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  • Conference ScheduleConference Registration The conference is free and open to the public.   SpeakersWednesday, October 24Cathy L. RozmusFrancis R. NicosiaRobert P. EricksenCathy L. RozmusCommentator Title: Video: “Caring Corrupted: The Killing Nurses of the Third Reich” Presentation Title: “Lessons From Nazi Germany for Today’s Healthcare Providers” Who: Cathy L. Rozmus, Ph.D., R.N. Vice Dean UTH Bio: Cathy L. Rozmus PhD, RN is PARTNERS Professor and Vice Dean for Academic Affairs at the Cizik

  • from anyone on campus other than common contact information (name, email address, phone number). Employers are not permitted to disrupt regular university operations such as classes, lectures, meetings, and other university events. Non-university affiliated advertising is not permitted on campus bulletin boards. If an employer would like to circulate posters, flyers, or marketing materials, they should contact PLU Alumni & Student Connections. The university reserves the right to declare a guest

  • strong classes in Holocaust studies and U.S. business and economic history. History faculty work closely with individual students to help them choose the path best suited to each student’s interests in history and career plans. The history department offers exciting study away opportunities and has a highly successful alumni community with noteworthy achievements in a wide range of careers and areas of public service. Skills the Well Trained History Student DevelopsThe Ability to Assess Evidence

  • audiences, including undergraduates and the general public. The lecture will be followed by a question-and-answer period and light refreshments. The lecture is free and open to the public. We are excited to have Professor Sullivan share his research with us and hope to see you there!Time: 7 p.m. Date: Tuesday, March 10, 2020 Place: Scan Center, AUC Free and open to the public Edward J Sullivan InterviewPrevious Schnackenberg Lecturers Schnackenberg LecturersDr. Fredy Gonzalez (2018) Charlotte Gordon

  • to tell this story through photographs made by other emigrants, Spanish refugees from that country’s Civil War (1936-1939), who — though they left their country for different reasons –nonetheless bring the particular gaze of emigrants to this task. A World of Difference Documentary Series Premiere 4 p.m. | Saturday, Feb. 17 | Microsoft Auditorium, Seattle Public Library All across the country, people of color, women, immigrants, low income communities, and many others, say they feel less

  • perspective, but we will model what intellectual discourse looks like for the students.” The topic of the U.S. military torturing prisoners broke on the U.S. consciousness four years ago, when both CBS and Seymour Hersh broke the Abu Ghraib prison scandal. Hundreds of pictures, photographed by military personal, were displayed in the news, on the Internet and in magazines to a shocked U.S. public. They showed bodies, men screaming in agony as they were being struck by soldiers and prisoners being hooked

  • Oct. 30 lecture led by Jennifer Pozner, executive director and founder of the Women In Media & News, an organization which tracks media bias and portrayals of women and minorities in newspaper and television stories. The lecture, titled “When Anchormen Attack!: Gender, Race and the Media in Election 2008,” will begin at 6 p.m. in the Regency Room of the UC. It is free and open to the public. A journalist and author herself, Pozner will look at how sexist backlash and racial prejudice have

  • , it’s lucky she did. In 2006, for example, Jones received a Most Innovative Foreign Language Teacher Award for starting a French immersion program at Tacoma’s Jason Lee Middle School. She currently works at Washington’s Office of the Superintendent of Public Instruction as the assistant director of student achievement and director of as director of the Center for the Improvement of Student Learning (CISL), a program that provides resources for parents and schools. “I work with kids of color and kids

  • . From engaging the world to being stewards of their communities. “These trips are designed to represent what PLU students enjoy doing,” she said. Deane said the biggest challenge is figuring out the logistics of travel for such a high volume of participants. She said that coordinators try to plan for as much public transportation to and from events as possible. Hundreds of students sign up for OTR every year. “College students don’t always have cars,” she said. “It is sustainable and efficient (to

  • across the country, and MESA students earn university degrees in engineering and science at a rate nearly five times the national average. On June 17, PLU will host a public luncheon to celebrate and fund its MESA program and the next generation of Math, Science and Engineering excellence in Pierce County. “We’re looking back in order to move forward,” Nobles said. “While 30 years of service is cause for celebration, it is also a time for reflection. As we turn toward our next 30 years, I am