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Greetings from the Dean 2018 Posted by: Matthew / May 7, 2018 May 7, 2018 By Kevin J. O'BrienDean of HumanitiesEach year, the PLU Division of Humanities puts together a collection of stories into Prism, offering a few reflections of the great work our faculty do in classrooms and beyond. This year’s stories will introduce you to a new Philosophy professor, a Nordic Studies professor who returned to teach at his alma mater, and our new Director of the Scandinavian Cultural Center. You will get
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. Laboratory practice required. (4) CHIN 202 : Intermediate Chinese - VW, GE A continuation of CHIN 102 or equivalent. Develops further the ability to communicate in Mandarin Chinese, using culturally authentic material. Laboratory practice required. (4) CHIN 287 : Special Topics in Chinese To provide undergraduate students with new, one-time, and developing courses not yet available in the regular curriculum. The title will be listed on the student term-based record as ST: followed by the specific title
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his body of work. During the Ruth Anderson Public Debate, hundreds of tweets flew back and forth between debate attendees. They were fact-checking one another and coming up with novel, innovative argumentation. Eckstein and I pored over every tweet during the summer. We discovered how new arguments emerged and watched reasoning flow and evolve, paralleling and splitting from the debate happening feet away. We found they were participants, not just audience members, actively engaging in
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ePass. [Save to ePass] Button: Save your current favorites to ePass. [ADD] Button: Add the current page to your favorites. [EDIT] Button: Edit your bookmarks, and give them a new title and URL. [REMOVE] Button: Remove selected bookmarks. Can also drag/drop them to reorder how you see fit. [SAVE] Button: Save your configured bookmarks. [NEW] Button: Click to add a custom bookmark, and give it a title and URL. [BACK] Button: Cancel your selected option. Load from ePass Save to ePass Save Add Edit
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you are signed into ePass. [Save to ePass] Button: Save your current favorites to ePass. [ADD] Button: Add the current page to your favorites. [EDIT] Button: Edit your bookmarks, and give them a new title and URL. [REMOVE] Button: Remove selected bookmarks. Can also drag/drop them to reorder how you see fit. [SAVE] Button: Save your configured bookmarks. [NEW] Button: Click to add a custom bookmark, and give it a title and URL. [BACK] Button: Cancel your selected option. Load from ePass Save to
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signed into ePass. [Save to ePass] Button: Save your current favorites to ePass. [ADD] Button: Add the current page to your favorites. [EDIT] Button: Edit your bookmarks, and give them a new title and URL. [REMOVE] Button: Remove selected bookmarks. Can also drag/drop them to reorder how you see fit. [SAVE] Button: Save your configured bookmarks. [NEW] Button: Click to add a custom bookmark, and give it a title and URL. [BACK] Button: Cancel your selected option. Load from ePass Save to ePass Save
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. In Luther’s intellectual work lay the seeds of a new vision of free and responsible society. The intellectual structure of the Lutheran reform movement was laid in previous centuries by the twin influences of the medieval European universities and Renaissance humanism. The medieval universities provided the foundations of free academic inquiry through a curriculum shaped by the classical trivium (grammar, logic, rhetoric) and quadrivium (arithmetic, geometry, music, astronomy). These in turn
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and moments of baroque and florid music. Britten pays attention to the Shakespearean play’s central theme: the madness of love. The plot follows that of the play, though Britten cut much of Act I and re-ordered scenes. Music tends to lengthen the duration of text, but anyone who knows the play will recognize the story. Jim Brown, vocal chair and director of A Midsummer Night’s Dream, is updating the opera to modern day Central Park in New York City- for a sort of “Shakespeare in the Park
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September 22, 2008 Dean says travel broadens perspectives At a time with the United State is no longer the 800-pound gorilla, it’s time for future leaders graduating from college and universities to take stock of what they can offer the world, according to PLU’s new business dean. At least that’s what James Brock, the dean of PLU’s School of Business, plans to talk about Wednesday night when he kicks off the State Farm MBA Executive Leadership Series in the Morken Center, Room 103 at 6 p.m
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