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  • Why a symposium?The biennial international symposium at PLU is one of the ways that the Wang Center supports the university’s goal of being an ever more globally focused university. PLU is nationally recognized for its international study away experiences that immerse students in other cultures and allows them to examine the complexity of global issues from other local, national and regional perspectives. However, not all PLU students are able to take advantage of these study away programs

  • Advising Resources at PLUPacific Lutheran University provides a wide range of resources to guide students in their exploration and choice of majors and minors.Contact For guidance on My Academic Pathway please see your Academic Advisor.Academic AdvisingAcademic Advisors at PLU are committed to assisting students as they discover and define their educational, personal, and emergent life goals. The advising relationship is a collaborative partnership through which students may gain an

  • off or fall off the bones. After the bacteria and wild animals had their go, about 90 percent of the skeleton remained. Then fish and wildlife packed up the bones, and plunked them down in the chicken coop. Meanwhile there was the matter of who would take the bones. At first, Harbor Wild Watch, based in Gig Harbor, thought they may have a home for the skeleton, but when that plan fell through, Behrens, who is on the Wild Watch board, suggested PLU. Both HWW and the state agreed. While all the

  • 2016 Department of Philosophy EventsThe Department of Philosophy has had an active event schedule this year. These events have spanned a wide range of philosophically interesting themes and socially relevant issues. Here are some highlights: In October, Eric Ruthford (PLU ’01) and Emeritus Professor of Philosophy Paul Menzel held a panel discussion titled “Determining the Value of Life” about beginning of life and end of life decision making. In February, the department hosted the 3rd Food

  • erased and you have disconnected from that session, the messages cannot be retrieved by the system administrator. If you accidentally erase one you want to save and are still in the session, the system will give you the opportunity to review the erased messages at the end of the session and to re-save them. After 30 days the message will be automatically deleted by the system. To Change Your Password Once you are into voicemail, press “3” for phone manager. Press “1” for personal options. Press “4

  • urge “to search for order amidst chaos, to make sense out of the senseless,” (President Obama, January 2011).  And given our common purpose, it can certainly be said that “We are all Norwegians tonight!” We are all Norwegians, first, because we share such a profound sense of both outrage and frustration, even anger and hopelessness, about the events of last Friday. As President Obama reminded us earlier this year in Tucson,  “there is evil in the world, and…terrible things happen for reasons that

  • Update December 16, 2022. The Health Center is open for phone visits and in-person visits Monday through Friday, from 8 AM to 5 PM, closed for lunch from 12-1 We will continue providing occasional phone visits but in-person visits for routine care have been resumed. Appointments will continue to be scheduled by phone (253-535-7337).  Please do not walk into the clinic to schedule an appointment.  If you are concerned about any illness symptoms, please call to speak with a provider. This allows

  • ACS Safety Information The American Chemical Society (ACS) maintains a number of important documents on chemical safety. They can be found on the following links. ACS Safety Information ACS Committee on Chemical Safety Safety in Academic Chemistry Laboratories: Volume 1 (Student Edition, pdf file) Safety for Introductory Chemistry Students Brochure (pdf file)

  • conversation we had with them about what being Indigenous means to them, or what they see as an Indigenous scholar. The Indigenous Scholars state: “We created this project in order to make our Native population at PLU more visible for the rest of the PLU community, reminding them that we are here too and that we have something to share. We also made them for our fellow Native students, and for ourselves, in order to remind us to recognize our Indigenous knowledge; we are scholars too. Our Native population

  • Carly Briggs '25 Communication Associate Full Profile she/her