
Kathryn Ervin’s induction into the College of Fellows of the American Theatre and Brian Levin’s expertise in hate crimes and extremism make headlines locally and nationwide.

The work off campus by David Carlson and Juan Delgado (English), Sant Khalsa (art), Tony Coulson (information and decision sciences) and Kathryn Ervin (theatre arts) is chronicled in the local news media.

This fresh perspective on the life of Dr. Victor Frankenstein is a chilling story of great triumph and the gravest tragedy that occurs as a result, forcing us to ask: Is it nature or nurture that truly makes one a monster?

Tom Provenzano (theatre arts) discusses the upcoming CSUSB production of “Frankenstein,” and the hate crime study compiled by Brian Levin and the Center for the Study of Hate and Extremism is cited in a report.

Brian Levin (criminal justice), Tom Provenano (theatre arts) and Thomas Pierce (economics) are mentioned in coverage by the news media.

Kathryn Ervin, a professor in the CSUSB Department of Theatre Arts, was one of only 10 people inducted into the College of Fellows of the American Theatre this past weekend at the historic Cosmos Club in Washington, D.C.

Alemayehu “Al” G. Mariam (political science), Juan Delgado (English) and Tom Provenzano (theatre arts) are mentioned in news articles.

The CSUSB production, this year’s Ellen Weisser Endowed Theatre Showcase, will run from June 1-10 at the Ronald E. Barnes Theatre.

The newspaper featured Terry Smith in its “Artist Spotlight” series. Smith, a Crestline resident, is playing Prospero in “The Tempest,” part of the third annual Courtyard Shakespeare Festival at California Baptist University in Riverside.