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pace.Which might seem contradictory at first. But Sandhu transferred to PLU with two years of Running Start credits as a 17-year-old, with plans to graduate in two years. The pandemic was in full force, and classes were online. When in-person classes started in Sandhu’s senior year, she felt a little behind and hesitant to ask for help. “I decided to add a year, slow down a bit and give myself space to grow,” she says. As a result, she pursued international interests while staying near her family and
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Act Six Scholar Finds Support, Future at PLU Posted by: Silong Chhun / April 27, 2021 April 27, 2021 By Veronica CrakerMarketing & CommunicationsA native of Yemen, Abdulghani Mosa ‘23 had no idea what his future would hold when he moved to Tacoma in 2012. “Moving here, everything changed,” said Mosa, who was 12 years old when he and his family joined his father who was already living in the states. “The culture was different, school, religion ... even the houses and trees. It’s like a different
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Community First: PLU alum supports local sellers and town with 3 Sisters Market Posted by: Silong Chhun / August 25, 2021 August 25, 2021 By Veronica Craker, video by Silong ChhunMarketing and CommunicationsFor Whidbey Island business owner Roshel Donwen ’17, her close-knit island community is everything. She finds fulfillment in running her store, 3 Sisters Market, providing local food and goods to the people she considers family.“The best part about running and owning 3 Sisters Market is the
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and Saint Paul had typhoid fever outbreaks. In 1900 both Maria and Jessie served as nurses. The Gould family had been exposed to typhoid fever in 1892 when they were in the San Francisco Bay area, intent on emigrating from Manitoba, Canada to USA. They got sidetracked when John and Maria Gould’s only son died of typhoid fever. Maria was hospitalized in Oakland’s Fabriola Hospital[1] for a long time. When she recovered, the family returned to Manitoba. They re-entered the USA in Minnesota in 1898
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Bjug Harstad Day of Giving – Resolute Online: Fall 2016 Search Features Features Welcome The Saint John’s Bible Hospitality Reformation Listen Called to PLU Women and the Holocaust On Campus Discovery Discovery Attaway Lutes Research Grants Accolades Lute Library Blogs Alumni News Alumni Board Letter Bjug Harstad Day of Giving Alumni Award Winners dCenter Alumni Weekend Alumni Profiles Class Notes Class Notes Family and Friends Submit a Class Note Calendar Calendar Calendar Highlights Bjug
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Calendar Highlights Legacy Lutes Each fall, Pacific Lutheran University’s community expands to include fresh faces who arrive with a commitment to make the Lute family their family. But for some, they were part of the family well before calling PLU home. The Office of Alumni and Constituent Relations extends a special welcome to our Legacy Lutes – new students whose parents attended the university well before them. We recognize the extra special commitment these alumni show their alma mater, and we are
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and plans to stimulate the local economy and fund their projects. The highlight of Luke’s service was the opportunity to find a shared humanity with people that live such different lives, something he had never thought would be possible. When he first arrived in Senegal, he never could have imagined how comfortable he would feel within his community, how close he would grow to his host family and friends, and how much reciprocal knowledge was shared between himself and others. He describes this
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Miller, Artistic Director of Music of Remembrance The Chris Knutzen Room (Anderson University Center) The Current Crisis: The Dehumanization of Refugee Children in the U.S. 3:45p.m. – 5:00 p.m. In 2014, thousands of children made the dangerous trek from Central America to the U.S., traveling without adult family members and facing violence, exploitation, and sexual assault. How was their plight described in various U.S. commentaries and why were these children not welcomed as refugees? This panel
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Miller, Artistic Director of Music of Remembrance The Chris Knutzen Room (Anderson University Center) The Current Crisis: The Dehumanization of Refugee Children in the U.S. 3:45p.m. – 5:00 p.m. In 2014, thousands of children made the dangerous trek from Central America to the U.S., traveling without adult family members and facing violence, exploitation, and sexual assault. How was their plight described in various U.S. commentaries and why were these children not welcomed as refugees? This panel
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Miller, Artistic Director of Music of Remembrance The Chris Knutzen Room (Anderson University Center) The Current Crisis: The Dehumanization of Refugee Children in the U.S. 3:45p.m. – 5:00 p.m. In 2014, thousands of children made the dangerous trek from Central America to the U.S., traveling without adult family members and facing violence, exploitation, and sexual assault. How was their plight described in various U.S. commentaries and why were these children not welcomed as refugees? This panel
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