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  • dCenter ’emerged’ as a resource for students, fun place to hang out For many, like senior art major Chelsea Putnam, PLU’s Diversity Center is a place to foster one’s individuality.“I really wanted to learn and gain my own individuality with this place,” said Putnam. Initially…

    . I came here intended to study exercise. It really changed my path being up here and working with these people.” But the Diversity Center hasn’t always been the resource for students that it is today. When the center began in 2001, it had a lot of programs that resembled Diversity 101, said Eva Johnson, Dean of Student Development and Director of Student Involvement and Leadership. The intent was for students to learn about different cultures and start conversations about diversity. “We spent a

  • Lutes study social justice at one of the world’s oldest, most prestigious universities By Barbara Clements, Content Development Director Nine Pacific Lutheran University students are studying at Oxford University as part of the first such program at PLU, one of the only universities on the…

    violence and conflict and humanitarian intervention. There also is a service component to the program, said program leader, Philosophy Professor Greg Johnson. Johnson said he has been working on the program for the last 18 months. Originally scheduled for launch in 2015, Johnson said that all the pieces fell into place early – so why not 2014? “No university on the West Coast, with perhaps the exception of Stanford, has a program like this,” Johnson said before leaving for Oxford earlier this month

  • Much more than event planners Student Involvement and Leadership isn’t just a department that plans events, but rather a partner and active participant in learning, in supporting the complete college student. That couldn’t be truer than at Pacific Lutheran University and a lot of that…

    October 28, 2009 Much more than event planners Student Involvement and Leadership isn’t just a department that plans events, but rather a partner and active participant in learning, in supporting the complete college student. That couldn’t be truer than at Pacific Lutheran University and a lot of that has to do with the leadership of Eva Johnson ’95, director of Student Involvement and Leadership. She’s been a leader in integrating how the department integrates learning into campus life, as

  • Greetings Class of 1969! The Class of 1969 celebrated their 50th reunion the first week of October. Even though it may have seemed like a gathering of strangers, the years fell away and recognition

    ) Herfindahl, Sharon (Swanson) LeMay, Sharon (Willms) Dillinger, Marjorie (Weiss) Ray, Douglas Wright, Ellen (Schnaible) Breiten, Jan Loreen-Martin, Nancy Kingston, Garnet Templin-Imel Third Row: Julie (Svendsen) Anderson, Barbara (Thompson) Aune, Patti (Callow) Krieger-Martin, G. Lee Kluth, Pam (Bach) Kluth, Bruce Eklund, Chris Anderson Fourth Row: Ron Grewenow,  Patsy (Davies) Johnson, David Hanson, Sandy Sanford, Rick Rouse, Betty (Burton) Beecher, Susan (Van Hoy) Burchfield, Barbara (Maier) Eklund

  • Lucia Candidate orientation, rehearsals, and interview dates will begin the first Sunday of November. The rehearsal times will be determined by students availability on Sundays but on Nov.

    , orientation will start at 4:00pm in the SCC. 2023 Lucia ScholarshipApplication for Lucia ScholarshipApply NowPast winners of the Scandinavian Cultural Center Lucia Scholarship are:1950-19591950  Lola (Murk) Gracey 1951  Unknown 1952  Unknown 1953  Charlotte (Brandt) Nordling 1954  Marion (Churness) Salvage 1955  Lois (Grimsrud) Capps 1956  Joy (Nelson) Johnson 1957  Hazel Dell Hansen 1958  Nadine (Bruins) Tetrault 1959  Nancy Johanson1960-19691960 Judy Schwartz 1961 Karin (Pihl) Leander 1962 Nancy

  • Kids invade Garfield Street, PLU for Halloween treats Hundreds of children brought their best frightening figures, glamorous costumes and laughable looks for trick or treating on Halloween in the Garfield Business District and PLU residence halls.“Most of them really enjoy having the little kids come,”…

    Halloween festivities, with many of the businesses offering fun activities like cookie decorating, blow-up monsters, family-friendly Halloween movies and more. “It’s really, really fun,” said Elizabeth Johnson, of Elizabeth’s Holistic Health Spa. “Everybody kind of teams up and does their own little special thing.” The Garfield Street business owner said the event has been a great source of community for all the participants. “You get out there and you just feel a real sense of community,” Johnson said

  • Stephanie was one of six recipients across the nation to receive an American Association of Nurse Practitioners Scholarship for the 2018-2019 school year. She received her RN/MSN through the PLU School of Nursing in 2016 and is currently in the DNP-FNP program and will graduate…

    education at PLU which contributed to me receiving this honor. Thank you!” We are so excited for you and can’t wait to see where this next step takes you! Read Previous Jessica Schwinck – Fellow for the 2019-20 Duke-Johnson & Johnson Nurse Leadership Program Read Next Congratulations Alum Natalie Bisceglia! LATEST POSTS Dr. Mary Moller – 2018 APNA Psychiatric Nurse of the Year April 30, 2019 Isabella Zubrod – Women’s Volleyball Athlete of the Week! April 30, 2019 Congratulations Danielle Paschall! April

  • PLU professor adds ‘board game inventor’ to his résumé.

    relationships. So, he theorized that clients attained a greater sense of hope when they had relationships with people who reinforced their belief in themselves and their pathways to getting there. “Our hope is tied to people around us,” he said. “That’s a big contributor.” Enter Grahe and then-PLU students Katelin Johnson ’15 and Katye Griswold ’13, along with a handful of other psychology students. They volunteered in 2014 to move Ward’s Hope Scale from theoretical to tangible, providing the evidence to

  • 1:05 p.m. – Mr. McNeese’s gym Class The eighth-grade PE class taught by Dan McNeese ’06 is short one player for a game of pickleball, so McNeese, 26, joins a team and starts swatting at the ball. McNeese says that, as a beginning teacher, he…

    school,” he said, herding the students into the locker room. “But once I got here, I didn’t want to leave.” 1:20 p.m. – Cascade Middle School courtyard, next to the gym Isaiah Johnson is watching Dan McNeese take his last class out on the field. The courtyard is clear,  and most of the school is on a field trip to the Pacific Science Center in Seattle. It is a rare moment of quiet at Cascade Middle School. Johnson is tired, but it’s a contented tired. He talks about his goal of building a school

  • Catching Up with Stephanie Anne Johnson ’06 ‹ Resolute Online: Spring 2014 Home Features NicarAGUA TED Fellow Positive Prankster The Voice Attaway Lutes Editor’s Note Setting the Course On Campus Discovery Research Accolades Lute Library Blogs Alumni News Homecoming Highlights Awards Recognition Alumni Profiles Alumni Events Class Notes Calendar Home Features NicarAGUA TED Fellow Positive Prankster The Voice Attaway Lutes Editor’s Note Setting the Course On Campus Discovery Research Accolades