For seven and half years from 1960 to April 4, 1968, I was privileged to serve Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. as a political advisor and subsequently as his personal lawyer and draft speech writer. With ...
USF undergraduates aren’t waiting until after graduation to launch their own companies. They’re using their classes to test new ideas — and relying on professors as business consultants. Meet some of ...
Practitioners, academics, and alumni from legal and non-legal backgrounds came together last month for the 2020 Law Review Symposium, Access to Justice in the Contemporary Workplace. Three panels of ...
What do you do when you’re 19 and in jail on a felony conviction? Antonio Reza resolved to go to college — and then law school. “I did wrong. I deserved to be punished,” says Reza of the times he ...
Why did you want to be a nursing major? I’ve always known that I wanted to help people and make an impact. When I was debating what my major would be, I leaned toward my interest in science and ...
Some Biology majors spent the past summer in the Sierra Nevada, reveling in nature and enjoying a front row seat to the activities of native wildlife. It was part of an annual field research trip led ...
The story of big coffee — Starbucks and Peet’s — and its connection to USF is the story of a 60-year friendship that began with two sophomores standing in line for their dorm assignments at the front ...
Speakers Dr. Darrick Smith, Dr. Letitia Johnson-Davis, Neha Ummat, Mauro Bautista, and Iracema Hromnik. Throughout 2020, K-12 school leaders led their communities through unprecedented and competing ...
MA in Asia Pacific Studies (MAPS) students Melissa Chen, Autumn Anderson, Karina Salomatina, Lance Ekelund, Nga Giang, and Brittany Tinaliga attended the 28th annual School of Pacific and Asian ...
Jerry Baldwin and Gordon Bowker, who met as students at USF, “had a love and a passion for coffee” that came together in Seattle when they joined Zev Siegl and opened the first Starbucks in 1971, said ...
We asked our alumni to share their stories of how they met and fell in love at USF. Here is part one of a two-part series of how their love began, blossomed, and triumphed. Michael Donahue ’96 and ...
For students who are the first in their families to enroll in college, financial barriers can often obstruct the path to a degree. Intimidation about a perceived lack of affordability, and a ...