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  • .     Elements are put in rows, which can house any number of elements. Rows can be organized into different layouts, or can have a different number of columns to hold various elements. This can be done by clicking the tab with the lines on top of the specified row. For more information on elements go to the elements help page. Once you are done editing your page hit the publish button to save your work and post the page on your site. To view your new page click on the View Page button on the top bar

  • Replacement Emergency Mitigation Quick Links Environmental Protection Agency EPA & Asbestos Puget Sound Clean Air Agency Washington Department of Ecology Tacoma Pierce County Health Department PLU SustainabilityAsbestos in PLU BuildingsMany buildings on the PLU campus are old enough to have building materials that contain asbestos. An asbestos survey was conducted in 1992 to identify the location of asbestos material on campus. The survey is available for review by contacting the Environmental Health

  • falls, or is ejected into position by the force of gravity, or by an outward, downward or centrifugal thrust or movement, or any pocket knife with a blade length longer than three inches, are prohibited. Kitchen knives will be allowed in the residential halls, but are to be used for food preparation purposes only, and must be stored in individual student rooms and/or kitchens. Self-defense items (examples include but are not limited to, mace, pepper spray, electronic shock devices including

  • keynote address by sharing how Veterans Day came to be and what it has become throughout the years. It was President Woodrow Wilson who first proclaimed Nov. 11 as Armistice Day – in recognition of the end of WWI with the signing of a peace accord in Versailles, France on the 11th day of the 11th month and celebration of remembrance for those who did not return and sacrificed so much in pursuit of peace. In 1954, President Dwight D. Eisenhower proclaimed Armistice Day as Veterans Day in recognition of

  • national initiative works to help close the shortage gap in the nursing workforce across the country. The three foundations will match $125,000 from the national initiative to provide a total of up to $250,00 to launch the Comprehensive Gerontologic Education Partnership in Thurston, Pierce, Mason and Kitsap counties. The partnership is formed by PLU and six supporting organizations. According to Terry Miller, dean of the School of Nursing and project director, the partnership is an original approach

  • understand and engage the world. It’s a great formula to ensure that you are challenged to grow in your faith, no matter who you are or what you believe in. PLU provides the type of education that not only satisfies your mind, but stirs the soul. That’s the Lutheran tradition. Our Lutheran roots compel us to search for truth. So bring your faith, your doubt, your conscience and your intellect to PLU. The following religious groups and clubs are organized and run by PLU students. Aliyah Jewish Club

  • recommendations. Dr. Barry Johnson leads a movement rehearsal under the tent in Red Square. Movement rehearsal. Dr. Brown conducts a section of students outside the frame of the photo. Read Previous Vocal Master Classes in Spring 2021 Read Next Springing Forward with Guest Artists LATEST POSTS PLU’s Director of Jazz Studies, Cassio Vianna, receives grant from the City of Tacoma to write and perform genre-bending composition April 18, 2024 PLU Music Announces Inaugural Paul Fritts Endowed Chair in Organ

  • , hippopotamus, rhinoceros, and buffalos, he had killed. There are specialized individuals who are commissioned to create these posts. These woodcarvers are typically from the Tonj group of the Bongo. (Evans-Pritchard, 35-38) (Santandrea, 74). The Bongo grave post in the PLU Collection is a male figure, made out of wood, and is approximately 58 inches in height. On the face, there are small metal pieces put in a symmetrical pattern (three rows of 12 on the forehead, three by three rows on the cheeks near the

  • rather changing from what they once were, Guzman said. The transition may be troubling, but it’s not a wake. “Because newspapers are troubled doesn’t mean they’re dying,” Zeeck said. “We’re in the middle of a 400-year evolution.” “Invite me when there’s a body to have a wake about it,” he added. As far as audience, more and more people desire a news source, especially in an online format of some source, Guzman said. With a strong audience or readership for newspapers there is a way for the business

  • HEOA Required Consumer InformationPacific Lutheran University has signed a participation agreement with the U.S. Department of Education that allows our students to receive funding from federal student aid programs, as authorized under the Higher Education Act of 1965. Regulations under this act require that the university (and all universities and colleges that offer federal student aid) provide students and prospective students the following consumer information. If you have questions about