Page 136 • (3,675 results in 0.041 seconds)

  • encourages everyone to go, whether you’re looking for an internship or job, or just trying to network. “Its just so important for your future,” Noble said. “It’s really good to get your people skills out there.” Employers, like Lauren Snyder, Human Resources Coordinator for Medical Consultants Network, agree. “I think it’s good to have the experience of actually talking with employers,” Snyder said. “They could even establish a relationship with a company so when they do graduate they can follow-up and

  • September 15, 2008 Care for the earth It all started because of the health department. A year ago, when the University Center closed down for its remodel, Dining and Culinary Services had to find a new place to feed the majority of the university’s students. They moved to the Columbia Center. That space, however, could not accommodate a commercial dishwasher, so meals were served on paper plates to alleviate health department concerns. But what to do with all that paper? Contaminated paper

  • written about this time period, as far as examining its reach in developing Chinese society. According the the selection committee, they were “particularly impressed with the clarity of writing and the intellectual breadth of the dissertation, which necessitated dealing with a wide range of Chinese materials that span the entire history of Buddhism in China. The result is an impressive contribution to our knowledge of the complex responses by modern Chinese Buddhist teachers and intellectuals to

  • PLU’s Master of Science in Marketing Analytics program to be offered exclusively online Virtual information sessions now available for interested students Posted by: Silong Chhun / February 5, 2021 February 5, 2021 By Veronica CrakerPLU Marketing and CommunicationsThe Pacific Lutheran University School of Business has announced that its Master of Science in Marketing Analytics (MSMA) program will now be offered exclusively online. The program is designed for graduate students interested in data

  • patient’s lives. To me it’s a beautiful marriage between practice and the health care needs of the community. When that happens, it’s magical.” Moss, the program’s nurse navigator with MultiCare, said this program might be one of the first of its kind in the nation. Not that the program, at first, didn’t have its detractors among doctors as well as students. Nursing student Megan Armstrong admits she was one of them. She was cynical and skeptical of how much good it would do. Another “to do” in a

  • , earning her Master’s Degree in Education in 2008. In turn, PLU found ways to maintain its connection to Namibia and Tjiramba. Professor, Paula Leitz, has travelled to Namibia since 2002 and beginning in 2008 she initiated a J-term course where PLU education students practice student teaching in Namibia’s primary and secondary schools. As a result of Leitz’s initiative, more than 50 of PLU’s future teachers have unique teaching experiences in Namibia. During his most recent homecoming, Tjiramba met

  • its experimentation will fail, but because it is not ‘adapted from’ it will follow that the director and writers will take more liberties. Even a ‘based on’ film could do meaningful work if it is historically conscientious, but Persuasion did not go that route. One of the many references to popular media throughout the film is the style of Anne Elliot’s narration. Hallmarks of this film are Anne Elliot’s constant glances and narrative asides to the audience/camera. We have seen this narrative

  • Accessibility Checker is a three-step process: Step 1: Click Accessibility Checker Icon Access the Accessibility Checker tool by clicking its icon in the rich-text editor toolbar. The Accessibility Checker icon looks like a human silhouette inside a black circle.   Step 2: Review Suggested Changes Review any reported issues in the Accessibility Checker dialog box that pops up. The pink area at the top of the box will provide a list of issues, along with Previous and Next buttons to navigate through the list

  • to them, and also working out in the community. I connect a lot of different levels of government to each other. That sounds like it must take a lot of communication chops. Yes, that’s a big part of it. Often it feels a lot like translating. I work with staff, agency partners and elected officials with high-level skills and expertise in finance, engineering, communications, and the environment. So I do a lot of work on my end to understand and evaluate things from those different perspectives

  • past and instruction for the present.6 Even those that were not Huguenot, who did not explicitly share in this history, identified with elements of this history —whether it be the experience of minority status, experiences of persecution or a biblical heritage—and affirmed their part in the identity of Le Chambon. The villagers, Huguenot and otherwise, saw their current situation in terms of what had happened before: they called on this common memory and its resources to respond to their situation