Founder of the Field
Remembering André L. Delbecq: four decades of teaching, service, and spiritual leadership.
Remembering André L. Delbecq: four decades of teaching, service, and spiritual leadership.
Remembering Paula Z. Kirkeby, a close friend of the de Saisset Museum.
Religious Studies Professor Phillip Boo Riley shares his memories of the dear Jim Reites, S.J., MST ’71.
Larger than life only begins to describe Kevin Starr, arguably the greatest California historian, period.
Ken Sears ’55 put Santa Clara in the Final Four and became the first basketball player on the cover of Sports Illustrated.
Wherever you are in the world, you’ve undoubtedly tasted the produce George Chiala ’64 grew. Once upon a time, it started with strawberries.
Saying goodbye to Ken Sears ’55, the first basketball player to appear on the cover of Sports Illustrated.
The firsthand view of sustainability on campus.
Serenity and savvy: remembering Peter-Hans Kolvenbach, S.J.
Remembering Paul Kantner ’63, one of the founding members of Jefferson Airplane.
Johnny Pasco ’52 quarterbacked the Broncos to a win for the ages, but he did so much more than that.
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.
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.
A physics professor who taught his students more than just science: remembering Professor Emeritus Carl Hayn, S.J.