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  • Acclaimed Novelist ‹ Resolute Online: Spring 2015 Home Features Germany J-Term Women’s Center at 25 Jehane Noujaim It’s On Us Attaway Lutes Editor’s Note On Campus Discovery Research Accolades Lute Library Blogs Alumni News Alumni Profiles Homecoming 2015 Twin Cities ‘Waste Not’ Seattle Connections Easter Egg Hunt Night at the Rainiers Alumni Events Class Notes Family and Friends Submit a Class Note Calendar Home Features Germany J-Term Women’s Center at 25 Jehane Noujaim It’s On Us Attaway

  • . Laurence Huestis, Ph.D. It is with great sadness that PLU announces the death of Laurence Huestis, Ph.D. , a retired chemistry professor who had a significant impact on students and campus programs throughout the 38 years he served the Lute community (1961-99). Perhaps the most notable mark he left at PLU — even after his retirement — was his commitment to students’ professional and academic development. He mentored many students in undergraduate research, training them for entry to graduate school and

  • Obituaries – Resolute Online: Spring 2019 Search Features Features Opening Note Defining Success Build It and They Will Come Undergraduate Research Symposium Grant Power On Campus Discovery Discovery Accolades Lute Library Blogs Alumni News Alumni News Explore the World Homecoming 2019 Alumni Profile Once a Lute, Always a Lute Five Guys, One Basketball and Fifty Years Class Notes Class Notes Obituaries Submit a Class Note Calendar Obituaries Sir Charles T. “Chuck” Nelson Sir Charles T. “Chuck

  • Campus Ministry ‹ Resolute Online: Winter 2016 Home Features What Was/Is It Like To Be… The Call Design School Open to Interpretation Attaway Lutes Welcome Note Setting The Course On Campus Discovery Research Grants Accolades Lute Library Blogs Alumni News Homecoming 2016 Connection Events Lute Recruit Alumni Profiles Class Notes Family and Friends Mike Benson Submit a Class Note Calendar Highlights Home Features What Was/Is It Like To Be… The Call Design School Open to Interpretation Attaway

  • much podcasting is being done at PLU. They believe this has given students an experience to a whole other level of collaboration and commitment. Creating podcasts challenges a student’s comfort level with technology as they study what it means to explore the humanities in a digital context.   Dr. Ramos hopes more Humanities professors will consider incorporating technology into their classrooms and their research. She believes that new methods and concepts can be created by exploring the different

  • design characterizes the wide-ranging nature of James Holloway’s interests. Dr. James Holloway (1960-2001) was the University Organist and Professor of Organ and Church Music at Pacific Lutheran University where he served as a studio teacher, musicologist and choral conductor. He created the Mentorship Program for Vocations in Church Music at PLU and taught in the Honors and Freshman Experience programs. A mentally unstable assailant murdered Dr. Holloway on campus in 2001. The artist, Kathryn Wold

  • specifically how tigers lap up liquids – as part of a PLU capstone project. Two years ago, physics major Matt Hubbard ’13 became intrigued by the subject when he encountered research taking place at Massachusetts Institute of Technology, which analyzed the roughness and size of a tongue and its relation to water-column pull and strength. “I liked the fact that you could take a field of complex mechanics and relate it, in a tangible way, to an everyday occurrence,” Hubbard said. He worked on his project for

  • Gateway program in Telemark. She was the first recipient of the Svare-Toven Endowed Professorship, through which she promoted a contemporary focus on Scandinavian migration, peacebuilding and gender equality. Claudia’s research focuses on the Norwegian author Sigrid Undset. She has published several articles on Undset’s historical novels and is now researching Undset’s life in exile in the United States during World War II. She also works as a translator, primarily of literature of new immigrants to

  • the end of the Second World War. I conclude that neither his defenders nor detractors are right. Presenters: Robert Ventresca, Associate Professor of History, King’s University College at Western University in London, Ontario (Canada) Jacques Kornberg, Professor Emeritus, Department of History, University of Toronto Moderator: Beth A. Griech-Polelle, Mayer Chair of Holocaust Studies, PLU 11:45 a.m. - 12:30 p.m. – Mayer Summer Research Fellow Presentations (Room 133, AUC)Mayer Summer Research

  • Fall 2020 10th Day - New Students & Overall Headcount (pdf) view download