Member Login
Username:Password:
or Sign up here
Discover

ST. BONAVENTURE UNIVERSITY


'St. Bonaventure University' is located in Cattaraugus County in western New York. The university was established by the Franciscan Brothers in 1858 and is a private, Catholic university, located near Olean, New York. It has roughly 2,000 students. The current president is Sister Margaret Carney OSF, the 20th president and the first religious sister to hold the position. Its sports teams, the Bonnies (formerly nicknamed the "Brown Indians") play NCAA Division I sports in the Atlantic 10 Conference.
Students and alumni refer to the university with an affectionate nickname—"Bona's"—which originates from the school's original name, 'St. Bonaventure's College'.

Contents
Location
History
Athletics
The university today
The Franciscan connection
Notable alumni
References
External links

Location


The campus sits on 1,200 acres (4.9 km²) in the town of Allegany, just over the line from the city of Olean. The area around campus is known as St. Bonaventure, New York, with a population of 2,130. The university is located off of Interstate 86 (exit 24).
The south edge of campus lies on the Allegheny River. Campus buildings are designed in red brick with Italianate roofs, to reflect the architecture of St. Francis' native Italy. A small portion of the campus is wooded, and it contains a cemetery, a 9-hole golf course, an old airport, among academic and dormitory buildings. The expansive front lawn has been cited in the ''Guinness Book of Records'' as the largest front lawn in North America.
The university also owns a plot of land on an Allegheny Mountain foothill in West Clarksville, New York called Mount Irenaeus. "The Mountain," as it is referred to by students, faculty and alumni, provides a retreat for students.
St. Bonaventure University has its own U.S. Post Office. Mail may be addressed to St. Bonaventure, NY 14778.

History


The college was founded by Utica financier Nicholas Devereux, one of the first to gain land grants in newly surveyed Cattaraugus County from the Holland Land Company. Devereux founded the town of Allegany on the grant, hoping to build a new city. A great city needed religious instruction, so Devereux approached John Timon, the bishop of Buffalo, for assistance. The two invited the Franciscan order to Western New York, and a small group under Father Pamfilo da Magliano OFM arrived in 1856. This was the first group of Franciscan brothers to settle in the United States. The school graduated its first class in 1858. St. Bonaventure's College was granted university status by New York State in 1957. The largest dormitory on campus, Devereux Hall, is named for the founder.
Once one of the nation's most prominent Catholic colleges, St. Bonaventure ran into financial difficulties in the early 1990s, and nearly declared bankruptcy in 1994. Since then, the school has been put on a more solid financial footing and has seen record growth and campus improvements in the past five years.
Thomas Merton taught English at St. Bonaventure for a year just at the start of World War II. It was at this school that Merton finally gave into his vocation and decided to join the Trappists. He entered the monastery in Kentucky in 1941. An unusual botanical phenomenon on a mountain in view of campus, where the trees have fallen and left a clearing in the shape of a heart, is linked to Merton in campus myth. Some students call it "Merton's Heart" and claim that Merton visited the place often.
St. Bonaventure is strongly identified with the Western New York region. A notable proportion of the student body are from the Buffalo and Rochester metro areas, and references to Buffalo and Rochester—and their Catholic high schools—are common even among students not from those areas.

Athletics


St. Bonaventure Bonnies logo

St. Bonaventure has been long known for a successful basketball program that plays in the Atlantic 10 Conference. Nearly every member of the spirited student body attends home games, leading ESPN to call St. Bonaventure one of the top-five "worst places to play" in the country, along with Duke and Michigan. The team has struggled lately, but had success in the past. St. Bonaventure most recently appeared in the NCAA Tournament in 2000, falling in the first round to Kentucky 85-80 in double-overtime.
Bob Lanier played at St. Bonaventure, leading them to the Final Four in 1970, as did Tom and Sam Stith. In addition to these, and other NBA players, other St. Bonaventure players have played in the top European leagues. The last St. Bonaventure player to reach the NBA was J.R. Bremer, who played for the Boston Celtics in 2002 and the Cleveland Cavaliers in 2003.
Mike Gansey, who finished his college career in 2006 as a star at West Virginia and signed with the Miami Heat as an undrafted free agent, played his first two years of college basketball at St. Bonaventure, but transferred along with several teammates in the wake of an academic scandal in 2003 involving a junior college transfer.
The scandal took a toll on the program. Dismissed in the aftermath of the scandal were: University president Robert J. Wickenheiser, head basketball coach Jan van Breda Kolff, assistant basketball coach and son of the president Kort Wickenheiser, and athletic director Gothard Lane. Lane was later absolved by the NCAA of culpability in the situation. In the most unfortunate event following the scandal, University trustee Bill Swan committed suicide on August 20, 2003, following sharp criticism from media and internet bloggers. He was criticized him for not interceding earlier to prevent the scandal.
Saint Bonaventure hired Robert Morris University's head basketball coach, Mark Schmidt, on April 10, 2007 to replace former head coach Anthony Solomon. Solomon was hired in May 2003 after the NCAA imposed sanctions resulting from the academic scandal, and was fired after a four season record of 24-88, and 10-54 in the Atlantic 10. The current women's basketball coach is Jim Crowley.
The men's and women's basketball teams play at the Reilly Center Arena. The Arena seats 6,012 and is often sold out during basketball season. Many people from the Olean area have been season ticket holders for years.

The university today


The school is well known in New York State and the mid-Atlantic region for its journalism, business and education programs, having produced five Pulitzer Prize-winning writers. The institute is traditionally considered as a "Buffalo and Rochester" school and has struggled to enroll students from other regions.
St. Bonaventure is home to the Russell J. Jandoli School of Journalism and Mass Communications. Its campus newspaper, ''The Bona Venture'', has been published continuously since 1926. The school is also home to ''The Laurel'', the nation's oldest continuously published college literary magazine. The school's student radio station, WSBU 88.3 The Buzz, is ranked No. 1 nationally by The Princeton Review. Lastly, the school has a unique organization known as SFM (Students for the Mountain). SFM holds retreats for students approximately thirty miles away from campus at the Franciscan Mountain Retreat Centre called Mount Irenaeus which is affiliated with the University.

The Franciscan connection


The school is the largest Franciscan-affiliated institution of undergraduate higher education in the English-speaking world. The friars at the St. Bonaventure Friary belong to the Holy Name Province, OFM. Franciscan brothers at the school are members of the Order of Friars Minor, one of the orders of Franciscan brothers.
The Bonaventure friars are involved in a number of activities in the greater Olean community, besides ministry on campus. They administer St. Bonaventure's Parish in Allegany, called "Little Bona's". There is a strong Franciscan presence at Olean General Hospital, and the university operates the area soup kitchen. Also adjacent to campus is the Motherhouse of the Franciscan Sisters of Allegany, a group of Franciscan religious sisters.
St. Bonaventure himself (1221-74), born John of Fidenza, was a cardinal and Doctor of the Church. A theologian and contemporary of St. Thomas Aquinas at the university in Paris, he became head of the Franciscan order and did much to institutionalize that order. His most famous work is ''Itinerarium mentis in deum'', or ''The Soul's Journey to God''. Bonaventure was canonized in 1482 by Sixtus IV.
The university is also home to the Franciscan Institute. Founded in 1939 by Fr. Thomas Plassmann, O.F.M., then President of St. Bonaventure College, and led by its first Director, Fr. Philotheus Boehner, O.F.M., the Franciscan Institute stands as the preeminent center in North America of teaching, research and publication on the history, spirituality and intellectual life of the Franciscan movement.

Notable alumni


Notable alumni of St. Bonaventure University include

Ed Don George '29, Hall of Fame wrestler, inducted 1975.

John McGraw Hall of Fame baseball player and manager, inducted 1937.

Hughie Jennings Hall of Fame baseball player and manager, inducted 1945.

Ted Marchibroda '53, NFL football coach

Fr. Mychal Judge OFM '57, chaplain, Fire Department of New York, and Victim #1 on September 11, 2001

Eugene M. O'Connor '75, partner at Chamberlain D'Amanda (Rochester, NY)

Thomas P. Ryan Jr. Democrat, Mayor of Rochester, NY 1974-1994

Samuel L. Molinaro Jr. , executive vice president and chief financial officer Bear Stearns Companies Inc.

Arnold J Eckelman Former Sr. Vice President - Operations,Verizon Communications

Lee Coppola '64, former Buffalo television news reporter and federal prosecutor, current dean of the Jandoli school

John "Jack" R. McGinley '65, Vice President of the Pittsburgh Steelers

Shaun Sheehan '66, public affairs specialist and vice president, Tribune Company

James T. Walsh '70, U.S. Congressman from New York

Bob Lanier '70, Hall of Fame basketball player

Charles J. Dougherty '71, President of Duquesne University

John K. Schmitt '71, Brigadier General, U.S. Army

Tom McElroy ’74, director of athletics at the University of Rhode Island

Leslie C. Quick III '75, investment banker and president, Fleet Securities

Timothy R. Brownell '83, real estate and hospitality financier, owner of Slider's Pub, Baltimore's Inner Harbor

Maureen Keenan LeBoeuf '76, Brigadier General, U.S. Army (ret.)

Richard A. Bucci '76, mayor of Binghamton, New York

Jim Baron '77, men's basketball coach, University of Rhode Island

Dan Herbeck '78, ''Buffalo News'' reporter and biographer of Timothy McVeigh

Neil Cavuto '80, Fox News Channel anchor

Thomas M. Marra '80, executive vice president of The Hartford

Catherine M. Young '82, New York State Senator, 57th Senate District

Mike Vaccaro '89, Sports Columnist, New York Post

Adrian Wojnarowski '91, author, "The Miracle of St. Anthony"

Tim Kolpien '91, President of Kolpien & Associates & Co-Chair of Young Republican National Federation, Inc.

Chuck Daly, Hall of Fame NBA coach

James Post, Boston University School of Management professor and founder of the Catholic lay group Voice of the Faithful

Eugene M. McQuade, President and Chief Operating Officer of Freddie Mac

Aaron Cappotelli, '97, morning radio host, Tony & Cappy KDMX - Mix 102.9/Dallas
The school also boasts five Pulitzer Prize winners as alumni.

Robert A. Dubill '58, former executive editor of ''USA Today''. Won in 1980 for public service (uncovering religious fund-raising scandals).

John Hanchette '64, former managing editor of Gannett Newspapers, now professor of journalism at St. Bonaventure. Won in 1980 for public service (uncovering religious fund-raising scandals).

Charles J. Hanley '68, reporter for the Associated Press. Won in 2000 for investigative reporting (the massacre at No Gun Ri).

Brian Toolan '72, vice president of ''The Hartford Courant''. Won in 1999 for breaking news reporting (shooting at the Connecticut Lottery).

Dan Barry '80, reporter for ''The New York Times''. Won in 1994 for investigative reporting (corruption in Rhode Island court system).
Four Members of the United States Congress also attended St. Bonaventure.

Rudolph G. Tenerowicz, U.S. Rep. from Michigan (Dem. & Rep., 1939-43, 49-57)

William F. Walsh '34, U.S. Rep. from New York (Rep., 1973-1979)

James J. Howard '52, represented New Jersey's 3rd congressional district in the United States House of Representatives from 1965–1988.[1]

James T. Walsh '70, U.S. Rep. from New York (Rep., 1989-present)

References


1. James John Howard, ''Biographical Directory of the United States Congress''. Accessed August 30, 2007.

External links



St. Bonaventure University webpage.

St. Bonaventure Bonnies athletics webpage.

St. Bonaventure University Campus Virtual Tours

WSBU 88.3 The Buzz

The Bona Venture (campus newspaper)

This article provided by Wikipedia. To edit the contents of this article, click here for original source.