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  • Megan M. Irving, Therapist in TrainingHowdy! My work is rooted in the belief that you are the expert in your journey. My approach is systemic, collaborative, and centered on helping folks create a more compassionate relationship with their bodies and minds, accessing the wisdom they carry from their lived experiences. I take special care to make space for the diversity of all your identities by affirming and keeping your experiences at the forefront of our work together. I look forward to

  • in a parsonage, she knew she wanted to live a life of service. “From an early age, I wanted to be a teacher,” she says. At PLU, she appreciated the practical experience that education students received at area schools. “Everything was action-reflection,” she says. “It wasn’t just theories about education, but getting you out there, and seeing if this was a fit.” Along the way, Shjerven took an interest in deaf education, and a professor encouraged her to focus in the area. This meant transferring

  • graduate, discovered her passion for archaeology early. “Ever since I can remember—ever since my family can remember—I’ve been obsessed with it,” Hunt said from her hometown of Anchorage. “I would watch National Geographic constantly and tear apart the magazines and put them in a special binder.” She pursued her passion through two years at another (ahem) western Washington university but briefly changed course when she was told her dreams were silly. As a result, she dipped into the Classics sphere

  • Military To Medicine: Air Force, Navy veterans become nurses after second chances at college Posted by: Zach Powers / September 5, 2023 Image: Raven Lopez ’22, left, is is part of NYU Langone’s Nurse Resource Team. Stephanie Millett ’22, right, is halfway through her critical cardiac care residency at Pulse Heart Institute. (Photos by Sy Bean/PLU) September 5, 2023 By Anneli HaralsonResolute Guest WriterStephanie Millett ’22 was in her early 20s when she walked into a U.S. Navy recruiting

  • English professor at the University of Arkansas at Little Rock, received the nonfiction prize for their translation of the eighteenth-century text “Work on Women” by Louise Dupin (also known as Madame Dupin). Wilkin teaches in multiple academic programs at PLU, including French & Francophone Studies, Global Studies, the International Honors program, and the First Year Experience Program. She is the author of Women, Imagination, and the Search for Truth in Early Modern France (Ashgate 2008) and of many

  • like this on special occasions.Learn more about the Zulu Hat 2

  • Relive the Christmas Magic at Home!×A Christmas Invitation - DVDFor the first time ever, you can bring home the magic of PLU Christmas concerts. This DVD of our 2015 concert, “A Christmas Invitation,” featuring Metropolitan Opera star and PLU alumna Angela Meade, includes traditional Christmas favorites that are sure to warm the heart and lift your holiday spirit!  This special collector’s DVD includes the full PBS broadcast, as well as seven additional concert works not included in the

  • . Kathleen allowed Alan to indulge his passion for bright murals, cacti, found objects and old metal bric-a-brac. One corner of the property became a sculpture farm, populated by found objects and rusty metal representing the farm animals Alan remembered from his small-town childhood in Nooksack Valley, Wash. Alan’s greatest coup was acquiring an old, rusty circa-1950 Ford tractor from the family farm in North Dakota. He had it shipped to the Morongo Valley on a flatbed truck and gave it pride of place

  • data, a group of PLU faculty, students, alumni and administrators sought to evaluate which social and environmental projects are active now and have the capacity to grow, seek partnerships, and become full-fledged social enterprises on their own. The data collection project began in early 2022 and concluded on June 1, 2022. Our group collected data on all social impact initiatives across the PLU campus, including all academic disciplines and non-academic programs. We asked our colleagues and

  • women can be tied back to poverty, hunger and environmental degradation, he said. Women’s rights and women in power were also addressed by such speakers as Brenda Miller, who read from her book “Season of the Body,” and a brash talk by Kristin Rowe-Finkbeiner on her  push to secure rights for working mothers. Sut Jhally, the founder and executive director of the Media Education Foundation, urged men to seriously consider how male gender roles can contribute in violence against women. Jhally spoke at