When disaster struck his native Santa Cruz last year, reporter Max Chun ’19 and a small team of journalists sprang into action for their community—and pocketed a Pulitzer Prize for their...
In his first book, city planner and architecture buff Max Podemski ’06 traces the DNA of urban housing
Over 25 years of leadership in Occidental’s Office of Student Affairs, Brigida Knauer (1935-2023) shepherded residential life into the modern era
Anna Dalton ’12 traded the tracks for the trails and is climbing the ranks of competitive technical runners
Fifty-seven years after an ill-fated grade placed his academic dreams in jeopardy, Dr. Elliott Oppenheim ’69 recalls the counsel of his mentor, Professor of Chemistry Frank Lambert
Jack Griffith ’64 is still flying high after decades of medical discoveries—and retirement’s not in his DNA
Jim Conlin '74 was not an ostentatious fellow—but his legacy gift to Occidental will improve the fortunes of generations of future students
Michael Gonzales ’96 embraces his new role as U.S. ambassador to Zambia with intelligence and integrity
Professor of Psychology Emeritus Dave Cole M’48 brought personality to the classroom and beyond
It's not easy to follow an Â鶹ƵµÀculinary legend—but Amy Munoz made the job her own over the last four decades. Somewhere, Clancy Morrison is smiling
With goodwill and a dash of whimsy (Obama-branded diaper covers!), Anne Wolf made the Â鶹ƵµÀBookstore a destination for more than textbooks
As prolific in the library as he was in the classroom, Andrew Rolle '43, who died in March, chronicled California, the American West, and Occidental with an honest and unflinching gaze
The Tony-winning set designer and legendary Yale professor, who died last fall, dedicated himself to theater and to teaching, Ann Sheffield ’83 recalls
Steve Casner ’73 and wife Karen ’74 share a love for Occidental—and have endowed a computer science professorship to build on that protocol
The Spanish flu pandemic of 1918–19 claimed the lives of more than 675,000 Americans and shut down the College for seven weeks—but it could have been even worse for Oxy