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Alex Turco  > Portfolio > Portfolio March 6, 2008
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Alex Turco > Sophomores (from upper left) Nick Pearson, Andrew Porter, Rob Meltzer, and Nikolai Petrovic study in the new Green Center for the Performing Arts.
Alex Turco > Liz Urso, Delta Zeta national representative, listens to arguments against DZ's expulsion of members from the DePauw chapter.  The expelled members argue that they were kicked out because of image, popularity, and race.
Alex Turco > United DePauw members Caitlin Neal and Ingrid Elias celebrate following the DePauw Student Government's decision to endorse same-sex marriage.  United DePauw is a group that promotes unity between straight and homosexual people.
Alex Turco > Senior Erin Ponto demonstrates a palm punch on self-defense instructor Brandon Sieg.
Alex Turco > Opponents of the Iraq war circled the Greencastle courthouse May 4, 2008.  The protesters included DePauw faculty, students, and staff, as well as Greencastle community members.
Alex Turco > Sophomore Maria Schwartzman demonstrates knitting techniques during a meeting of "Knit for Nets."  Knit for nets makes and sells knitted goods to raise money for the purchase of chemically treated mosquito netting that is crucial for the prevention of Malaria.
Alex Turco > Purdue University entomologist Greg Hunt inspects queen cells in an experimental hive at a honey bee research station in West Lafayette.  Honey bee research has increased in importance with the emergence of Colony Collapse Disorder in recent years.  CCD is characterized by the sudden disappearance of worker bees from a hive, leading to its death.
Alex Turco > Purdue molecular geneticistÊZhixiang ChenÊis studying a plant virus that causes illness in the same way as human immunodeficiency virus (HIV). Cauliflower mosaic virus infected the laboratory plant Arabidopsis on the left. Blocking a gene in the plant on the right prevented infection. Chen's research eventually could lead to new treatments for the plant disease, HIV and other similar illnesses.
Alex Turco > A Tibetan Buddhist monk watches tourists and pilgrims at the Yonghe Temple in Bejing.  Yonghe, known colloquially as the Lama Temple, dates to the 17th century, and is one of the few major religious sites to have survived the Cultural Revolution in the 1960s.
A Tibetan Buddhist monk watches tourists and pilgrims at the Yonghe Temple in Bejing. Yonghe, known colloquially as the Lama Temple, dates to the 17th century, and is one of the few major religious sites to have survived the Cultural Revolution in the 1960s.
 > A Tibetan Buddhist monk watches tourists and pilgrims at the Yonghe Temple in Bejing.  Yonghe, known colloquially as the Lama Temple, dates to the 17th century, and is one of the few major religious sites to have survived the Cultural Revolution in the 1960s.
A Tibetan Buddhist monk watches tourists and pilgrims at the Yonghe Temple in Bejing. Yonghe, known colloquially as the Lama Temple, dates to the 17th century, and is one of the few major religious sites to have survived the Cultural Revolution in the 1960s.
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