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The University of East Anglia (UEA) is a campus university located in Norwich, Norfolk, England, founded as part of the British Government's New Universities programme in the 1960s. Academically, it has been one of the most successful universities founded in the 1960s, consistently ranking amongst Britain's top higher education institutions. The famous 'ziggurats' of the student accommodation at Norfolk Terrace, photographed in January 2004. UEA admitted its first students in 1963 in temporary accommodation in Earlham Hall, on the western edge of the city of Norwich about 3 miles from the city centre, while a prefabricated "University Village" was built nearby and used until the early 1980s. The permanent campus was built on the adjacent Earlham Golf Course, principally to a design by Sir Denys Lasdun. The design of the campus consists of rather bleak 1960s concrete (Concrete being the name of the weekly student newspaper founded in the early 1970s, and resurrected in 1992 as a fortnightly tabloid) and can be uninviting in winter when cold winds can blow with little interruption from the Urals. The campus as seen from the air in the 1970s. In the mid-1970s, extraction of gravel in the valley of the River Yare, which runs to the south of the campus, resulted in the university acquiring its own 'Norfolk Broad' or lake. At more or less the same time, a bequest of tribal art and C.20th painting and sculpture, by artists such as Francis Bacon and Henry Moore, from the Sainsbury supermarket family resulted in the construction of the striking Sainsbury Centre for the Visual Arts at the western end of the main teaching wall, one of the first major works of architect Norman Foster. Recently the campus has gained an extensive new sports facility called the "Sportspark", built thanks to a £14.5 million grant from the Sport England Lottery Fund, and a purpose-built theatre. "The Square", as seen in September 2002. UEA has had notable successes in terms of courses taught. Malcolm Bradbury for many years taught in the School of English and American Studies and the Climate Research Unit in the School of Environmental Sciences was an early centre of work on climate warming. Aside from the independent student newspaper Concrete, there is a thriving student media across a range of areas. In the 1970s, there was a highly successful student newspaper named Phoenix, which ran for several years. Livewire, the campus radio station, which transmits to air on 1350AM in the vicinity of the university as well as broadcasting on the internet, was established in 1989. Nexus UTV, the campus television station broadcasting news, documentaries, comedy shows and various other types of programming, shows regularly in the bar and is one of the oldest still-running student television stations in the country, having been established in 1968.
The student population in 2003 is claimed to be 9000 undergraduates and 4000 postgraduates. Approximately 1000 students originate from outside the European Union. Notable alumni
External links
de:Universität von Ostanglien eo:University of East Anglia
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