Page 108 • (1,139 results in 0.058 seconds)

  • applied (for the bar).” Simmons went all in on that bet. She met with Shon Hopwood, a lawyer and author of “Law Man: My Story of Robbing Banks, Winning Supreme Court Cases, and Finding Redemption.” Hopwood graduated from the University of Washington Law School after serving time for crimes he committed. “He said ‘you absolutely can (become a lawyer),’” Simmons recalled, “and he told me exactly how to do it.” And she did. Just as she did during her time at PLU, Simmons leaned into her studies and then

  • character and fitness hearing when she applied (for the bar).” Simmons went all in on that bet. She met with Shon Hopwood, a lawyer and author of “Law Man: My Story of Robbing Banks, Winning Supreme Court Cases, and Finding Redemption.” Hopwood graduated from the University of Washington Law School after serving time for crimes he committed. “He said ‘you absolutely can (become a lawyer),’” Simmons recalled, “and he told me exactly how to do it.” And she did. Just as she did during her time at PLU

  • investment (because such support tends to favor applied research rather than pure research, and because such support tends to come with strings attached). The strongest position to be in—or at least the position that offers the most flexibility and options for facing an uncertain future—is the position PLU is in: that is, a largely undergraduate liberal arts university offering an array of select graduate and professional programs. When we talk to others about our commitment to the liberal arts, it’s

  • graduated with their graduate kinesiology degree from PLU. We had the opportunity to speak with Matt Leslie from the first graduating class of the MSK program. Here’s what Matt Leslie had to say about his experience in achieving a master’s in kinesiology from PLU. Read More. First MSK Graduate Class: Delaney SalterDelaney Salter, a graduate of both PLU’s bachelor’s and master’s degree in kinesiology, shared about what she has learned about improving the lives of others through applied kinesiology. Read

  • describes the traditions of a group of Yoruba people over a period of time. However, it may also be applied to the creation of artwork, where it relates to the accumulation of styles: an individual’s artistic àṣà results from the collection and combination of creative styles from a diverse range of locations and sources. Generally, the most well-known Yoruba woodcarvers travel a lot around Nigeria, so they are exposed to styles and work of artists beyond the immediate environment in their formation of

  • . Applicants are evaluated individually, based on multiple factors indicating equivalence to admission standards, a promise of success in graduate school, qualities of good character, and potential contributions to the educational mission of graduate study. Fast Track Admission Fast Track is an abbreviated application process to the School of Business graduate programs. Students and recent alumni from PLU, any AACSB accredited school, or any Bachelor of Applied Science program at a community or technical

  • had done is applied to other basins.View Corina's poster here. Geologically Controlled Contaminate Flow at the Hanford Nuclear Site Ea Kirkland-Woodward The Hanford Site, established in 1943 and now decommissioned, was a nuclear weapons production site created as part of the Manhattan Project in Benton County, Washington on the Columbia River (DOE 1). Decades of manufacturing at the site has left millions of gallons of contaminants behind, which have seeped into the ground and are slowly leaching

  • an appropriate credit for the reported disputed item(s) or billing error appears on a subsequent monthly billing statement. Verify charges on the monthly P-Card statement, and forward it to reviewer. Refuse cash from a vendor in lieu of a credit being applied to the P-Card account. Notify Bank of America immediately if the P-Card is lost or stolen (1-888-449-2273). Return the P-Card to the department reviewer or directly to the Business Office upon terminating employment or transferring to

  • cook for themselves. Some, like applied physics and computer science double major Tim Hurd ’13, who has lived off campus for more than a year, find themselves reinventing the meaning of cooking. Hurd draws his food-spiration from a book his grandma and mom bought him in high school. The book, “A Man, a Can, a Plan,” epitomizes a man’s approach to cooking, with dense laminated cardboard pages and recipes that require a large number of canned and pre-prepared food items – but for Hurd it’s perfect

  • Harper, S. R., & Hurtado, S. (2007). Nine themes in campus racial climates and implications for institutional transformation. New Directions for Student Services, 120, 7–24. Making the best of a bad situation Mallett, R. K., & Swim, J. K. (2009). Making the best of a bad situation: Proactive coping with racial discrimination. Basic and Applied Social Psychology,31, 304–316. The Multigroup Ethnic Identity Measure Phinney, J. S. (1992). The Multigroup Ethnic Identity Measure: A new scale for use with