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About opera at PLUPLU Opera offers two productions per academic year – a complete main stage opera with orchestra and an opera scenes program with piano in alternating semesters. Members participate in all facets of production, including set and costume design, staging and performance. The full productions are planned in a three-year cycle that includes early music, standard repertoire, and 20th/21st century. Recent productions have included Mozart’s The Magic Flute, Monteverdi’s L’Orfeo
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musician, she is a member of Baroque Northwest, La Lira, the Puget Sound Consort and Ayres and Graces, and has appeared in the Early Music Guild’s three baroque opera productions and with various other ensembles. An enthusiastic advocate for the guitar and lute, Elizabeth has given numerous outreach performances at schools, senior centers, and community centers for the Seattle Classic Guitar Society and the Early Music Guild, as well as by arrangement while on tour. She is head of the Guitar and Lute
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Learning Communities (LCs)Learning Communities are for all PLU students. At PLU, every residential student (including first-year, new transfer, returning, and upper division) is part of an LC, by year at PLU and/or by theme. Additionally, commuting students participate in LCs via the CAVE Learning Community. LCs provide opportunities for students to connect with community through co-curricular events and programs. New first-year students take a course called “PLUS 100: Transitions to PLU” that
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involving others in clean water projects, he was recognized in a 2015 annual report for a global nonprofit for these efforts. Professor Mulder is a proud member of the Parkland community, and seeks to find ways to not just live in Parkland, but to live FOR and WITH Parkland. He is an active supporter and volunteer in the Parkland and greater Tacoma communities. He is also a proud LUTE, and as an alum appreciates the opportunity to teach and mentor at the institution he loves. “PLU was transformative for
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involving others in clean water projects, he was recognized in a 2015 annual report for a global nonprofit for these efforts. Professor Mulder is a proud member of the Parkland community, and seeks to find ways to not just live in Parkland, but to live FOR and WITH Parkland. He is an active supporter and volunteer in the Parkland and greater Tacoma communities. He is also a proud LUTE, and as an alum appreciates the opportunity to teach and mentor at the institution he loves. “PLU was transformative for
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repetition of care aligns perfectly with the principles of diversity, justice, and sustainability. And one other way we remind ourselves of our mission to care is in our distinctive University Seal: note here on the lectern and on the inside front cover of your program, how the “L” in “Lutheran” reaches out under the “U,” suggesting the mission to care for you. I hope that as you make your way through this place and become a worthy member of our Lute community that you, too, will find ways to contribute
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actively speaks out against hatred and prejudice—including direct statements disavowing racism, anti-Semitism and discrimination in law or policy related to sexual orientation and gender identity. For its part, the university community works to create an environment in which every student, faculty, and staff member feels heard, seen and valued. That includes community members of all races, all faiths or no faith, all sexual and gender identities, political perspectives, all physical and mental
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positively impact the quality of life of my patients by working collaboratively with them to optimize their health.School of Business Dan Rosales, Class of 2007 Hometown: Anacortes, WA Degree: Marketing These days: Rosales is a financial planner for Northwestern Mutual in Tacoma and vice president of the Business Network Alumni Association board, an eight member group of business professionals that connects current students with PLU Business alumni through four annual core events. Learn more // Go Back
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containing inaccurate information reflecting upon the integrity of the University. Any member of the PLU community posting information on the web must abide by U.S. and international copyright and licensing laws. Copyrighted material reproduced on the web site must have prior written permission of the copyright holder. All published information will include identification of the owner, date modified or created, and contact information. Commercial use of PLU web pages is prohibited. Owner(s) of published
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, is anyone in need that God places in our path. So Philipp Nordquist’s history of PLU is appropriately entitled, Education for Service. At PLU, we teach about what Luther called vocation, i.e., the place where God calls us where our deep joy and the world’s deep hunger (i.e., our neighbor’s need) come together. You can’t get away from vocation at PLU. Every student and faculty member, every administrator and staff-person, everyone on campus regularly thinks, talks, and writes about vocation. We
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