WORLD NEWS & PERSPECTIVES
New Dental School Caps
40-Year Vision
hough the journey from concept to reality took 40 years, the Seventh-day Adventist Church's Universidad de Montemorelos in Mexico has completed its quest to open a dental school. They recently held opening ceremonies for the Dr. Lloyd Baum School of Dentistry with the first freshman class.
The opening ceremony, held in conjunction with the university's 62nd anniversary, began with speeches and mariachi music. Faculty, students and guests from throughout Mexico and the United States gathered in the new auditorium.
Though the school officially opened this year, the seeds were planted nearly 40 years ago when Baum, one of the original faculty members of Adventist-owned Loma Linda University School of Dentistry, or LLUSD, became involved with Montemorelos in the 1960s.
 Drs. Robert Kinzer (left) and Lloyd Baum |
Dr. Baum said the dream started when he was invited to speak in Mexico at an annual meeting of dentists--Grupo Estudios Odontolohicos de Monterrey--in 1965. He was invited back the following year and brought along Dr. Robert Kinzer, a professor of restorative dentistry at LLUSD.
"The second encounter," says Dr. Baum, "cemented my relationship to the group and they graciously invited me to become one of their members, working with them to recruit speakers for future meetings."
At the time, the Inter-American Division was developing a medical school at Montemorelos and, Baum, excited about the work he was doing with the Grupo Estudios, became interested in the possibility of developing a dental school in Mexico.
Baum and Kinzer, then president of the National Association of Seventh-day Adventist Dentists (NASDAD), drew up a proposal for a dental residency program that was submitted to leaders at the General Conference. They also began fundraising in preparation to purchase building materials to construct facilities for the clinic and faculty housing.
Baum and others also convinced church leaders that a dental school in Monterrey was needed. But the school had many starts and stops, becoming first a dental residency program with the understanding that if it was successful, church officials would seriously consider opening a dental school. The school soon morphed to include a program that offered dental laboratory training.
 The first class of dental students |
Harry Vega, an Adventist laboratory technician from Colombia, and his wife started the laboratory training program. Working 12-to 14-hour days, he did landscaping, road-building, plumbing, electrical work, and construction, in addition to dental laboratory teaching.
The clinic opened in 1984 and was operated with the help of volunteer Adventist dentists and dental students from LLUSD. NASAD members were also teaching, even though the residency program had not officially begun, Baum notes.
In 2000, with the assistance of Loma Linda University and Grupo Estudios, the former residency program, was turned into a one-year intense training program for clinical candidates. Nearly 30 people have completed the program and are trained and ready as the need arises, to serve as faculty in the dental school. In the fall of 2003, the Inter-American Division Executive Committee voted to start a dental school at Montemorelos, an action that culminated in the school's recent opening
--Adventist News Network
East Africa Baptizes 181,000
The East-Central Africa Division recently completed its second year-end
meetings since the division's inception in November 2002. The session
was
held in Nairobi, November 5-9, and chaired by division president
Geoffrey
Mbwana. World Church headquarters leaders Eugene Hsu, a General
Conference
vice president, and Donald Robinson, a GC associate treasurer, also
attended.
Mbwana reported that a record number of baptisms occurred in ECD in the
last
12 months-a total of 181,110. In addition, almost 1,000 churches
benefited
from Roofs for Africa, a program designed to facilitate the
construction of
church buildings. Mbwana emphasized, however, division's need to be
innovative in finding ways of becoming more financially self-reliant
and
less dependent on the World Church.
Delegates voted to launch an education initiative for pastors and other
district church leaders to enhance leadership, planning, and financial
skills, which was proposed by the division's Strategic Planning
Committee
secretary Kigundu Ndwiga. Church leaders plan to provide
skill-developing
workshops for pastors and administrators in every union in the division
by
the end of March 2005.
Delegates also voted to accept the concept of incorporating a
professional
Adventist health-care system in ECD to manage all the church's major
medical
institutions in the division. The hope is to update and modernize its
medical facilities.
More than 2 million members worship in nearly 8,500 Adventist churches
in
ECD.
--East-Central Africa Newsline/AR.
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