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FEATURE:
Silliman’s Journey of 107 Years | ||||
FEATURE:
Silliman’s Journey of 107 Years The
Church The
(Athletic) Court Institutional
Distinctions
While the ordinance on the wearing of helmets continues to struggle
for strict implementation, a similar policy is now on its second
semester of implementation on campus. The “No Helmet-No Entry
Policy” prevents students on their motorbikes from entering
the campus without helmets. It highlights the concern of the university
for the welfare and safety of the Silliman community and the larger
community of Dumaguete. Former RP President to Open Lecture Series Former Philippine President Fidel V. Ramos will be the first lecturer of Silliman University under its Eminent Persons Lecture Series program. Dr. Ramos, who was conferred a Doctor of Humanities honoris causa degree by Silliman University in 1993, will speak on August 26 at the Claire Isabel McGill Luce Auditorium. He will lecture on a topic pertaining to the challenges and development prospects of the Filipino people today. With the first of this lecture series falling on the Founders Week, joining the faculty, staff and students in the audience will be Silliman alumni from around the country and the globe, and local government and business leaders. Dr. Ramos served the country as President from 1992 to 1998. He is presently the Chairman of the Ramos Peace and Development Foundation, Inc., which aims to contribute in bringing about the “good life” for democratic societies through a culture of excellence and global competiveness. [ Back to top ] [ Home ] Alumni
Return to Alma Mater, Hold Int’l Nursing Symposium
Nursing professionals, mostly Sillimanians, gathered at the Luce Auditorium for the International Symposium on Nursing conducted August 20 to 22. The symposium was organized by Classes 1958 and 1968 of the Silliman University College of Nursing as part of their golden and ruby anniversary celebrations, respectively. It was conceptualized as a “Balik-Talent” tribute, giving the nursing alumni an opportunity to share with with the members of the Silliman community their years of professional experience and expertise. Dr. Jean Yan, Chief Nurse Scientist of the World Health Organization and a member of Class 1968, was the keynote speaker at the opening of the symposium on August 20. A unique feature of the symposium was the first public viewing of STAN, a human-size robot that represents an innovative trend in instructional simulation resources used in medical and nursing education. STAN is used for high-fidelity simulation, allowing learners to practice critical thinking and clinical skills without fear of harming a human being. The panel discussion in the afternoon of the first day on “Human Patient Stimulation and its Relevance to Nursing Education” revolved around STAN and its use as a teaching tool. Joining the panel was Atty. Martin Laburada, Vice President of Aspen Corporation, the sole distributor of STAN in the Philippines. He was joined by Silliman alumna Dr. Jahara Hayudini, who is a consultant to Virtual Laboratories, and the deans of the colleges of nursing of four universities in Dumaguete: Dr. Ma. Teresita Sinda (Silliman), Sr. Rosamond Abadesco (St. Paul University), Dr. Nenita Tayko (Foundation University) and Dr. Daisy Dumalag (Negros Oriental State University). Intended to be part of a nurse’s continuing education, the three-day symposium also offered breakout sessions on varied topics: Innovative Leaders and Policy for Better Health; Nursing Research and Education; The Nurse as Health Educator; Substance Abuse, Stress and Addiction; Critical Thinking Challenge: Female, Pregnant and HIV Positive; Nursing Care: Patients with Breast Cancer; Nursing Focus: The Older Adult; Nursing Our Patients / Nurturing Ourselves; End-of-Life Care and the Ethics of Caring; and Emergency Preparedness and Measuring Outcomes of Care. As a continuing nursing education activity, the symposium was approved by the Texas Nurses Association, an accredited approver by the American Nurses Credentialing Center’s Commission on Accreditation. Contact hours were awarded to the participants based on registration and actual participation. [ Back to top ] [ Home ] 10
Long-Serving Faculty, Staff Honored with Heritage Award
Silliman University honors this Founders Day the memory of 10 individuals whose years of service in the university manifested the best inspiration and example of what it is to be a true Sillimanian. The names of the following honorees will be inscribed in the Heritage Builders Wall, an adobe wall fronting the Silliman Hall, the university’s oldest building: Evangelina N. Bokingo, Home Economics Department (35 years of service) Magdaleno S. Cafe, Buildings & Grounds Department (34 years of service) Raymundo R. Dato, Registrar & Admissions Office (40 years of service) Severina S. Dionio, Elementary School Department (32 years of service) Abraham R. Villamac, Food Services Department (25 years of service) Nativad C. Ongcog, Business & Finance Office (36 years of service) Venancio B. Rendal, Business & Finance Office (38 years of service) Gil R. Severino, Sr., Buildings & Grounds Department (35 years of service) Charles A. & Henrietta H. Glunz, Missionary Educators (41 years of service) [ Back to top ] [ Home ] 2
Sillimanians Win Palanca Top Prizes
The most sought-after top prizes in the annual Don Carlos Palanca Memorial Awards for Literature went to two Silliman alumni this year. Dumaguete-based fictionist Ian Rosales Casocot won First Prize for the Short Story in English for “Things You Don’t Know,” and Baguio-based poet Francis Macansantos also won First Prize for Poetry in English for his suite of poems titled “Morphic Variations.” This is the fourth Palanca win for Casocot, and the third for Macansantos. Casocot is currently a member of the faculty of the Silliman University Department of English and Literature, while Macansantos used to be a teacher in the same department but has now retired from teaching from the University of the Philippines in Baguio. Casocot’s Sugar Land, a novel about Dumaguete, has also been long-listed in the 2008 Man Asian Literary Prize, which is considered as the Asian Booker Prize. The Palanca Awards is known as the Philippine equivalent of the Pulitzer Prize. Awarded to the best annual literary works by Filipino writers since 1951, its roster of winners has included many of the giants of Philippine literature. [ Back to top ] [ Home ] 6 to Receive Outstanding Sillimanian Awards Six Sillimanians who have exemplified and epitomized the ideals of excellence, character and service will receive the Outstanding Sillimanian Award (OSA) in a special ceremony at the Claire Isabel McGill Luce Auditorium on August 28. The awarding coincides with Silliman's 107th founding anniversary. This year’s recipients are: Rev. Francisco Beltran for Specialized Ministry, Mr. Efren Cordura for Package Engineering, Dr. Ester Timbancaya Elphick for Education/Linguistics, Dr. Marie Marjorie Evasco for Creative Writing, Atty. Alfredo Tadiar for Law, and Dr. Romulo Villanueva for Community Health Service. ![]() He started his ministry as a Pastor of the United Church of Christ in the Philippines in Batangas City in 1963 then became Associate Pastor of the Cosmopolitan Church in Manila from 1965 to 1967. He came back to Silliman in 1979 and taught at the Divinity School. When he moved to the United States, he held various positions from Chaplain of the United States Army to Associate Pastor of the First American-Filipino United Church of Christ in California. From 2004 to 2006 he served as Annuitant Visitor of the Pension Boards of the United Church of Christ. Rev. Beltran’s service as a military chaplain in the US earned him numerous distinctions, among them, The Legion of Merit, the highest military award during peacetime granted by a US President. A portion of the citation reads: “He has provided guidance and spiritual comfort to numerous soldiers, family members, and civilians throughout his career…[his] efforts and accomplishments reflect great credit upon him, the Field Artillery Center and the United States Army.” ![]() Mr. Cordura is the second Filipino to become a Certified Packaging Professional in the US. In 1985, he was listed in the “Who’s Who of Packaging” of the Institute of Packaging Professional Magazine. His professional career started with Procter & Gamble Philippines as Packaging Technologist. He later joined equally prestigious companies in the US: SC Johnson and Sons, Abbot Laboratories, Giorgio Beverly Hills and Guthy-Renker Corporation as Packaging Engineer, Packaging Manager and Senior Engineer. With Girgio Beverly Hills, he led a cost-saving project in “crimpless pump” system for high-end fragrances that is believed to have saved the company $7 million a year. Mr. Cordura gave more meaning to his successful corporate career with his philanthropy. He has made donations to the Negros Oriental Provincial Hospital, the Cancer Research Foundation, and the Salvation Army. Presently, he actively solicits donations for Gawad Kalinga to help build homes for poor families in the Philippines. ![]() A feature story in the Sunday Inquirer Magazine on Dr. Timbancaya-Elphick described her to be “saving her native tongue from across foreign shores.” Even with her vast professional experience and exposure in the United States, she has maintained her love for her native language, Cuyonon. As President and CEO of the Cuyonon Language and Culture Project, Inc., she heads a project that translates the Bible in Cuyonon. Dr. Timbancaya-Elphick devoted most of her professional career to building up and administering the English as a Second Language program of the Adult Education Department in Middletown, Connecticut – a program in cultural adaptation as well as language acquisition. She has also taught at the San Jose State University and San Francisco University in California, American International Schools in The Netherlands, Wesleyan University in Connecticut, and Rhodes University in South Africa. In 1996, she was presented the Outstanding Immigrant award by the Secretary of State of Connecticut “for [her] work and service in teaching ESL to thousands of immigrants and resettlement of refugees in Connecticut.” ![]() An award-winning literary artist, Dr. Evasco is Full Professor and University Fellow at the Department of Literature of DLSU. She is President and Board Member of the Creative Writing Foundation, Inc. and P.E.N. Philippines, respectively. Dr. Evasco has distinguished herself nationally and internationally through her published works in poetry and biography which have been included in the canon of Philippine Literature. She is a recipient of a number of Carlos Palanca awards, The National Book Award for Best Biography by the Manila Critics Circle (2001), the Alfonso T. Ongpin National Book Award (2006) and the Manila Critics Circle National Book Awards for Books (2006). She has also received several prestigious international writing fellowships and residencies in Italy, Canada, United States and Malaysia, and visitorship bursaries from the British Council in Scotland and Cambridge University. ![]() As a law professor at the University of the Philippines, he was instrumental in the amendment of the Supreme Court Rules of Court to include the Supervised Law Student Practice. He is considered as the “father of alternative dispute resolution (ADR) in the Philippines” for of his strong advocacy for and commitment to the ADR movement. His advocacy for ADR was recognized when he became Chairman of the National Amnesty Commission of the Philippines and pioneering Chair of the Government Panel to negotiate peace with the military rebels who sought to topple the Aquino administration with various coup attempts. Atty. Tadiar is also a reproductive health rights advocate. He is a member of the Board of Trustees of the International Women’s Health Coalition based in New York and has served as the first Executive Director of the pioneering Center for Research, Studies and Training on Reproductive Health, Rights and Ethics, a joint project of the UP Colleges of Law and Medicine. He also sits as Chairman of the Board of two Philippine NGOs: the Women’s Health Care Foundation and the Institute for Social Sciences and Action. ![]() It was in 1974, at the age of 26, when he was offered the opportunity for residency training in General Surgery at the St. Joseph Hospital in the US, where he served for four years. He later did Ear, Nose and Throat Residency from 1979 to 1981 at the General Baltimore Medical Center, and proceeded to do multispecialty group practice in Wheeling, West Virginia for three years until 1984. He established a private practice in Cumberland, Maryland. Before leaving for the US, Dr. Villanueva lived a life of service in the Philippines. He was offering free services in the towns of Zamboanga del Norte, crossing seas and rivers in pump boats and making house calls on his bicycles. This experience influenced how he practiced his profession in the US. He gave free medical services to those without health insurance. And for this, he was awarded for community service and was invited to join the Allegany County Health Right. Together with his family, he is part of NAILS, a community-service organization that repairs homes of low-income families. He also takes part in medical missions. [ Back to top ] [ Home ] California Energy Commission Deputy Director Links Up with SU The Deputy Director of the California Energy Commission (CEC) gave a lecture on renewable energy via videoconference last July 31 with professors and students of Silliman University and representatives of government offices.
Mr. Terrence O’Brien gave a presentation about California’s
initiatives toward a “zero energy” community, benefiting
both the economy and the environment. Known as among those involved
in shaping California’s projects and policies in balancing
economic growth and environmental protection, Mr. O’Brien
shared how California increased its efficiency in energy consumption
against that of the rest of the United States. Violinist Graces Cultural Season Launch The Silliman University Cultural Affairs Committee (CAC) will celebrate the grand re-opening of the newly-refurbished Claire Isabel McGill Luce Auditorium with the launching of the new cultural season for 2008-2009 on August 9. Expected to gather many of the social and cultural prime-movers of Dumaguete City and Negros Oriental, the launching will feature a dinner-concert with the special participation of acclaimed violinist Jay Cayuca. An accomplished instrumentalist who has been well-received here in the Philippines and abroad, Cayuca has trained with maestros Basilio Manalo, Leonidas Domingo, and Luis Valencia. His achievements include bagging the first prize for violin in the National Music Competition for Young Artists (NAMCYA) in 1985; the Best Instrumental Performance Award in KATHA’s music awards in 1995 for “Sino ang Baliw” (which is a cut from his self-titled album); Best Instrumental Performance in the 17th Awit Awards in 2004 for the song “Take me out of the Dark” by Gary Valenciano. The CAC launching has recently come to be known as a red-letter date in Negros Oriental’s social and cultural calendar. This is the third edition of the community event, which was spearheaded under the leadership of Silliman’s Cultural Officer Dr. Elizabeth Susan Vista-Suarez. According to Suarez, “the launch promises to be a one-of-a-kind event since we will also be celebrating the grand re-opening of the Luce Auditorium.” The venue, which was first opened in 1976, underwent extensive renovation and technical modernization, which started last March 2008. The refurbishment came with a grant from the Henry Luce Foundation through the United Board for Christian Higher Education in Asia, which was also the original benefactor for the building of the Luce. The Luce today is the largest auditorium of its kind outside of Manila, and has helped make Dumaguete the cultural center of the South. [ Back to top ] [ Home ] Research Director Reads Paper at Int’l Conference Silliman University Director of Research and Development Dr. Enrique Oracion presented a paper at the recently concluded 8th International Conference on Philippine Studies (ICOPHIL) held late last month at the Ateneo de Manila University. Titled “Human and Ecosystem Well-Being: The Anthropological Meanings of Marine Protected Area as Conservation Tool,” Dr. Oracion’s paper looks into how conflicting stakeholder perceptions of place vis-à-vis traditional open-access to commons as well as spatial regulations of human behaviors amidst poverty in many coastal communities have facilitated or constrained marine conservation initiatives in the Philippines. Against this backdrop, the paper subsequently examines how the MPA tool, an intervention developed by marine scientist, is effectively diffused through cultural through cultural mechanisms to stop destructive resource use practices. The 8th ICOPHIL featured 300 presentations. The next ICOPHIL will be hosted by the Michigan State University in East Lansing in 2012. (Malcolm C. Hiponia, SURDC Research Assistant) [ Back to top ] [ Home ]
2 Foreign Professors Cite Benefits from Nursing Graduate Degrees Two Australian professors handling courses under the Doctor of Philosophy in Nursing Program at Silliman University highlighted the benefits from pursuing graduate studies in nursing. Silliman is one of only two universities in the country offering a PhD in Nursing program. The other is the University of the Philippines-Manila. Dr. David Arthur and Prof. John Drury who are based in Singapore and Australia, respectively, said that a graduate degree in nursing yields more rewards in a profession they described as “evidence-based”. They made this statement even as they recognized that an undergraduate nursing degree is usually enough to land one a job and move up to enjoying a successful career in nursing. Teaching qualitative and quantitative research methods, Dr. Arthur noted that graduate nursing degree programs are gaining popularity in Australia and parts of Asia, like the Philippines. He attributed this to the need for more nursing professionals to get into research and the opportunities of linkages, which could translate into better rewards. Dr. Arthur is one of the personalities behind the establishment of the East Asian Forum of Nursing Scholars (EAFONS) in 1997. One of the objectives of EAFONS is to identify innovative ways of resource sharing in doctoral nursing education in East Asia through collaboration and cooperation among nursing scholars. The establishment of EAFONS, Dr. Arthur said, sought to address the issue of “brain drain”. It was organized to help sustain the interest among nursing scholars in research and enhance the study and practice of nursing in their respective areas. Zeroing in on Silliman University, he said one of the advantages of Filipino students pursuing graduate studies in nursing is the experience they have in primary health care. The interaction that Silliman nursing students enjoy with the community under their service-learning program provides depth to their understanding of the field and could play a vital role in their pursuit of research. Professor Drury, who teaches Husserlian phenomenology and Colaizzi’s method of data analysis, for his part said that apart from the opportunity for promotion within the organization, a graduate degree facilitates the further professionalization of the nursing career. A nursing professional, he said, is able to sharpen his/her skills in acquiring and processing information with the aid of science. This enables the nursing professional to practice more effectively and efficiently either in a hospital setting or elsewhere. A graduate degree in nursing, Professor Drury said, also allows a nursing professional to exchange knowledge and experiences with his/her foreign counterparts. This kind of arrangement provides the nursing professional with new skills and ideas that he/she may apply in his/her own place. While both professors enumerated the benefits from pursuing a graduate degree in nursing, they said they cannot blame Filipino nurses and nursing scholars who leave the country for employment abroad. According to Dr. Arthur, there is a need for government intervention in the form of incentives for these nurses. He explained that nurses work abroad because of the need to provide more for their families, so higher salaries and better benefits for Filipino nurses will keep them in the country. From an academic perspective, and in the context of research collaboration, Professor Drury said there is an opportunity for the home country in those working abroad. The experience gained by nursing scholars abroad, he said, could be applied in their home country. When made use of, this rich experience could encourage more Filipinos to put more value on pursuing research activities to improve the healthcare profession in the country. Both Dr. Arthur and Professor Drury worked in the same hospital in Australia before they pursued graduate degrees in nursing. [ Back to top ] [ Home ] Alumnus Receives Outstanding Filipino in America Award A Silliman alumnus who is based in the United States is one of this year’s recipients of the prestigious “Twenty Outstanding Filipinos Abroad (TOFA) Award”. Dr. Eusebio Kho, who finished high school and pre-medicine at Silliman University in 1952 and 1956, respectively, will receive his award on September 28 in Washington, D.C. Born in Jimalalud, Negros Oriental, Dr. Kho obtained his degree in medicine from the University of the Philippines. He later became junior researcher under the world-famous virologist Dr. George Beran of the Van Howelling Virus Laboratory at Silliman. Dr. Kho is a surgeon and holds the rank of Colonel in the US Army. His practice of his profession is enriched by his involvement as a surgeon in war operations, among them, the Operation Desert Shield in 1990. He resigned from the US Army in 2001, and was awarded the Army Meritorious Award. (click here to read write-up about Dr. Kho and his award on the Filipino Image Magazine website) Silliman University is a recipient of the generosity of Dr. Kho and his wife, Mrs. Grace Lim-Kho. Recently, they established through the United Board for Christian Higher Education in Asia a USD25,000 endowment for “The Dr. Eusebio and Grace Lim-Kho Chair and Professorship of Surgery" at Silliman University. [ Back to top ] | ||||