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fall of 2008. He headed back to Genesee for the summer, working on the family ranch. He’s also on call as a volunteer EMT. So, if you do wind up meeting Jensen somewhere in northwestern Idaho, rest assured, you are in good hands. He’s among the region’s best. -Steve Hansen, University Communications Read Previous A summer job that doesn’t suck Read Next Basketball adventure COMMENTS*Note: All comments are moderated If the comments don't appear for you, you might have ad blocker enabled or are
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literary interests with my management job,” Krise explained. “I think any teacher will tell you that we wind up learning as much from the classroom environment and the students as students learn from us. That’s part of the happiness of teaching, you just learn a lot doing it,” Krise said. “It’s fun to do what you’re trained to do and like to do and [what’s] worth while.” Read Previous PLU welcomed into CFA Institute University Recognition Program Read Next Farewell Reception COMMENTS*Note: All comments
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tickets LollaPLUza May 9 at 1p.m. PLU Golf Course PLU’s annual music festival returns featuring artists: Fame Riot, Lemolo, Dude York and headliner Sol. The festival will incorporate the community of businesses on Garfield Street and all vendors have been invited to participate. Free admission, no tickets University Wind Ensemble May 10 at 3p.m. Lagerquist Concert Hall Dr. Edwin Powell and guest conductor Ron Gerhardstein will perform “The Star Wars Trilogy” by John Williams; “Symphony No. 4” by
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” Kathi Breazeale, Troy Storfjell & Britta Helm, “Selling Wind: Sámi as Witches and Witches as Sámi in Northern European Religious Imagination” 2008-9: Carmina Palerm & Jackal Talorn, “Roots of Migration vs Roots of Community Branches of Survival in a Global Economy” PLU News article: Rethinking the Global Citizen Louis Komjathy & Jeff Rud, “Asian Religions in the Pacific Northwest” 2009-10: Brenda Llewellyn Ihssen, Kevin O’Brien, & Anna Duke, “Natural Disasters as Moral Lessons: Contemporary Social
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’ house. “I had no idea I needed special permission,” Tegels said. “It was a learning process for me and for Parkland Light & Water.” According to an article in Ruralite, a publication distributed by Parkland Light & Water, net metering allows customers to get credit for the electricity they generate with solar, wind or water and send it back through their utility meter. Tegels said if he produces more energy than he uses, that electricity cycles through the grid which powers houses served by Parkland
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Michigan B.A. and B.M., University of Washington Read Previous Student Sings way to Seattle Opera Read Next Pacific Lutheran University’s Jazz and Wind Ensembles go “Down Under” this summer LATEST POSTS PLU’s Director of Jazz Studies, Cassio Vianna, receives grant from the City of Tacoma to write and perform genre-bending composition April 18, 2024 PLU Music Announces Inaugural Paul Fritts Endowed Chair in Organ Studies and Performance January 29, 2024 PLU’s Weathermon Jazz Festival to Feature
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science you might end up writing code for software simulations of proteins, creating the next big video game, or developing a social application that connects people in new ways. The possibilities are limitless. Read Previous PLU Wind Ensemble: Musica Ignota Read Next Hope, a Pacific Lutheran University Christmas Concert COMMENTS*Note: All comments are moderated If the comments don't appear for you, you might have ad blocker enabled or are currently browsing in a "private" window. LATEST POSTS Three
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, green in the strong growing crops of corn and a multitude of vegetables. The wind was fierce and biting. And I was home. We were shown our cabins and told that the electricity would come on in a few hours, usually with the setting sun. We had dinner in the darkness, tables lit with dim candlelight, before man-made electricity illuminated the tables and the Zapotec women working hard to prepare our delicious food. Our cabin. Photo Credit: Camille LaRocca. La Nevería is a small pueblo two hours from
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experiences. I also knew Beth’s razor-sharp memory would be essential to mapping out the scope of this project. Beth arrived at PLU in 1989, after a two-year stint teaching at Elon University (Elon College at the time) in North Carolina: a state where same-sex intimacy was banned and where Beth was living with her long-term partner, Suzanne. They both wanted to wind up in Washington (Beth had grown up here and attended UW) because, “more than anything,” they loved the Northwest. It helped that Washington
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