Hauptmann Englande is a character from [[Marvel Comics]] and a character in the [[Captain Britain]] comics.
{{UC taxobox |
seal_image=[[Image:Ucb logo.png|120px|Seal of UC Berkeley (Trademark of UC Regents)]] |
establishment=[[March 23]], [[1868]] |
chancellor=[[Robert Birgeneau]] |
___location=[[Berkeley, California]] |
undergrad=23,000 |
grad=10,000 |
faculty=1,900 |
endowment=2.037 billion (2004)|
campus=[[urban area|Urban]], 1,232 acres (5 km²)|
teams=Golden Bears<br/>(mascot: [[Oski]]) |
website=www.berkeley.edu
}}
The '''University of California, Berkeley''' (also known as '''Cal''', '''UCB''', '''UC Berkeley''', '''The University of California''', '''California''', or simply '''Berkeley''') is a [[Public university|public]] coeducational university situated east of the [[San Francisco Bay]] in [[Berkeley, California]], overlooking the [[Golden Gate]]. The oldest and flagship campus of the [[University of California]] system, Berkeley is a leading research university. Its graduate programs and faculty are consistently ranked among the best in the world.
Translated from German to mean ''Captain Englishman'' (Possibly a reference to fellow superhero [[Captain England]]), Hauptmann Englande is a representative for an alternate Earth called ''Earth 597'' for the [[Captain Britain Corps]].
Founded in 1868, Berkeley enjoyed a golden age in the physical, chemical, and biological sciences in the 20th Century, leading to the development of the first [[cyclotron]] by Ernest O. Lawrence, the isolation of the human polio virus, and the discovery of numerous elements, including [[Plutonium]], [[Berkelium]], and [[Californium]]. Nobel Prizes have been awarded to nineteen past and present faculty, among the [[List of Nobel laureates associated with University of California, Berkeley|54 Nobel laureates associated with the university]]. The campus gained attention worldwide with the birth of the [[Free Speech Movement]] and student protests against [[United States]] involvement in the [[Vietnam War]], significantly defining the 1960s in America. Later developments include a number of key technologies associated with the development of the [[Internet]], [[BSD]] [[Unix]], and the [[Open source movement|Open Source Software movement]].
Earth 597 is an alternate Earth where the Nazis have won the Second World War, and Hauptmann Englande is the leader of the Lightning Squad, his worlds' equivalent of ''[[Excalibur]]''.
==Academics==
[[image:UCB-University-Library.jpg|thumb|240px|right|The north side of Doe Library with Memorial Glade in the foreground.]]
The University of California, Berkeley currently boasts 221 [[American Academy of Arts and Sciences|American Academy of Arts & Sciences]] Fellows, 3 [[Fields Medal]] holders, 83 [[Fulbright Program|Fulbright Scholars]], 139 [[Guggenheim Fellows]], 11 [[Howard Hughes Medical Institute]] Investigators, 28 [[MacArthur Fellowship|MacArthur Fellows]], 87 members of the [[National Academy of Engineering]], 128 members of the [[National Academy of Sciences]], 8 [[Nobel Prize]] winners, 3 [[Pulitzer Prize]] winners, 83 [[Sloan Fellows]], and 7 [[Wolf Prize]] winners among a bevy of distinguished faculty.
According to the [[National Research Council]], Berkeley ranks 1st nationally in the number of graduate programs in the top 10 in their fields (97 percent) and 1st nationally in the number of "distinguished" programs for the scholarship of the faculty (32 programs). World Universities Rankings performed in 2004 by the UK ''[[Times Higher Education Supplement]]'' named Berkeley No. 2 in the world overall. No. 1 Engineering and IT, No. 3 in Humanities & Social Sciences, and No. 4 in science. Similar rankings performed in 2004 by the Institute of Higher Education in Shanghai placed Berkeley at No. 4 among the Top 500 World Universities. Undergraduate rankings performed in 2006 by US News and World Report place Berkeley as the country's top public university but at No. 20 overall in the nation.
Berkeley has graduated more students who go on to earn doctorates than any other university in the United States, and its enrollment of [[National Merit Scholar|National Merit Scholars]] was third in the nation prior to 2002, when participation in the National Merit program [http://ucnewswire.org/news_viewer.cfm?story_PK=4989& was discontinued]. With more than 7,000 courses in nearly 300 degree programs, the university awards about 5,500 bachelor's degrees, 2,000 master's degrees, 900 doctorates and 200 law degrees each year.
The University's library system houses nearly 10 million volumes, spread over 32 departmental (and affiliated) libraries. Its library is ranked third in North America by the Association for Research Libraries after [[Harvard University]] and [[Yale University]].
==History==
[[Image:Berkeley1940.jpeg|thumb|left|250px|U.C. Berkeley campus circa 1940]]
In [[1866]], the land which is now the Berkeley campus was first purchased by the private [[College of California]] (established by Congregational minister [[Henry Durant]] in [[1855]]). However, lacking the funds to operate, the College of California merged with state-run Agricultural, Mining, and Mechanical Arts College, forming the [[University of California]] on [[March 23]], [[1868]], with Durant becoming the first president. The university first opened in [[Oakland, California|Oakland]] in [[1869]]. In [[1873]], with the completion of North and South Halls, the university relocated to the Berkeley campus with 167 men and 222 women students enrolled. (Note that Berkeley is not the oldest public university in California; that honor belongs to [[San Jose State University]].)
Through the middle decades of the [[20th century]], the Berkeley campus enjoyed a golden age in the physical, chemical and biological sciences. During that period, with Professor [[Ernest O. Lawrence]]'s invention of the [[cyclotron]], researchers affiliated with the campus discovered a great number of [[chemical element]]s heavier than [[uranium]], the only ones known at that time, garnering a number of [[Nobel Prize]]s for these efforts along the way. Two of the elements, [[Berkelium]] and [[Californium]], were named in honor of the university. Another two, [[Lawrencium]] and [[Seaborgium]], were named in honor of faculty members Ernest O. Lawrence and [[Glenn T. Seaborg]].
During [[World War II]], Lawrence's [[Lawrence Radiation Laboratory|Radiation Laboratory]] in the hills above Berkeley began to contract with the [[U.S. Army]] in efforts to help understand the fundamental science needed to develop the [[atomic bomb]] (including the then-secret discovery of [[plutonium]] by Seaborg). Physics professor [[Robert Oppenheimer|J. Robert Oppenheimer]] was named scientific head of the [[Manhattan Project]] in 1942. The University agreed to manage the project without knowing its purpose the same year, beginning a relationship with the [[Department of Defense]] which has endured to the present. Room 307 of Gilman Hall, where Seaborg discovered plutonium, is now a [[National Historic Landmark]]. Two other University of California managed labs, [[Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory]] and [[Los Alamos National Laboratory]], were established during this time period.
During the [[McCarthy era]] in [[1949]], the [[Regents of the University of California|Board of Regents]] adopted an anti-[[communist]] loyalty oath to be signed by all University of California employees. A number of faculty members firmly took a stand against the oath requirement and were eventually dismissed. They were reinstated with full honor and back-pay ten years later; one of them, [[Edward C. Tolman]] — the noted [[comparative psychology|comparative psychologist]] — now has a building on the campus named after him (it houses the departments of psychology and education). An oath to "support and defend the Constitution of the United States and the Constitution of the State of California against all enemies, foreign and domestic" is still required by all UC employees.
In [[1952]] the University of California became an entity separate from the Berkeley campus as part of a major restructuring of the UC system, and each campus was given its own Chancellor, and greater autonomy.
[[1962]] ushered in a new day for people with disabilities when [[Ed Roberts (activist)|Ed Roberts]] became a student. He would found the [[Independent Living]] movement with other wheelchair users while on campus.
The University gained notoriety worldwide nearly a century after its founding for the student body's active protests against [[United States]] involvement in the [[Vietnam War]]. This period of social unrest on campus could be traced to the [[Free Speech Movement]], which originated on the Berkeley campus in [[1964]] and inspired the political and moral outlook of a generation.
Today, the majority of students at UC Berkeley are less politically active than their predecessors and have political opinions similar to students at most other American universities. However, a small number of outspoken radical groups continue to flourish and thrive.
==Reputation==
In addition to UC Berkeley’s reputation as one of the best research universities in the world, it also has a reputation for [[student activism]]. Although there are claims that the university’s students have become politically apathetic and civically disengaged in the decades since the [[Free Speech Movement]] and [[Vietnam War]], there are also counter-claims that today’s campus activism spans a broader range of causes (making it appear more dispersed) and utilizes new approaches, such as [[e-mail]] networks and [[listservs]].
Beginning in 1996, California [[Proposition 209]], which ended [[Affirmative Action]] in [[California]] and the [[University of California]] system, and its subsequent impact on the campus population of African American, Latino, and Native American students helped to rekindle activism around issues of race. In this instance, reaction came not only from students, but also from alumni. Four alums established the [[IDEAL Scholars Fund]] to increase the number of qualified, underrepresented students of color at UC Berkeley.
Other creative protests included those in support of Professor [[Ignacio Chapela]] in his campaign for "[[tenure]] justice” against claims of undue influence from [[Novartis]] and the biotechnology industry. Chapela was eventually granted tenure.
== Campus architecture and architects ==
[[Image:Berkeley glade afternoon.jpg|thumb|320px|Memorial Glade, at the center of the Berkeley campus.]]
The campus is 1,232 acres (5 km²) in its entirety, though the main campus is on the western 178 acres (0.7 km²). Despite its urban setting, the campus manages to maintain a surprisingly park-like atmosphere, crossed by two creeks and including the tallest stand of hardwood trees in North America. Overlooking the main campus on the east side are several research units, most notably the [[Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory]], the [[Space Sciences Laboratory]], the [[Mathematical Sciences Research Institute]], and the [[Lawrence Hall of Science]]. Much of the rugged upper hill territory is still undeveloped. Residential Halls and administrative buildings spill out into the city of Berkeley, particularly to the south of the campus.
The campus and its surrounding community are home to a number of notable buildings by early 20th century campus architect [[John Galen Howard]], his peer [[Bernard Maybeck]] (best known for the [[Palace of Fine Arts]]), and Maybeck's student, [[Julia Morgan]]. Later buildings were designed by prominent architects such as [[Charles Willard Moore]] ([[Haas School of Business]]) and [[Joseph Esherick]] (Wurster Hall).
Very little of the early University of California (c. 1868–1903) remains, with the Victorian Second Empire style South Hall (1873) and [[Piedmont Avenue]] (designed by [[Frederick Law Olmsted]]) being notable exceptions. What is considered the historic campus today was the eventual result of the 1898 "International Competition for the [[Phoebe Hearst]] Architectural Plan for the University of California," funded by the mother of [[William Randolph Hearst]] and initially held in the [[Belgium|Belgian]] city of [[Antwerp (city)|Antwerp]] (eleven finalists were judged again in San Francisco, 1899). This unprecedented competition came about from one-upmanship between the prominent [[Hearst]] and [[Leland Stanford|Stanford]] families of the Bay Area. In response to the founding of [[Stanford University]], the Hearst Family decided to "adopt" the fledgling University of California and develop their own world-class institution. Although a Frenchman, [[Emile Bénard]], won the competition, he disliked the "uncultured" San Francisco atmosphere and refused to revise and oversee the plan. He was replaced by the fourth place winner John Galen Howard, who would later become UC Berkeley's resident campus architect. Only [[University House]], designed by architect [[Albert Pissis]] and then home to the President of the University of California, was placed according to the Bénard plan (it is today the home of UC Berkeley's Chancellor).
[[Image:Sather-Gate.jpg|thumb|left|240px|[[Sather Gate]] marks the original southern entrance to the campus, and now the entrance from [[Sproul Plaza]]]]
Much of the older campus is built in the stately [[Beaux-Arts architecture|Beaux-Arts]] Classical style, which was regarded as the most cultured, beautiful, and "scientific" style by the cultural establishment at the time of the competition, and thus was the style preferred by John Galen Howard and Phoebe Hearst (who paid his salary). With the support of University President [[Benjamin Ide Wheeler]], Howard designed over twenty buildings, which set the tone for campus up until it post-World War II expansion in the 1950s and 60s. These included the [[Hearst Greek Theatre]], the [[Hearst Memorial Mining Building]], [[Doe Memorial Library]], California Hall, Wheeler Hall, (Old) Le Conte Hall, Gilman Hall, Haviland Hall, Wellman Hall, [[Sather Gate]], and the 307-foot [[Sather Tower]] (nicknamed "the Campanile" after [[St. Mark's Campanile]] in Venice). Buildings he regarded as temporary, non-academic, or not particularly "serious" were designed in shingle or [[Gothic architecture|Collegiate Gothic]] styles, such as North Gate Hall, Dwinelle Annex, and Stephens Hall.
This collection of buildings (Founders' Rock, University House, Faculty Club and Glade, Hearst Greek Theatre, Hearst Memorial Mining Building, Doe Library, Sather Tower and Esplanade, Sather Gate and Bridge, Hearst Gymnasium, California, Durant, Wellman, Hilgard, Giannini, Wheeler, North Gate and South Halls), collectively are a [[California Historical Landmark]] and are listed in the [[National Register of Historic Places]]. [[Bowles Hall]]—built in 1928—is California's oldest state-owned dormitory and is also listed in the National Register of Historic Places.
John Galen Howard retired in 1924, his support base gone with both Phoebe Hearst's death and President Wheeler's resignation in 1919. [[William Randolph Hearst]], seeking to memorialize his mother, contributed to Howard's resignation by commissioning [[Bernard Maybeck]] and [[Julia Morgan]] to design a series of dramatic buildings on the southern part of the campus. These were originally to include a huge domed auditorium, a museum, an art school, and a women's gymnasium, all arranged on an eastward esplanade and classically oriented towards the campanile. However, only the Hearst Women's Gymnasium was completed before the [[Great Depression]], at which point Hearst decided to focus on his [[Hearst Castle|estate]] at [[San Simeon]] instead.
[[image:UCB-Campus.jpg|thumb|240px|View of campus looking north, with Evans Hall and [[Sather Tower]] on the right. South Hall is the brick building in the center.]]
The dramatic increase in enrollment during the 1950s, 1960s, and 1970s led to the rapid expansion of the campus, beginning with the University's appropriation of the north end of [[Telegraph Avenue]] to form [[Sproul Plaza]] and headed on its east side by Sproul Hall, a new neoclassical building for the campus administration. However, the administration moved out of Sproul and into California Hall, situated in the heart of campus, after students barricaded themselves in Sproul during the 1964 [[Free Speech Movement]]. (Today, Sproul Hall houses Student Services and the Admissions Office, and Sproul Plaza is the center of student activities.) A series of huge [[Brutalism|Brutalist]] concrete buildings were also built to provide much-needed housing, lab, office, and classroom space, including Evans Hall, Cory Hall, Wurster Hall, Davis Hall, McCone Hall, Zellerbach Hall, the undergraduate dorms Units 1, 2, and 3, and others.
Gray-green Evans Hall is the tallest instructional building on the campus and houses the offices of faculty in [[mathematics]], [[statistics]], and [[economics]], which once included former Assistant Professor of Mathematics [[Theodore Kaczynski|Ted Kaczynski]], infamously known as the Unabomber. Students widely revile Evans as the ugliest building on campus, with the possible exception of Wurster Hall. (Ironically, Wurster Hall is the building that houses UC Berkeley's architecture department.) The most recent campus development plan lists Evans Hall as a candidate for demolition within the next fifteen years. [[Cory Hall]], the [[electrical engineering]] building, was the site of two attacks by the Unabomber in 1982 and 1985. Its neighbor Soda Hall ([[computer science]]) is one of the few classroom buildings on campus with showers. It was completed in August [[1994]], at the cost of $35.5 million, raised entirely from private gifts. Dwinelle Hall is another large building on campus; its rooms are strangely numbered both because Dwinelle Hall was built on a slope, with entrances on different levels, and because expansion wings were numbered differently from the original building. Because this confusing building is host to both large lower-division lecture classes and many smaller discussion classes, it is sometimes called the "freshman maze."
Underneath UC Berkeley's oldest buildings is a system of steam tunnels which carry steam to those buildings for heat and power. During the 1960s, Berkeley students chained the doorknobs of the Chancellor's office in protest over the Vietnam War. The Chancellor, having no other way in or out of the building, used the steam tunnels to escape. Afterwards, the exterior double doors on that building were changed so they only had one doorknob, and this remains today.
Recent developments include the newly completed Jean Hargrove Music Library, only the fourth free-standing music library to be constructed in the United States. Current major construction projects include the first free-standing buildings to be devoted to East Asian Studies in the United States, the C.V. Starr East Asian Library and the [[Chang-Lin Tien]] Center for East Asian Studies, designed by noted architects [[Tod Williams Billie Tsien & Associates|Tod Williams and Billie Tsien]]; the former has broken ground and is scheduled for completion in Fall 2007. The headquarters building for [http://www.citris-uc.org/ CITRIS] (Center for Information Technology Research in the Interest of Society) broke ground in 2004 and is expected to be completed in 2007; it will include [[Nanotechnology|nanofabrication]] facilities, labs, and classrooms. Finally, the massive 285,000 square foot [[Wendell Meredith Stanley|Stanley Biosciences and Bioengineering Facility]] will be completed in mid-2006; oriented towards health-related interdisciplinary research, three-quarters of the building is devoted to labs and specialized facilities while one-quarter will be office and instructional facilities.
==Organization==
===Chancellors===
The position of Chancellor was created in [[1952]] during the reorganization and expansion of the [[University of California]]; there have since been nine inaugurated chancellors (1 was acting chancellor):
# [[Clark Kerr]] (1952–1958)
# [[Glenn T. Seaborg]] (1958–1961)
# [[Edward W. Strong]] (1961–1965)
# [[Martin E. Meyerson]] (1965, acting)
# [[Roger W. Heyns]] (1965–1971)
# [[Albert H. Bowker]] (1971–1980)
# [[Ira Michael Heyman]] (1980–1990)
# [[Chang-Lin Tien]] (1990–1997)
# [[Robert M. Berdahl]] (1997–2004)
# [[Robert J. Birgeneau]] (2004–present)
===Colleges and schools===
[[Image:Haas School of Business courtyard.jpg|thumb|200px|Haas School of Business]]
Berkeley's 130-plus academic departments and programs are organized into 14 colleges and schools. ("Colleges" are both undergraduate and graduate, while "Schools" are graduate-only, the exception being the School of Business.):
*[[Haas School of Business]]
*[[UC Berkeley College of Chemistry|College of Chemistry]]
*[[UC Berkeley Graduate School of Education|Graduate School of Education]]
*[[UC Berkeley College of Engineering|College of Engineering]]
*[[UC Berkeley College of Environmental Design|College of Environmental Design]]
*[[UC Berkeley School of Information Management and Systems|School of Information Management and Systems]]
*[[UC Berkeley Graduate School of Journalism|Graduate School of Journalism]]
*[[Boalt Hall School of Law]]
*[[UC Berkeley School of Information|School of Information]]
*[[UC Berkeley College of Letters and Science|College of Letters and Science]]
*[[UC Berkeley College of Natural Resources|College of Natural Resources]]
*[[UC Berkeley School of Optometry|School of Optometry]]
*[[UC Berkeley School of Public Health|School of Public Health]]
*[[Richard & Rhoda Goldman School of Public Policy]]
*[[UC Berkeley School of Social Welfare|School of Social Welfare]]
==Contributions to computer science==
Cal has nurtured a number of key technologies associated with the early development of the [[Internet]] and the [[Open source movement|Open Source Software movement]]. The original [[Berkeley Software Distribution]], commonly known as BSD [[Unix]], was assembled in [[1977]] by [[Bill Joy]] as a graduate student in the computer science department. Bill Joy also developed the original version of [[vi]]. [[PostgreSQL]] emerged from faculty research begun in the late [[1970s]]. [[Sendmail]] was developed at Berkeley in [[1981]]. [[BIND]] (Berkeley Internet Name Domain package) was written by a team of graduate students around the same time period. The [[Tcl]] programming language and the [[Tk]] [[GUI]] toolkit were developed by faculty member [[John Ousterhout]] in [[1988]]. [[SPICE]] and [[espresso]], popular tools for IC Designers, were also invented at Berkeley under the direction of Professor [[Donald Pederson]]. The [[Redundant array of independent disks|RAID]] and [[RISC]] technologies were both developed at Berkeley under [[David A. Patterson|David Patterson]].
Perhaps the most pervasive contribution to computing from UCB has been the algorithms and analysis of [[floating-point]] arithmetic, led by Professor [[William Kahan]]. These include extensive and ongoing contributions to the [[IEEE 754]] standard.
The [[EXperimental Computing Facility|XCF]], an undergraduate research group now located in Soda Hall, has been responsible for a number of notable software projects, including [[GIMP Toolkit|GTK+]], [[GIMP|The GIMP]], and the initial diagnosis of the [[Morris worm]]. In [[1992]], [[Pei-Yuan Wei]], an undergraduate at the XCF, created [[ViolaWWW]], one of the first graphically-based [[web browser]]s. ViolaWWW was the first browser to have embedded scriptable objects, stylesheets, and tables. In the spirit of Open Source, he merely donated the code to [[Sun Microsystems]], thus inspiring [[Java programming language|Java]] [[applet]]s. ViolaWWW would also inspire researchers at the [[National Center for Supercomputing Applications]] to create the [[Mosaic (web browser)|Mosaic]] web browser.
[[SETI at home|SETI@home]] was one of the first widely disseminated [[distributed computing]] projects, allowing hobbyists and enthusiasts to participate in scientific research by donating unused computer processor cycles in the form of a screen saver.
In an interesting example of the confluence of intellectual ideas, many of the arguments for the efficacy of Open Source software development, and of the Wikipedia project itself, find parallels in writings on urban planning and architecture published in the late [[1970s]] by [[Christopher Alexander]], a Berkeley professor of [[architecture]]. Across campus around that same time period, [[John Searle]], a Berkeley professor of philosophy, introduced a celebrated critique of [[artificial intelligence]] using the metaphor of a [[Chinese Room]].
List of research projects conducted at Berkeley:
* [[Daedalus project]] - Combine intelligent adaptive applications with smart networking software that can multiplex connections over a wide variety of different networking technologies.
* [[Digital library project]]
* [[GiST]] - A Generalized Search Tree for Secondary Storage
* [[Harmonia research project]] - open interactive programming tools
* [[Sather]] - Object oriented language derived from [[Eiffel programming language]]
* [[Not Another Completely Heuristic Operating System]] - Instructional software for teaching undergraduate, and potentially graduate, level operating systems courses.
==Sports and traditions==
[[Image:cal-logo.gif|frame|left|Cal Logo]]
[[Image:2002 big game flags.jpg|thumb|240px|right|Rally Committee running Cal flags across the Memorial Stadium field at the 2002 [[Big Game]]. (Note the Stanford visitors section on the left and the Cal alumni section on the right.)]]
Cal's sports teams compete as the California Golden Bears. They participate in the [[NCAA]]'s Division I-A, and in the [[Pacific Ten Conference]]. The annual football [[Big Game]] between the Bears and their rivals the [[Stanford University|Stanford]] Cardinal is the most important game on Cal's schedule. The winner of this game gains custody of [[the Stanford Axe|the Axe]]. [[The Play]], one of the most dramatic last-minute plays in college football history, occurred on November 20, 1982, in the 85th Big Game.
Berkeley's current football coach, [[Jeff Tedford]], has led the team to some of the most successful campaigns in the school's history. Indeed, seen on campus, variously, have been shirts saying "Ted Heads," "Tedford for President," and "Tedford is God."
Berkeley's main athletic venues, [[Memorial Stadium, Berkeley|Memorial Stadium]] and [[Haas Pavilion]], rank as some of the best college sports facilities in the nation. The Stadium, built to model the Colosseum in Rome, is consistently ranked as one of the best views by Sports Illustrated.
Across the street is Witter Rugby Field, home to Cal's varsity rugby team, the oldest varsity team on campus (they were founded in 1886). The Bears, coached by alumnus and campus legend Jack Clark, are utterly dominant on the American university rugby scene, once winning 12 consecutive national titles. Overall, the Bears have won the national championship 21 times since it was first awarded in 1980, and won the national championship in 2005.
In basketball, Haas Pavilion, donated in part by the owners of Levi-Straus and built on top of the old Harmon Gymnasium, is considered one of the most intimidating environments for visiting teams.
Close to Haas Pavilion is Edwards stadium. This is where the Cal track team practices and competes.
The [[Cal Band|University of California Marching Band]] has served the university since 1891, and performs at every football game and many other sports games and spirit activities. The university also has a [[Rally Committee]], formed in 1901, the members of which have served as the official guardians of Cal Spirit ever since. RallyComm wears traditional blue and gold rugbies.
The official school colors, Yale Blue and California Gold, were established in [[1874]]. Yale Blue was chosen because most of the original faculty were [[Yale University]] graduates. Gold was selected to represent the [[Golden State]] of California.
The official mascot is [[Oski|Oski the Bear]], who first debuted in [[1941]]. Previously, live bear cubs were used as mascots at [[Memorial Stadium, Berkeley|Memorial Stadium]]. It was decided in 1940 that a costumed mascot would be a better alternative to a live bear. Named after the [[The Oski Yell|Oski-wow-wow]] yell, he is cared for by the Oski Committee. The wearer of the costume is kept a secret. It is the tradition to have the [[basketball]] player with the largest feet donate his shoes for Oski to wear.
Cal's independent student-run newspaper is the ''[[The Daily Californian|Daily Californian]]''. Founded in 1871, ''The Daily Cal'' became independent in 1971 after the campus administration fired three senior editors for encouraging readers to take back [[People's Park]]. Cal's student-run radio station, KALX-FM, broadcasts on 90.7 MHz.
The annual summer orientation for incoming freshmen is called CalSO, short for Cal Student Orientation.
The [[Associated Students of the University of California]] (ASUC) is the [[student government]] organization that controls funding for student groups and organizes on-campus student events. It is currently the only autonomous student government in any public U.S. university.
==Lists of distinguished Berkeley people==
*[[List of Nobel laureates associated with UC Berkeley ]]
*[[List of UC Berkeley faculty]]
*[[List of UC Berkeley alumni]]
==Research facilities==
*[[Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory]]
*[[Helen Wills Neuroscience Institute]]
*[[Renewable and Appropriate Energy Laboratory]]
== Points of interest ==
*[[University of California Botanical Garden]]
*[[Hearst Greek Theatre]]
==Further reading==
* Susan Dinkelspiel Cerny, ''Berkeley Landmarks. An Illustrated Guide to Berkeley, California's Architectural Heritage''. Berkeley Architectural Heritage Association, 2001, ISBN 0-970-667604
* Jo Freeman, ''At Berkeley in the Sixties: The Education of an Activist, 1961-1965''. Indiana University Press, 2003, ISBN 0-253-216222
* Harvey Helfand, ''University of California, Berkeley''. Princeton Architectural Press, 2001, ISBN 1-568-982933
* W. J. Rorabaugh, ''Berkeley at War: The 1960s''. Oxford University Press, 1990, ISBN 0-195-066677
* Geoffrey Wong, ''A Golden State of Mind''. Trafford Publishing, ISBN 1-552-126358
== External links ==
{{Commons|Berkeley|Berkeley}}
===Official websites===
* [http://www.berkeley.edu/ Main Berkeley website]
* [http://newscenter.berkeley.edu/ Berkeley NewsCenter]
* [http://www.berkeley.edu/news/in_news/ Berkeley in the News]
* [http://www.dailycal.org/ ''The Daily Californian''—independent student newspaper]
* [http://www.berkeley.edu/news/berkeleyan/ ''The Berkeleyan''—faculty and staff newsletter]
* [http://calbears.ocsn.com/ Official athletic site]
* [http://calband.berkeley.edu/ The University of California Marching Band official web site]
* [http://ucrc.berkeley.edu/ The University of California Rally Committee official web site]
* [http://www.asuc.org/ ASUC student government site]
* [http://www.berkeley.edu/news/berkeleyan/2004/12/01_rankings.shtml "We're No. 2! Now What?"— Berkeleyan article about Berkeley's rankings and their validity]
* [http://www.csua.berkeley.edu CSUA (Computer Science Undergraduate Association) web site]
* [https://cal.berkeley.edu @cal, great minds online--UC Berkeley's online alumni community.]
===Other===
* [http://campusforum.org/ CampusForum.org - Cal's 1st Student-run online community]
* [http://gocyberbears.com/ Go Cyber Bears - Cal's Insider Look at Athletics - Sports Fan Webpage]
* [http://calstuff.blogsome.com/ Calstuff: A Student-Run News Blog]
* [http://www.ocf.berkeley.edu/~atwu/firstcultural/berkeleyguide.html A. Twu's Tour of UC Berkeley]
* [http://www.intemperance.net/berkeley/ Loafer's guide to the UC Berkeley campus by Carolyn Dougherty]
* [http://sunsite.berkeley.edu/uchistory/archives_exhibits/online_exhibits/romapacifica/index.html Online Exhibit on the Hearst Architectural Competition]
*[http://terraserver-usa.com/image.aspx?T=4&S=10&Z=10&X=2826&Y=20959&W=3 TerraServer-USA aerial image of campus]
* [http://www.calpatriot.org/ The California Patriot: Berkeley's Conservative Student Voice]
* [http://www.caldems.com/ The Cal Berkeley Democrats]
* [http://www.ocf.berkeley.edu/~bpreview/ The Berkeley Political Review - A non-partisan political quarterly]
* [http://www.arl.org/ Association for Research Libraries]
{{University of California}}
{{Pacific Ten Conference}}
[[Category:Association of American Universities]]
[[Category:Pacific Ten Conference|California]]
[[Category:Universities and colleges in California]]
[[Category:University of California, Berkeley|*]]
[[Category:University of California]]
[[Category:California Historical Landmarks]]
[[Category:National Register of Historic Places]]
[[Category:Universitas 21]]
[[de:University of California, Berkeley]]
[[eo:Universitato de Kalifornio, Berkeley]]
[[es:University of California, Berkeley]]
[[fr:Université de Berkeley]]
[[id:Universitas California, Berkeley]]
[[nl:Universiteit van Californië - Berkeley]]
[[pt:Universidade de Berkeley]]
[[ja:カリフォルニア大学バークレー校]]
[[zh:伯克利加州大学]]
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