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  • registration. To learn more, see: Getting Started with Duo Multi-Factor AuthenticationYou will do the following during this process:Choose your account usernameEnroll in multi-factor authentication (optional for students)Note: To enroll, you will need to have access to your mobile device to complete the registration.Choose your account passwordSet your account's security questionsAs a member of the PLU community, please be advised that usage of your ePass account is subject to all revelant university

  • California Mountains. West end: A Saucer Magnolia will give us large fragrant flowers in spring. Stuen Southeast (near the parking lot): There is an ash tree (Sorbus intermedia) reportedly from the original Stuen property donated to the University. This ash is native to Norway.Tingelstad Entry: Two Japanese Snowdrop trees (Styrax japonicus). They have small white flowers that dangle along each branch. Track Entry: There is one Coast Redwood struggling in the open dry location. Sequoia sempervirens is the

  • materials will remain in your reviewers dossier until you “revoke access” away with whom you have previously shared the item(s) with. RANK PROMOTION AND TENURE (RPT) PACKETYour Case Packet is created by the PLU Interfolio Administrator when you become a candidate for tenure and or promotion.  The case packet will be available only after the Rank and Tenure Committee meeting with candidates. To access your RPT packet, click on “Pacific Lutheran University” from the drop down menu.  Do not click on

  • limits to those charging times can be attributed to different parts of the battery, which is what makes this research exciting for students.” Now, buoyed by the NSF grant and a recent partnership with the University of Washington, Waldow’s polymer experiments are being used to create organic transistors based on polymers. While batteries store energy, transistors control the flow of and amplify electric currents. They are crucial elements of nearly all modern electronics. Waldow and his team hope to

  • . Visitors can also post comments on blog entries. To learn more about the study away opportunities at PLU, visit the Wang Center for International Programs’ Web site, or contact the center at ext. 7577 or wangctr@plu.edu. University Communications staff writer Megan Haley compiled this report. Comments, questions, ideas? Please contact her at ext. 8691 or at haleymk@plu.edu. Photo of Dubai water taxis provided by communication professor Cliff Rowe. Read Previous UC, Morken powered by wind turbines Read

  • , as well as the residents of Pacific Lutheran University, revolve around “can we use the water and then return it back as clean water,” she said. Then there are choices that an individual can make. Bottled water, or tap, for example. In the last few years, PLU’s Sustainability Committee and student groups have pushed for students to eschew bottled water – and the resources used to make the plastic – in favor of tap water and reusable bottles. Then there are hidden water choices. It takes 37

  • Science Center in Seattle. “This is a rare opportunity to have these kinds of objects in Seattle,” said archaeologist Donald P. Ryan, director of the Pacific Lutheran University Valley of the Kings Expedition. It’s been more than 30 years since Seattle has seen the wonders of the King Tut exhibit, and the current North American tour showcases twice as many artifacts as before, many of which have never been seen before in the United States. During a dig in Egypt’s Valley of the Kings, Don Ryan

  • 23; and May 26-May 31. RSVP here to help paint. Recognizing that Parkland has its own unique history and cultural identity, Pacific Lutheran University students have created the collaborative Parkland Community Mural Project in hopes of archiving those stories on a prominent neighborhood wall. This project is designed to be community-based; according to organizers, its purpose is to unite local artists, students, community organizations, businesses and community members to creatively and

  • components.That wondrous poster remained in her mind throughout her youth and became a beacon as she decided what to study in school. The feeling of being so small, yet part of a universe so big, was the inspiration behind her vocational choice: to educate others about the universe and the world around them. Hay is now Associate Professor of Physics at Pacific Lutheran University. Earlier this year, she took a sabbatical from teaching college courses on electromagnetism, physics and calculus-based physics to

  • University in May, and Wild Waves hired her to be their marketing communication coordinator soon after. So far, her adult experience has been far more enjoyable than that first visit. “You get to sell fun. That’s totally what I get to do,” Miller said, citing the park’s inaugural Paw Pool-ooza as her favorite event that she has helped organize so far. On that day, the park opened its half-million-gallon wave pool and its kiddie swimming area, Hook’s Lagoon, to the dogs-only swimming event, a fundraiser