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  • middle schoolers lives,” said Shelby Hasse ’14. “I love getting in the minds of middle schoolers and seeing what’s going on in their lives.” The middle school has a great staff, Hasse said, but they need all the help they can get in a time of sweeping state and federal budget cuts.”Everyone has heard the cliché, ‘It takes a village to raise a child,’ but it really does,” Mondragon said. “Any help we can get is so appreciated.”It is exciting to see Keithley students connect with PLU students, he said

  • maximize the diversity of species. The other was convinced it had to be a temperate climate in order to be hardy enough to survive. “Those are both great answers, but they were polar opposites and we have to be okay with that,” Heath says. “When we can sit in a classroom and have discussions in the fictional world of a starship, we can actually listen to each other. I don’t know how to recreate that in the real world. But just imagine what we could accomplish if we could.” Read Previous Opening Doors

  • middle schoolers lives,” said Shelby Hasse ’14. “I love getting in the minds of middle schoolers and seeing what’s going on in their lives.” The middle school has a great staff, Hasse said, but they need all the help they can get in a time of sweeping state and federal budget cuts.”Everyone has heard the cliché, ‘It takes a village to raise a child,’ but it really does,” Mondragon said. “Any help we can get is so appreciated.”It is exciting to see Keithley students connect with PLU students, he said

  • . “It’s a great networking opportunity for students,” Boeh said, and he’s seen internships come out of it. “You cannot simulate this exposure in the classroom,” Boeh said. “This experience allows the students to see in action what they learn in the classroom.” —   Student competitions like these are funded in part by the Dean’s Fund for Excellence. To help support innovative programs like these, click here. — This article was first published in the Spring 2013 issue of Business Scene magazine. To see

  • ://www.nationalgalleries.org/art-and-artists/4985. Accessed Aug 15 2022. Looser, Devoney. “What is Old in Jane Austen?”. Women Writers and Old Age in Great Britain, 1750-1850. Johns Hopkins UP, 2008, 75-96. ———————. “Age and Aging Studies, from Cradle to Grave.” Age, Culture, Humanities, no. 1, 2014, 25-29. Northcote, James. “Miss Staley” (1795). Royal Academy of Arts, https://www.royalacademy.org.uk/art-artists/name/staley. Accessed Aug 15 2022. Seeber, Barbara K. “Too cool about sporting.” Jane Austen and Animals

  • “provide our youth with the knowledge and will to participate in the great experiment; to teach them how to argue, and to help them discover what questions are worth arguing about; and, of course, to make sure they know what happens when arguments cease” (73-4). He also suggests that education aim for the student “to become a different person because of something you have learned —to appropriate an insight, a concept, a vision, so that your world is altered” (3). 2 – Martha Nussbaum, Cultivating

  • July 27, 2012 In the foreground of this picture is Audrey (Coryell) Okuda’78, who came all the way from Japan for the reunion. Next to her is Dominique Lopez Piper, who is singing for her mom, Mary (Piper) Lopez Garelli ’81, who can no longer sing due to a medical condition. (John Froschauer, Photos) Choir of the West reunion and benefit concert draws alumni from across the globe By Barbara Clements University Communications For Audrey (Coryell) Okuda ’78 traveling 5,000 miles to be with her

  • January 31, 2013 Cambodia: A reflection on the genocide by Khmer Rouge and coverage by US media by Kathryn Perkins ’13 In 1975 over one-fourth of the Cambodian people were murdered. Not by foreign aggressors or malicious diseases, but by their own people. The Khmer Rouge, a communist regime with a Utopian dream, decimated its own country. Like the Holocaust, the history of Cambodia needs to be remembered.   The Cambodian genocide is part of a larger story of human atrocities in the 20th century

  • August 6, 2013 Work on the Ness Chapel and the Karen Hille Phillips Center for the Performing Arts continued through August, and will continue until just before students arrive. (Photo by PLU Photo Director John Froschauer) Construction on the performing arts center, dugouts and the halls continue throughout the summer After a very busy summer, it’s almost showtime. Finishing work continues on the Karen Hille Phillips Center for the Performing Arts, as Phase Two construction wraps up in the

  • Ph.D. positions for research Across the disciplinary lines of soft matter physics, granular physics, and earth's near-surface processes Posted by: nicolacs / October 11, 2021 October 11, 2021 Fully-funded Ph.D. positions are available in the Ferdowsi Research Laboratory within the Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering at the University of Houston. Positions are available with start date as early as Spring 2022 and Fall 2022. Some of our active research areas are experimental and