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Stories In Focus

Recommended Reads: Gone Girl by Gillian Flynn

This summer I was introduced to the talented writings of Gillian Flynn, a contemporary writer, who has composed three novels, Sharp Objects, Dark Places, and her latest, and in my opinion her best, Gone Girl. All three of her writings are packed full of mystery that keeps you from putting the book down until the very end, and trust me, they are all worth it, so don’t skip ahead. These thrilling stories take you into the minds of very complex individuals whose lives revolve around seeking the truth, which takes them each on a journey worth reading about.

Courtesy of katyat34.typepad.com
Courtesy of katyat34.typepad.com

Gone Girl begins with introducing us to a couple from the Midwest, Nick and Amy Dune, on the day of their fifth anniversary. But this isn’t any normal anniversary; this is the day that Nick’s wife goes missing. The story is written from the perspective of Nick Dune, beginning the day Amy goes missing and continues to tell the story each day afterward. At the same time the reader is able to learn a lot about who Amy is through her diary entries, which date back as far as seven years.

From the very beginning it is obvious that Nick and Amy are not having the greatest relationship. This is mostly to do with the fact that they both were forced to move from their home in New York City back to Nick’s small hometown in Missouri. To make matters worse, their once flourishing jobs in the writing world came to an end because of the poor economy and the decline in newspapers and magazines jobs available. Another factor damaging their relationship is the secrets that they both have withheld from each other.

As the days go by we learn more about Nick and the difficulties he goes through. From the very beginning the police and the town assume Nick to be the main suspect for Amy’s disappearance. His lack of emotion is noticed by both the police and the media. He also has great difficulty at thinking before he acts which makes matters worse.  No one believes his innocence except for his sister Go (short for Margo.)

We can come to the conclusion that Nick couldn’t be the one behind his wife’s disappearance because we are reading the story in his point of view, and can see that he truly does not know where Amy is. Panicked and angry he responds to the police during their investigation “My wife is gone. My wife is gone!” finally showing his concern that he has so much trouble expressing throughout the book. But there is still so much that we don’t know about him, for instance the truth that that he no longer loves his wife. But he still cares for her and is determined to find what happened to her.

As the days go by we continue to learn about Amy through her diary. We come to know her like we would a new friend, listening to the stories of her life with Nick. She is a happy and bubbly person who is always on the positive side of things. Yet as we read further we make another discovery that casts her husband in an entirely different light than what we’ve previously encountered him as the narrator of the story. So who are we to believe, Nick or Amy?

I recommend reading Gone Girl because it is a story with many layers; it is interesting, compelling, and plays clever psychological tricks on your mind. As you read, you may start to think that you know these characters, and you might even venture a guess as to what happened to Amy. However as soon as you’re halfway through the book, there is a plot twist that you never seen coming, and the story abruptly and completely changes. One would expect elements of mystery in any of Flynn’s books, but with Gone Girl she takes it to a whole different level.

Gone Girl was number one on the New York Times’ Best Seller list for eight full weeks. It has garnered a generous amount of praise, and will soon be adapted into a major motion picture by 20th Century Fox, with Ben Affleck as Nick and Rosamund Pike as Amy. The film will be released October 3rd 2014. So go read this amazing thriller for yourself and experience the great writing Gillian Flynn has to offer.

 

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Stories In Focus

Franciscan Friars Welcomed with Open Arms

This week Houghton welcomed back the Franciscan Friars of the Renewal, a group of both friars and sisters that have visited every few years since 1989. With their distinctive gray habits and cord around their waist, they were hard to miss. They seemed to be everywhere this week, engaging with students in the classroom as well as on campus.

Courtesy of facebook.com
Courtesy of facebook.com

The Friary began in the Bronx of New York, where they continue to meet the material and spiritual needs of the homeless in the New York area; needs such as setting up soup kitchens, providing food, counseling, clothing, and shelter for homeless people. Over the years they have been blessed, growing into multiple friaries and having the opportunity to travel, and visit places such as Houghton.

The friars and sisters enjoyed hanging out in the lounges, dining halls, and eating meals with the students. “They are accessible to our students, that is one of the gifts they bring,” said Michael Lastoria, Director of Counseling Services, and coordinator of the Franciscan Friars visits.

According to Lastoria, the friars and sisters are very knowledgeable and love to talk to the students about many topics such as the Reformation, social injustice, Roman Catholicism, the new Pope Francis, and a number of other things. Lastoria said, “both theologically and spiritually, they are a gifted group”.

At every meal the friars and sisters sat with students to engage them in conversations. On one of those nights during dinner, two of the sisters, Sister Mary Pieta and Sister Maria Grace, sat engaging in conversation with a table full of students.

Sister Mary Pieta, originally from Kansas, has been part of the convent for eight years. She attended a college very similar to Houghton, and during her junior year she began to enter in a deeper relationship with Jesus. “Feeling like my heart couldn’t be satisfied by anything but him, I had to give my life to him there wasn’t any other option. It was an impulsive love, someone who had given himself so totally for me,” she said with great passion and joy on her face.

The Franciscan Renewal was formed in the spring of 1987 by a group of friars with the intention of a communal reform within the Catholic Church. The friars observed a rise in theological confusion and false teachings made by the Catholic Church during the 1970s and 1980s. This crisis was causing a major decline in religious life, so the friars made the decision to start the renewal.

This community is made up of friars and sisters, embracing the gospel of Jesus Christ, adhering to the teachings of Saint Francis of Assisi, and keeping to the root of the Capuchin tradition.  They show a strong passion in assisting the poor and the homeless as well as evangelizing to others.

Currently, the convent that Sister Mary Pieta and Sister Maria Grace both live in has a food pantry which distributes food to about 200 people. “You are always giving food, but it’s always with a prayer, meeting their physical needs but hopefully also reaching to their spiritual needs as well,” said Pieta. They also have a Bible study, where they read scripture, pray, and have discussions with their neighbors. In addition to food pantries and Bible studies, their convent frequently participates in home visits, including those to nursing homes.

Lastoria said “I just love the spiritual activity that I see going on, the livelihood, and the energy that they bring to campus, how they interact with the students. It’s a breath of fresh air.”

The friars and sisters had many opportunities to connect with the Houghton community this week. They were our special guests in chapel on both Wednesday and Friday with both services being led by father Glenn Sudano, one of the original members of the Franciscan Friars of the Renewal. During worship, the friars and sisters shared their musical and vocal talents, showing the great passion they have for their faith.

They expressed their Catholic faith by sharing an instructional sacrament of the mass with communion, which was one of the things Dean Jordan was looking forward to the most. In their words, this instructional mass “kind of unpacks it and helps people to see, and say ok this is what they’re doing and this is why they are saying this.”

After the mass, the friars held a jam session located in Java 101 where students, faculty, and staff were given the opportunity to worship alongside their new friar friends.

Jordan was excited to have them and said, “I think it’s important for our students to learn a little bit about what that subset of Christianity is like, I want them to see people who have given everything to follow Jesus in a way that most Protestants don’t grow up thinking about it.

Sister Pieta expressed how it was a great joy to come and visit Houghton, and said it was a pleasure to be with the students, learn about them, the school, and its traditions. She also expressed how she hoped that her and her sisters and the brothers were joyful witnesses to the Houghton community and said, “There is something unique and special about the brothers and the sisters and priests because we’re are consecrated and totally given over to Christ, so just even that witness of seeing someone who has given themselves totally and fully over to the Lord. Hopefully we hope [sic] to be an inspiration to you all; that it’s possible to live radically to Jesus in that way.”

 

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News

HOPE: A New Office for Service and Outreach

To encourage dedication of service amongst Houghton students towards the community and surrounding areas, the college has created a new office for Houghton Outreach Programs & Education, or as it is also known as, HOPE. This new office will provide a centralized space on campus where students can learn and participate in upcoming community service opportunities.

Courtesy of voiceseducation.org
Courtesy of voiceseducation.org

The HOPE office, which will be located in the basement of the Campus Center, will offer resources to a current database listing needs of services to students, faculty, and staff.

It will provide students with the chance to discover service opportunities that will accompany their passions in life and study. Gregory Bish, Director of Student Programs said, “I think that one of the key things for the office is actually just to help us better understand and recognize what students are already doing. But I also think that as students, they are looking for opportunities that will be a mechanism for them to find places that are the best fit for them and help their college to be more effective.”

While this new office is meant to provide information and opportunities for community service, Dr. Robert Pool, Vice President of Student Life, explained there is more to what the office can offer students. He said, “The students are learning about themselves, how much they learn about the world in which they live, how they learn to coordinate efforts around needs. There is a lot of learning that goes on that’s very transferable to the outside world when you engage in thought for service.”

Before HOPE, there had never been a coordinated report of the services volunteered by Houghton students. With this new office, the college will be able to obtain that information by reporting data of the volunteer services taking place. This will allow the office to evaluate its programs and services.  “Internally, we want to know how we are meeting the needs of the community” said Pool.

Miriam Griffith, a senior student, expressed her opinion about the new HOPE office, saying, “Service is a pivotal aspect of Houghton College; it seems as though Houghton would not be the same if it did not have a deep love of giving back to those in need. I feel as though having an on-campus office dedicated to providing service opportunities for Houghton students is a great thing and I cannot wait to be a part of what this office is planning.”

At the moment the new office is at the stage of research and development, students and staff currently working together to find out the needs of the community. Currently, Jina Libby, senior, is part of this student staff. Part of her duties include going to areas in need of service, finding what their volunteer needs are, and determining how the college can better prepare the students to address those needs through service.

The HOPE office has identified three places on which they aim to work as their pilot projects. “We are working with the Fillmore Powerhouse, the Houghton nursing home, and Wellspring Ministries in Belfast,” Bish elaborated. Students will be able to start volunteering as soon as this spring.

Pool said “There’s really no centralized place where anyone can say, ‘how can I serve,’ ‘what is available,’ ‘who needs me,’ ‘what are my talents’ and ‘how can I explore those talents by serving others in a volunteer capacity.’” HOPE’s goal is to change that. “That’s what this office is all about” said Pool.

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News

Houghton Student Investment Group Reaches $300,000

Student Investment Group closed their portfolio with over $300,000 this summer, reaching past their initial goal for the semester.

Courtesy of universityfinancelab.com
Courtesy of universityfinancelab.com

The group was established back in January of 2001 from a student’s idea. With the help from Richard Halberg, Professor of Business Administration and certified financial planner, it was passed onto the board of trustees which lead to the ultimate approval of the Student Investment Group (SIG). They were given the opportunity to manage a small portion ($25,000) of the Houghton College endowment, allowing them to participate in real investments. SIG is “treated as one of the other college money managers”, says Professor Halberg. “So how the money is used is ultimately decided by the board of trustees and the college administration.”

Each semester SIG decides on a new dollar amount based on the previous semester, this new amount then becomes their goal. Last semester the group went passed their goal. The group started out with $256,819 as of January 1, 2013 and was able to pass the $300,000 goal. John Carpenter, a member of the Student Investment Group since 2012, said, “It’s an amazing achievement. Whenever we reach one goal, we always set a newer, higher one. It’s really cool to be able to set a benchmark and reach it as a group.”

Veronica Gerace, a business major, expressed her opinion on this achievement, and said, “When I visited Houghton and learned about some of the programs in the business department, one of the things that impressed me the most was the student investment group. They’re a part of what makes our department so great, and I’ll be happy to watch and see what they can do with the group in the future.”

As Halberg said, this opportunity can be very beneficial to the students as they learn to invest with real money and deal with all the pressures it comes with that enterprise. In addition, the opportunity adds an interesting addition to their resume. Only a small percentage of business and accounting students get to have this experience while being an undergraduate. This opportunity “sets the students apart,” said Professor Halberg.

John Carpenter said, “not only are we learning different techniques and developing our own investing philosophies, we are learning how to interact productively in a group setting.” The group has to build off one another, overcome problems along the way, and in the end come together to make a final investment decision as a whole.

The group decides which companies to invest in by following “a set of guidelines determined by Professor Halberg and members of the board.” These guidelines describe the “types of companies that we are not allowed to invest to stay in line with the Houghton’s standards and community covenant. Other than that, we have free reign over who we can invest in,” says Carpenter.

SIG invests in a variety of companies, from well-known names like Johnson and Johnson, Kraft Foods, and Microsoft. The decisions are all based on ideas, research, and stock screening the students have done. Each member comes into the group with their own different strategies and so when it comes down to researching investment opportunities, “there is no telling who might bring what company to the table to invest in” said Carpenter.  “That is part of the fun of the whole process. We are able to use the things we have learned in other classes and apply them to our research.”