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  • House and 208 Garfield. There is a strict ID policy in place at 208 Garfield, so even professors and university administrators better have their ID ready if they want a glass of beer or wine. Wine on tap isn’t just about trends either. It’s a sustainable practice, McGinnis said. After all, the kegs that are being used were recycled and using soda kegs limits the disposal of bottles and corks. Finding products that are local and provide a PLU connection helps give 208 Garfield its character, she said

  • students who identify as Black, Indigenous, Latinx, and Trans/Non-Binary. Strategic Tactic No. 2 | Student Leadership Define and develop Student Life contributions to university-wide student leadership learning, including exploring current programs (e.g., DJS Coalition) as opportunities for multi-year, high-impact practices that support equitable student retention and progression. Strategic Tactic No. 3 | Wellbeing Ecology Expand PLU’s wellbeing ecology with an emphasis on promoting equity of access to

  • . Further optimization of PSCs reveal exceptional potential for competition, as well as integration, with silicon solar cells. H-J Iodobenzene Diacetate and its involvement in the Synthesis of a Structurally Novel Antibiotics Class Emily Hicks, Senior Capstone Seminar Antimicrobial resistance is a public health issue that the current classes of antibiotics are not equipped to handle. The majority of new drugs approved since the 1980s have been structural variants of previously established antibiotics

  • enquiry can be summarized in Luther’s question, oft-repeated throughout his teaching career: “What does this mean?” Robust questioning of the status quo and received knowledge remains a core practice in Lutheran higher education. Such questioning supports the search for truth that rests at the heart of the university. Read more … 2. Freedom for expression and protection of learning Contemporary university professors may take for granted academic freedom yet it was the 16th century reformers who

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  • (some distance, some face to face).  The interactive schedule reflects current plans. Per university requirements, at a minimum all classes will meet virtually the first week of the semester (9/8-9/12) and after Thanksgiving until the end of the semester.  Face to face class meetings will depend on public health and university guidelines as the semester unfolds.  You may request accommodations for complete distance/virtual learning at any point in the semester by emailing the Office of Accessibility

  • Brian Sung ’24 discusses his business and econ majors, Oxford trip, and PLU experience as a first generation Chinese immigrant Posted by: tpotts / April 4, 2024 April 4, 2024 Brian Sung ’24 has made the most out of his PLU years inside and outside the classroom. In the classroom, he’s an international honors student with a double major in business and economics and a double minor in data science and statistics. Outside the classroom, he’s served as DECA Club president, a resident assistant, and

  • teammate, to expect my best from myself and to push myself even when I didn’t think I could,” she says. Following in their footsteps, Flores-Handley coached for two decades, at Rogers High School in Puyallup, WA and elsewhere, including five years as an assistant PLU softball coach. She won a national championship with Lake Tapps Volleyball Club in 2015, and was named 2006 South Puget Sound League Coach of the Year and All-Area Coach of the Year by The News Tribune of Tacoma. Her teachers at PLU

  • , who gave the large initial gift. The fundraising quickly topped the $600,000 mark. Mary Baker Russell gave a substantial gift and the final $300,000 was given by the Gottfried & Mary Fuchs Foundation of Tacoma. The Fuchs organ, as well as Dahl and PLU organist Paul Tegels were recently mentioned in the current edition of “The American Organist.” The organ – completed in 1998 – is what drew Tegels to campus. He was awed by the size and power of the instrument, which includes playing not one, but

  • , joined the group last year as a chorus member in the production of Turandot by Puccini. After the show ended on Aug. 18, Marzano was invited back as a chorus member in La Boheme. Rehearsals for the universally popular classic began in January and since then Marzano has been leaving campus right after Choir of the West practice to head up to Seattle. Leaving at 5 p.m. puts him in Seattle around 6 p.m., so he can get his makeup done and costume on before the curtains go up at 7:30 p.m. “The good thing