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Return to the Radio: Alternative Buffalo 107.7 Review

“Your reason to return to radio has arrived” is a phrase commonly quipped on Buffalo’s radio station  Alternative Buffalo FM 107.7. It is a motto they live up to. The station surprisingly reaches all the way out to Houghton with reception extending across campus. It even has a mobile app or you can listen online. It is a relatively new station that has already got a lot going for it. It gives an excellent alternative for those who are tired of your typical pop radio station tunes, such as Iggy Azalea, Taylor Swift, or One Direction. For those who have forsaken radio altogether in favor of their iPod, try returning to this radio station.

Alt Buffalo plays a wide range artists ranging from legends like Nirvana to young new artists such as George Ezra. Popular artists such as Bastille, Lorde, Hozier, and Coldplay are commonly featured on the station, some even before they became international hits. Along with these big names are lesser known, but equally talented and entertaining musical artists. Alt Buffalo plays many up-and-coming or obscure artists, giving music lovers the opportunity to expand their musical library. Some artists you might discover include Panama Wedding, Catfish and the Bottlemen, Sir Sly, and Glass Animals.

Especially focused on the theme of discovery is the “The Underground Collective” session on Sunday nights 6-8pm. During this time they play only “underground” and indie rock artists, ones you mostly likely have not heard of, but that the station believes deserve to be listened to.

Similarly, “Localized” on Sunday nights 8-9pm features artists from Buffalo, Western New York, and surrounding areas. Local musicians can submit their music for the opportunity to gain exposure and listeners can hear local talented musicians. Joywave, a band out of Rochester, NY is now receiving a little more national attention, was featured on Localized.

Compared to similar alternative stations in other regions, Alt Buffalo keeps itself to the more indie and true alternative side of things. Other similar alternative stations sometimes begin to feel like a borderline pop station by playing too many top chart artists like Imagine Dragons or Fall Out Boy. While 107.7 does play some popular artists that fit into the indie or alternative genres, they steers clear of artists who do not belong on their station.

One drawback to Alt Buffalo is sometimes it can get slightly repetitive. If you listen too often you may find yourself hearing to the same songs multiple times in a week, which is perhaps a flaw of music radio stations in general. As more music comes out, however, they are always updating their playlists.

Besides just the radio station, a new and exciting addition to the Buffalo area from Alt Buffalo is their concert series. One of these series, called “You Saw Them First,” features lesser-known artists they expect to become big. Featured last spring was Bear Hands, who have their hit single “Giants.” Bear Hands went on to perform at Alt Buffalo’s big concert, the first Kerfuffle.

The unforgettable Kerfuffle concert happened in July at Canal Side under the skyway in Buffalo. It featured artists Bricks and Mortar, Semi-Precious Weapons, the Kongos, the Bleachers, and Cage the Elephant. Going from 3 to 11 p.m., the show had 10,000 people and was well-worth the price of admission.

With the success of summer concert and the growing popularity of the radio station, Alt Buffalo hosted the Kerfuffle Before Christmas. The concert featured artists Airborne Toxic Event, Jungle, Robert Delong, Neon Trees, and Walk the Moon – who recently came out with a new album, Talking is Hard.

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News

Broken Greenway Trail Runs Through Houghton

The Genesee Valley Greenway trail, which runs between Rochester and Hinesdale, south of Cuba, is closed in the section that goes through Houghton. Though students and community members run, walk, and bike on the Houghton section of the Greenway daily the interruptions prevent them from connecting to the rest of the trail.

The Greenway is a park originating from the land formerly occupied by area canals and railroads. Described as “an open space corridor” by the New York State Park Service, it is intended to be used for walking, hiking, and biking, and other outdoor recreation. It also has a crucial role in conservation, allowing organisms to travel on an uninterrupted wild space throughout Western New York.

Kristina Shoepfer, park manager for the Greenway, said that the land passed through several hands before becoming a state park. “The Genesee Valley Greenway follows the old Genesee Valley Canal and later, the Rochester Branch of the Pennsylvania Railroad. The railroad eventually sold the property to RG&E [Rochester Gas and Electric], who later sold the property to New York State for use as a recreational trail.” Because of the long history of the property, the Greenway runs past pieces of regional history, including ruins of stone locks, culverts, and historic inns such as the Yard of Ale and the National Hotel. One section near Black Creek, NY runs past areas of the canal which are still full of water, allowing trail users to imagine the canal in its heyday.

GreenwayTrailCMYKThe Friends of the Genesee Valley Greenway (FOGVG), a local nonprofit organization, in partnership with the state park system, attempts to promote and care for the Greenway to users of the trail. The Friends have brought more than $4 million in grants to the Greenway to develop it further, and often run events to promote and care for the trail. They also provide information about the length of the trail for potential users.

According to FOGVG there are several areas of the trail that are currently closed for use. One of the areas that is currently closed, according to the trail guide found on the FOGVG website, includes the section that goes through Houghton. Shoepfer pointed out that the trail nearest Houghton has a few obstacles that prevent it from connecting it to the rest of the trail. North of Houghton, “a bridge is needed to cross the creek adjacent to the Houghton soccer fields” while to the south, “there is a RG&E substation located on what used to be the old rail bed (and what would have been the path of the Greenway),” she said. Beyond these interruptions, the trail is maintained as it continues north to Rochester and south past Cuba.

“Having the Greenway connected in Houghton would be an asset to the college and community” for several reasons, Shoepfer said, as it would provide increased recreational opportunities over the length of the trail for activities including hiking, biking, snowmobiling, cross-country skiing, snowshoeing, and horseback-riding. Shoepfer also suggested that for students who currently run along Route 19, having the Greenway connected would allow for a safer alternative to running along the road.

The RVER Group, or Regional Ventures in Economic Revitalization, stated that one of its goals for the near future is to refurbish the park in the town of Houghton. Helping to connect the section of the Genesee Valley Greenway that runs through Houghton to the rest of the path would be a related goal worth pursuing.

The Greenway is a feature of Houghton that deserves to be more well-known and utilized. With a few improvements, the Genesee Valley Greenway could “stimulate business and tourism for the local community and benefit the community as a whole,” Shoepfer said.

For more information, including trail maps and updates on events, visit the Friends of the Genesee Valley Greenway website at fogvg.org, or the New York State Park website at nysparks.com

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Stories In Focus

Faces Behind the Kerr-Pegula Athletic Complex

If you have walked by the Kerr-Pegula Complex construction site in the past few days, you will have noticed a great deal of work has been done on the project in the past few months. Each day progress continues to be made from the finishing touches being put on the softball field, to the more major construction underway on the field house.

Athletic_ComplexLess visible are the faces behind the project that include the contractors, architects, and construction workers from companies outside of Houghton who are working long hours in tandem to reach their goal: a completed and open-for-business athletic complex.

Harold Lord, executive director of athletics, explained that bi-weekly OACM (Owner, Architect, Construction Manager) meetings are held to keep everyone up to date on the project. Lord, who has been heavily involved in the complex during all of its stages, discussed the major progress in construction, ensuring a finished complex by this coming summer.

In addition to Lord’s involvement, Keystone Associates architect Kenneth Gay has served in the role of senior architect for the construction of the complex. In charge of the architecture, engineering, and surveying, his company has been there since the beginning stages which included meetings with the owner, selecting locations, and drawing up designs, and they will see the project through until the end.

For Gay, the Houghton community is no stranger, having his wife and daughters as both alumni and current Houghton students. During a phone interview Gay explained, “We’ve been coming to Houghton from 1983 to now, so for me to have a project at Houghton is neat; it’s a unique community.”

“In the end, Houghton is going to be proud, the donors are going to be proud, and I know that our office is going to be proud,” expressed Gay. “It’s a great project with so many elements that fit with our company.”

Mike Norton, owners’ representative from Pike Company, has also put in a lot of work on the complex. “I represent Houghton College in the project,” Norton explained. When describing his job, he explained he works as the representative of the complex. This means overseeing the site and making sure everything is being done as it is supposed to be. Apart from these responsibilities, he participates in numerous meetings discussing the complex, as well as supervising the pay schedules.

Growing up in Hornell, Norton is familiar with the area; as is Pike Company, a fifth generation, family business, located in Rochester, NY. When discussing the project with Norton he simply replied, “Every project is kind of exciting in its own little way because what it means to its owner.” “What I like about this business is when its done you can step back and say I was a part of that and it stays for many years,” said Norton.

Apart from the planning and supervising, LeChase Construction Company is responsible for the actual building of the complex. They are the general contractors, having numerous employees working long hours in often not-so-friendly weather conditions. Recently, LeChase workers have been busy putting up the steel, roofing and siding, and even beginning stages on the second floor. LeChase is also involved in the hiring of subcontractors for other work including things like electric and plumbing.

Other Houghton staff involved in the project includes Phyllis Gaerte and Jason Mucher, who aid in design; Robert Pool, vice president of student life; and Dale Wright, chief business officer.

“The Houghton team has been very focused on making sure that this building responded to a bunch of different needs and uses; not just athletics but campus wide and community wide,” said Gay. The field house will be a future home not only to athletic events, but also youth events, concerts, graduation, and many other things.

Things to Do: Schein-Joseph International Museum of Ceramic Art

Courtesy of ceramicsmuseum.alfred.edu
Courtesy of ceramicsmuseum.alfred.edu

Just 45 minutes south-east of Houghton on the Alfred University campus is the Schein-Joseph International Museum of Ceramic Art. According to the museum website, the museum “houses nearly 8,000 ceramic and glass objects, ranging from small pottery shards recovered from ancient civilizations to contemporary sculpture and installation pieces to advanced ceramics reflecting the cutting edge of ceramic technology.”

Unique to this museum is “The outstanding collection of graduate thesis ceramics created by Alfred-educated ceramists… [which] historically has formed the core of the collection. The permanent collection has grown to include works by internationally recognized ceramic artists,” as stated on the website.

The current exhibition is titled New Morphologies: Studio Ceramics and Digital Processes, and will be on display through April 5. According to ceramicsmuseum.alfred.edu, the exhibit “highlights work that emerges from the encounter between the physical materiality of ceramic objects and the ephemerality of digital information. Working in Belgium, the U.S., Holland, and the U.K., the makers in this exhibition explore the intersection of digital technology with ceramic practice.”

Visit http://ceramicsmuseum.alfred.edu/exhibitions/ for more information on current, upcoming and former exhibitions.

The museum is open Wednesday through Friday from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. and is closed Saturday through Tuesday and some holidays. Oh, and did I mention admission is free? Now you have no reason not to go for a visit.

 

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Arts

Things to Eat: Chocolate Chip Cookies

arts&sports_kimfoodA few of you may know that I like to bake a lot.  When I was younger, I would watch and “help” my mom and grandmas bake.  Joining 4-H and taking home economics classes in junior high and high school continued to cultivate my interest.  

Now, I have the pleasure of baking with my children on Sunday afternoons; my daughter, Clancey, is eight and my son, Reid, is six.  They have been baking since they were toddlers and old enough to stand up in a chair next to me to add ingredients.  There are times when they are basically just waiting for a chance to lick the chocolate spoon, find a stray chocolate chip, or snitch gobs of cookie dough, but there are also other times where they are completely into the whole process from start to finish.

Just this past Sunday while baking with Reid, I mentioned we were going to double the recipe and right away he started saying instead of two cups of flour we will need four and so on.  Baking is fun math, even the fractions!  

There are life lessons in baking too: finish what you start, because something half-done is just a mess, and share whatever gift and bounty God has blessed you with, just like you would share cookies, and use patience to wait for dough to rise or cupcakes to set and cool.
In church, we have a group that does “Overt Ops.”  One of their ministries is taking baked goods, provided by our church family, to local merchants as a thank you for their service to the community.  They have received reactions ranging from, “Why are you doing this?” to “Wow, what a treat!”  What a great opportunity to show your care for community members and perhaps to plant some small seed.

Both of my kids also know that what we bake on Sundays is shared at the office on Mondays.  When I get home from work on Monday nights they always ask, “How did they like my [insert whatever we made the day before]?”  They are excited and pleased when they hear compliments and are ready to start pouring over cookbooks and looking at online recipes for what to make next week.
They have learned to take pleasure in serving others in this small way.  Just last week, Clancey asked to make our “Famous chocolate chip cookies with the secret ingredient” for her class Valentine’s Day party because some classmates had asked her to bring in that particular treat.  She collected all the ingredients, mixed up the cookies, and put them on the cookie sheet all on her own.

For me, baking is relaxing.  Kneading dough and mindlessly stirring batter is cathartic.  I could care less about how something looks when finished as long as it tastes good.   I have been bringing in Monday treats for several years now and have gotten to know people a little better by them just stopping in for a snack.  

Sometimes we have groups or individuals come to our house to have the space and equipment to do some larger scale baking, and I’ve gone to students’ places to bake together and fellowship, pray, or have some serious conversations.  There is something about doing a task together, like baking, that puts you at ease and distracts you from the cares of the day.  

¾ cup brown sugar 2 ¼ cups flour
¼ cup white sugar 1 tsp. baking soda
1 cup softened margarine or butter ¼ tsp. salt (optional)
2 eggs 1  (3oz.) package instant vanilla pudding  (use dry)
1 tsp. vanilla 1 c. chocolate chips 

Combine sugars and margarine until creamy.  Add eggs beating one at a time; stir in vanilla.  Add flour, baking soda, salt, and pudding mix; mix until well-blended.  Stir in chocolate chips – batter may be little stiff.  Place 2 inches apart on ungreased baking sheet.  Bake at 375 degrees for  8-10 min or until set.  

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Arts

Things to Do: Angelica Main Street

Courtesy of http://angelica-ny.biz/
Courtesy of http://angelica-ny.biz/

If you haven’t taken a trip to Angelica’s Main Street yet, shortlist it right now. If you have, you know you want to go back for another visit; I am willing to bet that you haven’t experienced everything the village has to offer.

West Main itself is a quaint little street with lots of small-town charm. You can stroll up and down the sidewalk peering into the local shops and restaurants and perhaps pop into one of the many antique stores for a look around. From old clothing and furniture to interesting books and knick knacks, I can assure you that you will find what you’re looking for.

If you are in the mood for some desserts, stop at the Angelica Sweet Shop. Want to check out some local hand-crafted pottery? Then the Three Clay Sisters is for you. For more local art, visit The Main Center gallery.

New in town is the Angelica Ink Letterpress, where you can purchase hand-pressed cards and stationery. Another new addition is The Village Closet, which sells new and recycled women’s clothing and accessories, among other various wares.

To break up your day of shopping and browsing, walk to the roundabout where there is a gazebo and a small park surrounded by a more residential area and numerous steepled  churches. You will most likely see local children laughing and frolicking on the swingset or the teeter totter in the playground.

And now we come to my personal favourite in the village, the Black-Eyed Susan Acoustic Cafe. I would recommend having a meal there on a Friday or Saturday when the restaurant features live music during evening dining hours.

I have always enjoyed the food I’ve ordered at the Black-Eyed Susan, and the music is definitely worth the trip in and of itself. It is nice to hear from local musicians outside of Houghton College every once in a while.

Tonight Pat Kane, an Irish and American performer and songwriter, will be featured. If blues is more your style, plan to attend Dallas Lucore’s gig this Saturday. Check out the Black-Eyed Susan’s website to find out more about these and future shows.

In addition to quality music, the restaurant features local artwork; the watercolors of Cuba native Lisa Robinson are currently on display. For a day exploring charming village shops and an evening listening to some great acoustic music over dinner, there is no better destination than the nearby Angelica, NY.

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News

Annual Internship and Summer Employment Day

news_jobfairHoughton College’s Career Services will put on the annual internship and Summer EmploymentDay on Wednesday, February 6th from noon to 3:00 P.M. in the Campus Center Van Dyk Lounge. Thirty-five employers will be on campus for the purpose of recruiting Houghton students for summer jobs and internships.  Camps and businesses will be looking to hire students from all fields of study. A complete list of attendees is posted on the HC Career Services Facebook page, as well as in the Career Services office.