News

After 10 years in professional baseball, Bradley Zimmer is back at USF to finish what he started.
“It’s great to network with people face-to-face — on the other side of the world,” said Noah David ’26.
This was a top story this year. Zac Clark ’23, right, provides solar backpack, center, to clients in San Francisco. Here are 2023’s most read USF News stories, starting with the No. 1 article.
Curious about investing? Want to learn how money works? Thinking about a future in finance? Talk to Tim Rasmussen MBA ’13. “For investing and finance, the investment lab is the place to be,” said ...
Growing up in Hawaii, Alex Min MSEI ’22 saw, touched, and tasted the ocean nearly every day. “My mom would take me to the beach to go fishing, and that was all I ever wanted to do,” he said. Today, ...
Daniel Rascher, a sport management professor at the University of San Francisco, has been recognized nationally for his pioneering work in antitrust litigation that is changing the landscape of ...
The University of San Francisco was recognized today for providing access to students from all ethnic and socioeconomic backgrounds and for setting them up for higher earnings after graduation. The ...
Encouraged by John A. and Susan Sobrato's past support of USF, three generations of the Sobrato family have committed $17 million for a new endowment to support scholarships for Bay Area students. The ...
In the U.S. News & World Report 2022 rankings released today, USF places No. 1 in the nation for ethnic diversity, No. 23 in undergraduate nursing, and No. 103 overall. In the new Princeton Review ...
Bill Russell’s most lasting triumph may have been off the court, after he joined Black teammates boycotting a 1961 Celtics game, says five-time NBA champion Bill Cartwright '79, MSOD '98. The walkout ...
In 2015, John A. and Susan Sobrato made a historical $15 million gift to launch the renovation of what was then known as War Memorial Gym. Six years later, as the transformation nears completion, the ...
On Feb. 19, 1945, Joe Rosenthal waded ashore with a battalion of Marines in the attack on the Japanese island of Iwo Jima. Instead of a rifle, he carried a camera above his head. The sea was choppy, ...