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  • /resolute/spring-2014/alumni-news . Supplemental Issue RESOLUTE is Pacific Lutheran University's flagship magazine, published twice a year, with an extra online-only update in September. EDITORIAL OFFICES PLU, Building 29 Tacoma, WA 253-535-8410 Contact Us Links Discovery Alumni News Class Notes Calendar Credits Contact Recent Posts Billboards September 8, 2014 Lutheran Studies Conference September 8, 2014 The Art of Diplomacy September 8, 2014 A Decade of Distinction September 5, 2014 Archives

  • , published twice a year, with an extra online-only update in September. EDITORIAL OFFICES PLU, Building 29 Tacoma, WA 253-535-8410 Contact Us Links Discovery Alumni News Class Notes Calendar Credits Contact Recent Posts Billboards September 8, 2014 Lutheran Studies Conference September 8, 2014 The Art of Diplomacy September 8, 2014 A Decade of Distinction September 5, 2014 Archives > < Winter 2018 Fall 2017 Spring 2017 Winter 2017 Fall 2016 Spring 2016 Winter 2016 Fall 2015 Spring 2015 Winter 2015 Fall

  • for the earth. Essays must demonstrate that students have read and interacted with: 1. The university’s mission statement at www.plu.edu/about/ 2. The Wild Hope statement on vocation at Center’s website: www.plu.edu/vocation 3. “Core Elements in Lutheran Higher Education,” and the core element entitled, “The Intrinsic Value of the Whole Creation,” at www.plu.edu/lutheran-studies/core-elements/ Please submit your essay, formatted as a Word document and sent electronically, to Laree Winer, Associate

  • lecture presented arguments from Halvorson’s most recent book, Code Nation: Personal Computing and the Learn to Program Movement in America (2020). It can be viewed now on PLU’s YouTube Channel, at https://youtu.be/mqsrEYMwR6w. Code Nation is a five-year research project that grew out of Halvorson’s work with the Innovation Studies program and his duties as Benson Family Chair of Business and Economic History at PLU. The book explores the business and technical history of computer programming in

  • Homecoming Highlights Awards Recognition Alumni Profiles Alumni Events Class Notes Calendar Home Articles posted byKatie Baumann Katie Baumann Katie Baumann graduated from PLU in May 2014 with a degree in Communication 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

  • or suspicious activity to Campus Safety or call 911 Pierce County Sheriff’s Department (PCSD). If you encounter: A disruptive or hostile individual  -Someone making threats (in person or on cyber/social media) -A person acting suspiciously -Harassing or threatening phone calls/text messages Contact the Pierce County Sheriff’s Department (PCSD) Dial 7911 from any campus phone Dial 911 from any other phone Provide the following information: Your location Description of events Description of

  • from previous studies, or audio recordings that were collected for a purpose other than research. In order to be considered human subject research, the existing data must include private information. If a data set is accessible to the public without special permissions, such as some portions of U.S. Census data, the data available is not private and thus would not need to be reviewed by the HPRB.Category 5: Public Benefits or Service ProgramsResearch and demonstration projects which are conducted

  • from previous studies, or audio recordings that were collected for a purpose other than research. In order to be considered human subject research, the existing data must include private information. If a data set is accessible to the public without special permissions, such as some portions of U.S. Census data, the data available is not private and thus would not need to be reviewed by the HPRB.Category 5: Public Benefits or Service ProgramsResearch and demonstration projects which are conducted

  • . in Xavier 201. About the Author: Joshua L. Reid was born and raised in Washington and is a registered member of the Snohomish Indian Nation. Reid is currently an associate professor of American Indian Studies and the John Calhoun Smith Memorial Endowed Associate Professor of History at the University of Washington. Reid’s presentation is titled “Makah Voices and the Sea” and will be related to his inaugural book “The Sea is my Country.” This award-winning book explores the Makahs, a tribal nation

  • sciences divisions, and the School of Business. “The heart of the university is its intellectual life, which is invisible,” said Patricia O’Connell Killen, provost and dean of graduate studies. “The research reception is one of the best ways we have of displaying the really exciting thinking and problem-solving and framing of new knowledge that our students engage in with faculty.” Geosciences professor Jill Whitman added that tangible representations of the research work, such as posters and papers