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  • list of researchers, and PLU Chemistry alum Kyle Siemers ’20 is in the Baack Lab! She’s offered to have further conversation with any interested students, in medicine, the summer research program, or otherwise! Summer Program Tracks REU Site in Cellular and Molecular Biology: This National Science Foundation (NSF)-funded opportunity provides research experience in basic cellular and molecular biology. Students perform cutting-edge research in diverse areas, such as signal transduction

  • YouTube: Summer Internship as a cancer research intern PLU partnered with the Fred Hutch Cancer Center to guarantee two PLU students a paid summer internship focusing on cancer research. Get an insider’s view as we follow for a day PLU chemistry major, Elijah Singleton ’25, one of the interns who spent his summer… November 15, 2023 AcademicsChemistryCurrent StudentsInternshipsResearchStudent Voice

  • Molecules Meet Materials (M3) REU Site The Molecules Meet Materials REU site at the University of South Dakota will support the training of 10 students for 10 weeks during summers 2022-2024. In this program, participants pursue collaborative research projects, with a focus on chemistry at interfaces in which molecular processes occur… January 23, 2024

  • Mississippi State University Summer REU The Mississippi State University Chemistry Department seeks applicants for an interdisciplinary NSF-supported summer Research Experience for Undergraduates (REU) program occurring in 2024. Students who have completed their freshman year of college and who have not yet graduated can participate fully in the Food, Energy and… November 30, 2023

  • 2011 Capstone Celebration SymposiumPLU Chemistry Department May 2nd to May 6th, 2011 Join the Chemistry Department to hear the senior capstone presentations. Student presentations will occur Monday through Friday. The schedule of talks with more details is given below. [ Monday | Tuesday | Wednesday | Thursday | Friday ] Morken Center, Room 103Monday, May 2nd, 2011 (Morken Room 103) 12:40 pm - Comparing Capacitances of Electrodes with Ordered & Disordered Pore GeometriesErin Madden, Senior

  • elend (op. 110, no. 1) Hallock, Peter: Phoenix English folk song/arr. Byrt, John: Among Thy Leaves So Green Weyse, C.E.F./arr. Christiansen: O Day Full Of Grace Christiansen, F. Melius: Beautiful Savior Dawson, William L.: Every Time I Feel The Spirit Esquivel, Juan: Ego sum panis vivus Mendelssohn, Felix: Die Nachtigall de Victoria, Tomas Luis: O Magnum Mysterium Farmer, John: Fair Phyllis I Saw Hovland, Egil: Karin Boye’s Evening Prayer Oakland, Ben and Drake, Milton/arr. Shaw: Java Jive

  • says book has brought more than he expected Read Next Making all the green moves COMMENTS*Note: All comments are moderated If the comments don't appear for you, you might have ad blocker enabled or are currently browsing in a "private" window. LATEST POSTS PLU Director of Athletics and Recreation Mike Snyder named President of NADIIIAA August 16, 2024 PLU College of Liberal Studies welcomes Dean Stephanie Johnson July 24, 2024 Three students share how scholarships support them in their pursuit to

  • choose to make a difference because of it, he said. “Victimhood is a disease you can slip into, “he said. “Use the crises in your life, big and small, to begin training to become resilient. “Whether it’s before or after, transitions are quite formative,” White said. “When you ask people about the before and after moment, if it’s an international student crowd, quite a few will raise their hand. If it’s more of a preppy town, less hands will be raised. But your time will come.” Read Previous How Green

  • an institution to be better able to adjust to meet the needs of future students,” DeLaRosby said. The PLU presenters represent a significant part of a multilayered conference program that includes keynote speakers Angela Davis, a civil-rights activist, prison abolitionist and professor; indigenous and environmental rights advocate and former Green Party vice presidential candidate Winona LaDuke; Harvard professor and director of the W.E.B. Du Bois Institute for African and African American

  • green millet, the grain is a high-protein food staple and more nutritionally dense than rice. The National Science Foundation and other funding sources support the project.   “Although millet is a culturally and nutritionally important food in Asia and Africa, it’s not commonly grown in western agriculture, so there’s not a lot of research,” Laurie-Berry says. A similar process of genetic experimentation refined rice production around 50 years ago. “After we figure out which genes control yield, the