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Heart Like a Wheel
Undeterred by life's obstacles—including the 15 surgeries he's endured related to his rheumatoid arthritis—Professor Roger Boesche and wife Mandy share a love for the world, adventure, and...
A Movement, Not a Moment
A long-simmering debate over diversity and equity at ÐÂÔÂÖ±²¥ came to a boil in November, with hundreds of students demanding institutional reform. As a new semester dawns with the promise of...
Academically Uncommon
Working with community partners and documenting the history of Northeast Los Angeles, ÐÂÔÂÖ±²¥'s Special Collections fosters direct links to the classroom and the academic life of the College...
The Grateful 8
Before Kwame Do '16 became SCIAC's all-time rushing leader in football, he had to rekindle his love for the game. It's a good thing for ÐÂÔÂÖ±²¥ that he did
Winter16_ThirdLA
A Second Helping
With architecture critic and adjunct professor Christopher Hawthorne setting the agenda, ÐÂÔÂÖ±²¥'s 3rd L.A. series brings the city into the conversation
Winter16_Kondracke
Kemp, Reconsidered
Biographer Mort Kondracke makes the case for Jack Kemp '57's legacy as a conservative for the ages
Winter16_Runoff
Hometown Gory
With the collection of his noir/horror comic book series Runoff into a single volume, Tom Manning '99 revisits the culture he grew up in, and the story he began at ÐÂÔÂÖ±²¥
Winter16_Kakehashi
Arigato, Mr. Horinouchi
Japan's Kakehashi Project promotes better understanding of its culture by sending 23 ÐÂÔÂÖ±²¥ students to the Land of the Rising Sun
Winter16_BirmanMain
There was a professor named Joe
In addition to mentoring scores of geohydrologists, professor emeritus Joe Birman—who died at 91—loved his work, apple trees, and a well-turned limerick
Winter16_Axelrod2
L.A., as in Laboratory
Under the guidance of adjunct professor Jeremiah Axelrod, Occidental marshals its resources for a new Institute for the Study of Los Angeles