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  • TACOMA, WASH. (January 12, 2016)- Sylvia May ’18, a doctoral student at Pacific Lutheran University, was one of just eight students in the country to receive the Armed Forces Health Professions Scholarship in 2015. The prestigious scholarship will cover her tuition, books and other fees…

    PLU Graduate Nursing Student Awarded Prestigious Armed Forces Scholarship Posted by: Zach Powers / January 12, 2016 Image: [Photo: Angelo Mejia ’17/PLU] January 12, 2016 By Matthew Salzano '18PLU Marketing & CommunicationsTACOMA, WASH. (January 12, 2016)- Sylvia May ’18, a doctoral student at Pacific Lutheran University, was one of just eight students in the country to receive the Armed Forces Health Professions Scholarship in 2015. The prestigious scholarship will cover her tuition, books and

  • The Two Desks Posted by: alex.reed / May 3, 2022 May 3, 2022 By Rick BarotOriginally Published in 2014When I was a graduate student at the University of Iowa, the classicist and writer Anne Carson came to campus to give a reading and a colloquium. During the colloquium, she was asked how she navigated among the wild variety of scholarly and creative projects that she was engaged in, and she answered that one of the ways she kept things organized was by having two desks— one desk for her

  • Vulnerabilities Amplified: The Impact of COVID-19 on LGBTIQ+ Communities Globally. The 5th biennial Ambassador Chris Stevens Celebration of Service keynote lecture will take place at 7 p.m.

    Featured Speaker Peace Corps in Morocco 1983 Amie Bishop with Chris Stevens Meet the Peace Corps Alumni PanelistsTheir presentation commemorates the launch of PLU's Peace Corps Prep Program in conjunction with the memorial lecture.Read NowMeet the AmbassadorMeet Chris Stevens, U.S. Ambassador to Libya, and learn about his unique connection to the Arab world.Watch NowThe event is made possible by the Wang Center for Global and Community Engaged Education

    Wang Center for Global and Community Engaged Education
    253-535-8752
    868 Wheeler Street Tacoma, WA 98447-003
  • Fr. Charles R. Gallagher, S.J., of the history department at Boston College will speak about his explorations of a heretofore unknown set of intelligence relationships involving Nazi, British, and

    Raphael Lemkin Lecture Spring 2018 Violence, Espionage, & Anti-Semitism: British & Soviet Spy Ops Against Boston’s Christian Front Organization, 1940-1945Fr. Charles R. Gallagher, S.J., of the history department at Boston College spoke about his explorations of a heretofore unknown set of intelligence relationships involving Nazi, British, and Soviet spy networks in Boston during World War II. Along with the lecture, each year, PLU offers students a chance to participate in a Lemkin Essay

  • June 17, 2014 On June 18, Benjamin Rasmus ’06 began a cross-country bike ride to bring awareness to the issue of hunger and food waste in the U.S. (Photo: John Froschauer/PLU) Lute Cycling from one Washington to the Other to Focus Attention on Hunger and Food Waste By Barbara Clements PLU Marketing & Communications Benjamin Rasmus ’06 plans to put some major miles on his bike—3,500, to be exact—as he rides cross-country to promote awareness of hunger in the U.S. as well as locally grown food

  • scholars that have mentored me through all these years, it gave me money to go to college, graduate school, it paid for me to get a doctorate, and to have my job here,” Eckstein said. While serving as director of forensics for Pacific Lutheran University’s Speech and Debate Team (T.O.H Karl Forensics Forum) for the past three years, Eckstein has shared his passion for debate with the students he works with. After a national search in the 2015-16 school year, he was awarded a tenure-line position

  • . She got caught, and was turned over to the Nazis.  She was immediately put on a train to Auschwitz. The year was 1944. When she got off the train, a Jewish woman from her hometown recognized her, and got her the job that would ultimately help save her life. Her job was to collect the clothes of those being taken into the gas chambers. Day in and day out, Georgette sorted the clothes of innocent people being herded to their deaths. The death marches started in late 1944 and into 1945. It was one of

  • . She got caught, and was turned over to the Nazis.  She was immediately put on a train to Auschwitz. The year was 1944. When she got off the train, a Jewish woman from her hometown recognized her, and got her the job that would ultimately help save her life. Her job was to collect the clothes of those being taken into the gas chambers. Day in and day out, Georgette sorted the clothes of innocent people being herded to their deaths. The death marches started in late 1944 and into 1945. It was one of

  • . She got caught, and was turned over to the Nazis.  She was immediately put on a train to Auschwitz. The year was 1944. When she got off the train, a Jewish woman from her hometown recognized her, and got her the job that would ultimately help save her life. Her job was to collect the clothes of those being taken into the gas chambers. Day in and day out, Georgette sorted the clothes of innocent people being herded to their deaths. The death marches started in late 1944 and into 1945. It was one of

  • . She got caught, and was turned over to the Nazis.  She was immediately put on a train to Auschwitz. The year was 1944. When she got off the train, a Jewish woman from her hometown recognized her, and got her the job that would ultimately help save her life. Her job was to collect the clothes of those being taken into the gas chambers. Day in and day out, Georgette sorted the clothes of innocent people being herded to their deaths. The death marches started in late 1944 and into 1945. It was one of