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  • to Share About Forgiveness at PLU-Sponsored March & Festival Read Next Rick Barot and Ann Pancake Discuss PLU’s MFA in Creative Writing and the Impact of Creative Writing (Podcast) COMMENTS*Note: All comments are moderated If the comments don't appear for you, you might have ad blocker enabled or are currently browsing in a "private" window. LATEST POSTS Three students share how scholarships support them in their pursuit to make the world better than how they found it June 24, 2024 Kaden Bolton

  • leading in New York. It’s also an example of the impact proposition that Professor Beth Kraig once presented to him in her office. Public libraries, his academic adviser told him, could be a catalyst for the democratization of education and information. Little did she know back then, her advisee would become one of the country’s most innovative, impactful and successful public librarians. Read Previous Opening more doors: PLU and PNWU strengthen their partnership to support future occupational and

  • will ping phones and offer fun facts about the historic theologian. All of the engaging events, including some that have yet to be determined, will build up to the milestone anniversary on Oct. 31, 2017, allowing a community to reflect together on a movement that continues to shape our values today. Challenging Authority Though he had the greatest impact, Luther was not the first to challenge the authority of church leaders. Samuel Torvend, Ph.D. and chair of Lutheran studies at PLU, explained that

  • hidden across PLU’s campus in October will ping phones and offer fun facts about the historic theologian. All of the engaging events, including some that have yet to be determined, will build up to the milestone anniversary on Oct. 31, 2017, allowing a community to reflect together on a movement that continues to shape our values today. Challenging Authority Though he had the greatest impact, Luther was not the first to challenge the authority of church leaders. Samuel Torvend, Ph.D. and chair of

  • of processing the juvenile delinquent by formal agencies of control. (4) SOCI 232 : Research Methods An overview of the methods to explore, describe, and analyze the social world. General issues in the design and implementation of research projects, as well as specific issues that arise in conducting interviews and field observations, constructing and administering surveys, analyzing existing data, and planning program evaluations. Required for sociology and social work majors. Prerequisite: SOCI

  • application, users can submit images and manage projects by storing multiple datasets and set parameters for the amount of blurriness deemed acceptable for any given project. The blurriness of the images is rated (1 to 5) to determine if images are in the acceptable range for the modeling datasets. Implications of this project could be used to efficiently sort or classify large image datasets. Currently, in the field of Geoscience, numerous images of topography are captured via drone imaging and manually

  • Presbyterian Church of Berthoud. After returning to the Pacific Northwest to raise a family, he found a new passion for the organ, both the sacred and the “cool”. While directing the choirs and performing on the pipe organ for St. Luke’s Memorial Episcopal Church (2020 – 2023), he continues to play the hammond B-3 organ at church events, local haunts such as Cider and Cedar, and now is working on several recording projects with his organ trio, Threocracy and the Noah Peddibon Trio. Yet the love of the

  • important factors helped me choose that PLU was the place for me. First, I wanted a culture change and to far be away from home. Growing up in rural Montana where everybody knows everybody and they all happen to be your fifth cousin, I wanted to get away from the small town life and experience an urban area in a controlled environment. The PLU “bubble” was exactly what I was looking for. Secondly, I was looking to play soccer for a university in the Northwest Conference and I knew that the program was

  • says, and it will serve other international students well, too. “It has strengthened my values and morals,” Urgessa said. “We’re not the same. We can’t be the same. That adds to the holistic experience of being a human being.” Urgessa’s cultural immersion won’t end with graduation. She plans to obtain a work visa and attend graduate school. She hopes to work in law and participate in ongoing activism. “I want to create change somehow,” she said. Eventually, she will return to Norway. But she isn’t