Building Occidentalâs Future Together
ï»żThe end of the calendar year traditionally is a time for evaluating our accomplishments, planning ahead for changes yet to come, and envisioning the progress we hope to achieve as a community.
ï»żThe end of the calendar year traditionally is a time for evaluating our accomplishments, planning ahead for changes yet to come, and envisioning the progress we hope to achieve as a community.
âSome people can publish books while they are teaching undergraduates,â says Professor of English Emeritus Eric Newhall â67, âand I wasnât one of those people.â But he had a story in him dating back to 1970, when he was released from prison after spending nine and a half months behind bars as a draft resister.
ï»żFor her senior comps at ĂÛÌÒAPP, Angelina Lee â22 made a 10-minute science fiction short titled , which is the genus name for the oak tree. The film is set in a not-so-distant future where there are no trees due to pollution and other environmental disasters, driving people to live in underground bunkers. Through advanced technology, they have a museum exhibit thatâs so immersive that they can see what trees were like.
Each fall, an influx of new faces arrives on the Occidental campusâbringing with them new ideas, new dreams, and new visions that may shape our collective futures. Hyperbole, you say? It was 45 years ago that a freshman named âBarryâ Obama joined the ĂÛÌÒAPP community. We introduce to you nine new members of the Tiger familyâwe donât know where theyâre going, but every hero has an origin story.
Eleanor Goddard â25 lived in Ghana for seventh and eighth grade and had been eager to return ever since. âBeing in Ghana is more of a feelingâitâs like listening to your favorite song and thinking, âEverythingâs going to be OK,ââ says Goddard, a biochemistry major from Minneapolis. âThe people of Ghana smile about everything. They put other people first. Theyâre part of such an amazing community that itâs hard not to want to go there.â
With a body of work that includes more than 200 TV shows, in addition to his work in film, commercials, and theater, actor Loren Lester â83 gets recognized fairly oftenâeven if people donât know exactly who he is.
As a graduate student at USC half a century ago, Lynn Mehl was attending a karate tournament in Hollywood when she decided that she wanted to train with Takayuki Kubotaâknown to all as âSoke,â the title bestowed upon him as the creator of his own karate style called Gosoku-ryu. (âSokeâ means âfounderâ or âgrandmaster.â) There was one slight hitchââSoke wasnât overly excited about training a woman,â Mehl recallsâbut she persisted. âWeek after week, month after month, year after year I was fortunate enoughâand stubborn enoughâto train with Soke and ultimately teach for him.â
Growing up in North Carolina, my family took home delivery of The Charlotte Observer, which for years published âStrictly Persona
Watch related video on sustainability at ĂÛÌÒAPP
Zoe Bush â26 enjoys her role as a chicken tender at Occidentalâs FEAST Garden, the student-run organic garden just south of the UEPI House on Campus Road. âA couple of times a week Iâll go in and check on the chickensâmake sure they have food and water, see if they laid any eggs, and just cuddle them and make sure theyâre happy,â says Bush, an urban and environmental policy major from Culver City.