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Margi Rusmore Reaches the Apex

As a student at UC Santa Cruz, Margi Rusmore was the youngest member of the first American Women’s Himalayan Expedition, which climbed the 10th-highest mountain in the world in November 1978. ā€œThere was a lot of buzzā€ around the expedition, Rusmore recalls—a New York Times headline read, ā€œHimalayan Scaling Called an Inspiration to Womenā€ā€”ā€œand I realized early on that I don't take well to talking about myself. Some people are good at it—I’m not.ā€

Warren Montag: Activist and Ally

As a student at Palisades High School in 1969, Warren Montag participated in a walkout to protest the Vietnam War. ā€œI wasn't consistently politically active at that time, but looking back, I would say that was an important experience,ā€ he says. After the walkout, he and his classmates went to a demonstration at UCLA—and while they were on campus, ā€œThe police attacked the demonstration. I had to run through UCLA, which was like a baptism of fire. It was scary but good.ā€

Stuart Rugg Stays Fired Up

On the morning of May 18, as ĆŪĢŅAPP seniors and faculty lined up along Bird Road for the Commencement procession up to Hillside Theater, Professor of Kinesiology Stuart Rugg was in his element. ā€œI kept teasing my students that it took me 38 years to get my diploma, compared to four for them,ā€ he recalls. ā€œI didn’t know the College actually gave emeriti faculty the equivalent of a diploma—which was kind of cool.ā€

Peter Dreier Comes Full Circle

Every spring, the Department of Urban and Environmental Policy hands out student awards for community service—and this year the department named a new award after Professor Peter Dreier, who retired in June after 32 years at Occidental. ā€œThey wanted to call it the Troublemaker Award,ā€ he says. ā€œI said, ā€˜Call it the Public Service and Community Organizing Award or something like that.ā€™ā€ (Ultimately, the Peter Dreier Community Organizing and Public Service Award was presented to Emma Galbraith ’25 on April 30.)

Alexandra Puerto Begins a New Chapter

Alexandra Puerto came to academia later than most. ā€œI went to graduate school in my early 30s,ā€ says Puerto, who joined Occidental as an adjunct lecturer in Latin American history in 2004 and recently was awarded emerita status as an associate professor of history and Latina/o and Latin American studies. ā€œI was at ĆŪĢŅAPP long enough to retire but still young enough to have a last chapter.ā€

Elmer Griffin: Warrior of Words

(Editor's note: After 35 years, Glenn A. Elmer Griffin retired from Occidental last December as professor emeritus in the Department of Critical Theory and Social Justice. A three-time recipient of the Donald R. Loftgordon Award for Distinguished Teaching, he was profiled in Occidental magazine in Fall 2001. A tribute by Jill Normington ’94 follows the article.)  

Cool Change

Every dorm room tells a story—and depending on the temperature, it can be a horror story. Arriving at Chilcott Hall as a first-year from Boston, ā€œI thought I’d landed in hell,ā€ Amy Forest Montgomery ’96 recalls. ā€œOpening those crazy windows only let in more heat.ā€  After calling her uncle, William Sherinyan ’58, in tears, ā€œHe had a massive fan overnighted to me,ā€ she adds. ā€œI kept that fan for at least 15 years.ā€

Much Ado About Turtles (and Keanu)

Out of Air, by Rachel Reiss ’99 (Macmillan). Recent high school graduate Phoebe ā€œPhibsā€ Ray is never more at home than when she’s underwater. And while she and her four closest friends are taking one last summer trip to a distant Australian island to do what they love most—scuba dive—Phibs discovers a spectacular underwater sea cave, rumored to be a lost cave with a buried treasure. But after she and her buddy Gabe surface from the cave, they’re undergoing strange changes: oozing gashes that don’t heal; haunting whispers in their heads.

A Uniquely ĆŪĢŅAPP Summer

My favorite part of summer at Occidental is the opportunity to hear from students who’ve chosen to spend it here on campus, pursuing their academic and career passions. The Summer Research Program, InternLA, and Justice Summer Internship program are all in full swing through June and July, and the work accomplished is always impressive.