PULLMAN, Wash. – The Board of Regents of Washington State University will hold a regularly scheduled meeting Jan. 28 and 29 on the WSU Vancouver campus, Firstenburg Student Commons building, Rooms 101-103.
VANCOUVER, Wash. – Your question reminds me of an experiment: You put a ringing alarm clock in a jar and use a hose to slowly suck out all the air. As the air escapes, the ringing gets quieter until there’s no sound at all.
VANCOUVER, Wash. – Michael Dunn, associate professor of special education and literacy, recently was elected to the International Academy for Research in Learning Disabilities (IARLD).
By Brenda Alling, WSU Vancouver VANCOUVER, Wash. – Six students will represent Washington State University Vancouver in national and regional business sales contests in the spring after winning in their recent campus competition.
By Will Ferguson, College of Arts & Sciences PULLMAN, Wash. – A pregnant woman’s relationship with food isn’t only about what she wants. It’s also about what she doesn’t.
PULLMAN, Wash. – Washington State University and the Zurich University of Applied Sciences (ZHAW) in Switzerland have launched an international, double master’s degree program designed to graduate globally educated professionals to assume leadership positions in technology-driven, multinational corporations.
By Brenda Alling, WSU Vancouver VANCOUVER, Wash. – April Tovar, student financial services manager at Washington State University Vancouver, was awarded the Distinguished Service Award from the Washington Financial Aid Association for extraordinary commitment over a sustained period of time.
VANCOUVER, Wash. – You are onto something. Quick, to the bat-lab! That’s where I met up with my friend Christine Portfors, a scientist at Washington State University who studies fruit bats.
VANCOUVER, Wash. – Washington State University Vancouver researcher Jessica Fales and colleagues are seeking adolescent participants for an online study of the social behaviors of female high-school students.
VANCOUVER, Wash. – There are very few cheaters among species that cooperate, according to a recently published paper co-authored by researchers at Washington State University. But information on this type of cheating is scarce, they found, and science would benefit from more thorough studies.