438972.pdf
[32.68 MB]
Link will provide options to open or save document.
File Format:
Adobe Reader
THE UNIVERSI T Y OF NORTH CAROLINA ESHELMAN SCHOOL OF PHARMACY 2008–2009 ANNUAL REPORT 1 Dear Friends I do not have to tell you that this past year has seen some of the toughest economic times the nation has faced. We have all been affected by it in one way or another and certainly the UNC Eshelman School of Pharmacy has not been immune. Peer schools across the country have taken budget cuts in excess of 20 percent, cuts that in some cases have compromised the classroom. As bad as the situation appears to be, the taxpayers and legislature of this state have always been unwavering in their support of this university. In addition, our alumni and friends continue to be very generous by serving on our School boards, precepting our students, and supporting us with their financial contributions. John Grover Beard was the dean of the School during some difficult times: the Great Depression and World War II. His words adorn the wall of Kerr Hall. “There will follow in the wake of the present-day pharmacist a vast company of young men and women to take up the task of providing suffering humanity with the curatives that must always be needed. It devolves upon the present generation to guarantee its lines of succession.” Dean Beard’s words remind me that we have a responsibility to our profession that never changes. In the pages that follow, you will see that we are committed to our mission. We will continue to advance pharmacy practice. We will continue to enhance the educational process. We will continue to provide lifelong learning opportunities. We will continue to grow the research enterprise. We will continue to build an academic environment that attracts outstanding faculty, staff and students. We will continue to provide the “curatives” of today in the form of biopharmaceuticals, nanotechnology, novel dosage forms, pharmacogenomics and more. With those curatives, we will teach our students to provide the medication therapy management needed for patients to improve their health. More than half a century has passed and our goal has remained the same, only the methods have changed. The Carolina Way is alumni and friends supporting and sharing in the successes of this program. Thank you for all you do. Robert A. Blouin, PharmD Dean Vaughn and Nancy Bryson Distinguished Professor F R O M T H E D E A N 2 2 0 0 8 – 2 0 0 9 B O A R D M E M B E R S PA A BOARD OF DIRECTORS Kenneth Phares ’91 ’93 President Hillsborough, N.C. Lori Setzer ’83 President Elect Lewisville, N.C. Jacquelin Touloupas Harrell ’78 Secretary/Treasurer Burlington, N.C. Kevin Almond ’83 Executive Director Chapel Hill, N.C. PFNC BOARD OF DIRECTORS J.A. “Sandy” McNeill, Jr. ’72 Chair Henry L. Smith ’72 Vice Chair Linda L. Butler ’68 Secretary H. Gray Hutchison, Jr. Treasurer Kevin L. Almond ’83 President Buck Albright ’70 Cockeysville, Md. Jennifer Askew ’03 Wilmington, N.C. Bryan Baines ’88 Wake Forest, N.C. Gary Bowman ’84 Oxford, N.C. George Brookins ’76 Lincolnton, N.C. Jerry Coln ’65 Raleigh, N.C. Steven Evans ’75 Kill Devil Hills, N.C. Jamie Hale ’97 Winston-Salem, N.C. Pat Hester ’76 Greensboro, N.C. Ruth Higgins ’79 Black Mountain, N.C. Mark Holshouser ’76 Lake Zurich, Ill. Woody King ’80 Warrenton, N.C. Lori Kodikara ’92 Charlotte, N.C. Steve McCombs ’74 Chapel Hill, N.C. Joe Minton ’70 Murfreesboro, N.C. Allen Munday ’80 Cornelius, N.C. David Oakley ’77 Holly Springs, N.C. Kristie Reeves-Cavaliero’99 Austin, Tex. Steady Steadman ’65 High Point, N.C. Andy Tennille ’67 Linville, N.C. Chad Terry ’99 Kinston, N.C. Andrew Trella ’99 King of Prussia, Penn. Susan Van Tassel ’79 Asheville, N.C. Tab Waldrop ’84 Kernersville, N.C. John Watson ’87 Tabor City, N.C. Vince Williams ’99 Trenton, N.J. Jimmy Wilson ’04 Wilmington, N.C. Eugene G. Anderson ’68 Alan Boyd ’82 George Brookins ’76 G.R. “Ronny” Buchanan ’62 Terrence Burroughs ’82 Stephen “Steve” G. Buckley ’83 W. Keith Elmore ’72 Steven “Steve” C. Evans ’75 James “Jim” R. Hall ’67 Hugh “Dan” Hardy, Jr. ’82 W. Seymour Holt ’52 Alan W. Knight ’81 William “Bill” H. Mast ’57 Gene W. Minton ’75 Ruth “Ann” Nassif ’69 Ken Phares ’93 Talbert “Tal” Lee Waldrop ’84 Mitchell “Mickey” Watts ’63 Christopher “Chris” L. Woody Gary L. Yingling ’62 3 A residency program that gives new pharmacists the opportunity to continue their education in a community pharmacy setting. Teaching innovations that bring not just technology but new ideas to the classroom. Researchers who look outside the University’s grounds for collaborative opportunities. Faculty to guide and support each other. In the classroom and in the clinic, leaders from the UNC Eshelman School of Pharmacy are fulfilling the School’s mission: to advance health care through innovation and collaboration in pharmacy practice, education, research and public service. On the following pages, you will see the work that the School’s faculty, staff and partners across the state are doing every day to help make the UNC Eshelman School of Pharmacy the best in the nation. I N T R O D U C T I O N 4 The UNC Eshelman School of Pharmacy’s Community Pharmacy Residency Program enrolled its 10th class this year, making it one of the oldest and most successful programs of its type in the nation. Established in 2000, the program gives new pharmacists the tools they need to be leaders and innovators in community pharmacy through a one-year, hands-on program supervised by experienced practitioners in community pharmacy. “It’s like an additional year where you are a practitioner in a pharmacy, but you’re not out on your own,” says Tasha Michaels (’07 PharmD), a preceptor and former resident in the Community Pharmacy Residency Program. During her residency at Kerr Drug in Durham, North Carolina, Michaels practiced medication therapy management, gave diabetes education classes, took patients’ blood pressure and filled prescriptions one day every two weeks. Michaels said the support she received from her preceptor and colleagues during her residency was invaluable. “You have other colleagues you can go to for advice—not just about counseling patients, but figuring out how you’re going to take guidelines and work them into your practice,” Michaels says. The program has had 30 residents since its inception and is accredited by ASHP and APHA. The first class had only one resident. Now about 30 applicants from across the country compete for the seven coveted spots each year, says Stefanie Ferreri, director of the program and a clinical associate professor in the Division of Pharmacy Practice and Experiential Education. P A R T O N E : R E S I D E N C Y Community pharmacy residency going strong after 10 years UNC ESHELMAN SCHOOL OF PHARMACY TIMELINE: 2000 TO PRESENT 2000 Center for Education and Research on Therapeutics launched 2001 Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation donated $15.1 million for drug develop-ment to a group led by the School Tasha Michaels (’07 PharmD), a preceptor with the Community Pharmacy Residency Program counsels a patient at Kerr Drug in Durham as her resident, Latasha Weeks, looks on. PHOTO BY WILL OWENS 2002 Carolina Pharmacy launched, replacing Pharmacy Mirror 2002 Oct. 11, Kerr Hall dedicated 6 Executive associate dean Gary Pollack says the program is in part an effort for the School to give back to the North Carolina residents who support the University. “We are a public institution,” Pollack says. “There’s a wonderful relationship between the citizens of North Carolina and its university system, especially its flagship. We should and are looking for ways to make an impact on a local and regional level.” Ferreri, along with a committee of preceptors, evaluates applicants based on their prior experience, leadership abilities and how they could benefit the site to which they are assigned. Preceptor sites are located across the state, including Moose Pharmacy in Concord, Carolina Apothecary in Reidsville, and Kerr Drug Health Care Centers in Chapel Hill, Durham, Raleigh and Zebulon. Michaels, a resident in 2007 and 2008 and now a preceptor at Kerr Drug in Durham, completed a research project on the North Carolina Medicaid MTM program during her residency. She is now working to submit that work for publication to the Journal of the American Pharmacists Association. While the residents may be sacrificing a year of a regular salary by delaying their entry into the workforce, they are gaining roughly three years of experience and will have higher quality positions available to them at the end of their residency, Ferreri says. The two initiatives residents most often pursue are bringing immuniza-tions and MTM to community pharmacies. “MTM has been successful in North Carolina in part because of the residents,” Ferreri says. Michaels is currently working with resident Latasha Weeks, a University of Maryland graduate who began her residency in July at the Kerr Drug health-care center in Durham. Several former residents have gone on to become preceptors, including Michaels, Debbie Pruss, James Bowman (’04 PharmD) and Abby Caplan. “We were there not long ago,” Michaels said. “We have a unique perspective and are able to provide insight from what we learned.” For more information on the Community Pharmacy Residency Program, go to www.pharmacy.unc.edu/cprp. P A R T O N E : R E S I D E N C Y 2003 Spring, Dean Bill Campbell retired after 11 years at the School 2003 Feb. 26, Chancellor Moeser declared Fred Eshelman Day at Carolina to celebrate Eshelman’s $20 million gift. It was the largest private donation to any school of pharmacy and the third largest gift to Carolina in history. 7 Jo Ellen Rodgers, Pharm.D., has just asked her class a multiple-choice question about the case they were discussing, but the room remains silent. No hands go up; instead everyone is pushing buttons on handheld devices. The students aren’t texting—they’re answering the question. Moments later, a bar graph appears on screen showing how many students chose each response. They’re using the new Audience Response System, or ARS, introduced to classrooms this academic year. Informally referred to as clickers, these devices resemble small remote controls and allow instructors to get instant feedback from their students to gauge their comprehension. “As an example, you can use the clickers at the beginning of a class to ascertain what foundational knowledge the students are coming in with,” says Adam Persky, Ph.D., a clinical associate professor in the Division of Pharmacotherapy and Experimental Therapeutics. “If you're going to discuss hypertension, you might ask what is high-blood pressure, what controls blood pressure, or what is normal blood pressure. That way you can see what information the students have and whether that information is correct.” Bringing in the clickers is an example of initiatives spawned by the School’s Educational Renaissance, which aims to develop new and better ways for faculty to teach as they prepare students to enter the profession. “I think everyone believes we can and should do a better job as educators,” says executive associate dean Gary Pollack, Ph.D. Pollack says faculty everywhere tend to teach the way they were taught, which leads to many professors standing at the front of a room and talking at their students. We are asking, “Is it possible to do this in a better way?” P A R T T W O : T H E “ C L I C K E R ” Tiny devices give professors a big advantage in the classroom 2003 April, Pharmaceutical Sciences Research Conference held 2003 Fall, Dean Blouin installed as the School’s 10th dean Jo Ellen Rodgers, PharmD, uses the Audience Response system to help students understand cases. PHOTO BY VALERIE MARINO 2004 $6 million renovation at Beard Hall began 2004 School received state funding to fully fund six $1 million professorships 9 Rodgers, who is a clinical associate professor in the Division of Pharmacotherapy and Experimental Therapeutics, introduced the idea of clickers to the School. “I begged and begged to get the ARS,” says Rodgers, who had seen them in action at the School of Medicine and also heard others talking about them at teaching conferences. “I just felt like it was much more interactive. The lecturer can assess the students and, if needed, reteach the information right then.” Rodgers said that in order for the clickers to be successful, professors have to be willing to alter the way they teach. She said the most important thing to students is for the professor to explain why answers are correct or incorrect, not to just give the correct answer and move on. “The first time I really saw it pan out, I watched my coworker Craig Lee give a lecture. He asked a question, and 85 percent of the students got it wrong. It makes you realize when you need to slow down and get a little more basic,” she says. “You can’t have 60 PowerPoint slides for an hour now. You need to take time to go over the cases.” From a research standpoint, Persky says the most exciting aspect of the Audience Response System is the real-time, quantitative feedback that both the instructors and students receive. “I can ask a question and have individuals answer, which gives me an array of data,” Persky says. “I can then pair students up or have them answer the questions in groups and see an increase in correct responses and even increases in the confidence in their responses.” In addition to the Audience Response System, Pollack says that faculty at the School have found some other innovative ways for students to discover information on their own, which he hopes will increase their retention. “They are very moderate changes to course delivery but very impactful,” Pollack says. One innovationthat Persky is using in his classroom is scratch-off exam sheets, where students are given multiple choices to find the correct answer. The exam sheets are similar to scratch-off lotto tickets in concept. “The scratch-off tests are interesting; students really like them,” Persky says. “It is immediate feedback for the students in terms of whether they are correct or not, and it is kind of fun.” P A R T T W O : T H E “ C L I C K E R ” 2005 February, Ground broken on the Genetic Medicine Building 2005 UNC/ECSU PharmD partnership launched 10 When Russ Mumper, Ph.D., considered leaving the university where he had been teaching and conducting research for nearly a decade, he had several requirements for his next school of pharmacy. He was looking for top-notch teaching, world-class research programs, and collaboration with industry professionals to create products and companies that benefit the economy as well as people’s health. Carolina was the only place he could find it, he says. Mumper came to UNC in 2007 from the University of Kentucky, where he was associate director of the Center for Pharmaceutical Science and Technology. “There was tremendous opportunity at UNC to do what I was doing at Kentucky but to do it better and with more opportunities with Research Triangle Park. So to me it was a no brainer,” Mumper says. “To be fair, after some analysis, this probably is the only place I would’ve left Kentucky for.” When the School set out to aggressively grow its research enterprise, the first step was hiring faculty members who could pursue growth opportunities for both research and teaching. “We want to make a difference,” says executive associate dean Gary Pollack. “We want to produce graduates who can drive us into the future.” To that end, the School must have a top research program, he says. “Research and graduate education are inextricably linked,” Pollack says. “If we wanted to have a larger graduate program, we needed to expand research.” Mumper, the John A. McNeill Distinguished Professor and director of the Center for Nanotechnology in Drug Delivery, fit the bill on both accounts. Mumper spends much of his time at the School building relationships in the industry with everyone from the Department of Defense and NIH to pharmaceutical companies. He is working with Starpharma in Melbourne, Australia, to develop microbial rings to prevent the P A R T T H R E E : R E S E A R C H Mumper helps grow research base through partnerships 2005 PAA celebrated 25th anniversary 2005 Inaugural Chapel Hill Drug Conference held Russ Mumper joined the School’s faculty in 2007 and has since worked to bring new research opportunities to the university. PHOTO BY WILL OWENS 2006 Beard Hall reopened after extensive renovations 2006 School ranked eighth in NIH funding 12 P A R T T H R E E : R E S E A R C H transmission of HIV, similar to the rings currently on the market for birth control. Since his arrival at UNC, Mumper says the School has tripled its number of partnerships with companies in the industry. And while he’s certainly not opposed to working with out-of-state organizations, Mumper says he gives special attention to inquiries from within state lines. This is, he says, in large part due to the Carolina Partnership, which was created in 2008 to enable UNC to build the preeminent, academic cancer-drug-discovery-and- development program in the world. Over the next four years, $18 million will be invested by the state and the School to pursue this goal. “One of our primary initiatives with the Carolina Partner-ship is that we’re going to work with companies in North Carolina,” Mumper says. “I’m always interested in talking to companies about work that we can do, but when North Carolina companies call me, I do whatever I can to make it happen. There’s a special interest we have in helping them.” Another way the School promotes North Carolina is through the Chapel Hill Drug Conference, which will be in its fifth year in 2010. Mumper directed the 2009 conference. Doing so allowed him to meet with a representative from a major pharmaceutical company located outside of North Carolina. The rep pitched a joined graduate training program. “He was here for two days and saw what we were doing,” Mumper says. “It’s a wonderful opportunity because in the area of science we’re doing, they’re world leaders. Then we’d be able to attract the best students in this focus area, and they’d be able to travel back and forth to apply their knowl-edge and maybe even create employment opportunities.” While the program is still in the proposal stages, it’s just one example of the opportunities the School is attracting. With so much going on, Mumper says he has a three-part gating mechanism to evaluate which projects should get his attention. It has to be exciting, it has to provide resources or enhance the educational experience for students and, finally, it has to help make the UNC Eshelman School of Pharmacy a top school in research funding and in U.S. News & World Report’s rankings of Pharm.D. programs. “To be the best, you can’t just be a fantastic teaching school; that’s not differentiating,” Mumper says. “There are a lot of teaching pharmacy schools that don’t have the best world-class researchers. But we’re also not the Scripps Research Institute—we don’t just do research, we do research in a teaching and education environment.” Mumper says the environment at the School is perfectly attuned to making strides in both teaching and research. “There’s something truly unique about the UNC Eshelman School of Pharmacy here in terms of the vision, the direc-tion, the purpose people have,” he says. “People are on the same page here, where we’re going and why we’re doing the things we’re doing. It’s the implementation of a vision, and it’s remarkable to me that people can see all that.” 2007 The School formed the Center for Integrative Chemical Biology and Drug Discovery through a campus-wide partnership. 2007 School ranked sixth in NIH funding 13 As a faculty recruit interviewing at the UNC Eshelman School of Pharmacy in 2008, Kelly Scolaro remembers that one major selling point for the School was the Bill and Karen Campbell Faculty Mentoring Program. “It was a huge deal for me,” says Scolaro, a clinical assistant professor and director of the Pharmaceutical Care Lab. “I had recruited mentors on my own before, but to have a formalized program, that’s unheard of.” The Bill and Karen Campbell Faculty Mentoring Program was established in 2006 out of the $1 million endowment of the Bill and Karen Campbell Distinguished Professorship. It was developed from the School’s desire to do a better job recruit-ing, developing and retaining quality faculty members. The goal of the program is to get junior faculty to a place where they’re settled in with their teaching approach, publishing articles, or funding their research. “I was really interested in becoming a better teacher,” says Scolaro, who came to the School in 2008 from the University of Florida’s College of Pharmacy, where she was assistant director of the St. Petersburg campus. Scolaro, who is mentored by executive associate dean Gary Pollack and Todd Zakra-jsek, executive director of UNC’s Center for Faculty Excellence, says she has found being part of the program invaluable. “I can bring them any issue and bounce things off of them,” she says. “They help me solve problems or tell me I’m doing things right.” The program is named for its biggest proponent, former dean Bill Campbell, who retired from the University in 2003. “Bill for many years was a leading advocate of a mentoring program, long before it was popular,” says Harold Kohn, who serves as the program’s director in addition to P A R T F O U R : M E N T O R I N G Mentoring program helps junior faculty spread their wings 2007 Fred Eshelman and the University Cancer Research Fund pledged $18 million for research at the School 2008 August, Master of Science in Health System Pharmacy program launched Executive Associate Dean Gary Pollack is mentor to Kelly Scolaro, a clinical as-sistant professor and direc-tor of the Pharmaceutical Care Lab. Former Dean Bill Campbell was the impetus behind the Bill and Karen Campbell Faculty Mentoring Program, which was named for him. PHOTO BY WILL OWENS 2008 May, School renamed the UNC Eshelman School of Pharmacy for Fred Eshelman (’72 BSPharm) 2008 School ranked second in both NIH funding and in U.S. News & World Report 15 his duties as the William R. Kenan Distinguished Professor in the Division of Medicinal Chemistry and Natural Products. Campbell provided “a wonderful blueprint” for the program, Kohn says. The mentoring program meets four core needs: recruit-ing junior faculty, developing those faculty to reach their full potential, retaining faculty and enlisting the help of senior faculty in the facilitation of these goals, Kohn says. There are currently seven junior faculty members (faculty who have not been awarded tenure) in the program. Each mentee has two mentors: one within the School and a second from elsewhere on campus relative to that mentee’s goal, such as executive leadership or, in Scolaro’s case, the executive director of UNC’s Center for Faculty Excellence, whose mission is to help faculty become better teachers. The mentors meet periodically to ensure they’re not giving their mentee contrary guidance, and mentors and mentees are expected to meet at least once a month. Scolaro says the opportunities at the School are head and shoulders above those at other universities. “They’re genuinely interested in me and my develop-ment,” she says. “That’s what is so unique about UNC. They really care about faculty development. They’re invested in it.” Scolaro says a major benefit of going to a mentor instead of a supervisor is being able to leave the employer-employee relationship intact. “You can be more blunt or more free with what you say to them,” she says. Pollack agrees. “Chairs are in a really conflicted role with their faculty,” he says. “You want them to succeed, but at the same time, you’re judging them. It’s probably impossible for a chair to serve as a mentor only. I can make suggestions to Kelly about things she should advocate for herself in a different way than if I were her chair.” None of the program’s mentees has yet reached tenure, something that can take years, but Kohn says he has seen good things in their progress. “What I see is with the mentoring team, junior faculty are much more mature and aware of what it takes to make an impact in scholarship and teaching. It extends their maturation; they think of problems that are more complex,” he says. “It’s been really effective. This is their first job, and we all know we need help. Our faculty are a human resource you can’t put a price tag on.” P A R T F O U R : M E N T O R I N G 2009 First class graduated from UNC/ECSU partnership 2009 May, Genetic Medicine Building formally dedicated 16 H O N O R R O L L O F D O N O R S DEAN’S INNER CIRCLE $25,000 and above Anonymous 13 Estate of Mary Lockwood Curry Fred Eshelman 5 Dorothy Renfrow Kerr 8 Estate of Sallye Lockhart 1 Mario Family Foundation 1 Ronald H. and Nancy McFarlane 2 Dhiren R. Thakker 6 Chris and Debra Woody 8 Pharmacy Network Foundation UNC Pharmacy Alumni Association MORTAR AND PESTLE $10,000 to $24,999 Bob and Maureen Blouin 2 Anthony J. Hickey 2 Seymour and Rheta Holt 21 John Albert McNeill Jr 14 Allen Thomas Munday 2 Estate of William Moss Salley Jr. Lloyd Milton Whaley 17 CVS Corporation Walgreens SUSTAINER $5,000 to $9,999 Ralph and Daphne Ashworth 19 Ronny and Barbara Buchanan 23 Stephen and Jill Buckley 5 Jan Lovelace Burrus 2 Bernard and Nancy Gutterman 2 Leaf Huang 4 Paul and Phebe Kirkman 1 Alan and Liz Knight 1 Evelyn P. Lloyd 18 Russell J. Mumper 2 Ruth Kannon Nassif 4 Ralph H. Raasch 17 Henry and Tracey Smith 15 Talbert L. Waldrop 16 Gary and Rachel Yingling 10 Alcon, Inc. Eisai Inc. Walmart Foundation ASSOCIATE $2,000 to $4,999 Anonymous 2 Kevin L. Almond 19 George William Brookins 6 Robert Adrian Brown 1 H. Chapman Brown III 24 Terrence and Terri Burroughs 9 Cliff and Linda Butler 11 Sadie Wolfe Byerly 5 Rowe Bogle Campbell Jr. 22 W. Stanley Campbell 13 Radu Ciocan and Meghan Peters 1 George H. Cocolas 19 Delbert Marvin Cranford 6 Thomas Peete Davis 11 W. Keith Elmore 4 James and Evelyn Fowler 7 James Michael Fuller 6 Stephen W. Fuller 17 Jim Hall 7 FACULTY SUPPORT 62.4% STUDENT SUPPORT 23.6% BUILDING PROJECTS 1.4% ADMINISTRATIVE AND FUNDRAISING 12.6% PFNC EXPENSES FOR FISCAL YEAR 2009 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 101 113 118 113 132 $700,000 $600,000 $500,000 $400,000 $300,000 $200,000 $100,000 0 Year No. of Scholarship Students SCHOL ARSHIP DOLL ARS AWARDED* *Includes funds awarded by the School of Pharmacy and the Pharmacy Foundation Blue names: Gave first gift more than 20 years ago. Superscript: Consecutive years of giving. H O N O R R O L L O F D O N O R S 17 Lisa Dawn Hampton 7 Betty and Brad Hussey 4 Lazelle Marks, Jr 2 Louis Alfred Newsome 1 Shara and Richard Owensby 8 Albert Paul Rachide 7 John and Lori Setzer 7 J. Robert and Linda Taylor 19 Judy W. Thompson 2 Tom and Kathryn Thutt 13 Benjamin Odell Williams 7 Cardinal Health, Inc. Duke University Outcomes Pharmaceutical Health Care Walmart Stores, Inc. SUPPORTER $1,000 to $1,999 George and Tessa Albright 14 Martha Williams Brookshire 8 Thomas Reeves Burgiss 9 Stephen Ray Carswell 12 Class of 2009 1 Shirley A. Clifton 3 Betty Hill Dennis 13 Fred M. Eckel 10 Johnny Warren Elkins 5 Mary Elizabeth Fearing 1 Elaine W. Fuller 3 Robert J. Garmise 2 Sara and Eugene Hackney 4 Joseph and Cindy Hamilton 5 Hugh Dan Hardy Jr. 3 L. William Harris 8 Clifford Ervin Hemingway 4 Ryan Thomas Hoskins 2 Gordon Robert Ingle 10 Larry Dwayne Irwin 1 Sarah Maner Lawrence 4 Susan Stone Luskin 1 George Patrick Markham 5 Steven Kelly McCombs 13 Larry G. McLellan 21 David Solomon Moody Jr. 2 Paul J. Nunnally 2 James and Margaret Booth Powell 1 Mary Jane Rivers 2 Ralph Peele Rogers Jr. 3 John Wesley Sides III 8 Elizabeth Schifano Skirvin 8 J. Michael Spivey 2 Paul Augustus Stevenson 7 Catherine Crumpton Stokes 2 Henry and Tracy Eatmon Thomason 5 Jane Stafford Thompson 8 John F. Watts 13 Romas Templeton White, III 3 Thomas Alton Williford 10 ACS NC Eagle Pharmaceuticals Eli Lilly and Company Kerr Drug Stores, Inc. Kroger Company Fdn NACDS NC Mutual Wholesale Drug Co. Pharmacists Mutual Insurance Co. SuperValue Foundation PATRON $500 to $999 Glenda F. Alexander 10 John Dean Badgett 8 Sara Hackney Barley 2 Amy Grace Bigus Beach 1 Stephen Dodson Bennett, III 5 Angela Blake Biggs 3 Frederick Oscar Bowman Jr. 11 Gary Lynn Bowman 3 Ronney Gray Bradshaw 16 Thomas E. Brewington Jr. 1 James Bedford Bryant 1 William and Karen Campbell 1 Desiree A. Carlson MD 11 Carlisle Chenault 8 Sue Cho 1 Jacquelyn Smith Cooke 1 Johnny Lynn Cox II 6 W. Grover Creech 2 Hubert Gordon Dameron 1 Mark Davis 8 Charles Robert Deadwyler Jr. 9 Steve and LaRue Draughon Dedrick 1 L. Aaron Dethloff 7 Cynthia Knapp Dlugosz 12 W. Gregory Dozier 4 Mary Ledbetter Fischer 11 The Genetic Medicine Building opened in late 2008 and was dedicated in May 2009. Researchers from the UNC Eshelman School of Pharmacy occupy 75,000 square feet of laboratory space over two floors in the building. PHOTO BY WILL OWENS 18 H O N O R R O L L O F D O N O R S Don Hedrick Fisher 12 Marilyn C. Frazier 1 Vincent E. Garver 3 Ronald Michael Geer 1 Donna Kay Gibson 15 L. Irvin Graham 18 Ronald Preston Greene 10 William Crane Griffin 6 Frances Powell Gualtieri 1 Matthew Stephen Hogan 1 Beverly Jean Holcombe 7 W. Howard Holsenbeck 1 R. Truman Hudson 4 David Jamison 4 Joseph Lewis Johnson Jr. 17 Robert and Leslie Jones 2 Stephen Yates Jones 5 E. Maurice and Carol Jones 5 Lloyd Adrian Jordan 26 Dale Jordan 2 Pamela Upchurch Joyner 12 Keith Eugene Kirby 15 Olga Michael Klibanov 1 Kimberly Parnell Lafferty 3 Casey S. Lawrence 2 David S. Lawrence 2 Patricia Claytor Lee 10 Laura Gaither Lennon 2 Kim Moran Lewis 3 Norman Colin Lewis 3 Samuel Floyd Lewis 6 William Dodd Lindsay 4 D. Michael Lindsay 7 Virgil S. Lucas 4 Janine Westmoreland Malone 2 Heidi Mansour 1 Jennifer Lane McCabe 2 Amy Mewborn Meadowcroft 2 Franklin Alexander Measamer 7 Michael and Jennifer Murray 5 James and Dolores Perkins 8 James Cornel Pinson 18 James Alston Pittman 11 William Gibbs Pittman Jr 1 John R. Plachetka 1 Richard Hiram Rains 9 Gill Ripley 1 Kellie Teague Rough 2 Billy Gerald Roughton 2 Cynthia Faye Sawyer 6 Alva Broughton Sellers Jr. Amy Hatfield Seung 1 Owren Dale Sides 7 Thomas Gail Sinnett 15 William Denny Smith 4 P. David and Jennifer Canaday Smith 4 W. Allen Smith 5 James Carlton Stewart Jr. 3 Chad and Marybeth Terry 2 Meredith Patton Tripp 9 Debra Ann Wentz 1 Tessie Yiottis 7 CENTURY CLUB $150 to $499 Tamara Watson Adams 7 Brian Cameron Alexander 1 Susan Ladd Alexander 1 Suzanne K. Alford 15 Jody Hicks Allen 1 Dallas L. Ammons 2 Holly Faye Anderson John Andrako 15 Stephen B. Archbell 4 Paul Saunders Ashworth 2 Roger and Judy Mabe Atkins 4 Susan Gretz Aycock 6 Debra Groshans Aycock 1 Maude Anne Babington 8 Shannon Bailey-Stanley 3 J. Hilton Barrett II 11 Ginger Moss Barrier 1 Bettye Davis Barto 2 Nicholas H. Batuyios 12 R. Earl Baxley 20 Charles H. Beddingfield 10 J. Stephen and Deborah Bedford 3 J. Warren and Becky Odham Berry 3 Douglas Kent Bettenhausen 2 Cynthia Thompson Bishop 2 Anne Rendleman Blackburn 10 George Asbury Blalock Jr. 18 Charles Donald Blanton Jr. 15 George William Bliss 2 Martha Hayes Boger 10 John S. Boreyko 7 Mehdi Boroujerdi 7 Sara Ellen Boss-Isenhour 20 Richard K. Bower 4 Shelton Bickett Boyd 19 Douglas and Joyce Boyette 1 V. Irving Boyles Jr. 17 Benjamin W. Brady 25 Rae Bragg-Jones 19 William Timothy Bratton 1 Timothy James Brennan 2 William and Marsha Hood Brewer 10 PHOTO BY WILL OWENS H O N O R R O L L O F D O N O R S 19 Jan Ball Brickley 6 Betsy Queen Briley 1 Charles Arnold Britt 2 Christina E. Brizendine 2 Jennifer K. Broders 1 Harry and Diane Brogden 4 Donna Johnson Brooks 1 Charles Michael Brooks 9 G. Jackson Brooks Jr. 8 AaronW.and PamelaMcDanielBrothers 2 Pamela Jacobs Brugger 1 Judy Cameron Bryson 4 Larry D. Bullock 12 Shirley Weaver Bumgardner 27 William Henry Burch 2 Malachi and Jennifer Price Burgess 1 Stephen A. Burrus 7 J. Frank Burton Jr. 13 Wesley Grimes Byerly III 1 Stephen Wayne Cagle 1 Stephen Michael Caiola 13 John Wilson Caldwell III 6 Richard Douglas Callicutt 7 Rebecca Hedrick Campbell 5 Laura Banner Carringer 9 Ervin McKay Carroll Jr. 3 Leanne Cartee 2 Donald Kermit Carter 2 J. Keith Caviness 11 Moo J. Cho 17 Catherine Anne Christianson 2 Stefanie Lozada Chua 1 Rodney G. Cline 8 Eddie Coats 4 Jerrel and Sarah Cobb 14 W. Bernard Collie 3 Dawn R. Conti 4 Rachel Leder Couchenour 10 Patrick Bryan Cox 5 Carole Winifred Cranor 1 Kathryn Seaver Cross 1 Judith Baucom Crouch 3 Jerry Stewart Curry 8 Tommy Dagenhart 5 Herman Hallet Daniels 16 Amy Young Darrow 1 Col. Ben Philip Daughtry 8 Beth Barbee Davidson 5 G. Ike Davis 2 Christopher Day 7 Kimberly Hardison Deloatch 17 Steven Grady Detter 6 Robert Dewar 18 Priscilla Amos Dollard 7 Frances Krohn Drescher 5 Everette Matthews Dunn 2 Richard and Allison Durham 2 Stewart and Tammy Eckard 1 Deborah Moore Edwards 14 Charles Eubie Evans Jr. 23 Kimberly Adcock Ferguson 2 Anna F. Ferguson 8 Ginger Lee Loving Filpo 3 William C. Finch Jr. 9 Ronald Alan Fleming 1 J. Hugh Fletcher 14 Sarah Katherine Ford 1 Jamie Nesbitt Francis 1 George E. Francisco 2 Edwin Rudolph Fuller Jr. 2 Elaine Teresa Fuller 4 James and Mary G. Teague Fullwood 3 James Wade Fulton 24 Jonathan and Allison Browning Gaddy 1 Richard L. Garner 8 Gary Renn Glisson 5 Robert L. Gordon 16 Laurie Owens Graham 1 Richard Adrow Gray 9 Richard Howard Gray 22 Joe David Greeson 1 Sharon Halsey Greeson 2 Eleyse Harrell Griffin 15 Bryan Austin Haas 2 Ray Gordon Hagwood Sr. 4 Tammy Coble Hall 19 Michele M. Hall 1 Marty Allen Hamrick 1 Lauren Bunting Hardin 4 Patricia Day Harris 13 William Lee Harris Jr. 9 Vicki Blackburn Harrison 19 William Heyward Harrison Jr. 8 Gilbert Hartis 12 W. Hampton Hatcher 8 Roy Lee Hawke 8 Raymond E. Heath Sr. 9 Terry Walter Heatherington 5 Margaret Simms Hedrick 2 John Michael Heilman 4 James Donald Helms 12 Eddy and Debbie Hemingway 7 Robert Ray Henley 2 Egbert Marcus Herring III 18 Rez Patterson Hester Jr. 2 Pamela Absher Heutte 1 Harry and Laura Bingham Hiersteine 1 Ruth Hall Higgins 4 Class year % who donated 1939 100.00% 1952 50.00% 1942 50.00% 1956 46.15% 1953 38.46% 1968 38.33% 1967 37.25% 1983 35.80% 1948 35.29% 1955 34.78% *The Class of 1955 was closely followed by the Class of 2009 with a participation rate of 34.27% TOP CL ASSES WITH THE GREATEST PARTICIPATION ETHNICITY % of alums % of donors Caucasian 88.6% 96% Asian 6.2% 2% African American 3.4% 1% Latino .72% .2% Unspecified .67% .1% Native American .48% .3% GENDER % of alums % of donors Male 44% 46% Female 56% 54% GIVING BY. . . 20 H O N O R R O L L O F D O N O R S Robert Milton Hines 10 Gregory Scott Hinson 8 Lewis Talmadge Holder Jr. 5 Ronald Lamar Holland 4 Keith Gordon Hood 12 Jonathan and Andria Hornaday 2 Julius Francis Howard 8 Shannon M. Howarth 2 Phil F. Icard 5 James Lewis Inabinet 3 Valerie Fleming Infinger 14 Bridgit Walker Jones 1 Nellie Silver Jones 20 Susan Speir Jones 11 Suzanne Fields Jones 3 Warren Rickman Jones 13 Dianne Creech Kapherr 3 Johanna Hunt Karas 2 Angela Dawn Marie Kashuba 12 Carla Dean Kennedy 1 Theodore and Lisa Kerner 12 Earl Wendell Key Jr. 4 Krista Tucker Kness 1 J. Dean and Tonya Lackey 4 Robert and Diana Lafferty 10 Lisa Cutrell 1 Hampton F. Langdon 16 Polly Johnson Lauffenburger 1 Randy Neil Lawson 1 Rachel Christine Lazim 8 Nancy Carol Leatherman 2 Andrew Loyd Lee 4 Mary Mayer Lefler 1 Marina Maggio Levandoski 19 Everett Lee Lewis Jr. 5 Amanda Grant Lewis 3 Margaret Gallagher Leyden 15 Thomas Lilly 3 Albert and Virginia Lockamy 5 J. Franklin Lowder 18 Cheryl Marie Lynch 1 Maurice Oliver Lynch 2 Pamela Lynne Mackey 4 Ernest Linwood Marks III 2 Justin and Ashley Marlow 3 Juliana Smith Massenburg 1 Harry F. McArver Jr. 5 James Archie McBryde Jr. 3 John L. McCall Jr. 3 Wesley Andrew McCall 1 Rebecca Proffitt McCall 1 Robert and Mary Ann McCommons 10 Katherine Bell McCorkle 6 Joseph Owen McDowell 1 Heather Daughtry McLamb 10 Sharon Isgett McMurry 2 Neil McPhail 1 G. Michael Medlin 6 John Meeker 2 Carl Porter Meroney 7 Kevin Alexander Miller 2 Debra Ann Miller 11 Phillip Dee Minton 8 Harvey and Linda Mitchell 2 John Agrippa Mitchener III 4 David Montgomery 5 Ellen Leitinger Monticello 2 James Edmond Moody 3 Hugh Jackson Moore 11 William Whitaker Moose Jr. 3 Leigh Ann Morris 11 Jarrett and Jodie Morris 7 Maxann Kerr Morrison 1 Fred M. Moss Jr. 3 Roslyn Johnson Muse 2 John H. Myhre 10 Thomas and Alisa Carrigan Nance 3 Andrew C. Nelsen 1 Christine Raven Norwood 2 Stephen Eugene Oglesbee Jr. 2 Chijioke Amara Okehie 1 Steven and Bettie Olson 6 Jane Therese Osterhaus 3 J. Dana Outten 5 Karen Marshall Overstreet 11 Emily Adams Pare 10 Craig Parker 1 Anne Brookshire Parris 5 J. Herbert Patterson 14 Fern Ellen Paul-Aviles 3 W. Stephen Perrow 2 Adam Persky 1 Grady Samuel Phillips Jr. 8 Joseph Pike III and Catherine Chitty 4 Wallace Hinton Plyler Jr. 2 Steven and Bonnie Allen Potter 1 David Mark Preston 1 Billy and Donna Price 5 Rita Kay Proctor 2 Roger D. Putnam 6 Freddy and Dawn Rabon 7 James Walter Reid 7 Hearne F. Rickard II 5 William E. Roach 2 Rebecca Jones, a fourth-year pharmacy student, and Steve Dedrick, director of continuing education, get to know each other at the 2009 Pharmacy Foundation Dinner. PHOTO BY WILL OWENS H O N O R R O L L O F D O N O R S 21 Stephanie Biggs Roberts 4 Stephen Burgin Roberts Sr. 9 James and Teresa Robertson 2 Philip and Jo Ellen Rodgers 6 Mary Williams Roederer 1 Charles and Lee Younts Rogers 3 Mary G. Rossiter 2 Robert Joal Roth 7 Mark Wayne Rountree 6 Stephen Bernard Ruddy 2 J. Marshall Sasser 12 Joseph Allen Saunders Jr. 7 Timothy D. and Pamela Voyles Scheets 1 Zankhana Nimesh Shah 1 Meredith Leigh Sheetz 1 Karen Englebert Sherrill 7 Fred Lee Sherrill Jr. 20 W. Darle Shouse 7 Peggy Costner Simmons 2 Elaine Holzsweig Simon 2 Linda Simoni-Wastila 7 Randall Joe Sims 6 Michael and Janie Skertich 8 Myra Guthrie Slaughter 6 Laura Kiser Sleater 8 Lester Mark Smith 3 L. Jackson and Katherine Poole Smith 1 Ron and Phyllis Smith 10 J. Hubert Smith Jr. 9 Billy Mac Smyre 24 L. Alan Sneed 6 Larry O’Neal Spears 1 Richard B. Stephens 1 Milton Graham Stewart Jr. 1 John Kingsley Stoots 2 A. Benjamin Suttle III 2 Gene Sutton 16 John Leonard Talley 5 Thomas Fain Taylor 12 Stacy Brown Taylor 3 Randall Scott Teague 2 Leigh Ann Teal 13 Mary Brown Teeter 2 Angela M Tennant 6 Andre Tennille 23 James Addison Thompson Jr. 4 Kristin Hinshaw Thornton 1 Emily Cate Tidwell 2 C. Stroud Tilley III 23 John B. Tinkler 4 Darren and Robin Tinney 14 Andrew Robert Trella 1 Alexander E. Tropsha 17 Jeffery and Joanne Tugwell 2 Stanley Elbert Tunnell 2 James David Tyndall 3 Susan Brittingham Van Tassel 13 Kathy Gay Vaughn 3 Ike and Kristi Vlahos 11 Arnold M. Walker 13 Catherine Crume Wallace 6 Christopher Lee Waller 2 Hanna Louise Wallin 1 Lynn Bell Walters 6 Kimberly Carroll Ward 1 Angela Raihala Ward 8 John Drake Watson 2 Ronald Dean Watts 2 C. Edwin and Julie Webb 4 1999 2000 2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 $80,000,000 $70,000,000 $60,000,000 $50,000,000 $40,000,000 $30,000,000 $20,000,000 $10,000,000 0 SCHOOL OF PHARMACY AND PFNC ASSETS FOUNDATION SCHOOL OF PHARMACY 22 H O N O R R O L L O F D O N O R S Jennifer Wandling Webb 4 Anna Shearin Wells 8 Andrea Michelle Wessell 3 Deborah Edwards Westbrook 6 Lance and Stephanie Wheeler 3 W. Harvey and Ann Whichard 1 Alfred and Amy Mittman White 2 Lindsey Lee White 1 C. Michael Whitehead 26 Richard Jones Whitesell 2 Sherri Sanders Whitesell 1 Patricia Wigle 2 Doris Bizzell Wilkerson 4 Charles and Sandra Wilkins 7 George Willets 25 JohnH. and PatriciaThrower Williamson1 H Van Williford 1 John Vernon Woodard Jr. 2 Anita Louise Woodring 1 Tammy E. Worden 4 Jane A. Younts 9 Dabur Pharma US FRIEND $50 to $149 Robert L. Abrams 9 David and Carolyn Slockett Adams 1 Margaret Evans Adams 16 Michael W. Adams 3 Medinat Alimi Akinbi 5 Mary L. Alexander 4 Susan Kochanowicz All 9 William Allen 9 Cynthia Lyerly Alligood 17 Barbara Gilliam Alphin 3 Patricia Amankwa 2 Eugene Gibson Anderson 3 Jane Powers Archer 3 Wells Sanford Armstrong 3 Theresa Arnold 1 Alma Kaye Arrington 1 Kellye Brown Aschmeyer 1 Kimberly Clifton Ashley 6 John Parker Austin Jr. 1 Richard and Jennifer Robinson Bagby 1 James Oliver Baity 14 Amanda M. Ball 2 Catherine Lee Banta 1 Sprite Barbee 4 Allan and Barbara Barkley 4 Suzanne Burns Barlow 2 Joseph Barrett III 2 Alan Bartholomew 4 Karen Thomas Barton 6 Donna H. Bauer 22 Laura Katherine Bayliss 1 David and Karen Beam 11 Roger Frederick Bedard 3 Glenn Andrew Belemjian 3 Carl J. Bennett Jr. 2 Alicia H. Bennett 1 Robert Gary Berger 1 Richard Wayne Bess 3 Sunny Shelton Biasi 2 Peter Steven Bieber 8 Martha Wyke Biggio 19 Tammy Kinney Black 10 Kenneth and Sally Crews Blackburn 4 Evelyn C. Blackley 2 Susan Jean Blalock 4 Elliott J. Blanchard 26 Jeffrey Galen Blanchard 1 Babette Goodman Blaug 10 Jean Winter Bliss 2 Ryan Neil Bookout 1 David L. Bourdet 1 Rebecca Lynn Boustani 2 Raymond and Gina Woodruff Boutwell 7 Kimberly Lantz Bowers 12 James and Marianne Bowling Bowman 5 Sharon Gaskins Braswell 1 Evelyn Shugar Brauer 3 Anne Allen Breza 6 Myra Craver Brickell 5 Harry A. Bright 7 Benjamin Thomas Brinson 1 Vivian Morris Broach 1 Neil and Elizabeth Barker Broadwell 1 DeAnne Labrecque Brooks 2 Henry Shelton Brown Jr. 1 William Henry Brown Jr. 2 Cynthia Register Brown 1 Elizabeth Howell Brown 1 Mark Patrick Brown 1 Mitchell Tucker Brown 3 Ronald O’Neal Brown 7 Robert A. Brown Jr. 2 Angela Euell Bryant 1 Tina Alexander Bullard 3 Patricia Owens Bumgarner 3 Carl and Susan Stafford Bumgarner 2 The Class of 2009 takes one last picture before its commencement ceremony. PHOTO BY VALERIE MARINO H O N O R R O L L O F D O N O R S 23 Michael Eugene Bunch 1 Stephen Donald Burch 2 Dana White Burgess 2 Linda Riggs Burke 6 Mary Jo and Jerry Burkot 1 Anne Kelly Burks 5 Ken Austin Burleson 9 C. Franklin and Lisa Burney 2 Bruce S. Burnham 8 M. Winston Burroughs 6 Samuel Brainard Burrus 1 Joan Turlington Callan 3 Bruce R. Canaday 1 Robert Lee Carr 6 Ken Carter 5 Heidi Hale Carter 9 Lewis and Nancy Faust Carter 5 James Edward Carver 6 Melanie Smothers Chrismon 4 Beverly and Russell Clark 1 Andy Clark 5 Renae Eckard Clark 2 Cynthia Knight Clayton 9 Ralph Dalton Cline Jr. 1 Col. M. John Coburn 1 Ann Guiton Coburn 4 David Emmett Cody III 5 Walter N. Coley 1 Robert and Annette Aman Collette 1 Vernon David Collins 1 Jerry and Anne Coln 11 Rebecca Buchanan Coltrane 2 Henry Bryant Combs Jr. 2 Jennifer Parker Cook 3 Robin Lane Cooke 2 B. Michael Cooper 2 Joanne Bullard Copeland 3 Susan Payne Cornett 1 M. Russell Cowan 1 William Irvine Cowden 2 Carl and Mary Cox 1 Michael Wayne Craven 2 Wilson and Mary B. Crawford 2 Howard Welda Creech 1 Otis Wayne Creech 17 Julie Ward Crocker 2 Rosemary Persaud Cross 6 Benjamin Garlon Cutrell 1 J. David Dalmas 8 Daniel Lee Danielson 1 Kevin and Yvonne Blackmon Daugherty 1 Alison Gray Davenport 1 Maria Mitchem Davidson 4 David and Betty Davis 16 Anne Garrett Davis 1 Wiley and Mary Dawson 2 Robert Lee Dayvault Jr. 25 Lauren Jeanette DeBolt 2 Gina Trentadue Decker 1 Paul Wesley Dempsey 3 Sherry Barbour Denning 6 Janet Eakins Dickinson 5 Russell and Louise Gill Dillard 2 Helen Catoe Dinkins 1 Lisa McCall Dinkins 2 Melissa Alyson McCall 2 David and Susan Disher 10 Christopher Thad Dixon 1 Karl Hans Donn 6 Kristin Price Douglass 1 Janell Downinig 2 Leslie Campbell Driver 1 Mary Woelfel Duffy 1 David and Pamela Earnhardt 1 James Michael Egbert Sr. 7 Revis Radford Eller 4 Clarence Peacock Ellison Jr. 3 Steven Ira Engel 5 Kelly M. Ennis 1 Myra Hopper Epley 10 David Wesley Etchison 4 Tom Eutsler 1 Christine Houser Evans 10 Nancy F. Faggart 1 Salmen Tucker Fayed 2 Cindy Shearin Feagans 9 Jackie Gwyne Fender 2 Charles and Nancy Fenske 8 Marie Ann First 4 George and Sandy Fisher 2 Debra Crumpler Fiztgerald 2 Christopher and Kelly Johnson Fleming 1 Jill A. Fowler 3 Carolyn Twiggs Fox 4 George and Cynthia Poulos Fox 19 Alisa Thomas Fraley 1 Mary R. Franks 6 Elizabeth Ring Freas 14 Stephen Edward Friday 2 William Frostick 7 Kimberly Shiflett Fullenwider 2 Megan Fuller 1 William Randolph Futrell Jr. 9 Marcia Hussey Gallo 9 Gary Ralph Gallo 2 Sandra Smith Garner 8 Sharon Rice Gates 12 Raghuvir Baxiram Gelot 6 Charles Thomas Gibson 1 Sue Leeuwenburg Gibson 1 Tammy Gilbert 1 Howard and Jacqueline Glasser 3 Mark L. Glover 3 David Ray Goble 1 Judith Morgan Goodman 1 Bruce Michael Goodson 1 Freda Hobowsky Gordon 1 Julie Ann Gouveia-Pisano 4 LaRue May Grady 1 Michael and Deborah Averette Grady 9 Samuel and Anita Creech Gray 1 Donald Lewis Greene 1 Jennifer Smart Greene 3 Nancy Green-Knepper 1 Deborah Barringer Greenspan 5 Robert Greenwood 12 Class year % of all giving Dollar amt 1972 51.82% $410,115.00 1983 3.47% $27,467.50 1984 2.86% $22,627.00 1977 2.74% $21,720.05 1980 1.75% $13,822.50 1952 1.47% $11,603.00 1981 1.43% $11,292.50 1988 1.39% $11,032.50 1951 1.35% $10,685.00 1969 1.34% $10,590.00 TOP DOLL ARS BY CL ASS 24 H O N O R R O L L O F D O N O R S Michael and Debra Keever Griffin 1 Merrill Tucker Griffin 5 David and Beth Griffin 2 James Boyd Groce III 1 Santosh Kumar Gupta 1 James Ruffin Gurganus 1 Robin Kluttz Gurley 1 William Preston Guy III 2 Julie Ann Haizlip 6 Sara and Jonathan Hall 1 T. Linwood and Kathryn Jordan Hamilton 1 Lisa Marie Hammond 2 Charles Vinson Hamrick 1 Jillaine Garris Hardee 1 Sandra Grace Hardee 1 W. Sidney and Anna Harmon 7 Ollie Cecil Harrell 3 William and Susan Stallings Harris 3 Ann Marie Harris 17 Mona Williams Harris 4 Margaret McCann Hartis 20 Robert Eldon Hedenskog II 4 Shirley Ann Heiman 3 Bradley F. D. Helms 1 Elizabeth Keiger Helpingstine 5 David and Donna Fargis Helton 1 Norma K. Henderson 1 Daryl Brinton Hendrix 7 Marla Rene Hersh 1 William Allen Hill 1 Beverly Thorndyke Hill 1 Denine Marie Hill 2 Susan Clelland Hinkamp 3 Lynn Turlington Hinson 15 David Thomas Hix Sr. 6 Debra Holkko 2 William Earl Hollamon Jr. 3 Thomas Marshall Holland 8 Carolin Phelps Holland-Wilson 10 L. Harris Hollingsworth 7 Amy Picklesimer Holmes 1 Carol Lowe Holmes 3 L. Randolph and Marie Holoman 2 John Cogdell Hood Jr. 10 David and Susan Hook 2 Judy Yates Hooks 3 Susan Smith Hoover 1 William P. Horne Jr 1 Elizabeth Barringer Houff 7 D. Lawrence Hughes 8 Barbara Hughes 15 Marcus Brown Hughes Jr. 3 Erica Pernia Hugo 1 Amy Cline Hull 12 Frank W. Hunter 9 Jasper and Carol Hurt 12 James Thomas Ingram 23 Sandra Sweitzer Irvin 2 Jena Ivey 3 Vicky Bishop Jackson 1 Victoria Lee Jackson 1 Eric Allen Jackson 6 John Duff James 9 Angela Dudley Jenkins 7 W. Ingram Jenkins, Jr. 19 Barbara Harper Johnson 3 Heather Johnson 6 Rena Elizabeth Johnson 1 R. Mark Johnson 3 Benny and Tracy Jones 5 Susan Plyler Jones 1 Clarence and Karen Jordan 5 Sylvia Bonner Jordan 5 Allyson Brawley Josey 2 Future pharmacists work on a chocolate compound during Family Day activities. PHOTO BY VALERIE MARINO H O N O R R O L L O F D O N O R S 25 Teresa May Journey 1 Stephen and Stephanie Melnyk-Joyce 1 Rudolph L. Juliano 1 Beth Ruby Kamp 4 William John Karahalios 3 Nick Gus Karres 3 April Maynard Keeney 1 Angela Colleen Kent-Mitchell 2 Summer Williams Kerley 1 L. Todd Kermon Jr. 1 Kathleen Gurney Ketcham 1 Lynne Nakashima Kiang 1 Chung Sook Kim 1 Scott and Carie Kimbrough 4 Kate Wilson King 8 Melissa Williams King 9 William Thad King II 2 Mary Ann Fulton Kirkpatrick Kelli Oliver Kirkpatrick 1 Melissa Donnelly Kirkton 2 Stephanie Norris Kiser 1 Nichole Kiziah 2 Dionne Lowder Knapp Cynthia Denise Knight 1 Jennings Eskridge Knight Sr. 1 Lori Williams Kodikara 2 Matthew and Anglea Benson Kodsi 2 Stefanie Berkoski Koewler 1 Harold Lewis Kohn 1 Kim and Lois Koontz 4 Stephen and Catherine Koontz 8 William Lamont III 3 Julia Scott Lane 23 Andrew and Rebeca Fornaro Largen 11 Tyre Beaman Lasitter 6 Timothy and Martha Lassiter 3 Lina Al-Adham Latouf 1 Kenneth Lee Lawing 8 Kristi Lynn Davis 1 Kristi Davis Lawrence 1 Rosemarie Zadlo Lawrence 3 Margaret LeDoux 11 Craig Richard Lee 3 Mark and Nayahmka McGriff-Lee 2 John and Cynthia Correll Leggett 2 Phyllis Ketner Lenhart 1 Marie Louise LeRoy 3 Susan Schenck Lester 7 Laura Woodward Lever 1 Ingrid Baumgartner Lewis 3 Rhonda Beth Liberto 1 W. Edwin Link Jr. 6 Anne Chiu Hwa Liu 2 Jolynn W. Lloyd 2 G. Edward Long Jr. 7 Mike T. Long 9 William Monroe Lovelace Jr. 2 Patricia Ferrell Lundblade 3 Bruce and Joy MacLeod 10 Brenda Martin Marcri 1 Marlene Maliszewski 1 Benjamin J. Malone 1 Teresa W. Maness 2 Gardner Mann 3 Linda Winship Manning 3 Davina Duncan Manuel 1 Harry Patrick Marcelin 1 Gregory Alan Marks 17 Jerold Lee Marlow 1 William Luther Marsh 23 Patricia Schafer Masarachia 1 Kimberly Clifton Massey 1 Jim and Bonnie Butler Matthews 1 Herbert O. Mayberry 3 Susan Miller Maynard 1 Melinda Steele McCabe 8 Jeanne Ann McCall 2 Charlotte Ridgeway McCorkle 2 S. Adair Gupton McCurry 1 Jack F. McGlinn 1 Jenny Marie McGuire 1 William Evans McKellar Jr. 3 Gary Walker McKenzie 13 Halbert Hill McKinnon Jr. 1 Kelly Overby McRae 3 Bruce D. McWhinney 2 Glen Meade 6 Robin Chapman Meade 2 Donald Franklin Medlin 1 Toni Annette Melvin 1 Robert Warner Mendes 8 William Andrew Merrill 4 A. Brent Miller 2 David F. Miller 6 Elizabeth Pendry Miller 8 Joseph Larry Miller 13 Seth George Miller 2 Stephen Perry Millikin Jr. 1 James Robert Minor 2 Arthur Harrell Minton 1 Gene and Sybil Minton 3 Kimberly Kerley Mitchell 1 T. Wayne Mitchell 2 Tom Saburo Miya 10 Lewis and Joyce Long Mize 4 Melisa Van Wagner Mizelle 3 Louis and Gayle Mizelle 2 Deborah Montague 2 Third-year pharmacy students receive their white coats at UNC’s Memorial Hall in March 2009. PHOTO BY VALERIE MARINO 26 H O N O R R O L L O F D O N O R S George William Moore Jr. 1 Jerry Preston Moore 8 Jonas Clayton Moretz Jr. 1 Franklin Scott Morgan 2 Timothy Francis Morley 1 Edward Zebulon Morris Jr. 6 Michael Monzo Morris 2 J. Christopher Morrison 3 Paul Allen Morton 1 Mary Mardre Moseley 2 Constance Hudson Motlow 3 Susan Decker Murphy 8 Charles Earl Myers 2 Kimberly Newkirk Myers 7 Sharon Godwin Nanagas 5 Bradley and Lisa Woolard Narron 2 Robert Stedman Neal 6 Dieu-Ha Thi Nguyen 4 Sandra Kaye Nicholson 1 James Wade Normark 2 Amy Alford Northup 10 Gary Miller Oakley 1 William M. Oakley 10 Gordon Lee O’Briant Jr. 1 Lea Walker O’Brien 1 Elizabeth Rodman Oden 2 Elizabeth Carol Oldham 1 Michael Overman 2 Beverly Humphrey Owen 1 Lindsay McCray Page 1 Kala Patel Pai 4 Gregory and Michelle Pait 8 James Edgar Parker 16 Cindy Ellen Parker 4 Minal Pravinch Patel 2 Gary and Cynthia Patterson 3 Ruth Patterson Pecora 1 Ronald and Edna Perkinson 2 Anne Peshel 1 Donald Vance Peterson 19 Kathleen Sullivan Petrizzi 8 Melanie Raper Philips 1 Jennifer Davenport Phillips 1 Amy Michele Phillips 1 Farrah Griffin Pickett 2 Lisa Noblett Piercy 4 Nancy Ann Pietroski 1 Person Bennett Pittman 10 John David Pitts 4 Wendy S. Player 2 Molly Ingram Pliszka 6 William Douglas Poe 3 Leann Trefz Poindexter 9 Josephine Lovelace Polhemus 1 Anne Kane Pontiff 3 Larry Hicks Pope 1 Pamela Reynonds Porter 1 Kimberly Renee Yates 2 Candice Turner Potter 2 Gregory Eugene Powell 2 James Lamar Price 2 Amy Jennings Prichard 1 James and Desiree Pridgen 1 Charla Smith Pridgen 20 Mary P. Pruette 1 Bradford and Melonie Pusser 2 Carol Renee Pusser 1 Robert and Melissa Hartis Putnam 1 Donald and Eileen Mitchell Rabil 2 Fred Rachide 15 Arlen Roy Rash Jr. 7 Robin Cook Reap 8 Tony Curtis Reynolds 2 Charles William Rhoden Jr. 12 William Warren Richards 6 Eric Dean Richards 1 Linda L. Richardson 2 Barbara Jones Richardson 7 Kenneth Bart Raddick 9 Charity Ann Riddle-Chapman 2 James Dean Rider 2 Gianna C. Rigoni 1 Marcus Cobey Riley 1 Leslie Waring Rini 1 Jeffrey Risse 1 Nellie Elizabeth Rittase 10 Robert Walter Ritter 10 Ailene Roach 1 Susan Williams Robertson 2 Alfred Ray Rogers 2 William Carroll Rose Jr. 1 Winfield Penny Rose 23 Elizabeth C. Rosenbaum 5 Anna Mashburn Rouse 1 Phillip N. Russ 2 Stephen Gaddy Russell 2 From left, UNC system president Erskine Bowles, Dean Bob Blouin, UNC School of Medicine dean William Roper and Chancellor Holden Thorpe cut the ribbon at the dedication ceremony for the Genetic Medicine Building in May 2009. PHOTO BY JOHN ZHU H O N O R R O L L O F D O N O R S 27 Christina Byrne Sarubbi 1 Jonathan and Amy Sauls 8 Amanda Clemmons Savage 1 Dabney Woodard Scaff 5 Donald James Schnoor 12 Robert Joseph Schollard 4 David and Regina Schomberg 2 Rebecca Tayloe Seegars 1 Amanda Kay Sellers 2 Rick Sessions 8 Sherrie E. Settle 4 Evelyn Salter Sewell 1 Patsy Kay Seymour 19 Kelly McKee Seymour 4 Laura Carpenter Sharpe 5 Jeffrey Dale Shatterly 1 Robert H. Shearin 4 Nina Elizabeth Shehan 2 Larry and Lindsay Shelton 1 Julie Troutman Sherrill 2 Foy Vincent Shingleton 3 Cynthia Easter Shinn 5 Elizabeth Holden Shriver 2 Sheryl Denny Siek 3 Joseph Kent Sigmon 1 Tracey Simmons-Kornegay 6 Toni Rowe Sisk 1 Sybil Austin Skakle 4 Richard and Billie Slade 10 Ann Rector Slade 1 Kathy G. Slade 1 Sandra Pleasants Slinkard 2 Deborah Wellons Sloan 2 Michelle Fink Sloop 1 Ronald and Pamela Small 5 Robert Garland Smith 1 Melissa Short Smith 9 Sandra Wood Smith 1 Russell and Tyanne Whitcomb Smith 1 Pamela Singleton Snipes 3 Helen Easter Snow 7 Karen Cobb Snyder 1 Tse-kin Kenneth So 4 Michael Percy Soucie 1 Barry William Southern 25 Gregory and Deborah Southern 4 Jacob Douglas Spangler 1 Martha Jo Harrelson Stanley 3 Gregory Brent Starnes 1 Horace Dean Steadman Jr. 3 Sharm Steadman 20 Jennifer Stegall 1 Ellen Robinson Stephens 2 Helen Stupalsky Stern 1 Nicholas Shawn Stevenson 6 Jeffrey Warren Stillwagon 10 Daniel Francis Stinehelfer 2 Kathleen McNeil Strausburg 13 James Thomas Street 4 Wade Baker Styron 12 Simon Oliver Styron 1 Huaying Su 2 Edward Donald Sumner 5 Laura Brown Sutton 1 Karen Gibbon Swain 1 Maxine McMahon Swalin 1 Charles Frederick Swift 6 Chris and Serina Tart 5 Nan Virginia Tauscher 1 Mary Anna Tayloe 3 Thomas George Taylor 1 Amanda Kay Harrelson 1 Nancy Hardy Thigpen 22 Monique Bembrey Thomas 9 Michael Edward Thompson 15 William N. Thrower Jr. 14 W. Lyndo and Lou Tippett 1 Mark Patrick Tompkins 2 Larry James Toth 4 Marlena Schwarz Travers 4 William and Teresa Gurganus Triplett 1 Stephen Wayne Tripp 1 Kathryne Hamilton Troxler 2 Heather Conner Tucker 1 Marsha Barrow Tucker 6 Mary Brooks Tucker 1 Joseph Tunstall 9 J. Kelly Turner Jr. 3 Rebecca Sue Turlington 7 Hamilton Polk Underwood Jr. 8 Allison Leigh Underwood 8 R. Kenneth Updegrave 1 Jack Herndon Upton 1 Harold Griffin Usher 17 Harold G Usher Jr. 2 Laura McLeod Vance 2 W. Scott and Laurie Carroll Varner 1 Ginger McLendon Vithalani 3 John Tom Vlachos 10 Sejal Vora 3 Athan Scott Vrettos 2 Jeffrey and Cramer Smith Walker 3 Lori P. Walters 8 Jialynn K. Wang 1 Deborah Hollingsworth Ward 1 Ronald Thomas Wassel 14 Charles and Elizabeth Watson 2 Valerie Hooper Watts 2 Harry and Peggy Waugh 2 Melissa Tillman Weeks 2 Courtney Deadmon Weller 14 Olin H. Welsh Sr. 1 Hobart Glenn Whaley 3 Robert Vernon Wheeler 5 Paul and Carol White 2 Roger Lewis White 2 Mavourneen Stallings Whitehead 8 Karin Anne Wiedenmayer 1 Doug Williams 2 James and Lynn Williams 5 Dennis Williams and Michelle Lener 2 Michelle Bunce Williams 1 Glenwood Lee Williams 3 Jerry and Dawn Caulk Williams 3 Alan and Kristi Krawietz Wilson 1 Lori Wilkins Wilson 2 Heber and Gina Mangas Windley 2 Marsha Barefoot Winstead 5 James and Daria Wooten 3 Anne-Marie Wray 13 Don Wright 3 Kathyrn Anne Yancey 1 Terry Eugene Yarborough 3 Charles and Linda Burris Yoder 3 Thomas M. Yost 8 George Chalmers Young III 3 Carolyn Renee Zaleon 2 Christine Elizabeth Zone 2 Deborah A Zurek 2 Southeastern Pharmacy Association 28 H O N O R R O L L O F D O N O R S Kristin Morris Adams Kevin L. Almond Angela Alston Eugene Gibson Anderson Stephen B Archbell Debra Groshans Aycock Maude Anne Babington Sprite Barbee Allan and Barbara Barkley Ginger Moss Barrier Holly Elizabeth Barrier John Marshall Barringer Laura Katherine Bayliss Bruen Crawford Beek Alicia H Bennett Robert Gary Berger Angela Blake Biggs Jacqueline Denise Billings Robert A. Blouin V. Irving Boyles, Jr. Timothy James Brennan Michael Edwin Brewer Thomas Reeves Burgiss Bruce S. Burnham Stephen Wayne Cagle Stephen Michael Caiola Rebecca Hedrick Campbell William and Karen Campbell Bruce R. Canaday Laura Banner Carringer Leanne Cartee Moo J. Cho Beverly and Russell Clark Class of 1996 Class of 2009 Rodney G. Cline James Melvin Coleman Marguerite Conger Dawn R. Conti Toby Hoffman Cox Rosemary Persaud Cross Jerry Stewart Curry Benjamin Garlon Cutrell Ramonna Ghitea Cvelich Sara Anne Dawson Christopher Day Betty Hill Dennis Robert Dewar Priscilla Amos Dollard Mary Woelfel Duffy Ashley Pell East Deborah Moore Edwards Stephanie Lynn Edwards W. Keith Elmore Steven Ira Engel Kelly M. Ennis Shana Lynn Falgout Anna F. Ferguson Lindsey Morgan Fierer Ronald Alan Fleming Nancy Stephens Fortson Amber Dianne Frick William Don Gersch Julie Ann Gouveia-Pisano Rebecca H. Grandy Frances Powell Gualtieri Bryan Austin Haas Ray Gordon Hagwood Sr. Lisa Dawn Hampton Joshua Parks Haney Sandra Grace Hardee Lauren Bunting Hardin Ammon Hardy Susan Foster Harris William Lee Harris Jr. Brandi Cahoon Harrison Emily Lauren Heil Eddy and Debbie Hemingway Marla Rene Hersh Matthew Stephen Hogan L. Harris Hollingsworth Amy Picklesimer Holmes Elizabeth Barringer Houff R. Truman Hudson Erica Pernia Hugo Betty and Brad Hussey Eric Allen Jackson Maria Pulido Jeffries Suzanne Fields Jones Pamela Upchurch Joyner Rudolph L. Juliano Jina Jung Earl Wendell Key Jr. Jenny Jane Kim Olga Michael Klibanov Stefanie Sue Berkoski Koewler Harold Lewis Kohn Jared Gregory Latus Nancy Carol Leatherman Craig Richard Lee William Dodd Lindsay Josie Looney Virgil S. Lucas Patricia Ferrell Lundblade Susan Stone Luskin Olga Marshall Juliana Smith Massenburg Melinda Steele McCabe John Meeker Debra Ann Miller Stephen Perry Millikin Jr. Gene Winston Minton Lydia Mis Tom Saburo Miya Deborah Montague Lauren Ashley Moore Michael and Jennifer Murray Kha Nguyen Amy Alford Northup Paul J. Nunnally Lindsay McCray Page Namrata Bakul Patel Will Adam Pearsall Allison Laurel Pecha Adam Persky Kathleen Sullivan Petrizzi John R. Plachetka Rita Kay Proctor Kathryn Marie Pruden Ralph H. Raasch Dawn Howle Rabon Freddy and Dawn Rabon Barbara Jones Richardson Linda L. Richardson Mary Williams Roederer Lee Yount Rogers Marlene Maliszewski Christina Byrne Sarubbi Tammy Winn Shealy Cynthia Easter Shinn Kathy G. Slade Kimlee Jane Smith Pamela Singleton Snipes Gregory and Deborah Southern Jacob Douglas Spangler J. Michael Spivey Jennifer Stegall Erin Darci Steinberg Richard Alan Sterling Daniel Francis Stinehelfer Kathleen McNeil Strausburg Christina Lee Teeter Mary Brown Teeter Bridgette Louise Therriault Emily Cate Tidwell Cynthia Dascani Toso Rachel Elisabeth Townson John Michael Triplett Katherine Irene Tweedy UNC Pharmacy Alumni Association Kyra Lynn Walgos Jennifer Wandling Webb C. Edwin and Julie Webb Trisha Weishuhn Andrea Michelle Wessell Lance and Stephanie Wheeler Karin Anne Wiedenmayer Amy Kathryn Wiglesworth Sandra Krentz Wilkins Benjamin Odell Williams Dennis Williams and Michelle Lener Lori Wilkins Wilson Laura Elizabeth Yoder Elizabeth Young Jane A. Younts CL ASS OF 2009 R ALPH H. R A ASCH SCHOL ARSHIP FUND
Object Description
Description
Title | Annual report of the University of North Carolina Eshelman School of Pharmacy |
Other Title | University of North Carolina, Eshelman School of Pharmacy annual report |
Date | 2009 |
Description | 2008/2009 |
Digital Characteristics-A | 33467 KB; 31 p. |
Digital Format |
application/pdf |
Pres File Name-M | pubs_serial_annualreportpharmacy20082009.pdf |
Pres Local File Path-M | \Preservation_content\StatePubs\pubs_borndigital\images_master\ |
Full Text | THE UNIVERSI T Y OF NORTH CAROLINA ESHELMAN SCHOOL OF PHARMACY 2008–2009 ANNUAL REPORT 1 Dear Friends I do not have to tell you that this past year has seen some of the toughest economic times the nation has faced. We have all been affected by it in one way or another and certainly the UNC Eshelman School of Pharmacy has not been immune. Peer schools across the country have taken budget cuts in excess of 20 percent, cuts that in some cases have compromised the classroom. As bad as the situation appears to be, the taxpayers and legislature of this state have always been unwavering in their support of this university. In addition, our alumni and friends continue to be very generous by serving on our School boards, precepting our students, and supporting us with their financial contributions. John Grover Beard was the dean of the School during some difficult times: the Great Depression and World War II. His words adorn the wall of Kerr Hall. “There will follow in the wake of the present-day pharmacist a vast company of young men and women to take up the task of providing suffering humanity with the curatives that must always be needed. It devolves upon the present generation to guarantee its lines of succession.” Dean Beard’s words remind me that we have a responsibility to our profession that never changes. In the pages that follow, you will see that we are committed to our mission. We will continue to advance pharmacy practice. We will continue to enhance the educational process. We will continue to provide lifelong learning opportunities. We will continue to grow the research enterprise. We will continue to build an academic environment that attracts outstanding faculty, staff and students. We will continue to provide the “curatives” of today in the form of biopharmaceuticals, nanotechnology, novel dosage forms, pharmacogenomics and more. With those curatives, we will teach our students to provide the medication therapy management needed for patients to improve their health. More than half a century has passed and our goal has remained the same, only the methods have changed. The Carolina Way is alumni and friends supporting and sharing in the successes of this program. Thank you for all you do. Robert A. Blouin, PharmD Dean Vaughn and Nancy Bryson Distinguished Professor F R O M T H E D E A N 2 2 0 0 8 – 2 0 0 9 B O A R D M E M B E R S PA A BOARD OF DIRECTORS Kenneth Phares ’91 ’93 President Hillsborough, N.C. Lori Setzer ’83 President Elect Lewisville, N.C. Jacquelin Touloupas Harrell ’78 Secretary/Treasurer Burlington, N.C. Kevin Almond ’83 Executive Director Chapel Hill, N.C. PFNC BOARD OF DIRECTORS J.A. “Sandy” McNeill, Jr. ’72 Chair Henry L. Smith ’72 Vice Chair Linda L. Butler ’68 Secretary H. Gray Hutchison, Jr. Treasurer Kevin L. Almond ’83 President Buck Albright ’70 Cockeysville, Md. Jennifer Askew ’03 Wilmington, N.C. Bryan Baines ’88 Wake Forest, N.C. Gary Bowman ’84 Oxford, N.C. George Brookins ’76 Lincolnton, N.C. Jerry Coln ’65 Raleigh, N.C. Steven Evans ’75 Kill Devil Hills, N.C. Jamie Hale ’97 Winston-Salem, N.C. Pat Hester ’76 Greensboro, N.C. Ruth Higgins ’79 Black Mountain, N.C. Mark Holshouser ’76 Lake Zurich, Ill. Woody King ’80 Warrenton, N.C. Lori Kodikara ’92 Charlotte, N.C. Steve McCombs ’74 Chapel Hill, N.C. Joe Minton ’70 Murfreesboro, N.C. Allen Munday ’80 Cornelius, N.C. David Oakley ’77 Holly Springs, N.C. Kristie Reeves-Cavaliero’99 Austin, Tex. Steady Steadman ’65 High Point, N.C. Andy Tennille ’67 Linville, N.C. Chad Terry ’99 Kinston, N.C. Andrew Trella ’99 King of Prussia, Penn. Susan Van Tassel ’79 Asheville, N.C. Tab Waldrop ’84 Kernersville, N.C. John Watson ’87 Tabor City, N.C. Vince Williams ’99 Trenton, N.J. Jimmy Wilson ’04 Wilmington, N.C. Eugene G. Anderson ’68 Alan Boyd ’82 George Brookins ’76 G.R. “Ronny” Buchanan ’62 Terrence Burroughs ’82 Stephen “Steve” G. Buckley ’83 W. Keith Elmore ’72 Steven “Steve” C. Evans ’75 James “Jim” R. Hall ’67 Hugh “Dan” Hardy, Jr. ’82 W. Seymour Holt ’52 Alan W. Knight ’81 William “Bill” H. Mast ’57 Gene W. Minton ’75 Ruth “Ann” Nassif ’69 Ken Phares ’93 Talbert “Tal” Lee Waldrop ’84 Mitchell “Mickey” Watts ’63 Christopher “Chris” L. Woody Gary L. Yingling ’62 3 A residency program that gives new pharmacists the opportunity to continue their education in a community pharmacy setting. Teaching innovations that bring not just technology but new ideas to the classroom. Researchers who look outside the University’s grounds for collaborative opportunities. Faculty to guide and support each other. In the classroom and in the clinic, leaders from the UNC Eshelman School of Pharmacy are fulfilling the School’s mission: to advance health care through innovation and collaboration in pharmacy practice, education, research and public service. On the following pages, you will see the work that the School’s faculty, staff and partners across the state are doing every day to help make the UNC Eshelman School of Pharmacy the best in the nation. I N T R O D U C T I O N 4 The UNC Eshelman School of Pharmacy’s Community Pharmacy Residency Program enrolled its 10th class this year, making it one of the oldest and most successful programs of its type in the nation. Established in 2000, the program gives new pharmacists the tools they need to be leaders and innovators in community pharmacy through a one-year, hands-on program supervised by experienced practitioners in community pharmacy. “It’s like an additional year where you are a practitioner in a pharmacy, but you’re not out on your own,” says Tasha Michaels (’07 PharmD), a preceptor and former resident in the Community Pharmacy Residency Program. During her residency at Kerr Drug in Durham, North Carolina, Michaels practiced medication therapy management, gave diabetes education classes, took patients’ blood pressure and filled prescriptions one day every two weeks. Michaels said the support she received from her preceptor and colleagues during her residency was invaluable. “You have other colleagues you can go to for advice—not just about counseling patients, but figuring out how you’re going to take guidelines and work them into your practice,” Michaels says. The program has had 30 residents since its inception and is accredited by ASHP and APHA. The first class had only one resident. Now about 30 applicants from across the country compete for the seven coveted spots each year, says Stefanie Ferreri, director of the program and a clinical associate professor in the Division of Pharmacy Practice and Experiential Education. P A R T O N E : R E S I D E N C Y Community pharmacy residency going strong after 10 years UNC ESHELMAN SCHOOL OF PHARMACY TIMELINE: 2000 TO PRESENT 2000 Center for Education and Research on Therapeutics launched 2001 Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation donated $15.1 million for drug develop-ment to a group led by the School Tasha Michaels (’07 PharmD), a preceptor with the Community Pharmacy Residency Program counsels a patient at Kerr Drug in Durham as her resident, Latasha Weeks, looks on. PHOTO BY WILL OWENS 2002 Carolina Pharmacy launched, replacing Pharmacy Mirror 2002 Oct. 11, Kerr Hall dedicated 6 Executive associate dean Gary Pollack says the program is in part an effort for the School to give back to the North Carolina residents who support the University. “We are a public institution,” Pollack says. “There’s a wonderful relationship between the citizens of North Carolina and its university system, especially its flagship. We should and are looking for ways to make an impact on a local and regional level.” Ferreri, along with a committee of preceptors, evaluates applicants based on their prior experience, leadership abilities and how they could benefit the site to which they are assigned. Preceptor sites are located across the state, including Moose Pharmacy in Concord, Carolina Apothecary in Reidsville, and Kerr Drug Health Care Centers in Chapel Hill, Durham, Raleigh and Zebulon. Michaels, a resident in 2007 and 2008 and now a preceptor at Kerr Drug in Durham, completed a research project on the North Carolina Medicaid MTM program during her residency. She is now working to submit that work for publication to the Journal of the American Pharmacists Association. While the residents may be sacrificing a year of a regular salary by delaying their entry into the workforce, they are gaining roughly three years of experience and will have higher quality positions available to them at the end of their residency, Ferreri says. The two initiatives residents most often pursue are bringing immuniza-tions and MTM to community pharmacies. “MTM has been successful in North Carolina in part because of the residents,” Ferreri says. Michaels is currently working with resident Latasha Weeks, a University of Maryland graduate who began her residency in July at the Kerr Drug health-care center in Durham. Several former residents have gone on to become preceptors, including Michaels, Debbie Pruss, James Bowman (’04 PharmD) and Abby Caplan. “We were there not long ago,” Michaels said. “We have a unique perspective and are able to provide insight from what we learned.” For more information on the Community Pharmacy Residency Program, go to www.pharmacy.unc.edu/cprp. P A R T O N E : R E S I D E N C Y 2003 Spring, Dean Bill Campbell retired after 11 years at the School 2003 Feb. 26, Chancellor Moeser declared Fred Eshelman Day at Carolina to celebrate Eshelman’s $20 million gift. It was the largest private donation to any school of pharmacy and the third largest gift to Carolina in history. 7 Jo Ellen Rodgers, Pharm.D., has just asked her class a multiple-choice question about the case they were discussing, but the room remains silent. No hands go up; instead everyone is pushing buttons on handheld devices. The students aren’t texting—they’re answering the question. Moments later, a bar graph appears on screen showing how many students chose each response. They’re using the new Audience Response System, or ARS, introduced to classrooms this academic year. Informally referred to as clickers, these devices resemble small remote controls and allow instructors to get instant feedback from their students to gauge their comprehension. “As an example, you can use the clickers at the beginning of a class to ascertain what foundational knowledge the students are coming in with,” says Adam Persky, Ph.D., a clinical associate professor in the Division of Pharmacotherapy and Experimental Therapeutics. “If you're going to discuss hypertension, you might ask what is high-blood pressure, what controls blood pressure, or what is normal blood pressure. That way you can see what information the students have and whether that information is correct.” Bringing in the clickers is an example of initiatives spawned by the School’s Educational Renaissance, which aims to develop new and better ways for faculty to teach as they prepare students to enter the profession. “I think everyone believes we can and should do a better job as educators,” says executive associate dean Gary Pollack, Ph.D. Pollack says faculty everywhere tend to teach the way they were taught, which leads to many professors standing at the front of a room and talking at their students. We are asking, “Is it possible to do this in a better way?” P A R T T W O : T H E “ C L I C K E R ” Tiny devices give professors a big advantage in the classroom 2003 April, Pharmaceutical Sciences Research Conference held 2003 Fall, Dean Blouin installed as the School’s 10th dean Jo Ellen Rodgers, PharmD, uses the Audience Response system to help students understand cases. PHOTO BY VALERIE MARINO 2004 $6 million renovation at Beard Hall began 2004 School received state funding to fully fund six $1 million professorships 9 Rodgers, who is a clinical associate professor in the Division of Pharmacotherapy and Experimental Therapeutics, introduced the idea of clickers to the School. “I begged and begged to get the ARS,” says Rodgers, who had seen them in action at the School of Medicine and also heard others talking about them at teaching conferences. “I just felt like it was much more interactive. The lecturer can assess the students and, if needed, reteach the information right then.” Rodgers said that in order for the clickers to be successful, professors have to be willing to alter the way they teach. She said the most important thing to students is for the professor to explain why answers are correct or incorrect, not to just give the correct answer and move on. “The first time I really saw it pan out, I watched my coworker Craig Lee give a lecture. He asked a question, and 85 percent of the students got it wrong. It makes you realize when you need to slow down and get a little more basic,” she says. “You can’t have 60 PowerPoint slides for an hour now. You need to take time to go over the cases.” From a research standpoint, Persky says the most exciting aspect of the Audience Response System is the real-time, quantitative feedback that both the instructors and students receive. “I can ask a question and have individuals answer, which gives me an array of data,” Persky says. “I can then pair students up or have them answer the questions in groups and see an increase in correct responses and even increases in the confidence in their responses.” In addition to the Audience Response System, Pollack says that faculty at the School have found some other innovative ways for students to discover information on their own, which he hopes will increase their retention. “They are very moderate changes to course delivery but very impactful,” Pollack says. One innovationthat Persky is using in his classroom is scratch-off exam sheets, where students are given multiple choices to find the correct answer. The exam sheets are similar to scratch-off lotto tickets in concept. “The scratch-off tests are interesting; students really like them,” Persky says. “It is immediate feedback for the students in terms of whether they are correct or not, and it is kind of fun.” P A R T T W O : T H E “ C L I C K E R ” 2005 February, Ground broken on the Genetic Medicine Building 2005 UNC/ECSU PharmD partnership launched 10 When Russ Mumper, Ph.D., considered leaving the university where he had been teaching and conducting research for nearly a decade, he had several requirements for his next school of pharmacy. He was looking for top-notch teaching, world-class research programs, and collaboration with industry professionals to create products and companies that benefit the economy as well as people’s health. Carolina was the only place he could find it, he says. Mumper came to UNC in 2007 from the University of Kentucky, where he was associate director of the Center for Pharmaceutical Science and Technology. “There was tremendous opportunity at UNC to do what I was doing at Kentucky but to do it better and with more opportunities with Research Triangle Park. So to me it was a no brainer,” Mumper says. “To be fair, after some analysis, this probably is the only place I would’ve left Kentucky for.” When the School set out to aggressively grow its research enterprise, the first step was hiring faculty members who could pursue growth opportunities for both research and teaching. “We want to make a difference,” says executive associate dean Gary Pollack. “We want to produce graduates who can drive us into the future.” To that end, the School must have a top research program, he says. “Research and graduate education are inextricably linked,” Pollack says. “If we wanted to have a larger graduate program, we needed to expand research.” Mumper, the John A. McNeill Distinguished Professor and director of the Center for Nanotechnology in Drug Delivery, fit the bill on both accounts. Mumper spends much of his time at the School building relationships in the industry with everyone from the Department of Defense and NIH to pharmaceutical companies. He is working with Starpharma in Melbourne, Australia, to develop microbial rings to prevent the P A R T T H R E E : R E S E A R C H Mumper helps grow research base through partnerships 2005 PAA celebrated 25th anniversary 2005 Inaugural Chapel Hill Drug Conference held Russ Mumper joined the School’s faculty in 2007 and has since worked to bring new research opportunities to the university. PHOTO BY WILL OWENS 2006 Beard Hall reopened after extensive renovations 2006 School ranked eighth in NIH funding 12 P A R T T H R E E : R E S E A R C H transmission of HIV, similar to the rings currently on the market for birth control. Since his arrival at UNC, Mumper says the School has tripled its number of partnerships with companies in the industry. And while he’s certainly not opposed to working with out-of-state organizations, Mumper says he gives special attention to inquiries from within state lines. This is, he says, in large part due to the Carolina Partnership, which was created in 2008 to enable UNC to build the preeminent, academic cancer-drug-discovery-and- development program in the world. Over the next four years, $18 million will be invested by the state and the School to pursue this goal. “One of our primary initiatives with the Carolina Partner-ship is that we’re going to work with companies in North Carolina,” Mumper says. “I’m always interested in talking to companies about work that we can do, but when North Carolina companies call me, I do whatever I can to make it happen. There’s a special interest we have in helping them.” Another way the School promotes North Carolina is through the Chapel Hill Drug Conference, which will be in its fifth year in 2010. Mumper directed the 2009 conference. Doing so allowed him to meet with a representative from a major pharmaceutical company located outside of North Carolina. The rep pitched a joined graduate training program. “He was here for two days and saw what we were doing,” Mumper says. “It’s a wonderful opportunity because in the area of science we’re doing, they’re world leaders. Then we’d be able to attract the best students in this focus area, and they’d be able to travel back and forth to apply their knowl-edge and maybe even create employment opportunities.” While the program is still in the proposal stages, it’s just one example of the opportunities the School is attracting. With so much going on, Mumper says he has a three-part gating mechanism to evaluate which projects should get his attention. It has to be exciting, it has to provide resources or enhance the educational experience for students and, finally, it has to help make the UNC Eshelman School of Pharmacy a top school in research funding and in U.S. News & World Report’s rankings of Pharm.D. programs. “To be the best, you can’t just be a fantastic teaching school; that’s not differentiating,” Mumper says. “There are a lot of teaching pharmacy schools that don’t have the best world-class researchers. But we’re also not the Scripps Research Institute—we don’t just do research, we do research in a teaching and education environment.” Mumper says the environment at the School is perfectly attuned to making strides in both teaching and research. “There’s something truly unique about the UNC Eshelman School of Pharmacy here in terms of the vision, the direc-tion, the purpose people have,” he says. “People are on the same page here, where we’re going and why we’re doing the things we’re doing. It’s the implementation of a vision, and it’s remarkable to me that people can see all that.” 2007 The School formed the Center for Integrative Chemical Biology and Drug Discovery through a campus-wide partnership. 2007 School ranked sixth in NIH funding 13 As a faculty recruit interviewing at the UNC Eshelman School of Pharmacy in 2008, Kelly Scolaro remembers that one major selling point for the School was the Bill and Karen Campbell Faculty Mentoring Program. “It was a huge deal for me,” says Scolaro, a clinical assistant professor and director of the Pharmaceutical Care Lab. “I had recruited mentors on my own before, but to have a formalized program, that’s unheard of.” The Bill and Karen Campbell Faculty Mentoring Program was established in 2006 out of the $1 million endowment of the Bill and Karen Campbell Distinguished Professorship. It was developed from the School’s desire to do a better job recruit-ing, developing and retaining quality faculty members. The goal of the program is to get junior faculty to a place where they’re settled in with their teaching approach, publishing articles, or funding their research. “I was really interested in becoming a better teacher,” says Scolaro, who came to the School in 2008 from the University of Florida’s College of Pharmacy, where she was assistant director of the St. Petersburg campus. Scolaro, who is mentored by executive associate dean Gary Pollack and Todd Zakra-jsek, executive director of UNC’s Center for Faculty Excellence, says she has found being part of the program invaluable. “I can bring them any issue and bounce things off of them,” she says. “They help me solve problems or tell me I’m doing things right.” The program is named for its biggest proponent, former dean Bill Campbell, who retired from the University in 2003. “Bill for many years was a leading advocate of a mentoring program, long before it was popular,” says Harold Kohn, who serves as the program’s director in addition to P A R T F O U R : M E N T O R I N G Mentoring program helps junior faculty spread their wings 2007 Fred Eshelman and the University Cancer Research Fund pledged $18 million for research at the School 2008 August, Master of Science in Health System Pharmacy program launched Executive Associate Dean Gary Pollack is mentor to Kelly Scolaro, a clinical as-sistant professor and direc-tor of the Pharmaceutical Care Lab. Former Dean Bill Campbell was the impetus behind the Bill and Karen Campbell Faculty Mentoring Program, which was named for him. PHOTO BY WILL OWENS 2008 May, School renamed the UNC Eshelman School of Pharmacy for Fred Eshelman (’72 BSPharm) 2008 School ranked second in both NIH funding and in U.S. News & World Report 15 his duties as the William R. Kenan Distinguished Professor in the Division of Medicinal Chemistry and Natural Products. Campbell provided “a wonderful blueprint” for the program, Kohn says. The mentoring program meets four core needs: recruit-ing junior faculty, developing those faculty to reach their full potential, retaining faculty and enlisting the help of senior faculty in the facilitation of these goals, Kohn says. There are currently seven junior faculty members (faculty who have not been awarded tenure) in the program. Each mentee has two mentors: one within the School and a second from elsewhere on campus relative to that mentee’s goal, such as executive leadership or, in Scolaro’s case, the executive director of UNC’s Center for Faculty Excellence, whose mission is to help faculty become better teachers. The mentors meet periodically to ensure they’re not giving their mentee contrary guidance, and mentors and mentees are expected to meet at least once a month. Scolaro says the opportunities at the School are head and shoulders above those at other universities. “They’re genuinely interested in me and my develop-ment,” she says. “That’s what is so unique about UNC. They really care about faculty development. They’re invested in it.” Scolaro says a major benefit of going to a mentor instead of a supervisor is being able to leave the employer-employee relationship intact. “You can be more blunt or more free with what you say to them,” she says. Pollack agrees. “Chairs are in a really conflicted role with their faculty,” he says. “You want them to succeed, but at the same time, you’re judging them. It’s probably impossible for a chair to serve as a mentor only. I can make suggestions to Kelly about things she should advocate for herself in a different way than if I were her chair.” None of the program’s mentees has yet reached tenure, something that can take years, but Kohn says he has seen good things in their progress. “What I see is with the mentoring team, junior faculty are much more mature and aware of what it takes to make an impact in scholarship and teaching. It extends their maturation; they think of problems that are more complex,” he says. “It’s been really effective. This is their first job, and we all know we need help. Our faculty are a human resource you can’t put a price tag on.” P A R T F O U R : M E N T O R I N G 2009 First class graduated from UNC/ECSU partnership 2009 May, Genetic Medicine Building formally dedicated 16 H O N O R R O L L O F D O N O R S DEAN’S INNER CIRCLE $25,000 and above Anonymous 13 Estate of Mary Lockwood Curry Fred Eshelman 5 Dorothy Renfrow Kerr 8 Estate of Sallye Lockhart 1 Mario Family Foundation 1 Ronald H. and Nancy McFarlane 2 Dhiren R. Thakker 6 Chris and Debra Woody 8 Pharmacy Network Foundation UNC Pharmacy Alumni Association MORTAR AND PESTLE $10,000 to $24,999 Bob and Maureen Blouin 2 Anthony J. Hickey 2 Seymour and Rheta Holt 21 John Albert McNeill Jr 14 Allen Thomas Munday 2 Estate of William Moss Salley Jr. Lloyd Milton Whaley 17 CVS Corporation Walgreens SUSTAINER $5,000 to $9,999 Ralph and Daphne Ashworth 19 Ronny and Barbara Buchanan 23 Stephen and Jill Buckley 5 Jan Lovelace Burrus 2 Bernard and Nancy Gutterman 2 Leaf Huang 4 Paul and Phebe Kirkman 1 Alan and Liz Knight 1 Evelyn P. Lloyd 18 Russell J. Mumper 2 Ruth Kannon Nassif 4 Ralph H. Raasch 17 Henry and Tracey Smith 15 Talbert L. Waldrop 16 Gary and Rachel Yingling 10 Alcon, Inc. Eisai Inc. Walmart Foundation ASSOCIATE $2,000 to $4,999 Anonymous 2 Kevin L. Almond 19 George William Brookins 6 Robert Adrian Brown 1 H. Chapman Brown III 24 Terrence and Terri Burroughs 9 Cliff and Linda Butler 11 Sadie Wolfe Byerly 5 Rowe Bogle Campbell Jr. 22 W. Stanley Campbell 13 Radu Ciocan and Meghan Peters 1 George H. Cocolas 19 Delbert Marvin Cranford 6 Thomas Peete Davis 11 W. Keith Elmore 4 James and Evelyn Fowler 7 James Michael Fuller 6 Stephen W. Fuller 17 Jim Hall 7 FACULTY SUPPORT 62.4% STUDENT SUPPORT 23.6% BUILDING PROJECTS 1.4% ADMINISTRATIVE AND FUNDRAISING 12.6% PFNC EXPENSES FOR FISCAL YEAR 2009 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 101 113 118 113 132 $700,000 $600,000 $500,000 $400,000 $300,000 $200,000 $100,000 0 Year No. of Scholarship Students SCHOL ARSHIP DOLL ARS AWARDED* *Includes funds awarded by the School of Pharmacy and the Pharmacy Foundation Blue names: Gave first gift more than 20 years ago. Superscript: Consecutive years of giving. H O N O R R O L L O F D O N O R S 17 Lisa Dawn Hampton 7 Betty and Brad Hussey 4 Lazelle Marks, Jr 2 Louis Alfred Newsome 1 Shara and Richard Owensby 8 Albert Paul Rachide 7 John and Lori Setzer 7 J. Robert and Linda Taylor 19 Judy W. Thompson 2 Tom and Kathryn Thutt 13 Benjamin Odell Williams 7 Cardinal Health, Inc. Duke University Outcomes Pharmaceutical Health Care Walmart Stores, Inc. SUPPORTER $1,000 to $1,999 George and Tessa Albright 14 Martha Williams Brookshire 8 Thomas Reeves Burgiss 9 Stephen Ray Carswell 12 Class of 2009 1 Shirley A. Clifton 3 Betty Hill Dennis 13 Fred M. Eckel 10 Johnny Warren Elkins 5 Mary Elizabeth Fearing 1 Elaine W. Fuller 3 Robert J. Garmise 2 Sara and Eugene Hackney 4 Joseph and Cindy Hamilton 5 Hugh Dan Hardy Jr. 3 L. William Harris 8 Clifford Ervin Hemingway 4 Ryan Thomas Hoskins 2 Gordon Robert Ingle 10 Larry Dwayne Irwin 1 Sarah Maner Lawrence 4 Susan Stone Luskin 1 George Patrick Markham 5 Steven Kelly McCombs 13 Larry G. McLellan 21 David Solomon Moody Jr. 2 Paul J. Nunnally 2 James and Margaret Booth Powell 1 Mary Jane Rivers 2 Ralph Peele Rogers Jr. 3 John Wesley Sides III 8 Elizabeth Schifano Skirvin 8 J. Michael Spivey 2 Paul Augustus Stevenson 7 Catherine Crumpton Stokes 2 Henry and Tracy Eatmon Thomason 5 Jane Stafford Thompson 8 John F. Watts 13 Romas Templeton White, III 3 Thomas Alton Williford 10 ACS NC Eagle Pharmaceuticals Eli Lilly and Company Kerr Drug Stores, Inc. Kroger Company Fdn NACDS NC Mutual Wholesale Drug Co. Pharmacists Mutual Insurance Co. SuperValue Foundation PATRON $500 to $999 Glenda F. Alexander 10 John Dean Badgett 8 Sara Hackney Barley 2 Amy Grace Bigus Beach 1 Stephen Dodson Bennett, III 5 Angela Blake Biggs 3 Frederick Oscar Bowman Jr. 11 Gary Lynn Bowman 3 Ronney Gray Bradshaw 16 Thomas E. Brewington Jr. 1 James Bedford Bryant 1 William and Karen Campbell 1 Desiree A. Carlson MD 11 Carlisle Chenault 8 Sue Cho 1 Jacquelyn Smith Cooke 1 Johnny Lynn Cox II 6 W. Grover Creech 2 Hubert Gordon Dameron 1 Mark Davis 8 Charles Robert Deadwyler Jr. 9 Steve and LaRue Draughon Dedrick 1 L. Aaron Dethloff 7 Cynthia Knapp Dlugosz 12 W. Gregory Dozier 4 Mary Ledbetter Fischer 11 The Genetic Medicine Building opened in late 2008 and was dedicated in May 2009. Researchers from the UNC Eshelman School of Pharmacy occupy 75,000 square feet of laboratory space over two floors in the building. PHOTO BY WILL OWENS 18 H O N O R R O L L O F D O N O R S Don Hedrick Fisher 12 Marilyn C. Frazier 1 Vincent E. Garver 3 Ronald Michael Geer 1 Donna Kay Gibson 15 L. Irvin Graham 18 Ronald Preston Greene 10 William Crane Griffin 6 Frances Powell Gualtieri 1 Matthew Stephen Hogan 1 Beverly Jean Holcombe 7 W. Howard Holsenbeck 1 R. Truman Hudson 4 David Jamison 4 Joseph Lewis Johnson Jr. 17 Robert and Leslie Jones 2 Stephen Yates Jones 5 E. Maurice and Carol Jones 5 Lloyd Adrian Jordan 26 Dale Jordan 2 Pamela Upchurch Joyner 12 Keith Eugene Kirby 15 Olga Michael Klibanov 1 Kimberly Parnell Lafferty 3 Casey S. Lawrence 2 David S. Lawrence 2 Patricia Claytor Lee 10 Laura Gaither Lennon 2 Kim Moran Lewis 3 Norman Colin Lewis 3 Samuel Floyd Lewis 6 William Dodd Lindsay 4 D. Michael Lindsay 7 Virgil S. Lucas 4 Janine Westmoreland Malone 2 Heidi Mansour 1 Jennifer Lane McCabe 2 Amy Mewborn Meadowcroft 2 Franklin Alexander Measamer 7 Michael and Jennifer Murray 5 James and Dolores Perkins 8 James Cornel Pinson 18 James Alston Pittman 11 William Gibbs Pittman Jr 1 John R. Plachetka 1 Richard Hiram Rains 9 Gill Ripley 1 Kellie Teague Rough 2 Billy Gerald Roughton 2 Cynthia Faye Sawyer 6 Alva Broughton Sellers Jr. Amy Hatfield Seung 1 Owren Dale Sides 7 Thomas Gail Sinnett 15 William Denny Smith 4 P. David and Jennifer Canaday Smith 4 W. Allen Smith 5 James Carlton Stewart Jr. 3 Chad and Marybeth Terry 2 Meredith Patton Tripp 9 Debra Ann Wentz 1 Tessie Yiottis 7 CENTURY CLUB $150 to $499 Tamara Watson Adams 7 Brian Cameron Alexander 1 Susan Ladd Alexander 1 Suzanne K. Alford 15 Jody Hicks Allen 1 Dallas L. Ammons 2 Holly Faye Anderson John Andrako 15 Stephen B. Archbell 4 Paul Saunders Ashworth 2 Roger and Judy Mabe Atkins 4 Susan Gretz Aycock 6 Debra Groshans Aycock 1 Maude Anne Babington 8 Shannon Bailey-Stanley 3 J. Hilton Barrett II 11 Ginger Moss Barrier 1 Bettye Davis Barto 2 Nicholas H. Batuyios 12 R. Earl Baxley 20 Charles H. Beddingfield 10 J. Stephen and Deborah Bedford 3 J. Warren and Becky Odham Berry 3 Douglas Kent Bettenhausen 2 Cynthia Thompson Bishop 2 Anne Rendleman Blackburn 10 George Asbury Blalock Jr. 18 Charles Donald Blanton Jr. 15 George William Bliss 2 Martha Hayes Boger 10 John S. Boreyko 7 Mehdi Boroujerdi 7 Sara Ellen Boss-Isenhour 20 Richard K. Bower 4 Shelton Bickett Boyd 19 Douglas and Joyce Boyette 1 V. Irving Boyles Jr. 17 Benjamin W. Brady 25 Rae Bragg-Jones 19 William Timothy Bratton 1 Timothy James Brennan 2 William and Marsha Hood Brewer 10 PHOTO BY WILL OWENS H O N O R R O L L O F D O N O R S 19 Jan Ball Brickley 6 Betsy Queen Briley 1 Charles Arnold Britt 2 Christina E. Brizendine 2 Jennifer K. Broders 1 Harry and Diane Brogden 4 Donna Johnson Brooks 1 Charles Michael Brooks 9 G. Jackson Brooks Jr. 8 AaronW.and PamelaMcDanielBrothers 2 Pamela Jacobs Brugger 1 Judy Cameron Bryson 4 Larry D. Bullock 12 Shirley Weaver Bumgardner 27 William Henry Burch 2 Malachi and Jennifer Price Burgess 1 Stephen A. Burrus 7 J. Frank Burton Jr. 13 Wesley Grimes Byerly III 1 Stephen Wayne Cagle 1 Stephen Michael Caiola 13 John Wilson Caldwell III 6 Richard Douglas Callicutt 7 Rebecca Hedrick Campbell 5 Laura Banner Carringer 9 Ervin McKay Carroll Jr. 3 Leanne Cartee 2 Donald Kermit Carter 2 J. Keith Caviness 11 Moo J. Cho 17 Catherine Anne Christianson 2 Stefanie Lozada Chua 1 Rodney G. Cline 8 Eddie Coats 4 Jerrel and Sarah Cobb 14 W. Bernard Collie 3 Dawn R. Conti 4 Rachel Leder Couchenour 10 Patrick Bryan Cox 5 Carole Winifred Cranor 1 Kathryn Seaver Cross 1 Judith Baucom Crouch 3 Jerry Stewart Curry 8 Tommy Dagenhart 5 Herman Hallet Daniels 16 Amy Young Darrow 1 Col. Ben Philip Daughtry 8 Beth Barbee Davidson 5 G. Ike Davis 2 Christopher Day 7 Kimberly Hardison Deloatch 17 Steven Grady Detter 6 Robert Dewar 18 Priscilla Amos Dollard 7 Frances Krohn Drescher 5 Everette Matthews Dunn 2 Richard and Allison Durham 2 Stewart and Tammy Eckard 1 Deborah Moore Edwards 14 Charles Eubie Evans Jr. 23 Kimberly Adcock Ferguson 2 Anna F. Ferguson 8 Ginger Lee Loving Filpo 3 William C. Finch Jr. 9 Ronald Alan Fleming 1 J. Hugh Fletcher 14 Sarah Katherine Ford 1 Jamie Nesbitt Francis 1 George E. Francisco 2 Edwin Rudolph Fuller Jr. 2 Elaine Teresa Fuller 4 James and Mary G. Teague Fullwood 3 James Wade Fulton 24 Jonathan and Allison Browning Gaddy 1 Richard L. Garner 8 Gary Renn Glisson 5 Robert L. Gordon 16 Laurie Owens Graham 1 Richard Adrow Gray 9 Richard Howard Gray 22 Joe David Greeson 1 Sharon Halsey Greeson 2 Eleyse Harrell Griffin 15 Bryan Austin Haas 2 Ray Gordon Hagwood Sr. 4 Tammy Coble Hall 19 Michele M. Hall 1 Marty Allen Hamrick 1 Lauren Bunting Hardin 4 Patricia Day Harris 13 William Lee Harris Jr. 9 Vicki Blackburn Harrison 19 William Heyward Harrison Jr. 8 Gilbert Hartis 12 W. Hampton Hatcher 8 Roy Lee Hawke 8 Raymond E. Heath Sr. 9 Terry Walter Heatherington 5 Margaret Simms Hedrick 2 John Michael Heilman 4 James Donald Helms 12 Eddy and Debbie Hemingway 7 Robert Ray Henley 2 Egbert Marcus Herring III 18 Rez Patterson Hester Jr. 2 Pamela Absher Heutte 1 Harry and Laura Bingham Hiersteine 1 Ruth Hall Higgins 4 Class year % who donated 1939 100.00% 1952 50.00% 1942 50.00% 1956 46.15% 1953 38.46% 1968 38.33% 1967 37.25% 1983 35.80% 1948 35.29% 1955 34.78% *The Class of 1955 was closely followed by the Class of 2009 with a participation rate of 34.27% TOP CL ASSES WITH THE GREATEST PARTICIPATION ETHNICITY % of alums % of donors Caucasian 88.6% 96% Asian 6.2% 2% African American 3.4% 1% Latino .72% .2% Unspecified .67% .1% Native American .48% .3% GENDER % of alums % of donors Male 44% 46% Female 56% 54% GIVING BY. . . 20 H O N O R R O L L O F D O N O R S Robert Milton Hines 10 Gregory Scott Hinson 8 Lewis Talmadge Holder Jr. 5 Ronald Lamar Holland 4 Keith Gordon Hood 12 Jonathan and Andria Hornaday 2 Julius Francis Howard 8 Shannon M. Howarth 2 Phil F. Icard 5 James Lewis Inabinet 3 Valerie Fleming Infinger 14 Bridgit Walker Jones 1 Nellie Silver Jones 20 Susan Speir Jones 11 Suzanne Fields Jones 3 Warren Rickman Jones 13 Dianne Creech Kapherr 3 Johanna Hunt Karas 2 Angela Dawn Marie Kashuba 12 Carla Dean Kennedy 1 Theodore and Lisa Kerner 12 Earl Wendell Key Jr. 4 Krista Tucker Kness 1 J. Dean and Tonya Lackey 4 Robert and Diana Lafferty 10 Lisa Cutrell 1 Hampton F. Langdon 16 Polly Johnson Lauffenburger 1 Randy Neil Lawson 1 Rachel Christine Lazim 8 Nancy Carol Leatherman 2 Andrew Loyd Lee 4 Mary Mayer Lefler 1 Marina Maggio Levandoski 19 Everett Lee Lewis Jr. 5 Amanda Grant Lewis 3 Margaret Gallagher Leyden 15 Thomas Lilly 3 Albert and Virginia Lockamy 5 J. Franklin Lowder 18 Cheryl Marie Lynch 1 Maurice Oliver Lynch 2 Pamela Lynne Mackey 4 Ernest Linwood Marks III 2 Justin and Ashley Marlow 3 Juliana Smith Massenburg 1 Harry F. McArver Jr. 5 James Archie McBryde Jr. 3 John L. McCall Jr. 3 Wesley Andrew McCall 1 Rebecca Proffitt McCall 1 Robert and Mary Ann McCommons 10 Katherine Bell McCorkle 6 Joseph Owen McDowell 1 Heather Daughtry McLamb 10 Sharon Isgett McMurry 2 Neil McPhail 1 G. Michael Medlin 6 John Meeker 2 Carl Porter Meroney 7 Kevin Alexander Miller 2 Debra Ann Miller 11 Phillip Dee Minton 8 Harvey and Linda Mitchell 2 John Agrippa Mitchener III 4 David Montgomery 5 Ellen Leitinger Monticello 2 James Edmond Moody 3 Hugh Jackson Moore 11 William Whitaker Moose Jr. 3 Leigh Ann Morris 11 Jarrett and Jodie Morris 7 Maxann Kerr Morrison 1 Fred M. Moss Jr. 3 Roslyn Johnson Muse 2 John H. Myhre 10 Thomas and Alisa Carrigan Nance 3 Andrew C. Nelsen 1 Christine Raven Norwood 2 Stephen Eugene Oglesbee Jr. 2 Chijioke Amara Okehie 1 Steven and Bettie Olson 6 Jane Therese Osterhaus 3 J. Dana Outten 5 Karen Marshall Overstreet 11 Emily Adams Pare 10 Craig Parker 1 Anne Brookshire Parris 5 J. Herbert Patterson 14 Fern Ellen Paul-Aviles 3 W. Stephen Perrow 2 Adam Persky 1 Grady Samuel Phillips Jr. 8 Joseph Pike III and Catherine Chitty 4 Wallace Hinton Plyler Jr. 2 Steven and Bonnie Allen Potter 1 David Mark Preston 1 Billy and Donna Price 5 Rita Kay Proctor 2 Roger D. Putnam 6 Freddy and Dawn Rabon 7 James Walter Reid 7 Hearne F. Rickard II 5 William E. Roach 2 Rebecca Jones, a fourth-year pharmacy student, and Steve Dedrick, director of continuing education, get to know each other at the 2009 Pharmacy Foundation Dinner. PHOTO BY WILL OWENS H O N O R R O L L O F D O N O R S 21 Stephanie Biggs Roberts 4 Stephen Burgin Roberts Sr. 9 James and Teresa Robertson 2 Philip and Jo Ellen Rodgers 6 Mary Williams Roederer 1 Charles and Lee Younts Rogers 3 Mary G. Rossiter 2 Robert Joal Roth 7 Mark Wayne Rountree 6 Stephen Bernard Ruddy 2 J. Marshall Sasser 12 Joseph Allen Saunders Jr. 7 Timothy D. and Pamela Voyles Scheets 1 Zankhana Nimesh Shah 1 Meredith Leigh Sheetz 1 Karen Englebert Sherrill 7 Fred Lee Sherrill Jr. 20 W. Darle Shouse 7 Peggy Costner Simmons 2 Elaine Holzsweig Simon 2 Linda Simoni-Wastila 7 Randall Joe Sims 6 Michael and Janie Skertich 8 Myra Guthrie Slaughter 6 Laura Kiser Sleater 8 Lester Mark Smith 3 L. Jackson and Katherine Poole Smith 1 Ron and Phyllis Smith 10 J. Hubert Smith Jr. 9 Billy Mac Smyre 24 L. Alan Sneed 6 Larry O’Neal Spears 1 Richard B. Stephens 1 Milton Graham Stewart Jr. 1 John Kingsley Stoots 2 A. Benjamin Suttle III 2 Gene Sutton 16 John Leonard Talley 5 Thomas Fain Taylor 12 Stacy Brown Taylor 3 Randall Scott Teague 2 Leigh Ann Teal 13 Mary Brown Teeter 2 Angela M Tennant 6 Andre Tennille 23 James Addison Thompson Jr. 4 Kristin Hinshaw Thornton 1 Emily Cate Tidwell 2 C. Stroud Tilley III 23 John B. Tinkler 4 Darren and Robin Tinney 14 Andrew Robert Trella 1 Alexander E. Tropsha 17 Jeffery and Joanne Tugwell 2 Stanley Elbert Tunnell 2 James David Tyndall 3 Susan Brittingham Van Tassel 13 Kathy Gay Vaughn 3 Ike and Kristi Vlahos 11 Arnold M. Walker 13 Catherine Crume Wallace 6 Christopher Lee Waller 2 Hanna Louise Wallin 1 Lynn Bell Walters 6 Kimberly Carroll Ward 1 Angela Raihala Ward 8 John Drake Watson 2 Ronald Dean Watts 2 C. Edwin and Julie Webb 4 1999 2000 2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 $80,000,000 $70,000,000 $60,000,000 $50,000,000 $40,000,000 $30,000,000 $20,000,000 $10,000,000 0 SCHOOL OF PHARMACY AND PFNC ASSETS FOUNDATION SCHOOL OF PHARMACY 22 H O N O R R O L L O F D O N O R S Jennifer Wandling Webb 4 Anna Shearin Wells 8 Andrea Michelle Wessell 3 Deborah Edwards Westbrook 6 Lance and Stephanie Wheeler 3 W. Harvey and Ann Whichard 1 Alfred and Amy Mittman White 2 Lindsey Lee White 1 C. Michael Whitehead 26 Richard Jones Whitesell 2 Sherri Sanders Whitesell 1 Patricia Wigle 2 Doris Bizzell Wilkerson 4 Charles and Sandra Wilkins 7 George Willets 25 JohnH. and PatriciaThrower Williamson1 H Van Williford 1 John Vernon Woodard Jr. 2 Anita Louise Woodring 1 Tammy E. Worden 4 Jane A. Younts 9 Dabur Pharma US FRIEND $50 to $149 Robert L. Abrams 9 David and Carolyn Slockett Adams 1 Margaret Evans Adams 16 Michael W. Adams 3 Medinat Alimi Akinbi 5 Mary L. Alexander 4 Susan Kochanowicz All 9 William Allen 9 Cynthia Lyerly Alligood 17 Barbara Gilliam Alphin 3 Patricia Amankwa 2 Eugene Gibson Anderson 3 Jane Powers Archer 3 Wells Sanford Armstrong 3 Theresa Arnold 1 Alma Kaye Arrington 1 Kellye Brown Aschmeyer 1 Kimberly Clifton Ashley 6 John Parker Austin Jr. 1 Richard and Jennifer Robinson Bagby 1 James Oliver Baity 14 Amanda M. Ball 2 Catherine Lee Banta 1 Sprite Barbee 4 Allan and Barbara Barkley 4 Suzanne Burns Barlow 2 Joseph Barrett III 2 Alan Bartholomew 4 Karen Thomas Barton 6 Donna H. Bauer 22 Laura Katherine Bayliss 1 David and Karen Beam 11 Roger Frederick Bedard 3 Glenn Andrew Belemjian 3 Carl J. Bennett Jr. 2 Alicia H. Bennett 1 Robert Gary Berger 1 Richard Wayne Bess 3 Sunny Shelton Biasi 2 Peter Steven Bieber 8 Martha Wyke Biggio 19 Tammy Kinney Black 10 Kenneth and Sally Crews Blackburn 4 Evelyn C. Blackley 2 Susan Jean Blalock 4 Elliott J. Blanchard 26 Jeffrey Galen Blanchard 1 Babette Goodman Blaug 10 Jean Winter Bliss 2 Ryan Neil Bookout 1 David L. Bourdet 1 Rebecca Lynn Boustani 2 Raymond and Gina Woodruff Boutwell 7 Kimberly Lantz Bowers 12 James and Marianne Bowling Bowman 5 Sharon Gaskins Braswell 1 Evelyn Shugar Brauer 3 Anne Allen Breza 6 Myra Craver Brickell 5 Harry A. Bright 7 Benjamin Thomas Brinson 1 Vivian Morris Broach 1 Neil and Elizabeth Barker Broadwell 1 DeAnne Labrecque Brooks 2 Henry Shelton Brown Jr. 1 William Henry Brown Jr. 2 Cynthia Register Brown 1 Elizabeth Howell Brown 1 Mark Patrick Brown 1 Mitchell Tucker Brown 3 Ronald O’Neal Brown 7 Robert A. Brown Jr. 2 Angela Euell Bryant 1 Tina Alexander Bullard 3 Patricia Owens Bumgarner 3 Carl and Susan Stafford Bumgarner 2 The Class of 2009 takes one last picture before its commencement ceremony. PHOTO BY VALERIE MARINO H O N O R R O L L O F D O N O R S 23 Michael Eugene Bunch 1 Stephen Donald Burch 2 Dana White Burgess 2 Linda Riggs Burke 6 Mary Jo and Jerry Burkot 1 Anne Kelly Burks 5 Ken Austin Burleson 9 C. Franklin and Lisa Burney 2 Bruce S. Burnham 8 M. Winston Burroughs 6 Samuel Brainard Burrus 1 Joan Turlington Callan 3 Bruce R. Canaday 1 Robert Lee Carr 6 Ken Carter 5 Heidi Hale Carter 9 Lewis and Nancy Faust Carter 5 James Edward Carver 6 Melanie Smothers Chrismon 4 Beverly and Russell Clark 1 Andy Clark 5 Renae Eckard Clark 2 Cynthia Knight Clayton 9 Ralph Dalton Cline Jr. 1 Col. M. John Coburn 1 Ann Guiton Coburn 4 David Emmett Cody III 5 Walter N. Coley 1 Robert and Annette Aman Collette 1 Vernon David Collins 1 Jerry and Anne Coln 11 Rebecca Buchanan Coltrane 2 Henry Bryant Combs Jr. 2 Jennifer Parker Cook 3 Robin Lane Cooke 2 B. Michael Cooper 2 Joanne Bullard Copeland 3 Susan Payne Cornett 1 M. Russell Cowan 1 William Irvine Cowden 2 Carl and Mary Cox 1 Michael Wayne Craven 2 Wilson and Mary B. Crawford 2 Howard Welda Creech 1 Otis Wayne Creech 17 Julie Ward Crocker 2 Rosemary Persaud Cross 6 Benjamin Garlon Cutrell 1 J. David Dalmas 8 Daniel Lee Danielson 1 Kevin and Yvonne Blackmon Daugherty 1 Alison Gray Davenport 1 Maria Mitchem Davidson 4 David and Betty Davis 16 Anne Garrett Davis 1 Wiley and Mary Dawson 2 Robert Lee Dayvault Jr. 25 Lauren Jeanette DeBolt 2 Gina Trentadue Decker 1 Paul Wesley Dempsey 3 Sherry Barbour Denning 6 Janet Eakins Dickinson 5 Russell and Louise Gill Dillard 2 Helen Catoe Dinkins 1 Lisa McCall Dinkins 2 Melissa Alyson McCall 2 David and Susan Disher 10 Christopher Thad Dixon 1 Karl Hans Donn 6 Kristin Price Douglass 1 Janell Downinig 2 Leslie Campbell Driver 1 Mary Woelfel Duffy 1 David and Pamela Earnhardt 1 James Michael Egbert Sr. 7 Revis Radford Eller 4 Clarence Peacock Ellison Jr. 3 Steven Ira Engel 5 Kelly M. Ennis 1 Myra Hopper Epley 10 David Wesley Etchison 4 Tom Eutsler 1 Christine Houser Evans 10 Nancy F. Faggart 1 Salmen Tucker Fayed 2 Cindy Shearin Feagans 9 Jackie Gwyne Fender 2 Charles and Nancy Fenske 8 Marie Ann First 4 George and Sandy Fisher 2 Debra Crumpler Fiztgerald 2 Christopher and Kelly Johnson Fleming 1 Jill A. Fowler 3 Carolyn Twiggs Fox 4 George and Cynthia Poulos Fox 19 Alisa Thomas Fraley 1 Mary R. Franks 6 Elizabeth Ring Freas 14 Stephen Edward Friday 2 William Frostick 7 Kimberly Shiflett Fullenwider 2 Megan Fuller 1 William Randolph Futrell Jr. 9 Marcia Hussey Gallo 9 Gary Ralph Gallo 2 Sandra Smith Garner 8 Sharon Rice Gates 12 Raghuvir Baxiram Gelot 6 Charles Thomas Gibson 1 Sue Leeuwenburg Gibson 1 Tammy Gilbert 1 Howard and Jacqueline Glasser 3 Mark L. Glover 3 David Ray Goble 1 Judith Morgan Goodman 1 Bruce Michael Goodson 1 Freda Hobowsky Gordon 1 Julie Ann Gouveia-Pisano 4 LaRue May Grady 1 Michael and Deborah Averette Grady 9 Samuel and Anita Creech Gray 1 Donald Lewis Greene 1 Jennifer Smart Greene 3 Nancy Green-Knepper 1 Deborah Barringer Greenspan 5 Robert Greenwood 12 Class year % of all giving Dollar amt 1972 51.82% $410,115.00 1983 3.47% $27,467.50 1984 2.86% $22,627.00 1977 2.74% $21,720.05 1980 1.75% $13,822.50 1952 1.47% $11,603.00 1981 1.43% $11,292.50 1988 1.39% $11,032.50 1951 1.35% $10,685.00 1969 1.34% $10,590.00 TOP DOLL ARS BY CL ASS 24 H O N O R R O L L O F D O N O R S Michael and Debra Keever Griffin 1 Merrill Tucker Griffin 5 David and Beth Griffin 2 James Boyd Groce III 1 Santosh Kumar Gupta 1 James Ruffin Gurganus 1 Robin Kluttz Gurley 1 William Preston Guy III 2 Julie Ann Haizlip 6 Sara and Jonathan Hall 1 T. Linwood and Kathryn Jordan Hamilton 1 Lisa Marie Hammond 2 Charles Vinson Hamrick 1 Jillaine Garris Hardee 1 Sandra Grace Hardee 1 W. Sidney and Anna Harmon 7 Ollie Cecil Harrell 3 William and Susan Stallings Harris 3 Ann Marie Harris 17 Mona Williams Harris 4 Margaret McCann Hartis 20 Robert Eldon Hedenskog II 4 Shirley Ann Heiman 3 Bradley F. D. Helms 1 Elizabeth Keiger Helpingstine 5 David and Donna Fargis Helton 1 Norma K. Henderson 1 Daryl Brinton Hendrix 7 Marla Rene Hersh 1 William Allen Hill 1 Beverly Thorndyke Hill 1 Denine Marie Hill 2 Susan Clelland Hinkamp 3 Lynn Turlington Hinson 15 David Thomas Hix Sr. 6 Debra Holkko 2 William Earl Hollamon Jr. 3 Thomas Marshall Holland 8 Carolin Phelps Holland-Wilson 10 L. Harris Hollingsworth 7 Amy Picklesimer Holmes 1 Carol Lowe Holmes 3 L. Randolph and Marie Holoman 2 John Cogdell Hood Jr. 10 David and Susan Hook 2 Judy Yates Hooks 3 Susan Smith Hoover 1 William P. Horne Jr 1 Elizabeth Barringer Houff 7 D. Lawrence Hughes 8 Barbara Hughes 15 Marcus Brown Hughes Jr. 3 Erica Pernia Hugo 1 Amy Cline Hull 12 Frank W. Hunter 9 Jasper and Carol Hurt 12 James Thomas Ingram 23 Sandra Sweitzer Irvin 2 Jena Ivey 3 Vicky Bishop Jackson 1 Victoria Lee Jackson 1 Eric Allen Jackson 6 John Duff James 9 Angela Dudley Jenkins 7 W. Ingram Jenkins, Jr. 19 Barbara Harper Johnson 3 Heather Johnson 6 Rena Elizabeth Johnson 1 R. Mark Johnson 3 Benny and Tracy Jones 5 Susan Plyler Jones 1 Clarence and Karen Jordan 5 Sylvia Bonner Jordan 5 Allyson Brawley Josey 2 Future pharmacists work on a chocolate compound during Family Day activities. PHOTO BY VALERIE MARINO H O N O R R O L L O F D O N O R S 25 Teresa May Journey 1 Stephen and Stephanie Melnyk-Joyce 1 Rudolph L. Juliano 1 Beth Ruby Kamp 4 William John Karahalios 3 Nick Gus Karres 3 April Maynard Keeney 1 Angela Colleen Kent-Mitchell 2 Summer Williams Kerley 1 L. Todd Kermon Jr. 1 Kathleen Gurney Ketcham 1 Lynne Nakashima Kiang 1 Chung Sook Kim 1 Scott and Carie Kimbrough 4 Kate Wilson King 8 Melissa Williams King 9 William Thad King II 2 Mary Ann Fulton Kirkpatrick Kelli Oliver Kirkpatrick 1 Melissa Donnelly Kirkton 2 Stephanie Norris Kiser 1 Nichole Kiziah 2 Dionne Lowder Knapp Cynthia Denise Knight 1 Jennings Eskridge Knight Sr. 1 Lori Williams Kodikara 2 Matthew and Anglea Benson Kodsi 2 Stefanie Berkoski Koewler 1 Harold Lewis Kohn 1 Kim and Lois Koontz 4 Stephen and Catherine Koontz 8 William Lamont III 3 Julia Scott Lane 23 Andrew and Rebeca Fornaro Largen 11 Tyre Beaman Lasitter 6 Timothy and Martha Lassiter 3 Lina Al-Adham Latouf 1 Kenneth Lee Lawing 8 Kristi Lynn Davis 1 Kristi Davis Lawrence 1 Rosemarie Zadlo Lawrence 3 Margaret LeDoux 11 Craig Richard Lee 3 Mark and Nayahmka McGriff-Lee 2 John and Cynthia Correll Leggett 2 Phyllis Ketner Lenhart 1 Marie Louise LeRoy 3 Susan Schenck Lester 7 Laura Woodward Lever 1 Ingrid Baumgartner Lewis 3 Rhonda Beth Liberto 1 W. Edwin Link Jr. 6 Anne Chiu Hwa Liu 2 Jolynn W. Lloyd 2 G. Edward Long Jr. 7 Mike T. Long 9 William Monroe Lovelace Jr. 2 Patricia Ferrell Lundblade 3 Bruce and Joy MacLeod 10 Brenda Martin Marcri 1 Marlene Maliszewski 1 Benjamin J. Malone 1 Teresa W. Maness 2 Gardner Mann 3 Linda Winship Manning 3 Davina Duncan Manuel 1 Harry Patrick Marcelin 1 Gregory Alan Marks 17 Jerold Lee Marlow 1 William Luther Marsh 23 Patricia Schafer Masarachia 1 Kimberly Clifton Massey 1 Jim and Bonnie Butler Matthews 1 Herbert O. Mayberry 3 Susan Miller Maynard 1 Melinda Steele McCabe 8 Jeanne Ann McCall 2 Charlotte Ridgeway McCorkle 2 S. Adair Gupton McCurry 1 Jack F. McGlinn 1 Jenny Marie McGuire 1 William Evans McKellar Jr. 3 Gary Walker McKenzie 13 Halbert Hill McKinnon Jr. 1 Kelly Overby McRae 3 Bruce D. McWhinney 2 Glen Meade 6 Robin Chapman Meade 2 Donald Franklin Medlin 1 Toni Annette Melvin 1 Robert Warner Mendes 8 William Andrew Merrill 4 A. Brent Miller 2 David F. Miller 6 Elizabeth Pendry Miller 8 Joseph Larry Miller 13 Seth George Miller 2 Stephen Perry Millikin Jr. 1 James Robert Minor 2 Arthur Harrell Minton 1 Gene and Sybil Minton 3 Kimberly Kerley Mitchell 1 T. Wayne Mitchell 2 Tom Saburo Miya 10 Lewis and Joyce Long Mize 4 Melisa Van Wagner Mizelle 3 Louis and Gayle Mizelle 2 Deborah Montague 2 Third-year pharmacy students receive their white coats at UNC’s Memorial Hall in March 2009. PHOTO BY VALERIE MARINO 26 H O N O R R O L L O F D O N O R S George William Moore Jr. 1 Jerry Preston Moore 8 Jonas Clayton Moretz Jr. 1 Franklin Scott Morgan 2 Timothy Francis Morley 1 Edward Zebulon Morris Jr. 6 Michael Monzo Morris 2 J. Christopher Morrison 3 Paul Allen Morton 1 Mary Mardre Moseley 2 Constance Hudson Motlow 3 Susan Decker Murphy 8 Charles Earl Myers 2 Kimberly Newkirk Myers 7 Sharon Godwin Nanagas 5 Bradley and Lisa Woolard Narron 2 Robert Stedman Neal 6 Dieu-Ha Thi Nguyen 4 Sandra Kaye Nicholson 1 James Wade Normark 2 Amy Alford Northup 10 Gary Miller Oakley 1 William M. Oakley 10 Gordon Lee O’Briant Jr. 1 Lea Walker O’Brien 1 Elizabeth Rodman Oden 2 Elizabeth Carol Oldham 1 Michael Overman 2 Beverly Humphrey Owen 1 Lindsay McCray Page 1 Kala Patel Pai 4 Gregory and Michelle Pait 8 James Edgar Parker 16 Cindy Ellen Parker 4 Minal Pravinch Patel 2 Gary and Cynthia Patterson 3 Ruth Patterson Pecora 1 Ronald and Edna Perkinson 2 Anne Peshel 1 Donald Vance Peterson 19 Kathleen Sullivan Petrizzi 8 Melanie Raper Philips 1 Jennifer Davenport Phillips 1 Amy Michele Phillips 1 Farrah Griffin Pickett 2 Lisa Noblett Piercy 4 Nancy Ann Pietroski 1 Person Bennett Pittman 10 John David Pitts 4 Wendy S. Player 2 Molly Ingram Pliszka 6 William Douglas Poe 3 Leann Trefz Poindexter 9 Josephine Lovelace Polhemus 1 Anne Kane Pontiff 3 Larry Hicks Pope 1 Pamela Reynonds Porter 1 Kimberly Renee Yates 2 Candice Turner Potter 2 Gregory Eugene Powell 2 James Lamar Price 2 Amy Jennings Prichard 1 James and Desiree Pridgen 1 Charla Smith Pridgen 20 Mary P. Pruette 1 Bradford and Melonie Pusser 2 Carol Renee Pusser 1 Robert and Melissa Hartis Putnam 1 Donald and Eileen Mitchell Rabil 2 Fred Rachide 15 Arlen Roy Rash Jr. 7 Robin Cook Reap 8 Tony Curtis Reynolds 2 Charles William Rhoden Jr. 12 William Warren Richards 6 Eric Dean Richards 1 Linda L. Richardson 2 Barbara Jones Richardson 7 Kenneth Bart Raddick 9 Charity Ann Riddle-Chapman 2 James Dean Rider 2 Gianna C. Rigoni 1 Marcus Cobey Riley 1 Leslie Waring Rini 1 Jeffrey Risse 1 Nellie Elizabeth Rittase 10 Robert Walter Ritter 10 Ailene Roach 1 Susan Williams Robertson 2 Alfred Ray Rogers 2 William Carroll Rose Jr. 1 Winfield Penny Rose 23 Elizabeth C. Rosenbaum 5 Anna Mashburn Rouse 1 Phillip N. Russ 2 Stephen Gaddy Russell 2 From left, UNC system president Erskine Bowles, Dean Bob Blouin, UNC School of Medicine dean William Roper and Chancellor Holden Thorpe cut the ribbon at the dedication ceremony for the Genetic Medicine Building in May 2009. PHOTO BY JOHN ZHU H O N O R R O L L O F D O N O R S 27 Christina Byrne Sarubbi 1 Jonathan and Amy Sauls 8 Amanda Clemmons Savage 1 Dabney Woodard Scaff 5 Donald James Schnoor 12 Robert Joseph Schollard 4 David and Regina Schomberg 2 Rebecca Tayloe Seegars 1 Amanda Kay Sellers 2 Rick Sessions 8 Sherrie E. Settle 4 Evelyn Salter Sewell 1 Patsy Kay Seymour 19 Kelly McKee Seymour 4 Laura Carpenter Sharpe 5 Jeffrey Dale Shatterly 1 Robert H. Shearin 4 Nina Elizabeth Shehan 2 Larry and Lindsay Shelton 1 Julie Troutman Sherrill 2 Foy Vincent Shingleton 3 Cynthia Easter Shinn 5 Elizabeth Holden Shriver 2 Sheryl Denny Siek 3 Joseph Kent Sigmon 1 Tracey Simmons-Kornegay 6 Toni Rowe Sisk 1 Sybil Austin Skakle 4 Richard and Billie Slade 10 Ann Rector Slade 1 Kathy G. Slade 1 Sandra Pleasants Slinkard 2 Deborah Wellons Sloan 2 Michelle Fink Sloop 1 Ronald and Pamela Small 5 Robert Garland Smith 1 Melissa Short Smith 9 Sandra Wood Smith 1 Russell and Tyanne Whitcomb Smith 1 Pamela Singleton Snipes 3 Helen Easter Snow 7 Karen Cobb Snyder 1 Tse-kin Kenneth So 4 Michael Percy Soucie 1 Barry William Southern 25 Gregory and Deborah Southern 4 Jacob Douglas Spangler 1 Martha Jo Harrelson Stanley 3 Gregory Brent Starnes 1 Horace Dean Steadman Jr. 3 Sharm Steadman 20 Jennifer Stegall 1 Ellen Robinson Stephens 2 Helen Stupalsky Stern 1 Nicholas Shawn Stevenson 6 Jeffrey Warren Stillwagon 10 Daniel Francis Stinehelfer 2 Kathleen McNeil Strausburg 13 James Thomas Street 4 Wade Baker Styron 12 Simon Oliver Styron 1 Huaying Su 2 Edward Donald Sumner 5 Laura Brown Sutton 1 Karen Gibbon Swain 1 Maxine McMahon Swalin 1 Charles Frederick Swift 6 Chris and Serina Tart 5 Nan Virginia Tauscher 1 Mary Anna Tayloe 3 Thomas George Taylor 1 Amanda Kay Harrelson 1 Nancy Hardy Thigpen 22 Monique Bembrey Thomas 9 Michael Edward Thompson 15 William N. Thrower Jr. 14 W. Lyndo and Lou Tippett 1 Mark Patrick Tompkins 2 Larry James Toth 4 Marlena Schwarz Travers 4 William and Teresa Gurganus Triplett 1 Stephen Wayne Tripp 1 Kathryne Hamilton Troxler 2 Heather Conner Tucker 1 Marsha Barrow Tucker 6 Mary Brooks Tucker 1 Joseph Tunstall 9 J. Kelly Turner Jr. 3 Rebecca Sue Turlington 7 Hamilton Polk Underwood Jr. 8 Allison Leigh Underwood 8 R. Kenneth Updegrave 1 Jack Herndon Upton 1 Harold Griffin Usher 17 Harold G Usher Jr. 2 Laura McLeod Vance 2 W. Scott and Laurie Carroll Varner 1 Ginger McLendon Vithalani 3 John Tom Vlachos 10 Sejal Vora 3 Athan Scott Vrettos 2 Jeffrey and Cramer Smith Walker 3 Lori P. Walters 8 Jialynn K. Wang 1 Deborah Hollingsworth Ward 1 Ronald Thomas Wassel 14 Charles and Elizabeth Watson 2 Valerie Hooper Watts 2 Harry and Peggy Waugh 2 Melissa Tillman Weeks 2 Courtney Deadmon Weller 14 Olin H. Welsh Sr. 1 Hobart Glenn Whaley 3 Robert Vernon Wheeler 5 Paul and Carol White 2 Roger Lewis White 2 Mavourneen Stallings Whitehead 8 Karin Anne Wiedenmayer 1 Doug Williams 2 James and Lynn Williams 5 Dennis Williams and Michelle Lener 2 Michelle Bunce Williams 1 Glenwood Lee Williams 3 Jerry and Dawn Caulk Williams 3 Alan and Kristi Krawietz Wilson 1 Lori Wilkins Wilson 2 Heber and Gina Mangas Windley 2 Marsha Barefoot Winstead 5 James and Daria Wooten 3 Anne-Marie Wray 13 Don Wright 3 Kathyrn Anne Yancey 1 Terry Eugene Yarborough 3 Charles and Linda Burris Yoder 3 Thomas M. Yost 8 George Chalmers Young III 3 Carolyn Renee Zaleon 2 Christine Elizabeth Zone 2 Deborah A Zurek 2 Southeastern Pharmacy Association 28 H O N O R R O L L O F D O N O R S Kristin Morris Adams Kevin L. Almond Angela Alston Eugene Gibson Anderson Stephen B Archbell Debra Groshans Aycock Maude Anne Babington Sprite Barbee Allan and Barbara Barkley Ginger Moss Barrier Holly Elizabeth Barrier John Marshall Barringer Laura Katherine Bayliss Bruen Crawford Beek Alicia H Bennett Robert Gary Berger Angela Blake Biggs Jacqueline Denise Billings Robert A. Blouin V. Irving Boyles, Jr. Timothy James Brennan Michael Edwin Brewer Thomas Reeves Burgiss Bruce S. Burnham Stephen Wayne Cagle Stephen Michael Caiola Rebecca Hedrick Campbell William and Karen Campbell Bruce R. Canaday Laura Banner Carringer Leanne Cartee Moo J. Cho Beverly and Russell Clark Class of 1996 Class of 2009 Rodney G. Cline James Melvin Coleman Marguerite Conger Dawn R. Conti Toby Hoffman Cox Rosemary Persaud Cross Jerry Stewart Curry Benjamin Garlon Cutrell Ramonna Ghitea Cvelich Sara Anne Dawson Christopher Day Betty Hill Dennis Robert Dewar Priscilla Amos Dollard Mary Woelfel Duffy Ashley Pell East Deborah Moore Edwards Stephanie Lynn Edwards W. Keith Elmore Steven Ira Engel Kelly M. Ennis Shana Lynn Falgout Anna F. Ferguson Lindsey Morgan Fierer Ronald Alan Fleming Nancy Stephens Fortson Amber Dianne Frick William Don Gersch Julie Ann Gouveia-Pisano Rebecca H. Grandy Frances Powell Gualtieri Bryan Austin Haas Ray Gordon Hagwood Sr. Lisa Dawn Hampton Joshua Parks Haney Sandra Grace Hardee Lauren Bunting Hardin Ammon Hardy Susan Foster Harris William Lee Harris Jr. Brandi Cahoon Harrison Emily Lauren Heil Eddy and Debbie Hemingway Marla Rene Hersh Matthew Stephen Hogan L. Harris Hollingsworth Amy Picklesimer Holmes Elizabeth Barringer Houff R. Truman Hudson Erica Pernia Hugo Betty and Brad Hussey Eric Allen Jackson Maria Pulido Jeffries Suzanne Fields Jones Pamela Upchurch Joyner Rudolph L. Juliano Jina Jung Earl Wendell Key Jr. Jenny Jane Kim Olga Michael Klibanov Stefanie Sue Berkoski Koewler Harold Lewis Kohn Jared Gregory Latus Nancy Carol Leatherman Craig Richard Lee William Dodd Lindsay Josie Looney Virgil S. Lucas Patricia Ferrell Lundblade Susan Stone Luskin Olga Marshall Juliana Smith Massenburg Melinda Steele McCabe John Meeker Debra Ann Miller Stephen Perry Millikin Jr. Gene Winston Minton Lydia Mis Tom Saburo Miya Deborah Montague Lauren Ashley Moore Michael and Jennifer Murray Kha Nguyen Amy Alford Northup Paul J. Nunnally Lindsay McCray Page Namrata Bakul Patel Will Adam Pearsall Allison Laurel Pecha Adam Persky Kathleen Sullivan Petrizzi John R. Plachetka Rita Kay Proctor Kathryn Marie Pruden Ralph H. Raasch Dawn Howle Rabon Freddy and Dawn Rabon Barbara Jones Richardson Linda L. Richardson Mary Williams Roederer Lee Yount Rogers Marlene Maliszewski Christina Byrne Sarubbi Tammy Winn Shealy Cynthia Easter Shinn Kathy G. Slade Kimlee Jane Smith Pamela Singleton Snipes Gregory and Deborah Southern Jacob Douglas Spangler J. Michael Spivey Jennifer Stegall Erin Darci Steinberg Richard Alan Sterling Daniel Francis Stinehelfer Kathleen McNeil Strausburg Christina Lee Teeter Mary Brown Teeter Bridgette Louise Therriault Emily Cate Tidwell Cynthia Dascani Toso Rachel Elisabeth Townson John Michael Triplett Katherine Irene Tweedy UNC Pharmacy Alumni Association Kyra Lynn Walgos Jennifer Wandling Webb C. Edwin and Julie Webb Trisha Weishuhn Andrea Michelle Wessell Lance and Stephanie Wheeler Karin Anne Wiedenmayer Amy Kathryn Wiglesworth Sandra Krentz Wilkins Benjamin Odell Williams Dennis Williams and Michelle Lener Lori Wilkins Wilson Laura Elizabeth Yoder Elizabeth Young Jane A. Younts CL ASS OF 2009 R ALPH H. R A ASCH SCHOL ARSHIP FUND |
OCLC number | 769754830 |