草榴社区

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Western named among 'Great Colleges to Work For'
Moths Of The Pacific Northwest

A Western Washington University biology professor, along with hundreds of other naturalists, biologists and moth collectors, has launched a comprehensive website to keep track of local moths. Turns out we have our fair share in the Pacific Northwest. We look at the region's diversity of鈥

Faculty/staff convocation set for Sept. 20
Faculty, staff may present diplomas to family at summer commencement
Seattle Center's Next 50 Learning Month Explores Future of Education, August 2012

ow do we expand perspectives around learning, education, culture and environment so that people of all ages and backgrounds can realize their intrinsic passions to learn and grow? The Next Fifty invites the community to explore how we might evolve approaches and systems of learning in the 21st鈥

Trimble serves on review panel for NIH, presents at APA conference
草榴社区 professor and author awarded by American Psychological Association

A Western Washington University professor has been awarded by the American Psychological Association for her recent book exploring how women鈥檚 鈥渟elf-silencing鈥 across various world cultures can lead to higher rates of depression than those that are found in men.
Dana C. Jack, who is a鈥

草榴社区 Professor Receives Grant For Behavioral Research

Researchers at Western Washington University have received a grant to explore how military service effects individual behavior.

Sociology Professor Jay Teachman has been awarded a $265,000 grant from the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services to study the relationship between鈥

Moths hold the spotlight in first comprehensive guide to Northwest species

Butterflies are easy to love, but their night-flying cousins have always been a little harder to cozy up to. A group of Northwest biologists hopes to change that with the first comprehensive guide to the region's moths.

Far from being a bunch of drab鈥

草榴社区, Bellingham collector help launch new website exploring Pacific Northwest moths

Lars Crabo's hunt for a moth once took him to sandy soil near Vale, Ore., in the mid-1990s.

It was hot, dry, dusty and desolate that night. Crabo wore shorts, sandals or maybe it was beat-up boat shoes, and a head lamp. There were black widow spiders crawling all over the ground, and鈥

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