Categories
International News

International // Syria Strikes Inspire Strife

For the past seven years, Syria has experienced war and conflict. The latest event in this unfolding catastrophe occurred last week, when the United States led airstrikes against the regime of Syrian president Bashar al-Assad.

These strikes were conducted with the intent of destroying the government’s chemical weapons facilities after Assad allegedly used chemical weapons on Syrian civilians, according to The Washington Post. After three sites in Syria were attacked, President Trump announced, “Mission accomplished!” in a tweet, but the situation remains volatile.

a photo of the authorAlthough the war in Syria began in 2011, the BBC reported that even before the conflict in Syria escalated, “many Syrians were complaining about high unemployment, officials not behaving as they should do, and a lack of political freedom.” In 2011, Syrians living in the city of Deraa began peaceful protests after 15 schoolchildren were taken captive for writing anti-government graffiti on a wall. Assad’s army opened fire on protesters, killing several people, according to the BBC. Outrage over this incident caused unrest to spread over the country, and many Syrian citizens called for Assad’s resignation. He refused, causing a violent rift to grow between Assad’s supporters and detractors. By 2012, the Red Cross described the situation as a civil war.

The people rebelling against Assad do not necessarily share a common vision for Syria, since there is not “one single group” of rebels, the BBC said. The rebels’ key international support comes from the United States, Turkey, and Saudi Arabia. As evidenced by their support for the recent U.S. airstrikes, the U.K. and France also support more moderate rebels.

In 2013, an extremist group that calls itself the Islamic State began to gain a foothold in Syria. This group is opposed to Assad but separate from other rebel groups. To counter the Islamic State, the United States launched previous airstrikes and currently has 2,000 armed forces members deployed.

Russia and Iran provide support for Assad’s government, and last week Russia backed up Assad’s claim that he had not used chemical weapons on civilians. Many worry that the United States may risk escalating tensions with Russia by attacking Assad’s regime.

The United Nations Security Council gathered after the strike to debate whether Assad’s government had used chemical weapons. The debate revealed bitter tensions. United Nations secretary general Antonio Guterres said, “the Cold War is back with a vengeance.” The New York Times noted that Guterres condemned the use of chemical weapons and lamented the Security Council’s failure to resolve the conflicts in Syria, which he called “the most serious threat to international peace and security.”

Russia’s ambassador, Vasily Nebenzia, said during the Security Council debate that the United States’ decision to conduct airstrikes was an act of aggression against a state “on the front lines of the fight against terrorism.” Nebenzia said he believes the United States acted with “blatant disrespect for international law.”

Others have suggested that President Trump’s authorization of the strike was unconstitutional. In an article for The Atlantic, Garrett Epps argues “under the Constitution and the War Powers Act, the president has no authority to send military forces into hostilities except after congressional authorization or in response to a direct attack on the U.S. or its forces.” This would suggest that even in a pressing situation, the United States must maintain transparency with its people about war aims.

The American ambassador, Nikki Haley, argued that the recent intervention in Syria was “justified, legitimate, and proportionate.” Haley said the United States “gave diplomacy chance after chance after chance,” only to have these efforts blocked by Russia. She said, “when our president draws a red line, he enforces that red line.”

For average Syrian people, an anti-government activist said, “the American strikes did not change anything.” Seven years of conflict has seen Syria “sliced up by world powers,” The New York Times reported, and some now argue that the only realistic way to halt the war is “to acknowledge that Mr. Assad…will remain in power.” Though many desire to punish Assad for his brutal actions in the war, Joshua Landis, an expert on Middle East Studies at University of Oklahoma, said he believes punitive measures will make life worse for average Syrians and impede efforts to address the country’s sizable issues.

 

Sarah is a senior double majoring in English and Biology.

Categories
National News

National // Facebook Practices Scrutinized

Facebook announced last week that the personal data of up to 87 million of its users may have been compromised and given to a political consulting firm called Cambridge Analytica, according to The New York Times. In addition, The Atlantic reported that “most” Facebook users have likely had their public profile information harvested by third parties.

In the wake of this news, Facebook has been the subject of public ire. Recent privacy concerns follow on the heels of other issues: last year Facebook admitted that its platform was used improperly “by Russians to buy political ads, advertisers to discriminate by race and age, hate groups to spread vile epithets, and hucksters to promote fake news on its platform,” according to The Atlantic.

a photo of the authorProfile scraping was enabled by a design vulnerability which Facebook said until last week allowed third parties to submit “phone numbers or email addresses they already have” using the site’s search and account recovery function. While these searches were rate-limited, Facebook Chief Executive Officer Mark Zuckerberg said that “malicious actors…cycled through hundreds of thousands of IP addresses and did a relatively small number of queries for each one.”

Cambridge Analytica obtained data from Facebook users through a different method, The New York Times reported.  The data firm contracted a researcher to create a personality quiz, and when some 270,000 users took the quiz, their personal data as well as data from all their Facebook friends was collected and stored. Facebook later stopped quizzes and apps from gathering data from users’ friends without their knowledge or consent.

The data involved in the Cambridge Analytica scandal was used to target political ads, according to The New York Times. The firm has connections to President Trump’s 2016 digital campaign: Cambridge Analytica is primarily owned by Robert Mercer, a right-wing donor who supported the Trump campaign. Facebook’s problems, however, began even before reports of voter profiling by Cambridge Analytica. Law enforcement and congressional committees are conducting ongoing investigations into Facebook’s role in swaying the opinions of American voters. According to The New York Times, Russian actors bought and targeted divisive political ads on Facebook. Zuckerberg initially dismissed this idea as “crazy,” but Facebook now acknowledges that its platform was misused to target voters based on their personal information.

Facebook Chief Operating Officer Sheryl Sandberg said of the Cambridge Analytica incident, “We really believed in social experiences. We really believed in protecting privacy. But we were way too idealistic. We did not think enough about the abuse cases.” Before coming to Facebook, Sandberg worked as a VP of Google. In an article for The Atlantic, Michael Jones explained the differences between the policies of Google and Facebook. He wrote that Google pays attention to what users search for in order to customize ads, but emphasized that “the user’s behavior and interest is held in secret by Google and the advertiser never has a hint of it.”

In contrast, Jones said, Facebook has created a place where they can “record what you tell your kids and spouse and friends, and use that to understand you and by extension, something about your friends.” Then, in an arrangement that has made the company wealthy, Facebook “sells access to this description to advertisers.” Jones noted that Facebook’s interactions with advertising companies is analogous to the system used by credit scoring companies because “their customers also get the report on the specific user rather than an anonymous introduction to certain users.” Unlike credit scoring companies, print ads, and television ads, however, online ads are very loosely regulated.

Recent discussion has focused on how to protect online privacy in the future. Some have suggested imposing fines for data breaches: Daniel J. Weitzner, a former White House deputy chief technology officer, says that technology should be policed by “something similar to the Department of Justice’s environmental-crimes unit,” which has levied hundreds of millions of dollars in fines.

Stricter policing of online political advertising is also in the works. Facebook recently backed proposed legislation that would require social media sites to verify the identities of people who buy ads related to political campaigns and divisive issues. However, Ann Ravel, a former commissioner at the Federal Election Commission, said that more could be done. She suggested that the FEC’s definition of political ads is too narrow, since it is limited to ads that mention a federal candidate and appear within 60 days prior to a general election or 30 days prior to a primary. This definition, Ravel said, will fail to arrest new forms of election interference, such as ads placed months before an election.

Many hope that further steps will be taken to hold Facebook accountable for activity that occurs on its platform. In the meantime, check your privacy settings and hope for the best.

 

Sarah is a senior double majoring in English and Biology.

Categories
Campus International Stories In Focus

Open to London’s Wonder

This semester, twenty-two first-year Houghton students are living and studying in London as part of the Honors in London program.

The students’ routine follows weekly rhythms: on Monday mornings, all the students and professors gather in a small upper room of St. Augustine’s Church for a “plenary session,” during which the major topics for the week are introduced. This past week, that meant exploring “the new ways nineteenth-century Westerners started thinking about history and their place in it,” according to Ben Lipscomb, one

students gather in the campus center for a picture before leaving
This semester, twenty-two first year Houghton students are living and studying in London as part of the Honors in London program.

of the three Houghton professors who traveled to London to teach the program this spring. The other two professors are Susan Bruxvoort-Lipscomb and Madison Murphy. At the end of plenary, students are handed Museum, Art and Gallery Guides—called “MAGGs”—which detail the museums and pieces of art they will explore on their own time during the week. On Tuesdays, Wednesdays, and Thursdays, the students are split into two groups for “colloquy sessions” during which they discuss the week’s readings. On Fridays, students meet for another plenary session, which is often geared towards helping them write their weekly paper, and which also includes a chapel service. On Saturdays, students buckle down to finish writing their weekly 5-7 page paper before the midnight deadline. Sundays are their day of rest.

The London program does not involve taking separate classes; instead, philosophy, history, art, literature, music, and theology are intertwined in a study of the development of Western modernity.  Ben Lipscomb said that one of the things he values most about the structure of the program is “the feeling of wholeness.” He explained that the tight integration of disciplines in the program is crucial to this feeling: “We and the students work really hard, but…we’re not pulled in as many different directions, and that allows us to enter more deeply into the experience and get more from it.” He said that a visiting parent of one student compared the program to a spiritual retreat, “not in the sense that it’s so restful, but in the sense that a lot of typical distractions are excluded so everyone can concentrate on doing something transformative.” A student in the program, Ally Stevick ’21, said “One of the things that I’ve appreciated most about the program so far is the chance to be part of a group of students all learning the same material.” Stevick said that this structure provides a “common base for conversations” and “a built-in network of other people” who are all wrestling with the same ideas. Another student, Abigail Wilkerson ‘21, spoke of the perspective the program helps students develop, saying: “Because of this program I can now look at current social structures in a new light.” Susan Bruxvoort-Lipscomb, another of the program’s professors, said she enjoys teaching the program because of the “wide foundation of knowledge” it gives students. She said, “I love it when we get to the 20th and 21st century sources and students can say, ‘This reminds me of something we read from the 17th century’ or ‘I can see how this idea developed from period to period.’”

The Honors in London program has experienced its own transformations over the years. Ben Lipscomb said that “the program ran, in its first manifestation (which covered the whole sweep from the ancient Greeks and Hebrews up to the present) from 1996-2011. Then a four-year hiatus.” The program’s TA, Anna Schilke ‘19, was an Honors in London student in the 2015-2016 academic year, when the program was reinstated. This year’s cohort is the third to go to London and study the new curriculum. Schilke said, “Coming back to London feels like stepping into a life, a life that has flowed and ebbed while I was away, but not changed a lot. But that’s an experience that’s unique to me, the sole student who has lived here before.” She said that the first-year students are “full of the same wonder that I remember experiencing—wonder for the tube and the cafes and the rain. Wonder for the sheer difficulty of the paper weekends. Wonder at the fact that we’re in a foreign country, not as visitors but as temporary residents.”

“Being in London Honors is truly a life-changing experience,” Wilkerson said. Stevick agreed, saying she’s especially appreciated “the independence of living in such a large and diverse city for the first time as an adult.” She said, “I’ve been able to retrace the steps of many of my literary heroes, but I’ve also been able to get to know the city as it is today—how to navigate the public transport by myself, and where to buy the best groceries.” Schilke concluded, “I’ve always been an advocate of the program…It’s been one of the best experiences of my life. Even on the second go.”

Categories
Campus Stories In Focus

Old Tradition, New Selections

Last month, the library reinstated an old tradition: asking faculty members to recommend a list of books, which are displayed in the library with annotated bookmarks tucked into their pages. The first of these book lists, which will be on display at the library until mid-March, was created by Professor of Art Ted Murphy.

“There’s nothing like walking into the library and seeing Professor Murphy’s face staring back at you from bookmarks,” said Matt Young ’18. Librarian Brad Wilber, who graduated from Houghton in 1991, said the Faculty Picks display is something he remembers from his time as a student. Murphy approached Wilber recently and suggested that the library revive this old tradition, saying that he had “enjoyed seeing what colleagues thought were books formative to their thinking and education.” Wilber responded with his own suggestion: that Murphy compile the first book list. Wilber said he hopes Murphy’s selections “will be something students and community members will gravitate toward.” The next Faculty Picks display will be compiled by President Shirley Mullen.

a photo of professor Ted Murphy
The Houghton library has reinstated an old tradition: having faculty members recommend a list of books, which are displayed with annotated bookmarks tucked into their pages. Professor Ted Murphy is the first to share his list.

Some students have already found the Faculty Picks display to be a useful guide. Young noted that books lists “provide insight into the intellectual and emotional lives of people we admire or respect.” Wilber agreed, saying that the exercise of reading Murphy’s book list “has made me feel closer to him.” Tyler Stetson ’20 was also appreciative of the display, saying “I think the faculty recommendations at the library is an awesome idea, especially since there is a bookmark in each book explaining why the professor found it particularly worthwhile. This program shows that developing expertise such as Houghton faculty possess requires reading broadly and deeply.” Even though some students may not have the time in their schedules for extra reading during the semester, Wilber said he has noticed many students reading every annotated bookmark in the display. The annotations can also be viewed on the library’s website, a feature created by Librarian Doyin Adenuga.

Many of the books Murphy chose are philosophical in nature, ranging from works by Fyodor Dostoyevsky to Cormac McCarthy. Murphy said he enjoys reading books lists himself: “I like them as guides,” he said. Anthony Burgess’  list titled “The 99 Best Novels in English Since 1939” introduced Murphy to “authors [he] still finds unfamiliar to many serious readers of literature.” He noted significant examples: Olivia Manning, Brian Moore, Budd Schulberg, and Angus Wilson. A self-described “generalist,” Murphy was grateful to become familiar with the work of these writers. 

Murphy reflected on the idea of the book list, observing that lists claiming to contain the best novels are “not looked upon well today in college literature.” He explained that there is “far too much hegemony at stake and the exclusivity of voice is a serious risk.” He then concluded lightly, “But I am a painter. I don’t have to worry about what I read in terms of the academy. No one is concerned that I don’t read enough in their particular ilk.”

Murphy made it clear that to him, reading is both a passion and a serious commitment. He spoke of the formative power books have in our lives, highlighting their ability to connect us to others. “Books, like all art, are conduits to other lives, he said. Further, he expressed that “Books have a life of their own…books branch out and connect you to the authors that inspired the novel you just read.” 

Reading, however, does not come easily for Murphy. He explained that he reads very slowly, and said that “from what I have investigated I can be pretty sure I have dyslexia. A great many of the conditions clearly describe my struggles early on in learning to read.” Murphy reads about 30 pages a day, which “most of my students can do in a half hour. Me…it takes hours.” He said that his slow reading pace does have its benefits: “I tend to recall well what I have read. Ernesto Sabato’s El Tunnel, which I read 40 years ago, is still clear enough in my memory I feel confident I could take a quiz on it.” Murphy reads between 35 and 50 books each year, “but it requires a big commitment.” 

This commitment has proved invaluable. “Reading has saved me,” Murphy said. “I am who I am in many ways because of the ideas books have exposed me to. I am lucky to have a job where I am essentially paid to read,” he said. For college-aged adults at a formative time of life, Murphy encouraged an exercise suggested by one of the writers on his list, Borges. “The first important thing an adult should do is establish a personal library. Buying a home and a car are typically what we think of as adults…Borges said it is the books you have brought into your life,” Murphy said.  “I hope a few people will read some of what I have been most inspired by.”

Categories
Arts Campus News

Congdon To Offer Valedictory Lecture

On March 8, Professor of Organ and Harpsichord Judy Congdon will be presenting her valedictory lecture. This lecture is part of a series from faculty in a variety of disciplines, providing an opportunity for faculty, staff, students, and community members to learn from local experts.

At Houghton, Congdon is well known as the chapel organist, and has performed in venues across the United States. She holds degrees from a variety of universities: Wheaton College, the University of Colorado, Eastman School of Music, and Robert E. Webber Institute for Worship Studies, according to her faculty profile on Houghton’s website. In 1996, Congdon was featured as soloist in Poulenc’s Organ Concerto with the Buffalo Philharmonic orchestra.

She frequently uses her musical talents for worship: she served for eight years as Organist and Choirmaster at St. Stephen’s Episcopal Church in Olean, NY, and presently serves as organist at Houghton Wesleyan Church. She also served as presenter, recitalist, and service organist at the January 2006 Calvin Symposium on Worship.

Congdon has served as Dean and Board Member of the Allegany Chapter of the American Guild of Organists (AGO) and member of the Music Commission for the Episcopal Diocese of Western New York. She currently serves on the board of the Portageville Chapel, a national retreat for organists. In recent years, Congdon has presented workshops by invitation for several AGO chapters on topics of organ pedagogy, organ repertoire, and use of the organ in contemporary worship styles. Additionally, she has been a judge at numerous organ competitions, both local and national.

Congdon’s organ performance is featured on two compilations recorded on Houghton’s Wesley Chapel Holtkamp organ. These are With Heart and Hands and Voices: Hymns and Chorales for Organ and Love So Amazing: Organ Hymns for the Church Year.  Congdon is also featured in two CD recordings on the James Louder organ at Houghton Wesleyan Church: Jesus Priceless Treasure is a recording of her all-Bach recital presented during the inaugural series for the organ and In Sweet Rejoicing features a bouquet of organ works for the Christmas season. All CDs are available through the Houghton Campus Store.

Congdon’s valedictory lecture will take place in Library 323 from 4:25 to 5:30. All are welcome to attend.

Categories
Arts Campus News

Artist Series: Brooks-Nebyu Duo

This Friday, February 16, the Brooks-Nebyu Duo will take the stage at Houghton College as part of the 2017-2018 Artist Series. According to Houghton College’s website, this duo is comprised of pianist Bethany Brooks and violinist Samuel Nebyu.

Brooks and Nebyu recently recorded an album together, called “Music By Composers of African Descent.” The Violin Channel called this work “cross-cultural and groundbreaking,” highlighting the ways in which this album celebrates Nebyu’s biracial heritage. Nebyu said recording the album was a meaningful experience: “It gave me the opportunity to reveal unknown composers and their music to new audiences.”

a photo of one of the instrumentalists
Visiting musicians offer music students the opportunity to see more from professionals in their chosen field, and give everyone the chance to enjoy music from world-class performers.

Naomi Tripp, a junior piano performance major, expressed excitement about seeing the Brooks-Nebyu Duo perform. “Hearing artists that have started their study at Houghton and those that haven’t will be a good experience for the music students here,” she said. Tripp also said she values the opportunity to “see professionals at work” in her area of study.

Sarah Madden, a junior music student with a concentration in violin, had a different perspective.  “I have mixed feelings about the artist series,” she said, citing the time commitment required of music students in attending the artist series. “It’s important for us musicians to listen to professionals and become inspired by their skill, but often it is seen as a chore to go to these events. Many students get annoyed when they have to give up a large chunk of their Friday nights for this,” she said. While critical of the length of these concerts, Madden noted “There have been a few artist series [concerts] that truly have been enjoyable.”

Brooks began her career at Houghton, where she earned a Bachelor of Music degree in piano performance. She went on to study at the Royal Academy of Music in London and at Temple University, where she earned a Master of Music degree in collaborative piano and chamber music. Today, Brooks works as a freelance pianist and piano teacher in the greater Philadelphia area. According to the website of Csehy Summer School of Music, a Houghton-based music program, Brooks began serving as faculty at Csehy in 2002. Brooks is also a staff pianist at the Crescendo Summer Institute in eastern Hungary, according to the organization’s website.

Among other pursuits, Brooks has performed as a soloist and collaborative artist in Philadelphia, New York, Nashville, London, Mexico City, Odessa, and Istanbul. She is a frequent pianist for the Lancaster Symphony Orchestra and the Pennsylvania Philharmonic. Csehy’s website notes that Brooks’s musical tastes vary widely. “She became active in the Philadelphia folk and rock music scene in 2006 and has drawn from this experience in her role as Director of Musical Worship at City Church, a congregation in West Philadelphia,” according to her faculty profile. Her solo recording project, Quarry Street Hymnal, reflects both classical and folk influences and is the product of more than a decade of writing new music for old hymn texts.

Nebyu was born in Hungary but grew up in Asia and Belgium. According to New York Public Radio, “After seeing a poster with a picture of a violin in a Belgian museum at age six, he was inspired to learn the instrument.” By age 15, Nebyu was part of the Young Talents Program at the Brussels Royal Conservatory of Music, where he studied with Igor Oistrakh and served as violinist-in-residence at the Queen Elisabeth Music Chapel. New York Public Radio states “He has performed at many renowned festivals, including the Mozarteum, the Eilat Music Festival in Israel, the Ravello Festival in Italy, and the Summit Music Festival in New York.” Currently, Nebyu is studying at Boyer College of Music and Dance at Temple University under Eduard Schmieder.

The Brooks-Nebyu Duo will perform tonight at 7:30 p.m. in Wesley Chapel. The performance is open to the public, and  $10 tickets for children and $20 tickets for adults can be purchased at the door.

Categories
International News

CDC Faces Tightening Budget

The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) informed its employees last month of its plans to discontinue overseas epidemic prevention work in 39 of 49 countries after severe budget cuts, according to CNN. Reports by The Atlantic also indicated that the country’s flagship public-health agency is facing internal scandal after the resignation of CDC director Brenda Fitzgerald in late January. According to a spokesperson for the Department of Health and Human Services, Fitzgerald’s departure came as a result of her “complex financial interests,” involving investment in tobacco stock.

Photo of the authorThe CDC’s Center for Global Health seeks to prevent the spread of disease abroad through monitoring between 30 and 40 outbreaks in other countries daily and training more than 10,000 people as disease detectives, according to the organization’s website. These efforts to stop outbreaks at their source have been funded mostly through a five-year supplemental package, which was awarded to the CDC in 2014 to respond to the Ebola epidemic in West Africa.

According to The Atlantic, Congress appropriated $5.4 billion at that time, most of which was directly dedicated towards quashing the epidemic. Around $1 billion was allocated to help developing countries respond to infectious diseases. This funding is now drying up, and the CDC, with no promise of future funding, has been forced to significantly downsize its international work. The director of a division of the Center for Global Health, Dr. Nancy Knight, said, “We estimate approximately an 80% reduction in the staff that are based overseas.”

Countries losing funding include the Democratic Republic of Congo, which recently experienced its eighth Ebola outbreak, and China, which recently underwent its worst outbreak of H7N9 bird flu. “This is also going to result in a significant reduction of the staff we have at headquarters,” Knight added. Dr. Rebecca Martin, the Center for Global Health’s director, said overseas work will remain in 10 priority countries: India, Thailand, Vietnam, Jordan, Kenya, Uganda, Liberia, Nigeria, Senegal and Guatemala.

The CDC’s looming funding cliff has been met with anxiety and criticism from experts. The CDC’s former director, Dr. Tom Friedan, said the loss of prevention activities overseas will “significantly increase the chance an epidemic will spread without our knowledge and endanger lives.” Additionally, Dr. Friedan noted that while some have downplayed the importance of disease prevention, it is these preventative efforts that will decrease the cost—both economical and human—of infectious disease. “We can either help other countries stop disease outbreaks abroad or fight them here at home,” said Dr. Tom Frieden.

Mary Chu, who was part of the White House Office of Science and Technology Policy during the recent Ebola outbreak, agreed with Dr. Friedan that prevention is crucial. “To respond to an outbreak, you need to have a presence on the ground to execute emergency operations, and that has to be based on existing trust,” she said. Unfortunately, scaling back the current CDC presence on the ground will likely be necessitated by financial realities. “People have to prepare and live their lives,” says Linda Venczel, from PATH, a nonprofit working in global health. “People are packing their bags and looking for other jobs. Things will unravel pretty quickly,” she said.

While beset by budget cuts and the worst flu season in a decade, the CDC is now also facing an unexpected shift in leadership. Dr. Brenda Fitzgerald, the organization’s director, has resigned because of her troubling financial investments in tobacco and health care companies. Her resignation came less than a day after reports revealed that the month after she became director of the CDC, she had purchased stock in Japan Tobacco Inc.  Dr. Fitzgerald said she had been unaware of the tobacco-stock purchase, according to the Wall Street Journal. In an email, she said that the purchase was made by an outside entity contracted by the couple’s investment manager and that she didn’t have control over which stocks were bought and sold.

Even before this information became public, lawmakers in Washington had expressed frustration with Dr. Fitzgerald’s investments, which required her recusal on several major health crises, including cancer and the opioid epidemic. Senator Patty Murray, the senate Health Committee’s top Democrat, said Dr. Fitzgerald’s resignation represents “yet another example of this Administration’s dysfunction and questionable ethics.” According to The New York Times, Dr. Anne Schuchat, a veteran official at the CDC, has been named acting director for the present.

 

Sarah is a senior double majoring in English and biology.

Categories
International News Sports

South Korea Hosts Olympics

The 2018 Winter Olympics begin next week, and will last from February 9 to February 25. For the first time in 30 years, the Games will be held in South Korea. The last time that the embattled nation played host was during the Seoul Summer Olympics of 1988. The city of PyeongChang, which will host the Games this year, is located 80 miles east of Seoul and 60 miles south of the Demilitarized Zone that divides North Korea and South Korea.

World-class athletes in sports such as skiing, speed skating, figure skating, and bobsleigh will travel to PyeongChang to participate in a variety of “snow sports, ice sports, and sliding sports,” according to PyeongChang Olympics’ official site. The BBC reported four new disciplines within existing sports have been added this year: big air snowboarding, mixed doubles curling, mass start speed skating, and mixed team alpine skiing. The International Olympic Committee (IOC) said they hope that these changes will have “youth appeal” and boost female participation. In addition, six nations are scheduled to make their Winter Olympics debut: Ecuador, Eritrea, Kosovo, Malaysia, Nigeria, and Singapore.

To prepare for the Games, new venues, stadiums, and rail lines have been built in PyeongChang. According to CNN, the estimated cost of the PyeongChang Winter Olympics is $10 billion, five times less than the 2014 Sochi Olympics, which were estimated to be the costliest ever. In spite of all the excitement, anxiety has hung over the preparations, too. When South Korea won the contest to host the 2018 Winter Olympics seven years ago, North Korea’s antagonism looked like little more than an inconvenience. At the time, there was even serious talk of South Korea co-hosting the event with North Korea as a sign of good will, according to the Chicago Tribune.  In light of recent nuclear tensions, several countries, including France, Germany, and—briefly—the United States, considered skipping the Olympics, citing concern for the safety of their athletes.

With a week to go, security concerns have been alleviated by North Korea’s agreement to participate in the Olympics. During the opening ceremony, North and South Korea plan to march together under a unified flag, according to NPR. In addition, the two nations have agreed to form their first joint Olympic team: a women’s ice hockey team. According to Robert E. Kelly, an expert on North Korean security issues at Pusan National University, a North Korean attack during the Olympics is unlikely. “I think the Olympics will be safe,” he said. Many see the fact that North Korea is sending athletes to the Games as insurance against violence during the event.

However, an article for NPR noted that this breakthrough in communications between North and South Korea does not necessarily indicate relations that will last beyond the Olympics. “The two Koreas are not talking about security issues—that is, this question of North Korea’s increasing nuclear and missile capabilities,” a reporter for NPR said.

In addition to potential security concerns, the IOC announced last December that the Russian Olympic Committee is barred from the 2018 Olympics due to the discovery of a state-run doping program. In the aftermath of the 2014 Sochi Winter Olympics, evidence from the former director of Russia’s anti-doping laboratory indicated that many of the country’s greatest athletic stars were using banned performance-enhancing substances throughout the Games. According to an article for The New York Times, Russian anti-doping experts tampered with urine samples as part of one of the most elaborate doping efforts in sports history.

During the 2014 Sochi Olympics, Russia won the greatest number of gold medals—though many of these will be retroactively awarded to other athletes in a special ceremony at the PyeongChang Olympics. This year, official records will state that Russia won zero medals, regardless of the performance of athletes from Russia who choose to compete as neutral athletes. The IOC’s suspension of the Russian Olympic Committee allows the participation of athletes who can prove through rigorous testing that they are not using banned substances; these athletes must comply with stipulations not to wear their country’s colors or march under their own flag, according to The New York Times.

For all the controversy and uncertainty, the mayor of PyeongChang County, Sim Jae-kook, expressed confidence that things will fall together and the Olympics will be a success this year, saying “Koreans have a tendency to work at the last minute.”

 

Sarah is a senior double majoring in English and biology.

Categories
Campus News

Equestrian Center Moving Forward

Last year, $2.4 million was anonymously donated for the expansion of facilities and programs at Houghton College’s Equestrian Center. According to Larissa Ries, Equestrian Program Director and instructor, construction of the new indoor arena began on October 23, 2017. Construction is continuing through the winter months, and the expected completion date of this project is June 18, 2018.  

Currently, the new building’s foundation has been laid and steel beams have been erected, according to Ries. Students reported their excitement at the progress and for what the new facilities will mean for the equestrian department. Hannah Williamson ’20, an Equestrian Management major, said “Seeing the progress on the new arena makes it seem more and more real each day. As more beams go up each week and the framework starts to resemble the new arena to a better scale, it makes me realize how lucky I am to be at a school with amazing instructors and lesson horses.”

Marianna Vityk ’18, an equestrian minor, said that the expanded facilities “will really help with space and allow us to give every class and people who want lessons a chance to practice.” She also noted, “The men that have been building the barn have made a significant amount of progress already!” Once complete, the arena will be 100 feet wide and 245 feet long and will have an attached barn that will be 30 feet by 245 feet, according to a Houghton College press release. By contrast, the older arena is 60 feet by 145 feet.

The construction of the new 36,400-square-foot facility will increase the number and quality of educational opportunities for equestrian students. Monica Farfoglia ’19, an equestrian minor, said she anticipates taking advantage of the benefits offered by the new building. “The new arena will allow for Houghton to host more clinicians and equestrian events— anything from riding lessons with distinguished instructors to conferences and shows,” she said.

She also indicated that the growth of Houghton’s equestrian’s program could significantly impact the surrounding community. “I believe it is going to be the largest facility in Western New York and could definitely turn into a sort of hub for all things horses. This will provide a plethora of learning opportunities for the students and a better chance to network for future careers,” Farfoglia said.

In addition to the construction of the new facility, a Houghton College press release announced a comprehensive $3.5 million campaign effort to expand and upgrade existing facilities. These upgrades will be completed in time for the 2018-2019 academic year.

Vityk, who plans to graduate this May, said she is excited for underclassmen and future students who will benefit from the equestrian program’s expansion. She said, “Even though I’ll already be graduated once they finish, I’d still love to come back and see the new arena!”

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Recent Grad Works for Peace

Daniel Bellerose, a 2017 Houghton College graduate, has been actively promoting interfaith development and climate action through his work. Since graduation, Bellerose said he has published a journal article inspired by his study abroad experience in Tanzania. Bellerose also founded and directs The Global Symmetry Project, an interfaith environmental organization that he began in Western New York during his sophomore year and has since expanded to address interfaith development on a global scale.

When Bellerose interacted with people of different faiths in Tanzania, he was struck by their ability to look past their differences and form a cohesive community. His reflections on this experience were published last fall in The Interfaith Observer, a monthly digital journal. In his article, titled “Doing ‘God’s Work’ In Tanzania,” Bellerose recalls his first experience of the “built-in connectivity” between religious communities in Tanzania: a conversation with his Anglican host mother. When he asked his host mother how she viewed her Muslim neighbors, she said simply, “They worship on Friday, and we worship on Sunday. We’re brothers and sisters. There’s nothing else,” a response which Bellerose said he found unexpected and refreshing.

Bellerose writes of the communities he encountered, “Everywhere we went, the expected animosity among Muslims, Christians, and Pagans was replaced by an openness and an understanding of the need to live in community.” From these examples, Bellerose concludes “Tanzania, and the wonderful people living there, is an inspiration for those of us in the development world.”

Bellerose said his experience in Tanzania influenced his ideas about how communities should address problems such as climate change. The goals of his organization, The Global Symmetry Project, reflect a hope he learned from the people of Tanzania: according to The Global Symmetry Project’s website, the organization “seeks a world where interfaith cooperation is the norm for social change,” and affirms that “we are a world of many faiths, but we are one community.”

He commented that currently The Global Symmetry Project “conducts research and outreach for the use of interfaith principles in development work.” This research focuses “creating a new set of indicators for determining which countries should be considered ‘developed,’” Bellerose said. Through this research on development strategies, the stated mission of The Global Symmetry Project is to “change the way international development is viewed.”

When Bellerose began the organization as a college student, he put into practice principles he was learning as part of his major in International Development and his minors in World Religion and Political Science. Sustainability Coordinator Brian Webb, who was a mentor to Bellerose during his time at Houghton, commented on Bellerose’s strong capacity to put his ideas into action. “Dan is the kind of guy who not only gets excited about great and new ideas, but actually makes them happen.  I’m not at all surprised to see him recognized for his accomplishments…Dan is wired to do good in this world,” Webb said.

Bellerose said changes are in the works for The Global Symmetry Project. He plans to apply for nonprofit status for the organization this year, a process which he described as “a long road.” He is also starting a podcast, called Global Symmetry Podcast, which he said will be released on Patreon. Monthly subscribers to the podcast will fund the organization’s monthly financial requirements. Finally, Bellerose said that he is beginning to work on a major long-term project for the organization: the publication of a book. He said he hopes to publish “a book of interfaith development principles [titled] Many Faiths, One Community” within the next few years.

Bellerose currently lives in Harrisonburg, Virginia with his wife, Rachel Bellerose, and a group of other Houghton alumni. In addition to his work with The Global Symmetry Project, he is employed as a Program Assistant at Eastern Mennonite University’s Center for Sustainable Climate Solutions. This allows him to exercise his “deep passion for working with climate issues,” he said. His involvement in climate action and development research also extends to a variety of smaller projects: as a contractor with Friends Committee on National Legislation, a researcher for the National Wildlife Federation, and a junior contractor for an independent contracting firm that works on development research. “I’ve been organizing here in my community a lot, mostly climate advocacy, doing some business development contracting with local businesses, and writing letters to the editor in local papers,” Bellerose said. His future plans include getting his PhD and continuing to write and travel.