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  • Alumni Profile Once a Lute, Always a Lute Archives © 2019 Pacific Lutheran University | All Rights Reserved X Facebook Instagram LinkedIn Vimeo VOLUME 6, ISSUE 2 – SPRING 2019 CO-EDITORS Debbie Cafazzo Lace M. Smith WRITERS Debbie Caffazo Thomas Kyle-Milward Tad Monroe ’97 Kari Plog ’11 Rosemary Ponnekanti Vince Schleitwiler PHOTOGRAPHER John Froschauer VIDEOGRAPHER Joshua Weirsma ’18 EXECUTIVE CREATIVE DIRECTOR Simon Sung ASSOCIATE VICE PRESIDENT OF MARKETING AND COMMUNICATIONS Lace M. Smith WEB

  • walk the talk February 5, 2016 Podcasts January 20, 2016 Campus Ministry January 13, 2016 Podcasts April 30, 2015 Archives > < Winter 2018 Fall 2017 Spring 2017 Winter 2017 Fall 2016 Spring 2016 Winter 2016 Fall 2015 Spring 2015 Winter 2015 Fall 2014 Spring 2014 © 2015 Pacific Lutheran University | All Rights Reserved Back to top

  • . They continue to fight each day, with his memory lingering in all they do — from online fundraisers for the Epilepsy Foundation to marches for equal rights. “We can keep Panayotis Alexandros Horton in our world by thinking and speaking our memories as long as we live,” his brother wrote. That’s how his family ensures their three-linked chain will never break, and — in Panago’s words — will carry on: “I am from a strong link of three,” Panago wrote in his “I Am” poem, in a PLU class. “From a chain

  • The university has determined that some control of and procedure for commercial solicitation and advertising is needed to:  Maintain a community respectful of individual right to privacy;  Regulate the means by which commercial advertising occurs on private property;  Offer procedure for students and businesses to request appeal of policy issues.  The intent of Pacific Lutheran University’s solicitation policy is to maintain the community living rights extended to all students, staff and

  • ignorance 40 years before Austen wrote Persuasion: “My own sex, I hope, will excuse me, if I treat them like rational creatures, instead of […] viewing them as if they were in a state of perpetual childhood, unable to stand alone.” Critics of the new Persuasion film echo A Vindication of the Rights of Women (1792) with their frustration at the way Austen’s original story lost some of its reason and complexity in this adaptation. Our dissatisfaction with the movie gives us much to reflect on, and as

  • umbrella of PLU’s Department of Recreation, it remains a student-run organization from pretty much the top down. That’s key, and something that makes the program stand out as more and more universities choose to contract out to professionals. Student directors Britt McCracken ’19 and Isaiah Scheel ’19 are running OR this year, coordinating a crew of 13 trip leaders and organizing at least one different trip each weekend. Rob Thompson, PLU’s assistant athletic director for recreation over the past five

  • think that our greatest contribution to children’s healthcare is through our emphasis on $1, interactive donations. This philosophy ensures that for every $1000 dollars we raise, we’ve ideally involved 1000 people within the PLU community. The interactive effort means that the individual becomes involved in the process of donating, rather than just dropping a dollar in a can. This the donor is more likely to reflect on the act of donating and what it means to them – why they want to support

  • academic professional; it was here I found mentors that helped me become a leader; and it was here that I could relax a little. Over the years I have also used the Center to hold Philosophy seminars. Some of my most successful and fulfilling classes were held in the Women’s Center, and I attribute much of that to the atmosphere it provides. The houses have changed over the years, but not the spirit of the place.” Alex Knowles ’14: Former Women’s Center volunteer; co-coordinator of SAPET her sophomore

  • echoed her frustration. Audrey Knutson ’07, a political science and global studies major, said 10-year-old Marimaua Muya can verbally comprehend what is said but has difficulty understanding what she reads. The Bantu children are still trying to adjust to life in the United States. During one tutoring session, Knutson asked Muya to locate Tacoma on a map of the United States posted in a corner of the classroom. Standing on a chair, Muya’s focus was on the Midwest. She needed prodding from Knutson to

  • 2016, they crafted a research paper examining those experiences, which are often marginalized at in higher education. It focused on how black students navigate the natural hair journeys on campuses in the Pacific Northwest. Taiwo and Hambrick jumped at the opportunity to write the paper after learning of a political science journal accepting submissions on the theme of #BlackGirlMagic, a movement created in 2013 by CaShawn Thompson to celebrate black women. Tolu Taiwo (left), outreach and