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Christina Tatu is a member of the editorial team in the Office of Communications and Public Affairs.
She writes for Lehigh’s various print publications and news websites.
Tatu joined Lehigh in September 2021 after 13 years as a reporter at several daily newspapers, writing for publications like The Morning Call in Allentown, the Pocono Record in Stroudsburg and the New Jersey Herald in Newton. While at The Morning Call she covered the city of Bethlehem and numerous other communities throughout the Lehigh Valley.
Her writing has been recognized by the Pennsylvania News Media Association and Pennsylvania Women’s Press Association.
A Poconos native, Tatu holds a B.A. in English from East Stroudsburg University, where she also minored in media communications.
Helble ’82 held a Community Conversation in person and virtually on Monday.
Workers dismantling the interior of the iconic structure find old drawings, fossils and other items from the past.
Sean Carberry ’91 writes about his time overseas in his new book, “Passport Stamps: Searching the World for a War to Call Home.”
A 3,000-year-old flint knifepoint is among the artifacts to be returned to the sovereign, federally recognized Delaware Nation, with whom Lehigh partnered with last year.
A bridge in Hellertown, Pennsylvania rehabilitated by a group of Lehigh engineering students in 1994 has been added to the National Register of Historic Places.
University leadership updated the Lehigh community on multiple strategic plan initiatives Wednesday at an information session held on the Mountaintop campus.
Looking back at some of the biggest Lehigh stories of the year.
An estimated 300 professionals from dozens of cultural and arts organizations around the state attended the event, which was well received.
Helble delivered a lecture during his first stop on a tour of Latin America Thursday, highlighting Lehigh’s commitment to interdisciplinary education.
Helble ’82 held a Community Conversation in person and virtually on Monday.
A Juris Doctor candidate at Yale Law School, Sicard plans to advocate for fair criminal justice after attaining his degree.
What does generative artificial intelligence mean for higher education? Promising or problematic?
Dulra Amolegbe ’26 created the start-up, Dot, that offers immigrant students a way to make cashless transactions.
The agreement will aid in Indigenous research opportunities and establish a historic preservation office on campus. Lehigh is situated on Delaware Nation’s ancestral lands.
A grant from the Appalachian Regional Commission will help the Pennsylvania Tourism Office, in partnership with Lehigh, to develop a plan for collecting Indigenous histories.
A Creative Inquiry team of students is bringing Amazon’s Alexa to Lehigh, where the voice-activated assistant can help students navigate campus.
Entering its 10th year, bLUeprint was updated to include five new foundations.
A new exhibit in Linderman Library will include maps dating back to the 16th through 18th centuries.
Donna Esposito has written two WWII-era novels and helped with the repatriation of an MIA American soldier.
The students showcased their venture projects after six weeks of immersive entrepreneurial experience through Baker’s Hatchery program.