Page 995 • (10,095 results in 0.054 seconds)

  • theatre through Vpstart Crow, the annual APO featured show, the J-term One-Act Festival, and PLU’s resident improv team the Clay Crows.ShowsThe APO One Acts January 21, 22, 23, at 7:30pm Studio Theater, Karen Hille Phillips Center Shatter’d January 28, 29 and 30 at 7pm and 8pm Studio Theater, Karen Hille Phillips Center Read Previous “The House of Blue Leaves” asks questions on mental illness Read Next Studio Theater production plays with theatricality and scholarship LATEST POSTS Theatre Professor

  • National Print Exhibition, “Vantage Points,” kicks off 2015 Focus Series Posted by: Mandi LeCompte / January 28, 2015 Image: First Place: “Antler” by John Hankiewicz January 28, 2015 SOAC’s 2015 FOCUS Series will kick off on February 11 from 5pm-7pm as the PLU and printing communities celebrate the opening of the University Gallery’s ‘National Print Exhibition: Vantage Points.’ The exhibition will be on view from February 4 – March 4, with the official opening reception on February 11. This bi

  • Science Foundation’s (NSF) Robert Noyce Teacher Scholarship Program (Award ID 195016), this program provides eligible students with forgivable loans of up to $21,700/year. Funding is awarded to eligible STEM majors during their final year as undergraduates at PLU and to graduate students in the PLU Masters in Education program earning certification to be a STEM teacher. Funding for this project is provided by the National Science Foundation Grant No. 195016 Any opinions, findings and conclusions or

  • Step 8: Understand your on-going responsibilities once approvedHPRB approval (expedited/full board) lasts for one year. During that time, you are responsible for: Requesting approval from the HPRB for any changes to your proposal Reporting to the HPRB any adverse events that occur while conducting your research Responding in a timely fashion to the annual renewal notices sent out to every researcher with an open project Notifying the HPRB when you have completed the research Requesting Changes

  • have already designed and printed, you are welcome to drop them off at our mailbox in a closed envelope along with a Contact Information Form outside our office, AUC 142. The Contact Information Form is located in an envelope outside our office. We will not distribute your posters unless this form is there. Impact will then stamp your posters and distribute them to all our boards. Impact Boards are for PLU-affiliated advertising only. Impact will not design or distribute personal ads, or ads for

  • Edwin C. Powell is the Director of Bands and Professor of Music at Pacific Lutheran University where he is responsible for the University Wind Ensemble, Conducting, and Music Education Methods courses. In 2015 he was the recipient of a Pacific Lutheran University Faculty Excellence Award. Dr. Powell earned degrees from the University of the Pacific, the Cincinnati College – Conservatory of Music and The University of North Texas where he completed a Doctor of Musical Arts in Conducting studying with

  • Carson: Witness for Nature published by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt, 2009 and www.rachelcarson.orgFind Out More The Life and Legacy of Rachel Carson The Linda Lear Collection of Rachel Carson Books & Papers Rachel Carson at a Microscope - courtesy of the Beinecke Rare Book and Manuscript Library, Yale University Rachel Carson Writing With a Pencil On a Dock, Seated Beside a Boat Named 'Bernice' - courtesy of the Beinecke Rare Book and Manuscript Library, Yale University Rachel Carson At a Typewriter

  • teachers,” Kaufman said. “The idea is that good teachers don’t give as much to research.” Kaufman is the sixth PLU faculty member to receive the award. Past recipients include Provost Patricia Killen (1991), history professor Beth Kraig (1993), associate English professor Lisa Marcus (1997), associate English professor Jim Albrecht (1999) and associate religion professor Alicia Batten (2007). Only one faculty member from each eligible college can apply for the honor, Kaufman explained. Along with the

  • jewelry design, to rapid prototyping and graphic design. At PLU, an obvious use of the software is in sculpture classes. Artists typically construct a scaled-down, 3-D model of their sculpture first in cardboard or clay, but editing the model is labor-intensive, Ebbinga said. In Rhino, artists can create the model and easily make adjustments. The software can also be used in math courses. Ebbinga is currently collaborating with associate math professor Daniel Heath, who studies complex knots. The

  • everyone being that way,” Cooley said. “Really, what’s most important is everybody making the little changes.” Reducing surplus by being smarter buyers makes an impact, Cooley said. “It’s not just about recycling,” she said. With campaigns like UnPLUgged, student residence hall communities are becoming more conscious about turning stuff off and unplugging devices when they’re not in use. There are also actions like identifying vending machines that aren’t being used, but cost more in electricity than