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  • , Stephanie Ferrell, Carolyn Drayden, Rita Pharris. Standing: Ira Hammon, Debra Hammon, Cynthia Wilson, Tom Mitchell, Michelle Ellison, Alfred Parker Kanisha Keal ’10: Although at the time the group started there was a significant increase in black students, the main reason I wanted to contribute and create the Black Student Union was because on campus you would encounter a lot of students who were white who doubted your merit. You were either an Achiever’s Scholar or the university was filling some sort

  • , and the Squaxin Island Nations. [video: All three professors framed on screen] Professor Ramos: This interdisciplinarity (laughs) [Man Off Camera]: That’s okay. (everyone laughs) [video: Cuts to black screen with white text reading, “Take Two.” Flashes back to all three professors in the office.] Professor Ramos: This interdisciplinarity distinguish our students and alumni from other candidates when applying for internships, graduate school and the job market. We’re proud to see how they transform

  • meaning for all living things that have a relationship with the earth.” – Pacific Lutheran University White Paper on Sustainability Pacific Lutheran University values Sustainability because: Sustainability supports the values and goals that are inherent in PLU’s mission. The project of educating students for lives of thoughtful inquiry, service, leadership and care for other persons, for the community, and for the Earth suggests all three legs of sustainability: people, planet, and prosperity. It is a

  • , regardless of whether they’re publishing, writers who are really contributing to the literary world at large with public and private success.” Some of that success is especially public. Notable Rainier Writing Workshop alumni include: • Kelli Russell Agodon ’07, whose third book of poems, Hourglass Museum, was published by White Pine Press. • Nonfiction writer Jennifer Culkin ’07, author of the memoir A Final Arc of Sky and winner of the prestigious Rona Jaffe Foundation Writers’ Award. • 2012-14

  • was the right answer and the wrong answer,” Hall said. “It is making pretty things, but it is also being very intentional. I fell in love with it because it was so gray. It wasn’t black and white.” The podcast brings some of these voices to light and the discussion relates to what Avila sees in the classroom. “I think a lot of times students think, ‘I have these great ideas, but I don’t have any way of doing it,’” Avila said. This Is Design School Podcast Listen to all the episodes for free with

  • Betron, Dan Murray, Marco Polo Ramirez Becerra and Jes Takla Spring 2018 Maggie Hendrickson Spring 2018 The Center for Gender Equity Spring 2018 Tiffany Artime Spring 2018 Tarka Wilcox Spring 2018 Lynn Hunnicutt Spring 2018 Ksenija Simic-Muller, Shannon Seidel and Wendy Gardiner Spring 2018 Melannie Denise Cunningham Spring 2018 Ami Shah and Michael Artime Spring 2018 Seth Dowland Spring 2018 Colleen Hacker Spring 2018 Sergia Hay Spring 2018 Wendy Gardiner Spring 2018 Maria Guarneri-White Spring 2018

  • was strikingly different than that of his white roommate. And Wallace also knew that both Pacific Lutheran University students likely viewed the narrative behind recent cases of police brutality differently, as a result. He used their conversation about the nation’s racially charged incidents as a teaching moment for his roommate, who Wallace says never needed to think about how their upbringings contrast. “We’re taught two different things when we’re growing up,” Wallace recalled explaining to

  • realities together at PLU, a white-dominated space where they dealt with microaggressions from members of the community throughout their educational experience. Still, he says Panago was quick to listen to many perspectives, to carefully and thoughtfully respond with intention. Angela Pierce ’12, another fellow Act Six scholar from the cadre, says that’s one of the first memories she has of Panago. She recalls being blown away by how pensive he was for a 17-year-old prospective student, during

  • minutes at a time, uncertain whether he could hear us. He died later that day. The last gathering in 2015The five friends pose for a photo before heading home after their visit to Scottsdale, Arizona. ``The four of us in white and Doug in black can not be but metaphor of what has happened in our story,`` Sherry says. (Photo by Jonathan Nesvig '67) Alan’s memorial service in Joshua Tree, Calif., north of Palm Springs, tells a lot about him. It included attendees from various categories—local friends

  • -timer image. I’m grateful to have spent a sunny autumn day in Northern Ireland, as the white limestone of the sharp cliffs contrasted brightly with the blue of the sky and water, lion jellyfish floated unbothered along, and seagulls passed overhead. Portrush Whiterocks Beach, Northern Ireland September 29, 2022 3rd Place Lisa Ha “Colors of the Week” On a group tour, we visited a Hindu temple and the largest statue of the Hindu Monkey God, Hanuman, outside of India. The colors of the temple were