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  • the Tacoma YMCA’s Skookum Club. By the end of the 1900s, PLA was vibrant with sports spirit, and many additional sports were added throughout the 1910s. (Photo: PLU Archives) The first men’s basketball team in 1901. +Enlarge Photo (Photo: PLU Archives) The 1907 women's basketball team. +Enlarge Photo 1920s & 1930s: Laying the Foundation Athletics continued to build momentum as legendary coach Clifford Olson led the men’s basketball and football teams into eras of rarefied form; the Parkland Golf

  • refreshment. “Life is not health but healing; not being but becoming; not rest but exercise. We are not yet what we shall be, but we are growing toward it. The process is not yet finished, but it is going on. This is not the end, but it is the road. All does not yet gleam brightly, but all is being purified.” — Martin Luther Torvend said Luther saw two problems with paying indulgences: it discriminated against the poor and was nowhere to be found in the Scriptures. Marty's Reformation StationLearn about

  • life-giving vine and receiving refreshment. “Life is not health but healing; not being but becoming; not rest but exercise. We are not yet what we shall be, but we are growing toward it. The process is not yet finished, but it is going on. This is not the end, but it is the road. All does not yet gleam brightly, but all is being purified.” — Martin Luther Torvend said Luther saw two problems with paying indulgences: it discriminated against the poor and was nowhere to be found in the Scriptures

  • until they are challenged, the oppressors both in the present and future, can continue to deprive the Romani people of their human rights and dignity.Sophia MahrTitle: Mayer Summer Research Fellow presentation Who: Sophia Mahr ’18, Pacific Lutheran UniversityBio: Sophia Mahr is a junior at PLU majoring in Global Studies with concentrations in Development and Social Justice & International Affairs. Sophia is also pursuing minors in Holocaust and Genocide Studies & French. She received the Kurt Mayer

  • correctional facility toward the end of her sentence. “She did all the practical things I needed,” Simmons said. “She facilitated and made sure I had connection with my children.” The lifeline of volunteers included a cohort of lawyers, who helped Simmons sort through the legal hurdles that awaited her after prison. Simmons credits them with preserving the nursing credentials she worked so hard to earn. “Today I’ve been able to keep my nursing license because I got access to legal information,” she said

  • thing in college programming if it was just given a fighting chance. At this point, it was really a last chance. The future was bleak if their arguments fell short. “It would have been the institutional end of the Outdoor Rec program,” Espinosa said. Fortunately the ASPLU was won over by the pair’s prospective budget plan and trip ideas, approving a $10,000 commitment to revamp the re-envisioned project during the following school year. “Outdoor Rec has always had this strong affinity group, a niche

  • was permitted to leave the correctional facility toward the end of her sentence. “She did all the practical things I needed,” Simmons said. “She facilitated and made sure I had connection with my children.” The lifeline of volunteers included a cohort of lawyers, who helped Simmons sort through the legal hurdles that awaited her after prison. Simmons credits them with preserving the nursing credentials she worked so hard to earn. “Today I’ve been able to keep my nursing license because I got

  • condition. This includes being able to modify decisions and actions when dictated by new relevant data or after analysis of new or existing data. The student is expected to use information gained in courses based in the liberal arts, basic and applied sciences in the development of the plan of care which includes being able to relate pathophysiological and psychological basis of disease to client’s status. Students must be able to problem solve and think critically in order to develop appropriate

  • organization, “Oeuvre de secours aux enfants” and specifically about persons from that organization who worked in Le Chambon-sur-Lignon and Chabannes. I will show brief interviews with four of those rescuers. I will end my talk by stressing why it is important to emphasize Jewish resistance and why it is essential to understand non-violent rescue as resistance. “Jewish Women in the Dutch Resistance” – Judith van Praag While there was no per se Jewish organized Resistance in the Netherlands, many Jewish men

  • she might end up settling back in Washington, maybe working at Olympic or Rainier national parks. But for now, she says she is very happy with where she is and she thinks she’s found her vocation. “I really enjoy this job and will stick with this as long as I can,” she said. Plog said she occasionally runs into fellow Lutes at the park. Her advice to them and others: “Take a side job,” she said. “Do whatever it takes to find your passions. “Don’t be worried about trying an internship or job that