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There’s a Bronco who can find hope, authenticity, God, and, yes, cat pictures online. We talk with @padreSJ.
Features
There’s a Bronco who can find hope, authenticity, God, and, yes, cat pictures online. We talk with @padreSJ.
After a year of tragedy, a community grieves and finds renewed communion with God.
Scientists can find the prints of human impact all over. These trails lead to a foreboding future. Could how we respond change everything?
There has long been a lack of diversity among therapists, creating an unhealthy cycle where many people can’t find the help they need. What are we doing to disrupt that?
So many Santa Clara women have found success in the male-dominated film and TV industry. We talked to five of them, at various stages in their career, on how they “made it” in Hollywood.
What’s it like to get out after spending 25 years in prison for a crime you didn’t commit? Arturo Jimenez, freed by efforts of the Northern California Innocence Project, explains.
A tattoo as an act of reclamation reminds not only of one’s ability to survive but also of vulnerability. The wolf on Maggie Levantovskaya’s skin is also a sign of the wolf within.
Living without a home is deadly in Silicon Valley. One SCU professor explores why so many die in a place of such wealth and finds the constant removal of communities of homeless people may be a danger to their lives.
When Ricardo Cortez ’07 started college, he thought he’d be an engineer. But his heart called him to express himself and his culture in art instead.
SCU’s 2021-22 Sinatra Artist-in-Residence on being grateful, getting your due, and dinosaurs.
We hate to join the chorus of producers bemoaning the supply chain, yet here we are.
SCU’s first layperson and woman leader, incoming President Julie Sullivan, looks to advance Santa Clara’s mission with the community.
The pandemic stole an entire year of games from them. But they still won it all. An oral history of the most unlikely winners of the NCAA women’s soccer national championship.
After decades of protests and calls for change, Santa Clara joins the queue of so many corporations hiring people to finally address issues of diversity.
Hardship forged a sense of gratitude in SCU finance professor Meir Statman and his wife, Navah.