Hope College Hope College Digital Commons The Anchor: 1981 The Anchor: 1980-1989 4-23-1981 The Anchor, Volume 93.23: April 23, 1981 Hope College Follow this and additional works at: https://digitalcommons.hope.edu/anchor_1981 Part of the Library and Information Science Commons Recommended Citation Repository citation: Hope College, "The Anchor, Volume 93.23: April 23, 1981" (1981). The Anchor: 1981. Paper 11. https://digitalcommons.hope.edu/anchor_1981/11 Published in: The Anchor, Volume 93, Issue 23, April 23, 1981. Copyright © 1981 Hope College, Holland, Michigan. This News Article is brought to you for free and open access by the The Anchor: 1980-1989 at Hope College Digital Commons. It has been accepted for inclusion in The Anchor: 1981 by an authorized administrator of Hope College Digital Commons. For more information, please contact [email protected]. ope college olland, michigan APRIL 23,1981 VOLUME 93-ISSUE 23 Hope to offer a nursing program • f 1! i ThTUret curriculuniii-r^ioillllm rr* foforr ththep prospectivnrosi e She received a nursing diploma from the will arise. However, Kielinen states. It by Tim Gortsema four-year degree student will be deman- Salem Hospital School of Nursing in 1964 will be a challenge to coordinate a pro- Beginning in the fall of 1982, Hope will ding. The freshman and sophomore years and the B.S.N, and M.S.N, degrees from gram between two schools, but the key is offer a bachelor of science degree in nurs- will be spent taking courses already of- the Boston University School of Nursing to establish one department, not separate ing. This program is in conjunction with fered in the college curriculum; these in- in 1967 and 1972, respectively. She com- ones." Calvin College and will give students She stresses that it will not be Hope and clude lower-level courses in biology, from both schools the opportunity to pleted her doctoral degree in the ad- chemistry, psychology, sociology and ministration of nursing education pro- Calvin nursing students but just nursing become registered nurses, providing they English. The yet-to-be developed nursing grams at Teachers College, Columbia students period. There are also ad- can pass the state examination. vantages to operating a dual program. courses will be required during the junior Cynthia E. Kielinen has been appointed University, in 1979. and senior years; these will probably con- Kielinen served on the staffs of a Kielinen explained, "It is a good situation chairwoman of the nursing department sist of a core of theory courses in which hospital and nursing home in because both schools have different con- and will begin to coordinate the effort this the student will develop the basic techni- Massachusetts before joining the faculty tacts in their respective areas that will be summer. ques of nursing and learn about its essen- of the Salem Hospital School of Nursing in benificial to a solid program." Kielinen, presently an associate pro- tial qualities. 1965. In 1972 she was appointed to a Salem Although Kielinen's office will be fessor in the nursing program of located at Hope, she plans to commute The next stage will be practical clinical Massachusetts' Salem State College, br- State College faculty post. experience, in which the student will put Since the program will be developed between the two schools quite often. "I ings to the post broad educational to use the knowledge gained from the jointly by both schools, there is the really like the atmosphere at both col- preparation and experience in both the theory courses. This will probably take possibility that some scheduling conflicts leges," she continued; "education in a practical and teaching aspects of nursing. Christian setting is exciting, especially if place in a variety of settings, most you yourself are a Christian." Kielinen notably Butterworth and Holland Com- saw this as an important part of her deci- munity Hospitals. Finally, the students sion to come here. "I want the students to will return to the classrooms for seminars New officers elected In which sharing of experiences and im- Jon Schmidt, current president of the be able to deal with patients when they br- by Richard Kuhrt ing up the subject of Christianity, she parting of new knowledge will be the focal Students packed the polls last week to Congress, who has "watched the said. point. elect Chris Simons as next year's Presi- organization pick up momentum,' sees dent of Student Congress; also elected the newly-elected officers as "energetic were Kevin Toren, first vice president, and capable to keep the legislature mov- and Rick Dernberger, second vice presi- ing" Trash-burning boiler dent. Simons, a sophomore with two years ween students and the legislature which experience, would like to see the Con- represents them. One plan of his is to gress become a more active force on broaden the avenues of communication. could heat up Hope campus and thus more representative. In Dernberger is a freshman who served on the Congress this year; he plans to in- order to attain this goal Simons plans to much of the community's trash. Popula- crease aid to those organizations filling by Keith Grigoletto develop a better rapport with faculty, ad- tion growth in the area and contamination out budget requests and to increase the "Burn trash, not gas" will become a ministration and a wide range of to water, however, may eventually force communication between the Appropria- Hope reality if the idea for a trash- students. burning boiler is pursued to its construc- the closing of the landfills, necessitating Toren, also a two-year veteran, stress- tions Committee and the organizations tion. The present boiler uses natural gas reconstruction at a more distant site. ed the importance of communication bet- being funded. to generate steam, which in turn heats the Drums of ash from the suggested boiler campus. A trash-burning boiler would use would still have to be dumped at the new materials such as our disposable paper landfill, but waste disposal would be cut and wood products to generate the same an estimated 95 percent. If the boiler project is pursued it will energy at a great savings. 4'It would pay for itself in six or seven not turn the college into a dump site. "It s years," said William Anderson, vice a clean operation," said Coates. president for business and finance. "We "The boiler would be located between Columbia Ave. and the railroad tracks, could save $200,000 a year." The trash boiler is a way to recycle not in the middle of campus," said Ander- energy and save dollars at the same time, son. but the seemingly good idea carries The $1.6 million boiler shows great pro- M\?m potential drawbacks. 4'We don't have mise; the Amway partnership, for exam- enough trash," said Fred Coates, director ple, is enjoying the success of their trash of maintenance. 41 We would probably boiler. "It's a good idea, I think," said have to make arrangements with other Anderson. companies who do generate trash of the Coates and Anderson made it clear, however, that they are merely pursuing type we want to burn." Landfills mark the resting place of an idea — it is a very preliminary look. Buildings need funds by Craig Potter Sinclair donors. Each fall Van Wylen goes to Detroit for President Gordon Van Wylen was in- volved in a number of fund-raising ac- the foundation and in the spring he covers tivities this week , under the auspices of Western Michigan. the Michigan Colleges Foundation, he The fund-raising for new buildings is was busy throughout Western Michigan under different responsibility. It will in- soliciting funds to cover the annual ex- volve individual efforts on the part of the penses incurred by the college. The Michigan Colleges Foundation is a President and other members of the ad- group of church-affiliated private col- ministration. They have been trying to reach major donors to get things started. leges in Michigan who banded together a few years ago in order to. organize the As Van Wylen said, "we are trying to con- fund-raising activities of the schools, and tact the larger donors first." to make it easier for the donors. Although there have not been any ma- Together, the representatives from the jor breakthroughs yet, the President colleges go out and solicit donations from seems confident that he will get the re- industry as well as individuals and foun- maining funds necessary for the building Chris Simons, newly elected Student Congress President for the academic year 1981- dations, who comprise a total of 1,161 projects. 82. (photo by Lora Rector) (N u Zuidema operates upon campus a < CL by Janet Lootens Zuidema's visit a significant one for the academic medicine has been extensive. which area doctors are being invited; On Friday, April 24, the biology depart- biology department and any students in- His studies include 241 published scien- "Social-Surgical Controversies: How ment will host surgeon-in-chief of Johns terested in medicine. Zuidema's resume tific papers and 20 books for which he has Much Unnecessary Surgery?" will be Hopkins Hospital George D. Zuidema. is thick, his accomplishments many, and served as editor; research has also taken discussed. Students will be able to meet M.D., a graduate of Hope and the Johns his lectures have taken him from "Japan him to NASA, where he studied the effects Informally with Zuidema at 2 p m. in Hopkins School of Medicine. Adjunct pro- to Ireland," pointed out Wettack. of high acceleration in space travel. Peale 243. fessor of surgery at the University of Zuidema's accomplishments began at "Patho-physiology and Prevemion ol Maryland Medical School and professor Hope when he conducted research, wrote Zuidema's schedule on Friday begins Stress Ulceration" is the final lecture of o and director of the Section of Surgical five papers on organic chemistry from his with a lecture to the Mammalian the day and will be presented as a biology § Sciences at Johns Hopkins School of S work and earned the Senior Biology Physiology class at 11:30 a.m.; the topic department seminar at 2:30 a.m.
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