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Automotive Restoration Institute Classes At McPherson College Attract More Than 120

More than 120 students attended this year’s Automotive Restoration Summer Institute at McPherson College – arriving from all across the country and ranging in age from high school teenagers to retirees.

Brian Martin, director of auto restoration projects at McPherson College, said this year’s enrollment represents about double the attendance at Institute even just a few years ago.

McPherson College is the only college in the nation to offer a four-year bachelor’s degree in automotive restoration. Not everyone has the time or resources to enroll as a full-time student, however, so the summer institute gives people interested in automotive restoration the opportunity to learn from McPherson College’s expert faculty on the MC campus during a focused class lasting five days. This year, institute students could choose from classes on electrical systems, paint restoration, automotive woodworking, engines, upholstery and trim, and sheet metal restoration, among others.
Matthew Joseph of Gaithsburg, Md., was attending for the second time this year, and has enjoyed the experience so much that he will be attending McPherson College this fall as a full-time student to earn his bachelor’s in automotive restoration. He said he found the professors at Institute to be hands on and interested in meeting students’ needs.

“I thought it was great,” he said. “So I sent in my application.”

At least three high school students are attending the institute, with Carson Hall of Wichita being one of the youngest at 14. He and his father, C.R. Hall, are attending this summer for the second year in a row, Both are taking the engines class taught by Curt Goodwin, associate professor of technology.

As C.R. Hall sat down to lunch on Monday, he joked, “I’m realizing how little I know about engines.”

C.R. Hall said that cars are an interest that he and Carson have developed together.

“He’s liked cars for as long as I have,” he said. “We just decided this is something we can do together that we’re both interested in.”

This year McPherson College again partnered with the REVS program at Stanford University to give five Stanford students the opportunity to attend Institute and add to their knowledge of vehicles and restoration. Tushar Goel and Vincent Laurense were two of these Stanford students, pursuing postgraduate degrees in mechanical engineering. Goel and Laurense are researching in the field of autonomous – that is, self-driving – cars, but with a bit of an extra twist. They’re working on a car that can not only drive itself, but also successfully complete the racing maneuver known as “drifting” without any human intervention.

Apart from being, honestly, pretty cool, a self-driven car that can drift provides an interesting engineering challenge.

“It’s an unstable equilibrium,” Laurense said. “It’s constantly changing.”

And it has the potential for more practical applications in the future, such as developing vehicles that can handle difficult road conditions or turn a vehicle suddenly to take an unavoidable collision in the best possible section of a car.

Laurense said taking the engines class at the Institute was giving him practical applications for the engineering skills he has learned at Stanford. The program at McPherson College came to him highly recommended.

“The students who were in previous years were really enthusiastic,” he said.

Learn more about the McPherson College Automotive Restoration Summer Institute and see pictures from the last three weeks of classes by liking the department’s Facebook page at https://www.facebook.com/MCautorestoration.

Race Team, Assemble!

The 2015 Great Race team has made it to St.Louis, Missouri for the Kick off of the 2015 Hemmings Motor News Great Race Presented By Hagerty!

The day began by gathering the team member from the airport and registering for the event. We had a wonderful welcoming committee in the form of Corky Coker himself: a supporter of the race and a great friend of the college.

Corky Coker greets the McPherson College Great Race crew.

Corky Coker greets the McPherson College Great Race crew

Our first minor hiccup of the race was a faulty turn signal, which decided to eat fuses. A few calls led us to another friend of the school that let us work on the Fairlane out of the rain. Thankfully we had some help to fix what would turn out to be a faulty bulb.

An enthusiastic supporter who let us work in his (parent's) shop

An enthusiastic supporter who let us work in his (parent’s) shop

After ensuring all systems were good we headed for tech inspection and most importantly race decals!

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Next order of business was dinner. On the way we made a pit stop at the Stiremann Brothers hot rod shop to check out some outstanding autos.

Vintage Neon at the Stirnemann Brothers shop

Vintage Neon at the Stirnemann Brothers shop

Dinner ended with a show as we enjoyed our complementary tour of Grant’s Farm and historic homestead of the Busch family.

The Sheep of Grant's Farm

The sheep of Grant’s Farm

Tonight will be an early night due to the general meeting in the AM and Hagerty Trophy run as well.

Stay tuned for all of the excitement and pictures as we race with the clock on Route 66 all the way from Kirkwood, MO to Santa Monica, CA!

Let’s get our kicks.

Car Show at McPherson College Attracts About 250 Vehicles, Hundreds of Visitors

Microcars and modern jazz, pop-tops and pinstripes, historic racers and even a haircut – all a part of the 16th Annual C.A.R.S. Club Car Show on May 2.

About 250 cars, trucks, motorcycles and tractors entered the student-run show on the campus of McPherson College, attracting hundreds of visitors and automotive enthusiasts.

Robert Bean of Great Bend, Kan., entered the show for the first time this year with what was probably the smallest car in the show – a 1954 Gebruder Ilhe Schottenring Microcar that doesn’t quite reach the knee.

With a single cylinder motor giving the tiny car a top speed of 25 miles per hour, only five of the microcars are known to remain, and Bean’s was the third manufactured. When Bean discovered the C.A.R.S. Club Car Show in an Internet search, he thought it would be a perfect venue for the Microcar.

“I like the setting,” he said. “It’s not like you’re sitting on Main Street somewhere.”

Evan Clary is a 2014 graduate from the college’s four-year automotive restoration bachelor’s degree program. He entered his daily driver in the show – which happens to be a 1967 Dodge A100 Sportsman with a Travco “pop-top” conversion to turn it into a RV/camping vehicle. With the pop-top up, it towered above any other car on the campus.

While Clary said the van was a good car but “nothing special.” As it won a top award for Student Choice, however, it still captured plenty of attention.

“Everybody loves the van,” Clary said. “I always get looks and comments when I drive it.”

Near the college’s iconic Heaston Gazebo, Jacob San Martin, a freshman from Perris, Calif., demonstrated his steady hand and artistic skill painting pinstripes on glass plates as well as a bright pink pedal car. San Martin said he’s been pinstriping since he was 12.

“I was just fascinated by the art,” he said. “Once the brush goes down, you’re in the zone.”

Nearby were the show’s featured cars, which were selected on a racing theme this year – including the 1991 Chevy Lumina winner of the Daytona 500, driven by Ernie Irvan; and a 1964 Shelby Cobra racer, owned by Tom Cotter – author of “The Cobra in the Barn” – who drove the Cobra to McPherson from North Carolina.

If the cars weren’t enough, many other special events were planned for the day. Hagerty Insurance gave kids the opportunity to race with “Valve Cover Cars” down a special racing ramp. Ed Barr, assistant professor of technology, demonstrated sheet metal shaping techniques just after lunch.

In the afternoon, the McPherson College jazz combo and the McPherson High School jazz band played several standards. Later, a team of restoration students assembled a functioning 1926 Ford Model T touring car from a pile of parts in just 9 minutes and 4 seconds in a competition against the clock that has become a tradition at the show.

Visitors to the show could also support the automotive restoration program by picking up lunch sold by the C.A.R.S. Club or getting a retro-style haircut or “mustache wax” right on the college campus from the Fox & Ash Barbershop in McPherson.

The day ended with students presenting the day’s awards, with top prizes going to a 1967 Corvette Stingray (People’s Choice) 1967 Dodge A100 Sportsman (Student Choice) and a 1951 MG T.D. Series (Best in Show).

‘Evening With Automotive Restoration’ Features Expert in Car Journalism

For decades, Jean Jennings has been helping make the automotive world accessible to non-experts – or, as she puts it, “I know the secret car-guy handshake, so you don’t have to.”

Jennings is this year’s featured guest speaker at the “Evening with Automotive Restoration” dinner at 6 p.m. on Friday May 1, in Mingenback Theatre on the MC campus.

Jennings first learned about cars at the kitchen table from her father, who was editor of “Automotive News.” She went on to become an owner/operator of a Yellow Cab in Ann Arbor, Mich., and then as a test driver, welder and mechanic at Chrysler’s test track. From there, she became a writer at “Car and Driver” magazine in 1980 and helped found “Automobile Magazine” as first executive editor in 1985, becoming editor in chief in 2000 and adding the role of president of the magazine in 2006. She now focuses on the website that she created – “Jean Knows Cars” – and has signed with the “Chicago Tribune” to write a syndicated column.

In her career, she has taught Oprah and her studio audience how to change a tire and jump a battery; served as automotive correspondent for “Good Morning America”; been a guest on the “Tonight Show” with Jay Leno; and been profiled in “The New Yorker.”

On television, she’s been a regular contributor to the “Fox Business Network,” “Behind the Wheel,” MSNBC, CNN’s Headline News, and CBS This Morning and Evening News, among others.

An Evening with Automotive Restoration is one part of a full weekend highlighting the automotive restoration program at McPherson College, which is the only college to offer a four-year bachelor’s degree in automotive restoration.

May 1 will also have a “cruise-in” for classic cars, May 2 is the student-run C.A.R.S. Club Car Show – which is free to the public to attend – and on May 3 is a swap meet – a new event this year.

Amanda Gutierrez, vice president for automotive restoration, said she expects a fun evening and weekend with both Jennings speaking Friday evening and the car show on Saturday.

“As the college’s reputation grows nationwide, we are able to bring in high-profile individuals from the automotive world to spend time with our students, the campus community and area car enthusiasts,” Gutierrez said. “Jean is a remarkable woman with a lot of industry knowledge.”

Tickets for An Evening with Automotive Restoration are $35 per person, with proceeds benefiting the automotive restoration program. Tickets can be purchased online at www.mcpherson.edu/autorestoration.

‘McPherson students helping replicate the roadster that won the 1935 Indianapolis 500’ – Hemmings Daily

Metal shaping students of Ed Barr have done this recreation of a 1935 Indy Winning car. This was part of an project with the Hub Society. Check out the full story at Hemmings Daily blog.

 

MC Alum featured in Petrolicious Video

McPherson College alum Adam Martin ’01 and his Camaro are the feature of this video:

CAMARO OWNERSHIP CHANGES LIFE PATH
by Petrolicious Productions

How many classic car owners can point to the single car in their collection that embodies their automotive education? How many enthusiasts can point to one vehicle that set them on their life path? On both fronts, Adam Martin certainly can. As a sixteen year-old in 1990s Minnesota, Martin used his pizza-making earnings to buy a ridden-hard, primer-gray 1968 Chevrolet Camaro…

 

MC Auto Restoration featured in RM Auctions SHIFT magazine

The McPherson College Automotive Restoration program has been featured in the Winter 2015 edition of SHIFT magazine from RM Auctions.  Click here to read the story Training Tomorrow’s Restorers Today by Ken Gross.

Leno and Carini talk McPherson College

Classic Car Garage Interviews AR Program

Jeff Shade from Classic Car Garage recently interviewed professor Garrick Green to talk about McPherson College’s Automotive Restoration program. Listen below.

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