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PLU Faculty Directs Local Documentary PLU Assistant Professor of Communication Dr. Kate Drazner Hoyt has directed a documentary which will premiere at the Grand Cinema in Tacoma on Monday, November 21. The film is one installment in the Chinese Reconciliation Project Foundation ’s “Our Communities, Our Neighbors” film series. Funded… November 8, 2022 Communicationcommunity eventsFacultyinterview
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Glean: Practices of Memory and Identity in Modern France – GE, IT This course is an introduction to French society from World War II to the present day with a focus on those who have been made invisible through the random violence of war or the everyday violence of extreme poverty. We observe how forgotten people collect, gather, and glean in response to trauma or as a means of subsistence. At the same time, we consider how writers and film-makers collect, gather, and glean to piece together the
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Henrik Ibsen (1828-1906) , Norway’s most famous author who is often described as “the father of modern drama.” His famous plays – A Doll’s Place, Hedda Gabler, Ghosts, and others – brought realism, along with controversial subjects questioning the moral code of his times, to the stage. Although Ibsen’s realist plays are the most popular to perform on stage, filmmaker can struggle to adapt them for the screen because they are often set entirely indoors.
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Micah Miller Visiting Assistant Professor Phone: 253-535-7784 Email: micah.miller@plu.edu Office Location: Hauge Administration Building - 220-F Curriculum Vitae: View my CV Professional Biography Education Ph.D., Religion, Emory University, 2019 M.A., Theological Studies, Saint Louis University, 2013 B.A., Theological Studies & English, Saint Louis University, 2011 Areas of Emphasis or Expertise Early Christianity, Ante-Nicene Christianity, Early Trinitarian Theology Selected Articles Miller
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, Islam, Judaism, Buddhism and the Lummi Tribe. Panelists: Imam Jamal Rahman, Co-founder and Muslim Sufi minister at Interfaith Community Sanctuary and adjunct faculty at Seattle University Dr. Dakotah C. Lane, MD, Peace Health, Lummi Indian Health Center Rabbi Bruce Kadden, PLU Religion Faculty & Retired Rabbi Temple Beth El, Tacoma Rev. Mara Forster Smith, Christian Chaplain, Swedish Medical Center Rev. Tadao Koyama, Tacoma Buddhist Temple 2:00-3:00pm Embracing Mortality: Resources and
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Course Title ANTH 101 Introduction to Human Biological Diversity - NW BIOL 111 Biology and the Modern World - NW BIOL 116 Introductory Ecology - NW BIOL 201 Introductory Microbiology - NW BIOL 205 Human Anatomy and Physiology I - NW BIOL 206 Human Anatomy and Physiology II - NW BIOL 225 Molecules, Cells, and Organisms - NW BIOL 226 Genes, Evolution, Diversity, and Ecology - NW CHEM 103 Food Chemistry - NW CHEM 104 Environmental Chemistry - NW CHEM 115 General Chemistry I - NW CHEM 116 General
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first part of the day allowed for a little more time to see Cambridge. We arrived at King’s College in the early afternoon and were grateful to have a workshop with assistant director of choirs, Ben Parry. Shortly thereafter we headed over to King’s College Chapel. Choir of the West had a brief warmup and after only a few notes there were tears because of the beautiful way the space sounded – such a unique sound that can be heard in this chapel. After this the choir joined the King’s Voices for
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and spiritual leaders, should be doing in such trying times.Samuel Torvend, Pacific Lutheran University professor of religion and university chair in Lutheran studies emeritus, recently hosted a series of Zoom presentations centering on Luther, and more specifically, how he navigated life and led others during the plague. The Zoom participants were from three local churches —two in Tacoma, and one in Olympia. Torvend has published articles, book chapters and books on Luther and early Lutheran
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space, a 16-bed inpatient skills lab and additional simulation labs designed to duplicate the kind of equipment and furnishings found in a modern hospital room. They will be equipped with life-like mannequins that replicate patient breathing, pulse, heart sounds and other functions. Ground level donor wallRendering of what the ground level donor wall could look like. Ground level public lobbyRendering of what the ground level public lobby could look like. Renderings courtesy of McGranahan Architects
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hand, and walked off. I just wanted out of there.” Huang spent most of her life in Nanning, a Chinese city in Guangxi Province, where she lived with her family and friends. China always signified childhood, self and home. But in 2011, she relocated to Everett with her mother, to live with her stepfather, Don Rollevson — someone she refers to, lovingly and simply, as “dad.” She finished her final years of high school and two years of community college before enrolling at PLU to major in biochemistry
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