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  • Strength of Juried Exhibition shows strength in PLU Arts Program Posted by: Mandi LeCompte / November 21, 2016 November 21, 2016 The University Gallery opened its fall semester’s final show with the annual Juried Student Exhibition on November 16, 2016. Works will be on display until December 14, 2016. The exhibition is open to the university community, as well as the general public. Students not only compete to be featured in the show but also for monetary prize. MalPina Chan juried the 2016

  • -cafes, and in libraries, is insecure. As when using any shared computer, don’t enter sensitive information such as passwords, bank account numbers, or credit cards numbers. As in the U.S., anything you send over the Internet from a public access point may be intercepted and logged by unknown parties. To avoid compromising sensitive data when using public Internet access, only enter confidential information on secure web pages. Secure web pages have addresses beginning with https. If you believe any

  • concentrations: Applied Sport Psychology and Applied Exercise Science.  A graduate degree in kinesiology will allow you to specialize your knowledge and skills. A master’s in kinesiology gives you the knowledge and skills you need to improve your practice and enhance your ability to serve others and the profession. Working professionals in health and fitness careers, public service, and public health can enhance their ability to better serve the needs of society in relation to physical activity promotion and

  • a.m. to 3 p.m. and is free and open to the public. It will provide information about local sustainable services and products, including transportation alternatives, green construction, energy conservation and alternative energy sources, waste minimization and recycling, and global climate change initiatives. The event will feature an array of speakers and exhibitors. Those scheduled to speak include the group Bridging Urban Gardens Sustainably (BUGS) to discuss community gardens in Tacoma, and

  • matters of our time.” 35:00 Barot and Pancake reflect on the cultural climate of the publishing industry and publishing paradigms that affect minority writers as well as writers from nontraditional places. 42:00 Discussion about PLU’s Rainier Writing Workshop. Specifically, the backgrounds, goals and writing styles of the students who seek out the program. 46:20 Barot and Pancake share the writing projects they are working on.   [READ MORE: Rainier Writing Workshop Begins Aug. 2—Along With Free Public

  • social issues of the new millennium. PLU has been a lively center for the study of Lutheran higher education and the Lutheran intellectual tradition since its beginnings in 1890. Distinguished lecturers, undergraduate courses in history, music, scripture, theology, and the visual arts, study away classes in Germany, Namibia, and Norway, campus ministry workshops, faith and reason dialogues, faculty publications and public presentations, musical performances, seminars on vocation, summer theological

  • Performing Arts 11:00 a.m. - 12:20 p.m. | PLU Alumni Panel Community Organizing Speakers: Eric Buley ’10 Katie Garrow ’11 Saiyare Refaei ’14 Introduction and Moderator: Joel Zylstra, Public Information Officer, Franklin Pierce Schools Location: Scandinavian Cultural Center, Anderson University Center 12:15 - 1:45 p.m. | PLU Community Connections: Combating Loneliness through Connection Mini Involvement Fair: Campus Life Center for Diversity, Justice, and Sustainability PLU Intramurals The Hidden Opponent

  • Teach 253: PLU partnership with Tacoma Public Schools supports aspiring teachers TACOMA, WASH. (June 7, 2018) — Brittany Bowen ’18 had barely started school when she chose her life’s work. By the age of 8, she’d decided to become a teacher. Although she set her career goal early in life, Bowen’s path to a Pacific Lutheran… June 7, 2018 Alumni, Internships, Career

  • Lace M. Smith Associate Vice President of Marketing & Communications Phone: 253-535-7436 Email: smit

    Contact Information
  • become common. Then, interbreeding can and does occasionally occur. This suggests that temporal isolation may reduce gene flow, but it is not the only reproductive barrier. Ecology-based selection also favors assortative grouping in Red Crossbills and may promote reproductive isolation as a by-product. Public information use in which individuals estimate patch quality by using the success of group mates foraging in the same patch is important to Red Crossbills (Smith et al. 1999). Effective use of