Page 506 • (5,177 results in 0.085 seconds)

  • communications. This strategy aims to raise the visibility of PLU and inspire connection with prospective students and their families, current students, alumni, donors, influencers/thought leaders, and community members. Smith joined Student Involvement & Leadership at PLU in 2005. Smith earned a bachelor’s degree in studio art from the University of Puget Sound and a MBA from PLU. Smith most recently served as the Executive Director of Content Development at PLU and was directly responsible for curating

  • . Themes such as social justice, criminal justice reform, persecution, exclusion, and structural inequality are explored alongside examples of persistence, resiliency, Black liberation, and humanity. E-books as well as print books are included in order to make the exhibit accessible to campus community members who are not able to be on campus due to the coronavirus pandemic. For a complete list of print and e-books in this exhibit, and their location or online links, see below. E-books Kendall, Mikki

  • performance in the lab. - Linda Tieman, Former Executive Director of Washington Center for Nursing and PLU School of Nursing Community Advisory Board Member Construction is Complete! Thanks to generous donations from individuals and area foundations, construction is now complete on the Clinical Learning and Simulation Center. Additional gifts will allow us to purchase the cutting-edge tools and technology necessary for the center to have its maximum impact. See below for exciting photos of the new space

  • steadily over the decades. With music written as early as in the 1930s and as recently as five years ago, this concert will span many eras and iterations of jazz, from swing era “popular” music to bold, modern works. Cassio Vianna, Director of Jazz Studies and Assistant Professor of Music, assembled the concert repertoire for the benefit of both the music students and the community. “I wanted to challenge our students and create a new listening opportunity for audiences. One of the added benefits is

  • Mediterranean cultures participated in and enjoyed the advantages of a religiously diverse community. This course examines the ways in which religion shaped the cultures of the ancient Mediterranean world. (4) RELI 220 : Early Christian History - RL, IT This course explores the social, cultural, and theological diversity and forms of self-definition of early Christian history across territories in which it emerged, including Western Asia, North and East Africa, and Western Europe. In this course, emphasis

  • scholarship not only for its own sake (and we do that too) but also for the value we gain from having people hear about the work that our faculty and staff do so well here. We need to energize our natural constituencies such as our alumni, our retired faculty and staff, our supporting congregations and synods of our Region One of the Evangelical Lutheran Church in America, our partners in the community, in various groups and associations—and we need to give them narratives to tell.  For those of us who

  • mother Rena Margulies Chernoff Marina Phal, ’16, Sociology major and Women’s & Gender Studies minor Natalie Mayer, mother, community activist, promoter of Holocaust education, philanthropist and volunteer Box lunches may be pre-purchased online On and Off Campus Dining Options Olson Gymnasium On Losing Your Children Twice: Survivor Parents and Their Refugee Children 2:00 p.m. – 3:30 p.m. Tens of thousands of Jewish parents sent their children abroad in an attempt to save them from Nazi persecution

  • mother Rena Margulies Chernoff Marina Phal, ’16, Sociology major and Women’s & Gender Studies minor Natalie Mayer, mother, community activist, promoter of Holocaust education, philanthropist and volunteer Box lunches may be pre-purchased online On and Off Campus Dining Options Olson Gymnasium On Losing Your Children Twice: Survivor Parents and Their Refugee Children 2:00 p.m. – 3:30 p.m. Tens of thousands of Jewish parents sent their children abroad in an attempt to save them from Nazi persecution

  • mother Rena Margulies Chernoff Marina Phal, ’16, Sociology major and Women’s & Gender Studies minor Natalie Mayer, mother, community activist, promoter of Holocaust education, philanthropist and volunteer Box lunches may be pre-purchased online On and Off Campus Dining Options Olson Gymnasium On Losing Your Children Twice: Survivor Parents and Their Refugee Children 2:00 p.m. – 3:30 p.m. Tens of thousands of Jewish parents sent their children abroad in an attempt to save them from Nazi persecution

  • mother Rena Margulies Chernoff Marina Phal, ’16, Sociology major and Women’s & Gender Studies minor Natalie Mayer, mother, community activist, promoter of Holocaust education, philanthropist and volunteer Box lunches may be pre-purchased online On and Off Campus Dining Options Olson Gymnasium On Losing Your Children Twice: Survivor Parents and Their Refugee Children 2:00 p.m. – 3:30 p.m. Tens of thousands of Jewish parents sent their children abroad in an attempt to save them from Nazi persecution