Community WSSU Nursing School Receives $1 Million Gift By MARK R. MOSS Chronicle Suff Writer In whit school officials said may be the largest donation ever given to a state-supported nursing program, Winston-Salem State Uni versity announced Tuesday a Sl million endowment from a donor who asked that he remain anony mous. A beaming Cleon F. Thomp son, the school's chancellor, made the "historical announcement'' in front of the F.L. Atkins Nursing Building and before a sizable gath ering of students, school officials and media. He described the gift as the largest "ever given to this school." The moment he announced the $1 million endowed gift, the crowd burst into applause. "I'm . sure the students applauded because a major portion will be used for student scholar ships," Thompson said, smiling at them. The faculty applauded, he added, because the contribution will also be used for "academic support. Thompson said that the donor's decision to make the contribution was influenced by his wife's hospi talization and the nurses who "assisted her so well." Besides their other important responsibilities, nurses make you feel good,'' the donor told Thompson. Thompson said that the donor was "particularly proud" of the "zest and zeal" by which the community supported the school s nursing pro gram. The nursing program has. indeed, come a long way. In 1990 the president of the University of North Carolina system. C.D. Span gler Jr., threatened to close the nurs ing program to all but registered nurses seeking a bachelor's degree. Under Spangler s proposed program, licensed registered nurses would not have had to take the nursing board exam. The school's nursing board passing rates had been so low for so long that they had become an embarrassment to the university sys tem. But restricting the program would have denied high school graduates and others ? like para medics and licensed* practical nurses ? the opportunity to-pursue a degree in nursing - the same stu dents the school has been attracting since it began in 1953. In 1992, 96 percent of the class passed the nursing board exam. Thanks to the efforts of con cerned alumni and a new director, Dr. Sylvia Flack, Spangler gave the nursing program a second chance. Flack told the crowd that she never doubted what "we could do with the nursing program." "Oh yes," she exclaimed, "this is a proud day for us! With this gift we will be able to produce a state of-the-art program second to none," she added. Thompson refused to disclose much about the nursing school's benefactor. When pressed, the chan cellor said the man was a white North Carolinian. Thompson said the donor wishes to remain anony mous because he doesn't want to be "bombarded" with other solicita tions. Jessie Draft, a 1982 graduate of the nursing school, cornered a reporter and told the story about how she and other alumni were "out there beating the streets'' to save the nursing program three years ago. She said she passed out fliers and wrote letters in an effort to persuade Spangler to give the school a second chance. "I'm so ecstatic," she said. She then introduced her daugh ter, Sabrina Dobson, who is a WSSU sophomore and a student in the nursing program. Creating Hea Healthy families are not only committed to promoting/the happi ness and welfare of individual fam ily members, but they are also com mitted to the family as a group. They perceive their family to be worthy and unique and are proud to be a part of it. Just as it is beneficial for an individual to have high self esteem, it is also valuable for a fam ily to feel good about itself as a group. Centra] to what gives a fam ily a sense of prjftp, worthiness ^ uniqueness is its family traditions. A family tradition is any activ ity or event that occurs with the same regularity and holds a special meaning for a family. It can be as simple as a parent' s nightly reading of a bedtime story or as elaborate as a yearly family trip to grandma's house, a reunion, birthday parties, anniversary celebrations, the Labor Day cookout or holiday dinners. The existence of family legends and traditions can make a family feel special and unique. They can serve as unifying themes around which family members can unite and celebrate. Family traditions can help to make a family more cohe sive. Because the shared meanings of these occasions and activities are usually understood and enjoyed by~~ the family alone, they can create feelings of warmth, closeness and specialness. In a changing world, traditions can also provide a stable anchor that fosters a sense of continuity, con nectedness and meaning, this can be particularly important for children who need stability in their world to help them understand it. Traditions, especially those that have been passed down through the generations, can provide a family with a link to its past. This can help family members understand and affirm the thread of continuity that~ has contributed to making the indi vidual and the family the unique people they are. An appreciation and reverence for the past also demonstrates to elders ? parents, grandparents and other older kin ? a respect and value for where they have been and what they have done. It helps to CQnfirm the meaning and value of the lie lived thus far by the older generation. For example, the life of grandparents can be given renewed meaning and significance by a grandchild's interest in and appreci ation of past deeds and events. Traditions should be enjoyable and bring family members together, sometimes, however, a tradition out lives its usefulness or evokes resent ment, boredom, discomfort or indif ference. If such is the case, it may be time to retire the tradition. Although many traditions are tied to the past, they need not be old traditions. They can be developed to fit with the family's lifestyle and values. What makes a tradition valu able is that it is meaningful, enjoy able and brings the family together. If these criteria are met and the activities are repeated, new family traditions can be created. As individual family members grow and families change, the value lthy Family Ties Increases Self-Esteem of traditions and pride in one's fam ily also change. There is evidence that a family feels most unique and proud when children are young, and changes take place when children are teen-agers or have recently left home. 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