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  • , including performances at the International Festival of Spanish Keyboard Music in Almería, Spain, the Simón Bolívar Amphitheater in Mexico City, and the Bibliothèque de Dinan, in Brittany, France. What made you choose PLU? PLU’s focus on service and vocation resonated with me, and with it’s smaller size and focus on supporting students, I felt it was the kind of place I could have a positive impact on students. Experience so far? I’m so impressed with the care and dedication faculty have for students

  • outside the standard university services.Learn More Student Advising Academic advisors are available to help PLU undergraduate degree-seeking students figure out where online classes can make the biggest impact on their program completion and graduation.Learn More Student Support Pathfinder Still not sure where to start with your question?  Follow the Student Support Pathfinder workflow!View

  • /organizations found on the Clubs website To post authorized publicity in approved posting areas, including IMPACT Boards as well as the use of cork-board and posting space in the AUC To reserve and use space in the AUC for “tabling,” as scheduled through Conferences and Events To use “PLU” as part of the organization name (The Pacific Lutheran University name may be used only for purposes generally consistent with the organization’s purpose and only to identify affiliation as a student organization) To

  • OutRight Action International and the author of its recent report, Vulnerability Amplified: The Impact of COVID-19 on LGBTIQ People Globally. In 2019, she authored OutRight’s report entitled, Harmful Treatment: The Global Reach of So-called Conversion Therapy. From 2008 to 2017, she also served on OutRight’s Board of Directors and was Board Co-Chair for three years. From 1989 to 2014, she worked for PATH, a non-profit global health organization and held numerous technical and leadership positions

  • By:Kari Plog '11 May 18, 2016 0 Lionheart Coffee Co. https://www.plu.edu/resolute/spring-2016/wp-content/themes/blade/images/empty/thumbnail.jpg 150 150 Kari Plog '11 Kari Plog '11 https://www.plu.edu/resolute/spring-2016/wp-content/uploads/sites/14/2016/05/kari-plog-avatar.jpg May 18, 2016 May 24, 2016 Lionheart Coffee Co. When she isn’t working on water projects, PLU alumna Lauren Reese ’09 is exercising her creative bug with coffee Lionheart Coffee Co. in Beaverton, Oregon, doesn’t skimp on

  • I love to give recitals and play concertos. What is your favorite thing about being a professional musician? I’m never bored! There’s always a new and interesting project and these projects immerse you in the world of the great giants like Beethoven, Mozart, and Schoenberg, but sometimes these projects introduce you to music and cultures that you didn’t even know that you liked. As I tell my students—I haven’t been bored since I was in Kindergarten! What kind of music do you listen to in your

  • Guatemalan children. The organization is also housing participants of this year’s Alternative Spring Break. Though there are no planned projects during the stay, PLU students and staff will volunteer their time for whatever small projects Common Hope might have for them. When Common Hope was first came to Guatemala 25 years ago, the organizers asked residents what they wanted help with in their communities. They expected to hear wells or help raising money for vocational colleges, said Franklin. “But to

  • emphasize political process and global social change in the development of the American welfare state and the profession of social work. Students reflect critically up on the development of social and political policies historically. Students also develop legislative policy practice and advocacy skills and examine the impact of policy implementation, administration, and governmental structure on services to vulnerable populations. Critical thinking is used to analyze contemporary policy in income

  • change, but also those of several other pollutants that affect human health. A carbon tax would make those who cause the emissions from their consumption pay something for it directly and, in the process, lead to fewer emissions. For an electorate that hates new taxes, one could offset the carbon tax increase by lowering some other existing tax such as payroll taxes. This way, the bottom line for most households need not change, but the incentive for conservation is preserved. To address equity

  • Posted on November 20, 2017October 31, 2018 How Mexico slowly, but surely, began to change my life Oaxaca has opened an amazing amount of doors for me and I cannot be more grateful. What this program entails and the time I have spent here have made me reconsider my vocational and educational goals. I am confused as to where I stand and to who I now am, but in the best way … Continue reading How Mexico slowly, but surely, began to change my life