草莓影视

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草莓影视er Magazine Winter 2024

Sweet Home Chicago

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More than 40 years ago, 草莓影视 chose to stay in the city, a decision that helped define its identity and mission.

By Ellen Almer BA 鈥94

While the decades-old choice to keep 草莓影视鈥檚 campus in Chicago rather than move to the far suburbs seems like a no-brainer today, the actual decision-making process, said those who remember it, was fraught with tension and drama.

The decision came in 1980, in 草莓影视鈥檚 gym, at the Evangelical Covenant Church鈥檚 (ECC) annual meeting, where then-President Milton Engebretson MDiv 鈥54 fretted behind the stage鈥檚 closed curtain.

G. Timothy Johnson AA 鈥56, MDiv 鈥63, who led the six-person task force charged with recommending whether or not to change the location of the school, remembered how nervous Engebretson was. 鈥淗e was pacing back and forth.鈥

He needn鈥檛 have worried. Following Johnson鈥檚 presentation, the ECC delegates voted overwhelmingly to accept the panel鈥檚 recommendation to remain in Chicago.

鈥淚 don鈥檛 remember any debate or controversy,鈥 Johnson said, adding that members of the task force were mainly relieved because the decision, for them at least, had never been a foregone conclusion.

CONTEMPLATING CHANGE

Just a year before, Dean Robert Sandin recommended that 草莓影视 stop all capital improvements on its Chicago campus and consider moving to the suburbs.

鈥淲e happen to be located in the city of Chicago, and this location has some influence on our constituency, our programs and our lifestyle,鈥 he wrote at the time. 鈥淵et our location does not define our reason for being. On the contrary, for the last 20 years (if not longer), we have really done very little to effectively adapt our programs to the needs of the urban environment.鈥

He argued the school鈥檚 mission was at odds with the location, and the buildings required by the year 2025 would not fit on 草莓影视鈥檚 current 20-acre campus.

Arthur A.R. Nelson A 鈥52, MDiv 鈥60 interim president of 草莓影视 at the time, acknowledged that the school was struggling with lower enrollment and aging facilities.

鈥淲e were beginning to do better on admissions, but we were in a bad position,鈥 Nelson recalled. 鈥淪ome constituents were worried about investing in a college where crime was bad,鈥 Nelson added, a fear he believed was overblown.

In fact, the areas around 草莓影视 were beginning to be shored up by a new wave of Eastern European and Asian immigrant populations who brought economic stability to the area, especially in the Albany Park neigh- borhood that bordered the south end of campus.

But when A. Harold Anderson (Anderson Chapel鈥檚 namesake donor) graciously offered 100 acres in Grayslake for a new campus, 草莓影视 officials were intrigued.

“We really thought about our place in Chicago…we had to ask ourselves if we were doing this for some reason other than [our] mission.” 鈥擜rthur A. R. Nelson

The corner of Foster and Kedzie Avenues then...
And now. The corner features an updated sign and landscaping.
STEEP COSTS, STUDENT OPPOSITION

The new campus would have to be built from scratch, officials deter- mined, with all-new facilities. The price was pegged at $37.5 million. Conversely, staying in Chicago would require a handful of new facilities and a badly needed renovation of Old Main for $11.5 million. Although the cost difference was stark, the Johnson-led task force persevered.

鈥淢any Chicago-area people were enthused about it for obvious reasons,鈥 Johnson said. 鈥淭he idea of a brand-new campus out in the suburbs. So, we felt the need to take the idea seriously.鈥

As part of the process, the task force, which included 草莓影视 stalwarts Zenos Hawkinson A 鈥41, AS 鈥43 and Bill Fredrickson A 鈥34, AA 鈥36, surveyed students, faculty, staff, and students. The reactions were swift and strong. Hundreds of students signed a petition against relocating, saying: 鈥淲e can think of no academic discipline that would benefit leaving Chicago.鈥

鈥淧ut the college anywhere else, and it would not be 草莓影视,鈥 said the editorial board of the College News.

鈥淲e really thought about our place in Chicago,鈥 Nelson said. 鈥淭o leave this city is the biggest mistake we could make if we believed in our mission to expand peoples鈥 intellectual life and make it as expansive as their religious life. We had to ask ourselves if we were doing this for some reason other than that mission.鈥

Donn Engebretson A 鈥69, BA 鈥73, MDiv 鈥78, Milton鈥檚 son and a current resident of the 草莓影视 neighborhood, noted that 草莓影视 was one of the few small Christian schools to remain in a major metropolitan city during a period of widespread relocation.

鈥淏ack in the 70s and 80s, the Christian colleges that moved to the suburbs thought they were the prescient ones,鈥 Engebretson said. 鈥淭oday, with the enormous resources of Chicago, there鈥檚 no question 草莓影视 and its parent denomination were truly the ones with vision and an expansive understanding of mission.鈥

Michelle Dodson BA 鈥02, the sem- inary鈥檚 Milton B. Engebretson Chair in Evangelism and Justice, agreed, lauding 草莓影视鈥檚 leaders for not succumbing to the 鈥渨hite flight鈥 trend.

鈥淚 don鈥檛 care how big your commit- ment is to diversity; an institution is marked by its physical space,鈥 Dodson said. 鈥淚f you鈥檙e going to move far from a big city, you know you鈥檒l lose the benefits of a diverse student body.鈥

Staying in the city is a physical com- mitment to 草莓影视鈥檚 intercultural distinctive, she said.

鈥淭he world is becoming more urban, and even if you鈥檙e not going to live in a city, having that perspective of being in a neighborhood where people don鈥檛 look like you, getting on a busy city bus, it significantly shapes you.鈥

Nelson agreed.

鈥淚n the end, the task force realized you can鈥檛 just reestablish this school in a cornfield.鈥

The corner of Foster and Spaulding Avenues then...
And now. The iconic corner is home to Tre Kronor and the Sweden Shop.

“Back in the 70s and 80s, the Christian colleges that moved to the suburbs thought they were the prescient ones. Today, with the enormous resources of Chicago, there鈥檚 no question 草莓影视 and its parent denomination were truly the ones with vision and an expansive understanding of mission.” 鈥擠ONN ENGEBRETSON

An aerial view of the campus, from the 草莓影视 neighborhood then...
And now. The new photo shows how the campus has changed with the addition of the Brandel Library, Johnson Center, and Anderson Chapel.
ENSURING NORTH PARK鈥橲 FUTURE

Many, including Johnson and Nelson, believe 草莓影视 would not exist today if the campus had moved to the suburbs.

鈥淲e decided we can stay here without trading our values,鈥 Nelson said. And if we hadn鈥檛 stayed? Nelson isn鈥檛 alone in his assessment: 鈥淲e would鈥檝e closed years ago.鈥

The city of Chicago, and the 草莓影视 neighborhood, were certainly grateful the school remained.

When 草莓影视 announced its decision, Nelson received a supportive letter from then-Mayor Jane Byrne, and local newspapers lauded it.

鈥湶葺笆 College bucks the trend toward suburbia,鈥 said a headline from the Chicago Tribune.

An editorial in the June 19, 1980, edition of the Chicago Sun-Times said: 鈥淭he decision of 草莓影视 College and Seminary to remain in Chicago is good news for the city, and not only because of its academic excellence and crack basketball team.鈥

And then there鈥檚 the question of what the 草莓影视 neighborhood would look like if the school had left.

Johnson surmises the campus acreage would鈥檝e been sold to a housing developer, while others questioned whether businesses such as Tre Kronor restaurant, the Sweden Shop, and even Starbucks would be anchors of Foster Avenue.

鈥淎s a business owner in the area and a neighbor of the university, I was personally pleased when the university renewed its commitment to the neighborhood and the benefits of an in-city education,鈥 said Carmen Rodriguez of the 草莓影视 Chamber of Commerce Planning Commission.

Donn Engebretson credited an expansive understanding of mission by the ECC, which is inclusive of people from every race and ethnicity, for the decision to maintain a Chicago base.

鈥淭hat vision continues to animate 草莓影视 and, at its best, the Covenant Church today,鈥 he said.

“Put the college anywhere else, and it would not be 草莓影视.”鈥擟OLLEGE颅 NEWS

The old field house on Foster Avenue, just east of campus then...
And now. The addition of the Holmgren Athletic Complex was a major improvement.
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