BODIES is open in Seattle through March 28.It features real preserved human organs and muscular and skeletal structures across two levels of interesting, education-packed displays. The exhibit also houses specimens of the nervous, circulatory and digestive systems.
Twenty people came to the Student Center on Thursday, Feb. 18, to learn gestures from around the world. This installment of the Cultural Cafè had students and faculty counting in Chinese, celebrating victory and peace in the United States and swearing in Hong Kong.
Plants in the George L. and Eugenia R. Moore Memorial Greenhouse are blooming. The Queen’s Orchid, a plant with magenta flowers, is flaunting its colors for the first time in recent memory.
“I have been here ten years, and this is the first time I’ve seen them bloom,” said Laboratory Technician Suzanne Hostetter.
“We have a great relationship with the college and we want to continue and expand the relationship,” said Providence Public relations Director Chris Thomas. “We really value the program, and having the nurses during rotation. It’s a win-win.”
George L. and Eugenia R. Moore Memorial Greenhouse