Being the only LGBTQ+ person in an office or department can be isolating. That’s why WSU Vancouver faculty and staff created PRISM, an affinity group for LGBTQ+ individuals, advocates, and allies.
As part of WSU’s Rural Community Design Initiative, students are working with the LaCrosse community on ideas for an Ice Age Floods and Heritage museum at the site of an old gas station.
Among the WSU programs and services receiving the most attention is La Bienvenida, a New Coug Orientation program tailored specifically for Spanish-speaking families.
Recent WSU graduate Alicia Callahan’s Honors College thesis about the heroic efforts of WWII soldiers has drawn national attention, earning her a summer speaking engagement in D.C., and a trip to Normandy.
Little did Chris Jose know that he would be virtually celebrating his WSU commencement ceremony on May 6 with another milestone that very same morning: the birth of his first child.
The Pullman area has seen an unusually high number of crisis situations this academic year. Fortunately, students adversely affected by local, national, or international events have support in these difficult situations.
Voiland College electrical engineering students had a chance to learn from power engineering industry experts during a week-long practicum organized by WSU’s Energy Systems Innovation Center.
Pen Friends is a project of WSU’s Center for Civic Engagement that’s been around more than a decade. More than 150 students take part each spring semester, exchanging letters with elementary school students.
Landscape architecture students are reimagining the future of the small towns of Malden and Pine City, Washington, which had much of their homes and buildings destroyed during a devastating fire on Labor Day in 2020.