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  • Froschauer/PLU) Noujaim in the Karen Hille Phillips Center for the 2nd biennial Ambassador Chris Stevens Memorial Lecture. +Enlarge Photo The best films have a timeless, transcendent quality, Noujaim explained. Her film, she said, is about the Egyptian revolution and the people who filled Tahrir Square, but it also reflects the social construct and potential for change throughout the Middle East and all over the world. “I’m interested in making films that capture the zeitgeist of our time, and to me that

  • every night, and I roomed with Alan twice. Doug was a great student. He helped me study the night before every Organic Chemistry test, making sure I managed to pass while he got his A. He was also an Academic All-American in basketball. After finishing seventh in his class at the University of Washington Medical School, he held a residency at the Mayo Clinic in Minnesota, and spent much of his career at a branch of the Mayo Clinic in Scottsdale, Ariz. Doug was one of the most avid students of pop

  • local, state, and federal response agencies. As a result, employees and students should anticipate a very different decision-making process with different personnel and authorities than during normal operations. Some will recognize ICS from the military or fire services.Utility FailureReport Failures During business hours (8 a.m. to 5 p.m. Monday through Friday), report gas, power, water, sewer, and elevator failures to Facilities Management at 253-535-7380. Telecommunication failures to the

  • review examines the chemical behavior of arsenic species in this system, an ICP-MS method to determine arsenic content in rice, and remediation. Wednesday, May 1st, 2013 (Morken Room 103)12:30 pm - Snacks Provided - Bring your own lunch12:50 pm - Welcome1:00 pm - Benzofulvene Molecules and Flavoprotein Inhibition: Research in Drug Development John Rubenkonig, Senior Capstone Seminar Benzofulvene molecules provide a potential new avenue for cancer therapy. This project optimized the reaction

  • , but at the same time I want to be a mentor, an advisor to my students on the right career path for them,” she says. “I had several mentors myself, both in South Korea and in the United States, and I want to be that kind of person for my students: someone who can provide both knowledge and meaningful recommendations.” As for her own early change of path, Dr. Ha still plays the piano—and has no regrets. “I’m lucky, because in many ways I’ve found it to be the right decision,” she says. “If I had

  • January 22, 2013 Mycal Ford ’12 has spent the year teaching in Taiwan on a Student Fulbright Fellowship. Mycal Ford ’12: A journey of discovery leads this Lute to China and Taiwan By Barbara Clements University Communications Mycal Ford eyed the skewer of fried scorpions he held at arm’s length in front of him and knew he had a decision to make.  Was he going to hold true to his promise to himself – “Say yes to everything?” He had come to Chengdu, China, one of six PLU Gateway programs, with

  • . “It helped me understand how a decision is made,” Doan said. “It’s not just coming from nowhere. It’s so easy now to collect data, but people are still struggling to figure out what you can do with it.” Mulder said graduates of the MSMR program are equipped to do just that. “It’s important to have data literacy,” he said, noting that it offers “more robust insights.” “PLU’s program focuses on this as a critical skill,” Mulder said. The approach is coupled with client projects that give graduate

  • in my family to get a master’s degree,” she said. “And I did it because I wanted to be the first.” Her decision to attend college was cultivated at home, by her parents who never earned degrees but constantly stressed the value of education. Oshiro’s father — born and raised in Oahu, Hawaii — served in the Army as part of the last wave of soldiers to be drafted. Coming from a large family with lots of siblings, college was a distant possibility for him. Still, Oshiro’s “super creative” dad, as

  • going. “I said, ‘Guys. What you’re pulling now is about what we do when we’re resting,’ ” Foltz said. The women train about 19 weeks during the academic year. The rest of the time they work out on their own – the rowing machines are where they push their bodies. They showed the men how to row with a purpose, incorporating their legs, backs and cores into every move along with their arms. “Every time you put that blade into the water you have to make the decision that you are going to push yourself

  • would help so much in making my business successful.” After three years and several twists along the way, Reed no longer has to eat Top Ramen. For her, art is more than a career, it is something that she has loved and labored at her whole life. “If I could go back and talk to myself when I was an 18-year-old kid coming to PLU, I would shake myself and tell myself to do what you want to do, from the beginning,” Reed said. “It would have made the most of my time here if I had just, from the get go