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  • and provided access to the online Registration form. Once received, please complete registration and payment using the link provided by the deadline. Each student must register on their own even if the payment is going through the school. Participant fee: $125 (non-refundable) Payment Deadline: December 23, 2024, 2:00pm Please note that no refunds will be allowed after registration has been completed, and no registration or payment will be accepted following the deadline of December 23, 2024

  • isolation because mates are often (usually?) chosen from within flocks. An additional behavioral factor that may promote assortative pairing is song divergence. I am currently investigating the nature and extent of song divergence between call types. Matt Smith My research centers around the mechanisms by which estrogen exerts effects on the central nervous system that goes beyond its ability to merely drive reproductive function. Recent evidence suggests that estrogen plays a role in such diverse

  • March 19, 2009 What would be awesome? By Steve Hansen It would be easy to say that, over his career, PLU graduate Peter Parsons has found himself in the right place at the right time. He was on the Xbox development team when there were fewer than a dozen people working on the project. He was product manager for some of the early groundbreaking video games like Flight Simulator and Age of Empires. He had a hand in the “Where the Hell is Matt?” video going viral. Oh, and by the way, he also led

  • June 4, 2009 Swimmer Jay Jones rewrites the record books. And he’s only a sophomore. When PLU swimming head coach Jim Johnson recruited Jay Jones out of Mt. View High School in Vancouver, Wash., during the 2006-07 school year, he knew that the young man with an ordinary last name could be an extraordinary swimmer for his Lutes. In (swimming)recruiting you go by times, not like other sports such as basketball and football where it is more subjective,” Johnson said. “He had good times, so we knew

  • July 23, 2009 Where the classes are hard. And the issues? Harder. By Steve Hansen Josh Stromberg and Catherine Cheng aren’t together in any of the same classes. They’re not studying the same major. They’re not even in the same year. (He graduates next year; she a year later.) But when they talk about what they are studying as part of PLU’s International Honors Program, they’re on exactly the same page. International Honors Program aren’t simply studying complex world issues. Their conversation

  • in the book – When China Rules the World: The End of the Western World and the Rise of the Middle Kingdom (The Penguin Press; November  2009). In his talk, Jacques will offer provocative answers to some of the most pressing questions about China’s growing place on the world stage. “I remember being very excited (when I read his book) because this was a set a questions that I’d been waiting for about 10 years for someone to ask,” said Gregory Youtz,  music professor at PLU and the director of

  • the Center for Continued Nursing Learning, and was directed by Dr. Patsy Maloney. A final major accomplishment of the School of Nursing was the PLU Wellness Center, which for over 23 years provided low-cost health care to the community until its closure in the summer of 2009 due to shrinking public funding. A nurse practitioner faculty member, Professor Joan Stiggelbout, started the Center in the mid-1980′s. The nurse-managed center made a major contribution to the School of Nursing and the

  • , and was directed by Dr. Patsy Maloney. A final major accomplishment of the School of Nursing was the PLU Wellness Center, which for over 23 years provided low-cost health care to the community until its closure in the summer of 2009 due to shrinking public funding. A nurse practitioner faculty member, Professor Joan Stiggelbout, started the Center in the mid-1980′s. The nurse-managed center made a major contribution to the School of Nursing and the university, as well as to the local community of

  • serves as Interim Director of CNE and of the CCNL. A final major accomplishment of the School of Nursing was the PLU Wellness Center, which for over 23 years provided low-cost health care to the community until its closure in the summer of 2009 due to shrinking public funding. A nurse practitioner faculty member, Professor Joan Stiggelbout, started the Center in the mid-1980′s. The nurse-managed center made a major contribution to the School of Nursing and the university, as well as to the local

  • requirements set by the Americans with Disabilities Act and Amendments Act of 2009 and Section 504 of the Rehabilitation Act of 1973. Each student has already provided documentation to our office verifying their status as a person with a disability, and their accommodation plan was developed in accordance with their documentation and disability law. We have implemented a case management approach to working with students. If you see a struggling student, or have concerns about their progress in your course