Legendary DJ Nic Harcourt spent months in 1994 lining up local bands, juggling schedules and helping to pull off what many thought impossible: Woodstock ’94, a three-day music festival marking the 25th anniversary of the music festival that changed the world.
Art comes in many forms — paintings, ceramics, photography or even collages. Regardless of the medium, it can turn the ordinary into the extraordinary, create beauty from the profane, evoke emotions and inspire the imagination.
As coverage of the race for president of the United States continues to escalate, California State University, Northridge journalism professor José Luis Benavides urged members of the news media to remember the vital role they play in the contest.
It isn’t enough to want their students to succeed, higher education leaders have a responsibility to identify and uproot the vestiges of historic racism that permeate academic spaces and can stand in the way of their students’ success, according to a team of researchers at California State University, Northridge.
California State University, Northridge associate professor of Chicana/o studies Xóchitl Flores-Marcial’s work to document and preserve the Indigenous languages of Mexico has received recognition from the National Archives.
La profesora asociada de estudios chicanos de la Universidad Estatal de California en Northridge, Xóchitl Flores-Marcial, ha recibido el reconocimiento de los Archivos Nacionales por su labor de documentación y conservación de las lenguas indígenas de México.
While the academic year winds down, Antastasiia Timmer, an assistant professor of criminology and justice studies at California State University, Northridge, said student activism over the war in Gaza is not over.
Legendary songwriter Jackson Browne to join acclaimed singer-songwriter Pete Yorn for a benefit concert in support of Southern California’s leading Triple-A (adult album alternative) format radio station, 88.5-FM, The SoCal Sound, on Saturday, June 15.
Denise Sandoval, a Chicana/o studies professor at California State University, Northridge, called the latest exhibit she’s co-curated with Los Angeles’ Petersen Automotive Museum a “love letter” to the craftsmen and craftswomen who have created some of the world’s most distinctive lowriders.
Denise Sandoval, profesora de estudios de Chicana en la Universidad Estatal de California, Northridge, calificó la última exposición que ha co-curado con el Museo de Automoción Peterson de Los Ángeles como una “carta de amor” a los artesanos que han creado algunos de los lowriders más distintivos del mundo.