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Servire Society The university’s motto is Servire, meaning to serve, Linner Griffin, associate provost for academic program planning and development, reminded the audience as she inducted this year’s members of the Servire Society, which began in 2008. Members must perform a minimum of 100 hours public service during a year. This year, 67 faculty and staff members along with 24 students were recognized for their volunteer service. First-year faculty and staff inductees are Curtis Anderson, Andrew Bates, Amber Blakey, Sloane Burke, Haozhe Chen, David Cistola, Paul Clifford, Jeffrey Coghill, Donna Lou Edwards, Jeffrey Ferguson, David Hannon, Kelly Harper, Dawn Harrison, William Hodges, Allison Hope, Theodore Koutlas, Linda Mooney, Patricia Peeble, John Rose, Karen Smith and Mary Sours. Servire Society faculty and staff members recognized for their continued membership are Harry Adams, Robin Armstrong, David Batie, Tommy Brady, Keisha Brown, Elizabeth Carroll, William Clark, Susan Copeland, F. Leonard Darby, Penney Doughtie, William Edwards, Elizabeth Fogarty, Mandee Foushee Lancaster, Margie Gallagher, William Gee, Nancy Harris, Sandra Harvey, Harriett Hickey, Jennifer Hodgson, Kathryn Kolasa, Angela Lamson, Charles Lesko, Janice Lewis, Aaron Lucier, Susan McCammon, Scott Meth, Vivian Mott, Amanda Pantelidis, Nick Pantelidis, Roman Pawlak, Annette Peery, Mary Pollock, Nancy Ray, Paul Russell, Ronald Sessoms, Michelle Skipper, Riddick Smiley, Kirk St. Amant, Chris Stallings, Donna Tedder, Linda Teel, Lynn Tuthill, J.P. Walsh, Sandra Warren, Tina Williams and Tiffany Woodward. First-year student inductees are Megan Campbell, Timothy Darden, Andrea Dowell, Amber Heckart, Quintara Jernigan, Laura Larion, Nirvaan Persaud, Tara Powell, Emilee Quinn, Deepak Ravindranathan, Bianca Revis, and Charisse Stevens. Students recognized for continued membership are Ian Bryan, Chelsea Demarest, Paula Loftin, Sharda Persaud, Sunil Persaud, and William Thomas. |
Founders Day, University Awards honor achievement, accomplishment at ECU By Jeannine Manning Hutson East Carolina University marked its 104th year by celebrating teaching, research and service during its annual Founders Day and University Awards Celebration held Tuesday, April 26 in Hendrix Theatre. Faculty, staff, students and a former chancellor were among those recognized for their achievements. Dr. Richard Eakin, chancellor of ECU from 1987 to 2001, was awarded the inaugural James R. Talton Jr. Leadership Award. During his years leading the university, East Carolina grew by 5,000 students, achieved doctoral status and saw the passage of a bond referendum responsible for the construction of the new Health Sciences Building. After listing the 15 nominees for the new award recognizing a servant leader on campus, Chancellor Steve Ballard said as he called Eakin to the stage, “This person is no stranger to leadership at East Carolina University; he served 14 amazing years as its chancellor.” After the event, Eakin said of the award, “It was very humbling. The first time this award has been given and Mr. Talton was a member of the Board of Trustees when I was chancellor. It’s very touching to have received this first award.” Eakin is still active on campus; he is the interim dean for the Honors College. “I told someone that I probably shouldn’t say this because they might stop paying me, but I’m having more fun than you could imagine,” he said. “It’s a really wonderful opportunity. The college is new; we have terrific students; and I believe the future is very bright for the Honors College.” Another new award presented at this year’s ceremony was for scholarship of engagement. Dr. Deirdre Mageean, vice chancellor for research and graduate studies, explained the award will annually recognize a faculty member for achievement in the scholarship of engagement and a sustained commitment to partnered scholarly endeavors with communities. “Scholars such as these help ECU accomplish its mission to be a national model for public service,” she said. The first recipient of the award was Dr. Carmen Russoniello of the Department of Recreation and Leisure Studies in the College of Health and Human Performance. Other awards presented during the ceremony included: • The UNC Board of Governors Award for Excellence in Teaching, the highest teaching award given at the university: Dr. John W. Howard III, associate professor of communication in the College of Fine Arts and Communication, is the ECU recipient. This year, 49 nominations were received for the 12 Centennial Awards for Excellence, which are given with up to three recipients per category, representing staff, faculty and others. Dr. Marianna Walker, chair of the faculty, and Phil Hulsey, chair of the Staff Senate, announced the winners. Service: Dr. Linda Mooney, Department of Sociology and faculty advisor for ECU Friends, faculty; Johnnie Turner, Health Sciences Campus Grounds supervisor, staff; Clayton Sessoms, director of Division of Continuing Studies and Summer School, other. Leadership: Dr. Todd Fraley, coordinator of undergraduate studies in the School of Communication, College of Fine Arts and Communications, faculty; Jan Foust, accountant with ECU Dowdy Student Stores, staff; Deborah Moody, assistant director of the Lucille Gorham Intergenerational Community Center, other. Ambition: Dr. David Collier, director of the Pediatric Healthy Weight Research and Treatment Center, Brody School of Medicine, faculty; Dr. Gregory Chadwick, associate dean for the School of Dental Medicine, other. Spirit: Carl Billingsley, School of Art and Design, College of Fine Arts and Communication, faculty; Dee Bowling, director of Student Financial Services, staff; and members of the ECU Pirate Summer Read Committee, other. Members of that committee are Michael Brown, Mary Beth Corbin, Tom Douglass, Karen Kus, Dionna Manning, Lauren Piner, Wendy Sharer, Karen Slough Smith, Jan Tovey (posthumous), Karen Warren, Eleanor Cook, Tracy Parrish Demar and Carol Woodruff. # # # |