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University of California San Diego
The University of California, San Diego, also known as the University of California, San Diego (UCSD), or "University of California, San Diego", was founded in 1959. It is a public university in California, belonging to the University of California system, located in the La Jolla community in San Diego, Southern California. There are Roger Reeve College, john moore College, thurgood marshall College, earl warren College and Eleanor Roosevelt College.

The University of California, San Diego is an important research center, and its research expenditure exceeds 600 million dollars. According to the data of the American Science Foundation, the research expenditure of the University of California, San Diego is the highest in the university system of California, ranking sixth in the United States. The departments and graduates of the University of California, San Diego have established about 200 local companies. More than 40% employees in the local bioengineering industry work in the company founded by the University of California, San Diego.

Twenty members of the University of California, San Diego won the Nobel Prize, and nine of them still work in the university. The University of California, San Diego ranks sixth in the number of members of the American Academy of Sciences.

Ranking of schools

American News and World Report 20 1 1 Ranking of American public universities: 7th.