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  • infamous Friday lab sessions! Does the process differ in the spring and fall semesters? Seasonal changes in the watershed have a big impact on what students do in the fall class versus the spring class. In the fall, many locations in Clover Creek are completely dry, and this past fall one of our typical sampling locations had a toxic algae advisory. In some spring semesters, sampling locations may have too much water, making it unsafe for students to enter the stream. So our sampling plan is always

  • : Music Theory & Analysis IA (2) MUSI 135: Music Theory & Analysis IB (2) MUSI 136: Music Theory & Analysis II (3) MUSI 151: Keyboard Musicianship I (1) and/or MUSI 152: Keyboard Musicianship II (1) or MUSI 251: Keyboard Musicianship III (1) or successful completion of the Keyboarding Proficiency Assessment All first-year students should complete the Theory online placement test before class registration. Students will be placed in the appropriate level Music Theory & Analysis course based on the test

  • picture was taken at the Parthenon in Athens, Greece. This was one of the last site visits and was at the end of our trip. Our class had bonded so much. My friend, Frankie, helped me hold up my bent-up Lutes pennet (on the right) and my other friend, Madeline popped up below the flag to make this picture a special, fun memory. The Parthenon itself is an iconic figure of Greece and one with history, paying tribute to the goddess Athena. Athens, Greece January 30, 2022Global Classroom CategoryWhile

  • Know Before You Go 10 Essentials Leave No Trace Ethics NOAA Weather Mountain WeatherWashington Know-HowNear PLU Tacoma Hiking & Biking Trails Tacoma REI: Hours & Class Schedule Tacoma City Parks Nisqually Wildlife Refuge Foothills Trail (Lakewood) Slater Museum of Natural HistoryWashington Systems Dr. Cliff Mass' Weather Blog Ferries State Parks Landscope - Washington's Ecosystems & GeographySection 2

  • Other services may be available on limited case by case basis: Names Fitness Center Mortvedt Library Delayed Start Announcement Offices open and classes begin at designated time, usually 10:00 am Attend whichever class was scheduled to be in session when the university opens Example: If your Writing 101 class was scheduled from 8:30 am to 11:20 am, you would arrive for that class at 10:00 am Activities beginning after 10:00 am start as scheduled Essential Services remain in operation on a limited

  • Sciences: preferably physics, chemistry, and biology; at least two semester-long courses. Social Sciences: psychology, sociology, economics, political science, and education. At least six semesters, including at least one semester of psychology. Foreign Languages – one or more of the following: Latin, Greek, Hebrew, German, French. Students who anticipate post- graduate studies are urged to undertake these disciplines as early as possible (at least four semesters). Religion: a thorough knowledge of

  • Summer Research Program – University of Nebraska Posted by: alemanem / December 1, 2016 December 1, 2016 The University of Nebraska’s summer program offers research opportunities in the science, technology, engineering, and mathematics fields in addition to an interdisciplinary Minority Health Disparities program aimed at converting cutting edge social and behavioral research into an understanding and reduction of health disparities among minorities. Summer 2017 research programs include

  • MediaLab's Current Client SpotlightAuburn Symphony OrchestraAuburn Symphony Orchestra is a local professional symphony orchestra in Auburn, WA. MediaLab has produced two videos for them in recent years and is currently producing photography work for Auburn Symphony Orchestra’s social media and other promotional purposes. The Grand CinemaMedialab has partnered with the Grand Cinema to create a series of advertisements, highlighting the local movie theater. On top of that, this year, Medialab ran

  • Hall in the Anderson University Center. Dean Douglas will speak from her book, Stand Your Ground: Black Bodies and the Justice of God (Orbis, 2015). “Stand Your Ground law signals a social-cultural climate that makes the destruction and death of black bodies inevitable and even permissible. . . . This book is an attempt to untangle the web of social, cultural, and theological discourse that contributes to stand-your-ground culture as well as to provide a theological response.” The lecture is free

  • 2021 Outstanding Capstone Award RecipientsThe Department of Sociology & Criminal Justice is pleased to announce the outstanding capstone award for the Class of 2021. The award for the outstanding quantitative capstone goes to Shayla Fletcher for her paper: ” ‘I am my own Person, I can do what I Want’: A Qualitative Study on Teen Rebellion.” Shayla Fletcher