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  • Student Internship: Annica Stiles ’25 studies in Iceland Posted by: mhines / December 12, 2023 Image: Annica Stiles ’25 spends the summer interning with Global Treks & Adventure in Iceland. (Photo provided by Stiles) December 12, 2023 Embarking on a journey to study in Reykjavik, Iceland, during the summer is a unique and life-changing experience that offers an extraordinary blend of academic enrichment and natural wonder. Imagine being immersed in a land of fire and ice, where the midnight sun

  • Thank you for supporting Lute Softball! Q&A with Coach Traci BarrettWhat are some highlights of this year that shows your team succeeding, facing a challenge, and supporting each other? Watching this team grow, get closer than any team we’ve had in my time at PLU, and believe in one another and what it takes to tell the game what you want it to know has been so special. Beating Linfield twice in our series, something no other team in the conference accomplished this year was special, but so

  • Welcome Tamara Williams, executive director of the Wang Center for Global Education, discusses PLU’s holistic approach to global education and its role in an increasingly interconnected world amid conflict and uncertainty. Read More Oaxaca An undocumented PLU student shares her experience going back to Mexico —  for the first time since her family relocated to the United States —  as part of the Oaxaca Gateway program. She opens up about her identity struggle and the valuable lessons learned abroad

  • Theatre in addition to Studio Art & Design or Media. However, your applications will need to be entirely separate and you will need to prepare all of the necessary application materials for all areas. On the other hand, if you have multiple interests among our Studio Art & Design programs (Art History, Ceramics, Graphic Design, Photography, Printmaking, or Publishing and Printing Arts) you will only need to submit one scholarship application—just be sure to address your interests in each of the three

  • Save Add Edit Remove Back New Delete French & Francophone Studies Academic Programs all programs program website French & Francophone Studies Undergraduate Major & Minor College of Liberal Studies Bachelor of Arts Meet the Professors More Stories Visit About French is the fifth most- spoken language in the world, used on a daily basis by over 230 million people in Europe, Africa, the Caribbean, North America, and Asia. In the French & Francophone Studies major, you’ll immerse yourself in authentic

  • Thank you for supporting Lute Men's Golf! Q&A with Coach Kyle DruggeWhat are some highlights of this year that shows your team succeeding, facing a challenge, and supporting each other? One of my favorite moments from this season was a team wiffle ball game that we played towards the end of the spring season. While it is not a story about being on the course, it represents so much of what makes this team special. Our student-athletes are competitors and you would have thought we were playing

  • total (48) and lowest shooting percentage (33%) of the season. What makes your student-athletes special? What makes you feel most proud of your team? We have a group of high character young men who are like minded and driven in terms of their overall improvement as human beings, students and as athletes. I am proud of the way the members of our program show a collective responsibility to represent the core values of not only our program but those of the entire athletic department. Being a Lute means

  • Thank you for supporting Lute Women's Basketball! Q&A with Coach Lee AduddellWhat are some highlights of this year that shows your team succeeding, facing a challenge, and supporting each other? This group of young women are the best of what college athletics is about. During a year that saw adversity and injury, our players banned together to persevere and record some of their most exciting wins at the end of the season. What makes your student-athletes special? What you makes you feel most

  • according to the art critics (Abiodun 22) – Kelsey Barnes ’16, Anthropology & Art History Sources Abiodun, Rowland. “African Aesthetics.” Journal of Aesthetic Education. Vol. 35, No. 4 (2001): 15-23. Drewal, Henry John, John Pemberton, Rowland Abiodun, and Allen Wardwell. Yoruba: Nine Centuries of African Art and Thought. New York: Center for African Art in association with H.N. Abrams, 1989. Fakẹyẹ, Lamidi Ọlọnade, Bruce M. Haight, with David H. Curl. Lamidi Ọlọnade Fakẹyẹ: My Life and My Art. Holland

  • By Genny Boots ‘18 and Kate Williams ‘16 Barry Johnson is not your typical new faculty hire. He has been a contingent faculty member at PLU since 1989. He will continue on at PLU working as a low voice instructor, but instead, on the tenure track. What is your background? I was born and raised in Douglas, Arizona on the Mexican border, the youngest of five children. I played baseball, acted in plays, and played trombone in the band. I didn’t sing in a choir until my junior year in high school