| The 2004 Medallion Awards Alumni Awards Spotlight 10 Who Have Engaged the Culture            
 
 
                           Throughout the academic year, the Seattle Pacific
 
              University Alumni Association gives Medallion Awards to select
 
              alumni in recognition of their outstanding service to SPU, the
 
              community and their profession.
 
             
 
             
 
              
 
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                | Roy Boettcher was one
 
of five members of the Class of 1954 to receive Medallion Awards at their 50-year reunion in June. |  |   “These are incredible people who often go unheralded,” says Alumni
 
              Director Doug Taylor. “The Medallion Award is a way of expressing
 
              our admiration and appreciation for the many ways in which our
 
            alumni are engaging the culture.” The following people received
 
              Medallion Awards at either the 2004 Homecoming President’s Alumni
 
            Luncheon in January or at the Class of 1954 reunion in June: Myra
 
              Adamson ’54 spent 31 years as a Free Methodist missionary in Rwanda,
 
              Burundi and what was then Zaire (Congo). This nursing major and
 
              midwifery school graduate delivered more than 400 babies with the
 
              help of African assistants. Trained in tropical medicine, Adamson
 
              traveled to birthings on horseback. She has written numerous health
 
              care manuals in French, Swahili and Arabic, and has volunteered
 
            this year to be a relief worker in the Middle East. J. Harland Beery ’54 is a sports journalist and 
 
                                                                        professional sports statistician. The former editor of The Falcon
 
                                                                         at SPC, he went on to work as a sports
 
              editor for the Yakima Herald and sports writer for The Herald (Everett)
 
              and The Sun (Bremerton). For a time, he directed the Seattle Pacific
 
              campus news bureau, and then assembled the first stats crew for
 
              a fledgling Seattle SuperSonics basketball team. Today, Beery is
 
            CEO of the Spanish-language Video Instruction Ministries. Roy Boettcher ’54 invested 20 years with Far East 
 
                                                                        Broadcasting Company, primarily in the Philippines, where he was involved with programming and
 
              administrative duties. An avid singer, he has performed in churches
 
              and prisons, as well as with symphony orchestras and a quartet
 
              of singing sergeants in World War II. He spent seven years in planned
 
              giving at Crista Ministries and 12 years at SPU as director of
 
            planned giving and part-time planned giving officer.  William Demmert
 
              Jr. ’61 is an educator, friend, mentor and role model
 
              to thousands of Native-American students. Half Tlingit Indian,
 
              half Ogallala Sioux, this former school teacher and product of
 
              the Harvard Graduate School of Education helped found the National
 
              Indian Education Association. In 1977, he was named Indian Educator
 
              of the Year. The first Native American to become Alaska’s commissioner
 
              of education, Demmert has spent the past 21 years teaching at Western
 
              Washington University.  Judith Fortune ’64 has served on the boards
 
              of both Central College and Seattle Pacific. With a doctorate in
 
              curriculum and instruction from the University of Washington, she
 
              took on several roles at SPU, including professor in the School
 
              of Education and dean of the Division of Continuing Studies. As
 
              dean, she provided oversight for off-campus programs, distance-learning
 
              courses, and summer and evening programs. Today, she is vice president
 
              for academic affairs at Simpson College. Vera Lockhart Goodman ’54 is committed to literacy 
 
                                                                        research and has taught hundreds of children
 
              to read. Her book Reading Is More Than Phonics! is a best seller,
 
              and she has produced a teaching video for parents called “Coaching
 
              Young Readers.” A retired teacher and educational administrator,
 
              Goodman was named a “Woman of Vision” by Canada’s Global TV for
 
              her efforts to help struggling readers find pleasure and meaning
 
              in reading. David Moberg ’47 is a leader in the field of sociology.
 
              With a doctorate from the University of Minnesota, he went on to
 
              direct research projects in the sociology of religion, gerontology,
 
              corrections and related fields. Moberg has published or edited
 
              27 books in his discipline, has taught sociology for a combined
 
              42 years, and is former chair of the Department of Sociology and
 
              Anthropology at Marquette University. Donald Raun ’54 invested his
 
              life’s work with Lutheran Brethren Missions and Wycliffe Bible
 
              Translators in the African nation of Chad. Fifteen years alone
 
              were devoted to translating the entire Bible into the Mundang language.
 
              In 1989, Raun and his wife moved 100 miles from the sSahara Desert
 
              and spent the next 10 years with an all-Muslim tribe of 50,000
 
              people with no written language. The three Raun children are also
 
              missionaries to Africa. Gordon Trepus ’61 and Joyce
 
                Chilcote Trepus ’60              met at Seattle Pacific and were married in 1958. They became elementary
 
              school teachers before embarking on a second career as owners of
 
              a successful painting, contracting and demolition firm. Over the
 
              years, the Trepuses have worked with 500 young people, including
 
              dropouts, runaways and lawbreakers. The couple gives the youth
 
              a second chance by employing them and teaching them a marketable
 
              skill. Joyce also serves on the board of Warm Beach Christian Camp. 
 
       — BY CLINT KELLY — PHOTO BY STEVE BARNETT
 
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  From
 
 the President
 As ºù«ÍÞÊÓÆµ gains notice nationwide, President Philip Eaton
 
challenges the community. “Build your city on a hill so everyone can see
 
what you are doing,” he writes. “Build a reputation.”
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  Honor RolesA President’s Chapel in May honored five faculty and staff members for
 
  their individual excellence. [Campus]
  Three Faculty Say Good-ByeAs they retire, three professors mark the completion of their remarkable careers
 
    at ºù«ÍÞÊÓÆµ and beyond. [Faculty]
  Attack of the Big-Screen ClonesResponse reviews some of Hollywood’s film portrayals
 
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   The Heritage Mile Before her hip-replacement surgery, Doris Heritage and 200 of her students
 
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  My ResponseDebra Prinzing, 1981 SPU alumna, helps readers find God in their gardens. “… I
 
  think the pursuit of beauty in the garden is a pursuit to know God better,” she
 
  says.
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