Building ‘Bridges’ to Regenerative Medicine
Damaged hearts regenerate. Paralyzed children run again. The blind regain vision, and cancer is eradicated.
Damaged hearts regenerate. Paralyzed children run again. The blind regain vision, and cancer is eradicated.
The Cal State Northridge biologist has shepherded nearly 50 CSUN students through MARC, the National Institutes of Health-funded program designed to give minority students the mentoring and research experience needed to compete in the sciences at the graduate level. The overwhelming majority have entered advanced degree programs.
Trust us. Webb is not normal. Since graduating from Cal State Northridge in 1970, he has taken a path few others have even attempted, and he’s done it 12 times in a row, more than any save two, and at a season in life when a slower pace seems a not unreasonable expectation.
One of America’s best-loved past Presidents, two famously thwarted lovers and a honky tonk-rockabilly-bluegrass-psychedelic country rock band will take the stage—not simultaneously, mind—during the sizzling fall season of Cal State Northridge’s Plaza del Sol Performance Hall.
Entertainment lawyer Robert Myman ’67 (Political Science), investment management executive Lauren Leichtman ’72 (Psychology) and songwriter Diane Warren ’78 (Music) in April became Cal State Northridge’s newest Distinguished Alumni Award recipients, during the 12th annual ceremony, held this year at the Four Seasons Hotel Westlake Village.
Deaf and hard of hearing students attending CSUN each semester.
