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you’re off on a weekend adventure in the great outdoors: hiking, rock climbing, skiing, kayaking. The concept is a simple one: provide students from all walks of life with access to people who know where to go, how to get there and who to organize those fun trips . Under the umbrella of PLU’s Department of Recreation, the program is a student-run organization from pretty much the top down. That’s key, and something that makes Outdoor Rec stand out as more and more universities choose to contract out
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my contract that says I can’t work for free!’”Ongoing WorkAlthough the Irene Creso Herbarium collection is full of potentially fabulous finds, it’s like looking into grandma’s attic: Just what is here? Irene, student workers and volunteers kept a card file, but it has not been updated since the 1980s, although new specimens have trickled in over the years since Irene’s death in 2000. Recently, the Herbarium was offered generous assistance through the Pacific Northwest Consortia of Herbaria to
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barware, if needed, will be included on your PLU Catering Event Contract. Volume Discounts are available for large events choosing Hosted Wine and Beer Service. We would be happy to discuss this option with you. Drink scrip service is available. Consider limiting the amount of beverages consumed at your event by providing scrip for consumption. Please let us know if this is something you are considering and we can discuss options and logistics. Service of alcohol is by law, limited to those 21 and
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to support OPT extensions. A candidate with OPT status may work at PLU in a tenure-track or visiting faculty position. If a future employee is on F-1 and has OPT authorized, PLU’s primary responsibility is to issue a properly worded contract. If a department hires someone in a tenure-track position, a change of status to H-1B will need to be filed by PLU. While it is important that proper non-immigrant documents from the individual be provided to HR before the start date, OPT status generally
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minorities, and the land itself have been deprived of freedom and justice. Martin Luther, the progenitor of Lutheran higher education, argued that God’s justice is a life-giving justice for all persons regardless of gender, race or ethnicity, social or economic status – a justice that should suffuse human relationships and the education of future leaders in society. Indeed, he was among the first of his generation to protest business, banking, and religious practices that favored the wealthy few and
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. Even today, the Dream of America is strong – not least in places where liberty and freedom are constrained. *** In the period from 1825 to 1925, roughly 800 000 men and women left Norway to seek a better life in America. For a better life for all, we must harness this pioneer spirit in our work to create a better world. First and foremost to find solutions to one of the greatest challenges of our time: climate change. My generation has little to show for itself when it comes to taking care of the
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employment and in education for all members of the university community without regard to an individual’s race, color, creed, religion, gender, national origin, age, mental and physical disability, marital status, sexual orientation, or any other status protected by law. www.plu.edu/personnel-manual/equal-employment-opportunity/preamble/ Faculty Handbook The PLU Faculty Handbook is the resource for all faculty. www.plu.edu/faculty-handbook/ Family Education Rights and Privacy Act www.plu.edu/student-code
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. As an anthropological archaeologist, his specific research interests include the comparative investigation of societal complexity, political economy, craft production, migration, and cultural ecology. His primary methodological specialty is the study of flaked stone tool production; this approach provides a useful means for reconstructing ancient economic systems, which provide a basis for making inferences about other aspects of society including social organization and ideology. He has
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workforce.That’s where PLU’s new Economics Mentorship Program comes into play. Students majoring in economics can partner with a PLU econ graduate to gain insight into the vast array of career possibilities. Those mentors will give advice, assist with networking and bridge the connection from PLU to real job opportunities using their skills. Chloe Wilhelm ‘20, a double major in economics and political science, has been working with mentor Tim Graciano ‘09, a Senior Manager at Amazon up in Seattle, for the past
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an anthropological archaeologist, his specific research interests include the comparative investigation of societal complexity, political economy, craft production, migration, and cultural ecology. His primary methodological specialty is the study of flaked stone tool production; this approach provides a useful means for reconstructing ancient economic systems, which provide a basis for making inferences about other aspects of society including social organization and ideology. He has published
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