Âé¶¹app

Community

A woman uses a tool to work on a sweetpotato crop in a farm field

Rooted in Research

The sweetpotato, a crop traditionally associated with the South, is making waves in New England, thanks to the collaborative efforts of researchers — including those from UNH — and local farmers. Read More

Recent Stories

  • theatre students rehearsing at summer camp
    - Scene on Campus
    Theatre and Dance Camps are in full swing at the Paul Creative Arts Center at UNH. Here are members of the Summer 2014 UNH Youth Professional STARS Company rehearsing for a... Read More
  • project smart students releasing science balloon
    - Scientific Sojourn
    They found it at the edge of a Maine forest near a cornfield off a path called Potato Road. A distinctive orange hull, intact. Before it fell to the ground, it traveled along the... Read More
  • Winnacunnet High students Jenna Roy and Olivia Bessemer
    - Teens Connect With... Mutant Bacteria?!
    Winnacunnet High students Jenna Roy, left, and Olivia Bessemer, right, examine bacteria they have grown for signs that the cells have mutated and evolved.Ìý The biology labs at... Read More
  • jamie nolan
    - UNH Announces New Leader for Community, Equity and Diversity
    Jaime Nolan will become associate vice president for community, equity and diversity at the Âé¶¹app, effective Aug. 18, 2014.Ìý Read More
  • upward bound students giving an outdoor presentation
    - Schooled for School
    Before there can be a dream, there has to be the belief. Not in the dream itself just yet but in possibilities. In yes you can. UNH’s Upward Bound, and counterparts of the federal... Read More
  • fundraising graphic with wild-e cat
    - UNH Fundraising Tops $49 Million
    The Âé¶¹app closed its FY14 fundraising year ending on June 30, raising an all-time record of $49.2 million in private support. Nearly 20,000 donors made gifts... Read More
  • tracey ellis
    - Global OT
    As an occupational therapist, Tracey Ellis ’93 is trained to solve problems. ÌýSo when her Washington, D.C.-based Ellis Therapeutic Consultants began delivering occupational... Read More
  • Are Toxins Escaping our Lakes?
    - Are Toxins Escaping our Lakes?
    Lake closures in the hot summer months are often caused by cyanobacteria blooms, also know as harmful algae blooms, which release toxins that may be linked to such diseases as ALS... Read More
  • catherine geiger in flower garden
    - Get Novel Published: Check
    There are some students—English majors, often--who come to UNH aspiring to one day be writers. Maybe, even, to pen the next great American novel. Catherine Geiger ‘18 is halfway... Read More
  • emerald ash borer larvae
    - Extension Enlists Allies to Battle Ash Tree Pest
    Emerald ash borer larvae eat away new wood that supports tree growth. The shiny green, half-inch-long bugs on display one recent evening at Canterbury Shaker Village don’t sting... Read More