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  • through a season here, but the transition has been exciting. New staff, new leadership — you have to embrace the change, but I think I’m in a unique position because I can still draw from all the things that made us great.” From a first-generation student to a multi-generation PLU family, Keim has never forgotten where it all began. “The values that I embrace and that have worked for me in my career, I learned here at PLU,” Keim said. “The impact that I was able to make in several different coaching

  • city of Córdoba to tour the Cathedral-Mosque of Córdoba. Through a guided tour, we learned the significance of the historic building that is made of a mosque surrounded by a cathedral. This is a landmark that represents the change of power between the (primary) Muslim settlers in the city, but then the eventual rule of Christianity and its leaders. However, there has been conflict within the city about who the cathedral-mosque belongs to– Muslims or Christians. The cathedral and mosque are still

  • ,” Keim said. “We have yet to go through a season here, but the transition has been exciting. New staff, new leadership — you have to embrace the change, but I think I’m in a unique position because I can still draw from all the things that made us great.” From a first-generation student to a multi-generation PLU family, Keim has never forgotten where it all began. “The values that I embrace and that have worked for me in my career, I learned here at PLU,” Keim said. “The impact that I was able to

  • , school districts, and local organizations to help shape the services the center will provide. When will there be community listening sessions? MultiCare will be hosting a number of community forums and information sessions this coming fall. This is part of the initiative’s commitment to change shaped by the community. As forums are scheduled, they will be added to the website. Where will the medical center be located? Based on the initial feedback from the community, the preferred location for the

  • —never to be satisfied with what one’s peers are doing, whether as an individual or an institution. “We can set higher standards for ourselves as a university,” she insisted. “Think bigger, dream bigger,” she added, which entails finding new language to name one’s experience. Referencing Octavia’s Brood, an anthology by the writers and organizers Walidah Imarisha and adrienne maree brown, she concluded, “All change is science fiction.”Emmanuel GonzalezMajor: Biology, with a minor in Chemistry

  • share the three compliments from teachers that she remembers to this day, how those brief moments of praise influenced her writing life, and ways that teachers can change a young person’s life in the briefest of moments. Erin Entrada Kelly is one of the most celebrated children’s authors writing today. She received the 2018 Newbery Medal for Hello, Universe, a 2021 Newbery Honor for We Dream of Space, the 2017 APALA Award for The Land of Forgotten Girls, and the 2016 Golden Kite Honor Award for

  • of the University. PLU employees, including student workers, must assume responsibility for legal and ethical computer, data, and network use. This data may include but is not limited to: Personal (non-public) information on students, employees, or university affiliates University financial information Other proprietary University information Activities considered to be in conflict with this policy include, but are not limited to, the following: Unauthorized change, deletion, corruption, or

  • , advertising, stage set design and sound and lighting, which is all coordinated through Conference Services. We have a great working relationship with PLU’S staff; they go out of their way to make sure we have everything we need to have a successful camp. For those of you have have organized events such as ours, you know that things don’t always go as planned. We have found PLU’s staff to be able to change things late in the game to provide us with seamless service. PLU’s facilities are excellent, the

  • of war, famine and disease caused by the Second Sudanese Civil War — including five of David’s siblings and his father. At one time, four million people were displaced. David, now 29, remains one of them. That will change Dec. 30, at least temporarily, when he travels to South Sudan for a four-week reunion with his mother, sister and other loved ones. The trip follows what David describes as a lifetime of isolation. “Most of what has happened to me is not good,” he says. “Pain is something that I

  • .” Hofrenning was born in Colombia and adopted by parents in Northfield, Minnesota. He said he gravitated toward Hispanic studies as a way to study his native culture. His religion minor is a nod to his mother’s career as a Lutheran pastor. The latter, he believes, can act as a force for progressive action. “I just think religion is a really important part of my theory of social change,” he said. “I had to understand the theology of different religions and how they play out in terms of liberating people