涩里番

Alumni, Parent, and Family Relations

Connections Winter 2017

Winter 2017, Volume 10, Issue 1
Homecoming and Parents Weekend

厂笔鲍鈥檚 125th-year Homecoming and Parents Weekend: Do not miss these bragging rights!

Homecoming and Parents Weekend 2017 is a rare opportunity to experience all the great Homecoming traditions and earn one-of-a-kind bragging rights. 鈥淚 was there the year 涩里番 turned 125 years old!鈥 will be yours to say for the rest of your life.

Mark February 10鈥11, 2017, on your calendar and plan to join us on campus for these favorite events that can only be experienced at Homecoming:

  • Student Talent Show
  • Falcon Fever: Basketball Doubleheader
  • Alumni Awards Luncheon
  • Homecoming Concert
  • Mainstage Theatre: Oscar Wilde鈥檚 鈥淎n Ideal Husband鈥

And. whatever you do, don鈥檛 miss out on the:

Athletics Hall of Fame Induction Brunch and Ceremony

The SPU Athletic Hall of Fame is back! Join your fellow Falcons as we induct John Glancy 鈥70, Virginia Husted 鈥63, soccer coach Cliff McCrath, and the 鈥78 Men鈥檚 National Championship soccer team! Tickets: $20.

All Athletics Reunion

The first-ever All Athletics Reunion is here. Following the men鈥檚 basketball game Saturday evening, athletes, managers, coaches, and trainers from every sport SPU has ever offered will gather at Royal Brougham Pavilion. Falcon fans are also invited to join in the celebration of current and alumni athletes.

Details/Registration: Visit spu.edu/homecoming, call 206-281-ALUM, or email alumni@spu.edu.

A grand turnout for a Grand Reunion

When a university turns 125, it is a milestone worthy of sound and spectacle, shared celebrations, rousing reunions, delicious food, and a pavilion filled with the singing of 鈥淎mazing Grace.鈥

涩里番鈥檚 鈥淕rand Reunion鈥 October 7 and 8 had all of that and more.

An estimated 1,000 涩里番 took in the span of activities and 1,400 immersed themselves in the Crowder experience in Brougham Pavilion for a light and music spectacular. Featuring Grammy-nominated folktronic artist David Crowder, rapper Tedashii, and rock guitarist and vocalist Evan Egerer 鈥10, the concert burst over the crowd in powerful beats and thunderous rhythms, later to be gentled by the moving reassurance of 鈥淎mazing Grace.鈥

The Taste of SPU event in Gwinn Commons not only celebrated dozens of GOLD alumni 鈥 graduates of the last 10 years designated Ones to Watch 鈥 but was also given the good humor and panache of past 涩里番 Pacific presidents. David McKenna, David LeShana, and Philip Eaton joined the fun, food, and good friends event in the company of current president, Dan Martin.

Four presidents at a Taste of SPU

A quartet of presidents, past and present, were introduced by Alumni and Parent Relations Director Bryan Jones.

Three affinity group reunions, 10 academic program reunions, and 11 class reunions drew nearly 700 alumni to gatherings of reconnection and storytelling on a 鈥済rand鈥 scale.

There was a hardy outdoor gathering at 厂笔鲍鈥檚 Story Pole near Beegle Hall. It was a rededication of the 25-foot cedar pole carved by Tlingit tribal member Abner Johnson and presented to SPU by the Class of 1971. The carvings tell the story of SPU. The rededication ceremony, including traditional Tlingit stories and songs, was led by Tlingit tribal member Tom Dalton 鈥85.

First-time attenders of the annual President鈥檚 Circle Dinner, held in conjunction with the Grand Reunion, included Walter Lee and his wife, Marie, of Brazil; Jim Ballard 鈥73 and his wife, Donna, of Colorado; and David Wong 鈥61 and his wife, Christina, of Indiana. Another first-time attender of the dinner was Wes Willmer 鈥71 of California, who was presented later in the weekend with the Centurion of the Year award for a life of Christian faith and leadership. There were 250 guests at the President鈥檚 Circle Dinner, which honors the generosity of donors who annually contribute $1,000 or more to support the University.

of Grand Reunion photos. And make your plans now to attend the next Grand Reunion, October 6鈥7, 2017.

He led a ministry in pursuit of all kids

Denny Rydberg

Denny and Marilyn Rydberg

When in 1993 Denny Rydberg began his tenure as president at Young Life International, the organization reached 700,000 teenagers each year. By the time of his retirement this fall, YL was reaching 2 million teenagers a year in 105 countries around the world.

鈥淵oung Life is all about introducing kids to Jesus Christ and helping them grow in their faith,鈥 says Rydberg, a 1967 graduate of 涩里番 Pacific. 鈥淭here are so many lost kids and we want to make a difference in their lives.鈥

Sixty thousand Young Life volunteers and 4,000 staff members make that difference through a mix of fun, adventure, and friendship.

鈥淚 love the fact we really are pursuing all kinds of kids,鈥 says Rydberg. 鈥淯rban, suburban, rural 鈥 kids with special needs, teen moms, military dependents 鈥︹ He reels off the subsets of young 涩里番 drawn to Young Life, kids who hail from a wide swath of the earth, including Armenia, Croatia, France, and Scotland.

Says Curtis McWilliams, a YL board member, 鈥(The Rydbergs) 鈥 have overseen a period of unprecedented growth and impact on the lives of kids worldwide.鈥

Rydberg, 厂笔鲍鈥檚 Alumnus of the Year in 2000, points to his professors who devoted themselves to their students and their subjects with faith and expertise. 鈥淲e appreciated the opportunity to get to know faculty personally,鈥 says Rydberg, who also met his future wife at SPU. Marilyn Henderson Rydberg attended SPU for five quarters. It would be another 15 years, however, before they would tie the knot.

Denny, now a father of four, grandfather of six, and an author of books on youth leadership, thrived on the student life at SPU. He captained the tennis team, played freshman basketball, and co-wrote 鈥淭he Fugitives,鈥 a column for The Falcon student newspaper. He only missed chapel twice and emerged with a psychology degree.

After graduation, he worked as the director of Christian education for a California church and eventually went to work writing for Youth Specialties, creators of materials for church youth workers and publishers of The Wittenberg Door, a satirical periodical that enjoyed getting under the skin of overly pious Christians. Denny interviewed a broad swath of believers in his time at the Door, including Billy Graham and Fred Rogers of TV鈥檚 鈥淢r. Rogers鈥 Neighborhood.鈥

It was later, while working as director of university ministries at 涩里番鈥檚 University Presbyterian Church, that Denny received the call from Young Life. Warm-hearted, optimistic, and tenacious, he was a good fit for the ever-expanding ministry. So was his wife, Marilyn, whom he married in 1980. She had been the national women鈥檚 coordinator for Campus Crusade for Christ.

Denny says he鈥檚 still learning what retirement means. And trusting in God to show them how he would next like the Rydbergs to invest their time and skills.

A trio of sisters serenade millions

A decade ago, music major Natalie Closner Schepman pursued vocal performance at 涩里番. Like so many young 涩里番 with a musical gift, she harbored a private dream to take her music in front of 涩里番 鈥 lots of 涩里番.

After graduation, when demons of self-doubt nipped at her heels, she recalled the hard lessons taught by professors Carlene Brown and Stephen Newby. 鈥淪how up, do the work, and give a little more than you think you can because there鈥檚 probably more in there than you realize.鈥 Indeed there was.

Schepman 鈥09 is lead singer for the three-sisters act known as The Band Joseph, that includes younger siblings Allison and Meegan. Named for their grandfather and a small town in eastern Oregon, the musical Joseph toured with their pop songs and ballads for seven years, building a fan base and a marketing team that led this year to smash performances of their hit single 鈥溾 on The Tonight Show Starring Jimmy Fallon, The Conan O鈥橞rien Show, The Ellen DeGeneres Show, and CBS This Morning. Their new album 鈥淚鈥檓 Alone, No You鈥檙e Not鈥 released August 26 and features that original song and 10 others.

Natalie Schepman

Taking a holiday breather from their international tour in the fall, Schepman took time to tell Alumni Connections three things she is thankful for:

鈥淚鈥檓 thankful we will not be on the road for Thanksgiving! I鈥檓 thankful for everyone who has supported this Joseph experience 鈥 parents, business team, 涩里番 who have come to shows. It all astounds me. And I鈥檓 thankful for all the voices of artists and thinkers making love louder during a dark time in our world.鈥

The short list of her 鈥済o-to truthsayers鈥 includes The Liturgist Podcast, Cheryl Strayed (Tiny Beautiful Things), Jimmy Fallon, Christine and the Queens, Rani Ban, Sia, Aziz Ansari (Master of None), This American Life, Invisibilia, and Humans of New York.

And then there鈥檚 厂笔鲍鈥檚 Brown and Newby. When Schepman thought for sure she would fail her music theory final, Newby would give her a tough solo or a pep talk. When she missed a lot of class time, Brown would give her a look that said, 鈥淵ou can do better than this鈥 and let her choose the grade she thought she had earned. Schepman will never forget, 鈥淚t was a C.鈥

鈥淪PU is good at believing,鈥 says Schepman. 鈥淚t鈥檚 good at hoping. But it鈥檚 not delusional. It鈥檚 good at being honest and sober about what is hard in life. I鈥檝e needed all that.鈥

Joseph鈥檚 tour schedule in the U.S. and abroad resumes this winter and spring, featuring scheduled concerts in Ireland, Germany, Belgium, Britain, and France. As for the self-doubt, there鈥檚 less of it these days.

Taproot Theatre Company celebrates 40 years

Taproot Theatre Company

Pam Nolte and Chris Shea in Taproot鈥檚 鈥淛oyful Noise.鈥 (Photo by Erik Stuhaug)

celebrates their 40th year in theatre this year and we couldn’t be prouder of the founders, five of whom are SPU graduates — Pam Nolte ‘76, Scott Nolte ‘79, Jonathan Langer ‘75, Jeff Barker ‘76, and Carol Krenelka Gibson ‘77.

In an era when arts organizations struggle to last, Taproot has been impressively successful. During the founders’ formative years, they developed strong friendships with each other as theatre majors at SPU. Their professors, especially Professors George Scranton and Jim Chapman, provided them support and counsel as they developed their vision for a professional theatre.

At 40 years, Taproot operates a facility with two theatres and support space, serves 150,000 kids and adults across the region, and is seeing a growing diverse audience engage with the theatre. As Taproot heads into the future, Producing Artistic Director, President, CEO Scott Nolte wants the theatre of hope to create bridges of understanding and be a theatre that offers “inclusion, compassion, and grace.”

Making a high fashion statement from the heartland

Gina Moorehead

Gina Marie Moorhead 鈥07 did not set out to be an artisan tailor of woolen garments and accessories. Her early career dreams leaned more to becoming a doctor, marine biologist, or sociologist.

So how did she become the fashion brand House of Gina Marie and travel to France, Hong Kong, Sweden, and other fashion centers of the world?

Growing up, she embraced her Nordic heritage, soaked in the warmth, colors, and textures surrounding her. 鈥淎fter a while, you see that it鈥檚 woven in you, a sense of fantastic natural beauty and simplicity,鈥 she says. She went from Minnesota to 涩里番, in part, because 涩里番 was 鈥渁 wonderfully international little universe鈥 that was 鈥渞ich with waterfront living, sailing, and Scandinavians.鈥 The beauty of the 涩里番 Pacific campus and the low student-to-teacher ratio drew her in. So did, it turns out, the exposure to the city鈥檚 corporate and independent designers in the fashion industry.

厂笔鲍鈥檚 Fashion Design program was the ideal proving ground for her fashion sense, as well as her career course correction. 鈥淕ina is such a creative and talented individual,鈥 says her professor of apparel design and merchandising, Jaeil Lee. 鈥淎t SPU she gained the various skills, strong knowledge foundation, and ethical decision-making abilities essential for creating her own brand and executing it.鈥 Lee believes Moorhead not only creates clothing for an individual consumer鈥檚 needs but also honors the God-created human body in a modest yet fashionable way.

From SPU, Moorhead went to the New York Fashion Academy for a graduate degree in fashion design, which she was awarded in 2011. She returned to Minnesota to be closer to her grandparents and to more fully explore all things Norwegian and Swedish. The home of her grandparents itself proved a treasure trove of ancestral sewing machines, handmade wedding dresses and baptismal gowns, Norwegian sweaters, and a vintage cast-iron shoe cobbler鈥檚 set.

Moorehead started her business and made a name for herself under the motto 鈥渇earlessly tailored.鈥 She sourced small cuts of special materials from around the world, told the stories behind them, made shift dresses out of shirting cotton and pleated skirts from suiting wool, and 鈥渇earlessly borrowed from the boys.鈥 The style editor for 涩里番 Met magazine noted 鈥渉er work encompasses her passion for high performance-meets-high style.鈥 It is quality clothing made to last.

Caldwell Collection Winter 2017

Caldwell Collection Fall 2016

Next spring Moorhead will immerse herself in European fashion markets and 鈥渋nvolve the brand鈥 at the Stockholm Fashion Week.

Moorhead鈥檚 fashion collections are designed a year in advance and created six months before they hit the stores. Waiting for the reviews 鈥渃an make you crazy,鈥 but so far her careful trend forecasting and research have paid off.

What do the critics say about her creations? 鈥淕race Kelly meets Swedish House Mafia.鈥 (To the uninitiated, SHM is a Swedish electronic music supergroup.) And back home, photos in Minnesota Magazine put Moorhead鈥檚 garments on a supermodel destined to be America鈥檚 next top model. 鈥淚 knew I was on the right track,鈥 says Moorhead, who readily admits that Minneapolis is far from the fashion capitals, and yet 鈥渢hat (geographic) extremity can inspire something new in fashion.鈥

鈥淚 like to think that I鈥檓 doing my part to reverse the game from fast fashion to personal tailoring,鈥 says Moorhead, and to do it in a place she has always called home.

In the know

157 SPU Family Legacy members attend the University this year. Legacy families are those of two or more generations of direct descendants who are recipients of degrees from SPU.

9 webcams are trained on some of your favorite SPU campus locations at all times, including Tiffany Loop and Martin Square. Missing the old alma mater? Have a look.

Royal Brougham Pavilion is one of seven 鈥渞eal-world locations鈥 for . Each venue in the online 鈥渇antasy basketball鈥 game has its own unique flavor and playstyle, including music that changes with the tempo of the game.

GOLD Tradition attracts 涩里番 and reindeer

GOLD tradition Christmas

Real reindeer for the petting, deluxe hot chocolate, fire pits and fresh-baked treats, a live nativity scene, and contestant Austin Ellis from season six of TV鈥檚 鈥淭he Voice鈥 serenading Tiffany Loop were among the crowd-pleasers at the annual Tradition Christmas celebration on December 2.

Alumni Open House at Tradition in the Student Union Building provided a cozy indoor refuge for alumni and their families wishing to escape the December chill. Letters to Santa were written. Christmas cookies were consumed. Grinning photos were taken. The toasty, flickering fireplace and soft couches were hard to resist.

Pre-Tradition, President Dan Martin hosted high school students who would be a good fit for SPU. Post-Tradition, Graduates of the Last Decade (GOLD), who hosted the Alumni Open House, gathered at Nickerson Street Saloon for complimentary appetizers, to network, and to strengthen ties.

Don鈥檛 miss the free fun of Alumni Open House at Tradition next year. Be sure to keep Friday, December 1, 2017, open!

Alumni Legacy Dinner Reception

During Orientation preceding the start of the academic year, students and their families arrived on campus for a signature annual event that marks the beginning of residential life at SPU 鈥 move-in day.

For alumni with students who are new to SPU, the Office of Alumni and Parent Relations hosted an Alumni Legacy Dinner Reception, inviting parents and their student to eat, relax, and mingle with other legacy families after a busy day. Attendees picked up some free SPU swag and met the Alumni and Parent Relations staff, while parents got a chance to flip through SPU yearbooks of the past as they shared with their students the joys of being an SPU Falcon.

Retired teacher and pastor Wilburn Sooter 鈥55 wore his original letterman鈥檚 sweater and proudly talked about his Falcon sons Stephen Sooter 鈥74 and Daniel Sooter 鈥82. Sooter鈥檚 Falcon granddaughter Abigail Durr was Class of 2005.

Let your car display your Falcon pride 鈥 while supporting SPU student scholarships

Since launching our effort for an official SPU Falcon Washington state license plate, we have received almost 500 signatures! We need at least 3,000 more signatures before the Department of Licensing considers the SPU plate series. Help make it happen by letting them know you’re interested! Go to the online signature form here: spu.edu/licenseplate.

When the plates become available, each purchase will contribute $28 to support SPU scholarships.

Wise wins philanthropy award

This year, Idaho鈥檚 Ralph J. Comstock Jr Light of Philanthropy Award was presented by St. Luke鈥檚 Health Foundation to three members of one family in honor of their commitment to leadership, philanthropy, and humanitarianism for six generations.

Janelle Wise 鈥00 and her father Harry Bettis and sister Laura Bettis provide guidance for the Laura Moore Cunningham Foundation. One of Idaho鈥檚 largest charitable foundations, and named for one of the state鈥檚 chief philanthropists, it has provided more than $90.5 million to hospitals and other health-related causes, social services, art, recreation, and educational scholarships.

A mother of four and an SPU psychology major, Wise also holds a master鈥檚 degree in counseling from the University of Idaho. A member of Falconettes, she has been a director of the Cunningham Foundation for 15 years. An avid adventurer, she has traveled to more than 40 countries and to every state in the Union.

Exploration of genetic ties

Alondra Nelson

The annual Day of Common Learning on October 26, 2016, took a fascinating look at the social and political significance of the increased interest in genealogy and examination of family trees. Keynote speaker Alondra Nelson is dean of social science and professor of sociology and gender studies at Columbia University. Her essays and commentary have appeared in the national media and she is author of The Social Life of DNA: Race, Reparations, and Reconciliation after the Genome.

A variety of seminars around the topic were open to faculty, staff, students, and alumni. They included 鈥淐rafting the Past: Writing Your Story as a Means of Empowerment鈥 and 鈥淭racing American Catholicism: From Archbishop John Carroll to Vice President Joe Biden.鈥 In a special emphasis, University Archivist Adrienne Meier explored the roots of mission in 厂笔鲍鈥檚 founding in her seminar titled 鈥淓ngaging the Culture and Changing the World for 125 Years.鈥

Don鈥檛 miss the Day of Common Learning in October 2017 when alumni are again invited to 鈥渄ive deeper鈥 and learn alongside the on-campus community.

Campus jobs

Mail Clerk 鈥 Counter Service. Provide primary customer service to the SPU community at Mailing Services service counter. Sell stamps and mailing supplies, answer phones, sort and track packages, and resolve customer issues.

For more information and to apply for this and other open positions at SPU, visit .

Alumni bookshelf

, by Moorea Seal McDaniel 鈥09

Sasquatch Books, 2016

Diary

Book cover by Jenny Moyer 鈥98

Henry Holt/Macmillan, 2016

Hardcover Fiction

Connections Winter 2017
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涩里番, Engaging the Culture, Changing the World

The Office of Alumni, Parent, and Family Relations
Walls Advancement Center
206-281-ALUM (206-281-2586)

alumni@spu.edu

Open weekdays, 8 a.m.鈥5 p.m. Visitors welcome!

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