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  • . (Feb. 23, 2015)—Over... January 20, 2015 Super Bowl Stage Setter Lute’s Company Sets the Stage for Seahawks Super Bowl Rally in Arizona TACOMA, Wash. (Jan. 28, 2015)—If... January 20, 2015 History Article Prize Molly Loberg ’98 Honored by Prestigious Female Historian Association TACOMA, Wash. (Jan. 29, 2015)—Molly... January 20, 2015 The Modern-Day Harstad Adventurers The Hikers Other Adventurers Chris Ann Meno, David's wife, Bloomington, Ind., b. 1977. Timothy... January 15, 2015 Presentation

  • community our President envisions, our commission’s goal is to develop ideas and priorities that position PLU for long-term financial health to deliver our mission. These are commitments that will guide our process and work: Be authentic to Pacific Lutheran University’s history, culture, and mission. Honor Pacific Lutheran University’s governance systems and processes. Use a broadly inclusive process that embraces Pacific Lutheran University’s collective wisdom, creativity, and experience. Develop

  • of quota. Shelondra Harris ’17: Black Student Union formed (again) in order to unite black students and other ethnicities through organization of events that emphasize the history, culture, existence and influence of such individuals. BSU is a space for my race. What were/are some of the club’s challenges? Bruce Driver ’78: Trying to have the meetings and consistently have people come to the meetings. Rodreshia Dunbar ’01: I don’t think we had challenges in the beginning. There was so much

  • Center for Vocation. In honor of our 50th reunion, we invite you to join us as classmates to invest in the futures and vocational discernment of all those who come through PLU. As a member of the Class of 1973, you understand the seriousness of purpose and desire to live a life of deeper meaning and contribution. We graduated from PLU during a highly conflicted time in U.S. history. Within this context, we made decisions about our future career paths, many of us feeling called to make an impact on

  • campus for both his passion for student learning and also his knack for teaching design principles to all students, including those lucky enough to be Design majors in the B.F.A. program. Avila’s influence on PLU’s Innovation Studies program is significant. Because of his guidance, all students working toward the Innovation Studies minor must develop essential skills in either Communications or Design, in addition to the essential coursework that they take in business, economics, history, and ethics

  • arguments being made.Chicago (used by History, Religion, Social Sciences, etc.)Chicago Manual of Style: RR Z253.U69 2017 (Located by the library help desk.) Chicago Style Resources: CMOS: Author-Date: Sample Citations CMOS: Notes and Bibliography: Sample Citations Published by the University of Chicago Press, Chicago style comes in two varieties: Notes and Bibliography: This variation is used in fields like history, religion, and arts. Unlike MLA or APA, this variation does not use in-text citations

  • , as the old joke goes, the extent of diversity on campus, was Swedes, Danes and Norwegians. But as the university began to grow, both in student population and in recognition, the make-up of the student population began to change. A lot of this has to do with PLU’s history. PLU always had an international focus inasmuch as it was very connected to Norway. By the late ’70s, things were beginning to fundamentally change – PLU was becoming more globally focused. By the early ’80s, according to Phil

  • degrees of separation from one person. “You know a lot more people than you think, and can impact,” Waller said. The Third Annual Holocaust Conference was kicked off Thursday night by an examination of the slave labor camps the Germans set up around Poland and Germany to power their war machine. Prof. Christopher Browning, Frank Porter Graham Professor of History at the University of North Carolina in Chapel Hill, and a former PLU professor who taught in the university’s history department for 25

  • skied from upper to lower campus. I studied away in Windhoek, Namibia, for one semester (though it was cut short by COVID). Learning about the history of Namibia was fascinating and eye-opening. Traveling to National parks and seeing elephants, giraffes, zebras, and cheetahs is something I’ll cherish for the rest of my life. Being able to study away without it costing more than my regular cost of attendance was amazing.  In Namibia, I started a biochemistry research project on the potential chemical

  • of Scene magazine, she was inspired to recall—and share—her own Choir of the West story … from 1939. It was so full of history and facts and fun, we wanted to share it with everyone. Writes Lorna: “Now at 93 years old, this trip remains very vivid in my memory!” By Lorna Vosburg '40, '69 “Whee…eee!,” I read in my diary. “We are off on the trip of a lifetime!” I was just 19 years old, a student at Pacific Lutheran College and a member of the famous Choir of the West, which was leaving on a 3,000