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Mabee, We’ve Missed You! LRC Returns with an Open House

At long last, the JBU’s Mabee Learning Resource Center is open for business. Starting in January of 2024, the renovation brought together the library, study rooms, writing center, media lab, IT Help Desk, Student Support Services and campus favorite, Ground Floor Coffee, into one centralized space. A reception was held on Monday, April 6, in celebration of the renovations' long-awaited completion. The highly anticipated opening was accompanied by an array of fruit, cheese and cookies along with complimentary drip coffee from Ground Floor.

Before the reception had begun, students were gathered in Ground Floor and in the new library studying, while faculty roamed the area, appreciating the work that had been done. The library had been supplemented with the Neufeld Commons before the finishing stages of construction, which offered limited space and limited resources.

“I’ve missed the library a lot, since my sophomore year, since freshman year, so I’m really excited for it to be back,” junior Kirsten Higley said.

Another junior, Olivia Bond, reciprocated the sentiment.

“I didn’t realize how much I would miss the library until it was gone, and then I was like, where will I study? Nowhere,” Bond said.

Although the common area had been well used and loved by students, it could never replace the library.

“It didn’t really feel like a full college library,” freshman Vale Guzman Rivero said.

The new library offers abundant seating and study areas, including study rooms for the students to use. This was a highlight for sophomore Lauren Moore.

“I love all of the study rooms, because when I need to meet for group projects, it’s been a lot harder to find places, since the old library was closed. They have so many good options for that,” Moore said.

Another highlight included spaces for children’s books.

“As an ‘elementary ed’ major, I love the little room that they kept upstairs for the children’s books. It just feels like a little fun space that I can go and hang out with some of my ‘ed’ friends,” junior Malorie McRostie said.

Once the reception had fully begun, the lobby and Ground Floor dining area were full of students, faculty, staff and even some off-campus visitors. Notable JBU appearances included both JBU Chaplain Keith Jagger and President Chip Pollard.

Walking from the old part of the LRC into the newly renovated area felt like stepping from one decade into another. It was clean and streamlined, and large glass windows gave a view into the different resource areas. At the beginning of the reception, the Media Lab was already full of busy students and those just coming in for a peek. The same was true for the smaller study spaces and the IT Help Desk. People weaved in and out, admiring the exciting new spaces.

“…all the natural lighting is so great. I’m like a plant and want the sun. I’ve missed places with windows to study, and I was excited to see all the windows,” Higley said.

The new Ground Floor took the same smiling faces, good coffee, tables and chairs, and put them into a brightly lit area. An outdoor plaza is under construction right outside the building, and the windows will eventually be able to open up to the seating area. The higher ceilings and large windows make the space feel much larger and more alive.

“It’s immaculate in here. The other one was so dark and ‘cave-like’, but this one is really nice. I really like it,” Bond said.

All the resources in Mabee Learning Resource Center are officially open, including Ground Floor Coffee, whether for a mid-study session caffeine fix or a study date.

Photo courtesy of Julianna Jones

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Sports


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Southwestern University Met Its Match Against JBU Tennis

On Saturday, Feb. 21, the Golden Eagles tennis team was able to complete a full sweep, despite less-than-favorable conditions. It was cold and windy as JBU competed against Southwestern University at the JBU Tennis Facility arena.

The match day started with the doubles games in which JBU players Andrew Aylor and Spencer Keeter won 6-2 for an early victory. In the second game, Grant Hinkle and Jonathan Hillock won 6-1. For the third game, Lucas Machado and Santiago Jaime were supposed to play, but Southwestern University didn't have enough players, so the game was won by forfeit.

After the John Brown University men’s tennis team swept the doubles games, the singles games began. Machado dominated the contest, winning the first set 6-3, the second set 6-1.

“In the first few games, I noticed that his backhand was his weakness. After realizing that, I started serving to his backhand to begin the points, which allowed me to open up the court and take control of the rallies. When returning his serve, I focused on hitting through the middle of the court at first, and then I began creating wider angles to his backhand. Overall, my strategy was to target his weakness and use it to my advantage,” Machado said.

For the second single game, Hillock won both sets 6-1 for a quick victory.

In the third single game, Jaime won the first set. Then for the second set, Jaime was able to have a bigger lead, winning the set 6-3.

I felt really good during the game, and I think I did well overall. In the first set, I didn’t play so well, but in the second set I improved a lot by focusing more and playing smart,” Jaime said.

For the fourth and fifth singles games, which were played by Aylor and William Prochazka, they were able to complete a full sweep. Both won their singles games 6-0 in both sets.

For the last single game, Hinkle won the game by default because they didn’t have enough players.

The Woman's tennis team won by default all of the games because Southwestern University didn’t have enough players to play the games needed.

Photo by David Camacho Padilla

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Opinion


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“AMAZE AMAZE AMAZE!” - "Project Hail Mary" is a movie out of this world

When I first saw that “Project Hail Mary was coming to theaters, it piqued my interest. Space, Earth in peril, scientific problems, spaceships, different planets and of course, Ryan Gosling — all elements added together promised a good and enjoyable movie. I had never read the book by Andy Weir, so I was curious what exactly this movie would entail. Going in, I thought I was just going to be watching a space movie with Ryan Gosling. I had moderate expectations, neither expecting it to be terrible nor great. Never did I expect “Project Hail Mary” would be one of the greatest movies I have ever seen.

The movie was incredible. With its stellar use of sound, dedication to practical effects, limited CGI, heartfelt story centered on connection and life, and goofy costumes (particularly from Dr. Ryland Grace, the main character), the film’s parts perfectly complemented one other. Even the use of Harry Styles’ song “Sign of the Times” added to the film’s themes of community and hardship. It is also fun to note how song has become a kind of anthem for the film, according to Gosling, who plays the protagonist Grace.

One of my favorite parts of the film was the use of sound. I was completely awestruck by it. In the most devastating or tense moments in the movie, they opted for silence, and it sucked you in. I can remember hearing the breaths of people around me in these moments and how that pulled me even deeper into the story and the life of Grace. It was beautiful.

Another one of my favorite parts about this film was its emphasis on connection and humanity. Despite this being a movie set in space and including alien first contact, this movie does a remarkable job in portraying a real human. Grace is a middle school science teacher, who is incredibly smart, but terrified of just about everything. He’s self-conscious, isolated and fearful, and placed in an impossible situation where he has to figure everything out himself. And the way he handles it isn’t perfect; throughout the movie you see Grace wrestling with cowardice and bravery and what it looks like to not be controlled by fear. One of the most beautiful things about it is how the journey is affected by Rocky, his wonderful new space friend. Grace’s friendship with Rocky teaches him how to be brave and where the courage for bravery comes from. In one of the flashbacks during the movie, one of Grace’s fellow astronauts confronts Grace’s comments on genetic bravery saying, “There is no gene. You have to find someone to be brave for.” Grace learns this through his friendship with Rocky.

It truly is a heartfelt movie about connection, life and fear, and it explores each topic with such grace and purpose that it leaves the viewer feeling wholesome and hopeful.

I haven’t even mentioned the steady and light-hearted comedy inspiring smiles throughout the film; the kind of comedy that directors, Phil Lord and Christopher Miller, are well-known for, especially in their film "The Lego Movie" and their work as producers for the "Spiderverse" movies. While “Project Hail Mary” wrestled with many dark themes such as isolation, loneliness, and grief, it was beautifully contrasted with Grace’s humor. Whether that was creating a spaceship out of Ramen, naming probes after the Beatles, or thumbs down becoming the new thumbs up.

Overall, "Project Hail Mary" was a beautiful film and worthy of anyone’s time. I truly think that like Christopher Nolan’s “Interstellar,” this will become one of the greatest sci-fi movies of all time (“Project Hail Mary” is currently rated even higher than “Interstellar” by critics at 94%). So, while you can, go watch it on the big screen and bring your friends and family. In the words of Styles, “Have the time of your life breaking through the atmosphere,” and go “somewhere far away from here.”

Photo designed by Hope Brittenham; Elements by Dam0812 and Aperture Vintage on Unsplash

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Lifestyles


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It’s Back! JBU Jail Ministry Returns

On Thursday April 16, John Brown University’s Jail CAUSE Ministry held an interest meeting to reintroduce their ministry to campus after it was shut down in 2020. Sophomore Olivia Bond and junior Hannah Joy Smith are currently leading the ministry. They use Hebrews 13:3 as the inspiration for their mission: “Continue to remember those in prison as if you were together with them in prison and those who are mistreated as if you yourselves were suffering.”

The ministry has attempted to return several times since its hiatus, but it has finally picked up enough momentum to come back.

“Getting it started back up was just so deeply the Lord. I had originally reached out to Frank [Hubert] about it in the spring semester of my freshman year, but I just kept hitting dead end after dead end. Then Hannah Joy mentioned in Growth Group one day that she had seen that there used to be a Jail Ministry and was emailing Frank about bringing it back. We started meeting with Frank and working to start it back- still hitting a lot of walls,” Bond said. “We were like, ‘Wait, we should reach out to Dr. Rivera from the CRJ department, he might know how to help us.’ Then, Dr. Rivera was a part of one of the special B-Pac Chapels-also known as “Bapel”- and talked about his conviction to love offenders. The Lord's timing was amazing and so wonderful.”

The volunteers respond to the call as Christians to love their neighbors through loving those incarcerated. Through spending time with small groups of jail-observed Bible studies, they share the hope of the gospel, learn more about the system in which the incarcerated are kept, and offer encouragement to the brothers and sisters being held behind bars.

There are currently three different ways to serve with the ministry. Volunteers can work with the jail team, prayer team and letter team. The different teams have different levels of time commitment and levels of hands-on experience.

The jail team meets bi-weekly and carpools to the Benton County Jail. There, the volunteers participate in small groups during the inmates' Bible study for an hour. They split into men’s and women’s groups. Some students can become Certified Jail Volunteers through training, enabling them to enter as volunteers. The prayer team holds a weekly 30-minute prayer meeting to encourage one another, pray for any specific requests and for the teams going to the jail. For a less frequent time commitment, the letter team offers a space where volunteers can grow closer together and encourage those who are incarcerated. They meet monthly at a letter-writing night.

The first opportunity to be involved in this ministry is a prayer meeting being held in the basement of the Cathedral. They will be meeting on April 26 from 8:30-9 p.m.

Bond mentioned how the Lord has really been putting everyone in the jails and prisons on her heart.

“Nyah Andrus's chapel had me in tears. How could that love not overflow into jails, especially when they so often don't get that much love?” Bond said.

Before the shutdown of the ministry in 2020, it had been a beloved CAUSE ministry. Professor and JBU Alumnus, Meaghan Ellenburg of the College of Education and Social and Behavioral Sciences, was a volunteer during her time as a student at JBU. For those in the social services, the ministry can be a great way to serve and gain insight into potential career paths.

“It was a unique opportunity to engage in the kind of work I was interested in pursuing after graduation while also seeing many of the concepts I was learning in my Family and Human Services classes play out in real life,” Ellenburg said.

The ministry also provides opportunities for challenge and growth.

“What stood out most to me was how often the experience challenged me spiritually and personally. It was a place where I felt the Holy Spirit continually prompting me to see people as God sees them, rather than through my own assumptions or limited perspective. It taught me a great deal about compassion, humility, and what it truly means to love your neighbor. Looking back, it helped shape the way I think about my faith, others and justice,” Ellenburg said.

More information about the jail cause ministry can be found on their Instagram and through Bond and Smith. They welcome any and all questions and can be reached by email at bond@jbu.edu and smithhj@jbu.edu.

Photo by Hope Brittenham

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