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  • An internship with the Portland Pickles solidifies Simon Luedtke’s plans for the future Posted by: Jeffrey Roberts / November 29, 2023 Image: Simon Luedtke ’24 spent the summer interning for the Portland Pickles, a collegiate wood-bat baseball team based out of Portland, OR. (PLU Photo / Sy Bean) November 29, 2023 By Jeffrey RobertsPLU Marketing & CommunicationsSimon Luedtke ’24 is a strategic communication major from Newberg, Oregon. His communication studies, combined with his part-time job

  • , and personal wellness skills within the context of PLU’s values of diversity, justice, and sustainability.  Section 16: International Students | Instructor(s): Dr. Scott Rogers, Dean of Assessment and Core Curriculum and Associate Professor of English & Dr. Bridget Yaden, Associate Provost for Undergraduate Programs and Professor of Hispanic and Latino Studies Transitions to PLU (PLUS 100) for LGBTQIA+ StudentsThis one credit course is designed to be an exclusive space for incoming LGBTQIA

  • FAQ for Students Asking for Letters of Recommendation Checklist, before you request the letter: Keep track of the deadlines. Ideally, your letter writers should have at least one month’s notice. Keep in mind that a potential letter writer might have to decline, and you’ll want to have enough time to find an alternate. Is this the right person from whom to request a letter? Choose people who are most familiar with your studies, research interests, or work, including at least one professor in the

  • collective understanding of this important region of the world.  A documentary titled The Revolutionary (2012) has been made about his life. He is a longtime friend of the Chinese Studies Program, and sometimes teaches at PLU as a Visiting Professor. Luz Vega-Marquis, Doctor of Humane Letters honoris causa Commencement, May 28, 2016 Luz Vega-Marquis is president and CEO of Marguerite Casey Foundation, where she oversees the foundation’s $700 million endowment and $35 million annual grantmaking budget. Ms

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  • is excellent preparation for the kinds of analyses they will be expected to master in law school.” Adamson credits multiple Economics professors in helping to prepare him for his Ph.D. research and coursework. “Professors Travis and (Lynn) Hunnicutt each worked with me on independent studies, and Professor (Martin) Wurm worked with me on my Capstone project. Both experiences were useful in learning about what graduate school and research would be like. Professor Peterson taught Game Theory and

  • practice partners.” Seavor says the entry-level master’s program is intense: within 15 months students complete the equivalent of a rigorous undergraduate nursing education, and are eligible to sit for the national licensure exam; then, for the second half of the program, the registered nurses begin their graduate-level studies. It’s not lost on Larsen how far he’s come since his 46-year-old self decided to embrace the intensity. “Nursing school was probably the most humbling thing I’ve done,” he said

  • and a minor in Religious Studies. At PLU, Katie worked with a variety of on-campus organizations, including MediaLab and University Marketing and Communications, and held a wide range of off-campus internships spanning from Tacoma to Seattle. Katie has just started work as an Account Coordinator at Copacino+Fujikado in Seattle and is looking forward to learning a new trade, a new city and staying in touch with her alma mater. Previous Post Service in Between Schooling Next Post Musical Memories

  • foster the ascent of his professional and personal vocation. Thankful to have had the opportunity to lead transit-advocacy efforts all over the country, Austin is now back in his element in Tacoma, advocating, organizing and educating on behalf of the issue in the state he loves. Now regarded as a national leader and expert on transportation advocacy, the Religion and Global Studies graduate says he’s still every bit as passionate about social justice as he was a decade ago while a student at PLU

  • , she said – and continued her research during her graduate studies at Cal Baptist. In 2014, at the Far West Athletic Trainers’ Association Conference in Las Vegas, she won the research presentation award for her poster titled “Arrhythmogenic Right Ventricular Dysplasia Treatment and Management: A Case Report.” Crushing as her diagnosis was, Daly has learned to cope with its ramifications. And her blossoming career as a certified athletic trainer shows she’s pretty good at caring for others, too