There’s another option for parents of would-be terrorists, writes USC’s Erroll Southers: Trying to disrupt the radicalization pathway and learn more about why individuals chose a violent course.
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USC Marshall students win a global competition with a proposal to de-mine Angolan land and turn it into farming property.
You may have to supply your own audience or perform in a cage to protect yourself against beer bottles, the battle-tested comic tells USC students.
The Chernobyl accident 30 years ago on April 26, 1986, is the worst disaster in the history of nuclear power generation. Although fewer than 50 deaths have been directly attributed to radiation from the disaster, up to 4,000 people could eventually die of radiation exposure, according to the World Health Organization.
The East Asian languages and cultures major simplifies — and personalizes — the process of donating to charity through his app Drops.
New funding goes to charter high school preparing students for success at college and beyond.
Construction is in high gear on the $700 million project that will change how Trojans live and learn.
Our nation owes an enormous debt to the today’s veterans, writes USC President C. L. Max Nikias and David Petraeus, retired general and a USC professor. Universities need to support them to the fullest extent, they note, including through the Yellow Ribbon Program.
USC’s Doris Sung is on a mission to create a “third skin.” From her perspective, the first is our human skin, the second is our clothing and the third should be the buildings we inhabit.
The alumnus learned his craft on music videos before finding success at the helm of films like Ride Along and Barbershop.