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  • Cincinnati College-Conservatory of Music, where she studied with Dr. Won-Bin Yim.  In 2014, she moved to Houston, Texas, to explore further teaching and performing opportunities and is currently an orchestra director at Dobie High School, where her ensembles have consistently received superior ratings at the Texas UIL Concert and Sightreading Contests.   Christine also teaches private lessons and enjoys performing with the Clear Lake Chamber Ensemble and taking advantage of the many freelance gigs

  • special? What makes you feel most proud of your team? They embrace the challenges that life as a student-athlete has to offer. They know that how they attack life’s challenges determines who they will become. How did your team engage with the community this year? Trinity Lutheran Childcare Center playground project. We donated about 120 hours of service to move and spread 120 yards of playground bark at the church. Looking ahead, what are you most excited about for next year? I’m simply excited for

  • convicted of genocide and crimes against humanity in late 2018.Event Details: Speaker: Alexander Hinton, Ph.D. Time: 7 p.m. Date: Thursday, April 11 Place: Scandinavian Cultural Center Free and open to the public.More about Alexander HintonIn this talk marking the 40th anniversary of the end of the Cambodian genocide, Hinton considers some of the reasons Khmer Rouge like “Brother Number Two” Nuon Chea “started fires of genocide” before concluding with a discussion of the connections between the Khmer

  • be useful to play around with and see examples, but DO NOT use it to create your actual thesis, as this may be considered plagiarism!Best of luck with your writing endeavors! –Your friends at the PLU Writing Center

  • A PLU Economics Degree: The First Step For Many World-Changing Lutes Posted by: Zach Powers / June 18, 2015 Image: PLU Economics Professors Martin Wurm (right) and Neal Johnson (left) deliver an economic forecast to the Tacoma/Pierce County Chamber of Commerce. (Photo by John Froschauer/PLU) June 18, 2015 By Zach Powers '10PLU Marketing & CommunicationsTACOMA, WASH. (June 18, 2015)- PLU Economics students past and present have selected their major with a seemingly endless list of vocational

  • How do I order my textbooks for my classes? Each faculty member will receive a personalized link from Verba once the term courses are approved and listed in Banner. Textbook orders should be submitted no later than the first day of registration for a given term. With some exceptions, TEXTBOOKS ARE NOT STOCKED AT THE BOOKSTORE. PLU partners with Verba for our textbook needs, and textbooks are coordinated through the Center for Student Success. The combination of simple online ordering and

  • .  Health and medical facilities.  Private offices that are essentially public areas due to the frequency with which they are visited by others and used for meetings.  The Anderson University Center.  Computing and Telecommunications machine room.  Residence halls and offices in residence hall buildings, except as allowed per Student Life Division policies.  (Note: see “Residence Hall Communities“ section below.)  Any area or situation in which another person has raised a legitimate concern for health

  • New Delete Religion Academic Programs all programs program website Religion Undergraduate Major & Minor College of Liberal Studies Bachelor of Arts Meet the Professors More Stories Visit About In a world where most social and political conflicts contain a religious dimension, it becomes increasingly necessary to have a better understanding of religion’s diversity and influence in regional, national, and global life. When you study religion at PLU, you’ll discover the history, thought, and practice

  • year,” she said, laughing. “And the honest answer is that I love teaching.”Hacker first came to PLU as a professor and women’s soccer coach. During her 17-year tenure as coach, the Lutes went to the national championship five times. That put her on the map for elite mental skills coaching, and she has spent the second part of her career with two full-time jobs. “How often do students really get to work with someone who is actually doing this? I get to bring these lived experiences that are evidence

  • body but her spirit and poetry continue to speak. Mary Oliver’s words are as common in our community as the scriptures themselves. Her “Instructions for Living a Life” are the armature of our liturgy. Pay attention. Be astonished. Tell about it. These same words have formed my own personal liturgy. For almost two decades they were posted above my desk or on the first page of my journal. Her words were painted on an exterior door that leads from my back yard to the alley. A reminder to me every time