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Family Donates $1 Million to Calvin College Programs

February 4, 2016

The estate of the late Dr. Bernard “Bernie” and Lorraine Goris Klamer has donated $1 million to be split among the biology, chemistry and nursing departments at Calvin College.

The funds will be used for scholarship endowments and research fellowships for all three departments and will support the nursing program’s community nursing component.

Klamer, who passed away in 2014 at age 85, was a 1950 graduate of Calvin College and earned his Ph.D in biochemistry at Michigan State University.

His research career spanned the fields of biology and chemistry. He worked doing pharmaceutical research at Parke-Davis Pharmaceuticals in Ann Arbor, Mich; the Institute of Pathology in Amsterdam, and Abbott Laboratories in Waukegan, Ill. He then spent 20 years conducting clinical drug trials around the world.

His wife, Lorraine Goris Klamer, was a 1950 graduate of the Calvin/Blodgett nursing program and worked in such places as Blodgett Hospital in Grand Rapids and Sparrow Hospital in Lansing, Mich.

In the latter years of her career, she spent time educating nursing students in Racine, Wis., and advocating for the Arthritis Foundation. She was especially passionate in raising awareness about rheumatoid arthritis, which she had throughout her adult life. She passed away of amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS) in 1988 at the age of 59.

The couple’s children, Craig and Janet Klamer and Lynn and John Morrow said the family carefully considered the opportunity to give Calvin the $1 million for endowments.

“We started thinking through various causes and what would be a unique way to honor them,” Craig Klamer said. “We decided the best way to honor them was by letting Calvin have a gift that will allow others to pursue what my parents had pursued as their passion and work for the Lord.”

Craig Klamer said he hopes the funds will make possible a Calvin education in the sciences for students who otherwise could not attend Calvin or who could not complete their programs because of financial obstacles.

“We hope this gift allows committed Christian students who want to pursue disciplines of nursing, biology and chemistry to do so,” he said.

Ken Erffmeyer, vice president for advancement, expressed his gratitude to the Klamer family for their gift.

“We are thankful for the lives of Dr. Bernard ‘Bernie’ Klamer and Lorraine Goris Klamer,” he said. “We appreciate the passion that their children, Craig Klamer and Lynn Morrow, have for Calvin College, demonstrated through this philanthropic partnership and the investment in our students in the critical areas of nursing, biology and chemistry.”
 
Arlene Hoogewerf, chair of the biology department, added her thanks.

“Not only will this enable us to choose a deserving biology student to receive a scholarship each year, but we will also be able to support summer research for students,” she said.

Cheryl Feenstra, nursing professor, said the gift will help students live out Calvin’s mission.

“Our students, faculty and those we serve will all be the beneficiaries of this remembrance,” she said.