| 		 News From The Campaign for ºù«ÍÞÊÓÆµ            
               Alumnus Funds Hall of Fame                   
                  He is a Korean War survivor of the horrors at Choisin Reservoir.
                  He has prospected for oil in Venezuela, sung with the Seattle
                  Opera, and been named Seattle’s Landlord of the Year by former
                  Mayor Norm Rice. But of all the things Al Hendricks ’54 has
                  done, one of the most personally satisfying is funding Seattle
                  Pacific’s Falcon Legends Hall of Fame to honor Falcon sports
                  stars.               
               Each year, Hendricks is a guest of honor at the Hall
                    of Fame induction luncheon held during Homecoming. He and
                his wife, Narci, are present for every major Falcon home game.
                    They vaca- tioned in Europe twice this past summer so as
                not to miss the SPU women’s crew team in their historic debut at the famed Henley Women’s Regatta. Says Athletics Director
      Tom Box, “When I told him I needed someone to support the Hall of Fame,
      Al immediately responded, ‘I’m your guy.’”               
               Hendricks owns the 86-unit El
        Capitan Aparments on Seattle’s Capitol Hill and in more than 30 years
        of ownership has never hung out a vacancy sign. “I operate under the
        Golden Rule,” he
        says, and he has a lengthy waiting list of prospective tenants to prove
        it.              
                Faculty Members Pursue Grant Dollars 
          In only her third year at Seattle Pacific, Associate Professor of Psychology
          Margaret Marshall wrote a National Science Foundation (NSF) grant proposal
          worth a potential $1.1 million. The Early Career Award Grant would
                be a key piece of funding for the University’s growth in the sciences, earmarked
          for new faculty research projects and focused on the integration of teaching and research. One of the exciting components of the proposal is money
          to hire both undergraduate and graduate students for research assistantships. These are “opportunities they would typically only have at larger
          state universities,” says Marshall.               
               Marshall’s is one of more than three
            dozen proposals submitted in 2003–2004, two-thirds of which involved
            faculty. The growing number of grant requests includes those submitted
            to the National Institutes of Health and the Fluke Corpo- ration.
            Marshall underscores that for Seattle Pacific to position itself
            as a premier Christian university, it must attract signifi cant grant
            funding, which in turn allows professors and students to gain prominence
            in their fields.               
               Churches Include SPU in Their Budgets  
                John Clark
              believes that the ºù«ÍÞÊÓÆµ vision is contagious.
              The pastor of Wenatchee Free Methodist Church, Clark says that
                Seattle Pacific is a line item in his church’s annual
              budget because the University’s vision to engage the culture and
              change the world is “big and bold.” He is solidly in support of President
              Philip Eaton “because
              it’s exciting to get behind a courageous leader who knows what it
              takes to form leaders for the future.”
               Clark is among the pastors of churches in Washington state that
                financially support SPU, or are considering it in the new year. “I
                will certainly advocate for that,” says Gary Gonzales, senior pastor
                at Timberlake Christian Fellowship in Redmond, Washington. “We have
                lots of our students at SPU and a mutual passion for educating the
                transformational leadership of tomorrow.”               
               Mark
                  Abbott, campus pastor to Seattle Pacifi c and senior pastor
                at Seattle’s
                  First Free Methodist Church, adjacent to the University, says that
                  the church board plans to add SPU to the operating budget. “We have
                  a shared history,” he
                  notes. “People
                  from this church began the school. We share facilities and are starting
                  a 5:00 p.m. Saturday service in part to appeal to younger adults,
                  including SPU students. To add SPU to our budget is a symbolic expression
                  of our institutional support.”
                  
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