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  • Political Science Lecture SeriesFree and open to the public. view images descriptions print Select which month(s) you would like to print: Close Print view all events Sept. 20, 11 a.m., AUC 133 Constitution Day Lecture: the challenges facing the press in these polarizing times Rebecca Poynter, Publisher of the Tacoma News TribuneSept. 26, 7:30 p.m., AUC 133 Mike Purdy, Creator of presidential history.com and author of “101 Presidential Insults: What They Really Thought of Each Other-and What it

  • Health in Oaxaca: Understanding the ComplexitiesProgram Brochure ENGL 387 (ES) or SOCI 387 (ES) | Public Memory and Social Identity in Northern IrelandProgram Brochure EDUC 385 (GE) | Comparative EducationProgram Brochure SOCW 325 (VW, GE) | Social, Health, and Educational Services in TobagoProgram Brochure HISP 201 (VW, GE)/HISP 202 (VW, GE)/HISP 331 (VW, GE)/HISP 403 | Intensive Spanish and Culture in UruguayProgram BrochureDomestic Programs RELI 226 (RL, VW) | Christian EthicsProgram Brochure This

  • Dylan Ruggeri ’23 and Kenzie Knapp ‘24 make a musical about climate change Together, senior Dylan Ruggeri ’23 and junior Kenzie Knapp ’24 created an innovative climate science musical performance on PLU’s campus in 2022. Both students are majoring in environmental studies and theatre, and the duo drew on their passions to create art, transforming audience perspectives on… July 7, 2023 AcademicsCreatorMusicReformerSustainabilityThe ArtsTheatre

  •  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. Mentor. Workshops and classes in poetry. Statement: “Every society we’ve ever known has had poetry, and should the day come that poetry suddenly disappears in the morning, someone, somewhere, will reinvent it by evening. Since ancient times, as long as we’ve had language, poetry has ritualized human life. It has dramatized and informed us

  • settings. Some schools are public and some are private, and they vary in size, curriculum, and character. To find out which schools might best meet your needs and goals, review the AAVMC’s list of veterinary schools.

  • settings. Some schools are public and some are private, and they vary in size, curriculum, and character. To find out which schools might best meet your needs and goals, review the AAVMC’s list of veterinary schools.

  • community organizations and integrating their experiences into an academic project. Placements are usually arranged by the student and may include the public school system, private and public social service organizations, criminal justice system agencies, local and state governmental agencies, and businesses. Prerequisite: SOCI 101 and declared major or minor in sociology or criminal justice. (1 to 4) SOCI 496 : Sociological Theories An analysis of influential sociological theories of the 19th and 20th

  • Division 2024 Outstanding Teaching Award, University of Maryland, 2022 Outstanding Service Award, University of Maryland, 2022 Summer Teaching Curriculum Development Fellowship, University of Maryland, 2022 Twitch 2021 Research Fellowship Finalist, Twitch Interactive Inc., 2021 COMM Public Good Fellowship for Curriculum Development, University of Maryland, 2022 Bob and Linda Haskins Award for Graduate Teaching, Colorado State University, 2018 Biography Dr. E. Brooke Phipps is originally from central

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  • ideas taught her how to enact change and influence those around her. Her experience at PLU and the Diversity Center equipped her with cherished tools that helped form how she operates in professional, public, and social settings. When she visited PLU as a high school senior, Ashely probably would never have dreamed of having the experience she did at a small, private school in Tacoma. But four years of Diversity Center experience gave her a true passion for social justice and an appreciation for

  • evening and outdoors. The second idea was linked to the completion of the new Keck Observatory on campus. Star charts are passed out at the concert and, with the help of physics professors Dr. Steve Starkovich and Dana Rush, the telescope is available for the public to stargaze after select performances. Judy Carr insisted that the concerts were a community service and should be free to the public. To pay the musicians and offer other accommodations, JUTS would need sponsorship and cooperation from a