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University of California, Riverside

The University of California, Riverside (UCR or UC Riverside) is a public land-grant research university in Riverside, California. It is one of the ten campuses of the University of California system. The main campus sits on 1,900 acres (769 ha) in a suburban district of Riverside with a branch campus of 20 acres (8 ha) in Palm Desert. In 1907, the predecessor to UCR was founded as the UC Citrus Experiment Station, Riverside which pioneered research in biological pest control and the use of growth regulators.

Motto

February 14, 1954 (February 14, 1954)[1][2]

$259.8 million (2019)[3]

$1.062 billion (2016-2017)[4]

Elizabeth Watkins[5]

1,638[6]

1,938[6]

26,809 (2022)[7]

22,903 (2022)[7]

3,906 (2022)[7]

, ,
United States

Large city, 2,131 acres (862 ha)[8]

The Highlander

Blue and gold[9]
   

Scotty Highlander

UCR's undergraduate College of Letters and Science opened in 1954. The Regents of the University of California declared UCR a general campus of the system in 1959, and graduate students were admitted in 1961. To accommodate an enrollment of 21,000 students by 2015, more than $730 million has been invested in new construction projects since 1999.[10][11] Preliminary accreditation of the UC Riverside School of Medicine was granted in October 2012 and the first class of 50 students was enrolled in August 2013. It is the first new research-based public medical school in 40 years.[12] UCR is a member of the Association of American Universities.


In 2000, UC Riverside was classified as an "R1: Doctoral Universities – Very high research activity."[13][14] UCR's sports teams are known as the Highlanders and play in the Big West Conference of the National Collegiate Athletic Association (NCAA) Division I. Their nickname was inspired by the high altitude of the campus, which lies on the foothills of Box Springs Mountain. The UCR women's basketball team won back-to-back Big West championships in 2006 and 2007.

Undergraduate admissions statistics

57.1%

(Steady −0.5)

17.1

(Decrease −2.4)

3.87

(Increase +0.19)

Baseball (1977 and 1982).

Women's Volleyball (1977 – AIAW, 1982 and 1986).

Women's Soccer (1983) First place in the California Collegiate Women's Soccer Conference.

– editorial cartoonist and two time Pulitzer Prize winner (1998 and 2009)[155]

Steve Breen

– author, 11th U.S. Poet Laureate[155]

Billy Collins

federal judge for the United States District Court for the Central District of California, since 2023

Sherilyn Peace Garnett

– professional baseball player

Joe Kelly

– ran Track & Field for UCR and later represented the United States in the 2016 Rio de Janeiro Olympics for the 1500 meter track event[155]

Brenda Martinez

geochemist and professor at the University of Grenoble-Alpes

Laurent Charlet

- actress and model The Secrets of Isis

Joanna Cameron

– former Amnesty International board member and UNDP aid worker killed in a terror attack in Kabul in November 2019[156][157]

Anil Raj

– physicist, Nobel Prize in Chemistry laureate[155]

Richard R. Schrock

– long-distance runner

Judy Shapiro-Ikenberry

Paleoanthropologist, one of Time Magazine's "100 Most Influential People of 2010" for his work with Lucy, one of the oldest known Hominin[155]

Tim D. White

– UCR's first student body president, later Chancellor of UCLA

Charles E. Young

University of California Students Association

Cahuilla people leader and scholar, received the Chancellor's Medal from UCR

Katherine Siva Saubel

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Official website

Official athletics site