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  • Services, USAID and UNICEF in the field of international maternal and infant nutrition and health care. She served on the Human Rights Committee of the APHA and on the Health Advisory Committee of International La Leche League. Prof. Baumslag presents at national and international conferences on infant nutrition and health care. In 2006 Prof. Baumslag’s definitive work on medical atrocities perpetrated by the Nazis during World War II, Murderous Medicine, was published (Praeger Press). It was reprinted

  • quickly realizing it wasn’t a good fit, she struggled to find a landing spot. She quickly learned that her next choice, chemistry, wasn’t in the cards either. Then, with the help of Hames’ class, she discovered the depth and breadth of global studies. Public health quickly rose to the top of her interests within the field. She plans to continue exploring that topic on a global scale through study away. She’s considering enrolling in the semester Gateway program in Oaxaca, Mexico. “This definitely

  • graduated in 1990 from the University of Washington. During his tenure in the design field he has worked for various clients including Simon and Schuster, Random House, Crown, Disney, Chronicle Books, Starbucks and the National Baseball Hall of Fame in Cooperstown. Lace M. Smith, executive director of content development Lace is responsible for curating adaptive and sharable content on PLU social media. Starting in PLU’s Student Involvement and Leadership in 2005, Lace has a rooted background in

  • Defects12 Rebecca KimCharles Wright Award: $50Breast Cancer in Adolescent and Young Women: Investigating Breast Microbiota, Estrogen, and Bacteria Impact on Biomarker Discovery10 Jadyn SmithPioneer Award $50Mycelium Bioplastic8 Asher FriedmanCatalyst Award $50Can Cabbage Juice Work as a pH Indicator?6 Sponsored by Ron Morris MD and Sarah BriehlAward is certificate and $50 cash.Category: Best Use of Research in the Biomedical, Bioengineering or Related Field of StatisticsCriteria: Prize Award for Project

  • now see myself as someone who can teach others, be a role model, and be confident. Isaiah Scheel '19“In high school,” says Isaiah Scheel ’19, “success was numerically measured in everything.” Grades, sports, extracurriculars — he excelled in all these areas at DeSales Catholic High in Walla Walla, WA, where he was a member of the football and track-and-field teams, and graduated as salutatorian. At PLU, however, he discovered additional measures of success. “I have found that I value my

  • (including the University Gallery Annex and the Karen Hille Phillips Gallery) and manages the University’s Permanent Art Collection. Conference ScheduleAustin KarrPresentation Title: “Slovakia and the Inability to Confront the Past: Slovakia’s Turbulent Relationship with the First Slovak Republic and the Holocaust.” Who: Austin Karr Bio: Conference ScheduleAnna MarkoPresentation Title: “The Application of the “Bloodlands Theory” to the Great Lakes Region of Africa and the Tutsi Diaspora” Who: Anna Marko

  • eight collections of essays, poems, and translations, most recently, Rough Likeness (essays) and It Shouldn’t Have Been Beautiful (poems). Her honors include a Guggenheim Foundation Fellowship, National Book Critics Circle Award Finalist, National Endowment for the Arts and Fulbright Fellowships, four Pushcart prizes, the Associated Writing Programs Award in Nonfiction, and the Beatrice Hawley, and Ohio State University Press awards in poetry. Recent work appears in Agni, Field, The Georgia Review

  • undergraduate courses “just clicked” for Munro Cullum. “I had been thinking about pre-med,” he said. But two courses in particular, an introductory psychology class taught by Dr. Erv Severtson ’55 and a neuropsychology course taught by Dr. Jerome LeJeune, made the field of psychology sound exciting. Severtson’s course “piqued my interest,” Cullum said. “The course taught by Jerry LeJeune taught me that I could use neuropsychology to study and probe human brain functions.” he added. Today, Cullum is a

  • By:Natalie DeFord '16 May 17, 2016 0 Kate Deines ’16 https://www.plu.edu/resolute/fall-2016/wp-content/uploads/sites/16/2016/05/kate-deines-cover-1024x427.jpg 1024 427 Natalie DeFord '16 Natalie DeFord '16 https://www.plu.edu/resolute/fall-2016/wp-content/uploads/sites/16/2016/09/natalie-deford-avatar.jpg May 17, 2016 September 9, 2016 Kate Deines ’16 TACOMA, WASH. (June 15, 2016)- Kate Deines ’16 is a natural on the soccer field and has a long résumé to prove it. She played at the local

  • quad, which kept him out for the season. Still, despite the cultural differences, all three players say the close relationships they built with their teammates helped ease homesickness and culture shock. “The guys have taken us in with open arms,” Askildt said. “All the teammates are good friends.” They use the differences as an opportunity to introduce the Americans to some Norwegian culture, such as teaching them Norwegian words — including some meant for exhibiting frustration on the field, one