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  • Summer Job Spotlight: Nursing Parker Simpson ’24 is spending his summer working at an assisted living facility in his hometown of Spokane, Washington. He comes from a family of healthcare professionals and has always wanted to help people. We sat down with him to discuss his experience taking classes… August 23, 2022 AcademicsBiologyChemistryCurrent StudentsInternshipsInvolvementLutheran Higher EducationNursingParentsProfessorsReformerResearchSciencesServiceStudent LifeStudent/Faculty Research

  • are manageable for one person and simple and strong enough to be compelling as a product. 1:15pm – Poker AI Kioni Kamau (BS), Logan Margo (BA), Natalie Sayre (BS) Solving poker games using artificial intelligence (AI) has been an active area of research for many years. However, the imperfect information nature of the game, combined with the large state space and the presence of multiple players, makes it a challenging problem for AI to solve. Two player Texas Hold’em has been solved, but extending

  • research on Nazi Germany has focused on sites of terror- especially concentration camps and extermination camps. Despite a multitude of works exploring these places of terror, comparatively little work has been done exploring the role of medical scientists and nurses in perpetrating ethical violations of their mandate to “first, do no harm.” Perhaps even fewer works have attempted to explore the role of Jewish medical personnel and their attempts to fight against the Nazi regime in whatever limited

  • holding onto one’s identity and fighting to maintain that identity was a moral victory over the brutality of the Nazi regime.Learn more about the “Jewish Resistance and Rescue during the Holocaust” conference 2018 Powell-Heller Conference for Holocaust EducationThe 2018 Powell-Heller Conference for Holocaust Education, in its 11th year at Pacific Lutheran University, was dedicated to exploring the role of medical science and the Holocaust. In the last decades, historical research on Nazi Germany has

  • . Presenter: Attorneys Julie Dickens and Lisa Kremer, Gordon Thomas Honeywell Room: AUC Regency Room11:00AM-12:00PM | The Unselfish Act of Self-CareThe Unselfish Act of Self-CareJoin us as we explore how to take care of our selves and our communities. Presenter: Tolu Taiwo and Dawn Cuthbertson, Center for Gender Equity Room: AUC 1331:30-2:30PM | The Science of HappinessThe Science of HappinessLearn how to bring more happiness to your personal and professional life. Research supports that happy people feel

  • the ILL office at ill@plu.edu or 253-535-7508 to let us know so we can cancel it.What copyright and photocopying restrictions apply?Under certain conditions specified in copyright law (Title 17, United States Code), libraries and archives are authorized to furnish a photocopy or other reproduction.  One of these specific conditions is that the photocopy or reproduction is not to be “used for any purpose other than private study, scholarship, or research.”  If a user makes a request for, or later

  • topics impact your particular life and work contexts. While this pre-conference session was created in response to pastors and congregations of the ELCA, we welcome members of all religious denominations and secular perspectives as well. Our speakers of the morning will be: Dr. David Ward, PLU Dean of Health Professions and Professor of Marriage and Family Therapy. Dr. Jacqueline Bussie, Executive Director of the Collegeville Institute for Ecumenical and Cultural Research Rev. Molly Knutson Keller

  • skied from upper to lower campus. I studied away in Windhoek, Namibia, for one semester (though it was cut short by COVID). Learning about the history of Namibia was fascinating and eye-opening. Traveling to National parks and seeing elephants, giraffes, zebras, and cheetahs is something I’ll cherish for the rest of my life. Being able to study away without it costing more than my regular cost of attendance was amazing. In Namibia, I started a biochemistry research project on the potential chemical

  • Programs provided the basis for her winning Fulbright proposal when it gave her – along with her professor and mentor, Joanne Lisosky – a research grant to study human rights at the U.N. in Geneva. That PLU is extremely successful at placing graduates in the Fulbright program should also be no surprise. In 2007, PLU was named by the Chronicle of Higher Education as one of the top four masters-level institutions in the United States, in terms of the number of students participating in the Fulbright U.S

  • skied from upper to lower campus. I studied away in Windhoek, Namibia, for one semester (though it was cut short by COVID). Learning about the history of Namibia was fascinating and eye-opening. Traveling to National parks and seeing elephants, giraffes, zebras, and cheetahs is something I’ll cherish for the rest of my life. Being able to study away without it costing more than my regular cost of attendance was amazing.  In Namibia, I started a biochemistry research project on the potential chemical