|  Letters to the Editor
 Response just keeps getting better and better with every
            issue. It is so good these days that I read it from cover to cover.
            The Winter 2004 issue with a focus on business was of particular
            interest to me since I have found myself in recent years speaking
            at management seminars for such international business groups as
            Samsung Aerospace and Rolls Royce International. Although my fields
            are theology and Asian studies, I have found that business leaders
            are interested in doing the right thing and that there is a deep
            concern for building character as well as making a profit. Response            and SPU are to be complimented for providing leadership in the world
            of business, and doing so from a Christian perspective.
 — Daniel James Adams ’65, Jeonbuk,
         Korea
 I JUST READ THE MAX DEPREE interview in the SPU Response.
              I want to thank President Eaton, the University and especially
              Sarah Jio and Jennifer Johnson Gilnett for this great piece. I’ve
              had the privilege of being a member of the Herman Miller family
              for the past 26 years, the past 15 in Seattle. This interview captures
              Max as he lived and led Herman Miller. He is the real deal. Thanks
              for honoring and featuring a great leader and a man of God.— Jerry
            Koster, Herman Miller, Seattle, Wash.
 THE ARTICLES AND LETTERS in Response draw
              me to write with a plea for balance, particularly as it relates
              to the magazine’s
              recent emphasis on “successful” businesspersons taking “biblical” principles
              to the world. Not bad in its own right, if admitted as a bias,
              yet problematic in a pluralistic society and age. A worldview
              that perpetuates the dichotomies of society in terms of sacred/secular,
              Christian/ non-Christian business and the like, equating this blend
              of market spirituality with living a spiritual life, undermines
              any honest attempt to serve together with diverse communities
              to get anything worthwhile done. Until the purveyors of this outlook
              recognize they are shutting out a majority of the world and,
              I would say, a large segment of God’s people, we
              will never move beyond the Us/Them thinking that has held back
              a full expression of E Pluribus Unum, a fundamental of
              our nation many of the “faithful” can’t seem to handle.             
             My nine years as a
              chaplain among homeless persons has revealed mountains of tensions
              between the life of faith and the “success” orientation of
              American society, or Seattle Pacific. I’m not saying that all
              these folks you exemplified in Response aren’t doing great things
              or aren’t good people. I think I’m reacting to the slickness
              of the “beautiful people” who are the focus because they are “successful
              Christians.” That’s a bit scary to me as a spiritual leader,
              as a person who works with wonderful friends of all religious
              traditions, and as someone who learned long ago that while we all
              focus our attention on the Great People, it is the Little Folks
              who often bring the message, the good news, we most desperately
            need to hear. — Chris Highland ’78, Chaplain, Interfaith Homeless
            Chaplaincy, San Rafael, Calif.
 Congratulations to the Alumnus of the Year
 THE GENEROSITY OF
              SPU Alumnus of the Year Ed Vander Pol and his company,
              Oak Harbor Freight Lines, allows Northwest Harvest to provide a
              diverse selection of nutritious food to our clients. To get by,
              many of our clients feed their families the same low-cost packaged
              foods day after day. The hundreds of thousands of pounds of fruit
              and vegetables we receive through Oak Harbor Freight Lines improves
            both their physical health and their spirit, as this client shares:
  “Today
              I came to your food bank with my niece, because I didn’t have enough
              food in my house to make a meal or enough canned goods and dried
              food items that would stretch until next Friday at which time I
              would have some money. The caring and friendliness that your staff
              showed my niece and me was unbelievable.... When I walked out
              of your door I felt renewed, with a little more pep in my step
              because Northwest Harvest showed me that people care. Again, thank
            you.”
              On behalf of this client and the thousands of others served
                by Northwest Harvest, I would like to extend my gratitude and
              congratulations to Ed Vander Pol, a true leader in the fight
              against hunger. — Shelley Rotondo, Executive Director, Northwest
              Harvest, Seattle, Wash.
 Thoughts on Science and Faith              
                I’VE DAWDLED OVER WRITING my reaction
              to a letter in the winter issue of Response. The writer was dismissive
              of scientific knowledge and repulsed by current stem cell research.
              Time has persuaded me that unless supporters of science speak up
              in the ongoing — and dare I say “unnecessary” — debate over creationism
              versus evolutionary evidence, the battle will be lost to those
              who cherish literal readings of the Scriptures over the observable
            phenomena of our planet and our universe.              
                It appears that the religious
              fervor that led to the destruction of the libraries in Alexandria 
                                                                                    1,600 years ago — an event that did immeasurable damage to
              the progress of civilization — is still a force today. Religious
              faith — that “incredulous leap” in the words of theologian Paul
              Tillich — does not require science for support just as science
              must be founded solely on physical observations and extrapolations
            instead of faith.               
               Sadly, I recall sitting in a Survey of Physics
              class at SPC in the early ’50s and being told that space travel
              was an impossibility “because a force exerted in a vacuum would
              bring no movement.” (The professor was oblivious to the fact that
              the opposing force is exerted against the front of the expelling
            container.)              
               It is even sadder that, with all of its efforts and
              excellence in the SPU science departments today, the scholarly
              reputation of SPU is diminished by the presence of the Discovery
              Institute on campus. Promoting an “intelligent design” theory seems
              to demonstrate a lack of faith. One’s faith should not be so fragile
              that one is compelled to resist any theories that confound a literal
            interpretation of Genesis.— Dan Näsman ’55, Port Townsend, Wash.
 Editor’s
              Note: Although SPU has co-sponsored some events with the Discovery
              Institute, people have on occasion assumed a connection between
              the organization and SPU that does not exist. Vice President for
              Academic Affairs Les Steele says, “The Discovery Institute is not
              on campus nor is there any official relationship between Seattle
            Pacific University and the Discovery Institute.”            
                    
             A Team With Passion, Leadership and Class            
             CONGRATULATIONS TO THE
              SPU women’s basketball team for another phenomenal season! What
              Coach Presnell, his staff and the players have accomplished over
              the past two seasons is truly amazing. They’ve been such a joy
              to watch, and they’re great representatives of SPU. With all the
              negative things reported in the media about sports and athletes,
              the SPU women’s program is a shining example of what is good about
              athletics. These women play hard, smart and as a team, and the
            results over the past two seasons have been incredible.             
             My daughter,
              Betsy, is in the sixth grade, and has gone to the Falcon Girls
              Basketball Camp the last three summers. As a result, we have come
              to know several of the women players. These women are not only
              great basketball players on the court, but great people off the
              court. I can’t begin to explain what it has meant to our family,
              especially Betsy, to be able to watch this team, and to see such
              effort, passion, leadership and class. 
 These are people and
              experiences that Betsy will remember forever.— Steve Kingma, Bellevue,
            Wash.
 MY WIFE AND I WERE convinced that watching Falcon women’s basketball
              was the sports bargain of the Seattle area. We watched a TEAM and
              not a group of individuals. Coach Presnell again assembled a talented
              group of young women who played an enthusiastic, selfless, disciplined
              and exciting game. 
 The team was our team and made us proud
              to be associated with ºù«ÍÞÊÓÆµ.— Andy Montana ’51
            and Kay Montana, Edmonds, Wash.
 Memories of a Favorite Professor 
            
             Editor’s
              Note: The following is a recent campus email conversation about
            the late Seattle Pacific Professor of Economics M.B. Miller. 
             “HEAVEN
            IS THE LAST PLACE I want to find myself.” M.B. Miller. This
            was one small part of [Professor of Theatre] George Scranton’s “JB” lecture
              in UCOR 1000 plenary session Wednesday last.— Michael Macdonald,
              Professor of European Studies
  MICHAEL, ET AL.: For “newer” faculty
              members: M.B. Miller was a “legend in his own time,” and greatly
              admired by us (then) “younger” faculty. He was noted for his wit
              and wisdom, his liberality and his laughter — and his many “quips.” As
              he would get up from the “faculty” table in the SUB (where many
              of us would gather for coffee), he might say, “Well, I have other
              fish to fry that are not of this pan,” or “I have other sheep to
              fold that are not of this pen.” The quip that I quoted, which Michael
              alluded to, was classic M.B. and has now come true. Since his death
              a number of years ago, he is now in the “last place he wanted to
              find himself — in heaven.” May his memory still remain with us
              who are not yet there. He was one of those grand faculty members
              who make SPU the kind of place in which I have been able to live,
              love and thrive.— George Scranton ’69, Professor of Theatre
 SEEING
              THE REMINISCENCES of M.B. Miller reminds me of my student days
              at SPC. Frequently, the highlights of my week were hearing him
              read chapel announcements in the mornings. It wasn’t that I had
              such a pathetic lifestyle, but that M.B. was exceptionally gifted,
              making the mundane delightfully humorous. — Lyle Peter ’72, Professor
            of Chemistry
 CELEBRATING THE MEMORIES of M.B., quite simply, make
              my day. May his memory (continue to) be blessed.— Frank Spina,
            Professor of Old Testament
 WITH ALL OF THE CLASSES I took from M.B.
              
 I should have all kinds of M.B. quotes. The only thing I can
              remember is that in one of his classes he said that the population
              explosion was due to the invention of the station wagon.— Mel Gimmaka ’66,
            Priest, St. Innocent Orthodox Church, Everson, Wash.
 Encouraging
            Tired Saints            
             ORCHIDS TO YOU! As a still-functioning member of the
              class of ’52, I am always thankful for Seattle Pacific and that
              I was blessed to have my four years of undergraduate study there.
              As for your publication, I have watched it through the years and
              am thrilled to see the caliber to which it has come. To Jennifer
              and staff, I would say God bless you. You are making a difference
              in God’s kingdom as you encourage often tired saints and give cause
              for praise and thanksgiving to many alums serving all over the
              globe.— Harry Oldenburger ’52, Retired Pastor, Vancouver,
              Wash.
 
 
 
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