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  • professors, you get to see people,” Franklin said. “It’s more of a family and you know each other.” Her formal education began as a nurse in her home state of South Carolina. She then moved to a military base in Germany with her husband and started a family. Eventually, her husband’s military career relocated the family to Tacoma where Franklin has remained ever since. Rosa Franklin '74An undated photo during her time with the Washington state Legislature. (Photo courtesy of Franklin) “My first job was

  • This paper was written for Gonzaga University’s research workshop, “The Tenacity of Antisemitism, in the Pacific Northwest and Beyond.” It explores antisemitism and Jewish stereotypes in Nazi Propaganda films while also providing crucial background about the origins of Jewish stereotypes, Nazi racial ideology, Nazi propaganda, and then the analysis of specific films: Hitler’s Youth Quex, Triumph of the Will, Jud Süß and Der ewige Jude. Eomon SullivanEnglishReason and Faith in Dostoyevsky's Crime

  • selections from the choir’s award-winning participation at the 2011 Harmonie Festival, held in Limburg-Lindenholzhausen, Germany, where Choir of the West competed with ensembles from over forty-seven nations. The album also features works from the choir’s performance at the 2012 American Choral Directors Association Northwestern Division Conference. The title work of the album was composed by PLU student Jason Michael Saunders.Listen to album selections on SoundCloud!Purchase A Child is BornThe music on

  • Special Edition: “… and justice for all?” ‹ 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

  • Headed for a History Ph.D. – Updates from an Alum Posted by: shimkojm / December 11, 2019 Image: Carli at the Museum of Jewish Heritage in NYC, with friends Celia (center) and Joy (right). Celia survived Nazi occupation in WWII by pretending to be a Polish Catholic child. December 11, 2019 By Carli Snyder, ’17, and Beth Kraig, Professor of HistoryFirst, we are glad that you chose PLU. Our mission is to prepare students for lives of thoughtful inquiry, service, leadership, and care – and we

  • , to monastic libraries and medieval urban universities, and the schools of the Renaissance. In one of those Renaissance universities, established in Germany at the beginning of the sixteenth century, Martin Luther, a professor and priest, launched the reform which would eventually take his name, a reform which spread to other countries and grew in various ways. As a university professor, Luther’s reform was shaped by the freedom of conscience, the need to engage one’s society in pursuit of a

  • laughed, as she set about packing this week to first meet up with the Team USA in Boston on Friday, and then fly together to Germany and then on to Sochi. “But if you start thinking about the quarter finals before you get out of that first group, you’re in trouble,” she said. “You need to stay focused on what’s in front of you.” Dr. Colleen Hacker, Professor of Kinesiology and Mental Skills Coach of the US Women’s Hockey Team. Photo by PLU Photographer John Froschauer. And to think and act like a team

  • special duty for about 200 days playing in a touring group around Germany and the Volksfest in Berlin.” He lives in Springfield, Ore. Saxophonist John C. Radke, 68, attended PLU from 1964-66. He enlisted in the U. S. Navy Reserve in 1967 and served two deployments to Vietnam aboard the U.S.S. Saint Paul. He later led the jazz-rock group Concrete Duck. He and his wife, Elma, taught and performed Mexican folk music and folk dances in Seattle and in Milwaukee, where they moved in 1984 so Radke could join

  • team had a diverse crew; Lindberg was one of two Americans. The squad also had rowers from Germany, Italy and Britain. In addition to competing in several bumps races, she watched the famed Boat Race between Oxford and Cambridge University clubs. Lindberg also raced with the women’s squad, who was down a rower, at Versailles in France. OXFORD, ENGLAND The study away experience is an extension of PLU’s International Honors program. In addition to three courses toward the IHON curriculum, students

  • Student Musicians Charm European Audiences PLU’s Choir of the West and KammerMusikere Orchestra toured Germany and France this past summer with great success. The two groups – sometimes playing together, other times apart – performed numerous concerts at beautiful locations such as the Cathedral at Chartres and the Luxembourg Gardens… September 21, 2011 Choir of the WestKammerMusikereTouring