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Goleta Point

Goleta, CaliforniaLandforms of Santa Barbara County, CaliforniaPeninsulas of CaliforniaUniversity of California, Santa Barbara
Campus Point (UCSB)
Campus Point (UCSB)

Goleta Point (also known as Campus Point) is a small peninsula on the central coast in the U.S. state of California. It is located 3 miles (4.8 km) southwest of the city of Goleta. The point forms an extension into Santa Barbara Channel and is situated within the campus of University of California, Santa Barbara (UCSB). It is characterized by a beach cliff, crashing waves, and a view of the Channel Islands. The rock formation is frequented by shorebirds.

Excerpt from the Wikipedia article Goleta Point (License: CC BY-SA 3.0, Authors, Images).

Goleta Point
Lagoon Road,

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Wikipedia: Goleta PointContinue reading on Wikipedia

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N 34.405 ° E -119.84416666667 °
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Lagoon Road 552
93106
California, United States
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Campus Point (UCSB)
Campus Point (UCSB)
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University of California, Santa Barbara Library
University of California, Santa Barbara Library

The University of California, Santa Barbara Library is the university library system of the University of California, Santa Barbara in Santa Barbara, California. The Library includes four facilities: Two libraries (the Main Library (Davidson Library) and the Music Library) and two annexes (Annex I and Annex II). The library has some three million print volumes, 30,000 electronic journals, 34,450 e-books, 900,055 digitized items, five million cartographic items (including some 467,000 maps and 3.2 million satellite and aerial images), more than 3.7 million pieces of microform, 167,500 sound recordings, and 4,100 manuscripts. The Library states that it holds 3.2 miles (5.1 km) of manuscript and archival collections.The library serves UC Santa Barbara's students, faculty, and staff. The Library is also open to the public, but to borrow materials, non-University affiliated individuals must purchase a UCSB Library Card for $100 for one year. However, members of UCSB affiliates may join for a reduced fee, and students and faculty at other University of California campuses, public school teachers, and faculty from reciprocating libraries may also obtain borrowing privileges with no charge, subject to verification. Members of the UC Alumni Association may obtain a courtesy library card, which provides borrowing access, but not access to licensed databases or interlibrary loan, or the ability to check-out journals.The Main Library has eight floors, with the Pacific View Room on the eighth floor offering a view of the Pacific Ocean.Kristin Antelman was named University Librarian in 2018.

Daily Nexus

The Daily Nexus is a campus newspaper at the University of California, Santa Barbara (UCSB). Daily Nexus lineage can be traced to the Santa Barbara State College student newspaper, The Eagle, of the 1930s. After the college became part of the UC system in 1944, The Eagle evolved under different names — The Roadrunner, El Gaucho, The University Post and The Daily Gaucho. The modern Daily Nexus emerged from the activism and civil protests of the 1960s-1970s. The newspaper's editors changed the publication's name in 1970 to the Daily Nexus to "keep with the changing nature of the university" after protesters burned down the Bank of America building in Isla Vista, a UCSB community neighboring the campus. The 1970-71 editorial board drew inspiration from a quote by Robert Maynard Hutchins: "A free press is the nexus of any democracy". Since then, the Daily Nexus has covered campus-related and county-wide news, sports and arts. Students run the editorial side of the paper, independent of faculty or administration input or guidance. The editor in chief hires editorial staff and has the final word on what goes to print. Editors train and supervise staff writers and reporters. UCSB students work on the advertising and business side, as well. The Daily Nexus office is situated in the Storke Communications Plaza, beneath Storke Tower and next to the offices of KCSB-FM, the campus radio station. The Daily Nexus receives about two thirds of its funds from advertising revenue. The other one third is derived from a quarterly lock-in fee of $3.85 per student during the regular school year and $1.00 per student during the summer session. The lock-in fee is voted upon by students every two years.

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The Center for Spatial Studies and Data Science (@spatial) is a research center at the University of California, Santa Barbara built on a rich legacy of providing visionary and interdisciplinary leadership in geographic data science. Formerly named the Center for Spatial Studies, @spatial was founded in 2008 by Michael Goodchild, and focuses on spatial thinking across domains, spatial intelligence, geoinformatics, geographic information science, and geographic information systems. Founded on values of excellence and inclusion, the mission of the Center for Spatial Studies and Data Science is to serve the UC Santa Barbara campus, the local community, and society by accelerating scientific discovery, education, and access to actionable solutions. The Center hosts speakers, workshops, and visiting researchers as well as the annual Specialist Meeting that brings global experts together on emerging topics in spatial data science to fuel discussion and set research agendas. The Center consists of core researchers engaged in center management and initiatives, affiliate researchers across UC Santa Barbara interested in participating in Center activities, a Trainee Network of post-docs, graduate students, and undergraduate students, support staff, and valued external partners. Community engagement and outreach is a priority of the Center, with efforts including the Earth + Humans podcast about the challenges brought on by human’s interactions with the environment and the Community GIS Initiative, which aims to increase access to GIS solutions by creating a pathway to those who have GIS skills.