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  • : Leading Family and Closely-Held Enterprises Explores issues unique to managing, working within, or advising closely held businesses. Role of closely held firms in global economy; control, fairness, and equity issues; succession; unique aspects of family firms including family dynamics inside and outside of the business. Prerequisite: BMBA 515. (4) BMBA 560 : Managing Health Care Enterprises Surveys policy and operational issues facing managers in the rapidly changing health care environment. Explores

  • studies in our region. Soon after, Neal Sobania (Professor of History, at that time, the director of the Wang Center), asked if I would be interested in being the 2012 Site Director in Chengdu for a semester. The opportunity to take my family and actually study/teach in China for three and a half months was a no-brainer, and off we went…one suitcase each. When I was asked if I would be interested in repeating the experience this year, I figured it was a vocational calling and perhaps this journey will

  • https://www.plu.edu/chws/urgent-emergency-resources/ Pacific Lutheran University Campus Ministry Email: cmin@plu.edu Telephone: 253-535-7465 Office: Anderson University Center 190 Pierce County Sexual Assault Center – Rebuilding Hope Website: Rebuilding Hope Telephone: 253-474-7273 or 800-756-7273 Pierce County Domestic Violence Helpline Website: Crystal Judson Family Justice Center (FJC)  Telephone: 253-798-4166 or 800-764-2420 National Sexual Assault Hotline 1-800-656-HOPE   Private Resources A

  • , nor the vehicle’s contents, while the vehicle is parked on university property. This includes damage incurred if the vehicle is towed.Visitor ParkingPacific Lutheran University welcomes all visitors to our campus and offers free parking passes to friends, family, guests and prospective students authorizing them to park in the PLU lots. Due to the limited parking in and around the PLU campus, parking regulations are strictly enforced. Visitors with passes are advised not to park in any reserved

  • ,” outside a classroom lab setting. “We don’t know the answers in advance,” she said. “Our job is to figure out how to ask the questions.” For Hoang, doing science can mean embracing failure, because it’s part of the process. “Conducting research allowed me to appreciate failed experiments,” she said. “This actually helps me become more problem-solving savvy.” For Kiyomi Kishaba ’21, studying Jewish immigrants in South America resonates with her own family history. Her father’s side is ethnically

  • in the middle of campus on Red Square, across from the Ness Family Chapel in the Karen Hille Phillips Center for the Performing Arts. The steel and brick Centennial Bell was a 100th-birthday present to the university in 1990 from then-President and Mrs. William O. Rieke. The bell structure is 12 feet high by 15 feet wide. Rune Stones Date and Artist: September 8, 1976; Tom Torrens See it: Rune Stones is located in Red Square The Rune Stones is a sculpture consisting of five weather steel shapes

  • executive director of Missoula Medical Aid, which leads groups of medical professionals to provide public health and surgery services in Honduras. In Missoula he has worked with the Missoula Writing Collaborative, teaching classes on short story writing in high schools, and the 406 writing workshop. For many years he worked as a fishing guide on the Smith River and raised cattle on his family farm in Wisconsin.Jenny JohnsonJenny Johnson is the author of In Full Velvet, published by Sarabande Books in

  • the credits she needed to graduate at 16 years old. Then, while studying at Olympic College in Bremerton, she learned about financial aid and the possibility of transferring to a university to study nursing, with tuition covered. “I didn’t even know those things were possible,” she said. “Nobody in my family had even graduated high school, let alone gone to college.” At 21 years old, she entered the School of Nursing at PLU in pursuit of a bachelor’s degree. Even though she felt out of place at

  • during the day and an alternative school at night to earn the credits she needed to graduate at 16 years old. Then, while studying at Olympic College in Bremerton, she learned about financial aid and the possibility of transferring to a university to study nursing, with tuition covered. “I didn’t even know those things were possible,” she said. “Nobody in my family had even graduated high school, let alone gone to college.” At 21 years old, she entered the School of Nursing at PLU in pursuit of a

  • Occupational Therapy, Eastern Washington University Master of Science in Dietetics & Clinical Nutrition Services, Bastyr University Master of Science in Family Practice Nursing, Seattle University MS in Athletic Training, Azusa Pacific University Doctor of Physical Therapy, Eastern Washington University Doctor of Physical Therapy, University of St. Augustine for Health Sciences Master of Public Health - Health Services/Allied Health/Health Sciences, University of Washington Loading... It’s FREE to apply to