USC student and radiation oncology specialist Faisal Rashid recently became the LAPD’s first Bangladeshi sworn officer through its reserve program.
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USC’s Neeraj Sood backs a novel approach in which a state contracts with a single manufacturer for a specific drug at a fixed rate, then can obtain as many pills as it needs. Louisiana is putting it to the test.
At USC Dornsife’s Spatial Sciences Institute, Andrew Marx uses satellites and data such as crowdsourced mapping to analyze and inform human migration and refugee policy.
USC Marshall’s Anthony Dukes and a colleague found that the more of a hassle it is for customers to seek a refund, the less likely they are to jump through multiple hoops to receive one.
USC’s Jeb Barnes notes that asbestos wasn’t just a construction material: Manufacturers found ways to add the material to everything from hair driers to car parts and children’s modeling clay.
Meet USC School of Architecture alumni who have quietly transformed the landscape of Southern California.
After Yijun “Jane” Liu and Hui “Angela” Wang earn their USC degrees, they’ll become the first occupational therapy faculty members at Peking University Health Science Center.
USC Viterbi researchers have developed 3D-printed rubber materials that can fix themselves, a potential game changer for industries like shoes, tires, soft robotics and even electronics.
Thirty of the USC School of Cinematic Arts’ influential alumni gather for a photo shoot and some reminiscing, with memories going all the way back to a time when classes were held inside a stable.
In an op-ed, USC’s Matthew Kahn notes that trains running 200 mph can connect people to jobs as much as 100 miles away from where they live, without their needing to suffer intolerably long commutes.