Archive: stories

The Road Less Lethal

Prairie grasses and blooms spread for miles beneath the sun

On the Colville Reservation, deadly car crashes have become a tragic fact of life. EWU faculty and students are determined to change that.   By Dave Meany To drive along one stretch of the Coulee Corridor, a national scenic byway, is to experience North Central Washington in all its glory. The majestic Columbia River is

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Mysteries of the Microbiome

Microscopic closeup of microbes

A prominent EWU scientist and his students explores new ways of thinking about a devastating neurodegenerative disease.

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In a Paradise Under Pressure, an Eagle Markets Unity

A customer picks up an order of food from the Island Pita food truck

The Hawaiian word lokahi, roughly defined, means “balanced, unified and harmonious.” For Michelle Horton ’10, and others who call the Aloha State home, the term is often deployed to describe the sort of benevolent, communitarian way of living that they and their neighbors aspire to perfect.

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Cultivating Sustainability

EWU Sustainability Garden

A cornucopia of organic produce aims to take a bite out of hunger. By Eastern Magazine Recent upgrades to the university’s sort-of-secret Sustainability Garden — already a cornucopia of gorgeous organic produce — are giving this out-of-the-way plot a more prominent role in helping food-insecure students eat better. The changes this season, according to EWU

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A Gift of Music

The newly varnished bodies of stringed instruments dry in the sun

An alumnus craftsman and his wife present Eastern with a tuneful, long-lived contribution. By Eastern Magazine Lynn Nelson ’69 is a luthier; i.e., a maker of stringed musical instruments. During a Thanksgiving event in Hargreaves Hall earlier this year, Lynn and his wife, Gail, presented the university with a gift as unique as it was

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Entrepreneurially Teaching

Piano keyboard with a computer and headphones

An Eastern arts expert masters the business case study. By Eastern Magazine Jonathan Middleton, a professor of music at EWU, is a champion of the fine arts. He is not, strictly speaking, a business person. But after a recent conference he may need to update his CV. In September, Middleton and Jeff Culver, an information

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Joy and Growth

EWU DPT students interact with a small child on a therapeutic swing

Eastern physical therapy students learn by assisting little ones in need. By Eastern Magazine Watching children grow, play and learn is a timeless joy. It’s a pleasure made even more palpable when kids with developmental delays and disabilities are doing these things with the help of EWU physical therapy students. This was the scene last

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Transformative Journey

EWU students stand on the front steps of the Peach and Justice Memorial Center

EWU students travel in the footsteps of America’s civil rights icons By Eastern Magazine Spring break is traditionally known as a week to relax and unwind, perhaps even to travel to a warmer climate and lay by a pool or the ocean. For 15 EWU Africana Studies students, however, spring break involved a different kind

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More Love for the New PUB

Photo of the stairs and entryway of the PUB

Professional architects agree, Eastern’s PUB is the place to be. Eastern’s Pence Union Building, recent recipient of a $47 million remodel, has become everything renovation advocates had hoped for: an inviting center for student activities, a welcoming gathering place for the campus community, and a symbol of Eastern’s commitment to a new era of higher

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Art and Science

Painted mural in the entryway of the Science Building featuring the moon, a whale, buildings and a helicopter

A colorful celebration of discovery now enlivens the Science Building. By Eastern Magazine Even as the new Interdisciplinary Science Center rises next door, the old Science Building at EWU remains a vital center for learning and discovery. It is also now a destination for art aficionados, thanks to a massive, science-celebrating mural recently completed by

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