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Campus News

Students Create Record Label: Fader 15

Four music industry students have joined with Director of Technical Arts and Music Industry Instructor, Kevin Jackson, to create an independent record label. Kayla Bernard ‘17, Olivia Dobmeier ‘19, Duncan Shalda ‘19, and Ryan Burrichter ‘20 are Vice Presidents (VP) of the label, called Fader 15 Records. Jackson is President of the label.

Dobmeier is the Vice President of Artist Development. “There are three other VP’s- Kayla Bernard is the VP of Artists and Repertoire, Duncan Shalda is the VP of Marketing, and Ryan Burrichter is the VP of Business,” she said. The role of the VP of Artists and Repertoire, Dobmeier explained, is to scout talent.

Burrichter, a music industry student “with a focus in the music business” has been charged with enacting the “comprehensive business plan” he drafted, which outlines “everything from a structure to a timeline, to finances.”

Fader 15 Records is an entity of the Greatbatch School of Music, Burrichter said. “The purpose of the label is to be a launch pad for artists who are serious about entering the music industry and give them a leg up as they leave college. It is our goal as a label to work with the artist and get them to where they want to go, whether that be a major record label or an independent label, or a touring deal,” Burrichter said.

“We’re not trying to make money,” Shalda said. “We’re taking people at Houghton College and pushing them to the level of excellency that they should be. We’re taking people who want to do this as a career and pushing them to professional level recording, professional level marketing, and producing and publishing their music.”

The record was born out of the Music Publishing and Marketing class, Shalda said. He said, “But it’s definitely branched out into the music industry major and the music school as a whole.”

Shalda said Fader 15 Records may produce single artist EPs. He said, “We’ve looked into other schools’ record labels, and they’ve taken one or two songs from each artist and made an album off of that.” Since Fader 15 Records has not chosen artists yet, these plans are “kinda touch and go,” Shalda said. “We’re gonna roll with it.”

Shalda stated the response to the label’s call for samples and auditions earlier in the semester stirred interest on campus. He said, “We don’t want to bite off more than we can chew, so we are planning on narrowing it down to just a few people that have the drive and motivation, who want to do this as their career.”

The label hopes to release music by the end of the school year, Shalda said. “We are looking more towards having three [artists]” he stated, who the label would begin working with next semester. The artists’ work with Fader 15 Records would end after they graduate,” Shalda stated.

According to Shalda Fader 15 Records will produce no particular music genre. He said, “That was one of the main reasons we went with ‘Fader 15’. We wanted [a name] that was not genre specific. We want anywhere from gospel from gospel to rap to rock to techno- anything under the sun that’s good music. That’s what we’re looking for, good music.”  

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Campus News

Sodexo Enters Bidding to Remain at Houghton

Houghton College is considering bids from dining service companies. Sodexo, the company which currently serves Houghton, runs out on its current contract this May. Student Government Association (SGA) Executive Officer of Student Life Sergio Mata-Cisneros ‘19 said three companies have “submitted a proposal, one being Sodexo.” Mata-Cisneros said a committee has been formed which is “working on reviewing the proposals. Currently Joanna [Friesen, SGA Student Body President] and I sit as student representatives on the committee.”

Vice President of Student Life, Rob Pool, said there are faculty and staff representatives on the the committee as well. Pool stated the rest of the committee is comprised of Director of conferences, Becca Crouch;Director of Operations for the president, Cindy Lastoria; chief business officer, Dale Wright Assistant Director of Admission Events and Office Operations, Elizabeth Rutledge; Athletic Director, Harold Lord; Assistant Dean of Students, Marc Smithers; Athletics Marketing & Scheduling Coordinator, Marshall Green; and Phyllis Gaerte, Director of Alumni and Community Relations.  Biology and Sciences professor, Ransom Poythress, is the faculty representative on the committee.  Sustainability concerns will be addressed on the committee by sustainability coordinator, Brian Webb.

Aside from Sodexo’s bid, Pool said Metz Culinary Management and American Dining Creations have submitted proposals.

Derek Chase ‘19 expressed enthusiasm that the dining services contract is open for bidding. “I think it’s good to consider all kinds of new options, especially because I love to try all kinds of food,” he said. “I think it would be cool to see what other companies have to offer.”

Sarah Vande Brake ‘19 concurred. “Sodexo has had this contract for awhile, and while I personally don’t mind the food, I know many students have gotten tired of it and it might be time to explore other options for the school.”

For the committee, price is not the only factor considered in the bidding process. According to Pool, Houghton published a request for bids which included several factors such as “Quality Assurance,” “Strategic and Business Planning,” and “Responsiveness to the College Community.”

“The committee will hear presentations from the three companies next week”, said Mata-Cisneros. After the semester break, Mata-Cisneros said the committee will continue deliberations and negotiations with the companies. The committee expects to “have all the contracts signed with the chosen company by February break” he stated. Houghton will release the information shortly after the contracts are solidified, Mata-Cisneros said.

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Campus News

Wesleyan Church Adjusts Alcohol Guidelines

Though the Wesleyan Church adjusted its alcohol guidelines, Houghton College’s policy regarding alcohol consumption will remain the same, according to Vice President of Student Life Rob Pool.

www.flickr.com/photos/zeevveez/7131075647
www.flickr.com/photos/zeevveez/

The Wesleyan Church, Houghton College’s sponsoring denomination, decided to reevaluate its longstanding membership policy at its general conference in June. According to the denomination’s website, the church discontinued its two-tier system of membership in favor of one single membership body. Characteristic of the former system was alcohol use: “community membership”, the lower tier, did not prohibit alcohol use. “Covenant membership”, the level a Wesleyan must reach to serve in various leadership functions in the Wesleyan Church, prohibited drinking. “Attendees can have a sense of belonging around the core scriptural beliefs of The Wesleyan Church without the church putting an expectation of spiritual maturity upon them prior to belonging”, the denomination said in a statement issued in August.

Those who wish to serve in ministerial positions, direct Sunday school programs, serve on church boards, and similar leadership positions are still required to abstain from alcohol.

Houghton College, along with Kingswood University, Southern Wesleyan University, Oklahoma Wesleyan University, and Indiana Wesleyan University are considered ministries of the Wesleyan Church, according to Pool. While changes in the denomination’s policy would not “directly change” policies at these schools, “they would inform them” Pool said. The Community Covenant, signed by faculty, staff, and students still stands in regard to Houghton’s alcohol free policy. “I have not heard of any faculty, staff, or students proposing a change to the campus alcohol policy,” he said.

Assistant resident director Ian DeHass ‘17 said “ In res life, we take our cues from the denomination, but I think we all value a space where alcohol isn’t an issue that we have to consider. We know people from other schools that allow alcohol, and most of their time is spent in conduct hearings, and for us that’s not really where we want to spend our time. We want to spend our time thinking about diversity and thinking about how we can best help our students grow. And I think that reason alone is good enough reason for why we wouldn’t want to add alcohol into the picture at Houghton.”

Pastor of Houghton Wesleyan Church, Wes Oden, said the change “really doesn’t have anything specifically to do with alcohol, but with membership requirements. As I understand it, they have moved [alcohol] from membership requirements to a different section of the Discipline. Instead of [abstinence] being a requirement [for membership] it becomes a matter of taking responsibility over what it means to be a member of the Body of Christ.”

Joseph Jennings, Superintendent of the Western New York District of the Wesleyan Church, said “I don’t expect any changes to be made in the policies of any of our Wesleyan colleges” regarding alcohol. He said he expects Houghton College’s alcohol policy to stay as is “for at least the next ten years.”

Though the Church’s new guidelines are expected to go into effect this month, Pool said any change in Houghton College’s alcohol policy would need to be initiated by a petition to amend the Community Covenant.

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National News

National // Jill Stein Files For Election Recount

Jill Stein, candidate for the Green Party’s failed bid for the White House, has filed for a recount in Wisconsin, Michigan, and Pennsylvania. According to the Associated Press (AP), Stein raised $7 million toward the effort, twice what she garnered for her campaign.

The AP reported that Stein alleged possible tampering with electronic voting machines in the three states. This claim which was backed by J Alex Halderman, a computer science professor at the University of Michigan, according to BBC.

The White House refuted any possibility of tampering with the election results. A senior official in the Obama administration stated to Politico, We stand behind our election results, which accurately reflect the will of the American people.” The Clinton campaign also acknowledged a lack of evidence to support Stein’s allegations. Marc Elias, general counsel of Hillary Clinton’s campaign, said he found no  “actionable evidence of hacking or outside attempts to alter the voting technology,” Politico reported. Nonetheless, observers from the Clinton campaign will be present at recounts in Michigan, according to BBC.

President-elect Donald Trump  countered the recount filings with allegations of his own via Twitter. “In addition to winning the Electoral College in a landslide, I won the popular vote if you deduct the millions who voted illegally,” he tweeted on Monday. Also on Monday, Trump clarified in another tweet that he was referring to “serious voter fraud” in Virginia, California, and New Hampshire. NBC News reported that no evidence has been found to support Trump’s claim.

California Secretary of State, Alex Padilla, responded with a tweet of his own, saying, “It appears that Mr. Trump is troubled by the fact that a growing majority of Americans did not vote for him. His unsubstantiated claims of voter fraud in California and elsewhere are absurd. His reckless tweets are inappropriate and unbecoming of a President-elect,” NBC News reported. Clinton won the popular vote by about 2 million votes, according to NBC News.

Also on Monday, Stein filed a suit against the Wisconsin Elections Committee. The Committee refused to require each county to conduct a recount; if Stein’s loses her suit, she will have to petition each of Wisconsin’s 80+ counties to recount votes.

A Pennsylvania recount will require Stein to provide evidence of probable vote manipulation, which the Pennsylvania Secretary of State Pedro Cortes says there is “absolutely no evidence” of, according to the Philadelphia Media Network.

The AP reported that while it is highly unlikely a recount will change the election outcome, the drive for funds will continue to push Stein onto the national stage. After the recount matter is settled, any leftover funds will be funneled into the Green Party for “election integrity efforts and to promote voting system reform,” Stein said. Stein also wrote on her website, “These recounts are part of an election integrity movement to attempt to shine a light on just how untrustworthy the US election system is.”

Trump denounced the recount efforts as a “scam,” and accused the Green Party of attempting to “fill up their coffers,” according to BBC. BBC also reported that Trump accused Clinton of reneging on her concession to Trump late on November 8.

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Campus News

Push for Turkey Drive Funds Continue

Fundraising for the Student Government Association (SGA) Annual Turkey Drive will continue through the next week, according to Sergio Mata ‘19, Executive Officer of Student Life.

houghton.edu
houghton.edu

The Turkey Drive is a campus wide effort to provide Thanksgiving turkeys and trimmings to families in need living in Allegany county. Security guard Ray Parlett has participated in the Turkey Drive for the last nine years. He said, “ [I] distribute turkeys each year through local food pantries and other organizations. You might say the students raise the money and I get to spend it.  I have worked primarily with Shop and Save in Fillmore but also with Harington’s Sure-Fine in Belfast and occasionally Tops in Wellsville, all of whom have provided the turkeys to us at their cost, and at times even below cost.”

Families in need of a Thanksgiving turkey receive coupons, which are “distributed through the Houghton and Fillmore food pantries with some provided to the Rushford pantry as well” said Parlett. Aside from turkeys, “the food pantries also provide other food supplies to these families so they can have a nice complete meal for Thanksgiving, a rare thing for many of them,”Parlett noted.

Fundraising began with the Homecoming 5k race, which replaced the Turkey Trot 5k race SGA and Campus Activities Board (CAB) have hosted in the past, according to CAB member Kasey Cannister ‘17.

Fundraisers for the charity include Turkey Grams and “sponsor a turkey/feather,” according to Mata. “Students can pay $1 to send a Turkey Gram from the turkey mascot, just like candy grams,” he said. He also stated the print-out turkeys and feathers, which students purchase and color, will be made into a mural to decorate the dining hall for Thanksgiving.

SGA Vice President, Daniel Merriam ‘19, said students can sponsor a whole Thanksgiving turkey for a needy family for $15, or can sponsor part of a turkey by purchasing a feather for $1. “If every student sponsors a feather, we will easily meet our fundraising goal,” he said.

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Campus News

Seniors Present Research At Penn-York Conference

Three Houghton College seniors presented independent research at the annual Penn-York conference last Saturday, accompanied by professor of English and writing, Laurie Dashnau.

Photo courtesy of Laurie Dashnau
Photo courtesy of Laurie Dashnau

The group travelled to St. Bonaventure University to participate with other undergraduate researchers from New York and Pennsylvania colleges. Grace MacKay presented research in psychology, Sophia Ross presented her study of American poet Elizabeth Bishop, and Wesley Payette gave a poster presentation on marine biology.

Professors “highly encourage” students to participate in the conference, said Dashnau. “Houghton has regularly participated in this conference since 2005….[Houghton’s and Dashnau’s participation] grew out of my passion for mentoring,” she said.

At this “less formal” interdisciplinary conference, Dashnau said presenters often receive feedback on their research from professors, which can be “especially helpful” for students whose research is still in progress. The five minute question and answer period after presentations “often continue into the hallway and lunch hour,” she said.

Payette’s poster presentation was titled, “The effects of ocean acidification on copepod physiological ecology.” In layman’s terms, the biology major said, “It’s just a small part of the marine food chain I was studying.” Payette said his research yielded findings “that tie in directly to climate change.”

“Copepods, which are an important part of the marine food chain, they prey on a lot of phytoplankton. When they are exposed to higher levels of CO2, they tend to eat less.” This could have major effects on marine ecosystems, he said. “If we can understand how plankton and their predators behave, we can predict how plankton will affect the ecosystem.” Payette’s research came about through a marine biology internship he participated in last summer, “a one time thing”, he said. “I’m going to try to go into biomedical research or disease ecology” in graduate school after taking a gap year, he said.

Psychology and writing major Grace MacKay presented on “The Effects of Life Orientation and Message Framing on Decision Making”.

“I haven’t done the study yet,” she said. The project is part of her honors thesis, and she plans to conduct experiments through the next several months. She will also present her research “several times in the spring”. She said psychology professor Paul Young encouraged her “to get some experience” delivering the topic to audiences at the Penn-York Conference.

MacKay said people “respond to the way a situation is described to us,” depending on whether a situation is described in terms of risk or reward. Life orientation, or optimism and pessimism,and  message framing, “the wording of a situation” influences how individuals make decisions, she said.

“A pessimist tends to be more negative in general, a negative message framing tends to reinforce their natural inclination to think in terms of losses,” MacKay said.

This research can be applied to help people make decisions “by understanding how people work” and calculate risk, MacKay noted. “This can be applied to health, investments, things like that,” she said.

English major Sophia Ross presented on the contemporary poet Elizabeth Bishop. Titled “Remembering Mother and Motherland: The Experience of Loss in Elizabeth Bishop’s Nova Scotia Prose and Poetry,” Ross’s work explored Bishop’s experience as a Canadian American. Though Bishop was born and raised in Canada before moving to New England. Ross said “She really is considered an American Poet. She won the Pulitzer Prize, the National Book Award, she was the US Poet Laureate. But if you read her letters, she says she is half Canadian and half American. In a letter to her biographer, she said she considered herself three quarters Canadian and one quarter New Englander.”

Ross said much of the research done on Bishop revolves around her [Bishop’s] years in Brazil, her relationship with Robert Lowell, and that Bishop was a lesbian. “I wanted to see how Nova Scotia played into her work and write something that really brought that forward…these [other subjects] are interesting and definitely matter, but there’s not a lot done about Nova Scotia and how that affected her work,” Ross said.

“It was good,” MacKay said. “It was a good experience- there was a broad range of research. It was cool to interact with other students in the same boat.” While Payette and Ross have closed the book on their topics for the time being, MacKay is still in the midst of her work, now gathering “as many [experiment participants] as [she] can get”.

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International News

World // Arab and U.S. Forces Surge Against ISIS

The Syrian Defense Forces (SDF), Turkish militias, Kurdish forces, and U.S. personnel have begun an offensive against the ISIS stronghold in Raqqa, Syria. SDF told CNN it established a joint operations center last Saturday, and launched the “Euphrates Rage” mission on Sunday.

Raqqa is the “de facto” capital of ISIS territory, according to CNN. Its population of 200,000 is held down by roughly 5,000 militants. The city has been under ISIS control since the summer of 2014, according to CNN. According to SDF leaders, the retaking of Raqqa may take up to two months as forces seek to isolate ISIS positions in the city.

The U.S. will support operations with air cover and military advisors according to NPR. Chairman of the U.S. Joint Chiefs of Staff General. Joseph Dunford told CNN that the US and Turkey are drafting a long term plan for “seizing, holding, and governing” Raqqa provided the Euphrates Rage operation is successful.

The commencement of the Euphrates Rage came just days after Iraqi forces’ surge against the ISIS stronghold in Mosul. The offensive to recapture Mosul is the result of several months of united Iraqi, Kurdish, and U.S. effort, according to NPR. Coalition spokesman Colonel. John L. Dorrian said to CNN, “In the meantime we will continue shaping operations like airstrikes against Da’esh leaders, command and control and resources. This is the first step in a campaign that will be conducted deliberately.”

“Doing operations simultaneously with the campaign to liberate Mosul will complicate command and control for the enemy, giving them more problems to solve than their flagging command and control can manage,” he added. As with Raqqa, Mosul has been under ISIS control since summer 2014, according to Al Jazeera, which also reported dozens of decapitated bodies found by Iraqi forces.

If control of Raqqa is successfully wrested from ISIS, there may be conflict between the Kurdish and Turkmen militias. According to Reuters and NPR, Turkey is concerned about Kurdish influence spreading into northern Syria as a result of the planned takeover. The Kurds and Turks have long-standing tensions, despite joining forces against a common enemy.

Mark Lowen of BBC stated “The Kurdish participation is problematic,” because “Kurdish fighters are accused of expelling Arabs from areas they’ve taken in the north and Raqqa has an overwhelming Arab majority.”

NPR reported that the coalition stated the Arab troops involved in the operation will be key in the aftermath of the offensive, as they are “indigenous to the area and will help establish regional support for SDF operations.”

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Opinions

Queer Love Isn’t A Tragedy

Last semester I was invited to participate in a faculty, staff, and student focus group regarding how Houghton can best serve “same-sex attracted” students committed to celibacy. I was asked to be a part of the discussion as a representative of LGBTQ identified students who are open to same sex relationships. Other participants hoped I could provide insight into ways Houghton College, as a traditional institution, could support these students as well. However, it soon became apparent to me that, the way things stand now, Houghton College is unable to fulfill this ideal.

Mary Cronin RGB
Photo By: Anthony Burdo

Most of us wish our sexual ethics weren’t so divisive; why do the actions of adults in their own bedrooms have to affect our friendships, our politics, our faith?

Some of us may also feel disturbed by this whole matter. Why are the LGBTQ students so upset? It’s not like they’re being stoned. They’re just being asked to live by a “traditional” standard. How could that possibly be insulting or hurtful?

I won’t pretend this isn’t complicated. But I will say that if one holds a traditionalist perspective and also desires to “reach out” to LGBTQ people, perhaps try putting a camel through the eye of a needle first.

Most traditionalists (in this case, someone who thinks sexual expression ought to be limited to heterosexual marriage) do not actively advocate the physical or mental abuse of LGBTQ people. They don’t have to. The idea that being LGBTQ is a tragedy, a result of the fall, an embarrassment, an abomination, is enough. This poor theology has created a roadmap of self harm scars. It has divided families, broken up churches, and justified the removal of gifted and sincere leaders from campus ministries.

You cannot love your brothers and sisters in Christ while also viewing them as a tragedy. You certainly cannot build relationships with them.

An example: the Counseling Center recently hosted the 9th annual relationship retreat. Only opposite sex couples attended this year, as with every other year. The retreat, as always, was heavily advertised through various media, including The Star. Meanwhile, Houghton College is considering adding clarifying language to the Community Covenant which would make handholding between two men or two women suspect and grounds for a meeting in the Student Life office.

micahquoteOur community tells straight couples that their sexual desires are (or can be) beautiful, holy, worthy of public celebration. Yet it tells queer couples that one of their most human qualities, the longing to become one flesh with their beloved, is to be dealt with swiftly behind closed doors. On the one hand, affirmation and love, and on the other, shame and suspicion.

Sometimes, when I speak about this publicly, I am told that LGBTQ/ progressive students don’t have to attend Houghton. They can just leave; after all, this is a “voluntary community.” Let me remind those who are ready to post such a sentiment on YikYak that any Christian community is subject to the entire Body of Christ. When fellow Christians critique the actions of other Christians, particularly regarding issues of justice and love, the proper response is not “you’re welcome to leave,” but rather, “Please, join us at the table. Teach us how to love you.”

I know this sets up an ultimatum: values or people? I’m inclined to choose people, but I understand what’s at stake for traditionalists: their interpretation of Scripture, their churches, their whole worldview. All difficult things to question. But this community cannot last much longer sitting on the bubble, attempting to please both “sides” of this issue. There are real, vulnerable people caught in the crossfire. Christ is standing at the door, knocking; it’s time for Houghton College to open the door to LGBTQ voices.

Micah is a senior theology major.

Categories
National News

National // Standing Rock Protests Escalate

Protests against the Dakota Access Pipeline at the Standing Rock Sioux reservation in North Dakota have shown signs of escalation. The New York Times reported that police forces attempted to move protesters out of an area in which they set up camp, and were warded off for several hours by a line of burning wood and vehicles. The New York Times also reported that a woman allegedly fired two rounds of a handgun at the authorities, though no one was hit.

The protesters were gathered on a section of land owned by Energy Transfer Partners, the private company responsible for the pipeline construction. Morton County Sheriff, Kyle Kirchmeier,  said protesters “forced our hand,” referring to his officers’ use of beanbag bullets, tear gas, and military vehicles against protesters.

Photo courtesy of Fibonacci Blue via Flikr
Photo courtesy of Fibonacci Blue via Flikr

Amnesty International sent individuals to observe police actions, according to the New York Times. Protesters see the pipeline as a significant cultural and environmental threat, the New York Times also reported. TIME stated that even a small oil leakage, if it were to occur near the Missouri River, could be detrimental for anyone living along the waterway, even as far south as the Gulf of Mexico.

The Standing Rock Sioux tribe is suing the Army Corps of Engineers, on the grounds that the agency allegedly violated the National Historic Preservation Act (NHPA) and the National Environmental Policy Act (NEPA). The NHPA requires Corps to consider the cultural significance of federally-permitted sites and NEPA requires it to take the preservation of waterways into account, according to TIME. Aside from the environmental concerns, tribal leaders also say that sacred lands, including burial grounds, would be desecrated by the pipeline’s construction, the New York Times reported.

“We have repeatedly seen a disproportionate response from law enforcement to water protectors’ nonviolent exercise of their constitutional rights,” Dave Archambault II, the chairman of the Standing Rock Sioux tribe told the New York Times. “We need our state and federal governments to bring justice and peace to our lands, not the force of armored vehicles,” he said.

A WhiteHouse.gov petition calling on President Obama to halt construction reached 312,476 signatures on September 14. Obama ordered construction to temporarily cease, but a federal court overturned this order. Democratic presidential candidate, Hillary Clinton, has not taken a firm stance on the matter, though TIME reported she urged both Energy Transfer Partners and the Standing Rock Sioux tribe to “find a path forward that serves the broadest public interest.” Republican candidate, Donald Trump, reportedly owns stock in Energy Transfer Partners, and while he has said the oil and gas industry should not be regulated, he has not commented specifically on the pipeline protests.

On social media, celebrities such as Mark Ruffalo and Al Gore have expressed their support for protesters at Standing Rock. Over 100,000 people used the Facebook “Check-In” feature to locate themselves at Standing Rock, according to TIME. This mass “Check-In” followed a rumor that local police forces were using the feature to track protesters on the ground, and individuals not at Standing Rock were encouraged to check in to the protest sight to overwhelm the police. However, the Morton County Police Department stated on Twitter that this rumor was false, and the department does not follow Facebook check-ins at the protest sight nor any other locations.

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Campus News

End of Season Fall Sports Update

Highlander fall sports are largely over for the season, with post season play pending for women’s soccer and the men’s soccer team slated to compete in the Empire 8 (E8) tournament.The men’s cross country team finished in 5th place at the Empire 8 cross country championship, and the women finished in 6th place. Tyler Deuschle ‘20 led the men’s 8k with a time of 28:16.5. On the women’s 5k, Ella Hotchkiss ‘18 was the first Houghton finisher at a time of 20:44.4.

Photo by: Anthony Burdo
Photo by: Anthony Burdo

Field hockey also opened with a strong start, winning its first home game against Wells College 7-0. However, a streak of midseason losses left the Highlander’s field hockey team with an 8-9 record, with a 3-5 record in conference play.

Women’s volleyball played under a new assistant coach, Houghton Highlander alum Brianne Starks, as well as longtime head coach Nancy Cole. The women split the season with a 14-14 record, and a 4-4 record in conference matches. The season ended on a high note with a close win over Marywood University at a home volleyball tournament last weekend. The team will graduate two seniors, Alicia Needham and Sydney Pow, and expects to induct four seniors next season,Naomi Prentice, Anna Coryell, Erica Barney, and Rebekah White.

Women’s tennis has split their season 6-6 so far. The team will look to add a win to their record at their next match in February against University of Pittsburgh at Bradford, at the Kerr-Pegula Field House (KPFH).

Men’s tennis sits at a 2-1 record, and will attempt to defend their win against the State University of New York at Oswego in February at the KPFH.

Women’s soccer ended conference play at 3-4, and was not eligible for E8 playoffs. However, the team is ranked 9th nationally in the National Christian Collegiate Athletic Association (NCCAA) and may be still be eligible to compete in the NCCAA regional tournament.

Men’s soccer has been strong all season. The team is 10-3-4 on the season, and is 4-1-2 in the E8 conference. In its first season of E8 eligibility, the men are ranked 3rd in the league. They will face off against Ithaca College, ranked 2nd, on November 4 in Hoboken, New Jersey.