The Festival of Scholars showcases projects by undergraduate and graduate students at Cal Lutheran. In addition to traditional research studies, the projects include creative work and the application of theory to real-life situations. Some are related to a particular class, while others were conceived as Senior Capstone projects or independent research. All of these high-quality projects reflect months or even years of focused work with faculty mentors.
All week, student researchers participate in poster sessions, oral presentations and panel discussions, teaching demonstrations, multimedia displays, art exhibitions and recitals.
Admission is free. For the full, updated schedule of Festival of Scholars events, visit CalLutheran.edu/fos.
Wellness Family 360 – The Pop-Up Series Healthy Living Meet and Greet – Product Review Parties – Go Green/Eat Clean Showcase – Fitness Demonstrations – Calabasas Story Time and Play Date We’re welcoming weekday wellness attendees taking a mid-day personal break 11am-1pm wellness expo. Guests will enjoy fitness classes on the lawn, and also be invited to our pop-up Eat Clean – Go Green snack and go sample station so that they can explore some healthy gluten/allergy-free snacks and some ECO household products. Complete Spring 2020 Series: Thursday, March 26 Thursday, April 30 Wednesday, May 13 Friday, June 19
Sarah Chang: Brahms Violin Concerto & Sibelius’ Symphony No. 3 The star returns to New West Symphony to perform Brahms’ uncharacteristically sweet violin concerto, a piece bursting with melodies. Grammy-winning Music Director Michael Christie also conducts the orchestra in Jean Sibelius’ majesty and bouncy Symphony No. 3, one of Christie’s signature works to conduct. Brahms wrote the Violin Concerto while on summer holiday on a lake in Vienna, where he said there were so many melodies, he had to be careful not to step on them. Unusual for his day, Brahms left a space for the violinist to improvise. While Brahms’ music isn’t usually thought of as cheerful, there’s plenty of lightheartedness in his Violin Concerto. With his Third Symphony, Jean Sibelius decided to go against the current. While the trend for popular composers was to use larger and larger orchestras with a bolder Romantic style, Sibelius intentionally wrote for a smaller orchestra and in a more structured, Classical style. He also liked a darker sound, so the work is heavy on cellos and basses. Lovers of the symphonic form, like Sibelius was, will love the interconnectedness of melodies, rhythms, and themes.
Sunday May 03, 2020 10:30 AM Please join us the first Sunday of every month for the Conejo Jewish Academy book club. It is instructed by Rebbetzin Brocha Sapochkinsky. Follow link for more details. https://urldefense.proofpoint.com/v2/url?u=http-3A__www.jewishacademy.com_2019Winter_detail.asp-3FSection-3D25-26ID-3D60&d=DwMFaQ&c=hBIIgbn3LPbq5g5LmH2UBMcIdB9HAgwjhxipq1o3nvg&r=Zr9f8JNeF-i5ZHRqNJ7uKA&m=_Dmf3Lj0v-Zi16-pL8Y47dY2H