Page 258 • (6,066 results in 0.024 seconds)

  • Students Future Students Visit PLU Apply to PLU Stay Connected LuteLink Invest in the Biology Department Contact Information Department of Biology Phone: 253-535-7561 Email: biology@plu.edu Rieke Science Center, Room 159 Tacoma, WA 98447 College Links College of Natural Sciences Pre-Health Sciences Advising Environmental Studies Social Media Future Students Visit PLU Apply to PLU Stay Connected LuteLink Invest in the Biology Department Contact Information Department of Biology Phone: 253-535-7561 Email

  • 2019 Capstone Talks 2018 Capstone Talks 2017 Capstone Talks 2016 Capstone Talks 2015 Capstone Talks 2014 Capstone Talks 2013 Capstone Talks 2012 Capstone Talks 2011 Capstone Talks 2010 Capstone Talks 2009 Capstone Talks 2008 Capstone Talks 2007 Archives Student Awards Contact Information Department of Chemistry Phone: 253-535-7530 Fax: 253-535-8700 Email: chair@chem.plu.edu Rieke Science Center Tacoma, WA 98447 College Links College of Natural Sciences Social Media Contact Information Department of

  • Talks 2017 Capstone Talks 2016 Capstone Talks 2015 Capstone Talks 2014 Capstone Talks 2013 Capstone Talks 2012 Capstone Talks 2011 Capstone Talks 2010 Capstone Talks 2009 Capstone Talks 2008 Capstone Talks 2007 Archives Student Awards Contact Information Department of Chemistry Phone: 253-535-7530 Fax: 253-535-8700 Email: chair@chem.plu.edu Rieke Science Center Tacoma, WA 98447 College Links College of Natural Sciences Social Media Contact Information Department of Chemistry Phone: 253-535-7530 Fax

  • webinar about the science of making (and enjoying) chocolate. Please bring chocolate to the presentation to participate in a taste-testing! Perhaps a kind you have never had before but plain chocolate – no nuts, flavors or candies inside – to concentrate on the chocolate flavor. In 2007, Prof. Lytle started the “Chemistry of Food” series with Erica Fickeisen. Lytle, Fickeisen, and Dining and Culinary Services have joined together to create fun, informative sessions that look at the chemistry of

  • tutorialPolitical Science DepartmentSuperCAPP – Degree audit data for course schedule planning and student advising. Watch a tutorialPublishing & Printing Arts ProgramSuperCAPP – Degree audit data for course schedule planning and student advising. Watch a tutorialReligion DepartmentSuperCAPP – Degree audit data for course schedule planning and student advising. Watch a tutorialSociology & Criminal Justice DepartmentSuperCAPP – Degree audit data for course schedule planning and student advising. Watch a tutorial

  • fellowship per student. Faculty are also eligible for up to $1,100 for travel and other project expenses per project. Applications for 2024-2025 are due by 5:00 pm on April 28, 2024. The competitive application process is open to students collaborating with any faculty member from the departments/programs previously housed in the Division of Social Sciences: Anthropology, Economics, History, Political Science, Psychology, Social Work, and Sociology & Criminal Justice. To apply, a student must submit a

  • academic programs, student scholarships, improved academic and athletic facilities and operating support and special projects. The focus of the final year of the campaign will be on Rieke Science Center and athletic facilities enhancements. Rieke Science Center requires upgraded equipment and reconfigured internal space to meet the demands of scientific inquiry, teaching and learning in the coming decades. The development of two all-weather fields on lower campus will enhance the athletic and

  • Rieke Science Center continue with a roof replacement, as well as upgrades to a lab which will include the installations of a “smart” podium, along with movable tables, chairs and flooring. Renovations to the science center are taking place incrementally and more lab renovations are planned, said John Kaniss, construction projects manager. Class space upgrades in the Hauge Administration building continue and the 108-seat Ingram lecture hall is being refurbished, with new carpeting, chairs and

  • . At a presentation this year at the Smithsonian Institution, Brekke told a packed auditorium about the early pioneers of Aurora Borealis science. He also told the crowd that to understand the Northern Lights, one must first understand the sun, as Brekke is first and foremost a solar physicist. He told that crowd to try and see the northern lights in the next four years, as he suspects that some of the displays will be the most spectacular in decades. Brekke received a doctorate degree in 1993 from

  • that’s why I went the natural sciences route,” she said. “But I changed my mind because I enjoyed the science part better than I thought I would.” Her passion for fact-finding led to a research job with Southern Illinois University through the Research Experiences for Undergraduates (REU) Summer Research, funded by the National Science Foundation. Her work included studying ammonia decomposition for the release of hydrogen. Her research was performed using computational chemistry, an area Ramirez