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  • benefits of meditation anytime, anywhere. Buddhify – mindfulness meditation on the go. MyLife – Slay your stress, get more sleep or find your calm with short mindfulness activities tuned to your emotions. Calm – Sleep more. Stress less. Live better. Insight Timer – 55,000 free guided meditations and music tracks. The Mindfulness App – Meditation for Everyone. Self-help Anxiety Management (SAM) – help you track your anxiety and learn how to manage it. Relax Melodies – Sleep to your own beat. Endless

  • than 270 diplomatic facilities worldwide. They develop, enhance, and manage interconnected, and secure IT networks and computer systems worldwide. They promote and safeguard the health and wellbeing of America’s diplomatic community. They are at the forefront of addressing some of the world’s most challenging issues like climate change, sustainable energy, global health, arms control, and nonproliferation. Women, people of color, LGBTQI+, individuals with disabilities, veterans, and interested

  • March 13 and run through April 10. In this exhibit, the artists’ paintings act as a metaphor for the current state of the earth. Although the artists have different processes, they both work to convey ecological concern. Camlin’s work is landscape-based, often representative of ice sheets and global glacial melting. Her icy landscapes explore relationships between abstract and naturalistic visual languages. Her pieces symbolize geological and environmental changes. Richman uses poured paint to evoke

  • global climate change or you might learn how sociologists examine how the structures of human societies results in the distribution of resources. FYEP 102 Seminars may also fulfill program requirements and they further emphasize the academic skills that are at the center of the first year experience.

  • and global communities. Students working to identify rocks in their "Geologic Principles of the Northwest" lab. Professor Michelle Crites shows her BIO 205 students how to use the virtual dissection table. Students in "Statistical Computing and Consulting" collaborate in the classroom. VisionPLU’s College of Natural Sciences aims to create a vibrant STEM community where faculty facilitate the learning and growth of our students and help them to become adept communicators and active, engaged

  • laughs at that, but notes that it’s been a great teaching experience – he’s teaching some of the fellow players Spanish, and he’s learning some Norwegian. Taylor plans to major in global studies and journalism, and take those skills back to Tumaco, Columbia, where he plans to do volunteer work in literacy camps. The area is very important to him. He was adopted at an early age, and lived in Gig Harbor, Washington, but Tumaco is where his birth parents are from. He relishes the opportunity to return

  • to know them, she said. “It’s nice to just reach out to the people around you everyday,” Pershall said. It’s a mission the Rieke Scholars hope to accomplish. The group of students aims to bring global issues to light by raising awareness and promoting diversity in all its forms. Everyone is diverse, Pershall said and worth getting to know. Plus it’s fun, she added. “Everyone has had an experience that is unlike yours,” Pershall said. Read Previous It’s time to vote Read Next Are you ready to rock

  • April 19, 2010 Claim: A carbon tax will reduce pollution In general, a tax on an action induces people to do less of the action. A “carbon tax” would raise the price of consuming goods like fossil fuels that cause carbon dioxide emissions, thus giving incentive to consume less of these. No one likes higher prices. But we as a society pay the cost of polluting emissions in other ways. Using less fossil fuel, for example, would not only reduce carbon dioxide emissions implicated in global climate

  • faculty Ksenija Simic-Muller and Daniel Heath. Read Previous Peacemaker visits PLU campus Read Next PLU prof named as “Highly Honored” photographer in global photo contest COMMENTS*Note: All comments are moderated If the comments don't appear for you, you might have ad blocker enabled or are currently browsing in a "private" window. LATEST POSTS Three students share how scholarships support them in their pursuit to make the world better than how they found it June 24, 2024 Kaden Bolton ’24 explored

  • during a study away experience in Antarctica with the Wang Center for Global and Community Engaged Education earlier this year. The contest receives more than 9,000 entries nationwide and internationally, with submissions from the United States, Canada and 46 other countries. As a contest finalist, Morin’s image of a penguin pointing its beak to the sky will be published in a hardback book that Photographer’s Forum will distribute nationally. She also has the opportunity to win higher-level awards