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will start making an immediate impact on the world—mostly because they already have done so much at PLU. Here’s a look at just a few outstanding members of this year’s graduating class.Greg HibbardMajors: Geoscience and Economics. Hometown: Olympia, Washington. Accomplishments at PLU: NCAA Postgraduate Scholarship recipient, two-time Capital One First Team Academic All American (first male student-athlete in PLU’s history to receive this honor twice), 2014 Football Team Captain, football player all
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change students will be notified. Link to Undergraduate Student Satisfactory Academic Progress (SAP)
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Action”Mary Sarpong12:00-12:30PMElizabeth Elliott12:30-1:00PM Capstone Title: “Shaping Change, Changing Worlds” Individualized Major: Science, Technology, and Society
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All staff employees are employed on an at will basis. This means that both the employee and the University may end the employment relationship at any time and for any reason, with or without advance notice or cause. Nothing in this Personnel Manual is intended to or shall be interpreted to change the at will nature of a staff employee’s employment at PLU. Similarly, nothing in this Personnel Manual is intended to or shall be interpreted to make any promise of specific treatment in any specific
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natural world around us; it is the value to engage with these complications and strive toward making a positive change.
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a faculty member or members in the design and execution of research projects. Responsibilities may include supervising undergraduate students on projects. Award amount: Awards vary depending on hours worked and funds available; typically $15-$19 per hour. Number of awards: Varied Eligibility: To be eligible for a graduate assistantship, an applicant must be: admitted to the DNP program maintain a minimum cumulative 3.0 graduate grade point average, and enrolled full or part-time during the
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career—and take him further than ever.Holland planned to major in English but became fascinated by the varied projects offered by PLU’s computer science major. With family in the tech, interest in computer science runs in the family, he says. Through the PLU IHON-Oxford Program, he took a distributed systems course. “It had very interesting, hard problems that interested me.” Overall, this is what he enjoys most—finding efficient ways to solve problems. “Computers give you immediate feedback on
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capital projects will be fully funded, including the Karen Hille Phillips Center for Performing Arts and lower-campus athletic fields. The Andersons, who came to PLU in 1992, say they are not retiring but are completing 20 years of service to the university and then moving on to new areas of professional focus and service. MaryAnn Anderson, 52, calls their decision, “a Wild Hope moment.” “We are living true to Mary Oliver’s line of poetry: ‘Tell me, what is it you plan to do with your one wild and
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opportunity to approach complex projects and issues from the perspective of building understanding. How can we best communicate about this project so everyone can understand what’s going on? How can we engage more people, so that the outcomes of projects are more reflective of their communities? It’s exciting to work on an active transportation project in general, but also fun to work so close to PLU and think about greater connectivity between PLU and the broader Parkland community. It’s been really
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combines feminist, process and Lutheran theologies and has focused on Christology, theological anthropology, the doctrine of God, and science and religion. As a contributor and editor, she published Cross Examinations: Readings on the Meaning of the Cross Today (Fortress, 2006) and contributed chapters to Transformative Lutheran Theologies (Fortress, 2010), Lutherrenaissance: Past and Present (Göttingen: Vandenhoeck & Ruprecht 2014), Theologies of Creation: Creatio Ex Nihilo and Its New Rivals
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