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The Reboot of Outdoor Rec The Reboot of Outdoor Rec https://www.plu.edu/resolute/winter-2019/wp-content/uploads/sites/29/2019/01/outdoor-rec-banner-1024x532.jpg 1024 532 Thomas Kyle-Milward Thomas Kyle-Milward https://www.plu.edu/resolute/winter-2019/wp-content/uploads/sites/29/2019/02/thomas-kyle-milward.jpg January 8, 2019 February 21, 2019 LUTHERAN HIGHER EDUCATIONFor the Earth For today’s PLU students, the university’s Outdoor Recreation program is a reliable portal to the Pacific
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. III The 1918 flu epidemic waned the first of August. And then all hell broke loose. Somewhere, somehow, the virus mutated into a killer. By late August 1918, the second wave of flu hit widely scattered Atlantic ports, including Boston’s crowded piers. Thereafter, influenza quickly spread northwest of Boston to Fort Devens crammed with 45,000 transient troops. Inevitably, on September 8, Fort Devens reported its first case. Shortly thereafter, a shipment of draftees from Ft. Devens arrived at
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the Religion Department, part of Holocaust and Genocide Studies faculty, and Affiliate Chaplain at PLU. He and his wife Barbara of blessed memory are authors of three books in Jewish education. He was the editor of a symposium on the theme of “Poetry after Auschwitz” that appeared in the Journal of Reform Judaism in Winter 2015 comprised of articles by PLU faculty. He earned his B.A. in Religious Studies from Stanford University and was ordained as a rabbi at Hebrew Union College-Jewish Institute
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are not forgotten. They forget us. The photograph that was taken the last time the five of us were all together in 2015 is like that. It was not planned. It just happened the day we were going home from Scottsdale after attending church with Doug. The four of us were prepped for traveling, with loose-fitting, white shirts while Doug was dressed by his caregivers in his Sunday best — an all black suit with black tie. The four of us in white and Doug in black can not be but metaphor of what has
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to access scaffolds must meet these requirements: Make sure ramps and walkways aren’t inclined at a slope steeper than one vertical in 3 horizontal (1:3 or 20 degrees from the horizontal). Make sure ramps and walkways that are inclined at a slope steeper than one vertical in 8 horizontal (1:8) have cleats to provide footing which are: Securely fastened to the planks; and Spaced not more than 14 inches (35 cm) apart. Reference: Ramps and walkways that are 4 feet (1.2 m) or more above a lower level
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Center, 1st Floor Monday through Friday, 7:30am-4:00pm 253-535-7969 Email: access@plu.edu Website: www.plu.edu/access Campus Safety Neeb Center, 1st Floor Office open Mon-Fri 8:00am-5:00pm 24/7 access for emergencies 253-535-7441 – Select Option 1Section 4 - Appendix 1BUILDING CLOSURES Type 1: No classes are in session, residence halls are occupied, departments closed. (i.e., PLU holidays, Thanksgiving break, mid-semester and spring break, weather closures) Building doors remain locked to
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CSCI 144, 270, 302, 343, 371, 390, 444, 499A, and 499B 12 additional hours selected from computer science courses numbered above CSCI 300 or MATH 356. MATH 151, 242, 245, 331 8-10 semester hours of a year’s sequence of a laboratory science. Choose one of the following options: PHYS 125 and PHYS 126 (with PHYS 135 and PHYS 136) PHYS 153 and PHYS 154 (with PHYS 163 and PHYS 164) CHEM 115 and CHEM 116 BIOL 225 and BIOL 226 One of ESCI 102-105 and ESCI 201 MinorsRestrictions on Computer Science Minors
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child-like capacity to always ask “why?” I remember so clearly heading off to college many years ago in search of great knowledge and certain answers. And I recall the surprise of leaving college 8 years later, with a Bachelor’s and Master’s degree in my drawer, and a brand new Ph.D. from the University of Michigan in my pocket, with a new awareness of how shockingly little I know. But, now, as I look back, I realize I left school prepared to wrestle with a lifetime worth of questions, and with a
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2014 ConvocationCreating a culture of sustainable and responsible citizenshipBy President Thomas W. Krise Sept. 8, 2014 We are delighted to welcome you all to the 2014 University Convocation! Whether you are a part of the entering class of 2018, a student joining us with some college experience already behind you, or an exchange student here for a more brief time…we are pleased to see you this morning. We are joined in this year’s class by 80 international students from Cambodia, China, Denmark
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