INSIDE: Honor Roll of Donors for Fiscal Year 2010
Transcription
INSIDE: Honor Roll of Donors for Fiscal Year 2010
INSIDE: Honor Roll of Donors for Fiscal Year 2010 B O N AV E N T U R E DECEMBER 2010 Vol. 3, No. 1, December 2010 From the President The Magazine of St. Bonaventure University Health care excellence goes to our roots 17 On the Cover William Wallace, a nuclear medicine technologist at Olean General Hospital, explains the hospital’s Nuclear Medicine program to SBU freshman Priyanka Kamalapathy. A unique shadowing program gives students a close-up look at life at a community hospital. 25 Through the Eyes of Faith In the 20-plus years since his first mission trip, optometrist Doug Villella’s work has received local, national and international attention. But all that matters to Villella is that thousands of Guatemalans now have permanent eye clinics. 10 Take a Seat Next To ... ? The Regina A. Quick Center for the Arts (QCA) has unveiled a new seat-naming initiative called “Take a seat next to … ?” This program will provide the necessary funds to support the QCA and its many projects for schoolchildren from the local area. Editor’s Letter . . . . . . . . . . . . . .4 Franciscan Minute . . . . . . . . . . .5 Campus News . . . . . . . . . . . . . .6 Off the Shelf . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .8 Our Gifts. Their Future . . . . .10 BonAlumnus . . . . . . . . . . . . . 29 Honor Roll of Donors . . . . . .38 Steve Mest Tom Missel Dr. Todd Palmer Carri (Gregorski) Prue, ’04 Lucia Scotty Dr. Emily Sinsabaugh Jordan Steves, ’09 Mary Jane Telford, ’75 Jocelyn Thomas, ’77 Dr. Denny Wilkins Contributors Thomas Donahue, ’76 Tim Gross, ’11 Anne-Marie Welsh In 1865, he invested a young woman in the habit of the Franciscans and appointed another — whose vows he had authorized earlier — as superior of a new congregation that worked in Joliet, Ill. (This took place on the Bonaventure campus.) That newly appointed superior was Mother Alfred Moes. She later took up work in Rochester, Minn., and was directly responsible for inviting William Worrel Mayo to found the hospital that eventually led to establishing the Mayo Clinic. Her statue, alongside that of Dr. Mayo, graces the plaza at the main entrance of the clinic. At a time when St. Bonaventure’s contributions to health care professions are reaching new levels of excellence, it is time to share this amazing coincidence — or is it the hand of Providence energizing each generation? The pages of this edition of Bonaventure magazine are filled with examples of the extraordinary contributions our students and graduates are making to health care Photography Ed Bernik Mark and Deb Fainstein Rich and Lisa Gensheimer Craig Melvin P.O. Box 2509 • 3261 W. State Road • St. Bonaventure, NY 14778 • Phone: (716) 375-2000 • Fax: (716) 375-2380 • On the Web: www.sbu.edu/bonamag Submit class notes: bonalumnus@sbu.edu • Address changes: alumni@sbu.edu • Additional contacts: Office of Alumni Services, (716) 375-2302 2 A In August, some of our Franciscan Health Care Professions students had the opportunity to visit the Mayo Clinic, where they were welcomed with open arms by our friends Sr. Ramona Miller, graduate of the Franciscan Institute, and Sr. Mary Elliot, administrator for mission at Mayo. Departments Editorial Advisory Board Beth Eberth, editor Susan Anderson Lisa Biedenbach, ’76 Br. F. Edward Coughlin, O.F.M., ’70 Mary Driscoll, ’79 little known fact of SBU history is that Fr. Pamfilo da Magliano, O.S.F., St. Bonaventure University’s first and founding president, also provided official guidance to the founding of a sisterhood in the Midwest in addition to founding the Sisters of St. Francis here in Allegany. Bonaventure: The Magazine of St. Bonaventure University is produced twice a year by the Office of Marketing and Communications. Pre-health care students and SBU staff who visited the Mayo Clinic in August are pictured near the statues of Dr. Mayo and Mother Alfred Moes. From left are Shivani Sharma, Priya Singhal, Jacob Donius, Dr. Allen Knowles, Anita Sambamurty, Neha Sanyal, and Sr. Suzanne M. Kush, C.S.S.F. professions across the U.S. and abroad. In fact, the Franciscan Institute has published Franciscans and Healthcare, edited by another institute alumna, Sr. Elise Saggau. You can be sure of a special alumni discount should you choose to purchase a copy! As we continue to build upon the success of our students and graduates in the health care professions, we also continue to ensure that students enrolled in other courses of study at St. Bonaventure have the opportunity to learn about the value that the Franciscan perspective brings to every area of inquiry. Our School of Business, for example, engages students in entrepreneurial service experiences where they use the business principles and practices they learn in the classroom to solve realworld social problems locally, nationally and internationally. This commitment has been recognized as a national best practice by the school’s accrediting agency, the AACSB. Similarly, the nationally accredited conceptual framework in our School of Education represents a commitment to social justice consistent with our Franciscan tradition. And, of course, our core curriculum, in which every student is enrolled, is grounded in the Franciscan intellectual tradition, with courses such as “The Intellectual Journey” that is based upon the vision of Saint Bonaventure. We are intentional about the role of the Franciscan tradition in the academic enterprise because the world is calling for the values, principles and foundations upon which our 800-year-old tradition was founded. The success of our students and graduates speaks to the continuing relevance and importance of the Franciscan tradition today. As we celebrate in the pages to follow the Franciscan influence on health care professions, we also celebrate this influence in all of the professions and callings of the worldwide St. Bonaventure University family. Pax et Bonum — Peace and Good, Sr. Margaret Carney, O.S.F., S.T.D. President of the University St. Bonaventure University Board of Trustees John R. McGinley Jr., Esq., Chair Raymond C. Dee, Vice Chair John J. McCormack Jr., Vice Chair Fr. Frank R. Sevola, O.F.M., Secretary Laurie A. Branch James J. Cattano Daniel F. Collins William M. Collins *March 2011 appointment Robert J. Daugherty Joseph A. DeMaria, Esq. Colette Dow Timothy F. Fidgeon, Esq. Timothy J. Finan William C. Foster Albert C. Horton* Robert S. King Dr. Bharat Kohli Fr. Fred A. Link, O.F.M. Thomas M. Marra James E. Meyer Eugene M. O’Connor, Esq. Very Rev. John F. O’Connor, O.F.M. Fr. Kenneth P. Paulli, O.F.M., Ed.D. Leslie C. Quick III John V. Sponyoe Marvin W. Stocker Bernard E. Stoecklein Jr. Vincent R. Volpe Jr. Lynda M. Wilhelm Trustees Emeriti Msg. Leo E. Hammerl The Hon. Howard M. Holtzmann Robert R. Jones, LL.D. Charles Osgood, LL.D. 3 Editor’s Letter Franciscan Minute The Immortal Life of Henrietta Lacks Beth A. Eberth H enrietta Lacks most assuredly would have been embarrassed by the attention: Her image peered up at St. Bonaventure freshmen as they arrived for Orientation and were handed a book in which she plays a starring role. Across campus, a giant 7foot-tall cutout of her greeted visitors to the Quick Center for the Arts. Science writer Rebecca Skloot’s book chronicles how a poor tobacco farmer impacted modern medicine and shares an engaging portrait of a family that felt betrayed by the scientific establishment. “The Immortal Life of Henrietta Lacks” engaged all of our freshmen — and many beyond our campus community — in discussions of science issues. Health Care and the Franciscan Tradition cussed how HeLa cells have informed HIV-AIDS research. Ritchie, part of an international research team that is working to solve major problems in HIV vaccine development and design, also serves as a faculty member for St. Bonaventure’s study abroad program at the University of Oxford. Other All Bonaventure Reads activities included a film festival, a lecture on medical ethics by assistant professor of philosophy Dr. Russell Woodruff, and class projects that will be displayed in a Poster Session. “The Immortal Life” impacted students in different ways. Many connected with Henrietta’s daughter Deborah on the loss of a parent. Others were drawn to learning about the landmark discoveries HeLa cells have played a part in, from the polio vaccine to gene mapping. Author Rebecca Skloot (right) describes the 10 years of research and interviews she accumulated for her book. Freshman Francis P. Matuszak (above) poses a question to Skloot. St. Bonaventure’s first-year students were asked to read “The Immortal Life of Henrietta Lacks,” the All Bonaventure Reads text that is the cornerstone of this year’s University 101 course. “The Immortal Life” is the story of the forgotten woman behind one of the most important tools in modern medicine. Lacks’ cancerous cells — taken from her without her knowledge in 1951 — were the first to grow and survive indefinitely in culture. The cells, called HeLa for the first two letters of Lacks’ first and last name, revolutionized medical research, a fact unknown to her family for decades. The entire campus community was invited to read the book and participate in numerous events planned over the course of the fall semester that opened up conversations into many of the book’s themes — medical ethics, racism, and the availability and cost of health care. One of the highlights was the author’s September visit to campus, where she had dinner with a group of freshmen before leading a public discussion about the book. Also welcomed to campus this fall was Dr. Adam Ritchie, a professor on the research staff at the University of Oxford, England, who diswww.sbu.edu/bonamag 4 DECEMBER 2010 B O N AV E N T U R E B O N AV E N T U R E DECEMBER 2010 As their first official college assignment, first-year students were asked to read "The Immortal of Henrietta Lacks” and then write a reflection on it. Thirteen top essays were chosen to be immortalized in their own way: They were published in a hardcover keepsake book for each student, and a copy was given to author Rebecca Skloot during her visit to campus. You can read the essays at www.sbu.edu/allbonaventurereads. Yes, Henrietta probably would have been embarrassed by the attention, but I think she would have been proud. (Beth Eberth is director of University Communications at St. Bonaventure.) By Bob Donius F ollowing the example of Jesus, education and healing have been vital ministries throughout the centuries of the Church, and so they find themselves well situated in the mission of St. Bonaventure University. Jesus was both a teacher and a healer. He told stories that opened listeners to new ways of seeing themselves, their neighbors and their world. And he healed many; for example, he cleansed a man with leprosy (Mt 8:1-4; Mk 1:4042), gave sight to two people who were blind (Mt 20:29-34; Mk 10:46-52); enabled one who was mute to speak (Lk 11:14); cured a woman who was hemorrhaging (Mt 9:20-22; Mk 5:25-34); and brought a girl back to life (Mt 9:18, 23-25; Mk 5:35-42). “In faithful imitation of Jesus Christ, the Church has served the sick, suffering, and dying in various ways throughout history.” (United States Catholic Conference of Bishops, “Ethical and Religious Directives for Catholic Health Care Services,” 2001, p. 5) One of those various ways happened in the life of Francis of Assisi in the 13th century. Francis’ encounter with human beings suffering from leprosy marks the beginning of his conversion. The ongoing care for suffering sisters and brothers is the experience within which Francis and his companions are transformed. “The Lord gave me, Brother Francis, to begin to do penance in this way: while I was in sin, it seemed excessively bitter to me to see lepers. And the Lord himself led me among them and I did mercy with them. And when I left them, that which seemed bitter to me had been changed into sweetness of the spirit and the body. And afterwards I lingered a little and left the world.” (Francis’ Testament 1-3, as translated from the Latin by Dr. Jean François Godet-Calogeras, professor of Franciscan Studies, SBU) “For Francis, lepers became the living icons of the suffering Christ.” (For more on this, read Dominic V. Monti, O.F.M., “Franciscans and Healthcare: Our Heritage,” Franciscans and Healthcare: Facing the Future, edited by Elise Saggau, O.S.F., pp. 3-28) Following in the footprints of Jesus, St. Francis reached beyond himself to extend mercy and healing to “the least of our sisters and brothers.” (Mt 25:3146) This was more than treating a disease, leprosy. Rather, it was a deeply intimate encounter and healing relationship with persons suffering from leprosy. They had names, and families and personal stories. This encounter and relationship with people who are sisters and brothers is what has moved Franciscans throughout the eight centuries since Francis and Clare. Doing mercy, relating to others with deep compassion, is itself healing. Rochester, Minn., who collaborated with Dr. William Worrall Mayo and his two sons, Dr. William J. Mayo and Dr. Charles H. Mayo, to found and staff St. Mary’s Hospital, which is now a part of the highly esteemed Mayo Clinic. The Allegany Franciscans, whose St. Elizabeth Motherhouse is located across the street from SBU, have established health care ministry in many locales and continue to serve as members of Catholic Health East, one of the largest Catholic health care systems in the United States. Fr. John Felice, O.F.M., a member of Holy Name Province and former trustee of SBU, ministers to sisters and brothers suffering with mental illness in New York City through three St. Francis Residences. Bona students are learning biology and chemistry and anatomy and physiology — and they are learning compassion and service in the Franciscan tradition. We are proud that our students are forming a new way of Franciscan mercy, to touch and heal a wounded world. As health care becomes more complicated and more demanding, we trust that they will bring healing and hope. Our first president, Fr. Pamfilo da Magliano, not only founded our university, but he also founded communities of brothers and sisters, who have extended a healing presence through the years to many people and places. In his October 1995 pastoral letter, “A Sign of Hope,” Cardinal Joseph Bernardin wrote, “We seek to do more than merely cure a physical illness. Like Jesus, we heal the whole person. We care for people in such a way that, whether or not we can physically cure their illness, they find strength and comfort in knowing God’s abiding love for them.” (p.6) As President Sr. Margaret Carney, O.S.F., discusses in her message (see Page 3), Mother Alfred Moes, who made her vows here on our campus on Aug. 2, 1865, founded the Franciscan Sisters of Joliet and the Franciscan Sisters of (Bob Donius, Vice President for University Ministries, serves as a member of the Board of Directors of St. James Mercy Health System in Hornell, N.Y., and as a member of the Stewardship Committee for Catholic Health East.) 5 DECEMBER 2010 B O N AV E N T U R E B O N AV E N T U R E DECEMBER 2010 Campus News Eco-friendly townhouse offers ‘green’ living for students It isn’t uncommon to hear Bona students say they bleed brown, but now some are bleeding green. This academic year, St. Bonaventure has turned half of Townhouse 23 “green.” Four alumni among group named to Board of Trustees Four alumni are among the five newest members of the University’s Board of Trustees. Joseph A. DeMaria, Esq., ’79, William M. Collins, ’76, Marvin Stocker, ’65, and Lynda Goldstein Wilhelm, ’86, and Bharat Kohli, M.D., have joined the board since the beginning of fiscal year 2010. DeMaria is a partner at the law firm of Tew Cardenas in Miami, Fla. He is a successful business litigator, construction lawyer and white collar criminal defense lawyer for the Florida area. Collins is a principal of Travers Collins & Company, one of the largest and most honored marketing communications firms in Upstate New York. Stocker, of Ellicott City, Md., worked in marketing and sales management positions for the General Electric Co. for 37 years, retiring in 2003. Goldstein Wilhelm, of Charlotte, N.C., is a consultant for Packard Learning Corp., a corporate training and executive coaching company. Kohli is chief medical officer at Applied Healthcare Resource Management (AHRM) Inc. Headquartered in Buffalo’s medical corridor, AHRM Inc. specializes in applied health care resource management for clinical trials, data management, post-market surveillance, regulatory compliance and many other areas. 6 The four eco-friendly apartments house 16 students who voluntarily chose to live there. Their sustainable living choices include walking or biking to class instead of driving, recycling and turning off utilities when not in use. They also compost and bring their compost weekly to Canticle Farm, a non-profit Community Supported Agriculture farm in Allegany. The apartments’ appliances have been made Energy Star compliant wherever possible, motion-detection lights have been installed in key locations, and lowflow shower heads have been installed. The students are also benchmarking their electric consumption and using sensors to measure how often their furnaces are used. The first tangible indication that efforts in the “green” townhouse were paying off came when electric usage proved to be 81 percent more efficient in September than in the “control” townhouse. The “green” unit used only 1,440 kilowatt hours, compared to 2,608 KW hours in the “control” unit. on campus between ministries and academics, encourages growth in spiritual life and facilitates discovery of personal faith. Bishop Edward Kmiec of the Buffalo Diocese accepted the award on behalf of the group at the gathering of bishops in Baltimore in November. “Plan ahead for storage.” That was the advice given by other universities when asked how best to market and sell a book about St. Bonaventure’s heritage and history. With that in mind, St. Bonaventure understood that a wellresearched and developed marketing plan would be important in selling the upcoming book, “The Good Journey: 150 Years of History at St. Bonaventure.” Volunteers assemble more than 113,000 meals for Haitian children On a solemn day of remembrance, hundreds of volunteers filled the Reilly Center Arena to offer a reminder of man’s nobler intentions. Spearheaded by more than 350 St. Bonaventure students and community members, more than 500 volunteers — divided into four shifts — spent roughly eight hours Saturday, Sept. 11, packaging more than 113,000 meals for Haitian children affected by last January’s devastating earthquake. BonaResponds coordinated the event, drawing assistance from Villa Maria and Daemen colleges in Buffalo, and school districts in Olean, Allegany and CubaRushford. Through pictures, vignettes and a broad historical account, this coffee-table book will take readers through the places, events and people that have shaped the University over the last century and a half. Yet, how would the book be marketed? Where would it be sold? Who would be interested? Why would they want to buy it? Computers, textbooks headed to Bahamas in Operation Boot Up St. Bonaventure’s Students in Free Enterprise chapter will perform the biggest technology transfer in the history of Grand Bahama Island over the holiday break — shipping 250 computers and 10 pallets of textbooks for use in local schools. The “green townhouse” also recycled 202.5 lbs. of glass, metals, plastic and paper. SPARK earns national ministry award The National Catholic Campus Ministry Association has recognized the student group SPARK with its 2010 Exemplary Program Award for Appropriating the Faith. SPARK, or Students of Prayer, Action, Reflection and Knowledge, is an “interdenominational and interfaith” group that attempts to build connections Oxford program strategists lead book marketing campaign The meals assembled for Haiti are called MannaPack-Rice. They consist of rice, dehydrated vegetables and chicken flavored vitamins, can be cooked with boiling water, and cost only 19 cents to produce. See a slideshow and video from the event: www.http://tinyurl.com/2ejdoxt To answer these questions, a team of marketing strategists was selected to create a comprehensive marketing plan for the book while studying in the Francis E. Kelley Oxford program this summer. ative lead. Research encompassed one-on-one interviews, an online survey and extensive secondary research. Recognizing students among the target markets, the strategists also led a focus group with undergraduates studying in the Oxford program. In addition to research, the team focused on client management, message strategy, creative concepting, plan writing, budget analysis, timeline creation, measurement and return on investment. The final 85-page strategic marketing plan highlighted areas such as target market analysis, plan objectives, marketing and creative strategies, tactics (web, advertising, PR and promotions), evaluation tools, financial analysis, a timeline and appendixes summarizing key research findings. At the culmination of the six weeks, the strategists presented the plan to the St. Bonaventure Oxford community and to VP for University Relations Dr. Emily Sinsabaugh and Board of Trustees member Laurie Branch, who were visiting the summer program. Called Operation Boot Up, St. Bonaventure SIFE members will be installing the first 96 computers (donated by IBM) in elementary schools, training teachers in technology, and maintaining the computers, said Abhi Aggarwal, the St. Bonaventure pre-med student who heads up the program. The students will also deliver 10 pallets of donated primers and textbooks for the elementary schools. The team included students and recent graduates of the University’s Integrated Marketing Communications (IMC) program: Jason MacBain, ’10; Mark Inman, ’10; Steven Sanfilippo, ‘10; Amber Scheck and Lindsay Varga. The group was led by visiting J/MC professor Shelley Jack, an alumna of the IMC program. SIFE’s five-year vision is to set up computer labs in every elementary school — about 20 in all, including both private and public schools — on Grand Bahama, Aggarwal said. SIFE is the largest student organization on campus, with members from all academic disciplines. It has ongoing projects locally and internationally (Bahamas, Uganda and Laos). During the intensive six-week Oxford program, the strategists worked in the structure and organization of a marketing firm. Jack assigned job roles such as lead strategist, account execFor book ordering information, see Page 51 utive, analyst and cre- When asked about the experience, Inman said, “Working on the marketing plan helped refine a lot of the skills I learned in the IMC program. The team environment opened my eyes to the drive and ability it takes to make a plan thrive, particularly for such a unique product. Getting a sneak peek at the text almost made the experience wholly worth it for me, but working in Oxford wasn’t too bad, either.” 7 B O N AV E N T U R E The novel chronicles the fictional investigation into the real-life death of Meriwether Lewis, leader of the famed expedition of 1804-06 who died under mysterious circumstances along a remote Indian trail in Tennessee called the Natchez Trace. During the War of 1812, four explorers from Lewis’ journey are brought back together to solve the death of their former captain, crisscrossing the country from St. Louis to Baltimore and from Canada down to New Orleans. Through flashbacks, we see how these four men became friends along their westward exploration several years earlier. The reader is offered rare glimpses into the lives of Sacagawea, Thomas Jefferson, Francis Scott Key, William Clark, Andrew Jackson, Napoleon and many others. The novel was four years in the making and carefully researched for authenticity. This is Thomas’ first published work. He is a software engineer for Bank of America in New Jersey and is married with five children. His author website is www.thomasberry.com and he welcomes e-mail at ThomasJBerry@gmail.com. CONTACT US We are happy to print announcements and brief summaries of new books, CDs, films and other multimedia works published by SBU alumni, faculty and staff. Send a copy of the book or CD and summary press release to: Bonaventure magazine P.O. Box 2509 St. Bonaventure University St. Bonaventure, NY 14778 DECEMBER 2010 Off the Shelf Thomas Berry, ’88, has published a historical fiction novel titled “Lewis and Clark: Murder on the Natchez Trace,” available at www.Booklocker.com. 8 B O N AV E N T U R E DECEMBER 2010 Off the Shelf “The Mayor of Strawberry Fields,” a short documentary film by Torre Catalano, ’04, is now available on Netflix, the mail-order and Internet movie service. The film is also available on Amazon and other online outlets. Nehst Studios, a new company founded by Academy Awardnominated producer Larry Meistrich, has signed the film to a global distribution deal. “The Mayor Of Strawberry Fields” is a moving look into the quirky homeless subculture living in Central Park. Gary, the self-proclaimed “mayor” of Strawberry Fields, has lived at John Lennon’s Imagine Memorial and decorated it with flowers for the past 14 years. Thousands of tourists see his labor of love daily, while he sits on as the “silent” artist. Catalano has written for Comedy Central, been published in Seventeen Magazine, and has creatively consulted for some of the biggest record labels in the music industry. After several years working in artist management, Catalano turned his focus to writing, directing and producing short films, documentaries and viral music videos for many of the brightest stars in music — including John Legend for the Emmy Award-winning “Yes We Can” Obama tribute video. He now lives in Hollywood where he is director of video production for Capitol Records. With his first novel, Greg Faherty, ’84, (writing as JG Faherty) takes readers on a thrilling, frightening roller coaster ride through the “Carnival of Fear,” a supernatural fair where monsters come to life and a group of teenagers must find their way out of the haunted mansion before they are the next victims. Enter the nightmare, where your soul is the final prize. When the carnival showed up on Halloween eve, everyone thought it would be a night of fun and adventure. Now they’re fighting to stay alive until dawn. Thomas F. Monteleone, awardwinning author of more than 36 novels, says, “‘Carnival of Fear’ is aptly named — Faherty takes us on an outrageous journey into nightmare that’s equal parts Bradbury and Barker. From the opening page, this one rips into high-gear and takes you on a funhouse ride you'll never forget.” Deborah LeBlanc, author of “The Wolven” and “Water Witch,” says, “JG Faherty’s ‘Carnival of Fear’ takes us into a world where survival of the fittest is a gross understatement and fear is the norm. In this page-turning novel, Faherty goes about proving once and for all that hell does exist — and you needn’t be dead to find it. It finds you. A must read!” Faherty’s short fiction has been published in numerous magazines and anthologies. He owns and operates a resume business, www.a-perfect-resume.com, and is busy with several other stories and novels. For more information, visit www.jgfaherty.com or www.gravesidebooks.com. Dr. Michael E. Frisina, ’77, has published his first book, titled “Metamorphosis — Why Christians Don’t Change.” The book makes a direct link between neuroscience research on how the brain functions in the midst of behavior changes and Biblical references to conforming behavior to the nature and character of Jesus Christ. The purpose of the book is to help people live their lives in peace and harmony by aligning core values and daily behavior choices. The book is available at all major bookstore outlets, online and on Kindle. John Robert Greene, ’77, is author of “America in the Sixties” published by Syracuse University Press. Sandwiched between the placid ’50s and the flamboyant ’70s, the ’60s, a decade of tumultuous change and stunning paradoxes, is often reduced to a series of slogans, symbols and media images. In “America in the Sixties,” Greene goes beyond the clichés and synthesizes 30 years of research, writing and teaching on one of the most turbulent decades of the 20th century. Greene sketches the well-known players of the period — John F. Kennedy, Lyndon B. Johnson, Martin Luther King Jr., Malcolm X and Betty Friedan — bringing each to life with subtle detail. He introduces the reader to lesser-known incidents of the decade and offers fresh and persuasive insights on many of its watershed events. Greene chronicles the decade in a thematic manner, devoting individual chapters to such subjects as the legacy of the ’50s, the Kennedy and Johnson administrations, the civil rights movements and the war in Vietnam. Greene is the Paul J. Schupf Professor of History and Humanities at Cazenovia College. He has written or edited 13 books, including “The Limits of Power: The Nixon and Ford Administrations” and “The Presidency of Gerald R. Ford.” Tim Lyons, ’69, has published his fourth book, “Good Guy Handbook: Comfort the Afflicted … Afflict the Comfortable.” The “Good Guy Handbook” is 330 pages devoted to volunteerism, and begins as an invitation to become involved or increase our involvement in some form of notfor-profit activity. “It discusses various causes, such as feeding the hungry, the environment, youth activities, prison ministry, supporting active duty military, etc. It then looks into what you can do individually or what you can accomplish by joining forces with established organizations,” said Lyons. The last section of the book, which is available at Amazon.com and goodguyhandbook.com, gives specific recommendations on improving one’s skills in the volunteer world. Tips are given on public speaking, running a meeting, managing and motivating other volunteers and selecting the appropriate fundraising program. 2009, “Imaginary Numbers” was rereleased by Origin Records in August 2010. In mid-September, the album cracked the Top 50 Jazzweek Airplay and Roots Music Jazz Airplay charts. “’Imaginary Numbers’ has roots in musical collaborations back to the 1970s in western New York state, but it’s as contemporary as the brilliant post-bop scene in Los Angeles,“ writes Simpson in the liner notes. Now based in Los Angeles, Rizzo plays music from Gregorian Chant to BeBop, as well as pop, funk, folk, and world music. Originally a member of Doc Severinsen’s fusion group Xebron, Rizzo was also a regular member of the Tonight Show Band, and he composed much of the music heard on the show during his tenure. Simpson, who has played tenor sax since the age of 9, has taught jazz improvisation and the history of jazz for the University’s visual and performing arts program, and is a well-known regional jazz musician. “Imaginary Numbers” is available at amazon.com by CD and MP3 downloads, from origin-records.com and on iTunes. Lyons also enjoys writing songs and plays, some of which he posts on his website to be used as fundraisers. Veteran guitarist and composer Tom Rizzo, ’72, and SBU professor of English Rick Simpson, Ph.D., have teamed up to produce a new jazz album, “Imaginary Numbers.” Originally released on a private label in December 9 Our gifts. Their future. www.sbu.edu/donate Ramming Scholarship fuels careers in finance T he Regina A. Quick Center for the Arts (QCA) has unveiled a new seat naming initiative called “Take a seat next to … ?” This program will provide the necessary funds to support the QCA and its many projects for schoolchildren from the local area. By Tim Gross, ’11 T o his employees at the Electro Abrasive Corporation in Buffalo, he was a strong leader. To his family, he was a devoted husband and father. Your contribution will also ensure that the QCA can continue to present internationally recognized performers from the world of classical music, theater and dance at ticket prices affordable to our audiences. In 2009, Ramming’s widow, Betty, and their daughter, Kristine Molek, established the Allan Douglas Ramming Annual Scholarship, which awards two $5,000 yearly scholarships to help business students in financial need. Your tax-deductible gift of $250 can enhance the cultural enrichment of our community. When you name a seat you will be with some pretty good company, too. Jack Klugman and Heather Randall (Mrs. Tony Randall) are two of the stars who have signed up to help with this program. Allan Ramming graduated from Bonaventure in 1963 with a bachelor’s degree in finance. After his passing in June 2003, Betty Ramming approached the University because she felt her husband’s career had been built on the values he learned during his undergraduate years at St. Bonaventure. The name(s) of your choice will be inscribed on a brass plaque on the back of an orchestra seat in the Quick Center theater, and your name will be recognized in the program on opening night of our performance season. Won’t you name a seat today? For more information, please contact Michael Kramer at (716) 307-5499 or by e-mail to mkramer@sbu.edu. She said she hopes the scholarships will help nurture in students the same Franciscan values her husband possessed. Details online at www.sbu.edu/quickcenter/seat TAKE THE CALL Another Bonathon season is under way. Join the Bona Wolf and take the call! Please add us to your select phone list. (716) 375-2000 Help us reach this year’s $2.5 million goal with a gift to The 2011 Bonaventure Fund. 10 Allan Ramming took those values to Carborundum, an abrasive product manufacturer, along with his Bonaventure degree. He served in the United States Air Force during the Pueblo Crisis in 1968, returning to the abrasive industry two years later. He joined the Ferro Corporation, a performance materials company, as sales CELEBRATE February 11 Worldwide Bona Pride Day Get out your Bona brown gear and support your Bonnies from near and far. Visit alumni.sbu.edu for further details manager for the abrasive division, a position he held for 18 years. After the company decided to sell his division in 1987, Allan Ramming teamed with employees from the plant and investors to buy it, renaming it Electro Abrasives. In its first year, Electro Abrasives expanded to two plants: one that manufactured fine powders and one that crushed materials into macro grits used for products such as sandpaper and brake linings. “He had a vision for what the company could achieve through strong leadership and employee involvement,” Betty Ramming said, noting Allan’s attention to the company’s quality systems. Their daughter, Kristine, researched boron carbide’s domestic suppliers as an Alfred University student and pointed out the need for more sources in the U.S. Allan Ramming added a boron carbide crushing plant to process materials for customers such as the federal government. Before Allan Ramming died of kidney cancer in 2003, his company expanded from 15 employees to 25 and manufactured 10 different product lines in hundreds of sizes. DECEMBER 2010 B O N AV E N T U R E B O N AV E N T U R E DECEMBER 2010 product manager in 1997, to eventually take over as the company’s president. Betty Ramming said her husband’s achievements extended beyond business minutiae. “(Allan) was more than just a smallbusiness owner,” she said. “He helped many customers improve their products along the way, providing technical help, research from a ceramic engineer on staff, and samples of materials so that they, too, could grow and improve their processes.” Allan Ramming served as chairman of the Abrasive Grain Association, and was a member of the United Abrasive Manufacturing Association and The Refractories Institute. He was honored by Oxford’s “Who’s Who” from 19921993. Betty Ramming said the two scholarships in his name honor him in another way. “The family hopes the scholarship winners will reflect some of Allan’s qualities — his steadfast forward thinking, his compassionate listening skills, his remarkable faith and spirit, and strong convictions that were so quietly spoken,” she said. (Tim Gross, ’11, a senior in the School of Journalism and Mass Communication, is editor-in-chief of The Bona Venture.) He also groomed Kristine, hired as a HOMECOMING 2011 February 12 Alumni Couples Reception Join us for a pre-game alumni reception then head over to “Rock the Reilly” as the SBU women take on Duquesne at 1:30 p.m. followed by the men vs. La Salle at 4 p.m. 11 Our gifts. Their future. www.sbu.edu/donate DECEMBER 2010 B O N AV E N T U R E B O N AV E N T U R E DECEMBER 2010 The key to ul calls f s s e c c u Three s nathon Bo f or t h e appy = one h student A Healthy Future at St. Bonaventure this is just not the case. Our Advancement staff is conscious each and every day of benchmarks and goals needed to sustain the annual operating vitality of the University as they also work to increase the University’s endowment. T he health of a person depends on a balanced diet, plenty of exercise, proper sleeping habits, and annual check-ups. The health of an organization involves a different set of indicators. How is financial health assessed and determined? For higher education institutions such as St. Bonaventure University, the answer can include many of the following: ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ A strong endowment Large classes and higher-scoring students Program accreditation and marketable academic offerings High percentage of alumni donors Highly-credentialed, diversified faculty Robust grants and/or government relations activity Solid revenue streams and economic development The University completed its most successful campaign in May 2009 with more than $95 million raised. What many alumni and friends don’t realize is that funds raised during a campaign are usually spent on capital “bricks and mortar” projects, or invested by the University’s endowment. Some folks think the University has $95 million in surplus, but 12 St. Bonaventure’s endowment totaled $42.4 million at May 31, 2010, which is an increase of $3.8 million from 2009. The Board of Trustees’ asset allocation policy is structured for longterm growth while minimizing risk and achieving targeted annual returns. “A healthy and growing endowment fund is one of the most important priorities for St. Bonaventure,” said Brenda McGee, senior vice president for Finance and Administration. Gifts to the endowment help to ensure St. Bonaventure’s long-term success while providing support for today’s students, she added. The Anniversary Campaign for St. Bonaventure University But even with generous aid packages, some of our families must commit to payment plans of as much as $1,000 per month in addition to taking out loans. 25% Our students and their families are making huge sacrifices to come to St. Bonaventure. When you give to the University, you help share that burden. Endowment Funds It is interesting to note that during The Anniversary Campaign for St. Bonaventure, nearly 50 percent of our alumni participated. But when the advancement office assessed how many alumni participate on an annual level, the percentage is lower. St. Bonaventure alumni have been participating on an annual basis between 17-23 percent. 28% Current Operations Capital Projects “This is still higher than the national average,” said Andrea Bidell, director of the Annual Fund, “but we want to retain our donors from year to year. In order to do that, we have aligned nearly 80 alumni volunteers who will be helping the Bonaventure Fund during the year.” The University is also committed to raising donor retention. Presently, the retention rate is 70 percent; the Annual Fund Office would like to see that number increase to a minimum of 80 percent. SBU Alumni Participation: All Levels of Giving St. Bonaventure is relying more on The Bonaventure Fund, our annual appeal to alumni, parents and friends. This fund has historically contributed 5 percent to the University’s operating revenue — just more than $2.2 million — which allows the University to retain top students and faculty, but it continues to compete in a very tough environment. 25% 10% Our University delivers approximately $22 million in scholarship and financial aid to 90 percent of our student body. While The Bonaventure Fund is just one indicator of the University’s financial health, it is a key lifeline of the institution. Please help us keep The Bonaventure Fund strong. Just as you receive your annual health check-up, please consider an annual gift to your alma mater for its continued financial health. This is a powerful statement coming from a small, independent college such as St. Bonaventure. If you haven’t already made your gift this year, please visit www.sbu.edu/donate and make a difference today! “While the pot of family funds is smaller these days, I continue to ask our donors if St. Bonaventure is among their top three philanthropies,” said Mary Driscoll, associate vice president for Advancement. “This is usually a good indicator that the alumnus/a is a loyal donor who will continue to give or increase their gift if given a compelling reason. And what better reason than knowing you are helping the next generation of Bonaventure leaders?” 47% 20% 22% 23% 20% 15% 19% 17% 5% 0% FY2006 FY2007 FY2008 FY2009 FY2010 13 The Future Faces of Health Care It’s natural to wonder how you’ll do in medical school when you come from a college most of your classmates know little about. Requirements vary from school to school, but GW even waives the Medical College Admission Test requirement, making its dual admit program particularly inviting. Patel. “Everyone was so personable. It was a lot different from all the other interviews I had, just because everybody was so genuine and so interested in helping you out.” “There are students here from MIT and Johns Hopkins,” said Zaikos. “And other students, who entered GW the same way I did, through an early assurance program, come from places like Maryland and other large colleges and universities throughout the country. They don’t come from 2,000student colleges in the middle of Western New York. The fact that we have this program at St. Bonaventure is incredible.” St. Bonaventure also has early assurance programs in medicine with GW and Upstate Medical. Students apply for early assurance after their sophomore year at Bonaventure and, if accepted, are guaranteed a seat in medical school when they graduate. John Bernett, another first-year GW medical student, applied to 15 schools with dual degree programs and was accepted at eight of them. The Sayre, Pa., native said St. Bonaventure presented “more of a family atmosphere. At some of the big schools, you were just a number and they pushed you through the process. At Bonaventure it was definitely more like a family.” George Washington has no other joint BS/MD program with an undergraduate institution, so the dual admit program with St. Bonaventure is a big lure for high school students far and wide who recognize GW as one of the foremost medical institutions in North America. But while it is the flagship program for medical school-bound students at St. Bonaventure, it is just one of several dual or combined degree opportunities under the university’s Franciscan Health Care Professions program. 14 There are 77 students, 29 of them freshmen, presently enrolled in dual degree and early assurance programs at St. Bonaventure, said Dr. Allen Knowles, Franciscan Health Care Professions director. And while most of those students come from the Northeast, the number includes students from California, Arizona, Florida and Michigan. << AT LEFT: St. Bonaventure graduates pictured following the White Coat Ceremony “Really, they’re from all over,” said Knowles. “And these are high qualiat George Washington University are (front ty applicants who have options.” row, from left) Ashish Shah, Devin Patel, Shilpa Bansal, Christina Ling and Allison Gould, and (back row, from left) Shawn Sood, Many of them learn of St. BonaArjun Sharma, Michelle Spears, John Bernett, venture from Medical School and Tommy Zaikos. The August ceremony Admission Requirements, the welcomed first-year medical students into premed student’s “bible” published The George Washington University Medical annually by the Association of American Center community. Medical Colleges. Others land on the COVER STORY St. Bonaventure’s Franciscan Health Care Professions program alumni are charting a course for success It’s natural for a small liberal arts college to have little name recognition beyond the limits of its traditional admissions recruitment area, but the Franciscan Health Care Professions program is helping to place St. Bonaventure on the “desired” list of prospective college students across the country. I Bonaventure website after searching for dual degree programs. By Tom Donahue t was a day or two after the first block of exams at The George Washington University School of Medicine and Health Sciences in early October, and several students who arrived at GW through the dual admission or early assurance program with St. Bonaventure University were hanging out, talking. Someone opened the St. Bonaventure website on his computer and there they were in a big photo on the home page: 10 recent St. Bonaventure graduates who are now attending medical school at GW — all sporting crisp white lab coats, all smiling proudly, and one, naturally, holding up a “Rock the Reilly” towel. Across the bottom of the photo was the message “becoming prepared.” “It’s funny,” said Tommy Zaikos, one of the students in the photo and one of the Bonnies in the room that day. “We had been talking about our transition from college to medical school and the exact words out of my mouth were, ‘we’re all better prepared.’ “It’s odd to say — I mean, I don’t want to jinx myself — but I think all the other Bonaventure students share the same feeling that our first block of exams was actually kind of easy,” said Zaikos, a 2010 SBU graduate. “I think Bonaventure prepared us very well.” There are also combined degree programs in medicine with SUNY Upstate Medical University in Syracuse and Lake Erie College of Osteopathic Medicine, with campuses in Erie, Pa., and Bradenton, Fla.; a dual degree program with LECOM’s School of Pharmacy; a dual degree program with University at Buffalo School of Dental Medicine; and a dual degree program with Daemen College School of Physical Therapy. Dual-degree students have a reserved seat in medical school awaiting them upon satisfactory completion of their undergraduate work at Bonaventure. Typically, they apply to multiple dual degree programs and they have a handful of acceptances from which to choose. Many find themselves heading to St. Bonaventure for reasons that ring familiar with any alum. Devin Patel, a first-year medical student at GW, grew up outside of Philadelphia. St. Bonaventure was one of a half-dozen schools with dual degree programs that he applied to. “I really liked the feel when I visited,” said DECEMBER 2010 B O N AV E N T U R E B O N AV E N T U R E DECEMBER 2010 Brooke Blazius, a St. Bonaventure junior who has a seat at LECOM in Erie waiting for her when she graduates, grew up an hour north of Detroit. “I applied to 11 colleges and about six were dual admission programs,” she said. “St. Bonaventure was the first to give me an interview — they responded quicker than anyone else. I always liked the idea of a smaller campus, smaller class sizes, more attention from teachers, so that was definitely a plus on paper. But when I came here I really loved how beautiful the area was and I just thought it was a place I could see myself for the next four years of my life.” The architect of the Franciscan Health Care Professions program was Dr. Michael Domboski, a 1972 St. Bonaventure graduate who went on to earn a doctor of medical dentistry degree from Tufts University School of Dental Medicine, then practiced in Olean for 22 years. After selling his practice in 2000, Domboski mentioned to a neighbor that he’d like to do some teaching at a community college. The neighbor, Dr. Robert Harlan, professor of computer science at St. Bonaventure, urged him to contact then-dean of Arts and Sciences Dr. James White. “Jim had heard something about these dual admission agreements – our sister school, Siena, had one with Albany Medical College – and wondered if I was willing to come down and look into it for St. Bonaventure,” said Domboski. He would spend the next seven years establishing the eight dual degree and early assurance programs under the Franciscan Health Care Professions umbrella. Learn more at www.sbu.edu/prehealth 15 program with them. We were going to be their bachelor of science/medical program. “I think a lot of it was my relationship with them 30 years earlier … but I was probably just in the right place at the right time,” said Domboski. It was more than serendipity that brought the schools together, said Dean McQuail. “When Mike approached me I was intrigued, particularly since St. Bonaventure, as we do, has a mission of service,” she said. Pre-health care student Priya Singhal Domboski first approached LECOM in Erie because of its close proximity to Bonaventure and because it already had dual degree programs with other schools. Using the Siena plan as a model, he secured contracts with LECOM for dual degree programs in osteopathic medicine and pharmacy. Then he had a brainstorm. Some 30 years earlier, Domboski had done his three-year oral and facial residency at Washington Hospital Center in Washington, D.C., and a fellowship in facial plastic surgery at George Washington University School of Medicine. “I was sitting in my office one day and thought, gee, I wonder if anybody’s left that I had some contact with,” he recalled. “So I wrote a cold letter to the dean of admissions at the medical school at GW.” A week later he got a letter from Diane McQuail, assistant dean of admissions at GW’s School of Medicine and Health Sciences. “She said, ‘ya know, we’d be very interested,’” said Domboski. George Washington had a dual BA/MD program with its own undergraduate school and was thinking of starting a BS/MD program. No one was more surprised than Domboski at how quickly things fell into place. “Of all the contracts I’ve done, it was probably the easiest,” he said. “Within six weeks, I had a fully functional 16 “Academic rigor is clearly important, but experience is important to us as well. Frankly, one of the concerns about dual degree programs is that kids come in and they don’t do very much. They’re in the program and they sort of coast through. They do really well academically but don’t really push themselves to go outside the box to have other experiences. But the Bonaventure students absolutely do. The students we’re getting from Bonaventure have done some interesting things.” The SBU-GW program is 4+4, meaning students must spend four years at St. Bonaventure before going to GW. But many dual admit students arrive at Bonaventure with a semester or more worth of AP and college credits. “I think it is something that is just in the warp and weft of the school,” he said. “They participate in Bona Responds, Bona Buddies, the Warming House and spring break service trips, in addition to completing internship opportunities at Olean General Hospital, area nursing homes and daycare centers. “We start when they are freshmen, saying, ‘When you go to GW, what are you going to take with you other than A’s in biology courses? What are you going to bring to their community of scholars that is going to make it a better place?” St. Bonaventure is doing things right, said Dean McQuail. “Academic rigor is clearly important, but experience is important to us as well ... We’re getting some great students from St. Bonaventure.” Coast? As a Bonaventure undergraduate, Zaikos, a native of Ontario, Canada, was a four-year varsity soccer player, a tutor, lab assistant, summer researcher, and was named the Ideal Bonaventure Student at commencement. In his four years at Bonaventure, Shawn Sood, ’09, of Katy, Texas, earned both a bachelor’s degree in biology and an MBA before heading to GW. First-year GW med student Shilpa Bansal, ’10, of Bethpage, N.Y., started the Asian Students In Action club while at SBU. And Keelan O’Connell, ’10, of Abilene, Texas, completed her undergraduate work in three years and is presently on a mission trip in East Timor before entering GW next fall. Knowles, who followed Domboski as program director in November 2008, said service is part of the Franciscan Health Care Professions students’ contract, but no armtwisting is needed. Diane McQuail Assistant dean of admissions, GW’s School of Medicine and Health Sciences “I can’t say enough good things about it. I’ve run early selection and linkage programs for more than 20 years and this really is a well-oiled program,” she said. “It’s the work on the ground that you all have been doing – certainly Mike (Domboski), Allen (Knowles), everyone in Admissions, and everybody else that’s supportive. They’re wonderful people to work with, and it certainly seems that Bonaventure is a community that supports its students.” Perhaps the best endorsement of the Franciscan Health Care Professions program comes from the students themselves. “The unique thing about Bonaventure is that it has so many of these programs that there is essentially a sub-community of students with pre-health contracts who have similar goals and interests,” said Danielle Schenone, a Bonaventure DECEMBER 2010 B O N AV E N T U R E B O N AV E N T U R E DECEMBER 2010 junior from Elmira who has a seat awaiting her at SUNY Upstate Medical. “We do tend to study together and interact together because we have that in common.” Knowles said the programs are also a lure for students who intend to take the traditional path to a medical career by applying to medical school after getting a bachelor’s degree at Bonaventure. “They see we have these connections with medical schools and assume we’re doing something right,” he said. Students also cite as Bonaventure bonuses the $13.5 million William F. Walsh Science Center that opened in 2008, small class sizes, and the opportunity to work closely with dedicated and approachable faculty. Thomas Walters looks at a culture in the lab at Olean General Hospital. “Right now, if I wanted to, I could go knock on the door of a biology professor or a chemistry professor, a Ph.D., and say, ‘Hey, how’d your son’s soccer game go, or what did you do this weekend — and by the way, can you explain what you were talking about in your lecture today?” said Schenone. “There’s no gate you have to cross, no teaching assistant you have to go to first. That’s definitely a Bonaventure advantage.” Pre-health students get A Healthy Dose of reality Dr. Michael Fischer, provost and vice president for academic affairs at St. Bonaven-ture, said the university’s ability to form and sustain relationships with prestigious medical schools is certainly a reflection of the energy and commitment of Drs. Domboski and Knowles, but it’s much more. “It’s also an endorsement of our academic programs and the ability of our knowledgeable, caring and dedicated professors to prepare our students for the most challenging academic and professional pursuits that await them when they leave here,” he said. “And most importantly, I think that it speaks volumes about the quality of our students, that they are offered acceptance to top medical schools before they have even graduated from high school.” GW’s Dean McQuail couldn’t agree more. “We’re getting some great students from St. Bonaventure,” she said. “When they come here they’re alive, very gracious, very interested. They’re genuinely nice kids.” By Tom Donahue I f some of the people in white coats at Olean General Hospital look too young to be physicians, they are. But give them time. Many will be putting “Dr.” in front of their names in a few short years. former director of the Franciscan Health Care Professions program at St. Bonaventure, the hospital program has been in place since October of 2008. For now, these St. Bonaventure University students are participants in The Experience in Clinical Medicine, a program that gives students a close-up glimpse of life in a community hospital. The semester-long experience includes six clinical rotations at Olean General. Students visit the hospital once a week for observational rotations in the emergency and operating rooms, the lab, the cardiology and radiology units, and with hospitalists — physicians making inpatient rounds. The brainchild of Timothy Finan, president and CEO of Upper Allegheny Health System, the parent company of Olean General and Bradford Regional hospitals, and Dr. Michael Domboski, creator and “It’s an opportunity for premedical students to see what real medicine is like and how it is practiced,” said Finan. “Most students won’t receive this level of exposure until they are already in medical school.” 17 From the classroom to the operating room, learn how SBU faculty and alumni are making an impact A HUMANE TOUCH O DECEMBER 2010 B O N AV E N T U R E B O N AV E N T U R E DECEMBER 2010 By Andrea Westerlund, ’10 n any given day, Dr. Julie Hens can be found in the Walsh cellular biology lab, wearing her signature frog-print lab coat, mentoring students on mammary gland physiology. Dr. Shoaib Asgher (center), a University at Buffalo family practice resident, talks with St. Bonaventure students Sandra Jenkins and James Lee during rounds at Olean General Hospital. Hospital officials were surprised when they started looking for programs to model theirs after, said William Mills, senior vice president of quality and professional affairs at OGH. “We did a lot of Internet searching and I talked with several folks around the country who did similar things, but no place really had a kind of structured approach to this,” said Mills. “Our thought was that this would not only be an opportunity for combined degree students in St. Bonaventure’s Franciscan Health Care Professions program to see things firsthand, but that it might serve as a differentiator on the medical application of a traditional premed student.” The Experience in Clinical Medicine is a shadowing program, but with a shot of adrenalin. “We refer to it as an observational experience, but it really goes deeper than that,” said Mills. “For instance, when students go into the operating room they’ll change their clothes and go to the sink where one of the staff will teach them how to scrub, and while they’re doing that they have a list of objectives that they’ll talk about: why they’re scrubbing, what sterile procedure entails. After they’re scrubbed they’ll go into the OR and observe what- 18 ever’s going on, from colon surgery to putting tubes in a kid’s ears to an orthopedic procedure of a joint replacement.” In addition to the hospital component, the program includes classroom sessions back at Bonaventure led by University Ministries team members in which students are asked to consider their hospital experience “through the lens of Franciscan values,” said Dr. Allen Knowles, who succeeded Dr. Domboski as director of the Franciscan Health Care Professions program in 2008. The program continues to be reshaped, said Knowles, and there are plans to change it from a voluntary offering to a credit course. “Having that hospital connection, being able to put people in there in several venues, is important,” he said. Hospital CEO Finan, who sits on the university’s Board of Trustees and whose father, Professor Austin Finan, taught finance at St. Bonaventure for 42 years, agrees. “I’m thrilled with it. It’s great for St. Bonaventure students and it adds a lot of vibrancy to the hospital,” he said. Alice Georgitso, a senior from East Amherst who plans to pursue a master’s in public health after she graduates from St. Bonaventure, then apply to medical school, said the program is helping her chart her future. “The most effective way to learn about what area of health care interests you is to be immersed in that environment, and the OGH experience does just that,” she said. Sophomore James Lee of San Marino, Calif., a combined degree student headed to Lake Erie College of Osteopathic Medicine (LECOM) after Bonaventure, said the program has helped him zero in on the kind of physician he wants to be. “I was fortunate enough to experience many departments in Olean General,” said Lee. “In the Emergency Department, I shadowed the attending physician who was compassionate and professional at the same time, which I really admire and hope to emulate.” The program is making a difference, said Mills. “You can’t really sell the idea that if you take this course you’re going to end up in med school, but I know for a fact that it helped one of the students now at LECOM,” he said. “I had a conversation with the dean there who said that the student was able to articulate some of the things she learned from our program and it bumped her up off their wait list to an accepted position. It made a difference because it showed that this was a motivated student who wanted to go above and beyond.” Even though October is Breast Cancer Awareness month, this disease is in the forefront of Hens’ mind a majority of the year. Undergraduate students in tow, the St. Bonaventure assistant professor of biology performs cell cultures, histology sections, and micro-dissections to try and discover what effect the absence of certain proteins may have on breast cancer and mammary gland development using mice as her model organism. Some of these terms may be confusing to non-biologists but the results of Hens’ research are easy to understand. “[This research] will help characterize the kind of breast cancer because breast cancer has all kinds of reasons for forming,” says Hens. She also states that being able to correctly identify the type of breast cancer will make it easier to assign an appropriate treatment for it, which will increase efficiency of treatment. The mice that provide the basis of Hens’ research are what Hens describes as “knock-out mice.” These mice don’t possess the proteins that Hens and her students are studying, such as cadherin11 or CTGF. This allows for her to research the effect that the absence of these proteins has on mammary gland development. Although Hens enjoys working with undergraduate students, she admits that some adjustments must be made. “[The research] takes a lot longer because everyone is taking classes so they only have a certain amount of time,” she said. She is trying to create an environment that allows for students to learn from one another. She tries not to enlist all new students at once, allowing the more seasoned students to aid the newcomers. This semester, Hens is teaching “Genetics” and “Junior Seminar.” In the spring, her course load will include “Developmental Biology” and “Molecular Cell Biology.” Presently, Hens is working to receive outside funding to expand her research opportunities. This year she is expecting to receive a confocal microscope, which will allow for much more precise Dr. Julie Hens joined the St. Bonaventure faculty in 2007 and holds a Ph.D. in animal science from the University of Maryland. observation. The microscope costs close to half a million dollars but will allow students to view live tissue. “You can take tissue and watch things move around in there,” Hens describes excitedly. It is clear, even to an audience whose interest in science may end with the Discovery Channel, that Hens’ research is not only exciting but useful. Right on the St. Bonaventure campus there is thrilling research taking place, with the help of undergraduate students, which may change the approach that physicians take toward treating breast cancer. Watch a slideshow of images from Dr. Hens’ lab: www.sbu.edu/bonamag 19 CHARLES E. CHAMBERS, M.D., ’76 HERSHEY MEDICAL CENTER By Beth Eberth W ith a surname like Chambers and a pre-med adviser named Hartman, Charles E. Chambers, M.D., ’76, may have been destined for a career in cardiology. Since 1987, he has been on staff at the Hershey Medical Center of the Penn State University College of Medicine where he has been director of the Cardiac Catheterization Laboratories since 1994, and professor of medicine and radiology with tenure since 2002. MICHAEL RAUH, M.D., ’95 UNIVERSITY ORTHOPAEDICS AND SPORTS MEDICINE Center, he is in charge of the policies and procedures as well as quality assurance for the laboratory. Rob classmates. Of the 84 guys on the floor in the fall of ‘72, 36 were freshmen. A clinical cardiologist with a busy practice, Chamber also spends several days a week in the cardiac catheterization laboratory doing procedures. “It was a tremendous group of guys … we won freshman basketball (tournaments) and it was a great start and gave me a support group that I really needed for the four years. I knew I needed to study really hard for the grades, and with a job on weekends I was limited with spare time, but the guys in the dorm were always great to me. They made feel good about myself and I will never forget them for that,” added Chambers. He participates in clinical research as well as teaching medical students during their clinical rotations, the internal medicine residents during their cardiology rotations, and the cardiology fellows in preparation to be cardiologists. He had similar experiences with SBU faculty and staff. “Dr. Ronald Hartman was my med school adviser and had a large impact on my career in medicine. Also, Fr. Dan Hurley, O.F.M., was a tremendous mentor. I never would be where I am today without him,” Chambers said. Chambers said he was quiet during his first two years at SBU, where he “studied my butt off” and worked weekends at the Cattaraugus County Nursing Home. Then he applied for an RA position. Dr. Charles E. Chambers (left) is pictured with colleagues from Hershey Medical Center. “I thought initially — and still do — that it would be a challenging and exciting career with many divergent opportunities and the potential to make a difference in people’s lives,” said Chambers. A cardiologist who chose invasive cardiology, Chambers does diagnostic and interventional procedures on patients within their cardiovascular system, predominantly diagnostic heart catheterizations and therapeutic coronary artery procedures such as stents. As director of the Cardiac Catheterization Laboratory at Hershey Medical 20 He said he has also been fortunate to participate in writing groups and committees for the American College of Cardiology (ACC) and the Society for Cardiovascular Angiography and Intervention (SCAI), the primary organization for invasive/interventional cardiologist. “My main interests have been in the quality area and radiation safety,” said Chambers. Reflecting on his undergraduate years at St. Bonaventure, Chambers described himself as a shy freshman who was drawn into the camaraderie of his 1st DECEMBER 2010 B O N AV E N T U R E B O N AV E N T U R E DECEMBER 2010 “Fr. Dan took me under his wings and gave me the support and assisted me with the needed self-confidence that was essential not only as an RA but for my medical career,” he said. Chambers graduated from the University of Maryland Medical School with subsequent training in internal medicine at the State University of New York at Buffalo, and cardiology at the University of Vermont. He said few patients actually call attention to his last name, “but I frequently tell them how to remember me, as the ‘heart having Chambers.’” (Beth Eberth, beberth@sbu.edu, is director of university communications at St. Bonaventure.) By Tom Missel M ichael Rauh remembers when he first thought about becoming a doctor. “I have this picture from a field trip to a Syracuse hospital when I was in second grade,” said Rauh. “I was decked out in the scrubs and hat and mask and I thought, ‘Wow, this is really cool. I think I might want to do this some day.’” Rauh moved in third grade to Orchard Park, where he now works at UBMD Orthopaedics and Sports Medicine, one of 18 practices under the umbrella of the University at Buffalo’s School of Medicine and Biomedical Sciences. The UBMD model means Rauh, SBU class of 1995 and a graduate of UB’s medical school, also teaches; he’s an assistant clinical professor of orthopaedic surgery. As a clinical professor, much of his time teaching takes place while he’s working. “A lot of the instruction is right in the operating room,” Rauh said. “A much smaller percentage of my time teaching is in a classroom setting.” A specialist in sports medicine, Rauh worked with the Browns, Indians and Cavaliers while doing a fellowship at the renowned Cleveland Clinic in 2006-2007. He’s now the team physician for the Buffalo Bandits of the National Lacrosse League. His residency in Buffalo was in general surgery, but the sports medicine field intrigued him. “I just felt it was an expanding field, with better opportunities,” Rauh said. “The ability to stay on the cutting edge of research meant a lot.” The days of having to open up the knee for almost any injury passed long before Rauh began practice, but surgical advances haven’t slowed down. “Just in the last 10 years we’ve made great progress in shoulder and knee arthroscopy,” Rauh said. “We’re currently working on computer assistance for reconstructions and osteotomies. “We have the ability to put in infrared trackers, kind of like a remote control, that get pushed into the femur and tibia bones so that we can … look at alignment and angles and instability. Things that were only able to be felt by a surgeon’s hands can now actually be quantified, which we hope will improve surgical outcomes.” Rauh treasures his experience at Bonaventure, where he was one of the first three students to earn a degree in biochemistry. (Dr. Sal Pacella is a California plastic surgeon, and Dr. Stacy Dacosta Byfield is a senior researcher at i3 Innovus.) “When I see patients … I treat them like they are my own family. Being a doctor is about building relationships,” Rauh said. “That’s what Bonaventure is really about — relationship building, with all the people in your major, with your professors, and with all the other students. “A successful medical practice is not just about treating an injury, it’s about creating a trust irrespective of the outcome. Your patients want to be able to trust that you’re doing the right thing.” (Tom Missel, tmissel@sbu.edu, is director of media relations and marketing at St. Bonaventure.) 21 AMY (BURLESON) SULLIVAN, PSY.D., ’99 MELLEN CENTER FOR MULTIPLE SCLEROSIS THOMAS HOOK, ’84 GREATBATCH INC. By Tom Missel By Beth Eberth T A “The Navy gave me a chance to expand my technology base but still be in a pretty exciting job,” said Hook, a native of Kenmore, N.Y., who then worked for Duracell USA for six years before founding the Van Owen Group Acquisition Company in 1997. The business acumen Hook brought to a traditionally slow-paced industry has helped Greatbatch become one of the nation’s leading medical technology companies. The company has acquired 10 medtech companies in the last 12 years — six since 2007. Wilson Greatbatch co-invented the pacemaker in 1960, “but the company he founded 40 years ago was to develop batteries for medical devices,” Hook said. “That’s still 10 to 15 percent of our sales, but the company today is very broad-ranging, from vascular and orthopaedics to neurology.” For decades, St. Bonaventure alumni have made their mark on medicine. From anesthesiology to pathology, here is a quick look at practices where SBU grads can be found. 22 The impact of St. Bonaventure’s faculty on Sullivan began her first day on campus and continues today. The basketball player from southern Ohio had gone on recruiting visits at several schools, but fell in love with Bona’s when she walked into the Reilly Center. She knew she’d made her decision after attending a class taught by Fr. Peter Schneible, O.F.M., assistant professor of biology. Sullivan said the principles she learned as a student-athlete at St. Bonaventure continue to guide her on a new team, a group of specialists at Cleveland Clinic’s Mellen Center who treat people with multiple sclerosis. A math and chemistry major at Bonaventure, Hook went on to earn master’s degrees from UB and Vanderbilt before serving in the U.S. Navy as a nuclear engineer. Hook worked for GE Medical Systems (now GE Healthcare) and CTI Molecular Imaging before being named president of Greatbatch in Learn more about the innovation of Greatbatch 2005; he added CEO to his title in 2006. www.greatbatch.com care; the best way to do that was to combine health care and psychology,” she said. my (Burleson) Sullivan doesn’t have to look far to connect the dots between the camaraderie and teamwork experienced on the St. Bonaventure women’s basketball team and her career as a psychologist. om Hook is glad he didn’t have a clue in college. “I always find it amazing that people at 18 think they know what they want to do because I had absolutely no idea,” said Hook, class of 1984 and president and CEO of Western New York-based Greatbatch Inc. “Maybe I was enlightened enough to keep an open mindset. That’s why I really liked Bona’s. As a small liberal arts institution, it kept all my doors open to me.” “I had owned a lot of companies and sold them all, but because of a non-compete (clause), I couldn’t go back and work in the electronics industry so I had to find a new industry,” he said. “As I got older, I realized that working on things that were significant to mankind was important so, for me, health care kind of stood out.” Greatbatch spends roughly $50 million annually on research and development. HealthNow New York asked Hook to join its board of directors in 2009, and in June he was appointed board chair of HealthNow, BlueCross BlueShield’s parent company. “This is a great opportunity to work in the health industry to facilitate change, to get higher standards of care and best practices out to the public sooner,” Hook said. Not bad for a guy who didn’t know what he wanted to do in college. “Even having zero experience in health care, I felt extremely well prepared based on the education I received at Bonaventure,” Hook said. “I learned how to learn there. Bonaventure taught me how to be a good student, a good listener, a good learner. Once you get good at learning, not a whole lot can inhibit you.” (Tom Missel, tmissel@sbu.edu, is director of media relations and marketing at St. Bonaventure.) “St. Bonaventure really prepares you for the real world. I was a well-rounded student athlete and learned how to focus and be a team player. Those are values I Learn more about the Mellen Center for MS have put to work in my.clevelandclinic.org/multiple_sclerosis_center my own clinical practice, and things I teach the students I mentor. I think the world of “A lot of my patients struggle with chronic pain, and staying on track in terms of Bonaventure,” said Sullivan, a member of treatment,” explained Sullivan. the class of 1999. One of the top four medical institutions in the nation, Cleveland Clinic has broken down its services into institutes and centers, where interdisciplinary teams work toward the complete treatment of a patient. So in the Mellen Center for Multiple Sclerosis, a patient can not only receive his MRI, but also see his neurologist, occupational therapist, physical therapist and other specialists. MS is a chronic and disabling disease that attacks the central nervous system. She helps them work through those issues while they learn how to adapt their illness to their career and home life. She is also able to utilize her athletic background and go to the gym with her patients as they undergo physical therapy. An undergraduate psychology major with a concentration in chemistry, Sullivan has always had an interest in health care, “but I can’t stand the blood,” she joked. “I come from a family of 11 dentists. I knew I wanted to do something in health Alnylam Pharmaceuticals Central Florida Foot Care Lehigh Valley Hospital Phoenix Endocrinology Clinic Limited University of Minnesota Albany Medical College Columbus Hospital Modular Genetics Southeast Denver Pediatrics, PC U.S. Army Dental Corps Pennsylvania Neurologic Temple University Hospital Advanced Healthcare Animal Hospital of Sullivan County Atlanta Dental Wellness Center Baptist Retirement Center Cardiovascular Group of Syracuse DECEMBER 2010 B O N AV E N T U R E B O N AV E N T U R E DECEMBER 2010 Children’s Hospital in Boston Duke University Medical Center Fairfax Anesthesiology Associates Genesee Valley Chiropractic Care Johnson & Johnson Merck & Co. North Syracuse Health Center Association Pennsylvania State University Rochester General Hospital School of Dental Medicine Univ. of Buffalo St. Vincent Health Center SUNY at Buffalo “He asked a lot of questions about what I wanted to do with my career. There was no other school that matched the warmth I felt there,” she said. Sullivan credits Dr. Robin Valeri, professor of psychology, with helping her develop her research skills, necessary today to administer a research program where she looks at the outcomes of her patients. “She helped guide my research foundation,” Sullivan said. Sullivan earned a doctorate in psychology from Argosy University in Atlanta, completed an internship at the University of Cincinnati Medical Center, and a residency in Health Psychology/Pain Management at Cleveland Clinic. (Beth Eberth, beberth@sbu.edu, is director of university communications at St. Bonaventure.) University of Nebraska Medical Center UT Southwestern Medical Center Veterans Administration Hospital West Virginia University Hospital White House 23 DECEMBER 2010 B O N AV E N T U R E B O N AV E N T U R E DECEMBER 2010 XIAO-NING ZHANG, PH.D. ST. BONAVENTURE UNIVERSITY By Andrea Westerlund C uriosity is the essence of education. This is what Dr. Xiao-Ning Zhang of St. Bonaventure’s Department of Biology believes, and much of the reason she includes undergraduates so extensively in her research. “[Scientists] are not weird people. We do science because it’s fun for us and we want to share this view with students,” states Zhang. Zhang’s research relates to the Arabidopsis plant, or “mouse-ear” cress. The cress is a “model organism,” which means the knowledge gained from studying it can easily be applied to many other organisms. Specifically, the research observes RNA splicing in the Arabidopsis. This is a naturally occurring function in all living things, including humans. However, if mutations occur during this process, it may lead to some serious malfunctions in the entire system. For example, such mutations can cause cystic fibrosis in humans. In addition to the main project that studies different regulating factors in the splicing network, Zhang and her students also apply outside variables to the Arabidopsis to study the RNA splicing process. One student, Alex Joseph, is studying how different concentrations of salt and sugar affect the growth of the seedlings and how germination will occur because of it. When asked about the practical application of her research, Zhang responds emphatically: Wellness. “I don’t think it matters what career path these students choose, they really have the opportunity to explore and then to wonder and to be curious about things. I think that’s the essence of education,” says Dr. Xiao-Ning Zhang (above, left). She’s pictured in the lab with SBU students Jill Remick (front) and Kevin Cilano. BELOW: Students Sinead Coleman and Jason Chien. “Plants are at the bottom of the chain of life and without plants, humans would cease to exist, “Zhang says. She believes that understanding that fact will lead to a better environment and ultimately a better life for all human beings. Just as the applications of Zhang’s research are infinite, so are the possibilities for every student who joins her in the lab. Zhang wants her students to enjoy the lab experience. “If you don’t enjoy something, you’re not going to do it for the rest of your life,” she reasons. She also thinks that lab work can help to reinforce the knowledge students have gained from textbooks and in classes. Some students even receive a salary for their work in the lab. Thanks to a grant from the National Science Foundation, Zhang is able to pay some students a salary, with priority going to seniors. Juniors who are patient and remain with the program until their senior year will then receive the same benefits. Many people may imagine research, especially of the magnitude that Zhang is conducting, to take place in a distant and intimidating laboratory. However, there are undergraduate students participating in exciting research right on our own campus and the benefits are tremendous. One of the key capacities she hopes for students to develop is to have an open mind. “If you don’t have an open mind, you’re not going to do good science. And it’s not just for your own sake, it’s for the sake of everybody,” says Zhang. Zhang’s ongoing research is supported by an award (0950158) from the National Science Foundation. (Westerlund, an English major from Lakewood, N.Y., plans to graduate from St. Bonaventure in December 2010. She has been accepted into Masters of Publishing Program at Pace University in New York City.) THROUGH THE OF EYES FAITH Y By Anne-Marie Welsh ou’d think it would be enough for a young optometrist to travel to some of the poorest nations in the Western Hemisphere — Haiti, Jamaica, Guatemala, Cuba, Trinidad — on mission trips for a few weeks a couple of times a year. You’d think Dr. Doug Villella, O.D., ’78, would be satisfied knowing he and his colleagues were changing lives by preventing the blindness glaucoma can cause, examining thousands of patients over the years and providing glasses and medication to people who would otherwise have no access to eye care. But he was not. {continued on Page 26} Watch a slideshow of images from Dr. Zhang’s lab: www.sbu.edu/bonamag 24 25 Written by Anne-Marie Welsh* Photos by Mark and Deb Fainstein Guatemalan photos and captions by Rich and Lisa Gensheimer E ven for a young man with an adventurous heart, you’d think it might be enough to doggedly pursue a connection with a complete stranger, Vincent Pescatore, who was running orphanages for the children of civil war victims in Guatemala, then hop into a tiny airplane with him and fly out of a cow pasture into the unknown. At one point Pescatore had to navigate through two mountain peaks because the plane didn’t have enough get-up-and-go to actually make it over the range. When they got to the remote rainforest outpost, Villella and his team provided basic care to hundreds of children who had never been seen by an eye doctor. You’d think maybe then he’d be satisfied that he was doing enough. Fortunately for the thousands and thousands of patients now being served by the permanent eye clinics Villella has helped to establish in Guatemala, he was not. And, of course, he’s not done yet. It’s a fascinating, spirit-infused story of trust. We all have dreams and passions. What is it that allows Villella to live his so fully? What goes on inside as he stares down one obstacle after another? And how has the Erie, Pa., optometrist grown through this incredible adventure? From the beginning, there were amazing, synchronous events. There was the intense, first mission trip to Haiti as he neared the end of his studies in optometry that followed the completion of his undergraduate degree in biology from St. Bonaventure. see if he could say hello to Fr. Tony, a Franciscan who ran the St. Francis Inn soup kitchen. Villella had frequently sought him out for dinner and considered him a friend and role model during his years of study. The priest known to Villella as “Fr. Tony” is today known as Fr. Bob Struzynski, O.F.M. Fr. Bob is now a member of the Mt. Irenaeus community and was a member of the theology faculty and Campus Ministry when Villella attended St. Bonaventure. “I went along because I was interested in travel,” Villella admits. “I had no idea I would want to be involved forever.” “I pulled in, and he was two minutes from getting in his car,” says Villella. “He had just closed down the operation after seven years, and was leaving to begin missionary work in Jamaica.” After graduation from Pennsylvania College of Optometry, Villella left the Philadelphia area. He shakes his head at the memory. “Three minutes later and I would have missed him.” A year later, he made a spur-of-themoment decision to get off I-95 as he drove past his old stomping grounds to So it was another year later Villella found himself in Jamaica. “I went so I could understand Fr. Tony’s work,” Villella says. “I spent the week sharing in the community and prayer life of several priests at the mission. I witnessed how they immersed themselves in the culture.” Fr. Tony’s ability to break down barriers made an impression on Villella. “He didn’t want to be a priest handing out food and clothing in a church,” Villella says. “I appreciated the degree to which he wanted to be present to the people he served.” The Jamaican experience stayed with Villella as he traveled to a handful of developing nations on mission trips twice a year over the next few years. It was a heady feeling to take the skills he had been taught and use them for people in dire need. Eventually, an unsettled feeling grew in Villella. “I began to wonder if I was serving my own needs more than the needs of the people,” he says. He sensed a call to do more, even though it wasn’t clear what that might mean. On one of his mission trips, Villella was caring for people at a temporary clinic set up in Guatemala. As usual, people were coming from miles around for eye care. At one point, he happened to see an elderly man guided by his two sons as they arrived in the courtyard outside the clinic. He guessed they had been walking for at least two days. “Without even bringing him into the clinic, I could tell right away that we would not be able to help him,” Villella says. “He had dense cataracts and we were not prepared to offer surgery.” His heart sank. Sure, he could share information about surgery options in Guatemala City. 26 * This article originally appeared in the July/August 2009 edition of Faith: The Magazine of the Catholic Diocese of Erie. Doug Villella’s firsthand experience convinced him of the importance of establishing permanent, local eye clinics in developing nations. “There was a lot of empowerment for us and for the people we served,” he says. “But as I look back on it, we were completely shrouded in naiveté.” And then in 1995, an encounter with a family in Guatemala changed everything. The life of 5-year-old Gerson Estuard changed dramatically when Volunteer Optometric Services to Humanity (now Vision for the Poor) paid for surgery needed to address his congenital glaucoma. Dr. Nicholas Yee performed the surgery at the Pescatore Clinic in Guatemala. DECEMBER 2010 B O N AV E N T U R E B O N AV E N T U R E DECEMBER 2010 But that was a 10-hour bus ride away. “They did not know much about life beyond their village,” Villella explains. “It was not realistic to think they would even be able to find their way to the hospital.” At that point, he was angered by the thought he was doing more harm than good. “I knew that if another team came to the area in the future, perhaps with a surgeon, this man and his sons would not return. What would make them think the journey would be worthwhile?” he asks. clinic,’” Villella remembers. “He didn’t say, ‘Could you, or would you,’ he said, ‘I need you to.’ But he was completely transparent, a holy man.” Villella says Pescatore always went 10 steps beyond what he’d ever seen anybody do when seeking God’s help prayerfully. “He didn’t just pray and fast, he slept on the floor,” Villella says. So Villella was open to new answers. At the end of that same week, he finally got through to Vincent Pescatore using the one phone in the village. They made arrangements for Villella and two colleagues to meet Pescatore in that cow pasture/air strip the next day. “I had no idea why I was visiting him,” says Villella, who had been encouraged to call by a friend adopting children from Pescatore’s orphanage. But the two formed an instant connection and had several important conversations in the one day they had together. “Vincent said, ‘I need you to build an eye 27 “So my response wasn’t, ‘Let me think about it.’ Because of who he was and what he was, I immediately said, ‘OK, we’ll do it.’” “So often we have our eyes on a goal and we try swimming upstream to get there,” he says. “But grace doesn’t flow that way. Now I’ve quit swimming and I go with the flow. I still bump into rocks along the way, but I also find ways around them. The challenge is, you never really know where you are going or what’s around the bend.” Looking back, Villella says it was almost comical. “I had no skill other than taking care of people’s eyes,” he says. “No grant writing, no fundraising, no idea about what it takes to run a nonprofit. But I still didn’t hesitate.” Over time, things began coming together. Returning to Erie, Pa., Villella brought the news to board members of what was then called Volunteer Optometric Services to Humanity (now Vision for the Poor). “That was the beginning of a struggle that continues today,” he says, acknowledging a challenging divide between those who wanted to move forward with the clinic and those who preferred an emphasis on shorter mission trips. Villella and Pescatore met several times in 1995, both here and abroad. But in 1996, Pescatore perished in a plane crash in Honduras where he was building another orphanage. “Right about the day I was ready to pull my hair out — we were floundering at the end of the ’90s — a friend of mine who works at a foundation came in for an eye exam. I was chatting about the clinic and he said, ‘I’m a grant writer, can I help you?’” Villella chuckles: “You’d think by now I wouldn’t worry about things at all!” he says. “My wife and family have been integral to my work,” says Dr. Doug Villella, enjoying a moment in the back yard with his step-daughter Amanda, son Anthony and his wife, Holly. So early in the process, how did this affect Villella’s commitment? He struggles for words as he considers the moment. “Vincent had such a positive influence on everyone he met, you wanted to honor his life,” he says. “He believed his vision was God’s vision. He was about creating the kingdom of God here on earth. The message was simple: The people in the developing world deserve health care services. So to honor his life, we carried on his mission.” Pescatore had introduced Villella to Dr. Antonio Hernandez, a native Guatemalan eye doctor who was interested in working with the rural poor. Villella called the International Eye Foundation about grant money; the director he happened to speak to said there was only one doctor he knew of in Guatemala who would be suited to the kind of work Villella was looking to establish: Antonio Hernandez. So with the first serious grant in hand, space was rented, and once a month Hernandez left his practice in Guatemala City to serve the people in the rainforest. Eventually Hernandez brought two more doctors into the effort and Villella continued to hone his skills as a fundraiser back in the United States. Villella kept trying to listen through prayer. >> Learn more about Vision for the Poor at www.visionforthepoor.org << 28 In 2004, with the help of grants from the Lions Club, the Rotary Club and numerous individual benefactors, the Pescatore Eye Clinic opened in Petén where Vincent had wanted to build. It’s a state-of-the-art facility addressing all eye care needs from new eye glasses to cataract surgery and corneal transplants. But Villella is even more excited about what he believes the future holds. Next on the agenda are similar clinics in Haiti and Nicaragua, where surgeons in those countries are building infrastructure. In fact, plans are in place for 15 clinics in eight countries using the Guatemalan model. “We are by no means secure in our efforts to raise the money we will need,” Villella says, “especially in this economy.” But then he thinks back on the events of the past 20 years. “As always,” he says, with a shrug of the shoulders, “that is out of our hands.” DECEMBER 2010 B O N AV E N T U R E B O N AV E N T U R E DECEMBER 2010 National Alumni Association Ensuring healthy alumni chapters A Message from National Alumni Association Board President Lynda (Goldstein) Wilhelm, ’86 T he theme of this magazine edition is health care. For each of us, our years at St. Bonaventure included a nurturing network of friends, friars and faculty. Today, as alumni, our circles have widened. Mind, body, spirit, schools, finances, communities and more impact our health. What I’d like to focus on is community health and how our close-knit family of 25,000+ alumni worldwide can strengthen the growth and health of St. Bonaventure alumni chapters. March 26, 2011, will mark the second annual International Day of Service. This day engages alumni from Olean, N.Y., to Singapore to Austin, Texas. The lifeline of our alumni is pumping across the world on this day and we need your help to keep it pumping. How can you help? • Mark March 26, 2011, on your calendar. • Contact your alumni chapter president to discuss plans for this big day. Offer your suggestions and volunteer. • If there is no plan yet for your chapter, or if you’re not sure you are connected to a chapter, contact our Alumni Director, Joe Flanagan (jflan@sbu.edu), to find out more details. Studies have shown that helping your community helps you — volunteering for a good cause improves mood, strengthens body and lessens stress. I know this is true for me, and every time I give my time to others in need, I walk away with more than I gave. So let’s all pitch in to help St. Bonaventure University’s second annual International Service Day be a big success. Let’s show the world what it means to be a strong Bonaventure alum! BonAlumnus Updates 1949 — John O. Grippo, BS, DDS, FACD, adjunct faculty professor in the Department of Biomedical Engineering at Western New England College of Springfield, Mass., assisted in obtaining a grant of $393,450 from the National Science Foundation. The grant will be used to acquire a scanning probe microscope (atomic force microscope) and an electrodynamic test instrument (mechanical fatigue instrument) to support biomedical materials and mechanics research. 1950 — Richard F. Mayer, M.D., continues as professor emeritus in the Department of Neurology at the University of Maryland School of Medicine in Baltimore, overseeing Neurology Fellows in the Clinical Neuromuscular Laboratory at the UMD Medical Center. 1951 — Robert J. Blake writes that he is still playing tennis a few days a week and he welcomed his first greatgrandson in March. 1960 — Cal Marquis, after almost 50 years in Washington, D.C., has relocated to Sarasota, Fla. 1962 — Bob McCully was named an Educator of Distinction for Maine by the Coca Cola Scholarship Foundation. 1964 — Dr. Anthony Bannon has become the longest-standing director in the history of the George Eastman House International Museum of Photography and Film, which was founded in 1947. Bannon assumed his current post in 1996. His 14 years at the helm surpasses that of the six past directors, including famed photo historian and curator Beaumont Newhall, who held the post the second longest, for 13 years from 1958 to 1971. Bannon’s time at Eastman House has been eventful, with the launch of three world-renowned post-graduate photographic and film preservation schools; the creation of alliances with museums and collectors clubs in major U.S. cities; the digitization of collections and launch of aggressive social-media campaigns to share Eastman House’s unparalleled collections with the world; and the most-attended exhibitions in the museum’s 63-year histo- ry. Recent Bannon and Eastman House projects include organizing with Kodak “Photo Week” at Chautauqua Institution (July 25-30, 2010); bestowing the George Eastman Medal of Honor upon filmmaker Ken Burns and his writing partner, Geoffrey C. Ward, at Eastman House on Aug. 13; and co-curating a new exhibition opening Sept. 9 at the 1285 Avenue of the Americas Art Gallery titled “60 from the 60s: Selections from George Eastman House.” International plans Bannon is spearheading include the creation of satellite schools in South Korea and Quatar. Bannon has been recognized as CEO of the Year by the Public Relations Society of America, Rochester Chapter, and was named Outstanding Arts Administrator of the Year by Buffalo’s Chamber of Commerce and Arts Council. 1966 — Frank Higbie recently celebrated his birthday and now his age is the same as the year he graduated from Bona’s. He has been doing quite a bit of traveling: He was able to see Bona’s play basketball in Charlotte, N.C., and he and his wife, Lois, flew to Bristol, England, as well as to the Olympic Peninsula northwest 29 BonAlumnus Updates of Seattle where they visited Higbie’s Bona’s roommate Joe Ryan. A trip to Florida allowed him to visit another distinguished “Ryan” classmate, Jack. Higbie participated in a community theater British comedy titled “There Goes the Bride.” He writes, “I was supposed to have an Australian accent, but even though I watched all the Crocodile Dundee movies and was coached I was never able to really master it. We got a favorable review in a local newspaper, which was very satisfying.” Baseball alums hit it off in D.C. Three former Bonnies baseball players — (from left) Glenn Hamel, ’93, John Boccieri, ’92, and Chris Paglia, ’92, — and their families got together in Washington, D.C., last summer. The trio is shown at National Stadium, site of the annual Roll Call Congressional Baseball Game. Boccieri, a congressman from Ohio, was co-MVP of the 2010 matchup as the Dems defeated the Republicans. “Finally, one of us gets to play on a Major League baseball field!” mused Paglia. Boccieri was also able to arrange White House tours for the Hamel and Paglia families during their D.C. visit. A rugby reunion This trio of former rugby players made plans to meet, renew Bona ties and attend the 35th St. Bonaventure Rugby Reunion in May. Pictured from left are Tom Morini, ’77; Charles Bivona, ’77; and John Pearson, ’78. All three were club members back in the beginning days of rugby at SBU. 30 DECEMBER 2010 B O N AV E N T U R E B O N AV E N T U R E SPRING/SUMMER ’10 1967 — Dr. Bill Duryea and his wife, Sondra, are now retired and enjoying time traveling (including five trips to Assisi, Italy) and spending time with their five children and nine grandchildren. Duryea taught biology and physician assistant studies at Saint Francis University in Loretto, Pa., for more than 40 years, and is now a professor emeritus at the university. He is also a professed secular Franciscan. 1968 — Louis Paris, president and CEO of the Rochester Primary Care Network, retired in July. During his six years as president, the company grew from a $3 million annual budget to more than $75 million. The Rochester Primary Care Network is the largest provider of primary medical/dental care in New York state. Tom Pitts has been named chairman of the board of Riverside Research Institute (RRI). RRI is a not-forprofit scientific and engineering institution conducting research and systems engineering for the Defense Department, the Intelligence Community and the National Institute of Health. Pitts is retired from a management career in aerospace research and engineering with the U.S. government, Northrop Grumman (Litton Industries), Hughes Aircraft and Raytheon. Pitts and his wife, Paula, live in Quechee, Vt. 1969 — Dorothy (Paretti) Carey is a mental health therapist at an agency in Brooklyn “and I have no plans to retire.” She and her husband, John, celebrated their 40th wedding anniversary Feb. 14, 2010. Bonnie Duran retired as a senior caseworker for Onondaga County Child Protective Services in New York state. Daniel Goodman retired last February as a detective lieutenant after a 38-year career in law enforcement. His wife, Julie, has also retired (from teaching). They look forward to traveling and visiting with their three daughters and their families in Charlottesville, Las Vegas and Montana. William “Bill” Pfohl was awarded the National Association of School Psychologists (NASP) Lifetime Achievement Award at the organization’s annual convention in March held in Chicago. Pfohl is serving as president of the International School Psychology Association (ISPA) and presided at its conference in July held in Dublin, Ireland. 1974 — Michael D. Tanner, a sportswriter with the Arcade Herald, was inducted into the Cattaraugus County Athletic Hall of Fame Class of 2010 on March 20. He was the first media inductee. Tanner covers sports for the Arcade Herald and its sister newspaper, the Franklinville Mercury Gazette. 1975 — Joe Kelly is assistant superintendent for Instructional Programs at Monroe 2Orleans BOCES. Kelly, who has been with BOCES 2 since 1988, had served as director for Exceptional Children for 11 years. He is involved with many organizations that support special education: Kelly is a member of the State Education Department Commissioner’s Panel for Special Education, serves on the Arc of Monroe Board of Directors, and is an honorary life member of the Special Education Parent Teachers Association. 1976 — Michael Biondolillo is senior vice president of human resources at Henkel’s Rocky Hill, Conn., headquarters. He leads Henkel’s HR organization including benefits, compensation, organizational development, recruiting, employee relations, learning and development, talent management, and diversity. He is also a member of Henkel’s North American Executive Council. Henkel has about 6,000 employees in the U.S., Canada and Puerto Rico and markets a wide range of consumer and industrial brands including Loctite adhesives, Dial soaps, Purex laundry detergents and Right Guard antiperspirants. A member of the Society of Human Resource Management, Biondolillo holds a law degree from the University of Dayton (Ohio) School of Law. 1977 — Bob Mcfarlane joined the Department of Athletics staff at St. Bonaventure as head men’s and women’s cross country coach. He served as the head varsity girls cross country coach at Bradford Area School District for the past seven years. He led the team to a 66-4 dual meet record as well as five Pennsylvania District IX AAA titles and coached four individual district champions. Mcfarlane has taught in Bradford secondary and elementary schools since 1977. He is also an adjunct professor at the University of Pittsburgh at Bradford, teaching World Regional Geography and Methods of Social Studies Teaching. 1978 — John Flint is vice president of Gas Operations and Construction NE for National Grid, an international electricity and gas company and one of the largest investor-owned energy companies in the world. Flint has worked for National Grid or its predecessor companies for 29 years. Flint and his wife, Donna, have three daughters and relocated to Shrewsbury, Mass., at the end of August. 1979 — James F. Balon received the Financial Executive for 2010 Award in the category of Manufacturing from Buffalo Business First Magazine and the Bonadio Group at an awards luncheon in October, 2010. Winners were nominated by peers from among Buffalo and Western New York financial and business executives and were selected by an independent judging group. Balon, also a CPA, is the CFO of Multisorb Technologies, Inc., Buffalo, where he oversees all financial operations for the multi-national company and its subsidiaries. He is also on the Board of Trustees of Hilbert College. He is married to Monica (Ryberg) Balon, ’80. 1980 — John Zavinski is in his 29th year at The Herald in Sharon, Pa., where he is director of graphics and technology. He 1982 — Eric Schickler welcomes alums to visit his websites at www.ericschicklerphotography.com and www.denvercoloradophotographers.com to view hundreds of photos from his photography career that started when his parents gave him his first 35mm camera on graduation from Bona’s in 1982. He has captured scenes from Colorado, Arizona, New York, Washington, British Columbia, Arkansas, New England, Florida, Utah, California, Africa, Costa Rica, Mexico and Europe. After spending the last 10 years in Denver, Schickler has moved back into the mountains of Colorado — to scenic Evergreen, in the foothills west of Denver. He is also teaching kids to ski through the Vail Snowsports School. areas of comprehensive wealth transfer strategies, tax planning, entity structuring and asset protection with an emphasis on representing wealthy families and entrepreneurs. Smith is a member of the Florida, Connecticut and New York state bar associations and a member of the South Palm Beach County Bar Association. He is also a member of the Palm Beach Planned Giving Council and the United States Tax Court. Smith was a practicing tax and estate planning lawyer in Connecticut and Florida, and he frequently speaks at seminars on tax, financial, and estate planning topics. Smith has served on the editorial advisory board for a national estate planning publication, and has been a speaker at a number of regional and national conferences. Leslie Abplanalp Walters was one of two physical education teachers to win The Excellence in Physical Education Award, which honors Brevard County, Fla., school physical education programs. Todd Martin was elected to a twoyear term as vice president of the Gates Chili Teachers Association in Rochester. 1983 — Edward F. Smith III was promoted to director in the Private Client Wealth Services Group at nationally recognized public accounting firm Morrison, Brown, Argiz & Farra, LLP. Formerly a manager at the firm, Smith’s concentrations are in the 1984 — Jim Morris was promoted to senior recruiter at Occupations, Inc., an agency that serves more than 14,000 individuals with disabilities in the Hudson Valley. Occupations, Inc., employs 1,400 staff members. won his fourth Pennsylvania State Press Association award, a second place for best niche publication for his work on The Herald's new Life & Times senior citizens magazine. He is design director for it and for the newspaper's monthly business magazine. Alums reach Aconcagua summit In the top photo, Jeff Brown, ’85, (on right) is pictured with world famous mountaineer Ricardo Pena from Boulder, Colo., at the summit of Aconcagua, Argentina, Jan. 12, 2010. Below, Brown (on right) is pictured with SBU alumnus Mike Sheehey, ’84, on their last day on the Aconcagua mountain (day 17), as they were getting ready to exit the park.The pair were in separate climbing parties, thus reached the summit on different days. At 22,841 feet, Aconcagua is the highest peak in North and South America, one of the famed “Seven Summits.” 31 DECEMBER 2010 B O N AV E N T U R E B O N AV E N T U R E DECEMBER ’10 BonAlumnus Updates Connecticut friends gather for Mass Connecticut alumni, families and friends got together for a summer evening Mass in Wilton, Conn., July 29 with Fr. Dan Riley, O.F.M., ’64, at the home of Phil Lauria, ’75, and Elaine Tai-Lauria, ’75. Pictured (from left) are Phil Lauria, ’75; Paul Niche, ’79; Stephen Flanagan, ’75; Marla (Cullen) Rapini, ’76; Kelly Flanagan; Kathleen Flanagan; Fr. Dan Riley, O.F.M., ’64; Carol Liotta, ’88; William “Jack” Plants, ’05, ’06; Frank and Betsy McGowan (parents of Maggie, ’11); Franey Donovan (parent of Kerry, ’93, and Susanne, ’02); John McAuliffe; Susan (Allen) Mantilia, ’74; Bob Mantilia, ’73; Elaine Tai-Lauria, ’75; Robert White, M.D., ’64; and Kathleen White, M.D. New members join NAAB St. Bonaventure welcomes several new members to the National Alumni Association Board: Anna Button, ’05; Matthew Dabrowski, ’04; Wendy Devine, ’95; Michael Donlon, ’95; and Priscilla Dos Santos Weaver, ’03. 1986 — Joe O’Conor completed a Masters of Science in Executive Fire Service Leadership while serving as assistant chief of operations for a 150-member combination fire department in suburban Atlanta. Tracy Gyoerkoe and her husband, Dan, moved to Watertown, N.Y., in fall 2009. She is director of Career and Technical, Adult and Continuing Education for Jefferson Lewis BOCES. 1987 — Paula Eade Newcomb was elected deputy treasurer for the Erie County Bar Association. She will assume the duties of treasurer for 2011-2012. There are 3,800 members in the association. Eade Newcomb is a member of the litigation group at the Bouvier Partnership. She lives in West Seneca with her family. 1988— Geri (Driscoll) Strecker received a McFarland-SABR Research Award from the Society for American Baseball Research for her article “The Rise and Fall of Greenlee Field: Biography of a Ballpark,” which appeared in the Fall 2009 issue of “Black Ball: A Negro Leagues Journal.” Greenlee Field was home to the Pittsburgh Crawfords baseball team from 1932-1938. The award honors the best articles on baseball history published during the previous year. 1989 — Anthony Minchella’s law firm is celebrating its seventh anniversary since he left a Connecticut litigation boutique in July 2003. His firm focuses on business and commercial litigation, including employment and trade secret disputes. Bonnies hit Cooperstown A number of alums gathered in Cooperstown, N.Y., for a mini-reunion in July. In addition to their assorted kids, pictured from left are Jennifer Corker, ’94, Barbara Seweryniak Snyderman, ’93, David Snyderman, Daniel Deyell, ’93, Kathy McGuinness Deyell, ’90, ’92, Barbara Vassallo McNally, ’93, John McNally, Kim Marks, and Chris Marks, ’91. 32 1991 — Derek P. Champagne was sworn in July 11, 2010, as the president of the District Attorneys Association of the State of New York. Champagne's proposed agenda for his presidency includes continued efforts at expansion of DNA collection upon conviction, passing new public integrity statutes, a persistent misdemeanor offender statute and achieving parity between the funding for prosecution and defense. Champagne has been the district attorney of Franklin County for the past eight years. He serves on the New York State Chief Judges Criminal Law and Criminal Procedure advisory committee, the New York State Bar Criminal Law Executive subcommittee, and the advisory board for Fight Crime Invest in Kids New York. As president, he will also continue to be on the Board of Directors for the New York State Prosecutors Training Institute, the New York State Law Enforcement Council and the Chief Judge’s Justice Task Force Committee. Todd Paris was named the international director of sales at Microsoft for all operations in Asia, South America and Canada. 1992 — Paul Hartwick, senior vice president of communication and public affairs at JPMorgan Chase's credit card division, led a team that won both a Silver Anvil award and an award of excellence in the Public Relations Society of America's 2010 national competition. Awards were announced in a June event in New York. The annual event honors organizations that have successfully addressed a contemporary public relations issue with exemplary professional skill, creativity and resourcefulness. Silver Anvil judges evaluate entries for their strategic nature of public relations programs using four key components — research, planning, execution and evaluation. Jenn Monroe has had a number of her poems published in recent months. She invites friends to check out her website, www.thepoetgirl.com. 1996 —Michael E. Hill has been appointed senior vice president of external affairs for the national office of United Cerebral Palsy. He will direct all national marketing, communications and fundraising for one of the nation’s largest disability organizations. 1998 — Nathan S. Bennett is program manager of the Bureau of Forestry’s Marcellus Shale Program within the Pennsylvania Department of Conservation & Natural Resources. Bennett previously was a senior geologic scientist within the Bureau of Forestry. Brendan McDaniels was named assistant women’s lacrosse coach at Nazareth College in Rochester. He also operates the Rochester/Finger Lakes Region for Herff Jones, which specializes in class rings, caps and gowns, and diplomas. Leah McGrath Goodman was selected as a 2010-2011 Ted Scripps Fellow in Environmental Journalism at the University of Colorado at Boulder. The fellowship is hosted by the Center for Environmental Journalism at the School of Journalism and Mass Communication and funded through a grant from the Scripps Howard Foundation. The ninemonth program offers experienced journalists an opportunity to deepen their understanding of environmental issues and policy through coursework, seminars and field trips in the region. McGrath Goodman is a freelance journalist and author based in New York City. Formerly based in London, she has written business, news and culture stories for Condé Nast Portfolio, Forbes, Associate Creative Director for GMCR's Specialty Coffee Business Unit. Versluys lives in Vermont with his wife, Maura, and his daughter and son. Profile, The Associated Press, The Wall Street Journal, Barron's, The Guardian and The Financial Times. McGrath Goodman also worked as a special writer on the energy desk at Dow Jones Newswires for three years, where she covered global energy markets. Her first book, an insider's account of the lives and times of the traders who built the global oil market, is due out in 2011. Richard Scotti is vice president of institutional sales at Stewart Capital Advisors. 2000 — Emily (Reese) Zieno graduated from Syracuse University in May 2010 with a Master of Science degree in library and information science with a specialization in school media. She is a school library media specialist with the Syracuse City School District. 1999 — Danielle Costanza, licensed to practice law in New York, New Jersey and Florida, accepted a litigation position at the New York City firm of Ptashnik & Associates, LLC. Costanza focuses her practice on defending medical professionals and health care facilities in medical malpractice and nursing home litigation. She welcomes e-mail at dcostanza@ptashnik-law.com. Michael Versluys won two American Graphic Design Awards from Graphic Design USA for his work on the revv® and Donut House® coffee brands. He is the 2001 — Matt Craver is a senior proofreader at Eric Mower and Associates. Craver’s primary role is reviewing and editing copy for accurate use of grammar and content. He also creates concepts and writes copy for a number of EMA clients and coordinates an internal training program focused on raising digital IQs. Craver, who joined EMA in 2006, Dr. Sallyanne Bonner, ’71, receives highest honor from Academy of General Dentistry Cronin named president of research foundation for SNM Dr. Sallyanne Bonner, ’71, has received the 2010 Mastership Award from the Academy of General Dentistry (AGD). The AGD is a professional association of more than 35,000 general dentists who are dedicated to staying up to date in the profession through continuing education. To accomplish this goal, Bonner completed 1,100 hours of continuing dental education. Val (Wiech) Cronin, ’74, manager of Imaging Services at Women and Children’s Hospital of Buffalo, assumed office as the 2010–12 president of the Education and Research Foundation (ERF) for the Society of Nuclear Medicine (SNM). During her two-year term, Cronin will focus on the foundation’s sole mission — raising funds and managing foundation assets to maximize funding for grants, awards, scholarships and educational programs in nuclear medicine and molecular imaging. The Mastership Award is the highest honor available at the AGD and is one of the most respected designations within the profession. Bonner joins 106 of her New Jersey colleagues with this distinction. MAGDs represent approximately 1 percent of the general dentists practicing in the state of New Jersey. SNM is an international scientific and professional organization founded in 1954 to promote the science, technology and practical application of nuclear medicine and molecular imaging. Its 16,000 members are physicians, technologists and scientists specializing in the research and practice of nuclear medicine and molecular imaging. Bonner graduated from the University of Medicine and Dentistry of New Jersey Dental School in May 1976 and practices comprehensive family dentistry in Lebanon Borough along with Dr. Vincent J. Schaible and Dr. Erin A. O’Grodnick. Cronin has served in numerous leadership capacities with the Society of Nuclear Medicine Technologist Section (SNMTS) and the Society of Nuclear Medicine, including: president of SNMTS, member of the SNM Board of Directors, member of the Molecular Imaging Outreach Task Force, chair of the Patient Advocacy Task Force, and vice president of the ERF. Bonner and her husband, Dr. Charles Krowicki, have three children. In addition to the Academy of General Dentistry, Bonner is a member of the American Dental Association, the Pankey Institute, and the American Academy of Cosmetic Dentistry. Cronin is an active member of the American Society of Radiology Technologists, the Medical Group Management Association and the Healthcare Executive Forum. She is pursuing a master’s degree in health science administration from D’Youville College. 33 B O N AV E N T U R E 2002 — Michael Cummings completed his master’s degree in education policy and administration at The Catholic University of America in Washington, D.C. He is director of Admissions at Georgetown University's School of Continuing Studies. 2003 — Kathleen Ann Mannion received her master of arts in liberal studies with a concentration in sociology. She also was promoted to assistant director of planned giving at St. John's University in Queens. 2004 — Tim Shaffer is a Ph.D. student at Cornell University studying higher education and civic engagement. Since graduating from St. Bonaventure, Shaffer completed a master’s in theological studies, writing his thesis on the Franciscan Influence on Thomas Merton. He also received a master’s in public administration, both degrees from the University of Dayton. 2005 — Tyshawn Davis teaches Entrepreneurship to 11th-graders and Virtual Enterprises to 12th-graders (http://veinternational.org/). During the summer he completed his coursework to become a state certified Work-Based Learning Coordinator. Jamie Zielonko joined SKM Group of Depew, N.Y., in June. “It is a marketing/advertising firm that I am ecstatic to be a part of. SKM now has a total of four Bonaventure employees in house,” she writes. 2006 — Benjamin Gregg graduated from Public Allies Chicago in June. Public Allies is a non-profit leadership development program offered through Americorps that places diverse young professionals in 10-month apprenticeships in the non-profit sector. “Allies” also receive Fr. Anthony Carrozzo, ’60, marks 50 years as a friar The Rev. Anthony Carrozzo, O.F.M., ’60, of St. Francis of Assisi Church in midtown Manhattan, marked 50 years as a member of the Order of Friars Minor in June. He is affiliated with Holy Name Province, headquartered in New York City. The Winsted, Conn., native is the former provincial minister of Holy Name, a title he held from 1987 to 1996. Today, he is spiritual director at the Center for Franciscan Spirituality and Spiritual Direction at the West 31st Street church in Manhattan. Prior to this, he was spiritual director at the former St. Vincent’s Hospital in Manhattan. Over the years, Carrozzo’s ministry has been in spiritual direction, preaching and teaching. He was the province’s first formation director, charged with overseeing the education and preparation of new friars. He also has served as provincial councilor and provincial director of ongoing formation, and directed the Franciscan Institute at St. Bonaventure University. His first ministry, in 1966, was as chaplain of St. Clare’s Hospital in New York City. In addition to his undergraduate degree from St. Bonaventure, Carrozzo is a graduate of the Catholic University of America in Washington, D.C., and the University of San Francisco. He received a doctor of ministry degree from the Jesuit School of Theology in Berkeley, Calif. training in the non-profit sector and participate in a team service project in which they partner with a community organization to develop sustainable initiatives. 2007 — Glen E. Busch II is a campus safety officer at Hilbert College. Lindsay (Saternow) DeGennaro is an event coordinator for the Institute for Healthcare Improvement in Cambridge, Mass. Her husband, Derek DeGennaro, ’07, is a project manager for American Plumbing and Heating Corp. in Norwell, Mass. They live in Quincy, Mass. Terrence J. McElduff is teaching English in South Korea. Check out his blog: megandterrsouthkorea.blogspot.com. Alixandra Tretter received a juris doctor degree from the Roger Williams University School of Law in May. She served as the executive managing editor of the “Ashburn Institute Transnational Law Journal” and was a member of the Honor Board and the Women’s Law Society for three years. Tretter was a law clerk for the Rhode Island Disability Law Center, Providence, R.I., and a summer associate at the law office of John V. Hogan, Sugar Hill, Ga. 2008 — Emily Ciraolo has a new position at National Fuel in Buffalo, where she now works in the Corporate Communications office handling the company’s community relations, corporate philanthropy and internal communications. Jack Sinden attends the Whitehead School of International Relations and Diplomacy at Seton Hall University. He will graduate with a master’s degree in May 2012. Tara (Franklin) Hogan is a sixth-grade teacher in the town of Chemung. Her husband, David Hogan, ’08, is a site coordinator for the OdessaMontour 21st Century Base Camp afterschool program. 2010 — Shannon Holfoth has joined Buffalo-based integrated marketing communications firm Travers Collins & Company as an account coordinator. During her time at St. Bonaventure she was the editor-in-chief of The Communicator and news editor of The Bona Venture. She also interned at the Public Information Office of the U.S. Attorney’s Office, Buffalo Business First and The Hamburg Sun. In her new position, she will be working with Independent Health, Phillips Lytle and — her alma mater — St. Bonaventure. Anne Young is the science lab teacher in a Cleveland, Miss., elementary school, where she works in the Teach for America program. Welcome, Baby Bonnies! Sydney Kieffer to Laurie (Kieffer), ’88, and Richard Lynn Kaitlyn Marie to Kristin (Davis), ’90, and Brian Lewis Liam Joseph to Seana Wyman, ’91, and Frank Bradley Grace adopted by Jenn (Monroe), ’92, and Glen Burgess Maddie Elizabeth to Cristina (Gallo), ’92, and Marcus Ernst Cleah Lorraina to Meaghan Panzer and Michael Vitale, ’92 Alexander Owen to Kari (Vunk), ’98, and Zeno Lantos Genevieve Riley to Meg (Lush), ’02, and Ryan Camire Keegan Joseph to Kate and Rick Scotti, ’98 Anthony Benjamin to Sarah (Brennan), ’02, and Benjamin Czekanski, ’02 Benjamin Taylor to Lisa (Taylor), ’97, and Anthony Gill, ’97 Oliver Sebastian to Kelly (Zajac), ’97, and Jonas Sickler Julia Ashlyn to Wendy (Czapla), ’99, and Rod Lorenz Charlotte Piper to Tenley (Ostrowski), ’99, and Robert Thomas David Anthony to Asseneth and Tony Tubiolo, ’99 Stella Elizabeth to Linda (Fawls), ’92, and Dave Miyares, ’91 Ruby Kay to Erin (Money), ’99, and Paul Berrigan Finn Joseph to Shannon (Reidy), ’92, and Jeffrey Eisel Emily Rose to Meghan (Braun), ’00, and Jason Desiderio, ’99 Lucas Robert to Rebecca (Marra), ’99, and Timothy Nunn, ’93 Katherine Josephine to Erin and Geoff Gerbasi, ’00 Kyle David to Kim and Michael Nugent, ’94 Brooklyn Nicole to Keri (Guminey), ’00, and Bill Thoman Benjamin John to Kelly (Davis), ’95, and Stephen Arehart Beckett Christian to Kathie (Oldach), ’95, and Rick Swack, ’94, ’96 Luke Christopher to Stacy and Scott Hemer, ’95 Lilly Annette to Kimberly and John D’Arcy, ’95 Declan Vincent to Katie (Farrell), ’95, and Vince Bair Paul Cooper to Kathleen (Gradischer), ’96, and Paul Healy Jack Michael to Julie and Scott Maginn, ’96 Charles Francis to Therese (Runfola), ’98, ’01, and Marty Blind, ’94, ’97 Rachel Scarlet to Jennifer (Lindow), ’98, and Peter Eskin Gina Patricia to Victoria (Pallone), ’00, and Paul Wheeler Jr., ’00 Allison Teresa to Deirdre (Lynch), ’00, and Jeffrey Stupp, ’00 Logan Edward to Megan (Labuda), ’01, and Timothy Spring, ’01 Ryan Austin to Angela (McDaniels), ’01, and Peter Barrett Casimira Heather to Erika and Peter Kendron, ’01 Carter Martin to Tracy (Bryniarski), ’02, and Corey Page Ella Grace and Caleb Anthony to Amy (Mardino), ’02, and Michael Sisley Tyler Eric to Katie (Maltzan), ’02, and Whit Merrill Logan James to Kate (Kane), ’02, ’03, and Rob Freemantle Addison Jane to Michelle Kearney-Gregg, ’03, and Ryan Gregg Benjamin Michael to Maureen and Andrew Modic, ’03 Liesl Reilly to Stephanie (Karl), ’06, and Matthew Gunesch, ’03 Liam Timothy to Vicki (Covey), ’04, and Tim McArdle, ’03, ’04 Brennan Daniel to Tina (Lavis), ’04, and Kevin Carney Jonathan Robert to Kelly (Smith), ’04, and Jon Hinett, ’04 Carter Brooks and Max Theodore to Katie (Hanny), ’05 and Tyler Collins, ’05 Benjamin David to Diana (Pollitt), ’06, and Bradley Owens, ’05, ’06 Lochlan Benjamin to Jennifer Meyer-Davis, ’09, and Ben Davis Charles Stewart to Holly (Brown), ’00, and Paul Snyder DECEMBER 2010 BonAlumnus Births/Adoptions Updates received marketing excellence awards in 2007, 2008 and 2009 for his work with the Boy Scouts of America Hiawatha Seaway Council’s Boypower Dinner. Jim Tamol is executive director of Family Promise of Western New York, a non-profit organization that serves homeless families. Kate Torok was named senior communication specialist at St. John Fisher College in August. Previously, she was a public relations account manager at Travers Collins & Company, an integrated marketing communications firm in Buffalo, where she worked for eight years. 34 B O N AV E N T U R E DECEMBER 2010 Alumni Deaths John J. Labas, ’38, Rochester, N.Y. Msgr. Robert C. Schwab, ’38, Getzville, N.Y. William C. Davis Jr., ’41, Shinglehouse, Pa. Joseph L. Ryan, ’43, Denver, Colo. Msgr. Edward J. Ulaszeski, ’47, Grand Island, N.Y. James F. Hackett, ’48, Warren, Pa. John J. Ainsworth, ’49, Oswego, N.Y. Thomas J. V. Cullen Jr., ’49, Goshen, N.Y. James B. Denman, ’49, Southborough, Mass. Joseph A. Cassetta, ’50, East Amherst, N.Y. James F. Shea, ’50, East Windsor, N.J. John W. Spencer, ’50, Camillus, N.Y. Thomas J. Sullivan, ’50, Painted Post, N.Y. William G. Carr, ’51, Lauderdale By The Sea, Fla. Lawrence R. Danehy, ’51, Rochester, N.Y. Harry Lobby, ’51, Middlesex, N.J. Michael J. Orbinati, ’51, Utica, N.Y. Dr. John S. Rouch, ’51, Erie, Pa. Frederick Snyder, ’51, Slatington, Pa. Carl A. Brunetto, ’52, Annapolis, Md. Louis F. Caponi, ’52, Port Orange, Fla. Dr. Joseph J. Cavanaugh, ’52, Carnegie, Pa. Philip J. Metz, ’52, Loveland, Colo. Dr. Robert E. Toner, ’52, Wilmington, Del. Donald F. Denz, ’53, East Aurora, N.Y. J. Thomas Clark, ’56, Miller Place, N.Y. Susan Wagner, ’56, Rock Hill, S.C. Donald A. Staff, ’57, Newport, R.I. Girard DeClement, ’60, Hammonton, N.J. John J. Bergen, Ph.D., ’61, Monument, Colo. Robert P. Rein, ’61, Henderson, Nev. Herbert G. Sherman, ’61, Wellsville, N.Y. John W. Titus, ’61, Greenwood, S.C. Thomas L. Petruccelli, ’63, Olean, N.Y. Robert J. Summers, ’65, Buffalo, N.Y. Sr. Jeanne M. Hartigan, ’66, Buffalo, N.Y. J. Nelson Hood Sr., ’66, West Nyack, N.Y. Timothy J. Leach, ’66, Webster, N.Y. Dr. Chester R. Jarmolowski, ’69, Allison Park, Pa. Geraldine A. Gorman, ’70, Brentwood, N.Y. Linda (Marino) Abrams, ’75, Allegany, N.Y. Charles B. Marquardt Jr., ’81, Mt. Pleasant, S.C. Jennifer Ann (Williams) Cottrell, ’90, Culpeper, Va. Dr. Lincoln W. Lawrence, ’92, Euclid, Ohio Sandra Swanson, ’95, McHenry, Md. In Memoriam William C. Davis Jr., ’41, American Rifleman’s longtime ballistics editor and one of the most brilliant and accomplished ballisticians and firearms engineers of the 20th century, died March 4, 2010, at the age of 88. Following his service in the U.S. Army (1942-1946), Davis returned to St. Bonaventure to teach until 1951, at which time he became an ordnance engineer for the U.S. Army. Submit your news for Bonaventure magazine! • use the enclosed envelope • e-mail bonalumnus@sbu.edu • fill out an electronic form at www.sbu.edu/bonamag 35 BonAlumnus Weddings Jennifer Moler and Michael Cummings, ’02 Weddings Kelly Rae Scanlon, ’04, and Daniel E. Mazon, ’01 SB U a Hundreds of St. Bonaventure alumni have disappeared from our records. Of the many missing alumni, our hope is to start finding lost alumni who will be celebrating their reunion next year – can you help us? If you know the whereabouts of the following alumni, please let us know at www.sbu.edu/foundalumni. Crystal A. Tucker and Christopher K. Monelt, ’94 Sarah Craig, ’05, and Mark Rizzolo, ’05, ’06 Additional Wedding Announcements Jenn Monroe, ’92, and Glen Burgess Kirsten Herkert, ’99, and Wilton Lawrence Douglas III Emily Reese, ’00, and Matthew Zieno Hillary Graves and Gabriel Potter, ’06 Stephanie Karl, ’06, and Matthew Gunesch, ’03 Kelly Smith, ’04, and Jon Hinett, ’04 Shannon Doherty, ’06, and David Wolf Ellen Hanley and Tim Shaffer, ’04 Jennifer Jermain, ’05, and Jeremy Monteleone, ’04, ’05 Getting married? To submit your wedding photo: • use the enclosed envelope • e-mail bonalumnus@sbu.edu • mail to P.O. Box 2509, St. Bonaventure University, St. Bonaventure, NY 14778 Gillian Smith, ’05, and Steven Harrington, ’05 Tara Franklin, ’08, and David Hogan, ’08 Michelle Buntich, ’07, and Christopher Fotiadis, ’07 All photos must be of good reproductive quality. Pictures submitted electronically must have a resolution of at least 300 dpi. The University is prohibited from publishing copyrighted photographs, unless accompanied by written permission from the photographer. The submission deadline for the Spring/Summer 2011 edition of Bonaventure magazine is March 1, 2011. Erica Mehm, ’07, and Anthony DiMario, ’07 36 DECEMBER 2010 B O N AV E N T U R E LOSlTum: s B O N AV E N T U R E DECEMBER 2010 Christina Cressler, ’08, and Michael Gawrys, ’08 Lindsay Saternow, ’07, and Derek DeGennaro, ’07 Michelle Manzella, ’07, and Michael Matt, ’05, ’06 Don’t forget to notify us of your new name or address! Update your information at Bona’s Online at www.sbu.edu/bonasonline. Donald G. Hunton, '61 Daniel C. Ryan, ’61 Joseph C. Battista, ’76 Sharon D. Hannah, ’76 Sally A. (Tellner) Knight, ’76 Julianna L. (Crawford) Kurtz, ’76 Robert C. Newman, ’76 Dorothy O’Connor, ’76 Carmelita M. (Joy) White, ’76 Susan K. (Capan) Burkett, ’81 Kathleen (Dunne) DeSantis, ’81 Timothy R. Moran, ’81 Ann Ponterio, ’81 Linda L. Wilson, ’81 Leslie A. (Wilk) Braksick, ’86 J. C. Caine, ’86 Paul P. Corcoran, ’86 Patricia R. Kurz, ’86 Paul L. Penepent, ’86 Gordon L. Wood, ’86 James C. Alexander, ’91 Mary C. (Sear) Clarke, ’91 Christina M. Dalto, ’91 Carolyn A. (Farchione) Duca, ’91 Stephenie C. Fisette, ’91 Mark W. Jarecki, ’91 Nathan W. Kenny, ’91 Hope Romano, ’91 Jane A. (Hilbert) Stevens, ’91 Kristin M. Vogel, ’91 Joan C. Blankschaen, ’96 Anne M. Cavanaugh, ’96 Emily K. DeVita, ’96 Louise M. Fiorello, ’96 Brian C. McDermott, ’96 Alicia G. Ryan, ’96 Stacey L. Venezia, ’96 Camille E. Williams, ’96 Amanda C. Dornsife, ’01 Sean D. Kelty, ’01 Mark R. Kubiak, ’01 Katherine E. Merrill, ’01 Kimberly E. Myers, ’01 Michael A. Ross, ’01 Renee M. Smith, ’01 Kelly A. Szymanowicz, ’06 37 B O N AV E N T U R E LIFETIME DONORS St. Bonaventure gratefully acknowledges gifts and grants received by the University during Fiscal Year 2010 (June 1, 2009, to May 31, 2010). The Honor Roll of Donors reflects donations at the Merton’s Heart Club level ($500-$999) and above. Alumni donors are listed by class year and giving society. A list of all giving levels is available for viewing at www.sbu.edu. THANK YOU FOR PARTNERING WITH OUR STUDENTS With every gift, you partner with parents and students. Families choose St. Bonaventure because of its distinctive brand of higher education — and many go to great lengths to afford this experience that they value so highly. They often put off replacing an aging vehicle, forgo home repairs and make other sacrifices. Some of our families commit to payment plans of as much as $1,000 per month. This is in addition to receiving generous scholarship aid, as well as subsidized and non-subsidized loans. The University allocates more than $22 million per year in scholarships LIFETIME DONORS Individuals Anonymous (12) Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Albright '73 Mr. and Mrs. Salvatore H. Alfiero Mr. and Mrs. Richard J. Attea '58 Dr. James D. Barnhurst '43 ✝ and Mrs. Kathryn Barnhurst Mr. and Mrs. Paul W. Beltz '50 Mr. and Mrs. Norbert A. Bennett '62 Mr. and Mrs. Todd F. Best Mrs. E. Kelly Bishop Mrs. Gertrude M. Borer Ms. Laurie A. Branch '04 Mr. Richard J. Bugno '61 Mr. and Mrs. Frank Buquicchio '83 Mr. and Mrs. William E. Campbell Mr. and Mrs. James J. Cattano '65 Mr. and Mrs. Albert Cecchi '49 Dr. Jerome J. Coffey, LL.D. '27 Mr. and Mrs. Daniel F. Collins '73 Mr. and Mrs. John F. Connors '58 Mr. and Mrs. Robert D. Crowley '71 Robert J. Daugherty, CPA '77 and Mrs. Nancy J. Daugherty '79 Mr. Michael W. Davey '61 Mr. and Mrs. Patrick J. Deagman '69 Mr. and Mrs. Raymond C. Dee '64 Mr. Charles R. Dineen '52 ✝ and Mrs. Sophie Dineen Br. Ivan Doszpoly, SJ '61 38 Mrs. Colette C. Dow '88 and Mr. David Dow Mr. and Mrs. Arnold J. Eckelman '66 Dr. and Mrs. Richard A. Falls '55 Mr. and Mrs. Rick F. Farina Jr. '67 Mr. and Mrs. Stephen A. Feinberg Timothy F. Fidgeon, Esq. '66 and Ms. M. Pamela Daniels Miss Dolores M. Finch '59 ✝ Mr. and Mrs. Jack Fishkin '53 Mr. and Mrs. Donald M. Flanagan '54 William C. Foster '62 and Daria L. Foster Mr. and Mrs. John G. Gaffney '58 Mr. and Mrs. Thomas M. Garvey '74 Mr. James G. Gould '80 and Mrs. Ann J. Gould '80 Mr. and Mrs. Donald J. Gracyalny '59 Mr. William J. Gray '61 ✝ and Mrs. Judy Gray Mrs. Susan R. Green '61 and Mr. David V. Green Mr. Thomas J. Hanifin Dr. James L. Hayes, D.C.S. '37 ✝ and Mrs. Pauline J. Hayes ✝ Ms. Deborah A. Henretta '83 and Mr. Sean Murray Mr. and Mrs. Daniel J. Herbeck '78 Mr. and Mrs. Donald J. Herdrich Sr. The Hon. Howard M. Holtzmann and Mrs. Carol Holtzmann and financial aid to approximately 90 percent of our student population. For these families and many others, your gifts are life-changing. In a time when students and parents fear that their college dreams will be dashed on the rocks of recession, your support is making all the difference. Thank you for dedicating your personal resources and time to our students and to your University. You can be assured that your extraordinary support translates each and every day into opportunities for today’s students to pursue their goals and more fully discover and serve our world. Pax et bonum, Sr. Margaret Carney, O.S.F., S.T.D. University President $100,000+ Mr. and Mrs. Albert C. Horton '66 Msgr. Anthony J. Jasinski '49 Mr. and Mrs. Robert R. Jones, D.C.S. '58 Mr. and Mrs. Richard P. Kearns '72 Mr. Francis J. Kestler '65 and Mrs. Norma Kestler Ms. Shirley A. Krise '57 Mrs. Marianne L. Laine '68 and Mr. Erick J. Laine Mrs. Elizabeth Lavender Mr. Mark J. Lawley '91 Mr. and Mrs. Michael R. Lawley '92 Mr. and Mrs. William J. Lawley Sr. '57 Mr. and Mrs. William Lawley Jr. '85 Mr. Jay C. LickDyke '58 and Ms. Priscilla Cunningham Mr. and Mrs. Louis A. Magnano, LL.D. '97 Mr. and Mrs. Thomas M. Marra '80 Dr. John P. Martin '47 and Mrs. Ann Marie Martin ✝ Mr. and Mrs. Raymond Mastoloni '54 Mr. and Mrs. John McCormack Jr. '66 John R. McGinley Jr., Esq. '65 Mr. J. Oliver McGonigle '66 Mr. and Mrs. Lawrence A. McLernon '61 Mr. and Mrs. Brian M. McNamee '78 Mr. and Mrs. Eugene M. McQuade '71 Mr. and Mrs. Brian R. McRedmond '63 Mr. and Mrs. John H. Meisch '58 Mr. James E. Meyer '76 and Mrs. Nina M. Meyer '79 Mr. and Mrs. Louis Michel Mr. Samuel L. Molinaro '80 and Mrs. Lisa J. Molinaro '81 Mr. and Mrs. John J. Murphy, D.C.S. '84 Mr. and Mrs. Richard J. Murphy '53 Mr. Edward R. Murray '68 and Mrs. Barbara M. Murray '68 ✝ Mr. and Mrs. James T. O'Hara Mr. William C. O'Neil '56 and Mrs. Carolyn O'Neil Mr. and Mrs. Carl P. Paladino '68 Mr. and Mrs. Richard A. Penna '68 Mr. and Mrs. David Preston Mr. and Mrs. Leslie C. Quick III, LL.D. '75 Mr. and Mrs. James R. Raftis Mrs. Allan D. Ramming Ms. Sandra A. Richter '57 Mr. William L. Richter Mr. and Mrs. Christopher D. Ross Robert J. Routier, Esq. '52 and Mrs. Audrey M. Routier '53 Mr. and Mrs. Ronald E. Salluzzo '72 Mr. James J. Slattery '58 Mr. and Mrs. John V. Sponyoe '61 Mr. and Mrs. Marvin W. Stocker '65 Jane Hoffman Till '77 and Robert E. Till '77 Mr. and Mrs. Robert W. Williams '70 Mr. Daniel Yankelovich, LL.D. and Ms. Barbara Lee Mr. and Mrs. Michael R. Zick '69 www.sbu.edu/donate Dun Scotus Friary Ellicott Development Company Elsie & Joseph Beck Foundation Ernst & Young Foundation Exxon Mobil Education Foundation F. Donald Kenney Foundation F.T. & Anna C. Manley Memorial Trust Fidelity Charitable Gift Fund First Niagara Bank Foundation FleetBoston Financial Foundation Galasso Foundation Game Creek Video LLC General Electric Foundation George I. Alden Trust Herdrich Charitable Trust $100,000+ Holy Name Province May Bonfils Memorial Fund Holy Name Province Franciscan Friars Holy Name Province Franciscan Missionary Union IBM Corporation Immaculate Conception Province Institute for Training and Development Jacobus-Iacobucci Foundation James A. Comstock Memorial Trust The John R. Oishei Foundation KPMG Foundation LLP The Kresge Foundation Lawley Service Insurance Lilly Endowment, Inc. The Margaret L. Wendt Foundation Mark IV Industries Fund, Inc. The Marra Family Fund McQuade Family Foundation McQuade Family Fund Michael Bedosky Endowment Monterey Fund, Inc. Nabisco Foundation NASA National Endowment for the Arts National Science Foundation New York State Department of Transportation New York State Education Department NYS Council on the Arts Pepsico Foundation, Inc. Petr-All Petroleum Corporation PricewaterhouseCoopers Foundation LLP The Procter & Gamble Fund The Providence Fund Richard and Mary Lou Murphy Charitable Fund St. Francis Fraternity St. Francis Friary St. John the Baptist Province The Schwab Fund for Charitable Giving Secular Franciscan Order Stella Matutina Foundation, Inc. Sun Microsystems, Inc. U.S. Clearing Corporation United States Department of Education U.S. Department of Housing & Urban Development Verizon Corporation Verizon Foundation William G. McGowan Charitable Fund, Inc. ALUMNI DONORS 1933 ................................... Merton’s Heart Club $500 - $999 Anonymous (1) Merton’s Heart Club $500 - $999 Dr. and Mrs. Joseph A. Battaglia 1937 ................................... Merton’s Heart Club $500 - $999 Mr. and Mrs. Marvin Hoffenberg 1947 ................................... Merton’s Heart Club $500 - $999 Col. and Mrs. Francis J. Kane, Ed.D. 1938 ................................... Greccio Society $5,000 - $9,999 Msgr. Salvatore P. Mitchell 1948 ................................... Grotto Society $1,000 - $1,999 Mr. and Mrs. Joseph E. Kane 1939 ................................... Grotto Society $1,000 - $1,999 Mr. and Mrs. Joseph W. Hull 1949 ................................... Greccio Society $5,000 - $9,999 Mr. and Mrs. Albert Cecchi 1940 ................................... Grotto Society $1,000 - $1,999 Rev. Albert J. Bosack Assisi Society $2,000 - $4,999 Mr. and Mrs. Edwin Foster Mr. Joseph J. Gonsiorek 1942 ................................... Assisi Society $2,000 - $4,999 Msgr. Leo E. Hammerl Dr. and Mrs. Thomas R. Simon Grotto Society $1,000 - $1,999 Mr. and Mrs. Robert L. Horey Mr. William J. Kane Grotto Society $1,000 - $1,999 Mr. James G. Flanagan 1943 ................................... Grotto Society $1,000 - $1,999 Dr. and Mrs. Robert C. Fenzl ✝ indicates deceased members 1950 ................................... La Verna Society $10,000 - $24,999 Mr. James F. Shea ✝ Assisi Society $2,000 - $4,999 Mr. John R. Lanz Grotto Society $1,000 - $1,999 Mr. William L. Bennett Lt. Col. and Mrs. John P. Convey Joseph G. DeMaria, Esq. and Mrs. Jackie DeMaria Mr. Edward F. Kline Mr. Christopher J. Scaturo and Mrs. Diane J. Scaturo Mr. John W. Spencer ✝ Merton’s Heart Club $500 - $999 Dr. and Mrs. Richard F. Mayer 1951 ................................... Assisi Society $2,000 - $4,999 Mr. and Mrs. Robert J. Blake Mr. and Mrs. John B. Butler Mr. and Mrs. George E. Maloof Grotto Society $1,000 - $1,999 Mr. and Mrs. John F. Breslin Mr. John J. Lane Mr. and Mrs. Joseph McCloskey Dr. and Mrs. Richard Sullivan Mr. and Mrs. William J. Vierhile Merton’s Heart Club $500 - $999 Anonymous (1) Msgr. Francis Braun Mr. and Mrs. Arnold D. Gallo Mr. and Mrs. Louis Heuschneider Dr. and Mrs. James C. Kenrick Mr. Thomas L. Lennon Dr. and Mrs. Daniel H. Mintz, LL.D. Mr. and Mrs. Ernest S. Virok 1952 ................................... Assisi Society $2,000 - $4,999 Mr. Nicholas J. Bongiovanni Mr. and Mrs. Joseph F. Ravener Robert J. Routier, Esq. and Mrs. Audrey M. Routier Contact: This Honor Roll of Donors recognizes the many donors who contributed $500 or more to St. Bonaventure University in fiscal year 2010 (June 1, 2009 through May 31, 2010). While every effort has been made to ensure the accuracy of these records, we encourage our readers to alert Advancement Services to any errors or omissions. Please contact: Diane N. Frick Director of Advancement Services Office Phone: (716) 375-7884 E-mail: dfrick@sbu.edu Grotto Society $1,000 - $1,999 Mr. and Mrs. John C. Lundberg Mr. Edmund L. MacDonald Dr. and Mrs. William T. Moynihan Mr. Richard J. O'Connor Mr. and Mrs. Leo J. Pranitis Mr. and Mrs. Thomas A. Ryan Merton’s Heart Club $500 - $999 Dr. and Mrs. Walter P. Dember Mr. and Mrs. John F. McGowan Mr. Donald E. O'Shea Maj. Gen. and Mrs. Norbert J. Rappl Mr. and Mrs. John B. Summers Mr. Anthony Termotto 1953 ................................... Assisi Society $2,000 - $4,999 Mr. and Mrs. William G. Edwards Mr. and Mrs. Richard J. Murphy Mrs. Audrey M. Routier and Robert J. Routier, Esq. Grotto Society $1,000 - $1,999 Mr. and Mrs. Michael J. Duffy Dr. and Mrs. Francis J. Gilroy Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth J. Wohlpart Merton’s Heart Club $500 - $999 Mr. and Mrs. James F. Dwyer Mr. and Mrs. Eugene R. Ferraro Mr. and Mrs. Roger J. Lehman June 1, 2009-May 31, 2010 39 Alumni 1933-1953 A s I review St. Bonaventure University’s Honor Roll of Donors each year, I am heartened to know that so many share in supporting our mission. Organizations Anonymous (8) Academy of American Franciscan History The Bob Koop Foundation Bloomberg L.P. Blue Bird Coach Lines The Capital Trust Company of Delaware Central New York Community Foundation Cerberus Capital Management L.P. The Charles A. Mastronardi Foundation The Community of Poor Clares of Chicago Curia Generalizia dei Frati Minori (OFM) Cutco Corporation Cutco Foundation, Inc. Dresser Foundation, Inc. HONOR ROLL OF DONORS Honor Roll of Donors June 1, 2009-May 31, 2010 1954 ................................... La Verna Society $10,000 - $24,999 Mr. and Mrs. Raymond Mastoloni Lt. Col. and Mrs. Donald Easton Mr. and Mrs. Richard T. Egan Col. and Mrs. George W. Goetz Greccio Society $5,000 - $9,999 Mr. and Mrs. Donald M. Flanagan Mr. John P. Spindler 1957 ................................... La Verna Society $10,000 - $24,999 Mr. and Mrs. Francis N. Carducci Mr. and Mrs. William J. Lawley Sr. Grotto Society $1,000 - $1,999 Rev. Carmine B. Raneri Mr. Edward F. Rhodes Merton’s Heart Club $500 - $999 Capt. John J. Bevins Mr. and Mrs. Alexander DiLella Mr. and Mrs. William J. Flynn Col. (Ret.) and Mrs. J. E. Graham Mr. and Mrs. Douglas Philpotts 1955 ................................... Greccio Society $5,000 - $9,999 Mr. and Mrs. Raymond J. Deuel Dr. and Mrs. Richard A. Falls Grotto Society $1,000 - $1,999 Mr. and Mrs. Vincent Aungier Mr. and Mrs. Joseph W. Carlon Jr. Mr. and Mrs. Raymond Gawronski Mr. and Mrs. G. Peter Klee Mr. and Mrs. John A. Kreuz Sr. Mr. Thomas E. Sparrow Mr. Thomas W. Torpey Mr. Raymond D. Viacava Merton’s Heart Club $500 - $999 Mr. and Mrs. Thomas H. Bresson 1956 ................................... Assisi Society $2,000 - $4,999 Mr. and Mrs. Donald F. Krott Mr. and Mrs. Robert Paradise Grotto Society $1,000 - $1,999 Mr. and Mrs. William Schrauth Mr. and Mrs. Thomas J. Watson Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Zanche Merton’s Heart Club $500 - $999 Dr. and Mrs. Fredric Buonocore Dr. Robert E. Burke Assisi Society $2,000 - $4,999 Dr. Ronald E. MacLeay Grotto Society $1,000 - $1,999 Rev. Donald Anderson ✝ and Mrs. Judith Anderson Ms. Shirley A. Krise Mr. and Mrs. Paul H. Titus Merton’s Heart Club $500 - $999 Dr. and Mrs. Justin J. Martin Mr. and Mrs. T. Ronald Mega Mr. and Mrs. Andrew T. Purcell Mr. and Mrs. Peter J. Zambito 1958 ................................... San Damiano Society $25,000 - $49,999 Mr. and Mrs. John H. Meisch La Verna Society $10,000 - $24,999 Mr. James J. Slattery Greccio Society $5,000 - $9,999 Mr. and Mrs. Richard J. Attea Mr. and Mrs. John F. Connors Mr. and Mrs. Robert R. Jones, D.C.S. Grotto Society $1,000 - $1,999 Mr. and Mrs. Ronald E. Davis Mr. and Mrs. Louis J. McDonald Merton’s Heart Club $500 - $999 Mr. and Mrs. Robert T. Haenn 1959 ................................... La Verna Society $10,000 - $24,999 Mr. and Mrs. Donald J. Gracyalny Assisi Society $2,000 - $4,999 Mrs. Ann M. Scanlon and Mr. Bernard P. Scanlon Grotto Society $1,000 - $1,999 Mr. and Mrs. E. Thomas Doddridge Mr. and Mrs. Robert A. Gentile Col. and Mrs. Edward V. Karl Mr. and Mrs. William J. Kirwan Mr. and Mrs. Edward Thibeault Merton’s Heart Club $500 - $999 Mr. and Mrs. Timothy L. Brewer Mr. and Mrs. Francis J. Carns Mr. and Mrs. Frank W. Grimone Adm. and Mrs. Frank W. Keane Mr. and Mrs. John C. Mahaney Mr. and Mrs. Ralph J. Marlatt Mr. and Mrs. Michael R. Schrauth 1960 ................................... La Verna Society $10,000 - $24,999 Mr. and Mrs. Herbert F. Rorke Greccio Society $5,000 - $9,999 Col. (Ret.) George W. Burkley Mr. and Mrs. George P. Farley Mr. and Mrs. Martin J. McAndrews Assisi Society $2,000 - $4,999 Mr. and Mrs. Theodore D. Choma Mr. Richard J. Gaeta and Mrs. Joan Gaeta ✝ Mr. and Mrs. Terrance H. Kearney Mr. and Mrs. James M. Kendrick Mr. and Mrs. Salvatore LaForgia Mr. and Mrs. Gerald F. Shanahan Mr. and Mrs. Joseph F. Shine Mr. and Mrs. Frank T. Taverrite Grotto Society $1,000 - $1,999 Anonymous (1) Mr. and Mrs. John G. Berger Sr. Mr. and Mrs. John C. Clark Mr. and Mrs. John L. Foote Mr. and Mrs. James M. Friery Mr. and Mrs. James W. Griffin Dr. and Mrs. Donald Hillner Mr. Donald W. Mayer Mr. and Mrs. Michael J. McCoy Mr. and Mrs. James M. McGoldrick Rev. Dr. Neil J. O'Connell, O.F.M. Mr. John F. Pickens and Mrs. Carol Anne Hamill Mr. and Mrs. Allan G. Schroeder Merton’s Heart Club $500 - $999 Dr. Robert K. Alico and Mrs. Marsha Alico ✝ Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Byrne III Dr. and Mrs. Donald W. Fornes Mr. and Mrs.Edward N. Fuierer Dr. and Mrs. Andrew J. Lacher Mr. Laurence J. Laughlin Mr. and Mrs. Robert A. Seifert Mr. and Mrs. Joseph L. Tierney Mr. Eugene J. Ushinski Mr. and Mrs. John L Worden III 1961 ................................... Heritage Society $50,000 - $99,999 Mr. and Mrs. John V. Sponyoe San Damiano Society $25,000 - $49,999 Mrs. Susan R. Green and Mr. David V. Green La Verna Society $10,000 - $24,999 Anonymous (1) Br. Ivan Doszpoly, SJ Greccio Society $5,000 - $9,999 Mr. Richard J. Bugno Assisi Society $2,000 - $4,999 Mr. Daniel F. Daly Terence J. O'Neill, Esq. and Mrs. Ethel O'Neill Grotto Society $1,000 - $1,999 Mr. and Mrs. Michael F. Julian Mr. and Mrs. John M. Kacani Merton’s Heart Club $500 - $999 Dr. and Mrs. David D. Keefe Mr. and Mrs. Walter P. Rybak Mr. Jerome M. Shea 1962 ................................... Century Society $100,000 - $499,999 William C. Foster and Daria L. Foster La Verna Society $10,000 - $24,999 Mr. and Mrs. Norbert A. Bennett Assisi Society $2,000 - $4,999 The Hon. Joseph E. Bergeron All gifts acknowledged online A list of all gifts to St. Bonaventure University during Fiscal Year 2010 (June 1, 2009, to May 31, 2010) is available online at www.sbu.edu Mr. and Mrs. Thomas C. Culligan Mr. and Mrs. Samuel L. Fitzpatrick Mr. Thomas B. Gaffney Mr. and Mrs. Charles Tarulli Grotto Society $1,000 - $1,999 Mr. Thomas A. Callahan Sr. Mrs. Patricia Dumser Mr. and Mrs. Charles G. Legler Mr. John C. Lemery Mr. John M. Noonan Merton’s Heart Club $500 - $999 Mr. and Mrs. Leonard F. Ferrante Mr. Thomas J. Fitzpatrick Mr. and Mrs. Gerald F. Ford Brig. Gen. and Mrs. James M. Morris 1963 ................................... San Damiano Society $25,000 - $49,999 Mr. and Mrs. Brian R. McRedmond Greccio Society $5,000 - $9,999 Mr. and Mrs. Joel Cote Mr. and Mrs. Charles Stepnowksi Assisi Society $2,000 - $4,999 Dr. Joseph M. Pastore Jr. and Mrs. Patricia O'Brien Pastore Grotto Society $1,000 - $1,999 Mr. and Mrs. M. William Corr Mr. Paul L. DeLisio Mr. and Mrs. Eugene DellaPietra Mr. and Mrs. John J. Young Mr. and Mrs. Richard Zamboldi Merton’s Heart Club $500 - $999 Mr. and Mrs. John M. Bauer Mr. Richard C. Bozenski Mr. Thomas I. Nientimp Mr. and Mrs. Robert J. Wegner 1964 ................................... Century Society $100,000 - $499,999 Mr. and Mrs. Raymond C. Dee San Damiano Society $25,000 - $49,999 Mrs. Pauline L. Panik and Michael Panik, Ph.D. Greccio Society $5,000 - $9,999 Mr. and Mrs. Stephen Ambroselli Mr. and Mrs. Peter R. Sullivan www.sbu.edu/donate Assisi Society $2,000 - $4,999 Anonymous (1) Mrs. Barbara D. Geary Lt. Col. and Mrs. Nicholas P. Speranza Dr. and Mrs. Harry J. Thie Mrs. Norma J. Worden and Dr. Robert L. Worden Grotto Society $1,000 - $1,999 Dr. and Mrs. Leibert Coppola Merton’s Heart Club $500 - $999 Mr. Michael J. Cescon Mr. Ray C. Dumser Dr. and Mrs. Robert E. White 1965 ................................... Century Society $100,000 - $499,999 John R. McGinley Jr., Esq. Heritage Society $50,000 - $99,999 Mr. and Mrs. James J. Cattano San Damiano Society $25,000 - $49,999 Mr. and Mrs. Paul C. Hilbert La Verna Society $10,000 - $24,999 Mr. and Mrs. Marvin W. Stocker Greccio Society $5,000 - $9,999 Mr. John M. Deignan Mr. Harold F. Hellinger Mr. and Mrs. James E. Hulihan Mr. and Mrs. Timothy J. Rinker Assisi Society $2,000 - $4,999 Mr. James E. Blatt Dr. and Mrs. R. Chiacchierini Mrs. Patricia O'Brien Pastore and Dr. Joseph M. Pastore Jr. Drs. James and Jeanette Post Mr. Paul F. Ribardo Mr. and Mrs. Eugene J. Vassel Grotto Society $1,000 - $1,999 Mr. and Mrs. David P. Andros Mrs. Kathleen D. Bauer and Mr. C. Roger Bauer Mr. Donald J. Borowiak Mr. and Mrs. Robert R. Brown Mr. Gerard J. Davies Mr. and Mrs. R. T. Donlon Mr. Charles T. Foskett and Mrs. MaryAnna Foskett Mr. Leslie A. Francis Jr. Dr. and Mrs. Mathew R. Glowski Mr. and Mrs. John F. Hillins Dr. and Mrs. Joseph Kantakevich Ms. Joan Roeben Licursi ✝ indicates deceased members Mr. Charles R. Schrauth Mr. and Mrs. Richard J. Stearns Merton’s Heart Club $500 - $999 Mr. and Mrs. John Ahearn Ms. Judith M. BeckettMcDonald Mr. and Mrs. David Boland Mr. and Mrs. Charles H. Fritz Mr. and Mrs. Jeremiah J. Hanley Mr. Joseph V. McCarthy Mr. and Mrs. William McNeece Ms. Rosemary Roche 1966 ................................... La Verna Society $10,000 - $24,999 Mr. and Mrs. Arnold J. Eckelman Timothy F. Fidgeon, Esq. and Ms. M. Pamela Daniels Mr. and Mrs. Albert C. Horton Mr. and Mrs. John McCormack, Jr. Assisi Society $2,000 - $4,999 Dr. Lawrence Brueckner Mr. and Mrs. Eugene F. McCue Mr. and Mrs. Charles R. Rae Mr. and Mrs. Shaun M. Sheehan Grotto Society $1,000 - $1,999 Mr. C. Roger Bauer and Mrs. Kathleen D. Bauer Mr. and Mrs. George E. Carr Dr. Charles Diminnie and Dr. H. Carol Diminnie John H. Klock, Esq. and Mrs. Connie E. Klock Mr. J. Oliver McGonigle Mr. and Mrs. Francis T. Quinn Dr. and Mrs. Charles V. Reilly Mrs. Marilyn B. Stetar and Mr. Joseph M. Stetar Merton’s Heart Club $500 - $999 Mr. and Mrs. James P. Early Mr. William E. Hammond Mr. and Mrs. Paul Harasimowicz Mr. Timothy J. Leach ✝ and Mrs. Barbara Leach 1967 ................................... Greccio Society $5,000 - $9,999 Mr. David M. Owen and Mrs. Sharon Jenkins-Owen Mr. and Mrs. Gerard M. Verdi Assisi Society $2,000 - $4,999 Mr. and Mrs. Roger J. Conlon Mr. and Mrs. James P. Cronin Mr. and Mrs. Lawrence P. Grassini Fiscal Year 2010 Annual Fund Volunteers Charles J. Aimone '54 Stephen V. Ambroselli '64 Vincent C. Aungier '55 Marie Baecher '65 Mark J. Battaglia '04 Gabriella M. Belli '70 John G. Berger '60 Anna E. Button '05 Kathleen E. Cannon '06 Joseph W. Carlon '55 Robert D. Crowley '71 Michelle A. Cullen '00 Thomas J. Cullen '00 Matthew P. Dabrowski '04 Emilie M. Davis '79 Raymond C. Dee '64 Jason B. Desiderio '99 Michael C. Donlon '95 Mark H. Edwards '85 Donald J. Gracyalny '59 Peter D. Gray '74 Robert T. Haenn '95 John M. Hannon '75 William J. Hanvey '84 William A. Harnisch '05 Caroline J. Harrington '80 Ryan M. Hoffnagle '00 Stephen M. Horan '89 Matthew J. Jwayad '99 Edward V. Karl '59 Stephanie M. Karnas '06 William P. Kelly '95 Helena M. Kessler '75 Salvatore F. LaForgia '60 Brendan H. Little '04 Charles E. Makey '90 Kathryn A. Malik '03 Kathleen A. Mannion '03 Andrew R. Mantilia '08 Nancy M. Mayer '77 John R. McGinley '65 John J. McGrath '09 Matthew J. Minichelli '04 Eugene M. O'Connor '79 Paul A. O'Dowd '02 Leslie C. Quick '75 John J. Quigley '75 Mary J. Quigley '75 Patrick J. Ricotta '89 Charles H. Riley '01 Timothy J. Rinker '65 Herbert F. Rorke '60 David P. Rust '01 Nicholas P. Speranza '64 John B. Stevens '74 Marvin W. Stocker '65 Therese F. Sullivan '79 Mary E. Sutton '95 Joseph H. Tavares '07 Edward R. Weinberg '85 Stephen D. Wilson '70 Peter G. Wong '04 David R. Yaun '85 James J. Zaniello '90 Jamie L. Zielonko '05 Dr. Robert L. Worden and Mrs. Norma J. Worden Mr. and Mrs. Mark H. Tuohey III Mr. and Mrs. Stephen F. Wilder Grotto Society $1,000 - $1,999 Mr. and Mrs. Thomas L. Aman Mr. and Mrs. John F. Boyle Mr. and Mrs. Wallace Ducayet Mr. and Mrs. John J. Ervin Jr. Mr. and Mrs. Thomas G. Hoag Mr. and Mrs. J. Michael Kelleher Mr. James M. Kirker Edward J. Maloney, CPA Mrs. Rita Fahey O'Sullivan and Mr. Denis O'Sullivan Mr. and Mrs. Joseph M. Palladino Mr. Joseph M. Stetar and Mrs. Marilyn B. Stetar Mrs. Maryann L. Walsh Vines and Mr. Donald V. Vines Merton’s Heart Club $500 - $999 Mr. John P. Bona Mr. Armand W. Burke and Dr. Peggy A. Burke Mr. George E. Denniston and Mrs. Kathleen Denniston Mr. and Mrs. John M. Doemel Ms. Kathleen M. Kosciol and Mr. Michael J. Kosciol Dr. Marie F. Plumb and John K. Plumb, Esq. Col. and Mrs. William J. Powers Mrs. Monica A. Roland and Mr. Joseph E. Roland Mr. and Mrs. Dennis J. Sheehan Mr. James J. Welch and Mrs. Nancy F. Welch The Hon. and Mrs. Daniel C. Wilson Merton’s Heart Club $500 - $999 Mr. Walter F. Brill and Mrs. Sheila M. Brill Mr. and Mrs. James J. Cullum Mr. and Mrs. Matthew G. McCollum John K. Plumb, Esq. and Dr. Marie F. Plumb Mr. and Mrs. Richard Strauss Mr. and Mrs. Joseph P. Talty 1969 ................................... San Damiano Society $25,000 - $49,999 Mr. and Mrs. Michael R. Zick La Verna Society $10,000 - $24,999 Mr. and Mrs. Patrick J. Deagman Greccio Society $5,000 - $9,999 Anonymous (1) Mr. Thomas P. Dougherty and Mrs. Catherine M. Dougherty 1968 ................................... Heritage Society $50,000 - $99,999 Mrs. Marianne L. Laine and Mr. Erick J. Laine San Damiano Society $25,000 - $49,999 Mr. and Mrs. Richard A. Penna La Verna Society $10,000 - $24,999 Mr. and Mrs. Carl P. Paladino Greccio Society $5,000 - $9,999 Mr. Edward R. Murray Mr. James F. Rittinger and Mrs. Kathleen O. Rittinger Assisi Society $2,000 - $4,999 Mr. and Mrs. John F. Barry Mr. and Mrs. Robert S. Pastore Mr. Arthur H. Roberts and Mrs. Nancy J. Roberts Assisi Society $2,000 - $4,999 Mr. and Mrs. William P. Garry Mrs. Nancy J. Roberts and Mr. Arthur H. Roberts Dr. Greg T. Sprissler and Mrs. Kathleen K. Sprissler Ms. Marilyn Zahm Grotto Society $1,000 - $1,999 Ms. Maureen Dell Mr. Michael P. Dodd and Mrs. Christine A. Dodd Mrs. Connie E. Klock and John H. Klock, Esq. Ms. Kristina Niccoli Merton’s Heart Club $500 - $999 Dr. Peggy A. Burke and Mr. Armand W. Burke Grotto Society Mrs. Kathleen Denniston and $1,000 - $1,999 Mr. George E. Denniston Anonymous (1) Mrs. Gloria S. Mack and Mr. Joseph S. Deery Jr. and Mr. David W. Mack Mrs. Irene V. Deery Rev. Edward J. McAuley Jr. Mrs. Ann E. Koelling and Mr. James E. McMahon and Mr. William L. Koelling Mrs. Kathleen E. McMahon A. Daniel McCaffrey, CFP and Dr. William F. Pfohl Jr. and Mrs. Marlena McCaffrey Mrs. Virginia A. Pfohl Mrs. Lynn Shane and J. Michael Mr. Joseph E. Roland and Shane, Esq. Mrs. Monica A. Roland June 1, 2009-May 31, 2010 41 Alumni 1964-1969 Alumni 1954-1964 Assisi Society $2,000 - $4,999 Mr. Walter R. Kuhn Jr. Mr. and Mrs. Raphael Rodriguez 40 B O N AV E N T U R E HONOR ROLL OF DONORS B O N AV E N T U R E HONOR ROLL OF DONORS B O N AV E N T U R E Mr. John J. Linnehan and Ms. Janet I. Bodnar Mr. and Mrs. Charles F. Martiny Mr. and Mrs. John M. Odenbach 1970 ................................... Assisi Society $2,000 - $4,999 Merton’s Heart Club Mr. and Mrs. Robert L. Cottier $500 - $999 Mr. and Mrs. Robert W. Ms. Ellen J. CreightonWilliams Montemarano and Dr. and Mrs. Stephen D. Wilson Mr. Francis A. Montemarano Mrs. Virginia A. Pfohl and Grotto Society Dr. William F. Pfohl Jr. $1,000 - $1,999 Mr. and Mrs. Robert T. Pochily Mr. and Mrs. James N. Ciampo Mr. John F. Puvogel Mrs. Christine A. Dodd and Mr. and Mrs. Robert G. Mr. Michael P. Dodd Sheridan Mr. and Mrs. J. Michael Ervin Mr. and Mrs. Dale B. Tepas Mr. Paul F. Kruse and Mrs. Ellen R. Kruse 1972 ................................... Mrs. Sharon C. Lynch and San Damiano Society Mr. Hugh Lynch $25,000 - $49,999 Mr. and Mrs. James A. Mertens Mr. and Mrs. Richard P. Kearns Mr. and Mrs. James P. Nolan La Verna Society Merton’s Heart Club $10,000 - $24,999 $500 - $999 Mr. Scott P. Cielewich Dr. Gabriella M. Belli and Mr. and Mrs. Ronald E. Salluzzo Dr. Robert Krapfel Mr. David M. Cantwell Greccio Society Mr. John K. Fiebelkorn $5,000 - $9,999 Mr. and Mrs. David Miehl Very Rev. Louis V. Iasiello, Mr. John F. Morrissey O.F.M., Ph.D. Mr. Eugene J. Orsenigo III Mr. John V. Zimmer and Dr. and Mrs. Leo J. Scarpino Mrs. Anne C. Zimmer Mr. Michael A. Verdone The Hon. and Mrs. James T. Assisi Society Walsh M.C. $2,000 - $4,999 Ms. Corinne L. Maydonovitch 1971 ................................... Mr. and Mrs. Stephen C. Nell Century Society $100,000 - $499,999 Grotto Society Mr. and Mrs. Eugene M. $1,000 - $1,999 McQuade Mr. Peter C. Grzybala and Mrs. Diane Korntheuer Greccio Society Mrs. Sharon P. Keenan and $5,000 - $9,999 Col. Leo E. Keenan III Mr. and Mrs. Robert D. Mrs. Ellen R. Kruse and Crowley Mr. Paul F. Kruse Mrs. Catherine M. Dougherty and Mr. Thomas P. Merton’s Heart Club Dougherty $500 - $999 Mrs. Maureen Abbett and Assisi Society Mr. Michael Abbett $2,000 - $4,999 Mr. and Mrs. Hermes L. Ames Mr. James H. Bonnes Dr. and Mrs. James G. Corrigan Mr. and Mrs. Geoffrey W. Mr. John N. Gravanda Culkin Mr. and Mrs. David P. Kramer Dr. Charles J. Dougherty and Mr. Dennis K. McDermott and The Hon. Sandra L. Mrs. Barbara A. McDermott Dougherty Mr. and Mrs. Charles H. Vayo Mr. William H. Scott Mrs. Kathleen K. Sprissler and 1973 ................................... Dr. Greg T. Sprissler San Damiano Society $25,000 - $49,999 Grotto Society Mr. and Mrs. Daniel F. Collins $1,000 - $1,999 Mr. James T. Clark and La Verna Society Mrs. Mary F. Clark $10,000 - $24,999 Mr. and Mrs. Gary M. Faraci Mr. Michael H. Tardugno and Frank L. Fernandez, Esq. Dr. Jodi A. Cook Col. Leo E. Keenan III and Mrs. Sharon P. Keenan Assisi Society $2,000 - $4,999 Dr. and Mrs. James G. Cayea Mr. and Mrs. William Greene III Mr. Stephen D. Hurley and Mrs. JoAnn R. Hurley Mr. and Mrs. Mark J. Pesci Grotto Society $1,000 - $1,999 Mr. James E. Buzzard and Mrs. Eileen C. Buzzard Mrs. Deborah E. Clark and Mr. Larry C. Clark Mr. and Mrs. Francis M. D'Andrea Mrs. Patricia A. Greiner and Mr. Bruce Greiner Mr. Michael J. Hagen and Mrs. Maureen M. Hagen Mr. Thomas M. Howley and Mrs. Michaela A. Howley Mr. Neal J. Johnson Mr. and Mrs. John F. Keane Dr. Lenard G. Presutti Mr. John Scarzafava and The Hon. Jeannie Scarzafava Mr. Ronald P. Smith and Mrs. Mary C. Smith Mr. and Mrs. Kevin J. Sullivan Mrs. Connie Monteleone Whitton Merton’s Heart Club $500 - $999 Mr. and Mrs. Richard J. Biryla Dr. and Mrs. Paul W. Esposito Dr. Walter K. Kulick Mr. and Mrs. Michael W. O'Sick Jr. Mr. and Mrs. John L. Tylock Mr. William J. Woodard 1974 ................................... La Verna Society $10,000 - $24,999 Mr. Brian E. Hickey and Jean P. Hickey, CPA Greccio Society $5,000 - $9,999 Mr. and Mrs. Thomas M. Garvey Dr. and Mrs. Peter M. Gigliotti Mrs. Anne C. Zimmer and Mr. John V. Zimmer Assisi Society $2,000 - $4,999 Mr. Peter D. Gray and Mrs. Christine L. Gray Mr. and Mrs. Michael T. Madden Grotto Society $1,000 - $1,999 Mrs. Eileen C. Buzzard and Mr. James E. Buzzard Mrs. Karen L. Eisemann and Mr. Richard E. Eisemann Mr. Gregory A. Gibson and Mrs. Barbara M. Gibson Class Reunion Donations (FY10) Class Donors 1940 1 $ $1,000 1945 1 $ 100 1950 54 $ 34,918 1955 52 $ 24,853 1960 86 $ 72,622 1965 103 $ 222,846 1970 107 $ 1975 117 $ 157,989 1980 125 $ 228,328 1985 125 $ 70,662 1990 84 $ 19,498 1995 56 $ 16,775 2000 56 $ 6,040 2005 22 Mrs. Michaela A. Howley and Mr. Thomas M. Howley Mrs. Ann M. McCarthy and Mr. Robert J. McCarthy Mr. and Mrs. Evan T. McElroy Mr. and Mrs. Richard A. Nicol Mrs. Mary C. Smith and Mr. Ronald P. Smith Mr. and Mrs. John B. Stevens Merton’s Heart Club $500 - $999 Mr. F. Paul Adorno Mr. James A. Buszuwski Ms. Maryann R. Correnti-McKelvey Mr. Joseph V. Flanagan and Mrs. Mary R. Flanagan Mr. and Mrs. Edward J. Kane Mr. and Mrs. Robert F. Keenan Mr. and Mrs. Philip J. LaBella Mrs. Barbara A. McDermott and Mr. Dennis K. McDermott Mr. and Mrs. Kevin M. Murphy Mr. and Mrs. Allen D. Williams 1975 ................................... Century Society $100,000 - $499,999 Mr. and Mrs. Leslie C. Quick III, LL.D. Greccio Society $5,000 - $9,999 Mr. and Mrs. John M. Hannon Assisi Society $2,000 - $4,999 Mr. and Mrs. William H. Bogart Mrs. Marianne Colucci Glover Mrs. Joanne L. Hoffacker and Mr. Jay J. Hoffacker Mrs. JoAnn R. Hurley and Mr. Stephen D. Hurley Amount $ 27,334 2,899 Mr. Robert L. Jordan and Mrs. R. Michele Jordan Mr. John J. Quigley and Mrs. Mary J. Quigley Grotto Society $1,000 - $1,999 Anonymous (1) Mrs. Maureen M. Hagen and Mr. Michael J. Hagen Mrs. Helena M. Kessler and Mr. Terry P. Kessler Dr. Rodney Littlejohn Mr. Richard P. Mann Mr. Mark R. Palumbo and Ms. Priscilla Nodine Michael B. Powers, Esq. Mr. and Mrs. Frank J. Roberts Joseph R. Wild, CPA and Mrs. Anne M. Wild Merton’s Heart Club $500 - $999 Mr. Charles J. Basinait, Esq. Mr. Kevin J. Boyle and Mrs. Mary Elizabeth Boyle Mrs. Mary R. Flanagan and Mr. Joseph V. Flanagan Mr. and Mrs. James D. Hickey Mr. Phillip A. Lauria and Mrs. Elaine E. Tai-Lauria Mr. Brian A. McCabe Dr. Alfred J. Morini Jr. and Mrs. Barbara A. Morini Mr. and Mrs. Louis J. Proto Mr. Thomas V. Rigoli and Mrs. Leslee A. Rigoli 1976 ................................... Century Society $100,000 - $499,999 Mr. James E. Meyer and Mrs. Nina M. Meyer www.sbu.edu/donate Heritage Society $50,000 - $99,999 Anonymous (1) La Verna Society $10,000 - $24,999 Mr. and Mrs. Michael T. Ryan Ms. Debra L. Klisart Ms. Carol A. Schumacher and Mr. Robert Kelly La Verna Society $10,000 - $24,999 Jean P. Hickey, CPA and Mr. Brian E. Hickey Greccio Society $5,000 - $9,999 Dr. Daniel J. Maydonovitch Grotto Society $1,000 - $1,999 Ms. Maureen P. Butler and Mr. Robert A. Maier Mrs. Kathryn Dillon Hogan and Mr. James Hogan Ms. Shannon Powell Emond Mr. Robert P. Kane Richard M. Kasperski, CPA Mr. James M. Krupa Mrs. Ann C. Pusateri and Mr. Leo J. Pusateri Jr. Mrs. Laura M. Post and Mr. Thomas Post Mr. and Mrs. Timothy M. Shults Mr. Richard C. Tantillo and Ms. Elizabeth M. Tantillo Dr. and Mrs. Douglas A. Watson Greccio Society $5,000 - $9,999 Brig. Gen. (Ret.) Maureen K. LeBoeuf and Col. (Ret.) Joseph LeBoeuf Assisi Society $2,000 - $4,999 Mr. Frank L. Borrelli and Mrs. Ann M. Borrelli Mr. and Mrs. William C. Murphy Grotto Society $1,000 - $1,999 Mr. William M. Collins and Mrs. Donna R. Collins Mr. and Mrs. Donald Eichenauer Mr. Robert A. Maier and Ms. Maureen P. Butler Mr. and Mrs. James A. Marchiony Mr. Robert J. McCarthy and Mrs. Ann M. McCarthy Mr. Paul S. Pesesky and Mrs. Amy M. Pesesky Mr. James F. Riley III and Mrs. Linda E. Riley Mr. David M. Thomas and Mrs. Penny S. Thomas Rev. James T. Vacco O.F.M. Mrs. Mary E. Wells and Mr. Gary Wells Mrs. Anne M. Wild and Joseph R. Wild, CPA Merton’s Heart Club $500 - $999 Mrs. Mary Elizabeth Boyle and Mr. Kevin J. Boyle Dr. Anthony A. Campagnari and Ms. Donna Crawford Mr. and Mrs. William M. Comerford Mr. and Mrs. A. Randy Floss Dr. and Mrs. Sean E. Keating Mr. Michael J. McGuire Mr. Edward J. Meylor and Mrs. Maureen B. Meylor Mr. Patrick M. Oliveto Mrs. Leslee A. Rigoli and Mr. Thomas V. Rigoli Ms. Clare M. Treichel 1977 ................................... Century Society $100,000 - $499,999 Robert J. Daugherty, CPA and Mrs. Nancy J. Daugherty Heritage Society $50,000 - $99,999 Anonymous (1) ✝ indicates deceased members Assisi Society $2,000 - $4,999 Mr. and Mrs. Robert E. Gould Mr. Kevin J. Hannon and Mrs. Anne M. Hannon Mark D. Thompson, Ph.D. and Mrs. Nancy Thompson Jane Hoffman Till and Robert E. Till Grotto Society $1,000 - $1,999 Anonymous (1) Mr. and Mrs. J. Stephen Harrison Mr. and Mrs. James P. Irwin Mr. Brian P. Lambert Mrs. Amy M. Pesesky and Mr. Paul S. Pesesky Mr. Leo J. Pusateri Jr. and Mrs. Ann C. Pusateri Mrs. Linda E. Riley and Mr. James F. Riley III Mr. John P. Sequerth Mrs. Penny S. Thomas and Mr. David M. Thomas Mr. and Mrs. John F. Whipple Merton’s Heart Club $500 - $999 Mr. and Mrs. Thomas M. Castellino Mrs. Mary Pat Donaldson Northrup and Mr. Ted Northrup Mr. Thomas H. Duffy and Mrs. Marcia J. Duffy Ms. Deirdre M. Keenan Ellis Mr. and Mrs. Dennis L. LeClerc Mrs. Monica H. Mattioli and Mr. Thomas Mattioli Mrs. Kimberly J. Measer Sindall and Mr. Donald Sindall 1978 ................................... Century Society $100,000 - $499,999 Mr. and Mrs. Daniel J. Herbeck San Damiano Society $25,000 - $49,999 Mr. and Mrs. Brian M. McNamee Greccio Society $5,000 - $9,999 Ms. Catherine M. Gleason and Mr. Frank Sammon Assisi Society $2,000 - $4,999 Mrs. Ann M. Borrelli and Mr. Frank L. Borrelli Mrs. Anne M. Hannon and Mr. Kevin J. Hannon Merton’s Heart Club $500 - $999 Mrs. Kathleen A. Donohue and Mr. Michael Donohue Mrs. Nancy S. Griffith and Mr. Richard D. Griffith Mr. Charles F. Hurley and Mrs. Jane C. Hurley Mrs. Maureen B. Meylor and Mr. Edward J. Meylor Mr. and Mrs. Thomas H. McNally Mr. John M. Pearson and Ms. Debra L. Wells 1979 ................................... Century Society $100,000 - $499,999 Mrs. Nancy J. Daugherty and Robert J. Daugherty, CPA Mrs. Nina M. Meyer and Mr. James E. Meyer La Verna Society $10,000 - $24,999 Mr. Edward H. Bastian Joseph A. DeMaria, Esq. Assisi Society $2,000 - $4,999 Mrs. Ann M. Barnard and Mr. Raymond Barnard Ms. Kathleen M. Brownschidle and Mr. John Brownschidle Mr. Henry A. Cramer Mrs. Maryann D. Glennon and Mr. Michael T. Glennon Mr. and Mrs. Christopher M. LaPlaca Eugene M. O'Connor, Esq. and Mrs. Maureen A. O'Connor Mr. Timothy P. Sweeney Mr. John F. Tubridy and Mrs. Maureen T. Tubridy Grotto Society $1,000 - $1,999 Mrs. Donna R. Collins and Mr. William M. Collins Mr. Brian D. Donahue and Mrs. Paula F. Donahue Mrs. Mary C. Driscoll and Mr. Steven E. Driscoll Mr. and Mrs. Gerard M. Helper William A. Hickey, CPA Mrs. Robin E. Kelly and Lt. Col. William P. Kelly Mrs. Therese F. Sullivan and Mr. Timothy Sullivan Merton’s Heart Club $500 - $999 Mrs. Emilie M. Davis and Mr. James S. Davis Mrs. Eileen H. Maslowsky and Mr. Myron Maslowsky Mr. Ronald V. Migliore Jr. and Mrs. Maryellen Migliore John V. O'Connor Jr. Ms. Ardythe A. Nothem Weston 1980 ................................... Century Society $100,000 - $499,999 Mr. Samuel L. Molinaro and Mrs. Lisa J. Molinaro San Damiano Society $25,000 - $49,999 Mr. and Mrs. Thomas M. Marra La Verna Society $10,000 - $24,999 Mr. James G. Gould and Mrs. Ann J. Gould Mr. and Mrs. Robert S. King Greccio Society $5,000 - $9,999 Mr. and Mrs. Peter G. Mantilia Assisi Society $2,000 - $4,999 Dr. Carol M. Fischer and Dr. Michael J. Fischer Ms. Susan L. Freshour Mr. and Mrs. Anthony LaBarbera Mr. and Mrs. William T. Mendick Grotto Society $1,000 - $1,999 Mr. and Mrs. John R. Dieter Mr. Richard F. Ferrari Lt. Col. William P. Kelly and Mrs. Robin E. Kelly Mr. Kevin P. McGann and Mrs. Coreen A. McGann Mrs. Catherine S. Meyer and Mr. Harvey I. Meyer Mr. and Mrs. Richard T. Rynone Dr. and Mrs. Daniel F. Squilla Paul J. Ulich, M.D. and Mrs. Paulette M. Ulich Merton’s Heart Club $500 - $999 Mr. Daniel F. Barry and Ms. Mary K. Trinity Rosemary B. Boller, Esq. Mr. Vincent J. Catalano Ms. Joanne M. Condon Mr. and Mrs. James B. Feenick Mrs. Jane C. Hurley and Mr. Charles F. Hurley Mrs. Megan M. Goodfellow and Mr. John Goodfellow Mrs. Maryellen Migliore and Mr. Ronald V. Migliore Jr. Mrs. Lisa M. Sweeney and Mr. John Sweeney Ms. Patricia M. Head Timmerman 1981 ................................... Century Society $100,000 - $499,999 Mrs. Lisa J. Molinaro and Mr. Samuel L. Molinaro Greccio Society $5,000 - $9,999 Anonymous (1) Assisi Society $2,000 - $4,999 Mr. and Mrs. Patrick J. Coyne Mr. Michael T. Glennon and Mrs. Maryann D. Glennon Mrs. Nancy Thompson and Mark D. Thompson, Ph.D. Grotto Society $1,000 - $1,999 Mr. and Mrs. Mark T. Fiato Mr. and Mrs. Patrick M. Hanna Mr. Robert J. Liguori Mr. John B. McGuigan and Mrs. Kimberly S. McGuigan Ms. Mary K. Piccioli Merton’s Heart Club $500 - $999 Dr. Paul W. Callahan and Dr. Karen M. Callahan Mr. Brian E. Hand Mr. Timothy F. Kennon and Mrs. Kathleen M. Kennon Dr. Michael K. Oros Mrs. Margaret E. Rohrer and Mr. Kent D. Rohrer Mrs. Breda E. Sgarro and Mr. Douglas Sgarro Ms. Mary K. Trinity and Mr. Daniel F. Barry 1982 ................................... La Verna Society $10,000 - $24,999 Mr. John W. Whelpley and Mrs. Karen Whelpley Greccio Society $5,000 - $9,999 Rev. Frank R. Sevola, O.F.M. Mr. and Mrs. John D. Sheehan Assisi Society $2,000 - $4,999 Mr. Edward J. Farrell and Mrs. Ellen R. Farrell Mr. Mark F. Mulhern and Mrs. Kelly A. Mulhern June 1, 2009-May 31, 2010 43 Alumni 1976-1982 Alumni 1969-1976 David P. Van Buren, Ph.D. Mrs. Nancy F. Welch and Mr. James J. Welch B O N AV E N T U R E HONOR ROLL OF DONORS 42 HONOR ROLL OF DONORS Mr. and Mrs. Timothy J. Mason Mr. and Mrs. Thomas M. McMahon Mr. Robert S. Ross and Mrs. Martha A. Ross Mr. Joel P. Serra and Mrs. Diane Garrity John M. Slating, CPA Ms. Ann M. Tenglund B O N AV E N T U R E Greccio Society $5,000 - $9,999 Mr. and Mrs. Charles R. Howe II Assisi Society $2,000 - $4,999 Mr. T. Kevin Beatty and Mrs. Kathleen R. Beatty Mr. and Mrs. Scott W. Isley Mrs. Kelly A. Mulhern and Mr. Mark F. Mulhern Mr. Mark T. Perry and Mrs. Lorraine M. Perry Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Yehl Grotto Society $1,000 - $1,999 Mr. and Mrs. Timothy M. Culhane Ms. Elizabeth J. Hughes Zimbler Mrs. Maureen A. Morrill and Mr. Stephen E. Morrill Mrs. Susan K. Younkins Scarbrough and Mr. Patrick Scarbrough Ms. Catherine Schaeder Batterman and Mr. Eric Batterman Ms. Donna L. Swartwout Mrs. Paulette M. Ulich and Paul J. Ulich, M.D Ms. Sherry C. Walton and Mr. Charles P. Joyce Merton’s Heart Club $500 - $999 Anonymous (1) Mr. and Mrs. Steven C. Bunce San Damiano Society $25,000 - $49,999 Mr. and Mrs. Drew W. Blum Mr. and Mrs. James E. Canty Mr. James F. Skrip Greccio Society $5,000 - $9,999 Mr. and Mrs. John A. Boucher Mr. and Mrs. Thomas J. Hook Assisi Society $2,000 - $4,999 Dr. Robert J. Buckla Mr. Richard E. Morrison and Mrs. Margaret Hennessy Morrison Mrs. Roberta L. Portegello and Mr. Michael Portegello Grotto Society $1,000 - $1,999 Mr. Joseph B. Blumenauer Mr. Joseph W. Burden III and Donna L. Burden, Esq. Mrs. Paula F. Donahue and Mr. Brian D. Donahue Mr. James J. Fien and Mrs. Christine M. Fien Mr. and Mrs. William J. Hanvey Mr. and Mrs. C. Krotje Mr. Kevin R. Van Norstrand and Mrs. Hilary I. Van Norstrand Merton’s Heart Club $500 - $999 Mr. and Mrs. Michael R. Collura Mr. and Mrs. John L. D'Angelo Mr. James R. Peluso and Mrs. Peggy A. Peluso Mrs. Maria T. PoczobuttJohanos and Dr. Andrew M. Johanos Mrs. Susan Romagnoli and Mr. Joseph J. Romagnoli Mr. Paul F. Scheib Dr. Carol A. Wittmeyer and Mr. Michael E. Wittmeyer 1985 ................................... La Verna Society $10,000 - $24,999 Mr. Christopher Kinslow and Mrs. Eileen M. Kinslow Mr. and Mrs. William Lawley Jr. Mr. Walter P. Montaigne Mr. Martin J. Stevens and Mrs. Mary Jean Stevens LTC Richard C. Trietley and Mrs. Michele Y. Trietley Greccio Society $5,000 - $9,999 Mr. and Mrs. Edward R. Weinberg Assisi Society $2,000 - $4,999 Sr. Margaret Carney, O.S.F., S.T.D. Mrs. Lynda M. Wilhelm and Dr. Robert Wilhelm Assisi Society $2,000 - $4,999 Theresa M. Bone, CPA and Mr. Thomas D. Bone Mr. Mark H. Edwards and Mrs. Colleen M. Edwards Mr. and Mrs. Stephen M. Louro Grotto Society $1,000 - $1,999 Anonymous (2) Mr. and Mrs. William T. Bradley Mr. and Mrs. Martin J. Cahill Mr. Kevin J. Curley and Pamela R. Curley, Esq. Mrs. Christine M. Fien and Mr. James J. Fien Mr. and Mrs. Douglas J. Healey Mr. Kevin G. Horey and Mrs. Karen A. Horey Mr. Jack A. Lorenz Dr. and Mrs. Andrew L. MacDonald Mr. Michael E. Styrcula Dr. Carl R. Szot and Mrs. Ann F. Szot Mr. David R. Yaun and Mrs. Julia M. Yaun Merton’s Heart Club $500 - $999 Mr. and Mrs. Mark R. Angelucci Mr. and Mrs. Peter J. Anzalone Mrs. Kerri A. Bamford and Mr. Mark S. Bamford Mr. and Mrs. Steven J. Cywilko Ms. Kathleen M. Diskin Dr. Chris E. Domes and Ms. Mary M. Domes Mr. James A. Healy Dr. and Mrs. Timothy K. Johnston Mr. Paul E. Kendall and Mrs. Eileen M. Kendall Mrs. Peggy A. Peluso and Mr. James R. Peluso Dr. Patricia A. Simon Mrs. Elizabeth A. Webb and Mr. James Webb 1986 ................................... La Verna Society $10,000 - $24,999 Mrs. Eileen M. Kinslow and Mr. Christopher Kinslow Greccio Society $5,000 - $9,999 Ms. Jean M. MacLeay and Capt. James D. Oliver III Grotto Society $1,000 - $1,999 Mrs. Judith M. Chiariello and Dr. Michael V. Chiariello Mr. Denis M. Farrell Dr. Charmagne A. Flanigan and Mr. Matthew Flanigan Mrs. Lisa C. Palvino and Mr. Mark L. Palvino Mr. John P. Santini and Mrs. Mary T. Santini Mrs. Ann F. Szot and Dr. Carl R. Szot Merton’s Heart Club $500 - $999 Mr. Mark S. Bamford and Mrs. Kerri A. Bamford Mr. Donald J. Blersch and Mrs. Heather Blersch Mr. Joseph G. Coffey Mr. and Mrs. Brian M. Conley Ms. Mary M. Domes and Dr. Chris E. Domes Mr. and Mrs. James J. Ducey Mrs. Dana M. Gaffney and Mr. Bruce Gaffney Mr. Mark J. Majka and Mrs. Allison A. Isley-Majka Mr. Christopher T. Morgan Mr. Michael R. Pauly and Mrs. Ann M. Pauly Mr. Michael W. Reinhardt and Ms. Germaine D. Reinhardt Mr. and Mrs. Gregory C. Sweeney 1987 ................................... Greccio Society $5,000 - $9,999 Mr. Paul J. Keller and Mrs. Patricia M. Keller Ms. Patricia A. Mallon Mr. and Mrs. Timothy Shanahan Assisi Society $2,000 - $4,999 Mr. James P. Meicke Jr. Mr. and Mrs. Walter J. Stubbs Grotto Society $1,000 - $1,999 Mr. Joseph M. Dumser and Mrs. Kelli A. Wirth Dumser Mr. Andrew D. Ireland and Mrs. Danielle L. Ireland Mrs. Mary T. Santini and Mr. John P. Santini Mrs. Julia M. Yaun and Mr. David R. Yaun Merton’s Heart Club $500 - $999 Mrs. Allison A. Isley-Majka and Mr. Mark J. Majka Mrs. Michele L. Maliwauki and Mr. David M. Maliwauki Mrs. Gina A. Mucke and John P. Mucke, CPA Mrs. Ann M. Pauly and Mr. Michael R. Pauly Ms. Germaine D. Reinhardt and Mr. Michael W. Reinhardt Mr. Michael E. Wittmeyer and Dr. Carol A. Wittmeyer 1988 ................................... Century Society $100,000 - $499,999 Mrs. Colette C. Dow and Mr. David Dow Greccio Society $5,000 - $9,999 Mr. and Mrs. Steven G. Barry Mrs. Michele Y. Trietley and LTC Richard C. Trietley Assisi Society $2,000 - $4,999 Mrs. Patricia A. Hamblen and Mr. D. Eric Hamblen Mr. and Mrs. Michael Magiera Grotto Society $1,000 - $1,999 Mr. and Mrs. Joseph P. Farrell Mr. and Mrs. Michael Fossaceca Mr. and Mrs. John P. Gracyalny Mr. Paul C. Hogan Merton’s Heart Club $500 - $999 Mr. and Mrs. John G. Berger Jr. Mrs. Heather Blersch and Mr. Donald J. Blersch Mr. and Mrs. Lee A. Kimball Mr. Steven G. Nash and Mrs. Julie P. Nash Roy J. Wullich II, CPA 1989 ................................... Greccio Society $5,000 - $9,999 Mrs. Patricia M. Keller and Mr. Paul J. Keller Assisi Society $2,000 - $4,999 Mr. Thomas L. Scanlan 1990 ................................... Greccio Society $5,000 - $9,999 Mr. and Mrs. Gregory Eckert Assisi Society $2,000 - $4,999 Mr. James J. Zaniello Grotto Society $1,000 - $1,999 Anonymous (1) Mr. Charles E. Makey III Ms. Mari L. Snyder Merton’s Heart Club $500 - $999 Mr. and Mrs. Thomas E. Dietz Ms. Lisa A. Hannahoe Mr. Richard D. Voci Jr. and Mrs. Kristin M. Voci 1991 ................................... La Verna Society $10,000 - $24,999 Ms. Patricia P. Brant Mr. Mark J. Lawley Greccio Society $5,000 - $9,999 Anonymous (1) Mr. Erik R. Addington and Ms. Rebecca Burrows Assisi Society $2,000 - $4,999 Mr. Michael R. Keilman and Mrs. Kristin M. Keilman Mr. and Mrs. Mark R. Murphy Grotto Society $1,000 - $1,999 Mrs. Judy L. Baumgartner and Mr. Kevin M. Baumgartner Merton’s Heart Club $500 - $999 Dr. Pauline W. Hoffmann Mrs. Julie P. Nash and Mr. Steven G. Nash Mr. and Mrs. Robert D. Raichel Mrs. Tracy M. Urquiaga and Mr. Carlos A. Urquiaga Mrs. Kristin M. Voci and Mr. Richard D. Voci Jr. 1992 ................................... La Verna Society $10,000 - $24,999 Mr. and Mrs. Michael R. Lawley Grotto Society $1,000 - $1,999 Dr. Stephen Michael Horan and Mrs. Connie Horan Michael T. Williams, CPA and Mrs. Lynn M. Williams Assisi Society $2,000 - $4,999 Mr. and Mrs. Michael R. Conroy Mr. John T. Farley Mrs. Kristin M. Keilman and Mr. Michael R. Keilman www.sbu.edu/donate ✝ indicates deceased members Young Alumni Grotto Society Anonymous (3) Kevin D. Bowers Jr. '05 Mr. Brian D. Cappellino '08 Michelle A. Cullen Mr. Thomas J. Cullen '00 and Ms. Michelle Hoffstaetter Cullen '00 Mr. Brendan T. Cullinane '03 Mr. Matthew P. Dabrowski '04 Mr. Christopher D. Ekimoff '08 Mr. Mark A. Evers '01 Mr. Matthew J. Fernandes '05 Ms. Jennifer E. Kane '03 Mr. Matthew A. Keenan '08 Mr. Sean P. Lynch '06 Mr. Andrew R. Mantilia '08 Mr. Brian P. McLaughlin '03 Mr. Alex J. Peck '06 Ms. Lindsay R. Pohlman '09 Mr. Nathan E. Shufran '04 Mr. Michael John Swope '07 Grotto Society $1,000 - $1,999 Mr. Paul S. Hartwick Jr. and Mrs. Deborah W. Hartwick Mrs. Diane J. Scaturo and Mr. Christopher J. Scaturo Merton’s Heart Club $500 - $999 Mr. Matthew D. Gianiodis and Mrs. Eileen C. Gianiodis 1993 ................................... Assisi Society $2,000 - $4,999 Mrs. Colleen M. Edwards and Mr. Mark H. Edwards Grotto Society $1,000 - $1,999 Mr. and Mrs. Andrew Crossed Mr. Douglas A. Kris Prof. Terrence J. Moran Merton’s Heart Club $500 - $999 Mrs. Eileen C. Gianiodis and Mr. Matthew D. Gianiodis Mr. and Mrs. Craig M. Mooney Mr. William A. Paladino Mr. and Mrs. Michael A. Paparo 1994 ................................... Assisi Society $2,000 - $4,999 Mr. Stephen W. Nicholson Merton’s Heart Club $500 - $999 Mr. and Mrs. Christopher M. Leardini Mr. and Mrs. Michael D. Nugent 1995 ................................... Greccio Society $5,000 - $9,999 Mr. Christian A. Andreach and Mrs. Courtney Andreach Assisi Society $2,000 - $4,999 Mr. Robert T. Haenn Jr. and Mrs. Paola Tiesi Haenn Grotto Society $1,000 - $1,999 Mr. and Mrs. Michael C. Donlon Mr. and Mrs. William P. Kelly Merton’s Heart Club $500 - $999 Anonymous (1) Mrs. Katharine Farrell Bair and Mr. Vincent Bair Mr. Stephen G. Chabot and Mrs. Amy P. Chabot Mr. and Mrs. Stephen R. Marcell Mr. Donald E. Roberts 1996 ................................... Greccio Society $5,000 - $9,999 Mrs. Courtney Andreach and Mr. Christian A. Andreach Mr. John D. McKay Grotto Society $1,000 - $1,999 Ms. Lynn M. Fair Mrs. Pamela R. Pezzimenti and Mr. Dennis B. Pezzimenti Mr. Christopher R. Rodi and Ms. Jennifer M. Osbelt Merton’s Heart Club $500 - $999 Anonymous (1) Mr. Bryan J. de la Bruyere Prof. Tracy L. Schrems and David Schrems 1997 ................................... Greccio Society $5,000 - $9,999 Ms. Kristan K. McMahon Grotto Society $1,000 - $1,999 Mr. John H. Moore and Mrs. Susan M. Moore Ms. Jennifer M. Osbelt and Mr. Christopher R. Rodi 1998 ................................... Assisi Society $2,000 - $4,999 Mrs. Paola Tiesi Haenn and Mr. Robert T. Haenn Jr. Mr. Philip J. LaBella and Mrs. Julie D. LaBella Mr. Daniel J. Hennessey and Mrs. Jaclyn K. Hennessey Mrs. Jessica K. Kawski and Mr. Jeffrey Kawski Mr. Michael C. Killigrew Ms. Shelley McClarigan Mr. Charles W. Murphy and Mrs. Alicia P. Murphy Mrs. Samantha K. Nedzinski and Mr. Jason D. Nedzinski Mr. Mark L. O'Rourke Mr. and Mrs. Shareef S. Rabaa Mrs. Stacy A. Reeves-Bliek and Mr. William P. Bliek Mr. Jeffrey D. Stupp and Mrs. Deirdre M. Stupp Capt. Theologos A. Voudouris Mr. Richard P. Walbroel Merton’s Heart Club $500 - $999 Mrs. Nora A. Dooley and Dr. Patrick K. Dooley Mr. Brendan W. McDaniels 1999 ................................... Assisi Society $2,000 - $4,999 Ms. Susanna B. Stitt and Mr. James M. Stitt Grotto Society $1,000 - $1,999 Anonymous (1) Ms. Danielle C. Burt Mrs. Susan M. Moore and Mr. John H. Moore Mr. and Mrs. Matthew R. Robertson Mr. and Mrs. Michael T. Wyse Merton’s Heart Club $500 - $999 Mr. Matthew J. Jwayad YOUNG ALUMNI 2000 Grotto Society $1,000 - $1,999 Mr. Thomas J. Cullen and Ms. Michelle Hoffstaetter Cullen Merton’s Heart Club $500 - $999 Anonymous (1) Enchanted Mountain Club $250 - $499 Mr. Paul J. Battaglia and Mrs. Jennifer Davie Battaglia Mrs. Hilary J. Schuler Cabodi and Mr. Chriss Cabodi Mr. John D. Gill Jr. Mr. Francis X. Greywitt III Mr. Nathan E. Herendeen Mr. Craig J. Maguire and Mrs. Diana M. Maguire Mr. Andrew M. McElwee and Mrs. Erin L. McElwee Bell Tower Club $100 - $249 Mrs. Erin M. Butch Mr. and Mrs. Scott V. Ellman Mr. Shannon J. Ells and Mrs. Leah I. Ells Mr. Eoin Gregg Good Journey Club $1 - $99 Anonymous (2) Mr. and Mrs. Christopher Alexander Ms. Margaret E. Bohall Mr. Michael J. Carolla and Ms. Jennifer Capaldi Carolla Mr. Christopher J. Devlin Mrs. Kathryn A. Elvin and Mr. David M. Elvin Ms. Jacquelyn R. Schutz Filkins Maj. Mark P. Frank and Mrs. Kristin Frank Mrs. April M. Guenther and Mr. Kurt E. Guenther Mr. Ryan M. Hoffnagle Mr. Eric C. Hund Ms. Candace B. Kaiser Mr. Mark D. Kimmel Mrs. Amanda S. Kulesza and Mr. Jeffrey M. Kulesza Mr. Sean M. Mulkeen and Mrs. Annemarie L. Mulkeen Mr. Mark A. Nickerson Mr. Tadge O'Brien Ms. Monica M. Parikh Mr. Justin P. Roman Mrs. Molly M. Ruddock and Mr. Elton A. Ruddock Ms. Patricia A. Scott Mr. and Mrs. Brian M. Sigritz Mrs. Holly J. Snyder and Mr. Paul S. Snyder Mr. Timothy M. Tiernan Mrs. Erin E. Wargula and Mr. Edward J. Wargula Mr. Daniel J. Winkler and Mrs. Katherine Winkler Mr. Eric R. Wischman and Mrs. Jacqueline M. Wischman Mr. Jason M. Yates and Mrs. Elizabeth Yates 2001 ................................... Greccio Society $5,000 - $9,999 Mr. Mark A. Evers June 1, 2009-May 31, 2010 45 Alumni 1990-2001 Mrs. Maureen A. O'Connor and Mr. and Mrs. George R. Falcon Eugene M. O'Connor, Esq. Mr. Fred R. James and Mrs. Lisa Col. and Mrs. Stephen C. James Schrader Prof. and Mrs. Michael Kasperski Grotto Society Mrs. Mary G. Lewandowski $1,000 - $1,999 and Mr. Paul Lewandowski Mr. Carl D. Berman Dr. John W. Martin III Mrs. Katherine H. McDermott John P. Mucke, CPA and and Mr. Brian D. McDermott Mrs. Gina A. Mucke Mr. and Mrs. James C. Ryan Mrs. Kathleen M. Kennon and Mr. Timothy F. Kennon Merton’s Heart Club Mrs. Cynthia Sinesiou and $500 - $999 Professor Craig C. Sinesiou Stephanie M. Dollinger, Ph.D. Mrs. Ruth A. Smith and Mr. and Mr. Stephen J. Dollinger Robert A. Smith Mr. and Mrs. Timothy R. Mr. and Mrs. Michael E. Wager Flaherty LTC and Mrs. Sean Linehan 1984 ................................... 1983 ................................... La Verna Society $10,000 - $24,999 Ms. Valerie A. Heeter 44 B O N AV E N T U R E HONOR ROLL OF DONORS Alumni 1982-1989 HONOR ROLL OF DONORS Grotto Society $1,000 - $1,999 Mrs. Connie Horan and Dr. Stephen Michael Horan Enchanted Mountain Club $250 - $499 Capt. Thomas J. Burke Mr. Scott E. Flaherty Mrs. Amy C. Lehaney and Mr. Christopher L. Lehaney Ms. Elizabeth L. Years Stevens and Mr. Matthew J. Stevens Mr. Nicholas M. Theodorakos Alumni 2001-2008 2002 ................................... Enchanted Mountain Club $250 - $499 Mr. and Mrs. Patrick M. Dailey Mr. William J. Gabler Sr. Mr. James P. Hondorf Mr. Matthew J. Stevens and Ms. Elizabeth L. Years Stevens Bell Tower Club $100 - $249 Ms. Heather L. Ahern Mr. James Banko Mr. Timothy C. Ferraro and Ms. Anne R. Goodrich Ferraro Mr. and Mrs. Michael S. Hoffman 46 Good Journey Club $1 - $99 Mrs. Staci L. Cramer and Mr. Paul Cramer Jr. Mrs. Kristin Frank and Maj. Mark P. Frank Mr. Michael S. Goudreau Ms. Melissa M. Grover and Mr. Eric Grover Mr. Adam Jester Mrs. Crystal Jewell and Dr. Jeremy Jewell Mr. Kevin W. Logan Miss Katie Lynch Ms. Megan E. Lynch Ms. Linda J. Manross Mr. William P. Maroney and Mrs. Salvatrice C. Maroney Ms. Tara M. McCormick Ms. Angela Mirarchi Mrs. Annemarie L. Mulkeen and Mr. Sean M. Mulkeen Ms. Brigid Mullen Mrs. Melissa Pietricola and Mr. David C. Pietricola Mr. Joseph A. Rizzo Mr. Elton A. Ruddock and Mrs. Molly M. Ruddock Mrs. Shannon Dean Steinwandel and Mr. Justin Steinwandel Mrs. Kathryn H. Thies and Mr. Marcus Thies Mr. Robert W. Westin and Mrs. Jamie L. Westin Ms. Megan P. Williams Mr. Jonathan R. Wright 2003 ................................... Grotto Society $1,000 - $1,999 Mr. Brendan T. Cullinane Merton’s Heart Club $500 - $999 Ms. Jennifer E. Kane Mr. Brian P. McLaughlin Mr. and Mrs. Terry Palmer Bell Tower Club $100 - $249 Ms. CiaraGrace Donley Mr. Edward J. Hayes Mr. and Mrs. Matthew G. Kahm Mrs. Susanne M. Morton and Mr. Gary O. Morton Ms. Valerie A. Muka Ms. Stacy Monaghan Mrs. Patricia L. Shumway and Mr. Elden H. Shumway Mr. and Mrs. Marc A. Vachon Good Journey Club $1 - $99 Mr. Kenneth A. Capperell Ms. Jennifer Capaldi Carolla and Mr. Michael J. Carolla Mr. Michael C. Curran Mr. Matthew J. Deapo Ms. Catherine G. Errington Mr. John W. Farrell Ms. Elizabeth F. Homan Mr. Sean M. McGarry and Mrs. Angela R. McGarry Ms. Meghan L. McGlone Ms. Leslie A. Morey Ms. Andrea M. Race Mr. and Mrs. Matthew D. Saeli Mrs. Autumn M. Scanlon and Mr. Douglas T. Scanlon Ms. Catherine R. Williams 2004 ................................... Century Society $100,000 - $499,999 Ms. Laurie A. Branch Grotto Society $1,000 - $1,999 Mr. Matthew P. Dabrowski Mr. Nathan E. Shufran Bell Tower Club $100 - $249 Anonymous (1) Mr. and Mrs. Michael Bysiek Mr. Gerard P. Cafaro Mr. Timothy B. Cullen Mrs. Leah I. Ells and Mr. Shannon J. Ells Capt. Michael M. Frank and Ms. Jane E. Keenan Frank Mr. Anthony J. Marullo Mr. Matthew J. Minichelli Mrs. Carri A. Prue and Mr. Edgar A. Prue Ms. Kathleen D.L. Smith Ms. Emily A. Zaleski and Mr. Joel Zaleski Good Journey Club $1 - $99 Mr. Daniel J. Arcangeli Mr. Robert D. Bell Mr. Kyle R. Benson Ms. Elizabeth M. Biro Mr. Andrew W. Bouskill Ms. Heather A. Grasso Ms. Carolyn E. Houserman Sr. Ann Kenyon Capt. Colby K. Krug Mrs. Angela R. McGarry and Mr. Sean M. McGarry Ms. Marie J. Ober Ms. Linda M. O'Donnell Mrs. Marissa G. Olles and Mr. Patrick Olles Mr. Gregory E. Osier Mr. Daniel J. Rust Mr. Douglas T. Scanlon and Mrs. Autumn M. Scanlon Ms. Colleen E. Stoneham Mrs. Jamie L. Westin and Mr. Robert W. Westin Ms. Jennifer J. Wolf and Mr. Scott Wolf Mrs. Cara M. Young and Mr. James Young 2005 ................................... Assisi Society $2,000 - $4,999 Paula J. Scraba, Ph.D. Grotto Society $1,000 - $1,999 Ms. Anna E. Button Mr. Kert E. King Merton’s Heart Club $500 - $999 Ms. Kathleen E. Curran Enchanted Mountain Club $250 - $499 Anonymous (1) Kevin D. Bowers Jr. Mr. Matthew J. Fernandes Bell Tower Club $100 - $249 Mr. Sean K. Cullinane Mr. Stephon P. Johnson Mrs. Kendra L. Kistner and Mr. William A. Kistner Mr. Kyle C. Renner Mr. Christopher A. Zimmer Mrs. Karen L. Hill and Mr. Timothy H. Hill Ms. Mary K. Kallenbach Ms. Rachel C. Massimi Mr. Patrick J. Schmitt Ms. Jane L. Spaulding Mrs. Shannon M. Wolf and Mr. David Wolf 2007 ................................... Enchanted Mountain Club $250 - $499 Mr. Michael John Swope Bell Tower Club $100 - $249 Mr. Peter N. Cerretani Mr. Brendan Karam Mr. Craig William Montanye Mr. Michael David Pochily Mr. Andrew Shulha Good Journey Club $1 - $99 Mr. Zachary Collin Michael Beach Mr. Daniel Breheny Mr. Glen E. Busch II Ms. Claire Elizabeth Collins Mr. Matthew Cullinane Mr. Joseph M. Davey Mr. Matthew J. Horton and Ms. Denise A. Moran Horton Mr. Robert J. Miranda Mr. Ryan H. Smith Good Journey Club $1 - $99 Meghan P. Bonagura Ms. Erin E. Collins Jonathan A. Gonzalez Mr. Andrew J. Kneller and Mrs. Sarah A. Kneller Mr. Gregory C. Mahns Ian P. McBride Mr. Jon M. Pawlowski William J. Plants II Mrs. Deborah L. Post and Mr. Ronald F. Post Mr. Mark E. Rizzolo and Mrs. Sarah A. Rizzolo Ms. Tera L. White Ms. Laurie A. Ziolkowski 2008 ................................... Merton’s Heart Club $500 - $999 Mr. Matthew A. Keenan 2006 ................................... Enchanted Mountain Club $250 - $499 Mr. Sean P. Lynch Mr. Alex J. Peck Bell Tower Club $100 - $249 Ms. Jennifer C. Ackers Ms. Angela M. Colomaio Mr. Gregory A. Green Bell Tower Club $100 - $249 Mr. Michal Bogacki Kristin L. Brunetto Mr. Jonathan R. Georger Jennifer L. Liberti Sean M. Mullen Mr. Alan C. Riddle Mr. Eric J. Sesta Karyn E. Wolf Good Journey Club $1 - $99 Anonymous (2) Mr. Alex M. Bauer Ms. Kathleen A. Cullinane Ms. Kristen N. Deane Mr. Joseph L. DiPerna Ms. Kathleen M. Ellis Ms. Ashley N. English Ms. Mallory J. Flynn Ms. Rachelle M. Hoeflschweiger Ms. Bridget C. Hurley Ms. Anneli F. Johnson Ms. Diana J. Keller Mr. Ryan M. Marchiori Ms. Rachel S. O`Donnell Mr. Kyle D. Pasi Ms. Meagan M. Saile Mr. Casey S. Schillinger Good Journey Club $1 - $99 Ms. Kathleen E. Cannon Mr. Joseph Enoch Mr. Ryan Fernandez Ms. Kara L. Fleet Mr. Jeremie B. Giacoia Mr. Ryan C. Gimlin Ms. Danielle Grobmyer Enchanted Mountain Club $250 - $499 Mr. Brian D. Cappellino Mr. Christopher D. Ekimoff Mr. Andrew R. Mantilia www.sbu.edu/donate 2009 ................................... Enchanted Mountain Club $250 - $499 Anonymous (1) Ms. Lindsay R. Pohlman Bell Tower Club $100 - $249 Ms. Emily F. Dillon Mr. Brendan D. Keating Ms. Rachel A. Maisto Mr. and Mrs. Norman M. Strotman Mr. Samuel S. Thomeier Good Journey Club $1 - $99 Anonymous (1) Mr. Joseph A. Anderson Mr. Joseph A. Aquino Mr. Michael M. Crosby Mr. Connor J. Daugherty Mr. Mark J. Larry Ms. Laura A. L`Esperance Mr. Michael T. Licata Mr. Craig R. Lorei Mr. John J. McGrath Ms. Amber D. Pietrobono Ms. Natalie M. Pronio Ms. Kelly A. Rzepka Mr. Robert A. Sonnenberger 2010 ................................... Bell Tower Club $100 - $249 Ms. Kaitlynn Alico Good Journey Club $1 - $99 Mr. Daniel J. Cappellino Mr. Andrew P. Fretthold FRIENDS AND PARENTS Millennium Society $1,000,000 and Above Anonymous (1) Century Society $100,000 - $499,999 Mr. and Mrs. Louis A. Magnano, LL.D. '97 Mr. and Mrs. Louis Michel Mrs. Allan D. Ramming Heritage Society $50,000 - $99,999 Anonymous (1) La Verna Society $10,000 - $24,999 Mr. and Mrs. Todd F. Best Mr. Daniel R. Brooks Mr. and Mrs. Michael W. Donnelly Mr. and Mrs. Donald J. Herdrich Sr. Mr. John E. Hull Fr. Fred A. Link, O.F.M. Miss Margaret Mastronardi ✝ indicates deceased members Mr. and Mrs. Christopher D. Ross Mr. and Mrs. Vincent R. Volpe Jr. Greccio Society $5,000 - $9,999 Dr. and Mrs. Douglas Cashing Mr. Timothy J. Finan Mr. R. Lee Hite Mr. Richard D. McKissock Rev. John F. O'Connor, O.F.M. Mr. and Mrs. Ian O'Malley Fr. Kenneth P. Paulli, O.F.M., Ed.D. Mr. and Mrs. James R. Raftis Mr. and Mrs. James E. Stitt Assisi Society $2,000 - $4,999 Anonymous (1) Ms. Lana D. Benatovich and Dr. Howard Benatovich Mrs. Carmela Bonanno Ms. Kim M. Brown Mr. and Mrs. James V. Corcoran Mr. and Mrs. Raymond F. Cormier Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Dwyer Maj. (Ret.) James C. Hayes Ms. Marion T. Higgins Mr. Jerome Kerkman Mrs. Kathryn H. Collett Lauterbach Mrs. Toni A. Litzinger Mr. Kevin Mead Mr. and Mrs. John P. Mulcahy Mrs. Mary Anne Palermo Mr. and Mrs. Robert Peraza Mr. and Mrs. Robert Prizel Dr. and Mrs. Richard Simpson Dr. Emily Sinsabaugh Dr. and Mrs. Paul W. Wood Mr. Daniel Yankelovich, LL.D. and Ms. Barbara Lee Mr. and Mrs. John Keating Mr. Allen L. Knowles III Mr. Louis B. Lucco Mr. Harry Manchester Mr. and Mrs. Arnold McHone Mr. and Mrs. Robert J. McKay Mr. Michael Mercier Mr. Nathan M. O'Lay Ms. Marilou Perie Dr. Jeffrey Peterson and Prof. Laura J. Peterson Mr. Craig B. Polson Mr. and Mrs. Daniel Schaaf Mr. and Mrs. Jon A. Schaumberg Mr. William Shanahan Ms. Melanie Spinella Mr. Gary Squires Dr. and Mrs. Donald J. Swanz Mr. and Mrs. Matthew J. Tornambe Mr. and Mrs. Stephen P. Watson Mr. Donald E. Will Dr. Joseph E. Zimmer and Professor Kayla Zimmer Merton’s Heart Club $500 - $999 Anonymous (3) Mr. and Mrs. Robert Angelucci Mr. and Mrs. Richard Atkinson Mr. and Mrs. Tyler Bach Mr. and Mrs. Albert J. Bennett Mr. Jay Birnbaum Mr. C. Kevin Brayer Mr. John P. Briggs Ms. Margaret T. Bryner Mr. Mark Chase Mr. Greg Chiapuso Mr. and Mrs. R. Kerry Clark, LL.D. '06 Mr. John F. Colligan Ms. Jean Comber Mr. and Mrs. Philip Craven Mr. and Mrs. Paul De Rosa Mr. and Mrs. Jack Dunn Mr. and Mrs. Lance Eastman Grotto Society Ms. Katie Folden $1,000 - $1,999 Mrs. Helen Goldman Anonymous (2) Ms. Eleanor H. Green Dr. Abdal S. Alwan and Mr. and Mrs. Kevin A. Harnisch Dr. Samera Alwan Ms. Rosemary Harris Mr. John J. Ash Mr. Rob C. Hegge Mr. Nicholas J. Ash Mr. and Mrs. Richard M. Mr. and Mrs. R. Don Benson Heidrick Mr. and Mrs. Robert D. Benson Mr. Frank H. Higgins Ms. Kathy Bloomfield Mr. Dennis Jones Dr. and Mrs. Edward M. Ms. Melody Jones Boyczuk Mr. and Mrs. John P. Junker Ms. Linda A. Brown Mr. and Mrs. David Kepler Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Drs. Zahid and Durriya Buffamante Khairullah Mrs. Edward J. Butler Mr. Michael A. Kotz and Mr. John H. Clement Dr. Kim M. Kotz Dr. and Mrs. Dominic Colarusso Mr. and Mrs. Nicholas DiCerbo Mr. Mark Kratts Mr. and Mrs. Richard Mrs. Frances A. Evers Langborgh Mr. and Mrs. Richard P. Fehl Mr. and Mrs. Jack Lepetich Dr. and Mrs. Joseph M. Mr. and Mrs. O. B. Lienau Ghassibi Ms. Jacqueline Lottermoser Dr. Ellen E. Grant Mr. and Mrs. Joseph E. Higgins Mrs. Josephine L. Lowe Mr. and Mrs. James C. Holihan Mr. Norman J. Marshall Ms. Brenda McGee Mr. and Mrs. Rakesh Mehta Ms. Justina Monaghan Mr. Leo J. Murphy Jr. Mr. and Mrs. Robert J. Murphy Mr. and Mrs. N. W. O'Connell Mr. Timothy P. O'Connell Mr. Raymond Padlo Mr. Neil J. Peraza Mr. Ronald Peters Mr. and Mrs. Stanley Pingelski Mr. and Mrs. Ron Pluta Ms. Dorothy K. Pohlman Mr. and Mrs. David Prince Mr. Trevor W. Prout Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Questa Mr. and Mrs. Herbert Rodriguez Jr. Mr. and Mrs. William H. Rodriguez Mr. Thomas J. Roth Dr. and Mrs. James M. Scarpino Jr. Mr. and Mrs. Michael Schmid Mr. and Mrs. Thomas P. Shea Mr. and Mrs. John Sheehan Jr. Dr. and Mrs. Daniel L. Spada Dr. and Mrs. Christopher Stanley Mr. and Mrs. Larry D. Sudbrook Mr. and Mrs. Peter W. Taylor Ms. Mary E. Vara Dr. Dennis M. Wilkins ORGANIZATIONS Fidelity Society $500,000 - $999,999 United States Department of Education Fidelity Charitable Gift Fund Holy Name Province IBM Corporation Jacobus-Iacobucci Foundation The Marra Family Fund NYS Council on the Arts PricewaterhouseCoopers Charitable Foundation, Inc. PricewaterhouseCoopers Foundation, LLP The Reginald A. & Elizabeth S. Lenna Foundation, Inc. La Verna Society $10,000 - $24,999 Amgen Foundation Andrew W. Mellon Foundation The Charles A. Mastronardi Foundation Donald F. and Maxine B. Davison Foundation Dresser-Rand Company English Speaking Conference Order of Friars Minor Ernst & Young Foundation General Electric Foundation Herdrich Charitable Trust Lawley Service Insurance Leo Burnett USA Olean City School District OppenheimerFunds Legacy Program PNC Financial Services Group, Inc. The Procter & Gamble Fund The Providence Fund St. John the Baptist Province United Way of Greater Rochester University of Pittsburgh at Bradford Verizon Foundation Century Society $100,000 - $499,999 The Capital Trust Company of Delaware Holy Name Province Franciscan Friars Institute for Training and Development The John R. Oishei Foundation McQuade Family Fund New York State Department of Transportation The Schwab Fund for Charitable Giving Greccio Society $5,000 - $9,999 Active Network Bank of America Foundation Bristol-Myers Squibb Foundation, Inc. Corning Incorporated Deloitte Foundation Elsie & Joseph Beck Foundation Erie County Exxon Mobil Education Foundation Franciscan Sisters of Allegany Greatbatch, Inc. The Hite Co. Heritage Society International Council for $50,000 - $99,999 Canadian Studies Academy of American KPMG Foundation, LLP Franciscan History New York Council for the Galasso Foundation Humanities Holy Name Province FMU Raymond and Maureen Dee National Science Foundation Foundation Realize Your Dream Foundation Rochester Area Community Foundation San Damiano Society St. Francis Parish/Center $25,000 - $49,999 The Community Foundation for State Farm Companies Foundation Greater New Haven Vanguard Charitable Corning Incorporated Endowment Program Foundation Wells Fargo Foundation Cutco Foundation, Inc. June 1, 2009-May 31, 2010 47 Organizations Good Journey Club $1 - $99 Anonymous (1) Mrs. Angela M. Barrett Mr. Matthew C. Blakley Ms. Kimberly A. Brucz Mr. Edward Bysiek Mr. Jason T. D'Agostino Ms. Leah Doherty Ms. Jessica L. Jock Mr. Jeffrey M. Kulesza and Mrs. Amanda S. Kulesza Ms. Anne M. Bauer Lyons Ms. Ann M. Marcellin Mr. David C. Pietricola and Mrs. Melissa Pietricola Mr. John D. Pohlman Jr. Mr. David P. Rust Mrs. Jenna A. Schettino and Mr. Ray Schettino Ms. Kathryn T. Steadman Ms. Carolyn E. Storms Mr. Daniel L. Tolomay and Mrs. Kimberly A. Tolomay Mrs. Joan LoPresti and Mr. David LoPresti Mr. Paul A. O'Dowd Mr. Matthew Pochily Mr. Joseph Sahlen Friends & Parents Bell Tower Club $100 - $249 Anonymous (1) Mr. William P. Bliek and Mrs. Stacy A. Reeves-Bliek Ms. Kathleen E. Cunningham Mr. Patrick M. Keenan Mr. Jeffery G. Kostusiak and Ms. Christine Beichner Mr. Christopher J. Pascuzzi Mr. Charles H. Riley III Mr. and Mrs. Steven Witkowski B O N AV E N T U R E HONOR ROLL OF DONORS B O N AV E N T U R E HONOR ROLL OF DONORS B O N AV E N T U R E Estates Gifts-in-kind 48 Sisters of St. Francis of Philadelphia Sisters of St. Francis of the Neumann Communities St. Bonaventure Church St. Louis Catholic Church St. Mary of the Angels Church St. Mary's Parish Swan Group, Inc. Travers Collins & Company Walt Disney Company Foundation Woods Oviatt Gilman LLP Xerox Foundation XL Foundation Ltd. Merton’s Heart Club $500 - $999 Anonymous (2) Abrasive-Tool Corp. ADP Foundation American International Group Ancient Order of Hibernians AXA Foundation BFS Machine Shop Campbell Soup Foundation Capital One Capstar Realty Central New York Community Foundation CIC Group, LLC Community Bank, N.A. Dana Corporation Foundation Databranch, Inc. Dun & Bradstreet Corporation Foundation Elsie P. and Lucius B. McCowan Private Charitable Foundation Fibertech Networks, LLC First Baptist Church of Olean Greater Olean Association of Churches Greg Stayer Electric, Inc. Harris Bank Foundation ING Foundation Jerry and Sharon Hanley Foundation Johnson & Johnson Family of Companies Jones Realty Group JP Morgan Chase The Keilman Family Foundation Kinley Corporation Kiplinger Foundation Lady Raiders Tournament Leadership Coaching, Inc. Marsh & McLennan Companies, Inc. Mason Selkowitz McDermott, Inc. Metco Industries, Inc. New York Life Foundation The New York Times Company Foundation The Northern Trust Company Northtown Podiatry Group Pelco Advisors, LLC R. Stephen Ross Associates, Inc. Raytheon Company St. Bernadette RC Church Saints Peter and Paul Church Securian Financial Group, Inc. Sidney Stern Memorial Trust Southern Tier Realty Co., Inc. Swiss Re America Corporation Travelers Foundation WellPoint Foundation ESTATES Century Society $100,000 - $499,999 Estate of Helen J. Baran ✝ Estate of Msgr. Cyril I. Trevett ✝ Heritage Society $50,000 - $99,999 Estate of Inez Koop ✝ Estate of Joseph Downey ✝ Estate of Josephine B. Truncellito ✝ La Verna Society $10,000 - $24,999 Estate of Thomas and Mary Ann Cozzo ✝ Greccio Society $5,000 - $9,999 Estate of Mary N. Higgins ✝ Merton’s Heart Club $500 - $999 Estate of Salvatore Saraceno ✝ GIFT-IN-KIND DONORS 501 Cafe & Pizzeria 501 Cafe & Pizzeria Carmike Cinemas VIII Mr. and Mrs. George E. Carr '66 Chautauqua Institution Mr. and Mrs. Daniel F. Collins '73 Cutco Corporation Days Hotel Duggan & Duggan General Contractors Mr. and Mrs. Daniel J. Herbeck '78 IBM Mr. and Mrs. Louis Michel Mio Gelato E Cafe Mr. and Mrs. John P. Mulcahy Mr. and Mrs. Carl P. Paladino '68 Nature's Path Ponderosa St. Bonaventure University Bookstore Mr. John P. Sequerth '77 Tops Market #204 Rev. James T. Vacco O.F.M. '76 Wendy's Restaurant Dr. Dennis M. Wilkins GIFTS IN HONOR OF Shane Abrams ‘10 Peter Aldridge ‘09 Margaret M. Amend ‘10 Gregory J. Anslow ‘10 Tyler Bellamy ‘10 Allison Bobinski ‘10 Carmela Bonanno Matthew Butch Jeffrey Butler ‘10 Amanda Ciavarri ‘10 Class of 1965 The Clavin Boys and Girls of St. Bonaventure Jennifer Crawford ‘09 Terry Cretekos ‘10 Amelia Diamond ‘10 Robert Donnelly ‘91 Daniel Eisemann ‘10 Elizabeth Erdle ‘10 Faculty Professor Al Finocchio Jessica Fisher ‘10 Stephen Fitzpatrick ‘10 William C. Foster ‘62 Sarah Ann Gagnon ‘10 Robert Gohn ‘10 Brendan Gosson ‘10 Janet Gunderson Ingram ‘10 Ruth A. Harper ‘10 Peter Hartnett ‘10 Kaitlyn Heller ‘09 James Hess ‘10 Professor Rod Hughes Joseph W. Hull ‘39 Joshua Inzana ‘10 Christina Jackson ‘10 Timothy F. Keating ‘10 Brian Kelvie ‘10 Justin Klumpp ‘10 Colleen Knauf Catherine A. Kula ‘08 Erick and Marianne Laine ‘68 John A. Lapomardo ‘10 Clint Lienau ‘10 Brittany Ann Lollier ‘10 Rachel Marie Maisto ‘09 Lindsey Ann Marrano ‘10 Kristen C. Marsicovetere ‘10 Philip and Rose Abbott Masi Joshua W. Mattern ‘10 Kevin and Judy McInerney ‘68 Taylor Ann Merena ‘10 Christopher L. Michel ‘08 Elizabeth Mohun ‘10 Michelle L. Monnat ‘10 James Moor Alexa Kyle Orlando ‘10 Katie Ormsbee ‘10 Tajudeen Oshodi ‘13 Nathan James Peck ‘10 Katie Peek ‘10 Christine Perez-O'Rourke ‘10 Phil Pia Brianne Rehac ‘10 Laura Elizabeth Reilly ‘10 Alan C. Riddle ‘06 Kenneth Riegel Emma M. Riley ‘10 www.sbu.edu/donate GIFTS IN HONOR OF Elizabeth Roche and Tyler Griffin Patrick Roth ‘92 Ashley Schinzing ‘10 Joseph Scotto ‘09 Ashish Shah ‘10 Kathleen Shank ‘81 Robert and Betsy Shields Jeffrey Shipman ‘08 David Sine ‘10 Kara Small ‘10 Allison Marie Smith ‘10 Cameron Smith ‘10 Ken Sofio ‘91 Charlie Specht ‘10 Kelly Squilla ‘10 Robert Taggart ‘10 Mike Tardugno ‘73 Josh Thomas ‘10 Brian Walsh ‘10 GIFTS IN MEMORY OF Phil Weise ‘08 Sandra Wendela ‘10 Justine Marie Whalen ‘10 Benjamin Yeager ‘10 Thomas D. Zaikos ‘10 Joseph Andalora ‘70 Kenneth Anderson Marian Artman Fr. Evan Bank, O.F.M. ‘47 Paul M. Branch Randy Broomfield '91 Brian Bussell ‘76 Christine and Kathleen Class of '57 deceased members Ilda Cocolicchio Richard M. Davis '60 William Dean John Doggett ‘49 William Dowd ‘72 Fr. Eric Doyle, O.F.M. Arlean Elliot Joseph M. Engl ‘86 John F. Evers '53 Professor Austin Finan Dolores M. Finch ‘59 Louis G. Fuchs, Jr. '51 Ed Godlewski '78 John Goepfert '67 James J. Goldman '57 Donald L. Hall '56 Richard and Janet Hanifin Col. John M. Hart ‘41 Jim and Polly Hayes ‘37 James Higgins ‘49 William F. Hogan Ryan O. Hughes Fr. Dan Hurley, O.F.M. ‘40 Arlene M. James Catherine Jandoli Fr. Mychal Judge, O.F.M. '57 Ann C. Kelly Tinling ‘62 Fr. Jerome Kelly, O.F.M. ‘35 James Kiernan Dick Mancuso ‘60 Timothy Manning ‘85 Eileen C. Mawe William D. McGuinness Collin Merritt Seth Mitchell Lois Mominey Leo and Lonny Moss George Paglia Robert D. Peraza ‘94 Arthur F. Perry Walter Perry John M. Reddington '44 Maureen Shanahan Fr. David Sweeney, O.F.M. ‘45 Raymond Tubridy ‘54 Fr. Gervase White, O.F.M. ‘51 Seraphim Legacy Society Members Anonymous (30) Mr. Joseph W. Adams '52 ✝ Mr. Richard W. Adolf '35 ✝ Mr. F. Paul Adorno '74 Mrs. Anne M. Aicher John G. Aicher, Esq. '52 Mr. Van T. Albanese '63 Mr. Philip R. Alfano '71 Mrs. Ernestina M. Allegrette ✝ Mrs. Helen Amato Kevin A. Anderson, Esq. '52 ✝ Mr. and Mrs. James F. Andre '43 ✝ Mr. Jay Antosh '67 Mr. Joseph J. Antosh ✝ Mr. Philip P. Arnheiter ✝ Richard J. Attea, Esq. '58 Mr. Thomas R. Augello '75 Mr. Jerome E. Baier '45 ✝ Mrs. Mary C. Baier Mrs. Helen Baran ✝ Dr. James D. Barnhurst '43 ✝ Mr. Richard G. Barto '62 ✝ Msgr. Thomas J. Beasley '50 ✝ Mr. Michael J. Bedosky '64 ✝ Dr. Stephen J. Bedosky '29 ✝ and Mrs. Margaretta Bedosky ✝ Mr. William L. Bennett '50 Mr. Vincent T. Berger Jr. '65 ✝ Sr. Helen C. Berwind '54 Msgr. William E. Biebel Julie (Agban) Biehn '97, '98 and Christopher Biehn Dr. John F. Biter '60 Mrs. Linda A. Biter Mr. Maurice G. Bley ✝ Ms. Arlene R. Bordonaro ✝ Mr. Donald J. Borowiak '65 Mr. Terrance J. Bouley '57 ✝ Mr. Warren F. Bowhall '55 Mrs. Alice Boyer Dr. Charles C. Boyer '38 ✝ ✝ indicates deceased members The Seraphim Legacy Society was established in 1991 to recognize alumni, parents and friends who will continue to give to St. Bonaventure University through deferred gifts. Members of the Seraphim Legacy Society provide resources in perpetuity allowing students to receive an education grounded in the Franciscan tradition. Rev. James M. Boyle '53 ✝ Ms. Kathleen Brady '68 Mrs. Claire A. Branch '49 ✝ Mr. Paul M. Branch Cliff and Judy Braun '62 Mr. Timothy L. Brewer '59 Mrs. Alfarata White Brill ✝ Msgr. Anthony M. Brown '53 Mrs. Mary H. Brown ✝ Mrs. Donna Bruno Mr. Gregory T. Bruno '74 Dr. Robert J. Buckla '84 Mr. Richard J. Bugno '61 Mrs. Shelley A. Burgio '88 Mrs. Helen I. Burlingham ✝ Mr. John W. Bush Jr. Mr. George V. Butler '46 ✝ Ms. Maureen P. Butler '78 Mr. Frank E. Caffoe '50 ✝ Mr. and Mrs. Edward H. Cain '27 ✝ Rev. Arthur M. Calter '51 Rev. James N. Cammisa '47 Mr. David M. Cantwell '70 Mr. Brian N. Carey '89 Mr. Joseph E. Carney '67 Mr. George E. Carr '66 Mr. William G. Carr '51 Mr. Stephen P. Cartwright '36 ✝ Mr. Malcolm Cawley ✝ Rev. Joseph A. Ciaiola '43 ✝ Mr. Scott P. Cielewich '72 Mrs. Mary Helen Collins '80 Ms. Joanne M. Condon '80 Mr. Edwin R. Connors '51 ✝ Mrs. Jane Connors Jane M. Costello ✝ Mrs. Cara Ann Countermine-Myers '83 Mr. Robert D. Crowley '71 Mr. Thomas J. Cullen '00 and Ms. Michelle Hoffstaetter Cullen '00 Mr. Thomas C. Culligan '62 Mr. T. Joseph Daley Mr. Daniel F. Daly '61 Dr. William Davenport '67 Ms. Judith de Brazay Mr. and Mrs. Thomas F. DeBolski '50 Ms. Denise E. Dee '89 Mr. Raymond C. Dee '64 and Mrs. Maureen Dee Mrs. Gloria DeLisio ✝ Mr. Paul L. DeLisio '63 Mrs. Jackie DeMaria Joseph A. DeMaria, Esq. '79 Joseph G. DeMaria, Esq. '50 Mrs. Sandra M. DeMaria ✝ Dr. and Mrs. Walter P. Dember '52 Ms. Sandra J. Dennison '82 Dr. John H. Dessauer ✝ Mrs. Margaret Dessauer ✝ Mrs. Marie A. Diggins William J. Diggins, Esq. '47 ✝ Ms. Mary E. Dill ✝ Mr. Richard J. Dillon '70 Msgr. Salvatore R. DiLorenzo '32 ✝ Mr. Saverio F. DiLorenzo '42 ✝ Rev. Gilio L. DiPre '51 Helen M. Doane, Ph.D. '74 Ms. Elizabeth C. Dolan ✝ Dr. and Mrs. Chris Domes '85 Cmdr. Thomas E. Donelan '50 ✝ Ms. Mary A. Donnelly ✝ Msgr. D. L. Donohue '45 ✝ Mr. John F. Downes '35 ✝ Mrs. Margaret B. Downes ✝ Ms. Katharine M. Doyle ✝ Ms. Marilyn Harloff Drilling '83 Lt. Col. Thomas H. Drinkwater '70 Mrs. Mary C. Driscoll '79 Mr. Steven E. Driscoll Mrs. Ingamar M. Ducey '32 ✝ Mr. Michael J. Duffy '53 Mrs. Janet Dumser Mr. Ray C. Dumser '64 Rev. Richard B. Duncan ✝ Mrs. Bonnie G. Duran '69 Mr. Paul D. Duran '66 Mr. Joseph Dwaileebe Mr. Edmund D. Dwyer '36 ✝ Msgr. Paul J. Eberz '30 ✝ Mr. C. P. Edel ✝ Mrs. Lorraine Egan Mr. Richard T. Egan '56 Ms. Shannon E. Powell '78 Mr. James R. Engel '65 Mr. John H. Enos '69 Mrs. Ann T. McDonald ✝ Mr. Ernest J. Beaudoin ✝ Ms. Josephine W. McDevitt ✝ Mrs. Elizabeth S. Lenna Fairbank, LL.D. '01 Mr. Pat S. Farenga '52 Mr. George J. Farhart '54 Mrs. Alice Farina Mr. Frederick F. Farina Jr. '67 Mr. William M. Farley '50 ✝ Mr. John T. Feeley '74 Mrs. Wilma Feeley Dr. David P. Feller '73 Mr. Eugene R. Ferraro '53 Mr. John W. Fisher ✝ Mr. James E. Flynn '26 ✝ June 1, 2009-May 31, 2010 49 Seraphim Legacy Society Grotto Society $1,000 - $1,999 Anonymous (2) The 1093 Group, LLC The 2468 Group, Inc. The 8246 Group, Inc. The 9274 Group, Inc. Aetna Foundation Allegany Friends Allstate Foundation Beacon Management Corp. The Board, Inc. Cattaraugus Region Community Foundation Chamberlain D'Amanda Oppenheimer Greenfield, LLP Charity Begins At Home Chemmet, LLC Community Facilities, Inc. Conifer DANCOFFEE, INC. DBP Realty Deloitte & Touche Dow Jones Foundation Ellicott Development Company Empire Resource Recycling, Inc. EQT Foundation Excellus Health Plan, Inc. Five Star Bank Food Bank of Western New York Franciscan Mt. Retreat Gawronski Foundation Harold L. Wyman Foundation, Inc. Home Properties of New York HSBC Innovative Mechanical Systems, Inc. Jefferson-Utica Group, Inc. John Ash Cleaners, Inc. JP Group Kasperski Owen & Dinan CPAs, LLC KPMG, LLP Kraft Foods Lincoln Financial Group Foundation MassMutual Financial Group McGraw-Hill Foundation McKay Hardware Mohawk Group, Inc. National Fraternity Secular Franciscan Order-USA Nationwide Foundation The New York Community Trust N.Y.S. Oil Producers Association Niagara Group, L.P. Nicklas Insurance Agency, Inc. Order Minor Coventuals Otis Eastern Service, Inc. Paris Kirwin Associates, Inc. Pennsylvania Power & Light Co. Peterson Roofing Company, Inc. Raymond Family Foundation The Scholarship Foundation Secular Institute of Missionaries of Kingship of Christ In Memory Of Assisi Society $2,000 - $4,999 Alesco Advisors, LLC AllianceBernstein The Bank of New York Mellon Corporation Chautauqua Institution Chevron Community Foundation for Greater Buffalo Cutco Corporation Emergency Food and Shelter National Board Program First Presbyterian Church FM Global Follett Higher Education Group GannettMatch Government of Canada Grassini Family Charitable Foundation Hospital Sisters of the Third Order of St. Francis The International Hildreth Meiere Association, Inc. James A. Comstock Memorial Trust Jefferies & Company, Inc. Joan Hetzelt Hanifin Memorial Fund Key Bank NA The M&T Charitable Foundation Manning and Napier Advisors Mark Pesci, Inc. The Merck Company Foundation Merrill Lynch & Co. Foundation, Inc. MetLife Foundation National Grid New York State Higher Education Services Corporation Pepsico Foundation, Inc. The Perry Law Firm Primary Resources, Inc. Prizel's Pharmacy Professional Group Plans, Inc. Robert & Joan Dircks Foundation Rubery Advised Fund Schering-Plough Foundation Shell Oil Company Foundation St. Cyril & Methodius CYO St. Mary's Church St. Patrick - St. Anthony Church Union That Nothing Be Lost, Inc. United Way of Cattaraugus County, Inc. Unitrin, Inc. W.H. Greene Foundation Wabash College Wachovia Foundation Wal-Mart Stores, Inc. B O N AV E N T U R E HONOR ROLL OF DONORS In Honor Of HONOR ROLL OF DONORS B O N AV E N T U R E Seraphim Legacy Society 50 HONOR ROLL OF DONORS Msgr. James P. Foley '29 ✝ Mr. Paul Fordiani '84 Rev. William L. Franklin '30 ✝ Mr. Frederick W. Fuller III '65 Mrs. Jan Furey Mr. Lawrence M. Furey '83 Mr. Stephen M. Gadziala '79 Mr. Paul T. Gallagher '52 Mr. and Mrs. Edward J. Gallaher Ms. Mary Ann Ganey '61 Sr. Frances T. Gavin, O.S.F. '51 Mrs. Mary Gawronski Mr. Raymond W. Gawronski '55 Mrs. Barbara D. Geary '64 Mr. Bruce E. Geary '65 ✝ Mrs. Kristen A. Geiger '86 Michael J. Geiger, Esq. '86 Mr. Frank T. Gelsomino ✝ Mrs. Cynthia J. George Mr. Vincent L. George '67 Mr. Dante Paul Georgini '41 ✝ Mr. Clair G. Gerringer ✝ Mr. James M. Gersitz '60 Mr. James J. Gertner '88 Mr. David F. Giannuzzi '64 Mrs. Margaret Gildea Mrs. Mary D. Gilligan '33 Ann and Jim Gould '80 Mr. William J. Gray '61 ✝ Mrs. Robert Gregory Mrs. Nancy S. Griffith '78 Mrs. Imogene F. Haenn ✝ Mr. Michael A. Hahn '64 Mr. Joel E. Halloran '59 Mr. Mason Hammond, LL.D. ✝ Mr. Thomas C. Hand ✝ Mrs. Winnie Hand '69 ✝ Mr. Thomas J. Hanifin Mrs. Tullah Hanley ✝ Mrs. Elizabeth A. Boser Hanlon '65 Miss Marion Hannifan ✝ Mr. Richard L. Harrington '57 Col. John M. Hart '41 ✝ Mr. Allen J. Hasselman '55 Mr. Edward J. Hayes '03 Dr. James L. Hayes '37 ✝ Mrs. Pauline J. Hayes Msgr. James A. Healy '41 ✝ Dr. James M. Hearn '35 ✝ Miss Ethel F. Hehir ✝ Mr. Bill Hehir ✝ Mr. Richard J. Hennessy Jr. '50 ✝ Ms. Marion T. Higgins Mr. Albert J. Holczman '68 Ms. Cecile O. Holt ✝ Thomas and Beth Ann Hook Mr. Joseph R. Horka '56 Mrs. Catherine Hughes Rev. Donald R. Hughes '49 ✝ Mr. J. Eugene Hughes '49 ✝ Ms. Elizabeth J. Hughes Zimbler '83 Mrs. Harriett C. Hull Mr. Joseph W. Hull '39 Mr. James A. Igoe '34 ✝ Mr. William E. Jackman '37 ✝ Dr. Aldo F. Jacobus-Iacobucci '44 ✝ Ms. Jane Jacques Mrs. Catherine Jandoli Msgr. Anthony J. Jasinski '49 Mrs. Catherine K. Joyce ✝ Mr. Harry F. Joyce '35 ✝ Mrs. Maura Kaley Lt. Col. Peter M. Kaley '56 Col. Edward V. Karl '59 Mrs. Patricia Karl Mrs. Jane A. Keenan Mr. Kevin A. Keenan '82 Mr. Robert F. Keenan '74 Mr. James A. Kelley '55 Mrs. Judith C. Kelley Mr. Paul E. Kendall '85 Mr. F. Donald Kenney, LL.D. '41,'90 ✝ Thomas S. Kernan, Esq. ✝ Mr. William L. Kilcoin '19 ✝ Mrs. Inez E. Koop ✝ Mrs. Eleanor G. Kopec ✝ Msgr. Walter M. Krajewski '50 ✝ Mrs. Dorothy L. Kramer ✝ Mr. John A. Kreuz Sr. '55 Dr. Molly F. Kulesz-Martin '71 Rev. Aloysius G. Kuntz '43 ✝ Mrs. Ann F. Lanz ✝ Mr. John R. Lanz '50 Mrs. Lydia M. Lavin '85 Dr. Michael J. Lavin Mrs. Rosemary Lawley Mr. William J. Lawley Sr. '57 Mr. James H. Layton III '62 Susan Leahy, Esq. '86 Mr. Reginald A. Lenna, LL.D. '81✝ Mr. Vincent A. Letro '32 ✝ Ms. Sheila K. Linehan Rev. J. Robert Long '35 ✝ Rev. Robert J. Lord '56 Msgr. Dino J. Lorenzetti '53 Dr. John Loughlen ✝ Mr. Robert D. Lozina '60 Mr. Edmund L. MacDonald '52 Mrs. Ellen L. Mackenzie ✝ Mrs. Janet M. MacLeay '59 ✝ Dr. Ronald E. MacLeay '57 Mr. Louis A. Magnano, LL.D. '97 David C. Magnuson '78 and Lisa A. Magnuson Dr. Francis S. Mainzer '23 ✝ Mr. John E. Maloni '35 ✝ Mr. Dominic Manieri '40 ✝ Mrs. Patricia C. Manieri '44 ✝ Mr. Robert E. Mann '74 Mr. David F. Manning Mrs. Nancy Manning Mr. Charles B. Marquardt Sr. '57 Mr. and Mrs. Louis G. Marquardt '65 Dr. Justin Martin Jr. '57 Mr. Vincent C. Martin Jr. '69 Mr. Walter F. Martineau '48 Monica Gray Mattoli Mr. William McAndrews '29 ✝ Rev. Gerald G. McCabe '30 ✝ Rev. Joseph H. McCann '54 ✝ Mrs. Mary A. McClure Mr. Matthew G. McCollum '67 Mr. James W. McDonald '39 ✝ Mr. John R. McGinley Sr. ✝ John R. McGinley Jr., Esq. '65 Mr. J. Oliver McGonigle '66 Mr. Frank J. McGuire Mr. John P. McGuire Rev. Robert J. McKay '51 Mrs. Barbara Carr McKee ✝ Rev. Raymond D. McKiernan '52 ✝ Lt. Col. John J. McKinney '41 ✝ Mrs. Micheline A. McKinney Dr. J. Eugene McMahon '21 ✝ Dr. Edward P. McWilliams '40 ✝ Rev. Thomas J. Meehan '36 ✝ Msgr. Raymond O. Meier '32 ✝ Mr. Michael D. Meilach '57 Mr. John H. Meisch '58 Mrs. Katherene L. Meisch Hon. Ann T. Mikoll Theodore V. Mikoll, Esq. '51 ✝ Mrs. Anita Miller Rev. Francis N. Miller '33 ✝ Rev. Paul W. Miller '40 ✝ Mr. Richard H. Miller '51 ✝ Mrs. Joan Mitchell Major General John H. Mitchell '56 Msgr. Salvatore P. Mitchell '38 Mrs. Eileen Monaghan Mr. Gerard J. Monaghan '67 Mr. Wilfred K. Moran ✝ Mrs. Anna Morgan Mr. Terrence M. Morgan '68 Ms. Jacqueline M. Morris '71 Gabriella and Rocky Mountain Mr. Kenneth R. Murphy, CLU '51 Mrs. Barbara M. Murray '68 ✝ Mr. Edward R. Murray '68 Mr. John C. Murray '66 Mr. Anthony P. Mustapich '61 Mrs. Christine Mustapich Mrs. Genevieve Nagle ✝ Mrs. Anne Marie Natale-Howard '75 ✝ Mrs. Frances H. Nevins '32 ✝ Mr. William D. Nyahay '85 Mr. Edward J. O'Connor '78 Mrs. Nancy L. O'Connor Ms. Anne C. Ortelee '76 Mr. Francis L. Ostrom III '80 Carl P. Paladino, Esq. '68 Rev. Max Panczakiewicz '47 ✝ Mr. Neil J. Peraza Mrs. Lorraine M. Perry '83 Mr. Mark T. Perry '83 Dr. Jeffrey Peterson and Prof. Laura J. Peterson Mr. Mario J. Pirrello '52 Mr. Peter Pond ✝ Mrs. Deborah L. Post '05 Mr. Richard W. Psyk '65 Mr. Paul P. Purta '48 Mr. Leslie C. Quick III '75 Mr. John Reddington '44 ✝ Mr. John J. Regan '39 ✝ Mr. and Mrs. Robert J. Regan '55 Mr. David P. Resch '73 Raymond M. Ripple, Esq. '68 Mr. John A. Ritzenthaler '47 ✝ Mrs. Mary Ann Ritzenthaler Mr. Eugene Rojek '52 Rev. Mark S. Roueche '50 Mr. Daniel C. Ryan '61 Mr. Francis J. Ryan '41 ✝ Mr. Paul F. Ryan '28 ✝ Mr. Raymond T. Ryan, LL.D. '72 ✝ Ms. Jeanne A. Sabrack '71 Mr. Salvatore Saraceno ✝ Mr. John T. Sawyers '63 Dr. Charles E. Schifley '42 Mr. George J. Schlachter '37 ✝ Mr. Dennis J. Sheehan '68 Mrs. Carolyn Simon Dr. Thomas R. Simon '42 Mr. Richard B. Sisson '41 ✝ Mr. J. Horan Smith '39 ✝ Mr. Robert W. Smith '37 ✝ Mrs. Ruth M. Smith ✝ Mr. John W. Spencer '50 ✝ Mr. Richard J. Stearns and Mrs. Kathryn A. Stearns Mr. George A. Steiner '47 Marv and Donna Stocker '65 Mr. Lester J. Suess ✝ Mr. Arthur H. Sullivan '51 ✝ C. David Sullivan Jr., Esq. '54 Mrs. Nancy Sullivan Mr. Robert T. Sullivan '51 ✝ Mrs. Ann L. Swan Mr. William E. Swan '69 ✝ Ms. Mary Jane Telford '75 Mr. Anthony P. Termotto '52 Mrs. Mary C. Termotto Mrs. Wendy Williams Terrell '68 Mr. Dale L. Thomas '65 Rev. Rocco A. Tito '51 Msgr. Cyril I. Trevett '48 ✝ Rev. John V. Tunny '54 ✝ Dr. James D. Twiname '63 ✝ Mr. John L. Tylock '73 Mrs. Lucy Vacco ✝ Mr. Vito Vacco ✝ Mrs. Joan M. Van Zwanenberg Mr. Nico Van Zwanenberg '52 Mr. Gerard M. Verdi '67 Mr. Matthew A. Vitanza '74 Ms. Elizabeth M. Vogel ✝ Ms. Gabriella Vogel ✝ Ms. Lucy Vogel ✝ Mrs. Jeanne Waldock '64 ✝ Ms. Christine Wasko '64 Mr. Thomas J. Watson Sr. ✝ Mr. Thomas J. Watson Jr. '56 Mr. Harlow A. Webert '54 Mr. Francis J. Weinaug Mrs. Marla J. Weinaug Mr. William M. Weir '58 Mr. Edward J. Welch '32 ✝ Dr. Mark W. Welch ✝ David and Sandra (Nothem) Whalen '84 Mrs. Patricia A. Wickenheiser Dr. Robert J. Wickenheiser Mrs. Lynda M. Wilhelm '86 Mrs. Donna Williams Mr. Robert W. Williams '70 Ms. Helen D. Winslow '64 ✝ Dr. Frederick E. Wirth ✝ Dr. Winifred Prozeller Wirth '38, '42 ✝ Mrs. Johanna L. Wittig Mr. George K. Woerth '62 Mrs. Mary M. Woods '68 Mr. Michael J. Woods '68 James J. Zaniello Mr. James L. Zubert '70 www.sbu.edu/donate Coming soon! A photographic history book of St. Bonaventure University. Available April 2011 Hardcover, 9” x 12”; 160 pages $45.00 Based on the research of Edward K. Eckert, Ph.D. Additional content and edited by Robert, Ann and Daniel McCarthy Order yours today! Contact our distributor, St. Anthony Messenger Press: Telephone: (800) 488-0488 Fax: (513) 241-1197 E-mail: SamAdmin@AmericanCatholic.org 3261 W. State Road St. Bonaventure, NY 14778 www.sbu.edu Reunion Weekend June 10-12, 2011 B O N AV E N T U R E www.sbu.edu/alumni DECEMBER 2010 Marines honor SBU alumnus: www.sbu.edu/bonamag J. Robert Burns graduated in 1966 with a bachelor’s degree in business administration. Some 25 St. Bonaventure graduates joined together with the Marine Corps Basic School Class 5-67 to honor 2nd Lt. John Robert “Bob” Burns, SBU class of 1966, who was killed in action during the Vietnam War. Burns’ brother and two sisters were also on hand at the unveiling of a new memorial at the National Museum of the Marine Corps.