Claire Baugher, double major in psychology and political science, helped to transform a storage facility into a small theatre…
USC Dornsife students were among those who spoke during a recent TEDx, a local, independently organized offshoot of the…
After neuroscience and human biology major Erin Walker volunteered assisting in dentistry work in Honduras, she founded the…
USC Dornsife Dean Steve Kay’s laboratory to receive new team member, Pew Latin American Fellow Sabrina Sanchez from Argentina.
Provost Professor Scott Fraser presented his imaging techniques during a recent retreat organized by USC and The Scripps…
There is good reason Susan Forsburg's laboratory smells of sourdough. The USC College biologist is among the most prominent fission yeast researchers in the country. Inside her lab are hundreds of petri dishes containing… more>
categories: research, faculty research, undergraduate research, graduate research, diversity, faculty diversity
tags: biology, cancer, dna, fungus, natural sciences, susan forsburg, yeast
One scientist seeks a complete understanding of nanowire properties while another designs a solar cell that boosts high efficiency. This is just one example of how researchers in the basic and applied sciences at USC work… more>
categories: research, faculty research, diversity, faculty diversity
tags: dave caron, jia grace lu, katrina edwards, mark thompson, natural sciences, richard roberts
We can assume by its prefix that a nanometer is small — very small, in fact. One nanometer is equal to one billionth of a meter. In comparison, a single human hair is about 50,000 nanometers wide, and a nanowire diameter… more>
categories: research, faculty research, diversity, faculty diversity
tags: center for energy nanoscience, jia grace lu, natural sciences, physics, physics and astronomy
"I believe that this nation should commit itself to achieving the goal, before this decade is out, of landing a man on the moon and returning him safely to the Earth.” These were the remarkable words spoken by President… more>
categories: research, faculty research, diversity, faculty diversity
tags: biological sciences, earth, earth sciences, grant, katrina edwards, national science foundation, natural sciences, ocean
Katrina J. Edwards, professor of biological sciences and Earth sciences in the University of Southern California's College of Letters, Arts & Sciences, has been recommended for an award of a $25 million NSF grant to… more>
categories: research, faculty research, diversity, faculty diversity
tags: biological sciences, earth sciences, grant, katrina edwards, national science foundation, natural sciences, ocean
First, the highly popular Asymptotia is not a science blog. It's a blog that happens to be written by a scientist. Clifford Johnson, professor of physics and astronomy in USC College, blogs about his life and vast interests.… more>
categories: research, faculty research, diversity, faculty diversity
tags: astronomy, blog, clifford johnson, culture, natural sciences, physics
Percival Everett doesn’t spend a lot of time considering his body of work. Instead, says the 52-year-old author, whose new novel I Am Not Sidney Poitier (Graywolf, 2009) came out in June, “I think about writing one… more>
categories: research, faculty research, diversity, faculty diversity
tags: author, book, english, humanities, percival everett
Maria Elena Martinez's book, Genealogical Fictions: Limpieza de Sangre, Religion, and Gender in Colonial Mexico (Stanford University Press, 2008), the first in-depth study of the purity of blood concept and repercussions, has… more>
categories: research, faculty research, diversity, faculty diversity
tags: american studies and ethnicity, award, book, history, humanities, latin america, mexico, religion, spain
George Sanchez, director of diversity and professor of American studies and ethnicity and history at USC College, has been selected as the outstanding Latino/a faculty in higher education research institutions by the American… more>
categories: research, faculty research, diversity, faculty diversity
tags: american studies and ethnicity, award, history, humanities
Every day for almost a year, Robin D. G. Kelley dug through junk to find a man. In a storage facility stacked to the ceiling with overflowing bags and boxes, Kelley donned a dust mask and spent hours sorting through the… more>
categories: research, faculty research, diversity, faculty diversity
tags: american studies and ethnicity, biography, book, history, humanities, jazz, music, piano


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