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  • , Catholic, feminist/womanist, Latin American liberation, and Black theologies. Students engage their own deepest convictions and beliefs and encounter tools to examine their ideas more clearly. RELI 247 for cross-cultural GenEd and RELI 257 for alternative perspective GenEd. (4) RELI 229 : Health and Healing in Christian History - RL, IT This course addresses the intersection of religion and medicine in Christian history. Students focus on approaches to health, healing, death and dying rooted in

  • in Tacoma, WA. Since 2005, he has regularly taught courses in introductory and organic chemistry, and his current research involves mentoring undergraduates in the lab synthesis of new, luminescent dyes to track RNA in cells. Neal also serves as a member of PLU’s Pre-Health Sciences Advising Team, a group of faculty who guide students and alumni discerning paths in medicine, dentistry, pharmacy, and other health professions.Tamara R. Williams is a professor of Hispanic and Latino Studies at

  • performers. Type of Club or Organization: Performance and Creative Interest Meeting Times & Places (Subject to Change): When: J-term only, Sunday-Thursday from 6:30pm-10pm Where: Eastvold Mainstage in KHP or Studio Theater in KHP Club President’s Email: dkoetje@plu.eduOutdoor RecDescription: Outdoor Rec is Pacific Lutheran University’s wilderness adventure club. We lead trips each weekend to scenic places around the Pacific Northwest, rent gear out to the PLU community, and provide the resources

  • Company. Directed by Rachel Morton.
 Titanic, by Christopher Durang. Directed by Nathan Rice. 
Uncommon Women and Others, by Wendy Wasserstein. Directed by Dahli Langer ‘01.
 Angry Housewives, by A. M. Collins and Chad Henry. Directed by Professor Jeff A. Clapp.
 Dance 2001. Directed by Professor Maureen McGill.
 The Merchant of Venice, by William Shakespeare. 
Directed by Professor William Becvar and Visiting Professor Danforth Comins.1990-20001999-2000 Ah, Wilderness!, by Eugene O’Neill. Directed by

  • McGill.
 The Merchant of Venice, by William Shakespeare. 
Directed by Professor William Becvar and Visiting Professor Danforth Comins.1990-20001999-2000 Ah, Wilderness!, by Eugene O’Neill. Directed by Professor William Parker.
The Ride Down Mt. Morgan, by Arthur Miller. Directed by Louis Hobson ‘00.
Inspecting Carol, by Daniel Sullivan and the Seattle Rep. Co. Directed by Professor William Becvar.
Dance 2000. Directed by Professor Maureen McGill.
The Shadow Box, by Michael Cristofer. Directed by

  • author of Auschwitz, Poland, and the Politics of Commemoration, 1945-1979 (Athens: Ohio University Press, 2003), which was awarded the Orbis Books Prize in Polish Studies from the American Association for the Advancement of Slavic Studies and was a finalist for the Pro Historia Polonorum award of the Polskie Towarszystwo Historyczne (Polish Historical Association) for the best foreign-language book in Polish history. In addition, he is co-editor, with Francis R. Nicosia, of Medicine and Medical

  • life is.” #WeAreOrlando And, of course, there’s the beauty nature has to offer. Woodsmith says one of her favorite stops has been the San Jacinto wilderness near Idyllwild, California. “It goes from boulder gardens to massive sugar pine forests down onto a 20-mile descent without water,” she said. “It’s beautiful, it’s challenging, it’s scary all at the same time.” Alexis Ballinger ’12 can relate. She said pictures from her Pacific Crest Trail hike in 2014 don’t do it justice. She said the hike

  • me for help and I will have very little to give. I already know that’s something I’m going to struggle with. People are going to come to me and say ‘I’m hungry.’ People are going to come to me and say ‘I’m ill and I need medicine.’ I know it will be a floodgate the minute I arrive, because conditions are dire and South Sudan is a failed state. David also knows that after 16 years in the U.S., he will have changed in ways that will not please his friends and family. “America now defines me,” he

  • Concept Analysis: “Healing is an intervention, an outcome, and a process, and at times, all three. It also describes an ability or power, energy, and cleansing of grief, trouble, or evil. The concept is relevant in a wide range of disciplines, including medicine, nursing, psychology, public health, education, religion, and spirituality. Healing occurs in multiple dimensions—physical, mental, emotional, spiritual, familial, social, communal, and environmental. Healing occurs at multiple levels from the

  • medical school. But after a study abroad experience in Panama and Costa Rica, she realized she wanted to make a difference on a larger scale. Rebekah Blakney '12Collects adult mosquitoes from catch basins in an Atlanta park to identify and test for West Nile Virus (Photo courtesy of Blakney). “It made me realize I’m more interested in medicine on a population level,” said Blakney, a former cross-country athlete who studied chemistry and biology at PLU. She eventually went on to earn a master’s degree