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Fanfare for a Mountain Lion

Last December, following the death of P-22 —the mountain lion who called Griffith Park home for more than a decade following his discovery in 2012—the Los Angeles Times published a story about his impact on the city. “An everyday citizen tweeted that the 12-year-old bachelor with the mesmerizing eyes clearly had been ‘L.A.’s coolest cat,’” James Raney reported—and that phrase resonated with Adam Schoenberg, the Emmy Award-winning and Grammy-nominated composer and associate professor of music at Occidental.

Navigating the New Admission Landscape

In June, the U.S. Supreme Court issued rulings in two major cases that will significantly impact the ability of colleges and universities, including Occidental, to consider race as a factor in admission decisions.

In cases involving a private institution, Harvard University, and a highly regarded public institution, the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, the court ruled that race-conscious admission practices violate the equal protection clause of the 14th Amendment and harm some qualified applicants.

Dave and Me

I had completed my first year of studies at Occidental when a serendipitous encounter in July 2012 sparked the beginning of a decade-long intergenerational friendship. My mom’s car, adorned with an Oxy bumper sticker, was parked outside the Kirkland (Wash.) Library. A passerby saw the sticker and left a simple note (with his email) on the windshield: “Hi Oxy-ite! David Wigglesworth, Occidental Class of ’50.” My mom sent me a photo of the note, and I emailed Dave later that day.

Lessons From Lambert

I am at an age where I have elated on mountain tops and groveled in murky swamps and ambled through brambles in the tricky valleys as well as thickets of downed timber. ÂÌñÉç and Frank Lambert—a name synonymous with organic chemistry students during his 33 years in the classroom—have been my guides throughout my journey.

Powering Up

ï»żâ€œGamers are the most vocal audience on the internet of any scale,” says Sam Bergen ’04, who speaks from nearly 20 years’ experience as an advertising executive. “Everything you do is scrutinized to a T. You know immediately if what you did was a hit or a flop in the eyes of the audience.”

One for the Ages: Professor Nina Gelbart

Nina Gelbart
Professor of History and Anita Johnson Wand Professor of Women’s Studies

Years at Occidental: 48

How did you wind up at Occidental? My husband [William Gelbart] and I were living in Berkeley at the time, where he was teaching, and he was basically poached by UCLA. He came in as a full professor at some absurdly young age. I had finished my Ph.D. just a couple years before, and I had just had our first child, so I thought an adjunct position of some kind would be perfect.