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  • power of global travel to inform and illuminate as we make our way in a troubled world. Read More Power Paddle to Puyallup Kelly Hall ’16 found a new connection to her native Samish tribal culture through her studies at PLU, then gave voice to her people as part of the revival of this traditional Northwest canoe journey. Read More Strong Link of Three People remember Panago Horton ’12 for his quiet leadership, devotion to family and passion for access to education for marginalized students. His

  • Power Paddle to Puyallup Power Paddle to Puyallup https://www.plu.edu/resolute/winter-2019/wp-content/uploads/sites/29/2019/01/power-paddle-puyallup-banner-1024x532.jpg 1024 532 Kari Plog '11 Kari Plog '11 https://www.plu.edu/resolute/winter-2019/wp-content/uploads/sites/29/2018/05/kari-plog.jpg January 5, 2019 February 26, 2019 LUTHERAN HIGHER EDUCATIONLeadership Before Kelly Hall ’16 and the rest of her Samish canoe family paddled their final strokes through the Hylebos Waterway, Hall did

  • collaborate across departments to bring forth rich and intersectional programming, and more work has prepared me to do that. Tell us more about your role at PLU as the coordinator of the Center for Gender Equity. I also support Queer programming for students across campus by partnering with various student leaders. Advocacy services are centered around encouraging the empowerment of victim-survivors during their healing process, supporting friends and family, and providing education about the issues

  • & AnswersRoom 4 - Anderson University Center 213 Identity & Emotional Labor Moderator: Dr. Laura Fitzwater Gonzales 6:00-6:10 pm - Kiara Williams6:10-6:20 pm - Kaitlyn Cook6:20-6:30 pm - Questions & Answers6:00-6:10 pm - Kiara WilliamsFast Food is More Than Food: How Women Practice Emotional Labor in The Food Industry6:10-6:20 pm - Kaitlyn CookFirst in Family: First Generation College Students and Stress6:20-6:30 pm - Questions & AnswersRoom 5 - Anderson University Center 134 Policing Moderator: Dr. Anna

  • guests artists are something gained. —MR Read Previous Faculty Feature: Meet Amanda Sweger, Associate Professor of Theatre Read Next Tips and Tricks for Your Virtual Dance Scholarship Application LATEST POSTS Theatre Professor Amanda Sweger Finds Family in the Theatre February 28, 2023 Twisted Tales of Poe: A Theatre/Radio Collaboration May 16, 2021 Theatre Guest Artists in Spring 2021 February 16, 2021 Hints and Help for Your Virtual Theatre Scholarship Application January 18, 2021

  • get the chance I love to explore the great outdoors (especially in this amazing state)! I love skiing, and meeting with friends and family to play outdoor games like football, volleyball and baseball.

  • to be of service. To be part of something that is life giving for not just me, not just my family, but the whole of the living community in the area that I live.’”  Robinson-Bertoni teaches her students to go beyond what they learn in the classroom. She says, “We can visit websites, but to actually go have my students practice pluralism and respectful engagement with others in the local community is a kind of conversational learning that can only happen outside of a classroom space.” One such

  • Undergraduate College of Liberal Studies Nurse Practitioner Certificates Post Graduate Nurse Practitioner Certificates Program Details Graduate College of Health Professions Nursing Master of Science in Nursing Program Details Graduate College of Health Professions Marketing Analytics – Online Program Master of Science in Marketing Analytics – Online Program Program Details Graduate College of Professional Studies msma,digital,analytics,data,business Marriage and Family Therapy Master of Arts in Marriage

  • Presbyterian Church of Berthoud. After returning to the Pacific Northwest to raise a family, he found a new passion for the organ, both the sacred and the “cool”. While directing the choirs and performing on the pipe organ for St. Luke’s Memorial Episcopal Church (2020 – 2023), he continues to play the hammond B-3 organ at church events, local haunts such as Cider and Cedar, and now is working on several recording projects with his organ trio, Threocracy and the Noah Peddibon Trio. Yet the love of the

  • was such a young child when he first left southern Sudan for Ethiopia. But the memories endure. On the journey to Ethiopia and then to Kenya, it was all too common to see other refugees stop on the side of the dirt road and look down at a person lying on the ground. They would give words of encouragement to a still form that every passing moment seemed more lifeless. They would console each other at the loss of a person who had become family. But staying put wasn’t an option. “There was a sense of