Washington and Lee University selected as home for SHECP
Washington and Lee University has been selected as the new academic home of the Shepherd Higher Education Consortium on Poverty following a competitive application process.
Washington and Lee University has been selected as the new academic home of the Shepherd Higher Education Consortium on Poverty following a competitive application process.
Washington and Lee University’s Staniar Gallery presents “A Yellow Rose Project,” an exhibition of photographic works made by women across the United States.
Kristie A. Ford has been named the inaugural associate provost for diversity, equity and inclusion at Washington and Lee University.
Washington and Lee University’s Campus Kitchen has announced a new multi-year series titled “Just Food” that examines the many ways in which the food system interacts with issues of justice.
The Native American and Indigenous Cohort at W&L is continuing to learn the historical, cultural and environmental stewardship practices of the Monacans and other Indigenous peoples of the region.
The Museums at Washington and Lee University, including the Reeves Museum of Ceramics, University Chapel & Galleries, and Watson Galleries, will reopen to the campus community and general public on Thursday.
Members of the undergraduate and law classes of 2020 returned to Washington and Lee University on Sept. 11 for an event they’ve eagerly awaited: their official, in-person Commencement ceremony, which was postponed for more than 500 days amid the COVID-19 public health crisis.
A series of events hosted at Washington and Lee University on the 20th anniversary of the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks will offer the community a chance to remember that dark day.
Washington and Lee University will name a new interdisciplinary academic center for teaching and research on Southern race relations, culture and politics in honor of late professor of history emeritus Ted DeLaney.
Professional conferences usually are considered a success when attendees pick up innovative ideas, do some networking or even land a plum job. But those outcomes sound mundane compared to what happened in the aftermath of a 2017 conference at Washington and Lee University.
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