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  • McKenna’s Story – Argentina & Antarctica, J-Term Communication (Anthropology minor) – Class of 2019 What she would like other students to know: Studying away was in important part of finding what I wanted to do with my life. We always talk about vocation but you can’t truly find it until you explore yourself and learn what you do and don’t like. A piece of advice to future study away students: Savor every moment by taking time to journal. Months or years after your travels you won’t remember

  • forthcoming in Barrelhouse, Quarterly West, Gulf Coast, The Millions, The Rumpus, Cream City Review, Colorado Review, Boulevard, Kenyon Review online, Longreads, and many other publications. He is at work editing Imagining and Seeing: Voices of the Armenian Diaspora, an anthology of essays slated for publication with University of Texas Press in Fall 2022. He is currently a Visiting Assistant Professor in English at PLU.

  • The text box is one of the most common elements you will use. This how you will add your blocks of text.     Once you click the Text Box element you will get the editor.     When copy and pasting from a word document, make sure to paste under the Text tab not the Visual tab. This will remove the formatting making it easier to work with once you click on the Visual tab. Each text box can have a title or header that is displayed above the block of text. The sizes look like this: h3 h4 h5 You can

  • Blue Gold: World Water Wars (link) view page Explore this year's World Philosophy Day theme, "Inclusive Societies, Sustainable Planet," with a screening and discussion of Blue Gold: World Water Wars, a documentary film about the depletion and privatization of the world's water supply and their consequences for the developing world.

  • at least 7-10 pages in length, the pages should be numbered, double-spaced with margins 1” – 1.25”, with a font size of 12 point. The essay should have either footnotes or endnotes and those citations must be in either the Chicago Manual of Style or the MLA format. For additional information, contact Professor Beth Griech-Polelle via email: griechba@plu.eduParker Brocker-Knapp - 2023 Lemkin Essay Contest WinnerTranslating Genocide: Preventing the Erasure of Holocaust StoriesCongratulations

  • I.D. #, a current mailing address, email address and telephone number.  Format must follow these guidelines: the essay should be at least 7-10 pages in length, the pages should be numbered, double-spaced with margins 1” – 1.25”, with a font size of 12 pt. the essay should have either footnotes or endnotes and those citations must be in either the Chicago Manual of Style or the MLA format. For additional information, contact Professor Beth Griech-Polelle via email: griechba@plu.eduCongrats to our

  • I.D. #, a current mailing address, email address and telephone number.  Format must follow these guidelines: the essay should be at least 7-10 pages in length, the pages should be numbered, double-spaced with margins 1” – 1.25”, with a font size of 12 pt. the essay should have either footnotes or endnotes and those citations must be in either the Chicago Manual of Style or the MLA format. For additional information, contact Professor Beth Griech-Polelle via email: griechba@plu.eduCongrats to our

  • at least 7-10 pages in length, the pages should be numbered, double-spaced with margins 1” – 1.25”, with a font size of 12 point. The essay should have either footnotes or endnotes and those citations must be in either the Chicago Manual of Style or the MLA format. For additional information, contact Professor Beth Griech-Polelle via email: griechba@plu.eduParker Brocker-Knapp - 2023 Lemkin Essay Contest WinnerTranslating Genocide: Preventing the Erasure of Holocaust StoriesCongratulations

  • at Wounded Knee in 1890 and the attacks on 9/11 in 2001.  In both cases there were those who responded in absolutistic terms of good and evil, “us” versus “them.”  This response tends to end inquiry by providing the comfort of apparent certainty.  However, there were also people who responded to these events with a call for greater toleration, more diversity or pluralism, engaged and situated inquiry, and ongoing and open democratic processes.  These voices do not hide from the moral ambiguity

  • revolutionaries to use its ballroom, which spans the river, as a bridge.  Yet Dupin was also a philosopher and the author of an enormous “Work on Women” that remains unpublished to this day. Ironically so, because she herself reflected on the ways in which historians trivialize and efface women’s actions and works.  Dupin’s original argument, which she supported with a vast array of evidence taken from historians and jurists, was that the subjection of women was a modern phenomenon. She argued (accurately