Congratulations to our History & Secondary Ed. Major, Mason Kelley, the 2019 Constitution Day Jeopardy Champion and the firstcontestant to win back-to-back championships! Mason fended off challenges from Grace Ferris and Bryce Kelly in last night's finals and won a ton of Bona Bucks!
Wednesday, September 18, 2019
Tuesday, September 17, 2019
Working for the Robert H. Jackson Center by Ashlee Gray
This summer I had the opportunity to intern for the
Robert H. Jackson Center in Jamestown, NY. The Robert H. Jackson Center in a
non-profit historical center dedicated Robert H. Jackson, a U.S. Supreme Court
Justice and Chief U.S. Prosecutor at the Nuremberg Trials.
Last summer, the Jackson Center offered an exhibit on
Charles Goodell. The exhibit, “A Model for Courage: The Life of Charles E.
Goodell,” was put together by Cameron Hurst, a St. Bonaventure student intern.
The exhibit was a success, and the Jackson Center wanted to take on another Bonaventure
intern to work on a program and exhibit celebrating the life and career of Stan
Lundine, former Mayor of Jamestown, U.S. Congressman, and NYS Lieutenant
Governor.
I originally heard about the position from St.
Bonaventure archivist, Dennis Frank. He recommended me to the Jackson Center
and encouraged me to apply. I was a bit hesitant applying for the position for
several reasons. The first was distance; I was nervous about making to commute
to Jamestown from my hometown of Delevan. It was an hour and fifteen-minute
drive and my car, Green Bean, was on her last legs. The second was my lack of
self-assurance. I did not think I had
the tools nor the skills to create an entire exhibit and a ten-minute video.
Though I was confident in my ability to learn new skills, I was still nervous.
In the end, I decided to apply, and I vowed to give
the project my all. I visited the center and met with several Jackson Center
staff and board members. A few weeks
later, I was offered the position.
I started working on the project at the end of the
spring semester at Bonas. I was able to find a few resources to give me a brief
biography of Stan Lundine. In all honesty, I did not know who Stan Lundine was
nor did I understand how important he was to the city of Jamestown, the
Southern Tier district, and the state of New York. I believe my lack of
knowledge on Stan was beneficial. It allowed me to go into the internship with
a fresh perspective and the ability to gather information through extensive
research rather than previous knowledge.
The first step was to write a biography that I could
use for the informational panels in the display portion of the exhibit and as a
possible narrative for the documentary. For the first few weeks, I was busy
finding articles, book, and newspaper clipping on Stan and watching hours of
old video interviews. I reached out to the New York state archives, Fredonia
University Archives, and the Fenton Historical Center for more information and
materials. After I gathered as much information as I could, I wrote my own
biography and began sorting out what items I could use in the display and
video.
I also conducted my own video interviews with several
people who had previously worked with or for Stan Lundine. This was rather
nerve-racking. I had no experience interviewing people. I went to my
supervisors at the Jackson Center and asked for advice on how to best conduct
the interviews. The first few interviews did not go spectacularly, but by the
end, I had learned what questions to ask, how to ask them, and the best way to get
a person to open up. It was a great way to practice these skills and, since
then, I am more confident in my ability to interview others.
Another challenge I faced was creating the panels for
the exhibit. The Jackson Center archives had a Mac desktop and I own a Lenovo
laptop. I needed a program that I could use on the Mac at home. That led me to
Canva. It is a simple online graphic-design tool that worked on both devices. I
taught myself to use Canva by watching tutorials and creating practice panels.
The program worked wonderfully, and I made 10 canvas posters for the exhibit.
For the color scheme, I chose the color blue. Details,
such as color, were crucial to making the exhibit aesthetically pleasing and I
wanted a color that would reflect Stan’s personality and capture his history.
During his first Mayoral campaign, Stan assembled a team of prominent
individuals to run alongside him and called his team the Blue Ribbon Ticket.
Stan is also a Democrat and a Duke University Alumni, so the color blue has
been an integral part of his history. The official color of the exhibit is Duke
blue because Duke was a special place to Stan and because it would be visually
appealing against the cream-colored walls of the exhibit. It was a unique color
that made the entire display pop.
After the panels, the next challenge was the video.
This was another skill set that I did not have, but I knew that I could learn.
I watched several tutorials on iMovie and eventually taught myself how to use the
software. Instead of fitting the video interviews to my narrative, I arranged
the video clips by a topic and set them in chronological order. I then made my
narrative fit the clips to tell Stan’s story. From there, I found various
images and video clips to use throughout the film. I had to do a lot of
cutting, which was hard, and I eventually cut the video to ten minutes in
length and added music.
The trickiest part of the video was choosing the music.
I did not want the documentary to sound like an epic movie soundtrack, nor did
I want it to sound like elevator music. I spent hours sifting through tracks,
looking for a right inspiring tune for each chapter of Stan’s life.
When the video was finished, I was left with roughly
five days to paint and spackle the walls, hang up the posters, and fill the
space. During the information collection stage of the internship, I gathered a
lot of original Stan Lundine campaign material. I found over 50 campaign
buttons, 2 hats, 10 bumper stickers, and 1 matchbook with a single match
remaining (plus various other materials). I used these items to fill the
display cases and arranged the campaign buttons in the shape of New York State.
I also had various plaques and several pictures in the collection. My personal
favorite item was the Duke University pennant flag. I was setting up the
exhibit up until the day before the Stan Lundine Tribute event making sure
everything was perfect.

Board Games in the Library
Tuesday, October 1
11 a.m. to 4 p.m.
Lower Seminar Room
Friedsam Memorial Library
Join us for pizza and games. Destress before midterms.
We'll have a variety of games. Bring a game. Stay for a little bit, stay for the entire time.
The past few semesters we've been playing board games near the end of the semester to chill before finals. This semester we're mixing things up, playing games before midterms.
Wednesday, September 11, 2019
Meet our New History Majors: Charlie Bridge
My Name is
Charlie Bridge I’m from Baldwinsville New York. It’s a small town just outside
of Syracuse. I went to Baker High School and played football. I loved
playing sports in high school and that led me to making new friends wherever I went.
I fell in love with history when I was in 7th grade because my
teacher would create lessons around the students, putting us into the history. It always
felt like we traveled back in time and the stories of the past were my stories too. Also, my mom
always took me to battlefields and historic landmarks. Some of my favorite destinations for history include Boston,
Williamsburg, and Gettysburg.
Over
the years in high school I traveled to Europe and became a Magician. I have played my last game of football and accomplished everything that I felt that I set out to
do in high school. I knew I wanted to go on to teaching history and coaching. When I came to St. Bonaventure, I knew this was the right place for me because it already felt like home.
Meet our New History Majors: Selena Vazquez
Hello my name is Selena Vazquez. I am a freshman history and international studies double major. I have always been into history, from reading The Magic Treehouse books in elementary school, to wanting to focus on the civil war as my concentration now. I hope in the future to become a museum curator and travel to collect pieces for exhibits all around the globe. I am originally from Lorain, Ohio which is thirty minutes away from Cleveland. In the past I have volunteered to do work for Johnson’s Island, a POW civil war camp, in Sandusky, Ohio. I hope to get even more involved with work like this during my time at St. Bonaventure.
Tuesday, September 10, 2019
Sunday, September 8, 2019
Bonas Student Works on Exhibit Opening at Robert H. Jackson Center
From the Jamestown Post-Journal:
A new exhibit is premiering at the Jackson Center to honor the career of a former Jamestown mayor, U.S. Congressman and lieutenant governor of New York.
On Sunday, "Leading with Integrity & Innovation: Stan Lundine," will open to the public at the Jackson Center, which is also hosting a special event to honor the life and career of Lundine at 5:30 p.m. Sunday at its Carl M. Cappa Theatre. The event is free and open to all.
In celebration of the 50th anniversary of Lundine's mayoral election, the center will highlight the influence of Lundine's career as the former mayor of Jamestown, Jan. 1, 1970, through March 8, 1976, U.S. Congressman, March 2, 1976, through Dec. 31, 1986, and lieutenant governor of New York, Jan. 1, 1987, through Dec. 31, 1994. He is also the former chair of the Jackson Center's Board of Directors and continues to serve as one of its members.
Ashlee Gray, Jackson Center intern and senior at St. Bonaventure University, created the exhibit and compiled interviews for a short documentary that will be shown at Sunday's event. Gray said she heard at college that the Jackson Center was looking for an intern for the summer.
"They wanted someone to take the reigns on the project this year," she said. "(Lundine) turns 80 years old and its the 50th anniversary of him being elected mayor."
Gray said she is a native of Machias and didn't know much about the history of the city or Lundine.
"Coming here I've learned quite a bit about Jamestown," she said. "I didn't even know who Stan was, but I've learned he is very important to Jamestown, to the Southern Tier and to the whole state of New York."
The event Sunday will include remarks from family, friends and professionals who worked with Lundine or were influenced by him during his almost 50 years in public service.
For more information, call the Jackson Center at 483-6646.
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