University Archives - USC https://usc.edu/category/university/ University of Southern California Fri, 13 Sep 2024 07:45:59 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.6.1 Business of Innovation offering combines business acumen, creativity to prepare innovators for the future https://today.usc.edu/new-business-of-innovation-offering-combines-business-acumen-creativity-to-prepare-innovators-for-the-future/ Fri, 13 Sep 2024 07:45:54 +0000 http://live-usc-dp.pantheonsite.io/?p=26456 The new degree program is a joint effort of the USC Jimmy Iovine and Andre Young Academy and the USC Marshall School of Business.

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The new degree program is a joint effort of the USC Jimmy Iovine and Andre Young Academy and the USC Marshall School of Business.

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Celebrating 25 years of USC’s Institute for Creative Technologies https://today.usc.edu/celebrating-25-years-of-uscs-institute-for-creative-technologies/ Thu, 12 Sep 2024 18:49:22 +0000 http://live-usc-dp.pantheonsite.io/?p=26436 Since its founding in 1999, the institute has produced cutting-edge computing research that has been used by Hollywood, academia, tech and the military.

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USC’s Institute for Creative Technologies anniversary: David Nelson

David Nelson demonstrates the Adaptive HMD Display. (USC Photo/Steve Cohn)

Science/Technology

Celebrating 25 years of USC’s Institute for Creative Technologies

Since its founding in 1999, the institute has produced cutting-edge computing research that has been used by Hollywood, academia, tech and the military.

September 12, 2024

By Will Kwong

Virtual humans speaking with museumgoers about their experiences surviving the Holocaust. A phone app giving soldiers suffering from post-traumatic stress disorder a mental health specialist in their pocket. Computer-generated actors populating many top Hollywood films and bestselling video games.

The USC Institute for Creative Technologies has been at the forefront of augmented and virtual reality technology such as these since its founding in 1999. The institute conducts cutting-edge research in key computing areas such as artificial intelligence, computer graphics, geospatial sciences and many others.

These technological breakthroughs, positioned near Hollywood and the Silicon Beach tech corridor in west Los Angeles, have earned ICT numerous plaudits, including two Academy Awards, 29 patents and hundreds of thousands of citations. Three ICT researchers have been named fellows of the Association for the Advancement of Artificial Intelligence, the world’s foremost AI research organization.

These accomplishments and more were on display at the ICT 25th anniversary event held Aug. 19 at the center’s headquarters in Playa Vista within Silicon Beach.

USC’s Institute for Creative Technologies anniversary: Louis Caldera, Carol Folt and Randall Hill
Louis Caldera (left), the former U.S. secretary of the Army who spoke at the event, visits with USC President Carol Folt and Randall Hill, Institute for Creative Technologies executive director. (USC Photo/Steve Cohn)

“ICT is truly one of the most wonderful beacons for exploration and innovation,” USC President Carol Folt said at the event. She noted the institute’s history of trailblazing work and its ability to evolve and expand its research areas, including in virtual reality, augmented reality, graphics rendering and artificial intelligence.

Innovative history

Demonstrations in the institute’s core areas of research drew attendees, who were able to engage with numerous technologies developed at ICT during its history. Of special interest was research in natural language processing, computer vision and machine learning, which culminated in the development of virtual humans capable of engaging in realistic conversations.

At the event, Folt noted that “ICT is a front line for USC in our new frontiers of computing,” referring to the USC Frontiers of Computing “moonshot,” a $1 billion-plus, 10-year initiative to fast-track developments in advanced computing and expand the impact of scientific discovery in Los Angeles County’s growing tech corridor that encompasses USC Silicon Beach.

Human-centric technology

From its beginnings, ICT has developed technology-driven solutions to real-world applications for all walks of life. “ICT came into existence because of the convergence of outstanding technology, creativity and commitment to national security and our enduring human values at USC,” said Yannis C. Yortsos, dean of the USC Viterbi School of Engineering, which is home of ICT, at the event. Bill Swartout, chief science officer of ICT, noted ICT’s tremendous growth since its inception.

As one of only a handful of university affiliated research centers sponsored by the U.S. Department of Defense in the country, ICT-developed technology spans a wide array of everyday applications as well. Louis Caldera, the former U.S. secretary of the Army who spoke at the event, said ICT’s standing as a university affiliated research center demonstrates how its creative and technological experts have a deep understanding of which kind of technologies to bring to the Army.

USC’s Institute for Creative Technologies anniversary: Carol Folt
USC President Carol Folt address the Institute for Creative Technologies’ anniversary event. (USC Photo/Steve Cohn)

ICT’s proximity to Hollywood and tech startups in L.A. also positioned it to play a role in advancing computer technology in the entertainment industry. “ICT has leveraged the best Hollywood immersive techniques and the best creative processes to envision and integrate the future,” ICT Executive Director Randall Hill said at the event. Graphic-rendering innovations from ICT have led to creating lifelike computer-generated characters in films such as Avatar and other Hollywood blockbusters.

One example that blends ICT’s research areas is the BRAVEMIND project, led by Skip Rizzo, Arno Hartholt and Sharon Mozgai. A virtual reality therapy system, this project has produced meaningful reductions in PTSD symptoms in clinical trials and has been adopted by Veteran Affairs medical centers and other sites that serve the needs of veterans.

“What we do here at ICT is look at what technologies are out there, and how can we apply those technologies to challenges in society,” said Rizzo, whose work in virtual reality-based PTSD exposure therapy received the American Psychological Association’s 2010 Award for Outstanding Contributions to the Treatment of Trauma. Mozgai, the director of the Virtual Human Therapeutics Lab at ICT, said, “While we are excited about the recent advances in AI, a core value of our work is to responsibly integrate this technology into our applications.”

Bridging the past and future

Other work includes the New Dimensions in Testimony project, a collaboration with USC Shoah Foundation — The Institute for Visual History and Education that gives visitors the opportunity to engage with an AI-powered video display of Holocaust survivor Pinchas Gutter. The specialized video display utilized advanced filming techniques developed using ICT’s Light Stage technology.

“Conversations are a powerful learning tool,” said Ron Artstein, a research scientist who demonstrated the interactive technology to attendees, engaging in a real-time virtual conversation with Gutter that made an emotional impact on many attendees. “When you talk to a person, you build an emotional connection. New Dimensions in Testimony lets people talk with historical witnesses in an immersive way.”

Researchers from the Visions & Graphics Lab demoed Text to Avatar, which lab director Yajie Zhao describes as “the front line of human-avatar technology.” Pairing sophisticated facial geometry and texture data in a digital environment, the project will utilize a deep learning model to “create numerous avatars that could fill entire environments,” Zhao said.

Developing computer-generated imagery for Hollywood is a central theme in ICT’s history: Visions & Graphics Lab researchers earned an Academy Award in 2010 for Best Achievement in Visual Effects, and the institute received a second award in 2018 for technical achievement. The applications stretch to other media as well. The hit video game The Last of Us also incorporated work developed through the institute’s motion-capture technology.

Creating the future

The two-day event and reception brought together key figures from the institute’s history to reflect on the progress made and to look to the future of ICT. Yortsos said the institute’s ability to bring together disparate industries including entertainment, academia, tech and the military has helped improved the lives of people worldwide.

Looking to the future, Hill said the institute would continue to bring together USC researchers and experts in immersive technologies to create the next generation of Department of Defense training tools and simulations: “The future is looking at how humans and machines can team together in all kinds of capacities.”

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Generous gift from Jerre and Mary Joy Stead boosts neurosurgery at USC https://today.usc.edu/generous-gift-from-jerre-and-mary-joy-stead-boosts-neurosurgery-at-usc/ Thu, 12 Sep 2024 16:44:39 +0000 http://live-usc-dp.pantheonsite.io/?p=26431 The Steads have given $12.5 million to the Keck School of Medicine of USC to support transformative clinical and research innovation and entrepreneurship.

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Neurosurgery at USC: Mary Joy and Jerre Stead

Mary Joy and Jerre Stead have been making philanthropic gifts since they were first married. (Photo/Courtesy of Jerre and Mary Joy Stead)

Health

Generous gift from Jerre and Mary Joy Stead boosts neurosurgery at USC

The Steads have given $12.5 million to the Keck School of Medicine of USC to support transformative clinical and research innovation and entrepreneurship.

September 12, 2024

By Janice O’Leary

Jerre and Mary Joy Stead are dedicated to helping improve health and wellbeing globally, giving more than $400 million to nonprofit organizations as well as investing in innovative startups through Stead Impact Ventures and Foundation.

Philanthropic giving has been stitched into their lives since the earliest days of their marriage. As newlyweds, they lived on only $2,900 a year, yet still donated $250 of that. Since then, Jerre Stead has led 11 public companies as CEO, including Clarivate, IHS Markit and Ingram Micro — and the couple’s philanthropy has grown as well.

“When we were young, we didn’t know what we couldn’t do,” Jerre Stead said, “and we still don’t know what we can’t do—so we do it.”

“Generosity lifts us outside of ourselves, bringing us joy,” Mary Joy Stead added.

The Keck School of Medicine of USC has benefited from that can-do spirit. The Steads have invested $12.5 million in the Department of Neurological Surgery to support transformative clinical and research innovation and entrepreneurship. Their gift establishes the Stead Family Neurological Surgery Innovation Fund, the Jerre and Mary Joy Stead Family Chair in Neurological Surgery, and the Jerre and Mary Joy Stead Family Neurosurgical Innovation Lab.

“We share a vision with USC to create a neurological surgery center of excellence, led by the leaders in the field, to swiftly accelerate research and advance care,” the Steads said in a statement. “We believe USC will lead neurosurgical innovation and improve patient outcomes for decades to come.”

Support President Folt’s Health Sciences 3.0 “moonshot”

The gift supports USC President Carol Folt’s Health Sciences 3.0 “moonshot,” an ambitious expansion of health sciences work across the university. The initiative recognizes the university’s unique position as a place where Trojans can make scientific discoveries, cure diseases and design new models of care. It is focused on catalyzing team-based research, education and care for the communities surrounding USC’s campuses and health system as well as patients worldwide.

The Steads’ neurosurgery gift enabled USC to recruit one of the nation’s most highly regarded neurosurgeons, Aaron Cohen-Gadol. He joined the Keck School of Medicine in July as vice chair of innovation and professor of neurological surgery.

The education and innovation platform he founded, the Neurosurgical Atlas, features novel techniques and is used by more than 90% of practicing neurosurgeons.

“Neurosciences, including neurosurgery, comprise a major component of our plan to expand research and clinical impact in the coming years, and Dr. Cohen-Gadol is a perfect fit to help realize our vision for igniting discovery,” said Carolyn C. Meltzer, dean of Keck School of Medicine. “His deep expertise and focus as a physician-scientist-educator drives breakthroughs toward addressing real-world surgical and health challenges. His emphasis on furthering the practice of neurosurgery, translating discovery to patients, and educating students and other physicians is ideally aligned with our overarching goals as a medical school where innovative thinking combines with research and skill to optimize human health.”

Neurosurgery at USC: Cohen-Gadol’s Trojan roots

Cohen-Gadol earned his medical degree at USC in 1997, and since then has become a relentless innovator committed to technical excellence in neurosurgery and performing more than 7,400 complex brain surgeries. In 2022, he was awarded the Vilhelm Magnus Medal, the highest honor in neurosurgery granted by Scandinavian countries. Only a dozen people have received the award.

“We are thrilled to have Dr. Cohen-Gadol returning to USC and bringing his clinical and research expertise to our patients and community,” said Steven Giannotta, chair of the Department of Neurological Surgery. “Dr. Cohen-Gadol’s entrepreneurial and innovative spirit will provide immediate impact to the patients and families he will serve, and his research efforts through the Neurosurgical Atlas will surely draw additional talent and resources to the Keck School of Medicine research enterprise.”

“For the past 20 years,” Cohen-Gadol said, “I have had the honor of advancing the art of neurosurgery beyond what I imagined could be possible, influencing the training of thousands of neurosurgeons worldwide and the lives of countless patients across the globe. I am excited to continue this mission in partnership with my colleagues at USC.”

Arizona residents Jerre and Mary Joy Stead are inspired by USC’s vision for creating a neurological surgery department that will be a global center for innovation, entrepreneurship and education: “We believe that, with partners like USC, we can foster new levels of innovation and help bend the curve of some of the biggest health and wellness challenges we face today.”

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At USC Safety and Preparedness Fair, Trojans get ready for anything https://today.usc.edu/at-usc-safety-and-preparedness-fair-trojans-get-ready-for-anything/ Tue, 10 Sep 2024 21:47:47 +0000 http://live-usc-dp.pantheonsite.io/?p=26416 Monday’s event on the University Park Campus included interactive demos, activities and giveaways.

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USC Safety and Preparedness Fair: Joyston Menezes puts out fire

Graduate student Joyston Menezes puts out a fire after learning how to use a fire extinguisher. (USC Photo/Gus Ruelas)

University

At USC Safety and Preparedness Fair, Trojans get ready for anything

Monday’s event on the University Park Campus included interactive demos, activities and giveaways. See the photo gallery.

September 10, 2024

By USC News Staff

Trojans learned important tips on Monday during USC’s Safety and Preparedness Fair. The event on the University Park Campus was presented by the USC Department of Public Safety, USC Environmental Health & Safety, USC Fire Safety & Emergency Planning, and USC Transportation.

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New Trojans explore USC’s Student Equity and Inclusion Programs spaces https://today.usc.edu/new-trojans-explore-uscs-student-equity-and-inclusion-programs-spaces/ Mon, 09 Sep 2024 20:53:41 +0000 http://live-usc-dp.pantheonsite.io/?p=26397 A joint open house provides students with the opportunity to make new connections at start of their USC journey.

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USC SEIP open house: Sophia Hou and Katrina Kong Smith

New student Sophia Hou spins the wheel for a prize as center assistant Katrina Kong Smith looks on. (USC Photo/Gus Ruelas)

University

New Trojans explore USC’s Student Equity and Inclusion Programs spaces

A joint open house provides students with the opportunity to make new connections at start of their USC journey.

September 09, 2024

By Greg Hernandez

New Trojans Cielo Barroso Espidio and Fernanda Morales Soto were happy to find seats inside a crowded La CASA space on the fourth floor of the Gwynn Wilson Student Union building on Thursday. The twofreshmen from the USC Dornsife College of Letters, Arts and Sciences had only recently met, but they stuck together as they navigated a bustling open house event inside the space on the University Park Campus that for more than five decades has been a home away from home for Latino students at USC.

“It’s just nice to have an area to study with a community you feel comfortable with,” said Barroso Espidio, who is from Portland, Ore. “We are all at this prestigious university and can collaborate and accomplish things together.”

Morales Soto, who is from San Jose, had already visited La CASA during an orientation and connected with the vibe of the space. “It’s really important in higher education to be around other Latinos who are very well-accomplished and have such drive,” she said.

Student Equity and Inclusion Programs hosted the joint open house for its six centers — Asian Pacific American Student Services, Center for Black Cultural and Student Affairs,First Generation Plus Success Center, La CASA, the LGBTQ+ Student Center and the Veterans Resource Center — and two Culturally Affirming Lounges — Native American and Pasifika Student Lounge and Middle Eastern North African Student Lounge. Staff members were on hand to answer questions, and fellow students who already frequent the spaces were also present for swag giveaways and to snack on an array of Sprinkles cupcakes.

USC SEIP open house: Fernanda Morales Soto and Cielo Barrosso
Fernanda Morales Soto, left, and Cielo Barrosso Espidio share a moment during the open house. (USC Photo/Gus Ruelas)

“Today’s a fantastic day,” USC Vice President for Student Life Monique S. Allard said as she made her way around the various spaces. “It’s the start of the semester, so it’s a wonderful time for us to connect folks with each other, with university resources and with the communities. It’s good to see students wandering in and out of all of the cultural and resource centers, making friends, grabbing a cupcake and just having a good time.”

More room for students to belong

During the 2023-24 academic year, the various centers and lounges saw 62,704 visitors. After a series of renovations last year, the spaces were tripled in size from 5,000 to 15,000 square feet. The changes have resulted in less cluttered areas for Asian Pacific American Student Services, La CASA, the LGBTQ+ Student Center and the Native American and Pasifika Student Lounge. The larger student spaces also now connect with shared kitchens and meeting rooms, an arrangement that has paved the way for more interaction between the different student groups.

Each area honors specific cultures and identities through artwork and other features, but all have one common design element: Stenciled on the wall of each space in large letters are the words “You Belong at USC.”

USC SEIP open house: Patrick Cardenas-Hirsig
New student Patrick Cardenas-Hirsig enjoys a break. (USC Photo/Gus Ruelas)

Student Gamma Posselt of the USC Viterbi School of Engineering sought a sense of belonging when they dropped into the LGBTQ+ Student Center on Thursday and chatted with a staff member and a fellow student. The nonbinary first-year student is part of the USC Trojan Marching Band but has been worried about finding “other people like me.”

“Finding this space has definitely helped assuage those fears,” Posselt said. “It makes me feel a lot better just knowing that there’s a place for me to be myself in a way that I can’t be in other places.”

Places to make memories

Graduate student Daniella Lake of the USC Annenberg School for Communication and Journalism, who is new to campus, paid a visit to the Center for Black Cultural and Student Affairs open house for a cupcake and to socialize.

“I was really involved in my community back at UC Berkeley and I want to tap into the Black community here,” Lake said. “I only have one year here, and I want to meet people and feel a part of it. Even if it’s just coming here to do homework, this could be my way to feel connected to the community.”

USC SEIP open house: Student visiting the Middle Eastern North African lounge
Students visiting the Middle Eastern North African Lounge show their spirit. (USC Photo/Gus Ruelas)

Standing nearby, CBCSA student employee Annmarie Easy said Lake had come to the right place.

“I always say, ‘Don’t be scared to just walk in and say hi,’” said Easy, a USC Dornsife political science major. “This is where I’ve met all of my friends, including some who have become mentors. It’s meant a lot to me and all my best memories are here.”

Junior Sophia Hou of the USC Marshall School of Business dropped into APASS for some swag. A transfer student from Pasadena City College, she’s grateful the various Student Equity and Inclusion Programs spaces are located in the center of campus.

“They are very accessible, and I think I’ll be visiting a lot,” Hou said. “I feel like the more often I go, the more I will feel connected with the people. They also have phone chargers, which is very important.”

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https://today.usc.edu/new-trojans-explore-uscs-student-equity-and-inclusion-programs-spaces/
Harris vs. Trump debate: USC experts available for comment https://today.usc.edu/harris-vs-trump-debate-usc-experts-available-for-comment/ Sat, 07 Sep 2024 01:37:34 +0000 http://live-usc-dp.pantheonsite.io/?p=26383 Vice President Kamala Harris and former President Donald Trump will face off in their first and only scheduled debate on Sept. 10. USC experts are available for pre- and post-debate comment and analysis.

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Harris vs. Trump debate: USC experts available for comment

Harris Image Credit: Official White House Photo by Lawrence Jackson; Trump Image Credit: Official White House photo by Shealah Craighead

University

Harris vs. Trump debate: USC experts available for comment

September 06, 2024

Vice President Kamala Harris and former President Donald Trump will face off in their first and only scheduled debate tomorrow night.

USC experts are available for pre- and post-debate comment and analysis.

Contact: Nina Raffio, raffio@usc.edu or (213) 442-8464; USC Media Relations, uscnews@usc.edu or (213) 740-2215

Campaigns, Polls and Voters

Mindy RomeroMindy Romero is a political sociologist whose research focuses on political behavior and patterns of voting and political underrepresentation, particularly among youth and communities of color in California and the U.S. She is the founder and director of the Center for Inclusive Democracy at the USC Price School of Public Policy.

Contact: msromero@usc.edu

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Bob ShrumBob Shrum is the director of the Center for the Political Future and the Carmen H. and Louis Warschaw Chair in practical politics at the USC Dornsife College of Letters, Arts and Sciences.

A renowed political strategist, Shrum has served as speechwriter for Senator George McGovern and Senator Edward Kennedy, as well as a strategist in numerous winning campaigns at various levels of government, including for Joe Biden, John Kerry and Al Gore in presidential races.

Contact: shrum@usc.edu

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Christian R. GroseChristian Grose is an expert on American government, political representation, polling and elections. Grose is a professor of political science and public policy at USC Dornsife and academic director of the USC Schwarzenegger Institute for State and Global Policy at USC Price.

Related article: Polls get a lot of hype, but what do they really tell us? A Q&A with polling pro Christian Grose

Contact: cgrose@usc.edu

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Morris LevyMorris Levy is an expert on race, ethnicity and politics; demographics; immigration policy and attitudes toward immigration in the U.S. and Europe; and voter ID laws and behavior. Levy is an assistant professor of political science at USC Dornsife.

Available for interviews in Spanish.

Contact: morrisl@usc.edu

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Kamy AkhavanKamy Akhavan is an expert on the origins of and solutions to political polarization, improving interpersonal communication, the power of debate, nonprofit leadership, digital marketing, civics education and how to teach controversial issues. Akhavan is executive director of the USC Dornsife Center for the Political Future.

Contact: kakhavan@usc.edu

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Jeff Blattner

Jeff Blattner, a Fall 2024 fellow at the USC Dornsife Center of the Political Future, is an expert on the U.S. Supreme Court’s powerful role in American politics and the role of politics in the decisions of the Court. Blattner is the former Judiciary Committee Chief Counsel for Sen. Edward Kennedy and the Deputy Assistant Attorney General for the U.S. Department of Justice.

Contact: raffio@usc.edu and uscnews@usc.edu

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Political Communications

Marty Kaplan

Martin Kaplan is an expert in politics, journalism and entertainment whose research interests include campaign coverage on TV news; the use of narrative change to effect social and cultural change; and the impact of the attention economy on democracy.

In the Carter Administration, Kaplan was chief speechwriter to Vice President Walter Mondale. In Mondale’s 1983-84 bid for the presidency, Kaplan was a deputy campaign manager whose portfolio included issues, speechwriting and media strategy.

Since 2000, Kaplan has held USC’s Norman Lear endowed chair and directed the USC Annenberg Norman Lear Center, a nonpartisan research and public policy center that has been studying the social, political, economic and cultural impact of entertainment and media for more than 20 years. Kaplan is also a research professor at the USC Annenberg School for Communication and Journalism.

Contact: martyk@usc.edu

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Steve Caplan

Steve Caplan is an expert in digital media, political advertising and political communications strategy. An adjunct instructor at USC Annenberg, Caplan is also the founder of Message, an award-winning strategic communications and marketing firm based in LA. Before launching Message, Caplan was a partner at GMMB, one of the nation’s leading cause marketing firms and the agency of record for the Obama 2008 campaign.

Related article: Political advertising in the 2024 election: Q&A with USC’s Steve Caplan

Contact: scaplan@usc.edu

###

Christina Bellantoni

Christina Bellantoni is an expert in political journalism, national politics, television punditry and partisan media. Over her more than 20 years in journalism, Bellantoni has worked as a reporter and editor, as a producer and as an analyst on national television. Bellantoni is a professor of professional practice at the USC Annenberg School for Communication and Journalism.

Contact: christina.bellantoni@usc.edu

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Harris vs. Trump debate: USC experts available for comment https://today.usc.edu/harris-vs-trump-debate-usc-experts-available-for-comment/ Sat, 07 Sep 2024 01:37:34 +0000 http://live-usc-dp.pantheonsite.io/?p=26382 Vice President Kamala Harris and former President Donald Trump will face off in their first and only scheduled debate on Sept. 10. USC experts are available for pre- and post-debate comment and analysis.

The post Harris vs. Trump debate: USC experts available for comment appeared first on USC.

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Harris vs. Trump debate: USC experts available for comment

Harris Image Credit: Official White House Photo by Lawrence Jackson; Trump Image Credit: Official White House photo by Shealah Craighead

University

Harris vs. Trump debate: USC experts available for comment

September 06, 2024

Vice President Kamala Harris and former President Donald Trump will face off in their first and only scheduled debate tomorrow night.

USC experts are available for pre- and post-debate comment and analysis.

Contact: Nina Raffio, raffio@usc.edu or (213) 442-8464; USC Media Relations, uscnews@usc.edu or (213) 740-2215

Campaigns, Polls and Voters

Mindy RomeroMindy Romero is a political sociologist whose research focuses on political behavior and patterns of voting and political underrepresentation, particularly among youth and communities of color in California and the U.S. She is the founder and director of the Center for Inclusive Democracy at the USC Price School of Public Policy.

Contact: msromero@usc.edu

###

Bob ShrumBob Shrum is the director of the Center for the Political Future and the Carmen H. and Louis Warschaw Chair in practical politics at the USC Dornsife College of Letters, Arts and Sciences.

A renowed political strategist, Shrum has served as speechwriter for Senator George McGovern and Senator Edward Kennedy, as well as a strategist in numerous winning campaigns at various levels of government, including for Joe Biden, John Kerry and Al Gore in presidential races.

Contact: shrum@usc.edu

###

Christian R. GroseChristian Grose is an expert on American government, political representation, polling and elections. Grose is a professor of political science and public policy at USC Dornsife and academic director of the USC Schwarzenegger Institute for State and Global Policy at USC Price.

Related article: Polls get a lot of hype, but what do they really tell us? A Q&A with polling pro Christian Grose

Contact: cgrose@usc.edu

###

Morris LevyMorris Levy is an expert on race, ethnicity and politics; demographics; immigration policy and attitudes toward immigration in the U.S. and Europe; and voter ID laws and behavior. Levy is an assistant professor of political science at USC Dornsife.

Available for interviews in Spanish.

Contact: morrisl@usc.edu

###

Kamy AkhavanKamy Akhavan is an expert on the origins of and solutions to political polarization, improving interpersonal communication, the power of debate, nonprofit leadership, digital marketing, civics education and how to teach controversial issues. Akhavan is executive director of the USC Dornsife Center for the Political Future.

Contact: kakhavan@usc.edu

###

Jeff Blattner

Jeff Blattner, a Fall 2024 fellow at the USC Dornsife Center of the Political Future, is an expert on the U.S. Supreme Court’s powerful role in American politics and the role of politics in the decisions of the Court. Blattner is the former Judiciary Committee Chief Counsel for Sen. Edward Kennedy and the Deputy Assistant Attorney General for the U.S. Department of Justice.

Contact: raffio@usc.edu and uscnews@usc.edu

###

Political Communications

Marty Kaplan

Martin Kaplan is an expert in politics, journalism and entertainment whose research interests include campaign coverage on TV news; the use of narrative change to effect social and cultural change; and the impact of the attention economy on democracy.

In the Carter Administration, Kaplan was chief speechwriter to Vice President Walter Mondale. In Mondale’s 1983-84 bid for the presidency, Kaplan was a deputy campaign manager whose portfolio included issues, speechwriting and media strategy.

Since 2000, Kaplan has held USC’s Norman Lear endowed chair and directed the USC Annenberg Norman Lear Center, a nonpartisan research and public policy center that has been studying the social, political, economic and cultural impact of entertainment and media for more than 20 years. Kaplan is also a research professor at the USC Annenberg School for Communication and Journalism.

Contact: martyk@usc.edu

###

Steve Caplan

Steve Caplan is an expert in digital media, political advertising and political communications strategy. An adjunct instructor at USC Annenberg, Caplan is also the founder of Message, an award-winning strategic communications and marketing firm based in LA. Before launching Message, Caplan was a partner at GMMB, one of the nation’s leading cause marketing firms and the agency of record for the Obama 2008 campaign.

Related article: Political advertising in the 2024 election: Q&A with USC’s Steve Caplan

Contact: scaplan@usc.edu

###

Christina Bellantoni

Christina Bellantoni is an expert in political journalism, national politics, television punditry and partisan media. Over her more than 20 years in journalism, Bellantoni has worked as a reporter and editor, as a producer and as an analyst on national television. Bellantoni is a professor of professional practice at the USC Annenberg School for Communication and Journalism.

Contact: christina.bellantoni@usc.edu

###

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USC Sustainability Hub celebrates its first anniversary https://today.usc.edu/usc-sustainability-hub-celebrates-its-first-anniversary/ Fri, 06 Sep 2024 07:04:00 +0000 http://live-usc-dp.pantheonsite.io/?p=26360 GREEN WEEK: The multiuse space on the University Park Campus marks a milestone. Watch the video.

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Carol L Folt meeting at Sustainability Hub

Sam Schongalla, left, and USC Viterbi Professor Mahta Moghaddam, right, give USC President Carol Folt a tour of the Sustainability Hub after its opening in September 2023. (USC Photo/Gus Ruelas)

University

USC Sustainability Hub celebrates its first anniversary

GREEN WEEK: The multiuse space on the University Park Campus marks a milestone. Watch the video.

September 06, 2024

By Stephen Gee

Assignment: Earth logo
Learn more about USC’s Assignment: Earth initiative.

In the 12 months since the USC Sustainability Hub opened as a collaborative, inclusive and multiuse meeting space, the venue has become an essential destination for students who are passionate about the environment. It has hosted 209 events, welcomed almost 8,000 visitors and collected 4,386 pounds of e-waste. Watch the video to learn more.

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‘An authentic L.A. experience’: USC’s upcoming role in the 2028 Olympic and Paralympic Games https://today.usc.edu/an-authentic-l-a-experience-uscs-upcoming-role-in-the-2028-olympic-and-paralympic-games/ Fri, 06 Sep 2024 07:03:00 +0000 http://live-usc-dp.pantheonsite.io/?p=26344 The post ‘An authentic L.A. experience’: USC’s upcoming role in the 2028 Olympic and Paralympic Games appeared first on USC.

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2028 Los Angeles Olympics: Coliseum rendering

A raised floor will accommodate track and field events in the Coliseum. (Illustration/LA28 Olympic and Paralympic Games)

Athletics

‘An authentic L.A. experience’: USC’s upcoming role in the 2028 Olympic and Paralympic Games

Los Angeles is getting ready to host the 34th Summer Games in 2028, and USC will be playing a major part.

September 06, 2024

By Grayson Schmidt

As the world tunes in to watch the best athletes compete at the Summer Olympic and Paralympic Games every four years, USC pays a little more attention than most universities. After all, whatever flag they might be competing under at the Games, Olympians who’ve worn cardinal and gold are always well-represented: If USC were its own country, it would rank 14th in all-time medals among today’s recognized countries.

When the Games return to Los Angeles in 2028, the university will not only be center-stage — it will help provide the stage itself, as USC and the iconic Los Angeles Memorial Coliseum will house major events, including part of the Olympic opening ceremony.

“I am absolutely thrilled that the Olympic Games are returning to Los Angeles for the third time and that we’ll be hosting the Paralympics for the first time in 2028,” said Janet Evans, two-time Olympian and USC alumna. Evans is the chief athlete officer of LA28, the group overseeing the 2028 Olympic and Paralympic Games.

“As a proud Trojan and Southern California native, it’s truly special to be a part of USC’s Olympic legacy and witness our athletes continue to carry the torch with their representation and success at the Games,” Evans said.

Preparing for LA28

According to LA28, both the L.A. Memorial Coliseum — managed and operated by USC Auxiliary Services — and USC’s Galen Center will host various competitions, the former for track and field and the latter for badminton. Parts of USC’s University Park Campus will also serve as the Olympic Media Village, where all accredited media covering the Games will stay.

Old scoreboards at the 1984 Olympics
The Coliseum is decked out for the opening ceremonies of the 1984 Summer Olympics. The 2028 will be the venue’s third; it also hosted the 1932 Games. (Photo/U.S. Air Force)

“We’ve worked closely with LA28 since the first LA24 Olympics bid, and they’ve always been supportive partners,” said Dan Stimmler, vice president for USC Auxiliary Services, which also oversaw the Coliseum’s recent renovation. “Now that all the preliminary behind-the-scenes details for 2028 are nearly wrapped up, we’re excited and energized about the next critical phase in our amazing partnership with LA28.”

The 2028 Games will mark the first time in Olympics history that no new permanent venues will be built to host the Games. L.A. will use existing venues across the region, with two sports — softball and canoe slalom — being hosted in Oklahoma City.

On the closing day of the Paris Olympic Games, L.A. Mayor Karen Bass also announced plans for the 2028 Games to be “car-free” to help keep traffic manageable — a task that LA28 has collaborated on with USC.

An L.A. touch

USC’s partnership with LA28 extends beyond facilities and transportation. Earlier this summer, LA28 announced a collaboration with the USC Race and Equity Center to design a series of diversity, equity, inclusion and belonging workshops ahead of the Games.

“It’s no secret that massive amounts of people are going to come here to experience the Games,” said Justin Morrow, head of sports programs and partnerships with the USC Race and Equity Center. “We’ve helped LA28 think through their transportation policy and how they can partner with local and city and state government to grow public transportation.”

The center has also designed the LA28 Diversity, Equity, Inclusion and Belonging Leadership Acceleration Academy, a program created to facilitate meaningful dialogue among the Games’ organizers, planners, employees and athletes. Through the program, Morrow hopes LA28 team members will understand what it means to deliver an Olympic Games that reflects a truly multicultural city and country.

“We’ve helped the people at LA28 think through a lot of different ways that the 2028 Olympic Games can have a positive impact for all the people living in Los Angeles,” Morrow said.

Part of that work involves community outreach before the Games to ensure that the many communities in L.A. have input on the Games and how the world sees their city.

“It’s about getting out into the community with people that live in different areas of the city, different ethnic groups, different sporting groups, and talking to them,” Morrow said. “We want to know what would make this feel like a really authentic Los Angeles experience.”

Evans said she’s looking forward to working closely with her alma mater to help create a Games unique to L.A.

“Equipped with the lessons and feedback we’re collecting from the Paris 2024 Olympic and Paralympic Games, we’re more excited than ever to create an extraordinary experience for our athletes, community, partners and fans in 2028,” she said.

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USC students make an impact in sustainability https://today.usc.edu/usc-students-make-an-impact-in-sustainability/ Thu, 05 Sep 2024 22:34:58 +0000 http://live-usc-dp.pantheonsite.io/?p=26308 GREEN WEEK: As USC celebrates its fourth annual Green Week, there are more ways than ever for students to get involved in sustainability. Read the story and watch the video.

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USC student sustainability: Carol Folt with interns and staff

USC President Carol Folt greets Sustainability Hub interns and staff. (USC Photo/Gus Ruelas)

University

USC students make an impact in sustainability

GREEN WEEK: As USC celebrates its fourth annual Green Week, there are more ways than ever for students to get involved in sustainability. Read the story and watch the video.

September 05, 2024

By Stephen Gee

Whether it is choosing from a record number of sustainability-focused courses or joining a student advocacy group, USC offers an unprecedented number of ways students can demonstrate their commitment to a greener, more sustainable future.

In the past four academic years the USC Sustainability Across the Curriculum Initiative, created and led by the President’s Working Group on Sustainability and Office of Academic Programs, has issued 46 grants to create new or update existing sustainability-related courses.

Among the array of newly launched options added to the USC Sustainability Course Finder for the fall semester are Sustainability and Self-Care, which offers alternative ways to integrate sustainability practices into a student’s daily routine as well as guidance on navigating climate anxiety and Climate Stories, which explores ways students can craft “action-oriented” narratives about climate crisis.

“USC has always had faculty that are passionate about sustainability and created courses for students that shared that passion,” said Jill Sohm, Sustainability Across the Curriculum Initiative academic director.

“In the past four years, with the support of the administration, we have seen an amazing increase in courses across the entire university because absolutely every discipline has an important role to play in achieving a sustainable world.

“I encourage all students to seek out and enroll in a course that explores sustainability topics because it will be a part of any job they have after college and sustainability is critical to all of our futures.”

Sustainability Hub anniversary

In the year since the Sustainability Hub opened in the Gwynn Wilson Student Union building on the USC University Park Campus, as a collaborative and inclusive multiuse gathering space for advancing sustainability, the venue has hosted 209 events and welcomed almost 8,000 visitors.

USC student sustainability: Students and President Carol Folt
The Sustainability Hub — here, during a visit by USC President Carol Folt — serves as a resource center as well as a place for students to hang out. (USC Photo/Gus Ruelas)

“The Sustainability Hub was designed with lots of great input from students, and purposely serves multiple functions,” said Mick Dalrymple, USC’s chief sustainability officer. “It’s a resource center where all Trojans can find out about sustainable behaviors and actions they can take, as well as news about upcoming events, jobs, internships and research opportunities.

“But it’s also an informal lounge to hang out, study, connect with friends and strengthen our vibrant sustainability community. In one year, the hub has become incredibly popular. There’s something for everyone, and everyone’s welcome.”

Environmental Student Assembly

Among the USC student groups that host regular meetings in the Sustainability Hub is the Environmental Student Assembly (ESA), which last April celebrated 10 years of promoting environmental awareness at the university.

The assembly’s current co-executive directors, Jon-Marc Burgess and Hope Hsiao, came from different backgrounds but found common purpose in the organization’s mission. Burgess first began to think about climate issues growing up in Kingston, Jamaica. Hsiao’s interest was sparked after spending time in Beijing as a middle school student and observing the city’s air pollution issues.

“Being part of the ESA has allowed me to develop my public speaking skills and taught me how to work in groups,” Burgess said. “Not only are you trying to benefit the environment, but you are also trying to better yourself as a person.”

“Being part of the ESA has shown me how to get things done,” Hsiao added. “I really learned from my peers that sustainability isn’t just a linear path. It is very important to surround yourself with a community of people that care.”

Student Sustainability Committee

Another way USC students can make an impact in sustainability is by applying to join the Student Sustainability Committee (SSC), which is the student committee of the Presidential Working Group on Sustainability in Education, Research, and Operations. The SSC organizes various initiatives under Assignment: Earth and also makes recommendations to university leadership on sustainability education, research and campus operations issues.

“Students should join the SSC if they want to work with a group that’s supported by the president and works together with the administration to make change,” said Skylar Funk, graduate co-chair of the committee. “It’s a chance to really see how much we can get done here at USC.”

Funk combines his time working on sustainability initiatives with his studies at the USC Thornton School of Music and his band Trapdoor Social, which has performed around the country with a self-contained solar power stage that fuels the sound and lights.

He works closely with Sara Eyassu, undergraduate co-chair of the Student Sustainability Committee, who left her home in Aurora, Colo., to pursue a degree in environmental studies at USC.

“The SSC is very much student-driven,” she said. “Anything that students want, they can pitch it, and if other students are interested, they can get involved.”

Funding opportunities

There are a variety of funding and scholarship opportunities available to USC students. They include the Undergraduate Sustainability Grand Challenge Fellowship program, sponsored by the USC Center for Sustainability Solutions, that supports multidisciplinary research focused on sustainability, and the Postdoctoral Fellowship for Sustainability Solutions, which seeks to advance sustainability research and inform future leaders in various areas.

The USC Wrigley Institute for Environment and Sustainability offers a variety of funded opportunities for students at different stages of their academic journey while the President’s Sustainability Internship Program was created to help build a community of students who could share knowledge across different project teams.

“It is a unique opportunity for students to combine their passion for sustainability with their academic training to help achieve our Assignment: Earth goals,” said Chelsea Graham, experiential learning manager. “Students work on a wide range of projects from analyzing and collecting data on USC operations, research and academics, to developing engagement strategies that reach every member of the USC community via social media and in person at the USC Peace Garden and Sustainability Hub.”

USC student sustainability: Sustainability Hub
The Sustainability Hub in the Gwynn Wilson Student Union building has hosted more than 200 events. (Photo/David Lee)

Applications are currently being accepted for the Arts & Climate Collective that provides an opportunity for students to combine arts, media and culture to bring attention to environmental issues.

All USC students who are curious about sustainability are strongly encouraged to take the Sustainability Training course that provides an introduction to the many ways the university has embraced sustainability and how they can make a difference.

“From joining the Environmental Student Assembly or the Arts & Climate Collective, to conducting research for the Undergraduate Research Grand Challenge, to discovering fabulous classes through the Sustainability Course Finder, to sampling the many Earth Month campus events, students have so many opportunities to get involved with sustainability at USC,” Dalrymple said.

“Getting involved in sustainability is incredibly rewarding: It helps students connect, teaches them about sustainable actions they can take and — most importantly — brings them hope by showing them how their actions build a solutions-based, sustainable future that works for everyone.”

Trojan Sustainability Alumni Network

Recognizing many former USC students who have gone on to become leaders in sustainability, the Trojan Sustainability Alumni Network officially launches this month.

Its mission is to “amplify, educate and empower sustainability across the USC community and beyond.”

“Trojans are making an incredible impact in sustainability,” said Mark Spears, who co-founded the network and serves as its chair. “The network is a way for us to join forces, learn about the best-in-class work underway at our university, share ideas about ways we can work together and learn from each other to make a positive difference.”

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