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  • schools, churches and conferences, volunteering for One America and MoLE, arranging legal assistance for DACA eligible students, and mentoring undocumented students on their journey through higher education. Martinez Hurtado graduated from Pacific Lutheran University in May of 2014 with a double major in Hispanic Studies and Political Science and a double minor in History and Sociology. She currently works at Metropolitan Public Defender in Hillsboro, OR as an Early Case Resolution Legal Assistant

  • education helps us understand the tradition that guides the heart of the institution. It’s about service, not individual gain. It’s about how to serve at home, in the broader community and in the world. How do you live side-by-side with others of varying perspectives and beliefs, and learn and serve together? It’s complex, it’s messy and it’s the essence of our PLU learning community. This is a deeper look at how Lutheran higher education fuels critical questioning and learning in community, the

  • , intramural sports, and physical education classes. It also features offices for coaches and administrative staff, as well as locker rooms for some athletic teams.GO Pool The PLU Pool is set to reopen this fall after extensive repairs and refurbishments. The schedule will be posted on their website every semester, indicating when the pool is open for lap swimming (usually an hour midday & in the evening Monday-Friday, plus 90 minutes at night every day of the week).GO Outdoor Recreation | 户外休闲活动“Outdoor

  • How the PLU School of Business is adapting with the times Posted by: vcraker / May 28, 2021 May 28, 2021 By Zach Powers '10PLU Marketing and CommunicationsSomaye Nargesi, a second-year business professor, came to PLU from a large research institution. She immediately noticed a stark difference in how her new institution approached the field.“At PLU, the business curriculum is mostly designed around soft skills, meaning how you build insightful inquiries, how you’re able to connect the dots

  • Information Systems & Technology As an added benefit, if you hold one of these degrees, you can apply with the Fast Track application, we will waive the GRE/GMAT requirement and your application for admission is free!Fast Track Application Requirements: Earn an eligible Bachelor of Applied Science degree from Tacoma Community College Earn a 3.0 or above cumulative GPA in all previous college level coursework Submit an online application Statement of Professional Goals Resume Official transcripts from each

  • Bake Sales, Potlucks, Class Projects and Self Catered Event PolicyDue to Tacoma/Pierce County Health Departments regulations and University Policy, food and beverage consumed on premise must be provided by Pacific Lutheran University Catering. There are a limited number of circumstances in which food does not have to be provided by Pacific Lutheran University (PLU) Catering. These are outlined below:Bake Sales and Class Projects Students or organizations wishing to hold bake sales must submit a

  • flourish together in this PLU environment.DJS CLUBS DJS Clubs believe in and work to promote equity between individuals and across the institution. This coalition of DJS Clubs will work from an intentional and intersectional framework that centers marginalized identities and raises awareness of injustice at PLU through an anti-oppression framework. EXPLORECOMMUNITY SPACES DJS spaces include the DJS Lounge (a community that explores and celebrates issues of intersectional identity and DJS), Office of

  • accomplish it.” Mbugua grew up in Kent and Federal Way, WA where his family has lived since 2003. But the Nairobi-born Lute keeps Kenya on his mind. And close at hand — he wears a bracelet with the colors of the Kenyan flag on his right wrist. Kenyans, he says, tend to be relentlessly entrepreneurial. His own ambitions are fueled by a desire to inspire others. This reflects the philosophy of Lutheran higher education and its insistence that human beings are not called upon to escape this world, but

  • and application in many disciplines from cooking to aerospace. Tell us a bit about your journey as an artist. How did you discover your vocation? Ebbinga: According to my parents I have been a creator since I was able to squish play dough. I find the most satisfaction, and learn more readily, when I am using my hands in concert with my brain and heart. My best classes all throughout my primary and secondary education were art and shop classes, or courses that had some creative hands-on component

  • Conference: Celebrating Cecelia Svinth Carpenter, Indigenous education and tribal sovereignty September 23, 2024 PLU Welcomes the Class of 2028: Trailblazers September 11, 2024 Ethos in Action September 11, 2024