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  • Start a Creative RequestDigital Display Ad (TV Ad)Need to advertise your event for just a few days? Our Digital Display Ads are a perfect option. Impact manages two TVs in the UC and have access to three others around campus and can place your advertisement there for a low cost. These TVs are seen by hundreds of students walking through each day. 10 seconds- $1.00/per day Anything over 10 seconds- $2.00/per day 20-30 seconds- $12 for two weeks (Special Offer) Over 30 seconds/ limited to a max of 1

  • , I want you to feel a sense of authority over your work. My reading selections and recommendations will often mirror this philosophy—I enjoy readings that showcase an author’s risks and challenge or subvert commercial expectations. As a workshop leader and mentor, I center collaborative conversations in which you can explain your reasoning and make a case for how you have put together a specific piece of writing. From there, I enjoy asking questions and discussing benefits and opportunities for

  • read, relax, or talk Faster commutes on freeway HOV lanes Combined exercise and commute time (with walking or bicycling) Stewardship of community and environment Some of the ways PLU benefits from faculty and staff using Commute Smart options are: Increased employee retention Decreased employee stress which leads to higher productivity Reduced demand for parking Compliance with state Commute Trip Reduction goals Improved air quality Reduced transportation/congestion problems Healthier workforce

  • graduate assistantships available to students. Graduate assistantships often provide tuition, health benefits, and a modest living stipend to students in exchange for their work as teaching, research, or administrative assistants. The majority of graduate students are not awarded federal grants to assist with tuition; however, it is possible to receive federally-subsidized student loans to attend a certified graduate program. Our department strongly encourages students interested in graduate school

  • Jeremy Reimers Resident Assistant Professor of Biology he/him/his Phone: 253-535-7128 Email: reimerjm@plu.edu Office Location: Rieke Science Center - 146 Professional Education Ph.D., Neuroscience, Rosalind Franklin University of Medicine and Science, 2010 B.A., Biology & Neuroscience, Carthage College, 2004 Selected Presentations STEM Best Practices Conference , Empires and Ecosystems:A Cross-Curricular PBL, Galveston, TX (2012) Selected Articles Werner CT, Murray CH, Reimers JM, Chauhan NM

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  • Form” should be completed.Notice of Intent to Apply It is required that faculty and staff submitting grants fill out a ‘Notice of Intent to Apply’ form. The form is to ensure that multiple requests are not submitted to the same organization and helps Foundation Relations to coordinate with campus partners. Notice of Intent To Apply FormGrant Approval Form The Grant Approval Form is required for all university faculty and staff to request external funding for the university through grants. This form

  • . Her placement is with a nonprofit organization that helps students connect with their community and get extra support. Marquez enjoys working with youth, so this position was an excellent fit for her. Marquez’s internship also connects to her capstone project, which is about finding resources for refugee families. “We have a caseload, and we work with a couple of students who come from refugee families. It has been so great to work with them and be a part of their lives,” she said.I love that they

  • Brian Teare Poetry, Nonfiction Biography Biography Brian Teare, a 2020 Guggenheim Fellow, is the author of seven critically acclaimed books, including Companion Grasses and Doomstead Days, winner of the Four Quartets Prize and a finalist for the National Book Critics Circle, Kingsley Tufts, and Lambda Literary Awards. His most recent publications are a diptych of book-length ekphrastic projects exploring queer abstraction, chronic illness, and collage: the 2022 Nightboat reissue of The Empty

  • , Seattle, Washington Bio: Dee Simon, is the Baral Family CEO of the Holocaust Center for Humanity. A graduate of the University of Southern California’s business school, she has held positions with major corporations in the finance field and as a business consultant. Dee has been working with the Holocaust Center for over 21 years. First as a volunteer, then a board member, followed by four terms as President of the Board. She joined the staff as Co‐Executive Director in 2006 becoming the Executive

  • department. Only nine programs statewide earned funding, and PLU tied for the third-highest award amount. Hibbs said earning the grant money speaks to the legitimacy of PLU’s program. “It’s demonstrating that the state is supporting our model of preparing teachers,” she said. The money funded scholarships for 21 students enrolled in the ARC program each of the following two years. It also covered administrative costs and activities tied to student development, such as mentoring and workshops. The