Dec 3, 2014
Interview with James Brubaker
James Brubaker is from Dayton, Ohio, originally, but now teaches and lives in Missouri. He is the author of one book of short stories, Liner Notes (Subito Press), a short volume of pilot episodes for fictional television shows, Pilot Season (Sunnyoutside Press), Black Magic Death Sphere: (Science) Fictions (which won the 2014 Pressgang Prize and will be published in 2015), and a number of short stories that have appeared online and in print. James is also...
Dec 2, 2014
Winter weather came early this year, and it's here to stay whether we like it or not. The November blast of arctic temperatures and heavy snow gave us all a wake-up call.
Dec 2, 2014
The Student Union Apollo Room will be transformed into an English manor of the Renaissance era for the annual Madrigal Dinner Dec. 11 to Dec. 14.
Dec 1, 2014
Wright State communication major Emma Harmeyer turned a technical-writing internship into a full-time job when she graduates.
Nov 25, 2014
Wright State’s popular “Holidays in the Heartland” concert will be rebroadcast on Dayton Public Radio on Thanksgiving.
Nov 25, 2014
Associate French professor Kirsten Halling helped spur growth of Wright State’s French program, led French Immersion Days and nurtured appreciation of France.
Nov 24, 2014
Father and son work together at the National Museum of the United States Air Force and in Wright State's Public History program.
Nov 24, 2014
Grabbing a box of Bill’s doughnuts and Starbucks coffee, Melissa Spirek, Ph.D., hurried to the Cox Media Center in Dayton for a meeting that would transform the mass communication program at Wright State University. Spirek, chair of Wright State’s Department of …
Nov 24, 2014
Kate Hoover Because of the experienced pro-fessors and array of practical courses the communication department at Wright State University offers, my future is filled with incredible opportunities. As an internal and external communication writer for Woolpert, an architecture and engineering …
Nov 24, 2014
To the soldier stationed in the war zone of mountainous central Afghanistan, the 10-year-old Afghan boy who bobbed around their camp was a welcome relief from the danger-induced stress. The boy would greet them with “What’s up?”—the first English words he …