The Official Fall 2014 UCLA Transfer Decisions Thread

<p>so the gym is free for students? cool! i wasn’t sure I just checked and I think its $110 for my spouse </p>

<p>@sonic23‌ </p>

<p>You probably shouldn’t be using the gym until it’s no longer flooded. :P</p>

<p>@cayton lol i know right! all the posts on instagram are so crazy idk how the heck it can get so out of control! </p>

<p>Pauley Pavillion is not the John Wooden Center</p>

<p>@k4201505‌ </p>

<p>No, but the UCLA newsroom reports that the John Wooden Center was still affected.</p>

<p>@randombookie‌ I’m sorry to here that. But how do you guys know? did you get an e-mail or something? I haven’t heard anything from the TAP yet. It’s killing me.</p>

<p>Another murder at USC, one the country’s most dangerous campuses (a campus that DIDN’T get on that controversial dangerous school list…)
Teens Charged With Murdering Xinran Ji, USC Student From China
<a href=“HuffPost - Breaking News, U.S. and World News | HuffPost”>HuffPost - Breaking News, U.S. and World News | HuffPost;

<p>@NeryNight, I got an email. You should try calling or emailing the woman in charge (I forgot her name). Good luck! </p>

<p>updated on Pauley Pavillion
<a href=“UCLA drying out flooded Pauley Pavilion”>UCLA drying out flooded Pauley Pavilion;

<p>@lindyk8, truly tragic</p>

<p>Good news about Pauley being ready for first game, but this part was sad:</p>

<p>“Although the arena floor at Pauley Pavilion is salvageable, the damage took 10 years off the life of the floor that was expected to last 50 years after it was installed in 2012 as part of a $136 million renovation of the arena, Newth said.”</p>

<p>They seemed to imply in a later paragraph they would redo it next year.</p>

<p>@lindyk8‌ </p>

<p>Well, at least this didn’t happen in the middle of basketball season. :)</p>

<p>There’s always a silver lining, @cayton:wink: </p>

<p>I have 5 different versions of a fall schedule. If I can’t any of these 5, I’m dropping out! :-S </p>

<p>My daughter has three core, hoping to get at least two - or one - or none!
She has about 8 possible electives. </p>

<p>@2016candles she’ll meet you Friday at the right mud puddle near Bruin Plaza! :D/ </p>

<p>Can anyone give me suggestions as to how I go about making these schedules? How long will it take to do this?</p>

<p>My orientation is in two weeks.</p>

<p>@cayton, it’s just going through the schedule coming up with best and worse case scenarios. Classes that can fulfill anything if plans A, B, or C screw up.</p>

<p>@Cayton‌
You should start looking on Saturday after this week’s orientation. The class availability will be the most up to date for your purposes. </p>

<p>Start with finding core classes in your major. Then find electives that sound at least semi-interesting. Use the class planner in my.ucla to help you. It really helps visualize everything better. </p>

<p>I’ll let you guys know how well my planning worked after Friday. :-SS </p>

<p>My only caveat is don’t go by open or closed as it is not always accurate. Just come up with various schedules, your dream list and variations all the way down.</p>

<p>I THINK ‘open’ is accurate, although ‘closed’ may not be. </p>

<p>A couple of ppl said that classes that said closed were not closed when they went to register and everything changed from what they had been looking at prior. I think it has to do with seats being reserved for new enrollees. There are a certain number that open up each orientation for classes in a new enrollee’s major. Not sure how it works, but I’ve seen it written that way more than once, so I would not discount closed classes because you might miss out. </p>

<p>I agree with you @lindyk8‌
I was saying if the class currently says ‘open’ with X number of seats, then it’s safe to assume it’s open. But if it says closed, that may not actually be the case. </p>