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  • Undergraduate Research Symposium Undergraduate Research Symposium https://www.plu.edu/resolute/spring-2019/wp-content/uploads/sites/31/2019/05/undergrad-research-header-1024x361.jpg 1024 361 Vince Schleitwiler Vince Schleitwiler https://www.plu.edu/resolute/spring-2019/wp-content/uploads/sites/31/2019/05/vince-schleitwiler.jpg May 13, 2019 May 21, 2019 Guiding her audience through a complex research talk, Cynthia Waite ’20 projects charisma and confidence. It’s hard to believe this self

  • of these devices is the semiconducting active channel layer. This semiconductor is mostly commonly a conjugated polymer material. However, recent literature reports ways to significantly improve the performance of conjugated polymer materials as semiconductors in the aqueous OECT environment. In this account, we discuss the merits which qualify an OECT as high-performing and what materials have been shown to be most promising in this application. Additionally, we detail synthetic modification

  • one day I can repay the favor to another hard-working student. Thank you to the donors who are supporting me; it makes me feel that all my hard work did pay off.” Austyn Blair ’25, English Lit and Holocaust and Genocide Studies, Religion, Gender and Sexuality Studies “My goals are to teach English and/or work in genocide prevention and education. I want to educate others as I educate myself.” Austyn Blair ’25 has a full schedule. He is majoring in English Literature and minoring in Holocaust and

  • Women’s and Gender Studies & Holocaust and Genocide Studies at PLU, in addition to her History major. She was well-prepared for graduate school elective courses like “Human Rights and Nation States,” and “Sex, Society, and Politics in Post-1945 Europe.” As Carli puts it, in those classes and her year-long required historical literature survey and required research seminar,” I was able to utilize and build upon the intellectual base I formed at PLU and was challenged by fresh perspectives, a new peer

  • PLU students. × “You could say that the entire reason I’m here is because of her.” Professor Brown describes himself as a big horror movie fan and recently co-wrote (with Matthew Anderson, MA, from the University of Austin at Texas) an academic article on religious narratives in Ghostbusters (1984). As Professor Brown explains, you can go through the spiritualist literature of the 19th and 20th century and find five prevailing views/opinions on the spiritualist movement. “We basically analyze

  • By:Brooke Thames '18 January 12, 2018 0 Carl Petersen ’04 https://www.plu.edu/resolute/winter-2018/wp-content/uploads/sites/20/2017/01/carl-petersen-cover-1024x427.jpg 1024 427 Brooke Thames '18 Brooke Thames '18 https://www.plu.edu/resolute/winter-2018/wp-content/uploads/sites/20/2016/05/brooke-thames-e1464106633496.jpg January 12, 2018 May 15, 2018 Carl Petersen ’04 In a lively yet ominous steampunk world, a boy and a bully clash in the classic struggle of good and evil. The stakes: bravery

  • Dragon and the Hummingbird” Mim Lindblom6:40-7:15pm Capstone Title: “Dog Gone” Friday, May 21 | 12:00-3:05pmJohn EvanishynKate PetersonAngelica MomotyukEmmanuel SanchezKayla ThorneJohn Evanishyn12:00-12:35pm Capstone Title: “Hundred Year Later Sun” Kate Peterson12:40-1:15pm Capstone Title: “Cat Lady” Angelica Momotyuk1:20-1:55pm Capstone Title: “Zachik” Emmanuel Sanchez2:00-2:35pm Capstone Title: “Wild Lily” Kayla Thorne2:40-3:05pm Capstone Title: “Support Needed” Engl 452 : Seminar in Literature

  • faculty member in the School of Writing, Literature, and Film at Oregon State University and is the founder of the Attic Institute of Arts and Letters in Portland.Ann PancakeAnn Pancake is the author of two short story collections, Given Ground and Me and My Daddy Listen to Bob Marley, and a novel, Strange As This Weather Has Been, which was one of Kirkus Review’s Top Ten Fiction Books of the year, won the 2007 Weatherford Prize, and was a finalist for the 2008 Orion Book Award and the 2008 Washington

  • pyramids. Click to view larger. For students of literature, it can be thrilling to see how the people and places in a work of fiction can crossover into the real world. This is especially true for books where location plays an important role, such as in James Joyce’s classic, Ulysses. Using a map like the one below, students can follow, chapter-by-chapter, as the protagonists journey around real-life Dublin. Click on the locations in this interactive map to see how context has been applied. Likewise

  • June 29, 2011 https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=d0eHyaJ26Ks Patience and a good ear essential in studying elusive crossbills, which live, breed and sing in the canopy By Barbara Clements Having a conversation with Julie Smith is a stop and go affair. In mid-conversation, she’ll stop, and listen. And then pick up the thread without missing a beat. Smith, an assistant professor of biology, and biology major Aaron Grossberg ’12, are picking their way on a muddy trail to a beach near La Push, Wash