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Events

Saturday,
Apr 4
Botanical Garden Tour(10AM - 11AM) Mathias Botanical Garden
Join a Garden Guide for a free tour on April 4 at 10 am. Explore our living museum featuring collections of plants from around the globe! You'll hear stories of selected plants in the Garden and their relevance to human society. All ages are welcome. Tours meet at La Kretz Garden Pavilion at the northern end of the Garden and are given a grace period of 5 minutes. This event is free and open to the public, no RSVP required. Location: La Kretz Garden Pavilion, 707 Tiverton Drive
Nature Play Day(10AM - 1PM) Mathias Botanical Garden
Join the Garden on Saturday, April 4 from 10 am to 1 pm for a day of outdoor fun! Explore scenic trails, discover local plants and wildlife, and participate in our Pollinators in Action activity to learn about pollinators. Don't miss the Carnivorous Plant Encounter to meet insect-eating plants, and take part in our nature scavenger hunt for a chance to win a prize. Whether your child is a nature enthusiast or just looking for a fun day out, this event offers an exciting way to connect with the outdoors! This event is free and open to the public, no RSVP required! Location: La Kretz Garden Pavilion, 707 Tiverton Drive
In recognition of Second Chance Month, the Bruin Underground Scholars End-of-Year Picnic is a joyful celebration that brings together our community of formerly incarcerated, system-impacted, and justice-involved Bruins, along with their families, allies, and supporters. This gathering marks the end of another successful academic year and honors the resilience, accomplishments, and growth of our students. Location: UCLA Family Housing, 3200 Sawtelle Blvd, Los Angeles CA 90066
Celebrate Several Eternities in a Day: Form in the Age of Living Materials and other new exhibitions with galleries open late and music in the courtyard. Food and drink will be available for purchase all night. Learn more here: https://hmmr.buzz/springopen26 This event is free and open to the public. The party starts early for Members! Become a Hammer Member and receive priority entry beginning at 7PM. Members at the Impact level and above ($500+) are also invited to attend the Director’s Reception, prior to the public celebration, featuring cocktails and bites. Join today. Location: Hammer Museum
Sunday,
Apr 5
Mark the occasion of the opening of Several Eternities in a Day: Form in the Age of Living Materials with talks by artists Edgar Calel and Raven Chacon, and two sound ceremonies with artist Guadalupe Maravilla. Schedule 12pm Edgar Calel artist talk 1:30pm Raven Chacon artist talk 3:00pm Sound Healing Ceremony with Guadalupe Maravilla* 6:00pm Sound Healing Ceremony with Guadalupe Maravilla* *The sound bath ceremony will last for one hour. Audiences are welcome to sit or lie down. A limited number of yoga blankets will be provided, but bringing your own yoga mat and/or blanket is suggested. Chairs will be made available on a limited basis, upon request. Bios Edgar Calel (b. 1987, Chi Xot, San Juan Comalapa, Guatemala) engages with topics related to the rich cultural heritage and rituals of Guatemala’s midwestern highlands, where he resides. Hailing from a family of Maya-Kaqchikel artists and artisans, Calel works across drawing, installation, painting, performance, and sculpture. His practice engages with sites and traditions around his hometown of Chi Xot as creative touchstones for works that meticulously interconnect localities, at home and internationally. The artist’s primary concerns include exploring the complexities of Indigenous experiences and representing the Maya-Kaqchikel worldview to new audiences. Recent solo exhibitions have taken place at Desapê, São Paulo (2023) and SculptureCenter, Queens, New York (2023). Selected group exhibitions have been held at Tate Modern, London (2025); Armada Galería, Mexico City (2024); the 35th São Paulo Biennial (2023); and Galeria de Artistas, São Paulo (2023). His work is included in the collections of Fundación TEOR/ética; Kadist Art Foundation; Museo Nacional Centro de Arte Reina Sofía; Museum of Contemporary Art and Design, San José, Costa Rica; National Gallery of Canada, Ottawa; Rijksmuseum; the Hammer Museum; and Tate Modern. Raven Chacon (b. 1977, Fort Defiance, Arizona) received a BFA from the University of New Mexico (2001) and an MFA from the California Institute of the Arts (2004). He is a Diné composer and artist who creates musical experiences that explore relationships among sound, space, and people. Chacon’s experimental practice cuts across the boundaries of visual art, performance, and music, breaking open musical traditions. The artist divides his time between New York and New Mexico. From 2009 to 2018, he was a member of the art collective Postcommodity, and is a recipient of a MacArthur Fellowship (2023) and the Pulitzer Prize in Music (2022). His work has been presented at numerous venues and festivals including SITE SANTA FE (2024); the Whitney Biennial, New York (2022); the Borealis festival in Bergen, Norway (2021); the Haus der Kulturen der Welt, Berlin (2021); the Los Angeles County Museum of Art (2020); the Renaissance Society at the University of Chicago (2020); the Vancouver Art Gallery (2019); and the San Francisco Electronic Music Festival (2013). Guadalupe Maravilla (b. 1976, San Salvador, El Salvador) is a transdisciplinary visual artist, choreographer, and healer currently based in New York. At the age of eight, Maravilla was part of the first wave of unaccompanied, undocumented children to arrive at the United States border in the 1980s as a result of the Salvadoran Civil War. In 2008, he became a US citizen and adopted the name Guadalupe Maravilla in solidarity with his father. The artist grounds his practice in the historical and contemporary contexts of undocumented and cancer communities. He has performed and presented his work at the Bronx Museum of the Arts, New York (2018); the Drawing Center, New York (2019, 2020); the Institute of Contemporary Art, Miami (2024, 2021); the Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York (2023, 2014); and the Whitney Museum of American Art, New York (2024, 2019, 2018), among others. His work is in the permanent collections of the Institute of Contemporary Art, Miami; Museo Nacional Centro de Arte Reina Sofía; the Hammer Museum; the Museum of Modern Art, New York; and Whitney Museum of American Art, among others. Location: Hammer Museum
A Depression era-set Southern Gothic thriller, The Night of the Hunter tells an adult story through the eyes of children. Actor-turned-director Charles Laughton described it as a “fairy tale of the Big Bad Wolf’s pursuit of the Little Pigs.” Robert Mitchum stars as the wolf in preacher’s clothing pursuing the two children of a widow (Shelley Winter) who know about a stash of ill-gotten loot. A dream-like work thanks in part to the unique cinematography by Stanley Cortez, it turns feverishly on dualities — heaven and hell, good versus evil, the sacred and profane — while paying homage to the silent era with Lillian Gish also starring.—Theater Manager Lauren Brown Director: Charles Laughton. Screenwriters: James Agee, Charles Laughton. With: Robert Mitchum, Shelley Winters, Lillian Gish. Location: Billy Wilder Theater
Monday,
Apr 6
Sex Week 2026 Trivia for Treats: Bruin Consent Coalition(11AM - 3PM) Health Education and Resource Team
@bruinconsentcoalitionucla 11:00 AM – 3:00 PM | Bruinwalk Answer trivia about sexual assault resources to win free cookies. Location: Bruinwalk
Cruising, Hookups & the Future of STI Prevention: UCLA CARE Center(4PM - 5PM) Health Education and Resource Team
4:00 – 5:30 PM | Zoom Exploring queer culture and innovations in STI prevention. Location: https://tinyurl.com/UCLACARE
Sex Week 2026 Colors and Connections: CARE & RISE(4PM - 5PM) Health Education and Resource Team
@uclacareprogram @risecenterucla 4:00 – 5:00 PM | RISE Center Connect with others through coloring, thought- provoking exercises, and rich conversations about sex. Location: RISE Center
How to Request Letters of Recommendation for Scholarships(5PM - 5:45PM) Center for Scholarships & Scholar Enrichment
Say you need a letter of recommendation for a scholarship or research opportunity, who do you ask? How do you ask? (And how should you *not* ask?) Learn effective strategies for approaching professors and requesting letters of recommendation via email for scholarship applications. Enrollment closes at 10:50am on the day of the workshop. Enrolled participants can access the Zoom link for this workshop in my.ucla.edu Academics -> Advising and Academic Services -> Workshops: https://be.my.ucla.edu/groupmanager/Events/Event/Reservations PLEASE CHECK YOUR SPAM FOLDER FOR REMINDER EMAILS. At the beginning of the workshop, you must provide your UID number to verify your status as a UCLA student who is on the Workshop Roster. CSSE workshops are protected intellectual property and recording is not allowed.
Tuesday,
Apr 7
This session offers a method for addressing a common challenge in environmental health courses: connecting complex scientific concepts with students' lived experiences and motivating them to think critically about public health solutions. It focuses on the implementation of a case-based learning guest lecture technique in three UCLA undergraduate and graduate courses to help students apply environmental health frameworks to real-world case studies involving air pollution and to foster critical thinking and discussion around environmental justice and vulnerable populations. Presenter: Yuan Yao, Postdoctoral Scholar in Environmental Health Sciences #makingconnections #criticalthinkingskills #casebasedlearning #environmentalhealth Each academic quarter, the UCLA Teaching and Learning Center (TLC) hosts a weekly series of 10+10 Pop-Up sessions on Zoom. These brief, 10-minute presentations focus on specific topics related to course design, teaching, learning, and assessment, and are led by instructional designers and developers from TLC and campus partners. The “+10” refers to an optional 10-minute discussion following each presentation, where participants can ask questions and share insights. These sessions are open to all UCLA instructors—including faculty, lecturers, instructors of record, graduate student instructors, and postdoctoral scholars. Please direct any inquiries to instructorsupport@teaching.ucla.edu.
The Executive Function(11AM - 2PM) Center for Accessible Education
Join CAE, the GSS LLC, and other campus partners for The Executive Function, a resource fair focused on support for neurodivergent students. There are so many wonderful resources at UCLA that exist to support students in their academic, professional, and personal growth. But, from a student perspective all these separate avenues of support can be daunting. The prospect of bouncing from office to office in search of the person or program that is right for them can exhaust students before they start.   Herein lies the role of The Executive Function!, a resource fair aiming to address this problem in two key ways: (1) Connect students directly with campus resource representatives that can best address their needs, and (2) Start the application/intake process right then and there!  Named after the common ADHD symptom of executive dysfunction, The Executive Function! is an acknowledgment that students know what they need, they may even know where to start, but the process of taking those first steps can feel insurmountable. Thankfully, one of the most effective techniques for addressing executive dysfunction is community support. Providing the space and time to fill out an intake form or book an appointment can make a world of difference. Location: Kerckhoff Patio
Sex Week 2026 Tabling & Resource Fair(11AM - 3PM) Health Education and Resource Team
11:00 AM – 3:00 PM | Bruin Plaza Campus orgs, free HIV testing, safer sex supplies, and free ice cream. Location: Bruin Walk
AAP "Community of Scholars" Orientation(12PM - 1PM) AAP (Academic Advancement Program)
This is the "official" AAP New Student Orientation Workshop - mandatory for students interested in becoming members of AAP. Late arrivals will not be admitted.
UCLA Affordability Workshop(12PM - 1PM) Financial Aid and Scholarships
Join UCLA Financial Aid & Scholarships for a one-hour interactive workshop designed to help newly admitted students and their families better understand their financial aid offer and estimated net cost of attendance. During this hands-on session, a UCLA financial aid expert will walk you through the key parts of your Bruin Financial Aid Letter, explain the different types of aid offered, and demonstrate how to calculate what attending UCLA may actually cost after grants, scholarships, and other support. Please complete the RSVP form below to join us!
Presented by the UCLA Library and the Jacob Marschak Interdisciplinary Colloquium on Mathematics in the Behavioral Sciences Social and political turbulence in the United States and Western Europe has been rising over the past decade. Cliodynamics, the new transdisciplinary field, which combines analysis of historical data with the tools of complexity science, has identified the deep structural forces that work to undermine societal stability and resilience to internal and external shocks. In this talk, Peter Turchin will look beneath the surface of day-to-day contentious politics and social unrest, and focus on the negative social and economic trends that explain our current “Age of Discord.” One of the most important, but little appreciated, such hidden forces is a perverse “wealth pump” that transfers wealth from the “99 percent” to “1 percent.” If allowed to run unchecked, the wealth pump results in both relative impoverishment of most people and increasingly desperate competition among elites. Since the number of power positions in a society remains more or less fixed, the overproduction of elites inevitably leads to frustrated elite aspirants, who harness popular resentment to turn against the established order. In America, the wealth pump has been operating full blast for two generations. In historical terms, our current cycle of elite overproduction and popular immiseration is far along the path to violent political rupture. In fact, today the USA finds itself in a situation that fits the definition of revolution, although, so far, fortunately a relatively non-violent one. The current focus of Turchin's research team is, how do we navigate our Age of Discord without descending into a hot civil war? Location: Charles E. Young Research Library, Main Conference Room 11360 - https://ucla.zoom.us/webinar/register/WN_C6cjvr5MTAKsry8XGFuVEA#/registration
Undergraduate Research Week Info Session – hybrid(3PM - 4PM) Undergraduate Research Week
*This info session is designed for both STEM and Humanities, Arts and Social Sciences students. At the Undergraduate Research Week Info Sessions, you will learn: -who is eligible to present -how to apply -prizes and awards offered -research and creativity events to attend The Info Session is hybrid: in-person at Powell Library: CLICC B/320B on Zoom: bit.ly/urcworkshops For more information, please email urweek@college.ucla.edu
Colors and Connections : Art(4PM - 5PM) Resilience In Your Student Experience (RISE) Center
Come join RISE for a free, one-hour workshop from Project UnLonely that bridges creative expression with meaningful connection-building! Location: RISE Center at Lu Valle Commons Basement Level
4:00 – 6:00 PM | Broad Art Center Lawn Design and decorate a dream-themed pillow with personal messages while engaging in guided discussion on relationships, intimacy, and self- reflection. Free food provided. Location: Broad Art Center Lawn
Secrets to Winning College Cash Part 2(5PM - 5:45PM) Center for Scholarships & Scholar Enrichment
Designed as a follow-up to Secrets to Winning College Cash Part 1, this workshop walks participants through the strategic process of conducting routine online searches for scholarships. Participants who wish to enroll in this workshop must attend Secrets to Winning College Cash 1 prior to this Workshop Date. Enrollment closes at 10:50am PT on the day of the workshop. Enrolled participants can access the Zoom link for this workshop in my.ucla.edu Academics -> Advising and Academic Services -> Workshops: https://be.my.ucla.edu/groupmanager/Events/Event/Reservations PLEASE CHECK YOUR SPAM FOLDER FOR REMINDER EMAILS. At the beginning of the workshop, you must provide your UID number to verify your status as a UCLA student who is on the Workshop Roster. CSSE workshops are protected intellectual property and recording is not allowed.
Nacho Average Transfer: A Non-Trad Social(6PM - 7PM) Transfer Student Center
Calling all Transfer Students who are 24+! Join us for nachos & new connections. Location: Kerckhoff 128
Technology & Innovation LLC: Tech Fest(6PM - 8PM) Residential Life
Tech Fest is an event designed to showcase UCLA’s Technology and Innovation Living Learning Community. The event highlights the creativity, entrepreneurial spirit, and technical talent across UCLA while connecting students with organizations, resources, and companies focused on innovation. Location: De Neve Plaza Room
Wednesday,
Apr 8
Neurodiversity Empowerment Resource Pop-Up(11AM - 1PM) Resilience In Your Student Experience (RISE) Center
Join us as we celebrate Neurodiversity Celebration Month! Learn about available resources and enjoy light refreshments. Location: RISE Center at Lu Valle Commons Basement Level
SPRING ENGLISH LANGUAGE CIRCLE: APRIL 8(12PM - 1PM) Dashew Center for International Students and Scholars
Are you looking for a safe and supportive space to practice your English conversation skills? Check out Dashew Center's English Language Circle (ELC)! Here you will have an opportunity to practice your English with other language learners. The circle is led by a native English speaker, who will help you become more confident in your speaking skills and who can answer your language and grammar questions. All of our ELC sessions will take place on Zoom this spring 2026. Space is limited to 20 participants per session. Participants are welcome to enjoy their lunch during these sessions. The Zoom link will be shared via email upon registering. Please email us at intlprograms@saonet.ucla.edu with any questions.
Sex Week 2026 Your Body, Your Call: Opill, Plan B & Abortion Pills(1PM - 2PM) Health Education and Resource Team
Hosted by the UCLA Center on Reproductive Health, Law, and Policy Breakdown of reproductive health options, access, and policy updates. Location: https://tinyurl.com/YourBodyYourCall
SPRING OPT WEBINARS (FOR F-1 VISA STUDENTS)(2PM - 3PM) Dashew Center for International Students and Scholars
UCLA F-1 visa students, do you want to know more about off-campus employment authorization? Join us on one of our weekly OPT webinars hosted by the Dashew Center staff to learn more! Location: https://ucla.zoom.us/j/98199114498
Co-sponsored by the UCLA Library, the Undergraduate Writing Center and the Undergraduate Research Center – Humanities, Arts, and Social Sciences. Learn all about the research process and research opportunities at UCLA, as well as how to find a faculty mentor and earn course credit for doing research. All spring quarter Cornerstone workshops will be held on Zoom.
Queer Creative Writing Space(4PM - 5:30PM) LGBTQ Campus Resource Center
The Queer Creative Writing Space meets bi-weekly during the academic year. This space is for writers of all backgrounds and experience levels who would like to stretch their creative writing muscles and meet other writers! Location: LGBTQ Campus Resource Center
Ace and Aro Space(4PM - 6PM) LGBTQ Campus Resource Center
The Ace and Aro Space is a weekly dialogue and affinity space wanting to build community or learn more about the asexual and/or aromantic spectrums. Location: LGBTQ Campus Resource Center
Secrets to Winning College Cash Part 1(5PM - 5:45PM) Center for Scholarships & Scholar Enrichment
Does the scholarship search confuse you? Do your web searches yield thousands, if not millions, of useless links? Guided by the CSSE’s experts, you’ll learn techniques to help you save time and hone your research skills so you can find the right scholarship opportunities for you! You’ll also learn how to think about your profile and strengths the way scholarship donors do. Enrollment closes at 10:50am PT on the day of the workshop. Enrolled participants can access the Zoom link for this workshop in my.ucla.edu Academics -> Advising and Academic Services -> Workshops: https://be.my.ucla.edu/groupmanager/Events/Event/Reservations PLEASE CHECK YOUR SPAM FOLDER FOR REMINDER EMAILS. At the beginning of the workshop, you must provide your UID number to verify your status as a UCLA student who is on the Workshop Roster. CSSE workshops are protected intellectual property. Recording is not permitted.
Thinking about preparing an article manuscript for submission? This workshop will focus on the aspects of the process of getting an article published that most differ from other graduate writing projects, such as selecting appropriate journals and interacting with editors. We will also discuss strategies for revising articles for a target journal.
Finding Community in your Co-Parenting Journey(6PM - 7PM) Bruin Resource Center
Skip cooking and enjoy light dinner with SwD for a workshop where you can learn about resources for co-parenting students and connect with others on the same journey. Location: University Apartments South
Join us for interactive trivia with food and fabulous prizes! Our focus would be education around STIs/STDs, with a particular attention to issues relevant to the LGBTQ+ community. Location: Carnesale Commons (Venice Room
Thursday,
Apr 9
NCTTA Nationals Location: Rockford, IL
Blind Date with a Book(11AM - 1PM) Library
Feeling lucky? Don't judge a book by its cover—because you won't be able to! Stop by Powell Library for Blind Date with a Book! Select a wrapped book, check it out at the circulation desk with your BruinCard, then return to the table to pick up a mystery gift. Your next favorite read just may be waiting for you. Location: Powell Library Rotunda
Career Center Virtual Drop-Ins(12:30PM - 1:30PM) Bruin Resource Center
Do you have questions about your professional future or need guidance on your career choices? Join the Career Center counselors over zoom for SwD-specific support! Location: https://ucla.zoom.us/j/99736684465
Sex Week 2026 ASU x BLAIDS: HIV/AIDS in Black & Latinx Communities(1PM - 3PM) Health Education and Resource Team
@uclablaids @blackbruins 6 – 8 PM | Latinx Success Center Discussion on disparities, prevention, and community impact. Location: Latinx Success Center
@itslagrh @uclahealthed 1:00 – 3:00 PM | Arthur Ashe Center (4th Floor, Large Conference Room) Join retired OB/GYN Dr. Bader for insight into what it takes to build a patient-centered medical career in obstetrics and gynecology in an evolving landscape. Location: The Ashe Center 4th Floor Large Conference Room
This hands-on workshop will provide people with revision strategies for longer texts, such as master’s theses, dissertation chapters or proposals. Please bring a hard copy of your own work—at least 15-20 double-spaced pages (more is fine). After the workshop, light refreshments will be provided. We will then have an open writing group session until 6:30 PM. Location: Conference Room 4, Student Activities Center (basement level)
Co-sponsored by the UCLA Library, the Undergraduate Writing Center and the Undergraduate Research Center–Humanities, Arts, and Social Sciences. Need help figuring out what topic you want to explore for your project? Having trouble turning a general idea into something more specific? Join us for this workshop with library instructors to learn about developing your research questions. All spring quarter Cornerstone workshops will be held on Zoom.
Impostor Feelings to Compassion(4PM - 5PM) Resilience In Your Student Experience (RISE) Center
This workshop explores the idea of imposter syndrome/feelings by identifying underlying causes, exploring the ways that intersecting identities might experience these feelings differently, and introducing self-compassion as a form of resilience-building Location: RISE Center at Lu Valle Commons Basement Level
Secrets to Winning College Cash Part 2(5PM - 5:45PM) Center for Scholarships & Scholar Enrichment
Designed as a follow-up to Secrets to Winning College Cash Part 1, this workshop walks participants through the strategic process of conducting routine online searches for scholarships. Participants who wish to enroll in this workshop must attend Secrets to Winning College Cash 1 prior to this Workshop Date. Enrollment closes at 10:50am PT on the day of the workshop. Enrolled participants can access the Zoom link for this workshop in my.ucla.edu Academics -> Advising and Academic Services -> Workshops: https://be.my.ucla.edu/groupmanager/Events/Event/Reservations PLEASE CHECK YOUR SPAM FOLDER FOR REMINDER EMAILS. At the beginning of the workshop, you must provide your UID number to verify your status as a UCLA student who is on the Workshop Roster. CSSE workshops are protected intellectual property and recording is not allowed.
bixby.ucla.edu 5:00 – 6:00 PM | CHS 76-059 + Zoom Indigenous perspectives and counterstories in sex education. Location: CHS 76-059 - https://tinyurl.com/CounterstoriesinSexEducation
UCLA Affordability Workshop(6PM - 7PM) Financial Aid and Scholarships
Join UCLA Financial Aid & Scholarships for a one-hour interactive workshop designed to help newly admitted students and their families better understand their financial aid offer and estimated net cost of attendance. During this hands-on session, a UCLA financial aid expert will walk you through the key parts of your Bruin Financial Aid Letter, explain the different types of aid offered, and demonstrate how to calculate what attending UCLA may actually cost after grants, scholarships, and other support. Please complete the RSVP form below to join us!
Artist Meet-Up - Musician Community Space(7PM - 9PM) Residential Life
UCLA CREATIVES ??????!!! De Neve Studios has the event for YOU to meet like minded people... Artists just like YOU ??!!! Join the Learning Centers' very own MUSIC TEAM for an Artist Meet-Up, bring a friend, EVERYONE is welcome ??!!! Snacks will be provided, so we want to see you there, making connections, new friends, or learning what we resources we have for you to go far in your music career ??!! Location: De Neve Plaza Room
Friday,
Apr 10
Second Week DeadlineAcademic Calendar
The Meaning of the American Revolution in 2026(9AM - 5PM) Center for 17th- & 18th-Century Studies
This conference will gather a group of leading scholars to see where scholarship about the Revolution is on its 250th anniversary. Through their own research, they’ll address the many and exciting ways we’ve come to rethink this important event, including its broader continental and even global reach, and its racial and ideological underpinnings. Unlike a traditional academic conference, however, these talks will be addressed to a mostly non-academic audience of students and members of the public. In doing so, we hope to show non-scholars new ways historians are currently thinking about the meaning of this seminal event in U.S. and world history. Location: William Andrews Clark Memorial Library
Symposium on Sound and Hate(10AM - 4PM) Bedari Kindness Institute
This half-day symposium at UCLA will examine the intersection of sound and hate, highlighting how auditory experiences can propagate, resist, and reflect social animosities. Bringing together diverse perspectives from sound studies and related fields, the event will deepen understanding of how sound influences, challenges, and shapes the dynamics of hate in society. The keynote address, “Sectarian Reckonings: The Politics of Voice and Song in Post-Authoritarian Syria,” will be delivered by Shayna M. Silverstein, Associate Professor in the Department of Performance Studies and faculty member of the Middle Eastern and North African Studies program at Northwestern University. Her talk explores public reckonings with sectarian violence in Syria from the 2010s conflict to the precarious present, offering guided listening to sonic practices—from chant and song to rock and livestream audio culture—that respond to sectarianized hate, violence, and animosity. Additional speakers include UCLA School of Music Associate Professor Jenny Johnson, UCLA Initiative to Study Hate (ISH) Research Manager Dr. Amalia Mora, and the symposium’s curator Dr. Kathryn Huether (ISH and Leve Center for Jewish Studies Postdoctoral Fellow-Antisemitism Studies). Location: Schoenberg Music Building, Lani Hall
Symposium on Sound and Hate(10AM - 4PM) Initiative to Study Hate
This half-day symposium at UCLA will examine the intersection of sound and hate, highlighting how auditory experiences can propagate, resist, and reflect social animosities. Bringing together diverse perspectives from sound studies and related fields, the event will deepen understanding of how sound influences, challenges, and shapes the dynamics of hate in society. The keynote address, “Sectarian Reckonings: The Politics of Voice and Song in Post-Authoritarian Syria,” will be delivered by Shayna M. Silverstein, Associate Professor in the Department of Performance Studies and faculty member of the Middle Eastern and North African Studies program at Northwestern University. Her talk explores public reckonings with sectarian violence in Syria from the 2010s conflict to the precarious present, offering guided listening to sonic practices—from chant and song to rock and livestream audio culture—that respond to sectarianized hate, violence, and animosity. Additional speakers include UCLA School of Music Associate Professor Jenny Johnson, UCLA Initiative to Study Hate (ISH) Research Manager Dr. Amalia Mora, and the symposium’s curator Dr. Kathryn Huether (ISH and Leve Center for Jewish Studies Postdoctoral Fellow-Antisemitism Studies). Location: Schoenberg Music Building, Lani Hall
Sex Week 2026 Advocating for Yourself in a Clinical Setting: FPA(11AM - 1PM) Health Education and Resource Team
@fpa.ucla 11:00 AM – 1:00 PM | Zoom Learn how to advocate for yourself as a patient in sexual healthcare settings.
Queer Fandom Fanatics(2PM - 3PM) LGBTQ Campus Resource Center
Come geek out with others about all things pop culture through a queer lens! Location: LGBTQ Campus Resource Center
Avoiding Plagiarism Workshop(3PM - 4PM) Office of the Dean of Students
This workshop providesThis workshop provides an overview on the various forms of academic dishonesty regarding plagiarism. Participants will learn when, where, and why it is important to cite properly. Students will also learn how to avoid plagiarism and the information presented will stress the need to attribute work to the original author and the potential outcomes for plagiarizing. Additionally, paraphrasing, and direct quoting will be discussed. ZOOM. Register through MyEvents on MyUCLA.
QTBIPOC Space(3:30PM - 4:30PM) LGBTQ Campus Resource Center
The QTBIPOC Space is an intentional space for all folks of different and similar lived experiences to build community, decompress, and practice collective care. Location: LGBTQ Campus Resource Center
Secrets to Winning College Cash Part 1(5PM - 5:45PM) Center for Scholarships & Scholar Enrichment
Does the scholarship search confuse you? Do your web searches yield thousands, if not millions, of useless links? Guided by the CSSE’s experts, you’ll learn techniques to help you save time and hone your research skills so you can find the right scholarship opportunities for you! You’ll also learn how to think about your profile and strengths the way scholarship donors do. Enrollment closes at 10:50am PT on the day of the workshop. Enrolled participants can access the Zoom link for this workshop in my.ucla.edu Academics -> Advising and Academic Services -> Workshops: https://be.my.ucla.edu/groupmanager/Events/Event/Reservations PLEASE CHECK YOUR SPAM FOLDER FOR REMINDER EMAILS. At the beginning of the workshop, you must provide your UID number to verify your status as a UCLA student who is on the Workshop Roster. CSSE workshops are protected intellectual property. Recording is not permitted.
Sex Week 2026 Trans Sex Talk(5PM - 7PM) Health Education and Resource Team
5:00 – 7:00 PM | RSVP for location https://tinyurl.com/transsextalk Sex-ed and open discussion for trans and nonbinary participants.
Introduction by Gerardo Fueyo Bros, consul general of Spain in Los Angeles, and Gonzalo del Puerto, cultural director, Instituto Cervantes Los Ángeles. 70-minute presentation by historian Silvia Ribelles de la Vega, followed by a Q&A with Ribelles moderated by May Hong HaDuong, director, UCLA Film & Television Archive. Presented in partnership with The Packard Humanities Institute, the Consulate General of Spain in Los Angeles, and the Instituto Cervantes Los Ángeles. Marking the 90th anniversary of the outbreak of the Spanish Civil War (1936–1939), Silvia Ribelles de la Vega, a scholar and historian at The Packard Humanities Institute, presents a program featuring seldom-seen views of the war, drawn from the Hearst Metrotone News collection. The preservation of and access to the collection have been made possible only through the incredible efforts of The Packard Humanities Institute, in collaboration with the UCLA Film & Television Archive, to expand access to one of the most significant newsreel archives of the 20th century. This collection of 27 million feet of newsreels includes approximately 288 reels of film related to the Spanish Civil War. At the time, newsreels — short-form, theatrically exhibited news stories — were often the only moving image records of unfolding events available to international audiences. Hearst cameramen covered the conflict extensively and, remarkably, filmed from both sides of the war. Ribelles’ presentation will move chronologically from 1936 to 1939 and feature not only edited newsreels but also selections from longer, previously unseen footage. Describing the Hearst Metrotone News collection as “a gem for any researcher,” Ribelles highlights the opportunities this newly accessible material offers to scholars and history enthusiasts alike. Drawing on production records, maps and related archival documents, she will examine how the newsreels were filmed, edited and circulated, and how studying them today can surface overlooked histories and reshape our understanding of the Spanish Civil War. 90 years after a conflict that tore a nation apart, these newsreels stand as vital audiovisual evidence and as a testament to the enduring impact of making archival collections accessible to all. The Archive is grateful to The Packard Humanities Institute (PHI) for its role as the driving force in the project to share the Hearst Metrotone News Collection for research, study and public access. To explore more than 20,000 news stories preserved and made accessible by PHI, including unedited materials featured in this program, visit newsreels.net. Location: Billy Wilder Theater