The Washington Animal Disease Diagnostic Laboratory on the Pullman campus has begun limited testing of animal samples for the SARS‑CoV‑2 virus, the causative agent for COVID‑19.
The digital exhibition is the culmination of two or more years work by the Master of Fine Arts graduate candidates and the first of its kind for the museum. It will be online from March 31–May 9.
The WSU Libraries on the Pullman campus closed as of Sunday, March 22, due to the evolving environment surrounding COVID-19. All other state university libraries have already closed, as have the vast majority of research libraries in the United States and Canada.
The decision is part of WSU’s ongoing response to the COVID-19 public health emergency and in accordance with Washington Gov. Jay Inslee’s temporary statewide shutdown of public facilities and recreational centers, including museums.
Two WSU librarians share their admiration of strong female leads through a display of books and films they collected at the library as part of International Women’s Day.
Thanks to life-saving efforts by WSU veterinarians, one of Moses Lake’s four‑legged finest returned home today—just days after suffering a gunshot wound to the head.
Seventeen undergraduates in Reza Safavi’s introductory Digital Design and Fabrication course last spring worked individually and as a team to create a 7-by-7-foot interactive art installation composed of 22 precision-cut and fitted, wooden cogwheels bearing the names of Palouse Discovery Science Center’s generous benefactors.
A spring semester test of the WSU Alert Pullman emergency alert system, including campus outdoor warning sirens, will be conducted at 11:45 a.m. Tuesday, March 3.
Jordan Graham and Nam Nguyen were the only students from a Washington university to be among the federation’s 50 Most Promising Multicultural Students of 2020.