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New Honors College faculty Annie Lampman publishes creative writing.

New Honors College Faculty Member Annie Lampman Publishes Creative Writing

Assistant Clinical Professor Annie Lampman teaches creative writing at the WSU Honors College and serves as Editor of the Honors College literary journal The Palouse Review and Fiction Editor of Blood Orange Review. Lampman writes creative nonfiction, fiction, and poetry and has had the following work recently published/forthcoming:

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Eight Students and Two Faculty from WSU Honors College to Present at Honors Conference in Seattle

Eight Students and Two Faculty from WSU Honors COllege to Present at Honors Conference in Seattle

Nearly 2,000 Students & Faculty to Attend NCHC Annual Event
Pullman, WA, September 21, 2016– Eight honors students and two faculty members from the WSU Honors College have been selected as presenters during the 51st annual conference to be held by the National Collegiate Honors Council in Seattle, Washington, October 12-16, ­2016. » More …

New One-Credit Workshop Announced: How to Get a Literary Agent/How to Be a Literary Agent

New One-Credit Workshop Announced: How to Get a Literary Agent/How to Be a Literary Agent

A One-Credit Workshop: English 358

Fall 2016 – November7-9

6:00-8:30 p.m. Bundy Reading Room, Avery Hall

tarynfagerness

In this hands-on class, veteran literary agent Taryn Fagerness will teach students how to attract a literary agent to their work and the pitfalls to avoid on their journey to publication.

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Honors Alumna Joey Redmon Featured on WSU Foundation Website

Honors Alumna Joey Redmon Featured on WSU Foundation Website


Joanna “Joey” Redmon, a graduate student in pharmacy at Washington State University, truly “gets” the significance of searching for opportunities and engaging in her own education. “My greatest learning experience,” she said, “has been how to find opportunities that will lead me to my goals.”

“College can be intimidating,” Joey said. “It’s a challenge to navigate and locate relevant opportunities. For me, it started with the WSU Honors College where I learned how to integrate into the WSU community and participate in many rewarding experiences. I want to share that understanding with other students.”

Joey’s path to Washington State University took some navigating. She’d started dancing at age three and was trained in ballet, tap, jazz, and modern dance. Dancing professionally was Joey’s dream. After she graduated from high school in her hometown, Spokane, Washington, she planned to move to California to fulfill that dream. But Joey was diagnosed with Crohn’s Disease, a chronic inflammatory condition of the gastrointestinal tract.

Read the full release on the Foundation website >>