Newsroom
Spotlight on Students Series (page 6)
Meet 61传媒Associated Students President Safia Hassan 鈥21
Scripps鈥 Office of Marketing and Communications editorial assistant Katie Clelland 鈥21 sat down with Science management major Safia Hassan ’21, who will serve as the 2020鈥21 61传媒Associated Students (SAS) president, to talk about Hassan鈥檚 goals for SAS, maintaining community through remote learning, and advice to fellow students.
Read MoreLillian Hahn 鈥21 Feeds Health Care Workers鈥 Bodies and Spirits
Amid the confusion and misinformation that defines so much of the public鈥檚 understanding of COVID-19, one thing that there seems to be unilateral agreement upon is the adverse mental health effects of the pandemic on frontline health care workers. Lillian Hahn 鈥21, a science management major on the public health track, identified a cohort among health care workers who may be even harder hit: those who work the night shift.
Read MoreInternational Rescue from Near and Afar: Students Aid Refugees in Remote Internship
Walking home from her class, 鈥淩efugee and Forced Migration,鈥 which she took entirely in Arabic at the University of Jordan in Amman last year, Julia Kelly 鈥21 recalls passing by a building that caught her eye. 鈥淚 walked by the International Rescue Committee鈥檚 office on my way home every day,鈥 recalls the Middle Eastern and North African studies major. 鈥淚 learned that Jordan is a safe haven for refugees from all over the Middle East, and since then, refugee welfare became an even greater focus for me.鈥
Read MoreUma Nagarajan-Swenson 鈥22 Interns at the Intersection of Scholarship and Activism
Uma Nagarajan-Swenson 鈥22 is a politics and history major with a passion for grassroots social movements. This summer, she is serving as an intern at the Institute for Policy Studies鈥 Criminalization of Race and Poverty Project, thanks to a summer internship grant from Scripps鈥 Career Planning and Resources (CP&R).
Read MoreStephanie Du 鈥21鈥檚 Homespun Efforts for Community Health
When Stephanie Du 鈥21鈥檚 grandfather was diagnosed with a heart condition, the necessity to protect those most vulnerable to COVID-19 became all the more poignant. 鈥淚 am currently living with my grandparents, who are both immunocompromised. As someone who is very close to their grandparents, I just wanted to do something that will help protect more vulnerable populations,鈥 she says.
Read MoreStudent Spotlight: Sophia Albanese 鈥21 Explores Impact of Cellular Stress
Long before starting at Scripps, biology major Sophia Albanese 鈥21 knew scientific exploration would be in her future. The child of an attorney and a chemist, she 鈥済rew up surrounded by science and law,鈥 and in middle school got her first glimpse of how she could pursue this goal at the W.M. Keck Science Center during a tour of The Claremont Colleges.
Read MoreAnna Burns 鈥22 Explores the Use of Drone Technology to Measure Air Quality in Summer Research Project
This summer, Anna Burns 鈥22 is examining potential methods to evaluate and reduce negative impacts within agriculture. She鈥檚 working with Marc Los Huertos, the Stephen M. Pauley, MD 鈥62 Associate Professor of Environmental Analysis at Pomona College, who鈥檚 exploring the possibility of using drone technology to measure particulate matter emissions, such as air pollution, on crop and cattle farms in California.
Read MoreKegan Peters ’23 Selected for World Food Prize Foundation’s George Washington Carver Internship
The World Food Prize Foundation, which aims to increase equitable and sustainable access to food around the globe, has selected Kegan Peters ’23 for its summer 2020 George Washington Carver Internship program. Interns will work with foundation mentors, government officials, and grassroots leaders to address issues of global food security.
Read MoreMonet Massac 鈥21 Explores US Haitian Identity in Summer Research Project
To understand how Haitian immigrants negotiated their identity on US soil, Monet Massac 鈥21, granddaughter of Marie Massac, is embarking on a summer research project that explores how Haitian migrants from the 1970s鈥90s navigate the racial terrain of the United States.
Read MoreJeannette Hunker 鈥23 Keeps the Music Alive with Driveway Concert Series
Social distancing and shelter-at-home guidelines have affected every facet of life, from the shift to work-at-home to telemedicine doctor visits. But it鈥檚 in our communal rituals and celebrations where many people are feeling the greatest loss. 鈥淲ith the ban of concerts, graduation ceremonies, weddings, and other large social gatherings, most people feel a void in their lives,鈥 says Jeanette Hunker 鈥23.
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