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  • — understanding, sharing, interpreting, and critically reflecting on the experience of being human— is vital to the future of our university, our nation, and our species. The Humanities are central to the biggest challenges facing us individuals —we can only discern our vocation with a rich understanding of the cultures from which we come— as a nation —we can only cooperate towards a better future if we find common language for our ideals— and as a species —we can only seek peace between nations if we learn

  • OFFICES PLU, Building 29 Tacoma, WA 253-535-8410 Contact Us Links Discovery Alumni News Class Notes Calendar Credits Contact Recent Posts Billboards September 8, 2014 Lutheran Studies Conference September 8, 2014 The Art of Diplomacy September 8, 2014 A Decade of Distinction September 5, 2014 Archives > < Winter 2018 Fall 2017 Spring 2017 Winter 2017 Fall 2016 Spring 2016 Winter 2016 Fall 2015 Spring 2015 Winter 2015 Fall 2014 Spring 2014 © 2014 Pacific Lutheran University | All Rights Reserved Back

  • OFFICES PLU, Building 29 Tacoma, WA 253-535-8410 Contact Us Links Features On Campus Discovery Alumni News Class Notes Calendar Credits Contact Recent Posts Discovery April 21, 2014 Saved by the Ball April 21, 2014 Musical Memories April 21, 2014 5 Lutes Play Major Roles at Tacoma's Broadway Center April 21, 2014 Archives > < Winter 2018 Fall 2017 Spring 2017 Winter 2017 Fall 2016 Spring 2016 Winter 2016 Fall 2015 Spring 2015 Winter 2015 Fall 2014 Spring 2014 © 2014 Pacific Lutheran University | All

  • . The Scandinavian Cultural Center is located on the ground floor of the Anderson University Center. Admission is free. More information can be found at www.plu.edu/scancenter. After closing on September 28th, the exhibition will move to the National Constitution Center in Philadelphia, where a scholarly symposium on the relationship between the constitutions of Norway and the United States will also be held.

  • covered a dozen wars and several revolutions. Until 2008, she covered U.S. foreign policy for The Washington Post. Wright has also been a fellow at the U.S. Institute of Peace, the Woodrow Wilson International Center for Scholars, the Brookings Institution, Carnegie Endowment for International Peace as well as Yale, Duke, Stanford, and the University of California.NPR InterviewListen as Steve Inskeep interviews Robin Wright about the ambassador's life and career in Libya.Listen NowAmong several awards

  • . © Pacific Lutheran University - 2023 Names Are Sacred Activity Guides Note Cards twitter facebook instagram linkedin vimeo Search Twitter Facebook Instagram LinkedIn Vimeo

  • Notes Calendar Credits Contact Recent Posts Communities in Schools May 21, 2015 National Think Tank May 4, 2015 Special Edition: "... and justice for all?" April 30, 2015 Seattle Startup Success April 28, 2015 Archives > < Winter 2018 Fall 2017 Spring 2017 Winter 2017 Fall 2016 Spring 2016 Winter 2016 Fall 2015 Spring 2015 Winter 2015 Fall 2014 Spring 2014 © 2015 Pacific Lutheran University | All Rights Reserved Back to top

  • Trust, professor of chemistry Neal Yakelis and his collaborators from two other Puget Sound area universities are working to adapt this concept for their research. “It never ceases to amaze me how my students transform into young scientists through their work in the lab during our summer research program at PLU,” said Professor Yakelis. “This project has allowed them to experience the collaboration necessary to answer important scientific questions. The students’ creativity and meticulous work have

  • Paris. “I think sometimes in the beginning, you can’t say why you do what you do,” she said. “Sometimes, it’s just listening to those little things that don’t maybe seem practical.” Her career began practically enough. She entered PLU’s School of Nursing, but the work Ford would pursue overseas coalesced during her senior year when PLU introduced the first study away program for nurses. Along with 11 classmates, Ford spent a semester working in clinics on the Caribbean island nation of Trinidad and

  • July 7, 2008 Student, professor investigate untold story of WWII In the spring of 1942, 10,000 soldiers were sent to the Yukon. Their task: construct the 1,500-mile military road, the Alaska-Canada Highway, to be used to repel a possible invasion by the Japanese during World War II. Sitting in a lecture at the Yukon Archives, as part of a Canadian fellowship program two years ago, Assistant Professor of Communication Robert Wells had never heard such a road even existed. When the archive