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  • or employment in a hospital, assisted care facility, clinic, or similar organization. Community Involvement Future health professionals need to be leaders in their professional and everyday communities. These experiences can be accomplished through participation in clubs, student government, and religious organizations. Pharmacy schools want to see that you are outgoing and able to work well with others.  Additionally, students who participate in extracurricular activities are exposed to diverse

  • or employment in a hospital, assisted care facility, clinic, or similar organization. Community Involvement Future health professionals need to be leaders in their professional and everyday communities. These experiences can be accomplished through participation in clubs, student government, and religious organizations. Pharmacy schools want to see that you are outgoing and able to work well with others.  Additionally, students who participate in extracurricular activities are exposed to diverse

  • . White will reflect on his journey, as well as his current job, which entails reaching out to leaders – both religious and secular – in the world’s conflict areas, when he comes to Pacific Lutheran University on Feb. 21 as one of the keynote speakers of the Wang Center Symposium: Legacies of the Shoah. White specializes in building cross-border coalitions and history-making campaigns, three of which led to major international treaties: the U.N. Convention on the Rights of Persons with Disabilities

  • justice. He is the co-author of An Introduction to Christian Environmentalism, co-editor of Theological and Ethical Perspectives on Climate Engineering, and author of the forthcoming Witness of Resistance: Nonviolence and Climate Justice. Kevin O'Brien Samuel TorvendSamuel Torvend is Professor of Religion at PLU and currently serves as the University Chair in Lutheran Studies. As a historian of Christianity, his research focuses on the history of religious responses to poverty and food insecurity

  • where you live or what your government is or what your religious beliefs are or that you’re 1,000 kilometers from the closest road,” she said, her piercing blue eyes flashing. “You’re a human being, and that means, at the minimum, we need food, water, shelter, health care, freedom.” As a child, the Anacortes, Wash., native knew she wanted to work overseas. She never imagined how that one thought would shape the trajectory of her life, taking her from Kenya and Ivory Coast, Africa, to New York and

  • the last 60+ years is an understatement of biblical proportions. Well, maybe not quite. But still … just one look at the September Chapel calendar confirms the indisputably interdisciplinary, all-are-welcome approach of today’s Chapel at PLU: Now held Mondays, Wednesdays and Fridays at 10:30 a.m., Chapel has become an inclusive, relevant—optional—oasis that reflects the diversity of religious expression on campus; presents stunning music and influential speakers in a perfectly acoustic setting

  • occupancy, and restitution for any cleaning charges resulting from having the pet. Additional consequences may include termination of the resident’s housing contract. In order to have an Emotional Support Animal you need to apply the Application is provided on our Documents Page.CandlesThe use of candles in residence halls is prohibited, except for religious purposes. Review the policy and see the application process here.Furnishings and Responsibility for Institutional PropertyUniversity furnishings

  • Prague and Vienna for a week. Upon my return to the States, I started working part time at MJH in a new capacity in the Education department. I assist with organizing the Shoah Teaching Alternatives in Jewish Education program for teachers at Jewish schools, planning workshops for Jewish day school students, and helping to plan for the annual Interfaith Living Museum program, which brings together fifth graders from Jewish and Muslim day schools to create an exhibition based on their family religious

  • she hails from a religious family, and often felt “stress” when it came to sexuality. She said she struggled reconciling Christianity and queer identity. “I had heard so much about (how) being queer was a sin, but I didn’t feel like a bad person,” she said. “Ultimately, I came to realize…I was loved for who I was.” While Brewer’s time at PLU helped her feel more comfortable with her sexuality, the campus wasn’t immune to larger societal tension surrounding LGBTQ issues. She recalls one incident in

  • Board of Trustees of the Institute for Ecumenical Research in Strasbourg and vice-chair of the LWF Program Committee for Mission and Development from 1997 to 2003. From 2003 to July 2010 Younan served as LWF vice-president for the Asia region, Council member and member of the LWF Executive Committee and Board of Trustees. In 2012 Bishop Younan joined global religious leaders in signing the historic “Welcoming the Stranger: Affirmations for Faith Leaders” developed by the United Nations High