Spicer College Auditorium
In 1958 Pastor
Rice announced to the college that a new auditorium would be built the next
year with a capacity of not less than 500.
This was truly ambitious because the enrolment in the ‘58-‘59 school
year had dropped to 178 from a record high of 199 in the ‘56-‘57 school
year (though they had the highest number
of college girls that year—45).
Students
pledged Rs1,100 towards the college goal of Rs 5,000, and the Division promised
to double-match what the college raised.
Richard Jonathan and Sam Kodan college seniors, and Stella P. Rao and
Gentry Israel, High School seniors promoted the fund-raising among the
students.
Pastor
O. O. Mattison, president of the Division broke the ground for the new
auditorium on August 21, 1959. Pastor D. S. Johnson, Division Secretary, and
Elder M. E. Kemmerer, Division Treasurer were also present. In his speech Pastor Mattison said that the
new assembly hall was was evidence of the growth of the college, and
expressed the hope that the day would come when the student body would outgrow
even the new auditorium.
The class of
1960 made first use of the new auditorium on Mar 18. The building was not fully
completed, but attractively decorated.
Florescent lights and a new PA system added a new dimension to the
services. Pastor
R. E. Rice, College President, and Pastor H. H. Mattison, church pastor,
conducted the last two services in the old chapel which was converted to a
reading room for the new library in April 1960. The new auditorium was calculated
to comfortably seat 700 while the old was crowded with 260. The benches were moved to the new auditorium
and folding chairs added along the sides. (The flowering trees now growing
beside the auditorium were planted by boys as punishment for going to the
movies.)
The new
auditorium was so spacious that students and staff could move the benches to
the walls and to play active indoor games on Saturday nights. But the enrolment rapidly increased to 700 in the seventies, and
suddenly the new auditorium was inadequate.
In
the early 1970’s Pastor Crump, college chaplain was the first to strongly
advocate the idea of a dedicated church.
The inspired congregation responded and money started trickling in. Some women even donated their wedding rings
for the cause. Social, academic and
mundane programs intruded upon the spiritual atmosphere of the hall, and
finally it just became way too small as the college family approached 2,000.
Two service on Sabbath helped, but created new difficulties. Secular events with large numbers moved
outdoors to the main lawn, but Sabbath services could not.
The College
has a new church now, but the auditorium continues to serve for chapel
exercises, social programs, and daily worship services for the men. Boys
and girls interested in each other still vie for aisle seats during services
and programmes, and of all things, spoons have started falling out of pockets
again during boring sermons just like in the ‘60s and ‘70s.
--Gordon
Christo