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  • fulfilling. You don’t want to become an echo chamber, you need someone else to work with. We both were craving collegiality. You need someone to bounce ideas off of.  Rude: A lot of students don’t know that we are actually in two different divisions. I am in Student Life and Laree is on the academic side. By working together, we increase our perspective about what is going on in other parts of the university, which impacts our ability to support our students and our staff. Chapel break has officially

  • baseball and serves on the boards of the Tacoma Pierce County Chamber of Commerce and Soundview Little League. Rachel Young ’06, ’13, Marketing Communication Supervisor, Cascade Regional Blood Services. Young earned her undergraduate degree in Communication and a master’s in Business Administration at PLU, where she was a founding member and one of the first managers of MediaLab and served on the MBA student advisory council. She worked as a reporter at the Northwest Guardian and as Marketing and

  • provider.Learn more about PLU's Business majorBusiness at PLUFoster credits much of his success to his professors at PLU, especially Chung-Shing Lee, Dean of the School of Business, who helped him get several internships. Auditing Lee’s MBA e-commerce class as an undergraduate, Foster was introduced to John Castle, CEO of the music software Cantametrix. He was able to help create a business plan for the enterprise. “The energy and effort PLU professors put in is something you don’t get at a larger school

  • . In Luther’s intellectual work lay the seeds of a new vision of free and responsible society. The intellectual structure of the Lutheran reform movement was laid in previous centuries by the twin influences of the medieval European universities and Renaissance humanism. The medieval universities provided the foundations of free academic inquiry through a curriculum shaped by the classical trivium (grammar, logic, rhetoric) and quadrivium (arithmetic, geometry, music, astronomy). These in turn

  • record 975 artists applied for the awards. Both Senn, virtual reference services librarian, and Youtz, professor of music, received the maximum award of $1,500. A visual artist, Senn uses discarded library books to make sculptures and installations that explore the lifecycle of ideas. It’s an organic, non-linear process, she explains, where thoughts are born, disseminated, and then adopted or forgotten. She finds inspiration in the natural world, from the variety of books she finds and in her work as

  • and games! PLU offered the opportunity for me to simultaneously pursue my passion for engineering and my love of music, and I just could not turn down an opportunity like that. My PLU experience: Adventure, growth, friends, Frisbees, The Big Bang Theory, music, and trebuchets. Over my four years I have grown as a student, musician, scientist, human being, and global citizen. I have learned the value and importance of community from my friends and mentors in the alumni office, the physics

  • House, this time as Walther von der Vogelweide in the opera Tannhäuser.Baetge grew up in Monroe, Wash., and attended college in Bremerton before coming to PLU from 2001-2004. “PLU had both great teachers and great coaches,” Baetge said. “I got to work with the choir,  which was a great place for me to work on my voice. I loved having the ability to go out and take all of these interesting classes at my will because I was at a full undergrad university.” Many who decide to pursue a career in music

  • Bring & Decoration GuidelinesClick HereMake It Your Own Comforter/bedspread Pillows Bed linens – twin extra long Clothes hangers Coffee mug, reusable water bottle Drinking cups, dishes and silverware Poster putty for hanging up decorations (command hooks are great for this!) Plastic containers with tight lids for storing snacks, detergent, etc. Headphones/ear buds (so your music doesn’t bother your roommate or neighbors) Digital music player Cell phone and charger Desk lamp or bed lamp TV/DVD-Player

  • 220, Humanities Division (Room 227) HEALTH CENTER – Administrative Assistant Cabinet HINDERLIE HALL – Mailroom HONG HALL – Mailroom  INGRAM – Art Department (Room 128), Ceramics (Room 140A) x2, Print Making (Room 124), Sculpture (Room 138) KREIDLER HALL – Mailroom MEMORIAL GYM – SE ROTC Entrance MORKEN – Kelley Cafe, School of Business (Room 176), MESA (Room 159) MORTVEDT LIBRARY – Office Behind 1st Floor Main Desk, 3rd Floor: University Archives MBR Music Center – Lobby (Telephone Alcove

  • March 19, 2012 Karissa Bryant ’03 with school girl at Sacred Heart Boarding School in Shillong, India. Here Bryant is asking the girls who live at the school what they wanted to be when they grew up. In the evening they would share Khasi songs with Bryant and she would teach them English songs. (Photo courtesy of Karissa Bryant) Alumna works to teach, train students in India By Katie Scaff ’13 Since graduating from PLU in 2003, music and vocal performance major Karissa Bryant has travelled the