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  • New Delete Lily Foundation Wild Hope Center for Vocation Site Menu Home Our Story Initiatives Staff Seminar Participants 2024-2025 Meant To Live Faculty Development Seminar Voices on Vocation Annual Wild Hope Award Wild Hope Video and Essay Winners Wild Hope Video Series Podcast Give to Wild Hope Wild Hope Staff Past Fellows Wild Hope Fellows Wild Hope Newsletter Upcoming Events Films, Books, Music, and More! FJC Affected Faculty Documents & Forms Contact Information Wild Hope Center for Vocation

  • Delete NetVUE Wild Hope Center for Vocation Site Menu Home Our Story Initiatives Staff Seminar Participants 2024-2025 Meant To Live Faculty Development Seminar Voices on Vocation Annual Wild Hope Award Wild Hope Video and Essay Winners Wild Hope Video Series Podcast Give to Wild Hope Wild Hope Staff Past Fellows Wild Hope Fellows Wild Hope Newsletter Upcoming Events Films, Books, Music, and More! FJC Affected Faculty Documents & Forms Contact Information Wild Hope Center for Vocation Phone: 253-535

  • Delete Wang Center Wild Hope Center for Vocation Site Menu Home Our Story Initiatives Staff Seminar Participants 2024-2025 Meant To Live Faculty Development Seminar Voices on Vocation Annual Wild Hope Award Wild Hope Video and Essay Winners Wild Hope Video Series Podcast Give to Wild Hope Wild Hope Staff Past Fellows Wild Hope Fellows Wild Hope Newsletter Upcoming Events Films, Books, Music, and More! FJC Affected Faculty Documents & Forms Contact Information Wild Hope Center for Vocation Phone: 253

  • original works include The Family Project and Drive Change, a musical that centers on the justice system in the US. He wrote Twilight in Manchego (Directed by Tony Winner Billy Porter) for the NYMF, has written and arranged music for Playwrights Horizons and translated, adapted and directed Romeo and Juliet in Pulaar (Mauritania, West Africa). Matt has performed around the world including Uganda, Mauritania, and Japan, and across the US. A graduate of Boston University’s College of Fine Arts, Matt is a

  •  /  April 21, 2014 Juggling His Way to a Career in Global Health Juggling has become more than an act for Curt Malloy ’88. Malloy began juggling during his freshman year at Pacific Lutheran University to distract himself when his mother was diagnosed with cancer. “I found it therapeutic that I learned how to juggle,” Malloy said. The two wrote a peer-reviewed... By Valery  /  April 21, 2014 Lute Plays Piano “Up Close with the Masters” A Q&A With Natalie Burton ’13 Music and Chinese Studies major Natalie

  • His Way to a Career in Global Health Juggling has become more than an act for Curt Malloy ’88. Malloy began juggling during his freshman year at Pacific Lutheran University to distract himself when his mother was diagnosed with cancer. “I found it therapeutic that I learned how to juggle,” Malloy said. The two wrote a peer-reviewed... By Valery  /  April 21, 2014 Lute Plays Piano “Up Close with the Masters” A Q&A With Natalie Burton ’13 Music and Chinese Studies major Natalie Burton graduated

  • often suppressed and a racially segregated community in which Latinos were often oppressed. She started in community college, transferred to California State University, Chico, and eventually earned her master’s degree there. She made the dean’s list each semester and was encouraged to apply to graduate school, landing her at Washington State University where she earned her Ph.D. She’s been teaching classes at PLU since 2006. The key to persistence for marginalized students, and subsequently their

  • Remove Back New Delete Criminal Justice Academic Programs all programs program website Criminal Justice Undergraduate Major & Minor College of Liberal Studies Bachelor of Arts Video Transcription Criminal Justice at PLU Transcription [Music] [video: April’s voice comes in over clips. A shot of a gold statue of Lady Justice. April sits in class taking notes on a computer. April Reyes ‘20, Criminal Justice Minor: when you go up no one tells you what these certain laws mean how it can affect your life

  • music from various religious traditions. Those visuals transform into a marriage of fluttering lines that dance on the pages, illuminated with gold trimmings and vibrant colors. The sound waves of psalms run horizontal; those of the other traditions — Islamic, Jewish, Native American and more — run vertical. Together, they create an inclusive tapestry of sound that you see rather than hear. The idea is to honor the physics of sound, which reverberates through the universe forever. For me, thinking

  • classes, and make sure summer classes happen on campus. I think it’d be disjointed if I wasn’t there to tie it all together. Working in continuing education, I get to work with a lot of PLU alumni and the surrounding community to bring professional development courses. Community engagement is my passion, and it helps to bring that passion into my work. How do you think you are currently still exploring your calling? I still take time everyday to learn more about myself and more about different topics