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  • Agreement Payment Methods Refunds Holds Emergency Financial Assistance Financial Wellness Undergraduate First-Year Students Transfer Students International Students Undocumented Students Current Students Recent Graduates Graduate Business — MBA Business — MSMR Creative Writing Education — Preparing New Teachers Marriage & Family Therapy Nursing — MSN Nursing — DNP Nursing — Post Graduate Certificates Military Benefits FAQs: Getting Answers 24/7 How To Videos Contacting Us Faculty and Staff Purchase Card

  • Payment Methods Refunds Holds Emergency Financial Assistance Financial Wellness Undergraduate First-Year Students Transfer Students International Students Undocumented Students Current Students Recent Graduates Graduate Business — MBA Business — MSMR Creative Writing Education — Preparing New Teachers Marriage & Family Therapy Nursing — MSN Nursing — DNP Nursing — Post Graduate Certificates Military Benefits FAQs: Getting Answers 24/7 How To Videos Contacting Us Faculty and Staff Purchase Card and

  • Agreement Payment Methods Refunds Holds Emergency Financial Assistance Financial Wellness Undergraduate First-Year Students Transfer Students International Students Undocumented Students Current Students Recent Graduates Graduate Business — MBA Business — MSMR Creative Writing Education — Preparing New Teachers Marriage & Family Therapy Nursing — MSN Nursing — DNP Nursing — Post Graduate Certificates Military Benefits FAQs: Getting Answers 24/7 How To Videos Contacting Us Faculty and Staff Purchase Card

  • a new program, and I enjoyed taking my first classes in areas that also satisfied Gen Ed requirements, like Economics 101 and History of Technology. I love that the minor is only 20 credits, and also flexible and interdisciplinary. I truly believe that this minor gives students skills and connections that anyone could benefit from and I am excited to be part of it. I will be writing this blog to share my excitement and discoveries with you, covering “innovative” topics that are current at PLU

  •  faculty member in the School of Writing, Literature, and Film at Oregon State University and is the founder of the Attic Institute of Arts and Letters in Portland. Mentor. Workshops and classes in poetry. Statement: “Every society we’ve ever known has had poetry, and should the day come that poetry suddenly disappears in the morning, someone, somewhere, will reinvent it by evening. Since ancient times, as long as we’ve had language, poetry has ritualized human life. It has dramatized and informed us

  • Population Studies and Environment and Society at Brown University Introduced by Scott Rogers, Assistant Professor of English and Director of the Writing Center Location: Regency Room 1:45 - 3:30 p.m. | Concurrent Panels Panel Title: Welcoming the Stranger I: Immigrant Workers in a Wisconsin Dairy Community—a 20 –Year Experiment Panelist: John Rosenow and Shaun Duvall Moderated by Jordan Levy, Assistant Professor of Anthropology Location: Scandinavian Cultural Center Panel Title: “And justice for all

  • BrothersLuke Olson ’13 of The Olson Bros, wrote “Lookin’ At You.” The band won the 2013 Texaco Country Showdown songwriting contest.Drum TapsComposition Professor Greg Youtz talks about his new piece “Drum Taps” and how the poetry of Walt Whitman inspired him.Jason Saunders '11Jason Saunders ’11 talks about his experience composing and his passion for writing and choir music.Composition Faculty Cassio ViannaAssociate Professor of MusicKorine FujiwaraLecturerLauren KottLecturerDawn SonntagLecturer

  • the concert, and I wanted it to be exciting.” At PLU, Whatley is principal bass in the University Symphony Orchestra and spends the bulk of his time practicing, writing and performing classical pieces. As a student of composition, he has participated in composers forums, represented the department in the National Association of Schools of Music concerts and has had works published in the student arts publication Saxifrage. After graduation, Whatley plans to pursue graduate studies in composition

  • disease eradication and control, he has taken an active role in the eradication of Guinea worm disease, polio and measles and the elimination of river blindness. By writing and lecturing extensively, Foege has succeeded in broadening public awareness of these issues and bringing them to the forefront of domestic and international health policies. A U.S. News and World Report article identified Foege as one of “America’s Best Leaders” in November. He is currently a senior fellow at the Bill and Melinda

  • politicians. “As the world gets more and more broken, it’s working its way into my writing,” she said. Among those poems she read at PLU last week, one was a tribute to Cook. And the picture of Rumsfeld with his nose in President Bush’s armpit? Oliver said that brought some murmurs of disapproval during a reading in a state that she refused to name. “Some applauded, and some didn’t,” she said of the reading of that particular poem. Oliver’s reading concluded the English Department’s Visiting Writer Series