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  • ,” added Rabbi Bruce Kadden, a guest lecturer at PLU. “This minor will not just be about history, but about so many other things that connect. It’s about giving students a global consciousness.” Close study of the Holocaust and other examples of mass violence challenges us to push far beyond our comfort zones, noted Associate Professor Rona Kaufman, Chair of PLU’s English Department. Students who choose to earn a minor in Holocaust and Genocide Studies will join a scholarly community that believes that

  • academic journey, but they’re also just part of my element. I think to come back and say thank you, and to come back to show how I’ve developed and how I’ve launched at this point in my life, is always a treasure — and it’s really a privilege to be able to do,” Aiken says. The event will also include performances from C. Ivan Johnson and the Washington State Church of God in Christ Mass Choir, as well as acts from Robin Henderson and Friends, and Anointed Brothers. In addition, there will be praise

  • networks with the intent to compromise any other computers or networks or to commit crimes or other unethical acts. Using computers or networks for unauthorized non-University-related commercial or for-profit activity. Sending or forwarding electronic mail for unauthorized purposes (i.e., spam). This includes but is not limited to unsolicited and unsanctioned mass mailings. University officials authorized to send or approve mass electronic mailings are the President, Provost and V.P. for Admission and

  • .” Miller’s award winning newscast featured coverage of the deadly mass shooting that took place in Oregon in the fall. This, Miller says, is a hard fact to reconcile. “I struggle with the fact that nine people died, yet I win an award?” Miller said. “It just shows you can deliver compassionate, compelling stories in a way that resonates with viewers, no matter what the topic.” Miller remains active at PLU and has visited the university’s student media office to give advice to students. As a senior

  • contain our pleasure, food, drink and other consumer goods became mass-produced, bottled, canned, condensed and distilled, unleashing new and intensified surges of pleasure, delight, thrill—and addiction. Event Details What: The 10th Annual Dale E. Benson Lecture in Business and Economic History, featuring Prof. Gary Cross: ‘The Package and Its Pleasures.’ When: 7:30 p.m. Monday, Oct. 13, 2014. Where: Scandinavian Cultural Center, Anderson University Center, PLU campus. Gary S. Cross, Distinguished

  • Master of Divinity degree from Harvard Divinity School in Cambridge, Mass., and a Bachelor of Arts degree in music education from the College of Wooster in Wooster, Ohio. Ordained June 4, 1981, Eaton served as assistant pastor of All Saints Lutheran Church in Worthington, Ohio; interim pastor of Good Hope Lutheran Church in Boardman, Ohio; and pastor of Messiah Lutheran Church in Ashtabula, Ohio. She was elected bishop of the ELCA Northeastern Ohio Synod in 2006 and re-elected in May 2013. Eaton’s

  • Guest Artist Eric Marienthal - SaxophonistEric Marienthal is a two time GRAMMY Award winner and has been nominated 9 times. After graduating high school in Southern California in 1976, Eric went on to study at the Berklee College of Music in Boston, Mass. There he studied with the legendary saxophone professor, Joe Viola. By the time he left Berklee, Eric had achieved the highest proficiency rating given by the school. In 1995, Eric was awarded the Berklee Distinguished Alumnus Award for

  • – cared about these diseases. They afflicted the billions of invisible poor in Africa, Asia and the rest of the developing world. What finally made the health of the developing world appear on our radar screen was not some new political movement or mass enlightenment. What happened, very simply, is that some powerful, high-profile people took an interest in these neglected diseases. In the mid-to-late 1990s, Bill Gates, at the time the richest man in the world, his wife Melinda and his father Bill

  • Miller is a freelance writer based in Tacoma. She is a graduate of the University of British Columbia and attended the Missouri School of Journalism. An avid reader, Karen also works at King’s Books as a bookseller, where she can be found offering recommendations and playing with the two store cats. See more from Karen at her website: karenemiller.wordpress.com. Christian Caple Christian Caple is an award-winning, Tacoma-based journalist and communications professional. He serves as the

  • sent via phone, text, and email will conclude with a request for confirmation of receipt. Emergency messages may repeat until you confirm receipt. An emergency message from PLU will always begin with “PLU Alert!”. The message will briefly describe the emergency, provide instructions of what to do and refer you to sources of further information. Non-Emergency PLU Alerts PLU Alert mass notifications are also utilized for non-emergency safety related information. Non-emergency alerts are typically