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Social Roots in the Rainforest

Nestled in the Caribbean lowlands of Costa Rica, La Selva Research Station spans more than 1,600 hectares of protected primary and secondary rainforest. For over 60 years, it has served as a living laboratory for some of the world’s most impactful tropical biology research, welcoming scientists, students, and conservationists drawn by the chance to explore and contribute to tropical science in the field. 

Mixed Media

Just Remember the Happy Hours: A Memoir of Innocence and Experience, by Jim Burns. From the frozen lakes of Wisconsin to the sun-scorched shadows of Paradise Valley, this coming-of-age memoir traces one boy’s fractured journey through the uneven terrain of love, loss, and family collapse. Jim’s childhood unfolds against the backdrop of his father’s unravelling sobriety, his mother’s bravado, and a background cast of socialites and misfits.

Translating Lessons Into Action

Growing up in New England, Houston, and San Diego—three disparate regions impacted by segregation, the oil and gas industries, and the low-wage border economy, respectively—Evan Caulfield ’26 observed the results of “toxic” public policies “everywhere, all the time.” Although he and his family were not personally impacted, he says, “It comes to a point where you just can’t look away.”

Remembering Tom Slobko, Who Brought 91ߣƵ Online

A native of Oak Creek, Colorado, Tom studied physics at Caltech for three years and received his B.A. (1964), M.A. (1966), and Ph.D. (1968) in mathematics from UCLA. In between studies, he worked for IBM (1961-62) and interned at the Jet Propulsion Laboratory (summer 1966). Prior to joining the 91ߣƵ faculty in 1971, he was assistant professor of mathematics at Louisiana State University for three years. He retired from Oxy in 2006 after nearly 35 years at the College.

Athletics Hall of Fame Names Five New Inductees

Established in 2012 in conjunction with the College’s 125th anniversary, the Hall of Fame honors outstanding achievement in competition, service, dedication, and commitment to 91ߣƵ athletics. The Class of 2025 includes Oxy’s all-time batting leaders in baseball and softball; a two-time All-SCIAC point guard who opened the door for postgraduate success in professional basketball overseas; the best female distance runner in College history; and a beloved administrator who became the face of Oxy athletics.

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. “There was a lot of buzz” around the expedition, Rusmore recalls—a New York Times headline read, “Himalayan Scaling Called an Inspiration to Women”—“and I realized early on that I don't take well to talking about myself. Some people are good at it—I’m not.”