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The Bruins will face No. 1 seed Texas tonight at 6:30 p.m. PDT in Phoenix, Arizona. “I’m just watching them be dream chasers,” head coach Cori Close said. “I’m watching them conquer hard things. It’s who they’re becoming; it’s who they’ve impacted.” RSVP to attend tonight’s watch party at Pauley Pavilion.
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Dr. Donald Kohn has been developing gene therapies for rare pediatric immune disorders for more than 30 years. Meet the children with the often fatal immune disorder leukocyte adhesion deficiency-1 who are now living with restored immune function.
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Check out stories all month long on how UCLA advances sustainability, develops climate change solutions, promotes conservation and biodiversity, drives policy at home and around the globe, and educates a new generation committed to creating a healthier, cleaner and more sustainable planet.
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Star guard Gabriela Jaquez on the history-making UCLA women’s basketball team reflects on last year’s incredible season — and why the journey to championship glory is just beginning.
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Catch up on the latest monthly roundup of faculty and staff breakthroughs, honors, milestones and memorable moments shaping our campus and community.
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Read more of the latest research & news stories
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Latest from Chancellor Frenk
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“Heat maps reveal something temperature data alone can’t: which communities are most vulnerable to heat-related health impacts,” said UCLA physician and professor at the UCLA Fielding School of Public Health Dr. David Eisenman. “Knowing who is hit hardest is essential for planning targeted interventions — especially as heat waves grow more frequent and severe.”
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A new study by the UCLA Latino Policy and Politics Institute finds that despite Latinos being highly employable, they remain highly underpaid. Included in the analysis are examinations of pay distribution, employment conditions, labor load and education rates of a demographic that makes up 39% of the Golden State’s labor force.
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New research by UCLA biologist Nandita Garud has found that the composition of our gut bacteria changes according to the level of ultra-processed food in our diet. Garud explains why this might not be a bad thing.
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“The biggest key to success here is the ability to communicate with our giant ecosystem of faculty, staff, students and others,” said Richard Mejia, director of emergency communications and information in UCLA’s Office of Campus & Community Safety.
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Apr
4
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Celebrate the opening of Several Eternities in a Day: Form in the Age of Living Materials alongside a dynamic lineup of new spring exhibitions. Explore the galleries after hours with late-night access, soundtracked by DJs from Chulita Vinyl Club in the courtyard. This event is free and open to the public.
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Apr
6
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12 p.m.
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Powell Library 186
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Offered by UCLA’s Teaching and Learning Center, this 30-minute interactive session explores why specific, criteria-aligned feedback supports learner motivation and improvement, and highlights practical strategies for delivering high-quality feedback efficiently at scale. RSVP for this event.
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Apr
7
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UCLA associate professor, Guggenheim fellow and award-winning artist Anna Sew Hoy exerts pressures of perception, language and feeling onto the externalized body and psychic figurations of the self. This event is free and open to the public.
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Apr
9
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3:30 p.m.
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UCLA Law School Room 2467
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This book talk is presented by the Center for Chinese Studies and UCLA Law. In Negotiating Legality, author and UC Irvine law professor Ji Li examines how Chinese multinational companies, such as TikTok, are navigating the challenges of the U.S. legal system. Attend this event.
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Apr
10
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10 a.m.
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Schoenberg Music Building, Lani Hall or livestream
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Presented by the Bedari Kindness Institute, this half-day symposium will examine the intersection of sound and hate, highlighting how auditory experiences can propagate, resist and reflect social animosities. Reserve your spot.
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As spring quarter begins, there’s an opportunity to get grounded — not as an abstract ideal, but as a way of reconnecting with the materials, histories and environments that shape daily life. This Earth Month, UCLA’s two major museums offer entry points into that practice. At the Hammer Museum, Several Eternities in a Day: Form in the Age of Living Materials, opening on April 5, brings together artists working with organic, time-based processes to explore how materials shift, decay and regenerate. A related program, Water for Life (April 14), extends that conversation to the elemental systems that sustain us.
At the Fowler, Mountain Spirits: Rice and Indigeneity in the Northern Luzon Highlands, Philippines opens April 12, immersing visitors in the world of the Ifugao people, which is shaped by rice terraces, ritual, labor and ancestral knowledge, with an opening celebration on April 11 and research talk on April 15. Together, these exhibitions invite a slower kind of looking and a deeper connection to land, matter and memory.
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