This dynamic exhibition features work from LA 222: Study Tour of Seattle, Washington. The course introduced the LA Sophomore class to the designed landscapes of Seattle through direct, immersive experiences. The focus was “Design and the Creative Process” where participants explored how designs and the drawings that represent those designs result in the spaces that affect our experiences and connect us to others and place.
What’s happening
Wednesday, April 20, 2022
Join our financial education fair where you will be able to meet with experts in the areas of employment, personal and consumer finance, and financial aid. We will also cover the Cougar Money Matters Learning Portal, our online personal finance tool.
Evan Hilpman presents, “Plant traits in Castilleja: how morphological traits and volatile organic compound emissions differentiate species, affect insect interactions, and correlate with individual plant fitness”.
SBS exit seminar
A comprehensive investigation on the formation dynamics and energetics of adlayer formation at the at the solution/solid interface has been performed using scanning tunneling microscopy (STM) with a custom solution flow cell design that offers new insight into the self-assembly process.
Come join Janicki Industries as they host a virtual information session! Get to learn more about their company and job opportunities by attending the event!
This presentation introduces students to important financial topics and setting yourself up for financial success. Topics covered include setting attainable goals, starting salary, ideal spending percentages, budgeting for your first large expenses, building credit, managing debt, investing, and saving for retirement. This is a great information session for students close to graduation as well as students beginning to manage their own personal finances.
Naomi Littlebear Morena is a Chicana lesbian writer and musician who is featured in the seminal third-wave feminist anthology, This Bridge Called My Back: Writings by Radical Women of Color. Her song, “Can’t Kill the Spirit” has been adopted in protests internationally from England to Nicaragua. In the 1980s, the Greenham Common Peace Camps adopted the song to protest the storing of nuclear cruise missiles, which lasted nearly two decades and was some 30,000 women strong.
Professor Emeritus David Jarvis! Prof. Jarvis will be performing on the WSU Jazz Band concert Tuesday, 4/19, and will be leading the forum advertised below on Wednesday, 4/20.