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  • Philosophy and Law Sarah Klein Attorney Crystal Aikin ’97 Recording artist Alice Ripley Tony Award-winning actress and musician William Foege ‘57 Presidential Medal of Freedom honoree Denny Heck Congressman Jason Reynolds Awarding-winning novelist and poet Sven Beckert Author and Harvard University history professor James McLurkin Senior Hardware Engineer Mae Ngai Professor of Asian American Studies and History at Columbia University Ijeoma Oluo Author The People’s Gathering Conversations About Diversity

  • , education, environmental justice, Hispanic Studies, history, Native American Indigenous Studies, philosophy, political science, and religion. Congratulations to the Environmental Studies Class of 2022! Capstones are May 24, 2022 from 2-6pm in Morken 103. 2:00pm, Shifting Narratives: A Brief History of the United States Environmental Ethics at both the National and Local Scale Aaron Pantoja The relationship Americans have had towards the environment is characterized by a dualism: we as humans are

  • “Democracy in Theory and in Practice,” with Michael Schleeter, assistant professor of philosophy. Both PLU faculty members received numerous emails from students concerning attendance of inauguration, prompting a discussion among faculty and registered students a week later to discuss Inauguration Day expectations. PLU students meet with Senator Patty Murray while studying in Washington D.C. during J-Term.× “We’re going to be walking into an epicenter,” Sill told the students, gathered in a Xavier Hall

  • deeply rooted. This is not something new. It is intensified because of COVID and rhetoric directed against Asian and Chinese people. This is something ACPSS and Chinese community members, lawmakers, and scholars and social science and health professionals need to face and address. Jingyi Song Professor of History Dept. of History and Philosophy SUNY at Old Westbury Behind the cruel and violent attacks on Asian Americans Racist attacks have soared against Asian Americans and their communities amid the

  • , and javascript. 10:30am – Break 10:50am – MushAI: Poisonous Mushroom Recognition Dawson Faker (BACS, BA Philosophy), Jacob Leigh (BACS), Caroline Powell (BACS) The Pacific Northwest is the perfect place for a mushroom to reside. Enthusiasts and amateurs enjoy finding and collecting these mushrooms, but they do not know if the mushrooms they are picking up are poisonous or not. MushAI provides help to individuals wanting to recognize mushrooms without having to risk hurting themselves. MushAI is a

  • missions—and a good marketer can help build good companies in terms of social responsibility, community, and the arts.” This connectedness to others is a central part of Ha’s life philosophy. “I’ve always thought that my knowledge wasn’t just for myself—it’s for everyone, and should benefit everyone,” she says. “It’s a vocational approach, I suppose, and it sounds like a lot for a marketing analyst! But I believe it.” In keeping with that concept, Ha appreciates the tailored approach to education that

  • again. “China did change my life, and it changed me and offered me a chance to look deep within myself and accept that invitation to think differently and feel differently about my world and myself, Ford said.“In China, I didn’t speak Chinese, know anything about the philosophy, history or culture, but I told myself, I was going to take a risk, even if it means trying something I didn’t want to do.” Looking back, two years later, Ford is so glad he did. He’s now six months into his Fulbright

  • , and there were no customers gathering in that spot,” recalled Doan, who earned a Master of Science in Marketing Research at Pacific Lutheran University. At the time, Doan worked part time at a brand new Starbucks store in Lakewood, a way of satisfying his passion for the philosophy behind the iconic green siren logo. But Doan had no idea those break-time photo shoots in the well-lit corner of that coffee shop would later land him at Starbucks headquarters as a full-time social media designer for

  • believe that the regimen of thrice-a-week shots in the bum for years on end is only likely to exacerbate a child’s perceptions that shortness is a problem. Emeritus Professor of Philosophy Paul Menzel Indeed the pediatric specialists —only board certified endocrinologists— who are so far allowed access to GH by Genentech seem right in not viewing the “disease” of GH-deficiency as the relevant line. If a human need is served (or at least human “benefit” delivered) by adding three or four inches to the

  • Karkowski, Ph.D. and Erin McKenna, Ph.D."Speciesism: Philosophy/Psychology Dialog"Department of Psychology, Capital University and Department of Philosophy, Pacific Lutheran University November 9, 2012K. Warner Schaie, Ph.D., ABEPP'The Seattle Longitudinal Study"Pennsylvania State University and University of Washington October 12, 2012Kathryn C. Oleson, Ph.D."Self-Doubt"Department of Psychology, Reed College September 14, 2012Alice Eagly, Ph.D."Women as Leaders: Negotiating the Labyrinth"Northwestern