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  • illustration. But if it was for the museum, I would have to repaint. For this market scene of the city of Calixtlahuaca, I have provided three to four versions in which I had done some minor color adjustments to the sky and the foreground for them to choose which to be the final illustration. A lot of people commented on the complexity of this product. But at the beginning stage, there were just about 15 figures. The earlier version of the painting was a very simplified version, and once I figured out the

  • current relationship with PCSD, and multiple alternatives to this relationship in Sections IX and X of this report; we hope PLU community members will take time to read our work. We anticipate polarized responses from our community to this issue and to our review, and we ask you to acknowledge the complexity of these issues and the diversity of perspectives in our community as you consider our findings and recommendations.  This review revealed a PLU community that is committed to our collective

  • live lives of thoughtful inquiry, service, leadership and care. Across the generations, PLU graduates have been difference-makers who engage the world, in all its complexity, with open minds and caring hearts. Citizens who strive to serve the common good. In my brief time at PLU, I have been blessed to intersect with so many of these amazing Lutes.  Tonight, four more alumni will add their stories to our collective memory. We will celebrate those who have accomplished much, and who exemplify the

  • of a female, Jewish Holocaust rescuer-survivor. Based upon extensive personal interviews, this paper explores the layers of deceptive and/or conflicted gendered and religious identities that Peperzak employed, embraced, or rejected during her rescue work. This talk contributes toward a more integrated and nuanced understanding of the complexity, and the costs, of Holocaust rescue while drawing attention to the agency of Jewish women in resistance to the Nazis’ genocidal ambitions. “Quaker Relief

  • doubles, your chances of unemployment are cut in half, you are more likely to vote and be active in your church and community; even your life expectancy is increased, and the probability of your finding happiness in love is higher. Today is a day to celebrate great gifts, to give hearty thanks — and to commence living a life of gratitude! WONDER Second, I wish for each of you a life of wonder, the ability to stand in awe as you contemplate the beauty and complexity of God’s creation; and always, the

  • a valuable learning environment for aspiring nurses. He’s hosted half a dozen students over the past 10 years, mostly nursing students from PLU. “It’s very rich in seeing complexity. It’s rich in dealing with very difficult patients,” he said, noting the prevalence of psychosocial and mental health issues. “You’ll see things you’ll see nowhere else. You never know what you’re going to find.” With that variety of care, a student leaves equipped with the confidence that they can do just about

  • 253.535.7595 www.plu.edu/social-work/ socw@plu.edu Heidi Brocious, Ph.D., Chair Within a program that is firmly based in the liberal arts, the social work major is designed to prepare students for beginning professional social work practice as well as graduate study in social work. Social work has both a heavily multidisciplinary-based body of knowledge and its own continuously developing knowledge base. The complexity of social issues and social problems that confront the modern-day social

  • Classical Greece, alcohol consumption grew more complexity as societal expectations rose. After decades of scholarship, many thinkers analyze the Greeks’ heavy drinking yet fail to notice the observation that there was heavy drinking in Greece, yet there is documentation that drinking in moderation was highly valued in Greek society and that drunkenness was looked down upon. An analysis of primary sources on this topic shows the primary represented drinking culture to be at events meant for drinking and

  • perspectives to examine issues such as socialization and stereotypes, relationships and sexuality, interpersonal and institutional violence, revolution and social change in the U.S. and in other selected international contexts.IHON 257: Aesthetics and Politics of the British ‘Postcolonial’ NovelThe British Empire changed its subject peoples, but those peoples ended up also changing Britain and the British themselves. However, the complexity of these changes is not always visible through analytic

  • ignorance 40 years before Austen wrote Persuasion: “My own sex, I hope, will excuse me, if I treat them like rational creatures, instead of […] viewing them as if they were in a state of perpetual childhood, unable to stand alone.” Critics of the new Persuasion film echo A Vindication of the Rights of Women (1792) with their frustration at the way Austen’s original story lost some of its reason and complexity in this adaptation. Our dissatisfaction with the movie gives us much to reflect on, and as