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  • J-1 Exchange VisitorsPacific Lutheran University extends a warm welcome to its international scholars! The Exchange Visitors and Visiting Scholars are a valued part of the PLU community. The Wang Center for Global and Community Engaged Education is committed to providing support to our visiting scholars each year. We are here to provide assistance with campus logistics, as well as support with immigration services. The broad purpose of the Exchange Visitor program is to promote international

  • , Armenian, Cambodian, Rwandan and Native American genocides. Each genocide is its own unit with its own texts, explored both individually and comparatively, through a combination of historical texts, films, memoirs, and first-person testimonies. This fall, Marcus and Griech-Polelle had funding to invite survivors and/or descendants of survivors from each genocide studied in the course, thus giving students a more personal and immediate way to think about each genocide and its legacy in the present

  • individual kind of recycling (plastic, metals, paper) we typically use a single stream recycling method, as a catch all, to simplify our recycling practices.   Each dorm on campus has their own recycling rooms located on each floor for convenience. Unlike the blue containers – the dorm recycling rooms require the students to sort their items by type. For easy sorting we have labeled the recycling room barrels with color coded signs. Items that can go in these containers include: Plastics (clean and dry

  • Elizabeth Landis Lecturer - Harp Phone: 253-535-7602 Email: elizabeth.landis@plu.edu Biography Biography Elizabeth Landis is a much sought-after harpist in the greater Seattle and Tacoma area. As a concert harpist she serves as principal harpist of Symphony Tacoma and Northwest Sinfonietta, among others. She’s performed professionally with the Seattle Symphony Orchestra, Seattle Opera, Columbus Symphony Orchestra, Cincinnati Symphony Orchestra, Jacksonville Symphony, Harrisburg Symphony

  • the Automated Clearing House, which includes out of state financial institutions. Employees are allowed to use one primary bank and may choose the credit union listed below as a secondary bank. Inspirus Credit Union Refer to the Credit Union section of the yellow pages of your local phone directory for the nearest branch locations and phone numbers.

  • notion of writing as “cleaning up,” rhetoric and composition posits that writing is itself a process of inquiry.  Writing begins with engagement, be it wonder, dismay, concern, fury, elation—or (seemingly) simple curiosity, a “What if?” or a “How so?”  Inquiry is the heart of writing, its generative force. When a writer tackles a condition or circumstance she deems both significant and unresolved, she has the opportunity to use writing to construct questions, engage knowledge, and wrestle with issues

  • Chapter is tackling the issue of homelessness in greater Pierce County, Washington. Co-founders Monique Patterson and Kathryn Hedrick, as well as Next Chapter clients, share their stories of resilience, hard work and community in their journey to house single mothers and their families.Eyes Above, 2020As the United States further militarizes its border with Mexico, the Tohono O’odham tribe in southern Arizona grapples with the encroaching surveillance technologies being implemented on its land under

  • Featured Stories – Resolute Online: Fall 2016 Search Features Features Welcome The Saint John’s Bible Hospitality Reformation Listen Called to PLU Women and the Holocaust On Campus Discovery Discovery Attaway Lutes Research Grants Accolades Lute Library Blogs Alumni News Alumni Board Letter Bjug Harstad Day of Giving Alumni Award Winners dCenter Alumni Weekend Alumni Profiles Class Notes Class Notes Family and Friends Submit a Class Note Calendar Calendar Calendar Highlights Featured Stories

  • July 8, 2008 Third-generation Lute takes the long route to PLU For Zach Klein, the old saying, “you can’t get there from here,” comes about as close to accurate as one can imagine. A freshman guard on the PLU men’s basketball team, most people probably haven’t heard about him. After all, little is written about the team’s reserve players. His story is compelling, nonetheless, because most of his growing-up years were spent in hard-to-reach villages whose populaces could be counted in the

  • , aren’t used on scaffold platforms to increase the working level height for employees. Meet all of the following when using stilts on scaffolds: Use stilts only on large area scaffolds Increase the height of a guardrail system used for fall protection by an amount equal to the height of the stilts being used Make sure scaffold platforms where stilts are used are flat and free of: Pits, holes, and obstructions such as debris; and Other tripping or falling hazards. Make sure stilts are: Properly