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  • FBI Virtual Career Trek Posted by: nicolacs / April 5, 2021 April 5, 2021 FBI Virtual Career Trek – 4/15/21 from 4:00-5:30 p.m. Each career trek will include an organization overview, panel with employees from various departments, discussion about any internships or entry-level job opportunities, plus plenty of time for Q&A. Register here: https://docs.google.com/forms/d/197OBydPX6ls01S-OA-C8CSvFJ3NJ6JlSM9JLszZUYow/viewform?edit_requested=true Questions? Contact: Sue Dahlin, sdahlin

  • University of Washington Chemistry: Virtual Graduate Program Info Session Posted by: alemanem / October 6, 2021 October 6, 2021 The University of Washington Chemistry Department invites you to join a virtual information session to learn about their graduate (MS and PhD) programs. Undergraduates will meet faculty & students and learn about the department. Date & Time: Tuesday 10/19 at 4pm (Pacific Time) Zoom Link: Register at https://tinyurl.com/urpkzjy8 For more information see the UW Virtual

  • include empire building, ancient monuments, religion, art, and literature. Students learn to investigate historical problems, use sources, and write historical essays. Attributes: 4 credits, upper division course, Social Sciences credit (SO), History elective To register for this course, visit https://www.plu.edu/summer/. For a preview of Dr. Halvorson teaching an online “PLUTO” class, see https://www.plu.edu/online/.

  • Online Resources for USO MembersFor Student Members, the MUSI 380 instructional site on Sakai will be a valuable resource for finding copies of the syllabus, information about rehearsals and events, and recordings that will be helpful in preparing our performances. Login with your PLU epass username and password, choose the USO Sakai site, and look under “Resources.” (This site will only be available to student members after they register for MUSI 380 following auditions. PLU Sakai LoginOther

  • Makonde Mask 3 Makonde Mask 3 Artist: Unknown Makonde artist Name: lipiko helmet mask Origin: Makonde people of Northeast Mozambique and Southern Tanzania Made of: Wood (ntene), human hair, pigment and beeswax Dimensions: H: 10”(25.4 cm); W: 7.5” (19cm); D: 12” (10.5 cm) From: Gift of Oliver and Pamela Cobb, 2009 Accession no. 2009-02-013 On display in the PLU’s Mortvedt Library (2nd floor) Northeast Mozambique and Southern Tanzania Description: This red-brown mask has more feminine and smaller

  • Program SupportBy making an endowment gift, you can provide critical support to a wide variety of academic programs and centers throughout campus. When you invest in PLU schools and departments, you help ensure the continuation of top-tier programming that embodies the PLU mission statement. Please contact an Advancement Officer if you would like to create an endowment that supports PLU programs.* President Krise looks to the sky in the W.M. Keck Observatory Endowed SchoolA named endowment fund

  • and was the Boeing Board member at Vanderbilt University, Clarkson University, and the University of Alabama-Huntsville as part of the NASA-Industry-University Centers for Commercial Development of Space. Sweberg is a member of the board of trustees for the Broadway Center for the Performing Arts in Tacoma and the Pierce County American Leadership Forum, also in Tacoma. Sweberg earned a bachelor’s of science from the U.S. Military Academy, West Point, where he graduated as a Distinguished Cadet

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  • Holocaust Studies Professorship turns into Holocaust ChairNew gifts in 2010 in support of the Kurt Mayer Professorship in Holocaust Studies have pushed that endowment total beyond $2 million, making it the third endowed chair at PLU. The Kurt Mayer Chair in Holocaust Studies again secures the university’s position as one of the premier centers for Holocaust studies in the nation. Holocaust studies is not a new idea at PLU. It is an area of academic distinction and excellence that has been built

  • A Vision for the FutureThe Wang Center opened in 2002 thanks to the vision of donors Drs. Peter ’60 and Grace Wang. With their generous philanthropy, the Wangs have emphasized the role education can play in building a more peaceful world. In concert with the Pacific Lutheran University mission of empowering students for “lives of thoughtful enquiry, leadership, service and care – for other people, for their communities and for the earth,” the Wang Centers is dedicated to preparing global

  • disabilities or behavioral problems. Others work with premature newborns at pediatric hospitals or children with cerebral palsy, Down syndrome, and other disabilities. Work with individuals in their homes, community centers, rehabilitation hospitals, businesses, and nursing homes. In these settings, occupational therapists help people with traumatic injuries, stroke, Alzheimer’s disease, or mental health problems, learn to live productive lives through the use of meaningful occupations. Train workers to