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  • Genocide: Preventing the Erasure of Holocaust StoriesCongratulations to Parker Brocker-Knapp! Please click here to read Parker’s winning essay entry.

  • $75 million mark in May, and on to just over $80 million today. Milestones last year included new endowed chairs in Holocaust studies and Elementary Education as well as an endowed professorship in Lutheran studies. Project Access, part of our commitment to enhanced student scholarship support, reached its $1 million goal. In summary, stable enrollment and fund-raising success, when combined with clear spending priorities and careful attention to fiscal matters, allowed us to balance our operating

  • efforts in making inclusive excellence a core value of PLU. We seek to foster a community that goes beyond tolerance of difference to one that is guided by the principles of equity, social justice, cultural competence and engaged citizenship. This comes through in our academic work including our annual Holocaust Education Conference, and this fall will also mark the beginning of a Minor in Holocaust and Genocide Studies, one of only a few in the nation. It comes through in our commitment to studying

  • tentative paperwork deadlines for the next year: Fall 2017 – July 9th (subject to change depending on timing of site confirmations and notifications) J-term 2018 – November 5th Spring 2018 – December 3rd Thank you all for your timeliness and quick replies to my “urgent” emails to ensure I can get your clinical experience going! I appreciate your cooperation in this chaos that is clinical placement! Lisa Message from Graduate Studies/ Dr. Teri WooGraduate Nursing Programs It is a busy time of year for

  • the child-welfare system. The topic is a natural fit for PLU—even beyond the Spring Spotlight Series theme. PLU Benson Family Chair in History and Professor of History E. Wayne Carp is a noted historian of adoption and residents in the area whose lives were affected by post-WWII adoption practices pertinent to indigenous children, and Jacobs’ lecture also ties in with the 2015 Powell-Heller Conference for Holocaust Education, held on campus March 4-6, whose topic is “Children’s Voices.” “Up until

  • archaeologist first and a cancer survivor second,” Hunt told the crowd. Of course, we know there’s much more to Hunt’s story than that. Certainly TED audiences will be impressed and inspired—but they heard only the first 27 years of it. Katie Hunt has a lot more story to live. Read Previous PLU’s New Holocaust and Genocide Studies Minor Read Next Musical Memories COMMENTS*Note: All comments are moderated If the comments don't appear for you, you might have ad blocker enabled or are currently browsing in a

  • ResoLute Staff – Resolute Online: Fall 2018 Search Features Features Welcome Circling the Heartbeat MBA to CFO ‘Building Humans’ Barista Creations Wall Street State of Mind Progress in the Face of Persecution Fortifying Health Within Prison Walls On Campus Discovery Discovery Attaway Lutes Accolades Lute Library Blogs Alumni News Alumni News Ingredient for Success Homecoming Bjug Day Holocaust Conference Christmas Concert Alumni Awards Class Notes Class Notes Obituaries Submit a Class Note

  • concepts in global studies and the perspectives of different peoples, states, and organizations as they relate to world events. Through specific units on global movements and reactions, global poverty and inequality, and global conflict and cooperation, students will gain global literacy and knowledge of contemporary issues. May be cross-listed with GLST 210. (4) HIST 218 : Women and Gender in World History - ES, GE This course uses a comparative and historical approach to understand gender ideologies

  • & Computer Engineering (ECE). Peace Health ProfileRabbi Bruce KaddenWho: Rabbi Bruce Kadden, Temple Beth El, Tacoma, Religon Department lecturer at PLU Bio: Bruce Kadden is rabbi of Temple Beth El in Tacoma and Adjunct Professor in the Religion Department, part of the faculty of Holocaust and Genocide Studies, and Affiliate Chaplain at PLU. He and his wife, Barbara of blessed memory, are authors of three books in Jewish education. He earned a B.A. in Religious Studies at Stanford University and was

  • community members and Parkland youth to meet, talk about personal experiences and begin the process of building relationships and understanding others. She founded the Network for Peacebuilding and Conflict Management and now is its student president. In the spring of 2013 she received a Kurt Mayer Holocaust Studies Fellowship and spent the summer conducting research on issues in Israel/Palestine; she was accepted to participate in a peace conference hosted by the Kroc Institute at the University of