- SBU student wins Murray Scholarship for sixth consecutive
year
- Students learn they can make a difference during hurricane
aid service trip
- Pulitzer Prize-winner to keynote at SBU's Communications
Day
- SBU to launch online community for alumni this weekend
- St. Bonaventure University professor introduces podcasting
in the classroom
- SBU visiting professor Breea Willingham's article featured
in USA Today
- St. Bonaventure plans events for Disability Awareness
Month
- SBU Theater to present original fall Shakespearean
production
- Lehrer, Barry share advice with St. Bonaventure students
during Media Excellence Awards
- Career Center news...
- Newsmakers
- Friday Forum
____________________
SBU student wins Murray Scholarship for sixth
consecutive year
For a sixth consecutive
year, a St. Bonaventure University student is among the seven selected
winners of the Jim Murray Memorial Foundation essay contest. The students
selected, including Joe F. Werkmeister of St. Bonaventure, will each
receive a $5,000 scholarship in memory of the late sportswriter Jim
Murray.
St. Bonaventure University is the only school to have a
student selected for this award all six years since the scholarships were
established. A total of 25 selected journalism programs take part in the
competition. Other school winners this year include University of Florida,
Indiana University, University of Montana and Syracuse University. Student
entries from Trinity College, Murray’s alma mater, and Columbia
University, which awarded Murray a Pulitzer Prize, automatically receive
scholarships.
“Joe Werkmeister is an excellent student and he was
part of a very tough application process for the scholarship,” said Lee
Coppola, dean of the Russell J. Jandoli School of Journalism and Mass
Communication. “It’s obviously quite an honor for another student from our
school to receive this award for a sixth year in a row.”
“It's a
tremendous honor to represent St. Bonaventure as the sixth straight Murray
scholar,” Werkmeister said. “Jim Murray was one of the best journalists of
his time and to win an award in his honor is very
exciting.”
Werkmeister is a senior journalism/mass communication
major at Bona’s. He graduated from Bellport High School in Brookhaven,
N.Y., in 2002. He has a 3.0 grade point average and is currently editor in
chief of The Bona Venture, the student newspaper on campus.
Last
summer, Werkmeister worked as a freelance sportswriter for the
Times/Review Newspaper, a group of four weekly newspapers on the North
Folk of Long Island. He also interned at another weekly called Dan’s
Papers in Bridgehampton, N.Y.
Werkmeister has worked at The Bona
Venture for nearly four years. He started as a sports staff writer, then
assistant sports editor, and then sports editor. Later, he became managing
editor, and is now the editor in chief.
Linda McCoy-Murray,
president and founder of the Jim Murray Memorial Foundation said, “After
six years of cultivating the crème of the crop at many prestigious
journalism schools in the nation, it is exhilarating to see our family of
Murray Scholars grow to 42 this year. Wearing the lifetime badge of
‘Murray Scholar,’ the scholarship winners are inspired to strive for a
higher standard in their writing and journalistic
integrity.”
McCoy-Murray established the Jim Murray Memorial
Foundation in 1999 to perpetuate her late husband’s memory and his love
and dedication to his extraordinary career in journalism. Murray, who died
Aug. 16, 1998, began his illustrious career at the New Haven (Conn.)
Register after graduating from Trinity College of Hartford, Conn. After a
stint at the now-extinct Herald Examiner in Los Angeles, he joined Time
& Life (now Time, Inc.). In 1954, while a Hollywood cinema
correspondent for Time magazine, Murray became one of the founders of
Sports Illustrated. Joining the Los Angeles Times in 1961, Murray was a
1990 Pulitzer Prize-winning sports columnist, and a 14-time winner of the
National Sportswriter of the Year award. His outstanding work landed him a
spot in the writers’ wing in Cooperstown Baseball Hall of Fame in
1988.
The panel of nationally known journalists who determined the
2005 winners included Larry Bohannan, The Desert Sun; Mike Downey, Chicago
Tribune; Tim Kawakami, San Jose Mercury News; John Nadel, Associated
Press-Los Angeles Bureau; Karen Rosen, Atlanta Journal-Constitution; Tim
Sullivan, San Diego Union-Tribune; and John Walters, Sports Illustrated
and SI on campus.
Werkmeister and the other six scholarship winners
will be honored on Dec.12, at the “Great Ones”- Murray Scholars’ award
banquet being held at the La Quinta Hotel and Resort in La Quinta,
Calif.
friars with strong ties to St. Bonaventure, including SBU
professor and former interim president Fr. Dominic V. Monti, O.F.M., were
called into leadership positions of the Province of the Most Holy Name of
Jesus during its chapter in June.
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Students
learn they can make a difference during hurricane aid service
trip
A small
group of people can truly make a big difference.
Six St.
Bonaventure Students in Free Enterprise (SIFE) and Finance Club members,
along with Dr. James Mahar, assistant professor of finance, found this out
over midterm break when they flew nearly 1,300 miles to Biloxi, Miss., to
clean up the damage left behind more than a month ago by Hurricane
Katrina.
“You can make such an impact in just a few days, Mahar
said. “Our group got
12 people out of their homes,” which were
mold-infested and uninhabitable, “and on the road to Federal Emergency
Management Agency trailers.”
Along with other volunteers from the
organization, Hands On USA, the group did hard, physical labor in the
Mississippi sun and 80-degree heat. They “gutted” the interiors of houses
that had been flooded with water and contaminated with mold. Each day,
they removed all the water-logged furniture, clothing and appliances from
homes and ripped down walls with hammers and crowbars.
“We weren’t
thinking about what we had to do,” said Christine Francis, a senior
management sciences major from Seneca Falls, N.Y. “We just had the wall in
front of us and knew what we had to do.”
One incident that stood
out in Mahar’s mind was working with the group of students and a Biloxi
family of five to clean out their house.
“College-age girls reached
in and picked up chunks of wood, moldy and covered with cockroaches, and
then came back and did it again, all day, non-stop,” he said.
Some
of the group also cut down trees that had fallen on houses and cars in
order to make room for the FEMA trailers.
“Houses were completely
covered by massive amounts of trees being thrown everywhere,” said Annie
Werner, a junior business major from Honeoye Falls, N.Y. “One day, we
removed a tree where the roots alone were taller than the 6-foot man we
brought with us to chop it down.”
Besides the interior and tree
crews, Hands On USA includes a street crew, which helps to give supplies
and consolation to victims of the storm, and a roofing crew, which puts
blue tarps over damaged roofs. The volunteer organization was did not
exist before the storm but has brought more than 300 unskilled laborers
from around the country together to help the devastated
city.
“Working with Hands On USA was the best experience of my
life,” Francis said. “I can do things at home to help, but it is better to
be able to interact with the people there and actually see how you are
affecting them one on one.”
“I’ve learned to think less about
myself and my little problems,” Werner said. “All of these people have
bigger problems. Every little thing you do helps, whether it’s picking up
or donating goods.”
The group flew into Gulfport, Miss., Oct 7,
stayed with other Hands On volunteers in a Methodist church while cleaning
up the city, and flew home Oct 11.
“They made quite a reputation
for themselves down there,” Mahar said. “They
worked their tails
off.”
In addition to Mahar, Werner and Francis, students participating
included Meghan Backus, a senior journalism and communication major from
Mumford, N.Y., Andrew
Hartnett, a senior finance major from Syracuse,
N.Y., Bridget Hurley, a sophomore business major from Horseheads, N.Y.,
and Sean Lynch, a senior finance major from Setauket, N.Y., as well as
Mahar’s sister, Mary Mahar.
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_____________________
Pulitzer
Prize-winner to keynote at SBU's Communications Day
Pulitzer
Prize-winner Charles Hanley of the Associated Press will give the keynote
address, “Why is Journalism Important?” for SBU’s Communications Day on
Friday, Oct. 21.
Hanley has been a roving correspondent assigned to
the AP’s International Desk in New York for most of the past 23 years. He
has reported from more than 80 countries on stories ranging from wars and
summit conferences, to the plight of a threatened tribe in New Guinea. He
recently spent nine months in Afghanistan and Iraq reporting on the crisis
and conflicts in those countries.
Hanley’s international reporting
has won awards from the Overseas Press Club, the AP Managing Editors
association, Brown University’s Feinstein media awards program, and the
Korn-Ferry awards for reporting on the United Nations.
Hanley and
his AP collaborators also won 11 major journalism awards, including the
Pulitzer Prize for investigative journalism and a George Polk Award for
their reporting on U.S. military’s killing of refugees at No Gun Ri, South
Korea, in 1950.
Hanley joined the AP in 1968 in Albany, N.Y., where
he became a political correspondent, and then bureau news editor. He moved
to AP Foreign Desk in 1976, served as AP assistant, and then as deputy
managing editor. He was later named a special correspondent, a title
awarded to only a few of AP journalists.
Communications Day focuses
on the needs of high school journalists under adviser supervision. It
introduces students and teachers involved in newspapers, literary
magazines, yearbooks and radio and television shows to media
professionals. The professional participants hold sessions ranging from
sports, to public relations, to interviews to photojournalism. All
professionals who participate represent a rich history in journalism
experience in media and communication areas.
St. Bonaventure community
welcomes everyone to attend a 9/11 Remembrance Ceremony at 12:30 p.m.
Friday, Sept. 9, in front of Plassmann Hall for a moment of prayer and
reflection in honor of those affected by the Sept. 11, 2001, terrorist
attacks.
The ceremony is a way for the St. Bonaventure community to pay tribute
to those affected by the tragedy. This ceremony also allows the St.
Bonaventure community to remember the people who died and their families
who suffered.
St. Bonaventure University welcomes the public and local businesses to
join in the fellowship of the event. For more information on the event,
please contact the St. Bonaventure University ROTC Department at (716)
375-2508.
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_____________________
SBU to launch
online community for alumni this weekend
St. Bonaventure alumni always talk about the closeness of their
days on campus. Now they will be able to live those days again with the
launch of the SBU Alumni Community!
University president Sr.
Margaret Carney, O.S.F., S.T.D., and National Alumni Board president
Eugene O’Connor will kick off the St. Bonaventure Alumni Community,
developed by the University’s offices of Alumni Services and Technology
Services, during this weekend’s National Alumni Board meeting on
campus.
It will officially open to online visitors starting Monday,
Oct. 17. Each SBU alum will have his or her own unique user name and
password for entering the secure online site, situated at
http://alumni.sbu.edu.
Some of the features of the online community
include:
• “Alumni News” — Get the 411 on what’s new at SBU.
•
“Calendar of Events” — Check back frequently to see where and when SBU
alums are getting together.
• “Search” — Looking for a former hallmate
from 2nd Rob? Search the online alumni directory to reconnect with former
Bona classmates, roommates and friends. An advanced search option allows
visitors to search by alumni chapter and/or major.
• “My Info” — This
is a listing of members’ current directory information. Alumni can
customize their business and personal profiles here, with the option of
requesting the information be kept private.
“We give them three
options. We felt it was very important in addressing alums’ privacy
concerns,” said William Grossman, Web systems administrator for the
University’s Technology Services.
Alumni can access the site by
registering with their first name, last name and identification number,
which is printed on the mailing label of the Fall 2005 edition of
BonAlumnus.
Here’s how to access the site:
• Go to
http://alumni.sbu.edu
• Register with your first name, last name and
ID number from the BonAlumnus mailing label
• Select a user name and
password
• Reconnect with friends!
“Members of the online
community will also be able to find friends and classmates on a real-time
basis. Reconnecting with classmates is our No. 1 alumni request and we
believe this will help alumni to make those contacts easier,” said Joseph
Flanagan, director of Alumni Services.
The former Bona Talk
discussion board will be integrated into the online community, but there
will be a separate registration for the message board.
Those who
are seeking more information or have difficulty accessing the site are
asked to e-mail alumni@sbu.edu or call (716) 375-2302.
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_____________________
St.
Bonaventure University professor introduces podcasting in the
classroom
Dr.
James Mahar, associate professor of finance, is St. Bonaventure
University’s first professor to introduce podcasting in his
classroom.
Podcasting is making audio files available online that
download automatically so the user can listen to them at his own
convenience. These podcasts are most commonly available in MP3
format.
Mahar, creator of financeprofessor.com, which was named one
of the top 10 finance blogs in the country by Yahoo Finance, envisions
podcast to be “office hours to go,” giving audio weekly updates and
reviews to his students to minimize the questions about class
discussions.
“I think the podcast will do many things,” Mahar said.
“It will enable people to learn in a way that they are most comfortable.
Some people like to read, whereas others are better auditory learners.
This will enable each to pick the way that best suits them.”
This
semester, Mahar has already broadcast more than 10 podcasts, varying in
lengths, with some lasting up to 12 minutes. He covers weekly reviews for
various classes and also focuses on certain subject matter per broadcast,
such as behavioral finance and allocational efficiency. Each site that the
podcasts are posted on gives descriptions of the subject matter, as well
as the date it was created and the length of the broadcast.
Mahar
believes there are many benefits of podcasting. It forces him to be more
organized because each week of reviews has to fit into the bigger picture
of what the course is covering.
“They will be able to listen to
this as many times as they wish at whenever they want and not just at
professor-scheduled office hours and review classes,” Mahar
said.
Mahar is also using podcast in conjunction with his
financeprofessor.com blog and class blog; he said he is trying to bring
the real world to the classroom, and vice versa.
For more
information, please contact Mahar at jmahar@sbu.edu.
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SBU visiting
professor Breea Willingham's article featured in USA
Today
Ten
years ago the famous Million Man March, an African-American march of
protest and unity, urged black citizens to vote in elections as well as
increase community activism. One and a half million African-American men
registered to vote in the months preceding the March.
Now, on the
eve of the 10-year commemoration of this historic moment, visiting
professor of journalism Breea C. Willingham offers her personal story. The
article will be featured in U.S.A. Today, the most widely distributed
newspaper in the U.S.
Willingham’s story, scheduled to run
Thursday, Oct. 13, looks in-depth at the 10th anniversary of the Million
Man March from her perspective as a black woman with a father and brother
in prison.It will also appear in Sunday's Democrat and
Chronicle.
“I am extremely to USA Today for running my story and giving
me the opportunity to share it with readers. I’ve been working on the
project for about seven months. The writing process has been a long, hard
and emotional road so finally seeing my efforts come to fruition is sweet.
I hope that by sharing my story I'll be able to help someone else in a
similar situation.”
Prior to joining SBU as a visiting professor
this fall, Willingham served as a fellow in the Kiplinger Program in
Public Affairs Journalism from January to June of this
year.
Previously, she covered high-profile cases during a two-year
stint at the Times Union in Albany, N.Y. Willingham also received a beat
reporter award for breaking a story on the financial problems of the
Rochester School District in her time with the Rochester Democrat and
Chronicle, also in N.Y. Willingham secured a $5,000 grant from the
American Society of Newspaper Editors to start a journalism program at
Benjamin Franklin High School. She then ran a six-week journalism program
for high school students.
Willingham received a bachelor's degree
in communications from the nearby University of Pittsburgh at Bradford,
Pa., and a master's degree in business management from Webster University,
Greenville, S.C.
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_____________________
St.
Bonaventure plans events for Disability Awareness Month
A “Walk for Accessibility” and two lectures are planned as SBU
recognizes October’s Disability Awareness Month.
Beginning at 1 p.m. Saturday, Oct. 15, a “Walk for Accessibility” will
be held to raise money for door assist devices to be installed in the John
J. Murphy Professional Building. The goal is $2,600 and the walk begins
with registration in front of Hickey Dining Hall. Participants are asked
to either raise money or make a donation the day of the walk. For more
information, contact Nancy Matthews at 375-2065.
From 12:30 to 1:30 p.m. Wednesday, Oct. 19, in The Robert J. Jones
Board of Trustees Room in Doyle Hall, SBU’s School of Arts and Sciences
will sponsor a presentation titled “Exploring Disability in Society:
Historically and Philosophically.”
Guest speaker Dr. Dwight Kauppi is a retired faculty member of the
counseling and educational psychology department of the University of
Buffalo, where he taught for 29 years. He received his Ph.D. in psychology
in 1971 from the University of Minnesota and is a certified rehabilitation
counselor and licensed psychologist.
From 4:30 to 6:30 p.m. Thursday, Oct. 20, in Murphy’s Dresser
Auditorium, SBU’s School of Education will sponsor a panel discussion
titled “The Transitioning Needs of Students with Disabilities: Preparing
for and During Higher Education.”
Panelists include Dr. Timothy Janikowski, director of the
rehabilitation counseling program and co-director of the proposed mental
health counseling program at the State University of New York at Buffalo;
Fran Moyer, private practitioner and counselor for students with
disabilities at Erie Community College’s South Campus; Heather Haas,
school counselor and special educator at Hopevale Union Free School
District; James Driscoll, school counselor at Olean Middle School; Ron
Hager, disability unit attorney for Buffalo Neighborhood Legal Services;
Kate Monroe, director of academic services at Hilbert College in Hamburg;
and Aleasa Michnik, SBU elementary education/special education student.
These events are open to the entire University community.
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SBU Theater to
present original fall Shakespearean production
SBU Theater will perform an original play, “The Inner Above: A
Shakespearean Journey” at 7:30 p.m, Wednesday through Saturday, Nov. 9-12,
in The Regina A. Quick Center for the Arts.
Director Dr. Ed.
Simone, associate professor and director of the theater program, is
writing “The Inner Above” in collaboration with John Neville Andrews, head
of performance in the theater department at the University of Michigan.
Simone says that the play is actually being re-written and revised as the
student actors rehearse and bring their own creative and personal
responses to the work.
The cast features 12 actors playing about 30
different roles as the modern central character, a girl named Kaci,
searches for meaning in her life through the lens of about a dozen
Shakespearean plays.
“I’m very excited about The Inner Above as a
performance piece and as a project,” said Simone, “It’s meant to be an
exciting, even inspirational story about one young actor’s struggle to
find self-worth and direction in life. We’ve taken a contemporary approach
to some of Shakespeare’s timeless works.”
Cast Members
include:
Jennifer Albanese, Allen, Texas
Patrick Devers, South
Euclid, Ohio
Judy Chiariello, Franklinville, N.Y.
Ben Gregg,
University Heights, Ohio
Blair Knowles, Olean, N.Y.
Emily Rose
Maher, Blasdell, N.Y.
Kara Manning, Olean, N.Y.
Stephanie Nikolaou,
Rochester, N.Y.
Matthew Osrsini, Allen, Texas
Gabriel Potter,
Olean, N.Y.
Stephen Schrader, Fredericksburg, Va.
Elizabeth Schumer,
Hamburg, N.Y.
The production is part of The Regina A. Quick
Center’s semester celebrating the works of William Shakespeare, billed as
“The Shakespearience.”
Simone hopes audiences will take advantage
of the SBU Theater’s new “Friday Talk-Back.” Following the Friday
performance of “The Inner Above,” the audience is invited to remain seated
for an informal discussion with the cast, technicians, and the director
about the production.
Tickets for “The Inner Above” are available
to the public for $8 and to subscribers, seniors and employees for $6.
Free student rush seating is available one hour before curtain time at the
box office in-person with a valid student ID.
SBU Theater
productions are presented by the Department of Visual and Performing Arts
in cooperation with the Regina A. Quick Center for the Arts and are part
of the growing academic Theater Program at St. Bonaventure University.
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_____________________
Lehrer, Barry
share advice with St. Bonaventure students during Media Excellence
Awards
Author and news analyst Jim Lehrer and Pulitzer-winning humor
columnist Dave Barry shared stories with St. Bonaventure University
students during the University’s Media Excellence Awards Luncheon Oct. 7
at the National Press Club in Washington, D.C.
Lehrer, who pointed
out that he was receiving the Douglas Edwards Award on behalf of a whole
team of people, shared personal guidelines from his career. They included,
“Do nothing I cannot defend;” “Assume there is at least one other side to
every story” and “Assume the person I am writing about is at least as good
a person as I am.” He closed by emphasizing, “I am not in the
entertainment business.”
That stood in contrast to Barry who noted
as he took the podium, “I was hoping for a Supreme Court nomination, but
this is really good too!”
He offered a story from his news career —
one shared with fellow Pulitzer winner John Hanchette, an SBU alum and
current faculty member.
Bored with endless protests and slow news
during the Democratic National Convention that nominated Dukakis, the pair
stood outside the convention with boxes over their heads. Despite the fact
that they admitted they were just doing it for news coverage, they got —
including front-page national coverage.
Previous recipients of the Bob
Considine Award wrote about the great issues of the day, he pointed out:
“I’ve written more about toilets.” He noted it was ironic that he received
the award a year after he stopped writing his column: “If Bob were me,
he’d have stopped writing too.”
“I am in the entertainment
business,” admitted Victoria Corderi, NBC News correspondent for Dateline
NBC, a 1979 graduate who received the Alumna of the Year
Award.
Corderi related that it can be difficult to put months into
a major story and have it beaten by fluffier offerings.
She fondly
recalled the school’s founder, Dr. Russell J. Jandoli, an “old-world guy,
so dedicated to his craft, so dedicated to making us journalists.” She
advised the students that, for her, “the key to success is that I have a
lot of balance in my life,” including her husband and four
children.
Also at the luncheon, Linda McCoy-Murray, widow of
legendary sportswriter Jim Murray, presented the University with a first
edition of “The Mark Hellinger Story” by Jim Bishop, along with a
provenance identifying it as from her late husband’s estate. McCoy-Murray
also congratulated St. Bonaventure on being the only university to have
six consecutive Murray Scholars, one each year since the award was
established.
Also honored was Chuck Scothon, senior vice president
of marketing and brand development for Fisher-Price, who received the
Thomas Mosser Award in honor of the SBU alum and public relations
executive who was the last victim of the Unabomber.
James Miller, a
2005 SBU graduate who is now the Wayne County reporter for The Finger
Lakes Times, received the Mark Hellinger Award for excellence and promise
in the field of journalism.
A 2001 graduate of Aquinas Institute,
he is the son of Paul and Lori Miller of Rochester, N.Y.
Runner-up
for this year’s Hellinger Award is Nicole Severino, the daughter of
When not reporting, he enjoys reading, genealogy and spending time
with friends and family.
The runner-up for this year’s Mark
Hellinger Award is Nicole Severino, who is an account coordinator for
Coyne Public Relations in Parsippany, N.J. A native of Boonton, N.J., she
is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Joseph D. Severino.
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_____________________
Career Center
News ...
For information on resume due dates, on-campus recruiting
interviews and an interviewing program for accounting and finance majors,
visit the Career Center Events Web page.
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Newsmakers
...
Dr. Elizabeth Littell-Lamb, assistant professor of
history, presented a paper titled “Mediating Exchanges: The Chinese YWCA
as an Intracultural Zone” at the New York Conference on Asian Studies
conference hosted by SUNY New Paltz from Sept. 30 – Oct. 1, 2005. She
organized and chaired the panel, “Facing East, Facing West: Encounters
along China’s Cultural Boundaries” with colleagues from Rochester
Institute of Technology, Pace University and Manhanttanville College. Her
paper examined the way in which the Chinese YWCA mediated culture for both
Western and Chinese women, focusing on the transmission of ideas on
internationalism, feminism and socialism.
•••
Rodney Paul, assistant professor of economics in the
Department of Finance, had the article “Expectations and Voting in the
NCAA Football Polls: The Wisdom of the Point Spread Markets,” accepted for
publication in the Journal of Sports Economics. The article develops a
voting model for the NCAA Football polls and shows that game results
compared to expectations (the market-based point spread) plays a
significant role in the change in rankings from week-to-week during the
season.
Also, Paul was invited to write the introduction to a
special issue of the Journal of Economics and Finance on the subject of
market efficiency in sports wagering markets. This issue contains articles
on market efficiency tests by many of the top researchers in this
field.
•••
Barbara Trolley, assistant professor of counselor
education, had an article titled “Supervision Requirements for Licensing
New York State Counselors: Ready or Not?” accepted for publication in the
Journal for the Professional Counselor.
In addition, Trolley will be presenting a three-hour New
York State School Counselor Association (NYSSCA) workshop called
“De-escalating and demystifying cyber bullying in the schools” with
alumnae Connie Hanel and Linda Shields, both MSEd, on Nov. 4. Trolley will
also be giving a NYSSCA presentation called “The Role of the School
Counselor in Special Education” with alumna Heather Haas, MSEd, on Nov. 5.
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Friday
Forum
All SBU faculty, staff
and administrators are welcome to all the Friday Forums.
Date: Oct. 14,
2005
Speaker: Lenna Visiting Professor Alan
Dobson
Time: Lunch starts at noon, Forum goes from
12:35 to 1:30 p.m., including Q&A
Place:
University Club - Above Hickey
Title: "U.S. Foreign
Policy in the Post-War Years"
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