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  • Room and Meals All full-time (12 semester hours) undergraduate students must live on campus in university housing unless they are: (a) living with their parent, spouse or child within 25 driving miles of PLU’s address (notarized/certified documentation required), or (b) at least 20 years old or have completed 60 semester credit hours by September 1 (for the next Fall Semester) or February 1 (for the next Spring Semester). Except for residents of South Hall, all students with an active housing

  • sciences. Through this comprehensive 10-week summer experience, Amgen Scholars will prepare for graduate study and a research career in the health sciences. Students will be matched with a faculty mentor and complete an original project under the guidance of their mentor. At the end of the program, Amgen Scholars will present their findings in the form of a written abstract, verbal presentation, and poster presentation. Brigham and Women’s Hospital (Massachusetts) – The Summer Training in Academic

  • sciences. Through this comprehensive 10-week summer experience, Amgen Scholars will prepare for graduate study and a research career in the health sciences. Students will be matched with a faculty mentor and complete an original project under the guidance of their mentor. At the end of the program, Amgen Scholars will present their findings in the form of a written abstract, verbal presentation, and poster presentation. Brigham and Women’s Hospital (Massachusetts) – The Summer Training in Academic

  • CS FacilitiesThe Computer Science department is housed in the Morken Center for Learning and Technology. Computer ClassroomsMorken 203 is a state of the art classroom with room for 38 students, each with access to a computer. Each desk is equipped with a computer running Windows with a recessed monitor. There are two projection screens that can project content from a variety of sources including DVD, VCR, computer, document camera, and laptop. Computer LabMorken 210 is an open lab available for

  • Medical Care | 医疗保健On-Campus | 校园內The PLU Health Center offers primary health care to PLU students (regardless of insurance), including illness and injury care and physicals. Services include filling prescriptions, management of acute illnesses and injuries like colds and muscle injuries, evaluating and managing chronic illnesses like asthma, immunizations, gender-specific health care, physical examinations, sexual health services and emergency contraception, and care for emotional and mental

  • perfectly with PLU’s educational mission to link “thoughtful inquiry” (learning) with “service and care for other people, their communities, and the Earth.” While PLU offers a quality education to undergraduates in a variety of disciplines, the Center adds value to a PLU education by helping students, staff, and faculty consider how their lives might promote “human and ecological flourishing.” Among the 95 schools who received Lilly money, PLU has been rated as one of the top five schools who used grant

  • exceed your financial aid budget (cost of attendance) for that given academic year if you are receiving any need-based aid (any fund with an asterisk * in its name)7: Required to report additional financial aidYou are required to Student Financial Services any additional scholarships, grants, or loans not shown on the Offer of Financial Aid.8: Required to report updates on FAFSA (or WASFA)You must report any change in permanent address, enrollment status, or financial information previously reported

  • -5 elementary school. It is common for students to know someone who has been in prison or even killed, said Kristen (Larsen) Schroeder ’90 ’97, principal. They may not have things like a bed or clothes provided for them at home, she said. “They have to overcome a lot of those hard things that we deal with as adults at a very young age,” Schroeder said. There’s a certain type of educator Schroeder is looking for as principal of James Sales Elementary School. “I ask everyone I interview, ‘Is this

  • served as Visiting Assistant Professor at the Center for Holocaust and Genocide Studies at Clark University, from 2000 to 2003. Since 2004, Kissi has been teaching and conducting research at USF. His research focuses on 20th Century economic and diplomatic history of Ethiopia and the Horn of Africa; history of US foreign relations (with Africa) since the 20th Century, and the comparative history of genocide and human rights. He is the author of Revolution and Genocide in Ethiopia and Cambodia (2006

  • About Diversity, Justice, and Sustainability (DJS) CommunityTaezha and Jamae (First Year Students, Residents of the DJS Community - Students of Color) “The SOC community offers us an opportunity to meet people who can relate to how we feel. We value the feeling of knowing each neighbor by name and being friends with everyone. Our hall is known for dancing to music, cooking, and playing games that bring us closer together ay. We love our hall because it gives us a home away from home with a