Go Big, Go Home
Ken Sears ’55 put Santa Clara in the Final Four and became the first basketball player on the cover of Sports Illustrated.
Ken Sears ’55 put Santa Clara in the Final Four and became the first basketball player on the cover of Sports Illustrated.
Farewell to Brian Doyle: a lover of life, catcher of stories, and dear friend to this magazine.
Professor emeritus of history and SCU historian Gerald McKevitt, S.J., told the history of Jesuits in the West. He wrote the definitive The University of Santa Clara.
Tennant Wright, S.J., STL ’63 had a favorite bit of advice he gave to students: “Judge me harshly.” That rarely was the case with this devoted teacher and priest who came from unlikely roots.
Remembering Theodore “Ted” Rynes, S.J., who pushed his students to do better and think deeper.
The Broncos won back-to-back Sugar Bowl titles in 1937 and 1938. For his exploits, Al Wolff ’40 was named All-American two years in a row.
At Santa Clara in the late ’50s and ’60s, Carolyn Cassady was known for her costume design for theatre productions.
So Long, Bill Adams ’37 and Professor Emeritus of Law Howard Anawalt. Plus tributes to other faculty, staff, and students we’ve lost in recent months.
Remembering Fr. William F. Donnelly, the Ciraulo brothers, and other folks we’ll miss.