| Editor's Note: The following is an abbreviated timeline of UCLA history and does not include, for example, the series of events that led to the campus' founding in 1919, or myriad developments that helped shape UCLA's course over the years. A more complete history of the campus will be told in the upcoming book to be published in 2009. Learn more... Comments? E-mail us at: UCLAHistoryProject@UCLAlumni.net. |
| California Gov. William D. Stephens signs Assembly Bill
626, establishing the Southern Branch of the University of California.
The Vermont Avenue campus opens on Sept. 15, offering two-year undergraduate
programs to 250 Letters and Science students and 1,250 students in
the Teachers College, under the direction of Ernest Carroll Moore. |
| Southern Branch confers its first degrees, awarding
the Bachelor of Education to 28 students. |
| Third and fourth years are added to Letters and Science
curriculum. |
• First Bachelor of Arts degrees in the College
of Letters and Science are awarded to 100 women and 24 men.
• UC Regents choose a 384-acre parcel of the Wolfskill Rancho
in Westwood as new site for the Southern Branch campus - declining
site proposals from Burbank, Pasadena, Fullerton and Palos Verdes.
• The UCLA band begins as a 50-piece ROTC unit under the
direction of W.G. Powell.
|
• The 75-ton Founder’s Rock marks site
where Westwood campus is dedicated.
• Student newspaper is renamed California Daily Bruin after
debuting as Cub Californian and then Daily Grizzly. |
• Construction of Westwood campus begins with
a bridge over the arroyo.
• Regents adopt the name University of California at Los Angeles. |
• Royce, Haines and Kinsey halls and Powell
Library are completed.
• Classes begin Sept. 23 with 5,500 students enrolled at Westwood.
|
| The University Residence, official home of UCLA’s
chief executive, is completed. Its first occupant is founding Provost
Ernest Carroll Moore. |
| Kerckhoff Hall, financed by a $715,000 gift from Louise
Kerckhoff, is dedicated as the student union. |
| Students take to tossing snowballs after the “Big
Snow” of Jan. 15. |
• Graduate study is authorized for the Master
of Arts degree.
• First Homecoming Parade winds its way
through Westwood Village. |
• The Graduate Division is established.
• UCLA Alumni Association is founded.
• First UCLA Homecoming Queen is crowned. |
• The College of Business Administration (now
the Anderson School) is founded as UCLA’s first professional
school.
• UniCamp, a student-run summer camp for underprivileged and
physically challenged youth, is adopted as UCLA’s official
charity. |
Graduate studies expand to include the doctoral degree;
Ph.D. programs are approved in three departments.
Center for the Performing Arts is established. |
| Mathematician Earle R. Hedrick succeeds Ernest Carroll
Moore as UCLA provost. |
| UCLA awards its first doctoral degree: a Ph.D. in history
to Kenneth P. Bailey. |
| The School of Education (now the Graduate School of
Education & Information Studies) and the College of Applied Arts
(replaced in 1960 by the College of Fine Arts) are founded. |
• The College of Engineering (now the Henry Samueli
School of Engineering and Applied Science) is established.
• Spring Sing debuts and becomes an annual showcase of student talent. |
• Clarence A. Dykstra becomes UCLA’s first post-World
War II provost. |
• UCLA enrollment reaches 13,800.
• The School of Medicine is founded. |
• The Progress Fund is formed by the Alumni
Association to generate philanthropy for UCLA.
• The School of Law is founded. |
| Federal government transfers 34 acres of Veteran’s
Administration property to UCLA, bringing total campus acreage to
419. |
• Ralph Bunche ’27 is awarded the Nobel
Peace Prize for brokering a truce between warring Arabs and Jews
in the Middle East.
• The School of Social Welfare (now part of the School of
Public Policy and Social Research) is founded. |
| Raymond B. Allen becomes first UCLA chief executive
with the title of chancellor. |
| Library volumes reach 1 million. |
| Bruin football team wins the national championship. |
• UCLA Medical Center opens.
• Following UCLA’s developmental work on electronic
computers in the late 1940s, IBM donates more than $1 million
to help establish the Western Data Processing Center at UCLA. |
| The first open-heart surgery in the western United States
is performed at UCLA Medical Center. |
• The regents change the school’s official
name to “University of California, Los Angeles.”
• The School of Dentistry and the School of Library Service
(now part of the Graduate School of Education & Information
Studies) are founded. |
| Vern O. Knudsen begins a one-year term as chancellor. |
|
|
|
• Franklin D. Murphy becomes chancellor, ushering
in a decade of growth.
• Professor Willard Libby is awarded the Nobel Prize in chemistry
for developing carbon dating. |
|
The School of Public Health is established. |
| UCLA enrollment exceeds 20,000. |
| |
• UCLA wins the first of 10 NCAA men’s basketball
championships under Coach John Wooden.
• The University Research Library (now the Young Research
Library) is completed. |
| |
• UCLA acquired the Japanese Garden in Bel-Air, a gift
from UC Regent Edward W. Carter.
• Professor Julian S. Schwinger receives Nobel Prize in physics
for his work in quantum electrodynamics. |
|
• The School of Architecture and Urban Planning (now affiliated,
respectively, with the School of the Arts and Architecture and the
School of Public Policy and Social Research) is founded. •
The Bruin football team beats Michigan State for its first Rose Bowl
victory. • The UCLA Foundation replaces the UCLA Progress
Fund as the campus’s fund-raising arm. The Annual Fund is established
to raise critically needed unrestricted support. |
|
• The Franklin D. Murphy Sculpture Garden is dedicated.
• In a first for a UCLA player, quarterback Gary Beban wins
the Heisman Trophy, college football’s top accolade. |
|
• Thirty-six-year-old Charles E. Young, UCLA’s administrative
vice chancellor, succeeds Franklin Murphy as chancellor.
• In a landmark year for ethnic studies on campus, the Center for African
American Studies, the American Indian Studies Center, the Asian American Studies
Center and the Chicano Studies Research Center are established. |
|
• UCLA is the first node on ARPANET, which later becomes
the Internet. |
|
 |
|
Enrollment tops 30,000. |
|
Coach John Wooden retires after UCLA wins its 10th men’s basketball
championship in 12 years. |
|
UCLA marks its 50th anniversary in Westwood with a “Golden
Year” celebration. |
|
 |
| UCLA physicians report the world’s first AIDS cases. |
• Conference Board of Associated Research Councils rate 17
of UCLA’s academic departments among the top 10 in the country
and 30 in the top 16. • The UCLA Campaign is launched to
raise private funds for academic programs across the campus. •
First UCLA Homecoming King is crowned. |
| Library volumes exceed 5 million. |
• UCLA hosts gymnastics and tennis competitions for the 1984
Olympic Games and serves as an Olympic Village. • To mark
its 50th anniversary, the UCLA Alumni Association commissions "Mighty
Bruins" and presents the Bruin Bear statue to the university.
The statue is now a campus landmark and a focal point on Westwood
Plaza. • UCLA’s Heart Transplant Program (now one
of the largest in the world) is founded. |
| UCLA hosts the first General Conference of the International Association
of Universities held in the United States. |
| Professor Donald Cram receives the Nobel Prize in chemistry for
“host-guest chemistry,” a field he helped to create. |
| The UCLA Campaign concludes after exceeding its $300 million goal
by $73 million. |
| The School of the Arts (now the School of the Arts and Architecture)
and the School of Theater, Film and Television are established, replacing
the College of Fine Arts. |
|
| Library volumes reach 6 million. |
| UCLA’s undergraduate student body becomes the most diverse
of any research university in the nation. |
• Sunset Village, a new student residential and academic complex,
opens on the northwest campus. • Fowler Museum of Cultural
History opens to the public. |
| UCLA takes over management of the Armand Hammer Museum in Westwood,
adding significant square footage for exhibitions, space for a library
and a 200-seat auditorium. |
• The 75th anniversary of UCLA’s founding is celebrated
with a year of activities on the theme, “Challenging the Future.”
The highlight is an academic convocation featuring President Bill
Clinton as keynote speaker. • Seven-building Anderson School
Management Education Complex opens its doors. • The School
of Public Policy and Social Research is established. |
• National Research Council ranks UCLA among the nation’s
premier research universities, with 31 Ph.D. programs among the top
20 in their fields – third best in the country. •
UCLA wins an unprecedented 11th national championship in men’s
basketball. |
• The UCLA Children’s Hospital (now the Mattel Children’s
Hospital at UCLA) opens at UCLA Medical Center. • Chancellor
Charles Young, the longest-serving university chief executive in the
nation, announces he will retire June 30, 1997. • First
Los Angeles Times Festival of Books at UCLA draws a crowd of 75,000. |
• UCLA unveils a plan to rebuild its medical sciences center
using awards from the Federal Emergency Management Agency and private
funds. • The Tom Bradley International Center opens.
• Harvard Provost Albert Carnesale is named chancellor, becoming
the eighth chief executive in UCLA’s history. • “Campaign
UCLA: where Great Futures Begin” is announced. With a goal of
$1.2 billion, it is the largest private fund-raising campaign in the
history of public higher education. • Library volumes reach
7 million. • The Arthur Ashe Student Health & Wellness
Center opens. • Paul Boyer, professor emeritus of biochemistry,
receives Nobel Prize in chemistry for pioneering work on enzymes essential
to the formation of cellular energy that drives all biological reactions. |
• Pharmacologist Louis J. Ignarro is awarded the Nobel Prize
in physiology and medicine for work showing that nitric oxide functions
as an important signaling compound, helping the body regulate key
functions such as blood pressure. • After a complete seismic
renovation to repair damage sustained during the Northridge earthquake
four years earlier, Royce Hall reopens. • The Gonda (Goldschmied)
Neuroscience and Genetics Research Center, home to UCLA’s new
Department of Human Genetics and the Brain Research Institute, is
dedicated. |
|
• Gov. Gray Davis announces the creation of the California
NanoSystems Institute, a partnership of UCLA and UC Santa Barbara,
and one of three California Institutes for Science and Innovation.
• After three years of construction, UCLA Housing opens the
doors to DeNeve Plaza, its newest addition to the northwest campus
student housing community. |
• Entertainment magnate David Geffen donates an unrestricted
$200 million gift to the medical school, which is renamed the David
Geffen School of Medicine at UCLA. The gift is the largest single
donation of its kind to a school of medicine in the United States,
and the largest donation ever made in the UC system. • The
campus marks Sept. 11 terrorist attacks with a memorial service in
Royce Quad; faculty quickly create 50 “Perspective on Sept.
11” seminars geared toward freshmen and sophomore students;
more than 650 students sign up in Fall Quarter. |
• The successful separation surgery of conjoined Guatemalan
twins at UCLA’s Mattel Children’s Hospital captures the
attention of the world. • Center for Community Partnerships,
the operational arm of the “UCLA in LA” program, is created
to foster relationships between UCLA and the greater Los Angeles area.
• The College and professional schools offer “Fiat Lux”
seminars, which evolved out of the Sept. 11 series, giving freshmen
the chance to enroll in small classes taught by distinguished professors.
• After a six-year absence, the Homecoming Parade returns
to the streets of Westwood. The event is part of a revitalized Homecoming
& Parents’ Weekend. • Campaign UCLA extends its
goal: to raise $2.4 billion by 2005. |
• Enrollment exceeds 38,500.
• The basketball court
in Pauley Pavilion is named the Nell & John Wooden Court in honor
of the legendary former coach and his late wife of 53 years. |
• The women's
gymnastics team wins its fifth national title.
|
• The UCLA Department of Chicana and Chicano Studies is created.
• Graduate student housing opens. About 1,400 graduate students make their home in Weyburn Terrace. Undergraduate Residential Plaza buildings Rieber Vista and Hedrick Summit open.
• Library hits 8 million volumes.
• Campaign UCLA officially wraps up raising $3 billion. |
• Eli and Edythe Broad Art Center (formerly the Dickson Art Center) opens as the permanent home of the UCLA Department of Art and the UCLA Design/Media Arts Department.
|
• UCLA becomes first university in the nation to reach 100 NCAA National Championship victories.
• Ronald Reagan UCLA Medical Center is dedicated.
• University of Virginia Provost Gene Block begins service as UCLA's ninth chief executive. |
|