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  • Kone My name is Jonah Kone, a student at the University of Puget Sound, and I major in International Political Economy with minors in Hispanic Studies and Environmental Policy. I am especially interested in how cultural, anthropological, and political factors shape environmental policy, especially with interdisciplinary and international issues such as climate change. As an outdoor enthusiast with an addiction for travel, I hope to do environmental work in the Americas with an international focus

  • professors there taught me how to become not only a better scholar but also a more thoughtful and engaged human being.” Loberg, whose area of expertise is modern European history, centered her article on the perspectives and uses of the city streets of Berlin during the 1920s and ’30s. She discusses how the city landscape translated and revealed the struggle of the political and economic crises of the period. By using different types of research tools, including police reports, photographs, newspaper

  • this Lute’s life workResoLute feature about Kristina Walker’s work as executive director of Downtown on the Go, a nonprofit organization that advocates for transportation alternatives in and around the heart of Tacoma.How did experiences at PLU prepare you for this political journey? I think having a liberal arts degree gave me a taste of a little bit of everything, taught me to be a good listener and a curious learner. And I certainly built my confidence as a leader in general at PLU. So much of

  • Senior Research Associate at the Centre for Collective Violence, Holocaust and Genocide Studies at University College London. Convener: Michael Artime, Department Chair of Political Science, PLU 10:30 a.m. - 12:15 p.m. – AUC, Regency Room (Zoom Presentation)The Jewish Community in Poland: Contemporary Jewish-Polish RelationsRabbi Haim Dov Beliak, Beit Polska and Friends of Jewish Renewal in Poland Anna Cichopek-Gajraj, Associate Professor in the School of Historical, Philosophical and Religious

  • . Larry died Jan. 24 at the age of 81. He was hired as an associate professor in the Department of Computer Science and Mathematics at PLU in 1982, before being promoted to professor in 1986. He completed phased retirement, which began in 1998, in 2003. He treated his colleagues with respect and exhibited genuine interest in their lives. He also was an advocate for educating the whole student and praised the small classroom setting, which helped him get to know his students on a more personal level

  • + students participate in recreation programs 71% of students participate in community service Every weekend Outdoor Rec hosts a trip in the PNW outdoors Clubs and OrganizationsThere are over 70 different clubs and organizations to join at PLU, from academic to just-for-fun, from cultural to political, and many more. Join those that interest you, or work to start your own!LEARN MORERecreationsPacific Lutheran University Recreational programs provide students positive social opportunities and are an

  • Future of Jewish – Christian Relations 2014 – Justice in Society: Lutheran Sources of Social Change 2013 – Lutheran Perspectives on Jesus of Nazareth 2012 – Political LifeOur speakers include: Lutheran womanist theologian and ethicist Rev. Dr. Beverly Wallace (Shaw University Divinity School).  As a scholar, Rev. Dr. Wallace has published African American Grief (2005) and the experience of widowhood for black women.  As an ELCA Lutheran pastor, she has led in many capacities in the church nationally

  • acts as a presentational force in the service of standpoint.” It was presented in the Argumentation and Forensics Division. Dr. Amy Young, Associate Professor of Communication, received the award for her paper “Beyond Supreme: Retired Supreme Court Justices as Public Intellectuals”, which deals with the increasingly vocal, political and mediated role we’ve seen Stevens, Souter and O’Connor play since their respective retirements.  It was presented in the Communication & the Law Division. Young’s

  • During the Great DepressionMay 16, 20233:45-4:15 - Kaelin Lor4:15-4:45 - Thoran Grauman4:45-5:15 - Dylan Barnett3:45-4:15 - Kaelin LorFrom Colonization to Killing Fields: Cambodians and their Rulers in the Mid-Twentieth Century4:15-4:45 - Thoran Grauman``There's a lot of things that I love about Hitler``: Kanye West and the Ongoing Spread of Antisemitism4:45-5:15 - Dylan BarnettDictators and Bananas: The United Fruit Company's Economic and Political Colonization of Guatemala, 1901-1958

  • the 17th, 18th, 19th and 20th Centuries.  Students will experience music in the spaces where many of these great works were first heard.  Museums and cathedrals of the region will help students gain a greater understanding of the times and socio-political climate to contextualize the lives of these great composers. Students start their adventure in Leipzig then travel to Berlin followed by travels to Prague, Salzburg and finally Vienna.  Check here for the full itinerary.Follow their adventures on