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  • Exposure Awards Recognize Lutes Posted by: Mandi LeCompte / August 17, 2015 August 17, 2015 During spring 2015, Elly Vadseth’s digital photography class introduced her to a new kind of image manipulation. She spent her semester combining nature shots with studio images using a photo collage method – the end result – a web of pictures. Now, Vadseth and Taylor Hardman ’16, both Art and Design majors at PLU, can say their works have been on view at the Louve Museum in Paris, France. SeeMe’s Vox

  • China in WashingtonFrom our early history to our prospects for the future, China is part of Washington. Chinese people helped build and shape Washington–even before it was a state. Stemming back two centuries, people of Chinese heritage came and were born in the Pacific Northwest. From railroad laborers to prominent business people to government leaders, thousands of people of Chinese heritage shaped our economy. The influx and interpretations of cultural traditions and the forging of civil

  • Born and raised in the Philippines, Maria Surla ’23 is now a PLU grad and a nurse at MultiCare Good Samaritan Emergency in Parkland Posted by: Zach Powers / June 9, 2023 Image: Maria Surla ’23 presents at an event she co-organized titled “Tubes and Lines.” The event was planned and run by PLU’s Delta Iota Chi Nursing Service Club and invited students from University of Puget Sound’s Occupational Therapy and Physical Therapy program to learn the proper way to move and ambulate patients who have

  • individual. The staff has a large amount of white pigmentation suggesting it relates to water spirits. The pigmentation is especially prominent at the top of the figure, and its intricate carving seems to suggest more detail than can be observed in images of similar staffs in other museum collections. Much like the ideas associated with staffs in western culture, the staff used by the traditional Urhobo society are used to represent prestige, but also nature, and spirituality. Also, before looking into

  • YOU’LL LIKE TACOMA— OUR LOCAL FAVORITES TACOMA is the third largest city in Washington and proud to be known as both “Grit City” and “City of Destiny.” DOWNTOWN It’s just a 15 minute drive or 25 minute bus ride from campus to check out some great restaurants as well as Tacoma’s amazing museums, including the Museum of Glass, Tacoma Art Museum, and Washington State History Museum. Head up the hill on Thursdays for Tacoma’s Farmers Market, and be on the look-out for the bi-monthly Tacoma Night

  • , Environment, and Resistance: Cultivating a Community-Focused Pedagogy for a DJS-Focused First Year Experience Seminar.9:55 am - Sahara Jones``Thoughtful Inquiry``: Curriculum Creation for the First Year Experience Seminar 10:15 am - Isaac Madsen-BibeauWhat's In Our Attic, and What Do We Do With It Now?: A PLU Ethnographic Collections Repatriation Policy10:40 am - Annika Nordleaf-NelsonDecolonizing the Art Museum Narrative: Bainbridge Island Museum of Art Centering Indigenous Voices in Indigenous Strength

  • A living representation of triumph over tragedy, BlueSteele Coffee Company embodies a community grateful for the bravery and sacrifice of first responders. On November 29, 2009, four Lakewood police officers were gunned down in this Parkland coffee shop. Three years later, owners, Courtney, Olly and Dylan Marshall, converted this place of sorrow into a memorial for fallen officers. Formerly a Forza Coffee Company location, the BlueSteele Coffee Company now stands privately owned, renamed for

  • , U.S. Holocaust Memorial Museum, “Reflections on Bonhoeffer”   11:15 a.m.-12:20 p.m., AUC Scandinavian Cultural Center   Dr. Dorothy Roberts , University of Pennsylvania, “Racism and the Paradox of State Violence”   Abstract :   Because of racism, state efforts that purport to control or redress violence have often inflicted worse violence on black Americans. I will examine three examples of this repressive paradox: public torture lynchings, coercive sterilization laws, policies, and programs, and

  • Neal Sobania Professor of History, Emeritus Email: sobania@plu.edu Professional Biography Education Ph.D., University of London (School of Oriental and African Studies), 1980 M.A., Ohio University, 1973 B.A., Hope College, 1968 Areas of Emphasis or Expertise African History with a particular focus on Ethiopia Eastern and Southern Africa Visual Culture Museum Studies The use of photographs as historical documents Books Painting Ethiopia: The Life and Work of Qes Adamu Tesfaw By Raymond Silverman

  • students at the Press has been exhibited at King’s Books, the Karpeles Manuscript Museum, and the University of Puget Sound. Originally located on PLU’s Lower Campus, today the Elliott Press is in Ingram Hall, between the graphic design and printmaking studios. The Press features two platen letterpresses from the early 1900s and a Vandercook proof press from 1940 along with a small, portable parlor press added to the program in 2012, dubbed “Baby Elliott.” The Press houses more than 300 different cases