News

Give a Little, Feed a Lot Food Drive a Major Success

The Center for Community Engaged Learning (CCEL) partnered with the New Hampshire Food Bank for their tenth annual Give a Little, Feed a Lot (GALFAL) food drive held on Saturday, September 15. More than 150 student and faculty volunteers trekked into nearby Manchester neighborhoods to collect food from residents to deliver to the New Hampshire Food Bank. The CCEL delivered brown paper bags to
News

Paul LeBlanc Uses Innovation to Steer Success

"Higher education as an industry is very tradition bound [and] changes slowly," said SNHU President Paul Leblanc. It takes a strong-willed risk-taker to break down the walls of tradition and build up new ones. LeBlanc is at the forefront of higher education and uses the process of innovation to create new breakthroughs within it. LeBlanc keeps himself in the conversation of innovation by allowing
Sports

Fall Sports’ Previews

Men’s Soccer [caption id="attachment_7923" align="alignleft" width="1652"] image credit: SNHU Penmen[/caption] Men’s soccer looks to continue dominance this season after rounding out last season with an 11-3-3 overall record. In mid-August, they were chosen to finish fourth in the Northeast-10 seasonal standings. Head coach Josh Taylor, who enters his 11th season with the Penmen, plans to steer the Penmen back toward their familiar championship aspirations
News Sports

SNHU Baseball Goes Viral

Recently, SNHU has been making a significant presence on social media. From hosting events such as the fall Fetty Wap concert to the incident of an online professor claiming Australia is not a country, SNHU has been receiving a tremendous amount of national attention. The attention is now shifting more toward SNHU’s sports teams, particularly the baseball team. On April 8, Penmen Productions posted
News

SNHU Voice Studio Holds Annual Spring Concert

The SNHU Voice Studio held their annual Voices of SNHU spring concert in the Last Chapter Pub Thursday, March 26 at 5 p.m in front of an extensive, enthusiastic crowd. Guests were greeted by voice instructor Lindsay Rinaldi who introduced the concert’s 16 performers, all of whom were accompanied by pianist Charlie Blood. Rinaldi spent last semester teaching the performing students in MUS-250 during