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  • As an WASI intern You will be matched with a Washington state business to create sustainability solutions for industry practices. During this 10-week internship, you will conduct research that can help improve efficiency, save money, and prevent/reduce waste. Project topics might include energy or water…

    Businesses Project Descriptions very carefully to determine which project best suits your interests, skills and knowledge. Additionally, you will benefit from: Hands on experience in project development and management Collaboration with industry Mentorship by an WASI engineer or scientist Communicating science to interdisciplinary audiences 2022 WASI Host Businesses and Project Descriptions (Note: applicants may apply to one or both positions): Harborview Medical Center | UW Medicine Crane Aerospace

  • The Pacific University School of Pharmacy in Hillsboro, Oregon is still accepting applications for Fall 2024! The School offers an on-campus 2-year Master of Science in Pharmaceutical Sciences (MSPS) degree. This is an innovative program combining didactic courses with extensive research training. The degree is a…

    presentation. The intentional design and delivery of this program affords graduates a competitive edge for various employment/opportunities in: pharmaceutical, biomedical, and biotechnology industries. other sectors such as governmental regulatory bodies. advanced academic pursuits such as PhD in Pharmaceutical Sciences or starting a professional healthcare program such as medicine or pharmacy with a leg up. See the MSPS Degree Brochure-PUSOP 2024 with more information  Interested individuals can also

  • Beginning with applications for the cohort starting in Fall 2024, Pacific Northwest University of Health Sciences (PNWU) School of Occupational Therapy (SOT) has agreed to admission interviews for

    basis. All scholarship funds will be applied toward the balance of tuition.Approximately 92% of MAMS graduates go on to a health professional school (i.e. DO, MD, PT, OT, PA, Pharmacy, Dentistry, Optometry, Podiatry) Program Prerequisites Official transcripts of all academic coursework Two letter of reference Three supplemental essays Employment verification from PNWU Ranked Top 10 U.S. Medical School in Three Mission-Related Categories Other PNWU Programs of Interest: Doctor of Osteopathic Medicine

  • The Religion Department is pleased to present the 2024 Spring Capstones.  Monday, May 20 - 4:00-6:30 pm  and Tuesday, May 21 - 1:00-3:00 pm Xavier Hall, Room 201

    Issued! Marguerite Porete and A Mirror of Simple Souls 1:20-1:40 pm - Rebeca Salinas Rosaries on my Altar: Towards a Contemporary Mexican-American Women’s Position on Indigenous Spiritual Practices 1:40-2:00 pm - Katie Olson Lutheran theological responses to theodicy 2:00-2:20 pm - Nathan Buegler The ELCA’s Response to Climate Change In Light of Realized Eschatology 2:20-2:40 pm - Marit Gjelde-Bennett An Unexpected Ally in Women’s Health: The Role of Religious Language in Medicine for the Reclamation

  • As an WASI intern You will be matched with a Washington state business to create sustainability solutions for industry practices. During this 10-week internship, you will conduct research that can help improve efficiency, save money, and prevent/reduce waste. Project topics might include energy or water…

    Businesses Project Descriptions very carefully to determine which project best suits your interests, skills and knowledge. Additionally, you will benefit from: Hands on experience in project development and management Collaboration with industry Mentorship by an WASI engineer or scientist Communicating science to interdisciplinary audiences 2022 WASI Host Businesses and Project Descriptions (Note: applicants may apply to one or both positions): Harborview Medical Center | UW Medicine Crane Aerospace

  • Biology is an adventure! It’s solving problems about living organisms. As a student of biology you must have a curiosity about living things and a foundation for questioning, exploring,

    Why Study Biology?Biology is an adventure! It’s solving problems about living organisms. As a student of biology you must have a curiosity about living things and a foundation for questioning, exploring, experimenting and experiencing the excitement of discovery.What careers are possible?Many of our biology graduates go on to programs leading to health-related professional careers in medicine, dentistry, veterinary medicine, pharmacy, physical and occupational therapy, optometry, medical

  • Counseling regarding what type of birth control method is best for you Free condoms Emergency Contraception/

    –$80 a month. Cons: ● Doesn’t protect against sexually transmitted diseases. 99% Birth Control ImplantA matchstick-sized rod that is inserted in the arm to prevent pregnancy. (Long acting reversible contraception)ProviderPros: ● Costs between $0 and $800 up front, but lasts up to three years. ● It gives continuous long-lasting birth control without sterilization. There is no medicine to take every day. Nothing needs to be put in place before vaginal intercourse. Cons: ● Doesn’t protect against

  • An affinity for social change. A dedication to activism and aiming for real change in the world has been a characteristic of student leadership on campus for decades. Saying yes to life’s opportunities, fighting for what you believe in, avoiding the tyranny of the majority…

    problems. “I learned how to conduct a meeting that allows all to participate and keeps a small minority from tyrannizing the majority,” he said. Wold advises current ASPLU leaders to, “Listen carefully to your constituency; don’t make promises you can’t keep, and don’t take yourselves too seriously.” “Be an advocate for people,” is the advice that Susan (Carnine) Hecker ’03 has for ASPLU officers. “That should be your number-one priority in student government, just as it is in my profession, medicine

  • William Foege ’57 receives Presidential Medal of Freedom from Obama By Barbara Clements, University Communications Dr. William Foege received the Medal of Freedom, the nation’s highest civilian honor, at a White House ceremony on Tuesday, where President Barack Obama called him a leader in “one…

    on Dr. William Foege ’57. (Photo from C-SPAN) “driven a decades of progress in medicine,” leading the effort to wipe out smallpox and save millions of lives. “In the 1960s,” noted Obama, ” 2 million died each year of smallpox; a decade later, that number had dropped to zero…we all owe Dr. Foege a debt of gratitude.” Foege received the award along with such notables as singer Bob Dylan, astronaut John Glenn, former Secretary of State Madeleine Albright, and another Washington state resident

  • During her senior year at Pacific Lutheran University, Margaret Chell ’18 decided to join the Peace Corps after a Returned Peace Corps Volunteer visited her global development class. She soon met with PLU Peace Corps advisor, Dr. Katherine Wiley to learn more. She was excited…

    out the first wave of the pandemic. Instead, she decided to apply for medical school at Kaiser Permanente Bernard J. Tyson School of Medicine, where she was eventually accepted. Since classes wouldn’t be starting for another year and a half, Chell looked for other ways to keep busy.  “I think my way of coping with evacuation was finding something to look forward to,” Chell says.  She found a one-year AmeriCorps role with Massachusetts General Hospital, which runs a Rural Health Leadership