| A Place of Welcome Alumni Board President Reconnects After 30 Years
  WHEN DARLENE Dunkin Hartley ’65 was a junior 
              at Seattle Pacific College, JFK was assassinated in Dallas and the 
              Beatles first appeared on the Ed Sullivan Show. Three decades, seven 
              U.S. presidents and thousands of rock bands later, Hartley attended 
              her first alumni event at SPU. 
             
 
Now Hartley serves as president of Seattle Pacific’s Alumni Board. 
            It was a circuitous road that led her to this place. “Because of my 
            less than sterling academic undergrad performance, and the failure 
            I felt for having divorced in my mid-twenties,” Hartley admits, “I 
            wasn’t at all sure my former classmates would accept me.”
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  Alumni Board President
Darlene Hartley holds her first grandchild, Mason Hartley Hoffman. She expects him to be the next 
SPU alum in the family.
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 For a long time, Hartley visited her alma mater only to attend Falcon 
            sports events. “After my remarriage, I felt secure enough in my anonymity 
            to go to basketball games with my husband,” she says. Even though 
            not a Seattle Pacific alum himself, Bill Hartley is known around the 
            University as a longtime Falcon fanatic. During those decades, however, 
            Darlene Hartley stayed away from the rest of campus and fellow alumni. 
            “My link with SPU began and ended at the gymnasium doors.”
 
 Her reconnection with classmates began a few years ago, when a fellow 
            alumna asked Hartley to drive with her to a planning meeting for their 
            class reunion. “I thought she wanted someone to join her so she could 
            drive in the carpool lane,” jokes Hartley. Prepared to feel excluded, 
            Hartley told herself, “I’ll give them one meeting, and if they act 
            judgmental, I’m outta here!”
 
 At the meeting, however, Hartley’s classmates and the Alumni Office 
            staff welcomed her into the group. “Even though I made it a point 
            to let them know of my failings, they accepted me,” she says. One 
            warm welcome began the healing process that ultimately led to Hartley’s 
            election as Alumni Board president and as a Free Methodist representative 
            to the SPU Board of Trustees.
 
 As Alumni Board president, Hartley carries out what she calls “the 
            marching orders” of the Alumni Association’s mission statement, which 
            includes fostering a vital relationship between the University and 
            its alumni. Among its many responsibilities, the Alumni Board plans 
            events ranging from Homecoming festivities in winter to Casey Alumni 
            Weekend in summer.
 
 Not exactly a fan of the Great Outdoors, Hartley first attended Casey 
            Week end only because she was president-elect of the Alumni Association. 
            But the event on Whidbey Island turned out to be more rewarding than 
            she ever expected. “Casey Weekend is planned for everyone except cranky 
            people: young, not so young, married, single, backpackers and couch 
            potatoes,” says Hartley. “The weekend was loads of fun, and I haven’t 
            missed it since.”
 
 From Eastern Washington to Africa, activities such as golf tournaments 
            and dinner parties have a way of bonding distant alumni. “But even 
            though we have the world’s most marvelous alumni staff,” Hartley says, 
            “the single most effective way to reach an alum is for another alum 
            to befriend him or her.”
 
 According to Alumni Director Doug Taylor, Hartley has made it her 
            personal goal to include alumni who might feel disconnected from the 
            University. Says Taylor, “Darlene cares about people who’ve had scrapes 
            and bumps along the way. She has a genuine concern that all alums 
            feel involved and welcomed. I like the kind of tenor she brings to 
            the board. Also, she’s a great leader. She does leadership in a low-key 
            way, getting stuff done and making it fun.”
 
 Both Hartley and Taylor say that alumni have made Seattle Pacific 
            a place of welcome. “They reach out to others and make a point of 
            crossing the bridges that separate us,” she says. “When that happens, 
            SPU and, more importantly, the kingdom of God, are advanced.”
 
 She hopes her own participation will encourage others to risk getting 
            more involved at Seattle Pacific. “Find one event that interests you,” 
            she suggests to alumni. “Commit to a time frame you feel comfortable 
            with, and come ready to be authentic.” Then she adds a characteristic 
            one-liner: “Remember, no one from your graduating class has yet been 
            elected pope.”
 
 
 
 
               
                | 2002–03 Alumni Board |   
                | 
 
                    
                      | President Darlene Hartley ’65
 
 President-Elect
 Lawrence Brown ’83
 
 Vice-President
 Kathi Teel ’65
 
 Secretary
 Vickie Nelson ’75
 
 Representative to the 
                        Board of Trustees
 Beth Kawasaki ’82
 Del Wisdom ’63
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                      | Representatives at Large C. Melvin Foreman ’42
 Kevin Gunhus ’88
 J. Denton Palmer ’55
 Mia Hays ’91
 Betty Jo MacPhee ’50
 Ken Knautz ’62
 
 Young Alumni Representative
 Asia Rau ’97
 
 Appointed Members
 Jennifer Gilnett ’81
 Wade McIntyre ’74
 Edith Root ’49
 Sharleen Larson ’80
 Bruce Clement ’81
 Larry Hanson ’91
 |  |   — BY MARGARET D. SMITH
 
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