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  • Communities are located in traditional residence halls: Harstad Hall, Hinderlie Hall, Ordal Hall, Pflueger Hall, and Tingelstad Hall.Great For Students Who ...are in their first year at PLU and looking to connect with others!Program + Learning OutcomesBy participating in First-Year Communities, students will: be able to identify academic and personal support resources to support their success in their first year at PLU build relationships with students, faculty, and staff to develop a sense of community

  • readiness Academic fit (i.e. meets Major/Minor/Gen Ed or other personal or professional goals) Motivation, intellectual curiosity, prior engagement with the site or program’s academic goals Responsibility, maturity, patience, flexibility, humor, good judgement, empathy Interpersonal skills, including sensitivity to others’ diverse perspectives and experiences Desire to understand and engage with other cultures Strong Faculty/Professional recommendations Applicants must: Be in good standing Meet any

  • Tom Smith Professor of Theatre he/him Phone: 253-535-7323 Email: smithtt@plu.edu Office Location: Karen Hille Phillips Center for the Performing Arts - 217 Website: http://www.tomsmithplaywright.com Professional Biography Personal Education M.F.A., Directing and Acting, University of Missouri-Kansas City, 1994 B.A., Dramatic Arts, Whitman College, 1991 Certification, Secondary Education, Whitman College, 1991 Areas of Emphasis or Expertise Playwriting Directing Improvisation Theatre Management

  • will benefit from this revolutionary way of brightening your moods without drugs or lengthy therapy. All you need is your own common sense and the easy-to-follow methods revealed in this book by one of the country’s foremost authorities on mood and personal relationship problems. In Ten Days to Self-Esteem, Dr. David Burns presents innovative, clear and compassionate methods that will help you identify the causes of your mood slumps and develop a more positive outlook on life. You will learn that

  • to the stories elevated in museum spaces. By drawing on space-place theory, literature on identity work in museum spaces, and personal experience interning at the Northwest African American Museum, I explore the reciprocal relationship between the physical context of a museum and the stories it houses. Reflecting the shift from narratives of normative colonialism to those of postcolonial structures, the physical construction of museum entryways aid how narratives are confirmed and refined within

  • discusses her book on the fostering and adoption of indigenous children in the postwar world for the 41st Annual Walter C. Schnackenberg Memorial Lecture. 7 p.m., Anderson University Center–Regency Room. MARCH Monday, March 2: Women, Leadership and Vocation: Vulnerability. Participants in this workshop will watch Brené Brown’s TED talk “The Power of Vulnerability” and listen to a panel of PLU women share their experiences feeling (and embracing) vulnerability in order to further their personal and

  • , which happened to be the day that my mother died.  So, it seemed somehow personal to me, and to my family, that the flag came down on the day of my mother’s death. The personal connection to these issues in Charleston touched me again closer to home.  Some of you may be aware of the “Hate Won’t Win” campaign launched by two granddaughters of the murdered pastor of Charleston’s Mother Emmanuel AME Church, the Rev. Daniel Simmons.  I think the whole country was astounded when the relatives of the

  • processed. “I struggled with professional relationships,” she said, adding that employers often wrote her off. “I was terminated from my first job out of nursing school and it’s unclear why.” (The employer cited incompatible “fit.”) Tarra SimmonsWalking outside the Supreme Court building in Olympia, WA. Her struggles manifested in her personal relationships, too. Simmons says she gravitated to men with their own traumatic backgrounds, who were violent or unfaithful. “I thought maybe I didn’t deserve to

  • chalks it up to a lifetime of trauma she never processed. “I struggled with professional relationships,” she said, adding that employers often wrote her off. “I was terminated from my first job out of nursing school and it’s unclear why.” (The employer cited incompatible “fit.”) Tarra SimmonsWalking outside the Supreme Court building in Olympia, WA. Her struggles manifested in her personal relationships, too. Simmons says she gravitated to men with their own traumatic backgrounds, who were violent or

  • are especially pleased to welcome emeriti and retired members of the faculty and staff. Please know that we value your continued presence and investment in the life of PLU, and know that we strive each day to reach the high standard you have set for us. Would you please stand and be recognized. A special welcome also to those of you returning from sabbaticals and other time away from campus for professional and personal leave. It’s good to have you back on campus. Would you please stand so we can