The names of top USC Dornsife students will adorn the wall of Leavey Library in an honor celebrating university-wide students…
The gift creates the Steven and Kathryn Sample Endowment for Ecumenism to support research centered on the foundational…
Howard Wayne Harris proves his 9th grade teacher wrong. Earning his Ph.D. at the USC Dornsife hooding ceremony May 16, he was…
USC Dornsife issued more than 2,500 degrees during Commencement 2013: 1,959 bachelor’s, 326 master's, 81 graduate…
USC Dornsife students win top prizes at the 15th Annual Undergraduate Symposium for Scholarly and Creative Work. In…
Like most of my fellow Trojans, I lived off the I-10 Freeway during my four years at USC. I took it to the beach on beautiful afternoons; I followed it to countless reporting assignments for Annenberg classes and the Daily… more>
tags: alumni, usc dornsife magazine
A New American Narrative The year is 2042. If you are white and living in the United States, you are a minority, according to Census Bureau projections. “By 2042, the U.S. is going to look completely different in terms… more>
categories: undergraduate, graduate, research, faculty research, undergraduate research, graduate research
tags: american studies and ethnicity, ange-marie hancock, antonio damasio, art history, business, english, humanities, kate flint, manuel pastor, natural sciences, political science, psychology, social sciences, usc dornsife 2020, usc dornsife magazine, wendy wood
When Troy Polamalu left Los Angeles to join the Pittsburgh Steelers in 2003, he vowed to return and complete his college education. On May 13, 2011, he traded in his black and gold Steelers helmet and jersey for a … more>
tags: alumni, football, history, humanities, pittsburgh steelers, troy polamalu, usc dornsife magazine
The 18 students in “Case Studies in Modern Leadership” sat with rapt attention listening to Los Angeles Mayor Antonio Villaraigosa as he shared his philosophy for overcoming adversity — a challenge he… more>
categories: undergraduate, graduate, diversity, community engagement
tags: antonio villaraigosa, california, class, dan schnur, event, government, jesse m. unruh institute of politics, los angeles, political science, politics, social sciences
More than 350 New York high school students had watched parts of Holocaust survivor Roman Kent’s video testimony about living in Lodz, Poland, when the Germans invaded during World War II. The young Roman, his parents,… more>
categories: research
tags: computer, event, holocaust, iwitness, new york, testimony, united nations, usc shoah foundation institute, usc shoah foundation institute for visual history and education
Researchers at USC have built a theoretical working model of the cellular engine that powers all life. The model will allow scientists to better understand the forces of life at the molecular level and potentially replicate… more>
categories: research, faculty research
tags: arieh warshel, biochemistry, cell, chemistry, natural sciences, paper, proceedings of the national academy of sciences
Scientists at USC have uncovered evidence that even when hydrothermal sea vents go dormant and their blistering warmth turns to frigid cold, life goes on. Or rather, it is replaced. A team led by USC Dornsife microbiologist… more>
categories: research, faculty research, diversity, faculty diversity
tags: biological sciences, katrina edwards, microbes, natural sciences, ocean
Richard Brutchey, assistant professor of chemistry, was recently lauded for his work as a researcher by ChemComm, a leading chemical sciences journal published by the Royal Society of Chemistry. ChemComm named Brutchey a 2012… more>
categories: research, faculty research
tags: award, chemistry, natural sciences, publication, raubenheimer junior faculty award, richard brutchey, royal society of chemistry
When thousands of workers filed lawsuits against employers in search of asbestos injury compensation, Congress planned to create a national social insurance program for asbestos claims but failed. A new book written by USC… more>
categories: research, faculty research
tags: alison dundes renteln, ann crigler, asbestos, jeb barnes, political science, social sciences
Put yourself in the position of a Jew during World War II who escapes to France penniless and is forced to beg on the streets. A passerby gives you roasted peanuts — your first morsel of food in several days. You are… more>
categories: graduate, research, graduate research
tags: brain and creativity institute, glenn fox, history, holocaust, natural sciences, neuroscience, oskar schindler, psychology, social sciences, usc shoah foundation institute


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