Page 857 • (14,063 results in 0.026 seconds)

  • the State Attorney General's Office as an Agent of ReformCalli VossHow To Draw Congressional Districts

  • . Almost 50 percent of the university’s graduating seniors each year have taken advantage of study away opportunities, reaping benefits such as leadership skills, adaptability, independence and self-reliance — all traits that employers recognize and covet. Building on a study away experience is another step toward becoming a well-rounded citizen of the world, and many PLU students choose to continue their global education through Peace Corps Preps, the Fulbright Program, Peace Scholars and more.Peace

  • DISTRIBUTION POLICIESImpact distributes posters to 29 boards on campus. For a map of board locations, please see our Distribution page. Impact Boards Posters are distributed on Mondays, Tuesdays, Wednesdays, and Thursdays during the Spring Semester(23). The standard time for a poster to be up is two weeks unless the information is to be considered vital to the PLU Community. Examples of this exception is things such as Mental Health Services, Covid-19 responses, and Title IX. The distribution

  • March 14, 2008 Civil War love letter inspires wind ensemble As the story goes, Maj. Sullivan Ballou was like most men in the Northern army at the start of the Civil War. He fought not to end slavery, but to preserve the Union. At 32, Ballou had a promising career as a lawyer, a wife and two sons. An ardent Republican and devoted supporter of Abraham Lincoln, he volunteered in the spring of 1861. Ballou and his men left Providence, R.I., for Washington, D.C., on June 19. Ballou wrote a letter to

  • November 2, 2014 Pierce County’s Youngest City Councilmember is a Double-Major at PLU Shannon Reynolds is a full-time double major at PLU and a member of the Fircrest City Council. (Photo: John Struzenberg ’16) Shannon Reynolds ’15 marks her first year as an elected Fircrest official By Brenna Sussman ’15 PLU Marketing & Communications Student Worker TACOMA, Wash. (Nov. 3, 2014)—For Shannon Reynolds ’15, after-school activities extend far beyond campus clubs and sports teams. When she’s not

  • community garden. The inclusion of the garden with the food bank is novel, because the food bank has fresh produce, a food group which is somewhat difficult to source in the greater Parkland area, considering its low number of local grocery stores. Produce can cost as much as milk or meat, and is often the first food group sacrificed from an impoverished budget. The pantry delivered almost 11 tons of food in summer 2018, serving nearly 600 families. It is a lifeline service for some members of the

  • Killer Drones - The Good, The Bad, and the Ugly (pdf) view download "The Ethics of Lethal Drone Warfare" - Dr. Bradley Strawser

  • BackAll researchers are required to complete the Collaborative Institutional Training Initiative (CITI) online training course prior to submitting an HPRB proposal. This is an ethics training to help you understand how to protect the rights and welfare of your research participants. Your CITI certification is automatically linked with your Mentor account, so you no longer need to provide a certification date as part of the proposal. HPRB requires updating your CITI certification every four

  • BackAll researchers are required to complete the Collaborative Institutional Training Initiative (CITI) online training course prior to submitting an HPRB proposal. This is an ethics training to help you understand how to protect the rights and welfare of your research participants. Your CITI certification is automatically linked with your Mentor account, so you no longer need to provide a certification date as part of the proposal. HPRB requires updating your CITI certification every four

  • share their research findings. The Adlers’ lecture will be based on their most recent book, The Tender Cut: Inside the Hidden World of Self-Injury (New York University Press, 2011). The book is based on a decade of interview-based sociological research with hundreds of self-injurers – people who engage in the deliberate, non-suicidal destruction of their own body tissue, such as cutting, burning, branding, and bone-breaking. Their work uncovers how self-injury is a coping mechanism, a form of