- Counterterrorism 
        officer to discuss balance between intelligence collection, civil rights 
        
        
- Exhibition 
        of photos by photojournalist Linda Panetta opens at QCA 
        
- 'Recovered 
        Views' features work of African American photographer 
        
- SBU 
        Annual Holiday Schedulel 
        
- Career 
        Center 
        
- Friday 
        Forum 
        
- Newsmakers 
        
____________________
      Counterterrorism officer to discuss balance between 
      intelligence collection, civil rights
What methods can the 
      U.S. intelligence community use to fight terrorism without violating your 
      civil rights? St. Bonaventure University will welcome James W. McJunkin, a 
      distinguished 20-year veteran of the Federal Bureau of Investigation, to 
      speak about this balance Thursday, March 6.
      
McJunkin, deputy 
      assistant director of the Counterterrorism Division of the FBI, will speak 
      at 7 p.m. in The Regina A. Quick Center for the Arts’ Rigas Family Theater 
      on the topic “Counterterrorism in the 21st Century: Striking a Balance 
      Between Intelligence Collection and the Preservation of Civil 
      Rights.”
      
The event is open 
      to the public and free of charge.
      
The lecture’s 
      importance goes far beyond the walls of St. Bonaventure.
      
“How do you weigh 
      the real threat of terrorism versus civil rights?” said Joel Horowitz, 
      Ph.D., professor of history at the University.
      
McJunkin holds a 
      bachelor’s of science in administration of justice from the Pennsylvania 
      State University. He began his professional career as a Pennsylvania State 
      Police trooper. Throughout his career with the FBI, he has served in the 
      San Antonio, Atlanta and Washington, D.C., offices and has supervised 
      numerous important investigations in the Organized Crime, White Collar 
      Crime, Violent Crime, Drug Trafficking Crime, Civil Rights and 
      Counterterrorism arenas.
      
In 2003, McJunkin 
      was promoted to Unit Chief within the International Terrorism Operations’ 
      Counterterrorism Division. That same year he was awarded the National 
      Intelligence Meritorious Unit Citation.
      
In 2004, after 
      being appointed to direct a multi-agency task force assembled to address 
      the 2004 Election Threat, he received the Attorney General’s Distinguished 
      Service Award. In 2005, he served as the Assistant Special Agent in charge 
      of the Washington, D.C., field office where he supervised a number of 
      significant overseas investigations involving terrorism attacks against 
      U.S. citizens. This past month, McJunkin was promoted to his current 
      position.
      
McJunkin and his 
      wife, Carla, also an FBI employee, have three children.
      
This event is 
      part of an initiative to kick off the international studies program, which 
      has been approved by the University to become a major selection for St. 
      Bonaventure students. The University is still awaiting approval by the New 
      York State Department of Education.
      
The international 
      studies major will be interdisciplinary, including courses in history, 
      political science, theology, modern languages, English and 
      business.
      
“The idea is to 
      help Bonaventure students to engage in the internationalizing world,” said 
      Horowitz, who will serve as coordinator of the program. 
      
      
      
      Click 
      here to return to the top of the page
      _____________________
      Exhibition of photos by 
      photojournalist Linda Panetta opens at QCA
The Regina A. 
      Quick Center for the Arts at St. Bonaventure University has opened an 
      exhibition of recent photographs by photojournalist and activist Linda 
      Panetta. The exhibition will be open until March 5.
      
Panetta’s work 
      focuses on cultural, environmental and human rights issues, particularly 
      within conflict zones. Her photos have been widely published in books, 
      magazines and newspapers and have been aired on several networks. They 
      have been exhibited throughout the United States, Canada and 
      Europe.
      
She has traveled 
      to Guatemala and Nicaragua, beginning in the late 1980s; to Chiapas and 
      Oaxaca, Mexico; Putumayo, Barranca and Choco in Colombia; to Afghanistan 
      in 2002; and Iraq in 2003 and 2004. She has been to Palestine, Haiti, El 
      Salvador, Argentina, Uruguay, Peru, Ecuador, Chile, Panama and Venezuela. 
      Most recently she has traveled to Nicaragua, Colombia, Guatemala, El 
      Salvador and Mexico.
      
In 2005, the 
      Catholic Press Association awarded Panetta two honorable mentions: in the 
      Best Photo Story category for “Iraq Diary” and in the Best General News 
      Photo category for “Iraq’s Search for a Future,” published in the National 
      Catholic Reporter.
      
Panetta is the 
      founder of Optical Realities Photography, the grassroots human rights 
      organization SOA Watch/NE, and coordinator of the Jean Donovan Community 
      Peace Center, which hosts the Mariposa Outreach Project, a mentoring 
      program that supports survivors of torture and their families.
      
The Quick Center 
      at St. Bonaventure University is open Monday through Friday from 10 a.m. 
      to 5 p.m., and Saturday and Sunday from noon to 4 p.m. There is no 
      admission fee.
      
Other current 
      exhibitions are:
      “African Odyssey: The 
      Arts and Cultures of a Continent,” featuring the arts and material 
      cultures of Africa. Over 500 artifacts are on loan from Wake Forest 
      University Museum of Anthropology, the University of Pennsylvania Museum 
      of Archaeology and Anthropology, and Hampton University in 
      Virginia
“African Resonance.” This exhibit, featuring select 20th 
      century prints from The Quick Center collection, explores the influence of 
      African art on artists of the 20th century such as Picasso, Braque and 
      Miro?
“Recovered Views: African American Portraits, 1912-1925”
“20th 
      Century European Prints from the F. Donald Kenney Collection”
“Whamm! 
      The late 20th Century Art Scene”
The St. Bonaventure University 
      Permanent Art Collection.
      All galleries are all 
      free and open to the public. For a complete listing of all exhibitions 
      e-mail quick@sbu.edu or call (716) 375-2494.
The Regina A. Quick Center for 
      the Arts at St. Bonaventure University has opened an exhibition of recent 
      photographs by photojournalist and activist Linda Panetta. The exhibition 
      will be open until March 5. 
      
Panetta’s work 
      focuses on cultural, environmental and human rights issues, particularly 
      within conflict zones. Her photos have been widely published in books, 
      magazines and newspapers and have been aired on several networks. They 
      have been exhibited throughout the United States, Canada and 
      Europe.
      
She has traveled 
      to Guatemala and Nicaragua, beginning in the late 1980s; to Chiapas and 
      Oaxaca, Mexico; Putumayo, Barranca and Choco in Colombia; to Afghanistan 
      in 2002; and Iraq in 2003 and 2004. She has been to Palestine, Haiti, El 
      Salvador, Argentina, Uruguay, Peru, Ecuador, Chile, Panama and Venezuela. 
      Most recently she has traveled to Nicaragua, Colombia, Guatemala, El 
      Salvador and Mexico.
      
In 2005, the 
      Catholic Press Association awarded Panetta two honorable mentions: in the 
      Best Photo Story category for “Iraq Diary” and in the Best General News 
      Photo category for “Iraq’s Search for a Future,” published in the National 
      Catholic Reporter.
      
Panetta is the 
      founder of Optical Realities Photography, the grassroots human rights 
      organization SOA Watch/NE, and coordinator of the Jean Donovan Community 
      Peace Center, which hosts the Mariposa Outreach Project, a mentoring 
      program that supports survivors of torture and their families.
      
The Quick Center 
      at St. Bonaventure University is open Monday through Friday from 10 a.m. 
      to 5 p.m., and Saturday and Sunday from noon to 4 p.m. There is no 
      admission fee.
      
Other current 
      exhibitions are:
      “African Odyssey: The 
      Arts and Cultures of a Continent,” featuring the arts and material 
      cultures of Africa. Over 500 artifacts are on loan from Wake Forest 
      University Museum of Anthropology, the University of Pennsylvania Museum 
      of Archaeology and Anthropology, and Hampton University in 
      Virginia
“African Resonance.” This exhibit, featuring select 20th 
      century prints from The Quick Center collection, explores the influence of 
      African art on artists of the 20th century such as Picasso, Braque and 
      Miro?
“Recovered Views: African American Portraits, 1912-1925”
“20th 
      Century European Prints from the F. Donald Kenney Collection”
“Whamm! 
      The late 20th Century Art Scene”
The St. Bonaventure University 
      Permanent Art Collection.
      All galleries are all 
      free and open to the public. For a complete listing of all exhibitions 
      e-mail quick@sbu.edu or call (716) 375-2494.
      
      
      
      
      
      Click 
      here to return to the top of the page
      _____________________
      SBU Annual Holiday 
      Schedule
      
      
      
      Summer
• Fourth of July (Thursday, July 3, 2008 
      and Friday, July 4, 2008)
 
      Fall
• Fall Break (Monday, Oct. 13, 2008)
• 
      Thanksgiving (Wednesday, Thursday, Friday 
Nov. 26, 27, and 28, 
      2008)
      Winter
• Wednesday, Dec. 24, 2008 – Thursday, 
      Jan. 1, 2009
      Spring
• Holy Thursday, Good Friday, and Easter 
      Monday
(April 9, 10 and 13, 2009)
• Memorial Day (Monday, May 25, 
      2009)
      
      In 
      addition, all eligible administrative and hourly employees are entitled to 
      three personal days based on the approval of their supervisor.
       
        
      
      
      
      
      
       
       
      Career Center news 
      ...
      
       
      Click 
      here to return to the top of the page
      _____________________
       
      Join us for this week's FRIDAY FORUM! 
      
      All SBU faculty, staff and administrators 
      are welcome to Friday Forums.
      Date: Friday, Feb. 8, 2008
Speaker: Donald J. 
      Swanz, Esq.
Time: 12:20 to 1:30 p.m. 
      
Place: the University 
      Club
Topic: "Can China be a 
      friend or a foe for the United States?"
Cost: 
      $3
       
      Click 
      here to return to the top of the page
      Newsmakers
      Dr. René 
      Wroblewski, assistant professor in the School of Education, coordinated 
      two presentations at the International Conference of the Association for 
      Persons with Severe Handicaps in Seattle. The presentations, titled “ 
      Chapter 2: More children’s books about disability written by preservice 
      teachers” and “ Does instruction affect attitude?: Measuring preservice 
      teacher’s attitudes about people with disabilities” were both based on 
      class assignments in her undergraduate special education 
      courses.