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  • , lectures or music performances. Price: Please Contact Hospitality Services for all pricing information events@plu.edu. Capacity: 580 Orchestra Pit: 457 square feet and 16′ X 36′Studio TheaterThe Studio Theater is an intimate performance space that can be arranged to suit your performance needs. A black box style theater, it can situate the audience on one, two, three or four sides. Price: Please Contact Hospitality Services for all pricing information events@plu.edu. Capacity: up to 140

  • , “I’ve never seen a bad movie there.” The Mandolin Cafe is a great place to get a coffee and listen live music. Mandolin Cafe (11.1 miles from campus) 3923 South 12th Street Tacoma, WA 98405 The Mandolin Café isn’t just a great place to get a latté, sandwich or pizza. You will almost always be surprised with what’s going on at the funky little indie restaurant – from trivia nights to an all-weekend bluegrass music festival. Wright Park (11.5 miles from campus) 501 South I Street Tacoma, WA 98405

  • , but soon discovered the physics and engineering aspects explored in the first few weeks of the class were not the important concepts. “Sure, the starship needed fuel, life support, and artificial gravity, but what about food? Livestock? Clothing and music? Body modification and medicine? What about the crew themselves? Who would be selected, and how?” Hyra, a music major, recalls. “It didn’t take me long to realize that the class was just disguising itself as a thorough, analytical look at our

  • and the original care takers of the land PLU is on. I am passionate about Indigenizing colonized spaces.”Waste Diversion EducationElizabeth Elliott (PLU ’22) assessed PLU’s current waste diversion education and offered suggestions to a cross campus group on reengaging Move Out as a waste diversion education. FINAL REPORT Elizabeth Elliott (PLU ’22) Hometown: Kent, WA, USA Major: Science, Technology and Society Major; Women’s and Gender Studies Minor “I chose the Waste Diversion Education project

  • teams with meals and snacks during the contest weekend. Students will receive final contest results in April, after their work is reviewed by a team of international judges. But regardless of outcomes, those who participated were proud of their efforts and excited for the opportunity to put their mathematical education to real-world use. Like many students in this year’s competition, chemistry major Betsabe Parmly ‘20 and her team selected a problem requiring them to assess the impact of warming

  • -Mosquera '09 Read Previous Evolutionary psychologist Corey Cook from Pacific Lutheran University Speaks on the Dangers of Implicit Bias Read Next Pandemic Performance: PLU Music Chair Brian Galante on education during the coronavirus 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 A family with a “Bjug” legacy of giving and service September 27, 2024 PLU hosts the 14th Annual

  • Bring & Decoration GuidelinesClick HereMake It Your Own Comforter/bedspread Pillows Bed linens – twin extra long Clothes hangers Coffee mug, reusable water bottle Drinking cups, dishes and silverware Poster putty for hanging up decorations (command hooks are great for this!) Plastic containers with tight lids for storing snacks, detergent, etc. Headphones/ear buds (so your music doesn’t bother your roommate or neighbors) Digital music player Cell phone and charger Desk lamp or bed lamp TV/DVD-Player

  • 220, Humanities Division (Room 227) HEALTH CENTER – Administrative Assistant Cabinet HINDERLIE HALL – Mailroom HONG HALL – Mailroom  INGRAM – Art Department (Room 128), Ceramics (Room 140A) x2, Print Making (Room 124), Sculpture (Room 138) KREIDLER HALL – Mailroom MEMORIAL GYM – SE ROTC Entrance MORKEN – Kelley Cafe, School of Business (Room 176), MESA (Room 159) MORTVEDT LIBRARY – Office Behind 1st Floor Main Desk, 3rd Floor: University Archives MBR Music Center – Lobby (Telephone Alcove

  • students with talents and interests in writing, graphic design, communication, or business a head start into the world of publishing and a broad variety of related professions. The PPA program readily complements majors concerned with language and the written word, such as English, languages, education, history, public relations, journalism, marketing, and graphic design. But students majoring in a wide spectrum of disciplines—from biology to music to anthropology—have discovered the value of a PPA

  • September 5, 2014 PLU Center for Media Studies and MediaLab students Amanda Brasgalla, Olivia Ash and Valery Jorgensen (L to R) conducting a video interview. New Center for Media Studies Takes the Classroom Into the Community By Natalie DeFord ’16 Communications Major Like many college students, Olivia Ash ‘15 was uncertain about her future when she first arrived on the campus of PLU back in the fall of 2011. “I’ve always loved music, and so I knew I wanted to get involved with PLU’s student