Page 176 • (4,627 results in 0.025 seconds)

  • TimelyCare (formerly Lute Telehealth)TimelyCare expands access to mental health and medical care by providing HIPAA compliant access to online or phone-based services, 24/7/365. All PLU students currently located in the United States and enrolled for classes may access TimelyCare services at any time, from anywhere.  (Students enrolled and located abroad may access the “Talk Now” portion of TimelyCare via a U.S.-based telephone/cellphone or via internet using the PLU VPN.) TimelyCare provides

  • for the community to enjoy the space VISITThe PLU Community is always open and welcome for you to enjoy the space.  There are benches and tables great for individual or group use.  While you are here, enjoy the: Our perennial fruit trees and vines Seasonal vegetables Birds – Birds of PLU Guide Schedule a Visit We also invite you to consider scheduling a time for a class visit or community builder work party in collaboration with the Center for DJS.  Please send us an email at garden@plu.edu

  • , in electronic form. Protocols may be submitted at any time and applicants should assume at least 10 days turnaround time for a response. Following review, a hard copy of the protocol, with the signature of the supervising faculty member, should be filed with the IACUC chair. Full meetings of the Committee occur at the end of each term. All personnel utilizing vertebrate animals must be listed on the proposal and receive appropriate training as outlined by the IACUC. Prior to initiating any

  • Brian Desmond insisted that she try out for a part in “Cabaret.” She lobbed back excuses. Too much homework, she had to work, too busy. “He finally told me that if I didn’t try out I’d regret it, so I gave in and did, and got the part of Sally Bowles,” she said. After that, Helland was hooked and quickly declared her theatre major. After she graduated, Helland recalled she was completely prepared to “do her time,” working small parts, part time jobs, and maybe eventually going to New York. But fate

  • September 1, 2009 11:15 a.m. – Mr. MacDougall’s seventh grade language arts class “I can wait.”With those three words, silence drops on the class of Joel MacDougall ’97.The 25 students know that for every second they continue to jabber, that time will be taken from lunch break or added to the last hour of the day. When they quiet, MacDougall, 34, reviews the basic concepts of “Where the Red Fern Grows.” What is the name of the two dogs? The main character? What gave Billie the idea to buy dogs

  • read a profile of Scott in the English Department pages.) As PLU celebrates its 125th year with a visit from His Majesty King Harald V of Norway, we in the Division of Humanities take time to celebrate another outstanding year of teaching, learning, and scholarship. Inquiry and community are two key values in PLU’s mission statement.  In our cover story you’ll read how four of our faculty have pursued inquiry that engages with communities outside PLU — and how this community engagement has in turn

  • Rousseau’s ideas on how this vicious circle might be undone. Much of my time in Scotland was spent on the campus of the University of Glasgow, where Smith himself held the Chair in Moral Philosophy from 1752 to 1764. The university is among the oldest in the English-speaking world and its enormous gothic buildings, which loom with weathered majesty, bespeak its long history. But not all of my time was spent there. I also traveled to the town of Kirkcaldy, where Smith was born and spent his early years

  • It’s Time to Rewrite the Rules of Civility by Jon M. Leiseth Original Song Lyrics: “Just a Little” by Mike Blair The Musician’s Vocation by Jeffrey Bell-Hanson (Pacific Lutheran University) About the Cover From the Publisher Mark Wilhelm From the Editor Jason Mahn Interested in contributing to Intersections with your own reflections or scholarship? Direct ideas and inquiries to the editor, Jason Mahn of Augustana College (jasonmahn@augustana.edu). *Note: All comments are moderated Read Previous

  • ). *Note: All comments are moderated Read Previous Congratulations to the 2019-20 Faculty Excellence Award Recipients! Read Next Intersections: The Tradition’s Wisdom in a Time of Pandemics LATEST POSTS Intersections: Called and Empowered (and Assessed) April 29, 2022 Intersections: Called to Place November 10, 2021 Intersections: Learning Love of Neighbor May 3, 2021 Intersections: The Tradition’s Wisdom in a Time of Pandemics December 1, 2020

  • What We DoMembers of the Vice President’s executive team and staff coordinate a wide variety of services, programs and activities designed to support the academic success and personal development of PLU students. We recognize that the college years will be a time for tremendous personal growth, value clarification and self-exploration. It is an incredible time of growth in the life of every student. We are here to provide guidance and assistance to students, by helping them to problem solve or by