Fight for It
The United States will go the way of history’s “failed empires,” warned former Secretary of Defense Leon Panetta ’60, J.D. ’63.
The United States will go the way of history’s “failed empires,” warned former Secretary of Defense Leon Panetta ’60, J.D. ’63.
As a new day rises, we take a moment to recap the most memorable moments of this year’s graduation ceremonies.
Engineering With a Mission has been the motto of the School of Engineering for the past decade.
The author of The Kite Runner talks writing, refugees, and his hopes and fears for Afghanistan.
In Undocumented and in College, Laura Nichols ’90 explains how past and present converge in post-DACA America.
A stately pedestrian mall, and the new arts neighborhood takes shape.
The Supreme Court closes a Texas-sized legal loophole in patent law, heeding the advice of SCU scholars Brian Love and Colleen Chien.
They dueled on the pitch: one representing the United States, one representing Mexico. Now they wear Bronco red.
Men’s crew goes global, competes in the Henley Royal Regatta in England—the Kentucky Derby of rowing.
Marni Murez ’20 won a bronze and a gold in the Maccabiah Games in Israel.
Tennis player Connor Garnett ’19 wins the WCC Men’s Sportsmanship Award. It’s about character—and calling your lines.
Introducing the first fully online version of the nationally-recognized Leavey School of Business MBA program.
The Leavey School of Business unveils its “Production Innovation” program aimed at helping companies beat the 80 percent fail rate.
OWN IT, a conference for women leaders, helps millennials find their strong and authentic selves.
Leavey School of Business Dean Caryn Beck-Dudley addresses the U.N. on the far-reaching value of small businesses.