Page 33 • (707 results in 0.033 seconds)

  • Upcoming Events Food Symposium, Feb. 26-29 This symposium on food and the environment will feature two keynote speakers, panels, a Pierce County food tour that will visit local innovative production, consumption and waste models, as well as the PLU MediaLab documentary on food waste titled “Waste Not.”” Learn More Sandstrom: ‘St. Matthew Passion’, Mar. 22-23 St. Matthew Passion is a traditional part of the Lutheran liturgy each spring. Sven-David Sandström’s setting is a thoughtful reimagining

  • production, market research, graphic design, marketing or web design, MediaLab can work for you. Our HistoryMediaLab began in 2006 as an experimental, extracurricular endeavor focusing on print journalism. Within a year, MediaLab evolved to become a for–credit class, with a broader scope that included videography, photography, print journalism and public relations. Each year MediaLab continues to enhance its programs and structure to best meet the needs of student members and their clients.

  • - Welcome1:45 pm - Developing a Selective Screen for Botryococcene Production via Fluorescence Daniel Amster, Senior Capstone Seminar Botryococcus braunii is a green algae capable of producing botryococcene using squalene synthase-like (SSL) enzymes. Botryococcene is a particularly interesting compound because it can be used to make biofuels that are useful for powering jet engines. The specific enzymes that form botryococcene are SSL-1 and SSL-3 which were expressed in E. coli hosts for this study. To

  • Learning Outcomes for the Gender, Sexuality and Race Studies MajorStudents who take Gender, Sexuality, and Race Studies courses at PLU will learn how to: Understand the social construction of gender, sexuality, and race. Analyze systems of privilege and oppression. Assess the intersectional relationship between knowledge production, identities, and power. Communicate and collaborate across differences. Practice community-engaged scholarship and coalition building. Engage in critical imagining

  • & Communication (4) COMA 342: Communication Inquiry (4) COMA 343: Media Writing (4) COMA 344: Media Production (4) COMA 357: Media Literacy Post-Truth Era (4) COMA 401: Contemporary Issues in Media and Visual Culture (4) COMA 421: Media, Ethics & the Law (4) COMA 461: Advertising, PR + Campaigns (4) In consultation with advisor, with Communication department chair approval, and based on availability, students may also count the following courses in the Film & Media Studies cluster: ENGL 320: Intermediate

  • scholarships to open doors of access and opportunity? Is it the building of spaces where learning and innovation happen? Is it supporting the craft of teaching and ensuring that exceptional faculty are hired and supported? Or is it creating experiences outside the classroom, where concepts collide in complex ways? At PLU we know that the answer to these questions is…yes. It is the combination of our collective vision that will make student successes both possibility and reality. As a University in the

  • published by Milkweed Editions in 2020. The Galleons was listed on the top ten poetry books for 2020 by the New York Public Library and was on the longlist for the National Book Award. Also in 2020, his chapbook During the Pandemic was published by Albion Books. His new book of poems, Moving the Bones, is forthcoming in 2024 from Milkweed Editions. Mentor. Workshops and classes in poetry. Oversight of program. Statement:  “I’ve always been intrigued by these two connotations of the word craft—that it

  • Wendy Call Nonfiction Biography Biography Wendy Call (she/her) is the co-editor of the craft anthology Telling True Stories: A Nonfiction Writers’ Guide (Penguin, 2007) and the new annual Best Literary Translations (Deep Vellum, 2024). She wrote No Word for Welcome: The Mexican Village Faces the Global Economy (Nebraska, 2011), winner of the Grub Street Book Prize and International Latino book Award, and the chapbook Tilled Paths Through Wilds of Thought (MBR/K2, 2012). She has translated two

  • the middle of my second semester. It’s a three-year, intensive program that hones actors by giving us a safe and challenging space to learn and practice our craft. We focus intensely on collaboration with the new playwrights and directors also seeking their MFA’s, and this allows us to form an artistic company. I have actually been accepted into the school’s smallest year, with only 17 other actors in the program. I work for The New School, as well, in a work-study position.” What is the most

  • craft, and preparing to work with him brings the focus and intensity in our rehearsals to an even higher level,” Richard Nance, PLU professor and conductor of the Choir of the West, said. “The students know what the level of expectation will be, and they are giving their best effort to achieve it.” At the conference and preview concert, the choir will perform an hour-long program of music selected by Carrington in consultation with Nance. The repertoire will include Libera nos, a Renaissance