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community service so it is a privilege to honor that commitment,” Selk said. Read Previous PLU Welcomes Doctor of Nursing Practice Cohort as First Doctoral Program Read Next Congratulations to Dr. Woo and Dr. Robinson! LATEST POSTS Dr. Mary Moller – 2018 APNA Psychiatric Nurse of the Year April 30, 2019 Isabella Zubrod – Women’s Volleyball Athlete of the Week! April 30, 2019 Congratulations Danielle Paschall! April 30, 2019 Congratulations Alum Natalie Bisceglia! April 30, 2019
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date. Upon registering you will receive an email for a Zoom Link to join us. Tuesday, February 23 from 3pm – 5pm Friday, February 26 from 10am – 12pm IS THE MIX & MINGLE FOR YOU? Whether you are an engineering student enrolled in an engineering program, a student at a local community college taking pre-engineering courses, or are a high school student not completely sure what your plans are but interested in learning more, the Mix & Mingle is meant for you. HOW DO I SIGN UP? If you are
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are carefully tailored to active research labs and projects led by faculty who have proven themselves as exceptional mentors for undergraduate students. Explore the Programs: Applications and Foundations of Unmanned Systems Applied Plant Systems Beneficial Bacteria Beneficial Insects Bioenergy Systems Biomedical Engineering Devices Chemical Assembly Community-Engaged Training for Advancing Health Equity Crop-to-Food Innovation Digital Legal Research Lab Emergent Quantum Materials and Technology
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Administration degree. She holds a master’s degree in public administration from Harvard University and a Master of Science in national resource strategy from Industrial College of the Armed Forces. She served as U.S. Ambassador to Namibia from 2004 to 2007 and has held assignments aboard including Sweden, Hungary, Kenya, Sudan, Turkmenistan and Malaysia. She has served as the executive director of East Asian and Pacific Affairs, in the U.S. State Department, responsible for the management and financial
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, the School of Arts and Communication, the School of Nursing and the Wang Center for Global and Community Engaged Education. Lives of Service and Vocation. In the language of the Mary Oliver poem from which PLU’s Wild Hope Project gets its name, PLU invites students to ponder, “What will you do with your one wild and precious life?” “Wild” because so much is possible and unpredictable and the complexities of the world are so great, and “precious” because the life of each individual student vitally
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figures are called bawoong tchitcheri (H: 25-90 cm) and this is the type found in the PLU collection. These figures are used in household shrines, which is distinct from a figure used specifically for individuals or the community, and are erected outside a home. This figure is used to ensure good health, the prosperity of domestic animals, and a successful harvest for the household. These carvings represent ancestors, specifically recently departed family members. The third type of figure is the
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graduation. Further, almost every faculty member has a broad network within the community and likely beyond – use them! They can help you get your foot in the door somewhere, learn more about potential industries – or whatever you may need to succeed. This doesn’t mean that you should not take responsibility on your own, but the University is a great resource that should be used. When I said choose your path wisely, I mean to pick the projects that utilize the broadest skill sets and are relatable to
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Oregon, but I found a great, flourishing Asian community here that I can call my friends. It is a place that makes me feel like I can be me. Who impacted you the most at PLU? Dr. Sailu Lulu Li has been my biggest mentor. She is also from China. Dr. Lulu jump-started my finance career and walked me through how to navigate America as a first-generation Chinese immigrant, especially in the field of finance. You started as a business major with a concentration in accounting but switched to a
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, who was the first in his family to attend college as well. He will speak at PLU’s Veterans Day Celebration on Friday. Farnum spent just over 22 years in the military before retiring in 2007, where he then attended Green River Community College before transferring to PLU in 2009. “PLU has a well-rounded program, and the Yellow Ribbon Program was just remarkable,” he said. Like Farnum, Duong Huynh, 28, went into the Army right out of high school. When he graduates with a degree in English, he plans
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isolated, with many woods, remote farms, no industry and poor transportation. Nelly Trocme Hewett grew up in Le Chambon, France, a community which sheltered up to 5,000 Jewish refugees in WWII. Its French Protestant community was wired to help those in need, given that their ancestors had been persecuted during the 17th and 18th centuries in the largely Catholic French nation. Without questions, they made an unspoken commitment to keeping refugees safe, she said. And, as a summer vacation destination
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