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  • organizations Collaborate with community partners for social impact Practice teaming and human-centered design principles Enrich the PLU Experience Nurture interdisciplinary connections Connect with Parkland and Tacoma communities Think deeply about vocation Create a safe space for dreaming and collaborating Make a genuine contribution to the world PLU students try a welding project under the guidance of Art & Design Professor Spencer Ebbinga. In addition to the academic curriculum, students get a chance to

  • Accessibility Checker is a three-step process: Step 1: Click Accessibility Checker Icon Access the Accessibility Checker tool by clicking its icon in the rich-text editor toolbar. The Accessibility Checker icon looks like a human silhouette inside a black circle.   Step 2: Review Suggested Changes Review any reported issues in the Accessibility Checker dialog box that pops up. The pink area at the top of the box will provide a list of issues, along with Previous and Next buttons to navigate through the list

  • Natalie Gutierrez. Krystal Handy, Ph.D., LMFT PLUS Group FacilitatorKrystal Handy Ph.D., LMFT was born and raised in the great state of California and ventured to Washington State for a few years following life’s pull to the Pacific Northwest. While in Washington, Dr. Handy became an alumnus of Olympic College with an Associate’s degree in Psychology; earned a Bachelor’s degree in Human Services from Western Washington University; a Master’s degree in Marriage and Family Therapy from Pacific Lutheran

  • ride later in their lives,” Desmond said. In fact one of the children introduces the play, somewhat like the stage manager in “Our Town,” as a ghost. During a rehearsal last month, the puppets looked like paper mache crash dummies. But once the curtain rises March 10th, the puppets’ faces will have been molded to resemble their human counterparts, and they will be dressed in clothing that will mirror what the actors will wear later in the play. Vogel pays homage to Wilder, through the space setting

  • research tools, food, camping gear, and clothes on their backs, packing light was a must. “It kind of got to a competition this summer, who could pack the lightest – who could make do with the least amount of clothing,” Page recalled. Although such a research project wasn’t required for his major, Page said there’s no other way he could see himself spending the summer. “I feel more at home in those types of environments than I do in a more human-dominated environment,” said Page. “Mount Rainier this

  • March 1, 2013 PLU pair starts theater company in NYC By JuliAnne Rose ’13 Tristan and Julie Morris are quite the couple. They graduated from PLU together in 2008 and took off to pursue their performing careers. In 2011???, the couple decided to start their own non-profit theater company, Babel, to help other performers get ahead in the business. “I think it is a wonderful place where a community can come together and learn what it means to be human,” said Tristan Morris. “It is a place to

  • said. “I would anticipate more of these in the future.” More students were interested in going than Career Connections could accommodate. At Alaska Airlines, there are many job opportunities in many different fields, including human resources, computer science, marketing, and communication. Gary Peterson, maintenance supervisor, led the students on a tour of the Alaska Airlines hangar. Students explored the ins and outs of a plane. They sat in the cockpit, looked in the engines and checked out the

  • space with the office of Human Resources and the Marriage and Family Therapy program, as well as several new classrooms. Moving to lower campus, work continues on the softball dugouts, which will include new backstops, new drains and wiring in the fields, and a new scoreboard. The $500,000 project will be completed in September, Kaniss said. Students will notice refinished floors at Olson Auditorium  and Memorial, as well as new wood floors and bleachers on the second floor of Olson. Upgrades are

  • after a day in the lab. “And this work with Dr. Saxowsky called to me. I knew I’d be interested in it. This (research) looked at how something so small could affect the human body … this is a fascinating experience to do groundbreaking work like this.” One recent August morning, Deane and her partners, Pannapat Angkanaworakul and Jessika Iverson, carefully counted yeast cultures that had started days earlier in agar plates. One culture was looking good, but when Deane showed another to Saxowsky

  • majors in their capstone projects on the topic of “The Nature, Ethics, and Politics of Technology.” During Fall 2014, students questioned the common conception of technology as an instrumentum or means, which human beings use to pursue their various ends.  They also explored other questions, such as: Has modern technology fundamentally altered the ways we understand and relate to the world, others, and ourselves? Has modern technology fundamentally altered the kinds of projects we pursue? If so, has