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  • Norway in 567 years. Crown Prince Olav and Crown Princess Märtha also had two daughters, Princess Ragnhild and Princess Astrid, both born before the Prince. At the time, the Norwegian Constitution of 1814 stipulated that only male heirs could inherit the throne. •  The first three years of Prince Harald’s life were spent in the peaceful surroundings of Skaugum. However, this came to an abrupt end on April 9, 1940, when German troops invaded Norway. To avoid being taken into custody by the occupying

  • foreign languages—particularly the “soft” ones such as Spanish and French—while men gravitate to the “hard” languages (German, Russian) and other academic subjects such as science and math. In the larger university setting, most foreign language departments have traditionally been split between (mostly male) tenured and tenure-track faculty members engaged in original research in literature or literary theory, and (mostly female) non-tenured lecturers and teaching assistants responsible for the

  • and Gender Studies Execuitve Committee, and Holocaust and Genocide Studies steering committee. She is the coordinator of the University Gallery & PLU Permanent Art Collection, overseer of annual Studio Art, Design, & Media Artistic Achievement Awards, manager of equipment, supplies, and repairs for all art and design studio area courses. Heather’s service extends beyond PLU, where her role as co-coordinator of Visual Culture for the German Studies Association highlights her commitment to

  • belief wanes by the final episode in the midst of the laudanum and Edward’s ongoing campaign to supplant her psychological well being. Edward is also unconsciously aided and abetted by Esther’s trusted German doctor, and man of his time, who is quick to diagnose her behavior as “hysterical” given she was in an emotional state with the failed attempts to conceive. This is a dismissive behavior consistent with his treatment of her ills by giving her a useless placebo mixture as his fertility tincture

  • Messiah Festival of Music and Art in Kansas where she sang Bach’s St. Matthew Passion, recitals, and performances of Handel’s Messiah. As a regional artist, she has appeared in many performances of Mozart’s Mass in C Minor, Brahms’ A German Requiem, Mahler’s Symphony No. 4, Haydn’s Creation, and world premieres. She sang the Mater Gloriosa in the first Oregon performance of Mahler’s Eighth Symphony with Eugene Symphony in 2002, conducted by Miguel Harth-Bedoya. Her career launched with notable

  • Gilbert, a former BIHE professor to Baha’i students in Iran. 6-8 p.m., Anderson University Center Regency Room Thursday, April 9: Commemoration of Dietrich Bonhoeffer. April 9, 2015, marks the 70th anniversary of the death of Dietrich Bonhoeffer at the hands of Nazi executioners. Bonhoeffer was a German Lutheran pastor, theologian, and–with friends and family–a member of the conspiracy to assassinate Adolf Hitler and his associates. At PLU, the anniversary of his death will be commemorated with the

  • the Center for Gender Equity, Women’s and Gender Studies Program, Center for Community Engagement and Service, ASPLU, Lute Vote, American Association of University Women (AAUW). Bach Concert Oct. 9 | 3 p.m. | Lagerquist Concert Hall The program will include selections from J. S. Bach’s Clavierübung III, sometimes referred to as The German Organ Mass, one of the many masterpieces by the most famous of Lutheran composers. Sponsored by the Department of Music. Let’s Talk About: Islamophobia and

  • youth with the Center for Community Engagement and Service, held multiple positions in Residential Life, participated in student activism and spent two years as a dance choreographer with dance ensemble. Natalie DeFord Natalie is a recent PLU graduate on the hunt for journalism jobs. She double majored in communication and German, with a minor in Holocaust and genocide studies. While at PLU, she interned for The Olympian , KPLU, The News Tribune and Premier Media Group. She also worked extensively

  • and Matthew Anderson, East German-Chinese Cultural Relations in the Cold War Amy Grinsteiner and Andrew D’Antonio, Music as a Hub in the London Community Barbara Temple-Thurston and Rae-Ann Barras,Using Culture to Shape Environmental Attitudes and Activism Robert Wells, Elizabeth Herzfeldt-Kamprath, Kari Plog, Lorna Rodriguez,Oil Literacy 2009-2010Student Projects Austin Goble, Exploratory Research of Organic Farms in Turkey Jessica Lupton, A community’s Response to a Government’s Neglect

  • rife with diseases of all sorts. Whether British troops heading for the front were infected with the flu by Camp Funston Americans or whether they picked up a different strain of virus, or both, the H1N1 virus first exploded on the British front, crossed easily through German lines, and rapidly felled soldiers up and down the front.  Concurrently, flu also overran Spain and then spread throughout Europe.   In this first wave, millions suffered, but comparatively few died.  That was about to change