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  • Psychology, Seattle Pacific University March 10, 2016Jennifer Howell, Ph.D."Avoiding Information Prevalence, Causes, and Remedies"Ohio University December 4, 2015Azim Shariff, Ph.D."Religion: How Social Psychology Can Help Us Answer the Big Questions"Department of Psychology, University of Oregon November 6, 2015Sherry L. Willis, Ph.D."Cognition and Aging: The Good, Not so Good, and Potential Plasticity"Department of Psychology and Behavioral Sciences, University of Washington September 11, 2015Melissa

  • working for the United Nations. RACHEL ESPASANDIN Hometown: Vancouver, Wash. Major: Political Science, with minors in Religion and Conflict Resolution. Graduation date: May 2014. Peace-building experience: Espasandin participated in PLU’s Alternative Spring Break trip to a remote village in Nicaragua, where a team partnered with a nonprofit to install a clean-water well. That might not sound like a typical peace-building activity, but Espasandin says it absolutely is. “A lot of conflict can erupt if

  • senior standing of 90 semester hours. Students may transfer in a maximum of 96 semester hours or 144 quarter hours; of these the maximum transferable from a two-year school is 64 semester or 96 quarter hours. These students will have satisfied all General Education Program elements except for four hours in The Academic Study of Religion (RL); four hours in Global Engagement (GE); and the Culminating Experience (SR). Applied Science Degrees: Students with a Bachelor of Applied Science degree seeking a

  • —“the religion of the blood.” 4 Rosenberg argued that each aspect of human existence fit perfectly into this racist system, so that “Race and self, blood and soul, stand in the closest connection.”5 This made his philosophy self-sealing: any attack upon its contents would simply mean that the attacker lacked the “racial soul” necessary to properly understand Rosenberg’s argument. And anyone lacking the proper racial soul to understand his argument was ignorant, inferior, and inherently deserving of

  • —“the religion of the blood.” 4 Rosenberg argued that each aspect of human existence fit perfectly into this racist system, so that “Race and self, blood and soul, stand in the closest connection.”5 This made his philosophy self-sealing: any attack upon its contents would simply mean that the attacker lacked the “racial soul” necessary to properly understand Rosenberg’s argument. And anyone lacking the proper racial soul to understand his argument was ignorant, inferior, and inherently deserving of

  • disciplines: Religion, Political Science, History, Languages & Literatures, Cultural Studies. Advanced Search JSTOR is at its most useful when using the advanced search option due to the variety of content available. Pay attention to the following options for narrowing down or broadening your search: Images: Above the search bar you will see a tab for Images. This is a great place to search for high quality images of primary sources. Access Type: Below the search boxes, you will see an option for “Select

  • my tutorial was mainly catered to agenda-setting theory and how the influence of technology in politics alters what we see and hear about different stories or political agendas. The second half of my tutorial was focused on things that I wanted to learn more about such as gender communication in politics and religion in politics. Through this tutorial I was able to compare how governments and media in different countries choose to promote political issues and how that environment differs

  • political tension: the years after the completion of the American transcontinental railroads in the late 19th century; the 1980s’ economic recession; and the current times of Covid-19 pandemic. During each of these times, racially motivated violence against Asian Americans escalated with the damaging effect of implicating Asian Americans as the persistent “others,” picked up as scapegoats by various interest groups in American society.Panel 1B: Chinese Culture and Religion (Morken 105)Chair: Erik

  • is until Winer intervenes. She doesn’t minimize their priorities: getting a great job, earning a good salary, making their family proud. Still, she helps the students discover the complete picture of success. “We’ll talk about hard things. Fear. Doubt,” Winer said. “A lot of my support is helping them be courageous.” And Winer knows firsthand what it takes to find courage. She’s a first-generation graduate who navigated a long, winding path to a religion bachelor’s degree from PLU. It took two

  • the same name (Vitalvisuals.com, 2005). He is co-editor with Susannah Heschel of Betrayal: German Churches and the Holocaust (Fortress, 1999) and has served on the Board of Editors of Kirchliche Zeitgeschichte since this journal was founded in 1988. He also is Chair of the Committee on Ethics, Religion and the Holocaust at the U.S. Holocaust Memorial Museum. Conference ScheduleThursday, October 25Thomas FothCarli SnyderChristina PepinNatalie MayerLisa MarcusPeggy KleinplatzBeverley ChalmersPaul