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  • must request housing with Summer Housing through Hospitality Services, as our office will not approve any requests prior to August 15th. The Early Arrival period is an extremely busy time for our office. Early Arrival requests take approximately 72  business hours to coordinate. Students who submit early arrival requests for next day arrival may be required to find alternative housing options if our staff is unable to process your request the day of your submission. You must have an Early Arrival

  • .  Our campus partners offer services that show our care for the whole student, not just their academics. Here are a few resources that you might find handy during your time with us. Accessibility and Accommodation Bedbugs: What you need to know Campus Ministry Campus Safety Alumni & Student Connections Counseling, Health & Wellness Services Center for Diversity, Justice, and Sustainability Suicide Prevention Resources Application for Accessibility and Accommodations Emergency Preparedness/Response

  • those auditions to get that SAG card, she added. Pansino found her first agent through connections she made at an acting studio class she took the first summer after she graduated. Have patience with your career. Look at it in the long term, she advised. For example, Jennifer Aniston was in five failed pilots before she landed her role on “Friends.” Pansino has already been in one failed pilot, “so I figure four more to go,” she quipped. “I don’t care if I’m 90 by the time I get that feature role in

  • pattern based on a series of dots, a kolam is an artful design that Hindu households use to communicate with their community: If there is a kolam on the doorstep, then all is well inside; if there is not, then neighbors know that all is not well. Thirumurthy, associate professor of Instructional Development and Leadership, remembers the days when she and her sisters would spend considerable time designing their family’s kolam – in a gentle spirit of competition, they would view their neighbor’s

  • November 12, 2012 A group of nine Computer Science and Computer Engineering students competed at an international computer programming competition Nov. 3. Team sets sights on next year By Jesse Major ’14 A group of nine Computer Science and Computer Engineering students competed at an international computer programming competition Nov. 3. First time competitor, Ben Landes ’14, described the Association for Computing Machinery International Collegiate Programming Contest as “sports for nerds

  • and procedures. The SCC does not accept books, manuscripts, or other printed materials. We suggest contacting PLU’s Archives. SCC Collection OnlineClick the image above to be taken to the SCC Artifact Collection OnlineSummary of Collection PrioritiesThe Scandinavian Cultural Center is adding to its artifact collection at this time. Summary of Acquisition Policy The Scandinavian Cultural Center (SCC) shall (1) collect artifacts that are consistent with its mission, (2) preserve its artifacts and

  • has been on the forefront of recruiting Norwegian students to attend university in the U.S., and in 1984 PLU became one of only 15 universities in the U.S. approved to receive special scholarships for Norwegian business majors. PLU has cooperative agreements with 9 Norwegian universities. Charles Nelson, former registrar at PLU, was knighted by King Olav for his efforts in building that relationship.  On average, PLU has about 60 Norwegian citizens studying at PLU annually. At the same time, PLU

  • institutional memory that suggests she really is the PLU Archives—and with humble humor. “Here I am projecting the Scandinavian image at the new library,” Ringdahl says of a 1967 photo. Six presidents have served PLU over Ringdahl’s single tenure, so clearly she has witnessed, and lived, a lot of history: the creation of BANTU (the black student union) on campus and recognition of Black History Month; campus unrest during the Vietnam war and the National Crisis Forum (“the only time Finals were cancelled

  • the largest private employer in Pierce County. She wore many hats, culminating in her role as CFO the last four years of her tenure. The opportunity started with CEO Bill Robertson, who was new at the time. After getting to know him, Loomis says she raised her hand for the next big step up: “I really want to do this job. I want to be CFO.” Before Loomis could take the leap, though, she needed to go back to school. The choice about where to go was easy. Pacific Lutheran University’s Master in

  • grandfather went into hiding. Inside the cellar, my son, Elliott, began searching for anything that could reveal insight about his great-grandpa’s experience during that time. He called me to the far back of the cellar, where an iron spiral staircase hung out of the ceiling. We looked at each other with shock in our eyes. We knew it was the staircase used by Grandpa Joe to hide from the Nazis. Flooded with emotion, my son and I dropped to sit on a broken step leading to nowhere. Revisiting the hard