UCLA History: Medical Center
A view of the UCLA medical center, circa 1959, above. The structure was used in the intro to a TV series, “Medical Center,” that aired from 1969 to 1976. See below:
A view of the UCLA medical center, circa 1959, above. The structure was used in the intro to a TV series, “Medical Center,” that aired from 1969 to 1976. See below:
Readers of this blog who look at the blog’s heading will know that this blog is sponsored by the UCLA Faculty Association. If you are a current faculty or a retired faculty, you can help the Faculty Association earn its daily bread by joining. An application form is at http://www.uclafaculty.org/FASite/Join_files/FAApplication.pdf And as we have been doing quarterly, the blog is available as a pdf-book at: Open publication – Free publishing – More ucla Note that the videos embedded in the blog are not available in the pdf version. For video, you have to use the blogsite itself.
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An earlier post on the UC-Berkeley affirmative action “bake sale” controversy noted that the issue that sparked that controversy was a bill – now on Gov. Brown’s desk – that would possibly relax the ban on affirmative action in UC student admissions enacted by voters in Prop 209. However, there are other changes in admissions standards underway that have received less attention in the news media. And another bill on the governor’s desk is involved. See below: UC turns career tech ed-friendly (excerpt) 9/30/11, John Fensterwald – Educated Guess A decade ago, 258 career technical education courses counted toward satisfying…
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After World War II, a UCLA graduate was arrested as being “Tokyo Rose.” She was convicted but later pardoned by President Gerald Ford. The story below: The Painful Ordeal of Tokyo Rose “L.A. Then And Now” section of the Los Angeles Times 5/24/98by Cecilia Rasmussen She was a soldier’s seductress whose sexy taunts earned her imprisonment, loss of her U.S. citizenship, and, ultimately, the derisive nickname “Rose With Thorns.” American GIs serving in the Pacific Theater during World War II knew her as “Tokyo Rose”, Imperial Japan’s radio propagandist whose infamous nickname became her curse. Wronged by her country and…
More I-405 problems for commuters to and from UCLA: Gridlock-causing closures to ramps connecting the 405 freeway to Sunset and Wilshire boulevards — crucial pipelines for UCLA commuters and visitors — will take place in waves that start as early as this Friday. A multi-week Sunset area closure scheduled from Oct. 15-29 and months-long Wilshire ramp closures beginning in November will likely cause the most traffic problems for Bruins. The Sunset work will particularly throttle traffic for UCLA commuters from the San Fernando Valley. The construction will allow utility work and bridge-widening at Sunset and ramp realignments at Wilshire as…
Many faculty have websites with access to recent papers they have written available for free – some published; some in working paper stage. The impression of yours truly is that journals seldom object, even if they hold copyrights and normally charge for access. Book publishers can be more resistant to free access, however, when it comes to chapters in books. In any case, as per below, there is a move in academe toward wider, free access. Princeton U. Adopts Open-Access Policy (except) September 29, 2011, Chronicle of Higher Ed (Wired Campus blog), Jennifer Howard The movement to make research freely…
The more technological among our readers may have an interest in the program announcement below: Building an Entrepreneurial University Monday, October 3, 2011 3:00-6:00 pm CNSI Auditorium Please join us for a presentation by Professor William Ouchi to discuss new opportunities now being created at UCLA to support university inventors, followed by a conversation with the audience about the value of synergy between the academic and industrial communities, and highlighting ways they can work together to create a robust entrepreneurial ecosystem. California Nanosystems Institute (CNSI) at UCLA 570 Westwood Plaza Los Angeles, CA 90095 Registration at http://events.r20.constantcontact.com/register/event?llr=9ulm8oeab&oeidk=a07e4vl8hxzee3adec5&oseq=a004gjhnqkl5
Officials on the way to opening day ceremonies at the new Westwood campus of UCLA in 1929.