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  • women involved in the economics department. After one year of school she will join the Peace Corps to fulfill her internship requirement for her degree. Taylor Brunstad, 2015Taylor is currently an assistant coach at Olympia Area Rowing where she mainly coaches the novice high school boys team and also coaches an adult learn to row program. In the future she wants to pursue a career in behavioral economics in either the public or private sector after completing a graduate program. Marguerite Clemens

  • Traveler. For 18 years, Cates was the executive director of Missoula Medical Aid, a non-profit that provides public health and surgery services in Honduras. In Missoula he has worked with the Missoula Writing Collaborative, teaching classes on short story writing in high schools, and the 406 writing workshop. For many years he worked as a fishing guide on the Smith River and raised cattle on his family farm in Wisconsin.Kent MeyersKent Meyers is the author of a memoir, a book of short fiction, and

  • Award, was a New York Times Book Review Editors’ Choice, and appeared on best books of 2013 lists from Amazon, Publishers Weekly, Salon, Library Journal, Bookpage, and the Pima County Public Library. His nonfiction has appeared in The New York Times, Tin House, the Guardian, and elsewhere, and recently won a Pushcart Prize. He attended the University of Arizona and was a Wallace Stegner Fellow at Stanford University. He has taught nonfiction writing at four MFA programs, Stanford’s Continuing

  • challenging thing hasn’t come yet."- Thomas Horn Horn also traveled to Holden Village in central Washington for a J-Term philosophy course. “There was no technology and 300 inches of snow on the ground,” he said. “Taking a class in that environment was pretty phenomenal.” Horn recently interviewed with AmeriCorps, a nonprofit organization focused on engaging adults in acts of public service. If accepted, he will be working in Seattle with the program College Access Now, helping to coach, mentor and

  • through a lower position must be moved to a safe position, or if necessary blocked, clamped or chained in place. All moving parts must be at rest and the start button must be activated to assure that the machine is in a zero mechanical state before starting work. Operating controls must be returned to the OFF position after the isolation of the equipment is verified. Equipment with power panels at public locations must be locked out or positively disabled at two separate locations. Plug-in cord

  • and Hong residence halls might be improved. There are other similar opportunities for us in the realm of both public and private grants for everything from student faculty research and creative projects to targeted capital projects to new initiatives in environmental sustainability. I salute all of you who are now involved in preparing over $12 million dollars in grant proposals. Goal #4: Long-Range Focus Our fourth goal is to maintain a long-range focus, even while dealing with immediate and

  • with us into exploring opportunities,” Belton says. The board is comprised of up to 37 members of the PLU alumni and Lutheran communities who are leaders in fields like technology, financial services, law, manufacturing and medicine. Frechette describes the board as a group wide open to new ideas and that asks smart, tough questions. “When I talk to enrollment managers at other schools I get the feeling that their boards are more hesitant about questioning traditional financial models and thinking

  • of biology with a private or public sector agency, organization, or company. Students will be expected to adhere to and document the objectives of a learning plan developed with and approved by a faculty sponsor. Credit will be determined by hours spent in the working environment and the depth of the project associated with the course of study. Prerequisites: BIOL 226 and consent of department chair. (1 to 4) BIOL 499 : Capstone: Senior Seminar - SR Capstone is a topical course in which students

  • demonstrations and experiments. Thus, the development of a yearlong, safe, “green” chemistry laboratory curriculum that addresses the needs and physical limitations of public schools is essential for future chemistry educators. 2:30 pm - Dissolution of Suspended Sediments from the Nisqually GlacierLuke Weinbrecht, Senior Capstone Seminar The dissolution kinetics of sediments taken from the Nisqually River was measured under field like conditions to investigate the chemical weathering present in the alpine

  • students in Pierce and King County as well as in Central Washington.  Janet hopes to begin graduate school soon to complete a Master’s in Public Administration in order to work toward equitable access to education for all students. Stephen Kitajo '12Stephen is a History major that now serves on the board of directors for the Puyallup Valley Chapter of the Japanese American Citizens League (JACL). Stephen’s role in organizing the Puyallup Fair’s 75th Remembrance event for those interned at the Puyallup