- Open
Information Meeting on Climate Change Policy
- SIFE
students mentor area high schoolers in Entrepreneurship Challenge
- Spring
Weekend events begin today with softball tournament
- Accounting
students help VITA hit $1.6 million in refunds
- Career
Center
- Friday
Forum
- Newsmakers
- Campus
luncheon honors faculty and staff donors
____________________
Open
Information Meeting on Climate Change Policy
WHEN:
2 p.m. Thursday, May 1
WHERE: Murphy Building, Auditorium C
As announced on Earth Day by Sister Margaret, we are embarking on an
ambitious planning project. “Green” consciousness for a university now
goes substantially beyond recycling containers and buying green products.
What is under discussion in today’s world is the need to control climate
change by drastically reducing the emission of greenhouse gasses. This
cannot be achieved without seriously reconsidering energy use in society
as a whole.
Shortly, we will form a commission to consider the proper role for a
Franciscan university in this process. Whether or not you have already
volunteered to participate, you are invited to attend this informational
meeting.
How
much carbon dioxide is SBU responsible for emitting? What are the reduction
targets and strategies currently under discussion here, nationally,
or worldwide? What are universities doing about this — educationally,
in campus life, and in their facility operations?
What kind of help is needed?
For more information, please e-mail Phil
Winger.
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SIFE
students mentor area high schoolers in Entrepreneurship Challenge
Local
high school students may have walked away with trophies in Tuesday’s
Social Entrepreneurship Challenge, but communities across Cattaraugus
and Allegany counties were the true winners.
The objective: implement a service learning project partnering St. Bonaventure
University SIFE students and area high school students to increase blood
donations to the Community Blood Bank.
The result: dozens of local high school students helped organize eight
blood drives this spring that netted 250 pints of blood.
Eight high schools formed teams to take on the entrepreneurship challenge
and create marketing plans for a blood drive in their community that
would assist the non-profit Community Blood Bank, which provides about
40,000 units of blood per year to hospitals in Western New York and
Northwest Pennsylvania.
Team members obtained sponsors for their themed blood drive; developed
radio, video and print advertising; surveyed donors and non-donors;
and researched the blood bank and its competition.
Participating schools were Belfast, Bolivar-Richburg, Fillmore, Friendship,
Genesee Valley, Olean, Scio and Whitesville.
The students’ projects were judged on the development of a plans book
and Tuesday’s presentation of their project to a panel of judges.
Schools earning prizes in the overall competition were:
• first place: Fillmore
Central
• second place: Genesee Valley
• third place: Scio
Recipients of individual awards were:
• Marketing plan:
Genesee Valley
• Theme: Fillmore
• TV ad: Genesee Valley
• Radio ad: Fillmore
• Print ad: Fillmore and Genesee Valley
• Non-traditional: Genesee Valley
Dr. Todd Palmer,
adviser to Bona’s Students in Free Enterprise organization, described
the service learning competition as a reinvention of the high school
blood drive.
“It’s different from anything I’ve ever seen before,” he said. “The
response (to the drives) has been
overwhelming. Each of these schools had great blood drives, extracting
approximately 35 percent more blood than in traditional drives.”
In addition to building marketing and communications skills, “It gave
students a chance to reach out and appreciate their communities,” said
Hallie Steube, a graduate assistant with SIFE. Students at one of the
schools received internship offers from television and radio stations
they interacted with for the project.
Colleen Myers, who served as adviser of the Fillmore Central team, was
impressed as she watched students at her school “going out of their
comfort zone” to make contacts and organize Fillmore’s blood drive.
“These are kids who are really motivated and really trying to focus
on a cohesive theme,” said Myers, who is a math teacher at Fillmore
and a 1981 graduate of St. Bonaventure.
Groundwork for the blood drives began last fall with a leadership training
day for the teachers and student leaders. St. Bonaventure business and
education students followed up by visiting each school several times
over the past few months.
In addition to cash prizes, which were provided by CBB, members of the
winning team will have the opportunity to spend a day in Erie, Pa.,
talking with top marketing executives. Joining SIFE and Community Blood
Bank in sponsoring the Social Entrepreneurship Challenge were New York
Real, which promotes entrepreneurship throughout Allegany and Cattaraugus
counties through project-based learning and teacher training, and Cattaraugus-Allegany
BOCES.
The Community Blood Bank of Northwest Pennsylvania and New York is the
exclusive supplier of blood to all the hospitals in Erie, Warren, McKean
and Elk counties and provides about 90 percent of all the blood used
in Chautauqua, Cattaraugus and Allegany counties in Western New York.
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Spring Weekend events begin today with softball tournament
Foam
dance parties, an all-day concert series and inflatable games are just
a few activities in store for St. Bonaventure’s Spring Weekend.
St. Bonaventure University will host its annual Spring Weekend celebration
beginning on Thursday, April 24, through Sunday, April 27.
The traditional Rick Farina Memorial Softball Tournament kicks off festivities
on Thursday. Hosted by the Sandra A. and William M. Richter Center and
SBU Intramurals, 64 teams compete throughout the weekend for the title
of Spring Weekend softball champion. All games take place on the fields
behind the Reilly Center.
All other Spring Weekend events will be located on the basketball courts
outside of the Richter Center. The celebration continues at 4 p.m. on
Friday with inflatable games and barbequed foods. An inflatable riding
bull, obstacle course and jousting ring are free and open to the campus.
ARAMAK Dining Services will provide hamburgers, hot dogs, pulled-pork
sandwiches, pasta salads and other barbeque favorites on Friday and
throughout the weekend. Students can receive a dining wristband prior
to the weekend for $18.50. Students with platinum, gold, or silver meal
plans receive a wristband for free.
The festivities continue on Friday night at 6 with a Foam Dance Party
sponsored by the Campus Activities Board and WSBU-FM 88.3 The Buzz.
Students can dance to their favorite songs in an inflatable bouncing
pit filled with foam and bubbles. The dance party will also take place
on the basketball courts located outside of the Richter Center.
CAB, WSBU and Student Activities will sponsor a Spring Weekend concert
series beginning at 11:30 a.m. on Saturday. Dj.dstar of Buffalo will
play between each musical act, bringing an infusion of classic rock
and hip-hop to the stage.
Standard of Living will return to St. Bonaventure to kick off the series
at 1 p.m., followed by the indie-band The Jaguar Club at 2:30 p.m. Session,
a “jam band” from Valley Stream, NY, will perform at 4 p.m.
Rap artist Freeway will headline the concert series at 6 p.m. Freeway,
a member of Rockafella Records and native of Philadelphia, has worked
with recording artists such as Jay-Z and 50 Cent.
A caricature artist, a scavenger hunt and a tie-dye booth are just a
few of the other activities available to students on Saturday. The Buzz
will also have a booth set up with music and prizes.
The night will end with a black-light dance party in the Rathskeller
from 8 p.m. to 2 a.m. Students can wear white T-shirts into the ‘Skeller,
and CAB will provide highlights and the black-lights for students to
draw on each-other.
Spring Weekend will conclude with the softball tournament championship
on Sunday afternoon.
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Accounting
students help VITA hit $1.6 million in refunds
lThe hard work of St. Bonaventure University accounting students has
paid off immensely for residents of Cattaraugus County.
After five years of assisting with the Volunteer Income Tax Assistance
(VITA) program, accounting students have helped generate approximately
$1,600,000 in cumulative tax refunds. This exceeds expected totals from
the start of the program.
The VITA program provides free income tax preparation and e-filing to
people with low or moderate incomes, which helps them receive state
and federal income tax benefits. VITA was created by New York state
as a way for low-income taxpayers to receive 100 percent of their refund
without having to pay a tax preparer.
Working more than 2,000 hours, a total of 25 student volunteers were
certified this year as tax preparers under IRS requirements. There were
450 total tax returns prepared this year, compared to an average of
150 over the past two years. This brought the cumulative total to 1,000
tax returns over the past five years.
In total, VITA generated $600,000 in total refunds this year, far exceeding
the previous average of $250,000. Two students, Brian McCabe and Nicholas
Bohdanowycz, are responsible for almost one-third of the total tax returns,
McCabe being responsible for generating $100,000 of the $600,000 refunded.
Dr. Susan Anders, associate professor of accounting, estimated that
in addition to this year’s tax refunds, prepared tax returns will bring
in a minimum of $150,000 to $200,000 in Stimulus Payment rebates.
Anders became involved with VITA when the students pushed to help with
the program five years ago. Anders has 15 years of experience as a practicing
Certified Public
Accountant and tax specialist. She says that assisting low-income people
through VITA is a different type of tax practice than most CPA’s will
experience, albeit a rewarding one.
“Very few accountants realize how much the community needs the accounting
and business skills that we (accountants) take for granted,” Anders
said.
This year, VITA worked at a new tax preparation site at the Olean Center
Mall. Volunteers worked at the site from January 30 to April 15.
SIFE helped take over management of the program this year. Its contributions
included marketing and promotions for VITA’s new location.
Students work with those who are eligible for the Earned Income Tax
Credit, a refundable income tax credit available to low-income workers
with earned income. The students work in pairs and meet with clients
to prepare and review their tax returns.
In addition to the work done locally, four volunteer students also helped
taxpayers in Houston, as part of a trip funded by Tony Annunziato, a
1971 St. Bonaventure graduate, for the second straight year. A total
of 60 tax returns generated $60,000 in total refunds, bringing the two-year
total to $100,000.
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Career
Center News
Detailed
information on upcoming Career Center events such as NACE’s Virtual
Career Fair for International Students, other career fairs, SBU
College Central, and BonaConnection is available in Directions,
the Career Center’s monthly newsletter, located on the Career
Center’s Events’ page.
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_____________________
Join
us for this week's FRIDAY FORUM!
All
SBU faculty, staff and administrators are welcome to all the Friday
Forums.
Date:
Friday, April 25, 2008
Time: 12:30 to 2 p.m.
Place: Robert R. Jones Board of Trustees Room
Topic:
"Student Research and Creative Endeavors Exposition 2008"
Reception
Abstract: All SBU faculty, staff and administrators
are invited to view posters and paintings summarizing the wonderful
projects of students in the School of Arts and Sciences. The posters
will be displayed in Trustees Room from Friday to Monday. The students
will be present to answer questions about their projects during the
reception on Friday from 12:30–2 p.m. During the reception, hors d’oeuvres
and beverages will be served. Cost:
Free!
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Newsmakers
Dr.
Carl J. Case, professor of management science, and Donald J. Swanz,
professor of accounting, had a paper titled “A Decision Support Model
for the China Studies Program” published in the journal Business Research
Yearbook. The paper was also presented at Annual Meeting of the International
Academy of Business Disciplines in Houston on April 3, 2008.
Dr. Leslie Sabina, professor of music, presented a paper, “Arranging
Jazz Standards for the SATB Saxophone Quartet,” at the 2008 Biennial
Conference of the North American Saxophone Alliance (NASA), April 16-19,
2008, at the University of South Carolina in Columbia. Sabina also presented
a clinic, “Writing About Jazz,” at the International Association for
Jazz Education’s 2008 International Conference in Toronto, Canada, on
Jan. 11, 2008.
Dr. Carol B. Wittmeyer, Visiting Assistant Professor of Management Sciences,
presented “An Examination of Trustee Participation in Institutional
Policy and Financial Decision Making” in Houston at the April 3-5, 2008,
Annual Conference of the International Academy of Business Disciplines.
In addition, she had published “Pritchett Foods: From Basement Production
to Thriving Innovative Enterprise in Two Generations, in the Family
Business Casebook Annual 2007 (Atlanta). Wittmeyer also presented her
case “The Rise and Fall of the Raymond Institute: Inside a Tail of Unfulfilled
Promises” at the United States Association for Small Business and Entrepreneurship
Conference 2008, held Jan. 10-13, 2008, in San Antonio, Texas.
Dr. René Wroblewski
and elementary education student Amy Gibson authored an article in the
March issue of Exceptional Individuals. The article, titled “Plunging
into learning: A college class’ experience with the Polar Plunge” outlined
their experiences participating in the Polar Plunge to raise funds for
Special Olympics last November.
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_____________________
Campus
luncheon honors faculty and staff donors
The University honored
the many faculty and staff members who made financial contributions
during this fiscal year with its annual Faculty and Staff Donor Appreciation
Luncheon on Wednesday in Doyle Dining Hall. More than 60 faculty and
staff donors attended the event.
“No one understands St. Bonaventure — our needs, our opportunities,
our past and our future — better than the people who work here,” said
Mary Driscoll, associate vice president for Advancement, adding that
employees play an “incredible role” in the life of the University.
According to Driscoll, St. Bonaventure enjoyed the financial support
of 138 faculty and staff members during 2007 and 2008, with gifts to
such areas as the unrestricted Bonaventure Fund, athletics, scholarships
and academic programs.
Faculty and staff gifts for this fiscal year (June 1, 2007 through May
31, 2008) stand at $65,902.66 as of April 23, Driscoll said. This figure
represents a 9.5 percent increase from last year at this time.
“Our internal campaign is an opportunity for all faculty and staff to
participate in the 150th Anniversary Campaign,” Driscoll said, noting
that more than $88 million has been raised toward the campaign’s $90
million goal.
Ann Tenglund, coordinator
of Library Computer Services, Information Literacy Instruction &
Curriculum Center, and Doug Cashing, Ph.D., professor of mathematics,
served as co-chairs of the 2008 Faculty and Staff Campaign.
Tenglund, guest
speaker at the event, noted that faculty and staff donations demonstrate
to the outside world “that those who work here are the first to show
their support. That means a lot.” She encouraged colleagues to get involved,
adding that she continues to “contribute financially to the University
because it will help other students achieve the same experiences that
I was fortunate to have as a student.”
For information about donating to the Faculty and Staff Campaign, please
contact Andrea Bidell, executive director of the Annual Fund and Alumni
Services, at (716) 375-2301 or at abidell@sbu.edu.
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