| New Summer Leadership Institute
              Attracts
Urban High School Students 
 WITH MORE ENERGY THAN Seattle City Light, 20 high school
students came to ºù«ÍÞÊÓÆµ for a challenging summer weekend:
the Northwest Urban Youth Leadership Institute. Funded by the Lilly Endowment,
the institute was established by SPU to introduce urban students to life at a
Christian university
while helping them hone leadership skills.
 
 “A lot of the students live 20 minutes
away,
but they’ve never heard of SPU,” says Veeda Easterly, Seattle Pacific pre-college
program coordinator. In organizing the weekend, she interviewed regional leaders
who work with teens through organizations such as Young Life, Vision Youth and
Emerald City Outreach
Ministries. “I listened to their ideas about what was needed, and they had a
strong interest
in developing leadership in the
students,” she explains. “The organizations also wanted teens to learn that
college
is within their reach.”
 
 During the weekend, students attended seminars on time
management, leadership styles and scholarships. They also had minicollege classes
with Seattle Pacific faculty members Lisa Surdyk (economics), Sharleen Kato
(family and consumer sciences) and Todd Rendleman (communication). The teens
finished with a co-curricular fair showcasing
other segments of SPU life: student
government, campus ministries and athletics.
 
 “Seattle is right in the middle of an increasingly diverse 21st-century world,
and these
students are our future leaders,” says Kathleen Braden, associate vice president
of academic
affairs and dean of student life. “We hope this program will provide them with
a sneak preview
of what the future can hold.”
 
 That’s exactly what happened, say the teens. “Coming
to this conference made me realize I
could go to college no matter what,” says Jessica Chappell, a 17-year-old junior
at Seattle’s
Rainier Beach High School. “God is with me,” she adds, “and as long as I know
that and believe
that, I can become something good.”
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 From the President
 Americans today are searching for a new tone for their lives. “We
 
              are talking here about another set of values — not the giddy sense
 
              of entitlement that emerges out of exuberant times,” says President
 
              Philip Eaton.
 
 
              
 
            A Gift at Any AgeYoung alumni are supporting The Campaign for SPU with the Young Alumni
 
            Endowment. They will provide scholarship support to students 
 
            engaging the culture. [Campaign]
  The Retiring Class of 2003Five professors, with a combined 162 years in the classroom, retired
 
                this year. They tell of their careers and the impact students
 
                had on them. [Faculty]
  Still ExploringMissionary bush pilot Roald Amundsen ’41 founded
 
            Missionary Aviation and Repair Center (MARC) — becoming an
 
            explorer just like the famous Norwegian for whom he was named. [Alumni]
 
 Second Wind
 A marathoner, wife, mother and business alumna, Claudia Shannon came back after tough
 
            times. As a 45-year-old senior, she was on the SPU cross country
 
            team that ranked 14th in the nation. [Athletics]
 
 My Response
 After 25 years, Joyce Quiring Erickson, retiring professor of English and
 
              dean of the College of Arts and Sciences, reflects on glossy brown
 
              chestnuts, home and the Promised Land.
 
 
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