
Articles
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6 days ago |
idahostatesman.com | Anthony Kuipers
May 10-Before attending the University of Idaho, Billy Croston felt lost. He was still trying to figure out who he was as a person and what to do with his life. This conflict created tension and anxiety for him, he said. "College seemed like the last resort for me to try and answer that question of who I want to be," Croston said. When the Moscow High School alumnus attended the UI, he discovered a love for filmmaking and a group of people who felt the same way he did.
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6 days ago |
yahoo.com | Anthony Kuipers
May 10—Before attending the University of Idaho, Billy Croston felt lost. He was still trying to figure out who he was as a person and what to do with his life. This conflict created tension and anxiety for him, he said. "College seemed like the last resort for me to try and answer that question of who I want to be," Croston said. When the Moscow High School alumnus attended the UI, he discovered a love for filmmaking and a group of people who felt the same way he did.
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2 weeks ago |
idahostatesman.com | Anthony Kuipers
MOSCOW - "Smack - smack - smack."As Moscow Middle School students walked into Tom Garrett's choir class, they greeted their teacher with enthusiastic high-fives. It may seem like a simple gesture, but Garrett said it is part of making a student feel welcome. "It's just kind of a little bit of connection that they can have, that they can hold onto and know this is a spot where they feel safe or they feel comfortable and they're able to make some music together," Garrett said.
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2 weeks ago |
yahoo.com | Anthony Kuipers
Apr. 29—MOSCOW — "Smack — smack — smack."As Moscow Middle School students walked into Tom Garrett's choir class, they greeted their teacher with enthusiastic high-fives. It may seem like a simple gesture, but Garrett said it is part of making a student feel welcome. "It's just kind of a little bit of connection that they can have, that they can hold onto and know this is a spot where they feel safe or they feel comfortable and they're able to make some music together," Garrett said.
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3 weeks ago |
idahopress.com | Anthony Kuipers
MOSCOW — A University of Idaho professor says the termination of a nearly $59 million USDA grant caused an “enormous disruption” to a university research project. Sanford Eigenbrode, an entomology professor, was co-director of the project being funded by the USDA grant, called the Innovated Agriculture and Marketing Partnership project (IAMP). The IAMP project, which is also co-directed by UI professor Erin Brooks, was supposed to help Idaho growers use climate-smart agricultural practices.
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Fiona Shepherd
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Luke Walton
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