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  • PLU’s ability to bring the top scholars in the field to our small corner of the country and by how deeply the PLU community engaged with the challenging questions and ideas presented by the Conference’s first speaker, Doris Bergen. But I perhaps I was most surprised with my own participation in the discussions that followed Bergen’s talk and the Powell-Heller Conference – PLU had inspired and prepared me to engage in those conversations.When I graduated PLU in 2008, HGST was still in its early

  • PLU’s ability to bring the top scholars in the field to our small corner of the country and by how deeply the PLU community engaged with the challenging questions and ideas presented by the Conference’s first speaker, Doris Bergen. But I perhaps I was most surprised with my own participation in the discussions that followed Bergen’s talk and the Powell-Heller Conference – PLU had inspired and prepared me to engage in those conversations.When I graduated PLU in 2008, HGST was still in its early

  • PLU’s ability to bring the top scholars in the field to our small corner of the country and by how deeply the PLU community engaged with the challenging questions and ideas presented by the Conference’s first speaker, Doris Bergen. But I perhaps I was most surprised with my own participation in the discussions that followed Bergen’s talk and the Powell-Heller Conference – PLU had inspired and prepared me to engage in those conversations.When I graduated PLU in 2008, HGST was still in its early

  • PLU’s ability to bring the top scholars in the field to our small corner of the country and by how deeply the PLU community engaged with the challenging questions and ideas presented by the Conference’s first speaker, Doris Bergen. But I perhaps I was most surprised with my own participation in the discussions that followed Bergen’s talk and the Powell-Heller Conference – PLU had inspired and prepared me to engage in those conversations.When I graduated PLU in 2008, HGST was still in its early

  • PLU’s ability to bring the top scholars in the field to our small corner of the country and by how deeply the PLU community engaged with the challenging questions and ideas presented by the Conference’s first speaker, Doris Bergen. But I perhaps I was most surprised with my own participation in the discussions that followed Bergen’s talk and the Powell-Heller Conference – PLU had inspired and prepared me to engage in those conversations.When I graduated PLU in 2008, HGST was still in its early

  • Student Services Select Registration Select Student Schedule Student Schedule By Week In the Go To field, enter 09/09/2019, and then click submit. You should then be able to see BOTH MFT 503 and 504 listed Tuesday and Thursday from 3:00-6:20pm. For questions about registration, contact Registrar’s Office at 253-535-7131 or registrar@plu.eduHOUSING INFORMATION PLU offers limited housing options for graduate students. Visit Residential Life for information living on campus. For off campus housing, visit

  • in the eco-ministry field, facilitating spiritual and religious action on environmental and climate justice. It doesn’t just rely on religious foundations, however. The center engages secular and faith-based environmental leaders for education, outreach, support, and action. CEE is creating “incredible spaces where people from all walks of life come together for problems and solutions, while cultivating beauty and a sense of community,” he says. “It keeps me coming back to embrace the struggle

  • housing field, which combined service and a physical outcome that people can see and experience.” Today, Lloyd puzzles over how a regional labor shortage has constrained building and pumped up housing prices, two key factors contributing to a shortage of affordable housing throughout the state. Even when affordable projects are funded, “We produce fewer units when they cost more,” Lloyd says. “When the public starts to see and feel the impacts of the housing crisis, that’s when they become engaged in

  • ) – required both consummate research and hard, gutsy field work.  His dozens of articles in prestigious nature periodicals – Smithsonian, Audubon, Natural History, National Geographic, to name a few – appeared there not only due to the excellence of his writing, but also because of his willingness to go where and do what few others would.  It took more than just adventurousness; it also took innovation, creativity, and commitment.  When the need for a professional photographer for his nature writing

  • , in Yakima, Washington, as the younger of two sons born to Jack and Mardelle McClary. He was raised in Tacoma, Washington, where he graduated from Lincoln High School in 1958. He received a bachelor’s degree in education from Pacific Lutheran University in 1963 and a master’s degree in education from Western Washington University in 1969. From 1963-72, Doug taught and, in June of 1972, he entered the FBI as a special agent where he was assigned to the Los Angeles FBI Field Office. During his 23