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FYI |
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Banner 7 Training Is Available
User training for faculty and staff who use the Banner Student Administrative
System is scheduled to begin this month. An overview presentation
will be given in the MUB Theatre II Thursday, Sept. 29, 2 to 4 p.m.
Registration is not required. The sessions will be the same, so
there is no need to attend both. The training lab at 1 Leavitt Lane
will be open and available for hands-on training, practice, and
assistance beginning in October. Members of the SIS Steering Committee
will be present. That schedule is as follows: Monday, Oct. 3, 8
a.m. to noon; Wednesday, Oct. 5, 1 to 5 p.m.; Thursday, Oct. 6,
8 a.m. to noon; Tuesday, Oct. 11, 8 a.m. to noon; Thursday, Oct.
13, 1 to 5 p.m., and Friday, Oct. 14, 8 a.m. to noon.
More FYIs >>>
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TOP STORIES
Sept. 28, 2005
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Publication Date: Wednesday, Oct. 5 More
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Sinthy
Kounlasa: Going As Far As She Can Go
Sinthy
Kounlasa, administrative assistant with the Whittemore School, has
run hundreds of marathons, but the most important was the one that
brought her to America. Born in Communist-controlled Laos, Kounlasa
came to America in 1982 with the help of a missionary worker after
spending 16 months with her young childrenin Thai detention camps.
More
>>> (09-28-05) |
Trip Report: Ronald LeBlanc Travels to Russia
Ronald
LeBlanc, professor of Russian, received one of the 2004-05
CIE Faculty International Travel Grants funded by the VPAA to support
travel to Russia. Here is his report. More
>>> (09-28-05) |
President Allocates $400,000 to Support Research and Scholarship
As part
of the university’s commitment to faculty research and scholarship,
President Ann Weaver Hart has announced she will dedicate $400,000
from her President’s Fund for Excellence to a competitive and
strategic program to initiate and sustain research and scholarship
at UNH. More >>>
(09-28-05) |
UNH
Faculty Member Researches Face Mask Removal For Injured Football Players
This fall, as more than a million high school football
players take to the gridiron, UNH’s Erik Swartz is focused on
the worst-case scenario. No, not losing the big game, but cervical
spine (c-spine) injuries that, while less frequent than muscle strains
or concussions, can result in paralysis or even death. More
>>> (09-28-05) |
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More
News
Human
Impact On Global Land Surface Extensive Since 1700, UNH Scientist
Reports (09-28-05)
UNH Team
Runs, Pedals, Paddles to Victory (09-28-05)
Grant Will
Aid UNH Faculty In Assessing Student Learning Outcomes of New Discovery
Program (09-28-05)
UNH
Faculty Senate Minutes for Sept. 12, 2005 (09-28-05)
Anthropologist
Discusses Depictions of Evil at Sept. 29 Sidore Lecture
(09-28-05)
Investing and
the U.S. Economic Outlook Focus of 2005 Investment Forum Hosted
by the UNH Whittemore School Friday, Sept. 30 (09-28-05)
The Last Supper And
The Da Vinci Code Discussed At UNH Manchester Luncheon Lecture
Oct. 5 (09-28-05)
Students, Faculty
And Staff of New Hampshire Colleges and Universities Respond to
Hurricane Disaster (09-28-05)
UNH In The News: Fosters:
From clambakes to JFK (09-28-05)
HR Profile: Michele
Holt-Shannon, assistant director of Discovery and First Year Programs
(09-28-05) |
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