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  • Major Minute(ish): Environmental Studies Posted by: vcraker / June 2, 2022 June 2, 2022 Professors Suzanne Crawford O’Brien, Adela Ramos, and Kevin O’Brien share why it’s a great time to study environmental studies and why PLU is a great place to do so! Keep reading to learn more about the environmental studies program. Read Previous International student finds home away from home Read Next Makaela Whalen ’23 pursues newly launched pre-law minor LATEST POSTS YouTube Short: PLU Parkland Night

  • Summer Internship: Economics major finds family environment with global company Posted by: tpotts / October 28, 2022 October 28, 2022 Travis McDaneld ’23 is entering his fourth year at PLU as an economics major, minoring in data science. When he enrolled at PLU, he had every intention of majoring in business, although he admits to not having any idea about what he wanted to do after graduation. But when he took a microeconomics class, he says it all clicked, and he knew what he wanted to study

  • PulidoDirty Anne Frank1:35-2:05 - Marley Cochran``The Only Girl I've Ever Loved``: Anne Frank's Mediating Men2:10-2:40 - Jessica Lee``Can't Repeat the Past? Why of Course You Can!``: Repairing The Great Gatsby2:45-3:15 - Alexis Nussbaum``When My Hands are Cut, Her Fingers will be Found Inside``: Queering Emily Dickinson3:20-3:50 - Jadyn ForeeDrawn to Darcy: The Afterlives of Jane Austen's Iconic Love Interest3:55-4:25 - Olivia BrownfieldFishtails and Feminism: ``The Little Mermaid`` and the Critique of

  • The 2016 Pauling Medal Award Press Release Nominations are now closed and a Pauling Medal Award winner has been announced. Nominations are being accepted for the 2016 Linus Pauling Medal Award. This award is sponsored by the Pacific Northwest local American Chemical Society Puget Sound, Oregon, and Portland local sections, and it presented annually in recognition of outstanding achievement in chemistry in the spirit of and honor of Linus Pauling, a native of the Pacific northwest. The medal

  • March 13 and run through April 10. In this exhibit, the artists’ paintings act as a metaphor for the current state of the earth. Although the artists have different processes, they both work to convey ecological concern. Camlin’s work is landscape-based, often representative of ice sheets and global glacial melting. Her icy landscapes explore relationships between abstract and naturalistic visual languages. Her pieces symbolize geological and environmental changes. Richman uses poured paint to evoke

  • watching every move Venison all cut up and ready to plate Venison all cut up and ready to plate Katherine working on plating the dish Katherine working on plating the dish The plating process is almost finished The plating process is almost finished The Lead Cooks from The Commons came along to cheer Katherine on! The Lead Cooks from The Commons came along to cheer Katherine on! Katherine's family cheering her on Lute-style Katherine's family cheering her on Lute-style Finishing up the plating process

  • Dance concert covers new creative ground Dance 2017: Innovation features PLU dancers working with guest and student choreographers exploring inventive themes through dance. The performances are on Friday, April 7 and Saturday, April 8 at 7:30 p.m. in Eastvold Auditorium of Karen Hille Phillips Center for the Performing Arts. This year’s… March 28, 2017 Dance

  • Dance concert covers new creative ground Dance 2017: Innovation features PLU dancers working with guest and student choreographers exploring inventive themes through dance. The performances are on Friday, April 7 and Saturday, April 8 at 7:30 p.m. in Eastvold Auditorium of Karen Hille Phillips Center for the Performing Arts. This year’s… March 28, 2017 Dance

  • Internship Program consists of one six-month assignment across many different Shared Services teams within Providence, with the possibility of extending into a second 6-month assignment. Each unique assignment will build business acumen, provide exposure to core skills, and give participants the ability to add value and have impact for one of the leading healthcare systems in the United States. This remote, paid internship program starts with a short on-boarding session where participants receive focused

  • . Students will also receive classroom training in topics pertinent to the emerging field of computational biology, such as computational structural biology, cell and systems modeling, computational genomics, and bioimage informatics.  Additionally, TECBio students will participate in a weekly journal club, attend research and career seminars organized specifically for the program, take part in an ethics forum that will instruct them in the responsible conduct of research, present their work at a