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  • , and the work demands a pianist of her virtuosic skill. But until now, we haven’t been able to work out a collaboration due to schedule conflicts.” “Last spring our department hired three outstanding new full time faculty – mezzo-soprano Soon Cho, baritone Barry Johnson and pianist Lark Powers. It seemed to me the perfect time to try to schedule this mass in a concert to showcase all these fabulous new colleagues along with Oksana, soprano Jessica Milanese and tenor James Brown. And of course the

  • , 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 designated by the academic unit. (1 to 4) ARTD 410 : Graphic Design 4 Design and execution of printed materials; emphasis on technical procedures and problems in mass communication. Explores advanced techniques with multiple color, typography, and other complex problems. Prerequisite: ARTD 310 or consent of instructor. (4

  • Fetler, Paul Make a Joyful Noise Gretchaninoff, A. Nunc Dimittis Rozsa, Miklos Alleluia! Luther-Olds A Mighty Fortress Is Our God Schutz, Heinrich Song of Praise Graun, Karl Heinrich Surely He Hath Borne Our Griefs Bach, J. S. Be Not Afraid Vaughan Williams, Ralph Mass in G Minor Pinkham, Daniel Sinfonia Sacra Barber, Samuel Agnus Dei Lockwood, Normand Hosanna Christiansen, Paul Make Us One Bender, January Christ Is Born Today Kodaly, Zoltan Evening Zimmerman, Heinz Werner In That Great Gettin’ Up

  • core concepts at an early age. He wrote a series of emoji based math books for kids from five to ten so they could enjoy a story of smiley faces adventuring while discovering properties of numbers and patterns that show up with geometry. These were deep mathematical concepts accessible to children. Bryan originally wrote them for his young grandchildren and then shared these books with some PLU faculty members and alumni with young children. Bryan served on many committees during his 35-plus years

  • 2022 Physics Capstone SymposiumSenior Physics capstone presentations will take place Wednesday, May 18th starting at 2pm in Morken 103. If you’d like to join the capstone Zoom session, please email Professor Rich Louie at louie@plu.edu. 2:00pm Kelly Pham – “Airstream Magic: ‘Levitating’ Tower of Spheres” This capstone project focuses on the physics behind balancing spheres within a vertical column of air. A physical model relating the ball radius, mass, terminal velocity, equilibrium height

  • By:Debbie Cafazzo September 12, 2019 0 Palmer Scholars https://www.plu.edu/resolute/fall-2019/wp-content/uploads/sites/33/2019/09/palmer-scholars-cover-1024x504.jpg 1024 504 Debbie Cafazzo Debbie Cafazzo https://www.plu.edu/resolute/fall-2019/wp-content/uploads/sites/33/2019/05/debbie-cafazzo.jpg September 12, 2019 September 26, 2019 Palmer Scholars Alumni Board member Jonathan Jackson ’12 leads the Tacoma-based organization In a sea of flowing red, white, green, blue and black, dozens of proud

  • IntroductionAfrican ArtFind out moreIn terms of land mass, Africa is a large continent, in which all of the United States, Europe, China, India, Mexico, and Japan could easily fit. It is also a place of tremendous diversity, in terms of languages spoken, ethnic identities, cultural traditions, environments in which people live and work, and historic experiences. Sadly, popular culture has profoundly shaped what Africa, Africans, and their rich and diverse cultures are “supposed” to look like

  • Transit Pass Benefit Revised January 2009; Revised June 2010 Pacific Lutheran University supports sustainability initiatives – and efforts to get its employees onto mass transit by subsidizing the cost of an annual transit pass via a PLU ORCA card for all PLU employees with benefits. Phased retirees are not eligible for this benefit. Employees pay a small portion of the cost of the annual pass each year with the majority of the cost paid for by the university. The PLU ORCA card is valid on any

  • plan to have Webcasts from the NMR lab to teach local college and high school students about NMR spectrometry. “This is really going to be the crown jewel of the instruments in our department,” Waldow said. Read Previous Looking into the laws behind adoption Read Next Making an art out of giving of oneself COMMENTS*Note: All comments are moderated If the comments don't appear for you, you might have ad blocker enabled or are currently browsing in a "private" window. LATEST POSTS PLU hosts the 14th

  • : Special Topics in Chemistry 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 designated by the academic unit. (1 to 4) CHEM 288 : Special Topics in Chemistry 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