
News
Take 5: AI and the Future of Work
In this issue's Take 5, David Guy Brizan, professor of computer science, says don’t just face it — embrace it.
More USF News
Sheillah Tumusiime ’23 has been chosen by the National Institutes of Health to address health care disparities among people of color.
Here are 10 ways to celebrate Black History Month, from talks on campus to the annual Black Joy Parade.
When COVID-19 closed the Hilltop campus in spring 2020, Zac Clark ’23 moved out of Gillson Hall and into a studio apartment in the Tenderloin. While Clark could barely afford his apartment, he saw that many of his neighbors couldn’t afford any lodging at all. That got him thinking.
Kevin Mullin ’92 was surrounded by family, including his wife, Jessica Stanfill Mullin, and their 4-year-old twins, and a couple of his old friends from USF — all waiting for him to be sworn in to the U.S. House of Representatives on Jan. 3.
They waited. And waited.
USF graduate students in school counseling programs are getting hands-on experience in Bay Area schools and community clinics while providing support during a shortage of mental health professionals.
Sadie Mills’ fellowship at the San Francisco Public Library (SFPL) took her beyond books and connected her to a new passion — the prison justice reform movement.
When Danielle Savage looks at her computer screen, she sees data. But she also sees thousands of children whose lives she can improve
It’s time to review the year in stories at the University of San Francisco. These are 2022’s most read USF News stories by students, alumni, parents, friends, faculty, and staff, starting with the No. 1 article.
When they collected their diplomas on Dec. 16, these members of the Class of 2022 already had jobs lined up. Here’s how they did it.
Sixty-seven years after starting college at USF, Charles Lyden Murphy Sr. will walk across the sanctuary in St. Ignatius Church tomorrow and receive a bachelor of business administration.