| For the Second Year
              in a Row, Women Are Loss-Free in Regular Season Play 
 THE SEATTLE PACIFIC UNIVERSITY women’s
            basketball team, ranked third in the nation at press time, continues
            its meteoric rise. Sports columnist John Levesque said it best in
            a recent Seattle Post-Intelligencer piece on the Falcons’ phenomenal
            season: “As has become their custom, they’re flying in the stratosphere 
 If
            the run continues through the NCAA Division II tournament this year,
            there should be no question about who the Sports Stars of the Year
            are for 2004.”
 
 At the beginning of Valentine’s week, SPU received
            one first-place vote in the USA Today/ESPN Women’s Basketball Coaches
            Association Division II Top 25 Coaches’ Poll. At 20-0, the Falcons
            were one of only two remaining undefeated teams in the nation. They
            had run their win streak to 53 regular season games.
 
 After the first
            11 games in the Great Northwest Athletic Conference, Seattle Pacific
            led the field in 14 of 19 statistical categories, including scoring
            margin (+18.8), three-point field goal percentage (.404) and rebounding
            (43.4).
 
 Opponents find it particularly difficult to stop the Falcons’ inside
            trio of senior Valerie Gustafson and sophomores Brittney Kroon and
            Carli Smith. Gustafson leads her team in scoring, shooting and steals;
            Smith leads in rebounding; and Kroon leads the nation in blocked
            shots.
 
 Team leadership also accounts for SPU’s winning ways. Head
            Coach Gordy Presnell hasn’t registered a losing season in 16 years
            at the helm. He took a team that had not had a winning record in
            nine seasons, or earned a trip to the postseason, and transformed
            it into a Division II powerhouse. Presnell told the Post-Intelligencer
            he doesn’t have a high-maintenance player on the team. “It’s a privilege
            to work with the kind of kids I work with,” he said.
 
 The NCAA West
            Regional playoffs are March 12–15. The Falcon men have been battling
            to register a winning season and must win all of their remaining
            regular season games to be considered for postseason play.
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  From the President
 With years of experience in business and higher education,
President Philip Eaton brings a unique perspective to the subject of good business. “For
me,” he says, “business is all about investing in a worthy vision.”
  Circle of Influence GrowsNearly 4,000 new donors have supported The Campaign for SPU, including those
    with no previous connection to Seattle Pacific. [Campaign]
  Planning for Casey's
                FutureSPU faces challenges in its efforts to retain and maintain Camp Casey while
  working to preserve its historic and environmental resources. [Campus]
  Talk About ImaginationProfessors of physics and art probe the “brilliant bridge” between their two
  disciplines. [Faculty]
 
 You Can  Go Home Again! Hundreds
  of SPU alumni and families returned to campus for Homecoming. See photos of “Discover
  More in ‘04.” [alumni]
 
 My Response
 Professor Rick Steele writes a letter to SPU community members about the “divine
  grace” he and his daughter, Sarah, experienced at “The Sacred Sounds of Christmas.”
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