Let it snow, let it snow, let it snow!
Think in “Jeopardy!” lingo. It’s sparked by a decrease in daylight hours. It’s found most commonly in the northern states where residents face harsh winters, forcing people into states of temporary seclusion. For the most part, symptoms normally begin appearing in late fall, increase during the holidays and lessen when the sun comes out of winter migration.
The correct answer is, “what is Seasonal Affective Disorder (SAD)?”
For St. Bonaventure students, preventing SAD during these frozen months -- lasting from about the beginning of January through the middle of March -- is no easy battle, but the battle can be won.
Jeffrey Baker, a freshman education major, uses skiing as his weapon against SAD.
“It’s a great form of exercise, but you don’t even really realize it while doing it. I just love going straight down hills for the thrill,” Baker said.
Holiday Valley in nearby Ellicottville offers college students a special discount price on night passes. From Sunday through Thursday, those passes sell for $25. For the Bonaventure skiers and snowboarders who cannot find a car to get to the resort, a bus leaves every Sunday from the parking lot outside the Richter Center around 3:30 p.m. and returns around 10 p.m.
When Baker can’t make the trip to Holiday Valley, he can be seen participating in the many intramural leagues held at the Richter Center on a nightly basis, fighting for a team victory.
Morgan Nyweide, also a freshman education major, avoids SAD by working out, staying in with friends and snow tubing at O’Dea’s, a tubing resort across the Allegheny River from campus.
“I've grown up in western New York, so I don't really let the weather interfere with my plans because I am used to it. The only way it ever interferes is if the roads are too bad to drive on and don't allow me to go anywhere,” Nyweide said.
Michael Vieyra is another student who gets the best of winter. For the past three years, Vieyra, a fifth-year graduate student in the management program, has created an outdoor pond/hockey rink with his friends. Unlike a majority of the students who look forward to a mild-winter day, Vieyra dreads the warmer temperatures that could potentially melt his rink.
“Skating keeps me entertained and the shoveling of the new snow keeps me busy,” said Vieyra.
It’s incredibly easy to fall into the SAD trap, but Bonaventure students have found solutions to escape winter’s wrath. Participating in the leagues offered at the Richter Center, playing games in the Rathskeller, trying new outdoor activities, such as tubing, skiing and snowboarding, or even creating an ice-skating rink can keep students out of the emotional hole or pull those stuck in it out.
A little snow never hurt anybody. The best thing to do is to not let the weather trap you indoors, unless, of course, it’s a blizzard out there.
-Kelly Jackson
Class of '08
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Academic honors
As parents, you encourage your student to work for academic excellence. When he or she reaches those goals, St. Bonaventure joins you in recognizing their achievements.
Students who have earned a semester grade point average (GPA) of 3.25 or above make the dean’s list. St. Bonaventure’s Provost, Dr. Michael Fischer, said approximately 38 percent of undergraduate students make dean's list every semester.
Dr. Fischer sends a letter to the students who made the dean’s list, which recognizes and congratulates them on their academic excellence. Parents also receive a letter noting their student's academic success.
The three professional schools carry those honors one step further by celebrating dean's list students at special gatherings.
Ann Lehman, academic coordinator for the School of Business, said their dean's list students are recognized at an annual luncheon. She recognized students look forward to it, often stopping to ask for the date before it is announced.
The School of Education provides each dean's list student with a certificate honoring his or her accomplishments.
The Russell J. Jandoli School of Journalism and Mass Communication hosts an annual recognition dinner for its dean's list students along with induction for new members in to Kappa Tau Alpha, the journalism and mass communication honor society.
To share the news about your student’s achievement, the University’s Office of Marketing and Communications will send notification to your hometown newspaper.
The recognition of academic achievement continues at Commencement Exercises. St. Bonaventure students who attain a cumulative GPA ranging from 3.25 to 3.59 are graduated cum laude. Those earning a cumulative GPA of 3.60 to 3.89 are graduated magna cum laude and those who earn a GPA of 3.90 or above are graduated summa cum laude. Those achievements are listed with the student's name in the Commencement program and are announced during the ceremony.
-Christina Jackson
Class of '10 |