Page 303 • (3,576 results in 0.022 seconds)

  • @plu.edu with questions. Read Previous YouTube Short: Lutes at the Daffodil Parade! Read Next What’s in our room? Take a tour in Pflueger. LATEST POSTS Summer Reading Recommendations July 11, 2024 Stuart Gavidia ’24 majored in computer science while interning at Amazon, Cannon, and Pierce County June 13, 2024 Ash Bechtel ’24 combines science and social work for holistic view of patient care; aims to serve Hispanic community June 13, 2024 Universal language: how teaching music in rural Namibia was a

  • . Dave described Norm as a cautious, quiet professor type who took great care of himself after having a heart problem in early 2008. By the time of the reunion, his classmates noticed that he seemed to look healthier than he did when he was a student. Then everything changed. In mid-February Norm had a heart attack. It was severe enough that his heart could not be completely repaired. Then, in quick succession he had a stroke, developed pneumonia and was diagnosed with pancreatic cancer that had

  • beneficial an economics degree is in the world today. Discuss current events at the local, federal, and global level and how they relate to economics. Have the opportunity to meet and connect with other economic majors and minors. Alumni Mentorship ProgramAll declared economics majors have the opportunity to get matched with an economics alumni mentor. This year we will match interested students to alumni in fields such as technology, banking, health care, and consulting, for example. Learn more about

  • reside in residence halls, attend classes, and engage in other activities while following the university guidelines for mitigation strategies in place at that time. Students with COVID-19-like symptoms Any student who develops illness symptoms consistent with COVID-19, regardless of vaccination status, must contact the Health Center or their healthcare provider for evaluation and possible COVID-19 testing. If they seek care from a non-PLU healthcare provider, the student must additionally inform the

  • involved with health-care and entertainment. Many of our alumni work in these companies and helped to start or expand them. The current director of Innovation Studies is Junichi Tsuneoka, Assistant Professor of Communication, Media, and Design Arts. Professor Tsuneoka teaches graphic design and has a list of professional clients that includes Nike, Adidas, Brooks, Google, Microsoft, and Seattle’s Best Coffee. The founding director of Innovation Studies was Michael Halvorson, Ph.D., Benson Family Chair

  • foundation in Chinese language, culture, and history, and an opportunity to focus on the religious-philosophical world view and the economic structure of China. Economics The Pacific Lutheran University Economics department offers a multitude of ways to study the field of economics. Are you interested in understanding how choices made individually and collectively affect issues such as immigration, health care, environmental issues, or income inequality? English The study of English offers excellent

  • Lutheran colleges and universities – “Educating for lives of thoughtful inquiry, service, leadership, and care: for others, their communities, and the earth.” Not only do we encourage our students to discern where and how best they can serve the world (their vocations), we ourselves serve the world through the provision of this education. At their best, then, Lutheran schools are organized around this calling, a calling committed to the promotion of human well-being in a world marked by much ignorance

  • magic, I also believe in tough-minded examinations of the thematic and formal elements that we use as writers.  As a teacher, I prefer discussions in which everyone seems to have a lab coat on, detailing the mechanics of the work at hand.  How a piece achieves its force through writerly decisions—decisions which have been guided by thought and feeling, insight and intuition, analysis and imagination, failure and risk—this is what I care about. As a necessary complement to the writer’s solitary work

  • ’08                 Moderated by Katherine Wiley, Assistant Professor of Anthropology Location: Scandinavian Cultural Center 3:30 - 4:45 p.m. | Births, Deaths, and Deportations: Health Care and the Struggle for Immigrant Rights     Speaker: Lisa Sun-Hee Park, Professor and Chair of Asian American Studies with affiliations in Sociology and Feminist Studies at the University of California – Santa Barbara      Introduced by Teresa Ciabattari, Professor of Sociology and the Chair of Women’s and Gender