Archive Posts
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A Return to Middle Earth
University NewsMauricio Carranza ’14 looked at how J.R.R. Tolkien's writing changed his life and literature.
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Turning (and Writing) Another Page
University NewsMargret Aldrich, '03 M.A. in English, wrote a book about the Little Free Library movement, published by Coffee House Press this month. -
Professional Notes for April 30, 2015
University NewsThis week's notes feature faculty John Buri, Vanessa Cornett-Murtada, Massimo Faggioli, Hans Gustafson, Mike Klein, John Martens, Thomas Redshaw, Deborah Savage, Father Scott Carl, John Wendt and Victoria Young; staff Josh Hengemuhle, Lindsey Loree and Talia Nadir; and students from St. Thomas' Geography, Psychology, and Justice and Peace Studies departments. -
Next noonartsound at St. Thomas Library to Focus on Songs of the 1930s and Early Labor Movement
University NewsPerforming May 5 will be Andrew Scheiber and Liz Wilkinson, a folk duo who recently put out their first CD of folk and honky-tonk. -
Celebrating Lon Otto
University NewsSt. Thomas' English Department is holding an event to celebrate Lon Otto, who taught 40 years before retiring last year. The event will take place 6-9 p.m. in Terrence Murphy Hall, Thornton Auditorium (Room 260). -
Thirty-fifth Annual Sacred Arts Festival Features Artists, Authors and Musicians
Faith and MissionThis year’s festival has the theme of “Illumination” and features five events in April. -
Creating Conversations
University NewsSarah Hayes '10 M.A., a doctorate student at the University of Florida, is preparing to defend her dissertation, which examines the relationship between prisons and American Indian boarding schools. -
Twenty Faculty Earn Promotions or Promotions With Tenure
University NewsFour tenured faculty members were promoted, and 16 were granted tenure and promoted simultaneously to associate professor. -
The Resistance of Memories: Stories of Disaster From Pinhook, Missouri
David Todd Lawrence, associate professor of English, shares his project documenting the stories of Pinhook, Missouri, residents who lost their homes in May 2011 as a result of a U.S. Army Corps of Engineers' order to operate a floodway. -
Please Remember in Your Prayers Paul Hague
In Our PrayersThe 1987 Professor of the Year taught English here for 35 years. He died at home Wednesday.