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PUC Registers Record Number of Potential Bone Marrow Donors
Posted by Lainey S. Cronk on December 18, 2007
When Pacific Union College participated in Matchmaker’s national campus and community bone marrow drive last week, responses far exceeded student coordinator Stefanie Holimon’s hopes. “I was excited but nervous before,” she explains. “I wasn’t sure of the response we’d get.” But after PUC registered 145 students, faculty and staff as potential bone marrow donors (compared to the 13 Microsoft registered and 55 from UC Berkeley in the same drive), Stefanie was completely thrilled. “I’m really proud of the school,” she says. Stefanie’s involvement with projects such as these really started 17 years ago in Japan, when her aunt was diagnosed with lukemia. In response, Stefanie’s mother and aunt started a much-needed registry of bone marrow donors in Japan. Stefanie has personally been involved in numerous bone marrow drives. “This one has been the most successful of all of them” she says. Matchmaker, a function of the Mavin Foundation, is a national program dedicated to mixed race bone marrow donor recruitment and education and is under the umbrella of the National Marrow Donor Program....

Local Pianists Earn National Membership
Posted by on December 18, 2007
In the yearly auditions of the National Guild of Piano Teachers, 116 Napa County piano pupils earned memberships in the National Fraternity of Student Musicians. Two students received additional honors: Sasha Fulton was a Five-Year National Winner, and Michelle Holy earned the College Sophomore Diploma. Auditions were held May 14 to 18 in Napa at the Napa Valley Baptist Church and in Angwin at Pacific Union College. Students participating were from the classes of Ruth Andrieux, Lois Case, Judith Cochran, Angela D’Angelo, Anita Ford, Winsome Gane, Donna Kuntz, Janel Tasker, Phyllis Webster, and Lynn Wheeler. From coast to coast (and now also in Taiwan), nearly 120,000 enthusiastic piano pupils participate in this annual piano-playing event held in 843 music centers throughout the country. Each of the student winners receives a year’s membership in the National Fraternity of Student Musicians and Piano Hobbyists of the World, a gold or bronze embossed pin, and a certificate according to the number of pieces performed. Begun at Hardin-Simmons University, Abilene, Texas, in 1929, national headquarters are still maintained in Texas, where Rules and Regulations are available on request free of charge by addressing Piano Guild, Box 1807, Austin, Texas 78767-1807. The names of local...

Golf Pays Off
Posted by on December 18, 2007
Five grand. That's exactly what St. Helena Hospital employee Dwight Boyd won when he sunk a 50-foot putt during Pacific Union College1s Malcolm Maxwell Golf Classic on May 17. It was the first time someone has won the putting contest prize. PUC1s annual fundraiser, held at the Napa Valley Country Club, raised nearly $40,000 towards student aid through the Malcolm Maxwell Scholarship Fund In addition to playing 18 holes of golf, participants had an opportunity to win prizes sponsored by various Napa Valley businesses. Former PUC president Malcolm Maxwell was on hand to distribute awards to students during the dinner ceremony. In addition, prizes were awarded in the winning categories: low net-women: Diane Dillon low net-men: Gary Ortman low gross-women: Julie Ching low gross-men: Lenny Ballew 1st place team: Jay Lewis, Nelson Thomas, Pat Patterson, and Gary Nelson 2nd place team: Bob, Brian, Phyllis and Julie Ching...

PUC Graduation-a fiesta in the forest
Posted by Michelle Rai on December 18, 2007
Flying tortillas. Gigantic beach balls. If it hadn’t been for the 364 students clothed in graduation regalia, one might have thought Pacific Union College’s Commencement Grove was the site of a very large family cook-out. “ My friends and I bought 1,500 corn tortillas,” exclaimed Landon Bennett, international communication/Spanish graduate. “And we used them all.” Tucked away in the college’s forested land, PUC’s commencement on Sunday, June 13, closed another chapter of late-night study sessions, weekend hikes to Inspiration Point, and emergency lunch-runs to Giugni’s. “ I’ll miss this place—there’s nothing that comes close to this experience,” said Kristi Chiang, biochemistry graduate who will be attending Loma Linda University’s School of Dentistry this fall. Commencement speaker Jose Rojas, director of volunteer and young adult ministries for the Seventh-day Adventist Church, presented a challenging address. Rojas encouraged the Class of 2004 to build relationships with those around them and their God instead of worrying about grades as a measure of success. Richard Osborn, PUC president, then presented a total of 380 degrees, including associate’s, bachelor’s and master’s degrees. Nearly 80 teaching credentials were awarded for elementary, secondary and early childhood education teachers. Notably, over 30 adult learners from PUC’s Center for...

Training Executives from Age Five
Posted by Lainey S. Cronk on December 18, 2007
Educational gurus David and Roger Johnson, co-directors of the Cooperative Learning Center at the University of Minnesota, brought their dynamic workshop to the Napa Valley on June 28-30. The Johnson brothers, well-known for their international research, have dedicated their life’s work to educating teachers about the importance of cooperative learning. The workshop, coordinated by Sandy Balli of Pacific Union College’s education department, drew participants from both public and private schools from as close as Angwin and as far as Wyoming. Dr. David Johnson, professor of educational psychology at the University of Minnesota and the author of over 350 research articles and book chapters and over 40 books, has been the editor of the American Educational Research Journal. His brother, Dr. Roger Johnson, is a professor of science education at the University of Minnesota and has co-authored numerous research articles and books with David Johnson. Roger is also a member of the Search for Excellence Team of the National Science Teacher’s Association. The Johnson brothers are advancing ideas that are hundreds of years old, but which have been overlooked in recent decades. They are trying to achieve a form of the cooperative learning that took place naturally in the old one-room...