Page 892 • (12,464 results in 0.03 seconds)

  • Karissa Bryant ’03 teacher and traveler, will join Sr. Helen Puwein Biography Biography Karissa Bryant, PLU class of 2003, is happy to be back in the northwest after almost three years teaching, studying, volunteering, and traveling in Asia. She teaches yoga to kids and adults with a focus on developing an internal calmness, a constant place of stability and quiet surrender. She also teaches singing with Studio East and Village Theater Kidstage!. Karissa is producing a series of fundraising

  • Professor of Military Science LTC Jeremy Click Full Profile 253-535-8459 clickj@plu.edu

  • Registration for each session closes 24-hour before each session begins. Recordings of each session will be made available at the conclusion of the Spring Series in Pastoral Theology. Contact Kendall Jeske, Director of Congregational Engagement, at jeskekj@plu.edu with questions. Thank you. /* fix for jQuery UI library issues when using the date picker popup */ jQuery.browser = {}; (function () { jQuery.browser.msie = false; jQuery.browser.version = 0; if(navigator.userAgent.match(/MSIE ([0-9

  • Upcoming PerformancesVisit the links below to view some of the upcoming concerts that feature PLU trumpet students or facultyAll PLU Concerts (except Christmas Concerts) are FREE to prospective students. Contact Dr. Lyman to request tickets. Many PLU Concerts are also streamed live online. Click here to watch! Be sure to check out the full music calendar for a complete list of Music events.See upcoming trumpet & brass events hereSee a list of upcoming student recitals hereSee upcoming Wind

  • Cara Gillespie ’17: BA in Communication, Minor in Religion “Since graduation I’ve been in a period of transition. I’ve officially been invited to serve with the Peace Corps in Peru as a Business Advising Volunteer. I leave for Lima in March 2018. In the meantime, I am spending time with my family and working as a bartender saving money to prepare for my two years of volunteer service, as well as, brushing up on my Spanish in my free time. I am so grateful for my time at PLU and know that my

  • Should I go to Graduate School Right After Undergrad? Posted by: chaconac / January 25, 2022 January 25, 2022 As an undergraduate student, you have countless opportunities ahead of you. You also have countless options regarding your next professional or academic move.If you think that graduate school is in your future, you may be wondering — when should I go to grad school? Should I go to graduate school right after undergrad? There’s data-backed research that suggests that now is the best time

  • SafetyWhen stormy weather creates hazardous travel conditions, university students and employees are urged to use caution when traveling. During inclement weather, please exercise caution while walking from parking lots, transit locations and on pathways to and around campus. Wearing non-slip, rubber-sole footwear until you arrive at your destination is recommended, as is walking on grass instead of sidewalks or roadways if they are icy. Facilities Management concentrates clearing efforts on

  • Commuter Students make up a huge population of the PLU Community. Students get to and from PLU using a variety of different methods! Driving & Parking on CampusAll PLU lots are private property and require a parking decal or pass issued by PLU to park in them. Students are permitted to park in varying campus lots based on the type of Parking Permit they are issued. Parking Passes can be purchased on the Campus Safety website using the PermitExpress Parking Portal.  Parking permits cost $50.00

  • Chinese Guest Teacher ProgramThe Confucius Institute of the State of Washington partners with the Chongqing Municipal Education Commission and Hanban to sponsor visiting teachers to teach in K-12 schools in Washington. Whenever possible, these teachers come from partner schools to CIWA-sponsored Confucius Classrooms in Washington. Washington schools request visiting teachers in the fall, then the teachers are selected in Chongqing and sent to Beijing for further training and interviews. In the

  • April 25, 2008 One person can make a difference As he watched his family drive away down a dirt road in Kigali, Rwanda, Carl Wilkens thought he’d seen them in a few days, a week tops. But it was April 10, 1994, and Wilkens – he only American out of 257 who stayed in Rwanda through the genocide that claimed one million lives in three months – would not see his family until after the horror had ended. It was tempting to get on the convoys to the border of nearby Burundi, he told a packed audience