
Senior receiver Jordan Payton led UCLA with seven catches for 136 yards and a touchdown in a 56-30 throttling of Arizona. The Bruins recorded 329 of their 497 yards of offense in the first half en route to a 42-14 halftime lead over the Wildcats.

Third-year communications studies student Jessica Trinh said she wants to turn conceptual pet photography into an art form. She edits props such as glitter, paper hearts and sparklers into her photographs of dogs.

Freshman midfielder Jose Hernandez leads his teammates in celebration after his overtime goal capped the Bruins’ remarkable comeback from a 3-0 deficit against UC Irvine on Sunday night.

Eric Rosner, who teaches at UCLA Extension, was approved to decorate utility boxes around Westwood with stylized interpretations of Westwood buildings.

Eric Rosner spent over 20 years sketching the grand, swooping skyline of New York City, where each tower and pointed spire felt like home.

Sophomore forward MacKenzie Cerda’s early goal lifted UCLA over Oregon 1-0 in the first game of its Pac-12 schedule. The Bruins only managed five shots on goal, compared to Oregon’s 13, but withstood a furious Duck attack in the second half to improve their record to 5-4-0.

Architecture graduate student Anna Kudashkina is one of 56 UCLA graduate students whose work will be displayed at the Perloff Gallery starting Friday. The exhibition will present the projects of students from SUPRASTUDIO.

Architecture graduate student Anna Kudashkina is one of 56 graduate students whose work will be displayed at Perloff Gallery.

Junior middle blocker Claire Felix (left) and sophomore outside hitter Reily Buechler leap to get the block Wednesday night in Pauley Pavilion. The No. 13 Bruins were unable to upset the No. 3 Trojans.

Sebastian Flores traveled to Cuba as a fourth-year Chicana/o studies student for UCLA’s first International and Area Studies: Revolutionary Culture and Popular Religion travel study program after the U.S. recently lifted its embargo.

Flores holds a Cuban coin made into a key chain he brought from his travels in UCLA’s first travel study program in Cuba this summer.

James Anderson, who got involved with gangs and drugs as a teenager, was accepted to UCLA this spring. His determination to establish a crimi nal rights and mentorship organization has seen him cross paths with Supreme Court Justice Sonia Sotomayor and President Barack Obama.

Anderson was accepted to UCLA last spring and hopes to earn his master’s degree from the University of Cambridge in the United Kingdom.

Anderson has spoken at the White House five times over the last three years as a criminal rights advocate, and has met Chicago Mayor Rahm Emmanuel, Supreme Court Justice Sonia Sotomayor and President Obama.