Alumni

Class Notes

CLASS NOTES

Updates and news from your fellow Broncos, with photos, links, and all that's fit to print online. Notes are published online as they're contributed. And notes submitted now can be included in the Summer 2012 print magazine.


Alumni

ALUMNI NEWS

The latest from the SCU Alumni Association and your fellow Broncos.


Bronco Profiles 

BRONCO PROFILES

Folks rearranging the stars or changing the world in small ways—in enterprise or athletics, art or music, in the Bay Area and around the world.


Alumni Books & Arts 

ALUMNI BOOKS & ARTS

On stage and screen and the radio, on the page and on the canvas—or behind the lens of the camera: Here are creative and scholarly and literary endeavors by Santa Clara alumni.


In Memoriam 

OBITUARIES

News on some of the recent passings of SCU alumni, faculty, staff, and friends of the university.


Spring/Summer 2013

Table of contents

Features

Walk Across California

An epic journey whereby one foot is put in front of the other to discover, up close and personal, who and what and where is the Golden State.

Miller's Tale

To tell the story of Bob Miller ’67 is to tell the coming-of-age tale of Las Vegas itself. And it’s the chronicle of a man who served a decade as governor of Nevada. Quite a journey for the son of an illegal bookie from Chicago.

Blood. Sweat. Tears. Repeat.

Nina Acosta ’82 was a tough enough cop to pass the test for the LAPD’s SWAT team. Then she learned the hard way about gender discrimination. So how did she do on Survivor?

Mission Matters

When justice is kidnapped

The 2013 Alexander Law Prize honors Chen Guangcheng, a Chinese civil-rights activist and attorney who protested government abuses—including excessive enforcement of the one-child policy—then escaped house arrest to the U.S. Embassy in Beijing.

Double trouble

Growing up tennis with Kelly Lamble ’13 and John Lamble ’14. And Bronco teams that are a force to be reckoned with nationally.

Keep the door open

For teaching and advising and a ministry that’s blessed this place for 48 years—paying tribute to Charles Phipps, S.J.