Overview of federal health appropriation processes and a discussion of WSU’s concept paper procedures. Guidance will be provided on how to utilize the concept paper process to maximize impact along with examples shared of lessons learned and how it is used to build federal support for WSU.
Office
May 2022
Research Faculty are Invited! Please join the Office of External Relations & Government Affairs in collaboration with WSU Health Sciences & the Office of Research for a virtual town hall event from 9 am – 11:30 am PT Monday, May 2nd featuring experts from the Cornerstone Government Affairs team discussing federal support for health science research.
In this deep-dive webinar, New York Times bestselling author and award-winning speaker Keith Ferrazzi and coauthor Kian Gohar will show you how to shape your organization to remain competitive in a new post-pandemic context.
Join the Brelsford WSU Visitor Center for special hours during Washington State University Pullman’s Spring Commencement to celebrate the graduating class of 2022.
Terri Trespicio, author of the new book Unfollow Your Passion, will lead an insightful hour of ideas and discussion as we reframe work, ambition, and yes, passion in our work and our lives.
In this deep dive webinar, author Brendan McGurgan explores the 10 Principles of Scaling – from developing a scaleup psyche to establishing your purpose, sourcing the right people, planning, and implementing repeatable performance to fuel 10x growth.
Inside this power-packed session, we’ll explore strategies grounded in neuroscience principles, that will empower you to create meaningful (and seriously impactful) change in your life NOW.
Keiko Hara’s exploration of her relationship to her surrounding environment has been continually formulated through the artist’s ongoing series titled, Topophilia. Meaning “a strong love of place,” the term topophilia, with its connection to humanistic geography, also represents a universal desire to hold onto ephemeral moments of beauty and sadness as related to conceptions of place—even if unattainable.
In 1967, Irwin Nash visited the Yakima Valley to take photographs for a free-lance magazine piece on valley agriculture. After completing this assignment, he nevertheless returned to the farming communities around Yakima each season until 1976 to document the lives of these workers. In the process, he created a compelling archive of more than 9,400 photographs.