Page 37 • (601 results in 0.021 seconds)

  • , including Wittenberg, Germany, where Luther famously developed his 95 Theses that sparked the Protestant Reformation. Tintagel Castle - England Granada, Spain Swiss Alps “Just like travel can be a political act, travel can be a spiritual act,” Steves said. “When I travel, I like to travel alone. Because I’m never really alone. I’ve got a friend in Jesus, so he’s always with me.” Getting to know the world — both places faraway and in a student’s own backyard — is at the heart of a well-rounded Lutheran

  • Reformation-related sites throughout Europe, including Wittenberg, Germany, where Luther famously developed his 95 Theses that sparked the Protestant Reformation. Tintagel Castle - England Granada, Spain Swiss Alps “Just like travel can be a political act, travel can be a spiritual act,” Steves said. “When I travel, I like to travel alone. Because I’m never really alone. I’ve got a friend in Jesus, so he’s always with me.” Getting to know the world — both places faraway and in a student’s own backyard

  • /feminism (as opposed to art). “It’s unusual to have artists that also do their own writing, especially collaboratively, so folks are surprised to hear [that it’s historical in nature],” Spring says. “I enjoy a fairly active day printing, and just sitting for lengthy periods to write or research was tough. While the writing was difficult, I enjoyed focusing on the social issues we pair with the feminists in the book and especially connecting some threads throughout their histories.” Since Spring and

  • , administrator, mentor, faithful church attendee and lover of historical architecture who was meticulous in his approach to academics. Norm was born in Minot, N.D., but spent most of his youth in Puyallup and Sumner, Wash. He came from a family of modest means. His brother once described the family home as a chicken coop, and said Norm was known to break gum in two and save half a stick to make it go further.A fellow 1958 PLC alumnus, Dave Berntsen, knew Norm well. Dave retired in 1999 after a career in the

  • been catalogued as history/biography/feminism (as opposed to art). “It’s unusual to have artists that also do their own writing, especially collaboratively, so folks are surprised to hear [that it’s historical in nature],” Spring says. “I enjoy a fairly active day printing, and just sitting for lengthy periods to write or research was tough. While the writing was difficult, I enjoyed focusing on the social issues we pair with the feminists in the book and especially connecting some threads

  • brings long-term perspectives to these issues, as we study how processes such as continental drift and climate change influence the earth and our lives. The earth sciences are distinct from other natural sciences. The study of the earth is interdisciplinary and historical, bringing knowledge from many other fields to help answer questions. Geoscientists investigate continents, oceans and the atmosphere, and emphasize both the processes that change the earth through time and the results of those

  • Bachelor of Music in CompositionThe Bachelor of Music in Composition is intended for those who want the maximum training in compositional technique possible at the undergraduate level. Students in this degree spend 2/3 of their time in music courses and receive a solid introduction to composition, theory, arranging, orchestration, counterpoint, historical styles and genres, ethnomusicology and the new tools of the electronic studio. They create a portfolio of scores, performance recordings and

  • vision, the annual lectureship was made possible through a generous gift from Marilyn Knutson. David Knutson’s vision guides the lectureship and, under its auspices, each year the Department of Religion brings to campus a lecturer who works critically and creatively out of the historical, scriptural and theological resources of a living faith tradition, bringing them into conversation with the major questions and challenges of our time. Read Previous Program brings people from around the world

  • amount, he said. In many ways the immigration has created a renewed Jewish cultural life in Germany, Schuette said. Read Previous Present for historical moment Read Next Making strides at a feverish pace 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 PLU hosts the 14th Annual Lutheran Studies Conference: Celebrating Cecelia Svinth Carpenter, Indigenous education and tribal

  • anyone and published later. The paper is entitled “Bureaucrats, Soldiers and Murderers: Issues of Guilt and Responsibility in Holocaust Literature” and I would like to think that while it does not answer the question of why these patterns occurred it does give some evidence that these patterns are there. I started with an outline, knowing what I needed to read to answer questions about guilt and innocence – that is, I needed volume as well as depth, and historical information on top of literary