Page 1212 • (12,535 results in 0.042 seconds)

  • local college fairs? Where do I get computer help? Where can I find updates about the Coronavirus? Upcoming Events loading events... All Events News loading news... All News ePass Apps Bookmarks ePass Apps Gmail Banner Care Form Sakai WordPress Calendar I&TS Help Desk I&TS Bookmarked Pages Bookmark your favorite pages for quick and easy navigation throughout the site. [Load from ePass] Button: Sign into ePass and load your saved favorites. This allows you to keep your favorites for any browser you

  • local college fairs? Where do I get computer help? Where can I find updates about the Coronavirus? Upcoming Events loading events... All Events News loading news... All News ePass Apps Bookmarks ePass Apps Gmail Banner Care Form Sakai WordPress Calendar I&TS Help Desk I&TS Bookmarked Pages Bookmark your favorite pages for quick and easy navigation throughout the site. [Load from ePass] Button: Sign into ePass and load your saved favorites. This allows you to keep your favorites for any browser you

  • Kurt Mayer Chair in Holocaust Studies. The Mayers, along with the Powell and Heller families and many others were the foundational members in promoting Holocaust Studies at PLU. Over the past ten years these three families have worked to never forget the past. Natalie Mayer wanted to expand on that message and keep the conversation going throughout the year — an interactive experience for students and community members that focused more on present-day issues around the world. She’s carrying on her

  • Geosciences with a minor in Innovation Studies. He also played on the PLU football team, and was recently inducted into the National Football Foundation’s Hampshire Honor Society for a high level of achievement in academics and athletics. Hannah McAllister graduated with a B.A. in Economics and minors in Innovation Studies and Statistics. She writes: “I liked the Innovation Studies minor because it allowed me to learn about the design process. This will benefit my future career in marketing research

  • March 1, 2011 From Microsoft to Martin Luther, and back again In 1994, Mike Halvorson was the first one to write a book about something nobody else cared about. The book? How to use a little-known software program called Microsoft Office. We can guess how that turned out. Halvorson graduated PLU in 1985 with a degree in computer science and a minor in history. That unique combination seemed to help when, soon after graduation, Halvorson found himself working for Microsoft, back in the days when

  • forgotten. “If you look a little deeper it’s not that hard to figure out why people come here,” said Germano about life in the U.S. One interview subject featured in the documentary makes $13 a day working in Mexico when he could be making between $ 70 and $80 a day in the U.S. “If people invest in Mexico, we won’t want to leave,” said another interview subject. Throughout the course of the year, the Department of Language and Literature Film Festival Series screens a film for every language in the

  • Students crammed into PLU’s Studio Theatre on April 17 for the 2014 edition of PLU’s Hebrew Idol Live finale. Even the stairs and aisles were filled as the audience clapped, cheered and laughed its way through the event, hosted by Tommy Flanagan ’14 and organized by Religion Professor Antonios Finitsis. PLU Hebrew Idol reflects the knowledge students have gained in Finitsis’ introductory Religion and Literature of the Hebrew Bible course. Each year, students are required to apply their interpretations

  • organizational behaviors but are expected to be able to adapt to the wide range of challenges that students bring with them to school. Our social conversation needs to be more aware of the difficulties here.” Milton credits PLU with helping him “hone his teaching for younger students.” He encourages PLU students working toward a teaching degree to get to know a variety of school settings. “Make sure you get as wide a sense as possible of what different schools, school cultures, districts, etc., are like,” he

  • the charge for Lute spirit. (His arrival was well-timed: The Lutes beat Lewis & Clark in a thrilling overtime battle, 55-51.) Under the new plush exterior, Lancelute has a student underneath it who drives this energy. While his secret identity cannot be revealed, his thoughts can.  “Being inside the mask itself is a whole new world,” Lancelute said. “You can see everyone, but no one can see you. I just got really into it, into a whole new world. It was an awesome experience.” He wants the PLU

  • -lives-matter/?utm_source=CPB&utm_medium=cms&utm_campaign=JPF15066# I know that it is the summer, but we would also like to offer an opportunity to gather as a community and discuss this issue. I have included a Google form and you can indicate whether you would be interesting in attending such a forum and, if so, the days/times that would work for you. https://docs.google.com/forms/d/e/1FAIpQLSfVs63oq_AYjb849IxD6ucq9UWnhWsDIyDTYdMIigJuVhWwGw/viewform?usp=sf_link We are thinking of you and hoping for