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  • DEDICATION FOR 3 GRAVITATIONAL-WAVE ANTENNAS Posted by: alemanem / February 3, 2021 February 3, 2021 DEDICATION FOR 3 GRAVITATIONAL-WAVE ANTENNAS Feb 3rd, 8:30-10:00am (PST) This international event will be held online on when a prestigious IEEE Milestone in Electrical Engineering and Computing will be dedicated for the massive Gravitational-Wave Antennas in Hanford, WA, Louisiana and Italy. They collectively confirmed Albert Einstein’s 1916 General Theory of Relativity which predicted the

  • ApplicationStudents can apply via the Common App. It is free to apply to PLU!Personal EssayThe essay should be at least 250 words.Official TranscriptsSend in official transcripts from all high school and college coursework. When reviewing applications of prospective freshmen, PLU computes an “admission GPA” for the applicant. Check out the weighted GPA section below.Academic RecommendationThe academic recommendation must be from a qualified person familiar with your academic record such as a principal, teacher

  • one or more faculty members and presented to the department. Completion of the departmental reading program of primary sources. Honors majors in philosophy are expected to complement their regular courses by reading and discussing three or four important works under the personal supervision of department faculty. The reading list should be obtained at an early date from the department chair. it is best that the reading program not be concentrated into a single semester, but pursued at a leisurely

  • Chambon, France, and I didn’t know the meaning behind that,” said Sauvage from his base in Los Angeles.“It was still a footnote in history when I started looking into the story,” Sauvage said. “There has been a sea change since then, and these stories are the flavor of the month. It wasn’t that way in 1989.” Sauvage credits several factors for the Le Chambon region successfully hiding 5,000 Jewish refugees during WWII, including his parents. Germans were spread thinly in France at the time, he said

  • No Labor Lost: Industries of the Labor MovementA Student-Curated Exhibit  This semester Dr. Elisabeth Ward has had the privilege of teaching a course for the History Department entitled “Public Museums”. History students who don’t go into teaching or get an advanced degree can put a B.A. in History to good use at museums, especially smaller regional and local history museums. Scan majors and minors also have promising museum potential, especially in this area. So PLU likes to offer this course

  • Classroom SupportInstructional Technologies provides classroom technology and support. Most classrooms include computers, computer projectors, audio systems, and DVD players. Classroom support is automatically escalated to a high priority for rapid problem resolution. Request Classroom SupportUse the online Help Desk service request system. You’ll need an active PLU ePass to log in.

  • the setup, the new account holder will be called and given the complete instructions on using their account.  For additional questions regarding this process, please call or visit the Help Desk on the main floor of the Library.New Windows Accounts (Student Workers)For security of our systems, the supervisor must verify his/her student’s employment before they are granted access to computers in a particular office. To establish or change the password for a student, download the Student Employee

  • Teaching in the Pandemic: How Three Teachers Made the Best of an Unprecedented Time Posted by: Silong Chhun / May 27, 2021 Image: Alonso Brizuela ’14, Sarah Lord ’00, Caitlyn Zwang ’09 May 27, 2021 By Lora ShinnPLU Marketing and Communications Guest WriterHigh school choir and guitar teacher Alonso Brizuela ’14 was in Spokane at a national choral directors conference in mid-March of 2020. Just a day and half days into events, the conference shut down early—due to a mysterious new illness that

  • , eating dinner with my friends in Red Square in the fall, and the PLU Christmas concert are also up there. In my first year, it snowed just enough, so my friends and I built a jump and skied from upper to lower campus. I studied away in Windhoek, Namibia, for one semester (though it was cut short by COVID). Learning about the history of Namibia was fascinating and eye-opening. Traveling to National parks and seeing elephants, giraffes, zebras, and cheetahs is something I’ll cherish for the rest of my

  • Heal,” a documentary about the experiences of orphans after the genocide. (Photo: John Froschauer/PLU) Emmanuel Habimana, filmmaker and survivor of the 1994 Rwandan genocide, speaks at PLU, Tuesday, Oct. 25, 2016. Habimana co-directed a documentary, titled “Komoro (to heal),” in partnership with National Geographic in which he interviewed survivors about their personal experiences during the Rwandan genocide. “I was asking myself what really happened to us,” he said of conceiving the project