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contact: Jack
Stenger, Public Information Officer, Andrews University (616)471-3315,
fax(616)471-6650 GROUNDBREAKING MARKS BEGINNING OF SEMINARY EXPANSION
Building's History Rooted in the Andrews Story
BERRIEN SPRINGS - Groundbreaking for a $5.8 million renovation
and expansion of the Seventh-day Adventist Theological Seminary
took place on Sunday, April 25, on the south lawn of the Seminary
Building. The grassy plot of land will soon give way to backhoes
and construction crews, as 25,000 square feet of new office, auditorium
and classroom space are added to the building's existing 35,000
square feet of space. The groundbreaking brought together university
administration, seminary faculty and church leaders from around
the nation and world. Among those in attendance were Andrews Board
Chairman Robert Kloosterhuis, board member Dolores Slikkers, Andrews
President Niels-Erik Andreasen, Seminary Dean Werner Vyhmeister
and Associate Dean John McVay. Adventist Church leaders attending
included Gerry Karst, assistant to the General Conference president,
and Humberto Rasi, director of the General Conference Department
of Education. Construction on the Adventist Theological Seminary
building was completed in 1961 and since that time no significant
improvements to the building have been made. But today, the home
to a whole generation of Adventist graduate theological studies
is starting to show considerable wear, said McVay. "Like our church
and its message, this building has stood strong. But we need to
ensure that this home of Adventist graduate theological study
is ready and equipped for the next century." Classrooms are increasingly
crowded in the seminary and the building lacks central air-conditioning
and sufficient work spaces. A bigger building will also make it
possible to house departments that currently are in separate buildings,
including the Siegfried H. Horn Archaeological Museum and the
North American Division Evangelism Institute. The seminary groundbreaking
represents not only a capital improvement on a 38-year-old building,
but also the inauguration of brick-and-mortar activity under the
"Campaign for Andrews II." The university's current $13 million
dollar capital campaign will fund construction on four campus
buildings: the seminary expansion and renovation, a new undergraduate
classroom building, an extension for the Architecture Building
and the renovation of Nethery Hall, the campus' academic center.
To date, $10.7 million has been raised in cash and pledges toward
the $13 million goal. "It's appropriate that the spirit of sacrifice
and generosity that our donors have shown us will first manifest
itself in a building for the training of Christian leaders," said
David Faehner, vice president for university advancement. Though
the seminary's placement as one of the six schools that constitute
Andrews is now well-established, the story behind the seminary's
migration to Berrien Springs is still a chapter of campus history
worth recounting. Graduate theological education first started
in the Adventist Church with the Advanced Bible School, which
was housed on the campus of Pacific Union College in the 1930s.
The fledgling institution was transplanted eastward in 1937 to
Takoma Park, Maryland, then the church's administrative epicenter
and home to all General Conference offices. The renamed Seventh-day
Adventist Theological Seminary was located on a small lot behind
the GC office building. But growth in enrollment brought about
problems: Cramped quarters and insufficient parking eventually
necessitated the need for another facility. Space problems were
further exacerbated when the church's graduate school was joined
with the theological seminary in 1956. (The academic amalgam was
given the name "Potomac University.") In the late 1950s, church
leaders considered both a Maryland and a California site for the
seminary and graduate schools. But during the October 1958 Fall
Council meetings held in Takoma Park, a new site was considered
and pushed by delegates from the American Middle West. If the
church wanted to heed the "rural-is- better" counsel of Ellen
White, why not choose the campus of bucolic Emmanuel Missionary
College in rural Berrien Springs, Mich? Leading the argument at
the meetings -- and offering the 40 free acres of real estate
-- was Floyd Rittenhouse, then the president of EMC. The idea
caught on and was carried by a vote of 113 to 60. By the spring
of 1959, earth movers were changing the face of EMC's campus,
as buildings (the seminary, the James White Library and the Garland
Apartments) rose where once only orchards and open fields had
been. The seminary move and the new graduate school spurred the
transformation of EMC from a primarily Midwestern, undergraduate
institution into a university with an international student body
and vision. To reflect the change, the Board of Trustees voted
in 1960 to rename to the college "Andrews University." Construction
on the seminary's renovation and expansion is expected to be finished
by fall 2000. The contractor will be Fiskars, Inc. In the last
12 years, the Benton Harbor, Mich.- based company has done several
projects on the campus, including the expansion wings on Pioneer
Memorial Church, Nethery Hall and Administration Building elevators,
and Chan Shun and Harrigan halls. # # #
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