Susan Dumais '88 '02G
Susan Dumais '88 '02G's Articles
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English Major Tom Spencer Writes Prize Play
English major Tom Spencer has written a play, "Whatever You Want," that was chosen as a winner in UNH's annual Undergraduate Prize Playscompetition. The play, directed by Elizabeth Girard, is about... -
Live in the Big World: UNH challenges itself to double the number of students studying abroad by 2020
Jim Parsons is a study abroad coordinator who never studied abroad as an undergraduate. Strange? Not really. As a first-generation college student at a small private university, he wasn’t quite sure... -
MAJS Graduate Receives UNH Research Award
Liz Moschella, a 2015 graduate of the Master is Justice Studies program at UNH, has received the Graduate School Research Award for her research in justice studies. Moschella is currently in the Ph.D... -
Ph.D. Candidate Wins NeMLA Fellowship
Catherine Welter, an English Literature Ph.D. candidate, has won a Northeast Modern Language Association (NeMLA) summer fellowship to support archival work in Canterbury, England, related to her... -
The Path to Peace
Only a dozen or so awards are given each year to graduating seniors who have made an extraordinary mark at UNH. Of those awards, one of the most prestigious is the Hood Achievement Prize, given to... -
English Students Forming New Writing Club, Wildcat Wordsmiths
English students Melissa Hurlburt, Stephanie Mazejka and Sarahanne Kent are in the process of starting a new student organization devoted to creative writing, called Wildcat Wordsmiths. Their goal is... -
New Volume Explores Genre of Spanish Historical Novel
ssociate professor of Spanish Carmen García de la Rasilla has edited a new volume of essays on the modern Spanish historical novel titled "La novela histórica española contemporánea: novedades y... -
A Celebration of the Life of Arlene Kies Announced
A celebration of the life of Arlene P. Kies will be held on Sunday, May 29, 2016, at 3 p.m. in the Johnson Theatre of the Paul Creative Arts Center. -
Music Professor Publishes Book of Reviews on Classical Recordings
Associate professor of music Rob Haskins has been a critic for "The American Record Guide" since 1993. In his newest book, "Classical Listening: Two Decades of Reviews from 'The American Record Guide... -
Time Changes Still
"My approach was to look at this place — my home — and think about it as View Slideshowif it were already in my past." -
Arts On the Road
With help from donors, students and faculty in the university’s performing arts programs are taking the creativity that happens on campus off, from the Seacoast to the North Country, urban to rural. -
Shakespeare at the Quad
One fateful day in high school, Doug Lanier’s English teacher played a 1964 recording of Richard Burton performing Hamlet. When she dropped the needle on the record, she profoundly impacted Lanier’s... -
Student Sculpture on the Great Lawn
Two students in Prof. Akiyama's sculpture workshop course have installed public sculpture on the Great Lawn on campus. These are temporary exhibits that will be taken down within the next few weeks.... -
COLA Faculty Honored with University Awards and Professorships
Faculty members in the College of Liberal Arts have been selected for a number of prestigious university awards. -
Communication Professor Publishes Book on Motherhood Business
For the past eight years, the Souhegan High School Ethics Forum has taken the lead on organizing the statewide conference HYPE (Hosting Young Philosophy Enthusiasts), founded by SHS Ethics Forum... -
Fulbright Specialist
UNH researcher Laurence French is selected as a Fulbright Specialist to Bosnia-Herzegovina. -
One Historic Honor
To mark the holiday celebrating the country’s first president, Washington College announced seven finalists for the prestigious George Washington Prize. -
UNH and Currier Museum of Art Celebrate 400 Years of Shakespeare, Featuring Exhibition of 1623 “First Folio”
The University of New Hampshire in conjunction with the Currier Museum of Art in Manchester, NH is sponsoring a series of events in the winter and spring of 2016 to commemorate the 400thanniversary... -
Passing: Arlene P. Kies
Arlene Pepe Kies died peacefully at home on February 11, 2016, following a two-year battle with cancer. She confronted her illness with dignity, strength and grace, and continued to support and be... -
UNH Sociologist David Finkelhor in Washington Post
UNH sociologist David Finkelhor, director of the Crimes Against Children Research Center, has published an opinion piece in "The Washington Post" that warns about placing too much emphasis on online... -
UNH Journalism Students Cover Democratic Debate on Campus
Students from the University of New Hampshire's journalism classes and The New Hampshire student newspaper cover the Democratic Debate held on campus before the 2016 NH Primary. Link to the class... -
Poll Results: Sanders Widens NH Lead, Almost Half of Democrats Still Not Decided
New poll results from the UNH Survey Center show that Vermont senator Bernie Sanders has increased his lead over former Secretary of State Hillary Clinton in New Hampshire. Sanders’ popularity among... -
Museum of Art Hosts LiveARTS! an Evening of Open Mic with the University Community, Feb. 11
The Museum of Art, University of New Hampshire is hosting LiveARTS!, a program for musical arts. A surprising medley of university talent from solo student artists, trios or other music groups will... -
Getting Used to Old Age and Retirement
UNH Professor Emeritus of English Tom Carnicelli has written a book of poems about his thoughts and feelings during the first few years of retirement. "Old Guy Part One: Gettings Used to Old Age and... -
The Elements of Mental Tests, Second Edition
"The Elements of Mental Tests" provides an introduction to mental testing and the use of psychological and educational measures. -
Changing Minds
Falling for Ibsen When Isabelle Beagen '18 read “A Doll’s House” by Henrik Ibsen in her freshman theatre history course, she fell in love. “Ibsen is a writer in which every prop, every line, every... -
Chinese Lunch Special
On a round wooden table that fills most of the room, a large lazy susan turns slowly, with dishes of eggplant, fish and watermelon floating by, and bowls of obscure meats and vegetables. “Lotus root... -
Even as We Speak
We don’t pahk the cah anymore. That’s at least one of the conclusions coming out of a multi-year study about changes in New Hampshire dialect led by assistant professor of linguistics Maya... -
Sustainable Happiness
Happiness Cubed Happiness studies span disciplines — each of these Liberal Arts course offerings takes its own unique approach to the topic. Interested students might take all three for a multi-... -
The Power of Liberal Arts in the Marketplace
The value of a liberal arts education in the twenty-first century. -
The View from the Coast
Tom Safford“There isn’t an environmental issue that isn’t a people issue,” contends sociologist Tom Safford. -
Students Eat Up Course On Geography
Blake Gumprecht, associate professor of geography and chair of the Geography Department A Professor Uses Food to Teach Geography Combine a cup and a half of late-season Quebec maple syrup and a cup... -
International Students Learn More Than English in UNH's English as a Second Language Program
International students learn more than English in UNH's rapidly-expanding English as a Second Language program. -
Junior Takes Studies a World Away
Hilary Bird is a woman who craves the new and the different. A communication major from Mont Vernon, New Hampshire, Hilary decided to study abroad in China this semester because it was one of the few... -
Ms. Priest Goes to Washington
Political science major and Derry, N.H., native Alexandra (Ally) Priest is in Washington, D.C., this semester rubbing elbows with senators, congressional lawmakers, notable White House residents (Bo... -
Epic
Hundreds of young people are packed in the hallway outside Bratton Room in the Paul Creative Arts Center.
College of Liberal Arts