- Screening
of 'The Sugar Babies' set at SBU
- SBU
Kenney International Scholars spend spring semster in Ireland
- Honor
a friend, mentor, student or co-worker
- Introducing
a new postal meter ad
- Career
Center
- Friday
Forum
- Newsmakers
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Screening of 'The Sugar Babies' set at
SBU
St. Bonaventure University alumna Claudia Chiesi,
Ph.D., will return to her alma mater in March to show her film “The Sugar
Babies” and discuss the plight of the children of agricultural workers in
the sugar industry of the Dominican Republic.
“The Sugar
Babies” examines the moral price of sugar — present and past — from the
perspective of the conditions surrounding the children of sugar cane
cutters of Haitian ancestry in the Dominican Republic, and the continuing
denial of their basic human rights.
The film
screening will be held at 2 p.m. Sunday, March 9, in Dresser Auditorium of
the John J. Murphy Professional Building on the University
campus.
Chiesi, a 1969
graduate, served as executive producer of the film, which focuses on the
history of slavery in the sugar industry, as well as the current
conditions surrounding human trafficking and child labor in Hispaniola.
Chiesi will also have the opportunity to discuss the film and its human
rights issues during various classroom visits on campus the following
day.
Prior to joining
Siren Studios in 2005 as a producer, Chiesi spent most of her career in
higher education, most recently as the president of Harford (Md.)
Community College.
“The field of
human rights is as significant to me now as when I first visited the
Franciscan missions in Jamaica when I was a 16, and later, in 1988 and
1989. While I was working at a college in south Florida, I visited the
local sugar plantations and saw the impoverished living conditions of its
workers,” Chiesi said.
Chiesi credits
her 16 years of Franciscan education as being the foundation for her new
career. Chiesi graduated from St. Francis of Assisi Elementary School and
Archbishop Carroll High School in Buffalo. Following her undergraduate
work at St. Bonaventure, Chiesi earned her master’s and doctorate at the
University at Buffalo.
Haitian author
Edwidge Danticat narrates “The Sugar Babies,” which was shot in Haiti and
the Dominican Republic. The film includes interviews with the Haitian
ambassador to the U.S., the U.S. State Department’s Office of Human
Trafficking, Human Rights Watch, an organization dedicated to protecting
the human rights of people around the world, and anthropologist Dr. Sidney
Mintz. The film also features human rights activists, missionary priests
and the child workers and their families.
The film
screening is free and open to the public. Viewer is discretion advised:
Some footage may be too graphic for young viewers.
To view clips
from the film or learn more about the trafficking of Haitians into the
Dominican Republic, go to www.sugarbabiesfilm.com. Chiesi’s visit to
campus is sponsored by the Franciscan Center for Social Concern, NAMASTE,
and the Center for Nonviolence.
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SBU Kenney International Scholars
spend spring semester in Ireland
Three St. Bonaventure
University students, recipients of the F. Donald Kenney International
Scholars Awards, are spending the spring semester in Ireland at the
National University of Ireland at Galway.
The recipients
are Kelly Cobb of Syracuse, a sophomore marketing and accounting major;
Katharine Holly of Orchard Park, a sophomore accounting and international
business major; and Tim Keating of Williamsville, a sophomore history
major. Each received $1,000 scholarships to study abroad.
Each recipient is
utilizing his or her time in Ireland differently.
Cobb plans to
focus on business courses to fulfill her major curriculum. She hopes that
these courses will allow her to grasp a better understanding of global
markets. At St. Bonaventure, Cobb has been involved with Students in Free
Enterprise (SIFE) since her freshman year, becoming the first freshman to
run her own project when she ran a computer literacy program in Olean and
on SIFE’s annual trip to Grand Bahama Island.
Holly also plans
to round out her business curriculum. She hopes her classes will broaden
her knowledge on more than international business. At St. Bonaventure,
Holly has maintained a 3.7 grade-point average while being involved with
several business-oriented clubs and community service projects, such as
the Warming House, a University-run soup kitchen located in Olean. She
hopes to do similar work in Ireland.
Keating, a member
of the ROTC program, will focus on history and University-required courses
while overseas. He is most interested in learning about Ireland’s history
during the 19th century when many Irish immigrated to America, including
some of his ancestors.
He hopes that his
classes will give him a better understanding of the past and of his family
history. At St. Bonaventure, Keating is active as a retreat leader with
Students for the Mountain, a club promoting Mt. Irenaeus, a Franciscan
mountain retreat center off campus.
The Kenney Awards
were established in 1999 through the F. Donald Kenney (an Olean native)
estate to promote study abroad programs in Ireland and England. The Kenney
awards are given each semester for students to study at any of three
approved sites in Ireland: National University of Ireland at Maynooth,
University of Limerick and National University of Ireland at Galway. The
program at NUI Galway complements the two other Irish programs sponsored
by the University since the mid-1980s. Awards are also available for the
Francis E. Kelley Oxford summer program in England.
For additional
information about St. Bonaventure’s study abroad program opportunities,
please contact Alice Sayegh at (716) 375-2574 or at asayegh@sbu.edu.
Program overviews are available at www.sbu.edu/intstudies.
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Honor a friend, mentor, student or
co-worker
Nomination
forms for the 2008 Fr. Joe Doino, O.F.M., Honors & Awards are now
being accepted from St. Bonaventure faculty, students and
staff.
The Fr. Joe
Awards are to honor those exceptional individuals in the St. Bonaventure
community who have made others’ experiences here better and whose
Franciscan spirit may go unrecognized.
The awards’
namesake honors Fr. Joe Doino, a much beloved friar who died in 1994 and
was known for his practical jokes, his love of tennis, his dedication as
the SGA adviser. A professor, scholar, musician, preacher and priest, Fr.
Joe became the first faculty member to receive the Faculty Appreciation
Award posthumously.
Award categories
include: University Ministries Volunteer of the Year; Adviser/Moderator of
the Year; Program of the Year; Community Service Award; Staff Person of
the Year; Organization/Club of the Year; Student Leader of the Year;
Student Life Award; Cabinet Member of the Year; and the Faculty
Appreciation Award. Click here to review descriptions of the award
categories.
Nomination forms
can be picked up in the Student Life Office, Student Activities Office,
Reilly Center Ticket Office and at University Ministries.They also are
available in pdf format online. Nominations should be submitted to Ann
Hurlburt in the Student Life Office by Friday, March 14.
The awards
ceremony will be held at 4 p.m. Thursday, March 27, in the Robert R. Jones
Board of Trustees Room, Doyle Hall.
For any
additional information, please contact Ann Hurlburt at (716)
375-2513.
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Introducing a new postal meter
ad
A new postal meter ad has been created as yet
another way of sharing the good news of St. Bonaventure’s
Sesquicentennial. Beginning now through May 2009, all letters and flats
processed through the St. Bonaventure University mailroom will sport the
new meter ad.
Career Center news
...
Check out the Career Center’s
Event’s page to find information on the upcoming student program
“Backpack to Blackberry.” Also available on the page is this month’s issue
of the Career Center’s newsletter, Directions, which contains information
on Teacher Recruitment Days and Alumni/Student Networking: Meet &
Mingle.
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Join us for this week's FRIDAY FORUM!
All SBU faculty, staff and administrators
are welcome to Friday Forums.
Date: Friday, Feb. 22, 2008 Speaker:
Dr. Charles Walker Time: 12:20 to 1:30
p.m. Place: The University
Club Topic: “The Class of
2011: The Smart, The Flourishing, & The
Drunk” Abstract: Walker has been gathering data for
the Journey Project on the well-being of students since 2004. He will
share the most interesting results of a recent survey done on the current
freshman class. What this class looks like and how it compares with others
will be the focus of the presentation. Cost:
$3
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Newsmakers
Dr.
Robert Amico, professor of philosophy, was an invited speaker at the State
University of New York at Geneseo on Feb. 20, 2008. He spoke about the
four-college Consortium on Curriculum and Program Transformation, which
was initiated six years ago to assist participating institutions in their
efforts to create a more inclusive curriculum and more inclusive
programming that address issues of race, class, gender, sexual orientation
and other institutionalized systems of inequality.
Fr. Michael
Calabria, O.F.M., lecturer in the Department of Modern Languages, and Fr.
Michael Blastic, O.F.M., Conv., associate professor at the Franciscan
Institute, will be presenters during the Eighth National Franciscan Forum,
to be held June 19-22 in Colorado Springs, Colo. This year’s theme of the
forum is “Mirroring One Another, Reflecting the Divine: The
Franciscan-Muslim Journey into God.”
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