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  • – Walking campus tour – Meet at the Clock Tower in front of the Anderson University Center 3:00 – 5:00 pm – Informal gathering at Farrelli’s on Garfield Street 5:30 – 8:30 pm – 50th Reunion, the key event for everyone to reconnect and reminisce. There will be a slideshow and a table of memorabilia. Please bring any items from your time at PLU to display and if you have college photos you would like to submit for the slideshow, please send them to alumni@plu.edu. Business casual (suits not required

  • Add Edit Remove Back New Delete Student Instructions Training Video Human Participants Review Board Site Menu Home Students Step 1: Do you need review? Step 2: Consult Step 3: Online CITI training Step 4: HPRB basics Step 5: Methods issues Step 6: Review time Step 7: Submit Proposal Step 8: Respond to HPRB Step 9: Your responsibilities Faculty et al. PLU Researchers Instructors Faculty Supervisors Non-PLU Researchers Forms & Templates Mentor Instructions Frequently Asked Questions Meet the HPRB

  • Remove Back New Delete Unit Designates Training Video Human Participants Review Board Site Menu Home Students Step 1: Do you need review? Step 2: Consult Step 3: Online CITI training Step 4: HPRB basics Step 5: Methods issues Step 6: Review time Step 7: Submit Proposal Step 8: Respond to HPRB Step 9: Your responsibilities Faculty et al. PLU Researchers Instructors Faculty Supervisors Non-PLU Researchers Forms & Templates Mentor Instructions Frequently Asked Questions Meet the HPRB Meeting Schedule

  • . These notes illuminate a word, a phrase, or whole sentences by foregrounding contextual knowledge and making connections to other texts and media across space and time. As a complement to this project, we’ll be posting scholarship, articles, and media at the intersection of Jane Austen and environmental humanities. Our project does not presume to be transformational–it is a drop in an overflowing bucket. But we hope to create a meaningful conversation about how her work can help us reflect on the

  • Seattle vocalist Gail Pettis, and the Jazz Sound Trio, with PLU jazz faculty David Deacon-Joyner, Clipper Anderson, and Mark Ivester. In October, 2015, PLU announced its intention to sell KPLU. Through a historic fundraising effort, the legions of listeners gathered the $7 million dollars to purchase the broadcast license and reform 88.5 FM as a community-owned radio station. At the time of this writing, 88.5 is awaiting FCC approval to transfer the license. The station will acquire new call letters

  • Award for Dedication to Justice and Fairness.Naghmeh ShadabiNaghmeh is an alumna of BIHE. She attended high school but could not accompany her friends into college because she is a Baha’i, and entered BIHE in 2007. She received a decent education in psychology despite all the difficulties and risk factors, and graduated in 2011. During this period, BIHE was attacked several time by Iranian official. She was doing her last semester in 2011 which the members of psychology department at BIHE were

  • chemistry or dentistry was his future—but a medical mission trip the summer before his senior year to Costa Rica and Panama changed everything. He kept a journal of his time and felt his perspective shift, reflecting on new ideas about who he was and wanted to do. “After seeing a place that doesn’t have much access to medicine and is very underserved, I felt my heart tug in the direction of medicine,” he says. Arnits discussed his plans with PLU mentor, Professor Neal Yakelis, who encouraged his

  • weeks, giving people plenty of time to watch them all, Finitsis said. The videos pull stories from Genesis, Judges, 2 Kings and Job. The modern interpretation takes the form of talk shows, Lego animation, soap operas and spoofs on “The Office,” “Dr. Phil” and “Judge Judy.” “We want to reward their creativity and all this talent,” Finitsis said. “People should catch a glimpse of it. It’s a lot of work. These students have gone out of their way to produce something really good.” The three videos with

  • campus master planning documents and staff positions. “It’s fun seeing how everything on campus meshes together,” Krzmarzick said. It’s the first time data from across the university has been collected and compiled into one report. Krzmarzick said most of her information comes from Dining and Culinary Services, Facilities and Environmental Services. The STARS system has helped highlight what PLU is doing right and revealed where improvements are needed. “We definitely have a lot of good things going

  • said. “And for me sports is the one place where you can go to an event and almost always see something you didn’t expect – an amazing catch or a buzzer-beater shot. That’s the purest appeal of covering sports.” Eagan said that while covering major sports teams is at the core of his work he finds high school sports and small college sports offer some of the most compelling stories. All three journalists agreed that the priorities in sports coverage have changed over the years with less time and