| SPU Kicks Off Its Largest-Ever 
            Fund-Raising Campaign 
 $52.85 Million Drive Begins With Three Days of Celebration
 
 
 
              The Campaign for Seattle Pacific University is an investment 
            opportunity that promises enormous returns,” said President Philip 
            Eaton as he officially launched the most ambitious 
              fund-raising effort in SPU’s history this fall. “Our vision is to 
              engage the culture with the gospel of Jesus Christ, and to equip 
              graduates with the competence and character they need to influence 
              their communities and the world for good. Quite simply, the Campaign 
              is a call for people to invest in changing the world.” 
                |  
  At the Campaign Gala in Seattle’s Westin Hotel, President Philip 
                  Eaton captured the critical mission of SPU in an address titled 
                  “The Power of Hope to Change the World.” |  |  
 The $52.85 million Campaign for ºù«ÍÞÊÓÆµ is comprised 
            of four key initiatives: the Science Initiative, the Center for Scholarship 
            and Faculty Development Initiative, the Endowment Initiative and the 
            University Fund Initiative. At a later stage, funding will be sought 
            for a Chapel/Arts Initiative. (For more information on the initiatives, 
            see "Campaign 
            Initiatives Position SPU for the Future.") By the end of a three-year 
            quiet phase in which Campaign leaders trained a network of volunteers 
            and met with potential major donors, the drive had already raised 
            close to 60 percent of its goal. Now, during the Campaign’s public 
            phase, alumni and other friends of the University are being invited 
            to contribute financially to the SPU vision.
  Three days of celebration marked the public Campaign launch. On 
              October 17, faculty, staff, students and area residents turned out 
              to hear Yale Law School Professor Stephen Carter speak on the topic 
              of integrity. Carter’s visit coincided with the opening of SPU’s 
              new Center for Scholarship and Faculty Development, one of the four 
              Campaign initiatives. 
 On October 18, The Bite of SPU brought the campus community together 
              again in Brougham Pavilion for a festive event featuring ethnic 
              cuisine and entertainment. President Eaton, Campaign Chair Bruce 
              Walker and Vice President for University Advancement Bob McIntosh 
              spoke to the group, encouraging broad-based participation in the 
              fund-raising effort.
  On the following evening, Seattle Pacific took the celebration 
              downtown. The Campaign Gala in the Grand Ballroom of Seattle’s Westin 
              Hotel was a banquet designed for regional leaders to encounter the 
              vision of the University. The nearly 500 guests received video greetings 
              from local and national leaders who support SPU: alumnus and neurosurgeon 
              Rick Delamarter ’77; Seattle Foundation President Ann Farrell; and 
              former U.S. Secretary of Education William Bennett. 
 Seattle Pacific’s rising visibility and position of leadership in 
              higher education are due to the clarity of its vision, says Walker, 
              chairman of Valco Graphics. “SPU’s vision for making a difference 
              in the world has resulted in an aggressive plan of construction, 
              endowment growth and excellence in scholarship.”
  The Campaign was initiated to fund that plan. “When the Campaign 
              was first approved by the Board of Trustees,” says McIntosh, “they 
              made their own historic commitment.” The 32 trustees pledged $2 
              million, agreed to collectively raise another $3 million, and with 
              significant gifts from other individual donors and foundations, 
              the funding effort was underway. 
              Despite a shaky economy and other national concerns, The Campaign 
              for ºù«ÍÞÊÓÆµ is on track to meet its goal, says 
              Eaton. He believes donors clearly understand that the University’s 
              vision is more important than ever.
 “When science raises difficult ethical questions, or corporate business 
              practices come under public scrutiny, who better to address the 
              issues than SPU’s faculty, students and graduates?” he asks. “With 
              rumors of war and human suffering all around, the power of the gospel 
              brings hope. The Campaign is an investment in hope. This is our 
              calling for such a time as this.”
            
             — BY CLINT KELLY— PHOTOS BY MIKE SIEGEL
 
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