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Saturday, May 12, 2018

From our examples-that-show-that-not-every-donation-has-to-be-a-building department

A gift from philanthropists Jane and Terry Semel will enable UCLA to expand research, teaching and activities connected to the campus’s Healthy Campus Initiative.
Chancellor Gene Block announced the gift May 9 at the initiative’s annual celebration at Pauley Pavilion. The funds will establish the Semel HCI Center at UCLA and support students, projects and programming.  
The initiative, which was instituted at UCLA in 2012 and officially launched a year later, was envisioned by the Semels and funded by them with support from Block and other senior administrators and faculty. It aims to promote the physical, mental and social well-being of UCLA students, staff and faculty members and develop best practices that other campuses and communities can replicate.
“This pioneering effort has enabled UCLA to engage with a wide cross section of our community, stimulating research and introducing activities that influence people to make healthier choices,” Block said. “The Semel HCI Center at UCLA will ensure that these important efforts grow for generations to come. I deeply appreciate Jane and Terry Semel’s long-standing support, vision and generosity.”
To date, the initiative has funded the creation of a traditional medicinal garden at the Ronald Reagan UCLA Medical Center, the biodynamic jane b semel HCI Community Garden at the UCLA Sunset Canyon Recreation Center and hundreds of health-related student projects. The initiative also supports up to 10 graduate student researchers each year and has driven the development of several new UCLA courses, including a popular life skills class, and an undergraduate minor and graduate-level certificate in food studies.
It also played key roles in enhancing UCLA’s student dining offerings, which are widely regarded among the nation’s most healthful; developing and studying a teaching kitchen curriculum for undergraduates and health sciences students; implementing UCLA’s smoke-free campus program; and developing one of the nation’s first campuswide diabetes prevention programs...

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