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. PLU CSIStudents in a forensic anthropology class investigate a faux crime scene. FIRST HOME WINNew football coach Brant McAdams pumps the air after Lutes achieve victory over the Claremont-Mudd-Scripps team. MUSICAL INTERLUDEMembers of the PLU Jazz Ensemble hang loose as they prepare for a group photo with new director of jazz studies Cassio Vianna, left. Celebrating Winter GraduatesDenis Julio and her family gather with others for a reception. KALEIDOSCOPE EYESNursing student Tiffany Haukenberry
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Dancing to new levels: PLU’s Dance minor program celebrates 40 years Some say dance is a universal language. At Pacific Lutheran University, that concept is growing further through the opportunities that its Dance minor program offers. This fall 2017 semester marks the 40th anniversary of the program. The Dance minor program and Dance Ensemble were created… November 14, 2017 Dance
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Dancing to new levels: PLU’s Dance minor program celebrates 40 years Some say dance is a universal language. At Pacific Lutheran University, that concept is growing further through the opportunities that its Dance minor program offers. This fall 2017 semester marks the 40th anniversary of the program. The Dance minor program and Dance Ensemble were created… November 14, 2017 Dance
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burnt out and unfulfilled. But perhaps it was inevitable that Hall, the daughter of a teacher, would wind up putting her communications skills to work in the service of education. She remembers learning at PLU about the concept of vocation. “That’s not a word I had heard or used a lot before attending PLU,” she says. “I learned that it is not just a career, but a set of values — things that are intrinsically important to you in the work you do, no matter how that work is funneled.”Considering a
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2. Point camera 3. Hit record 4. Repeat! Another good tip when getting coverage is establish then expound. Let the viewer know what they are seeing, and then go in for a closer look: While you’re shooting, don’t forget that video is all about movement. The most important aspect of video is motion. There are two easy ways to capture motion: 1. Move the subject: Is there something visually interesting about the way someone walks? Does the wind move the subject? Is there traffic or rushing water? 2
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headed home. As more and more people exited the Mall dust clouds where whipped up in the wind, dropping from an already 30 degree temperature to an estimated 15 degrees. It was all worth it. To walk along the Mall and see news cameras, the capital in front of me, to hear the cheers of the crowd as the President and Vice President made their way to the White House, to see the Parade on the jumbotrons, there is just nothing like that I have ever done. For a long time I have known a Bush (Sr. and W.) in
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Caribbean, “During my home stay in Paramin, Trinidad, I found myself sitting atop a small garden path, beaten down guitar in hand. The sky was light blue, greatly contrasting the multitudes of rich greenery spread out over rolling hills. I could hear chickens crowing, dogs barking, and the rustle of trees. The scent of mango permeated the air, and I began to play the guitar. In that moment, combining the songs of the wind with my own, I came to a new realization of what home is. I can be anywhere
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.” Then the humorous exchange between husband and wife begins. John starts by saying “Fortunately we have more than one carriage so if one is blown over in the wind…” Isabella responds: “Husband, please!”. He, with a slight tone of amusement, replies: “Happy Christmas!” as he exits the room. De Wilde’s Christmas scene, then, centers on a bitter family relationship. However, what does carry over from the novel and from McGrath’s version is Emma’s devotion to her father’s happiness. When Mr. Woodhouse
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2011 Teaching Grant, Center for Teaching and Learning, Pacific Lutheran University, for Ethnic Studies Working Group: Curricular Conversations Workshop, with Melannie Cunningham, Spring 2010 Faculty Student Research Grant, Scandinavian Cultural Center, Pacific Lutheran University for “Sustainability and Urban Planning in Malmö, Sweden ”with student Emma Kane, Fall 2009 and Spring 2010 Kelmer Roe Grant, Humanities Division, Pacific Lutheran University, for “Selling Wind: Sámi as Witches and Witches
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crowd lines and occasionally fielding questions. As the doors opened, I was surprised to see, after hours of waiting in the wind and rain, smiling, cheering Clinton supporters and thousands of waving signs. This same support wasn’t apparent at the next day’s 27th District Caucus in Tacoma’s Stanley Elementary School. Caucus organizers, unprepared for the enormous turnout, hurriedly copied additional sign-in sheets, pleaded with the crowd to snap instead of clap and to please stop cheering after
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