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  • : If it’s not necessary, don’t travel with it. If you must take it, consider taking a loaner device that does not have unnecessary data already stored on it. Check and see if your mobile devices such as cell phones will work in the location your will be traveling to. You may need to make prior arrangements with your mobile carrier to maintain service while away. Back up any information on the device and remove and store any information that is not necessary to bring with you. If any sensitive data

  • that may be of biotechnological significance. She was a research mentor for many years in PLU’s Natural Sciences Summer Undergraduate Research Program (NSSURP) where her research team examined microbial communities in various soils collected from the Pacific Northwest looking for their potential to produce novel antimicrobial compounds. Over time, she moved this research project into the laboratory component of her microbiology course where teams of students work on this project. In recent years

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  • , renderings, planning paperwork, etc, that represents your work thus far. When will adjudications happen? Faculty begin reviewing application materials in mid February. Finalists may be asked to interview with faculty, and if so, these will be conducted virtually. When will I know if I’m receiving an Award? Letters with Award notifications will be mailed as quickly as staff are able once decisions are made and paperwork is processed. How do I keep my Award? After entering PLU as a first-year or transfer

  • eight West Coast premieres. I am very proud of that. Honorable mention should be given to the J-Term study away class I teach in Europe every two years. Taking students to experience the best of the best in music to the homes of Mozart, Beethoven, Bach, Mendelssohn to name a few is inspiring and an amazing opportunity for growth.What do you hope your students take away from your classes? That no matter where you start, goals can be accomplished with the right plan, work ethic, and positive attitude

  • prose. She has a Masters of Fine Arts in Creative Writing (Poetry) from the Rainier Writing Workshop at Pacific Lutheran University. Gregory Youtz, composer, Professor of MusicGregory Youtz is head of the PLU music composition program. His compositions include works for orchestra, band, choir, voice and chamber ensembles, three operas and a full-length musical theater show. He is currently at work on a fourth opera, with librettist Zhang Er, about the expulsion of the Chinese from Tacoma in 1885

  • as Sámi in Northern European Religious Imagination,” joint project with Kathi Breazeale and Britta Helm, Fall 2007 - Spring 2008 Professional Memberships/Organizations Native American and Indigenous Studies Association Society for the Advancement of Scandinavian Study Norwegian Researchers and Teachers Association of North America American Association of University Professors Biography Troy Storfjell (Sámi) specializes in Sámi and Indigenous studies, where his work is largely guided by Indigenist

  • Anders Ramstad, a professor of chemistry from 1925 to 1961. A new wing was added in 1959, and a major renovation designed by Michael Fogde and Ted A. Werner was undertaken in 1985. That same year saw the end of Ramstad Hall’s use for science work, which moved to the newly completed Rieke Science Center. In the years since Ramstad Hall has been home to nursing, psychology, and various student services offices. The Carol Sheffels Quigg Greenhouse is named in honor Carol Sheffels Quigg, a generous donor

  • what products the microbes make that may be of biotechnological significance. She was a research mentor for many years in PLU’s Natural Sciences Summer Undergraduate Research Program (NSSURP) where her research team examined microbial communities in various soils collected from the Pacific Northwest looking for their potential to produce novel antimicrobial compounds. Over time, she moved this research project into the laboratory component of her microbiology course where teams of students work on

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  • receive accolades. Elea Carey’s story “First Love, Last Love” was chosen for the collection “18 Lies and 3 Truths,” and Mark McCaig’s poem “Abundance” won the Bay to Ocean Writer’s Workshop contest. “First Love, Last Love” is about how you give everything for love, regardless of what it does to you, Carey explained. It is her first published work of fiction. The collection, published by Story Quarterly, features 18 stories and three essays written by today’s master storytellers (and a few Pulitzer

  • opportunities to meet and work with mentors in the business community, students do get every chance to roll up their sleeves and get that essential hands-on experience. That was certainly true for Liz Anderson ’10, a business major with an emphasis in accounting and public relations director for the fund. She was part of the fund last year when the economy tanked. She, like  other members of the board, jumped in and tried to figure out what to do. “You really have to keep on top of things,” she said. And