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  • success to the opportunities PLU has provided me. What’s next? I am currently seeking weekly and daily newspaper jobs in the greater Pacific Northwest region. I have a passion for community journalism, and hope to connect with people by telling their stories through whatever outlet I am given the opportunity to use. I hope to eventually go back to school after gaining some practical experience and get a masters in education and teach media literacy and journalism in local public schools. Lauren

  • Christian Responses to Plagues and Public Health: Two Perspectives from the History of Religion Dr. Brenda Llewellyn Ihssen, Associate Professor of Early and Medieval Christian History Lecture Description:  Through the discipline of religious history, this lecture the responses of two Christian bishops to a third-century Ebola-like plague and a sixth-century bubonic plague. Through primary texts we will explore how these events shaped theological views and social activity of bishops Cyprian of Carthage

  • Christian Responses to Plagues and Public Health: Two Perspectives from the History of Religion Dr. Brenda Llewellyn Ihssen, Associate Professor of Early and Medieval Christian History Lecture Description:  Through the discipline of religious history, this lecture the responses of two Christian bishops to a third-century Ebola-like plague and a sixth-century bubonic plague. Through primary texts we will explore how these events shaped theological views and social activity of bishops Cyprian of Carthage

  • to participate in the United States Institute for Theatre Technology Expo $5,000 for Stuen & Ordal Halls 3rd Annual Farmer’s Market $41 to support an RA Community Program $200 for assistance with costuming for a student-produced play $2,535 in additional support for six private changing stalls to be placed in the KHP Dressing Room Up to $7,000 for travel and lodging to support PLU Club Wrestlers going to the National Tournament $1,400 in support of Five students attending and presenting at the

  • , chamber, jazz; we’ve got it all. And our majors go on to incredible careers as performers, producers, educators. They transfer the lessons they learned in discipline and creativity into collaboration and careers in public and non-profit sectors. This is where we live, this is where we breathe, this is where we eat and sleep all things music. And if you love music, you belong at PLU. Meet the Professors More Stories Visit About The PLU School of Music, Theatre & Dance is a nationally recognized center

  • ? I am wondering if my parent’s/guardian's job counts.If your parent or legal guardian works full-time for a K-12 public school district or a non-profit private school their job will qualify you to receive at least 50% off of tuition at PLU. Does my parent or legal guardian need to be currently employed as an educator or nurse?Yes, they must be currently and full-time employed at the time of application in one of the fields described above. My step-parent and/or legal guardian is a nurse or

  • speaking, it kept a lot of doors open. There are a lot of options out there for economics majors. You can go into law. You can go into data. You can go into public policy, politics, and all those kinds of things. Finally, why did you decide to study at PLU? PLU follows the principles of a Lutheran Higher Education, which is something that is really close to me and that I’m a very passionate believer in. I’m not a Lutheran myself, but the higher education principles that come along with that, I think

  • Research Study found that Black women’s hair is 2.5 times more likely to be perceived as unprofessional, and Black women are over 1.5 times more likely to feel like they must wear their hair straight to a job interview to be successful. That’s why Lucas’s capstone welcomes and writes about the 2019 California CROWN Act, which ensures workplace and public school protection against discrimination based on race-based hairstyles, including braids, afros, locs, twists, knots and hair coverings. In

  • culture in a series of celebrations called mapiko about which far more is known than the use of he face masks. When, in this male dominated part of Makonde culture, the men wear these masks, they take on not only their own identity – a man in a mask – but also the dramatic depiction of a character and the incarnation of an ancestral spirit. Men make the masks in secret and talk of them in public is prohibited in order to maintain the separation between reality and the spiritual realm of the mapiko. As

  • Code can be found here: PCC Title 10. It is the responsibility of the driver to be familiar with state and city traffic laws. Parking in a handicap space without displaying the required placard, card or plate$250 Parking on a roadway.$30 Parking on the street side of a parked vehicle (double parking).$20 Parking on a sidewalk or street planting strip.$20 Parking on or within 20 feet of a marked / unmarked crosswalk / intersection.$20 Parking in front of, or within 5 feet of, a public or private