Page 121 • (1,496 results in 0.035 seconds)

  • , 2020 at 8:55 am Next Page Contact Information Department of Environmental Health & Safety Phone: 253-535-7233 Fax: 253-535-5047 Email: safety@plu.edu Pacific Lutheran University 12180 Park Ave. S. Hauge Administration Building Office 124b Tacoma, WA 98447 © Pacific Lutheran University. All rights reserved.

  • 28, 2021 at 12:48 pm Next Page Contact Information Department of Environmental Health & Safety Phone: 253-535-7233 Fax: 253-535-5047 Email: safety@plu.edu Pacific Lutheran University 12180 Park Ave. S. Hauge Administration Building Office 124b Tacoma, WA 98447 © Pacific Lutheran University. All rights reserved.

  • Information Department of Environmental Health & Safety Phone: 253-535-7233 Fax: 253-535-5047 Email: safety@plu.edu Pacific Lutheran University 12180 Park Ave. S. Hauge Administration Building Office 124b Tacoma, WA 98447 © Pacific Lutheran University. All rights reserved.

  • Makaela Whalen ’23 pursues newly launched pre-law minor Makaela Whalen ’23 has a passion for the environment and animals. Her desire to find a meaningful vocation that feeds those passions resulted in her pursuing a degree in either environmental or animal law. “As long as I can remember, I knew I wanted to… June 7, 2022 AcademicsAlumni ProfilesClubs & OrganizationsCurrent StudentsDiversity Justice SustainabilityInternshipsInvolvementJusticePolitical ScienceStudent Life

  • Makaela Whalen ’23 pursues newly launched pre-law minor Makaela Whalen ’23 has a passion for the environment and animals. Her desire to find a meaningful vocation that feeds those passions resulted in her pursuing a degree in either environmental or animal law. “As long as I can remember, I knew I wanted to… June 7, 2022 AcademicsAlumni ProfilesClubs & OrganizationsCurrent StudentsDiversity Justice SustainabilityInternshipsInvolvementJusticePolitical ScienceStudent Life

  • thoughts.  Diversity allows us to interact with a broadened understanding of each other and the social and environmental communities we inhabit. Difference is not to be ignored, but acknowledged, celebrated, and respected. Diversity is necessary for resilience because of the interdependency and interconnectedness of the world and its inhabitants. PLU’s mission directs us is to nurture resilient graduates who can respond to and lead across a range of issues. We must be open and affirming to multiple

  • ; geographic locations; national origin; immigrants and refugees; language; any impairment that substantially limits a major life activity; religious beliefs; and socioeconomic status. Inclusion represents environmental and organizational cultures in which faculty, students, staff, and administrators with diverse characteristics thrive. Inclusive environments require intentionality and embrace differences, not merely tolerate them (AACN, 2017; Bloomberg, 2019). Everyone works to ensure the perspectives and

  • Courses offered by the Biology department BIOL 111 : Biology and the Modern World - NW This course is intended to introduce students to the principles and concepts that pertain to all living organisms, with special emphasis on those topics typically encountered in everyday life, including human physiology and disease, environmental issues, and the fundamentals of genetics. Lecture and laboratory. Not intended for biology majors. (4) BIOL 116 : Introductory Ecology - NW A study of the

  • 343 : East Asian Cultures - ES, GE A survey of the cultures and peoples of Eastern Asia, concentrating on China but with comparative reference to Japan, Korea, and Vietnam. Cultural similarities as well as differences between these nations are stressed. Topics include religion, art, politics, history, kinship, and economics. (4) ANTH 368 : Edible Landscapes: The Foraging Spectrum - ES, GE The course examines foragers in Africa, North America, and Australia. Using classic ethnographic literature

  • Wajsfeld, moved to various parts of occupied France. In September 1943, with the help of the Catholic cleric Simon Gallay, the family, then numbering parents and six children, fled to Switzerland, where they stayed until the war’s end — then returned to Belgium. In 1950, the family moved to the USA, and settled in Brooklyn. In 1962, Mordecai Paldiel made Aliyah and studied at the Hebrew University, Jerusalem, where he earned a BA degree in Economics and Political Science. He then furthered his studies