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  • IHON, Global Studies, and/or Language courses. Faculty from these courses regularly collaborate with Hong professional and student staff to provide linked co-curricular offerings connected with Hong Global Community.STEM HouseSTEM House is for students interested in learning about the fields of STEM (Science, Technology, Engineering, and/or Mathematics). This community is great for intended STEM-related majors and also for those not majoring in STEM who would like to continue their learning on

  • and colleagues. Dr. Doris Geneva Stucke Doris died Dec. 22, 2017, at the age of 99. She was born in Malta, Montana, to Herbert and Esther Stucke on Jan. 31, 1918, and lived in Parkland since 1967. Her early childhood through two years of college were lived in Minnesota and Montana. She earned a nursing diploma from Sibley Memorial Hospital School of Nursing and a Bachelor of Science in nursing at The American University in Washington, D.C. She received a Master of Education in nursing from the

  • some mismatched cross-country skis, moldy tents and battered snow shoes. So two students, Eddie Espinosa ’96 and Matt Wade ’98, set out to save it. “It was just a line in the (Associated Students of Pacific Lutheran University) budget,” Espinosa said. “There was nobody really running it.” Espinosa, an exercise science major with a passion for climbing, vowed to rectify that problem. But, as a senior, he needed someone to partner with who could take the reins on this project after he graduated

  • procedures prescribed to protect the integrity of an assignment, test, or other evaluation. The most common forms of academic dishonesty are cheating and plagiarism. Cheating includes, but is not limited to: Submitting material that is not yours as part of your course performance, such as submitting a downloaded paper off of the Internet; or Using information or devices not allowed by the instructor (such as formulas or a computer program or data); or unauthorized materials (such as a copy of an

  • prescribed to protect the integrity of an assignment, test, or other evaluation.  The most common forms of academic dishonesty are cheating and plagiarism. Cheating includes, but is not limited to: Submitting material that is not yours as part of your course performance, such as submitting a downloaded paper off of the Internet; or Using information or devices not allowed by the instructor (such as formulas or a computer program or data); or unauthorized materials (such as a copy of an examination before

  • the liberal arts—A basic understanding of history, language, art, religion, culture, ethics, philosophy and science is a foundation for all more specialized knowledge, c.f., PLU’s ROTC program. Learning and research within community—Nobody pursues an education alone. We were meant to collaborate with each other. It’s built into our DNA. Even an online course assumes there’s someone on the other end helping to lead and guide us while we study in front of our laptop. The intrinsic value of the whole

  • financial analysts; Lauren as an accountant at Moss Adams.  Master’s graduate Chris will be teaching science at Washington High School; Melanie will be in elementary special education in Clover Park.  Sean is off to teach life skills through soccer in Uganda, while Nikki will be working to save lives in the ICU at Seattle’s Children’s Hospital. Yes, the Pacific Lutheran University Class of 2012 is ready for launch, and while the trails you have traveled make us proud; the paths lying ahead stretch our

  • Hall Associate Vice President for Campus Life Ramstad Hall Dean, School of Nursing Rieke Science Center Dean of Natural Sciences South Hall Associate Vice President for Campus Life Stuen Hall Associate Vice President for Campus Life Swimming Pool Director of Athletics and Recreation Tingelstad Hall Associate Vice President for Campus Life University Printing/Mail Services Associate Vice President for Marketing and Communications Wang Center House Executive Director Wang Xavier Hall Dean of Social

  • Kernel in God’s Eye, explores her family’s one-hundred-year-old wheat farm in Nebraska, and the changing role of food, God, science, race and agriculture in society, and was a finalist for the Lukas Prize, awarded by Columbia and Harvard University’s Schools of Journalism. She lives in San Francisco.Suzanne BerneSuzanne Berne is the author of four novels: The Dogs of Littlefield, The Ghost at the Table, A Perfect Arrangement, and A Crime in the Neighborhood, which won Great Britain’s Orange Prize in

  • the editor and founder of Humanosphere , an independent online news site based in Seattle and devoted to covering aid, development, global health, poverty and the humanitarian community. Before starting Humanosphere , which was first launched as an NPR experiment based at KPLU, Tom worked for decades as the science and medical reporter for the Seattle Post Intelligencer . A Seattle native, Tom also has produced a few local plays, about the news business, and once lived in his car. Previous Post