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  • individual sponsor — a member of the faculty or administrative staff; a department or program connection — signature of chair required; unit endorsement — signature of dean required. Offers should be coordinated by the Wang Center for Global and Community Engaged Education (where international visiting scholars’ arrangements currently are coordinated). Obligations of the Host: The initiating trio is responsible for hosting the visitor (international visitors in particular may need assistance with housing

  • that let students operationalize what we’re learning, or ways to help them connect policy history to real life today. When I think about teaching, I try to provide an environment where there are didactic, heuristic, and philetic learning opportunities… This approach comes from teaching the social foundations of education, but also applies to teaching the craft of social work, a blend of knowledge, values, and skills. “Because of Kathy, students learned the important connection between social

  • :00PMMashel Falls (meet Meet at the Columbia Center) LUTE Welcome (LW) Headquarters & Recharge Room Optional: Your one-stop-shop for all-things LW; stop by if/when you have any questions!1:00PM-3:30PMAnderson University Center (AUC) Grey Area (Main Floor, North Side of Building) Wang Center Presentation Optional: Join the Wang Center to learn about Study Away opportunities, what you should be doing now to plan ahead, and other global learning engagement opportunities1:30PM-2:30PMAnderson University Center

  • ALLOWED to add this minor, as it essentially is the minor aligned with the Applied Physics major. ENGR 131 PHYS 153/163, 154/164 (calculus-based introductory physics plus laboratory) 8 additional semester hours chosen from: ENGR 240, 333, 334, 355 Plus: 8 additional semester hours chosen from: ENGR 495 (credits vary depending on internship type and schedule) Courses in business, economics, ethics, and history that introduce students to aspects of industry: BUSA 201, 310, or 358 ECON 101 or 313 HIST

  • had to wear in P.E., the day we moved a hundred thousand books to the new library, intramurals, dorm competitions, Louis Armstrong in concert, a Hubert Humphrey speech, the first dances on campus, girls wearing pants only on weekends, upper campus for women, lower campus for men, Old and New Testament taught as half sermon, half lecture, half history, crew cuts and Jackie hair, The Mooring Mast, a new swimming pool, were we the Knights or were we Lutes when the saints came marching in? When you

  • bring a rich, lively analysis to bear grounded in the trio’s own personal experiences and expertise. Other Episodes+ In the podcast’s third episode, Hambrick talks with noted Trinidadian author Earl Lovelace, PLU English professor Barbara Temple-Thurston and dCenter alum Shelondra Harris ’17 about the university’s Trinidad and Tobago exchange program. The conversation covers PLU’s 25-year history with the twin-island republic, Harris’ experiences when she took part in the program and the Diversity

  • oriented and unoriented samples. Investigation of the structure was initially completed using Circular Dichroism to observe the global structure results indicated that P3 amidated and non-amidated are alpha helical. Rotational Echo Double Resonance conducted on piscidin 3 to characterize distances between residues located at positions 16 and 20 indicates that the peptide is alpha helical. Two-dimensional Polarization Inversion Spin Exchange at the Magic Angle (PISEMA) experiments were performed on

  • global learning engagement opportunities1:30PM-2:30PMAnderson University Center (AUC) Regency Room (203) Required (IHON Students)IHON New Student Orientation REQUIRED: For new International Honors students only3:00PM-4:00PMAnderson University Center (AUC) Room 133 HUNGRY? Optional: Dinner in the Commons4:30PM-7:00PMAnderson University Center (AUC) Commons (AYCTE) & Old Main Market (OMM) Required (Residents) Love Where You Live: Community Building REQUIRED for new ResidentsResidential Wing Meetings

  • , with 82 percent of its population living on less than $1 a day. It’s a country dominated by trade—now mostly beef, sugar and coffee—trying to elbow its way into tourism and leave behind a past crowded with civil war, damaging foreign involvement and corrupt politicians. PLU students learned about the history of Nicaragua through a series of interdisciplinary lectures scheduled by Mulder that explored the environment, ethics and culture of a country that still struggles to provide basic necessities

  • Capstone Seminar With concerns of global warming and population increase money is being heavily invested in renewable energy sources that are cheap, safe, eco-friendly, and can perform at the same level if not exceed the capabilities of current energy sources. Iron air batteries are lightweight and safe however cannot currently meet the power needs of current technology. We hypothesize that the specific power of iron-air batteries can be increased if the surface area that is accessible to