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For nearly a century, UCLA has been home to dreamers and game changers. People come to these sun-drenched grounds not to be famous or to win awards but to be great. They become innovators and influencers, groundbreakers and nation builders that move the hearts and minds of the world. We are optimists. Bruin spirit imbues everything we do. Get Connected Admission | http://ucla.in/2bFNa4C Newsroom | ucla.in/2bFJyj4 Timeline inspired by UCLA: The First Century | http://ucla.in/2bFOfcw
Edwin W. Pauley Pavilion is an indoor arena located on the UCLA campus in Los Angeles, California. It is home to the UCLA Bruins men's and women's basketball, volleyball, and gymnastics teams.
Drake Stadium is an 11,700-capacity stadium in Los Angeles, California used by UCLA soccer and athletics. The track stadium was built in 1969. The stadium is named for UCLA track legend Elvin C. "Ducky" Drake, who was a student-athlete, track coach and athletic trainer for over 60 years.There was an attempt in 1965 to build a 44,000 seat football stadium on campus, at the site where Drake Stadium eventually was built. It would have been the new home of UCLA Bruins football, the team would have moved out of the Los Angeles Coliseum. However, the proposal was blocked by influential area residents, as well as other politicians. Although the football stadium never became a reality, there have been UCLA Bruin football scrimmage games played in the stadium.Drake Stadium has hosted the Pacific-10 (now Pac-12) Track and Field Championships, the National AAU in 1976-77-78, the Pacific-8 Championships in 1970 and 1977 and the CIF California State Meet for high schools in 1969-71-77. The facility hosted the first-ever California-Nevada Championships on April 30-May 1, 1994. It also has hosted other student events such as concerts and graduation ceremonies.The field at Drake Stadium is named for UCLA alumnus Frank Marshall, a film producer.
Inspiring the UCLA community to foster active, healthy lifestyles and life-long learning
The Community Programs Office does three main things: 1.) Works on encouraging college matriculation of underserved students from underresourced communities in Southern California. This is done through 7 projects that provide comprehensive mentorship and tutoring services. 2.) Works on graduating UCLA undergraduates from underserved backgrounds. This is done through 5 projects that provide comprehensive peer counseling and mentorship services, and includes the food bank, computing center, writing counselors, examination database, and study hall. 3.) Inspires students to take responsibility for their community through service related efforts. This is done through over 2 dozen projects that work on improving community conditions in Southern California. The overall goal is for CPO students to graduate from UCLA as community leaders.
The Arthur Ashe Student Health and Wellness Center (The Ashe Center) is devoted to providing quality, accessible, state-of-the-art healthcare and education to support the unique development of UCLA students. Our comprehensive services include Primary Care, Women’s Health, Immunizations, Travel Medicine, Physical Therapy, Specialty Clinics, Optometry, Acupuncture and Massage – all under one roof! Students can schedule appointments online, in person, or by phone and can communicate with their primary care providers via secure electronic messaging. For more immediate concerns, Urgent Care is available during business hours, and after hours, students can access our 24/7 Nurseline for advice and information by phone. The Ashe Center also houses its own full-service Pharmacy, Laboratory and Radiology units. We are committed to helping students “shine, inside and out.” From eating well and staying active to managing stress, The Ashe Center focuses on student wellbeing by providing ongoing wellness workshops, participating in health-related outreach events on campus, and offering “Student Health 101,” a monthly interactive online magazine. Our website has a robust health resource library and a virtual wellness lounge linking students to many other campus wellness services. It’s no wonder that in Princeton Review’s 2011 national survey, students voted UCLA “#1 in Student Health Services!”
UCLA UniCamp is the official student charity of the University of California, Los Angeles. UniCamp operates as an independently funded non-profit organization linking the University with the community. Each year, UniCamp inspires nearly 1,000 children from low-income families to envision brighter futures by sending them, along with 500 student volunteers, to its residential outdoor summer camp.
Our Vision: To cultivate a campus culture at UCLA where career education and development of Career Readiness Competencies transform the student experience and are embraced and prioritized at all levels throughout the University.
We usually play on the IM Field, if it's open and available. If it's not available, which sometimes is the case due to maintenance or whatever, we move to Drake Stadium, which is directly adjacent to the IM Field. If both spaces are unavailable, then we move to the upper part of campus, and play on the fields in between the library and Royce Hall.
The Electrical Engineering department is one of seven academic departments in the UCLA Henry Samueli School of Engineering and Applied Science (HSSEAS). The department is administratively divided into three research areas: Circuits & Embedded Sytems, Physical & Wave Electronics, and Signals & Systems, although much of our research is multi-disciplinary and feature collaborations in varied fields including medicine, physics, mathematics, and theater & film.
Edwin W. Pauley Pavilion, commonly known as Pauley Pavilion, is an indoor arena located in the Westwood Village district of Los Angeles, California, on the campus of UCLA. It is home to the UCLA Bruins men's and women's basketball teams. The men's and women's volleyball and women's gymnastics teams also compete here.The building, designed by architect Welton Becket, was dedicated in June 1965, named for University of California Regent Edwin W. Pauley, who had matched the alumni contributions. Pauley donated almost one fifth of the more than $5 million spent in building the arena. The arena was renovated in 2010-12 and was reopened on November 9, 2012 when it hosted a men's basketball game against Indiana State.FeaturesPauley Pavilion contains 11,307 permanent theater-style upholstered seats, plus retractable seats for 2,492 spectators, making a total basketball capacity of 13,800. The capacity prior to the renovation had been exceeded several times for several men's basketball games by adding portable seating alongside the retractable seats. The Bruins reopened the newly renovated Pauley Pavilion on November 9, 2012 in front of a record crowd of 13,513. Then a new record was set when 13,727 fans watched the Bruins defeat the Arizona Wildcats 74–69 on March 2, 2013.
The Los Angeles Tennis Center is a tennis facility located on the campus of the University of California, Los Angeles in Westwood, Los Angeles, California. The center opened May 20, 1984, and hosted the demonstration tennis event of the 1984 Summer Olympics. The UCLA Bruins tennis teams moved to the facility in 1985 (men) and 1997 (women). The NCAA Women's Tennis Championships were held at the LATC in 1984, 1987, and 1988, and the Men's Championships took place there in 1997.The center hosted the Los Angeles Open, an ATP World Tour 250 event. The main grandstand surrounds three courts, and has a capacity of 5,800 spectators. There are eight lighted, hard-surface courts at the center, which can hold 10,000 spectators. The Straus Stadium was named for Leonard Straus, the former chairman of Thrifty Drugs; the Center court was called the Times-Mirror Center Court; the drawboard was named for Johnny Carson; and the scoreboard was named Union 76 Scoreboard.The Center hosted for many years the annual "Spring Sing", UCLA's student talent show and the presentation of the George and Ira Gershwin Award. Winners included Angela Lansbury (1988), Ray Charles (1991), Mel Torme (1994), Bernadette Peters (1995), Frank Sinatra (2000), Stevie Wonder (2002), k.d. lang (2003), James Taylor (2004), Burt Bacharach (2006), Quincy Jones (2007), Lionel Richie (2008), Julie Andrews (2009) and Brian Wilson (2011).