Exceeding the Vision
The new spaces in Reynolds Hall exceed expectations of both founder and students.
The new spaces in Reynolds Hall exceed expectations of both founder and students.
The WVU School of Public Health celebrates a decade of making a difference.
50 years after its inception, Title IX still shapes women’s educational experience in myriad ways.
Fifty years after women first joined “The Pride of West Virginia,” the Mountaineer Marching Band, the WVU Magazine follows a senior industrial engineering major who fits “spinning” with the band’s color guard into a packed class and work schedule.
A new home for the Pride. The Mountaineer Marching Band will soon have the perfect place for perfect practice: the Pride Practice Facility.
When Dr. Jeff Coben looks back on the last few years, knowing then what he knows now about the novel coronavirus would have been valuable.
The Benjamin M. Statler College of Engineering and Mineral Resources resumed its popular Pumpkin Drop this year after a two-year hiatus.
Thousands of quilters in West Virginia work their magic to create unique designs, in varied fabrics — from old shirts to new wedding dresses — and a myriad of colors to blanket their loved ones or their walls with a lasting bit of handiwork and memories that will last for generations.
Meet the founding dean of the newly created WVU College of Applied Human Sciences — she’s a force of nature in custom sneakers.
Elizabeth Mullen, ’81, journalism, might not be Dr. Doolittle, but she can “listen” to the dogs she trains through their body language and talk back to them using behavior modification and positive reinforcement.
Luke Yingling, Law ’22, is blazing his own trail as the founding president and CEO of Analytica Legalis, a technology company that uses artificial intelligence to help attorneys win in court.
WVU celebrated Mountaineer Week with a full schedule of events featuring the Beard Growing Contest, the Arts and Craft Fair, the ever-popular Quilt Show and more.
A team led by a biomedical engineering researcher hopes to ramp up and reimagine how medical professionals diagnose tick-borne infections.
A Mountaineer Reunion spanning more than 40 years was held over Homecoming weekend in October, with 23 of the buckskinned mascots joining current Mountaineer Mary Roush.
WVU Health Sciences and West Virginia University Libraries dedicated the William A. Neal Museum of the Health Sciences in October.
Wren Baker has been named WVU’s new vice president and director of Inter Collegiate Athletics.
Dean Jorge Atiles celebrated his two-year anniversary with WVU Extension this summer. Over the last few years, he has spent a lot of time listening and learning. Although he has worked with Cooperative Extension programs for 23 years, he quickly realized that a vast number of programs and West Virginia’s geographic terrain make WVU Extension’s opportunities and challenges unique.