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  • wanted to tell, or the actual music? I really developed a story before I wrote the music. The story turned into the video, but the music follows the story. I tried to create a sense of mystique and wonder in the beginning, with the water glasses, and a motif that’s not quite tonal, but is a “twinkling of the stars” idea. Coming into celebrating Earth, I have a happy theme, then, when it gets dark, I experimented with some Blade Runner-type strings.  I was going to ask you about film scores, is that a

  • monitoring assignments. 3:00pm – Bioinformatics Tools Website Christian Oakley (BA), Daniel Shin (BA) The Bioinformatics Tools project is a web server to host pre-existing tools for protein modelling. Students and researchers can submit protein strings and receive estimations of a protein’s structure and function. They can also submit models of a protein’s structure and get back a summary of how accurate the model is. It uses a Docker backend with FastAPI and a Celery queue, with a MySQL database, and a

  • notes at quarter note equaling 52).  BA/BMA At least two solo pieces from two different periods (no less than 12 minutes of playing time). At least one of the pieces is to be performed by memory. All major/minor ​4 octave scales (in sixteenth notes at quarter equaling 72) and 4 octave arpeggios (in sixteenth notes at quarter note equaling 52). STRINGS BM At least three works in contrasting style prepared to the level of a conservatory student Solo from the standard repertoire Contrasting piece from

  • organ has only complemented his journey as a guitarist. He performs regularly throughout the South Sound with the Susan Tuzzolino Quartet, his own trio and the Bill Frisell/Pat Metheny-inspired guitar/piano duo 96 Strings Attached. Now returning to his natural habitat amongst the evergreens, Elliott is determined to build up Seattle’s musical community through performing, writing, and teaching the children of Tacoma about the spiritually healing and inspiring power of music. Elliott’s love for music

  • personal attribute—which he can disguise but seldom fully repress—almost certainly has been critical to his amazing list of accomplishments. How so? Well, to begin with, psychologists tell us that practical jokers are motivated (whether they know it or not) by a desire to disrupt order, the status quo. Foege is all about disrupting order, when he thinks it needs a little disruption. It may have started when he sneaked behind his mother at the dinner table in Colville to tie her apron strings to the

  • students at a low-income, high-mobility elementary school. The vouchers come with strings—parent involvement and housing stability—that benefit students. Partnerships with three local, four-year colleges and universities, both public and private, have yielded gap financial funding for qualified low income students, priority admission to education programs with guaranteed teacher interviews at graduation from college, and a whole child district initiative designed to provide a sustainable system for

  • investment (because such support tends to favor applied research rather than pure research, and because such support tends to come with strings attached). The strongest position to be in—or at least the position that offers the most flexibility and options for facing an uncertain future—is the position PLU is in: that is, a largely undergraduate liberal arts university offering an array of select graduate and professional programs. When we talk to others about our commitment to the liberal arts, it’s

  • dessert wine with the perfect amount of sweetness tugged at his heart strings. Standing in a chilled storage room surrounded by cases of wine, Benson said the Ruby Port is named after his grandmother. “It was a labor of love and a fitting wine for someone like her,” he said. The port was a three-year project, and Grandma Ruby never got the chance to drink it before she died in 2010. But her sweet memory lives on every time someone uncorks a bottle. “It’s a tribute to my Benson family roots,” Benson

  • on his face. The velvety dessert wine with the perfect amount of sweetness tugged at his heart strings. Standing in a chilled storage room surrounded by cases of wine, Benson said the Ruby Port is named after his grandmother. “It was a labor of love and a fitting wine for someone like her,” he said. The port was a three-year project, and Grandma Ruby never got the chance to drink it before she died in 2010. But her sweet memory lives on every time someone uncorks a bottle. “It’s a tribute to my