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  • school to be a pediatrician. That all began to change my first semester when I took a class about Race and Identity in the US. Because of that class, I combined my newfound awareness of social justice issues with my initial curiosity in medicine. From there, I became more interested in the accessibility of medicine for underserved communities and how research can have such a significant influence in healthcare policy reform. After PLU, I’m planning to get a Master’s in Public Health concentrating in

  • will miss out on commencement in May and are facing a working world that has dramatically shifted. Any PLU student you know would be grateful for a word of encouragement right now — whether via email, phone, text or video chat.  Participate in the Check5 initiative. Check5 is a social media campaign with one simple goal: to remake a network among all displaced Lutes to help us care for and connect with each other during the coronavirus crisis and beyond.  Sign up for LuteLink, if you’re a PLU

  • & Recreational Meeting Times & Places (Subject to Change): When: Tuesdays: 6:15pm-8:15pm Thursdays: 8pm-10pm Where: East Field (Turf/Fieldhouse) Club Email: womenult@plu.eduSwing Dancing ClubDescription: In Swing Dancing club, we get together once a week to dance together. Learn a variant of East Coast swing, and social dance the rest of the time! No experience required. Type of Club or Organization: Athletic and Recreational Meeting Times & Places (Subject to Change): When: Every Wednesday from 6:30pm-8pm

  • includes: academic dishonesty, policy violation, and conduct. Student Care Network (SCN) – SCN works with the PLU community to proactively connect with students and partners for a successful academic, social, and emotional experience at PLU Office of Accessibility and Accommodation – Serve students with either temporary or permanent physical, health, learning, sensory or psychological disabilities Get Support (click the icon!)Center for DJSCenter for Student SuccessCampus SafetyStudent Financial

  • Why Study Mathematics? Mathematics is an exciting and intellectually stimulating field whose frontiers are rapidly expanding. Mathematics provides the foundation for much of the natural and social sciences, as well as many other fields where quantitative reasoning is essential. The study of mathematics offers opportunities for creative effort and accomplishment, both within mathematics and through its application. Why Study Mathematics at PLU?The Department of Mathematics offers a broad choice

  • prior written approval. Fees and Scheduling Appointments We are committed to supporting social equity through widened access to affordable therapy. Counseling sessions are currently being conducted in-person or through teletherapy to individuals, couples, and families around Washington state. Costs of visits is determined by a sliding scale based on your household’s gross monthly income and the number of people in your household, with fees from $15 – $65 per session. Gross Monthly Household

  • math major is excited about teaching in his community LATEST POSTS Three students share how scholarships support them in their pursuit to make the world better than how they found it June 24, 2024 The Passing of Bryan Dorner June 4, 2024 Student athlete Vinny D’Onofrio ’24 excelled in biology and chemistry at PLU June 4, 2024 Ash Bechtel ’24 combines science and social work for holistic view of patient care; aims to serve Hispanic community May 22, 2024

  • Gombe Stream National Park, where renowned primatologist Jane Goodall began her work studying chimpanzee social and family life in 1960. While in the country, Webb’s independent research project looked at the conservation program run by the Jane Goodall Institute in Kigoma. It focuses on community development and education as the backbone of environmental conservation. “For someone who is interested in chimpanzee conservation, it’s a place you have to go,” Webb explained. Webb visited the national

  • left his post as CEO of the United Way of New York City to assume a full time teaching position at New York University’s Robert F. Wagner Graduate School of Public Service. During a long career that includes senior positions in the Koch, Dinkins and Giuliani administrations in New York City, Campbell counts two turning points that changed his life. In the mid-1980s, Campbell was charged with developing a social service response to the AIDS crisis in the city, which at that time was one of the

  • challenges. Bellah’s topic was that of his next book, the namesake of the lecture, in which he explores the advancement of modern society in relation to the rises and falls of past societies. Those societies have experienced a hard ceiling, said Bellah, produced by “the paradox of development – the very success of pre-modern societies leads to overpopulation, famine, plague and war.” Bellah explained the tendencies for societies to rise and fall using the social development index developed by historian