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Stories In Focus

Summer Research Institute

Students and Faculty Work Side by Side

While most students spend their summer sitting by the pool, traveling, or working, this summer a group of students spent their summer on campus, conducting research and experiments.

Physics professor Mark Yuly, helps lead and guide students through research each summer.“It’s a time when professors and students can work on research projects during the summer… and stuff.” Yuly laughed. “It’s nice, because during that time—during the rest of the year, professors and students are still working on research, but in the summer you can really focus.”

According to its webpage, the Summer Research Institute (SRI) allows students “to interact with faculty in a much more collaborative sense than in the classroom setting” through research in physics, chemistry, biology, math or computer science. This research ranges from studying genetic modifications in influenza viruses, to exploring spam message detection on Twitter.

SRIforreal2Yuly has been involved with the SRI since it began, writing the initial proposal for the program. He then worked with computer science professor Wei Hu to make the SRI a reality.

Hu is the director of the SRI. He coordinates the research projects, in addition to doing his own research with students each year. Hu said he and Yuly met with Ron Oakerson, the Dean of the College, in 2006, and received approval to launch the program in 2007.

Seniors August ‘Gus’ Gula and Thomas Eckert worked with Yuly this summer on research involving inertial confinement fusion (ICF). Yuly explained ICF as a process “when you take a little tiny pellet of nuclear fuel and hit it with laser beams from every direction.” This results in an implosion which is incredibly dense and hotter than the core of the sun.

Unfortunately, the scientific instruments which may be used to study the implosion are too delicate to withstand the experiment. Therefore, as an alternative, scientists “put a piece of carbon in [the test chamber], a piece of graphite, and the neutrons that are coming out of the explosion cause the graphite to undergo a nuclear reaction.” This can hopefully be used to determine what happened inside the implosion, said Yuly.

For this technique to work, scientists need to know “how likely it is that a neutron would interact with the graphite and not just go right through it,” said Yuly. Until recently, no one knew what that likelihood was, so Yuly and his two students spent the summer finding out.

Yuly’s days at the SRI started early. “A typical day for me would be to get here at 5:30, and work for a couple hours before Gus and Thomas came,” Yuly said.

Once the students arrived, they would meet with Yuly to review their plans for the day. Each student had a focus area, tailored to their individual strengths. “Thomas mostly worked on simulating the experiment using computer codes,” said Yuly. “Gus primarily worked on collecting data.”

The objective of the research project, according to Yuly, was gradually tweaking and improving Eckert’s simulation, so it coincided with the data Gula collected. Yuly said by the end of the summer, all the collected data, aside from one set of results that Yuly is “still not completely sure” about, aligned with the final simulation Eckert had created.

For science students interested in going to graduate school and someday carrying out their own research, hands-on experience during undergraduate school is crucial, said Yuly. “You won’t get [research experience] in a graduate school unless you have some experience that you can point to.” he said. Yuly said the reason graduate programs want students with hands-on experience is because it teaches them key skills that will help them in later research.He said, “You learn a lot of things that you wouldn’t learn just by taking a normal class or listening to a lecture.”

According to Hu, faculty members benefit from the program, as well, “Our SRI faculty learn how to work with students in research, which is not possible in a standard course work.”

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Stories In Focus

A Tale of Two (Married) Couples

While some students may be waiting for a “ring by spring”, four current Houghton students are learning what it’s like to be a student while being married. Juniors Rachel Brunea and Dan Bellerose, as well as seniors Cherith Sylor and Ben Yuly got married over the summer.

Rachel and Dan met as freshman and dated for a year before they got engaged. Both Rachel and Dan lived in the dorms their first two years.  Now they live with their dog Mandy in a rented apartment on route 19.

Cherith and Ben first met in second grade when they played on the same T-ball team.  They forgot about each other after attending separate middle and high schools, but met again during their first year at Houghton. The couple dated for six months before they got engaged. Both Ben and Cherith have been commuters throughout their time at Houghton and are now living in a rented apartment, attached to a professor’s house, on Fancher Drive.  

Although it is a lot of responsibility, both couples have enjoyed having a sense of freedom as well as leaving the dorm atmosphere and living in a real house. Rachel commented, “It’s been a little stressful as we are both working 15-20 hours every week and doing school. It’s been difficult doing that as well as home life and making time for friends.”

In taking on the responsibility that comes with being married, one of their biggest challenges has been finances, both Rachel and Dan doubled their work hours in order to pay rent and taxes.

Dan said, “We had to form a plan and realize, sometimes school isn’t always the most important thing. It’s easy to get sucked into work and school, but it’s important to make sure Rachel and I spend time together.” The couple reflected on a time they got home from classes and instead of doing homework right away, went to Moss Lake, to spend time together.

While being married in college can be difficult, it also has its advantages. As the dynamics of social life around campus have changed for both couples, they have enjoyed the changes and feel like they are not missing out on college life.

On the weekends Rachel and Dan try to fit in everything they haven’t been able to do during the week, like hanging out with friends. The couple take their dog for a walk every Saturday, and carpool with friends to Mt. Irenaeus every Sunday morning for Church. However, despite being busy, the couple has been striving in the classroom. Dan said, “Academically, this has been my best semester yet.”

Dan Bellarose
Dan Bellarose

Cherith and Ben have also had to adjust to the daily life of marriage, but overall they have felt it is less stressful. In the past it was very difficult to try and find time to spend together because they were both commuters, living in separate towns, without cars. While they still don’t have a car, it is much more convenient to be with each other.

Cherith’s father works at Houghton, so she would have to rely on his schedule to get a ride to and from school every day. She commented, “It has been great to sleep in a little bit, walk to school when I’m ready, and just come home and hangout at the end of the day.”

Ben and Cherith eat all their meals at home together and enjoy supporting local businesses when they go out. Ben commented, “Dinner’s not always glorious, sometimes that means ramen on the couch while watching TV, but we love getting to share our meals together.”

On the weekend, they catch up on homework from a busy week and attend church every Sunday. Since both of their families live close, they try to  see them at least once a week. Ben commented, “We see our families pretty consistently on Sunday or we invite them over during the week.”

Since they were both commuting from home, Ben and Cherith have enjoyed the freedom of living away from their parents. They have felt like they have more independence and control in their lives. Ben said, “It’s nice to have our own place to go back to and get away from people when we want.  You can force yourself to relax.”

Cherith commented, “It’s been difficult trying to juggle being my mom and being a student.” In the past both Cherith and Ben could focus on school and work while their parents took care of the house. Now, they have had to create a plan to take on all of the responsibility.

Through the busyness of school life both couples agreed that they still see friends as much as usual. They’ve really enjoyed having a place where they can invite friends. Cherith commented, “We spent more time with friends now because we have a place to invite them to.”

With graduation quickly approaching, both couples have started thinking about future plans. Ben and Cherith will graduate this spring. The couples will move out of Houghton after graduation and travel to a new home based on the outcome of Ben’s grad school applications for Fall 2016.

Dan and Rachel will study abroad in Tanzania this spring semester and will be the first married students to enroll in Houghton’s Tanzania program. Following graduation in 2017, the couple wants to move to Oregon where Dan will attend grad school and Rachel will find a job working with plants and botany.

While Ben, Cherith, Dan and Rachel are all living different lives compared to most college students, through their marriages, they are really very similar to regular students. They take on the same activities and schedules of the everyday student. Marriage has simply made their relationship easier as they get to be with each other every step of the way in a home they can enjoy together.

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Stories In Focus

Alumnus Becomes New Director of Counseling Services

As you walk into the counseling office in the Campus Center, you immediately feel welcomed by a smile, beautiful paintings, and a quiet atmosphere. This sense of acceptance continues as you walk into Bill Burrichter’s office, the new Director of Counseling Services at Houghton. After graduating from Houghton, Burrichter thought it would be great to return to Houghton someday. Now, 23 years later, he’s back.

While speaking with Burrichter, he reflected on his time in Lancaster, PA where he has spent most of his life. He also spent time working in the Boston area, Philadelphia, and even spent a year in Venezuela. In Venezuela, he served as a house parent alongside his wife, who served as a school nurse where he counseled. “I kept trying to go other places, Burrichter said, but God kept bringing me back to the Lancaster area,” he said. After meeting his wife at a summer camp in Pennsylvania and then marrying, they they pursued their common goal of overseas missions. However, their plan to stay overseas was short-lived when they felt God calling them back home to the U.S. Burrichter said, “Sometimes His path doesn’t make sense to us, but He directs them in ways that we never would’ve imagined.”

Bill BurrichterForRealBurrichter graduated from Houghton with a Bachelor’s degree in psychology and a minor in sociology. Following his four years at Houghton, he went on to graduate  school at Villanova for counseling and later earned his doctorate from Walden University in Indianapolis, Indiana. Burrichter and his wife now have three kids, who are still making the transition from Lancaster to Houghton. He reiterated, “God has a plan” and is hoping to buy a farm near Houghton for their family and their pets.

Burrichter worked in Lancaster for 15 years, including teaching at Lancaster Bible College, where he started and directed a counseling center for students. While teaching full-time and working at a private practice in addition to his work in the counseling center, Burrichter was contacted by Michael Lastoria , the former counseling director, about the position at Houghton. Lastoria told him that he was retiring and Burrichter fairly quickly declined. After receiving more emails from Houghton faculty about the position opening, Burrichter decided to ask his wife and kids about the job. Upon hearing their approval instead of the “no’s” he was expecting, Burrichter knew he should listen to God. He applied and was offered the job last April after extensive interviews.

When asked about his passion for counseling and reaching students, he replied , “Seeing lives changed, seeing lives impacted by the services they get, it keeps you going.” His love for counseling can be traced back to the  Introduction to Psychology Burrichter took with Professor Richard Stegen, in which he realized he wanted to interact with people and help them. Burrichter also said, “One of the things I think is really cool about Houghton is that it has a Christian faith foundation.” For Burrichter, “the ability to freely integrate [his] faith with what [he does]… and to be able to talk about faith issues is pretty exciting.”

Burrichter is happy to be back at Houghton, to see students and how far they have come and will come, and to be back to the slower pace of life in our open and rural community.

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Opinions

Our Idolatry of God

Just Another Supplement

Many of you will not like what I have to say; but I believe it is the truth, and it needs to be said. Professors, administrators, and fellow students; even if we have never met, we all share in the friendship of God. But I agree with Aristotle when he said that we must honor the truth more highly than we do friends. So, here’s the truth as I see it.

We have a God problem. That is to say that we have a problem in the way that we relate to, talk about, and sell (yes, sell) God to each other and the world. More specifically, we have turned God into an idol, some thing we elevate to a place in our lives in the hope that it will provide us with ultimate satisfaction, happiness, fulfillment, comfort, peace, etc. An idol promises to give us life. It promises to satisfy our desires in an ultimate sense, in a way that nothing else can. Anything can be an idol; money, fame, prestige, health, beauty, a partner, and even God. When we treat God as a thing — as an object sought for gaining personal satisfaction in our search for meaning — God becomes an idol. For God is not a thing; there is no thinghood in God. Rather, God is that which calls us to relate to all things in a certain way. Put another way, God is the non-thing that organizes our relation to all things. But we have treated God as a thing — a product that will satisfy us — and this turns God into an idol.  

Matt YoungRGBAt this point you are probably close to accusing me of being dramatic, nonsensical, and ridiculous. You want evidence; some “for instances” that explain just how we are committing this grave sin I speak of. I will offer two evidences of this idolatry of God. The first has to do with the way in which we have tried to sell God to each other. The second is what I will call a supplement, something we use when the God-product isn’t working the way we had hoped. For when this God-product fails to satisfy our desire and search for meaning by itself, we create supplements, or apps (if you will) as add-ons promised to complete the God-product experience. God is not enough, else we would have no need for these supplemental apps.    

Several weeks ago we had a “church fair” in the Campus Center. Representatives from a dozen plus churches or faith groups set up tables filled with shiny flyers, pamphlets, posters, bagels, cookies, coffee, etc. One poster said:“What we can offer”. Let’s be honest: What is the point of a fair? Well, I participated in the Activities Fair, and the point was to present your club’s activity to interested parties, hoping to pique their interest with something you had to offer. In a sense, we were peddling a product, an activity, a form of entertainment. If fairs are events for advertising and selling products, what does this say about the church fair? What product were we selling to each other if not a God-product — a God-as-thing-to-be-peddled?

The thing with products is that they are never enough on their own. We need supplements. Any good salesperson knows this. An Apple product wouldn’t be an Apple product without the Apps. The iPhone would be a virtually useless, unsatisfying piece of metal and software if not for the infinite number of supplemental applications one can download and use. “Oh c’mon”, you say, “we don’t do this with God”! What, then, did people line up for hours a couple weekends ago to take part in? To worship God? Certainly not, for we could all do that in the privacy of our own homes or in our local churches. People lined up for a concert — a “Christian” concert — a supplement to the God-product unique to our modern, Western, would-be-relevant, form of Christianity.

Is the church fair fundamentally different than any other fair? No. Were the long, snaking, endless lines for TobyMac fundamentally different than what we see at the latest release of an Apple product? No. What are we selling? Why are we selling it? I fear that rather than approval, Jesus would have cause to invoke “den of thieves” language if he were to step foot on our campus. Lord have mercy, Christ have mercy.

 

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Opinions

Being Queer at Houghton: Sally Murphy ’11

When I was a kid I was known for a few things- crazy hairstyles , my buck teeth I shot water through, and the fact that I never had a crush on any boys at school. Famously at every sleep over- my friends and I giddy with sugar and the freedoms of a late night- we would play truth or dare, never have I ever and eventually settle solidly on the topic of the cutest boys in school. In earlier days I was asked and I smirked and shrugged- even the most popular didn’t interest me. Eventually they stopped even trying, Sally simply didn’t like any boys.

What I didn’t know at the time was that Sally just didn’t like boys…at all. And quite frankly, Sally still doesn’t.

I am lucky honestly. I am lucky that I grew up going to a school that didn’t put  too much stock in one’s dating or sex life. People did or did not date, there were even a few openly gay kids smattered through my middle and high schools and while I am sure they did not have it 100% easy time of it, most of us never really second guessed it. I didn’t think too much about what made me different because I didn’t have to. At home my parents made it clear that issues of sexuality were not issues. I went to church, but I didn’t feel comfortable there for a myriad  of reasons. It might not have been a safe space, but again- I was not necessarily looking for that.

It wasn’t until college that I began to learn the nuances of being rejected.

It should be noted that I am, in fact, a local kid. I was born in Warsaw, NY and carried home to a house on rt. 19. I moved once in my childhood, when I was 7, to a quiet home next to the president’s house. I loved growing up in a college town. I loved the picnics on the quad every year to welcome back faculty and staff. I loved talking about my parent’s professions with confidence and pride, I loved listening from the railing at home while my parents discussed lofty topics far past my bedtime and I loved seeing the students come in and out of our home and my life leaving behind them a sea of unobtainable fashion and wit. But growing up in Houghton and attending the school are very different. One doesn’t get a full understanding of what it means to be in a Christian place until one must sign a paper to abide by their rules.

I remember reading the community covenant for the first time when I was 17. I don’t remember signing it- but I am sure I did. I think I pretended I didn’t to save myself the shame of feeling that I had somehow broken it.

Because, after all, it was just around that time- entering college- that I knew I was different. And I suspected I was queer.

I won’t go into gritty details of my coming out or the nuances of what I have learned along the way, but I will say it was hard. It was a lot of dark conversations, a lot of reading the Bible  and googling articles about sin and a lot of self-abusing. But one of the things that made it the hardest was the conversation about “practicing homosexuality” or “homosexual behavior.” This made no sense to me. Besides the obvious problem that homosexuality was not a choice, I was ironically constantly being told that I was not committing a sin because I was not acting on it. I was not “practicing it.”

Here is the thing though- I was still gay. I never dated in college, I certainly never had sex and I barely dipped the romantic pot but I was still gay. We talk a lot about homosexuality but little about the romantic or emotional that is intertwined in that. I wondered if I talked to a girl I liked innocently after chapel if that counted. If I fell in love- was that a sin? What about walking next to someone? Doing homework together? Where was this line between me just being me and me being the sinful predator the church had made me out to be? It’s a question that continues to bother me. It’s a question that remains imbedded in the community covenant to this day.  

I am lucky. I had a great college experience. My sexuality has never been the most important part of my being and so though I bear a few scars on my arms I have not had the trial so many of us in the LGBTQ community have had coming out. I have been loved by my family and friends and I enjoyed my time in high school and even college. I love Houghton. I loved growing up there, I loved attending school there, I even loved working there after college. Really- I really  do- just ask me, I will gush for hours.

But recently I was asked if I would return if a position became available. And the answer is, quite frankly, that I could never do that. Not only have I spent the past few years more honestly exploring who I am and understanding how wrong the community covenant is, but I am dating someone and it is  clear that Houghton does not want me.

In my time at Houghton I followed the community covenant really well. I never did drugs, I attended way more chapels than needed, I never attempted witchcraft (although one time I snuck off campus to read some Harry Potter- JK, I would never) and I only cracked a beer one time on campus after the death of a friend. And yet, I broke it- every day, every hour, every minute. And that’s hard, because I love Houghton, and there is not anything I can do about that.

I am lucky- I get to walk away from this with a little sadness and a little more hope. But I do want to say- that’s not often the case. This issue has hurt people. Houghton has hurt people. And so long as the covenant is the way it is- that will continue to be true. It’s a step in the right direction at least.

Who knows, maybe one day a job will open up and I will be able to apply.

But in the meantime, I will stay where I am- happy, accepted, loved, a Christian trying their hardest, a human doing what they can, wearing crazy hairstyles and wishing she could still shoot water through her teeth.

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Opinions

Keep Our Government Accountable

On Saturday, October 3rd, the US Government ordered an airstrike that inadvertently hit a Doctors Without Borders hospital in Kunduz, Afghanistan. This hospital provided trauma care for Afghani victims of war. It is also one of the only medical centers left in this region of Afghanistan. In its response to this negligence, the Pentagon stated that “there may have been collateral damage to a nearby medical facility,” according to the New York Times. The hospital had released their GPS coordinates, prior to the strike, to all active parties in the region. How does this happen? At the highest levels of government, how can such flagrant “errors” occur, and why have we, as a nation, accepted the rationalization of ‘collateral damage’?

Emily FriesenRGBThis kind of thing has happened before and it will continue to happen as long as the public passively accepts the so-called “realities of warfare”. Reports about drones, airstrikes, and civilian casualties are so common, it is  hard to feel outraged anymore. In the news cycle, there is an unspoken rating scale for tragedies. There’s a VIP list of who was killed: “how many?” and “were any US citizens killed?” On such a scale, this incident in Kunduz falls pretty low.

To counter this kind of hierarchy, I won’t tell you how many people died, or their individual nationalities—our guilt and grief shouldn’t be tied to numbers—it belongs to the fact that a hospital was bombed and our government representatives basically said, “Oops.” Patients burned to death in their hospital beds. Innocent civilians seeking medical treatment should not have to fear hospital-bombings. The United States should not be paying lip-service to peacekeeping  while simultaneously hindering the work of international doctors who are giving their time and expertise to treat individuals with limited medical access. Days after the airstrike, Doctors Without Borders evacuated northern Afghanistan because of severely damaged facilities and staff casualties. Afghans from the Kunduz region will now have to travel hours to be treated.

I am by no means a journalist, so if you would like to know more about the airstrike, the New York Times has a number of informative articles on their website. Please read more about this!

Believe it or not, we are the voice of our government, and while our national attention has been focused on the election, this is what has actually been happening. I’m worried about the national election outcome; and (I think) like a lot of people, I follow the daily gaffes, comments, and pronouncements of both the Republican and Democratic candidates. I worry about who the future president might be, but this is just one office, of one branch of government. In comparison, so little of my time, thought, and outrage is given to the daily actions of the Pentagon, the top military officers, or the Department of Defense.

As citizens, we have the privilege and responsibility to stay informed and to speak out about all areas of government. Examine how you spend your political efficacy: Staying politically active is more than just voting. Keep our government accountable: email your state representatives and stay informed on international events. Through your political activity, force the presidential candidates to address these issues. As citizens of a democracy, we have intrinsic political power. When we don’t take action as citizens, I believe we are, in part, responsible for the consequences of our complacencies and indifferences. We have an obligation to ourselves, to our country, and the world to do more than just vote. Government decisions are made every day, every hour, that radically affect  the world—who could honestly believe that just voting once every four years makes a difference?

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Stories In Focus

The Atinga Project: Where the Rubber Meets the Road

Walking on good intentions is like walking on clouds: it sounds beautiful in theory, but lacks enough substance to support true progress. Good intentions lack the practicality that encourages individuals to seek tangible opportunities for change. This type of change starts from the roots and slowly climbs towards the surface. As a globally engaged campus, social justice issues are at the forefront of Houghton students’ minds. As college students, are there practical ways for action to transcend mere intention? Chris Way, class of 2012 offers an application for this query. The application is enhanced by an abstract cognitive exercise in human relationship that aids in the physical incarnation of development strategies. Way and Princess Nabintu Kabaya began a collaborative work called The Atinga Project. Way works with a team of artisans who create sandals made from repurposed tires. The simple, durable design is not only a resilient shoe, but also a powerful metaphor for Christ-centered relationships. The three core values of the Atinga project: dignity, honor, and humility give diverse meaning to this metaphor.

Francoiss product lineThis three-dimensional value statement applies to many forms. For example, the dignity of artisans is protected when a fair wage is received for the product. Junior International development major, Emily Barry, interned with the Atinga project this past summer as a communications and social media representative. In her work, she conducted research on the average Rwandan salary as published by the World Bank compared to an artisan employed in fair wage artisanship. She found that fair trade artisans make more per year than the average Rwandan. This is one way of directly restoring economic dignity. For this reason, buying fair trade is crucial for restoring dignity to the individual artist and to the art form. According to Barry, fair trade is saying, “I’m doing something, I’m doing it responsibly, and we’re doing it together.” Supply and demand then becomes a collaborative effort of human relationship on an international scale.

Furthermore, artisans honor and protect the environment by recycling a product that might otherwise prove harmful for the atmosphere. Tire waste emits toxins and attracts unwanted pests. As the international demand for Atinga sandals increases, potentially harmful waste has a reliable means of re-entry into a productive market.  

Contributors to the global market engage in a mutual learning relationship because of this exchange of goods and ideas. But sometimes “mutual empowerment” and “mutual learning” according to Barry, are romanticized on a global scale. However, These are more challenging ideas when applied to individual relationships. To embrace the Atinga Project slogan, “Walk a Mile in Their Shoes” is to walk in close connection with the people we encounter everyday. With this slogan, Way encourages Houghton students to “listen with love” as everyday opportunities to learn and grow with fellow classmates present themselves. To listen with love is a response to the Biblical mandate of Proverbs 12:15 to “Rejoice with those who rejoice; mourn with those who mourn.” Consumerism can no longer be about an economic transaction.

Part of the Atinga mission is to walk alongside someone with a humble attitude in order to listen to the needs of another person. The mission is to acknowledge that behind every headline there are individual stories. With global and local interactions, relating to others in a dignifying, honoring, and humbling way gives motion back to the wheel in its reconstructed state.

If you are interested in learning more about the Atinga Project, please visit atingaproject.com or check out their display in the campus store.

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Stories In Focus

Recent Grads Serving in Buffalo

“My typical day thus far has been anything but typical,” said Amanda Irwin, member of the Class of 2015. After graduating last spring, Amanda moved to Buffalo to work with the Wesley Service Corps.

Moving to Buffalo has bombarded me with diversity, my race, and understanding a new concept of community,” Irwin wrote in a recent e-mail interview. “The support of fellow Houghton students in the area has been great and extremely helpful – I don’t know that I could have done this program without that.”

WSCStephanie Smith, Director of Wesley Service Corps (WSC) and Houghton alumna from the Class of 2007, noted that sixteen Houghton graduates are currently engaged with the program, which was established in 2010. She said that it grew from the many connections Houghton students were building in Buffalo as student teachers, summer AmeriCorps project participants, and full-time AmeriCorps workers. WSC also built upon the work of former Houghton professor Dr. Chuck Massey and the relationships which he had developed in the city. According to Smith, Wesley Service Corps now encompasses year-long opportunities for recent Houghton grads through AmeriCorps as well as Buffalo Urban Mission Partnership (BUMP). The latter, as stated on their website, is a “collaboration of churches and ministries in Buffalo for the purpose of equipping and training women and men for Kingdom work in the City.” This equipping and training, the webpage says, is done through living and worshipping together in fellowship, studying urban missions,  and serving others through non-profit organizations and local churches.

Since beginning the WSC program, Irwin has been grant-writing, working with her hands to assemble things like a candy machine, and compiling a newsletter for senior citizens in the area where she lives. “I go to work every day trying to anticipate the solutions to problems I may be faced with and never really knowing what might arise,” Irwin commented. She lives only two and a half blocks from her office, with two fellow Houghton graduates who are also participating in AmeriCorps programs.

As an AmeriCorps VISTA, Irwin serves a nonprofit agency known as Concerned Ecumenical Ministry, on the west side of Buffalo. According to her description, this organization runs facilities housing youth directors, support centers for Congolese and Burmese communities, a church known as the Dream Center, case managers for service to senior citizens, and a ceramics collective. Assisting with administrative work for the organization, Irwin is in charge of managing room rentals and communicating building maintenance issues to a board of directors.  “I had to learn quickly, be unafraid to ask questions, and be confident enough in myself to make decisions,” she said.

Smith also pointed out that the Wesley Service Corps is not only for alumni. Summer programs through AmeriCorps are available for current students, as well. These include urban agricultural youth development programs and ESL programs for refugee students. There are approximately twelve to fourteen slots in these programs each year.

“Wesley Service Corps members get to engage in a highly formative service experience that is well beyond a typical entry level job,” commented Smith.  “While there are inherent challenges, such as navigating cultural barriers, living at poverty level, and finding work/life balance when surrounded with so much need, these are part of what make WSC opportunities so deeply formative and meaningful.” These sentiments are shared by Irwin, who writes, “This is definitely not for everyone.  But if you have a ready heart and an open mind than it is possible to experience some really amazing things.”

According to Smith, “These WSC members are infusing life, energy, and passion into the communities they serve, reaching beyond themselves and entering into the story of thousands of Buffalonians.”

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News Stories In Focus

Nancy Cole: Celebrating 20 Years as Head Women’s Volleyball Coach

1990 Houghton graduate, Nancy Cole, has moved up in the ranks of Houghton and is now entering her twentieth year of coaching the women’s volleyball team. Fortunately for us, the Houghton Bubble kept her around after graduation.  She got her coaching start while volunteering for Fillmore High School and Houghton Academy’s girls’ athletics.  A few years later, she began working with Houghton’s women’s volleyball team and has never looked back.

As we celebrate Cole’s twenty years of coaching she is proud to say, “All of those years have been at Houghton.”  She assisted at Houghton for 2 years before becoming the head coach.

Nancy Cole GrayTransitioning from player to coach can be difficult, especially when your transition is in the same program you participated in.  However, for Cole the experience was different.  She says, “When I started coaching here, it was already home.”  Cole assisted her own college coach, Coach Skip Lord.  The strong values the volleyball program had established such as living a Christ-centered life and exemplifying Him both on and off the court were ones Cole agrees with and wanted to carry on.

Those values were evident as they won regional tournaments, qualified for NAIA nationals, played in Empire 8 conference playoffs and NCCAA nationals, and dined with the Nicaraguan  national volleyball team to celebrate 10 years of partnership in ministry.  To all of the amazing achievements and memories over the course of her career, she credits her teams.  “My teams have been full of amazing young women who love God and each other and they have been a blessing in so many different ways over the years.”

Junior player Anna Coryell explains, “Coach Cole pushes us to be strong women of faith. She takes this strong faith and makes sure that we understand that our volleyball talents are not our own, but God’s. Every practice, every game, every time we touch a volleyball it is to glorify God. It is our form of worshiping God with the talents that we are given. She makes sure that our team is being salt and light to the world in everything that we do.”

Coach Cole’s two favorite things about coaching are interacting with her team and watching them grow as women and as Christians.   She says, “I have been amazed and humbled by the faith and courage that some of them have at this age. I definitely was not that intentional about my faith in college.  They also make me laugh so much. Relationship tends to put wins and losses into perspective.”  

Senior captain Meagan Palm says, “[Cole ] is so much more than just our coach.  She is our mentor, our friend, and our mother away from home.”  Coryell echoes her teammate by calling Cole her, “mom away from mom.”

Cole describes her team as passionate.  “It encompasses a lot of who they are in many ways and the commitment they have for each other and for God.”  Members of the volleyball team feel the same about their coach and also describe her as passionate, caring, devoted, and inspiring.  No one on campus knows her better than her players.  

First-year player Kaylee Haller says, “She is tough when she needs to be, she believes in us with all of her heart, she hurts when we don’t do well, and she praises us for our accomplishments.”  Even though Haller is new to the team this year, she can already see how deeply Cole cares for her team in all areas of her players’ lives.

Senior captain Hattie Burgher agrees with this, saying, “She really invests in our lives off of the court and I know I could always confide in her about something that is personally going on in my life.”

Senior captain Jessica Hayner says, “She is a great example of a Godly woman for us.  She is not only able to push us to be the best we can be on the court; but she also encourages us to be the best women of God that we can be.”  Senior player Stephanie Glick continues this thought saying, “She loves volleyball and expects us to work hard and have the desire to play well.  But more importantly, she expects us to play with integrity, and play in a way that honors God.”

Junior player Kayla Bernard describes this dynamic, “Because of the way she acts she makes you want to work as hard as you can, and when you mess up it’s almost more motivating . . . You want to do everything you can to make her proud.”   

At the end of the day, Cole is wonderfully invested in the lives of her players, her career, her family, and her God.

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Data Science Students Travel South

While most Houghton students and faculty spent October break visiting family, studying, or traveling, a group of 18 students, faculty, staff and alumni traveled to Hilton Head, South Carolina, for the GolfWeek Amateur Golf Tour’s National Championships. Faculty, staff and alumni in attendance were Professor Kenneth Bates, Vocational Opportunities and Career Advising (VOCA) Director Kim Pool, and Houghton alumna Carmen McKnell. The trip was not one for pleasure as the students interned for the tournament organizers throughout their stay.

Hilton head groupThe students’ main objective was to gather information on the golfers competing in the tournament. They garnered demographic data and surveyed the golfers’ spending habits while at the tournament. Over 900 athletes participated in the tournament, competing on eight different courses. The economic impact of such a large event will be analyzed by Professor Wei Hu’s Data Science 1 class, and the findings will be presented to the tournament organizers.

“The days were long for the students,” Pool stated. “They had to be on the courses before dawn and before the golfers started to arrive. Students were responsible for golfer check-in, marshalling the course to make sure the golfers were keeping the appropriate pace of play, and recording all players’ scores at the end of the day. After the golfers finished playing each day our students would survey them by using clipboard surveys. The event organizers also plan to send out the survey via email to all of the golfers.”

Houghton students collaborated with students from the University of Tennessee Martin (UTM) as well as York College in Pennsylvania. Senior Matt Bissett valued this cooperation saying, “I definitely believe that this trip was beneficial to me professionally.  This trip was all about creating some connections…There were multiple golfers who gave me their business cards…but I also made so many connections with my peers, especially the UTM students…maybe someday in the future we will be able to help each other out in the job market.”

This “experiential learning opportunity” as Pool calls it was coordinated by Pool and the VOCA staff to help students apply classroom learning to situations they will encounter later on, helping “students prepare for careers by allowing them to apply classroom learning and practice their skills.” Pool added that plans are in the making for a similar learning experience in Daytona, Florida for NASCAR week.

Pool, Bates, as well as participating students Bissett and Bjorn Webb (’18) each held different perspectives on what the GolfWeek trip accomplished. Bates viewed the experiential learning trip as one aspect of a whole education, saying “One event can’t really prepare someone for (his/her) career, but multiple events go a long way in rounding out the important equipping task to which Houghton is committed.” Bissett concurred, noting, “as much as I love my classes and my professors…experiences like this are ones that you can’t teach in a classroom, and I believe that is true of most jobs.”

Webb felt the experience benefitted him professionally, not just for the hands on learning, but also for its resume value. He said, I was able to make connections and relationships with people in many fields that will help me as I move forward with my career… This opportunity will also look great on resumés in the future. To be able to tell someone that you have actually taken part in a real life study [applying] data science is very beneficial in your professional career.” Pool, whose job is partly to help undergraduates at Houghton build resumes, agreed with Webb when she stated, “These experiences allow students to make linkages between classroom learning and the real world. They also provide them with concrete experience that can be highlighted on a resume and in interviews with prospective employers.”

The Data Science 1 class expects to finish their analysis of the data collected at GolfWeek in Hilton Head SC by the end of their semester, having gone from raw data to polished, concrete findings of the economic impact the golf tournament had on the local economy on Hilton Head and nearby Savannah, Georgia. Pool expects promotional videos advertising this and upcoming experiential learning trips as well as the new Data Science major to appear on Houghton College’s website in the near future.