Both the classes of 2020 and 2021 will have an opportunity to walk across the stage inside Beasley Coliseum and receive their diplomas Saturday, Dec. 11 on the WSU Pullman campus.
Tazbah Chavez, a citizen of the Bishop Paiute Tribe, from the Nüümü, Diné and San Carlos Apache tribes, is speaking today at 4 p.m. Chavez is a performance poet turned director and television writer.
More than a dozen pharmacy students helped Pullman students who live off campus with their COVID-19 nasal swab tests, providing instruction on how to administer the test and ensuring samples are handled and stored properly.
The near-empty Pullman campus was an unusual sight for the opening of a new academic year, but it doesn’t mean students, faculty and staff aren’t already hard at work.
To meet the needs of their student populations, pre-packaged boxes of food are being assembled on several campuses for pickup, while others are taking steps to ensure shopping can occur with minimal in-person contact.
Construction crews will continue work on the new Plant Sciences Building a few months longer than originally planned in order to complete its top two floors.