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Letters to the editor, 11-3-09

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Published: Tuesday, November 3, 2009

Updated: Tuesday, November 3, 2009

Leadership Camp provides skills, creates memories

All around campus I see flyers for Leadership Camp 2010 giving me fond memories of when I went to Leadership Camp last year. The amazing five-day experience was something I will never forget. Each day had a different theme, however the overall purpose is to help students gain and build upon their leadership skills. The action pack days are filled with new ideas that will help cultivate change at UNH for the better.
To help drive this point home there are follow up sessions during the spring semester, even a high ropes course event! When I went to camp a majority of the people there were involved in student organizations or where freshmen and sophomores who wanted to be more involved. The other participants became some of my closest friends after camp.
My only regret is that I attended as a junior that left me only a year and a half to bring about change here. After camp, I immediately joined student senate because I felt as though that was the best way to bring the ideas I had at camp to the UNH community. For all of the freshmen and sophomores out there, I highly recommend you apply. Not only will this amazing experience give you the skills to be a great leader here at UNH but also these skills will help you once you have graduated.
As a senior with a job already lined up, my employer mentioned the main reason to hire me was because of my leadership skills and the ability to help others build upon theirs. These are the very skills I gained at Leadership Camp.

Karen Coutinho
Class of 2010


Professors’ research found most often in Inquiry

The UNH community should know that it is not only faculty work that makes the news (“UNH profs featured in journals, media outlets” in The New Hampshire’s Oct. 9 edition). Research by undergraduates has been part of news stories in The Boston Globe and other New England newspapers, on radio shows and on public TV.
This research is published in Inquiry, UNH’s online undergraduate research journal, where the researchers themselves learn how to explain their work and make it accessible to the general public. Some of the stories featured in news media have been on athletes’ use of eye black, letters from New England soldiers, and the production of biodiesel—research from all the disciplines at the University.
The Office of University Communications and Marketing covers these articles in their press releases, but much international attention comes in the form of queries to the authors from all over the world. Read about the exciting work UNH undergraduates are doing at www.unh.edu/inquiryjournal.
 
Jennifer Lee
Inquiry Senior Editor

 

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