Truck ignites in Finish Line parking lot A man woke up to flames surrounding his truck parked in the parking lot of the Finish Line restaurant at 6:30 a.m. Saturday. A6
Birzer Bandana drops new album Professor of History Brad Birzer recently released a progressive rock album with British musician Dave Smith. B1
Campus coffee culture A.J.’s Café and Jitters Coffee Cart, Hillsdale’s two sources of caffeination, each has its own distinct culture. B3
Christ Chapel benefactors Jo and Jack Babbit, College President Larry Arnn, Board of Trustees President WIlliam Brodbeck, and Chief Administrative Officer Rich Péwé break ground in honor of the beginning of construction of Christ Chapel on April 6 in Phillips Auditorium. Breana Noble | Collegian
Michigan’s oldest college newspaper Vol. 140
Issue 25
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13 April
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College celebrates Christ Chapel groundbreaking By | Breana Noble News Editor Snowy and windy weather did not stop Hillsdale College President Larry Arnn from shoving a spade into dirt for the groundbreaking of Christ Chapel on April 6. Arnn, the chapel’s original benefactors, and members from the college Board of Trustees turned over soil from a makeshift ground, as faculty, students, and other donors congregated in Phillips Auditorium immediately following spring Convocation to celebrate the beginning of the twoyear construction of the $28.6 million chapel. Between songs of hallelujahs from the chamber choir, Arnn said today, the education debate treats students as “factors of production” but that schools need to train them as what they are: “immortal souls created in the image of God.” “Something is lost,” Arnn said. “It has to be recovered. This chapel will be the single most visible act of restoration and recovery that we will commit in a physical sense. It is a
Food fight: Student Fed approves CHP request By | Emily Blatter Collegian Reporter After a contentious debate, Hillsdale College’s Student Federation voted 14-4 to allocate nearly $7,000 from its surplus fund for Centrahallapalooza at its April 6 meeting. The $6,858.21 is covering half the cost of food — the other half coming from the Student Activities Board’s own fund — which SAB members said they hope will purchase more and better options. “Time after time, when we survey students after each Centralhallapalooza, the most surveyed thing people wanted to see more of was quality of food and amount of food,” SAB Event Coordinator senior Shelby Phillips said. Last year, Student Fed gave SAB $6,214.99. The amount this year is coming from the federation’s surplus accumulated over several years, since the group has already spent its $10,000 discretionary budget. “This is seven tenths of the budget that we get per semester,” Student Fed Junior Rep. Brendan Noble said. “That’s a lot of money, and we’re running a deficit. And the surplus, at this rate, if we pass this, we’ll run out in three semesters, which will be before sophomores graduate.” T h e See Fed A2 Follow @HDaleCollegian
statement about something higher from which we take our dignity. Today, that is so often called bigotry, but it is not. It is love.” Although the construction on Christ Chapel has begun, the college is still working to raise $4.6 million for construction and fees, $4.5 million to endow scholarships and a faculty position for a sacred music program, and $1.75 million for the operating endowment. Hillsdale has already raised $24 million in cash and pledges, as well as an additional $3 million for the chapel’s two organs. Arnn said since he arrived at Hillsdale, his master plan for campus has included a chapel. With moldy classrooms and dated architecture, the college, however, needed to focus its resources toward other projects, Arnn said. He said he was waiting for someone who would bring the chapel to the forefront. That was Jack and Jo Babbit. On a visit to Hillsdale in 2013, the couple asked if the college had a space in which students could worship. After seeing the small chapel in the Knorr Student Center, they offered to
help build a new one, donating $12.5 million. “They took us to a room that reminded me more of a wine cellar than a chapel,” Jack Babbit said. “You could maybe fit 20 people in it.” Christ Chapel will be 27,000 square feet and hold up to 1,350 people. In addition to serving as a sacred space, the building will offer room for the college to hold Convocation, music performances, and large lectures. “God’s been working his blessing to allow us to have the thoughts, but, most of all, we see how everyone has responded to add their talents, their money, their time,” Jo Babbit said. “We’ve all come together for the glory of God.” Duncan Stroik, the architect of the project, said he was grateful to have designed Christ Chapel, which was inspired by colonial American churches, St Paul’s Cathedral in London, and Oxford University. He said the greatest challenge was designing a space that could fit nearly all of the students and still feel comfortable holding a few hundred. “There’s really nothing bet-
ter than doing a college chapel, because we know people are going to use it and they’re going to use it well,” Stroik said. “It’ll be used for centuries, and they’re going to come back and appreciate this wonderful chapel, Christ Chapel, your chapel.” Students who attended the groundbreaking said the ceremony made them more excited about the chapel. “It was interesting hearing the architect and what it meant to Dr. Arnn,” freshman Nate Gipe said. “I approve of all the work and money they’re putting into it.” Freshman Jenna Wiita agreed: “I saw that their hearts are in the right place.” Freshman Samuel Musser said he is grateful for the Babbits and the work the college is putting into the chapel. “I appreciate it’s for the glory of God and Jesus,” Musser said. “We see the construction, and sometimes it’s hard to have faith in what you can’t see.” But, freshman Helen Potter said: “We’ll be grateful, when it is done.”
Centralhallapalooza
Robert Abisi and Nick Shanholtz of Lost Kings will perform at Hillsdale College on April 29 for Centralhallapalooza. Facebook
Lost Kings to perform at SAB’s space-themed CHP By | S.M. Chavey Features Editor There’s 16 days left in the “Countdown to Launch” until students are “blasted off into outer space” — the theme for this year’s Centralhallapalooza on April 29. According to the Student Activities Board, the outer-space theme naturally fits the event, which will feature bounce houses and neon colors, black lights, and futuristic decorations to set the stage for the Lost Kings, a DJ duo known for electronic dance music, remixes, and mashups. “We went country, alternative, what do we have left?” SAB Director Anthony Manno
said. “We do cover bands for music, when everyone has their Garden Party and President’s personal taste, we’re always goBall, and you listen to top 40, ing to get criticism, so just by trying new genres and very diverse artists over the years, that’s how we’ve addressed that best.” Rather than a grand reveal of the headlining artist, students can expect daily spacethemed giveaways in different areas around campus, during the week leading up to the event. Lost Kings has reached No. 5 on Spotify’s Top Ten most viral tracks for a week, and the group appeared at Billboard’s Hot 100 Festival. Since 2014, the Los Angeles-based duo has and they all have elements of g a i n e d EDM. With something like populari- See CHP A2
“We’re creating a social environment where things can happen and people can have fun.”
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Professors say chapel reaffirms Christian heritage By | Brooke Conrad Collegian Reporter
Christ Chapel will be the newest chapter in Hillsdale College’s long affiliation with Christianity. Provost David Whalen told The Collegian earlier this semester the college has always been Christian and the purpose of the chapel is to “make explicit what is too often implicit.” A group of Free Will Baptists established the college in 1844, because they wanted to create a place for the education of the clergy. The college dropped this affiliation in 1918, because of tension with the denomination over the college’s acceptance of black students. The college switched to an American Baptist affiliation but eventually dropped all sectarian ties in 1962, after a lack of financial support from Baptist churches. The administration attempted to keep the
disassociation covert, however, and did not allow The Collegian to report on it at the time, according to a 2001 Collegian article. In 1964, the college also ended mandatory chapel attendance. The earliest available record from 1856 says students were required to attend chapel every day of the week and twice on Sunday, but over the years, that requirement lessened as student attendance waned, eventually decreasing from five or six days a week, to four, to three, to two, and then finally to twice a month. Although a few students suggested positive reasons for mandatory chapel attendance in early Collegian issues, several students published more critical or satirical pieces, arguing the chapel was unnecessary and had become a place only for sleep or last-minute studying. “I heartily believe chapel
See Chapel A2
Suspects charged in Barron homicide By | Thomas Novelly Editor-in-Chief After a week of DNA testing, interviews, and investigation, authorities said they arrested a man and a woman on Sunday believed to be responsible for the recent murder and disposal of a Hillsdale man’s body. Police identified the suspects in Jeremy Barron’s death as Jay Scott Clark, 40, of Bryan, Ohio, and Ashley Diane Hoath, 27, of Hillsdale. A group of Amish boys riding their horses through the woods near the intersection of Dimmers and Gilmore roads in southern Hillsdale County discovered Barron’s body on April 2 and contacted the sheriff ’s department. “I want to make it real clear to the residents of our community,” Hillsdale County Sheriff Tim Parker said during a press conference Monday, “we firmly believe that these two individuals are fully responsible for the murder of Jeremy Barron and that there is no additional threat to our community at this time.”
According to a press release, Clark is being held in prison and faces numerous charges including homicide-open murder, carrying away/disposing of corpse, felon in possession of a firearm, concealing the death of an individual, and possession of methamphetamine. Hoath is being held as an accessory after the fact to homicide-open murder as well as lying to the police in a criminal investigation. Hillsdale County court documents obtained by The Collegian show that Barron was killed by a .45 caliber revolver. According to records from Mitchell Research Center, the latest murder in Hillsdale County was in October 2009 when James McKinney shot and killed James Harper in Jefferson Township. McKinney was sentenced to life in prison. Hillsdale County’s chief assistant prosecuting attorney Megan Stiverson said during a public press conference on Monday that she hopes
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