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  • dry eye was in sight. Tears of joy were streaming down their faces. They didn’t even know that Ellen and Target were giving the school $100,000. “We received the money [from The Ellen Show] not because there’s something wrong with our school, but because something is right with our school,” Herold said, a social worker at James Sales. Gretchen Saunders in her kindergarten class at James Sales Elementary. The money is being used to provide a safe play area for the community at the school and things

  • classroom a week after the election. “This is where everyone is coming that cares the most. We’re going to get people with a lot of emotion and people who are extremely invested in this.” Sill and Schleeter urged the students to consider how social scientists would engage such an event, by recognizing the significance and trying to remain impartial. “We want to think of this as a very unique and amazing opportunity in which we are living and experiencing history as it’s unfolding in real time,” Sill

  • all my design choices.Lianne Tjoelker BIO Lianne Tjoelker is a senior at Pacific Lutheran University in Tacoma, Washington. She is will be graduating with her Bachelor of Fine Arts in graphic design and a minor in Chinese Studies in the spring of 2017. She plans to pursue her passion for video games by making a career in the video game industry. Lianne has done work and commissions for Pacific Lutheran University’s student run advertising agency, Impact, as well as PLU’s School of Art and Design