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  • anthropologist and physician, he has worked on social hierarchies, health inequities, and the ways in which such asymmetries are naturalized, normalized, and resisted in the context of transnational im/migration, agro-food systems, and health care.  He has received national and international awards from the fields of anthropology, sociology, and geography, including the Margaret Mead Award. In addition to scholarly publications, he has written for popular media such as The Huffington Post and Salon.com  and

  • personnel of the United States Government that is used for auditing or evaluation of federally funded projects or for information that must be disclosed in order to meet the requirements of the Federal Food and Drug Administration (FDA). You should understand that a Certificate of Confidentiality does not prevent you or a member of your family from voluntarily releasing information about yourself and your involvement in the research. If an insurer, employer or other person obtains your written consent

  • scholarship and how competitive is it to get one?You can come to campus or send in a recorded audition any time you’d like, but it is strongly suggested that you come to PLU for a live audition during our scholarship audition weekend in early February. That weekend doesn’t give you preferential treatment, but provides you and your family with a wonderful opportunity to experience the campus and music faculty and ask questions of us when we’re asking questions of you. Scholarships are given on the basis of

  • , Allen suggested that Huertas journal about his coming out story. He laughs while explaining that when he came out to his friends and family as a teenager they all had already assumed and loved him no less or no more. “I’m very lucky that that was my experience, but it’s boring,” Huertas says. When he began writing about it in his journal, he wanted to spice it up. He thought about the comic book superheroes he loved: X-Men, Spiderman and the Ninja Turtles. He wrote a story about a queer protagonist

  • UCLA or anywhere in the world. But it is our story — a PLU story. Maybe someone in your circle has such a story. Ask them. And if they do, ask them to tell it. Stories such as ours, and hopefully such as yours, are important — memories are sometimes all we have left of each other. One of my favorite memories is of the last time the four of us visited Doug in his room at a memory care facility. Hanging on the wall were pictures of his children, his medical degree, and a photograph of the five of us

  • artifact, a symbol, when you learn about discoveries in its mental abilities, for example. It’s harder to treat an animal as a genetic program after savoring the presence of animals in W. S. Merwin’s poems. Most important, I would urge us to pay greater heed to the animals themselves. After the grueling challenges of chasing the jaguar in the rainforest of Mexico—and touching it—one comes away with an increased respect for the animal’s intelligence and value. We need to care as much for the worlds of

  • submit HPRB proposals. Overview of HPRB process and resources including online submission of research through Axiom Mentor system.  This workshop is open to all faculty. Registration is required. University Conference University Conference Wednesday, August 30, 2023 9:30 – 10:00 a.m. | Chapel – Karen Hille Phillips Center for the Performing Arts – Ness Family Chapel All are welcome for the first chapel of the new Academic Year 10:00 – 10:30 a.m. | Morning Refreshments – Karen Hille Phillips Center

  • visual and literary culture of Austen’s era in the choice to associate Anne Elliot (Dakota Johnson) with animals. When Anne first introduces her family, she is carrying a pet rabbit who will be by her bed, on her lap, and in her arms, when she breaks the fourth wall. In her first conversation with Lady Russell (Nikki Amuka-Bird), the camera frames Anne next to a stylized bird (possibly a white heron) from the wallpaper background. In the poignant swim scene at Lyme, one of many beautiful

  • with a local high school jazz ensemble. Our April 19, 2017 concert will be shared with Rogers High School and internationally-renowned saxophonist Jeff Coffin, our first Weathermon Endowment artist. Jeff is currently the saxophonist with the Dave Matthews Band, played over twenty years with Bela Fleck and the Flecktones, fronts his own Jeff Coffin Mu’tet, and recently recorded Family Dinner Vol. 2 with Snarky Puppy. We will have another unique event on our March 15 concert. I love doing

  • said. “I tried to not share my opinions and just listen to what they had to say. For the most part, they were really nice.”For two students in particular, Lottie Duren ’19 and Josephine Rodriguez ’17, the experience resonated on a personal level. “I went in thinking I’d be super neutral and that I’d just watch things, but that all changed when I felt terrified for my identity,” said Duren, who recently came out as queer to her friends and family. “When Schumer mentioned the existence of gay people