Our Alumna Magnuson-Hung

I have worked for the Mid-Atlantic Regional Center for the Humanities (MARCH) at Rutgers-Camden for just over two years. I was hired as the Digital Media Assistant at the start of my second year in the public history program, and became the Digital Media Coordinator one year later.

I manage MARCH’s team of bloggers; update the regional conference calendar; and post humanities news stories, and help update MARCH’s social media accounts on Facebook and Twitter.

In the past, I have worked on the Encyclopedia of Greater Philadelphia, making an author’s essay web-ready by combing text, images, captions and web resources into a cohesive whole. However, my favorite tasks are the special projects on which I have worked. Last year, I facilitated a blogger search, and wrote a story for the MARCH newsletter, Cross Ties.

This fall, we’ve launched a re-designed MARCH websiteJennifer Pope, web designer of the Faculty of the Arts and Sciences did the heavy lifting of creating the site — and now I’m helping to coordinate the Scholarship and Partnerships forum scheduled for November 6 at Rutgers-Camden. 

I’m fortunate because MARCH is heavily invested in humanities work in the region. There are always opportunities to learn a new skill or meet someone new.  It has been a great supplement to my MA in public history from Rutgers.  

Mandi Magnuson-Hung

TV Appearance by Alumni Chris Threston

Christopher Threston, graduate of our MA program, appeared on a CBS local story about the film “42” and the legacy of Jackie Robinson.  

Chris is the author of The Integration of Baseball in Philadelphia (available on amazon). This book began life as an MA capstone paper!  Chris teaches AP US History at Bishop Eustace Prep.After the book was published nearly 10 years ago, he has been contacted periodically by the media.  

He reports “Four years ago, when the Phillies and Yankees were in the World Series, I was interviewed by the NY Daily News about the 1950 World Series (same teams) being the last “all-white” World Series. Then, just a few weeks ago, I received an invitation to a special Philadelphia screening of “42” for historical insight and which included the CBS3 interview.” They brought him to the rebuilt Pearl Theatre for the screening and the interview.

Alumna Susan Hamson Featured in “We Are Rutgers Camden”

Thinking critically.  This is what Susan G. Hamson does on a daily basis as the university archivist and the head of Access Services and Operations of the Rare Book and Manuscript Library at Columbia University.  She credits her education at Rutgers-Camden with helping her to develop this all-important skill.  In 1995, Susan graduated from Rutgers-Camden with a master of arts degree in American history, with concentrations in twentieth century urban history and eighteenth to twentieth century women’s history.  “I enjoyed the intellectual discourse,” she says, noting that her classmates, many of whom had full-time day jobs and worked on their graduate degrees at night, enriched the classroom experience because of the real-world insight they could offer.  She also cites history professors such as Drs. Rodney Carlisle, Janet Golden, and Philip Scranton as essential to her growth as a scholar.  “They challenged me and made me a better writer,” she says.  “It was – and is – a real privilege to live in South Jersey and get a Rutgers education.”

A typical day as a university archivist guarantees only two things: there will be challenge, and there will be reward.  Always busy, Susan’s job can have her trolling eBay for rare Columbia University items, fundraising, answering research queries, and organizing exhibits like the one which is currently on display, “100 Years of Journalism at Columbia.”  Despite her often chaotic schedule, Susan loves that her job allows her the opportunity to meet new and interesting people, such as Erica Jong, who had been a hero of Susan’s since she was thirteen years old.  “Rutgers-Camden provided me with these experiences because it gave me the academic skill and insight necessary to take on this important job,” she says.  

In addition to her work as an archivist at Columbia, Susan teaches at the Pratt Institute School of Information and Library Science.  She enjoys teaching, having spent eleven years as an adjunct lecturer at Camden County College.  At Pratt, she teaches “Management of Archives and Special Collections.”  In this course she and her students think critically about the archival profession, and also speak about the practical manner of finding employment after graduation.  “I think I’m a born educator, just like I’m a born archivist,” Susan says. 

Susan attributes much of her success to her education at Rutgers-Camden, where she was pressed and encouraged to think critically, an asset that she says is priceless and has helped her tremendously in her career.  We here at Rutgers-Camden are thrilled by Susan’s achievements, and are so happy to have been a small part of her climb to the top.       

The Best Little Book Club in Camden–A Reflection on My Graduate Education

By Evan Laine

At the end of every semester in my Law and Society introduction class at Philadelphia University, I always give the students a “pep” speech, so I give it to you:  Life is a pinball game, the old-fashioned type where you stand behind the machine and not a video screen. Those of you who played real pinball know that once you pull the plunger back the ball travels onto the field and in a wild, loud, exciting and totally unexpected way, it bounces off obstacles, rings bells and scores points. You control the ball somewhat with your bumpers and perhaps subtle machine shaking, but there’s a lot you don’t control. But, the game is exciting! However, you can go up to the machine, put your quarter in, yes they were a quarter when I was younger, and not push the lever that puts the ball in front of the plunger. You can decide not to play, indeed if you don’t, it’s safe, it’s quiet, you don’t lose points, but nothing happens. I tell my students pull back the plunger,  put your ball in play, you will never be absolutely sure what will happen,  but I guarantee you there will be excitement and bells, points will be scored, risks will be taken, goals that you never even imagined when you pull back the plunger can be accomplished. I tell my students this story because this is exactly what I did.

Up until 2002, I was a trial attorney with my own law firm. I had been practicing law since my graduation in 1981 from Rutgers Law School.  My profession taught me a very important lesson; an idea cannot and should not be submitted to a judge and/or jury without proper foundation. Concepts must be the fruit of careful, often painstaking, research and analysis. Suppositions, opinions, and conclusions held no weight in a court of law unless one could prove they were based upon adequate and credible evidence.   After time, I also learned that solutions to convoluted and critical problems often do not exist in black-and-white; instead careful analysis frequently revealed the many different shades of gray in between.

For some years, I enjoyed my position and my profession.  As a trial lawyer, your primary job is to teach juries why products are defective or why certain medical practices were performed negligently, but in the end, what I really taught them was limited to that one particular circumstance and for no greater purpose other than making money for myself and of course my client. It soon dawned upon me that I was not contributing as I could and should. I was no longer happy.  I knew I could teach and knew that my skills needed to be applied to a broader and larger objective.

One spring day, I believe it was in 2002, my wife and I were walking near the Battleship New Jersey when we got into a discussion on what we should be doing with the rest of our lives. We were empty-nesters with both of our children in college. Maybe it was the battleship, maybe it was the smell of desperation in the air in Camden, yes it is a chronic condition, that stimulated us into this conversation. She stated she wanted to go in the medical field, and indeed she went back to school and now works full-time in that profession. I stated that the true love that I’ve developed over the years was history. I was an avid reader of anything historical, especially topics in early U.S. history.  I decided at that point I would teach history.   That fall I enrolled in Prof. Seitter’s Civil War history class in the undergraduate program as a type of test drive.   I absolutely loved the class.  I knew at that at point I wanted to teach at a college level and soon thereafter enrolled in the Masters in American History program at Rutgers University.  I would describe it as follows; it’s the best damn book club in America or at least in Camden New Jersey!  Moderated and directed by accomplished and caring professors, twice a week at night I would gather with very intelligent people to analyze fascinating books.  We would discuss, argue, agree and debate, all while having an amazingly good time.  Yes, we had to write papers, but they were on subjects I cared deeply about and was anxious to express my opinions on. I’m not exaggerating when telling you that going to classes were the highlight of my week.

Upon graduation from Rutgers University, with the help and recommendation of my professors, (big shout out to Professors Golden, Woll, Seigel and Bernstein among others) I became an adjunct professor of history and criminal justice in Rutgers University Camden and Philadelphia University. Eventually, I became a full-time professor and Director of the Law and Society program at Philadelphia University where I’m now Associate Professor of History. I teach classes, and research and write articles on topics that continue to fascinate me. My current Interests include the genesis of 9/11 conspiracy theories which led to my article Modernity, Fear and 9/11 Conspiracy Theories, a Rational Attempt to Explain the Irrational. I especially enjoyed giving a lecture on my article during a social sciences conference in Honolulu Hawaii. I’ve also written a book concerning Richard Nixon’s conspiracy to destroy Pres. Lyndon Johnson’s attempts to bring peace to the Vietnam War in 1968. The book is titled Nixon and the Dragon Lady (available at popular prices on Amazon.com!)  Currently, I am writing a museum exhibit for the Arlen Specter Center for Public Policy concerning the late Senator’s investigation into the assassination of Pres. Kennedy. This museum exhibit will coincide with the 50th anniversary of Pres. Kennedy’s assassination.

I look forward to every day of work. Teaching gives me a sense of accomplishment and satisfaction that I never had as an attorney. I honestly believe that I’m affecting people’s lives, helping them think, analyze and understand the complicated and difficult world we live in. When I put my ball in play that day when I enrolled in the Masters program in American History at Rutgers Camden, it indeed led to a fascinating unexpected ride, one that continues to this present day. As I say to my students I will say once again to you, put your ball in play!