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  • : ENGL 227. (4) ENGL 334 : Studies in Literature for Young Readers - IT Study of literature and media produced for and about young audiences, from early childhood to adolescence. Possible topics include genres, themes, historical periods, and traditions. Course content varies. Course is repeatable once with different topic. (4) ENGL 336 : Digital Writing and Storytelling Students analyze and practice various genres of creative and professional digital writing, visual rhetoric and narrative, and

  • month; if they use a Commute Smart option to get to work 12 or more times per month, they receive $2 in LuteBucks. LuteBucks rewards are applied to your account on a quarterly basis in the months of January, April, July, and October. To receive LuteBucks, you must track your commute using the online Pierce Trips calendar and you must still be employed in a with benefits position at the time the LuteBucks are applied in the month following the end of the quarter. By reporting your commute trips, you

  • Applied-Physics REU at the University of South Florida The NSF-funded REU in Applied Physics at the University of South Florida in Tampa is about to enter its twelfth summer! The program runs May 20th through July 29th and includes projects with faculty in experimental, theoretical, and computational physics.  They cover travel expenses to… January 20, 2022

  • discussing some final connections between the abstract algebra concepts provided and the Common Core Standards in the high school classroom. 2:30-2:55pm – Group Actions: Burnside’s Counting Theorem Corey Ng In this talk, we prove Burnside’s Counting Theorem and provide a geometric example of the use of the theorem. 3:00 – 3:30pm Break 3:30-3:55pm – Cryptography and Proofs of Security Nathan Hohnbaum Cryptography is an important branch of applied mathematics for computer security. Although there is a lot

  • strong classes in Holocaust studies and U.S. business and economic history. History faculty work closely with individual students to help them choose the path best suited to each student’s interests in history and career plans. The history department offers exciting study away opportunities and has a highly successful alumni community with noteworthy achievements in a wide range of careers and areas of public service. Skills the Well Trained History Student DevelopsThe Ability to Assess Evidence

  • applied). And we didn’t expect to get the money that would let us buy something this powerful.” This grant comes on the heels of another grant from the NSF in early 2007, where the department received $181,000 to buy an atomic force microscope. The spectrometer itself, which arrived this spring, is not much to look at – even the enthusiastic team of professors Craig Fryhle, Dean Waldow, Myriam Cotten and Neal Yakelis admit this. It looks, from the photographs, like a rather large thermos surrounded by

  • Administration has tweaked the definition of what it considers torture. Now, sleep deprivation and water boarding, where water is poured over the head covered in a sack or cloth to simulate drowning, is not considered torture, she noted. Kaurin holds a PhD in philosophy from Temple University in Philadelphia and is a specialist in military ethics, war theory, philosophy of law and applied ethics. “I guess David and I just want a chance to argue with each other,” Kaurin laughed. “We don’t come from the same

  • . “All the things that help make our community safer are made possible through this grant funding,” said Bobbi Hughes ‘00, director of the Women’s Center. “We’re really a leader in making the community safer.” This is the third time the center has applied for and received the funding, formally called “The Grant to Reduce Sexual Assault, Domestic Violence, Dating Violence and Stalking on Campus,” which is awarded specifically to colleges and universities that address and prevent intimate partner

  • his part, Dan Brett ’10 seconds Rogers’ observations. Brett credits the Office of Career Development with helping him find his current job at the Bank of New York Mellon offices in Tacoma as a financial analyst. After graduating with a business degree and working several jobs and on a political campaign, Brett returned to PLU’s spring career fair in 2011 and started talking with representatives of the bank. The recruiter gave Brett her card – Brett had already applied online and researched the

  • applied for the Peace Corps after graduation and spent three and a half years volunteering in Azerbaijan. “Every volunteer service different and it is what you make of it,” Baghirov  said . “Meaningful service not only changed the life of those I worked with, but it changed my own life as well. You get more than you give.” For some, like Baghirov, volunteering was a way to fulfill two passions, serving others and traveling. For others though, like Goble, who volunteered with Lutheran Volunteer Corps