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Carrying the Torch

Four days a week, Claire Wilson-Black ’26 takes the Gold Line to Los Angeles City Hall. Although July 14, 2028—the opening ceremony of the Games of the XXXIV Olympiad—is nearly three years away, she is one of seven Occidental students working this summer to ensure the LA28 Summer Olympics will be equitable and sustainable.

A Voice for “The Invisible Majority”

Mary Elizabeth “Betsy” Perry, emerita adjunct professor of history at Occidental, died June 30, 2025, in Altadena. She was 87.

A native of Turlock, Calif., Betsy graduated from Washington State University as class valedictorian in 1959, with what was at the time the highest GPA in the university’s history—a feat aided by several A-pluses. (A general studies major, she used shorthand to take notes during classes, and then typed her notes afterward.)

A Word or Two About Ann La Rue Matlow

Ann La Rue Matlow ’68 made her debut as class secretary in the Spring 1987 edition of Occidental magazine. (“The response to the questionnaire I sent you in February was gratifying,” she wrote. “Thank you for responding and especially for your thoughts on turning 40.”) Over the next 37 years, she became the “glue" for the Class of 1968, meticulously tracking classmates’ lives and fostering friendships.

Contrarian Documentarian

It might come as something of a bombshell that Oscar-winning documentary filmmaker Marcel Ophuls ’50 is no great tan of the genre. “Put that in there,” he says by phone from his home in Lucq-de-Bearn, France. “I always like to surprise people. It’s such a puritanical business. Most documentary filmmakers are anti-Hollywood and anti-show business, and I happen to be the son of a great director and my mother was an actress.”

Changing Times and Protest Signs

March-April 1912: President John Willis Baer announces the trustees’ decision to convert Oxy into an all-men’s school. Students protest, and the idea is abandoned.

March 22, 1948: The Board of Trustees cancels a rental agreement of Thorne Hall for a March 31 program with poet Langston Hughes, citing the potentially “divisive social and political effect” of his visit. The decision creates friction between Oxy and the American Civil Liberties Union, and 28 students sign a letter to the trustees condemning their action.

Life After Fire

Camilla Taylor had been driving for 16 hours on the night of January 7 and was getting close to their Altadena home when the fire on the mountain came into view. “The hillside was black besides the fire because all of the power was out,” recalls Taylor, an artist, printmaker, and sculptor who joined the Oxy faculty as a resident assistant professor in 2018. Once they got home, they ran inside to find their husband, Jason Troff, with an overnight bag packed and carriers at the ready for their four cats, waiting for an evacuation order.

Judgment Calls

Whenever Administrative Law Judge Ira Sandron ’71 of Miami is in Los Angeles for a trial, he has lunch with his L.A.-based counterpart, Brian Gee ’87. “We enjoy reminiscing as well as discussing procedural issues,” says Sandron, who works out of the Washington, D.C., Branch of the Division of Judges within the National Labor Relations Board (NLRB).

“Ira and I have a lot in common, including our shared Oxy experience,” says Gee, who works out of the San Francisco Branch—just like Sandron did at the outset of his nearly 50-year career in government service.

Tapping Into the Power of Research

Higher education has a unique capacity to address national priorities, confront global challenges, and improve outcomes for humanity. Many of our most important medical, technological, and social advancements have been driven by academic researchers who dedicate their careers to furthering our collective knowledge.

Our society benefits from the rigorous work accomplished at U.S. colleges and universities—not just at large research institutions but at small liberal arts colleges such as Occidental.