Stories @ EKU - Students
Kasey Waddell remembers the moment she decided to become a Colonel.
Diamond Richards, a first-generation college student from Lexington, shared the difficult, yet revolutionary journey she...
EKU’s baseball team will serve approximately 250 local children grades K-5 by washing their feet and giving them a new pair of...
Parking on college campuses: Everybody talks about it, but Eastern Kentucky University has gone a step further with the recent...
The first in a series of interviews with campus QEP leaders – those staff, faculty and administrators across campus promoting...
EKU ranks seventh nationally, and tops in Kentucky, among the best colleges and universities for military veterans, according...
Many Americans visit Jamaica for the warm Caribbean sunshine, sipping their pina coladas on sandy beaches as they eye an...
Caitlin Buckley of Crab Orchard, Kentucky, student commencement speaker for Eastern Kentucky University’s College of Education...
The road to a degree winds differently for everyone. For Mariah Richardson, the path was paved with hard work and perseverance.
Student speaker Katherine Grasberger, who addressed fellow College of Science graduates on Dec. 15, suggests that graduates of...
When a contingent from EKU traveled to Harrodsburg in June 2017 to present 80-year-old Joyce Sanders with an associate’s degree...
The third annual eCAPS Awards luncheon, hosted by the EKU Office of e-Campus Learning on Dec. 5, honored EKU Online students,...
The fall semester has been a busy one for Esther Epps, who is pursuing a master’s degree in public health. Over the course of...
John A.D. McArthur, environmental manager of Bechtel Parsons Blue Grass, recently visited EKU to meet with nearly 50 students,...
The “transformation” of EKU continued on Monday, Dec. 11, with groundbreaking for a new Student Recreation and Wellness Center.
He spent this past summer studying abroad in Argentina, and recently returned from the Forum for Education Abroad Gala in...
December graduate Yasmin White thanks EKU for teaching her that "anything is possible."
The future wasn’t always so hopeful for the native Haitian Kevely Dumay.