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  • Connecting for Commerce: Port of Tacoma Executive Director Eric Johnson ’83 Posted by: Zach Powers / November 7, 2022 Image: Eric Johnson ’83 is the executive director of the Port of Tacoma. (Photo by John Froschauer/PLU) November 7, 2022 By Zach Powers ’10PLU Marketing & CommunicationsWhen Pacific Lutheran University alumnus Eric Johnson ’83 majored in political science and minored in biology, he wasn’t sure how the two would fit together in a career. After he graduated from PLU, he earned a

  • Global – to understand how writers have used the creative power of literary expression to understand and engage the world. Concentrations: Creative Writing Concentration Professional, Public, and Digital Literacies Concentration Literature Concentration Graduates from the last 5 years: Their jobs Editor, State of Oregon Editorial Intern, Perspectives in Biology and Medicine Journal Teacher, Miami-Dade County Public Schools Legal Advocate, YWCA of Pierce County English Teacher, Peace Corps

  • one uses what one learns in order to think through particular issues or problems).  Some recent assignments include podcasts, blogs, taking on the personas of authors, philosophers, and thinkers from the course, and making a special issue of an academic journal. Can IHON work with my major?Yes, absolutely! IHON students have majored and minored in every program at PLU, from Biology to Global Studies, Nursing to English, Business to Education. Because IHON courses are interdisciplinary, they work

  • . By the beginning of next year I’ll start narrowing things down. Read Previous PLU researchers shine light on RNA activities Read Next PLU Psychology professor awarded $2.5M to lead implementation of evidence-based trauma treatment LATEST POSTS Three students share how scholarships support them in their pursuit to make the world better than how they found it June 24, 2024 The Passing of Bryan Dorner June 4, 2024 Student athlete Vinny D’Onofrio ’24 excelled in biology and chemistry at PLU June 4

  • : function () { jQuery(this).jPlayer("setMedia", { mp3: "//www.plu.edu/news/wp-content/uploads/sites/573/2016/02/kacie-intern.mp3" }); }, preload: "auto", cssSelectorAncestor: "#player-1008", swfPath: "/wp-content/themes/plu/library/js/jplayer/jquery.jplayer.swf", supplied: "mp3", useStateClassSkin: true, autoBlur: false, smoothPlayBar: true, keyEnabled: true, remainingDuration: true, volume: 1 }); }); Jim Troyer '84 ( )Chief of Staff, Senate Republican Caucus | Biology Major   Update Required To play

  • studies and biology, said she initially experienced anxiety about coming to WCCW. She acknowledged how brave it was for the inmates to be so vulnerable with a group of strangers. “That’s a hard thing to do.” Smith and Collis plan to continue the partnership between PLU and WCCW. It’s unusual for correctional facilities to allow outsiders to spend so much time with inmates, Collis stressed. “It’s a big deal the prison let us do this,” she said. Students who wish to participate in the next class can

  • great shot is challenging. “Orcas can be hard to spot and shoot, while [we’re] being respectful by staying at the required distance,” she says. The process was aided by a large zoom lens and their readiness to drive to a local sighting alert from the Orca Network. “We drove up as quickly as possible, and it worked quite a few times—but they’re fast swimmers.”   For the film, Stafki and her sister interviewed PLU biology professor Michael Behrens, the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Association’s

  • additional strategies for meeting these goals. Dr. Michael Schleeter, Associate Professor of Philosophy, teaches and produces scholarship in the areas of ethics and political philosophy. During his sabbatical, he was able to take time to rest and restore as well as explore new topics that further extended his areas of expertise, including the role of biology and evolution in systems of ethics.Dr. Schleeter stated that this branch of philosophy includes humanity’s development of moral capacity over time

  • Saved by the Ball April 21, 2014 Musical Memories April 21, 2014 Service in Between Schooling April 21, 2014 Juggling His Way to a Career in Global Health April 21, 2014 Lute Plays Piano “Up Close with the Masters” April 21, 2014 More Story Service in Between Schooling Biology Graduate Spends a Year with Lutheran Volunteer Corps Between PLU and Med School Anthony Markuson ’13... April 21, 2014 Supplemental Issue RESOLUTE is Pacific Lutheran University's flagship magazine, published twice a year

  • throughout their educational experience. Still, he says Panago was quick to listen to many perspectives. Angela Pierce ’12, another fellow Act Six scholar from the cadre, says Panago approached everything — at PLU and beyond — with quiet reflection. He put school and family first. Jackson and Pierce are both involved with the rollout of the scholarships. But they play a supportive role, letting the family take the lead. Panago’s life after PLU was one of self-discovery. The biology major opted to veer