| Volumes of Volumes 
 SPU Library Resources
            Will Top 22 Million Items in 2003
 
 A GENERATION AGO, librarians at ºù«ÍÞÊÓÆµ
            could direct readers to volumes that numbered in the thousands. Now,
            in the 21st century, SPU faculty, staff and students will soon be
            able to borrow from a wealth of more than 22 million books, films
            and other resources.
 
 
 
 
              Starting this summer, materials
            can be ordered online from the new “Orca” catalog through
            the Orbis Cascade Alliance, which will route the items among 26 college
            and university libraries in Washington and Oregon states. 
 
                | 
 |  |  
 
                |  |  
 Two academic
            library consortia — Orbis and Cascade — will merge, creating
            the Orbis Cascade Alliance (Orca), a type of clearinghouse for higher-education
            resources. At this point, Orbis is made up of Washington’s
            SPU, Whitman College and the University of Puget Sound, as well as
            17 Oregon institutions. Cascade is composed of six major public Washington
            universities, including the University of Washington. When the alliance
            is made, Seattle Pacific’s resources will skyrocket, since
            the six universities in Cascade offer many materials that were unavailable
            to the University before.
 
 If a biology professor plans to deliver a class lecture on killer
            whales, for example, he or she can visit the SPU Library’s
            Web site at www.spu.edu/library to find free resources such as books,
            films and audiotapes. The Library has four books about killer whales
            available on site and, by checking the Orbis catalog, the faculty
            member can borrow from among 52 other items. When the merger is complete,
            the Orbis Cascade Alliance will offer the professor 131 resources,
            minus duplicates, on killer whales.
 
 Delivery from any of the participating schools to the SPU Library
            should take just two to three days, versus one to two weeks through
            older versions of interlibrary loans. The Library will e-mail students,
            faculty and staff when items are ready for pickup.
 
 One particular advantage of the alliance is that it allows Seattle
            Pacific students to check out library materials from schools the
            size of the University of Washington. Says Ray Doerksen, director
            of learning resources at SPU, “Our relationship with the UW
            libraries will be very close. SPU students will be able to order
            UW items either by requesting them online or by checking them out
            on site.”
 
 Since Seattle Pacific is one of only three private Washington colleges
            or universities that is now a member of Orbis, the merger will give
            SPU access to services and resources that many schools do not have.
            In fact, Remote Services Librarian Jenifer Phelan says, “In
            terms of library resources that are accessible within three days,
            this move puts SPU in a league with the top universities of the country.”
 
 
 
— BY MARGARET D. SMITH— PHOTO BY JOHN KEATLEY
  Back to the topBack to Campus
 |  |  
  
  From the President
 Cultivating hope in the face of chaos is vital today. "This is the time
for a Christian university to dig down deep into its formative foundations … and
decide quite clearly what bread we have to offer,” says President Philip
Eaton.
  Homecoming 2003: The Weekend
                    in PhotosFrom fast-paced hoops to class reunions where former classmates reconnected,
  Homecoming 2003 was a picture-perfect weekend. See the action here. [Alumni]
  The World of Teng ChiuSeattle’s Frye Museum spotlights an art collection owned by an SPU professor
  and her husband. Chinese artist Teng Chiu’s work has largely been forgotten,
  but Joanna Poznanska is helping to reintroduce him to the West. [Faculty]
  Playing With Joy After an incredible season, the unbeaten Falcon women’s
                basketball team lost the championship game but won the hearts
                of the Puget Sound fans. [Athletics]
 
 My Response
 “The soldier and chaplain are each unique callings fulfilled by those who
respond to the call of the nation and to the call of God,” says Chaplain
(Major General) Gaylord T. Gunhus, U.S. Army Chief of Chaplains.
 |  |