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  • students in Grays Harbor, Lewis, Mason, Pacific and Thurston Counties receive an excellent and equitable education. That birthday gift, Hall says, is the gift that keeps on giving. She feels privileged to work with a talented team of communicators. “I have loved watching the communications team blossom and grow,” she says. She’s had a variety of roles supporting internal and external communications needs, including web design, graphic design, social media and web and document accessibility projects

  • feels privileged to work with a talented team of communicators. “I have loved watching the communications team blossom and grow,” she says. She’s had a variety of roles supporting internal and external communications needs, including web design, graphic design, social media and web and document accessibility projects. Read our full profile of Kate Hall. Lute Powered: AmazonLute Powered: MultiCare Health SystemLute Powered: City of Tacoma Read Previous Kate Hall ’17 builds connections, serves

  • she DJs at Lute Air Student Radio (LASR). We caught up with the busy senior to learn more.How has your PLU experience prepared you for your future? My PLU experience has prepared me by letting me have hands-on experience that I know I wouldn’t have gotten at a bigger university. Through MediaLab and several other communications classes, I’ve had the opportunity to work with and create content for real clients. Because of this, I have been able to start a portfolio of projects I’ve worked on to

  • (meet at 9:30 a.m.)Join The Diversity Center in the PLU Community Garden for a work party to assist with harvesting, weeding, and planting.  We encourage participants to bring a hat and water bottle and to wear closed toe shoes.  Meet by the steps in front of Xavier at 9:30 a.m. Stay for a long as you like, with the projects wrapping up about 11am.Grounds Project (meet at 9:30 a.m.)Join President Belton and members of the grounds crew to spruce up pathways between upper and lower campus. Meet at 9

  • justice projects, and articulated a mission: to build diverse, critically engaged, compassionate communities of justice and to model one such a community.  Third rail inquiry was central when I began attending in 2007, and it remains so. So what is third rail inquiry?  It is not just a list of “dangerous” topics.  It is a process of engagement.  Respect for study and for learning runs high, but they float free of any credentialing process.  There are no exams, no term papers, no extra points for

  • Series Service Projects (such as Emergency Food Network and L’Arche Farms volunteering) ContactFor more information about this Learning Community option contact: Marie Tucker, Community Director for Tingelstad Hall | marie.tucker@plu.eduWellness House ReferencesGerdts, K. (2019, February 25). Finding balance when you’re “going through it”: I put my life into perspective with this one simple exercise. Thrive Global [Web site]. https://thriveglobal.com/stories/finding-balance-going-through-it/ Height

  • program from August 2007 to February 2014. Teska was dedicated to teaching, scientific research, and sustainable development and conservation. He developed research programs in Central America and the Galapagos Islands in the 1980s at Furman University in Greenville, South Carolina, where he chaired the Latin American studies concentration, implemented an interdisciplinary program among five departments and supervised dozens of undergraduate research projects. In addition to his work with the U.S

  • one problem, another problem starts to poke in,” said Edgar. “This should inspire future projects—for students at PLU or other institutions.” Olafson said that working on this research project pushed her intellectually. “I really liked how much it challenged everything I know about everything,” Olafson said of the process. “It was such an intellectual stretch to think about these things that only like two people had published papers on before. It was a hard transition going back to normal

  • Administrator, was selected to participate in the national Think Tank on Sexual Violence Prevention on College and University Campuses organized by the Centers for Disease Control. Warwick, who has worked with the Department of Justice since 2006 with PLU’s Campus Grant Project and over the past three years as a private contractor to review grant submissions, was recommended by the DOJ to take part in this meeting of experts who will compose a set of guidelines for funding future grant projects out of the

  • in and around the heart of Tacoma. Walker and other regional leaders, including Tacoma Mayor Victoria Woodards, visited Copenhagen to glean ideas for innovative transportation projects, such as the planned Tahoma to Tacoma Trail Network. The region-wide system would connect communities from Mount Rainier National Park to Commencement Bay. Some segments of the trail already exist, but more investment is needed to create the kind of network Walker dreams about. She and others want it to function as