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  • is given by the Washington Planned Giving Council. In 2012, the Washington Planned Giving Council established the Frank Minton Award to recognize those who have demonstrated an outstanding career of service, dedication and leadership in charitable gift planning. “This award means a great deal to me because the selection comes from my colleagues in the development community,” said Larson, who graduated from PLU in 1957 (his wife, Betty,  and three children also are PLU graduates). After graduation

  • Internships (Juniors and seniors) Technically only Consortium University Member students eligible…but I imagine internships in general are available. Aerojet Rocketdyne: Aerojet is a world-recognized aerospace and defense leader, specializing in rocket and missile propulsion. Eagle Harbor Technologies: Dedicated to producing innovative solutions to technological problems relating to plasma science including in-space electric propulsion, fusion energy development, and plasma sources for materials

  • Affordable Housing ProjectsTaken from Pierce County's WebsiteAffordable Housing ProjectsHuman Services uses local and federal funding to finance the development and preservation of affordable rental housing and the development of homeownership opportunities for low income households in Pierce County. Below are some highlights from projects we’ve helped develop over the last several years.Orting Veterans VillageThe Washington State Department of Veterans Affairs lased 5+ acres in Orting to

  • Hirsh Diamant Faculty, The Evergreen State College Phone: 360-867-6736 Email: diamanth@evergreen.edu Biography Biography Technical Degree, Building and Architecture, Kiev, Ukraine, 1964; B.F.A., Painting and Sculpture, Bezalel Academy of Arts and Design, Jerusalem, Israel,1975; M.F.A., Photography and New Forms, Pratt Institute, 1978; Ph.D., Arts in Education and Human Development, Union Institute, 1998. Expertise: visual arts, Chinese studies, human development Related Subject Areas

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  • Tony Warfield Senior Manager for Development Studies, Environmental Programs, Port of Tacoma; will join Connie Baker Biography Biography Tony Warfield has practiced in the environmental field for over twenty years in the Puget Sound region. He has worked for the Washington State Department of Ecology, the Boeing Company, the Washington State Department of Transportation and most recently the Port of Tacoma where he serves as the Senior Manager for Development Services in the Port’s

  • cases in epidemiological research not only diminishes the size of the data by a sometimes unignorable amount, but also takes out a critical component of the narrative behind the data. “Why is this data missing? Why do certain groups have more missing data than others? How can we address this?” These are questions that every researcher should be asking before starting analysis on any dataset, but they are questions that often go overlooked or unanswered. In this presentation, we will explore

  • cases in epidemiological research not only diminishes the size of the data by a sometimes unignorable amount, but also takes out a critical component of the narrative behind the data. “Why is this data missing? Why do certain groups have more missing data than others? How can we address this?” These are questions that every researcher should be asking before starting analysis on any dataset, but they are questions that often go overlooked or unanswered. In this presentation, we will explore

  • . “During my junior year, I witnessed people in Tacoma relying on buses to get to work, school, the doctor or just visit their families,” says Austin. “It really hit home that public transit access touches and impacts so many other critical issues.” Transit in Tacoma Andrew Austin discusses why public transportation is so important, not only now, but for our future. “Even now, nearly 10 years later and equipped with a few more tools, I feel like I’m the same young guy, figuring out how I can be an

  • high school shape how you teach now? Well, soon after I started there I had a lot of the underrepresented minority students in my classroom after school and during lunch. Just wanting to talk about their experiences in life. For many of them, I was their first Black teacher that they’ve ever had, and I taught 10th graders. That experience really opened my eyes to what I—as a Black woman in science and as an educator—represent. That was the moment where I started thinking that I really love science

  • Justice and Indigenous People D. Agriculture 12 semester hours from any of the following ANTH 368: Edible Landscapes, The Foraging Spectrum BIOL 116: Introductory Ecology BIOL 356: Economic and Cultural Botany BIOL 358: Plant Physiology BIOL 367: Conservation Biology and Management BIOL 368: Ecology BIOL 443: Plant Development and Genetic Engineering BIOL 462: Plant Diversity and Distribution ECON 101: Principles of Microeconomics ENVT/GEOS 104: Conservation of Natural Resources E. Youth in